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.'
8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. July 22, 1975

Income tax voted

· :·

Barr sells 68
apartments in

·- :~;;·~~·- ~,~~~~-&gt;

' ,.,' ''

HOSp }TAL :::::::;::~:~t:}~{{{:t~:~ ~:r~:~: :~::::::::::::::::=:::t:::;::;:~~::::::::;:~i?'''''::::;::::::t:t(i:::::: FrMk E. I .ance
da

f-

I
U. S. Senator John Glenn
PRICES U
JU
(Continued from page 1)
today announced Me igs
.
WASIIINGTON (UP I ) - Cons'!mer prices
higher wages and other costs have made acuon necessa ry to
Countyhasbeendeclareda
rose O.M per cent in June, the liiggest one
REEDSVI!LE .:._ FrankE.
increase the village funds The permisstve auto ' li cense lax
County
by
the
,,
month
increase
this
year,
the
Labor'
DepartLance,
70, Rl. 1, Reedsville,
Biecnlenniul
which was voted down several times by Middleport voters ,
llmcrican Revolution
VeteransMemorlaiHospltal
ment said today .
passedawayMondayevening
came up for discusSion durmg the meeting. Several observers
Hkentennial
Committee.
ADMISSIONS
·Vicki
Much
of
the
increase,
the
department
at
Veterans Memorial
. srud they favored that as a more fatr tax . Howev er. vtllagc
Haymond G . Barr of
As such, Meigs can apply
Roush, New Haven ; Norman
said , was attributed to s harply higher prices
Hospital
10
Po~eroy
officials said that the auto license tax would not bnng m as
for
state
and
federal
funds
Lehew,
Portland
;
Dora
for
f
I
.
g
I'
d
ed
following
an
extended'
illness.
Galltpolis
today
announced
much money as the vtllage mcome tax .
01 1'
in
carrying
out
BlcenHatfield
,
Cheshire,
·
Dora
ue
aso
me,
an
us
cars
.
Bo
·
"'-'
County
W
10
The discussiOn brought out that senior citizens on pensiOns lhe sale of 48apartment units
Th · d
· th
· t I f
·
rn
~....,•
·
tennialprojects.
JohnRice.
Hamm,
Minersville;
Tara
c
m
ex
IS
e
mam
00
or
measurmg
v
Mr
Lancewasthesonof
and fixed income wtll not be affected by the mcome tax II located at 35 West on Rt. 35
Meigs CountY, Extension
Bacon, Middleport; George
the rate of inOation . It showed that for the
Uta~, Ia~ Fleet and Nora
letter from Solicitor Bernard Fultz pomted out tha t an mcomc we•l of Gal hpoli s and the
Agent,
heads
the
local
Stobart
,
Racine;
Bernard
months
ending
in
June,
prices
rose
7.1
per
Nicholas Lance. He was a
lax of more than one percent must be put to the vote of the R1 vers 1d e Apartments m
Bicentennial
committee.
Reardon, Hartford.
cent. The index last month was 9.3 per cent
former coal miner and
people. A one percent or less tax does not have to be vo ted upon Middleport.
Carbo n Estates Lunited of ..... _:·:::··.-··:·:.......... : ., ..., -:··
DISCHARGES - James
higher than in June , 1!174.
construction worker, and
by the people, but is subject to referendum actwn
Jr
.,
John
Wood,
lived in the Tuppers Plains
William
Clevela
nd,
a
rea
l
estate
A suggestion arose se veral ttmes, that the vtllagc should
Joseph McElroy, Ida Dud- :;)\{{{':{):):'})):)::}})::::::::;::::::::::::::}f)):{:{}i{::;;::,.;::::::::::::: area the past 23 years.
Ueve
lupm
g
f1rm,
r
ece
ntly
attempt to secure federal funds to help out However, ofhcia ls
Mr. Lance is survived by
ding, Pearl Scarberry, Terry
said th e town never ha s local matchmg fund s for such federal purchased lhe 48 uruts tn
Jones
to
address
Ga llia Counly which mcludes
Spencer.
Charles Bennett died on Tuesday
foursons,JoeandJack, Rt. 1•
grants
PLEASAN.fVAU, EY
Reedsville; Roger, Dayton,
The discusston brought out that some 70 communillcs m four garden-type apartment
Cha rles Bennett died rettred employe of t he New and Michael, Coolville; four
bu1ldmgs.
Twenty
addttional
August
banquet
Ohto the stze of Mtddleport or smaller have the mcome tax m
DISCHARGES - Mrs
unexpectedly
Tuesday York Central Railroad .
Paul McDamel, daughter,
daughters, Mrs . David
effect. Mayor Fred Hoffman read a letter from the mayor of um ts mak e up Riv erside
morning at his home on
Surviving are a son,
Elk "
T
ApartmenL~
m
M1ddleport.
Middleport
·
,
Mrs
.
Robert
(Judy ) · tns,
uppers
Crooksville in reference to the mcome lax there The mcome
GREENVILLE,
S
C.
Dr
Beech
St.,
Middleport.
Warren,
and
a
daughter,
Miss
Mr
La
(R th
Ronald
Mason
of
Oeveland
Plains;
s.
rry
u
tax m that comrnwuty has put th e vtllage on a sound fmanc1al
Bob
Jones III, pres 1de nl uf Bailey , Bidwell·, Mrs. Leslie
The Middleport E-R squad Maxtne Bennett, both of Ann I Ep lin g, Co o1v ill e; Mrs.
negot ta ted th e dea l wtlh
Pomt
Pleasant.
basts, the letter sta ted.
Bob Jones Um vers 1ty, Gree n- Weaver'
was called to the home al8:35 Columbus, and a daughter,
y
Birth , July 18, a son to Mr.
Robert ( Barbara) oung,
Questions arose on the cost of adrn1mstering the new m- fulymond G "Tony " Barr of vtlle, S. C., wt ll be the
a.m
.
where
Mr.
Bennett,
who
Mr~. Vernon (Jean) Rogers,
·11
d
Mr
c
th "
Reedsvt e an
s. YD ta
come tax, but Ma}'or Hoffman pomted out that reports fr om Rt. I , Galhpolis Barr sltll fea tured s pea ker a t a and Mrs. Da vid DeWitt, Pomt had
been culling
tree of Oak Harbor , Ohio .
lbo
Fla t
owns lhe ongmal 24 uruts,
Pleasant.
Vereen,Me urne,
.; wo
several small commumt1es on the1r income tax indicate thot
banque
t
for
a
lumnt
,
s
tuden
l,,
·
branches,
was
dead
upon
the
Preceding
hun
in
death
were
brothers,
Herbie
Lance,
apartments
at
35
townhouse
admimstrative costs are •·qwte reaso nable ."
squad's arrival. Death was his wife, Mabel Stewart Bidwell, and Roscoe Lance,
Holzer Medical Center
West and the Mtll St. project and olhcr frtcnd s of the
Councilman Brewer tndicated that he would mee t wtth the
Un1verslty to be held In
attributed to a heart attack .
' nnett, in 1971 ; a son,
w v
th
t Discharges, July 21)
1
in Mtddleport.
county commissioners today to d1scus the posstb1hties of the
r.Bennettwasamember
1
d
nd
Ivydae,
·
a .;
ree
Charlesto
n,
Sat
w·day,
August
M
' ares, an a gra son .
sisters, Mrs. Zora Truman,
lllice Barnhouse, Loretta
Terry Carhart is the new
permissive sales ta x However , that tax wh1ch would have to
9. Tlus ts one of :18 such
of the Middleport First
Funeral arrangements are
w v
Mr
c
Morgantown,
. a.;
s.
be put into effect by the c omnusswners would cover the entire resident mana ger for the banquets sc heduled 111 key Maxme Bennett, Connie Lou B
1
apttst
hurch and had being made at the fulw mgs- Myrtle Douglas, Akron, and
Bowen,
Marilyn
Chapman,
apartments
m
Galha
County.
county and 1t was felt by some lhat the comm1ssJoncrs would
c1hes throughout the Umled Davtd R . Donn ally, Nelle E. belonged lo Middleport Coa ts Funeral Home tn Mrs . Effie McLaughlin,
not be tnlerested.
States this sWl)mer.
Ivydale ; 17 grandchildren
Franklm, JWle F. Huff, Sr., Masomc Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, Middleport.
Offtctals attending last night 's spec ial meetmg wer e
The West Vtrgm1a banquet Mrs. Vaughn W. Johnson and the past 31 years. He was a
and
three
greatMayor Hoffman , Clerk-Treasurer Grate, and counctl members
wtll be held at the Charleston infan t daughter, Jeanette
grandchi ldren .
William Walters, Carl Horky, Jame s Brewe r, llllen Kmg , Mrs
Armory, 1701 Coonsktn Dri ve, Kemper ,
Raymond
F.
He was preceded in death
'J ean Cratg and Marvin Kelly .
at 7:15 p rn In charge of Musgrave, Everett A Prtce,
(Contmued from page I)
in 1967 by his wife, Ora, and
reserva t ions
and
loc al Harry L. Pugh, Tabitha L.
m 1ts second reading. Volmg
Goodyear also by a daughter, a brother,
George W. Reuter , 68, 714 from
the
arrangemenl5 for the OC· Ritter , Susan Lynn See, Elsie
aga1nst were Harry Davis
Shorb Ave., Canton, died Aerospace Corp.
and a sister.
cas wn IS Miss Re becca L Shaffer, Ltda Swain,
and Wilham Snouffer.
Funeral services will be
Monday at the Timpken
Mr. Reuter is survived by
Mat thews, 17 Stewart Park, Deanna J. Wyatt.
Mrs. Walton read a letter
Mercy Hospital.
his wife, Charlotte; a son, held Thursday at I p.m. at the
Nttro 2514:l, te lephone t3041
!Birth
I
subm
itted
by
Fred
Crow,
Mr.
Reuter
was
born
tn
8
p
m
at
the
Grange
Hall
Blake, of Seabright, N. J ., White Funeral Home in
It was prev tousl y an
776-2812 .
Mr
and
Mrs
.
John
so li ci tor, who e nc losed a
Pomeroy, but had resided 25 and a daughter, Mrs. Linda Coolville with burial in the
nounced that the TB skm te st
THE POMEROY . MID wh1ch wdl be given to Me1gs
Williams, a son, Syracuse. years in Akron and 25 years Sarno! of Canton.
le
tter
fr
om
the
Ohio
Sl.ale
Rogers Cemetery in Ivydale.
DLEPORT L1on s Club will
County sc hool employees on
Department of Htghways tn
in Canton. He was retired
Funeral services will be Friends may call any time
August 18 would be read by meet for l unch at noon
Wednesd ay at the Me1gs Inn
regard to the payment for
the health department on
held at 8:30p.m. Wednesday after noon on Wednesday.
Each Lion Is to bring a friend
August 20 The skin test w1ll
removmg and replacin~
at the Eckard-Baldwin
be given on the same date and
w•ler pipe done by the s tate,
Funeral Home , 760 East
MEIG
S
COU
NTY
COM
checked Aug us t 20 by Jane
MON
Pleas
Court
today
set
wlt
1
ch
the
sta
te
wants
for
Market St., Akron, with
Brown at the same place
the dat e of July 30 at 9 am
retmbursemen t.
(Continued from page I)
from 8 . 30 a.m. to 11 30 and
Father B. Whitman Dennison
for the second sess ion of the
from l · JO p m to 3 : 30 .
It
cost
the
s
late
$36,826
to
as
Salem
Prectnc
t
wtth
the
officiating. Interment will be
May term grand 1 ury tn
Meigs County Sheriff
change the water ptpe and voltng place to be tn Salem
in the Chester Cemetery at
THE MIDDLE PORT E -R o ther c ourt a c f 1on tw o
Robert C. Harten bach's
they wan t lo be patd $~3,896. Center.
squad made two r uns today , divorce s were granted. both
noon Thursday. Friends may department investigated a
on
charges
of
gross
neglect
of
at 12 21 am transportmg
ll was potnted out that the
Lebanon
T o wn s hip
call at the funeral home from s ingle car accident Saturday
Barbara
Rou sh, 33,
to duty and ext r eme cruelly
By
slate
did
not
give
the
village
a
prectncts,
Great
River
and
Granted
divorces
we
r
e
2to 4 and 7 to time of services
Pleasant Valley Hospital
at noon on SR 124.
iiEV.
HOWARD
C.
ILACK
Jo
Cla
tworthy
from
Nan
c
y
to
do
the
work
The
Portland.
have
been
cumchance
{medical) , and at 7 :ro a m
Wednesday.
Roy W. Proffitt, 36, Rt. I,
transporting Eula Fran c iS, James W Clatworthy. and
malt"r wtll be referred to the btned and wtll be known as
HOW MATURE ARE YOU?
about you, you are mature . .
Marjorie
Goett
from
Thomas
Locust St ., to Veterans
Portland, was traveling east
board of pubhc affairs.
Leban on Precinct wilh lite
The immature people are
Ltfe is full of disaph\c.morial Hosp1tal . She was Goett
n 124 when a wheel dropped
Coun ctl tn other bustness voting place to be tn lhe poinlments and hard knocks . they who talk back, trying to
given oxygen enroute.
off on the right edge of the
POMEROY
E R
THE
agreed to e nter mto 8 Lebanon Township trustee No one lS immune from the defend thel1'selves. They ki ck CINCINNATIAN
RACINE GRANGE No . SQUAD made two run s
pavement. Unable to pull
ARRESTED
depos 1 tory agreement wtlh bmldtng . Olive Township strain and s tress of ev eryday back, trying to get even. They
2606 will hold 1ts regular yesterday , the first at 3 36
CHARlOTTE, N.C. (UP!) back on the highway, the car
the Pome roy Naltonal Bank prectncls , Long Bottom, ltving. But how we react lo paul, feeling so rry for
meeting Wednesday. July 23, p.m . to the Ivy Stewart
res1dence in Welchtown for
Police Chief Jed Websler Oltve'&lt;iale a nd Reedsville , dtscomfort and problems and themselves . They ge t angry - The F ol has arrested Otis went over an embankment
Mrs Dora Hamm who was
reported
that
Russell are reahgned into two simple disappointments is and frustrated, th ey yell and Lee Freeman, of Clncmnati, into a ditch. A passenger,
taken to Veterans Memorial
Eshelman , Rt . 4, Pomeroy, precmcts. The present Long tndicative of our maturity . threat. The world .is full of and charged him with Joan Proffitt, was taken to
Hosp1tal whe re she was
adm 11ted, and at a· 35 p m
has been hired as merchanl Bottom Voters. east of State How do you measure up on immature people today who unlawful flight to avoid Veterans Memorial Hospital
TONITE THURS.
where a motorcycle was on
prosecution on forgery by the Syracuse ER Squad
pohceman and as of Monday Route 248 and north to Sue- the followin g
test of always want thetr own way,'
tire on State St.
July22-24
where she was treated and
charges.
had signed 56 merchants for cess Road, county road 46, maturtly ~
and no one can act more
NOT OPEN
released.
The
23-year-&lt;~ld
Freeman
THE
TWIN
CITY
Ins services. Webster asked will now vote tn Reedsville .
- When you have begun a childtsh than an adult who
Shrinettes p1cnic will be held
was arrested at Gastonia,
permission
to
swea..---The remaining Long Bottom work and later have tt taken does not get his own way!
Thursday Instead of th 1s
.N.C.,
located about 2() miles
Eshelman 10 as an officer to voters will vote al the newly away from you by someone
Fn .- Sat -Sunday
It tsn ' t important that we
AUTOS BUMP
evening , as was announced,
. July 2S, 26,27
which council agreed.
at the Shnne Park in Racine
'
named Olive Prectnct in the else, and you have no bit- defend ourselves when self- west of here, by FBI agents
Meigs County Sheriff
at 6·Jo p m .
"ALICE DOESN't LIVE
Council discussed at length Success Church basement. terness about it, you are preservation 1s not an issue . and local policemen , an FBI Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept.
HERE ANYMORE "
spokesman said.
alleged deplorable condtlions
0 ran ge
'I' owns h t p mature .
What is important is that we
investigated a minor accident
{Technicolor)
The spokesman said a warIN
HOSPITAL
in
front
of
two
business
precincts,
Alfred
and
TupMonday at 12:42 p.m. in
- When you hear someone learn to accept people for
Show starts at 7:00p.m.
Six-year
old
Lonnie
establishments on Pomeroy's pers Plains , are combtned crittclze you~ even unkindly, what they are and what they rant was Issued July 11 at Racine in which Bettha H.
Lemaster, son of Ed and
Main St. It was noted that the mto what ts to be known as and you find instruction and can become. It is important Cincinnati for Freeman. Simpson, 66, Racine, backed
Bonme Lemaster, Rt. 2,
conditions wtll be tmproved Orange Precinct wtlh the help from it without havmg til tha we lea rn to get along Freeman had been living in from a parking space into a
Pomeroy, ts a patient at St.
soon.
voting place to be at the feelings toward the one who with people , to overlook some Gastonia briefly before his , parked car owned by George
Joseph Hospital tn ParkersMayor Dale Smtih said a Orange Townshtp fire depart- cnhcized you~ you are of the things they do, and that arrest, the spokesman said. M. Freeland, 67, Syracuse
1
Freeman was arraigned
·.~ 1 111 \~,' Vo~
burg. Lonnie may undergo
building.
Letart mature.
delegation came to hts home ment
Ti1ere was slight property
lakes maturtly on every/ 1 t o~rlnn11 N1qhlh
Monday
and was in custody in
surgery for a possible tumor
in1'egard to havtng Willis Htll Township buildings, East
damage and no injuries or
-- VVhen others are chosen body's part. How mature are lieu of $10,000 bond.
or cyst on his brain. He at- graded . There 1s a slip In the Letart and Letart, are for a job which you, yourself, you?
~
cil.atton.
tended the ftrsl grade at area and a dozer should be combined and will be known are better qualtfied to do , and .. . when you
Salisbury
last year . Hts room
brought in lo do lite work. The as Letart Precinct with the yet you do not feel hurt about e.w.press
TONITE
yourself
number is 441 for those wo area will be checked Friday. voting to take place in the it, you are mature .
JUL Y22
Md
imp re ss
Double Feature
wish to send cards.
Counctl also liste ned to Letart Townshtp building.
When
a
person
argues
a
someone
"TIDAL WAVE"
other problems in the village
Salisbury
Township point of view whtch is con- else . .
· LOCAL TEMPS
lPG I
including
a
drain
needed
on
Prectncts,
Middlepor
t trary to yours and you are
Plu s
The
temperature
in
Welsh Town Hill, also to be Precinct, Pomeroy Prectnct, able to accept his nght to his
"BEYOND ATLANTIS"
downtown · Pomeroy at 11
The JomperDress
l.aken care of.
and Rock Sprtngs, are now opinion wfthout a feeling of
a .m. Tuesday was 86 degrees
fr om Cl~ire Larabee
In regard to the ordinance reduced to two precincts. hostility, you are mature .
under sunny skies.
di sallowing parktng at According lo the board, all
gels its flu id softness from
- When someone you know
Powell 's Super Valu, other present Pomeroy Prectnct deltberately snubs you and
the great suede-look of
than customers, Webster voters west of State Route 143 you can still make allowances
Ce lanese Arnel® triacetate.
slated that a sentence m the and Slate Route 7, north to for his actions, you are
Total ly terrific-the
ordinance needs to be lhe township boundary, will mature.
jumper with new wider
changed givtng Larry Powell, vote at Bradbury Prectnct,
- When you can have a
sleeves, squdre ned,
the owner, the right to stop formerly
Mtddleport personal, inward peace from
the parking.
Precmct .
All
present God tn a frustrated world
pocketed skirt. Po storal print
Phil Globokar, counc ilman, Pomeroy Precmct voters
turtl ed pull is polykn it.
suggested that the mayor and east of Sl.ale Route 143, will
Moc h; ne wash/dry.
counctl meet 10 regard to the vote at Rock Springs.
CLASS SET
Brown/Green or
bridge c losing and try
The ftve precincts in
RACINE - The Ractne
Brown/Gold. 6- 16.
to get the contractor Middleport
have
been emergency squad will have a
to put on thr ee crews reduced lo four wtlh the vital signs class on July 23
Use a bank Checktn slead of two so that boundaries as follows:
and 30 from 7-10 p.m. at lhe
ing Account to
First Ward - North cor- Racine Fire House. All
work on the bridge could be
'straighten out your
completed sooner than an- poration line ; E. Front St. emergency
medical
ltcipated. The brtdge is to from corporation line to north technicians are urged to
finances. Record
close Aug. 1 to Dec. 15 of this side of Mill St.; south-north attend these classes. The
your finances.
year ' and again next year for side of Mill St.
class will be taught by
nine months.
Second Ward - North- side Barbara Van Meter.
Don McKenzie, street side of Mill St.; East Front St.
Cancelled checks will tell you where every
superintendent, said it was from Mtll to North side of
-penny goes each month. It's the easy way
necessary to call Jed Wtll out Lincoln; West Seventh Ave.,
to work for eight hours in and Grant St., includin g
ASKfOWED
to keep ·your budget straightened out.
Dennis-Raymond Hawk, 19,
order to have two graves dug Brownell and Chestnut St. to
Rt.
I, Minersville, and Jo
and
to
be
told
where
purand
including
Pearl
St.;
Apply for a Checking Account today.
chasM lots begin and end.
south-north side of Lincoln St. Ellen Wells, 16, Rt. 1, Long
He was told by counctl that
Third Ward -north -south Bottom.
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
it was the superintendent's side of Lincoln, Grant St.,
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
job to oversee the operation from Pearl St. through to and
FRI. EVENINGSS To 7 P.M.
of the cemetery. McKenzie including Fairlane; east
also slated that the rates for Front from south side of OHIOAN DIEII
"THE
opening and closing of graves Lincoln to North Locust; west
JUNCTION CITY, Kan.
shpuld
be
increased,
which
ts
Page
and
Powell
Sls.
to
PITTSJURGit
(UP!) - Authorities have
up to the cemetery trustees. corporation line; south-north identified the body of a man
AI L!
Attending were Mayor side of Locust.
· found in a burning field as
Sptilh , Globokar, Ralph
Fourth Ward, All south of Herbert Williams, 32, of
-......,.CINCfHNA Tl
Werry, Osborne, Harry Locust St. to corporation line. Cincinnati.
Davis, council members.
The board sent a letter of
Authorities did not release
Mrs . Walton, Phyllis Hen~ appreciation to Mrs. Jean the results of an autopsy. His
nessy , clerk, Webster and Craig for her assistance in body was discovered in the
McKenzie.
establishing boundary lines field Saturday. A wallet and a
for the changes made in the
gasoline can were' found
___ , ..._ ·- - ,Middleport Village precincts.
Dress Department
'nearby.
'1!~~~
Help
Wanted
It
is
reported
that
all
Second Floor
Member .Federal Deposit Jnsurance Corporation
Relatives in Ohio told in""
GRILL
cook,
c a,.
hops , committeemen for precincts
'
wa!lrcsses
A pply 1 n person before the cha nges wt"ll
'DEPOSITS I~SURED TO '40,0QO
Crow 's
St eak
House ,
Po me ro y
continue to function as such
7 77 6
' ' until their terms expire.
fire himself.
t . ._ _ _; . , _. .;,;;,;,;..;;;;.;;;;.~,.;;;.~;;.;;.;;~.;-.;;;.;;,;.;;.;;;::,::.;::..:,_.J

died Mon

NEWS

}'

two locations

•

•

Wt&gt;,ather ·
• Cloudy toni~ht and Thurs- ,
- day, a c hance of showers and
thWldershoiwers. Lows tonight
in the upper ~ - Highs
~ Thursday in the upper 80s
Probability of rain 30 per cent
tonight and Thursday.

VOLXXVII NO. 70

enttne
/Jevote(/ 1'o 'f ile lnterests oj' The

@[p)~~

ROAD

By MICHt\El. J. CONLON
WASHING'IUN (UP)) The shortage of home canning lids has gone from a
serious threat to a critical
problem in the past few
weeks, according to government experts.
They say they don't know
what to do about it.
More supplies are in the
pipeline, they told a congressional hearing Tuesday. But
if hoarding and black
marketing continue, consumers in many areas may
never see them.
Nancy Steorts, consumer

»
«
srRETCHER CREW- Members of the Mason City E-R unit carried the body of Joan
Marie Smith to shore from the car in which she drowned .

FRIENDLY BANK "

lil•
--- na ....onaI
. l3ei\S

kk

MJDDLEPORT; OHIO

--

-

-

~

-

Arn.!:!J

·

~;::~~:~;2~:~1~~E ELBERFELDS IN )POMEROY

'

'

1

t

.'

. t

w
w

By Unne&lt;t t'ressJnternauonal
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO SENATE has overridden a
governor's veto for the first time in 14 years, turning aside
Gov. James A. Rhodes ' rejection of a major Democratic
energy policy bill converting the Ohio Development Center
into an Energy Resource and Development Agency . The veto,
overridden Tuesday on a 21-12 party-line vote with Democrats
in support and Republicans opposed, was sent to the House for
further action.
·
House Democrats, lacking one vote of the three-fifths
majority required to override a veto, are expected to meet
later this week to decide whether to take action on the energy
proposal. They anticipate no support from minority
Republicans. Their decision is expected to depend on a test
vote, scheduled for today. on overriding Rhodes ' veto of a $5
million appropriation for energy programs, including the
ERDA.
COLUMBUS - LEGISLATION AUTHORIZING the state
Bureau of Motor Vehicles to issue special identification cards
to nondrivers who apply for them has been sent to Gov. James
A. Rhodes by the Oruo General Assembly. A conference
committee report on the measure was !'\!~Pled. by the !Jouse 69
to 24, and the Senate Tuesday agreed to the report23 to9.
The bill, authored by Rep. Sherrod Brown, D-Mansfield,
calls for deputy motor vehicle registrars to issue the identification cards to nondrivers over 18 for $2 beginning Jan . I,
1976. Fifty cents of a fee would be kept by the deputy registrar,
and the rest would go into a state fund to support the program.
An appropriation of $25,000 also was included to finance startup costs.
Renewable every five years, the cards would bear
the holder's color photograph, name, age, hair and eye color,
&lt;height and weight. An applicant would have to furnish proof of
identity and age to obtain a card.

MASON DRIVE-IN

Budget minding
can be easier!

adviser to lite Agriculture
Department, suggested in her
testimony the government
might want to consider encouraging or even forcing
stores to remove lids from
jarlid combinations which
are sitting unsold. She said
that would free 100 nullion
lids .
Home canning jars come
with lids when bought new
But while the jars are
reusable, the lids to seal them
are not.
Mrs . Steorts said the
Federal Trade Commission
- which has announced an

investigation
tnto
the
situalton - should follow
several shipments of lids
from the factory to the retail
store to find out why industry
production figures don't seem
to jtbe with supplies at the
store level.
Two House members Reps . Charles Rose, 0-N.C .,
and Floyd Fithian, D-lnd . questioned a promotion
General Foods is running for
Sanka coffee under which the
buyer can send in a label
from the product and receive

a dozen lids for 25 cents.
Fith4tn said he Wlderstood
G F had an arrangement with
Kerr Jar Co. for 2(),000 dozen
lids and wondered if that was
adding to the problem.
Ac c ording
to
the
Washington Star, Rose
recently
had
his
congressional staff buy 2,160
canni ng
lids
from
Washington area stores to
send to his constituents.
White House Consu mer
Adviser Virginia Knauer
said : "In many parts of the
country right now (the

shortage) · has reached
critical proportions. The harvests are starting to come in
and canning lids are in tight
supply. And with no other
completely satisfactory
method of presevlng the
crops available, the end
result will be spolllng fruits
and vegetables, and for many
people severe economic
losses.
" Home canners stand to
lose - and to lose mucb," she
added. "For many It will be a
wasted swruner and a hard

winter .''

r;v;;,=;:,:,,I;;7;;:;~ Commission

MEIGS lltEATRE

Checking Accounts

PRICE 15'

Home canning lid shortages
getting worse Congress told

Notices, local news in brief

CCihe

Area

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

George Reuter dies in Canton

Two hurt when
- auto ditched

Meig.~-Mmlotl

Peter Stuyvesant, the flist
governor of New York when it
was a Dutch colony, •lost a leg
during an unsuccessful attempt to recapture the
Spanish-held island of St.
Maarten in 1644.
'

WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1975

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Mini Park

Eight

Now You·Know

WASHING'IUN - THEIR CAUSE VIRTUALLY doomed,
southern senators today were making a last.&lt;Jitch effort to
soften provisions in a J~year extension of the voting rtghts law
CAR RECOVERED - The 1974 Todel auto in which Joan Marie Smith of Pomeroy
as liberals pressed for its immediate passage .
Se" . John
drowned at Otfton Tuesday mght IS wmched to the shore. The car , driven along Camp
Tunney,
D-Calif.,
the
bill's
floor
manager,
fought
· to keep
Ground Road, veered suddenly rightward, into the water .
amendments from being attached to the House-passed
measure so it could be sent straight to President Ford's desk
without having to go to conference with the House.
A cloture motion to limit further debate on the bill was
expected to be easily approved later today . Democratic
leaders were hoping final passage could come some time
tonight. The only snag could come on an amendment to be
A 40-year-old Pomeroy vehicle went approx imately than an hour after the m- offered by Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W . Va., to extend the landmark
cident occurred. A Mason voting rights act for only five years, an extension period
woman died late Tuesday 25 feet mto nver.
originally proposed by the administration.
night when the car s he was
The car was travelin g Volunteer Ftre Department
d!'iving plunged mto the Ohto along lhe camp ground road winch truck was used lo pull
'IUUWN, FRIINCE - liN EXCURSION BOAT carrying
River near the Cltfton Camp when t t veered to the nght, lhe vehtcle from the river.
more than 270 tourists caught fire today, causmg many
Mason rescue squadmen
Gfound at about 10 :30 p.m . over the embankment a nd
casualties.
Joan Marte Smith of 1618 into the r iver, Deputy Love look the body to Pleasant
Authorittes set the toll at 12 killed and 50 hurt after the
Lincoln
Hei ghts
was said. The only witness to lhe Valley Hos pital after squadboat, the Venus des Isles, burst mto flames following an engine
pronounced
dead
by accident, Eugene McKinn ey, men unsuccessfu ll y at- explosion. Identifies of the victims were not lmmedtately
drowning at the scene by Pomeroy, told Deput y Love tempte d to rev1ve the vichm.
known . .
Mason Counrv Coroner Dr. that he went into the wa ter m Dr . Grubb pronounced her
The boat, a 90-footer with a capactty of 300 persons, was on
John Grubb- at 11 :50 last several attempts to save Mr s. dead at the scene .
its way to the islands of Polquerolles just off France 's
night.
The body was later tran sSmi th, but was unable to get
Mediterranean coast with up to 270 tourists aboard when the
ferred to Fog lesong Funeral
Deputy K. W. Love of the the car door open .
(Continued on page 16)
Mason County Sheriff 's
The 1974 model automobtle, Home tn Mason where
Dept., who investigated the with the body inside it, wa s funeral arran gements were
pendtng late lhts mormn g.
tncident , said the .Smith dragged from the river less

River ·c laims woman

Little Hocking
Revision urged .i n formula . claims victim
'

COLUMBUS ( UPI )
Repeal of the stale's utility
ratemaking formula has been
called for by two members of
th'e Public Utilities Comll)ission of Ohio, '!Yho also
Jl!'Oposed legislation they said
could save Ohioans more
than $1.2 billion .
testimony before a joint
l~g islative committee on
energy, David c. Sweet and
Slilly W. Bloomfield said
Tuesday they fully support
rweal of Reproduction Cost
~:~tw
Less Deprecia_tion
(flCN) and called for a bill to
establish an -Original Cost
formula in ·. place of the
current rate-making formula.
• The coJTtmissioners :;aid
tile $1.2 billion represents t he
w .tential cost to consumers -if
the state's 13 major utilities

:1n

...

were granted rate increases
under guidelines set by a
recent Supreme Court of Ohio
decision.
Under the high court
rulins, utilities may earn up
to an additiopa'l $603 million
after taxes if allowed to
charge consumers an added
$1.2 billion, said the com. . '
mtsswners.
The commissioners satd
that before t he court decision,
the PUCO used "imbedded
cost of debt," th e actual cost
or interest paid by a utiltty on
its borrowed money , to
calculate allowable rate of
return. Since th e ruling ,
however, some have ad·
vanced arguments that lhe
PUCO
must
calculate
a llowable rate ' of r et ur n on
the current cost of debt, the
mteresl rate y.·hen the in·

crease is being investigated,
said the comrmssioners.
The potential for windfall
profits ts a major problem
with RCN, the commissioners
said.
"These po_tential windfall
profits would have to come
from
the
consumers '

COOLVILLE- Elwood H.
Root, 47, Coolville, drowned
Tuesday afternoon at his
summer cam p on the
Hocking River near Frost.
Mr. Root left Coolville
about 10 a .m . Tuesday for
Pomeroy to pur
pockets," said the com- Pomeroy to purchase lottery
ttckels which he sold at his
missioners .
business in Coolville, anlf for
..: :·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·· auto par ts. He picked up both
in Pomeroy.
EXTENDED FORECAST
However , he had not
Friday through Sunday,
relurned home by evening,
a chance of showers Friday
and his family searched for
and mostly fair Saturday
him , finding his car at the
and Sunday. Daily
river camp. The se'a rch was
highs will be in the upper
started aboul 6:50 p.m . and
70s no,th and in the lower
draggmg operations s tarted .
80s south. Lows will be in
at 7· 30 the body bein g
the upper 30s and ""' BOs.
recovered about 12 :30 am.
today .
Takwr. par t m the dra gg in g
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=::;:::;.;:;:;.;:;:;:;.;.·=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:·:·

were the fire departments of
Chester, Little Hocking and
Coolvtlle, and the department
of Athens County Sheriff Paul

Brown .
Root was

wearin~ onlv his
undershorts when his body
was
recov'e red.
The
remainder of his clothing was
m the cabin of the camp site.
It was nol known if he had
been swimming or not , but
the Athen s County Coroner's
office ruled accidental
drown mg .
Mt. Root was born at
Coolville the son of Mrs.
Marte Harper Root, Coolvtlle
and the late P.lbert (Bill!
Root.
Mr
Root owned and
operaled Root's Garage in
Coolv11le and served wtlh the
(Continued on page 16)

prom:ises
M-R School decision

By Jo Ellen Diehl
An answer will be
available next Tuesday from
the Meigs County Commissioners whether or not
they intend to provide fun ding to operate the Meigs
Community School for the
mentally retarded.
Some 28 persons from the .
Meigs Assoc . for Retarded
Children, the Committee
on Mental Retardation and
parents of mentally retarded
children met with the commtsstoners Tuesday to
request funds to continue the
school. A tax levy of 1.6 mills
for operation of the school
failed in the county on June 3.
A building levy for ·a new
school building passed last
year, but those funds cannot
be used for operation expenses. Members of the
Mental Retardation Board
169 had met previously with
the commissioners and
received negative answers;
that there was no money
available.
Mrs. Grace Weber, a
member of the Mental
Retardation Board with the
citizens group, emphasized to
the commissioners that the
board's duty is to supervise
the school, not to provide

funds.
Mrs. Faye Sauer, chairman
of the Committee on Mental '
Retardation, said that it was
mandated by law that the
commissioners provide funds
for such a school. It was
pointed out that no money
had ever been allocated in the
budget for the school.
Prosecuting Attorney
Bernard Fultz, speaking for
the coJTtmissioners, replied
that he had a letter ready to ,
send to the State Attorney
General
asking
what
procedure should be followed.
Members of the group
suggested that the commissioners set up a "permissive tax" of 1 cent on the
dollar if they cannot appropriate enough money for
all the necessary activities in
the county . The school could
run in the red until January
when it could then be taken
over by budgeted funds, the
group suggested.
The
co mmissioners
already have submitted a
budget for 1976 to the county
budget commission which
allocated no money to mental
retardation .
However,
com missioners said this
budget could be changed.
The
commission was

reminded that Meigs County
is the only county in the state
not providing an . education
for the mentally •retarded as
required by law .
In answer to queotloDIDg,
the ronunl8fllooen aald they
had made no aUempt to IIDd
out how other •ountleo f1Did
their program• nor to find
other sourees of fWids .
Fultz suggested that the
school administration sul:mlt
a budget of the money II
needs for the remainder of
the year to stay open, and !he
rommissioners could study It .
The copy of a letter was
produced stating a need of
$43,103.80 for the remainder
of the year , It was sent June 9
to the commissioners and had
not been answered.
The collllDissloners agreed
to study the problems and
give definite answers to the
group at next week's meeting
regarding the inclusion of tbe
school in the budget, funding
theremainderof1975,andtbe
procedure it will undertake.
In other matters, commissioners, Henry, weui,
Bernard Gilkey and Warden
Ours performed routine
business.

Wally Bradford
retiring to farm
By Bob Hoeflich
lifter 28 years as an agent
for the Western and Southern
Life Insurance Co., William
Wallace I Wally) Bradford
will retire Friday .
Actually, retirement for
Bradford will not mean going
mto a hfe of leisure . Bradford
has a 22() acre farm near
Darwin which will keep him
busy, not to mention his civic
and church activities.
Born in Pomeroy, the son of
the late Mr. and Mrs. William
Bradford, the retiring insurance agent attended
Middleport schools for the
most part and graduated
from Midilleport High School
in 1935. Before becoming
employed with Western and
Southern, Bradford worked
for a periOd with the New
York Central Railroad, the
Red Anchor Department
Store
and
Elberfelds
Department Store.
A member of the Meigs
County Frur Board for the
past 10 years , Bradford has
served as board president the
last t~ree years. He is

currently shifting into high
gear in readying the 1975
edition of the fair . He is a
member of all the Masonic
Bodies in Pomeroy and
belongs to the Ken Amsbary
Chapter of the lzaak Walton
League of America. He IS a
member of the Hemlock
Grove Church of Christ.
Upon retirement, Bradford
wtll devote much of his time
to his farm. While he does
raise some livestock, his real
pleasure is growing row,
after row, after row of trees
for the Chri~tmas holiday
season.
Bradford is married to the
former Murtel Whale ~. also a
native Meigs Countian . Mr .
and Mrs. Bradford lived in
Middleport - Brown Avenue
- for many years before
moving permanently to their
farm home. The Bradfords
have a son, Major 'Bruce
Bradford, serving with the U.
S. Army at Monterey, Calif.,
and two daughters, Mrs. John
(Carolyn) Ketchka of Indianapolis, Ind., and Mrs.
Neda Oemson who resides

WALLY BRADFORD
near her parents . The
Bradfords h:we six grandchildren Dana Lee and Leslie
Ann Bradford, Kimberly
Dawn and Kelly Ann Ketcbka, and Albert Todd and
Sean Clemson. Mrs. Bradford
is employed at the SwisherLohse Pharmacy in Pomeroy
and will be continuing her
duties there.

350 come to check on health
The Rev. Dwight Zavitz,
coordinator of the health fair
now in progress here, said
today 100 persons vtsited the
health fair Monday, and 200
Tuesday. Ill the Harrisonville.
mmi·fa1r ,
30
persons

re g istered a s dtd 20 at
Chester.
The health group is at
Chesh1re today , at Rutland
Thursday and Syracuse on
Frtday.
The group working the

health fair went swinuning at
Middleport pool Tuesday
evening and will be entertained with a wiener roast
and , boat rides Thursday
evening at the beach in
Mason.

�2
n a

9 6
SECT ON
RE URN A ND
OF TAX

g

a se

e

r

he

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISE~ENT
The Slate of Oh o Meigs
County Court of CommO..
p eas P obale D voslon
To the Co Executor of lbe
o such of the follow ng
es dents of the State of
the surv v ng

Ad

o ma on
g

3

Yo a e he eby not fed lha
he
n enlo y
and Ap
p a semen o he es ate of the
a o emen oned
deceased
a e o sa d Coun y was f ed
n h s Cou I Sad nvento y
and App a semen w I be for
hea ng be o e lh s Cou I on
975 a
he 5 h day ol Aug us

O OOo

o kAM

o

f e
e~ ep ons he eo must f e
hem a east
e days p o o
hedae eo hea ng
G en unde my hand and
ng

Any pe son des

adCo

I

hs

9h

9 5

Ma n ng D Websle
Judge
By Ann B Watsqn
DepuyCek
23 20 2
P
Pa

A

ed

ES

e

M

Ke

d en o

C •-&gt;.. T • ea

o
e

2 566

nod

30

FOR
ON
AND
ON

Man

g 0 Webs e

Judge

DR. LAMB
Cleanng confuswn

on blood pressure

o a

n ome

By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB -Many
arl cles are
pub! shed
regardmg hypertens on high
blood pressure ) and you can
find people 111 department
stores who have a set-up for
taking blood pressure Also
many people
mcludmg
myself have purchased a
blood pressure k t for the1r
own use
I realize that only your own
doctor know ng your con
dit on can actually deter
m ne if you have high blood
pressure or not I hear of the
rule of thumb that if your
diastol c low pressure) IS
above 60 you should consider
that your pressure IS getting
on the highs de and aga n you
hear somethmg else
Could you g ve the ordinary
layman any information that
would be helpful for those
who do cbeck their own
pressure
DEAR READER - In
general a top reading below
140 and a lower reading below
90 are considered normal
Both the systol c
top)
reading and the diastolic
low readmg are unportant
If e ther are over these limits
you should certainly see your
doctor for a more complete
e evaluation of your pressure
The medical professiOn has
changed ts mind about blood
pressure readmgs over tbe
last several years That IS
part of the confusiOn It used
to be S8ld the top reading
wasn t unportant but studies
on the me1dence of strokes
and heart attacks have
proved that t IS
Then we also know now that
there IS no exact cut off on
normal
or
abnormal
pressure In general a
person with lower readings
has a better outlook m tenns
of heart and vascular disease
than those w th h gh normal
readmgs Stallshcally a
person w th a pressure of 110

om a

wha soe e
NET

PROF TS

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

EFFECT VE

sha

be

Sport Parade

s nee
My quesllon IS what do you
adviSe usmg if I go swun
m ng as the stocking would
rease to support when 1t gets
wet and m SWIIDIIllill! I use a
pre tty strong kick
DEAR READER
You
don t need anythmg while
swmunmg Vancose vems
stand out when you staiXI up
The pressure from the
column of blood runnmg
down hill to the leg cause~
thiS When you lie down the
var case velllS dram
In swmurung you will be
IYillg down so that Is part of
the solution Also when yorl
contract your leg muscles 1t
milks the deep veins In tll«&lt;
legs and prevents aC"
cumulat on of blood m the
legs
Fmelly the water aroWld
you will exert pressure on
your bssues and help prevent
distention of the veins In
short swimming should be
good exercise for anyone with
var case vems and you don t
need support while actually
swurumng

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP I Sports Editor
NEW YORK t:JPI
Billy Mart n can have another JOb thiS
"lninute two of them 111 fact Only trouble s ne ther of them are
'In baseball where t s still three strikes and you re out
Texas owner Brail Corbett the man "ho ftred h m as
manager ofthe Range rs has offered Ma tin a v t'&lt;! pres dency
m a publ c rela ons flnll completely d sassoc a ted w th the
ball club
Similarly Bob Shor former Rangers owner who or gmally
Signed Martm to manage them when he had he club says he
has an executive JOb for him n the M nneapollS hotel he runs
B lly Martm sn t sure what he II do R gh now he s n a
turmoil over the sudden fl pflop of events
My wife and I have to s t down and l.'!lk over he says I
have to wa t unt I my emot ons settle I hough! I had another
two years to go on my contract but I found out I d dn
Nobody quest ons the fact Martin IS an excep onally abe
manager Three times now he has p oven beyond any eason
able doubt that when t comes to handlin ~&lt; a ba I elub betwe en
the two foul I nes there are none bet er and three times now he
has been fired by the very people he has proven t to n M n
nesota Detro and Texas
Unfortunately for B lly Mart n there s more o mana g ng
than do ng the JOb between those two whi e nes A mana ger
IDly manager mus f rst learn to manage hunself Sometunes
that seem ngly mmor detail sl ps by B lly Mart n He gets so
wrapped up w1th th ngs on the he d and some of hiS other
purswts he forgets
Billy Martin IS f ercely ndependent n his th nking
sometune bl ndly so He feels the fll'111er stand he takes he
more stature he galllS n others e)es Tha s no always true
s
He forgets he s only the manager no the owner and ha
the owner who s paymg h s salary
Martm rerta nly can have no leg unate compla nt w th
Texas owner Brad Corbett He was given a luxur ous home to
:live 111 a car to use and a generous expense aceount to go w th
his $75 000 annual salary wh ch he II be pa d through next year
Corbett even nv ted Mart n to s t n on the Rangers board
meetmgs and express h1s opm ons and here aren t many
managers w th that pr v lege
Corbett who bough the Rangers from Short last year f1rst
began thinkmg about letting Martm go his past spr ng
Martm s obst nacy and ntrans gene&lt;! espec ally 111 ns st ng
upon older players on the roster nstead of youngers ones was
one of the th ngs which repeatedly disturbed the Rangers

II

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sp rls Writer
Steve Car on has one&lt;!
aga n become the most m
portant name on the
Ph ladelph a Ph llies ros er
Th ee year s ago Carl on
was the b ggesl star m the
Na onal Lsague when he won
2 ganes and the C1 Young
A\\ard bu sluggers
ke
G eg .uz nsk and M ke Sch
m d have s rpassed the 31).
yea -o ld
sou hp a w
n
popular y ove r he past two

seasons
St II baseball men believe
tllat Ca on s the key man if
the Ph II es hope to overtake
the P ttsburgh Pirates n he
NL Eas h s yea Carl on
when he s n top form s st II
one of the bes p che s 111
basebal and could be he
stopper th e Phil! es w
need down tll e stretch
S nee h s golden year of
!972Ca r ton has been terr bly
er a c bu
he showed
Tuesday rugh tha he m gh

sl dern wa s ext'&lt;!llent ton gh
W thout t the batter only lias
to guard aga nst two p
ches
Th&lt;;o B aves had ony one
se rou s
t hrea t aga ns
Ca rlton and tha came 111 the
e ghth nn ng when he y
loaded the bases w th two ou
However Car on go Ma ty
Perez to pop ou to e nd he
111nmg
Th e Phill es who moved to
h n four games of he
P a es v. h he v c or y
scored the game s only run n
he 9 h nn ng w th he a d of
a th ow ng e ror by Braves
ca cher V c Corre I The Ph
I es oaded the bases w th
none ou and after Schm d
popped out Johnny Oates hit
wha appeared to be a double
play ball However after
mak ng the for t'&lt;! out at home
Corre II threw the relay wildly
pas t hrs base for an error
allow ng Luz nsk to score
In other Na onal League
action San D ego n pped

f nally be ge tmg hiS game
und er control agam If so t
w II be a welcome rei ef to he
Ph II es who have bee n
staytng close to the Pirates
w hou nuch help f om he r
ace
Ca r on who has bee n
plagued by arm trouble for
part of the season p1tched
perhaps his bes ga me of the
season Tuesday n gh when
he s toppe d the Atlanta
Braves 1..0 on a hree-11 Iter
The fastballing efty walked
on y h ee an d s uck out
e gh n no ch ng h s n n h w n
aga ns seven losses
ThiS IS the best groove
I ve been n th s year sa d
Ca r ton
-..ho now ha s
recorded wo com plete game
VIClo es 111 his last three
starls I had all hree of my
p ches gomg for s r kes and
that makes a b g difference
My sl der ha s been n
cons ste nt all year My arm
has bothered me and kept me
f om working on
The

Ma o

L ea gu eS a nd ng

8

groove this year where I
could throw the ball w th
cons stency I II continue to
have games I ke th s un I I
get my rhytlun back
DaviS three RBI gave hun
30 for the year and 999 for hiS
career Baltimore s dura ble
des gnated hitter also drew to
w thm f ve hits of the 2 000

