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8- The Daily Sentinel, MiddleJ.lO•I -Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 15, 1975

Notices, ,local news in brief
There will

be

celebra t •on ot the 90th birth day of the old es t square
da ncer at the cen ter , Wilb ur
Logan Everyone i s welcom e,
and bri ng the k 1ds

a meet ing of

the
Syracuse -M i ne r sv ill e
Baseball Booste rs ton ight at
6 : 45
at
the
mun ic ip al

building .
THE

SE NI OR

T H E A R EA Volu ntee r Fire
and Eme rg ency A ssn .. wi ll
meet Wedn esd ay , July 16, at
7 30 p .m . at the f i r e station in
New Haven . Co mmun i t y
eme r gency 1 pla nn ing ·
ope r ations w ill tJe th e su b ie d
of the pr ogram. Bob E . Byer,
associa tion pre5iden t said

Ci ti zens

organi zation w ill s ponsor a

squa re dance thi s Sa t urday ,
J u ly 19 from 8 : 30 to 11: 30
p .m . a t the sen ior ci ti zens

cenJu i in

Pom eroy.

Fire subdued
at Goodyear
chemical .plant

Th ere

will be square a nd roun d
dancing
and
a
spe cia l

T HE MARTIN a nd Em m a
Rou sh Sayr e annual r eu ni on
w i ll be hel d ~ug . J, n l the
Shri ne P!l r k tn Racine

MEIGS TltEATRE
Tonight a nd Wedn esday

THE T HIRD Fridny Clu b
wi l l meet Friday at 7· 30 p.m
at the home o f Mr ~ Phillip

Walt Di sney's

THE STRONGEST MAN
IN THE WORLD

Me111 h~1 rt

(Tec hni co lor)
St arri ng : Kurt Russe l l, Joe
Flynn , Eve A r den, Cesar
Romero. Ph il Silve r ~

LOCAL TEMPS
Tem perature in dow ntow n

" G"
Fealuret1e : Goofy SpOr lacular, Di sney
Show starts a-17 : 00p. m .

Pom eroy Ttlesday at I I a .m .

was -'9 degrees under par tly
cloudy skies .

PT . PLEA!;ANT - A fire at
the local Goodyear chemical
plant in Apple Grove, W. Va.,
was

r e ported

Monday

eve nin g. Cause of the fire is
und e r

in vest igat ion ,

but

appa rentl y resul ted from a
leak in a pipe conta ining

heati ng fluid .
The fire, wh1 ch bega n at
approx imately 11 p.m., oceurred 1n a p1pe ro ck, located
on the northeast side of the
resin building. It was conta ined in i::l ' small area 'and
was subdued by midnight.
!\

minor blast resulting

in juri es as

C:~

re:-m lt of the

mishap .
The re was minor damage

tempora ril y. Most opera tions
have bee n restored .

IIII

•••••

BEER HOLDUP
CACUAS. P .R. (UP I)
J ose l .uis Morales Garay
pulled out a pistol in the bar
of Bernardo F onseca TOrres,

demanded and got a beer ,
then fl ed. He was apprehended a few hours later
Monday, arraigned and jailed
m $5,000 bond.

·-··

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two month time
Middleport
Firemen
answered 74 calls during
t~e months of May and
June, six lor lire and 68 fur
llrst ald. Total manhours
lor fire only were 17.9 and
lor II(St aid, Z77.6. Mileage
on all vehicles was 1,970.5.
Parking meter collectiuns by the pollee
department totaled
$1,134.50 with 4,716 miles
put on the cruiser. Arrests
totaled 36, according to
reports to council Monday
night.

ONE ~'INED
SYR'A CUSE
One
defendant was fined and
another forfeited bond in
May or He rman Lond on 's

Court Monday night. Poli ce
Chief Milton Varian said Roy
W. Proffitt, Portland , forfe\ted a b&lt;lnd of $ZZ.70 posted
on a charge of speeding, and
on the same charge, Michael
P. Salser, 18, Racine , was
fined $12 and costs.
TWO RUNS MADE
RACINE - The Racine ER squad answered two calls
Monday, one at 3 p.m. to
assisl Anna Louise Stanley ,
Long Bottom, who was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted and
Johnson , Racine ,

taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital at 4:40 p .. and admitted .

- -

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I-,'.I •'·I

SERVICE

out 74 times in '.

Vivian

,.

-

Soyuz up

.Firemen called

from the fire occurred aroun d
II: 15 p.m. There were no

to the elevator pan el and a
nearby building. No damage
es tima te has been made .
Production was interrupted

Our Favorite Word Is

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TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Racine E-R squad was
called today at 8:35a.m. for
Belva Ambergy, Racine, a
medical patient, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Yes. we're a F-ull Se rv ice

s ·a nk an d ready to he lp yo u Wit h a ll your bank·
ing needs .from passbo o k and cert lii ca te sav ·
ings to checkmg accounts. cashier c hec ks.
mocey orders. trave le r·s c hecks. dep os it t:&gt;oxes
loans of all types and f rie ndly serv1 ce .
WAL~-UPTELLER

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

"THE FRJI!.'NUL} BANK "
PlTTSBURGit

.~

t.ilbens
/ialiona\
-""'CiiiiClNNATI
MIDDLEPORT
-...- . OHIO

MIDDLEPORT.

0~

Stephen Hopkin s. the e ldest
signer of th e Dec lara tion of

In depend ence next to BenJamm
F ra nklin . is remembered for

hi s tre mul ous signature . Aged
69 and affli cted with palsy , ac·

cor d1ng t o traditi o n he
decl ared, ·· My hand trembles
b ut m y hea rt dues not' .,

Hopkins sub sequ ently served on
th e committees that prepared
the Articles of Confederation and
created th e Contin ental Navy.
The World Almanac notes.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Evelyn C.
Stewart, Mason; Anna

I.T COSTS NO MORE FOR THE BEST

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Read., for automatic: Ice when 'IOU are.
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Teakwood trim and distinctive
smok~d onyx accents are elegant
hmts of co nvenience inside.
Top-freezer has 4.75 cu . it. with
separate ice sto rage a nd a shelf.
Automatic Ice Maker. with
exclusive Cube Level Control
can be added now or laler
'
(ext ra charge). Storage includes
twin Vegetable Hydrators, Meat
Tender. d·oor compartments.

.)

Get comfort power that happens
From Frigidaire.
From Frigidaire, here's an
Environment Maker Room
Air Conditioner that cools
automatically. The big
15,000 BTUs/ hr' cooling
capacity of this.room air
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days and a warm room.
Provides set-it-and-forgetit Comfort Power t:&gt;y automatically ~?Ontrolling compressor and fan speed as
room temperature
changes . A great addition
to your home environment.
~c..t
. Hied by. AHAM. When operatln_9

on 230. volts: 14 ,500 s -; Ja t hr. @
208 '4o.lll.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
went Monday at 9:48a.m. for
Ora Waddle , Leading Creek,
who was removed to Holzer
Medical Center.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
was called at 11:20 p.m.
Monday for Mrs. Floyd Barnhart, a medical patient, taken
to Holzer Medical Center.

Stanley , Long Bottom; Jason
Bush, Middleport; Vivian
Johnson, Racine ; Opal
Taylor, Racine ; Timothy
Drake, New Haven; Pearl
Scarberry, Mason.
DISCHARGES - Sheriden
Pierce , Irene Cross, James
Partlow, Carla Kauff, Clyde
Salser, Matgaret Donahue .

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Marvin
Bennett, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. Danny Potts and son,
Gallipolis Ferry ; Mrs.
William Robinson, daughter,
Pliny; Joanna Burris, Point
Pleasant; Mrs . Robert
Hornback, Point Qleasant,
and Mrs . Robert Byerley,
Gallipolis.
Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, July 14)
Genevieve Ann Barnhart,
Mrs. Steele Carrico and infant son, Roxie M. Cremeens,
William C. Eggleton, Harry
Lester Gilliland, Charles M.
Harmon, John Arlen Jenkins,
Mark Monroe Layne, Randall
L. Maynard, Mrs . John Earl
Norton and infant son, Candy
Kay Proffitt, Rosina SaWlders, John Daniel Simpkins,
Mrs. Jerry L. Waters and
infant daughter, Mrs. Virgil
VV. VVatson, and infant son
and Sue Jo White.
(Births)
'
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Malone,
a son, Hamden; Mr. and Mrs.
Myron D. Bartram, a· son,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert E. Kiser, a son,
Bidwell.
. ·. .

The
Environment
Makers
from Frigidaire·
Model A-1s3a

MA~.N o.R~~E-IN
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TONIGHT
Double FeatUr.e Program

'MONIQUE'

"

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT ; OH"ft~f ·

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"HOT PANTS
HOLIDAY 11 I
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I

(Continued Fom page I)
Witn Sov1et television
beaming the view to hundreds of millions of persons
aroimd lhe globe for tbe first
lime, the 162-foot, :IIH!ngine
Soyuz rocket climbed slowly
out of a pit in its COQcrete
firing pad and rose over the
flat, hot expanse of the
Russian base that opened the
s pace age in 1957 with
Sputnik.
The ro cket 's engines,
gulping liquid oxygen and
kerosene, produced 1 million
pounds of thrust. The ir
combined red and orange
flame soon became !WI the
could be seen as tbe booster
accelerated in th e clea'r
sky.
The . cosmonauts gave a
running technical com mentary in Russian of the
launch phase .
" Very slight swinging, "
Leo nov said. " Pressure
normal. Everything is perfect . Lit tie overload 1pull
against gravity) but it is
possible to work under these

Ernest R-iffle died Monday
POINT PLEASANT Ernest E . Riffle , 65,
Gallipolis Ferry,
died
Mo11day at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. He was b&lt;lrn in
Mason County, the son of the
late Samuel i Jake) and Ann
Elizabeth Childers Riffle. A
boilermaker, he wa s a
member of Local 667 in
Charleston and of the Point
Pleasant Presbyterian
Church .
Mr . Riffle is survived by his
wife , Evelyn Jennin gs Riffle ;
one daught er, Mrs. Roy
(Carol~ Ann) Click, Mt. Alto;
a son , Frank , Gallipolis

Ferry;. a sister, Mrs. Cora
Bonecutter, Pt. Pleasant;
five grandchlldren, and
several cousins in Meigs
County.
Funeral services will be

Mam County

held Thursda1.at 2 p .m. at the
erow-H~W~ell Funeral Home
with the Rev . Rufus
Cromartie officiating. Burial
will . be in ' L1)ne Oak
Cemetery. Friends may call
·at the fun~ral home after 6
this evening.

(r&lt;&gt;ntinued from page 6)
Strother and son, Tod at LOUISville, Ry.
Mr. and Mrs. Stan Saunders and family, Cameron, Amber
and Melanie of Columbus, visited from VVednesday until ·
Saturday with Mrs. Saunders' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
McDaniel.
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Jenks went to MoWldsville, VV. Va.
where they observed the 23rd wedding anniversary of their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Huck. From·
there the Jenks and Mr . Howard Huck and family went to
Pittsburgh to attend the Pirates and San Diego Baseball game.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Roush, Cuyla and Thomas attended
lhe New York Mets and Cincinnati Reds game at Cincinnati
and while tbere visited the zoo, and from there to Seven Caves.
They left on Wednesday and returned on Saturday.
Vernon Roush, Jr ., a second year student at Parkersburg
Community College, visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Roush, Sr., Guyla and Thomas over the weekend.
Mr. a nd Mrs . Ted Riley of Clifton, visited on Sunday
evening with their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Roush and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Roush and daughters of Newburg, N.
Y., spent several days visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Jenks in Mason. Mr. and Mrs. ,SOnny Roush and family
of Addison, Ohio visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Jenks, his brother and family on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. Uoyd Williams has been returned to his home in
Clifton, after spending about three weeks in Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Mrs. Charles Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ross and son
Shawn visited over the weekend at Lebanon, Va . with Mrs:
Yeager's aunt, Mrs. Evelyn Hobbs .
Mrs. A. L. Stewart of Charleston Road is a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mrs. Reginald Harland daughter, Regina, of Glendale VV.
Va ., are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Zerkle. '
Mrs. Edward Ryan and daughter, Rita, went to Wheeling
where Rita took the state board of cosmotology exam. s~
attended Charleston Beauty Academy and is employed at
Carol's Coiffures in Mason.
Mrs. Nellie Dudding of New Haven, was a SWlday visitor
of Mr. and Mrs. Eber Roush and Mary .
Marty Yeager and Vicki Burton were two of the lucky ones
to attend Ule ~!vis Presley Show on Saturday in Chafldton.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lambert and son Mike visited
their son, Pvt. James Robert Lambert, station~d at Ft. Hood,
Texas. The Lamberts were gone five days on their vacation.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'

. Canton firm to
·strip coal in
northeas~ Meigs
By Joe Ellen Dlelil
TUPPERS PLAINS - A new strip mining firm will soon
be in full scale operation here, according to Bob Grimm, of the
Grimm Mining Co. Inc., Canton.
Located on the former Parker Nutter farm , the strip mine
presenUy covers a 70-acre area . Equipment has been moved
in,. setting up is. going on this week; and Grimm expects
production to begin within a week with full scale production by
fall.
All employees will be local Grimm .
Concerning the condition of
people with the exception of
the
land Crimm said, "We 'll
the company's master
mechanic, Art Nethekin, of res tore it back to as near
Morgantown, W. Va. Five norJ'!lal as can be ." The
area men are now working company is a member of the
with the company , and the Ohi o Reclamation
number is expected to climb Association.
Grimm , who recently
to 15 in the fall . Crimm said
he wants "experienced m oved to Coolville from
operators" which he thinks Canton, was a strip miner
should be easy to find in the earlier in his life. VVhen
speculation about the Nutter
area .
.. "We hope to lease mw:e PMP"*Jte'•rted:&amp;MMf.·a year
land, going to several httn- ago, he decided to dissolve his
dred ac.res if everything Can ton trucking firm and go
works out" in the next ten to into partnership with Francis
twenty years, said Crimm. Bruchey early this spring .
An office is planned with a
There is a 20 to 50 foQt cover
processing
plant and scales in
to be stripped before the
miners reach a three to four the future. Pleased with
foot belt of coal. Local southern Ohio, Grimm said
trucking firms will be con- the company will do all it can
tracted to haul the coal to the toward progress in the
company's own resources. community. " Anything we
" VVe have unlimited op- can do to help, we'll be glad to
portWlities in the area," said participate," he said.

iNews.
. . in Briefst\'*
,,,.
By United Press international
COLUMBUS - LEGISLATION ELIMINATING the
current 8 per cent interest ceiling on conventional and business
real estate loans and establishing a "floating" interest rate
has cleared both chamber-s of the Ohio G~eral Assembly . The
measure, aimed at stimulating the housing market in Ohio,
i"as passed by the Senate Tuesday and returned to the House,
which passed a similar .version last May 6.
The Senate vote was 2!i to 8 on a bipartisan basis. The
House must now concur in Senate changes before sending the
bill to Gov. James A. Rhodes. Meanwhile, H(iuse Democrats
continued to try to work out a settlement on a controversial
rewrite of the state's school subsidy formula, ticketed for a
vote in the House Finance Committee later this week.
CHICAGO - THE SOVIET UNION will have to impot;IIO
million ton of grain this year and some will be purchased from
the United Stales if the "to-do" about the grain deal does not
scare them off, A~riculture Secretary Earl Butz said Tuesday .
Butz warned that the United States could lose its share of
the business if people continue to think th'e re's "something
evil" in selling a bushel of wheat to Russians."
WASHINGTON - REP. JOHN M. ASHBROOK, R.Ohio,
said today he is opposed to President Ford's proposed plan to
divert a portion of the federal gasoline tax from the highway
trust fund to the general revenue fund. Ford's proposal would
divert balf of the present 4 cents per gaHon federal tax on
gasoline from the federal highway trust fWld to the general
revenue fWld.
Of the other 2 cents, 1would go into the highway trusl'fund
and the other would be available to the states by allowing them
to·raise their state gasoline tax by a penny. When this is done, ·
the federal government would lower its feder!ll tax by 1 cent.

Polygab Knits by Queen Casuals •.• fresh answer
for hot summer-into early fall days
.

. JACKSONVILLE, FLA. - AN UNIDENTIFIED man
burned to death Tuesday night in a restroom aboard a National
Al!'lines flight en route to Miami from New York, forcing the
plane to make an emergency landing here, officials said.
· Pollee said the death was an appm:ent suicide.
A passenger on National flight- 1601, which had 57
paSSengers aboard, said the victim, a llear&lt;kld man wearing a
T .,5hirt, entered a restroom. Suddenly passengers and crew
saw a "flash of lleht." "Stewardesses were running down the
aisle !lhoutin&amp;.. 'Tell the captain,, tell the captain'," said
Jll!ssenger George PizaiTo of Miami.
"
" The plane made an emergency landing at Jacksonville ,
InternaUonal-.Airport. Airline officials said the passengers
were transferred linmediately to an Eastern Airlines flight
hiading for Miami.

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Mam Store. Annex and Wa,rehouse Open Wednesday 9:30 to s

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY
'

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By BAIU\Y JAMml
MOSCOVV ( UPI) - Two
Soviet cosmmauts cut lllort
their sleep today to work m a
balky television camera that
has prevented coverage of
their preparatims for a space
rendezvous with three
American astronauts.
Officials at Kallningrad
mission control center said
Col. Alexei Leonov and
engineer Valeri Kubasov
were doing their job · "~­
cellently ."
Vlktor Blagov, who headed
the overnight team at the
center said, " They are
carrying
out
some
procedures from memory
without referring to their log
books."
The cosmonauts woke up
hours early to try to
repair a black and white
television camera that went
dead
during Wtoff Tueaday.
ART NE'IHEKIN, MASTER MECHANIC of the Grimm Mining Co ., Inc. , is the only
By
midday,
nearly 24 hours
non-local employee of the firm . Some 15 men are expected to be employed when the firm
(Continued on page 14)
goes mto full scale operation this fall.

1,.

·~~:::::::::::::::::.":=:=:-"::;:;:~;:;:::::::;:;:;::::::::::.;::~:::~:::::::·:·:::::·:::·:~:::::;:::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~o:::~~~:~

Ceiling

'•

• , space
m

By Alma Mushall

QUEEN
CASUALS

(Continued from page 1)
representation from Olmsted
Falls and Reynoldsburg,
respectively, b&lt;lth of which
became city school districts
July 1.
-Revised the Stark County
Area Joint Vocational School
District
to
include
representation from the new
member
districts
of
Louisville City and Minerva
Local, both in Stark County,
and Brown Local in Carroll
County.
- Authorized the Delphos
City School District to contract with the Lima City
School District for vocational
educatiion services.
-Approved dissolutian of
the Auglaize-Mercer Joint
Vocational School District.
- Extended from Sept. I,
1975, until Sept. I, 1978, a
provision enabling school districts thjlt are members of
joint vocational school
districts to count up to five
units of vocational education
·11.!1 part of the 45 units
minimum required, provided
at least 10 per eent of
enrollment in grades 9
through 12 is In attendance at
th.. joint vocational school.
- Approved expanded
teacher education offerings
at eight institutions.
.
-Chartered the Ohio Youth
Conunission's Indian River
School
Massillon
.in
'
Massillon 'Christian School,
VVayside Christian School in
Bucyrus and Olmsted Falls
City School District to reflect
change of status from local
districts effective July 1..

balk. Y

News Notes

mission is a truly historic
occasion. Never before have
representatives of two
countries lived and worked
together in space. They have
a wonderful, unique opportunity as a result."
In Moscow, Secretary
Leonid Brezhnev wished the
spacemen a safe journey and
a successful accomplishment
of the mission. Ab&lt;lard Soyuz
19 was a United Nations flag
the
c;osmonauts plan to give
conditions."
"One hundred and sixty to the Americans . who will
bring it back to earth for
seconds and the sky is very,
very blue," one of the pilots presentation to the United
said . "Saw little white snow- Nations. Both spaceships also
carried seeds, medallions
flakes."
Ten minutes after launch, and other gifts to be exSoyuz went into an orbit changed.
The Apollo also had 8.7
ranging from 137 to 116 miles
ounces
of gold and 4.5 OWlces
high.
"The program of flight for of lead to be melted and
the first orbit has been mixed in a special furnace in
normal," said Moscow the Apollo. Some of tbe
control as the 25-foot resulting alloy will be
spaceship went into its presented to the Russians.
On the American crew,
second 88-minute swing
Stafford,
44, was making his
around Earth. The basic
objective of the Apollo-Soyuz fourth spaceflight. But it was
mission is to demonstrate the first for Brand, 44, and
that men of different nations, Slayton, 5i-year-old Mercury
using different leclmologies pilot grounded for years by a
and speaking different minor heart irregularity.
Leonov and Kubasov were
languages, can rendezvous
scheduled
to parachute to a
and link up in orbit. This
could he used for future landing on the Siberian plain
rescue flights and more near Karaganda Monday .
ambitious
cooperative The Apollo astronauts
planned to stay in orbit three
ventures.
U.S. AmbassadorVValter J. additional days to carry out
Stoessel Jr., his wife and two experiments, splashing down
other Americans watched &gt;Pe in the Pacific Ocean July 24.
launch
from
the
cosmodrome. They were the
first VVesterners to see a
manned shot there.
President Ford watched
the shot on television with
Russian Ambassador Anatoly
Dobrynin in a ceremony
washed with detente in
Washington . The ambassador
for girls who know the nome of Ihe game
then flew to Florida If see \he
Apollo blastoff.
Twice the 300 viewers in the
State Department auditorium
burst into applause during
the show from Russia and
both times it was the
President, his hands raised
over his head and clapping,
who led the cheering.
"I am impressed," Ford
said. "I am very impressed. I
wish them well. ·
"The launch marks the
beginning of a very epic
venture into space. It's my
judgment that this joint space

.

Camera

CRANES BEGAN MOVING earth this week in
preparation for strip mining by the Grimm Mining Co.
Inc. this week on the former Parker Nutter farm two
miles from Tuppers Plains.

•

enttne
VOL. XXVII,.._ NO. 65

Devoted To Th e Interests of 1'h e Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1975

New pet show
format at fair
There will be an all new and
different ··show. at the
Meigs County ·Fair next
month .
Eight classes open to all
youth 19 years of age and
under are dog class, rodent
class, cat class, tiest-dressed ,
most-talented , and bes t
overall. There will be a best
animal class for adults only .
Adults may enter any kind of
animal in this class .
There also will be an open
class for the most WJusual pet
for b&lt;lth · youth and adults.
Contestants are allowed only
one entry per class.
Rules for the pet show
follow :
No animals weighing over
150 pOWldS.·
One entry per class .
Regi stration is due by
Friday , August 8. Send

Pel

registration to the Meigs
CoWJty Extension Office, Box
32, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Entry fee of 25 cents (to
help cover cost of awards ).
Have pet Wlder control at
all times.
If pel can be led , lead him ;
if not, carry pet in suitable
container.
In most-talented class,
tricks listed on entry blank
must be done in front of
judges.
Judges ' decision is final.
All pets should have had
rabies shots.
The pet show will be
Friday, August 15 at 10 a.m .
in the new lives tock show
ring . More pet show information will be published
later . Below is an entry form
to be mailed as directed :

ENfRY B
K
1975 Meigs County Fair Pet Show
Class - - - - - - -- - - Your Age _ __
Your Name, _ __ _ _ _ _ _ Address _ _ __
Type of Pet _ _ _ _ _ Pet's Name - - - - Tricks to be done --;-:-;-:::--::-:-:-::--;-;--:-:-'7--;---:-- (if in most-talented class)
I wish to participate in the Meigs County Fair Pet
Show. I agree to abide by the show rules.

- - -- - - - - - - - - (Signature)
Send entry blank plus 25 cents (entry fee) to the
Meigs County Extension Office , Box 32,Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 ..

Corn fest drew.
500 into park
I

The Middlep.o rt Citizens'
Recreation Committee
termed its Saturday evening
"corn fest" a success with an
e,stimated 500 people meeting
at the park. Over 40 watermelons
and
one-half
truckload of roasted corn
were consumed throughout
the evening, and there was
free swimming fot all .
Those contributing either
goods or services for the fest
were · Delbert Swisher,
Kanauga, 46 dozen ears of
:. KINGSTON,N . Y. - SHE VVATCHES THE WORWfrom corn ; Jack Cumf(lin~ , Letart
·het bedroom window blue eyes keenly observing the every!lay Falls, 30 dozen ears of cor~ ;
with usual intetesl; /rail hands 'gingerly'maneuvering crochet Eli ];;l)ersbach, Middleport,
(Continued on ·page 14)
.}. corn and m oney; Larry

.

O'Brien, Letart Falls, six
bushel of corn; Charles
Harris, produce, Portland; 2
bu. corn ; Mark V Supermarket, picnic supplies ; M
and R Stores, picnic supplies;
Goeglein Sllnd and Gravel,
sand, and !Jghtninjl Boyd,
. trash removal.
Contributors for other
re c reation

committee

pr bjects include Larry's
Re c reation Center, DHle
Ellis '
Sohio ,
Ossie 's
RecreatioQ Room , · Co lton
Miller , Clyde Boyles, Delmar
Hawley, James Clatworthy,
Spencer's Market, Young's
iConli nued on page ) 4)

The 1976 budget was approved showing a balan ce of
$857.1 1 by the Meigs CoWJty
Commissioners Tuesday . It
shows recei pts for the year
1976 anticipated at $673.562.27
and expected expenses of
$672,705 .16.
A hearing on the budge~
was held Tuesday morn ing.
With no questions asked , the
commission adopted it.
In other busin ess th e
commissi oners

aCcepted

a

bid in the amount of $2,000
subm itted by VValter (Scott )
Lucas, administrator of
Vete ran s Memorial Hospital
for lan d, the forme r sc hool
yard at the children 's home ,
fr om Mulberry Ave., to the
ce nter of the hospital drive .
Lucas today said the land
will be used to erect a doctors
office complex.
The bid of R. E."Tracy Fire
Equipmen t and Citco Fire

A delega tion of property

owners an ~ Salisbury and
Chester Twp . trustees met
with the commissioners · to
disc uss the road situation at
fai rv iew Heights, loca ted

PRICE 15'

back of the fairgrounds. They
wanted the 20-foot wide road
widened . They will meet with
Buehl to get his opinion on
what can be done and if
county equipmen t can be

used .
Attending were Henry
VVells, Warden Ours and
Bernard Gilkey,
commissio ners, a.nd Martha
Chambers, clerk.

Moore of Middleport·
to coach Blue Devils
Willard ( Buddy) Moore will Tuesday.
Moore, a fiv e-year veteran
be the new head fo otball
coach of the Ga llia Academy of the GAHS staff , is a
Blue Devils. The a n- graduate of Middleport High
noun ceme nt ca me toda y Sc hool ( 1966 ). and Ohio
from Dea n R. Circle , University ( 1970). While at
president of tpe Ga llipolis Middleport, Mo ore was
City Board of Education.after named to the All - SEOAL
in-depth interviews with the grid team in both his junior
candidates were conducted an d se nior years. In 1973
by the screening committee , Moore guided the GAHS

Protecti on , ln c., was ac-

cepted to place a sprinkling
system in the coun ty infirmar y for $26,980.
The commissioners als o
approved a project submitted
by County Engineer VVesley
Buehl ,
conside red
an
emergency, on Twp. road 288
where a culvert is plugged
with debris causing flooding.
Cost of the project is $4,433 .

Tractor hit

by train on
rural road
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept . investigated the
collisi on of a tractor and train
at 4:10 p.m. Tuesday on
Leading Creek Road near
Rutland.
Howard German, 63, R t. I,
Middleport, driving his
tractor south in a private
drive, pulled onto Penn
Central Railroad tracks .
Upon seeing an oncoming
WILLARD (BUDDY) MOORE
train, German attempted to
get the vehicle in to reverse in
order to back off tl)e tracks.
But this attempt failed, and
the tractor was s tru ck
A joint meeting Tuesday have turned down requests
broadside by the train .
of
the
Meigs for funding . Members of the
night
The train 's engineer had
attempted to stop when he Associa tion for Retard ed organi za tions reported on
saw the tractor stranded on Citizens and the Committee other avenues they had exthe tracks. The tractor was on Menta l Retardati on ·to plored, to no avail.
If no fWlds are available,
torn in half and the driver dis~ uss plans of action in
thrown off. The Rutland ke epin g the Meig s C? m- the sc hool cannot reopen this
branch of · the SEOEMS mWJity School and workshop fall . The groups decided to
ambulance trans port e d upen produced only one new · start a le tter writing campaign to state and federal
German
to
Veterans ·proposal.
An operating levy was legislators to inform them of
Memorial Hospital where he
turn
ed dow n by county voters the coun ty's predicament in
and two children who were on
the tr actor were treated and in the June election and the ed ucati n ~ the retarded.
Me1gs Cuun t; -.Cummissioners
rele~sed.
'

Lett~r writing planned

I

Freshmen squad to an outslanding Wldefeated season
and in 1974 served as varsity
offensive coordinator as the
Blue Devils led the league in
practically every offensive
category .
Coach Moore is married to
the former Karen Shamblin
of Cheshire. They have two
children,
Jill, 5, and Brent ' 13
.
months. Moore is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Riley,
Beech St., Middleport. Coach
hold Mrs. Moore reside at 204
Kineon Dr ., Gallipolis.
It was also announced that
Ed Pauley and Bill Wamsley
will serve as varsity
assistants on a coaching staff
that is felt to be among the
best in the SEOAL.
Coach Moore will assume
his new duties immediately
with Superintendent Donald
Staggs making the official
re commendation for the
appointment at a special
meeting of the Board of
Education on August 1. That
will be Staggs first official
day on the job, although he is
serving the district in a
consultant capacity .now.
Members of the interview
committee were : James
N .M. Davis, GAHS Principal;
Ed
Stewart,
Athletic
Director ; Superintendent·,
Don Staggs ; Board Member
Paul Dean Niday; Attorney
Bill Eachus, President of the
Blue Devils Club ; and Board ·
President Circle as chairman .

Weather
Sunny and warm Thursday,,
highs in upper 80s. Fair, mild ·
tonight,
lows
to
65.
Probability of . precipi~tion
-10 per cent today, tonight and
Thursday.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
fair Friday and Saturday
and a chance of showers
Sunday. Warm through the
period with highs In the
upper 80s and the lower 90s.
Lows wUI be In the upper
60s and 11M! lower 70s.

•

'

:----..---·-· ...

'

\

�'

3 - TheDaUySentmei, Middleport-Pllllleroy,O-, Wednesdav. July 16, 1975

1

2- Th~ Datly Sentmel, Mtddlepori;J:omeroy, 0 . WednP s~v . .July 16,

'

TOM TIEDE
Prophets
and losses: the capital ledger
H\ Tom Tiede

1'1 ASHINGTON -

1NEA )

- In lhetr ongomg researc h •
mt11 ways tu destroy one

Today's

E·cJitdrial comment,
opinion, features

an nther , mtli ta r) scientis ts of
Slall un, Ne w York, NY 10019. se veral natwns are workin g
and ask for The Health Letter on the use of mag ntfiCd j tght
ntunber 3-7, Gtr!h Control
and sound as wa1 wea pons
Av01dmg the Btg Mtddle
Ht gh fr equ e ncy " Infra
Send a long, stamped, self- sound " theore tically would
addressed envelope and 50 work on soldiers m the same
cents for mailing and cos ts
way some gasses do, a nd
DF.AR DR LAMB - A few brtllian t hght could bhnd the
Amid the rumors and susp1c1ons and allegations thst the Centrallntelhgence Agency, wtth
weeks ag o you had a column oppos1ll un or mduce epileptic
the
knowledge of Amencan presidents, plotted or perpetrated the assassmat10n of certain
deahng wtth hemorrhoids. I fi ts m 1ts rank s Sen Robert
am under the Impression that P a ckwood, I R -O r e ) foreign heads of state, a number of commentators have questwned whether thiS kind of secret,
you stateo that the outer es timat es the bureaucracy " gunpomt dtplomacy" ts necessarily and always evtl
CaU10g 1t not murder but tyranmctde, colurnrust John P Roche asks, ' 'Would 1! h;lve been
hemorrhoids could be taken neceisary to administer the
unconstttutwnal
, unmoral and ge nerally dreadful If some Amen can mtelhgence agent had put
care of 10 the doctor 's office I r e g1 s te nn g of Am e n c an
would hke to know tf thts Is ha ndg un s would cos t $4 a 31J..cahber slug mto Httler's skullm, say, 1937?"
On the face of 1t , 1t might appear that th e 20th century would have been a far happier one
done wtth a local or tf the btlhon, or about $100 pe r
had
someone
diSpatched Herr Hitler when he ftrst raised Nazism's ugly head The same could
patient has to be put to sleep
pis tol
Restiv e VIetnamese be satd about Torquemada and \he 15th century, or GenghlS Khan and the 12th century .
Two y~ars ago I had a heart refugees say they are eagerl y
The argument collapses, however, as soon as wv consider the death of a leader like
attack and was 10 the hospital awaiting the fate of the 200
for four months My doctor wh o are offiCially trymg to go Abraham Lmcoin Yet hlSassassm fervently believed tl\at he was ridding the world of a tyrant
does not want to do any • back to Southeas t Asia If The student who assassinated the Archduke of Austria in 1914 and precipitated the FITs\ World
surgery that reqUires putllng that group gets bac k, and tf 1t War no doubt thought of hts act as hero1c
Of course , neither of these "tyranmctdes," nor others which have dramatically a!·c·red
tne to sleep He says that handled fa1rly by the new
history,
was the official act of an orgamzed government. They were the work of fana ,. P inwould be too dangerous, but Communtst regtme , the word
some thmg has to be done as 1s "many th ousands " of other dividuals Nevertheless, 11 would be perilous if we came to believe that even 10 the case of a
the Itch10g IS terrifiC and IS refugees wtll also opt to Httler we can set up a standard of morality for goverrunents separate from that demanded of
mdlVlduals m soc1ety.
abput to dnve me crazy He return
Whtle the natiOn
Yes, 1t can be argued that 1t would have been a good thing if someone had killed Hi(.ier in
satd he has never heard of 1! awaits positi ve ac tion fr om
1937
Perhaps Stalin, too . But what about Mussolmt ' And Franco ? Once embarked on such a
bemg done m a doctor's of- Congress on a van ety of
course, where would we stop ?
flee I would apprec1ate cnttcal matters , Including
The assassinatiOn of Fidel Castro m 1962 or 1963 would not have changed the factors that
anythmg you can tell me
energy, unemployment and
brought hll'D 10to power m the fll'st place, any more than the assassmatwn of President D1em of
about thiS problem
h.ous10g , the news from. the
South
VIetnam was of benefit to that tragic land And as for Adolph Hitler, there were other,
DEAR READER - You House Small Bus10ess Subnonmurderous means of dealmg w1th hun m 1937, 1! world statesmen had had the guts to stand
have confused the treatment
committee on Commodities
up to htm
for an acute thrombos ed and Servtces Is that 1t os
One feature distmgUishmg the Amen can political experll'Dent from all others before 11 was
hemorrhOid and the chrome th10king of enachng laws to
that it proVIded a peaceful means for changmg rulers If we ever reach the pomt where we
problem Doctors do not do a atd people who are compractice a different morality 11' our dealings wtth foretgn nations than we practice at home, if
hemorrhotd repair 10 the plammg about, s 1gh , a
we adopt "tyrannicide" as a valid, even if only a last-resort, method of furthermg national
offtce They often do open and shortage of home cannmg
pohcy, we wtll have assass10ated all that lS best m ourselves
dram an acute thrombosed hds
hemorrhmd of the external
If athng Supreme Court
area 10 the office
Jusllce Wtlham 0 Douglas
In !hts case a clot ts formed retires soon, as some predict,
Students have nghts. Teachers have n ghts Now the rtghts of parents have been offictally
m the vem of the hemorrhoid, women push10g for a female
recogntzed m one ctly, reports Education U.S A newsletter
and 1t can be pamful To replacement hope president
They are conta10ed m a " Parents Bill of Rights and Respvnstbthtles" adopted by the
reheve
the tmmedtale Ford does not follow the Phtladelphta Home and School Counctl and the Parents Umon of Phtladelphta and approved by
discomfort the top of the
the school board. Among the 15 nghts granted parents are
strategy of hts predecessor
thrombosed hemorrhOid 1s On announcmg potenti a l
To be treated wtth courtesy by the school staff To be respected as mdtvtduals regardless of
cut off and the clot expelled. court nommee s , Richard race, econom1c status , sex or age To be mformed of school polic1es and decistons, as well as
With the pressure removed, Ntxon always mcluded the avenues for changing policies and appealing dectstons To be allowed to 10spect their child's
the person usually obtams names of women with lll'Dtted records and to remove or correct any " false or mtsleadmg statements "
considerable rehef.
Among parent's responstbtilties are
appeal, thus fear10g no great
To do a proper hemorrhOid
To
stnve to prepare the child emotionally and soc1ally to make him receptive to learmng
obJectiOn when he chose the
repair and remove the dtlated
dtsctphne
To try to have the chtld attend school regularly and on tll'De , and to help the child
and
men
The Umon Bank of
vems Is a fairly extensive
Sw1 tzerland has recently develop proper study habtts
procedure, at least more than
detenmned that Kuwait, w1th
most doctors would th10k of
$11,000 worth of goods and
doing 10 the office
services for each member of
Many patients who have
tis populati on, IS th e
had heart attacks subwealthiest per capita nallon
sequently
have
maJor
10 the world , the U S , w1 th
By Ralph Novak
tell the truth and defend the
always eqwvocated so much.
surgery Without problems It
$6,595 worth of th10gs per
Remember how m cartoons freedom of the press from all
It wasn 'I as if they just told
depends on how well you are
person, ranks No 5
John when a character 1s transgressions at the bnefing
whtte
lies hke we do."
domg Only your doctor
Connally has told frtends he ts struggling wtth hts con- tomorrow."
"Yes, Devil Ron, but don't
knows that
"probably" go10g to run for sctence, his good stde Is
" Truth, ha! " Devil Ron
you remember how J. F.
the Senate from Texas
always represented by an sputtered "Freedom of the
terHorst qwt because he had
Congress passes about 600 angel figure while the evtl press, ha' They're all agamst
been dece1ved by the Wh1te
laws annually but non-elected stdeisshownasadeviJ? Well us , all those sneaky, un- House? And how you
bureaucrats 10 government just the other day, President worthy, scandal-monger g
promised everythmg would
10
agenctes wnte 6,000 laws a Ford's press secretary, Ron reporters."
be open?"
year of their own . Bella Nessen, woke up in the
"Last week you were
"Well, I didn't mean open
Abzug, the human pubhc mtddle of the mght to fmd an talkm g about the ' Bhnd, to question! I meant open to
address system from New Angel Ron perched on one of mmdless, ll'ratwual susp1c n
mterpretat10n. Mine. I mean,
10
York City, Is hands down the his shoulders, a Devil Ron on and cymctsm,' weren't you' "
who are they, after all? Mere
by ll'Dprovmg the quahty of most thoroughly resented
the other.
Angel Ron asked sweeting
reporters and I'm a real hve
the federal justice system It member of Congress. "Even
Angel Ron was strurnmmg
"Darned nght, I was And
government offiCial."
can enact and vigorously her staff hates her," says a
his harp and s10g10g a few It sounded pretty good, too, If
" Look, Devil Ron , couldn't
enforce
laws covermg former Abzug asststant, "she
soothing bars of "Ah, Sweet I do say so myself Just
I soothe your problems With a
crtmmal conduct within the IS selftsh, brultsh, tyranmcal
few choruses of 'It's a Sin to
federal junsdtctlon that and uncool _ women's Mystery of Life" when Devil because we hedge a httle here
Ron mterrupted.
or there about some old CIA Tell a Lte'?"
cannot
be
adequately hberatlon can have the old
" You're as bad as THEM,
"Come on, come on 1" Devil report and forget to tell about
regulated at the state and crow ..
Ron shouted. "Enough of this some meeting or other wtth always p1cking on me. We've
local level. Fmally Jl can
Who's in control of your
relaxahon stuff already
John Connally, they're all got to band together and
fmanctal
and town' Sta!Jshcs indiCate that
provtde
when they say something
techmcal assistance to state between 1951 and 1972 the We've got to be thinking of callmg me a liar Just
mean
about us we will make
some plans to put something beckuse you don't exactly tell
and local governments, m- nwuber of state, county and
them
correct 1t and say
creasing their abihty to muntclpal workers 10creased over on the White House the truth doesn't make you a
something nice 10stead "
press corps tomorrow. We liar."
enforce the law.
an
Issue
that
by
151
per
cent,
thetr
payroll
"No, Devil Ron, that will
Crime Is
can't be lollygaggmg around
" But don't you remember
touches the lives of all mcreased by almost 600 per here all mght "
when we were a reporter'" never do . We've got to
Americans. Even when a cent, the1r unton membership
remember how much m"Now, now," Angel Ron Angel Ron sa1d
grew by 130 per cent, and the replied. "The more we rest,
"Ah, those were the days," forln8t10n was hidden in the
citizen Is not directly affected number of thetr stnkes
the better able we will be to Devil Ron s1ghed " Pin 'em past and that we 're not really
by violent crime, be suffers multlphed by a factor of 1,000
unportant. We're just the
up against the wall, make
the economic consequences . Tttle lO, Section 888 of the
messenger,
you know, so
'em squirm with the tough
when government and U S. Code threatens court
business must spend millions
Byrd of Vtrgmta says the cost questiOn, ferret out the old even if the reporters get mad,
martial or worse for any
they're not really mad at us.
of dollars to
pursue
of runnmg Congress has truth, don 't let those sntvehng
rebred general who ts concriminals, maintain a prison victed of usmg "con- doubled m ftve years and government lackeys cover Our goal should be to make it
so nobody not1ces us."
system, and protect stores temptuous words 10 speech or tripled m 10; more than 17,000 up
"Rats 1 Rats ' Rats!"
"Of course, m those days,
and Industrial plants. The U.
people now work for the 535S. Chamber of Commerce pnnt agamst" the prestdent, member body
we reporters were justified m shrteked Devil Ron " I can't
the vice president, Congress,
recently reported that In 1974 the secretary of defense or
Democrats are begmmng badgermg away, smce the stand it. Are you sure Ron
alone white-collar crime cost
to worry about Gerald Ford's government spokesman Ziegler started like this?"
governors of any state;
the public UO bllUon.
presumably, though, they " unconsciOnable" advantage
This trend cannot be
10 the 1976 elechon campatgn
may rap other generals
allowed to continue. It is time The Republican Nahonal " 1t's tmposstble to compute
the political value of all the
to get tough with the
Committee spent $125,000 on
CrlDllnal. President Ford has the ftrst of three TV spectals Btcentenmal tnps he'll make
recommended that criminal designed to enlist new sup- at government expense, "
fines be increased from a port; viewers tiave thus far says one gr1U'Dbler, " but at a
maxtmwn of $10,000 to a sent 10 contributions of less mmtmum 1t Wlll be the
May-July, 1775:
malllmwn of $100,000 if the th
eqwvalent of $2 to $3 mtlhon
...
·defendant is an individual
an $6,000
Sen Harry 10 contributiOns
An FBI
Cleavages deepen 10 Brlttsh opmton regard10g the
and $500,000 If the defendant
- - ~ - ~ agent says pnvately that
colomes The news of Lexmgton and Concord reaches
IS an organJZatlon. This is a
Patricia Hear.! has' " done
London 10 late May Ten days earlier Lord Effingham_ a
step in the rtght direction. In
DEVOTE-D- TO TftE
1 more
to
destroy
the
respected veteran m the Royal army - restgns hts coma ddt t1 on,
mandatory
ME l~l.l'/A~~1, ~~ E A
credibility of the bureau than
mtsston In order to avOid tak10g up arms aga 10st the
mmimum sentences are
fHESTER L TANNEHILL! I all our other cribcs comcolonists On June 24.10 an address to the Kmg, thecttlzens
of London tell the Kmg that the English people can exneeded, especially for the
ROBEi~e~·lll'FucH
bined" He says the public
career criminal and repeat
Cotv Edolor
can ' t retam fatlh m an
l peel nothmg from war wtth the colomes except "gazettes
' PubliShed dally except
of blood and mutual lists of
off ender
when
a Salurday
by The Ohio Valley agen cy of th ousan d s wh'IC h IS '
their slaughtered fellow subdangerous
weapon
Is 'Publ\Shmg Company, 111 hum
. 1hated by one lone gll'l ..
idourt St . Pomeroy . Qh•o
Pr
Jects
" Sympathy for the
used m the commtsswn 46769 Busmess Office Phone
wr to the recent supress10n
156
colomes extends even to the
of a cnme and for ser- f,~/
Ed,tor~at Pho~e 992 . of democratic principles m
1
King's brother, the Duke of
ious offenses such as
socond class postage paod Indta, the U. S. - based
4 Freedom House determined
.
ki
in
had
dr
t
Pomeroy
,
Oh
ro
Gloucester In July he JOUrtr a ffIC ng
r
ugs. I
_Nollonal advertrsrn~
neys
to France, where he Is
feel that such a strong ap- · ~eY,resentatove wa-rd• , that35percentoftheworld's
r•ff•th
Company
,
In
c
1
I
pop
'
ul
t'
1366000000
received
as a guest of Louis
proac h d oes , ac t as a
eott •nen 1 &amp; Gsllatlher D•v
a IOn , or
, , ,
757 Th~rd Ave New York'
XVI At a banquet for the
deterrent to further crime.
people were living in free
1 "J y
10017
~
Duke,
oneofthe guests Is the
The lenient approach of the ' s ubs c , , p ,, 0 . ,-, . tes• states ; the loss of 600 million
Marqu1s
de Lafayette Hearlast decade certamly has not ~:~W:bf: 7 ~Yc e~~~r~~~ :;~::;.~ Indians would reduce that
Ing descriptions of the hos."
worked in holding down the 'By Motor Rout e wh~re already pathetic count by
ttllttes
1n Massachusetts, La.
serv•
c e , $3noll
aim os th a If · The US ArmY
Cri me ra te. It IS I1me
to make ~arr1er
variable One
month
2~
fayette
leaves the banquet
our streets safe agam for
By matl rn ·Ohoo and w va , has a tax-produced tra10ing
ne
Year
S22 OQ ,
S1X
h h
.
vowmg to enlist 10 the '
I
chums
by vigorously pur- . months , s11 so , Three mov1e w IC teaches officers
Amer1can cause
suing the criminal element ' S26
'1\0nths
, S7 00
~ how to mfluence women at
Lafayette
00 year
. ,=» IElsewhere
X :Tion t h'S
and separaltng them from • " 3 so, three months . s7 s.e j parhes ; 1t also has more than
society
1' / Sun
S u bscr~ ptoon proce on c tudes a dozen ftlms on the control of
- By Ros s MIICkr-nz•e &amp; Jef't MacN~II y f 111 1975 Un1ted Ff'a lurt- Synd 1catrd ay T 1me s Sent1n e l
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venereal disease
1 -

The perilous politics of tyrannicide

Equal rights for parents

DR. LAMB

Swimming is fine exercise
excellent exercise
I often recommend tt for
people who have problems
wtth knees, ankles, htps or
the back It 1s one way many
people can exerc1se w1 thou!
bearmg the full weight of the
body It 1s also a good
exerciSe to stretch the
muscles and tendons to
regam theiT full range of
motwn Many JOint and back
pams are related or at least
mvolve muscle spasm
Swnmmng helps stretch the
muscles and relaxes the
spasm
Many of the swlmm10g
movements strengthen the

RAY CROMLEY

abdomen wh1ch helps the
back Some people will need
more specific exercises that
mvolve more work for the
abdommal
muscles
to
provtde good support to the
back. Strong abdommal
muscles help pro~ct the back
and prevent backache and
mmor back inJuries.
For more mformatlon on
exerctses to strengthen the
abdommal muscles, write to
me m care of thiS newspaper,
P 0 J¥&gt;x 1551, Radio City

Message
_,

from Mao: U.S. stay in Asia
By Ray Cromley

WASHINGTON- Mae Tse-tung ts now engaged 10 an allout effort to get the Umted States and West Europe to snatch
his chestnuts out of the fire
He's 10tent on selling the United States on keeping a strong
enough force in the waters off Southeast Asta and a sufficient
diplomatlc and econ01ruc presence to blunt Russian expansion.
He has an abtdmg fear of Soviet encU'clement, which seems
high on the list of Kremlm all'Ds. And Mao also hopes, through
a continued IJmted States presence, to keep the door open for
the building of a more effectlve Ounese-6ponsored underground in Thailand, Malaysta, Singapore and the Philipp10es.
It ts clear that after Laos, Vtetnam and Cambodia, Mao lS
not worried that Amencan operallons in Asia will be any bar to
the parttcular brand of underground subversion and guerrilla
warfare in which he has proven his technical genms. On the
contrary, a bwldup of RUSSian-backed parties, as has occurred
m Latin Amer1ca, Afrtca and in South Asia, could prove a hardto-beat comb10ation
Mao 's stay-m-Asta messages to the Uruted States come in
the form of covert hmts to sources close to American
diplomatic cll'cles. Mao has learned, by careful observation,
that U. S foretgn sernce offtcers, the State Department
hierarchy and selected 10fluential academic leaders jwnp
much more quickly to the batt when the hints are mdirect,
channeled confidenttally through men With "inside contacts."
The Olmese have also let 1t be known in Japan, again
"secretly" but taking care to make certain the secret lS
spread, that they are not seeking to end the alliance that
country has With the Umted States. As has been well reported,
they confidentatlly told Pre5tdent Marcos of the Philippines
they had no objection to Amencan bases m his country. Mao's
men hjive also hmted strongly they are m no hurry to acquire
Taiwan, now governed by Oltang Ka1-6hek'S successors.
The United States IS not Mao's only target. He's been
spryly active these past months m mvltmg a bevy of West
European leaders to Olma, giving them red carpet treatment
having his men suggest to these Westerners that Europe, not
OJ!na, is Brezhnev's target.
There has been a veritable par~de of West Germans.
Agam and again, with infinite patience, Mao's atdes drwn on
the theme that the Kremlin is making a femt to the East
1!88inst Olina, only to bemuse and distract West Europe.
Britair., France and West Germany relax, the story rllllS the
Russians Will move m
'
Premier Cbou En-la1 tells the Europeans they must
strengthen themselves economtc~lly, pollhcally and
militarily. Teng Hsiaopmg indirectly urges the British to stay
in the Common Market. The O!inese pull no punches m
deriding the paivete of those European leaders who believe in
promoting friendship with Russia and who work actively ' for
detente .
Mao'shope, of course, is that a financtally strong united
militarily effective West Europe, reaching out politlc~lly and
I!CQnomically to East Germany, Poland, CZechoslovakia,
Hungary, and Ruman1a, will keep Leonid Brezhnev and his
Kremlin colleagues so occupied in the \fe!it that Mao and
aasoclates will be free to follow
alms in Africa the Middle
East, Latin America and Asia.
'
If there's to be conflict, lite Oline5e strategy rlllls: let It be
between the! superpowers and their Western alltes, leavmg
fe~ free to PIC' up i!Je pieces.
1

On.;

!herr

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Damn the advisers, full sptc:::! ahead!"

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - I read
your column about the man
who lll]ured hts back whtle
changtqg a ttre. He said
exercises trntated hts back
Would he be able to sWim' I
had back trouble, and
swtmmmg cured my aliment.
Isn ' t 1! a safe way to exercise "
DEAR READER - The
answer depends on what IS
c ausmg the back pam
Exercise of any form IS
sometimes not advisable m
the presence of recent inJuries However, you are
generally nght. Swnnming ts

.I I '

•

The Preamble to the
ConstitutiOn states that one of
tts goals 1s to "insure
domestic tranqu1hty."
Toward this goal, strenuous
federal efforts - along with
state and local imtiatlves have been undertaken in the
last decade to reduce the
mctdence of cnme 10 the
United States
The
latest
statistics
released by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation
reveal that this effort has not
been successfuL The FBI
estimates are that the rate of
serious crime - murder,
forcible rape, robbery,
aggravated assault,
burglary, larceny and auto
theft- was 17 percent blgber
In 1974 than In 1973. 1blsls the
largest lncreaae In the 44
years the Bureau bas been
collecting statistics. Obviously It Is time to get tough
with the criminal and sbow
more concern for the Innocent victim of crime.
The personal and social toll
that crime exacts from our
citizens Is enormous. In
addtiJOn to the direct damage
to victims of crime, violent
cnmes m our streets and
homes create a pervasive
fear. This fear has caused
people to rearrange their
daily lives. Citizens shop only
when they feel the chances of
attack are lower . Commercial areas become
deserted at other times.
Shopowners arm themselves
and VIew unknown customers
wl th suspicion . In a free
society such as ours, this
atmosphere cannot
be
allowed to endure. Everyone
must commit themselves to
the goal of reducing crime.
It 1s my belief that the
federal role in fighting crime
should be a lll'Dited one. What
may work as a solutwn 10 Los
Angeles or Boston won 'I
necessarily
work
in
Southeastern Ohio, However,
there are some ways in which
the federal government can
aid m combatting crime· it
can provide leadership to
state and local govermh~nts
)
~,

RALPH NOVAK

. Which side are you Ron?

