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20--:The ~ntinel,Middlepori-Potneroy, 0., Wednesday, July30,1975
Veterans Memorial Hospttal
ADMITTED IBetty
Gilmore , Middleport ; Lydia
Ebers bach ,
Pomeroy;
Joseph Roush, Letart, W.
Va. ; ·John Bacon IIJ , Middleport; Rob erta Dailey,
Middleport ; Salem Yates,
Racin e;
Dordy
Call,
Pomeroy .
DISCHARGED - Betty
Williams, Linda Bailey,
Beatrice Blake, Clara Karr ,
Betty Hammons, Noah
Carroll, Ada Root.

TONITE and THURS.
JULY 30-31
. - NOT OPEN

·.. ~

Fri. , Sat., Sun . . Aug . 1-3
Freebi~ &amp; The Bean
(TechnicolorJ
Rated R
Show starts 7:00P.M.

'

MAS~' N " ~-~~~E-IN i
,', (

11 ' " " ',

Nnrtlfl;

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TONITE lhru FRI .
July 30-Aug. 1
Double Feature
"THE STING "
"Rated PG"
PLUS
" COMPANY OF
KILLERS"

"Rated G"

Paul W. ·winn, .,71, retired
Funeral services will be at
railroad engineer, who 2 p .m . Saturday at the
Funeral
r esided in Bradbw·y. died Rawlings-Coats
Wednesday morning at Home with Mr . Jeff Ranson
Pleasant Valley Hos pital officiating. Burial wHJ be in
followi ng a lingering illness. Riv erv iew Cemetery.
Born Nov. 18, 1903 in Friends may call at the
Rutland, he was the son of the funeral home from 7 to 9 on
la te Fred W. and Effie Thursday and on Friday froJil
Warden Winn. He was a 2 '" 4 and 7'to 9 p.m, Masonic
. member of the Bradbury services by the Harrisonville
Chur ch
of
Christ, Lodge will be held at a p .m.
Harri sonvi lle Lodge 411' Friday at the funeral home.
F&amp;AM, and the Brotherhood
of Locomotive Engineers.
PLEASANT VALLEY
He was employed with the
DISCHARGES - Mrs . New York Central Railroad
Raymond Mount, Henderson;
and the Penn Central
Kathy New, Vinton; Julia · Railroad for 45 years.
•
UeS
Kirby, Gallipolis; Gene Bush ,
Surviving are his wife ,
'
Edington ; Mrs . Gary Braun, Bernice Lyons Winn ; three
Mrs. Mary E. Reed, former
and son , Crown City; Mrs . sisters, Mrs. F. c. (Ethel) Meigs County resident, died
Gerald Brig ht , daughter, Taylor, Rutland, and Mrs . Tuesday in Fort Lauderdale,
Pliny; Susan Rose, Racine ; Martin (Edith) Summe rs , Fla., following an illness of
· Herber(Deal, Pliny: Mildred
Norton, Ohio, who are twins i several months.
Rainey, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs . Harry (Helen ) Gross ; of
Mrs . Reed is survived by
Imogene Moore, Henderson . Cuyahoga Falls; a sister-in- three children, Mrs. Richard
BIRTH, July 30, a son to law, Mrs. Haze l Thomson, (Lillian) Daniels, Hartford,
Mr. and Mrs. Sammy Jeffers, Bradbury, and several nieces Conn.; Robert E . Reed ,
Glenwood .
and nephews.
Dallas, Tex., and William C.
Reed, Saratoga, Calif., and
several grandchildren.
Mrs. Reed was preceded in
death by her husband, D.
Curtis Reed, and a daughter,
Mary Kathryn.
Graveside services will be
held at 11:30 a .m. Saturday
morning at the Beech Grove
Cemetery with the Rev.
Harold Deeth , rector of
Grace Episcopal Church,
officiating.

Mary E. Reed
died T da
Louise Bryan
Y

10 PAGE .

a

MAGNETIC

WHITE TEFLON

Pari!

PHOTO

FRY

free
At
All

ALBUM

PAN

$ 99

2

Pattern

SAVE '1.00

NEW COVERS

$J77

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THRU 4UG. 6

ALL LAWN
FIGURE
DECORATIONS
AND BRICK
--BORDER

'

SIZE 16x52 AND 16x34

WIPE ClfAN VINYl

2

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FOR

Anns control

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News •• in Briefs

AT EASE!, Theile memben of the Eastern Eagle marching band

(Continued from p~~ge 1)-

Tuesday she was seeking a divorce from her famed playwright
husband '"d named the famous wife of a member flf
parliament as the other woman. II was one of the juiciest
British scandals since War Minister John Profumo took up
with call girl Cluistine Keeler _in 1963.
Vivien Merchant, a leading stage and screen actress, told
a newspaper she was seeking a divorce from Harold Pinter, a
former actOr and whose plays such as ''The Careta)l;er" have .
been smash hits In London and on Broadway. She named Lad:f
Antonia Fraser as the other woman. Lady Antonia, one of the
most beautiful women in British society, is 43, the mother of
six children, daughter of a leading Roman Catholic family and
an acclaimed historian and biographer in her own right.
Fraser, her husband of 19 years, is a Conservative party
member of the House of Commons and also a leading British
Roman Catholic.

-WOMEN'S
TOPS

FAYGO
SODA
POP

'IVORY
SOAP

Nylons

12 Ounce Size

6

FOR

(Continued from page 1)
taught basic design, the
hogarth and symmetrical
triangle, and free style
Japanese.
. This is her second summer
of clasies for Meigs County
garden club members. Active
in garden club work lor over

CHEER
s lb.

4 Ounces

PLASTIC

Reg.
$2.39

-. ~-

50

Sl.PO

Value

.

4 PIECE SET

·MELAMINE:
DISHES
2 CEREAL .i;OwLS

2LAIGE SAUCERS

.99. -su
4

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MASOJ'I
W.EST ·

li.V'ER BRiDG
PLAZA

VIRGINIA

•

POINT
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PI.,EASANT
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sl~pa~e.

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RIO Gru\mJE _, .,.,,..t no .• T sometimes wondered

you getwoon you put)65 kidS
out of four high school bands
playing various sizes, shapes,
and types of musical in. struments together on a
small college campus II! a
remote area In 90 plus 'degree
weather lor a week. The
answer is easy : YO\! get 465
sunburned and very tired
klds ready to come horne on

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SUSPENDED SENTENCES
GIVEN
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio
( UPI) . - Three former
employes of the Southern .
Ohio Correctional Facility at .
Lucasville were given :,
suspended five-day jail
sentences and suspended $100
lines here Tuesday.
The former employes of the
prison were found · guilty of '
contempt of court in con-•
nection with a May strllte at
the prison.
Scioto County Comnion
Pleas Court Judge Richard
Canter prounced the lll'D·
tentes on · Gary Ballhford, .
Gary Lundy and · Nancy
Hartele.
Three other persons wer~
found Innocent of viohiting a
court order prohibiting inl, rference with prison activities during . the, work

Tammy Fitch,

The education of students of the Meigs Community School
for the Retarded may be continued for the next school term at
Cheshire in Gallla County.
This was the suggestion this mornin--g when 30 parents,
interested persons, and members of the Meigs County Board of
Retardation met with the Meigs County Commissioners to
discuss operating funds for the continuation of the school in
Meigs County.
Prosecuting Attorney Bernard Fultz, advisor to the Meigs
County Commissioners, asked the Board of Mental Retardation to arrange a meeting with the Gallia County Board of
Mental Retardation and the Gallla County Commissioners to
discuss taking the Meigs children for the next school term.
Fultz said that be had talked with several people, including
Judge J;t. William Jenliins oftheGallla County Board of Mental
Retardation. He said his (Fultz) opinion is that oome suitable
arrangements could he worked out to continue the education of
the Meigs children at the Gallia facility.
Fultz indicated he and the commissioners would attend
such a meeting along with the Meigs Board of Retardation .
Judge Maming Webster, president of the Meigs Board of
Retardation, is expected to set up the session as early as yet
this week.
By negotiating a contract with Gallia County for tile
children's education this fall, the Meigs County Com-

•

ON SALE
•AT OUR
MEQIANIC
STREET ·
·WAREHOUSE

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statebouae Reporter
COLUMSUS (UPl) House sponsors of major drug
abuse refo.rm · legislation
unanimoU81y cleared by the
Senate said today they p!B.n to
ask for prompt concurrence
in the Senate version and
send it to Gov. James A.
Rhodes for signature.
The Senate, fighting off a
brief attempt to stiffen penalties for possession and use of
marijuana, Wednesday
adopted the bill aimed at
cracking
down
on
professional dope peddlers
while easing up on I casual
users of soft drugs.
The measure, with widell)ll'l!ad iUppOrt from both
liberal arid conservative
groupa on the drug Issue, was
hal1ed In the Senate as "the
eecond strongest drllg bill in
the countr-y."
Floor diBcUssion of the l!mpage bill la.sted onlY 45
minutes.
The
Senate
Judiciary Committee, in
· concert with apeclal interest
groups, bad dme u · extenalve job of .rewriting the
venlon approved by the
HOWie 1aat June 4.
• The_looe
amendment,
'wblch wau1d have cut in baH
the alilount of inllrijuana
cl-awing a jail term, Wled
a vote of 19 to 9. · ·
1NooCiimlMI Record
,. Under tile bin, pO&amp;aession
cr 11111 of im811 amounts of
lll8rij!lana . would
be
pjriUbable by' a maximum
$100 IDle blit' no jail term or
criminal tec:Ord on the first
convlctlou.

noor

an

Mai~ ,store·, Annex and Warehouse Open· Thursday 9:30 to 5:00
•

ELBERFELD$'
IN
POMEROY
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what band c8Jllp was all
about, so yesterday I got the
answer the hard way. During
my high school years, which
weren't so long ago, I thought
we had it rough on the football field running in the sun
for a lew hours a day. But
after spending a day at Camp
Crescendo on the Rio Grande
College Campus I found th at

A small. amount Is defined
.as 100 grams, or I If.! ounces of
marijuana, enough for about
100 cigarettes according to
testimony.
Rep . Jerome Stano, DParma, wanted to lower this
amount to 45 grams and increase the penalties for
possession of larger amounts
of marijuana, but his
amendment was defeated.
As wriiten, the bill provides
for a maximum ~Y jail
sentence and a fine of up to
$250 for possession of more
than 100 grams of marijuana.
"This bill. gives the casual
user a second chance, but it
does not make it easier -on the
pusher," said Sen. David L.
Headley, D-Barberton, floor

it~ not as easy to be in the
band as I \ISI!d to think.
Spending this week at the
camp are the bands of Bloom ·
Carroll, Boone County ,
Eastern and Meigs High.
Upon my arrival I
questioned the director of the
camp as to where I might
locate the Eastern and Meigs
Bands . After recelVlng
directions and good advice to
take my car instead of

walking , I located both
groups in adjoining fields
over the hill from Lyne
Center.
My fir st encounter was
with Charles Wills, Eastern
Band director who was
standing alone as an observer
while his band took direction
from a ·camp instructor . This
was just before noon . The
kids had been up since 6: 30
(Continued on page 10)

·I •

manager of the measure and
chairman of the Judiciary
Committee.
"In fact, the mandatory
penalties make it very tough
on the pusher," Headley said.
The measure provides lor a
mandatory minimum sentence of seven years in prison
for anyone convicted of
corrupting another with the
most dangerous categories of
narpotics as defined in a
section reclassifying drugs of
abuse.
Penalties for pushing hard
drugs could range up to 25
years in jail and a maxbnum
$10,000 fine.
Corrupting another with
!11Brijuana would draw a jail
term of six months to five

years and a maximum fine of
$2,SOO, with a guarantee that
at least one-fourth of the jail
term would be served.
Penalties lor second of·
lenses of pushing drugs would
be more severe.
The Judiciary Committee
reduced the length of the
mandatory minimum sentences from the House version, Headley said, "to increase the certainty of incarceration." He said the
longer terms written by the
House might have produced a
sympathy factor and lost
convictions.
illegal drug peddling is.now
punishable by a one-to-five
year prison term and
maximum line of $500.

missioners would have an opportunity to decide what kind of
taxing effort could be employed in funding a program here,
Fultz said. He said the commissioners will probably consider a
"piggy hack" sales tax and quoted figures which indicated
that not even a one percent tax would be needed. He stated he
felt Meigs Countians might be better sstislied with a sales tax
rather than a real estate tax since voters already have twice
rejected the real estate levy.
He-indicated in his opinion there Is no point in submitting
another tax levy to the voters, ·thereby leaving tile sales tax as
about the only route open to the commissioners.
Mrs. Denver Weber, a member of the local board of
retardation, asked about the expenses of transporting local
children to the school In Cheshire and was assured that every
effort would he made to frnance this part of the problem out of
existing funds. Mrs. Weber said she does not feel that there
would he much difference in the cost of sending the children to
Gallia County and in keeping them in a school in Meigs County,
since additional staff members would be needed at the Gallia
County School, and there would be additional expenses which
would have to be assumed by Meigs County.
Fultz felt that, perhaps, the cost would be considerable
less than the approximate $80,000 in local funds spent to

operate the school in Ml\igs County.
The Rev. W. H. Perrin, a member of the Board of Retardation, stated that the commissioners were not acting In "good
faith ," and Misll Judith Kock, Educational Consultant for the
Board of Mental Retardation, Districts 7 and 8, also leveled the
same charge since Fultz and the commissioners would not
issue a flat statement that Meigs County's retarded children
will begin school on Aug. 26.
Fultz emphasized that every effort will he made to work out
something before that time and expressed his concern that the
children he educated. He again stated that decisions cannot be
made until a meeting is held with the Gallia r:ounty officials.
Rev. Perrin commented also that some financial or job
arrangements for personnel of the school who are covered by
civil service would have to be worked out.
Several of the parents staled that they would not send their
children out of the county, and asked the commissioners to
borrow·the $43,000 to keep the school open until the first of the
year, and then include adequate funds in the commissioners'
budget to finance operation.
Parenls also expressed concern that once children are to
go out of the county for their education, the period of one year
would go on indefinitely, and they would npt he returned.

Ford assured

.,,,:i:=:::=:=i·===::==·===·:======&gt;==:=:=:·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·:·=·=·=·=·=·=·:·:·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·:·=·=·==:,,,,,,,,,:,:,:,:,:;,:,,,,,,~,.,,

COLUMBUS (UPI) - John
Stackhouse, director of the
Ohl.o
Department
of
Agricul~, said Wednesday
If Ohio's com and soy)lean
fields don't get some rain
within the next three to seven
days, there could be a 5 to IS
P\lr cenl reduction in yield.
Stackhouse said Central
Ohio is in relatively good
· shape comp~~red to the North
Central and Northwestern ·
regions. ·
The National Weath'er
Service in Columbus said as
of Wedn!!aday tolal 111infall
for th'e year measured was
22.23 inches - 2.41 inches
· below normal with no 'rain
· predicted for the nexi several
days.
· '

More bans

the controversial agreements
to be signed Friday does not
mean the West has the right
to meddle in Russia's internal
. s.
affall'
"There are neither victors
.
nor vanquished, winners nor
losers," Brezhnev said of the
summit participants. .
Demeril 's
government
'
u.s.
mili'tary
bases
Closed 2•
retaliation
for
l·n
congressional refusal to lift
the arms han imposed in
February when U.S. weapons
were used illegally in the
. vasion of Cyprus.
Turkish m
After the session, Ford and

Petitions are
ffiedhy four

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r~in

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r

ByUnltedPresaiDternaUouat
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WASHINGTON - niE OIDO HOUSE DELEGATION
.
. .
.
. .,.
vnted•I.Mo8We&lt;lnesday againat·a,!'&lt;Jil\11Uivb)gincr~lor l.!lP
fl'&lt;l•rill erhiJ)oyes1 which the IowercliaJhber approved bjr_a 214
By HELEN THOMAS
relations are very valuable. to 213 roll call. The pay increase, if approved by President
UPI White House Reporter
We will do our best not to Ford, would go to members of Congress, the judiciary, the vice
HELSINKI (UPI) - Pres!- spoil these relations. "
president and top scale federal employes.
dent Ford worked overtime
Ford concurred.
The Ohio vote : Democrats for: Ashley, Carney, Hays,
today · to patch America 's
"We will do our best to Seiberling, James Stanton, stokes, Vanik. Democrats against:
quarrel with Turkey, and remove any roadblocks Mottl .
heard assurances from 'its between the United States
Republicans for : Whalen. Republicans against : Ashbrook,
premier that "we will do our and Turkey, because we Brown, Clancy, Devine, Gradison, Guyer, Harsha, Kindness,
best not to spoil" Turkish- believe that good relations Latta, Miller, Mosher, Regula, J. Williarn Stanton, Wylie.
U.S. relations.
with Turkey are of utmost
•""• Ford met over breakfast
porta nee to Turkey and the
CLEVELAND - A STATE AUDITOR'S representative
with Premier Suleyman United States, and to the free will handle every phase of the weekly Ohio Lottery drawing
Demirel, indications were world, to the world as a
be&lt;rinnlna tonight after the discovery that last week's contest
Republican congressiona I whole."
e--·--..
leader• would mount a final,
But perhaps the trump card was supervised by a lottery employe whose cousin was one of
the eight contestants lor the $300,000 top prize.
prevacation attempt to was held by Congress. The
The employe, Patrick D. Manco, has been forbidden from
rescind the embargo on arms Senate today attempts to
sales to Turkey that has partially lift the ban to Jet particip~~ting In any more drawings as a result of the incident.
·
He had been drawing director, but will be reassigned to other
fueled the crisis between the Turkey take possession of
two allies.
$IB5 million in equipment it duties, according to David F. Leahy, lottery commission
·
chairman. "The commission considers it as an act of
After the meeting Ford
-(Continued on page 10)
attended the second day of
thoughUessness," Leahy said Wednesday. "It was a very
thoughtless thing to do in a very sensitive situation." An inthe European sununit. On
vestigation by William Horrigan, the lottery's security
center
stage
was
Soviet
. terferre d m
.
Communist party leader
director, failed to reve al any ev idence Manco m
the regular procedures of the July 24 drawings.
Leonid 1. Brezhnev , who said

Demerll were smiling and
shaking hands, but there
seemed to be no Substantive
SOiuli·on m· 81·ght.
"W
. e
have
reviewed
Turkisli-American relations,"
far a•
Demirei SBI'd. '""
""
•
Stackhouse said a single consumers can expect higher Turkey is concerned, these
com plant will use about food prices this fall whether
three-tenths of an inch of or not the crop yields are
water in a single day with the below normal, because
weather cooditlons that have "grain sales to Russia , will of
existed for the past. several course, have oome impact,
days
high temperatw:e, . too ."
.
low humidi~ and some wind.
"For example, a $1 inFour candidates filed their
"lt's hard to generalize crease In the !rice of wheat
about which areas are har- will change the cost of Dour in petitions to run for posl!l in
dest hit because rainfall has a loaf of br&lt;;ad less than two the Ni&gt;vember election witll
the Metgs Cpunty, Board of
been spotty and crop cents," he said.
development varies," said
"The things that will affect Elections Wednesday.
They are Chester Wells lor
stackh~.
. consumer prices more than
"There are some areas in the cost of the agricultural trustee of Olive Township;
the state where the corn crop corpriiodities wiil be things Harold G. Roush and Gordon
is two to three weeks ahead of like transportation costs, H. CoJ,lins for the county
' normal and some areas costs of fuel necessary for board of education and carol
where it is normal or two to processing, labor costS in F. Pierce fpr ,the Meigs Local
three
weeks
beblnd," processing plants
and Board of Education. Filing deadline.is 4 p. m. on
Stackhoull(l said. ,
regulatory ~sts," he said.
Aug. 6.
Stackhouse also said

Ohio's corn needing

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PRICE 15'

THURSDAY. JULY 31, 1975

Ou

Tough drug abuse hill
• close to final form
IS

LOCAL ·TEMPS
The
temperature
in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Wednesday was 85
degrees under sunny skies.

_ KING SIZE

GEl liNG THE RIGHT BEAT -

.

I

PAPER
TOWEL
HOLDER "

POMEROY-MIDDLE.PORf. OHIO

Cheshire school is proposed

,.,. ~' !Y~~~'~•~':l! '• .,. ,.Sa!".f&lt;!!'~_morn!J:l!l,·

Fair tonight, low near 70.
Partly cloudy Thursday,
highs near 90. Probability of
precitation is 20 per cent
today, 10 per cent tonight and
20 per cent Thursday.

CANS

NO. 76

./

Weather

6 9

$194

$100

VOl . XXVII

practicing her trade during a sectional practice at band
camp. During this type of practice each group in the band
tnss, woodwinds, etc. separate for individual practice.

-Diet

SHORT ,SLEEVE

Devoted To ThP. Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

drummer for the Eastern High School !'agle band is busy

-orange
· BATH SIZE

enttne

KAMBALA, UGANDA- DEPOSED Nigerian leader Maj.
Gen. Yakubu Gowan pledged his full support today for the new
government in Nigeria and said be was prep~~red to serve it in
any c&amp;paclty. In his first public statement since the aiUIOUilce- ·
ment of his overthrow Tuesday, a smiling and remarkably
relaxed Gowon told newsmen in Kampala : "From all indications there is a new government .Stablished in Nigeria."
Radio Dagos announced Tuesday that Gowan had been
deposed while attending tlie li-ganti,ation of -A!rlcim- tiriliect
summit conference here and that lll'Jg. Murtala Kutal
Mohammed had become the new Nigerian chief of state.
40 years, Mrs. Jackson is a
certified instructor in the
Sogetsu School of Japanese
flower arranging, is a
National Flower Show
Schools instructor, and has
_taught classes from Maine to
California. She is certified to
teach in ?:1 foreign countries
as well as every state in the
United States. Since April 1,
she has conducted 14 courses
in program deslj!n .

THESE ARE niE BRASS - The lnss section of the Meigs Marauder Band. It is
rewarding practice , and beats marching in the hot sun .

•

COLUMBUS - BLUE CROSS OF CEN'lRAL OIDO asked
the Ohio Department of Insurance Tuesday to grant a 25 per
cent rate increase for about 25,000 non-group subscribers,
about 6.7percentofthe company's 757,000members in central
Ohio.
Howard Franz, president of roue O'oss of Central Ohio;
said roue Cross had made extensive efforts to hold down costs
of hospitalization and has had good cooperation from area
hospitals. However, he said many cost increases are beyond .
the control of hospitals and are part of the buill-in lnllationary
process affecting every segment of the economy.

Sculpture

atCampCrescendoBandCampthisweekatRioGrandeCollege.

.l!,lml read,y to receive orders~their instructor_&lt;!_uring morning J&gt;ractice

RECUPERATING
Mrs . Beatrice Lisle is
recuperating at home In
Syracuse following major
surgery at the Holzer Medical
Center.

-Cola
-Grape

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WASRINGl'ON (UPU - Deinoentk lnda ....,
' agreed t• dedare tbe dllpated New Bam.. bile 8,ate
seat vacat ud c.U fot a aew-olectiGa. A wfe
lbe 'months-long bitter e&lt;11dronny could come ...in&amp;me
today or J'bundlly,
·
·
.
Democratic leader Mike MaDafleld met earl)' IIIla
morning with Democrat John DarkiD, wlu! clllulpd 1111
miDd l'uetday 8lld uted for a aew eleetlo!L Aller die
meetiDg, _Malltfleld said Democrats would
wUII· •
Durkin's request ,
.
·
"R'sblsdecl8lon and we will abide wHb It," Mlulafleld
lald,-addiDg thai a vote on declariD&amp; the_, vacaal may
come later In the day or perbapo l'bundlly.

UNIT CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to Beech St.,
at 11 : 15 p.m. Tuesday for
four-year-old Anthony Rowe,
who was running a high
temperature. He was taken to
the Holzer Medical Center.

DRESSER
SCARFS

PRICE ·

died Tuesday

Mrs. Louise Heilman
Bryan, 88, Middleport, died
(Contin~ed from page I)
Tuesday at the Arcadia more peroonal liberty.
Nursing Home in Coolville .
It will climax a 20-year
Mrs. Bryan was born Sept. Moscow campaign for a pact
14, 1886, the daughter of the to substitute for a World War
late John and Elizabeth n peace treaty and to give
Reuter Heilman. Besides her legal hacking to the way
parents she was preceded in Russia altered Eastern and
death by her husband, Clay; Central European frontiers in
a brother, Carl Heilman , and the Cold War years.
a sister, Mrs. Anna Hanning .
Arriving in Helsinki, Ford
Surviving are two brothers, said the conference ''can give
Richard Heilman, Pomeroy, new impetus to the process of
and Norman Heilman, West detente." But he said the
Liberty, and several nieces -participating states must
and nephews. Mrs. Bryan translate the document's
was a member of the general provisions into actual
Bradbury Church of Christ. policies and actions "if we
Funeral services will be are to realize promises of
held at 3p .m. Thursday at the greater
security
and
Ewing Funeral Home with cooperation in Europe ."
Jeff Ranson offici a ling .
Later Ford had his first
COURT NOTES
Paul Arnell Haynes, 25, Burial will be in Riverview Finnish sauna, which inMiddleport and Janice Sue' Cemet~ry, Middleport. eluded heating himself with
Eastman, 23, Coolville, have Friends may ca~l at the ,- birches . He found It
"delightful."
applied lor a marriage funeral home anytune .
llcense; granted a divorce
Ford faced criticism at
were Paul E. Garnes and
home over the security
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
agreement. Critics said it
Dorothy Ann Garnes, and
Mr . and Mrs. Donald C. gives Moscow what the
granted a dissolution of
marriage was Doris J. Mc- Brown, Jr., Westerville, the Communists want but gives
former Karen · Bachner of the people of SovietDonald .
Middleport, are announcing dominated countries only
the birth of a daughter, fuzzy pledges of greater
Stacey Renee. The baby was freedoms in the fields of
born July 22 at Riverside press, travel and human
SERVICE SET
Methodist Hospital and contacts.
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Ford meets later today
Funeral services will be held · _weighed seven lbs., six ozs.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Brown
have
a
with
Greek Prime Minster
here Friday for Gen. Chester
W. Goble, 82, who served as son, Christopher Lee, age Constatine Caramanlis to
Ohio's Selective Service three. Grandparents are Mr. discuss Cyprus and the
Director during World War and Mrs. Everett Bachner, closing of the American bases
Middleport, and Mr . and Mrs. in Turkey.
II.
Donald C. Brown, Sr., New
On Thw:sday he meets with
Haven, W. Va. Mrs. Ida Turkish Prime Minister SuleBachner, Middleport, and man Demirel to discuss the
DINNER PLANNED
The Northeast Cluster of Cecil C. Brown, New Haven, base closings in Turkey, orare
great- dered in rl!lallation to ConUnited Methodist Churches W. . Va.
will hold a ·basket dinner at I grandparents. Mrs. Bachner gress' refusal to lift an emp.m. Sunday at -Forked Run is in Columbus with her · hargoonanns aid to Turkey.
State Park. Those attending daughter and family :
are to take their own table
service . Games will be
played.

EA

Red Gingham

·
Plans for the next salety three guests were present ior
stop operations on Labor Day Saturday night ' s meeti'ng
were begun when the Big . when club jackets were
Bend Citizens Band Radio distributed to members who
club met Saturday night at · had placed orders. The apthe Rock Springs Grange pointment of a temporary
'Hall.
secretary wa s discussed
The next operation will be ' along with the development
held on Labor Day when the of a benevolence fund.
club plans to set up safety.
Refreshments were served
stops at the roadside parks on and music was provided by
Route 33 where motorists can "Tom and the Country
stop for free refreshments Sounds."
Guy
Hysell,
over the holiday period.
president, was in charge of
Fortv-seven members and. the mee ting. The next session
will be a picnic beginning at 4
p.m. 'on Aug . 10 at Fort
Meigs.

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::=: ===:::=:=:: ==~:::?.:::::~:=:=:=:=:~:~;==fi=-:~;rr=;.a-:m.Y~i~o?"~

Paul W. Winn died Wednesday P.Jans next ·safety operation

. '

reques.t ed
WASHINGTON (UPI) _
An environmental group,
'd
of
c1t 1ng new evl ence
damage to the earth's
protective ozone layer, asked
the Food and Drug Administration today to ban
'th
aeroso1
sprays
WI
fl
bo
llants
uorocar n prope
·
The Natural Resources Defense Council said balloon
measurements taken last
month by the National
.
0 cean 1c an d At mosp hertc
Administration and the
National Center for Atmospheric Research provide
the first cone Ius! ve proof that
fl uorocar b on gases are
de
in the
Ia
:e";;o! tests~~: g;:p
'd
t n1
bot
sm , wen o y a u 19
kilometers above the earth,
ro"n~'y tbe beginning of the

""'u

ozone layer which filters out
the sun's harmful ultraviolet
rays. The effects beyond that
point
were
largely
speculative, said . Ruby
Compton, a lawyer for the
.groilp, The new tests reached
26 kilometers and showed the
SUI\ was breaking down the
fluorocarbons with increasing Intensity • as the
probe moved upward, she
said.
When the fluorocarbons are
broken down, chlorine atonia
are released and destroy the
ozone.
A depletion of the ozone
layer could lead to increases
•·
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in skin cancer.
'
.

CLEVELAND _ u.s. DISTRICT COURT jurors bearing
the $46 million Kent State University civil damage suit here
will view a-motion picture today which a former stud~nt took of
the 1970 campus shooting scene when four were killed and nine
1 G dsm
others wounded by Ohio Nationa uar
en.
After listening to hours of argument by attorneys over
whether the film should be shown, Judge Donald young viewed
the fllm Wednesday and then ruled it could be shown. Young
· he
Abell · te tiall the
said the film, taken by Cbristop rR.
'"IS po n
y
single most bnportant piece of evidence" in the trial. Defense '
Jim sh fr
th fifth f1
of do
attorneys contend the I
, ot om e
oor a rmitory about one-half mile from the scene of the May 4
shootings, had a spliced segment where demonStrators moved
toward Ohio National Guard troops. The defense maintained
anbnportantpartofthefilmcouldbemissing .
After viewing the picture during the noon recess, defense
· bein sh
attorneys dropped their objections to 11
g own.
COLUMBUS _GOV. JAMES A. RHODES' camp~~ign to
· d at he1ping t he
put four constitutional amendments IIJIIle
be ballot has
I ed the
state's economy on the Novem
rece
he ofr
Rhodv ha
support or the Ohio Cham r
mmerce.
es
s
started a drive to obtain enough petitions to put the amendmentupforavote.Thesignaturesaretobefiledsbortly.
H-'M
\lblish - 1 the
Chamber President Edwin L. ~~,..er' P
er o
Findlay Republican-Courier, said the Chamber's l!oard of
directors recommended itS members support the four Issues
"as a means of coping with Ohio's economic stagnation,
1 in
reversing its unacceptably high unemployment and ow •
dustrlal investment and meeting pn a current ~sis its need for
state and local facilities, highways, and public transportation,
private housing and health care facilities."
·

eo

IF YOU DON'T 8I'OCK UP ON FWUR and sugar today,
you may be too late. Wholesale Jrices on both will be up by
Fridlly~t least from two food processors. 'I:J)e increaaes
apparently are after..effects of the large Soviet pw:chaaes of
grain from the United Slates and sugar on. the international .
marteta·.
General Mills, in Minneapolis, one flf the naUon's largest
millers, raised wholesl\le flour llflces 1.6 cents a pol!nd ef. ·
fective Frjday and 'Ams\ar, 'the nation's largest. · Sllg&amp;l'
producer, raised its wholesale !rices effective Immediately.
The wholesale pclce of a five-pound bag of grocery
rose
to $1.64from $1.54twow•ei\Sago. Itwas as low as $1.2l·on July
(Continued-on page 10)

sular

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! -1'111! DailySenttnei,MlddlellOrt·Pomeroy, 0 ., 'lburaday, July 31. l!l'/5

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HUNTINGDON, Pa. (UP!)
- Aubran .. Buddy" Martin,
who faces three death senten~s after his conviction of
the Dec . 30, 1969, killings of
candidate for United Mine
Workers president Joseph
Yablonski, his wife and
daughter, says he doubts the
death penalty w1ll be rein·
stated.
Bringing back executions
would only serve the purpose
of furthering the reputation of
solving social problems with
violence and aggression, " he
said at the State Correctional
Institution here.
Martin is one of three men
sentenced under the old
Pennsylvania capital punishment law tha~ was invalidated by a 1972 U.S.
Supreme Court.
Three other men have been
sentenced to death since a
new state capital punishment
law was passed over Gov.
Shapp's veto in March 1974.
The U.S . Supreme Court is
expected to rule this fall on a
test case from North Carolina
which could bring a decision
on whether the death sentence is "cruel and unusual
;...-1 punishment."

~~~~~c::...______________....:_~~~
~

~~~_.:___:--....;.-.!

"If he could just get rid of all those buildings and plant
wheat."

-Shockers, SOCCO

Conlicted killer doubting·
electrocution is his fate

He is the only one of several
defendanis in the Yablonski
case who has been officially
sentenced to death.
Martin is optimistic he will

not be executed and some day
he will be freed from
prison.
Ironically, when he was
younger (he turned 27 in
May) he believed in the dealh
sentence for certain cases.
However, after his conviction, " I began to reevaluate my previous concept of capital punishment,"
Martin said with a grin.
After 51.'.! years in the penal
syste m, Martin said he
believes a n inmate can find
only one positive aspect in
prison- education.
" At first I found it difficult
to receiVe assistance while in
search of my education . Until
recently, I did all studying on
my own."
To keep from becoming
institutionalized, "or at least
slow the process down," Martin, who had a seventh grade
education when he was
convicted, has obtained his
high school diploma through
the General Educational
Development program. He
also has completed recently
two college courses from
Penn State University A's. He
Is
presently
studying
soc iology, psychology and
art.
To Martin, contemplating a
lifetime in prison is worse
than facing death in the

•

•

easy ca,ge VIctones

to fight as long as I'm
breathing . I don't want to
adjust to a system that

dehumanizes a n md.1vidual. "
dividual."
observe
negative
"I
behavior and haired every
day . I watch guys change
degree by degree and the
changes are not toward the
positive nature. I also feel the
changes taking place m
myself.
"Other inma tes may not
fa ce the chair," Martin said.
"but whether they realize it
or not, they're dying anywa y.
To adapt a nd accept prison
values is to d1e little by little.
If the penal system stays the
present way, a man in prison
for 1().2(1 years is emotionally
mcapacitated. He loses the
capability to love , be compassionate and-or feel the
emotional needs necessary to
exist in any free society. For
all practical purposes, this
man
is
emotionally
castrated. They might as well
electrocute him ."
"No way do I want to live
like this. I don't worry about
the chair ; I worry about the
eventual psychological death
this system will bring, and
contrary to the laws of
nature, not even the strong
can survive this dealh . If I
thought I had no possible way
electric chair. ''It's ex· of winning a new trial; .I'd
tremely agonizing, he said, " I walk to the chair, sit down
and relegate myself to the
sitl,lation.''

Middleport summer
basketball program got back
into high gear Monday night
with the Daily Sentmel
Shockers blasting J im's
campers 8().55 and socco
defeating Mark V 00-65.
In the opening game the
Shockers , with the hot outside
shooting of Lonnie Coats and
Chip Brauer and the
reboundmg power of Andy
Chonko , overpowered the
Campers Chonko, Ii-I former
all SEOAL basketball pla yer
of Athens, hit 26 pomis and
hauled down 20 rebounds.
Coats scored 30 poinis for
game hon orswhil e Brauer
scored 18.
For the Campers, who were
playmg w1thout their high
scormg forward, Mike Sayre,
were led by Steve Price with
17 and Bill Myers and Jim
Boggs each hit 16. Myers and
Boggs al so ied 10 the
rebounding for the Campers,
each with 14.
In the nightcap, SOCCO,
who is in first place with one
defea t, held on to an early
lead to down the Mark V
itajun Cajuns B0-65. Rich
Haggerty's fir st quarter
shooting and ball handling .for
the Cajuns kept them close,
but once again the SOCCO
front line helped them pull
The

Natllaal Luipe Roullup
By FilED DOWN
UPI SpGI1a Writer
.;llle Pittsburgh Pirates call
· catcher Manny Sangulllen
•:J'!I,e Mechanical Man" ..:. l
119!!.with good, reason.
,..\Wie just wind him up in
'M'arch
dlirlng
spring
1ii.ainlng/' says Manager
CNIDY Murtaugh, "and let
1m, play the season. It
ys e&lt;mes out the same.
t a .300 batting average,
s r e r and as good a job
d the plate as can 'b!!
fQiind in the ma!Ors."

away by hallw.u"
their fifth contest
away.
For SOCCO, Ron F•r·o\\'o~·
was the game's
with 26 points while "Sfl'idfy'
Smith had
16,
Cremeans 12 and
Meadows 10. For thee:;~~
Dox Walters led w
pomis, Rich Haggerty
an d Tom Walters 13.
In reounding, SOCCO~:W
led by Ferguson with 15
Bill Chaney had 13
Mark V was led by the
Walte rs
brothers
wh&lt;
grabbed 12 each.
':'
FIRST GAME
':,
DAILY SENTINEL (981JiBrauer 9-().18, Andy Chool&lt;.t
13-().26, Arnie Chonko, 2-jW
Coates 14-2-30, Lavender -:t~
2. Totals 39-~ .
.::
CAMPERS (55) - Mye1'3:l
0-16, Price 6-5-17, Boggs 6-4,
16, Burney 1-0-2, Magnotta.:ej
0-4. Total 23-9-55.
"~ 1
SECOND GAME " ,
socco (80) -Smith 8-0-lf,
Ferguson 12-2-26, Meadows.&amp;,
2-10, Cremeans 6·0·12,
Vanlnwagen 2-U, Halley ~~
7, Chaney 1+3. Total~
MARK V (65) -D. Wallen'&lt;
10-3-23, T. Walters ih'l-~
Shrock 2-6-4, Grande! 1~f;:
M. Haggerty 1-0-2, B:~
Haggerty 7..a:.l7.
:::;~
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In Ohio only 16 percent of
the medical do ctors are
general practitioners while 67
percent of the osteopathic
physicians are general
practitioners.
" Investing
m
an
Osteopathic Medical School
promises to pay major
dividends in creating a more
adequate supply of family
practitioners," said Senator
Collins. " We need to
make them aware of our
medical plight."
Ohio requires Osteopathic
physicians to take the same
state board tests as anM . D

but they are equally well
trained.
Senator Collins further
explained that Ohio youth
who are mterested in
osteopathic careers should
be given special con sideration .
" There are no Colleges of
Osteopathic Medicine in Ohio
and only nine in the United
States," said Senator Collins.
" Many schools are closing
their enrollment to out-&lt;&gt;!slate applicants. This new
school will give Ohio youth
the opportunity to study."
Ohio has been tradLhonally

'

Report from
North_Vietnam:
By ARrHUR W. GAlSI'ON

Written For
United Press International
Anhur Glllston Is a professor
of biology at Yale University.
He recently spent a month in
North VIetnam.
At the North Vietna mese
farm cooperative of Yen
Doyen, peasant houses are
simple and basic, but all are
electrified. Ninety per cent
are of brick construhion, and
all have access to decent
drinking water and sanitary
facilities.
Prior to 1954, only the
landlord's house was made of
Irick, and all of the peasants
lived in mud huts.
I was surprised to find that
every house has a radio set,
and except for 62 older
members, all of the peasants
can read and write. Before

Peasant houses, once mud, now are. of bnck
1954, there was only one small
school at the primary level;
now, over 1,000 pupils are
educated in a network of
primary and secondary
schools at the CO-&lt;&gt;p.
A nursery school, staffed
by young women trained for
18 months, teaches 600
youngsters how to dress and
feed themselves, how to sing
and dance,. ho" to play
together , and how to
cooperate in simple work
tasks. In the meantime, their
mothers are off working in
the fields, helping to increase
production . After childbirth,
each woman is entitled to
three months of paid
vacation, during which time
she receives 55 pounds vi
paddy (rice) and 15 dongs per
month , After that she retirrns
to work , at first being
assigned to light duties until
her full strength has retur-

ned .
A comprehensive soctal
" elfare scheme •.akes care of
the health and retirement
needs of co-&lt;&gt;p members and
provide s a1d for funeral
expenses. The 10-bed·'lospital
shared by Ye n Duren and a
contiguous co-&lt;&gt;p is staffed by
one permanent residen t
doctor and 10 trained nurses.
Pa t ients rec eive medical
care without additional
payment, but most buy \herr
own medicines if at all
financially able to do so. In
case of need, the co-op
welfare fund can absorb even
that small fee . Aged peasants
are generally cared for by
their children, but should
they be childless, they are
given food, clothes and
housing by lhe coop. When a
person dies, lhe family is
given 50 dongs for burial
expenses
and
funeral
ceremony.