NEW YORK UP!
C nc nnat catcher Johnny
Bench has been named to
hea d
A h etes Aga ns t
Cancer
Bench who was found to
have a berugn les on on one of
h s un gs dw- ng a ou ne
checkup n 1972 was named
Tuesda y
to help
he
Arn e ca n Ca nce Soc el y
wth a new g oup tha s
auned a coordl118 t ng and
ncreas ng
e ffort s
of
prom ne nt athletes n he
f gh aga nst ca nce
I earned my lesson about
value of
eg u ar
he
checkups sa d Bench
It
was a fr gh en ng expe ence
but t p oved tha a baseba I
player n top cond on was
vu nerable Ike anybody else

6

0
We

9 b

career mark

In other games
he
Oakland A s destroyed the
Detro t Tigers n both ends of
a doubleheader ll..O and 16-4
the Boston Red Sox rupped
the M nnesota TwillS :&gt;-4 the
Texas Rangers blanked the
Cleveland Indl8lls 4..() the
New York Yankees bounced
the Ch cago Whi e Sox 11-&lt;i
and the Kansas C ty Royals
spl t a twmb II w1th the
M !waukee Brewers w nrung
:l-2 and los ng 6-3
In the Nallonal League
New York downed C nc nnali
3 1 Ph lade ph a edged
A anta I 0 San D ego
sl pped by P ttsburgh also by
a 1..0 score Montreal dumped
Hous on 2-1 San Franc sea
trampled Ch cago 9-5 and
S Lows tr pped Los Angeles
43
A s 11 16 rtgers ll-4
Regg e J ackon and B lly
W II ams each slugged three
run home runs o h ghl ght
the
mas
product ve
doubleheader n Oakland
h story Glenn Abba t hurled
6 2-3 mrungs of no h t ball
before settlmg for a three
hitter 111 the f rs game and
bo h Jackson and W l11ams
knocked n four runs n the
rughtcap
Red Sox 5 rwms 4
J m R ce s run scor ng
tr pie and Carlton Fisk s two
run smgle staked Boston to an
early 5-11 lead and B II wlee
w thstood a four'f"un M n
nesota comeback for his 12tll
Vlchor~ of the season Rod
arew homered for the Twms
Rangers 4 lnd ailS 0
Gaylord Perry ossed a
wo h er fo he Jrd shutou
111 his las four starts s ruck
ou 13 o move mto lith plat'&lt;!
on the all tune I st and retired
the last 22 ba ters m a row to
keep Frank Lucches un
bea en 111 wo games as Texas
manager
The Rangers
JUmped on loser Er c Ra ch
for three runs n the th1rd
capped by Jun Spenrer s two
ores fo he Reds
run s ngle
Yankees 11 White Sox 6
The two teams meet agam
Sandy Alomar collected
on gh w th Gary Nolan
three
doubles knocked 111 two
workmg for the Reds and the
Mets w II counter w th John runs and scormg three more
to giVe Calf sh Hunter hIS
Matlack
13th v ctory of the season

o

gee

A

Gam e
EO

0

sa

onbo g

9

a
6

to cancer
Ana her eason for Bench s
0
8 0
keen nte es n the Soc ety
9
a
stems from hiS fr endsh p
0 8 8 0
w th Mr and Mrs Carl
a Sa
9
0 Buck ngham of Dayton Ohio
In 1973 Bench befr ended a
a
0
curly-lla
red 5-year-old boy
0 0
who oved baseball bu loved
ague
I fe
even more
The
"hom Bench
g b youngster
VIS ed frequently for a year
6
and a half suffered from
eukem a a form of cance
I d scovered hat true
cou age can be wrpped up n
the life of a s iX year-o d
Bench sa d sadly
When V ck e and I made
ou
wedd ng p an s as
February we nv ted Ph I p
and h s dad ca I a nd h8s
mo her Mel ssa, to be w th
us Bu Ph p cou dn make
We we e marr ed on a
Fr day and he died he next
day
H s death conVInced me
hat the one mean ngf ul

Am e

an

L

Ea

We

0

INTEREST

On Certificates
Of Deposit
$1,000 M1mmum
30 Mo Term
N My d•y nterest penalty
I
w thd awn
before

ma u ty date

memor a I cou d g ve Ph p
would be o led cate m)self
personal y o h s ba le
aga ns cant'&lt;!r
Bench sad he was mv t ng
a hletes f om all spo ts to

Me1gs Co Branch

o n his cru sade
There s much to be done
Bench sa d A hletes can bf!
th e powerful persuaders for
men and women o ge
regula checkups o know
the warn ng s gnals o qwt
s mok ng These a e he
pract ca defenses aga ns

The Athens Coun ,
Sa v ngs &amp; Loan Co
296 Second St
Pome oy Oh o

;~I
~

cancer

GOOD-YEAR
EXtRA
SPECIAL
ANY SIZEGOOD/'iE.M

PASSENGER TIRE
(RIB

TRE~D

Plus
Exc: se Tax
27c to llc

FREE MOUNTING

-

$}Q95

With
Recappable Casing

MEir,s TIKE CENTER
7ot E Main 51
POMEROY OHIO
9922 01

~UIS

h

IIlLI IS outs
h

8

If You 'Veed A R ulm~ Mower TH/S/S/1

1

pm

NEW, LATE SHIPMENT
HUFFY and TURFMASTER

e{)

RIDING
MOWERS
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S EVE SNOWDEN
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W th Reco I Starter

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W th Re co

ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
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CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
&amp;

K V COMPUTING DEPT
Of
UNION CARBIDE TECH CENTER
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER Sp m

CAMDEN PARK
CLOSED EVERY MON

th rd on a double by Willie
Dav s AI Hrabosky was the
w nne n el ef while reliever
M ke Ma rshall took the loss
ohn Hale hom~red for the
Dodge s
Gants 9 Cubs 5
W e Montanez drove n
fou runs w h a home
s ngle and sacrif ce fly to
pa e th G ants to a !h)
o
o e
the Cubs
Montan
se e nth homer of
the season a two'f"un blow
"as he b g hit n a four-run
f f h nn ng ally tha pu he
G anls ahead 7-'1

a

SATURDAY JULY26th

US60WEST

w th a smgle and moved to

a

PARK RESERVED
11

e and a so scor ed a
un af e
ea ng he f rs
base of his naJo league
ca r ee to lead the Mets o
o y ove
he Reds
K()( man wa ked four and
s ru k ou e gh n ga n ng h s
n nth tr umph n 16 dec s on
Wayne Gar e d o e n wo
runs for the Me s
Expo 2 A tros 1
Ga y C te s ngled home
the w nn ng un "" h one ou
n the
h nn ng o g e e
Expos a Vlcto )
e
he
As os Ca ter s h scored
Pepe Manb'Ua who -..a ked
and moved o second on a
sa f ce bun Da e Mur ay
\\as e u nne n c e JA h e
Jose Sosa
a k ng h f s
n o
cag u appea
wa I a ged
h he o s
Cardinals 4 Dodger 3
Mar o Gue era s sa
e
fly w th one ou n the top of
he I h
ed Ro F'a ly
and ga e the Cardinals a
vtcto y o e
he Dodge s
Fa rly had led off the nrung
s x h

Bench to head
•
cancer proJect

V n ed P es n e na on a
Na ona
eague
Ea
p
w
9 b

Koosman cools Big
Red Machine, 3-1
NEW YORK UP! - It s
not often that a p tcher has as
much fun working aga nst
the Clncmnat Reds as Jerry
Koosman of the New York
Mets had Tuesday rught
Koosman p tched a siX
hitter for hiS Dlllth wm as the
Mets defeated the Reds 3-1
but that was only half of 1t
:whilt gave the New York left
~nder an added lhr II was
the first stolen base of hiS
career-a delayed steal
which led to a run 111 the third
IMlng
Known as one of the
\veakest h ttlng p tchers m
baseball Koosman opened
!he mnmg With a smgle W th
}'layne Ga rett battmg
oosman suddenly took off
or second and wound up at
bud when catcher B1ll
i&gt;Iummer s throw went Into
clenter field for an error
Moments later he scored on
Wayne Garrett s sacr1f ce

Pittsbw-gh ..() New York
defeated C nc nna
31
Montreal edged Houston 2
m I nn ngs S LouiS bea
Los Angeles 4-3 n I n
n111gs and Sa n Fra n s co
outslugged Ch cago 9-5
In
Amer can Lea gue
games Oak land swep a
doubleheader from Detro t
1..() a nd 16-4 Bos on rupped
M nnesota :&gt;-4 New Yo k
beat Ch cago 11-&lt;i Ba timore
de fea e d Cal forn a 8 3
Texa s blanked Cle e and 4..0
a nd M !wauk ee downed
Kansas C ty 6-3 af e os ng
e
ga n e of he
daub eheader 3-2
Padres I Pirates 0
Randy Jon es os ed a
seven h e fo I s f f h
shu ou of the yea n eading
the P.adres over the Pira es
Johnny Grubb s loopmg t pie
to r gh n the s x tll nn ng h s
f rs hi n 5 a ba~ s o ed
he on y run
MeL• 3 Reds I
Je rry Koosma n ossed a

Ryan dropsBASEBALL
•
8th mrow

By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Wr ter
Baseball s most pr zed
shotgun has evolved nto a
blunderbuss
No an Ryan he oast of
he Amer can League n
lash on ng a 10 3 record
through he f rst week of
owner
June has suddenl1 os he
Look I don t want o be the manager of the ball club says
ve oc ty and accuracy 111 hiS
the 37 year-old Corbett a self made multi mill ona re I was
r gh arm drdpp ng e ght
perfectly w lling to let B lly manage But you still have to have
stra gh dec s ons
!!Orne kind of orgaruzation
Ryan las ed a mere I 1-3
All I ever asked for was a reasonable exchange o a eas
nn ngs aga nst the Baltimore
:The older I ge the more I realize the truly great teams n Or ales Tuesda y n ght
)laseball never were bu It around one man Maybe n a wa y
al ow ng siX runs on four hits
;what this al comes down to wh ch kmd of general do you and an equal numbe of
prefer Patton or Bradley W th the k ds we have we need an wa ks Tommy Dav s drove
Omar Bradley someone who could show more patience and 111 three of the runs w th h s
undersl.'!nding w th them Some of our k ds were so fr ghtened second home run of the year
.of Billy they couldn t even play
and a s ngle Bait more
Martm prec p tated his own departure Saturday n ght after f n shed up aga ns rei ever
a loss to the Red Sox He told Corbe he wanted to add backup Chuck Hockenbery w th two
catcher Tom Egan released by the Angels Egan 29 was more runs for the 8-3 VIC
hitting 229 with the Angels He s no a cons stent h Iter has tory
only an average arm and can t run which s why the Angels
He s labormg to throw
released him
s r kes Dav s observed of
Corbett S8ld why waste a spot on the roster when t could be Ryan
He can
ea y do
better filled by one of the Rangers youngsters Mart n kept what he wants to You can tell
argumg pressmg h s pomt and soon there were heated words by his express on The 1974
Both men grew angry and said thmgs tha cu deeply and then No an Ryan had a lot of
portions of the quarrel became public
conf dence n h s p tche s
On Sunday ?4artm asked Corbe
Guys would be tak ng
Am I let go
anyth ng he threw offspeed
B lly I don t know replied the Rangers owner R gh
he cw-ve sl der whatever
now I don t think there IS any way we can make t together ove r You had to psyche yourseif
the long haul
for h s fastball
Late Monday afternoon Dan 0 Br en the Rangers general
I h nk he I come back
manager mformed Martm Corbe w shed to see hun m hiS bu I th nk may take hun a
office Martm had an Idea what the meetmg would be abou
long me
and d1dn t show
Ryan has bea en
he
Meanwh le Ranger coach Frank Lucches who used to
0 oles w ce h s season no
manage the Phillies was told Martm was go ng to be f red n a hitt ng them n one of the
few hours and asked whether he would take the JOb Lucches
g&amp;mes Tha was June I and
was stunned but sa d he would
he s won ust once smce then
Martm ran nto Lurches shortly afterward and asked hun
He told me before the
What s happenmg
ga me he felt as strong as an
Well I guess I got the JOb Lucches answered honestly
ox
Cal forn a Manager
after which Martm announced h sown f rmg on hiS rad o show D ck W lliams said He was
m Texas
ry ng to muscle them bu I
What hes ahead now for B lly Mart n That s hard to say
don t think he ever really
)'he baseball grapev ne operates constantly 24 hours a day
popped the ball
Most clubs aware of what happened to him m Mmnesota
I just couldn ge my
Detroit and Texas are bound to be wary about ask ng Martm fastball over
lamented
to manage for them Somewhere along the I ne hough Ryan who sa d the e ght
someone s likely to remember the kmd of JOb he does between ga me loSing streak s the
those wh te lines and maybe hire hun ag8111
onges he s ever endured
Billy Martin IS 47 but there sst II time for hun to change h s
I ve
been
Bu
hen
thinkmg The b ~quest on s not so much whether he ever w II s trugg ng all season I
but w II t be too late when he f11131ly does
haven
eally gotten nto a

t

e ed

om

I

over 70 s better off than a
person With 140 over 90 But
the chance of Improvement Ia
not great eno~Ch In liiGit
cases to ••rral'l vtcoroul
treatment otiMI; !Ill- !lll.na
sens1ble llvlnc •Mb YOII
should do anywty unl
lhi
upper preuure 11 c:on
slstently over 140 or the IC~Wer
reading IS perslstenUy 90 or
more
For more Information
about blood pressure wr1te to
me m care of this newspaper'
P 0 Box 1551 Radto Cit;
Stat on New York NY 10019
and ask for The
Health
Letter number 1_, on blood
pressure Send a long
stamped
self addressed
envelope and 50 rents for
rna ling and costs
DEAR DR LAMB A few
years ago I had a varicose
vem removed from my leg
and have used support hose

Phils nip Braves, Cards edge LA

Today's

spouse he next of k n the
bene c a es under the w
and o he attorney or at
o neys ep esen ng any bf
he a o emen oned pe sons
ea h
B
Schaefe
Deceased Pome oy Oh o
Sa sbu y Townsh p
No
2 464

The Daily Sentmel M ddleport-Pomeroy 0 Wednesday July 23 t975

HUNTINGTON
Y EXCEPT LABOR DAY

Starter

26"-8 HP
A Word
W th Electr c Starter
to the Wzse . ..
BUY NOW AT OUR LOW PRICE'

W1ll Be Much H1gher Pnced Next Year

�2
n a

9 6
SECT ON
RE URN A ND
OF TAX

g

a se

e

r

he

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISE~ENT
The Slate of Oh o Meigs
County Court of CommO..
p eas P obale D voslon
To the Co Executor of lbe
o such of the follow ng
es dents of the State of
the surv v ng

Ad

o ma on
g

3

Yo a e he eby not fed lha
he
n enlo y
and Ap
p a semen o he es ate of the
a o emen oned
deceased
a e o sa d Coun y was f ed
n h s Cou I Sad nvento y
and App a semen w I be for
hea ng be o e lh s Cou I on
975 a
he 5 h day ol Aug us

O OOo

o kAM

o

f e
e~ ep ons he eo must f e
hem a east
e days p o o
hedae eo hea ng
G en unde my hand and
ng

Any pe son des

adCo

I

hs

9h

9 5

Ma n ng D Websle
Judge
By Ann B Watsqn
DepuyCek
23 20 2
P
Pa

A

ed

ES

e

M

Ke

d en o

C •-&gt;.. T • ea

o
e

2 566

nod

30

FOR
ON
AND
ON

Man

g 0 Webs e

Judge

DR. LAMB
Cleanng confuswn

on blood pressure

o a

n ome

By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB -Many
arl cles are
pub! shed
regardmg hypertens on high
blood pressure ) and you can
find people 111 department
stores who have a set-up for
taking blood pressure Also
many people
mcludmg
myself have purchased a
blood pressure k t for the1r
own use
I realize that only your own
doctor know ng your con
dit on can actually deter
m ne if you have high blood
pressure or not I hear of the
rule of thumb that if your
diastol c low pressure) IS
above 60 you should consider
that your pressure IS getting
on the highs de and aga n you
hear somethmg else
Could you g ve the ordinary
layman any information that
would be helpful for those
who do cbeck their own
pressure
DEAR READER - In
general a top reading below
140 and a lower reading below
90 are considered normal
Both the systol c
top)
reading and the diastolic
low readmg are unportant
If e ther are over these limits
you should certainly see your
doctor for a more complete
e evaluation of your pressure
The medical professiOn has
changed ts mind about blood
pressure readmgs over tbe
last several years That IS
part of the confusiOn It used
to be S8ld the top reading
wasn t unportant but studies
on the me1dence of strokes
and heart attacks have
proved that t IS
Then we also know now that
there IS no exact cut off on
normal
or
abnormal
pressure In general a
person with lower readings
has a better outlook m tenns
of heart and vascular disease
than those w th h gh normal
readmgs Stallshcally a
person w th a pressure of 110

om a

wha soe e
NET

PROF TS

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

EFFECT VE

sha

be

Sport Parade

s nee
My quesllon IS what do you
adviSe usmg if I go swun
m ng as the stocking would
rease to support when 1t gets
wet and m SWIIDIIllill! I use a
pre tty strong kick
DEAR READER
You
don t need anythmg while
swmunmg Vancose vems
stand out when you staiXI up
The pressure from the
column of blood runnmg
down hill to the leg cause~
thiS When you lie down the
var case velllS dram
In swmurung you will be
IYillg down so that Is part of
the solution Also when yorl
contract your leg muscles 1t
milks the deep veins In tll«&lt;
legs and prevents aC"
cumulat on of blood m the
legs
Fmelly the water aroWld
you will exert pressure on
your bssues and help prevent
distention of the veins In
short swimming should be
good exercise for anyone with
var case vems and you don t
need support while actually
swurumng

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP I Sports Editor
NEW YORK t:JPI
Billy Mart n can have another JOb thiS
"lninute two of them 111 fact Only trouble s ne ther of them are
'In baseball where t s still three strikes and you re out
Texas owner Brail Corbett the man "ho ftred h m as
manager ofthe Range rs has offered Ma tin a v t'&lt;! pres dency
m a publ c rela ons flnll completely d sassoc a ted w th the
ball club
Similarly Bob Shor former Rangers owner who or gmally
Signed Martm to manage them when he had he club says he
has an executive JOb for him n the M nneapollS hotel he runs
B lly Martm sn t sure what he II do R gh now he s n a
turmoil over the sudden fl pflop of events
My wife and I have to s t down and l.'!lk over he says I
have to wa t unt I my emot ons settle I hough! I had another
two years to go on my contract but I found out I d dn
Nobody quest ons the fact Martin IS an excep onally abe
manager Three times now he has p oven beyond any eason
able doubt that when t comes to handlin ~&lt; a ba I elub betwe en
the two foul I nes there are none bet er and three times now he
has been fired by the very people he has proven t to n M n
nesota Detro and Texas
Unfortunately for B lly Mart n there s more o mana g ng
than do ng the JOb between those two whi e nes A mana ger
IDly manager mus f rst learn to manage hunself Sometunes
that seem ngly mmor detail sl ps by B lly Mart n He gets so
wrapped up w1th th ngs on the he d and some of hiS other
purswts he forgets
Billy Martin IS f ercely ndependent n his th nking
sometune bl ndly so He feels the fll'111er stand he takes he
more stature he galllS n others e)es Tha s no always true
s
He forgets he s only the manager no the owner and ha
the owner who s paymg h s salary
Martm rerta nly can have no leg unate compla nt w th
Texas owner Brad Corbett He was given a luxur ous home to
:live 111 a car to use and a generous expense aceount to go w th
his $75 000 annual salary wh ch he II be pa d through next year
Corbett even nv ted Mart n to s t n on the Rangers board
meetmgs and express h1s opm ons and here aren t many
managers w th that pr v lege
Corbett who bough the Rangers from Short last year f1rst
began thinkmg about letting Martm go his past spr ng
Martm s obst nacy and ntrans gene&lt;! espec ally 111 ns st ng
upon older players on the roster nstead of youngers ones was
one of the th ngs which repeatedly disturbed the Rangers

II

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sp rls Writer
Steve Car on has one&lt;!
aga n become the most m
portant name on the
Ph ladelph a Ph llies ros er
Th ee year s ago Carl on
was the b ggesl star m the
Na onal Lsague when he won
2 ganes and the C1 Young
A\\ard bu sluggers
ke
G eg .uz nsk and M ke Sch
m d have s rpassed the 31).
yea -o ld
sou hp a w
n
popular y ove r he past two

seasons
St II baseball men believe
tllat Ca on s the key man if
the Ph II es hope to overtake
the P ttsburgh Pirates n he
NL Eas h s yea Carl on
when he s n top form s st II
one of the bes p che s 111
basebal and could be he
stopper th e Phil! es w
need down tll e stretch
S nee h s golden year of
!972Ca r ton has been terr bly
er a c bu
he showed
Tuesday rugh tha he m gh

sl dern wa s ext'&lt;!llent ton gh
W thout t the batter only lias
to guard aga nst two p
ches
Th&lt;;o B aves had ony one
se rou s
t hrea t aga ns
Ca rlton and tha came 111 the
e ghth nn ng when he y
loaded the bases w th two ou
However Car on go Ma ty
Perez to pop ou to e nd he
111nmg
Th e Phill es who moved to
h n four games of he
P a es v. h he v c or y
scored the game s only run n
he 9 h nn ng w th he a d of
a th ow ng e ror by Braves
ca cher V c Corre I The Ph
I es oaded the bases w th
none ou and after Schm d
popped out Johnny Oates hit
wha appeared to be a double
play ball However after
mak ng the for t'&lt;! out at home
Corre II threw the relay wildly
pas t hrs base for an error
allow ng Luz nsk to score
In other Na onal League
action San D ego n pped

f nally be ge tmg hiS game
und er control agam If so t
w II be a welcome rei ef to he
Ph II es who have bee n
staytng close to the Pirates
w hou nuch help f om he r
ace
Ca r on who has bee n
plagued by arm trouble for
part of the season p1tched
perhaps his bes ga me of the
season Tuesday n gh when
he s toppe d the Atlanta
Braves 1..0 on a hree-11 Iter
The fastballing efty walked
on y h ee an d s uck out
e gh n no ch ng h s n n h w n
aga ns seven losses
ThiS IS the best groove
I ve been n th s year sa d
Ca r ton
-..ho now ha s
recorded wo com plete game
VIClo es 111 his last three
starls I had all hree of my
p ches gomg for s r kes and
that makes a b g difference
My sl der ha s been n
cons ste nt all year My arm
has bothered me and kept me
f om working on
The

Ma o

L ea gu eS a nd ng

8

groove this year where I
could throw the ball w th
cons stency I II continue to
have games I ke th s un I I
get my rhytlun back
DaviS three RBI gave hun
30 for the year and 999 for hiS
career Baltimore s dura ble
des gnated hitter also drew to
w thm f ve hits of the 2 000

NEW YORK UP!
C nc nnat catcher Johnny
Bench has been named to
hea d
A h etes Aga ns t
Cancer
Bench who was found to
have a berugn les on on one of
h s un gs dw- ng a ou ne
checkup n 1972 was named
Tuesda y
to help
he
Arn e ca n Ca nce Soc el y
wth a new g oup tha s
auned a coordl118 t ng and
ncreas ng
e ffort s
of
prom ne nt athletes n he
f gh aga nst ca nce
I earned my lesson about
value of
eg u ar
he
checkups sa d Bench
It
was a fr gh en ng expe ence
but t p oved tha a baseba I
player n top cond on was
vu nerable Ike anybody else

6

0
We

9 b

career mark

In other games
he
Oakland A s destroyed the
Detro t Tigers n both ends of
a doubleheader ll..O and 16-4
the Boston Red Sox rupped
the M nnesota TwillS :&gt;-4 the
Texas Rangers blanked the
Cleveland Indl8lls 4..() the
New York Yankees bounced
the Ch cago Whi e Sox 11-&lt;i
and the Kansas C ty Royals
spl t a twmb II w1th the
M !waukee Brewers w nrung
:l-2 and los ng 6-3
In the Nallonal League
New York downed C nc nnali
3 1 Ph lade ph a edged
A anta I 0 San D ego
sl pped by P ttsburgh also by
a 1..0 score Montreal dumped
Hous on 2-1 San Franc sea
trampled Ch cago 9-5 and
S Lows tr pped Los Angeles
43
A s 11 16 rtgers ll-4
Regg e J ackon and B lly
W II ams each slugged three
run home runs o h ghl ght
the
mas
product ve
doubleheader n Oakland
h story Glenn Abba t hurled
6 2-3 mrungs of no h t ball
before settlmg for a three
hitter 111 the f rs game and
bo h Jackson and W l11ams
knocked n four runs n the
rughtcap
Red Sox 5 rwms 4
J m R ce s run scor ng
tr pie and Carlton Fisk s two
run smgle staked Boston to an
early 5-11 lead and B II wlee
w thstood a four'f"un M n
nesota comeback for his 12tll
Vlchor~ of the season Rod
arew homered for the Twms
Rangers 4 lnd ailS 0
Gaylord Perry ossed a
wo h er fo he Jrd shutou
111 his las four starts s ruck
ou 13 o move mto lith plat'&lt;!
on the all tune I st and retired
the last 22 ba ters m a row to
keep Frank Lucches un
bea en 111 wo games as Texas
manager
The Rangers
JUmped on loser Er c Ra ch
for three runs n the th1rd
capped by Jun Spenrer s two
ores fo he Reds
run s ngle
Yankees 11 White Sox 6
The two teams meet agam
Sandy Alomar collected
on gh w th Gary Nolan
three
doubles knocked 111 two
workmg for the Reds and the
Mets w II counter w th John runs and scormg three more
to giVe Calf sh Hunter hIS
Matlack
13th v ctory of the season

o

gee

A

Gam e
EO

0

sa

onbo g

9

a
6

to cancer
Ana her eason for Bench s
0
8 0
keen nte es n the Soc ety
9
a
stems from hiS fr endsh p
0 8 8 0
w th Mr and Mrs Carl
a Sa
9
0 Buck ngham of Dayton Ohio
In 1973 Bench befr ended a
a
0
curly-lla
red 5-year-old boy
0 0
who oved baseball bu loved
ague
I fe
even more
The
"hom Bench
g b youngster
VIS ed frequently for a year
6
and a half suffered from
eukem a a form of cance
I d scovered hat true
cou age can be wrpped up n
the life of a s iX year-o d
Bench sa d sadly
When V ck e and I made
ou
wedd ng p an s as
February we nv ted Ph I p
and h s dad ca I a nd h8s
mo her Mel ssa, to be w th
us Bu Ph p cou dn make
We we e marr ed on a
Fr day and he died he next
day
H s death conVInced me
hat the one mean ngf ul

Am e

an

L

Ea

We

0

INTEREST

On Certificates
Of Deposit
$1,000 M1mmum
30 Mo Term
N My d•y nterest penalty
I
w thd awn
before

ma u ty date

memor a I cou d g ve Ph p
would be o led cate m)self
personal y o h s ba le
aga ns cant'&lt;!r
Bench sad he was mv t ng
a hletes f om all spo ts to

Me1gs Co Branch

o n his cru sade
There s much to be done
Bench sa d A hletes can bf!
th e powerful persuaders for
men and women o ge
regula checkups o know
the warn ng s gnals o qwt
s mok ng These a e he
pract ca defenses aga ns

The Athens Coun ,
Sa v ngs &amp; Loan Co
296 Second St
Pome oy Oh o

;~I
~

cancer

GOOD-YEAR
EXtRA
SPECIAL
ANY SIZEGOOD/'iE.M

PASSENGER TIRE
(RIB

TRE~D

Plus
Exc: se Tax
27c to llc

FREE MOUNTING

-

$}Q95

With
Recappable Casing

MEir,s TIKE CENTER
7ot E Main 51
POMEROY OHIO
9922 01

~UIS

h

IIlLI IS outs
h

8

If You 'Veed A R ulm~ Mower TH/S/S/1

1

pm

NEW, LATE SHIPMENT
HUFFY and TURFMASTER

e{)

RIDING
MOWERS
32"-8 HP

S EVE SNOWDEN
58 Pcw e S M dd po
Phone 99

W th Reco I Starter

26"-8 HP
W th Re co

ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
&amp;

K V COMPUTING DEPT
Of
UNION CARBIDE TECH CENTER
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER Sp m

CAMDEN PARK
CLOSED EVERY MON

th rd on a double by Willie
Dav s AI Hrabosky was the
w nne n el ef while reliever
M ke Ma rshall took the loss
ohn Hale hom~red for the
Dodge s
Gants 9 Cubs 5
W e Montanez drove n
fou runs w h a home
s ngle and sacrif ce fly to
pa e th G ants to a !h)
o
o e
the Cubs
Montan
se e nth homer of
the season a two'f"un blow
"as he b g hit n a four-run
f f h nn ng ally tha pu he
G anls ahead 7-'1

a

SATURDAY JULY26th

US60WEST

w th a smgle and moved to

a

PARK RESERVED
11

e and a so scor ed a
un af e
ea ng he f rs
base of his naJo league
ca r ee to lead the Mets o
o y ove
he Reds
K()( man wa ked four and
s ru k ou e gh n ga n ng h s
n nth tr umph n 16 dec s on
Wayne Gar e d o e n wo
runs for the Me s
Expo 2 A tros 1
Ga y C te s ngled home
the w nn ng un "" h one ou
n the
h nn ng o g e e
Expos a Vlcto )
e
he
As os Ca ter s h scored
Pepe Manb'Ua who -..a ked
and moved o second on a
sa f ce bun Da e Mur ay
\\as e u nne n c e JA h e
Jose Sosa
a k ng h f s
n o
cag u appea
wa I a ged
h he o s
Cardinals 4 Dodger 3
Mar o Gue era s sa
e
fly w th one ou n the top of
he I h
ed Ro F'a ly
and ga e the Cardinals a
vtcto y o e
he Dodge s
Fa rly had led off the nrung
s x h

Bench to head
•
cancer proJect

V n ed P es n e na on a
Na ona
eague
Ea
p
w
9 b

Koosman cools Big
Red Machine, 3-1
NEW YORK UP! - It s
not often that a p tcher has as
much fun working aga nst
the Clncmnat Reds as Jerry
Koosman of the New York
Mets had Tuesday rught
Koosman p tched a siX
hitter for hiS Dlllth wm as the
Mets defeated the Reds 3-1
but that was only half of 1t
:whilt gave the New York left
~nder an added lhr II was
the first stolen base of hiS
career-a delayed steal
which led to a run 111 the third
IMlng
Known as one of the
\veakest h ttlng p tchers m
baseball Koosman opened
!he mnmg With a smgle W th
}'layne Ga rett battmg
oosman suddenly took off
or second and wound up at
bud when catcher B1ll
i&gt;Iummer s throw went Into
clenter field for an error
Moments later he scored on
Wayne Garrett s sacr1f ce

Pittsbw-gh ..() New York
defeated C nc nna
31
Montreal edged Houston 2
m I nn ngs S LouiS bea
Los Angeles 4-3 n I n
n111gs and Sa n Fra n s co
outslugged Ch cago 9-5
In
Amer can Lea gue
games Oak land swep a
doubleheader from Detro t
1..() a nd 16-4 Bos on rupped
M nnesota :&gt;-4 New Yo k
beat Ch cago 11-&lt;i Ba timore
de fea e d Cal forn a 8 3
Texa s blanked Cle e and 4..0
a nd M !wauk ee downed
Kansas C ty 6-3 af e os ng
e
ga n e of he
daub eheader 3-2
Padres I Pirates 0
Randy Jon es os ed a
seven h e fo I s f f h
shu ou of the yea n eading
the P.adres over the Pira es
Johnny Grubb s loopmg t pie
to r gh n the s x tll nn ng h s
f rs hi n 5 a ba~ s o ed
he on y run
MeL• 3 Reds I
Je rry Koosma n ossed a

Ryan dropsBASEBALL
•
8th mrow

By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Wr ter
Baseball s most pr zed
shotgun has evolved nto a
blunderbuss
No an Ryan he oast of
he Amer can League n
lash on ng a 10 3 record
through he f rst week of
owner
June has suddenl1 os he
Look I don t want o be the manager of the ball club says
ve oc ty and accuracy 111 hiS
the 37 year-old Corbett a self made multi mill ona re I was
r gh arm drdpp ng e ght
perfectly w lling to let B lly manage But you still have to have
stra gh dec s ons
!!Orne kind of orgaruzation
Ryan las ed a mere I 1-3
All I ever asked for was a reasonable exchange o a eas
nn ngs aga nst the Baltimore
:The older I ge the more I realize the truly great teams n Or ales Tuesda y n ght
)laseball never were bu It around one man Maybe n a wa y
al ow ng siX runs on four hits
;what this al comes down to wh ch kmd of general do you and an equal numbe of
prefer Patton or Bradley W th the k ds we have we need an wa ks Tommy Dav s drove
Omar Bradley someone who could show more patience and 111 three of the runs w th h s
undersl.'!nding w th them Some of our k ds were so fr ghtened second home run of the year
.of Billy they couldn t even play
and a s ngle Bait more
Martm prec p tated his own departure Saturday n ght after f n shed up aga ns rei ever
a loss to the Red Sox He told Corbe he wanted to add backup Chuck Hockenbery w th two
catcher Tom Egan released by the Angels Egan 29 was more runs for the 8-3 VIC
hitting 229 with the Angels He s no a cons stent h Iter has tory
only an average arm and can t run which s why the Angels
He s labormg to throw
released him
s r kes Dav s observed of
Corbett S8ld why waste a spot on the roster when t could be Ryan
He can
ea y do
better filled by one of the Rangers youngsters Mart n kept what he wants to You can tell
argumg pressmg h s pomt and soon there were heated words by his express on The 1974
Both men grew angry and said thmgs tha cu deeply and then No an Ryan had a lot of
portions of the quarrel became public
conf dence n h s p tche s
On Sunday ?4artm asked Corbe
Guys would be tak ng
Am I let go
anyth ng he threw offspeed
B lly I don t know replied the Rangers owner R gh
he cw-ve sl der whatever
now I don t think there IS any way we can make t together ove r You had to psyche yourseif
the long haul
for h s fastball
Late Monday afternoon Dan 0 Br en the Rangers general
I h nk he I come back
manager mformed Martm Corbe w shed to see hun m hiS bu I th nk may take hun a
office Martm had an Idea what the meetmg would be abou
long me
and d1dn t show
Ryan has bea en
he
Meanwh le Ranger coach Frank Lucches who used to
0 oles w ce h s season no
manage the Phillies was told Martm was go ng to be f red n a hitt ng them n one of the
few hours and asked whether he would take the JOb Lucches
g&amp;mes Tha was June I and
was stunned but sa d he would
he s won ust once smce then
Martm ran nto Lurches shortly afterward and asked hun
He told me before the
What s happenmg
ga me he felt as strong as an
Well I guess I got the JOb Lucches answered honestly
ox
Cal forn a Manager
after which Martm announced h sown f rmg on hiS rad o show D ck W lliams said He was
m Texas
ry ng to muscle them bu I
What hes ahead now for B lly Mart n That s hard to say
don t think he ever really
)'he baseball grapev ne operates constantly 24 hours a day
popped the ball
Most clubs aware of what happened to him m Mmnesota
I just couldn ge my
Detroit and Texas are bound to be wary about ask ng Martm fastball over
lamented
to manage for them Somewhere along the I ne hough Ryan who sa d the e ght
someone s likely to remember the kmd of JOb he does between ga me loSing streak s the
those wh te lines and maybe hire hun ag8111
onges he s ever endured
Billy Martin IS 47 but there sst II time for hun to change h s
I ve
been
Bu
hen
thinkmg The b ~quest on s not so much whether he ever w II s trugg ng all season I
but w II t be too late when he f11131ly does
haven
eally gotten nto a

t

e ed

om

I

over 70 s better off than a
person With 140 over 90 But
the chance of Improvement Ia
not great eno~Ch In liiGit
cases to ••rral'l vtcoroul
treatment otiMI; !Ill- !lll.na
sens1ble llvlnc •Mb YOII
should do anywty unl
lhi
upper preuure 11 c:on
slstently over 140 or the IC~Wer
reading IS perslstenUy 90 or
more
For more Information
about blood pressure wr1te to
me m care of this newspaper'
P 0 Box 1551 Radto Cit;
Stat on New York NY 10019
and ask for The
Health
Letter number 1_, on blood
pressure Send a long
stamped
self addressed
envelope and 50 rents for
rna ling and costs
DEAR DR LAMB A few
years ago I had a varicose
vem removed from my leg
and have used support hose

Phils nip Braves, Cards edge LA

Today's

spouse he next of k n the
bene c a es under the w
and o he attorney or at
o neys ep esen ng any bf
he a o emen oned pe sons
ea h
B
Schaefe
Deceased Pome oy Oh o
Sa sbu y Townsh p
No
2 464

The Daily Sentmel M ddleport-Pomeroy 0 Wednesday July 23 t975

HUNTINGTON
Y EXCEPT LABOR DAY

Starter

26"-8 HP
A Word
W th Electr c Starter
to the Wzse . ..
BUY NOW AT OUR LOW PRICE'

W1ll Be Much H1gher Pnced Next Year

�~

'.

..·~

, I

r

I

t'

·-

...•

•

:

•..•

.

...•
"'••
.•.
•

..•

Hard Question To Answer
• Dear Helen :
With prostitution legal in a few areas, and becoming very
common - you might even say "accepted '' as a profession here 's a modern question :
How can a prostitute explain her job to her child if the child
seems curious ' Or does she take the chi cken way and let the
kid find out from others ' - T.D.R

POMEROY- ·MIDDLEPORT

+++

~

~

FOOTWEAR

SUMMER SPORTSWEAR

$ 00

$11.99

Pair

TO • .99

00

Each

Each

••
••

••
••

••
••

•
•••
•

•••

''•
•••
'

••••
••
•••
••

ALL

ALL

ITEMS
SUBJECT
TO
PRIOR

ITEMS
SUBJE
TO
PRIOR

SALE

SALE

••
'•
'•

. ' . ' ,... ....\ ·.
.

'
'

I
MENS SHORT SLEEVE
SPECIAL SALE GROUP

SPORT SHIRTS
Big Clearance Group of
men 's better short sleeve
sum mer dress and sport
shirts . Famou s brands.
Values to $8 .00. Wide
selection .

$ 00
EACH

OFF

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale

FINAL CLEARANCE CHILDREN
SPRING AND ~MMER

REGULAR
PRICE

FOOTWEAR 1 2

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale

FINAL a.EARANCE LADIES
BffiER SPRING AND SUMMER

Children's SHOES

FOOTWEAR

Save 50 Pet . now. Buy for Back to
School. Large selection . Close out
lot of girls and children's oxfords,
sandals , dress and casUJll footwear. See these and save now .

HECK'S REGULAR LOW DISCOUNT PRICE

OFF

REG.
PRICE

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale

REG. s3,99 VALUE SPECIAL GROUP

Final Clearance! A group of ladies
famous brand dress and casual footwear
in some of the season's latest fashions.
Values to$10.99, $11.99, $12.99. Spring and
Summer styles.

eGIRLS' WEAR
eBOYS' WEAR
eLADIES' WEAR
eMEN'S WEAR

MENS NYLON JACKETS.
Regular values to S3.99 each. Special
clearance group of men 's nylon jackets in
assorted sty les. Your choice.

FAMOUS
.BRANDS
SAVE
NOW!

Reg. 13.99
Value

$ 88
EACH

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale

MENS-YOUlltS-BOYS .
LACE-TQ.THE·TOE.
Black lace. to the toe style· gymoxfords.in all sizes for men, boys and
youths . Thick moulded soles,
cushioned inner soles.

$ 00

•'•

•••
••
•
•

•••
•

YOU ARE INVITED TO COME IN AND TAKE
ADVANTAGE OF THIS MONEY
SAVING CLEARANCE.

TENNIS OXFORDS

SPORT SHIRTS

•
••

OUTFIT THE ENTIRE FAMILY FOR.
A .BIG 20% OFF HECK'S REGULAR PRICE

Stiffler's Jui'!:Ciearance Sale

MENS
SHORT SLEEVE
'
SPECIAL SALE GRoUP
VALUES TO '7 .00

...

••

••
••
•

••
••
•

-.•
~

EA.

•
••
•••
~

ST.IFFLER'S-Your .Fritnfdly .Stores

. Mon~ay
thru Thursday 9:30 to s
Friday and Saturday 9:30 fo 8

WITH FRIE-·NDLY
.

'

PRICE~
"
~
'

! '

' .

j .

:· I

•

••
~

••
••

'

.

WE CAN
.SAVE YOI.f MONEY·I'.
'
'

\

I

••
••
•

Stiffler's Storewide July Clearance Sale

BIG SELECTION-FAMOUS BRANDS
REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE

IPAK 160%.

.-- --·

00

Choose now during our July Clearance Sale, a summer
wardrobe of famous brand spring and sununer sportswear and save one-half off regular price. Sbop early for
best selection from this clearance group. Tremendous
savings on smart styles for the young at heart.

'

••
•

GOOD SELECTION OF SIZES
REGULAR VALUES TO $17.99

SAVE! MARKED DOWN ONE-HALF
LADIES' BOBBIE BROOKS-RUSS TOGS
SPRING and SUMMER

Final Clearance on this large
group of men's knit and cut and
sewed short sleeve sport and
. dress st- 1rts . Va lues to $6 .00.
Famous labels . Save now at your
Friendly Stiffler Stores .

••

Seolational clearance sale group of better dresses.
CIJios•el saving~ for you! Real high fashion desl8ns for
tile "Young at Heart." Excellent selection of the
-.ons newest fabrics and patterns. All lltlllllller
merchandise must go! Shop early for best selection.

SPORTSWEAR

R. C. &amp; DIET RITE

••

BlESSES

-STIFFLER!.$ STORE-WIDE JULY CLEARAIICE SALE-

PLAY SHOES

••
•

SPRING and SUMMER

TAKE YOUR CHOICE!
COME SAVE FOR YOURSELF!

Bollen

•

OOLOSSAL SAVINGS! LATEST STYLES'
CLEARANCE OF LADIES' BEITER

July Clearance group of ladles' polyester doubleknlt two
piece pant suits, conststlng of top and matching or contrasting flare slacks in your choice of colors and patterns.
Shop early for best selection and save. Out they Go! So
hurry!

All good things must come program for veterans and
to an end. And, so it is with servicemen is handled, ad- ·
Veterans Group Life In- vises those who want this
surance for Vietnam-&lt;!ra coverage to get an application from any VA office.
veterans.
Only nine days remain for
Those aged 34 and under
those separated from service can get $20,000 worth . of
between AprU 3, 1970, and coverage for $3.40 a month,
Aug. I, 1974, to apply for this while those 35 and over pay
low-east group life insurance. $6.80. VGLI is issued in
Applications and the fil'St multiples of $5,000 up to the
premium must be submitted maximum
of
$20,000,
before Aug. 2, 1975, to the Melidosian points out. The
Office of Servicemen's Group coverage is for a period of up
Life
Insurance,
212 to five years and offers the
Washington St., Newark, N. veteran the opUon of conJ. 17102.
verting to a -commercial
S. W. Melidosian, director policy, without a physical
of the Philadelphia VA Center examination, when the rerm
where the nation's insurance policy expires.

-••

-STIFFLER'S STORE-WIDE JULY CLURAICE SIL£-

PANT SUITS·

first

~

••
••
•

EACH

SPRING and SUMMER

GLI rights end for

~

•100

VALUES

VALUES TO $18.99-SPECIAL GROUP
LADIES' BETTER TWO-PIECE

Dear Readers:
According to my mail, it isn 't so much the children, but the
PARENTS and stepparents who suffer in divorce cases.
Please, somebody out there, can't you send me ONE example
of frictionless double parenthood• - H.

•

Final Clearance on this group of children girls spring and summer sportswear . Shirts
- knit tops . Values to $1 .99. Save B1g Now.
Shop early .

- STIFFLER'S STORE-WIDE JULY CLEARAICE SALE-

Dear Helen :
" Divorcing " the children from the noncustody parent
certainly has two sides to the coin . Consider poor fathers like
my husband.
He pays his child support on time, pays dental and insurance premiums, is paying for braces and helping to buy a
car for the oldest. Better than half his salary goes to his
children. I made the first formal for one of them because the
mother won't sew.
For all this the noncustody parent gets nothing. The kids
don't want to spend time with him because they might miss
some of their social activities. He sees them only if the mother
gets fed up with them or has plans to be out of town; in other
words, at her convenience. Then too he gets calls if the grades
are bad or there is a problem. Their mother is too busy running
around to train them properly, so they're bad mannered and
inconsiderate, and my husband has no authority to offer them
guidance. He's caught in the middle.
He loves them and tries desperately to be a good father ,
but all he seems able to do is answer the phone to another "I
want" call.
It's tough to give and give and get not. - ANOTHER
POINT OF VIEW

~

FINAL CLEARANCE GROUP LADIES'
DRESS AND CASUAL STYLE

VALUES

++~

..

FINAL CLEARANCE GROUP
INFANTS AND GIRLS

TO

Dear T .S.:
And another reason why socialized medicine should be
considered in this country , right? - H.

••
••

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale

Final clearance! A group of ladles' famous brand
dress and casual footwear in some ol the seasoDB lata!
styles. Odd lots, samples, broken sizes and dillcontinued styles .from regular stock. Save!

Dear Helen :
Here's ano ther instance of discrimination.
In all the 3() years I was married , I work ed part-time on
jobs that did not give me medica l insurance. But it didn 't
matter because my husband was fully covered on his group
health insurance plan for the whole family .
But when my divorce came through, I was left without
health or hospital insurance. So I had to pay the very expensive
individual rates whi ch took a big bite out of my part-time
wages.
Now if my husband had been fired from his job, he would
have had the option of pi cking up the tab on his insurance and
medical covera ge for a period of a year. When he fired me
from MY job as his wife, I had no su-i opt ion.
There are many widow,, Jnd eli vorcees who were
previously covered through th·!! husbands' jobs and now find
themselves out in the cold, •.1&lt; .;pite the many years of work
they put in as part of a teat•'· That 's just one reason why I
would never go back to being a housewife, and why I am THINKING SINGLE

A~st

~

- STIFFLER'S JULY CLEAUICE SALE-

Dear T.:
I'll counter w1th a question : If the mother considers her
profession so dishonorable that she ca n't discuss it with her
child, then why doesn't she find other work ? Or perhaps find
another home for her child ?- H.

Viet-vets

....
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Hard Question To Answer
• Dear Helen :
With prostitution legal in a few areas, and becoming very
common - you might even say "accepted '' as a profession here 's a modern question :
How can a prostitute explain her job to her child if the child
seems curious ' Or does she take the chi cken way and let the
kid find out from others ' - T.D.R

POMEROY- ·MIDDLEPORT

+++

~

~

FOOTWEAR

SUMMER SPORTSWEAR

$ 00

$11.99

Pair

TO • .99

00

Each

Each

••
••

••
••

••
••

•
•••
•

•••

''•
•••
'

••••
••
•••
••

ALL

ALL

ITEMS
SUBJECT
TO
PRIOR

ITEMS
SUBJE
TO
PRIOR

SALE

SALE

••
'•
'•

. ' . ' ,... ....\ ·.
.

'
'

I
MENS SHORT SLEEVE
SPECIAL SALE GROUP

SPORT SHIRTS
Big Clearance Group of
men 's better short sleeve
sum mer dress and sport
shirts . Famou s brands.
Values to $8 .00. Wide
selection .

$ 00
EACH

OFF

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale

FINAL CLEARANCE CHILDREN
SPRING AND ~MMER

REGULAR
PRICE

FOOTWEAR 1 2

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale

FINAL a.EARANCE LADIES
BffiER SPRING AND SUMMER

Children's SHOES

FOOTWEAR

Save 50 Pet . now. Buy for Back to
School. Large selection . Close out
lot of girls and children's oxfords,
sandals , dress and casUJll footwear. See these and save now .

