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Coun,t down smooth for Soyuz on Tuesday

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- ' ' ;32- The Sunday Times- Sentinel: SUilday , July 13, 1975
: . . . ' ~-=~-=~::!:!:~:::::!:!:!:~:~~;;:~::::~·:·:·:~~:~·;·:·:·::;:;:;~:~::::o. .8::::::::::::::::::::::;::::~t

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, _ Jaycees .name Phillips

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t:aLLIPUI.IS - . The
Galllpol!s Area Jay cees
announced Sa turda y the

~

wwner of lhl:' K Albert Adl er
Jr Memonal Scholars hip for

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By Jo Ellen Diehl
POMEROY - The beauty of livmg beside the Ohio River IS
trequenUy taken for granted by the thousands who do . until
something about that big ol' stream makes them sit up and
· take notice .
Last Wednesday, not one, but two happemngs made people

$500 award at

the Galha

Ccunty Junwr Fa tr on J aycee

I&gt;Ight. Jul y 29 Making the
presentation w!ll

When young Terry Hannigan floated by th e shores of the
Big Bend on his homemade raft, he attracted several spectators who watched a Similar verswn of th e area's forefather s.
Something as folksy as that sets one's mmd to imagmmg the
hardships and courage of the early settlers, and how well off
we are now in the twentieth centill'y. The river has a reminder
of our history , no longer utilized for such purposes
Later the same evening, though, along came the majeStic
Delta Queen, crmsmg toward Its destmalion full or fun and
laughter, the calliope puffing out lively tunes, and passengers
enjoying the qmet lazmess aboard the luxury boat And mslead
of hardships, one's mmd jumps to though ts of leiS ur e and fun .

Se holar s h tp
De nms Fravel

AS OF THE FIRST OF THIS MONTH , 1l IS now an Ohio
~ate law that a driver may turn n ght at a red stop li ght If there
is no sign prohibiting that turn . However, the driver must
&lt;lOIIle to a complete stop and check for oncommg traffic before
making the turn.

be

th e
the
Curnm ttlee,

of

TAMMY EICHINGER, DAUGHTER of Mr . and Mrs. Paul
J!;ichinger, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, is pictured this month
In Drwn Major magazine for which she was chosen Little Moss
Majorette of the Month. She IS a student of Glona Buck
(
Wallace of Gallipolis.

yourspec111t needs And of course
you c11n depend on t he best
service Call for det ails

Carrol K. Snowden
24 Slale 51.

GalliP•V•

-

446-4290, Home 446-4518
UATI fAtlol

l.ii1 1 go«! ntighbor,
SlJII F•f111 JJ thtn

.1iSl.._
.,..,
IN ~UU.NC I

STAH FARM GtHE~fll HtS U~A N CE COMPt.ff!'
Harne Oll~tr
Blooou~g l on lllillOLS
p 7-408

year and we are lookmg

forward to a better year
ahead.
Hartley
then
gave
stockho lders an In-dept h
report on the bank's new
customer packaged banking
service called THE CLUB.
"Through this plan we are
able to offer our customer a
complete package of bankmg
serv ices," Hartley sa1d. He
noted that there has been an

Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis , Ohio ,

desire to stay w the Galha
County area to tmp~ove 1t

Un iversity tn the fall , intendmg a career m Jour-

The Gallipohs Area Jaycees
are pleased to choose a youn g
man who more than fulfills
~II of the above traits.,

naltsm. He ranked sec ond m

hts gra duatmg class wtth a
~ 76 average an d performed
m a host of extt·a -cur n cular
acttvtt tes .

member of the band lor 8

He \\as president of his

years, he wa s li sted in Who 's

senwr class , s tud ent body
vice-president, edttor of the

Who Among Music Students
'" AmeriCan High Schools

school paper , Bela Club vicepreSident,
Pep
Clu b
preSident, Libra ry Clu b
secretar y, and a member of

the yearbook :;la ff

As a

aca demic

ach ievement,
s trong
leadership abi li l!es, and a

Trace ~h gh School. Phillips
will be attending Ohio

GARY PHILLIPS

and was wtnner of the John

Ph1l1p Sousa Award fur
Oulslandmg Music Ability
Out side school, Phillip s
has been m the publi c

Parker of Columbus

•

lS

Reedsville
News Notes
Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Hauber , Steve and Mtke
VISited with Rt ck Hauber at
Fort Walton , Fla
Mrs Gladys Morgan is
spendin g sometime with her

of Cancinnatt
Parker will preside over

awarded the Sil ver
Beaver. !he highest local
m~;anl fur vo lu nteers f () r

daug hte r,
Debbie
1n
Colwnbus.
Mrs. Opal Randolph and
Mrs. Dortha Riebel attended
a ballgame at Cmcmnali
recently.
Denms Reed from Disney
World in Flonda recently
visited with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Alvin Reed and
family.
Debbie Wilson of Pomeroy
Rl. and Jane Whitehead
visited with Patty Hewitt at

da sllngmshcd service to bnv-

Ctncinna ti for severa l days.

Scouting acl!vilies of IB Buy

hood

Gerral Chevalier, Carrie
and Jeff of Mansfield, spent a
few days w1th Mr . and Mrs.
Edward Chevalier.
Mr and Mrs Grant Smith

Scout area president
L P;:~rke r , presid en t of Btg
Drum. Inc., Colwnbus, has

been clccl&lt;&gt;d president or
Area 6, F:ast Central Regwn,
Boy Scouts of Amen ca, at the
Rcgwna l meeting in Ch1ca go

He succeeds Penn W Ziegler

Seou l Counci ls

W. Va Scout membership

was

.

We s t

Vir gmta, tncluding the TriStrll e Area Co un cil w1 th
headquarters in Hun tmgton,

excellen t response fr om bank
customers on the new

Yau ' I I
tract t t down
much faster
wI I h a

WANT AD

program
Re-elected as directors for
the next year were Russell
Bibbee, Charles L. Brown,
Jr , Forrest Clark, Cecil B.
Dean, John R. Felker, Jack
E. Fruth, V!tus Hartley, Jr .,
Dale Nibert, Vaught Smith,
Paul Somerville , Jr., Cecil
Williams, R. B. Rothgeb, and
Robert Wingett.

•

. POST CARD PICI'URE ofa _ferry serving Pomeroy and Mason taken many years ago,
was submitted by Mrs . Pearl (Helen ) Williams. The ferry service was used until the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge was built and even for a time after the bndge was erected as it was
a toll bridge . The ferry sank m the river, its top visible for a tune after the sinking. The
picture shows the ferry on the West Virginia side of thE!' river

Rio Grande workshop will

For real home cooktn' the
whole family will enjoy anytime, come to the Bob Evans
Steak House . Where once
·again, ·'round the clock
service is a Gallia County
tradition .
· ,.

RIO GRANDE - A four
day workshop at RIO Grande
College - Rio Granoe Community College beginning
Monday and ending Fnday
Will offer teachers a
showcase or an educational
method which guodes individuals via non-grading and
multi-age grouping t 34 year
age span)

Registration will
be
Monday, July 14, in Allen Hall
on the Rio Grande College
Campus. Linda Bauer, a
nativ e of Oak Hill and
ass is tant professor
of
education at Rio Grande , will
be the instructor. She is a
ce rtified Individualiz ed
Guided Education Instructor ,

E . Williams and family.
Recent visitors of Mr. an d
Mrs. Lawrence Rose were
Mr . and Mrs. Brooks Foully
of Pomona . Cahf., Mr and
Mrs. Rome Sandy of
Parkersburg, W. Va and Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Rose of

Bidwell.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pnce
of
Long Bottom viSited w1th
are attending a Mail earne rs
Ches ter
ConventiOn at Cmcmnatt this Mr . and Mrs
Murdry
Jr
.
an
d
Lori.
'Yeek .
Mr and Mrs. Harold Sauer
Mr. and Mrs. J . D. Kibble
of Parkersburg, W Va . of Middleport Rd , visited
visited with H. E Kibble and with Mr. and Mrs. Warren
fam ily and Mr. and Mrs . R. Pickens and other re latives.

GET
ATTENTION

trained. by the Kettering
Foundation .
Participants will explore
functions of multi.,.ge units,
evaluation of the child's instr.uctional program , role of
the principal, unit leader,
unit teacher, intern, and
instructional aide, effective
functioning of a unit, and
advantages of uruts over selfcontained classes.
Participants will examine
co ncepts of individually
guided education, view film
media developed on unit
teaching by IDEA Kettering
Foundation, and visit an open
school which is organized
around multi-age unit
grouping concepts.
Cost of the four-day
workshop is $26. One credit
hour will be earned. The class
is scheduled from 1-3 p.m.
daily. For more information ,
contact the Office of Ad·
missions,
Rio
Grande
College, Rio Grande, Ohio,
telephone 245-5353.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy Furniture Department, 3rd Floor

Celebration

• Closed Sunp ay night at 10:00 p m
f

onv ')

w,.ather

Devoted To The
VOL XXVII

NO. 63

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

$1.8 billion m
deal with Israel
~

negotiators met in JeruSalem mitments Washington would
Sunday to draw up Israel's give Israel in any new Sinai
latest proposals for a new agreement.
accord with Egypt m the
" In the economic sphere it
Sinai Desert.
seems that there was underDuring its regular meeting standing reached that the
Sunday,
the
cabinet United States would give
authorized the government to Israel economic aid of $1.7 to
go ahead with its negotiations $1.8 billion and that adon the basis of the Rabin- ditionally the United States
Kissinger meeting.
would carry the expense of
Ha'aretz said it had learned supplying oil to Israel for a
that the main subject of three-year period ,' 1 the
discussion between Rabin newspaper said.
"Following the Kissinger
and Kissinger was the level of
guarantees
and
com- meeting the chances for ari
agreement have . increased
but there are still large
question marks and it is too
early to speak of Kissinger
visiting the area," Ha'aretz
said.
Rabin told newsmen on his
return from Bonn Sunday
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - FOR DECADES AMERICANS have that a new Smai accord might
poured off the farms and into the cities. But a government be as much as a year away.
population study says all that has changed since 1970 and
Americans are now heading back to rural areas. Calvin Beale,
author of the study released during the weekend, said the main
reasons for the turnaround in the population pattern are the
decentralization of mannfacturing, the growth of retirement
towns and state colleges in rural areas and the boom in
recreational centers.
"This is the first period in this century in which nonmetro
areas have grown at a faster rate than metro areas," wrote
Beale, head of population studies for the Agriculture Department. Beale's analysis of census data showed that from 1970 to
Lonnie Black, 19, Rutland,
1973 metro counties grew 2.9 per cent and nonmetro counties
been charged with theft
has
swelled by 4.2 per cent. During the 1960s the metro counties
had gained 6 million persons while the nonmetro counties while having a deadly
weapon in or about his person
actually lost 3 million residents.
in connection with the robBOSTON- SEN , EDWARD KENNEDY, D-Mass., says bery of Kroger's Thursday
constant speculation he will change his mind and run for night, Pomeroy police report.
Black apparently jumped
Presidli!J1,could hurt his U. S. Senate re-election campaig~.
the riverbaiik while
over
Kennedy, in an interview in the Boston Surday Globe, saod
Republicans might be encouraged by the presidential talk to attempting to run from the
launch a strong challenge against him in the Senate race next scene and suffered a broken
neck. He is now in a
year.
"The speculation about the presidency is counter- Columbus hospital.
Police, following additional
productive. It is not illogical to think that all the speculation
leads,
speculated today that
about a candidacy or presidential draft would indicate to
Republicans that their primary nomination in the state is very two other persons were inmuch worth fighting for and pursuing," said Kennedy . Ken- volved, one who was with
nedy said last year he would not run for president and has Black at the time of the
robbery, and one who was in
consistently repeated that statement.
a getaway car up the road.
The money has not been
JSRAE!J JETS HAVE ATTACKED PALESTINIAN
recovered.
The holdup ocTARGETS in southern Lebanon for the second time in a week.
The guerrillas retaliated with rocket fire on settlements in curred Thursday at 9:30p.m.
northern Israel. An Israeli spokesman Tel Aviv said the Two men app,;ehended John
warplanes raided a guerrilla weapons factory Surday, but a Ambrose on foot, store
Lebanese spokesman in Beirut said the jets struck a manager, who was taking the
money to the bank from the
Palestinian refugee camp.
Lebanon said four persons were killed and 20 WOIII\ded in night's receipts.
air strikes against the Ain el Helweh refugee camp near the
port city of Sidon, 35 miles south of Beirut. Lebanese newsmen
said Israeli artillery also shelled the town of Bini Jubayl in
southern Lebanon for 30 minutes Surday night, killing a man
A pick up truck owned by
and wounding two others.
·
Michael G. Caton, 22, Rt. I,
In Jerusalem, the Israeli cabinet met Sun!lay but still Vinton, was gutted by fire
made no decision on an interim peace agreement with Egypt. Sunday morning when Caton
A- communique said the cabinet authorized the Israeli was travelling on SR 124 in
negotiating team to keep up its efforts. Israeli Prime Minister
Salem Twp.
Yitzhak Rabin, back from talks with Secretary of State Henry
According to the Meigs
Kissinger tn West Germany, expressed hope for a peace County Sheriff's office, Caton
agreement but said it may take as long as a year.
noticed fire coming from
FORD, IN his first trip unh der flldeHhood atnd tpullfed off
WASHINGTON - .PRESIDENT
t•
.
t e roa . e pu ou a 1re m
since becOming a candidate, showed this weekend he may be h
b
t
d th
en
.
d'
. M'ddl . t e car ure or, an
effective
campa1gner
among
1verse
groups
m
1
e
lk
d
t
b
h
to
. an
.
,
d
f
wa
e
o
a
near
y
ouse
1
America and - by hiS own a~~SCssment .- ' 'In
'Ina e a ot o
d t'
d phone for he1p. Wh en he
t
bo
akin
iends
"Whether
spe
g
a
u
econorruc
o
era
Jon
an
d h. t k
fr
· to corporate execulives
·
· Ch'JCago, or droppmg
· m
· ,returne
m
.
• . 1s rue was
.
restraint"
·
ert · his home state of Michigan Ford received burmng agam. The Rutland
onabandconc m
'
Fire Dept. answered the call .
abundant cheers.
.
.
.
At a regionally teleVIsed news conference m CJ,ticago, Ford
again criticized Congress' inaction on his energy program. The
LOCAL TEMPS
effect was not missed by political pros. The President met with
Te)Tlperature in downtown
a group of llllnois GOP leaders in ~icago Saturday ~nd with Pomeroy Munday at 11 a.m.
Michigan Republicans Sunday. Polltteal sources m lllmms sav was 77 degrees urder partly
(Continued on page H)
cloudy skies .

TEL AVIV (UP!) - Israel
and the United States have
agreed Washington would
provide up to $1.6 billion in
economic aid to Israel if a
new interim peace accord Is
concluded with Egypt, an
Israeli newspaper said today.
The newspaper Ha' aretz
said this understanding was
reached by Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin and Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger
when they met in Bonn
Saturday.
Rabin and his top

in theft

mattress and foundation

Truck gutted

Here's a terrific bedding
value! You get innerspring
construction, great overall
support with relaxing comfort,
quilted mattress cover. Big features- yet pnced for small budgets.
Full size

SET

·Open Monday to Thursday 9:30 !o 5

The astronauts' wives were here . Among other Vls itors

Now You Know

entine

Makers of famou s

Shop Friday and Saturday 9;30 to 8 pm

PERFECT SLEEPER®
maltresses and

ELBERFELD$ N POMEROY
•

of The Meigs-Mason Are;J

MONDAY

PRICE 15'

JULY 14, 1975

·~

0

: : Ford offers compromise

{

:·::

:·.·

:: on phasing out controls

.:::
\
;:;.

24-megawatf
furnace
':
?: proposed at Graham

WASHINliTON tlJPII President ·,:,:
Ford today proposed phasing out remaining
oil price controls by January 1!17ij in favor of :-.·
a new overall price ceiling that would boost }
:::_ the price of gasoline about 7 cents a gallon )
by then.
_
}
;;:_
He said this would be "a small price to
:::· pay" to free the nation· from dependence on :::
l'oreign oil producers.
::::
::::
In a message to Congress. Ford warned }
;::
':.: that he would veto an extension of the \
:·.' current oil price control law- due to expire ;:::
) ,\ug . :11 - unless the lawmakers accept ::;:
:·:: "this reasonable compromise."
::::
:)
The price of "old;, oil, that produced by ::::
.::· American wells prior to I973 and accounting ::::
::: for some 60 per cent of production. }
:::: currently is controlled at an average of (
:::: about $:..25 per barrel while the average {
·:·: price of "new" domestic oil is controlled ::·:
) and is now about $1:1 a barrel.
::.;
:·;:
Removing controls from "old" oil :::;
:::; completely, critics have charged, would j''\
::_:: allow the per-barrel price to soar abruptly :·.·
... to the higher level and drive gasoline prices \
by as much as ·u cents---a gallon.
::::
~
;
.. ·.. ... ... . .. ... ... ' . ... . .. .. .. .. . . . . .. ' ..
. . . . . ..... .

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GRAHAM STATION, W.
Va. - Foote Mineral Company today announced from
its Exton, Pa. headquarters
that ots board of directors has
authorized prehmmary
e.ngineering studies for a

&lt;

major expansion of Foote's

ferr oalloys business . An
engineering contract for new
furnaces at three Foote
plants - including its unit
here - has been awarded to
The Auslm Company .
At 1ts Graham plant Foote
is planmng the possible addilton of a new 24-megawatt
furnace for the production of
1ts pr opnetary chromiUm
alloying element, H.S. Cr -50
This expansion would be in
addil!on to a $15 million
capital
program
for
modernization and air qual!ly
control now bein g completed
at the Graham facility . By
the end of '!975 the Graham

plant woll contain all large
modern fa cilities for the
production of both commodi ly and proprietary
ferrosJlicon products .
The eng meenng studies
also cover a new 6 megawatt
submerged arc furna ce at
Cambridge, Ohio where
Foote produces Ferovan(r l,
ot her
ferrovanadtum
products and -St-ainal. The
new
furnace
would
. Significantly increase Foote's
ability to participate fully in
gr owi ng
markets
for
ferrovanadiwn and boron
products.
The expansion pr og ram
also includes the addition of a
new 24-meg~watt ferrosilicon
furnace at the company's
Keokuk, Iowa works. The
Keokuk plant, which now
produces Silvery Pig Iron, IS
presently undergomg a $7.25

million modernization and air
quality control capital expenditure program . The
proposed new furnace would
produce 50 pet. and 75 pet.
ferrosili co n ,thereby Impr oving the flexibility,
product mix, and competition
capabJhly of the facility .
The proposed expansion
would boost Foote's installed
ferroalloy capacity by 44 pel.
to 177 installed megawatts. In
1974, Foote 's Ferroalloys
Division sales were approximately $91 ,000,000.
Foote Mineral Company,
based in Exton, Pa ., IS a
leading producer of lithiwn
produ c ts , electrolytic
manganese and lerroalloys
containing sihcon, vanadium

and chrome. Eighty-four pet.
of Foote's voting stock is
owned by Newmont Mining
Corporation .

:lr·:·:·:···:·:·:s ·:·:···:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:.; -:-:-:-:-:-.·:-.. -::-:-....,.,...,.,.,.,.,.,.,.;.,: .;·.·.·:-..-;;.:-; ;.,., ,.,,.,.,.,., ·-::·.

Projected
schools
budget
&lt;
treet proJect : :
r
:; ; set for nearly $5% million
: : studied further ':
~

[_!_:

. :·

SYRACUSE - Syrac.use
council Saturday evening in a
continued session authorized
the Hornsby Co., to prepare
plans and specifications ,
subject to final approval of
council for the proposed
Syracuse municipal swimming pool. There would be no
cost to the village.
Council in its meeting of
July 8 discussed making
College Road one way from
the Dick Harris property
west to the Orville Crooks
property. Virgil Teaford was
present to continue it.
He said be felt the road
could be widened as there has
been an apparent encroachment by the village as the
road in question at one time
was much wider. Teaford felt
that to make the street oneway would handicap tile
village, perhaps hindering
growth of the town . He advised widening instead of
making it one way and
leaving it narrow.
Council explained that to
widen the area would cost
over $50,000 and the town just
does not have the funds to
tackle su,ch a project. Also

there
might be slippage
problems, due to the sandy
groWld.
Robert Wingett, president
of council, explained that the
village has 13 rrules of streets
to maintain and only receives
$5,000 a year for streets.
Teaford suggested getting
assistance from the county
highway department or
township trustees.
To this council stated it still
would cost the village for any
work done by the county.
Attending were Mayor
London, presiding; Eber
Pickens, Barry McCoy, Ed
Neutzling, Troy Zwilling,
Wingett and Kathryn Crow,
clerk.

Supplies
reduced

WASHINGTON (UP!) Businessnien sold a record $3
billion worth of ilwentories in
May, the fourth consecutive
month of large-scale 'lflling
of warehouse stocks, the
Commerce Department
reported today.
The huge inventory decline
was coupled with a modest 0.4
per cent improvement in
combined business sales ,
with most of the strength at .
A
sign
appeared the retail level.
mysteriously from no where
The latest statistics were
on the front of the courthouse another indication that the
Saturday at daylight· ad- nation 's economic health is
vertising a blue grass festival gradually improving.
with an arrow pointing west
Economists have said that
on Second Street.
businesses must liquidate
No one m the courthouse their now unwanted inknew anything about the sign ventories in order to
or how it got there. And there stimulate new orders and the
definitely ;.as no festival '" overall upturn in economic
Pomeroy. Thee sign was still growth that would follow.
on the front of the courthouse Manufacturers and retailers
today. Prank or whatever, overstocked .their backroom
the sign is attracting at- shelves as a hedge against
unusually heavy onflation
tentton .

Sign appears

on courthouse

,

,j

••

Interest.~

The first book to be
published w1th photographic
illustrations was The Pencil
of Nature, !844-46, by William
Henry Fox Talbot.

.:·. ,.;:, ;:,:,.,:;.;:;:;.;.;:;:;.;:: .:;:,;:;::·::;:;::::::·.:: .::·:::·. ;:,: :;;. ·::· :;::·•::::: ·:: ·:;:• ·::· ::=· .:;:;:· :=·&gt;:;:· ;: ::·: .:

charged

week only!

will be Russia 's ambassador to the United State5, Anatoly
Dobrynin . America 's' Moscow ambassador, Walter
Stoessel, will watch the Soyuz launch from Balkonur,
becoming t,he first Westerner to see a Soviet mame&lt;l
launching.
'
U all goes weU, the Apollo will catch up with the Soyuz
Thursday and the ships will dock 136 mlles above 'Germany. Two hours later, Stafford and Leonov will shake
hands lor the first time in space in th e first of four crew
transfers between the two ships while they are linked for
44 hours.
" People of good will will see this experiment as a
forerunner of joint work by the peoples of our countries
and a pooling of their efforts in battle with the elements
and in investigating the universe," the official Soviet
newspaper Pravda said Sunday.
Stafford sa1d in a greeting to the Soviet people during
his telephone talk with Leonov that "we are certain the
m1ssion will strengthen the friendship between our two
countnes. ''

worry for project officials although meteorologiSt J ess
Gul1ck said the trend is for more favorable conditions.
There has been lightning and rain in the Cape area for the
past eight days and forecasters said more was likely
sometime Tuesday.
Lightning or even electrified clouds overhead could
delay the shot a day. Scientists were prepared to drop
metallic fibers into cumulus clouds in an attempt to short
circuit potential thunderheads. Four aircraft will be
constanUy measuring the electric potential of clouds
24,000 to 41,000 feet overhead.
The weather forecast at Baikonur was good . Meteorologists expected a high of 91 degrees Fahrenheit and northerly wmds or 16to 22 miles per hour .
The shot marks the end of the Apollo era for the Umted
Stales. Local officials estimate it may draw as many as I
million spectators to the Cape area. There wo~·t be
another American manned space'shot until 1979 when the
space shuttle rocket plane begins flying .

•

Chance of showers tomght
Highs today 1n low 80s,
tonight on upper 50s . Mostly
sunny Tuesday, highs on low

Black is

(Continued from page 25)
Portsmouth has a reputahon
of putting on top-notch horse
shows.
I HAVE NOTICED a few
people in luwn, such as Herman Black and Win Blake, fly
the AmeriC,iln flag the
maJOrity of the lime . ThiS
!being the Bicentennial year
of our country) would be a
good lime for all of us to take
the lime to display our
natwnal flag more often. I
· know we have a flag but don't
bother to get 11 out.
'I resolve to do better this
year . Why don' t you make the
same resolution, and make
the Bicentenrual Year a great

and a soft landing ."
It was also reported that the two cosmonauts _aboard
Russia's Salyut 4 space lab will continue tony during the
Soyuz-Apollo mission, ending their two month mission
during the last JOdays of this month. Leonov and Kubasov
,.,
land }uly 21.
Foreign Ministry press chief Vsevolod Softnsky said in
Qpening the Moscow news conference that the two ships'
Union in orbit will "strengthen peace and deepen the
process of detente. This is an ellllmple of solving many
difficulties and mutuai problems in an atmosphere of
cooperation and mutual understanding."
The Russians open the doubleheader with an 6;20 a .m.
EDT blastoff from their desert base east of the Aral Sea.
The America pilots, and millions of other persons around
the world, will watch the launch on television.
The U S.launch issetfor 3:50p.m. EDT Tuesday.
" We will see you in a couple of days," Stafford said in a
telephone call to Leonov while both crews relaxed Sunday .
The threat of thunderstorms remained the one big

show open class systems

Tuppers Plains

OPEN 24 HOURs~:~

. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UP!! - Countdowns continents apart moved smoothly today toward Tuesday
mornmg•s launch of Russia's Soyuz spaceship and the
blastoff 7 ~ hours later of America's Apollo in a mission a
Soviet offoctal said would. strengthen peace and deepen
detente.
Astronauts Thomas P. Stafford, Vance D. Brand and
Donald K. "Deke" Slayton were ready . And Russian
ffil\llagers said in Moscow that cosmonauts Alexei A
Leonov and Valeri N. Kubasov likewise were set at the
Baikonur Cosmodrome, 6,670 miles from here , for the
rendezvous in orbit
"All the training has been completed and the crew~ are
in full readiness for ASTP (AIXJUo-Soyuz Test Project,)
srud Andrian G. Nikolaev, deputy director of the Gagarin
Cosmonaut Training'Center, at a midday news briefmg in
Moscow.
"We are convinced that the crews will fully cope with
the mission and we wish the cosmonauts and astronauts a
successful launch , a full completion of the flight program

80s.

•

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Pleasant Valley
DISCHARGES - Philmore
Hudnall. Point Pleasant;
Mrs . Elza Powell , Ashton;
VIckie Vernon Legue, Evans;
Prisc1lla Fndley, Leon; Mrs.
Lewis Taylor, Gallipolis, 0. ;
Cecil Cotton, Point Pleasant ;
Fred Painter, Bidwell, 0.;
George Roush, Mason;
Wilham Robbms, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . BernRrd
Goelhng, Gallipolis , 0 .; ~-' -' ·
Clarence
Clay,
Point
Pleasant; Charl es Taylor .
Pomt Pleasant; Mrs . Denms
Whii&lt;&gt;, Poin t Pleasant: Mrs
Russe ll See, Poin t Pleasant;
Mrs.
Andrew
Lemley ,
Middleport;
Ge or g ia
Hugg1ng s, Lakin; Mr s
William See, West Colwnbia ;
Zola Buzzard, Lakin; Terry
Clagg, Glenwood ; Edward
Rastclift; Jackson, 0.
Births - Jul y 11, a son to
Mr . and Mrs. D~nny Potts,
Gall!polis Ferry, and July 12,
a son to Mrs. Alice
Cha pman . Gallipolis Ferry.

1n

the ar ea exceeds 12:1,000
Pmker. execut t~,o·c boa rd
memb er (Jf Central OhiO Boy
Scout Council , is se rvin g as
eounc1l presid ent. In April he

m .Sout l1

Centra l Ohi o and

Peoples' Bank stock split 2-1
POINT PLEASANT - A to exos tw g
s toc khold- ·
series
of
resolutions ers
or
thetr
tra nsauthorizing • two-for-one feree and an additional 3,500
stock split and the sale of to new stockh olders. The
additional shares were ap- action rai ses the Pe oples
proved during the annual Bank's capital stock to 40,000
stockholders meeting of the shares .
President Vitus Hartley,
Peoples Bank of Pomt
Jr. told stockholders that the
Pleasant last week.
The resolutions, approved benefits of the stock plan
unanimously , also gave tnclude rewardmg prese nt
bank officials authority stockholders, which nwnber
to sell
7,300
shares over 300 persons, broademng
the bank's cap1tal base and
·increa sing growth poten tial.
In other business of the
s t oc kh olders meeting
presided over by Chairman of
the Board R. B Rothgeb, 1l
was announced that total
assets of the bank mcreased
$1,986,393.62 during the past
12-monlh period . The total
assets on .Jure 30, 1975 were
$12,781,713.02 compared to '
$10,795,319.40 on June 30, •75.
President Har tley, in his
State Farm has econom 1cal c011
ei'age for your mobile home &lt;Jnd
report, told the s tockh olders
contents Liability pr otection for
"we have had a very good
~ou. Many opt1on al extras to meet

out~tandi n g

A June graduate of Hannan

HUNTINGTON -- Thuma s
NOTONLYDOESamiable H. C. Roney of New Haven own
~ baby robe of Abe Lincoln 's, but he IS also the owner of a
Yl!luable Chinese coin called a " Ka1-Yuen Cash."
, It seems that around 850 C.D. King Ka1 Yuen of Cluna
became a Nestorian Christian and dec1ded to root out Buddhism. So he confiscated all Buddhist property, lands, and
particularly bells. Each province was ordered to make cash
out of the bronze melted down from the bells , and one of these
IltUe coins is what Roney owns.

Clothiers Football Review .
The scholarship , given in
memory o[ Adler, a local
Ja yce e
member
who
penshed on the Silver Bndge
disaster or December 15,
1967, is awarded to a young
adult of htgh character,

Phillips will be presented a

notice, and what a contrast they were

BUT I WONDER HOW beaut1fullh!S s1de of the vie\\ lo ~k s
to those floating by. Painting the building housmg the Green
lantern and Jim O'Brien's law offic es a pretty soft green color
trimmed with white improved the aesthetic quality of that
corner immensely . Now that bmlding and the Meigs Inn are
two of the nicest lookmg structures in town , showing off the
unique architecture with pamt jobs. Wouldn 'l it be great if the
test of the town spruced up to show off some of th e origiriahly
of the old time buildings which is so often hidden'

Will Bounee " and was heard
as a reporter for the Thomas

1975 IS Gary Alan Pho lhps of

eh&lt;:Jtrpers un

The many personalities of a beautifu l n ver .

spntltght as sports colwnnist
fur Gallopolis Datly Tribune.
He had his own sports column
entitled " How the Basketball

HI. 2, Crown City

,

\ -

The Galha County Local
Board of Education Saturday
night approved its 1976
budg et totaling $5,491,332
which may - or may not be In excess of tax revenue.
The budget was prepared
by the board 's clerk Mrs.

Naom1 Beman, assistant

s up erin ten dent David C.
Campbell and supennl&lt;&gt;ndenl
C. Comer Bradbury . It was
developed to provide increases in expendttures for
transportation , maintenance,
and plant operation due to the

Prime raised
NEW YORK fUPI) First National Bank of
Chicago and Mellon Bank
of Pittsburgh today raised
their prime interest rate to ·
71·a per cent from 7 per

cent. The higher rate at
Mellon was effective Immediately. First National's
rate Is effective Tuesday.
The banks followed the
lead of trendsetting First
National City Bank of New
York which raised Its
prime to 7~, per cent
Friday.
The Increase in the prime
is a result of Federal
Reserve moves to tighten

up the money supply and to
slow credit demand. The
prime Is the Interest banks
charge their most creditworthy corporate
customers.

.

:;:;:;:;:::::::::::.:.:::::::::.:::::::;:;:;:::::;:.::·.::-::;:;::;:··::::
[).J GOES UP

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
stock market opened higher
today in acl!ve trading on the
New York Stock Exchange.
The Dow Jones industrial
average, a 0.7!1-poinl loser
last week, was up 0.23 point to
871.32 s hortly after the
opening . Advances .led
declines, !58 to 118. among
. the 415 issues crossmg the
tape.

increase of
natural gas, gasoline and
electncity. In addition, since
consolidation, the diStrict has
not had funds enough- ID
purchase any new school
bu ses or con tract major
repairs on existing school
bU!ldmgs which must be
tremend ous

main tamed .

The budget, based upon the
need of the dis!rict, nevertheless had to be "projected"
because the board had no
odea exactly the amount of
money to be ra1sed through
taxes assessed to the James
M. Gavin Plant
At th1s t1me, the Gallia
County Auditor's Office has
not recetved the exact
assessme nt from the Utili lies
CommissiOn of Ohio.
The budget now goes before
(Continued on page 2)

•

AL SCARBERRY

Two women shot
• •
•
s1ttmg m car
CHILLI COT HE, Ohio
(UP!) - A man, apparently
despondent about not being
able to find work, shot two
women in their car at a fastfood· restaurant here, then
apparently killed himself
Saturd~y.

The women were listed in
fair condition at Ross County
Medical Center here Sunday.
Mrs. Robert Clark , 23,
Chillicothe, underwent
surgery for a wound to the
left shoulder. Mary Barclay,
57, Waverly, sustained a
temple wound.
Dead is Doyle Johitson, 25,
Chillicothe, who police said
opened fire into the cars here
from a wooded area behind a
shopping· center restaurant.
Authoriti~ searched the
area for more than three
hours before discov~ring
- Johnson's body in an a ban-

doned house . He apparenUy
was the victim of a selfinflicted gun wound, police
said.
Johnson's brother, Donald,
30, Chillicothe, said his
brother was "upset about
people turning him down for
work. He was looking for
anything and he felt he was
getting a bad attitude from
people he was talking to."
Johnson said his brother, a
former Army paratrooper,
was a "sensitive v.erson " who

felt after his military service
that "pressure was getting to
him. "

Johnson said he had been
"getting wrapped up in
studyillg psyschology."
The victim kept to himself
pretty much and lived In an
apariment here, according to
the elder Johnson .

.,'

\
,'

)

.

�r
I

I

2-The Dally Sentmel, Mtddleport-P&amp;meroy, 0, Monday, July 14, 1975

We ·Hold These Truths·:.

Assembly boring in. on malprac-tice legislation
Thorofare clerks say yes,
butchers no, to pay cuts

·:·

·-

PITTSBURGH (UP I) - Retatl clerks for Thorofare
Markets Inc voted Sunday to accept an 11 per cen t pay
cut to save their JObs, but the butchers voted agamst
cuttmg thetr salartes
The supermarket company, whtch has about 70
stores m four states employmg 2,500 people, satd last
month tt would have to close all or many of the stores if
the employes do not accept a reduclton m thetr .salartes
The clerks agreed to accept the pay cuts and curtatlment m frmge benefits until J a n 4, 1976
However, a company spokesman satd Thorofare now
"wtll JUSt have to go back tn and revtew the whole
thmg" because of the refusal of the butchers to go
along wtth the company 's proposal
" We'll have to close some of tbe stores," the
spokesman SBld, "but we don 't know urunedtately how
many or whtch ones."
The spokesman satd the company wtll make a store
by store reVIe w
The retatl clerks, members of Local 1407, and the
butcher s, members of Local 424, make up about 1,600 of
the 2,500 employes of Thorofare, whtch has stores m
western Pennsylvarua, Ohio, northern West Vtrgtma
and Kentucky

COLUMBUS (UJ'il) - Ohio
leg tslators wtU work harder
and longer thiS week to try to
clean up thmr major
busmess, mcludmg the
r evtsed medical malpractice
msurance legislation pending
m the Senate Insurance
Olmmlttee
The malpractice msurance
bill the House adopted underwent more than I 00 changes
m the subcommittee before
bemg turned over to the full
Senate conuruttee, which has
scheduled hearmgs on it
today and Tuesday. It wants
to report the btU to the floor
for a vote by late m the week .
Ocasek sa1d he wanted the
btU, to guarantee the
availability of malpractice
msurance to phystctans and
hospttals at a reasonable
cost,
approved
before
senators went home thts
week.
" We wtU allow all the
amendments anybody wants
to put m on the floor, but we
are gomg to vote on a bill," he
said.
Since so many changes
already have been made m

Gasoline prices force
change in buying ways
gasolme prices In order to get
huge windfall profits, announced JOint hearmgs m
Washmgton
begmning
Wednesday to look mto recent
gasolme production cuts and
prtce increases Federal
Energy AdminiStrator Frank
Zarb wtll be the first witness.
An otl mdustry econOffi!St
"For example," she satd,
"if there IS a good sale across doubted tbe price could go to
town, I now weigh the savmgs $1 a gallon But, be said, "I
agamstthe extra gas I'll use, cannot say verily, verily, tbe
and I often fmd tt more prtce can't go to a buck."
Dollar.,a.gallon gasolme, be
economical m the long run to
SBld, would requtre another.
pass up the sale ."
In Buffalo, N Y , Joe Arab otl embargo, "wtld
Latona, 26, sold his car and actton" on prices by the
bought a bicycle. It was hiS Orgaruzation of Petrolewn
Countrtes,
way of getting hack at the oil Exporttng
compames for htgh gasoline removal of the $5.25 per
prices . "If no one checks it, 1t barrel cetling on " old "
will go as high as they can get domesllc otl and another $1
hike m the unport duty and
away witb."
According to a UPI survey, high demand.
Most dealers thtnk the
the price of gasoline surged to
prtce
wtll peak at 70 or 75
65 cents per gallon or htgher
cents this year. Denzel
m many areas of the natton
durmg the weekend - and
pushed toward 70 cents.
"All thiS talk about a 7().
cent gallon, which seemed so
outlandish months ago, Is not
that far off," SBtd Forrett
Orr,
Vermont
energy
directory.
NEW YORK (UPI)- AlexSome dealers predtcted ander
Butterfield,
the
regular will cost $1 a gallon prestdenttal
aide
who
by the end of the year. A Los -disclosed to the nation tbe
Angeles dealer said that if the existence of the Ntxon adwholesale price reaches 70 numstratlon 's White House
cents
a
gallon
by tapes, says he was "very
Thanksgivmg, as he expects, definitely not" an agent or
be '11 charge a dollar at tbe contact for the ClA
pump.
Butterfield dented totally
But
Lou
Magg10tto, statements last week by
manager of a Mobtl statton m retired Air Force Col.
Buffalo, N.Y., satd motoriSts F1etcher Prouty, who said
won't stand for it. "Tbe Watergate conspirator E .
Amencan public will blow up Howard Hunt told him
the storage tanks first," be Butterfield was a White
said.
Hoose contact for the ClA.
Sens. Henry Jackson , D"If I was their contact
Wa.sh., and Adlai Stevenson , man," Butterfield said
DID., who said Sunday some Sunday, "I was a hell of a
oil companies may have poor one, because I had no
deliberately mampulated contact whatsoever with tbe

By RICHARD HUGHES
Unlted Press International
Dell Kmght, a Mtamt
housewife, says the recent
surge m gasolme prtces has
no.t changed he r family's
vacation plans But 1t has
curtatled her local bargamhuntlrig.

Kennemer, who runs a
Phillips station m Auslm,
Tex , predicted tbe prtce
would Jump 10 to 15 cents
from the 60-cent level by
September
" I doubt we'll see $1 a
gallon before the end of tbe
year, unless we get another
embargo," said another
Texas retailer, Joe Zylka Jr.
of Dallas. "But I do expect $1
a gallon by next summer."
The UPI survey showed
gasoline sold this weekend at
60 to 65 cents a gallon .
Regular-grade gasolme was
as low as 53 cents at selfservtce or diSCOunt stations,
but as htgh as 68 cents at
freeway or metropolttan
stations.
" lt's the htghest I've ever
seen," SBld W. Bancroft Timmons of the Alabama
Motortsts Association in
Btrmmgham

Tape tipper no
agent for CIA
CIA. 11
The former Whtte House
at de, who later headed the
Federal
Aviation
Admmistralion, said be has
never met or even seen Hunt.
Butterfield said Prouty's
claun about ClA links to tbe
Whtte House had "led
reporters to at least discern a
spy motive. In other words,
infiltration was used ..
"And I thmk that is
irresponsible,"
Butterfield
said during a televiSion mtervtew (CBS, "60Minutes").
"I think 11 is false ... I am
upset by that."
Of Hunt, a former CIA
offiCIBl who was working
parttlme at tbe White House
at the time of tbe Watergate

.

Democrats may not have
enough votes to overrtde
.some of the more controverstal vetoes. Tbey have
the required tbree-ftfths
majority m the Senate to
over rid e gubernatortal
vetoes, but they lack one vote
m the House.
Democrats are pushmg
legtSiatton m the House reestablishing the state Olntrollmg Board, whtch they
say has been eltmmated lor
90 days by fthodes ' veto
act10n Re publtcans, who
mamtam that the board sttll
extsts, refuse to supply any of
the 66 votes needed to gtve
that bill emergency prtortty
The
House
Ftnance
Co mmittee has schedul ed

the upper chamber, Senate
Prestde nt Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocasek , D-Akron,
thinks It wtll be up to a
Senate-House conference
commJttee to work out the
differences
The Senate has scheduled a
floor vote pertod tontght, but
state representatives do not
convene until Tuesday
Democratt~legtslators are
to caucus thts week on
strategy to be taken regarding Gov James A. Rhodes'
72 ttem vetoes m the 1976-77
state budget . They are Ill
dectde whtch ones they will
try to dectde , and whether to
take legal acllon on several
ve toes which may have been
unconstttuttonal

A Chronicle of America

COLUMBUS (UP!) - More
high offtctals of the adminlstrahon of former Gov
John J Gilligan and hiS
campaign orgamzation than
ortgmally suspected were
involved tn the so-ealled
"phantom employe" state
payroll scandal late last year,
it was disclosed over the
"
weekend
Gtlltgan satd Saturday
someone who earlter appeared before the Franklin
Olunty grand jury looking
into the matter has supplied
him with mformatton that
indtcated " the culpabthty
mvolves more than one

results
"People who were m positions of authortty m the
campaign and m my administration were aware that
so-c alled phantom sta te
employes were used Illegally
on the electton recount last
December," Gtlltgan satd
" lt
(a
long-dts tance
telephone call from his unnamed mformant) has
shaken my earlier convtctton
that only Bannon was
responstble, " satd Gilligan
"I'm wtlling to belteve there
were people other than
Bannon who knew what was

person .' '

The fonner governor would
not say who he suspects may
have been mvolved m telling
campaign workers they dtd
not have to report to work at
thetr new state jobs after
workmg on the recdunt of hiS
unsuccessful gubernatorial
race agamst Gov. James A
Rhodes Gilligan satd be has
no proof of hts suspictons
Twenty-two young campatgn workers , three of whom
pleaged guilty to theft by
deception m Franklin Olunty
Olmmon Pleas Court and

gomg on "

The former governor at
first denounced only Wtlltam
J Bannon, hiS 1974 deputy
campaign manager and
chatrman of his Recount
Planmng
Group ,
as
responsible for youths being
paid With state funds for work
m retabulating last year's
gubernatorial
election
MISSION VIEJO, Call! .
( UPI) - Tim Shaw cltpped
four seconds off the IIOIJ.rneter
record to htghltght an exhtbttion swtm by tbe United
States world champiOnship
team Saturday night
Shaw, 17, an mcommg
freshman at Long Beach
State Universtty, swam tbe
distance m 8·09.60. He set the
old mark of 8 13.68 last
month.

were requtred to return tbetr
salaries, met pnvately with
Gtlltgan Frtday mght. Seven
others also have pleaded
guilty and five mnocent to
similar theft charges .
Gilligan satd he has no
plans to make his suspicions
known to Franklin Olunty
Prosecutor George Smtih,
who called a spectal grand·
JUry to mve sigate the payroll '
paddmg scandal. Gtlhgan
satd he presumes hiS mformant also gave the mformatton to Smtth.
Smtih satd Saturday only
that he would reopen the
grand Jury mvesttgation if
substantial new evtdence ts
uncovered
concerning
members of the recount
committee who held " noshow" JObs wtth the stste
The former governor satd
he u;as " isolated" by top
atdes who dtd not infonn hun
of the recount payroll
operation or tell him how
badly his campatgn was
gomg earlier m 1974. He
compared hls isolatton to that
of former Prestdent Richard
M
Ntxon durmg
the
Watergate scandal

RAY CROMLEY

Outmaneuvering
ourselves on missiles

breakm, Butterfteld satd hts
"presence in the Whtte House
staff was kept from me It
was purposely kept off tbe
rolls and I had the official roll
of all members of the White
House staff m my CBJII!City as
Head of Administration "
Hunt was not listed as a
White House staff member at
the behest of H.R. Haldeman,
Richard Nixon's chief of
staff, Butterfield satd - "for
what reason I have no idea."
Asked if be was "ever
assigned by, controlled by,
employed by the CIA m any
capacity" during hls servtce
in the White House, Butterfield satd, "No, very
defmitely not. No."
Butterfield disclosed tbe
existence of a taping system
in Nixon's office while
testifying at the Watergate
bearings two years ago. He
said he had no doubLs about
the
propriety
of
hiS
testimony.