To run this elaborate social
structure, the peasants annually nominate and elect t.he
members of t.wo bodies. A
directorate of seven mem.
hers IS charged With overall
supervision of agncultural
production activ1ty, and a
thr ee-member sectio n of
co ntrol is charged with
safeguarding the rights of
peasan ts . Candidates are
nominated by their respec tive work bngades. After the
casting of electoral ballots by
all members 18 years or
older, those recei vin'g the
highest numher of votes 'are
declared
elected .
The
director is then chosen by the
electorate at large, which
also assigns specific roles to
each of the elected members
of the directorate. The 16
nominating work brigades
include 11 engaged in plant
cultivation, 2 in irrigation,
and one each for fish

Dr. Lamb

Oversexed male menopause

• s• IJI(ore raa caa llop.

and then quit. UsuallY. a man 'male hormone, but treatment behavior.
will have a gradual decline in of the depression.
In the rest of your letter you
hormone production from his
With the psychological mentioned several medicines
middle years into what we change, the male may need to that you are taking and that
consider old age. The sudden prove his masculinity. He wi 1 you have arthritis. Two of
shock to the endocrine sytem then start looking for new these medicines contain
of sudden decreased hormone sexual experiences or push hormones from the adrenal
productionjustdoesn'toccur. himself in this area. He may gland. They · are not . sex
Men
do
undergo seem more sexy, but in truth hormones. However, these
psychological changes in he may simply be more hormones may affect a
lheir middle years, and these de!!perate. This is one of person's psychological
tnay not be related to lheir many •, factors that lead to· behavior. They may cause
hormones at all. The mid middle-aged romances with el.th!!r "~pr~ssl!lfl or marked
point in a man's life, when he another woman or women acceleration In activity,
begins to realite he is not the and often the excess use of " locked in the go position"
response,
·young man of promise ' but alcohol.
must struggle to hold on to
0( course, new experiences
In the extreme form we call
what .he has, rcan be an may
turn
him
on this manic behavior as openormous ego shock. In some . 'psychologically. The sudden posed to depression behavior,
inslances this brings on a ' interest in a new sexual With the brain turned on full
mUd or even
severe partner often turns on the. throtue It is not surprising
this may activate a
!iePresalon. The depression whole sexual system, and the then
may, in turn, affect his in- ,person, il\8]e or-female, may person's sexual Interest 1
tere.t in sex and his per- suddenly be readily aroused would guess that has
fOI'IDaJICe. "nle flrsl thing_ to , · and feel sexier than he or she · something to do with your
look for In· moat middle-aged has felt in years. This is a ~n~dden increased sex drive
men willl sudden 1088 of good example of how and Ulat sex is just one part of
IHual Interest or capacity Is powerful the influence of the your total increased inll!rest
a depre111ion . The tteatment •brain can be on a J!!!rson's • and· activity.
·
in these cases is nut unneeded sexual
interests , and

Ilia'

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Allll D JU,, aMm do not
..... a tl'W" lblrp decline

'aiJY •• WUill .when lbe

1: ill lit

r 'lr dy ·a1ow down

departrnenis of welfare.
" This legis! a bon will
provide immediate food
assistance to families in need
within 24 hours after application is made ," satd
Senator Collins. "Once
eligilbility is established by
full verification, full benefits
are to contmue as long as the
eligibility continues. All
applications for food stamps
will be approved or denied
within 30 days after the
county department of welfare
receives the application ."
The legislation will be sent to
the Governor for signature.

•

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By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB _: Do
·men in their 50s uhdergo a
change of life? If so, do they
experience a period of
unusual and unaccounted for
sexUal stimulation? If this is
not true what would cause
this IDiusual and inexplicable
stimulation? What remedy
would•you then suggest?
D~ READER - Your
quealloa reminds me of the
IIJIIWel' of a friend of mine
whenukedtfmen go thtlllll!h
tbe menopa~~~e . He replied,
''Yes, mine .Wted · when I
was seven and I'm not
lllrough It yet."
Slrlclly apeaklng, men do
not have a menopause. After
all, meaopaue means
•lalll!lnl menall'uation, and
,... .,..,. to be able- to men-

COLUMBUS
State
Senator Oakley C. Collins (R·
Ironton ) co-sponsored a bill
passed by the Senate this
week that will provide any
household in need of immediate "food assistance"
stamps without charge.
Senator Collins explained
that under the federal Food
Stamp Program eligibility Is
determmed on the basis of
monthly income,
after
allowable deductions, and by
the number of persons in the
household. The charge for
stamps 1s determined ,on the
same bas ts by the county

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production, p1g production
and electrical work.
I chatted at length with the
director , Ngo; the vicedirector, Khang; and · two
party functionaries, Qui and
Phot. All were in their late
lhirties or early forties , had
been in service 7 to 10 years,
and had been demobili.zed
between 1971 and 1974. They
impressed me as disciplii\ed,
dedicated and incorruptible
civil servants.
The director emphasized
repeatedly the role of new
science and technology in the
productive life of the
cooperative. He boasted that
the rice yield, currently 18.5
metric tons of paddy per
acre, has risen threefold
since 1939, and greatly exceeds the n.ational norm of
about It metric tons per acre.
This advance, he emphasized, was due to technical innovations such as use of
'new, improved varieties, application of much manure,
optimal irrigation practices,
and intelligent use of insecticides. He was proud of the
three large electrically
driven irrigation pumps, the
threshing machine for each
brigade ,
the
milling
machines for rice, the
machines to cut feed, and the
m.gorse. than • 1,000 beautiful
P1
The pigs, obviously the
pride of the cooperative, were
something to behold. Housed
in inunaculate brick and
concrete pens, their health is
scrupulously t~ from
birth to marketing. A
veterinarian, an animal
husbandman
and
15
technicians, . aided by three
junior technicians from the'
pig production brigade
supervise breeding,
trin)onthly lnoculati0118 and
nutrition.
Agricultural wastes are
carefully ground, Inoculated
with a rapldly1ll'owlng strain
of yeast, and molded into
balls that incubate in tbe
wann · sun. '!be resulting
product is milCh higher in
protein than the starting
agricultutal wastes. The pigs
weigh a healthy 225 pounds on
I
the average
at 'market time.

When special seed, r--.
tilizer,
insecticide
r
machinery is needed, it is
purchased by the co-op
through th e agriculture
committee
of
the
municipality of Hanoi. The
funds used for these purchases are those of the co.op
itself. At the time of the sale
of its crops, the cO-&lt;&gt;p pays
four per cent in taxes to the
state, distributes 611 per cent
to the members as salary,
and reserves 28 per cent for
the general fund. Although
the prices for crops and labor
are fixed, premium prices
are paid for extra quality
produce and labor. Thus,
private incentive is shrewdly
utilized as a means of increasing production . The
growing prosperity of the coop fund is reflected in the
increasing number of tractors,
pumps
and
miscellaneous
machinery.
I took tea in the neat, threeroom house of an electrician.
Built in 1973 of brick on a
concrete slab, it represented
ten years of saving by the
entire family. The electrician
himself had done much of the
construction work, but had
received aid from his neighbors In putting in some of the
heavy beams and the tile
roof. He collects rain water
for drinking, has a nearby
private
twO-compartment
toilet, ~d adequate land for
growing his vegetables. At 55,
he is succeSaful and content,
and can look forward to a
_.secure retirement when he
can work no longer.
The Yen Doyen cooperative
farm has received two orcters
of merit and many certlflcates of ·commendation
from the government. It aiBo
· sent 300m~ to 'the fighting
front, gaining three 8pe!:ial
commendations for their
meritorious service. They are
proud of their record, and
seemed determined to improw it. They, and other
cooperatives like them, help
to explain the remarkable
) resiDency. of the Vietnamese
peop\e during 30 years of
savage warfare against
technologically superior
western powers.

•"o(o ~

L•

belllnd a 13-hlt Montrea1
attack which included a
homer by Mike Jorgenson,
who alao bad a double and a

6
Tuaa

eeo

•

KENT, Clllio (UPI) - 'l1le
Cleveland Browne announced
the trade Wednesday of

Americ•n League SUIInd i ng!.
cornerback Clifford Broob to
United Preulntern•tlonal
Ea1t
w. 1. pet. g.b . the Phlladel(Jbla EagiM ftr a
61 •2 .592
future draft cholce,
Boston
52 49 .5\S 8
Balli more
Broobwu~from
52 51
505 9
New York
52
53
A95
10
lhe
roster last weekend for
M il waukee
46 55
455 14
Cl eveland
what a Browns' spokesman
46 57
4.7 1.S
Detro it
Wnt
called " a major rules violaw. 1. pet. g .b tion." The fourth year man ·
oakl and
66 38
635
Kan C•tv
56 47
544 9' ~ started live games last
Ch 1cago
SO 52
490 15
season but then gave way
Te"ICa!.
A8 57
•s 7 18' '
hardhltting Van Green.
calil
47 59
443 70
Mlnn
.44 60
423 21
Brooks, who Uvea In
Wedn e!.dBY ' ' R es ults
Houston, Tex., during the off
Milwaukee 6 Boston l
New York 2 Oelro lt 1, n1ght season, said he was not given
Cleveland 3 Baltlmof"e 1, night
Kansas C•IY 6 M inneso ta 4
a reason 101' being dumped
night
from the team, but Arthur
Oakland 1 1'e:~~l'IS 0 . n 1ghl
Cal• lorn•a 5 Chlcag'O ,., n1qht ModeU, owner of the Browns,
Thu r$ day ' s Gam e!.
said Brooks was informed of
All Times EDT
the nature of the violations.
Kansas C1ly {F 1tzmorr 1S 10
8 1 at M •nn esoHI ! Hugh es ll 9 ),
Leaving camp WednesdaY
7 15 p m
Oe t ro1t ( Lemanczyk 0 1 and was rookie Mike Zeigler of
Bar e 6 5 ) a t Bos t on ( Lee 13 6 Painesville . Zeigler, auf·
and Moret 7 1 ). '2 5 p m

04

oi.ta

.-

J

••rl

to lay

Snead

ioi

Find out why
State Farm

insures more cars
than anybody else.
Call
55

I

.

,, ,
''''"'

rhe Almanac
~
Today is Thursday, JUlY';'
31st, the 212th day of 1975 willl:
153 to follow.
..,n
The moon is in its IIY,It
quarter.
Ud l
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars, Jupiter ailG
Saturn.
•. •
The evening star is Ventii~
Those born on this date 111'\l.;
under the sign of Leo.
American writer John Kent
was born July 31st, 1763. '"''
oo O

On this day in history: ;,
In 1792, Director Davi.d..
Rittenhouse laid the come~;,
stone in Philadelphia for \1111,
United States Mint, the first
building of the federal.
·~
governrnent.
In 1972, Missouri Senat4i'"
Thomas Eagleton withdrew:,
as
Democrat!~
viCf;.,
presidential nominee, s••
~
days
after
disclosing
previous hospitalization
psychiatric treatment.
-· •

..

anir:
'"
.nu

...,......
II I.

J-

1!

.......
A

sa(!

EHectlve Aug. J, J 975

Announcing
NEW STORE HOURS
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8·PM

4I

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

?

TO .WAffiE LOVERS

-

., Try Our All New Waffles

J U

. . ..
" ''
1111

he said.
R' d and
'
After eonnors beat Newcombe in Las Vegas, 1or an
Trabert had a talk. Trabert told Rl,o r,dan he didn't understand
what eomors was so 11pset about.
.
.
"He said he bad some feelings Ulat he mtght be named DaVIS
Cu aplain and he knew .t.here were some problems between
~ ~nd Jlnuny ,''said 'Riordan. "Trabert Sl_lid ~·d like to set
up an apJ,oinlment so they cO'~Id resolve thell' differences, ~d
I told him, f.ine we'd ~et up a ~a~.e . That was April 26th, and I ve
never heard from him agsm ..
In June, Joe Carrico, chatrman of the u.~. Davis Cup
'ttee contacted Connor~a•.d tuordan and told them they
to keep politics out of the selection of a captain for the u s team . (larrico had a llat of 40 candidates, Connors said

!'=

~·dbebai&gt;PytoplayforanybodyexceptTrabert..

"Know somethin'? I'm ready for ro//erba/1
NOW!':

·J

....

"ThesaytheywantJinunytoplayfor them and then they go
ahead and name Trabert," said Riordan. "They call Junmy
defiant but 1 think they're the ones who are being defiant. It's
•lmost 'as if they have a death wish."

THEY ARE MADE WITH .A NEW,
PATENTED MALTED WAFFLE
AND PANCAKE FLOUR. THIS
,FLOUR IS . EXTREMELY LIGHT,
' AMAZIN·GLY . DIGESTIBLE,
UNBELIEVEABLY DELICIOU~.

FOR AU.

YOUR BUILDING

NEEDS
STOP IN TODAY

v· ALLEY
'

,

·tuM·_BER &amp;,s·upp(y·

A rose Is a rose Ia a roset And the;.. are pretty crafty.
Blending the beautifully detailed look of pollt point with
sleek Finesse Cowhide. tn glowing colors!
"Tri-Part•te" french Purse •
.. $10.00
KEY GARD0

..

.

.. . . . . . $

.. .. .

•

5 .00

And, matching pi~s from iust S5.00

''

CROW'S sTEAK HOUSE
'

•

'

•

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

•"

·c
·
o
· ·.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy

Court St.

DDLEPORT 0
l.;...._..;,___M,_I_-:""'_..;'~'-~---_.
\

'

••

'

&lt;,

I

_.=1 !1,~!~th ~

""'

byc;~nd

up golf clubs

Cook also suggests riding
with " lights on" to make ,llle
motorcycle more visible , Ill
motorisis.
11\K.
Motorisis also are askf4;to
review their driving hal?!!«
and learn to watch for
motorcycles as well as
cars and trucks.
.~:.~
" Both motorcyclists and.
motorists should regard.
operation of their vehicles .as
a responsible action,;:,
Director Cook conclud~Jt .
" Each user of Ohio streets
and highways is depend~
upon all other users forpersonal safety. "
"-

n========--

year, six fewer than he had
~ the 19'14 campaign.
d
EsiiOS I CW. 1

Ytr~t !•=~~~ r!.ev~~;:ub~.:d Dave ~le. Ray Burris, f:Bgged for

streak of nine straight wina
over the Pirates.
The Cincinnati Reds
defeated the San Fl'anclaeo
Glantl 6-1, the Los Angeles
Dodgers beat the Atlanla
droveintwo· n~~~~andsoored 'Braves &amp;-2, the Montreal
three Wednesday nlaht when Emos topped lhe Ollcago
,

doesri 't even know *re he's
going to hlt the ball."
Sanguillen, now fied for
second in the N at1o11al
League's batting race with a
_341 average, went ~for-6,

Sport Parade

......
......;.\

Berry's World

without a strike zone:•
SanguUien Ia a constant
lle~che ~pitchers because
he s a spny hitter.
" There's no defense
againlthim," sa)'l teammate
AI 011
" He hita to right
field ;.';;'.to left field Sailgy

Pirates defeated the . Cubi &amp;-1, the Holllton::: ~~~ames~ 8
· Philadelphia P~llllea, &amp;-1, dQ'":!tthelhellan~~uls Car· ltal'tln8 pitcher goinl the
behind tbe nine-bit pitclllng of ~ IICOred ~ w victory dlltlllce. Johnny Bendl llld
Je~ n:.:~ restored the over the New York Meta 1n Tally Perez ctrove in flw 111111
~-· • ·
the olher NL games
bet en them as the 1\a
P)rates'slead to 4\'z games In
•
";d tie Pete Falcone
the National !Aague's
In the~-:=· 2,it :~hi!&amp;roo
th 10811_
Eastern Dlvillon race and was Mllwa-ee
seven
alao snapped the Phlllles Cleveland 3 Baltimore 1, .New Dod&amp;en I Braves I In two

I

his ninth game wtth live runs and nine hits in 41-J
5
to
and 'Callfornl&amp; • : ' ~:-;lef help of Mlite , .innings, lost hi!' eighth game
OllcaS:
Manhall for the Doclleri!t llllainst ellltt wins.
1
~ Pat Dare pitched wbo clinched the gii!M Whten Altroe 8 P..Sre1 t
Rootle
Jete Y In tbe they ICOI'ed four ilnea!'Md
Jose Cruz and Doug Rader
hlsfirst~ ~ Cl
in the eighth lt waa clroveinatotalofflvel'\lll5
majors an
en e
n- runs
'
with homers in a sixth-Inning
outburst which carried the
Astros to their win over the
:'f1'
Padres. Doug Konieczny allowed three runs and six hits
In six Innings to win his fifth
game of the year. Bob Tolan
~erlean League Roundup "selfish" play by Cleveland .Boston (which also lost) In with ninth 11111ing help from lut 16 batters he faced. Roy homered for San Diego.
fering from a muscle strain
~ BilL MADDEN
Indians' manager Frank the American League East. reUevers RoiUe Fingen and Wlllte doubled home the first C8rd1rut 5 Meta %
Nahon41tleague sundln9s
since coming to camp, told
Willie Davis' three-run
U'I Sports Writer
Robinson. But. after a still·
"I don't have a doghouae," Paull.Jndblad made It stand :Vankee run off loser Mickey
Un1t ed Press Int ernational
the coacltea he was retiring
east
homer hJ&amp;hlighted a five-run
Out of the doghouse came unconfinned apology, Ellis said'RobiNon In reipmse-lo · up. FergPm Jenklna (l:t-1%) lAillcb' (l~lO).
w . I pet. g b
4
from football .
second
Inning
which
carried
Jbhll Ellis - just 1n time to got himself back into the questions about Ellis' recent took tbe lo•· despite Yielding ·a.:rala I, l'wiDa
63 40
6 12
P itts
1
Joining
the
Browns
59 45
567 4
pbt the bite on the Baltimore Indians' lineup and Wed- publicized benching. "My just live hits and no walks.
Fred Pate_k drov~ ~e the Cardinals to their Ph•la
53
48
525
q
York
Saturday wlll be their
d tw
original quote on the incident
Yanilees
J'lgen 1
three runs, two o
m triumph over Randy Tate and New
52 51
50S II
sda lght s1
St Louis
number-one draft choice ,
.48
57
A57
16
~: :S~~~":e~ ~ ~:ner t:;m~~ ~ was 'he will nOt play another Rudy May fired a three- during a four-run fourth the Mets. John Curtis 'yielded Chicago
41 58
4\A 20
Montreal
defensive end Mack Mitchell.
Only a couple of weeks ago Orioles 3-1 and kept them game until he comes to me hitter and Thurman Munson lnning Royals' uprising, and two runs in the first inning,
west
6 but won his seventh game of
Mitchell is currently laboring
w
I.
pet
.
9
b
O:Ufs was benched and from improving their eight- about his attitude.' He did." singled home the tie-«ealdng rookie DenniS Uonard went
C.ncin
68 37
648
in the College All-Star camp
ch•.• ti
f
game deficit on . firs' -•·ce
Ellis, however, pleaded the run in the sixth lnninl! as the 2-3 innings to gain his eigh~ the year.
....... i 1
L os Ange l es
55 51
519 13 1 •
1
cv
or
,_,_
&lt;11th.
Yankees moved up to nine win. n wa:' Kansas City s :·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:::·:·:::·: San F r a n
52 5'2
500 15 1 Wider Coach Willie Davis.
S.!in o 1ego
49 56
467 19
Davis raved about 6-3, 241·
"I have nothing to say games behind BostOn and one ~h win . m seven games
Allant a
45 59
43 3 22 1 1
First
practice
pound Mitchell.
about it," said the Tribe behind second-place smce Whitey Herzog took
Hou sto n
38 69
355 3 1
W ednesday's Results
"Mitchell I!&amp; the best condicatcher, who followed a Baltimore In the A1. East. over as manager.
Montreal 6 Ch1c ago 1
at
Meigs
called
tioned
player in camp and
leadoff double by Rico Carty May ( 10-6) retired 15 of the
Los A ngeles a Atlol!lnta '2 , n•ght
P ittsburg h 8 Ph i ladelph i a 1, has the best attitude of
with hi!&amp; sixth homer of the
Melgl High Scbool
n.ght
.
year to break up a 1-1 tie in
Cl ncinnali 6 San F ran c•sco 1. anyone here," said Davis.
football coach Charles
" He's
attentive,
asks
night
the eighth.
Chancey announces that
St Louis s New York 2, night
questions
and
15
easy
to
Houston 8 san D iego d, night
" I had the green light on a
lbe flnt practice will be
Thursday's Games
teach.
3-0 pitch," Ellis continued
thla Friday night begiDnlng
All Tlme.s EDT
"He rushes the pall88t well,
after side.,gtepping his obSt. Louis (Rasmussen 1 11 at
at 1:3t. '!bose boya who
Ch
lcl'lg
o
&lt;S
ton
e
8
5
L
2
30
P
m
but
needs work on tbe inlllde
viOusly still-simmering
mllsed the meeUng on
By MILTON RICHMAN
Los Angeles (S utton 4 9 or
Oown~ng 1-0) at Alll'lnla ( Cal trap," the fonner Green Bay
dispute with Robinson. "I've
Wednuday nlgbt should
UPI Sports Editor
Canton
0 3), 7 · 30 p .m
star added. "I think he's
been hitting terribly against
report early Friday to pick
New York (S tone 2 2) at
YORK
(UPI)Jlnuny
Connors
stands
aU
a1une
now,
NEW
Pittsburgh ( Rooker 7 6 l. 7 35 ~oing to be a super player."
the Orioles all season and
up eqnlpmenl
pm
,
tranded as a hopeless, selfish renegade, or a modem da.Y (Baltimore loser Mike)
::·:::·:·:::::::::~::·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
Phllade lph •a (Sc huel er 4 2 }
Conc epcion . Cln 23
'Bimedict Arnold with l&lt;)mis racquet turning his back on hiS Cuellar took something ' off
at Montreal tWl'lr then 4 4 ).
American League: Rivers .
By
IRA
MilLER
monthoccurred
while
just
I!Oilhlry in its greatest hour of need.
_ _
Wednesdly 's
8 OS p .m
Cal 56 ; Wash ington , Oak 3•.
the ball. I can only guess they
san F ran c•sco ·!Mon te fus co Remy. Cal and Otis. KC 31.
eanball Results
UPI Spr-ta Writer
about every top player was at
HiS high crime?
wanted to see if I could hit at
10 4) at Cincinnati (Ki rby 7 4 ),
United Press ln1ernat l onal
North , Oak 26.
HARRISV•.. V .Y. (UPI) the British Open. He's 1Mth
-'· ~lnuny Connors, the No. 1 tennis player in the whole world,
Amerlun League
7 00 p m
Pitching
all."
San Diego (J ohnson 1 0) at
This
is
the
last
time around on the year's money lilt with Milwaukee 000 010 230- 6 10 0
(Ballet
on
moat victorln)
sbnp)y refuses to play on the U.S. Davis Cup team, a team
Robinson, an ex-Oriole ,
Boston
100 000 100- 2 6 1 Housto n IFonc 4 8 L 8 . 35 P m
National League : Seaver .
the
stammer'
Sam
Snead
total
winnings
of
$2,9211.
for
&amp;iirly crying for help, having been nothing less than an ab- meanwhile, issued a warning
Slaton I 10 101 and Moore .
NV U7 , Sutton, LA ,. .9,
Major League Leaders
Cleveland . J:lurton (8l and
is getting ready to retire.
Most
of
the
top
playen
ll1'e
Jones . SO \J .6 , Messersmith ,
Un1ted
Press
International
solute disaster the past two years.
.
to his ex-mates. "I think
Blackwell, F1Sk (8 l. LP LA 13 9 ; ReU$S , Pitt 12·6 ,
Leading
Batters
"I just thought I'd play my in the field for this $2110,000 Cieveland 18 11 H Rs - Evans
~·:N'obody, except those closest to him, like his mother, or hiS Boston can be caught," the
Matlack , NV 12 ·1!1 .
1 based on 27S at bah!
American L••tue:
Kaat.
OO§t friend and advisor, Bill Riordan, can und~rstand why he Indians' skipper said, " but committrnents out and let event, but Jack Nicklaus, (9th J. Lezcano {8t h I
National League
g ab r h pet . Chi 15-8; Palmer , Bait 1.4 -7 ;
Arnold Palmer and Lee Del
\\foh 't budge or merely bend a little from his fiXed, ~ockhard somebody better get to them go,'' Snead said.
000 010 000- I 3 0
Ch
94 38 1 S3 135 JS4 Blue , Oak 14·8 ; Lee and Wise .
ooo 001 oox - 2 52 Mdlck,
Then his voice tailed off. Trevino are not. Nicklaus and NY
Bas 13 6 , Busby , KC and
jkl!ltion. Everybody who is supposed to have a?Y mfluen~e quick or they can forget it."
S1
mmons
.
51
L
Loll c h ( 10 10 } and F r eehan ,
Ho1t1man. Oak 13-8 ; 1'1Bnt,
100
JSS
53
121
341
It's
something
he
hasn't
Palmer
both
are
·
skipping
It
with him keeps trying to get him to change his mmd, and thiS
May ( 10 6) an d MUO!OO
Dennis Eckersley, the In.Bos and ~,b(- 1-f V 1.3 -LO .
Sa nguill en. Pitt
wanted
to
face
.
for
the
first
time,
their
mates him look more of a villain yet, but looks have a way of dians' 20-year old rookie
89 328 41 112 .341
.
000 010 020- 3 4 l Parkr , Pit
92 343 Sl 113 329 .
The Westchester Golf thoughts trained flnnly on Cleve
Ball
ooo ooo 100- 1 'o Mrgn , Cn
being deceiving sometimes.
righthander outdueled the
98 339 72 111 327
Ecker!.ley ( 8 31 and Ell 1s . Bowa , Phi
--.Jinuny Connors isn't a villain or a turncoat at all, although veteran Cuellar, giving up Classic which begins today the PGA Champioll8hlp next Cuellar
78 3 36 47 110 3'27
( 10 ]) a nd H en dr ic k!.
97 368 .49 110 .326
marks
snead's
ninth
tourweek
at
Akron,
Ohio.
oo5eems to be with some who are concerned only with the U.S . four hits and striking out nine
HRs.- - Sinoleton { 1Hh l, Sp1k.es watson. H
Csh , Phi
104 441 76 141 .320
nament appearance of the
'!be field is headed by { 6th L Ellis 16th)
Grvy , LA
106 H2 58 HI 319
l'!!Capturing the Davis Cup.
.
in going the distance. The
Br c k , St L
86 333 S6 106 .JIB
year,
but
he
doesn't
expect
Johnny
Miller, the delending Kan ' cit y
?lJe has as muclt pride as anybody representing the Uruted Oriole run was a homer by
00\ 401 000- 6 10 0
American League
much.
'At
63,
the
remarkable
champion,
Hale
Il:wln,
Mlnn
020
000
020
4
1l
1
SClftes in Congress today. All he ever dreamed of since he was Ken Singleton in lhe seventh.
g ab r h pet .
Leona r d . B i rd
171 and
95 359 66 134 373
Crw, Mnn
a"ldd was playing for the Davis Cup team, llut ~·s co~vinced a . Charlie Spikes' solo homer skilla ·Ulat have carried him British Open champion Tom Mart inez . A lb ury , Johnson I .:I ) Lynn
94 339 69 11 3 333
, Bos
certain few in tennis deliberately are going out of !herr way to gave Cleveland a 1-!1 lead in through a 4().year career are Watson, Canadian . Open and Borgmann WP - Leonard Hrgrv nc.
92 32 1 53 106 330
(
8
SJ
L
PA
lbury
5
61
beginning to ebb; the smooth champion Tom Weiskopf, a
Munson NY
make him look bad, and when that happens, what does any the fifth.
100 37 9 52 118 311
swing _just isn't so smooth near-winner here the last two Texas
000 000 000- 0 5 0 wash ington . Oak
redblooded 22-year-old American young man do? He stands up
Elsewhere in the American
001 ooo oox - 1 5 0
anymore.
yean, Gary Player, Gene oak
98 394 59 122 .310
Jenktns (171 1) and Sund
League, Milwaukee put away
and rebels.
.
Me
R
,
KC
100
385 48118 .306
quitting
:
LltUer
and
U
.S.
Open
Snead
won't
be
berQ , Holtzm an , F1n g ers (9) ,
This, in essence, is what Jlnuny Connors is domg.
.
Orta , Ch1
85 321 42 96 299
Boston &amp;-2, New York shaded
Lindblad ( 9 ) and Fosse WP R Ice . Bas
9S 376 66 11 2 .298
First he refused to play for a Davis Cup team .captained by Detroit 2-1 , Kansas City because he wants to. He has . Champion Lou Graham.
Hottzman
( 13 SJ
HR Dent , Chi
99 375 35 111 296
to.
At
8,614
yards
and'
par.
72,
Cam pan ens ( J.th)
Dennis Ralston because of Ralston's close lies w1th the downed Minnesota 6-4 ,
Brtt , KC
101 403 S• 118 293
Last year It was a rib injury Westchester Country Club Ch 1cag0
Home Runs
A,"Mociation of Tennis Professionals, a group. Conn~rs h~s Oakland blanked Texas 1-0
301 000 000- A 8 ~
National League . Luzinskl.
that
knocked
him
out
of
the
"
produces
some
of
the
lowest
Caf
1
f
002
000
00
35
7
2
de'ctined to join because he does not agree w1th their prm- and California ambush ed
Phil 26 . Kingman , NY 22.
Kaat , Gossage (9) and Bench, C1 n and Starge11 , Pitt
u .S. Open. nus year it is a scores on the pro tour every Down.ng
,
Ryan
t12
l
l)
and
5-4.
Chicago
ciples.
.
t
·
20. Schmidt , Phil 19
' !ilow he says he'll play on the .S. Da':'IS Cup earn m a
Amencan League : J ackson ,
In National Uague action pinched nerve that has year. Miller was 19under, the Ham pion LP - Kaal ( l5 Sl
toumament record, in winOa k 26 , Mayberry, KC, Scott,
minute, but not while T9ny Trabert IS captam of the team. And it was Los Angeles atop troubled him.
like a good neighbor,
National League
i l and Bond!. , _NY '21 ,
"lt's been· bothering me ninl a year ago.
Montreal
022 010 010 - 6 l3 0 M
Atlanta 11-2, Montreal over
tHat's where the problem arises .
.
Burroughs,
Tex.
19
Ch tcago
000 100 000- 1 8 2
State Farm,...--,
Runs Ba1ted In
"J'ony Trabert was named captain Wednesday byU .S. TenniS Chicago 6-1, Pittsburgh on top since March, before that · "It's not a tough course by
Rogers { 8 7 J and Car te r ,
National
League
:
Luz
lnsk
1,
,,.
is there.
Association President Stan Malless. Less ~an five ~mutes of Philadelphia 8-1, Cin- actually," he said Wed- any means," says Sn~d. "It Burri s, P Reusch e l (5), Phil 88 , Ben c h , Cin 82.
Wilcox
(6J.
Dettore
{
9)
and
ttlfl fdM MI!UL
after the amouncement, Trabert had the obv10us quesllon put cinnati topping San Fran- nesday. "But lately it's been has abo~t four or five key Hosle y LP - Burr•s (8 BJ Watson , Hou 72: Staub , NY
..lMIILl
and
S1mm
ons
,
St
L
69
HRs - Jorgen sen
(9th ),
cisco &amp;-1, Houston over San a little worse. I've had holesonLt.Youplaythosepar Monday
ui"him. What about Jlnuny Connors?
.
. ,
American League . Lynn ,
111WIJICI ~-~~'
IHIUIANU
(
13th
)
.... lftl•:
eos 75 , May , Ball 74 , Ja c kson .
7.1 bope Connors plays," tie said. "I would be sad.if he d•d? t. Diego 8-4 and St. Louis acupuncture treatments, I've or better and you ~
.,
.........
11,
.....
Oak 73 . R1 ce, Bas 71 ; Ho rton .
had all kinds of treatments, la)ock the stuffmgs out ol.lt.
Los Ang .
200 001 140- 8 10 2
for the team, sad for the country, and for Junmy, hllfl· beating New York ~2.
At lanta
OO'l 000 000- 2 9 2 Det 68
, 71 ·102
but it doesn't seem to clear It
- "
A:au . Marshall (71 and
Biewers 6, Red Sox Z
~If.''
.
Yeager,
Morton
.
Leon
18
L
Other U.S.T.A. officials said the same thmg.
.
.
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI) Sou (9) and Correll . WP Sixto Lezcano's three-run up.
"It's really hurt beclluse I _ Green Bay Packers Coach Rau (9 Bl LP- M orton (11
There is the feeling in some quarters that Bill RIOrdan IS eighth inning homer and Jim
urj:ing Connors not to play for the Da.vis Cup team, but that Slaton's six-hit pitching pre- don't have much power, espe· and General Manager Bar! 12)
isn't true at all. Riordan, in fact, has tr1ed to persuade Connors vented the Red Sox from dally with my left band or Starr WedneSdaY suspended San Fran
010 000 000- 1 8 1
Cine
In
200
002 20x - 6 8 0
left
ann.
My
right
tak~
over
veteran
cornerback
Ken
Ellis
tO''relent and play.
.
.
. moving even farther out in
Falcone , La v elle (7 ), Moff•tl
' Y'Tony and I are singing the same duet," srud Riordan at hiS front of the distant Orioles. too quick and it's either a for failing to appear at (7) and Rader , Dar c y (7 5)
end Bench . LP - Fa l cone (7
sh'lisbury, Md., law office when he heard what Trabert had to Lezcano's homer, with slice to the right or a duck , training camp.
1)
Ellis had left camp 1a1t
George Scott a,nd Henry hook to the left. When both
ODD 001 000- 1 9 1
"'!~i just left Jimmy last night and told him substantially the Aaron aboard, improved on a hands don't work together • Friday over contract dlf· Phil•
Pitts .
211 300 Oh - 8 12 0
same thing. But I do think some of those people are a ~ttle late 3-2 Brewers' lead and helped brother you can call the dogs ferences but showed up for
Carlton , TWitchell
(5 ),
· 'inaking those speeches. Jimmy has made up his mmd not to Slaton even his record at 1(). and go home."
the tea'm breakfast and Hoerner (8l and McCarver ,
Reuss ( 12 6) and Sangulllen
Two weeks ago lhe pain morning practice TuesdaY . LP
;:iay as long as Trabert is captain of the team, and he won't 10. Dwight Evans homered
- Carllon (10 Bl
HRs "an
' ge his mind. He's got too much character to back down . for Boston.
was sufficient that Snead However he was not at the Sanguilen 16th), Ol iv er ( 121h l.
en
. "
withdrew from the tour- Tuesday'
afternoon
or Brown (5 th) .
ftl! will not prostitute himself to hypocriSy.
Angels 5, While Sox 4
s an "Diego
010 110 010- 4 10 o
Part of the trouble goes back to some comments Trabert
Jim Kaat was cruising nament at sutton, Mass., and Wednesday practices.
Houston
ooo oso 03 x. - 8 a 1
..Mcintosh , Grief. Tomlin ( 7),
made on television.
. along toward his 16th v!ctory went home. He thinks he feels
Friesella ( 8) and Hundley .
"He had some very uncomplimentary things to say about when he blew a 4-2lead in the well enough now that, "I'll
CLOSE AT 5 PM SATURDAY
fi t 36 NY
200 000 000- 2 10 0 K onie c zny , N i ekro
(7) ,
Jlnuny uncomplimentary and inaccurate things, and Jimmy ninth inning, loading the make it th rough the II'S
• 51 L
oso ooo oox- s 10 1 Cosgrove (8) , Sosa 181 and
Tate . Parker (2), Sanders
Jutze . WP - Konieczny (5 11 ) .
was ~t about that," said Riordan. "Trabert did the com- bases with Angels. Reliever I'll say."
LP - Mclntosh (8 9)
HRs He
hasn't
won
in
10
years,
16)
and
Stearns.
Curtis
17
-Bl
- ntary for Jimmy's matches with Rod Laver and John Rl~ Goi!SB!le came on and
and Simmons LP - Tate (4 9).
Tolan &lt;•th), Cruz (4th) , Rader
(Bt h l. Sosa l lstl
~=wcombe in Las Vegas and said Jimmy liked to be known as walked home one run before or since he was 53, but he's HR - Davos l3rd l
still
a
competifor.
~h
of
the
'
•arrogant.' That whole tliing .started in an airport -;vhen
giving up a giroe~winning
reporter asked Jlnuny jf he enjoyed being called brash . two-run single to pinch hitter last three y111rs, Snead hall
JimmY laughed arid said 'don't call me br~, call me John Doherty. Nolan ' Ryan challenged for the PGA
arrogant'. He said It in jest but that wasn't the.way 11 came.out (12-11) went the route for the Championship and finished
.• .
when Trabert said it on television. He t(l(lk It as a strrught line, win despite yielding eight hits among the top 10.
Th1s year he hasn't been
and seven walks.
which it wasn't.
.
.
close
anywhere. He has sur"When that was brought to Trabert's attention, he S31d he A's 1, Rangers 0
was only quoting from a magazine. Well, he s~ply had~'t
Bert Campaneris' solo vived ljhe cut In only three of
done his hlmiework. I told him that and he got uptight about 1t. ))omer in the third inning his eight tournaments and ,
'when I was ,a kid playing, he'd have been sus~nd~~ for accounted for the game's two of th---Mllwaukee and
saying something like that,' Trabert said. I told hllfl. II s ~~ only run and Ken Holtzman Quad Cities earlier this
entirely different era we're living in now. 'Notfor me, 1t isn t,

,.u.,.

t .....\

Director Donald D. Cook has
renewed a plea for concentration on motorcycle
safety. Four motorcyclists
were killed in Ohio traffic
during a recent weekend.
The safety director em·
phas1zes:
"A m otorcyclist involved in
even a minor crash must
expect
serious m]ury .
Motorcyclisis must accept
lhe fact ltlat they are extremely vulnerable in traffic
and develop the necessary
skills to prevent accident
involvement.''
Statistics show collision
with another motor vehicle is
the most usual type of
motorcycle accident, Cook
said. He noted, however, that
weekend accident reports
compiled by the Ohio State
Highway Patrol show cyclists
also wreck their vehicles and
sustain serious injuries by
running off roadways.
This indicates unskilled
operation, excessive speed or
rhysical impairment, Cook
observed.
''Again,
motorcyclists
rnnot
remember
their
vehtcles are not " little cars",
he stressed. "Although
motorcyclists have greater
manueverability of their
vehicles , the two-wheeled
vehicles are less stable than
cars and more susceptible to
driver error and mechanical
failures."
Director Cook suggests
cyclisis make a daily preriding check, paying close
attention to conditio" of tires,
bent or loose spokes, power
chain condition, fuel or oil
leaks and any missing parts.
Both front and rear brakes
should be tested and

u ','the ~ _ the

'

z.

m

practicing
osteopathic
physicians .
This new legislation will
emphasize family practice
and require that SOper cent of
the s tudents be from Ohio or
intend to practice in Ohio for
f1ve years. An advisory board
will also be crea ted.
In add1hon , a $670,000
General Revenue Fund appropriation for the 197~77
biennium will he provided for
planmng purposes. " This new
school gives south eas tern
Ohio hope," Senator Collins
said. " Health is hrst and we
need doctors.''

Alao known

Indians' John Ellis out of doghouse

Cycle safety drawing .........'""
...
Collins pushing Osteopath school· bill ~::~:~~~!c!~i?~~.!;:eg
increased ·attention
COLUMBUS State s tatistics snow .many more before they can be licensed among the top 10 states in the Food stamp wait is cut
COLUMBUS - In view of a headlight, brake lights 8riil
Senator Oakley C. Collins ( R· osteopaths are practicing by the state. The Osteopath's number of studenis enrolled
continued rise in motorcycle turn signals all should bEi:iii
medicin e
than trainin g differs somewha t in out-of-state schools and
WI•th
Sen.
CollinS
biJl
Ironton), is strongly sup- family
accidents,
Highway Safety working condition .
;:.··
porting the bill to create an M.D.s."
from the trainmg of aM.
ranks high
the number of
---Osteopathic
School , of
Medicine at Ohio University
in Athens . The measure
passed the Ohio $enate
Monday evening by a 24-jj
margin and had overwhelmingly passed the Ohio
House on March 26.
" There Is a desperate need
for increasing medi cal
services in Ohlo- especially
in the Appalachian areas of
southeastern Ohio," said
Senator Collins. "There are
many rural areas where
there ar no physicians within
a 30-mile radius. We need
family. practitioners and

Rrooks' traded

.

Pirates end jinx, drop Plill~7~.!!~1." ...

wiJUrsday ,July 31, 1975

o

I

\.

-

'

''

�I'

,
I

..
! -1'111! DailySenttnei,MlddlellOrt·Pomeroy, 0 ., 'lburaday, July 31. l!l'/5

--------

,

!"

HUNTINGDON, Pa. (UP!)
- Aubran .. Buddy" Martin,
who faces three death senten~s after his conviction of
the Dec . 30, 1969, killings of
candidate for United Mine
Workers president Joseph
Yablonski, his wife and
daughter, says he doubts the
death penalty w1ll be rein·
stated.
Bringing back executions
would only serve the purpose
of furthering the reputation of
solving social problems with
violence and aggression, " he
said at the State Correctional
Institution here.
Martin is one of three men
sentenced under the old
Pennsylvania capital punishment law tha~ was invalidated by a 1972 U.S.
Supreme Court.
Three other men have been
sentenced to death since a
new state capital punishment
law was passed over Gov.
Shapp's veto in March 1974.
The U.S . Supreme Court is
expected to rule this fall on a
test case from North Carolina
which could bring a decision
on whether the death sentence is "cruel and unusual
;...-1 punishment."

~~~~~c::...______________....:_~~~
~

~~~_.:___:--....;.-.!

"If he could just get rid of all those buildings and plant
wheat."