HECK'S REGULAR LOW DISCOUNT PRICE

OFF

REG.
PRICE

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale

REG. s3,99 VALUE SPECIAL GROUP

Final Clearance! A group of ladies
famous brand dress and casual footwear
in some of the season's latest fashions.
Values to$10.99, $11.99, $12.99. Spring and
Summer styles.

eGIRLS' WEAR
eBOYS' WEAR
eLADIES' WEAR
eMEN'S WEAR

MENS NYLON JACKETS.
Regular values to S3.99 each. Special
clearance group of men 's nylon jackets in
assorted sty les. Your choice.

FAMOUS
.BRANDS
SAVE
NOW!

Reg. 13.99
Value

$ 88
EACH

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale

MENS-YOUlltS-BOYS .
LACE-TQ.THE·TOE.
Black lace. to the toe style· gymoxfords.in all sizes for men, boys and
youths . Thick moulded soles,
cushioned inner soles.

$ 00

•'•

•••
••
•
•

•••
•

YOU ARE INVITED TO COME IN AND TAKE
ADVANTAGE OF THIS MONEY
SAVING CLEARANCE.

TENNIS OXFORDS

SPORT SHIRTS

•
••

OUTFIT THE ENTIRE FAMILY FOR.
A .BIG 20% OFF HECK'S REGULAR PRICE

Stiffler's Jui'!:Ciearance Sale

MENS
SHORT SLEEVE
'
SPECIAL SALE GRoUP
VALUES TO '7 .00

...

••

••
••
•

••
••
•

-.•
~

EA.

•
••
•••
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ST.IFFLER'S-Your .Fritnfdly .Stores

. Mon~ay
thru Thursday 9:30 to s
Friday and Saturday 9:30 fo 8

WITH FRIE-·NDLY
.

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PRICE~
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WE CAN
.SAVE YOI.f MONEY·I'.
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••
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Stiffler's Storewide July Clearance Sale

BIG SELECTION-FAMOUS BRANDS
REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE

IPAK 160%.

.-- --·

00

Choose now during our July Clearance Sale, a summer
wardrobe of famous brand spring and sununer sportswear and save one-half off regular price. Sbop early for
best selection from this clearance group. Tremendous
savings on smart styles for the young at heart.

'

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•

GOOD SELECTION OF SIZES
REGULAR VALUES TO $17.99

SAVE! MARKED DOWN ONE-HALF
LADIES' BOBBIE BROOKS-RUSS TOGS
SPRING and SUMMER

Final Clearance on this large
group of men's knit and cut and
sewed short sleeve sport and
. dress st- 1rts . Va lues to $6 .00.
Famous labels . Save now at your
Friendly Stiffler Stores .

••

Seolational clearance sale group of better dresses.
CIJios•el saving~ for you! Real high fashion desl8ns for
tile "Young at Heart." Excellent selection of the
-.ons newest fabrics and patterns. All lltlllllller
merchandise must go! Shop early for best selection.

SPORTSWEAR

R. C. &amp; DIET RITE

••

BlESSES

-STIFFLER!.$ STORE-WIDE JULY CLEARAIICE SALE-

PLAY SHOES

••
•

SPRING and SUMMER

TAKE YOUR CHOICE!
COME SAVE FOR YOURSELF!

Bollen

•

OOLOSSAL SAVINGS! LATEST STYLES'
CLEARANCE OF LADIES' BEITER

July Clearance group of ladles' polyester doubleknlt two
piece pant suits, conststlng of top and matching or contrasting flare slacks in your choice of colors and patterns.
Shop early for best selection and save. Out they Go! So
hurry!

All good things must come program for veterans and
to an end. And, so it is with servicemen is handled, ad- ·
Veterans Group Life In- vises those who want this
surance for Vietnam-&lt;!ra coverage to get an application from any VA office.
veterans.
Only nine days remain for
Those aged 34 and under
those separated from service can get $20,000 worth . of
between AprU 3, 1970, and coverage for $3.40 a month,
Aug. I, 1974, to apply for this while those 35 and over pay
low-east group life insurance. $6.80. VGLI is issued in
Applications and the fil'St multiples of $5,000 up to the
premium must be submitted maximum
of
$20,000,
before Aug. 2, 1975, to the Melidosian points out. The
Office of Servicemen's Group coverage is for a period of up
Life
Insurance,
212 to five years and offers the
Washington St., Newark, N. veteran the opUon of conJ. 17102.
verting to a -commercial
S. W. Melidosian, director policy, without a physical
of the Philadelphia VA Center examination, when the rerm
where the nation's insurance policy expires.

-••

-STIFFLER'S STORE-WIDE JULY CLURAICE SIL£-

PANT SUITS·

first

~

••
••
•

EACH

SPRING and SUMMER

GLI rights end for

~

•100

VALUES

VALUES TO $18.99-SPECIAL GROUP
LADIES' BETTER TWO-PIECE

Dear Readers:
According to my mail, it isn 't so much the children, but the
PARENTS and stepparents who suffer in divorce cases.
Please, somebody out there, can't you send me ONE example
of frictionless double parenthood• - H.

•

Final Clearance on this group of children girls spring and summer sportswear . Shirts
- knit tops . Values to $1 .99. Save B1g Now.
Shop early .

- STIFFLER'S STORE-WIDE JULY CLEARAICE SALE-

Dear Helen :
" Divorcing " the children from the noncustody parent
certainly has two sides to the coin . Consider poor fathers like
my husband.
He pays his child support on time, pays dental and insurance premiums, is paying for braces and helping to buy a
car for the oldest. Better than half his salary goes to his
children. I made the first formal for one of them because the
mother won't sew.
For all this the noncustody parent gets nothing. The kids
don't want to spend time with him because they might miss
some of their social activities. He sees them only if the mother
gets fed up with them or has plans to be out of town; in other
words, at her convenience. Then too he gets calls if the grades
are bad or there is a problem. Their mother is too busy running
around to train them properly, so they're bad mannered and
inconsiderate, and my husband has no authority to offer them
guidance. He's caught in the middle.
He loves them and tries desperately to be a good father ,
but all he seems able to do is answer the phone to another "I
want" call.
It's tough to give and give and get not. - ANOTHER
POINT OF VIEW

~

FINAL CLEARANCE GROUP LADIES'
DRESS AND CASUAL STYLE

VALUES

++~

..

FINAL CLEARANCE GROUP
INFANTS AND GIRLS

TO

Dear T .S.:
And another reason why socialized medicine should be
considered in this country , right? - H.

••
••

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale

Final clearance! A group of ladles' famous brand
dress and casual footwear in some ol the seasoDB lata!
styles. Odd lots, samples, broken sizes and dillcontinued styles .from regular stock. Save!

Dear Helen :
Here's ano ther instance of discrimination.
In all the 3() years I was married , I work ed part-time on
jobs that did not give me medica l insurance. But it didn 't
matter because my husband was fully covered on his group
health insurance plan for the whole family .
But when my divorce came through, I was left without
health or hospital insurance. So I had to pay the very expensive
individual rates whi ch took a big bite out of my part-time
wages.
Now if my husband had been fired from his job, he would
have had the option of pi cking up the tab on his insurance and
medical covera ge for a period of a year. When he fired me
from MY job as his wife, I had no su-i opt ion.
There are many widow,, Jnd eli vorcees who were
previously covered through th·!! husbands' jobs and now find
themselves out in the cold, •.1&lt; .;pite the many years of work
they put in as part of a teat•'· That 's just one reason why I
would never go back to being a housewife, and why I am THINKING SINGLE

A~st

~

- STIFFLER'S JULY CLEAUICE SALE-

Dear T.:
I'll counter w1th a question : If the mother considers her
profession so dishonorable that she ca n't discuss it with her
child, then why doesn't she find other work ? Or perhaps find
another home for her child ?- H.

Viet-vets

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•7__ _.,The
_ Dall
' y Sentinel I

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Prymeroy, 0., Wednesday, July 23, 1975

·vinton Officers installed

.4-uxiliary elects
officers at meeting "
•

CHESTER - New officers
were elec"'d when the I..adies
Au)dliary of the Bashan
Vo!un"'er Fire Department
met recently at the fire
hoUse .
Elected were Mrs. Mary K.
HoJ.ter , president ; Mr s.
Thcima
Whi te.
vtce
pn!sident ;. Mrs . Judy Holter,
se&lt;;:etary, and Mrs. Jean
n,.ssen, treasurer .
Plans were made for an ice
cr6arn social and square
dance on Aug. 2J at the
reoreation building at Royal
Oak Park . The ice cream
so¢al will begin at 6 p.m . and
r"'{idents of the Bashan area

will be contacted for contributions of ingredients. The
square dance will begin at 8p.m. and the admission- will
be $1.50 per couple, ~1 a
single, and no charge for
children under 12. There will
be a cake walk and entertainment durin g the
At"'nding the meeting were
Mrs . Celia Bailey, Mrs.
Charlotte Grant, Mrs. Hol"'r,
Mrs. Dorothy Lawson, Mrs.
Kathleen
Morri s, Mrs .
Trussell , Mr s. Gera ldin e
Varney . Mr s. Betty Van
Meter and Mr s. White.

$PW holds picnic
'

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Attendin g the picnic were
Mr . and Mrs . John Werner ,

Mrs. Louise Davis, Mr. and
Mrs . Char les Hayes. Mrs .
Nelli e Vale, Mrs . Mary
Elizabeth Turner. Mr . and
Mrs . James Co nkle, Mr. and
Mrs . Harold Sarge nt, Mr. and
Mrs . Edgar Reyn olds and
granddaughters, Lynn and
Gwynn Reynolds, and Dianne
Nuce. Morgantown, W. Va.;
Mrs . Eloise Wilson, Mrs. L.
W. McComas, Miss Houdashelt, Mrs . Harry Houdashelt, Miss Erna Jesse,
Mrs . Mary Kunzelman, Mrs.
Ann Bailey and Mrs . Janet
f\orn .
Mrs.

Werner

won

the

traveling prize, and Mrs.
Davis the silver dollar, an
attendance award.

Polly's Point-at""
BYPt1LLYCRAMER

Return coat with
chamelean lining
DEAR POLLY - A couple
of months ago I bought a
spring coat with a navy blue
lining and now the lining is
changing color around the
hem and looks orange-red. Do
you know why this happened?
- MARGARET.
DEAR MARGARE r Since the color change Is
aroulid the hem It could not
be from perspiration or even
be caused by exposure to
sunlight. I thlok you should
take the coat back to the store
where It was purchased and
show It to them. fhere Is
something wrong with the
fabric if It bas · not been
subjected to an accident of
any kind.- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - One of
my Pet Peeves is that when I
go to a show~rr ar&amp;_!he gifts
are opened I see how the gift
recipient has to struggle
opening the boxes that small
appliances and housewares
come in. They are usually
stapled together with large
staples that to open them
often causes broken nails,
scraped knuckles and a lot of
frustration.
I think anyone giving such
a gift should remove or at
least loosen such staples
before wrapping the gift.
Gummed tape could be used
to keep the box closed and
tape is certainly easier to
remove ·than staples. LUPITA.

DEAR POLLY - When
washing woolen gloves I slip
a round clothespin into each
finger to keep them !rom
shrinking. They hold their
shape bet"'r and even dry
faster.
· Most old plastic and leather
purses are great to use for
making slippers, shoes and
boots for dolls. Such material
in 'Jiiable and can he sewn on
l (. machine.
..'o avoid losing iny
children's gloves I sew the
i.Op of the glove to the front of
the jacket sleeve.
When storing your ironing
board on end slip a paper bag
over the end on which it
stands to keep the cover ·
clean.
Cut notch marks on a
pattern so that they go out
rather than in on the
material. This helps prevent
fraying and also allows a bit
more material if the garmet
has to be let out.
Wear a "'rry cloth apron
when sewing slippery fabric.
(Polly's note: If you do not
have such an apron pin a big
bath towel around your
waist .)
Sheet blankets are never
long or wide enough to tuck in
when used as a bottom sheet.
I pin a blanket to a fitted
sheet and sew them together
with a long stitch. In summer
the stitches are easily
removed and the sheet is used
alone. - MRS. M. D.

Observance wekomes
'

-return of minister
A family night observance was returned
by the
was held recently at the Methodist Conference to the
Unite&lt;! Wesleyan Methodist charge for the fourth year.
Church, Racine, welcoming · Mrs . Roberta Thaxton
the return of the Rev. Howard . pre'sented the program which
Shiveley as pastor for included words of welcome to
another year. · The mi_nister the minister and his family
by Mrs. Virginia Reese and
the presentation of boxes of
groceries from a truck at the
LAFF- A- DAY
back door of the church along
with a check for $50 from the
United Methodist Church.
The birthday of the
minister
was also celebrated
~ .
- ~- .
with a cake baked by Mrs.
Beulah Bradford being given
to hlm as the congregation
· sang "Happy Birtliday."

-~
-::

CLUB TO ' MEET

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

Mrs . Robbie Good, chapeau;
Mrs. Mildred Strausbaugh,
first demi chapeau premiere;
Mrs. Evelyn Napper, second
demi chapeau deuxieme;
Mrs.
Erma
Newsom,
J"aumonier ; Mary Helm , Ia

secretaire - cassiere, and

Mrs. Strpm is

evening.

'

4nnual family picn ic of the
MWdleporl Business and
Prpfessional Women 's Club
w~ held Monday ni ght at the
Ohjo River camp site of Mr .
and Mrs. Charles Hayes.
Miss Freddie Houdashelt
presided at a brief business
mtleting and announced that
sh' will be a llending a
-di!ltricl budget commit tee
mlleting ton ight at the Bob
E'1'"s Sausage House . Mrs.
J~q~~es Conkle noted that the
Rock Springs Community
wiA sponsor an ice cream
sothal for the Pomeroy
Erilergency Sq_uad. Bicente~ial me&lt;la!ions are still
be!ng sold by the club
m$Jbers . New committees
wi~ be announ ced at the next
meeting.

Offic ers of the Mei gs
County Salon 712, Eight and
Forty installed the new officers of the Vinton County
Salon 752 in ceremonies held
recently at the Wilkesville
American Legion hall .
Officers installed wer e

•
~
·-iz.'""' _;
The Pomeroy Garden Club
..·.;;itiii-;,-:-~say . dt:ar .. will . meet at 7:30 p .m.
did you know yt•St&lt;•r&lt;lll\".wlts nur Mon_day at the home of Mrs.
It
,. WilliS McMurr'i, Mason .
1 anniver~~"

guest demonstrator

Crowds pour into pageant
despite threatening weather

Family returns from
California vacation

...

was

"WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN
Girls
Basketball team at 7 p.m . at
the high school.
VITAL Signs class to be
held at Racine fire station,
7:30 p.m. and July 30,
sponsored by Racine ESquad; ! taught by Barbara
Van Meter. All EMT 's are
wlecome.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 7:30p.m. at the hall
with a potluck dinner at 6:30
p.m. with the post. Installation of both post and
unit officers for the 1975-76
year.

SAVE TO

1h OFF

AND MORE

THURSDAY
REVIV Ai.; Now in progre~s
at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church through Sunday.
Services at 7:30p.m. nightly.
The Rev. Lee Morriss is the
speaker from Scarry, W. Va.
REVIVAL now in progress
at
Syracuse
Apostolic
Mission through Friday.
Services 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Sister Virginia Vitatoe is the
speaker.

POMEROY

THIR"'D"'F"'"'
ri"day Club at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Phillip Meinhart . ..
FRIDAY
PAST Matrons, Evangeline
Chapter, O.E.S. home of Mr.
and Mrs. James Clatworthy,
6p.m. Potluck with husbands
invited.

House
COFFEE

housing under ,the Section 8 Housing Assistance
Payments Prograr:n .
.

RETURNS HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Roush,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, have
returned from a Florida
vacation. They visited Mr .
and j'llrs. Larry Roush and
Jean Ann in Winterhaven;
Mr. and Mrs. Don Matlack,
Lake Worth , and Mrs.
Margaret Heaton, Bradenton. Mr. and Mrs. Roush also
recently attended the golden
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Foster Bean of
Guysville .

.OPENe
6 DA1YS
A WEEK
MON. thru SAT.

D&amp;D MEAT
830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

Proposal$ may be submitted _
b'( private owners
or Publk Housing Agency ( PHA) owners or by PHA' s
in combination with private owners · for newly constructed units to be located in the following Ohio cities
and counties and not to exceed the number and type of
units listed for each county :

NEW COttSTRUCTtON

Area County· Community

Number Numbea:. Nurrib"'"e
of
• Elderly Family
United
Units
Units

I lb. Size

With

I

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994

Expires 7-26-75

RUTLAND
DEPT. STORE

5gf

TEEN QUEEN
46 oz.
TOMATO JUICE .................. .

I ~~~::rrER . . . .. .:~.~-':.8s~

BARBS

MEATS

AGAR CAN'NED HAMS .................................... 4.69 ea:
HOME MADE HAM SALAD ................................ ggc lb.
TEETER'S ................................................. Olunk $1.25 lb.
Ali MEAT BOLOGNA ............................ Siiced s1.29 lb.

YOU'RE AlWAYS FIRST!

RIB STEAK ••••••••••• -~~·••••
sAL£
CHUCK ROASl.~~·
•.&lt;•. •,

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.~.1'.·.­

"&amp;'""'J

29

CUBE STEAK ••••••••~--~.

·.o·.•
·.·,-.·."
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.,
.........

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. .. : ·3 LBS.-OR MORE

·- l

BEEF..•.• ~.~~·.

GROUND

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GROUND CH~UCK •• ~.~~-.

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WAGNER

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ORANGE DRINK •••••s~.~~

s

JJ .

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STARKIST

TUNA ............. ~~~-~. 4

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HUNfS

FRUIT COCKTAIL ••••.

15

oz..,

"'
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'

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~vwu•--

· Area A . Putnam- Ot1awa : Giandorf
30
0
30
Area B Fulton- Wauseon
40
o
40
· Area C Henry- Napoleon
30
30
.0
30
15
15
Ar'ea D Meigs- Pomeroy
&lt;&gt;Area E Vinton- McArthur
10
5
5
Area F Clinton---Wilmi'lgton ,
40
0
40
Area G Campaign- UrbMa
45
20
25
Area H Clark- Springfield
150
tOO
·so
Area t Clark-New Carlisle
30
0
30
Area J Warren- Franklin
60
60
0
Area K Portage--xx
125
25
tOO
xx -Sites in any location in the county with required
amenities and services will be considered.
Proposals .must b.e received by NOON on September 10,

tns

Coupon

PRICES GOOD THRU
NO SALES TO' DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

TRAVEL OUT WEST
Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Fred
Smith, Sr., Middleport,
returned Monday night from
a visit in Oefiance with Mr .
and Mrs. Ted E . Spires. The
Smiths accompanied the
Spires family on a ..trip west
traveling nearly 4,000 miles.
They traveled to Omaha,
Neb. where Mr. and Mrs.
Smith lived 46 years ago and
spent time at Big Horn,
· Wyoinlng
on the snow. capped mountain.

Maxwell

PRELIMINARY PROPOSALS

POMEROY, OHIO.

SUNDAY
ANNUAL
MATLACK
reunion, Rising Park, Lancaster. Potluck dinner at
noon. Families to take their
own table service.

STAR .KIST LIGHT TUNA ..............~:~.?~:2/99~
KRAFT SLICED CHEESE SINGLES ... ~.~?.-.. 89~
HANDI WRAP. ... _............................ ~ !?.0..'.t:! 2/79~

INVITATION FOR

298 Second St.

Social
Calendar

CAKE MIXES ...........................~.~~:~.~.z:... 69~
...
NESTEA ...................................
...3..oz.
......... '139-

OPPORTUNITY

I

s.

Club installs officers

EQUAL HOUSING

NoteS

Mr. and Mrs. WlUiam N.
Moore and dal!8h"'rs, Carla
and Cathy, Ashland, Ky.
spent several days last week
here visiting Mr. and Mrs .
Harry S. Moore.
Brett Bunton of Denver
Colo. is here visitmg hi~
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs .
Arnold Richards. Prior to
coming to Middleport, he
visite&lt;l. in Cincinnati with
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Moore returned Tuesday
from Colunibus where they
visited Mr. and Mrs . Ernest
A. Jones, Mrs . Moore's
brother-in-law and sister. On
Sunday they celebrated the
birthdays of Mrs. Moore and ·
Mrs. Jones' twin aunts, Miss
Grace Sauvage and Mrs.
Harry Hoagland, with a
family
dinner.
Before
returning home, Mr. and
Mrs. Moore visited a cousin,
Miss Doris Cook, at Grant
Hospital .
Gwynn and Lynn Reynolds
and Dianne Nuse returned to
Morgantown, W. Va. today
after being here for a several
days' visit with Mr. and Mrs.
· Edgar Reynolds

Chapman's Shoes

By PHIL P ASTORET
Are more men bringing their
lunches to work or is it just that
they can't afford brief cases for
'em?

5

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Detailed information is contained in a Deve loper's
Program ijacket which may be obtained bY. writing to:
Director, Housing_ Production Mortgage Credit, HUD
Area : Office, 60 'East Main Street, Columbus, ' Ohio .
· 43215, Alln : Developer's Packet (phone 614-469' 6783).
Please requesl Developer's Packet by Area and
County (example : Area A · Putnam Countyl.
1 ne liSt ot Gltles and counttes by numoer a no type
of units fo be listed in our next two advertising cycles is
also available on requP.st .
Paul G. Lydens
Area Director

FROSTY ~CRES

ORANGE
JUICE ·

12

HEAD

oz. Can

LEITUCE
RED

. 49~

•
I

Personal

Mrs. Edith Wagoner, Ia
concierge.
Mrs. Mary Martin of the
Meigs Salon was installing
officer. The Vinton County
Salon was organized during
her term as Ohio's departemental chapeau. She Is ·
currently the demi chapeau
Nationale of the Central
Division. The installing Ia
concierge was Mrs. Lula
Hampton, chapeau ·elect of
the Meigs Salon, assiste&lt;l by
Mrs. Florence ·R ichards,
newly elec~ Eighth District
presidimt of the American
Legion Auxiliary.
Sherrie Marshall, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Marshall, Hemlock Grove, a
cystic. fibrosis child,
"adopted" by the Vinton
County Salon and will he
remembered throughout the
year with cards and gifts.
Mrs. Martin, following the
installation,
congratulated
the Salon on work in
respiratory diseases during
the past year . She presente&lt;l
a gift to Mrs. Good. Mrs.
Martin also received a gift
from the Salon for serving as
installing officer. Twentydollar gold piece replicas Bfe
being sold by both the Vinton
and Meigs Salons as a
bicentennil!l .. project.
Going to Wilkesville for the
meeting besides Mrs. Martin,
Mrs. Richards and Mrs.
Hampton were Mrs. Eileen
Searls, Mrs. Rhoda Hackett,
Mrs. Ruby Marshall and
daughter, Sherrie, Mrs. Iva
Powell, and Mrs . Eunie
Brinker .

nington .
Devotions were gtven by
Mrs . Harold Massar who
"GALLI A COUNTRY" is attracting capacity crowds to its evening performances at the
read a poem, " My Country"
natufal amphithea ter on the Bob Evans Farms in Rio Grande. Above is a scene from la st
follo wed by the Garden
weekend's performance. Daniel Boone, left, is portrayed by Bill Sptres. Tim Hea ton, nght ,
Prayer . Officers' reports
is Col. Safford.
were
given .
Members
responded to roll call by
naming the flower they most
one using cuba and yarrow in en joy . Present were 16
a triangular arrangement. members and four guests .
On display at the meeting Refreshments were served
were arrangements
of by Mrs . Gray.
gladioli made by Mrs. Rose
Carr, one of roses by Mrs. F.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
W. Goebel, and one with wild
Despite
threatening pro£essionalism or local area Gallipolis Band Boosters
Mr. aoo Mrs. Joseph Keel,
fl owers by Mrs . 0 . J . Penwea ther. c rowds poured into tal ent . as well as t he Association.
Denver, Colo., the fanner
the amphitheatre at Bob cos twning , staging a nd overRosetta Jo Richards of
Evans Farms, Ri o Grande, all production .
Middleport, are announcing
over the past weekend to
Murl Rush. Jr ., the
the birth of a son, Miles
enjoy t.he entertainme nt pageant's director , and Lee
Arnold, born July 8 at a
offered by the cast of "Gallia Durieux , the pageant 's
Denver hospital.
Country." This historical composer and author, feel
The infant weighed five
musical pageant will be this is an outstanding conpounds, eight ounces. Mr. and
presented for its third and tributi on of the Gallia
Mrs. Keel have a son, Brett.
final performances this· Dramati c Arts Society
· Grandparents are Mr. and
coming weekend, July 25. 26 towards
our
nation's
Mrs. Arnold
Richards,
and 27 .
Bicentennial celebration .
Middleport,
and
Mrs.
Joseph
Mr. and Mrs. William R . California with their son, Bill.
Despite the rain-out Friday
Admission prices are : $3 Zerkle and daughter, Jackie,
While there the family Keel, Denver,. Colo.
nigh t,
new
attendan ~e for adults; $1.50 for c hildren
have returned from a motored 1,400 miles over the
records are being recorded 16 years of age and under ;
vacation
in
Oakland. state to see the various places
and members of the en- group pri ces, 20 lu 99, $2 per
of interest . They visited
thusiastic audiences come ticket and 100 or more , $1.50
Fisherman's Wharf in San
from dist&lt;In t points including each . Family night will be
Francisco, rode the cable
Funeral service
New
Hampshi-re , observed again Sunday night
cars , electric train and took a
Massachusetts, Penn - when families of four will be
cruise in San Francisco Bay.
sylvania, Wa shington, D. C. admitted for $6 and each set on Thursday
They loured Chinatown,
and Michigan as well as addi tional member, $1 each .
Disneyland , and Hearst
nearby states. Many come as Performance time is 9 p.m .
Funeral serv ices for Castle in San Simeon, forthe result of reviews by the Light wraps are rec om- Charles H. Bennett, who died
merly owned by William
news media who attended mended.
Tuesday morning at his Randolph Hearst , grand·Jpening ni ght. Many are
"Gallia Country " is en- Beech St. home in Mid- father of. Patty Hearst,
BIGGER
tourists passing through the tertainment the entire family dleport, will be held at~ p.m .
surrounded by 240,000 acres,
SAVINGS FOR
area who are attracted to the can enjoy. There is ample Thursday at the Rawlingsall donated to the State of
pageant's signs and as a parking and the Bob Evans Coats Funeral Home.
THE FAMILY
California for a tourist atresult remain overn ight to Farm wagons are available
The Rev. Pete Granda! will traction.
attend.
for those desiring tran s- officiate, with burial in
The Zerkle family saw the
Those who meet with the portation from the parking lot Riverview Cemetery.
Redwoods, drove to the Bing
cast following the perform- lo the seating area .
Friends may call at the Crosby Golf Course, and
ances are generous in their
Refreshments
are funeral home any time today . visited Monterey, before
MAIN ST.
praise for a production of this available in the Shelter Masonic rites by Middleport
their flight home .
ma gnitude
and
the House, Sponsored by the
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will be
held al 8 this evening .
Mr . Bennett was born at
Arbuckle, W. Va., the son of
the late Harry and Margaret
Greenlee Bennett. Survivors
not named in the earlier
CHESTER - Officers of Showalter and Mrs . Ada account of his death include
the 1975-76 year were in- Neutzling will be hostesses three grandsons, Steve
stalled when the Past for the August meeting .
Bennett, Columbus; Charles
Others attending
the Bennett, Florida, anij James
Councilors Club of Chester
Council,
Daughters
of meeting were Mrs . Mae Rogers, Harbor, Ohio.
Pauline
America , met recently at the Spencer, Mrs.
home of Mrs. Sadie Trussell. Ridenour, Mrs. Inzy Newell,
SQUAD CALLED
Installed were Mrs. Mary Mrs. Opal Hollon, Mrs . Hattie
The
Pomeroy E-R squad
K. Holter, president ; Mrs. Frederick, Mrs. Ada Morris,
NCAN INES
Thelma .
White ,
vice Mrs. Goldie Frederick, Mrs . was called Tuesday at 12 :25
president ; Mrs . Betty Roush, Mabel Van Meter, Mrs. Ada p.m . for Leora Schar!, of the
secretary;
Mrs.
Jean Van Meter, Mrs. Sadie Texas Community, who was
Summerfield, treasurer; Trussell and Mrs . Betty I&lt;Iken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted as a
Mrs . Ada Neutzling , sentinel; Roush.
)
medical
patient.
Mrs. Opal Hollon and Mrs.
Dorothy Lawson , flower
committee,and Mrs. Mary Jo
Pooler, news reporter .
A potluck dinner preceded
the meeting with Mrs.
Trussell and Mrs. Lawson
AMERICAN or PIMENTO
providing
the
dessert .
Scripture, the pledge to the
IFP No.5
flag and prayer opened the
( UUPLJN
•
meeting . Mrs . Leda Mae
Kraeuter and Mrs. Margaret
Tuttle conducted games with
prizes going to the winners.
Mrs. Letha Woods won the
The Department of Hou sing and Urban
door prize . Mrs . Mary
Development will accept preliminary proposals for
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs .
Andrew D. Strom of Ashland ,
Ky. was guest demonstrator
at a meeting of the Rose
Garden Club held at the home
of Mrs . Maude Gray.
Mrs. Strom made several
arrangements using wild and
garden flowers, along with

Mijdleport

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Year tags for '.'everlastin('
license plates would be okay 1f
tiMi plat~s didn't J;Ust away ·annually. '
How do -alrJines schedule
flights so planes dOil'l jiggle the
TV picture durlug commercials?
I'

RED .· RIPE

WATE

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•7__ _.,The
_ Dall
' y Sentinel I

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Prymeroy, 0., Wednesday, July 23, 1975

·vinton Officers installed

.4-uxiliary elects
officers at meeting "
•

CHESTER - New officers
were elec"'d when the I..adies
Au)dliary of the Bashan
Vo!un"'er Fire Department
met recently at the fire
hoUse .
Elected were Mrs. Mary K.
HoJ.ter , president ; Mr s.
Thcima
Whi te.
vtce
pn!sident ;. Mrs . Judy Holter,
se&lt;;:etary, and Mrs. Jean
n,.ssen, treasurer .
Plans were made for an ice
cr6arn social and square
dance on Aug. 2J at the
reoreation building at Royal
Oak Park . The ice cream
so¢al will begin at 6 p.m . and
r"'{idents of the Bashan area

will be contacted for contributions of ingredients. The
square dance will begin at 8p.m. and the admission- will
be $1.50 per couple, ~1 a
single, and no charge for
children under 12. There will
be a cake walk and entertainment durin g the
At"'nding the meeting were
Mrs . Celia Bailey, Mrs.
Charlotte Grant, Mrs. Hol"'r,
Mrs. Dorothy Lawson, Mrs.
Kathleen
Morri s, Mrs .
Trussell , Mr s. Gera ldin e
Varney . Mr s. Betty Van
Meter and Mr s. White.

$PW holds picnic
'

'

Attendin g the picnic were
Mr . and Mrs . John Werner ,

Mrs. Louise Davis, Mr. and
Mrs . Char les Hayes. Mrs .
Nelli e Vale, Mrs . Mary
Elizabeth Turner. Mr . and
Mrs . James Co nkle, Mr. and
Mrs . Harold Sarge nt, Mr. and
Mrs . Edgar Reyn olds and
granddaughters, Lynn and
Gwynn Reynolds, and Dianne
Nuce. Morgantown, W. Va.;
Mrs . Eloise Wilson, Mrs. L.
W. McComas, Miss Houdashelt, Mrs . Harry Houdashelt, Miss Erna Jesse,
Mrs . Mary Kunzelman, Mrs.
Ann Bailey and Mrs . Janet
f\orn .
Mrs.

Werner

won

the

traveling prize, and Mrs.
Davis the silver dollar, an
attendance award.

Polly's Point-at""
BYPt1LLYCRAMER

Return coat with
chamelean lining
DEAR POLLY - A couple
of months ago I bought a
spring coat with a navy blue
lining and now the lining is
changing color around the
hem and looks orange-red. Do
you know why this happened?
- MARGARET.
DEAR MARGARE r Since the color change Is
aroulid the hem It could not
be from perspiration or even
be caused by exposure to
sunlight. I thlok you should
take the coat back to the store
where It was purchased and
show It to them. fhere Is
something wrong with the
fabric if It bas · not been
subjected to an accident of
any kind.- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - One of
my Pet Peeves is that when I
go to a show~rr ar&amp;_!he gifts
are opened I see how the gift
recipient has to struggle
opening the boxes that small
appliances and housewares
come in. They are usually
stapled together with large
staples that to open them
often causes broken nails,
scraped knuckles and a lot of
frustration.
I think anyone giving such
a gift should remove or at
least loosen such staples
before wrapping the gift.
Gummed tape could be used
to keep the box closed and
tape is certainly easier to
remove ·than staples. LUPITA.

DEAR POLLY - When
washing woolen gloves I slip
a round clothespin into each
finger to keep them !rom
shrinking. They hold their
shape bet"'r and even dry
faster.
· Most old plastic and leather
purses are great to use for
making slippers, shoes and
boots for dolls. Such material
in 'Jiiable and can he sewn on
l (. machine.
..'o avoid losing iny
children's gloves I sew the
i.Op of the glove to the front of
the jacket sleeve.
When storing your ironing
board on end slip a paper bag
over the end on which it
stands to keep the cover ·
clean.
Cut notch marks on a
pattern so that they go out
rather than in on the
material. This helps prevent
fraying and also allows a bit
more material if the garmet
has to be let out.
Wear a "'rry cloth apron
when sewing slippery fabric.
(Polly's note: If you do not
have such an apron pin a big
bath towel around your
waist .)
Sheet blankets are never
long or wide enough to tuck in
when used as a bottom sheet.
I pin a blanket to a fitted
sheet and sew them together
with a long stitch. In summer
the stitches are easily
removed and the sheet is used
alone. - MRS. M. D.

Observance wekomes
'

-return of minister
A family night observance was returned
by the
was held recently at the Methodist Conference to the
Unite&lt;! Wesleyan Methodist charge for the fourth year.
Church, Racine, welcoming · Mrs . Roberta Thaxton
the return of the Rev. Howard . pre'sented the program which
Shiveley as pastor for included words of welcome to
another year. · The mi_nister the minister and his family
by Mrs. Virginia Reese and
the presentation of boxes of
groceries from a truck at the
LAFF- A- DAY
back door of the church along
with a check for $50 from the
United Methodist Church.
The birthday of the
minister
was also celebrated
~ .
- ~- .
with a cake baked by Mrs.
Beulah Bradford being given
to hlm as the congregation
· sang "Happy Birtliday."

-~
-::

CLUB TO ' MEET

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

Mrs . Robbie Good, chapeau;
Mrs. Mildred Strausbaugh,
first demi chapeau premiere;
Mrs. Evelyn Napper, second
demi chapeau deuxieme;
Mrs.
Erma
Newsom,
J"aumonier ; Mary Helm , Ia

secretaire - cassiere, and

Mrs. Strpm is

evening.

'

4nnual family picn ic of the
MWdleporl Business and
Prpfessional Women 's Club
w~ held Monday ni ght at the
Ohjo River camp site of Mr .
and Mrs. Charles Hayes.
Miss Freddie Houdashelt
presided at a brief business
mtleting and announced that
sh' will be a llending a
-di!ltricl budget commit tee
mlleting ton ight at the Bob
E'1'"s Sausage House . Mrs.
J~q~~es Conkle noted that the
Rock Springs Community
wiA sponsor an ice cream
sothal for the Pomeroy
Erilergency Sq_uad. Bicente~ial me&lt;la!ions are still
be!ng sold by the club
m$Jbers . New committees
wi~ be announ ced at the next
meeting.

Offic ers of the Mei gs
County Salon 712, Eight and
Forty installed the new officers of the Vinton County
Salon 752 in ceremonies held
recently at the Wilkesville
American Legion hall .
Officers installed wer e

•
~
·-iz.'""' _;
The Pomeroy Garden Club
..·.;;itiii-;,-:-~say . dt:ar .. will . meet at 7:30 p .m.
did you know yt•St&lt;•r&lt;lll\".wlts nur Mon_day at the home of Mrs.
It
,. WilliS McMurr'i, Mason .
1 anniver~~"

guest demonstrator

Crowds pour into pageant
despite threatening weather

Family returns from
California vacation

...

was

"WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN
Girls
Basketball team at 7 p.m . at
the high school.
VITAL Signs class to be
held at Racine fire station,
7:30 p.m. and July 30,
sponsored by Racine ESquad; ! taught by Barbara
Van Meter. All EMT 's are
wlecome.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 7:30p.m. at the hall
with a potluck dinner at 6:30
p.m. with the post. Installation of both post and
unit officers for the 1975-76
year.

SAVE TO

1h OFF

AND MORE

THURSDAY
REVIV Ai.; Now in progre~s
at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church through Sunday.
Services at 7:30p.m. nightly.
The Rev. Lee Morriss is the
speaker from Scarry, W. Va.
REVIVAL now in progress
at
Syracuse
Apostolic
Mission through Friday.
Services 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Sister Virginia Vitatoe is the
speaker.

POMEROY

THIR"'D"'F"'"'
ri"day Club at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Phillip Meinhart . ..
FRIDAY
PAST Matrons, Evangeline
Chapter, O.E.S. home of Mr.
and Mrs. James Clatworthy,
6p.m. Potluck with husbands
invited.

House
COFFEE

housing under ,the Section 8 Housing Assistance
Payments Prograr:n .
.

RETURNS HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Roush,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, have
returned from a Florida
vacation. They visited Mr .
and j'llrs. Larry Roush and
Jean Ann in Winterhaven;
Mr. and Mrs. Don Matlack,
Lake Worth , and Mrs.
Margaret Heaton, Bradenton. Mr. and Mrs. Roush also
recently attended the golden
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Foster Bean of
Guysville .

.OPENe
6 DA1YS
A WEEK
MON. thru SAT.

D&amp;D MEAT
830 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

Proposal$ may be submitted _
b'( private owners
or Publk Housing Agency ( PHA) owners or by PHA' s
in combination with private owners · for newly constructed units to be located in the following Ohio cities
and counties and not to exceed the number and type of
units listed for each county :

NEW COttSTRUCTtON

Area County· Community

Number Numbea:. Nurrib"'"e
of
• Elderly Family
United
Units
Units

I lb. Size

With

I

I

994

Expires 7-26-75

RUTLAND
DEPT. STORE

5gf

TEEN QUEEN
46 oz.
TOMATO JUICE .................. .

I ~~~::rrER . . . .. .:~.~-':.8s~

BARBS

MEATS

AGAR CAN'NED HAMS .................................... 4.69 ea:
HOME MADE HAM SALAD ................................ ggc lb.
TEETER'S ................................................. Olunk $1.25 lb.
Ali MEAT BOLOGNA ............................ Siiced s1.29 lb.

YOU'RE AlWAYS FIRST!

RIB STEAK ••••••••••• -~~·••••
sAL£
CHUCK ROASl.~~·
•.&lt;•. •,

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.~.1'.·.­

"&amp;'""'J

29

CUBE STEAK ••••••••~--~.

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BEEF..•.• ~.~~·.

GROUND

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GROUND CH~UCK •• ~.~~-.

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ORANGE DRINK •••••s~.~~

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TUNA ............. ~~~-~. 4

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HUNfS

FRUIT COCKTAIL ••••.

15

oz..,

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· Area A . Putnam- Ot1awa : Giandorf
30
0
30
Area B Fulton- Wauseon
40
o
40
· Area C Henry- Napoleon
30
30
.0
30
15
15
Ar'ea D Meigs- Pomeroy
&lt;&gt;Area E Vinton- McArthur
10
5
5
Area F Clinton---Wilmi'lgton ,
40
0
40
Area G Campaign- UrbMa
45
20
25
Area H Clark- Springfield
150
tOO
·so
Area t Clark-New Carlisle
30
0
30
Area J Warren- Franklin
60
60
0
Area K Portage--xx
125
25
tOO
xx -Sites in any location in the county with required
amenities and services will be considered.
Proposals .must b.e received by NOON on September 10,

tns

Coupon

PRICES GOOD THRU
NO SALES TO' DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

TRAVEL OUT WEST
Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Fred
Smith, Sr., Middleport,
returned Monday night from
a visit in Oefiance with Mr .
and Mrs. Ted E . Spires. The
Smiths accompanied the
Spires family on a ..trip west
traveling nearly 4,000 miles.
They traveled to Omaha,
Neb. where Mr. and Mrs.
Smith lived 46 years ago and
spent time at Big Horn,
· Wyoinlng
on the snow. capped mountain.

Maxwell

PRELIMINARY PROPOSALS

POMEROY, OHIO.

SUNDAY
ANNUAL
MATLACK
reunion, Rising Park, Lancaster. Potluck dinner at
noon. Families to take their
own table service.

STAR .KIST LIGHT TUNA ..............~:~.?~:2/99~
KRAFT SLICED CHEESE SINGLES ... ~.~?.-.. 89~
HANDI WRAP. ... _............................ ~ !?.0..'.t:! 2/79~

INVITATION FOR

298 Second St.

Social
Calendar

CAKE MIXES ...........................~.~~:~.~.z:... 69~
...
NESTEA ...................................
...3..oz.
......... '139-

OPPORTUNITY

I

s.

Club installs officers

EQUAL HOUSING

NoteS

Mr. and Mrs. WlUiam N.
Moore and dal!8h"'rs, Carla
and Cathy, Ashland, Ky.
spent several days last week
here visiting Mr. and Mrs .
Harry S. Moore.
Brett Bunton of Denver
Colo. is here visitmg hi~
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs .
Arnold Richards. Prior to
coming to Middleport, he
visite&lt;l. in Cincinnati with
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Moore returned Tuesday
from Colunibus where they
visited Mr. and Mrs . Ernest
A. Jones, Mrs . Moore's
brother-in-law and sister. On
Sunday they celebrated the
birthdays of Mrs. Moore and ·
Mrs. Jones' twin aunts, Miss
Grace Sauvage and Mrs.
Harry Hoagland, with a
family
dinner.
Before
returning home, Mr. and
Mrs. Moore visited a cousin,
Miss Doris Cook, at Grant
Hospital .
Gwynn and Lynn Reynolds
and Dianne Nuse returned to
Morgantown, W. Va. today
after being here for a several
days' visit with Mr. and Mrs.
· Edgar Reynolds

Chapman's Shoes

By PHIL P ASTORET
Are more men bringing their
lunches to work or is it just that
they can't afford brief cases for
'em?

5

..

Worse-mlsuse-of:words dept:
Ca!IID&amp;. those balr fries "perIIUUiellls."

\

FRESH BAKERY

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·'DOZEN .
NUTS.i.• i~ ........ .
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Detailed information is contained in a Deve loper's
Program ijacket which may be obtained bY. writing to:
Director, Housing_ Production Mortgage Credit, HUD
Area : Office, 60 'East Main Street, Columbus, ' Ohio .
· 43215, Alln : Developer's Packet (phone 614-469' 6783).
Please requesl Developer's Packet by Area and
County (example : Area A · Putnam Countyl.
1 ne liSt ot Gltles and counttes by numoer a no type
of units fo be listed in our next two advertising cycles is
also available on requP.st .
Paul G. Lydens
Area Director

FROSTY ~CRES

ORANGE
JUICE ·

12

HEAD

oz. Can

LEITUCE
RED

. 49~

•
I

Personal

Mrs. Edith Wagoner, Ia
concierge.
Mrs. Mary Martin of the
Meigs Salon was installing
officer. The Vinton County
Salon was organized during
her term as Ohio's departemental chapeau. She Is ·
currently the demi chapeau
Nationale of the Central
Division. The installing Ia
concierge was Mrs. Lula
Hampton, chapeau ·elect of
the Meigs Salon, assiste&lt;l by
Mrs. Florence ·R ichards,
newly elec~ Eighth District
presidimt of the American
Legion Auxiliary.
Sherrie Marshall, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Marshall, Hemlock Grove, a
cystic. fibrosis child,
"adopted" by the Vinton
County Salon and will he
remembered throughout the
year with cards and gifts.
Mrs. Martin, following the
installation,
congratulated
the Salon on work in
respiratory diseases during
the past year . She presente&lt;l
a gift to Mrs. Good. Mrs.
Martin also received a gift
from the Salon for serving as
installing officer. Twentydollar gold piece replicas Bfe
being sold by both the Vinton
and Meigs Salons as a
bicentennil!l .. project.
Going to Wilkesville for the
meeting besides Mrs. Martin,
Mrs. Richards and Mrs.
Hampton were Mrs. Eileen
Searls, Mrs. Rhoda Hackett,
Mrs. Ruby Marshall and
daughter, Sherrie, Mrs. Iva
Powell, and Mrs . Eunie
Brinker .

nington .
Devotions were gtven by
Mrs . Harold Massar who
"GALLI A COUNTRY" is attracting capacity crowds to its evening performances at the
read a poem, " My Country"
natufal amphithea ter on the Bob Evans Farms in Rio Grande. Above is a scene from la st
follo wed by the Garden
weekend's performance. Daniel Boone, left, is portrayed by Bill Sptres. Tim Hea ton, nght ,
Prayer . Officers' reports
is Col. Safford.
were
given .
Members
responded to roll call by
naming the flower they most
one using cuba and yarrow in en joy . Present were 16
a triangular arrangement. members and four guests .
On display at the meeting Refreshments were served
were arrangements
of by Mrs . Gray.
gladioli made by Mrs. Rose
Carr, one of roses by Mrs. F.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
W. Goebel, and one with wild
Despite
threatening pro£essionalism or local area Gallipolis Band Boosters
Mr. aoo Mrs. Joseph Keel,
fl owers by Mrs . 0 . J . Penwea ther. c rowds poured into tal ent . as well as t he Association.
Denver, Colo., the fanner
the amphitheatre at Bob cos twning , staging a nd overRosetta Jo Richards of
Evans Farms, Ri o Grande, all production .
Middleport, are announcing
over the past weekend to
Murl Rush. Jr ., the
the birth of a son, Miles
enjoy t.he entertainme nt pageant's director , and Lee
Arnold, born July 8 at a
offered by the cast of "Gallia Durieux , the pageant 's
Denver hospital.
Country." This historical composer and author, feel
The infant weighed five
musical pageant will be this is an outstanding conpounds, eight ounces. Mr. and
presented for its third and tributi on of the Gallia
Mrs. Keel have a son, Brett.
final performances this· Dramati c Arts Society
· Grandparents are Mr. and
coming weekend, July 25. 26 towards
our
nation's
Mrs. Arnold
Richards,
and 27 .
Bicentennial celebration .
Middleport,
and
Mrs.
Joseph
Mr. and Mrs. William R . California with their son, Bill.
Despite the rain-out Friday
Admission prices are : $3 Zerkle and daughter, Jackie,
While there the family Keel, Denver,. Colo.
nigh t,
new
attendan ~e for adults; $1.50 for c hildren
have returned from a motored 1,400 miles over the
records are being recorded 16 years of age and under ;
vacation
in
Oakland. state to see the various places
and members of the en- group pri ces, 20 lu 99, $2 per
of interest . They visited
thusiastic audiences come ticket and 100 or more , $1.50
Fisherman's Wharf in San
from dist&lt;In t points including each . Family night will be
Francisco, rode the cable
Funeral service
New
Hampshi-re , observed again Sunday night
cars , electric train and took a
Massachusetts, Penn - when families of four will be
cruise in San Francisco Bay.
sylvania, Wa shington, D. C. admitted for $6 and each set on Thursday
They loured Chinatown,
and Michigan as well as addi tional member, $1 each .
Disneyland , and Hearst
nearby states. Many come as Performance time is 9 p.m .
Funeral serv ices for Castle in San Simeon, forthe result of reviews by the Light wraps are rec om- Charles H. Bennett, who died
merly owned by William
news media who attended mended.
Tuesday morning at his Randolph Hearst , grand·Jpening ni ght. Many are
"Gallia Country " is en- Beech St. home in Mid- father of. Patty Hearst,
BIGGER
tourists passing through the tertainment the entire family dleport, will be held at~ p.m .
surrounded by 240,000 acres,
SAVINGS FOR
area who are attracted to the can enjoy. There is ample Thursday at the Rawlingsall donated to the State of
pageant's signs and as a parking and the Bob Evans Coats Funeral Home.
THE FAMILY
California for a tourist atresult remain overn ight to Farm wagons are available
The Rev. Pete Granda! will traction.
attend.
for those desiring tran s- officiate, with burial in
The Zerkle family saw the
Those who meet with the portation from the parking lot Riverview Cemetery.
Redwoods, drove to the Bing
cast following the perform- lo the seating area .
Friends may call at the Crosby Golf Course, and
ances are generous in their
Refreshments
are funeral home any time today . visited Monterey, before
MAIN ST.
praise for a production of this available in the Shelter Masonic rites by Middleport
their flight home .
ma gnitude
and
the House, Sponsored by the
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will be
held al 8 this evening .
Mr . Bennett was born at
Arbuckle, W. Va., the son of
the late Harry and Margaret
Greenlee Bennett. Survivors
not named in the earlier
CHESTER - Officers of Showalter and Mrs . Ada account of his death include
the 1975-76 year were in- Neutzling will be hostesses three grandsons, Steve
stalled when the Past for the August meeting .
Bennett, Columbus; Charles
Others attending
the Bennett, Florida, anij James
Councilors Club of Chester
Council,
Daughters
of meeting were Mrs . Mae Rogers, Harbor, Ohio.
Pauline
America , met recently at the Spencer, Mrs.
home of Mrs. Sadie Trussell. Ridenour, Mrs. Inzy Newell,
SQUAD CALLED
Installed were Mrs. Mary Mrs. Opal Hollon, Mrs . Hattie
The
Pomeroy E-R squad
K. Holter, president ; Mrs. Frederick, Mrs. Ada Morris,
NCAN INES
Thelma .
White ,
vice Mrs. Goldie Frederick, Mrs . was called Tuesday at 12 :25
president ; Mrs . Betty Roush, Mabel Van Meter, Mrs. Ada p.m . for Leora Schar!, of the
secretary;
Mrs.
Jean Van Meter, Mrs. Sadie Texas Community, who was
Summerfield, treasurer; Trussell and Mrs . Betty I&lt;Iken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted as a
Mrs . Ada Neutzling , sentinel; Roush.
)
medical
patient.
Mrs. Opal Hollon and Mrs.
Dorothy Lawson , flower
committee,and Mrs. Mary Jo
Pooler, news reporter .
A potluck dinner preceded
the meeting with Mrs.
Trussell and Mrs. Lawson
AMERICAN or PIMENTO
providing
the
dessert .
Scripture, the pledge to the
IFP No.5
flag and prayer opened the
( UUPLJN
•
meeting . Mrs . Leda Mae
Kraeuter and Mrs. Margaret
Tuttle conducted games with
prizes going to the winners.
Mrs. Letha Woods won the
The Department of Hou sing and Urban
door prize . Mrs . Mary
Development will accept preliminary proposals for
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs .
Andrew D. Strom of Ashland ,
Ky. was guest demonstrator
at a meeting of the Rose
Garden Club held at the home
of Mrs . Maude Gray.
Mrs. Strom made several
arrangements using wild and
garden flowers, along with

Mijdleport

..