Body really needs a balanced diet
energy you have can be affected by your dtet. The
energy we need to run our
bodies comes from releasmg
the energy that ts in the food
Proteins, carbohydrates and
fats are all hydrocarbons,
and, hke the hydrocarbon ml,
release energy when broken
down . Vi lamtns are tmportant m the breakdown process,
but the actual energy comes
from the food.
Some CO\Iples hllvmg
trouble starting a family are
successful after betqe placed
on thyroid The extra boost
seems to help both mena nd
women m some cases With
the comment that your
daughter
has
low
metaboltsm, I would wondertf thiS mtght not be helpful.
Certamly an aid to improved
fertility Is 9Piunal health,
and proper nutrilton ts
necessary for opltmal health

•

By Ray Cromley

WASHINGTON - We may have negottated ourselves mto
a dangerous corner m our missile agreements with the Soviet
Umon.
Melvm Latrd, former Defense secretary and one of
President Ford's closest mtunates, says the Russians are
Vlolatmg the strategic arms lirmts . Not so, say Mr Ford and
present Defense Secretary James Schlesmger.
So far as this reporter can determme, all three men are
correct. Technically, the SoVIet Umon Rlay not be v10latmg the
treaty. Actually, 1t ts engaged m a deliberate flouting of the
unde•standings
But tt's our O\Yil fault. We forget, m our dealing wtth the
Russians, the common rules of caulton known by any oldfashioned horse trader. We have neglected to cross each " I"
and dot each "1". And that has been ourundomg
The pact, as Laird accurately pomts out, severely limit..
unprovements m anttballlstic ffilSSUe systems The testing of
ABM radar IS prohibited. But by some slipup the papers we
signed do not prohibit the development and testing of other
radar that Just nught happen to be useful for superior ABM
systems. Under this loophole the Russians have tested ABM
radar under another name
As American offtctals read the treaty, there was to be a
limit on the total or over-all increase m the size of the larger
mJssiles. As the RuSSians read the pact, the increase ts allowed
m each dunenSlon of each miSSile, whtch enables Moscow to up
the overall size ofthetr weapons by 50 per cent instead of the 15
per cent we thought we had agreed to
This IS not a mere honest difference of optmon The
American negotiators wanted strict defmittons. Tbe Soviet
Union refused. This, of course, should have alerted careful
men that the Russtans had somethmg m mind. But tl did not
alert Secretary of State Kissinger. He agreed to the loose
wording. And then we went further and took a course of action
that can only be described as insane.
That is, after tbe negotiations had failed to get Russtan
agreement on preciseness, we unilaterally armounced our own
understanding of what had been agreed to, thus seemingly
binding the United States to a str1ct interpretation of the
arrangement while leaving the Russians free to interpret m
any way which best suits their purposes.
Technically, of course, since the RUSStam&lt; are building
missiles much larger than our reading of what the pact permJts, the United States could do the same. Except that the
hands of the top men m our government are so tied by our
interpretations, corrective action may be psychologtcally
impossible.
Now the Russl8n leaders arc cautious men . They have, m
the course of history, taken few chances. That went for Stalin
and for Khrushchev, and goes now for Brezhnev . They probe
carefully. If there's no reaction, or if tbe reaction llj weak, they
exploit the opening. If \he reaction IS stroug, they withdraw.
Russian probing has a long history- the Berlin blockade,
the emplacement of missiles in CUba, the taking of the Pueblo
by the North Koreans, the cautious buildup of the North
Vietnamese with offensive equipment after the peace treaty .
Each succeSsful probe was followed by action. Each blocked
proliiWas followed by a Russian backoff. The signs are that
this is another probe .
Mosco"! also watches for other stgns of weakness. Take,
lor example, the report that Kissi11ger had adVISed Mr. Ford
not to meet With Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the great Sovtet
dissident writer, out of fear that such a meeting would diSturb
the Russians and wea"ken detente. If precedent Is any guide,
thts will be mterpreted in Moscow as a sign of weaklless, and
lead to another probe to test our will.

•

July, 1775:

Sport Parade

The news of Lexmgton and Concord reaches Savannah on
May 10 and quickly ahgns hitherto reluctant Georgia wllb
theoth~r colontes On July 4, meeting In the Great Room of
Tondee's Tavern tn Savannah, the Provlnctal Congre!ls
convenes' wllh representatives from all but two small
par~ shes- contrary to the sparse attendance at prior conventions The Pro'v tnctal Congress agrees (on the 8th) to
adhere to all measures of rest stance approved by the Continenta l Congr ess. elec ts (on the 7th) tts first delegation to
the Continental Congress. and wrttes(onthe lith) to Royal
Governor James Wnght . saying that Georgta ts " no more
the defaullmg ltnk tn the Amencan cham .. In a leiter to
Lord Dartmouth Secretary lor the Colonies, Governor
Wrtght lament s that ··a Kmg's Governor has ltttle or no
busmess here ·

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPJ Sports Edttor

~ By R O!i~ Mat ken1:1t &amp;. J~lf Mac Nelly / (l\97~ IJmtt'd Feoturt Syndtcate

stgned contract and the msurance clause m the boardteachers nego ttated package
of last September
Contmued from page I
Mrs Beman r eported that
the Coun ty Budget Com- the $80,000 negoltated for the
msurance ts almost gone.
mtsswn
.
Here ts a breakdown of the Wtlham Bahr, assoctattOn
prestdent, satd the amount
1976 budget
was nego ltated for the
Anltctpated expendttures
teachers only and dtd not
Admtmstratt on, $129,330
mclude admmtstrators or non
Inslructton, $2,129, 166.
teachmg personnel.
Libranes, $68,548
In other matters, the board
Transportalton of Puptls,
approved ·
$812,850
A $350,000 advance wtthAuxtltary Agenctes ,
drawal of real estate taxes
$490,505
A change m the school
Operalton of School Plant,
calendar to provtde holtdays
$518,000
Mamtenance of School lor Martm Luther King and
Plant, $166,370
President's Day
Capttal Outlay, $59,695
The fmanctal statement m
Debt Servtce. $613,000
whtch the board recetved
Contingency, $150,000
$337,648.18 durmg the monlh
Title ProJects, $155,000
but patd out $41 2,839 94, and
Lunchroom , $286,145 60
recessed the mee tmg until
Umform Supplies , $190,050 Frtday, July 18
Permanent Improvement,
$1,163 51, and Bond fund,
$38,980
Scarberry Named
Alfred A Scarberry, R t I ,
Thurman,
Dtrector
of
Gwdance for Gallta County
Schools the last two years and
former prtn c tpal at Mtddleport High School, was
gtven a three-year contract
Freda V Beatty to Orman
as prmctpal at Btd\\eliPorter
and
Vmton Mays, Ruth M Mays, 31
Acres, Oltve
Elementary Schools
Leonard Wilkes , Rodney E
Scarberry, a former aliWtlkes,
Domta Wtlkes to
SEOAL halfback at MidHarry
D
Vaughn, Abbte L
dleport
Htgh
School ,
graduated from Rio Grande Vaughn , Parcels, SctptO
Roger W Davts, Ins J
College and rece ived his
Davts
to Roger W. Davts, Iris
Maste r 's Degree m AdParcels, Bedford.
J
Davts,
mtmstratton from Mtamt
Isaac Wtlt, dec'd .; Marla
Umverstty He has also done
Neut,
hng , Comm. to Lida •
extenstve work m gutdance at
Ohto University and The Wtlt, . Dell Wilham Wtlt,
Chester Wtlt, Kenneth Wtlt,
Untverstty of Dayton
Scarberry was a former Richard Wilt, Isaac Wtll, Jr ,
gwdance superviSor at Tipp Jackte Lee Wtlt, Kathryn Wtlt Ctty, Ohto and a former Hysell, Marcella Wtlt Durst, :
gwdance counselor at North Julte Wtlt Hysell, Etleen Wtlt Galha Htgh School He Searles, Lot 79, Middleport
Frances Larkins, dec'd to
succeeds Charles L Downer
became
assistant Elza Larkins, Mf of Trans.,
who
supenntendent at Metgs High Oltve
Olen E . Bailey , Exec,
School earlier thts month
Mary
Batley, dec to Guy T
Upon the recommendatton
Mtshta
Sue
of Supermtendent Bradbury, Hayman,
Hayman,
38
Acres,
Chester.
-Scarberry's old posttton m
Ethel Rtfe to Edward
the Galha County School
Reinhard,
Helen Remhart, 1,1,
Office was aboliShed
Resignaltons
accepted Acre, Salem
mcluded those of elementary
mstructors, Carol Moody and
Pam Wht te at CheshtreOHIOAN KILLED
Kyger ; Debra Copenhaver at
ORR'S ISLAND, Mame Btdwell-Porter ; )untor htgh
A 25-year-old Oh10 man was •
EMR mstructor Cynlhta
killed Sunday mght in a headDmeen of Kyger Creek, and
on colhston wtth another
Mrs Lyvoma Bunce, comvehicle on Mame 24 at Jorr's
mereta! teacher at KC .
Island State poltce satd
Valley Bell Datry was the
Roger 'Casada, of Amherst,
only btdder for mtlk products
Ohto, dted at the Regtanal •
for lhe 1975-76 school year
Memortal Hospttal m BrunsValley Bell wtll furmsh mtlk
Wick. He was slattoned at the •
and tee cream to all schools
Brunswtck Naval Air Statton '
Hemer's Bakery was the
low btddet for bread and
baked goods.
~
- I
The board, followmg an
.sentinel
:
execultve sesston, awarded
DEVOTED TO THE
INTERES'T OF
Standard Foods, Hurrtcane,
MEIGS-MASON AREA
"
,CHESTER L TANNEHILL .,
W Va , a contract to furmsh
Exec 'Ed
food for schools m the Kyger
ROBER"!; HOEFLICH
Coly Edtfbt
1
Creek area. C. R. Rtce of I
Pubtr shed darly excep~ ....
Cadmus wtll furmsh grocery , \'Saturday by The Ohro Valley \
Company , llp
ttems for the North Galha, Publrshrng
eourt St
Pomeroy. OhiO
Southwestern and Hannan 46769 Busrness Offrce Phone ~. ,..
2156 Edrtonal Pho"e 992
Trace areas. Rice had the i992
rll1 57~ ,,
I ..
S&amp;cond class pos•age pard ·,
contracts for two of the three
~~ Pomeroy , Ohro
areas last year.
Natrona!
advertrsrn $o ,,..
repr ese ntatrve Ward tl
. The board dtd not rec.e}VJ!
Gnffath Company, In c~ t tl
any btds on gasoline, ltres
Botlmell• &amp; Gallather D•v
Ave , New Yorkl
and coal. It was dectded to • N57y Th1rd
10017
~ IV
stay with the same comSub sc r1pt1on
rarest •Oe l•vered • by carrier where
pames as last year for ;ava•
lable 75 cents per week ~;
gaS&lt;&gt;Itne products. Board IBy Motor Route where ,oJ
er
servtc-e
not~
Clerk Mrs Beman was 1, ~arrl
va1lable , One month , $3 2
HI
By
mall
In
Oh•o
and
W
Va,
authorized to readverttse for One Year , $22 O.Q. , S•
coal and ttre bidders
months,
Sll 50,
Thr e~ '"-'
. $7 00 Elsei'Nher
The board held a long· , months
S26 00 year, S1X month ,...
dtscussion on a legal manner $13 50 three months. $7..5 .
,Jubscnpflon pncei 1nclud
•··
mvolvmg a teacher's un- J$\)nda v Times Sen •hel 1
; :

Projected

Meigs
Property
Transfers

The .DailY

f-

I

"

'

•

'

•

Reds make' it 10 straight,

Today's

Payroll scandal spreading

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
They have been gomg to a should have a balanced dtet.
DEAR PR. LAMB - I have doctor because of thetr The fact so many people get
a daughter who has been a inabtltty to have a baby and by without one IS a tribute to
very ltght eater all her ltfe
are very concerned because how well the human body is
While she was a teenager she they want a famtly Could able to cope wtth mistreatate plenty of fruit but few thetr dtet contribute to this ment
vegetables. At college she problem' The doctor says my
Your description of your
lived on practically nothing
daughter
has
a
low chtldren 's dtet strongly
The dorm mothers and room- metabolism, but I don ' t thtnk suggests
a
calcium
mates were always con- they have ever told hun how deftctency Mtlk and milk
cemed but nothing changed. they eat My daughter also products are our ma)Or
A year and a half ago she has severe mtgrame head- source of calcium. Meat is
married, and I thought she aches. She ttres easily and not They could be getting
would change her eatmg lacks the vttality of a person thetr vilamlns witi1 a d.1ily
habits cookmg for her who IS only 24.
tablet, but that leaves out
husband. But, the man she
Does thetr nutntton play a needed bulk in cereal ll"d
married doesn ' t eat any part m their tnabtltty to have vegetables and who knows
better than she does. Neither children and the lack of what else
one drinks milk or eats vitality' Could you recomIf you wan I them to read a
vegetables. She eats fruit, but mend some good books and book on what the body needs
he eats none at all.
give us some advice on how io for food and its effect on the
They like meat and have help them ' When they -eome- energy system, have them go
plenty .In their diet. Both are to our house to eat we msist to the ltbrary and read my
school teac~ers and my they eat r1ght, but they do it book, "Metabolics: Putting
daughter goes all day without I without relish
Your Food Energy To Work"
breakfast or lunch They
DEAR READER - For !Harper and Row, 1974)
don't drink, smqke or use • oplimal health a person
It ts true that thP. amount of
qs (we are Morm~ns1

five heanngs Tuesday
through Thursday on Senatepassed legislation reVIsmg"
the state school foundahon
formula
The Senate EducatiOn
Committee wtll hold tis ftrst
hearing Tuesday mght on a
bill cleared by the House Just
last week, destgned to cut
down on cases of chtld neglect
and abuse
The House State Government Conuruttee will meet
Wednesday mght to constder
Senate-passed leg ts la tton
reqwrmg pubhc agenctes to
hold open meetmgs
Heanngs on a Housepassed drug abuse reform bill
wtll continue Wednesday m
th e Senate Judictary Olmmtttee .

3 - The Daily SentmeJ, Mtddleport-Bomeroy, 0, Monday , July 14 , 1975

MIL WAUKEE (UP!) - Bowte Kuhn c-an relax He was a
little worried there for a mmute or so, and maybe he had good
reason to be, but come thiS Wednesday, after the All-sta r
Game is rmished, there wtU be the ea rth-rattling a nnouncement he ha s bee n reelected baseball commiSSioner
Otarlie Finley wtll not be among those cheermg the news
Maybe Bowte Kuhn won't be etther when 's all over He'll
wm the war, but not before lostng one mtgh' .tportant battle
A battle over money
The comnusstoner, you see, has not teed prtces gomg up
•lately .
Like so many others, he- feels he should be prud more Now
that's where he ftgures to have some trouble Put another way.
the owners aren' t about to gtve him any ra tse Some of them
feel he's overpaid now
Kuhn 's present contract as commlSStoner, calling for
$150,000 a year plus a liberal expense account, exptres next
.F~bruary and, if It was up to Cha r he Fmley, that eontract
would not be renewed . Tbe Oakland owner ISD't a lone tn that
,feelmg. Kuhn knows he doesn' t exactly have the unqualifted
endorsement of the Onoles, Ya nkees, Padres and Mets etther,
but lucktly !or hun, 1t takes four votes in etther leagu e to un seat htm and m the end, the A's and Ortoles may be the only
clubs which won 't swmg over and vqte for hlVI 1J1 any case
Baseball owners change thetr mmds a lot
Otarlie Fmley ts one of th e few who doesn 'I He certatnly ts
the most tmagmattve owner, qwte possibly the smartest one
In hiS own untque way, he has done as much, if not more, for
baseball than any other owner lf Pele IS Said to help soccer by
the publicity be gets, and that ts absolutely true, th en what
would you say about Charlie Ftnley's contrtbutton to baseball '
Anyway, Kuhn comes up for re-eleclton wtth two btg factors
m hts favor, one of them bemg that lu crative $96 mtlhon contract the 24 major league clubs stgned wtth teleVISIOn not so far
hack and the other bemg the lack of anybody m the wmgs
considered suitable to replace htm.
No matter how lukewarm they are over Kuhn , none of the
owners seem to have any one ca ndtdate m mtnd they'd push to
become the new commtsstoner Many of them apparently feel
the same way as Chtcago White Sox owner John Allyn, who
when asked what he thought of Kuhn r ecently , satd , " He's
better than nothing "
Allyn subsequently trted explammg he dtdn't mean what he
Said m specifically that context, but he had gotten the message
across Of some posstble sigmftcance there 1s that none of the
other owners JUmped m to challenge Allyn and champton
Kuhn.
"Everytune we go mto a meetm g and talk abo ut the
possibility of a new commJsstoner, somebody says 'well,
gentlemen, do we have any candtdates'' and there's never any
answer," reveals another Amertcan League owner.
What all this comes down to ts that Bowte Kuhn wtll stsy on
as comrntSSloner the same way many of our other electees
remam in office once they get in tt, by default
Maybe you nottced the other day where Gerald Ford announced he was gomg to be a candidate for re-eleet10n ' Bowte
Kuhn did the same thtng , only he did tt some tune a go, and not
so loudly. He was a ltttle more subtle about tt Nonetheless, he
campaigned for the job, and Wednesday he'll be offtcally told
he 's gomg to stsy on tt.
That's when Bowie Kuhn ts gomg to throw his shoulders back
and tell the owners he thmks he should have more money In
turn, they're gomg to tell hun , there ts no more, he's gomg to
have to make do, sacriftce a btl and work for the same $150,000
a year he has been the past seven years .
If the comm!Sstoner perststs, the owners wtll put tt to htm
quite plamly Take 1t or leave tt. Bowte Kuhn wtll then make
hls declston For the good of baseball, of course

59 Bengals report
for initial drills

CINetNNATI ( UPI) The Reds swept the fourPete Rose, whose bases- game sertes from the Mets
loaded seventh mning smgle and notched tbelr 41st vtctory
Sunday beat the New York in the last 50 games They
Mets 5-3 and extended the now have a 12'h game lead
Reds' wmnmg s treak at 10 over the Los Angeles Dodgers
games; hasn't batted .300 or ~ m tbe National League West
better nme of the past 10.
Tom Seaver, btddmg for hts
years by acCident.
14th VICtory, wound up wtth
Rose knew a little about the his fifth loss when the Reds,
Mets rookie nghthander Rick blanked wtth two hits through
Baldwm when he stepped to the ftrst stx mnmgs, erupted
the plate
for four runs in the seventh.
" I dtscllS'ied Baldwm wtth
A walk to J oe Morgan
Gr eg Luzmski and Larry touched off the wmnm g rally
Bo wa when I had the m out to The Reds second haseman 's
my house a couple of mghts 39th theft of the season, a nd a
ago when the Phtls were m passed ha ll moved htm to
town," Rose satd
third

Wtth on out , Danny
Drtes sen · doubled to left
center and the Reds had tbetr
ftrs t run of the tnntng
One out . later Cesar
Gerontmo beat out an infield
hit and Dave Olncepc ton
follo wed wtth a smg le to score
Dnessen Seaver walked
pmch hitter Terry Crowley to
load the bases .
Baldwin replaced Seaver
and Rose stepped m
Rose remembered he had
been told Baldwm " throws
mostly fast halls His slider
and curve don't break too
much He throws a smker,

too ..

Rose greeted Baldwm wtth
a shot to center lor hjs thtrd
stratght smgle It scored
Gerommo and Olncepcton
wtth the go-ahead runs
" That ball went n ght
through Baldwm's legs, " satd
Rose ·'I don't see hot tt got to
center held "
The three htts boosted
Rose 's batttng average to 319
and the last of those three hits
was hts mnth game-wmmng
blow of the season Only
Morgan, who has dehvered 11
game-wmnmg htt s, tops
Rose
Will McEnaney, one of lour

Legion 2 for 3 over weekend
SYRACUSE - The Metgs
l.eg ton baseball team captured 2 of 3 contests over the
weekend opemng Saturday
he re aga mst Dayton Fatrbo rn wtth a ttght come from
behmd 2· 1 vtctory
Fatrborn plated the ftrst
run of the game and their last
tn the ft rst frame The contest
then went the next 41,1, mmngs
wtthout etther team crossmg
home hase
In the stx th, Metgs tied tt up
1-1. and m thetr last at bat
scored the wmmng run , when
Mtke Nesselroad s tn gled
cleanly to left fteld , moved to
second on a sacrtftce by Mtck
Davenport.
Manager
George
Nesselroad at that pomt put
speedy' Worm " Holland tn to
run for Nesse lroad wtth Mtk e
Watso n a t bat
Watson
smgled to center to scor e
Holland and wtn the game
On the Me tgs htll, Perk Ault

ptcked up hts fifth wm of the
season gomg the dtstance ,
sinking out I and walkmg l
On the Fat rborn htll, James
went a ll the way and fanned 1
and tssued I free pass, bemg
tagged wt th the loss
Ault pttched a real fine
game for Metgs accordmg to
"Ness" and managed to ptck
off a runner at hrst base
Another bn ght spo t tn the
Me tgs defe nse was Gary
George who made several
!me catc hes tn the outfteld
Metgs httters were Nesselroad wtth a double and smgle,
Watson had 2 smgles, and
Aull had a stng le For the
vtsttors, Porter had a double
and gett m g smg les were
Kelly, Stanley, and James
In Chillicothe
On Sunday Metgs trav eled to Clulhcothe for
a
twmbtll
In
tbe
ftrst game Metgs won tbetr
seventh game m a row

TUCSON , Artz ( UPI) Tour rookte Rick Perry of
Co lumbia Falls , Mont ,
vaulted mto the lead m the
$50,000 Tucson open Bowlmg
Tournament Saturday mght
after the ftrst two rounds of
qualify mg.
Perry, competmg m dnly
his fourth tournament of the
year, started the second
: round 132 pins behind ftrst
round leader curt Schmtdl
But Ute 23-year-old pro
averaged 236 m the final SIX
game qualifymg block en
route to a 1,420 tots! , good
enough for a 34-pm lead over
Fred Conner of Marvlsta,
Cahf

WILMINGTON ,
Ohto
(UPI ) - Paul Brown, the
Cincinnatt Bengals general
manager
and
coach,
welcomed 59 candidates to
the Bengals trammg camp l\t
Wilmington College here
Sl.tnday .
The only player on the preseason roster unaccounted
for was free agent Isaac
Jackson, a running back out
of Kansas State Bengals
officials satd they hadn't
heard from him and dtdn't
know if he planned to report.
Three rooktes and two
veterans also were not in
camp.
Rooktes
Glenn
Cameron of Flortda, Pat
Mci11811y of Harvard and
Marvm Olbb of Southern Cal
have been selected for the
Olllege All-Star game Aug. I
and won ' t be m camp until
after that game.
Veteran John McDaniel
was excused from camp for a
few days because of the
recent death of hts mother
and Bob Maddox Is awaitmg
the court outcome of hts
arrest on drug charges
earlier this year

before the regular season
starts
Although three of the four
Bengals quarterbacks at
camp are newcomers , Brown
clauns the club IS m its best
shape ever for quarterbacks.
Joimng ftrst-stringer Ken
Anderson was three year
veteran John Reaves, JUS!
recently ptcked up m a trade
from Phtladelphia, and
rooktes Gary Shetde of
Brtgham Young Umverstty
and Tom Shuman of Penn
State Only one of the four ts
expected to be cut
The player ftgured to be
most mtssed at camp thiS
summer ts Mike Reid, the AllPro defenstve tackle who has
announced
an
early
retirement Reid qmt football
to devote more tlffie toward a
promtsing muSic career. He
IS a ptamst and composer.
The Bengals had a 7-7
record last year and although
Brown won't make a
predtctton about the upcommg season he went mto
traming camp saymg tl
looked like he had a good
team

More cf85SI"oom work was
on today's agenda, along wtth
sprints on the practtce field .
Two-a-day practices ·are
scheduled most of the rest of
the month.
A few of the players worked
out on their own Sunday
afternoon and Dave Green
was on the field domg some
kicking . Rain kept ~e work
to a mintmum.
About one-third of the
candidates here can expect
be cut within the next two
months.
All
National
Football League te~~ms must
be down to a final roster of 43
players by Sept 15 - six_days

. HELSlNKl ( UPI ) - Paul \\h. I I dn \ nu nw.-tn llw Sl' l' H.. C
Kirketerp of Denmark took a '"' pnm 1 hti \l'll t )!I\ C' ll 'cn1 .Ill\
cvmmanding 22.7 pomt lead 'rl
m the world dmghy chamOn 'thts day in history
pionships OK classc Sunday,
In 1789, the French stormed
placing second in the only
Bastille priSOn in PariS, a day
start
commemorated as a
now
Wtth one start remammg
on Monday , only Peter Lester nattonal holiday m France
In
1965,
Amertcan
of New Zealand has a chance
statesman
Adlai
Stevenson,
to stop Kirket,erp, a 24-yearambassador r to the
old computer programmer.
United
Nations and former
Lester must finish first m the
last race and Kirk eterp worse governor of IllinoiS, died of a
heart attack m London at the
than seventh
age of 65

BUDAPEST (UP!)
Chrtsttan Noel of France won
the men's smgles tttle at the
world fencmg championshtps
Saturday night
Noel, 30, who also won the
tttle two y ears ago m
Goteborg, Sweden, scored
four vtctones m the final
round Defendmg champ10n
Alexander Romankov of the
Sovtet Umon did not reach the
fmals thts year
NAPLES, ltaly ( UPI) Ahmed Youssef of Egypt won
the 22nd edttion of tbe CapriNaples swtmmmg marathon
Sunday by a margm of more
than 18 mmutes over
Argentmtan Claudio Pht
Youssef swam the 18 miles
m 7 hours, H mmutes and 42
seconds, followed by Pitt m
7 32 33 and another Argen timan, Lows Dtaz, in 7.39 56
Dtaz had the htghest placmg
among amateurs

'

I

Gene Locklear drove m two
runs wtth a homer and Hector
Torres knocked m two wtth a
double m the Padres' vtctory
over the Ptrates Brent Strom
pttched 71-3 mrungs, allowmg
11 ht ts and lour runs, to
recetve credit for hts ftf th
vtclory Dock Eilts was the
Pirates' loser
Cltff Johnson drove tn three
runs and Dave Roberts pitched 2 1-3 tnnmgs of shuto ut
rehef for the Astros, who
dealt the Qodgers !he last loss
of a disastrous road trtp
Wtlhe Howard also had three
htts m the Astros' 15-htt at·
tack, saddlmg Tom Unde rwood -..tth hts seventh
loss Mtke Schmidt htt hts
16th homer lor the Phi lltes
The St Louts Ca rdinals
defeated the Dodgers, 2-1, the
San Franctsco Gtants beat
the Chtcago Cubs, 4-1 , and the
Atlanta Braves outlasted the
Montreal Expos, 5-4, m 14
mmngs tn the oth er Nattonal
League games

Cardinals 2 Dodgen 1
Reggte Smith drove in the
wmnmg run wtth a single off
Mtke Marshall m the last of
the mnth mmng to give the
Cardtnals thetr victory.
Smtth's smgle came after
Bake McBride tripled and
helped reltever AI Hraboslty
gam hts ftfth wm . Marshall
was tagged wtth hls sixth
defeat aga ms t four wtns
desptte Dave Lopes' sixth
homer
Gtants 4 Cubs I
John Montefusco and
Charlie Wtlliams combmed
un a s tx-httter for the Gtant.o&gt;,
"ho backed them wtth a 12hit attack, tncludmg three by
Bruce Mtller The win raised
Montefusco's record to 7-4
while Geoff Zahn was dealt
his seventh Joss against two
wtns for the Cubs.
Braves 5 Expos 4
Darrell Evans scored the
winnmg run wtth two out m
the 14th mrung when second
baseman Pete Mackanm was
attempting to handle a relay
from the outfield on Mike
Lum 's s mgle to give the
Braves thetr vtctory Ray
Sadeckt pttched the last mmng and ptcked up the victory

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season

Kyger play

ltst by the New York Yankees
BUDAPEST I UPI)
Ka ta hn Jencstk-Stahl of Sunday wtth a stramed rtght
Romarua won the women's shoulder muscle .
smgle Iitle a t the world
Blomberg suffered a recurf e n c tn g c hamptonshtp s ren ce of an old mJury while at
Sunday, scormg four VIC- bat m the third mnmg of
tories m the final round.
Saturday mght's game.
Olga Knyazeva of the Earher thts season, BlomSovtet Umon, wtth thr ee berg was put on the disabled
Vlctortes tn the fmal round, ltst for a sumlar mJury m a
different spot
was second

5~3

Reds pitchers used m the
game, wound up wtth hts
loltrth vtctory agamst one
loss Rawly East wick pstched
a score less mnth mning to
gam hts SIXth save of the

Victories
posted in

Briefs

LOS ANGELES ( UP[) Marty Rtessen beat Tom
Okker 6-4 m the men's smgles
fmals Saturday mght as the
East dumped the West 28-21
m the ftrst World Team
Tenms All-Star matc h
Playmg before a Sports
Arena crowd of 7,112, the
East won four of the ftve
matches wtth only Francotse
Durr wmnmg for the West
WIth a 6-4 Victory over
Wunbledon champion Bilhe
J~an King

as they played perfect
J ames and Whtted ~ult
defense to blan k Chtlltcothe 5- and Joh nson
0 Jtm Perry pttched a fine Metgs
130 001 0--5 7 0
game lor Metgs, fan mn g 11 Chtlhcothe
and walktng 7 Perry had
000 000 0- 0 2 2
another no-httter unttl the
Perry a nd J oh nson Bruce
stxt h tnntn g when M
and Lewts
Shoemaker smgled to left to Metgs
100 000 0--1 8 8
spot! the btd Perry gave up Chtlhco the
another smgle tn the seventh
000 000 ()-5 2 2
tnnt ng For Chtllicothe, Br uce
Ntday and Hamtlton and
walked 3 and s truck out I
Johnson I 6) Htll and WorkIn the held the Metgs gang man
gobbled up every thmg htt to
them tn the firs t ga me but tt
was exactly the oppost te tn
the nt ghtcap as Metgs
commttted 8 costly errors,
seven commg in one mmng
In tha t second game Jtm
Ntday went the dtstance on
the mound and pttched a rme
2 httter but shlllost 5-1 due to
the e rr or-plagued Metgs
The Pomeroy Gtants, Pt
defense
Pleasant Ctty lee a nd fuel,
Metgs started the scormg,
plating one run tn the ftr st and Pt Pleasant Johnson s
mmng The contest then went Market ca pture d Kyger
score less until the Chtlltcothe
Creek Uttle League Tourhalf of the se venth when, wtth nament vtclon es Saturday
the help of one htt a nd 7 Metgs even mg
errors , the home towners
The Pomero~
Gtants
plated 5 runs and won the dow ned Vmton, 9-4, Ctty Ice
contest gomg away
and Fuel edged the Gal hpohs
Httters lor Metgs tn the Ttg e r s 9-5 and J ohnson 's
doubl eheade r were Brent
Market downed Cheshtre, 8-6
Johnson wtth 4 ht ls and 3
Ctty Ice and Fuel wtll now
play the P omeroy Gtants tn
stolen bases , Brett Wtlson
had 3 ht ts, Mtke Nesselroad 3 quarterftnal pla y wh1le
smgles and Jtm Perry, Mtke
Johnson's Market takes on
Watson, BtU Holland and the wmner of to mght's
Mtke Larkms each had a Syrac use Astro s-Sale m
Baptist wtnner tn quarstngle Jim Ntday rapped a
te rfmal play later thts wee k
double
PI Pleasant People 's Ban k
Manager
Nessel r oa d
c omme ntm g on the tea m s ts slated to battle Green thts
play, sa td , "Errors have evemng as play resumes 1n
the 17th annual event F tfteen
plagued us all year, but the
boys are begmmng to Je ll and of the ong mal 31 teams have
are pmntmg to the 8th dtstrtct now been eltmmated as play
tourney whe r e they lock enters th e second week m th e
horns wtth Athens m the ftr st tournam en t
game"
Nesselroad also satd of thts
year 's club, "Thts ts one of
the fmes t gr oups of boys from
Metgs, Galhpolts, Eastern ,
and Kyger Creek that a coac h
could ask for They do the JOb,
wm or lose, and always show
good sportsmanship "
The Metgs Legton team has hed a record for number of
wms m a smgle season lor a
Metgs squad Thus far the
team has 18 vtctortes, and
thts ts pla ymg the roughest
schedul e of any Metgs team
Fatrborn
100 000 ()-1 4 0
Metgs
000 001 1- 2 5 I

.•

r

�r
I

I

2-The Dally Sentmel, Mtddleport-P&amp;meroy, 0, Monday, July 14, 1975

We ·Hold These Truths·:.

Assembly boring in. on malprac-tice legislation
Thorofare clerks say yes,
butchers no, to pay cuts

·:·

·-

PITTSBURGH (UP I) - Retatl clerks for Thorofare
Markets Inc voted Sunday to accept an 11 per cen t pay
cut to save their JObs, but the butchers voted agamst
cuttmg thetr salartes
The supermarket company, whtch has about 70
stores m four states employmg 2,500 people, satd last
month tt would have to close all or many of the stores if
the employes do not accept a reduclton m thetr .salartes
The clerks agreed to accept the pay cuts and curtatlment m frmge benefits until J a n 4, 1976
However, a company spokesman satd Thorofare now
"wtll JUSt have to go back tn and revtew the whole
thmg" because of the refusal of the butchers to go
along wtth the company 's proposal
" We'll have to close some of tbe stores," the
spokesman SBld, "but we don 't know urunedtately how
many or whtch ones."
The spokesman satd the company wtll make a store
by store reVIe w
The retatl clerks, members of Local 1407, and the
butcher s, members of Local 424, make up about 1,600 of
the 2,500 employes of Thorofare, whtch has stores m
western Pennsylvarua, Ohio, northern West Vtrgtma
and Kentucky

COLUMBUS (UJ'il) - Ohio
leg tslators wtU work harder
and longer thiS week to try to
clean up thmr major
busmess, mcludmg the
r evtsed medical malpractice
msurance legislation pending
m the Senate Insurance
Olmmlttee
The malpractice msurance
bill the House adopted underwent more than I 00 changes
m the subcommittee before
bemg turned over to the full
Senate conuruttee, which has
scheduled hearmgs on it
today and Tuesday. It wants
to report the btU to the floor
for a vote by late m the week .
Ocasek sa1d he wanted the
btU, to guarantee the
availability of malpractice
msurance to phystctans and
hospttals at a reasonable
cost,
approved
before
senators went home thts
week.
" We wtU allow all the
amendments anybody wants
to put m on the floor, but we
are gomg to vote on a bill," he
said.
Since so many changes
already have been made m

Gasoline prices force
change in buying ways
gasolme prices In order to get
huge windfall profits, announced JOint hearmgs m
Washmgton
begmning
Wednesday to look mto recent
gasolme production cuts and
prtce increases Federal
Energy AdminiStrator Frank
Zarb wtll be the first witness.
An otl mdustry econOffi!St
"For example," she satd,
"if there IS a good sale across doubted tbe price could go to
town, I now weigh the savmgs $1 a gallon But, be said, "I
agamstthe extra gas I'll use, cannot say verily, verily, tbe
and I often fmd tt more prtce can't go to a buck."
Dollar.,a.gallon gasolme, be
economical m the long run to
SBld, would requtre another.
pass up the sale ."
In Buffalo, N Y , Joe Arab otl embargo, "wtld
Latona, 26, sold his car and actton" on prices by the
bought a bicycle. It was hiS Orgaruzation of Petrolewn
Countrtes,
way of getting hack at the oil Exporttng
compames for htgh gasoline removal of the $5.25 per
prices . "If no one checks it, 1t barrel cetling on " old "
will go as high as they can get domesllc otl and another $1
hike m the unport duty and
away witb."
According to a UPI survey, high demand.
Most dealers thtnk the
the price of gasoline surged to
prtce
wtll peak at 70 or 75
65 cents per gallon or htgher
cents this year. Denzel
m many areas of the natton
durmg the weekend - and
pushed toward 70 cents.
"All thiS talk about a 7().
cent gallon, which seemed so
outlandish months ago, Is not
that far off," SBtd Forrett
Orr,
Vermont
energy
directory.
NEW YORK (UPI)- AlexSome dealers predtcted ander
Butterfield,
the
regular will cost $1 a gallon prestdenttal
aide
who
by the end of the year. A Los -disclosed to the nation tbe
Angeles dealer said that if the existence of the Ntxon adwholesale price reaches 70 numstratlon 's White House
cents
a
gallon
by tapes, says he was "very
Thanksgivmg, as he expects, definitely not" an agent or
be '11 charge a dollar at tbe contact for the ClA
pump.
Butterfield dented totally
But
Lou
Magg10tto, statements last week by
manager of a Mobtl statton m retired Air Force Col.
Buffalo, N.Y., satd motoriSts F1etcher Prouty, who said
won't stand for it. "Tbe Watergate conspirator E .
Amencan public will blow up Howard Hunt told him
the storage tanks first," be Butterfield was a White
said.
Hoose contact for the ClA.
Sens. Henry Jackson , D"If I was their contact
Wa.sh., and Adlai Stevenson , man," Butterfield said
DID., who said Sunday some Sunday, "I was a hell of a
oil companies may have poor one, because I had no
deliberately mampulated contact whatsoever with tbe

By RICHARD HUGHES
Unlted Press International
Dell Kmght, a Mtamt
housewife, says the recent
surge m gasolme prtces has
no.t changed he r family's
vacation plans But 1t has
curtatled her local bargamhuntlrig.

Kennemer, who runs a
Phillips station m Auslm,
Tex , predicted tbe prtce
would Jump 10 to 15 cents
from the 60-cent level by
September
" I doubt we'll see $1 a
gallon before the end of tbe
year, unless we get another
embargo," said another
Texas retailer, Joe Zylka Jr.
of Dallas. "But I do expect $1
a gallon by next summer."
The UPI survey showed
gasoline sold this weekend at
60 to 65 cents a gallon .
Regular-grade gasolme was
as low as 53 cents at selfservtce or diSCOunt stations,
but as htgh as 68 cents at
freeway or metropolttan
stations.
" lt's the htghest I've ever
seen," SBld W. Bancroft Timmons of the Alabama
Motortsts Association in
Btrmmgham

Tape tipper no
agent for CIA
CIA. 11
The former Whtte House
at de, who later headed the
Federal
Aviation
Admmistralion, said be has
never met or even seen Hunt.
Butterfield said Prouty's
claun about ClA links to tbe
Whtte House had "led
reporters to at least discern a
spy motive. In other words,
infiltration was used ..
"And I thmk that is
irresponsible,"
Butterfield
said during a televiSion mtervtew (CBS, "60Minutes").
"I think 11 is false ... I am
upset by that."
Of Hunt, a former CIA
offiCIBl who was working
parttlme at tbe White House
at the time of tbe Watergate

.

Democrats may not have
enough votes to overrtde
.some of the more controverstal vetoes. Tbey have
the required tbree-ftfths
majority m the Senate to
over rid e gubernatortal
vetoes, but they lack one vote
m the House.
Democrats are pushmg
legtSiatton m the House reestablishing the state Olntrollmg Board, whtch they
say has been eltmmated lor
90 days by fthodes ' veto
act10n Re publtcans, who
mamtam that the board sttll
extsts, refuse to supply any of
the 66 votes needed to gtve
that bill emergency prtortty
The
House
Ftnance
Co mmittee has schedul ed

the upper chamber, Senate
Prestde nt Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocasek , D-Akron,
thinks It wtll be up to a
Senate-House conference
commJttee to work out the
differences
The Senate has scheduled a
floor vote pertod tontght, but
state representatives do not
convene until Tuesday
Democratt~legtslators are
to caucus thts week on
strategy to be taken regarding Gov James A. Rhodes'
72 ttem vetoes m the 1976-77
state budget . They are Ill
dectde whtch ones they will
try to dectde , and whether to
take legal acllon on several
ve toes which may have been
unconstttuttonal

A Chronicle of America

COLUMBUS (UP!) - More
high offtctals of the adminlstrahon of former Gov
John J Gilligan and hiS
campaign orgamzation than
ortgmally suspected were
involved tn the so-ealled
"phantom employe" state
payroll scandal late last year,
it was disclosed over the
"
weekend
Gtlltgan satd Saturday
someone who earlter appeared before the Franklin
Olunty grand jury looking
into the matter has supplied
him with mformatton that
indtcated " the culpabthty
mvolves more than one

results
"People who were m positions of authortty m the
campaign and m my administration were aware that
so-c alled phantom sta te
employes were used Illegally
on the electton recount last
December," Gtlltgan satd
" lt
(a
long-dts tance
telephone call from his unnamed mformant) has
shaken my earlier convtctton
that only Bannon was
responstble, " satd Gilligan
"I'm wtlling to belteve there
were people other than
Bannon who knew what was

person .' '

The fonner governor would
not say who he suspects may
have been mvolved m telling
campaign workers they dtd
not have to report to work at
thetr new state jobs after
workmg on the recdunt of hiS
unsuccessful gubernatorial
race agamst Gov. James A
Rhodes Gilligan satd be has
no proof of hts suspictons
Twenty-two young campatgn workers , three of whom
pleaged guilty to theft by
deception m Franklin Olunty
Olmmon Pleas Court and

gomg on "

The former governor at
first denounced only Wtlltam
J Bannon, hiS 1974 deputy
campaign manager and
chatrman of his Recount
Planmng
Group ,
as
responsible for youths being
paid With state funds for work
m retabulating last year's
gubernatorial
election
MISSION VIEJO, Call! .
( UPI) - Tim Shaw cltpped
four seconds off the IIOIJ.rneter
record to htghltght an exhtbttion swtm by tbe United
States world champiOnship
team Saturday night
Shaw, 17, an mcommg
freshman at Long Beach
State Universtty, swam tbe
distance m 8·09.60. He set the
old mark of 8 13.68 last
month.

were requtred to return tbetr
salaries, met pnvately with
Gtlltgan Frtday mght. Seven
others also have pleaded
guilty and five mnocent to
similar theft charges .
Gilligan satd he has no
plans to make his suspicions
known to Franklin Olunty
Prosecutor George Smtih,
who called a spectal grand·
JUry to mve sigate the payroll '
paddmg scandal. Gtlhgan
satd he presumes hiS mformant also gave the mformatton to Smtth.
Smtih satd Saturday only
that he would reopen the
grand Jury mvesttgation if
substantial new evtdence ts
uncovered
concerning
members of the recount
committee who held " noshow" JObs wtth the stste
The former governor satd
he u;as " isolated" by top
atdes who dtd not infonn hun
of the recount payroll
operation or tell him how
badly his campatgn was
gomg earlier m 1974. He
compared hls isolatton to that
of former Prestdent Richard
M
Ntxon durmg
the
Watergate scandal

RAY CROMLEY

Outmaneuvering
ourselves on missiles

breakm, Butterfteld satd hts
"presence in the Whtte House
staff was kept from me It
was purposely kept off tbe
rolls and I had the official roll
of all members of the White
House staff m my CBJII!City as
Head of Administration "
Hunt was not listed as a
White House staff member at
the behest of H.R. Haldeman,
Richard Nixon's chief of
staff, Butterfield satd - "for
what reason I have no idea."
Asked if be was "ever
assigned by, controlled by,
employed by the CIA m any
capacity" during hls servtce
in the White House, Butterfield satd, "No, very
defmitely not. No."
Butterfield disclosed tbe
existence of a taping system
in Nixon's office while
testifying at the Watergate
bearings two years ago. He
said he had no doubLs about
the
propriety
of
hiS
testimony.