-Shockers, SOCCO

Conlicted killer doubting·
electrocution is his fate

He is the only one of several
defendanis in the Yablonski
case who has been officially
sentenced to death.
Martin is optimistic he will

not be executed and some day
he will be freed from
prison.
Ironically, when he was
younger (he turned 27 in
May) he believed in the dealh
sentence for certain cases.
However, after his conviction, " I began to reevaluate my previous concept of capital punishment,"
Martin said with a grin.
After 51.'.! years in the penal
syste m, Martin said he
believes a n inmate can find
only one positive aspect in
prison- education.
" At first I found it difficult
to receiVe assistance while in
search of my education . Until
recently, I did all studying on
my own."
To keep from becoming
institutionalized, "or at least
slow the process down," Martin, who had a seventh grade
education when he was
convicted, has obtained his
high school diploma through
the General Educational
Development program. He
also has completed recently
two college courses from
Penn State University A's. He
Is
presently
studying
soc iology, psychology and
art.
To Martin, contemplating a
lifetime in prison is worse
than facing death in the

•

•

easy ca,ge VIctones

to fight as long as I'm
breathing . I don't want to
adjust to a system that

dehumanizes a n md.1vidual. "
dividual."
observe
negative
"I
behavior and haired every
day . I watch guys change
degree by degree and the
changes are not toward the
positive nature. I also feel the
changes taking place m
myself.
"Other inma tes may not
fa ce the chair," Martin said.
"but whether they realize it
or not, they're dying anywa y.
To adapt a nd accept prison
values is to d1e little by little.
If the penal system stays the
present way, a man in prison
for 1().2(1 years is emotionally
mcapacitated. He loses the
capability to love , be compassionate and-or feel the
emotional needs necessary to
exist in any free society. For
all practical purposes, this
man
is
emotionally
castrated. They might as well
electrocute him ."
"No way do I want to live
like this. I don't worry about
the chair ; I worry about the
eventual psychological death
this system will bring, and
contrary to the laws of
nature, not even the strong
can survive this dealh . If I
thought I had no possible way
electric chair. ''It's ex· of winning a new trial; .I'd
tremely agonizing, he said, " I walk to the chair, sit down
and relegate myself to the
sitl,lation.''

Middleport summer
basketball program got back
into high gear Monday night
with the Daily Sentmel
Shockers blasting J im's
campers 8().55 and socco
defeating Mark V 00-65.
In the opening game the
Shockers , with the hot outside
shooting of Lonnie Coats and
Chip Brauer and the
reboundmg power of Andy
Chonko , overpowered the
Campers Chonko, Ii-I former
all SEOAL basketball pla yer
of Athens, hit 26 pomis and
hauled down 20 rebounds.
Coats scored 30 poinis for
game hon orswhil e Brauer
scored 18.
For the Campers, who were
playmg w1thout their high
scormg forward, Mike Sayre,
were led by Steve Price with
17 and Bill Myers and Jim
Boggs each hit 16. Myers and
Boggs al so ied 10 the
rebounding for the Campers,
each with 14.
In the nightcap, SOCCO,
who is in first place with one
defea t, held on to an early
lead to down the Mark V
itajun Cajuns B0-65. Rich
Haggerty's fir st quarter
shooting and ball handling .for
the Cajuns kept them close,
but once again the SOCCO
front line helped them pull
The

Natllaal Luipe Roullup
By FilED DOWN
UPI SpGI1a Writer
.;llle Pittsburgh Pirates call
· catcher Manny Sangulllen
•:J'!I,e Mechanical Man" ..:. l
119!!.with good, reason.
,..\Wie just wind him up in
'M'arch
dlirlng
spring
1ii.ainlng/' says Manager
CNIDY Murtaugh, "and let
1m, play the season. It
ys e&lt;mes out the same.
t a .300 batting average,
s r e r and as good a job
d the plate as can 'b!!
fQiind in the ma!Ors."

away by hallw.u"
their fifth contest
away.
For SOCCO, Ron F•r·o\\'o~·
was the game's
with 26 points while "Sfl'idfy'
Smith had
16,
Cremeans 12 and
Meadows 10. For thee:;~~
Dox Walters led w
pomis, Rich Haggerty
an d Tom Walters 13.
In reounding, SOCCO~:W
led by Ferguson with 15
Bill Chaney had 13
Mark V was led by the
Walte rs
brothers
wh&lt;
grabbed 12 each.
':'
FIRST GAME
':,
DAILY SENTINEL (981JiBrauer 9-().18, Andy Chool&lt;.t
13-().26, Arnie Chonko, 2-jW
Coates 14-2-30, Lavender -:t~
2. Totals 39-~ .
.::
CAMPERS (55) - Mye1'3:l
0-16, Price 6-5-17, Boggs 6-4,
16, Burney 1-0-2, Magnotta.:ej
0-4. Total 23-9-55.
"~ 1
SECOND GAME " ,
socco (80) -Smith 8-0-lf,
Ferguson 12-2-26, Meadows.&amp;,
2-10, Cremeans 6·0·12,
Vanlnwagen 2-U, Halley ~~
7, Chaney 1+3. Total~
MARK V (65) -D. Wallen'&lt;
10-3-23, T. Walters ih'l-~
Shrock 2-6-4, Grande! 1~f;:
M. Haggerty 1-0-2, B:~
Haggerty 7..a:.l7.
:::;~
.:---,.,

0 .,

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In Ohio only 16 percent of
the medical do ctors are
general practitioners while 67
percent of the osteopathic
physicians are general
practitioners.
" Investing
m
an
Osteopathic Medical School
promises to pay major
dividends in creating a more
adequate supply of family
practitioners," said Senator
Collins. " We need to
make them aware of our
medical plight."
Ohio requires Osteopathic
physicians to take the same
state board tests as anM . D

but they are equally well
trained.
Senator Collins further
explained that Ohio youth
who are mterested in
osteopathic careers should
be given special con sideration .
" There are no Colleges of
Osteopathic Medicine in Ohio
and only nine in the United
States," said Senator Collins.
" Many schools are closing
their enrollment to out-&lt;&gt;!slate applicants. This new
school will give Ohio youth
the opportunity to study."
Ohio has been tradLhonally

'

Report from
North_Vietnam:
By ARrHUR W. GAlSI'ON

Written For
United Press International
Anhur Glllston Is a professor
of biology at Yale University.
He recently spent a month in
North VIetnam.
At the North Vietna mese
farm cooperative of Yen
Doyen, peasant houses are
simple and basic, but all are
electrified. Ninety per cent
are of brick construhion, and
all have access to decent
drinking water and sanitary
facilities.
Prior to 1954, only the
landlord's house was made of
Irick, and all of the peasants
lived in mud huts.
I was surprised to find that
every house has a radio set,
and except for 62 older
members, all of the peasants
can read and write. Before

Peasant houses, once mud, now are. of bnck
1954, there was only one small
school at the primary level;
now, over 1,000 pupils are
educated in a network of
primary and secondary
schools at the CO-&lt;&gt;p.
A nursery school, staffed
by young women trained for
18 months, teaches 600
youngsters how to dress and
feed themselves, how to sing
and dance,. ho" to play
together , and how to
cooperate in simple work
tasks. In the meantime, their
mothers are off working in
the fields, helping to increase
production . After childbirth,
each woman is entitled to
three months of paid
vacation, during which time
she receives 55 pounds vi
paddy (rice) and 15 dongs per
month , After that she retirrns
to work , at first being
assigned to light duties until
her full strength has retur-

ned .
A comprehensive soctal
" elfare scheme •.akes care of
the health and retirement
needs of co-&lt;&gt;p members and
provide s a1d for funeral
expenses. The 10-bed·'lospital
shared by Ye n Duren and a
contiguous co-&lt;&gt;p is staffed by
one permanent residen t
doctor and 10 trained nurses.
Pa t ients rec eive medical
care without additional
payment, but most buy \herr
own medicines if at all
financially able to do so. In
case of need, the co-op
welfare fund can absorb even
that small fee . Aged peasants
are generally cared for by
their children, but should
they be childless, they are
given food, clothes and
housing by lhe coop. When a
person dies, lhe family is
given 50 dongs for burial
expenses
and
funeral
ceremony.

To run this elaborate social
structure, the peasants annually nominate and elect t.he
members of t.wo bodies. A
directorate of seven mem.
hers IS charged With overall
supervision of agncultural
production activ1ty, and a
thr ee-member sectio n of
co ntrol is charged with
safeguarding the rights of
peasan ts . Candidates are
nominated by their respec tive work bngades. After the
casting of electoral ballots by
all members 18 years or
older, those recei vin'g the
highest numher of votes 'are
declared
elected .
The
director is then chosen by the
electorate at large, which
also assigns specific roles to
each of the elected members
of the directorate. The 16
nominating work brigades
include 11 engaged in plant
cultivation, 2 in irrigation,
and one each for fish

Dr. Lamb

Oversexed male menopause

• s• IJI(ore raa caa llop.

and then quit. UsuallY. a man 'male hormone, but treatment behavior.
will have a gradual decline in of the depression.
In the rest of your letter you
hormone production from his
With the psychological mentioned several medicines
middle years into what we change, the male may need to that you are taking and that
consider old age. The sudden prove his masculinity. He wi 1 you have arthritis. Two of
shock to the endocrine sytem then start looking for new these medicines contain
of sudden decreased hormone sexual experiences or push hormones from the adrenal
productionjustdoesn'toccur. himself in this area. He may gland. They · are not . sex
Men
do
undergo seem more sexy, but in truth hormones. However, these
psychological changes in he may simply be more hormones may affect a
lheir middle years, and these de!!perate. This is one of person's psychological
tnay not be related to lheir many •, factors that lead to· behavior. They may cause
hormones at all. The mid middle-aged romances with el.th!!r "~pr~ssl!lfl or marked
point in a man's life, when he another woman or women acceleration In activity,
begins to realite he is not the and often the excess use of " locked in the go position"
response,
·young man of promise ' but alcohol.
must struggle to hold on to
0( course, new experiences
In the extreme form we call
what .he has, rcan be an may
turn
him
on this manic behavior as openormous ego shock. In some . 'psychologically. The sudden posed to depression behavior,
inslances this brings on a ' interest in a new sexual With the brain turned on full
mUd or even
severe partner often turns on the. throtue It is not surprising
this may activate a
!iePresalon. The depression whole sexual system, and the then
may, in turn, affect his in- ,person, il\8]e or-female, may person's sexual Interest 1
tere.t in sex and his per- suddenly be readily aroused would guess that has
fOI'IDaJICe. "nle flrsl thing_ to , · and feel sexier than he or she · something to do with your
look for In· moat middle-aged has felt in years. This is a ~n~dden increased sex drive
men willl sudden 1088 of good example of how and Ulat sex is just one part of
IHual Interest or capacity Is powerful the influence of the your total increased inll!rest
a depre111ion . The tteatment •brain can be on a J!!!rson's • and· activity.
·
in these cases is nut unneeded sexual
interests , and

Ilia'

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Allll D JU,, aMm do not
..... a tl'W" lblrp decline

'aiJY •• WUill .when lbe

1: ill lit

r 'lr dy ·a1ow down

departrnenis of welfare.
" This legis! a bon will
provide immediate food
assistance to families in need
within 24 hours after application is made ," satd
Senator Collins. "Once
eligilbility is established by
full verification, full benefits
are to contmue as long as the
eligibility continues. All
applications for food stamps
will be approved or denied
within 30 days after the
county department of welfare
receives the application ."
The legislation will be sent to
the Governor for signature.

•

'

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB _: Do
·men in their 50s uhdergo a
change of life? If so, do they
experience a period of
unusual and unaccounted for
sexUal stimulation? If this is
not true what would cause
this IDiusual and inexplicable
stimulation? What remedy
would•you then suggest?
D~ READER - Your
quealloa reminds me of the
IIJIIWel' of a friend of mine
whenukedtfmen go thtlllll!h
tbe menopa~~~e . He replied,
''Yes, mine .Wted · when I
was seven and I'm not
lllrough It yet."
Slrlclly apeaklng, men do
not have a menopause. After
all, meaopaue means
•lalll!lnl menall'uation, and
,... .,..,. to be able- to men-

COLUMBUS
State
Senator Oakley C. Collins (R·
Ironton ) co-sponsored a bill
passed by the Senate this
week that will provide any
household in need of immediate "food assistance"
stamps without charge.
Senator Collins explained
that under the federal Food
Stamp Program eligibility Is
determmed on the basis of
monthly income,
after
allowable deductions, and by
the number of persons in the
household. The charge for
stamps 1s determined ,on the
same bas ts by the county

~' ·

-.

production, p1g production
and electrical work.
I chatted at length with the
director , Ngo; the vicedirector, Khang; and · two
party functionaries, Qui and
Phot. All were in their late
lhirties or early forties , had
been in service 7 to 10 years,
and had been demobili.zed
between 1971 and 1974. They
impressed me as disciplii\ed,
dedicated and incorruptible
civil servants.
The director emphasized
repeatedly the role of new
science and technology in the
productive life of the
cooperative. He boasted that
the rice yield, currently 18.5
metric tons of paddy per
acre, has risen threefold
since 1939, and greatly exceeds the n.ational norm of
about It metric tons per acre.
This advance, he emphasized, was due to technical innovations such as use of
'new, improved varieties, application of much manure,
optimal irrigation practices,
and intelligent use of insecticides. He was proud of the
three large electrically
driven irrigation pumps, the
threshing machine for each
brigade ,
the
milling
machines for rice, the
machines to cut feed, and the
m.gorse. than • 1,000 beautiful
P1
The pigs, obviously the
pride of the cooperative, were
something to behold. Housed
in inunaculate brick and
concrete pens, their health is
scrupulously t~ from
birth to marketing. A
veterinarian, an animal
husbandman
and
15
technicians, . aided by three
junior technicians from the'
pig production brigade
supervise breeding,
trin)onthly lnoculati0118 and
nutrition.
Agricultural wastes are
carefully ground, Inoculated
with a rapldly1ll'owlng strain
of yeast, and molded into
balls that incubate in tbe
wann · sun. '!be resulting
product is milCh higher in
protein than the starting
agricultutal wastes. The pigs
weigh a healthy 225 pounds on
I
the average
at 'market time.

When special seed, r--.
tilizer,
insecticide
r
machinery is needed, it is
purchased by the co-op
through th e agriculture
committee
of
the
municipality of Hanoi. The
funds used for these purchases are those of the co.op
itself. At the time of the sale
of its crops, the cO-&lt;&gt;p pays
four per cent in taxes to the
state, distributes 611 per cent
to the members as salary,
and reserves 28 per cent for
the general fund. Although
the prices for crops and labor
are fixed, premium prices
are paid for extra quality
produce and labor. Thus,
private incentive is shrewdly
utilized as a means of increasing production . The
growing prosperity of the coop fund is reflected in the
increasing number of tractors,
pumps
and
miscellaneous
machinery.
I took tea in the neat, threeroom house of an electrician.
Built in 1973 of brick on a
concrete slab, it represented
ten years of saving by the
entire family. The electrician
himself had done much of the
construction work, but had
received aid from his neighbors In putting in some of the
heavy beams and the tile
roof. He collects rain water
for drinking, has a nearby
private
twO-compartment
toilet, ~d adequate land for
growing his vegetables. At 55,
he is succeSaful and content,
and can look forward to a
_.secure retirement when he
can work no longer.
The Yen Doyen cooperative
farm has received two orcters
of merit and many certlflcates of ·commendation
from the government. It aiBo
· sent 300m~ to 'the fighting
front, gaining three 8pe!:ial
commendations for their
meritorious service. They are
proud of their record, and
seemed determined to improw it. They, and other
cooperatives like them, help
to explain the remarkable
) resiDency. of the Vietnamese
peop\e during 30 years of
savage warfare against
technologically superior
western powers.

•"o(o ~

L•

belllnd a 13-hlt Montrea1
attack which included a
homer by Mike Jorgenson,
who alao bad a double and a

6
Tuaa

eeo

•

KENT, Clllio (UPI) - 'l1le
Cleveland Browne announced
the trade Wednesday of

Americ•n League SUIInd i ng!.
cornerback Clifford Broob to
United Preulntern•tlonal
Ea1t
w. 1. pet. g.b . the Phlladel(Jbla EagiM ftr a
61 •2 .592
future draft cholce,
Boston
52 49 .5\S 8
Balli more
Broobwu~from
52 51
505 9
New York
52
53
A95
10
lhe
roster last weekend for
M il waukee
46 55
455 14
Cl eveland
what a Browns' spokesman
46 57
4.7 1.S
Detro it
Wnt
called " a major rules violaw. 1. pet. g .b tion." The fourth year man ·
oakl and
66 38
635
Kan C•tv
56 47
544 9' ~ started live games last
Ch 1cago
SO 52
490 15
season but then gave way
Te"ICa!.
A8 57
•s 7 18' '
hardhltting Van Green.
calil
47 59
443 70
Mlnn
.44 60
423 21
Brooks, who Uvea In
Wedn e!.dBY ' ' R es ults
Houston, Tex., during the off
Milwaukee 6 Boston l
New York 2 Oelro lt 1, n1ght season, said he was not given
Cleveland 3 Baltlmof"e 1, night
Kansas C•IY 6 M inneso ta 4
a reason 101' being dumped
night
from the team, but Arthur
Oakland 1 1'e:~~l'IS 0 . n 1ghl
Cal• lorn•a 5 Chlcag'O ,., n1qht ModeU, owner of the Browns,
Thu r$ day ' s Gam e!.
said Brooks was informed of
All Times EDT
the nature of the violations.
Kansas C1ly {F 1tzmorr 1S 10
8 1 at M •nn esoHI ! Hugh es ll 9 ),
Leaving camp WednesdaY
7 15 p m
Oe t ro1t ( Lemanczyk 0 1 and was rookie Mike Zeigler of
Bar e 6 5 ) a t Bos t on ( Lee 13 6 Painesville . Zeigler, auf·
and Moret 7 1 ). '2 5 p m

04

oi.ta

.-

J

••rl

to lay

Snead

ioi

Find out why
State Farm

insures more cars
than anybody else.
Call
55

I

.

,, ,
''''"'

rhe Almanac
~
Today is Thursday, JUlY';'
31st, the 212th day of 1975 willl:
153 to follow.
..,n
The moon is in its IIY,It
quarter.
Ud l
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars, Jupiter ailG
Saturn.
•. •
The evening star is Ventii~
Those born on this date 111'\l.;
under the sign of Leo.
American writer John Kent
was born July 31st, 1763. '"''
oo O

On this day in history: ;,
In 1792, Director Davi.d..
Rittenhouse laid the come~;,
stone in Philadelphia for \1111,
United States Mint, the first
building of the federal.
·~
governrnent.
In 1972, Missouri Senat4i'"
Thomas Eagleton withdrew:,
as
Democrat!~
viCf;.,
presidential nominee, s••
~
days
after
disclosing
previous hospitalization
psychiatric treatment.
-· •

..

anir:
'"
.nu

...,......
II I.

J-

1!

.......
A

sa(!

EHectlve Aug. J, J 975

Announcing
NEW STORE HOURS
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8·PM

4I

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

?

TO .WAffiE LOVERS

-

., Try Our All New Waffles

J U

. . ..
" ''
1111

he said.
R' d and
'
After eonnors beat Newcombe in Las Vegas, 1or an
Trabert had a talk. Trabert told Rl,o r,dan he didn't understand
what eomors was so 11pset about.
.
.
"He said he bad some feelings Ulat he mtght be named DaVIS
Cu aplain and he knew .t.here were some problems between
~ ~nd Jlnuny ,''said 'Riordan. "Trabert Sl_lid ~·d like to set
up an apJ,oinlment so they cO'~Id resolve thell' differences, ~d
I told him, f.ine we'd ~et up a ~a~.e . That was April 26th, and I ve
never heard from him agsm ..
In June, Joe Carrico, chatrman of the u.~. Davis Cup
'ttee contacted Connor~a•.d tuordan and told them they
to keep politics out of the selection of a captain for the u s team . (larrico had a llat of 40 candidates, Connors said

!'=

~·dbebai&gt;PytoplayforanybodyexceptTrabert..

"Know somethin'? I'm ready for ro//erba/1
NOW!':

·J

....

"ThesaytheywantJinunytoplayfor them and then they go
ahead and name Trabert," said Riordan. "They call Junmy
defiant but 1 think they're the ones who are being defiant. It's
•lmost 'as if they have a death wish."

THEY ARE MADE WITH .A NEW,
PATENTED MALTED WAFFLE
AND PANCAKE FLOUR. THIS
,FLOUR IS . EXTREMELY LIGHT,
' AMAZIN·GLY . DIGESTIBLE,
UNBELIEVEABLY DELICIOU~.

FOR AU.

YOUR BUILDING

NEEDS
STOP IN TODAY

v· ALLEY
'

,

·tuM·_BER &amp;,s·upp(y·

A rose Is a rose Ia a roset And the;.. are pretty crafty.
Blending the beautifully detailed look of pollt point with
sleek Finesse Cowhide. tn glowing colors!
"Tri-Part•te" french Purse •
.. $10.00
KEY GARD0

..

.

.. . . . . . $

.. .. .

•

5 .00

And, matching pi~s from iust S5.00

''

CROW'S sTEAK HOUSE
'

•

'

•

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

•"

·c
·
o
· ·.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy

Court St.

DDLEPORT 0
l.;...._..;,___M,_I_-:""'_..;'~'-~---_.
\

'

••

'

&lt;,

I

_.=1 !1,~!~th ~

""'

byc;~nd

up golf clubs

Cook also suggests riding
with " lights on" to make ,llle
motorcycle more visible , Ill
motorisis.
11\K.
Motorisis also are askf4;to
review their driving hal?!!«
and learn to watch for
motorcycles as well as
cars and trucks.
.~:.~
" Both motorcyclists and.
motorists should regard.
operation of their vehicles .as
a responsible action,;:,
Director Cook conclud~Jt .
" Each user of Ohio streets
and highways is depend~
upon all other users forpersonal safety. "
"-

n========--

year, six fewer than he had
~ the 19'14 campaign.
d
EsiiOS I CW. 1

Ytr~t !•=~~~ r!.ev~~;:ub~.:d Dave ~le. Ray Burris, f:Bgged for

streak of nine straight wina
over the Pirates.
The Cincinnati Reds
defeated the San Fl'anclaeo
Glantl 6-1, the Los Angeles
Dodgers beat the Atlanla
droveintwo· n~~~~andsoored 'Braves &amp;-2, the Montreal
three Wednesday nlaht when Emos topped lhe Ollcago
,

doesri 't even know *re he's
going to hlt the ball."
Sanguillen, now fied for
second in the N at1o11al
League's batting race with a
_341 average, went ~for-6,

Sport Parade

......
......;.\

Berry's World

without a strike zone:•
SanguUien Ia a constant
lle~che ~pitchers because
he s a spny hitter.
" There's no defense
againlthim," sa)'l teammate
AI 011
" He hita to right
field ;.';;'.to left field Sailgy

Pirates defeated the . Cubi &amp;-1, the Holllton::: ~~~ames~ 8
· Philadelphia P~llllea, &amp;-1, dQ'":!tthelhellan~~uls Car· ltal'tln8 pitcher goinl the
behind tbe nine-bit pitclllng of ~ IICOred ~ w victory dlltlllce. Johnny Bendl llld
Je~ n:.:~ restored the over the New York Meta 1n Tally Perez ctrove in flw 111111
~-· • ·
the olher NL games
bet en them as the 1\a
P)rates'slead to 4\'z games In
•
";d tie Pete Falcone
the National !Aague's
In the~-:=· 2,it :~hi!&amp;roo
th 10811_
Eastern Dlvillon race and was Mllwa-ee
seven
alao snapped the Phlllles Cleveland 3 Baltimore 1, .New Dod&amp;en I Braves I In two

I

his ninth game wtth live runs and nine hits in 41-J
5
to
and 'Callfornl&amp; • : ' ~:-;lef help of Mlite , .innings, lost hi!' eighth game
OllcaS:
Manhall for the Doclleri!t llllainst ellltt wins.
1
~ Pat Dare pitched wbo clinched the gii!M Whten Altroe 8 P..Sre1 t
Rootle
Jete Y In tbe they ICOI'ed four ilnea!'Md
Jose Cruz and Doug Rader
hlsfirst~ ~ Cl
in the eighth lt waa clroveinatotalofflvel'\lll5
majors an
en e
n- runs
'
with homers in a sixth-Inning
outburst which carried the
Astros to their win over the
:'f1'
Padres. Doug Konieczny allowed three runs and six hits
In six Innings to win his fifth
game of the year. Bob Tolan
~erlean League Roundup "selfish" play by Cleveland .Boston (which also lost) In with ninth 11111ing help from lut 16 batters he faced. Roy homered for San Diego.
fering from a muscle strain
~ BilL MADDEN
Indians' manager Frank the American League East. reUevers RoiUe Fingen and Wlllte doubled home the first C8rd1rut 5 Meta %
Nahon41tleague sundln9s
since coming to camp, told
Willie Davis' three-run
U'I Sports Writer
Robinson. But. after a still·
"I don't have a doghouae," Paull.Jndblad made It stand :Vankee run off loser Mickey
Un1t ed Press Int ernational
the coacltea he was retiring
east
homer hJ&amp;hlighted a five-run
Out of the doghouse came unconfinned apology, Ellis said'RobiNon In reipmse-lo · up. FergPm Jenklna (l:t-1%) lAillcb' (l~lO).
w . I pet. g b
4
from football .
second
Inning
which
carried
Jbhll Ellis - just 1n time to got himself back into the questions about Ellis' recent took tbe lo•· despite Yielding ·a.:rala I, l'wiDa
63 40
6 12
P itts
1
Joining
the
Browns
59 45
567 4
pbt the bite on the Baltimore Indians' lineup and Wed- publicized benching. "My just live hits and no walks.
Fred Pate_k drov~ ~e the Cardinals to their Ph•la
53
48
525
q
York
Saturday wlll be their
d tw
original quote on the incident
Yanilees
J'lgen 1
three runs, two o
m triumph over Randy Tate and New
52 51
50S II
sda lght s1
St Louis
number-one draft choice ,
.48
57
A57
16
~: :S~~~":e~ ~ ~:ner t:;m~~ ~ was 'he will nOt play another Rudy May fired a three- during a four-run fourth the Mets. John Curtis 'yielded Chicago
41 58
4\A 20
Montreal
defensive end Mack Mitchell.
Only a couple of weeks ago Orioles 3-1 and kept them game until he comes to me hitter and Thurman Munson lnning Royals' uprising, and two runs in the first inning,
west
6 but won his seventh game of
Mitchell is currently laboring
w
I.
pet
.
9
b
O:Ufs was benched and from improving their eight- about his attitude.' He did." singled home the tie-«ealdng rookie DenniS Uonard went
C.ncin
68 37
648
in the College All-Star camp
ch•.• ti
f
game deficit on . firs' -•·ce
Ellis, however, pleaded the run in the sixth lnninl! as the 2-3 innings to gain his eigh~ the year.
....... i 1
L os Ange l es
55 51
519 13 1 •
1
cv
or
,_,_
&lt;11th.
Yankees moved up to nine win. n wa:' Kansas City s :·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:::·:·:::·: San F r a n
52 5'2
500 15 1 Wider Coach Willie Davis.
S.!in o 1ego
49 56
467 19
Davis raved about 6-3, 241·
"I have nothing to say games behind BostOn and one ~h win . m seven games
Allant a
45 59
43 3 22 1 1
First
practice
pound Mitchell.
about it," said the Tribe behind second-place smce Whitey Herzog took
Hou sto n
38 69
355 3 1
W ednesday's Results
"Mitchell I!&amp; the best condicatcher, who followed a Baltimore In the A1. East. over as manager.
Montreal 6 Ch1c ago 1
at
Meigs
called
tioned
player in camp and
leadoff double by Rico Carty May ( 10-6) retired 15 of the
Los A ngeles a Atlol!lnta '2 , n•ght
P ittsburg h 8 Ph i ladelph i a 1, has the best attitude of
with hi!&amp; sixth homer of the
Melgl High Scbool
n.ght
.
year to break up a 1-1 tie in
Cl ncinnali 6 San F ran c•sco 1. anyone here," said Davis.
football coach Charles
" He's
attentive,
asks
night
the eighth.
Chancey announces that
St Louis s New York 2, night
questions
and
15
easy
to
Houston 8 san D iego d, night
" I had the green light on a
lbe flnt practice will be
Thursday's Games
teach.
3-0 pitch," Ellis continued
thla Friday night begiDnlng
All Tlme.s EDT
"He rushes the pall88t well,
after side.,gtepping his obSt. Louis (Rasmussen 1 11 at
at 1:3t. '!bose boya who
Ch
lcl'lg
o
&lt;S
ton
e
8
5
L
2
30
P
m
but
needs work on tbe inlllde
viOusly still-simmering
mllsed the meeUng on
By MILTON RICHMAN
Los Angeles (S utton 4 9 or
Oown~ng 1-0) at Alll'lnla ( Cal trap," the fonner Green Bay
dispute with Robinson. "I've
Wednuday nlgbt should
UPI Sports Editor
Canton
0 3), 7 · 30 p .m
star added. "I think he's
been hitting terribly against
report early Friday to pick
New York (S tone 2 2) at
YORK
(UPI)Jlnuny
Connors
stands
aU
a1une
now,
NEW
Pittsburgh ( Rooker 7 6 l. 7 35 ~oing to be a super player."
the Orioles all season and
up eqnlpmenl
pm
,
tranded as a hopeless, selfish renegade, or a modem da.Y (Baltimore loser Mike)
::·:::·:·:::::::::~::·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
Phllade lph •a (Sc huel er 4 2 }
Conc epcion . Cln 23
'Bimedict Arnold with l&lt;)mis racquet turning his back on hiS Cuellar took something ' off
at Montreal tWl'lr then 4 4 ).
American League: Rivers .
By
IRA
MilLER
monthoccurred
while
just
I!Oilhlry in its greatest hour of need.
_ _
Wednesdly 's
8 OS p .m
Cal 56 ; Wash ington , Oak 3•.
the ball. I can only guess they
san F ran c•sco ·!Mon te fus co Remy. Cal and Otis. KC 31.
eanball Results
UPI Spr-ta Writer
about every top player was at
HiS high crime?
wanted to see if I could hit at
10 4) at Cincinnati (Ki rby 7 4 ),
United Press ln1ernat l onal
North , Oak 26.
HARRISV•.. V .Y. (UPI) the British Open. He's 1Mth
-'· ~lnuny Connors, the No. 1 tennis player in the whole world,
Amerlun League
7 00 p m
Pitching
all."
San Diego (J ohnson 1 0) at
This
is
the
last
time around on the year's money lilt with Milwaukee 000 010 230- 6 10 0
(Ballet
on
moat victorln)
sbnp)y refuses to play on the U.S. Davis Cup team, a team
Robinson, an ex-Oriole ,
Boston
100 000 100- 2 6 1 Housto n IFonc 4 8 L 8 . 35 P m
National League : Seaver .
the
stammer'
Sam
Snead
total
winnings
of
$2,9211.
for
&amp;iirly crying for help, having been nothing less than an ab- meanwhile, issued a warning
Slaton I 10 101 and Moore .
NV U7 , Sutton, LA ,. .9,
Major League Leaders
Cleveland . J:lurton (8l and
is getting ready to retire.
Most
of
the
top
playen
ll1'e
Jones . SO \J .6 , Messersmith ,
Un1ted
Press
International
solute disaster the past two years.
.
to his ex-mates. "I think
Blackwell, F1Sk (8 l. LP LA 13 9 ; ReU$S , Pitt 12·6 ,
Leading
Batters
"I just thought I'd play my in the field for this $2110,000 Cieveland 18 11 H Rs - Evans
~·:N'obody, except those closest to him, like his mother, or hiS Boston can be caught," the
Matlack , NV 12 ·1!1 .
1 based on 27S at bah!
American L••tue:
Kaat.
OO§t friend and advisor, Bill Riordan, can und~rstand why he Indians' skipper said, " but committrnents out and let event, but Jack Nicklaus, (9th J. Lezcano {8t h I
National League
g ab r h pet . Chi 15-8; Palmer , Bait 1.4 -7 ;
Arnold Palmer and Lee Del
\\foh 't budge or merely bend a little from his fiXed, ~ockhard somebody better get to them go,'' Snead said.
000 010 000- I 3 0
Ch
94 38 1 S3 135 JS4 Blue , Oak 14·8 ; Lee and Wise .
ooo 001 oox - 2 52 Mdlck,
Then his voice tailed off. Trevino are not. Nicklaus and NY
Bas 13 6 , Busby , KC and
jkl!ltion. Everybody who is supposed to have a?Y mfluen~e quick or they can forget it."
S1
mmons
.
51
L
Loll c h ( 10 10 } and F r eehan ,
Ho1t1man. Oak 13-8 ; 1'1Bnt,
100
JSS
53
121
341
It's
something
he
hasn't
Palmer
both
are
·
skipping
It
with him keeps trying to get him to change his mmd, and thiS
May ( 10 6) an d MUO!OO
Dennis Eckersley, the In.Bos and ~,b(- 1-f V 1.3 -LO .
Sa nguill en. Pitt
wanted
to
face
.
for
the
first
time,
their
mates him look more of a villain yet, but looks have a way of dians' 20-year old rookie
89 328 41 112 .341
.
000 010 020- 3 4 l Parkr , Pit
92 343 Sl 113 329 .
The Westchester Golf thoughts trained flnnly on Cleve
Ball
ooo ooo 100- 1 'o Mrgn , Cn
being deceiving sometimes.
righthander outdueled the
98 339 72 111 327
Ecker!.ley ( 8 31 and Ell 1s . Bowa , Phi
--.Jinuny Connors isn't a villain or a turncoat at all, although veteran Cuellar, giving up Classic which begins today the PGA Champioll8hlp next Cuellar
78 3 36 47 110 3'27
( 10 ]) a nd H en dr ic k!.
97 368 .49 110 .326
marks
snead's
ninth
tourweek
at
Akron,
Ohio.
oo5eems to be with some who are concerned only with the U.S . four hits and striking out nine
HRs.- - Sinoleton { 1Hh l, Sp1k.es watson. H
Csh , Phi
104 441 76 141 .320
nament appearance of the
'!be field is headed by { 6th L Ellis 16th)
Grvy , LA
106 H2 58 HI 319
l'!!Capturing the Davis Cup.
.
in going the distance. The
Br c k , St L
86 333 S6 106 .JIB
year,
but
he
doesn't
expect
Johnny
Miller, the delending Kan ' cit y
?lJe has as muclt pride as anybody representing the Uruted Oriole run was a homer by
00\ 401 000- 6 10 0
American League
much.
'At
63,
the
remarkable
champion,
Hale
Il:wln,
Mlnn
020
000
020
4
1l
1
SClftes in Congress today. All he ever dreamed of since he was Ken Singleton in lhe seventh.
g ab r h pet .
Leona r d . B i rd
171 and
95 359 66 134 373
Crw, Mnn
a"ldd was playing for the Davis Cup team, llut ~·s co~vinced a . Charlie Spikes' solo homer skilla ·Ulat have carried him British Open champion Tom Mart inez . A lb ury , Johnson I .:I ) Lynn
94 339 69 11 3 333
, Bos
certain few in tennis deliberately are going out of !herr way to gave Cleveland a 1-!1 lead in through a 4().year career are Watson, Canadian . Open and Borgmann WP - Leonard Hrgrv nc.
92 32 1 53 106 330
(
8
SJ
L
PA
lbury
5
61
beginning to ebb; the smooth champion Tom Weiskopf, a
Munson NY
make him look bad, and when that happens, what does any the fifth.
100 37 9 52 118 311
swing _just isn't so smooth near-winner here the last two Texas
000 000 000- 0 5 0 wash ington . Oak
redblooded 22-year-old American young man do? He stands up
Elsewhere in the American
001 ooo oox - 1 5 0
anymore.
yean, Gary Player, Gene oak
98 394 59 122 .310
Jenktns (171 1) and Sund
League, Milwaukee put away
and rebels.
.
Me
R
,
KC
100
385 48118 .306
quitting
:
LltUer
and
U
.S.
Open
Snead
won't
be
berQ , Holtzm an , F1n g ers (9) ,
This, in essence, is what Jlnuny Connors is domg.
.
Orta , Ch1
85 321 42 96 299
Boston &amp;-2, New York shaded
Lindblad ( 9 ) and Fosse WP R Ice . Bas
9S 376 66 11 2 .298
First he refused to play for a Davis Cup team .captained by Detroit 2-1 , Kansas City because he wants to. He has . Champion Lou Graham.
Hottzman
( 13 SJ
HR Dent , Chi
99 375 35 111 296
to.
At
8,614
yards
and'
par.
72,
Cam pan ens ( J.th)
Dennis Ralston because of Ralston's close lies w1th the downed Minnesota 6-4 ,
Brtt , KC
101 403 S• 118 293
Last year It was a rib injury Westchester Country Club Ch 1cag0
Home Runs
A,"Mociation of Tennis Professionals, a group. Conn~rs h~s Oakland blanked Texas 1-0
301 000 000- A 8 ~
National League . Luzinskl.
that
knocked
him
out
of
the
"
produces
some
of
the
lowest
Caf
1
f
002
000
00
35
7
2
de'ctined to join because he does not agree w1th their prm- and California ambush ed
Phil 26 . Kingman , NY 22.
Kaat , Gossage (9) and Bench, C1 n and Starge11 , Pitt
u .S. Open. nus year it is a scores on the pro tour every Down.ng
,
Ryan
t12
l
l)
and
5-4.
Chicago
ciples.
.
t
·
20. Schmidt , Phil 19
' !ilow he says he'll play on the .S. Da':'IS Cup earn m a
Amencan League : J ackson ,
In National Uague action pinched nerve that has year. Miller was 19under, the Ham pion LP - Kaal ( l5 Sl
toumament record, in winOa k 26 , Mayberry, KC, Scott,
minute, but not while T9ny Trabert IS captam of the team. And it was Los Angeles atop troubled him.
like a good neighbor,
National League
i l and Bond!. , _NY '21 ,
"lt's been· bothering me ninl a year ago.
Montreal
022 010 010 - 6 l3 0 M
Atlanta 11-2, Montreal over
tHat's where the problem arises .
.
Burroughs,
Tex.
19
Ch tcago
000 100 000- 1 8 2
State Farm,...--,
Runs Ba1ted In
"J'ony Trabert was named captain Wednesday byU .S. TenniS Chicago 6-1, Pittsburgh on top since March, before that · "It's not a tough course by
Rogers { 8 7 J and Car te r ,
National
League
:
Luz
lnsk
1,
,,.
is there.
Association President Stan Malless. Less ~an five ~mutes of Philadelphia 8-1, Cin- actually," he said Wed- any means," says Sn~d. "It Burri s, P Reusch e l (5), Phil 88 , Ben c h , Cin 82.
Wilcox
(6J.
Dettore
{
9)
and
ttlfl fdM MI!UL
after the amouncement, Trabert had the obv10us quesllon put cinnati topping San Fran- nesday. "But lately it's been has abo~t four or five key Hosle y LP - Burr•s (8 BJ Watson , Hou 72: Staub , NY
..lMIILl
and
S1mm
ons
,
St
L
69
HRs - Jorgen sen
(9th ),
cisco &amp;-1, Houston over San a little worse. I've had holesonLt.Youplaythosepar Monday
ui"him. What about Jlnuny Connors?
.
. ,
American League . Lynn ,
111WIJICI ~-~~'
IHIUIANU
(
13th
)
.... lftl•:
eos 75 , May , Ball 74 , Ja c kson .
7.1 bope Connors plays," tie said. "I would be sad.if he d•d? t. Diego 8-4 and St. Louis acupuncture treatments, I've or better and you ~
.,
.........
11,
.....
Oak 73 . R1 ce, Bas 71 ; Ho rton .
had all kinds of treatments, la)ock the stuffmgs out ol.lt.
Los Ang .
200 001 140- 8 10 2
for the team, sad for the country, and for Junmy, hllfl· beating New York ~2.
At lanta
OO'l 000 000- 2 9 2 Det 68
, 71 ·102
but it doesn't seem to clear It
- "
A:au . Marshall (71 and
Biewers 6, Red Sox Z
~If.''
.
Yeager,
Morton
.
Leon
18
L
Other U.S.T.A. officials said the same thmg.
.
.
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI) Sou (9) and Correll . WP Sixto Lezcano's three-run up.
"It's really hurt beclluse I _ Green Bay Packers Coach Rau (9 Bl LP- M orton (11
There is the feeling in some quarters that Bill RIOrdan IS eighth inning homer and Jim
urj:ing Connors not to play for the Da.vis Cup team, but that Slaton's six-hit pitching pre- don't have much power, espe· and General Manager Bar! 12)
isn't true at all. Riordan, in fact, has tr1ed to persuade Connors vented the Red Sox from dally with my left band or Starr WedneSdaY suspended San Fran
010 000 000- 1 8 1
Cine
In
200
002 20x - 6 8 0
left
ann.
My
right
tak~
over
veteran
cornerback
Ken
Ellis
tO''relent and play.
.
.
. moving even farther out in
Falcone , La v elle (7 ), Moff•tl
' Y'Tony and I are singing the same duet," srud Riordan at hiS front of the distant Orioles. too quick and it's either a for failing to appear at (7) and Rader , Dar c y (7 5)
end Bench . LP - Fa l cone (7
sh'lisbury, Md., law office when he heard what Trabert had to Lezcano's homer, with slice to the right or a duck , training camp.
1)
Ellis had left camp 1a1t
George Scott a,nd Henry hook to the left. When both
ODD 001 000- 1 9 1
"'!~i just left Jimmy last night and told him substantially the Aaron aboard, improved on a hands don't work together • Friday over contract dlf· Phil•
Pitts .
211 300 Oh - 8 12 0
same thing. But I do think some of those people are a ~ttle late 3-2 Brewers' lead and helped brother you can call the dogs ferences but showed up for
Carlton , TWitchell
(5 ),
· 'inaking those speeches. Jimmy has made up his mmd not to Slaton even his record at 1(). and go home."
the tea'm breakfast and Hoerner (8l and McCarver ,
Reuss ( 12 6) and Sangulllen
Two weeks ago lhe pain morning practice TuesdaY . LP
;:iay as long as Trabert is captain of the team, and he won't 10. Dwight Evans homered
- Carllon (10 Bl
HRs "an
' ge his mind. He's got too much character to back down . for Boston.
was sufficient that Snead However he was not at the Sanguilen 16th), Ol iv er ( 121h l.
en
. "
withdrew from the tour- Tuesday'
afternoon
or Brown (5 th) .
ftl! will not prostitute himself to hypocriSy.
Angels 5, While Sox 4
s an "Diego
010 110 010- 4 10 o
Part of the trouble goes back to some comments Trabert
Jim Kaat was cruising nament at sutton, Mass., and Wednesday practices.
Houston
ooo oso 03 x. - 8 a 1
..Mcintosh , Grief. Tomlin ( 7),
made on television.
. along toward his 16th v!ctory went home. He thinks he feels
Friesella ( 8) and Hundley .
"He had some very uncomplimentary things to say about when he blew a 4-2lead in the well enough now that, "I'll
CLOSE AT 5 PM SATURDAY
fi t 36 NY
200 000 000- 2 10 0 K onie c zny , N i ekro
(7) ,
Jlnuny uncomplimentary and inaccurate things, and Jimmy ninth inning, loading the make it th rough the II'S
• 51 L
oso ooo oox- s 10 1 Cosgrove (8) , Sosa 181 and
Tate . Parker (2), Sanders
Jutze . WP - Konieczny (5 11 ) .
was ~t about that," said Riordan. "Trabert did the com- bases with Angels. Reliever I'll say."
LP - Mclntosh (8 9)
HRs He
hasn't
won
in
10
years,
16)
and
Stearns.
Curtis
17
-Bl
- ntary for Jimmy's matches with Rod Laver and John Rl~ Goi!SB!le came on and
and Simmons LP - Tate (4 9).
Tolan &lt;•th), Cruz (4th) , Rader
(Bt h l. Sosa l lstl
~=wcombe in Las Vegas and said Jimmy liked to be known as walked home one run before or since he was 53, but he's HR - Davos l3rd l
still
a
competifor.
~h
of
the
'
•arrogant.' That whole tliing .started in an airport -;vhen
giving up a giroe~winning
reporter asked Jlnuny jf he enjoyed being called brash . two-run single to pinch hitter last three y111rs, Snead hall
JimmY laughed arid said 'don't call me br~, call me John Doherty. Nolan ' Ryan challenged for the PGA
arrogant'. He said It in jest but that wasn't the.way 11 came.out (12-11) went the route for the Championship and finished
.• .
when Trabert said it on television. He t(l(lk It as a strrught line, win despite yielding eight hits among the top 10.
Th1s year he hasn't been
and seven walks.
which it wasn't.
.
.
close
anywhere. He has sur"When that was brought to Trabert's attention, he S31d he A's 1, Rangers 0
was only quoting from a magazine. Well, he s~ply had~'t
Bert Campaneris' solo vived ljhe cut In only three of
done his hlmiework. I told him that and he got uptight about 1t. ))omer in the third inning his eight tournaments and ,
'when I was ,a kid playing, he'd have been sus~nd~~ for accounted for the game's two of th---Mllwaukee and
saying something like that,' Trabert said. I told hllfl. II s ~~ only run and Ken Holtzman Quad Cities earlier this
entirely different era we're living in now. 'Notfor me, 1t isn t,

,.u.,.

t .....\

Director Donald D. Cook has
renewed a plea for concentration on motorcycle
safety. Four motorcyclists
were killed in Ohio traffic
during a recent weekend.
The safety director em·
phas1zes:
"A m otorcyclist involved in
even a minor crash must
expect
serious m]ury .
Motorcyclisis must accept
lhe fact ltlat they are extremely vulnerable in traffic
and develop the necessary
skills to prevent accident
involvement.''
Statistics show collision
with another motor vehicle is
the most usual type of
motorcycle accident, Cook
said. He noted, however, that
weekend accident reports
compiled by the Ohio State
Highway Patrol show cyclists
also wreck their vehicles and
sustain serious injuries by
running off roadways.
This indicates unskilled
operation, excessive speed or
rhysical impairment, Cook
observed.
''Again,
motorcyclists
rnnot
remember
their
vehtcles are not " little cars",
he stressed. "Although
motorcyclists have greater
manueverability of their
vehicles , the two-wheeled
vehicles are less stable than
cars and more susceptible to
driver error and mechanical
failures."
Director Cook suggests
cyclisis make a daily preriding check, paying close
attention to conditio" of tires,
bent or loose spokes, power
chain condition, fuel or oil
leaks and any missing parts.
Both front and rear brakes
should be tested and

u ','the ~ _ the

'

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m

practicing
osteopathic
physicians .
This new legislation will
emphasize family practice
and require that SOper cent of
the s tudents be from Ohio or
intend to practice in Ohio for
f1ve years. An advisory board
will also be crea ted.
In add1hon , a $670,000
General Revenue Fund appropriation for the 197~77
biennium will he provided for
planmng purposes. " This new
school gives south eas tern
Ohio hope," Senator Collins
said. " Health is hrst and we
need doctors.''