I

•'

\

Year tags for '.'everlastin('
license plates would be okay 1f
tiMi plat~s didn't J;Ust away ·annually. '
How do -alrJines schedule
flights so planes dOil'l jiggle the
TV picture durlug commercials?
I'

RED .· RIPE

WATE

o.

.'

•••••••••••

'I

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"

•••

.

' ., 'o\
•

.'

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�.•

.I

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-·

'

•

. I
1 I

•

..

·.

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..

Seconit~
...
j

·'

'.11.~..

'

j l ~t._.

toun1e}i... ..
,

date
~ '

...

LOIN END

PORK ROAST

PREMIUM BOLOGNA
CHOPPED SIRLOIN STEAK
SMOKED
POLISH SAUSAGE
ECKRICH SMORGAPAK

I

' 1 LB.

CHUNK
STYLE

$1 49

)

MIDDLEPORT INDIANS - Front row, 1-r, Scott Hartinger, Ricky Hall, Shane Smith ,
Randy Hall, Troy McDaniel, John Cremeans. Second row 1-r, Allen King, assistant coach,
Patty Cremeans, April King, Steve Hood, Steve Carson, Dave Hoffman, Jack Bacon,
assistant coach and Richard Hovatter, coach. Absent were Scott Pickens, Ralph Snyder,
Tara Bacon , Mike Jackson .

. COLUMBIA
lB.

SLICED

FAMILY PACK

BACON
12

...

~;1

.•.

SWIFT
'

ser

CENTERS, FIRST CUT MIXED

PORK .CHOPS

oz.

.$

COUNTRY
STYLE

The second annual Melp
UtUe League Tourney has
been scheduled to begin
August 14 with Th~ .Dally
Sentinel, Pomeroy ana Dan
Thompson Ford, Middleport,
as sp&lt;insors.
Team trophies wiU be
awarded to first, second,
third, and fourth place 'teams
with individual trophlee.going
to the first and secon·cl"jjlace
teams.
A first place IS-inch !lPPhY
will be donated by t&lt;l.,,l\ N
Sport Shop, Pomeror.,~~
this year, three trop'!I~ .,.W
be awarded to the player with
'
the "most hits," ''most'lnome
runs," and "Most Valuable
Player.'' ·These lrophlei Will
be a horsehide baseball
"collectOrs Item" moWJicd on
a walnut base and in~bed .
Last year's tourq..menl
had eight teluns partic!~~ing
with the Middleport Bravell
taking first place an·d the
Syracuse Atros second;,"hua
year it appears 16 to 20JUma
may see ·a ction. Tour11811lent
rilles and invitations !id1l be
forthcoming to local ,. ~ .
Tournament director~ f&lt;lf, the
tourney are Gene Wise and
Milford Hysell.
"'
.I

'

Rutland·

SP!RERIBS

I.G.A.

.

team

•

IS

unbeaten

CRISP-N-GOOD

'

CRACKERS

Don

I.G.A. SALTINE CRACKERS

oz.

... .

BOXES

CAMPBELL

. CREAM
or

1 LB.
•

:~·I;

WHITE BREAD

b...,/

16
..

BROOKS

BAMA
GRAPE JELLY

•.

oz.

CATSUP

LOAVES

P·U·Z·Z·l·E

PIECES AT OUR STORE

.

-LUCKY LEAF

2 LB. JAR

14 OZ. BOmE

GET

.CHICKEN SOUP

BOX

I.G.A.

tP-_,1-·

PINESOL 1s or

I

' .

SHOWBOAT

ICE COLD

MELON

•

I

American swim coach 'happy'

'

:. o:
'

''

:;/(

PORK &amp; BEANS

.... •.

MIDDLEPORT REDS - Kneeling, 1-r, David Iannarelli, Kevin Milam, Jim Pooler, Jeff.
Baughman, Earl Wines, Andy laMerelli, Keith Slaven, Tim Justis. Second row 1-r, Ray
Stewart, Manager, John Smith, Bat Boy, Verne Slaven, David Demoskey·, Paul McElhaney ,
Ray Stewart, Jr., Bobby Duckworth, Paul McElhaney, coac h.

CIDER .
VINEGAR

WATERMELONS
1h

'

U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN'

Lettuce~ ·

Head

.

.

.GAL

WinnonN...... ww
Be P-d In OUr
Store Eacll WMk

lj[l' APIECE OF IGA

'

.

.
I

-. o .. c• ~.• •""- ~

~'"' "C"
1) ~O.,i:ll~~ OIN I&gt;&lt;N.

HEADS

SHOPPING ·
CENTER

BAG

N9 PV,IICM.... ltlelt1M'1
M..,Ra UID IWlOYIU
HOT ILIG.U TO "AimCIP~TI ,

; ', IDlE 10 RIOOUNER ·

.

10 LB.

FUN!
FUN I

,,' PUIZLE EVEimME YOU

are

LB.

00

$
12

MIDDLEPORT METS - Kneeling, 1-r' Keith Scott, Keith Pummel, Tye Herman, David
Reuter , Brian George, John Blake. Second row 1-r, Stacey Herman , Ali,&lt;;a Johnson, Tony
Scott, Greg Bush, Bob Fox, Charles Scott, coach. Absent were Lisa Becker, Tom Kelly, and
assistant coach
Reuter .
·

' ""'

I'

I

·'

J

MIDDLEPORT

'

l

..

j.

'

The Rutland Doclgei'i:Jtep
pace with the Mlddliipor
Reds by defeating the Indian•
24-1 to remain W1beaten ii
second half play lij-' tho
Middleport Youth LUguo
Monday. The Dodgers
4-0
Dave Spangler pltcbed !
innings, giving up 3 hits, :
walks, and 1 riDl for tho
Dodgers. Spangler fanned 6
Troy Brooks carne on in relle
to finish, walking 2, fanning 2
and allowing no runs.
Shane Smith pitched tho
first five innings for the In
dians giving up 15 hits and 1:
runs while fanning l ano
walking 2. April King pitcheo ,I
the final Inning, giving up li
runs, 3 walks, and 12 bits.
Hi tiers for the winner. 1
were . Spangler with . 3 hi~ I
including a home run, Brook
had 5 hits including a triple
Paul Michael 3 hitS IJ!cludlnt
a triple, Andy Cross 4 hi~
including 2 iripies, - Ol!an•
Berger had 4 hits including '
double , Marty Spangle, had .
singles, Herb Noel 2 singles
Todd Eads, Guy Schuler, 1
T. Simmons, and And:
Pocklington each a single.
For the Indian!{ Stev•
Carson, John Cremeans ano
April King each had a single
Tomorrow
night ·· th•
Rutland Dodgers meet tho
Middleport Reds whicll,coulo
be the showdown of tho
season. The Reds have a :;..
record in the second half .

CALI, Colombia (UP!) The United States pulled off
just orie 1-2 sweep on the nirst
day of swimming competition
at the world championships,
but the highly-touted East
Germans didn't entirely live
up to their reputation, either.
In the first five finals
Tuesday night, the intense
rivalry between two Long
Beach Swim Club members,
17-year-&lt;lld high schooler Tim
Shaw and 22-year-&lt;!ld Bruce
Furniss, produced American
gold and silver medals in the
200 meters freetyie .
" The man I fear most
is s teve, my own . teammate," Shaw said before the
race. Furniss is the world
record holder in the event and
looked as if he would once
again beat his younger riva l
Tuesda~ night.
But Sliaw overtook him on
the last lap, posting a time of
1::;1.04 compared to F.ur·
niss' 1 ::;1.72, both just shy of
Furniss' I :50.89 world record .
Despite predict ions that

every existing world record the silver and a nother Briton,
would fall, not a single new David Leigh, the bronze.
mark was set in five events.
In the backstroke sprint,
"The wind will keep the times John Murphy, 21 of Hinsdale,
down " an offcial of the Til ., And Mel Nash, 20, of
American delegation said in Bloomington, Ind ., set the
the afternoo n when a fastest times in the morning
swirling, blustery wind came heats, but defending and
down· from the Andes moun· Olympic champion Roland
tains over the fa st Pan- Matthes was not to be denied
the gold in his specialty.
American Pool.
American men's team · "Matthes didn 't look too
coac h Ron Ballatore of good in the morning, but we
Pasadena. Calif .. said he wa s knew we had to wait to see
"extreme!y h!'ppy'' wi th the him at night," Ballatore said.
performance of the American " If he 's here, he's here to
men
in
th e morning swim ."
elimination s. " We were 1-2 in
Matthes finished first in the
just about everything." But not particularly fast lime of
the Americans couldn't hold 58.15, his world record stands
on to their positions in the 100 . at 56.30, while Murphy look
meters brea st and back- the silver · and Nash the
strikes in the night finals .
bronze.
Hick Hofsteter, 18, of · In the· women 's 2QO..metei'S
McKeesport, Pa., and Rick individual. medley, Kathy
Colella, 23, of Seattle, Wash. , Heddy, a 17-year-&lt;!ld veteran
fa ded in the stretch of the of the Central Jersey Athletic
breaststroke sprint, allowing C1ub. turned in a •trong
Creal Bril ain's David Wilkie freest rle to overtake favored
to .take the gold in 1:04.26, Ulrika Tauber, the East Cer.lapan's Nobutaka Taguchi man world record holder, and
,. '

'·

finished a golden first il
2:19:80. Miss Tauber took tho
silver and another East Ger
man, Angela Francke, tb
bronze.
.
The individual medley wa
a disappointment for 1&amp;-year
old Shirley Babas~off o
Mission Viejo, Calif. who fel
too far behind in ' th•
backstroke and finishe•
fourth.
The east Gennan G!tla tool
revenge in the 4 x 100 medle:
relays, nmning away fr011
the field in 4:14.~t;; Th •
United States look the:ftilve
and Holland was third.
Today, Miss Babashoff wi:
try again for a gold medal
a head-to-bead confro'litatk
with East Gennany:s Ko1
nella Ender in the zoo.rneter
freestyle. otberevell~on th
program are the men's 401
meters individual ,medlel
women's 100'- meter,
. backstroke, womeri"s ·,101-•
meters breaststroke : an ·
men's 4x IOOmetersfteest)'l ·
· relays.

•

.. ..

.

'

·/

't •..

·- .

�.•

.I

•

I.

-·

'

•

. I
1 I

•

..

·.

~ ~·

..

Seconit~
...
j

·'

'.11.~..

'

j l ~t._.

toun1e}i... ..
,

date
~ '

...

LOIN END

PORK ROAST

PREMIUM BOLOGNA
CHOPPED SIRLOIN STEAK
SMOKED
POLISH SAUSAGE
ECKRICH SMORGAPAK

I

' 1 LB.

CHUNK
STYLE

$1 49

)

MIDDLEPORT INDIANS - Front row, 1-r, Scott Hartinger, Ricky Hall, Shane Smith ,
Randy Hall, Troy McDaniel, John Cremeans. Second row 1-r, Allen King, assistant coach,
Patty Cremeans, April King, Steve Hood, Steve Carson, Dave Hoffman, Jack Bacon,
assistant coach and Richard Hovatter, coach. Absent were Scott Pickens, Ralph Snyder,
Tara Bacon , Mike Jackson .

. COLUMBIA
lB.

SLICED

FAMILY PACK

BACON
12

...

~;1

.•.

SWIFT
'

ser

CENTERS, FIRST CUT MIXED

PORK .CHOPS

oz.

.$

COUNTRY
STYLE

The second annual Melp
UtUe League Tourney has
been scheduled to begin
August 14 with Th~ .Dally
Sentinel, Pomeroy ana Dan
Thompson Ford, Middleport,
as sp&lt;insors.
Team trophies wiU be
awarded to first, second,
third, and fourth place 'teams
with individual trophlee.going
to the first and secon·cl"jjlace
teams.
A first place IS-inch !lPPhY
will be donated by t&lt;l.,,l\ N
Sport Shop, Pomeror.,~~
this year, three trop'!I~ .,.W
be awarded to the player with
'
the "most hits," ''most'lnome
runs," and "Most Valuable
Player.'' ·These lrophlei Will
be a horsehide baseball
"collectOrs Item" moWJicd on
a walnut base and in~bed .
Last year's tourq..menl
had eight teluns partic!~~ing
with the Middleport Bravell
taking first place an·d the
Syracuse Atros second;,"hua
year it appears 16 to 20JUma
may see ·a ction. Tour11811lent
rilles and invitations !id1l be
forthcoming to local ,. ~ .
Tournament director~ f&lt;lf, the
tourney are Gene Wise and
Milford Hysell.
"'
.I

'

Rutland·

SP!RERIBS

I.G.A.

.

team

•

IS

unbeaten

CRISP-N-GOOD

'

CRACKERS

Don

I.G.A. SALTINE CRACKERS

oz.

... .

BOXES

CAMPBELL

. CREAM
or

1 LB.
•

:~·I;

WHITE BREAD

b...,/

16
..

BROOKS

BAMA
GRAPE JELLY

•.

oz.

CATSUP

LOAVES

P·U·Z·Z·l·E

PIECES AT OUR STORE

.

-LUCKY LEAF

2 LB. JAR

14 OZ. BOmE

GET

.CHICKEN SOUP

BOX

I.G.A.

tP-_,1-·

PINESOL 1s or

I

' .

SHOWBOAT

ICE COLD

MELON

•

I

American swim coach 'happy'

'

:. o:
'

''

:;/(

PORK &amp; BEANS

.... •.

MIDDLEPORT REDS - Kneeling, 1-r, David Iannarelli, Kevin Milam, Jim Pooler, Jeff.
Baughman, Earl Wines, Andy laMerelli, Keith Slaven, Tim Justis. Second row 1-r, Ray
Stewart, Manager, John Smith, Bat Boy, Verne Slaven, David Demoskey·, Paul McElhaney ,
Ray Stewart, Jr., Bobby Duckworth, Paul McElhaney, coac h.

CIDER .
VINEGAR

WATERMELONS
1h

'

U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN'

Lettuce~ ·

Head

.

.

.GAL

WinnonN...... ww
Be P-d In OUr
Store Eacll WMk

lj[l' APIECE OF IGA

'

.

.
I

-. o .. c• ~.• •""- ~

~'"' "C"
1) ~O.,i:ll~~ OIN I&gt;&lt;N.

HEADS

SHOPPING ·
CENTER

BAG

N9 PV,IICM.... ltlelt1M'1
M..,Ra UID IWlOYIU
HOT ILIG.U TO "AimCIP~TI ,

; ', IDlE 10 RIOOUNER ·

.

10 LB.

FUN!
FUN I

,,' PUIZLE EVEimME YOU

are

LB.

00

$
12

MIDDLEPORT METS - Kneeling, 1-r' Keith Scott, Keith Pummel, Tye Herman, David
Reuter , Brian George, John Blake. Second row 1-r, Stacey Herman , Ali,&lt;;a Johnson, Tony
Scott, Greg Bush, Bob Fox, Charles Scott, coach. Absent were Lisa Becker, Tom Kelly, and
assistant coach
Reuter .
·

' ""'

I'

I

·'

J

MIDDLEPORT

'

l

..

j.

'

The Rutland Doclgei'i:Jtep
pace with the Mlddliipor
Reds by defeating the Indian•
24-1 to remain W1beaten ii
second half play lij-' tho
Middleport Youth LUguo
Monday. The Dodgers
4-0
Dave Spangler pltcbed !
innings, giving up 3 hits, :
walks, and 1 riDl for tho
Dodgers. Spangler fanned 6
Troy Brooks carne on in relle
to finish, walking 2, fanning 2
and allowing no runs.
Shane Smith pitched tho
first five innings for the In
dians giving up 15 hits and 1:
runs while fanning l ano
walking 2. April King pitcheo ,I
the final Inning, giving up li
runs, 3 walks, and 12 bits.
Hi tiers for the winner. 1
were . Spangler with . 3 hi~ I
including a home run, Brook
had 5 hits including a triple
Paul Michael 3 hitS IJ!cludlnt
a triple, Andy Cross 4 hi~
including 2 iripies, - Ol!an•
Berger had 4 hits including '
double , Marty Spangle, had .
singles, Herb Noel 2 singles
Todd Eads, Guy Schuler, 1
T. Simmons, and And:
Pocklington each a single.
For the Indian!{ Stev•
Carson, John Cremeans ano
April King each had a single
Tomorrow
night ·· th•
Rutland Dodgers meet tho
Middleport Reds whicll,coulo
be the showdown of tho
season. The Reds have a :;..
record in the second half .

CALI, Colombia (UP!) The United States pulled off
just orie 1-2 sweep on the nirst
day of swimming competition
at the world championships,
but the highly-touted East
Germans didn't entirely live
up to their reputation, either.
In the first five finals
Tuesday night, the intense
rivalry between two Long
Beach Swim Club members,
17-year-&lt;lld high schooler Tim
Shaw and 22-year-&lt;!ld Bruce
Furniss, produced American
gold and silver medals in the
200 meters freetyie .
" The man I fear most
is s teve, my own . teammate," Shaw said before the
race. Furniss is the world
record holder in the event and
looked as if he would once
again beat his younger riva l
Tuesda~ night.
But Sliaw overtook him on
the last lap, posting a time of
1::;1.04 compared to F.ur·
niss' 1 ::;1.72, both just shy of
Furniss' I :50.89 world record .
Despite predict ions that

every existing world record the silver and a nother Briton,
would fall, not a single new David Leigh, the bronze.
mark was set in five events.
In the backstroke sprint,
"The wind will keep the times John Murphy, 21 of Hinsdale,
down " an offcial of the Til ., And Mel Nash, 20, of
American delegation said in Bloomington, Ind ., set the
the afternoo n when a fastest times in the morning
swirling, blustery wind came heats, but defending and
down· from the Andes moun· Olympic champion Roland
tains over the fa st Pan- Matthes was not to be denied
the gold in his specialty.
American Pool.
American men's team · "Matthes didn 't look too
coac h Ron Ballatore of good in the morning, but we
Pasadena. Calif .. said he wa s knew we had to wait to see
"extreme!y h!'ppy'' wi th the him at night," Ballatore said.
performance of the American " If he 's here, he's here to
men
in
th e morning swim ."
elimination s. " We were 1-2 in
Matthes finished first in the
just about everything." But not particularly fast lime of
the Americans couldn't hold 58.15, his world record stands
on to their positions in the 100 . at 56.30, while Murphy look
meters brea st and back- the silver · and Nash the
strikes in the night finals .
bronze.
Hick Hofsteter, 18, of · In the· women 's 2QO..metei'S
McKeesport, Pa., and Rick individual. medley, Kathy
Colella, 23, of Seattle, Wash. , Heddy, a 17-year-&lt;!ld veteran
fa ded in the stretch of the of the Central Jersey Athletic
breaststroke sprint, allowing C1ub. turned in a •trong
Creal Bril ain's David Wilkie freest rle to overtake favored
to .take the gold in 1:04.26, Ulrika Tauber, the East Cer.lapan's Nobutaka Taguchi man world record holder, and
,. '

'·

finished a golden first il
2:19:80. Miss Tauber took tho
silver and another East Ger
man, Angela Francke, tb
bronze.
.
The individual medley wa
a disappointment for 1&amp;-year
old Shirley Babas~off o
Mission Viejo, Calif. who fel
too far behind in ' th•
backstroke and finishe•
fourth.
The east Gennan G!tla tool
revenge in the 4 x 100 medle:
relays, nmning away fr011
the field in 4:14.~t;; Th •
United States look the:ftilve
and Holland was third.
Today, Miss Babashoff wi:
try again for a gold medal
a head-to-bead confro'litatk
with East Gennany:s Ko1
nella Ender in the zoo.rneter
freestyle. otberevell~on th
program are the men's 401
meters individual ,medlel
women's 100'- meter,
. backstroke, womeri"s ·,101-•
meters breaststroke : an ·
men's 4x IOOmetersfteest)'l ·
· relays.

•

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't •..

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�•

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f

'

.

lG_ ~The DaUy Sentinel, Mt_cl_dl~:Pomei'(Jy, 0., Wednesda~. Julv 23. 1975

•
'.•

,.

-

OPaiU.Y

OPRDAILY

10 to 9

10 to 9

SUNDAY JULY 27 WHILE QUANTITI
ALL QUANTITIES
SUBJECT
--.TO PRIOR SALE_

UNUSUALBliTTRUE -Mrs. Mae Offett, Arnoldsburg, W.Va. (Calhoun County, neat
Charleston) a niece of 0. D. Parsons, Gallipolis, reported an unusual or rare event which
took plaee last year on her farm. Her Jersey cow first raised a veal calf in tlle spring of 1974,
then last fall finished up the two hogs shown above. Gallia County Extension Service personnel agreed the Jersey cow indeed did the unusuaL

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By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Repor1er
COLUMBUS (UP!) Majority Democrats in the
Ohio House today were expeeled to try to override nine
of Gov. James A. Rhodes' 72
item vetoes in the $10.6 billion
general appropriations bill
for 1976-77. 5
The attempt was to be
made following a party .
caucus at the outset of a 1:30
p.m. floor session.
Meanwhile, a conference
corrunittee negotiating differences between the Senate and
House on a medical malpractice insurance reform bill
was to begin work at 10 a.m.
in hopes of getting quick
$greement, perhaps in time
for a vote today.
The conference committee
was hastily assembled
Tuesday when the House
refused, 54 to 40, to go along
with the Senate version of the
malpractice bill.
Action came as both chamhers opened a final drive
toward -a summer adjournment target date of Aug.
1. The pace ls expected to
become frantic during the
two weeks.
Breaks loom later this
week In logjams on school
finance, workmen's compensation, unemployment
compensation and capital
construction legislation.
More VetGes
Anticipation of the Impending showdown between
the Democratic-dominated
legislature
and
the
Republican governor on
'vetoes was sharpened Tieday
when the Senate overturned
Rhodes' veto of a major
Democratic energy bill--the
first override of a gubernatorial veto by either
chamber In 10 years.
House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, said
the House would consider
overriding the energy bill
veto later this week.
Override action requires a
three-fifths vote in each
chamber. l,)emocr$s have the
required 20 votes in the
Senate. They lack one vote of
the 60 needed in the House.
Republicans are expected
to sustain Rhodes • opposition
to the Democratic energy
bill. But they have hinted
they might go along with the
Democrats on two of the
overrides of the item vetoes
in the budget.
The items believed to have
Republican support are a $10
Jllillion appropriation ·to the
· University of Cincinnati and
a p oposal to. exempt from
tulllon and fees any out-ofstate student living within 30
miles of tlle campus · of a
state-supported college or
university.
Secret ldormation
Meanwhile, the Senate
Tuesday passed and sent to
the House on a bipartisan 2110 vote Jec~tlon allowing th
Public UWittes CommissiOn
r1. Obio to refuse to make
publlc ' any information
furnllbed by uttUties In ratemaking cases.
11te bill, sponsored by Sen .
Robert • T. Secrest, D-

next'

prietary" and that disclosure
would work to its economic
disadvantage.
Sen. Donald J . Pease, DOberlln, an opponent of the
bill,' said the phrase
"otherwise confidential"
would create a loophole for
utilities to conceal information . He also objected
to thetiming of the protective
bill- --~~wllen we are being
asked by utility consumers to
pay particular attention to
the methods by which rates
are calculated."
Secrest parried the objections by saying the bill
would make information
available to the PUOO, "and
they're the ones that set the
rates. They could say 'you're

.,

\•

.

--·

ASK TOWED
Gary Paul Norris, 22, Rt. 2,
Racine, and Donna Marie
Cross, 22, .Rt. 2, Racine .

SAVE !1?.9_5_1 Buy

I ~I I.

--

/!;)'

-

. ..... to.Mr dMiw ....
tellgh Inch •to~tg tlie

G.l HAIR DRYER ,
Heck's
Reg. 119.96

MIDDLEPORT

1

.

79e

WORM
BEDDING

aae

Heck's Reg. '1.22
Sporting Goods

Set Of 8
CORN
HOLDERS

"•,,
~

-lb.

~.,

•'·

39
STEAK.......... ~.$}

FRENCH CITY BRAND
WEINERS ••••••••••••••2~ !~:t.. '
GOLDEN ISLE
HAMBURGER &amp; · a pks.
HOT DOG BUNS • • • • • •• •• .

~

'100

,.

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)·

•,.

Heck's Reg. 1.44

~

Your Thom MeAn S1ore
Middleport, Ohio

MEIGS HIGH STUDENTS

.,

Galvanized
BUCKET
$122
.Heck's Reg. 11.99
Hardware

Reg. '10.99

POLYESTER ·

POLYESTER

We're giving a FREE class ring 1o someone • enter

now!
,
.
.
·
Winner gets either a Boy's Siladium rir:'lg or:- an elegant
10k gold Girl's ring, both by John Roberts .

Crepe . ~ch

KNITS
60" Wide
$298

Yd.

. Reg.

$3.98

For DisheS or Fine Fabrics . ·

Your class ri·ng Is for a lifetime. The extra meaning to
you demands extra quality from us- you'll like what ·
you see at our display .

$298

Yd.

Heck's
Re9. •9.63

CORDLESS
LAMPS

PRINT$
.

.

TICKOS

Yd.3.98
'

'

16

McCall's, Kw1k -.Sew, S1mplic;i'J PaHerns .·
. SINGER SALES&amp;SER ICE
~
115 W. Se&lt;;ond
992 -2284
Pomeroy, Ohio

'·

'

ON

SALE

..

·.~

), *

·-' NOW
.

Galvanized Garbage

CAN

·-·

'

·Mirro

JUICER

"

Sports Dept.

Sporting Goods Dept.

sa••

effective

Heck's

SIMONIZ
CAR WAX

•266

-Hardware

Jewelry Dept•

CORN
WISK
BROOM

aae

Heck's Reg. 99•

Heck's Reg. '1

Hardware ·Dept.

Hardware .Dept.

..,..,-

4

-

. -_

--

-

-300

-

"3.69

Sporting Goods

$}88

Heck's Reg. '1 .99

:1

GOLF BALLS

LUG
WRENCH

.,22

Reg. •12.96

r . '

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K-28
WILSON

PAINT
BRUSH

Heck's

•

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Heck's Reg. •18.88

Hardware Dept.

Proctor Silex

'
-~- L

88

-

Reserve Right To limit

'' . f

l igh t -

One tuner

BOX

Heck's
Reg.

~

'

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'

Heck's Reg. •4.58

Heck's
Reg. 14.99
Hardware Dept.

'Oiursdav
thru saturday;, .•.
.

no p1.1rchase
necess11ry _. __ .enter now!
'
.
&gt;

lb ~

Trophy Tackle

' -1 2

3" Nylon

20 Gallon

'
.- r,1on.:Sat•:
.'!

•a••

Sporting Dept.

-

.. HERE.
...

: .'fJe '. Fa]iitic ·Shop···

3

•

KEROSENE
LANT·ERNS

Heck's Reg. •6.48

9 til7

., ' .

tron ~htor .

- ~ hl :

'466

Heck's
Reg. '6.48

'466

BRAND NEW SHIPMENT

60" POLYESTER

QO . All

FOR CAMPING

$711

77e

.

ITALPASTA CUT MACARONI •• !~.at·e ·

So Register now for the drawing: August 10, 1975 .

~OT

RALLY
CAR
WASH

CLEARFIELD AMERICAN CHEESE
INDIVIDUAL SLICES ••••••1~ .0: !~
SMOOTHIE BRAND . .
32 oz.
LIQUID DETERGENT•••••••••••

.,

COOK
KIT

20 Quart
Century Stew

4 Qt.
PRESSURE COOKER

.

.

ct:&gt;me\ (omplete, rcdy to

Housewares Dept.

Houseware

10 Quart

FIRESIDE COOKIEs •••••••••• ~~l. 39~

CLEARANCE!
Seled Group

wi th " Sound Off" loud ·
~pe eke r . v , ry p owe rfu l.

Reg. •2.99

••

Heck's

CLEARANCE!
Seled Gro11p

1.... ...___,.--:

~

GOLD BOND
·
, 119
PEANUT BUTTER ••••••••• :~-.~:
.

Win Your High _School Ring

Heck's Reg. '14.74

.,,

3/'1 00
FRESH PEA-CHES •• 4,b~ 100
FRESH CARROTS ••••• ~~ 19e

heritage house

Qt. •2.66

1

'

PROGRESS

Reg. •2.69

conh ol.

•

NOW IN .

Join Amer ico ' i • H iting
new h o bby - Trea1 ule
f in di ng , Works lhr o ugh.
dirl, w nd, wood, .water ,
o nd even •o t k. witn no lon
o l po ~r . Detecfl o _penny
to 5 inche~ . Detec:ts. sharply

l '

GROUND BEEF

JULY
SUMMER SALE

I

Jewelry Dept.

Fresh-Lean

CUBE

1688

TREASURE
FINDER

Pint •2.44

HD-51

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

9 JAR RACK

\
.c;;::'-_=-· ___-_

949--5772

sanctioned and has an entry)
fee of $45. Drawing for the
event will be held Wednesday, August 27 at 7 p.m. at
Labold Field No . 1.
Team trophies will be
awarded to the first four
places witb
individual
trophies to the winners and
nmners up , to the most
valuable player and to the
player hitting the most
homerUns. For more in~
formation contact Jim Rhea,
2532 Argonne Rd., Portsnrouth, or phone 614-3538790 .

CANNING
JARS

Home Canning

WAID CROSS SONS
Pearl St.
STORE Racine, Ohio

Specials

work to -their economic

· To
P,event · · public ·
• ._... of 1Df~2cl'h
ad" d to 1118 · PU2!, a
ulflllr ..W haw to 111....w 1t
11 "a &amp;ndl IICftt or otherwin confidential or pro-

The Meigs County Amateur
Football team, the Meigs
County
Warriors,
are
preparing for the start of
their first season with
practice to begin in a few
days. Equipment is due to be
delivered soon . For the first
season the team has seven
games scheduled with the
first against the West
Virginia State Prison team at
Moundsville, W. Va . on October 5 at I p.m .
The team is open to all
athletes, 18 years or older
who still desire to play Iackie
football.
Athletes interested in
joining the team should fill
out a paper giving their
name, address, age, phone
number, height, weight, and
positions desired to play and
NAME RESTORED
mail it to C. D. Mcintyre, Rt.
Nancy Jo Clatworthy;-trr-1. Box 8, Racine, Ohio 4577L
being granted a divorce from Everyone who wishes to play
James
Clatworthy
as must sign up in advance so
previously re))Qrted, also had eqwpment can be ready.
her maiden name, Nancy Jo
Mayer, restored .

. CLEANING T~ You

Receipts, expenditures and
balance respectively in all
active funds were : $63,675.98,
$56,984.90, $134,191.67.
In the inactive funds,
receipts, expenditures and
balance respectively were:
bond retirement, $1,719.31,
$28,908.42, $26,089 .83; '!I!Wer
bond and improvement, no
receipts, no expenditures,
$4,884 .26; fire house, no
receipts , no expenditures,
$2,477.40.
Receipts, expenditures and
balance respectively in all
funds were: $65,395 .29,
$85,893.32, $167,643.16.

July
FABRIC

the PUOO witbout feat It will
be IJII!de jlablk: lf. it could

··.-.

$2,920.65 , $555 .40 ; fire
department, $27,573 .10,
$7,050 . 35,
$26,262 . 55;
cemetery, $782 , $1,503 .64 ,
($234.64 ); street, $11,224.11 ,
$4,949.66, $4,883 .19; state
highway, $504.65, no expenditures, $4,367.17; water
operating, $10,661.64 ,
$10,033.71, $957.58; guaranty
meter, $250, $125, $5,648.60;
parking meter, $1,240, $5,000,
$8,822.55; utility, $1,209.88,
$1,185.64, $23 , 271.39 .

Labor Day
Pads, gear tourney

and Thursday for the Apolo- into orbit r'!nging from 132 to
Soyuz international 131 miles.
spaceflight (all times EDT
rhursday, July 24
and subject to change):
12:20 a .m. - Astronauts
roday, July 23
begin 11-bour sleep period.
12:20 a.m. - Astronauts
8:20 a.m. -- Astronauts
begin 7-hour sleep period.
awaken.
7:20 a.m. - Astronauts
4:38 p.m. - APQllO maln
awaken.
engine is fired for 7 seconds to
8:23 a.m. - Astronauts begin descent.
4:45p.m.- APQllo service
hold 42-rninute ln-flight news
module ls jettisoned from
conference. (TV).
12:40 p.m. - Astronauts conunand module.
·
close down orbital module.
4:58p.m. - Apollo enters
3:41 p.m. - Docking upper fringes of atmosphere.
Main
module is jettisoned from
5:13 p.m.
Apollo.
parachutes de'ploy.
5:18 p.m. - ApoUo para4:16 p.m. - Apollo uses
main engine to maneuver into chutes into Pacific Ocean, 345
145-by-131-mile higli orbit, mlles west of Honolulu.
moving away from docking

Camlridge, Ill designed to
encourage utiJiUes to furnish
fuU ftDanclal infOI'III!IIion -to

~- ·

B.a lances in all funds
totaled $167,643.16 as of June
31, according to a financial
report submitted to Pomeroy
Council Monday night by
Jane Walton, clerk.
In the active funds,
receipts, expenditures and
balance respectively were :
general, $5,249.81, $7 ,876.18,
$3,777 .22; federal revenue
sharing, no receipts, no expenditllres, $28,598.80; water
well improvement, no
receipts, $16,340.07,
$27,281.86 ; sewer , $4,980.79,

reported announced
The fifth annual Benny's
Labor Day Softball TourSpace events schedule
. SOOn · nament
will be held In Portsmouth on August 30-31. The
HOUSTON
(UPI)
module.
commg
slo pitch tourney is A.S.A.
Timetable of events today
8:43p.m. - Apollo switches

Reg . $3.98

. RIGIPJJt l'ffiSUPRIOffl'
WHh REGULAR $11.11

Balances shown in all funds

crazy' to the utilities and
order the information made
public if It isn't dsmaging ,"
he said .
In other legislative actvity
Tuesday :
- The House passed 91 to 2
and sent to the Senate a bill
ql&amp;king Ohio a party to an
Interstate Mining Compact
• concerned with reclamation
and qrotection of natural
resources and an economic
and productive mining lndustry.
- Tl\e Senate Uiilli'illiiliusly
adopted -House-passed
legislation strengthening the
regulatory powers othe state
Division of Banks.
Both chambers were to
reconvene at I :30p.m. today.

SON BORN
Mr . ;md Mrs. Vincent
Knight •.~ sr ., Pomeroy, announce .the birth of their
second son, Christopher
Ladd, July 18, at Holzer
Medical Center. The infalt
weighed
nine
pounds .
Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs:-A. R. Knight,
Pomeroy, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. 0. W. Neal, Point
Pleasant. The couple-s oldest
son -is Vincent, Jr., age 8.

TO PRIOR

BROWNING SOLOS - Ronald Kim Brownlng, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald J.
Browning, Laurel Cliff, made his first solo flight recently. Browning soloed foUowing 10
hours of instructions from John VanMeter at Point Pleasant Airport. Brownlng flies a lot
witll his father, who has a commercial ticket. A vocational graduate of Meigs High School
where he was an honor student, he works part-time at the Pomeroy Bowllng Lanes.
·
Browning, left, Is being congratulated by VanMeter.

Democrats to attempt
overriding 9 vetoes
·'

LAST

-

Heck's Reg. •2.77
Hardware

.

-·

---

BERKLEY COMBO•

'1799
Heck's Reg. •22.99

Sporting Goods

CAR CREEPER
Heck's
Reg. •8.99

•6··
Hardware Dept.

�•

I

I

f

'

.

lG_ ~The DaUy Sentinel, Mt_cl_dl~:Pomei'(Jy, 0., Wednesda~. Julv 23. 1975

•
'.•

,.

-

OPaiU.Y

OPRDAILY

10 to 9

10 to 9

SUNDAY JULY 27 WHILE QUANTITI
ALL QUANTITIES
SUBJECT
--.TO PRIOR SALE_

UNUSUALBliTTRUE -Mrs. Mae Offett, Arnoldsburg, W.Va. (Calhoun County, neat
Charleston) a niece of 0. D. Parsons, Gallipolis, reported an unusual or rare event which
took plaee last year on her farm. Her Jersey cow first raised a veal calf in tlle spring of 1974,
then last fall finished up the two hogs shown above. Gallia County Extension Service personnel agreed the Jersey cow indeed did the unusuaL

'

'

'
"•

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,
.r
-F

"'•

'

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.
•
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By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Repor1er
COLUMBUS (UP!) Majority Democrats in the
Ohio House today were expeeled to try to override nine
of Gov. James A. Rhodes' 72
item vetoes in the $10.6 billion
general appropriations bill
for 1976-77. 5
The attempt was to be
made following a party .
caucus at the outset of a 1:30
p.m. floor session.
Meanwhile, a conference
corrunittee negotiating differences between the Senate and
House on a medical malpractice insurance reform bill
was to begin work at 10 a.m.
in hopes of getting quick
$greement, perhaps in time
for a vote today.
The conference committee
was hastily assembled
Tuesday when the House
refused, 54 to 40, to go along
with the Senate version of the
malpractice bill.
Action came as both chamhers opened a final drive
toward -a summer adjournment target date of Aug.
1. The pace ls expected to
become frantic during the
two weeks.
Breaks loom later this
week In logjams on school
finance, workmen's compensation, unemployment
compensation and capital
construction legislation.
More VetGes
Anticipation of the Impending showdown between
the Democratic-dominated
legislature
and
the
Republican governor on
'vetoes was sharpened Tieday
when the Senate overturned
Rhodes' veto of a major
Democratic energy bill--the
first override of a gubernatorial veto by either
chamber In 10 years.
House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, said
the House would consider
overriding the energy bill
veto later this week.
Override action requires a
three-fifths vote in each
chamber. l,)emocr$s have the
required 20 votes in the
Senate. They lack one vote of
the 60 needed in the House.
Republicans are expected
to sustain Rhodes • opposition
to the Democratic energy
bill. But they have hinted
they might go along with the
Democrats on two of the
overrides of the item vetoes
in the budget.
The items believed to have
Republican support are a $10
Jllillion appropriation ·to the
· University of Cincinnati and
a p oposal to. exempt from
tulllon and fees any out-ofstate student living within 30
miles of tlle campus · of a
state-supported college or
university.
Secret ldormation
Meanwhile, the Senate
Tuesday passed and sent to
the House on a bipartisan 2110 vote Jec~tlon allowing th
Public UWittes CommissiOn
r1. Obio to refuse to make
publlc ' any information
furnllbed by uttUties In ratemaking cases.
11te bill, sponsored by Sen .
Robert • T. Secrest, D-

next'

prietary" and that disclosure
would work to its economic
disadvantage.
Sen. Donald J . Pease, DOberlln, an opponent of the
bill,' said the phrase
"otherwise confidential"
would create a loophole for
utilities to conceal information . He also objected
to thetiming of the protective
bill- --~~wllen we are being
asked by utility consumers to
pay particular attention to
the methods by which rates
are calculated."
Secrest parried the objections by saying the bill
would make information
available to the PUOO, "and
they're the ones that set the
rates. They could say 'you're

.,

\•

.

--·

ASK TOWED
Gary Paul Norris, 22, Rt. 2,
Racine, and Donna Marie
Cross, 22, .Rt. 2, Racine .

SAVE !1?.9_5_1 Buy

I ~I I.

--

/!;)'

-

. ..... to.Mr dMiw ....
tellgh Inch •to~tg tlie

G.l HAIR DRYER ,
Heck's
Reg. 119.96

MIDDLEPORT

1

.

79e

WORM
BEDDING

aae

Heck's Reg. '1.22
Sporting Goods

Set Of 8
CORN
HOLDERS

"•,,
~

-lb.

~.,

•'·

39
STEAK.......... ~.$}

FRENCH CITY BRAND
WEINERS ••••••••••••••2~ !~:t.. '
GOLDEN ISLE
HAMBURGER &amp; · a pks.
HOT DOG BUNS • • • • • •• •• .

~

'100

,.

f

·''j.
)·

•,.

Heck's Reg. 1.44

~

Your Thom MeAn S1ore
Middleport, Ohio

MEIGS HIGH STUDENTS

.,

Galvanized
BUCKET
$122
.Heck's Reg. 11.99
Hardware

Reg. '10.99

POLYESTER ·

POLYESTER

We're giving a FREE class ring 1o someone • enter

now!
,
.
.
·
Winner gets either a Boy's Siladium rir:'lg or:- an elegant
10k gold Girl's ring, both by John Roberts .

Crepe . ~ch

KNITS
60" Wide
$298

Yd.

. Reg.

$3.98

For DisheS or Fine Fabrics . ·

Your class ri·ng Is for a lifetime. The extra meaning to
you demands extra quality from us- you'll like what ·
you see at our display .

$298

Yd.

Heck's
Re9. •9.63

CORDLESS
LAMPS

PRINT$
.

.

TICKOS

Yd.3.98
'

'

16

McCall's, Kw1k -.Sew, S1mplic;i'J PaHerns .·
. SINGER SALES&amp;SER ICE
~
115 W. Se&lt;;ond
992 -2284
Pomeroy, Ohio

'·

'

ON

SALE

..

·.~

), *

·-' NOW
.

Galvanized Garbage

CAN

·-·

'

·Mirro

JUICER

"

Sports Dept.

Sporting Goods Dept.

sa••

effective

Heck's

SIMONIZ
CAR WAX

•266

-Hardware

Jewelry Dept•

CORN
WISK
BROOM

aae

Heck's Reg. 99•

Heck's Reg. '1

Hardware ·Dept.

Hardware .Dept.

..,..,-

4

-

. -_

--

-

-300

-

"3.69

Sporting Goods

$}88

Heck's Reg. '1 .99

:1

GOLF BALLS

LUG
WRENCH

.,22

Reg. •12.96

r . '

I

K-28
WILSON

PAINT
BRUSH

Heck's

•

'"

Heck's Reg. •18.88

Hardware Dept.

Proctor Silex

'
-~- L

88

-

Reserve Right To limit

'' . f

l igh t -

One tuner

BOX

Heck's
Reg.

~

'

•

'

Heck's Reg. •4.58

Heck's
Reg. 14.99
Hardware Dept.

'Oiursdav
thru saturday;, .•.
.

no p1.1rchase
necess11ry _. __ .enter now!
'
.
&gt;

lb ~

Trophy Tackle

' -1 2

3" Nylon

20 Gallon

'
.- r,1on.:Sat•:
.'!

•a••

Sporting Dept.

-

.. HERE.
...

: .'fJe '. Fa]iitic ·Shop···

3

•

KEROSENE
LANT·ERNS

Heck's Reg. •6.48

9 til7

., ' .

tron ~htor .

- ~ hl :

'466

Heck's
Reg. '6.48

'466

BRAND NEW SHIPMENT

60" POLYESTER

QO . All

FOR CAMPING

$711

77e

.

ITALPASTA CUT MACARONI •• !~.at·e ·

So Register now for the drawing: August 10, 1975 .

~OT

RALLY
CAR
WASH

CLEARFIELD AMERICAN CHEESE
INDIVIDUAL SLICES ••••••1~ .0: !~
SMOOTHIE BRAND . .
32 oz.
LIQUID DETERGENT•••••••••••

.,

COOK
KIT

20 Quart
Century Stew

4 Qt.
PRESSURE COOKER

.

.

ct:&gt;me\ (omplete, rcdy to

Housewares Dept.

Houseware

10 Quart

FIRESIDE COOKIEs •••••••••• ~~l. 39~

CLEARANCE!
Seled Group

wi th " Sound Off" loud ·
~pe eke r . v , ry p owe rfu l.

Reg. •2.99

••

Heck's

CLEARANCE!
Seled Gro11p

1.... ...___,.--:

~

GOLD BOND
·
, 119
PEANUT BUTTER ••••••••• :~-.~:
.

Win Your High _School Ring

Heck's Reg. '14.74

.,,

3/'1 00
FRESH PEA-CHES •• 4,b~ 100
FRESH CARROTS ••••• ~~ 19e

heritage house

Qt. •2.66

1

'

PROGRESS

Reg. •2.69

conh ol.

•

NOW IN .

Join Amer ico ' i • H iting
new h o bby - Trea1 ule
f in di ng , Works lhr o ugh.
dirl, w nd, wood, .water ,
o nd even •o t k. witn no lon
o l po ~r . Detecfl o _penny
to 5 inche~ . Detec:ts. sharply

l '

GROUND BEEF

JULY
SUMMER SALE

I

Jewelry Dept.

Fresh-Lean

CUBE

1688

TREASURE
FINDER

Pint •2.44

HD-51

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

9 JAR RACK

\
.c;;::'-_=-· ___-_

949--5772

sanctioned and has an entry)
fee of $45. Drawing for the
event will be held Wednesday, August 27 at 7 p.m. at
Labold Field No . 1.
Team trophies will be
awarded to the first four
places witb
individual
trophies to the winners and
nmners up , to the most
valuable player and to the
player hitting the most
homerUns. For more in~
formation contact Jim Rhea,
2532 Argonne Rd., Portsnrouth, or phone 614-3538790 .