Body really needs a balanced diet
energy you have can be affected by your dtet. The
energy we need to run our
bodies comes from releasmg
the energy that ts in the food
Proteins, carbohydrates and
fats are all hydrocarbons,
and, hke the hydrocarbon ml,
release energy when broken
down . Vi lamtns are tmportant m the breakdown process,
but the actual energy comes
from the food.
Some CO\Iples hllvmg
trouble starting a family are
successful after betqe placed
on thyroid The extra boost
seems to help both mena nd
women m some cases With
the comment that your
daughter
has
low
metaboltsm, I would wondertf thiS mtght not be helpful.
Certamly an aid to improved
fertility Is 9Piunal health,
and proper nutrilton ts
necessary for opltmal health

•

By Ray Cromley

WASHINGTON - We may have negottated ourselves mto
a dangerous corner m our missile agreements with the Soviet
Umon.
Melvm Latrd, former Defense secretary and one of
President Ford's closest mtunates, says the Russians are
Vlolatmg the strategic arms lirmts . Not so, say Mr Ford and
present Defense Secretary James Schlesmger.
So far as this reporter can determme, all three men are
correct. Technically, the SoVIet Umon Rlay not be v10latmg the
treaty. Actually, 1t ts engaged m a deliberate flouting of the
unde•standings
But tt's our O\Yil fault. We forget, m our dealing wtth the
Russians, the common rules of caulton known by any oldfashioned horse trader. We have neglected to cross each " I"
and dot each "1". And that has been ourundomg
The pact, as Laird accurately pomts out, severely limit..
unprovements m anttballlstic ffilSSUe systems The testing of
ABM radar IS prohibited. But by some slipup the papers we
signed do not prohibit the development and testing of other
radar that Just nught happen to be useful for superior ABM
systems. Under this loophole the Russians have tested ABM
radar under another name
As American offtctals read the treaty, there was to be a
limit on the total or over-all increase m the size of the larger
mJssiles. As the RuSSians read the pact, the increase ts allowed
m each dunenSlon of each miSSile, whtch enables Moscow to up
the overall size ofthetr weapons by 50 per cent instead of the 15
per cent we thought we had agreed to
This IS not a mere honest difference of optmon The
American negotiators wanted strict defmittons. Tbe Soviet
Union refused. This, of course, should have alerted careful
men that the Russtans had somethmg m mind. But tl did not
alert Secretary of State Kissinger. He agreed to the loose
wording. And then we went further and took a course of action
that can only be described as insane.
That is, after tbe negotiations had failed to get Russtan
agreement on preciseness, we unilaterally armounced our own
understanding of what had been agreed to, thus seemingly
binding the United States to a str1ct interpretation of the
arrangement while leaving the Russians free to interpret m
any way which best suits their purposes.
Technically, of course, since the RUSStam&lt; are building
missiles much larger than our reading of what the pact permJts, the United States could do the same. Except that the
hands of the top men m our government are so tied by our
interpretations, corrective action may be psychologtcally
impossible.
Now the Russl8n leaders arc cautious men . They have, m
the course of history, taken few chances. That went for Stalin
and for Khrushchev, and goes now for Brezhnev . They probe
carefully. If there's no reaction, or if tbe reaction llj weak, they
exploit the opening. If \he reaction IS stroug, they withdraw.
Russian probing has a long history- the Berlin blockade,
the emplacement of missiles in CUba, the taking of the Pueblo
by the North Koreans, the cautious buildup of the North
Vietnamese with offensive equipment after the peace treaty .
Each succeSsful probe was followed by action. Each blocked
proliiWas followed by a Russian backoff. The signs are that
this is another probe .
Mosco"! also watches for other stgns of weakness. Take,
lor example, the report that Kissi11ger had adVISed Mr. Ford
not to meet With Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the great Sovtet
dissident writer, out of fear that such a meeting would diSturb
the Russians and wea"ken detente. If precedent Is any guide,
thts will be mterpreted in Moscow as a sign of weaklless, and
lead to another probe to test our will.

•

July, 1775:

Sport Parade

The news of Lexmgton and Concord reaches Savannah on
May 10 and quickly ahgns hitherto reluctant Georgia wllb
theoth~r colontes On July 4, meeting In the Great Room of
Tondee's Tavern tn Savannah, the Provlnctal Congre!ls
convenes' wllh representatives from all but two small
par~ shes- contrary to the sparse attendance at prior conventions The Pro'v tnctal Congress agrees (on the 8th) to
adhere to all measures of rest stance approved by the Continenta l Congr ess. elec ts (on the 7th) tts first delegation to
the Continental Congress. and wrttes(onthe lith) to Royal
Governor James Wnght . saying that Georgta ts " no more
the defaullmg ltnk tn the Amencan cham .. In a leiter to
Lord Dartmouth Secretary lor the Colonies, Governor
Wrtght lament s that ··a Kmg's Governor has ltttle or no
busmess here ·

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPJ Sports Edttor

~ By R O!i~ Mat ken1:1t &amp;. J~lf Mac Nelly / (l\97~ IJmtt'd Feoturt Syndtcate

stgned contract and the msurance clause m the boardteachers nego ttated package
of last September
Contmued from page I
Mrs Beman r eported that
the Coun ty Budget Com- the $80,000 negoltated for the
msurance ts almost gone.
mtsswn
.
Here ts a breakdown of the Wtlham Bahr, assoctattOn
prestdent, satd the amount
1976 budget
was nego ltated for the
Anltctpated expendttures
teachers only and dtd not
Admtmstratt on, $129,330
mclude admmtstrators or non
Inslructton, $2,129, 166.
teachmg personnel.
Libranes, $68,548
In other matters, the board
Transportalton of Puptls,
approved ·
$812,850
A $350,000 advance wtthAuxtltary Agenctes ,
drawal of real estate taxes
$490,505
A change m the school
Operalton of School Plant,
calendar to provtde holtdays
$518,000
Mamtenance of School lor Martm Luther King and
Plant, $166,370
President's Day
Capttal Outlay, $59,695
The fmanctal statement m
Debt Servtce. $613,000
whtch the board recetved
Contingency, $150,000
$337,648.18 durmg the monlh
Title ProJects, $155,000
but patd out $41 2,839 94, and
Lunchroom , $286,145 60
recessed the mee tmg until
Umform Supplies , $190,050 Frtday, July 18
Permanent Improvement,
$1,163 51, and Bond fund,
$38,980
Scarberry Named
Alfred A Scarberry, R t I ,
Thurman,
Dtrector
of
Gwdance for Gallta County
Schools the last two years and
former prtn c tpal at Mtddleport High School, was
gtven a three-year contract
Freda V Beatty to Orman
as prmctpal at Btd\\eliPorter
and
Vmton Mays, Ruth M Mays, 31
Acres, Oltve
Elementary Schools
Leonard Wilkes , Rodney E
Scarberry, a former aliWtlkes,
Domta Wtlkes to
SEOAL halfback at MidHarry
D
Vaughn, Abbte L
dleport
Htgh
School ,
graduated from Rio Grande Vaughn , Parcels, SctptO
Roger W Davts, Ins J
College and rece ived his
Davts
to Roger W. Davts, Iris
Maste r 's Degree m AdParcels, Bedford.
J
Davts,
mtmstratton from Mtamt
Isaac Wtlt, dec'd .; Marla
Umverstty He has also done
Neut,
hng , Comm. to Lida •
extenstve work m gutdance at
Ohto University and The Wtlt, . Dell Wilham Wtlt,
Chester Wtlt, Kenneth Wtlt,
Untverstty of Dayton
Scarberry was a former Richard Wilt, Isaac Wtll, Jr ,
gwdance superviSor at Tipp Jackte Lee Wtlt, Kathryn Wtlt Ctty, Ohto and a former Hysell, Marcella Wtlt Durst, :
gwdance counselor at North Julte Wtlt Hysell, Etleen Wtlt Galha Htgh School He Searles, Lot 79, Middleport
Frances Larkins, dec'd to
succeeds Charles L Downer
became
assistant Elza Larkins, Mf of Trans.,
who
supenntendent at Metgs High Oltve
Olen E . Bailey , Exec,
School earlier thts month
Mary
Batley, dec to Guy T
Upon the recommendatton
Mtshta
Sue
of Supermtendent Bradbury, Hayman,
Hayman,
38
Acres,
Chester.
-Scarberry's old posttton m
Ethel Rtfe to Edward
the Galha County School
Reinhard,
Helen Remhart, 1,1,
Office was aboliShed
Resignaltons
accepted Acre, Salem
mcluded those of elementary
mstructors, Carol Moody and
Pam Wht te at CheshtreOHIOAN KILLED
Kyger ; Debra Copenhaver at
ORR'S ISLAND, Mame Btdwell-Porter ; )untor htgh
A 25-year-old Oh10 man was •
EMR mstructor Cynlhta
killed Sunday mght in a headDmeen of Kyger Creek, and
on colhston wtth another
Mrs Lyvoma Bunce, comvehicle on Mame 24 at Jorr's
mereta! teacher at KC .
Island State poltce satd
Valley Bell Datry was the
Roger 'Casada, of Amherst,
only btdder for mtlk products
Ohto, dted at the Regtanal •
for lhe 1975-76 school year
Memortal Hospttal m BrunsValley Bell wtll furmsh mtlk
Wick. He was slattoned at the •
and tee cream to all schools
Brunswtck Naval Air Statton '
Hemer's Bakery was the
low btddet for bread and
baked goods.
~
- I
The board, followmg an
.sentinel
:
execultve sesston, awarded
DEVOTED TO THE
INTERES'T OF
Standard Foods, Hurrtcane,
MEIGS-MASON AREA
"
,CHESTER L TANNEHILL .,
W Va , a contract to furmsh
Exec 'Ed
food for schools m the Kyger
ROBER"!; HOEFLICH
Coly Edtfbt
1
Creek area. C. R. Rtce of I
Pubtr shed darly excep~ ....
Cadmus wtll furmsh grocery , \'Saturday by The Ohro Valley \
Company , llp
ttems for the North Galha, Publrshrng
eourt St
Pomeroy. OhiO
Southwestern and Hannan 46769 Busrness Offrce Phone ~. ,..
2156 Edrtonal Pho"e 992
Trace areas. Rice had the i992
rll1 57~ ,,
I ..
S&amp;cond class pos•age pard ·,
contracts for two of the three
~~ Pomeroy , Ohro
areas last year.
Natrona!
advertrsrn $o ,,..
repr ese ntatrve Ward tl
. The board dtd not rec.e}VJ!
Gnffath Company, In c~ t tl
any btds on gasoline, ltres
Botlmell• &amp; Gallather D•v
Ave , New Yorkl
and coal. It was dectded to • N57y Th1rd
10017
~ IV
stay with the same comSub sc r1pt1on
rarest •Oe l•vered • by carrier where
pames as last year for ;ava•
lable 75 cents per week ~;
gaS&lt;&gt;Itne products. Board IBy Motor Route where ,oJ
er
servtc-e
not~
Clerk Mrs Beman was 1, ~arrl
va1lable , One month , $3 2
HI
By
mall
In
Oh•o
and
W
Va,
authorized to readverttse for One Year , $22 O.Q. , S•
coal and ttre bidders
months,
Sll 50,
Thr e~ '"-'
. $7 00 Elsei'Nher
The board held a long· , months
S26 00 year, S1X month ,...
dtscussion on a legal manner $13 50 three months. $7..5 .
,Jubscnpflon pncei 1nclud
•··
mvolvmg a teacher's un- J$\)nda v Times Sen •hel 1
; :

Projected

Meigs
Property
Transfers

The .DailY

f-

I

"

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•

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Reds make' it 10 straight,

Today's

Payroll scandal spreading

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
They have been gomg to a should have a balanced dtet.
DEAR PR. LAMB - I have doctor because of thetr The fact so many people get
a daughter who has been a inabtltty to have a baby and by without one IS a tribute to
very ltght eater all her ltfe
are very concerned because how well the human body is
While she was a teenager she they want a famtly Could able to cope wtth mistreatate plenty of fruit but few thetr dtet contribute to this ment
vegetables. At college she problem' The doctor says my
Your description of your
lived on practically nothing
daughter
has
a
low chtldren 's dtet strongly
The dorm mothers and room- metabolism, but I don ' t thtnk suggests
a
calcium
mates were always con- they have ever told hun how deftctency Mtlk and milk
cemed but nothing changed. they eat My daughter also products are our ma)Or
A year and a half ago she has severe mtgrame head- source of calcium. Meat is
married, and I thought she aches. She ttres easily and not They could be getting
would change her eatmg lacks the vttality of a person thetr vilamlns witi1 a d.1ily
habits cookmg for her who IS only 24.
tablet, but that leaves out
husband. But, the man she
Does thetr nutntton play a needed bulk in cereal ll"d
married doesn ' t eat any part m their tnabtltty to have vegetables and who knows
better than she does. Neither children and the lack of what else
one drinks milk or eats vitality' Could you recomIf you wan I them to read a
vegetables. She eats fruit, but mend some good books and book on what the body needs
he eats none at all.
give us some advice on how io for food and its effect on the
They like meat and have help them ' When they -eome- energy system, have them go
plenty .In their diet. Both are to our house to eat we msist to the ltbrary and read my
school teac~ers and my they eat r1ght, but they do it book, "Metabolics: Putting
daughter goes all day without I without relish
Your Food Energy To Work"
breakfast or lunch They
DEAR READER - For !Harper and Row, 1974)
don't drink, smqke or use • oplimal health a person
It ts true that thP. amount of
qs (we are Morm~ns1

five heanngs Tuesday
through Thursday on Senatepassed legislation reVIsmg"
the state school foundahon
formula
The Senate EducatiOn
Committee wtll hold tis ftrst
hearing Tuesday mght on a
bill cleared by the House Just
last week, destgned to cut
down on cases of chtld neglect
and abuse
The House State Government Conuruttee will meet
Wednesday mght to constder
Senate-passed leg ts la tton
reqwrmg pubhc agenctes to
hold open meetmgs
Heanngs on a Housepassed drug abuse reform bill
wtll continue Wednesday m
th e Senate Judictary Olmmtttee .

3 - The Daily SentmeJ, Mtddleport-Bomeroy, 0, Monday , July 14 , 1975

MIL WAUKEE (UP!) - Bowte Kuhn c-an relax He was a
little worried there for a mmute or so, and maybe he had good
reason to be, but come thiS Wednesday, after the All-sta r
Game is rmished, there wtU be the ea rth-rattling a nnouncement he ha s bee n reelected baseball commiSSioner
Otarlie Finley wtll not be among those cheermg the news
Maybe Bowte Kuhn won't be etther when 's all over He'll
wm the war, but not before lostng one mtgh' .tportant battle
A battle over money
The comnusstoner, you see, has not teed prtces gomg up
•lately .
Like so many others, he- feels he should be prud more Now
that's where he ftgures to have some trouble Put another way.
the owners aren' t about to gtve him any ra tse Some of them
feel he's overpaid now
Kuhn 's present contract as commlSStoner, calling for
$150,000 a year plus a liberal expense account, exptres next
.F~bruary and, if It was up to Cha r he Fmley, that eontract
would not be renewed . Tbe Oakland owner ISD't a lone tn that
,feelmg. Kuhn knows he doesn' t exactly have the unqualifted
endorsement of the Onoles, Ya nkees, Padres and Mets etther,
but lucktly !or hun, 1t takes four votes in etther leagu e to un seat htm and m the end, the A's and Ortoles may be the only
clubs which won 't swmg over and vqte for hlVI 1J1 any case
Baseball owners change thetr mmds a lot
Otarlie Fmley ts one of th e few who doesn 'I He certatnly ts
the most tmagmattve owner, qwte possibly the smartest one
In hiS own untque way, he has done as much, if not more, for
baseball than any other owner lf Pele IS Said to help soccer by
the publicity be gets, and that ts absolutely true, th en what
would you say about Charlie Ftnley's contrtbutton to baseball '
Anyway, Kuhn comes up for re-eleclton wtth two btg factors
m hts favor, one of them bemg that lu crative $96 mtlhon contract the 24 major league clubs stgned wtth teleVISIOn not so far
hack and the other bemg the lack of anybody m the wmgs
considered suitable to replace htm.
No matter how lukewarm they are over Kuhn , none of the
owners seem to have any one ca ndtdate m mtnd they'd push to
become the new commtsstoner Many of them apparently feel
the same way as Chtcago White Sox owner John Allyn, who
when asked what he thought of Kuhn r ecently , satd , " He's
better than nothing "
Allyn subsequently trted explammg he dtdn't mean what he
Said m specifically that context, but he had gotten the message
across Of some posstble sigmftcance there 1s that none of the
other owners JUmped m to challenge Allyn and champton
Kuhn.
"Everytune we go mto a meetm g and talk abo ut the
possibility of a new commJsstoner, somebody says 'well,
gentlemen, do we have any candtdates'' and there's never any
answer," reveals another Amertcan League owner.
What all this comes down to ts that Bowte Kuhn wtll stsy on
as comrntSSloner the same way many of our other electees
remam in office once they get in tt, by default
Maybe you nottced the other day where Gerald Ford announced he was gomg to be a candidate for re-eleet10n ' Bowte
Kuhn did the same thtng , only he did tt some tune a go, and not
so loudly. He was a ltttle more subtle about tt Nonetheless, he
campaigned for the job, and Wednesday he'll be offtcally told
he 's gomg to stsy on tt.
That's when Bowie Kuhn ts gomg to throw his shoulders back
and tell the owners he thmks he should have more money In
turn, they're gomg to tell hun , there ts no more, he's gomg to
have to make do, sacriftce a btl and work for the same $150,000
a year he has been the past seven years .
If the comm!Sstoner perststs, the owners wtll put tt to htm
quite plamly Take 1t or leave tt. Bowte Kuhn wtll then make
hls declston For the good of baseball, of course

59 Bengals report
for initial drills

CINetNNATI ( UPI) The Reds swept the fourPete Rose, whose bases- game sertes from the Mets
loaded seventh mning smgle and notched tbelr 41st vtctory
Sunday beat the New York in the last 50 games They
Mets 5-3 and extended the now have a 12'h game lead
Reds' wmnmg s treak at 10 over the Los Angeles Dodgers
games; hasn't batted .300 or ~ m tbe National League West
better nme of the past 10.
Tom Seaver, btddmg for hts
years by acCident.
14th VICtory, wound up wtth
Rose knew a little about the his fifth loss when the Reds,
Mets rookie nghthander Rick blanked wtth two hits through
Baldwm when he stepped to the ftrst stx mnmgs, erupted
the plate
for four runs in the seventh.
" I dtscllS'ied Baldwm wtth
A walk to J oe Morgan
Gr eg Luzmski and Larry touched off the wmnm g rally
Bo wa when I had the m out to The Reds second haseman 's
my house a couple of mghts 39th theft of the season, a nd a
ago when the Phtls were m passed ha ll moved htm to
town," Rose satd
third

Wtth on out , Danny
Drtes sen · doubled to left
center and the Reds had tbetr
ftrs t run of the tnntng
One out . later Cesar
Gerontmo beat out an infield
hit and Dave Olncepc ton
follo wed wtth a smg le to score
Dnessen Seaver walked
pmch hitter Terry Crowley to
load the bases .
Baldwin replaced Seaver
and Rose stepped m
Rose remembered he had
been told Baldwm " throws
mostly fast halls His slider
and curve don't break too
much He throws a smker,

too ..

Rose greeted Baldwm wtth
a shot to center lor hjs thtrd
stratght smgle It scored
Gerommo and Olncepcton
wtth the go-ahead runs
" That ball went n ght
through Baldwm's legs, " satd
Rose ·'I don't see hot tt got to
center held "
The three htts boosted
Rose 's batttng average to 319
and the last of those three hits
was hts mnth game-wmmng
blow of the season Only
Morgan, who has dehvered 11
game-wmnmg htt s, tops
Rose
Will McEnaney, one of lour

Legion 2 for 3 over weekend
SYRACUSE - The Metgs
l.eg ton baseball team captured 2 of 3 contests over the
weekend opemng Saturday
he re aga mst Dayton Fatrbo rn wtth a ttght come from
behmd 2· 1 vtctory
Fatrborn plated the ftrst
run of the game and their last
tn the ft rst frame The contest
then went the next 41,1, mmngs
wtthout etther team crossmg
home hase
In the stx th, Metgs tied tt up
1-1. and m thetr last at bat
scored the wmmng run , when
Mtke Nesselroad s tn gled
cleanly to left fteld , moved to
second on a sacrtftce by Mtck
Davenport.
Manager
George
Nesselroad at that pomt put
speedy' Worm " Holland tn to
run for Nesse lroad wtth Mtk e
Watso n a t bat
Watson
smgled to center to scor e
Holland and wtn the game
On the Me tgs htll, Perk Ault

ptcked up hts fifth wm of the
season gomg the dtstance ,
sinking out I and walkmg l
On the Fat rborn htll, James
went a ll the way and fanned 1
and tssued I free pass, bemg
tagged wt th the loss
Ault pttched a real fine
game for Metgs accordmg to
"Ness" and managed to ptck
off a runner at hrst base
Another bn ght spo t tn the
Me tgs defe nse was Gary
George who made several
!me catc hes tn the outfteld
Metgs httters were Nesselroad wtth a double and smgle,
Watson had 2 smgles, and
Aull had a stng le For the
vtsttors, Porter had a double
and gett m g smg les were
Kelly, Stanley, and James
In Chillicothe
On Sunday Metgs trav eled to Clulhcothe for
a
twmbtll
In
tbe
ftrst game Metgs won tbetr
seventh game m a row

TUCSON , Artz ( UPI) Tour rookte Rick Perry of
Co lumbia Falls , Mont ,
vaulted mto the lead m the
$50,000 Tucson open Bowlmg
Tournament Saturday mght
after the ftrst two rounds of
qualify mg.
Perry, competmg m dnly
his fourth tournament of the
year, started the second
: round 132 pins behind ftrst
round leader curt Schmtdl
But Ute 23-year-old pro
averaged 236 m the final SIX
game qualifymg block en
route to a 1,420 tots! , good
enough for a 34-pm lead over
Fred Conner of Marvlsta,
Cahf

WILMINGTON ,
Ohto
(UPI ) - Paul Brown, the
Cincinnatt Bengals general
manager
and
coach,
welcomed 59 candidates to
the Bengals trammg camp l\t
Wilmington College here
Sl.tnday .
The only player on the preseason roster unaccounted
for was free agent Isaac
Jackson, a running back out
of Kansas State Bengals
officials satd they hadn't
heard from him and dtdn't
know if he planned to report.
Three rooktes and two
veterans also were not in
camp.
Rooktes
Glenn
Cameron of Flortda, Pat
Mci11811y of Harvard and
Marvm Olbb of Southern Cal
have been selected for the
Olllege All-Star game Aug. I
and won ' t be m camp until
after that game.
Veteran John McDaniel
was excused from camp for a
few days because of the
recent death of hts mother
and Bob Maddox Is awaitmg
the court outcome of hts
arrest on drug charges
earlier this year

before the regular season
starts
Although three of the four
Bengals quarterbacks at
camp are newcomers , Brown
clauns the club IS m its best
shape ever for quarterbacks.
Joimng ftrst-stringer Ken
Anderson was three year
veteran John Reaves, JUS!
recently ptcked up m a trade
from Phtladelphia, and
rooktes Gary Shetde of
Brtgham Young Umverstty
and Tom Shuman of Penn
State Only one of the four ts
expected to be cut
The player ftgured to be
most mtssed at camp thiS
summer ts Mike Reid, the AllPro defenstve tackle who has
announced
an
early
retirement Reid qmt football
to devote more tlffie toward a
promtsing muSic career. He
IS a ptamst and composer.
The Bengals had a 7-7
record last year and although
Brown won't make a
predtctton about the upcommg season he went mto
traming camp saymg tl
looked like he had a good
team

More cf85SI"oom work was
on today's agenda, along wtth
sprints on the practtce field .
Two-a-day practices ·are
scheduled most of the rest of
the month.
A few of the players worked
out on their own Sunday
afternoon and Dave Green
was on the field domg some
kicking . Rain kept ~e work
to a mintmum.
About one-third of the
candidates here can expect
be cut within the next two
months.
All
National
Football League te~~ms must
be down to a final roster of 43
players by Sept 15 - six_days

. HELSlNKl ( UPI ) - Paul \\h. I I dn \ nu nw.-tn llw Sl' l' H.. C
Kirketerp of Denmark took a '"' pnm 1 hti \l'll t )!I\ C' ll 'cn1 .Ill\
cvmmanding 22.7 pomt lead 'rl
m the world dmghy chamOn 'thts day in history
pionships OK classc Sunday,
In 1789, the French stormed
placing second in the only
Bastille priSOn in PariS, a day
start
commemorated as a
now
Wtth one start remammg
on Monday , only Peter Lester nattonal holiday m France
In
1965,
Amertcan
of New Zealand has a chance
statesman
Adlai
Stevenson,
to stop Kirket,erp, a 24-yearambassador r to the
old computer programmer.
United
Nations and former
Lester must finish first m the
last race and Kirk eterp worse governor of IllinoiS, died of a
heart attack m London at the
than seventh
age of 65

BUDAPEST (UP!)
Chrtsttan Noel of France won
the men's smgles tttle at the
world fencmg championshtps
Saturday night
Noel, 30, who also won the
tttle two y ears ago m
Goteborg, Sweden, scored
four vtctones m the final
round Defendmg champ10n
Alexander Romankov of the
Sovtet Umon did not reach the
fmals thts year
NAPLES, ltaly ( UPI) Ahmed Youssef of Egypt won
the 22nd edttion of tbe CapriNaples swtmmmg marathon
Sunday by a margm of more
than 18 mmutes over
Argentmtan Claudio Pht
Youssef swam the 18 miles
m 7 hours, H mmutes and 42
seconds, followed by Pitt m
7 32 33 and another Argen timan, Lows Dtaz, in 7.39 56
Dtaz had the htghest placmg
among amateurs

'

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Gene Locklear drove m two
runs wtth a homer and Hector
Torres knocked m two wtth a
double m the Padres' vtctory
over the Ptrates Brent Strom
pttched 71-3 mrungs, allowmg
11 ht ts and lour runs, to
recetve credit for hts ftf th
vtclory Dock Eilts was the
Pirates' loser
Cltff Johnson drove tn three
runs and Dave Roberts pitched 2 1-3 tnnmgs of shuto ut
rehef for the Astros, who
dealt the Qodgers !he last loss
of a disastrous road trtp
Wtlhe Howard also had three
htts m the Astros' 15-htt at·
tack, saddlmg Tom Unde rwood -..tth hts seventh
loss Mtke Schmidt htt hts
16th homer lor the Phi lltes
The St Louts Ca rdinals
defeated the Dodgers, 2-1, the
San Franctsco Gtants beat
the Chtcago Cubs, 4-1 , and the
Atlanta Braves outlasted the
Montreal Expos, 5-4, m 14
mmngs tn the oth er Nattonal
League games

Cardinals 2 Dodgen 1
Reggte Smith drove in the
wmnmg run wtth a single off
Mtke Marshall m the last of
the mnth mmng to give the
Cardtnals thetr victory.
Smtth's smgle came after
Bake McBride tripled and
helped reltever AI Hraboslty
gam hts ftfth wm . Marshall
was tagged wtth hls sixth
defeat aga ms t four wtns
desptte Dave Lopes' sixth
homer
Gtants 4 Cubs I
John Montefusco and
Charlie Wtlliams combmed
un a s tx-httter for the Gtant.o&gt;,
"ho backed them wtth a 12hit attack, tncludmg three by
Bruce Mtller The win raised
Montefusco's record to 7-4
while Geoff Zahn was dealt
his seventh Joss against two
wtns for the Cubs.
Braves 5 Expos 4
Darrell Evans scored the
winnmg run wtth two out m
the 14th mrung when second
baseman Pete Mackanm was
attempting to handle a relay
from the outfield on Mike
Lum 's s mgle to give the
Braves thetr vtctory Ray
Sadeckt pttched the last mmng and ptcked up the victory

"outstanding
service?
You get that
right along with
our low rates..:'
/'. IHHI v11t1 ou r f:'Jmnus IO\\ cos t auto o rot ec t on comes
o t nro nr.t per &lt;'ion~ I ser.. •c e So you don t
r.4vc lo C)•ve uo a thmg to qet ou r tow rates You rust

&lt;1 ororr115 ~

!la ve ro rake ar:Jvanrage of thern

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell Street
Middleport, Ohio

PH. 992-7155

,..,A....-.. Like a good neighbor,
~ '" '" '"""

State Farm is there.
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AUTOMOBILE INSURAN CE COMPANY
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NEW YORK (UPI) -Outfielder Ron Blomberg was
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Kyger play

ltst by the New York Yankees
BUDAPEST I UPI)
Ka ta hn Jencstk-Stahl of Sunday wtth a stramed rtght
Romarua won the women's shoulder muscle .
smgle Iitle a t the world
Blomberg suffered a recurf e n c tn g c hamptonshtp s ren ce of an old mJury while at
Sunday, scormg four VIC- bat m the third mnmg of
tories m the final round.
Saturday mght's game.
Olga Knyazeva of the Earher thts season, BlomSovtet Umon, wtth thr ee berg was put on the disabled
Vlctortes tn the fmal round, ltst for a sumlar mJury m a
different spot
was second

5~3

Reds pitchers used m the
game, wound up wtth hts
loltrth vtctory agamst one
loss Rawly East wick pstched
a score less mnth mning to
gam hts SIXth save of the

Victories
posted in

Briefs

LOS ANGELES ( UP[) Marty Rtessen beat Tom
Okker 6-4 m the men's smgles
fmals Saturday mght as the
East dumped the West 28-21
m the ftrst World Team
Tenms All-Star matc h
Playmg before a Sports
Arena crowd of 7,112, the
East won four of the ftve
matches wtth only Francotse
Durr wmnmg for the West
WIth a 6-4 Victory over
Wunbledon champion Bilhe
J~an King

as they played perfect
J ames and Whtted ~ult
defense to blan k Chtlltcothe 5- and Joh nson
0 Jtm Perry pttched a fine Metgs
130 001 0--5 7 0
game lor Metgs, fan mn g 11 Chtlhcothe
and walktng 7 Perry had
000 000 0- 0 2 2
another no-httter unttl the
Perry a nd J oh nson Bruce
stxt h tnntn g when M
and Lewts
Shoemaker smgled to left to Metgs
100 000 0--1 8 8
spot! the btd Perry gave up Chtlhco the
another smgle tn the seventh
000 000 ()-5 2 2
tnnt ng For Chtllicothe, Br uce
Ntday and Hamtlton and
walked 3 and s truck out I
Johnson I 6) Htll and WorkIn the held the Metgs gang man
gobbled up every thmg htt to
them tn the firs t ga me but tt
was exactly the oppost te tn
the nt ghtcap as Metgs
commttted 8 costly errors,
seven commg in one mmng
In tha t second game Jtm
Ntday went the dtstance on
the mound and pttched a rme
2 httter but shlllost 5-1 due to
the e rr or-plagued Metgs
The Pomeroy Gtants, Pt
defense
Pleasant Ctty lee a nd fuel,
Metgs started the scormg,
plating one run tn the ftr st and Pt Pleasant Johnson s
mmng The contest then went Market ca pture d Kyger
score less until the Chtlltcothe
Creek Uttle League Tourhalf of the se venth when, wtth nament vtclon es Saturday
the help of one htt a nd 7 Metgs even mg
errors , the home towners
The Pomero~
Gtants
plated 5 runs and won the dow ned Vmton, 9-4, Ctty Ice
contest gomg away
and Fuel edged the Gal hpohs
Httters lor Metgs tn the Ttg e r s 9-5 and J ohnson 's
doubl eheade r were Brent
Market downed Cheshtre, 8-6
Johnson wtth 4 ht ls and 3
Ctty Ice and Fuel wtll now
play the P omeroy Gtants tn
stolen bases , Brett Wtlson
had 3 ht ts, Mtke Nesselroad 3 quarterftnal pla y wh1le
smgles and Jtm Perry, Mtke
Johnson's Market takes on
Watson, BtU Holland and the wmner of to mght's
Mtke Larkms each had a Syrac use Astro s-Sale m
Baptist wtnner tn quarstngle Jim Ntday rapped a
te rfmal play later thts wee k
double
PI Pleasant People 's Ban k
Manager
Nessel r oa d
c omme ntm g on the tea m s ts slated to battle Green thts
play, sa td , "Errors have evemng as play resumes 1n
the 17th annual event F tfteen
plagued us all year, but the
boys are begmmng to Je ll and of the ong mal 31 teams have
are pmntmg to the 8th dtstrtct now been eltmmated as play
tourney whe r e they lock enters th e second week m th e
horns wtth Athens m the ftr st tournam en t
game"
Nesselroad also satd of thts
year 's club, "Thts ts one of
the fmes t gr oups of boys from
Metgs, Galhpolts, Eastern ,
and Kyger Creek that a coac h
could ask for They do the JOb,
wm or lose, and always show
good sportsmanship "
The Metgs Legton team has hed a record for number of
wms m a smgle season lor a
Metgs squad Thus far the
team has 18 vtctortes, and
thts ts pla ymg the roughest
schedul e of any Metgs team
Fatrborn
100 000 ()-1 4 0
Metgs
000 001 1- 2 5 I

.•

r

�..
.

.-

I

I ,

-

'

'

4 ~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-t'oiaeroy, 0

.

5- The Daijy ' •ltlnel,Middlep01 ,., ...1eroy, o., Monliay, July 14, 1975
a:::=-.::::::-':•:...~•:•:•:O:•:•,•:•:•:O:•:•:•:O:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:··,·,•,-...-,.,•.•.&gt;.o,•.•.•,•u,·~..;..;;."U~•
. . . . ..........................................-.~·"'''""'"·~

Monday, July 14 , 1975
1

Tuesday's clash: NL hitters vs. AL hurlers
Nallona L L ea gue Stand.ng s·
B y United Press lnternat•onal
,_
East
pel g b.
w I
P •ttsburgh
55 33 6?5
Phdedelph ta
49 40 551
61
New York
43 41 506 10 1
St LOUtS
42 4J 488 1?
Ch•cago
4? 48 467 14
Montreal
35 48 4'17 17 1
West
w 1 pet g b
c.ncmnah
61 29 678
Los Angeles
4V 4? 538 17 '
San F ran ctsco 41 47 466 19
San Otego
41 49 456 ?0
A tl anta
JV 49 443 71
Houston
JJ S'il JS'il 18 1 •
Saturday 's R es ull s
Ch• cago 6 San Franctsco .t
St Lout s 1 Los Ange l es 1 10
mn.ngs
Jst
A ttanla 9 Montreal 4
twll tghT
Montreal 7 At lanta 3 2nd n1gh1
Crn cmnatr 3 N ew York. 2, n1ghl
Pt ttSburgh 6 San Di ego 4 n 1ght
Phtladelphra 14 Hou ston 2 n1ght
Sundav ' s Results
Ctn c•nna t• 5 N ew York. 3
Houston 9 Phdade lph•a 5
San Ot ego 7 P1 tt sbur gh s
St L OU IS 1 LOS Angeles I
San Franctsco 4 Ch•cago 1
A llan ta 5 Montr ea l 4, 14 •nnmgs
Monday 's Games
No Games Sc f1 edul ed (Al l
St ar Break)

Am t'!r 1can L (!aguc Sta nd1nq s
By Un1t ed Pr ess lnf t'r n a tl on a l
E oH f

w

Boston
Milwaukee
New York.
Bill t 1m ore
Cleve l and
Detro• I

so

I

p et ' 9 b

31
16 J/

5?3

,.

.1~

J t

5?3

41

J I

J I

J8 7

8

40

46

465
453

9'
10'

39 1I
W est
w
1

571

pet q b
Pc1k l rmd
\'l !7
63?
Kan sas Clly
4! 41
~)J
8'
Ch1CdQO
10 4~
Jll 14
Te)(aS
II &lt;19 .1 ~ 6 15 1
M•nneso ta
39 IR
448 16
Ca l,forn .a
40 Sl
440 17
Saturday's RCsu lts
Boston 10 Te)(as 4
Oa ld and ' Sall•more I
M il wauke e S Ch i Cago 4 n1gh1
M.nnesota 6 New York 6 14
nn 1nqs susp end ed qam e
Detro•! ? Kan!&gt;aS C1ly 0 n1ght
Cleveland 9 Cnl•torn•n I n1gh l
Sunday's Re sults
Boston 7 Texas 5
Ch~eago 5 M1lwaukec 0
Delre• I 8 Kansa !'. C• t y 4
Cleveland 8 Ca llforn•a 7
Oakl and 1 Balt•more 3
Mmneso ta al New York. comp
o f susp game ppd r et n
M1nnesota a! N ew York. reg
qam e ppd ra.n
Monday 's Ga m es
No GQmes Sc h edu l ed (A ll Star
Br ea ld

MILWAUKEE , W1s (UPI )
The All -Star game
Tuesday shapes up as a
contest between the Nallonal
League's sluggers and the
American League pitchers,
and AL Manager AI Dark was
coun tmg on hard-throwm g
so uthpaw V1da Blue to get the
JOb do.ne
Dark last week na med
Blue , 12-7 this year. to open
for the Americans on t he
mound Natw na l League
Mana ge r Walter Alston was
expected to counter today by
nammg Pittsburgh Pirates
ace J erry Reuss, 1(}.li, t.&lt;l
sta rt
The Amenca n League-, and
Blue, were trym g to end the
re ce nt domman ce of th e

Linescores
Sunday ' s Baseball Resu lt s
By Umted Pte ss lnternat•onal
Am encan L eague
Mmnesota
al
New
Y ork.,
po stponed ra 1n

well."
fired a methodical
.' ·Watson
'
one-under-par 71 for the
victory and the $16,500 first

Detro• 1
oo 1 430 oco-a 13 o
Kan sas C•tv 300 ooo IOo-4 11 1
Coleman
H1ll er
(7)
and
Fr ee f1an
Leona rd , McDan.el
{d), Bril es (6). B•rd (9l and
Mart1ne z

.

.~.~:.
...
~e.

'Using a revamped swing,
Watson explained, "It cuts
.dQwn my distance but Is more
: C9f1slstent."
• He also said, "I finally felt
:gOod on the greens but I can't
:I!Xplain why."
: ' Watson won the cham: plonshlp on the monster, 446. yard 18th hole.
; "While Watson coolly putted
: fi:om 40 feet to two inches for
·a tap-in par, · Newton
'
• bunkered his approach and
: then took three to get down
"

Te~eas

ooo 010 220-s 11 1
Boston
1OJ JOO oo x- 7 15 1
Hargan , Fou ca ult (3). Urn
barg er (4), M oor e (4), Wright
( 6) , Bacs •k (8 ) an d Sundberg ,
Wtse , Lee ( 7), Wil loug hby CS J
and F 1Sk WP W1se ( ll 6) LP
Hargan { 6 5) HR Howell (4th)
Ch•cago
ooo 401 ooo-s 6 2
M•lwaukee
ooo ooo ooo-o 3 o
Wood (7 13 ) and Down1ng ,
Travers ,
Broberg
(4)
and
Port er LP Travers (4 3)

.

8alt1more
100 000 20o-3 8 0
Oakland
130 000 oo x-4 6 o
Gnmsley, M1t c h ell C2J and
Duncan , Holtzman Tod d (7) ,
F mger s {7) and Tena ce WP
Hol tzman ( 11 7J L P Gr im Sl ey
(5 11l HR Robmson (4 th )

·.

' '

'

. ones enough

t

"

.to. win 9-8

Cle veland
000 001 S2o-8 13 0
Calltorma
102 000 103- 7 10 0
H ood B1bby (3), La Roche (7)
and Ell •s As f1b y OJ , Tana n a ,
K 1rkwood {7), Scoff (71 , S•n ger
(8) an d Rodr.gu ez WP B •bby
(4 9) L P K rrkwood (I 4) HR
M il ey ( l stl
Nat1onal League
San Otego
120 130 OOo-7 10 J
Pttfsburgh
001 200 02o- 5 14 2
Strom , Gre •f (8). Folkers (8 ),
Sp1ll ner (8 } and Hundle y , E l li s,
Tekulve (5 J. Hernandez OJ,
Demery C9 J an d Sangu111en

The Middleport Mets
: scored 9 runs in the first
. inning and held off a steady
: comeback
by
the WP Sl rom IS 21 LP Ellis 16 6)
L ocklear
(3rd ),
Dy er
• Harrisonville Bobcats to wtn HRs
(2nd)
9-8 In Middleport Youth
L os Angel es
000 000 01 o- 1 51
: League action last week.
St. lOUI S
000 00~ 001- 2 6 1
: Tony Scott went all the way
Messersm•th
Marsh a ll
(8)
and Yeager . Reed , Hra bosky
Pll the mound for the Meis
(9) and S1mmans
WP Hra
striking out 10 and walking 9 boskv (5 21 L P Mar sha l l (II 6)
and allowing 3 hits. Willie H R Lop es (6t h )
Donohue started for the New York
JOO ooo ooo-J 9 o
000 000 41 )(-57 1
Bobcats going 3 innings Crncmnat1
Seaver , Baldwm (7), H all (8).
fanning 5 and walking 10. Sander s (81 and Grote , Nolan ,
cEnaney (7), Borbon
(8 ).
Reggie Arnold came on to M
Ea stw1 ck (9 ) and Bench WP
t'flllsh the game, sttiking out McEnan ey (4 1J LP Seaver ( 13
51
walking '· and allowing 3
hils.
I
'Ph•ladelph,a 004 ooo JOG-S 9 0
Houston
200 321 Olx- 9 15 3
Hillel'S for the winners
Underwood . Garber (5).
were Bobby Fox with a first Schuele!" (6 ), McGraw (8) and
Boone, Oates
( 7),
D1 erker,
inning homerun and a single ForsCh
(3 ) , Roberls ( 7) and
~ the same frame, and one in Johnson ""'P Fe¥ ~ctl ( 3 6 ) LP
' •"'
HR Schm1 d t
the fifth. Fox's homerun in Underwoo~o-\'
06th)
the first
with hues
innlngsJ
~dec! and put the Mets (14
Mntrl 010 001 110 000 OG-4 12 1
ahead to stay.
220 000 000 000 01- 5 13 1
, ,Hillen for the Bobcats Allan!
Roger s, Warthen Cn. Taylor
terf. Tim Shamblin with a &lt;7) Murray (8), _ OeMola ( 14 )
an d Foo te . Oal C,;~nton , Sosa
~ble In the firsl and Jeff
(6 1. House (9 ); Leon ( t2L
llranham bail a double In the Sadeck• (1.4 ) and Correll WP
Dwine Jooes had the Sadeckl 13 1) . LP Oe Mola 13 41
ether hlt a fourth inning San Franc iic 101 020 OOo-4 12 2

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
Somethin g
old

and

ya rd 16th. But !hie time the
s tory had a differ ent endin g
Both men were at par after
17 holes But Watson , 1cy cool,
ran down h1s par at 18,
leaVIng Newton. to falter
"I just thought my time had
come," Watson said. " I had a
goal m my life, to wm a maJOr
champwnsh1p, and I fulfilled
it.,,
Watson planned some
mausplclous celebrating with
tour chum and fellow
American, John Mahaffey.
They sent the1r w1ves on a
European tour and then flew
off to Canada for a rest.
" We're gomg to Canada,
about 45 miles from nowhere ,
do a little fishing, drmk a few
beers and tell a few hes,"
Watson said.

