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,
10 - The Daily Sent mel , Middleport'Pomeroy , 0, Tuesday, June 10. 19?5

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medtcal Center
t Discharged, June 9)
Russell Ball , Karen
Barrett, Penny Blackburn ,
Garlantl Boston. Matthew
Bowden, Jea n Cu cle. Mrs
Robert Oatley and son. Do11s
De nney, Ktmberl y Flits ,
Dame! Ewmg , Mt's Donald
Hammond and son , Rebecca
Henderson, Freddie Kaylor.
Mary Ann Ker ns. Anna
Kinder, Anna Polh tt, Shelby
Rober ts ,
Rvan
Rose
Mtlhcence s.~I:vers. Jamc~
Stms, Donald Skaggs, Ahce
Smtlh, Ruth Spu es. MIS
Von ley S!a nle1 and su n
George Steele , Co n n t ~
Wa tso n, Mrs
Mtchae l
Willl c~ms and son
I Births!
Mr and Mrs Hdrl ey
Cr ouse.
a
da ughter,
Ga lltpolts; Mr and Mrs
Lester McCoy. a son . Pomt
Pleasant, Mt and Mrs

News •• in Briefs

Street
lights ''''~~~~·;~~·;~J;~~~'':= ·= =
(Continued from
e I)
Drawings lor a sanc-

(Continued from page 1)

Dan ny Morrow. a daughter.

per cent to 6' 1.
Cittbank's 6·' ' pet cent rate is the lowest m the nation and
Davtd Muihns a so11
ts
the
ftrst ltme m more than two years that the prune has been
Galltpolis. Mr a11d Mt s'
be
low
7 at any major U S. bank Bank of America of San
Lon nie Sunpson, a son, Oa k
F'ranctsco,
the natwn 's largest, lowered its rate to 7 per cent
Htll, Mt and Mrs flobet 1
Whltt tngton a daughte1 . Monday as dtd maJor banks tn New York, Clucago, Los
Angeles , Ptttsburgh, Detro tt, St . Lou is and Seattle.
r 1azcr 's IJ ottom. W Va

Ruth1·ans go 2-2
m ·w·eek end p Iay·

dtssentuw ot K ~I g h
titmed slo-pilcb softball
" v e
e Y as tournam ent
will
be
•
sta ted that h1e IS not against sponsored by the · Village
recrealton but 1s, "Agamst
Pharmacy team, June 13_
pool . h~~ls bemg open on 15 at Kyger Creek field In
Sunday .
Cheshire ' this evening.
In weekend action the Kuhn , a single, Stan Moon a
Mrs Elea nor Thom as,
Entry fee is $! 5 and two
Meigs Sr. Babe Ruth team of smgle and Tim Cundiff had a
exec uttv e dtrector of th e softballs. Trophies will be
Woody Call went 2-2 without home run and a smgle
Metgs County Coun ctl on
awarded. Any team Inthe servtce of four starters.
Vel&lt;•rans Memonal Hospital
On Sunday the Ruthians
Ariton, ap peared before
terested In participating
On Saturday Meigs lost the traveled to Spencer, W. Va.
ADM IT1 ED - Myrtl e
coun ctl and asked the body to
call 992-3132 992_3363 or
ftrst game to Post 140 by 9-0, and won the ftrst game 6-4 in
Du1 st Sy1acuse, Da n1el
approprta
te
$700
for
the
992-7074
'
but came back m the 12 innings but lost the fmale ,
Aurh
ey
Betzmg,
64,
De&gt;~tt! ,
Bidwell. Golda
Don ; her mother, Mrs Dora
Mulberr
y
Av
e
,
Pomeroy
,
coun ty-wide semor c1t1zens :··-:..: :· :.... .;... : .. ......•..·,·.·.·..·. .... nightcap to down them 18-5. S-2.
Epple, Pomeroy, Carl Sit II,
Hea ton , one Sisler, Mr s
.. .. · · .. · · · .. ......... In the opening loss, the only
Mtddleport, Opal Duff, w1fe of promment buswess- Edward 1Ruby ) Baer, all of program
Greg McKmney pitched the
Mrs. Thomas sa td that a
two Meigs hits were singles mttial contest, going the 12
Dexter. Burzc ner Bego, man . Roy Betzmg, dted at her Pomeroy; two step-brothers,
mt mmum of $23,500 must be
by greg Cundiff and Tun mmngs. fanning 20, issumg
Mtddleport,
Rt c hard home Monaay evemng.
Clyde Hea ton, Gree nboro
Mt s Betzt ng was a lnd , and Clatre Heaton, Lo; ratsed locally to contmue the
Kuhn. Greg McKinney went only two freebees, and
Thomas, Pomeroy . Juamkl
semor
citize
ns
progra
m
hte
distance, gtvmg up only allowmg only two htts
of
the
Pomeroy
member
Conde. Ree dsvtlle: Ranrh
Angeles, Ca hf , and four
Syracuse
and
Rutland
have
three
hits while striking out
Methodtsl
Church,
Pomeroy
Tluvenet. Galhpolts; , Hope
Getting htts for Metgs m the
grandchtldren
already
agreed
to
apLONG
BOTTOM
Mary
mne
and
walking four .
Garden
Cl
ub
and
Women
's
Ebl tn. Sy ro cuse, Judy
first
game were Marshall
Funeral servtces will be proprtate money for the Lou Evans, 40, Rt I, Long
In the second game Tim wtth two smgles, G. Cundtff
Gutn !her, Long Bottom , Golf Assoctatwn
Fnday at 2 p m at Ewmg
BQttom, dt ed Monday at Cundiff went the distance on wt th a double, Rtch Berry a
She was preceded tn death Cha pel wtth Rev. Wtlham program , she satd
Chalies Kessmger. Pomeroy
Mrs Thomas outhned Veterans Memonal HospitaL the mound allowmg only two double, B. Marshall a single,
DISCHARGED - SIC\ e by her father, Charles Rtre; Mtddleswarth offlctalmg.
serv
tces by the program
Mrs . Evans ts survtved by hits whtle strtking out seven
one
brother,
Frankhn
Rtce
,
Trussell. Jud1th Bacon
Bunal w11I be tn Meigs statmg that about half of the her parents, George M. Hens- and walking three. Gettmg Jtm Howard McKinney,
one stsler, Maxine Rice and Memory Gardens
Moon and T. Cundtff each a
Pleasant Va lley Hospital
county's semor citizens ley, Long Bottom, and Stella Meigs htts were Charlie smgle.
step-fa ther, Clarence Heaton .
Fnends
may
call
at
the
DISCHARGES - Mt s
In addttton to her husband fun eral home after 1 p m some l,BOOpersons -are now L. Chevalter, Waterford ; two Marshall with two smgles,
The second game was won
V~rgil Wa tso n and son
participating in ac lt vtlt es. daughters, Mahnda L. and GregCundlffhad a double,B by Spencer who ptcked up tts
she IS survived by one son, Wednesday
, James Roush Jr ·
She satd that the semor Diana L. and a son, John J , Marshall had two singles, ftve runs on five hits . Woody
THEAT~E Galhpohs
'
Hartford ; Chn stt Rose,
ci ti zens program is im- at home; four brothers, Jeff McKinney a double, Tim Call started on the mound for
portant tn Metgs Co unty George A Hensley, ReedsRactne ; Grace Thevenet
Meigs, but was relieved in
Ton1ghf thru Thur sday
Ga ihpolt s, Robert Knaul .
beca use one out of hve vtlle; John C. Hensley, Giants go 30-2
the second by Ttm Cundtff
NOT OPEN
Pom l Pleasant
·
RACINE - Mrs. Frank Ga hann a: two brothers, restden ts are over 60 and 37 Tuppers Plams; Henry L.
who ftnished up. Combmed
BIRTHS - June 9, a
I Co ra I Buck, 80, Rt 2, Harold Arthur Stobart and pet. are at or below the Hensley and Robert D. Hens- over Pirates
efforts struck out stx and
daughter to Mr and Mrs . Guv
Racme, dted Monday at the Ben Stobart, both o£ Racine; poverty mcome level of $3,000 ley, both of Long Bottom ; her
Fn , Sat &amp; Sunday
In Pomeroy Little League walked two for Metgs pttgrandmother, Ada Triplett,
Thoma, Rutland , June 10, ~
home of her da ughter, Betty one stster. Faye Beegle , annually.
CHINA TOWN
action
Monday night th~ cbers. Ht tters were Berry
Semor Ct!tzens through the Waterford , and several
daughter to Mr and Mrs. Stewart, Gahan na
Columbus , and
seven
(Technlco lorl
uncles, nieces, G1ants defeated the Pirates' wtth a single, Howard and T.
Delmas Flora, Henderson
Rated " R"
Mrs
Buck was the gra ndch tldren, and It ve local program are playmg aunts,
•
30-2 with C. Allen picking up Cundiff each had a double,
Also Cartoon
useful roles They ha ve nephews and cousms.
and a daughter to Mr. and
daug hter of the late Thomas great-grandchtldren
Show sta rts at 7 00 p m
She was a member of the the win. For the Pirates, R. and Stan Moon a double. The
Mrs
Alvtn
Morn son,
P and Belle Stobart She was
Fun eral servtces will be worked over 40,000 hours m
team record is now 8-2.
Manley took the loss.
Ravenswood
also preceded m death by her Thursday at 11 a m. at Ewmg the past two ye ars m Long Bottom Methodtst
The Giants' Allen was
husband, Frank Buck.
Chapel wtth Rev Wilbur volunteer programs to help Church.
In the fourth by C.
relieved
Funeral services will be
Mrs Buck ts survtved by Pernn offtctallng . Burial will others. She spoke on the hot
McKinney
and he pitched two
two sons , Roy Buck, Belpre, be 111 Leklrt Falls Cemetery. meal and tr ansportatiOn Thursday at 2 p.m. at the
innings
before
R. Smith came
· DANCE PLANNED
and Frttz Buck, Rt. 2, Friends may call at the aspects of the program and Long Bottom Methodist
Racme , two daughters, Mrs funeral home any tune after outlmed general servtces. Church wtth burial m the on to fintsh the contest. C.
There will be a square
Councilman Kmg voiced his Sutton Cemetery. Rev. Eldon Judge gave relief help for the dance at the Pomeroy Juntor
Mtldred Foster, Columbus, noon Wednesday
approval of the program but Blake wtll offtciate. Friends Pirates.
and Mrs . Betty Stewart ,
High Audttortum, Saturday,
Getting hits for the Giants
made a motion, whtch may call at Ewing Funeral
June 7, from 8:30 to 11 :30
were J . Fields wtth a home
passed, that Mrs. Thomas' Home at any tune.
p.m . The dance is being held
run,
!rtple, double, and two by the Senior Citizens Center
request for funds be tabled
singles; A. Young had a
DETROIT (UP!) - Faced vtce president and general un ttl a study could be made
and ts open to the public.
NOW YOU KNOW
double, single, and a tr1ple;
wtth fuel - ef!tcwnt unports manager of tts Lincoln - on what Middleport Vtllage
Admtssion is $1. Children
a peach is 87 per cent C.
McKmney had three admitted free.
grabbmg one of every five Mercury Divtswn, admttted can do
water .
singles and a double, R.
new car sales, the Ford Motor Monday that the No. 2 Accumulated sick leave
Stewart, C. Allen, J .
Co next week will mtroduce automaker was forced mto and vacatwn of Matntenance
McKinney, and R. Allen each
three reengmeered small the move by the record share Supervisor Chase who wtll be
THREE FINED
had a double, and T. Jewell,
..,_..
cars rated at 34 miles per of the U S market the im- retiring was dtscussed He
SYRACUSE
Three
R. Smith and J. Evans each
gallon m the government's ports have been taking.
has been employed for etght
(Continued from page 1)
defendants
were
fmed
m
had a single.
years and has not had
htghway drtvmg test.
Syracuse Mayor Herman
For the Pirates, R. Manley
vacatwn or sick leave and civilian and military leaders
The Ford Mustang II , Ford
London 's court Monday
R. Landers each had a
and
TO
MEET
THURSDAY
had earlier stated that he over warfare in Vietnam,
Pm to and Mercury Bobcat
mght.
Fined were Terry D.
The June meeting of the
would settle for 120 days pay. Ford said : "I think we can smgle.
al so are rated by the EnMoore, Syracuse, $10 and
Southeastern Ohio
He has vacation ac- learn somethmg from those
vtronmental Pro tec lton
costs, stop stgn violatton;
Agency at 23 m.p g. m the Regional Council will be cumulated at the rate of two differences and if we ever
Bobby E. Dill, Jr ., Pomeroy,
SEATS AVAILABLE
ctty cycle - almost equal to held 6 p.m. Thursday at weeks for each year's servtce become engaged in any
There is room for 15 per- $1~ and costs, s peeding;
the Holiday Inn, Galllpolls plus some 120 days of stck mtlitary operation m the
the hest of the smaller unMtllard L. Roush, Jr .,
and not Sept. 12 as leave Counctl had agreed future -and I hope we don't SOflS on tbe senior ciltzen
ports. Ford accomphshed the
Syracuse,
$10 and costs, left
previously ·announced. that Chase should recetve 120 -1 trust we have learned excur~ion to Cmcinnati
fuel-tmprovmg fea t by addmg
of
center
The defendants
Wednesday, June 18, to the
a catalytiC converter to Speaker will be Richard days as requested m ex- something about how we Reds-Atlanta Braves game. were cited to court by Police
Jackson, director of high- change to the servtee, without should handle such an
control
e mJsswns
and
The cost of the trip is $15 and Chtef .Mtlton Varian
ways
In Ohio.
!tme off, he has gtven to the operation."
lowenng the axle ratio
town.
He declined to discuss any buses will leave from
Wtlham Benton, a Ford
specific posstble future cases. Pomeroy at 8 a.fll. Anyone 50
Howe ve r,
Clerk
CLASS CHANGED
or over Wishing to make the
Treasasurer
Gene
Grate
satd
RACINE - The Racine
NOTICE OF
trip should call 992-7886 to
PUBLIC HEARING
Emergency
Class on Vttal
)
page
he
had
checked
with
Solicttor
(Continued
from
Public
Affairs
and
no
definite
make a reservation .
1
ON THE COLUMBIA
Bernard
Fultz
on
the
matter
Signs
has
been
changed from
TOW NSHIP TRU STEES
actions on the project were
satd, there are people to and learned that thes tate takenn .
BU DGET
June 18 and 25 to some time in
No l!ce 15 hereby QJ\Ien th a t operate thorne. There are
code provtdes that only stx
July. Date and time will be
on the 3rd d ay of July , 1975, ar
Mayor
Hoffman
said
he
whteh operate a
k
FUND
AT$4,135
a JO o c lock PM a publtc corporatwns
announced.
The members of
home
on
a
lease
basts.
wee
s
vacation
and
only
onewould tnqlllre tnto the status
hear1ng will be held on the
The
public
fund
drite
for
fourth
of
120
acc
umulated
the emergency squad wtll
Budge t prepa r ed b y the
of retmbursement funds the
" The operatton of the stck leave can be paid. He
Ryan Jeffers, 3, power hold a spec1al meeting June
Townsh i p
Trus tees
of
town
is
supposed
to
receive
Co lu mb1a Town sh 1p ot Me 1g s faciltty' whtch IS one of the
agreed to get back with Fultz for the placement of stgns in mower acctdent victim 23 at the fire station at 8 p.m.
County OhiO for th e next
to see tf somethmg can be
succeedm9 f1 scat y ea r endmg most cructal, IS not a
the town. More signs from the stands at $4,134.99. Latest to make plans for the 4th of
Decembe r J i st 1976
problem . Our greatest
ked
contributor to the fund, which July program.
Such he ar 1ng W1ll b e he ld a t problem IS who will own tt be
wor
out lor 120 days of pay State of Ohio have been
th e o fl1 ce ot th e Tow nshi p
•
tQ Chase.
rece1ved and more posts are ~as been offtctally disconTru stees
t! public or pnvate," he said
tinued, Is Wtlliam Francis.
If tl does turn out to be a
As a result of the report needed It was agreed to wait
G lor1a Hu lton
to determine 1f the reimWILL WASH CARS
Clerk pubhc venture, there is a
Col u mb•a T w p
bursement funds will be ·
The
Meigs High Varstty
to the ordmance commtttee.
Tru stees posstbthty that the county
forthcommg soon to provide
Cheerleaders wtll hold a car
ASK TOWED
can recetve a federal grant to The commtttee will be asked
! 6 J 10, 1tc
funds for the posts.
.
Michael
L.
Barr,
23,
Langswash
Wednesday from 9 a.m.
fmance the proJect at 5 to work out an ordmance
ye
r
precedmg
the
Pra
ville,
and
Margaret
J.
Riggs,
to
3:30
p m at Welker's
percent tnterest.
wh1ch provtdes that a worker mee~in g was by Rev. Dwight 21, Rt. 2, Pomeroy; Robert Ashland
Economtcally
speaking, must take vacation time or
Zav1tz. John David Gerard Wayne Byer, 38, Leon, w.
there would be an tmportan t pay each year so that emwho will be a candtdate for' Va., and Cassandra Hamimpact on the county' satd ployes '" the future wtll not be
council in the fall, attended mond, 30, Gallipolis; Robert
BOARD TO MEET
Edison Baker' Mtddleport fa ced with the problem whtch
Dad does, of course.
the
meeting
and
police
Chief
Nelson Greenlee, 19, Point
RACINE - The Southern
busmessman, also mvolved m Chase has.
J
·
J
·
Cremeans
was
also
Local
Board of Educa!ton wtll
QUALITY
WORK
Pleasant,
,
and
Theresa
the
study.
"Such
a
fac1hty
It's just one of the
would employ many people,
Counctl approved the ap- present for a portton of the . Colleen HarbolD', 16, Apple hold a special meehng
d
pomtment of Wtlhs Anthony session.
AT
Grove, W. Va.
Wednesday, June 11 at 7:30
responsibilities of fatherhood.
an some people would stay to the Board of Public Mlairs
p.m. at the high school.
in
the
area
to
be
near
LOW PRICES
relattves m the home, rather upon the recommendation of
than travelhng for hours to go Mayor Hoffman . Anthony
Call
for
a vistt. " Baker reflected wtll ftll the unexpired term of
We try to ease Dad's worries by
992 -7453 In Ohio
the feehngs of many m these Don Pearch who ts moving
882 -2698 In W. Va .
offering savi ngs account plans
words :
from the community.
and time certificate accounts
" I always thought of a
Counclhnan King reported
that help Dad put away money
nursmg homeasa lastresort
that progress is being made
but my feelmgs have changed m the estabhshment of a
for the future ... for the kids'
cttizens group whtch will
constderably. When elderly
k
education, that special vacation
people are ill, a nd the wor towards an expanded
or retirement. Visit us soon and
hospital releases them, but program at the community
find out about our savings plans.
they sttll need constant care, park. Council also heard a
I
there ts a defmite need for a report from Chase statmg
I
nursmg home. Many tunes that tile for a sewer on Lower
I
famtlies just can 't provtde Park St. to the nver, to en1
the care."
close sewage now runmng tn
WALK -UP TELLER WINDOW AND
,I A.s Crow satd, "We hav~ the ~~e ope~, wtdll cost $4,515. The
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
ground , the real estate, and
unct
tscussed
the
FRI. EVENINGSS To7 P.M.
the operation. Now we need a posstbthty of the sewer being
Sizes 29 to 42 waist. Select your cc.rrect
group to own !I."
a problem' of the Board of
length. Solid colors · checks - plaids .
When You Visit, Park FREE
stripes . A tremendous selection and all
at sale prices.
I
Kan{Iuga , Mr . a nd

M1s

Audrey Betzing died Monday

Mary Lou Evans
di d M
e
onday

.

MEIGS

Cora Buck of Racine dies

Who worries
about the future?

•

CIA ·zs ound· guilty on two counts
'

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Tbe Rockefeller Commisston finds
the CIA gmlty as charged of spymg on Americans and abusmg
itS powers It says the agency should be brought under the
constant scrutiny of Congress and an outstde !untune watchdog.
The commtsswn 's 299i)8ge report confirms and documents
how the CIA kept files on tens of thousands of Amencans,
tapped phones, kept people under surve1Uance, opened mail
tllegally, jailed a defector for three years in near solitary
confmeme~t and experunented on unsuspecltug mnocent persons with I.SD, causmg one smctde.
Presidents S I Hayakawa of San Franc1sco State College
and Theodore Hesburgh of Notre Dame University were
among those Americans whose names show up in files on
diss1dents. "
The commission charged that pressure from two prestdents
-Lyndon Johnson and Rtchard Ntxon - was partly responSible for the agency's transgressions.
"Two presidents and thetr staffs made continumg and insistent requests of t~e CIA for detailed i!valuation o{ possible
foretgn mvolvement m the domestic dtsstdent scene," the
·
report said.
"The agency's repeated conclusiOn in its reports - that it
could find no signilicant foreign connection wtth domesbc
disorder -led to further White House demands that the -CIA
account for any gaps in the agency 's investigation and that it
remedy any lack of resources for gathering information. "
The CIA even spted on tts own people. Tbe report tells of one
employe m the 1960s who attended meetmgs of a group thought
1

'

to be financed by leftwmgers from abroad He was kept under
surveillance for almost a year "hole was cut into hts apart·
ment and mtcrophones mstallcd m every room. His mat! was
watched for seven months. His tax returns were exammed .
"This mves!tgation yielded no evidence of dtsloyalty," the
report satd.
But the report also stressed these "plamly unlawful and
improper" activities are matters of the past - mostly "of the
Cold War aod the anxwus 19615 -and that "the great
majority" of domesttc acttvtltes by the agency over the course
of tts 28-year htstory were wtthin the law.
The report results from a five-month mvesliga lton by a
panel of eight men; mostly former government officials,
headed by Vice President Nelson Rockefeller and appomted m
January by President Ford followmg publication in the New
York Ttmes of stones alleg mg "masstve" violation of the law
by the CIA
The commission intervtewed 51 wttnesses and took 2,900
pages of testimony.
The report, as Presiqent Ford announced, said nothing of the
CIA's alleged role m assassmalton plots against foretgn
leaders. Tbe commtsston sent what it learned on that to Ford
who forwarded it to Attorney General Edward LeVI fo~
possible prosecuhons. Levi's office,satd the attorney general
was giving it personal attention
Sen. Frank Church, D-ldaho, s8ld his Senate intelligence
comrmttee would probe beyond the Rockefeller report and
make a "full dtsclosure" of facts. In the House, Rep. Bella
Abzug, D-N Y., said the report does not tell "the whole story"

WP.ather

•

Showers likely tonight
Lows tonight m mtd 60s
Shower s endmg Thursday
mornmg, highs m the upper
70s .
Probability
of
prec ipttatton 60 per cent
today and tomght, 30 per ce nt
Thursday.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

--·-·-1

r-·- ·- --.

l

Father'~

I

I

Men's Double Knit

Il

I
I

I
Ii

I

PITTSBURGh

litbens
/4aHonal B tt
~INC:fNNATI
f\1\

I

L1ncle Stars - they're worn
by Hol lywood and TV
ce l ebr~tle s They're
awarded to th e All .
j Amenca footba ll team.

OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

t

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"RAPE
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. ~::yp~:p~~a~~~~~gda~oll ~ SQUAD" /;'ll~~f~l ~
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t.t.::TI~:•.:2. 'Joco! *
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~MIDDLEPORT

DRESS SLACKS

I GIVE 0'1"10 I
I ALINDE STAR - '/*****~************************
THE ALL-AMERICA
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
·RING
1
TONITE

"THE FRJENlJLY BANK ''

~ember federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

I

DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

i

I

mk, $60.oo up
Blue.S87.50up.

GOESSLER'S
Jewelry Store

l;ourt St., Pomeroy

,..

TH~~-e;:: AIU:s ~:veN

,..

GASIC Fll l'f.ALE
/?,'" ;, ~E~ I-'ONSES!

n

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~

,..

Ii MASON DRIVE-IN THEATRE i*
1*

1:

MASON, W. VA.

;_

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. .. . ....,

-...

Day Saie

9.95 Slacks

1G.95 Slacks
11.95 Slacks

12.95 Slacks
13.95 Slacks
14.95 Slacks

15.95 Slacks
16.95 Slacks

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

6.89
7.69
8.49 ·

9.19

Sale 9.79
Sale 10.39
Sale 11.19
Sale 11.89

Father's Day is Next Sunday

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

. . . . ..

the state Ractug Corrumsswn, was
offered on behalf of the Meigs
County Croakers , a group sponsormg frog jumping competition at
the Btg Bend Regatta m Pomeroy,
June 21.
The btU would return between 1
per cent and 7 per cent of the bettmg
handle to the state. Collins srud he
had no tdea how much thts would
ratse, but he conceded bets have
been placed on the frogs m previous
contests

about CIA, and Congress must brmg that story out.
The Rockefeller panel satd it found "no credtble evtdence"
of the mvolvement of the CIA or any of tts people m the
assassination of John Kennedy -persistent rumor notwithstandmg.
Ch1ef among 30 recommendattons to keep the CIA from

Uooer Collins' bill, the Racing
Commission would be able to set
frog Jumping seasons, and a state
mspector would su pervise any
contest The commission could
establish rules, prohibiting the use
of drugs on the frogs or entermg a
frog under another's name.
The bill provides a fine of up to
$100 lor entering a toad in a frog
race. It also provides for higher
purses to OhiMwned frogs.