Alao known

Indians' John Ellis out of doghouse

Cycle safety drawing .........'""
...
Collins pushing Osteopath school· bill ~::~:~~~!c!~i?~~.!;:eg
increased ·attention
COLUMBUS State s tatistics snow .many more before they can be licensed among the top 10 states in the Food stamp wait is cut
COLUMBUS - In view of a headlight, brake lights 8riil
Senator Oakley C. Collins ( R· osteopaths are practicing by the state. The Osteopath's number of studenis enrolled
continued rise in motorcycle turn signals all should bEi:iii
medicin e
than trainin g differs somewha t in out-of-state schools and
WI•th
Sen.
CollinS
biJl
Ironton), is strongly sup- family
accidents,
Highway Safety working condition .
;:.··
porting the bill to create an M.D.s."
from the trainmg of aM.
ranks high
the number of
---Osteopathic
School , of
Medicine at Ohio University
in Athens . The measure
passed the Ohio $enate
Monday evening by a 24-jj
margin and had overwhelmingly passed the Ohio
House on March 26.
" There Is a desperate need
for increasing medi cal
services in Ohlo- especially
in the Appalachian areas of
southeastern Ohio," said
Senator Collins. "There are
many rural areas where
there ar no physicians within
a 30-mile radius. We need
family. practitioners and

Rrooks' traded

.

Pirates end jinx, drop Plill~7~.!!~1." ...

wiJUrsday ,July 31, 1975

o

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•

Darcy goes all the
way, Reds win, 6-1
performance Wednesday
night.
In that game, Darcy, with a·
10-2 lead, threw six straight
balls to Greg Luzinski and
Dick Allen leading off the
sixth Inning. He inunediately
was replaced by Anderson.
"I told Pat that as long as
he continued to lob the baD
when he had big leads, I was
going to come and get him"
said Anderson. "I told him

Namath ready to· play

'

·,.

By MARriN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y . (UPI)
- Well-taMed, healthy and
very, very rich, Joe Namath
was as happy as he could be
today.
Why not? He's the proud
possesso• of the richest contract In pro football-and he
ha811't been htt yet.
"Maybe in a few weeks I'D
have an assortment of bumps
and bruises," the grinning
Namath said Wednesday
after signing a two-year
corill'act with the New York
-Jets worth an estimated
f85(),000. "But right now I feel
physically good and my right
knee ju8l doesn't · have the
psln in it that it used to.
"Physically, I'm ready to
play now. Mentally, I'm not
ready yet."
:rile 32-year-old quarterback admitted he had to
compromise on his original
sslary demands to play for
New York for an lith year,
but this Is a sacrifice he was
weD able to afford after
signing a 20-year contract

earlier this ·month with a
cosmetics company that will
bring him $~0,000 annually.
In addition, Namath has
numerous other commercial
deals, so it isn'ttoo surprising
that he refrains from
becoming emotional in
discussing his Jet contract.
Mter all, It's only a few
weeks since he rejected a $4
million offer from the World
Football League .
" Years ago, when I first
signed a contract, I was
excited and pleased that I got
more than anyone else," he
said. "Now I can't think
about money and what people
get paid. I expected to be the
highest psid player in footbaD. It's nice, but I'm not
going to dwell on it."
Namath contends that
quarterbacking has become a
more difficult job in the last
few years, one of the reasons .
both he and the Jets got off to
such a poor start in 1974 when
they lost seven of their first
eight games.
"There is more of an onus
on a quarterback to think

better than he had to in '67 or
'66," he said. " The defenses
are more sophisticated and
you've always got to be alert.
My mind wasn't all on it
during the first half of last
year,andthathurtus.Imade
.a 1ot of mistakes, and I know I
can do better."
In preparing for the Sept.
21, Namath is encouraged by
two major factors: He is
coming off his first injuryfree year In a long time·, and
the Jets closed out 1974 with a
rush, winning their last six
games.
"We have a lot of potential,
but we have to go out and
prove it," Namath said. " I'm
sure I'D play better this
year."
Namath underwent a
physical soon after the
contract signing Wednesday
and then joined his teammates for an afternoon
practice. He is expected to
play for about half the game
when the Jets open their
exhibition season a week
from Saturday against
MIMesota at Phoenix, Ariz.

Lavelli kind of pass receiver
you don't forget--Brown
By RICK VAN SAN·r
WILMINGTON, -- Ohio
(:UPl) -It's been nearly 20
years since Dante Lavelll
caught a pass in pro football
but Paul Brown says he was
the ldnd of receiver you don't
forget.
: "Dante had ~ best pair of
hands I've ever seen in
football," Br'own' remem. bers. ·
· That's Quite. a statement,
because Brown has seen a lot
of good receivers in his 41
seasons of coaching.
Brown, now head· c&lt;iach of
the Cincinnati Bengals, has
been· thinking aboul Lavelll
quite a bit lately because this
weekend he will present his
former star player for enshrinement in the Pro
Football Hall of Fame at
Canton, Ohio.
"What a man and what a
player," Brown . recalled·
about Lavelll. "He was
spirited, dashing and handsome. ADd he was every bit
as good as he tooked."
Brown was LaveiU's coach
for all U of his seasons with
the Cleveland Bl'oims back in
the 19408 ancr 50s.
Lavelll,ahlghschoolsprint
champion . out of ·Hudson,
CJ!llo, was on the receiving
end of many of Otto
Graham's psases in those

piling up numerous awards in
both the old All-American
Football Conference and the
National Football League .
Lavell!, now the successsful of appliance stores at
Cleveland, only had a threegame collegiate career and
that involved some controversy.
Brown was coaching
Lavelli at Ohio State in 1942
but after only three games
LaveiU had to go into the
Army because of World War
II. When Lavelli came hack
four years later after fighting
in the Battle of the Bulge,
Brown was then coaching in
the pro ranks with the
Browns and he persuaded
Dante to play for him.
Brown also did the same
with several other collegians.
"I was criticized for doing
it but I had an agreement
.,vlth these guys," Brown
said. "They had to give me
their word that if they went

nickname ·was
'glue fingers"' remembered
Bl:own; "He would tell OttQ to
l1!st throw it In his directiOn
. andhewould·g~ lt.lt seemed
like Dalite'i»uuilllteraUy go a

he can stand the psln 'from a
coliar bone fracture.
Witte suffered the injury
when he hit a beam whUe
practice shooting in his barn ·
Friday.
·
A M,vllngton High School
and Ohio State star, Witte
said he e.zpected to be ·
shooting basketa again "in a
pie of
ks" and be
~
wee .
..
. re~~d,y' In
for the Cl!vs• .
ll'alnlnv;aDJ.P which opens
Sept. ,24. . '

da1.~ante's

III!IIDI withoUt dropping a
pus. He had big hands that
went arolmd' the ball just like

a fUction ~:~~p."
Ill Lavelll's 11 ~ seaiiOIIS
he CBU8ht • P.' 11 for 6,488
yards aDd

.

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a

lo!~-.

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that no matter how big the
lead, a pitcher can't change
his style of pitching . He's got
to challenge the hitter. You
have a chance to get a player
out if he hits the bali, but you
don't if you walk him."
Wednesday night Anderson
stuck with Darcy in the ninth
inning, although the Giants
loaded the bases on singles by
Gary Matthews, Willie Montanez and Steve Ontiveros.
"Pat was throwing the ball
hard," said Sparky, " He
wasn 't letting up, trying' to
throw strikes. I was
especially proud of him when
he struck out Chris Speier."
Speier struck out on a 3-2
pitch for the first out in the
ninth and after singles by
Matthews and Montanez .
Mter pinch hitter Derrel
Thomas flied out, Ontiveros
singled before pinch hitter
Jake Brown grounded out to
end the game.
Singles by Pete Rose,
Bench and Perez gave the
Reds two runs in the first
inning. Bench doubled home
one of two runs in the sixth
and Perez tripled home the
Reds' final two runs in the
seventh.
Clay_Kirby will go against
John Montefusco t.onight in
the series ender.

SAN FRANCISCO I UPI) A seven home run outburst
over a 12 eame stretch after
the All-Star break earned
Dave Kingman of the New
York Mets the National
League's Player of the Week
award for the period, July 1727.
Kingman's spree raised his
home run total to 22 for the
season. During the spree,
Kingman also had 14 runs
batted in and compiled a .3M
batting average.
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. tUPI)
The New York Jets announced Wednesday that Lou
Piccone, who led the National
Football League in kick.off
return yardage last season,
has been placed on waivers at
~is own request.
Piccone, a walk-on who
earned a spot on the Jets'
roster as a special teams
player, returned kickoffs for
961 yards last season, his
rookie year. The 1&gt;-9, 170pounder became involved in a
contract dispute with the club
prior to the 'lraining season·
and walked out of camp
Tuesday .

pro they would go back and
get their degrees.
"And," s·a id Brown, "to a
man, they all got their
degrees. "
Brown will make a short
speech about Lave!U at a
Friday night banquet in
Canton and officially present
him for enshrinement at 2
p.m. Saturday.
A ·couple of hours later
Brown will lead his Bengals
against the Washington
Redskins in the annual Hall of
Fame game.

1!-

.liD, AND:GREEN
W.VA.

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Mt~ Mon.- Thurs •• 8-I:OO ·Frl.- Sa~.

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BACK TO SCHOOL CLOTHES

NEW YORK IUPI) - The
National Football League has
no immediate plans to
remove the controversial
" Rozelle Rule " from its
bylaws.
Asked to comment on the
decision of U.S. District
Judge Warren J. Ferguson to
issue
a
temporary
restraining order in respect
of running back Cullen
Bryant's move from the Los
Angeles Rams to the j)etroit
Lions, an NFL spokesman
said:
" Today's action has no
significance other than to
ATHLE,TE'S FOOT
preserve the status quo until HOW
TO TREAT ITthe issue can be aired at a
Ap~ty Quick -drying T -4-L .
Feel•t take hold to check itch
hearing. We will take every burning
in MINUTES . In J to 5
measure available to us days. infected sk in sloughs off .
Skin
within the framework of the Watch HEAL THY
replace i t ! If not delighted IN
law to defend the principle of ONE HOUR. yoru 59c back at
drug counter . NOW at
competitive balance, a factor any
NELSON'S DRUG STORE.
vital to the National Football

·.Tussy cream, ·_ ·..
d

.

·~

~--·-M-ID_DL_E-PO-RT---. l

POMEROY &amp;
MIDDLEPORT

..

ILA~, ALUMINUM~

COLUMBUS (UPI) -· The
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services reported Wednesday
that Ohioans unemployed for
one week arid filing for
une10ployment benefits for
the first time dropped 15.6 per
cent during the week e(\cjing
last Saturday.
Bureau
Administrator
Albert Giles said there were
22,854 initial claiinants last
week, down from the 27,062 of
the previous week.
Giles said a labor-management dispute and modelchangeover layoffs in tile''
auto industry were responsible for nearly 2,800 claims.
Those out of work for more
than one week totaled 196,000,
up 3.1 per cent over the'
previous week.

SPONSORED · BY

RUTLAND
IN

benefits down

$2-GO each Hole In One.
•

Nelson fomity .enjoys reunion . ~-

Club holds social

CANTON (UPI) _ Luke
Witte,
t~e
Cleveland
Cavaliers 7-foot center, has '
been·ordered by his physician
to take ruiUling exercises if

"'

·By Helen and

Theme of annual
style revue named

For Sight Conservation Programs

JIOOp:· PAIN.TBY

MASON

LOS ANGELES I UPI) Lightweight contenders
Randy Shields, 25-0, and Tury
Pineda, 21Hi, are rated even
for their 10-round fight at the
Olympic Aug . 16.
Pineda is training at
Gilman Hot Springs near
Palm Springs, Calif., and will
remain there until Aug. 11.

oollar bone

• • T ·,

Sue &amp;ttel

.

'.

·' The annual Nelson f""ily 'Jimmy and Sally, LUlie ~· llld Mra. ~ Blo
reunion was held Sunday at Smith, · Mr . .and. : Mrs. and granciiOII, Mr. ,ina 11111.
·-. the forest Acres Park. Raymond Smith Mr. and F.ArDMt NP.IAon. nA,.,..tt ..vi.
· Following the picnic dinner, Mrs. Leland Nelson an-:=- Warr 6 ' :
u- •nd )tlrlj.
Mr. and Mrs. Franch Leach, Johimy, Mr. and Mts. Cecil Richard Nelson and 11(1111, Mr:
· Rap:
.
A wrl!A!t' urged liiJ all to collect alumlnuni cans for Wilma Gilmore and .J une ·Banks, Mr. and Mrs. Steve and Mrs. Buck . Slewart,
Mra.
Joseph
Struble,
Mrs.
RACINE - Mill Patricia William Hayman, Mrs.
recycllnt!. She saki remolding tbe metal Into new cans takes Y011t, all local, lind Waller LancandKelli, Fred Tackett, Bucky and Timmy, Mr. and
lhle, bride-elect of Michael . Nan®~ Hendrlcb, Mrs. KArl John Ihle, Mrs. Michael mly one-tft!lt1eth the energy of tbe original procus. I agree, Ray Nelson, Pleasantville, Mrs . Yvonne Tackett, Sherry Mrs . Clifford Gibson and
Struble, Wl.l honoied Friday Kloea, Mrs. Dennll Eyn'on Boring and Miss Nancy with
and Shauna, Marvin Monk, family, Mra. SharQn Golden
valionl. A fact not printed out is that initial provided music.
· · , proc •ng of an aluminum can colliUDies nearly seven. Urnes
night with a llbower at the and Chrlatlna, Mrs. Thomas Thlrkleld.
Baseball was played during Mr. and Mrs. William Smith, and children, Mr. and Mn.
Others presenting gifts to the energy It takes to ~e a tin can. ADd tin can be recycled the afternoon. The reunion Carla and Judy Sargent, Mr. Uoyd Nelson, Mr. and .)(ra,
Racine Baptist Church social Halilln, Mrs. Helen Slmpeon,
the
bridiH!lect were Mra. Roy too ~ acept ibat compsn1es
rooms.
,.
.Mrs. Paul Sayre and Paula,
pay collecton for used tin,. was set for the fourth Sunday and Mrs. Gary Drenner , Joe Andl-eoni and Rhonda,
Mrs.
Clarence and seem to be dlalntereeted In rellllng it.
·
in July, 1976, at the State . Jason and Darrin , Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Edward
H011'-a for the shower Mrs . Eileen Buck, Mrs. Jones,
G.rueser,
Mrs
.
Virginia
were Mrs. Robert LOuks Wllllam Eichinger, Mrs .
Caroll
Gilmore, Scheneeman, Eric, Mary and
Do we need al1lllllrllnl cans when ~ (tin 1 ones do as Park at Pleasantville . .It was Mrs .
Mrs. Nicholas Jhle, Mrs: Charles rb!e, Lois, Mell.!sa, Thoren, Mra. Earl Dill, Mra. well? U youmuat Wle alumlnmn, do recycle it, as thismeialla reported that Mr. and Mrs. Everett. Diana , Kay and Pat, Mr. and Mrs. Rlcbar\1
Mlcbaellhle and Mrs. Clark Cathy · and David, Miss Ronnie Salser •.. Mra. Wanda. virtually lndtllructlhle and will not decompOIIe In the environ- Chatles Dill and family were Gary, Ben Cotterill, Tim Thompson, Tammy and
lhle.
Debbie wood, Mrs. Ralph Powell, Mrs. ThOIIlBii Gumpf, ment as tin will. But are people reeDy turning In old aluminum unable to attend because of Workman , Rhonda and Richard, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Glftawereplaced on a table Badgley,Mra. DeltOn Fowler, Mrs. Unley Hart, Miss Vera as they're askted to do? The payment Ia too tiny for most of us Mra. DIU's illness. She was Fhonda Wood, Mr . and Mrs. Nebcin, Cara, Uaa, Barry
covered In yellow with Mrs. Danny Brown, Mra. Beegle, 'Mrs. Nick Brown, to bother. -BEGINNING ENVIRONMENTALIST
released from the hospital Cecil Yost, Sr., and Cecil Jr., and Brian, Ronald Smith and
Sunday.
David Napper, Jr ., Diana Barbara R~ll.
streamers ~blue and yellow William Harris, Mrs. Earl Mrs. J . Alan Smith, Miss
Megan
Brown,
Mrs.
Vernon
suapellded from a yellow beU Shuler, Mra. John Terrell,
Dear B.E. :
Meigs County members of Walker and Eric, Danny
Let'siMipe there'llccme a day when a new self-destructing the Nelson family attending Walker and Autumn Ellis.
atta~ to the corners. The Mrs. Charles Legar, Mrs. Nease, Miss Debbie Brown,
refreshment table had a blue Gene Mitch, . Mra. Edison Mra. Jim Anderson and Wlllle product will replace present metal container?. Meanwhile : wereMr. andMrs. John Yost,
Traveling to Meigs County
we •re doillg better than you Imagine on liluminum collectionS. Donald , Rick , Tina and for the reunion were Wibna
cloth and was centered with a Hollon •. Mra. Pauline Collins,, Frecker.
Aoolrdlng · to a news releue from tbe Aluminum Retha , Robin Cremeans, Lee Knighton and family, Mr.
yellow . beU and blue and
Asl1oclatiol1, Americana returned 2.3 lil1lon all.alumlnmn cans Debbie Norman, Christine and Mrs. Walter Ray Nelson
yellow tapers In crystal
to recycling centers acr01111 tbe United States in 1974. 1bat Riggs, Ro'!er Cotterill, and son, Mr . and Mrs.
holders.
shows a 44 per cent Increase over 1973, and a near-70 per cent Bonnie Mill•r, Sid Taylor, William Moore , Mr . and Mrs.
Games were. played 'with
lncr- aver 1972.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Leach, Gary West, Denise arid Jim,
pn- going to Mrs. Walter
The
2.3
bllllon
cans
are
equivalent
to
103
million
pounds
of
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Nelson, Marguerite a nd Curt Baker,
Blkascan, Mrs. Frances .
alumln11111, and represent about one out of every six such cans Mr . and Mrs . Jain~ Miller,
Roberts and Mrs. Robert
used.
Beegle, Mra. VIrgil Hamm
e~~•.
At an average 12'&gt;2 centa per pound from recycllng cenwon the door prize.
"All-American Girl" will also be presented.
ters, 1974 collectors received almost $13 million fc, ·weir ef· Attending the shower
Announcement of the forts. Some people are in the collection business for themthe
theme
of
the
BIUlual
4be
besides thoee named were
achievement award wiiUlers selves (earning up to $100 a month), but most drives are
Mra. Robert Hart, Mra. Alan H style rewew Tuesday in
will be made at the style · conducted by civic or student groups who donate the money to
CUnningham and Olivia, Mra. the Meigs High School•
revue. They are the out- worthy causes.
Elizabeth Vlgar,
Mrs. auditorium beginning at 7:30
Mark Mora and Niese!
standing boy and girl in 4-H
p.m.
And that's our educational contribution for the day . Back Duvall were the outstanding
lrl each of the 11 classes of . Club work selected by out-of- to per!Mlllal problems ... - HELEN AND SUE
4-H boy and girl selected this
the rewe, a grand champion county judges on the basis of.
+++
year to attend the Citizenship
NOTE FROM SUE : Not quite yet, Mom : here's another
and reserve champion will be information contained in the .
Short Course held annually in
1 selected. The state fair National Report Form which happy note from the raft o( flyers we get in the mall each day : Washington, D. C.
H a new mosquito fighter proves as effective as U. S.
.winners will also be selected each 4-H member filled out in
The hto Meigs Countians
but will not be announced January.
Department of Agriculture tests have indicated, we may soon
joined
34 other young people
Announcement of the king be on our way to licking those pesky critters.
. until Junior Fair Night at the
from
the
counties In the
A tiny, waiA!t'-borne nematode that lives mly on mosquito
: Meigs County Fair, Aug. )3. and queen will not be made
Jackson and Belle Valley
At that time the trophies will until Junior Fair Night.
larvae has averaged ~ to 100 per cent control of laboratory
THURSDAY
Districts for the trip chapand field mosquito populations In three years cf USDA studies
FREE CLOTHING day at
eroned by Miss Marta
'•
conducted In Louisiana and Maryland.
Salvation Army, l15 ButGuilkey, Meigs County ExThe parasitic nematode, "Reesimermis nleisenl," infects
tension
Agent ,
Home
ternut Ave.; Pomeroy, 10
about 60 species of mosquitoes, Including our common garden
a.m. until noon; anyone in
Economics,
and
Nick
variety and also those associated with malaria.
area needing clothing is
Calabro, 4·H advisor in
" Unlike chemical control of mosquitoes, no recurring
The annual reunion ·of the Klein, David Klein , Bill
welcome.
Guernsey County .
applications
may be necessary with R. nielseni," says Dr.
Klein family was held Sunday Klein, Kaley Klein, Charles
Traveling by chartered
SATURDAY
at the Route 33 Roadside Klein, Vicki Klein , Buddy William Nickle of the USDA's Agricultural Research Service. bus, the group stayed at the
CREMEANS
FAMILY Park.
.
Klein, Jerry Klein, Connie "We are finding that these paraSites kill mosquitoes aU National 4-H Center in Chevy
.
summer long aM are still effective the next summer, and the
reunion, at Forest Acres
Attending were Mary Klein Mertle Mae Klein
Chase, Md. Emphasis for the
r--------,----~--_,
Park; starts at 12 noon; Sharpnack; Patty Goldhart, . Don~ Klein, Tammy Klein: next. What's better than Mother Nature's way of skeeter week was on environment,
Ladies' White
Men's White
basket dinner; all relatives Angelia Patterson, Frankie Edna Klein, Henry Ray control?"
Remember, the .nemetode is still "experimental." You and at the center were
invited.
Clay, Carrte Clay, Scott Klein Trena Kay Klein
speakers on interdependence
LAUREL
Cliff
Free Bateman, Wayne Klein, David,L. Klein, Larry Poweu: can't buy him on the open market yet, but by next year, it is among
countries,
en· Junior Sizes
Methodist Sunday Scliool Kathy Klein, Roger Klein, Marvin Wise, Gertrode Wise, hoped, we'll be better able to zap the mosquito before he (or is vironmental protection and
annual picnic, 6 p.m. at Fort Marsha Klein, Roger Klein, Teresa Lynn Wise and it she?) zaps us. - SUE
quality of Ufe. Mter hearing
+++
Meigs Park. Take covered Jr., Seth Klein, Hannah Rosalie Mae Wise.
PERSONAL TO "F11LL OF REGRETS": It's said .t hat the various speakers, the
Values to '12.00
Re • $9.00
dishes, own table service and Depen, Margorie Klein, Betty
young people were taken on
opportunity
is
more
recognizable
going
than
coming.
Since
you
Lane, Tommy Lane, Carolyn
beverage.
can't undo what's already done, cut loose those regretful field trips as laboratory
SUNDAY
Klein, John Klein , Michael
TO SELL ICE CREAM
memories and take it from today, with the good sense ex- experience .
NORTHEAST Cluster of Klein, Johnny Allen Klein,
'"
They visited the John F.
RUTLAND- An ice cream perience taught you. - HELEN AND SUE
00
United Methodist Churches Kevin Klein, Jack Bateman, social will be held by the
Kennedy Center, all the
will have basket dinner at Sally '!!aleman.
memorials and monuments,
Rutland Emergency Medical
VALUES TO $5.99
Forked Rllll state Park, 1
Kay
Clay,
Leonard Service Saturday evening at
the Smithsonian Institution,
p.m. &amp;mday; take own table Bateman,
Gertrude the Rutland gymnasium .
the White House, the USDA
service. G'a mes will be Bateman, Chuck Bateman, Serving wiD begin at 4 p.m.
Research
Center
in
Sheila ·Bateman, Darlene and cake, pie, coffee and soft · The Loyal Women's Class Roush, Miss Nina Russell , Marvbnd, and spe"t an
played in ·aflernoon.
TWO WEEK revival at Boyd, Dennis Boyd, Jenny drinks wiD be sold in addition of. the Middleport Church of Miss Mildred Hawley, Miss entire day on Capitol Hill
Maplewood Lake starts 2 Boyd, Joe Boyd,' Clifford to the homeriiade ice cream &lt;;hrist held a picnic at the Frances Roush, Mrs. Reva where they met with their
p.m. Sunday. Evening · ser- Klein, Irene Klein, Crystal in several flavors.
church Thursday night. Blue Beach, Mrs . Margaret Jones, Congressmen and aides.
vices at 7 p.m. after..§unday Lane, Keitb Klein , Tom
The group left on July 20
hydrangeas were used on the Mrs. Audrey SWett, . Mrs.
and Bible study each morning Sarver, Gloria Partlow ,
rable, and Mrs. George Glaze Margaret Lallance , Mrs . and returned Saturday night.
at 10 a.m. SpeCial musical Peggy Jeffers, Roger PartHOMECOMING SET
Carrie Kennedy, Mr. and
gave the blessing.
numbers each evening; low, Billy MiiUron, Howard
RACINE - The annual
In
1971 ,
Apollo-!~
Others attending were Mrs. Mrs. Walter Swett and Trey
·
b
R
o
G . .Jeffers, Fred Pullins, Mary homecOJDing of the Carmel
astronauts David Scott and
Martha Childs, Mr. and Mrs. and Clinton Glaze.
services y
ev .. .
. ·• Plillins Sheil Pullins Sh 11
McKinney
and
other
. • . ~
. • e Y Church near Racine will be Edgar Reynolda, Mr. and
Members of the class and James Irwin landed on the
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. TIL 1:00
'1linisters. Public invited.
~ns. Vrrgte. Klem, Henry held Sunday, Aug. 10 at 10 Mrs. Allen Jenkinson, Mr. others of the church meet at moon for a second U-S lunar
Klem, Lawrence Klein, Gene a .m. There will be lh basket
J{nd Mrs . Wilbur Theobald, the church every Wednesday
SIXTrl annual Teaford Klein, Arends Klein, Michelle dinner at 12:30 p:'ln. The
Mrs. Blanche Gilkey, Mrs. for a quilting bee. In addition,
reunion will be held at the Klein, Gene Klein·, Jr., Patty afternoon program will begin
Alice Robeson, Mrs. Eula the class makes rugs for sale.
roadside park on U.S. 33 Klein, Robert Klein, Mary
at 1:30 p.m. with . the Rev.
south. Basket lunch at noon. Klein, Todd Klein, Larry Richard Young, Sidney, Ohio,
ANNUAL WEBER Family Klein, Rodney Klein, Kim as speaker. The public is
reunion, Royal Oak Park Klein, Angela Klein, Penny invited .
•
The Bashan Bunch 4-H Club Beckie Pullins and Terri,
archery building. Everyone Klein, Kevin Klein, TQmmy
entertained recently with a Mrs. Jean Spencer and
to take covered dish, prizes .Klein, Kenny Klein, Paul
mother-daughter social at the Angie, Mrs. Louise Pitzer and
for games and own table
Sutton Methodist Church.
Tammy, Robin and Cindy,
service; dinner served at
"'
HOSPITALIZED
Cookies and punch were Mrs. Pat Thomas and Melba, · ·
n~n .
.
Mrs. Margaretha Wolfe of served . from
a table Henrietta' and Missy, Mrs.
. _,~ -29THANNUAL Theo Smith
Columbus, formerly of decorated in green and white . Jesse Morris and Sherry,
.,~-family re1111ion, Ft. Meigs
Pomeroy, is a patient at The girls modeled their Mra. Cornelius PhiUips and
Park . near Rutland. All
Doctor's Hospital West on garments and explained their Becky and Martha, Mrs.
friends and relatives jnvited.
West Broad St., Columbus, projects.
Jeanie rrusseu and Renee
Basket dinner at noon.
Room
419.
Mrs.
Wolfe
has
Attending were Mrs. Mary · Kim Bickers, Lori Wood
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
been there for two weeks Rose and Mandie. Mrs. Mrs. Robert Wood 1111d Terri.
ANNUAL Weber reunion,
Mrs. Jacob Johnson and
Royal Oak Park archery Arthur Reeves, Rutland, undergoing medical treatbuilding, noon, potluck dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Edward ment. £ - . .
with everyone to take a Marshall, Moundsville, W.
covered dish and their own Va ., and Mr. and Mrs .
.-Knee.Hi h~se-Speclal4 pr.
$1.19
table service along with Chester Howe, Glendale, W.
-Hosiery Guard Cleansing Bath, strengthens as it
PRESCRIPTION
game prizes.
cleans to help prevent runs, snagging and bagging.
Va. On T1,1esday, Mrs .
16ol. Size, Reg.SI .47
·
Speclal66c
TEAFORD Reunion, Route Johason went to Pataskala tc
8
Ol.
Size,
Reg.IJc
Speclal33c
33 Roadside P&amp;rk.
AND SURGICAL
visit her sister, Mrs. Fay•
-Super Fly New Airplane Kites, Reg. 99c Spechil66c
-Raggety Ann Teeter Totter
Hammond and children
Reg. $10.88
Special S7.97
Support Center
Barbara, Tracy and Gle!ICI
-Golden Press Soft Cover Books
.
MONDAY
ftlr •.and Mra. Charles Gibl
·
Specla I Buy, 41or 99c
MiDDLEPORT GARDEN and son, Mark, Decatur, ll
-Assorted Coloring Books, Reg. 29c
Special19c
CLUB. BIUlual picnic and andhismotber,Mrs. Blancl. .
-4
01.
Mennen's
Spray
Deodorant,
guest night, 6 p.m. at the · Gibbs, Racine, were recent
Reg. Sl.07
.
Speclal33c
home of Mra. Michael Fry dinner guests of Mrs:
-7 oz. Mennen's Spray Deodorant
. Jrith Mrs. William Morris and Malcolm Roller. The family
Reg. $1.44
.
5peclal53c
Mrs. Roscoe Fowler, .co- . has bel:n In the area viSiting
-18 ·ox. Micrln Mouth Wash .
h011tesaes.
relatives including Mr. and
Reg. $1.59
Special73c
VACATION Bible School Mrs. William Nease,. Racine,
20Gailiiii Trash cans, Reg. $5,99 ·
. Spec • ..,,,, .
through Aug. ~ . at the . and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Gibba,
(Hard plastic reslsh extreme temperatures)
20 Gal. Trash cans (soft plastic) Reg. $3.99 Spec. $1.92
.re«ganlzed Clnirch of Jesus Rutland. Gibbs has been .
. We' Havit Trash can Liners
Christ of Latter Day Saints, transferred tp New Jersey by'
'
PICNIC supplies Racine-Portland l!.olld; Ge~ E~trlc. MrS. Gibbs ·
~lm'ON'S
nepkins,
plates, cups,
certltlcatea given and arts is tile former J"'IUI Roller.
table cloths; forks,
and lnfla displayed on Aug.
Don Go&amp;ney was returned
: - - spoons .
+a;~ rout and 'hayrlde, Wednesday to· Veterans
SUMMER lays - Sand
. Salll'day eveu~n&amp;.
Hospital in LeldngtOII, Ky.,
Pills,.sand toys, garden
CHEERLEADING Clinic, . after spending a couple of
sets, s.prln.kUng ~·~·
thtGu&amp;h Aug. a, ta.m. to 12:15 days at his Middleport home .
p.m., at fGI'mer I'Omeroy His wife is In Leslngton with
' Senlclr
School for girls of h!ui. .
all ages and spoiiiiOI'8(I
Mr. and Mrs. Ml'chael
. .
.
Meigs .
High · School ·Erwlil and · children, Scott,, .
cbeei-lelid!Dg CCII'JIII: Awarils · Kevin . and
Melissa,
.to be giftll and training In WalterbOro,. S. C., spent tbe
jlml)ii, cb 111 s, chants end.. ~t week here visiting his
MAIN ST•
gymnastic mini tramp. p per P.arents; Mr. and Mrs
girl ~;
Chester Erwin;

"&gt;ars . He earned eight
varsity letters in his high
school athletic career.
He is the son of Mr. and
'Mrs. C. William Neal , 400 N.
Main ,St., Dunkirk .

.

• •

Generation Rap

•

son.

GU~AANTEES
IT*
.,

'.~·

'

.

Bridal shower honors;Miss Patricia lhle

BRIAN NEAL

.. ... tUSSY ·

'

r

......

. I

,,

doll'

. A goOd deodorant
.·.
.doesn't have to be S&gt;,&lt;pensive; .. •.

'

.

raw

Wltte breaks

.

-.

.I."'!''J.'he~Sennnet.~rt.P-oy,O., Ttnnday,July3t,' 1975

••
EASTERN - There will
be a meeting of all boys.
grades ll-12, Interested In ·
playing football at Eastern
High Scticiol this year on
Monday, ·Aug. 4 at 7 p. m. In
·
the school gym.

'

- '.

•

•-The
n.uy Se.n tlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., whursday, July 31,197~
•
I.
-,._
---

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The support from Johnny Bench
Cincinnati Reda' consecutive and Tony Perez who drove
Incomplete games by star- home five runs between
ters, which bad reached a them, notched his seventh
record ~. ended Wednesday victory against five losses. ·
night with a 6-1 victory over The last five of Darcy's
· tbe San Francisco Giants.
victories have ~orne in a row.
1bat the Red8 should set
A little talk Reds' manager
SU!:h a record was about as Sparky Anderson had with
Wlllltely as the fact that It was Darcy a couple of days after
a rookie righthander, Pat his July 21 outing against the
Darcy, who ended the streak . Phlls might have had more
Darcy, getting hitting than a little to do with Pat's

·"'r-.1

·•

.. .

I

:

I

•

.,

L

�I

•I

I

I I

•

...

• ••
•

Darcy goes all the
way, Reds win, 6-1
performance Wednesday
night.
In that game, Darcy, with a·
10-2 lead, threw six straight
balls to Greg Luzinski and
Dick Allen leading off the
sixth Inning. He inunediately
was replaced by Anderson.
"I told Pat that as long as
he continued to lob the baD
when he had big leads, I was
going to come and get him"
said Anderson. "I told him

Namath ready to· play

'

·,.

By MARriN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y . (UPI)
- Well-taMed, healthy and
very, very rich, Joe Namath
was as happy as he could be
today.
Why not? He's the proud
possesso• of the richest contract In pro football-and he
ha811't been htt yet.
"Maybe in a few weeks I'D
have an assortment of bumps
and bruises," the grinning
Namath said Wednesday
after signing a two-year
corill'act with the New York
-Jets worth an estimated
f85(),000. "But right now I feel
physically good and my right
knee ju8l doesn't · have the
psln in it that it used to.
"Physically, I'm ready to
play now. Mentally, I'm not
ready yet."
:rile 32-year-old quarterback admitted he had to
compromise on his original
sslary demands to play for
New York for an lith year,
but this Is a sacrifice he was
weD able to afford after
signing a 20-year contract

earlier this ·month with a
cosmetics company that will
bring him $~0,000 annually.
In addition, Namath has
numerous other commercial
deals, so it isn'ttoo surprising
that he refrains from
becoming emotional in
discussing his Jet contract.
Mter all, It's only a few
weeks since he rejected a $4
million offer from the World
Football League .
" Years ago, when I first
signed a contract, I was
excited and pleased that I got
more than anyone else," he
said. "Now I can't think
about money and what people
get paid. I expected to be the
highest psid player in footbaD. It's nice, but I'm not
going to dwell on it."
Namath contends that
quarterbacking has become a
more difficult job in the last
few years, one of the reasons .
both he and the Jets got off to
such a poor start in 1974 when
they lost seven of their first
eight games.
"There is more of an onus
on a quarterback to think

better than he had to in '67 or
'66," he said. " The defenses
are more sophisticated and
you've always got to be alert.
My mind wasn't all on it
during the first half of last
year,andthathurtus.Imade
.a 1ot of mistakes, and I know I
can do better."
In preparing for the Sept.
21, Namath is encouraged by
two major factors: He is
coming off his first injuryfree year In a long time·, and
the Jets closed out 1974 with a
rush, winning their last six
games.
"We have a lot of potential,
but we have to go out and
prove it," Namath said. " I'm
sure I'D play better this
year."
Namath underwent a
physical soon after the
contract signing Wednesday
and then joined his teammates for an afternoon
practice. He is expected to
play for about half the game
when the Jets open their
exhibition season a week
from Saturday against
MIMesota at Phoenix, Ariz.