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chr_onidc of America

Th! .Daily Sentinel

1

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Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Edttor
':, MILWAUKEE (UP !) ~ Bill Madlock Is an otherwise
Pll!asant young man, who
goes about hiS busmess and
make"s fnends easily, but th1~
was one time he VIolated the
code.
Normally, whenever you
beat the other guy m baseball
you put on your coat, button
up yo!" hp and go on home
That's standard procedure
everywhere m baseball One
thmg you don 't do ts rub 11 m
But that 1sn't the way Btll
Madlock did 11 at all
Naturally, the}"'h"Sked the
Oltcago Cubs ' affable 24yearold third baseman a lot
of q::esllons Tuesday mght
after h1s nmth~nnmg , tworun stngle d1d the American
League AIIStars 10 again and
powered
the
National
Leaguers to a 6-3 vJctory ,
thetr fourth m a row and 12th
m the last 13 years , and he
answered as hones\ly as he
could
He S81d 1t seems to him the
NatJOnal Leaguers are mor'ij
aggressive
than
the
American Leaguers and that
the Americans merely s1t
around wa1t10g to get beat.
What a thing to say r
Especially when you've
been up m the majors only
two years and played m only
one All-Star game
Now you'd think the Amencan Leaguers would ask who
does Bill Madlock think he IS,
laugh at what he had to say
and put hll'D down, wouldn't
you'
You know what they did ?
They agreed completely
With hun
None of them came right
out and S81d m so many words
they stt around wa1tmg to get
beat, but almost to a man,
they admitted BtU Madlock
was rtght- the National
League IS much more
spmted,
far
more
aggressive.
Actually, B1ll Madlock was
only saying what Mtckey
Mantle had sa1d 24 hours
earlier. Mantle, an honorary
coach for the Amertcan Lea "
guers, had said the Nationals
always seemed to show more
enthus1asm m the All-Star
contests
Now this game was over
The Nat10nal League had
put it to the Amencans a gam ,
and Madlock, the NL's
leading httter who came to
the Cubs a year ago after
spendmg only a month w1th
the Texas Raqgers, was
named co-MVP for the
contest along w1th Mets '
pitcher Jon Matlack, who
blanked the losers m the
seventh and eighth and
picked up the VIctory.
"I'd have to say the same

thing, "

sa1d

second baseman Rod Care"
"hen they told him wha t
Madlock had to say about the
Ame n can League I' ve seen
1t m a number of these AllStar games I particula rly
r em e mber th e game m
Kansas City two years ago
Every tll'De they_htt the ball
they wer e runmng for two
bases "
Hank Aaron, "ho put 10 20
years m the National Leauge
before commg over w the
Milwauke e Brewer s tht s
year , said substantially the
same thing
· I 'd say the Natwnal
League ts more aggressive,"
he concurred " And Bobby
Bonds , formerly w1th the San
Francisco Gtants and now
with the New York Yankees,
also agreed
" It's funny," put m
Oakland's Vtda Blue , who
started Tuesday night 's game
for the Amencan Lea gue and
was roughed up for two runs
and ftve htts m the two mrungs he worked, " but George
Scott and I were talking about
that on the bench durmg the
game Scotty sa1d the guys
over there go up swtngmg the
bats all the tll'De He sa.Jd the
guys 10 our league take more
pitches .
"They," Blue went on,
meanmg
the
National
Leaguers , "seem to have an
entiTely different attitude. I
saw how they were whoopmg
1t up on the bench while 1 was
out there pttchmg . They were
hollenng and havmg fun It
remmded me of the atlltude
we have on our Oakland
club."
Ex-Met Nolan Ryan, now
w1th the Cahforma Angels,
saw 1t the same way as
Madlock also
"I'd say that's true," he
satd upon learmng what
Madlock had to say " I don 't
think they play htt-and-run
enough over here National
League hitters are more
aggressive m the sense that
tt's a fastball league and you
see more fastballs over there
Over here, you see more
breakmg balls "
Mtckey Mantle sat by hts
locker and satd he dtd nollce
a httle more enthusiasm
generated
among
the
American Leaguers than he
had 10 the past. Espectally
when Carl Yastrzemski 's
three-run homer temporarily
tied the score m the stxth
IDDing.
"Otherwise, we dtdn't have
a whole lot to yell about,"
said Mantle
How true.
Bill Madlock wasn't really
rubb10g 11m. All he was do10g
was tellmg the truth You
can't ktll a guy for that. Even
Minnesota tf it does VIolate the code

Reds to get
better
Rose
day record for consecu!Jve
VICiones ts 12, set 10 1940 and
matched in 1957
Manager Sparky Anderson
says the team IS stronger
than hls 1970 club which won
Machine ."
There's only one problem70 of the first 100 games and
there may not be an "off" wound up With 102 VICiones.
Anderson predicts more than
switch.
The ghstenmg "Big Red 100 vtctones this year. The
Machine" ----also known as the Reds are now 61-29 and have
Cincinnati Reds- IS def101tely 72 games to play .
Why IS the Big Red
switched "on" and lS leaVIng
the Los Angeles Dodgers and Machine hummmg'
the rest of the National
Well, first of all the
"heavyduty" veterans like
League West teams to rllSt
The Reds-Dodgers race had Rose, Morgan, Johnny Bench
figured to be Uoe closest 10 and Tony Perez are perbaseball th1sseason. So far ; 1t formmg as expected-well
has turned out tt, be the most
Rose has proven to be sohd
at hiS new th1rd base post !Jon
lop-Bided.
The Reds have a com- and 1s cracking hits at a .319
manding 12'h game lead over clip. Morgan has a fat .345
the Dodgers as regular play battmg average and Bench
resumes Thursday followmg has not only smashed 19
homers and collected 73 RB!s
the All-Star break.
And Pete Rose, the ftred-up but 1s hitting for a good 293
sparkplug of the machme, average Perez 1s now
predicts the Reds Will be even reboundmg mcely from a
better the second half of the slow start.
But there also have been a
season . .
Rose says the club 1s couple of surprlSCS named
"hungry" for another shot at Ken Ghffey and George
the World Sertes. Adds Joe Foster who have helped out
Griffey ts the the team 's
Morgan, the team's leading
thtrd
best hitler at .311 and
hitter, "We have unlimited
Foster, now getting a chance
potential."
The Reds have won 19 of to play regularly 10 the
their last 21 games, an outfield thanks to Rose's
amazing record, and have a move to third, 1s not only
10-game wmmng streak hittmg 293 but lS nght behind
going . The team 's modern- Bench 10 home runs w1th 15
By RICK VAN SANI
CINCINNATI (UP!) - National League teams are
trymg to ftgure out how to
turn off the ' 'Big Red

By IUU. MADDEN
UP! Sports Write r
MILWA UKEE t UPII E ve u the st ~ht of Henry
K1s sm ger
v. ea rm g
a
Mtlwauk ee Bre wers' cap ,
fatl ed! to deter the Na tional
League Tuesday mght from
Its usual dom10a t1on of the
All-Sta r Game
On Bill Madlock's I wo.,-un
s10gle 10 the mnth tnnmg, the
NL "hipped the Amencan
League 6-3 for Its fourth
stra 1ght victory
of
Stat e
Sec r e tary
Kt ss mger was obv iO us ly
thnll ed b) Ya s tr zem skt 's
three-run sixth mrung homer
ty10g the ga me at 3-3, but
Madloc k, the NL's leading

hitter and lhe onl y 011cago
( ub on the squad , set the AI.
defeat - Its 12th' m the last 13
i\11-Sta r Games
·nwguys m the Amen ca n
Leag u~ JUSt seem to be
" at tmg out there to get beat
and that's \\ha t ha ppened,
satd Madlock, who sna pped
the 3-3 t1e wt th a two-run
s10g le durmg a thr eerun mnth
mmng rally
The end came wh en, held1 10
check for two 10mngs by Jll'D
'Catfi sh " Hunter , the NL
started the mnth wtth Reggie
Smtth bloopmg a lead off
smgle to left off the glove of
Cla ud e ll
l e f t ft e ld e r
Washmgton
A.l Oln '' r 01nrh J·11ttm e for

,
Y.Jnnmg pitt·her Jon Ma llack, game 's mosl va lua ble player second Gene Tenace walked Secretary of State, an oldtll'De
doub led m to the Ieftft e ld '- hono r s
wtt h
Madloc k. an d Car l Yas trzem skt , Yank ee fa n, cheered happtly
corn er an&lt;l Smith stopped at Mat lal k, Ito.. ever , gave all batt10g fo r pitcher J U'D Kaat , for Yastrzemski 's hom er and
tht rd Reliever Rtch Gossage the credit to Madlock tor the Jut Seaver 's fir st pt tr h deep th e a ppea r ance of the
mto the nghtheld bL:i lpen l&lt;l Brewers' 41-year -&lt;&gt;ld home
h1t La rry Bowa to load the tnumph
bases
' G•ve the trophy to Mad- lie the sco re
run kmg, Hank Aaron , who
Ktssmger , who threw out en[ied a thtrd mnmg AL
Madloc k then htt a. smgle lock," he s&amp;d · Witho ut hun
the first ball wa s g1ven a threat l)y hnm g ou1 to short
pa s t thtrd ba se , sconn g we don '! wm 1! "
ca p by th e
A record County Stadium
The Nl., now leadmg the Brewe r s
Sm ith a nd Oliver Bowa went
hometown
ba
llclub
a
nd
wore
to tlurd a nd sco red on a sen es 27-18, sta rted the game
crowd of 51,480 a ttended the
sca nflce fly by Pete Rose
With the po wer that had made It throughout the game Afte r 46th an nual ga me between
throwm g out the ftrst ball, the lhc two l ea :~~ tes
I don't htt too many n ghl II the 8-5 favont e
Leadmg off the sec-ond
down the hne likc tha t, " satd
Madl ock I'm really mor e of Inning Dodgers Steve Garvey
a spray hitter tha n a pull- and Jtmmy Wynn htt back-lohttter •
back homers off sta rter Vtda
Matlack, who pitched the Blue. one of seve n Oa klan d
seventh a nd etghth mmn gs A's on the i\1 , squad, fo r a 2-ll
and struck out four , got the lea d
EXTRA
It was the ftr st ttme convic tory a nd shared th e
SPEC\ A\.
secullve home r s had been hi t
m an All-Sta r ga me smce 1956
wh e n Ted Wi l liam s an d
ANY -SIZEGOOD/'iEAif
Mt ckey Mantle of the AL did
It
1
(RIB TREAD)
The NI. made 1t 3-0 lit the
thtrd off Steve Busby when
Plus
to pla ce him on probalwn " Lou Brock smgled , went to
Excise
Tax
Ho\\ ever , Rozelle added second on a ba lk by the
27c
to
17c
tha t Maddox wa s told that Kansas Ctty Royals· n ghtan ~ further dtffl culttcs wtth
ha nd e r - am! stole thir d
With
the law Yt'tll result m se vere Johnn y
Benc h
s mgled
disctphn ary action by thts sha rply 1ns1de the thtrd base
Recappable Casing
FREE MOUNTING
off tee,' ' presum a bly meamng line to scor e the Ca rdina I
suspensmn
outfielder
Judge Black told Madd ox
By then 1! looked hke 11
he will have to hve up to the might be a runa way as seven
c our t's
p ro b a ti o n of the on gmal NL starters
r e quir e m e nt s
" mor e
701 E. Main St.
had gotten base hits But,
POMEROY, OHIO
s tnngently
than oth e r after J erry Reuss and Don
.., 2101
people "
Sutton had blanked the AL
As a professwnal athlete .
over the farst ftv e mrun gs, the
especially a football playe r ,
Ame n can s ca m e to life
you're a n example to others
against Matlack 's teammate ,
You 're 10 the lll'Delight '
Uf( IS MU AS Olm
Tom Sea ver , m the stxth
lvhn t- t nh1.
The JUdge further told the
Joe Rudt led off w1th a
Frede n ck , Md , na tive tha t a
sm gle a nd ptnch-runn e r
s pecial condi tion of ht s
Washmgton promptly stole
proba tiOn IS !pat he 'will not
so mu ch as touch" any type of
narcotic or drug ·
Befor e th e sent e nc m g,
Madd ox to ld th e JUdge,
"Gtven another opportumty ,
I would hke to furth er my
caree r a s a profess iOnal
41NCH
INTERIOR/ EXTERIOR
football playe r I wtll not
POLYESTER
hav e any further mvolvement
wtth drugs whatsoever.
ASSORTED COLOR S
Easy to c l~on brush ret oms sllape
" I would hke to gtve some
res1sts mo1Siure
youth group talks for the NFL
If I do ha ve the opportumty to
further my career, " added
the 6-5 , 240-pound er wh o
captamed his college team at
Frostbur g State ( Md )
Maddox's lawyer satd part
REG
REGULAR 7 99
of the NFL probation IS that
I 59
Maddox wtll work wtth youth
groups to try to steer them
away from drug abuse
Rozelle said that Maddox
'has been mtervtewed at
len gth (by NFL officials ) and
will be agam m the near
Thomas
future so he full y under stands
Product s
the te rm s of hi s NFL
proba tion "
Maddox srud he wt shed to
91NCH
" pubhcl~ apolog12e for any
embarrassment that I ha ve
cau sed
th e
Cmcmnatl
Bengals "
Maddox wa s a seventh
Now ts the tt me to start ftxt ng up arou nd
round draft chm ce of the
you
r home
The Froendly One has
• 10" x I5" tray
Benga ls m 1973 but spent
from po rnt to
everylh tng you need
• Rol ler cover and !rome
most of hts f1rst season on t he

GOOD-YEAR

Maddox on probation
CIN CINNATI t UPl ) Defe nsive end Bob Maddox
has been placed on probation
by both the Natwnal Football
League and a JUdge followmg
a gutlty plea to a dru g charge,
clearmg the way for Maddox
to report to the C!ncmnatl
Bengals tra.Jmng carpp at
Wtlmmgton , Ohio .
Maddox, 26, Tuesday was
gtven a suspended sentence
or 10 to 19 and hve years on
proball on b) Hamilton
Coun ly Common Pleas Court

Judge Robert L Black
Madd ox had previOus ly
pleaded guilty to a charge of
possession of hashish for sale
He had been arrested last
March 12 after pohce raided
his apartment and satd they
found 24 ounces of hashtsh
NFL Commtsswner Pete
Rozelle S81d he had notthed
both the Bengais and Maddox
that "no U'Dpedtment will be
placed 10 the way of Maddox
reporting to tramtng m as
much as the court has seen ftt

Scou feels A's
only NL match
By DAVE BEGEL
MTI~WAUKEE , Wts. (UP! )
- George Scott pulled no
punches
"The only team we got m
the Amencan League that
plays hke they do IS the
Oakland A's, " Scott satd
after the American League
had lost for the 12th tll'Oe m 13
games to the Natwnal League
m the All-Star game by a 6-3
score.
Vtda Blue, who started for
the Amencan League and
gave up three runs, agreed .
"In our league , we run and
take the extra base ," he sa1d
"All the other teams play
conservative baseball and try
to play catch up with us "
Bill Madlock, who was a cowmner of the game's Most
Valuable Player award, put
his fmger on the difference
between the two teams
" Our guys were on the
bench cheermg all the tune,"
he satd
" It was unbeheveable. Over on the
other bench they were s1ttmg
there waj{mg to get beat."
The quest1on of enthusiasm
was ratsed Monday when
former Amencan League
great Mickey Mantle brought
up the subject
Mantle said that even when
he was playmg 1! appeared
the National League had
more desll'e and more spint
than the Amencan League
Pete Rose sa1d the
Amencan League "had a lot
of young guys on the bench

and they seemed kmd of awed
by the whole thmg wh1le our
guys were loose as a goose ."
Bobby Murcer, who came
to the Nattohal League after
four All-Star years m the
American League, noticed a
difference, too
"From what I saw there IS
a different atmosphere of
some kmd, " he said "On our
bench everybody had the
w1nnmg sp1r1t and 1t poured
out Over there it didn 't seem
hke they had muc h "
Scott and Blue were the two
most eloquent spokesmen m
the losers ' locker room on the
subJect.
"Those guys m the othe r
league play a lot more
aggressive," Scott satd "Our
teams play con servativ e
baseball "
" In the Natwnal a guy 's on
ftrst and someone gets a hit
and there are runners on f1rst
and thtrd Over here that
happens and we got runners
on ftrst and second Thetr
guys aren't afraid and
everythmg they do IS geared
to force rrustakes on us
There are more mental
mistakes made m the
Amencan League than m the
Natwnal League "
Blue satd the Natwnal
League httters were "much
more agressive
"And those guys really tear
up the bases and always play
hard - to wm,'' he satd , " Our
guys Just aren't used to that
approach ."

PASSENGER TIRE

$}Q95

-

MEIGS TIICE CENTER

SPRAY ENAMEL

WALL BRUSH

488

ROLLER
&amp;TRAY
SET

InJured reserve hst
Last year 's s trike by some
players gave Maddox a n
opporturuty to play more than
had been expected and he \
was a pleasant sur pnse m
several gam es In ;m e
exhtbtllon game he scooped
up a fumble and ran for a
touchdown

~~i~

99

Cponeltng'

(i =!'t'l ~

~ER'N~H::»t

WOOD SCRAPER

6 FOOT ALUMINUM

STEPLADDER

$&lt;rope old po mt ott the eas y wa y I
II long tool g ve s good leverage

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Top end bottom steps ore

braced

50

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REGULAR I 99

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99~

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Pomeroy Giants
•
• •
ga1n semis m
KC tournament
It was a mght for bombmgs Tuesday mght at the
17th Annual Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament as
Fruth's Pharmacy blasted
the Galhpohs Red Sox, 21-7 ,
Pomeroy's Gtants rolled over
Pomt Pleasant City Ice and
Fuel, 11-4 and the New Haven
Reds overran the Galhpohs
Indians, 11-3 Seven of the
or1gmal 31 teams remam
altve m the tourney .
Fruth's slammed 16 h1ts
enroute to 1ts lopsided VICtory Jones, the wmn·ng
hurler, led the way wtth a
homer and three doubles ;
Sulhvan had a trtple, smgle
and double ; Stmpson doubled
and smgled; Rutherford had
two smgles and Barnett
smgled
Pacmg the Red Sox attack were Armstrong'; a
double and two singles; Mtke
Burger had two smgles, Dave
Retmund, a smgle and Van
Gundy, a tnple
New Ha ve n led by

Haymaker who smgled and
defeated
th e
doubled
Galhp ohs lndtans , 11-3 Other
New Haven h1tters we re
Gtbbs, a smgle, Thompson , a
smgle and Long, a smgle
Weaver was the wmmng
pitcher whtle Wtller took the
loss
Gettmg htls · for
Galhpohs were Lee , a smgle ~
Wtller, a double and smgle
and Cornett, a smgle
Pomeroy's
Gtant s
blasted Pt Pleasant City Ice
and Fuel, 11-4 J Ftelds led
the attack wtth three doubles
C Allen had a double, J
Sheets slammed a double and
smgle, R Smtght and C
McKmney had smgles The
Giants moved to the semtfmals
Pacmg Ctty lee and Fuel
were M. Dooley, two smgles
and J Jones, a smgle
To ntght ,
Johnson' s
Market plays Salem Baplls t ;
Green will play the Rutland
Dodgers and New Ha ve n will
ba ltic F t ulh 's
'

CHESHIRE WINS
CHESHIRE
Ace
righthand er Ste ve Batrd
pitched a one hit, 2-0 shutout,
over the Pome roy A's pony
team to lead Cheshire to
undi s puted
and
sole
leadership 10 the MeigsGallia-Mason Pony League
Tuesday evenmg here. Dale
Browning "as the losmg
pitcher

2h INCH

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SNOWDEN

REDWOOD STAIN
REG
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PH 992 7155
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3 - TheDaUySentmei, Middleport-Pllllleroy,O-, Wednesdav. July 16, 1975

1

2- Th~ Datly Sentmel, Mtddlepori;J:omeroy, 0 . WednP s~v . .July 16,

'

TOM TIEDE
Prophets
and losses: the capital ledger
H\ Tom Tiede

1'1 ASHINGTON -

1NEA )

- In lhetr ongomg researc h •
mt11 ways tu destroy one

Today's

E·cJitdrial comment,
opinion, features

an nther , mtli ta r) scientis ts of
Slall un, Ne w York, NY 10019. se veral natwns are workin g
and ask for The Health Letter on the use of mag ntfiCd j tght
ntunber 3-7, Gtr!h Control
and sound as wa1 wea pons
Av01dmg the Btg Mtddle
Ht gh fr equ e ncy " Infra
Send a long, stamped, self- sound " theore tically would
addressed envelope and 50 work on soldiers m the same
cents for mailing and cos ts
way some gasses do, a nd
DF.AR DR LAMB - A few brtllian t hght could bhnd the
Amid the rumors and susp1c1ons and allegations thst the Centrallntelhgence Agency, wtth
weeks ag o you had a column oppos1ll un or mduce epileptic
the
knowledge of Amencan presidents, plotted or perpetrated the assassmat10n of certain
deahng wtth hemorrhoids. I fi ts m 1ts rank s Sen Robert
am under the Impression that P a ckwood, I R -O r e ) foreign heads of state, a number of commentators have questwned whether thiS kind of secret,
you stateo that the outer es timat es the bureaucracy " gunpomt dtplomacy" ts necessarily and always evtl
CaU10g 1t not murder but tyranmctde, colurnrust John P Roche asks, ' 'Would 1! h;lve been
hemorrhoids could be taken neceisary to administer the
unconstttutwnal
, unmoral and ge nerally dreadful If some Amen can mtelhgence agent had put
care of 10 the doctor 's office I r e g1 s te nn g of Am e n c an
would hke to know tf thts Is ha ndg un s would cos t $4 a 31J..cahber slug mto Httler's skullm, say, 1937?"
On the face of 1t , 1t might appear that th e 20th century would have been a far happier one
done wtth a local or tf the btlhon, or about $100 pe r
had
someone
diSpatched Herr Hitler when he ftrst raised Nazism's ugly head The same could
patient has to be put to sleep
pis tol
Restiv e VIetnamese be satd about Torquemada and \he 15th century, or GenghlS Khan and the 12th century .
Two y~ars ago I had a heart refugees say they are eagerl y
The argument collapses, however, as soon as wv consider the death of a leader like
attack and was 10 the hospital awaiting the fate of the 200
for four months My doctor wh o are offiCially trymg to go Abraham Lmcoin Yet hlSassassm fervently believed tl\at he was ridding the world of a tyrant
does not want to do any • back to Southeas t Asia If The student who assassinated the Archduke of Austria in 1914 and precipitated the FITs\ World
surgery that reqUires putllng that group gets bac k, and tf 1t War no doubt thought of hts act as hero1c
Of course , neither of these "tyranmctdes," nor others which have dramatically a!·c·red
tne to sleep He says that handled fa1rly by the new
history,
was the official act of an orgamzed government. They were the work of fana ,. P inwould be too dangerous, but Communtst regtme , the word
some thmg has to be done as 1s "many th ousands " of other dividuals Nevertheless, 11 would be perilous if we came to believe that even 10 the case of a
the Itch10g IS terrifiC and IS refugees wtll also opt to Httler we can set up a standard of morality for goverrunents separate from that demanded of
mdlVlduals m soc1ety.
abput to dnve me crazy He return
Whtle the natiOn
Yes, 1t can be argued that 1t would have been a good thing if someone had killed Hi(.ier in
satd he has never heard of 1! awaits positi ve ac tion fr om
1937
Perhaps Stalin, too . But what about Mussolmt ' And Franco ? Once embarked on such a
bemg done m a doctor's of- Congress on a van ety of
course, where would we stop ?
flee I would apprec1ate cnttcal matters , Including
The assassinatiOn of Fidel Castro m 1962 or 1963 would not have changed the factors that
anythmg you can tell me
energy, unemployment and
brought hll'D 10to power m the fll'st place, any more than the assassmatwn of President D1em of
about thiS problem
h.ous10g , the news from. the
South
VIetnam was of benefit to that tragic land And as for Adolph Hitler, there were other,
DEAR READER - You House Small Bus10ess Subnonmurderous means of dealmg w1th hun m 1937, 1! world statesmen had had the guts to stand
have confused the treatment
committee on Commodities
up to htm
for an acute thrombos ed and Servtces Is that 1t os
One feature distmgUishmg the Amen can political experll'Dent from all others before 11 was
hemorrhOid and the chrome th10king of enachng laws to
that it proVIded a peaceful means for changmg rulers If we ever reach the pomt where we
problem Doctors do not do a atd people who are compractice a different morality 11' our dealings wtth foretgn nations than we practice at home, if
hemorrhotd repair 10 the plammg about, s 1gh , a
we adopt "tyrannicide" as a valid, even if only a last-resort, method of furthermg national
offtce They often do open and shortage of home cannmg
pohcy, we wtll have assass10ated all that lS best m ourselves
dram an acute thrombosed hds
hemorrhmd of the external
If athng Supreme Court
area 10 the office
Jusllce Wtlham 0 Douglas
In !hts case a clot ts formed retires soon, as some predict,
Students have nghts. Teachers have n ghts Now the rtghts of parents have been offictally
m the vem of the hemorrhoid, women push10g for a female
recogntzed m one ctly, reports Education U.S A newsletter
and 1t can be pamful To replacement hope president
They are conta10ed m a " Parents Bill of Rights and Respvnstbthtles" adopted by the
reheve
the tmmedtale Ford does not follow the Phtladelphta Home and School Counctl and the Parents Umon of Phtladelphta and approved by
discomfort the top of the
the school board. Among the 15 nghts granted parents are
strategy of hts predecessor
thrombosed hemorrhOid 1s On announcmg potenti a l
To be treated wtth courtesy by the school staff To be respected as mdtvtduals regardless of
cut off and the clot expelled. court nommee s , Richard race, econom1c status , sex or age To be mformed of school polic1es and decistons, as well as
With the pressure removed, Ntxon always mcluded the avenues for changing policies and appealing dectstons To be allowed to 10spect their child's
the person usually obtams names of women with lll'Dtted records and to remove or correct any " false or mtsleadmg statements "
considerable rehef.
Among parent's responstbtilties are
appeal, thus fear10g no great
To do a proper hemorrhOid
To
stnve to prepare the child emotionally and soc1ally to make him receptive to learmng
obJectiOn when he chose the
repair and remove the dtlated
dtsctphne
To try to have the chtld attend school regularly and on tll'De , and to help the child
and
men
The Umon Bank of
vems Is a fairly extensive
Sw1 tzerland has recently develop proper study habtts
procedure, at least more than
detenmned that Kuwait, w1th
most doctors would th10k of
$11,000 worth of goods and
doing 10 the office
services for each member of
Many patients who have
tis populati on, IS th e
had heart attacks subwealthiest per capita nallon
sequently
have
maJor
10 the world , the U S , w1 th
By Ralph Novak
tell the truth and defend the
always eqwvocated so much.
surgery Without problems It
$6,595 worth of th10gs per
Remember how m cartoons freedom of the press from all
It wasn 'I as if they just told
depends on how well you are
person, ranks No 5
John when a character 1s transgressions at the bnefing
whtte
lies hke we do."
domg Only your doctor
Connally has told frtends he ts struggling wtth hts con- tomorrow."
"Yes, Devil Ron, but don't
knows that
"probably" go10g to run for sctence, his good stde Is
" Truth, ha! " Devil Ron
you remember how J. F.
the Senate from Texas
always represented by an sputtered "Freedom of the
terHorst qwt because he had
Congress passes about 600 angel figure while the evtl press, ha' They're all agamst
been dece1ved by the Wh1te
laws annually but non-elected stdeisshownasadeviJ? Well us , all those sneaky, un- House? And how you
bureaucrats 10 government just the other day, President worthy, scandal-monger g
promised everythmg would
10
agenctes wnte 6,000 laws a Ford's press secretary, Ron reporters."
be open?"
year of their own . Bella Nessen, woke up in the
"Last week you were
"Well, I didn't mean open
Abzug, the human pubhc mtddle of the mght to fmd an talkm g about the ' Bhnd, to question! I meant open to
address system from New Angel Ron perched on one of mmdless, ll'ratwual susp1c n
mterpretat10n. Mine. I mean,
10
York City, Is hands down the his shoulders, a Devil Ron on and cymctsm,' weren't you' "
who are they, after all? Mere
by ll'Dprovmg the quahty of most thoroughly resented
the other.
Angel Ron asked sweeting
reporters and I'm a real hve
the federal justice system It member of Congress. "Even
Angel Ron was strurnmmg
"Darned nght, I was And
government offiCial."
can enact and vigorously her staff hates her," says a
his harp and s10g10g a few It sounded pretty good, too, If
" Look, Devil Ron , couldn't
enforce
laws covermg former Abzug asststant, "she
soothing bars of "Ah, Sweet I do say so myself Just
I soothe your problems With a
crtmmal conduct within the IS selftsh, brultsh, tyranmcal
few choruses of 'It's a Sin to
federal junsdtctlon that and uncool _ women's Mystery of Life" when Devil because we hedge a httle here
Ron mterrupted.
or there about some old CIA Tell a Lte'?"
cannot
be
adequately hberatlon can have the old
" You're as bad as THEM,
"Come on, come on 1" Devil report and forget to tell about
regulated at the state and crow ..
Ron shouted. "Enough of this some meeting or other wtth always p1cking on me. We've
local level. Fmally Jl can
Who's in control of your
relaxahon stuff already
John Connally, they're all got to band together and
fmanctal
and town' Sta!Jshcs indiCate that
provtde
when they say something
techmcal assistance to state between 1951 and 1972 the We've got to be thinking of callmg me a liar Just
mean
about us we will make
some plans to put something beckuse you don't exactly tell
and local governments, m- nwuber of state, county and
them
correct 1t and say
creasing their abihty to muntclpal workers 10creased over on the White House the truth doesn't make you a
something nice 10stead "
press corps tomorrow. We liar."
enforce the law.
an
Issue
that
by
151
per
cent,
thetr
payroll
"No, Devil Ron, that will
Crime Is
can't be lollygaggmg around
" But don't you remember
touches the lives of all mcreased by almost 600 per here all mght "
when we were a reporter'" never do . We've got to
Americans. Even when a cent, the1r unton membership
remember how much m"Now, now," Angel Ron Angel Ron sa1d
grew by 130 per cent, and the replied. "The more we rest,
"Ah, those were the days," forln8t10n was hidden in the
citizen Is not directly affected number of thetr stnkes
the better able we will be to Devil Ron s1ghed " Pin 'em past and that we 're not really
by violent crime, be suffers multlphed by a factor of 1,000
unportant. We're just the
up against the wall, make
the economic consequences . Tttle lO, Section 888 of the
messenger,
you know, so
'em squirm with the tough
when government and U S. Code threatens court
business must spend millions
Byrd of Vtrgmta says the cost questiOn, ferret out the old even if the reporters get mad,
martial or worse for any
they're not really mad at us.
of dollars to
pursue
of runnmg Congress has truth, don 't let those sntvehng
rebred general who ts concriminals, maintain a prison victed of usmg "con- doubled m ftve years and government lackeys cover Our goal should be to make it
so nobody not1ces us."
system, and protect stores temptuous words 10 speech or tripled m 10; more than 17,000 up
"Rats 1 Rats ' Rats!"
"Of course, m those days,
and Industrial plants. The U.
people now work for the 535S. Chamber of Commerce pnnt agamst" the prestdent, member body
we reporters were justified m shrteked Devil Ron " I can't
the vice president, Congress,
recently reported that In 1974 the secretary of defense or
Democrats are begmmng badgermg away, smce the stand it. Are you sure Ron
alone white-collar crime cost
to worry about Gerald Ford's government spokesman Ziegler started like this?"
governors of any state;
the public UO bllUon.
presumably, though, they " unconsciOnable" advantage
This trend cannot be
10 the 1976 elechon campatgn
may rap other generals
allowed to continue. It is time The Republican Nahonal " 1t's tmposstble to compute
the political value of all the
to get tough with the
Committee spent $125,000 on
CrlDllnal. President Ford has the ftrst of three TV spectals Btcentenmal tnps he'll make
recommended that criminal designed to enlist new sup- at government expense, "
fines be increased from a port; viewers tiave thus far says one gr1U'Dbler, " but at a
maxtmwn of $10,000 to a sent 10 contributions of less mmtmum 1t Wlll be the
May-July, 1775:
malllmwn of $100,000 if the th
eqwvalent of $2 to $3 mtlhon
...
·defendant is an individual
an $6,000
Sen Harry 10 contributiOns
An FBI
Cleavages deepen 10 Brlttsh opmton regard10g the
and $500,000 If the defendant
- - ~ - ~ agent says pnvately that
colomes The news of Lexmgton and Concord reaches
IS an organJZatlon. This is a
Patricia Hear.! has' " done
London 10 late May Ten days earlier Lord Effingham_ a
step in the rtght direction. In
DEVOTE-D- TO TftE
1 more
to
destroy
the
respected veteran m the Royal army - restgns hts coma ddt t1 on,
mandatory
ME l~l.l'/A~~1, ~~ E A
credibility of the bureau than
mtsston In order to avOid tak10g up arms aga 10st the
mmimum sentences are
fHESTER L TANNEHILL! I all our other cribcs comcolonists On June 24.10 an address to the Kmg, thecttlzens
of London tell the Kmg that the English people can exneeded, especially for the
ROBEi~e~·lll'FucH
bined" He says the public
career criminal and repeat
Cotv Edolor
can ' t retam fatlh m an
l peel nothmg from war wtth the colomes except "gazettes
' PubliShed dally except
of blood and mutual lists of
off ender
when
a Salurday
by The Ohio Valley agen cy of th ousan d s wh'IC h IS '
their slaughtered fellow subdangerous
weapon
Is 'Publ\Shmg Company, 111 hum
. 1hated by one lone gll'l ..
idourt St . Pomeroy . Qh•o
Pr
Jects
" Sympathy for the
used m the commtsswn 46769 Busmess Office Phone
wr to the recent supress10n
156
colomes extends even to the
of a cnme and for ser- f,~/
Ed,tor~at Pho~e 992 . of democratic principles m
1
King's brother, the Duke of
ious offenses such as
socond class postage paod Indta, the U. S. - based
4 Freedom House determined
.
ki
in
had
dr
t
Pomeroy
,
Oh
ro
Gloucester In July he JOUrtr a ffIC ng
r
ugs. I
_Nollonal advertrsrn~
neys
to France, where he Is
feel that such a strong ap- · ~eY,resentatove wa-rd• , that35percentoftheworld's
r•ff•th
Company
,
In
c
1
I
pop
'
ul
t'
1366000000
received
as a guest of Louis
proac h d oes , ac t as a
eott •nen 1 &amp; Gsllatlher D•v
a IOn , or
, , ,
757 Th~rd Ave New York'
XVI At a banquet for the
deterrent to further crime.
people were living in free
1 "J y
10017
~
Duke,
oneofthe guests Is the
The lenient approach of the ' s ubs c , , p ,, 0 . ,-, . tes• states ; the loss of 600 million
Marqu1s
de Lafayette Hearlast decade certamly has not ~:~W:bf: 7 ~Yc e~~~r~~~ :;~::;.~ Indians would reduce that
Ing descriptions of the hos."
worked in holding down the 'By Motor Rout e wh~re already pathetic count by
ttllttes
1n Massachusetts, La.
serv•
c e , $3noll
aim os th a If · The US ArmY
Cri me ra te. It IS I1me
to make ~arr1er
variable One
month
2~
fayette
leaves the banquet
our streets safe agam for
By matl rn ·Ohoo and w va , has a tax-produced tra10ing
ne
Year
S22 OQ ,
S1X
h h
.
vowmg to enlist 10 the '
I
chums
by vigorously pur- . months , s11 so , Three mov1e w IC teaches officers
Amer1can cause
suing the criminal element ' S26
'1\0nths
, S7 00
~ how to mfluence women at
Lafayette
00 year
. ,=» IElsewhere
X :Tion t h'S
and separaltng them from • " 3 so, three months . s7 s.e j parhes ; 1t also has more than
society
1' / Sun
S u bscr~ ptoon proce on c tudes a dozen ftlms on the control of
- By Ros s MIICkr-nz•e &amp; Jef't MacN~II y f 111 1975 Un1ted Ff'a lurt- Synd 1catrd ay T 1me s Sent1n e l
1
' ·
- ..........
venereal disease
1 -

The perilous politics of tyrannicide

Equal rights for parents

DR. LAMB

Swimming is fine exercise
excellent exercise
I often recommend tt for
people who have problems
wtth knees, ankles, htps or
the back It 1s one way many
people can exerc1se w1 thou!
bearmg the full weight of the
body It 1s also a good
exerciSe to stretch the
muscles and tendons to
regam theiT full range of
motwn Many JOint and back
pams are related or at least
mvolve muscle spasm
Swnmmng helps stretch the
muscles and relaxes the
spasm
Many of the swlmm10g
movements strengthen the

RAY CROMLEY

abdomen wh1ch helps the
back Some people will need
more specific exercises that
mvolve more work for the
abdommal
muscles
to
provtde good support to the
back. Strong abdommal
muscles help pro~ct the back
and prevent backache and
mmor back inJuries.
For more mformatlon on
exerctses to strengthen the
abdommal muscles, write to
me m care of thiS newspaper,
P 0 J¥&gt;x 1551, Radio City

Message
_,

from Mao: U.S. stay in Asia
By Ray Cromley

WASHINGTON- Mae Tse-tung ts now engaged 10 an allout effort to get the Umted States and West Europe to snatch
his chestnuts out of the fire
He's 10tent on selling the United States on keeping a strong
enough force in the waters off Southeast Asta and a sufficient
diplomatlc and econ01ruc presence to blunt Russian expansion.
He has an abtdmg fear of Soviet encU'clement, which seems
high on the list of Kremlm all'Ds. And Mao also hopes, through
a continued IJmted States presence, to keep the door open for
the building of a more effectlve Ounese-6ponsored underground in Thailand, Malaysta, Singapore and the Philipp10es.
It ts clear that after Laos, Vtetnam and Cambodia, Mao lS
not worried that Amencan operallons in Asia will be any bar to
the parttcular brand of underground subversion and guerrilla
warfare in which he has proven his technical genms. On the
contrary, a bwldup of RUSSian-backed parties, as has occurred
m Latin Amer1ca, Afrtca and in South Asia, could prove a hardto-beat comb10ation
Mao 's stay-m-Asta messages to the Uruted States come in
the form of covert hmts to sources close to American
diplomatic cll'cles. Mao has learned, by careful observation,
that U. S foretgn sernce offtcers, the State Department
hierarchy and selected 10fluential academic leaders jwnp
much more quickly to the batt when the hints are mdirect,
channeled confidenttally through men With "inside contacts."
The Olmese have also let 1t be known in Japan, again
"secretly" but taking care to make certain the secret lS
spread, that they are not seeking to end the alliance that
country has With the Umted States. As has been well reported,
they confidentatlly told Pre5tdent Marcos of the Philippines
they had no objection to Amencan bases m his country. Mao's
men hjive also hmted strongly they are m no hurry to acquire
Taiwan, now governed by Oltang Ka1-6hek'S successors.
The United States IS not Mao's only target. He's been
spryly active these past months m mvltmg a bevy of West
European leaders to Olma, giving them red carpet treatment
having his men suggest to these Westerners that Europe, not
OJ!na, is Brezhnev's target.
There has been a veritable par~de of West Germans.
Agam and again, with infinite patience, Mao's atdes drwn on
the theme that the Kremlin is making a femt to the East
1!88inst Olina, only to bemuse and distract West Europe.
Britair., France and West Germany relax, the story rllllS the
Russians Will move m
'
Premier Cbou En-la1 tells the Europeans they must
strengthen themselves economtc~lly, pollhcally and
militarily. Teng Hsiaopmg indirectly urges the British to stay
in the Common Market. The O!inese pull no punches m
deriding the paivete of those European leaders who believe in
promoting friendship with Russia and who work actively ' for
detente .
Mao'shope, of course, is that a financtally strong united
militarily effective West Europe, reaching out politlc~lly and
I!CQnomically to East Germany, Poland, CZechoslovakia,
Hungary, and Ruman1a, will keep Leonid Brezhnev and his
Kremlin colleagues so occupied in the \fe!it that Mao and
aasoclates will be free to follow
alms in Africa the Middle
East, Latin America and Asia.
'
If there's to be conflict, lite Oline5e strategy rlllls: let It be
between the! superpowers and their Western alltes, leavmg
fe~ free to PIC' up i!Je pieces.
1

On.;

!herr

'

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I
I

1

:&lt;:!

w15

Damn the advisers, full sptc:::! ahead!"

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - I read
your column about the man
who lll]ured hts back whtle
changtqg a ttre. He said
exercises trntated hts back
Would he be able to sWim' I
had back trouble, and
swtmmmg cured my aliment.
Isn ' t 1! a safe way to exercise "
DEAR READER - The
answer depends on what IS
c ausmg the back pam
Exercise of any form IS
sometimes not advisable m
the presence of recent inJuries However, you are
generally nght. Swnnming ts

.I I '

•

The Preamble to the
ConstitutiOn states that one of
tts goals 1s to "insure
domestic tranqu1hty."
Toward this goal, strenuous
federal efforts - along with
state and local imtiatlves have been undertaken in the
last decade to reduce the
mctdence of cnme 10 the
United States
The
latest
statistics
released by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation
reveal that this effort has not
been successfuL The FBI
estimates are that the rate of
serious crime - murder,
forcible rape, robbery,
aggravated assault,
burglary, larceny and auto
theft- was 17 percent blgber
In 1974 than In 1973. 1blsls the
largest lncreaae In the 44
years the Bureau bas been
collecting statistics. Obviously It Is time to get tough
with the criminal and sbow
more concern for the Innocent victim of crime.
The personal and social toll
that crime exacts from our
citizens Is enormous. In
addtiJOn to the direct damage
to victims of crime, violent
cnmes m our streets and
homes create a pervasive
fear. This fear has caused
people to rearrange their
daily lives. Citizens shop only
when they feel the chances of
attack are lower . Commercial areas become
deserted at other times.
Shopowners arm themselves
and VIew unknown customers
wl th suspicion . In a free
society such as ours, this
atmosphere cannot
be
allowed to endure. Everyone
must commit themselves to
the goal of reducing crime.
It 1s my belief that the
federal role in fighting crime
should be a lll'Dited one. What
may work as a solutwn 10 Los
Angeles or Boston won 'I
necessarily
work
in
Southeastern Ohio, However,
there are some ways in which
the federal government can
aid m combatting crime· it
can provide leadership to
state and local govermh~nts
)
~,

RALPH NOVAK

. Which side are you Ron?

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chr_onidc of America

Th! .Daily Sentinel

1

I

•

•

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Edttor
':, MILWAUKEE (UP !) ~ Bill Madlock Is an otherwise
Pll!asant young man, who
goes about hiS busmess and
make"s fnends easily, but th1~
was one time he VIolated the
code.
Normally, whenever you
beat the other guy m baseball
you put on your coat, button
up yo!" hp and go on home
That's standard procedure
everywhere m baseball One
thmg you don 't do ts rub 11 m
But that 1sn't the way Btll
Madlock did 11 at all
Naturally, the}"'h"Sked the
Oltcago Cubs ' affable 24yearold third baseman a lot
of q::esllons Tuesday mght
after h1s nmth~nnmg , tworun stngle d1d the American
League AIIStars 10 again and
powered
the
National
Leaguers to a 6-3 vJctory ,
thetr fourth m a row and 12th
m the last 13 years , and he
answered as hones\ly as he
could
He S81d 1t seems to him the
NatJOnal Leaguers are mor'ij
aggressive
than
the
American Leaguers and that
the Americans merely s1t
around wa1t10g to get beat.
What a thing to say r
Especially when you've
been up m the majors only
two years and played m only
one All-Star game
Now you'd think the Amencan Leaguers would ask who
does Bill Madlock think he IS,
laugh at what he had to say
and put hll'D down, wouldn't
you'
You know what they did ?
They agreed completely
With hun
None of them came right
out and S81d m so many words
they stt around wa1tmg to get
beat, but almost to a man,
they admitted BtU Madlock
was rtght- the National
League IS much more
spmted,
far
more
aggressive.
Actually, B1ll Madlock was
only saying what Mtckey
Mantle had sa1d 24 hours
earlier. Mantle, an honorary
coach for the Amertcan Lea "
guers, had said the Nationals
always seemed to show more
enthus1asm m the All-Star
contests
Now this game was over
The Nat10nal League had
put it to the Amencans a gam ,
and Madlock, the NL's
leading httter who came to
the Cubs a year ago after
spendmg only a month w1th
the Texas Raqgers, was
named co-MVP for the
contest along w1th Mets '
pitcher Jon Matlack, who
blanked the losers m the
seventh and eighth and
picked up the VIctory.
"I'd have to say the same

thing, "

sa1d

second baseman Rod Care"
"hen they told him wha t
Madlock had to say about the
Ame n can League I' ve seen
1t m a number of these AllStar games I particula rly
r em e mber th e game m
Kansas City two years ago
Every tll'De they_htt the ball
they wer e runmng for two
bases "
Hank Aaron, "ho put 10 20
years m the National Leauge
before commg over w the
Milwauke e Brewer s tht s
year , said substantially the
same thing
· I 'd say the Natwnal
League ts more aggressive,"
he concurred " And Bobby
Bonds , formerly w1th the San
Francisco Gtants and now
with the New York Yankees,
also agreed
" It's funny," put m
Oakland's Vtda Blue , who
started Tuesday night 's game
for the Amencan Lea gue and
was roughed up for two runs
and ftve htts m the two mrungs he worked, " but George
Scott and I were talking about
that on the bench durmg the
game Scotty sa1d the guys
over there go up swtngmg the
bats all the tll'De He sa.Jd the
guys 10 our league take more
pitches .
"They," Blue went on,
meanmg
the
National
Leaguers , "seem to have an
entiTely different attitude. I
saw how they were whoopmg
1t up on the bench while 1 was
out there pttchmg . They were
hollenng and havmg fun It
remmded me of the atlltude
we have on our Oakland
club."
Ex-Met Nolan Ryan, now
w1th the Cahforma Angels,
saw 1t the same way as
Madlock also
"I'd say that's true," he
satd upon learmng what
Madlock had to say " I don 't
think they play htt-and-run
enough over here National
League hitters are more
aggressive m the sense that
tt's a fastball league and you
see more fastballs over there
Over here, you see more
breakmg balls "
Mtckey Mantle sat by hts
locker and satd he dtd nollce
a httle more enthusiasm
generated
among
the
American Leaguers than he
had 10 the past. Espectally
when Carl Yastrzemski 's
three-run homer temporarily
tied the score m the stxth
IDDing.
"Otherwise, we dtdn't have
a whole lot to yell about,"
said Mantle
How true.
Bill Madlock wasn't really
rubb10g 11m. All he was do10g
was tellmg the truth You
can't ktll a guy for that. Even
Minnesota tf it does VIolate the code

Reds to get
better
Rose
day record for consecu!Jve
VICiones ts 12, set 10 1940 and
matched in 1957
Manager Sparky Anderson
says the team IS stronger
than hls 1970 club which won
Machine ."
There's only one problem70 of the first 100 games and
there may not be an "off" wound up With 102 VICiones.
Anderson predicts more than
switch.
The ghstenmg "Big Red 100 vtctones this year. The
Machine" ----also known as the Reds are now 61-29 and have
Cincinnati Reds- IS def101tely 72 games to play .
Why IS the Big Red
switched "on" and lS leaVIng
the Los Angeles Dodgers and Machine hummmg'
the rest of the National
Well, first of all the
"heavyduty" veterans like
League West teams to rllSt
The Reds-Dodgers race had Rose, Morgan, Johnny Bench
figured to be Uoe closest 10 and Tony Perez are perbaseball th1sseason. So far ; 1t formmg as expected-well
has turned out tt, be the most
Rose has proven to be sohd
at hiS new th1rd base post !Jon
lop-Bided.
The Reds have a com- and 1s cracking hits at a .319
manding 12'h game lead over clip. Morgan has a fat .345
the Dodgers as regular play battmg average and Bench
resumes Thursday followmg has not only smashed 19
homers and collected 73 RB!s
the All-Star break.
And Pete Rose, the ftred-up but 1s hitting for a good 293
sparkplug of the machme, average Perez 1s now
predicts the Reds Will be even reboundmg mcely from a
better the second half of the slow start.
But there also have been a
season . .
Rose says the club 1s couple of surprlSCS named
"hungry" for another shot at Ken Ghffey and George
the World Sertes. Adds Joe Foster who have helped out
Griffey ts the the team 's
Morgan, the team's leading
thtrd
best hitler at .311 and
hitter, "We have unlimited
Foster, now getting a chance
potential."
The Reds have won 19 of to play regularly 10 the
their last 21 games, an outfield thanks to Rose's
amazing record, and have a move to third, 1s not only
10-game wmmng streak hittmg 293 but lS nght behind
going . The team 's modern- Bench 10 home runs w1th 15
By RICK VAN SANI
CINCINNATI (UP!) - National League teams are
trymg to ftgure out how to
turn off the ' 'Big Red

By IUU. MADDEN
UP! Sports Write r
MILWA UKEE t UPII E ve u the st ~ht of Henry
K1s sm ger
v. ea rm g
a
Mtlwauk ee Bre wers' cap ,
fatl ed! to deter the Na tional
League Tuesday mght from
Its usual dom10a t1on of the
All-Sta r Game
On Bill Madlock's I wo.,-un
s10gle 10 the mnth tnnmg, the
NL "hipped the Amencan
League 6-3 for Its fourth
stra 1ght victory
of
Stat e
Sec r e tary
Kt ss mger was obv iO us ly
thnll ed b) Ya s tr zem skt 's
three-run sixth mrung homer
ty10g the ga me at 3-3, but
Madloc k, the NL's leading

hitter and lhe onl y 011cago
( ub on the squad , set the AI.
defeat - Its 12th' m the last 13
i\11-Sta r Games
·nwguys m the Amen ca n
Leag u~ JUSt seem to be
" at tmg out there to get beat
and that's \\ha t ha ppened,
satd Madlock, who sna pped
the 3-3 t1e wt th a two-run
s10g le durmg a thr eerun mnth
mmng rally
The end came wh en, held1 10
check for two 10mngs by Jll'D
'Catfi sh " Hunter , the NL
started the mnth wtth Reggie
Smtth bloopmg a lead off
smgle to left off the glove of
Cla ud e ll
l e f t ft e ld e r
Washmgton
A.l Oln '' r 01nrh J·11ttm e for

,
Y.Jnnmg pitt·her Jon Ma llack, game 's mosl va lua ble player second Gene Tenace walked Secretary of State, an oldtll'De
doub led m to the Ieftft e ld '- hono r s
wtt h
Madloc k. an d Car l Yas trzem skt , Yank ee fa n, cheered happtly
corn er an&lt;l Smith stopped at Mat lal k, Ito.. ever , gave all batt10g fo r pitcher J U'D Kaat , for Yastrzemski 's hom er and
tht rd Reliever Rtch Gossage the credit to Madlock tor the Jut Seaver 's fir st pt tr h deep th e a ppea r ance of the
mto the nghtheld bL:i lpen l&lt;l Brewers' 41-year -&lt;&gt;ld home
h1t La rry Bowa to load the tnumph
bases
' G•ve the trophy to Mad- lie the sco re
run kmg, Hank Aaron , who
Ktssmger , who threw out en[ied a thtrd mnmg AL
Madloc k then htt a. smgle lock," he s&amp;d · Witho ut hun
the first ball wa s g1ven a threat l)y hnm g ou1 to short
pa s t thtrd ba se , sconn g we don '! wm 1! "
ca p by th e
A record County Stadium
The Nl., now leadmg the Brewe r s
Sm ith a nd Oliver Bowa went
hometown
ba
llclub
a
nd
wore
to tlurd a nd sco red on a sen es 27-18, sta rted the game
crowd of 51,480 a ttended the
sca nflce fly by Pete Rose
With the po wer that had made It throughout the game Afte r 46th an nual ga me between
throwm g out the ftrst ball, the lhc two l ea :~~ tes
I don't htt too many n ghl II the 8-5 favont e
Leadmg off the sec-ond
down the hne likc tha t, " satd
Madl ock I'm really mor e of Inning Dodgers Steve Garvey
a spray hitter tha n a pull- and Jtmmy Wynn htt back-lohttter •
back homers off sta rter Vtda
Matlack, who pitched the Blue. one of seve n Oa klan d
seventh a nd etghth mmn gs A's on the i\1 , squad, fo r a 2-ll
and struck out four , got the lea d
EXTRA
It was the ftr st ttme convic tory a nd shared th e
SPEC\ A\.
secullve home r s had been hi t
m an All-Sta r ga me smce 1956
wh e n Ted Wi l liam s an d
ANY -SIZEGOOD/'iEAif
Mt ckey Mantle of the AL did
It
1
(RIB TREAD)
The NI. made 1t 3-0 lit the
thtrd off Steve Busby when
Plus
to pla ce him on probalwn " Lou Brock smgled , went to
Excise
Tax
Ho\\ ever , Rozelle added second on a ba lk by the
27c
to
17c
tha t Maddox wa s told that Kansas Ctty Royals· n ghtan ~ further dtffl culttcs wtth
ha nd e r - am! stole thir d
With
the law Yt'tll result m se vere Johnn y
Benc h
s mgled
disctphn ary action by thts sha rply 1ns1de the thtrd base
Recappable Casing
FREE MOUNTING
off tee,' ' presum a bly meamng line to scor e the Ca rdina I
suspensmn
outfielder
Judge Black told Madd ox
By then 1! looked hke 11
he will have to hve up to the might be a runa way as seven
c our t's
p ro b a ti o n of the on gmal NL starters
r e quir e m e nt s
" mor e
701 E. Main St.
had gotten base hits But,
POMEROY, OHIO
s tnngently
than oth e r after J erry Reuss and Don
.., 2101
people "
Sutton had blanked the AL
As a professwnal athlete .
over the farst ftv e mrun gs, the
especially a football playe r ,
Ame n can s ca m e to life
you're a n example to others
against Matlack 's teammate ,
You 're 10 the lll'Delight '
Uf( IS MU AS Olm
Tom Sea ver , m the stxth
lvhn t- t nh1.
The JUdge further told the
Joe Rudt led off w1th a
Frede n ck , Md , na tive tha t a
sm gle a nd ptnch-runn e r
s pecial condi tion of ht s
Washmgton promptly stole
proba tiOn IS !pat he 'will not
so mu ch as touch" any type of
narcotic or drug ·
Befor e th e sent e nc m g,
Madd ox to ld th e JUdge,
"Gtven another opportumty ,
I would hke to furth er my
caree r a s a profess iOnal
41NCH
INTERIOR/ EXTERIOR
football playe r I wtll not
POLYESTER
hav e any further mvolvement
wtth drugs whatsoever.
ASSORTED COLOR S
Easy to c l~on brush ret oms sllape
" I would hke to gtve some
res1sts mo1Siure
youth group talks for the NFL
If I do ha ve the opportumty to
further my career, " added
the 6-5 , 240-pound er wh o
captamed his college team at
Frostbur g State ( Md )
Maddox's lawyer satd part
REG
REGULAR 7 99
of the NFL probation IS that
I 59
Maddox wtll work wtth youth
groups to try to steer them
away from drug abuse
Rozelle said that Maddox
'has been mtervtewed at
len gth (by NFL officials ) and
will be agam m the near
Thomas
future so he full y under stands
Product s
the te rm s of hi s NFL
proba tion "
Maddox srud he wt shed to
91NCH
" pubhcl~ apolog12e for any
embarrassment that I ha ve
cau sed
th e
Cmcmnatl
Bengals "
Maddox wa s a seventh
Now ts the tt me to start ftxt ng up arou nd
round draft chm ce of the
you
r home
The Froendly One has
• 10" x I5" tray
Benga ls m 1973 but spent
from po rnt to
everylh tng you need
• Rol ler cover and !rome
most of hts f1rst season on t he

GOOD-YEAR

Maddox on probation
CIN CINNATI t UPl ) Defe nsive end Bob Maddox
has been placed on probation
by both the Natwnal Football
League and a JUdge followmg
a gutlty plea to a dru g charge,
clearmg the way for Maddox
to report to the C!ncmnatl
Bengals tra.Jmng carpp at
Wtlmmgton , Ohio .
Maddox, 26, Tuesday was
gtven a suspended sentence
or 10 to 19 and hve years on
proball on b) Hamilton
Coun ly Common Pleas Court

Judge Robert L Black
Madd ox had previOus ly
pleaded guilty to a charge of
possession of hashish for sale
He had been arrested last
March 12 after pohce raided
his apartment and satd they
found 24 ounces of hashtsh
NFL Commtsswner Pete
Rozelle S81d he had notthed
both the Bengais and Maddox
that "no U'Dpedtment will be
placed 10 the way of Maddox
reporting to tramtng m as
much as the court has seen ftt

Scou feels A's
only NL match
By DAVE BEGEL
MTI~WAUKEE , Wts. (UP! )
- George Scott pulled no
punches
"The only team we got m
the Amencan League that
plays hke they do IS the
Oakland A's, " Scott satd
after the American League
had lost for the 12th tll'Oe m 13
games to the Natwnal League
m the All-Star game by a 6-3
score.
Vtda Blue, who started for
the Amencan League and
gave up three runs, agreed .
"In our league , we run and
take the extra base ," he sa1d
"All the other teams play
conservative baseball and try
to play catch up with us "
Bill Madlock, who was a cowmner of the game's Most
Valuable Player award, put
his fmger on the difference
between the two teams
" Our guys were on the
bench cheermg all the tune,"
he satd
" It was unbeheveable. Over on the
other bench they were s1ttmg
there waj{mg to get beat."
The quest1on of enthusiasm
was ratsed Monday when
former Amencan League
great Mickey Mantle brought
up the subject
Mantle said that even when
he was playmg 1! appeared
the National League had
more desll'e and more spint
than the Amencan League
Pete Rose sa1d the
Amencan League "had a lot
of young guys on the bench

and they seemed kmd of awed
by the whole thmg wh1le our
guys were loose as a goose ."
Bobby Murcer, who came
to the Nattohal League after
four All-Star years m the
American League, noticed a
difference, too
"From what I saw there IS
a different atmosphere of
some kmd, " he said "On our
bench everybody had the
w1nnmg sp1r1t and 1t poured
out Over there it didn 't seem
hke they had muc h "
Scott and Blue were the two
most eloquent spokesmen m
the losers ' locker room on the
subJect.
"Those guys m the othe r
league play a lot more
aggressive," Scott satd "Our
teams play con servativ e
baseball "
" In the Natwnal a guy 's on
ftrst and someone gets a hit
and there are runners on f1rst
and thtrd Over here that
happens and we got runners
on ftrst and second Thetr
guys aren't afraid and
everythmg they do IS geared
to force rrustakes on us
There are more mental
mistakes made m the
Amencan League than m the
Natwnal League "
Blue satd the Natwnal
League httters were "much
more agressive
"And those guys really tear
up the bases and always play
hard - to wm,'' he satd , " Our
guys Just aren't used to that
approach ."