::··
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future "devtations within the Umted States from its assigned
mtsswn" is creation of a Joint Committee on Intelligence In
Congress and of a full time chairman and staff of an executive
intelligence oversight board in the execultve branch.
The report also recommends a maxunum 10-year term for
(Continued on page 16)

Now You Know

en tine

Pagophagta is the custom
of eating a tray of tee datly
for two months to help offset
iron deftciency .

Board told progress excellent
•
In Meigs Local corps .program
.....

.. h
(

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·~.4.

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........

PRESENTED CERTIFICATE - Lucille Smith
prestdent of the Meigs County Council on Aging, recet ves'
a certificate designating the Metgs County Council as the

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clearing house for all programs for the elderly in the
county. Maktug the presentatiOn ts John Matthews,
deputy director of the Buckeye Htlls-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District.

By Jo Ellen Diehl
A repo rt of excellen t
progress was gtven by
managers of the Teacher
Corps readmg projects, and
no achon was taken on htrtng
an asststant superintendent
during the Metgs Local Board
of Educa tton meetmg
Tuesday mght.
Dr . John Mangien, Dave
McWilhams, and J olin
Redovtan, dtrectors of the
readmg proJect, presented a
detatled survey of the readmg
abthty of students m and out
of the Teacher Corps proJect.
Mos t parttctpants jumped
more than one grade level m
reading abtlity over the year,
and m some mstan ces
studen Is moved up as much
as 3 1 levels
At the high school level.

whtch Mangtere destgnated
as the corps' Hs tarn school,
students tmproved from two
to three limes more than
normally .
Wtth one year left in the
two-year program, Mangteri
satd the goal is to leave the
dtstrtct wtlh a good rea dmg
program to carry on when the
corps leaves
The board approved the
proJect to contmue lor one
more year, allocatmg $14,500.
The board went mto
execul!ve session tO dtscuss
the htrmg of an asststant
supermte nden t to replace the
late Larry Mornson. No
offt ctal actwn was taken
Ray Goodman, vocational
dtrector, was given a tentahve go-ahead for plans to
extend present mmmg class

fNews . . .in Briefsl Creston Newland honored by hoard
By Unlted Press1nternatlonal
WASHINGTON- THE ROCKEFElLER COMMISSION
says it found "no credible evidence" the CIA was involved in ·
the assassination of President John Kennedy. The commissiOn
reported Tuesday it assembled a new panel of five experts to
restudy motwn pictures taken as Kennedy was shot in Dallas
on Nov. 22, 1963.
The experts concluded separately and unanimously that
Kennedy was struck by only two bullets, both' ftred from the
rear, and that no medical evidence pomts to any other shots. In
an 18-page chapter of its report to President Ford on CIA activities, and conunlssion discussed - and dismissed as unsupported by ev1dence - two theories:
- That E. Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgts, both convicted
of burglarizing Democratic headquarters in the Watergate
complex in 1972, participated in the assassination. Hunt Is a
former CIA employe who handled political aspects of the Bay
of Ptgs operation in 1960 and 1961. Sturgis was active in anttCastro groups in Miami.
- That the CI had links with Lee Harvey Oswald, identified by tbe Warren Commission as Kennedy's sole assassin or
with Jack Ruby, who ktlled Oswald two days after the
assassination.
WASHINGTON - ''MO" UDAlL HAS WST the strip
mming battle again, but insists he will not give up. A 278-to-143
House vote Tuesday feU three short of the two-thirds needed to
override President Ford's veto of strip mine control
legislation.
The administration had predicted a larger, 20-vote margf11
to sustain the veto. "This thing isn't dead. The fight must go
on," Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz., floor manager of the
measure, said, pointing to the narrowness of the vote.
"We are going to sit down with tbe supporters of the billfarm groups, ranchers, unioflS, and environmentalists - and
devise a strategy to send tbe blll to the President again." One
tactic, he said, might be to tack tlie measure onto another bill
constdered "must" legislation by Ford.
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE liAS APPROVED a $473
million bill to provtde summer work lor 840,000 youngsters.
The measure was passed Tuesday on a 4()8-to;8 vote and sent to
the Senate for expected speedy approval. It was taken from tbe
$5.3 billion emergency JObs bill which Prestdent Ford vetoed.
The money would keep going a summer youth employment
program under which the federal government pays the full
salary to c1ties or colUlties that employ young people at various
jobs such as life guards,leaf rakers or teachers. Young people
would get nine weeks of work, averagmg 26 hours a week,
under ti)e program, and their total pay for the sununer
would average about $500.
LONDON - PRIME MINISfER HAROLD Wilson has
overhauled his government, switching a controversial leftist
cabinet minister in a blow tq the Labor party's left wing.
With hili own prestige boosted by an overwhebnlng "yes"
(Continued on J18!1e 18)
I

,.-

COLUMB US (UPI) - Frog
racmg, complete with frog jumpmg
seasons and a frog racing commissioner, would become reality m
Ohw if the General Assembly approves legtslal!on to be mtroduced m
the Sena te today by Sen Oakley C.
Collms, R-lronton
. Collins satd the proposed
leg tslation, which authoriZes panmutuel wagering on frog racing
under the control and regulalton of

_V_DL_._XX_VI~I_N_0_.4_1_________P_O_
M_
ER~OY_·M_ID_D_LE_PO_R_T._O_HI_O__________~W~E~
DN~ES=D~
AY~,=
JU~NE~
ll~,1~97~5__________________________________~P~RICE15'

Nursing home

PHOTOS

·. ·

Legislature pondering taxes, welfare, prison reform,
recession, unemployment, energy and frog racing

Devoted 1'o The Interests uf The Meigs-Mason Area

Doll!II...S

WEDDING

·:

at y

Ford offering 34 gpm autos

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EASTERN - Creston 0 .
Newland, retinng as a school
employe after more than 40
years service , was honored
by the Eastern Local School
Dtstrtct Board of EducatiOn
Tuesday night
Board members after their
bustness sessiOn were JOined
by thetr wtves and Mrs.
Newland joined her husband
for a social hour when
homemade 1ce cream and
cake, provtded by Supt John
Rievel and Prtncipal Chester
Gooding, were served by
Mrs Rtbel and Mrs . Gooding
Newland, who has been a
driver of school buses and
more recently clerk of the
Distnct, was presented a
clock wtth an engraved plate
at the base commending him
for his years of servtce to the
schools and the community.
Durmg tts busmess the
board session accepted the
resignation of Mrs. Carolyn

Ford in 2
day talks
with Rabin
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Ford and Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabm today began two days
of talks that coUld open the
door for a new American
peace drive in the Middle
East.
,
Ford smiled and shook
Rabin's hand, settling his
visitor into an Oval Office
armchair to hear the Israeli
leader 's views. Ford is
completing a reassessment of
U.S. Middle East policy and
planning that Included
prestdential talks "'' h

L Smith, ftrst grade teacher
at Chester, and Helen Cald·
well, second grade teacher at
Tuppers Plams wh o ts
·rettrtng afte r 42 years of
teachmg
Linda Myers restgned as
asststant custodian at the
Chester Bwldmg, a position
that will be filled later this
summer.
The board a ppotn ted Elotse
Boston as the new clerk She
has been servmg as asststant
to Newland and wtll begm her
duttes July 1. Her adva nce ment creates the
vacancy of assistant clerk
and sec re ta ry to the
supenntendent,. a combmed
post. Appbcatwns for that
post, which will also be filled
later tn the summer, are
bemg accepted.
The board entered into a
written agreemen t wtth the
Metgs County Board of
EducatiOn for prov1dmg

Ell.TE('IDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
fair Friday and a chance of
showers Saturday and
Sunday. Highs will be In the
upper 70s and low 80s and
lows will be In the upper 50s
and low 60s.

psychologtcal servtces The
dtslrtcl wtll pay a part of the
expenses involved, accordmg
to the agreement . Lewts
( Sptke ) Be rkhtmer was
employed as dnver educatwn
mstructor for the summer
and tutl!on rate was se\ at
$157.25 a year
Represe ntatives from the
dtstnct's band boosters met
wt th the board to dtscuss the
posstble purchase of drapes
for the band room and the use
of buses for getting band
members to camp at Rio
Grande m July Some parents
of c heerleader candidates
were also on hand to discuss
recent tryouts.
The board mdt cated tt
plans to visit all of the schools
dunng the summer to
determine needed repairs.
Tuppers Plams has already
been inspected Supt. Riebel
is expected to accompany
members on vist ts to the
other schools The mee ting
was recessed unhl this
evening. Btlls were approved
for paymen t.

Attendtn g were Howard
Caldwell, Jr , Oris Smith,
Clyde Kuhn, Starhng Massar
and Dorsel Larkins, board
members, Newland, Boston,
Gooding, Riebel and Duane
Wolfe, Chester principal.
FILES SUIT
Marilyn F Wilhams,
Minersvtlle, has flied suit for
dtvorce in Metgs County
Common Pleas Court against
Wendell Allen Wtlliams, RD.
Pomeroy, chargtn g gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.
LOCAL TEMPS
The
tempera lure
m
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. today was 72 degrees
with Ught ram falling
$862.75 RECEIVED
Receipts of $862.75 were
reported for the offtce of
Mayo r Fred Hoffman ,
Mtddleport, for May The
total mcluded $711 75 m fines
and fees and $121 in merchant
pohce collections

facthlies at the old Pomeroy
Jr Htgh Plans call for
butldmg an added room to
more than double the present
amount of space for more
mmmg equipment. The plans
must firs t be approved by an
arc htte ct and the state
bwldmg mspector.
No acllon was taken in
starling an Occupational
Work Adjustment program
due to lack of funds. Goodman reported ·that a leak m
the floor of the vocational
agn culture shop shower
room ts bemg repatred.
A collective bargamtng
agreement was reached wtth
OAPSE, Chapter No. 17, and
renewed for one year Also
approved was the collective
bargaming agreement wtth
the Metgs Local Teachers
A.ssoctatwn for one year
In other action the board :
- Appointed Ron Logan,
William Gibbs, and John
Mora as summer dnver
eduoahon teachers
- Accepted the resignation
of Sam Crow as the asststant
wrestlmg coach.
- Accepted the resignation
of James Vennar1 for the
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SEE PETE
RACINE- Entry blanks
for participation In the 4th
of July parade at Racine
11 ill not he mailed this
year. Persons wishing to
participate are asked to
contact Pete Simpson,
parade marshal~ at 9494292 as soon as possible.

Four hurt in car
FOW' persons were taken to
St Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg, following a single car
accident Tuesday at 3:30p.m.
Me1gs County Sheriff
Deputy Manning Roush said
Robert Geissler, 21, Parkersburg, was traveling southeast

Health care refunded

COLUMBUS - Gov. James
A
Rhodes Tuesday an:::•:•'•:-'·:···:·.·:·.·:· ...•,•,·:·.·:·. :· ·: ··: :·::·· :· •' •' :·
nounced approval of a
Egypt's Pres1dent Anwar $140,442 grant from the ApSadat_ last week in Salzburg, palachian Regwnal Commtsston (ARC) to the Ohio J
Auslr1a.
"The prime minister ts Ed ucat i onal Network
optimtstic. He is in a good Commtsst on (OENC) for
mood,'' Rabin's spokesman contmued fillldmg of a project
to tmprove primary health
Dan Pattir said.
Ford took a chair on care delivery in Athens,
Rabin's left and Secretary of Franklin and Galha counbes.
The project presently is
State Henry A. Kissinger,
alternating between smiling pro v idin g microwave
at photographers and som- telecommunications
berly belting a fistful! of technology to better the
documents and files, sat on a quality of primary health
so(Rbetw•~n the two leaders ., can' deb very m the dtsad-

vantaged rural areas of
Southeastern Ohio.
The microwave system
now hnks the Ohio State
Umversity
College
of
Medicine m Columbus with
the 0 'Bleness Memonal
Hospttal in Athens, the
Athens Medtcal Center, the
Athens Mental Health Center
and the Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolts.
Current program activities
include medical consultation,
radiology conferences, social
work conferences, medical
grand rounds, video tape
contlnuing educahon for
''

purpose of retirement.
- Appomted Eric Hart as
prmcipal of Rutland for one
year.
Appomted Donald
Hannmg as principal of
Bradbury for one year.
- Appomted Robert Oliver
as gol! coach.
Action was tabled concermng fmancial support for
cheerleaders and band
uniforms.
The board signed an
agreement with the county
hoard of education to pay
$1,500 as the district's share
for psychologiCal services.
The board also set the
salary for tbe vocattonal
director at base and three
mnths; put the cafeteria
supervtsor salary on a 16month scale plus ITilleage;
approved a reso luhon to
advertise for msurance on
buses and other vehicles;
approved the filing of the
applicatiOn for Title I funds
(remedtal reading program)
for 1975-1976, and approved
the filing of the applicat1on
lor DPPF funds.
It was announced that there
will be a budget hearing at
the July 8 board meeting.
Clerk L. W. McComas read
a thank you note from the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens for
the use of the Pomeroy Jr.
High bUilding. Attending the
meeting were board members Virgil King, Joe Sayre,
Bob
Wendall
Hoover,
Snowden, Carol Pierce, Supt.
George Hargraves, and
McComas.

physicians and nurses,
emergency
medical
techmctan trainink and
professional meetings and
planning sessions.
The ARC is a state-federal
partnership which promotes
the economtc and social
development of the Appalachian region of the
United States.
ARC - funded
" The
programs will increase
private Investment In the 28
counties of Oh1o Appalachia
and crea te more jobs,''
Rhodes said.

on TR 262, Chester Township,
when he slid in loose gravel
and sideswtped a bridge
abutment on the rtght &amp;de.
The driver and three
passengers, Roger D. Eagle,
John C. Eagle and Timmy ,
Cline were taken to tbe
hospttal
by
Coolville '
SEOEMS ambulance. The
accident is still under inves!tgahon.
At 2p.m. Tuesday m Salem
Township on CR I, Mark A.
Morris, 18, Rutland, was
traveling south. Thomas A.
Crisp, 21, Rt. 1, Langsville,
was traveling north according to Deputy Randall
Carpenter.
Morris was making a turn
onto Salem .Township Road
328 when Crisp 's car Clllle to
the top of the hill, and struck
the Morris vehicle. Both
drivers tried to avoid the
accident.
There were no pe1'801181
injlD'Ies. There was moderate
property damage. 'lbe IC·
cident Is still under Investigation.

�.

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Has

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , June 11,197~

.

~ , -

Wc Hold These Truths ...

-

Reag~

been asleep the past

Is America blind to Shah's tyranny
to the present· Iranian
system, they say, this is
heresy and a form of antipatriotism. Mohammed Reza
Shah Pahlevi runs t he store
in Persia and suffers nobody
lightly who questions the
propriety of his ownership.
For instance , say the
students, who lor self
protection oiten wear masks,
even on Pennsylvania
Avenue , the one party
government of the Shah of
Iran is curren tly holding "at
least
3~,000
political
prisoners" in slums back
home.. Their offenses, in some
cases , as verified by
numerous international
mquiries, fall into the
category of "working atainst
the state," that is, criticizing
the Shah.
It's not nice to rap the Shah,
apparently, and the co nsequences ·allegedly include
more than prison sentences.
To extract "confessions, "
according to an account this
year in the London Times,
Iranian jailers resort to
torture : " Victims allege that
methods of torture include
fl ogging, extraction of finger

and toe nails, electric shock
treatment to sexual organs
and the thrusting of broken
bottles into the anus of
prisoners suspended by their
wrists from a beam. " The
Times reports that another
favorite device in Iran jails is
to put naked prisoners, of all
ages, on bare bed springs and
then heat the metal.
It is against this kind of
terror , and the mentality
condoning it, that the Iranian
students have organized.
They
hold
meetings,
demonstrate at the Wl)ite
House, pass out leaflets.
Nobody pays the slightest
attention, of course, conscience raising having gone
the way of all flesh in
Amenca, as if bed spring
roastings were a yawn. But
the students continue to risk
their lives hoping for some
small support from the
earth's oldest constitutional
democracy .
The support, actually,
could be much more than
small. The students believe
the Shah, or at least the
Shah's repressive laws, could
not long stand without the ·

DR. LAMB

-By R05! Mackenzie and Jeff MacNelly.

Silent partner
massive military and
political assistance provided
by the U. S. government. The
U. S. has sold the oil rich
monarch $10 billion worth of
sophisticated arms since
1950. The U. S. has provided
at least 1,400 Defense
Department people to assist
the Shah in militarization.
Also, America is to sell and
send $1~ billion worth of
goods and services to Iran
over the next five years,
including nuclear material
and nuclear expertise.
What we are thus doing,
argue the students, is setting
up "another Vietnam." The
Shah is like Nguyen Van
Thieu, without wide support
among his people, and heUbent in directions opposite the
peoples' good. "Why does this
nation of oil need nuclear
reactors for electricity?" the
students ask. "Why so much
money for defense in a nation
where 6~ per cent of the
people cannot yet read or
write? And why, with $22
billion annually in oil income,
is so much of the population
still in rags and starving? If
for just one day the U. S.
stopped support, the Shah
would collapse ."
Albeit the support will not
stop. Even for a day. Despite
the lessons of Southeast Asia,
the United States continues
the policy of supporting
nations instead of people . We
back the leaders not the led.
At present the Shah has
revoked the passports of
some Iranian students in
America and has asked the U.
S. government to send them
home. It wiD surprise no one,
not least the students, when
America, bastion of freedom,
inevitably complies.

D,t,;AR READER - There
seem to ,IJe 5everal varieties
of' the grapelrul t diet in
common circulation. I am not
fond of any of them.
1ne uruy way any of them,

rr other reducing diets, work

is if they result in your eating
fewe r calories . In that
regard, some_people may get
some benefit' from eating a
plain grapefruit before a
meal, becausb it helps fill
them up on low calorie food,
and they may not eat as much
rich food as usual. However,
if they con tinue to eat the
same amount as always, it
will not help one bit.
Ea ting the grapefruit after
your usual meal, of the same
quanti ty and type, will not do
a thing for you. In fact, the
additional calories in the
grapefruit will simply add to
the problem. It is a good
substitute for a high calorie
dessert, though.
If you want to lose weight
}UU should go on ,a sensible
balanced diet and maintain a
general, regular exercise
program. You may try my .
. diet for this purpose . Write to
me in care of this newspaper,
P. 0. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, N. Y.

'

10019, and ask for The Health
Letter number 4-7 on Weight
Loss Diet. Be sure to enclose
~0 cents and a long, selladdressed stampCif envelope.
Now, about the safflower
oi l and corn oil, both contain
the same number of calo~ies.
per ounce so you are . not
gaining a thing by using
safflower oil instead of corn
oil in terms of calories. It is
true that safflower oil contains lesS saturated fat and
more polyunsaturated fat
than corn oil. To th~ extent
that decreasing saturated fat
and increasing polyunsaturated fat in the diet is
beneficial in helping some
people
lower · their
choles,terol, safflower oil is
superior.
_
Too much of either, though,
will increase the fat intake in
your diet and the total fat,
or
polyunsaturated
saturated, can be a factor in
raising your cholesterol level.
The only real harm in using
the oils or the polyun-

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Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

Last week, in a move which
I opposed, Members of
Congress were handed a
significant increase in
various office-related
allowances without the
necessity of a vote by the
House.
In July, 1971, the ·House
decided to spare itseH the
time and effort of debating
and voting on about 10 petty
housekeeping resolutions
each year. Procedures were
"streamlined" so that orders
by the House Administratrion
Committee would take effect
automatically. At· that time I
voted against the change. The
last four years ' record has
proven the correctness of that
position. Members' accommodations, facilities and
allowances have swelled
steadily without public
debate on the issue of need.
'The decisions of the House
Administration Committee
have been made in secret
meetings, closed to the public
and the press.
To give some idea of the
scope of the increases, since
1971 the number of reimbursed trips back to the
district are up 116 percent,
optional lump sums for travel
up 300 percent, stationery
allowances up 85 percent,
clerk hire funds up ~2 percent, telephone allowance
units up ~ percent, district
office rentals up 7~ percent.
The same Democratically controlled Congress that
brought inflation to the nat!on
The Bath White Butterfly was has practiced identical
named in England in 1702 techniques on congressional
because of its resemblance to a finances.
piece of em brmdery created in ram not saying that some
B&lt;l th
of these increases were not
justified to a certain extent.
~ the problems of constituents become more
complex and increase in
number, Members need more
facilities and resources to do

Grapefruit won't shave pounds
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I have
been told one can eat a large
evening meal as usual , then
eat hall a pink grapefruit ,
plain with no salt or sugar on
it and lose weight. I have
tried 'it but am not having
mucl\ luck. Is there any truth
to it?
I have also been told that
safflower oil is less fattening
than corn oil and cuts high
blood cholesterol. I have been
usin g both the oil and
margarine for about three
years. Can, you use too much
too long and harm yourseH?
I am a female, age 66, and a
potential diabetic. I have had
some high blood cholesterol
when I was checked lor it
years ago. I'm 5 feet tall and
weigh about 146 ~ounds.

1775:

On June 2, having established an Army Pay De!Mirtment
a! though there was no army to pay, Congress fills the void .
Responding to a request from .f1assacbusettJ that
Congress assume responsiblllty lor the colonial .
militiamen besieslng Boston, Congress airees to do 10and desig!lates 'them the Continental Army. Conll'esS also
authorizes the raising of six companies of riflemen to be
enlisted in Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia; several
days later, Pennsylvania is asked to raise lour more companies. Frontier riflemen are almost unknown to New
Englanders. Writing from Philadelphia to his wile in
Braintree, Massachusetts, John Adams says: "They use a
peculiar Kind of [gun) called a Rille- It has . .. Grooves
within the Barrel, and carries a Ball, with great Exactness
to Great Distances." These riflemen prove lndispen!Bble
·
to colonial success In the war.

decade~

TOM TIEDE

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - The
United States hosts thousands
of foreign students who
because of the prestige of
their American education
look forward to gomg back
home to optimistic futures.
Some current students from
Iran, however, foresee quite
different
circumstances
when they return. They
believe they will be arrested,
jailed, possibly tortured and,
as one of them glooms, "there
is the likelihood some of us
may also be shot."
The collegia tes, grouped
together as the Iranian
Students Association , have,
they say, learned more in
American than may be good
for them. Exposure to
democracy of thought has
radicalized their long held
opposition to the Iranian
monarchy., and it is this
radicalism that worries
them.
Actually, the students are,
as leftists go most mild . They
merely wish for free speech,
associatiort
and
free
representative govern ment
m tneir homeland. According

June 74,

Berrys World

saturated margarines comes
from the point that they do
contain lots of calories
because they are fats. This
means excess use of them, as
with other fats, increases
your cajorie intake and may
make it harder to control
}Uur weight. And, too much of
all types of fat in the diet,
leading to overweight conditions, is often associated
with high cholesterol levels.
I usually recommend using
the polyunsaturated oils in
.cooking and limiting the total
intake of all kinds of fat in the
diet. You do that by eating
lean meat, lean poultry and.
fish, and eliminating fat
whenever you can in food
preparation.
It takes lJss cooking oils lor
most baking than the amount
of solid fats called lor in most
recipes. That helps cut down
on calories some, but pies,
cakes and cookies are not
good foods for most weight
reducing diets. ·"

...