Lavelli kind of pass receiver
you don't forget--Brown
By RICK VAN SAN·r
WILMINGTON, -- Ohio
(:UPl) -It's been nearly 20
years since Dante Lavelll
caught a pass in pro football
but Paul Brown says he was
the ldnd of receiver you don't
forget.
: "Dante had ~ best pair of
hands I've ever seen in
football," Br'own' remem. bers. ·
· That's Quite. a statement,
because Brown has seen a lot
of good receivers in his 41
seasons of coaching.
Brown, now head· c&lt;iach of
the Cincinnati Bengals, has
been· thinking aboul Lavelll
quite a bit lately because this
weekend he will present his
former star player for enshrinement in the Pro
Football Hall of Fame at
Canton, Ohio.
"What a man and what a
player," Brown . recalled·
about Lavelll. "He was
spirited, dashing and handsome. ADd he was every bit
as good as he tooked."
Brown was LaveiU's coach
for all U of his seasons with
the Cleveland Bl'oims back in
the 19408 ancr 50s.
Lavelll,ahlghschoolsprint
champion . out of ·Hudson,
CJ!llo, was on the receiving
end of many of Otto
Graham's psases in those

piling up numerous awards in
both the old All-American
Football Conference and the
National Football League .
Lavell!, now the successsful of appliance stores at
Cleveland, only had a threegame collegiate career and
that involved some controversy.
Brown was coaching
Lavelli at Ohio State in 1942
but after only three games
LaveiU had to go into the
Army because of World War
II. When Lavelli came hack
four years later after fighting
in the Battle of the Bulge,
Brown was then coaching in
the pro ranks with the
Browns and he persuaded
Dante to play for him.
Brown also did the same
with several other collegians.
"I was criticized for doing
it but I had an agreement
.,vlth these guys," Brown
said. "They had to give me
their word that if they went

nickname ·was
'glue fingers"' remembered
Bl:own; "He would tell OttQ to
l1!st throw it In his directiOn
. andhewould·g~ lt.lt seemed
like Dalite'i»uuilllteraUy go a

he can stand the psln 'from a
coliar bone fracture.
Witte suffered the injury
when he hit a beam whUe
practice shooting in his barn ·
Friday.
·
A M,vllngton High School
and Ohio State star, Witte
said he e.zpected to be ·
shooting basketa again "in a
pie of
ks" and be
~
wee .
..
. re~~d,y' In
for the Cl!vs• .
ll'alnlnv;aDJ.P which opens
Sept. ,24. . '

da1.~ante's

III!IIDI withoUt dropping a
pus. He had big hands that
went arolmd' the ball just like

a fUction ~:~~p."
Ill Lavelll's 11 ~ seaiiOIIS
he CBU8ht • P.' 11 for 6,488
yards aDd

.

-·

a

lo!~-.

'

.

:£·

~·

that no matter how big the
lead, a pitcher can't change
his style of pitching . He's got
to challenge the hitter. You
have a chance to get a player
out if he hits the bali, but you
don't if you walk him."
Wednesday night Anderson
stuck with Darcy in the ninth
inning, although the Giants
loaded the bases on singles by
Gary Matthews, Willie Montanez and Steve Ontiveros.
"Pat was throwing the ball
hard," said Sparky, " He
wasn 't letting up, trying' to
throw strikes. I was
especially proud of him when
he struck out Chris Speier."
Speier struck out on a 3-2
pitch for the first out in the
ninth and after singles by
Matthews and Montanez .
Mter pinch hitter Derrel
Thomas flied out, Ontiveros
singled before pinch hitter
Jake Brown grounded out to
end the game.
Singles by Pete Rose,
Bench and Perez gave the
Reds two runs in the first
inning. Bench doubled home
one of two runs in the sixth
and Perez tripled home the
Reds' final two runs in the
seventh.
Clay_Kirby will go against
John Montefusco t.onight in
the series ender.

SAN FRANCISCO I UPI) A seven home run outburst
over a 12 eame stretch after
the All-Star break earned
Dave Kingman of the New
York Mets the National
League's Player of the Week
award for the period, July 1727.
Kingman's spree raised his
home run total to 22 for the
season. During the spree,
Kingman also had 14 runs
batted in and compiled a .3M
batting average.
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. tUPI)
The New York Jets announced Wednesday that Lou
Piccone, who led the National
Football League in kick.off
return yardage last season,
has been placed on waivers at
~is own request.
Piccone, a walk-on who
earned a spot on the Jets'
roster as a special teams
player, returned kickoffs for
961 yards last season, his
rookie year. The 1&gt;-9, 170pounder became involved in a
contract dispute with the club
prior to the 'lraining season·
and walked out of camp
Tuesday .

pro they would go back and
get their degrees.
"And," s·a id Brown, "to a
man, they all got their
degrees. "
Brown will make a short
speech about Lave!U at a
Friday night banquet in
Canton and officially present
him for enshrinement at 2
p.m. Saturday.
A ·couple of hours later
Brown will lead his Bengals
against the Washington
Redskins in the annual Hall of
Fame game.

1!-

.liD, AND:GREEN
W.VA.

r '

Mt~ Mon.- Thurs •• 8-I:OO ·Frl.- Sa~.

..
'

LAY-A-JPAY NOW!

Calendar··

HEALTH TEX .SlACKS &amp; SHIRTS,
BILLY-THE-KID SLACKS &amp; JEANS,

ROB ROY SHIRTS
See our selection ·
of girls 11Jean Shirti"
by Happiness Is.

:

•"

The Kiddie Shoppe
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

~ACH

'

12 E. MAIIII

..

PANTS, StllR1S
· AND TOPS

WRANGLE~

'666 •

•
••'
•
•

----..
~

•

JEANS

sr

•'
•
•

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.

~

MEN'S CUT.QFFS &amp; SHORTS

'2"- '4

f

•

..•

SUMMER MERCHANDISE
OVER ALL THE STORE . .•
I
REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE' "•

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

'

•

•

J

~

-

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•
•

·~

••
•

~
~

-

'5

F~iendlv Servite

lf3 • 1/2 OFF
RED EYE

••
•

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Mitdleport
Personal Notes·

.

•
Golf Club

SAT., AUG.
2 - 1 PM TIL DARK
..
'

s~ II

1.00

ilUS

..'

-

~~r .·Wet!k

·PAY ·
YOUR
TELEPHONE
BILLS
AT

-

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........

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••

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-.....•
,.
'

Hilh

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F'!

• Closest ·To,· Hole $tOO.

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PUSH MOWERS

Elbersbach Hardware

bY

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July 31Aug. 6

''Everything In Hardware"

"""'
.

..

On~

·~

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MOWERS

SELF-PROPELLED
RIDING

..

Ladies' Trophy
Mea's Trophy
Jr. Troplly 16 or liDder

:

·'

LS-

1 Week

.DAY 1 DOZEN GOLF BALLS

For Week -3TROPHIES
. Additiimal PJizes Daily \. ·. .
K••lll McCulloUIIIi, R; I'll. Charle• Rlfflo, R. ·
1"
·Open Dlllly l:wa.m.tot:3Up.nr;
. . Sund.ly IO:JOta 12:3Uaric15tcftp;m;
PRfit.RI.PTIONS·..
' PN.,,9'12··2955i

TOPS

'600

'•

.

'

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WR.NGLER
JEANS

•

SIZES 7-14

'

Pomeroy

Whr
pay mot~?
-.
' '
,.
''

SUMMER CLEARANCE

PANTS, SHORTS,

-.·

DAILY 5 PM TIL DARK

.8i:ltFP4[!rsplr:a'nf spray $1 ,59
.. , . . . . : .. :i~ OZ:, .
'

·PI'IOM 115-3537

:

l/3 _ lf2 OFF

.• ,

'

Ohio

DEPARTMENT STORE

AILEEN GROUP

Kleins hold gathering

.

-r=sptay

''['(j~y.d(X.. . . :.

Outstanding members
selected for course

Women enjoy picnic

,"

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PICKENS . HARIMARE CO.
'

~·s~cc_.

stick, ·t:oU-on .· 6911:

orarit .7 oz.7~

..

Social

BACK TO SCHOOL CLOTHES

NEW YORK IUPI) - The
National Football League has
no immediate plans to
remove the controversial
" Rozelle Rule " from its
bylaws.
Asked to comment on the
decision of U.S. District
Judge Warren J. Ferguson to
issue
a
temporary
restraining order in respect
of running back Cullen
Bryant's move from the Los
Angeles Rams to the j)etroit
Lions, an NFL spokesman
said:
" Today's action has no
significance other than to
ATHLE,TE'S FOOT
preserve the status quo until HOW
TO TREAT ITthe issue can be aired at a
Ap~ty Quick -drying T -4-L .
Feel•t take hold to check itch
hearing. We will take every burning
in MINUTES . In J to 5
measure available to us days. infected sk in sloughs off .
Skin
within the framework of the Watch HEAL THY
replace i t ! If not delighted IN
law to defend the principle of ONE HOUR. yoru 59c back at
drug counter . NOW at
competitive balance, a factor any
NELSON'S DRUG STORE.
vital to the National Football

·.Tussy cream, ·_ ·..
d

.

·~

~--·-M-ID_DL_E-PO-RT---. l

POMEROY &amp;
MIDDLEPORT

..

ILA~, ALUMINUM~

COLUMBUS (UPI) -· The
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services reported Wednesday
that Ohioans unemployed for
one week arid filing for
une10ployment benefits for
the first time dropped 15.6 per
cent during the week e(\cjing
last Saturday.
Bureau
Administrator
Albert Giles said there were
22,854 initial claiinants last
week, down from the 27,062 of
the previous week.
Giles said a labor-management dispute and modelchangeover layoffs in tile''
auto industry were responsible for nearly 2,800 claims.
Those out of work for more
than one week totaled 196,000,
up 3.1 per cent over the'
previous week.

SPONSORED · BY

RUTLAND
IN

benefits down

$2-GO each Hole In One.
•

Nelson fomity .enjoys reunion . ~-

Club holds social

CANTON (UPI) _ Luke
Witte,
t~e
Cleveland
Cavaliers 7-foot center, has '
been·ordered by his physician
to take ruiUling exercises if

"'

·By Helen and

Theme of annual
style revue named

For Sight Conservation Programs

JIOOp:· PAIN.TBY

MASON

LOS ANGELES I UPI) Lightweight contenders
Randy Shields, 25-0, and Tury
Pineda, 21Hi, are rated even
for their 10-round fight at the
Olympic Aug . 16.
Pineda is training at
Gilman Hot Springs near
Palm Springs, Calif., and will
remain there until Aug. 11.

oollar bone

• • T ·,

Sue &amp;ttel

.

'.

·' The annual Nelson f""ily 'Jimmy and Sally, LUlie ~· llld Mra. ~ Blo
reunion was held Sunday at Smith, · Mr . .and. : Mrs. and granciiOII, Mr. ,ina 11111.
·-. the forest Acres Park. Raymond Smith Mr. and F.ArDMt NP.IAon. nA,.,..tt ..vi.
· Following the picnic dinner, Mrs. Leland Nelson an-:=- Warr 6 ' :
u- •nd )tlrlj.
Mr. and Mrs. Franch Leach, Johimy, Mr. and Mts. Cecil Richard Nelson and 11(1111, Mr:
· Rap:
.
A wrl!A!t' urged liiJ all to collect alumlnuni cans for Wilma Gilmore and .J une ·Banks, Mr. and Mrs. Steve and Mrs. Buck . Slewart,
Mra.
Joseph
Struble,
Mrs.
RACINE - Mill Patricia William Hayman, Mrs.
recycllnt!. She saki remolding tbe metal Into new cans takes Y011t, all local, lind Waller LancandKelli, Fred Tackett, Bucky and Timmy, Mr. and
lhle, bride-elect of Michael . Nan®~ Hendrlcb, Mrs. KArl John Ihle, Mrs. Michael mly one-tft!lt1eth the energy of tbe original procus. I agree, Ray Nelson, Pleasantville, Mrs . Yvonne Tackett, Sherry Mrs . Clifford Gibson and
Struble, Wl.l honoied Friday Kloea, Mrs. Dennll Eyn'on Boring and Miss Nancy with
and Shauna, Marvin Monk, family, Mra. SharQn Golden
valionl. A fact not printed out is that initial provided music.
· · , proc •ng of an aluminum can colliUDies nearly seven. Urnes
night with a llbower at the and Chrlatlna, Mrs. Thomas Thlrkleld.
Baseball was played during Mr. and Mrs. William Smith, and children, Mr. and Mn.
Others presenting gifts to the energy It takes to ~e a tin can. ADd tin can be recycled the afternoon. The reunion Carla and Judy Sargent, Mr. Uoyd Nelson, Mr. and .)(ra,
Racine Baptist Church social Halilln, Mrs. Helen Slmpeon,
the
bridiH!lect were Mra. Roy too ~ acept ibat compsn1es
rooms.
,.
.Mrs. Paul Sayre and Paula,
pay collecton for used tin,. was set for the fourth Sunday and Mrs. Gary Drenner , Joe Andl-eoni and Rhonda,
Mrs.
Clarence and seem to be dlalntereeted In rellllng it.
·
in July, 1976, at the State . Jason and Darrin , Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Edward
H011'-a for the shower Mrs . Eileen Buck, Mrs. Jones,
G.rueser,
Mrs
.
Virginia
were Mrs. Robert LOuks Wllllam Eichinger, Mrs .
Caroll
Gilmore, Scheneeman, Eric, Mary and
Do we need al1lllllrllnl cans when ~ (tin 1 ones do as Park at Pleasantville . .It was Mrs .
Mrs. Nicholas Jhle, Mrs: Charles rb!e, Lois, Mell.!sa, Thoren, Mra. Earl Dill, Mra. well? U youmuat Wle alumlnmn, do recycle it, as thismeialla reported that Mr. and Mrs. Everett. Diana , Kay and Pat, Mr. and Mrs. Rlcbar\1
Mlcbaellhle and Mrs. Clark Cathy · and David, Miss Ronnie Salser •.. Mra. Wanda. virtually lndtllructlhle and will not decompOIIe In the environ- Chatles Dill and family were Gary, Ben Cotterill, Tim Thompson, Tammy and
lhle.
Debbie wood, Mrs. Ralph Powell, Mrs. ThOIIlBii Gumpf, ment as tin will. But are people reeDy turning In old aluminum unable to attend because of Workman , Rhonda and Richard, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Glftawereplaced on a table Badgley,Mra. DeltOn Fowler, Mrs. Unley Hart, Miss Vera as they're askted to do? The payment Ia too tiny for most of us Mra. DIU's illness. She was Fhonda Wood, Mr . and Mrs. Nebcin, Cara, Uaa, Barry
covered In yellow with Mrs. Danny Brown, Mra. Beegle, 'Mrs. Nick Brown, to bother. -BEGINNING ENVIRONMENTALIST
released from the hospital Cecil Yost, Sr., and Cecil Jr., and Brian, Ronald Smith and
Sunday.
David Napper, Jr ., Diana Barbara R~ll.
streamers ~blue and yellow William Harris, Mrs. Earl Mrs. J . Alan Smith, Miss
Megan
Brown,
Mrs.
Vernon
suapellded from a yellow beU Shuler, Mra. John Terrell,
Dear B.E. :
Meigs County members of Walker and Eric, Danny
Let'siMipe there'llccme a day when a new self-destructing the Nelson family attending Walker and Autumn Ellis.
atta~ to the corners. The Mrs. Charles Legar, Mrs. Nease, Miss Debbie Brown,
refreshment table had a blue Gene Mitch, . Mra. Edison Mra. Jim Anderson and Wlllle product will replace present metal container?. Meanwhile : wereMr. andMrs. John Yost,
Traveling to Meigs County
we •re doillg better than you Imagine on liluminum collectionS. Donald , Rick , Tina and for the reunion were Wibna
cloth and was centered with a Hollon •. Mra. Pauline Collins,, Frecker.
Aoolrdlng · to a news releue from tbe Aluminum Retha , Robin Cremeans, Lee Knighton and family, Mr.
yellow . beU and blue and
Asl1oclatiol1, Americana returned 2.3 lil1lon all.alumlnmn cans Debbie Norman, Christine and Mrs. Walter Ray Nelson
yellow tapers In crystal
to recycling centers acr01111 tbe United States in 1974. 1bat Riggs, Ro'!er Cotterill, and son, Mr . and Mrs.
holders.
shows a 44 per cent Increase over 1973, and a near-70 per cent Bonnie Mill•r, Sid Taylor, William Moore , Mr . and Mrs.
Games were. played 'with
lncr- aver 1972.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Leach, Gary West, Denise arid Jim,
pn- going to Mrs. Walter
The
2.3
bllllon
cans
are
equivalent
to
103
million
pounds
of
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Nelson, Marguerite a nd Curt Baker,
Blkascan, Mrs. Frances .
alumln11111, and represent about one out of every six such cans Mr . and Mrs . Jain~ Miller,
Roberts and Mrs. Robert
used.
Beegle, Mra. VIrgil Hamm
e~~•.
At an average 12'&gt;2 centa per pound from recycllng cenwon the door prize.
"All-American Girl" will also be presented.
ters, 1974 collectors received almost $13 million fc, ·weir ef· Attending the shower
Announcement of the forts. Some people are in the collection business for themthe
theme
of
the
BIUlual
4be
besides thoee named were
achievement award wiiUlers selves (earning up to $100 a month), but most drives are
Mra. Robert Hart, Mra. Alan H style rewew Tuesday in
will be made at the style · conducted by civic or student groups who donate the money to
CUnningham and Olivia, Mra. the Meigs High School•
revue. They are the out- worthy causes.
Elizabeth Vlgar,
Mrs. auditorium beginning at 7:30
Mark Mora and Niese!
standing boy and girl in 4-H
p.m.
And that's our educational contribution for the day . Back Duvall were the outstanding
lrl each of the 11 classes of . Club work selected by out-of- to per!Mlllal problems ... - HELEN AND SUE
4-H boy and girl selected this
the rewe, a grand champion county judges on the basis of.
+++
year to attend the Citizenship
NOTE FROM SUE : Not quite yet, Mom : here's another
and reserve champion will be information contained in the .
Short Course held annually in
1 selected. The state fair National Report Form which happy note from the raft o( flyers we get in the mall each day : Washington, D. C.
H a new mosquito fighter proves as effective as U. S.
.winners will also be selected each 4-H member filled out in
The hto Meigs Countians
but will not be announced January.
Department of Agriculture tests have indicated, we may soon
joined
34 other young people
Announcement of the king be on our way to licking those pesky critters.
. until Junior Fair Night at the
from
the
counties In the
A tiny, waiA!t'-borne nematode that lives mly on mosquito
: Meigs County Fair, Aug. )3. and queen will not be made
Jackson and Belle Valley
At that time the trophies will until Junior Fair Night.
larvae has averaged ~ to 100 per cent control of laboratory
THURSDAY
Districts for the trip chapand field mosquito populations In three years cf USDA studies
FREE CLOTHING day at
eroned by Miss Marta
'•
conducted In Louisiana and Maryland.
Salvation Army, l15 ButGuilkey, Meigs County ExThe parasitic nematode, "Reesimermis nleisenl," infects
tension
Agent ,
Home
ternut Ave.; Pomeroy, 10
about 60 species of mosquitoes, Including our common garden
a.m. until noon; anyone in
Economics,
and
Nick
variety and also those associated with malaria.
area needing clothing is
Calabro, 4·H advisor in
" Unlike chemical control of mosquitoes, no recurring
The annual reunion ·of the Klein, David Klein , Bill
welcome.
Guernsey County .
applications
may be necessary with R. nielseni," says Dr.
Klein family was held Sunday Klein, Kaley Klein, Charles
Traveling by chartered
SATURDAY
at the Route 33 Roadside Klein, Vicki Klein , Buddy William Nickle of the USDA's Agricultural Research Service. bus, the group stayed at the
CREMEANS
FAMILY Park.
.
Klein, Jerry Klein, Connie "We are finding that these paraSites kill mosquitoes aU National 4-H Center in Chevy
.
summer long aM are still effective the next summer, and the
reunion, at Forest Acres
Attending were Mary Klein Mertle Mae Klein
Chase, Md. Emphasis for the
r--------,----~--_,
Park; starts at 12 noon; Sharpnack; Patty Goldhart, . Don~ Klein, Tammy Klein: next. What's better than Mother Nature's way of skeeter week was on environment,
Ladies' White
Men's White
basket dinner; all relatives Angelia Patterson, Frankie Edna Klein, Henry Ray control?"
Remember, the .nemetode is still "experimental." You and at the center were
invited.
Clay, Carrte Clay, Scott Klein Trena Kay Klein
speakers on interdependence
LAUREL
Cliff
Free Bateman, Wayne Klein, David,L. Klein, Larry Poweu: can't buy him on the open market yet, but by next year, it is among
countries,
en· Junior Sizes
Methodist Sunday Scliool Kathy Klein, Roger Klein, Marvin Wise, Gertrode Wise, hoped, we'll be better able to zap the mosquito before he (or is vironmental protection and
annual picnic, 6 p.m. at Fort Marsha Klein, Roger Klein, Teresa Lynn Wise and it she?) zaps us. - SUE
quality of Ufe. Mter hearing
+++
Meigs Park. Take covered Jr., Seth Klein, Hannah Rosalie Mae Wise.
PERSONAL TO "F11LL OF REGRETS": It's said .t hat the various speakers, the
Values to '12.00
Re • $9.00
dishes, own table service and Depen, Margorie Klein, Betty
young people were taken on
opportunity
is
more
recognizable
going
than
coming.
Since
you
Lane, Tommy Lane, Carolyn
beverage.
can't undo what's already done, cut loose those regretful field trips as laboratory
SUNDAY
Klein, John Klein , Michael
TO SELL ICE CREAM
memories and take it from today, with the good sense ex- experience .
NORTHEAST Cluster of Klein, Johnny Allen Klein,
'"
They visited the John F.
RUTLAND- An ice cream perience taught you. - HELEN AND SUE
00
United Methodist Churches Kevin Klein, Jack Bateman, social will be held by the
Kennedy Center, all the
will have basket dinner at Sally '!!aleman.
memorials and monuments,
Rutland Emergency Medical
VALUES TO $5.99
Forked Rllll state Park, 1
Kay
Clay,
Leonard Service Saturday evening at
the Smithsonian Institution,
p.m. &amp;mday; take own table Bateman,
Gertrude the Rutland gymnasium .
the White House, the USDA
service. G'a mes will be Bateman, Chuck Bateman, Serving wiD begin at 4 p.m.
Research
Center
in
Sheila ·Bateman, Darlene and cake, pie, coffee and soft · The Loyal Women's Class Roush, Miss Nina Russell , Marvbnd, and spe"t an
played in ·aflernoon.
TWO WEEK revival at Boyd, Dennis Boyd, Jenny drinks wiD be sold in addition of. the Middleport Church of Miss Mildred Hawley, Miss entire day on Capitol Hill
Maplewood Lake starts 2 Boyd, Joe Boyd,' Clifford to the homeriiade ice cream &lt;;hrist held a picnic at the Frances Roush, Mrs. Reva where they met with their
p.m. Sunday. Evening · ser- Klein, Irene Klein, Crystal in several flavors.
church Thursday night. Blue Beach, Mrs . Margaret Jones, Congressmen and aides.
vices at 7 p.m. after..§unday Lane, Keitb Klein , Tom
The group left on July 20
hydrangeas were used on the Mrs. Audrey SWett, . Mrs.
and Bible study each morning Sarver, Gloria Partlow ,
rable, and Mrs. George Glaze Margaret Lallance , Mrs . and returned Saturday night.
at 10 a.m. SpeCial musical Peggy Jeffers, Roger PartHOMECOMING SET
Carrie Kennedy, Mr. and
gave the blessing.
numbers each evening; low, Billy MiiUron, Howard
RACINE - The annual
In
1971 ,
Apollo-!~
Others attending were Mrs. Mrs. Walter Swett and Trey
·
b
R
o
G . .Jeffers, Fred Pullins, Mary homecOJDing of the Carmel
astronauts David Scott and
Martha Childs, Mr. and Mrs. and Clinton Glaze.
services y
ev .. .
. ·• Plillins Sheil Pullins Sh 11
McKinney
and
other
. • . ~
. • e Y Church near Racine will be Edgar Reynolda, Mr. and
Members of the class and James Irwin landed on the
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. TIL 1:00
'1linisters. Public invited.
~ns. Vrrgte. Klem, Henry held Sunday, Aug. 10 at 10 Mrs. Allen Jenkinson, Mr. others of the church meet at moon for a second U-S lunar
Klem, Lawrence Klein, Gene a .m. There will be lh basket
J{nd Mrs . Wilbur Theobald, the church every Wednesday
SIXTrl annual Teaford Klein, Arends Klein, Michelle dinner at 12:30 p:'ln. The
Mrs. Blanche Gilkey, Mrs. for a quilting bee. In addition,
reunion will be held at the Klein, Gene Klein·, Jr., Patty afternoon program will begin
Alice Robeson, Mrs. Eula the class makes rugs for sale.
roadside park on U.S. 33 Klein, Robert Klein, Mary
at 1:30 p.m. with . the Rev.
south. Basket lunch at noon. Klein, Todd Klein, Larry Richard Young, Sidney, Ohio,
ANNUAL WEBER Family Klein, Rodney Klein, Kim as speaker. The public is
reunion, Royal Oak Park Klein, Angela Klein, Penny invited .
•
The Bashan Bunch 4-H Club Beckie Pullins and Terri,
archery building. Everyone Klein, Kevin Klein, TQmmy
entertained recently with a Mrs. Jean Spencer and
to take covered dish, prizes .Klein, Kenny Klein, Paul
mother-daughter social at the Angie, Mrs. Louise Pitzer and
for games and own table
Sutton Methodist Church.
Tammy, Robin and Cindy,
service; dinner served at
"'
HOSPITALIZED
Cookies and punch were Mrs. Pat Thomas and Melba, · ·
n~n .
.
Mrs. Margaretha Wolfe of served . from
a table Henrietta' and Missy, Mrs.
. _,~ -29THANNUAL Theo Smith
Columbus, formerly of decorated in green and white . Jesse Morris and Sherry,
.,~-family re1111ion, Ft. Meigs
Pomeroy, is a patient at The girls modeled their Mra. Cornelius PhiUips and
Park . near Rutland. All
Doctor's Hospital West on garments and explained their Becky and Martha, Mrs.
friends and relatives jnvited.
West Broad St., Columbus, projects.
Jeanie rrusseu and Renee
Basket dinner at noon.
Room
419.
Mrs.
Wolfe
has
Attending were Mrs. Mary · Kim Bickers, Lori Wood
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
been there for two weeks Rose and Mandie. Mrs. Mrs. Robert Wood 1111d Terri.
ANNUAL Weber reunion,
Mrs. Jacob Johnson and
Royal Oak Park archery Arthur Reeves, Rutland, undergoing medical treatbuilding, noon, potluck dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Edward ment. £ - . .
with everyone to take a Marshall, Moundsville, W.
covered dish and their own Va ., and Mr. and Mrs .
.-Knee.Hi h~se-Speclal4 pr.
$1.19
table service along with Chester Howe, Glendale, W.
-Hosiery Guard Cleansing Bath, strengthens as it
PRESCRIPTION
game prizes.
cleans to help prevent runs, snagging and bagging.
Va. On T1,1esday, Mrs .
16ol. Size, Reg.SI .47
·
Speclal66c
TEAFORD Reunion, Route Johason went to Pataskala tc
8
Ol.
Size,
Reg.IJc
Speclal33c
33 Roadside P&amp;rk.
AND SURGICAL
visit her sister, Mrs. Fay•
-Super Fly New Airplane Kites, Reg. 99c Spechil66c
-Raggety Ann Teeter Totter
Hammond and children
Reg. $10.88
Special S7.97
Support Center
Barbara, Tracy and Gle!ICI
-Golden Press Soft Cover Books
.
MONDAY
ftlr •.and Mra. Charles Gibl
·
Specla I Buy, 41or 99c
MiDDLEPORT GARDEN and son, Mark, Decatur, ll
-Assorted Coloring Books, Reg. 29c
Special19c
CLUB. BIUlual picnic and andhismotber,Mrs. Blancl. .
-4
01.
Mennen's
Spray
Deodorant,
guest night, 6 p.m. at the · Gibbs, Racine, were recent
Reg. Sl.07
.
Speclal33c
home of Mra. Michael Fry dinner guests of Mrs:
-7 oz. Mennen's Spray Deodorant
. Jrith Mrs. William Morris and Malcolm Roller. The family
Reg. $1.44
.
5peclal53c
Mrs. Roscoe Fowler, .co- . has bel:n In the area viSiting
-18 ·ox. Micrln Mouth Wash .
h011tesaes.
relatives including Mr. and
Reg. $1.59
Special73c
VACATION Bible School Mrs. William Nease,. Racine,
20Gailiiii Trash cans, Reg. $5,99 ·
. Spec • ..,,,, .
through Aug. ~ . at the . and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Gibba,
(Hard plastic reslsh extreme temperatures)
20 Gal. Trash cans (soft plastic) Reg. $3.99 Spec. $1.92
.re«ganlzed Clnirch of Jesus Rutland. Gibbs has been .
. We' Havit Trash can Liners
Christ of Latter Day Saints, transferred tp New Jersey by'
'
PICNIC supplies Racine-Portland l!.olld; Ge~ E~trlc. MrS. Gibbs ·
~lm'ON'S
nepkins,
plates, cups,
certltlcatea given and arts is tile former J"'IUI Roller.
table cloths; forks,
and lnfla displayed on Aug.
Don Go&amp;ney was returned
: - - spoons .
+a;~ rout and 'hayrlde, Wednesday to· Veterans
SUMMER lays - Sand
. Salll'day eveu~n&amp;.
Hospital in LeldngtOII, Ky.,
Pills,.sand toys, garden
CHEERLEADING Clinic, . after spending a couple of
sets, s.prln.kUng ~·~·
thtGu&amp;h Aug. a, ta.m. to 12:15 days at his Middleport home .
p.m., at fGI'mer I'Omeroy His wife is In Leslngton with
' Senlclr
School for girls of h!ui. .
all ages and spoiiiiOI'8(I
Mr. and Mrs. Ml'chael
. .
.
Meigs .
High · School ·Erwlil and · children, Scott,, .
cbeei-lelid!Dg CCII'JIII: Awarils · Kevin . and
Melissa,
.to be giftll and training In WalterbOro,. S. C., spent tbe
jlml)ii, cb 111 s, chants end.. ~t week here visiting his
MAIN ST•
gymnastic mini tramp. p per P.arents; Mr. and Mrs
girl ~;
Chester Erwin;

"&gt;ars . He earned eight
varsity letters in his high
school athletic career.
He is the son of Mr. and
'Mrs. C. William Neal , 400 N.
Main ,St., Dunkirk .

.

• •

Generation Rap

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son.

GU~AANTEES
IT*
.,

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Bridal shower honors;Miss Patricia lhle

BRIAN NEAL

.. ... tUSSY ·

'

r

......

. I

,,

doll'

. A goOd deodorant
.·.
.doesn't have to be S&gt;,&lt;pensive; .. •.

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raw

Wltte breaks

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.I."'!''J.'he~Sennnet.~rt.P-oy,O., Ttnnday,July3t,' 1975

••
EASTERN - There will
be a meeting of all boys.
grades ll-12, Interested In ·
playing football at Eastern
High Scticiol this year on
Monday, ·Aug. 4 at 7 p. m. In
·
the school gym.

'

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•-The
n.uy Se.n tlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., whursday, July 31,197~
•
I.
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CINCINNATI (UPI) - The support from Johnny Bench
Cincinnati Reda' consecutive and Tony Perez who drove
Incomplete games by star- home five runs between
ters, which bad reached a them, notched his seventh
record ~. ended Wednesday victory against five losses. ·
night with a 6-1 victory over The last five of Darcy's
· tbe San Francisco Giants.
victories have ~orne in a row.
1bat the Red8 should set
A little talk Reds' manager
SU!:h a record was about as Sparky Anderson had with
Wlllltely as the fact that It was Darcy a couple of days after
a rookie righthander, Pat his July 21 outing against the
Darcy, who ended the streak . Phlls might have had more
Darcy, getting hitting than a little to do with Pat's

·"'r-.1

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~The Dallv Senti""I. MiddlePOrt-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursd~y. July JL W '

- Tl)e oaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, July 31, l975

.

By JOSEPH W. GRIGG
HELSINKI (UP!) - Soviet
leader Leonid I. Brezhnev
said today the agreement on
European security to be
signed here Friday does not
CQnfer on the West the right to
meddle in Russia's internal
affairs.
"No one should try to
dictate to other peoples, on
the basis of foreign policy
CQnsiderations of one kind or
another, the manner in which
they ought to manage their
internal affairs," he said in

up to .Governor's liking

PlYlLY CRAMER

Earlier this month, Rhodes co nv ersion fa c ilities,
COLUMBUS I UPI) - A
three-man Senate E nergy vetoed Meshel's bill to turn . hopefully to attract a $237
and
Environment sub- the Ohio DcvelopriJent Center million pilot project which
DEAR POLLY - I have six put on relati ve ly • Jll
,... CQmmittee today was to put into an Energy Resource and CoalCQn Corp. is seeking . to
children's blackboards that canvases or pieces of fabric.
locate in one of six states,
the finishing touches to a new Dc'•clopment Agency.
can no longer be used for But there are ways to get
The Senate last week voted including Ohio,
energy bill, combining coal
writing on. Is there a ny way I around that. Recently I saw
- Permitt in g the Ohio
gasification incentives with a to override Rhodes' veto, but
can resurface these chalk big, big pillows that had fish
Financing
new state energy financing House members lack one vote ' Developme nt
hoards to make them useable motifs needlepointed with no
board tailored to the liking of of being able to override a Commission to lend revenue
again - MRS. R.K .P.
worked background . The
veto.
bond funds for construction of
Gov. James A. Rhodes.
· DEAR MRS. RXP. - des igns were cut out with
Meshel said the Senate coal gasification plants, as
The subcommittee planned
When my children were small ca nvas margins left ali
to have the bill ready for full subcommittee would over- well as coal mining and
I bought a can of blackboard around and the!l turned back
committee action today and a come Rhodes' objections to reclamation demonstration
paint at tbe hardware store before a fish was blind stitprojects.
possible floor vote Friday . the ERDA by :
and painted their old black· ched to the center cf each
him
power
to
Giving
The new proposab were to be
board. Once I even used this Iabrie top. The effect was
attac.hed to House-pa ssed name a majority of members
to paint one exposed end of an very smart. However, do not
legislation to eliminate the to the bipartisan board of
• ·For the Lowest
upper kitchen cabinet and attempt this with a design
need for further committee directors.
had a blackboard for writing that has small jutting lines
- Reducing th e size of the
hearings in the House .
kitchen reminders and it was that would be hard to turn
Tire Prices
board
from the 15 members
The top-priority measure
even successful used on the back neatly.
thus could rea ch
the originally proposed.
wood.- POLLY.
I n the Area
- Making it an agency
Also a small needleport or
governor's desk before the
separate
from
the
Ohio
Devecrewel embroidered piec e
lawmakers leave for a
DEAR POLLY - My Pet could have pattern and
It's
swnmer recess this weekend. lopment Center.
Peeve is really a wis h that we background worked and then
Also
in
the
subcommittee
's
Majority Democrats ac could again buy bobby pins be applied to the center front
ceded
to Rhodes' demands energy package were to be
DOING WHAT COMES NATURALLY it may be for most people, but walking is quite a
without those horrible raised of a large pillow. Stitch It on
for a smaller and more provisions:
fea t for young Anthony Johnson of Newton, N.C. Anthony was born with severely twisted
bumps on the ends. I fi nd with trimmed edges (about
- Authorizing 30-year real
manageable
board
of
legs which were amputated when he was 18 months old to save him from a life in "
them hard to use as the one to one--and-a-half inches)
director s on an energy estate and personal property
Mason; W. Va . '
wheelchair . Later fitted with artificiallegs, he learned to walk step by hesitant step with th•·
773-&gt;181
bumps peel and ca tch one's extending flat at the sides.
mptions
for
coal
tax
exe
agency
separated
from
the
love and determined assistance of hts l:'"rents. Now on his second set of legs, Anthony .
hair when being withdrawn. I Then these edges are covered
Ohio Development Center.
Newton's
March of Dimes poster child , rides a tricycle, runs and plays !ike ;Jny n · ~t'r four have be£i1 told this is the onl y with velvet ribbon mitered at
To attract the governor 's
year-()!d .
l¥pe that is sold any m ore. I the corners.
approval, they also planned
nope there will be enough
Scraps· of ribbon can be
to incorporate tax abatement
&lt;l'o mplaints that man ufa c- laced (basket weave fashion!
and financing provisions for
tllrers will go back to making to form an Interesting pattern
coal gasification facilities,
.
J.ust plain old bobby pins. - and color arrangement for a
chieny as a lure for a pilot
MRS. C.L.D.
pillow top. Or applique one
project in southeastern Ohio.
: DEAR READERS- A sofa square of a lovely old quilt
The
subcommittee
without pillows Is like a plain pattern and apply It to the top
members were Sens. Robert
4" SOLID OR
d'ress with no personal of a cushion. Use silk or
E . O'Shaughnessy ,
DtOuches such as a bit of cotton scraps to make a
PERFORATED
Columbus, chairman; Harry
jewelry, a scarf or flower. patchwork top. Or even knit .
.
Meshel, D-Youngstown ; and
including incentives for coal passed and returned to t he Thomas A. Van Meter, RHow uninviting they look and one In a cable stitch pattern
By LEE LEONARD
DRAIN LINE
gasification facilities and a House for concurrence in Ashland.
Jlilw uncomfortable many are - white or off-white look best UPI Statehouse Reporter
'~;hen sitting on them. Deep for this. Have a more inviting
COLUMBUS tUPI) - The state energy policy board amendments legislation de 10 FT.
Ohio General Assembly , with a makeup suiting the signed to encourage prompt
~ated sofas need BIG pillows and comfortable looking sofa.
LENGTH
reporting a nd early innearly on schedule so far , governor .
'!! be comfortable. A few ltsy· -POLLY.
tervention
in cases of child
The package was to be
bltsy ones add up to pracYou will receive a dollar if today was to continue its rush
PRESENTS BOOK
UCally nothing in looks or Polly uses your favorite toward sununer adjournment tacked onto a House-passed abuse .
RACINE
- Mr. and Mrs .
- The Senate agreed with
oomfort.
homemaking idea . Pe t with action centering on bill in the full Energy and
Donald Manuel, Robin and
: Many needleworkers arc Peeve, Polly's Problem or workmen's
compensation, Environment Comnnittee and House chan ges and sent to the
Donita, Racine , Rt. 2; were in
dlaki ng small cushions solution to a problem . Write capital improvements and prepared for a floor vote governor an emergency bill
Ravenswood, W. Va . Tuesday
Friday . ll would t~en need reestablishing the state
f»:cause most- patterns are Polly in care of thi s drug abuse reform bills.
llmgth
u
where Manuel
evening
Board
to
Both chambers were to only House floor concurrence Contro llin g
newspaper
.
"
presented a copy of his hook,
reconvene at I :30p.m. to deal and no committee hearings in distribute appropriations for
•...
"Love, Hate, and War - Life
vArious sta te agencies and
that chamber.
with heavy ca lendars.
Also stock a large selection of other
of an Ex-P.O.W." to the
The CQnference committee prpgrams.
Activity off the floor also
types of plastic pipe, fittings, etc.
Jackson County Library .
- The House unanimously
was expected to be frantic, on the new school foundation
GOES TO PARK
•
News
pictures
were
taken
with a conference committee formula got off to a slow start passed and returned to the
• House of Fabrics
CLIFTON - Deborah Ann
•
of him making the presenon a new school subsidy Wednesday and was still Senate a comprehensive
Young, daughter of Mr . and
tation . The book will be
:Shop
our
Fabric
formula appearing to be .the es tablishin g
areas
of overhaul of Ohio's probate
Mrs. Jack Young , Clifton,
;:Specials during our
disagreement between the law generally making it displayed along with a copy
celebrated her ninth birthday only potential snag in plans to
:,Opening Sale thru
adjourn late Friday until House and Senate \Jy easier for surviving spouses of a letter which Manuel
on July 27 with a trip to
Racine, Ohio
nightfall.
to claim estates and making received from President
Sept. 10.
~tug. 9.
Camden Park with her
Gerald
Ford
who
was
earlier
their shares more generous in
The Senate was to vote on
Open Other Areas
± MORE NEW BARGAIN
mother and brother, Darin.
presented a copy of the book.
the
absence of a wiU.
Major
poin
t
of
negotiation
House-passed
legislation
...
BUYSCOMING!J!
her grandmother, Mrs . Alice
is
a
difference
in
the
local
The
House
passed,
63
to
liberalizing workmen 's
Ph . 992.28t0
Lieving, Mason, and a grea t•
compensa
tion benefits. A millage needed by school 29, and sent to th~ House a bill
•
1 Mile South of
aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
• Middle~orl
on Rt . 7
simila r
bill
upgrading · districts to qualify for state requiring printed prices to
Carson Roush, New Haven .
••
unemployment compensation aid . But some of the con- accompany prices deterbenefits was ticketed for ferees wanted to open up mined' by comp uters on
&amp;
House action today or Friday. ~1ther areas for discussion , consumer products costing 10
In
other
legislative cents or more.
The
Senate
Fin~nce
- The House State GovernConunittee was expected to ~cve lopments Wednesday :
- The Senate passed, 27 to ment Conunittee approved
promptly approve a Housepassed $678.8 million capital 1, and sent to the governor a and sent to the floor a Senateimprovements bill and send it bill requiring automatic passed constitutional amendsmoke detection devices in ment designed to eliminate
to the floor.
'1igh r ise apartments and the "bedsheet" ballot in next
Unanimously Adopted
year 's presidential primary
·0ndominiwns .
The
measure,
ap
propria ling $344 million for
The Senate unanimously in Ohio .
construction
and
im•
provements at colleges and
-rrr- ·
universities, and another $238
million for similar. purposes
1 PIECE
at mental institutions, was
unanimously adopted in the
House Wednesday in record
Catalina &amp; Jantzen
time
less than 10
(47 Only)
minutes.
RlliDUCED
House sponsors of a major
· COLUMBUS (UP!) - The colleges and universities, and
NOW ONLY
drug abuse reform bill unaniOhio House unanimously $238 million for the same
mously cleared by the Senate
passed in 10 minutes without purpose at menial health
Polyester Knit
Wednesday planned to ask for
- dissent and sent to the Senate facillties . Lesser amounts are
REDUCED
agreement in Senate changes
. ·•
Wednesday a $678.8 million allocated for parks and
and send the proposal to Gov.
recreation,
wildlife,
capital improvements approJames A. Rhodes for
By Catalina, Jantzen. Cot priation having more money waterway safety aild emsignature.
tington
and Lori Lynn .
thansoughtbyGov. James A. ployment services conMeanwhile, a Senate
and
House struction projects.
Rhodes
REDUCED
Energy and Environment
House members took the
Democrats.
PANJ.!DUCED
. subcommittee was expected
The measure is the last opportunity to include approto issue a new energy bill
major appropriation to cover priations for four items
state government financing vetoed by Rhodes in the state
budget enacted in June.
for the next two years.
The_y .~re:
Values to $14.00
House Democrats proposed
~10 million in operating
FATHER IN HOSPITAL
a $649 capital outlay earlier
NOW
Mrs.
Jean
Murray, this year. Rhodes recom- funds for the University of
Lexington, Ky., and Bob mended spending only $528 Cincinnati, to·be sent directly
to the school.
Carnahan , Mentor, were million.
-$56 million for slate emThe capital budget as
called home by the serious
illness of their father, Delbert passed by the House would ploye pay raises, to be funIn Polyester knns and ble11ds .
Carnahan, a patient at the furnish $344 million for neled through the state
Street length and long .
Holzer Medical Center, construction
and
im- Controlling Board.
~1. 8 million for the new
provement projects at state
Gallipolis.
REDUCED
Ohio Rail Transportation AuthOrity.
.&lt;...
-415 million for operating
funds for the Department of
1'-·FREE ESTIMATE5-~~=~=.J1
Mental Health and Retardation.
Oh rnany winter days , it uses heat from
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker,
•OLitd&lt;10r air to warm your home . Gives
~Boui-neVIIJe,
chalnnan of
l:ex&lt;:e~ltio•nal heating economy that can "t
REDUCED
the House Finance Combe matched by other heating systems.
mittee, said etlstlng state
2 RACKS LADIES'
_
During th'e summer. it efficiently cools your ·
revenues would ' finance tbe
t;,jnorne . It's an all-electric. complete ly
plan Without wibalanclng the
RANGE FROM
r&amp;lJtomaltic comfort system . And Amana
budget: Republicans offered
OO··arguments.
.
. ·
: qLtaury assures you of lasting dependability
Reduced Up To
.,.lmd operating efficiency.