CANNING
JARS

Home Canning

WAID CROSS SONS
Pearl St.
STORE Racine, Ohio

Specials

work to -their economic

· To
P,event · · public ·
• ._... of 1Df~2cl'h
ad" d to 1118 · PU2!, a
ulflllr ..W haw to 111....w 1t
11 "a &amp;ndl IICftt or otherwin confidential or pro-

The Meigs County Amateur
Football team, the Meigs
County
Warriors,
are
preparing for the start of
their first season with
practice to begin in a few
days. Equipment is due to be
delivered soon . For the first
season the team has seven
games scheduled with the
first against the West
Virginia State Prison team at
Moundsville, W. Va . on October 5 at I p.m .
The team is open to all
athletes, 18 years or older
who still desire to play Iackie
football.
Athletes interested in
joining the team should fill
out a paper giving their
name, address, age, phone
number, height, weight, and
positions desired to play and
NAME RESTORED
mail it to C. D. Mcintyre, Rt.
Nancy Jo Clatworthy;-trr-1. Box 8, Racine, Ohio 4577L
being granted a divorce from Everyone who wishes to play
James
Clatworthy
as must sign up in advance so
previously re))Qrted, also had eqwpment can be ready.
her maiden name, Nancy Jo
Mayer, restored .

. CLEANING T~ You

Receipts, expenditures and
balance respectively in all
active funds were : $63,675.98,
$56,984.90, $134,191.67.
In the inactive funds,
receipts, expenditures and
balance respectively were:
bond retirement, $1,719.31,
$28,908.42, $26,089 .83; '!I!Wer
bond and improvement, no
receipts, no expenditures,
$4,884 .26; fire house, no
receipts , no expenditures,
$2,477.40.
Receipts, expenditures and
balance respectively in all
funds were: $65,395 .29,
$85,893.32, $167,643.16.

July
FABRIC

the PUOO witbout feat It will
be IJII!de jlablk: lf. it could

··.-.

$2,920.65 , $555 .40 ; fire
department, $27,573 .10,
$7,050 . 35,
$26,262 . 55;
cemetery, $782 , $1,503 .64 ,
($234.64 ); street, $11,224.11 ,
$4,949.66, $4,883 .19; state
highway, $504.65, no expenditures, $4,367.17; water
operating, $10,661.64 ,
$10,033.71, $957.58; guaranty
meter, $250, $125, $5,648.60;
parking meter, $1,240, $5,000,
$8,822.55; utility, $1,209.88,
$1,185.64, $23 , 271.39 .

Labor Day
Pads, gear tourney

and Thursday for the Apolo- into orbit r'!nging from 132 to
Soyuz international 131 miles.
spaceflight (all times EDT
rhursday, July 24
and subject to change):
12:20 a .m. - Astronauts
roday, July 23
begin 11-bour sleep period.
12:20 a.m. - Astronauts
8:20 a.m. -- Astronauts
begin 7-hour sleep period.
awaken.
7:20 a.m. - Astronauts
4:38 p.m. - APQllO maln
awaken.
engine is fired for 7 seconds to
8:23 a.m. - Astronauts begin descent.
4:45p.m.- APQllo service
hold 42-rninute ln-flight news
module ls jettisoned from
conference. (TV).
12:40 p.m. - Astronauts conunand module.
·
close down orbital module.
4:58p.m. - Apollo enters
3:41 p.m. - Docking upper fringes of atmosphere.
Main
module is jettisoned from
5:13 p.m.
Apollo.
parachutes de'ploy.
5:18 p.m. - ApoUo para4:16 p.m. - Apollo uses
main engine to maneuver into chutes into Pacific Ocean, 345
145-by-131-mile higli orbit, mlles west of Honolulu.
moving away from docking

Camlridge, Ill designed to
encourage utiJiUes to furnish
fuU ftDanclal infOI'III!IIion -to

~- ·

B.a lances in all funds
totaled $167,643.16 as of June
31, according to a financial
report submitted to Pomeroy
Council Monday night by
Jane Walton, clerk.
In the active funds,
receipts, expenditures and
balance respectively were :
general, $5,249.81, $7 ,876.18,
$3,777 .22; federal revenue
sharing, no receipts, no expenditllres, $28,598.80; water
well improvement, no
receipts, $16,340.07,
$27,281.86 ; sewer , $4,980.79,

reported announced
The fifth annual Benny's
Labor Day Softball TourSpace events schedule
. SOOn · nament
will be held In Portsmouth on August 30-31. The
HOUSTON
(UPI)
module.
commg
slo pitch tourney is A.S.A.
Timetable of events today
8:43p.m. - Apollo switches

Reg . $3.98

. RIGIPJJt l'ffiSUPRIOffl'
WHh REGULAR $11.11

Balances shown in all funds

crazy' to the utilities and
order the information made
public if It isn't dsmaging ,"
he said .
In other legislative actvity
Tuesday :
- The House passed 91 to 2
and sent to the Senate a bill
ql&amp;king Ohio a party to an
Interstate Mining Compact
• concerned with reclamation
and qrotection of natural
resources and an economic
and productive mining lndustry.
- Tl\e Senate Uiilli'illiiliusly
adopted -House-passed
legislation strengthening the
regulatory powers othe state
Division of Banks.
Both chambers were to
reconvene at I :30p.m. today.

SON BORN
Mr . ;md Mrs. Vincent
Knight •.~ sr ., Pomeroy, announce .the birth of their
second son, Christopher
Ladd, July 18, at Holzer
Medical Center. The infalt
weighed
nine
pounds .
Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs:-A. R. Knight,
Pomeroy, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. 0. W. Neal, Point
Pleasant. The couple-s oldest
son -is Vincent, Jr., age 8.

TO PRIOR

BROWNING SOLOS - Ronald Kim Brownlng, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald J.
Browning, Laurel Cliff, made his first solo flight recently. Browning soloed foUowing 10
hours of instructions from John VanMeter at Point Pleasant Airport. Brownlng flies a lot
witll his father, who has a commercial ticket. A vocational graduate of Meigs High School
where he was an honor student, he works part-time at the Pomeroy Bowllng Lanes.
·
Browning, left, Is being congratulated by VanMeter.

Democrats to attempt
overriding 9 vetoes
·'

LAST

-

Heck's Reg. •2.77
Hardware

.

-·

---

BERKLEY COMBO•

'1799
Heck's Reg. •22.99

Sporting Goods

CAR CREEPER
Heck's
Reg. •8.99

•6··
Hardware Dept.

�'t

\I
12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Wt·dncsdny. July

~3.

13 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, July 23, '1975

!975

•

By Dan Lufkin
The best Bice nte nnia l gift this
country ra·n give itself is a rediscovery ,

--·
-·-·-

lr tl'l l J, Ut ~I S nalton&lt;.tl policy. Ow s lates
art- U/H..'C Cl~ ain in a pos i tJmi to be
·· J:J!&gt;I!I'&lt;I III I'ies qf dcmocrc:H:y,'' as
.l it:-;l in.; Br;_111dcis described them. In
t'Pv ir ., rl lllcnlal pr utcc l io n , resourcC'
tli&lt;Uia~t·ntcnt , welfare pulicy, ene rgy
cun se r vct lil•n . reven u e ~e u erat i un,
puhlic sa fety , health a nd educali 1JfJUI
:-;c rviC'cs, the sta tes are coming up with
l'l't_'~dlvr leg is la tion based on their
lUI iq ue prub)C IIlS ~tnd indiVidual fleeds.

'.

of t he UH'cming and valuL' nf its JO

_,_.

states. I am not referr ing''' their scen ic
wonders or hist oric m onuments but to.

""'""''

the unique

and rssentia l

"tmtrib ulion
they make tu 11ur feclerod ::.~ · s t cn1 of

govern ment.
Over the pas t ..tO years. thr su nir:tl
of the stntt•s has been ve ry rn uch 111
doubt. As tJ lU" natiqn ha:-i brP r l phmgt•d
int o the tr:u una llf s w.·cessi n • wars and

bW"eaucrae1es on the

social

tnstorian.

Putomac . On1.·

watchiog

AmP ri ca

editorial opinion
trying to rid itself of the shack l£•s of ttH•
Great Depress inn said. ·· The Ameri ca n
state is fin ished. I du not pred!(: t
the states \.,.·ill go but affirm tll&lt;-:~t

-·

lll~d
the~·

hav e gon e."

-

For a gene ra twn. we have acted as
if we be lie ved th is ob ituary " Tht•
slates ar e dead. Long live Wa sh in g ton.
D. C." A s m'Cesston uf "s lrong"

· presidents. eaeh trying to embody the
variety and comp le xity uf the nalion a .c;
a whole, has tr ied to re loca te the levers
of power in tile exec utive branc h uf
gove rnm ent. P ur short perwds of time,
the ir' ab ili ty to summon Am e rica's vast
re sources to meet nati ona l an d in ternational cri ses see m ed to work . I3ig
governme nt cured the Depres:-;ion and
won World War II. II ended 2QO yea'rs ul
ra cial discrimi nation a nd declared war
on poverty. At least that was its version

,.

--·
--·-

of even ts. From !he White House. the
message came loud and clea r : " Don 'I
try to solve yo ur own prob lem s. The

executive br anch alone sees the big
picture . II alone can pr ovide the big
answers ''

'·
Over the last decade, especiall y,
policy has been es ta bl is hed and
legis lation designed in the executive
branch a s never before in ow· history .

And, if the Congress has had the
temerity to pass bills the White House
didn't like , funds were sim ply im·
pounded and programs voted by the

•

--•

·•.

" representatives of the people " were

-

starved to death .
In recent months, Congress has
tried to re-establisb its eq uali ty if not its

:

preemine nce as a keystone of our

':

federal system. While it has enjoyed

-

some successes, especially in setting

•

limits on presidential power to make
commitments abroa d - it has been too
weak and divided to provide leadership

,(

r

.r

on domestic issues suc h as energy and

'

economic policy .
Meanwhile , as attention has bee n

focused on the struggies between
Congress and the White House, stron g
political leadership has been emerging
in the states as a new breed of governors in many , if not all, of America's 50
state houses is providing a kind of tough
decisiveness that hard times demand .

•

••

••

,

:

••
••

DETROIT !UP!) - The

:

slow recover_y from

:
:
:
•
••
•,.,
•
:
:
:

•

'

the

auto industry 's worst sales
slwnp in three decades
perked up in mid-July.
Deliveries matched - and
possibly surpassed - last
year's levels , according to
industry analysts.
Even a Slight improvement·
over results of last July 11-20
would mark the first time
since the opening period of

-

•

..•

..

"•

· ch~ges

('onnt;ct inJt nw ereate a
Ht•snur ce Hecovery Au th ority to lumdl e
Jls llV !Uil l&lt;tin s of s&lt;:lid waste un a
st ;Jie wide hasis . /\ Florida ca n pass a
1\

~WJd

l'('~tstHI

fu r thi s
emergen cy of the ste~te as the cen ter of
dl'(:ision -IJJakjng in tlmttt's li c affairs
The Wl111i..• House nwy set til e bi g
pit' I LUT. bul nw~t Allleri cc.an s don't
u&lt;.Tup y til a t lctr ge frame . They mu~t
lt\' l ' !Itt_' if' lives fr om day to dt l)'. fpcding
their ftunil ies, payi ng the rent or the
m or lg &lt;~ gc, battling the tretr fil'. holding
()r fin d ing jobs, concerned for tilt_' daily
and n igh tl y - lwallh, and , safe ty uf
Tllt ·n·

is

.,elf. fami ly a nd ne ighbo rhood.

bill of rights for the retarded and the
ha ndi ca pped within its borders. 1\ New
Hamps hi re can pi oneer a sl&lt;:tte lutlery
lo help s upport pub lic ed ucation. An
Oregun can ban aerosol sp r ays and
Jumre llU'n bo tll es. A New York can
c reate a " bi g MAC" tu he lp bail ou t a
nt•cu· bankrupl New Yor k City.

By CLAY F. RJCHARDS

WASHINGTON fUPIJ Sen.. Jennings fu\ndolph, D·
W. Va .. said Tuesday the
Chessie System has notified
him of plans to drop a bandon·
ment of the Petersburg-to-

'V ASHINGTON (UP! ) vice President Nelson A.
Rockefeller has warned
Republica ns that the con;
servative challenge to
President Ford could cost the
party the White House in 1976.
Rockefeller, who has previ·
ously sidestepped any com ·
ments about party fights in
the upcoming election, said
Republi ca ns should " not
allow the dust to get in our
eyes" at the GOP convention
to a point where the election
is forgotten.

Vincent

Benet ,

hrall h . po li ce pr otect ion, law e n·
'for cemen l . welfare, park s and

cxperime n tin~,

recreat iun and poll ution control. The

defi niti ons and objectives

only

unique revolution .

in

which

the

fede ral

st ill

fin din g new

lor ow·

as a democ r atic society unless·

\\'C

vital r esour ces are in increasin gly

to the peop le - through th eir sta te and

short suppl y, the people are dema nding
accountability as never before. They
are tired ,,f bw·eaucratic double ta lk ,
congress iona l vacc ila ting and the Big
Brother altitude of the Executive

local represent.atives - the power to
m a ke i ndependent l oc al decisions

wil hin the broad framewor k of national
policy. II a lso mean s providing funds in
signifi can t am ounts to pe rmi t loca l
gove rnm e nt to fWlcti on crea tively and
in the bes t inte rest of those it serves -

sible for the ir actions . The federal
bw·ea ucracy has 100.000 hiding places.

to deal with people as ne ighbor s - not
as subjects.
No place to hide. Tha t is the way
the people want the ir govern ment to

At t he sta te an d loca l leve l there a re

work at eve ry level. U we are to s urvive

none. No place to hid. And that's why.
with their cam pai gn rhetoric be~ind

as a dece nt and honorable nat ion - if
we are to fulfill the promises that were
made a t our birth - that is the kind of

me n and women ca n be held res p on-

them -

governor s like Dukakis,

Brown , Walker, Longley, Evans,
Milliken. Bond and Carey are coming
on s ~· on g. bitin g bullets ha rd, and
wmning respect, if not popularity, lor
their policies.
We've come a long way s in ce the
days when governors we re tools or

special interests and state legis latures
were the "bawdy houses" of politics .
Wi th reve nue sharing at least being

KEY WEST, F1a. (UP!) -It may take several weeks
to clean up an on slick spread aloog a :15-mUe stretch of
Florida Keys, the worst splU on the state's Atlantic Coast
in recent years. Residents said "the only thlog we can do
Is moan and groan about it."
"A lot depends on how much we have to go Into, the
mangroves," said Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. WUllam
Monson, an oil-splU expert flown In from Mississippi to
assist in the clean-up. "There may be a Umlt to bow much
we can try to clean up the mangroves without doing them
more harm In the process."
Coast Guard Investigators say they belleve the splU
occurred Friday night In the Florida Straits and was
caused by a tanker Intentionally cleaning up to 126,000 .
gallons of on from Its tanks. ·They were checldng a tip by
an Air Force pilot who reported seeing a tanker trailing a
stream of on south of Key Largo. The-Y said they hoped to
identify the guilty ship by matching samples of Its on with
samples taken from the splU.

ur

with J ohn Hani£in, president
an d c hief exec utive offi cer or

Tax receipts
up a little
Meigs County for June were
up s li ghtly over June , 1974,
but sales tax receipts from
m otor vehicle sales dropped
lor the month accord ing to
the repor t of Mrs . Fertrude
W. Donahey, state treasurer _
Retail sa les ta x receipts for
June, 1975, amounted to
$65,779 .18 compared to
$76.547.29 lor June, 1974, an
increase of $231.89. Vehicle
sales tax reports lor June,
1975. tota le d $39,258.78
compared to r ece ipt s of
$40,391.74 lor June , 1974, a
decrease of $1, 132.96.

~

•

·';

Sales report s were ex-

pected from the lour U. S.
companies today.
The sales level would be the
best for any mid-month
period since last July.
But even with the op.
timistic repor.t, mid-July
deliveries were the lowest for
the period since 1970 and 26

infant

Pleasant ;

Dan Lufkin was Connecticut 's first
Commissioner of Environmental

STUDS

Protection. He is c hairman of Donald·

son. Lufkin &amp; Jenrette, a Now York
investm ent banking firm, and the
author of the recently published book
"Many Sove reign States" (David
McKay!.

the las t of the 1973s .
One executive said he did
not expec t the rush to beat
hikes would be as great as
last August, when sales were
at their highe st level since the
curren t slump began .
Analysts es timated sales of
at least 205,000 cars in this
year's July 11-20 pe riod
compared with 231,070 last

and .injuring s cores more .

each

year.

cont inue d

(

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
773-55S4

Even more important than

FOLGER'S

•
•
••

".,
'
•
•

- .
..

"•
•
•
•
••
•

'

.
'
'
'

COFFEE
All

.
.

. :

.

.. USDA

CHOICE
·
.•

'

:'

•

'

.

• :II :
•• I •
•
•• I :
•
• III :•
••
.

69~ lb.

pkg.

5th and PEARL STS., RAClftE
"The Store With A Heart
You. WE L1 KE'~

Tide's ln ...Dirt's Out

BACON

MEATS

TIDE .

'

lb.1.59

giant

FRENCH CITY

size

Sliced Beef

WIENERS
20 ct. pkg. 1.39

.

1.99

LIVER
lb.

39~

Right Reserved to L1m1t l,!uantities
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food ~tamps

1.19

l'nces t.necuve .Ju~ 23-30

Age
MACARONI .. ..l.~~:.b.a~••••~ .
China

'·

Golden·

CARROTS
· c.

'I

I

l-Ib.

Calif. Sunkist

pkg.

ORANG.ES

doL

99¢

tt coordinator

Appointment of Mrs .
Audrey Clary of Waverly as
By LeROY POPE
t Travel Tour Coordinator for UPI Business Writer.
~ the Automobile Club of
NEW YORK (UP!) -The
~ · Southern Ohio has been electric motorcyle and small
•• annoup·c ed· · by Executive electric cars - particularly
•
f Vice-President, John Irwm. little gasoline vehicles like
••
,.. Mrs. Clary will have the Volkswagen converted to
~ responsibilities In both the
electric power - soon may
i World Wide and Motorcoach find a fair market in the
Travel Departments. She will United States.
1 be bas'iid in the AAA's main
The electric golf cart and
; office, in Portsmouth. Her small electric trucks made by
r primaty responsibility will be
to as&amp;'ui'e that all travel
customers are pleased with Westinghouse and other
t AAA service.
companies already ·are apr
" With offices in Ports- pearing in noticeable num; mouth; Ironton, Gallipolis, hers around the country.
Corbin-Gentry, Inc., of So·
; Jackson, Athens, and Logan,
: · handllng airline, Amtrak and mersville, Conn., and Dallas,
• motorcoach travel and tours has been. experimenting with
; we feel the need to have a the electric motorcycle since
t P.rson with Mrs. Clary's
1973 and recently brought out
experience to coordinate aU a kit to convert the
of our travel activities,". Volkswagen from gasoline to
, Irwin said.
electric power for folks who
1 The AAA Travel Agency is want to use the little beetle
open to the public as. well as only for driving to and from
i AAA members.
the station or for local
She was a hostess for shopping .
Corbin-Gentry is a maker
Welcome Wagon, Inc., for 12
years and for 5 years worked .. of components and acin the advertising depart- cessories
for
gasoline
ment of the Waverly News powered motor cyles . The
Watchman. She has been electric vehicle project is a
actlve.in the Altrusa Club of new enterprise. Its present
Chillicothe, the Waverly motorcycles and Volkswagen
Garden ' Club, Eastern Star conversion kits employ ordiand Rainbow Lodges.
nary lea~-acid batteries
'

f

•

!

r
1

Silas Deane, one or Connecticut's representatives in the
Continental Congress, writes from Philadelphia to his wife
about Connecticut's hrael Putnam, who recently has been
designated one of the Continental Army's four major
generals: " ... In the appointment of General Putnam ,
[Congress] acted on principles as much superior to those
which actuate the dissatisfied as Heaven is superior to
earth. Putnam's merit [.rings] through this continent; his
fame stlll Increasl!S - and every day justifies the un·
animous applause of the continent. Let it be remembered
he had every vote of the Congress: and his health has been
the second or third [toasted] at almost ail our tables in this
·
city .... "

Monday Thru tnda¥ '
9:00 to 7:00
.Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

·

HI-C DRINKS••••••• ~.~~.~~ •• A9e
•

8

16 oz.
bois.

givmg a range of 35 to 45
miles and a top speed of about
30 miles an hour.
But spokesman AI Simmons said Corbin-Gentry
hopes by 1977 to have a
production model on the
market of a m otorcycle
powered by a silve r-zin c
battery made by Yardney
Electric Co ., Pawcatuck,
Conn. This bike would have a
range of 150 miles and speed~
of 50 miles an hour or better.
Yardney is the company that
attracted a lot of attention a
few years ago by converting
several small cars to electric
motors and silver-zinc batteries and producing some
impressive
performance
&lt;
figures .
The silver-zinc battery is
used primarily in aircraft
and would have to be rented
instead of purchased by users
of motorcycles or small cars.
Its purchase price would be
prohil)itive. aut since the
large silver content of the
battery is fully recoverable at
the end of its useful life ,
marketing on a rental basis is
quite feasible, Simmons said.
The silver-zinc battery not
only gives an electric vehicle
more range and speed but it
overcomes another obstacle .
Electric vehicles fueled by
lead-a cid batteries are
notoriously poor hill climbers. In
the current
VolksWagen conversion kit,
Simmons said CorbinGentry

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Susanna Arnold, Susanna
Fitzgerald, Paul D. Fitzgerald to Albert S. Harmon,
April L. Harmon, Parcets,
Salisbury, Enter!irise .
Edna Bradford Deem, G.
A. Deem aka George A.
Deem to Louiseii . Counts, I
acre, Racine.

FOAM PLATES••••••~~.c!~~'!-.. A9e
Assorted

Cans

Cenri&amp;llt UJ5-TIIt l .r tt:u Ct. nun 111~ Pricu
lflrt Julr . 2S 11 lalli,tlis a_, "•~my
r111r nerts. We rtstr'l t Uit tilllt 11 Ji•it
IUttiliU. NONE SOLD TO DUURS.

1..,

S. Govt. Gt aded Choice
P1 apie's Cholce,Boneleu Whole
10 to 12-Lb. Avg.
-

Lb.$

.R'o.s MackHlie
&amp; Jerr Mac~etl)I/C1 1975. United FeatureSyndicalei.
._-By
____
..;.,______________
,u

Triangle
Development
Corp. to Interstate Credit
Corp. )00 A. Lot 383, .3 Acre,
Salisbury .
Interstate Credit Corp. to
Colonial Financial Service,
100 A. Lot 383, Salisbury.
Beulah M. Crabtree to
Charles E . Cadle, Faye M.
A thought for the day :
Cadle,
2.4048
acres,
Gen.
William
Union
Colwnbia.
Tecumseh Sherman said,
Russ~ll Priddy, Alice
" War is cruel and you cannot
Priddy
to
Howard
Long,
rerine
it. "
J ennie Long, 1.6552 acres,

oung Turke

39

Lb.
Jumbo 27 Slu

Cantaloupes

For$
Kroger
Fnsh Grade A

•

Medium Eggs

Kroger

Chunk Tuna

2

Dol.

gets around that difficulty by
retaining the VW's clutch and
transmission gears although,
traditionally,
electric
vehicles have used direct
drive.
But Corbin-Gentry recently
demonstrated
the
hill
climbing abilities of an
electric motorcycle with
silver-zinc battery at the Mt.
Washington Alternative
Vehicle Regatta over a
course with an average 12 per
cent grade .
A little over a year ago.
Corbin-Gentry and Yardney
teamed up to build a special
electric motorcycle that set a
speed record of 161.367 mph
at the Bonneville, Utah, salt
flats.
Sinunons said he has not
heard of any other company
marketing full-sized electric
motorcycles in the United
States but several electric
minibikes fueled by ordinary
lead-acid automobile batteries are being sold in
various parts of Ute country.
" The higher . the · price of
gasoline goes, the more interest these little vehicles will
attract," he said.
But unless some scientist
comes up with a radical and
cheap new battery that will
greatly improve their range,
they will remain restricted to
use for local shopping and
driving to and from the
sta tion .
Rutland .
Harold E . Gilmore, Lucille
R. Gilmore ·to Charles D .
Hatfield, Kaaron Hatfield,
Lots 339 Pt., 340, 341, Middleport.
Tommy B . Simmons,
Shirley J . Simmons to
Tommy B. Sinunons, Shirley
J. Simmons, 2.44 Acres,
Rutland.
Dillon H. Taylor, MarUta
Taylor,
Isaac
Taylor ,
Virginia Taylor, David C.
Taylor, Dillon H. Taylor,
gdn ., Alban L . Taylor, Ruth
E . Taylor, Mary Edith
Taylor, Clifford Taylor,
Delbert Taylor, William
Taylor, Carolyn Taylor ,
Delmer Grady, Zelma Grady,
Stanley Watson , Evelyn
Watson, Edward . James
Taylor to Larry Hofbnan,
Danette Hoffffian, 19 acres,
Lebanon.

U.S.D.A. lnspacted,
Frozen 8 to 14-Lb. Avg.

irloin Tip Roa

popularity as gasoline costs rise

.-

ee11o Bag eut

•..... $

Electrj.c cycles, mini -cars gaining

July ~o. 1775:

OHIO VAllEY SLICED

foenel(fity

-. l ..
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c
:
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•
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. chunk

~

.. Audrey Oary
~ appointed. as

A Chronicle of America

OXYDOL

Applesauce·

trJ:t

We Hold These Truths ...

KING SIZE

BOLOGNA

•

..
' '
'

99~

TASTEE BRAND

•

I

lb.

Grinds
.

• ' "
••• I' •
•
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MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W. VA..

im-

provement upward month by
month means we 're pulling
out, " said one c~ mpany
analyst.

••
••

,.

business today

No.2 Grad•

the comparison with last
year, sa id one ana lyst, is the
fact t hat mid -July sales
topped mid-June levels by
a!)o ut 8 per cent, countering a
normal 10 per cent month-tomonth drop.
~' That

•,
,
..
,,

country would have equally liberal passport and visa
In two weeks the governments of 35 colll'\tries of Europe regulations ). The only·.people who seem to get a cut-and-dried
and North Mnertca expect to sign in Helsinki a declaration promise in aU this are journalists: regular correspondents can
that accepts .l,lle admissibility of the acquisition of territory by have multiple-&lt;&gt;ntry vislasfor the countries they cover. so th•t
force .
they can count on being able to move in and out of them
:rtmes change. Is;ael is slowly being asked to disgorge the reasonably freely.
territory tt acqwred lD 1967, whereas this conference will put
Those are the only sizeable slivers chipped off Br"!'hnev 's
another seal of acceptance on the swallowing by Russia of lwnp of granite : tbe rest of the non-communist side 's suc114,000 squar~ miles of one-time Poland, Germany, Finland, cesses in Geneva consisted of preventing the RuSsians from
Czecboslovalua and Rumania after their occupation by the adding even more ifs and buts to the text. What the nonSoviet anny in ~944 and 1945; not to mention Ute huge slice of communists chiefly hoped to get out of this conference, once
Germany acqutred by Poland by .the same method.
•
they had allowed themselves to be maneuvered into it, was a
If you are strong enough - as Russia is, and North Viet- piece of paper which a few of the smaller communist governnam will be when it absorbs South Vietnam into a single state ments of Eastern Europe could wave under the Russians'
-you are exempt from principles smaller powers are asked to noses if they wanted to run their countries a bit more libera lly
honor. Tbe outcome of the European security conference in than Brezhnev nms his.
The piece of paper is there. but much of the ink on it is
Geneva, to be ratified by a sununit in Helsinki probably at the
end of the month, is what Ute Chinese call an unequal treaty . nearly invisible; and anyway it has not become plain that
The main argument against ever agreeing to hold this Edward'Gierek in Poland and Janos Kadar in Hungary are not
conference was that Russia would use it to confirm the going to risk any liberalization that could remotely challenge
changed frontiers of 19-lf&gt;, and indirectly to get the West's tacit their own hold on power. There has also been non-progress on
agreement that everything east of the Elbe is to be regarded as two other fronts of Ute wider detente battlefield :
permanently Communist.
- The negotiations in Vienna about cutting the size of the
On both those counts, Leonid Brezhnev must be pretty Nato and Warsaw pact annies in Europe. which the Russians
pleased. with the past two years' work at Geneva . But the agreed to as their side of Ute deal which gave them the Genevaconference has not gone quite the way the Soviet optimists, Helsinki conference, have got nowhere . The Russians have sat
and Western pessimists, expected. The Russians, having tight on a proposal which would perpetuate the Warsaw pact's
exposed themselves to an interrogation by Europe's non· advantage in central and northern Europe - :1-1 in tanks , :1-2 in
communists, have been obliged to yield a few concessions men, 2-1 in aircraft - and the hope of using the Geneva talks as
-which to some extent dilute their main achievement :
a lever to get them to be more forthcoming in Vienna has now
I. The post-1945 frontiers of Europe cannot be changed by vanished.
.- The past three years have seen a brisk campaign by
force, but the conference has insisted that it should remain
possible for them to be changed by agreement. That may Russia to give itself even more political and economic insound academic, but it is a major improvement on the treaty fluen ce over the smaller East European countries . One result
the West Germans signed with Russia in 1970, which by using of, this is that, by most of the tests of what constitutes, " relaxed
the vern 'antasten' allowed it to be said that the frontiers were communism,.,.even Poland and Hungary n·ow have rather less
not only unchangeable by force but "untouchable."
freedom of action than they did in 1972.
2. The Russians have agreed to give three weeks' notice of
Brezhnev wanted the coming Helsinki meeting as the first
military maneuvers - but not other movements of troops step in his planned ladder of grand occasions which will take .
which they do not count as maneuvers - when these involve him, he hopes, to the Soviet Communist party 's acclamation of
more than 25,000 men within 156 miles of their borders. The his 10 years as Russia's leader next February . He has got his
snag is that, like everything else in the Geneva agreement, this first step, with very few loose nails. Which could be a reason
carries no legal obligation ; the Russians have made it clear for Western skeptics to change their mind about the most
that they will give that notice only if they choose to. But it is the important piece of unfinished business left over from Geneva
one tiny gain for Europe's physical security the "security" -the question of whether tbiii"ffrst aU-European conference
conference has produced.
about Europe's affairs should be followed up with more
3. In the vaguest wording (the signers agree to "do their meetings later on . Several Western governments have resisted
best" to take "positive action," and so on ) the Communist the idea of such follow-up meetings, because they did not want
goverrunents say they may be willing to allow some families to give Russia an opportunity to poke embarrassing fingers
divided by Andrei Gromyko's " visible boundary between the into the West's internal problems .
But look at it the other way round. The most important
two social worlds" to meet each other again; to let some more
of their citizens marry Westerners; and to ease some of the thing after Geneva and Helsinki will· be to find out whether
restrictions on their subjects' freedom to travel to the West Europe's Communist governments are actually doing
(th ough the non-communist side missed its chance to
to anything about the wooly undertakings they have agreed to
insist on fixing a year - 1980' - by which every European sign. So why not get them around a table again, and ask them ?

f

••

•
•
•

Point

Walter

TRAINS CRASH
HAMBURG, West Germany 1UPI 1 - A passenger •
train jammed with rush-hour
commuters collided head-on
with a fr eight tra in Tuesday,
killing nearly a dozen persons

"'
'
•'

•'
•
•

so n ,

Mrs.

,,.

"Now 18

per cent are not going to elect
a president.
' 'The party has a responsibility to nominate a
president with the capabilty
to inspire the people of
America,and I think we want
to focus on both the convention and the election and
not let the dust get in our eyes
fo a point where we only see
the convention and do not go
on to the election .
"Any fight within the party
is not going to help the party
win national support in next
year's election," Rockefeller
said.
He obviously referred to he
only such fight on the
horizon involving fonner
California Gov. Ronald
Reagan. Though Reagan has
not yet made up his mind
whether to challenge Ford, a
campaign committee has
been established in his name,
and his supporters are urging
him to enter all the
Republican
presidential
primaries next year against
Ford.

2"x4"x8·'

'•
•

Schoonover, Gallipolis;
Harry Hudnall, Leon; Brooks
Glover, Gallipolis Ferry;
Bryant Duncan, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Walter Donohue, Point
Pleasant.
BIRTH - July 23, Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Stanley, a son,
Point Pleasant.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Charlie
Markin s, Ga llipoli s ; Mrs.
Ferrell
Kiser ,
Point
Pleasan t ; Charles Long and
Chad Sines, Gallipolis;
Mrs . J ose ph Jones , .Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . David Whitt
and

of a series of semipolltical
a ppearances around the
country on behalf of Ford.
Later, aboard Air Force
Two on the trip back to
Washington, Rockefeller said
he plans to step up his speech
making schedule and make
frequent appearances around
the country after his August
va cation in Seal Harbor,
Maine .
"The Republican party has
18 per cent of the voters In
this country ... and a minority
in the party who identify
themselves
as
conservatives,"he said.

government the peop le must be given.

per cent below the re cord
level of July 11-20 two years
ag o. before the Arab oil
embargo sent sales skidding.
Analysts credi ted some of
the sales upswin g to " buy·
ahead" by consumers trying
to beat anticipated price
hikes on 1976 models - ex·
pected to average $300 a car
above current models. The
1975 models are priced an
average of $1,000 more than_

Se pt ember that domestic
a uto sales have topped 1973
sales. ·

The vice president said that
his statement was not aimed
at securing his position on the
1976 ticket, but helping-Ford
gain
the
nomination
· unanimously . He said be was
· "relaxed and totally un concerned" about his own
position on the ticket and that
it was up to Ford to pick a
rwming mate after he is
nominated.
His comments, at a news
conference in Cincinnati
following a speech at the
Midwestern Governors'
Conference, marked the first

Retail sales tax receipts in

We will not enter our th ird cen tw·y
recogn ize the fundam e nta l basis or our
federa l system. Thi s means , returning

precisely who is making !he decis ion s
that affect their daily lives so that these

apphcalion .
''Thi s action co nstitutes a
r ecogn ition or th e poten tial
fo r develop ment in our rural
a reas an d sma lle r towns a nd
a rea lization of the importance
having viable rail

said,

As the economy has slumped a nd

branch. They wa nt mos t of a ll tu know

1he

lo the future ra ther than to concen tr ate
on the past . As our grea t native poet,

Our glory as a nation is tha t alter
200 yea rs. we are still unfinished, still

a r eas

s hire. Hardy and Grant
counlies . How eve r , the B&amp;O's
pare nt firm , Chessie, .told
Handolph it has withdrawn

tinuati on of !he service.

"America is promises .''

dom inion really is d ecisive, accordi ng
to this poll , are national defe nse . soc ial
securit y and cancer research.

rail se rvice through Hamp-

Che ssie, and urged co n·

li ves:

transpo rtation,

&amp; Ohio
Railroad
las t
March
proposed aban d onment of

200 th year , it wou ld profit us all to look
Stephen

educat io n,

Wesl Virgi nia.
,The Baltimore

sys tems lor the movement of
good s and products." Ran·
dolph said.
The senator met June II

that im pact di rectly on their d aily

Kroger

)

.

cost GOP 76 victory

its mind

Th es.e and hWldreds more pi eces (Jf
loca l leg is la ti on are the cu tting edge nf
po litical vision and acco untabili ty. Not
all arc good . No t all will work . But the
s tales are tryi ng, an d if there is failure.
the people will kn ow immediate ly who
is re spons ible and why.
As we begi n the coun tdow n to our

On ly s tate and !Heal govern m e nt
cu·c c lvsC' e nuugh to lhc s 1 ·~ne tu culrninistcr these day-by-d ay need s \\o'ilh
a n y d egree tJf effec tive ness o r
tim eli ness. And, when th e crunch
C•JillC'S --- the American people kn ow
that the a ns wers are not go ing ln come
from e ith er the Congress or the Whit.e
Hou se In a recent Harris poll, the gr eat
m a jorit y rtf(irrned tha t th e sta te is the
m os t im portant factor in all services

Parley approves Soviet conquests
By NEA, Londoo Ecooomlllt News Service

Auto industry's recovery picks up during mid-July

••
••

.,•

Conservatives could

Green Sp ri ngs rail line in

depressions. po licy and pmw r hcn·p
s hifted fr om the st a te capitals tu lhl'

..'

Otessie

There is no place to ·hide

•-

a
For Your Shopping Convenience

----Wit~

Coupon
Limit One with Coupon &amp; $10 or More Purchase
Veoid oft~r Sol .. Julr 26, \97S Subiect lo applicable State &amp; local ·To ..

.

1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

I

�'t

\I
12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Wt·dncsdny. July

~3.

13 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, July 23, '1975

!975

•

By Dan Lufkin
The best Bice nte nnia l gift this
country ra·n give itself is a rediscovery ,

--·
-·-·-

lr tl'l l J, Ut ~I S nalton&lt;.tl policy. Ow s lates
art- U/H..'C Cl~ ain in a pos i tJmi to be
·· J:J!&gt;I!I'&lt;I III I'ies qf dcmocrc:H:y,'' as
.l it:-;l in.; Br;_111dcis described them. In
t'Pv ir ., rl lllcnlal pr utcc l io n , resourcC'
tli&lt;Uia~t·ntcnt , welfare pulicy, ene rgy
cun se r vct lil•n . reven u e ~e u erat i un,
puhlic sa fety , health a nd educali 1JfJUI
:-;c rviC'cs, the sta tes are coming up with
l'l't_'~dlvr leg is la tion based on their
lUI iq ue prub)C IIlS ~tnd indiVidual fleeds.

'.

of t he UH'cming and valuL' nf its JO

_,_.

states. I am not referr ing''' their scen ic
wonders or hist oric m onuments but to.

""'""''

the unique

and rssentia l

"tmtrib ulion
they make tu 11ur feclerod ::.~ · s t cn1 of

govern ment.
Over the pas t ..tO years. thr su nir:tl
of the stntt•s has been ve ry rn uch 111
doubt. As tJ lU" natiqn ha:-i brP r l phmgt•d
int o the tr:u una llf s w.·cessi n • wars and

bW"eaucrae1es on the

social

tnstorian.

Putomac . On1.·

watchiog

AmP ri ca

editorial opinion
trying to rid itself of the shack l£•s of ttH•
Great Depress inn said. ·· The Ameri ca n
state is fin ished. I du not pred!(: t
the states \.,.·ill go but affirm tll&lt;-:~t

-·

lll~d
the~·

hav e gon e."

-

For a gene ra twn. we have acted as
if we be lie ved th is ob ituary " Tht•
slates ar e dead. Long live Wa sh in g ton.
D. C." A s m'Cesston uf "s lrong"

· presidents. eaeh trying to embody the
variety and comp le xity uf the nalion a .c;
a whole, has tr ied to re loca te the levers
of power in tile exec utive branc h uf
gove rnm ent. P ur short perwds of time,
the ir' ab ili ty to summon Am e rica's vast
re sources to meet nati ona l an d in ternational cri ses see m ed to work . I3ig
governme nt cured the Depres:-;ion and
won World War II. II ended 2QO yea'rs ul
ra cial discrimi nation a nd declared war
on poverty. At least that was its version

,.

--·
--·-

of even ts. From !he White House. the
message came loud and clea r : " Don 'I
try to solve yo ur own prob lem s. The

executive br anch alone sees the big
picture . II alone can pr ovide the big
answers ''

'·
Over the last decade, especiall y,
policy has been es ta bl is hed and
legis lation designed in the executive
branch a s never before in ow· history .

And, if the Congress has had the
temerity to pass bills the White House
didn't like , funds were sim ply im·
pounded and programs voted by the

•

--•

·•.

" representatives of the people " were

-

starved to death .
In recent months, Congress has
tried to re-establisb its eq uali ty if not its

:

preemine nce as a keystone of our

':

federal system. While it has enjoyed

-

some successes, especially in setting

•

limits on presidential power to make
commitments abroa d - it has been too
weak and divided to provide leadership

,(

r

.r

on domestic issues suc h as energy and

'

economic policy .
Meanwhile , as attention has bee n

focused on the struggies between
Congress and the White House, stron g
political leadership has been emerging
in the states as a new breed of governors in many , if not all, of America's 50
state houses is providing a kind of tough
decisiveness that hard times demand .

•

••

••

,

:

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••

DETROIT !UP!) - The

:

slow recover_y from

:
:
:
•
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the

auto industry 's worst sales
slwnp in three decades
perked up in mid-July.
Deliveries matched - and
possibly surpassed - last
year's levels , according to
industry analysts.
Even a Slight improvement·
over results of last July 11-20
would mark the first time
since the opening period of

-

•

..•

..

"•

· ch~ges

('onnt;ct inJt nw ereate a
Ht•snur ce Hecovery Au th ority to lumdl e
Jls llV !Uil l&lt;tin s of s&lt;:lid waste un a
st ;Jie wide hasis . /\ Florida ca n pass a
1\

~WJd

l'('~tstHI

fu r thi s
emergen cy of the ste~te as the cen ter of
dl'(:ision -IJJakjng in tlmttt's li c affairs
The Wl111i..• House nwy set til e bi g
pit' I LUT. bul nw~t Allleri cc.an s don't
u&lt;.Tup y til a t lctr ge frame . They mu~t
lt\' l ' !Itt_' if' lives fr om day to dt l)'. fpcding
their ftunil ies, payi ng the rent or the
m or lg &lt;~ gc, battling the tretr fil'. holding
()r fin d ing jobs, concerned for tilt_' daily
and n igh tl y - lwallh, and , safe ty uf
Tllt ·n·

is

.,elf. fami ly a nd ne ighbo rhood.

bill of rights for the retarded and the
ha ndi ca pped within its borders. 1\ New
Hamps hi re can pi oneer a sl&lt;:tte lutlery
lo help s upport pub lic ed ucation. An
Oregun can ban aerosol sp r ays and
Jumre llU'n bo tll es. A New York can
c reate a " bi g MAC" tu he lp bail ou t a
nt•cu· bankrupl New Yor k City.

By CLAY F. RJCHARDS

WASHINGTON fUPIJ Sen.. Jennings fu\ndolph, D·
W. Va .. said Tuesday the
Chessie System has notified
him of plans to drop a bandon·
ment of the Petersburg-to-

'V ASHINGTON (UP! ) vice President Nelson A.
Rockefeller has warned
Republica ns that the con;
servative challenge to
President Ford could cost the
party the White House in 1976.
Rockefeller, who has previ·
ously sidestepped any com ·
ments about party fights in
the upcoming election, said
Republi ca ns should " not
allow the dust to get in our
eyes" at the GOP convention
to a point where the election
is forgotten.

Vincent

Benet ,

hrall h . po li ce pr otect ion, law e n·
'for cemen l . welfare, park s and

cxperime n tin~,

recreat iun and poll ution control. The

defi niti ons and objectives

only

unique revolution .

in

which

the

fede ral

st ill

fin din g new

lor ow·

as a democ r atic society unless·

\\'C

vital r esour ces are in increasin gly

to the peop le - through th eir sta te and

short suppl y, the people are dema nding
accountability as never before. They
are tired ,,f bw·eaucratic double ta lk ,
congress iona l vacc ila ting and the Big
Brother altitude of the Executive

local represent.atives - the power to
m a ke i ndependent l oc al decisions

wil hin the broad framewor k of national
policy. II a lso mean s providing funds in
signifi can t am ounts to pe rmi t loca l
gove rnm e nt to fWlcti on crea tively and
in the bes t inte rest of those it serves -

sible for the ir actions . The federal
bw·ea ucracy has 100.000 hiding places.

to deal with people as ne ighbor s - not
as subjects.
No place to hide. Tha t is the way
the people want the ir govern ment to

At t he sta te an d loca l leve l there a re

work at eve ry level. U we are to s urvive

none. No place to hid. And that's why.
with their cam pai gn rhetoric be~ind

as a dece nt and honorable nat ion - if
we are to fulfill the promises that were
made a t our birth - that is the kind of

me n and women ca n be held res p on-

them -

governor s like Dukakis,

Brown , Walker, Longley, Evans,
Milliken. Bond and Carey are coming
on s ~· on g. bitin g bullets ha rd, and
wmning respect, if not popularity, lor
their policies.
We've come a long way s in ce the
days when governors we re tools or

special interests and state legis latures
were the "bawdy houses" of politics .
Wi th reve nue sharing at least being

KEY WEST, F1a. (UP!) -It may take several weeks
to clean up an on slick spread aloog a :15-mUe stretch of
Florida Keys, the worst splU on the state's Atlantic Coast
in recent years. Residents said "the only thlog we can do
Is moan and groan about it."
"A lot depends on how much we have to go Into, the
mangroves," said Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. WUllam
Monson, an oil-splU expert flown In from Mississippi to
assist in the clean-up. "There may be a Umlt to bow much
we can try to clean up the mangroves without doing them
more harm In the process."
Coast Guard Investigators say they belleve the splU
occurred Friday night In the Florida Straits and was
caused by a tanker Intentionally cleaning up to 126,000 .
gallons of on from Its tanks. ·They were checldng a tip by
an Air Force pilot who reported seeing a tanker trailing a
stream of on south of Key Largo. The-Y said they hoped to
identify the guilty ship by matching samples of Its on with
samples taken from the splU.

ur

with J ohn Hani£in, president
an d c hief exec utive offi cer or

Tax receipts
up a little
Meigs County for June were
up s li ghtly over June , 1974,
but sales tax receipts from
m otor vehicle sales dropped
lor the month accord ing to
the repor t of Mrs . Fertrude
W. Donahey, state treasurer _
Retail sa les ta x receipts for
June, 1975, amounted to
$65,779 .18 compared to
$76.547.29 lor June, 1974, an
increase of $231.89. Vehicle
sales tax reports lor June,
1975. tota le d $39,258.78
compared to r ece ipt s of
$40,391.74 lor June , 1974, a
decrease of $1, 132.96.

~

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·';

Sales report s were ex-

pected from the lour U. S.
companies today.
The sales level would be the
best for any mid-month
period since last July.
But even with the op.
timistic repor.t, mid-July
deliveries were the lowest for
the period since 1970 and 26

infant

Pleasant ;

Dan Lufkin was Connecticut 's first
Commissioner of Environmental

STUDS

Protection. He is c hairman of Donald·

son. Lufkin &amp; Jenrette, a Now York
investm ent banking firm, and the
author of the recently published book
"Many Sove reign States" (David
McKay!.

the las t of the 1973s .
One executive said he did
not expec t the rush to beat
hikes would be as great as
last August, when sales were
at their highe st level since the
curren t slump began .
Analysts es timated sales of
at least 205,000 cars in this
year's July 11-20 pe riod
compared with 231,070 last

and .injuring s cores more .

each

year.

cont inue d

(

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
773-55S4

Even more important than

FOLGER'S

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COFFEE
All

.
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. :

.

.. USDA

CHOICE
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69~ lb.

pkg.

5th and PEARL STS., RAClftE
"The Store With A Heart
You. WE L1 KE'~

Tide's ln ...Dirt's Out

BACON

MEATS

TIDE .

'

lb.1.59

giant

FRENCH CITY

size

Sliced Beef

WIENERS
20 ct. pkg. 1.39

.

1.99

LIVER
lb.

39~

Right Reserved to L1m1t l,!uantities
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food ~tamps

1.19

l'nces t.necuve .Ju~ 23-30

Age
MACARONI .. ..l.~~:.b.a~••••~ .
China

'·

Golden·

CARROTS
· c.

'I

I

l-Ib.

Calif. Sunkist

pkg.