I

Zanesville man
has Jones' seat

II! l

ZANESVILLE - William~ •
Keslar, a resident of
Zanesville , Muskingum
County,hasbeenappointed to &lt;,
the executive committee of
the Ohio
Republicans
representing the Tenth
Congressional District.
He will complete the
elective term of Elmer Jo~es
of Athens who was appointed
to the Real Estate Division,
. Dept.· of Natural Resources.
The term expires in June,
1976.
Keslar, a former president
of Zanesville City Council,
owns and operates Baker's
•
~ ''
Restaurant in Norwich, Ohio
and is president of Keslar
Supply Co., ZanesviUe. He
was appointed to council to
WILLIAM KESLAR
fill an unexpired term, and .
later was elected, then serves on the county board of
,,
elected president in 1~ .
elections.
Keslar-is a native of Westtl
He studied Chemistry at
Miami University, was a moreland County, Pa . He is
member of the footbaU team married to the former Ellen
and later did further study at McCoy of Washington Court
the University of Alabama. House. They live at 1220
He served four years in the Newark Road. They have a
Army in WW 2, attaining the daughter and a son.
""
....
,
rank of Captain.
Keslar belongs to the
'"
Rotary Club, Elks, Eagles,
"
UCT, 32nd degree Mason,
,_
University Club, Aladdin
··· "1
Temple, ROJ No. 13,
American Legion, 40 et 8, the
' "'
Zanesville Chamber of
Commerce, · and is a past
."
COLUMBuS (UP!) -Ohio
president of the Ohio will submit a foqnal request
.....
Jaycees. Keslar received the Thursday to Coalcon in New . " '
Jaycees' outstanding York to construct a pilot coal
....... .
presidents award during his gasification
plant
in
year as state president.
'
southeastern Ohio.
Keslar is a member and
Gov. James A. Rhodes and
past chairman of the Robert Ryan, executive
I ll'. •
Zanesville - Muskingum secretary of the Ohio Energy
County Board of Health, and Emergency Commission, are
scheduled to submit a request
that the plant be constructed
The Almanac
in
Jefferson, Belmont,
By United Press InMonroe
or Scioto counties.
ternational
A group of officials from
Today is Wednesday, June
Monroe
County is also sche11, the 162nd day of 1975 with
duled
to
be in New York
203 to follow.
Thursday
to
formally request
The moon is between its
new phase and first quarter. that the plant be located in
.
The morning stars are that county.
Monroe
Coooty
was
a late
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
entry
in
the
bidding
for
lbe
The evening sta~s are
plant and Jame~ Diehl, a
Venus and Saturn.
Woodsfield
businessman wbo
Those born on this date are
helped
put
together the
under the sign of Gemini.
German composer Richard county's bid for the facUlty,
Strauss was born June 11, said the proposed site In that
county covers 86S acres of
1864.
level land next to the Ohio
On this day in history:
,
In 1920, Ohio's Sen. Warren river.
"The
local
effort
has
been
Harding was cbosen ~ the
and
the
"dark horse" Republican tremendous
candidate for president. fie cooperation crossed all ,
won ill November,, defeating barriers, Including political
James Cox, to become lbe party lines," Diehl said.
Officials of West VirKtnJa,
nation's 29tb president.
In 1927, CharleS Undbergh Tennessee, Pennsylvania,
was welcomed home by Kentucky, llllnois and . InPresident Calvin Coolidge diana also are seeking to •
after making history's first have the coal gasification.'
non-stop flight across the plant constructed in their
states.
Atlantic Ocean to Paris.

m A.

their jobs properly. What is
objectionable is that these
increases were not subjected
to the scrutiny of the entire
House so that each could be
examined and those which
were unnecessary could be
eliminated. If taxpayers are
to loot the bill lor these increased costs of government,
they should be able to watch
these decisions being made
and their Representatives
should be allowed to vote on
any such changes.
To promote a' more open
,and responsive Congress I
have sponsored two bills
which will allow Members to
go on record on any
allowance or salary increases. The first biU, H. Res.
434, would require that any.
increase in allowances, such
i that approved by the House
Administratrion Committee
last week, would have to be
authorized by the full House .
The second bill, H. R. 6~,
would similarly give Members an opportgunity to cast
their vote in favor or against
an in_crease in their salary. As
the procedure now stands, a
commission recommends
salary increases to the
President. If he approves, the
increase.can go into effect l)y .
congressional inaction., The
bill which I have reintroduced in this Congress
would make it easier lor an
individual Member to caU lor
a record vote on such an
increase, rather than passing
the buck to a commission and
then sitting back and doing
nothing.
If Congress is ever to have
the full faith and trust of the
people it represents, it must
take steps such as those
outlined above. This will
insure that each Member has
the opportunity to make his
position known on any :;alary
or allowance increase.

Stargell,Pirates awesome with hats

Sports
Desk

A Chronicle of America ··

opinion, features

Ronald Reagan has not, and may noit, toss his hat into the 1976 GOP presidential ring. But
if the former governor of California seriously entertains hopes of becoming a future president
of the United States, he is going to have to stop pouring the same old rhetoric out of the same old
bottles if he is to gain the support of more than a fringe fraction of Americans.
Either that, or we are mistaken in the belief that the American people as a whole have
consistently demonstrated more perception, more compassion, more plain common sense than
their leaders, or those who would lead them:
_
Reagan came on like Barry Goldwater in 11964 in his remarks at the National Headliners
Club annual awards banquet in Washington the other night. The Uruted States, he said, should
have sent its B..S2s to blunt North Vietnam's thrust into South Vietnam in violation of the Pans
peace accords.
The objection is not that the big bombers could not have done the job and South Vietnam
once again have been saved. But at what cost ? How many bombers would have been shot down ,
how many new POWs and M!As have been created•
And to what pW'pOse ? The American people long ago realized that they could go on saving
South Vietnam indefinitely and that at some time or another the Vietnamese had to be left to.
sink or swim by their own ef!orts.
It ls dismaying, if not downright frightening, to hear a man of Reagan's political
prominence talking as if he had been on another planet for the past IOyea~s .
.
The United States should also have acted "in any way to prevent or discourage the (leftlst)
takeover of Portugal" which threatens our bases in the Azor~~. said Reagan.
''In any way,? Does that mean economic blackmail? Subversion? As~assination?_ The. B~2s again ? Or the way the Soviet Union prevents and diScourages her sateUites ~om wandermg
- by military occupation?
.
.
What gives the United States the right to act "in any way" toward another nation (proVIded
it is a much smaller nation, of course) if that nation does not behave the way we thmk 1t should?
Americans like to think they are a little different from their ideological opponents, that
they have something more to offer the world than continual proof that we are the fastest gun in
the West.
The United States, Reagan went on, should be "stronger, tougher , more detennined to
battle the Communists in any area of the world." The free world is crying out for strong
American leadership, he said, and we are not providing it.
But why must we be strong and tough and determined when it comes to North Vietnam,
which could never remotely threaten our national security, and be smiling and friendly and
cooperative with China and the Soviet Union, at least one of which has the power to obliterate
us many times over ?
It is not that the American people oppose detente with the two Communist powers . Indeed,
this is one of tbe few accomplishments they have always given Richard Nixon high marks for.
But they cannot see what purpose was served by expending ~.000 lives and $1~ billion
dollars in the name of stoppmg "world communism" in Vietnam, only to turn around and sell
high technology products to the Russians.
As we said Ronald Reagan comes on like Barry Goldwater in 1964. If he keeps it up, he's
' same way- and maybe the Republican Party With
. him.
.
going to go out the

•

.

--·-

Editorial comment,
•

.

..

f ..

I. I I

~· J'

Four cowtties
offered for
pilot plant

.

.

IJJJ

BY MEL CREMEANS
The Meigs American Legion baseball , team has eight
games under its belt and stands at 4-4 alter dropping 3 of 4 over
the weekend.
Thus far this season, Meigs has outscored its opponents by a
slim 41-38 margin. Second sacker Mike Nesselroad is leading
in RB!s , knocking in ~ runs. Brent Johnson and Jim Perry
follow with three each and several other have two apiece.
In pitching , righthander Perk Ault is leading the staff with
two victories in as many outings. Jim Niday and Gary George
are at 1-1 and Jim Perry is at 0-2.
Meigs' leading scorers are Johnson and Nesselroad with
six runs each.
.
At the plate Steve Baird, the fine Cheshire athlete, leads
the team in batting .666with 4 hits in 6 trips. Jim Perry is next,
collecting .JO hits in. 20 at bats for a hot .~00 clip. Jim Niday is
batting . 37~ (6-13), Mike Watson .364 (4-11), and Brent Johnson
is at .310 (9-29) .
The Legion squad travels to Parkersburg, W. Va. this
Thursday for a single game and then to Logan (Ohio) for a
Saturday afternoon doubleheader before returning to friendly
soil in Syracuse Sunday when they tangle with Lowell in an
afternoon twinbill starting at I o'clock.
IJTTLE LEAGUE.BASEBALL ON TV? Yep, starting this
season Pomt View Cable TV is going to televise one Middleport
Youth ,League ga mes per week. The games, which will be
taped and shown on Cable TV later, will be announced in the
.Daily Sentinel.

.·':''·;~:;::·::;:;[;::;~;;;;;·:;~:;·•·:·.·;!·
~~

~

:;:·
SYRACUSE - Sam Flanagan, 32-year-old pro of ,:;:
,''.,:., : Syracuse now residing In Parkersburg, W.Va., rolled a /
300 game Sooda;y on his way to a sizzling opening round
·.· performance in the $50,000 Sacramento Open Bowlin!!' :::
\ roumament.
.,:
)
Flanagan, looking for his first win In six years on :::
·::: the pro bowling tour, started out with a 193 game, ,::
·:~:: loUowed it with a 258 dlort, then poured through 12 :::.~
::: straight strikes lor his third perfect line score on the :::
} tour. He closed out the roood with 248, 187 and 223, a :.:..:
.::: total of 1,409 for an average of 234.
:':
-~~;.;:;.;:;.;.;.;.;.;:;.;:;:;.;:;:;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;.:-:·:·:·:-::;.;.;::·:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.:-:::·:-:-: -:-:·:·: :::-:·:·:·:·.·:-~::!

i

Big 10 teams OK request
to play in other bowl tilts
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!)
- A unanimous vote by the
University of Michigan has
paved the way for Big Ten
football participation in bowl
games other than the
traditional Rose Bowl.
The university's Board of
Control of Athletics voted
Tuesday lo approve the Big
Ten proposal, which allows
teams other than the cqnference champion to compete
in league:approved bowls.
Michigan is the sixth
league school to approve the
plan, which stiU stipulates the
conference champion will go
to the Rose Bowl.
The.vote by Michigan made
it a rna jority decision, despite
the fact four other schools
have not yet balloted on the
issue. The proposal .now
becomes Big Ten policy.
Under tbe plan, the next
three teams under the conference champion will be
eligible to accept bids from

bowls that are leagueapproved . Those
will
probably include the Cotton,
Orange and Sugar bowls.
The league stipulated no
team can play in a bowl game
prior to Dec. 26, thus avoiding
participation in minor bowl
games that might detract
from the Big Ten's prestige.
Michigan has finished the
season with impressive
records and consecutive Big
Ten cochampionships the
past three years but Ohio
State beat them out for the
Rose Bowl berth each time.
Coach Bo Schembechler
crusaded to get ·a change in
the policy that banned participation in other bowl
games by second and third
place teams .
The policy also allows a Big
Ten team to refuse a bid to a
bowl game but must declare
its intentions after the final
Saturday in October.

- 1\ial.iou.al League Roundup
By United Press lnternatlnal
During the month of June
Willie Stargell turns ripe.
Stargell pounded out lhree
doubles and a single to drive
in iive runs Tuesday night,
powering the Pittsburgh
Pirates to a 9-!i victory over
the Cincinnati Reds and a
sweep of a three.game series.
The Pirates bunched five
hits including doubles by
Stargell and Richie Zisk to
score three runs in the first
inning. '!'hey added two more
in the fourth when Stargell hit
his third straight double after
a walk to Rennie Stennett and

BASEBALL

NEW YORK (UP!) - A
published report' that Bowie
Kuhn is in danger of being
ousted as baseball commissioner proved without
founda lion Tuesday whe11 cne
of tbose owners supposedly
opposing his re-election,
George Steinbrenner of the
Yankees, gave Kuhn his
endorsement.

Middleport Youth League schedule for
nine teams frOm five communities

"As a freshperson congressperson, I'm still frying to. learn the ropes! How does'one lose touch
with one's constituents gracefully?"

East

w.

Boston
New Yo r k
M ilwaukee
Detroit
Cl eve land
Baltimor e
Oa kl and
Kan sas 'Crty
Mmn esota
Texas
Ca l iforn 1a
Ch1cago

I. pet 9 .b
28 22
1
29 25 ~l~
25 27 'B 1 '
2J 27

2J
22
We st
w.
33

30
JO
1

:l~

;, ,

423

7

pet. g.b

22

000 37 25 561 2
26 25 510 5
28 27 509
5
28 29 49 1 6
23 31 426 9 1~
Today ' s Results
Texas 8 Bos ton 3, n 1ght
Oa kl and 3 Ba ltimor e 0, night
Minneso ta 5 Clev eland 3. 12
innings , night
New Yo rk 6 Ca l ifornicl 4.
n rg ht
Kan sa s City 4 De tro11 3, nigh t
Chrcago 9 M il wau kee 2. nigh t
Wednesday's G am es
(All Times EOTl
Cal1for n1a (Hassler 3 5 and
Tanana 3 II } at Detroit ( Bar e 1
2 and Lolich 7 J l. 2. 6·05 p m
Minneso ta fPaz1k 0 3 ) at New
·York (May 6 '}} , 8 .00 p m .
Oak l and (Bosman 1 3) at
Mi lwaukee ! Slaton 3 71, 8: 30
pm
Cl eveland
( Perr y 6 8 ) at
Kansa s Crty ( Leonard 2 2), 8. 30
p m
Boston f Lee a 5) at Ch icago
( Bahn sen .:l5). 9 00 p .m
Batt rmo r e (Torrez 7 3) at Texas
( H argan 11 3), 9 00 p rn Thur sday's Games
Minnesota at New York
Califor nia a t Detro 1t. n1 g hl
Oa kl and at Milwaukee, nr gh t
Cl ev elan d at Kan sas City ,
n 1g ht
Bos ton at Ch1cago, n1 gh t
Baltimore at Texa s, night
National Leagu e Standings

By Un1t ed Press Int er national
Ea st
w. I. pd. g . b .
P1 II Sburg h
29 '22 569 -·
New Yor k
Phi l ad el phia
Chicago
St Louis
Mon tr eal

23 .5dQ
25 531
26 527
25 510
18 29 .JB 3

27
29
29
26

)I I

11 ~
2

J
9

West

w. 1. pet . g.b.

M n

Pomeroy As &amp;-1. In other
action, Syracuse downed the
,
Pomeroy Tigers 16-~ and
Hartford defeated Mason 4-3.
The Racine Pony Leaguers
held onto second place by
defeating Letart 7-1.
The Blazers in keeping
their winning streak alive,
handing the Pomeroy As
the ir fir st league defeat.
Baird fanned 17, walked 3,
&lt;l nd allowed 2 hits. For
Pomeroy, Dale Browning,
Greg Smith, and Brian
Hamilton combined to strike
out 7, walk 10, and give up ~
hits. Browning was charged
with the loss.
Racine held on to remain in
second place by downing
Letart 7-1 behind the pitching
of John Sayre and Mike
Huddleston . Sayre pitched 4
innings, picking up the win.
David Robinson was the
losi ng pitcher.
Sayre, during his 4 innings
allowed'no hits, no walks and
struck out 9. Huddles ton
allowed onl y one hit in
finishing the contes t and
str uck out 5.
Hitters for Racine were led
bv Scott Wolfe who has 4
RB!s including a bases
loaded double in the fourth
inning , and Sayre , Hud-

5Y

The Daily Sentinel
OEVOTEOTOTHE

76
11
INTEREST OF
Lo s Angele5
3,l 25 · 5
MEIGS · MASON AREA
41
1
9
San Fran CIS CO 28 21 50
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
6
Sa n Diego
27 29 ·l f:l 2
Exec. Ed .
11
4
9
At lanta
25 32
3
81
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Houston
21 40 J44 14 1
Cih Editor
Tu esday 's Re sults
PubliShed da1ly except
Hou ston 4 Chicago 3, night
satu rda y by Th e Oh1o Valley
Pittsburgh 9 C1ncm nat 1 5,
Publ i Shing Company , 111
night
Co urt St., Pomeroy, Ohio
S t LOUIS at At lan ta. n1ght. .15769 . Business Office Ph one
ppd , rain
992 ,215 6. Editorial Phone 992
Montreal 5 Los Angel es ·1, 2157
n ight
: Second class postage pa 1d
Philadelphia 7 San Diego 0 , . a t Pomeroy , Oh1o
nig ht
: Na t 1ona l
adver t. is inq
New York 5 San F r an cisc o 0.
r e pr es entat i ve
Wa rd .
Grlft lfh Compa n y , In c ,
n 1ght Today 's Games
(Al l T•mes EDT)
Botlinel l 1 &amp; Gallag her D•v ,
757 Th •rd Ave. N Pw York ,
Ph .t lad elph ia ( Und er wood 6 4)
NY . l 00 17
a t san F ra nc 1sco (Fal co ne 4 41, . Subsc rip t l( on
rate s ·
4. 05 p .m
De l ivered bv , carrier where
Chicago
(Burr is
6 5)
at . available 75 cents per week ,
Atlan ta (Morton 5·6l. 7 ·35 P m
By Motor Route Wh (( re
St . Loui s (McG lot hen 6 4 ) at ca rr •er
service
not
Cinc1nn at1 (Gu ll et1 7 3 or Darcy 'avai lable , One month , $3 25 .
By mail in Ohio an d W Va.
1 2) , 8 05 p m.
P•ttsburgh (Kison 6·1) at One Year,
$22 .00 ,
Six.
Houston fD,erk.er 5·6l. a · JO months,
$11 .50 ,
Three l
p m.
'm onth s, $7 00 Elsewhere
Montreal I Blair 2·71 at San r$26 00 year ; S1X m o nths
Diego 1 Folkers o 3), 10 p m
1 1$ 13 so. th_ree m on ths , $7 50
New York (Mat lack 7 4) at Lo s 1 rSu bscnp t 1_on price. 1M eludes
Ange les fRau 5·6 L 10 30 p m . 1 ~S~d.ay T1m es .sent.nel.
Thur sday ' s Gam es
Mon tr eal at Sa n D1ego
Philadelphia at San Franc1sco
Chi cago at Atl anta , tw iligh t
P1ltSburgh at Houston , night
St . L ouis at Crnc1nnati, night
N ew York at Lo~ Ang e les ,
night

hander did not win his ninth
game untO Sept. 3.

INTEREST

On Certificates
Oi DepOsit

dleston, and Perry Hill each
had 2 singles.
Steve
Hill,
Richard
Teaford, an d Bill Harns each
had a single. The on ly Letart
hit came with 2 out m the
seventh mning.
Syracuse mopved to 2-1 by
defea tm g the Pomeroy
Tigers 16-5 with the Tigers
droppmg to 0-3.
For Syracuse, Danny Riffle
sta rted on th e mound ,
working 4 innings striking out
2, walking 10, allowing 3 hits
and all :; Tiger runs. Don
Hendricks came on in relief
and fi nished, striking out 2
and walking ~. allowing no
runs.
Dan Icenhower and Jeff
Grueser saw mound duty for
the Tigers, combinin g to
strike out 3, walk 11 and give
up 10 hits and 16 runs.
Icenhower was charged with
the loss.
Gettmg hits for Syracuse
were Hendricks and Mark
Forbes with 2 si ngles each,
John Davis, Matt Weaver,
Kelly Winebren ner, Marty

Ninety day Interest peftllty
if
withdrawn
before
maturity date.

Mason 4-3 dropping the
Mason squad to 1-3 in standings. Scott Fields and
Warren Fields pitched for
Hartford. Don Russell
worked on the mound for
Mason.
THE STANDINGS
W. L.
4 0
Cheshire
2 0
Racine
2 1
Pomeroy As
2 1
Hartford
2 1
Syracuse
I 3
Mason
0 3
Pomeroy Tigers
0 4
Letart

Meip Co. Branch

@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
2f6 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

:NFJ ~
~

~!Jil~

GOODfYEAR

Foley, Riffle , and Jack Duffy
each had a single.
For Pomeroy Icenhower
had 2 singles, Grueser and
Ri chard Demoss each a
si ngle.
Hartfo rd moved to 2-1 in
loop play by slipping by
M&amp;RLOSES
In girls softball action the
M&amp;R gals were defea ted by
Hits 'N Misses 16-1. Girls
hitting sa fely for the M&amp;R
team were Kellee Burdette,
Tracy Burdette, and Glenda
Brown, each a double ; Jackie
Brown, Megan Miller , Mary
.Boggs, and Sally Carleton
each a single. M&amp;R will play
New Haven at the Minersfield
field at 6: 1~ p.m. Thursday.

30 Mo. Term

JUSl

CAll

• Fl a ts repaired or replaced promptly • Tube val ves
repla ce d! • Tires li q uid-filled ' • Tire sales &amp; service
for e very truck, tractor, and a uto on your farm!

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
POMEROY

JOHN F. FULTZ
OWNER

OHIO

MOORE'S, POMEROY

s

LS....
71J4'' CIRCULAR

3/8" DRILL

$1199

SAW

•24.99

and up

lUCk &amp; DICKIEI
Waat
toaaw

29

1nternat1onal League
Standings
By UP1
w. 1. pet.
Rochester
34 24 .586
Sy ra cuse
JJ 25 569
Tidewater
31 25 . 554
Charleston
30 25 .545
Richmond
27 29 482
Pawt ucket
26 30 .464
Toledo
25 32 439
Memphis
21 37 .362

I· ~&gt;•••·•••'

opa

.._,.

g .b.
1
2
21!2
6

7
81f1

13

Rochester 1 Memphis 0 , 1st.

ve
IndiiDI

va
Bl'l!.VI!II

,.

Roc he ster 2 Memphis
2nd , , 7 innings
Syracuse 4 Charleston
lsf. 7 in nings
Sy ra cuse 5 Charl eston
2nd , 8 innings
Richmond 8 Pawtucket
1s t. 7 innings
Pawtuc ket 2 Richmond
2nd , 7 Inning s

'

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uted with optional acCessories for aandinv, polishing,
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Tuesday's Re sults
Tol edo 6 Tide wa ter I
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Addnss ----------~~--------------

pctd &amp;ll'l . O]liD

Pbone --------------------,...-------·l'ype of Entryr____

Americ.1n Leilgl.l e S tandm g ~
Bv Un•1cd Press tnt er nat1on a 1

MIJ .

Nune--------------------~~------

() 11l7lltV NEA. Inc.

In Meigs-Mason Pony
League action Tuesday the
Cheshire Blazers behind the
2-hit pitching of Steve Baird
won their fourth straight
game without a loss this
season by downing th e

, I

Results of the Girls Jr. softball games played Monday,
Jtine 9 show Pomeroy 16, New
Haven 4; Pantheretles 6,
Syracuse ~; Letart 7, Rutland
6; Mason 7, Meigs Inn 0 and
Forest Run 1~ . Racine 2.
The Panthereltes continued
their winning streak by
defeating the Syracuse gals 6~ in a close contest. For the
winners Missy Cale and Terri
Wilson had 3 singles, Tracy
Burdette and Brenda Brown
had 2 singles Glenda Brown
had 2 singles ~nd a triple, Jo
McKinney, Marcia Cale and
Sharon Karr each had a
single.
Hitters for Syracuse were
Sonya Ash with 2 singles,
Teaford a double , Julia
Nance a triple, Patterson and
Slavin each had a single.
With the victory the
Pantherettes are now in first
place with a 3-0 record while
Syracuse dropped behind
with a 2-1 slate.
Here is the Jr. and Sr.
schedule for the week. /
JUNE II I JR.) £~
6:15 Pomeroy vs. Letart if
Letart.
6: 15 Middleport vs. Rutland
at Rutland.
6:1~ New Haven vs. Pantherettes at Middleport.
6:15 Racine vs. Mason at
Mason.
6: I~ Fore.s t Run vs.
Syracuse at Minersville .
June 12 (SR.)
6:1~ New Haven vs. M&amp;R at
Minersville.
6: 1:i Hits 'N Misses vs.
Forest Run at Minersville.

hander Larry Christenson his
first win of the year.
Tom Seaver pitched a sixhitter for his first shutout of
the season and Jerry Grote
drove in two runs with a
single and double to lead the
New York Mets to a 5-0
victory over the San Francisco Giants. Seaver struck
out nine including the side in
the ninth and walked two in
picking up his ninth victory
against four losses. A year
ago, the star Mets' right-

Blazers win 4th game

contmue on
win streak

the winning run in the
seventh inning as the Montreal Expos edged the Los
Angeles Dodgers 5-4. The
unearned run cos t the
Dodgers, who couldn't hold a
3-0 lead, a chance to regain
first place in the NL West.
Mike Schmidt, Te~ry
Harmon and Jay Johnstone
each drove in two runs and
the Philadelphia Phillies
made the most of nine hits to
defeat the Sa n Diego Padres
7.{) and earn rookie right-

'1,000 Minimum

Pantherettes

Big Bead Regatta Parade
Entry Form

~

Cesar Cedeno and Milt May
walked to open the eighth
broke a 2-2 tie. Konieczny
followed with a double off the
wall in left field for the fourth
run, assuring the young
righthander of his fourth
vic tory agai ns t seven
losses.
St. Louis at Atlanta was
rained out.
Reliever Mike Marshall's
errant pickoff attempt
allowed Pepe Mangual to
score from second base with

a sin gle by AI Oliver and then
took a 7-3 lead in the fifth
when Manny Sa ngu illen
foll9wed a single by Zisk with
his third homer of the season.
Sam McDoweU, pitching
the first live innings, picked
up his second victory in three
decisio ns.
Before
his
departure, he was touched for
three runs and six hits.
Pitcher Doug Konieczny
drove in two runs with a
double and a single and
limited the Chicago Cubs to
eight hits in a 4-3 Houston
vic tory which snapped a nine
game Astros' losing streak.
Enos Cabell's single after

'-

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-- ·

Has

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , June 11,197~

.

~ , -

Wc Hold These Truths ...