""
TOWER OF POWER under study as a possible new
source of electricity would utilize computer-aimed
mtrrors to focus the sun's rays on a.boile r atop the tower.
Water converted to high-pressure steam would be pumped
to a conventional steamturbine generator at the tower 's
hase. Research on the tower authorized by the Energy
Research and Development Administration is being done
by Honeywell solar energy scientists in Minneapolis.

PLASTIC
PIPE
SPECIALS
..[

assembly before quitting

'344

Y2 CPUC Plastic For Hot
or Cold Water Lines
Illltlot·

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D&amp;J's

A

~

STAR SUPPLY

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A PALM IS A PALM IS A PALM most places, but not
at Georgia's Marsh wood golf course. Smack in the middle
of the 16th green , "The Palmer Tree" was left standing a t
the suggestion of the des ign consultant, Arnold Palmer ,
for the course at The Landings, residentia l-resort community on Skidaway Island. It can be both good news and
bad news for golfers - a spot of shade fr om which to putt
or a trap 20 feet high.

MON., TUE., WED
THUR. SAT.
9:15 - 5:00
FRI. • 9:15 • 8:00

·suMMER

·I

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LADIES

Capital improvements
SWIM SUITS
expanded inHouse vote

SPORT COATS

PANTSUITS

of an
na~
electric \heat

.30%~

COlTON DRESSES

pump

KNIT PUllOVER

DRESSES

SUMMER

SHiRTS .

40cyo
SHORTS, .TOPS,
CULOTTES· &amp; SKIRTS
30%

SALE -~

CONTINUES

SALE PRICES

2 RACKS, SUITS &amp;
SPORT

ro •4•o.
THE SHOE BOX·

70%

.•1 ·0~

E'Befor·e you replace your heating system.
out more ab6'ut ~;~n Amana heatpump .
··
·
a no-obligation estimate. call •

FOREMAN and ABBOTt .
1 .

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Middleport, Oh•o

·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
I·

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t·•·'

thought for tne dal
American writer Henry Thoreau said : "It lakes two to
speak the truth; one to speak,
the other to hear."

l
DUAL BIR.THDAYS were celebrated on NassauParadise Island ill the Bahamas where Camille Cooper
enjoyed her second birthday earlier this month along with
the Bahamas observing its second anniversary as an
independ~nt nation .
•

GOATS

SPORTSWEAR AND DRESSES

·

4.0%·
30%

DRESS &amp; CASUAL

40%

BLOUSES

. By · -Lady Manhattan ,
'sleeve. short sleeve.
sleeveless.
REDUCED

.30

By WilLIAM E. CLAYTON
WASHINGTON (UPI) Congress has said "no" for
the seCQnd time to President
Ford's proposal to gradually
lift oil price controls.
The action creates an impasse which - unless it is
quickly resolved - could
result in the CQntrols expiring
all at once Aug. 31, causing
irrunediate and sharp rises in
gasoline and other petroleum
prices.
The House voted 223-189
Wednesday night to reject
Ford's plan to gradually
remove the oll price controls
over a 39-mon th period ending November, 1978. The
Senate voted 50-44 in favor of
Ford's plan. But a rejection
by only one branch of
Congress is enough to kill his
proposal.
That
leaves
two
possibilities: the present
controls could expire Aug. 31,
or they could be extended.
Some economists say expiration could raise retail
gasoline prices as much as 10
or 12 cents a gallon and have
an inflationary impact
throughout the economy,
s ince fue 1 costs are a·n
element in the prices of many
products . Others say the
effects would be less
severe ,
Ford has said - and
Federal
Energy
Administrator Frank Zarb
repeated it Wednesday - the
President will veto any extension without a congressional acceptance in some
form of his phase-out of
controls.
" The President feels
strongly that additional
delays of any variety can only
deepen
this
nation's
vulnerability (to foreign
oil)," Zarb wrote Rep .
Clarence Brown, R.Qhio, a
leading Ford supporter in the
debate.
Later, Zarb said the administration is " ex~remely

:

DANCE SET
A square dance will be held
from 9 p. m. to 12 midnight
Sa turday at the Racine
Junior High School with
music by the String ·Dusters
and Olive Weber with Bob
Pickett calling. Donations
will be accepted at the door.
The dance, •t.aged by the
Beegle keunion Ason :, is open
to the public.

AT WORKSHOP
ATHENS
Jennifer
Machir, Rl. 3, Pomeroy, is
a !tending
a
summer
workshop, " Families in
Crises," this week at Ohio
University . The workshop is
designed to aid clergymen,
COWl selors , a;nd teache rs in
the study of the rOITiplex
pr o blt:rll~ LdC ing lhe family
today.

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Corn is stunted
United Press International
Jim Siebert held the freshpicked corn in his hand and
shook his head.
"They 'll never fill .out it'll be small kernels and
small coba," Siebert said .
" The heat and dry stress
during pollination doesn't
take long to cut a field by 20 to
30 bushels per acre. I figure
we've lost about 21 bushels an
acre already."
. Iowa Agriculture Secretary
Robert Lounsberry, who
accompanied Siebert on a
tour of his 341H!cre farm
north of Des Moines Wednesday, agreed.
" Yeah, the pl'ognosis isn't
for a bumper crop this year
for you," Lounsberry said.
Earlier · this summer,
agriculture observers
estimated an average corn
yield of a record-high 109
bushels per acre in Iowa . But
dry weather could cut Iowa
}ields by 50 bushels per acre,
,lopping 650 million bushels
from the state's production
and costing farmers -lots of
money.
RelenUess heat scorched
crops in Iowa , KanSas,
Missouri and the Dakotas and
projections of record or
bumper CQrn crops withered
in the blazing sun . Corn stalks
browned and leaves curled.
Grain sorghum leaves lay
twisted and deformed by the
heat.
Hazy . hot, humid weather
gripped a vast belt of the
midlands and the mercury
soared again into the 90s and

100-plus ranges with little
relief in sight.
Farmers in the heat-baked
nnidlands may well have been
envious of their. neighbors in
Illinois and Indiana, where
prospects for bumper crops
remained good.
"I've been told by my
counterparts in Illinois and
Indiana that they still have
some of tlle best prospects,"
Lounsberry said. "They've
been getting an average of an
inch of rain a week .
But Indiana and Jllinois
appeared to be the only corn
belt regions in good shape.
Kansas CQrn and grain
sorghum crops already have
been permanenUy damaged
by the hot, dry weather.
Agricultural officials warned
a healthy downpour is needed
in the next few days to halt
the losses.
" It's worsening a little bit
each day," said Max Johnson, an official of the
Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation Service .
Johnson said his office has
already received a few
disaster relief applications
from corn and sorghum
farmers whose crops are
useless except for silage or
hay . Soybeans also have
suffered damage.
"This isn't a great acreage
at this point but it's right at
the point of getting that
way," Johnson said. " [f we
don't get some relief in the
next week we'll probably get
quite a few applications."

proposal, this would ha ve
risen to $13.45 a barrel, close
to the present uncontrolled
price, over 39 months .
Ford earlier had proposed
deCQntrol over 30 montlls .
The House rejected that
proposal 262-t67 on July 22.
In another vote, which
signaled ils intention, the
House Wednesday refused to
amend an energy bill with a
modified version of the Ford
plan . It substituted a
proposed tough pricing plan
that would roll back the price
of uncontrolled oil to $7.50 a
barrel.
MARKET REPORT
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
July 26,1975
SLAUGHTER STEERS Standard Holstein 800-1100
lbs. 21.25-22.00.
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS Good &amp; Choice 700-1,000 lbs .
21, Standard 700-1,000 lbs. 20.
SLAUGHTER COWS Commercia l 22.45, Utility
18.56-20, Canner &amp; Cutter
15.75-20.10, Bulls over 1,000
lbs. 19.56-22.
VEAL - Choice &amp; Prime
1%-225 lbs . 3J, 226-265 lbs. 35.
HOGS - U.S. 1-3 1%-240
lbs. 55.70, U.S. 1-3 240-260 lbs .
55.35, Sows, U.S. 1-3 3()()..500
lbs. 40, Boars 3~00 lbs.
40.10, Pigs (by .head) 20--10
lbs. '1:1, 40-60 lbs . 37, 60 lbs .
plus 42.
YEARLING HEIFERS Good &amp; Choice 5~00 lbs.
18.56-23.50.
STEER CALVES -Good &amp;
Choice ·under 300 lbs. 25.75,
4oth500 lbs. 20.75-22.25.
BULL CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice 300-400 lbs. 25.75, 400500 lbs. 18.75-22, 500-600 lbs .
22.
HEIFER CALVES - Cows
&amp; Calves (by head) 232.50,
cows {by head ) 153.
BABY CALVES ( By Head )
- Beef 23-40, Holstein &amp;
Brown Swiss 11-28.

. i

'·

''

I I•.

l
\·'

might he thinking, "If he did
it, so can I."
According to Fred Cooper,
a former derelict and now
counselor at the Holy Name
Center for Homeless Men,
recovered alcoholics and
Bowery derelicts sometimes
understand each other only
too well.
"There's a feeling of closeness which is healthy - up to

a point/' he said. "We even
call each other bums. But we
have to be careful. I might
get too emotionally involved
with a man's problems and
lose perspective, and he
might get resentful and say,
'I've seen you in the gutter.
Have you forgotten what it's
like ?'"
Nevertheless ,
the
recovered Bowery alcoholics
agreed, their familiarity With
the skid row mentality helps
them in their work.

" Alcoholics are .the hest

con artists on earth," said
Buford Peterson of the
Fellowship Center. " But a
kick in the seat sometimes
works wonders - as long as
they understand you can't be
maneuvered .''
Peterson, who said he
couldn't remember the births
of his first four children " or
much about their growing
up" but who now enjoys a full ·
family life, said he believed
90 per cent of Bowery
alcoholics could be helped to
lead constructive lives.
"Sure, everybody out there
wants to continue drinking,"
he sald. "But nobody wan is to
continue suffering."
While the Bowery drinker's
road to recovery is full of
dangerous curves, the former
guzzlers
said,
just
recognizing that fact is part

We ·show and Tell

t.sk&lt;'&lt;l if he viewed Brezhnev·s rema rks -as renotmcing
the oo ca ll ed Brezhnev Doctrine, under which the Soviet
Unirm claimed the right to
intervenr in Eastern Europe
and used this to justify the
1968
invas ion
of
Czechoslovakia,
Kissinger
said only . " it indicates there
should be 'lQ interference in
the affair~ of other nations ."
Toda y's session wa s
marked by a walkout by
Turkish Premier Suleyman
Dcmirel when Arcbhbishop
Makarios, president of
Cyprus, r ose to s peak .
Turkey does not recognize
Makarios as the Cypriot head
of state and Dcmirel wa s not
present wh en Makarios said
the Turkish invasion of
Cyprus last s ummer was a
flagrant v iolation of the
"Final Act" the delegates are
here to sign.
Brezhnev looked well . He
spoke slowly but in a strong,
clear voice as he addressed
the leaders of East and West
Europe and Canada and the
United States.
He left a dinner given by
President Urho Kekkonen of
Finland Wednesday nillht

"

:.~

because he was unwell.

" It is not true that Mr. &lt;'·
···
Brezhnev left the dinner :;~
early because of ill health," ·'h
the Soviet spokesman said .
" He explained to President.
Kekkonen that he had to work ·:
6n his speech to the con· . ~
terence . The president "
agreed . Mr.
~rezhnev "
worked all evening on h.is
speech .''
In his warnin g against ..
meddlin g in the internal" :
affairs of other CQuntries.:
Brezhnev did not refer . ~
spedfically to the West . But
the impli ca lion wa s un - ""
mistakable .
''
Among the agreements in-' ~
eluded in the " Final Act" to ·';
be signed Friday are pledges ::
to increase human CQntacts
between
Eastern
and
Western Europe, something
the Soviets previously have .
resisted strongly.
'
Brezhnev 's words ap-' '
pea red to mean Moscow will ·~
interpret these undertakings ;;
in its own way and does not ...
want the West to tell it how to
act.

'"

...

,,

~------------------FINAL

LADIES &amp; OtiLDREN'S
Dress &amp; Casu a Is
Values to $18.00

--------------------------·

LADIES' SHOES
Dress &amp; Casuals
Values to $19.00
---------------------------~

LADIES' SHOES
Dress &amp; Casuals
Values to $20.00
----~---------------------

1 Group Odds &amp; Ends
Children's &amp; Ladies

final
Sale

96~

10% OFF All Ladies' Sandals
·---------------------------

of the batUe.
"You work with someone
for several weeks, then
ruddenly he comes stumbling
into the building," Cooper
said.
"But if you've been there
before - you know this isn't
the last.inning of the game."

ALL SALES FINAL!

Marguerite's Shoes
BETTY OHLINGER
102 E. Main ·

TOPS

IN

IT; .

before the meal was served. ...,
' ·"
But a Soviet delegation ~,
spokesman denied this was ~

. BOlTOMS

Pomeroy

Here's a shoe thal's big
news in bottoms. It' s a
one piece so"le th at's
scooped out in the
middle for one of the
neatest silhouettes
around! And there's
top interest, too, with
stitch detailing a n d a
monk ·strap that pufls
the look together .

·1·.:r-··1

Headlin er fashion from
Connie!
brown or black

'

. tfii :FACTS!
behind fiile home

.furnishings ·and:
appliance$
*QUALITY
AT THE

beritage hoUse

LOWE$T

POSSIILI
PRICB

:MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

sober."

Now, he said, he sees "my
former self " in the men he
counsels a nd hopes they_

- _,
.'

de ten te . 1\ priority goal is to
find ways tu reduce armed
forces and armaments in
Central Europe without
diminishing the security of
anyone. On the CQntrary, to
the benefit of all."
" It is the materialization of
detente which is thC essence
of all that should make peace
in Europe truly durable and
solid," Brezhnev said. " And
here uppermost in our mind
is the task of ending the arms
race and achieving tangible
results in disarmament ."

disappointed" over the House prices .
rejection and that his agency
Present oil price controls
is
"making necessary apply to about 6(1 per cent of
preparations for an orderly domestic oil - the so-&lt;:alled
transition" when the controls "old oil," produced from
expire. He didn't say how the · wells existing in 1972. The
transition would work or spell Controlled price is $5 .25 a
out what would happen to barrel.
Under
Ford's

By BRENT BOWERS
NEW YORK (UPI) - Jim
Durick woke up in a flophouse
on Christmas Day three
years ago so sick he couldn't
walk.
" I was shaking so hard I
couldn 't even hold on to a
cigarette," Durick recalled.
"I tried to drink some beer,
but I couldn't get it to my lips.
I was spilling it aU over me."
That's when Durick longtime panhandler and skid
row drifter - decided to quit
drinking.
Today, he's one of a
growing number of former
Bowery derelicts who have
stayed in the ramshackle
neighborhood on Manhattan's
Lower East Side to try to
CQ8X other drunks out of the
gutter.
"A lot of the fellows say
they can handle booze," said
the nattily dressed, 52-yearold medical aide at the
Manhattan Bowery Project's
detoxification center.
''They'll say they've never
been in trouble and there they ·
are, filthy, in rags, and
sleeping on the sidewalks."
Dan
Donovan,
a
caseworker for the same
organization, remembers his
days on the streets.
"I was given the last rites
three times, but it didn't faze
me," Donovan, 42, said. "As
soon as I was well enough,l'd
hit the bottle again. My life
was a series of blackouts."
Then, he said, " some sort
of. miracle" happened.
un wasn't really a conscious decision, but I became
a patient in a special
program and somehow found
out I didn 't get hurt when I

\
1

Soviet Jews from Russia .
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger said he thought it
was a "coociliatory speech ."
Brezhnev made a strong
appeal
for
East-West
military detente in Europe
after the Helsinki conference
and for renewed efforts to
speed up disarmament.
"The Soviet Union," Brezhnev said, " has CQnsistenUy
supported the idea that the
co nferen ce
should
be
followed by a further
development of military

Fornter skid row guzzlers help out

WINTER &amp; SUMMER
WT. SUITS

lf2 PRICE

·

; ;:~ Ford denied wishes again by House

BEND
TIRE CEN.TER ,

Three major hills facing

an address to summit leaders
from 35 nations of East and
West Europe, the United
States and Canada.
Some delegates saw in the
speech a r;5iation of the
" Brezhnev
trine," under
which the yiet Union after
the invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 claimed the
right to Intervene anywhere
m _E astern Europe.
.
Others saw it as a warning
to the U.S. Congress not to
link a trade agreement with
Russia with emigration of

&lt;"

-

-

'

I

Special paint
saves btackboara

ft

..

Russians pre.f er no _meddling from the West .

Ne_,v energy .bill shaping

Polly's Point-a.-..
l

.1

Milldleport, Ohio

-

�,I

.,

II
I

~The Dallv Senti""I. MiddlePOrt-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursd~y. July JL W '

- Tl)e oaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, July 31, l975

.

By JOSEPH W. GRIGG
HELSINKI (UP!) - Soviet
leader Leonid I. Brezhnev
said today the agreement on
European security to be
signed here Friday does not
CQnfer on the West the right to
meddle in Russia's internal
affairs.
"No one should try to
dictate to other peoples, on
the basis of foreign policy
CQnsiderations of one kind or
another, the manner in which
they ought to manage their
internal affairs," he said in

up to .Governor's liking

PlYlLY CRAMER

Earlier this month, Rhodes co nv ersion fa c ilities,
COLUMBUS I UPI) - A
three-man Senate E nergy vetoed Meshel's bill to turn . hopefully to attract a $237
and
Environment sub- the Ohio DcvelopriJent Center million pilot project which
DEAR POLLY - I have six put on relati ve ly • Jll
,... CQmmittee today was to put into an Energy Resource and CoalCQn Corp. is seeking . to
children's blackboards that canvases or pieces of fabric.
locate in one of six states,
the finishing touches to a new Dc'•clopment Agency.
can no longer be used for But there are ways to get
The Senate last week voted including Ohio,
energy bill, combining coal
writing on. Is there a ny way I around that. Recently I saw
- Permitt in g the Ohio
gasification incentives with a to override Rhodes' veto, but
can resurface these chalk big, big pillows that had fish
Financing
new state energy financing House members lack one vote ' Developme nt
hoards to make them useable motifs needlepointed with no
board tailored to the liking of of being able to override a Commission to lend revenue
again - MRS. R.K .P.
worked background . The
veto.
bond funds for construction of
Gov. James A. Rhodes.
· DEAR MRS. RXP. - des igns were cut out with
Meshel said the Senate coal gasification plants, as
The subcommittee planned
When my children were small ca nvas margins left ali
to have the bill ready for full subcommittee would over- well as coal mining and
I bought a can of blackboard around and the!l turned back
committee action today and a come Rhodes' objections to reclamation demonstration
paint at tbe hardware store before a fish was blind stitprojects.
possible floor vote Friday . the ERDA by :
and painted their old black· ched to the center cf each
him
power
to
Giving
The new proposab were to be
board. Once I even used this Iabrie top. The effect was
attac.hed to House-pa ssed name a majority of members
to paint one exposed end of an very smart. However, do not
legislation to eliminate the to the bipartisan board of
• ·For the Lowest
upper kitchen cabinet and attempt this with a design
need for further committee directors.
had a blackboard for writing that has small jutting lines
- Reducing th e size of the
hearings in the House .
kitchen reminders and it was that would be hard to turn
Tire Prices
board
from the 15 members
The top-priority measure
even successful used on the back neatly.
thus could rea ch
the originally proposed.
wood.- POLLY.
I n the Area
- Making it an agency
Also a small needleport or
governor's desk before the
separate
from
the
Ohio
Devecrewel embroidered piec e
lawmakers leave for a
DEAR POLLY - My Pet could have pattern and
It's
swnmer recess this weekend. lopment Center.
Peeve is really a wis h that we background worked and then
Also
in
the
subcommittee
's
Majority Democrats ac could again buy bobby pins be applied to the center front
ceded
to Rhodes' demands energy package were to be
DOING WHAT COMES NATURALLY it may be for most people, but walking is quite a
without those horrible raised of a large pillow. Stitch It on
for a smaller and more provisions:
fea t for young Anthony Johnson of Newton, N.C. Anthony was born with severely twisted
bumps on the ends. I fi nd with trimmed edges (about
- Authorizing 30-year real
manageable
board
of
legs which were amputated when he was 18 months old to save him from a life in "
them hard to use as the one to one--and-a-half inches)
director s on an energy estate and personal property
Mason; W. Va . '
wheelchair . Later fitted with artificiallegs, he learned to walk step by hesitant step with th•·
773-&gt;181
bumps peel and ca tch one's extending flat at the sides.
mptions
for
coal
tax
exe
agency
separated
from
the
love and determined assistance of hts l:'"rents. Now on his second set of legs, Anthony .
hair when being withdrawn. I Then these edges are covered
Ohio Development Center.
Newton's
March of Dimes poster child , rides a tricycle, runs and plays !ike ;Jny n · ~t'r four have be£i1 told this is the onl y with velvet ribbon mitered at
To attract the governor 's
year-()!d .
l¥pe that is sold any m ore. I the corners.
approval, they also planned
nope there will be enough
Scraps· of ribbon can be
to incorporate tax abatement
&lt;l'o mplaints that man ufa c- laced (basket weave fashion!
and financing provisions for
tllrers will go back to making to form an Interesting pattern
coal gasification facilities,
.
J.ust plain old bobby pins. - and color arrangement for a
chieny as a lure for a pilot
MRS. C.L.D.
pillow top. Or applique one
project in southeastern Ohio.
: DEAR READERS- A sofa square of a lovely old quilt
The
subcommittee
without pillows Is like a plain pattern and apply It to the top
members were Sens. Robert
4" SOLID OR
d'ress with no personal of a cushion. Use silk or
E . O'Shaughnessy ,
DtOuches such as a bit of cotton scraps to make a
PERFORATED
Columbus, chairman; Harry
jewelry, a scarf or flower. patchwork top. Or even knit .
.
Meshel, D-Youngstown ; and
including incentives for coal passed and returned to t he Thomas A. Van Meter, RHow uninviting they look and one In a cable stitch pattern
By LEE LEONARD
DRAIN LINE
gasification facilities and a House for concurrence in Ashland.
Jlilw uncomfortable many are - white or off-white look best UPI Statehouse Reporter
'~;hen sitting on them. Deep for this. Have a more inviting
COLUMBUS tUPI) - The state energy policy board amendments legislation de 10 FT.
Ohio General Assembly , with a makeup suiting the signed to encourage prompt
~ated sofas need BIG pillows and comfortable looking sofa.
LENGTH
reporting a nd early innearly on schedule so far , governor .
'!! be comfortable. A few ltsy· -POLLY.
tervention
in cases of child
The package was to be
bltsy ones add up to pracYou will receive a dollar if today was to continue its rush
PRESENTS BOOK
UCally nothing in looks or Polly uses your favorite toward sununer adjournment tacked onto a House-passed abuse .
RACINE
- Mr. and Mrs .
- The Senate agreed with
oomfort.
homemaking idea . Pe t with action centering on bill in the full Energy and
Donald Manuel, Robin and
: Many needleworkers arc Peeve, Polly's Problem or workmen's
compensation, Environment Comnnittee and House chan ges and sent to the
Donita, Racine , Rt. 2; were in
dlaki ng small cushions solution to a problem . Write capital improvements and prepared for a floor vote governor an emergency bill
Ravenswood, W. Va . Tuesday
Friday . ll would t~en need reestablishing the state
f»:cause most- patterns are Polly in care of thi s drug abuse reform bills.
llmgth
u
where Manuel
evening
Board
to
Both chambers were to only House floor concurrence Contro llin g
newspaper
.
"
presented a copy of his hook,
reconvene at I :30p.m. to deal and no committee hearings in distribute appropriations for
•...
"Love, Hate, and War - Life
vArious sta te agencies and
that chamber.
with heavy ca lendars.
Also stock a large selection of other
of an Ex-P.O.W." to the
The CQnference committee prpgrams.
Activity off the floor also
types of plastic pipe, fittings, etc.
Jackson County Library .
- The House unanimously
was expected to be frantic, on the new school foundation
GOES TO PARK
•
News
pictures
were
taken
with a conference committee formula got off to a slow start passed and returned to the
• House of Fabrics
CLIFTON - Deborah Ann
•
of him making the presenon a new school subsidy Wednesday and was still Senate a comprehensive
Young, daughter of Mr . and
tation . The book will be
:Shop
our
Fabric
formula appearing to be .the es tablishin g
areas
of overhaul of Ohio's probate
Mrs. Jack Young , Clifton,
;:Specials during our
disagreement between the law generally making it displayed along with a copy
celebrated her ninth birthday only potential snag in plans to
:,Opening Sale thru
adjourn late Friday until House and Senate \Jy easier for surviving spouses of a letter which Manuel
on July 27 with a trip to
Racine, Ohio
nightfall.
to claim estates and making received from President
Sept. 10.
~tug. 9.
Camden Park with her
Gerald
Ford
who
was
earlier
their shares more generous in
The Senate was to vote on
Open Other Areas
± MORE NEW BARGAIN
mother and brother, Darin.
presented a copy of the book.
the
absence of a wiU.
Major
poin
t
of
negotiation
House-passed
legislation
...
BUYSCOMING!J!
her grandmother, Mrs . Alice
is
a
difference
in
the
local
The
House
passed,
63
to
liberalizing workmen 's
Ph . 992.28t0
Lieving, Mason, and a grea t•
compensa
tion benefits. A millage needed by school 29, and sent to th~ House a bill
•
1 Mile South of
aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
• Middle~orl
on Rt . 7
simila r
bill
upgrading · districts to qualify for state requiring printed prices to
Carson Roush, New Haven .
••
unemployment compensation aid . But some of the con- accompany prices deterbenefits was ticketed for ferees wanted to open up mined' by comp uters on
&amp;
House action today or Friday. ~1ther areas for discussion , consumer products costing 10
In
other
legislative cents or more.
The
Senate
Fin~nce
- The House State GovernConunittee was expected to ~cve lopments Wednesday :
- The Senate passed, 27 to ment Conunittee approved
promptly approve a Housepassed $678.8 million capital 1, and sent to the governor a and sent to the floor a Senateimprovements bill and send it bill requiring automatic passed constitutional amendsmoke detection devices in ment designed to eliminate
to the floor.
'1igh r ise apartments and the "bedsheet" ballot in next
Unanimously Adopted
year 's presidential primary
·0ndominiwns .
The
measure,
ap
propria ling $344 million for
The Senate unanimously in Ohio .
construction
and
im•
provements at colleges and
-rrr- ·
universities, and another $238
million for similar. purposes
1 PIECE
at mental institutions, was
unanimously adopted in the
House Wednesday in record
Catalina &amp; Jantzen
time
less than 10
(47 Only)
minutes.
RlliDUCED
House sponsors of a major
· COLUMBUS (UP!) - The colleges and universities, and
NOW ONLY
drug abuse reform bill unaniOhio House unanimously $238 million for the same
mously cleared by the Senate
passed in 10 minutes without purpose at menial health
Polyester Knit
Wednesday planned to ask for
- dissent and sent to the Senate facillties . Lesser amounts are
REDUCED
agreement in Senate changes
. ·•
Wednesday a $678.8 million allocated for parks and
and send the proposal to Gov.
recreation,
wildlife,
capital improvements approJames A. Rhodes for
By Catalina, Jantzen. Cot priation having more money waterway safety aild emsignature.
tington
and Lori Lynn .
thansoughtbyGov. James A. ployment services conMeanwhile, a Senate
and
House struction projects.
Rhodes
REDUCED
Energy and Environment
House members took the
Democrats.
PANJ.!DUCED
. subcommittee was expected
The measure is the last opportunity to include approto issue a new energy bill
major appropriation to cover priations for four items
state government financing vetoed by Rhodes in the state
budget enacted in June.
for the next two years.
The_y .~re:
Values to $14.00
House Democrats proposed
~10 million in operating
FATHER IN HOSPITAL
a $649 capital outlay earlier
NOW
Mrs.
Jean
Murray, this year. Rhodes recom- funds for the University of
Lexington, Ky., and Bob mended spending only $528 Cincinnati, to·be sent directly
to the school.
Carnahan , Mentor, were million.
-$56 million for slate emThe capital budget as
called home by the serious
illness of their father, Delbert passed by the House would ploye pay raises, to be funIn Polyester knns and ble11ds .
Carnahan, a patient at the furnish $344 million for neled through the state
Street length and long .
Holzer Medical Center, construction
and
im- Controlling Board.
~1. 8 million for the new
provement projects at state
Gallipolis.
REDUCED
Ohio Rail Transportation AuthOrity.
.&lt;...
-415 million for operating
funds for the Department of
1'-·FREE ESTIMATE5-~~=~=.J1
Mental Health and Retardation.
Oh rnany winter days , it uses heat from
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker,
•OLitd&lt;10r air to warm your home . Gives
~Boui-neVIIJe,
chalnnan of
l:ex&lt;:e~ltio•nal heating economy that can "t
REDUCED
the House Finance Combe matched by other heating systems.
mittee, said etlstlng state
2 RACKS LADIES'
_
During th'e summer. it efficiently cools your ·
revenues would ' finance tbe
t;,jnorne . It's an all-electric. complete ly
plan Without wibalanclng the
RANGE FROM
r&amp;lJtomaltic comfort system . And Amana
budget: Republicans offered
OO··arguments.
.
. ·
: qLtaury assures you of lasting dependability
Reduced Up To
.,.lmd operating efficiency.

""
TOWER OF POWER under study as a possible new
source of electricity would utilize computer-aimed
mtrrors to focus the sun's rays on a.boile r atop the tower.
Water converted to high-pressure steam would be pumped
to a conventional steamturbine generator at the tower 's
hase. Research on the tower authorized by the Energy
Research and Development Administration is being done
by Honeywell solar energy scientists in Minneapolis.

PLASTIC
PIPE
SPECIALS
..[

assembly before quitting

'344

Y2 CPUC Plastic For Hot
or Cold Water Lines
Illltlot·

., ••

..

D&amp;J's

A

~

STAR SUPPLY

..

A PALM IS A PALM IS A PALM most places, but not
at Georgia's Marsh wood golf course. Smack in the middle
of the 16th green , "The Palmer Tree" was left standing a t
the suggestion of the des ign consultant, Arnold Palmer ,
for the course at The Landings, residentia l-resort community on Skidaway Island. It can be both good news and
bad news for golfers - a spot of shade fr om which to putt
or a trap 20 feet high.

MON., TUE., WED
THUR. SAT.
9:15 - 5:00
FRI. • 9:15 • 8:00

·suMMER

·I

•

LADIES

Capital improvements
SWIM SUITS
expanded inHouse vote

SPORT COATS

PANTSUITS

of an
na~
electric \heat

.30%~

COlTON DRESSES

pump

KNIT PUllOVER

DRESSES

SUMMER

SHiRTS .

40cyo
SHORTS, .TOPS,
CULOTTES· &amp; SKIRTS
30%

SALE -~

CONTINUES

SALE PRICES

2 RACKS, SUITS &amp;
SPORT

ro •4•o.
THE SHOE BOX·

70%

.•1 ·0~

E'Befor·e you replace your heating system.
out more ab6'ut ~;~n Amana heatpump .
··
·
a no-obligation estimate. call •

FOREMAN and ABBOTt .
1 .

.

.

Middleport, Oh•o

·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
I·

J ·

t·•·'

thought for tne dal
American writer Henry Thoreau said : "It lakes two to
speak the truth; one to speak,
the other to hear."

l
DUAL BIR.THDAYS were celebrated on NassauParadise Island ill the Bahamas where Camille Cooper
enjoyed her second birthday earlier this month along with
the Bahamas observing its second anniversary as an
independ~nt nation .
•

GOATS

SPORTSWEAR AND DRESSES

·

4.0%·
30%

DRESS &amp; CASUAL

40%

BLOUSES

. By · -Lady Manhattan ,
'sleeve. short sleeve.
sleeveless.
REDUCED

.30

By WilLIAM E. CLAYTON
WASHINGTON (UPI) Congress has said "no" for
the seCQnd time to President
Ford's proposal to gradually
lift oil price controls.
The action creates an impasse which - unless it is
quickly resolved - could
result in the CQntrols expiring
all at once Aug. 31, causing
irrunediate and sharp rises in
gasoline and other petroleum
prices.
The House voted 223-189
Wednesday night to reject
Ford's plan to gradually
remove the oll price controls
over a 39-mon th period ending November, 1978. The
Senate voted 50-44 in favor of
Ford's plan. But a rejection
by only one branch of
Congress is enough to kill his
proposal.
That
leaves
two
possibilities: the present
controls could expire Aug. 31,
or they could be extended.
Some economists say expiration could raise retail
gasoline prices as much as 10
or 12 cents a gallon and have
an inflationary impact
throughout the economy,
s ince fue 1 costs are a·n
element in the prices of many
products . Others say the
effects would be less
severe ,
Ford has said - and
Federal
Energy
Administrator Frank Zarb
repeated it Wednesday - the
President will veto any extension without a congressional acceptance in some
form of his phase-out of
controls.
" The President feels
strongly that additional
delays of any variety can only
deepen
this
nation's
vulnerability (to foreign
oil)," Zarb wrote Rep .
Clarence Brown, R.Qhio, a
leading Ford supporter in the
debate.
Later, Zarb said the administration is " ex~remely

:

DANCE SET
A square dance will be held
from 9 p. m. to 12 midnight
Sa turday at the Racine
Junior High School with
music by the String ·Dusters
and Olive Weber with Bob
Pickett calling. Donations
will be accepted at the door.
The dance, •t.aged by the
Beegle keunion Ason :, is open
to the public.

AT WORKSHOP
ATHENS
Jennifer
Machir, Rl. 3, Pomeroy, is
a !tending
a
summer
workshop, " Families in
Crises," this week at Ohio
University . The workshop is
designed to aid clergymen,
COWl selors , a;nd teache rs in
the study of the rOITiplex
pr o blt:rll~ LdC ing lhe family
today.

waS

.

'

..

Corn is stunted
United Press International
Jim Siebert held the freshpicked corn in his hand and
shook his head.
"They 'll never fill .out it'll be small kernels and
small coba," Siebert said .
" The heat and dry stress
during pollination doesn't
take long to cut a field by 20 to
30 bushels per acre. I figure
we've lost about 21 bushels an
acre already."
. Iowa Agriculture Secretary
Robert Lounsberry, who
accompanied Siebert on a
tour of his 341H!cre farm
north of Des Moines Wednesday, agreed.
" Yeah, the pl'ognosis isn't
for a bumper crop this year
for you," Lounsberry said.
Earlier · this summer,
agriculture observers
estimated an average corn
yield of a record-high 109
bushels per acre in Iowa . But
dry weather could cut Iowa
}ields by 50 bushels per acre,
,lopping 650 million bushels
from the state's production
and costing farmers -lots of
money.
RelenUess heat scorched
crops in Iowa , KanSas,
Missouri and the Dakotas and
projections of record or
bumper CQrn crops withered
in the blazing sun . Corn stalks
browned and leaves curled.
Grain sorghum leaves lay
twisted and deformed by the
heat.
Hazy . hot, humid weather
gripped a vast belt of the
midlands and the mercury
soared again into the 90s and

100-plus ranges with little
relief in sight.
Farmers in the heat-baked
nnidlands may well have been
envious of their. neighbors in
Illinois and Indiana, where
prospects for bumper crops
remained good.
"I've been told by my
counterparts in Illinois and
Indiana that they still have
some of tlle best prospects,"
Lounsberry said. "They've
been getting an average of an
inch of rain a week .
But Indiana and Jllinois
appeared to be the only corn
belt regions in good shape.
Kansas CQrn and grain
sorghum crops already have
been permanenUy damaged
by the hot, dry weather.
Agricultural officials warned
a healthy downpour is needed
in the next few days to halt
the losses.
" It's worsening a little bit
each day," said Max Johnson, an official of the
Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation Service .
Johnson said his office has
already received a few
disaster relief applications
from corn and sorghum
farmers whose crops are
useless except for silage or
hay . Soybeans also have
suffered damage.
"This isn't a great acreage
at this point but it's right at
the point of getting that
way," Johnson said. " [f we
don't get some relief in the
next week we'll probably get
quite a few applications."

proposal, this would ha ve
risen to $13.45 a barrel, close
to the present uncontrolled
price, over 39 months .
Ford earlier had proposed
deCQntrol over 30 montlls .
The House rejected that
proposal 262-t67 on July 22.
In another vote, which
signaled ils intention, the
House Wednesday refused to
amend an energy bill with a
modified version of the Ford
plan . It substituted a
proposed tough pricing plan
that would roll back the price
of uncontrolled oil to $7.50 a
barrel.
MARKET REPORT
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
July 26,1975
SLAUGHTER STEERS Standard Holstein 800-1100
lbs. 21.25-22.00.
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS Good &amp; Choice 700-1,000 lbs .
21, Standard 700-1,000 lbs. 20.
SLAUGHTER COWS Commercia l 22.45, Utility
18.56-20, Canner &amp; Cutter
15.75-20.10, Bulls over 1,000
lbs. 19.56-22.
VEAL - Choice &amp; Prime
1%-225 lbs . 3J, 226-265 lbs. 35.
HOGS - U.S. 1-3 1%-240
lbs. 55.70, U.S. 1-3 240-260 lbs .
55.35, Sows, U.S. 1-3 3()()..500
lbs. 40, Boars 3~00 lbs.
40.10, Pigs (by .head) 20--10
lbs. '1:1, 40-60 lbs . 37, 60 lbs .
plus 42.
YEARLING HEIFERS Good &amp; Choice 5~00 lbs.
18.56-23.50.
STEER CALVES -Good &amp;
Choice ·under 300 lbs. 25.75,
4oth500 lbs. 20.75-22.25.
BULL CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice 300-400 lbs. 25.75, 400500 lbs. 18.75-22, 500-600 lbs .
22.
HEIFER CALVES - Cows
&amp; Calves (by head) 232.50,
cows {by head ) 153.
BABY CALVES ( By Head )
- Beef 23-40, Holstein &amp;
Brown Swiss 11-28.

. i

'·

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I I•.

l
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might he thinking, "If he did
it, so can I."
According to Fred Cooper,
a former derelict and now
counselor at the Holy Name
Center for Homeless Men,
recovered alcoholics and
Bowery derelicts sometimes
understand each other only
too well.
"There's a feeling of closeness which is healthy - up to

a point/' he said. "We even
call each other bums. But we
have to be careful. I might
get too emotionally involved
with a man's problems and
lose perspective, and he
might get resentful and say,
'I've seen you in the gutter.
Have you forgotten what it's
like ?'"
Nevertheless ,
the
recovered Bowery alcoholics
agreed, their familiarity With
the skid row mentality helps
them in their work.