ORANG.ES

doL

99¢

tt coordinator

Appointment of Mrs .
Audrey Clary of Waverly as
By LeROY POPE
t Travel Tour Coordinator for UPI Business Writer.
~ the Automobile Club of
NEW YORK (UP!) -The
~ · Southern Ohio has been electric motorcyle and small
•• annoup·c ed· · by Executive electric cars - particularly
•
f Vice-President, John Irwm. little gasoline vehicles like
••
,.. Mrs. Clary will have the Volkswagen converted to
~ responsibilities In both the
electric power - soon may
i World Wide and Motorcoach find a fair market in the
Travel Departments. She will United States.
1 be bas'iid in the AAA's main
The electric golf cart and
; office, in Portsmouth. Her small electric trucks made by
r primaty responsibility will be
to as&amp;'ui'e that all travel
customers are pleased with Westinghouse and other
t AAA service.
companies already ·are apr
" With offices in Ports- pearing in noticeable num; mouth; Ironton, Gallipolis, hers around the country.
Corbin-Gentry, Inc., of So·
; Jackson, Athens, and Logan,
: · handllng airline, Amtrak and mersville, Conn., and Dallas,
• motorcoach travel and tours has been. experimenting with
; we feel the need to have a the electric motorcycle since
t P.rson with Mrs. Clary's
1973 and recently brought out
experience to coordinate aU a kit to convert the
of our travel activities,". Volkswagen from gasoline to
, Irwin said.
electric power for folks who
1 The AAA Travel Agency is want to use the little beetle
open to the public as. well as only for driving to and from
i AAA members.
the station or for local
She was a hostess for shopping .
Corbin-Gentry is a maker
Welcome Wagon, Inc., for 12
years and for 5 years worked .. of components and acin the advertising depart- cessories
for
gasoline
ment of the Waverly News powered motor cyles . The
Watchman. She has been electric vehicle project is a
actlve.in the Altrusa Club of new enterprise. Its present
Chillicothe, the Waverly motorcycles and Volkswagen
Garden ' Club, Eastern Star conversion kits employ ordiand Rainbow Lodges.
nary lea~-acid batteries
'

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1

Silas Deane, one or Connecticut's representatives in the
Continental Congress, writes from Philadelphia to his wife
about Connecticut's hrael Putnam, who recently has been
designated one of the Continental Army's four major
generals: " ... In the appointment of General Putnam ,
[Congress] acted on principles as much superior to those
which actuate the dissatisfied as Heaven is superior to
earth. Putnam's merit [.rings] through this continent; his
fame stlll Increasl!S - and every day justifies the un·
animous applause of the continent. Let it be remembered
he had every vote of the Congress: and his health has been
the second or third [toasted] at almost ail our tables in this
·
city .... "

Monday Thru tnda¥ '
9:00 to 7:00
.Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

·

HI-C DRINKS••••••• ~.~~.~~ •• A9e
•

8

16 oz.
bois.

givmg a range of 35 to 45
miles and a top speed of about
30 miles an hour.
But spokesman AI Simmons said Corbin-Gentry
hopes by 1977 to have a
production model on the
market of a m otorcycle
powered by a silve r-zin c
battery made by Yardney
Electric Co ., Pawcatuck,
Conn. This bike would have a
range of 150 miles and speed~
of 50 miles an hour or better.
Yardney is the company that
attracted a lot of attention a
few years ago by converting
several small cars to electric
motors and silver-zinc batteries and producing some
impressive
performance
&lt;
figures .
The silver-zinc battery is
used primarily in aircraft
and would have to be rented
instead of purchased by users
of motorcycles or small cars.
Its purchase price would be
prohil)itive. aut since the
large silver content of the
battery is fully recoverable at
the end of its useful life ,
marketing on a rental basis is
quite feasible, Simmons said.
The silver-zinc battery not
only gives an electric vehicle
more range and speed but it
overcomes another obstacle .
Electric vehicles fueled by
lead-a cid batteries are
notoriously poor hill climbers. In
the current
VolksWagen conversion kit,
Simmons said CorbinGentry

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Susanna Arnold, Susanna
Fitzgerald, Paul D. Fitzgerald to Albert S. Harmon,
April L. Harmon, Parcets,
Salisbury, Enter!irise .
Edna Bradford Deem, G.
A. Deem aka George A.
Deem to Louiseii . Counts, I
acre, Racine.

FOAM PLATES••••••~~.c!~~'!-.. A9e
Assorted

Cans

Cenri&amp;llt UJ5-TIIt l .r tt:u Ct. nun 111~ Pricu
lflrt Julr . 2S 11 lalli,tlis a_, "•~my
r111r nerts. We rtstr'l t Uit tilllt 11 Ji•it
IUttiliU. NONE SOLD TO DUURS.

1..,

S. Govt. Gt aded Choice
P1 apie's Cholce,Boneleu Whole
10 to 12-Lb. Avg.
-

Lb.$

.R'o.s MackHlie
&amp; Jerr Mac~etl)I/C1 1975. United FeatureSyndicalei.
._-By
____
..;.,______________
,u

Triangle
Development
Corp. to Interstate Credit
Corp. )00 A. Lot 383, .3 Acre,
Salisbury .
Interstate Credit Corp. to
Colonial Financial Service,
100 A. Lot 383, Salisbury.
Beulah M. Crabtree to
Charles E . Cadle, Faye M.
A thought for the day :
Cadle,
2.4048
acres,
Gen.
William
Union
Colwnbia.
Tecumseh Sherman said,
Russ~ll Priddy, Alice
" War is cruel and you cannot
Priddy
to
Howard
Long,
rerine
it. "
J ennie Long, 1.6552 acres,

oung Turke

39

Lb.
Jumbo 27 Slu

Cantaloupes

For$
Kroger
Fnsh Grade A

•

Medium Eggs

Kroger

Chunk Tuna

2

Dol.

gets around that difficulty by
retaining the VW's clutch and
transmission gears although,
traditionally,
electric
vehicles have used direct
drive.
But Corbin-Gentry recently
demonstrated
the
hill
climbing abilities of an
electric motorcycle with
silver-zinc battery at the Mt.
Washington Alternative
Vehicle Regatta over a
course with an average 12 per
cent grade .
A little over a year ago.
Corbin-Gentry and Yardney
teamed up to build a special
electric motorcycle that set a
speed record of 161.367 mph
at the Bonneville, Utah, salt
flats.
Sinunons said he has not
heard of any other company
marketing full-sized electric
motorcycles in the United
States but several electric
minibikes fueled by ordinary
lead-acid automobile batteries are being sold in
various parts of Ute country.
" The higher . the · price of
gasoline goes, the more interest these little vehicles will
attract," he said.
But unless some scientist
comes up with a radical and
cheap new battery that will
greatly improve their range,
they will remain restricted to
use for local shopping and
driving to and from the
sta tion .
Rutland .
Harold E . Gilmore, Lucille
R. Gilmore ·to Charles D .
Hatfield, Kaaron Hatfield,
Lots 339 Pt., 340, 341, Middleport.
Tommy B . Simmons,
Shirley J . Simmons to
Tommy B. Sinunons, Shirley
J. Simmons, 2.44 Acres,
Rutland.
Dillon H. Taylor, MarUta
Taylor,
Isaac
Taylor ,
Virginia Taylor, David C.
Taylor, Dillon H. Taylor,
gdn ., Alban L . Taylor, Ruth
E . Taylor, Mary Edith
Taylor, Clifford Taylor,
Delbert Taylor, William
Taylor, Carolyn Taylor ,
Delmer Grady, Zelma Grady,
Stanley Watson , Evelyn
Watson, Edward . James
Taylor to Larry Hofbnan,
Danette Hoffffian, 19 acres,
Lebanon.

U.S.D.A. lnspacted,
Frozen 8 to 14-Lb. Avg.

irloin Tip Roa

popularity as gasoline costs rise

.-

ee11o Bag eut

•..... $

Electrj.c cycles, mini -cars gaining

July ~o. 1775:

OHIO VAllEY SLICED

foenel(fity

-. l ..
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~

.. Audrey Oary
~ appointed. as

A Chronicle of America

OXYDOL

Applesauce·

trJ:t

We Hold These Truths ...

KING SIZE

BOLOGNA

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99~

TASTEE BRAND

•

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lb.

Grinds
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MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W. VA..

im-

provement upward month by
month means we 're pulling
out, " said one c~ mpany
analyst.

••
••

,.

business today

No.2 Grad•

the comparison with last
year, sa id one ana lyst, is the
fact t hat mid -July sales
topped mid-June levels by
a!)o ut 8 per cent, countering a
normal 10 per cent month-tomonth drop.
~' That

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country would have equally liberal passport and visa
In two weeks the governments of 35 colll'\tries of Europe regulations ). The only·.people who seem to get a cut-and-dried
and North Mnertca expect to sign in Helsinki a declaration promise in aU this are journalists: regular correspondents can
that accepts .l,lle admissibility of the acquisition of territory by have multiple-&lt;&gt;ntry vislasfor the countries they cover. so th•t
force .
they can count on being able to move in and out of them
:rtmes change. Is;ael is slowly being asked to disgorge the reasonably freely.
territory tt acqwred lD 1967, whereas this conference will put
Those are the only sizeable slivers chipped off Br"!'hnev 's
another seal of acceptance on the swallowing by Russia of lwnp of granite : tbe rest of the non-communist side 's suc114,000 squar~ miles of one-time Poland, Germany, Finland, cesses in Geneva consisted of preventing the RuSsians from
Czecboslovalua and Rumania after their occupation by the adding even more ifs and buts to the text. What the nonSoviet anny in ~944 and 1945; not to mention Ute huge slice of communists chiefly hoped to get out of this conference, once
Germany acqutred by Poland by .the same method.
•
they had allowed themselves to be maneuvered into it, was a
If you are strong enough - as Russia is, and North Viet- piece of paper which a few of the smaller communist governnam will be when it absorbs South Vietnam into a single state ments of Eastern Europe could wave under the Russians'
-you are exempt from principles smaller powers are asked to noses if they wanted to run their countries a bit more libera lly
honor. Tbe outcome of the European security conference in than Brezhnev nms his.
The piece of paper is there. but much of the ink on it is
Geneva, to be ratified by a sununit in Helsinki probably at the
end of the month, is what Ute Chinese call an unequal treaty . nearly invisible; and anyway it has not become plain that
The main argument against ever agreeing to hold this Edward'Gierek in Poland and Janos Kadar in Hungary are not
conference was that Russia would use it to confirm the going to risk any liberalization that could remotely challenge
changed frontiers of 19-lf&gt;, and indirectly to get the West's tacit their own hold on power. There has also been non-progress on
agreement that everything east of the Elbe is to be regarded as two other fronts of Ute wider detente battlefield :
permanently Communist.
- The negotiations in Vienna about cutting the size of the
On both those counts, Leonid Brezhnev must be pretty Nato and Warsaw pact annies in Europe. which the Russians
pleased. with the past two years' work at Geneva . But the agreed to as their side of Ute deal which gave them the Genevaconference has not gone quite the way the Soviet optimists, Helsinki conference, have got nowhere . The Russians have sat
and Western pessimists, expected. The Russians, having tight on a proposal which would perpetuate the Warsaw pact's
exposed themselves to an interrogation by Europe's non· advantage in central and northern Europe - :1-1 in tanks , :1-2 in
communists, have been obliged to yield a few concessions men, 2-1 in aircraft - and the hope of using the Geneva talks as
-which to some extent dilute their main achievement :
a lever to get them to be more forthcoming in Vienna has now
I. The post-1945 frontiers of Europe cannot be changed by vanished.
.- The past three years have seen a brisk campaign by
force, but the conference has insisted that it should remain
possible for them to be changed by agreement. That may Russia to give itself even more political and economic insound academic, but it is a major improvement on the treaty fluen ce over the smaller East European countries . One result
the West Germans signed with Russia in 1970, which by using of, this is that, by most of the tests of what constitutes, " relaxed
the vern 'antasten' allowed it to be said that the frontiers were communism,.,.even Poland and Hungary n·ow have rather less
not only unchangeable by force but "untouchable."
freedom of action than they did in 1972.
2. The Russians have agreed to give three weeks' notice of
Brezhnev wanted the coming Helsinki meeting as the first
military maneuvers - but not other movements of troops step in his planned ladder of grand occasions which will take .
which they do not count as maneuvers - when these involve him, he hopes, to the Soviet Communist party 's acclamation of
more than 25,000 men within 156 miles of their borders. The his 10 years as Russia's leader next February . He has got his
snag is that, like everything else in the Geneva agreement, this first step, with very few loose nails. Which could be a reason
carries no legal obligation ; the Russians have made it clear for Western skeptics to change their mind about the most
that they will give that notice only if they choose to. But it is the important piece of unfinished business left over from Geneva
one tiny gain for Europe's physical security the "security" -the question of whether tbiii"ffrst aU-European conference
conference has produced.
about Europe's affairs should be followed up with more
3. In the vaguest wording (the signers agree to "do their meetings later on . Several Western governments have resisted
best" to take "positive action," and so on ) the Communist the idea of such follow-up meetings, because they did not want
goverrunents say they may be willing to allow some families to give Russia an opportunity to poke embarrassing fingers
divided by Andrei Gromyko's " visible boundary between the into the West's internal problems .
But look at it the other way round. The most important
two social worlds" to meet each other again; to let some more
of their citizens marry Westerners; and to ease some of the thing after Geneva and Helsinki will· be to find out whether
restrictions on their subjects' freedom to travel to the West Europe's Communist governments are actually doing
(th ough the non-communist side missed its chance to
to anything about the wooly undertakings they have agreed to
insist on fixing a year - 1980' - by which every European sign. So why not get them around a table again, and ask them ?

f

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Point

Walter

TRAINS CRASH
HAMBURG, West Germany 1UPI 1 - A passenger •
train jammed with rush-hour
commuters collided head-on
with a fr eight tra in Tuesday,
killing nearly a dozen persons

"'
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so n ,

Mrs.

,,.

"Now 18

per cent are not going to elect
a president.
' 'The party has a responsibility to nominate a
president with the capabilty
to inspire the people of
America,and I think we want
to focus on both the convention and the election and
not let the dust get in our eyes
fo a point where we only see
the convention and do not go
on to the election .
"Any fight within the party
is not going to help the party
win national support in next
year's election," Rockefeller
said.
He obviously referred to he
only such fight on the
horizon involving fonner
California Gov. Ronald
Reagan. Though Reagan has
not yet made up his mind
whether to challenge Ford, a
campaign committee has
been established in his name,
and his supporters are urging
him to enter all the
Republican
presidential
primaries next year against
Ford.

2"x4"x8·'

'•
•

Schoonover, Gallipolis;
Harry Hudnall, Leon; Brooks
Glover, Gallipolis Ferry;
Bryant Duncan, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Walter Donohue, Point
Pleasant.
BIRTH - July 23, Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Stanley, a son,
Point Pleasant.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Charlie
Markin s, Ga llipoli s ; Mrs.
Ferrell
Kiser ,
Point
Pleasan t ; Charles Long and
Chad Sines, Gallipolis;
Mrs . J ose ph Jones , .Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . David Whitt
and

of a series of semipolltical
a ppearances around the
country on behalf of Ford.
Later, aboard Air Force
Two on the trip back to
Washington, Rockefeller said
he plans to step up his speech
making schedule and make
frequent appearances around
the country after his August
va cation in Seal Harbor,
Maine .
"The Republican party has
18 per cent of the voters In
this country ... and a minority
in the party who identify
themselves
as
conservatives,"he said.

government the peop le must be given.

per cent below the re cord
level of July 11-20 two years
ag o. before the Arab oil
embargo sent sales skidding.
Analysts credi ted some of
the sales upswin g to " buy·
ahead" by consumers trying
to beat anticipated price
hikes on 1976 models - ex·
pected to average $300 a car
above current models. The
1975 models are priced an
average of $1,000 more than_

Se pt ember that domestic
a uto sales have topped 1973
sales. ·

The vice president said that
his statement was not aimed
at securing his position on the
1976 ticket, but helping-Ford
gain
the
nomination
· unanimously . He said be was
· "relaxed and totally un concerned" about his own
position on the ticket and that
it was up to Ford to pick a
rwming mate after he is
nominated.
His comments, at a news
conference in Cincinnati
following a speech at the
Midwestern Governors'
Conference, marked the first

Retail sales tax receipts in

We will not enter our th ird cen tw·y
recogn ize the fundam e nta l basis or our
federa l system. Thi s means , returning

precisely who is making !he decis ion s
that affect their daily lives so that these

apphcalion .
''Thi s action co nstitutes a
r ecogn ition or th e poten tial
fo r develop ment in our rural
a reas an d sma lle r towns a nd
a rea lization of the importance
having viable rail

said,

As the economy has slumped a nd

branch. They wa nt mos t of a ll tu know

1he

lo the future ra ther than to concen tr ate
on the past . As our grea t native poet,

Our glory as a nation is tha t alter
200 yea rs. we are still unfinished, still

a r eas

s hire. Hardy and Grant
counlies . How eve r , the B&amp;O's
pare nt firm , Chessie, .told
Handolph it has withdrawn

tinuati on of !he service.

"America is promises .''

dom inion really is d ecisive, accordi ng
to this poll , are national defe nse . soc ial
securit y and cancer research.

rail se rvice through Hamp-

Che ssie, and urged co n·

li ves:

transpo rtation,

&amp; Ohio
Railroad
las t
March
proposed aban d onment of

200 th year , it wou ld profit us all to look
Stephen

educat io n,

Wesl Virgi nia.
,The Baltimore

sys tems lor the movement of
good s and products." Ran·
dolph said.
The senator met June II

that im pact di rectly on their d aily

Kroger

)

.

cost GOP 76 victory

its mind

Th es.e and hWldreds more pi eces (Jf
loca l leg is la ti on are the cu tting edge nf
po litical vision and acco untabili ty. Not
all arc good . No t all will work . But the
s tales are tryi ng, an d if there is failure.
the people will kn ow immediate ly who
is re spons ible and why.
As we begi n the coun tdow n to our

On ly s tate and !Heal govern m e nt
cu·c c lvsC' e nuugh to lhc s 1 ·~ne tu culrninistcr these day-by-d ay need s \\o'ilh
a n y d egree tJf effec tive ness o r
tim eli ness. And, when th e crunch
C•JillC'S --- the American people kn ow
that the a ns wers are not go ing ln come
from e ith er the Congress or the Whit.e
Hou se In a recent Harris poll, the gr eat
m a jorit y rtf(irrned tha t th e sta te is the
m os t im portant factor in all services

Parley approves Soviet conquests
By NEA, Londoo Ecooomlllt News Service

Auto industry's recovery picks up during mid-July

••
••

.,•

Conservatives could

Green Sp ri ngs rail line in

depressions. po licy and pmw r hcn·p
s hifted fr om the st a te capitals tu lhl'

..'

Otessie

There is no place to ·hide

•-

a
For Your Shopping Convenience

----Wit~

Coupon
Limit One with Coupon &amp; $10 or More Purchase
Veoid oft~r Sol .. Julr 26, \97S Subiect lo applicable State &amp; local ·To ..

.

1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

I

�I .

l
r-.._--_..
.. _________ ,___ _.......,._ --·-

..

~'"='~::-:""'t..o™=o-=:!~--r---.

·c lassifieds
,,

L{ !J)f.;f.;

CARP E NIRY
(Pdn1q

l h

WORK

pilncl1nq

6 l·l '171{.

I (J

I I

c:o

f\I:: MOOEl l NG .
Pl u •.,bmy
t, e,1t111q .~ 11 r 1 -"II typ es of
Cl f' rorr,lt
rt.' Pcl•r
Work
qu,,r ,lnt;

t

rt

p f' ru::- n c. •·

70 .,.ea r "&gt; ex
l'hont
'Y'i'l 7t 09

'.&gt; I tl r

I I

THE.Y OPEN IN
"THE. ?P R:IN6.

I
I I (]

I FLOUJY

1911 CO MET 1 DOOR
SI8SO
6 cy l 5ld tr ans, radio, lt k e ne w w w f1rc s. blue fm1 s h ,

H OUSC: .1nd roof pa ont,ng by

ho u r o r contract
r- ree
cs trm&lt;'l es Sf'c Car l Ne lson
ll'&gt;'i S y camo re S t . Mtd
dl eport Ol1 o0

Now J\rrange the circled lfotler!l
to form the surprise &amp;n!l"-er , M

PHI MATADOR
$1495
4 door , local C&lt;lr. atr condlf1 oned. lull equtpmenf

197a CHE VROLET ESTATE

'-1_

___:_::
Pril::_c
lllle
= SUR:::.:
PR::::IS!.::::
AN:::
SW::::.
!R ~her::_!_
Jumhl• • FELON

SWASH

__jl 0: XI

TANGLE

3 seat wagon .

j

brakes a1r cond , till wheel.
fm1 sh . rad10 . Nt ce

EASILY

NfED E D

Arak c

rn il n
rncl , ncd

me cnan .ra lly

E l(per1en&lt;:e n ut

[mptoyN wilt tra1n R eply
J? QM
c o Tht• Dady
'-.e nt,n t" l Pomeroy, Oh10

Notice

1~ 169

NO'N ~e tlm q f-uller ~rush
P rodu c ts, phone 992 3410

concern tor me dunng my

I '} 1! ti C

VISJfS

Hnrry Ptckens, Sr
7 13 2tc

lost
MAL E r ed bone hound
T uppers
Pla1ns
Arec
f-!eNMd P hO n P 667 JBSB
1 17 6TC

Notice
SWEEPER

and

Sewtng

Machm es Repatr, Parts,
and
Sup pl1 es
Vacuum Cleaner,

Davi s

LOSl 1n Syra(us.e area Small
n 1a 1
poodle . wh1te w 1lh
some apr1cot wh1ch was last
seen w1th femal e Beeg l e
Substant1al r ewa rd , an
swe r s to the name of
osct,R Ca ll 997 '296~ atter
5 30 p Ill
' tO 6tc

'·2mde up

George's Creek Rd off Stat e
Route 7 Phone 446·0294

7-23 -ltc

TO WHOM t1 may concern
1-'"lw long am I gomg to ha ve
lh ts "cockeyed'' mud hole 1n
front of my place of

busmessn? " BOO "
7 23-21c
DEBBIE

Hunne ll Ferguson,
Helen's Beauty Shop , 800 E
Mam 5 1
Special1zes m
High Styling , B low Cuts,
Natural styles
7 18 Otp

ME I GS County F 1Sh and
Ga me Assoc•al1on m ee lm g.
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
at
Snowball Htll.
7 18 Stc

ne c t·~sa ry

Flox

I WOU L 0 ltke to eKpress my
graltlude to a ll who showed
stay m the hosp1tal for th eir
prayers , cards flowe r s. and

Yard Sale
YAR 0 SA LE, 2 weeks, July 12
thru 76th Ant 1ques. allad1 n
ta m p , old clocks, dep r ess,on
glass. m 1sc J m1tes south o t
Athens on R r 33
7 10 14tc
3 FAMILY Yard Sale, July 26
and 27 a t Harley Han mg's
restdence. Flatwoods Rd ,
Furnrture, Drshes, c lofh1ng .
an l1q ues and cra nk type
te lep hone, etc

7

n

Jtc

ANYO N E I NT ERESTED 1n
dona t,nq t1me to - &lt;:heste r
Vol
F 1re Dept
1n Th e1r
booth du ~ mg Me1gs Co Fat r
wee!\ pl ease call 985 JS TO
P1es. ar e als.o apprecta l ed
Chester Vo l
F 1re
Dept
pres1dent K1rk. Chevul1er
7 ? I Jtp
H EAD meat c utter Twin City
Gatewny Apply between 9
a m and 5 p m M ond ay
thr ough Frrday Phone 992 ·
6194
7 23-4tc
GR IL L
cook:
c ar
hops.
wa1Tresses Apply 1n person
House,
Crows
S t e ak
Pom eroy
7 n 61c

BE A
"SENTINEL
CARR.IER"

7 23 3tp
YARD
Sa les,
Thursday,
Friday and Satu rd ay, 10
am till 5 p m n of Chester,
off Rt
7 follow srgns.
Clothrng, dtshes, furmture,
app liances, some an trq ues
YARD Sa le, U nt on Ave, July

•

•
•

•

13 th roug h 27 Near Rt 7 by -

••
••
•
••
•
•

••

•'•
•
•

, ,.
"'

&gt;~"

I:. &gt;
;;.~

R1 v
.__
....
, ··
v1
....~ .

""
.....
';" '
v .

~~·

&lt;~ ... v

- - lhe

cont ra cl

a nd

lhe

fur

ni shin g Of t he r equi r ed per ·
' formance bond , after which
they will be r etu rn ed on
demand The checks of the
, ... :. other b 1dders will be returned
... ,. . ~ on dem and after the bi ds are
-v f canvassed
... ~ .
A per for ma n ce bond and a
..
tabor &amp; material payment
bond , each to be 100 percent of
the amount of the contract ,
wi t h sa tisfactory su r et i es, wi ll
be required from th e sue
'v" cessful bidders for the faithful
"' performan ce of the work.
The righ t 1S r eserved by the
Board of
Ga ll 1a County
.
'" , Commissioners,
Ga llipoli s,
,.t~&lt;• Ohio. the Director of th e Oh10
1 .. Department of Mental Hea lth
~: · and Mental R etardation, and
. : ' the United States Depart ment
of Health , Education and
; Welfare , to reject any and all
b i ds
and
to
wa i ve
in
formalit ies . No b idder may
withdraw his bid for a per i od
of sixty days .
J
Advertising tlates for bid s
• • are July 16, 23, 30, and August
. 1 6, 1975 . Bids will be open
·•
August 1.4, 1975, 12.oo p .m. at
01

-

·r

'!

:

•t

", ~
•'

;'• f:I

Good clothrng, g lass
wa r e, trr cycle, bteycle, toys,
co lor TV, s hallow we ll
wa t er p ump . Also , 1970
Suzukt 125 Trailbike, two
cragar mags w 1th tir es
J .2J.Jtc

-;: , Form approve.d by the
";. Gallfa County Prose c u ti ng
( . Attorney, Gallipolis, OhiO
Gene .Wetherholt
~

Protected T er ritory
N o Com pe llt ron
Stay Home Eves
&amp;
Weeken d s
SJO.OOO Potent,al l SI Yr
Pa1d Tra.nmg
Operate Your Own Bus
after Prov rng yourself
No In vestments
R ep ly to Box 72'1 c -O Th e
Dally Sentinel . Pomeroy,
Oh1o
All replays c on fidentiaL

7-23-J ic

T RA I LER lo t m Middleport.
Ca ll 99'1 5434
7 16 2btc
3

3 BEDROOM ' hom e in coun
try Ca ll 992 5442 , or aller 7
P m ca ll 992 5196
7 18 12tc
- -------------~LO furl"iiture , ice boxes ,
bras~ beds , or comple te
households
Write M
D ,
M1ller, Rl
4, Pomer oy,
Ohio Call 992 7760
tO 7 7J
---------------::.- , DISCARDED l awn mowers ,
Idler s, rid ing mowers , etc .
Phone 7:12 -J0 7A
7 16 26tc
- --- --- ---~----- U S CO IN S and cu rr ency.
1964 and older , d 1me s,
qua r ters,
ha l ves.
war
nic k els and V ntc kels. tn
dian and s t eel pennies ,
si lv er dollars . Call Rutland .
74? 365 1 for offer or write to
Roger W'amstey, Rl . t, Box
I J7 , Midd l eport. Oh i o 45760
7 15 12tc
- - - ----- - - - ---

For Sale or TIade

sh owroom
conditio n .
Cons ider trade tOr small
truckot car Phone992 -7210.

BEDROOM u nfur nished
apar tm ent 1n Midd l eport.
Phone 992 5A3A
7 16 He

12x51 TRAI L ER , l1ke new, 535
p e r week. , uti11tles pa 1d
Phone 992 33?4
7 22 lfc
LAURELA ND
a p ar tm ents.
6th 7 George Sts, N ew
Have n , W Va
Ava ilabl e
A ugust 15, Brand new 2
bedrooms
t ow nh o u ses,
ap pli ances furniShed , fully
carpe ted Rentmg $128 up
1nclud1ng uti l it1es For more
Info rm ation call 1 304 882
1788
7 18 IOtc
ruRN apt 5 ro oms and bath ,
n1 ce l arge yard , bath an d '.,
1 90
South
c,econd
Sl ,
Middleport adu lt s on l y
Phone 991 5262 e venmgs
~
5 21 If(
"'FUR NI SHED
apartment,
adu ll s only m M1ddleport
Phone 992 3874
3 25 tfc

-------

__)

R OOM turn1 Sh Cd and
unfurn, shed
apa rt me nt !'.
P t. one '&lt;'i 7 '&gt; t J.T
t 17 !l c

l f, N[' I

PRIV fl l E nlC' Ciul q room for
,lny orq,ln17Cll 10 11 phon( '1'1 7
l &lt;i' '

J I I II C

) 23 8tp
1966
BELAIR
Phone 997 2081

1910 DODGE ,Challenger . Will
trade ' for dune buggy or
motorcycle of equa l ¥alue
Ca ll 949 3953

..

'

MuDER N Watnut Console
s ter eo r ad•o comb1nai 10n -1
s p eed changer
Balance
\101 40 or ter m s Ca ll 992
)965
7 9 1fc

TOMATOES ,
cucumbers .
Cl eland Fa rm s. Gera ldm e
Cle land
7 6 tfc
CAMP I NG trader. slee p s
s1x, self con tamed, 1B to ote r
Good condilio n Phone 99?
3? 09

7

n

16tc

1977 HONDA Ch opper. best
offer ma de Can be seen at
Har ley McDona l d's Rt IJ 3,
Harr, som11 lle Rd
7 n Jtc
HOL LO N co rn et, exce l lent
co nd1t1on
P h one · 985 3882
7 22 61 p
NEW Improved "Zippies,"
the great tron pill now with
Vitamin C Ne l son Drug.

1'&gt;171 CHEVELLE SS, tor sa te
or tradr for small car
Phone '19? 3980
7 ?0 Sip
Phone 99? 2082
7 20 61p

Wanted
CASH pa1d tor a ll makes ano
models. of mobi l e homes
Phone ar ea co d e 614 423
l'll 53 1
A 1J t i c

Pets For Sale
SIA MESE ktftens , 5 mates
and 1 f ema l e Ca ll 991 ·7201
after 4 p m
7·23 ·3tc
GENTLE R eg. Co llt e, female
to good home - make offer
Phone 742 4211 alter 5, 742

c onditioner. s lightly u sed,
$ 1 so. Phone Ch est er 985-

3862

Paul Orr, 949-5272.

7 23 4tc
Phone
MIXED pups $5
Long Bollom 6 14985 4244 .
7 20 Ole

REG QUARTER ho r se bay
ge ld1ng , and 1J month old
pam! col t Also. AKC blac k
toy pood le Can be seen at
?01 Lcad1nq Cre ek Rd,
Middleport
1 18 lfc

Real Estate for Sale
Vtrqtl

r...,

Sr, BroiH'f

446-4922

1111 Mt'' 11.ll11( ~I
f' (' Tllf'l oy. Oh10

INV ESTME NT Property 3
Good 12
room older home with 2 bath s.
modern kr t chen, firep lac es,
carpettng on good corn er lot.

MOBILE HOM;E LOT water,

w ilh

sewaQe,

furn is h ed apartments w rth
good ren tal. monthly in
come S225 Phone 992 -5131
day time
7-23 4tc
I 72 ACRES land

and locust
posts At so . 1965 Ford L TO
P hOne 742 3656
5 23 52 1p

a nd

Phone 992-7406.

REAL NICE 7 ·23-3tc

~EANS,

pick your own , 12 50
pe r bu sh el Also, cabbage
an d ye l low and zuc c hin i
s.quash Phone 843 2353 after
7 p m
7 20 6tc

3 bedrooms,

~

na t ga s. fu rnace, fu l l
basement. All tn nr ce clean
cond it ron

MODERN KITCHEN - Large
lot fat g arden. 3 bedrooms,
ba th , dining, modern k tf ch en,
na t . a as furna ce in Racine

WEEK'S

BARGAIN

-

70

Ca ll 992

un fu rnished h ouse,
1650 L1 n coln Hgts , phone
992 367 J
7 6 tfc
~&lt;vvM

bedroom home N ew kt t ch en,
nr ce bath, nat . gas furn ace,
thermopane wtndows, a nd
nice lot at Ch est er

YOUR FUTURE SAVINGS
LIE IN PROPERTY . FOR A
GOOD INVESTMENT CALL

4· 10 · 1 mo

--

-----

-----

CLELAND
608 E.
REALTY
MAIN
PuM~R_OY,O
NEAR

DEXTER -

30

ac r es good clean g rou nd ,
l'h story frame home, 3
BR , barn &amp; other buildi ng s
$3,500 down bal. 5133. per
m onth rnc ludes tnterest
Tota l pnce $17,500

MIDDLE PORT -

BEORM
double wide ,
f ur n1 shed , utiltt1es pa1d ,
coun fry local ro n yet near
Pomeroy No pets Phon e
992 7666 o r 992 7017
7 20·31p

-

EXCAV-A-TT NG. dozer. loaaer
and backhoe work , se pfl c
tanks
'nstalled,
dump
trucks and lo boys for hire
will ha ul fill d1rt, lop soil ',
limestone and gravel . Ca ll
Bo b or Roger Jeffers., day ·
phone 992 7089, n1ght phone
992 3525 or 992 5232
2· 11 tfc

I t:Cl.l'i

/

and knockmg out dummy 's ace
or d i amonds but nq one can

"Q l08
. 6J

~

lb~T,I

/

blame WesUru: ducking When
the 10 held it was a simple
m a tter to cas h the king of
spaces, lead the queen of hearts
and w1nd up with three spades.
three hearts, two cl ubs, a dia ·
mond and a top score

A AKJ9

MeAN

Norlh-South vu lnerable

1D RSH W\lf\ 1

•

West

North

Pass
Pass
Pass

1¥

,.

3NT

Sou lh

pass

lA
INT

Pass

Pass

Opemng lead - 7 •

I INSIS"T YOU
DRINK UP,
GENTS!

p er yard
Ca ll R tc hard
West, phone 8tl3 2667

------ - ----- -~~ 26tp

'

GENERAL Repa 1r, clean up
and
hau l 1ng ,
cutting ,
weldrng,
carpentry
plumbing , e l ec . maso n rY
an d general remodeling .
Ca ll Skll Poo l. Phone 992 5126
6 17 tf c

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

LOOK, FRIEND, r iOLDJUf-4
BEFORE AN ' l 'LL "TELL
..OU AG"'IN, WE DON'T
WANT ANY RED-EVE' "

by THOMAS JOSEPH
.. ....,_ DOWN
ACROSS
I Secret group
1 Expense
5 Snooze tune 2 Martini
addttive
m SonQra
3
Treat wtth
II Toward
contempt
s helter
(3 wds .)
12 P atriotic
4
Kmd of
song
square
13 Pungency
5 One's ea rn·
14 City. in
mgs
Paktstan
15 Girl 's name 6 Old lnsh
garment
16 Sailor
17 Skm problem 7 Biblical s uf·
fix wtth do.
18 Athlete's
go, etc
award
8
Sna rl
20 Bottled m ( 3 wds I
21 Gainsay
9 Roman
22 Fairy tale
dramatist
opener
23 Thorax
25 Engender
26 Port side
27 Speakers'
' platform
28 "Essays
of - "

GASOIJNE ALLEY

Couldn't find

them! Ther..j've
cleared out

Yeah' Well.I'll h
a look anl.jwal

&lt;

d\

Square
Yard

fwe ha ve hundreds o~
carpet values . Your tob c8
b e comp leted in 1 to
weeks
No long waiting
per1od Our installer has 28
years experrence . Expert
tnstatlatron
You'll like
what you get

,1(1, \Y

..-('\
0\Y .-&lt;\ \Y
~ ::~g , ..c:P

lJL ABNER

- .

HANC ' UPON Tl-11:: ~APSkATE ~!
$ 5 Cqcx:D HARDLY PAYS FoR
GARS 1 VVRE:CK. MY '\
FEE IS $ I, ooq 000 !rt

-~===::::---~;::;)7,;:-;~::i:'mc;M'M~'\:=-----~'"i::~w

FATSON,
SIR-

A GENTLE;MAN
WISHES YW TO
HANDLE" A
CA""
-= F0/2.

=

$ 50q 000 ~!-

me=

CALL 74-2-4211

TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE,

Yesterday's Answer
10 Se t ri ght
'!I Casmo
16 Go campin g
employee
19 Seed
cove rmg
20 Karlofl
23 Ex plam
12 wds.l
24 Greek
25 P h oemc ta n
sun god

30 Actress
Verdugo
31 Atrport need
33 Abjecl
36 Former
chess
c hampton
37 Moisten

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

nice lot . JUST $14 ,800
RUTLAND - E xcell ent 2

m a Serl&amp;s

E1ghteenths

BR home, ca rpeted, tiled ,.
paneled , LR ha s nice
fireplace, porches. garage ,
close to shopprng , A SK 1NG

of

32 Pte - mode
33 Formal
dance I Fr I
34 Old musical
note
3&gt; - library
37 Mourmng
band
38 Free from

Bemlce Bede Osol
For Thurtday, July 24 , 1975

ARIES (March 21·Apnl 19)
Coo l your spend1ng urg es tdl
later in the day You II be ex
travaganl earl1er to sa Hsfy what
could be a foolish wh1m

TAURUS (April 20- May 20)
Fr u strat1on rules your PlHSu• t
ot des,res early m the day
Arter m1dday a sympathetiC
person soothes you r re el1 nq s

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

Coupon
is Worth

O.NL Y $9,500. (see this a nd

Service

WAV50PEN1D
WENDY'S FRIEND51
MR. LONG!

Here's ho)V
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ia

to work it:

One l etter simply stands for another In lh is sample A is
used for the three I.'s, X for the two o·s. etc Sing le letters,

apostrophes. the

l ength

and

of the words are all

f ormatwn

hints . Each day t he code letters are different

CRYPTOQUOTES

~oupon · Nii-.~

'3.00

Y N UU

PD N F

WF

YCAFWSCH

On The Purchose Of A

vcxvuc

1. Complete Chassis Lubrication

2 · 5 Quarts Oil ••• Installed
3 . An AC Oil Filter ••• Installed

FX

ZXQ

NKC

P X-K M

PWUU,
PDNF

Regular Prices are /lll.atloblein our Ser.vlce Dept.

MOB I LE hom e f or rent Also,
t railer s pace ready for
hookup Phon e A l bert H HI,
949 276 1.
7 20 Jtp

GU N S, amn1o:., ...... __ .,..,..,des,
GUARANTEEO
FINAN
C IN G ava1lable for most
customers
V ill age Gun
Shop . M idd l e port Phone
992 5177
7·20 ·61C
ST RAW fo r sa le
59SJ

4 RM- apt w1th wa1'1 t o wall
carpf' t , 104 Spr1ng Ave .
7 17 6tc
Po me r oy Ca ll 992 5906
- 6 12 lfc
F I SHING J,cense, Canadian
N11 c cr aw l ers , 60c doz Dug
3' F\EDRM 6':ixl2 mobile hom~
worms J doz 5.1 Other ba,f
for rent , util i ties pai d ,
t ackle . Quns , ammo, co's:
toca t ~d •n , AurllnQham Call
l nd,an Joe's Spor t s
308
992 715 I
Paqe St .. Phonr 992 3509 .
7 1 lfc
7 1 26tc

I' I \ ' 1 I ...

keep watchint our Ids fo,. m
'. coupons, coming your way week~re monev-Sivi,. . service

Dear

y.

!n YOUR CAR'S ENGINE, AND

Contrilxltor,

SAVE ON .THE NECESSARY SERVICES.
Call fo~ an appointment or stop by today.
· Do ,Busine3s With A Lead ,