-

Reag~

been asleep the past

Is America blind to Shah's tyranny
to the present· Iranian
system, they say, this is
heresy and a form of antipatriotism. Mohammed Reza
Shah Pahlevi runs t he store
in Persia and suffers nobody
lightly who questions the
propriety of his ownership.
For instance , say the
students, who lor self
protection oiten wear masks,
even on Pennsylvania
Avenue , the one party
government of the Shah of
Iran is curren tly holding "at
least
3~,000
political
prisoners" in slums back
home.. Their offenses, in some
cases , as verified by
numerous international
mquiries, fall into the
category of "working atainst
the state," that is, criticizing
the Shah.
It's not nice to rap the Shah,
apparently, and the co nsequences ·allegedly include
more than prison sentences.
To extract "confessions, "
according to an account this
year in the London Times,
Iranian jailers resort to
torture : " Victims allege that
methods of torture include
fl ogging, extraction of finger

and toe nails, electric shock
treatment to sexual organs
and the thrusting of broken
bottles into the anus of
prisoners suspended by their
wrists from a beam. " The
Times reports that another
favorite device in Iran jails is
to put naked prisoners, of all
ages, on bare bed springs and
then heat the metal.
It is against this kind of
terror , and the mentality
condoning it, that the Iranian
students have organized.
They
hold
meetings,
demonstrate at the Wl)ite
House, pass out leaflets.
Nobody pays the slightest
attention, of course, conscience raising having gone
the way of all flesh in
Amenca, as if bed spring
roastings were a yawn. But
the students continue to risk
their lives hoping for some
small support from the
earth's oldest constitutional
democracy .
The support, actually,
could be much more than
small. The students believe
the Shah, or at least the
Shah's repressive laws, could
not long stand without the ·

DR. LAMB

-By R05! Mackenzie and Jeff MacNelly.

Silent partner
massive military and
political assistance provided
by the U. S. government. The
U. S. has sold the oil rich
monarch $10 billion worth of
sophisticated arms since
1950. The U. S. has provided
at least 1,400 Defense
Department people to assist
the Shah in militarization.
Also, America is to sell and
send $1~ billion worth of
goods and services to Iran
over the next five years,
including nuclear material
and nuclear expertise.
What we are thus doing,
argue the students, is setting
up "another Vietnam." The
Shah is like Nguyen Van
Thieu, without wide support
among his people, and heUbent in directions opposite the
peoples' good. "Why does this
nation of oil need nuclear
reactors for electricity?" the
students ask. "Why so much
money for defense in a nation
where 6~ per cent of the
people cannot yet read or
write? And why, with $22
billion annually in oil income,
is so much of the population
still in rags and starving? If
for just one day the U. S.
stopped support, the Shah
would collapse ."
Albeit the support will not
stop. Even for a day. Despite
the lessons of Southeast Asia,
the United States continues
the policy of supporting
nations instead of people . We
back the leaders not the led.
At present the Shah has
revoked the passports of
some Iranian students in
America and has asked the U.
S. government to send them
home. It wiD surprise no one,
not least the students, when
America, bastion of freedom,
inevitably complies.

D,t,;AR READER - There
seem to ,IJe 5everal varieties
of' the grapelrul t diet in
common circulation. I am not
fond of any of them.
1ne uruy way any of them,

rr other reducing diets, work

is if they result in your eating
fewe r calories . In that
regard, some_people may get
some benefit' from eating a
plain grapefruit before a
meal, becausb it helps fill
them up on low calorie food,
and they may not eat as much
rich food as usual. However,
if they con tinue to eat the
same amount as always, it
will not help one bit.
Ea ting the grapefruit after
your usual meal, of the same
quanti ty and type, will not do
a thing for you. In fact, the
additional calories in the
grapefruit will simply add to
the problem. It is a good
substitute for a high calorie
dessert, though.
If you want to lose weight
}UU should go on ,a sensible
balanced diet and maintain a
general, regular exercise
program. You may try my .
. diet for this purpose . Write to
me in care of this newspaper,
P. 0. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, N. Y.

'

10019, and ask for The Health
Letter number 4-7 on Weight
Loss Diet. Be sure to enclose
~0 cents and a long, selladdressed stampCif envelope.
Now, about the safflower
oi l and corn oil, both contain
the same number of calo~ies.
per ounce so you are . not
gaining a thing by using
safflower oil instead of corn
oil in terms of calories. It is
true that safflower oil contains lesS saturated fat and
more polyunsaturated fat
than corn oil. To th~ extent
that decreasing saturated fat
and increasing polyunsaturated fat in the diet is
beneficial in helping some
people
lower · their
choles,terol, safflower oil is
superior.
_
Too much of either, though,
will increase the fat intake in
your diet and the total fat,
or
polyunsaturated
saturated, can be a factor in
raising your cholesterol level.
The only real harm in using
the oils or the polyun-

. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::.:·:·,.,.:·: .,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,,:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::.::~:.&lt;w~~::..~,o:s ;; 111 a11§1

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Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

Last week, in a move which
I opposed, Members of
Congress were handed a
significant increase in
various office-related
allowances without the
necessity of a vote by the
House.
In July, 1971, the ·House
decided to spare itseH the
time and effort of debating
and voting on about 10 petty
housekeeping resolutions
each year. Procedures were
"streamlined" so that orders
by the House Administratrion
Committee would take effect
automatically. At· that time I
voted against the change. The
last four years ' record has
proven the correctness of that
position. Members' accommodations, facilities and
allowances have swelled
steadily without public
debate on the issue of need.
'The decisions of the House
Administration Committee
have been made in secret
meetings, closed to the public
and the press.
To give some idea of the
scope of the increases, since
1971 the number of reimbursed trips back to the
district are up 116 percent,
optional lump sums for travel
up 300 percent, stationery
allowances up 85 percent,
clerk hire funds up ~2 percent, telephone allowance
units up ~ percent, district
office rentals up 7~ percent.
The same Democratically controlled Congress that
brought inflation to the nat!on
The Bath White Butterfly was has practiced identical
named in England in 1702 techniques on congressional
because of its resemblance to a finances.
piece of em brmdery created in ram not saying that some
B&lt;l th
of these increases were not
justified to a certain extent.
~ the problems of constituents become more
complex and increase in
number, Members need more
facilities and resources to do

Grapefruit won't shave pounds
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I have
been told one can eat a large
evening meal as usual , then
eat hall a pink grapefruit ,
plain with no salt or sugar on
it and lose weight. I have
tried 'it but am not having
mucl\ luck. Is there any truth
to it?
I have also been told that
safflower oil is less fattening
than corn oil and cuts high
blood cholesterol. I have been
usin g both the oil and
margarine for about three
years. Can, you use too much
too long and harm yourseH?
I am a female, age 66, and a
potential diabetic. I have had
some high blood cholesterol
when I was checked lor it
years ago. I'm 5 feet tall and
weigh about 146 ~ounds.

1775:

On June 2, having established an Army Pay De!Mirtment
a! though there was no army to pay, Congress fills the void .
Responding to a request from .f1assacbusettJ that
Congress assume responsiblllty lor the colonial .
militiamen besieslng Boston, Congress airees to do 10and desig!lates 'them the Continental Army. Conll'esS also
authorizes the raising of six companies of riflemen to be
enlisted in Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia; several
days later, Pennsylvania is asked to raise lour more companies. Frontier riflemen are almost unknown to New
Englanders. Writing from Philadelphia to his wile in
Braintree, Massachusetts, John Adams says: "They use a
peculiar Kind of [gun) called a Rille- It has . .. Grooves
within the Barrel, and carries a Ball, with great Exactness
to Great Distances." These riflemen prove lndispen!Bble
·
to colonial success In the war.

decade~

TOM TIEDE

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - The
United States hosts thousands
of foreign students who
because of the prestige of
their American education
look forward to gomg back
home to optimistic futures.
Some current students from
Iran, however, foresee quite
different
circumstances
when they return. They
believe they will be arrested,
jailed, possibly tortured and,
as one of them glooms, "there
is the likelihood some of us
may also be shot."
The collegia tes, grouped
together as the Iranian
Students Association , have,
they say, learned more in
American than may be good
for them. Exposure to
democracy of thought has
radicalized their long held
opposition to the Iranian
monarchy., and it is this
radicalism that worries
them.
Actually, the students are,
as leftists go most mild . They
merely wish for free speech,
associatiort
and
free
representative govern ment
m tneir homeland. According

June 74,

Berrys World

saturated margarines comes
from the point that they do
contain lots of calories
because they are fats. This
means excess use of them, as
with other fats, increases
your cajorie intake and may
make it harder to control
}Uur weight. And, too much of
all types of fat in the diet,
leading to overweight conditions, is often associated
with high cholesterol levels.
I usually recommend using
the polyunsaturated oils in
.cooking and limiting the total
intake of all kinds of fat in the
diet. You do that by eating
lean meat, lean poultry and.
fish, and eliminating fat
whenever you can in food
preparation.
It takes lJss cooking oils lor
most baking than the amount
of solid fats called lor in most
recipes. That helps cut down
on calories some, but pies,
cakes and cookies are not
good foods for most weight
reducing diets. ·"

...

I

Zanesville man
has Jones' seat

II! l

ZANESVILLE - William~ •
Keslar, a resident of
Zanesville , Muskingum
County,hasbeenappointed to &lt;,
the executive committee of
the Ohio
Republicans
representing the Tenth
Congressional District.
He will complete the
elective term of Elmer Jo~es
of Athens who was appointed
to the Real Estate Division,
. Dept.· of Natural Resources.
The term expires in June,
1976.
Keslar, a former president
of Zanesville City Council,
owns and operates Baker's
•
~ ''
Restaurant in Norwich, Ohio
and is president of Keslar
Supply Co., ZanesviUe. He
was appointed to council to
WILLIAM KESLAR
fill an unexpired term, and .
later was elected, then serves on the county board of
,,
elected president in 1~ .
elections.
Keslar-is a native of Westtl
He studied Chemistry at
Miami University, was a moreland County, Pa . He is
member of the footbaU team married to the former Ellen
and later did further study at McCoy of Washington Court
the University of Alabama. House. They live at 1220
He served four years in the Newark Road. They have a
Army in WW 2, attaining the daughter and a son.
""
....
,
rank of Captain.
Keslar belongs to the
'"
Rotary Club, Elks, Eagles,
"
UCT, 32nd degree Mason,
,_
University Club, Aladdin
··· "1
Temple, ROJ No. 13,
American Legion, 40 et 8, the
' "'
Zanesville Chamber of
Commerce, · and is a past
."
COLUMBuS (UP!) -Ohio
president of the Ohio will submit a foqnal request
.....
Jaycees. Keslar received the Thursday to Coalcon in New . " '
Jaycees' outstanding York to construct a pilot coal
....... .
presidents award during his gasification
plant
in
year as state president.
'
southeastern Ohio.
Keslar is a member and
Gov. James A. Rhodes and
past chairman of the Robert Ryan, executive
I ll'. •
Zanesville - Muskingum secretary of the Ohio Energy
County Board of Health, and Emergency Commission, are
scheduled to submit a request
that the plant be constructed
The Almanac
in
Jefferson, Belmont,
By United Press InMonroe
or Scioto counties.
ternational
A group of officials from
Today is Wednesday, June
Monroe
County is also sche11, the 162nd day of 1975 with
duled
to
be in New York
203 to follow.
Thursday
to
formally request
The moon is between its
new phase and first quarter. that the plant be located in
.
The morning stars are that county.
Monroe
Coooty
was
a late
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
entry
in
the
bidding
for
lbe
The evening sta~s are
plant and Jame~ Diehl, a
Venus and Saturn.
Woodsfield
businessman wbo
Those born on this date are
helped
put
together the
under the sign of Gemini.
German composer Richard county's bid for the facUlty,
Strauss was born June 11, said the proposed site In that
county covers 86S acres of
1864.
level land next to the Ohio
On this day in history:
,
In 1920, Ohio's Sen. Warren river.
"The
local
effort
has
been
Harding was cbosen ~ the
and
the
"dark horse" Republican tremendous
candidate for president. fie cooperation crossed all ,
won ill November,, defeating barriers, Including political
James Cox, to become lbe party lines," Diehl said.
Officials of West VirKtnJa,
nation's 29tb president.
In 1927, CharleS Undbergh Tennessee, Pennsylvania,
was welcomed home by Kentucky, llllnois and . InPresident Calvin Coolidge diana also are seeking to •
after making history's first have the coal gasification.'
non-stop flight across the plant constructed in their
states.
Atlantic Ocean to Paris.

m A.

their jobs properly. What is
objectionable is that these
increases were not subjected
to the scrutiny of the entire
House so that each could be
examined and those which
were unnecessary could be
eliminated. If taxpayers are
to loot the bill lor these increased costs of government,
they should be able to watch
these decisions being made
and their Representatives
should be allowed to vote on
any such changes.
To promote a' more open
,and responsive Congress I
have sponsored two bills
which will allow Members to
go on record on any
allowance or salary increases. The first biU, H. Res.
434, would require that any.
increase in allowances, such
i that approved by the House
Administratrion Committee
last week, would have to be
authorized by the full House .
The second bill, H. R. 6~,
would similarly give Members an opportgunity to cast
their vote in favor or against
an in_crease in their salary. As
the procedure now stands, a
commission recommends
salary increases to the
President. If he approves, the
increase.can go into effect l)y .
congressional inaction., The
bill which I have reintroduced in this Congress
would make it easier lor an
individual Member to caU lor
a record vote on such an
increase, rather than passing
the buck to a commission and
then sitting back and doing
nothing.
If Congress is ever to have
the full faith and trust of the
people it represents, it must
take steps such as those
outlined above. This will
insure that each Member has
the opportunity to make his
position known on any :;alary
or allowance increase.

Stargell,Pirates awesome with hats

Sports
Desk

A Chronicle of America ··

opinion, features

Ronald Reagan has not, and may noit, toss his hat into the 1976 GOP presidential ring. But
if the former governor of California seriously entertains hopes of becoming a future president
of the United States, he is going to have to stop pouring the same old rhetoric out of the same old
bottles if he is to gain the support of more than a fringe fraction of Americans.
Either that, or we are mistaken in the belief that the American people as a whole have
consistently demonstrated more perception, more compassion, more plain common sense than
their leaders, or those who would lead them:
_
Reagan came on like Barry Goldwater in 11964 in his remarks at the National Headliners
Club annual awards banquet in Washington the other night. The Uruted States, he said, should
have sent its B..S2s to blunt North Vietnam's thrust into South Vietnam in violation of the Pans
peace accords.
The objection is not that the big bombers could not have done the job and South Vietnam
once again have been saved. But at what cost ? How many bombers would have been shot down ,
how many new POWs and M!As have been created•
And to what pW'pOse ? The American people long ago realized that they could go on saving
South Vietnam indefinitely and that at some time or another the Vietnamese had to be left to.
sink or swim by their own ef!orts.
It ls dismaying, if not downright frightening, to hear a man of Reagan's political
prominence talking as if he had been on another planet for the past IOyea~s .
.
The United States should also have acted "in any way to prevent or discourage the (leftlst)
takeover of Portugal" which threatens our bases in the Azor~~. said Reagan.
''In any way,? Does that mean economic blackmail? Subversion? As~assination?_ The. B~2s again ? Or the way the Soviet Union prevents and diScourages her sateUites ~om wandermg
- by military occupation?
.
.
What gives the United States the right to act "in any way" toward another nation (proVIded
it is a much smaller nation, of course) if that nation does not behave the way we thmk 1t should?
Americans like to think they are a little different from their ideological opponents, that
they have something more to offer the world than continual proof that we are the fastest gun in
the West.
The United States, Reagan went on, should be "stronger, tougher , more detennined to
battle the Communists in any area of the world." The free world is crying out for strong
American leadership, he said, and we are not providing it.
But why must we be strong and tough and determined when it comes to North Vietnam,
which could never remotely threaten our national security, and be smiling and friendly and
cooperative with China and the Soviet Union, at least one of which has the power to obliterate
us many times over ?
It is not that the American people oppose detente with the two Communist powers . Indeed,
this is one of tbe few accomplishments they have always given Richard Nixon high marks for.
But they cannot see what purpose was served by expending ~.000 lives and $1~ billion
dollars in the name of stoppmg "world communism" in Vietnam, only to turn around and sell
high technology products to the Russians.
As we said Ronald Reagan comes on like Barry Goldwater in 1964. If he keeps it up, he's
' same way- and maybe the Republican Party With
. him.
.
going to go out the

•

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Editorial comment,
•

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f ..

I. I I

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Four cowtties
offered for
pilot plant

.

.

IJJJ

BY MEL CREMEANS
The Meigs American Legion baseball , team has eight
games under its belt and stands at 4-4 alter dropping 3 of 4 over
the weekend.
Thus far this season, Meigs has outscored its opponents by a
slim 41-38 margin. Second sacker Mike Nesselroad is leading
in RB!s , knocking in ~ runs. Brent Johnson and Jim Perry
follow with three each and several other have two apiece.
In pitching , righthander Perk Ault is leading the staff with
two victories in as many outings. Jim Niday and Gary George
are at 1-1 and Jim Perry is at 0-2.
Meigs' leading scorers are Johnson and Nesselroad with
six runs each.
.
At the plate Steve Baird, the fine Cheshire athlete, leads
the team in batting .666with 4 hits in 6 trips. Jim Perry is next,
collecting .JO hits in. 20 at bats for a hot .~00 clip. Jim Niday is
batting . 37~ (6-13), Mike Watson .364 (4-11), and Brent Johnson
is at .310 (9-29) .
The Legion squad travels to Parkersburg, W. Va. this
Thursday for a single game and then to Logan (Ohio) for a
Saturday afternoon doubleheader before returning to friendly
soil in Syracuse Sunday when they tangle with Lowell in an
afternoon twinbill starting at I o'clock.
IJTTLE LEAGUE.BASEBALL ON TV? Yep, starting this
season Pomt View Cable TV is going to televise one Middleport
Youth ,League ga mes per week. The games, which will be
taped and shown on Cable TV later, will be announced in the
.Daily Sentinel.

.·':''·;~:;::·::;:;[;::;~;;;;;·:;~:;·•·:·.·;!·
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:;:·
SYRACUSE - Sam Flanagan, 32-year-old pro of ,:;:
,''.,:., : Syracuse now residing In Parkersburg, W.Va., rolled a /
300 game Sooda;y on his way to a sizzling opening round
·.· performance in the $50,000 Sacramento Open Bowlin!!' :::
\ roumament.
.,:
)
Flanagan, looking for his first win In six years on :::
·::: the pro bowling tour, started out with a 193 game, ,::
·:~:: loUowed it with a 258 dlort, then poured through 12 :::.~
::: straight strikes lor his third perfect line score on the :::
} tour. He closed out the roood with 248, 187 and 223, a :.:..:
.::: total of 1,409 for an average of 234.
:':
-~~;.;:;.;:;.;.;.;.;.;:;.;:;:;.;:;:;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;.:-:·:·:·:-::;.;.;::·:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.:-:::·:-:-: -:-:·:·: :::-:·:·:·:·.·:-~::!

i

Big 10 teams OK request
to play in other bowl tilts
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!)
- A unanimous vote by the
University of Michigan has
paved the way for Big Ten
football participation in bowl
games other than the
traditional Rose Bowl.
The university's Board of
Control of Athletics voted
Tuesday lo approve the Big
Ten proposal, which allows
teams other than the cqnference champion to compete
in league:approved bowls.
Michigan is the sixth
league school to approve the
plan, which stiU stipulates the
conference champion will go
to the Rose Bowl.
The.vote by Michigan made
it a rna jority decision, despite
the fact four other schools
have not yet balloted on the
issue. The proposal .now
becomes Big Ten policy.
Under tbe plan, the next
three teams under the conference champion will be
eligible to accept bids from

bowls that are leagueapproved . Those
will
probably include the Cotton,
Orange and Sugar bowls.
The league stipulated no
team can play in a bowl game
prior to Dec. 26, thus avoiding
participation in minor bowl
games that might detract
from the Big Ten's prestige.
Michigan has finished the
season with impressive
records and consecutive Big
Ten cochampionships the
past three years but Ohio
State beat them out for the
Rose Bowl berth each time.
Coach Bo Schembechler
crusaded to get ·a change in
the policy that banned participation in other bowl
games by second and third
place teams .
The policy also allows a Big
Ten team to refuse a bid to a
bowl game but must declare
its intentions after the final
Saturday in October.

- 1\ial.iou.al League Roundup
By United Press lnternatlnal
During the month of June
Willie Stargell turns ripe.
Stargell pounded out lhree
doubles and a single to drive
in iive runs Tuesday night,
powering the Pittsburgh
Pirates to a 9-!i victory over
the Cincinnati Reds and a
sweep of a three.game series.
The Pirates bunched five
hits including doubles by
Stargell and Richie Zisk to
score three runs in the first
inning. '!'hey added two more
in the fourth when Stargell hit
his third straight double after
a walk to Rennie Stennett and

BASEBALL

NEW YORK (UP!) - A
published report' that Bowie
Kuhn is in danger of being
ousted as baseball commissioner proved without
founda lion Tuesday whe11 cne
of tbose owners supposedly
opposing his re-election,
George Steinbrenner of the
Yankees, gave Kuhn his
endorsement.

Middleport Youth League schedule for
nine teams frOm five communities

"As a freshperson congressperson, I'm still frying to. learn the ropes! How does'one lose touch
with one's constituents gracefully?"

East

w.

Boston
New Yo r k
M ilwaukee
Detroit
Cl eve land
Baltimor e
Oa kl and
Kan sas 'Crty
Mmn esota
Texas
Ca l iforn 1a
Ch1cago

I. pet 9 .b
28 22
1
29 25 ~l~
25 27 'B 1 '
2J 27

2J
22
We st
w.
33

30
JO
1

:l~

;, ,

423

7

pet. g.b

22

000 37 25 561 2
26 25 510 5
28 27 509
5
28 29 49 1 6
23 31 426 9 1~
Today ' s Results
Texas 8 Bos ton 3, n 1ght
Oa kl and 3 Ba ltimor e 0, night
Minneso ta 5 Clev eland 3. 12
innings , night
New Yo rk 6 Ca l ifornicl 4.
n rg ht
Kan sa s City 4 De tro11 3, nigh t
Chrcago 9 M il wau kee 2. nigh t
Wednesday's G am es
(All Times EOTl
Cal1for n1a (Hassler 3 5 and
Tanana 3 II } at Detroit ( Bar e 1
2 and Lolich 7 J l. 2. 6·05 p m
Minneso ta fPaz1k 0 3 ) at New
·York (May 6 '}} , 8 .00 p m .
Oak l and (Bosman 1 3) at
Mi lwaukee ! Slaton 3 71, 8: 30
pm
Cl eveland
( Perr y 6 8 ) at
Kansa s Crty ( Leonard 2 2), 8. 30
p m
Boston f Lee a 5) at Ch icago
( Bahn sen .:l5). 9 00 p .m
Batt rmo r e (Torrez 7 3) at Texas
( H argan 11 3), 9 00 p rn Thur sday's Games
Minnesota at New York
Califor nia a t Detro 1t. n1 g hl
Oa kl and at Milwaukee, nr gh t
Cl ev elan d at Kan sas City ,
n 1g ht
Bos ton at Ch1cago, n1 gh t
Baltimore at Texa s, night
National Leagu e Standings

By Un1t ed Press Int er national
Ea st
w. I. pd. g . b .
P1 II Sburg h
29 '22 569 -·
New Yor k
Phi l ad el phia
Chicago
St Louis
Mon tr eal

23 .5dQ
25 531
26 527
25 510
18 29 .JB 3

27
29
29
26

)I I

11 ~
2

J
9

West

w. 1. pet . g.b.