PASSENGER TIRE

$}Q95

-

MEIGS TIICE CENTER

SPRAY ENAMEL

WALL BRUSH

488

ROLLER
&amp;TRAY
SET

InJured reserve hst
Last year 's s trike by some
players gave Maddox a n
opporturuty to play more than
had been expected and he \
was a pleasant sur pnse m
several gam es In ;m e
exhtbtllon game he scooped
up a fumble and ran for a
touchdown

~~i~

99

Cponeltng'

(i =!'t'l ~

~ER'N~H::»t

WOOD SCRAPER

6 FOOT ALUMINUM

STEPLADDER

$&lt;rope old po mt ott the eas y wa y I
II long tool g ve s good leverage

Slip proo f pl os t 1c feet
Top end bottom steps ore

braced

50

lb

REGULAR I 99

copoc ty

99~

shelf

Pomeroy Giants
•
• •
ga1n semis m
KC tournament
It was a mght for bombmgs Tuesday mght at the
17th Annual Kyger Creek
Little League Tournament as
Fruth's Pharmacy blasted
the Galhpohs Red Sox, 21-7 ,
Pomeroy's Gtants rolled over
Pomt Pleasant City Ice and
Fuel, 11-4 and the New Haven
Reds overran the Galhpohs
Indians, 11-3 Seven of the
or1gmal 31 teams remam
altve m the tourney .
Fruth's slammed 16 h1ts
enroute to 1ts lopsided VICtory Jones, the wmn·ng
hurler, led the way wtth a
homer and three doubles ;
Sulhvan had a trtple, smgle
and double ; Stmpson doubled
and smgled; Rutherford had
two smgles and Barnett
smgled
Pacmg the Red Sox attack were Armstrong'; a
double and two singles; Mtke
Burger had two smgles, Dave
Retmund, a smgle and Van
Gundy, a tnple
New Ha ve n led by

Haymaker who smgled and
defeated
th e
doubled
Galhp ohs lndtans , 11-3 Other
New Haven h1tters we re
Gtbbs, a smgle, Thompson , a
smgle and Long, a smgle
Weaver was the wmmng
pitcher whtle Wtller took the
loss
Gettmg htls · for
Galhpohs were Lee , a smgle ~
Wtller, a double and smgle
and Cornett, a smgle
Pomeroy's
Gtant s
blasted Pt Pleasant City Ice
and Fuel, 11-4 J Ftelds led
the attack wtth three doubles
C Allen had a double, J
Sheets slammed a double and
smgle, R Smtght and C
McKmney had smgles The
Giants moved to the semtfmals
Pacmg Ctty lee and Fuel
were M. Dooley, two smgles
and J Jones, a smgle
To ntght ,
Johnson' s
Market plays Salem Baplls t ;
Green will play the Rutland
Dodgers and New Ha ve n will
ba ltic F t ulh 's
'

CHESHIRE WINS
CHESHIRE
Ace
righthand er Ste ve Batrd
pitched a one hit, 2-0 shutout,
over the Pome roy A's pony
team to lead Cheshire to
undi s puted
and
sole
leadership 10 the MeigsGallia-Mason Pony League
Tuesday evenmg here. Dale
Browning "as the losmg
pitcher

2h INCH

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seals seams 11 oz

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value

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SNOWDEN

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REG
1 49

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J"hought for the week, try abig. •• •
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4 - The Daily Sentine l, Middlepori-J-)Omerov.
0 .. Wt:&gt;dnc~
da •\' . Julv
1fi, ~~~ ~a
•
1
•

•

I

Braves1 back

SOCCO, Campers wm- cage.games
In Monda\· eren in g SUIII·
mer baskrtball actjor; a: thr··

for SOC&lt;"O. cu! ti ng
short the Sht·.. -:·kcr ndly The
Shot.: kns \H' n ' d()Wil i~-1: 1
l ~t1t• in llw contest and had
cullh.' bac k to l&lt;tkr ttw 1Pad.
ga111e

Mi dd le po rt Par k , SOC'CO
nipped li te Dati~· Sentinel
Shoc kers ~0- 79 ctnd J im's

7!).;8

Campers ran un·r the :\la rk 5
" R;mjun Cajuns" 81-6!1
In the upentng cnn iL•:&gt; t of
the en•mng SOCCO hrld nff a
fa n t&lt;tstic btr rally b) the
·'tw('·kers r\ (;rL' g Pt•c k fi l' ld

l 'fl i-1

H;:m dy Y;llt•s fr« ·t'

throw Sl'('llnd s bl'fPI'l' 1\ •ck' s
l!;tllll' ' \\llllllrl ,L! l!UCJJ.

SO Cl 'O

thus

r Pill &lt;cttned

undl'fPii!Pd . TllL• c lub w;t s led
Ill st'IJrt rtg by Hun 1&lt;\·rguson

go~tl ! rt l!ll 1·~ fix·! tlUt Wllll lhL'

~-1

wttlr

points.

j)u lll ;:-. drtd ~0

n·buunds. and

H rd Jilunds
In thL' nigh tcap . .Jtm' s
i ·arnpt•rs behind the team
pl;t) 11f .J im " Slim" 8 11~gs
upr-ndt•d Mark Fivt• 81-60.
\\' i rh only (!fll' player o\' er 6
fl• t•l ta ll, lhl• Campe rs won the

man y as 25 poinLc; behind at
unt• time .
Hilly :Vf.n·r~ led for the
\\· in ner~ a s ht&gt; hatl a game

b\· P&lt;ts."tng C~round and
rtn·"ugh !ht· ('(J juns who arr

St~ve

&lt;d l prelly good sizetl gents.

l){,ggs. wh o is 5 ft. 8 in . tall
Wets
cred i t~d
with
15
rebounds against a front line
which averaged 6 rt. 4 inches.

g; l!ne

.le r n ·

l'f't'lllt' an s ~ I . P{'c k a nd Hru t'l'

t=larn s t'al'h

History made

by Adventists

."icioto

duublr

fl~un·s .

IJ)'

Htck

.J uly lO . \dw n ttw 52rtd W11rld
C u ngr es~ of St•n•nth-da)
t\dY~:·ntis l Churc h convcnrd
fur the fir~\ ttrr lt.' outo;.; itl e

three-quarters mark on to
sc·ore a one-half length victory over Show Biz Time in
the fe atured $1.300 pace at
Sciut o Downs IH.'re Tuesday

Badry .

nigh l.
Co showPel .

Junior
•
meet zn
4th round

!\' ll l' lh .'\ l llef lC' ;J .

S{Jlll(' 2.000 delegate s fr om
Wl'!'l'

: re g is tl'red. 1-lowevN, thL·
:total &lt;.Jl tending the ten-day

Th e winner , driven by
I Joyd Myers, carded a new
lifetime record of 2: 02 2-5 and

returned $:11 .40, $5.60 and $5.
Th e 4-3 nightly double
combination of Triphammer
cuuJ Action Girl was worth
$8:l.BO.

PX·

:ceed 20.000 .
• One of I he pnnclp&lt;o l dvc~ tri nes U:tught ll\ tht&gt; l'hur d1 is
:the second CIIJ~lim: of (' hn st
ThE' conventll)n tlleme. " \1 1\\
is ll1e Time ." ~HIS c hvs Pn tu
emphasize t he 1rnmedialt.'
need for spreadi ng to the
world tlt P gospel r1f Christ's
return .
T he problem of ' carrying

out this task was demeon·
strated fir st-hand at th e
convent ion by the many
lan guages
r ep r esen t ed
am ong delegates
All business a nd
be carr ied over
a ddress system

and guests.
reports will
the publi c
in th e 1,.,..u
:major lan guages ~ German

:Ond English. Simultaneous
;translation will be available
:Vi a indt vidua l tr ansiSto r
tece ivers in five lang uages :
:Sranish. French. Por tuguese.

ST LO UIS. Mo. t l!P i i Top-serded Tony Giauunalva
of Houston. Tex .. faced lOth -

A crowd of 4,513 wagered
$226, 175.

Northfield results

s~P ded Jim Hodg es of Chevy

Cl1ase, Mel ., today in the
fourth ro und of the St. Louis
.J un ior In vitati onal Tenn is
T ournament.
Giammalva won hi s thirdr ound match over Harrison
Howes of Deerfield , DL , 6-2, 63, and Hodges beat Michael
Benado of East Meadow ,
N.Y., &amp;-1 , &amp;-1.
· In
oth er
third-r ou nd
matches . Second-see ded Jai
DiLouie of Dallas, Tex., beat
C'haim Arzeroff .of Israel, 6-1,
6-2, third-seeded Matt Mitchell of Palo Alto, Calif. ,
crushed Mik e Brunnberg of
Miami. Fla., fi-1 , &amp;-0, and
fourth-seeded John Austin of
Rollin" Hills, Ca ll.f ., defeated

NORT HFI E LD.
Ohio
UP! I - Benton Widow
cruised to a six-length victory
in the fe at ured $2,500 seventh
race at Nort hfield Park
Tuesday night.
Th e three-year-old filly
paced to her career best of
2:04 with Bill Zendt in the
sulky and returned $9.00,
$3.60, and $3.00.
r

Tar Tac was second and

Law Honor third.
The tenth race Big Triple
combinatin of lll-2-9 returned
$5,028.30 to 11 ticketholders.
A crowd of 5,103 wagered
$347,574 .

t&gt;

•P olish and Scandinavian.
: Held every five years, th is
busi ness sess ion of the chur c h

Thoma s Porter of Cincinnati ,
G-J, 6-1.
Sixth-seeded J ohn R.ast of

Is conducted by elected and
~ppo in te d de legate;; from

St. Petersburg, Fla., advanced to the fourth round by
beati ng Hadley Scott of
Col mb
Oh'
0
u
us,
10, 6-4 ' 6.•
seventh-seeded Juan Farrow
of St. Louis beat Lawrence

)!round the world. Robert H.
fierson , president of the
y;orld churc h organiza tion, in
his opening rep or t, pointed to
the facl that 85 per ce nt of the
l!.s milli on members live
butside of North America.
:·we are a world chureh, not
•
.
h h
h
pn Amen can e urc •"
e
$aid .
; Exhibi Is fr om the ten
~eographi cal di visions of the
chur ch ring the c orrid ors of
lhe S!&lt;ldhalle. The lobb.v area
ln lhe main entrance contains
a 9().foot exhibit of photos
aepicting the work of the
church and paintings showing
the ministry of Christ. The
paintings were done by Bill
of Miami , Fla. , well
Read
,
kn own for his contemporary
wotks. Pa sto r
of
t he
Pomer oy Sevent h-da y Adventist c h~rrch , Gerard Seton,
and his wife Fran, will be
among those attending the
Sabbath Services , Saturday,
jul y 19.'
·

rl'.mlt.~

COLUMBUS 1UP! 1
Ilufonl Doll lee! from the

01/tl'r Sll 11ckPr s scoring were
··Cht ppy' ' Hr a ur r with 1:!

V1 rn na . ,\ us tri ;r. Thur;-;da~.

:congress is exprchjd t(l

111

fo n n;~n r· e

( 'hurc h h1stury was mad e

l.'lfUn l rtt'S

J~tck

Th e
St 'fl tilll'l (('(1111. \\ith th r loss.
drnppl·J \11 1-1 &lt;HILl sp11 ii Pd &lt;:1
fiointa sric 15 pr11nt per-

in Austria

•
t150

and

Snltlh 11 All SOCCO s l&lt;.rr tc rs
~;t!l

1n

1:~.

Leeds of New York Ci ty, 6-l ,
&amp;-2, and eighth-seeded Brian
Mitchell of Columbia, Mo.,
defeated Jonathan Molin of
Yonkers, N.Y., 6-1, 6·3.
In the only upsets, 12th·
seed ed Jose Llamas of
Mexico fell' to Russ Muenz of
St. Louis. &amp;.I, &amp;.2 and 15thseeded Luis Perez of Mexico
was eliminated by Michael
·Kushma of North Caldwell ,
N.J ., 7-5, 6-2.
In the second round in the
. girls division, top-seeded
Paula . Smith of La Jolla ,
Calif., beat Gail Ramsay of
Bal a Cy nwoo d , p a., 7'
~. 6-3,
a nd · second-se;,ded Lea
Antonoplis of Glendora,
Calif., defeated Leanne
Harrison of Sharon, Pa., 6·1,
6-4 .
Fifth-seeded Barbara Hallquist of Areadia ; Calif., beat
Lourdes Ortega of Mexico, !)-

MOSCOW I UP!) - Team
Canada ice-hockey star
Bobby Hull of the WHA
Winnip eg Jets has been
awa rded a 10-day vacation in
the Soviet Union as a prize for
his fair play in 1974 matches
with the Soviet Union
national team, Tass said
Tuesday .
The prize was awarded by the
Soviet magazine Travel in the

with winner

f'an!&lt;IStll' fa st ~reak used by
tht: Ca mpers hiid Mark V as

Jim Hu t tun h;-HI 12 twinL-. and

h~d

In second half action in ' the
Middleport Youth League lhe
Hei ners
Braves
ha ve
defeated the . Harrisonville
Bobcats 12·2, as the Braves
finally got baclr on the win-

18 and Boggs

had 14 .

ning road after losin g the first

half championship to the
Rutland Dodgers in a play off
, The losers were led by 6 ft . 7· game last Saturday .
in . Doxie Walters wit h 20
Jeff Wayland s l&lt;Jrted on the
points and 27 rebounds . Mark hill for the Braves , allowing
Moyer had 18 poinl• a nd 10 one hit and no runs fn four
rebounds .
innings . Terry Wayland came
Wedn esday night's games on in relief, going two input the Daily Sentin el against nings, g iving up 2 runs ahd
Jim 's Campers and SOCCO one hit and walking 5 batters
vs. Mark V.
before Jim Boyer came in to
BOX SCORES
fimsh the game in the sixth .
SOCCO t 37-!HIOJ - Smith 5- Boyer only faced 4 batters in
I-II, Ferguson
10·4-24, that frame, walking 1 and
Cremeans lll-l-21, Peck 0-0- retiring the other three .
12, Harris &amp;.ll-12, Sisson 0-0-0.
Throwing from the Bobcat
Daily Sentinel 134-11-79 1 hill was Reggie Arnold who
Bailey 18-9-45, Brauer &amp;.1·13, went the entire contest,
Shrock 2-0-4, Hutton 6.().12, striki ng out 6 and issuing 13
Yates 2-1·5.
free passes.
Jim 's Campe rs t 32·17-IIJ Leading the Braves hitting
Magnotl&lt;J 10-0-20, Myers 9-7- was Steve Fife, the slugger of
25, Price 7-4-18, Boggs 4-S-14, the team, who smacked out
Burney 1-ll-2, Sisk !.().2.
his lOth and ~lth homerun s of
Mark V - D. Walters 9-2· the season . Other hitters
20, T. Walters 2-1-5, Drenner were Miller with a homerun,
1-2-4, Moyer 8-2-18, A. Dodson his first, and tw o singles, and
3'1'7, Beaver 1.().2, Childs Jeff Wayl and and Terry
2'0'4.
Wayland each 2 singles and a
double, Jim Boyer a single
and a triple, and Dan Hysell a
sing le .
For the Bobcats Brian
Haning had a triple for the
on ly base hit .

Reds win 3rd
straight in

In

over Bobcats

h1gh 25 puin ts and 17
rC'bound s. Mike Magnotta, ctl
5 ft. 4 in ches, mlded 20 points.
Price

Racine edges Mason 9 to 8
Meigs -Ma son Pony
Lea gue
action
Racine
duwned Mason 9-8 in a close
ga me at Ra ci ne Monda y
evening .
Racine led 5·1 after only
one inning of play and , fattened that lead to 7-2 iri the
third . Mason scored a single
nui in the top of the fourth but
erupted for 6 in the seventh to
tie the game up at 8-ll.
ln that seventh inning rally ,
Mason came up with their 6
runs on 4 walks, :J hit'3 and an
error .
In the bottom of that inning
RacinP. scored ·the winning
run as Perry Hill si ngled with
the bases loaded .
Hitting leaders for Racine
were Scott Wolfe and Mike
Huddleston , J.3, all sing les;
Richard Teaford also had a
perfec t nigbt at the plate with
a double, a
bo omin g
homerun , and a wa lk, and
scored the winning run on
Hill's single in the last inning .
Mark Sayre. Dan Duddin g,
and Bill Harris also singled
for Racine .
F or Mason Young had two
doubles and a single to lead
and F . Smith, J. Smith,
Stodola , and Camp also had

dleston started for Racine the fi th and RWISell 1n the
and pitched 5 innings walking. seventh. Russell gave up the
2 and fanning 3. Mark Sayre winnirjg run.
.
came· on in relief and finished Mason
100 100 6-li 7 1
:i02 001 1- 9 12 2
the game walking 6 and Racine
fanning 3.
Honaker, Young, (LP) (~).
Honaker started on the . Russell, ( 7) and Stodola,
Mason m ound going 4 innings Honaket ( 5), Huddleston ,
givi ng up 9 hits and 7 runs . Sayre (6), Huddleston ( WP )
Honaker fanned 5 and gave 7, and Dan Dudding, •Btll
up 2 walk.s . Young' came on in Harris (5) and Steve Hill (7).

Skeet phase of 15th U. S. event

Clay Pigeon phase last
Saturday. \
The competition will deterCHARDON, Ohio (UP!) mine a national champion in
The skeet phase of the 15th
Olympic Style Skeet and the
U.S. International Shooting
members of the U.S. Team to
Championships is to begin at
the Pan Amel'ican Games, to
,the Clevela nd-Win chester
be held at Meiico City in
Gun Club here Th~rsday,
,
following the windup of the October.
The three-day tournament
is sponsored by the National
Rifle Association, governing
international
body
for
shooting sports in the United
States.
Heading the field will be
CLEVELAND (UP!)
defending national champion,
Filbert Bayi of Tan••m!•, the
John
Satterwhite,
30, ·
world mile record holder, and
Issaquah, Wash.; Allen
American
star
Rick
Buntrock, 48, san Diego, and
Wohlhuter, the half-mile
Slahucka,
27,
champion, are not expected William
Rochester,
N.Y.
si ngles for ' Mason.
to run in the U .S.Africa Track
All three were members of
In pitching , Mike Hud- and Field Meet next week.
It was learned Tuesday the 1974 U.S. International
that Bayi has malaria and Team.
Also com~.ting will be
that Wohlhuter may not
Robert Rodale, Emmaus,
compete, leaving Wilson.
Pa ., the 1973 national
Waigwa of Kenya, who has
·'l
run the mile in 3:55.6, as tbe champion.
About
100
shooters are
With a first place lie be- only top distance runner in
tween Tuppers Plains and the meet at BaldwinWallaee expected to compete, firing at
Syracuse in the local Ind· College in suburban Berea, 100 targets daily in lour
rounds of 25 each for the
pendent Baseball League, the Ohio.
three-day
total ol 300 targets.
championship game will be
Other top attractions are
In the women•s l division ,
played this Sunday on the expected to be sprinters
Racine diamond at 3 p .m. The Ivory Crockett and Houston defending champion Claudia .
Butler, 25, Virginia Beach,
league tournament will begin McTear, ccH1olders of the 1~
Va., and fellow 1974 U.S.
the following Sunday, July 27, yard dash record of 9.0
International Women's Team
with the first round pairings seconds.
members, Shirley Ci'aig; 33,.
as follows :
Corvallis, Ore., and
Hill,
Letart will battle Syracuse
DENVER (UPI) - The 45, Troy, Mich., were the
at Letart , Portland goes
Denver Broncos announced early favorites to take the
1 TUCSON, Ariz. (UP! ) Don Johnson equalled Dick against Pomeroy at Mid· Tuesday the signing of 1975 title.
Weber's record of 24 career dleport and Minersville will veteran quarterback John
Professional Bowlers tangle with Tuppers Plains at Hufnagel.
Association titles Tuesday Tuppers Plains. All games
The club also announced
night by winning the $50,000 will begin at 2 p.m .
the signing of veteran of.
In other i ndep e ndent !ensive lineman
Tucson
Open
Bowling
Steve
baseball
news, Bill Hubbard Coleman and free-agent Carl
tournament.
The 34-year-old Johnson, of resigned as vice president of Schaukowitch, a 6-2, 237·
Akron , Ohio, who has, won at the league and Richard pound offensive guard who
least one championship in . Arnold was elected to take his played with the Philadelphia
each of the last 10 years, place. Don Hupp is president Bell of the World Football
defeated
rookie
Guy and Terry Brewer secretary. League last season.
Rowbury, Ronan, Mont., ' 234226, to capture the $5,000 first
prize. Rowbury, competing in
only his fourth PBA tournament, gained the finals by
beating the tour's leading
money winner, Earl Anthony,
SATURDAY-JULY 19TH
Tacoma, 258-206.
FOR
1
In the
championship
match, Johnson broke a tie
with a onepin lead in the third
OF
and increased it to 31 pins in
the seventh as he stning
together
lour
strikes.
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTERS P\M.
Rowbury closed out with five
strikes, forcing Johnson to
'
mark in the tenth in order to

to begin

League by defea ling the
Salem Center Pirates 13·!2.
Ray Stewart sl&lt;lrted on the
mound

for

the

winners ,

walking 8 and striking out 6
before he was relieved by
David Demoskey in the fifth.
Demoskey walked I and
fanned 3 the rest of the game.
E. Lester started on the
mound for the Pirates but,
was replaced after facing 2
batters by D. Shuler who was
himself relieved in the fourth
USSR
by Sto?ey Johnson . Lester
TOURNEY OPENS
walked the firSt two batters
The Meigs Jr. Babe Ruth he faced and Shuler. after
All-Star team will open com ing on in relief, walked
tournament pla y tomorrow five and fanned 4. Johnson
ni ght at Point Pleasant in the walked 2 and struck out 1.
Distnct 3 for 14-15 year olds.
Middleport Reds hitters
Meigs wi ll play in the second. were Verne .S laven with 2
game of the opening round homeruns , Paul McElhaney
against Ripley at 7:30 p.m. had a triple and 3 singles,
Ray Stewart a double and
single, Earl Wines a single,
1, &amp;-0, sixth-seeded Patricia
and . Tim Justis 2 singles.
Varga of San Marino, Calif.,
beat Karen Krajewski of
For Salem Center, W.
Pacific Palisades, Calif., &amp;-0,
Garnes had a homerun ,
6·1, seventh-seeded Renee
double and single, and
Blount of St. Louis beat
Pirates getting singles were
Wilmette Wilson of Hawaii, 1). D. Thornton, E . Lester, F.
3, 6-0, a nd eighthseeded Kim
Holliday, and C. Smith .
Ste inm etz of St. Louis
The Reds' overall record is
defeated Aimee Conlan of
8-3 and thei r second·' ·hal!
Vienna, Ohio, &amp;-2, &amp;-3.
record 3-0.

Right Keserved to

Prices Effective
'

Ju~

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00

~AUF.

Saturday 9 to 9

SMUCKER'S CREAMY .

18 oz. .

¢

,

,. . I

' ·'

.

..

CHEESE

~'IMENTO

12

oz.

PKG.

uck ·Steaks·

BETSY ROSS

SHOWBOAT

SWEET·
ROLLS

&amp; BEANS
oz.

14

ork

59tp

Beans
... fit f0tU10 UUCI

lilT Wf~l

·

•

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•••

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1-LB.

GROUND BEEF.;;~...................~~. 89~
LIVER PUDDING ..................~~~! 1o• .
RIB STEAK.~......................'.....~·.! 1.••
-1

WESSON
Q .IL

24

IGA

-

CORN. FLAKES
-

TASTEE BRAND

2 LB.

'

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$1·39

BOLOGNA •••••r!!v..

'

-

.

oz.

18 oz.

'

99~.
69~

LARGE
HEADS

.

46

oz.

1

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4 LB.

''

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89(
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-- NEW .CALIFORNIA

69c: LONG WHITE
.. 59c; POTATOES
cl

----,

C:ANTALOl!~ [S

MIDOLIPORI, OHIO

.. :·.

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~~~G

--

REO Gf?AP~S

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

··

69

-

IGA ORANGE
OR GRAPEFRUIT JUICE

•

For Lunc.hes or Picnics!

• Wilson's Ev_ap; Milk~_.:__.:..,$3 cans 99i:
Favorite Bread
loaves 1Wc
Pea_k N_a vy ~Beans - 2 lb. 49c
Studio Facial Tissue
00 ct. 49c

10 OZ. JAR

c••
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FROM OUR GOOD BEEF

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2 LB.

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INSTANT

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-·-

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59~

AMERICAN
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¢

9 oz.

LARGE SIZE OHIO -

Bakeri~e Sh'orten,ing ........ 3 lb. 11.69

gal.

SINGLE
WRAPPED

•••

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EVERVDA Y LOW PRICES

2% MILK

ALL VARIETIES EXCEPT HAM

~

CUBE STEAK

9¢
3
9¢
7 · CELERY••••••••••••~~~·
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MORTON TV DINNERS

CANS

USDA CHOicE

¢

t

Jumbo

J().;BO DOG FOOD
, 6 cans su)(J

5 LB. BAG 88~
FRENCH
FRIES
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VALI:.EY BELL

LB.

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D
R

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•••

LEMONS •••••••~o:~.

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CHOPPED

CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

No. 2

StOTT SINGLE

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COOKIES.................................:~~~.39
CHEF BOX· .O:R· DEE
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15 oz.
9¢
Spaghetti Sauce/Meat •••••••••••••••:a.n•••4.

16-23

SQUARES

HUNTINGTON

Rowbury won $3,000 for his
biggest check on the tour,
while Anthony's earnings of
$2,500 raised his season's
total to more than $73,000.

PEANUT BUTTER ••••••••••••••••••••••~~r••• 89

,We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

COD FISH

CAMDEN PARK
U.S. 60WEST

win.

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ASSORTED PACKAGE

BREADED

GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.

PAPER TOWELS~ ••••••••••••••••••••••~~~ •• 49

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(Fine for Sandwiches)

..ANNUAl SUMMER OUTING"

69¢
PIE FILLING .•••• ~~:~::: ••••••••••••••• ~=~... ·
DILt sueEs ...........................~~...•79
¢

"The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"

1 LB. PKG.

·-

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PARK RESERVED

TOILET TISSUE •••••••••••••••••••••• 4Rolls 69¢

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE

-

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NORTHERN

WEE-PICK

4 KINDS

1h LB. PKG.
1
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Otampionship
·comes Sunday

ON EVERY FOOD SHELF IN OUR STORE

Cherry. Apple, Lemon ,

SMORGASPAK

ASH &amp;atiPS
'
STYLE

miss meet

ttlllf IA,'IIt-1.\lf~
WILDERNESS

ECKRI

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Runiiers will

Johnson cops
The Middleport Reds title, equals
Monday won their third game
in a row in second hal! action Weber's mark
of the Middleport Youth
second half

IAnER &amp; BAKE

10 LB.
ISAG

$'

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J"hought for the week, try abig. •• •
~...delicious Do-it-yourself.. ...

4 - The Daily Sentine l, Middlepori-J-)Omerov.
0 .. Wt:&gt;dnc~
da •\' . Julv
1fi, ~~~ ~a
•
1
•

•

I

Braves1 back

SOCCO, Campers wm- cage.games
In Monda\· eren in g SUIII·
mer baskrtball actjor; a: thr··

for SOC&lt;"O. cu! ti ng
short the Sht·.. -:·kcr ndly The
Shot.: kns \H' n ' d()Wil i~-1: 1
l ~t1t• in llw contest and had
cullh.' bac k to l&lt;tkr ttw 1Pad.
ga111e

Mi dd le po rt Par k , SOC'CO
nipped li te Dati~· Sentinel
Shoc kers ~0- 79 ctnd J im's

7!).;8

Campers ran un·r the :\la rk 5
" R;mjun Cajuns" 81-6!1
In the upentng cnn iL•:&gt; t of
the en•mng SOCCO hrld nff a
fa n t&lt;tstic btr rally b) the
·'tw('·kers r\ (;rL' g Pt•c k fi l' ld

l 'fl i-1

H;:m dy Y;llt•s fr« ·t'

throw Sl'('llnd s bl'fPI'l' 1\ •ck' s
l!;tllll' ' \\llllllrl ,L! l!UCJJ.

SO Cl 'O

thus

r Pill &lt;cttned

undl'fPii!Pd . TllL• c lub w;t s led
Ill st'IJrt rtg by Hun 1&lt;\·rguson

go~tl ! rt l!ll 1·~ fix·! tlUt Wllll lhL'

~-1

wttlr

points.

j)u lll ;:-. drtd ~0

n·buunds. and

H rd Jilunds
In thL' nigh tcap . .Jtm' s
i ·arnpt•rs behind the team
pl;t) 11f .J im " Slim" 8 11~gs
upr-ndt•d Mark Fivt• 81-60.
\\' i rh only (!fll' player o\' er 6
fl• t•l ta ll, lhl• Campe rs won the

man y as 25 poinLc; behind at
unt• time .
Hilly :Vf.n·r~ led for the
\\· in ner~ a s ht&gt; hatl a game

b\· P&lt;ts."tng C~round and
rtn·"ugh !ht· ('(J juns who arr

St~ve

&lt;d l prelly good sizetl gents.

l){,ggs. wh o is 5 ft. 8 in . tall
Wets
cred i t~d
with
15
rebounds against a front line
which averaged 6 rt. 4 inches.

g; l!ne

.le r n ·

l'f't'lllt' an s ~ I . P{'c k a nd Hru t'l'

t=larn s t'al'h

History made

by Adventists

."icioto

duublr

fl~un·s .

IJ)'

Htck

.J uly lO . \dw n ttw 52rtd W11rld
C u ngr es~ of St•n•nth-da)
t\dY~:·ntis l Churc h convcnrd
fur the fir~\ ttrr lt.' outo;.; itl e

three-quarters mark on to
sc·ore a one-half length victory over Show Biz Time in
the fe atured $1.300 pace at
Sciut o Downs IH.'re Tuesday

Badry .

nigh l.
Co showPel .

Junior
•
meet zn
4th round

!\' ll l' lh .'\ l llef lC' ;J .

S{Jlll(' 2.000 delegate s fr om
Wl'!'l'

: re g is tl'red. 1-lowevN, thL·
:total &lt;.Jl tending the ten-day

Th e winner , driven by
I Joyd Myers, carded a new
lifetime record of 2: 02 2-5 and

returned $:11 .40, $5.60 and $5.
Th e 4-3 nightly double
combination of Triphammer
cuuJ Action Girl was worth
$8:l.BO.

PX·

:ceed 20.000 .
• One of I he pnnclp&lt;o l dvc~ tri nes U:tught ll\ tht&gt; l'hur d1 is
:the second CIIJ~lim: of (' hn st
ThE' conventll)n tlleme. " \1 1\\
is ll1e Time ." ~HIS c hvs Pn tu
emphasize t he 1rnmedialt.'
need for spreadi ng to the
world tlt P gospel r1f Christ's
return .
T he problem of ' carrying

out this task was demeon·
strated fir st-hand at th e
convent ion by the many
lan guages
r ep r esen t ed
am ong delegates
All business a nd
be carr ied over
a ddress system

and guests.
reports will
the publi c
in th e 1,.,..u
:major lan guages ~ German

:Ond English. Simultaneous
;translation will be available
:Vi a indt vidua l tr ansiSto r
tece ivers in five lang uages :
:Sranish. French. Por tuguese.

ST LO UIS. Mo. t l!P i i Top-serded Tony Giauunalva
of Houston. Tex .. faced lOth -

A crowd of 4,513 wagered
$226, 175.

Northfield results

s~P ded Jim Hodg es of Chevy

Cl1ase, Mel ., today in the
fourth ro und of the St. Louis
.J un ior In vitati onal Tenn is
T ournament.
Giammalva won hi s thirdr ound match over Harrison
Howes of Deerfield , DL , 6-2, 63, and Hodges beat Michael
Benado of East Meadow ,
N.Y., &amp;-1 , &amp;-1.
· In
oth er
third-r ou nd
matches . Second-see ded Jai
DiLouie of Dallas, Tex., beat
C'haim Arzeroff .of Israel, 6-1,
6-2, third-seeded Matt Mitchell of Palo Alto, Calif. ,
crushed Mik e Brunnberg of
Miami. Fla., fi-1 , &amp;-0, and
fourth-seeded John Austin of
Rollin" Hills, Ca ll.f ., defeated

NORT HFI E LD.
Ohio
UP! I - Benton Widow
cruised to a six-length victory
in the fe at ured $2,500 seventh
race at Nort hfield Park
Tuesday night.
Th e three-year-old filly
paced to her career best of
2:04 with Bill Zendt in the
sulky and returned $9.00,
$3.60, and $3.00.
r

Tar Tac was second and

Law Honor third.
The tenth race Big Triple
combinatin of lll-2-9 returned
$5,028.30 to 11 ticketholders.
A crowd of 5,103 wagered
$347,574 .

t&gt;

•P olish and Scandinavian.
: Held every five years, th is
busi ness sess ion of the chur c h

Thoma s Porter of Cincinnati ,
G-J, 6-1.
Sixth-seeded J ohn R.ast of

Is conducted by elected and
~ppo in te d de legate;; from

St. Petersburg, Fla., advanced to the fourth round by
beati ng Hadley Scott of
Col mb
Oh'
0
u
us,
10, 6-4 ' 6.•
seventh-seeded Juan Farrow
of St. Louis beat Lawrence

)!round the world. Robert H.
fierson , president of the
y;orld churc h organiza tion, in
his opening rep or t, pointed to
the facl that 85 per ce nt of the
l!.s milli on members live
butside of North America.
:·we are a world chureh, not
•
.
h h
h
pn Amen can e urc •"
e
$aid .
; Exhibi Is fr om the ten
~eographi cal di visions of the
chur ch ring the c orrid ors of
lhe S!&lt;ldhalle. The lobb.v area
ln lhe main entrance contains
a 9().foot exhibit of photos
aepicting the work of the
church and paintings showing
the ministry of Christ. The
paintings were done by Bill
of Miami , Fla. , well
Read
,
kn own for his contemporary
wotks. Pa sto r
of
t he
Pomer oy Sevent h-da y Adventist c h~rrch , Gerard Seton,
and his wife Fran, will be
among those attending the
Sabbath Services , Saturday,
jul y 19.'
·

rl'.mlt.~

COLUMBUS 1UP! 1
Ilufonl Doll lee! from the

01/tl'r Sll 11ckPr s scoring were
··Cht ppy' ' Hr a ur r with 1:!

V1 rn na . ,\ us tri ;r. Thur;-;da~.

:congress is exprchjd t(l

111

fo n n;~n r· e

( 'hurc h h1stury was mad e

l.'lfUn l rtt'S

J~tck

Th e
St 'fl tilll'l (('(1111. \\ith th r loss.
drnppl·J \11 1-1 &lt;HILl sp11 ii Pd &lt;:1
fiointa sric 15 pr11nt per-

in Austria

•
t150

and

Snltlh 11 All SOCCO s l&lt;.rr tc rs
~;t!l

1n

1:~.

Leeds of New York Ci ty, 6-l ,
&amp;-2, and eighth-seeded Brian
Mitchell of Columbia, Mo.,
defeated Jonathan Molin of
Yonkers, N.Y., 6-1, 6·3.
In the only upsets, 12th·
seed ed Jose Llamas of
Mexico fell' to Russ Muenz of
St. Louis. &amp;.I, &amp;.2 and 15thseeded Luis Perez of Mexico
was eliminated by Michael
·Kushma of North Caldwell ,
N.J ., 7-5, 6-2.
In the second round in the
. girls division, top-seeded
Paula . Smith of La Jolla ,
Calif., beat Gail Ramsay of
Bal a Cy nwoo d , p a., 7'
~. 6-3,
a nd · second-se;,ded Lea
Antonoplis of Glendora,
Calif., defeated Leanne
Harrison of Sharon, Pa., 6·1,
6-4 .
Fifth-seeded Barbara Hallquist of Areadia ; Calif., beat
Lourdes Ortega of Mexico, !)-

MOSCOW I UP!) - Team
Canada ice-hockey star
Bobby Hull of the WHA
Winnip eg Jets has been
awa rded a 10-day vacation in
the Soviet Union as a prize for
his fair play in 1974 matches
with the Soviet Union
national team, Tass said
Tuesday .
The prize was awarded by the
Soviet magazine Travel in the

with winner

f'an!&lt;IStll' fa st ~reak used by
tht: Ca mpers hiid Mark V as

Jim Hu t tun h;-HI 12 twinL-. and

h~d

In second half action in ' the
Middleport Youth League lhe
Hei ners
Braves
ha ve
defeated the . Harrisonville
Bobcats 12·2, as the Braves
finally got baclr on the win-

18 and Boggs

had 14 .

ning road after losin g the first

half championship to the
Rutland Dodgers in a play off
, The losers were led by 6 ft . 7· game last Saturday .
in . Doxie Walters wit h 20
Jeff Wayland s l&lt;Jrted on the
points and 27 rebounds . Mark hill for the Braves , allowing
Moyer had 18 poinl• a nd 10 one hit and no runs fn four
rebounds .
innings . Terry Wayland came
Wedn esday night's games on in relief, going two input the Daily Sentin el against nings, g iving up 2 runs ahd
Jim 's Campers and SOCCO one hit and walking 5 batters
vs. Mark V.
before Jim Boyer came in to
BOX SCORES
fimsh the game in the sixth .
SOCCO t 37-!HIOJ - Smith 5- Boyer only faced 4 batters in
I-II, Ferguson
10·4-24, that frame, walking 1 and
Cremeans lll-l-21, Peck 0-0- retiring the other three .
12, Harris &amp;.ll-12, Sisson 0-0-0.
Throwing from the Bobcat
Daily Sentinel 134-11-79 1 hill was Reggie Arnold who
Bailey 18-9-45, Brauer &amp;.1·13, went the entire contest,
Shrock 2-0-4, Hutton 6.().12, striki ng out 6 and issuing 13
Yates 2-1·5.
free passes.
Jim 's Campe rs t 32·17-IIJ Leading the Braves hitting
Magnotl&lt;J 10-0-20, Myers 9-7- was Steve Fife, the slugger of
25, Price 7-4-18, Boggs 4-S-14, the team, who smacked out
Burney 1-ll-2, Sisk !.().2.
his lOth and ~lth homerun s of
Mark V - D. Walters 9-2· the season . Other hitters
20, T. Walters 2-1-5, Drenner were Miller with a homerun,
1-2-4, Moyer 8-2-18, A. Dodson his first, and tw o singles, and
3'1'7, Beaver 1.().2, Childs Jeff Wayl and and Terry
2'0'4.
Wayland each 2 singles and a
double, Jim Boyer a single
and a triple, and Dan Hysell a
sing le .
For the Bobcats Brian
Haning had a triple for the
on ly base hit .

Reds win 3rd
straight in

In

over Bobcats

h1gh 25 puin ts and 17
rC'bound s. Mike Magnotta, ctl
5 ft. 4 in ches, mlded 20 points.
Price

Racine edges Mason 9 to 8
Meigs -Ma son Pony
Lea gue
action
Racine
duwned Mason 9-8 in a close
ga me at Ra ci ne Monda y
evening .
Racine led 5·1 after only
one inning of play and , fattened that lead to 7-2 iri the
third . Mason scored a single
nui in the top of the fourth but
erupted for 6 in the seventh to
tie the game up at 8-ll.
ln that seventh inning rally ,
Mason came up with their 6
runs on 4 walks, :J hit'3 and an
error .
In the bottom of that inning
RacinP. scored ·the winning
run as Perry Hill si ngled with
the bases loaded .
Hitting leaders for Racine
were Scott Wolfe and Mike
Huddleston , J.3, all sing les;
Richard Teaford also had a
perfec t nigbt at the plate with
a double, a
bo omin g
homerun , and a wa lk, and
scored the winning run on
Hill's single in the last inning .
Mark Sayre. Dan Duddin g,
and Bill Harris also singled
for Racine .
F or Mason Young had two
doubles and a single to lead
and F . Smith, J. Smith,
Stodola , and Camp also had

dleston started for Racine the fi th and RWISell 1n the
and pitched 5 innings walking. seventh. Russell gave up the
2 and fanning 3. Mark Sayre winnirjg run.
.
came· on in relief and finished Mason
100 100 6-li 7 1
:i02 001 1- 9 12 2
the game walking 6 and Racine
fanning 3.
Honaker, Young, (LP) (~).
Honaker started on the . Russell, ( 7) and Stodola,
Mason m ound going 4 innings Honaket ( 5), Huddleston ,
givi ng up 9 hits and 7 runs . Sayre (6), Huddleston ( WP )
Honaker fanned 5 and gave 7, and Dan Dudding, •Btll
up 2 walk.s . Young' came on in Harris (5) and Steve Hill (7).

Skeet phase of 15th U. S. event

Clay Pigeon phase last
Saturday. \
The competition will deterCHARDON, Ohio (UP!) mine a national champion in
The skeet phase of the 15th
Olympic Style Skeet and the
U.S. International Shooting
members of the U.S. Team to
Championships is to begin at
the Pan Amel'ican Games, to
,the Clevela nd-Win chester
be held at Meiico City in
Gun Club here Th~rsday,
,
following the windup of the October.
The three-day tournament
is sponsored by the National
Rifle Association, governing
international
body
for
shooting sports in the United
States.
Heading the field will be
CLEVELAND (UP!)
defending national champion,
Filbert Bayi of Tan••m!•, the
John
Satterwhite,
30, ·
world mile record holder, and
Issaquah, Wash.; Allen
American
star
Rick
Buntrock, 48, san Diego, and
Wohlhuter, the half-mile
Slahucka,
27,
champion, are not expected William
Rochester,
N.Y.
si ngles for ' Mason.
to run in the U .S.Africa Track
All three were members of
In pitching , Mike Hud- and Field Meet next week.
It was learned Tuesday the 1974 U.S. International
that Bayi has malaria and Team.
Also com~.ting will be
that Wohlhuter may not
Robert Rodale, Emmaus,
compete, leaving Wilson.
Pa ., the 1973 national
Waigwa of Kenya, who has
·'l
run the mile in 3:55.6, as tbe champion.
About
100
shooters are
With a first place lie be- only top distance runner in
tween Tuppers Plains and the meet at BaldwinWallaee expected to compete, firing at
Syracuse in the local Ind· College in suburban Berea, 100 targets daily in lour
rounds of 25 each for the
pendent Baseball League, the Ohio.
three-day
total ol 300 targets.
championship game will be
Other top attractions are
In the women•s l division ,
played this Sunday on the expected to be sprinters
Racine diamond at 3 p .m. The Ivory Crockett and Houston defending champion Claudia .
Butler, 25, Virginia Beach,
league tournament will begin McTear, ccH1olders of the 1~
Va., and fellow 1974 U.S.
the following Sunday, July 27, yard dash record of 9.0
International Women's Team
with the first round pairings seconds.
members, Shirley Ci'aig; 33,.
as follows :
Corvallis, Ore., and
Hill,
Letart will battle Syracuse
DENVER (UPI) - The 45, Troy, Mich., were the
at Letart , Portland goes
Denver Broncos announced early favorites to take the
1 TUCSON, Ariz. (UP! ) Don Johnson equalled Dick against Pomeroy at Mid· Tuesday the signing of 1975 title.
Weber's record of 24 career dleport and Minersville will veteran quarterback John
Professional Bowlers tangle with Tuppers Plains at Hufnagel.
Association titles Tuesday Tuppers Plains. All games
The club also announced
night by winning the $50,000 will begin at 2 p.m .
the signing of veteran of.
In other i ndep e ndent !ensive lineman
Tucson
Open
Bowling
Steve
baseball
news, Bill Hubbard Coleman and free-agent Carl
tournament.
The 34-year-old Johnson, of resigned as vice president of Schaukowitch, a 6-2, 237·
Akron , Ohio, who has, won at the league and Richard pound offensive guard who
least one championship in . Arnold was elected to take his played with the Philadelphia
each of the last 10 years, place. Don Hupp is president Bell of the World Football
defeated
rookie
Guy and Terry Brewer secretary. League last season.
Rowbury, Ronan, Mont., ' 234226, to capture the $5,000 first
prize. Rowbury, competing in
only his fourth PBA tournament, gained the finals by
beating the tour's leading
money winner, Earl Anthony,
SATURDAY-JULY 19TH
Tacoma, 258-206.
FOR
1
In the
championship
match, Johnson broke a tie
with a onepin lead in the third
OF
and increased it to 31 pins in
the seventh as he stning
together
lour
strikes.
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTERS P\M.
Rowbury closed out with five
strikes, forcing Johnson to
'
mark in the tenth in order to

to begin

League by defea ling the
Salem Center Pirates 13·!2.
Ray Stewart sl&lt;lrted on the
mound

for

the

winners ,

walking 8 and striking out 6
before he was relieved by
David Demoskey in the fifth.
Demoskey walked I and
fanned 3 the rest of the game.
E. Lester started on the
mound for the Pirates but,
was replaced after facing 2
batters by D. Shuler who was
himself relieved in the fourth
USSR
by Sto?ey Johnson . Lester
TOURNEY OPENS
walked the firSt two batters
The Meigs Jr. Babe Ruth he faced and Shuler. after
All-Star team will open com ing on in relief, walked
tournament pla y tomorrow five and fanned 4. Johnson
ni ght at Point Pleasant in the walked 2 and struck out 1.
Distnct 3 for 14-15 year olds.
Middleport Reds hitters
Meigs wi ll play in the second. were Verne .S laven with 2
game of the opening round homeruns , Paul McElhaney
against Ripley at 7:30 p.m. had a triple and 3 singles,
Ray Stewart a double and
single, Earl Wines a single,
1, &amp;-0, sixth-seeded Patricia
and . Tim Justis 2 singles.
Varga of San Marino, Calif.,
beat Karen Krajewski of
For Salem Center, W.
Pacific Palisades, Calif., &amp;-0,
Garnes had a homerun ,
6·1, seventh-seeded Renee
double and single, and
Blount of St. Louis beat
Pirates getting singles were
Wilmette Wilson of Hawaii, 1). D. Thornton, E . Lester, F.
3, 6-0, a nd eighthseeded Kim
Holliday, and C. Smith .
Ste inm etz of St. Louis
The Reds' overall record is
defeated Aimee Conlan of
8-3 and thei r second·' ·hal!
Vienna, Ohio, &amp;-2, &amp;-3.
record 3-0.

Right Keserved to

Prices Effective
'

Ju~

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00

~AUF.

Saturday 9 to 9

SMUCKER'S CREAMY .

18 oz. .

¢

,

,. . I

' ·'

.

..

CHEESE

~'IMENTO

12

oz.

PKG.

uck ·Steaks·

BETSY ROSS

SHOWBOAT

SWEET·
ROLLS

&amp; BEANS
oz.

14

ork

59tp

Beans
... fit f0tU10 UUCI

lilT Wf~l

·

•

•••
•••

:•

1-LB.

GROUND BEEF.;;~...................~~. 89~
LIVER PUDDING ..................~~~! 1o• .
RIB STEAK.~......................'.....~·.! 1.••
-1

WESSON
Q .IL

24

IGA

-

CORN. FLAKES
-

TASTEE BRAND

2 LB.

'

'•

$1·39

BOLOGNA •••••r!!v..

'

-

.

oz.

18 oz.

'

99~.
69~

LARGE
HEADS

.

46

oz.

1

OR ANGES

4 LB.

''

''

.,

'

89(
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-- NEW .CALIFORNIA

69c: LONG WHITE
.. 59c; POTATOES
cl

----,

C:ANTALOl!~ [S

MIDOLIPORI, OHIO

.. :·.

'