Phone 949

soo

~~~~ Ne~n
Motors
i~c.
Moi'..- Fn.';!~!! -.
o.
Service Hours:

4

~ -~

Pomeroy,

. . . . . . .,

loftllft

0 CF

DNKECK

'·

'

.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Your l h , nkt~;~g cap 15 on
Si d eways loda y
Avo 1d
anyth •ng 1nvolvmg reason1ng o r
1og1c Seek a light hea rted
fnend to soc•al1ze with

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You sl art the day leeltng l1ke
e¥eryone IS gang• ng u]J on you
Eve nmg b r1ngs a turnabout
and somelh1ng you 11 l1ke

LEO (July 23-Aug . 221 You&lt;
pursu1t o f recog011ron could be
luhle 1111 you ret urn from work
and f1nd that your lamtly ap precJa\e9o you

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)

C© 1915 Kina Fea twes' Synd.icate , Inc .)
MOB I LE home for rent m
Rat.tne
Phone 9.49 2261.
A lber! H1ll.
7 20 3tp

W A·

AWMWFN
MDKQH DYDCS
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I SHALL NEVER PERMIT
MYSELF TO STOOP SO LOW AS TO HATE ANY MAN .
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON

I

3,.4, News 13.

Grapt-1

39 Spin! lamp 1
.W E ng !is h
'"'
bobby
H ··-she
blows 1"'

THANK.5 fOR IN/ ITING ME TO
IE ALONG WITH
lDYONIHIB
r; MA!AM.

Frandsco6, 13; Mov ie " Te x a s Across the River" 4.

Movie " Hot Spell" 8; Mov ie "The Kid from
Brooklyn " 10; Philadelphia Folk Festiva l 33.
9 ' 3!1-Jazz Is Alive and Well 20
10:1»-Harry 0 6, 13; News 20. We man 33

Astro-

htghhght

OUR HOMe 15 AL-

e, 10;

Episode Action 33.
2'1»-Baseball 3,4; $10,000 P yramid 6,13 ; Guiding
Light 8,10; Family At War 33 .
2' »-Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Doctors IS: Edge of
_Night 8,10.
3:1»-Genera( Hospital 6, 13 ; Another World 15; Price
Is Right 8, 10 ; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Play Chess 33.
3 ·JO-One Lite to Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8,10. Feeling Good 20; Folk Guitar 33
4·1»-Somerset 15; Gllllgan•s Is land 6; Musical Chairs
8; Sesame St . 20,33; Mov ie ··cougar Country·· 10 ;
Mike Douglas 13.
4: 3!1-Bewllched 3. Merv Grlfl ln 4; Mod Squa d 6;
Mickey Mouse 8, Bonanza 15
S· I»-FBI 3; Lucy Show 8; Mi ster Rogers' Neigh .
borhood 20.33 ; I ron side 13.
S:3G- New56 , Andy Grlflllh 8: Get Smart 15 , Elec. Co.
20.33.
6 :1»-News 3,4,8; 10,13,15; ABC News 6, Sesame St 20.
Book Beat 33.
6 :34}- ~BC News 3,4, 15; ABC New s 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:1»-Truth or Cons. 3,4; What's My Line 8; News 10;
Let's Make a Deal 13, Jimmy Dean 15' Making It
Counnt 20, Nova 33
7:3!1-Hollywood Squares 3; ,4; Ohio Lotlery 6; New
Price Is Right 8. Evening Edition With Martin
Agronsky 20; Wild Kingdom 10. To Tell The Truth
13; American Outdoorsman 15
8 :1»-Giadys Knight &amp; lhe Pips 3,4,15, Barney Mdler
6,13 ; TheWaltons8, 10; Evening at Pops33, llteot
Leonardo Da VInci 20
8 :3!1-Texas Wheelers 6, 13
9 1»-Movle "The Greatest Gift" 3.15; Sl reets of San

l ·oo-TQmorrow

29 Sprmg

,..,:+-+-+- 1-+-

.IIUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-4211
Rull;'iiif

Monev-Saving

Gourmet 8; ; New Zoo Revue 13

10 ,00-Ce lebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4. 15 ; Spln -Ofl 8,1 0.
Dinah 13: Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
10 .3!1-Wheel 'of Fortune 3,4, 1S. Gambit 8,10. Frying
Pans West 33.
11 ,oo-Hgh Roll ers 3,4.15 ; Wild Wild World of ·Anlmals
6' Tattletales 8,10
11. 3!1-Hollywood Squares 3,15, Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4; Love ot Llle 8, 10.
11 ' 55-Take Kerr 8; Dan I mel 's World 10.
12 ,oo-Magnlflcenl Marble Mac hine 3.15 : Showofls 13;
_ Bob Braun's SO-SO Club 4; News 6,8.10; Mister
Rogers 33.
12 .3!1-Jackpot 3, 15; All My Chi ldren 6.13 ; Search tor

10 : 30-Horace Marshall 33

covenng

CAR Pt=T COfiiSULTANT

Saye 0~ ~ Service!

6 ' 55- News 13
7' 1»-Today 3,4, 15; AM Amer ic a 6. 13 ; CBS News
8,10 .
8 ' 1»-Lassl~ 6; Capt Kangaroo 8, Schoo lles 10;
Sesa m e St 33
8 ' 3!1-Big Val ley 6: Popeye 10
8 :55-Chuck While Reports 10
9'0(}-A .M 3; Phil Donahue 4,15 , Mur iel Slevens 8;
Capt. Kangaroo 10, Morning wllh D J 13
9 ' 3!1-Nol For Women On ly 3, Dinah 6; Galloping

11 ·1»-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 33
11 : JQ-Johnny Carson 3.4,15; Wide World Spe cia l 13;
FBI6; Movie " Who's Atrald ot Virginia Woolf?" 8;
Movie " : My Foo li sh Heart•· 10. Janakl 33
12 ,3!1-Wide World Special 6.

Very

nrce 3 BR hom e, dining R.,
liv tn g R. has fir e pla ce, full
basement
with
utility
space, na tura l gas furna ce,

6 . 25-Farm Report 13
6 .Jo-Five M inutes to Lrve By .4, N ews 6 , Bible An swers 8; School Scene 10 , Patlerns for Living 13
6 : 35-Columbus Today 4
6 : 45--Mornlng Report 3, Farmtime 10

Dream ~ of Jeannie 4 ; As the World Turns

501 'NYLON
99
RUBBER BACK

6 oo-Sunrlse Semtnar 4; Summer Semes ter 10

Tomorrow 8, 10 ; E lee Co . 33

Carpetiog

4

THURSDAY , JIJL Y 24 , 1975

12,55-NBC News 3,15;
1.1»-News 3: Ryan's Hope 6, 13. Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women On!y 15 ;
VIlla Alegre 33.
1 ' 3!1-Daysof Our Lives 3,15; Let' s Make a Deal6,1 3; 1

LET US DO IT! !

;u

cARP~T i nstilTfatian~$125

---'

GOOD c lean large trail er w1th
co¥ere d patio on large
co r ne r lot in M 1ddl epo r t
Adu l ts only , n o pets Call
997 23 19 or 99? 21 01
7 20 3tc

tKQ H

... Q 10 7 3 2
A6
SOUTH
• K 10 52

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

WOULD YOU ot:L IE VE?
Build an a !I st eel bUilding at
Po l e Bar n prices? G olden
G1ant Al l Steel Buildings,
Rt 4 , Box 148, Waverly,
Oh 10 Phone 947 2296
6 24 ·26 t c

CALLING US ABOUT
THESE HOMES MAY BE
THE WISEST CALL YOU
EVER MADE.
Phone 992-22S9

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

• J 10 2

NOW OPEN

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

make an ot ter).
2

AJ986 J

"96 4

La,.ry and Vivian Hopps
Owners

-----

0- - T-REE T~;ming ,

.74
• AJ 2

Freeze

DOZER wo rk , l and c learrng
7 17 1 mo
by t h e ac r e. hourly o r
cont ra ct
Far m
ponds,.
roads. e t c Large dozer and EXCAVA TING ,
backhoe.
operat or w1th over 20 yea r s i
dozer and dil cher
Gas,
experie nce
Pull rns Ex
e l ectric and water l ine
cavatmg, Pomeroy, Oh1o
bur i!tl , basements , tooter s,
Phone 992 2J7 8
septrc system s and brush
12 19 tic
ctean •ng Will haul fill dirt ,
top soiL sand and !iJravel ,
limestone for driv eways and
I"'L.U/V11:31N ..... n ectllll!J, repa ir
roads . Phone Charles R
and ,n sta llat ,on , electrical.
water pump repair , roof ing ,
Hatf ie ld , Backhoe Service.
Rt 1, Rut la nd , Ohio , 7.42
ho use and roof pa1ntmg.
6092
general repa1r , reasonable
7 11 90tc
rates , free estimates. 15
years
ex per ie n ce
Call
Cha rl es S•nc la1r, 985 ·4121 or HOME- I m provemen t ana
992 222 1.
Repair se rvice
Anything
7 JQ . J2tc
f ixed around the home from
root to basement Yob'll like
ou r work and rates . Phone
NttD A n ew norne oultt on
7425081
your; loP Contact Mi1o B
7 17 tfc
H otc h ison, Rutland , Oh'io
Phone 742 3615
5·8-tfc
ELWOOD BOWERS'REPA IR
----- - -==~
Sweepers, t oas ters, iron'S,
ROOFi N G,
Sp outing ,
all sma ll appl1ances Lawn
al u m.nu m and vi ny l S+dtng,
mowe r , next to State High
com plete
remoctel1nQ
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 742 62 73 or (304) 773
Phone 985 3625 .
5684 Free estimates
4 16 tfc
6 2s .26IP
·-· - -

.cr-&amp;

He needed three heart tncks
and proceeded lo gel them by
leadmg h1s 10 of hearts !
West could have covered wilh
the Jack and s till beaten the
ha nd by wmmng a second heart

EAST IDI

Ohio Raute7, North- Eut of
Tupper Pla1ns .
Cool¥ille, Ohio
Phone : 667-3608
Open
Mond~y
thru
Saturday a:oo to 8: 00.

SEWI NG
MACHINE.
Repe1rs, ser¥tce, all makes
992 228J The Fa bri C Shop,
Po,meroy A uthorized Smger
Sa tes and Se rv1 ce
We
sha rpen SC ISSo r s
J 29 lf c
.

sort or play that w1nners
come up With on occaston .
th e

Proces!ing

Ph . 9~2 c~993

yea r s ~xper ien ce In sur ed,
free est1mates Ca ll 992 3057
Cool¥ille
Phone (1) 667,
30&lt;11
,.,.'
A 30 ·tfc

e lec tri c Only $1800 00 NEW
7-23 -4tc LISTING .
LIKE NEW - 3 be droom s

7 21 lfc
4

Phone Gallipolis

J YEAR OLD -.3 bedrm house
Ca ll a t te r ,J p m , 992 5064
7 15 ntp

1971, 350 , JOHN Deere dozer, with la rg e c l oset s. Huge
detsel engine, 6 ft . blade, Irv ing. bath. nat gas furnace,
canopy draw bar and PTO, wi th low luel bllls and garage
$6.000 Ph one 985 -3594
on J,::, acre
7 -23-Btp 27 ACRES - Large bar~ wrt h
concrete fl oo r , L.C
water
EMERSON 110 air cond it ioner available. 4 bedrooms, bath,
$30, 22- tn ch la wn mower, $20. on hard road

$10 1 40 or terms
3965

Plus
2 acres on
Muskingum
River.
Above Beverly, 0.
Excellent
condition.

H OUSE 1n Portland , 5 rms .
and bath . good we ll , 2 acres
of
ground
Tak e ov" p"+ymenfs Phone 8J3 22 'r '
7 9 12tc

Realty

Teaford

Phone city

- ----

ch 1ldrer'1 pl ease. Phone 9925131, d uring day .

CABIN

577?

Walnut Conso l e acres on n ew Route 33.
t ype apT- fur - MODERN
stereo ra d10 co mbin at ion , 4
nished and paid util i ti es No
speed c han ger
Balance NEW LISTING - Renovated 2

BACHELOR

Real Estate For Sale

Phone Paul Orr, 949 ·

NEW LISTIN!; - J bedrooms ,
gas hot wate r heat, 1112 baths,
20 FT . CAB IN c rui ser. dmtng , TV room , so larrum
Thompson hull. tra tl er,
and ma gn rfi cen t view rn ex phone 992 -28 15
ce ll ent n ei!=j hborhood
GOOD horses for sa le

'&gt; EP TI (
T A NK S clea ned
Modern Sanllatron 992 395 ,1
or 992 73 19
9 18 tfc

Syracuse, Ohio

Masterpiece

1LJQ-Movie "Ki ller Bees" b
1 ·()()-Tomorrow 3, 4,; News 13

L &amp;V Meat

··

lARRY IAYEttDER

8, 10.

Cannon

.

3.4.6.8.10. 13 . 15' ABC News 33
11 JQ-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Movie " Ki ller Bees" 13;
FB I 6. Movie " Seven Go lde1. M en" 8; "The Italian
Brigands" 10; Janakl 33

2J Malco lm played hts kmg
At th1 s pomt Malcolm made

WEST

Middleport
.;1-JO-l mo .

Wrap

3..4, 15,

~LI»-New s

CUSTOM SLAUGHTER
Cut

Gang

9 36-Jean Shepherd ' s America 20
lO :ClO-Baretta 6, 13, Mannix 8 .1 0, News 20 ; Family At

East discarded a spade a nd

NORTH

Emergency
949-2211 or "2 -5700
Comp lete a.r conditioning
sates a~d ser¥1ce, heat ing ,
plumb1ng , roofing and
genera l sheet metal work
Fre e Est1mates
7 lllmo .

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown mto Wa lis &amp; A Hies
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

lUNC~ETE

SEP TI C iANK S CLEANED
Reil SOnablr R 1\ T E S Pl10ne
John
! 16 t7B? Galltpol1s
Rus sel l owner
4 9 lie

ENGLISH Shepherd pups lor

&lt;nd

oo-zoo

Theatre 33

WIN AT BRIDGE
Heart play saves contract
•AQ
" K75J
t A~ 8 4
... 8 54

Your Heil Dealer
Th i rd St .
R iJ C1n e, Oh1o
Ph . 949-5961

Pomeroy

FREE ESTIMATES

d e t,ve r ed r 1Q hl to your
pro1e c t r a st and eas y ~ree
est 1mcttes Pl10 n e 992 32 8 1
Gor qt e,n Ready M 1x co
M 'd dl eporL Oh ,0
'
6 Jo 11 C

7-23 6lc

7-23 -3tp

7 23-12tc

BOAT Motors , R epa1rs 498
Locust
sr , Middleport,
Oh10 Phone 997 309?
7 n 26tc

6863

sa le

Ph . 992 -2114

-

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

.

REA D Y MIX

~-

327

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS, INC._

7-7- 1 mo

DIDN'T L1

AND WHAT AM I 5 UPP05E'D TO
~E FOR AN AUTOMATIC DI5HWA$Hi;R 1 .. M'/ HAN/)$ I'

Free Estimates
PH. 992 -2550

Nathan B1gg s
Radiator Specialis-t

"A t Caution L1ght"
Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains, 0 .
Shop U s Last &amp; Save
Open 9 5 Wed through Sun

W IL L TR '"" u • cut trees and
shrubbery an d pamt roofs
Phone 949 3271 o r 742 JJ4 1
6 2J 26tp

7 23- ltp

COLDS POT. 11,000 BTU air

BARGAIN CENTER

Hill/()

9

War 33

THAT SIG CLOJ'/I&lt;J: YO U 'D --~
THINK WE- WE;RE 5DME
1
KIND 01' MAR.. IED
I
COUPL!i:
IMA61NI1
TAL~ lNG A$ I I :
IT"$ MV OUT . Y
TO DO THE;,
D 15 H WA5HIN&lt;3!

l WOULD,

Construction
and Plumbmg

Fro m th e largest Truck or
Bulldoze r Rad1ator to th e
&lt;:.ma ll est Heater Core

Ph. 667-J8S8

7 23 31c

1\Pl lik. e new ] rooms wllh
tarqe bnth lr~bl e top ranq e,
i arq(.• c loset East Ma1n ', 1 ,
F'omr r oy ~ e E' to appr c c1a t e
Pho11C Gall 1p o11s du r 1n q dav .
.TJ6 7699 , even1ngs 4J6 9539

.-

Chevro l e t

1965 COMET, new motor and
transm•ss ron Call 949 4935

19 1? TOYOTA
extras

EXPERIENC.ED
Radiata ' "'
Service
--

L

{

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING

7-8-l mo .

---------~-- , --- ---

7·23-4tc

16. 13, JO (81 6. 41c

-

I

Phone 992 -5682
or 992 -7121

KUHL'S

7 23 41p

9 x 12 TENT. Ca ll 949 4935.
7-23 -3tc

For Rent

Wanted TO Buy

7 17 61c

(7)

WOULD YOU LIKE?

Ca ll 992-

n

(\I NT" "
Mob1IC
H ome
f'ilrk. Rt lj ten mil L·~ nor Ill
o t PonHcroy La rqt' lots wllh
COilCrcte pa i 10S !, ld Cwalk.S
runner &lt;, and o ft s trf'Ct
p ar t.. •nq Ph on e 'I'J 7 7 !19
1711 lfc'

-SALESMAN-

res tdence, 24 1 Sou th Th1rd

YARD Sale. Wednes d ay, July
23
26 at the Homer Mills
res i dencf! , Ro se Valley ,
Sy r acuse, Oh10
Clothing.
furnllur e, e t c
7 22 4tp
- - - - - --------- - - - YARD Sa l e, July 23. and 24, 10
am fill 7 p m at Cla1 r and
A n n Boso residence, Rt 33 S
G r ea t Ben d , Oh 10, men's,
women's a nd c h ildren's
c loth 1ng, curta ,ns, drapes,
boo k s, records, c raft sup
plies , driftwood ,
yarn,
wheelba rr ow,
stan d s,
tamps , and other 1t ems too
nu mer ou s to me n t 1on
7 22 2tc
- - - - _____ ___ _
FAMILY
YARD
Sale
c lo t hin g
(c htldren
and
a du l ts ), bed , l a¥atory, 14 1n
wheels m 1Sc 1terns Th urs
day and F riday , 24 and 25 of
July , fr om 9 am !til 5 p m
above Eastern H1gh School.
Starlm g Massar restdence
7 21 3tc
- - - - - - - - - - - ____ _
2 FA MILY Yard Sale, d•shes ,
drape s.
bedspre-ads ,
pressu.re g lass, c lot h es, of
a ll s •z es, l oo many to
menl10n
11:.&gt; mile from
Ches h1r e on 554, Ju ly 24, 25
and 26 9 am t ill dark .
7
3tc
- - - ---- - - - - - - - - - 6 FAM I LY Yard Sales, J u ly 24
and 25, 10 a m to 6 p m SJ9
Beech
St , Middlepo rt
Dishes , shoes, baby car
seat. ma ,orette boots . 1nfant
clo th es ,
men's
and
Chi l dre n 's
clo thi ng ,
women's and teen clo thes,
s •zes 7 to 20
Matern1ty
c lo thes, avon bottles and
othe r m tsc rtems For more
•nfo r mat,an, call 992 3289
7 21 3tp

.For Rent

\l

Ben Batey

lhe Gall Ia County Courthouse,
Eastern Daylight Savings 1975 HONDA Cb-7SO. Extras .

Time .
By' order of the Gallia
Coun t y Commissioners
Joe Stewar t
John L. Belv ille

Phone 992 -2156
TODAY

YARD Sa le, Saturday, July 26,
St , Middle po rt
5158

WE DO&gt;
Roo fin!! • Siding
Complete
Home
Maintenance .

ALL
MECHANICAL
WORK

Guaranteed
appliances
used fu rniture a l
'

1967 DODGE wtndow van, 6
cy l. st andard New pa1nt,
good condd1on. $800 Phon e
985 3594

196~

pass

a lot of mise

2 Miles We st

CAS H ' N CARRY
SAVES U $'son

_ _ ______ _ _____

. ..

your
home
Does
require any of these
services?

On St. Rt. 124
Off Rt . 7 By -Pa ss

7 T 1 mo ..

OPEN EVES.8:00 P . M .
POMEROY, OHIO

For Sale

In Pom erov

Sea l ed proposals will be
r ece1ved by the Clerk of th e
Boar d
of
County
Com
m+~sioners , Ga ll1 a County,
Oh10, at the office of the
County Commissioners at t he
Coun t y
Cou r thouse
•n
Ga llipoliS, Oh10 on Thursday.
August 14, 1975 unt tl 12 00
Noon ,
Eastern
Daylight
~a._.r ng s Trme , and a t that
ttme will be open ed publ ic l y
and r ead for the furniShing o f
a ll
labo r
and
ma terit'll
necessary for the grad•ng o f
the building site tor fu tur e
Mental H ealth Cen ter at
Gallipolis, Oh 1o All work Shall
be dpne accordmg to the
drawmgs an d spec ,ficat 1ons ,
as
pr epa red
by
Hayes ,
Dona ldson.
Wittemyer
&amp;
P~rtners ,
Arc h 1tects, 601
Eighth Slreet. Portsmouth ,
Oh10 .
Proposals Will be r ecetved
for
t he
General
Work
Proposals s hall be subm1tted
on ~roposal Form contamed
•n the bound sped1f ica t ion s
andothercontractdocuments ,
Whlchdocumentsareonfileat
the o ffi ces of the Clerk of sa•d
Comm •ss i on'ers at the off i ce of
t he
Arc hi tect,
and
are
available to all prospective
bidders durmg r egula r Off lce
hour s , un ti l the cl osrngo f bi d s
O ne comp lete se t of b1d
docum enl s. for th e purpose of
biddmg , may be ob ta, ned
from
Hay es,
Do nal d so n ,
Witlenmyer
&amp;
Partners .
Arch itects, 601 E1ghth St r ee t ,
Portsmouth ,
Oh+o,
upon
deposit of S25 .00 which deposit
will b e refunded to each
bidd er, upon return of b1d
docum en t s 10 good con d1t1 on
wlthm a p er1o d of te n ( 10 )
d aysafteropentngofb ld S
All proposal s must be ac
compan 1e d by a b1 d bond
executed by
a Bonding
Company , 11c en sed by th e
Stat e of Ohio , or by a Certified
Check drawn upon a solvent
bank. in the State of Ohio ,
payabl e to th e order of the
Board o f
Ga lii a Coun t y
Com m rsstoners ,
Ga llrpol•s.
Ohio , in an amount no t le ss
th an fi ve (51 p ercent and tn a
specihc amount of the b•d Th e
bond or chec k sha ll be for
fe i ted if the bidder fails to
ente r into a contrac t w tlh satd
O wn er The bonds or checks of
the thr ee lowe st btdders will
be h el d un ti t th e execut ron of

JOHNSON
REMODELING

Eventngs 742 -4902

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

COUP L E to be res1dent
manage r l or n ew apartment
comp te• 1n New Haven. w
Va
l nt erest 1ng
rob ot
I I0 H e
re nt 1ng
apa rt ments,
collect.ng
rent ,
some
ma1nte nance work Ca ll 1
304 881 2788 o r wnte- Pr1me
Managemen t Co Attn Joe
K1ng . 306 E
Gay St , . APP RO X 6 II x 7 fl new
Columbus , Oh10 43?15
plush
carpet
re mnant
7 18 t Ote
neutral c olor, 1 15
Phone
- -·- --992 3496 after 5 30
7 9 lf c

7 23 3tc

~OTICE TO BIDDERS

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

Ph . 992-7608

power steermg and
luggage rack green

4 3!1-I&lt;Sewltched 3. Merv &lt;;rlffln 4, Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8. Bonanza 15.
S 1»-FB I 3; lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers· Neighborhood 20,33. I ron side 13.
5 3G-~ews6 . Andy Griffith 8. Gel Smart 15; Elec. Co.
20,33.
6 ·1»-News 3,4.8, 10,13, 15; Sesame St 20. You Owe It
To Yovrself 33.
6·»-NBC News 3,4.15. ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8,1 0; Jody's Body Shop 33
7 1»-Truth or Cons. 3.4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10. Country Music Jubilee 13,
Drug Abuse 15 , Book Beat 20 . The Romagnoli 's

!

..

•

Help Wanted

"a't-•l"nla, '"

Card of Thanks

SI69S

V 8 automat1c,

-

V tnyl sidrng, a lu minu m
srdmg, patio cover s. storm.
wt ndow s,
kitchens,
bathrooms and garages
We Carry
L1abthty Insurance

n1ce ca r wt l h good economy

;:::==~~::;;'=;;;~~~~~__:•~u~u~e~s~te:d'_"by the above cartoon.

'

Business Services

Table 33.
7· 3!1-Polcle Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Name
That Tune 4 ; Let's Make a Deal 6; Wilburn
Brothers 8; Evening Edition wllh Martin Agronsky
20; The Judge 10, To Tell the Trulh 13; Episode
Action 33
_ -··
8 ·!»-Little House on Ihe Prair ie 3.4, 15; That's My
Mama 6. 13; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10; Feeling
Good 20.33
8 3!1-Movle " Unwed Father" 13. Philadelphia Folk
Festival 20; Another Look al Appalachia 33.

WEDNESDAY , JULY 23, 1975

'

"_,.

._.... _.._, _ _ _ _ _ _ ..

television log for .easy viewing·

I

""""-

f

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF
,QUALITY Motor

lloorm q

Phon e 9'i/ 77W

l

.

Auto Sales

Employment Wanted

.....

'

-"~w-·-------

People brrng their problems to
you today Just when you te ei
lrke scream•ng , someone does
someth•ng n1ce for you

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) Yo u'

We are returninQ yoor P.S. We note that you
manuscrtpt.Jt aoes not sent your story by
suit our present needs. first class mail..

1n1 e res t 1n se r1ou s matrers
wane s easily t oday b u t a
r om an t1c 1nterlude could perk
you uo 1n th e eve n1n g

SCORPIO (Del. 24- NO¥. 22)
Fam1 ly O T CISSOC!8\€S Wtll bug
vou to d•stractJOn w1th trt¥ tB
ear ly today Ho ld oH on senous
work un11t tater

SAGITTA RIUS (Nov 23-Dec.
21) lh1S 1S not th e day to work
wilh un tam 1ll ar 01 dangerous
tnots You• m 1nd ten ds to
wande r Relax HaYe lu n 1n !he
evf' ntn q

CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22-Jon.
19) You 11 have pangs of consc encc '' you spe nd a lot l1¥1ng
,, up Bet tet st ,ck clos e to
I10111C

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 18)
You diSfJOSi h On at home dnves
lhe !Ctm!ly up th e wall By e¥en ·
1ny you II all feet be tter 11 you go
Oi.J 1 for a spell

PISCES (Feb. 20 -March 20)
Spea k 1ng belore yo u lh1nk ca n
get you 1n a heap of trouble \o day Be qu1et A YO' d be•ng
cau qh t 1n t11e mlddle

~Your
~Birt hday
July 24, 1975

,

You cflll b e very fortunate tn
your care er or relal1ons wrth
love d ones thIS comtn g year ,
but you must make majO r
dec•s,ons on your own
L

:'•.IJ:I', """p ~ R E ~TERI'RISE ASSN

Junk mail may be
sent third class.

�I .

l
r-.._--_..
.. _________ ,___ _.......,._ --·-

..

~'"='~::-:""'t..o™=o-=:!~--r---.

·c lassifieds
,,

L{ !J)f.;f.;

CARP E NIRY
(Pdn1q

l h

WORK

pilncl1nq

6 l·l '171{.

I (J

I I

c:o

f\I:: MOOEl l NG .
Pl u •.,bmy
t, e,1t111q .~ 11 r 1 -"II typ es of
Cl f' rorr,lt
rt.' Pcl•r
Work
qu,,r ,lnt;

t

rt

p f' ru::- n c. •·

70 .,.ea r "&gt; ex
l'hont
'Y'i'l 7t 09

'.&gt; I tl r

I I

THE.Y OPEN IN
"THE. ?P R:IN6.

I
I I (]

I FLOUJY

1911 CO MET 1 DOOR
SI8SO
6 cy l 5ld tr ans, radio, lt k e ne w w w f1rc s. blue fm1 s h ,

H OUSC: .1nd roof pa ont,ng by

ho u r o r contract
r- ree
cs trm&lt;'l es Sf'c Car l Ne lson
ll'&gt;'i S y camo re S t . Mtd
dl eport Ol1 o0

Now J\rrange the circled lfotler!l
to form the surprise &amp;n!l"-er , M

PHI MATADOR
$1495
4 door , local C&lt;lr. atr condlf1 oned. lull equtpmenf

197a CHE VROLET ESTATE

'-1_

___:_::
Pril::_c
lllle
= SUR:::.:
PR::::IS!.::::
AN:::
SW::::.
!R ~her::_!_
Jumhl• • FELON

SWASH

__jl 0: XI

TANGLE

3 seat wagon .

j

brakes a1r cond , till wheel.
fm1 sh . rad10 . Nt ce

EASILY

NfED E D

Arak c

rn il n
rncl , ncd

me cnan .ra lly

E l(per1en&lt;:e n ut

[mptoyN wilt tra1n R eply
J? QM
c o Tht• Dady
'-.e nt,n t" l Pomeroy, Oh10

Notice

1~ 169

NO'N ~e tlm q f-uller ~rush
P rodu c ts, phone 992 3410

concern tor me dunng my

I '} 1! ti C

VISJfS

Hnrry Ptckens, Sr
7 13 2tc

lost
MAL E r ed bone hound
T uppers
Pla1ns
Arec
f-!eNMd P hO n P 667 JBSB
1 17 6TC

Notice
SWEEPER

and

Sewtng

Machm es Repatr, Parts,
and
Sup pl1 es
Vacuum Cleaner,

Davi s

LOSl 1n Syra(us.e area Small
n 1a 1
poodle . wh1te w 1lh
some apr1cot wh1ch was last
seen w1th femal e Beeg l e
Substant1al r ewa rd , an
swe r s to the name of
osct,R Ca ll 997 '296~ atter
5 30 p Ill
' tO 6tc

'·2mde up

George's Creek Rd off Stat e
Route 7 Phone 446·0294

7-23 -ltc

TO WHOM t1 may concern
1-'"lw long am I gomg to ha ve
lh ts "cockeyed'' mud hole 1n
front of my place of

busmessn? " BOO "
7 23-21c
DEBBIE

Hunne ll Ferguson,
Helen's Beauty Shop , 800 E
Mam 5 1
Special1zes m
High Styling , B low Cuts,
Natural styles
7 18 Otp

ME I GS County F 1Sh and
Ga me Assoc•al1on m ee lm g.
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
at
Snowball Htll.
7 18 Stc

ne c t·~sa ry

Flox

I WOU L 0 ltke to eKpress my
graltlude to a ll who showed
stay m the hosp1tal for th eir
prayers , cards flowe r s. and

Yard Sale
YAR 0 SA LE, 2 weeks, July 12
thru 76th Ant 1ques. allad1 n
ta m p , old clocks, dep r ess,on
glass. m 1sc J m1tes south o t
Athens on R r 33
7 10 14tc
3 FAMILY Yard Sale, July 26
and 27 a t Harley Han mg's
restdence. Flatwoods Rd ,
Furnrture, Drshes, c lofh1ng .
an l1q ues and cra nk type
te lep hone, etc

7

n

Jtc

ANYO N E I NT ERESTED 1n
dona t,nq t1me to - &lt;:heste r
Vol
F 1re Dept
1n Th e1r
booth du ~ mg Me1gs Co Fat r
wee!\ pl ease call 985 JS TO
P1es. ar e als.o apprecta l ed
Chester Vo l
F 1re
Dept
pres1dent K1rk. Chevul1er
7 ? I Jtp
H EAD meat c utter Twin City
Gatewny Apply between 9
a m and 5 p m M ond ay
thr ough Frrday Phone 992 ·
6194
7 23-4tc
GR IL L
cook:
c ar
hops.
wa1Tresses Apply 1n person
House,
Crows
S t e ak
Pom eroy
7 n 61c

BE A
"SENTINEL
CARR.IER"

7 23 3tp
YARD
Sa les,
Thursday,
Friday and Satu rd ay, 10
am till 5 p m n of Chester,
off Rt
7 follow srgns.
Clothrng, dtshes, furmture,
app liances, some an trq ues
YARD Sa le, U nt on Ave, July

•

•
•

•

13 th roug h 27 Near Rt 7 by -

••
••
•
••
•
•

••

•'•
•
•

, ,.
"'

&gt;~"

I:. &gt;
;;.~

R1 v
.__
....
, ··
v1
....~ .

""
.....
';" '
v .

~~·

&lt;~ ... v

- - lhe

cont ra cl

a nd

lhe

fur

ni shin g Of t he r equi r ed per ·
' formance bond , after which
they will be r etu rn ed on
demand The checks of the
, ... :. other b 1dders will be returned
... ,. . ~ on dem and after the bi ds are
-v f canvassed
... ~ .
A per for ma n ce bond and a
..
tabor &amp; material payment
bond , each to be 100 percent of
the amount of the contract ,
wi t h sa tisfactory su r et i es, wi ll
be required from th e sue
'v" cessful bidders for the faithful
"' performan ce of the work.
The righ t 1S r eserved by the
Board of
Ga ll 1a County
.
'" , Commissioners,
Ga llipoli s,
,.t~&lt;• Ohio. the Director of th e Oh10
1 .. Department of Mental Hea lth
~: · and Mental R etardation, and
. : ' the United States Depart ment
of Health , Education and
; Welfare , to reject any and all
b i ds
and
to
wa i ve
in
formalit ies . No b idder may
withdraw his bid for a per i od
of sixty days .
J
Advertising tlates for bid s
• • are July 16, 23, 30, and August
. 1 6, 1975 . Bids will be open
·•
August 1.4, 1975, 12.oo p .m. at
01

-

·r

'!

:

•t

", ~
•'

;'• f:I

Good clothrng, g lass
wa r e, trr cycle, bteycle, toys,
co lor TV, s hallow we ll
wa t er p ump . Also , 1970
Suzukt 125 Trailbike, two
cragar mags w 1th tir es
J .2J.Jtc

-;: , Form approve.d by the
";. Gallfa County Prose c u ti ng
( . Attorney, Gallipolis, OhiO
Gene .Wetherholt
~

Protected T er ritory
N o Com pe llt ron
Stay Home Eves
&amp;
Weeken d s
SJO.OOO Potent,al l SI Yr
Pa1d Tra.nmg
Operate Your Own Bus
after Prov rng yourself
No In vestments
R ep ly to Box 72'1 c -O Th e
Dally Sentinel . Pomeroy,
Oh1o
All replays c on fidentiaL

7-23-J ic

T RA I LER lo t m Middleport.
Ca ll 99'1 5434
7 16 2btc
3

3 BEDROOM ' hom e in coun
try Ca ll 992 5442 , or aller 7
P m ca ll 992 5196
7 18 12tc
- -------------~LO furl"iiture , ice boxes ,
bras~ beds , or comple te
households
Write M
D ,
M1ller, Rl
4, Pomer oy,
Ohio Call 992 7760
tO 7 7J
---------------::.- , DISCARDED l awn mowers ,
Idler s, rid ing mowers , etc .
Phone 7:12 -J0 7A
7 16 26tc
- --- --- ---~----- U S CO IN S and cu rr ency.
1964 and older , d 1me s,
qua r ters,
ha l ves.
war
nic k els and V ntc kels. tn
dian and s t eel pennies ,
si lv er dollars . Call Rutland .
74? 365 1 for offer or write to
Roger W'amstey, Rl . t, Box
I J7 , Midd l eport. Oh i o 45760
7 15 12tc
- - - ----- - - - ---

For Sale or TIade

sh owroom
conditio n .
Cons ider trade tOr small
truckot car Phone992 -7210.

BEDROOM u nfur nished
apar tm ent 1n Midd l eport.
Phone 992 5A3A
7 16 He

12x51 TRAI L ER , l1ke new, 535
p e r week. , uti11tles pa 1d
Phone 992 33?4
7 22 lfc
LAURELA ND
a p ar tm ents.
6th 7 George Sts, N ew
Have n , W Va
Ava ilabl e
A ugust 15, Brand new 2
bedrooms
t ow nh o u ses,
ap pli ances furniShed , fully
carpe ted Rentmg $128 up
1nclud1ng uti l it1es For more
Info rm ation call 1 304 882
1788
7 18 IOtc
ruRN apt 5 ro oms and bath ,
n1 ce l arge yard , bath an d '.,
1 90
South
c,econd
Sl ,
Middleport adu lt s on l y
Phone 991 5262 e venmgs
~
5 21 If(
"'FUR NI SHED
apartment,
adu ll s only m M1ddleport
Phone 992 3874
3 25 tfc

-------

__)

R OOM turn1 Sh Cd and
unfurn, shed
apa rt me nt !'.
P t. one '&lt;'i 7 '&gt; t J.T
t 17 !l c

l f, N[' I

PRIV fl l E nlC' Ciul q room for
,lny orq,ln17Cll 10 11 phon( '1'1 7
l &lt;i' '

J I I II C

) 23 8tp
1966
BELAIR
Phone 997 2081

1910 DODGE ,Challenger . Will
trade ' for dune buggy or
motorcycle of equa l ¥alue
Ca ll 949 3953

..

'

MuDER N Watnut Console
s ter eo r ad•o comb1nai 10n -1
s p eed changer
Balance
\101 40 or ter m s Ca ll 992
)965
7 9 1fc

TOMATOES ,
cucumbers .
Cl eland Fa rm s. Gera ldm e
Cle land
7 6 tfc
CAMP I NG trader. slee p s
s1x, self con tamed, 1B to ote r
Good condilio n Phone 99?
3? 09

7

n

16tc

1977 HONDA Ch opper. best
offer ma de Can be seen at
Har ley McDona l d's Rt IJ 3,
Harr, som11 lle Rd
7 n Jtc
HOL LO N co rn et, exce l lent
co nd1t1on
P h one · 985 3882
7 22 61 p
NEW Improved "Zippies,"
the great tron pill now with
Vitamin C Ne l son Drug.

1'&gt;171 CHEVELLE SS, tor sa te
or tradr for small car
Phone '19? 3980
7 ?0 Sip
Phone 99? 2082
7 20 61p

Wanted
CASH pa1d tor a ll makes ano
models. of mobi l e homes
Phone ar ea co d e 614 423
l'll 53 1
A 1J t i c

Pets For Sale
SIA MESE ktftens , 5 mates
and 1 f ema l e Ca ll 991 ·7201
after 4 p m
7·23 ·3tc
GENTLE R eg. Co llt e, female
to good home - make offer
Phone 742 4211 alter 5, 742

c onditioner. s lightly u sed,
$ 1 so. Phone Ch est er 985-

3862

Paul Orr, 949-5272.

7 23 4tc
Phone
MIXED pups $5
Long Bollom 6 14985 4244 .
7 20 Ole

REG QUARTER ho r se bay
ge ld1ng , and 1J month old
pam! col t Also. AKC blac k
toy pood le Can be seen at
?01 Lcad1nq Cre ek Rd,
Middleport
1 18 lfc

Real Estate for Sale
Vtrqtl

r...,

Sr, BroiH'f

446-4922

1111 Mt'' 11.ll11( ~I
f' (' Tllf'l oy. Oh10

INV ESTME NT Property 3
Good 12
room older home with 2 bath s.
modern kr t chen, firep lac es,
carpettng on good corn er lot.

MOBILE HOM;E LOT water,

w ilh

sewaQe,

furn is h ed apartments w rth
good ren tal. monthly in
come S225 Phone 992 -5131
day time
7-23 4tc
I 72 ACRES land

and locust
posts At so . 1965 Ford L TO
P hOne 742 3656
5 23 52 1p

a nd

Phone 992-7406.

REAL NICE 7 ·23-3tc

~EANS,

pick your own , 12 50
pe r bu sh el Also, cabbage
an d ye l low and zuc c hin i
s.quash Phone 843 2353 after
7 p m
7 20 6tc

3 bedrooms,

~

na t ga s. fu rnace, fu l l
basement. All tn nr ce clean
cond it ron

MODERN KITCHEN - Large
lot fat g arden. 3 bedrooms,
ba th , dining, modern k tf ch en,
na t . a as furna ce in Racine

WEEK'S

BARGAIN

-

70

Ca ll 992

un fu rnished h ouse,
1650 L1 n coln Hgts , phone
992 367 J
7 6 tfc
~&lt;vvM

bedroom home N ew kt t ch en,
nr ce bath, nat . gas furn ace,
thermopane wtndows, a nd
nice lot at Ch est er

YOUR FUTURE SAVINGS
LIE IN PROPERTY . FOR A
GOOD INVESTMENT CALL

4· 10 · 1 mo

--

-----

-----

CLELAND
608 E.
REALTY
MAIN
PuM~R_OY,O
NEAR

DEXTER -

30

ac r es good clean g rou nd ,
l'h story frame home, 3
BR , barn &amp; other buildi ng s
$3,500 down bal. 5133. per
m onth rnc ludes tnterest
Tota l pnce $17,500

MIDDLE PORT -

BEORM
double wide ,
f ur n1 shed , utiltt1es pa1d ,
coun fry local ro n yet near
Pomeroy No pets Phon e
992 7666 o r 992 7017
7 20·31p

-

EXCAV-A-TT NG. dozer. loaaer
and backhoe work , se pfl c
tanks
'nstalled,
dump
trucks and lo boys for hire
will ha ul fill d1rt, lop soil ',
limestone and gravel . Ca ll
Bo b or Roger Jeffers., day ·
phone 992 7089, n1ght phone
992 3525 or 992 5232
2· 11 tfc

I t:Cl.l'i

/

and knockmg out dummy 's ace
or d i amonds but nq one can

"Q l08
. 6J

~

lb~T,I

/

blame WesUru: ducking When
the 10 held it was a simple
m a tter to cas h the king of
spaces, lead the queen of hearts
and w1nd up with three spades.
three hearts, two cl ubs, a dia ·
mond and a top score

A AKJ9

MeAN

Norlh-South vu lnerable

1D RSH W\lf\ 1

•

West

North

Pass
Pass
Pass

1¥

,.

3NT

Sou lh

pass

lA
INT

Pass

Pass

Opemng lead - 7 •

I INSIS"T YOU
DRINK UP,
GENTS!

p er yard
Ca ll R tc hard
West, phone 8tl3 2667

------ - ----- -~~ 26tp

'

GENERAL Repa 1r, clean up
and
hau l 1ng ,
cutting ,
weldrng,
carpentry
plumbing , e l ec . maso n rY
an d general remodeling .
Ca ll Skll Poo l. Phone 992 5126
6 17 tf c

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

LOOK, FRIEND, r iOLDJUf-4
BEFORE AN ' l 'LL "TELL
..OU AG"'IN, WE DON'T
WANT ANY RED-EVE' "

by THOMAS JOSEPH
.. ....,_ DOWN
ACROSS
I Secret group
1 Expense
5 Snooze tune 2 Martini
addttive
m SonQra
3
Treat wtth
II Toward
contempt
s helter
(3 wds .)
12 P atriotic
4
Kmd of
song
square
13 Pungency
5 One's ea rn·
14 City. in
mgs
Paktstan
15 Girl 's name 6 Old lnsh
garment
16 Sailor
17 Skm problem 7 Biblical s uf·
fix wtth do.
18 Athlete's
go, etc
award
8
Sna rl
20 Bottled m ( 3 wds I
21 Gainsay
9 Roman
22 Fairy tale
dramatist
opener
23 Thorax
25 Engender
26 Port side
27 Speakers'
' platform
28 "Essays
of - "

GASOIJNE ALLEY

Couldn't find

them! Ther..j've
cleared out

Yeah' Well.I'll h
a look anl.jwal

&lt;

d\

Square
Yard

fwe ha ve hundreds o~
carpet values . Your tob c8
b e comp leted in 1 to
weeks
No long waiting
per1od Our installer has 28
years experrence . Expert
tnstatlatron
You'll like
what you get

,1(1, \Y

..-('\
0\Y .-&lt;\ \Y
~ ::~g , ..c:P

lJL ABNER

- .

HANC ' UPON Tl-11:: ~APSkATE ~!
$ 5 Cqcx:D HARDLY PAYS FoR
GARS 1 VVRE:CK. MY '\
FEE IS $ I, ooq 000 !rt

-~===::::---~;::;)7,;:-;~::i:'mc;M'M~'\:=-----~'"i::~w

FATSON,
SIR-

A GENTLE;MAN
WISHES YW TO
HANDLE" A
CA""
-= F0/2.

=

$ 50q 000 ~!-

me=

CALL 74-2-4211

TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE,

Yesterday's Answer
10 Se t ri ght
'!I Casmo
16 Go campin g
employee
19 Seed
cove rmg
20 Karlofl
23 Ex plam
12 wds.l
24 Greek
25 P h oemc ta n
sun god

30 Actress
Verdugo
31 Atrport need
33 Abjecl
36 Former
chess
c hampton
37 Moisten

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

nice lot . JUST $14 ,800
RUTLAND - E xcell ent 2

m a Serl&amp;s

E1ghteenths

BR home, ca rpeted, tiled ,.
paneled , LR ha s nice
fireplace, porches. garage ,
close to shopprng , A SK 1NG

of

32 Pte - mode
33 Formal
dance I Fr I
34 Old musical
note
3&gt; - library
37 Mourmng
band
38 Free from

Bemlce Bede Osol
For Thurtday, July 24 , 1975

ARIES (March 21·Apnl 19)
Coo l your spend1ng urg es tdl
later in the day You II be ex
travaganl earl1er to sa Hsfy what
could be a foolish wh1m

TAURUS (April 20- May 20)
Fr u strat1on rules your PlHSu• t
ot des,res early m the day
Arter m1dday a sympathetiC
person soothes you r re el1 nq s

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

Coupon
is Worth

O.NL Y $9,500. (see this a nd

Service

WAV50PEN1D
WENDY'S FRIEND51
MR. LONG!

Here's ho)V
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Ia

to work it:

One l etter simply stands for another In lh is sample A is
used for the three I.'s, X for the two o·s. etc Sing le letters,

apostrophes. the

l ength

and

of the words are all

f ormatwn

hints . Each day t he code letters are different

CRYPTOQUOTES

~oupon · Nii-.~

'3.00

Y N UU

PD N F

WF

YCAFWSCH

On The Purchose Of A

vcxvuc

1. Complete Chassis Lubrication

2 · 5 Quarts Oil ••• Installed
3 . An AC Oil Filter ••• Installed

FX

ZXQ

NKC

P X-K M

PWUU,
PDNF

Regular Prices are /lll.atloblein our Ser.vlce Dept.

MOB I LE hom e f or rent Also,
t railer s pace ready for
hookup Phon e A l bert H HI,
949 276 1.
7 20 Jtp

GU N S, amn1o:., ...... __ .,..,..,des,
GUARANTEEO
FINAN
C IN G ava1lable for most
customers
V ill age Gun
Shop . M idd l e port Phone
992 5177
7·20 ·61C
ST RAW fo r sa le
59SJ

4 RM- apt w1th wa1'1 t o wall
carpf' t , 104 Spr1ng Ave .
7 17 6tc
Po me r oy Ca ll 992 5906
- 6 12 lfc
F I SHING J,cense, Canadian
N11 c cr aw l ers , 60c doz Dug
3' F\EDRM 6':ixl2 mobile hom~
worms J doz 5.1 Other ba,f
for rent , util i ties pai d ,
t ackle . Quns , ammo, co's:
toca t ~d •n , AurllnQham Call
l nd,an Joe's Spor t s
308
992 715 I
Paqe St .. Phonr 992 3509 .
7 1 lfc
7 1 26tc

I' I \ ' 1 I ...

keep watchint our Ids fo,. m
'. coupons, coming your way week~re monev-Sivi,. . service

Dear

y.

!n YOUR CAR'S ENGINE, AND

Contrilxltor,

SAVE ON .THE NECESSARY SERVICES.
Call fo~ an appointment or stop by today.
· Do ,Busine3s With A Lead ,

Phone 949

soo

~~~~ Ne~n
Motors
i~c.
Moi'..- Fn.';!~!! -.
o.
Service Hours:

4

~ -~

Pomeroy,

. . . . . . .,

loftllft

0 CF

DNKECK

'·

'

.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Your l h , nkt~;~g cap 15 on
Si d eways loda y
Avo 1d
anyth •ng 1nvolvmg reason1ng o r
1og1c Seek a light hea rted
fnend to soc•al1ze with

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You sl art the day leeltng l1ke
e¥eryone IS gang• ng u]J on you
Eve nmg b r1ngs a turnabout
and somelh1ng you 11 l1ke

LEO (July 23-Aug . 221 You&lt;
pursu1t o f recog011ron could be
luhle 1111 you ret urn from work
and f1nd that your lamtly ap precJa\e9o you

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)

C© 1915 Kina Fea twes' Synd.icate , Inc .)
MOB I LE home for rent m
Rat.tne
Phone 9.49 2261.
A lber! H1ll.
7 20 3tp

W A·

AWMWFN
MDKQH DYDCS
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I SHALL NEVER PERMIT
MYSELF TO STOOP SO LOW AS TO HATE ANY MAN .
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON

I

3,.4, News 13.

Grapt-1

39 Spin! lamp 1
.W E ng !is h
'"'
bobby
H ··-she
blows 1"'

THANK.5 fOR IN/ ITING ME TO
IE ALONG WITH
lDYONIHIB
r; MA!AM.

Frandsco6, 13; Mov ie " Te x a s Across the River" 4.

Movie " Hot Spell" 8; Mov ie "The Kid from
Brooklyn " 10; Philadelphia Folk Festiva l 33.
9 ' 3!1-Jazz Is Alive and Well 20
10:1»-Harry 0 6, 13; News 20. We man 33

Astro-

htghhght

OUR HOMe 15 AL-

e, 10;

Episode Action 33.
2'1»-Baseball 3,4; $10,000 P yramid 6,13 ; Guiding
Light 8,10; Family At War 33 .
2' »-Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Doctors IS: Edge of
_Night 8,10.
3:1»-Genera( Hospital 6, 13 ; Another World 15; Price
Is Right 8, 10 ; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Play Chess 33.
3 ·JO-One Lite to Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
8,10. Feeling Good 20; Folk Guitar 33
4·1»-Somerset 15; Gllllgan•s Is land 6; Musical Chairs
8; Sesame St . 20,33; Mov ie ··cougar Country·· 10 ;
Mike Douglas 13.
4: 3!1-Bewllched 3. Merv Grlfl ln 4; Mod Squa d 6;
Mickey Mouse 8, Bonanza 15
S· I»-FBI 3; Lucy Show 8; Mi ster Rogers' Neigh .
borhood 20.33 ; I ron side 13.
S:3G- New56 , Andy Grlflllh 8: Get Smart 15 , Elec. Co.
20.33.
6 :1»-News 3,4,8; 10,13,15; ABC News 6, Sesame St 20.
Book Beat 33.
6 :34}- ~BC News 3,4, 15; ABC New s 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:1»-Truth or Cons. 3,4; What's My Line 8; News 10;
Let's Make a Deal 13, Jimmy Dean 15' Making It
Counnt 20, Nova 33
7:3!1-Hollywood Squares 3; ,4; Ohio Lotlery 6; New
Price Is Right 8. Evening Edition With Martin
Agronsky 20; Wild Kingdom 10. To Tell The Truth
13; American Outdoorsman 15
8 :1»-Giadys Knight &amp; lhe Pips 3,4,15, Barney Mdler
6,13 ; TheWaltons8, 10; Evening at Pops33, llteot
Leonardo Da VInci 20
8 :3!1-Texas Wheelers 6, 13
9 1»-Movle "The Greatest Gift" 3.15; Sl reets of San

l ·oo-TQmorrow

29 Sprmg

,..,:+-+-+- 1-+-

.IIUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-4211
Rull;'iiif

Monev-Saving

Gourmet 8; ; New Zoo Revue 13

10 ,00-Ce lebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4. 15 ; Spln -Ofl 8,1 0.
Dinah 13: Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
10 .3!1-Wheel 'of Fortune 3,4, 1S. Gambit 8,10. Frying
Pans West 33.
11 ,oo-Hgh Roll ers 3,4.15 ; Wild Wild World of ·Anlmals
6' Tattletales 8,10
11. 3!1-Hollywood Squares 3,15, Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4; Love ot Llle 8, 10.
11 ' 55-Take Kerr 8; Dan I mel 's World 10.
12 ,oo-Magnlflcenl Marble Mac hine 3.15 : Showofls 13;
_ Bob Braun's SO-SO Club 4; News 6,8.10; Mister
Rogers 33.
12 .3!1-Jackpot 3, 15; All My Chi ldren 6.13 ; Search tor

10 : 30-Horace Marshall 33

covenng

CAR Pt=T COfiiSULTANT

Saye 0~ ~ Service!

6 ' 55- News 13
7' 1»-Today 3,4, 15; AM Amer ic a 6. 13 ; CBS News
8,10 .
8 ' 1»-Lassl~ 6; Capt Kangaroo 8, Schoo lles 10;
Sesa m e St 33
8 ' 3!1-Big Val ley 6: Popeye 10
8 :55-Chuck While Reports 10
9'0(}-A .M 3; Phil Donahue 4,15 , Mur iel Slevens 8;
Capt. Kangaroo 10, Morning wllh D J 13
9 ' 3!1-Nol For Women On ly 3, Dinah 6; Galloping

11 ·1»-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 33
11 : JQ-Johnny Carson 3.4,15; Wide World Spe cia l 13;
FBI6; Movie " Who's Atrald ot Virginia Woolf?" 8;
Movie " : My Foo li sh Heart•· 10. Janakl 33
12 ,3!1-Wide World Special 6.

Very

nrce 3 BR hom e, dining R.,
liv tn g R. has fir e pla ce, full
basement
with
utility
space, na tura l gas furna ce,

6 . 25-Farm Report 13
6 .Jo-Five M inutes to Lrve By .4, N ews 6 , Bible An swers 8; School Scene 10 , Patlerns for Living 13
6 : 35-Columbus Today 4
6 : 45--Mornlng Report 3, Farmtime 10

Dream ~ of Jeannie 4 ; As the World Turns

501 'NYLON
99
RUBBER BACK

6 oo-Sunrlse Semtnar 4; Summer Semes ter 10

Tomorrow 8, 10 ; E lee Co . 33

Carpetiog

4

THURSDAY , JIJL Y 24 , 1975

12,55-NBC News 3,15;
1.1»-News 3: Ryan's Hope 6, 13. Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women On!y 15 ;
VIlla Alegre 33.
1 ' 3!1-Daysof Our Lives 3,15; Let' s Make a Deal6,1 3; 1

LET US DO IT! !

;u

cARP~T i nstilTfatian~$125

---'

GOOD c lean large trail er w1th
co¥ere d patio on large
co r ne r lot in M 1ddl epo r t
Adu l ts only , n o pets Call
997 23 19 or 99? 21 01
7 20 3tc

tKQ H

... Q 10 7 3 2
A6
SOUTH
• K 10 52

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

WOULD YOU ot:L IE VE?
Build an a !I st eel bUilding at
Po l e Bar n prices? G olden
G1ant Al l Steel Buildings,
Rt 4 , Box 148, Waverly,
Oh 10 Phone 947 2296
6 24 ·26 t c

CALLING US ABOUT
THESE HOMES MAY BE
THE WISEST CALL YOU
EVER MADE.
Phone 992-22S9

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

• J 10 2

NOW OPEN

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

make an ot ter).
2

AJ986 J

"96 4

La,.ry and Vivian Hopps
Owners

-----

0- - T-REE T~;ming ,

.74
• AJ 2

Freeze

DOZER wo rk , l and c learrng
7 17 1 mo
by t h e ac r e. hourly o r
cont ra ct
Far m
ponds,.
roads. e t c Large dozer and EXCAVA TING ,
backhoe.
operat or w1th over 20 yea r s i
dozer and dil cher
Gas,
experie nce
Pull rns Ex
e l ectric and water l ine
cavatmg, Pomeroy, Oh1o
bur i!tl , basements , tooter s,
Phone 992 2J7 8
septrc system s and brush
12 19 tic
ctean •ng Will haul fill dirt ,
top soiL sand and !iJravel ,
limestone for driv eways and
I"'L.U/V11:31N ..... n ectllll!J, repa ir
roads . Phone Charles R
and ,n sta llat ,on , electrical.
water pump repair , roof ing ,
Hatf ie ld , Backhoe Service.
Rt 1, Rut la nd , Ohio , 7.42
ho use and roof pa1ntmg.
6092
general repa1r , reasonable
7 11 90tc
rates , free estimates. 15
years
ex per ie n ce
Call
Cha rl es S•nc la1r, 985 ·4121 or HOME- I m provemen t ana
992 222 1.
Repair se rvice
Anything
7 JQ . J2tc
f ixed around the home from
root to basement Yob'll like
ou r work and rates . Phone
NttD A n ew norne oultt on
7425081
your; loP Contact Mi1o B
7 17 tfc
H otc h ison, Rutland , Oh'io
Phone 742 3615
5·8-tfc
ELWOOD BOWERS'REPA IR
----- - -==~
Sweepers, t oas ters, iron'S,
ROOFi N G,
Sp outing ,
all sma ll appl1ances Lawn
al u m.nu m and vi ny l S+dtng,
mowe r , next to State High
com plete
remoctel1nQ
way Garage on Route 7
Phone 742 62 73 or (304) 773
Phone 985 3625 .
5684 Free estimates
4 16 tfc
6 2s .26IP
·-· - -

.cr-&amp;

He needed three heart tncks
and proceeded lo gel them by
leadmg h1s 10 of hearts !
West could have covered wilh
the Jack and s till beaten the
ha nd by wmmng a second heart

EAST IDI

Ohio Raute7, North- Eut of
Tupper Pla1ns .
Cool¥ille, Ohio
Phone : 667-3608
Open
Mond~y
thru
Saturday a:oo to 8: 00.