Letart edges

Minersville

by 6-5 score
In mdependent baseball
actwn on Sunday Le tart
mpped Mmersv11le 6-5 m ten
inmngs, w1th Letart's Fred
M1ller pitching a fine game,
go111g 7Y.; 111mngs, fanmng 5
and walkmg 3 Brady Huffman came on m relief. and
allowed only one h1l the rest
of the game plckmg up the
w111. Pete Hendn cks went all
the way on the Mmersv1lle
mound and wa s tagged w1th
teh loss.
H1tters for Letart were
Fred M1ller, Jr. w1th a triple
and a smgle, Monk Jenkms
had two doubles, Terry
Tucker a double , and gelt111g
smgles were Fred M1ller, Sr ,
Gary Roush, Brady Huffman ,
Roy Johnson , Gill Tucker,
and the game wmning single,
by Glen Tuc ker. Monk
Jenkins picked up 2 more
s tolen bases to g1ve h1m 17
thefts this year , good enough
to lead the league.
H1tters for Mmersville
were Clonch with a tnple and
a smgle, Sarver a double,
Arnold a double and getting
singles were Hendricks,
Haggey, and Mamn g.
The Independent Baseball
Tournament play w1ll begm
next Sunday and the tournament schedule will appear
m th1s paper after the
drawmg 1s held.

Mason club

11-0 winner
Th e Ma so n Merchants
blanked the Pomeroy Tigers
11-0 111 recent Pony acti on
w1th Raymond Andrews
going the first 6 inmn gs on the
Tigers' hill, fanning 8 and
walkin g 10.
M1ke Tnplett ca me on to
work the seventh mmng,
walkin g one. John VanMeter
went the distance on the
Merchants' mound, fanmn g 8
and walking 3
Hillers for the Ios111g T1gers
were Todd Rawlings w1th 2
s mgles, and ge ttmg one
s mgle each were Chuck
Kennedy and Jeff Grueser.
For the Merchants, Pat
Kearns had a smgle, Kelvin
Honoker a tr1ple, and John
VanMeter a double .
The win made the Merchants season record 5-7 and
the Tigers dropped to 3-8.

lilhale.

-

=

• '-

'. Clwles Scott ma~ages the

Meta

and Bob Williams

....... the Bobcats.'

Ch•cago
000 aoo Olo-t 6 1
' Mon)efusco , W1 l ltams C9l and
Sa'de k , ZAh n , Solon .un
( 5).
F~a t ltng {bl, Zamora ( 8J and
Sw•sher WR Montfusco (7 41
L P Zahn (7 7)

Brewers. Wooil walked two
and struck out five m
recording his seventh trlwnph against 13 losses. N1les
Nyman smgled home two
runs and also scored tWice in
support of Wood.
rigers 8, Royals 4 "
Gary Sutherland's two-run

REVENUE
SHARING

POMEROY LANES
Thunday Stnk ers
Jun e5, U75
T ea m
w L
No 1
37 11
No 6
31 l7
No 3
24 24
No 4
26
No 2
20 28
No 5
10 38
H 1gh team senes - No 6
1385 No 3 1371 , No 1 1350
H1gh team g a m e No 6
498 . N o 3 d79 an d 47d
H 1gh tnd1V1 d u at ser1es Wanda T eaford 478. Sh 1rl ey
Milchell 475 , Patlr Wil l 1ams

n

452

H1gh md1v1dual game Sh 1r ley M1tchetl 18 ? Wanda
Teafo rd 177
Patt1 Wll ltam s

173
Thursd av Stnkers
Jun e 12.1 975
Tea m
W. L.
No 1
43 13
No 6
39 17
No 3
31 25
No 4
23 33
No 7
34
No 5
10 46
H1 gh team se r .es
No 1
1416 No 6 131 6 . N o 2 1324
H1gh team game No I
510 No 6 471. N o 2 46 4
H1gh •ndtv 1dua1 ser •es Sh•rl ey M•lchell 480 Wanda
T ea f ord 467
Conn• e Chap
man 460
H 1gh tnd1V1d Ua l gam e Sh.rley M1tchel l 179 Wanda
Teaford 169. Frank1e Hunnel

n

164

Thursday Sinkers
June 19, 1975
F •nat Stand•ngs
F1rst Hall
Team
w L
51 13
No I
41 23
No 6
No 3
32 32
No 2
28 36
No 4
23 41
17 47
No 5
H •gh team ser t es - No 5
1321, N o 2 1289 No 6 1264
H 1gh tea m game - N o 6
469 No 2 46 1, N o 5 45 1
H1gh md•v•dual ser•es Nan cy Parsons 468. Frank•e
Hunnel A2 B, Sh1rley M1tch e ll

396

H1gh •nd•vrdual game Nan cy Parson s 18 1, Fran k. te
Hun ne l 157 Shirley M1tchell
141
Thur sday Sinker s
June 26 , 1975

No
No
No
No
No
No

3
5

6
6

2
2

4
4

4
4

2

6

2

6

83 328 51 104
85 307 59

H 1Qf1 team sen es - No 1
1411 , N o s 1372 . N o 6 1295
H19h team game No 1
518 No 5 49 2 No 1 470
H1g h tndlvtdual se r 1es Sh1rl e y M• lc h ell 490, Ruby
Hupp 463. Conn 1e Chapman

424
H1Qil •nd tvl dual game Conn1e Cf1apman 178 , R uby
H up p 176 . Sh1 r ley M•fch e ll
171

Thursday St r 1kers
Jul y 3, 1975
T eam
W
L
14 2
No 6
No 1
12 4 ~
No 1
10 6
No 3
4 12
No 4
4 12
No 5
4 11
H1gh t ea m ser1 es - No 6
1367 No 1 135 2 No 2 1299
Hrgh t eam game No l
486 No 6 48 2, No 2 469
Hrgh IndiVI dUa l Serle-5 Sh1rl ey Milcf1ell 4 38 , Joann
Ward 430, Pa1 t• Wrl l1 ams 429
H1 gh 1ndrv •d ua 1 game Co nn1e Cha p ma n 164, Shtrl ey
M•lche l l 160 P att1 Wil l•a m s
an d Frank1e Hunn el 158

WAILUA, Hawan (UP!) Randy Barenaba, 18, of Laie,
beat another local golfer,
Allan Yamamoto, on the first
hole of a playoff to capture
the National Public l.Jnks
championship Saturday
afternoon at the Wailua
Country Club.
Barenaba 's
brother ,
Charles, won the tournament
last year:
International League
Stand•ngs
Untted Press International
w. 1. pet. g b
Syracus e
53 34 609
Roc he-ster
52 37 584 2
T1dewat er
51 37 580 21/1
Charleston
45 45 500 91f2
Memph1s
42 49 462 13
R •chmond
19 46 459 13
Tol edo
40 51 440 15
Pawtucket
33 56 371 21
Sunday 's Result s
Memph IS 5 Paw tuc k et 3
Toledo 10 Char leston 1
T1dewater 2 Rocf1esler 1,
1st, 7 1nnmg s
Roc h ester 4 Tidewater 2,
2nd . 7 .nnrn gs
Syracuse at R•cf1mond , 2,
ppd , ra 1o

MON.· FRI. 8-5, SAT. 9-5, CLOSED SUN.

..

96

$2.303

dum'ljlhl '"""iod trom .lui~ I \97•1llru Ju"11 30 1975

NY 59
Amer• can Lea gue Lvnn, Bas
71, Horton , Det 62 , Rice, Bos
61, May, Ba tt 59, Scott, Mil 58
stolen Bases
Nat.ona l League · Morgan ,
C1n 40 Cedeno , rtou and Brock,
Sl L
36
Lopes ,
LA
33,
Mangual , Mtl 20
Amen can L eague
R•vers ,
Cal 46 wash•ngton, Oak 32,
pt .s, KC 29. Remy Cal 26.
Le F lor e. Det 25
P1tchmg
(Based on most v•ctones)
N a t•ona l League Seaver , NY
13 5, Sult on , L A 13 a, Messers
m 1th , L A 12 6 Jon es , SO 11 6.
Bil lingham , Cm 10 3. Reuss,
P1tt and McG lot hen , Sf L 10 6,
Matl ack, NY 10 7 Morton, Atl

10 9
Amer •can League
Palmer ,
Ball and K aat , Ch 1 13 6 , Blue ,
Oak
127,
Ttant,
Bos and
Hunter . NY 128

IHe, heallh,
honle•ld
car lnslnnce
for

Your Nahonwi&lt;te agent can

rnall.e ture you get1 11
lowett "-·•• ana thtl beat
C&lt;;..erage lor your Insurance
dottar A 9Q0C1 reuon to do
bu••""' w •tl'l Nationwide
an ll"lt time
Co li

P. J. PAVLEY
J07 5PrtRI Awe., ltssatr.y

PH. 992-. HI

t)~
•

PH. 992-3502

2 A.,.n11t Sh1rtng

treltf to ,,.,,u"oon Dl
, _,_,_
1,0!&lt;Jll9L. _ _ __

F~ndl

Aac.o~edtromJutr 1 1914thfYJun~30 197!

3 lnterHIIIKIIYfll
Of

Ctlldlttd

IJlll~

1

197Athou

Fundi Aet urntd

FOR I'U8LIC SCRUTINY AT

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

2

+++
Got a problem? An adult subject for discussion? You can talk it
over in her column if you write to Helen Bolte!, care of thiS ·
newspaper.

Harrisonville Society News

Coolville , Ctllo

On

•

and Mrs Robert Clark.
Mr . Walter Ell1s has
returned much improved
from Veterans Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed King Jr.
and children spent Sunday
w1th Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Kmg Jr. and Susie.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Young
made a trip to Columbus
Monday to see her brother
who 1s hospitalized following
an automobile accident. His
condillon is grave.
Kenneth Wyant cut 2 toes
with the lawn mower and is a
pat1ent at Holzer Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs F 0 . Whaley
of Columbus spent Wed nesday mght with Ava
Gilkey
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alk1re
v1s1ted the Charles Alkires
and Sam Pickens at Racme
Tuesday evemng .

Mrs. Ruth Gillihan and
daughter Ll&gt;is were over
night guests of Mrs Golda
Wyant Thursday night , also
Mrs . Hazel Emory of
Langham.
Dr. and Mrs. Don Gibson,
son Mark and Kay Lynn were
weekend guests of Mrs. Lana
Gibson and Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Douglas.
The Emergency squad took
Mrs . Charles Ellis to
Veterans Hosp1tal, July 4th
with a blood clot.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Frum
and Paul Anderson VIsited
Dunbar, W. Va . July 4th .
Mr. and Mrs. Tad Gilkey of .
Albany and Mr . Dennis
Gilkey and girlfriend of
Columbus, vis1ted Ava
Gilkey, Saturday evemng.
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Epple
are leaving by bus to visit h1s
son in Maryland who will take
them to vis1t their other sons
in adjoining states 1
- Mr. and Mrs . .Kenneth
Payne and children are
v1siling relatives m West
V1rgima.
Mr-:- and · Mrs . Darold
Graham and children v1sited
the Jr. Paynes Saturday
Mr. Raymond Arnold, 69, a
retired prosperous farmer of
the community died Friday
on the same farm he was
born. He has been in poor
health.
Perry and Tamra Clark of
Chester spent the weekend
with their grandparents, Mr.

India ink
defies removal

WANT METZENBAUM
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
Oh1o Slate. Council of
Machinists has asked former
U.S. Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum of Cleveland to
enter
the
Democrahc
senatorial primary neJCl year
" m order to make hlS voice
heard m Washington in the
battle
against
soaring
gasoline and utility charges."
The plea came at the council's weekend meeting here .
The Machinists, second
largest
AFL-CIO
orgamzation m Ohio,· has
60,000 members

David Kienzle, Susan Smart

Marriage planned

.t'lay it eafe and sore
It may be time to
have your present
policy updated.
.

'Let's Faile Soon

DALE C. .WARNER
102

W.

992 2 143
Mam

Pomerov

More
headlines
expected

\

'

COLUMBUS (UPl) -The
United Auto Workers have
asked Ohio senators to reject
DEAR POLLY - Can you tell me how to get India mk out th e med1cal malprach ce
of white pants' I havetned alcohol, bleach and spray remover leglslallon when.iL comes up
for a floor vote this week
but nothing worked. Any suggestions' - LOUISE.
DEAR LOUISE - India lok stains are difficult to remove because it "cancels people's
once they ' are dry . lbe 1,1. S. Department of Agriculture nghts" and will end up msuggests forcing water through the stain until all loose pigment creasmg insurance costs.
A letter co ntammg the
ts removed or tbe staiD will spread during the removal
request
was sent to the
process. Wash with detergent, several limes If necessary, and
then soak stain in wann suds containing one to four senators by UAW Regwnal
tablespoons ammonia to each quart of water. Dried stains will Co un sel Lawrence Landneed an overnight soaldng. An alternate method is to force the skroner, speakmg for the
water through the staiD, wet staiD with ammonia and then un1on membership.
The
measure
would
work in the detergent. Rinse. Repea t 11 necessary . Good luck.
guarantee adequate medical
- POLLY.
malpra ctice 1nsurance to
DE.AI{ POLLY - My Pet Peeve 1s the habit many doctors ph ys1c1ans hit by r ecent large
and nurse• u~ve (especially m hosp1tals ) of calhng patients by mcreases in pnvate coverage
their· first names. We a re not personal fr1ends. Th1s IS as a result of damage swts.
" Th1s bill cancels people's
professional and it should be done on a professiOnal bas1s How
nghts
," Landskroner sa1d
would these nurses and doctors hke bemg called " George" or
Sunda y. " It force s them to
" Sadie," etc.? - LAURA.
·pay
for a spec1al court
DEAR POLLY - Our family 1s great on " quickie" picnics
system
to help cancel those
To make sure we can get ready m a hurry and st1ll not forget
anythmg I have dev1sed a " P1cn1c Barrel. " I bought a large rights.
" It aggravates the cost
plast1c trash can , mto 1t went everythmg for a p1cmc except
to
medical
the food. This Includes paper plates and napkins, cups and problem
specialists
and
the1r
patients
thermos, lmives, forks and spoons Also, it mcludes some
and does ab so lutely
canned items like beans, spaghetti, shoe string potatoes and nothmg
to solve anything
mstant coffee plus a pot for regular coffee The can is easily
except
the
profit margin of
stored out of sight durmg the off-p1cmc months. - MRS .
the insurance interests m th1s
V.WH
state."
DEAR POLLY - Those who have to watch the fat m their
Landskroner also said the
diets m1ght like my Pomter. One of the truly good ca nned foods
bUI
also would allow mis soup. When a can 1S opened and there lS a laye r of fa t on top
surance
compani es "to
(sucQ!hs m chicken noodle, etc. ) an easy way to get rid of this is
to refrigerate the can untU soup is completely c-old, open, skim continue to privately collect
premiums
from
off the fat m one chunk and the soup is fat-free - or almost. I fancy
phys1cians and ho sp itals
find this is a good 1dea. - MARGARET
against
whom ... malpractice
DEAR POLLY - When we dec1ded to make our twin beds
mto a king size bed I found the cost of king size blankets was claims may never be made."
As a result, he said, inprohibitive. One store advertised a special sale on top quality
wool blankets so I bought three twm s1ze blankets for little dicallons were that the health
more than the cost of one kmg s1ze I split one of the twm size care proVIders who now must
blankets down the rruddle and sewed half to each of the other pay "exhoribant prerruums
twin blankets usmg the zigzag stitch on my machine. These ... may receive even more
blankets f1t quite well and we have two king size ones for little severe treatment."
''Thus effecllvely the msurmore than the regular cost of one such blanket. - D.L.J
ance compames operating m
You wlll receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite Ohio are making no contribuhomemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution to a llon whatsoever to the resolutiOn of their own problem,"
problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper.
he added. "Rather they are
usmg the Ohio General
Assembly to force the people
of Ohio not only to ball them
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
out but to increase their
Mr and Mrs Russell Roush
profits."
Dean Sayre, Middletown, an d fa m1ly.
Pa , Mr and Mrs Danny
Mr and Mrs . Chester Durst
He said that when the
Sayre of Co lumbus were of N1les, 0 called on Mr and
special subcorrumttee recomSunday dmner guests of Mr
Mrs Russe ll Rous h a nd mended the measure out last
week, it "chose by a 2-1 vote
and Mrs. Herbert Sayre. Mrs. fam1ly Saturday
to take several gia nt steps
Georgia Wolfe of Washington,
Mrs Georg •a Wh ee ler
backwards." He sa1d the
D. C. was a Tuesday guest of Wolfe of Washmg ton, 0 C.
union had hoped the Senate
the Sayres Mr and Mrs
spen t a day w1th Mrs . Bertha
would improve the HouseCarroll Sayre of Racme spent Robmson.
Sunday evem ng w1th the
Sayres.
Mrs Dorothy Parsons was
a med1cal pa tient at Holzer
Medical Center
Mr. and Mr s. Robert
Parsons of Delaware , 0.
VISited Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Pa rsons over the weekend
Mr . and Mrs Ronald
Russell, Mandy, and M1ke of
Wolf Pen spent Sunday Wlth

approved legislation.
The un10n spokesman ~aid
the Senate measure has.
sever al prov1sions wh1ch
would m effect w1pe out the
gams won through collective
bargaming He cited the
elimination of the collateral
source doctrme, which would
reduce court award$ to inJUred patients by the amount
of Ule1r own insurance.
Landskroner noted that
ms ur a nce packages have
been part of the total wage
packages negollated w1th
employers.
The letter also crillc1zed
the bill 's versiOn of an under"Titmg plan to guarantee
msurance cover age to Ohio
doctors
Landskroner sa1d the
measure called for annua lly
collectmg $24 m1lhon from
doctors, although the plan 's
annual cost of admimstration
and claims 1s estima ted at $4
miilhon by the
Ohio
Department of Insurance

Fairview News Notes

Sociat
Calendar

DRESS SHOES

30% gt:g.

heritage house

N. W

Hi gr. school and college graduates swell America's t otal work force by over a million
people each yea r They want j obs They deserve JObs. Th ey're wllilng and able
But every j ob in America depends, m one way
or ano ther, on energy . And as our a'a il able
supplies of ene rgy dwind le, so wlll the number
of JObs Amcnca needs eno ugh energy
supphes to suppm t the eco nom iC growth
tha t crea tes more JO bs, for more people.

27 different beautiful
SUITES"TO CHOOSE FROMPRICED FROM A LOW

$11 ~P

TER.MS TO SUIT YOU- FREE DELIVER.Y
Fm~:;: . e ~ ~oog! cc :

I-

·~x;s:~ 3:: ~:·::.-.:?:~:~:~~X:&gt;;'t#mt&lt;~"'l#.~~-z.~~

BAKER fU,RNITURE

~·
~

· MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ,

~~:·:-:~ $; , !~0::0!~:=:-:;:;:;s;:--:o:::~;:::;:~-:; c; ;
0

\

U A W opposing
malpractice hill

M1ss Smart 1s a 1974
MIDDLEPORT - Mr . and
Mrs Paul M Smart, Perrys- gr ad uate of Wittenberg
burg1
announce
the UmverSI ty where she was a
engageme nt
of
the1r member of Gamma Phi Beta
daughter, Susan Lynne, to soronty She IS currently
Dav1d W. Kienzle, son of Mrs. attendm g law school at the
Charles
A.
K1enzle , UniverSity of Toledo.
K1enzle was also graduated
Columbus, and the late Mr
fr om Wittenberg Umvers1ly
Kienzle .
The wedding Will be an whe re he was a member of
event of Sept 6 m the garden Ph1 Mu Delta fratermty and
of the Smarts' West R1ver Gamma The ta Up s ilon
nat10nal ho norary. He 1s
Road home
c urrently domg graduate
work at the Umvers1ty of
Mmnesota
Paul M Smart, father of
the bride , IS a semor member
of the Toledo law f1rm Fuller,
Hen ry, Hodge and Snyder
and 1s v1ce president of
Toledo Ed1son Compan y. The
late Mr Kienzle, fat her of the
gr oom, wa s a pra ~; ll c m g
OBERUN , Oh10 (UP! ) attorney
m Columbus. M1ss
Chnst Ep1scopal Church
here,
which
became Smart 1s the granddaughter
prominent when its pastor, of Mr and Mrs Paul S
Rev. L. Peter Beebe , allowed Smart of Middleport
women priests to celebrate
the Eucharist, may make
news headlines again.
The church's vestry asked
Beebe Sunday to appomt as a
priest associate one of the 11
women liTegularly ordained
last year to the Episcopal
ministry. And Beebe S8ld he
would appeal his conviction
MONDAY
by an ecclesiastical court a
SECOND Monday Sewing
month ago on charges of Oub, 8 p. m . home of Mrs .
breaking church law by Robert Lewis.
allowing two of the women to
WEEK LONG meeting ,
celebrate communion. .
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Beebe said he did not know Church, 7 30 p. m. Different
which woman m1ght be ap- speaker each evening ,
pomted. He said talks were Monday through Sunday.
MEN'S WHITE
bemg held With "different
FREE
clothm g
day
people", and he hoped the Monday for low income
pos1tion would be filled by persons sponsored by GalliaSept . 9.
Me lgs Community Acllon
The Ep1scopal Church has Agency Location 1s m the old
held the women's ordinations
h1 gh school bUlldmg at
Price
were not valid because Chesh1re. Hours are fr om 9
church law llimts priesthood
a m to 2 p m.
to men. But Beebe and most
POMEROY CHAMBER of
of the governing body of .
Commerce
at noon at Me1gs
Your Thom MeAn Store
Christ Church hold the orInn
.
Middleport Oh1o
dinations were proper.
Beebe said the full
respons1bihty for hiring
priests is legally left up to the
rectors and he does not need
off1cial consent to hire a
women . But 1t 's believed
OFFICE HO RS: 9: 30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
Chnst Church could be
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT
suspended from the diocese
ST
for doing so.

FOR THE
PROTECTION
YOU NEED-:-

LB

"ONE
STOP
.
.. .
:MEAT SHOP,.
r ..... ,w
·ln

•

BY POl-LY C RAM~: R

d

-=~~------~~~

_ _

i~

DEAR HElEN :
+++
My hll;'band is 18 years older than I am, which rna
him
ahnost tWice my age. I'm 20 and have been mai'i'ii!&lt;l
him
four years . We have two sons.
He treats me like his daughter. He says' that I'm extravagant, but I say he'scheap. He makes me keep account of
what I spend, and he even goes grocery shopping with me . He's
always saying we're broke, but how could we be when he
makes $200 a week ? The checkbook 1s "his," (I'm not good at
finances), but that seems like a lot.
Lately I've been thinking I should have found someone
nearer my age - and now I've found him . Thetrouble is, he 's a
very close favorite cousin of my husband's and 11 would cause
a terrible hassle if I showed this 21-yearo()ld man how I felt.
If I left my husband I'd have a hard time getting alone, and
would probably have to go home to my parents, which I'd hate .
Should I let my cousin-in-law know how I feel and hope for the
best?-PROBLEMS
DEAR PROBLEMS:
Your biggest problem is a prolonged adolesence. For
Pete's sake, U you can't stand yoW' marriage, leave It, but
don't start a famDy feud by chasing your husband's favorite
couslu.-H. '
DEAR HELEN :
About children of divorce, and parents' visiting privileges ·
It would be unfair, "dlvorcmg" the kids from the natural
parents, but I admit, as a stepmother, that visiting rights
cause problems.
· Here's how I manage it :
I never let my stepchUdren (whom I love dearly) know
how I really feel about their mother. When she gives them a
gift or a treat, I praise her for it. I respect their love for their
mother, and I bite my tongue before I add, "even though .. . "
When she isn't very nice to them', I suggest that she 's t1red,
or that she didn't mean it. They'll form their own conclusions
•
soon enough.
When returning from VISits cause problems in our house
(because the mother or stepfather made derogatory remarks ),
I won't get Involved in "fighting back." We let the chUdren
know that visiting their mother is a privilege they earn by
being "good guys" at home. It usually works.
Olildren have enough love to go around, even for four
parents. And they need just as much .-STEPMOTHER

BROWN COUNTRY SMOKED SAUSAGE.. .............~.l ~ 8Buv 1 Lb. Get 1Oc Off on Doz. Eggs.

---;:-;,::;:----

, _ .,3,,.322
,._,_

•

'

• •

By Helen Bottel

'U'.I...Ly 's Point-.a~c-'

DEAR HELEN :
Zeke and I have been "almost married" for two years. My
little daughter calls him Daddy. It's really more than an affair.
Because I'm divorced, Zeke says the Bible doe~ not permit
our marriage. Actually, !have an aMuhnent (I'm Catholic ) so
my priest says I'm free to marry, but Zeke's religion is very
fundamentalist flld getting more so all the time . I don't mind
raising any fulqte children in his fa1th , but he still says God is
against OW' marriage and points to several passages in the
·
Bible that prove it.
What are my chances for a real wedding?- PliT OFF
DEAR P .O.: ·
U yon stay with Zeke, I'd say your cbanceo for a wedding
are slim, very slim! And perbapa you're lucky.
Only a very "fDDdameotal" hypocrite would quote the
Bible to avoid marriage while ludulglng lu an affair which bla
owu reUglon condemns as "adultery."-H.

6

$ _ _ _ _ __

.

io ORS

7 Tottl-fll fldtAVtilabll

I

30 181 51

$_ 2.,.,30..,_3_ _ __

·-=~---­
, _ 3,322 ~--

5Sumol hnnllJI

II

Jun.

US.

LB.

UJ,,JIIJ,/lJI.,,,!I,J,IJI..JJJ/,,JJfl,,,,u, .. ,JL,J//,,L

I

Helen Help

Sirloin Ste,ak ..............._.......................... : _..~ 1a9
Fal~r's Slab Bacori~... ;·~::&gt;:~;·£:;:; . ..5 ~.·',~.~-~ ~ 159
Ratn's All Meat 80kiii;~·::.3~~.~-~~~. 8~LB.·
HJ ~~usage ..............'~"""'
gN .
omema.:.e
::.~\.. ...... -:~ LB.
.......

1974

313

311
H1s l , Mnn 61 225 34
70
310
M e R a, KC 87 335 42 104
307
Mdd x, NYS5 2 18 36
67
304
Brett , KC 86 349 48 106
Home Runs
Nallona l Leag ue
Luz1n Sk 1,
Phil
25,
Bench,
Cm
19 ,
StargeiL P1tt 17 , Schm •dt , Ph1l
16 Foster , Crn , K1 ngman, NY
and Parker , P1tt 15
Amer.can League Bonds, NY
20. J ackson. Oak and Bur
roughs Te:x 18 , Mayberry , KC •
17 Lynn , Bos, H end nck , Clev,
Horton , D el and Scot! , M1l 16
Run s Batted In
Nat 1onal League
Luzmski,
Phil 79 . Bench Ctn 73 , Watson ,
Hou 61, Morgan , C1n 60 , Staub ,

-THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS-

34 3 053 001

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP 694
TWP. CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

1 Bfl•nctuotJ~,.,. 30

317

-MID-JULY SPEC/A~
3 LB. GROUND BEEF
4 LB. SIRLOIN STEAK
3 LB. CHUNK ALL MEAT BOLOGNA
$
4 LB. CHUCK ROAST
3 LB. HOMEMADE SAUSAGE
1 LB. WIENERS

! .

.

Yastr zemsk r Bos

'One Stop
Meat Shop"

~
'

Ma 10r League L eaden
By Un1t ed Pr ess lnternattanat
L ead•ng Batters
(based on 225 at bah&gt;
Nat1anal League
g
ab
r
h
pet .
353
Mdl ck, Ch 79 310 45 113
M r gn, Cn 83 287 61
99 .345
338
Snglln , P t 77 281 33 95
Parkr , Pt 77 286 44 96
336
326
watson . H 84 31J 41 102
32A
Cash , Ph 1l 89 376 65 122
S1mmon s, Sl L
84 296 44
96
324
321
Bowa , Ph i 63 274 34
88
319
Rose C•n 90 379 58 121
31S
Grvy, L A 9 1 381 48 121
318
Jos hu , SF 70 264 38
84
Amencan League
pet.
g
ab
r
h
373
Carw, Mn 81 303 55 113
342
Lyn n Bos 79 284 60
97
338
Hrg r v, Tx 79 278 50
94
326
Mnsn NY 84 3 19 4 7 104
Wasf1 1ngton , Oak

D&amp;D's

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP

~~~~menlliOI I trlg

I
6
2
4

Toby Harrah of the ti'UB
Rangers was named to
replace Orta, who · will be
permitted to remain 81 a
member of the team but will
not be able to play according
to commissioner Bowie
Kuhn .
The only Brewers named to
th.e team were first baseman
George Scott. and oulflelder ,
Hank Aaron . Aaron, if he
appears, will tie a record with
a 24th appearance. He has
been named to every team
smce 1955, missing making
the National League team
only in his rookie year of 1954.

AT

Ohio NBC rournament
By United Press International
(Saturday Night Scores)
ZanesvUle Senior P10neers 13
CaMelville 4
'
Mount Vernon 6 Brewster 2
(Game Schedule)
Monday night : Marion vs
Mansfield Farmers Bank
Tuesday
night : Mount
Vernon vs Zanesville Senior
Pioneers

~ACCO UNT NO

W. L

Team

ACTUAL USE REPORT

~~~~~~~~==j~===j

s mgl e c apped a four-run
fourth inmng which paced the
Tigers to v1ctory over the
Royals Joe Coleman worked
s1x mnings and won his third
game in a row to raise his
record to 6-12. The victory
was the Tigers' 11th in their
last 12 games.

Local Bowling

GENERAL

--

*-·

figure to 71 while Yastrzemskl, who has batted 389
over the last 20 games,
boosted his batting average
to 313. The Red Sox currently
lead th e league with a .274
team battmg average.
"Th1s is gomg to last a long
tlme," Yastrzemski sa1d of
his h1ttmg spree. "For one
thmg, I'm hittmg m front of
Freddy Lynn and Jinuny
R1ce Pitchers aren't pitching
around me anymore and I'm
gettmg better p1tches to hit.
"Before, pitchers felt they
could give me lousy pitches
and take a chance of walking
me, but with Lynn and Rice
dr1ving in runs like crazy, no
pitcher is gomg to purposely
put a ruMer on base with
either of them coming up.
The pitches are around the
pla te and I'm seemg them
better "
In other AL ga me s,
Oakland
Dipped
Balhmore ,
4-3 ;
Cleve land
edged
California,
8-7 ;
Oucago blanked Mllwaukee,
5-0 , and Detroit topped
Kansas City, 8-4 . Mlllllesota
at New York was rained out.
A's 4, Orioles 3
Ken Holtzman, with rebel
help from Hollie Fingers, won
his 11th game as the A's
defeated the Or10les . The A's
scored three runs JOo..in the
second inning to tak~ a 4-1
lead, then Fingers relieved
after a tworun homer by
Baltimore's Brooks Robinson
m the seventh and allowed
only one-h1t m 2 1-3 innmgs to
record h1s 12th save.
Indians 8, Angels 7
Pinch-h1tler Boog Powell's
two-run smgle and Buddy
two-run
double
Bell 's
highlighted
a
five -run
seventh inning that carried
the Indians to victory over
the Angels. The triumph was
the Indians' 13th m a row at
Anaheun Stadium, tymg the
AL record for most consecullve victories in an opponent's park. Mike Mosley
had a three-run homer for the
Angels , his first in the
majors.
White Sox 5, Brewers 0
Wilbur Wood tossed a
three-hitter to lead the White
Sox to v1ctory over the

something new, part of the
legendary formula for a
succesful marnage, ha s been
the secret to the success of
the Boston Red Sox so far th1s
season
Th e Red Sox have two of
the best r oo ki es in the
Amencan League m Fred
Lynn and Jun Rice, but a n
"old-tuner" by the name of
Ca rl Yastrzemsk1 has been
more than pulling h1s we1ght
m Boston's surge to the top of
the AL East
Yastrzemski, a 15-year
ve teran w1th three AL battmg
titles and more than 1,100
runs batted m to h1s credit,
started off slowly this year
but has been on a tear the last
couple of months and has
been a major contnbutor to
the Red Sox ' recent wmrung
streak
•
Boston made it seven Vlcton es m a row Sunday by
defeatmg the Texas Ran ge rs,
7-5, and both LyiUl and Yastrzemskl played key roles 111
the outcome. The triumph
boosted the Red Sox' lead to
4'fz games over the secondplace Ne-w York Yankees and
Milwaukee Bre wers 111 the AL
East .
Lynn , the major candiate
for Rookie of the Year honors
m the AL, drove m four runs
~ith a prur of doubles and
Yastrzemsk1 enjoyed a
perfect 5-for-5 day at the
plate as the Red Sox pounded
out 15 hits. R1co Petrocelli, a
veteran of 11 btg league
campaigns, also chipped in
with three hits for Boston.
•
Lynn's four runs batted m
ra1 sed his league-leading

G:

came

second baseman Joe Morgan,
shortstop Dave . ConcepciOn
and outfielder Pete Rose.
The A's placed Gene
Tenace at first, Bert Campaneris at short and Regg.e
Jackson and Joe Rudi in the
ouUield and the Yanks have
Thurman Munson catching,
Graig NetUes at third and
Bobby Bonds m the outfield.
AL All-Star pitcher Jun
Palmer, with a 13-6 record,
sa1d Sunday 1t was doubtful
he would be able to play
Tuesday because of a sore
arm and another AI, All.Star,
second baseman Jorge Orta
of the Clucago White Sox, has
been declart!d out of the game
because of mjury Shortstop

Red Sox post 7th straight wm, 7-5

l.

for a bogey and a 72
The 71 matched the h1ghest
score Watson shot all week
enroute to a mne-under-par
279 and a t1e after the
regulation four rounds wlth
Newton, a 25-year&lt;lld who
zoomed into contention w1th a
course record 65 on Fr1day.
favonte
Pre-tournament
Jack Nicklaus JOmed Johnny
M1ller and South Afr~can
Bobby Cole m fuushmg the
regula tion 72 holes one stroke
back at 280; wh1le another
Australian, Graham Marsh,
was at 281.
Watson 's
back-and-forth
battle with the Australian
included plenty of rain and
both players were drenched
by the time they walked off
the final green.
Twice Watson had shot
ahead , once on a 25-yard ch1p
that gave hun an eagle at the
par five 14th, only to see
Newton f1ght back to tie .
Once the Australian pulled
into a one-stroke lead.
Visions of his U.S Open
blowups must have passed
through the American's head
when he blew a one-5troke
edge by bogeymg the 235-

Cincmnall
Reds,
the
Amencan League by the New
York Yankees and defendin g
world champion Oakland A's
The starting llneups,
chosen by a vote of the fan s,
had only base-stealing L&lt;lu
Brock of the St. L&lt;&gt;uis Cardinals breakin g the DodgersReds monopoly , Except for
second baseman Rod Carew,
the American League starters were all from the
Yankees and A's.
Steve Garvey of the
Dodgers 1s at first base for
the Nationals with team mates !«in Cey at th~rd and
Juruny Wynn in the outfield .
Reds in the startmg lineup
are catcher Johnny Bench,

•

Watson claims crown
CARNOUSTIE, Scotland
(UPI) The beammg
tournament offic1al gestured
to 13,000 spectators gathered
around Carnoustie's 18th
sreen and then handed one of
golf's most coveted winner's
cups to "that very good
American player Tom Kite ."
· Tom Watson smUed back
and took his trophy.
It was he, not K•te a'nother young American
pl-ofessional- who won the
104th British Open champlonslnp Sunday m a ramdrenched 18-hole playoff w1th
l\!lstralian Jack Newton.
His one-&amp;roke victory in
the game's oldest championship was the first major
title for the young player who
had led the last two U.S.
Opens and this year's
Masters in the early rounds,
only to collapse at the finish .
•As Wll'llffled by the official's blooper as he had
been all day on Carnoustie 's
7.~yard par 72 seaside
links, Watson proceeded to
annoWICe he was giving the
sUver cup and accompanying
gold medal to his wife as a
belated second wedding
anniversary gift.
"I for got to get her
anything on the actual day
'l'llesday," he said, "but she
._d this would do quite

The game 1s the f1rst AllStar contes t since 195S in
Milwaukee County Stadium,
and this time a llegiances
have been switched. Twenty
years ago, w1th the Braves,
the e1ty was a National
League stronghold, and the
Nallonal Leag ue won 6-5 m 12
mnings .
Today, with the Brewers,
the c1ty 1s m the Amer1can
League and most of the more
than 50,000 persons expected
w1ll be rootm g for the un denlogs.
Only two Brewers are on
the AL team, neither of them
sta rters. The Nallonal
League lS doml118ted by the
L&lt;ls Angeles Dodgers and

Nallonal League, wh1ch has
won 11 of the last 12 mitlsummer class•cs and is
favored to win agam. Overall,
the NL has a 23-18 edge m the
series , winmng last year, 7-2.
The long-range weather
forecast was for Jarmer
temperatures than the 6Us
and 70s of recent days m the
M1lwaukee area a nd there
was a shght poss1b1hty of
showers or thundershowers
for Tuesday as th e wanner
wea ther moves m
Secretary of State Henry
K1ssmger, who was due here
for a speech tonight, was
scheduled to throw out the
first ball as he takes a break
m his harned negollallons m
the Mideast

•

&amp;:a

~;:.:.:;;::::::m;:::;:::;::::::::::::::::-;:::::::::=-:-·:::::::::w..;:.o:::::-.::::::::::::::

But all pnma ry for ms of energy that
industry needs - gas, oil, coal, nucleararc alrc,,dy 111 shor t supply.
An d thin gs will on ly get wo rse unless the
urgl' ncy for corrP"' "·.: ad ton IS
rccogn1.:cd 1p · go,~ r nment· and by the public
Th e most b&lt;~cl l y needed action lS reVISion of
the ll lliL al"t ic rcgul.1tion s and e nvironmen tal
proce du res t lldt arc fru stratmg
needed ene rgy sup ply development.
You c,1n help by learning more about the
cne1 gy c1iSi s ,111d sup portmg effo rt s to provide
A111cr "'' w1th enough ene rgy s upphe s to meet
all 1b llC'ecb, 111clud111g JObs for the future.

Co lu mbta Gas

IS

spendtng mtlhons to

hel p solve the cnerg} cnsts. We're
c urrently deli ven ng natural gas from

v-.clls tn a lmutcd area of
Ihe Gulf of Mc :u co. We
must develop addltJOnal
supplies in the Gulf
and m th e Atlanttc
Ocean, where
sur.oeys md tcate
a large amount

of valuable
natural gas

lies buried
deep be11eath

the waters

c6u

1MBIAGAS

Gas is preciou s, pure energy , , • usc It wlse)y.

..

'

�..
.

.-

I

I ,

-

'

'

4 ~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-t'oiaeroy, 0

.

5- The Daijy ' •ltlnel,Middlep01 ,., ...1eroy, o., Monliay, July 14, 1975
a:::=-.::::::-':•:...~•:•:•:O:•:•,•:•:•:O:•:•:•:O:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:··,·,•,-...-,.,•.•.&gt;.o,•.•.•,•u,·~..;..;;."U~•
. . . . ..........................................-.~·"'''""'"·~

Monday, July 14 , 1975
1

Tuesday's clash: NL hitters vs. AL hurlers
Nallona L L ea gue Stand.ng s·
B y United Press lnternat•onal
,_
East
pel g b.
w I
P •ttsburgh
55 33 6?5
Phdedelph ta
49 40 551
61
New York
43 41 506 10 1
St LOUtS
42 4J 488 1?
Ch•cago
4? 48 467 14
Montreal
35 48 4'17 17 1
West
w 1 pet g b
c.ncmnah
61 29 678
Los Angeles
4V 4? 538 17 '
San F ran ctsco 41 47 466 19
San Otego
41 49 456 ?0
A tl anta
JV 49 443 71
Houston
JJ S'il JS'il 18 1 •
Saturday 's R es ull s
Ch• cago 6 San Franctsco .t
St Lout s 1 Los Ange l es 1 10
mn.ngs
Jst
A ttanla 9 Montreal 4
twll tghT
Montreal 7 At lanta 3 2nd n1gh1
Crn cmnatr 3 N ew York. 2, n1ghl
Pt ttSburgh 6 San Di ego 4 n 1ght
Phtladelphra 14 Hou ston 2 n1ght
Sundav ' s Results
Ctn c•nna t• 5 N ew York. 3
Houston 9 Phdade lph•a 5
San Ot ego 7 P1 tt sbur gh s
St L OU IS 1 LOS Angeles I
San Franctsco 4 Ch•cago 1
A llan ta 5 Montr ea l 4, 14 •nnmgs
Monday 's Games
No Games Sc f1 edul ed (Al l
St ar Break)

Am t'!r 1can L (!aguc Sta nd1nq s
By Un1t ed Pr ess lnf t'r n a tl on a l
E oH f

w

Boston
Milwaukee
New York.
Bill t 1m ore
Cleve l and
Detro• I

so

I

p et ' 9 b

31
16 J/

5?3

,.

.1~

J t

5?3

41

J I

J I

J8 7

8

40

46

465
453

9'
10'

39 1I
W est
w
1

571

pet q b
Pc1k l rmd
\'l !7
63?
Kan sas Clly
4! 41
~)J
8'
Ch1CdQO
10 4~
Jll 14
Te)(aS
II &lt;19 .1 ~ 6 15 1
M•nneso ta
39 IR
448 16
Ca l,forn .a
40 Sl
440 17
Saturday's RCsu lts
Boston 10 Te)(as 4
Oa ld and ' Sall•more I
M il wauke e S Ch i Cago 4 n1gh1
M.nnesota 6 New York 6 14
nn 1nqs susp end ed qam e
Detro•! ? Kan!&gt;aS C1ly 0 n1ght
Cleveland 9 Cnl•torn•n I n1gh l
Sunday's Re sults
Boston 7 Texas 5
Ch~eago 5 M1lwaukec 0
Delre• I 8 Kansa !'. C• t y 4
Cleveland 8 Ca llforn•a 7
Oakl and 1 Balt•more 3
Mmneso ta al New York. comp
o f susp game ppd r et n
M1nnesota a! N ew York. reg
qam e ppd ra.n
Monday 's Ga m es
No GQmes Sc h edu l ed (A ll Star
Br ea ld

MILWAUKEE , W1s (UPI )
The All -Star game
Tuesday shapes up as a
contest between the Nallonal
League's sluggers and the
American League pitchers,
and AL Manager AI Dark was
coun tmg on hard-throwm g
so uthpaw V1da Blue to get the
JOb do.ne
Dark last week na med
Blue , 12-7 this year. to open
for the Americans on t he
mound Natw na l League
Mana ge r Walter Alston was
expected to counter today by
nammg Pittsburgh Pirates
ace J erry Reuss, 1(}.li, t.&lt;l
sta rt
The Amenca n League-, and
Blue, were trym g to end the
re ce nt domman ce of th e

Linescores
Sunday ' s Baseball Resu lt s
By Umted Pte ss lnternat•onal
Am encan L eague
Mmnesota
al
New
Y ork.,
po stponed ra 1n

well."
fired a methodical
.' ·Watson
'
one-under-par 71 for the
victory and the $16,500 first

Detro• 1
oo 1 430 oco-a 13 o
Kan sas C•tv 300 ooo IOo-4 11 1
Coleman
H1ll er
(7)
and
Fr ee f1an
Leona rd , McDan.el
{d), Bril es (6). B•rd (9l and
Mart1ne z

.