' I

,.

~~~G

--

REO Gf?AP~S

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

··

69

-

IGA ORANGE
OR GRAPEFRUIT JUICE

•

For Lunc.hes or Picnics!

• Wilson's Ev_ap; Milk~_.:__.:..,$3 cans 99i:
Favorite Bread
loaves 1Wc
Pea_k N_a vy ~Beans - 2 lb. 49c
Studio Facial Tissue
00 ct. 49c

10 OZ. JAR

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FROM OUR GOOD BEEF

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2 LB.

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INSTANT

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1

KRAFT

BAMA

••

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59~

AMERICAN
OR

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¢

9 oz.

LARGE SIZE OHIO -

Bakeri~e Sh'orten,ing ........ 3 lb. 11.69

gal.

SINGLE
WRAPPED

•••

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EVERVDA Y LOW PRICES

2% MILK

ALL VARIETIES EXCEPT HAM

~

CUBE STEAK

9¢
3
9¢
7 · CELERY••••••••••••~~~·
.

MORTON TV DINNERS

CANS

USDA CHOicE

¢

t

Jumbo

J().;BO DOG FOOD
, 6 cans su)(J

5 LB. BAG 88~
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FRIES
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VALI:.EY BELL

LB.

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D
R

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•••

LEMONS •••••••~o:~.

....

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CHOPPED

CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

No. 2

StOTT SINGLE

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lb.

•1.99 lb.

COOKIES.................................:~~~.39
CHEF BOX· .O:R· DEE
.
15 oz.
9¢
Spaghetti Sauce/Meat •••••••••••••••:a.n•••4.

16-23

SQUARES

HUNTINGTON

Rowbury won $3,000 for his
biggest check on the tour,
while Anthony's earnings of
$2,500 raised his season's
total to more than $73,000.

PEANUT BUTTER ••••••••••••••••••••••~~r••• 89

,We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

COD FISH

CAMDEN PARK
U.S. 60WEST

win.

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ASSORTED PACKAGE

BREADED

GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.

PAPER TOWELS~ ••••••••••••••••••••••~~~ •• 49

L1m1t Quantitie ~

(Fine for Sandwiches)

..ANNUAl SUMMER OUTING"

69¢
PIE FILLING .•••• ~~:~::: ••••••••••••••• ~=~... ·
DILt sueEs ...........................~~...•79
¢

"The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE"

1 LB. PKG.

·-

.

PARK RESERVED

TOILET TISSUE •••••••••••••••••••••• 4Rolls 69¢

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE

-

na

NORTHERN

WEE-PICK

4 KINDS

1h LB. PKG.
1
'

Otampionship
·comes Sunday

ON EVERY FOOD SHELF IN OUR STORE

Cherry. Apple, Lemon ,

SMORGASPAK

ASH &amp;atiPS
'
STYLE

miss meet

ttlllf IA,'IIt-1.\lf~
WILDERNESS

ECKRI

COD FISH

Runiiers will

Johnson cops
The Middleport Reds title, equals
Monday won their third game
in a row in second hal! action Weber's mark
of the Middleport Youth
second half

IAnER &amp; BAKE

10 LB.
ISAG

$'

.:.• .,··... ·

. , ;{7
·.·, , 9'
·.:.-.'...·.~ .. . ·.-

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. 6- T-he Daily Sentinel. Middlepor'-.'QITleroy, 0., Wednesday. July 16, 1975

/ .

::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·::::::::&gt;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::·:::·:·:·::

W aldheim musters UN opinion ag~inst action by

·::::

Tips to livestock showing . .
" Don't overheat cattle, sheep, or dogs when transporting them to and from the fair ," Jim Cia)·. Jackson
Area Extension Animal Industry Agent, is telling 4-H
and FFA members.
·&gt;:
Poor loading facilities c~n lead to frustrati on on
•_,•.: ,: inthe parrllt of t_he junf ithor fair exhibitor which oft en res ults
'
ove eatmg o e animal.
"Probably the most susceptible animal to
•.•:.•
overheating," adds Clay, "is the fat market hog. " He
/ suggest• that hogs be handled quietly, loaded from a
( firm ramp, and transported In the coolest part of the
:''• day. fhe same rules apply to cattle and sheep,
::•: altbough hogs seem to be more critical.
{
Be aware that an imals can become overhea ted and
( die. Watch for fast breathing symptoms of the
overheated animal.

::::

}j

By
lJ u it• •d
P n· :-~ s
ln +
( terna ti ona l
;::: .
U .N . Secretary (;!' lll'r n l
Kurt
Wa ldlwim fll tlbi l lz(• c!
::::
:~~
diplom:1 tiC' st ren gth today to

deal with what he ca lled thl'

:-:
:-·

; 'sPri ous &lt;1nd

sttu a-tlon c r cat"d

~

'

in

thl·

---·-·- "

..

PARrY CHOICE
WAS HINGTON 1 UP ! 1
New York is the leading

:::
·.·
:·:

conte nder in tht&gt; raee am ong

citi es

·:::

to

hos t · the

1976

Democra tie national eo n ~
ven ti on , par t y Chairma n

Robert Strauss sa id.
St ra uss told a g roup of
Florida reporters Tuesday
Manhatl&lt;ln probably wi ll be
selec ted if its con ve ntion
fa c ilit ies prove adequate,
N &lt;:~ ti on al

D e m ocratic

today and it's burmn g rig ht Committee press spokesman
to ward wh ere th e shee p Vin ce R. Clephas sa id.
Actual choice of the city
live,"saidMark Jorgensen, a
will
not be made by the 2().
wildlife specialist witb the
memb
e r Site Selec tio n
sla te parks department who
ha s bee n stud yin g the Committee unt il Aug. 27,
penipsulai' desert bighorns, Clephas said , bu t Str auss was
an endangered species, for " assessing the sentiment as
he reads it ri ght now.··
three years.
"We've got about 450 of
them in the park and the
threat fr om the fir e is salesrooms. And , of course.
growing by the honr ," he most of the works of art going
said . "The flames are moving back to the Orient were tak en
right through an area wh ere from there by European and
about 30 to 50 of them can American collectors wh en the
usually be found, and all we finan cial
balance was
can do is hope they run the weighted the other way .
right direction . Sometimes
they instinctively head for
safety and sometimes they
run the wrong way."
Jorgensen said the fire was
"about two miles" from the
park headquarters, where 20
persons live , and personnel
there were getting worried.
At night the fire " looks like
the corona you see on piclures of the sun - licking up
15 or 20 feet high in big
tongues. There's a kind of a
wall of fire and whenever it
reaches one of those dry, taU
old bushes , full of oils and aU,
they just flare up like tOrches,' ' he said.

-r-.: . f•wc..·

of 4,000 men fr om
rdus;ll :o rt new the mandate s ..·ven coun tries as a buffe r
of the U. N peacekeeping ht•lween Israel and Egypt in
Fnrce .
. tho· Sinai. Waldhein1 said th ey
In Tel ?\vi\' the Israeli ,·ould not remain wit hout
go n :&gt; rnmen t Issued a com ~ l'Xtension of the mandate d ue
rnuniquc tud:~y saying the to expire in eight dpys. UNEF
U .N . forces &lt;J r c an integral couhJ, not remain on duty
part of eurrf'nt agreeme nts without a mandate agreed to
with Egypt and 01al Cairo's

Brush fire hits
westen1 park
WARNER SPRINGS, Calif.
(UP! )- An erratic brush fire
flared out of control again
today and drove a spearhead
of flames 20 feet high into the
Anza-Borrego State Park , endangering a flock of the rare
desert bighorn, sheep .
The fire began Monday
afternoon and had burned
more than 4,500 ac res of
desert brush by this morning,
forcing the evacuation of the
little town of Ranchita, the
state Division of Forestry
reported.
Firefighters reported
getting the upper hand
Tuesday and at one point had
the blaze 65 per cent conained.
" But it flared up again just
efore midnight and it's
moving very strongly to the
. east now," a spokeswoman
sald.
" We might have it 30 or 40
per cent contained but that's
juat a guess - it's moving too
fast to tell now," she said .
The blaze, about 50 miles
northeast of San Diego, was
being pushed by 15 to 25 mile
an bour winds.
_
"The frre came over the
boundary of the park early

d a r t g e r uu :-;·~ ·

Middl e Ea st by Egyp t's

r e fu s rd to exten d t h eir
mandate does not help the
dl&lt;::tnf'CS for fX'ilC'C .
Egypt lias demanded the

The

pea&lt;;e ~'keepi n g

next wee k unless negotiations

int eg ra l

with lsrao•l achieve progress sepa r ation
inter im

peace

agree m ent

fo rces is an

par t

of

the

· of
fo r ces
be tween Isr ae l

and Egypt. Israel believes
Egyptia n F'oreign Minister that eve ry move tha t inIsmail Fa hmi told a ne ws crea ses the tension in the
confe r ence in Cai r o Tuesdav a rea does not help the
ni g ht he has ad vised diplomat ic efforts toward
, Waldh eim that Egypt would peace."
r efu se
to
ex tend
the
The communiqu e followed
peacekeeping manda te when sta te ments by an Israeli
it expires.July 24.
Fo reign Ministry official th at
Waldheim said pri vate consulta ti on among the 15 me m be rs was expected to bring a

eOPENe

cou nc il mee ting "in th e next

fe w days. "
" It is a serious situation , a
d ange r ous
s i t ua ti a.n,' ·
Wa ldh e im told ne wsmen,
"and we ca n only hope the
eff or ts which will be undertaken now will lea d to an
agreed solution."
Alt hough l'ahmi appeared
to leave an opening for the
continu ed presence of th e U.

6 DAYS
A WEEK
MON . thru SAT.

D&amp;D MEAT

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tcl-im peace accord in

on negotiations between the
two countriC$ for a new ,in.

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Open Daily 9:00 Til 7:00 Fri. &amp; Sat. 9 Til 8

-

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EVERY DAY LOW PRICES -

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

ROUND STEAK •••.•...••.••• !-¥;. *1 69
SIRLOIN STEAK.•••.•..••.••.•L~~.•1••

10 TO 9

R.C. COLA ...............~ltQ?- ••••. 99~
DIET RITE COLA .•••• !~~~-~~ ......99~
tANNING JARS

-

PINTS - QUARTS -

V2

GALLONS

REGULAR AND WIDE MOUTH

CANNING SP.ICE
VINEGAR BY THE GALLON

830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

,,

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PANASONIC T.V.

iS

•
40
To
Sell

$1]88
40 To Sell
Quant . -

HECK'S REG.
$19.99
NAIIDWA.E s•r.

HECK'S REG.
$104.96

ITEM

REG.

SALE

SPORTING GOODS
10
8
10
20
' 40
1s

so

4
2
4,
6
4
3
S
·4
4
6

s

Day in and day out, Want Ads demonstrate their tremendous
pulling power. Power to move merchandise, power to bring
employer and employee together, power to move people into
better homes and apartments.

the usable but no-longer-used items around the house a Want
Ad will clean them out of the storage spaces and you wi'll realize
cash I benefits.
,

If you need the services of a l)ome repair specialist, . use the
power of the .Want Ads.

Use the Want Ads to find bargains in all kinds of merchandise
such as large ~nd small appliances, toys, musical instruments'
typewriters and similar articles.
'

Want' Ads have cleaning power, too. If Y?U take inventory of

Nothing matches the pulling power of the Want Ads .

12
20
10
40
25
2
1
2
1
1S
15
12
6
4
2
6
6
6
4
SO
8
2S
2S
4
6
10
10
12
10
10
IS
10
12
12
10
a
10
6
5
1S
a
a
2
2
2
6
10
30
40
8
10

•

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•A

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~""""""
~

Zebco 202 Reel Comb. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 8.99
Zebco 600 Reel Comb.
13.99
Zebco 33 Reel Comb.
23 .99
Ballgloves
11 .99
Shakespeare Golf Balls, pak of 3
2.24
Wi !son Snead Classic Golf Ball
2.22
Don January Golf Ball
2.24
Golf Sand lrQn
9.99
Golf Sand Irons
8.99
Golf Sand Irons
7.99
Golf Wedges
9.99
Golf Wedges
a .99
Golf Wedges
7.99
Golf Putter
9.99
Golf Putters
8.99
Golf Putters
7. 99
Shakespeare Graphite Drive~
54 .95
Stac-a-pack (Golf Bag)
6.aa
Lawn Bowling
10.99
Achilles Tennis Shoes
12.99
Boat Cushion Life Preserver
6.99
Regent Little League Baseballs
2.99
Badminton Set
1.99
Ram Golf Set
89 .99
Ladies Wilson Golf Set
a9.99
Wilson Sam Sneed Woods (set of 3
89 .99
Wilson Ladies Golf Irons Set
78.88
Garcia Tennis Balls
2.94
Regent Flight Tennis Racket
8.99
Regent Monour Tennis Racket
8.99
Regent Diplomat Tennis Racket
13 .99
Regent Tempered Steel Tennis Racket
- 17.99
Regent Tempered Steel Tennis Racket
23.99
Kodustex Golf Head covers
8.88
Golf Iron Cover
5. 94
Golf Iron Covers
5.94
Golf Umbrella
4.68
Golf Green Markers
.47
Sunday Golf Bag
7. 99
Golf Tubes
.24
Children's Life Preserver
4.99
Kent Ski Belts
5. 99
Zebco XRL40 Reel
10.99
Zebco202 'Reel
3.99
Zebco 33 Reel
11.99
Zebco 600 Reel
8.99
Zebco No. One Reel
22.99
Zebco XBL39 Reel '
17 .44
Shakespeare 2052 NL Reel
19.99
South Bend 630 A Reel
12.88
Gladding 2202 Reel
4.99
Daiwa 7280 B Reel
8.64
Berkley 440 Reel
13.99
Johnson 110 B Citation Reel
19.99
Johnson 100 B Century Reel
10.99
Johnson 130 B Sabra Reel
25.99
Berkley 446 Reel
14.68
Garcia Kingfish Reel
9.44
Ga'rcia Mitchell 206 Reel ·
19.99
Garcia Mitchell204 Reel
15.99
Garcia ABU-MATIC 1SO Reel
·2'5.99
Garcia Mitchell410 Reel
29.99
Garcia Mitchell408 Reel
34 .99
Berkley 300 Reel
1I. 99
Golf Glove
6.99
1 gal. Thermos Jug
2.99
1(2 Gal. Thermos Jug
l
1.97
Electra- Pal Trolling Motor
79.99
Alpine30qt. Ice Chest
11.99

5.99
8.99
15.99
7.99
1.79
1.77
1.79
5.99
5.99

5.99
5.99
S.99
5.99

5.99
5.99
5.99

34.99
3.88 '
6.99

8.66
3.99
1.99

1.22
S9 .a.8
59 .88
59.8a
59.88
1.88
5.99
5.99
8.88
11 .88
14.79
5.88
3.99
3.99

3.77
.29
6.39
. 12
2.99
4.79
8.79
2.99
8.39
6.99
16.99
12 .24
13.99
9.99
3.99 '
6.99
9.79
13.99
8.79
18.44
10.88
7.77
13.99
11.99
18.24
22.8a
26 .49
9.59
5.44
1.99
1.18
39.99
9.59.

Heck's Reg .

Heck's Reg . SS. 99

s16 .88
REG.

Foam Cooler_ _ __ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ 3.44
Foam Cooler
I .66
Tennis Shirts
6.99
Tennis Shirts
8.88
Tennis Shirts
9.88
TennisJackets
17 .99
Tennis Dresses
11 .99
Tennis Shorts
11 .88
Fish Net Football Shirts
8.99

6

2.77
1.29
4.68

5
95

100
10
80
100
10
180
7

S.95

6.62
12 .05
8.03
7.96
6.02

HARDWARE DEPT.

3

·1 High Wheel Cultivator_ _ __ _ _ _ _
38 .88 25 .00
6.99
30 Hibachi ...,--= - -- - - - - - - -- - 8.99
5.59
20 Tiki Torch Kit
6.99
60 4" Paint Brush Eldorado
7.69
5.99
125 Deta Dog Collars
.99
.66
4 Flat Head Rake
3.88
2.99
4 Post Hole Digger
12. 97
8.99
18 Bow Rake
4. 44
3.59
2.99
3. 88
4 Pointed Shovel
s Square Shovel
4.99
3.99
3 Hoe
3.66
2.88
so 1 Gal. Gas Can
1.22
.88
1.99
18 2 Gal. Gas Can
2.49
100 2 Gal. Utility Can
2.19
1.66
1.44
15 11/• Gal. Utility Can
1.88
1.99
35 Steel Lawn Edging
2.88
SO Log Charcoal Lighting Bricks
.39
. 18
1.99
1.22
95 No Pest Strips
.66
200 Plastic Picket Fence
. 99
35 Patio Glo
.98
.66
25 Vigoro 20
4.48
2.49
25 Vigoro 40 lb .
7.34
3.99
10 Golden Vigoro 40 lb .
9.17
5.99
25 Potting Soil, 8 lb.
1.39
.77
75 Potting -Soil, 4 lb.
.79
.47
30 Ferti !mix
1 .44
.66
2 Cow Manure, 10 lb.
2.48
1.48
10 Cow Manure, Sib . ·
1.48
.77
20 Bone Meal
2.99
1.66
.99
5 Tomato Food
1. 99
.99
6 Bulb Food
1. 99
2 Evergreen Fodo
1.58
.99
2.99
25 Barbecue Tools
3.99
2.66
10 An vi I Pruner
3.89
3.66
10 Garden Pruner
5.36
2.99 ·
I 0 Garden Pruner
4.63
2.99
10 Prime-A-Matic
5.55
1.99
25 Flowr Shear
3.11
2.99
25 Mower Blades
4.12
3.99
8 Folding Pruning Saw
5.49
3.9~
10 Curved Pruning Saw
5.35
.59
8 Cultivators
.84
2 Bulb Planter
1. 99
1.44
3.99
4 Pruner- Flower Stanley
5.06
2.59
15 . Pruner-Flower Village Blacksmith
3.26
4. 12
20 Pruner No. 300 Village Blacksmith
5.44
5.29
2 Pruner Village Blacksmith
6.66
6 Folding Cot
·
12.88
a.99
12.88
8 8" Elec . Fan ·
a .99
9.a8
IS M-C Lounge
i3.88
S Dust to Dawn ·Light
39.88 27 .99
5.99
40 1&amp;" Grill
9.88
5.99
25 Lawn Chair Green
9.99
10 Fold-N- Table
24.88 17.49
1 Work Bench Legs
15.45
a .a8
4.99
4 Saw Horse Legs
8.54
6.88
10.99
1 Saw Horse Legs
4.99
40 s pc. Recreational Vehicle Tools
6.48
4.99
30 8 pc. Precision Screwdriver Set
6.48
s Disston Garden Sprayer
29.99 20.99

"(/)Nlicahd fo ~inq,

-~

'lJo!.L

'

35

so
35
85
75
142
300
125

B&amp;DGeared Chuck _ _ __ _ _ __ _
Matlock, without handle
Car Wash Brush
~ ..,..
Car Wash Brush
Car Wash Brush
Shorty Wash Brush
~eHa~er

Hose Hanger
Liquid Plumber
Suds Well
Shimmy Stop
Air Cushions
Air Cushion
Air Cushions
Air Cushions
Frig -a - Fio Oil Gun
Prestone Car Wash
Try Bo Oil Treatment
Fry Bo Trans. Treatment

\

Ouant .
ITEM
Reg .
20 Steve Scout
5.28
7 Vogue Dolls
11.99
S G. I. Joe Jeep
14.99
_ 1.76
4 Steve Scout Asst.
10 Wait Disney Train
5.99
8 Play Castle
5. 99
20 Dotz Fun dotting machin e__ _____ _____ 8.77
6 Vacuum Cleaner
---·--~
4.88
5.28
2 Guitar

.

Quant .
ITEM
Reg .
72 Everynite Shampoo·- -- --..,,--- - - - 1. 49
100 V0-5 Hair Spray
1.09
125 Wilkinson 5's Blades
.88
30 Gillette Trac II
2. 68
200 TEK Tooth Brush
.49
96 Selsum Blue
3.88

••

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'

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•,

..

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•

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tBJdblt."

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7.99
.99

1.99
2.99
4.99
1.99
3.44
Sale
.99
.77
.66

1.99
.29
2.99

JEWELRY DEPT.

. ...

~-

5.99

Quant .
ITEM
Reg.
SALE
1 .. (·Sunbeam) Fry Pan, FP-954 _ __ __ __ 31.95 24.88
25 (Remington) Eiec . Shaver Cleaner
1.29
.99
12 ( Soundesignl 8 TR . Player 4946-230
59.96 42 .88
12 PretJy Power Hair Drayer
21 .96 15.99
2 (Kodak) Super 8 Movie Projector
124.95 89 .99
50 (Sunbeam) Elec . Alarm Clock, 8021
3 .19 2.44
100 Apollo Clock
2. 99
2.39
15.96 11.99
4 ProjectorTable
6 Wall Clockhbaltery
17. 99 12.59
8 Conair Hair Dryer
19. 96 13 .99
{10 GE Make-up Mirror
19.96 13.99
6 Clairol Make-up Mirror
19.96 13 .99
60 Van Wyck Can Opener
11 .96
8.66
7.96
6.39
3 (Munsey) Warming .Tray

· ~

~

Sale
2.66

COSMETIC DEPT.

••
r

,

4.88
3.99
U9
4.99
.88
.66
.8a
.88
3.88
11.88
5.99
1.99
3.66
1.18
1.99
.84
.66
.99

TOY DEPT.

~

..
....
..' -···

4 .99

Quant .
ITEM
Reg .
Sale
96 Fruit Fresh _ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ __ _ 1.79
1.44
so Lysol 7 oz. Spray
1.04
.77
30 Step Saver_ _
.93
.63
36 Big Wally
1.46
1.19
1.22
48 Klear
1. 57
48 Jubilee
1.16
.88
96 Spray &amp; Wash
I .21 '11.: .a8
16 Oval Roaster
6 .59 . 3.99 '
15 Barware Set
6 .43
4.99
5.99
12 BarwareSet
7.79
20 2 N 1 Table or Wall Lamp
6.99
4.99
10 Ironstone China Service for 4
16 .88 10.99

..

THE rDAILY SENTIN-EL

9.45
7.35
4.99
2. 99
6.99
1.38
.W
1.19
1.19
4.77
16.99
7.99
3.99
4.99
1.77
2.66
1.09
.89
1.39

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

•
••

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT

. '1099

HOUSEWARE D

ITEM

'

.- ~ .

' 30 TO
SELL

HARDWARE DEPT.

Quant.
25
30
10
12
12
10
8
10
1S

7 PC. TEFLON II SET

•2699
500 To Sell .

JEWELRY DEPT.

.

TREASURE
FINDER

Th i1 powe-rf VI p1.1ihb vhor&lt;~ tan can
emily be u~ed on the floor, tgble-,
or in o wind ow. 1 ~peed.

TO SELL ·

JETCO

Black &amp; White

201NCHFAN

~

I

PRICES II EFFECT

1 TO 7

McGRAW .EDISON

WAIIT ADS SURE
liT RISILTII

. (

•

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1

Events inflate
portraits' value
WNDON- A portrait of the Persian manuscript which
15sonsand grandsons of Fath brought $2,900 at Sotheby's in
'All Slah could have been 1949 sold in the same
bought in 1970 for a few saleroom last April for
thousand dollars. This year $92,400.
the picture fetched $440,000 at
It is the Iranians and the
a London auction, because Lebanese who have set the
Fath 'All Shah ruled Persia in pace : Iran, in particular, has
the early 19th century, and a long tradition of painting.
his kingdom has become .the
The' Iranians have constupendously wealthy Iran. centrated on 19th Century
On July 7, a portrait of the works of art, especially the
monarch himself, with a full paintings of the Qajar
black beard, bejewelled dynasty. But they are also
robes and elaborate crown, active purchasers of Vicwas purchased at Sotheby's torian silver and furniture,
by a private Iranian collector buying heavy, elaborate
who paid $220,000 for it. The items which are out of fashion
attention given these events now with European buyers.
by dealers reflected the They also seem to prefer 19th
gradual involvement of the century copies of classical
oil-rich Middle East in French furniture instead of
Western fme art markets )
the real thing, which carry
Many 19th century Persian $4,000 rather than $40,000
paintings have been bought pricetags.
by Iranian Empress Farah
There are some important
and other members of the Iranian collectors with
Slah's family for the Royal refined tastes. At the first
Palce in Tehran. But the Sotheby sale in Monte Carlo
buying has been cautious and 'in May, Habib Sa bet paid
.selective. The idea that m~re than $325,000 for a
wealthy Arabs and Iranians Renaissance bronze horse
would dominate salesrooms, built in the late 16th century
pushing up all art prices that in Florence.
had been badly hit by a
That was the highest price
recession in 1974, has proved in a -sale of objects from the
an illusion.
homes of Baron Guy de
Both
Sotheby's
and Rothschild and Baron de
Christie's, the largest fme art Rede; it was around four
auctioneers in the world, times the p•&lt;H;8le estimate.
have strenuously courted
As Middle Eastern buyers
Middle Eastern buyers in lhe get better acquainted with
past year. Executives are Western art works, prices
now appointed to serve the seem bound to rise higher, in
region and Sotheby's has line with the higher quality of
established an office in the purchases .
Tehran which accepts bids
Among the sought after
for sales in London, New artists are Delacroix, Utrillo,
York and Los Angeles.
Vlaminck and Braque. Such
Judging by the number of works appear destined for
Middle Eastern dealers who rich 'Middle Eastern homes.
have set up offices in London Old Masters seem not to fit
there is a great potential in the Arab taste.
selling art works to the area,
' The scale of purchases
but tbe . market is limited. intensified in 1975. In March a
Unlike the Japanese, who a Beirut dealer named Atallah
few years ago triggered a gave $38,500 for a Charles II
boom in Impressionist prices toilei (~rvice at Christie's.
as an inf!StiQO hedge, Middle Another Lebanese dealer
Eastern buyers concentrate paid $9,000 in Febrtiary for a
on items they Ilk~ .espeeiaUy Swiss gold watch. There have
objects 'linked to their also been first purchases of
hom~. They Me . oot Chine•• ceramics; with a
Speculative investors.
Caton fimille rose punch bowl
To a great extent religion selling for $3,265.
controls their buying. The
Cultural ; religious and
Strict Sllbdi Arabians and the histor,ical . factors will conGull · emirs ildhere to the tinue to temper the trade, but
Kcnb's iojUJJCiions against in a short time the Middle
birilan pottr!liture, arid' their East has become an im· 8CQ1118ltioll8 ·are confined to portant but discerning in-·
11181 anc1 . ~nu~pts. A fluence
in · Wes te r n

... -,

'

Sad~t;

115 Main ·st., Pomeroy

Israel i commun ique

said :
"T-he Pxistence of the U.N.

'

-'·

.

'
•

SIMON'S M ARKET

by both sides and appr!!Ved
by the Security Council, he
said.

withdrawal of the U.N. truce
fo r e\." fr om the .S inai Deser t
towa r d i:tn
ag r et"rnent.

the Egyptian move was designed to impose· a deadline

·-..

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. 6- T-he Daily Sentinel. Middlepor'-.'QITleroy, 0., Wednesday. July 16, 1975

/ .

::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·::::::::&gt;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::·:::·:·:·::

W aldheim musters UN opinion ag~inst action by

·::::

Tips to livestock showing . .
" Don't overheat cattle, sheep, or dogs when transporting them to and from the fair ," Jim Cia)·. Jackson
Area Extension Animal Industry Agent, is telling 4-H
and FFA members.
·&gt;:
Poor loading facilities c~n lead to frustrati on on
•_,•.: ,: inthe parrllt of t_he junf ithor fair exhibitor which oft en res ults
'
ove eatmg o e animal.
"Probably the most susceptible animal to
•.•:.•
overheating," adds Clay, "is the fat market hog. " He
/ suggest• that hogs be handled quietly, loaded from a
( firm ramp, and transported In the coolest part of the
:''• day. fhe same rules apply to cattle and sheep,
::•: altbough hogs seem to be more critical.
{
Be aware that an imals can become overhea ted and
( die. Watch for fast breathing symptoms of the
overheated animal.

::::

}j

By
lJ u it• •d
P n· :-~ s
ln +
( terna ti ona l
;::: .
U .N . Secretary (;!' lll'r n l
Kurt
Wa ldlwim fll tlbi l lz(• c!
::::
:~~
diplom:1 tiC' st ren gth today to

deal with what he ca lled thl'

:-:
:-·

; 'sPri ous &lt;1nd

sttu a-tlon c r cat"d

~

'

in

thl·

---·-·- "

..

PARrY CHOICE
WAS HINGTON 1 UP ! 1
New York is the leading

:::
·.·
:·:

conte nder in tht&gt; raee am ong

citi es

·:::

to

hos t · the

1976

Democra tie national eo n ~
ven ti on , par t y Chairma n

Robert Strauss sa id.
St ra uss told a g roup of
Florida reporters Tuesday
Manhatl&lt;ln probably wi ll be
selec ted if its con ve ntion
fa c ilit ies prove adequate,
N &lt;:~ ti on al

D e m ocratic

today and it's burmn g rig ht Committee press spokesman
to ward wh ere th e shee p Vin ce R. Clephas sa id.
Actual choice of the city
live,"saidMark Jorgensen, a
will
not be made by the 2().
wildlife specialist witb the
memb
e r Site Selec tio n
sla te parks department who
ha s bee n stud yin g the Committee unt il Aug. 27,
penipsulai' desert bighorns, Clephas said , bu t Str auss was
an endangered species, for " assessing the sentiment as
he reads it ri ght now.··
three years.
"We've got about 450 of
them in the park and the
threat fr om the fir e is salesrooms. And , of course.
growing by the honr ," he most of the works of art going
said . "The flames are moving back to the Orient were tak en
right through an area wh ere from there by European and
about 30 to 50 of them can American collectors wh en the
usually be found, and all we finan cial
balance was
can do is hope they run the weighted the other way .
right direction . Sometimes
they instinctively head for
safety and sometimes they
run the wrong way."
Jorgensen said the fire was
"about two miles" from the
park headquarters, where 20
persons live , and personnel
there were getting worried.
At night the fire " looks like
the corona you see on piclures of the sun - licking up
15 or 20 feet high in big
tongues. There's a kind of a
wall of fire and whenever it
reaches one of those dry, taU
old bushes , full of oils and aU,
they just flare up like tOrches,' ' he said.

-r-.: . f•wc..·

of 4,000 men fr om
rdus;ll :o rt new the mandate s ..·ven coun tries as a buffe r
of the U. N peacekeeping ht•lween Israel and Egypt in
Fnrce .
. tho· Sinai. Waldhein1 said th ey
In Tel ?\vi\' the Israeli ,·ould not remain wit hout
go n :&gt; rnmen t Issued a com ~ l'Xtension of the mandate d ue
rnuniquc tud:~y saying the to expire in eight dpys. UNEF
U .N . forces &lt;J r c an integral couhJ, not remain on duty
part of eurrf'nt agreeme nts without a mandate agreed to
with Egypt and 01al Cairo's

Brush fire hits
westen1 park
WARNER SPRINGS, Calif.
(UP! )- An erratic brush fire
flared out of control again
today and drove a spearhead
of flames 20 feet high into the
Anza-Borrego State Park , endangering a flock of the rare
desert bighorn, sheep .
The fire began Monday
afternoon and had burned
more than 4,500 ac res of
desert brush by this morning,
forcing the evacuation of the
little town of Ranchita, the
state Division of Forestry
reported.
Firefighters reported
getting the upper hand
Tuesday and at one point had
the blaze 65 per cent conained.
" But it flared up again just
efore midnight and it's
moving very strongly to the
. east now," a spokeswoman
sald.
" We might have it 30 or 40
per cent contained but that's
juat a guess - it's moving too
fast to tell now," she said .
The blaze, about 50 miles
northeast of San Diego, was
being pushed by 15 to 25 mile
an bour winds.
_
"The frre came over the
boundary of the park early

d a r t g e r uu :-;·~ ·

Middl e Ea st by Egyp t's

r e fu s rd to exten d t h eir
mandate does not help the
dl&lt;::tnf'CS for fX'ilC'C .
Egypt lias demanded the

The

pea&lt;;e ~'keepi n g

next wee k unless negotiations

int eg ra l

with lsrao•l achieve progress sepa r ation
inter im

peace

agree m ent

fo rces is an

par t

of

the

· of
fo r ces
be tween Isr ae l

and Egypt. Israel believes
Egyptia n F'oreign Minister that eve ry move tha t inIsmail Fa hmi told a ne ws crea ses the tension in the
confe r ence in Cai r o Tuesdav a rea does not help the
ni g ht he has ad vised diplomat ic efforts toward
, Waldh eim that Egypt would peace."
r efu se
to
ex tend
the
The communiqu e followed
peacekeeping manda te when sta te ments by an Israeli
it expires.July 24.
Fo reign Ministry official th at
Waldheim said pri vate consulta ti on among the 15 me m be rs was expected to bring a

eOPENe

cou nc il mee ting "in th e next

fe w days. "
" It is a serious situation , a
d ange r ous
s i t ua ti a.n,' ·
Wa ldh e im told ne wsmen,
"and we ca n only hope the
eff or ts which will be undertaken now will lea d to an
agreed solution."
Alt hough l'ahmi appeared
to leave an opening for the
continu ed presence of th e U.

6 DAYS
A WEEK
MON . thru SAT.

D&amp;D MEAT

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I

·:

-I

.I

I

tcl-im peace accord in

on negotiations between the
two countriC$ for a new ,in.

..'
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Open Daily 9:00 Til 7:00 Fri. &amp; Sat. 9 Til 8

-

'

EVERY DAY LOW PRICES -

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

ROUND STEAK •••.•...••.••• !-¥;. *1 69
SIRLOIN STEAK.•••.•..••.••.•L~~.•1••

10 TO 9

R.C. COLA ...............~ltQ?- ••••. 99~
DIET RITE COLA .•••• !~~~-~~ ......99~
tANNING JARS

-

PINTS - QUARTS -

V2

GALLONS

REGULAR AND WIDE MOUTH

CANNING SP.ICE
VINEGAR BY THE GALLON

830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

,,

.

.,
.

~,' .

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PANASONIC T.V.

iS

•
40
To
Sell

$1]88
40 To Sell
Quant . -

HECK'S REG.
$19.99
NAIIDWA.E s•r.

HECK'S REG.
$104.96

ITEM

REG.

SALE

SPORTING GOODS
10
8
10
20
' 40
1s

so

4
2
4,
6
4
3
S
·4
4
6

s

Day in and day out, Want Ads demonstrate their tremendous
pulling power. Power to move merchandise, power to bring
employer and employee together, power to move people into
better homes and apartments.

the usable but no-longer-used items around the house a Want
Ad will clean them out of the storage spaces and you wi'll realize
cash I benefits.
,

If you need the services of a l)ome repair specialist, . use the
power of the .Want Ads.

Use the Want Ads to find bargains in all kinds of merchandise
such as large ~nd small appliances, toys, musical instruments'
typewriters and similar articles.
'

Want' Ads have cleaning power, too. If Y?U take inventory of

Nothing matches the pulling power of the Want Ads .

12
20
10
40
25
2
1
2
1
1S
15
12
6
4
2
6
6
6
4
SO
8
2S
2S
4
6
10
10
12
10
10
IS
10
12
12
10
a
10
6
5
1S
a
a
2
2
2
6
10
30
40
8
10

•

-·..
•A

...........
~""""""
~

Zebco 202 Reel Comb. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 8.99
Zebco 600 Reel Comb.
13.99
Zebco 33 Reel Comb.
23 .99
Ballgloves
11 .99
Shakespeare Golf Balls, pak of 3
2.24
Wi !son Snead Classic Golf Ball
2.22
Don January Golf Ball
2.24
Golf Sand lrQn
9.99
Golf Sand Irons
8.99
Golf Sand Irons
7.99
Golf Wedges
9.99
Golf Wedges
a .99
Golf Wedges
7.99
Golf Putter
9.99
Golf Putters
8.99
Golf Putters
7. 99
Shakespeare Graphite Drive~
54 .95
Stac-a-pack (Golf Bag)
6.aa
Lawn Bowling
10.99
Achilles Tennis Shoes
12.99
Boat Cushion Life Preserver
6.99
Regent Little League Baseballs
2.99
Badminton Set
1.99
Ram Golf Set
89 .99
Ladies Wilson Golf Set
a9.99
Wilson Sam Sneed Woods (set of 3
89 .99
Wilson Ladies Golf Irons Set
78.88
Garcia Tennis Balls
2.94
Regent Flight Tennis Racket
8.99
Regent Monour Tennis Racket
8.99
Regent Diplomat Tennis Racket
13 .99
Regent Tempered Steel Tennis Racket
- 17.99
Regent Tempered Steel Tennis Racket
23.99
Kodustex Golf Head covers
8.88
Golf Iron Cover
5. 94
Golf Iron Covers
5.94
Golf Umbrella
4.68
Golf Green Markers
.47
Sunday Golf Bag
7. 99
Golf Tubes
.24
Children's Life Preserver
4.99
Kent Ski Belts
5. 99
Zebco XRL40 Reel
10.99
Zebco202 'Reel
3.99
Zebco 33 Reel
11.99
Zebco 600 Reel
8.99
Zebco No. One Reel
22.99
Zebco XBL39 Reel '
17 .44
Shakespeare 2052 NL Reel
19.99
South Bend 630 A Reel
12.88
Gladding 2202 Reel
4.99
Daiwa 7280 B Reel
8.64
Berkley 440 Reel
13.99
Johnson 110 B Citation Reel
19.99
Johnson 100 B Century Reel
10.99
Johnson 130 B Sabra Reel
25.99
Berkley 446 Reel
14.68
Garcia Kingfish Reel
9.44
Ga'rcia Mitchell 206 Reel ·
19.99
Garcia Mitchell204 Reel
15.99
Garcia ABU-MATIC 1SO Reel
·2'5.99
Garcia Mitchell410 Reel
29.99
Garcia Mitchell408 Reel
34 .99
Berkley 300 Reel
1I. 99
Golf Glove
6.99
1 gal. Thermos Jug
2.99
1(2 Gal. Thermos Jug
l
1.97
Electra- Pal Trolling Motor
79.99
Alpine30qt. Ice Chest
11.99

5.99
8.99
15.99
7.99
1.79
1.77
1.79
5.99
5.99

5.99
5.99
S.99
5.99

5.99
5.99
5.99

34.99
3.88 '
6.99

8.66
3.99
1.99

1.22
S9 .a.8
59 .88
59.8a
59.88
1.88
5.99
5.99
8.88
11 .88
14.79
5.88
3.99
3.99

3.77
.29
6.39
. 12
2.99
4.79
8.79
2.99
8.39
6.99
16.99
12 .24
13.99
9.99
3.99 '
6.99
9.79
13.99
8.79
18.44
10.88
7.77
13.99
11.99
18.24
22.8a
26 .49
9.59
5.44
1.99
1.18
39.99
9.59.

Heck's Reg .

Heck's Reg . SS. 99

s16 .88
REG.

Foam Cooler_ _ __ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ 3.44
Foam Cooler
I .66
Tennis Shirts
6.99
Tennis Shirts
8.88
Tennis Shirts
9.88
TennisJackets
17 .99
Tennis Dresses
11 .99
Tennis Shorts
11 .88
Fish Net Football Shirts
8.99

6

2.77
1.29
4.68

5
95

100
10
80
100
10
180
7

S.95

6.62
12 .05
8.03
7.96
6.02

HARDWARE DEPT.

3

·1 High Wheel Cultivator_ _ __ _ _ _ _
38 .88 25 .00
6.99
30 Hibachi ...,--= - -- - - - - - - -- - 8.99
5.59
20 Tiki Torch Kit
6.99
60 4" Paint Brush Eldorado
7.69
5.99
125 Deta Dog Collars
.99
.66
4 Flat Head Rake
3.88
2.99
4 Post Hole Digger
12. 97
8.99
18 Bow Rake
4. 44
3.59
2.99
3. 88
4 Pointed Shovel
s Square Shovel
4.99
3.99
3 Hoe
3.66
2.88
so 1 Gal. Gas Can
1.22
.88
1.99
18 2 Gal. Gas Can
2.49
100 2 Gal. Utility Can
2.19
1.66
1.44
15 11/• Gal. Utility Can
1.88
1.99
35 Steel Lawn Edging
2.88
SO Log Charcoal Lighting Bricks
.39
. 18
1.99
1.22
95 No Pest Strips
.66
200 Plastic Picket Fence
. 99
35 Patio Glo
.98
.66
25 Vigoro 20
4.48
2.49
25 Vigoro 40 lb .
7.34
3.99
10 Golden Vigoro 40 lb .
9.17
5.99
25 Potting Soil, 8 lb.
1.39
.77
75 Potting -Soil, 4 lb.
.79
.47
30 Ferti !mix
1 .44
.66
2 Cow Manure, 10 lb.
2.48
1.48
10 Cow Manure, Sib . ·
1.48
.77
20 Bone Meal
2.99
1.66
.99
5 Tomato Food
1. 99
.99
6 Bulb Food
1. 99
2 Evergreen Fodo
1.58
.99
2.99
25 Barbecue Tools
3.99
2.66
10 An vi I Pruner
3.89
3.66
10 Garden Pruner
5.36
2.99 ·
I 0 Garden Pruner
4.63
2.99
10 Prime-A-Matic
5.55
1.99
25 Flowr Shear
3.11
2.99
25 Mower Blades
4.12
3.99
8 Folding Pruning Saw
5.49
3.9~
10 Curved Pruning Saw
5.35
.59
8 Cultivators
.84
2 Bulb Planter
1. 99
1.44
3.99
4 Pruner- Flower Stanley
5.06
2.59
15 . Pruner-Flower Village Blacksmith
3.26
4. 12
20 Pruner No. 300 Village Blacksmith
5.44
5.29
2 Pruner Village Blacksmith
6.66
6 Folding Cot
·
12.88
a.99
12.88
8 8" Elec . Fan ·
a .99
9.a8
IS M-C Lounge
i3.88
S Dust to Dawn ·Light
39.88 27 .99
5.99
40 1&amp;" Grill
9.88
5.99
25 Lawn Chair Green
9.99
10 Fold-N- Table
24.88 17.49
1 Work Bench Legs
15.45
a .a8
4.99
4 Saw Horse Legs
8.54
6.88
10.99
1 Saw Horse Legs
4.99
40 s pc. Recreational Vehicle Tools
6.48
4.99
30 8 pc. Precision Screwdriver Set
6.48
s Disston Garden Sprayer
29.99 20.99

"(/)Nlicahd fo ~inq,

-~

'lJo!.L

'

35

so
35
85
75
142
300
125

B&amp;DGeared Chuck _ _ __ _ _ __ _
Matlock, without handle
Car Wash Brush
~ ..,..
Car Wash Brush
Car Wash Brush
Shorty Wash Brush
~eHa~er

Hose Hanger
Liquid Plumber
Suds Well
Shimmy Stop
Air Cushions
Air Cushion
Air Cushions
Air Cushions
Frig -a - Fio Oil Gun
Prestone Car Wash
Try Bo Oil Treatment
Fry Bo Trans. Treatment

\

Ouant .
ITEM
Reg .
20 Steve Scout
5.28
7 Vogue Dolls
11.99
S G. I. Joe Jeep
14.99
_ 1.76
4 Steve Scout Asst.
10 Wait Disney Train
5.99
8 Play Castle
5. 99
20 Dotz Fun dotting machin e__ _____ _____ 8.77
6 Vacuum Cleaner
---·--~
4.88
5.28
2 Guitar

.

Quant .
ITEM
Reg .
72 Everynite Shampoo·- -- --..,,--- - - - 1. 49
100 V0-5 Hair Spray
1.09
125 Wilkinson 5's Blades
.88
30 Gillette Trac II
2. 68
200 TEK Tooth Brush
.49
96 Selsum Blue
3.88

••

I . •'

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'

'

'

.

'

'

'

•,

..

.\ _

•

I

,,

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tBJdblt."

'

'

7.99
.99

1.99
2.99
4.99
1.99
3.44
Sale
.99
.77
.66

1.99
.29
2.99

JEWELRY DEPT.

. ...

~-

5.99

Quant .
ITEM
Reg.
SALE
1 .. (·Sunbeam) Fry Pan, FP-954 _ __ __ __ 31.95 24.88
25 (Remington) Eiec . Shaver Cleaner
1.29
.99
12 ( Soundesignl 8 TR . Player 4946-230
59.96 42 .88
12 PretJy Power Hair Drayer
21 .96 15.99
2 (Kodak) Super 8 Movie Projector
124.95 89 .99
50 (Sunbeam) Elec . Alarm Clock, 8021
3 .19 2.44
100 Apollo Clock
2. 99
2.39
15.96 11.99
4 ProjectorTable
6 Wall Clockhbaltery
17. 99 12.59
8 Conair Hair Dryer
19. 96 13 .99
{10 GE Make-up Mirror
19.96 13.99
6 Clairol Make-up Mirror
19.96 13 .99
60 Van Wyck Can Opener
11 .96
8.66
7.96
6.39
3 (Munsey) Warming .Tray

· ~

~

Sale
2.66

COSMETIC DEPT.

••
r

,

4.88
3.99
U9
4.99
.88
.66
.8a
.88
3.88
11.88
5.99
1.99
3.66
1.18
1.99
.84
.66
.99

TOY DEPT.

~

..
....
..' -···

4 .99

Quant .
ITEM
Reg .
Sale
96 Fruit Fresh _ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ __ _ 1.79
1.44
so Lysol 7 oz. Spray
1.04
.77
30 Step Saver_ _
.93
.63
36 Big Wally
1.46
1.19
1.22
48 Klear
1. 57
48 Jubilee
1.16
.88
96 Spray &amp; Wash
I .21 '11.: .a8
16 Oval Roaster
6 .59 . 3.99 '
15 Barware Set
6 .43
4.99
5.99
12 BarwareSet
7.79
20 2 N 1 Table or Wall Lamp
6.99
4.99
10 Ironstone China Service for 4
16 .88 10.99

..

THE rDAILY SENTIN-EL

9.45
7.35
4.99
2. 99
6.99
1.38
.W
1.19
1.19
4.77
16.99
7.99
3.99
4.99
1.77
2.66
1.09
.89
1.39

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

•
••

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT

. '1099

HOUSEWARE D

ITEM

'

.- ~ .

' 30 TO
SELL

HARDWARE DEPT.

Quant.
25
30
10
12
12
10
8
10
1S

7 PC. TEFLON II SET

•2699
500 To Sell .

JEWELRY DEPT.

.

TREASURE
FINDER

Th i1 powe-rf VI p1.1ihb vhor&lt;~ tan can
emily be u~ed on the floor, tgble-,
or in o wind ow. 1 ~peed.

TO SELL ·

JETCO

Black &amp; White

201NCHFAN

~

I

PRICES II EFFECT

1 TO 7

McGRAW .EDISON

WAIIT ADS SURE
liT RISILTII

. (

•

' j

1

Events inflate
portraits' value
WNDON- A portrait of the Persian manuscript which
15sonsand grandsons of Fath brought $2,900 at Sotheby's in
'All Slah could have been 1949 sold in the same
bought in 1970 for a few saleroom last April for
thousand dollars. This year $92,400.
the picture fetched $440,000 at
It is the Iranians and the
a London auction, because Lebanese who have set the
Fath 'All Shah ruled Persia in pace : Iran, in particular, has
the early 19th century, and a long tradition of painting.
his kingdom has become .the
The' Iranians have constupendously wealthy Iran. centrated on 19th Century
On July 7, a portrait of the works of art, especially the
monarch himself, with a full paintings of the Qajar
black beard, bejewelled dynasty. But they are also
robes and elaborate crown, active purchasers of Vicwas purchased at Sotheby's torian silver and furniture,
by a private Iranian collector buying heavy, elaborate
who paid $220,000 for it. The items which are out of fashion
attention given these events now with European buyers.
by dealers reflected the They also seem to prefer 19th
gradual involvement of the century copies of classical
oil-rich Middle East in French furniture instead of
Western fme art markets )
the real thing, which carry
Many 19th century Persian $4,000 rather than $40,000
paintings have been bought pricetags.
by Iranian Empress Farah
There are some important
and other members of the Iranian collectors with
Slah's family for the Royal refined tastes. At the first
Palce in Tehran. But the Sotheby sale in Monte Carlo
buying has been cautious and 'in May, Habib Sa bet paid
.selective. The idea that m~re than $325,000 for a
wealthy Arabs and Iranians Renaissance bronze horse
would dominate salesrooms, built in the late 16th century
pushing up all art prices that in Florence.
had been badly hit by a
That was the highest price
recession in 1974, has proved in a -sale of objects from the
an illusion.
homes of Baron Guy de
Both
Sotheby's
and Rothschild and Baron de
Christie's, the largest fme art Rede; it was around four
auctioneers in the world, times the p•&lt;H;8le estimate.
have strenuously courted
As Middle Eastern buyers
Middle Eastern buyers in lhe get better acquainted with
past year. Executives are Western art works, prices
now appointed to serve the seem bound to rise higher, in
region and Sotheby's has line with the higher quality of
established an office in the purchases .
Tehran which accepts bids
Among the sought after
for sales in London, New artists are Delacroix, Utrillo,
York and Los Angeles.
Vlaminck and Braque. Such
Judging by the number of works appear destined for
Middle Eastern dealers who rich 'Middle Eastern homes.
have set up offices in London Old Masters seem not to fit
there is a great potential in the Arab taste.
selling art works to the area,
' The scale of purchases
but tbe . market is limited. intensified in 1975. In March a
Unlike the Japanese, who a Beirut dealer named Atallah
few years ago triggered a gave $38,500 for a Charles II
boom in Impressionist prices toilei (~rvice at Christie's.
as an inf!StiQO hedge, Middle Another Lebanese dealer
Eastern buyers concentrate paid $9,000 in Febrtiary for a
on items they Ilk~ .espeeiaUy Swiss gold watch. There have
objects 'linked to their also been first purchases of
hom~. They Me . oot Chine•• ceramics; with a
Speculative investors.
Caton fimille rose punch bowl
To a great extent religion selling for $3,265.
controls their buying. The
Cultural ; religious and
Strict Sllbdi Arabians and the histor,ical . factors will conGull · emirs ildhere to the tinue to temper the trade, but
Kcnb's iojUJJCiions against in a short time the Middle
birilan pottr!liture, arid' their East has become an im· 8CQ1118ltioll8 ·are confined to portant but discerning in-·
11181 anc1 . ~nu~pts. A fluence
in · Wes te r n

... -,

'

Sad~t;

115 Main ·st., Pomeroy

Israel i commun ique

said :
"T-he Pxistence of the U.N.

'

-'·

.

'
•

SIMON'S M ARKET

by both sides and appr!!Ved
by the Security Council, he
said.

withdrawal of the U.N. truce
fo r e\." fr om the .S inai Deser t
towa r d i:tn
ag r et"rnent.

the Egyptian move was designed to impose· a deadline

·-..

'

•

' O!o •

�..

I ,

•.I'
I

'.
8- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrtcPorn•roy, 0 ., Wt~lnrsday, ,l,tl;· 16. 1915

1

9- The Dai v Sentinel

Farm income slun,tp predicted
•

: HUNTINGTON, Ind. 1UP! )
.._ U.S. net farm inco me this
•
rear may be down 10 to 25 per
&lt;!ent from its 1974 level , a
Purdue University economist
•
says.
, : Dr . John F . Marten ,
Purdue
exte n sion
agricultural economist, ~aid
. Tuesday the decrease will be
o:;aused by. highe r production
costs and moderately lower
-crop receipts . · The nation' s
.fanners had a net income of
$27 billion last year, he said.
Marten also said a strong
export demand for wheat " is
a must to prevent prices from
moving lower. '·
"If
U.S. D.A.
export
estimates are 'i n the 'ball
park,' an average 1975-76
price range at th e farm of
$2.90 to $3.30 a bushe l see ms
like ly,'' Marten said.

·'Wi th current conilltions ,
1975 net fa r m inemn e may
fa ll within a range of $20 to
$2 4 bil l&gt;on still well above
th e $15 to $16 bi lli on dv~rage
of th e 1960s," he to ld the
annuul banquet of the Indiana

Stale Far111 M&lt;-Jn~1gement
Tour at I-IW1 ti11gton Co llege.
Marten said tilal of thr
facto r s inf luenci ng farm
pri ces. "nonC' hw.; greatpr
impa l; nh;·i-ri·\-n•Jther and now
tha t t..: ram pncc s ilre
dctL· r rnint·d
by
war ld
markets . weather condition s
;Jr olmd t.lll' world take on
added .stgnt fi cancr ...
Ht&gt; said his ert.HHlllll C
pr c di ctior1 :-; · iiSS U!Ilt' ncar
n ormal W(•alht•r for the
reJJ la indt•r of 1915.''
Martt 'rl sai d "S IL' ::tdy to
st ro nge r pr ice moveiiiL' nl
st•L•ms likdy for old c rop

corn, wt th a s1gniricant cut in
1975 eorn prospect• like ly to .
push prices in the country · to
s:t a bushel or above."
" If a six bi llion bll'Jhel corn
cr op materializes this fall ,
even with substantial export
de llll1nLI.
prices
could
average $1.90 to $2.30 a
bushc1,'5 he sa id . " Howeve r,
a crop closer to 5.5 bi llion
bushels eou ld support prices.
of $2 .C.O a bushel."
He _,a id a lower soybean·
ou tput rould mP:m a dPf'!inP

Tlw (;a11i a - Jack son .
Vi nl oJJ Voeat iona l Board of
Educ&lt;Jtlon Tuc ~ day eve ning
1r1 speci ul session , approved
its I ~J71i budgr_.L totaling
$1. 12o.no.

rn ini ~t rati on,

$75,860;

In-

struet irm, $612,500 : Libraries,
$15.0011;
Trans portation,
$2.000; Auxiliary Agencies,
$1 14 ,5 40 ' Operation of School
P lant, $275,750; Maintenance
.,f Bui ldin gs , $27,500 and
Capllal Ou tlay, $54.761.50.

PROBE HIT-SKIP
A hi t-skip accident was
investigated at 12 :45 p.m .
Tuesday on Rt. 7, north of
County Rd. 36 in Cheshire
Twp .
The Ga lli a-Me igs P ost
State Highway Patrol sa id
Ik e McVicker, 27 , Rt .
:1,
West
Salem ,
wa s
pulling a mobi le home
and ctn unknown motorist "'ent left of center
sideswip ing the corner of the
mobile home.

Oregon clerk-treasurer
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - A
findin g for recovery of nea rly
$250,000 against Hildred Fox,
fo rme r clerk-audi tor of the
comm unit y of Oregon in
Lu cas Co unty, has been
reported by exam iners for
sta te
Auditor
Thomas
Fe rguson.
Fer{,'Uson said Monday t he
s hortage wa s di scovered
during a outine audit
covering the period June 1,
1972 through Aug. 31 , 1974.
Mrs. Fox took offi ce on N"ov.
25, 1957 and resib'Tled Dec. 10,

.'

1974, serving 17 ~ears in the
post.
According to' a report by
examiners for the audi~rs
office, Mrs. Fox manipulated
ba nk deposits from the early
1960s throug h last swnmer by
withholding small amounts of
cash a nd covering the shortages with delayed checks.
Fergusion said the shortages were masked from
previow examiners because
of acco unt juggling .
On th e last day of previous

audits, Mrs. Fox would write
a chec k on one account a nd
depo s it it to another,
F ergu so n said and, t he
depos it
would
appear
imed ia tely on the account ,
but the check would not be
recorded until it cleared
which placed it in the next
audit period .
The a ud itor
claimed
anot her reason why the
deception continued .for such
a long time was that Mrs . Fox
also handled the city
treasurer's · chores. He ~a id
this practice had been
criticized in previous reports,
but not corrected. .
"The taking over of the city
treasurer's duties ca used a
seriou s impariment and
breakdown of in te rnal contrQ[
which ultimately led to a
substan tial misapp ropriati on
of the public funds for private
use, " the examiners said in
their report.
Ferguson's office said local
officials in Oregon and Lucas
County would have to institute action to recover the
money.

... ·--'

INDEPENDEN'J: PRODUCTIONS PRESENT:

LIVE! IN CONCERTI

ALIAS 1' .t:

8:30-11:30
FRIDAY ,

JULY 18
POMEROY

JUNIOR HIGH

DEXTER - Marion Me·
Clure, 82, Rt.1 , Dexter, died
yesterday at his residence.
Born Oc. 28, 1892, to John and
Cordilla Faxton McClure, he
was a fanner all his life. He
was married to the former
Flora Cleland who survives.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, one daughter ,
and one sister.
In addition to his wife, he is
survived by two grand·
children,
Mrs.
Robert
) Dia.!lt!J, f_a~sen, -Rt. I,
Albany; and William E.
McClure ,1 ' Albany; · one
daughter-m-law, Mrs. Carl
(Nid) McClure, Rt. 1,
AIDany; two brothers, Dale of
Akron, and Glen, Cuyahoga
Falls ;
two
great•
grandchildren, Andrea and
Chr!Stoopher McClure of
Albany, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p .m. at the WBlker
Funeral Home with the Rev.
I.Joyd D. Grlnun Jr., of: ,
ficiatlng. Burial will be at the
Robinson Cemetery . The
family will receive friends
from 2 to 4 p .m . and 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday.

Come on out and see the band that drew .crowds of over
350 in Jackson and over 450 in Oak Hill. With great vocals
and brass. playing songs to g.et down with, by the Ohio
Players, Doobies, AWB, Stones, and etc. So grab your
favorite boogie partner, and let's get down .

Shop Participating Middleport &amp; Pomeroy Stores

Market Report

BUYS

PARKING

PT. PLEASANT MARKET
SLAUGHTER HEIFERSGood and Choice 700-1,000 lbs.
22 · Standard 700-1,000 lbs. 21.
'
SLAUGHTER COWS Commercial 22 .40; Utility
19.50; Canner and Cutter
14.50.
VEAL - Choice and Prime
100-225lbs. 29.50-32.25; 226-265
lbs. 37.50.
YEARLING STEERS Feeder Bulls 700-1,000 lbs. 1926.
YEARLING HEIFERS Good and Choice 500-600 lbs.
25; 600-750 Ibs. 25.
STEER CALVES - Good
and Choice, Under 300 lbs.
19.50-26; .300-400 lbs. 19-25;
.40().500 lbs. 21 .50; 500-600 lbs.

AFTER 5 PM
Inflation-Beating

DISCOUNTS

18.75-22.
BULL CALVES - Good
8nd Choice 300-400 lbs. 2525.25; 400-500 lbs. 19.50-25;
500-600 lbs. 23-24.
HEIFER CALVES- Good
and Choice, Under 300 lbs.
37 .50; 300-400 Ibs. 19.50-25;

Participating Pomeroy &amp; Middleport Stores:
Moore's, ·Pomeroy

K&amp;C Jewelers, Pomeroy
Sears
Catalog . Store
.

Heritage'11buse, Middleport

The Shoe Box,·Middleport
The Sewing Center

'

New York Clothing House
Fabric: Shop, Pome!V.f
Ingels Furniture, Middleport

Ben Franklin Store Pomeroy

Swisher,&amp; LolJse Pharmacy

· SPONSORS OF THE SAtE:
Elberfelds, Pomeroy

Baker Furniture, Middleport

Marguerite's Shoes, Pomeroy ·

See· Merchants' Ads
·In The

Bahr Clothiers, Middleport

Thurs~ay

Sentinel

Stiffler's, Pomeroy
and Middleport
Goessler's Jewelry
. Pomeroy
Ne~n's

Drug, Pomeroy

Werner Radio, Middleport
..

.~

'

·.

f.

~

•

..

.

.

'

PQMEROY, OHIO
STORE HOURS:
Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to 10 PM
Sllndays 10 AM to 10 PM

400-550 Ibs. 23-25; Cows &amp; '
Calves (By Head) 185-213;
, Cows (By Head) 145.
.
BABY CALVES (BY
: HEAD) Beef 23-33·
Hols.t ein and Brown Swiss &amp;25.". .
. HOGS - US. 1-3, 100-240
lbs. 51~3.75; U. S. 1-3_. 2411-280 ,
•lbs. 53-64.75; Sows, U.S. 1-3,
300-500 Ibs. "39.50-47 .50; Boars
: ~ lbs. 31.50-37.25; Pigs
(By Head) 20-40 lbs. 13-28; .4060 Ibs. 29; 60 lbs. + 34.50.

Citizens Bank, Middleport
•

Fanners Bclnk an~ Savings, Pomeroy
Pomeroy National Bank
Powell's Super Valu, Pomeroy
Ath.ens Co. savings &amp; l,oan
~eigs Branch, Pomeroy ·

-

,.. L.

. BABY BEEF

BABY BEEF

ROUND STEAK T-BONE 'STEAK

'149

LB.

BABY BEEF

GROUND BEEF
3 LBS.
OR MORE

LB.

7

CUBE STEAK

'129
LB.
.

ECKRICH

KRAFT

CHIPPED
MEAT MIRACLE WHIP
Whitehouse

BErrY CROCKER

CIDER
VINEGAR

Cake Mix

gal.$139
ARGO

FREE

Hartley's Shoes, Pomeroy

298 Second St.

Marion McClure
died on Tuesday

ht, July 18-6 TI·L ·9 PM

'

QUANTITY
RIGHTS
RESERVED

O'Neill made the statement
In an address to a meeting of
the MWlclpal Judges of the
Second Appeallate District

Beverly Crouch, Robin Bumen, Robin Wilson , Pam.l&gt;;lllliron, Peggy Neigler, Tammie Cleland, Norma Jarrell,
Nancy Parsons, coach. Absent when the picture was taken
was Diana Thoma.

,

TO DEALERS

· driver.''

LETART WHIPEITES - Whipettes softball players
are, 1.;, front, Deanna White, Terri Crouch, CindyAUen,
Tina Hill , Linda O'Brien, Kathy Rilfle, Mindy Morris,
Darla White; 2nd row , Orville Jarrell, assistant coach,

•

NO SALES

Court .

Chief Justice c. William
O'Neill Tuesday called for a
"stop to the killing and
maiming of people on our
highways by the dnmlten

O'Neill said the most
serious problem In Munlcpal
Courts today is caused by
attorneys demanding jury
trial In drunken driving
cases.
"Jury requests are usually
made not for the purpose of
securing a jury trial, but for
the purpose of delay," said
O'Neill. " It is hoped that as a
result of such delay key
witnesses will become discouraged, Intimidated, move
away, geCSfck or die, and
thus , the case - will be
dismissed for want of
prosecution or a plea to a
lesser offense ca n be
negotiated, or because of the
loss of a key witness a guilty
person will be acquitted."
" I have no patience with a
judge
who
advocates
Ieniencey for the dnmlten
driver because excessive
speed and drunken driving
cause more deaths than all
other causes of highway
accidents · c\lmblned," said
O'Neill.

'

PRICES GOOD
THRU JULY 19

SPRINGFIELD, . Ohio
( UPI) - Ohio Spreme

The regular monthly meeting
of the board of educati on is
July 22 a t 7 &lt;10 p.m.

Embezzlement charged

'

~-~--==~-----,---r-~--'__,_.,

. off highwavs

a

I

I

drunken ·driver

in price to near $4 a bushel at
harvest. Marten said the
average farm price for the
1975-76 marketing year is
expected to be near $5
bushel. Profit prospects for
producers
remain
hog
favorab le for the next 12
months, he said, arKI "even
tho ugh cos ts co ntinue to
increase,
profits
from
dair y in g s hould improve
moderately in t he year
ahead ."

Budget approved

·Berry's World

;

.

here.

ThP budget · 1s as follOws:
General Fund, $700,75 1.50,
Bund lktirt.&gt;ment Fund,
$:Hili. 558.50 and Lun chroom ,
$57,8110 .
•
He re's a brea kdown of the
( ;cne r&lt;:~l
Fund :
Ad-

"Look Mom' Gran 'ma bought me a brand new
sailor su1 f' "

'

~ldh!l~~i;lliii!~~

Q'Neill wants

•

...

GR.EEN BEANS
$

'1

32 oz.

19 oz.

WILSON
MILK

303

CANS

SHOWBOAT

ORK &amp;BEAN
40

WAGNER

Orange Drink
.

.

oz.
HOME GROWN

GREER

PEACHES

APPlESAUCE

LB.

..' '

�..

I ,

•.I'
I

'.
8- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrtcPorn•roy, 0 ., Wt~lnrsday, ,l,tl;· 16. 1915

1

9- The Dai v Sentinel

Farm income slun,tp predicted
•

: HUNTINGTON, Ind. 1UP! )
.._ U.S. net farm inco me this
•
rear may be down 10 to 25 per
&lt;!ent from its 1974 level , a
Purdue University economist
•
says.
, : Dr . John F . Marten ,
Purdue
exte n sion
agricultural economist, ~aid
. Tuesday the decrease will be
o:;aused by. highe r production
costs and moderately lower
-crop receipts . · The nation' s
.fanners had a net income of
$27 billion last year, he said.
Marten also said a strong
export demand for wheat " is
a must to prevent prices from
moving lower. '·
"If
U.S. D.A.
export
estimates are 'i n the 'ball
park,' an average 1975-76
price range at th e farm of
$2.90 to $3.30 a bushe l see ms
like ly,'' Marten said.

·'Wi th current conilltions ,
1975 net fa r m inemn e may
fa ll within a range of $20 to
$2 4 bil l&gt;on still well above
th e $15 to $16 bi lli on dv~rage
of th e 1960s," he to ld the
annuul banquet of the Indiana

Stale Far111 M&lt;-Jn~1gement
Tour at I-IW1 ti11gton Co llege.
Marten said tilal of thr
facto r s inf luenci ng farm
pri ces. "nonC' hw.; greatpr
impa l; nh;·i-ri·\-n•Jther and now
tha t t..: ram pncc s ilre
dctL· r rnint·d
by
war ld
markets . weather condition s
;Jr olmd t.lll' world take on
added .stgnt fi cancr ...
Ht&gt; said his ert.HHlllll C
pr c di ctior1 :-; · iiSS U!Ilt' ncar
n ormal W(•alht•r for the
reJJ la indt•r of 1915.''
Martt 'rl sai d "S IL' ::tdy to
st ro nge r pr ice moveiiiL' nl
st•L•ms likdy for old c rop

corn, wt th a s1gniricant cut in
1975 eorn prospect• like ly to .
push prices in the country · to
s:t a bushel or above."
" If a six bi llion bll'Jhel corn
cr op materializes this fall ,
even with substantial export
de llll1nLI.
prices
could
average $1.90 to $2.30 a
bushc1,'5 he sa id . " Howeve r,
a crop closer to 5.5 bi llion
bushels eou ld support prices.
of $2 .C.O a bushel."
He _,a id a lower soybean·
ou tput rould mP:m a dPf'!inP

Tlw (;a11i a - Jack son .
Vi nl oJJ Voeat iona l Board of
Educ&lt;Jtlon Tuc ~ day eve ning
1r1 speci ul session , approved
its I ~J71i budgr_.L totaling
$1. 12o.no.

rn ini ~t rati on,

$75,860;

In-

struet irm, $612,500 : Libraries,
$15.0011;
Trans portation,
$2.000; Auxiliary Agencies,
$1 14 ,5 40 ' Operation of School
P lant, $275,750; Maintenance
.,f Bui ldin gs , $27,500 and
Capllal Ou tlay, $54.761.50.

PROBE HIT-SKIP
A hi t-skip accident was
investigated at 12 :45 p.m .
Tuesday on Rt. 7, north of
County Rd. 36 in Cheshire
Twp .
The Ga lli a-Me igs P ost
State Highway Patrol sa id
Ik e McVicker, 27 , Rt .
:1,
West
Salem ,
wa s
pulling a mobi le home
and ctn unknown motorist "'ent left of center
sideswip ing the corner of the
mobile home.

Oregon clerk-treasurer
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - A
findin g for recovery of nea rly
$250,000 against Hildred Fox,
fo rme r clerk-audi tor of the
comm unit y of Oregon in
Lu cas Co unty, has been
reported by exam iners for
sta te
Auditor
Thomas
Fe rguson.
Fer{,'Uson said Monday t he
s hortage wa s di scovered
during a outine audit
covering the period June 1,
1972 through Aug. 31 , 1974.
Mrs. Fox took offi ce on N"ov.
25, 1957 and resib'Tled Dec. 10,

.'

1974, serving 17 ~ears in the
post.
According to' a report by
examiners for the audi~rs
office, Mrs. Fox manipulated
ba nk deposits from the early
1960s throug h last swnmer by
withholding small amounts of
cash a nd covering the shortages with delayed checks.
Fergusion said the shortages were masked from
previow examiners because
of acco unt juggling .
On th e last day of previous

audits, Mrs. Fox would write
a chec k on one account a nd
depo s it it to another,
F ergu so n said and, t he
depos it
would
appear
imed ia tely on the account ,
but the check would not be
recorded until it cleared
which placed it in the next
audit period .
The a ud itor
claimed
anot her reason why the
deception continued .for such
a long time was that Mrs . Fox
also handled the city
treasurer's · chores. He ~a id
this practice had been
criticized in previous reports,
but not corrected. .
"The taking over of the city
treasurer's duties ca used a
seriou s impariment and
breakdown of in te rnal contrQ[
which ultimately led to a
substan tial misapp ropriati on
of the public funds for private
use, " the examiners said in
their report.
Ferguson's office said local
officials in Oregon and Lucas
County would have to institute action to recover the
money.

... ·--'

INDEPENDEN'J: PRODUCTIONS PRESENT:

LIVE! IN CONCERTI

ALIAS 1' .t:

8:30-11:30
FRIDAY ,

JULY 18
POMEROY

JUNIOR HIGH

DEXTER - Marion Me·
Clure, 82, Rt.1 , Dexter, died
yesterday at his residence.
Born Oc. 28, 1892, to John and
Cordilla Faxton McClure, he
was a fanner all his life. He
was married to the former
Flora Cleland who survives.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, one daughter ,
and one sister.
In addition to his wife, he is
survived by two grand·
children,
Mrs.
Robert
) Dia.!lt!J, f_a~sen, -Rt. I,
Albany; and William E.
McClure ,1 ' Albany; · one
daughter-m-law, Mrs. Carl
(Nid) McClure, Rt. 1,
AIDany; two brothers, Dale of
Akron, and Glen, Cuyahoga
Falls ;
two
great•
grandchildren, Andrea and
Chr!Stoopher McClure of
Albany, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p .m. at the WBlker
Funeral Home with the Rev.
I.Joyd D. Grlnun Jr., of: ,
ficiatlng. Burial will be at the
Robinson Cemetery . The
family will receive friends
from 2 to 4 p .m . and 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday.

Come on out and see the band that drew .crowds of over
350 in Jackson and over 450 in Oak Hill. With great vocals
and brass. playing songs to g.et down with, by the Ohio
Players, Doobies, AWB, Stones, and etc. So grab your
favorite boogie partner, and let's get down .

Shop Participating Middleport &amp; Pomeroy Stores

Market Report

BUYS

PARKING

PT. PLEASANT MARKET
SLAUGHTER HEIFERSGood and Choice 700-1,000 lbs.
22 · Standard 700-1,000 lbs. 21.
'
SLAUGHTER COWS Commercial 22 .40; Utility
19.50; Canner and Cutter
14.50.
VEAL - Choice and Prime
100-225lbs. 29.50-32.25; 226-265
lbs. 37.50.
YEARLING STEERS Feeder Bulls 700-1,000 lbs. 1926.
YEARLING HEIFERS Good and Choice 500-600 lbs.
25; 600-750 Ibs. 25.
STEER CALVES - Good
and Choice, Under 300 lbs.
19.50-26; .300-400 lbs. 19-25;
.40().500 lbs. 21 .50; 500-600 lbs.

AFTER 5 PM
Inflation-Beating

DISCOUNTS

18.75-22.
BULL CALVES - Good
8nd Choice 300-400 lbs. 2525.25; 400-500 lbs. 19.50-25;
500-600 lbs. 23-24.
HEIFER CALVES- Good
and Choice, Under 300 lbs.
37 .50; 300-400 Ibs. 19.50-25;

Participating Pomeroy &amp; Middleport Stores:
Moore's, ·Pomeroy

K&amp;C Jewelers, Pomeroy
Sears
Catalog . Store
.

Heritage'11buse, Middleport

The Shoe Box,·Middleport
The Sewing Center

'

New York Clothing House
Fabric: Shop, Pome!V.f
Ingels Furniture, Middleport

Ben Franklin Store Pomeroy

Swisher,&amp; LolJse Pharmacy

· SPONSORS OF THE SAtE:
Elberfelds, Pomeroy

Baker Furniture, Middleport

Marguerite's Shoes, Pomeroy ·

See· Merchants' Ads
·In The

Bahr Clothiers, Middleport

Thurs~ay

Sentinel

Stiffler's, Pomeroy
and Middleport
Goessler's Jewelry
. Pomeroy
Ne~n's

Drug, Pomeroy

Werner Radio, Middleport
..

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·.

f.

~

•

..

.

.

'

PQMEROY, OHIO
STORE HOURS:
Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to 10 PM
Sllndays 10 AM to 10 PM

400-550 Ibs. 23-25; Cows &amp; '
Calves (By Head) 185-213;
, Cows (By Head) 145.
.
BABY CALVES (BY
: HEAD) Beef 23-33·
Hols.t ein and Brown Swiss &amp;25.". .
. HOGS - US. 1-3, 100-240
lbs. 51~3.75; U. S. 1-3_. 2411-280 ,
•lbs. 53-64.75; Sows, U.S. 1-3,
300-500 Ibs. "39.50-47 .50; Boars
: ~ lbs. 31.50-37.25; Pigs
(By Head) 20-40 lbs. 13-28; .4060 Ibs. 29; 60 lbs. + 34.50.

Citizens Bank, Middleport
•

Fanners Bclnk an~ Savings, Pomeroy
Pomeroy National Bank
Powell's Super Valu, Pomeroy
Ath.ens Co. savings &amp; l,oan
~eigs Branch, Pomeroy ·

-

,.. L.

. BABY BEEF

BABY BEEF

ROUND STEAK T-BONE 'STEAK

'149

LB.

BABY BEEF

GROUND BEEF
3 LBS.
OR MORE

LB.

7

CUBE STEAK

'129
LB.
.

ECKRICH

KRAFT

CHIPPED
MEAT MIRACLE WHIP
Whitehouse

BErrY CROCKER

CIDER
VINEGAR

Cake Mix

gal.$139
ARGO

FREE

Hartley's Shoes, Pomeroy

298 Second St.

Marion McClure
died on Tuesday

ht, July 18-6 TI·L ·9 PM

'

QUANTITY
RIGHTS
RESERVED

O'Neill made the statement
In an address to a meeting of
the MWlclpal Judges of the
Second Appeallate District

Beverly Crouch, Robin Bumen, Robin Wilson , Pam.l&gt;;lllliron, Peggy Neigler, Tammie Cleland, Norma Jarrell,
Nancy Parsons, coach. Absent when the picture was taken
was Diana Thoma.

,

TO DEALERS

· driver.''

LETART WHIPEITES - Whipettes softball players
are, 1.;, front, Deanna White, Terri Crouch, CindyAUen,
Tina Hill , Linda O'Brien, Kathy Rilfle, Mindy Morris,
Darla White; 2nd row , Orville Jarrell, assistant coach,

•

NO SALES

Court .

Chief Justice c. William
O'Neill Tuesday called for a
"stop to the killing and
maiming of people on our
highways by the dnmlten

O'Neill said the most
serious problem In Munlcpal
Courts today is caused by
attorneys demanding jury
trial In drunken driving
cases.
"Jury requests are usually
made not for the purpose of
securing a jury trial, but for
the purpose of delay," said
O'Neill. " It is hoped that as a
result of such delay key
witnesses will become discouraged, Intimidated, move
away, geCSfck or die, and
thus , the case - will be
dismissed for want of
prosecution or a plea to a
lesser offense ca n be
negotiated, or because of the
loss of a key witness a guilty
person will be acquitted."
" I have no patience with a
judge
who
advocates
Ieniencey for the dnmlten
driver because excessive
speed and drunken driving
cause more deaths than all
other causes of highway
accidents · c\lmblned," said
O'Neill.

'

PRICES GOOD
THRU JULY 19

SPRINGFIELD, . Ohio
( UPI) - Ohio Spreme

The regular monthly meeting
of the board of educati on is
July 22 a t 7 &lt;10 p.m.

Embezzlement charged

'

~-~--==~-----,---r-~--'__,_.,

. off highwavs

a

I

I

drunken ·driver

in price to near $4 a bushel at
harvest. Marten said the
average farm price for the
1975-76 marketing year is
expected to be near $5
bushel. Profit prospects for
producers
remain
hog
favorab le for the next 12
months, he said, arKI "even
tho ugh cos ts co ntinue to
increase,
profits
from
dair y in g s hould improve
moderately in t he year
ahead ."

Budget approved

·Berry's World

;

.

here.

ThP budget · 1s as follOws:
General Fund, $700,75 1.50,
Bund lktirt.&gt;ment Fund,
$:Hili. 558.50 and Lun chroom ,
$57,8110 .
•
He re's a brea kdown of the
( ;cne r&lt;:~l
Fund :
Ad-

"Look Mom' Gran 'ma bought me a brand new
sailor su1 f' "

'

~ldh!l~~i;lliii!~~

Q'Neill wants

•

...

GR.EEN BEANS
$

'1

32 oz.

19 oz.

WILSON
MILK

303

CANS

SHOWBOAT

ORK &amp;BEAN
40

WAGNER

Orange Drink
.

.

oz.
HOME GROWN

GREER

PEACHES

APPlESAUCE

LB.

..' '

�I

... \

'

1fl- The Dailv Sentinel. Middlepor~·llomeroy,. o.

''

WednesdBy. Julv 16. 1975

'I

,.
16. 1975

I
,.

•

I '

Social
Calendar

'

·Helen· Help

Polly's ·Pain

·us...

. BY p&lt;Jt.LY CRAMER

Removing deposit!.
from tea kettk _

5.75%

Bamngardner
services held ,

Meigs Co. Branch

+++
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.

Women in prisons is
topic of church women
NEW HAVEN
A party will be held ·on July 29
program about women in in the Missionary Building .
prisons and given when the Roberta Maynard will be the
·New Haven Women of the demonstrator. Finance
Church of God held their Director
Sarah
Gibbs
regular July meeting in the reported on a houseware
Missionary Building with party held by the members.
Connie Aeiker and Fay . The annual Prayer Retreat
Carpenter
serving
as will be held August 14 with a
hostesses.
" potluck" dinner at the
The local historian, Bonnie Racine Dam and Locks
Fields, displayed a new Recreation area at 6 p.m. All
camera purchased for the members are urged to attend.
society and gave a report on
The program presented by
the flower fund.
Orpha Fields had the title, "II
mbers were reminded to Was in Prison ." The obtheir items for the jectives of the Stewardship
bit sale to be held at the Program was to discover
state camp meeting in some things about women in
August . Several members American prisons; to try to
plan to attend Missions Day experience emotionally some
to be held on Thursday, of the feelings of women in
August 7, at Cross Lanes. prison; to learn what we have
Tom A. Smith, secretary of to offer these women; and to
the Department of Home involve ourselves in creating
Missions Evangelism Board environments for change.
Church Extension , Anderon , The program openet{, with
Ind., will be the guest devotions given by SUe Erspeaker.
The
annual win. Others assisting in the
Achievement Certificates program were Sarah Gibbs,
and History Book Awards will Connie Aeiker, and Iva
be presented. The Unified Capehart.
State Project Offering will be
Circle prayer closed the
received in the 2:30 p.m . meeting led by Bonnie Fields.
service. The theme is, "New Attending were Iva Capehart,
Horizons Because We Care ." Pansy
Fry,
Roberta
Orpha Fields and Bonnie Maynard, Sarah Gibbs, Sue
Fields gave a report on the Erwin, Bonnie Fields, Susie
1975 International Convention Wolfe, Orpha Fields, Connie
that they attended in An- Aeiker, Eleanor Davis and
derson, Ind. A dmonstration Fay Carpenter.

Racine Social Events

HEFTY TRASH BAGS

ACTUAL USE REPORT

1~~~~~====~~~~~

99~

e

99

JUMBO VIVA TOWELS ..........~~.~~~:2/'1

°

0

COFFEE ·MATE ...............................~~.~~:..'1 39

lromJul~

.

~~.JOR

~

FORMERLY, OF GENE.RN.
EISE.NKOWEI?S $TAFF!
NOT Tt\AT YOURE KERE
10 TALK AllOU.T TKE.

.

HOME MADE HAM SAI.AO ...... ~ ·······.··················Ib. 99'

NDRIIIAN[)Y, tNVA510N,
OF COURSE!

POLISH SMOKED SAUSAGE ............................ '1.09 lb.
.SUPERIOR WNQi MEAT.....................J lb. pkg. $1.10

d ~~R· ·:

f

GENERAL
REVENUE
SHARING.

LEB~~Q.~ TOWNSHIP .

r..t rtc••~t&lt;l

=-fL----r-----j

G'""'"' A-nu1 S~ l ""il

OIVm1n11 lolal 1ng

AC~OUNT NO

WAID CROSS SONS
Pearl St.
STORE Racine, Ohio
949-5772
Fresh-Lean

GROUND BEEF
lb.

39
CUBE STEAK•••••••••• !-1!·.$}
CARNIVAL BRAND 2 lb. pkg. $}79
WEINER$ .••• ••••••••••• •••••
NEW RED ·
, 10 lb. bag $}69
POTATOES •••••••••••••••••

~~:.~~~~..................6g~

39¢
O~EOMARGARINE.••••••••••• ~·.
TEEN QUEEN
4/$1
QQ.
PORK N' BEANS •••••••••
TEEN QUEEN
4
9¢
TOMATO JUICE •••••••••• ··.-•• •

TEEN QUEEN ·

46 oz. can

$2404.00

du rongt he...,.oodlrornJ.J tv 1 197 41hfuJun•l0_ 1915

./

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VISITED CLIFTON
CLIFTON .,. Mr . and Mrs .
Don Quisenberry and Kim
and
Linda
of
South
Charleston, Ohio spent the
weekend with Mrs. Theima
Henry, Clifton. Others
visiting Mrs. Henry on
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmy Coleman and Brenda,
Aaron and Chris Ward , all of
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Terry Henry and sons of
Mason. Theresa Becker of
Middleport and Mrs . Hazel
Hoschar of Mason .

!&amp;oz.

ACTUAL USE REPORT

]6 ] 05] 004

LEBANON TOWNSHIP 697
TWP. CLERK
MEIGS CO.
PORTLAND, OHIO 45770

4-32.oz. Bottles

1176 .00

COCA COLA .... !~·.~.~~ 99~

...C==--1--

S•

1

'B;:;:;.•;r,a'!\,,. ..., Junelo. 1anl : iii=~
' -=

.::: 3580.00

:.23~581£0~.00~===