" Alcoholics are .the hest

con artists on earth," said
Buford Peterson of the
Fellowship Center. " But a
kick in the seat sometimes
works wonders - as long as
they understand you can't be
maneuvered .''
Peterson, who said he
couldn't remember the births
of his first four children " or
much about their growing
up" but who now enjoys a full ·
family life, said he believed
90 per cent of Bowery
alcoholics could be helped to
lead constructive lives.
"Sure, everybody out there
wants to continue drinking,"
he sald. "But nobody wan is to
continue suffering."
While the Bowery drinker's
road to recovery is full of
dangerous curves, the former
guzzlers
said,
just
recognizing that fact is part

We ·show and Tell

t.sk&lt;'&lt;l if he viewed Brezhnev·s rema rks -as renotmcing
the oo ca ll ed Brezhnev Doctrine, under which the Soviet
Unirm claimed the right to
intervenr in Eastern Europe
and used this to justify the
1968
invas ion
of
Czechoslovakia,
Kissinger
said only . " it indicates there
should be 'lQ interference in
the affair~ of other nations ."
Toda y's session wa s
marked by a walkout by
Turkish Premier Suleyman
Dcmirel when Arcbhbishop
Makarios, president of
Cyprus, r ose to s peak .
Turkey does not recognize
Makarios as the Cypriot head
of state and Dcmirel wa s not
present wh en Makarios said
the Turkish invasion of
Cyprus last s ummer was a
flagrant v iolation of the
"Final Act" the delegates are
here to sign.
Brezhnev looked well . He
spoke slowly but in a strong,
clear voice as he addressed
the leaders of East and West
Europe and Canada and the
United States.
He left a dinner given by
President Urho Kekkonen of
Finland Wednesday nillht

"

:.~

because he was unwell.

" It is not true that Mr. &lt;'·
···
Brezhnev left the dinner :;~
early because of ill health," ·'h
the Soviet spokesman said .
" He explained to President.
Kekkonen that he had to work ·:
6n his speech to the con· . ~
terence . The president "
agreed . Mr.
~rezhnev "
worked all evening on h.is
speech .''
In his warnin g against ..
meddlin g in the internal" :
affairs of other CQuntries.:
Brezhnev did not refer . ~
spedfically to the West . But
the impli ca lion wa s un - ""
mistakable .
''
Among the agreements in-' ~
eluded in the " Final Act" to ·';
be signed Friday are pledges ::
to increase human CQntacts
between
Eastern
and
Western Europe, something
the Soviets previously have .
resisted strongly.
'
Brezhnev 's words ap-' '
pea red to mean Moscow will ·~
interpret these undertakings ;;
in its own way and does not ...
want the West to tell it how to
act.

'"

...

,,

~------------------FINAL

LADIES &amp; OtiLDREN'S
Dress &amp; Casu a Is
Values to $18.00

--------------------------·

LADIES' SHOES
Dress &amp; Casuals
Values to $19.00
---------------------------~

LADIES' SHOES
Dress &amp; Casuals
Values to $20.00
----~---------------------

1 Group Odds &amp; Ends
Children's &amp; Ladies

final
Sale

96~

10% OFF All Ladies' Sandals
·---------------------------

of the batUe.
"You work with someone
for several weeks, then
ruddenly he comes stumbling
into the building," Cooper
said.
"But if you've been there
before - you know this isn't
the last.inning of the game."

ALL SALES FINAL!

Marguerite's Shoes
BETTY OHLINGER
102 E. Main ·

TOPS

IN

IT; .

before the meal was served. ...,
' ·"
But a Soviet delegation ~,
spokesman denied this was ~

. BOlTOMS

Pomeroy

Here's a shoe thal's big
news in bottoms. It' s a
one piece so"le th at's
scooped out in the
middle for one of the
neatest silhouettes
around! And there's
top interest, too, with
stitch detailing a n d a
monk ·strap that pufls
the look together .

·1·.:r-··1

Headlin er fashion from
Connie!
brown or black

'

. tfii :FACTS!
behind fiile home

.furnishings ·and:
appliance$
*QUALITY
AT THE

beritage hoUse

LOWE$T

POSSIILI
PRICB

:MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

sober."

Now, he said, he sees "my
former self " in the men he
counsels a nd hopes they_

- _,
.'

de ten te . 1\ priority goal is to
find ways tu reduce armed
forces and armaments in
Central Europe without
diminishing the security of
anyone. On the CQntrary, to
the benefit of all."
" It is the materialization of
detente which is thC essence
of all that should make peace
in Europe truly durable and
solid," Brezhnev said. " And
here uppermost in our mind
is the task of ending the arms
race and achieving tangible
results in disarmament ."

disappointed" over the House prices .
rejection and that his agency
Present oil price controls
is
"making necessary apply to about 6(1 per cent of
preparations for an orderly domestic oil - the so-&lt;:alled
transition" when the controls "old oil," produced from
expire. He didn't say how the · wells existing in 1972. The
transition would work or spell Controlled price is $5 .25 a
out what would happen to barrel.
Under
Ford's

By BRENT BOWERS
NEW YORK (UPI) - Jim
Durick woke up in a flophouse
on Christmas Day three
years ago so sick he couldn't
walk.
" I was shaking so hard I
couldn 't even hold on to a
cigarette," Durick recalled.
"I tried to drink some beer,
but I couldn't get it to my lips.
I was spilling it aU over me."
That's when Durick longtime panhandler and skid
row drifter - decided to quit
drinking.
Today, he's one of a
growing number of former
Bowery derelicts who have
stayed in the ramshackle
neighborhood on Manhattan's
Lower East Side to try to
CQ8X other drunks out of the
gutter.
"A lot of the fellows say
they can handle booze," said
the nattily dressed, 52-yearold medical aide at the
Manhattan Bowery Project's
detoxification center.
''They'll say they've never
been in trouble and there they ·
are, filthy, in rags, and
sleeping on the sidewalks."
Dan
Donovan,
a
caseworker for the same
organization, remembers his
days on the streets.
"I was given the last rites
three times, but it didn't faze
me," Donovan, 42, said. "As
soon as I was well enough,l'd
hit the bottle again. My life
was a series of blackouts."
Then, he said, " some sort
of. miracle" happened.
un wasn't really a conscious decision, but I became
a patient in a special
program and somehow found
out I didn 't get hurt when I

\
1

Soviet Jews from Russia .
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger said he thought it
was a "coociliatory speech ."
Brezhnev made a strong
appeal
for
East-West
military detente in Europe
after the Helsinki conference
and for renewed efforts to
speed up disarmament.
"The Soviet Union," Brezhnev said, " has CQnsistenUy
supported the idea that the
co nferen ce
should
be
followed by a further
development of military

Fornter skid row guzzlers help out

WINTER &amp; SUMMER
WT. SUITS

lf2 PRICE

·

; ;:~ Ford denied wishes again by House

BEND
TIRE CEN.TER ,

Three major hills facing

an address to summit leaders
from 35 nations of East and
West Europe, the United
States and Canada.
Some delegates saw in the
speech a r;5iation of the
" Brezhnev
trine," under
which the yiet Union after
the invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 claimed the
right to Intervene anywhere
m _E astern Europe.
.
Others saw it as a warning
to the U.S. Congress not to
link a trade agreement with
Russia with emigration of

&lt;"

-

-

'

I

Special paint
saves btackboara

ft

..

Russians pre.f er no _meddling from the West .

Ne_,v energy .bill shaping

Polly's Point-a.-..
l

.1

Milldleport, Ohio

-

�'

v
I

:~J(gWi3)1)i:;"':::;;;r=~"For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

lJNc:nmhle these four Jumbleo,
one letter to each oquare, to

them out so fast?

I

2 FAM I LY Yar d Sa te , dre sses

2/SIGNS

from chil d ren's size 3 to
women' s size 221.·2 . Other
childre n 's clothing, odds
and ends , end of Sec:;:ond St .,
Sy ra cuse . Phone 992 -6888 .
Lavendar .
7 . ) J 2tc

'

I K)

) I

II

DJELEY

2

Now arranre the cireled letttnl
io form the surprise answer, aa

r:t: I

(Aa.w~n

Jumble~~:

DRYLY

BEGUN

SUBURB

Y ~•terd•r'•

~-·

I I )
lomorro"")

tfftil

7 30 31&lt;

l

Now listed white
Phone 99:1 20 81

__.... - ....-------------

Court of
Common P leas.
Probat e Div isi on
24. 3 1, 3tc

Wanted
CAS H pa id for a ll m akes an d
models of mobile homes .
Phone ar ea code 614 423
9531.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 21563

Estate of William

Deceased.

BE A
"SENTINEL,
CARRIER"

B. Witte,

Notice is hereby given that
Sarah S. W i tre , of Route 3,
Pomeroy , Ohio , ha s been duly
appointed Executri x of th e
Estate of William B . Witte ,
deceased , lllte ot Meigs

Sy ra cuse

Nur si ng

Home .
7 30 -3tc

sou th o f
Richard
Starting
through
7 JO 3t c

PORC H Sa l e ; 9 a .m 5 p .m
T h u r sday t hrough Sa turday ,
clothes, meta l cabinet, high
cha i r , carpet remnant. etc
T hir d house fr om Tuppers
Plains f irehouse
7 30 3tp
YARD SALE, "t h ree days,
Th u rsday , Friday, Satur
day , J uly 31 t o A ug. 2.
Cl oth in g , typewr iT e r , dishes ,
pot s
and
pan s,
baby
bl ankeT s, toys , canning iar s
and
l i d s . Across f rom
Chester
G ra de
Schoo l
· For more in f ormation , ca ll
Ha r old John son 98 5 4259
7 79 Jlp

Creditors are required to
their claims with said
fiduciAry within tour· months .
Dated this 14th day of Ju ly
1975 ,

file

In Pomeroy

Phone 992-2156

Manning 0 . Webster
Judge
Court of Common Plea s,
Probat e D i vision
(7) 17, 24, 31, J t c

TODAY

LEGAL NOTICE
Th e T uppers Pla ins -Chester
Water District is accepting
b i d s for c lea n in g and pai nting
the insi d e and outs i de ot two
(']) gr ou nd s to r age tanks and
four (4) e leva ted tanks until
Thursday , Augus l 8, at 1 p . m .
B id s a r e to be su b mit ted on
a per sing le tank basis and all
ta nk s as a g r o up . Bid s are to
give a dollar cos ! br ea kdown
o f la bo r and mat eria l on a
si ng l e tan k basis .
Spe c ifi cations.
and
in
s tru c tion s tor biggers with all
necessa ry Far m€' rs Hom e
Adminis tr a tion con tra c t
documents a r e avai lab le and
may be p ic k ed u p in the office
at Ch es te r, Ohio . Mail i n g
add ress , Bo x 7, Chester
Inspection tours of t h e tanks
wil l leave from the office al
10 00 Mondays and Fridays .
012 3,3 1; ( 8 )7. Jtc

Racine

Social
Events

By Mrs. Francis Morris
The Booster Class of First
Baptist Church School met at
the home of Mrs. Marjorie
Grimm Friday evening July
Sports Briefs
18. The opening song for the By United Press In·
meeting was "Some Golden
Untted Press International
Daybreak" and scripture was
MISSION VIEJO, Calif.
Ps .. 91. Prayer was given by (UP!) - A slaNtudded cast
Mlss Vera
Beegle.
A of gold medal wirmers, back
devotional program by Mrs. from the championship swim
Grimm included readings.
meet in Cali, Colwnbia, head
Mrs. Grimm closed the for more competition at the
program with prayer. After a
Mission Viejo_ Swimming
business session a silent Champions Friday through
auction was held and potluck Sunday.
refreshments were served.
Tim Shaw, Steve and Bruce
Mrs .
Frank
Cleland Furniss, all of Long Beach,
retUrned home after a week Calif., and Shirley Babashoff,
at Holzer Medical Center.
Valerie Lee and Brian
Mr . and Mrs. Donald S. Goodell, all ol Mission Viejo,
Parsons of Athens Route and are among the top swirruners
their
son-in-law
and entered in the competition.
daughter, Rev. and Mrs.
More than 80 teams and
Fred Thorn and children, eight foreign countries will be
Robert and Mary,
of represented during the thr ee·
Homestead, Fla., visited at day meet.
the home of Mr . and Mrs .
Critt Bradford, Tuesday
NASHVILLE , Tenn . (UP! )
afternoon .
- A trio of young Hawaiians
Mrs . Marty Kasser of
overcame their cases of jet
Colwnbus spent the weekend
lag Tuesday to make an
with Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
impressive showing in the
Cozart.
first qualifying round of tbe
Mrs. Clara Martin ol
United
States
Golf
Hw\tlngton Beach, Calif. is
Association Junior. Chamvisiting her daughter, Mrs .
pionships here.
Betty Christpforson. Mr .
"It's the earliest I've ever
Robert Martin came for the
played golf,'' quipped 17weekend and she acyear-old Clyde Rego of
companied him back to
Honolulu, who tied tor the
Cali,fornla.
early lead with a par 71 on tbe
Mr. and Mrs. Kyle Stwnp
Richland Country Club
and her mother, Mrs . Clara
course. " An 8 :30 tee-off time
Roush of Akron arrived
here would be 3:30 a .m. in
Saturday evening. Mr: and Hawaii.!.
Mrs. Stwnp spent a weekend
Close on Rego's beels was
with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Beegle
Lellehua
High
School
and Mrs. Roush visited her
tearrunate Kalua Makalena,
· sister, Vera Beegle . .
16, who carded a 72. At 73 was
Monica arid JaneU Birch of
. Kekaha, Hawaii's Tomrtly
BeUewe·returned home after Hines.
spending ten days with their
&lt; '
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs .,
·Elza Birch and Mrs. Erruna .

Saifer.

!IfF. and Mrs. Edison Brace
&amp;net Mrs. Jack Adams· visited

r.trl and Mrs. Ronald
Suriday at Cool;ville.

-----------'

Mobile Homes for Sale
MU ST se tl i975 tr ave l trail er ,
18 ft . w i th t ip out r oom ,
c arpeted , a ir conditioned,
many ex tr as
Will take
Tra de 1n Johnson' s Trailer
Par k , Rt . 7, across from
B lu e
F ou n ta 1n
Motel ,
Ga llipolis
7 30 6tc

Wanted To Buy

1969 C HEVY Pickup , 783
Engme . 3 speed. long bed ,
tour nearly ne w tir,es. plu s 2
that have never been used .
N ew ballerv . and ex hau sl .
Maroon pa inl . extril cl ean .
runs p er f ec t ~ 11 50 Phon e
381:1 8869
I J l 11 p

DISCA R OED lawn mowers ,
t i ller s , riding mowers . e t c
Phon e 7&lt;17 30 7-t
. 7 167 6t c

For Sale
NICE .
g en tle
Palamino
yea rli ng co l t . and 1 ches tnut
sorrel , very gentl e . Phon e
1.1? 4? 1 1 or phone 747 686 3,

CARPENTRY
WORK
Ce ,ling , pa n eling, floor,nq . - ·

--·

19 11 VEGI\ car , exce ll e n t
conc ·• :on Atso. elec dryer
P'"l o•; e (~011 B87 ?052 .
7 74 6tc
19 17 HONDA

Ph one 99?5716
7. 24 -61c

7 77 tfc

PORJA-COOL"'
· ROO_M·to-ROOM

TRA I LER l ot in Midd l eport .
Ca ll 997 5434 .
7 16 26t c

G I BSO N Air
Conditione r .
?&lt;t ,OOO BTU, hard l y used .
tit.c.e new Pho ne 992 2386 .
7 31 4tc
SH AS T A ca rnper , 18 fl . sleeps
6 Ph on e 9J9 51 61
8 3 6t (
REG
O u ar rer Hors.e and
Paint co lt Pho ne 742 3?67 .
7 31 t fc
.10

IN
COPPERTO NE
Fr1g •daire el ectr,c range ,
se l f c lean :nq oven . Call 9·19
&lt;9 "&gt;J
7 31 6t c
~· ---STEREO
n1ode rn deS. 1gn ,
rad 10 . a m tm , 8 •rack t ape
comb"la' •on
Balance
~10? '9
or ' erms Call 992
'Q65 .
7 29 1 fc
1? 11

HOND I\ 350 , .1 cyli nder
Very t ine Phone 949 2225
7 ?9 dtc

' REAL GOOD BUY J
Saw
f il in g eq u ipment . Gravely
w1 th u 11 equipment . Ca ll
uarotd w'o'lnson ." 985 -4159 .
7 29 4fp
MI L K cow for sa l e Phone 997.
S78?
7 29 -3tc

RM . op1 . w!ln walt -to -wa ll
carpet, 104. Spring Ave., .
P'om eroy . Ca ll 992 5908 .
6 -22 -tfc

Cl.'L.' NII-!Y
MO tll le
Hom e :
Park. R t . 33. t en mil es north '
of P'omeroy . Large lots with
conc ret e pat ios, sidewalkS ,
ru nner s an d Off street,
:;arking . Pho'ne 992 7tl79 .
1
12 31 -tfc
,·. ~ :. . .1 R0 01\~ furnished a n d
u ntu rni~ ~' e d
apa rtments '
Ph on e ll 9') 5·l3&lt;1 .
11 12-tfc

AUCTION

Sun., Aug. 3-11:30 AM
Tuppers Plains, Ohio • Rt. 7
See Complete Listing in

1\lr.

and Mrs. Edison Brace
~~ &amp;itiD'd&amp;y in ·- earkerswith Mr. and Mrs . Tom
~ and vlllted Mr. and
Mr~. · Fred
Brace
at
~· Ky., . Tuesday.

AP T I ik e n ew, 3 roo 'm s , with.
large bath , tabletop ra nge. · .
ta r ge c!oset. East Main St .•.
Pomeroy See to app r ecia t e'

bq

rh on
e Gall ;pof; s durJ!J.!Ld.!U&lt;,
7699 . evenings tltl6 .9539. ·

l.l,ol,

o~

·L

to u c

',j

oy Ohro

RIVER FRONT - 3 bedroom

-

M ob il e

hom e

14 x 6B , 2 bedrooms , drilled well

and sto cked p ond .

POMEROY -

Sun. 7/27 &amp; 8/1 Paper

Nea r slor es.

good 5 r oom house on- little
trav e led street. N a t. gas
f u rnac e . Por c h and basement.

I

l&amp;VMeat
Processing
Ohio ROute7, North- East of
Tupper Plains .
Coolville. Ohio
Phone ; 667· 360'8
Op e n
Monday
thru
Saturday 1 : 00 to 8 : 00 .

SfRit&lt;.J~

mo .

LARGE BUT NICE - 7 room

Service'
Nathin liggs
Radiator Soeot:ialld

SMITH N~LSON '
MQTO.ll$_,_ INC.

Owners

:-~·h· .

7- 17 1 mo .

L

'l EPT I C TANK S c l ea ned .
Mode rn Sanitat ion 992 3954
or 99 2 7JJ9
9 18 t f c
GENERAL Repair , c l ean -up
and
hauling ,
cu tting ,
welding,
ca rpentry,
plumb i ng , elec . maso nr y
and gene r a l remode lin g .
Ca ll Skii -Po ol. Phone 992 5 126 .
6-17 H e

,..,_..,1,.

POmeroy

SEPTIC TA 'N K S CL~;.•: r:.,rED
Reason able R ATES . Phone
.L16 &lt;1 782 Gallipo l is . Jo hr
Russel l , owner
4 9

.If I

-WILL

TRIM or cu t t r ees a
shr ubbe r y and paint roo ...
Phone 949 -3221 or 742 -444
6-24 261p

~eal Estate for Sale

WE NEED GOOD 3 TO 4 --------------1
BEDROOM RENTALS . CALL ,4 ] AC RE S of ground with
s.p ring . P hon e
742 -3942 .

742 -582 3 or
.
7-31 -Jtc

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

Custom-Built
5 BR. HOME
2 112
baths.
fir eplace .
complete! y
carpeted,
located on Lincoln HilL
ta·rge··secluded lot .

Shown by
appointment only

UTrLE ORPHAN

-

~

----~

HOME

Improvement and
se rvice . Anything
f1 xe d a round the hom e from
r oof t o basemen!. You'lllike
our work and r ates . Phone
7425081.
7-17 -tfc
~epair

WALL
paper
hang i ng ,
pa 1nting, and panelling .
Phone 742 -5081 .
7-27 - 12t c

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

'lbu are about
destrol.j this
beautiful
buildlnqr
What are
40ur

porches, garag e. ONLY
$13.000 .
MIDDLEPORT Older
home in good condition Close to shaRping. 2 story

trame, 3 BR , 2 baths.
dining R.. Util ity R ..
storage bldg . LOVELY
FOR $8,300.
POMEROY
Mobile
Home - 12x 60 , 3 BR , air
cond., $4,500.
POMEROY
Mobile

building s . JUST $7,600
down.- bal. $290.54 per

Fred Voshel,

AuctiOII"eer

1.--~---------------------

terest.
ROUTE 681 - 135 Acres ,
just $123 per acr e, part
minerals,

ab9ut

~

·v o.

o Tf&lt;EE Trim-ming ; "'"1o
years experience . I nsured.
free es timates . Call 992 -3057,
Coolville . Phone { 1 ) . 667
3041
4-30 -tfc

·,ear

;: ~

AstroGrapt:l

M./JC5

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

WINNIE
SHANGHAI BETTER IF

YOU DON'T 5PEND

IN FACT, I WAS
HOPIN0 YOU'D 5eE
' A l.DT OF HIM ON

lHIB VISIT!

7tME WIIH HIM?

MAINTAINED DURING'
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

L HAVE AN
IDEA I
ALREADY
HA~E ;

WENDY

f

VXBIB

MASON FURNITURE

XOTNEP

HERMAN GRinE
VA.

UDE
HM

NA
OEH

N A

EM

EMVXNEP
NE
EMV

·-

LRBOADIB
VM

XOTNEP
HMNEP

HM;
RMVA

NE
VXB
VM

NV . - YOIZ

QNRAME
RNVVRB
:=::==:::_.Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE DOG 'S KENNEL IS NOT THE
PLACE TO KEEP A SAUSAGE. - DANISH SAYING
----'--,--~-.---:;~I--8-E_T_A_B_O_D_V_,---=~---'---;j
rc 187~ KIDI Fcoluno Syndlcote. lac.)

'

GOOD RADIO

GLORY BE!!
LISTEN AT THAT
WHISSLIN' TEA

COULD HEAR IT
A MILE OFF- -

i

I

1 you mtend to play a leading
role.

GEMINI (MOJ 21-Juno 20) H"s .

m 1s e . Others await your ._ .....,
leadership
• 11

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-F•b.

Take the initiative in settling
fam ilY gr ievances . Others will 1 ~ 1 ·''
look to you for guidance af)d , ~,(,
follow your example.
IV / l

CANCER (June 21-JuiJ 22) H"s

PISCES (fob. 2o-Morch 20) ._ •·

important to one you 've known
for a long time 10 knqw you 're
behind her In a matter she's
concerned abou t.

Cha nces are your ideas will be -~-.
better th an those ot associates;;~.~
today . You 'll have to be more ·- fo rceful to get them across. ~ ~

LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 22) Others

~~:

want to see you succeed in a
very important endeavor . In
fact , they' ll take surprising
steps to help you.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S..,C. 22) You
have a way with words today to
make them a real tool . Others
will react. You say the right
things at the right time.

LIBRA_ (Sopt. 23; 0cl. 23) -

, Your

-~~:

Aug. t , 1975

,

~Birthday :.....:::
You will have a considerable !;.·:-.::
r ise in status this coming year ., t .. o..
Thi s will be due lo some., 11"'· -·
myster ious , unusual
hap. penings early in the year .' "~~
tNEWSPAPE R !-:NTERPR11iE ASSN . I

I •t \ ' t I ...,

I

KITTLE
' .

$5,000

down . bal. like rent.
THE HOM E FOR REAL
ESTATE
SALES
IN
MEIGS COUNTY .
Pl:t.ONE 992 -2?59
-(1

'\

'

.

19),:.~

an opportune lime to indicate
to a fr iend who borrowed
something that she could
return. it now without causing a
problem .

?- 3 1

'·

•••

'

It:

CRYPTOQUOTES

r

r

to work

One letter simply stands for another. In thio sample A iJ
used for the three L's, X lor the two O"s. etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and format~on of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different

Phone 773-5591

. WMPO FM ..• STEREO 92

.

w ..

...

----------

WMPO .. . 1390

~

Jc;;:;=::_

TSK.':- TOOK
us 127
RESTAURANTS
TOMAKE/2
MILES .'.'- )

Home - 14x 70 , 3· BR, l lf2 .
DEXTER - 157 acres ni ce
clean
land ,
House

'

.

large BR . bath, TV room ,
lovely
kitchen.
full

utility R . Nat . gas furnace,

.

h :c;::;=;:

feelinqs?

ExtAvATING. doZer,- iOader
and ba ckhoe work ; se p tic
t a11ks
i nstalled ;
dumr
truc k s and to -boys for hire
w ill haul fill d irt. top soi
l imestone and gravel ; Ca lt
Bob or Roger. Jeffers , day
phone 992 -7089 , night phonE
992 3525 or 992 52Jii.

basement,
own
water
system plus tap. porch,
carpor-t, large garage, 2
trailer hookups for extra

-.

..··'"-.

a

SEW I "Nc
MA· CHI Ne :
Repbirs , service, all makes
992 2284. T he Fabri&lt;; Shop ,
Pomeroy . Au t hdr .. zects inger
Sal es and Service . We
sharp en Sc1sso r s.
3-29 -tfc

PH. 992-3118

-

'

......

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

6-2S-26tp

~ ·

...

BACKHOE fo r renl. hour or
contract, r eg. or excavatory
type. Se p tic tanks in s talled .
Bill Pu llins , ph one 992 -2478 .
7 -24-26tc

-- ----

"I
•
__.'

-

WOULU YUU BELIEVE?
Build an all stee l b uilding at
P o l e Barn prices? Golden
Giant A ll -Stee l Build ings,
Rt . 4, Box 148 . Waverly ,
Oh io . Phon e 947 -2296.
7-24 -ttc

ROOI-tNt.,
::. pout1ng
alumLnum and vinyl siding,
c omplete
remod.elin ·Q .
Phone 7of2 -6273 or (.)0.4) 773 5684 . Free estimates .

Ridge

~

.

7-1l -90tc

CLU!&gt;E. IN - Love 1y no nte
consisting of 2.77 Acres. 3

income . JUST LOOK,
S28,000 , Call now . ·
A RADIO OPERATOR'S
DREAM - High on a h ill ,
(VERY PRIVATE ) 1112
acre, 2 nice BR. bath.

---~~_,.

6091.

ELWOOD BO WE R ~ t&lt;t:,...Att&lt;
-- Sweepe rs , toaste rs , iron"s
a ll sm all appliances . Lawr
mower , nex t to ';; tat e High
way Ga r age on Route 7
Phone 985 3825.
4- 16-tf

swers 8; Ounce of Preventlo" 10;. Blue

so

LITTLE ORPR.A.N

EXCAVA TING ,
bacKhoe ,
doz er
and dit cher . Gas,
e l ectric and water lin e
buria l. basemen ts, footers ,
se ptic sy stems and brush
c lean ing . Will haul f il l dirt ,
top soil , sand and gravel,
lim es tone for dr iveways and
roads. Phon e Charles R .
Hatfi e ld , Backhoe Se rvice.
Rl. I. Rutland, Ohio, 742 -

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

'•

..,i r.

~Q~~

F rom ·the largeSt T'(ucl( Or
. Bulldozer Radiator· to the
_s ill all est lje_ater Cor~ .

NOW OPEN
Larry and Vivian Hopps

' I
_..

Quartet 13.
•
6 :35-Columbus Today • 6 : ~5-Mornlng Report 37 Farmt lme 10.
Thus . •s a sl.arter agree that
6:55-News 13.
NORTH
31 an immediate lour notrump
7:0G-Today 3.•.15; A. M America 6.13 : CBS News
• Q6
response to partne(s opening
8,10 .
¥A 10 9
. bid or o n e. two or three
8 :0G-Lassle 6;. Captain Kangaroo 8: Schoolles 10;
notrump is a plain raise and
• K 10 53
Sesame Street 33.
A A Q 10 6
does not ask for aces.
8:34&gt;-Big
Valley 6: Popeye 10.
WEST
North "s lour notrump shows
EAST
8:55--&lt;:huck
White Reports 10.
IH to 16 points. His plus was
• A 91
• 8 '3 2
9:0()-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue • .15; Muriel Stevens 8;
the three 10 spots. South jumps
¥ 87652
¥H
111'1 .
Captain Kangaroo 10: Morning with D. J . 13;
to six because he holds 17 points
• Q 864
. 12
Consumer' s World 33.
plus one 10 and two nines .
.. J 3
.. 875 2
9:JO-Not
For Women Only 3; Dinah ! 6: Galloping
The slam makes easily when
SOUTH IDI
Gourmet
8; New Zoo Revue 13.
the jack or clubs drops on the
• K J 10 4
lO:oo-celebrlty
Sweepstakes 3,4,15: Spin -Off 8,10:
second lead. it !ailed to drop ,
¥ KQ3
Dinah!
13;
Jody.
' s Body Shop 33 ,
·
,.u)-'
,.,.J '
South would have had to locate
• AJ 9
10 :34&gt;-Wheel ot Fortune 3.4,15; Gambit 8,10;
the queen or diamonds.
A K 94
Designing Women 33.
.
':t t ,·,
ll :OG-High Rollers 3.~. 15 ; One Life to Live 6; Tat.
. '"' ''
tletales 8.10.
11 :34&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,15: Br ady Bunch 13;
. ,,
Wt'st
:\urt h t:as l
SQu\t"r
A reader from Illinois wants
Midday
~
~
Love
of
Life
8,10.
to know what the correct
11 :55-Take Kerr 8: Dan I~Ml's World 10.
~ 1
response to partner "s opening
12
:0G-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3.15; Sho'f'"OHS 13;
, : · bid or one diamond is when you
Pass
4 :"'1
Pass
Bob Braun' s 50·50 Club 4; News 6,8,10; Mister
:
hold
Pass
Pass
Rogers 33.
49764 •AI02 +J3
12 :34&gt;-Jackpotl 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search For
Opening lea d
•K 97 4'.
Tomorrow 8,10; Electric Company 33.
."
The answer is that you should
12
:55-NBC
News 3,15.
respond one notrump unless you
1:OG-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
have some s pecial partnership
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Young and Tho Restless 10; Not For Women Only
When you play Blackwood agreement that you. nev~r
15; Villa Alegre 33.
s hould you use all rour·notrump bypass a lour-card major suit.
.
WRA.T!
1:
34&gt;-Days
Of Our Lives 3.~.15; Let' s Make A Deal
YES,
bids as ace requests?
In thai case you respond one
6,13; As tho World Turns 8,10; Folk Guitar 33.
That is the simple way to play spade. .
.
.
HOW 'S1I' HAS Bli/IWERED
2:00-$10,000
Pyramlll 6,13; Guiding Light 8.10;
"IE5- WriHOOT
~:~
the convention. Later on you With eight high-card pomts,
tKTO eXIt HAHOS - 11' IS
- ~
OOU9"! SIIE KHOWS
Woman
33.
·
"
'"
SIMPLE - SHE WILL 6E WITH and your partners might want you are too s trong to pass and
All "lltAT
2:
JO-Doctors
3,~.15;
Rhyme
and
Reason
6,13;
Edge
of
HAPPEHED OlD ""ISI&lt;a!S OOWH BfLOW to pla y some ro ur·notrump calls too weak to respond two clubs.
WHEN WE SEAL 1HE. EX\T
Night 8,10: Masterpiece Theatre 33.
- ·-'
as s tron~ bids in notrump . (Uo you have a question for
-- -- ~ - SO WtiAT 3: OG-Another World •3,4,15; Generel Hospital 6,13;
..
.
.
.......
Bel ore do mg so. make sure that the Jacobys? Write ""Ask the
Price Is Right 8,10: Interface 20.
' .. 1a
youareincompleteagreementJacobys"' care of this
3: 30-0ne Lllo to Live 13; Lucy Show 6; Match Game
as to which bid s aren "t newspaper. The most in 8,10; Boarding House 20; Spotnght On 33.
Blackwood . You ca n make this teresting questions will be
• : DO-Mr . Cartoon 3; I Dream Of Jeann le ~~ SomerMI
as co mplicated as you wish . but used in the column and writers
15; Huck and Yogi 6; Musical Chairs 8; Sesame
the best thing to do is to keep it will receive copies of JACOBY
Street 20,33; Movie "I Walk Alone" 10; Mike
simple .
MODERN.)
Douglas 13 .
~ : JO-Bewltched 3; Merv Grlflln ~ ~ Mod Squad 6;
. ',,
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15.
5:0G-FBI 3; Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh ·
borhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
5:34&gt;-News 6; Andy Griffith 8; Get Smart 15; Electric
ACROSS
J Actr ess .
Company 20,33.
I Pitdunan ·,
Balin
••
6:0G-News 3.~.8.13,15; ABC News 6; Sesame Street
confedera••· l Couple
20; Je1111 Shepherd's America 33.
·~
6 Dismay
5 Michiga n · ·•
6:JO-NBC News 3.~. 15; ABC New&amp; 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8.10; Jody's Body Shop 33.
ll Anchmt
Ontario
7:0G-Truth
or Consequences 3,~; Bowling for Dollars
Gr eek
6 Alder lr•'•
6:
WCHS-TV
Report 8; Aviation Weather 20.33;
colony
; Words
News
10;
Jimmy
Dean 13; Phil Donahue 15.
12 :\ouY•:'
describ111 '
7:
34&gt;-Porter
Wegoner
3; Pop! Got• The Country ~ ~
13 Frest-1
man·iag"
New Candid Camera 6; Pop I Goes The Country 8;
1 colloq
~ Skin
..-.• Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky 20;
Treasure Hunt 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Black
I 2 wds .
problt·n •
!:1 \1ap
34 Twofold
q VIets·
15 Pw·,·ir \'
Perspectl
ve on the News 33.
·giant ..
35 Penny 8 :0G-Sanford and Son 3.~.15; Movie "The Tribe" 6,13;
16 1\ ctor
stadiW11
!4 _ Harbor . Ji Semi·
Movie "The Family Kovack" 8,10; Washington
Conner '
10 Cut down
·
Guam
precious
Week In Review 20,33.
li HW'ried
\ \ In a narr Pn 25 Lacerate
stone
8 :30-Chlco and The Man 3.4.15; Wall Street Week
20 Squatted
wa)
26 Therelore
:l8 Stubborn
20,33.
-:---:-::--:----;---;---;-;---n
Aristotle
•: 1944 :\Pbel
,8 R 1 h
Flies 3.~. 15 ; Masterpiece Theatre 20;
9
:0G-Rockford
•
,_
as a bm ·.
Prize
·.
a p one
To
Be
Announced
3.
I I
bt.Jq€
1Gieaso n in 10 Land
....
23 Golden .
- - . ,J
9:30-College
All-Star
Football Game 6,13; Movie
.t.he
d t
? Th
physicist
·"The Honey·
measure
1
. "'
·n d
1
"Catholics" 8.10.
moone r s 1 41 e p wne
•is ance .· •Ne11 27 c ollv· fe (l, ." 1"a Classy hOI"S"'
I
10:0G-Pollce Woman 3.~.15; News 20; Paul Nuchlms
Co\'8 rlJS acom1n. e • 29 t9 Riviera resort :l3 Nick
42 Orienl.al tea
33.
babl.jt
Peninsula
71 Islands off
Charles
43 Chinese
11 :()()-News 3.~.8.10,15 ; ABC News 33.
30 Tease
Galway
dog
dynasty
11 :34&gt;-Johnny Carson 3.~.15; Movie "The Black
(", l. , . ,
31 Swiss m ·er ~.....,~-rr-T.:"-,r.-­
Scorpion" 8; Movie "Dr . Goldfoot and theGirl
.. .
.12 Nigerian
Bombs." 10; Janak! 33.
_,__ ......
tribesma n
• • • .J
12:30-News 6.13.
1 :OG-Nlght Dreams 3.~.15; Sammy and Company 6;
H.;:;=O:.J3 Garden
~--.-·"_.
,,.., .....
Movie "Fog Island" 10.
dweller
2:34&gt;-Star Tr• ~36 Actor.
. 3:-Movle "Doctor Blood' s Coffin" ~ ­
Herbert
_ _1~30.....,1\ovle ...,.. Golden Troai!IMI" 4.
Hard
l 1-i I
You'l
l
gain
from
your
business:.;
whack
acumen today . though you ' ll •. ,
1colloq. 1
operate without trying to take~· :~
i2wds, )
advantage of anyone.
- ·- - ·
&lt;:v-~--:-----"""""r----:--:- 44 Spud
''
SCORPIO (Oct. 2~-No•. 22) ,~~
STEP ON IT!!- A BELLY Lll&lt;£ 45 Hawaiian
Superiors will deal with you on ·
Bamlce Bede Oaol
I'LL BE THROU6H
YCUR'N IS NO
greeting
a one-to-one le "Yel loday .' "' 1' 1
They' ll recognize your Ideas as ur-.h
WITH THIS BEF'VI&lt;E SMALL.
46 coeur d'-.
For Frldoy, Aug. 1, 1175
tieing well -tho ught - qut.
•-;J
1 ,
"r= 6 ,...,... TO
RESPONSIIdaho lake
ARIES (MOfch 21·Aprll 1SI)
W&lt;='
&lt;= 1
47 Another
SAGITTARIUS (No•. 23-0ec.~ o ;;·
You'll co.m e out handsomely
21) Efforts you've expended--o ?~
f&lt;QA'5T" BIL.I
name lor
today in activities wh ich have
recently have not gone un:·: ::.
financial overtones. Give these
ee~F~Lake
noticed . You're not o"Yerlooked .
areas
top
priority
.
Geneva
Your reward will come later. ' ... 1
TAURUS (April 20·MOJ 20) Be
,..:
CAPRICORN IOoc. 22-Jon.
DOWN
f i rm , but not abrasive . In
11) The impact of your social'' 1
negotiations concerning your
I Uttle lady
plans will ha ve mo r e far- , ;u,-,
self-i nterests. let others know
2 Spring
reach in g eflects tha n you sur- :; ~ ..

rr

WHAT'01A

CUSTOM SLAUGHTER
Cut
Wrap
Freeze

home with ga s. fireplace , 2
built-i n bookcases, and chi na
cl ose t. 2 ba th s. one e ncl osed.
L arge m od e rn k itchen with air
BRlCK house on. ·.)e cond St.,
conditioning.
downtown
Pomeroy .
13 .8S ACRES Ni ce 4
Su i ta ble tor livi ng quarters
bedroom brick home, ba th ,
upstairs , ·Small business
down . offi ce or hom e. Within
F .A. heat, enc losed p orch,
walking· dis tance of all
utilit y, and l arge garden .
stores Ca ll 992 -3489 .
NEW LIS T ING .
s . J. ltc

month for 15 yrs. Inc. in-

·KUH~'S ·BARG,AI N.CENTER

1,\/f;ARI-.16 7

BORN LOSER

~yracustr.oruG
Dh GO?I,;~fO"t
.. . 1" - I

WIN AT BRIDGE
When 4NT bid isn't Blackwood

PEitFUNIE 'fOU "RE

-'" .
~

FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1975
6:06-Sunrlse Semln.a r 4; Summer SemesJer 10.
6·2s--Farm Report 13.
6:30-Five Minute! lo Live By 4; N• ws 6; B;ble An ·

...'.

-.,...

·: - .•J

....

i..ARRY LAVENDER.

7 II 1 mo

lov el y kitchen. slid ing glass (A RPE T- -iO~ICiuu , ''-'"• .., r.25
door s, and garage .
per
yard
Call Richard
West. phone 843 2667.
LOTS - Building and mobilt
7-2-26tp
h o m e. Some with water a nd
sewer. O ut o r
in town . BOAT Motors. R epai r s . 498
$1 500.00.
Locust
St, Mid dlepor t ,
Ohi o Phone 992 -3092 .
Fishing
FORKED RUN
... .! ·2? 26 t c
cabin a nd lot 50x225.
ACRES

I DID 50ME
EXPLORI!J6L.I F!SUI&lt;:f;D
IF I I'IEfJT DOWN THESHORE A WAY!!&gt; AND
THE'/".J OUT-

AIown

lnsulatjon Services
Blown into Wolla &amp; Affics'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDINQoSOFFITT
GUTTERS..AWNINGS

949-2211 or 992 -5700
Complete air condit i onmg
sa l es and s.ervice, hea t ing ,
plumbi n g , rooting and
gene ra l sheet meta l work .
Free E stimates

block cabin with bath, forced READY M I X CON -dfE T E
de l ive r ed r ight to your
air furnace . d rill ed well. full
pr oject Fas l and eas.y . Free
basement, a nd ex ir a space to
estimates
Phone 992 3284 ,
build . NEW LI STIN G.
G o~glein
Rea d y M1x Co ..
NEW LISTING New 3 Mr ddteport . Ohio .
6-Jo ttC
bedroom hom e, cer ami c bath ,

5

l S·~·~Ef ... I MEAN
I GAW ... l "'-EAN· ·
605H! IS THAT
SOME K I/".JD OF

RIGHT~

baths. patio. etc. 58,900.