M n

Pomeroy As &amp;-1. In other
action, Syracuse downed the
,
Pomeroy Tigers 16-~ and
Hartford defeated Mason 4-3.
The Racine Pony Leaguers
held onto second place by
defeating Letart 7-1.
The Blazers in keeping
their winning streak alive,
handing the Pomeroy As
the ir fir st league defeat.
Baird fanned 17, walked 3,
&lt;l nd allowed 2 hits. For
Pomeroy, Dale Browning,
Greg Smith, and Brian
Hamilton combined to strike
out 7, walk 10, and give up ~
hits. Browning was charged
with the loss.
Racine held on to remain in
second place by downing
Letart 7-1 behind the pitching
of John Sayre and Mike
Huddleston . Sayre pitched 4
innings, picking up the win.
David Robinson was the
losi ng pitcher.
Sayre, during his 4 innings
allowed'no hits, no walks and
struck out 9. Huddles ton
allowed onl y one hit in
finishing the contes t and
str uck out 5.
Hitters for Racine were led
bv Scott Wolfe who has 4
RB!s including a bases
loaded double in the fourth
inning , and Sayre , Hud-

5Y

The Daily Sentinel
OEVOTEOTOTHE

76
11
INTEREST OF
Lo s Angele5
3,l 25 · 5
MEIGS · MASON AREA
41
1
9
San Fran CIS CO 28 21 50
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
6
Sa n Diego
27 29 ·l f:l 2
Exec. Ed .
11
4
9
At lanta
25 32
3
81
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Houston
21 40 J44 14 1
Cih Editor
Tu esday 's Re sults
PubliShed da1ly except
Hou ston 4 Chicago 3, night
satu rda y by Th e Oh1o Valley
Pittsburgh 9 C1ncm nat 1 5,
Publ i Shing Company , 111
night
Co urt St., Pomeroy, Ohio
S t LOUIS at At lan ta. n1ght. .15769 . Business Office Ph one
ppd , rain
992 ,215 6. Editorial Phone 992
Montreal 5 Los Angel es ·1, 2157
n ight
: Second class postage pa 1d
Philadelphia 7 San Diego 0 , . a t Pomeroy , Oh1o
nig ht
: Na t 1ona l
adver t. is inq
New York 5 San F r an cisc o 0.
r e pr es entat i ve
Wa rd .
Grlft lfh Compa n y , In c ,
n 1ght Today 's Games
(Al l T•mes EDT)
Botlinel l 1 &amp; Gallag her D•v ,
757 Th •rd Ave. N Pw York ,
Ph .t lad elph ia ( Und er wood 6 4)
NY . l 00 17
a t san F ra nc 1sco (Fal co ne 4 41, . Subsc rip t l( on
rate s ·
4. 05 p .m
De l ivered bv , carrier where
Chicago
(Burr is
6 5)
at . available 75 cents per week ,
Atlan ta (Morton 5·6l. 7 ·35 P m
By Motor Route Wh (( re
St . Loui s (McG lot hen 6 4 ) at ca rr •er
service
not
Cinc1nn at1 (Gu ll et1 7 3 or Darcy 'avai lable , One month , $3 25 .
By mail in Ohio an d W Va.
1 2) , 8 05 p m.
P•ttsburgh (Kison 6·1) at One Year,
$22 .00 ,
Six.
Houston fD,erk.er 5·6l. a · JO months,
$11 .50 ,
Three l
p m.
'm onth s, $7 00 Elsewhere
Montreal I Blair 2·71 at San r$26 00 year ; S1X m o nths
Diego 1 Folkers o 3), 10 p m
1 1$ 13 so. th_ree m on ths , $7 50
New York (Mat lack 7 4) at Lo s 1 rSu bscnp t 1_on price. 1M eludes
Ange les fRau 5·6 L 10 30 p m . 1 ~S~d.ay T1m es .sent.nel.
Thur sday ' s Gam es
Mon tr eal at Sa n D1ego
Philadelphia at San Franc1sco
Chi cago at Atl anta , tw iligh t
P1ltSburgh at Houston , night
St . L ouis at Crnc1nnati, night
N ew York at Lo~ Ang e les ,
night

hander did not win his ninth
game untO Sept. 3.

INTEREST

On Certificates
Oi DepOsit

dleston, and Perry Hill each
had 2 singles.
Steve
Hill,
Richard
Teaford, an d Bill Harns each
had a single. The on ly Letart
hit came with 2 out m the
seventh mning.
Syracuse mopved to 2-1 by
defea tm g the Pomeroy
Tigers 16-5 with the Tigers
droppmg to 0-3.
For Syracuse, Danny Riffle
sta rted on th e mound ,
working 4 innings striking out
2, walking 10, allowing 3 hits
and all :; Tiger runs. Don
Hendricks came on in relief
and fi nished, striking out 2
and walking ~. allowing no
runs.
Dan Icenhower and Jeff
Grueser saw mound duty for
the Tigers, combinin g to
strike out 3, walk 11 and give
up 10 hits and 16 runs.
Icenhower was charged with
the loss.
Gettmg hits for Syracuse
were Hendricks and Mark
Forbes with 2 si ngles each,
John Davis, Matt Weaver,
Kelly Winebren ner, Marty

Ninety day Interest peftllty
if
withdrawn
before
maturity date.

Mason 4-3 dropping the
Mason squad to 1-3 in standings. Scott Fields and
Warren Fields pitched for
Hartford. Don Russell
worked on the mound for
Mason.
THE STANDINGS
W. L.
4 0
Cheshire
2 0
Racine
2 1
Pomeroy As
2 1
Hartford
2 1
Syracuse
I 3
Mason
0 3
Pomeroy Tigers
0 4
Letart

Meip Co. Branch

@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
2f6 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

:NFJ ~
~

~!Jil~

GOODfYEAR

Foley, Riffle , and Jack Duffy
each had a single.
For Pomeroy Icenhower
had 2 singles, Grueser and
Ri chard Demoss each a
si ngle.
Hartfo rd moved to 2-1 in
loop play by slipping by
M&amp;RLOSES
In girls softball action the
M&amp;R gals were defea ted by
Hits 'N Misses 16-1. Girls
hitting sa fely for the M&amp;R
team were Kellee Burdette,
Tracy Burdette, and Glenda
Brown, each a double ; Jackie
Brown, Megan Miller , Mary
.Boggs, and Sally Carleton
each a single. M&amp;R will play
New Haven at the Minersfield
field at 6: 1~ p.m. Thursday.

30 Mo. Term

JUSl

CAll

• Fl a ts repaired or replaced promptly • Tube val ves
repla ce d! • Tires li q uid-filled ' • Tire sales &amp; service
for e very truck, tractor, and a uto on your farm!

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
POMEROY

JOHN F. FULTZ
OWNER

OHIO

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Waat
toaaw

29

1nternat1onal League
Standings
By UP1
w. 1. pet.
Rochester
34 24 .586
Sy ra cuse
JJ 25 569
Tidewater
31 25 . 554
Charleston
30 25 .545
Richmond
27 29 482
Pawt ucket
26 30 .464
Toledo
25 32 439
Memphis
21 37 .362

I· ~&gt;•••·•••'

opa

.._,.

g .b.
1
2
21!2
6

7
81f1

13

Rochester 1 Memphis 0 , 1st.

ve
IndiiDI

va
Bl'l!.VI!II

,.

Roc he ster 2 Memphis
2nd , , 7 innings
Syracuse 4 Charleston
lsf. 7 in nings
Sy ra cuse 5 Charl eston
2nd , 8 innings
Richmond 8 Pawtucket
1s t. 7 innings
Pawtuc ket 2 Richmond
2nd , 7 Inning s

'

when you 11ura art

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uted with optional acCessories for aandinv, polishing,
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$1099
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State Farm Car Fln1nce Plan.

Tuesday's Re sults
Tol edo 6 Tide wa ter I
7 1nnin gs

l.
3,

3,

'

-

Steve Snowden
I2SB Powell st.
Middl~port1

Ohio

PH: 992-7U5

IrATI ,AII:Iill MUJUA~
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Addnss ----------~~--------------

pctd &amp;ll'l . O]liD

Pbone --------------------,...-------·l'ype of Entryr____

Americ.1n Leilgl.l e S tandm g ~
Bv Un•1cd Press tnt er nat1on a 1

MIJ .

Nune--------------------~~------

() 11l7lltV NEA. Inc.

In Meigs-Mason Pony
League action Tuesday the
Cheshire Blazers behind the
2-hit pitching of Steve Baird
won their fourth straight
game without a loss this
season by downing th e

, I

Results of the Girls Jr. softball games played Monday,
Jtine 9 show Pomeroy 16, New
Haven 4; Pantheretles 6,
Syracuse ~; Letart 7, Rutland
6; Mason 7, Meigs Inn 0 and
Forest Run 1~ . Racine 2.
The Panthereltes continued
their winning streak by
defeating the Syracuse gals 6~ in a close contest. For the
winners Missy Cale and Terri
Wilson had 3 singles, Tracy
Burdette and Brenda Brown
had 2 singles Glenda Brown
had 2 singles ~nd a triple, Jo
McKinney, Marcia Cale and
Sharon Karr each had a
single.
Hitters for Syracuse were
Sonya Ash with 2 singles,
Teaford a double , Julia
Nance a triple, Patterson and
Slavin each had a single.
With the victory the
Pantherettes are now in first
place with a 3-0 record while
Syracuse dropped behind
with a 2-1 slate.
Here is the Jr. and Sr.
schedule for the week. /
JUNE II I JR.) £~
6:15 Pomeroy vs. Letart if
Letart.
6: 15 Middleport vs. Rutland
at Rutland.
6:1~ New Haven vs. Pantherettes at Middleport.
6:15 Racine vs. Mason at
Mason.
6: I~ Fore.s t Run vs.
Syracuse at Minersville .
June 12 (SR.)
6:1~ New Haven vs. M&amp;R at
Minersville.
6: 1:i Hits 'N Misses vs.
Forest Run at Minersville.

hander Larry Christenson his
first win of the year.
Tom Seaver pitched a sixhitter for his first shutout of
the season and Jerry Grote
drove in two runs with a
single and double to lead the
New York Mets to a 5-0
victory over the San Francisco Giants. Seaver struck
out nine including the side in
the ninth and walked two in
picking up his ninth victory
against four losses. A year
ago, the star Mets' right-

Blazers win 4th game

contmue on
win streak

the winning run in the
seventh inning as the Montreal Expos edged the Los
Angeles Dodgers 5-4. The
unearned run cos t the
Dodgers, who couldn't hold a
3-0 lead, a chance to regain
first place in the NL West.
Mike Schmidt, Te~ry
Harmon and Jay Johnstone
each drove in two runs and
the Philadelphia Phillies
made the most of nine hits to
defeat the Sa n Diego Padres
7.{) and earn rookie right-

'1,000 Minimum

Pantherettes

Big Bead Regatta Parade
Entry Form

~

Cesar Cedeno and Milt May
walked to open the eighth
broke a 2-2 tie. Konieczny
followed with a double off the
wall in left field for the fourth
run, assuring the young
righthander of his fourth
vic tory agai ns t seven
losses.
St. Louis at Atlanta was
rained out.
Reliever Mike Marshall's
errant pickoff attempt
allowed Pepe Mangual to
score from second base with

a sin gle by AI Oliver and then
took a 7-3 lead in the fifth
when Manny Sa ngu illen
foll9wed a single by Zisk with
his third homer of the season.
Sam McDoweU, pitching
the first live innings, picked
up his second victory in three
decisio ns.
Before
his
departure, he was touched for
three runs and six hits.
Pitcher Doug Konieczny
drove in two runs with a
double and a single and
limited the Chicago Cubs to
eight hits in a 4-3 Houston
vic tory which snapped a nine
game Astros' losing streak.
Enos Cabell's single after

'-

IIG. . . .,

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29

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period during his 17-year
career with Santns of Sao
Paulo and the Brazil national
team.
The Brazilian wonderman

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Sure."

So, at 8 a.m. Sunday, June
29, Tom will leave home and
. should jog into Riverfront
Stadium in time to watch a

long way in five years and his
running record indicates he
won't have any trouble at all .
Last year he ran 3,030 miles
and did this year's ~ile
Boston Marathon in 3 hours
and 21 minutes .
Able to click off eight miles
an hour, Tom usually runs
about nine miles before
breakfast, does another three
or four instead of eating lunch
and saves the best for the
weekends -15 miles straight.
He's become somewhat of a
local hero and is sought after
as a club and after-dinner
speaker .
"! don't try to tell people
what tn do," he says. "lf they
want to know how I've found
happiness- ! tell them .
"Running has helped me
physically, but more im·
portantly, mentally . Like
everyone, problems come up
at mY job. But I don't sweat it
anymore. I tell myself, 'look,
you've already run nine miles
this morning. You can whlp
this. !It ~
Tom also figures his running will keep him a safe
distance from the product
manufactured by his employer .
He works for the Aurora
Casket Co.

for weekend event

BOX

f

11

little hair'y, " he says .
However, Tom has come a

Evans pond stocked

26 oz.

I

to the game."

"Why not," Tom thought.

little batting practice before
the 1:15 p.m. Reds-Padres
game begins .
Tom's wife and daughter
will follow him down U.S. 50
in a chase car, bringing
drinking water with !bern .
Tom already has drawn up a
detalled itinerary, including
eight water stops at
prescribed mileposts .
"lf it's hot, it might get a

'

.

LB.
BAG

IGA

By RICK VAN SANf
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Tom Ward says he's going to
run over tn see the Cincinnati
Reds later this month.
Tom lives 31 miles away in
Aurora, Ind., and when he
says he's going to "run over"
tn the baUpark, he means it.
He figures tn jog the 31
miles in just four hours-a
pretty quick trip for a 47year-old man.
·
It's ·not a public relations
ginunick. He's not pushing
anything-just himself and
the new lifestyle he's found .
Five years ago Tom was 40
pounds overweight and at age
42 figured it was too late in
life to try to do anything
about it.
One day his son was
training for high school track
and Tom trieil tn join him.
But after only about 400
y~rds, Tom gave out.
·This made him angry-at
himself.
"Little by little," he
recalls, "! start&lt;\~ jogging.
Every day I got a little better."
·
Now at age 47, Tom is 40
pounds lighter, feels in the
best health of his life and
maintains a running program
;that takes him up to 100 miles
'a week .
· So,- when his 16-year-old
daughter Mary Jean, a
baseball fan, tnld her father
she was going tn the June 29
Redo game, she joked, "why
don't you come along-and

run

POTATOES

•

•

now five years ahead of
schedule."
Pele made his debut for the
Cosmos as a spectator
Tuesday
· night
in
Philadelphia, sitting on the
bench after kicking out the
first ball as the Cosmos lost J.
0 in overtime.
He stands to make $4.7
million during the next three
years, more money than he

led his country to three World
Cup victories between 1958
"and 1970. He appeared in
every major ·soccer-playing
country, adding thousands to
the gate when his name was
included in the starting
lineup.
Asked if 34 was not a bit old
to reswne his career, Pele
said : "Soccer, unlike football, where the emphisis is on
physical condition, is a
creative game. If you take
care of your body, you can
play until you are 36. I don't
expect any problem."
Pele makes his Cosmos
debut here Sunday in an
exhibition game against the
Dallas Tornado, whose attack
is spearheaded by 1974
Superstars winner Kyle Rote
Jr., previously the highest
paid NASL player at around
$15,000 per season.
The match will be carried
live on CBS television (3:30
p.m. edt) and will also be
shown in Brazll and
Venezuela.

VIENNA SAUSAGE Jogger to run
4 oz.
·31
miles
to
see
I
CAN
0
Reds
play
game
R

ROLL

•
•

NEW YORK (UP!) Soccer, officials said, moved
ahead five years in the United
Stales
Tuesday when
superstar Pele signed his
New York Cosmos contract.
Clive Toye, the Cosmos'
vice president and general
manager and the man
responsible for bringing Pele
out of retirement, said:
"Soccer has moved ahead
five years in terms of
popularity . We always
believed it would one day
become a major league sport
in the United States, but with

ever earned over a similar

ARMOUR

,,

boosts soccer

Pele joining our league, we're

ARMOUR

P'AMILY PACK

IGA

5- · The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., W~sday ; June u, 1975
·:
.

-

'

'

RIO GRANDE, Ohio (UPI)
- A unique organizatlon
whose motto is ·"take a boy
fiShing" will host about 200
youngsters for a weekend
introduction to fishing and
the out-o(-doors near here
this weekend.
The program is sponsored
by the Ohio Chapter of the
· Brotherhood of the Jungle
Cock and will be held at the
Bob EIIIUIS Farm.
"The weekend program is a
busy one and a complete
introduction to the· klds in
fishing and the out-of-doors,"
said Martin Vulgamore,
president of the Ohlo chapter. ·
"A fuU staff of instructors
from the state Divlson of
Wildlife,
Divisi~n
of
Watercraft ·and noted
sportsmen w.ill be on hanrl as
.well as many distinguis!led
guests.
"F1y-Fishing and fly-lying
wlU be emphasized but in. structions wlll be glven in all

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Perry
blanks
Orioles

Newly-acquired Jim Perry
NEW YORK (UP]) - For Pele, the world is simply a soccer
ball, which he now holds.in the palm of his hand and needs only fired a one-hitter and. Gene
let drop when he pleases so he can score still another goal.
Tenace
and
Claudell
Product of a poverty-stricken Brazilian family . money no Washington backed him up
longer drives him .
willl homers Tuesday night tn
Patiently, he tried explaining that in Portuguese Tuesday give the Oakland A's a 3-ll
during a ceremonial signing for the news media which turned victory over the Baltimore
wild and unmanageable at one point when a pair of newsreel Orioles.
ca meramen swung at each over the delicate issue of who was
Perry had aUowed no hits
pushing whom.
anct retired 17 straight until
The New York Cosmos' soccer team was to blame for that . hot-hitting AI Btunbry singled
Cosmos' officials were ecstatically proud and excited about wiih two out in tbe sixth. The
signing the 34-year-old Pele to a three-year contract calling for 38-year old right-hander
an estimated 14.7 million, but in all t)leir ecstacy they raised his record to '1,-7 in
neglected to choose a room large enough at the fan cy "21 " recording his first complete
Club to accomodate the more than 300 attending newsmen, · game of the season and first
cameramen and g'atecrashers.
win for the A's since coming
Ethel Kennedy was having lunch on another floor of th e Club from Cleveland . Perry
and nobody even noticed in the confusion.
walked two and struck out
Long accustomed to melees at soccer matches, Pele paid seven. Ross Grimsley, 1-8,
little attention to the fracas which temporarily disrupted his tnok the loss.
In other AL games , Texas
news conference. Seated at a table up front in the company of
Cosmos' officials, he seemed hardly aware of it until his wife, pounded Boston S-3, Min·
nesota defeated Cleveland 5-3
Rosa, sitting alongside him, nervously pressed his hand .
in
12 innings, New York
When some semblance of order eventuaUy was restored by
downed
California 6-4,
Clive Toye, the Cosmos' perspiring vice president and general
Kansas
City
shaded Detroit 4manager, who kept alternatedly pleading "Gentlemen of tbe
Press! ... GENTLEMEN of the Press'" it was announced that 3, Chicago hammered
Milwaukee 9-2.
Pele would answer any questions.
Jeff Burroughs hit a twoThis, he did, handling himself perfectly as English questions
from the floor were translated tn him in Portuguese by his run homer and Roy Smalley
drove in two more runs , to
long{ime friend and advisor , Julio Mazzei.
lead the Rangers over the
Pele became Americanized in a matter of minutes.
It was easy tn tell from the answers he gave. They were the Red Sox. The loss was the
same ones generally provided by any other 34-year-old U.S. third straight for the Sox.
ballplayer past his prime who knows he has lost a step or so Fergie Jenkins evened his
along the way but still insists he's just as good as he has always record at 1M; while Luis Tlant
suffered his sixth loss in 13
been ... well, almost as good, anyway.
Why was Pele coming out of retirement? Was it for the decisions. Bernie Carbo hit a
pair of homers for Boston.
money ?
Steve Brye drove in one run
No, not for that, replied Pele, reputed to be the world's
with a single and Tony Oliva
richest athlete.
Everybody has a mission in life, a ~oa l , he explained through drew a walk with the bases
his fri end, Mazzei. His goal now is 1o promote soccer in the loaded to give the Twins a
U.S., the only country where the sport hasn't really flourished . victory over the Indians. Tom
This all came to him in a dream , Pele said, and that's why he Burgmeier, who came on in
the lOth, picked up tbe win,
came out of retirement, not because of the money.
his third in five decisions,
What about his age ? Wouldn't that be a handicap?
Again Pele answer'ld in terms of a U.S. athlete, choosing while Dave LaRoche dropped
American football to illustrate.
· to 2-1.
Chris Chambliss drove in
"American football is different from soccer,' 1 he said. ~~rn
American football, a player's ability depends much more on lllree runs with a homer and
his physical condition than upon his creativeness. An athlete's sacrifice fly to help Larry
actual age doesn 't really matter. What matters is how much Gura notch his ftrst victory of
care he has taken of his body. In soccer, you can be 34, 35, 36 or the season as the Yankees
37 and there is no problem if you have taken care of your defeated the Angels and
Nolan Ryan. The victory was
body ."
Pele undoubtedly has taken care of his. Not big by U.S. the Yanks' ninth in the last 10
standards, the man acknowledged the greatest soccer player games and moved tbem (()
in the world has no fat whatsoever on him. He still is lightning within one game of the
division leading Red Sox, who
quick, resourceful and imaginative on the soccer field .
lost to Texas.
There were more questions.
George Brett singled home
What about any possible conflict between him and Cosmos'
llle winning run in tbe eighth
coach Gordon Bradley?
·
inning tn lift the Royals tn a
No problem, Pele assured. They would work together .
'' As a coach he knows his business, and as a player I know vic tory over the Tigers.
Marty Pattin, making his
my business on the field."
first
start of the season, got
What about the soccer fan s back in Brazil? Aren 't they upset
with him for not playing with their nation al team and coming llle win with the ninth-inning
relief help of Lindy Me·
here instead?
"Brazilian people, like all Latin people, are sentimental," Daniel. John Mayberry hit
Pele replied. "They were angry with me at first, but then when his eighth honer of the
they realized for the first time Brazilian know-how could he season .
Jorge Orta lead a 14-hit
exported tn the United States, they started to change their
attack
with three safeties and
emotions. Now they're proud I'm playing over here."
two
RBI
as the White Sox
Pele ducked one question. Asked precisely how much money
defeated
the
Brewers, ending
he was getting for playing with the Cosmos, he said the only
a
six-game
losing streakconfusion was the result of various guesses by the press .
" You can clear up the confusion by teUing the exact amount their longest since 1972.
Wilbur Wood went the
now," came an invitation from the floor .
distance for Chicago tn get
Pele declined the invitation.
The extravaganza for his signing Tuesday was unlike any his third win against 10
I've ever witnessed for any other athlete. It's the only one I losses.
know of where security men were employed(() keep order, but
disorder prevailed anyway .
team contributes to a well
There was a crowd outside the place as well as inside . known player's success.
Among·those standing and wailing for a glimpse of Pele was Without compensation or the
Wanda Huderski, 25, of Rutherford, N.J., who admitted she Rozelle rule, the morale
wouldn't know the soccer multimillionaire if she btunped into would be very low, he said.
him . Th~n why was she waiting to see him ?
Fifteen present and former
" I'm just killing my lunch hour ," she said .
NFL players brought suit
ag ainst the league and
Rozelle, charging that the
rule limits a player's ability

Sayers defends
league policies

to move from one team to

MINNEAPOLIS (UP]) Football great Gale Sayers
says elimination of the
National Football League's
Rozelle rule could destroy a

he offered his testimony
because he was angry about
poor publicity the NFL
received during the 1974
players strike.
team's morale.
The RozeUe rule empowers
Sayers, an all-pro for the NFL Commissioner Pete RoChicago Bears uritil knee zeUe to set compensation
injuries' forced his early when an athlete who plays out .
retirem.e nt, appeared his option with one &lt;;lub ~ig ns
Tuesday as a defense-witness with another team.
in the trial over the rule
Sayers said the loss of a.
before u.s. District Court starting player affects team
,Judge Earl Larson. He said morale beeimse the whole

types of fishing equipment
and the different techniques
used to catch different
species of fish."
F1y-fishing for trout will be
stressed, said Vulgamore
who noted the name of the
organization was adopted
from 'the fowl whose hackle
feathers produce exceUent
flies:
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) -Dick Dewey couldu't be awakened
The pond at the Evans farm
has been stocked with trout from a deep sleep ·'l'uesday morning, proving that even a
for the weekend and also person nicknamed the "Iron Man" gets tired once In awhlle . .
There W'l" good reason why the 46-year-old Kansas CitY
includes catfish, bass and
man
dropped oft in slumber so deep at 2:25a.m. he bad to be ·
bluegills.
carried
to 8 motel.
Vulgamore said sleeping
,
.
He
had·
bowled 1,474 games in a row - a world record· ·
facilites are provided by Rlo
setting
task
which
kept hiiO busy for II4 hours and 25 minutes
Grande College which wlll
at
the
Leisure
Lanes.
The marathon raised $6,500 for a new cat
give the Ohio chapter the
complex
at
the
Henry
Doorly Zoo and more mooey was
advantage of Qlling able to
pledged
·
for
the
project.
.
. ·
take girls fishing also.
He wore out 17 bowllnc balls alld two pair of shoes, wbicb
"The first campfire at Rlo
had
their sides and toes cut out to allow for swelling in the feet.
Grande was mostly a
According
to the Guineas World Boyll .of Reconl•, tbe
learning
session
for
previous
record
was set by Bob Petel'lll!n in Sllcramen;o,
organizationar purposes and
in
1973
when
Petersen bowled I,Z52 games in 8! hours
Calli.,
was llmited to about 50 kids,"
and
ZO
minutes.
said Vulgamore .

another and is monopolistic.
Sayers said he was upset by
comments by · some of the
plaintiffs in the suit, particularly Dick Gordon, a
former wide receiver for the
Bears and teammate of
Sayers.
He said Gordon was one of
several players who in 1969
"didn't give a damn abQut
playing footbaU and only
wanted to collect their
salaries every Tuesday."
Sayers, 32, currently an ·
assistant athletic directnr at
the University of Kansas, was
drafted by the Bears in 11H16
and played until his
retirement in 1971.
"Everything I have today I
owe to football," he said.
"The game itself is not a
livelihood. It's too short. It's a
stepping stone to something
else."