~~~,~~~~~~ ...... ,98'
.19

¥ie

SERVING AT CAMP
NEW HAVEN, W. Va .
Mrs . David Fields, Jr . is
serving as counselor from the
New Haven First Church of
God for the State Youth Camp
this week at Camp Caesar .
Youths attending are Tim
Davis and Lisa Davis, Jennifer Weaver and Jeff
Weaver. Guest speaker for
the week is the Rev. Elsworth
Jackson of Columbus, Ohio.
The Lordsmen from Anderson College are in charge
or singing .

2 . ~ueShlror&gt;g Funch
2404.00
Flee. .... from July \ 19741111uJu ... 30. 1915 s; _:c.:.:=~~-

all

WHITE POTATOES

A s pecial tribute to Will Follow ."
Frances Reibel , a Sunday
The group then discussed
School teacher for 50 years , " The World Is Fast Ripening
was held Friday evening For the Coming World DiePlans to present 25 year
during the business meeting tator," a missionary message
pins at the August meeting
of the Happy Harvesters Club from John E. Douglas, Sr . It
were made at the regular
of the Trinity Church .
tells about Satan, the antimeeting of Middleport
The meeting followed a Christ ,
and
lukewarm
Evangeline Chapter, No. 172,
poUuck dinner in the church Protestants and Catholics,
O.E.S., July 3 with Worthy
basement. Tables were and how Christ will reappear
Matron , Farie Kennedy , and
decorated to carry out the from heaven. The program
Worthy, Patron,
Harry
topic " The Feet of Jesus ." closed with the poem "Time
Chesher, presiding .
Mrs . Carrie
Neutzling Is Running Out" and a picPortems for the evening
designed sandals of all sizes lure of sand running through
were Chaplain, Evelyn
as Jesus probably wore an hour glass .
Lewis; Marshal, Bob King ;
During the business
throughout His life on earth .
Conductress, Marie Hawkins,
The largest pair rested at the meeting, Frances Reibel was
and Ruth, Lillian Moore.
foot of a cross at the corner of . honored and cards were read
Sunshine Page for the
the L-shaped tables . On one from the Dale Smith family
evening was Bill King .
side
was a pair of sandals and the J ohn Terrell family .
· Communications read were
climbing the Mount of Olives, It was noted that· Freda
as follows : Invitation to
and on the other was a replica Heinz, the mother of Mina
reception at Lakewood
of the Sea of Galilee lined by Swisher and grandmother of
Chapter No. 509 for L. June
evergreen trees.
Barbara Riggs has died , that
Brice, Grand Esther of Grand
The program table in the Roy Smith has returned to
Chapter of Ohio; reception at
social room carried out the University Hos pital , and
Unionport Chapter No. 360,
Steubenville, for Doris P . theme "Chris t, the Light of Ruby Erb has entered a
Smith, Grand Conductress of the World," with a globe at nursing home in Pomeroy.
Ada Holter who recently
the Grand Chapter of Ohio ; the center of the table and a
at
the
returned
from Spain gave
candle
beside
it.
Seated
reception at Eugenie Chapter
table
were
Genev'ieve
excerpts
from different
No. 507, Colutnbus, for Ray E.
Meinhart, Erma Smith, Neva dances she learned there . She
Belfrage, Worthy Grand
Seyfried
and Rose Ginther will show slides of her trip at
Patron , and Dottie Belfrage,
Grand Representative of who assisted Mrs . Neutzling a future meeting.
The group sang "Happy ·
California in Ohio, of the in the presentation.
The program opened with Birthday" to Uncle Sam in
Grand Chapter of Ohio;
meditation,
a
prayer , observance of July 4th, and to
Grand Vis ita lion of the
Worthy Grand Matron , "Walking with Jesus," and a Ruth Massar by telephone
Elizabeth Whitehouse and reading from the scriptures because she was unable to
reception for Bruce Han- Isaiah 52 : 7-10 followed bu.-attend.
sford, Grand Sentinel, of the short meditation on Mary's . Future wedding recepGrand Chapter of Ohio, at thoughts about where the fee t lions were discussed and a
Olive Chapter No. 53, Kent,_ of Jesus would lead Him . The rummage sale for October
and an announcement of the entire group then sang "0 was planned . It was decided
Roberta Circle meeting to be Master, Let Me Walk with not to hold an · August
held at McConnelsville Aug . Thee." Mrs. Meinhart lighted meeting. Hostesses for the
21 at noon with a potluck the candle by the globe and September meeting will be
Neutzling ,
Sybil
gave her meditation which Mrs .
lunch.
ended with Mrs. Neutzling Ebersbach, Clara Karr and
Worthy Matron Farie reading "! Wish I Had Been Gladys Cuckler.
reminded everyone of the His Apprentice," from " In
A special tribute was
Masons-Eastern Star picnic the Carpenter Shop." She given to all lo·ted ones with
to be held on Sunday, July 27, then read from Romans 10 : the song ''Will There Be Any
at Forest Acres Park . Ham 10-15 dealing with Isaiah the Stars in My Crown ? and
will be provided. Everyone is · prophet after which the Frances Reibel gave the
to bring a-covered dish and readers and Mrs . Neutzling closing prayer . The group
sang "Where He Leads Me 1 formed a friendship circle
table service .
and sang "Blessed Be the Tie
She also announced that 25
year pins will be presented at
that Binds."
PARTICIPANT
the August meeting and a
Attending were Frances
LANGSVILLE - Marine Reibel and guest, Mrs. Thor
silen't auction will be held
with the proceeds going to the Corporal Daniel R . Midriff, Blackwo od,
Genevieve
Educational Loan Fund and son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Meinhart and houseg11est
the Fire Safety Code Fund . Midriff, Rt. I, partiCipated in Carrie Hamm Smith, HunAlso the Sunshine Collection "Solid Shield , " a joint- tington; Ada Holter, Sybil
service exercise near the Ebersbach, Gladys Cuckler.
will go to Estarl. ·
"
Refreshments were served Marine Corps Base, Camp Rose Ginther, Neva Seyfried;
in the dining area by Mr. and LeJeune, N. C. Midriff, a 1972 Stella Kloes , Lillie Houck;
Mrs. Ferman Moore and Rev . graduate of Meigs High Eva Dessauer. Edith LanSchool, joined the Marines in ning, Ella Smilh and
and Mrs. Robert Kuhm.
January 1973.
Neutzling.
·
..· , •.

1, 811..-.tl U &lt;l!June30. 11H

OE~ElC~MEN T

590

Harvesters pay
tribute to teacher

( 0 ) TRUST FUNC fi.EPOI'IT t•eler ID in11ructoon Dl

$0\: 1 .0.~

T.V. DINNERS

Presentation
of 25 year
pins planned

with Major Hoople

·OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Robin Wills and William were Mr. and Mrs . Homer
Morris were united in Baxter , Anna and Lisa, Billy
marriage Jul y 9 at six p.m . at tand Duane Morris, sons of the
the home of Mr . and Mrs . groom, and Mrs . Betty Wilts ,
Homer Ballter .
mother of the bride.
Robin is a 1971 graduate of
The double ring ceremony
was performed by Rev . Meigs High School. The new
~· reetand Norris . Refresh - Mr . and Mrs. Morris are
ments were served following presently residing at Blake's
the ceremony .
trailer court in Racine.
Attending th e wedding

CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY -Norman Grueser, Minersville; celebrated his 77th birthday Sunday with a dinner party at his home. Attendln~ were his daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Haines, Colwnbus; his son and daughter-in.Jaw, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Grueser, Pensacola, F1a .; Gail Warford, Laurinda Lee, Na·thalei, and Tabbatha Kay
Warford, Pensacola; and Sue Laurinda Fowler.and Darrell Alan, California.

Sl59 .

1

geldings any age; western
pony, 48" t.o 56" inclusive,
mares and geldln~, any age;
showmanship under 14 years ;
showmanship, 14 thru 18
years; western weanUng and
yearling
foals;
and
registered English halter .
Performance classes slated
to begin at 12:30 p.m . are _
lead-in pony (to be judged l;
ladles' barrel race; walk-trot
class, pony under 48", rider 8
years and under ; ba.!:~back
horsemanship, open, eng!lsn
five-gaited horse; open
pleasure horse ; dash for
cash ; western pleasure pony
under 48", rider 12 years and
under ;
non -regis tered
western pleasure horse :
junior pleasure, open, rider
18 years and under. no
stallions ; bareback pleasure;
englis'h 3-gai ted horse (full
mane and tail); western
horsemanship, rider under 14
years; horse or ponies also,
flag race , juvenile flag race,
rider 16 years and under;
english pleasure horse, hunt
seat; roadster pony, western
pleasure pony, 48" to 56"
inclusive, rider 16 years and ·
under; english equitation,
rider 18 years and under;
walk-trot horse , rider 8 years
and under ; juvenile barrel
race, rider 16 years and
under i
western
horsemanship, 14-18 years;
registered
quarterhorse
pleasure ; egg and spoon;
open registered pleasure
horse , 4 years and under;
english pleasure horse.
registered appaloosa
pleasure horse, western
horsemanship, over 18 years;
barrel race; and open trail
class .

pers Plain s Community
Club .
The halter classes beginning at 9:30 a .m . are :
Registered Quarterhorse
junior mares; geldlngs; and
stallions: registered quar'
terhorse senior
mares;
geldings ; and stallions :
reg'istereed
appaloosa
mares;
geld ings
and
stallions; non -registered
stock horse, mares and
geldings, any age; western
pony, under 48" mares and

Morris- Wills wed

+++

held for
area packs

COLQ POWE_R
oz
LAUNDRY DETERGENT....................... :..

TUPPERS PLAINS- The
Bar-30
Horsemen
will
sponsor an approved Ohio
Valley
Horse
Show
Association horse show on
Sunday, July 20, at the Bar.JO
show grounds near here with
Mrs . Becky Scott Long, of
Marietta as judge. ·
Seven~n halter classes
and 20 performance classes
will be offered with ribbons
and prize money being
awarded . Food will be served
on the grounds by the Tup-

By Helen Bottel

DEAR HELEN :
This is directed to all working women who need help
aro1Dld the house. In our family of nine, the laundry was my
most overwhelming problem. I finally announced I would wash
only what was in the laundry room, and all clothes given me
lnside-&lt;:~ut would remain so .
·
You can imagine the condition of a favorite slacks suit
after it went through the wash, a leg and a sleeve not " turned ."
And socks which went Into the hamper in balls, stayed ditry
through the wash . And filthy tennis shoes simply remained so
because they weren't put out on wash day.
The kida learned real fast. It was "Mr." we had trouble
with,ashe was used to "maid service." When biB dirty clothes
piled three layers deep in the bedroom and I couldn't tolerate
the smell of them and slept in the front room , only then did he
catch on.
I do admit It was difficult for me to walk over and around
the enormous amount of laundry the family accwnulated, but
they DID Jearn I meant business. Shame ·on me for spoiling
them all in the first place!-WVE, LUCK AND LAUGHTER
DEAR HELEN:
You probably won 't print this, but I felt your answer to the
newlywed working-wife was terrible. She wanted to " retrain "
ber husband to pick up, turn his dirty clothes right side out
before she washed them, etc.
You advocated "reminders," or just letting biB. undershirts 1Jtay wrong side out, and the next time he shed them
they'd come out right.
.I
Instead of driving MY husband out the door with nagging
(even nice reminders are •'nagging"), I think of his protective,
secure and loving chest as I turn biB undershirts, etc. As I pick
up biB towels, I think of the body they dried, and as I pick up
after hlm I think how lucky I am.
Ladies, love him and hold his little faults dearly, change
YOUR way of thinking, not biB. Good husbands are . hard to
come by. Compliment him on biB goodness and he 'II get better.
Complain of biB faults and he'll only get worse. Follow tbe
same rule with your children. It works !-WISDOM THROUGH
EXPERIENCE
DEAR WTE:
Compllmeots are great, butl'd hate to think my man's ego
was so fragile that he couldo 't take a few reminders too -and
heed tbem.-H.

Olympics

~~~f}AGJ.~~.~..~~~~~....................3.~-~~::.

'

HELEN:
What do you think of a husband who never kisses biB wife
or shows ber any affection, but pours out all biB love on his
dog?
last nlgbt I came in with a big bag full of groceries. The
dog jumped up on me, and I scolded her. My husband grabbed
me by the throat and started choking me. I jUst sinUed. He said
"That's not funny," and hit me. in the face. He's always beating
on me, but the dog can get away with any-thing, I hate to tell
you what.
rm a good housekeeper. I work hard. But all I get is
lruises. What should I do?--G.L.
DEAR G.
.. Need you ask? Concede that your marriage has gone to tbe
dog and leave. Unless, that Is, you're a total masocblat .-H.

Birthday
celebrated

. . II

Bar-30·group plan$ ·horse show

UJ!;J~

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Angels Pee
t wonder - for me, but ne1ther the soap
Wee team, family picnic·
if you could tell me how to flakes nor the detergent alone
swimming party, Middleport
clean the inside of an will do it. ( Polly 's note : Test
Pool, 6 p.m . Bring a covered
aluminum whistling tea first and be sure )'Qur fabric
dish and silverware.
kettle
that fills only through can take the hot water, etc.)
THURSDAY
the
spout.
The inside looks _ MRS. R.D.S.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
terrible as there are deposits
DEAR POLLY - Most
Health Club, annual picnic , II
of
some
kind
in
it.
aprons
have strings to tie a
a.m. home or Frances
JARED SPENCER
bow in the back but this Is
MILDRED.
Goeglein. Ham furnished .
DEAR
MILDRED
You
ciften
difficult for an elderly
Bring table service. covered
do have a problem mainly person to do. I tie a knot in
dish, and drink.
because of t.b e small opening. each apron string where they
RACINE American Legion
All
I can suggestw.ould be to fit at the waist and simply
Post No. 602, 8 p.m. at the
fill the kettle with water, add draw these knots over one
hall . Corn feed.
WNG
BOTTOM
Jared
three tablespoons water another . They stay In place
TWIN CITY Shrine Club at
PART OF THE CROWD watches the competition at
Spencer
celebrated
hi
s
conditioner and let II come to and a Hrt of the strings gives a
Gallipolis State Institute track . Over 80 area Cub Scouts
Shrine Park in Racine , at 7:30
second
birthday
thP' .!nne 28 ~and Annual Cub Olympics held at the
on
June
20
took part.
a
boil. Then turn down the quick release. - MATT.
p.m. All nobles invited.
with
a
supper
given
by
his
heat and let it simmer 15
DEAR POLLY - During
REVIVAL now in progress
parents
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
Tom
minutes
or
so.
Hopefully
the
the
hot summer months I find
through Thursday at 7:30
Spencer.
Long
Bottom
.
loosened scale will be In a bucket of water and an old
p.m. at the Midway ComA circus theme was carried small enough pieces to pour paint brush will keep my
munity Church, Langsvilleentertained
Dexter Road. Rev. 0 . H. Cart out with a Merry Go Round on out through the spout. Keep three-year-old
top
of
his
birthday
cake.
He
rinsing until water comes.Dut for hours . She "paints" all
is evangelist. Pastor Theron
received
many
nice
gifts.
clean. - POLLY.
washables like the carport,
Durham invites the public.
Those
attending
were
Mr
.
LAUREL CLIFF Health
sidewalk, tricycle , etc. This
DEAR
POLLY
My
Pet
Spencer
and
and
Mrs
.
Waid
also stimulates her drawing
Club, family picnic, 7 p.m.,
Racine Locks and Dam. West Ray, Mrs. Henry Spencer and Peeve is with those beauty and creative nature. Thanks
Vance, Mrs. Esther Wright, operators who take on go to my very smart husband
Virginia side. Potluck .
Mr. and Mrs . J ohnnie Kibble, another customer just at the wh o invented such "painFRIDAY
Mrs
. Harlis Frank, George time I am ready to come out tin~" - MR$ R I..H.
New Haven 's Pack 235 won
HAYRIDE. wiener roast,
Pickens and Cheryl Griffin. from under the dryer. This
the initial 'M-G-M Cup at the games and square dance,
makes me wait 30 to 45
Second Annual Cub Olymm· sponsored
by
Rutland
minutes
while they do a head
Our Interest Is
pies held June 28 at Gallipolis Baseball League. 6 p.m . from
Market Report
even though I came in first.
State Institute 's new outdoor Rutland Post Office to Forest
Gre;oter
For You
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
When
your
dish
drainer
is
track.
Acres Park. Tickets on sale
July 122, 1975
over-stacked what can you
Eleven packs from the at Rutland Dept. Store,
SALES REPORT OF
do?
Pull out a cookie sheet
Mason-Gallia-Meigs District Village Pharmacy and New
Obio Valley Livestock Co.
and set it on a table or over a
of the Tri.State Area Council York Clothin2 House.
STOCKER CATTLE pulled drawer under the sink
of Cub Scouts participated in
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 17 and you have a place for the
SATURDAY
the day long event. A total of
MEIGS COUNTY Retired to 30; 300 to 400 lbs . 17 to
overload. -MARY.
On 90-Day
82 boys took part in the Teachers Association picnic 27.50; 400 to 500 lbs. 20 to 31;
DEAR
POLLY
Mrs.
E.
Olympiad·patterned games at New Haven Park at dam 500 to 600 lbs. 19 to 29; 600 to
B. wrote that she and her
Certificates
under the direction of District site at 5:30p.m.
700 lbs. 15 to 30; 700 Ibs . and
daughter
had spots they could
Activities Chairman Frank
Over 17 to 35.
not remove from polyester
DiClemente.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 tc garmenls so I want to tell
Placing second in the
300 lbs.16 to 23; 300 to 400 lbs.
per cent paid on
them how I do this. I had
overall competition was Pack
15 to 21; 400 to 500 Ibs. 15 to 20;
day
Certificates of
grease spots on a polyester
STREAKING- Finalists for the 5().yard dash stretch the frantic final steps hoping for
253 of Mason and third place
500 to 600 lbs. 18 to 25; 600 to
De sit.
$1,000.00
and cotton poplin dress so I
victory. These are just a few ofthe Cub Scouts who participated in this year's Cub Olympics.
went to Pack 256 of Point
700 lbs. 18 to 24; 700 lbs. and
Interest
made a paste with soap flakes
Pleasant. Individual trophies
Over 16 to 28.
Quarterly.
Payable
just wet enough to soak in to
were awarded to Jeff
STOCK COWS &amp; BULlS
the material and applied this
Frishette as the outstanding
Attending the funeral (By The Head) -Stock Cows
to the spots. This covered
8-year old; Steve Wolfe, services on July 5 for Ervin 100 to 165; Stock Cows and
large areas of the .front of the
outstanding 9-year old; and Baumgardner who died at his Calves 125 to 240; Stock Bulls
dress.
Fold the dress with the
Keith Clark, outstanding 10- Pomeroy residence on July 3, 95 to 200; Baby Calves 7 to 35;
treated side in, fold and roil
year old.
were Mr . and Mrs. George 1By The Pound) - Canners
up.
Leave for at least an hour
Individual winners were Bawngardner, Ramona and · and Cutters Cows 12.50 to 18;
or overnight. Then unfold tHe
(1st, 2nd, 3rd, in order Eric, Mrs. Lucille . Cousins, Holstein Cows 16.50 to 21.60;
dress
and pour on a generous
listed) :
Kenneth Cousins, and Danea Commercial Bulls ( 1,000 lbs.
The Athens ""ountv
amount of liquid detergent.
100 yard dash - 8 year aids and Randy Bowles, children and Over) 18 to 27.50.
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
Fold together and Jet set a
296 Second St .
- Jeff Frishette , David of Randall Bowles, all of
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
Pomeroy
, Ohio
whileat
least
half
an
hour.
Fountain, Kim Pauley; 9 yr. Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. lbs. to 250 35 to 38; Medium
Wash the dress in hot (to the
aids - Mike Pethel, Steve Robert Nelson, former Alma 200lbs. to 300 22 to 28; Culls 20
touch) water in the washer. If
children, Down.
Wolfe, Jeff Wnyes; 10 yr. olds Baumgardner ,
all spots don't come out,
- Rodney Manley, Keith Shawna, Shayne, Robbin and SHOATS - 20 to 32.50.
repeat. Th'· -·•llv worked
Rome, Mr. and Mrs. Manning
Clark, Steve Runyon.
50 yd. dash - 8rs. - John Baumgardner, LuTonda,
Edwards, Jeff Frlshette , Manning Jr., and Gary, Miss
David Fountain ;9 yr. - Steve Julia Reese, Mrs. Donald
Wolfe, Jason Cooper, Arthur Cross (Jeanine Bowles), Mr.
W. Tey; !Oyr. - Keith Clarb, and Mrs . William Johnston
Rodney Manley , Georgia ( Barbara Bowles), son,
Ernest, Mrs. Mary Boyer,
Yaspen.
Softball throw Steve Mrs. Ora Scott and grandRunyon, Chris Burchett, daughter, Terria Kay Glenn,
Mrs. Alfred Baumgardner,
Rhett Milhone.
Charles
and Donnie, Rev.
Javelin - Jim Fanning,
Rodney Manley, Tim Bush. Samuel Jackson, Clyde
Lynch, Rev. Henry Key, all of
Running broad jump Colwnbus.
Steve Wolfe, Arthur Wiley •
GRUNTS AND GROANS wer.;'llie order of the day as the boys struggled through the
Also, Rev. Elbert McGhee,
Mike Pethel ( tie) , Keith
modified push-ups, one of the ten events in the Cub Olympics. Standing at left is new M-G-M
Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs .
Clarb.
District Scout Executive Ron Horn.
Modified Push-ups - Steve Jesse Roberts, Rendville;
Wolfe, David Carpenter, John Mrs. Dorothy Thomas,
Bidwell; Frances and John
Hien.
Warner,
Athens; Mr. and
Modified situps - Steve
Wolfe, Chris Humphries • Mrs. James Bowles and
COMMISSION IS
Brian George (tie), Daren daughter Davonna, of West
Hy Mrs. ~·rancls Morris
Corn wells had just returned
CREATED BY RHODES
Virginia and Mr. and Mrs.
Keep America Beautiful from a vacation to California.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A Matthews.
Charles
Lewis and Rev.
Standing broad jump was the topic . of tpe
Mrs. Bill McKenzie, Phil, Governor's Mobile Home and
Buffington
of ·
devotional program by Mrs. Jeff and Jozie of Gallipolis Recreational Vehicle Ad· Steve Wolfe, Georgie Yaspen, Edward
Pomeroy
.
Steve
Runyon.
Mildred Hart at First Baptist visited Mr . and Mrs. Roy visory Commission was
High jwnp - Steve Wolfe,
Church Monday evening, Riffle, Friday, July 11.
created Tuesday to advise
International League
Keith
Clark,
Andy
July J4 for the meeting of the
Mrs. Rub&amp;' Williams of Gov. James A. Rhodes on the
Standings
United Press International
Esther Circle. After a Marietta was a dinner guest mobile
home
and DiClemente.
w. 1. pet. g . b.
Relay race - Pack 232,
bUBiness session, the Love Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Roy recreational vehicle industry
Syracuse
53 3.4 .609
10 Cnt., 30 Gal. Size .••••••••.•••••••••••••••••..••••••••••••••
Rochester
53 38 .582 2
Gift program was presented Riffle .
in the Buckeye State. Rhodes Pack 235, Pack 256.
T idewater
52 38 .578 2 1h
by Mrs. Frances Wilcoxen,
Hazel
Carnahan
and said the new commission
Charleston
46 45 .505 9
using the subject, Enr· Frances Foster visited Mrs . would also advise him on
Memph is
43 48 .473 12
Richmond
37 46 .446 14
courage Each Other. Mrs. Lottie Wilcoxen at Mark's methods to promote fair and
40 51 .440 15
In 1945, the first test of tbe Toledo
Dorothy Badgley gave a book Rest Center, McConnelsville equitable regulations for the
Pawtucket
33 57 .367 21112
atomic bomb was conducted
(10 Cents Off)
49
Tuesday's Results
review; Tramp for the Lord to observe her 93rd birthday industry.
No games scheduled.
in New Mexico.
_
.
Saturday.
......
Mrs. Paula Laird and sons,
- Corrie Ten Boom, a
GENERAL
I
sequel to ' "The Hiding' Don and Paul, of San Diego, - REVENUE
SHARING
Place." The meeting closed . Calif. are here for a visit with
with the Lord's Prayer in her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
unison. Sandwiches, cookies Linley Hart.
and punch were served by
Mrs. Joe Foster and two
Mrs. LiliJan Hayman and children of Livonia, Mich.
Miss Carol Foster.
were here over the weekend
·A family gathering at the visiting her parents, Mr. and
MEATS
home of Frances Roberts Mrs. Ralph Webb and Mrs .
durong l h• pe•;od
19741NuJun•30. 19 75
~
,I ACCOUNT1.NO
36 2 053 001
"
enjoyed ·a picnic on the Edward Foster, returning on
lawn
July
4
f~l- Tuesday accompanied by her
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE 689
lowing the parade. ' Those daughter, Carol, · who had
VILLAGE CLERK
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO 45760
a-ttending were Mr. and spent · a month with her
Mrs. Philip Roberts of grandparents.
Patriot, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
Jeff Webb of Columbus
Clarklhle,Mr.an,d .Mrs. John spent Sunday and Mo.nday
~U.//,1Ju ..11J.W.,IUJ,,j,/I..,,,,, .... ,,.. JU,,j/
,,
lhle, Mr. and Mrs. Mike lhle, with his grandparents, Mr.·
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Ihle and and Mrs. Ralph Webb.
DAIRY
I C EOI,J CJr,I ION
s 7,370.00
famUy, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
BUDAPEST (UP!)
II
2 R1.,.nu1Shung funclt
9,565.00
R.c,.-1(1 from July I . 197• IIIIU Ju,. JO. 1975 $..:::_=:::;:_~==
lhJe and family, Miss Pat France beat the Soviet Union,
J l n i .. U I RKIIYed
"
Dlle,
of Racine and Mr. 9-4, Tuesday to gain the gold
Of Crtdil.,;l !Ju\y 1. 1974 thrv Ju1'4 :JO. 11751 S=~~~==~~
4, Fund• A1l11.... frgm Q~ ~l ioM
IMike Struble· of Pomeroy.
medal in the men's team foil
s
"
5
Sum ultinet U . 3. 4
S
16,935 00
Rex Roy has returned competition at the World
, 8 fllnd1 "-tu•n•d roO AS
MORTON
• ,.,........,...-'"7-'bome
from
Veterans Fencing Qlampionshlps.
._16,9JS'.d0
'
1&amp; TOT .. lS
Memorial Hospital alter iln
Christian Noel, who won
extended stay due to a
the Individual men's title, and
.Calif. Lang While
molorj:ycle accident.
compatriot
Frederic
Mr. and Mrs. Roberl··Corn- Pietruska each had three
ro-oz.
Ea
. well of GaJHpolis spent victories. Bernard Talvard
}b.·············~······~ ···
. f'rldlly ·wtth her parents, Mr. won twice and Daniel
and Mrs. Ed Miller. The Revenue once.

.

'

TICKETS ON SALE
HERE
NOW

•

lfR
' ;·.·.' ·-J
..
.... ·...• .......

~ ··~

OPEN

I

.,

.,

-•
,•

9 til 7

Mon.-Sat.:

Prices effective
Thursday thru Saturday

Reserve Right To Limit

II

"1

7-t&lt;
t

I
.

.

'

.:-..

...

'-

·' :·
'

'

.'

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'

_.,

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'

'

'

�I

... \

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1fl- The Dailv Sentinel. Middlepor~·llomeroy,. o.

''

WednesdBy. Julv 16. 1975

'I

,.
16. 1975

I
,.

•

I '

Social
Calendar

'

·Helen· Help

Polly's ·Pain

·us...

. BY p&lt;Jt.LY CRAMER

Removing deposit!.
from tea kettk _

5.75%

Bamngardner
services held ,

Meigs Co. Branch

+++
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.

Women in prisons is
topic of church women
NEW HAVEN
A party will be held ·on July 29
program about women in in the Missionary Building .
prisons and given when the Roberta Maynard will be the
·New Haven Women of the demonstrator. Finance
Church of God held their Director
Sarah
Gibbs
regular July meeting in the reported on a houseware
Missionary Building with party held by the members.
Connie Aeiker and Fay . The annual Prayer Retreat
Carpenter
serving
as will be held August 14 with a
hostesses.
" potluck" dinner at the
The local historian, Bonnie Racine Dam and Locks
Fields, displayed a new Recreation area at 6 p.m. All
camera purchased for the members are urged to attend.
society and gave a report on
The program presented by
the flower fund.
Orpha Fields had the title, "II
mbers were reminded to Was in Prison ." The obtheir items for the jectives of the Stewardship
bit sale to be held at the Program was to discover
state camp meeting in some things about women in
August . Several members American prisons; to try to
plan to attend Missions Day experience emotionally some
to be held on Thursday, of the feelings of women in
August 7, at Cross Lanes. prison; to learn what we have
Tom A. Smith, secretary of to offer these women; and to
the Department of Home involve ourselves in creating
Missions Evangelism Board environments for change.
Church Extension , Anderon , The program openet{, with
Ind., will be the guest devotions given by SUe Erspeaker.
The
annual win. Others assisting in the
Achievement Certificates program were Sarah Gibbs,
and History Book Awards will Connie Aeiker, and Iva
be presented. The Unified Capehart.
State Project Offering will be
Circle prayer closed the
received in the 2:30 p.m . meeting led by Bonnie Fields.
service. The theme is, "New Attending were Iva Capehart,
Horizons Because We Care ." Pansy
Fry,
Roberta
Orpha Fields and Bonnie Maynard, Sarah Gibbs, Sue
Fields gave a report on the Erwin, Bonnie Fields, Susie
1975 International Convention Wolfe, Orpha Fields, Connie
that they attended in An- Aeiker, Eleanor Davis and
derson, Ind. A dmonstration Fay Carpenter.

Racine Social Events

HEFTY TRASH BAGS

ACTUAL USE REPORT

1~~~~~====~~~~~

99~

e

99

JUMBO VIVA TOWELS ..........~~.~~~:2/'1

°

0

COFFEE ·MATE ...............................~~.~~:..'1 39

lromJul~

.

~~.JOR

~

FORMERLY, OF GENE.RN.
EISE.NKOWEI?S $TAFF!
NOT Tt\AT YOURE KERE
10 TALK AllOU.T TKE.

.

HOME MADE HAM SAI.AO ...... ~ ·······.··················Ib. 99'

NDRIIIAN[)Y, tNVA510N,
OF COURSE!

POLISH SMOKED SAUSAGE ............................ '1.09 lb.
.SUPERIOR WNQi MEAT.....................J lb. pkg. $1.10

d ~~R· ·:

f

GENERAL
REVENUE
SHARING.

LEB~~Q.~ TOWNSHIP .

r..t rtc••~t&lt;l

=-fL----r-----j

G'""'"' A-nu1 S~ l ""il

OIVm1n11 lolal 1ng

AC~OUNT NO

WAID CROSS SONS
Pearl St.
STORE Racine, Ohio
949-5772
Fresh-Lean

GROUND BEEF
lb.

39
CUBE STEAK•••••••••• !-1!·.$}
CARNIVAL BRAND 2 lb. pkg. $}79
WEINER$ .••• ••••••••••• •••••
NEW RED ·
, 10 lb. bag $}69
POTATOES •••••••••••••••••

~~:.~~~~..................6g~

39¢
O~EOMARGARINE.••••••••••• ~·.
TEEN QUEEN
4/$1
QQ.
PORK N' BEANS •••••••••
TEEN QUEEN
4
9¢
TOMATO JUICE •••••••••• ··.-•• •

TEEN QUEEN ·

46 oz. can

$2404.00

du rongt he...,.oodlrornJ.J tv 1 197 41hfuJun•l0_ 1915

./

~

VISITED CLIFTON
CLIFTON .,. Mr . and Mrs .
Don Quisenberry and Kim
and
Linda
of
South
Charleston, Ohio spent the
weekend with Mrs. Theima
Henry, Clifton. Others
visiting Mrs. Henry on
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmy Coleman and Brenda,
Aaron and Chris Ward , all of
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Terry Henry and sons of
Mason. Theresa Becker of
Middleport and Mrs . Hazel
Hoschar of Mason .

!&amp;oz.

ACTUAL USE REPORT

]6 ] 05] 004

LEBANON TOWNSHIP 697
TWP. CLERK
MEIGS CO.
PORTLAND, OHIO 45770

4-32.oz. Bottles

1176 .00

COCA COLA .... !~·.~.~~ 99~

...C==--1--

S•

1

'B;:;:;.•;r,a'!\,,. ..., Junelo. 1anl : iii=~
' -=

.::: 3580.00

:.23~581£0~.00~===

~~~,~~~~~~ ...... ,98'
.19

¥ie

SERVING AT CAMP
NEW HAVEN, W. Va .
Mrs . David Fields, Jr . is
serving as counselor from the
New Haven First Church of
God for the State Youth Camp
this week at Camp Caesar .
Youths attending are Tim
Davis and Lisa Davis, Jennifer Weaver and Jeff
Weaver. Guest speaker for
the week is the Rev. Elsworth
Jackson of Columbus, Ohio.
The Lordsmen from Anderson College are in charge
or singing .

2 . ~ueShlror&gt;g Funch
2404.00
Flee. .... from July \ 19741111uJu ... 30. 1915 s; _:c.:.:=~~-

all

WHITE POTATOES

A s pecial tribute to Will Follow ."
Frances Reibel , a Sunday
The group then discussed
School teacher for 50 years , " The World Is Fast Ripening
was held Friday evening For the Coming World DiePlans to present 25 year
during the business meeting tator," a missionary message
pins at the August meeting
of the Happy Harvesters Club from John E. Douglas, Sr . It
were made at the regular
of the Trinity Church .
tells about Satan, the antimeeting of Middleport
The meeting followed a Christ ,
and
lukewarm
Evangeline Chapter, No. 172,
poUuck dinner in the church Protestants and Catholics,
O.E.S., July 3 with Worthy
basement. Tables were and how Christ will reappear
Matron , Farie Kennedy , and
decorated to carry out the from heaven. The program
Worthy, Patron,
Harry
topic " The Feet of Jesus ." closed with the poem "Time
Chesher, presiding .
Mrs . Carrie
Neutzling Is Running Out" and a picPortems for the evening
designed sandals of all sizes lure of sand running through
were Chaplain, Evelyn
as Jesus probably wore an hour glass .
Lewis; Marshal, Bob King ;
During the business
throughout His life on earth .
Conductress, Marie Hawkins,
The largest pair rested at the meeting, Frances Reibel was
and Ruth, Lillian Moore.
foot of a cross at the corner of . honored and cards were read
Sunshine Page for the
the L-shaped tables . On one from the Dale Smith family
evening was Bill King .
side
was a pair of sandals and the J ohn Terrell family .
· Communications read were
climbing the Mount of Olives, It was noted that· Freda
as follows : Invitation to
and on the other was a replica Heinz, the mother of Mina
reception at Lakewood
of the Sea of Galilee lined by Swisher and grandmother of
Chapter No. 509 for L. June
evergreen trees.
Barbara Riggs has died , that
Brice, Grand Esther of Grand
The program table in the Roy Smith has returned to
Chapter of Ohio; reception at
social room carried out the University Hos pital , and
Unionport Chapter No. 360,
Steubenville, for Doris P . theme "Chris t, the Light of Ruby Erb has entered a
Smith, Grand Conductress of the World," with a globe at nursing home in Pomeroy.
Ada Holter who recently
the Grand Chapter of Ohio ; the center of the table and a
at
the
returned
from Spain gave
candle
beside
it.
Seated
reception at Eugenie Chapter
table
were
Genev'ieve
excerpts
from different
No. 507, Colutnbus, for Ray E.
Meinhart, Erma Smith, Neva dances she learned there . She
Belfrage, Worthy Grand
Seyfried
and Rose Ginther will show slides of her trip at
Patron , and Dottie Belfrage,
Grand Representative of who assisted Mrs . Neutzling a future meeting.
The group sang "Happy ·
California in Ohio, of the in the presentation.
The program opened with Birthday" to Uncle Sam in
Grand Chapter of Ohio;
meditation,
a
prayer , observance of July 4th, and to
Grand Vis ita lion of the
Worthy Grand Matron , "Walking with Jesus," and a Ruth Massar by telephone
Elizabeth Whitehouse and reading from the scriptures because she was unable to
reception for Bruce Han- Isaiah 52 : 7-10 followed bu.-attend.
sford, Grand Sentinel, of the short meditation on Mary's . Future wedding recepGrand Chapter of Ohio, at thoughts about where the fee t lions were discussed and a
Olive Chapter No. 53, Kent,_ of Jesus would lead Him . The rummage sale for October
and an announcement of the entire group then sang "0 was planned . It was decided
Roberta Circle meeting to be Master, Let Me Walk with not to hold an · August
held at McConnelsville Aug . Thee." Mrs. Meinhart lighted meeting. Hostesses for the
21 at noon with a potluck the candle by the globe and September meeting will be
Neutzling ,
Sybil
gave her meditation which Mrs .
lunch.
ended with Mrs. Neutzling Ebersbach, Clara Karr and
Worthy Matron Farie reading "! Wish I Had Been Gladys Cuckler.
reminded everyone of the His Apprentice," from " In
A special tribute was
Masons-Eastern Star picnic the Carpenter Shop." She given to all lo·ted ones with
to be held on Sunday, July 27, then read from Romans 10 : the song ''Will There Be Any
at Forest Acres Park . Ham 10-15 dealing with Isaiah the Stars in My Crown ? and
will be provided. Everyone is · prophet after which the Frances Reibel gave the
to bring a-covered dish and readers and Mrs . Neutzling closing prayer . The group
sang "Where He Leads Me 1 formed a friendship circle
table service .
and sang "Blessed Be the Tie
She also announced that 25
year pins will be presented at
that Binds."
PARTICIPANT
the August meeting and a
Attending were Frances
LANGSVILLE - Marine Reibel and guest, Mrs. Thor
silen't auction will be held
with the proceeds going to the Corporal Daniel R . Midriff, Blackwo od,
Genevieve
Educational Loan Fund and son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Meinhart and houseg11est
the Fire Safety Code Fund . Midriff, Rt. I, partiCipated in Carrie Hamm Smith, HunAlso the Sunshine Collection "Solid Shield , " a joint- tington; Ada Holter, Sybil
service exercise near the Ebersbach, Gladys Cuckler.
will go to Estarl. ·
"
Refreshments were served Marine Corps Base, Camp Rose Ginther, Neva Seyfried;
in the dining area by Mr. and LeJeune, N. C. Midriff, a 1972 Stella Kloes , Lillie Houck;
Mrs. Ferman Moore and Rev . graduate of Meigs High Eva Dessauer. Edith LanSchool, joined the Marines in ning, Ella Smilh and
and Mrs. Robert Kuhm.
January 1973.
Neutzling.
·
..· , •.