.~.~:.
...
~e.

'Using a revamped swing,
Watson explained, "It cuts
.dQwn my distance but Is more
: C9f1slstent."
• He also said, "I finally felt
:gOod on the greens but I can't
:I!Xplain why."
: ' Watson won the cham: plonshlp on the monster, 446. yard 18th hole.
; "While Watson coolly putted
: fi:om 40 feet to two inches for
·a tap-in par, · Newton
'
• bunkered his approach and
: then took three to get down
"

Te~eas

ooo 010 220-s 11 1
Boston
1OJ JOO oo x- 7 15 1
Hargan , Fou ca ult (3). Urn
barg er (4), M oor e (4), Wright
( 6) , Bacs •k (8 ) an d Sundberg ,
Wtse , Lee ( 7), Wil loug hby CS J
and F 1Sk WP W1se ( ll 6) LP
Hargan { 6 5) HR Howell (4th)
Ch•cago
ooo 401 ooo-s 6 2
M•lwaukee
ooo ooo ooo-o 3 o
Wood (7 13 ) and Down1ng ,
Travers ,
Broberg
(4)
and
Port er LP Travers (4 3)

.

8alt1more
100 000 20o-3 8 0
Oakland
130 000 oo x-4 6 o
Gnmsley, M1t c h ell C2J and
Duncan , Holtzman Tod d (7) ,
F mger s {7) and Tena ce WP
Hol tzman ( 11 7J L P Gr im Sl ey
(5 11l HR Robmson (4 th )

·.

' '

'

. ones enough

t

"

.to. win 9-8

Cle veland
000 001 S2o-8 13 0
Calltorma
102 000 103- 7 10 0
H ood B1bby (3), La Roche (7)
and Ell •s As f1b y OJ , Tana n a ,
K 1rkwood {7), Scoff (71 , S•n ger
(8) an d Rodr.gu ez WP B •bby
(4 9) L P K rrkwood (I 4) HR
M il ey ( l stl
Nat1onal League
San Otego
120 130 OOo-7 10 J
Pttfsburgh
001 200 02o- 5 14 2
Strom , Gre •f (8). Folkers (8 ),
Sp1ll ner (8 } and Hundle y , E l li s,
Tekulve (5 J. Hernandez OJ,
Demery C9 J an d Sangu111en

The Middleport Mets
: scored 9 runs in the first
. inning and held off a steady
: comeback
by
the WP Sl rom IS 21 LP Ellis 16 6)
L ocklear
(3rd ),
Dy er
• Harrisonville Bobcats to wtn HRs
(2nd)
9-8 In Middleport Youth
L os Angel es
000 000 01 o- 1 51
: League action last week.
St. lOUI S
000 00~ 001- 2 6 1
: Tony Scott went all the way
Messersm•th
Marsh a ll
(8)
and Yeager . Reed , Hra bosky
Pll the mound for the Meis
(9) and S1mmans
WP Hra
striking out 10 and walking 9 boskv (5 21 L P Mar sha l l (II 6)
and allowing 3 hits. Willie H R Lop es (6t h )
Donohue started for the New York
JOO ooo ooo-J 9 o
000 000 41 )(-57 1
Bobcats going 3 innings Crncmnat1
Seaver , Baldwm (7), H all (8).
fanning 5 and walking 10. Sander s (81 and Grote , Nolan ,
cEnaney (7), Borbon
(8 ).
Reggie Arnold came on to M
Ea stw1 ck (9 ) and Bench WP
t'flllsh the game, sttiking out McEnan ey (4 1J LP Seaver ( 13
51
walking '· and allowing 3
hils.
I
'Ph•ladelph,a 004 ooo JOG-S 9 0
Houston
200 321 Olx- 9 15 3
Hillel'S for the winners
Underwood . Garber (5).
were Bobby Fox with a first Schuele!" (6 ), McGraw (8) and
Boone, Oates
( 7),
D1 erker,
inning homerun and a single ForsCh
(3 ) , Roberls ( 7) and
~ the same frame, and one in Johnson ""'P Fe¥ ~ctl ( 3 6 ) LP
' •"'
HR Schm1 d t
the fifth. Fox's homerun in Underwoo~o-\'
06th)
the first
with hues
innlngsJ
~dec! and put the Mets (14
Mntrl 010 001 110 000 OG-4 12 1
ahead to stay.
220 000 000 000 01- 5 13 1
, ,Hillen for the Bobcats Allan!
Roger s, Warthen Cn. Taylor
terf. Tim Shamblin with a &lt;7) Murray (8), _ OeMola ( 14 )
an d Foo te . Oal C,;~nton , Sosa
~ble In the firsl and Jeff
(6 1. House (9 ); Leon ( t2L
llranham bail a double In the Sadeck• (1.4 ) and Correll WP
Dwine Jooes had the Sadeckl 13 1) . LP Oe Mola 13 41
ether hlt a fourth inning San Franc iic 101 020 OOo-4 12 2

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
Somethin g
old

and

ya rd 16th. But !hie time the
s tory had a differ ent endin g
Both men were at par after
17 holes But Watson , 1cy cool,
ran down h1s par at 18,
leaVIng Newton. to falter
"I just thought my time had
come," Watson said. " I had a
goal m my life, to wm a maJOr
champwnsh1p, and I fulfilled
it.,,
Watson planned some
mausplclous celebrating with
tour chum and fellow
American, John Mahaffey.
They sent the1r w1ves on a
European tour and then flew
off to Canada for a rest.
" We're gomg to Canada,
about 45 miles from nowhere ,
do a little fishing, drmk a few
beers and tell a few hes,"
Watson said.

Letart edges

Minersville

by 6-5 score
In mdependent baseball
actwn on Sunday Le tart
mpped Mmersv11le 6-5 m ten
inmngs, w1th Letart's Fred
M1ller pitching a fine game,
go111g 7Y.; 111mngs, fanmng 5
and walkmg 3 Brady Huffman came on m relief. and
allowed only one h1l the rest
of the game plckmg up the
w111. Pete Hendn cks went all
the way on the Mmersv1lle
mound and wa s tagged w1th
teh loss.
H1tters for Letart were
Fred M1ller, Jr. w1th a triple
and a smgle, Monk Jenkms
had two doubles, Terry
Tucker a double , and gelt111g
smgles were Fred M1ller, Sr ,
Gary Roush, Brady Huffman ,
Roy Johnson , Gill Tucker,
and the game wmning single,
by Glen Tuc ker. Monk
Jenkins picked up 2 more
s tolen bases to g1ve h1m 17
thefts this year , good enough
to lead the league.
H1tters for Mmersville
were Clonch with a tnple and
a smgle, Sarver a double,
Arnold a double and getting
singles were Hendricks,
Haggey, and Mamn g.
The Independent Baseball
Tournament play w1ll begm
next Sunday and the tournament schedule will appear
m th1s paper after the
drawmg 1s held.

Mason club

11-0 winner
Th e Ma so n Merchants
blanked the Pomeroy Tigers
11-0 111 recent Pony acti on
w1th Raymond Andrews
going the first 6 inmn gs on the
Tigers' hill, fanning 8 and
walkin g 10.
M1ke Tnplett ca me on to
work the seventh mmng,
walkin g one. John VanMeter
went the distance on the
Merchants' mound, fanmn g 8
and walking 3
Hillers for the Ios111g T1gers
were Todd Rawlings w1th 2
s mgles, and ge ttmg one
s mgle each were Chuck
Kennedy and Jeff Grueser.
For the Merchants, Pat
Kearns had a smgle, Kelvin
Honoker a tr1ple, and John
VanMeter a double .
The win made the Merchants season record 5-7 and
the Tigers dropped to 3-8.

lilhale.

-

=

• '-

'. Clwles Scott ma~ages the

Meta

and Bob Williams

....... the Bobcats.'

Ch•cago
000 aoo Olo-t 6 1
' Mon)efusco , W1 l ltams C9l and
Sa'de k , ZAh n , Solon .un
( 5).
F~a t ltng {bl, Zamora ( 8J and
Sw•sher WR Montfusco (7 41
L P Zahn (7 7)

Brewers. Wooil walked two
and struck out five m
recording his seventh trlwnph against 13 losses. N1les
Nyman smgled home two
runs and also scored tWice in
support of Wood.
rigers 8, Royals 4 "
Gary Sutherland's two-run

REVENUE
SHARING

POMEROY LANES
Thunday Stnk ers
Jun e5, U75
T ea m
w L
No 1
37 11
No 6
31 l7
No 3
24 24
No 4
26
No 2
20 28
No 5
10 38
H 1gh team senes - No 6
1385 No 3 1371 , No 1 1350
H1gh team g a m e No 6
498 . N o 3 d79 an d 47d
H 1gh tnd1V1 d u at ser1es Wanda T eaford 478. Sh 1rl ey
Milchell 475 , Patlr Wil l 1ams

n

452

H1gh md1v1dual game Sh 1r ley M1tchetl 18 ? Wanda
Teafo rd 177
Patt1 Wll ltam s

173
Thursd av Stnkers
Jun e 12.1 975
Tea m
W. L.
No 1
43 13
No 6
39 17
No 3
31 25
No 4
23 33
No 7
34
No 5
10 46
H1 gh team se r .es
No 1
1416 No 6 131 6 . N o 2 1324
H1gh team game No I
510 No 6 471. N o 2 46 4
H1gh •ndtv 1dua1 ser •es Sh•rl ey M•lchell 480 Wanda
T ea f ord 467
Conn• e Chap
man 460
H 1gh tnd1V1d Ua l gam e Sh.rley M1tchel l 179 Wanda
Teaford 169. Frank1e Hunnel

n

164

Thursday Sinkers
June 19, 1975
F •nat Stand•ngs
F1rst Hall
Team
w L
51 13
No I
41 23
No 6
No 3
32 32
No 2
28 36
No 4
23 41
17 47
No 5
H •gh team ser t es - No 5
1321, N o 2 1289 No 6 1264
H 1gh tea m game - N o 6
469 No 2 46 1, N o 5 45 1
H1gh md•v•dual ser•es Nan cy Parsons 468. Frank•e
Hunnel A2 B, Sh1rley M1tch e ll

396

H1gh •nd•vrdual game Nan cy Parson s 18 1, Fran k. te
Hun ne l 157 Shirley M1tchell
141
Thur sday Sinker s
June 26 , 1975

No
No
No
No
No
No

3
5

6
6

2
2

4
4

4
4

2

6

2

6

83 328 51 104
85 307 59

H 1Qf1 team sen es - No 1
1411 , N o s 1372 . N o 6 1295
H19h team game No 1
518 No 5 49 2 No 1 470
H1g h tndlvtdual se r 1es Sh1rl e y M• lc h ell 490, Ruby
Hupp 463. Conn 1e Chapman

424
H1Qil •nd tvl dual game Conn1e Cf1apman 178 , R uby
H up p 176 . Sh1 r ley M•fch e ll
171

Thursday St r 1kers
Jul y 3, 1975
T eam
W
L
14 2
No 6
No 1
12 4 ~
No 1
10 6
No 3
4 12
No 4
4 12
No 5
4 11
H1gh t ea m ser1 es - No 6
1367 No 1 135 2 No 2 1299
Hrgh t eam game No l
486 No 6 48 2, No 2 469
Hrgh IndiVI dUa l Serle-5 Sh1rl ey Milcf1ell 4 38 , Joann
Ward 430, Pa1 t• Wrl l1 ams 429
H1 gh 1ndrv •d ua 1 game Co nn1e Cha p ma n 164, Shtrl ey
M•lche l l 160 P att1 Wil l•a m s
an d Frank1e Hunn el 158

WAILUA, Hawan (UP!) Randy Barenaba, 18, of Laie,
beat another local golfer,
Allan Yamamoto, on the first
hole of a playoff to capture
the National Public l.Jnks
championship Saturday
afternoon at the Wailua
Country Club.
Barenaba 's
brother ,
Charles, won the tournament
last year:
International League
Stand•ngs
Untted Press International
w. 1. pet. g b
Syracus e
53 34 609
Roc he-ster
52 37 584 2
T1dewat er
51 37 580 21/1
Charleston
45 45 500 91f2
Memph1s
42 49 462 13
R •chmond
19 46 459 13
Tol edo
40 51 440 15
Pawtucket
33 56 371 21
Sunday 's Result s
Memph IS 5 Paw tuc k et 3
Toledo 10 Char leston 1
T1dewater 2 Rocf1esler 1,
1st, 7 1nnmg s
Roc h ester 4 Tidewater 2,
2nd . 7 .nnrn gs
Syracuse at R•cf1mond , 2,
ppd , ra 1o

MON.· FRI. 8-5, SAT. 9-5, CLOSED SUN.

..

96

$2.303

dum'ljlhl '"""iod trom .lui~ I \97•1llru Ju"11 30 1975

NY 59
Amer• can Lea gue Lvnn, Bas
71, Horton , Det 62 , Rice, Bos
61, May, Ba tt 59, Scott, Mil 58
stolen Bases
Nat.ona l League · Morgan ,
C1n 40 Cedeno , rtou and Brock,
Sl L
36
Lopes ,
LA
33,
Mangual , Mtl 20
Amen can L eague
R•vers ,
Cal 46 wash•ngton, Oak 32,
pt .s, KC 29. Remy Cal 26.
Le F lor e. Det 25
P1tchmg
(Based on most v•ctones)
N a t•ona l League Seaver , NY
13 5, Sult on , L A 13 a, Messers
m 1th , L A 12 6 Jon es , SO 11 6.
Bil lingham , Cm 10 3. Reuss,
P1tt and McG lot hen , Sf L 10 6,
Matl ack, NY 10 7 Morton, Atl

10 9
Amer •can League
Palmer ,
Ball and K aat , Ch 1 13 6 , Blue ,
Oak
127,
Ttant,
Bos and
Hunter . NY 128

IHe, heallh,
honle•ld
car lnslnnce
for

Your Nahonwi&lt;te agent can

rnall.e ture you get1 11
lowett "-·•• ana thtl beat
C&lt;;..erage lor your Insurance
dottar A 9Q0C1 reuon to do
bu••""' w •tl'l Nationwide
an ll"lt time
Co li

P. J. PAVLEY
J07 5PrtRI Awe., ltssatr.y

PH. 992-. HI

t)~
•

PH. 992-3502

2 A.,.n11t Sh1rtng

treltf to ,,.,,u"oon Dl
, _,_,_
1,0!&lt;Jll9L. _ _ __

F~ndl

Aac.o~edtromJutr 1 1914thfYJun~30 197!

3 lnterHIIIKIIYfll
Of

Ctlldlttd

IJlll~

1

197Athou

Fundi Aet urntd

FOR I'U8LIC SCRUTINY AT

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

2

+++
Got a problem? An adult subject for discussion? You can talk it
over in her column if you write to Helen Bolte!, care of thiS ·
newspaper.

Harrisonville Society News

Coolville , Ctllo

On

•

and Mrs Robert Clark.
Mr . Walter Ell1s has
returned much improved
from Veterans Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed King Jr.
and children spent Sunday
w1th Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Kmg Jr. and Susie.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Young
made a trip to Columbus
Monday to see her brother
who 1s hospitalized following
an automobile accident. His
condillon is grave.
Kenneth Wyant cut 2 toes
with the lawn mower and is a
pat1ent at Holzer Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs F 0 . Whaley
of Columbus spent Wed nesday mght with Ava
Gilkey
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alk1re
v1s1ted the Charles Alkires
and Sam Pickens at Racme
Tuesday evemng .

Mrs. Ruth Gillihan and
daughter Ll&gt;is were over
night guests of Mrs Golda
Wyant Thursday night , also
Mrs . Hazel Emory of
Langham.
Dr. and Mrs. Don Gibson,
son Mark and Kay Lynn were
weekend guests of Mrs. Lana
Gibson and Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Douglas.
The Emergency squad took
Mrs . Charles Ellis to
Veterans Hosp1tal, July 4th
with a blood clot.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Frum
and Paul Anderson VIsited
Dunbar, W. Va . July 4th .
Mr. and Mrs. Tad Gilkey of .
Albany and Mr . Dennis
Gilkey and girlfriend of
Columbus, vis1ted Ava
Gilkey, Saturday evemng.
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Epple
are leaving by bus to visit h1s
son in Maryland who will take
them to vis1t their other sons
in adjoining states 1
- Mr. and Mrs . .Kenneth
Payne and children are
v1siling relatives m West
V1rgima.
Mr-:- and · Mrs . Darold
Graham and children v1sited
the Jr. Paynes Saturday
Mr. Raymond Arnold, 69, a
retired prosperous farmer of
the community died Friday
on the same farm he was
born. He has been in poor
health.
Perry and Tamra Clark of
Chester spent the weekend
with their grandparents, Mr.

India ink
defies removal

WANT METZENBAUM
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
Oh1o Slate. Council of
Machinists has asked former
U.S. Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum of Cleveland to
enter
the
Democrahc
senatorial primary neJCl year
" m order to make hlS voice
heard m Washington in the
battle
against
soaring
gasoline and utility charges."
The plea came at the council's weekend meeting here .
The Machinists, second
largest
AFL-CIO
orgamzation m Ohio,· has
60,000 members

David Kienzle, Susan Smart

Marriage planned

.t'lay it eafe and sore
It may be time to
have your present
policy updated.
.

'Let's Faile Soon

DALE C. .WARNER
102

W.

992 2 143
Mam

Pomerov

More
headlines
expected

\

'

COLUMBUS (UPl) -The
United Auto Workers have
asked Ohio senators to reject
DEAR POLLY - Can you tell me how to get India mk out th e med1cal malprach ce
of white pants' I havetned alcohol, bleach and spray remover leglslallon when.iL comes up
for a floor vote this week
but nothing worked. Any suggestions' - LOUISE.
DEAR LOUISE - India lok stains are difficult to remove because it "cancels people's
once they ' are dry . lbe 1,1. S. Department of Agriculture nghts" and will end up msuggests forcing water through the stain until all loose pigment creasmg insurance costs.
A letter co ntammg the
ts removed or tbe staiD will spread during the removal
request
was sent to the
process. Wash with detergent, several limes If necessary, and
then soak stain in wann suds containing one to four senators by UAW Regwnal
tablespoons ammonia to each quart of water. Dried stains will Co un sel Lawrence Landneed an overnight soaldng. An alternate method is to force the skroner, speakmg for the
water through the staiD, wet staiD with ammonia and then un1on membership.
The
measure
would
work in the detergent. Rinse. Repea t 11 necessary . Good luck.
guarantee adequate medical
- POLLY.
malpra ctice 1nsurance to
DE.AI{ POLLY - My Pet Peeve 1s the habit many doctors ph ys1c1ans hit by r ecent large
and nurse• u~ve (especially m hosp1tals ) of calhng patients by mcreases in pnvate coverage
their· first names. We a re not personal fr1ends. Th1s IS as a result of damage swts.
" Th1s bill cancels people's
professional and it should be done on a professiOnal bas1s How
nghts
," Landskroner sa1d
would these nurses and doctors hke bemg called " George" or
Sunda y. " It force s them to
" Sadie," etc.? - LAURA.
·pay
for a spec1al court
DEAR POLLY - Our family 1s great on " quickie" picnics
system
to help cancel those
To make sure we can get ready m a hurry and st1ll not forget
anythmg I have dev1sed a " P1cn1c Barrel. " I bought a large rights.
" It aggravates the cost
plast1c trash can , mto 1t went everythmg for a p1cmc except
to
medical
the food. This Includes paper plates and napkins, cups and problem
specialists
and
the1r
patients
thermos, lmives, forks and spoons Also, it mcludes some
and does ab so lutely
canned items like beans, spaghetti, shoe string potatoes and nothmg
to solve anything
mstant coffee plus a pot for regular coffee The can is easily
except
the
profit margin of
stored out of sight durmg the off-p1cmc months. - MRS .
the insurance interests m th1s
V.WH
state."
DEAR POLLY - Those who have to watch the fat m their
Landskroner also said the
diets m1ght like my Pomter. One of the truly good ca nned foods
bUI
also would allow mis soup. When a can 1S opened and there lS a laye r of fa t on top
surance
compani es "to
(sucQ!hs m chicken noodle, etc. ) an easy way to get rid of this is
to refrigerate the can untU soup is completely c-old, open, skim continue to privately collect
premiums
from
off the fat m one chunk and the soup is fat-free - or almost. I fancy
phys1cians and ho sp itals
find this is a good 1dea. - MARGARET
against
whom ... malpractice
DEAR POLLY - When we dec1ded to make our twin beds
mto a king size bed I found the cost of king size blankets was claims may never be made."
As a result, he said, inprohibitive. One store advertised a special sale on top quality
wool blankets so I bought three twm s1ze blankets for little dicallons were that the health
more than the cost of one kmg s1ze I split one of the twm size care proVIders who now must
blankets down the rruddle and sewed half to each of the other pay "exhoribant prerruums
twin blankets usmg the zigzag stitch on my machine. These ... may receive even more
blankets f1t quite well and we have two king size ones for little severe treatment."
''Thus effecllvely the msurmore than the regular cost of one such blanket. - D.L.J
ance compames operating m
You wlll receive a dollar If Polly uses your favorite Ohio are making no contribuhomemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution to a llon whatsoever to the resolutiOn of their own problem,"
problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper.
he added. "Rather they are
usmg the Ohio General
Assembly to force the people
of Ohio not only to ball them
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
out but to increase their
Mr and Mrs Russell Roush
profits."
Dean Sayre, Middletown, an d fa m1ly.
Pa , Mr and Mrs Danny
Mr and Mrs . Chester Durst
He said that when the
Sayre of Co lumbus were of N1les, 0 called on Mr and
special subcorrumttee recomSunday dmner guests of Mr
Mrs Russe ll Rous h a nd mended the measure out last
week, it "chose by a 2-1 vote
and Mrs. Herbert Sayre. Mrs. fam1ly Saturday
to take several gia nt steps
Georgia Wolfe of Washington,
Mrs Georg •a Wh ee ler
backwards." He sa1d the
D. C. was a Tuesday guest of Wolfe of Washmg ton, 0 C.
union had hoped the Senate
the Sayres Mr and Mrs
spen t a day w1th Mrs . Bertha
would improve the HouseCarroll Sayre of Racme spent Robmson.
Sunday evem ng w1th the
Sayres.
Mrs Dorothy Parsons was
a med1cal pa tient at Holzer
Medical Center
Mr. and Mr s. Robert
Parsons of Delaware , 0.
VISited Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Pa rsons over the weekend
Mr . and Mrs Ronald
Russell, Mandy, and M1ke of
Wolf Pen spent Sunday Wlth

approved legislation.
The un10n spokesman ~aid
the Senate measure has.
sever al prov1sions wh1ch
would m effect w1pe out the
gams won through collective
bargaming He cited the
elimination of the collateral
source doctrme, which would
reduce court award$ to inJUred patients by the amount
of Ule1r own insurance.
Landskroner noted that
ms ur a nce packages have
been part of the total wage
packages negollated w1th
employers.
The letter also crillc1zed
the bill 's versiOn of an under"Titmg plan to guarantee
msurance cover age to Ohio
doctors
Landskroner sa1d the
measure called for annua lly
collectmg $24 m1lhon from
doctors, although the plan 's
annual cost of admimstration
and claims 1s estima ted at $4
miilhon by the
Ohio
Department of Insurance

Fairview News Notes

Sociat
Calendar

DRESS SHOES

30% gt:g.

heritage house

N. W

Hi gr. school and college graduates swell America's t otal work force by over a million
people each yea r They want j obs They deserve JObs. Th ey're wllilng and able
But every j ob in America depends, m one way
or ano ther, on energy . And as our a'a il able
supplies of ene rgy dwind le, so wlll the number
of JObs Amcnca needs eno ugh energy
supphes to suppm t the eco nom iC growth
tha t crea tes more JO bs, for more people.

27 different beautiful
SUITES"TO CHOOSE FROMPRICED FROM A LOW

$11 ~P

TER.MS TO SUIT YOU- FREE DELIVER.Y
Fm~:;: . e ~ ~oog! cc :

I-

·~x;s:~ 3:: ~:·::.-.:?:~:~:~~X:&gt;;'t#mt&lt;~"'l#.~~-z.~~

BAKER fU,RNITURE

~·
~

· MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ,

~~:·:-:~ $; , !~0::0!~:=:-:;:;:;s;:--:o:::~;:::;:~-:; c; ;
0

\

U A W opposing
malpractice hill

M1ss Smart 1s a 1974
MIDDLEPORT - Mr . and
Mrs Paul M Smart, Perrys- gr ad uate of Wittenberg
burg1
announce
the UmverSI ty where she was a
engageme nt
of
the1r member of Gamma Phi Beta
daughter, Susan Lynne, to soronty She IS currently
Dav1d W. Kienzle, son of Mrs. attendm g law school at the
Charles
A.
K1enzle , UniverSity of Toledo.
K1enzle was also graduated
Columbus, and the late Mr
fr om Wittenberg Umvers1ly
Kienzle .
The wedding Will be an whe re he was a member of
event of Sept 6 m the garden Ph1 Mu Delta fratermty and
of the Smarts' West R1ver Gamma The ta Up s ilon
nat10nal ho norary. He 1s
Road home
c urrently domg graduate
work at the Umvers1ty of
Mmnesota
Paul M Smart, father of
the bride , IS a semor member
of the Toledo law f1rm Fuller,
Hen ry, Hodge and Snyder
and 1s v1ce president of
Toledo Ed1son Compan y. The
late Mr Kienzle, fat her of the
gr oom, wa s a pra ~; ll c m g
OBERUN , Oh10 (UP! ) attorney
m Columbus. M1ss
Chnst Ep1scopal Church
here,
which
became Smart 1s the granddaughter
prominent when its pastor, of Mr and Mrs Paul S
Rev. L. Peter Beebe , allowed Smart of Middleport
women priests to celebrate
the Eucharist, may make
news headlines again.
The church's vestry asked
Beebe Sunday to appomt as a
priest associate one of the 11
women liTegularly ordained
last year to the Episcopal
ministry. And Beebe S8ld he
would appeal his conviction
MONDAY
by an ecclesiastical court a
SECOND Monday Sewing
month ago on charges of Oub, 8 p. m . home of Mrs .
breaking church law by Robert Lewis.
allowing two of the women to
WEEK LONG meeting ,
celebrate communion. .
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Beebe said he did not know Church, 7 30 p. m. Different
which woman m1ght be ap- speaker each evening ,
pomted. He said talks were Monday through Sunday.
MEN'S WHITE
bemg held With "different
FREE
clothm g
day
people", and he hoped the Monday for low income
pos1tion would be filled by persons sponsored by GalliaSept . 9.
Me lgs Community Acllon
The Ep1scopal Church has Agency Location 1s m the old
held the women's ordinations
h1 gh school bUlldmg at
Price
were not valid because Chesh1re. Hours are fr om 9
church law llimts priesthood
a m to 2 p m.
to men. But Beebe and most
POMEROY CHAMBER of
of the governing body of .
Commerce
at noon at Me1gs
Your Thom MeAn Store
Christ Church hold the orInn
.
Middleport Oh1o
dinations were proper.
Beebe said the full
respons1bihty for hiring
priests is legally left up to the
rectors and he does not need
off1cial consent to hire a
women . But 1t 's believed
OFFICE HO RS: 9: 30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
Chnst Church could be
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT
suspended from the diocese
ST
for doing so.

FOR THE
PROTECTION
YOU NEED-:-

LB

"ONE
STOP
.
.. .
:MEAT SHOP,.
r ..... ,w
·ln

•

BY POl-LY C RAM~: R

d

-=~~------~~~

_ _

i~

DEAR HElEN :
+++
My hll;'band is 18 years older than I am, which rna
him
ahnost tWice my age. I'm 20 and have been mai'i'ii!&lt;l
him
four years . We have two sons.
He treats me like his daughter. He says' that I'm extravagant, but I say he'scheap. He makes me keep account of
what I spend, and he even goes grocery shopping with me . He's
always saying we're broke, but how could we be when he
makes $200 a week ? The checkbook 1s "his," (I'm not good at
finances), but that seems like a lot.
Lately I've been thinking I should have found someone
nearer my age - and now I've found him . Thetrouble is, he 's a
very close favorite cousin of my husband's and 11 would cause
a terrible hassle if I showed this 21-yearo()ld man how I felt.
If I left my husband I'd have a hard time getting alone, and
would probably have to go home to my parents, which I'd hate .
Should I let my cousin-in-law know how I feel and hope for the
best?-PROBLEMS
DEAR PROBLEMS:
Your biggest problem is a prolonged adolesence. For
Pete's sake, U you can't stand yoW' marriage, leave It, but
don't start a famDy feud by chasing your husband's favorite
couslu.-H. '
DEAR HELEN :
About children of divorce, and parents' visiting privileges ·
It would be unfair, "dlvorcmg" the kids from the natural
parents, but I admit, as a stepmother, that visiting rights
cause problems.
· Here's how I manage it :
I never let my stepchUdren (whom I love dearly) know
how I really feel about their mother. When she gives them a
gift or a treat, I praise her for it. I respect their love for their
mother, and I bite my tongue before I add, "even though .. . "
When she isn't very nice to them', I suggest that she 's t1red,
or that she didn't mean it. They'll form their own conclusions
•
soon enough.
When returning from VISits cause problems in our house
(because the mother or stepfather made derogatory remarks ),
I won't get Involved in "fighting back." We let the chUdren
know that visiting their mother is a privilege they earn by
being "good guys" at home. It usually works.
Olildren have enough love to go around, even for four
parents. And they need just as much .-STEPMOTHER

BROWN COUNTRY SMOKED SAUSAGE.. .............~.l ~ 8Buv 1 Lb. Get 1Oc Off on Doz. Eggs.

---;:-;,::;:----

, _ .,3,,.322
,._,_

•

'

• •

By Helen Bottel

'U'.I...Ly 's Point-.a~c-'

DEAR HELEN :
Zeke and I have been "almost married" for two years. My
little daughter calls him Daddy. It's really more than an affair.
Because I'm divorced, Zeke says the Bible doe~ not permit
our marriage. Actually, !have an aMuhnent (I'm Catholic ) so
my priest says I'm free to marry, but Zeke's religion is very
fundamentalist flld getting more so all the time . I don't mind
raising any fulqte children in his fa1th , but he still says God is
against OW' marriage and points to several passages in the
·
Bible that prove it.
What are my chances for a real wedding?- PliT OFF
DEAR P .O.: ·
U yon stay with Zeke, I'd say your cbanceo for a wedding
are slim, very slim! And perbapa you're lucky.
Only a very "fDDdameotal" hypocrite would quote the
Bible to avoid marriage while ludulglng lu an affair which bla
owu reUglon condemns as "adultery."-H.

6

$ _ _ _ _ __

.

io ORS

7 Tottl-fll fldtAVtilabll

I

30 181 51

$_ 2.,.,30..,_3_ _ __

·-=~---­
, _ 3,322 ~--

5Sumol hnnllJI

II

Jun.

US.

LB.

UJ,,JIIJ,/lJI.,,,!I,J,IJI..JJJ/,,JJfl,,,,u, .. ,JL,J//,,L

I

Helen Help

Sirloin Ste,ak ..............._.......................... : _..~ 1a9
Fal~r's Slab Bacori~... ;·~::&gt;:~;·£:;:; . ..5 ~.·',~.~-~ ~ 159
Ratn's All Meat 80kiii;~·::.3~~.~-~~~. 8~LB.·
HJ ~~usage ..............'~"""'
gN .
omema.:.e
::.~\.. ...... -:~ LB.
.......

1974

313

311
H1s l , Mnn 61 225 34
70
310
M e R a, KC 87 335 42 104
307
Mdd x, NYS5 2 18 36
67
304
Brett , KC 86 349 48 106
Home Runs
Nallona l Leag ue
Luz1n Sk 1,
Phil
25,
Bench,
Cm
19 ,
StargeiL P1tt 17 , Schm •dt , Ph1l
16 Foster , Crn , K1 ngman, NY
and Parker , P1tt 15
Amer.can League Bonds, NY
20. J ackson. Oak and Bur
roughs Te:x 18 , Mayberry , KC •
17 Lynn , Bos, H end nck , Clev,
Horton , D el and Scot! , M1l 16
Run s Batted In
Nat 1onal League
Luzmski,
Phil 79 . Bench Ctn 73 , Watson ,
Hou 61, Morgan , C1n 60 , Staub ,

-THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS-

34 3 053 001

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP 694
TWP. CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

1 Bfl•nctuotJ~,.,. 30

317

-MID-JULY SPEC/A~
3 LB. GROUND BEEF
4 LB. SIRLOIN STEAK
3 LB. CHUNK ALL MEAT BOLOGNA
$
4 LB. CHUCK ROAST
3 LB. HOMEMADE SAUSAGE
1 LB. WIENERS

! .

.

Yastr zemsk r Bos

'One Stop
Meat Shop"

~
'

Ma 10r League L eaden
By Un1t ed Pr ess lnternattanat
L ead•ng Batters
(based on 225 at bah&gt;
Nat1anal League
g
ab
r
h
pet .
353
Mdl ck, Ch 79 310 45 113
M r gn, Cn 83 287 61
99 .345
338
Snglln , P t 77 281 33 95
Parkr , Pt 77 286 44 96
336
326
watson . H 84 31J 41 102
32A
Cash , Ph 1l 89 376 65 122
S1mmon s, Sl L
84 296 44
96
324
321
Bowa , Ph i 63 274 34
88
319
Rose C•n 90 379 58 121
31S
Grvy, L A 9 1 381 48 121
318
Jos hu , SF 70 264 38
84
Amencan League
pet.
g
ab
r
h
373
Carw, Mn 81 303 55 113
342
Lyn n Bos 79 284 60
97
338
Hrg r v, Tx 79 278 50
94
326
Mnsn NY 84 3 19 4 7 104
Wasf1 1ngton , Oak

D&amp;D's

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP

~~~~menlliOI I trlg

I
6
2
4

Toby Harrah of the ti'UB
Rangers was named to
replace Orta, who · will be
permitted to remain 81 a
member of the team but will
not be able to play according
to commissioner Bowie
Kuhn .
The only Brewers named to
th.e team were first baseman
George Scott. and oulflelder ,
Hank Aaron . Aaron, if he
appears, will tie a record with
a 24th appearance. He has
been named to every team
smce 1955, missing making
the National League team
only in his rookie year of 1954.

AT

Ohio NBC rournament
By United Press International
(Saturday Night Scores)
ZanesvUle Senior P10neers 13
CaMelville 4
'
Mount Vernon 6 Brewster 2
(Game Schedule)
Monday night : Marion vs
Mansfield Farmers Bank
Tuesday
night : Mount
Vernon vs Zanesville Senior
Pioneers

~ACCO UNT NO

W. L

Team

ACTUAL USE REPORT

~~~~~~~~==j~===j

s mgl e c apped a four-run
fourth inmng which paced the
Tigers to v1ctory over the
Royals Joe Coleman worked
s1x mnings and won his third
game in a row to raise his
record to 6-12. The victory
was the Tigers' 11th in their
last 12 games.

Local Bowling

GENERAL

--

*-·

figure to 71 while Yastrzemskl, who has batted 389
over the last 20 games,
boosted his batting average
to 313. The Red Sox currently
lead th e league with a .274
team battmg average.
"Th1s is gomg to last a long
tlme," Yastrzemski sa1d of
his h1ttmg spree. "For one
thmg, I'm hittmg m front of
Freddy Lynn and Jinuny
R1ce Pitchers aren't pitching
around me anymore and I'm
gettmg better p1tches to hit.
"Before, pitchers felt they
could give me lousy pitches
and take a chance of walking
me, but with Lynn and Rice
dr1ving in runs like crazy, no
pitcher is gomg to purposely
put a ruMer on base with
either of them coming up.
The pitches are around the
pla te and I'm seemg them
better "
In other AL ga me s,
Oakland
Dipped
Balhmore ,
4-3 ;
Cleve land
edged
California,
8-7 ;
Oucago blanked Mllwaukee,
5-0 , and Detroit topped
Kansas City, 8-4 . Mlllllesota
at New York was rained out.
A's 4, Orioles 3
Ken Holtzman, with rebel
help from Hollie Fingers, won
his 11th game as the A's
defeated the Or10les . The A's
scored three runs JOo..in the
second inning to tak~ a 4-1
lead, then Fingers relieved
after a tworun homer by
Baltimore's Brooks Robinson
m the seventh and allowed
only one-h1t m 2 1-3 innmgs to
record h1s 12th save.
Indians 8, Angels 7
Pinch-h1tler Boog Powell's
two-run smgle and Buddy
two-run
double
Bell 's
highlighted
a
five -run
seventh inning that carried
the Indians to victory over
the Angels. The triumph was
the Indians' 13th m a row at
Anaheun Stadium, tymg the
AL record for most consecullve victories in an opponent's park. Mike Mosley
had a three-run homer for the
Angels , his first in the
majors.
White Sox 5, Brewers 0
Wilbur Wood tossed a
three-hitter to lead the White
Sox to v1ctory over the

something new, part of the
legendary formula for a
succesful marnage, ha s been
the secret to the success of
the Boston Red Sox so far th1s
season
Th e Red Sox have two of
the best r oo ki es in the
Amencan League m Fred
Lynn and Jun Rice, but a n
"old-tuner" by the name of
Ca rl Yastrzemsk1 has been
more than pulling h1s we1ght
m Boston's surge to the top of
the AL East
Yastrzemski, a 15-year
ve teran w1th three AL battmg
titles and more than 1,100
runs batted m to h1s credit,
started off slowly this year
but has been on a tear the last
couple of months and has
been a major contnbutor to
the Red Sox ' recent wmrung
streak
•
Boston made it seven Vlcton es m a row Sunday by
defeatmg the Texas Ran ge rs,
7-5, and both LyiUl and Yastrzemskl played key roles 111
the outcome. The triumph
boosted the Red Sox' lead to
4'fz games over the secondplace Ne-w York Yankees and
Milwaukee Bre wers 111 the AL
East .
Lynn , the major candiate
for Rookie of the Year honors
m the AL, drove m four runs
~ith a prur of doubles and
Yastrzemsk1 enjoyed a
perfect 5-for-5 day at the
plate as the Red Sox pounded
out 15 hits. R1co Petrocelli, a
veteran of 11 btg league
campaigns, also chipped in
with three hits for Boston.
•
Lynn's four runs batted m
ra1 sed his league-leading

G:

came

second baseman Joe Morgan,
shortstop Dave . ConcepciOn
and outfielder Pete Rose.
The A's placed Gene
Tenace at first, Bert Campaneris at short and Regg.e
Jackson and Joe Rudi in the
ouUield and the Yanks have
Thurman Munson catching,
Graig NetUes at third and
Bobby Bonds m the outfield.
AL All-Star pitcher Jun
Palmer, with a 13-6 record,
sa1d Sunday 1t was doubtful
he would be able to play
Tuesday because of a sore
arm and another AI, All.Star,
second baseman Jorge Orta
of the Clucago White Sox, has
been declart!d out of the game
because of mjury Shortstop

Red Sox post 7th straight wm, 7-5

l.

for a bogey and a 72
The 71 matched the h1ghest
score Watson shot all week
enroute to a mne-under-par
279 and a t1e after the
regulation four rounds wlth
Newton, a 25-year&lt;lld who
zoomed into contention w1th a
course record 65 on Fr1day.
favonte
Pre-tournament
Jack Nicklaus JOmed Johnny
M1ller and South Afr~can
Bobby Cole m fuushmg the
regula tion 72 holes one stroke
back at 280; wh1le another
Australian, Graham Marsh,
was at 281.
Watson 's
back-and-forth
battle with the Australian
included plenty of rain and
both players were drenched
by the time they walked off
the final green.
Twice Watson had shot
ahead , once on a 25-yard ch1p
that gave hun an eagle at the
par five 14th, only to see
Newton f1ght back to tie .
Once the Australian pulled
into a one-stroke lead.
Visions of his U.S Open
blowups must have passed
through the American's head
when he blew a one-5troke
edge by bogeymg the 235-

Cincmnall
Reds,
the
Amencan League by the New
York Yankees and defendin g
world champion Oakland A's
The starting llneups,
chosen by a vote of the fan s,
had only base-stealing L&lt;lu
Brock of the St. L&lt;&gt;uis Cardinals breakin g the DodgersReds monopoly , Except for
second baseman Rod Carew,
the American League starters were all from the
Yankees and A's.
Steve Garvey of the
Dodgers 1s at first base for
the Nationals with team mates !«in Cey at th~rd and
Juruny Wynn in the outfield .
Reds in the startmg lineup
are catcher Johnny Bench,

•

Watson claims crown
CARNOUSTIE, Scotland
(UPI) The beammg
tournament offic1al gestured
to 13,000 spectators gathered
around Carnoustie's 18th
sreen and then handed one of
golf's most coveted winner's
cups to "that very good
American player Tom Kite ."
· Tom Watson smUed back
and took his trophy.
It was he, not K•te a'nother young American
pl-ofessional- who won the
104th British Open champlonslnp Sunday m a ramdrenched 18-hole playoff w1th
l\!lstralian Jack Newton.
His one-&amp;roke victory in
the game's oldest championship was the first major
title for the young player who
had led the last two U.S.
Opens and this year's
Masters in the early rounds,
only to collapse at the finish .
•As Wll'llffled by the official's blooper as he had
been all day on Carnoustie 's
7.~yard par 72 seaside
links, Watson proceeded to
annoWICe he was giving the
sUver cup and accompanying
gold medal to his wife as a
belated second wedding
anniversary gift.
"I for got to get her
anything on the actual day
'l'llesday," he said, "but she
._d this would do quite

The game 1s the f1rst AllStar contes t since 195S in
Milwaukee County Stadium,
and this time a llegiances
have been switched. Twenty
years ago, w1th the Braves,
the e1ty was a National
League stronghold, and the
Nallonal Leag ue won 6-5 m 12
mnings .
Today, with the Brewers,
the c1ty 1s m the Amer1can
League and most of the more
than 50,000 persons expected
w1ll be rootm g for the un denlogs.
Only two Brewers are on
the AL team, neither of them
sta rters. The Nallonal
League lS doml118ted by the
L&lt;ls Angeles Dodgers and

Nallonal League, wh1ch has
won 11 of the last 12 mitlsummer class•cs and is
favored to win agam. Overall,
the NL has a 23-18 edge m the
series , winmng last year, 7-2.
The long-range weather
forecast was for Jarmer
temperatures than the 6Us
and 70s of recent days m the
M1lwaukee area a nd there
was a shght poss1b1hty of
showers or thundershowers
for Tuesday as th e wanner
wea ther moves m
Secretary of State Henry
K1ssmger, who was due here
for a speech tonight, was
scheduled to throw out the
first ball as he takes a break
m his harned negollallons m
the Mideast

•

&amp;:a

~;:.:.:;;::::::m;:::;:::;::::::::::::::::-;:::::::::=-:-·:::::::::w..;:.o:::::-.::::::::::::::

But all pnma ry for ms of energy that
industry needs - gas, oil, coal, nucleararc alrc,,dy 111 shor t supply.
An d thin gs will on ly get wo rse unless the
urgl' ncy for corrP"' "·.: ad ton IS
rccogn1.:cd 1p · go,~ r nment· and by the public
Th e most b&lt;~cl l y needed action lS reVISion of
the ll lliL al"t ic rcgul.1tion s and e nvironmen tal
proce du res t lldt arc fru stratmg
needed ene rgy sup ply development.
You c,1n help by learning more about the
cne1 gy c1iSi s ,111d sup portmg effo rt s to provide
A111cr "'' w1th enough ene rgy s upphe s to meet
all 1b llC'ecb, 111clud111g JObs for the future.