P R I V /\ TE meeting r oom- for
any o rg ani7at ion . phone 992
397'i
3 tl .lfc

Hart

f/'\1'( hd1111

p,'lll+'t

Real Estate for Sale

B ROOM HOU SE , Upper
5 RM HOU SE a nd bath i n
Sy ra cuse. c arport. river
Pome r oy . Inqu i r e at 796 B I C Y CLE Re pair s. Sa les and
view . Phone 992 -7066 .
So u th Third. Middlepor t
Se rv ice, tl98 Locust S t .,
7 24 -lfc
7 29 Stc
Midd le port . Ohio . Phon e
997 3092 .
3 ROOM and bath fur . apt . in
HOUSE tor sale on 2 a cres of
Mid dleport , util i ties paid .
land near Vinton, Ohio on
Ca!l 992 -3205 betwee n 9 a .m.
Mt.
Tabor Rd ., 3 bedrooms ,
20
FT.
CABIN
c ruiser ,
a nd 5 : 30 p .m .
and bath , fir epl ace, good
Thomp s on h u ll , trailer ,
7 -J0 -3tc
well, outbuildings. Call 388 phone 992-2815.
8879 .
TWO b edrm . m o bi le hom e,
7-23·121C
7 -27 -12tc
d epos il requ1red . Phone 99 2
34~ 9 .
PLOW a nd disc. for 1 pt . fas t
7-30 -l'2tp
h itc h on a 130 or Super· A 1.72 AC RE S l and , a nd locust
posts. A l s.o, 1965 Ford L TO ..
tra c tor .
Also,
a
belly
Phon e 742 -3656 .
mower
.
Phone
949
-2837
.
ruR N . ap l 5 roomsandbath.
7-27 -6tc
nice l a r ge yard , bath and' ~ .
.1 90
So\ll h
Sec ond
St
Middle por t. adults onl\
Phone 992 5262 even ings .
5 .2 1 If

-1

)II'

GOOD part .Jersey mil k cow.
Call 992 5084 after 6 p m .
7 29 5tc

TRAILER. 7 bedrooms, cl ose
' O Harrisonville, 1 chi l d , no
p c1s Phone 7tl 2 3173 .
7 79 6t c

apartmen 1
adults ontv Jn Mi ddl epor1
Pho ne 992-- 3874 .
3-25 -tft

VII q II B . ~ .. ' l:ll Ok l'l

1971 MASSEY
Ferguson
tr acto r, brush hog, d·isc, 3
bot t o m p low s, $5,500 . Also.
Fa rm a ll H 3 bottom p lows ,
mower. front end loader ,
rake , met al
and rubber
wheels . $1.050 . . L ee Wood,
phone 747 6tl56 .
7-29 -3t p

l ?x5 7 TRAILER , l il(e f"lew, $35
per weeLc. , u t ; t.ties paid
Phon e 997 JJ ; 4
7"

-"!'U RNISHED

lcaford Re alty

THOROU G HBRED
Ge l ding
for sa le Gent l e . will work
aro u nd cattle . Has been
wormed . 10 years o t age .
Phone 696 108.1 t ill 3: 30 p . m .
7-31 l21c

FORO hay cr1m p er . $750. Ca ll
992 5111 b ef o r e S p .m . or 742
'i9 79 a l ter 5 o .m .
7 29 3tc

'lBSB
STORE bl dgs ., Rt . l, Tuppers
Pta ins . Phone 66 7 3858 .
7 27 7tp

70 ACRE S o t farm 1ng and
graling land Wilh severa l
ext r .:ts lik e bi g pond , deep
we lL fruil tr ees, 1 sma ll
gardens , cel lar , smo k e
house , h uge ba r n , 1 story
farm hou se. 4 b edr ooms .
Year old total el ec tric 3 1
bed r ooms , 2 full baths .
double wide tra iler . trailer
furn ished or unfurnished
Call 992 - 7590. Kingsbury
Road .

7 17 Stc

!oACk FROM
YOUR SWIMl

sile

cyl standilrd N ew pai nt.
good condt l ion. S800 . Phon e
?85 359 d

' 6.000 . Phone 985 -3594.
7·238tp

.1 ROOMS and bath ap t . in
Rutland area
Phone 992

Real Estate For

1:oo- Tomorrow 3,,.; News 13.

FREE ESD.M_ATfS~

Your Heil Dealer
Third St.
Racine , Ohio
Ph . 9n-S961

7-24- 1 mo .

7 79 J l c

Employment Wanted

For Rent

East Main
Pomeroy
Ph. 992 -2798

1967 DODGE window van, 6-

CA NN t N G ro nH1 10CS.. g r e£'n
bean s.
S W f.: C'
p ep pe rs. .
c u curnbcr s
Gc raldin c
Cle l ond . Ra c in e Phone 9.19
11}1
7 75 ' f c
PROFES S I O N AL
Poodl e
grooming , $5 With b alh , $6 .
Wil l do mos t breeds of dogs . I I SHING l icense. CC1nad 1an
Ca ll
667 J9 15
fo r
ap
N rl e cra wler s, 60c do z. Duq
pointm enl .
worn •-s . J doz ') 1 O th er bait .
r~c k t c . ouns
a nHllO . c b's .
7 31 SIC
lndi,1n
Joe's &lt;; ports. . 308
Pi!QC C, l
PhOPr' 992 350 9
PUREBRED
German
7 1 26t c
Shepherd pupp ies . S25 each
Profitt' s G·r ocery at Port
5 H P . HU F FY rid in g lawn
lan d . P hone 843 7900
mower . ove rh ea d ga r age
7 31 61c
door , 1 f1 high , 9 tt wide :
good
c ondition .
. ~ 9 7.1
K awasa k i, good co nd1l10n :
Ping Pong table Phone 7.1'2
1)97 1.
W IL L do n o u se pa i nti n g
Phon e 997 7658 .
7 79 ) 'C
M I XED hay , 60c oer bat e
Phon e 747 J!.I J
W I LL d o od d jobs , mowing .
? JO d'C
hauling, painting or roofing .
Phone 997 7409
C ANN IN G tomat oes for sate
7 29 26tc
Harold Rous h , Po r tland,.
Ohio Ph one 843 7755 .
REMODE L IN G .
Plumbing .
7 30 6T C
heat ing and all types of
ge n era l
re pa r
Work. 197 1, JSO. JOHN Deere d ozer.
gu arant ef' d
70 y e ar~ ex
de1sel engi n e. 6 ft . b la d e,
o~:~rience
o ~on e
&lt;;9'} 2-109.
cano py d r aw bar and P TO,
5 l 'f (""

Phore 997 7759 6 7.'. 27tc

DICK SEYLER

19 70

7 23-81p

7-8- 1 mo.

Em er gency

17 VOLT
Slurl er tor
VW Call 99 7 1658

for Sale

Pels For Sale

MODERN CHEMICALS

r OR sa l e in Reedsville, 2
s.tory , 7 bedroom older
1948 WILLY S Jeep with 1964
house on l ot and ' 1 ; sale by
engi ne . new paint Call 997
owner Fir st $ 13, 500 takes .
'il0 1
Phon e 37 8 6339 or 378 6285 .
1 19 Stc
7 30 -3tp

JLD 1u rn1ture , ice boxes,
b r ass beds. or comp l ete
household s. Wr i te M
0 .
Miller . Rt . 4, Pome r oy ,
Oh io Call 992 7760
10 7 7 4

Phone 992-5682
or 992-7121

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

PRO P-ERTY on land contrac t
w i th or without house
Phone 74? 3074

REG . Toy Poodle , Phone 1J7
3767
7 31 H e

, E+ tc

F OR SA C E bv ow n er, sh.:i r p
1969 Datsun. 5 10 se rie s
Phone 991 7-11 3 a lt er 5 p . m
7 31 3t p

"At Caution Light"
Rt . 7, Tuppers Plains. 0 .
Shop Us Last &amp; Save
oPen 9-5 Wed. through Sun.
Ph . 667-3858
1 ·1·1 mo

WORK

ANTIQUES

8 :0G-Giadys Knight &amp; ·the Pips 3.~. 15 ; ; Almost

BAKGAIN &amp;ENlER

MECHANICAL

WOO O-M ETA L- PLA S Tl C

13; American Outdoorsman 15.

KU . . .

ALL

PAINt
STRIPPING
SERV.ICE

•OPEN EVES. a,oo P:M '
POMEROY OHlO
'

GARAGE

,

6:JO-NBC News 3,~, 15; ABC News .13; Bewllched 6; .
CBS NeWs 8.10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33 .
7:0G-Truth or Cons.3.~; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's
My Line&amp;; News 10; Lei's Make a Deal13; Jimmy
Dean 15; Making It Count 20; Nova 33.
7:JO-Hollvwood squares 3.~; Ohio Lotten&lt; 6; ·New Price Is Right 8; Evening Edltlon with Martin
Agronsky 20; Wild Kingdom 10; To Tell the truth

CASH 'N CARRY
SAVES U S'son
Guaranteed
appllancos,
used furniture at

2 MIIH West
On St. Rt . 124
Off Rt .- 7 By-Pass

Evenings 742 -490"2
1.7. 1 mo .

·)POM
' EROY MO'JiO.R ro.
1

ROGER 'HYSEU.'S

We Carry
Liability Insurance
Ph. 992-7608

4-door, ;ioca l car , air cond iti on ed, fu ll eq uipm en t .

chrome bumpers &amp; w h ee l trim. C l ea n .

FOUR Family Yard Sa l es, at
P
A
Parsons, An tiqu i ty ,
O hi o s t ar ti ng Wednesday ,
d1f f e r e nt misc . ilems you
have been l ook i ng for .
7-30 Si c
YARD Sa l e , 4 mi l es
Middleport at the
F ink resi d en c e
T h ursday at 10 a m
Saturday .

S1495

Anything Goes 6,13; The Woliona 1,101 Evening at
Pops 33; Lit. of Leona«&lt;o Da VInci 20.
.
9:oo-Movle "Flight from Ashlyo" 3,~.15: Nlo'lle
··smile Jenny, You're Deed" 6.13; Nlo'lle "My. Six
Loves'; 8; Movie "My Blood Run&amp; Cold'' 10: Firing
Line 20; Philadelphia Folk Festival 33.
IO:OG-News 20; Woman 33.
10 :JO-Horace Marshall 33.
11 : ~News 3.~.6.1,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11: :lo-Johnny Carson 3.~ . 15; Wide World Special 13;
FBI 6 ; Movie "The FBI Story : Alvin Karpls" I ;
Movie " You're Never Too Young" tO; Janak! 33 .
12:34&gt;-Wide World Special 6.

THURSDAY. JULY 31 . 1"f75

Vinyl s id ing, aluminur.1
si d ing , patio covers, st orm
windows ,
k i tchen s,
bathrooms and garages.

S2295
1.972 FORD "8"" PICKUP
XLT Pkg . • power steering, w h ite -wall tir es, radio,

County, Ohio .

l

S185C

1971 MATADOR

Gene Slo ul . ne&gt;l door lo lhe

pages

Notice is h e rebv given th at
730 -12tc
James Stark Ru sse ll of 528
Nautilus , La Jolla, California WA NT ED TO RENT 3
92307, has been duly appointed
bedroom home or l ar ger in
Executor of the Estale o f
Tuppers P l ains area . Call
Corabelle Russell . deceased,
Parker sbu r g. Co ll ect. 1
lat e of Village of Pomeroy ,
(304) 422 3180 .
M ei g s County, Ohio .
7 ·31 6t c
Creditors are r eq uired to
fil e the ir c laim s with said
_.N OW selling Fu ller Brush
f iduciary within four mont h s.
Products , phone 992 34 10
Dated thi s 14th day of Ju l y
I 14 If&lt;
1975 .
Manning D . Webster
Judge

j

Sa turday , Aug . I and 2. Mrs

Case No. 21538 P I ANO Tun ing . Lane Daniels

CORABELLE

YOU
l

JOHNSON
REMODELING

~ cyl. ~td . trans .• radio, lik e new w -w tires. blue finish

-YARD
----- Sa--------le , Friday and

·Notice

RUSSELL Deceased .

171 17'

otor ·c o

1972 COMET 2 DOOR

3 FAMILY Yard Sale s t a rt ing
Jul y 31, A l so. Aug . 1 from
9 30 till 5pm . a t C iairM ight
residence on Lea ding Cree l&lt;
Road. Co Rd . 3. Lots ot
clo the s, avons, bottles ,
dishes, misc . In case of rai11
w ill be cance ll ed .
7-30 -2tc

and
St.. Aug
M;ddleport
Ju l y 3Park
1 through
. I an d 2

Jwrpommi- BLUBBERED

of

FAMILY YARD Sale on
Fou r t h St ., Racine. Mo n day-

YA RD Sale , corner of Pear 1

HEREBY

.....

Anewer1 What Mobg }Jkk did rdu·n lu·

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

-

r

1ice ca r w ith good economy.

I.._--'-Prill="=IIII=SIIPIISE~lHSW!II==_IIere_ _l

. Estate

PomerQyl

OF
OUALilY

through F r 1day . Aug . 4
through Aug a , fr om 10 a .
m . ti ll 4 p . m .
a 3-6tc

V "'\J
I
~:::::::::::::~h.:;.A::==~~·:u~r~r:••:t::edbytheabovee~oon.

•'

~Sales

Yard .Sale

1:

I
I

ti-The O.Uv Sentii"IP.l Ml&lt;!oft•nn"' ~omeroy, 0 ., Thunday, July 3l,l97S
.
.

Why do you Wfi!r

form four orclinary words.

tTUPSID

'

.

, I

�,,

j

.' .

v i·

I.

..

10-The Dally Sentinel, Middi!)Xirt-Pmlerov. 0 .. Thunulav. July 31. 1975

&amp;escendo.

·HOSPITAL NEWS

Ford

(ConUnued from page 1)

(Continued from page 1)
purchased
before
the
prohibition became effective.
The Senate has approv~ it
before only to have the Uftlng
of the ban defeated In the
House.
House Republican Leader
John J. Rbodes predicted the
House would get a second
chance to vote on the Turkish
arms isaue before going off on
a month-long vacation
Friday. He said there was-"a
fairly good chance" the
previous House vote could be
reversed ,
Following the breakfast
meeting which lasted more
than the scheduled hour,
Demirel held out a slight hope
that the bases problem could
be resolved.
Answering questions by
reporters, he said the
monitoring bases from which
the United States listens in on
Soviet communications will
remain out of action "for the
time being."
What wolj)d It take to get
the bases reopened?
"I cannot tell you that right

(at least most of-them) .
It was hot ; jus( standing
there watching . them; obviously, they were burning
up. After a brief talk I
strolled over the where the
Meigs gang was marching
back and forth, learning a
new halftime sho.w :
About noori the two groups
took a break for lunch.
During this free tim e
(about an hour and a half) the
kids rested, ate in the
cafeteria, and then returned

TONITE
THUR .. JULY 31
NOT OPEN

Fri., Sat ., Sun .- Aug . J. J
Freebie &amp; The Bean

ITechnicolor)
Rated R

Show starts 7:00P. M.

now."

TONITE thru FRI.
July JJ .Aug. 1

WAITING IN THE LUNCH LINE BLUES - Members of tbe Meigs High School Marching Band are in line
waiting for the cafeteria to open following a hot morning
practice session in the July sun. The band Is one of four
participating in the week long camp at Rio Grande
College.

Double Feature
"THE STING"

"Rated PG"
F'LUS
"COMPANY OF
KILLERS"
"~a ted

G"

to practice.
In the afternoon both bands

Get

Ready

had sectional practice for
about an hour and a half when
the brass, woodwinds and
percussion split up.
Then it was back to full
band practice, on another
field , over another hill, under
that same hot sun, for
perhaps another hour and a
half.
Finally, there is a break
and a free time period,
followed by the evening meal.
But guess what? Right ! It's
back to another field over
another hill until about 8:30 p.

m.
I didn't have the stsmina to
stay for the evening practice,
so I
departed
Camp
Crescendo understanding
better what it is like "being in
the band."
Believe me, it isn't all fun
and games. It is hard work.
Nevertheless, the kids enjoy
something about it or they
wouldn't be back every year.
I
became
convinced
Wednesday that both Meigs
and Eastern High Schools
should be proud of the hard
work their young people do at
Camp Crescendo. The continued enthusiasm they and
their band directors show is
remarkable.
·Before leaving, I was let in
on a secret by Dwight Goins,
Meigs band director. Surely,
those cold watermelons
tasted good.

For•••
BOYS' TANK TOPS
%PRICE
BOYS' SHORTS
Y2 PRICE
BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE
SP. SHIRTS &amp;·KNITS
Y2 PRICE
KERM'S KORNER

New York Clothing House

REUNION CANCELLED
The Cole family reunion
has been cancelled due to the
death of Ola Camt&gt;bell.

POEROY, OHIO

Inn Place

b=:=

=
·S-5

Is Proud

To Present ~

ono~C

BACK UP BAND

"THE CASUALS"
4 Piece Group From Nashville, Tenn.
-

Brenda can't make it. but her band will
be here ...

FRI~Y .&amp;SAiuRDAY
' .
.·.

.

10 UNTIL 2

THE

Make your reservationS
Hrly and 'don 'l miss 'the
ex.c ifing Sound• of ''The

· C.suals11 •

Veteratll Memorial Hospital Meadnws, Glenwood ; Mrs .
ADMITTED
Mae Helen Painter, Bidwell ; Bert
English, Pomeroy; Randall Rodgers , Point Pleasant, and
Dennis
Hoschar ,
Friend, Long Bottom; Ruth Mrs .
Duerr, Pomeroy; Agnes · Danville.
Weeks, Pomeroy; Joseph
Markins, Point Phiasant ;
Ronnie Hubbard, Syracuse ;
Holzer Medical Center
Charles Neece, Middleport;
(Diuharges,July 30)
Irene Cross , Middleport ;
Mrs. Larry James Blair
Brett Matthews, Pomeroy;
and infant son, Joseph Peter
David Spurlock, Tuppers
Bond, Melinda Brunton ,
Plains.
Norvin Lewis (Jack) Carter,
DISCHARGED - Mila ·
Patricia Jean Christian,
Hudson, Belva Riggs.
Alice F. Clagg , Mrs. Jerry
Collins and Infant son, Jana
Mary Collins, Etta Cullums,
PLEASANT VALLEY
James G. Dodrill , Jr .,
DISCHARGES Mrs.
John Gordon, Letart; Johnnie Delores Duff, Molly Ann
Jefferies , Evans ; Harold Fisher, Donna Faye Gibbs,
Whittington, Leon: Mrs. Bill Jill Denise Gillenwater ,
Gay, and son, Ashton ; Mrs. Nicholas Nye Grueser, Doris
Brian Friend and son , Jean Halley, Sam Hardwick,
Middleport; Mrs. Clarence Nolene Hatfield, Rita Jean
Stover,
and
daughter, Hughes, Louise Kimberling ,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Ray Jerry Lee Lowry, Jr ., MatBrowning, Gallipolis Ferry; thew James McCorkle ,
WUUam Wolfe, New Haven ; Marcus M. McKean , Mildred
Mrs. Carse! Stone , West Lucille Mitchell, Helen Jean
Velma
G.
Columbia; Jerry Luscott, Mittendorf,
Mason ; Robert Boles, Point Mueller, ,Robert Lee Neal ,
Pleasant ; Chauncey Kid a J . Newell, Cynthia
Norton, Mrs. John Nuce and
infant daughter, Goldie
Osborne, D. Aaron Phillips, •
Eric T. Putney, Jean C.
Ragland, Rosa Alice Raines,
Mary
Louise Saunders, Mrs.
Cloudy tonight and Friday,
Richard
A. Sayre and Infant
chance of evening thun~
dershowers. Highs Friday in son, Rebecca Jean Spaulding,
the lower 90s. Lows tonight Roger Eric Springer, Fred
between
65
and
70. Michael Stumbo, Cllu'ence
Probability of precipitation Lester Walburn , Dolores I.
Sherrie
Rene
30 per cent today, 20 per cent Wolfe,
tonight, 40 per cent Friday. Wollenburg, Eldon Wright.

Weather

FOLKESTONE. ENGLAND - AMERICAN JACK
ROBERTSON " swam like a champion" for 18 hours, hl.s
powerful arms pulling his Semi-paralyzed body through '!hi!
choppy ·Waters of the English Channel. The ellhausted
paraplegic, paralyzed from the waist down, came within sight
of the French coast Wednesday night before giving up his
attempt to cross the channel.
"Jack swam like a champion," escort Don Philabawn said
this morning. "He got within a half-mile of Ca~rlsNez about
11 :30 a . m. Wednesday but just couldn't make it." Philab&amp;wn,
·ho returned to the English coast with. the 25-year.())d
- ,;immer after accompanying Robertson in a escort boat,
blamed the failure on a late start.
" It was the tide, because we started late and we had fog most
of the way over," he said.

DETROIT - HUNDREDS OF RIOT-EQUIPPED police
roamed deserted streets early today in a west side neigh.
borhood that was the scene of two consecutive nights of
violence. They found only quiet. Although hundreds of officers
remained in the area Wednesday night and early today, police
scrapped plans to cordon off the center of the troubles that
erupted Monday and Tuesday nights.
"I think we made one arrest in the area," a police
spokesman said, "and that was for public intoxication."

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

MEIGS
''
INN
·-

992-3629
Pomeroy, o.
·)')h.

V&lt;tl'ES REOORDED
WASHlNGTON (Ufl)
Sen: Robert Td Jr., ft.Oblo,
wu one of n liNton 'itbo .
wted Wedneaday to rilum

. the contelted New Hamil- .
ahlre election to that state for ·
' a new election;
· Sen,: John Glenn, D-Oblo,.
wu one of 2l ·to VIlle qalnst ·
the move.

I .

'

'
.

• ;

VOL. XXVII

N:.: _O:_:.7__:7___ __ PO:__M_E_RO_Y_-M_ID_D_LE_
PO_R:_:
T, _O~
HI_
O - - -- - - - ,
FR:-1D_A_
Y,~A_
UG_U_
ST_l_,_19_7_
5 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _P_RI_CE-'-15'

By United Press Interualional
OOLUMBUS -A SERIES OF MEETINGS will be held in
August to help Ohio industries meet energy problems because
of expected natural gas curtailments. The series will be cosponsored by the state Departmen! of Economic and Community Development and the Ohio Manufacturers '
Association.
Both Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc., and East Ohio Gas Co., the
state's major natural gas distribution companies, have indicated that curtailments to industry this winter will be much
greater ·than last winter's because of short supplies.

'

conswner.''
Cresente said the independent dealers he represents will
not realize any profit from the increase, they will merely be
passing it on to the consumers.
THERUEL, SPAIN - OOCI'ORS EXAMINED a 7&amp;-yearold woman who complained of abdominal pains and found she
has been pregnantfor 40years, the national news agency Cifra
said Thursday. The agency quoted a report by Dr. Alejandro
llenedi, chief surgeon of the provincial hospital of Teruel.
Benedi said the case was the result of an exti'a-\lterine
pregnancy and that x..-ays had calcified and was causing
abd&lt;minal Irritation.
Citra quoted the physician as saying that the woman's
condition was correctly diagnosed when she was in the eighth
month.of pregnancy in 1935. Because of lack of proper hospital
facilities and specialists in Teruel, then a small town, doctors
decided not to remove the fetus, hoping that it would disappear, the report said. The woman eventually resumed menstruation and-had no complaints until a few weeks ago. The
woman was offered a free operation to remove the calcified
fetus, but refused it.

ol18

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• Not 10 or 20, but 200 styles in the newest fabrics and colors.
• N~t the "almosr' length, but cut to a.ny length_.
At 20% savings now, isn't there a room in your house that could
·use new drap~ries?
·
·
.· __
-· .
...:HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX
Ma'ii'l- Store, Annex and Mechanic Street Warehouse Open F-riday and Saturda'y
' 9:30 to 8.:00 p.m.
.
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-.EtBERFELDS IN POMEROY
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rate for nearly aU categories
of workers with the major
improvements among teenagers and women.
Teen-age unemployment
fell from 20.5 per cent to 19.1
per cent. The jobless rate for
women dropped 0.6 per cent
to M per cent.
The July report, coupled
with other economic indicators in the past six weeks,
indicate that the economy has
stabilized . . New employment
had held steady in April, May
and July, after 2.6 million job
losses in the preceding six
months .
But the Labor Department
said the unemployment rate
would have improved even
more in July except for an
estimated 95,000 workers on
strike. The bulk of these were
in the construction trades,
where a decline in employment of 45,000 jobs was
"entirely due to Increased
strike activity," the department said.
The 8.4 per cent jobless rate

in July was the lowest since
February when it was 8.2 per
ce nt, but co mpared un(avorably with July, 1974,
when the rate was 5.3 per
cent.
The jobless rate feU for
both part-time and full-time
workers in July and continued the trend established
in June .
Unemployment for
household heads was 6 per
cent in July, virtually uncha nged from June. The
mfmber of workers employed
at least 15 weeks rose
slightly .
In other ca tegories, the
black unemployment rate
dropped from 13.7 to 13 per
cent, while the white total
was constant at 7.9 per cent
for both months .
Unemployment
among
white collar workers was
unchangedat4 ,8 per cent, but
the jobless rate for blue collar
workers dropped 0.5 per cent
to 12.1 per cent in July, the
department said .

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Devoted To The Interests of 1'he Meigs-Mason Area

CLEVELAND - JAMES CRESENTE, head of the Northern Ohio Petroleum Retailers Association, predicted Thursday the price of gasoline in Northern Ohio will go up 1 to 3 cents
per gallon within the next few days.
Cresente said the increase will represent " product costs
and non-product costs" tacked on by the oil companies. "It
shouldn't happen," he said. "They should roll back, but as long
as the people are willing to pay they will accommodate the

Gartley's
"special order'
ready-made
draperies in a choice

been even better except that
95,000 Americans were on
strike last month .
The decline.from June 's 8.6
per cent jobless rate was a
surprise to the department,
which said seasonal adjustment difficulties encountered during the two
previous months did not arise
in July.
The number of unemployed
in July was 7.8 million, down
100,000 from June. But the
number of jobs increased
from 84.4 million In June .
The department said there
were declines in the jobless

enttne

beer.
.The president of the American Farm Bureau Federation,
however, accused the AFL-CIO of " dictatorial arrogance."
The AFL-CIO's Executive Council Thursday adopted a
resolution calling for "effective government regulations of
exports of farm products" which might create domestie
shortage and higher prices, and urged restriction of Russian
access to the American grain m8!'ket while the Soviet Union
"continues in its course of aggression ...
Meany said later the longshoremen have the AFUIO's
"complete support" in theii' decision to boycott unless
President Thomas Gleason of the International
Longshoremen's Association decides the shipments will not
harm American conswners and workers.

OFF

By LEONARD CURRY
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The nation's unemployment
rate dropped 0.2 percentage
points to 8.4 per cent in July
and the number of (l&lt;iople
with jobs rose for the first
time in seven months, the ·
Labor Depariment said
today .
Labor said 630,000 people
EXTENDED FORECAST
were added to the job rolls In
Sundsy through Tuesday,
July, including substantial
a chance of dally showers
boosts in work for teen-agers
with highs in the 80s and
and women. Total emlows in the 60s or lower 70s.
ployment rose to 85.1 million .
The department said the
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•

CHICAGO - AFL-CIO PRESIDENT George Meany says
the giant labor organization will stage massive strikes . if
necessary to back up longshoremen's refusal to load U.S. grain
bound for the Soviet Union. Longshoremen have threatened to
boycott the loading of grain shipments unless they are assured
the grain sale won't boost the domestic price of bread and

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HEAVY EQUIPMENT HAS BEEN MOVED onto the upper parking lot along the Ohio
River in Pomeroy .to repair the upper parking lot wall, a section of which crumbled into the
Ohio River a couple of weeks ago. Repair of the section at a cost of $103,100 will be done by ·
the Allen Stone Construction Co. of Chesterhill, and will begin at once . Tlie village has no
financial obligation on the project except resurfacing of a section of the parking lot when the
wall has been rePaired. The project is being supervised by the U. S. Corps &lt;if Engineers
through Cong. Clarence Miller. It had been the contention of local officials and Miller that
erosion by the river caused the damage to the wall.
·

DELMONT SHUMANN, AN UNEMPLOYED Minneapolis
offset printer, is not so sure Vice President NeiBon Rockefeller
needs an extra $5,000 in his paycheck this year. Or any high
govenunent official, for that matter.
"I'm opposed to the whole thing," he said of the newly
passed pay increase. "·Why should they get more money while
I'm walking the streets? And Nelson Rockefeller has so much
money he doesn't need anything ." Most Americans, contacted
Thursday by UPI in a randO!ll survey, were in no mood to
accept the increases. Congress apparepliy was. It swiftly
approved them thi,a,.:week. ·
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BONDS WERE$100
Bonds for Terry Brewer,
'1:1, Portland, and Forrest
Teaford, 19, Long bottom,
charged with steaUng three
bushel baskets of mangoes .
from Arnold Hupp were set at
$100 each, not f250 as
reported earlier.

EMPLOYMEN·l ' REPORT
OOLUMBUS (UPl) - The
Ohio Buteau of Employment
Services the number :of
Ohioan- seeking unemployment benefits 111.6 per
cent last weelt.
Bureau
Adinlnlstrator
Albert Giles said there were
22,854 lnltlai. claimants last
week, down from the 27,0112 of
the prevlo118 ·week.
Giles said a tabor-manage- .
• ment dispute and modelChangeover , layoffs In the
alito Indultl'Y
~·
llbli! tor nearly II* dall!ll.
Thole out of 'II'Oit for more ·
than one week totaled '11!1,000,
up' 3.1 per cent owr the
prevloiiB week.

Jobless rate at 8.4%,
85.1 million employed

WASIDNGTON - VICE PRES:(DENT NeiBon Rockefeller,
Speaker Carl Albert, and Chief Justice Warren Burger, eaCh
making $62,500a year, are going to get a pay ra!R under a bill
rushed through Congress aNI sent to the White Houae. Also In
Une for more money are the ..,,QOO.a-year members of the
Cabinet and the Supreme Court and the 53S senators and
cringressmen struggling along on ~.500.
Former President Nil:on's pension, tied to the salary ol
cabinet me'l'bers, aiBo will go up. President Ford'a $200,000
annual salary Is not affected. Ford, who strongly endoraed the
bill, is certain to sign it - which means bigger paychecks
beginning Oct. 1 for all federal governments high-level officers, whose salaries have been frozen since 1969.

FENDERS HIT
Sheriff
Robert
Hartenbach 's Dept. Wednesday
investigated a minor accident
involving two autos on County
Rd. 10 near Langsville. Paul
D. Mitchell, 20, Langsville,
was driving south In a cloud
of dust following another
auto. Margaret E. Raymond,
28, also of Langsville, was
driving north. The Mitchell
and Raymond autos hit
fenders as ihey passed. There
were no injuries or citations.
. HALEY FINED
Mark Haley, found guilty of
petty theft when he appeared
before Judge John C. Bacon ·
in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court, was fined $100
and costs.

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(ConUnuoid from page 1)

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday
through
Monday, fair weather with
highs In the upper 80s or the
lower 90s. Overnight lows
will be In the upper 80s or
the lower 70s.

were

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After the morning session
of the surnmlt conference,
Ford and Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger walked
from the American Embassy
across the street to the
British Embassy.
Kissinger briefed Ford
during the walk, occassionally making fist and
hand gestures as he talked.
Ford had a working lunch
with British Prime Minister
Harold Wilson, French President
Valery
Giscard
D'Estaing, and West German
Chancellor Helmut Schmidt
for a working lunch.

News •• in Briefs

SQUADCAUED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
was called to Flatwoods Road
at 12:34 a. m. Thursday for
Gloria Reynolds who was ill.
She was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

The

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$200 for hole-in-one

proves elusive so far
· The hole in one golf contest · cap. As yet there have been
is continuing at the Pomeroy
golf course with the final day ·
belnj~ this Saturday from 1
p.m. until dark. The con.test,
sponsored by tlie Pomeroy Middleport Lions Club,
benefits. . the ' sight conservalioiqirogram.
closest golfer to the pin
each night receives, a dozen
golf balls .and the runnerup
eacht_.·, night
receives , a golf
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no hole in ones. l'he prize for
each hole in one is $200.
- Nearest to the pin winners
this week have been Monday,
Roger Stewart, 6 ft. 2 in.,
runnerup Max Folmer, 7ft. 8
in . ; Tuesday night , Bill
Nelson, 2 ft. 9 in ., runnerup·,
Rex. ·ROush 5 ft. '6&gt;t.. in.;
Wednesday night, Jim Rickman, 5 ft . min., runnerup ,
Ron Toler, 6 ft., 11 in.
., ,
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c o·m m uni s t b I0 c
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e

day security surnmlt, Ford audience heard Ford out in
repeatedly shook his finger silence and then gave him a
for emphasis and warned his 40-second final ovatton colleagues they must carry perhaps the longest salute of
out the doc u m e n t's grand the three -day conference.
humanitarian pledges or risk Leonid I. Brezhnev, the
bitter popular b!ocklash at Soviet Communist party
chief, clapped heartily even
home.
"The- people of aU Europe though the thrust and tone of
and, I assure you, the people Ford's remarks ran counter
of North America are to his own call Thursday for
thoroughly tired of having each nation to mind its own
their hopes raised and then political business.
A Soviet delegation source
shattered by empty words
said
the Russians considered
upiece of paper"-a con~ and unfulfilled pledges ,"
Ford's remarks "positive and
troversial do·c'ument Ford 'said.
acknowledging the political
"We had better say what realistic."
The President himself told
divisions of postwar Europe we mean and mean what we
and oullining 10 principles for say, or we will have the anger UP!, "I'm glad it's over, but
it went very well."
peaceful relations.
of our citizens to answer."
Mindful of criticism that
in a 20-rninute address near
The
Finlandia
Hall
summit document ratifies
the
the conclusion of the threeSoviet domination of Eastern
Europe In return for vague
promises of respect for
human rights, Ford put
heavy stress on the need for
practical followup action.
11
Peace is not a piece of
paper," he said. "Detente ...
must be a two-way street ."
He referred specifically to
the
stalled
East-West
HELSINKI (UP!) - The doubts have been voiced in negotiations on mutual
heads of state of 35 nations the U.S. Congress and in reduction of military forces
today signed an historic but Western Europe about its in Central Europe, which
controversial agreement that value and even its wisdom. have made little headway in
pledges them to the perhaps
Critics argued it simply set two ·years.
" It Is now time to reduce
unachievable goal of a ten- the sea I on Soviet conquests
the high -levels
substantially
sion-free Europe released in Europe during and after
from the constant threat of World War ll and underwrote of military forces stationed in
the East-West division of Central Europe," Ford said,
war.
The agreement was called Europe. Other critics said the and he offered to meet the
simply the "Final Act" of West had given Moscow a Soviets halfway to break the
their three-day summit free hand · in Communist- stalemate.
" The United States stands
conference by which they controlled Eastern Europe
ready
to
demonstrate
pledged to try to reduce the without winning any solid
flexibility in moving these
risk of war and to dismantle commitments in return.
some of the barriers to
Whether or not the critics negotiations forward, if
human contact on a continent were right in down-grading others will do the same. An
that has known little but the significance of the " Final agreement that enhances
conflict
and
tension Act," the summit meeting mutual security Is feasibleand essential."
throughout its history.
and the signing of the
But it did commit the 35 document di&lt;l succeed in
nations
morally
and creating a moment of
• IN BIG DRAWING
politically to work for the euphoria, however temperhaps unachievable goals porary, among the nations
CLEVELAND (UP!) of a tension-free Europe involved.
The Ohio Lottery . Comreleased from the constant
President Ford, in the most
mission bas Identified
threat of war,
goals applauded of the 35 speeches
seven persons who will be
proclaimed by aU in a series the conference heard, said,
finalists in the next
of formal set speeches in the "We owe it to our children, to
mlllioualre drawlug.
past three days.
the children of .au continents,
They
were:
The document was con- not to miss any opportunity,
· Joseph
Pytko,
troversial because deep
(Continued on page 10)
Cleveland ;
Calogero
Brunello, Garfield
•
Heights;
Jack
Low,
1
Toledo; Robert W. HamP:
ton, Franklin; , Frank
Menke, Deer Park; Robert
D. Harrison,
Rt.
I
. Gallipolis ; and Edward
McNerney, Lakewood.
_
Nearly $13 'h million is ~arked for a general imHarrison, Georges Creek
included in the General provement and upgradin g
Road,
has been employed
Assembly 's Capital Im- project at the Gallipolis State
as a rural mall carrier out
provements Bill for Gallia inst.itute ( ov~r $11,000,000),
of Gallipolis for 20 years.
and Meigs Counties passed by and to update facilities at Rio
Grande Community College
the House Thursday.
·
Rep. RoQ James, Proc- ($2 million ).
included in the HSI projec\,
torville, said $270,000 was put
in the final version of the bill James said, were renovation
on his amendment before it of the electric system, conwent to the Senate today struction of four 16-bed and By WIWAM E. CLA nUN
WASHINGTON (UP!) _
directly benefitting for a soil- three 2-bed cottages, ren~wal
.erosion project in the Shade of the sanitary storm sewer With Congress preparing to
Rivers basin , in Meigs system, activ'!te an expanded leave for. a month's recess ,
therapy
program
and President Ford said today he
·county.
The balance of · the ap- complete other more minor will veto the proposed sixmonth extension of oil price
propriation would be ear- improvements,
\
l!y HELEN fHOMAS
UPl White House Reporter
HELSINKI
(UP!)
Saying "peace Is not a piece
of paper," President Ford
today urged large cuts in
East and West bloc military
forces and challenged the
Communists to honor the
Helsinki summit pledge of
respect for human rights.
Then; he and the other 34
sunlniit leaders sat down at a
long table and signed that

Nat1on
• s pledge
to seek peace

Nearly $13 ;2 .m illion m

hill

f~r

Gallia, Meigs

Syracuse has
$112,000 for
pool, court
The U. S. Dept. or
Housing
and
Urban
Development and Rep.
Clarence Miller today
aonounced the approval of
a $112,000 grant for the
community of Syracll!'e for
assistance in development
or Its plaoned recreation
complex.
The project includes the
constructlou of a swimming pool and teonis court.'
The funds are made
available
under
the
Community Development
Block Grant Program.
::::::::-:-:::::::-:::::::::·:·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

JENNIFER SHEETS

Jennifer Sheets nominated
for outstanding women list
Jennifer Lohse Sheets of
near Rutland has been
selected for inclusion in the
1975 edition of Outstanding
Young Women of America.
The Outstanding Young
Women of America Program
was conceived and Is guided
by leaders of the nation's
major ·women's clubs and
organizations. Its board of
advisors is chaired by Mrs .
Dexter Otis Arnold, honorary
president of the General
Federation of Women 's
Clubs.
Purpose of the program is
to bring recognition to young
women who are working to
improve where they live.
Mrs. Sheets, through her
selection as an Outstanding
Young Woman of America , is
now being considered for
further
state and
national awards. This fall ,
51 of the young women
listed in the awards national
awards. This fall, 51 of the
young women listed in the
awards volume - one .from
each state and the District of
Columbia - will be named as
their state's Outstanding
Young Women of the Year '
From the state winne(s, the
nation 's Ten Outstanding
Young Women of America for
1975 will be selected by a
panel of distinguished judges.
The national winners will be
presented at an awards
ceremony to be held this fall
in Washington, D. C.

Daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Jared, four . The family 's
Harold Lohse, Pomeroy, Mrs. ac tivities also include some
Sheets is -.. - graduate of farming.
Pomeroy High School and
For the past three years,
received both her bachelor Mrs. Sheets has served as a 4and master's degr ees from H judge at the Ohio State
Ohio State University where Fair . She is president of the
she excelled academically , Community Action Executive
graduating in first place in Board, a trustee of the Meigs
the spring class of 1967. That Co unty
Pioneer
and
same year she was selected Hi storica l Society, second
the outs tanding se nior vice chairperson of the Meigs
woman .
Co un ty Bice nt e nnial ComHer master's degree was in mission, and serves on the
home economics with a Ohio 4-H Advisory Comma jor in food and nutrition. mittee.
She recei ve d the Borden
In addition she find s lime to
Company Scholarship Award be active in the Middleport
and also a University Church or Christ where she
Fellowship while in graduate teac hes a Sunday school
school.
class . She is secr etary of the
A member of Alpha Lamba Middleport Amateur GarDelta, Mirrors, Chimes, and de ners, a member · of the
Mortarboard, Mrs. Sheets Order of 'Eastern Star, and
was also selected the out- the
American
Home
standing senior woman in the Economics Association.
College of Agriculture and
Mrs . Sheets served on the
Home Econimcs.
Meigs Library Board several
years and was active with the
A former Highland and Rio Grand e Com munity
Meigs County E xtension College advisor y board
Agent, Mrs . Sheets now is a
during its organizational
part-lime instructor at Rio years.
Grande College and a subAn accomplished pianist,
stitute teacher at the
having studied under Mrs.
Wellston High School. She
Patrick Lochary, Mrs. Sheets
and her husband James also
has performed in recitals and
' a teacher ar~ curr;ntly
has taught piano . For the past
managers ' of the Centers
several years she has-studied
Cave 4-H Camp near Jackson
Appalachian mu sic and
and spent the summer there
presented programs around
with their two sons Aaron
the state playing selections
Bradford , age tw~. and
on a dulcimer .

Congj.ess blocks Ford on·· decontrols

.- ..

···..

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controls.
.
White.
House
Press
Secretary Ron Nessen said in
Helsinki, 'where Ford was
attending the European
security summit, that any
sharp price hikes in gasoline

i

and heating ojlthis fall should it."
,
be blamed on Congress.
~on~res.s
cleared
" I think Americans . are legtslallon thiS week to exnow aware of th~ energy • tend pr.ice. .contro~ on some
problef!l," he satd. " The domesllc oll for SIX months
President is trying to solv~ it. past the ~ug. 31 cutoff dateCongress is trying to block
(Continued on page ~?l
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