In 1960, Sayers signed a
four-year contract with the
Bears totaling t150,ooo with
bonuses during those years
ranging from $10,000 to
$25,000. In 1969 and 1970 he
received $80,000 a year.
He said he was COOIJilelely
satisfied with the salary he
received wblie witb the Bears
and never disputed what
Chicago gaw him•

...,

.

'

, /1,~:·

•

~

�- ~· ~·- -......-----~~-------~---~

·I

•

4- The n.uv Sllptil'f'l. Mlrkfl•nort-Pomerov. 0 .. Wednesday. J-11.1975 I

Thin
Saltines

DOMINO

BATHROOM·
TISSUE

IGA

KING SIZE

'

Pele signing
.,

SUGAR

TIDE

5 LB. BAG

4 ROLL PACK

1 LB. BOX

.

ONLY

'

POTTED MEAT

PORK CHOP

Jumbo
Towels

I

3 oz.

CENTERS &amp;FIRST CUT MIXED

CAN

0

R

DEL MONTE

FRUIT COCKTAIL

•
•'
••

.

•••
•

29

•
•
••

period during his 17-year
career with Santns of Sao
Paulo and the Brazil national
team.
The Brazilian wonderman

CAMPBELL'S

oz.

CREAM OF CHICKEN
SOUP

HEAD

••
•
• •
••
•
.,•
••
••
•

LETTUCE

•

,•

DOMINO
LIGHT BROWN
OR
lOX SUGAR

•

•

•
•
••
..
••

•
••
•"•
••

2

WAGNER
ORANGE
DRINK

HEAD!i

••

•
••
•
e•
•
••
•
••
h

•

•

••

••
•

VAN CAMP

•" .•'·

.•• ••

&amp; BEANS

.·-..

.........
·-••·- ~

~

11

~­

om

oz..

4

LEMON

FROZEN

1 DOZEN PLUS

FRENCH

64 OZ. PITCHER

PACK
FOR

QT.

KRAFT BAR-B-OUE

FRIED

SAUCE

'

IGA

FLOUR
5 LB. BAG

SALT

SUNSHINE

HUNrS

PEACHES

'

-

•

29 OZ, CAN ·

-

LB. ONLY
BAG

...•

.,

-'
•

F D

CHUNKY STYLE

..

Sure."

So, at 8 a.m. Sunday, June
29, Tom will leave home and
. should jog into Riverfront
Stadium in time to watch a

long way in five years and his
running record indicates he
won't have any trouble at all .
Last year he ran 3,030 miles
and did this year's ~ile
Boston Marathon in 3 hours
and 21 minutes .
Able to click off eight miles
an hour, Tom usually runs
about nine miles before
breakfast, does another three
or four instead of eating lunch
and saves the best for the
weekends -15 miles straight.
He's become somewhat of a
local hero and is sought after
as a club and after-dinner
speaker .
"! don't try to tell people
what tn do," he says. "lf they
want to know how I've found
happiness- ! tell them .
"Running has helped me
physically, but more im·
portantly, mentally . Like
everyone, problems come up
at mY job. But I don't sweat it
anymore. I tell myself, 'look,
you've already run nine miles
this morning. You can whlp
this. !It ~
Tom also figures his running will keep him a safe
distance from the product
manufactured by his employer .
He works for the Aurora
Casket Co.

for weekend event

BOX

f

11

little hair'y, " he says .
However, Tom has come a

Evans pond stocked

26 oz.

I

to the game."

"Why not," Tom thought.

little batting practice before
the 1:15 p.m. Reds-Padres
game begins .
Tom's wife and daughter
will follow him down U.S. 50
in a chase car, bringing
drinking water with !bern .
Tom already has drawn up a
detalled itinerary, including
eight water stops at
prescribed mileposts .
"lf it's hot, it might get a

'

.

LB.
BAG

IGA

By RICK VAN SANf
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Tom Ward says he's going to
run over tn see the Cincinnati
Reds later this month.
Tom lives 31 miles away in
Aurora, Ind., and when he
says he's going to "run over"
tn the baUpark, he means it.
He figures tn jog the 31
miles in just four hours-a
pretty quick trip for a 47year-old man.
·
It's ·not a public relations
ginunick. He's not pushing
anything-just himself and
the new lifestyle he's found .
Five years ago Tom was 40
pounds overweight and at age
42 figured it was too late in
life to try to do anything
about it.
One day his son was
training for high school track
and Tom trieil tn join him.
But after only about 400
y~rds, Tom gave out.
·This made him angry-at
himself.
"Little by little," he
recalls, "! start&lt;\~ jogging.
Every day I got a little better."
·
Now at age 47, Tom is 40
pounds lighter, feels in the
best health of his life and
maintains a running program
;that takes him up to 100 miles
'a week .
· So,- when his 16-year-old
daughter Mary Jean, a
baseball fan, tnld her father
she was going tn the June 29
Redo game, she joked, "why
don't you come along-and

run

POTATOES

•

•

now five years ahead of
schedule."
Pele made his debut for the
Cosmos as a spectator
Tuesday
· night
in
Philadelphia, sitting on the
bench after kicking out the
first ball as the Cosmos lost J.
0 in overtime.
He stands to make $4.7
million during the next three
years, more money than he

led his country to three World
Cup victories between 1958
"and 1970. He appeared in
every major ·soccer-playing
country, adding thousands to
the gate when his name was
included in the starting
lineup.
Asked if 34 was not a bit old
to reswne his career, Pele
said : "Soccer, unlike football, where the emphisis is on
physical condition, is a
creative game. If you take
care of your body, you can
play until you are 36. I don't
expect any problem."
Pele makes his Cosmos
debut here Sunday in an
exhibition game against the
Dallas Tornado, whose attack
is spearheaded by 1974
Superstars winner Kyle Rote
Jr., previously the highest
paid NASL player at around
$15,000 per season.
The match will be carried
live on CBS television (3:30
p.m. edt) and will also be
shown in Brazll and
Venezuela.

VIENNA SAUSAGE Jogger to run
4 oz.
·31
miles
to
see
I
CAN
0
Reds
play
game
R

ROLL

•
•

NEW YORK (UP!) Soccer, officials said, moved
ahead five years in the United
Stales
Tuesday when
superstar Pele signed his
New York Cosmos contract.
Clive Toye, the Cosmos'
vice president and general
manager and the man
responsible for bringing Pele
out of retirement, said:
"Soccer has moved ahead
five years in terms of
popularity . We always
believed it would one day
become a major league sport
in the United States, but with

ever earned over a similar

ARMOUR

,,

boosts soccer

Pele joining our league, we're

ARMOUR

P'AMILY PACK

IGA

5- · The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., W~sday ; June u, 1975
·:
.

-

'

'

RIO GRANDE, Ohio (UPI)
- A unique organizatlon
whose motto is ·"take a boy
fiShing" will host about 200
youngsters for a weekend
introduction to fishing and
the out-o(-doors near here
this weekend.
The program is sponsored
by the Ohio Chapter of the
· Brotherhood of the Jungle
Cock and will be held at the
Bob EIIIUIS Farm.
"The weekend program is a
busy one and a complete
introduction to the· klds in
fishing and the out-of-doors,"
said Martin Vulgamore,
president of the Ohlo chapter. ·
"A fuU staff of instructors
from the state Divlson of
Wildlife,
Divisi~n
of
Watercraft ·and noted
sportsmen w.ill be on hanrl as
.well as many distinguis!led
guests.
"F1y-Fishing and fly-lying
wlU be emphasized but in. structions wlll be glven in all

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Perry
blanks
Orioles

Newly-acquired Jim Perry
NEW YORK (UP]) - For Pele, the world is simply a soccer
ball, which he now holds.in the palm of his hand and needs only fired a one-hitter and. Gene
let drop when he pleases so he can score still another goal.
Tenace
and
Claudell
Product of a poverty-stricken Brazilian family . money no Washington backed him up
longer drives him .
willl homers Tuesday night tn
Patiently, he tried explaining that in Portuguese Tuesday give the Oakland A's a 3-ll
during a ceremonial signing for the news media which turned victory over the Baltimore
wild and unmanageable at one point when a pair of newsreel Orioles.
ca meramen swung at each over the delicate issue of who was
Perry had aUowed no hits
pushing whom.
anct retired 17 straight until
The New York Cosmos' soccer team was to blame for that . hot-hitting AI Btunbry singled
Cosmos' officials were ecstatically proud and excited about wiih two out in tbe sixth. The
signing the 34-year-old Pele to a three-year contract calling for 38-year old right-hander
an estimated 14.7 million, but in all t)leir ecstacy they raised his record to '1,-7 in
neglected to choose a room large enough at the fan cy "21 " recording his first complete
Club to accomodate the more than 300 attending newsmen, · game of the season and first
cameramen and g'atecrashers.
win for the A's since coming
Ethel Kennedy was having lunch on another floor of th e Club from Cleveland . Perry
and nobody even noticed in the confusion.
walked two and struck out
Long accustomed to melees at soccer matches, Pele paid seven. Ross Grimsley, 1-8,
little attention to the fracas which temporarily disrupted his tnok the loss.
In other AL games , Texas
news conference. Seated at a table up front in the company of
Cosmos' officials, he seemed hardly aware of it until his wife, pounded Boston S-3, Min·
nesota defeated Cleveland 5-3
Rosa, sitting alongside him, nervously pressed his hand .
in
12 innings, New York
When some semblance of order eventuaUy was restored by
downed
California 6-4,
Clive Toye, the Cosmos' perspiring vice president and general
Kansas
City
shaded Detroit 4manager, who kept alternatedly pleading "Gentlemen of tbe
Press! ... GENTLEMEN of the Press'" it was announced that 3, Chicago hammered
Milwaukee 9-2.
Pele would answer any questions.
Jeff Burroughs hit a twoThis, he did, handling himself perfectly as English questions
from the floor were translated tn him in Portuguese by his run homer and Roy Smalley
drove in two more runs , to
long{ime friend and advisor , Julio Mazzei.
lead the Rangers over the
Pele became Americanized in a matter of minutes.
It was easy tn tell from the answers he gave. They were the Red Sox. The loss was the
same ones generally provided by any other 34-year-old U.S. third straight for the Sox.
ballplayer past his prime who knows he has lost a step or so Fergie Jenkins evened his
along the way but still insists he's just as good as he has always record at 1M; while Luis Tlant
suffered his sixth loss in 13
been ... well, almost as good, anyway.
Why was Pele coming out of retirement? Was it for the decisions. Bernie Carbo hit a
pair of homers for Boston.
money ?
Steve Brye drove in one run
No, not for that, replied Pele, reputed to be the world's
with a single and Tony Oliva
richest athlete.
Everybody has a mission in life, a ~oa l , he explained through drew a walk with the bases
his fri end, Mazzei. His goal now is 1o promote soccer in the loaded to give the Twins a
U.S., the only country where the sport hasn't really flourished . victory over the Indians. Tom
This all came to him in a dream , Pele said, and that's why he Burgmeier, who came on in
the lOth, picked up tbe win,
came out of retirement, not because of the money.
his third in five decisions,
What about his age ? Wouldn't that be a handicap?
Again Pele answer'ld in terms of a U.S. athlete, choosing while Dave LaRoche dropped
American football to illustrate.
· to 2-1.
Chris Chambliss drove in
"American football is different from soccer,' 1 he said. ~~rn
American football, a player's ability depends much more on lllree runs with a homer and
his physical condition than upon his creativeness. An athlete's sacrifice fly to help Larry
actual age doesn 't really matter. What matters is how much Gura notch his ftrst victory of
care he has taken of his body. In soccer, you can be 34, 35, 36 or the season as the Yankees
37 and there is no problem if you have taken care of your defeated the Angels and
Nolan Ryan. The victory was
body ."
Pele undoubtedly has taken care of his. Not big by U.S. the Yanks' ninth in the last 10
standards, the man acknowledged the greatest soccer player games and moved tbem (()
in the world has no fat whatsoever on him. He still is lightning within one game of the
division leading Red Sox, who
quick, resourceful and imaginative on the soccer field .
lost to Texas.
There were more questions.
George Brett singled home
What about any possible conflict between him and Cosmos'
llle winning run in tbe eighth
coach Gordon Bradley?
·
inning tn lift the Royals tn a
No problem, Pele assured. They would work together .
'' As a coach he knows his business, and as a player I know vic tory over the Tigers.
Marty Pattin, making his
my business on the field."
first
start of the season, got
What about the soccer fan s back in Brazil? Aren 't they upset
with him for not playing with their nation al team and coming llle win with the ninth-inning
relief help of Lindy Me·
here instead?
"Brazilian people, like all Latin people, are sentimental," Daniel. John Mayberry hit
Pele replied. "They were angry with me at first, but then when his eighth honer of the
they realized for the first time Brazilian know-how could he season .
Jorge Orta lead a 14-hit
exported tn the United States, they started to change their
attack
with three safeties and
emotions. Now they're proud I'm playing over here."
two
RBI
as the White Sox
Pele ducked one question. Asked precisely how much money
defeated
the
Brewers, ending
he was getting for playing with the Cosmos, he said the only
a
six-game
losing streakconfusion was the result of various guesses by the press .
" You can clear up the confusion by teUing the exact amount their longest since 1972.
Wilbur Wood went the
now," came an invitation from the floor .
distance for Chicago tn get
Pele declined the invitation.
The extravaganza for his signing Tuesday was unlike any his third win against 10
I've ever witnessed for any other athlete. It's the only one I losses.
know of where security men were employed(() keep order, but
disorder prevailed anyway .
team contributes to a well
There was a crowd outside the place as well as inside . known player's success.
Among·those standing and wailing for a glimpse of Pele was Without compensation or the
Wanda Huderski, 25, of Rutherford, N.J., who admitted she Rozelle rule, the morale
wouldn't know the soccer multimillionaire if she btunped into would be very low, he said.
him . Th~n why was she waiting to see him ?
Fifteen present and former
" I'm just killing my lunch hour ," she said .
NFL players brought suit
ag ainst the league and
Rozelle, charging that the
rule limits a player's ability

Sayers defends
league policies

to move from one team to

MINNEAPOLIS (UP]) Football great Gale Sayers
says elimination of the
National Football League's
Rozelle rule could destroy a

he offered his testimony
because he was angry about
poor publicity the NFL
received during the 1974
players strike.
team's morale.
The RozeUe rule empowers
Sayers, an all-pro for the NFL Commissioner Pete RoChicago Bears uritil knee zeUe to set compensation
injuries' forced his early when an athlete who plays out .
retirem.e nt, appeared his option with one &lt;;lub ~ig ns
Tuesday as a defense-witness with another team.
in the trial over the rule
Sayers said the loss of a.
before u.s. District Court starting player affects team
,Judge Earl Larson. He said morale beeimse the whole

types of fishing equipment
and the different techniques
used to catch different
species of fish."
F1y-fishing for trout will be
stressed, said Vulgamore
who noted the name of the
organization was adopted
from 'the fowl whose hackle
feathers produce exceUent
flies:
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) -Dick Dewey couldu't be awakened
The pond at the Evans farm
has been stocked with trout from a deep sleep ·'l'uesday morning, proving that even a
for the weekend and also person nicknamed the "Iron Man" gets tired once In awhlle . .
There W'l" good reason why the 46-year-old Kansas CitY
includes catfish, bass and
man
dropped oft in slumber so deep at 2:25a.m. he bad to be ·
bluegills.
carried
to 8 motel.
Vulgamore said sleeping
,
.
He
had·
bowled 1,474 games in a row - a world record· ·
facilites are provided by Rlo
setting
task
which
kept hiiO busy for II4 hours and 25 minutes
Grande College which wlll
at
the
Leisure
Lanes.
The marathon raised $6,500 for a new cat
give the Ohio chapter the
complex
at
the
Henry
Doorly Zoo and more mooey was
advantage of Qlling able to
pledged
·
for
the
project.
.
. ·
take girls fishing also.
He wore out 17 bowllnc balls alld two pair of shoes, wbicb
"The first campfire at Rlo
had
their sides and toes cut out to allow for swelling in the feet.
Grande was mostly a
According
to the Guineas World Boyll .of Reconl•, tbe
learning
session
for
previous
record
was set by Bob Petel'lll!n in Sllcramen;o,
organizationar purposes and
in
1973
when
Petersen bowled I,Z52 games in 8! hours
Calli.,
was llmited to about 50 kids,"
and
ZO
minutes.
said Vulgamore .

another and is monopolistic.
Sayers said he was upset by
comments by · some of the
plaintiffs in the suit, particularly Dick Gordon, a
former wide receiver for the
Bears and teammate of
Sayers.
He said Gordon was one of
several players who in 1969
"didn't give a damn abQut
playing footbaU and only
wanted to collect their
salaries every Tuesday."
Sayers, 32, currently an ·
assistant athletic directnr at
the University of Kansas, was
drafted by the Bears in 11H16
and played until his
retirement in 1971.
"Everything I have today I
owe to football," he said.
"The game itself is not a
livelihood. It's too short. It's a
stepping stone to something
else."

In 1960, Sayers signed a
four-year contract with the
Bears totaling t150,ooo with
bonuses during those years
ranging from $10,000 to
$25,000. In 1969 and 1970 he
received $80,000 a year.
He said he was COOIJilelely
satisfied with the salary he
received wblie witb the Bears
and never disputed what
Chicago gaw him•

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OES inspection held

.Evangeline OES chapter convenes

RACINE - Dr. Howard I. 1950. Other members eligible
Shull, Associate Grand for 25 year pins were : Beulah
Patron of the Grand Chapter Stobart, Man on Thompson,
of Ohio, was the inspecting Ethel Eul er, arid Avis
officer at the 74th inspection Frecker. Their pins -will be
of Racine Chapter, No. 134, delivered to them.
·Order of Eas tern Star, when
After the meeting refresh·
the chapter met in regular ments ·of sandwiches, salad
session June 2 with Worthy and cookies were served by
Matron , Opal Diddle and the refreshments committee
Worthy Patron , B~n Philson with Helen Pickens, chairpresiding, with the following man .
officers in their stations ':
The chapter will recess
associate matron, Barbara during the months of July and
Roush; associate patron, August reconve ni ng in
James Roush ; conductress, September·.
Ca.therine Wood ; associate
The Past Officers Club will
co ndu ctress,
Romaine meet at the Temple June 19.
Frederick; secretary, Grella
Simpson: treasurer, Chlorus
Grimm; chaplain , ·Llllian
Weese : mar sha ll , Laura
Circle: orga nist , Shirley
Johnson ; Adah, Barbara
Dugan; Ruth , Patricia
While; Estller, Jane Wagner :
Martha , Bernice Theiss:
RACINE - Members of the
Electa, Margaret West ; Meigs County Salon 712,
warder, Kate McNickle with Eight and Forty, met Monday
Leona Hensley pro-tem: night at the Racine Locks and
Helen Pickens, sentineL
Dams fo r a picmc and
Guests who were presented busi ness meeting.
Past Grand Matron , Rober ta
Mrs . Lula
Hampto n
K. Mind ling : Associate · presided with members
Grand Patron, Howard I. signing a card for Mrs. Veda
Shull ; Grand Ruth of W. Va. Davis, hos pitalized in
Grand Chapter, Wanda Colu mbus. Plans were
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENf - Mr. and Mrs.
Gabritsch ; Deputy Grand discussed for the four-c ounty
Howard R. Allen, New Knoxville, announce the
Matrons, District No. 24, joint installation in August.
engagement of their daughter, Cindy Lou, to Michael D.
Fort, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fort, Cincinnati. Miss
Marie Turner : and District Money making projects were
No. 25, Donna
Spring. planned with proceeds to go
Allen is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Orville Allen,
Grand Representatives, Elsie toward paying expenses of
Pomeroy, andfWI.!!I!J~ . Harris, Portland. The bride~lect
Schoenian, represe nti ng members attending the stale
is a graduate of New Knoxville High School and Sawyer
Michigan ; Mary Shull, convention in July.
Colleg~ of Business. She is employed by the Montgomery
representing Oklahoma ;
County
Bureau of Suwort in Dayton. Her fiance is a
Following the picnic, the
Nellie Casto, representing group was taken on a tour of
graduate of Taylor High School In Cincinnati and is now
Saskatchewan , Ca nada for the facilities there . Attending
associated with tbe Wooster Iron and Metal Co., Wooster.
West Virginia. These guests were Mrs . Catherine Welch,
The wedding will be an event of Aug. 16 at the Way Inwere given seals in the East. Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, Mrs.
ternational Biblical Research Center, New Knoxville.
Those recognized at their Eunie Brinker, Mrs. Pearl
seats were Honored Masons, Knapp, Mrs. Iva Powell, Mrs.
visi ling Worthy Matrons and Zuelelia Smith, Mrs. Lula
Patrons, Past Matrons and Hampton , Mrs. Eileen
Patrons of Racine Chapter ; Searles, Mrs. Julia Hysell
Grand Aide and Grand Pages and Mrs. Myrtle Walker.
of the next Grand Chapter
session, former Grand ap·
pointments, 50 &lt;year mem.BY POLLY CRA~IER
bers, District officers, and
Past Matrons and Patrons of
visiting chapters .
Over I00 members and
visitors representin g 19
chapters were present witCHESTER - The Ladies
nessing the initiation of two Auxiliary of the Chester fire
candidates which was done in' department met Wednesday
possible I would just be a real
POLLY'S PROBLEM
a very impressive manner. evening at the firehouse. The
DEAR POLLY - We sport and have It painted like
Honorary membership meeting presided over by
bought
two new colored the other things. - POLLY.
were presented to Howard president Clari ce Allen,
Shull and wife, Mary Shull by opened with the Lord's appliances but are stuck with
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
quite
new
white
Louise Stewart and Martha Prayer, followed by roll call . a
Lou Beegle was presented a Minutes of the previous refrigerator. We have been Peeve is ha ving to stand in
25 year pin by Cora Webb, meeting was read by Erma told it can be painted like the line with cold cash in hand
who was the Worthy Matron Cleland and the treasurer's other things but wonder if while the cashier is dawdling
there is anything else we with charge cards. It seems
when she was initiated ·in report by Opal Wickham.
could do like using decals, there could be a checkout line
New co mmittees were etc. to make it blend in with for those paying cash and
named by the vice president, the other. appliances. I would another
for
cl]arge
ANNOUNCES BIRTH
Georgia Smith and a new certainly appreciate any customers. I also think we
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee · member, Sheila Taylor, was
Pickens of Etna-Green, Ind., welcomed. Plans for serving suggestions. - DOROTHY. who pay 'cash deserve
DEAR DOROTHY - I am discounts. We are paying
formerly of Meigs County, food at th e Museum on
announce the birth of a five Heritage Sunday were sure many readers have been ahout 5 per cent extra to
pound, seven ounce daughter, discussed and ·au members in the same dilemma and will cover the service given to
Micki Lee, on May 16. were asked .to donate a cake tell us how they solved it. charge card customers.
Grandparents are Mr . and or pie. A gift of money was Decals might look very spotty MRS. E.M.T., Canadda.
DEAR POLLY - I do not
Mrs. Elmer L. Pickens, given by members to Grace and would have to be used
think
, Richard's buttons
Letart Falls, and Mrs. Mae Kumpf who recently lost her with a generou.s hand and be
would
come off so quickly if
very carefully placed. I
Carroll, Rutland . Mrs . home by fire .
would prefer trying that he painted a bit of colorless
Maggie Chaney, Albany, and
Members presen t were heavy, adhesive • backed, nail varnish on the thread at
Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Pickens, Clarice Allen, Clara Conroy,
Syracuse,
are
great. Opal Eichinger, Karla washable paper that has a the button 's c.e nter. This
plastic .coating. Perhaps makes the thread firmer.
grandparents.
Chevalier, Sheila Taylor, stripes In the colors of the
If furniture is damaged by
Smith , Gaye other appliances, Ute floor cigarette burns fill the holes .
In
1963, federalized Georgia
National Guard troops stood Smalley, Marcia Keller, Opal and other decorative features ·with beeswax and polish over
by as Gov. George Wallace Wickham, Erma Cleland, would be smart. However, do with furniture polish. Try this
permitted two Negroes to Betty Newell, Opal Hollon, be sure you would really like and see how well it works. enroll at the University of Margaret Christy and Grace such a covering. Removing It BARBARA.
Gumpf.
Alabama .
DEAR POLLY - I live
could be a real job. U at ~II
alone and to save energy
when cooking I have
discovered that by correctly
timing things I can do quite a
bit by only heating one burner
115 Main St., Pomeroy
on my electric stove. I heat
just the right amount of water
Open Daily 9:00 Til 7:00 Fri. &amp; Sat. 9 Til 8
for my instant coffee in the
morning, make my first cup
USDA CHOICE
and set the kettle aside while
MIXED
cooking my egg on the same ·
burner. I can even turn the
burner down to complete the
cooking and then return the
kettle to the burner, set it at
"Simmer" and keep it hot
enough for my second cup of
lb.
coffee.
TV dinners are very con·
venient for me (! stock up on
them when they are on sale)
1 .. .49
and have found no difference
in food when I put it right in
the oven without pre~eating
as the directions say. , When
the dinner is removed the
BROUGHTON'S
door of the oven is left open .
FAVORITE
part way so .the heat goes Into
the kitchen. Of course, this is
when the weather is. cool.
This does not add to tbe .time
. Gal.
Loaves
00
the oven is on. u,ually the .
food is hot enough ln half an
SHASTA
hour even though the
directions say 35 to 40
minutes. Test in half an hour.
8 Pk. 16 oz. Bottles
- JEAN.
DEAR POLLY ~ A plastic
For $399
drinking glass makes a good
cookie cutter. One 'slight
squeeze will drop the cookie

Meigs salon
has meeting

Miss Cindy Lou Allen

ENJOY VA CATION
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Russell of Racine,
joined by Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
T. Chapman, daught ers,
Shelley and Kimberly,
Columbus, enjoyed a week's
vacation at Myrtle Beach, S.
C. They attended the South ,
Carolina Grand Strand 24th
annual Sun Fun Festival. Mr .
and Mrs . Chapman, the
former Kenda Russell, also
spent an afternoon at Brook
Green Gardens Nature Walk .
VISIT MRS. BURTON
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Savino
and Mr . and Mrs. Cecil Roush
of Youngstown ; Mary Roush,
North Lima, and Mr. and
Mrs. Boivin Minor, Millersport, were weekend guests of
Mrs. Edith Burton, Mid·
dleport.