1, 811..-.tl U &lt;l!June30. 11H

OE~ElC~MEN T

590

Harvesters pay
tribute to teacher

( 0 ) TRUST FUNC fi.EPOI'IT t•eler ID in11ructoon Dl

$0\: 1 .0.~

T.V. DINNERS

Presentation
of 25 year
pins planned

with Major Hoople

·OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Robin Wills and William were Mr. and Mrs . Homer
Morris were united in Baxter , Anna and Lisa, Billy
marriage Jul y 9 at six p.m . at tand Duane Morris, sons of the
the home of Mr . and Mrs . groom, and Mrs . Betty Wilts ,
Homer Ballter .
mother of the bride.
Robin is a 1971 graduate of
The double ring ceremony
was performed by Rev . Meigs High School. The new
~· reetand Norris . Refresh - Mr . and Mrs. Morris are
ments were served following presently residing at Blake's
the ceremony .
trailer court in Racine.
Attending th e wedding

CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY -Norman Grueser, Minersville; celebrated his 77th birthday Sunday with a dinner party at his home. Attendln~ were his daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Haines, Colwnbus; his son and daughter-in.Jaw, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Grueser, Pensacola, F1a .; Gail Warford, Laurinda Lee, Na·thalei, and Tabbatha Kay
Warford, Pensacola; and Sue Laurinda Fowler.and Darrell Alan, California.

Sl59 .

1

geldings any age; western
pony, 48" t.o 56" inclusive,
mares and geldln~, any age;
showmanship under 14 years ;
showmanship, 14 thru 18
years; western weanUng and
yearling
foals;
and
registered English halter .
Performance classes slated
to begin at 12:30 p.m . are _
lead-in pony (to be judged l;
ladles' barrel race; walk-trot
class, pony under 48", rider 8
years and under ; ba.!:~back
horsemanship, open, eng!lsn
five-gaited horse; open
pleasure horse ; dash for
cash ; western pleasure pony
under 48", rider 12 years and
under ;
non -regis tered
western pleasure horse :
junior pleasure, open, rider
18 years and under. no
stallions ; bareback pleasure;
englis'h 3-gai ted horse (full
mane and tail); western
horsemanship, rider under 14
years; horse or ponies also,
flag race , juvenile flag race,
rider 16 years and under;
english pleasure horse, hunt
seat; roadster pony, western
pleasure pony, 48" to 56"
inclusive, rider 16 years and ·
under; english equitation,
rider 18 years and under;
walk-trot horse , rider 8 years
and under ; juvenile barrel
race, rider 16 years and
under i
western
horsemanship, 14-18 years;
registered
quarterhorse
pleasure ; egg and spoon;
open registered pleasure
horse , 4 years and under;
english pleasure horse.
registered appaloosa
pleasure horse, western
horsemanship, over 18 years;
barrel race; and open trail
class .

pers Plain s Community
Club .
The halter classes beginning at 9:30 a .m . are :
Registered Quarterhorse
junior mares; geldlngs; and
stallions: registered quar'
terhorse senior
mares;
geldings ; and stallions :
reg'istereed
appaloosa
mares;
geld ings
and
stallions; non -registered
stock horse, mares and
geldings, any age; western
pony, under 48" mares and

Morris- Wills wed

+++

held for
area packs

COLQ POWE_R
oz
LAUNDRY DETERGENT....................... :..

TUPPERS PLAINS- The
Bar-30
Horsemen
will
sponsor an approved Ohio
Valley
Horse
Show
Association horse show on
Sunday, July 20, at the Bar.JO
show grounds near here with
Mrs . Becky Scott Long, of
Marietta as judge. ·
Seven~n halter classes
and 20 performance classes
will be offered with ribbons
and prize money being
awarded . Food will be served
on the grounds by the Tup-

By Helen Bottel

DEAR HELEN :
This is directed to all working women who need help
aro1Dld the house. In our family of nine, the laundry was my
most overwhelming problem. I finally announced I would wash
only what was in the laundry room, and all clothes given me
lnside-&lt;:~ut would remain so .
·
You can imagine the condition of a favorite slacks suit
after it went through the wash, a leg and a sleeve not " turned ."
And socks which went Into the hamper in balls, stayed ditry
through the wash . And filthy tennis shoes simply remained so
because they weren't put out on wash day.
The kida learned real fast. It was "Mr." we had trouble
with,ashe was used to "maid service." When biB dirty clothes
piled three layers deep in the bedroom and I couldn't tolerate
the smell of them and slept in the front room , only then did he
catch on.
I do admit It was difficult for me to walk over and around
the enormous amount of laundry the family accwnulated, but
they DID Jearn I meant business. Shame ·on me for spoiling
them all in the first place!-WVE, LUCK AND LAUGHTER
DEAR HELEN:
You probably won 't print this, but I felt your answer to the
newlywed working-wife was terrible. She wanted to " retrain "
ber husband to pick up, turn his dirty clothes right side out
before she washed them, etc.
You advocated "reminders," or just letting biB. undershirts 1Jtay wrong side out, and the next time he shed them
they'd come out right.
.I
Instead of driving MY husband out the door with nagging
(even nice reminders are •'nagging"), I think of his protective,
secure and loving chest as I turn biB undershirts, etc. As I pick
up biB towels, I think of the body they dried, and as I pick up
after hlm I think how lucky I am.
Ladies, love him and hold his little faults dearly, change
YOUR way of thinking, not biB. Good husbands are . hard to
come by. Compliment him on biB goodness and he 'II get better.
Complain of biB faults and he'll only get worse. Follow tbe
same rule with your children. It works !-WISDOM THROUGH
EXPERIENCE
DEAR WTE:
Compllmeots are great, butl'd hate to think my man's ego
was so fragile that he couldo 't take a few reminders too -and
heed tbem.-H.

Olympics

~~~f}AGJ.~~.~..~~~~~....................3.~-~~::.

'

HELEN:
What do you think of a husband who never kisses biB wife
or shows ber any affection, but pours out all biB love on his
dog?
last nlgbt I came in with a big bag full of groceries. The
dog jumped up on me, and I scolded her. My husband grabbed
me by the throat and started choking me. I jUst sinUed. He said
"That's not funny," and hit me. in the face. He's always beating
on me, but the dog can get away with any-thing, I hate to tell
you what.
rm a good housekeeper. I work hard. But all I get is
lruises. What should I do?--G.L.
DEAR G.
.. Need you ask? Concede that your marriage has gone to tbe
dog and leave. Unless, that Is, you're a total masocblat .-H.

Birthday
celebrated

. . II

Bar-30·group plan$ ·horse show

UJ!;J~

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Angels Pee
t wonder - for me, but ne1ther the soap
Wee team, family picnic·
if you could tell me how to flakes nor the detergent alone
swimming party, Middleport
clean the inside of an will do it. ( Polly 's note : Test
Pool, 6 p.m . Bring a covered
aluminum whistling tea first and be sure )'Qur fabric
dish and silverware.
kettle
that fills only through can take the hot water, etc.)
THURSDAY
the
spout.
The inside looks _ MRS. R.D.S.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
terrible as there are deposits
DEAR POLLY - Most
Health Club, annual picnic , II
of
some
kind
in
it.
aprons
have strings to tie a
a.m. home or Frances
JARED SPENCER
bow in the back but this Is
MILDRED.
Goeglein. Ham furnished .
DEAR
MILDRED
You
ciften
difficult for an elderly
Bring table service. covered
do have a problem mainly person to do. I tie a knot in
dish, and drink.
because of t.b e small opening. each apron string where they
RACINE American Legion
All
I can suggestw.ould be to fit at the waist and simply
Post No. 602, 8 p.m. at the
fill the kettle with water, add draw these knots over one
hall . Corn feed.
WNG
BOTTOM
Jared
three tablespoons water another . They stay In place
TWIN CITY Shrine Club at
PART OF THE CROWD watches the competition at
Spencer
celebrated
hi
s
conditioner and let II come to and a Hrt of the strings gives a
Gallipolis State Institute track . Over 80 area Cub Scouts
Shrine Park in Racine , at 7:30
second
birthday
thP' .!nne 28 ~and Annual Cub Olympics held at the
on
June
20
took part.
a
boil. Then turn down the quick release. - MATT.
p.m. All nobles invited.
with
a
supper
given
by
his
heat and let it simmer 15
DEAR POLLY - During
REVIVAL now in progress
parents
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
Tom
minutes
or
so.
Hopefully
the
the
hot summer months I find
through Thursday at 7:30
Spencer.
Long
Bottom
.
loosened scale will be In a bucket of water and an old
p.m. at the Midway ComA circus theme was carried small enough pieces to pour paint brush will keep my
munity Church, Langsvilleentertained
Dexter Road. Rev. 0 . H. Cart out with a Merry Go Round on out through the spout. Keep three-year-old
top
of
his
birthday
cake.
He
rinsing until water comes.Dut for hours . She "paints" all
is evangelist. Pastor Theron
received
many
nice
gifts.
clean. - POLLY.
washables like the carport,
Durham invites the public.
Those
attending
were
Mr
.
LAUREL CLIFF Health
sidewalk, tricycle , etc. This
DEAR
POLLY
My
Pet
Spencer
and
and
Mrs
.
Waid
also stimulates her drawing
Club, family picnic, 7 p.m.,
Racine Locks and Dam. West Ray, Mrs. Henry Spencer and Peeve is with those beauty and creative nature. Thanks
Vance, Mrs. Esther Wright, operators who take on go to my very smart husband
Virginia side. Potluck .
Mr. and Mrs . J ohnnie Kibble, another customer just at the wh o invented such "painFRIDAY
Mrs
. Harlis Frank, George time I am ready to come out tin~" - MR$ R I..H.
New Haven 's Pack 235 won
HAYRIDE. wiener roast,
Pickens and Cheryl Griffin. from under the dryer. This
the initial 'M-G-M Cup at the games and square dance,
makes me wait 30 to 45
Second Annual Cub Olymm· sponsored
by
Rutland
minutes
while they do a head
Our Interest Is
pies held June 28 at Gallipolis Baseball League. 6 p.m . from
Market Report
even though I came in first.
State Institute 's new outdoor Rutland Post Office to Forest
Gre;oter
For You
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
When
your
dish
drainer
is
track.
Acres Park. Tickets on sale
July 122, 1975
over-stacked what can you
Eleven packs from the at Rutland Dept. Store,
SALES REPORT OF
do?
Pull out a cookie sheet
Mason-Gallia-Meigs District Village Pharmacy and New
Obio Valley Livestock Co.
and set it on a table or over a
of the Tri.State Area Council York Clothin2 House.
STOCKER CATTLE pulled drawer under the sink
of Cub Scouts participated in
STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 17 and you have a place for the
SATURDAY
the day long event. A total of
MEIGS COUNTY Retired to 30; 300 to 400 lbs . 17 to
overload. -MARY.
On 90-Day
82 boys took part in the Teachers Association picnic 27.50; 400 to 500 lbs. 20 to 31;
DEAR
POLLY
Mrs.
E.
Olympiad·patterned games at New Haven Park at dam 500 to 600 lbs. 19 to 29; 600 to
B. wrote that she and her
Certificates
under the direction of District site at 5:30p.m.
700 lbs. 15 to 30; 700 Ibs . and
daughter
had spots they could
Activities Chairman Frank
Over 17 to 35.
not remove from polyester
DiClemente.
HEIFER CALVES - 250 tc garmenls so I want to tell
Placing second in the
300 lbs.16 to 23; 300 to 400 lbs.
per cent paid on
them how I do this. I had
overall competition was Pack
15 to 21; 400 to 500 Ibs. 15 to 20;
day
Certificates of
grease spots on a polyester
STREAKING- Finalists for the 5().yard dash stretch the frantic final steps hoping for
253 of Mason and third place
500 to 600 lbs. 18 to 25; 600 to
De sit.
$1,000.00
and cotton poplin dress so I
victory. These are just a few ofthe Cub Scouts who participated in this year's Cub Olympics.
went to Pack 256 of Point
700 lbs. 18 to 24; 700 lbs. and
Interest
made a paste with soap flakes
Pleasant. Individual trophies
Over 16 to 28.
Quarterly.
Payable
just wet enough to soak in to
were awarded to Jeff
STOCK COWS &amp; BULlS
the material and applied this
Frishette as the outstanding
Attending the funeral (By The Head) -Stock Cows
to the spots. This covered
8-year old; Steve Wolfe, services on July 5 for Ervin 100 to 165; Stock Cows and
large areas of the .front of the
outstanding 9-year old; and Baumgardner who died at his Calves 125 to 240; Stock Bulls
dress.
Fold the dress with the
Keith Clark, outstanding 10- Pomeroy residence on July 3, 95 to 200; Baby Calves 7 to 35;
treated side in, fold and roil
year old.
were Mr . and Mrs. George 1By The Pound) - Canners
up.
Leave for at least an hour
Individual winners were Bawngardner, Ramona and · and Cutters Cows 12.50 to 18;
or overnight. Then unfold tHe
(1st, 2nd, 3rd, in order Eric, Mrs. Lucille . Cousins, Holstein Cows 16.50 to 21.60;
dress
and pour on a generous
listed) :
Kenneth Cousins, and Danea Commercial Bulls ( 1,000 lbs.
The Athens ""ountv
amount of liquid detergent.
100 yard dash - 8 year aids and Randy Bowles, children and Over) 18 to 27.50.
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
Fold together and Jet set a
296 Second St .
- Jeff Frishette , David of Randall Bowles, all of
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
Pomeroy
, Ohio
whileat
least
half
an
hour.
Fountain, Kim Pauley; 9 yr. Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. lbs. to 250 35 to 38; Medium
Wash the dress in hot (to the
aids - Mike Pethel, Steve Robert Nelson, former Alma 200lbs. to 300 22 to 28; Culls 20
touch) water in the washer. If
children, Down.
Wolfe, Jeff Wnyes; 10 yr. olds Baumgardner ,
all spots don't come out,
- Rodney Manley, Keith Shawna, Shayne, Robbin and SHOATS - 20 to 32.50.
repeat. Th'· -·•llv worked
Rome, Mr. and Mrs. Manning
Clark, Steve Runyon.
50 yd. dash - 8rs. - John Baumgardner, LuTonda,
Edwards, Jeff Frlshette , Manning Jr., and Gary, Miss
David Fountain ;9 yr. - Steve Julia Reese, Mrs. Donald
Wolfe, Jason Cooper, Arthur Cross (Jeanine Bowles), Mr.
W. Tey; !Oyr. - Keith Clarb, and Mrs . William Johnston
Rodney Manley , Georgia ( Barbara Bowles), son,
Ernest, Mrs. Mary Boyer,
Yaspen.
Softball throw Steve Mrs. Ora Scott and grandRunyon, Chris Burchett, daughter, Terria Kay Glenn,
Mrs. Alfred Baumgardner,
Rhett Milhone.
Charles
and Donnie, Rev.
Javelin - Jim Fanning,
Rodney Manley, Tim Bush. Samuel Jackson, Clyde
Lynch, Rev. Henry Key, all of
Running broad jump Colwnbus.
Steve Wolfe, Arthur Wiley •
GRUNTS AND GROANS wer.;'llie order of the day as the boys struggled through the
Also, Rev. Elbert McGhee,
Mike Pethel ( tie) , Keith
modified push-ups, one of the ten events in the Cub Olympics. Standing at left is new M-G-M
Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs .
Clarb.
District Scout Executive Ron Horn.
Modified Push-ups - Steve Jesse Roberts, Rendville;
Wolfe, David Carpenter, John Mrs. Dorothy Thomas,
Bidwell; Frances and John
Hien.
Warner,
Athens; Mr. and
Modified situps - Steve
Wolfe, Chris Humphries • Mrs. James Bowles and
COMMISSION IS
Brian George (tie), Daren daughter Davonna, of West
Hy Mrs. ~·rancls Morris
Corn wells had just returned
CREATED BY RHODES
Virginia and Mr. and Mrs.
Keep America Beautiful from a vacation to California.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A Matthews.
Charles
Lewis and Rev.
Standing broad jump was the topic . of tpe
Mrs. Bill McKenzie, Phil, Governor's Mobile Home and
Buffington
of ·
devotional program by Mrs. Jeff and Jozie of Gallipolis Recreational Vehicle Ad· Steve Wolfe, Georgie Yaspen, Edward
Pomeroy
.
Steve
Runyon.
Mildred Hart at First Baptist visited Mr . and Mrs. Roy visory Commission was
High jwnp - Steve Wolfe,
Church Monday evening, Riffle, Friday, July 11.
created Tuesday to advise
International League
Keith
Clark,
Andy
July J4 for the meeting of the
Mrs. Rub&amp;' Williams of Gov. James A. Rhodes on the
Standings
United Press International
Esther Circle. After a Marietta was a dinner guest mobile
home
and DiClemente.
w. 1. pet. g . b.
Relay race - Pack 232,
bUBiness session, the Love Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Roy recreational vehicle industry
Syracuse
53 3.4 .609
10 Cnt., 30 Gal. Size .••••••••.•••••••••••••••••..••••••••••••••
Rochester
53 38 .582 2
Gift program was presented Riffle .
in the Buckeye State. Rhodes Pack 235, Pack 256.
T idewater
52 38 .578 2 1h
by Mrs. Frances Wilcoxen,
Hazel
Carnahan
and said the new commission
Charleston
46 45 .505 9
using the subject, Enr· Frances Foster visited Mrs . would also advise him on
Memph is
43 48 .473 12
Richmond
37 46 .446 14
courage Each Other. Mrs. Lottie Wilcoxen at Mark's methods to promote fair and
40 51 .440 15
In 1945, the first test of tbe Toledo
Dorothy Badgley gave a book Rest Center, McConnelsville equitable regulations for the
Pawtucket
33 57 .367 21112
atomic bomb was conducted
(10 Cents Off)
49
Tuesday's Results
review; Tramp for the Lord to observe her 93rd birthday industry.
No games scheduled.
in New Mexico.
_
.
Saturday.
......
Mrs. Paula Laird and sons,
- Corrie Ten Boom, a
GENERAL
I
sequel to ' "The Hiding' Don and Paul, of San Diego, - REVENUE
SHARING
Place." The meeting closed . Calif. are here for a visit with
with the Lord's Prayer in her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
unison. Sandwiches, cookies Linley Hart.
and punch were served by
Mrs. Joe Foster and two
Mrs. LiliJan Hayman and children of Livonia, Mich.
Miss Carol Foster.
were here over the weekend
·A family gathering at the visiting her parents, Mr. and
MEATS
home of Frances Roberts Mrs. Ralph Webb and Mrs .
durong l h• pe•;od
19741NuJun•30. 19 75
~
,I ACCOUNT1.NO
36 2 053 001
"
enjoyed ·a picnic on the Edward Foster, returning on
lawn
July
4
f~l- Tuesday accompanied by her
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE 689
lowing the parade. ' Those daughter, Carol, · who had
VILLAGE CLERK
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO 45760
a-ttending were Mr. and spent · a month with her
Mrs. Philip Roberts of grandparents.
Patriot, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
Jeff Webb of Columbus
Clarklhle,Mr.an,d .Mrs. John spent Sunday and Mo.nday
~U.//,1Ju ..11J.W.,IUJ,,j,/I..,,,,, .... ,,.. JU,,j/
,,
lhle, Mr. and Mrs. Mike lhle, with his grandparents, Mr.·
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Ihle and and Mrs. Ralph Webb.
DAIRY
I C EOI,J CJr,I ION
s 7,370.00
famUy, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
BUDAPEST (UP!)
II
2 R1.,.nu1Shung funclt
9,565.00
R.c,.-1(1 from July I . 197• IIIIU Ju,. JO. 1975 $..:::_=:::;:_~==
lhJe and family, Miss Pat France beat the Soviet Union,
J l n i .. U I RKIIYed
"
Dlle,
of Racine and Mr. 9-4, Tuesday to gain the gold
Of Crtdil.,;l !Ju\y 1. 1974 thrv Ju1'4 :JO. 11751 S=~~~==~~
4, Fund• A1l11.... frgm Q~ ~l ioM
IMike Struble· of Pomeroy.
medal in the men's team foil
s
"
5
Sum ultinet U . 3. 4
S
16,935 00
Rex Roy has returned competition at the World
, 8 fllnd1 "-tu•n•d roO AS
MORTON
• ,.,........,...-'"7-'bome
from
Veterans Fencing Qlampionshlps.
._16,9JS'.d0
'
1&amp; TOT .. lS
Memorial Hospital alter iln
Christian Noel, who won
extended stay due to a
the Individual men's title, and
.Calif. Lang While
molorj:ycle accident.
compatriot
Frederic
Mr. and Mrs. Roberl··Corn- Pietruska each had three
ro-oz.
Ea
. well of GaJHpolis spent victories. Bernard Talvard
}b.·············~······~ ···
. f'rldlly ·wtth her parents, Mr. won twice and Daniel
and Mrs. Ed Miller. The Revenue once.

.

'

TICKETS ON SALE
HERE
NOW

•

lfR
' ;·.·.' ·-J
..
.... ·...• .......

~ ··~

OPEN

I

.,

.,

-•
,•

9 til 7

Mon.-Sat.:

Prices effective
Thursday thru Saturday

Reserve Right To Limit

II

"1

7-t&lt;
t

I
.

.

'

.:-..

...

'-

·' :·
'

'

.'

.

'

_.,

.

'

'

'

�.,
I"

•

'

'·

l _._._._!_ '

!\

I

8 : 3~Movl e

" The -Sex Symbol" 13 ; Movie " Wake Me
When the Wa r Is Over" 6; P hi ladelph ia Folk
Fes tival 20; Another Look at Appa lachia 33.
9:00-Zoo Ga ng 2 3.4. 15: Cannon 8.10; Maste rp iece
Theatre 33 .
·

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1975

-

. . - --·
FREE ESTIMATES

I [)

I
I I

"/

IRATI AC

17K'INK- THE EN6LISI-&lt;MAN 60T WHEN HE
ATE A LOT

K 41'/iVf,j
~

.

l"u "" arra nre th ~ ri rcled lelten
form th f' 11urpriae a ns wer, u

V

I I.

J-o

~

sugge!! led by the above cartoon.

~=~Prin=lllle~=SUR~Pfi=ISI~ANS=W~IR

==[ "n XI I r

=her=
e

=[

(An.wt r • to m or r o,.)

Jum l•l•·~. DOUG H
\ ' r-t l f' r d•~ '•

I Aru •..· r

PIETY

SOC IAL

BRIDLE

} "II IIIUJI/1 Q/&lt;1 llwl '""' l11 fr r luur {,om

l 11flfl l rr ~ - ·S OLITUDE .

N OT I CE OF
APPOI N TMEN T
Ca se No 21560
Es t ate o t Raymo n d 0 Arno l d,
De CCi'lSed
N ot• ce •S h e r e by q rven lhat
Mary Ir e ne Arnold of Route J
Pomeroy Oh 10 has been du l y

appo.nted

E x.ec utr •x

Es tat e ot Rayrnond D

dc c esaed
County

la te

of

Card of Thanks
1 WOULD l1kc l o e)( pr es~ my
lh,lnk s lv Dr
Boonsue.
nur ~ e os

il nd ~ t all ot
the
ver c ran s M emor 1al Ho spital
nnd t o all ol my lr1ends who
se nt c ards . and flowe rs
dur ,ng my
rl lness
Mrs
Geor qe (T h e l m a ) Grue~er .
Sy r a cu se Oll 10 4') 77 9
l 16 1tc

th e

Arnold ,

ot

Me,gs

Oh10

C r e di!Or'.&gt;

are

re qu, r ed

to

f i le thetr c latms IN il h s.a•d
f •ducrary wdhlfl four monlhs
Dated th tS 17t h day o f Julv
1915

I

Mann •n g D We b ster
J udq e
( 71 16 . 73. 30. Jtc

P UBLI C N O TI Cf!
In t o llowing Sec l1on 571 S 11
of t h e Oh io R-ev i se d Cod e. 1t1e
Board o f R ev 1S1 on s has ap
p r oved t he ta)( retu r n for t h e
cu rr ent year and has rev1sed
Th e valua!. o ns Th e Boa r d has
c omp l eted 11s work and th e
books ar e open for publi c
1nspcc lron m th e AuditOr 's
Off1ce

WISI) to tha n k
rhe fr 1end s ne 1qhb or s and
rc lai iVCS lor t he ! l ow e r s ,
cards . l e tt er s and p r ay ers
and v 1s il s wh 1le be m g
h OSp,tal 1zed
at
Holzer
Med, c al Cen le F 1 wou l d al so
l 1ke to thc~ n lo..
Rev
B il l
Pcrr1n t or Il lS pray er s and
bC d S1d v v •s il s. a l so m e rn
be r s ot the T rm 1ty Churc h
for their k1ndness shown to
me and my W1 f e an d lo Dr .
Holz er and Dr Har d er and
'he nur ses t or the1r patience
and k1ndness
May God
bless you a l l
John H Terre l l
7 16 1 to

~ !N ( E~ELY

Howard E F-rank
Metgs Coun ty
A uddor
(7)

16 . 10tc

Notice
N O H U N T IN G . t r espassm g o r
f 1S hing Wi thou t
wrilte n
permtSSI On on David Dav ts
property ,
Hyse ll
Run
V1o l ator s w ill be p r o sec u te d
7 13 6tp

Laurel Oiff
News Notes
Sabbath School attendance
July 13 at the Free Me thodis t
Chur c h was 73. Wor s hip
services attendance wa s 80.
Offerin g ·for a ll services was

$106.18.
R e v . and Mr s. Shook
re turn ed Monday fr om the
Free
Methodi s t
Camp
m ee ting at Mansfi eld. Rev.
Shook has been r e turned to
the local church for another
year .
Mr s. E dn a Fa ulk, a nd
Ma ster Mark F r ie nd ha s been
reported ill.
Mr. Mark Stahl , a nd friend
Stockdale v is ited r ece ntl y
with Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Schaejer.
Mr . and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs,
received word from their son
Mr . Paul Jacobes , Southside,
Ky. that he wa s improvening
from a recent hea rt attack .
Mr. F r itz Sta hl , Ne w
Marshfield, Mr . a nd Mrs.
Paul Stahl, Colwnbus, Mrs.

J

Connie

Gr ounds,

NOW sel! 1n g Fu ll er
B r us h
Products . phone 997 34 t 0
1 24 tfc
SW..,EEPER
and
Sew1ng
Machines Repa1r, Pa r ts,
and
Su pp.l1es
Dav1d
vacuum Cl ea n er . 1 ~ mil e up
George's Cr ee k Roa d o fl
St ate Ro ute 7 Phone 446
d'.194
7 1S H e.
TEWKSBARY'S Barbe r Sh op
wi(l b e c l osed J ul y 21
t h rough Jul y 28
7 16 3t c
WOULD l1ke to co rr es pond
w ll h an y desce nd an t s o f
Isaac Da r s t . bo r n abo ut 1801
m Vi r gin1a Died Se pt. 2.
1B72 in Meigs Cou nt y. Oh10 .
His wi f e was Ma r y Sco tt
Ha d
J ac k so n ,
marr red
Be l 1n da
Lambe r son ,
Sama nt ha, ma r ried Dav rd
W n g ht , Isaac , J r and Ma r y
(My
g r eat g reat
g r an d mo t he r wh o marri ed
Be n 1ami n L an gl Will a n
swe r A LL l e tt er s . Writ e
Ka r e n
Z ac h ,
R R
7,
Craw f ordSv il le ,
Indiana
47933
7 II 6tp

Employment Wanted
REMODELING ,
Pl umbing ,
hea t 1ng and a ll t y p es of
ge neral
repa 1r
Wo r k
qua r ante ed
20 years ex
per1ence
Phone 997 /409
S 1 tfr

Mr s .

Margaret Allen, Harrisonville called on Mr. a nd Mrs.
N . E . Schaefe r r ece ntly.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

CARPEN T RY
WORK
Ceiling pa'lelmg , fl ooring.
e t c Ph on e 992 2759
6 24 27tc
BU L LDOZER work a n d wi l l
fill d 1rl Phon e ( 304 f 773 523B
or n3 5841
7 1'i 3tc

•

Pets For Sale
AKC R eg1s ter e d Old Eng l fsh
Shee pdog pups P hone ( 304 )
BB I 29 1S
7 15 4t C

Pat E . Mitchell , Mar cella
Sue Mitche ll to Roger E.
Carpen ter , La ura L. Carpe nter, Lois 5-6, Rutland .
Wanted
Arc hie E. Lee, June P. Lee t:AS H pa 1d t or a ll makes a n a
to J on P . Karschnik , Con- mod el s of mob 1l e h omes
Phon e area co d e 6 14 423
stan ce L. Ka r schnik, 1.04
953 1
Acr e, Ches ter .
4 13 tfc
Larry M. Smith , Janet A.
Smith l o R ob e rt Millon
Scar be rr y,
Ca thy
Sue Business Opportunities
Scarberry, 1.7 Ac re, ohe and HI C. a nationally ad vertised
noncarbo n a t ed v 1tam 1n C
one-third acre, Salis bury .
enr 1c h ed fru !l dr 1nk i s
available t o r ven d in g tn 12
Be ulah M . Crabt r ee · to
oz cans
l n d1v •d u a l s w ho
Donald W. Cra btree, Bra bara
a r e ser1o u sly consi d er i n g a
business of t h eir ow n shou l d
Jo Crabtree, .882 Ac r e,
i nvestigate
an
ex
Colwnbia .
trao rdin ary
op p ortu n i t y
c u r r ently availa b le in t his
Dana E. Turne r b y Atty. in
a r ea
Thi s is a sec ur e
Fac t, Pansy Jordan, Ally. in
b us i ness f or th ose w h o ca n
sp a r e a f ew ho urs each w ee k
F act to Ronald A. Hanson ,
(no se llin g ), · res t ock ing
5.07 Acres , Scipi9.
. ve n do r s placed on l oc al I on
by
our
specia l is t s
A
Duane B . Wolfe to Timothy
q u ali f i e d In di vi dual ma y
f\ . Gumpf, Cheryl Lee start part r .me and
expan d
with
com
Gwnpf, 3125 Acres, Olive .
pany
f i na n c i ng
to
a
Clifford L. Adams , Judith
fu ll
ti m e
business
CAS H REQU I RED . Plan I
Diane Adams to Clifford L.
S3.450. P l an 2 S6.240 ;
Adams , Judith Diane Adams,
Pl an 3 -- $ 10,2 25 Tra i n mg
p r ovided N o ex p erie n ce
Parcels, Olive.
requ i re d Ta-.: shelter w1th
,Marie E . Bishop, William
wr1 f e -o f f.
ln &gt;Jestme n t
C. Bishop, Te rri L . Bishop, to secu r ed by new eq u ipme n t
(fi v e · year war r a nt y) , and
Bob
Bishop, Margaret
i n ve nlo r'y .
E ar ni n gs
BishoP, 1.11 Acre, Rutland . gua r. an t eed w i th 1a w r itten
b ,u y ba c k ag reeme n t. For
\ Mertlse, 0 . Blakey, Harlen
imme di ate in for ma ti on o r
1nterv iew ca ll col l ec r 130 11
P . Blakey to Qoris J . Grover,
345 7300 or wn t e m c l ud i ng
lilt: In Minerals, Lebanon .
p h nu mber to SU N RI P E,
IN C , 62 15 Greenb e lt R oa d ,
Adrian A. Carson , R ose
College F?ark. Ma r yla nd
Ellen Ca rs on to Adams
70740 . (Not a su b sidiary of
Coca Co l a Co 1
Drilling Co ., Me ter $ ite
16 ltp
1\gree ., Rutland .

•

c.

."

'"
r

I·

Blow n tn fo W a lls &amp; A tftcs

,,

1974 CH EVE LL E

Yard Sale
u

rn d c o tt ~ 1 1? 4
on Happy Hollow Rd at th e
l C~wrcn cc Hy sel l r es1de n ce.
st art. nq Jul y 17th 1111 ?
7 16 ] lp

Y 1\k

~ a le

.

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOOR S
R EPLAC EM ENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING -SOFFITT
GUTT ER S-AWNINGS

S3095

Mal1bu H T Cpe. J50 V 8 e ngme. power st ee rtng. la c
tory a tr , l1nted g lass. r a d 1o , wheel COV'ers. good !ires,
blk 1nt er1or; . ~ il ve r g r ey fini sh Spec1al

1

1

1972 COM ET 2 DOOR

S\850

1971 MAT ADOR

'- - -- -

EX PERIE"fCED
I Radiato ' ' " .
I Service I F rom lhe largest
I

For Rent

[R J\ I LER spa ce all u lillli i..'S.
ch eap Phone 997 S~ 35
6 ~9 tf c
"F URN I SHED
apar t me n t ,
ad ult s on ly m M 1ddleport
Phone 992 3874
3 75 tfc

7 t O 6tp
CO L: Nl RY
Mobil e Hom e
P&lt;Jrk R t 33 t en mt1esnortt1
ol Pome r o y Large lot s w1 t h
(Qnc r l' IC patiOS . ~ 1dCWill k S
r u nn e r s and e lf s t reet
pMkii1Q Phone Q9 J /1/1,1
. 12 J t 1l c
1

/

Nll I ROOM f ur ni Shed and
unlurn1ShC'd
apa r tme nt ~
P hon e 997 ) J ].J
1 17 ttc

FOUR lamily ya r d sa l e, /\ Pl like n ew ] room s . W1lh
larqe bath . t ab l etop ran ge
Thu r sday an d . F r 1day . 9
larg e clo se t Ea s l Ma1n ~.t.
am till 5 p m Fi r st r oad to
Pomeroy See to ap p r ec 1a t c
le ft afte r paSSing W M PO
Pho n e Ga l lipO l i S dur 1ng day
Lo f s of clot h ing, lay s. a h1gh
·1·16 7699 , evenir19 s 4.16. 95 39
ch a 1r . an d a l so a 1969 Fo r d
&lt;I IU lf c
To ri no P hon e 992 3463
7 15 Jl p
3 BEDRM 65x 11 mob 1l e h ome
fo r r ent , ut ll ll t es pa1d ,
3 FAM I LY yard sale, l ll h ,
loca t ed '" Burlmqt1am Call
18t h an d 19th , J t m Ca ldwe ll
992 775 1
r es t dence.
RI
7
near
7 1 tfc
T uppers P l ams . 10 a rn Ill 5

s

7 1 2tc
3 FAMILY yard sa l e . Sa m
Ar no l d res1 d en ce, Ap pl e an d
Water St , Syrac u se, P h on e
99? 7360 St art Wed nesd ay
t h rough F n day, 10 a m til '&gt;
C l o t h 1ng, to o ls, od d ll i es,
ap pli ances . 5.000 boo ks of all
ki nd s.
7 15 Jtc
YA RD Sale, S70 P ea rl St. ,
Mi ddl e port ,
Tu esday,
We dn e~day and T h u rs d ay,
Cl o thes, d1s h es, et c
W ill
star t at9a m
7 15 Jtc

GA R AGE
A p t.
$100 pe r
mo nt h, wa t er p aid . 353
P a l mer St , Midd le p ort
P hone 997 748 S
7 I S S IC
d RM apt w1th wall to wall
ca r pet
\04 Sp r ing fwf:! .
P omeroy Ca ll 992 590B
6 22 li e

Wanted To Buy
DI SC ARDED lawn mo we r s, ·
Id l er s, r i din g mowers , et c
P h on e 742 307 4
7 16-26tc

GARAGE sale. 16 t h , 17t h a nd U S CO IN S an d c u rrency ,
18t h , Lan gsvil l e , f 1rst ho u se
19 64 an d olde r . d 1mes .
beyond th e b r1 d ge N ew and
qua r te r s .
halves,
wa r
used clot h mg . Av on bo ttl es
n icke l s an d V n 1c k e l s. I n
an d house ho l d rt ems
d i a n an d s t eel pe n nies ,
7 15 3t c
sil ¥e r do lla r s Cal l Ru tl and ,
742 31iS1 fo r o ff er or wrlle to
YAR D SA LE , 2 weeks, Jul y 12
Roge r W ams l ey, R t . L Bo)(
th ru 76 th A nt i qu es , a lladin
177, Mid d le po rt , Ohi o 45760
t am p, o l d c loc k s , d e pr es si on
7 15 12t c
glass , m1sc 4 m1les so u t h of
- - -'--- - -- --- - -A t he ns o n R t 33
OLD furl'1 1tur e, 1cc boxes,
7 10 Ht c
bra Y-o b ed s, or co mpl ete
---- -- ---h ou se holds
Wril e M . D 5 FAMILY g arage sa l e JUlY
M i ll e r . Rl
4, Po me r oy,
17 , 1B an d 19 on 681 Turn at
Oh io Call 992 7760 .
A lfre d on T ucke r Road , 1
10 7 74
m de E l ec tr ic gui t ar case
an d a m plif ie r , gas h eat m g
s t ove , Iars of d i shes a nd
m i se. boat do lli es. 6 x 17 0 x
15 l1re , a l ar ge amoun t. of a ll
1&lt;.1n d s of cloth m g, an t1 q ues . 1976 STARC RAFT TRA IL E RS
1n stock A ll 1975 models,
7 14 31p
t r a il ers and fold d ow n s
- ---- - - - - - - - - re d uce d
We s t oc k ac
cessor1es, se r v 1ce what we
se ll Cam p Conley St ar c r a fl
SaleS , R I. 62 , N or t h Of PI
MAT U RE wo man t o li ve m
Pl easant
.a nd h e l p ca r e f o r ch ildr en
7- 15 4t c
Ca l l f or m t erv1 ew at Ga l ha
County Chil d ren ' s H om e,
1975 H OND A C B 75 0 3 m onth s
446 9237
old , Wi xo m f ai rm g . Ph one
7-16 6tc
992 77 10
---------------- -7 15 Stc
~---

For Sale

~-

Help Wanted

BE A
"SENTINEL
CARRIER"

1971 SU Z U KI T M 400 dirlbi k e
Run s good Mu s t se ll , 1350
P h on e (6 14 ) 985 3938
7 15 61p

GI&lt;EEN
4620

b eans ,

p h one
1

742

15 31p

YOU N G r a bbit s f o r sa l e,
Reedsv ill e Ph on e 378 626 1..
7 8 7t c

fn Pom e roy

Phone 992 -2156
TODAY

7 p m

NEW
Improved " Z1ppie s."
th e g reat iro n pil l now with
Vi! am 1n C N e lson Drug
7 15 lip

APPROX 6 ft x 7 f t new
plu sh
carpe t
remnant ,
n eu tral c olor . $15
Phon e
992 ]4 96 after 5 30
7 9 1f c

a day

t r a il e r .
de p osi t
992 34/9
7 13 61 p

r 1 f. ~ J np t s room s and both .
n1cc tar q e yardr bath and '
11,10
•,o uth
' ,C'cOnd
' .1
" ' 1d dl c port . ildult s only
rh onc '19 ') '&gt; 'l bJ c ven ·nq s
'

.., 'I I If c_

--

Phone
992-3313

7-8-1 mo.

fV'.'O oEOi'H.&gt;OM hou se l or
sal e Phon e 98 5 4102
6 10 26t c
S RM S and bath , ni ce lo t ,
large out b Ui l ding , front and
bac-k porc 11es. f r ont shaded.
needs repa1r lo c at ed 1n
Cl1 f to n w va Ca ll 99 2 53757 9 7tc

ELWOOD BOWER S REPAI R
Sweepe r s . toas t er s, tr ans .
oil sm all appltances . Lawn
mower . next to St ate H1gh
way G a r age on Route 7·
- Phone 9B 5 382S
.4 16 tf c

· ----------------------~
EXCAVA T I N G,
backno e,
do ze r
and d 1tc her . Gas .
e l ec tri c and wa t er line
bur i al. base m ent s, foot e r s,
se pt ic s yst e m s and br ush
cl eaning . Will haul fi ll d ir t,
t o p soi l. sand an d g ra ve l ,
lim estone for dr iveway s and
roa d s . Phone Ch ar l es R .
Hatfi e l d, B ackh oe Serv i ce .
R t. 1, R u tl and , Ohio, 742 -

609 2.

.

'

·--

10

., Q

mg

SOUTH 10 1
• 86 ·
• A K J 865 4

• J 93
East-Wl' st vu lneri:ib le
0

0

6 · 25-Farm Repor t l3

6:30-Five Minutes lo Li ve By 4. News 6, Bi bl.e
A n swers 8; Schoo l Scene 10 : Patterns for Living 13.

6.J5-Col umbus Today 4

North

West

t:ast

South

3.

5.
7.

seven

diamonds and he was

no t mter ested in seven hearts
Hence he do ubl e d Sfve n
di amonds .
Eas t rea ll y s hould not have
dou bled If he had passed tile
cha nces are l ha l Wes t would
have b1d seven hea r ts on the
theo ry that 11 JUSt m ighl make .
No rth m1 ght well have ope ned a
club a nd the hea rt gr a nd slam

• 3

would have come Ul

Pass
Pa:;s

Pass

Opening lead - J •

LI'ITLE ORPHAN ANNll): _

LITTLE ORPHAN

ABOUT
BUT IT 'S 50 ~­
.._LMOS.T &amp;fS I~ "T\oiiR~
w&amp; S A GR.E ..T BEAST IN
THERE, GETTJN' .ti..'.L
SET "TO SPR.tf'+Q -

,., ........ , I · ~ c '
R ep•rrs, se rv 1ce , al l makes
992 2264. T h e Fa b r1c Sh op ,
P omero y . Au th orize d Sin g e r
Sales a n d Se rvi ce
We
sharpe n Sc i ssors.
3-29 He

t'lrt\

SHVnDER
t CAN -'l.MOST Ei£L.
50ME-n..tN' M OV! N ' IN

'NA.T .JUNG LE - SOM.El1·U"'' '
W ··· A.NO ~! BUT
SI-IU'I( f GUESS I' VI! BEEN
liSTININ' "1'0 TOo M.~V

SCARED!

0 ' .tllM' S Wtt..D

STOA.IES-

ALLEY OOP

-

READY -ro GO BY

- -- - - - -- -- - - .REAuy rv" " .._..., ,., C~ET E

de l 1ve r ed r 1g h t t o your
p r otect Fast a n d eas y . Free
es t tmates Phon e 992 - 3 ~ 84,
Goeglein R eady M r)( Co ,
M1d dl e por t, Oh10
6 30 uC

POMEROY,O
TUPPERS PLAINS - Rt. 7

1f

l st o r y frame, 2 BR .
bath , basement . n ew st ee l
sidi n g, own wa t e r a nd ci t y
w at er , 21h a c r es in lawn ,
so m e
b uildin g
sit es.

bedroom s w ith cl ose t s, ba th ,
m o d e rn kit c h en i n c l u din g
stov e, b r ea kfas t n ook , fu ll
basem e nt, an d d ou ble g a r a ge
Exce ll e nt loca tion .

$1 0.500.
MIDDLE PORT

E x-

PINE

cell e n t cond1 t ton a nd ver y
co m f orta bl e. 2 stor y fr ame,

1st floor has 1 BR , bath ,
din in g R , uti lit y R , n 1ce
k i t chen ca b . r a nge, ref. 2nd
floo r 2 ntce BR . $15,500.

•
HOME

NEW

-

COUNTRY -

Good

h u n tin g, p le nty o f bu ildi ng
sites, a nd e lbow r oo m . N o on e
c lose ,
JU St
p r ivacy a nd
fr eedo m . 97 ac r es w1th a ll
mt ne r a l s.

SMALL

1 level

HOUSE

SEPT I C f A N KS CLC A N t:U
Re a son a b le RATES Ph onl
-1&lt;16 4782 Ga llipolt s
Jo hn
R u sse ll. owne r

~ 1::::1--' I lt.
1 ANKS Cleane d
Mod ern San II a li on 992 3954
or 992 7349
9 18 ti c

2

bedrooms, ba th , na tu ral gas.
c ity water , a nd compact l o t.

acre, 3 BR l arge close t s,
b a th , nt ce kit c h e n a nd
dining , uti l i t y R . ga r age,

Lt f RE1::: Trr mm m g, · 20
yea r s ex pe ri en ce I ns ured ,
f ree es l1 m at es Call992-3057,
Coolv ill e
Ph one ( 1) 667
304 1
4 3G-ifc

Askin g $6,000.00

yo u r ch o i ce of c o l ors in OUT OF TOWN - 3 bed r oom
c a r pe t ing. F u ll finan ci n g to ' m ob il e ho m e an d la r g e l ot
right p arty. S20,000.
L .C. wa t e r . ~ nd n at ura l gas.

POMEROY - 1'12 ac res, 2 Wan t only $9,500 00
BR , bath , la rge k it ~h en, LARGE - 10 room older home

Hou Se an d r oo f p ai nt ing and
repa 1r s F or tree esti mates,
ca l l 992 6190 or 99 2 5B37
6 15 26tc

------ -

GASOUNE ALLEY

I can see it
all as if it were
tjesterdal.l!

pit'

4

99 Yard
Square

CALL 742-4211 ··

TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE,
CARPET CONSULTANT

, build .

All

utrlt ttes.

An

ex -

THE
SAFEST
INYOUR
.VIOSTMENT THAT YOU TO«:I'TI&lt;NCREASE
CAN MAKE IS IN A HOME
RING 992-Jl25
SEE OR CALL US
TODAY.

on eself
14 wds .)
4 Sea ea gle
5 Marriage
partner
6 Hair-raising
i Unpersized
8 The end of
one's ·
patience
14 wds. i
9 Put back
10 Awesome

Yesterday ' s Answer

r.--r.,....r.--r.-

16 " Everything
Happens - "
12 wds. l
19 Frenetic
state
22 Actress
Corda y
23 Vis ionary
24 Surpassed
25 Functi on

7 :3G-Hollywood Squares 3;

27 Swa y ;
lurch
29 Attorney,
Melvin 30 Bobwhite
31 Rev1se
:16 " Not Stranger"
12 wds. l
3i Go to - for

[======~::~~P£:~~~Yi\(~~~tJ/~~~~ir-=E~:f~~f;~~~~1lJ~~;-~::::::::::==---,
- NAT'CHCI&lt;L.Y A SClUIRI CF - 8&lt;CEPT F(){:2. THr:= TIP OF
YO KIN L-IVE' WITH

LJS ~-

FOOD IS PL-AIN
FILL-IN' r-t)N IGHT,
COL-D SLICE D

MACHINE' OIL-

£VERY F£W
.·~.~.... C1C&gt;:YS WIL-L

MY NOSE, ONE WART'
AND A TOE -NAIL , I AM
AL L
INEr&lt;Y _._._

CO ME -

..--~'

TAURUS (April 20-May 201

package
38 Isolate
Of the same
family

Get on t he phone to tha t scr
\l tCe man or s tra1g h ten out th e
mo~: -up w t\h the s t ore
The
o dd s favor you 1n ty1ng up
loose en d s
~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
WINNIE
HI M ro'MEET
THE FAMILY.

loupgn no 17

I GUES6 SHE
/5 6ERIOU5
AOOUT HIM!

MAY5E wEl L GET TO

II

BE GREAT GRAND.

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to work It :

One letter simply stands for another. In th is sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two o·,, etc. Single lel,lers,
apostrophes, the length and form a tion of th e words are all

PARENTS YE"" rl.l P!

hints. Each

•5.00

d&amp;)' the r ode lellers are diffe r ent

CRYPTOQUOTES

Saves!.oo oli a Minor Motor Tun• Up. I ~yl, with air
cond. We will tun.-up ond odjutt your car on our
Sun Diagnostic Equipment.
Includes replacing Points. Plugs &amp; Condenser
Re~~ularly $42.95. NOW ONLY

t'G

Z FQ

WF I M

" GFT XET B 1 "

OT Z

EIB

E

•37.95

E

UF

TASFHQUPFIPDU,
pI

'

AREOUHZ

F y,

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) You
can m ake up to r the t1m e lost
yes t er d ay
You re ex t r aeu,·c tent at w o r k.ng today
W hat"s more . the payoff 1s n1 g h

CANCER (June 21-July 22 ) A
-· lig h t hearted summe r da y that
you 'll eq ua lly en JOY w1th the
l am 1ly and Ch tldren . or SOCializIng wtth closes ! t ne nd s

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Play any
hunches you have today about
th1 ngs concer ning your home
It could be a p l an tor
red ecorating or p 1ant1ng

YIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sepl. 22)
Yo u'll be domg somethrng w1\h
lnen ds to d ay . Travttltng . having lhem d rop tn or Just calltng
lhem w ould al l be happy

and get 1 1.-.. cor wosh with !hit coupon also. Offer
good lllr~ugh S.lurdly, June 7, 1975,
"'

10; To Be A nnbu nced 15

better Ide 15 ahe ad for you and
you r t am1 ty That ma1o r dea l
yo u ve been work 1ng Qn for a
lon g ltme f1nally bear s fru11

concern

YE~ 6HE WANTS

8; Sp ace for Ma n 20,33; Movie " The Kentu ckia n"

For Thurlday, July 17, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) A

:Ji Large

HMM ...WHAT HAVE
'IOU ElEEN TEL LIN&amp;
HER AOOUT ME?

8:3(}-Tex as Whee le rs 6, 13.
9:oo-Streets of Sa n Fr anctsco 6, l J,· M ov ie " P a rdn er s"

• Bem1ce B - Oool

:!3 ~~ore
34 Golfer
Weiskopf
35 Coac h's

rtRFE:CI-

'

Ch OICCS.

NO. 17_ m a series of money-saving service coupons. Keep

watchtng for our ads for mare coupons, designed to save you
money , coming your way weekly..
All work It Guoronleod
Complete healer, air conditioning and rodiotor 11rvlco,
. bocbd by experloilco . .
3 NIASE Cortiflod Mochanin.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A
rew ard you 're en1 11led to wt ll

81Ul5 0' FIR£!!
NOW I KNOW WHAT
THEI( MEAN ABOUT
BAD LUCK COMIN' IN

.I

,;

THREES

00 BUSINESS WITH A LEADER

Smith Nelson Motors' ln.~.
500 E . ~Min St.
Phone m-2174
Pomeroy, ONe
Service Hours: Mon.- Fri. 1-4: 30, S.lurdoyt 1-12 noon

•

•'

'

'

..
·,

1'1 , , .

,,

I'VE JUST
CaHE UP IIIlTH

1Hf PERFECT
THf()RI(

Squares 4;

Bess Mye r son : 20 .

AstroGrapt-l

bank
statement
320klahoma

NOBCOY'S

Hollyw ood

Ohio Lotte r y 6 ; New P rice is R1ght 8; Evening
Edition with Ma rtin Agronsky 20 ; Wild Kingdom
10; To Te ll the Trut h 13 . American Outdoors man
15.
8:00-Baseball 3. 4; Barne y Mil ler 6. 13; Glad ys Knight
&amp; the Pips 15; The Wa llons 10. Evening a t Pop s 33;

10 :00-H a rry 0 6, 13; News 15.
10 : 3~Jeopard y 3; News 6,8, 10, 13.20; ABC News JJ .
11 : J~Johnn y Carson 3, 4,; Wide Wor ld Specla l 13; FBI
6: Pllo1 8; Movie "T he Bobo" 10: Jana k! 33.
12 :00-P ilot 8.
12 :30-Wide World Speci al 6; P ilot " Gra nd pa Max" 8.
1:00-Tomor.row 3,4; P ilot 8, News 13.

' '26 Hayseed
2i Beloved of
Unc a s
Summer
I Fr.l
29 Word on a

for your money-with service

This Coupon
Is Worth

ce lle nt buy at $9, 000.00

nest

3 Resign

, '23 Artifice

_RUTLAND
.FURNITURE
742 -4211

lfS:VACATION TUNE-UP nME

I Defraud

2 Eagle' s

,·1:25Went apace h--+-t--+-

RUBBER-BACK
We have hundr e os ' o~
c arpet values Your [ob c e
be c omplet ed in 1 to
weeks
No long waiting.
period . Our lnslaller has 28
year s experience . E x p ert
In s talla t ion
You'll l i ke
whal you get

DOWN

common

CONDITI ON. men ts a nd e noug h space to

$8,900·

Wilber Pickett
and his bot.~s
in the

40 Remember
41 Watch over

14 Threatener's phrase
12 wds. i
15 French
river
16 Parson bird
I've
17 Japanese
enouqh 1 river
(rood
18 Flower.
12 wds. )
bt.~e'
20 Doze off
21 Appellation
22 Ordinary ;

GET MORE OUT OF YOUR CAR

~nw 'more

u til i t y R . g arag e. p rt v ate in t ow n . Suitable fo r a pa rt o r c it y wa ter , IN EX-

CELLEN T

- ----

ACROSS
I Cashier's
cubicle
5 "Folly"
fellow
II Mister, in
Munic h
12 KP worker
13 Hibernia

501 NYLON

&amp;

G ourme t 8; New Zoo Revue 13

9:45-Livln g Word 4
10 :1)(}-{;eleb rlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Di nah 13; Lili as
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
10 : 3~Wh ..,l of Fortune 3, 4, 15 . Gambil 8, 10; Frying
Pans West 33 .
11 :00-High Roll ers 3,4, 15 , One Life lo Live 6; Tat llelal es 8,1 0.
·
11 :36-Holl ywood Squares 3, 15; Brady Bunc h 13;
Midda y 4; Love ol Lile 8.10.
11 :55-Ta ke Ker r 8, Dake Ker r 8; Dan Ime l's World
10.
12 :00-Magnlf lcent Ma rbl e Mac hine 3, 15; Showoff s 13;
Bob Braun' s 50-SOClub 4: News 6.8 : Miste r Rogers
33.
12 : 30-Jackpot 3, 15; Searc h for Tomorrow 8, 10 ; E lec .
Co. 33.
12 :55-NBC Ne ws 3,15.
1:00-News 3; Ryan 's Hope 6,13, Phil Don a hue 8;
Yo ung &amp; the Restless 10; Not Fo r Wome n Onl y 15;
VIl la Alegre 33.
1 : 3~Day s of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Lei' s Make a Deal 6,1 3;
As lhe World Turns 8.10; Episode Action 33 .
2: 00-SIO ,OOO Pyr a mi d 6, 13 ; Guiding Li ght 8, 10;
Family at War 33 .
2: 3(}-Doctors 3, 4, IS;" Rhym e &amp; Reason 6, 13, E dge of
Night 8, 10 .
3:00-Another World 3, 4,1 5: Genera l Hos pital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8,10: Lilia s Yoga &amp; You 20; Play
Chess 33.
3:JO-One Llle to Live 13 ; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
. 8,10: Feeling Good 20; Fo lk Guita r 33 .
" Because They're Young " 10; Mi ke Douglas 13.
3; Me rv Griff in 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mic key Mouse Club 8; Bona nza 15.
5:00-FBI 3; Lu cy Show 8; Miste r Roge r s' Ne igh borhood 20,33; Iron si de 13.
5 : J~News6 ; Andy Griffith 8; Ge t Sma rt 15; El ec. Co.
20,33.
6:00-News 3, 4.8. 10. 13. 15 ; ABC News 6, Sesam e St . 20;
Book Beat 33
6:J~NBC News 3, 4,1 5; ABC News 13 ; Bewitc hed 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Li lias Yoga &amp; You 33 .
7:00-Truth or Cons . 3,4; Bowl ing for Dollar s 6; What's
My Line 8: Ne ws 10: Let's Make A Deal 13 ;
Jimm y Dean 15; Ma ki ng it Counl 20: Nova 3J.

by

'THE llMii; 'rOLl. .....
I
FELLOWS GOT .....,ME·

Carpeting

-.

-

7:00-Today 3,4,15 , AM Amer ica 6. CBS News 8,1 0
8·00- Lassle 6: Capt. Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesa me St 33
8· 30-Big Va ll ey 6; Popeye 10
8:55-C huck While Reporls 10 .
9·00-A M. 3; Phi l Do nahue 4; Phil Dona hue 15;
Mur ie l Stevens 8. capt Kangaroo 10, Mor ning with
O.J 13.
9 : 3~ N ot For Women On ly 3. Dinah 6. Ga llop ing

4 : 3~Bewltched

6!ltUe.W"td'
THOMAS -JOSEPH

.. :Tl-lEN I COULD
HAVE E.VE~lNG

LET US DO IT! !

Q.ELAND
608 E.
REALTY
MAIN

6 · 45-M orn lng Report 3: Farmtime 10

6:55- News 13

A: oo-Mr . Cartoon 3; I Dre am of J ea n n ie 4 ; Somerset
IS: Musical Cha irs 8. Sesa me St. 20,33; Movie

rN

-EX

Real Estate for Sale

T OMATOES.
cucum b e r s.
Clel an d Fa rm s , Ger a ld in e
Cleland
7 6 tfc

.•

THUR SDA Y, J ULY 17,1975

North's biddmg has been both
NORTII
16 bril lian t a nd successf ul. He
• -could have JUmped right to SI X
• 6
diamonds. but he wa nted to buy
• Q 10 3 2
the ha nd there so he bid jus t
4 A K 876s 42
five The n when Wes t wen! to
Wt;ST
EAST
SIX hear ts North fe lt he had to
4 K J 10 3
4 A Q 9 7 5 4 :save at seven dia monds .
• 1\ K 10 9 7 ~ 4 2 • Q J 8
East ha d no 1dea tha t there
. 9
• 7
was any da nger of South mak-

7 -tb

s E Wi N 1.7

I

-----------

'

12 : 30--M ovie " Death Cru i se " 6
I oo- Tomorrow 3. New s 13 .