Co lu mbta Gas

IS

spendtng mtlhons to

hel p solve the cnerg} cnsts. We're
c urrently deli ven ng natural gas from

v-.clls tn a lmutcd area of
Ihe Gulf of Mc :u co. We
must develop addltJOnal
supplies in the Gulf
and m th e Atlanttc
Ocean, where
sur.oeys md tcate
a large amount

of valuable
natural gas

lies buried
deep be11eath

the waters

c6u

1MBIAGAS

Gas is preciou s, pure energy , , • usc It wlse)y.

..

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�,.

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7

'

The Dail Se t

'.

•

' .,

' Y n mel , Mlddlepori.-Pomemy,..O. Monday July 14 1975
~fCK TRACY
'
'
'

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-L'omeroy, 0. ; Monday, July 14, 1975
NOTICE

NOTICE OF

PUBLIC HEARING

APPLICATIONS

ON .LFBANON
Publt c Not tee •5 hereby
TOWNSHIP BUDGET
g•ven
that
R1 c h a rd
E
FOR 1976
We av er ha s f1tcd wllh The
NOI ICC IS hereby g 1ven th ai
PubliC Uliiiii CS CommiSSiOn
on the 18th d ay of Ju l y , 975 a t •_ o f Oh10 an applrcat•on for
7 00 p M
a publt c hear.nq Certtf!cale of Pub lt c Co n
wil l b e held on the budge t
ventence a n d N ecess dy t o

prepared by the Le ban o n
Townsh1 p Tru s t ees o f Mergs

tran spo rt
pe r sons
reqular r oute o r

O h ro
tor lht' n ext
s uc ceed •ng t 1sca l yee~r c nd•n g
Decem b e r Jl 191 6
Suc h h ea r• ng wtll b e h e ld ill

ltx £&gt;d tc r rn •n• as fo llows Rt
No DR from Let art to Ra cme
and all .nt errned •a t e pomts

County

the
Lebano 11
C arag e P o rtland
1

rn 1 '

Townsh 1 p
Ohro R 0

Lebanon Townshr p
T r us r ees
Clarence L,lwr ence
Clerk

Jt c

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sea l ed proposa l s wrl l be
r cce rvcd by nH? Board of
E du ca tron o f th e MerQS Local
Sc hool D rs!r t c t tn th e olftce of
the Cl erk rn th e Merqs Jun to r
H tgh Bu ll d rng rn Mr d dleport
Oh rO tor rnsu r ance coverage
for sc hool buses trucks and
othe r mo tor veh rctes until
l 30 PM on Augus t 17, 1975
Easter n Davlrghl
St andard
T rm e , at whrch lrme b 1d s will
be opened
A lr s t o f th e buses tru c k s
and ott1 cr mo t o r vchrcles to be
1nsurcd Wolh the sp ecrtrcatro ns
to r sum e may be o brarned by
ca llrn r, th e Cle rk s O ffr ce
TPIE'ph:Jnf' numbe r 99? 56 50
Mergs Loc a l
Sc hool Dr Str rct
Boa rd of Edu c&lt;~ l r o n
L W McComas
Cler k
U l 11

7 1 ?fl (B l &lt;l

lie

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sea l ed btd!:o wrll be r ecerved
by the Mergs Loca l Sc hool
Drst r1 c t Board o t Educa tr on at
the rr otfrce rn the Mergs J un ror
H rgh Sc hool B urldrng , Mrd
dleport Ohro for school bus
lrre s unltl 7 30 PM
Eastern
Day lrgh t Savrngs T1m e on
A ugu s t 12 19 75, at whr c h lrm e
brds wrll be opened The trre
brd p rr ces ar e t o rnc l ud e
dem ountrng of the old trr e and
mou nt rng ot th e new or
recapped on the rrm and
p lacrng th e mounted t rre an d
n m on the bus
Fo r specr lr ca t ro n s please
c al l 99 7 5650
M ergs Local
Sc hoo l D rstrrc t

7)

L W McComas
Cler k
14 2 1, 28 (8) J JI C

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs . Chester Durst
of Niles, 0 , Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Roush , Chuck MIChael
wer~ dinner guests Saturday
of 'Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush.
Mrs Ruth G1llm~ , Laughman, Fla., Lou1se G11lian
McClure of Cleveland, Tenn.,
Haze l Emory of Laughman,
F1a ., Mrs. Bonnie Snighon,
Mrs. Nora Staats of Letart,
W. Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Everette
Parsons
and
daughters, Mr . and Mrs.
Richard McCoy of Negley,
Ohio, Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Parsons of Delaware, 0.
visited Mrs. Ruth Parsons
and Preston, Mrs. Edna
Parsons and Mark.
Miss Lorna
Bell of
Colwnbus, Bruce Hart of
Colwnbus spent the Fourth of
July weekend with their
parents, Mr·. and Mrs. Don
Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hart at Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery
Donohew and two children,
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory
Donohew and baby of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Ours of New Brighton,
Pa. spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Donohew
and attended the Ours
reunion at the Letart Falls
Community Hall Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Brrd and
son of Norfofk, Va. are
spending three weeks with
l"'r· and Mrs. Harold Bird,
.l.ntiquity, Mr. and Mrs .
Everette Roush at Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ours of
New Brighton, Pa. called on
Mrs. Herbert Roush Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Everette
Parsons and four daughters,
Mr. and Mrs . Richard McCoy
of Negley,
. 0 . spent a week's
vacatiOn at their farm on
iTariners Run. Visiting the
Parsons Tuesday evening
were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Parsons and sons, Mr. ·and
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Hupp, Roger
Parsons, Mrs. Ruth Parsons,
Pre~n Parsons, Mrs. Edna
Parsons, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Parsons of · Delaware
called in the Parsons home
SUnday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Spencer are the proud owners
of a new mobile home whieh-they placed on their ian"d
_purchased from Jim Riffle.
Mr. and Mrs. Riffle and
family moved to. the former
George Sayre ,residence. Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Michael
have PI!I"Chased a mobile
home and will move · in
lt, placed on the land
formerly
occupied
by
the Spencers, and Mr. and
Mn. James &lt;W:impy) Hunt

.

I

'

.

.

ove r
a
between

Rt No
12 4 to Dorcas
to
Rac rne ,
Pt&gt;Q1e r oy,
Mrd
dlc port to Rut l anCI ana rn
tcr m t•d ra t e pornts
N umber
and capacity o l vehrc le s to be
u sed one
!/
pi!Ssenger
Nurnber
ot
trrps
darty
Mo nda y Thur sday 6 t rrp s
FrrdclY Sa t urday 8 t rr p s
h llcrcstcd p,l rl re" rnay o btarn
further rn f or matron by a d
d r essrnq l h(' Publr c UttltrC'~
Comrn •SS ron
ot
O h ro
Co lunr bu s Ohro
R1 c hilrd E Weave r
Box 346
~ y rn cusc Ohro
r '

J

11

1 1 )I(

NOTICE ON FILING

OF INVENTORY

AND APPRAISEMENT
Ttle State of Ohta , Mergs
County, Court of Common
Pleas, Probate Dt'tiiSron
To the Exec utor ot the
estate to such of the toltowrng
as are res rd en ts of the State or
Ohro, v rz
the surv1v1 ng
spouse. the ne)(l of krn, the
benetrcrarres und e r t he wrtl,
and to the altorney or at
torney s repr ese nlmg any of
the afor e m entiOned p erso n s
Srdney
A
Spencer,
Deceased, Syracuse. Oh ro,
Sutton Townshtp , No / 1486
You are hereby notrfted that
the
Inventory
and .Ap
prarsemen t o f the es t ate of the
aforementron ed ,
deceased,
late of sard Co unty , was fried
rn thrs Court Sard Inventory
and App ra rs emen t wri t be tor
hearrng before lhrs Court on
the 18th day of J uly , 197S at
10 OOoc lock AM
Any person desrrrng to file
e')(ceptrons thereto must frle
them at l eas t f1ve days prror to
the date set for heMrng
Grven under my hand and
sea l of sard Court, thrs 2n d
day of J uly PHS
Mannrng D Webster
J udge
B y Ann 8 Watson
Depu ty (I Nk

( 7J 7 1-1 , 2tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Ca se No 21552
E s t a t e of ELLA F
AN DERSON D ecease d
N o tr ce rs t1erc by qrven that
Curtr s 1\ Anderson of Mrdway
Drrve Dunbar West Vrrgr nra
h as b ee n duly appornted
E)(ecu t or o f th e Estat e of Ella
F A n de r son d ece as ed late of
Rutland Towns hrp
Metgs
County Oh ro
Cr eddors arc requrrcd to
! lie thcr~· c larm s wrth sar d
frd ucr~ r y wrth 1n l ou r months
uated thrs qth day of July
19/5
Man n rn g D Webster
Judge
Cou rt of Common Pl eas
Proba te Drvr s ron
( I I II ? I 78 Jtc

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
NO HUNT IN G, t re spa ss rng or

l1 s hrn g wrthout
wr1tten
perrnr ssro n on Oav rd Davr s
proper t y
Hy se ll
Run
Vrolato r s wrll be pro sec uted
7 13 6tp

Pomeroy·
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

sE- IIrn q F u lle r
Bru sh
Produ c ts
phone 992 34 10
1 2&lt;~ lf c

WOULD tr ke to c orr espond
w rth anv o escen dant s of
I saac Dars t , born about 18 0 1
rn Vrrgrn ra Dr ed Sep t ?
187? rn Me tg s Covnty Oh ro
H rS wrf e was Mary Scott
Had
Jackson
m arr red
Belrnda
Lamberson
Samantha marr ied Davrd
Wrrght I saac. J r and Mary
I ~ y
g r e a t g r e a t
grandmother who marrred
Bent am 111 L ang) Wil l an
sw e r ALL tell er s
Wrrte
Kar en
~a c h
R R
7
C r aw f ordsvrlle
tn dra na
47933
l 11 6tp

1972 COMET2 DOOR

1970 NOVA V-8 C PE.
lop

YARD SAL E Tues.day and
W ed nesday mornrng, 448 S
S econd,
Mrdd le port
Sponsored by E rg ht and
For t y , Salon 710
7 13 21 c

POMEROY, OHIO

1

BE A

•

for Rent
TRAI L ER space , l1 mile
north of Me rgs Hrgh Sc hoo l
on o ld Rt JJ Pho ne 992 1941
7 14 li e
J BEDRM 65x12 mobr le hom e
f or re nt
u tdrt res pa1d ,
lo c at ed rn Bur t rnq ha m Call
992 775 1
7 1 If c

1 URN ap t 5 ro oms and bath
n rce larg e ya rd , bath and 1
190
So uth
&lt;",ec ond
st
M rddlcport
adults o nly
Phone 992 5267 eve nrng s
'i 21 1tc

19 }) DU STER brown m e tal
fl ake wrth whrte strrpe A 1r
co ndrl 10n e d
p s , p b ,
.;~utoma t tc
tra ns m:-1118SIOn ,
25,00 0 mrles , 340 mopar
enqrne am tm rad ro good
c ondr t ron Ca ll 997 77 68 after
5 p m
7 8 6t c

REG
old

femal e Beagles 9 weeks
S40 Phone 99 2 3717
7 11 Jtc

H OUSE and ro of parntmg and
r epa1rs For fr ee es trmat es,
ca ll 992 6190 or 992 5837
6 15 26 t c

3 ~EDROOM house wrth 5
acres of land on Welch town
Hrll Phone 99{ 708 4
7 II 3tc

----- -

72 A CRE S land and locust
po sts Als o 1965 Ford L TO
Phone 742 3656
5 23 52tp

608 E.
MAIN
- pOMEDn.v, 0
TUPPERS PLAINS- Rt. 7
- 1 story frame . 2 BR,

Wanted To Buy
O LD furnr ture , rce boxes ,
brass b eds, or comp lete
households
Wrrte M
D _
Mille("
Rt
J Pomeroy ,
Ohro Ca ll 992 7760
10 7 7 4
PORTABLE cement
Phone 992 7190

'' RM apt
carpe t
Pomeroy

wrth wall to wall
10 ~
Sprr ng Ave
Ca ll 992 5908
6 22 H e

2

BE DR M
double wrde,
furntshed
utdtl res pard ,
country to c atron yet near
Pomeroy No pets Phone
992 7666 or 991 7017
7 13 Jtc
____ __
TWO
-- - --- --bedrm
trader
refe rence
and
depos 1t
requrred
Phone 992 3429
7 13 6tp
- - - - - ---------COUNTRY
Mobrle
Home
Park R I :13 ten m rles north
ot Pom eroy Large lot s wrth
c oncrete pa tro s Sidewa l ks
runn e rs and otf s tr eet
park1nq Phone 992 7479

for Sale

Ex ·

Wanted

floor 2 nice BR $15,500

Whe~ler.

In 1971, a half million
workers went on strike
against the Bell Telephone
Company.
A thought for the day:
American statesman Adlai
Stevenson said, " A w1se man
does not try to hurry
history."

CHIPWOOD ~
Poles, maximum dia. 10" on
largest end ...... •7 .00 per ton
Bundled Slabs .. !6.00 per ton

CELLENT
$8,900.

modern

DELIVERED TO:

THE
SAFEST
VESTMENT THAT YOU
CAN MAKE IS IN A HOME
SEE OR CALL 1US
TODAY.

OHIO

P~LLET

Rt. 2 Pomeroy

CO.
Ph. 992-2689

5728

7 13 6tc
rtNO BEDROOM house tor
sale Phone 985 4102
6 10 26tc

5 RMS

and bath nrc:e lot
large outburldrng, front and
back porches , front shaded,
needs reparr located in
Cltfton , W va Call 992 -53 25
_____ _ ______ 7_9 7tc

.

CB

condrtron

750,
Phone

full

3965

AM

THINGS 'TI LL ~EV 'D SUN
' EM- n.IEN USUA.U,.Y, IT
WA.S TOO

TWOSE

LA,TE ...-

TERQ181..E , MONSIROUS
81ROS l'r-tAT' O EAT PEOPL.E -

1-4M- M·- · I WONOER

~NSENSE/

I~

IVT EVEN IF

MR AM WAS HINTING we 'Aii:

IN F'OR A MESS 0' ~OU8LE ,
8lfT HE WOH'"T WARN
·' OAOOY " 'CAU~ HE FIGGER:~
IT' S NO USE-

Mli: SwOUl.D1

1 GUESS Wl't&gt;
1-4AVE

'lWE

MEDIC:tNE

~0~

1-41M"'

a forc e he should go on to three
nut1 ump Y ou m1ght as well 11 v
for so m et htn~ wurthwlu! e
rather th ~1n g() aftt•r a part
score

Jm1
There IS· little to the
plav of the hand Sou th takes
th e f1r s t heart lrtes the dw -

z•

Pass

3 1\ T

P.l SS

m o nd fin esse and
thr ee no trump

Sou th

,. r

succeeds
Oswal d

2N

·· u

wr ap s up
wh e n 1t

11 had fa il ed . he

would have been doY.n one. but
year tn a nd vear out vou "''" b\

P . ISS

h1dd1n~ ever-1 mon ey "games

J1m "In the language of b1ds
a ny b1d of one less than ga me 1s
a s tro ng mvttat10n to partner to
go on to ga m e In most ca ses 1f
yo u want t o play 1t as a force

What

1s

the correct opcmng

lmJ vu lnerab le Wllh
4 AKQJib5 Y ~2

.64
...53 .,
Th e co rr&lt;•e t opcn1ng b1d
e tthrr v uln (•r able or not
vuln erabl e ts one spad e There

yo u' won "t get 1010 trouble
Oswald
· In s tand ard 1s no good rea son t o pr eempt
1 Amencan South "s two no tr ump v. twn v o u hold tw o a ces and
reb 1d 1s JU St a strong m v 1talton
yn ur hilnd IS nul stron g enough
but not qu1t e a Ioree In .Jacoby lo r c1 lo H mg ope mng b1d Of
modern we go along w1th the ('UUrSe \ OU Will JUmp dt yo ur
~~;; best cu rrent prac t1ce and pia! . n&lt;'xl turn tl partner responds

Middleport

partner rcb1ds to three of h1 s

~.YH:d' ·

ALLEY OOP
"THI:N YOU'LL
TRY 10 RE-

COVER OLSON'.S
BURIED

LOOT?

let's qet
out of here,
Walt' There's

noth1ne1 more
we cando'

I"l l askthe
welfare people
to talk to
memones the old man'
this old
place ,

Then

was

then.

Walt'

Come

stirs

on'

up!

let's
qit'

- Swee pers toasters , rron'S
al~ small appltances Law~
mower, next to State Hrgh
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
4 16 ttc

IN THE
I LEFT NY 15
MINUTES AGO .AND DE:EP

TOOK A LEFI AT

USED TO
MY OWN

SOLJTH~

5rRENGTH~-

CHICAGO-

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

ctty water, and compact lot

CAt.!PET rnstallatron , $1 25
per yar:d
Call
R1chard
West. phone 8d3 2667
7 2 26tp

$6.000.00

OUT OF TOWN- 3 bedroom
mobile home, and large lot
L. C water. and rratural gas.
Want only $9,500 oo

--- - - - - -

EXCAVATING , dozer~iOader
and backhoe work, sept1c
tanks
rnstalled
dump
truc ks and to boys tor h1re •
will haul frl l d rrt. top sot!
l1 mestone and gravel Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers. day
phone 992 7089, night phone

LARGE-10 room older home
in town Suitable for apart
ments and enough space to

/

'

992 3525 or 992 5232

build. All utilities An excellenl buy at $9,000 00

2 11 ttc

- -y- -------- -

..

EDDIE, HOW WOULD
YOU LIKE TOG010

WILLf do odd lObs, paintJng
roo rng ,
baullng
and
mowmg Phone 992 -7409
__ _ ___ '!..___
7 6 12tc

TO

CENmAL CllY
WIIH ME?

ILL CALL
MOM AND
SEE IF 11'5
ALL I(IGHlf

.1 HAVE A COLLECT PHONE

6 S5-- News 13
7 OQ-Today 3. 4.15, A M Amenca 6.13

8 DO-Lasste 6 . C BS N ews Spec1al 6.,.10, Sesame Street

33
8 3G-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3. Phil Donahue 4. Phil Donahue 15. Muriel

Slevens 8. Schoolles 10. Morning Wllh D J 13
9 lG- Nol For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping

Gourmel 8. Popeye 10; New Zoo Revue 13.
9 5!;--Chuck While Reports 10

10 oo-Celebnly Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Spin Olf 8,10,
Dinah 1 1) , Lil tas, Yoga and You 33 .

10 3G-Wheel 01 Forlune 3.4.15; Gambit 8.10 The
Romagnolls' Table 33
11 OQ- Hrgh Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 6. Tal
llelales 8.10
11 lG-Hotlywood Sq uares 3.15 . Brady Bunch 13,
Midday 4. Love ol L1ve 8,10
II 5!;--Take Kerr 8. Dan I mel ' s World 10
12 oo-Magnillcenl Marble Machine 3. 15, Showolfs
13, Bob Braun ' s 50 50 Club 4 ; News 6,8, 10-r Mister

Rogers 33
12 3G- Jackpol! 3, IS, All My Children 6,13, Searc h For
Tomorrow 8. 10 , E lectrlc Company 33 .
12 5!;--NBC News 3,15
1 OQ- News 3, Ryan 's Hope 6,13 , Phil Donahue 8,
Vou ng a nd lhe Res lless IO .. Nol For Women Only
IS ; V1lla Alegre 33
lQ-Days Of Our L1ves 3,4.15; Let's Make A Deal
6,13, As The World Turns 8, 10. Eplsoce Acllon 33
2 OQ-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Guiding Light 8,10;
Minneso ta Orchestra at Orchestra Hall 33

2 3o-Doctors 3,4, 15 , Rhyme and Reason 6 13 , Edge of
Night 8,10
3 oo-Anolher World 3,4,15 , General Hospital 6.13,
Pnce Is Right 8,10. Lilias. Yoga and You 20
3 3G-One Ltfe to Live 13: Lucy Show 6, Match Game

8,10, The Romagnotls' Table 20 .. Folk Guitar 33
4 QO-Mr. Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset

15. G1lllgan"s Island 6 , Musi ca l Chairs B. Sesame
St reet20,3l ; Movie '" N1ghl Wilhoul Sleep"" 10; Mike
Douglas 13
4 1o-Bew1tched 3, Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
M1ckey Mou se Club 8, Bonanza 15.
5 oo-FBI 3. Lucy Show 8; M1ster Rogers' Neigh.
borhood 20,33, Iron side 13
5 3o-News 6 , Andy Gnfflth a. Gel Smarl15. Electric
Company 20.33
6 OQ-News 3.4,8.10.13.15· ABC News 6, Sesa me Streel
20, Catch -33 33

6 24 26tp
---------GENERAL Repa tr, clean up

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Your percept1 on rs way ofl bdse to ddy I I would be wt se to
:l v01d ilniltyzrng ano th e r s
motr ve s You II only embar r ass
yo u rselt

ARIES {March 21-Aprtl19} Not
Ole mos t hilrmnnrous cl.1 ~ rn
ltlf' home
It an rtrq1tmen 1
d eve lop s be1t er I a back o ff
The orld s "' e i'lga rn st you

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) An ou t spoke n lnend wrll
unlllrnkrngly cause a rtll
betw een yOLJ and you r l oved
o ne o r sp irt you and another
pel I

TAURUS (Apnl 20·May 20)
Avo1d workmq wrth tools or
mec llllnrcnt devrces rl possrble
tod;oy YoutC'nd to be ca , eless
SPrrou s c: n nsr&gt;Qu c nccs cou ld
rf! S! I 11

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
Refr.') tn rrom mak1ng any
aqreemen l or co ntrn cl tod ay
You tl be d err trng 111 good fa rth
Othe1 s won 't

GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20)
Don I ,11!L•mpt ilnythrnq rrsky or
rl th e o utcome d epe nel s o n
c hrtnce Yo u q; 1rre sponsrb le
t o do~ v o~n d wrtl milke a wrong
cos tl y cho1ce

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19)
You II be long on word s but
'&gt;ho rt on deed s 1 o da~ You II
sp reo1cl yo ur se lf too \111n and
Bccomolr !=ih lr lli P.

CANCER (June 21 ·July 22)
Yotrll he 1 1~;Jrrnq the blrrdens
of o thers to day Ur, l o rtun~t ely
t hey wo n I apprccrc:tte whilt you
c1 o rn then hehrrl l

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Someone mrry try to talk you
m lo ;lfl en d rng a sacra l tunctton
11 you go you II spend a lot of
rno nP.v on a borrng trme

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
R ech;-~r qry

YOlH Of\tterres by
wrth (lfilwrnq to d quret place
i'l lone Yn u r e no l rn thro mood
fo r l ttn nnrt Q&lt;lmf'S

Be
w ;ory of ,1 f rrcnd wh o a p proncncs you l or ~ ~ l o&lt;~n It s
nossr h iP you co uld los.e thr
monry .1n d th e lrr cnd too

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23)

~Your

~Birthday
July 15, 1975

You h;w e ~ qood ch&lt;wce l o r
nchrevemen t tl1t s commg yea r
rf you d o n I tru st only to luck
H,l t d w o rk ilnd e ){t r n effort ar e
yo rrr 1vron ucs to success

~1]1~1]3)1~@

lki ~~M .....J 'f4'M

I n ~cramhle th(' "'(' fourJumbles.
one lettH to ('ach square, lo
form f o ur urdtnar) "'ords .

"' "

.-

[)I

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEIs

Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter stmply stands for another In lhts sample A ts
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc S10gle le tters
apostrophes, the length and formatiOn of the \\Ords are all
hints Each day the code letters are dttTerent

DSNV

and
haul rng ,
cutting.
welding,
carpentry
Plumbrng, elec masonrY
and general remodeling
Call Skil Pool
Phone 992
-~ 26 _
6 17 ttc

Ttuouqh n o l ~u tt of yours you
LOttld to-. &lt;• t,1ce amo n g
il&lt;; &lt;:; OCi d !P c; rn drr il r ea whtch
m~.u1 ~ i'l tnt to yo u
II s tust
lousy lu ck

for Tuesday, July 15, 1975

15 B1g bus1·
35 Man's name
ness deal
37 Region
17 Greg or
39 Tasca's
Howard
·· V1ss1
18 Of a Great
d ' -··
Lake
40 Anamas
20 F encmg
41 Before tee
fo1l
42 Journal.
21 Mechamcal
for short
r ou tme
13 Last
22 Encourage
Spamsh
23 Identical
queen
24 Like so me 45 Black
cuckoo
necklines
1':"""""'1'~;,;,;,.......,

CBS News

8.10

-Bernice Bede 0101

CRYPTOQUOTES

- - -- -

--------- -----,.,..,..,..---,.

6 4s- Morn l ng Report 3 F armtrme 10

Grap~

mormn?
34 Japanese
receptacle
36 Laughmg 38 Chest sound
42 Israeli
stateswoman
44 Barbara or
Juhe
46 Quebec's
patron samt .__.._ _,__.__

CALL FOR WINNIE
WINK LE FI(O M WENDY
WRIGHT Will YOU
ACCEPT CHARGES?

WILL TRIM or-;ut-;-rees ~nd
shrubbery and paint roofs
Phone 9.t9 3221 or 742 4441

HOUSE tn Portland, s rms
and bath, good well , 2 acres
of ground
Take
over
payments. Phone B.t3 229 2
7 -9 12tc:

6 .3!;--Columbus Today 4

Astro-

TSK ~!- I /'A NOT

MUST BE

WOULD YOU BELIEVE,
Burld an all steel buildrng at
Po l e Barn prtees' Golden
Grant All Steel Burldrngs,
Rt
d Box 148, Waverly
Oh ro Phone 947 2296
'
6 24 26tc

SMALL
HOUSE
2
bedrooms, balh, natural gas,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
47 Quarter1 Desist
back of
6 Old-style
renown
pulpit
48 FooliSh
10 Joined
49 Clemen·
tine ·s
forces
11 BeasUy
father, e.g.
place
DOWN
12 Songstress. I " - Nome ··
Amta 2 Ares'
13 S1gnorma ·s
mol11er
name
3 Don or Edie
14 Threaten
4 Legislator
15 Homo
I abbr.)
sap1ens
5 Time zone
16 Pirate m
I abbr. )
·'Peter
6 Seaweed
Pan"
19 Celtic de1ty 7 Continent
8 Storage
22 Snake
25 Hockey star 9 box
- pro
26 Gl mailnob1s
mg center 10 Barrel
1abbr.)
!abbr.)
27 Formal
dance
(Fr.)
28 Outfit
29 F1nal
30 Australian
b1rd

6 3G-Ftve Mmutes to Ltve By 4, News 6 . Bible An
swers 8, Concerns &amp; Commen t s 10 , Rev Cleopt''IUs
Robinson 13

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl . 22)

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

APPROX 6 ft x 7 ft new
plush
carpet
remnant,
neutral color , $15 ' Phone
992 3496 after 5 30
7 9-tfc
MODERN Walnut Console
stereo radro c:omb rnation .4
speed changer
Balance
Sl01 dO or terms . Call 992

Oswald
l·:ven 1f North does
no t play th e two no trump bid as

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

E LWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

for Sale

GBW

OGJ
WLOP

MSHVC

GA

BGVU
GA

AG I

OGJI

MSN
OGJMS,

LBUNZIL

-

U GGW

F J PM

LJMSGJ

10
·X]

NOI FOR HOME

I

CON5U.t\PTION.

LDNPEI.

Now ~rrange the circled letters ,
to form the su rprise answer, aa

~=~:::':==:::::::======='--':suggested

L-.:.:.:
Prirt:::..:~=.-SUR
::-:.:::
PIIISI:::..:A::::
NSW~ER~here:.':___l

(

by abo\·e
the

JVCVGDV

HE JEST TOOK TH' 'iOUNG-UNS
OFF FISHIN' FER THREE
r---.;:,.

' Jumhlt•..

Yealerday's Cryptoquote: AFTER ENOUGH TIME HAS
PASSED, ALL MEMORIES ARE BEAUTIFUL.-AUGUST
STRINDBERG

"'11lurd,u

ICING

SKUNK

RATION POLICE

~

\(tdlrl uh111 flt1 1/JitfHIICfl I~ "fill r111
urf(lll/ - KING PINS "

BEE-'100-TEE·FUL DA'&lt;S

l!:tY 95

95
BTU
43 lb

I

models
on sale.

~,

iPO"MUOY LAffDM;jiR. i
' '

9~.:.J•c•w.cornr.Mtr.

......

~ ...... fft-1111

.

'

excellent

949 2220

7 11 6t c

lo

..

'
•,

\
. I

,.

cartoon.

J XI I XXJ .
(AII~w..-n

-----------

PORT'A-COOL TM
ROOM-to-ROOM

48 IN PONY , S40 , btlly goat,
$15 , Shetland pony, $20
Phone 247 2711
7 13 3tc

HONDA

includtng

s1tes, and eiOOw room No one
close,
JUSt
privacy
and
freedom 97 acres with all
minerals

Askm~

~R ODACTVLS ,

PLUMBING , heating , reparr
and rnstallatron, electrrcal,
water pump repa1r. roofing,
house and roof patnting,
general repatr , reasonable
rates. tree estimates, 15
vears
experrence
Call
Charles Srnctarr, 985 4121 or
992 2221
7 10 12tc

PINE COUNTRY Good
hunt1ng, plenty of building

HOUSE for sale located nea ;
Chest~:r , 1'2 acre. all electric,
3 bedroom, 2 baths. drsh
washer .
carpet.
full
basement, 2 car garage all
brrck Week days , call 985
4262, weekends , (30•0 773

~UNMY STO RY

OR

ORPHAN

HE SA.lC NOBOD\' '0
BEU'EVE ~ER:E WERE SuCI-4

-n-.AT SURE

WAS TELUN' 'BOUT ""tl-1 '
ONE· ARMED HLLA ANO -rn'

DOZER work , land clear rng
by the acre
hourly or
co ntrac t
F arm
ponds ,
roads , elc La rge dozer and
operator wrth over 20 years
ex per rence
Pullrns Ex
cavat mg , P ome roy , Ohto
Phone 992 2J78
12191fc

basement, and double garage.
E xcellent location .

3 BEDRM home rn Chester
Phone 985 3582
- _ __________7_ 8_!_tp

7 12lllp

BEANS p1ck your own $2.50
per bushel Phone 8d -2353
after 7 p m
7 11 3tc

kttchen

LITTLE

S EWING
MACHINE
Repe1rs se rvr ce all makes
992 2284 The Fabrrc Shop
Pomeroy Author~ red Srnger
Sales and Serv 1ce
we
sharpen Sc1sso rs
3 29 He

--- - - - - -

stove. breakfast nook,

F.a !&lt;il

t o two

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

7 11 90tc

REAL N
bedrooms w1th closets, bath,

CONDITION

Norlh

JbOU I

notrurnp '

• K2
• J 4 .,

6092

Real Estate For Sale

utlltty R garage. private
or ctty water, IN EX -

\H' &lt; .111 d 1o p htlll

e lect s to r(&gt; b td

Opt•nmg \cad - Q ¥

EXCAVATING,
backhoe ,
dozer and ditcher
Gas,
electrtc and water line
bur1al , basements, footers.
septrc syste ms and brush
cleanmg W rll haul fill drrt.
top soli, sand and gravel.
ltmestone for dnveway s and
roads
Phone Charles R
Hatfield , Backl)oe Service,
Rt 1 Rutland , Oh10, 742

POMEROY- l'h acres, 2
BR , bath, large k1tchen,

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

7 11 lie

OR ,.,_ HIVE'?

5 30 1 mo

nght party. $20,000.

V 8

HORSE saddle and nrc:e
brrdle Phone 7.t2 -3842

~---

the

It a s a f orce to game. except !I

327 N 2nd

1 level

acre. 3 BR large closets,
bath, ntce k1tchen and
dmmg. utiltty R garage,
your choice of colors In
carpetmg Full financtng to

7 13 -ltc

1959 DODGE prckup ,
Phone 992 3907

~ ~T

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2550

4 9 If (

Wanted

WANTED I

WHERE IJJ6RE IPJ ~,IN

'IEAA, M'l F,qHER IDl-D M8
PoU. ,A.BOVT 'EM .

Con;truction
and Plumbing

SE PTIC fA N KS CLEANED
Reasonable RATES Phone
146 J78 2 Gall rpotr s
J ohn
Russe l l owner

kitchen cab. range. ref. 2nd

NEW HOME -

---

Caught rn

o ne r e:; punse h.1 s prom1sed at
lcds t tt•n pomts Sou th pr o per )\.

•QJI0 73
• 864
t 872
tK 5
.A 95 "!
• K 10 7
SOUTlt il) 1
•AK 654

Pass
Pa ss
Pa ss

WA~ A

1 3o-Tomorrow 3, 4

6 2!;--Farm Re porl 13

J,A. 15 .

So uth s Oflt'nlng bi d Is
cl
J.l (' k J bOV (' d
m1mm urn bu t Nor t h s two over
lU St

Pomern'l

GEE I

" Lisa" 10
12 3G-Movle 6
I 06--News 13
TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1975

then•
Jun

No r th -South vulnerable

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING

NEED A new hom e burtt on
your toP Contact M~o B
Hutchrson
Rutland , 0hto
Phone 742 3615
5 B If c

-

14

AQJ4

Roofing
Siding
Complete
Home
Maintenance.

Emergency
949-2211 or 992-5700
Complete a1r condition1ng
sales and servrce, heating ,
Plumb1ng , roof rng and
gene ral sheet metal work
Free Esftmates
7 II 1 mo

~--

1st floor has I BR. bath,
dining R. uhllty R. nice

REDUCE sate and tast wtth
GoBese tablets and E Vap
" water p tl ls , ' Ne l son Drug
7 14 lip

Mr.

'()UR Fct.I&lt;S ltU.. 'PJ .A-60UT
111&amp; BIRDS r.ND Bt6'S 'lf'T z

WE DO&gt;

Your He1/ Deater
Th1rd Sf
Racrne, Ohio
Ph 949 -5961

D &amp; D TREE Tr rmm rng , 20
years e){ pertence In sured ,
fre e es trm ates Call 992 3057
Coolville
Phone ( 1J 667,
3041
4 30 tfc

$10,500
MIDDLEPORT

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

d e l 1vered rrgh t to you r
prote c t F a9'1 and easy Free
est rma tes Phone 992 3284
Goeglern Ready Mrx Co'
M rddteport, Ohro
'
6 30 If (

eel lent condtfton and very
comfortable 2 story frame,

--- ----- - -

NORTll

-

Does
your
home
require any of these
services?

READY MIX CONCf&lt;ETE

bath , basement, new steel
stding, own water and ctty
water. 2112 acres m lawn.
some
building
sites.

mrxer

a

Ph n:z -1174

Death "

rntnor s u tl

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

ROOFING ,
Spoutrng,
alummum and vrnyl s rdrng ,
complete
remo &lt;Jel rn Q
Phone 742 6273 or (3 0-4 ) 773
5684 F ree estrmates
6 25 26tp

BEDRM
mobrle home
17x60 Phon e 992 5858
7 11 3tc

~

spending a vacation With her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Alex

mo

Nathan Btggs
R ildtator Spec•altst

Shop Us l:.ast &amp; Save

\ EP TI C TANK S c l ea ned
Mo d er n Sa nrtalton 992 3q5&lt;1
or 99'} 73 J9
9 18 tf c

1913 - 12 x 70 Hillcrest Mobrle
Hom e , 3 bedroom, total
etectr rc , red shag ca rpet
throughout ,
underprnnrng
and 2 sets of steps rncluded
Phone 2-17 3941
7 9 6tc

R oberl L Cole, eta 1
In
pur s uance
to
an
Executron ISS ued from the
Marrne Sates
Common Pleas Court of Me1gs
1965
SEA RAY
Inboard
County Pomeroy , Oh10 , rn the
outboard 19ft long , 120h p
case of The Farmers ~Bank &amp;
Mercrutser , new Chevy 11, 4
Savrngs Co,
Plarnt 1tt , vs
cyl, engme, new lower unit ,
Robert
L
Cole ,
eta I ,
new rnterror, deep vee hole ,
Defendant
betng Case No
$7,500 Excellent skt boat
15 5541 11 sard Court , 1 Wil l offer
See at Jo hn Gtbson Motor
at publr c auclron at the front
Crty, Athens, 593 7758 or 742
door ot the Court House at
3694,
weekends
and
Pomeroy m sard County on the
eve n rngs
26th day of July, 1975, at 10 00
7 13 2tc
O'Clock AM , the fOllOWing
descr rbed real estate , to wrt
197 2 TR!SONIC
18B h p
Berng tn Sectron No
11
1 'J 3 1 ttc
Hercruiser . 18ft long , Ford
T own 4 , Range 12 of the Ohro
302 V8 engrne. cat hera I haul.
Compa ny's Purchase . and
l
rght brand new $4,500 See
commencrng 111 !he center of TRAILER space for rent rn
at John Gtbson Motor Crty,
t he road teadrng from Tuppers
Mrddleport Phon e ~92 5434
Athe ns 593 7758 or 742 3694,
7 8 6fp
P l arns to Alfred Post Off rce at
weekends
and evenings
the southeast corner of the 74 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7 13 2tc
acre tract ot land owned by MOBILE Home for ren t rn
the Grantor RobertL Coleas
Racrne
Phone 949 2261 ,
YOUNG rabbrt s for sale
desert bed in Deed Recorded m
Albert H11!
Reedsvtll e Phone 378 6261 ,
Vol 163 , page 658 of the Deed
7 10 6f c
JUDGE Re cords of Mergs County , - - - --~ - - - - - - - - - - 7 B 71 c
By Ann B Watson
Ohro, thence west along the WATER t ank , Sl 00 a day
Deputy Clerk
south lrne of the said 74 acre
Phone 992 5704
17) 14 21 2tc
trac t of land 220 t ee t to a point
7 10 6tp HAY for sale detrvere d or
picked up rn lteld Phone
thereon , whrch p01nt rs also rn ---- - - - - - - - - - - - 742 37 d3
the center lrne of satd road
3 BEDROOM mob1le home
• 1 8 61c
located on 1-13,2 m11es from
and family will move to the then ce north 450 feet , thence
- - ---eas t 220 feet to the east trne of
Pomeroy Phone 992 5858
197 1 350 CL Honda ~Ph~n-;-;92
house vacated by the sa1d 7.t acre tract of l and
7 2 tfc
3529
then
ce
south
JSO
feet
to
the
-------~
Michaels owned by Tri.State
7 61p
place of beginnrng , conta lnmg 'l=URNISHED
apartment
Mater1als.
2 2B acres. , more or less
adults only in Mtddleporf
TOMATOES.
cucumbers
Phone 992 3874
Mr. andMrs. Chester Durst • Togeth e r w rth the rrght of way
Cleland Farms, Geraldm~
eserved by Robert Cole rn
3 25 tfc
of Niles, 0., Mr. and Mrs. rDeed
Cleland
Bo o k 252 , Page 48 5
- - - - - - - -- Reference Deed
Volume
---Herbert Roush,
and Mrs.
7 6 tfc
163 , paQe 658 of the Merqs TRAILER space , all ut t1 1tr es
Dorsa Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. County Deed Record s and Vol
cheap Phone 992 5535
Canadran
6 29 lfc ' F I SHING l rcense
Everette Parsons, Mr. and 252, Page A81 , and Vol 252
N rte c raw lers, 60c doz Dug
ge 48 3, Deed Records Metgs
worms, 3 doz $1 Other bail ,
Mrs. Russell Roush, Mrs. Pa
County. Oh ro
J AN D J ROOM furnished and
tackle , quns , ammo. cb's,
Richard McCoy, Kay Parsons
The appra1sed value of the
unfurnrshed
apartments
lndran Joe's Sports
308
estate rs $3600 00
Phone 992 54 3-l
Page St , Phon e 992 3509
called at the Wilcoxen real
Terms of sale Cash m hand
J 12 tfc
7 1 26tc
Funeral Home Saturday upon del111ery of deed
Robert
C
Hartenbach
,
PRIVATE meetrng room lor
evening to pay reapect to
LARGE gnll with rotrsser1e,
Sherrff
any orqanrzatron phone 992
new large gurtar , 7 h p 26"
lhe1r uncle, Vallie Bauer, at
Me1gs Co unty , Pomeroy, Ohro
3975
cut Huffy riding mower ,
3 11 He
Pt ..Pleasant, W.Va. Mr. and (6l 23 JO , rn 7, 14, 21 5tc
good condrt1on Phone 992
3442
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr. and
T lik e n ew, 3 rooms . wrth
In 1966, eight nurses were APlarge
7 10 Stc
bath
,
tabl
et
op
range,
Mrs. Chester Durst attended
lar ge closet East Ma rn &lt;; +
found murdered in Chicago.
funeral services for Mr .
Pomeroy See to ar&gt;::, cc tate
27 FT private owned travel
Drifter Richard ·speck was
Phone Galhpo/1!; durrnq dav ,
Bauer at the Baden Church.
trailer , fully self contained,
4
7
J6 6q9 eventnQS .td6 9539
later convicted of the
tandem wheels, fully car
Baden, W Va. Sunday at 2
" IU ftc
peted,
arr
condit i oned ,
slayings and sentenced to
P m. with interment in the
awn tng See any time at
death. The U.S. Supreme
Young's
Mobtle
Home
church cemetery Mr Bauer
Court , Rt 7 Gallrpolrs, OhtO
Court subsequently ruled out
was 91 years old
7 13 7tp
the death sentence and Speck t:ASH paid for all makes ana '
M:r. and Mrs. Roger Roush
models of mobile homes
1971 TRUCK camper, over cab
remains in prison.
Phone area code 614 423
sleeper. ftts any 6 ft bed
and Cindy Roush visited
9531
truck
Was carried on a
Camden Park at Huntington ,
4 13 tfc
Datsun prckup
Excellent
condrt1on Can be seen at
W.Va. Sunday.
Kingsbury Home Sales or
Mrs ., Georgia Wheeler
call
992 7034
Monday
through Saturday
Wolfe of Washington, D.
is

c.

~lEEP~

We-st

Mobile Homes For Sale

3

BEAUT Y

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radtalor to the
smallest Hearfer Core

Stnners 33

II :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15, ABC News 33.
II 3o-ABC News Special 3 . ~ . 15 ; Movie "Gel Christie
Love' '" 13 , FBI 6 ; CBS News Special 8 10 · Janak!
33
' •
12 DO-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 , Movie "' Lizzie" B; Movie

6 oo-Sunnse Semmar 4 , Summer Semes ter 10

WIN AT BRIDGe
One short of game invites it

BORN LOSER

Open 9-S Wed lhrough Sun
Ph 667-3858
7-7-1 mo

Real Estate for Sale

Pets For Sale

HU T~

• 93
• A9 5
t A Q 10 9 6
"' R6 Z
WEST
EAST
• J7
• Q 10 8 2

"AI Cauhon Light"
Rt 7, Tuppers Plains, 0 .