The instruction committee Lowell Chapter 272, Grand
page. Mrs. Evel yn Lewis
reported for th e cheer composed of Harry and inspe~tion, June 17, 7:30
committee noting that Mrs. Jenevee Chesher and Naomi p.m.; Roberta Circle meeting
Kathryn Werner had been Reed will function at the July · at McConnelsville, Aug. 21
with a potluck dinner at noon;
. remembered in her ·bereave- meeting.
ment and that Mrs. Naomi · Bob King, Demolay ad· Grand visitation of •the
announced
the worthy grand matron,
Roush remains hospitalized. visor ,
Elizabeth Whitehouse, at the
Demolay
open
installation
Mrs. Bessie King reported
George
Lewis Behrens
for the ways and means Friday, June 13, at 7:30p.m.
committee after which the at the Middleport Masonic · Chapter 504, Delaware, and
chapter decided to buy paint Temple. Scott Reuter will be reception honoring the Grand
and new curtains for the installed as the mas ter Warder, Suzanne Pearl ,
Friday at 7:30p.m. Also read
upstairs dining area, along councilor.
During the meeting Robert was a letter from Mrs. Wilcox
wi th some new tables. Mrs.
Kuhn
was installed as regarding the recent district
Kennedy announced the· July
Sunshine Fund would go to marshall for the chapter by meeting.
Refreshments of jello
ESTARL and thai there will Bob King, who also read the
be a silent auc ti on at the landmarks of the Order of the salad crackers and coffee
were ;erved by Mrs. Kathryn
August
mee tin g
with Eastern Star.
Invitations read included Evans and Mrs. Wilcox.
proceeds to go to th e
Educational Loan Fund and
the Fire Safety Code Fund.
Members were asked to lake
items for the auction.
Mrs. Marie Hawkins an- Lord's Prayer will be sung by
RACINE - The open
nounced that she is stiU Mrs. Judy ?ape, Syracuse . church wedding of Miss
taking pre-registrations for
Miss Linda Hill, Racine , Jennifer Lee Mugrage,
Grand Chapler ..A meeting of will be maid' of honor, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
"Howard's Stars" was an- Paul
Valentine, • New Charles Mug rage , Racine,
nounc ed for June 12 at Matamoras, will serve as and David Lee Beaver, son of
Marietta . Al so announced best man for the groom. Mrs. Patricia Beaver, New
was a distri ct party with a Ushers will be Todd Matamoras, and the late
rece ption honoring Mrs. Mugrage, Racine, and Allen Harmon Beaver, will be at 2
Maryln , Wilcox, distri ct ?ape , Racine. Flower girl p.m. Saturday, at the Letatt
president Oct. 4 at 6:30 will be Valarie Little, Falls Methodist Church.
p.m.
at
Evange· daughter of Mr . and, Mrs.
Rev. Howard Shiveley will
line Chapter .· It was Rusty Little, Columbus.
officiate at the ceremony
A reception honoring the following a program of
announced that Friends
Night will be in September couple_will be at the Letart nuptial music by Mrs .
with Evangeline Chapter as Falls Community Hall, Jocelyn Baer, Minersville,
host. ·
Letart Falls.
beginning at 1:30 p.m . The

Wedding plans completed

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Polly's Poin

Auxiliary
has meeting

•

Plans for joining the
Middleport Masonic Lodge
for a picnic af Forest Acres
Park July 27 were made
during a meeti ng of
Evangelin e Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star ,
Thursday night at the Middleport Masonic Temple .
Farie Kennedy, worthy
matron' and Harry Chesher,
.
worthy patron, presided at
the meeting with Ferman
Moore serving as sunshine

White appliance
calls for paint

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a~ o\9 (t\0

SIMON'S MARKET
ROUND
STEAK

PORK CHOPS

$},59

R. C. COLA

•115

BREAD

.4

•1

CAN Pop·

24

:============-===============::!J ·

MRS.
on
. to R.theL. cookie sheet. -

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WEDNESDAY
LADIES Day at Pomeroy
Golf Course . Tee-off time is
10 :30 a .m. All interes ted
golfers are invited to attend .
REVIVAL through June 14
at Fairplay Uaapel just off SR
325. Rev. A. B. Maloy,
Hamden, will be guest
speaker. Services 7:45 p.m,
Special singing by Dan
Hayman and the Davis
Family Friday evening. A
potluck dinner will be served
on the grounds at noon
Sunday
followed
by
homecoming session. The
public is invited to attend.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. at American Legion Hall
in Middleport.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Community Club meeting ,
7:30p.m . at building; jewelry
party to be held.
VETERANS of Foreign
Wars meeting at Jack Ward's
·.- Club, 7 p,.m.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. at the
Middleport Fire Department
Lounge. Mrs. Jean Morgan to
give an art craft demonstration. Guest night will be
observed and each member is
to take a guest .
POMEROY Lions Club,
noon, Meigs Inn . Officers to
be installed by the district
governor 13 K, Joe Hanning,
Nelsonville.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
p.m. with Bosworth Counci
46, Royal and Select Masters
at 8:30 p.m. Election and
installation of each body to be
held.
ffiURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. at the hall . Gladys
Morgan to receive a golden
certificate from the national
grange for 50 years continumis membership, with
son, Roger, and daughter
BeUt, to receive 25· year
membership certificate. Mrs.
Wihnette Leifheit will also be
honored for 25 years membership . Mr. and Mrs.
William Radford to be
hostess for the meeting.
SHADE River 'Lodge 453
F&amp;AM 7:30p.m. All Master
Masons welcome.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Society , Thursday, 7:30p .m.
at the Middleport Village·
Hall. Public invited.
GALLIA COUNTY Silion
612, Eight and Forty , home of
Mrs. Iries Marchi. 6 p.m.
potluck dinner to precede the
meeting.,
'
LAUREL Cliff Better
Health Club, 7:30p.m . at the
home 11f Mrs. Bertha Parker.
FRIDAY
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution , annual
picnic, Reedsville Locks and
Dam picnic area, 1 p.m.
Dessert and drinks provided
by hostesses, Mrs. Dwight
Milhoan, Mrs. John Rose, and
Mrs. Robert Craig.
ANNUAL FLAG DAY
picnic , Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, DAR, Fnday,
Jime 13 . at 1 p.m. at the
Reedsville sheller house at
the dam. Members may
invite guests. Installation of
new officers ; planning
committee Mrs. Dwight
Milhoan chairwoman; Mrs.
·' Mrs. Bob Crarg.
.
John Rose,
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of White Shrine of Jerusalem
'Ceremonial at 8 p.m.,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Potluck refreshments will
follow meeting.
HAPPY Harvesters Class,
Triinity Church, 7:30 p.m.
social room of Trinity
Church, Devotions by Mrs.
Edna Reibel, hostesses, Mrs.
Rose Ginther and Mrs. Ada
Holler.

-··-----·

PRICES GOOD
THRU 6-14-75

298 Second St.

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

POMEROY, OHIO

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STORE HOURS:
Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to 10 PM
Sundays 10 AM to 10 PM

U. S. CHOICE

CHUCK
'

GROUND

79e

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BEEF

ROAST
LB.

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OR
MORE
LB.

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SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

·FRAN K·lES BACON
12 OL

"69~
.

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$ 19

12 oz.

"'
'"

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FRESH BAKERY

·STAR KIST

·DONUTS

TUNA

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CEELECT

NAVY
BEANS

1"

MARTHA WHITE

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FLOUR

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FRESH SWEET

TROPICANA

CORN

ORANGE
DRINK
'

EARS

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$

KRAFT FRESH

SHOWBOAT

ORANGE
JUICE

PORK &amp;
BEANS

YzrJl79t;
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32 Ol

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400l

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5 LB.

SUNDAY
"LIVELY STONES1" a
goSpel group from Nashville,
Tenn., will sing at 9:30 a:m.
at Bradford Chur~h of Chnst.
Public invited.
REV. BII.L Dalton will be
guest minister at Pageville
Freewill Baptist Uaurch, 7:30
p.m. Singers from Ra.y •.?hio
will be guestS. Public mvtted.
WEDNESDAY
CAR WASH 9 a.m. to 3:30
p.m. at Welker's · Ashla~d .
Sponsored by Meigs High
Varsity cheerleaders.
SA'l1JRDAY
SQ.UARE DA!"CE at
Pomeroy Junior High 8: 30 to
11 .30 p.m. Sponsored. by
Se;uor Citizens. Admissi~n $1
children . under 12 admtlled
free.

SLICED BOLOGNA ... :.........................}. .~~· •1
HAM SALAD........................................ ~.~.~ .. 89~
MILK

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OES inspection held

.Evangeline OES chapter convenes

RACINE - Dr. Howard I. 1950. Other members eligible
Shull, Associate Grand for 25 year pins were : Beulah
Patron of the Grand Chapter Stobart, Man on Thompson,
of Ohio, was the inspecting Ethel Eul er, arid Avis
officer at the 74th inspection Frecker. Their pins -will be
of Racine Chapter, No. 134, delivered to them.
·Order of Eas tern Star, when
After the meeting refresh·
the chapter met in regular ments ·of sandwiches, salad
session June 2 with Worthy and cookies were served by
Matron , Opal Diddle and the refreshments committee
Worthy Patron , B~n Philson with Helen Pickens, chairpresiding, with the following man .
officers in their stations ':
The chapter will recess
associate matron, Barbara during the months of July and
Roush; associate patron, August reconve ni ng in
James Roush ; conductress, September·.
Ca.therine Wood ; associate
The Past Officers Club will
co ndu ctress,
Romaine meet at the Temple June 19.
Frederick; secretary, Grella
Simpson: treasurer, Chlorus
Grimm; chaplain , ·Llllian
Weese : mar sha ll , Laura
Circle: orga nist , Shirley
Johnson ; Adah, Barbara
Dugan; Ruth , Patricia
While; Estller, Jane Wagner :
Martha , Bernice Theiss:
RACINE - Members of the
Electa, Margaret West ; Meigs County Salon 712,
warder, Kate McNickle with Eight and Forty, met Monday
Leona Hensley pro-tem: night at the Racine Locks and
Helen Pickens, sentineL
Dams fo r a picmc and
Guests who were presented busi ness meeting.
Past Grand Matron , Rober ta
Mrs . Lula
Hampto n
K. Mind ling : Associate · presided with members
Grand Patron, Howard I. signing a card for Mrs. Veda
Shull ; Grand Ruth of W. Va. Davis, hos pitalized in
Grand Chapter, Wanda Colu mbus. Plans were
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENf - Mr. and Mrs.
Gabritsch ; Deputy Grand discussed for the four-c ounty
Howard R. Allen, New Knoxville, announce the
Matrons, District No. 24, joint installation in August.
engagement of their daughter, Cindy Lou, to Michael D.
Fort, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fort, Cincinnati. Miss
Marie Turner : and District Money making projects were
No. 25, Donna
Spring. planned with proceeds to go
Allen is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Orville Allen,
Grand Representatives, Elsie toward paying expenses of
Pomeroy, andfWI.!!I!J~ . Harris, Portland. The bride~lect
Schoenian, represe nti ng members attending the stale
is a graduate of New Knoxville High School and Sawyer
Michigan ; Mary Shull, convention in July.
Colleg~ of Business. She is employed by the Montgomery
representing Oklahoma ;
County
Bureau of Suwort in Dayton. Her fiance is a
Following the picnic, the
Nellie Casto, representing group was taken on a tour of
graduate of Taylor High School In Cincinnati and is now
Saskatchewan , Ca nada for the facilities there . Attending
associated with tbe Wooster Iron and Metal Co., Wooster.
West Virginia. These guests were Mrs . Catherine Welch,
The wedding will be an event of Aug. 16 at the Way Inwere given seals in the East. Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, Mrs.
ternational Biblical Research Center, New Knoxville.
Those recognized at their Eunie Brinker, Mrs. Pearl
seats were Honored Masons, Knapp, Mrs. Iva Powell, Mrs.
visi ling Worthy Matrons and Zuelelia Smith, Mrs. Lula
Patrons, Past Matrons and Hampton , Mrs. Eileen
Patrons of Racine Chapter ; Searles, Mrs. Julia Hysell
Grand Aide and Grand Pages and Mrs. Myrtle Walker.
of the next Grand Chapter
session, former Grand ap·
pointments, 50 &lt;year mem.BY POLLY CRA~IER
bers, District officers, and
Past Matrons and Patrons of
visiting chapters .
Over I00 members and
visitors representin g 19
chapters were present witCHESTER - The Ladies
nessing the initiation of two Auxiliary of the Chester fire
candidates which was done in' department met Wednesday
possible I would just be a real
POLLY'S PROBLEM
a very impressive manner. evening at the firehouse. The
DEAR POLLY - We sport and have It painted like
Honorary membership meeting presided over by
bought
two new colored the other things. - POLLY.
were presented to Howard president Clari ce Allen,
Shull and wife, Mary Shull by opened with the Lord's appliances but are stuck with
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
quite
new
white
Louise Stewart and Martha Prayer, followed by roll call . a
Lou Beegle was presented a Minutes of the previous refrigerator. We have been Peeve is ha ving to stand in
25 year pin by Cora Webb, meeting was read by Erma told it can be painted like the line with cold cash in hand
who was the Worthy Matron Cleland and the treasurer's other things but wonder if while the cashier is dawdling
there is anything else we with charge cards. It seems
when she was initiated ·in report by Opal Wickham.
could do like using decals, there could be a checkout line
New co mmittees were etc. to make it blend in with for those paying cash and
named by the vice president, the other. appliances. I would another
for
cl]arge
ANNOUNCES BIRTH
Georgia Smith and a new certainly appreciate any customers. I also think we
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee · member, Sheila Taylor, was
Pickens of Etna-Green, Ind., welcomed. Plans for serving suggestions. - DOROTHY. who pay 'cash deserve
DEAR DOROTHY - I am discounts. We are paying
formerly of Meigs County, food at th e Museum on
announce the birth of a five Heritage Sunday were sure many readers have been ahout 5 per cent extra to
pound, seven ounce daughter, discussed and ·au members in the same dilemma and will cover the service given to
Micki Lee, on May 16. were asked .to donate a cake tell us how they solved it. charge card customers.
Grandparents are Mr . and or pie. A gift of money was Decals might look very spotty MRS. E.M.T., Canadda.
DEAR POLLY - I do not
Mrs. Elmer L. Pickens, given by members to Grace and would have to be used
think
, Richard's buttons
Letart Falls, and Mrs. Mae Kumpf who recently lost her with a generou.s hand and be
would
come off so quickly if
very carefully placed. I
Carroll, Rutland . Mrs . home by fire .
would prefer trying that he painted a bit of colorless
Maggie Chaney, Albany, and
Members presen t were heavy, adhesive • backed, nail varnish on the thread at
Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Pickens, Clarice Allen, Clara Conroy,
Syracuse,
are
great. Opal Eichinger, Karla washable paper that has a the button 's c.e nter. This
plastic .coating. Perhaps makes the thread firmer.
grandparents.
Chevalier, Sheila Taylor, stripes In the colors of the
If furniture is damaged by
Smith , Gaye other appliances, Ute floor cigarette burns fill the holes .
In
1963, federalized Georgia
National Guard troops stood Smalley, Marcia Keller, Opal and other decorative features ·with beeswax and polish over
by as Gov. George Wallace Wickham, Erma Cleland, would be smart. However, do with furniture polish. Try this
permitted two Negroes to Betty Newell, Opal Hollon, be sure you would really like and see how well it works. enroll at the University of Margaret Christy and Grace such a covering. Removing It BARBARA.
Gumpf.
Alabama .
DEAR POLLY - I live
could be a real job. U at ~II
alone and to save energy
when cooking I have
discovered that by correctly
timing things I can do quite a
bit by only heating one burner
115 Main St., Pomeroy
on my electric stove. I heat
just the right amount of water
Open Daily 9:00 Til 7:00 Fri. &amp; Sat. 9 Til 8
for my instant coffee in the
morning, make my first cup
USDA CHOICE
and set the kettle aside while
MIXED
cooking my egg on the same ·
burner. I can even turn the
burner down to complete the
cooking and then return the
kettle to the burner, set it at
"Simmer" and keep it hot
enough for my second cup of
lb.
coffee.
TV dinners are very con·
venient for me (! stock up on
them when they are on sale)
1 .. .49
and have found no difference
in food when I put it right in
the oven without pre~eating
as the directions say. , When
the dinner is removed the
BROUGHTON'S
door of the oven is left open .
FAVORITE
part way so .the heat goes Into
the kitchen. Of course, this is
when the weather is. cool.
This does not add to tbe .time
. Gal.
Loaves
00
the oven is on. u,ually the .
food is hot enough ln half an
SHASTA
hour even though the
directions say 35 to 40
minutes. Test in half an hour.
8 Pk. 16 oz. Bottles
- JEAN.
DEAR POLLY ~ A plastic
For $399
drinking glass makes a good
cookie cutter. One 'slight
squeeze will drop the cookie

Meigs salon
has meeting

Miss Cindy Lou Allen

ENJOY VA CATION
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Russell of Racine,
joined by Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
T. Chapman, daught ers,
Shelley and Kimberly,
Columbus, enjoyed a week's
vacation at Myrtle Beach, S.
C. They attended the South ,
Carolina Grand Strand 24th
annual Sun Fun Festival. Mr .
and Mrs . Chapman, the
former Kenda Russell, also
spent an afternoon at Brook
Green Gardens Nature Walk .
VISIT MRS. BURTON
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Savino
and Mr . and Mrs. Cecil Roush
of Youngstown ; Mary Roush,
North Lima, and Mr. and
Mrs. Boivin Minor, Millersport, were weekend guests of
Mrs. Edith Burton, Mid·
dleport.

The instruction committee Lowell Chapter 272, Grand
page. Mrs. Evel yn Lewis
reported for th e cheer composed of Harry and inspe~tion, June 17, 7:30
committee noting that Mrs. Jenevee Chesher and Naomi p.m.; Roberta Circle meeting
Kathryn Werner had been Reed will function at the July · at McConnelsville, Aug. 21
with a potluck dinner at noon;
. remembered in her ·bereave- meeting.
ment and that Mrs. Naomi · Bob King, Demolay ad· Grand visitation of •the
announced
the worthy grand matron,
Roush remains hospitalized. visor ,
Elizabeth Whitehouse, at the
Demolay
open
installation
Mrs. Bessie King reported
George
Lewis Behrens
for the ways and means Friday, June 13, at 7:30p.m.
committee after which the at the Middleport Masonic · Chapter 504, Delaware, and
chapter decided to buy paint Temple. Scott Reuter will be reception honoring the Grand
and new curtains for the installed as the mas ter Warder, Suzanne Pearl ,
Friday at 7:30p.m. Also read
upstairs dining area, along councilor.
During the meeting Robert was a letter from Mrs. Wilcox
wi th some new tables. Mrs.
Kuhn
was installed as regarding the recent district
Kennedy announced the· July
Sunshine Fund would go to marshall for the chapter by meeting.
Refreshments of jello
ESTARL and thai there will Bob King, who also read the
be a silent auc ti on at the landmarks of the Order of the salad crackers and coffee
were ;erved by Mrs. Kathryn
August
mee tin g
with Eastern Star.
Invitations read included Evans and Mrs. Wilcox.
proceeds to go to th e
Educational Loan Fund and
the Fire Safety Code Fund.
Members were asked to lake
items for the auction.
Mrs. Marie Hawkins an- Lord's Prayer will be sung by
RACINE - The open
nounced that she is stiU Mrs. Judy ?ape, Syracuse . church wedding of Miss
taking pre-registrations for
Miss Linda Hill, Racine , Jennifer Lee Mugrage,
Grand Chapler ..A meeting of will be maid' of honor, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
"Howard's Stars" was an- Paul
Valentine, • New Charles Mug rage , Racine,
nounc ed for June 12 at Matamoras, will serve as and David Lee Beaver, son of
Marietta . Al so announced best man for the groom. Mrs. Patricia Beaver, New
was a distri ct party with a Ushers will be Todd Matamoras, and the late
rece ption honoring Mrs. Mugrage, Racine, and Allen Harmon Beaver, will be at 2
Maryln , Wilcox, distri ct ?ape , Racine. Flower girl p.m. Saturday, at the Letatt
president Oct. 4 at 6:30 will be Valarie Little, Falls Methodist Church.
p.m.
at
Evange· daughter of Mr . and, Mrs.
Rev. Howard Shiveley will
line Chapter .· It was Rusty Little, Columbus.
officiate at the ceremony
A reception honoring the following a program of
announced that Friends
Night will be in September couple_will be at the Letart nuptial music by Mrs .
with Evangeline Chapter as Falls Community Hall, Jocelyn Baer, Minersville,
host. ·
Letart Falls.
beginning at 1:30 p.m . The

Wedding plans completed

. . 'S

1n8t8 '\\48
f8 \O '

~utc:\ef

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o"

Polly's Poin

Auxiliary
has meeting

•

Plans for joining the
Middleport Masonic Lodge
for a picnic af Forest Acres
Park July 27 were made
during a meeti ng of
Evangelin e Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star ,
Thursday night at the Middleport Masonic Temple .
Farie Kennedy, worthy
matron' and Harry Chesher,
.
worthy patron, presided at
the meeting with Ferman
Moore serving as sunshine

White appliance
calls for paint

•'
v C\

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(\8'1•
a~ o\9 (t\0

SIMON'S MARKET
ROUND
STEAK

PORK CHOPS

$},59

R. C. COLA

•115

BREAD

.4

•1

CAN Pop·

24

:============-===============::!J ·

MRS.
on
. to R.theL. cookie sheet. -

I

..

'·

.,
WEDNESDAY
LADIES Day at Pomeroy
Golf Course . Tee-off time is
10 :30 a .m. All interes ted
golfers are invited to attend .
REVIVAL through June 14
at Fairplay Uaapel just off SR
325. Rev. A. B. Maloy,
Hamden, will be guest
speaker. Services 7:45 p.m,
Special singing by Dan
Hayman and the Davis
Family Friday evening. A
potluck dinner will be served
on the grounds at noon
Sunday
followed
by
homecoming session. The
public is invited to attend.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. at American Legion Hall
in Middleport.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Community Club meeting ,
7:30p.m . at building; jewelry
party to be held.
VETERANS of Foreign
Wars meeting at Jack Ward's
·.- Club, 7 p,.m.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. at the
Middleport Fire Department
Lounge. Mrs. Jean Morgan to
give an art craft demonstration. Guest night will be
observed and each member is
to take a guest .
POMEROY Lions Club,
noon, Meigs Inn . Officers to
be installed by the district
governor 13 K, Joe Hanning,
Nelsonville.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
p.m. with Bosworth Counci
46, Royal and Select Masters
at 8:30 p.m. Election and
installation of each body to be
held.
ffiURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. at the hall . Gladys
Morgan to receive a golden
certificate from the national
grange for 50 years continumis membership, with
son, Roger, and daughter
BeUt, to receive 25· year
membership certificate. Mrs.
Wihnette Leifheit will also be
honored for 25 years membership . Mr. and Mrs.
William Radford to be
hostess for the meeting.
SHADE River 'Lodge 453
F&amp;AM 7:30p.m. All Master
Masons welcome.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Society , Thursday, 7:30p .m.
at the Middleport Village·
Hall. Public invited.
GALLIA COUNTY Silion
612, Eight and Forty , home of
Mrs. Iries Marchi. 6 p.m.
potluck dinner to precede the
meeting.,
'
LAUREL Cliff Better
Health Club, 7:30p.m . at the
home 11f Mrs. Bertha Parker.
FRIDAY
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution , annual
picnic, Reedsville Locks and
Dam picnic area, 1 p.m.
Dessert and drinks provided
by hostesses, Mrs. Dwight
Milhoan, Mrs. John Rose, and
Mrs. Robert Craig.
ANNUAL FLAG DAY
picnic , Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, DAR, Fnday,
Jime 13 . at 1 p.m. at the
Reedsville sheller house at
the dam. Members may
invite guests. Installation of
new officers ; planning
committee Mrs. Dwight
Milhoan chairwoman; Mrs.
·' Mrs. Bob Crarg.
.
John Rose,
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of White Shrine of Jerusalem
'Ceremonial at 8 p.m.,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Potluck refreshments will
follow meeting.
HAPPY Harvesters Class,
Triinity Church, 7:30 p.m.
social room of Trinity
Church, Devotions by Mrs.
Edna Reibel, hostesses, Mrs.
Rose Ginther and Mrs. Ada
Holler.