~~~~~~R eg

LA R GE g ril l with ro li s~Ser ie ;
new l a r ge g uit ar ; 7 h . p 26"
c ut H u ffy rid in g m ow e r ,
good c ond it 10n P hone 992
] 44]

)

13; FBI6 ; Movie " The Connec t ion" 8; M ovie " F all

Sale" 10 . Janaki 33 .

6 ·QO-Sun r ise Seminar 4 : Su mm er Se mester 10.

~b

...
'

9:3()-J ean Shephe r d's America 20.

10:00- B&amp;r ella 6, 13 , Mannix 8; Al&amp;ska' s Inside
Passage 10; News 20; Family al War 33 .
11 :00- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 33 .
'11 :30-J ohnny Carson 3.4. 15; Mov ie " Dea th Cruise"

WIN AT BRIDGE
East's double brings trouble

7 11 -90t c

WOVLU YO U B ELIE V E ?
Bui ld an a ll st ee l b u il di ng at
Po l e Ba r n p rices? G old en DOZER w o rk, la nd cle ari ng
G1a nt A ll Stee l Bu il din gs ,
b y the acre, h ou rl y o r
IM
Rt
4, Box 148. W averl y,
c on t rac t
Fa r m
p ond s, .
Oh1o Phon e 947 22 96
r oads. etc L ar ge do ze r an d
THE HOM E 'hat you hav e
6 -24 261 c
ope r ator w1th over ~0 yea r s i
b een
wa11r ng for , co n
ex p erience
P u ll i ns E v ·
\ien,enlly located on a n ice CARPET Ins t alla t ion , Sl ~5
cavat tng, P ome r oy, Oht o
159 95
s t r eet
3 l a r ge bedrooms ,
per yard . Ca ll
R i chard
P h o n e 992 2478
139 95
mo dern
kil che n
wllh
West.
phone
'MII3
2667
.
12-19 ti c
4,UOOOTU
modern cabmets . ga r bage
7 2 26tp
Only .! J i b
d1sposa l , o utsi de venrs o n
- - - -------- - - LUM tjiNU , nt:'dl~&lt; •!,l • ~ ' "" "' "' ' '
___
&gt;lher mod els
ra nqe an d dr yer . lar ge GENERAL R epa 1r , clean up
a n d inst allat ton , e l ec t r ica l.
--=- ~
on sa le
li Ving r oo m , d1n1ng r oom ,
and
h au11ng ,
cut t in g,
w at er pump r e p a 1r , roo f ing ,
wa t l t o wall carpe! mg , air
we l d1ng.
ca rp e ntr y ,
h o u se an d roof pa inl ing ,
co nd il 10n1ng , h ot water
plum b 1n g, ele c ma sonr y
ge n er a l r epa 1r . reasonable
bast:&gt;board h ea l , 1,560 II .o()f
and g eneral rem o de l 1ng .
ra t es , fr ee esti m a t es , 15
:POMI!ROY LANDMARK
spac1ous l 1v1ng a r ea Also
Call Sk 1I -Poo l P hon e 992
ex peri e n ce
Ca ll
y e ars
9._Jick W. C•rny, Mgr .
u t li lly r oom and g arage
5 126
6 17 -tf c
Charles Si ncli!lir . 985-41 21 or
6:. Phone tfl-2111 · ...
N1ce.:- lawn
House 1n e)(
992 222 1.
c ellen t
Condi l ion
t rn
WILL T RI M or cut t ree s and
7 10 -1l t c
mediate posse ss .on P hone
shru bbe ry a n d pa in t r oofs
997 37 60
CAVA T
G ,do:ier~fO ad e r
Phone 949 3221 or 742 -444 1.
7 15 61 (
a nd ba c kh oe wor k. se pti c
6-24 -26tp
t a nk s
in st al led,
dump
1 72 AC~E S land an d l oc u s t
·I Y E/\R OLD 3 bedrm hou se
tru cks an d l o boy s t o r hlfe.
pos t s Als o 196'i 1 ord LT D
WI L L do odd job s, pa inting ,
Ca ll a lt er 4 p m , 992 S064
wi ll ha ul fi ll dir t , top SOl i,
Phone 7 t ? :1 656
roo f i n g ,
h aul 1ng
a nd
7 15 l?lp
lim es t on e and gravel , Ca ll
mowi n g Phon e 992 740 9.
S 23 S2tp
B o b o r Rog er J eff e r s. da y
76 - 1~tc
ph
on e 99 2 7089 , n ig ht p hone
HOUSE
for
sale
located
near
H OUSE 1n Po rtl and . 5 r ms .
992 3525 o r 992 5232
Cheste r , 1~ acre. a ll e lec tr ,c. NEt.LJ P.. n ew n ome buill on
and b alh , good we ll, 2 a c res
'2 11 lf c
yo u r lo t ? Cont ac t M i\o B
3 b~"'1 r oom. 2 bathS , d 1Sh
of
grou nd .
T ake
ove r
Hutc
h
ison,
Rutl
a
nd
,
Oh'iO
.
was
n
er
.
carpe
t,
f
ul
l
p a yments
Phone B43 1292
Phone 742 36 15
basement. 'l ca r garage , al!
7 9 17t c
5-8 t f c
br• ck Week day s, ca ll 985 476 2, week en ds , ()04) 773
S p 0 ut i n g ,
R 0 -Q"F I N G ,
5 7?8
alu minum a nd v inyl si ding ,
7 13 6t c
co mp le t e
remod e linq
Phon e 742-62 73 or ( 304 ) 773 5684 . Free esti mates.
_
6 -25 -.: ..,,p

PORT A-COOL
ROOM -to-ROOM

z

Middleport
5-30-1 mo .

1

Phone 992-5682
or 992-7121

Real Estate For Sale

MODERN wat n ut console
s te r eo rad10 (Oillbmat,on d
s p eed c hanger
Ba l ance
'l.\ 0 1 40 or term s Call 991
J96 S
7 9 tl c

32 7 N. 2nd

WORK

AND NOW r ·M PREPAR I"6
ltE'I' IO:.I! 1'"0 !l!ODDY- E5'&gt;' E : ... A
l l l"H!O PRIVACY, PlEASS, IF
'IOU DON 'T Ml"lD :

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2550

GARAGE
2 Miles West
ALL
MECHANICAL

THIN K YOU' RE
GOI NOTO DO ,
$ 1~ GAcAHA D

UNFOLD
THI$
CO T...

Construction
and Plumbing

ROGER HYSELL'S
On St. Rl . 124
Off Rl. 7 By- Pass

"-"'1-IA I'" DO YOIJ

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING

- - - - --,

6- 18- 1 mo .

TRA I LE R lot in Mi ddl epo rl. 27 FT p r iva t e own ed tra v el
Call 99/ 5434 .
tr a i l er. f ull y sel f -conta in ed .
7 16 ~6tc
t an de m whee l s, fu ll y ca r _p f!o t ed , · a 1r
co ndll i o ne d . 1
l ROOM un f u r n1s h ed apart
.a wnt no See any t i me at
ment in MiddlepOr t Pho n e
' Yo u n g 's
M ob i le
Home
• 9..9') 54)jl
Cou r t , R t 7 Gall 1poli s, Oh io .
1 16 6tc
7 13 7t p
TWO
bedrm
re f ere n ce
a nd
reQu ire d
Pho n e

·'"em e rgenc y
949-22 11 or 992 - 5700
Comp l ete rt 1r con d1t10ni ng
sales and serv tce, hea t ing,
plumbin g , ro ofing a n d
gene r a l sheet metal wo rk
F ree Esttm a l es
7 11 l mo .

+------------------ --

H G N DA c B 750, exce llent
cond it 1on
Ph on e 94 9· 222v .
7-11 -6tc

For Rent

Y our H ell D earer
T hrr d Sf .
Ra c tne, Otlio
Ph . 949- 5961

Washer &amp; Dryer
and
Small Appliance
Repair

7 2i

RE G po ll ed H erefo r d bull s, 2
y ea rling s . 1 f o ur yr o ld
Ph one 992 556 5 or 99 2 2B26
7 13 -Mc

-- - -

Truck or
Bu l l dozer Rad1M or to t he
sm all es t Heater Co re

BEAN S. PI Ck you r o wn , ~'J SO
p er b ushel A lso . (dbbag e
and yellow an d zucc hm •
squash Phone BJ3 2353 aft e r ; - - - - -

MOBILE Home for r ent m
Ra.c1ne
Phon e 949 77 6 1.
Albe rt H il l
7 I 0 6t c
WATER tank . '$ 1 DO
Phon e f:/9'1 5704

l

For Sale

B EDROOM mob •l e h ome
loc at ed on 143 . 2 m11es. tr om
Pom eroy Phone 997 5858
7 7 lfc

3

~---

CAP!' AIN EASY

Does your home
require any . of these
services?
WE DO&gt;
Siding
Roofing
Complete
Home
Maintenance.

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

I

N at h a n B 1gg s
Ra dt ator Sp e ci a li s t

r ! SHIN G I ICCI1SC . Ca n ad1 an
N li e cra wl ers 60c doz O uq
wor ms 3 d07 \ 1 O t he r b ad .
ta c k l e . qun s . nm m o . cb's,
tnd i(Ul
Joe s Spo r t s
JOB
Pa 4e Sl
P hon e 992 3S09,- j.o("
6
I

GARAGE SAL E
Wed
nesday t h r oug h Sa t urday ,
July 16t h through 19t h, 35 3
Pa l mer 5 1 . Mi d dlepor t
Lo t s of g ood c h il dren's and PR I VA T E m eet 1nq room l or
an y orqa n, l a t• on . phone 99 7
adult clothing, var1o u s othe r
If/ 7 '}
ttems
J 1I I f c
7 I S 41C

p m

TOYOTA waqon
30
m p q Phon e 99 7 70B7
7 10 61p

19 17

7 16 ]IC

5 F AMILY Yard Sa l e, south of

YARD Sa l e Thu r sday . July 17 .
and Friday , Ju l y 18 . 10 am
Co r ner o f F ront a n d Hu d son
St, Mid d lepo rt .4 Family ·ViO l a Edwa r d , Co ll een Van
Me ter. Terr 1 T o l e r , an d
Luc11 1e Yo un g Fa n s, d1s h es ,
bow lm g ba ll
a n d b ag ,
c l oth es of a ll sizes. boo k s.
cu r tains an d d rapes. co ff ee
pot . rugs m any , many o t her
i t em s l oo numerous to I 1st
7 15 Jtp

7-7·1 mo ...,

I

YARD SALE 17, 18 and 19 at 9
am
L.o t s o t g 1r l s' and
womt'n 's c l oth1ng , r ad10.
goo d wa sh1 ng
rnach 1ne d ROOM unfurni Sh ed hous ~.
motor
t1r e r1m s, rugs ,
1650 L mco l n Hgts , phonP
drapertcs and bedspnads, 1
99 2 3814
tw1 n bed co mpl e te . t r 1cy c le.
7 6 1tc
tCt wn mower , antiQUe se wing
mach1n e. big bO)( ot free 2 BEDROOM trailer , s:n p er
!! ems
?f 88 Ol1 v e r
St.
week . util1tt es pa1d Ph o n e
M•dd te po r t , of f Grant St
992 332 4
7 16 )t (
1 6 tf c
T upper s Plam s at R1ggs
crest Houstng Deve lopment,
F r1day and Satu r day f rom
10 a m till 4 p m
7 16 Jtp
-· , YARD Sa l e. Br u ce Dav •s
res 1d ence Ru tl and. LarkinS
S t Tuesday , Wed n.es d ay
and Thursday . T w o gas
ct rculalt n g
6 , 000
J?TU
hea t er s. 6.000 BTU gas cook
s tov es g ood fo r cannmg ,
several w h it e ShirtS , w1ndow
awn 1ngs , and some c lo t hes
Also , would lrke to buy a
bil l y goat
7 15 '.1 tc

Eve nings 742 -4902

d 10 I mo

T HER E will be a Yard Sa l e at
!h e
G race
Hultma n
rPS 1dc ncc .
co rnc r
of
.;-wc amor e ilnd F1fth Str eets
1r1
Ra c1 n e. Thur sd ay and
F r •d ny f rom 9 a m to 4 p m
7 16 ?tc

Caution Light"
Rl . 7, Tuppers Plains, 0 .
Shop Us Last &amp; Save
Ope n 9-5 Wed. through Sun .
Ph . 667-J8S8
7-7-1 mo
)
" At

Ltabilitv Insu r ance
Ph . 992-7608

Ph . 992 -J993

4 door , loca l car, air con d1flon ed , f ull e quipm en t

BARGAIN CENTER

We Carry

Sy r ac u se, Ohio

Sl495

KUHL"S

Vi n y l s1d ing , al~u minum
sidtng, patio c o v~rs , stor m
wi n dows ,
k tt c h e n s,
bath r oo m s a nd g arages.

LARRY I,AVU.OER

6 c y l s t d tran s , rad•o . l1k c n ew w wIt r es, blue f 1n1 sh.
n tce car w tth good eco no m y

YARD SALE qood clothing,
a dut!S nnd childr e n chord
orqan , q uilt p1 eces. d1she s
and rHi Sc
ll em s
James
f\.Jii'-' Y r c~ 1 dc n c e
Che s ter
f- r 1dily .:md S.:rtur d &lt;'!y
9 30
a m to l p m
1 16 3t c

CASH ' N CARRY
SAVE S US's on
Guaranteed
appliances,
used furniture at

JOHNSON
REMODEUNG

Blown
In sulation Services

6:00-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; AB C News 6: Sesa me St . 20 ;
YO&lt;J Owe It To Yourself 33.
6 :30-NBC Ne ws 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bew itc hed 6;
CB S News 8, 10; Jody' s Body Shop 33
7:00-Truth or Con s. 3,4; Bow ling for Dollars 6; What' s
My Line 8; Ne ws 10; CO&lt;Jnl ry Mus ic Jubll.., 13; To
Be Announ ced 15; Bool&lt; Beat 20; The Rom agnolls'
Ta ble 33
·
1 . 3~ Poll ce Surgeon 3; Na me That Tune 4; Le t's
Make a Deal 6; Wilburn Brot he r s 8; Evening
E dlflon with Ma rt in Agr....,sky 2Q; · Movie " Be lle
Starr" 9 ; The Juge 10; To Te ll the Truth 13;
E pisode Action 33.
· ·
8:00-LIIIIe HO&lt;Jse on the Prairie 3.4.15: Th a i's My
Mama 6.13; Tony Orla ndo &amp; Dawn 8, 10; F..,llng
Good 20,33 .

_j

IT'S M'( lHEOR't' THA'T

,8EETHOVEN IIIOULO .HAVE

WRITTeN EVEN Be~MI/S(C .
IF HE HAD BEEN MARftlEO!

WHAT'5 50 PERFECT
ASOUT ll-IAT 'lllEOR'I' 1

come you r way to d ay tn som e
farm L o ok l o r a ra1se o r
rememh rnn ce f or a favor

SC ORP ' 0 (Oc t. 24-Nov . 22)
Wh at a pear s 1o be luck to
o the rs IJu t IS really th e res ult of
do1ng all the nght th1ngs w1 11 b r ' ng you s omething lo n gdesned

SAG!TT ARIU S (N ov. 23-Dec.
21) Yo ur 1nSt 1nc ts a re sup er acute today
You cou ld
probably w1n on t he ho rses or
81 poker .

CAPRI CORN IDee. 22 -Jan .
19) Call tha t ln en d w1t h whom
you ha d the disagreem en t
recenlly The d ay s per fec t ro r
c lermng the &lt;'I If ge1t 1ng a fresh
start

AQUARIU S (Jan . 20-Feb. 18
Thts IS the day to talk to the
boss abou t what you d do 11 you
get tha t new tob th afs opened
up He'll be recept1ve to your
1d eas

PI SC ES (Feb. 20-March 20)
l ake th e Child r e n to t he
amusemen t park today You "lt
have as much fun as they Wlll
JUS! watct11ng the tr you thfu l exube rance

A

Your

~ Birthday
July 17, 1S75
A new love ln l ftrest Wilt come
111 10 your tile th 1s com1ng yea r
It co lll d be a new rom ance. a
baby or even a new sOC ial
dlll €f!'j10n
· :\'~: W s\-' ,,1'1-:H ~: \'H : HI'H l~E

-\ S,•&gt;\'

IT CAN'T E'E PROVED ONE
WA'&lt; OR THE OTHER !

'

�.,
I"

•

'

'·

l _._._._!_ '

!\

I

8 : 3~Movl e

" The -Sex Symbol" 13 ; Movie " Wake Me
When the Wa r Is Over" 6; P hi ladelph ia Folk
Fes tival 20; Another Look at Appa lachia 33.
9:00-Zoo Ga ng 2 3.4. 15: Cannon 8.10; Maste rp iece
Theatre 33 .
·

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1975

-

. . - --·
FREE ESTIMATES

I [)

I
I I

"/

IRATI AC

17K'INK- THE EN6LISI-&lt;MAN 60T WHEN HE
ATE A LOT

K 41'/iVf,j
~

.

l"u "" arra nre th ~ ri rcled lelten
form th f' 11urpriae a ns wer, u

V

I I.

J-o

~

sugge!! led by the above cartoon.

~=~Prin=lllle~=SUR~Pfi=ISI~ANS=W~IR

==[ "n XI I r

=her=
e

=[

(An.wt r • to m or r o,.)

Jum l•l•·~. DOUG H
\ ' r-t l f' r d•~ '•

I Aru •..· r

PIETY

SOC IAL

BRIDLE

} "II IIIUJI/1 Q/&lt;1 llwl '""' l11 fr r luur {,om

l 11flfl l rr ~ - ·S OLITUDE .

N OT I CE OF
APPOI N TMEN T
Ca se No 21560
Es t ate o t Raymo n d 0 Arno l d,
De CCi'lSed
N ot• ce •S h e r e by q rven lhat
Mary Ir e ne Arnold of Route J
Pomeroy Oh 10 has been du l y

appo.nted

E x.ec utr •x

Es tat e ot Rayrnond D

dc c esaed
County

la te

of

Card of Thanks
1 WOULD l1kc l o e)( pr es~ my
lh,lnk s lv Dr
Boonsue.
nur ~ e os

il nd ~ t all ot
the
ver c ran s M emor 1al Ho spital
nnd t o all ol my lr1ends who
se nt c ards . and flowe rs
dur ,ng my
rl lness
Mrs
Geor qe (T h e l m a ) Grue~er .
Sy r a cu se Oll 10 4') 77 9
l 16 1tc

th e

Arnold ,

ot

Me,gs

Oh10

C r e di!Or'.&gt;

are

re qu, r ed

to

f i le thetr c latms IN il h s.a•d
f •ducrary wdhlfl four monlhs
Dated th tS 17t h day o f Julv
1915

I

Mann •n g D We b ster
J udq e
( 71 16 . 73. 30. Jtc

P UBLI C N O TI Cf!
In t o llowing Sec l1on 571 S 11
of t h e Oh io R-ev i se d Cod e. 1t1e
Board o f R ev 1S1 on s has ap
p r oved t he ta)( retu r n for t h e
cu rr ent year and has rev1sed
Th e valua!. o ns Th e Boa r d has
c omp l eted 11s work and th e
books ar e open for publi c
1nspcc lron m th e AuditOr 's
Off1ce

WISI) to tha n k
rhe fr 1end s ne 1qhb or s and
rc lai iVCS lor t he ! l ow e r s ,
cards . l e tt er s and p r ay ers
and v 1s il s wh 1le be m g
h OSp,tal 1zed
at
Holzer
Med, c al Cen le F 1 wou l d al so
l 1ke to thc~ n lo..
Rev
B il l
Pcrr1n t or Il lS pray er s and
bC d S1d v v •s il s. a l so m e rn
be r s ot the T rm 1ty Churc h
for their k1ndness shown to
me and my W1 f e an d lo Dr .
Holz er and Dr Har d er and
'he nur ses t or the1r patience
and k1ndness
May God
bless you a l l
John H Terre l l
7 16 1 to

~ !N ( E~ELY

Howard E F-rank
Metgs Coun ty
A uddor
(7)

16 . 10tc

Notice
N O H U N T IN G . t r espassm g o r
f 1S hing Wi thou t
wrilte n
permtSSI On on David Dav ts
property ,
Hyse ll
Run
V1o l ator s w ill be p r o sec u te d
7 13 6tp

Laurel Oiff
News Notes
Sabbath School attendance
July 13 at the Free Me thodis t
Chur c h was 73. Wor s hip
services attendance wa s 80.
Offerin g ·for a ll services was

$106.18.
R e v . and Mr s. Shook
re turn ed Monday fr om the
Free
Methodi s t
Camp
m ee ting at Mansfi eld. Rev.
Shook has been r e turned to
the local church for another
year .
Mr s. E dn a Fa ulk, a nd
Ma ster Mark F r ie nd ha s been
reported ill.
Mr. Mark Stahl , a nd friend
Stockdale v is ited r ece ntl y
with Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Schaejer.
Mr . and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs,
received word from their son
Mr . Paul Jacobes , Southside,
Ky. that he wa s improvening
from a recent hea rt attack .
Mr. F r itz Sta hl , Ne w
Marshfield, Mr . a nd Mrs.
Paul Stahl, Colwnbus, Mrs.

J

Connie

Gr ounds,

NOW sel! 1n g Fu ll er
B r us h
Products . phone 997 34 t 0
1 24 tfc
SW..,EEPER
and
Sew1ng
Machines Repa1r, Pa r ts,
and
Su pp.l1es
Dav1d
vacuum Cl ea n er . 1 ~ mil e up
George's Cr ee k Roa d o fl
St ate Ro ute 7 Phone 446
d'.194
7 1S H e.
TEWKSBARY'S Barbe r Sh op
wi(l b e c l osed J ul y 21
t h rough Jul y 28
7 16 3t c
WOULD l1ke to co rr es pond
w ll h an y desce nd an t s o f
Isaac Da r s t . bo r n abo ut 1801
m Vi r gin1a Died Se pt. 2.
1B72 in Meigs Cou nt y. Oh10 .
His wi f e was Ma r y Sco tt
Ha d
J ac k so n ,
marr red
Be l 1n da
Lambe r son ,
Sama nt ha, ma r ried Dav rd
W n g ht , Isaac , J r and Ma r y
(My
g r eat g reat
g r an d mo t he r wh o marri ed
Be n 1ami n L an gl Will a n
swe r A LL l e tt er s . Writ e
Ka r e n
Z ac h ,
R R
7,
Craw f ordSv il le ,
Indiana
47933
7 II 6tp

Employment Wanted
REMODELING ,
Pl umbing ,
hea t 1ng and a ll t y p es of
ge neral
repa 1r
Wo r k
qua r ante ed
20 years ex
per1ence
Phone 997 /409
S 1 tfr

Mr s .

Margaret Allen, Harrisonville called on Mr. a nd Mrs.
N . E . Schaefe r r ece ntly.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

CARPEN T RY
WORK
Ceiling pa'lelmg , fl ooring.
e t c Ph on e 992 2759
6 24 27tc
BU L LDOZER work a n d wi l l
fill d 1rl Phon e ( 304 f 773 523B
or n3 5841
7 1'i 3tc

•

Pets For Sale
AKC R eg1s ter e d Old Eng l fsh
Shee pdog pups P hone ( 304 )
BB I 29 1S
7 15 4t C

Pat E . Mitchell , Mar cella
Sue Mitche ll to Roger E.
Carpen ter , La ura L. Carpe nter, Lois 5-6, Rutland .
Wanted
Arc hie E. Lee, June P. Lee t:AS H pa 1d t or a ll makes a n a
to J on P . Karschnik , Con- mod el s of mob 1l e h omes
Phon e area co d e 6 14 423
stan ce L. Ka r schnik, 1.04
953 1
Acr e, Ches ter .
4 13 tfc
Larry M. Smith , Janet A.
Smith l o R ob e rt Millon
Scar be rr y,
Ca thy
Sue Business Opportunities
Scarberry, 1.7 Ac re, ohe and HI C. a nationally ad vertised
noncarbo n a t ed v 1tam 1n C
one-third acre, Salis bury .
enr 1c h ed fru !l dr 1nk i s
available t o r ven d in g tn 12
Be ulah M . Crabt r ee · to
oz cans
l n d1v •d u a l s w ho
Donald W. Cra btree, Bra bara
a r e ser1o u sly consi d er i n g a
business of t h eir ow n shou l d
Jo Crabtree, .882 Ac r e,
i nvestigate
an
ex
Colwnbia .
trao rdin ary
op p ortu n i t y
c u r r ently availa b le in t his
Dana E. Turne r b y Atty. in
a r ea
Thi s is a sec ur e
Fac t, Pansy Jordan, Ally. in
b us i ness f or th ose w h o ca n
sp a r e a f ew ho urs each w ee k
F act to Ronald A. Hanson ,
(no se llin g ), · res t ock ing
5.07 Acres , Scipi9.
. ve n do r s placed on l oc al I on
by
our
specia l is t s
A
Duane B . Wolfe to Timothy
q u ali f i e d In di vi dual ma y
f\ . Gumpf, Cheryl Lee start part r .me and
expan d
with
com
Gwnpf, 3125 Acres, Olive .
pany
f i na n c i ng
to
a
Clifford L. Adams , Judith
fu ll
ti m e
business
CAS H REQU I RED . Plan I
Diane Adams to Clifford L.
S3.450. P l an 2 S6.240 ;
Adams , Judith Diane Adams,
Pl an 3 -- $ 10,2 25 Tra i n mg
p r ovided N o ex p erie n ce
Parcels, Olive.
requ i re d Ta-.: shelter w1th
,Marie E . Bishop, William
wr1 f e -o f f.
ln &gt;Jestme n t
C. Bishop, Te rri L . Bishop, to secu r ed by new eq u ipme n t
(fi v e · year war r a nt y) , and
Bob
Bishop, Margaret
i n ve nlo r'y .
E ar ni n gs
BishoP, 1.11 Acre, Rutland . gua r. an t eed w i th 1a w r itten
b ,u y ba c k ag reeme n t. For
\ Mertlse, 0 . Blakey, Harlen
imme di ate in for ma ti on o r
1nterv iew ca ll col l ec r 130 11
P . Blakey to Qoris J . Grover,
345 7300 or wn t e m c l ud i ng
lilt: In Minerals, Lebanon .
p h nu mber to SU N RI P E,
IN C , 62 15 Greenb e lt R oa d ,
Adrian A. Carson , R ose
College F?ark. Ma r yla nd
Ellen Ca rs on to Adams
70740 . (Not a su b sidiary of
Coca Co l a Co 1
Drilling Co ., Me ter $ ite
16 ltp
1\gree ., Rutland .

•

c.

."

'"
r

I·

Blow n tn fo W a lls &amp; A tftcs

,,

1974 CH EVE LL E

Yard Sale
u

rn d c o tt ~ 1 1? 4
on Happy Hollow Rd at th e
l C~wrcn cc Hy sel l r es1de n ce.
st art. nq Jul y 17th 1111 ?
7 16 ] lp

Y 1\k

~ a le

.

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOOR S
R EPLAC EM ENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING -SOFFITT
GUTT ER S-AWNINGS

S3095

Mal1bu H T Cpe. J50 V 8 e ngme. power st ee rtng. la c
tory a tr , l1nted g lass. r a d 1o , wheel COV'ers. good !ires,
blk 1nt er1or; . ~ il ve r g r ey fini sh Spec1al

1

1

1972 COM ET 2 DOOR

S\850

1971 MAT ADOR

'- - -- -

EX PERIE"fCED
I Radiato ' ' " .
I Service I F rom lhe largest
I

For Rent

[R J\ I LER spa ce all u lillli i..'S.
ch eap Phone 997 S~ 35
6 ~9 tf c
"F URN I SHED
apar t me n t ,
ad ult s on ly m M 1ddleport
Phone 992 3874
3 75 tfc

7 t O 6tp
CO L: Nl RY
Mobil e Hom e
P&lt;Jrk R t 33 t en mt1esnortt1
ol Pome r o y Large lot s w1 t h
(Qnc r l' IC patiOS . ~ 1dCWill k S
r u nn e r s and e lf s t reet
pMkii1Q Phone Q9 J /1/1,1
. 12 J t 1l c
1

/

Nll I ROOM f ur ni Shed and
unlurn1ShC'd
apa r tme nt ~
P hon e 997 ) J ].J
1 17 ttc

FOUR lamily ya r d sa l e, /\ Pl like n ew ] room s . W1lh
larqe bath . t ab l etop ran ge
Thu r sday an d . F r 1day . 9
larg e clo se t Ea s l Ma1n ~.t.
am till 5 p m Fi r st r oad to
Pomeroy See to ap p r ec 1a t c
le ft afte r paSSing W M PO
Pho n e Ga l lipO l i S dur 1ng day
Lo f s of clot h ing, lay s. a h1gh
·1·16 7699 , evenir19 s 4.16. 95 39
ch a 1r . an d a l so a 1969 Fo r d
&lt;I IU lf c
To ri no P hon e 992 3463
7 15 Jl p
3 BEDRM 65x 11 mob 1l e h ome
fo r r ent , ut ll ll t es pa1d ,
3 FAM I LY yard sale, l ll h ,
loca t ed '" Burlmqt1am Call
18t h an d 19th , J t m Ca ldwe ll
992 775 1
r es t dence.
RI
7
near
7 1 tfc
T uppers P l ams . 10 a rn Ill 5

s

7 1 2tc
3 FAMILY yard sa l e . Sa m
Ar no l d res1 d en ce, Ap pl e an d
Water St , Syrac u se, P h on e
99? 7360 St art Wed nesd ay
t h rough F n day, 10 a m til '&gt;
C l o t h 1ng, to o ls, od d ll i es,
ap pli ances . 5.000 boo ks of all
ki nd s.
7 15 Jtc
YA RD Sale, S70 P ea rl St. ,
Mi ddl e port ,
Tu esday,
We dn e~day and T h u rs d ay,
Cl o thes, d1s h es, et c
W ill
star t at9a m
7 15 Jtc

GA R AGE
A p t.
$100 pe r
mo nt h, wa t er p aid . 353
P a l mer St , Midd le p ort
P hone 997 748 S
7 I S S IC
d RM apt w1th wall to wall
ca r pet
\04 Sp r ing fwf:! .
P omeroy Ca ll 992 590B
6 22 li e

Wanted To Buy
DI SC ARDED lawn mo we r s, ·
Id l er s, r i din g mowers , et c
P h on e 742 307 4
7 16-26tc

GARAGE sale. 16 t h , 17t h a nd U S CO IN S an d c u rrency ,
18t h , Lan gsvil l e , f 1rst ho u se
19 64 an d olde r . d 1mes .
beyond th e b r1 d ge N ew and
qua r te r s .
halves,
wa r
used clot h mg . Av on bo ttl es
n icke l s an d V n 1c k e l s. I n
an d house ho l d rt ems
d i a n an d s t eel pe n nies ,
7 15 3t c
sil ¥e r do lla r s Cal l Ru tl and ,
742 31iS1 fo r o ff er or wrlle to
YAR D SA LE , 2 weeks, Jul y 12
Roge r W ams l ey, R t . L Bo)(
th ru 76 th A nt i qu es , a lladin
177, Mid d le po rt , Ohi o 45760
t am p, o l d c loc k s , d e pr es si on
7 15 12t c
glass , m1sc 4 m1les so u t h of
- - -'--- - -- --- - -A t he ns o n R t 33
OLD furl'1 1tur e, 1cc boxes,
7 10 Ht c
bra Y-o b ed s, or co mpl ete
---- -- ---h ou se holds
Wril e M . D 5 FAMILY g arage sa l e JUlY
M i ll e r . Rl
4, Po me r oy,
17 , 1B an d 19 on 681 Turn at
Oh io Call 992 7760 .
A lfre d on T ucke r Road , 1
10 7 74
m de E l ec tr ic gui t ar case
an d a m plif ie r , gas h eat m g
s t ove , Iars of d i shes a nd
m i se. boat do lli es. 6 x 17 0 x
15 l1re , a l ar ge amoun t. of a ll
1&lt;.1n d s of cloth m g, an t1 q ues . 1976 STARC RAFT TRA IL E RS
1n stock A ll 1975 models,
7 14 31p
t r a il ers and fold d ow n s
- ---- - - - - - - - - re d uce d
We s t oc k ac
cessor1es, se r v 1ce what we
se ll Cam p Conley St ar c r a fl
SaleS , R I. 62 , N or t h Of PI
MAT U RE wo man t o li ve m
Pl easant
.a nd h e l p ca r e f o r ch ildr en
7- 15 4t c
Ca l l f or m t erv1 ew at Ga l ha
County Chil d ren ' s H om e,
1975 H OND A C B 75 0 3 m onth s
446 9237
old , Wi xo m f ai rm g . Ph one
7-16 6tc
992 77 10
---------------- -7 15 Stc
~---

For Sale

~-

Help Wanted

BE A
"SENTINEL
CARRIER"

1971 SU Z U KI T M 400 dirlbi k e
Run s good Mu s t se ll , 1350
P h on e (6 14 ) 985 3938
7 15 61p

GI&lt;EEN
4620

b eans ,

p h one
1

742

15 31p

YOU N G r a bbit s f o r sa l e,
Reedsv ill e Ph on e 378 626 1..
7 8 7t c

fn Pom e roy

Phone 992 -2156
TODAY

7 p m

NEW
Improved " Z1ppie s."
th e g reat iro n pil l now with
Vi! am 1n C N e lson Drug
7 15 lip

APPROX 6 ft x 7 f t new
plu sh
carpe t
remnant ,
n eu tral c olor . $15
Phon e
992 ]4 96 after 5 30
7 9 1f c

a day

t r a il e r .
de p osi t
992 34/9
7 13 61 p

r 1 f. ~ J np t s room s and both .
n1cc tar q e yardr bath and '
11,10
•,o uth
' ,C'cOnd
' .1
" ' 1d dl c port . ildult s only
rh onc '19 ') '&gt; 'l bJ c ven ·nq s
'

.., 'I I If c_

--

Phone
992-3313

7-8-1 mo.

fV'.'O oEOi'H.&gt;OM hou se l or
sal e Phon e 98 5 4102
6 10 26t c
S RM S and bath , ni ce lo t ,
large out b Ui l ding , front and
bac-k porc 11es. f r ont shaded.
needs repa1r lo c at ed 1n
Cl1 f to n w va Ca ll 99 2 53757 9 7tc

ELWOOD BOWER S REPAI R
Sweepe r s . toas t er s, tr ans .
oil sm all appltances . Lawn
mower . next to St ate H1gh
way G a r age on Route 7·
- Phone 9B 5 382S
.4 16 tf c

· ----------------------~
EXCAVA T I N G,
backno e,
do ze r
and d 1tc her . Gas .
e l ec tri c and wa t er line
bur i al. base m ent s, foot e r s,
se pt ic s yst e m s and br ush
cl eaning . Will haul fi ll d ir t,
t o p soi l. sand an d g ra ve l ,
lim estone for dr iveway s and
roa d s . Phone Ch ar l es R .
Hatfi e l d, B ackh oe Serv i ce .
R t. 1, R u tl and , Ohio, 742 -

609 2.

.

'

·--

10

., Q

mg

SOUTH 10 1
• 86 ·
• A K J 865 4

• J 93
East-Wl' st vu lneri:ib le
0

0

6 · 25-Farm Repor t l3

6:30-Five Minutes lo Li ve By 4. News 6, Bi bl.e
A n swers 8; Schoo l Scene 10 : Patterns for Living 13.

6.J5-Col umbus Today 4

North

West

t:ast

South

3.

5.
7.

seven

diamonds and he was

no t mter ested in seven hearts
Hence he do ubl e d Sfve n
di amonds .
Eas t rea ll y s hould not have
dou bled If he had passed tile
cha nces are l ha l Wes t would
have b1d seven hea r ts on the
theo ry that 11 JUSt m ighl make .
No rth m1 ght well have ope ned a
club a nd the hea rt gr a nd slam

• 3

would have come Ul

Pass
Pa:;s

Pass

Opening lead - J •

LI'ITLE ORPHAN ANNll): _

LITTLE ORPHAN

ABOUT
BUT IT 'S 50 ~­
.._LMOS.T &amp;fS I~ "T\oiiR~
w&amp; S A GR.E ..T BEAST IN
THERE, GETTJN' .ti..'.L
SET "TO SPR.tf'+Q -

,., ........ , I · ~ c '
R ep•rrs, se rv 1ce , al l makes
992 2264. T h e Fa b r1c Sh op ,
P omero y . Au th orize d Sin g e r
Sales a n d Se rvi ce
We
sharpe n Sc i ssors.
3-29 He

t'lrt\

SHVnDER
t CAN -'l.MOST Ei£L.
50ME-n..tN' M OV! N ' IN

'NA.T .JUNG LE - SOM.El1·U"'' '
W ··· A.NO ~! BUT
SI-IU'I( f GUESS I' VI! BEEN
liSTININ' "1'0 TOo M.~V

SCARED!

0 ' .tllM' S Wtt..D

STOA.IES-

ALLEY OOP

-

READY -ro GO BY

- -- - - - -- -- - - .REAuy rv" " .._..., ,., C~ET E

de l 1ve r ed r 1g h t t o your
p r otect Fast a n d eas y . Free
es t tmates Phon e 992 - 3 ~ 84,
Goeglein R eady M r)( Co ,
M1d dl e por t, Oh10
6 30 uC

POMEROY,O
TUPPERS PLAINS - Rt. 7

1f

l st o r y frame, 2 BR .
bath , basement . n ew st ee l
sidi n g, own wa t e r a nd ci t y
w at er , 21h a c r es in lawn ,
so m e
b uildin g
sit es.

bedroom s w ith cl ose t s, ba th ,
m o d e rn kit c h en i n c l u din g
stov e, b r ea kfas t n ook , fu ll
basem e nt, an d d ou ble g a r a ge
Exce ll e nt loca tion .

$1 0.500.
MIDDLE PORT

E x-

PINE

cell e n t cond1 t ton a nd ver y
co m f orta bl e. 2 stor y fr ame,

1st floor has 1 BR , bath ,
din in g R , uti lit y R , n 1ce
k i t chen ca b . r a nge, ref. 2nd
floo r 2 ntce BR . $15,500.

•
HOME

NEW

-

COUNTRY -

Good

h u n tin g, p le nty o f bu ildi ng
sites, a nd e lbow r oo m . N o on e
c lose ,
JU St
p r ivacy a nd
fr eedo m . 97 ac r es w1th a ll
mt ne r a l s.

SMALL

1 level

HOUSE

SEPT I C f A N KS CLC A N t:U
Re a son a b le RATES Ph onl
-1&lt;16 4782 Ga llipolt s
Jo hn
R u sse ll. owne r

~ 1::::1--' I lt.
1 ANKS Cleane d
Mod ern San II a li on 992 3954
or 992 7349
9 18 ti c

2

bedrooms, ba th , na tu ral gas.
c ity water , a nd compact l o t.

acre, 3 BR l arge close t s,
b a th , nt ce kit c h e n a nd
dining , uti l i t y R . ga r age,

Lt f RE1::: Trr mm m g, · 20
yea r s ex pe ri en ce I ns ured ,
f ree es l1 m at es Call992-3057,
Coolv ill e
Ph one ( 1) 667
304 1
4 3G-ifc

Askin g $6,000.00

yo u r ch o i ce of c o l ors in OUT OF TOWN - 3 bed r oom
c a r pe t ing. F u ll finan ci n g to ' m ob il e ho m e an d la r g e l ot
right p arty. S20,000.
L .C. wa t e r . ~ nd n at ura l gas.

POMEROY - 1'12 ac res, 2 Wan t only $9,500 00
BR , bath , la rge k it ~h en, LARGE - 10 room older home

Hou Se an d r oo f p ai nt ing and
repa 1r s F or tree esti mates,
ca l l 992 6190 or 99 2 5B37
6 15 26tc

------ -

GASOUNE ALLEY

I can see it
all as if it were
tjesterdal.l!

pit'

4

99 Yard
Square

CALL 742-4211 ··

TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE,
CARPET CONSULTANT

, build .

All

utrlt ttes.

An

ex -

THE
SAFEST
INYOUR
.VIOSTMENT THAT YOU TO«:I'TI&lt;NCREASE
CAN MAKE IS IN A HOME
RING 992-Jl25
SEE OR CALL US
TODAY.

on eself
14 wds .)
4 Sea ea gle
5 Marriage
partner
6 Hair-raising
i Unpersized
8 The end of
one's ·
patience
14 wds. i
9 Put back
10 Awesome

Yesterday ' s Answer

r.--r.,....r.--r.-

16 " Everything
Happens - "
12 wds. l
19 Frenetic
state
22 Actress
Corda y
23 Vis ionary
24 Surpassed
25 Functi on

7 :3G-Hollywood Squares 3;

27 Swa y ;
lurch
29 Attorney,
Melvin 30 Bobwhite
31 Rev1se
:16 " Not Stranger"
12 wds. l
3i Go to - for

[======~::~~P£:~~~Yi\(~~~tJ/~~~~ir-=E~:f~~f;~~~~1lJ~~;-~::::::::::==---,
- NAT'CHCI&lt;L.Y A SClUIRI CF - 8&lt;CEPT F(){:2. THr:= TIP OF
YO KIN L-IVE' WITH

LJS ~-

FOOD IS PL-AIN
FILL-IN' r-t)N IGHT,
COL-D SLICE D

MACHINE' OIL-

£VERY F£W
.·~.~.... C1C&gt;:YS WIL-L

MY NOSE, ONE WART'
AND A TOE -NAIL , I AM
AL L
INEr&lt;Y _._._

CO ME -

..--~'

TAURUS (April 20-May 201

package
38 Isolate
Of the same
family

Get on t he phone to tha t scr
\l tCe man or s tra1g h ten out th e
mo~: -up w t\h the s t ore
The
o dd s favor you 1n ty1ng up
loose en d s
~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
WINNIE
HI M ro'MEET
THE FAMILY.

loupgn no 17

I GUES6 SHE
/5 6ERIOU5
AOOUT HIM!

MAY5E wEl L GET TO

II

BE GREAT GRAND.

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to work It :

One letter simply stands for another. In th is sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two o·,, etc. Single lel,lers,
apostrophes, the length and form a tion of th e words are all

PARENTS YE"" rl.l P!

hints. Each

•5.00

d&amp;)' the r ode lellers are diffe r ent

CRYPTOQUOTES

Saves!.oo oli a Minor Motor Tun• Up. I ~yl, with air
cond. We will tun.-up ond odjutt your car on our
Sun Diagnostic Equipment.
Includes replacing Points. Plugs &amp; Condenser
Re~~ularly $42.95. NOW ONLY

t'G

Z FQ

WF I M

" GFT XET B 1 "

OT Z

EIB

E

•37.95

E

UF

TASFHQUPFIPDU,
pI

'

AREOUHZ

F y,

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) You
can m ake up to r the t1m e lost
yes t er d ay
You re ex t r aeu,·c tent at w o r k.ng today
W hat"s more . the payoff 1s n1 g h

CANCER (June 21-July 22 ) A
-· lig h t hearted summe r da y that
you 'll eq ua lly en JOY w1th the
l am 1ly and Ch tldren . or SOCializIng wtth closes ! t ne nd s

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Play any
hunches you have today about
th1 ngs concer ning your home
It could be a p l an tor
red ecorating or p 1ant1ng

YIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sepl. 22)
Yo u'll be domg somethrng w1\h
lnen ds to d ay . Travttltng . having lhem d rop tn or Just calltng
lhem w ould al l be happy

and get 1 1.-.. cor wosh with !hit coupon also. Offer
good lllr~ugh S.lurdly, June 7, 1975,
"'

10; To Be A nnbu nced 15

better Ide 15 ahe ad for you and
you r t am1 ty That ma1o r dea l
yo u ve been work 1ng Qn for a
lon g ltme f1nally bear s fru11

concern

YE~ 6HE WANTS

8; Sp ace for Ma n 20,33; Movie " The Kentu ckia n"

For Thurlday, July 17, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) A

:Ji Large

HMM ...WHAT HAVE
'IOU ElEEN TEL LIN&amp;
HER AOOUT ME?

8:3(}-Tex as Whee le rs 6, 13.
9:oo-Streets of Sa n Fr anctsco 6, l J,· M ov ie " P a rdn er s"

• Bem1ce B - Oool

:!3 ~~ore
34 Golfer
Weiskopf
35 Coac h's

rtRFE:CI-

'

Ch OICCS.

NO. 17_ m a series of money-saving service coupons. Keep

watchtng for our ads for mare coupons, designed to save you
money , coming your way weekly..
All work It Guoronleod
Complete healer, air conditioning and rodiotor 11rvlco,
. bocbd by experloilco . .
3 NIASE Cortiflod Mochanin.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A
rew ard you 're en1 11led to wt ll

81Ul5 0' FIR£!!
NOW I KNOW WHAT
THEI( MEAN ABOUT
BAD LUCK COMIN' IN

.I

,;

THREES

00 BUSINESS WITH A LEADER

Smith Nelson Motors' ln.~.
500 E . ~Min St.
Phone m-2174
Pomeroy, ONe
Service Hours: Mon.- Fri. 1-4: 30, S.lurdoyt 1-12 noon

•

•'

'

'

..
·,

1'1 , , .

,,

I'VE JUST
CaHE UP IIIlTH

1Hf PERFECT
THf()RI(

Squares 4;

Bess Mye r son : 20 .

AstroGrapt-l

bank
statement
320klahoma

NOBCOY'S

Hollyw ood

Ohio Lotte r y 6 ; New P rice is R1ght 8; Evening
Edition with Ma rtin Agronsky 20 ; Wild Kingdom
10; To Te ll the Trut h 13 . American Outdoors man
15.
8:00-Baseball 3. 4; Barne y Mil ler 6. 13; Glad ys Knight
&amp; the Pips 15; The Wa llons 10. Evening a t Pop s 33;

10 :00-H a rry 0 6, 13; News 15.
10 : 3~Jeopard y 3; News 6,8, 10, 13.20; ABC News JJ .
11 : J~Johnn y Carson 3, 4,; Wide Wor ld Specla l 13; FBI
6: Pllo1 8; Movie "T he Bobo" 10: Jana k! 33.
12 :00-P ilot 8.
12 :30-Wide World Speci al 6; P ilot " Gra nd pa Max" 8.
1:00-Tomor.row 3,4; P ilot 8, News 13.

' '26 Hayseed
2i Beloved of
Unc a s
Summer
I Fr.l
29 Word on a

for your money-with service

This Coupon
Is Worth

ce lle nt buy at $9, 000.00

nest

3 Resign

, '23 Artifice

_RUTLAND
.FURNITURE
742 -4211

lfS:VACATION TUNE-UP nME

I Defraud

2 Eagle' s

,·1:25Went apace h--+-t--+-

RUBBER-BACK
We have hundr e os ' o~
c arpet values Your [ob c e
be c omplet ed in 1 to
weeks
No long waiting.
period . Our lnslaller has 28
year s experience . E x p ert
In s talla t ion
You'll l i ke
whal you get

DOWN

common

CONDITI ON. men ts a nd e noug h space to

$8,900·

Wilber Pickett
and his bot.~s
in the

40 Remember
41 Watch over

14 Threatener's phrase
12 wds. i
15 French
river
16 Parson bird
I've
17 Japanese
enouqh 1 river
(rood
18 Flower.
12 wds. )
bt.~e'
20 Doze off
21 Appellation
22 Ordinary ;

GET MORE OUT OF YOUR CAR

~nw 'more

u til i t y R . g arag e. p rt v ate in t ow n . Suitable fo r a pa rt o r c it y wa ter , IN EX-

CELLEN T

- ----

ACROSS
I Cashier's
cubicle
5 "Folly"
fellow
II Mister, in
Munic h
12 KP worker
13 Hibernia

501 NYLON

&amp;

G ourme t 8; New Zoo Revue 13

9:45-Livln g Word 4
10 :1)(}-{;eleb rlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Di nah 13; Lili as
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
10 : 3~Wh ..,l of Fortune 3, 4, 15 . Gambil 8, 10; Frying
Pans West 33 .
11 :00-High Roll ers 3,4, 15 , One Life lo Live 6; Tat llelal es 8,1 0.
·
11 :36-Holl ywood Squares 3, 15; Brady Bunc h 13;
Midda y 4; Love ol Lile 8.10.
11 :55-Ta ke Ker r 8, Dake Ker r 8; Dan Ime l's World
10.
12 :00-Magnlf lcent Ma rbl e Mac hine 3, 15; Showoff s 13;
Bob Braun' s 50-SOClub 4: News 6.8 : Miste r Rogers
33.
12 : 30-Jackpot 3, 15; Searc h for Tomorrow 8, 10 ; E lec .
Co. 33.
12 :55-NBC Ne ws 3,15.
1:00-News 3; Ryan 's Hope 6,13, Phil Don a hue 8;
Yo ung &amp; the Restless 10; Not Fo r Wome n Onl y 15;
VIl la Alegre 33.
1 : 3~Day s of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Lei' s Make a Deal 6,1 3;
As lhe World Turns 8.10; Episode Action 33 .
2: 00-SIO ,OOO Pyr a mi d 6, 13 ; Guiding Li ght 8, 10;
Family at War 33 .
2: 3(}-Doctors 3, 4, IS;" Rhym e &amp; Reason 6, 13, E dge of
Night 8, 10 .
3:00-Another World 3, 4,1 5: Genera l Hos pital 6,13;
Price Is Right 8,10: Lilia s Yoga &amp; You 20; Play
Chess 33.
3:JO-One Llle to Live 13 ; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
. 8,10: Feeling Good 20; Fo lk Guita r 33 .
" Because They're Young " 10; Mi ke Douglas 13.
3; Me rv Griff in 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mic key Mouse Club 8; Bona nza 15.
5:00-FBI 3; Lu cy Show 8; Miste r Roge r s' Ne igh borhood 20,33; Iron si de 13.
5 : J~News6 ; Andy Griffith 8; Ge t Sma rt 15; El ec. Co.
20,33.
6:00-News 3, 4.8. 10. 13. 15 ; ABC News 6, Sesam e St . 20;
Book Beat 33
6:J~NBC News 3, 4,1 5; ABC News 13 ; Bewitc hed 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Li lias Yoga &amp; You 33 .
7:00-Truth or Cons . 3,4; Bowl ing for Dollar s 6; What's
My Line 8: Ne ws 10: Let's Make A Deal 13 ;
Jimm y Dean 15; Ma ki ng it Counl 20: Nova 3J.

by

'THE llMii; 'rOLl. .....
I
FELLOWS GOT .....,ME·

Carpeting

-.

-

7:00-Today 3,4,15 , AM Amer ica 6. CBS News 8,1 0
8·00- Lassle 6: Capt. Kangaroo 8; Schoolles 10;
Sesa me St 33
8· 30-Big Va ll ey 6; Popeye 10
8:55-C huck While Reporls 10 .
9·00-A M. 3; Phi l Do nahue 4; Phil Dona hue 15;
Mur ie l Stevens 8. capt Kangaroo 10, Mor ning with
O.J 13.
9 : 3~ N ot For Women On ly 3. Dinah 6. Ga llop ing

4 : 3~Bewltched

6!ltUe.W"td'
THOMAS -JOSEPH

.. :Tl-lEN I COULD
HAVE E.VE~lNG

LET US DO IT! !