7 10 5tc

NOTICE OF SALE

vs.

4 10 -I

BARGAIN CENTER

Evemngs 742 4902
7-7-l mo

----- - - -

-

The Farmers Bank
&amp; Savmgs Co. Pla1ntttf

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

On
Lincoln Hi II
Pomeroy and
in Syracuse
Phone 992-2156
TODAY

AS5E'MBLIN&amp;

THAT PI&lt;:EFAB

Ohto

Ph. 992-3,93

KUHL'S

Ph. '92·7608

19 72 TOYOTA wagon, 30
m p g Phone 997 2082
7 10 6tp

AT TH15 R:ATE',
~E ....Y GUE?T.
THE NIG&gt;H LL I!.E Ml% FRU&amp;Y-- FEEL
OVE;R ~EF"ORE FReE TO FI..OP DOWN
YOU"IZE; DONE .
ANYWHERE THE
AND I"D LIKE'
';AND LOOK!&gt;
TO GE-T 501;\E
INVITtNel

LARRY LAVENDER·
Syracuse.

Hall 20.33
9·Q.O-S.W AT 6,13, Maude 8,10
9 3G-Movle " A Malter ol Wife and
Rhoda 8.10. Jeanne Wolf W1lh 20 ;
acl 33

Guaranteed
appliances.
used furmture at

Vtnyl sidtng, alumtnum
s1ding, patto covers, storm
w1ndows,
kttchens,
bathrooms and garages .
We Carry
Liabthty Insurance

1967 DODGE POidra wrlh new
se t of 1rres Ca ll Pilu l Baker
Syra c u se 99 '1 2395
7 13 Jt c

"SENTINEL
CARRIER"

Employment Wanted

-

t 97l P I NTO 4 sp ee d 2,000 cu
rn low mr! eage Phone 992
77 80 or 992 5271
7 lJ 3tp

Help Wanted

..

.

CAPTAIN EASY •
WILL YOU
Kli-JDLY HURR Y
UP A'ID FIN I:OH

10 oo-Carlbe 6. 13. Medical Center 8,10; News 20;

Gun smoke 8, 10, Mtnnesota Orchestra at Orchestra

CASH 'N CARRY
SAVES U S"s on

JOHNSON
REMODELING

- ----

---------

..1

®

I POMo~~9YvE~~!9.~. CO.

17, 18 and 19 on 681 Turn at
Alfre d on Tucke r Road , 1 4 ROOM unfurn1shed house
1650 Lrn c oln Hgts, phon e
mrle Ele c trrc gu rtar ~ case
99 2 387 4
and ampl rfrer, gas heatrng
7 6 tr c
s tove . lots of diShes and - - -- mrsc boa t dol l res , 6 x 170 x
15 tr r e a large amount o f all 2 BEDROOM trail e r $27 per
week utrl rtres pard Phon e
k rnds of c lothrng , antrques
q9') 332 -1
7 14 3tp
7 6 t fc

CARPENTRY
WORK
Cerlrng panelrng , floorrng
e tc Phone 992 2759
6 24 27tc

.

Phone 992-5682 ' 1
or 992-7121
7-8-1 mo .

6-18-1 mo.

5 FAM ILY garage sa te July

REMODf::LING
Plumbrng
healing and all type s of
general
reparr
Work
guaranteed
20 years ex
perrence
Phon e 992 2409
S I tf r

ALL
MECHANICAL
WORK

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown tnto Walls &amp; A Hies'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING.SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

'

YARD Sa l e at
the Davrd
Ha ggy resrden c e Happy
H o ll ow Road Rut l and Lot
of
drs h es
old
wooden
st rarg ht charrs
St ar t on
Sun d ay la st s all week
7 13 Jtp

7 I 3 1tc

On St. Rt . 124
Off Rl . 7 By-Pass

Phone
992-3313

S1295

Vtnyl roof. grey ftnl sh , h tgh mileage, good tt res,
au to mati c. power steermg, radto. s1 lver flntsh Black

RUMMAGE SA L E at th e
La n gsvd l e Fe llow shrp Rm
Monday
through
Wed
ne sday 10 am trl t 4 p m
7 13 Jtc

elc

S2495

FREE ESTIMATES

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
2 M1les West

Washer &amp; Dryer
and
Small Appliance
Repair

Local 1 owner &amp; l ess than 30,000 mtles Betge f1n1sh,
automattc power s teermg, rad ro, factory atr

YARD S/I.LE ? w ee k s, Ju ly 12
thr u 76 th A ntrques , alladl!l
l amp , o ld c lo c k s depress ton
gla ss. mrsc 4 m rl es south o f
A th ens on Rt 33
7 10 ) 41 c

3 FAMILY Yard Sale , July 14
and
15
(Mo nday
and
Tuesday l 10 to Jon Georges
Creek
Rd
For
exact
ljocat 10n call 446 4078 or 992
18 7 Lots of chrldren's and
good c lothrh g o t " aft srzes,
rncludrng
summer
an d
wrnter w e ar , shoe s
e tc
Also , adult clothrng
c ur
tarn s, b edspreads , drshes

-~~-

SIB50

1972 BUICK SKYLARK CPE

J

\ Business Services

6 cyl std trans. radro , l tke new w w t 1res. blue ftnrsh ,
nrc e car wtth good economy

Yard Sale

-

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY AND
APPROAISEMENT
The Stille of Oh1o, Me1gs
County, Court of Common
Plea s, Probate DIVISIOn
To tn e E xecu t or of 1 the
es tat e, to suc h of th e follow rng
as are re sr d enls o f th e St ate of
Ohro vrz
ttle su rvrv rng
spo u se , t h e ne ){t of k rn , t he
benei i Ci ar• ES under the wrll
and to the a tt or ney or at
to rncy s rep r esc ntrng any of
th e aforemen t rone d p ers ons
Elfr e S Kenn e dy Deceased,
L ong Bottom, Ohro. Chester
Township , No 21506
You ar e hereby noltfted that
the
Inv e ntory
vnd
Ap
pra,sement of the es tate of t he
atorement1oned
de ceased,
late of sa1d Co unty was fried
rn thr s Court Sa1d Inve ntory
and Apprarsement wrll be for
h earrng before th rs Court on
the 25th day o f July 1975, at
10 00 o c l ock AM
Any p ers on des1rrng t o f1le
ex ce ptrons t here to must frle
them at l eas t f rve days prror to
the dat e set for hear1ng
Gtven un der my hand and
seal ot sard Court t h1s 11th
day ot July 1975
Mannrng D Webster

2 SIGNS

N OW

,

7 oo- Truth or Consequences l . ~ ; Bowling For Dollars
6. What's My Line? 8. News 10, New Candid
Camera 13. Watl(s Workshop 15, Mak1ng 11 Counl
20 ; One of a Kind 33
·
7 lG- That Good Ole Nashville Music l. Masquerade
Party 4; Police Surgeon 4, S25.000 Pyram1d 8.
Evenmg Edition with Marlm Agronsky 20.
Municipal CourllO. To Tell The Trulh 13. Unlamed
Worldl 5, Episode Action 33.
a OQ-Movle " The Rangers" 3,4, 15. Rookies 6, 13,

( .-,

Auto Sales

Notice

(. s

MONDAY. JUlY 14, 1'75

'

tomurrowl

�,.

'

'

7

'

The Dail Se t

'.

•

' .,

' Y n mel , Mlddlepori.-Pomemy,..O. Monday July 14 1975
~fCK TRACY
'
'
'

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-L'omeroy, 0. ; Monday, July 14, 1975
NOTICE

NOTICE OF

PUBLIC HEARING

APPLICATIONS

ON .LFBANON
Publt c Not tee •5 hereby
TOWNSHIP BUDGET
g•ven
that
R1 c h a rd
E
FOR 1976
We av er ha s f1tcd wllh The
NOI ICC IS hereby g 1ven th ai
PubliC Uliiiii CS CommiSSiOn
on the 18th d ay of Ju l y , 975 a t •_ o f Oh10 an applrcat•on for
7 00 p M
a publt c hear.nq Certtf!cale of Pub lt c Co n
wil l b e held on the budge t
ventence a n d N ecess dy t o

prepared by the Le ban o n
Townsh1 p Tru s t ees o f Mergs

tran spo rt
pe r sons
reqular r oute o r

O h ro
tor lht' n ext
s uc ceed •ng t 1sca l yee~r c nd•n g
Decem b e r Jl 191 6
Suc h h ea r• ng wtll b e h e ld ill

ltx £&gt;d tc r rn •n• as fo llows Rt
No DR from Let art to Ra cme
and all .nt errned •a t e pomts

County

the
Lebano 11
C arag e P o rtland
1

rn 1 '

Townsh 1 p
Ohro R 0

Lebanon Townshr p
T r us r ees
Clarence L,lwr ence
Clerk

Jt c

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sea l ed proposa l s wrl l be
r cce rvcd by nH? Board of
E du ca tron o f th e MerQS Local
Sc hool D rs!r t c t tn th e olftce of
the Cl erk rn th e Merqs Jun to r
H tgh Bu ll d rng rn Mr d dleport
Oh rO tor rnsu r ance coverage
for sc hool buses trucks and
othe r mo tor veh rctes until
l 30 PM on Augus t 17, 1975
Easter n Davlrghl
St andard
T rm e , at whrch lrme b 1d s will
be opened
A lr s t o f th e buses tru c k s
and ott1 cr mo t o r vchrcles to be
1nsurcd Wolh the sp ecrtrcatro ns
to r sum e may be o brarned by
ca llrn r, th e Cle rk s O ffr ce
TPIE'ph:Jnf' numbe r 99? 56 50
Mergs Loc a l
Sc hool Dr Str rct
Boa rd of Edu c&lt;~ l r o n
L W McComas
Cler k
U l 11

7 1 ?fl (B l &lt;l

lie

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sea l ed btd!:o wrll be r ecerved
by the Mergs Loca l Sc hool
Drst r1 c t Board o t Educa tr on at
the rr otfrce rn the Mergs J un ror
H rgh Sc hool B urldrng , Mrd
dleport Ohro for school bus
lrre s unltl 7 30 PM
Eastern
Day lrgh t Savrngs T1m e on
A ugu s t 12 19 75, at whr c h lrm e
brds wrll be opened The trre
brd p rr ces ar e t o rnc l ud e
dem ountrng of the old trr e and
mou nt rng ot th e new or
recapped on the rrm and
p lacrng th e mounted t rre an d
n m on the bus
Fo r specr lr ca t ro n s please
c al l 99 7 5650
M ergs Local
Sc hoo l D rstrrc t

7)

L W McComas
Cler k
14 2 1, 28 (8) J JI C

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs . Chester Durst
of Niles, 0 , Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Roush , Chuck MIChael
wer~ dinner guests Saturday
of 'Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush.
Mrs Ruth G1llm~ , Laughman, Fla., Lou1se G11lian
McClure of Cleveland, Tenn.,
Haze l Emory of Laughman,
F1a ., Mrs. Bonnie Snighon,
Mrs. Nora Staats of Letart,
W. Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Everette
Parsons
and
daughters, Mr . and Mrs.
Richard McCoy of Negley,
Ohio, Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Parsons of Delaware, 0.
visited Mrs. Ruth Parsons
and Preston, Mrs. Edna
Parsons and Mark.
Miss Lorna
Bell of
Colwnbus, Bruce Hart of
Colwnbus spent the Fourth of
July weekend with their
parents, Mr·. and Mrs. Don
Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hart at Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery
Donohew and two children,
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory
Donohew and baby of
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Ours of New Brighton,
Pa. spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Donohew
and attended the Ours
reunion at the Letart Falls
Community Hall Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Brrd and
son of Norfofk, Va. are
spending three weeks with
l"'r· and Mrs. Harold Bird,
.l.ntiquity, Mr. and Mrs .
Everette Roush at Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ours of
New Brighton, Pa. called on
Mrs. Herbert Roush Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Everette
Parsons and four daughters,
Mr. and Mrs . Richard McCoy
of Negley,
. 0 . spent a week's
vacatiOn at their farm on
iTariners Run. Visiting the
Parsons Tuesday evening
were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Parsons and sons, Mr. ·and
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Hupp, Roger
Parsons, Mrs. Ruth Parsons,
Pre~n Parsons, Mrs. Edna
Parsons, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Parsons of · Delaware
called in the Parsons home
SUnday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Spencer are the proud owners
of a new mobile home whieh-they placed on their ian"d
_purchased from Jim Riffle.
Mr. and Mrs. Riffle and
family moved to. the former
George Sayre ,residence. Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Michael
have PI!I"Chased a mobile
home and will move · in
lt, placed on the land
formerly
occupied
by
the Spencers, and Mr. and
Mn. James &lt;W:impy) Hunt

.

I

'

.

.

ove r
a
between

Rt No
12 4 to Dorcas
to
Rac rne ,
Pt&gt;Q1e r oy,
Mrd
dlc port to Rut l anCI ana rn
tcr m t•d ra t e pornts
N umber
and capacity o l vehrc le s to be
u sed one
!/
pi!Ssenger
Nurnber
ot
trrps
darty
Mo nda y Thur sday 6 t rrp s
FrrdclY Sa t urday 8 t rr p s
h llcrcstcd p,l rl re" rnay o btarn
further rn f or matron by a d
d r essrnq l h(' Publr c UttltrC'~
Comrn •SS ron
ot
O h ro
Co lunr bu s Ohro
R1 c hilrd E Weave r
Box 346
~ y rn cusc Ohro
r '

J

11

1 1 )I(

NOTICE ON FILING

OF INVENTORY

AND APPRAISEMENT
Ttle State of Ohta , Mergs
County, Court of Common
Pleas, Probate Dt'tiiSron
To the Exec utor ot the
estate to such of the toltowrng
as are res rd en ts of the State or
Ohro, v rz
the surv1v1 ng
spouse. the ne)(l of krn, the
benetrcrarres und e r t he wrtl,
and to the altorney or at
torney s repr ese nlmg any of
the afor e m entiOned p erso n s
Srdney
A
Spencer,
Deceased, Syracuse. Oh ro,
Sutton Townshtp , No / 1486
You are hereby notrfted that
the
Inventory
and .Ap
prarsemen t o f the es t ate of the
aforementron ed ,
deceased,
late of sard Co unty , was fried
rn thrs Court Sard Inventory
and App ra rs emen t wri t be tor
hearrng before lhrs Court on
the 18th day of J uly , 197S at
10 OOoc lock AM
Any person desrrrng to file
e')(ceptrons thereto must frle
them at l eas t f1ve days prror to
the date set for heMrng
Grven under my hand and
sea l of sard Court, thrs 2n d
day of J uly PHS
Mannrng D Webster
J udge
B y Ann 8 Watson
Depu ty (I Nk

( 7J 7 1-1 , 2tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Ca se No 21552
E s t a t e of ELLA F
AN DERSON D ecease d
N o tr ce rs t1erc by qrven that
Curtr s 1\ Anderson of Mrdway
Drrve Dunbar West Vrrgr nra
h as b ee n duly appornted
E)(ecu t or o f th e Estat e of Ella
F A n de r son d ece as ed late of
Rutland Towns hrp
Metgs
County Oh ro
Cr eddors arc requrrcd to
! lie thcr~· c larm s wrth sar d
frd ucr~ r y wrth 1n l ou r months
uated thrs qth day of July
19/5
Man n rn g D Webster
Judge
Cou rt of Common Pl eas
Proba te Drvr s ron
( I I II ? I 78 Jtc

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds
NO HUNT IN G, t re spa ss rng or

l1 s hrn g wrthout
wr1tten
perrnr ssro n on Oav rd Davr s
proper t y
Hy se ll
Run
Vrolato r s wrll be pro sec uted
7 13 6tp

Pomeroy·
OF
QUALITY Motor Co.

sE- IIrn q F u lle r
Bru sh
Produ c ts
phone 992 34 10
1 2&lt;~ lf c

WOULD tr ke to c orr espond
w rth anv o escen dant s of
I saac Dars t , born about 18 0 1
rn Vrrgrn ra Dr ed Sep t ?
187? rn Me tg s Covnty Oh ro
H rS wrf e was Mary Scott
Had
Jackson
m arr red
Belrnda
Lamberson
Samantha marr ied Davrd
Wrrght I saac. J r and Mary
I ~ y
g r e a t g r e a t
grandmother who marrred
Bent am 111 L ang) Wil l an
sw e r ALL tell er s
Wrrte
Kar en
~a c h
R R
7
C r aw f ordsvrlle
tn dra na
47933
l 11 6tp

1972 COMET2 DOOR

1970 NOVA V-8 C PE.
lop

YARD SAL E Tues.day and
W ed nesday mornrng, 448 S
S econd,
Mrdd le port
Sponsored by E rg ht and
For t y , Salon 710
7 13 21 c

POMEROY, OHIO

1

BE A

•

for Rent
TRAI L ER space , l1 mile
north of Me rgs Hrgh Sc hoo l
on o ld Rt JJ Pho ne 992 1941
7 14 li e
J BEDRM 65x12 mobr le hom e
f or re nt
u tdrt res pa1d ,
lo c at ed rn Bur t rnq ha m Call
992 775 1
7 1 If c

1 URN ap t 5 ro oms and bath
n rce larg e ya rd , bath and 1
190
So uth
&lt;",ec ond
st
M rddlcport
adults o nly
Phone 992 5267 eve nrng s
'i 21 1tc

19 }) DU STER brown m e tal
fl ake wrth whrte strrpe A 1r
co ndrl 10n e d
p s , p b ,
.;~utoma t tc
tra ns m:-1118SIOn ,
25,00 0 mrles , 340 mopar
enqrne am tm rad ro good
c ondr t ron Ca ll 997 77 68 after
5 p m
7 8 6t c

REG
old

femal e Beagles 9 weeks
S40 Phone 99 2 3717
7 11 Jtc

H OUSE and ro of parntmg and
r epa1rs For fr ee es trmat es,
ca ll 992 6190 or 992 5837
6 15 26 t c

3 ~EDROOM house wrth 5
acres of land on Welch town
Hrll Phone 99{ 708 4
7 II 3tc

----- -

72 A CRE S land and locust
po sts Als o 1965 Ford L TO
Phone 742 3656
5 23 52tp

608 E.
MAIN
- pOMEDn.v, 0
TUPPERS PLAINS- Rt. 7
- 1 story frame . 2 BR,

Wanted To Buy
O LD furnr ture , rce boxes ,
brass b eds, or comp lete
households
Wrrte M
D _
Mille("
Rt
J Pomeroy ,
Ohro Ca ll 992 7760
10 7 7 4
PORTABLE cement
Phone 992 7190

'' RM apt
carpe t
Pomeroy

wrth wall to wall
10 ~
Sprr ng Ave
Ca ll 992 5908
6 22 H e

2

BE DR M
double wrde,
furntshed
utdtl res pard ,
country to c atron yet near
Pomeroy No pets Phone
992 7666 or 991 7017
7 13 Jtc
____ __
TWO
-- - --- --bedrm
trader
refe rence
and
depos 1t
requrred
Phone 992 3429
7 13 6tp
- - - - - ---------COUNTRY
Mobrle
Home
Park R I :13 ten m rles north
ot Pom eroy Large lot s wrth
c oncrete pa tro s Sidewa l ks
runn e rs and otf s tr eet
park1nq Phone 992 7479

for Sale

Ex ·

Wanted

floor 2 nice BR $15,500

Whe~ler.

In 1971, a half million
workers went on strike
against the Bell Telephone
Company.
A thought for the day:
American statesman Adlai
Stevenson said, " A w1se man
does not try to hurry
history."

CHIPWOOD ~
Poles, maximum dia. 10" on
largest end ...... •7 .00 per ton
Bundled Slabs .. !6.00 per ton

CELLENT
$8,900.

modern

DELIVERED TO:

THE
SAFEST
VESTMENT THAT YOU
CAN MAKE IS IN A HOME
SEE OR CALL 1US
TODAY.

OHIO

P~LLET

Rt. 2 Pomeroy

CO.
Ph. 992-2689

5728

7 13 6tc
rtNO BEDROOM house tor
sale Phone 985 4102
6 10 26tc

5 RMS

and bath nrc:e lot
large outburldrng, front and
back porches , front shaded,
needs reparr located in
Cltfton , W va Call 992 -53 25
_____ _ ______ 7_9 7tc

.

CB

condrtron

750,
Phone

full

3965

AM

THINGS 'TI LL ~EV 'D SUN
' EM- n.IEN USUA.U,.Y, IT
WA.S TOO

TWOSE

LA,TE ...-

TERQ181..E , MONSIROUS
81ROS l'r-tAT' O EAT PEOPL.E -

1-4M- M·- · I WONOER

~NSENSE/

I~

IVT EVEN IF

MR AM WAS HINTING we 'Aii:

IN F'OR A MESS 0' ~OU8LE ,
8lfT HE WOH'"T WARN
·' OAOOY " 'CAU~ HE FIGGER:~
IT' S NO USE-

Mli: SwOUl.D1

1 GUESS Wl't&gt;
1-4AVE

'lWE

MEDIC:tNE

~0~

1-41M"'

a forc e he should go on to three
nut1 ump Y ou m1ght as well 11 v
for so m et htn~ wurthwlu! e
rather th ~1n g() aftt•r a part
score

Jm1
There IS· little to the
plav of the hand Sou th takes
th e f1r s t heart lrtes the dw -

z•

Pass

3 1\ T

P.l SS

m o nd fin esse and
thr ee no trump

Sou th

,. r

succeeds
Oswal d

2N

·· u

wr ap s up
wh e n 1t

11 had fa il ed . he

would have been doY.n one. but
year tn a nd vear out vou "''" b\

P . ISS

h1dd1n~ ever-1 mon ey "games

J1m "In the language of b1ds
a ny b1d of one less than ga me 1s
a s tro ng mvttat10n to partner to
go on to ga m e In most ca ses 1f
yo u want t o play 1t as a force

What

1s

the correct opcmng

lmJ vu lnerab le Wllh
4 AKQJib5 Y ~2

.64
...53 .,
Th e co rr&lt;•e t opcn1ng b1d
e tthrr v uln (•r able or not
vuln erabl e ts one spad e There

yo u' won "t get 1010 trouble
Oswald
· In s tand ard 1s no good rea son t o pr eempt
1 Amencan South "s two no tr ump v. twn v o u hold tw o a ces and
reb 1d 1s JU St a strong m v 1talton
yn ur hilnd IS nul stron g enough
but not qu1t e a Ioree In .Jacoby lo r c1 lo H mg ope mng b1d Of
modern we go along w1th the ('UUrSe \ OU Will JUmp dt yo ur
~~;; best cu rrent prac t1ce and pia! . n&lt;'xl turn tl partner responds

Middleport

partner rcb1ds to three of h1 s

~.YH:d' ·

ALLEY OOP
"THI:N YOU'LL
TRY 10 RE-

COVER OLSON'.S
BURIED

LOOT?

let's qet
out of here,
Walt' There's

noth1ne1 more
we cando'

I"l l askthe
welfare people
to talk to
memones the old man'
this old
place ,

Then

was

then.

Walt'

Come

stirs

on'

up!

let's
qit'

- Swee pers toasters , rron'S
al~ small appltances Law~
mower, next to State Hrgh
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 985 3825
4 16 ttc

IN THE
I LEFT NY 15
MINUTES AGO .AND DE:EP

TOOK A LEFI AT

USED TO
MY OWN

SOLJTH~

5rRENGTH~-

CHICAGO-

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

ctty water, and compact lot

CAt.!PET rnstallatron , $1 25
per yar:d
Call
R1chard
West. phone 8d3 2667
7 2 26tp

$6.000.00

OUT OF TOWN- 3 bedroom
mobile home, and large lot
L. C water. and rratural gas.
Want only $9,500 oo

--- - - - - -

EXCAVATING , dozer~iOader
and backhoe work, sept1c
tanks
rnstalled
dump
truc ks and to boys tor h1re •
will haul frl l d rrt. top sot!
l1 mestone and gravel Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers. day
phone 992 7089, night phone

LARGE-10 room older home
in town Suitable for apart
ments and enough space to

/

'

992 3525 or 992 5232

build. All utilities An excellenl buy at $9,000 00

2 11 ttc

- -y- -------- -

..

EDDIE, HOW WOULD
YOU LIKE TOG010

WILLf do odd lObs, paintJng
roo rng ,
baullng
and
mowmg Phone 992 -7409
__ _ ___ '!..___
7 6 12tc

TO

CENmAL CllY
WIIH ME?

ILL CALL
MOM AND
SEE IF 11'5
ALL I(IGHlf

.1 HAVE A COLLECT PHONE

6 S5-- News 13
7 OQ-Today 3. 4.15, A M Amenca 6.13

8 DO-Lasste 6 . C BS N ews Spec1al 6.,.10, Sesame Street

33
8 3G-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3. Phil Donahue 4. Phil Donahue 15. Muriel

Slevens 8. Schoolles 10. Morning Wllh D J 13
9 lG- Nol For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping

Gourmel 8. Popeye 10; New Zoo Revue 13.
9 5!;--Chuck While Reports 10

10 oo-Celebnly Sweepstakes 3,4,15, Spin Olf 8,10,
Dinah 1 1) , Lil tas, Yoga and You 33 .

10 3G-Wheel 01 Forlune 3.4.15; Gambit 8.10 The
Romagnolls' Table 33
11 OQ- Hrgh Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 6. Tal
llelales 8.10
11 lG-Hotlywood Sq uares 3.15 . Brady Bunch 13,
Midday 4. Love ol L1ve 8,10
II 5!;--Take Kerr 8. Dan I mel ' s World 10
12 oo-Magnillcenl Marble Machine 3. 15, Showolfs
13, Bob Braun ' s 50 50 Club 4 ; News 6,8, 10-r Mister

Rogers 33
12 3G- Jackpol! 3, IS, All My Children 6,13, Searc h For
Tomorrow 8. 10 , E lectrlc Company 33 .
12 5!;--NBC News 3,15
1 OQ- News 3, Ryan 's Hope 6,13 , Phil Donahue 8,
Vou ng a nd lhe Res lless IO .. Nol For Women Only
IS ; V1lla Alegre 33
lQ-Days Of Our L1ves 3,4.15; Let's Make A Deal
6,13, As The World Turns 8, 10. Eplsoce Acllon 33
2 OQ-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Guiding Light 8,10;
Minneso ta Orchestra at Orchestra Hall 33

2 3o-Doctors 3,4, 15 , Rhyme and Reason 6 13 , Edge of
Night 8,10
3 oo-Anolher World 3,4,15 , General Hospital 6.13,
Pnce Is Right 8,10. Lilias. Yoga and You 20
3 3G-One Ltfe to Live 13: Lucy Show 6, Match Game

8,10, The Romagnotls' Table 20 .. Folk Guitar 33
4 QO-Mr. Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset

15. G1lllgan"s Island 6 , Musi ca l Chairs B. Sesame
St reet20,3l ; Movie '" N1ghl Wilhoul Sleep"" 10; Mike
Douglas 13
4 1o-Bew1tched 3, Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6;
M1ckey Mou se Club 8, Bonanza 15.
5 oo-FBI 3. Lucy Show 8; M1ster Rogers' Neigh.
borhood 20,33, Iron side 13
5 3o-News 6 , Andy Gnfflth a. Gel Smarl15. Electric
Company 20.33
6 OQ-News 3.4,8.10.13.15· ABC News 6, Sesa me Streel
20, Catch -33 33

6 24 26tp
---------GENERAL Repa tr, clean up

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Your percept1 on rs way ofl bdse to ddy I I would be wt se to
:l v01d ilniltyzrng ano th e r s
motr ve s You II only embar r ass
yo u rselt

ARIES {March 21-Aprtl19} Not
Ole mos t hilrmnnrous cl.1 ~ rn
ltlf' home
It an rtrq1tmen 1
d eve lop s be1t er I a back o ff
The orld s "' e i'lga rn st you

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) An ou t spoke n lnend wrll
unlllrnkrngly cause a rtll
betw een yOLJ and you r l oved
o ne o r sp irt you and another
pel I

TAURUS (Apnl 20·May 20)
Avo1d workmq wrth tools or
mec llllnrcnt devrces rl possrble
tod;oy YoutC'nd to be ca , eless
SPrrou s c: n nsr&gt;Qu c nccs cou ld
rf! S! I 11

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
Refr.') tn rrom mak1ng any
aqreemen l or co ntrn cl tod ay
You tl be d err trng 111 good fa rth
Othe1 s won 't

GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20)
Don I ,11!L•mpt ilnythrnq rrsky or
rl th e o utcome d epe nel s o n
c hrtnce Yo u q; 1rre sponsrb le
t o do~ v o~n d wrtl milke a wrong
cos tl y cho1ce

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19)
You II be long on word s but
'&gt;ho rt on deed s 1 o da~ You II
sp reo1cl yo ur se lf too \111n and
Bccomolr !=ih lr lli P.

CANCER (June 21 ·July 22)
Yotrll he 1 1~;Jrrnq the blrrdens
of o thers to day Ur, l o rtun~t ely
t hey wo n I apprccrc:tte whilt you
c1 o rn then hehrrl l

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Someone mrry try to talk you
m lo ;lfl en d rng a sacra l tunctton
11 you go you II spend a lot of
rno nP.v on a borrng trme

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
R ech;-~r qry

YOlH Of\tterres by
wrth (lfilwrnq to d quret place
i'l lone Yn u r e no l rn thro mood
fo r l ttn nnrt Q&lt;lmf'S

Be
w ;ory of ,1 f rrcnd wh o a p proncncs you l or ~ ~ l o&lt;~n It s
nossr h iP you co uld los.e thr
monry .1n d th e lrr cnd too

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23)

~Your

~Birthday
July 15, 1975

You h;w e ~ qood ch&lt;wce l o r
nchrevemen t tl1t s commg yea r
rf you d o n I tru st only to luck
H,l t d w o rk ilnd e ){t r n effort ar e
yo rrr 1vron ucs to success

~1]1~1]3)1~@

lki ~~M .....J 'f4'M

I n ~cramhle th(' "'(' fourJumbles.
one lettH to ('ach square, lo
form f o ur urdtnar) "'ords .

"' "

.-

[)I

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEIs

Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter stmply stands for another In lhts sample A ts
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc S10gle le tters
apostrophes, the length and formatiOn of the \\Ords are all
hints Each day the code letters are dttTerent

DSNV

and
haul rng ,
cutting.
welding,
carpentry
Plumbrng, elec masonrY
and general remodeling
Call Skil Pool
Phone 992
-~ 26 _
6 17 ttc

Ttuouqh n o l ~u tt of yours you
LOttld to-. &lt;• t,1ce amo n g
il&lt;; &lt;:; OCi d !P c; rn drr il r ea whtch
m~.u1 ~ i'l tnt to yo u
II s tust
lousy lu ck

for Tuesday, July 15, 1975

15 B1g bus1·
35 Man's name
ness deal
37 Region
17 Greg or
39 Tasca's
Howard
·· V1ss1
18 Of a Great
d ' -··
Lake
40 Anamas
20 F encmg
41 Before tee
fo1l
42 Journal.
21 Mechamcal
for short
r ou tme
13 Last
22 Encourage
Spamsh
23 Identical
queen
24 Like so me 45 Black
cuckoo
necklines
1':"""""'1'~;,;,;,.......,

CBS News

8.10

-Bernice Bede 0101

CRYPTOQUOTES

- - -- -

--------- -----,.,..,..,..---,.

6 4s- Morn l ng Report 3 F armtrme 10

Grap~

mormn?
34 Japanese
receptacle
36 Laughmg 38 Chest sound
42 Israeli
stateswoman
44 Barbara or
Juhe
46 Quebec's
patron samt .__.._ _,__.__

CALL FOR WINNIE
WINK LE FI(O M WENDY
WRIGHT Will YOU
ACCEPT CHARGES?

WILL TRIM or-;ut-;-rees ~nd
shrubbery and paint roofs
Phone 9.t9 3221 or 742 4441

HOUSE tn Portland, s rms
and bath, good well , 2 acres
of ground
Take
over
payments. Phone B.t3 229 2
7 -9 12tc:

6 .3!;--Columbus Today 4

Astro-

TSK ~!- I /'A NOT

MUST BE

WOULD YOU BELIEVE,
Burld an all steel buildrng at
Po l e Barn prtees' Golden
Grant All Steel Burldrngs,
Rt
d Box 148, Waverly
Oh ro Phone 947 2296
'
6 24 26tc

SMALL
HOUSE
2
bedrooms, balh, natural gas,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
47 Quarter1 Desist
back of
6 Old-style
renown
pulpit
48 FooliSh
10 Joined
49 Clemen·
tine ·s
forces
11 BeasUy
father, e.g.
place
DOWN
12 Songstress. I " - Nome ··
Amta 2 Ares'
13 S1gnorma ·s
mol11er
name
3 Don or Edie
14 Threaten
4 Legislator
15 Homo
I abbr.)
sap1ens
5 Time zone
16 Pirate m
I abbr. )
·'Peter
6 Seaweed
Pan"
19 Celtic de1ty 7 Continent
8 Storage
22 Snake
25 Hockey star 9 box
- pro
26 Gl mailnob1s
mg center 10 Barrel
1abbr.)
!abbr.)
27 Formal
dance
(Fr.)
28 Outfit
29 F1nal
30 Australian
b1rd

6 3G-Ftve Mmutes to Ltve By 4, News 6 . Bible An
swers 8, Concerns &amp; Commen t s 10 , Rev Cleopt''IUs
Robinson 13

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl . 22)

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

APPROX 6 ft x 7 ft new
plush
carpet
remnant,
neutral color , $15 ' Phone
992 3496 after 5 30
7 9-tfc
MODERN Walnut Console
stereo radro c:omb rnation .4
speed changer
Balance
Sl01 dO or terms . Call 992

Oswald
l·:ven 1f North does
no t play th e two no trump bid as

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

E LWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

for Sale

GBW

OGJ
WLOP

MSHVC

GA

BGVU
GA

AG I

OGJI

MSN
OGJMS,

LBUNZIL

-

U GGW

F J PM

LJMSGJ

10
·X]

NOI FOR HOME

I

CON5U.t\PTION.

LDNPEI.

Now ~rrange the circled letters ,
to form the su rprise answer, aa

~=~:::':==:::::::======='--':suggested

L-.:.:.:
Prirt:::..:~=.-SUR
::-:.:::
PIIISI:::..:A::::
NSW~ER~here:.':___l

(

by abo\·e
the

JVCVGDV

HE JEST TOOK TH' 'iOUNG-UNS
OFF FISHIN' FER THREE
r---.;:,.

' Jumhlt•..

Yealerday's Cryptoquote: AFTER ENOUGH TIME HAS
PASSED, ALL MEMORIES ARE BEAUTIFUL.-AUGUST
STRINDBERG

"'11lurd,u

ICING

SKUNK

RATION POLICE

~

\(tdlrl uh111 flt1 1/JitfHIICfl I~ "fill r111
urf(lll/ - KING PINS "

BEE-'100-TEE·FUL DA'&lt;S

l!:tY 95

95
BTU
43 lb

I

models
on sale.

~,

iPO"MUOY LAffDM;jiR. i
' '

9~.:.J•c•w.cornr.Mtr.

......

~ ...... fft-1111

.

'

excellent

949 2220

7 11 6t c

lo

..

'
•,

\
. I

,.

cartoon.

J XI I XXJ .
(AII~w..-n

-----------

PORT'A-COOL TM
ROOM-to-ROOM

48 IN PONY , S40 , btlly goat,
$15 , Shetland pony, $20
Phone 247 2711
7 13 3tc

HONDA

includtng

s1tes, and eiOOw room No one
close,
JUSt
privacy
and
freedom 97 acres with all
minerals

Askm~

~R ODACTVLS ,

PLUMBING , heating , reparr
and rnstallatron, electrrcal,
water pump repa1r. roofing,
house and roof patnting,
general repatr , reasonable
rates. tree estimates, 15
vears
experrence
Call
Charles Srnctarr, 985 4121 or
992 2221
7 10 12tc

PINE COUNTRY Good
hunt1ng, plenty of building

HOUSE for sale located nea ;
Chest~:r , 1'2 acre. all electric,
3 bedroom, 2 baths. drsh
washer .
carpet.
full
basement, 2 car garage all
brrck Week days , call 985
4262, weekends , (30•0 773

~UNMY STO RY

OR

ORPHAN

HE SA.lC NOBOD\' '0
BEU'EVE ~ER:E WERE SuCI-4

-n-.AT SURE

WAS TELUN' 'BOUT ""tl-1 '
ONE· ARMED HLLA ANO -rn'

DOZER work , land clear rng
by the acre
hourly or
co ntrac t
F arm
ponds ,
roads , elc La rge dozer and
operator wrth over 20 years
ex per rence
Pullrns Ex
cavat mg , P ome roy , Ohto
Phone 992 2J78
12191fc

basement, and double garage.
E xcellent location .

3 BEDRM home rn Chester
Phone 985 3582
- _ __________7_ 8_!_tp

7 12lllp

BEANS p1ck your own $2.50
per bushel Phone 8d -2353
after 7 p m
7 11 3tc

kttchen

LITTLE

S EWING
MACHINE
Repe1rs se rvr ce all makes
992 2284 The Fabrrc Shop
Pomeroy Author~ red Srnger
Sales and Serv 1ce
we
sharpen Sc1sso rs
3 29 He

--- - - - - -

stove. breakfast nook,

F.a !&lt;il

t o two

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

7 11 90tc

REAL N
bedrooms w1th closets, bath,

CONDITION

Norlh

JbOU I

notrurnp '

• K2
• J 4 .,

6092

Real Estate For Sale

utlltty R garage. private
or ctty water, IN EX -

\H' &lt; .111 d 1o p htlll

e lect s to r(&gt; b td

Opt•nmg \cad - Q ¥

EXCAVATING,
backhoe ,
dozer and ditcher
Gas,
electrtc and water line
bur1al , basements, footers.
septrc syste ms and brush
cleanmg W rll haul fill drrt.
top soli, sand and gravel.
ltmestone for dnveway s and
roads
Phone Charles R
Hatfield , Backl)oe Service,
Rt 1 Rutland , Oh10, 742

POMEROY- l'h acres, 2
BR , bath, large k1tchen,

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

7 11 lie

OR ,.,_ HIVE'?

5 30 1 mo

nght party. $20,000.

V 8

HORSE saddle and nrc:e
brrdle Phone 7.t2 -3842

~---

the

It a s a f orce to game. except !I

327 N 2nd

1 level

acre. 3 BR large closets,
bath, ntce k1tchen and
dmmg. utiltty R garage,
your choice of colors In
carpetmg Full financtng to

7 13 -ltc

1959 DODGE prckup ,
Phone 992 3907

~ ~T

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2550

4 9 If (

Wanted

WANTED I

WHERE IJJ6RE IPJ ~,IN

'IEAA, M'l F,qHER IDl-D M8
PoU. ,A.BOVT 'EM .

Con;truction
and Plumbing

SE PTIC fA N KS CLEANED
Reasonable RATES Phone
146 J78 2 Gall rpotr s
J ohn
Russe l l owner

kitchen cab. range. ref. 2nd

NEW HOME -

---

Caught rn

o ne r e:; punse h.1 s prom1sed at
lcds t tt•n pomts Sou th pr o per )\.

•QJI0 73
• 864
t 872
tK 5
.A 95 "!
• K 10 7
SOUTlt il) 1
•AK 654

Pass
Pa ss
Pa ss

WA~ A

1 3o-Tomorrow 3, 4

6 2!;--Farm Re porl 13

J,A. 15 .

So uth s Oflt'nlng bi d Is
cl
J.l (' k J bOV (' d
m1mm urn bu t Nor t h s two over
lU St

Pomern'l

GEE I

" Lisa" 10
12 3G-Movle 6
I 06--News 13
TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1975

then•
Jun

No r th -South vulnerable

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING

NEED A new hom e burtt on
your toP Contact M~o B
Hutchrson
Rutland , 0hto
Phone 742 3615
5 B If c

-

14

AQJ4

Roofing
Siding
Complete
Home
Maintenance.

Emergency
949-2211 or 992-5700
Complete a1r condition1ng
sales and servrce, heating ,
Plumb1ng , roof rng and
gene ral sheet metal work
Free Esftmates
7 II 1 mo

~--

1st floor has I BR. bath,
dining R. uhllty R. nice

REDUCE sate and tast wtth
GoBese tablets and E Vap
" water p tl ls , ' Ne l son Drug
7 14 lip

Mr.

'()UR Fct.I&lt;S ltU.. 'PJ .A-60UT
111&amp; BIRDS r.ND Bt6'S 'lf'T z

WE DO&gt;

Your He1/ Deater
Th1rd Sf
Racrne, Ohio
Ph 949 -5961

D &amp; D TREE Tr rmm rng , 20
years e){ pertence In sured ,
fre e es trm ates Call 992 3057
Coolville
Phone ( 1J 667,
3041
4 30 tfc

$10,500
MIDDLEPORT

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

d e l 1vered rrgh t to you r
prote c t F a9'1 and easy Free
est rma tes Phone 992 3284
Goeglern Ready Mrx Co'
M rddteport, Ohro
'
6 30 If (

eel lent condtfton and very
comfortable 2 story frame,

--- ----- - -

NORTll

-

Does
your
home
require any of these
services?