SEWI NG
MACHINE.
Repe1rs, ser¥tce, all makes
992 228J The Fa bri C Shop,
Po,meroy A uthorized Smger
Sa tes and Se rv1 ce
We
sha rpen SC ISSo r s
J 29 lf c
.

sort or play that w1nners
come up With on occaston .
th e

Proces!ing

Ph . 9~2 c~993

yea r s ~xper ien ce In sur ed,
free est1mates Ca ll 992 3057
Cool¥ille
Phone (1) 667,
30&lt;11
,.,.'
A 30 ·tfc

e lec tri c Only $1800 00 NEW
7-23 -4tc LISTING .
LIKE NEW - 3 be droom s

7 21 lfc
4

Phone Gallipolis

J YEAR OLD -.3 bedrm house
Ca ll a t te r ,J p m , 992 5064
7 15 ntp

1971, 350 , JOHN Deere dozer, with la rg e c l oset s. Huge
detsel engine, 6 ft . blade, Irv ing. bath. nat gas furnace,
canopy draw bar and PTO, wi th low luel bllls and garage
$6.000 Ph one 985 -3594
on J,::, acre
7 -23-Btp 27 ACRES - Large bar~ wrt h
concrete fl oo r , L.C
water
EMERSON 110 air cond it ioner available. 4 bedrooms, bath,
$30, 22- tn ch la wn mower, $20. on hard road

$10 1 40 or terms
3965

Plus
2 acres on
Muskingum
River.
Above Beverly, 0.
Excellent
condition.

H OUSE 1n Portland , 5 rms .
and bath . good we ll , 2 acres
of
ground
Tak e ov" p"+ymenfs Phone 8J3 22 'r '
7 9 12tc

Realty

Teaford

Phone city

- ----

ch 1ldrer'1 pl ease. Phone 9925131, d uring day .

CABIN

577?

Walnut Conso l e acres on n ew Route 33.
t ype apT- fur - MODERN
stereo ra d10 co mbin at ion , 4
nished and paid util i ti es No
speed c han ger
Balance NEW LISTING - Renovated 2

BACHELOR

Real Estate For Sale

Phone Paul Orr, 949 ·

NEW LISTIN!; - J bedrooms ,
gas hot wate r heat, 1112 baths,
20 FT . CAB IN c rui ser. dmtng , TV room , so larrum
Thompson hull. tra tl er,
and ma gn rfi cen t view rn ex phone 992 -28 15
ce ll ent n ei!=j hborhood
GOOD horses for sa le

'&gt; EP TI (
T A NK S clea ned
Modern Sanllatron 992 395 ,1
or 992 73 19
9 18 tfc

Syracuse, Ohio

Masterpiece

1LJQ-Movie "Ki ller Bees" b
1 ·()()-Tomorrow 3, 4,; News 13

L &amp;V Meat

··

lARRY IAYEttDER

8, 10.

Cannon

.

3.4.6.8.10. 13 . 15' ABC News 33
11 JQ-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Movie " Ki ller Bees" 13;
FB I 6. Movie " Seven Go lde1. M en" 8; "The Italian
Brigands" 10; Janakl 33

2J Malco lm played hts kmg
At th1 s pomt Malcolm made

WEST

Middleport
.;1-JO-l mo .

Wrap

3..4, 15,

~LI»-New s

CUSTOM SLAUGHTER
Cut

Gang

9 36-Jean Shepherd ' s America 20
lO :ClO-Baretta 6, 13, Mannix 8 .1 0, News 20 ; Family At

East discarded a spade a nd

NORTH

Emergency
949-2211 or "2 -5700
Comp lete a.r conditioning
sates a~d ser¥1ce, heat ing ,
plumb1ng , roofing and
genera l sheet metal work
Fre e Est1mates
7 lllmo .

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown mto Wa lis &amp; A Hies
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

lUNC~ETE

SEP TI C iANK S CLEANED
Reil SOnablr R 1\ T E S Pl10ne
John
! 16 t7B? Galltpol1s
Rus sel l owner
4 9 lie

ENGLISH Shepherd pups lor

&lt;nd

oo-zoo

Theatre 33

WIN AT BRIDGE
Heart play saves contract
•AQ
" K75J
t A~ 8 4
... 8 54

Your Heil Dealer
Th i rd St .
R iJ C1n e, Oh1o
Ph . 949-5961

Pomeroy

FREE ESTIMATES

d e t,ve r ed r 1Q hl to your
pro1e c t r a st and eas y ~ree
est 1mcttes Pl10 n e 992 32 8 1
Gor qt e,n Ready M 1x co
M 'd dl eporL Oh ,0
'
6 Jo 11 C

7-23 6lc

7-23 -3tp

7 23-12tc

BOAT Motors , R epa1rs 498
Locust
sr , Middleport,
Oh10 Phone 997 309?
7 n 26tc

6863

sa le

Ph . 992 -2114

-

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

.

REA D Y MIX

~-

327

SMITH NELSON
MOlORS, INC._

7-7- 1 mo

DIDN'T L1

AND WHAT AM I 5 UPP05E'D TO
~E FOR AN AUTOMATIC DI5HWA$Hi;R 1 .. M'/ HAN/)$ I'

Free Estimates
PH. 992 -2550

Nathan B1gg s
Radiator Specialis-t

"A t Caution L1ght"
Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains, 0 .
Shop U s Last &amp; Save
Open 9 5 Wed through Sun

W IL L TR '"" u • cut trees and
shrubbery an d pamt roofs
Phone 949 3271 o r 742 JJ4 1
6 2J 26tp

7 23- ltp

COLDS POT. 11,000 BTU air

BARGAIN CENTER

Hill/()

9

War 33

THAT SIG CLOJ'/I&lt;J: YO U 'D --~
THINK WE- WE;RE 5DME
1
KIND 01' MAR.. IED
I
COUPL!i:
IMA61NI1
TAL~ lNG A$ I I :
IT"$ MV OUT . Y
TO DO THE;,
D 15 H WA5HIN&lt;3!

l WOULD,

Construction
and Plumbmg

Fro m th e largest Truck or
Bulldoze r Rad1ator to th e
&lt;:.ma ll est Heater Core

Ph. 667-J8S8

7 23 31c

1\Pl lik. e new ] rooms wllh
tarqe bnth lr~bl e top ranq e,
i arq(.• c loset East Ma1n ', 1 ,
F'omr r oy ~ e E' to appr c c1a t e
Pho11C Gall 1p o11s du r 1n q dav .
.TJ6 7699 , even1ngs 4J6 9539

.-

Chevro l e t

1965 COMET, new motor and
transm•ss ron Call 949 4935

19 1? TOYOTA
extras

EXPERIENC.ED
Radiata ' "'
Service
--

L

{

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING

7-8-l mo .

---------~-- , --- ---

7·23-4tc

16. 13, JO (81 6. 41c

-

I

Phone 992 -5682
or 992 -7121

KUHL'S

7 23 41p

9 x 12 TENT. Ca ll 949 4935.
7-23 -3tc

For Rent

Wanted TO Buy

7 17 61c

(7)

WOULD YOU LIKE?

Ca ll 992-

n

(\I NT" "
Mob1IC
H ome
f'ilrk. Rt lj ten mil L·~ nor Ill
o t PonHcroy La rqt' lots wllh
COilCrcte pa i 10S !, ld Cwalk.S
runner &lt;, and o ft s trf'Ct
p ar t.. •nq Ph on e 'I'J 7 7 !19
1711 lfc'

-SALESMAN-

res tdence, 24 1 Sou th Th1rd

YARD Sale. Wednes d ay, July
23
26 at the Homer Mills
res i dencf! , Ro se Valley ,
Sy r acuse, Oh10
Clothing.
furnllur e, e t c
7 22 4tp
- - - - - --------- - - - YARD Sa l e, July 23. and 24, 10
am fill 7 p m at Cla1 r and
A n n Boso residence, Rt 33 S
G r ea t Ben d , Oh 10, men's,
women's a nd c h ildren's
c loth 1ng, curta ,ns, drapes,
boo k s, records, c raft sup
plies , driftwood ,
yarn,
wheelba rr ow,
stan d s,
tamps , and other 1t ems too
nu mer ou s to me n t 1on
7 22 2tc
- - - - _____ ___ _
FAMILY
YARD
Sale
c lo t hin g
(c htldren
and
a du l ts ), bed , l a¥atory, 14 1n
wheels m 1Sc 1terns Th urs
day and F riday , 24 and 25 of
July , fr om 9 am !til 5 p m
above Eastern H1gh School.
Starlm g Massar restdence
7 21 3tc
- - - - - - - - - - - ____ _
2 FA MILY Yard Sale, d•shes ,
drape s.
bedspre-ads ,
pressu.re g lass, c lot h es, of
a ll s •z es, l oo many to
menl10n
11:.&gt; mile from
Ches h1r e on 554, Ju ly 24, 25
and 26 9 am t ill dark .
7
3tc
- - - ---- - - - - - - - - - 6 FAM I LY Yard Sales, J u ly 24
and 25, 10 a m to 6 p m SJ9
Beech
St , Middlepo rt
Dishes , shoes, baby car
seat. ma ,orette boots . 1nfant
clo th es ,
men's
and
Chi l dre n 's
clo thi ng ,
women's and teen clo thes,
s •zes 7 to 20
Matern1ty
c lo thes, avon bottles and
othe r m tsc rtems For more
•nfo r mat,an, call 992 3289
7 21 3tp

.For Rent

\l

Ben Batey

lhe Gall Ia County Courthouse,
Eastern Daylight Savings 1975 HONDA Cb-7SO. Extras .

Time .
By' order of the Gallia
Coun t y Commissioners
Joe Stewar t
John L. Belv ille

Phone 992 -2156
TODAY

YARD Sa le, Saturday, July 26,
St , Middle po rt
5158

WE DO&gt;
Roo fin!! • Siding
Complete
Home
Maintenance .

ALL
MECHANICAL
WORK

Guaranteed
appliances
used fu rniture a l
'

1967 DODGE wtndow van, 6
cy l. st andard New pa1nt,
good condd1on. $800 Phon e
985 3594

196~

pass

a lot of mise

2 Miles We st

CAS H ' N CARRY
SAVES U $'son

_ _ ______ _ _____

. ..

your
home
Does
require any of these
services?

On St. Rt. 124
Off Rt . 7 By -Pa ss

7 T 1 mo ..

OPEN EVES.8:00 P . M .
POMEROY, OHIO

For Sale

In Pom erov

Sea l ed proposals will be
r ece1ved by the Clerk of th e
Boar d
of
County
Com
m+~sioners , Ga ll1 a County,
Oh10, at the office of the
County Commissioners at t he
Coun t y
Cou r thouse
•n
Ga llipoliS, Oh10 on Thursday.
August 14, 1975 unt tl 12 00
Noon ,
Eastern
Daylight
~a._.r ng s Trme , and a t that
ttme will be open ed publ ic l y
and r ead for the furniShing o f
a ll
labo r
and
ma terit'll
necessary for the grad•ng o f
the building site tor fu tur e
Mental H ealth Cen ter at
Gallipolis, Oh 1o All work Shall
be dpne accordmg to the
drawmgs an d spec ,ficat 1ons ,
as
pr epa red
by
Hayes ,
Dona ldson.
Wittemyer
&amp;
P~rtners ,
Arc h 1tects, 601
Eighth Slreet. Portsmouth ,
Oh10 .
Proposals Will be r ecetved
for
t he
General
Work
Proposals s hall be subm1tted
on ~roposal Form contamed
•n the bound sped1f ica t ion s
andothercontractdocuments ,
Whlchdocumentsareonfileat
the o ffi ces of the Clerk of sa•d
Comm •ss i on'ers at the off i ce of
t he
Arc hi tect,
and
are
available to all prospective
bidders durmg r egula r Off lce
hour s , un ti l the cl osrngo f bi d s
O ne comp lete se t of b1d
docum enl s. for th e purpose of
biddmg , may be ob ta, ned
from
Hay es,
Do nal d so n ,
Witlenmyer
&amp;
Partners .
Arch itects, 601 E1ghth St r ee t ,
Portsmouth ,
Oh+o,
upon
deposit of S25 .00 which deposit
will b e refunded to each
bidd er, upon return of b1d
docum en t s 10 good con d1t1 on
wlthm a p er1o d of te n ( 10 )
d aysafteropentngofb ld S
All proposal s must be ac
compan 1e d by a b1 d bond
executed by
a Bonding
Company , 11c en sed by th e
Stat e of Ohio , or by a Certified
Check drawn upon a solvent
bank. in the State of Ohio ,
payabl e to th e order of the
Board o f
Ga lii a Coun t y
Com m rsstoners ,
Ga llrpol•s.
Ohio , in an amount no t le ss
th an fi ve (51 p ercent and tn a
specihc amount of the b•d Th e
bond or chec k sha ll be for
fe i ted if the bidder fails to
ente r into a contrac t w tlh satd
O wn er The bonds or checks of
the thr ee lowe st btdders will
be h el d un ti t th e execut ron of

JOHNSON
REMODELING

Eventngs 742 -4902

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

COUP L E to be res1dent
manage r l or n ew apartment
comp te• 1n New Haven. w
Va
l nt erest 1ng
rob ot
I I0 H e
re nt 1ng
apa rt ments,
collect.ng
rent ,
some
ma1nte nance work Ca ll 1
304 881 2788 o r wnte- Pr1me
Managemen t Co Attn Joe
K1ng . 306 E
Gay St , . APP RO X 6 II x 7 fl new
Columbus , Oh10 43?15
plush
carpet
re mnant
7 18 t Ote
neutral c olor, 1 15
Phone
- -·- --992 3496 after 5 30
7 9 lf c

7 23 3tc

~OTICE TO BIDDERS

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

Ph . 992-7608

power steermg and
luggage rack green

4 3!1-I&lt;Sewltched 3. Merv &lt;;rlffln 4, Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Club 8. Bonanza 15.
S 1»-FB I 3; lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers· Neighborhood 20,33. I ron side 13.
5 3G-~ews6 . Andy Griffith 8. Gel Smart 15; Elec. Co.
20,33.
6 ·1»-News 3,4.8, 10,13, 15; Sesame St 20. You Owe It
To Yovrself 33.
6·»-NBC News 3,4.15. ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8,1 0; Jody's Body Shop 33
7 1»-Truth or Cons. 3.4; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Line 8; News 10. Country Music Jubilee 13,
Drug Abuse 15 , Book Beat 20 . The Romagnoli 's

!

..

•

Help Wanted

"a't-•l"nla, '"

Card of Thanks

SI69S

V 8 automat1c,

-

V tnyl sidrng, a lu minu m
srdmg, patio cover s. storm.
wt ndow s,
kitchens,
bathrooms and garages
We Carry
L1abthty Insurance

n1ce ca r wt l h good economy

;:::==~~::;;'=;;;~~~~~__:•~u~u~e~s~te:d'_"by the above cartoon.

'

Business Services

Table 33.
7· 3!1-Polcle Surgeon 3; Name That Tune 4; Name
That Tune 4 ; Let's Make a Deal 6; Wilburn
Brothers 8; Evening Edition wllh Martin Agronsky
20; The Judge 10, To Tell the Trulh 13; Episode
Action 33
_ -··
8 ·!»-Little House on Ihe Prair ie 3.4, 15; That's My
Mama 6. 13; Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10; Feeling
Good 20.33
8 3!1-Movle " Unwed Father" 13. Philadelphia Folk
Festival 20; Another Look al Appalachia 33.

WEDNESDAY , JULY 23, 1975

'

"_,.

._.... _.._, _ _ _ _ _ _ ..

television log for .easy viewing·

I

""""-

f

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
OF
,QUALITY Motor

lloorm q

Phon e 9'i/ 77W

l

.

Auto Sales

Employment Wanted

.....

'

-"~w-·-------

People brrng their problems to
you today Just when you te ei
lrke scream•ng , someone does
someth•ng n1ce for you

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) Yo u'

We are returninQ yoor P.S. We note that you
manuscrtpt.Jt aoes not sent your story by
suit our present needs. first class mail..

1n1 e res t 1n se r1ou s matrers
wane s easily t oday b u t a
r om an t1c 1nterlude could perk
you uo 1n th e eve n1n g

SCORPIO (Del. 24- NO¥. 22)
Fam1 ly O T CISSOC!8\€S Wtll bug
vou to d•stractJOn w1th trt¥ tB
ear ly today Ho ld oH on senous
work un11t tater

SAGITTA RIUS (Nov 23-Dec.
21) lh1S 1S not th e day to work
wilh un tam 1ll ar 01 dangerous
tnots You• m 1nd ten ds to
wande r Relax HaYe lu n 1n !he
evf' ntn q

CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22-Jon.
19) You 11 have pangs of consc encc '' you spe nd a lot l1¥1ng
,, up Bet tet st ,ck clos e to
I10111C

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 18)
You diSfJOSi h On at home dnves
lhe !Ctm!ly up th e wall By e¥en ·
1ny you II all feet be tter 11 you go
Oi.J 1 for a spell

PISCES (Feb. 20 -March 20)
Spea k 1ng belore yo u lh1nk ca n
get you 1n a heap of trouble \o day Be qu1et A YO' d be•ng
cau qh t 1n t11e mlddle

~Your
~Birt hday
July 24, 1975

,

You cflll b e very fortunate tn
your care er or relal1ons wrth
love d ones thIS comtn g year ,
but you must make majO r
dec•s,ons on your own
L

:'•.IJ:I', """p ~ R E ~TERI'RISE ASSN

Junk mail may be
sent third class.

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i Frost hits coffee crops
-

By ROZ LISfON
4
United Press Internallonal
~ · Coffee drinkers aro\Uld the
..,. world may find the price of
..:. their morning cup rising
~ sharply because of severe
_ frost damage to Brazil's 1976
_ coffee crop.
.
· ,.... The worst cold wave in 50
~ years has destroyed between
":' 70 and 80 per cent of Brazil 's
.:. 1.2 billion coffee trees, which
~ produce one-third of the
~ world's coffee. The United
~ States buys about 60 per cent
~ of Brazil's coffee exports.
~
The damage could affect
'. the world coffee supply in
~- 1977 as well as next year,
' causing shortages that would
· drive prices still higper.
U.S. coffee roasting and
· manufacturing firms refused
• comment on the immediate
- impact of the frost on retail
: prices. But sources on the
~ I.Jmdon coffee market - the
- world's largest coffee ex: change - said the consumer
may have to pay at least 40
: percent more in 1976.
, Prices of coffee for future
- delivery had soared 62 per
" cent over a two-&lt;lay period by
:- early Tuesday, and prices
~ were driven higher by
~ bargainhunters at the end of
-· the session.
: In Rio de Janeiro, the
::: Brazilian Coffee Institute
• predicted 70 per cent, or half
~ of next year's estimated crop
~ of 28 million bags of coffee,
•. may be lost. Brazil normally
produces about 25 million
,. bags, although this year's
~ crop, already harvested, is

RAY CROMLEY _

only about 21 million bags. 1976 productiOn to 12 or 13
Camilio
Calazans, million bags.
president of IBC, said "for
"The frost was so severe
this year we have enough that "the Brazilian governcoflee to meet both our ex- ment and private trade interna l and internal dc- terests are estimating the
mands. 11 But Calazans said
damage will reduce the 1977
Brazilians probably will have crop to only 14 or 15 million
to pay m ore thi s year for
bags," he said.
their customary cup .
" Be cause
of
the
Brazil suspended exports seriousnesS of the frost," Ihe
pending an exact deter- spokesman said , "the crop
mination of the crop loss .
will not come back in One
A spokesman for a major year as 1t normally would
U.S. coffee ' firm with in- under less severe conterests in Brazil said the frost dilion s." He predicted only a
may have damaged 80 per modes! recovery in 1977.
cent of Brazil 's crop and cut

News .• in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
accident occurred, authorites said. They said all the casualties
and survivors were removed by helicopter .
ISRAELI TROOPS CROSSED INTO SOUTHERN
LEBANON today, blowing up houses in a frontier village and
taking captives back across the frontier. The military command in Tel Aviv said an Israeli patrol searching for guerrillas
blew up two houses in the Lebanese village of Kfar Kela and
took seven captives.
A military spokesman in Beirut said the Israelis seized
six villagers in a 21:!-hour raid. He said Lebanese gunners
"shelled the enemy concentration points and foiled its
repeated attempts to comb the whole village and region."
The predawn raid came as Israel awaited a decision by
Egypt on letting U. N. peace-keeping forces remain in the Sinai
Desert. The mandate authorizing the truce force expires
Thursdday.

i'

EIGS THEATRE
TONITE· THURS.
JULY 23 ·24
NOT OPEN

Fri.-Sat.-Sunday

July 25, 26, 27
"ALI.CE DOESN't LIVE
HERE ANYMORE "

(Technicolor)
Show starts at 7:00p.m.

MASON
DRIVE-IN
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TONITE thru FRI.
July 23-25
Double Feature
"S UMMER SCHOOL
•
TEACHER"
Plus
"THE CLASS OF 74"

.•.•

Little
(Continued from page 1)
U.S. Marines during the
Korean War.
In addition to his mother he
is surviv ed by his wife, Alyce
Kincaid Root; one brother.
Frank·
Robert
Root,
Coolville ; two sisters, Mrs.
Jack (Terri) Dodd, Uttle
Hocking; and Mrs. Ronnie
(Deanna) Workman,
Coolville and several aunts,
urcles, nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded in
death by an infant brother.
Funeral services will be
held Friday at 1 p.m. at the
White Funeral Home in
Coolville with the Rev.
Wesley Thatcher officiating.
Burial will be in Coolvi11e
Cemelery. Friends may call
at the fWJeral home after 2
p.m. on Thursday. The family
has requested ihat in lieu of
flowers donations be made to
the Athens County Hwnane
Society.

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i;' 16-T')e DailfSentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ~l&gt;dnesday, July 2:1, 1975

Social
Calendar
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinettes
picnic, Shrine Park, Racine,
6:30p.m.
SATURDAY
ICE CREAM social, from
noon on; Middleport Masonic
Hall. Sponsored by Meigs 1
Chapter Order of DeMolay.
SUNDAY
ANNUAL Cozart reunion at
Shrine Park in Racine.
ANNUAL Long Bottom
community homecoming at
the Methodist Church. Basket
dinner at noon. Public is
invited.
UNIT CALLED
The Middleport ER squad
was called , Monday at 7:30
p.m . to the home of Eula
Francis, Locust Street.
Oxygen was given to her at
her home. She was not taken
to the hospital as was
reporled.

··M·-

Job hunting
the hard way
By Ray Cromley
ploymenl payments. All too
WASHINGTON - Nowhere frequently, .applicants do not
are the fumbles of a plodding · report to the employer at an·.
bureau'c racy more apparent In a high percentage of cases,
and more disgraceful than in when hired, they don't stay on
the sl&lt;lte-federal employment the job,
services.
As if all the above were not
There has been a major enough , I he invesligators
effort to extend unem- speak of the rigid altitudes of
ployment payments in this the employment officials, of
time of recession. And the inflexible guidelines they
rightly . But a job is far better live by.
than an unemployment
With all this, the ap·
check . Yet the efforts of plicant's time is wasled. The
Congress and of President employer's lime is wasled.
Ford to straighlen out the And the taxpayer 's money is
agencies dealin g with those in wasled.
desperate need of work have
These studies, it should be
been pitifully inept.
noted, offer a great many
New government • spon- recommendaliops. Most miss
sored studies pinpoint the the point. ·The real question is
problems:
not better organization,
In employment offices in money or management. II is
one state and another, the simply how does the governaverage man and woman ment, federal state and local,
looking for a job is treated go about e ncouraging a
routinely with little or no bureaucracy, which deals
atlention paid to personal with huge numbers of people
abilities- and no atlempt to looking for jobs, to consider
place an ·applicant where best each man and woman as a
qualified.
person? How does a governThe applicants are num- ment instill empathy for
bers, not people. Job people in its officials?
openings are funnels into
The other day I called an
which to pour the job seekers. official who thought I was
Never mind whether they do applying for some governor do nol fit. Never mind ment assistance or other. She .
whether they get a job or not. was snippy, sarcastic,
It's the number of referrals dealing with me as though I
that cour !8.
were a school child, teiUng
Ukewise there's often little me what I was to do and when
atlempt to delermine what an and how in a most conemployer's needs are - and descending way, down to the
little effort to send him the last petty bureaucratic
person who will do best at the detail.
job. Many employment ofMost
of
what
she
ficials seem to have little " required" me to do was a
the wasle, a submission of odds
knowledge
of
qualifications required for and ends of papers of no use
the opening they're sending for any purpose except the
the applicant to, or what the filling of filing cabinets, and
duties are. The applicant, not quite unrelated to what she
forewarned or prepared, may thought I was applying for.
thus spend his days going Her whole attitude changed
from one employer to another when she discovered I was
with little hope of success. not in need, not a supplicant
With little orientation, and after all .
nol knowing what the emI submit this is intolerable.
ployer expects, he has little What must this bureaucratic
chance of landing a job, or of attitude do to the hundreds of
lasting long if he is employed. thousands
of
already
There apparently is little discouraged men and women
attempt to screen those looking for work, desperately
looking for work to see -if approaching bureaucrats,
they're inlerested or merely many of whom regard them
going through the motions in as inferiors or worse.
order to collect unem -

.

F aia · tickets
at$~~ each
are on sale

.,..,

Ford Gun· Bill fin~
few wilijng to back it

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Mem b ership tickets for the
1975 M· e igs County Fair are
on sale ' •I $4 each in several
Meigs
County business
establish ments.
Ticke :I s will entitle the
purcha~ :e r to free admission
to the f1-i; 1r for the enlire five
days a1n. j six nights, plus
vehicle ~ 'arking. They also
entitle t ht ' purchaser to free
admissi&lt; " ' to all grandstand
events.
The ti· cl &lt;ets may be purchased a\ Spencer's Market,
Middlep&lt; ll ·t; New York
Clothing , Green LanterJI ,
Sugar R"' n Mill, Swisher'Lohse I P harmacy, Five
PointsGri U I, Pomeroy; sports
departmeJJ I t of the Middleport
Departmt" nt Store; Miller
Brothers 1 G :rocery, Rutland;
Sadie's II l arket, S)"racuse,
and Waid C :r oss Sons, Racine.
The Mei1;1 'County" Fair will
open on A1 ~ g. 11 with annual
services b} · the Meigs County
Ministerial
Assn. The fair
closes on Sl oturday, Aug. 16.

Five Jtl ·ay for
traffic sins
Three ·d efendants were
fined and t.1 •o others forfeited
bonds in ~ ~iddleport Mayor
Fred
H~ 1ffman 's
court
Tuesday ni ght.
Fined we1 re Terry L. Wolfe,
26, Racine , $20 and costs,
speeding; I ~obert M. Newell,
29, Middlep &gt;Ort, $35 and costs,
reckless op ·eration, and Jane
Newell, Mi ddleport, $35 and
costs, rec kless operation.
Forfeiting
bonds were
Charles J. : Sauer, Middleport,
$25, failur&lt; ' to yield right of
way, and I ~ichard C. Martin,
21, Porn&lt; .roy, $25 bond,
speeding.

By ED ROGERS
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Ford is . having
trouble finding a Republican
willlng to introduce his new
gun control bill, Senate
BOurces said today .
The Republicans were
reported reluctant to endorse
the
administration ' s
proposed ban on .the importation, manufacture and
sale of cbeap handguns used
mainly in street crime
because of fear the bill's
broad defmition also might
ban some sporting guns.
SUbject of the worry is the
so called "Saturday Night
Special" - roughly any
handgun which Is Inaccurate
and therefore good only for
conducting a holdup.
The trouble comes in
defining it legally . Ford
adopted a highly technical
definition drafted by Attorney General Edward Levi.
But when Ford asked ftrst
Republican leader Hugh
Scott of Pennsylvania and
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Opel
Cummins, Racine; Violet
Baley, Pomeroy;. Eunice
Wilson, Racine; Howard
Sisk, Mason; Ullian Duffy,
Syracuse; Clara Karr,
Pomeroy; Mathew VanVranken, Pomeroy; Brody
Knapp, New Haven; Leora
Schar!, Pomeroy; Lloyd
Williams, Clifton; Steven
Mayes, Jr., Grant, Mich.; ·
Margaret Parcell, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Linda
Preston, Timothy Wolfe, Ida
Black, Cecil Higgonbotham,
Betty Roush, Geraldine
O'Conner, Benjamin Moore,
· Ruth Duerr, William Smith,
Sara M. Diddle, George
Stobart.

Roman

Hruska, R .then Sen.
Neb.. , .. to introduce the
measure, they turned him
down on grounds the bill's
defmition goes too far .
Even though it had not been
introduced, Levi outlined
Ford's bill to the ~llBte
juvenile delinquency subconunittee Tuesday. It wonid
reqUire handg\Uls to have a
combined length and height
of at least 10 inches and to
meet mmunum safety
standards. It would tighten
requirements for licensed ,
gun dealers and mail order
ftrms to determine that a
purchaser is leg~~lly entitled
to ,own a handgun.
Ford also proposed an allout attack on the handgun
black market in the nation's
10 largest cities, led by a
Treasury Departmdnt force
of 500 new firearms control
agents.
A spokesman said the
White House hoped to get the
bill introduced "today ,
tomorrow or hopefully this
week.''
The subcommittee has
other bills before it, including
_one br Sen. Birch Bayh, 0..
lnd., which Scott voted in
a previous congressional
session.
The Bayh bill would simply
prohibit the commercial sale
·of ''non~g" handguns,
narrowly defined.
Otber bills include one by
Sen. Edward Kennedy, 0..
Mass., which would prohibit
manufacture and sale of
handguns less than six inches
long to make them harder to
conceni, and a sweeping one
by Sen. Philip)Iart, O..Mich.,
which would ban all handguns except for the military,
law enforcement officials and
licensed pistol clubs.

'

By AL R!)SSITER JR.
UPI Science Editor
HOUSTON
(UP!)
America's three astronauts
readied the last of the Apollos
for a Pacific Ocean splashdown today to end a
pioneering era of spaceflight
that sent 24 men to the moon
and kept others in orbit up to
12 weeks.
The landing from the nineday, 307-()rbit mission was set
for 5:20 p.m. EDT.
Thomas Stafford, Vance
Brand and Donald "Deke"
Slayton began their final day
in space after their two
Russian comrades said at a
Moscow news conference that
the historic joint flight went
"as smooth as peeled eggs."
The three astronauts were
awakened by the tune "Redneck Mother" radioed up
from Houston control at 8:27
a.m. EDT. "The party's over

and it's time to come home,"
said grOIUld comm\Ulicator
Robert Crippen.
The return of Stafford,
Brand and Slayton marked
the last planned ocean landing by U.S. spacemen, last
parachute descent, last flight
of the Apollo a.·•.1 the last time
Americans go in space before
1979,
The astronauts also met
men of another na lion in

Pitts

000 000 000- 0

~

Chicago

San Diego
000 001 OOx- 1 6 0
Kison.
Giusti
(8)
and
Sangui llen ; WP - Jones (12 ·6)
and Davis . LP - Kison (9 .5).

By United Press International
ISRAEL DENIED TODAY IT HAD RAISED A NEW
ohstacle to a Middle East agreement by demanding face-toface talks with Egypt. An authorized government source also
reported progress in the search for an interim Sinai agreement
with Egypt but warned that the negotiations could drag on for
another month or two.
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat announced Wednesday
he has agreed to permit a U. N. peace keeping force to remain
in tbe Sinai desert another three months, a move that was
etpecteil to ease the negotiations. The U.N. Security Council
·called a meeting today to give formal approval to extending
the mandate.
·
An apparent snag in the negotiations developed Wednesday when Israeli Premier Yitzak Rabin said there must be
direct Israeli-Egyptian talks and Sadat said in Cairo he opposed direct talks "in any form."

Qu IEEN

CASt JALS
... holc.rlowthe-nameoflhegame

300 040 20x - 9 11 1

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT JOHN KENNEDY
discussed, but firmly opposed, the possibility of an
assassination plot ag~~inst Cuban Premier Fidel Castro in the
early 1960s, according to a close friend, former Florida
Democratic Sen. George Smathers. "He was very outspoken
and wasn't interested in proceeding along that line at all, even
though admitt.ing that someone had suggested it to him. I don't
know who it was," Smathers said after testifying before the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Wednesday.
"He wanted to know what the reaction would be,"
Smathers said, "and I said it would be terrible if it got out in
the United Stat·~ and because no matter what Kennedy did it
would be attributed to him." CIA Director William Colby and possibly other witnesses - were being called to testify
further today on assassination plots.

Burr i s, Wilcox (6), Fraillng
and Swisher , Mitterwa l d
(6) ; Falcone, Williams (4).
Moffitt (1) and · Rader . WP -Williams (4 . 2). LP - Burris ca.
7J. HR - Montanez {5 th l
(8)

11 mnings
American League
Houston 001 000 000 00- 1 10 0
1 sf game
..Mont.
000 000 100 01 - 2 8 3 Oak.
001017 002- 1190
Konieczny. Sosa (10) and Detroit
000 000 000- 0 3 2

Rogers , Murray ( 11 )
and Foote . WP - Murray (4 .Jl.
LP - Sosa (Q . J) .

May ;

WP - Abbott
(5 . 21
and
Tenace ,
Haney
(6) ;
Lamanczyk (6) and Freehan.
LP -- Wa t ker
(3 .7)
HRs .
Tenace 15th , Han ey (ls i) .

2nd game
Oakland
000 916 000- 16 15 o
Detroit
001 102 000- 4 a o
Bahnsen, Lindbl.!!ld (8) and
Tenace, Haney C6J ; Lagrow ,
Reynolds(4),Ar
royo (6) and Wockenfuss.
WP - Bahnsen (6 . 8) . LP Lagrow (7 .91 . HRs- Williams
(13th). Jackson (21St), Ban do

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TAMPA, FLA. - IllS DEFENSE ATTORNEY pictures
S. Sen. Edward Gurney as a noble statesman
former
hoWlded by "admitted lawbreakers, liars and persons who
agreed to testify only after being given immunity." Attorney
C. Harris Dittmar took the final hour of Wednesday's federal
court session to open his summation of Gurney's defense, and
planned to continu.e it for most of today's session.
Dittmar began by· attacking in detail the credibility of a
long line of wiinesses the government,called during 86 days of
testimony to back its charge that Gurney knew his fiUldraiser
was amassing a $400,000 slush fund by trading federal favors to

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There's plenty of lids

I

where .gardens aren't
. ,.

Apparently there's no
shortage of jar lids in
metropolitan
areas
throughout the coiUllry, at
least in Kentucky.
According to Earl Dabney,
Hi!
Adelaide
Drive,
Gallipolis, an employee of the
Gavin
.Power
Plant,
Cheshire, flats and tops and
flats are plentiful in the
metropolitan Louisville, Ky. ,

For unlimited possibilities, there's nothing
like our Tw13ed Knits by Quun ~asuals

I

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Di! ;cover the versatility of these superb sportswear separates with
fue .
,
- r ·1 lally pulled-together gc &lt;• looks you've come to expect from
Que ·ron Casuals. All deftly t&lt;••' ,red in tweedy, washable double knits
of Encron(r) polyest. ~. Pull-on pant, bird print shirt,
shirt jacket, Fl &lt;&gt;re skirt •. solid color skivvy,
easy-fitting big top, beige. Sizes a to 20.
®

·BAKER FURNITURE

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- · Mictdleport, Ohio

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CLUB TO MEET
There will be a meeting of
the Big Bend CB Club
Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
Rock Springs Grange H~ll on
the fairgrounils. All members
are urged to attend. Visitors
are welcome.

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IN POMEROY·
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In Louisville where there is
little or no space for gardening - and canning -

M. of Ame1ic8n Enka

El~ BERFELDS
Amtmofl _
......
!I

area.

Main Store, Anoex and Mechanic Street Warehouse
Open Thursday, 9:30 to 7 p.m.

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DONNA BOYD, 1974 REGATTA QUEEN, crowned
Cathy Osborne as the 1975 Regatta Queen following the
resignation of Cookie Weddle Dodson who has given up
her title upon her marriage. Cathy wiU represent the Big
Bend Regatta in state festivals whtle she attends Mo\Ultain Stal.e Business College this fall.

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CA TIIY OSBORNE WILL REIGN as the 1975 regatta queen for the rematmer r:1. the
year due to the resignation of Cookie Weddle Dodson who gave up the title when she married ··
recently. Miss Osborne was first runner-up, and Debbie Boatright, second runner-up,
became first runner-up. The two will represent the Big Bend Regatta at festivities
thro~gh.out the state. At the recrowning are, 1-r, Miss Boatright, Tonya Keebaugh, last
years f1rst f\Ulner-up; Miss Osborne and Donna Bovd.l974aueen.

•

enttne
VOL. XXVII

NO. 71

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1975

PRICE 15'

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there are plenty of lids. This
is in contrast to rural areas
where home canning is a way
of life, and no _lids, at least
according to Dabney's findings:
Dabney, while on vacation
the past two weeks, returned
to his home town near
Louisville, and purchased
flats for 29 cents a dozen and
tops and flats for 69 cents a
dozen.
" All chain stores had as
many as you wanted to buy, "
Dabney remarked today.
"Knowing - of the shortage
here in southern Ohio, I made
it a point to check numerous
stores in the Louisville a·rea,
and there were plenty of lids
everywhere,"
Dabney
continued .
Dabney, who has resided in
Gallipolis the past two years,
added, "It's hard to believe
there's a sh9rtage here when
there's plenl.y elsewhere ."

Otild IS
pulled

baby contest at fair
'

Everybody loves a ·baby
and Jhat's why the pretty
baby contest scheduled as a
new attraction for this year's
Meigs County Fair is destined
for success.
Fourteen babies ranging in
age from birth to four years
or age will be selecled as
winners in the contest which
is being headed by Mrs.
Lucille Leifheit, fair board
member, and sponsored by
the Elberfeld Department
Store.
There are seven age
categories to be included and
a boy and a girl will be
selected from each by a panel
of out..of..,ounty judges..Each
winner will receive a $5 gift
certificate from the sponsoring store.
To be held also in conjurction with the pretty baby
con lest will be a Little Misler
and Miss Meigs County
con lest for children from four

through seven years old . A
boy and girl will be selecled
fr·om these conlestants, each
to receive a $50 gift certificate from Elberfelds .
The county fair program
book is in error on the upcoming event not only from
the standpoint of when the
conlests will be held but also
on the dates delermining the
various age categories.
The pretty baby coolest
will be on Saturday, August
16, at I p . . m. and will be
followed immediately by the
Uttle Misler and Miss County
con lest.
Parents planning on their
children taking part in either
event are to fill out the accompanying application form
and pul it in the mail. There is
a 50 cent registration fee for
each child in both conlests
which is to accompany the
application form .
The age categories for the

pretty baby coolest are:
- Birth to three months; no
older than three months as of
Aug. 16.
- Three months to six
months; not older than six
months before Aug. 16.
-Six months to 12 months;
not over 12 months as of Aug.
16.
- Twelve mo nths to 18
months: no I over 18 months
by Aug. 16.
- Eighleen months to two
years of.age; cannot be over
two as of Aug . 16.
- Two years of age; must
not be three before Aug. 16.
ARTIST COMING - Crystal Gayle, recording artist,
- Three years of age; must
will
be a featured performer at the 112th annual Meigs
not be four before Aug. 16.
County Fair during the evening grandstand performance
Conlestanls for the Uttle
on Thursday, Aug. 14. Miss Gayle, a sister to performer
Misler and Little Miss Meigs
Courty event must be at least : Loretta Lynn, has made guest appearances on the Del
Reeves Show, the Wilburn Brothers Show, and "Hee
four years of age and cannot
Haw".
Several Of her recordings ha'/e broken into the top
be over seven by Aug. 16, the
20 hit tunes of the co\Ultry . Grandstand performances at
da te of the event. All conthe Meigs County Fair are free of charge.
testants must be residents of
Meigs County .

from car

ALBANY - Two .year old
Dendra Lee Bartlett of
Albany narrowly escaped
drowning w!ten lhe c:er abe
was sitting In rolled into a
farm pond on the Nutter
Brothers Coal Co. farm I ere.
According to Sheriff Robert ·
C. Hartenbach's Dept.
Wednesday at 5:40p.m. Earl
Bartlett, Albany, had parked
his car In front of Ridge View
Carryout on SR 681 at the
Athens-Meigs County tine to
purchase soda pop . Mrs .
Bartlett told deputies her
hu.t.Jd parked the auto,
turned off the motor, and put
the Cllr in park, leaving his
two year old daughter and
Collie pup Inside.
Dennis Booth, inspector,
Ohio
Division
of
Reclamation,told deputies he
was traveling south on Rt. 681
and saw the car as it entered
the poond. He turned aroWld,
returned to the carryout
parking lot in time to see the
father jumping into the
water .
Bartlett, using a lire tool
ATHENS - The Ohio held at Coal Grove High from the state vehicle, was
University Area of Special School the week of August 4~. able to smash out the side
Education is sponsoring a directed by Miss Sally rear glass of the sinking car
suinmer
workshop
on Schaaf.
and pulled his daughter to
Teacher-Made Materials and
Participants will be offered safely, just as the vehicle
Crafts for the Classroom to be instruction and practice in sank. An WJidentified person
school crafts as dived into the pond and
:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;. such
woodworkin
g, silk-screening , rescued the pup .
CANCER INCREASES
laminating,
pottery, and
It is believed the yo\Ulgster
GENEVA (UPI) - The
candle-making.
The accidentally took the car out
World Health Organization
workshop, designed for of park, causing it to coast 900
said Wednesday cancer
elementary and special feet before going into the
deaths keep rising In
education teachers, may be pond. The vehicle, a 1971
countries where cigarette
taken for graduate or un- model, sank quickly in ap·-·smoking is widespread.
dergraduate
credit. Housing proximately 15 feet of water.
In the latest of a series of
and food service will be
Sheriff Robert C. Harreports on smoking and
available
in
University
lenbach
also reported Robert
cancer, WHO said lung
facilities
.
Consultant
for
the
W. Couch, 21, Rt. 2, Mulberry
cancer mortality continues
program
will
be
Bill
Heights, Pomeroy, has been
to rise at an increasing
Garrison , noted art instructor cited to Meigs CQunty Court
rate, particularly among
and
lecturer on school crafts. for unlawfully removing
women, whose cigarette
The
workshop, urder the traffic control devices in the
consumption has risen
direction of Miss Schaaf, of Long Bottom area last
rapidly in the past30 years.
Ohio University's School of Sunday morning.
Curriculum and Instruction ,.
He allegedly removed three
will
accept
requests
for
instop
signs, two curve warning
Autos sideswipe
formation . Applications may signs, one SR 248 sign, two
be direcl.ed to the Office of arrow signs, one Olive
Workshops,
301 Tupper Hall Township road sign, one
in narrow curve
al Ohio University in Athens Forked RWl State Park sign,
No one was injured or ciled ( 45701 ) , Phone 614~94-3765. one Department of Resources
in a two car mishap at 11: 10
road marker, one boat laWJch
a .m . Wednesday on township
sign and one scenic route
UNIT CALLED
road 11, five tenths of a mile ,
At 1:54 p.m . Wednesday the marker.
east of Rt. 661 in Meigs
Pomeroy E-R Squad was
County.
called
to the Walter Bentz
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said residence to assist Lucille
cars driven by Jackie Jordan , Casto, a babysitter. She was
Showers likely today and
taken to Holzer Medical tonight. Lows tonight in !he
18, of Albany, and Roland
Uewellyn, 47, New Marsh- Cen ler. The squad was called 60s : Cloudy, not as warm
ville, Ohio, sideswiped in a at 6:25 a .m. boday to take Friday, highs in low 80s.
floranell Burney to Holzer Probability of rain 6o per cent ·
curve on the narrow road.
There was minor damage to Medical Center. She suffered today and tonight, 20 per cent
an appendicitis attack .
. both vehicles.
Friday .

Sp-Ed workshop is set

PRETTY BABY
-_MALE

_LimE MR. &amp; MISS
_FEMALE

CHILD'S NAME ________________ _ __
PARENTS NAME _________________ _

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(Continued on .Page 14)

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.

and opened what world
leaders hailed as a new epoch
of international cooperation
in exploring space and
solving scientific problems
closer to home.
"It's .· mission of firsts and
lasts and still a beginning all
in one," said flight director
Frank Uttleton.
The return also came on the
25th anniversary of the first
rocket launch from Cape
Canaveral, Fla.
The veteran recovery ship
USS New Orleans cruised 322
miles west of Honolulu, ready
to pick up the pilots' coneshaped command module .
The weather was good partly cloudy skies, good
visibllity and four-foot seas.
Stafford, Brand and
Slayton were bringing back
six Russian flags, a Jar ge
United Nations flag and
medals and plaques carried
into orbit by cosmonauts
Alexei Leonov and Valeri
Kubasov when they opened
the international mission nine.
days ago.
The two Russians flew from
their Balkonur launch site to
Moscow Wednesday and
scheduled a news conference
for today.

000 401 000- 5 8 3

San Fran
2

experiments and ceremonies,

Another Soviet space crew,
Salyut 4 cosmonauts Pyotr
Klimuk and Vitaly Sevastiyanov, also appe&lt;~red about
to return to Earth. They have
been in orbit 61 days, and the
Soviet news agency Tass said
their work had been completed and recovery forces
were being deployed.
Americans won't fly in
space again until 1979. Then
they will be piloting tbe
revolutionary space shuttle
rocket plane that will take off
like a rocket and land llke an
airplane.
The space shuttle also is
llke ly to be used In the next
Soviet-American spaceflight.
Russian officials already are
talking about shuttle flights
to
Salyut
orbiting
laboratories and U.S. and
Soviet officials meet this fa II
to work out the next joint
effort in space.

ri

/

•

Linescores
Todav's B.aseball Results
United Pre ss International
National League Results J

space for the first time, flew
together for 44 hours or joint

I.

.'

Apollo years of
moon probing to
close 5:20 today

:. El.BERFELDS IN POMEROY
forgirl,l

·-

..

ADDRESS __--:------,-----

- -- - - --

CHILD'S AGE ______________ BIRTltDATE _ ___
PLEASE SEND ENTRY NO LATER THAN
AUG. 12 TO:

PRETTY BABY OR LlffiE MR. &amp; MISS CONTEST
P. 0. BOX 227
'
POMEROY, OHIO
45769

Ten candidates have filed ·
Ten residents have filed , board of education petitions
peti!ions of candidacy for the and petitions [or municipal
fall election, the Meigs positions in Racine, Rutland
County Board of Elections and Syracuse. This year, two
reports.
members w.ill be elected to
The board is accepting the Meigs County Board of
petitions of candidacy for one Education and lwo to , the
Lruslee and the clerk in each Soulhern LQcai Board of
'l 1 he l~ townships as well .as Educati on. In lhe F.as oern

Local and the Meigs Local
School Districts, three
members will be elected.
In Racine, Rutland and
Syracuse, the mayor, the
clerk or clerk-treasurer, two
council members and two
members to the respective
(Continued" on Page 14)

Weather

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