Q.ELAND
608 E.
REALTY
MAIN

6 · 45-M orn lng Report 3: Farmtime 10

6:55- News 13

A: oo-Mr . Cartoon 3; I Dre am of J ea n n ie 4 ; Somerset
IS: Musical Cha irs 8. Sesa me St. 20,33; Movie

rN

-EX

Real Estate for Sale

T OMATOES.
cucum b e r s.
Clel an d Fa rm s , Ger a ld in e
Cleland
7 6 tfc

.•

THUR SDA Y, J ULY 17,1975

North's biddmg has been both
NORTII
16 bril lian t a nd successf ul. He
• -could have JUmped right to SI X
• 6
diamonds. but he wa nted to buy
• Q 10 3 2
the ha nd there so he bid jus t
4 A K 876s 42
five The n when Wes t wen! to
Wt;ST
EAST
SIX hear ts North fe lt he had to
4 K J 10 3
4 A Q 9 7 5 4 :save at seven dia monds .
• 1\ K 10 9 7 ~ 4 2 • Q J 8
East ha d no 1dea tha t there
. 9
• 7
was any da nger of South mak-

7 -tb

s E Wi N 1.7

I

-----------

'

12 : 30--M ovie " Death Cru i se " 6
I oo- Tomorrow 3. New s 13 .

~~~~~~R eg

LA R GE g ril l with ro li s~Ser ie ;
new l a r ge g uit ar ; 7 h . p 26"
c ut H u ffy rid in g m ow e r ,
good c ond it 10n P hone 992
] 44]

)

13; FBI6 ; Movie " The Connec t ion" 8; M ovie " F all

Sale" 10 . Janaki 33 .

6 ·QO-Sun r ise Seminar 4 : Su mm er Se mester 10.

~b

...
'

9:3()-J ean Shephe r d's America 20.

10:00- B&amp;r ella 6, 13 , Mannix 8; Al&amp;ska' s Inside
Passage 10; News 20; Family al War 33 .
11 :00- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 33 .
'11 :30-J ohnny Carson 3.4. 15; Mov ie " Dea th Cruise"

WIN AT BRIDGE
East's double brings trouble

7 11 -90t c

WOVLU YO U B ELIE V E ?
Bui ld an a ll st ee l b u il di ng at
Po l e Ba r n p rices? G old en DOZER w o rk, la nd cle ari ng
G1a nt A ll Stee l Bu il din gs ,
b y the acre, h ou rl y o r
IM
Rt
4, Box 148. W averl y,
c on t rac t
Fa r m
p ond s, .
Oh1o Phon e 947 22 96
r oads. etc L ar ge do ze r an d
THE HOM E 'hat you hav e
6 -24 261 c
ope r ator w1th over ~0 yea r s i
b een
wa11r ng for , co n
ex p erience
P u ll i ns E v ·
\ien,enlly located on a n ice CARPET Ins t alla t ion , Sl ~5
cavat tng, P ome r oy, Oht o
159 95
s t r eet
3 l a r ge bedrooms ,
per yard . Ca ll
R i chard
P h o n e 992 2478
139 95
mo dern
kil che n
wllh
West.
phone
'MII3
2667
.
12-19 ti c
4,UOOOTU
modern cabmets . ga r bage
7 2 26tp
Only .! J i b
d1sposa l , o utsi de venrs o n
- - - -------- - - LUM tjiNU , nt:'dl~&lt; •!,l • ~ ' "" "' "' ' '
___
&gt;lher mod els
ra nqe an d dr yer . lar ge GENERAL R epa 1r , clean up
a n d inst allat ton , e l ec t r ica l.
--=- ~
on sa le
li Ving r oo m , d1n1ng r oom ,
and
h au11ng ,
cut t in g,
w at er pump r e p a 1r , roo f ing ,
wa t l t o wall carpe! mg , air
we l d1ng.
ca rp e ntr y ,
h o u se an d roof pa inl ing ,
co nd il 10n1ng , h ot water
plum b 1n g, ele c ma sonr y
ge n er a l r epa 1r . reasonable
bast:&gt;board h ea l , 1,560 II .o()f
and g eneral rem o de l 1ng .
ra t es , fr ee esti m a t es , 15
:POMI!ROY LANDMARK
spac1ous l 1v1ng a r ea Also
Call Sk 1I -Poo l P hon e 992
ex peri e n ce
Ca ll
y e ars
9._Jick W. C•rny, Mgr .
u t li lly r oom and g arage
5 126
6 17 -tf c
Charles Si ncli!lir . 985-41 21 or
6:. Phone tfl-2111 · ...
N1ce.:- lawn
House 1n e)(
992 222 1.
c ellen t
Condi l ion
t rn
WILL T RI M or cut t ree s and
7 10 -1l t c
mediate posse ss .on P hone
shru bbe ry a n d pa in t r oofs
997 37 60
CAVA T
G ,do:ier~fO ad e r
Phone 949 3221 or 742 -444 1.
7 15 61 (
a nd ba c kh oe wor k. se pti c
6-24 -26tp
t a nk s
in st al led,
dump
1 72 AC~E S land an d l oc u s t
·I Y E/\R OLD 3 bedrm hou se
tru cks an d l o boy s t o r hlfe.
pos t s Als o 196'i 1 ord LT D
WI L L do odd job s, pa inting ,
Ca ll a lt er 4 p m , 992 S064
wi ll ha ul fi ll dir t , top SOl i,
Phone 7 t ? :1 656
roo f i n g ,
h aul 1ng
a nd
7 15 l?lp
lim es t on e and gravel , Ca ll
mowi n g Phon e 992 740 9.
S 23 S2tp
B o b o r Rog er J eff e r s. da y
76 - 1~tc
ph
on e 99 2 7089 , n ig ht p hone
HOUSE
for
sale
located
near
H OUSE 1n Po rtl and . 5 r ms .
992 3525 o r 992 5232
Cheste r , 1~ acre. a ll e lec tr ,c. NEt.LJ P.. n ew n ome buill on
and b alh , good we ll, 2 a c res
'2 11 lf c
yo u r lo t ? Cont ac t M i\o B
3 b~"'1 r oom. 2 bathS , d 1Sh
of
grou nd .
T ake
ove r
Hutc
h
ison,
Rutl
a
nd
,
Oh'iO
.
was
n
er
.
carpe
t,
f
ul
l
p a yments
Phone B43 1292
Phone 742 36 15
basement. 'l ca r garage , al!
7 9 17t c
5-8 t f c
br• ck Week day s, ca ll 985 476 2, week en ds , ()04) 773
S p 0 ut i n g ,
R 0 -Q"F I N G ,
5 7?8
alu minum a nd v inyl si ding ,
7 13 6t c
co mp le t e
remod e linq
Phon e 742-62 73 or ( 304 ) 773 5684 . Free esti mates.
_
6 -25 -.: ..,,p

PORT A-COOL
ROOM -to-ROOM

z

Middleport
5-30-1 mo .

1

Phone 992-5682
or 992-7121

Real Estate For Sale

MODERN wat n ut console
s te r eo rad10 (Oillbmat,on d
s p eed c hanger
Ba l ance
'l.\ 0 1 40 or term s Call 991
J96 S
7 9 tl c

32 7 N. 2nd

WORK

AND NOW r ·M PREPAR I"6
ltE'I' IO:.I! 1'"0 !l!ODDY- E5'&gt;' E : ... A
l l l"H!O PRIVACY, PlEASS, IF
'IOU DON 'T Ml"lD :

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2550

GARAGE
2 Miles West
ALL
MECHANICAL

THIN K YOU' RE
GOI NOTO DO ,
$ 1~ GAcAHA D

UNFOLD
THI$
CO T...

Construction
and Plumbing

ROGER HYSELL'S
On St. Rl . 124
Off Rl. 7 By- Pass

"-"'1-IA I'" DO YOIJ

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING

- - - - --,

6- 18- 1 mo .

TRA I LE R lot in Mi ddl epo rl. 27 FT p r iva t e own ed tra v el
Call 99/ 5434 .
tr a i l er. f ull y sel f -conta in ed .
7 16 ~6tc
t an de m whee l s, fu ll y ca r _p f!o t ed , · a 1r
co ndll i o ne d . 1
l ROOM un f u r n1s h ed apart
.a wnt no See any t i me at
ment in MiddlepOr t Pho n e
' Yo u n g 's
M ob i le
Home
• 9..9') 54)jl
Cou r t , R t 7 Gall 1poli s, Oh io .
1 16 6tc
7 13 7t p
TWO
bedrm
re f ere n ce
a nd
reQu ire d
Pho n e

·'"em e rgenc y
949-22 11 or 992 - 5700
Comp l ete rt 1r con d1t10ni ng
sales and serv tce, hea t ing,
plumbin g , ro ofing a n d
gene r a l sheet metal wo rk
F ree Esttm a l es
7 11 l mo .

+------------------ --

H G N DA c B 750, exce llent
cond it 1on
Ph on e 94 9· 222v .
7-11 -6tc

For Rent

Y our H ell D earer
T hrr d Sf .
Ra c tne, Otlio
Ph . 949- 5961

Washer &amp; Dryer
and
Small Appliance
Repair

7 2i

RE G po ll ed H erefo r d bull s, 2
y ea rling s . 1 f o ur yr o ld
Ph one 992 556 5 or 99 2 2B26
7 13 -Mc

-- - -

Truck or
Bu l l dozer Rad1M or to t he
sm all es t Heater Co re

BEAN S. PI Ck you r o wn , ~'J SO
p er b ushel A lso . (dbbag e
and yellow an d zucc hm •
squash Phone BJ3 2353 aft e r ; - - - - -

MOBILE Home for r ent m
Ra.c1ne
Phon e 949 77 6 1.
Albe rt H il l
7 I 0 6t c
WATER tank . '$ 1 DO
Phon e f:/9'1 5704

l

For Sale

B EDROOM mob •l e h ome
loc at ed on 143 . 2 m11es. tr om
Pom eroy Phone 997 5858
7 7 lfc

3

~---

CAP!' AIN EASY

Does your home
require any . of these
services?
WE DO&gt;
Siding
Roofing
Complete
Home
Maintenance.

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

I

N at h a n B 1gg s
Ra dt ator Sp e ci a li s t

r ! SHIN G I ICCI1SC . Ca n ad1 an
N li e cra wl ers 60c doz O uq
wor ms 3 d07 \ 1 O t he r b ad .
ta c k l e . qun s . nm m o . cb's,
tnd i(Ul
Joe s Spo r t s
JOB
Pa 4e Sl
P hon e 992 3S09,- j.o("
6
I

GARAGE SAL E
Wed
nesday t h r oug h Sa t urday ,
July 16t h through 19t h, 35 3
Pa l mer 5 1 . Mi d dlepor t
Lo t s of g ood c h il dren's and PR I VA T E m eet 1nq room l or
an y orqa n, l a t• on . phone 99 7
adult clothing, var1o u s othe r
If/ 7 '}
ttems
J 1I I f c
7 I S 41C

p m

TOYOTA waqon
30
m p q Phon e 99 7 70B7
7 10 61p

19 17

7 16 ]IC

5 F AMILY Yard Sa l e, south of

YARD Sa l e Thu r sday . July 17 .
and Friday , Ju l y 18 . 10 am
Co r ner o f F ront a n d Hu d son
St, Mid d lepo rt .4 Family ·ViO l a Edwa r d , Co ll een Van
Me ter. Terr 1 T o l e r , an d
Luc11 1e Yo un g Fa n s, d1s h es ,
bow lm g ba ll
a n d b ag ,
c l oth es of a ll sizes. boo k s.
cu r tains an d d rapes. co ff ee
pot . rugs m any , many o t her
i t em s l oo numerous to I 1st
7 15 Jtp

7-7·1 mo ...,

I

YARD SALE 17, 18 and 19 at 9
am
L.o t s o t g 1r l s' and
womt'n 's c l oth1ng , r ad10.
goo d wa sh1 ng
rnach 1ne d ROOM unfurni Sh ed hous ~.
motor
t1r e r1m s, rugs ,
1650 L mco l n Hgts , phonP
drapertcs and bedspnads, 1
99 2 3814
tw1 n bed co mpl e te . t r 1cy c le.
7 6 1tc
tCt wn mower , antiQUe se wing
mach1n e. big bO)( ot free 2 BEDROOM trailer , s:n p er
!! ems
?f 88 Ol1 v e r
St.
week . util1tt es pa1d Ph o n e
M•dd te po r t , of f Grant St
992 332 4
7 16 )t (
1 6 tf c
T upper s Plam s at R1ggs
crest Houstng Deve lopment,
F r1day and Satu r day f rom
10 a m till 4 p m
7 16 Jtp
-· , YARD Sa l e. Br u ce Dav •s
res 1d ence Ru tl and. LarkinS
S t Tuesday , Wed n.es d ay
and Thursday . T w o gas
ct rculalt n g
6 , 000
J?TU
hea t er s. 6.000 BTU gas cook
s tov es g ood fo r cannmg ,
several w h it e ShirtS , w1ndow
awn 1ngs , and some c lo t hes
Also , would lrke to buy a
bil l y goat
7 15 '.1 tc

Eve nings 742 -4902

d 10 I mo

T HER E will be a Yard Sa l e at
!h e
G race
Hultma n
rPS 1dc ncc .
co rnc r
of
.;-wc amor e ilnd F1fth Str eets
1r1
Ra c1 n e. Thur sd ay and
F r •d ny f rom 9 a m to 4 p m
7 16 ?tc

Caution Light"
Rl . 7, Tuppers Plains, 0 .
Shop Us Last &amp; Save
Ope n 9-5 Wed. through Sun .
Ph . 667-J8S8
7-7-1 mo
)
" At

Ltabilitv Insu r ance
Ph . 992-7608

Ph . 992 -J993

4 door , loca l car, air con d1flon ed , f ull e quipm en t

BARGAIN CENTER

We Carry

Sy r ac u se, Ohio

Sl495

KUHL"S

Vi n y l s1d ing , al~u minum
sidtng, patio c o v~rs , stor m
wi n dows ,
k tt c h e n s,
bath r oo m s a nd g arages.

LARRY I,AVU.OER

6 c y l s t d tran s , rad•o . l1k c n ew w wIt r es, blue f 1n1 sh.
n tce car w tth good eco no m y

YARD SALE qood clothing,
a dut!S nnd childr e n chord
orqan , q uilt p1 eces. d1she s
and rHi Sc
ll em s
James
f\.Jii'-' Y r c~ 1 dc n c e
Che s ter
f- r 1dily .:md S.:rtur d &lt;'!y
9 30
a m to l p m
1 16 3t c

CASH ' N CARRY
SAVE S US's on
Guaranteed
appliances,
used furniture at

JOHNSON
REMODEUNG

Blown
In sulation Services

6:00-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; AB C News 6: Sesa me St . 20 ;
YO&lt;J Owe It To Yourself 33.
6 :30-NBC Ne ws 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bew itc hed 6;
CB S News 8, 10; Jody' s Body Shop 33
7:00-Truth or Con s. 3,4; Bow ling for Dollars 6; What' s
My Line 8; Ne ws 10; CO&lt;Jnl ry Mus ic Jubll.., 13; To
Be Announ ced 15; Bool&lt; Beat 20; The Rom agnolls'
Ta ble 33
·
1 . 3~ Poll ce Surgeon 3; Na me That Tune 4; Le t's
Make a Deal 6; Wilburn Brot he r s 8; Evening
E dlflon with Ma rt in Agr....,sky 2Q; · Movie " Be lle
Starr" 9 ; The Juge 10; To Te ll the Truth 13;
E pisode Action 33.
· ·
8:00-LIIIIe HO&lt;Jse on the Prairie 3.4.15: Th a i's My
Mama 6.13; Tony Orla ndo &amp; Dawn 8, 10; F..,llng
Good 20,33 .

_j

IT'S M'( lHEOR't' THA'T

,8EETHOVEN IIIOULO .HAVE

WRITTeN EVEN Be~MI/S(C .
IF HE HAD BEEN MARftlEO!

WHAT'5 50 PERFECT
ASOUT ll-IAT 'lllEOR'I' 1

come you r way to d ay tn som e
farm L o ok l o r a ra1se o r
rememh rnn ce f or a favor

SC ORP ' 0 (Oc t. 24-Nov . 22)
Wh at a pear s 1o be luck to
o the rs IJu t IS really th e res ult of
do1ng all the nght th1ngs w1 11 b r ' ng you s omething lo n gdesned

SAG!TT ARIU S (N ov. 23-Dec.
21) Yo ur 1nSt 1nc ts a re sup er acute today
You cou ld
probably w1n on t he ho rses or
81 poker .

CAPRI CORN IDee. 22 -Jan .
19) Call tha t ln en d w1t h whom
you ha d the disagreem en t
recenlly The d ay s per fec t ro r
c lermng the &lt;'I If ge1t 1ng a fresh
start

AQUARIU S (Jan . 20-Feb. 18
Thts IS the day to talk to the
boss abou t what you d do 11 you
get tha t new tob th afs opened
up He'll be recept1ve to your
1d eas

PI SC ES (Feb. 20-March 20)
l ake th e Child r e n to t he
amusemen t park today You "lt
have as much fun as they Wlll
JUS! watct11ng the tr you thfu l exube rance

A

Your

~ Birthday
July 17, 1S75
A new love ln l ftrest Wilt come
111 10 your tile th 1s com1ng yea r
It co lll d be a new rom ance. a
baby or even a new sOC ial
dlll €f!'j10n
· :\'~: W s\-' ,,1'1-:H ~: \'H : HI'H l~E

-\ S,•&gt;\'

IT CAN'T E'E PROVED ONE
WA'&lt; OR THE OTHER !

'

�'
14 - Tpe Daily 3entmel, Mtdolleport-Pomeroy, 0 ; Wttlnesday, JUly 16: 1975

Malpractice bill ready for floor vote
•

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
•,. COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
revtsed medical malpracttce
: msurance reform btl! has
7. cleared the Senate Insurance
1J:onumttee and ts bemg pre• pared for a floor vote later
thts week, perhaps Thursday '
The
legtslalton,
IUlarumously adopted by t~e
conumttee Tue$y everung,
has been substantially
changed s mce tt left the
House on a 92-2 vote last June
17, and further amendments
are expected on the Senate
floor
It ts destgned to answer the
problem of skyrocketmg mal-

practice msurance costs
whi ch tn some cases have

prevented phy s tcta ns and
hospttals from affo rdm g
coverage
Portions of the measure
have al tenated attorneys,
medtcal care provtders and
Insurance compames, all of
whom are ftghtmg a vanety
of restrtcttons the btl! would
place on them
Even members of th e
Senate commttlee, whtle

Corn fest
.
.
;
·
,

(Continued from page I)
Supermarket, A and P Store,
Powell 's Super Valu, D and D
Meat Dtstnbutor, Tony's
Carry-Out, Joe's Carry-Out,
Martm Restaurant, Jack 's
Datry Bar , RC Bolthng Co ,
Frtendly
Tavern,
Headquarters Bar, Mtddleport LIUlch Room, Har old
Chase, Mayor Fred Hoffman ,
all members of Mtddleport
Counctl and Mtddleport
Pollee Department

votmg for the btll to get tt to
the floor, ratsed questwns
about the effects of vanous
proVlstons Legtslators a nd
lobbytsts for . the spec tal mterest groups tndt cated
confuston •a bout the vanely of
amendments adopted durmg
the SIX hours of comnut tee
work Tuesday
MaJor amendments Inserted by the commtltee
\\Ould
malpracttce
- Shtft

law su1ls to county common
pleas co urts rather than send
them to the state Court of
Clauns
- Eltrmnale a $500,000
limitatiOn on overall damage
awar d s In malpractice
lawsUits but restore a $200,000
ltd on 'pa m and sufferm g"
awa rds
- Establtsh a " btl! of
nghts" for pattents
.._J arrut contmgency fees
for attorneys representmg
phys\Clans and hospttals tn
malpractiCe cases, as well as
lawyers for plamltffs
The $200,000 hmtt on "pa m
and suffermg" awards whtch
may be sought m court by
medical malpractiee victuns
was restored by the commtttee
after
tang led
procedural maneuvermg
It had been con Ia med m the
House verswn of the btl! , but
was removed by a Senate
s ubcommittee in favor of the
$500,000 ltmtt on overall
damages As voted by the
full Senate commtttee, there
would be no lumt on medtcal
expense awards whtch could
be sought m malpracttce
laWSUits
Twenty-etght amendments
were offered durmg the meeltng, and 16 were accepted

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Belvta
Rtggs, Langsvtlle; Belva
Amburgey, Syracuse; Pearl
Greathou se, Galltpolts;
George Conde, Syracuse ;
Thelma Roberts , Mtddleport;
Naomi BtsseU, Long Bottom,
Ada Keesee, Pomeroy
DISCHARGES - Rtchard
Dye, Rtchard Rathburn ,
Harold Ntce, Paula Cunnmgham, Wetzel Batley,
Harry Ptckens, Sr., Mabel
Swan , Gregory Cunmngham

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, July 151
Mrs Ronald Lee Aleshtre
and trdant son, Osste Auxter,
Sharon
Lee
Barcus,
Wyllodine Barker, Donna
Jean Byer, Mrs Lewts Earl
Davts and tnfant daughter ,
l&gt;atsey Ruth Denney, Carne
L. Ferrell, Mrs Lowell Cecil
Flowers and mfant daughter ,
Gene P Gregg, Jr., Eva

TONITE THRU FRI.
DOUBLE FF.ATURE
"MY NAME IS NOBODY"
' Rated PG'
PLUS
"THE SUGAR LAND
EXPRESS"
'Rated PG'

: MEIGS THEATRE
Tontght &amp; Thursday
July 16-17
NOT OPEN
;

Fri. . Sal &amp; Sun.

July 18 19 20
THE TRIAL
OF B1LLY JACK
(Techmcolor)
Show starts at 7:oop.m.

Alene Head, Gladys Henderson , John Joseph Horan ,
Mabel Delores Hughes, Vtckt
Lynn Jordan, Mae B Love,
Mark Edward Manmng, Juha
Margaret McGhee, Ellen L
Moss, Oswin Sterling Nease,
Dons May Patterson, Teddy
Gene
Poe ,
Orv tll e
Radabaugh, Mrs Frank R
RadlUle and infant daughter,
James R Rtggs, Mrs. John
Everett Sayre and mfant
daughter, Mary C Scherer,
Jeffery Allen Sexton, Cora M
Sharp, Eva B Shtelds, Sally
K Shupe, Wtlltam E Slagle,
Rwe V. Stewart, Juamta Sue
Tdylor, Wtlham Hay Walker,
Elizabeth G Wmkler
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED - Mrs
Ronald Harnson, daughter,
Mtddleport; Mrs . Alftce
Chapman, son, Galhpohs
Ferry;
Mrs .
Charles
Marktns, Galhpolts; Mrs
Cltfford Cornell, Buffalo;
Morgan Flora, Southstde,
Desste Burdette, Potnt
Pleasant , Samuel Stone,
Leon, Mrs Btlly Cochran,
Potnl Pleasant and son,
Wtlham Ray, Ashton, Mrs
Clyde Tucker, Leon, Mrs
Juntor Gtlhspte,
Po tnt
Pleasant; Mrs. James Lee,
Cltfton, Vtrginta Wolfe, ,
Syracuse;
Mrs
James
Crump, Pomt Pleasant; Mrs
Ray
Dawson,
Mason ,'
Frankie Ptcket, Crown Ctly,
Mrs Ronald Stmpktns, Pomt
Pleasant; Herbert Deal ,
Pliny; Paula Hurlow, Mason
BIRTHS, July 13,
a
daughter to Mr and Mrs
Rodney Gtbeaut, Raeme;
July 14, a son to Mr and Mrs
Jeffery Hubbard, Racme;
July 15, a daughter to Mr. and
Mrs . Rtchard Wray, Ashton,
and a daughter to Mr. and
Mrs . Howard Wolfe, Portland

SAVE $100
from the regular
low price

Special buy¢on 2 piece
living room suites
makers.

NOW'

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDI.£PORT, OHIO
t

One ame ndment, oltered by
Sen. Stanley J Aronoff, RCincmnatt, and adopted by
the com mtttee, sets a $50
datly luntt on defense attorney fees In medical
IIJ alpracllce lawsuits
The commtllee refused to
knock out a contmgency fee
ltmllatwn for attorneys
repre senting malpracttce
VI CtimS

The Ohw Bar Assoctalton
has mamtamed It IS unconsllt utwnal for the state to
ltmtt attorney fees
Aronoff a lso proposed
settmg a $75 maxtmum datly
fee for doctors, but that
amendment dted for lack of a
second
An o ther amendment
adopted wou)d permtt the use
of expert wttnesses from
outSide OhiO m malpracllce
Ia\\ SUits
The conun tttee added a
sweepmg pattents' "btU of
nghts" to the measure

Camera
(Contmued from page 1)
after the launch , the Soviet
pubhc sltll had not seen any
him of the two men mstde
Soyuz 19
Blagov satd the fault ''wtll
not affect the flight The only
sufferers are the VIewers.''
Asked about the atmosphere at m1ssion control,
Blagov sa1d, "Excitement 15
great on both sides."
As the cosmonauts hurtled
through space, the Sovtet
unton celebrated the htstonc
jomt nnsswn wtth a song, an
ongmal perfume and a new
brand of ctgarettes.
Bng. Gen. Thomas Stafford
and ctvthans Vance Brand
and Donald "Deke" Slayton
maneuvered thetr modifted
Apollo moonshtp toward that
stngle orbit goal twtce
Tuesday rught
Today's schedule called for
Leonov and Valert Kubasov
to swttch mto Soyuz's !mal
assembly orbtl Soyuz was
2,600 mtles ahead and 15
mtles htgher than Apollo
early today.
The
mam
ca tchup
maneuvers begm Thursday
mormng. The Amencans will
quickly overtake their
Russian colleagues and
rendezvous over South
America shortly before noon
EDT.
two
ships
are
The
scheduled to come together at
12 15 p .m. EDT, when
Apollo's new dockmg module
clasps the nose of Soyuz over
Germany. The htslonc
handshake m space wtll come
later when Stafford shthers
through the cyhndrtcal
docking module and meets
Leonov m the hatchway of
Soyuz The shtps wtll be
hnked 44 hours.
The two space crews,
speakmg their nattve tongues
when talking to thetr control
centers m Moscow and
Houston , will speak each
other's language when they
get together, This is to slow
thetr talk so the other crew
will better understand them
The pilots started out Tuesday from time zones eight
hours apart. As a result, the
cosmonauts were eating
dinner when the astronauts
had breakfast Leonov and
Kubasov went to sleep three
hours before the Americans
T~esday night
But by
Thursday, the spacemen will
be on the same time
schedules.
Both crews became orbttal
repair men during their first
day m space to deal Wlth
mmor problems.
The Russians were given
lengthy
step-l)y-step
procedures to try to ftx a
balky television camera.
They were told to unscrew a
panel
and
cut
some
decorative matenal lining
the cabin of thetr descent
module to geteto the camera's
cables.
This surpnsed
American fhght controllers
because the Russians in the
past have not camed out
such repatrs.
" We'll try to do all that,"
Leonov satd. " It will lake a
little ltme but we understand ."
The Apollo pilots ftred a
burst from a control Jet to get
rid of a bubble m a fuel tank
caused when Bran~ . inadvertently flipped a wrong
switch. They also had
problems Wlth a lme that
dumps urine overbo ard and
difficulties with the cabin
heating system before gettmg
the temperature to a comfortable
70
degrees
Fahrenheit

Tuesday mor mn g - as the !tents be gtven the right to a
commtttee began votmg on dtagnosts, prognosts and
amendments offered by knowledge of nsks m " unphySICians,
attorneys, derstandable language ; " the
hospttal represenlattves and rtght to prtvacy and conftdenltaltty; the rtght to
msurance firms
select
a different phySJctan;
" I think there ought to be
nghts
to an ttemtzed bill
the
something m here for the
pattents," satd Sen DaVld L • and a look at hts medtcal
Headley, D-Barberton, m records; and the nght to
prompt lifesavmg techmques
offenng the amendment
Headley proposed that pa- regardless of mcome

Agency se~ces
explained here
'

Servtces prov tded by the
Dtvtston of Mental RetardatiOn and Developmental
Dtsabtltltes were explam ed to
the Metgs CulUlty Human
Resources Counc1l wh1ch met
Tuesday at the Me1g s lnn
lWlcheon room.
Leo nar d
M
In glese,
manager of 01stnct 8 and
Judy
Koch,
EducatiOn
Consultant for Dtstnct 7 and 8
spoke
concern mg
the
responsibilities and services
provtded by thetr agency
Some of the fwJCtwns mvo lv ed mclude treatment,
restdenttalcare , tram mg and
consultatiO n to mentally
retarded
and
developmentally dtsabled mdtvtduals
and thetr famtltes The
Dtstnct 8 offtce ts responstble
for coordmatmg commwuty
educataon
traintng
programs, protecltng the
nghts and mterest of menta lly
retarded
and
developmentally dtsabled
persons, and supervising
annual
mspeclton
and
hcenstng all of the restdenttal
care facthttes wtthm etght
cotmtJes
It was annoW1ced that the
ColUl ty Servtce Dtrectory ts
now completed wtlh 42 ser·
vtce agencies hsted These
are agencies with responstbtlthes m Metgs County
Ltsted also are churches and
clubs acltve tn the colUlty
Stnce tht s ts the ftrst
dtrectory pubhshed by the
ColUlctl many addthons and
rev1s10ns are expected
Anyone wan ltng to order a
dtrectory may contact Anna
Schuler, Gallta-Metgs
CummlUltly Aclton Agency,
P 0 Box 272, Cheshtre, Oh10,
45620 or phone 367-7341 or 9925606 The cost of the dtrectory
IS $2 25

Notic~s,

local news in brief

There w •ll be a county w1de
prayer meetmg Sunday, July
20, at 2 p m at the Allegheny

Wesleyan MethodiSt Church
011 SR 7 at Tuppers Platns
Glen B•ssell
leader

DELORES

ts

The next meetmg wtll be
August 19 at the Metgs Inn
and the Metgs County
CommW1 tly Mental Health
Center and Personal Advocacy wtll co nduct the
program Twenty-four people
atte nded the meetmg They
were Hank Cleland, Bureau
of Vocatwnal Rehabthtatton,
Mary Sktnner, Personal
Advocacy, Btl! Wrtght, Metgs
Co unt y Welfare, Robtn
Chaphn , Center for Human
Development,
Deby
Kltmaszewskt , Center for
Human Development,
Evelyn Scarberry , Ohto
Bureau of Employment
Serv1ce, Joe Green, Bureau
of Servtces for the Blmd,
Marcy Kubbs, Metgs Co•"•'Y
CommlUltty Mental Health
Ctr.; Dons Bailey, Metgs
ColUlty Health Department,
and Joyce Thoren, Planned
Parenthood
Also, Margaret Ella Lewis,
Metgs CommlUltty School;
Chester V Kmg, Chatrman,
Amencan Red Cross; Beulah
Strauss, Metgs ColUlty Health
Department, Gene Lyons,
Metgs
County
Health
Department, Vernon Nease,
Blood Program, Amencan
Red Cross, Manmng Webster, Mental RetardatiOn
Board, Leafy Chasteen,
Metgs Co lUl ty ColUlcil on
Agmg, Ann Shuler, GalhaMetgs Commumty Aclton
Agency, Ann Shuler, GalhaMetgs Communtly Actton
Agency, Fay Sauer, Commtttee for Mentally Retarded , Len Inglese, Dtstnct 8,
Mgr ,
Dtv ,
Mentally
Retarded and Developmentally Dtsabled, and Judy
Koch , EducatiOn Consultant,
Dtv Mentally Retarded and
Developmentally D1sabled

the

class

w•sh to send cards

GUY HYSELL. prestdent
of lhe B1g Bend C B Club,
sa1d

today

Dates
Qf
have been
AEIKER,

Pomeroy, is in guarded
cond1t1on at
Unnterslty
Hospital She ts in the card1ac
ward, room 623 for those who

the

meeftnq

the
club
changed to

the second Tuesday and
the

last

:saturday

at

the

month, w1th the next meehng

July 26 at 8 p m
THE MT . MORIAH Church
of God will hold Its annual
homecommg Sunday, July 20.
Lunch well be served at noon
and the afternoon speakers

Virginia Hawk
of Coolville
died Tuesday
COOLVILLE - Vtrgtnta
Floral Hawk I 51 I ' Rt 2t
Coolvtlle, dted IUlexpectedly
at her home Tuesday mght.
She was born m Reedy , W.
Va , to Mrs Floda Westfall
Loti of Rt 1, Reedsvtlle , and
the late Ehsha Loti
A member of the Tuppers
Platns Chrisltan Church, she
was employed at the former
Elmwood Nursmg Home
several years
In addtlion to her mother,
she IS survt ved by her
husband , Lester M. Hawk; a
son, Roger L. of Rt 1, Reedsville; two daughters, Mrs
·Candace Carleton, Rt 2,
Coolvtlle, and Nancy Hawk,
Columbus; three grandchildren; stx sisters, Mrs
Ernest (Dale) Sanders,
Reedsville; Mrs. Harry
(Lilhan) Fmdling, Carroll,
Ohto, Mrs June Carson, Rt.
I, Reedsville; Mrs Carol
Stalnaker, Greenville, S.C.;
Mrs. Robert ( Elve 1 Schirtzmter, Columbus, and Mrs.
Dale
(Hope)
Logsdon,
Columbus, and one brother,
Oren Loll, Tampa, Fla.
Funeral 'servtces will be
held Friday at 2 p.m. at the
Tuppers Plams Chrtsltan
Church with burtal to follow
m ~he church cemetery.
Frtends may call at the
White
Funeral
Home ,
Coolvtlle, after noon on
Thursday. The body will lie in
state at the church one hour
pr.10r I&amp; services

are the Rev

Ralph Woods

and the Rev Mark Muncy .
The publlc ts lnv1ted, and all

s• ngers are welcome The
pastor Is the Rev Donald
Combs

THREE MEN WERE fined
on

two charges each

•n

Middleport Mayor's Court
last night with Mayor Fred
Hoffman preSiding
Don
Lovett, 52, Middleport, was
sentenced to 15days In ja1l for
disorderly manner , and an
addt!tonai 15 days for
disturbing the peace
Others were Roy F Boggs,
41, Shade, $10 and cos ts ,
disorderly manner, and $25
and costs, resisting arrest,
and Paul Spencer, 18. Midd leport, $150 and costs and 3
days 1n 1ali, OWl. and SIO and
costs, no operator's license

CORREl"i'ION
Jl was erroneously reported
Tuesday of the Mtddleport
Counctl that Lowell Price
asked the clerk and mayor to
deny thetr "pay wages" m
the future to help the village's
ftnanc1al s ituation . Pnre
asked lhe clerk and mayor to
deny thetr "wage increases"
scheduled to begtn 1n
January

ASK TOWED
A marr1age hcense has
been tssued to Donald Ray
Desktns , 33, Dexter and
Kathenne Luctlle Pauley, 28,
Albany

DIVORCE GRANTED
A dtvorce has been granted
to Alva Lee Reed from
Wtlham Reed on grolUlds of
gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals will be
rece1ved by th e Clerk ot !h e
Board
of
County
Com
m•sstoners Gall ta County,
Oh10 at the otttce of the
County Com m ss•oners, at the
County
Courthouse
•n
Galllpo l• s Ohto on Thurs day .
AUQIJ$1 14
1975 until 12 00
Noon
Eastern
Dayltght
Sav mgs T me and a l that
'•me will be opened publicly
and read for the furnt sh ng of
all
l t~bor
an d
matertal
necessary for the grad•ng of
the bu il dtng s 1te lor future
MediCal Bu1ldmgat GalltpOliS
Oh•o All work shall be done
accordtng to the drawmgs and
spe&lt;:•f•caltons as prepared by
H ayes Donaldson W•tlemyer
&amp; Par tne r s
Architects, 601
E •ghth Street
Portsmouth .
Oh10
Proposals wtll be recel\led
lor
the
General
Work
Proposals shal l be submitted
on Proposal Form co n tamed
•n the bouna spedtf•cat.ons
and other contract documents,
whtch documents are on file at
th e olf •ces of the Cl erk of sa•d
Comm1SS10ners at the offtce of
the
Archtfect ,
and
are
avatlable to all prospect.ve
btdders dur•ng regular off•ce
hours,unttl the ctos tn g of btds
One complete set of b1d
documents for the purpose of
btddtng
may be oblatned
from
Hay es,
Donaldson,
Wlfk!nmyer
&amp;
l='artners,
Architects 601 Etghth Street,
Portsmouth
Oh 10,
upon
depostl of $25 00 whtch depostt
w ill be refunded to each
b•dder upon return of b•d
do cument s •n good cond iliOn
wtlhm a periOd of t en ( 10 )
days after opentng ot btds
All proposals must be ac
camp an •ed by a b1d bond
executed by
a Bondtng
Company, l •c ensed by the
State o f Ohto , or by a Cer l tfted
Check drawn upon a solvent
bank tn the Sta te of Ohto
payable to the order of the
Board o f
Gall t a
County
CommtSStoner s
GalltPOIIS,
Ohto •n an amount not le ss
than ftve (5) percent and 1n a
spectf1c amount of th e btd The
bond or check shall be tor
letted If the b tdder tails to
ent er •nto a contract wtth satd
Owne r The bonds or checks of
the three lowest btdders wilt
be held unl tl the executton of
the contract and th e fur
n•sh•ng of the r equtred per
formance bond , after whtch
they wtll
be returned on
demand The checks of the
other btdders w tl l be returned
on demand afte r the bidS are
canvassed
A performance bond and a
labor &amp; matenal payment
bond, each to be 100 percent of
the amount of the c ontract ,
w1th sattslactory suret1es, will
be requtred from the sue
cessful btdders for the fa 1fhfut
performance of the work
Th e rtgh t tS reserved by the
Board of
Gall•a
Co unty
CommISSIOners ,
GallipOliS,
Ohto the D~r ector ot the Ohto
Department of Mental Health
and Mental Retardalion , and
the Un1ted States Department
of Health , Educat1on and
Welfare, to re1ect any and all
b •d s
and
to
watve
tn
formal tltes No btdder m ay
w•thdraw hts btd for a pertod
of stxty days
AdverttS•ng dates for b1dS
are July 16, 23, 30 and August
6 1975 Btds w1 1l be open
August 1&lt;1, 1975 12 00 p m at
the Gall•a County Courthouse,
Eastern Oayltght Savi ngs
T•me
By order of the Gal11a
County Commtsstoners
I
Joe Stewart
John L Belville

News .• in Briefs
needles.
Blmd for 10 ye~&lt;rs Mrs. Gertrude Hasbtouck Mowell of
Kingston, N y ., will celebrate her JOist birthday lonighi--,&amp;Jd
She will see the catered party through the eyes of a yowtg
woman, \hanks to two cataract operations which have restored
near perfect vision. "I don't feel!Ol, you know, maybe 75," she
says m slow, low tones. " I'm a temperate woman, never
touched a drop - never wanted It- and never smoked tobacco
either Aside from that, I JUst take care of myself."
WASHINGTON - ALTHOUGH RESERVING a final
dectswn, Rollllld _Reagan has taken the first formal steps
toward challengmg Prestdent Ford for the Republican
preSJdenltal nommatton next year.
The former California governor, a favorite of GOP conservatives, moved to the brink of a formal candidacy Tuesday
by authorizing creation of a campatgn committee to organize
and raise funds on his behalf.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN - SECRETARY OF STATE
Henry Kissinger has ruled out the posstbility of U.S. mllltary
mvolvement m the Sinai Desert as a buffer between Israel and
Egypt "Whatever might be done in the Sinai it will not involve
the Umted States in any possible mllltary operation," he satd
Tuesday m response to a question about any new interim
agreement m the Mtddle East.
Kissmger told a news conference such mvolvement had
not been brought up m general discussions on the Mtddle East.
The proposal, he satd, was that the reconnaissance flights the
Uruted States has been conducting the past 18 months on behalf
of both Israel and Egypt might be extended on "a more permanent basts" to warn hoth parttes of mllltary movements by
one side or the other.

'

LOCAL TEMPS
The
temperature
in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a m was 78 degrees under
slUlny skies Wednesday-

Hanes

T·Shirt &amp; Brief

United Press International
Egypt and Israel have
reached agreement on the
genera l pnnc1ples for a ne"
mtenm peace accord, an
Israeli government source
satd today m Tel Aviv
He satd desptte Egypt's
threat to oust U N troops
from the Smat Desert,
negollahons on an mtertm
accord could succeed, 'tf
thmgs are played nght "
"The general pnnctples are
agreed/ ' the sow-ce sa1d
"The pnnctples on whtch the
next agreement would be
based are understood "
However, he caultoned that
an Arab move to expel Israel
from the Untied Naltons
could hmder the talks. " Thts
would make the negoltatwns
more dtfftcult," he satd "But
we wtll
conltnue
the
negohahons "
Elsewhere m the world,
The
mtltlary 's
rultng

Stock Up Now

On Your
Back To
School Needs!

3for

•2.99

f
'

t/

•_/

r

Be sure to see the
complete selection
of
Hanes
underwear for men
and boys on the 1st
floor.

STUDS
each
No.2 Grade

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W. VA.

developed for hmar flt g hts
The
fl ve
spacemen
eslabltshed rad1o con ta ct
three hours
befo re the
rend ezvous, happil y ex
changmg gree ting s lf1 eetch
uthcr·s lart g uagc Soyll! ftr st
appearell to the astronauts as
a bnght star
As Apollo dose d m on
&amp;1) uz . atrcraft radw tran srm ssto ns tn fo'rcnch Enghsh

s iHmcd Stafford s haking Iu s

clent:hed ft s l tn a gesture of
angt y furstratwn
HendeZ\.'OUS

opera twn s

contt nued, twwever, and at
10 50 .t m , Stafford told
Lennuv the two sh1ps v.ere ~8
rntles ctparl
Fl) tng th etr fnend l)
pU!SU\1
Y..llh pre CISIOn,
Thom as Stafford Van c e
Brand and Donald "Deke"

en tine

ment today soon after the
Popular Democrats followed
the Soctahsts m pullin g out of

RevolutiOnary
Council
dtssolved the remnants of
Purtuga1 1S coahtwn govern-

Suspect walks in
Black due to the fact Black
was tn)ured when he Jumped
over the nver bank followmg
the robbery Black was taken
to Umverstty Hosptlal on July
11 He suffered a fractured
neck when he Jumped
Bernard Fultz, prosecutmg
attorney, drove to Columbus
to talk wtth Black at the
hospttal and obtamed a
confesSion from Black, the
shenff satd.
Black was taken to
Columbus by SEOEMS
ambulance Hartenbach has
been working on the case as
has the Pomeroy Po!tee Dept

A second suspect m connectton .wtth the armed
robbery of John Ambrose,
manager of the Kroger Store
m Pomeroy on July 10, has
turned htmself m accordmg
to Shenff Robert C Hartenbach
The shenff satd Danny Lee
Walker, 18, of 1644 Myrtle
Ave , Columbus, walked m
Wednesday and ts lodged m
the colUlly Jatl but has not
confessed to any mvolvement
m the robbery
On July 11 at 1 25 a m
Shenff Hartenbach arrested
Lonme Black, Rutland , at hts
residence Hartenbach said
he stayed up all mght wtth

the cabmet
The move left only the
mmortt)' Communists as
altes of Portugal's mthtaryleaders who satd they would
form a new " non-partisan"
cabmet of mthtary officers
and left-wmg tehnocrats
Both the Soctahsts and
Popular Democrats called
mass rallaes w northern
Portugal to pursue thelf
struggle agamst the posstble
formatlon of a Communtst
dtctatorshtp
The Commun tsts ca ll ed
these oppostlton rallies an
at tempt to create 'a cltmate
of s tnfe and vtolence wtth
Wlforseeable consequences '
IN SAIGON, authortltes
have cracked an tntelh gence
nng allegedly set up by
deparhng Amencan offtctals
(Contin~ed on page 12)

Courthouse, academy
on national register

Chester Academy !Chester

1s a reg•stered trademark of Hanes Corporat•on

moonshtp follo\\ed a claSsiC
29-orblt rendezvous patlern

and Husstan over Europe
tnlcrfcrr ed w1Lh the radiO
equ 1pmcnt t h e astronauts
used lu measure the d1stance
bt'IY.een the l\\o spaccshtp s
AI une potnt , tel evtsiOn

PRICE 15'

)
••

-

Slayton pUlled closer and
closer to Soy uz cosmonaut s
Alexe1 Leono\ and Val ert
Kuba sov They stghted the
Soy uz three hours before the
rendez vo us and spoke to
the m by radt o
He llo, Vct lerl. hm" are
th tn gs " Sl~t;, tun asked 111
Huss1an
·Hello ever) body, ' l.eonov
sa1d, also speaking English
The Americans , a Y.akened
I', houl's early by the loud
buzzin g of an apparent false
trouble alarm. fired a bn e£
burst from the1r mam engme
at 8 52 a m F.DT to start the
fmal phase of maneuvers
lca dmt-: to the hrst meettng of
men fr om two nalwns m
space
Ten tnimJnute::; later ,
Brand reported JUb tlant lv he
had stghted Soyuz for the ftrst
lime through the Apollo
telesco pic se xtant Soyuz
then wa s about 295 miles
away
"Rtght now tl's hard to
dtstmgmsh from a star," he

satd
Leonov and Kubasov
Y.a1ted tn an orbtt rangmg
from 137 to 139 rmles htgh
The Sovtet spacecraft,
hundreds of rmles ahead
early toda)', walled m an
m btl ran gtng from 138 to 140
tmles h\gh "tnle th e last U.S.
spacecrew for the next four
years ful! o-y.ed a classic
r en dezvous
pattern
de veloped for fltghts to the
1
moon
Th e rendezvous occurred
over South Amenca w1th the
hnkup commg a few mmutes
later over the Allanite Ocean
or centra l EuroJO
Durtng the 44 hours the
shtps are hnked, each of the
ft ve spacemen wtll have
transferred at least once to
the other shtp They Will
share meals, work on jomt
expenments, conduct
tcleytsJOn tours of lands
below for the benefit of
vtewers arolUld the world and
hold a Jmnt news conference
Fnday

.

•

••
PUPILS OF THE Metgs County Conununity School
wtll no longer enJOY the pnvtlege of recetvmg an

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through Monday,
fatr Sa turday and Sunday,
a c han ce of shov.l'rs
Monda} H1ghs wdl be m
the Hils and lo\\er 90s Lows
"1!1 be m the 60s and loY.l'r
70s

NC

By Uruted Press International
WASHINGTON - SEN. WILIJAM PROXMIRE, D-Wts,
say~ commercial televlSlon networks are reportmg the ApolloSoyuz proJect wtthout the obJecltvtly they brmg to other news
events. In a speech prepared for delivery m the Senate today,
Proxmtre S31d only pubhc televiswn ts reporting the space
program obJectively _
.
Proxmire satd the others are "are so enraptured wtth
space activtties like the Apollo-Soyuz test program that they
have lost thetr obJecttvtty " Although the prmted media have
aired a discussion of the pros and cons of the nussion, Prox·
rmre S31d, the teleVISIOn networks "have fallen mto the role of
advocates of the U S. space program. "
He suggested the maJOr networks should be asking why the
United States ts spending $225 million on a program "wtth no
S&lt;;tentiftc value "
WASHINGTON - WITH SOME NUMBERS already
pomtmg to the end of the recession, eeonomtsts were watting
for a signal from the biggest mdex of all- tbe Gross National
Product. The Commerce Department today releases the GNP
figures for April-June. Most observers thought tl will show the
growth rate of the U.S economy, adjusted for inflation, fell for
the sixth straight quarter
But the decline was likely to be small. James Pate,
assistant Conunerce secretary for econonuc affairs, predtcted
the figure would be " rr.ght around zero "Thts would be a huge
improvement over January-March, when the growth rate fell
at an 11.3 per cent annual rate, the worst perf9rmance m
nearly three decades.
WASHINGTON - IN THE PREVIOUS 15 mmutes, the
crew had talked about Richard Ntxon, about unpeachment,
abo)lt used cars. Then tbe captain told the frrst offtcer, "All we
got to do is fmd the atrport." Three secOJlds later , Eastern
Airlines flight 212 crashed and burned on t\s approach to the
Charlotte, N C., atrport Seventy-two persons dted
" The prol)able cause of the acctdent was the fhght crew's
lack of altttude awareness at crtttcal pomts durin g the ap'
(Continued on page 11)

"

NEW HAVEN, W Va The area vollUlteer ftre and
Emergency Assoctatwn set
up a new backup system to
begm when the Pomeroy.
Mason Bndge ts dosed Aug_ 1
at the1r regular meettng here
Wednesday night
It was dectded that
emergencies w11l have to
change thetr patterns, and
alarm systems wtll need to be
revtsed wtth backup squads

also to be changed Pomeroy ,
Mtddl eport, and Mason,
whtch serve as backups tn the
unmed1ate area, w1ll have to
have backups from the same
stde of the nver Pomeroy
and Mtddleport wtll have to
call on Rutland or Racme
rather than Mason, and
Mason wtll rely on New
Haven and PI Pleasa(lt
W Va State Trooper G. R
Young showed ftlms on

educatton tf the school closes down thts fall due to a lack of
funds Here they enJoyed a ptcnic at Forest Acres Park
ear lier thts sprtng

Parents of retarded
troubled over future

By .10 ELLEN DIEHL
Angmsh 1s a good word for
Jt, '' sa 1d Mrs
Paul Karr,
Fatr, mtld tomght, lows tn
v. hose 8·year-old son has
the mtd 60s Cloudy, con attended the Mctgs County
IJnued warm Fnday, htghs tn
Cornmwuty Sc hool for the
the upper 80s Probabtltty of
me ntal!; retarded for the
ram 20 per ce Loday, tomght
past thre e years
" It 's
and Fnday
heartbreaktng to lhtnk t h ~t
h1s learnm~ will stop These
LOCAL TEMPS
ch
tldren shou ld have the
Temperature m downtown
d1ance to learn all they can "
Pomeroy Thw sday at 11 a m
She wa s speaking about the
was 84 degrees under part!)
po ssible closing of the
cloud; sktes
cumrnuil!ty schooltf no funds
are made available tu
operate the school
Voters m Me1gs County
turned do\'. n an opera ling
bombs and exp lostves to the levy Jun e 3, and county
group
cumm1sswne rs ha'&lt;e refused
It was annolUlced that there any fwanClal support, saymg
wtll be no August meetmg due there 1s no money Funds
to conventtons and vacetlwns
from a previOus levy to bUlld
The next meetmg wtll be tn a ne 'W sc hool are not
September
a\&gt;atlable as the lev; has not
Nme departJ;Tients were been collected Thts leaves 31
represented. at the meetmg chtld r en who attend the
wtlh 34 m attendance The sc hool and around 12 adults
assoctatwn 1s comprtsed of wh o attend the " orkshop out
volunteer squads m Metgs, tn the cold wtlh no place to go
Mason and Galha Co!,ll1ttes
Mr s Homer Proffitt satd

Weather

:·.·
• Brie-fs\\\l
fNews. • .ln
J' \~ New .back·up system approved

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Hanes

up afte r
out 2 200 mil es
behmd
the
Hu ss aan
spaceship The rnodtfted U S

•

CHESTER
Metgs Grange Hall and Annex ),
Co unt y's ftrst court hou se State Rt 248, Chester, Ohto
here and the old Chester has been entered 1n the
Academy have made the Nattonal Regtster of Htstonc
Nattonal Regtsler of Htstonc Places by the Nattonal Park
Work wtll begm next week and wtll be ready to be ocServtce,
Untied States
Places
on a new doctors office cupted wtlhm t80 days
The Metgs ColUlly Com- Department of the lntenor
complex, accordmg to Scotty Contractors are Carter and
''The nommatwn was made
misstoners received a letter
Lucas, Veterans Memonal Evans of Galhpolts
Wednesday from Thomas H m connectiOn Y.'lth a slate
Hospttal adrnmtslrator
Cost of the offtce complex
Smtih,
Dtrector ,
OhiO plan to tdenltfy and document
Covermg 6,000 sq ft m the wtll be $166,000 The hosptlal
Htstoncal Soctely State prehtstonc and htslortc
area m front of the old hoard hought the land from
Histone Preservalton Offtcer places tn Ohto whtch quahfy
children's home, the struc- the county commtssaoners at
"htch nottfted the com- for Nattonal Regtster stat us
ture wtll house four doctors' a pnce of $2,000 at the
missiOners o f the action under prov1s1ons of the
offices, each w1th waitlng comnussiOners meeting
NatiOnal H1stonc PreserSmtih wrote
rooms, receptwn rooms, and Tuesday The Board of
valton Act of 1966 All
examming rooms
D1rectors have auth onzed the
Gentlemen
nommat1ons are approved by
The bwldmg wtll be made flUlds for the project
" I am pleased to mform the Ohto Htstonc Stte
of brtck to match the hospttal
you that the Old Metgs Preservatton
Advtsory
~~::::::::::::::::::;.;::::.:-:-:·:···:·:·:···=·=···...·.··:·:·:· .;•.•; • : .·.·:·:: :·:·:·· :···:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: :-:·:::·:::::::::::::~:=~ County Courthouse and Board ''

'

Boys HANES T sh~rts and
bnets keep thm 111 You can
mac h1ne-wash and mach1ne
dry these T-shlfts
HAN ES lor maxtmum
shnnk res1stance
th ey
won I lose lhe~r Original fit
Re1nlorced neck S1zes 3 20
Bnefs w1th heal res1s1an1
elas11c Shnnk-res1stan1
Back to sc hool - 1n com iort
S1zes 3 20

I

ca u~llt

J\pullo

s tar tm~

Uevuted Tu The Interests of The Meigs-Mll.wm Art'CI
POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THURSDAY, JULY 17,-1975

Four doctors to
have new offices

'\

I

HOUSTON 1 UPI ) - Three
Amencans and two russum s
docked tn earth urbtt today
fop 44 hours of fhght together
opemng an age of 1n
ternatwnal umty tn space
The histone ltnkup between
the Apollo flown by Thomas
Stafford, Vance Brand and
Donald · Deke " Slayton and
the Sov tel Soyuz wtth Alexei
Leon ov and Valen Kubasov
aboard came two days arter
the lwu shtps took off fr om
bases half a world apart
Leonov and Kubasov were
tn an orbtt rangmg from 13i
to 139 miles htgh when the

Mideast agreement is reached

®

I

NO. 66

- - - - - - --

2"x4"x8'

773-55S4

•
VOL XXVII

DRIVER CITED
Harold E. Ash, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy, was ctted to
court for dnvmg left of center
m a two vehicle accident at
4:25 p.m. Tuesday Investigated by Pomeroy
pohce. Ash was dnvmg south
on Union Ave. when he met a
SEOEMS vehicle driven by
Carl E. Kennedy, Rt I,
Rutland, m a curve. There
were no lnjurtes and medium
damage to Ash's car.

E-R UNIT CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
was called at 4:54 p.m.
Tuesday to assist Nellie
Dunn, 95 Pearl St, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
'

LOCAL STUDENTS ATTEND MUSIC CAMP AT EKU - Approxunately 200 young
mustctans from seven states attended the 40th annual Stephen Colhns Foster Mustc Camp
which concluded last weekend at Eastern Kentucky Umverstty, Rtchrnond. Fosler Camp
mcludes a four-week seSSion of mstrumental tnstru chon for JUniOr htgh and high school
students, and a twe&gt;-week vocal sesston for htgh school students Attendmg from here were,
L-R, Terrie Russell and Kun Jones, both of Pomeroy and Dma Pratt, of Mtddleport

ELBERFELDS

Form approved by the
Gall1a County Prosecuttng
A t torney, GalllpoiJs, Ohio
Gene Wetherholt
OJ 16 23 30 18) 6 4tc

AmericanS, Russians in
orbit of earth docked

'&gt;

(Continued from page I)

her 17-year-old son has led a
more normal hfe smce he
began attendtng the sc hool
when tt started, but that now
he 1s withdrawn because of 1ts
tmpending closmg
'' He used to see our other
four chtldren gotng to school,
ndmg b1kes and leadmg a
normal ltfe, and he fell the
difference No'.'. he s been
able to become a part of a
school htmself ' she satd
Mrs Karr 's son asks eve ry
mght tf there ts gm ng to be
sc hool for h1m next year She
sa id he looks forward to
ndmg the bus to schoo l
THE II- YEAR-OLD SON of
Mrs Hugh Roush "lso looks
for'.'.ard to travelltng on the
school bus tcJ the place where
he has learned tu put ,., orOs
together to form sente nces
Mrs Rou sh sa td that before
he went to the school three
years ago he couJd unl) say
one or two words
Asked her reactwn to the
flnanc1al s ttu atlun CJ f the
sc hool , and tis havmg been
turned dow n at the polls and

GNP decline slowed to 0.3%
WASHINGTON (UP!) The Gross National Product,
a vttal barometer m the
nalton's ftght to shake off the
recessiOn, registered a
mtmscule 0.3 per cent annual
decline between April and
June,
the
Commerce
Department satd today.
The department also satd
that the country's trdlatwn
rate, a maJOr admtnistralton
conC)!rn last fall, dtpped to tis
lowest level m 2\z years
Prtces rose at a 5.1 per cent
rate - compared wtth 8.4 and'
14 4 per cent rtses m the
preVIous two quarters

The encouragmg second
quarter figures were a sohd
mdtcation that the country ts
snappmg back from the
recesston, which has cost
mtlhons of persons thetr JObs
stnce early last year
The 0.3 per cent declme m
the GNP was the smallest
quarterly drop smce the
recesston began and was the
btggest unprovement from a
preceed mg
three-month
pertod tn more than four
years
Durmg the ftrst quart~r of
1975, the GNP dropped by 11 4
per cent, the " orst , three-

month performance by the m the next few months ''
Amencan economy m three
Morton called the GNP
decades
figures 11heartemng, because
The department measured they tndtcate that the
the " real" GNP at $779 btllwn recess ton has ftnally touched
durmg the second quarter. bottom "
11
Theeconomy ts now ready
The recessiOn-has now run
for takeoff ," satd Commerce stx quarters and ~eal GNP
Secretary Rogers C B
has dropped 7 8 per cent
Morton, after revtewmg the durmg that tune
The
GNP report "Whether tt flys pr~VIous worst recesswn of
smoothly and .. steadtly up- ' the post-World War II era
ward on a long, stable path of occurred m 1957-1958 when
economtc growth, or whethe. GNP fe ll 3 9 per cent
11 s hoots up sharply and then
The btggest factor tn the
comes crashmg down agam, second quarter dedme was
wtll depend up on the the co ntmumg ltqutdatwn of
econom1c pohC!es \\ e choose busmess mvent one s,. The
selloff of backroom stocks ts

a pamful but necessary
precond1 liOn to a nse m new
orders that wtll stunulate
productton and help reduce
unemployment
·
Fmal sales, however, rose
3 3 per cent at an annuaj rate ,
compared wtlh 0 7 per cent m
the ftrst quarter, wtth all
sectors of the economy ex·
cep l busmess Investment
spe!I!Jmg, contributmg to the
rtse .
The
rate
at
whtch
Amertcans were puttmg thetr
mcome mto savmgs rose 10 6
per cent, the highest savtngs
rate smce the ftrst quarter of
t946

the comrmsswners offtce ,
Mrs Roush sa td
I'm like everyone else,
diSgusted, that's all." She
aaded, ' People don't thtnk
these ktds can be educated,
but they can "
A bus dnver for the school
th e pa st seven ;ear~. Mrs
No1 man Wood agrees Y..Ilh
Mrs Roush " If you "ork
wtth them tthe c hildren 1 hke
I have
Jt s IUldescnbable
what they can do , ' she sa td
She noted that so many
youn ger peop le have compasswn for the retarded, " but
not the older ones wtth the
vote" m reference tn the
fat lure of the operatmg levy
Mrs
Cla rence Mtght ,
mother of a boy, 10, a puptl at
the school , feels that the
rel&lt;trded are bemg " pushed
to the bottom of the hst " She
satd she feel. that tf she pays
taxes for othe r peop le's
children to attend school that
her cht ld IS e nlttled to an
educatJ •n, also Her son, wh o
she says wouldn't begm to
be where he's at 1f not for the
sc hool, wtll hve wtth her
sister tn Parkersburg where
he can rece1ve an educatiOn
1n the event that the school
here ts closed
Mrs Pr offitt 's son may go
on to school m Columbus to
learn a trade tf pe ts ~ble so
that he can get at least a portIt me JOb " If he doesn't get an
educatiOn he 'll be wtlh us
un hi he dies ," she said, " wt th
no outside mterests "
' It's a ptty that our county
can ' t take care of tts children
Ftrst tt was the county home
done away wtth, and now tl's
the retarded," satd Mrs
Karr She doesn' t know the
answer to y.;hat her son wtll
do wtlhout the school, but she
doesn · t " m tend to qut t
fighting " for the school to
stay open " as lonR as there's
( Conunued,, on page 12)

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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50559">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50558">
              <text>July 16, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2409">
      <name>baumgardner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="137">
      <name>hawk</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="535">
      <name>mcclure</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