READY MIX CONCf&lt;ETE

bath , basement, new steel
stding, own water and ctty
water. 2112 acres m lawn.
some
building
sites.

mrxer

a

Ph n:z -1174

Death "

rntnor s u tl

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

ROOFING ,
Spoutrng,
alummum and vrnyl s rdrng ,
complete
remo &lt;Jel rn Q
Phone 742 6273 or (3 0-4 ) 773
5684 F ree estrmates
6 25 26tp

BEDRM
mobrle home
17x60 Phon e 992 5858
7 11 3tc

~

spending a vacation With her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Alex

mo

Nathan Btggs
R ildtator Spec•altst

Shop Us l:.ast &amp; Save

\ EP TI C TANK S c l ea ned
Mo d er n Sa nrtalton 992 3q5&lt;1
or 99'} 73 J9
9 18 tf c

1913 - 12 x 70 Hillcrest Mobrle
Hom e , 3 bedroom, total
etectr rc , red shag ca rpet
throughout ,
underprnnrng
and 2 sets of steps rncluded
Phone 2-17 3941
7 9 6tc

R oberl L Cole, eta 1
In
pur s uance
to
an
Executron ISS ued from the
Marrne Sates
Common Pleas Court of Me1gs
1965
SEA RAY
Inboard
County Pomeroy , Oh10 , rn the
outboard 19ft long , 120h p
case of The Farmers ~Bank &amp;
Mercrutser , new Chevy 11, 4
Savrngs Co,
Plarnt 1tt , vs
cyl, engme, new lower unit ,
Robert
L
Cole ,
eta I ,
new rnterror, deep vee hole ,
Defendant
betng Case No
$7,500 Excellent skt boat
15 5541 11 sard Court , 1 Wil l offer
See at Jo hn Gtbson Motor
at publr c auclron at the front
Crty, Athens, 593 7758 or 742
door ot the Court House at
3694,
weekends
and
Pomeroy m sard County on the
eve n rngs
26th day of July, 1975, at 10 00
7 13 2tc
O'Clock AM , the fOllOWing
descr rbed real estate , to wrt
197 2 TR!SONIC
18B h p
Berng tn Sectron No
11
1 'J 3 1 ttc
Hercruiser . 18ft long , Ford
T own 4 , Range 12 of the Ohro
302 V8 engrne. cat hera I haul.
Compa ny's Purchase . and
l
rght brand new $4,500 See
commencrng 111 !he center of TRAILER space for rent rn
at John Gtbson Motor Crty,
t he road teadrng from Tuppers
Mrddleport Phon e ~92 5434
Athe ns 593 7758 or 742 3694,
7 8 6fp
P l arns to Alfred Post Off rce at
weekends
and evenings
the southeast corner of the 74 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7 13 2tc
acre tract ot land owned by MOBILE Home for ren t rn
the Grantor RobertL Coleas
Racrne
Phone 949 2261 ,
YOUNG rabbrt s for sale
desert bed in Deed Recorded m
Albert H11!
Reedsvtll e Phone 378 6261 ,
Vol 163 , page 658 of the Deed
7 10 6f c
JUDGE Re cords of Mergs County , - - - --~ - - - - - - - - - - 7 B 71 c
By Ann B Watson
Ohro, thence west along the WATER t ank , Sl 00 a day
Deputy Clerk
south lrne of the said 74 acre
Phone 992 5704
17) 14 21 2tc
trac t of land 220 t ee t to a point
7 10 6tp HAY for sale detrvere d or
picked up rn lteld Phone
thereon , whrch p01nt rs also rn ---- - - - - - - - - - - - 742 37 d3
the center lrne of satd road
3 BEDROOM mob1le home
• 1 8 61c
located on 1-13,2 m11es from
and family will move to the then ce north 450 feet , thence
- - ---eas t 220 feet to the east trne of
Pomeroy Phone 992 5858
197 1 350 CL Honda ~Ph~n-;-;92
house vacated by the sa1d 7.t acre tract of l and
7 2 tfc
3529
then
ce
south
JSO
feet
to
the
-------~
Michaels owned by Tri.State
7 61p
place of beginnrng , conta lnmg 'l=URNISHED
apartment
Mater1als.
2 2B acres. , more or less
adults only in Mtddleporf
TOMATOES.
cucumbers
Phone 992 3874
Mr. andMrs. Chester Durst • Togeth e r w rth the rrght of way
Cleland Farms, Geraldm~
eserved by Robert Cole rn
3 25 tfc
of Niles, 0., Mr. and Mrs. rDeed
Cleland
Bo o k 252 , Page 48 5
- - - - - - - -- Reference Deed
Volume
---Herbert Roush,
and Mrs.
7 6 tfc
163 , paQe 658 of the Merqs TRAILER space , all ut t1 1tr es
Dorsa Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. County Deed Record s and Vol
cheap Phone 992 5535
Canadran
6 29 lfc ' F I SHING l rcense
Everette Parsons, Mr. and 252, Page A81 , and Vol 252
N rte c raw lers, 60c doz Dug
ge 48 3, Deed Records Metgs
worms, 3 doz $1 Other bail ,
Mrs. Russell Roush, Mrs. Pa
County. Oh ro
J AN D J ROOM furnished and
tackle , quns , ammo. cb's,
Richard McCoy, Kay Parsons
The appra1sed value of the
unfurnrshed
apartments
lndran Joe's Sports
308
estate rs $3600 00
Phone 992 54 3-l
Page St , Phon e 992 3509
called at the Wilcoxen real
Terms of sale Cash m hand
J 12 tfc
7 1 26tc
Funeral Home Saturday upon del111ery of deed
Robert
C
Hartenbach
,
PRIVATE meetrng room lor
evening to pay reapect to
LARGE gnll with rotrsser1e,
Sherrff
any orqanrzatron phone 992
new large gurtar , 7 h p 26"
lhe1r uncle, Vallie Bauer, at
Me1gs Co unty , Pomeroy, Ohro
3975
cut Huffy riding mower ,
3 11 He
Pt ..Pleasant, W.Va. Mr. and (6l 23 JO , rn 7, 14, 21 5tc
good condrt1on Phone 992
3442
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr. and
T lik e n ew, 3 rooms . wrth
In 1966, eight nurses were APlarge
7 10 Stc
bath
,
tabl
et
op
range,
Mrs. Chester Durst attended
lar ge closet East Ma rn &lt;; +
found murdered in Chicago.
funeral services for Mr .
Pomeroy See to ar&gt;::, cc tate
27 FT private owned travel
Drifter Richard ·speck was
Phone Galhpo/1!; durrnq dav ,
Bauer at the Baden Church.
trailer , fully self contained,
4
7
J6 6q9 eventnQS .td6 9539
later convicted of the
tandem wheels, fully car
Baden, W Va. Sunday at 2
" IU ftc
peted,
arr
condit i oned ,
slayings and sentenced to
P m. with interment in the
awn tng See any time at
death. The U.S. Supreme
Young's
Mobtle
Home
church cemetery Mr Bauer
Court , Rt 7 Gallrpolrs, OhtO
Court subsequently ruled out
was 91 years old
7 13 7tp
the death sentence and Speck t:ASH paid for all makes ana '
M:r. and Mrs. Roger Roush
models of mobile homes
1971 TRUCK camper, over cab
remains in prison.
Phone area code 614 423
sleeper. ftts any 6 ft bed
and Cindy Roush visited
9531
truck
Was carried on a
Camden Park at Huntington ,
4 13 tfc
Datsun prckup
Excellent
condrt1on Can be seen at
W.Va. Sunday.
Kingsbury Home Sales or
Mrs ., Georgia Wheeler
call
992 7034
Monday
through Saturday
Wolfe of Washington, D.
is

c.

~lEEP~

We-st

Mobile Homes For Sale

3

BEAUT Y

From the largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radtalor to the
smallest Hearfer Core

Stnners 33

II :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15, ABC News 33.
II 3o-ABC News Special 3 . ~ . 15 ; Movie "Gel Christie
Love' '" 13 , FBI 6 ; CBS News Special 8 10 · Janak!
33
' •
12 DO-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 , Movie "' Lizzie" B; Movie

6 oo-Sunnse Semmar 4 , Summer Semes ter 10

WIN AT BRIDGe
One short of game invites it

BORN LOSER

Open 9-S Wed lhrough Sun
Ph 667-3858
7-7-1 mo

Real Estate for Sale

Pets For Sale

HU T~

• 93
• A9 5
t A Q 10 9 6
"' R6 Z
WEST
EAST
• J7
• Q 10 8 2

"AI Cauhon Light"
Rt 7, Tuppers Plains, 0 .

7 10 5tc

NOTICE OF SALE

vs.

4 10 -I

BARGAIN CENTER

Evemngs 742 4902
7-7-l mo

----- - - -

-

The Farmers Bank
&amp; Savmgs Co. Pla1ntttf

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

On
Lincoln Hi II
Pomeroy and
in Syracuse
Phone 992-2156
TODAY

AS5E'MBLIN&amp;

THAT PI&lt;:EFAB

Ohto

Ph. 992-3,93

KUHL'S

Ph. '92·7608

19 72 TOYOTA wagon, 30
m p g Phone 997 2082
7 10 6tp

AT TH15 R:ATE',
~E ....Y GUE?T.
THE NIG&gt;H LL I!.E Ml% FRU&amp;Y-- FEEL
OVE;R ~EF"ORE FReE TO FI..OP DOWN
YOU"IZE; DONE .
ANYWHERE THE
AND I"D LIKE'
';AND LOOK!&gt;
TO GE-T 501;\E
INVITtNel

LARRY LAVENDER·
Syracuse.

Hall 20.33
9·Q.O-S.W AT 6,13, Maude 8,10
9 3G-Movle " A Malter ol Wife and
Rhoda 8.10. Jeanne Wolf W1lh 20 ;
acl 33

Guaranteed
appliances.
used furmture at

Vtnyl sidtng, alumtnum
s1ding, patto covers, storm
w1ndows,
kttchens,
bathrooms and garages .
We Carry
Liabthty Insurance

1967 DODGE POidra wrlh new
se t of 1rres Ca ll Pilu l Baker
Syra c u se 99 '1 2395
7 13 Jt c

"SENTINEL
CARRIER"

Employment Wanted

-

t 97l P I NTO 4 sp ee d 2,000 cu
rn low mr! eage Phone 992
77 80 or 992 5271
7 lJ 3tp

Help Wanted

..

.

CAPTAIN EASY •
WILL YOU
Kli-JDLY HURR Y
UP A'ID FIN I:OH

10 oo-Carlbe 6. 13. Medical Center 8,10; News 20;

Gun smoke 8, 10, Mtnnesota Orchestra at Orchestra

CASH 'N CARRY
SAVES U S"s on

JOHNSON
REMODELING

- ----

---------

..1

®

I POMo~~9YvE~~!9.~. CO.

17, 18 and 19 on 681 Turn at
Alfre d on Tucke r Road , 1 4 ROOM unfurn1shed house
1650 Lrn c oln Hgts, phon e
mrle Ele c trrc gu rtar ~ case
99 2 387 4
and ampl rfrer, gas heatrng
7 6 tr c
s tove . lots of diShes and - - -- mrsc boa t dol l res , 6 x 170 x
15 tr r e a large amount o f all 2 BEDROOM trail e r $27 per
week utrl rtres pard Phon e
k rnds of c lothrng , antrques
q9') 332 -1
7 14 3tp
7 6 t fc

CARPENTRY
WORK
Cerlrng panelrng , floorrng
e tc Phone 992 2759
6 24 27tc

.

Phone 992-5682 ' 1
or 992-7121
7-8-1 mo .

6-18-1 mo.

5 FAM ILY garage sa te July

REMODf::LING
Plumbrng
healing and all type s of
general
reparr
Work
guaranteed
20 years ex
perrence
Phon e 992 2409
S I tf r

ALL
MECHANICAL
WORK

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown tnto Walls &amp; A Hies'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING.SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

'

YARD Sa l e at
the Davrd
Ha ggy resrden c e Happy
H o ll ow Road Rut l and Lot
of
drs h es
old
wooden
st rarg ht charrs
St ar t on
Sun d ay la st s all week
7 13 Jtp

7 I 3 1tc

On St. Rt . 124
Off Rl . 7 By-Pass

Phone
992-3313

S1295

Vtnyl roof. grey ftnl sh , h tgh mileage, good tt res,
au to mati c. power steermg, radto. s1 lver flntsh Black

RUMMAGE SA L E at th e
La n gsvd l e Fe llow shrp Rm
Monday
through
Wed
ne sday 10 am trl t 4 p m
7 13 Jtc

elc

S2495

FREE ESTIMATES

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
2 M1les West

Washer &amp; Dryer
and
Small Appliance
Repair

Local 1 owner &amp; l ess than 30,000 mtles Betge f1n1sh,
automattc power s teermg, rad ro, factory atr

YARD S/I.LE ? w ee k s, Ju ly 12
thr u 76 th A ntrques , alladl!l
l amp , o ld c lo c k s depress ton
gla ss. mrsc 4 m rl es south o f
A th ens on Rt 33
7 10 ) 41 c

3 FAMILY Yard Sale , July 14
and
15
(Mo nday
and
Tuesday l 10 to Jon Georges
Creek
Rd
For
exact
ljocat 10n call 446 4078 or 992
18 7 Lots of chrldren's and
good c lothrh g o t " aft srzes,
rncludrng
summer
an d
wrnter w e ar , shoe s
e tc
Also , adult clothrng
c ur
tarn s, b edspreads , drshes

-~~-

SIB50

1972 BUICK SKYLARK CPE

J

\ Business Services

6 cyl std trans. radro , l tke new w w t 1res. blue ftnrsh ,
nrc e car wtth good economy

Yard Sale

-

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY AND
APPROAISEMENT
The Stille of Oh1o, Me1gs
County, Court of Common
Plea s, Probate DIVISIOn
To tn e E xecu t or of 1 the
es tat e, to suc h of th e follow rng
as are re sr d enls o f th e St ate of
Ohro vrz
ttle su rvrv rng
spo u se , t h e ne ){t of k rn , t he
benei i Ci ar• ES under the wrll
and to the a tt or ney or at
to rncy s rep r esc ntrng any of
th e aforemen t rone d p ers ons
Elfr e S Kenn e dy Deceased,
L ong Bottom, Ohro. Chester
Township , No 21506
You ar e hereby noltfted that
the
Inv e ntory
vnd
Ap
pra,sement of the es tate of t he
atorement1oned
de ceased,
late of sa1d Co unty was fried
rn thr s Court Sa1d Inve ntory
and Apprarsement wrll be for
h earrng before th rs Court on
the 25th day o f July 1975, at
10 00 o c l ock AM
Any p ers on des1rrng t o f1le
ex ce ptrons t here to must frle
them at l eas t f rve days prror to
the dat e set for hear1ng
Gtven un der my hand and
seal ot sard Court t h1s 11th
day ot July 1975
Mannrng D Webster

2 SIGNS

N OW

,

7 oo- Truth or Consequences l . ~ ; Bowling For Dollars
6. What's My Line? 8. News 10, New Candid
Camera 13. Watl(s Workshop 15, Mak1ng 11 Counl
20 ; One of a Kind 33
·
7 lG- That Good Ole Nashville Music l. Masquerade
Party 4; Police Surgeon 4, S25.000 Pyram1d 8.
Evenmg Edition with Marlm Agronsky 20.
Municipal CourllO. To Tell The Trulh 13. Unlamed
Worldl 5, Episode Action 33.
a OQ-Movle " The Rangers" 3,4, 15. Rookies 6, 13,

( .-,

Auto Sales

Notice

(. s

MONDAY. JUlY 14, 1'75

'

tomurrowl

�•'

,

I

I .

•

I

•,

8- The Daily-Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 14, 1975
Noi1viLL PROMOTED
Marine Lance Corporal
· Robert L. Norville, son of Mr.
and Mrs . Herman L.
Halstead, of Rt. I , Letart. W.
Va., has been promoted to his
present rank while serving
with the 2nd Marine Division
at the Marine Corps Base.
Camp Lejeune, N. C. A former student of Waham a High
School, he joined the Corps in
July , 1972.

WOMAN KILLED
YOUNGSTOWN. Ohio
' 1UP! )- Isabele Mae Krantz,
Youngstown, died early
today in a fire at her home
believed started while the
woman was smoking in her
bed. Damage was estimated
at $7,000.

time to join the
l~roo•dworlter's Union when
IYtiUr boss asks you, 'Would

"11'5

mind working?"' ...

H. OSPJ.·T
· AL· NEWS
'

·
VeterarisMemorlal Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
William Long, Long
Bottom;
Ida
Dudding,
Middleport ; Rosa Ball, Long
Bottom; Basil Cr emea ns ,
Rutland.
DISCHARGES - Tracy
Salser, Joseph Quivey, Rex
Roy, Linda Preston, Marjorie
Gibbs, Paula McKinney,
Robert Deemer, Vivian
Johnson, Yvonne Sellers,
Eula Francis, Ca ndy Proffitt,
Albert Thompson , Susan
Tracy, Mark Markham,
Bessie Ellis, George Kauff,
Gary Nakamoto .

-8UNDA Y ADDMISSIONS
- Richard Rathburn II ,
Middleport; Edith McCoy.
Syracuse; Ruth Duerr ,
Pomeroy: Richard Dye, New
Haven;
Gregory
Cunningham, Pomeroy ; Id a
Black, Syracuse ; 'Geraldine
O'Connor. Nelsonville; Media
Schoonover, Rutland.
DISCHARGES - Betty
Persons, Mayme Custer,
Ruth Thorla, Kathryn Link.
PLEASANf VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Lloyd
William s , Clifton; May
Evans,
Lakin ;
Robert
Tomblin, Point Pleasant;
Samuel
Ferrell,
Poin t
Pleasant ; Josephine Oliver,
Masseyville,
0.;
Jack
Pickens, Bidwell, 0 .; Danrty
Stanley, Southside ; Mary
Davis, Rutland ; Jimmie
Graham, Hartford; Hilda
Coleman, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. George Greene, Hartford; Mrs . John Barker,
Glenwood; Adolph Farley,
Cleveland, 0.; Walter Rose,

" FRIENDLY ONES"
always on the job
lw•orking for you . From a
- you name it lthev' re all of one mind ;

THAT
THE
!STONIER GETS WHAT
OS ...

MEIGS THEATRE

Holzer Medical Center
1Births,July 11)
Mr . and Mrs . Ronald
Aleshire, a son, Patriot; Mr.
an d Mrs. Steele Carrico, a
son, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Radune, a daughter,
Jackson; Mr . and Mrs. John
Sayre, a daughter, Hen derson, W. Va .
(July 12)
Mr . and Mrs . Roland
Dovenbarger,
a
son,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs .
Gary Dray, a son, Gallipolis;
Mr . and Mrs. Lowell Flowers,
a daughter, Mason, W. Va .
(July 13)
Mr . and Mrs. James
Hysell , a daughter, Mid ·
dleport; Mr . and Mrs. John
Waugh, Jr ., a daughter,
Gallipolis.
FOUND DEAD
JACKSON, Miss. ( UPI ) Frank Hains, 49, longtime
radio and newspaper personality, was found dead in
his apartinent early today,
the victim of a crushing blow
to the head. He had been
bound and gagged. A Jackson
police spokesman said Hains
was found in the bedroom of
his apartment about 1:12
a.m . by a roommate, Kevin
Sessums.

Walt Disney's
THE STRONGEST MAN
IN THE WORLD
(Technicolor)
Starring : Kurt Ru sse lL Joe
Flynn, Eve Arden, Cesa r
Romer o, Phil Silvers.

" G"
Featurette : Goofy Spar.
tacular , Disney
Show starts at 7:00p.m.

nppenin!S

From a Great American Bank

We're tired of fattening British tills. Tired of
paying taxes on everything from newspapers
to playing cards. Tired of British control over
our daily lives. Until the British stop taxing,
we stop buying. They stop, but they don't remove one last finger from control of us. As a
symbol of power the tea tax remains.

.

'

There will be a joint
meeting of the Citizens
Committee for Mentally

'RI!farded and the Meigs
tor

died on

~unday

LONG BOTTOM - Mrs .
Geraldine Good, Rt . I, Long
Bottom, died Sunday mor ning at Holzer Medical
Cenf:j:r at the age of 41. She
was the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd B. White, Kentuck, W. Va .
Survivors includ e her
parents; her husband , Monid
Good; two sons, Danny and
Dewayne, at hom e; one
daughter , Mrs. Diana Pettit,
Pomeroy; two brothers, Paul
White, Atwater, Ohio, and
John White, Ken tuck; two
sisters, Mrs . Pauline Riley,
Bashan, and Mrs. Aline Ni&lt;.
Pickens, S. C., and one
grandchild, Cindy Ann Pettit.
Funeral services will be
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the
Parsons Funeral Home,
Ripley. W. Va. with burial at
the White Family Graveyard,
Kentucky . Calling hours are
all day Monday and until the
funeral Tuesday .

Mentally

SEOEMS out
757 times in

month of Jnne
The SEOEMS Emergency
Medical Technicians ( EMT '.
s)
responded
to
757
emergency runs during June.
A tabulation of emergency
runs by county shows Athens
County had 133 runs , Gallia
County 47, Hocking County
94, Jackson County 169.
Lawrence County 202, Meigs
coun tY51 an d v·mton County, .
61.
.,
SEOEMS has responded to
4,547 emergency runs since
January I, 1975, bringing the
total runs to 16,387 since the
system began in March 1973,
according to Ken Morgan ,
director .
Forty-two
SEOEMS

Retard ed

Citizens, Tuesday , July 15) at
8 p .m . In the Meigs Court
Room . The meetings also
includes the parents Qf
mentally ' retarded students.
Persons interested in keeping
the schoor and works·hop from
cl osing are urged to a ttend .

THE REGULAR meeting
of Twin City Sh rine Club will
be Thursday, July 17 at the
Shrine Park in Ra cine at 7: 30

p.m. All Nobles Invited.
THERE

IS

ROOM

available for anyone of any
age to lake the bus trip to
King's. Island Thur sday
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Senio r C i tizen s. Cost per
person is $16 for bus fare and
admission info the park .
There are s ti II 20 seats
ava i lable. The bus will leave
the Senior Citizens Center at 7
a.m . Those wishing to make
reservations are to ca ll 992 -

7886.
BARRY MCCOY, Syracuse
cou ncilman , announced
fcxjay that anyone wanting to
use the Syracuse ball field
during the month of August is

to ca ll City Hall dur ing the
day at 992-5201.
GEORGE

JUSTUS ,

News •. in Briefs

Saturday at 10: 25 where he

was treated and released .

MEI(i S

Common

Plea s

Attorney General Edward
Levi to see if money spent by .
the Fed above that necessary
to run the nation's banking
system can be recovered.
A Fed spokesman declined
to discuss the report. "Those
are Mr. Patman's charges
and\ we would not cominertt
on them, " he said.
1;he report sa}d the Fed's
owh records show that in
1974:
- $13,969 was spent to
transfer employe Ralph
Evans from Miami to the
Federal Reserve Bank in
Atlanta, a distance of 600
miles. It including ~ ,931 for
expenses in selling his home.
- $94,000 was spent for
"employe
recognition,''
including $2,1183 for employe
birthday luncheons at the St.
Louis bank, $402.25 for
watches for six 25-year·
employes at the Atlanta bank
and $339 for llO gift paperweights in Houston .
- The New York ban~
spent _.,749 for Christmas
decorations, including $1,073
for flowers, and another
$10,985 for a Christmas
luncheon. Three CllrlStmas

7,

Middleport, was tak en by the
Middleport E ·R sq uad to
Veterans Memorial Hospital

IN

And so does one Johnny Malcolm, British customs spy, tax official and tyrant. Now that
we've enjoyed our Boston Tea Party, we think
we'll throw one·for old Johnny. We dress him
up in tar and feathers and serve him a spot of
tea. Enough to toast all eleven members of his
beloved Royal Family. ~

Maximum Insurance
for Each Depositor

WASHINGTON ( UP! ) The government agency that
sets monetary policy ·' and
nms the banks has nearly
tripled its expenses in the
past 10 years, spending ...749
on Christmas decorations in
one bank and '14,000 to
transfer an employe 600
miles.
A report Sunday by a House
banking subcommittee staff
said the Federal Reserve
System's operating expenses
went from $197 to .,90 million
in the past decade. Salaries
for officials rose 148 per cent.
Rep . Wright Patman, DTex., head of the subcommittee, said it discloses
··a classic case or misuse of
public funds by a government
agency."
'
Patman, a long-time critic
of the Fed, issued the report
to spur support for his bill
calling lor an audit of the
Fed's operations by the
General Accounting Office, a
congressional investigative
agency. The Fed opposes an
audit, arguing it would interfere with its independence.
The congressman said he
sent a copy of the report to

(Continued from page I)
.
Ford's handling of the Mayaguez incident and his use of the
veto already are helping disarm a threat to his support there
from former California Gov. Ronald Reagan.

Counly
Court.

Delores Bea ch. Rt . 1, Mid dleport, filed suit for divorce
against Michael Beach, Rt . I ,
Middleport, charging gross
neglect of duty and extreme

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD INVITED
Congressional leaders to the White House today to tell them his
proposed timetable for gradual decontrol of oil prices. He said
he hoped "the wiser heads" on Capitol Hill would get his plan
enacted.
Presidential aides said Ford wants Democratic and
Republican leaders to support removal of the controls over two
or three years - to spur domestic production but keep consumer prices from zooming abruptly . Ford, who said he would
send his plan to the skeptical Democratic-controlled Congress
today or Tuesday, also called for quick action on a proposed
"windfall profits tax " for oil companies.
"If Congress does nothing ... we get the · worst of all
worlds," he said. "I think Congress has to face up to the hard
realilies. 1 '

cruelty. Henry E. Cleland

was awarded $800 and in terest from
Barton
E.
Pearson , eta!., in a default
judgment.

CHESTER COUNCIL No.
323 of Daughters of America
will meet Tuesday at 8 p .m .

at the lodge hall. Games will
be ' conducte'd

and each
member is to bring a small
gift for prizes .

THE BASHAN BUNCH 4-H
Club met July 9 at the home
of Angela Spencer with 17
members and two advisors
present. Refreshments were

M~ddleport's

dinners for Buffalo, N.Y.,
branch employes cost $3,606.

- J. Dewey Daane, after
one of thf nine Fed governors, was hired as a con, sultanr li!ld paid '10,074 from
March to JW!e . · '
- The New York
bought '123,013 worth/
airline Uckets,· all A nom
American Airlines.
- The
bank
bought $59
of bus
tickets so staff members
could "acquaint themselves
with the convenience of
public transportation during
the energy crisis."
- In St. Louis, Janice
Faigle was given ..3.41 to
cover her participation in the
United Fund program "as
Ms. Torch 1975."

Community Church, Langs-

vllle ~ Dexter

Road , 7:30p.m.
nightly . Evangelist is the
Rev . 0 . H. Cart of Mid dleport. There will be special

STARS INJURED
HINCKLEY, Ohio (UP!) Ahead.on auto collision near
here Saturday night caused
minor pnjury to six persons,
including James and Juan
Hager,
the
Hee-Haw
television show's famed
singing twins. James Hager
was cited for improper
passing. The Hagers were
returning to Cleveland
following an engagement at
the Coliseum in Richfield
Township . State Highway
Patrolman Lee Foster said
the singers' car apparently
went left of center on Ohio 303
and smashed into an oncoffiing auto.

Beware of Camel
Mailmen in the United States
have difficulty with dogs but
thmgs could be worse . Egyptian
mai lmen complain of being

mpped by ca mels , mailmen in
Brazil have been bitten by
jaguars. a Tongan Island
mailman was killed by a shark
and Afghanistan had to suspend
rural deliveries a few years ago
because leopclrds ate letter
carri ers.

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - THE SENATE TODAY approved a sixm?nth extension of emergency legislation that has kept t.he
price of nearly two-thirds of American produced oil from
soaring to world levels.
The Senate 's swift action came one day after President
Ford announced he would ask Co_n gress to let the controlled
price oil rise from .,.25 to $13.50 a barrel over the next 30
months. Congressional liberals plan to fight Ford's decontrol
plan. Under existing law, it goes into effect automatically
unless eith~r the Senate or House rejects it williin five working .
days after it is submitted.
WASHINGTON - EXXON CORP. HAS DISCLOSED gifts
of~ million to Italian politicians, the largest amount for any
company since federal probes in 1973 began uncovering the
corporate financing role in U.S. and world politics. Exxon said
political contributions are legal in Italy, but acknowledged
that ils subsidiary Esso Italiana had disguised the gifts for
nine years "so that they could not be identified as political
contributions."
"This was a inistake, " Exxon said in a statement Monday.
Exxon said the practice was stopped in 1971, two years before
th~_\Vp~rga~ \!:l~_!ti~_at!on~iscQy~r~ll illegal involvement of
corporations tn u. S. poUtlcs.
· Exxon disclosed the amount of its contributions in Italy in
advance of company officials' testimony Wednesday before
the Senate multinational corporations subcommittee which
has been investigating foreign payments by U. S. con{panies.

Elberfelds
In
Pomeroy
HEADQUARTERSFORFREEZfflG
AND CANNfflG SUPPLIES

eP~IC

CONTAINERS • FREEZER BOXES
eFREEZER BAGS • PRESSURE CANNERS
• BLANQIERS • ENAMELED CANNERS
• CANNING FUNNELS • FOOD MILlS.

WASHINGTON- CONTRACT TALKS BETWEEN the
postal service and its unions may extend beyond next Monday's strike deadline, but there may be some walkouts in big
cities, according to a union source. W. J. Usery Jr., White
House special assistant for labor management relations,
brought the two sides together for long weekend sessions and
more took place Monday.
Usery, also trying to prevent a nationwide railway strike
at 12:01 a.m. EDT Monday, said "we nm the risk of demonstrations" by disgruntled postal workers after Sunday night.
"Demonstrations are everything from people walking around
with signs just demonstrating to people not showing up for
work for one reason or another," he said.

-Ill L Al SALE PRICES THIS WEEK
HOUSEWARES DEPARTMENT, FIRST FLOOR
MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE OPEN WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5:00

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

DETROIT - SOME U. S. AUTO INDUSTRY analysts
think they see a glimmer of hope in an estimated modest increase in car sales in the first 10 days in July. The fact that the
estimated 160,000sales in the July 1-10 period did not follow the.
usual pattern of dropping about 8 per cent from early June is a
sign that the sales upswing is continuing, one analyst said. The
four U. S. companies sold 157,573 cars in the June 1-10 period.
Sales reports from the four domestic automakers were due
today. The 160,000 new car sales, however, would be about 9
per cent below last year's already depressed level and close to
35 per cent off the record July 1-10 period two years before the
start of the Arab oil embargo. If sales do hit 160,000, it would be
the lowest for the period since 1971 rather than the usual
(Continued on page 2)

A FULL
SERVICE
BANK

'
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lS

.- a I y
Devoted To The
VOL. XXVII

NO. 64

POMEROY-M'IDDLEPORT, OHIO

Soyuz
By AL ROSSITER JR.
UPI Science Editor
· Two Russian cosmonauts
carrying a United Nations
flag rocketed flawlessly into
orbit from a Central Asian
desert today 7•r, hours before
three 'Americans were
scheduled to blast off for
history's first meeting in
space of men from two
nations.
Col. Alexei Leonov and
civilian flight engineer Valerj

lrllere.~ts

•
In

Kubasov reported their Soyuz
19 spaceship was working
perfectly as it circled the
globe in the opening half of
the international project
drawing the attention of
millions around the world.
America 's
Apollo
astronauts Thomas Stafford,
Vance Brand and Donald
" Deke" Slayton waited
patiently at Cape Canaveral,
Fla., for launch at 3:50p.m.
EDT in pursuit of their

en tine

of 1'he Meigs-Masofl Area
TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1975

PRICE 15

orbit for Apollo
Russian co mrades. Congratulations from the Americans were radioed to the
cosmonauts nearly two hours
after launch.
"Thank you very much,"
Leonov said . "Everything is
perfect."
President Ford and 300
others watched on television
in the State Department
auditorium in Washington as
the Russians blasted off and
the Pressident led the cheers

ai\d applause as the two
cosmonauts went into orbit .
He said he was "very impressed ."
The countdown at the
Florida oceanside spaceport
was clicking along without a
hitch and project officials
reported the best weather
there in months.

If all goes according to
plan, the five spacemen will
meet in orbit Thursday,
docking 136 miles above
Germany. The symbolic
handshake will come three
hours later when Stafford
floats through a special
docking module-airlock to
Soyuz .

Mrs. Murray, at 95,
still d·o es housework
By Jo Ellen Diehl
a dressmaker for 20 years,
she "could see clothes.
hanging all around" when she
closed her eyes to sleep at
night.
Mrs . James
Murray,
Middleport, the former Lula
Randolph, remembered bits
of 95 years when I talked with
her Monday . She turned 95
last Wednesday .
The youngest of 13 children,
she was the daughter of
Joseph
Randolph
who
operated the ferry at Reedsville. He had come to Reedsville on a flatboat from Meadville, Pa ., where he was born.
Mrs. Murray remembers
winters when the Ohio froze,
and horses and. sleighs went
across the river to the B&amp;O
railroad tracks in West
Virginia where food was
brought in. " We had real
winters in those days, " she
said, with snow "clear to our
knees."
Her husband died about 25
years ago, but Mrs. Murray
remains in their white frame
home at 525 Gra.nt St., as she
has for the past 68 years and
still does her housework. In
all, she has lived in Middleport 77 years since her
marriage at the age of 18 and
has been a member of the
First Baptist Church of
Middleport 68 years. Said
Mrs. Murray , " I'm a Baptist,
my children are Baptists, and
they all married Baptists."
Though her health has
failed in recent years, and
she can't tend to raising
flowers in her garden, Mrs.
Murray crochets, sews, reads
the newspaper, and reads two
chapters in her Bible every
morning and evening.

She is of the opinion that
everything is very different
from the time when she was
young, especially c lothes '
styles. " They keep getting
worse .
But
I'm
old
fashioned ," she said.

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INGELS FURNITURE

•
SPOONBILL CAtFISH - Barry Allen, Antiquity,
displays a 38 inch fish his children found along the
riverbank at AntiqUity Monday afternoon. He believes it is
a spoon-bill catfish which he says are almost extinct.

Concern was apparent
Monday among members of
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce
over
the
scheduled closing of the
Pomeroy-Mason bridge Aug .
I through Dec. 1 or 15 for
repairs.
· Following a regular :uncheon at the Meigs lnn, Jack
Carsey pointed out that the .
closing of the bridge will
sharply affect the economy of
the Pomeroy, Middleport and
Mason area . He suggested
thai perhaps one side of the
bridge could be kept open to
permit · at least one-way
traffic. However, President
Ted Reed said this will not be
possible due to the 'type of
fl oor lhat will be placed on
lhe bridge. Pedestrian traffic

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...
Hargraves honored by Meigs Local
Monday night at the Meigs High School cafeteria was "George Hargraves Night". Mr.
Hargraves, who is leaving Meigs Local School District after serving as superintendent for nine
years, was honored by teachers, board members, non-certified school personnel and friends.
Hargraves has accepted the position of superintendent of the Jefferson County Joint .
Vocational School.
L. W. McComas, district clerk, served as master of ceremonies in an informal tribute to
Hargraves who com'!'ended him for an e.cellent job as did Carol Pierce, president of the
school board ; Ed Bartles, president of the Teachers' Association, and Dwight Goins, who
presented Hargraves a wrist watch on behalf of the employes of Meigs Local High School.
Hargraves, left, is congratulated by Carol Pierce at Monday night's event. Hargraves expressed appreciation to his m?ny friends and wished the school board " nothing but success."
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;.;.;.:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:=:·:

MRS . JAMES (LULA) MURRAY, 525 Grant St.,
Middleport, celebrated her 95th birthday last week with
family and friends. A formal celebration was held Sunday
at her home.

One item in her home of
which she is especially proud
is a family history that traces
the Randolph family back to
Rolf,
the
Norseman
Conqueror in England who
died in 932. She can also lind
links with the pilgrims in the
town of Plymouth.
The highlight ol her life
she said was " bringing up
my children." She had three,
one of whom died in infancy .
Her daughk!r, Mrs. Randolph
IMary ) Ward, lives in
Ravenswood, and a son,
William R. Mtirray, in Worth'
ington, Ky .
She never liked to travel.
"I'm more of a home person I
guess, " she said. And she

th inks she has good cause to
stay home with her "good
neighbors " around her.
Her famil y held a party in
her honor Sunday . The table
was decora ted with red
carnations and
baby's
breath, a gift from Fay
Sauer, he r grea t-niece, and
the cake had red and green
decorations.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Randolph Ward, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Dow, Mr. and
Mrs . Richard Ward, Sherry ,
Ricky and Mike; Mr . and
Mrs . Dwaine Giles, Tammy
(who was seven on Mrs.
Murray 's birth da y ) , an d
Angie, a nd Chad Colmer.

will be possible.
Carsey suggested that if nq
C. E. Blakeslee suggested solution to 'the problem can be
that as soon as possible a
worked out, federal money
meeting be set up of th ~ may be available to subsidize
Pomeroy and Middlepor\ the cost or the ferry service
Chamber of Commerce and which would lower the
key legislators to see wh •t proposed rates of 80 cents per
can be done :
car, one way, and two-ton
Reed stated that he will trucks , $2.
write
to
congressman
In other business the
Clarence Mi.ller at once. Most chamber hired Russell
members eJxpressed concern Eshelman, Rt. 4, P omeroy ,
over the length of time the as the new m er cha nt
bridge will be closed . It will policeman.' Eshelman is a
be closed as noted 'above and form er indus trial guard
again in 1976 from March 15 having worked at Gavin. He
to November.
will furni sh 'his own uniform,
As one member pointed gun , and car.
out, if the bridge is closed
Jed Webste r, chief of
until Dec . 15, "Chri stmas police.
will
in troduce
shoppin g' will be hurt as mos t Es he lman In lhe merchants.
peop le s larl early
in F:she lman wi ll also do his own
November ."
cu lleclinl:! fr um lhC&gt; lll f' l' ·

'•
'.

I

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'&gt;
'

Leonov, 41-year-&lt;Jld Soyuz
commander, and Kubasov,
40, blasted away only five
thousandths of a second late
at 8:20a .m. EDT (4 :20p .m .
local time ) from Baikonur
Cosmodrome near the town of
Tyuratam east of the Aral
Sea .
(Continued on page 8)

'

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'

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$36,500 in red

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday
through
Saturday;
chance
of
showers or thundershowers
each day. Highs will be in
the upper 80s and lower 90s
and lows will he In the mid
and upper 60s.

Campaign opens
SYRACUSE - Members of
the Syracuse ER Squad will
begin canvassing the village
for donations toward the
purchase of a new ER ambulance .
The present truck, a 1960
model, cannot meet state
specifications . It will be used,
however, for back up runs
after the new ambulance is
acquired . Fifteen members
re ce ntly completed state
instructional classes o n
" emergency victim care " .

Ceiling ·prices
on buses jump
COLUMBUS i UPI) - New
ceiling prices for school
buses , $1.71 million for
educational television and
1'•75-76 sc hoo l foundation
1uuds for the South Point
Local School District in
Lawrence County were approved Monday by the state
Board of Education, which
also honored outstanding
Ohio high school scholars.
New ceiling prices for
buses range from $948 more
than in 1974-75 for vehicles
with seating capacities of 1620 to $5,400 more than in 197475 for vehicles with seating
capacities of 72.
Preliminary contracts with
eig ht nonprofit television

corporations totaJJng $1.54
million were approved by the
board to assure 30 hours of
instructional television per
week for 32 weeks during the
1975-76 school year.
In addition, the board approved $147,598 to lease 26
telec-ourses for broadcasting
during the 1975-76 school
year, $6,127 for Ohio membership in the Chicag()-based
Central Educational Network .
and $14,750 to provide new
VIdeotape and dubbing of
television lessons.
Foundation funds for South
Point were approved after
the board determined that the
distri.ct had reopened schools
for nine additional days in
June to comply with statutory
minimum
school
year
requirements.
Recognized for academic
excellence were
three
Presidential Scholars and the
26 top scorers orr the Ohio
Tests
of
Scholastic
Achievement.
This year's Presidential
Scholars from Ohio are Kate
·A Bauer of Lakewood High
School, Michael A. Weiss of
fund to purchase Christmas Hawken High School at Gates
decorations . No action was Mills in Cuyahoga County and
~ken, however .
John W. Campbell III of
Ferman Moore said he has Findlay High School.
space available for the safety
The board also :
course bein g offered for
- Allocated Appalachia
empl oyer and employees vocational construction and
over 14 weeks. The classes equipment money 'to the
will be two hours per night. Southern
Hills
Joint
Courses being offered are Vocational School District in
helpful in cutting down on ; Brown County ($210,300) and
costs or workman's com - the Switzerland of Ohio Local
pensation, Moore said.
School District in Monroe
Attending were Reed, Mrs. Count~ ($117,459 ).
Thomas , Moore, Carsey,
- Allocated $48,742 in
Blakeslee
,
Fred
Morrow
federa
I work -study funds to
.
'
Veran VanMeter, Melvin
11 new school districts.
VanMeter. Virgil Teaford,
-Changed membership of
Bob Jacobs, George Hobthe Southwest Cuyahoga and
ste lter, Wendell Hoover Don
Eastland joint vocational
Thomas,
Bill
Gru~ser
school districts' boards of
Beulah Jones, Melissia'
education
to
provide
Kerr anrt K.::.tiP rrnw
f ("""t1rm¥ """ ~QO'P fl\

Relief from bridge closing
wanted by Pomeroy Otamber

'

.•·

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•

A budget showing a deficit five-year ordinance contra ct
of . ~.500 ~as adopted by with Columbus and Southern
Middleport Council last night. Elec tric Co. for street li ghts.
Gene
Grate ,
clerk - However, beffre the new
treasurer, said he made the contract begins in July, 1976,
budget with "everythi ng council must find a new way
everybody wanted ." The of paying for street lighting,
budget must be filed with lhe tiw' would be included in the ·
county _auditor by July 20.
prop&lt;»v l income tax.
Council, in discussm g ways
Previou~! ~, the electric
to make up the deficit agreed company has dune the billing
that an income tax would be and collecting itself, but in
the best way, although each the past year the company
member polled personally has lost in excess of $100,000
was against it. However, all in the process from Mid expressed the opinion that an dleport and eight other towns
income tax would be the where this has been the
"fairest way" to finance the policy, according to Bill
village expenditures .
Wilcoxen, company spokesAn informal meeting was man . The cost of the street
called for Thursday at 1 p .m . lighting is approximately
to discuss legislation that $9,000, or 2!i percent of the
could include an income tax. bbdget defi cit.
If legislation is planned a
In other matters, J . J .
special - and open Cremeans , Chief of Police,
meeting will be held.
representing the citizens
Council also approved a
Continued on page 2

PRICES INCLUDE COMPLETE INSTAUAnON OVER FOAM RUBBER PADDING
CARPET
your choice

$799

. .

no one on council, is
' considered the fairest

Spencer. The next meeling

A REVIVAL IS in progress
and will continue through .
July 19 at the Midway

budget for '76

Income tax, liked by

served by Jean and Angela
will be at the home of Tina
Beaver on Tuesday, July 15.

•

his retirement in February as

· Lydia, dear-you .
simply must attend!
It's the biggie big event
of the year- and all
the best carpet buys
will be there!

1773: The year the colonists stopped taking tea
and started making trouble.

1~,000~00

news in brief

Emergency
Medical
Technicians are presently singing each eveening .
enrolled in the 84-hour ad- Pastor Theron Durham in vanced training program in vites the public.
preparation for activating the
telemetry phase .of the 1975. Morgan reported,
demonstration project. telemetry in the Phase II,
Implementation of telemetry Athens County area, and
in Lawrence County, the Phase III, Gallia County area
•
Phase I area, is projected to is scheduled to occur in the
take place . during August fall.
The Department of Health,
Education and Welfare announced in January of this
year that it had extended the
period of federal funding to
the demonstration project an
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
additional ' six months , or
Double Feature Program
until December 31, 1975.
'MONIQUE'
Rated X
PLUS
"HOT PANTS
HOLIDAY"
Today is Monday, July 14,
Rated X
the !95th day of 1975 with 170
to follow.

=

THE FARMERS .BANK
AND SAVINGS
CO.
Ponierov, Ohio

Fed goinglthe .swank way

Notices, local

County Chapter. Association

Geraldine Good

CAROL MANN WINS
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UP! ) Carol Mann, who took the
lead. on opening day and
never relinquished it, won the
darkness and storm delayed
$65,000 Columbus
Ladies
Professional Golf Association
open here today when she
completed the last four holes
of her final round in even par
for a 54 hole total of 209-seven
under par .

Tonight thru Wed .

*
m~nean

Willow Wood, 0 .; Mrs.
W. R . Doolittle,
Point
Pleasant;
Bryan
Edmonds,
Scottown,
b.; Mrs. Sam Boston, Letart;
Edward Finley, Racin e;
Jacqueline Greene, Hartford,
and Mrs . Dewey White ,
Gallipolis.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wt•dnesday 'through
Friday, lair Wednesday.
Chance of showers Thursday .. anJi Friday. Hlglts in
.the 80s Wednesday and in
the low 90s Thursday and
Friday. Lows in the 80s.

cha n~

for his serv ices.
Newly elected board of
direc tors for a two year term
were Jack Carsey, Bill
Grueser, Ralph Graves,
Ferman Moore , Wendell
Hoover and Virgil Teaford .
Other directors with a year to
serve are N. W. Compton,
Earl Ingels, Fred Morrow ,
Dale Warner, Fred Crow ,
J ohn Kerr and Ted Reed .
Carolyn Grueser ,
secretary. reported that 28
members have paid "dues.
The annual fee of $35 was due
by July I.
Reed reported the re is
$3,451.08 in the Regatta fund
and $1,098.10 in the gene ral
fund . Members discussed
lranslerrin g $2.000 fr om the
RPv ~ lt ~

rHnrl tn lhP Hf' T1l' ,. "l l

..

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