-··-----·

PRICES GOOD
THRU 6-14-75

298 Second St.

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

POMEROY, OHIO

.

,

,,

'

'

STORE HOURS:
Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to 10 PM
Sundays 10 AM to 10 PM

U. S. CHOICE

CHUCK
'

GROUND

79e

'.

BEEF

ROAST
LB.

"

,,

.

'

79t;

r

J

'

l!Bi
OR
MORE
LB.

'
"
'·
•

"'

'"

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

·FRAN K·lES BACON
12 OL

"69~
.

•!
l \).

$ 19

12 oz.

"'
'"

'"

'"

FRESH BAKERY

·STAR KIST

·DONUTS

TUNA

,, .'

.

'" '
""

,,

"'

,.;. ,
,,.;,

~·"

..

·~

·•'•
:r.~

·(:

CEELECT

NAVY
BEANS

1"

MARTHA WHITE

"

-! vJ
oJii

FLOUR

""
..
··'-'
L'.

FRESH SWEET

TROPICANA

CORN

ORANGE
DRINK
'

EARS

,.

'.

•

$

KRAFT FRESH

SHOWBOAT

ORANGE
JUICE

PORK &amp;
BEANS

YzrJl79t;
:t'

32 Ol

"(

"

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...=

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400l

59t;
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5 LB.

SUNDAY
"LIVELY STONES1" a
goSpel group from Nashville,
Tenn., will sing at 9:30 a:m.
at Bradford Chur~h of Chnst.
Public invited.
REV. BII.L Dalton will be
guest minister at Pageville
Freewill Baptist Uaurch, 7:30
p.m. Singers from Ra.y •.?hio
will be guestS. Public mvtted.
WEDNESDAY
CAR WASH 9 a.m. to 3:30
p.m. at Welker's · Ashla~d .
Sponsored by Meigs High
Varsity cheerleaders.
SA'l1JRDAY
SQ.UARE DA!"CE at
Pomeroy Junior High 8: 30 to
11 .30 p.m. Sponsored. by
Se;uor Citizens. Admissi~n $1
children . under 12 admtlled
free.

SLICED BOLOGNA ... :.........................}. .~~· •1
HAM SALAD........................................ ~.~.~ .. 89~
MILK

I

I
I

.,:'

.1
'I

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. .

.

~

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' .

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, ,!&gt;fiddlleJl(l•rt-l&gt;oma~r9·Y·

,..

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0 ., Wednesday, Sune 11,1 ~75
Q

10 TO 9

SUNSHINE
SUMMER SALE

Dear Helen :
You asked for a polite way for parents to explain that one
of their children is living with a "mate" out of wedlock .
How about this polite but complicated phrase ? "Ignominiously cohabituated." (I got it from Rogel's
Thesaurus.)
By the time people decipher these· words the couple will
either be separated or married. - AN UNEMPLOYED
PLUMBER
Dear Plumber:
.
Tell me, when the plumbing overflows, do you say, "The
eortunode's hydroefficiency is impeded?" - H.

+++
Dear Helen:
_ I prefer "roommate" to ."live-together." As in, ' 'This is
my son and his lovely roommate," or "This is my daughter
and that.clodof a roommate of hers." - NAT '

.ESPECIALLY FOR THE
HOME GARDENER

NOTE FROM H: As I was saying, the double standard is
alive and well ...

+++
Dear Helen:
I would like a word with NWTSB who was upset that her
husband asswned HE is head of the household. I am an ancient ·
male with five grown children, but I am not behind the times. I
feel sorry for the many women who are constantly up tight
about their status, particular!¥ with respect to their husbands.
It is my opinion from mahy years of observation that the
truly ~uccessful houSehold is the one where the wife is th~ head
of the house but the husband thinks HE is . Let it be, yoWlg
lady, let it be. - N.G.B.

I'

ALL AMERICAN

\'
'·

1¥2QT. PRESSURE CANNER

/'I

I

' HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

I
\

\_____

...

:It

' ·

. . .·

~

• n di!pen~o? l e

$5''

H~CK'S
REG.

.

ft)i&gt;jy

~-If

HOUSEWARE
. DEPT.

..

1.99

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

DISH PANS
17 QT . . , ....

}2

99

2

44
14 QT ........ 5
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

4 PC. MEA SURETTE
SET

77c ~
HECK'S REG. $1.09
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

,~

·~.

.

'·

1 h PINTS
CHO ICE

7 jar Columbian po rcelain wore con·

sa~

ner. A

lor the home col'\ ncr!

PACKAGE
NDUSEWARE
DEPT.

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

2-CUP MEASURE

FRUIT
FRESH

. !I

. ·,

~

STAINLESS STEEL

JAR WRENCH

UTILITY
TONGS

FLAT GRATER

lARGE

87C

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

4 PC. MEASURING
SPOON SET

24(

$1''

mu~!

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

~~
c:' ( l: ..
POTATO
RICER

•·

.flll/lllli- .•

.

PKG. Of 6
1

HECK'S
REG.
$7.87

I

MIRRO ALUMINUM

--~ .

.

'

AND

. \ ' • ..

1

$544

ALUMINUM

PKG 0

QUAR;~

·•·::m'.-:.
. ' "''&gt;Iii
~~

47(

HECK'S
REG.
88 '

10 QT. PAIL

44

.~ .,~t ~ - -

2'h.QUART
FOOD PRESS

5QT .....

$1 ~~

FREEZER
.. CONTAINERS

DIPPER
ALUMINUM

2 CASES

PLASTIC .
PINT SIZE
ALUMINUM

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

PINTS

LIMIT 2 CASES

HOIISEWAREDEPT.

_y·

COLANDERS
3 QT. .
1.Jl

QUARTS

--- ---

,.

HECK'S

HECK'S REG.
$44.96
JEWElRY •
DEPT.

.

'9.63

--tlo!-,

6 QT. FOOD BLANCHER

MASON
:' HOME CANNING
JARS
8 JARS PER CASE
REGULAR
REGULAR

fo r conn•ng . The rod re1 t ~ o n the
pot ~ i dt&gt;s la o do"' mq . Sturd y ~reel ha nd le&gt; lo r ~ a l e
hc1ndhng . JAR S NO T INClUDto 1.

· ,...

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COLD PACK CANNER

HECK'S REG . '6.93
HOUSEWARE DEPT.
~

half ga llon

Ideal for Iorge quon ht y c oo~ ing m wt&gt;ll en bemg

S]99 .

I ../

~ ""'7

7-JAR

14 QT. PRESERVING
KETTLE

t--.

18 pinl&gt;, 7 quarh,
r 4

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

)

ANCHOR HOCKING

Canning . capacity

HECK'S REG. $2.88
HOUSEWAIII DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 39'
HOUSIWARE DEPT. •

CANNING
FUNNEL

STAINLESS STEEL

CHOPPER.

'

HECK'S
REG .

. 39f.

HECK'S REG.
88 1
HOI/SEWARE
DEPT.

DEI'T.

APPLE CORER
AND PEElER

AND CttOPPER &amp;
GARNISHER
CttOict

HECK'S REG.
'1.09
SMALL .

11-PIKI

MEASURING

sn

MIXING SPOON

sn

66C

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

FRUIT JAR FUNNEL

37(

HECK'S RIG.

HECK'S REG. '5 9'
HOI/SEWAII DEPT.

12'
ltOIISIWAB
.

,.,

HICK'S
II G.

HICK'S
RIG.

..,

$1.29
W.SIWAB

91'
.W.SIWAB

.,,

Dear Ruby:
Your husband is the "weird" one. Someone should shake
the stereotype out of his head and tell him how ,lucky he is to
have a woman who shares his interest in sports.
I'm sure at least fifty of my correspondents will do just
that. Stand by for the deluge, Weird Husband. - H.

+++
Dear Helen:
You may be enlightened to know that family intermarriage still produces problem children. (You said that
second-cousin marriages should be legal in every st ate, and a
union of first cousins isn't too risky .)
My tiusband's family, on both sides, intermarried for
generations. There are many instances of "vegetables" and
put-away children. I did not know this until after we had our
first (and only) child. He was born with club feet, semi-claw
hands, collapsed lungs and dislocated hips.
After a psychogenetic test; it was concluded that my
husband should NEVER have more children, since his chances
of having a deiormed child are 95 per cent.
Relatives should not marry! - P . T.
Dear P.:
We said cousin-marriages MIGHT produce faulty
children, but according to experts, chances are remOte unless,
as in your husband's case, intermarriage had been practiced
over several generations. Family mixing might also produce a
genius . It works both ways. - H.

Bible school
is underway

;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

·.·.

.f...

·:::·
~:::::

....
·.
.·.

School closes ·::
Sunday evening g
•'•

CLOSEOUT!
FASHION MATE*zig-zag machine

Save$30

Reg. $149 .95
NOW $119.95

• 7 interchangeable stitches inc lud ing
blind·hem • Built·in zig· zag o Exclusive Sing~· front drop-in bobbin .

Carrying case or cab inet extra

Closing program for the
annual daily vacation Bible
REEDSVILLE The
school of the Middleport First
Riv e rview
Community
Baptist Church was held
Vacation Bible School opened
Sunday night with Mrs.
Monday at 9 a.m. with an
Beulah White in charge.
attendance of 85. The last day
The welcome was extended
McCall's, Kwik ·Sew, Simplicity Patterns
will be June 20 with a
by Mrs. Milton Hood ,
SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
program at 8.m. at the
director, with the opening
tiS W. Second 992-2284
Pomeroy, Ohio
school. A picnic will be heJd
prayer by Mrs. Cleo Boyd.
for the boys and girls
The children sang the theme
following Bible School at 11
song, "Jesus Touch Me" and
a.m. on June 19.
Angela Farley and Zandra
Delores Frank, director,
Vaughan led in the pledges to
and Marlene Putman, craft
the Christian flag and the
director , are assisted by
American flag. Several of the
Donna Connolly and Mary·
VBS songs were sWlg by the
Frecker; pianist, Maralene
en tire enrollment.
Kimes; song leader, Frances
C'
Rev. Cleo Boyd noted that
Reed; secretary, Kathy
the offering for the week
Maxey; Ruth Dillon, nursery
teacher, assisted by Cathy
Spencer, Chris Yates, Lucille
Kimes and Edna Boggs;
beginner class teachers,
Connie Connolly and Virginia
Newlun, and their helpers,
Mary Wells, Charlene Althouse, Phyllis Newlun and
Patricia Boston ; primary
teacher, Lorriane Wigal, and
helpers, Pat Martin and
INFANT THROUGH S.IZE 14
Sandy Cowdery; middlers,
teachers, Mary Cowdery and
Eloise Connolly' junior
teacher, Marilyn Coulson,
and youth teacher, Janet
Connolly.
All boys and girls of the
area are invited. For more ·
information call Delores
Frank at 985-3368.

SUMMER -SALEI

ttECK'S REG. 63'

3-PIKE
WOOD

Dear Helen:
· My husband considers himself a sports widower. This is a
switch from your usual letter complaining about husband 's TV
game-itis. It's I who enjoy watching sports on TV and he who
complains that I don't spend this time on him.
Here's the rub: he doesn't mind watching games with his
men friends, but he won 't watch them with me. Evidently he
thinks women aren't supposed to enjoy baseball, football , etc.,
and there must be something wrong with me, which he
hesitates to encourrage. - "WEIRD" RUJ!Y

would go half to the Baptist
Hospital in Haiti and the
other half to the One Great
Hour of Sharing through the
Church World Service. The
offering was taken by Tony
Scott, Darla Wilcox , Lynn
Kloes and Robin Kitchen .
For the program, Mrs.
Boyd 's beginners sang
several songs, the primary
class gave Bible verses, there
were two selections by Trina
Gibbs, Velvet Swisher and
Valerie Lewis, and Bible
verses and songs by the
middlers taught by Mrs.
White. Miss Barbara Anthony's jWlior class gave a
demonstration on things they
had learned in Bible sc hool.
For specia l mu sic, Dan
Thompson sang '' He Touched
Me."
Diplomas were presented
to those enrolled and Mrs.
Hood gave certi fi cates of
appreciation to the teachers,
craft instructors and helpers.
The benediction was by Rev.
Boyd.
· Friday the children were
taken on the church bus to the
Middleport Commun ity Park
for a picnic .

STARTS THURSDAY, JUNE 12

NEW SHIPMENT

.Shorts, Shirts, Sun Suits,
Dresses, Crib Sets, Coats,
Jack~, .Sweaters, Bathing
Suits, and Pajamas

TO

Of
MEN'S CASUAL

SHOES
heritage house
.,
;

..

'

.

.OFF

•

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Middleport, Ohio ·

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0 ., Wednesday, Sune 11,1 ~75
Q

10 TO 9

SUNSHINE
SUMMER SALE

Dear Helen :
You asked for a polite way for parents to explain that one
of their children is living with a "mate" out of wedlock .
How about this polite but complicated phrase ? "Ignominiously cohabituated." (I got it from Rogel's
Thesaurus.)
By the time people decipher these· words the couple will
either be separated or married. - AN UNEMPLOYED
PLUMBER
Dear Plumber:
.
Tell me, when the plumbing overflows, do you say, "The
eortunode's hydroefficiency is impeded?" - H.

+++
Dear Helen:
_ I prefer "roommate" to ."live-together." As in, ' 'This is
my son and his lovely roommate," or "This is my daughter
and that.clodof a roommate of hers." - NAT '

.ESPECIALLY FOR THE
HOME GARDENER

NOTE FROM H: As I was saying, the double standard is
alive and well ...

+++
Dear Helen:
I would like a word with NWTSB who was upset that her
husband asswned HE is head of the household. I am an ancient ·
male with five grown children, but I am not behind the times. I
feel sorry for the many women who are constantly up tight
about their status, particular!¥ with respect to their husbands.
It is my opinion from mahy years of observation that the
truly ~uccessful houSehold is the one where the wife is th~ head
of the house but the husband thinks HE is . Let it be, yoWlg
lady, let it be. - N.G.B.

I'

ALL AMERICAN

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1¥2QT. PRESSURE CANNER

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DEPT.

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$5''

H~CK'S
REG.

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HOUSEWARE
. DEPT.

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1.99

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

DISH PANS
17 QT . . , ....

}2

99

2

44
14 QT ........ 5
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

4 PC. MEA SURETTE
SET

77c ~
HECK'S REG. $1.09
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

,~

·~.

.

'·

1 h PINTS
CHO ICE

7 jar Columbian po rcelain wore con·

sa~

ner. A

lor the home col'\ ncr!

PACKAGE
NDUSEWARE
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ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

2-CUP MEASURE

FRUIT
FRESH

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JAR WRENCH

UTILITY
TONGS

FLAT GRATER

lARGE

87C

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

4 PC. MEASURING
SPOON SET

24(

$1''

mu~!

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

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POTATO
RICER

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PKG. Of 6
1

HECK'S
REG.
$7.87

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$544

ALUMINUM

PKG 0

QUAR;~

·•·::m'.-:.
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47(

HECK'S
REG.
88 '

10 QT. PAIL

44

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2'h.QUART
FOOD PRESS

5QT .....

$1 ~~

FREEZER
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DIPPER
ALUMINUM

2 CASES

PLASTIC .
PINT SIZE
ALUMINUM

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

PINTS

LIMIT 2 CASES

HOIISEWAREDEPT.

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HECK'S

HECK'S REG.
$44.96
JEWElRY •
DEPT.

.

'9.63

--tlo!-,

6 QT. FOOD BLANCHER

MASON
:' HOME CANNING
JARS
8 JARS PER CASE
REGULAR
REGULAR

fo r conn•ng . The rod re1 t ~ o n the
pot ~ i dt&gt;s la o do"' mq . Sturd y ~reel ha nd le&gt; lo r ~ a l e
hc1ndhng . JAR S NO T INClUDto 1.

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HECK'S REG . '6.93
HOUSEWARE DEPT.
~

half ga llon

Ideal for Iorge quon ht y c oo~ ing m wt&gt;ll en bemg

S]99 .

I ../

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7-JAR

14 QT. PRESERVING
KETTLE

t--.

18 pinl&gt;, 7 quarh,
r 4

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

)

ANCHOR HOCKING

Canning . capacity

HECK'S REG. $2.88
HOUSEWAIII DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 39'
HOUSIWARE DEPT. •

CANNING
FUNNEL

STAINLESS STEEL

CHOPPER.

'

HECK'S
REG .

. 39f.

HECK'S REG.
88 1
HOI/SEWARE
DEPT.

DEI'T.

APPLE CORER
AND PEElER

AND CttOPPER &amp;
GARNISHER
CttOict

HECK'S REG.
'1.09
SMALL .

11-PIKI

MEASURING

sn

MIXING SPOON

sn

66C

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

FRUIT JAR FUNNEL

37(

HECK'S RIG.

HECK'S REG. '5 9'
HOI/SEWAII DEPT.

12'
ltOIISIWAB
.

,.,

HICK'S
II G.

HICK'S
RIG.

..,

$1.29
W.SIWAB

91'
.W.SIWAB

.,,

Dear Ruby:
Your husband is the "weird" one. Someone should shake
the stereotype out of his head and tell him how ,lucky he is to
have a woman who shares his interest in sports.
I'm sure at least fifty of my correspondents will do just
that. Stand by for the deluge, Weird Husband. - H.

+++
Dear Helen:
You may be enlightened to know that family intermarriage still produces problem children. (You said that
second-cousin marriages should be legal in every st ate, and a
union of first cousins isn't too risky .)
My tiusband's family, on both sides, intermarried for
generations. There are many instances of "vegetables" and
put-away children. I did not know this until after we had our
first (and only) child. He was born with club feet, semi-claw
hands, collapsed lungs and dislocated hips.
After a psychogenetic test; it was concluded that my
husband should NEVER have more children, since his chances
of having a deiormed child are 95 per cent.
Relatives should not marry! - P . T.
Dear P.:
We said cousin-marriages MIGHT produce faulty
children, but according to experts, chances are remOte unless,
as in your husband's case, intermarriage had been practiced
over several generations. Family mixing might also produce a
genius . It works both ways. - H.

Bible school
is underway

;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

·.·.

.f...

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~:::::

....
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.·.

School closes ·::
Sunday evening g
•'•

CLOSEOUT!
FASHION MATE*zig-zag machine

Save$30

Reg. $149 .95
NOW $119.95

• 7 interchangeable stitches inc lud ing
blind·hem • Built·in zig· zag o Exclusive Sing~· front drop-in bobbin .

Carrying case or cab inet extra

Closing program for the
annual daily vacation Bible
REEDSVILLE The
school of the Middleport First
Riv e rview
Community
Baptist Church was held
Vacation Bible School opened
Sunday night with Mrs.
Monday at 9 a.m. with an
Beulah White in charge.
attendance of 85. The last day
The welcome was extended
McCall's, Kwik ·Sew, Simplicity Patterns
will be June 20 with a
by Mrs. Milton Hood ,
SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
program at 8.m. at the
director, with the opening
tiS W. Second 992-2284
Pomeroy, Ohio
school. A picnic will be heJd
prayer by Mrs. Cleo Boyd.
for the boys and girls
The children sang the theme
following Bible School at 11
song, "Jesus Touch Me" and
a.m. on June 19.
Angela Farley and Zandra
Delores Frank, director,
Vaughan led in the pledges to
and Marlene Putman, craft
the Christian flag and the
director , are assisted by
American flag. Several of the
Donna Connolly and Mary·
VBS songs were sWlg by the
Frecker; pianist, Maralene
en tire enrollment.
Kimes; song leader, Frances
C'
Rev. Cleo Boyd noted that
Reed; secretary, Kathy
the offering for the week
Maxey; Ruth Dillon, nursery
teacher, assisted by Cathy
Spencer, Chris Yates, Lucille
Kimes and Edna Boggs;
beginner class teachers,
Connie Connolly and Virginia
Newlun, and their helpers,
Mary Wells, Charlene Althouse, Phyllis Newlun and
Patricia Boston ; primary
teacher, Lorriane Wigal, and
helpers, Pat Martin and
INFANT THROUGH S.IZE 14
Sandy Cowdery; middlers,
teachers, Mary Cowdery and
Eloise Connolly' junior
teacher, Marilyn Coulson,
and youth teacher, Janet
Connolly.
All boys and girls of the
area are invited. For more ·
information call Delores
Frank at 985-3368.

SUMMER -SALEI

ttECK'S REG. 63'

3-PIKE
WOOD

Dear Helen:
· My husband considers himself a sports widower. This is a
switch from your usual letter complaining about husband 's TV
game-itis. It's I who enjoy watching sports on TV and he who
complains that I don't spend this time on him.
Here's the rub: he doesn't mind watching games with his
men friends, but he won 't watch them with me. Evidently he
thinks women aren't supposed to enjoy baseball, football , etc.,
and there must be something wrong with me, which he
hesitates to encourrage. - "WEIRD" RUJ!Y

would go half to the Baptist
Hospital in Haiti and the
other half to the One Great
Hour of Sharing through the
Church World Service. The
offering was taken by Tony
Scott, Darla Wilcox , Lynn
Kloes and Robin Kitchen .
For the program, Mrs.
Boyd 's beginners sang
several songs, the primary
class gave Bible verses, there
were two selections by Trina
Gibbs, Velvet Swisher and
Valerie Lewis, and Bible
verses and songs by the
middlers taught by Mrs.
White. Miss Barbara Anthony's jWlior class gave a
demonstration on things they
had learned in Bible sc hool.
For specia l mu sic, Dan
Thompson sang '' He Touched
Me."
Diplomas were presented
to those enrolled and Mrs.
Hood gave certi fi cates of
appreciation to the teachers,
craft instructors and helpers.
The benediction was by Rev.
Boyd.
· Friday the children were
taken on the church bus to the
Middleport Commun ity Park
for a picnic .

STARTS THURSDAY, JUNE 12

NEW SHIPMENT

.Shorts, Shirts, Sun Suits,
Dresses, Crib Sets, Coats,
Jack~, .Sweaters, Bathing
Suits, and Pajamas

TO

Of
MEN'S CASUAL

SHOES
heritage house
.,
;

..

'

.

.OFF

•

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Middleport, Ohio ·

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13 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., W•.•ctne~day , june 11 , f!l75

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- Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middieport·Pooleroy,

Property
·'Transfers

THE SINGING HEMPIDU.S from Nashville Tenn.
will sing at tbe Rutland O!urch of the Nazar~ne thi;
Thursday at 7:30p.m, ·There will be no admission charge
but a free will offering will be received. Everyone i;
welcome.

the poet's corner
ATALK WlfH DAD
Hi, Dad, thought I'd have a talk with you.
You know, tomorrow is Father's Day,
That day is yours, Dad, and yours .alone.
It's a day to honor you in a special way.
Now I've thought and thought, on what gift to get
But what do you find for the grandest Dad of all?
Nothing, Ifind, seems to say what I feel,
Besides, you don't like gifts, as I recall.
You've always said everything should be earned
Accepting never anything for nothing,
But, Dad, how else can I say how I feel
If I ~on 't give you a gift of something?

May Beegle , dec. to
Charles C. Beegle , Frankie
McKelvey , Firn Gaul , Betty
Carpenter, Clifford Beegle,
Harry Beegle, Edward
Beegle, Paul Beegle, Pauline
Beegle, All. for trans .. Sutton .
Pauline Beegle , dec. to
Charles C. Beegle, All. of
trans., Sutton. ·
Sybil Ebersbach, Comm .
Charles C. Beegle, dec. to
Ann
Beegle ,
Frankie
McKelvey, Firn Gaul, Belly
Carpenter, Clifford Beegle,
Harry Beegle , Edward
Beegle, Paul Beegle, Sutton.
Ann
Beegle.
Frankie
M~Kelv ~y.
Robert
McKelvey, Firn Gaul, Betty
Carpenter. Clifford Beegle.
Mattie Beegle, Harry Beegle,
Edward Beegle, Hilda
Beegle, Paul Beegle, Helen
Beegle to Wesley Clark,
Geneva Clark, 5 Acres,
Duyyon.
John W. Arbaugh, Ethel
Arbaughto Donald Sprague,
Wanda Sprague, Lot 6, Ar·
baugh's 4th Tuppers Plains.
Harrison Rood, Elva Rood
to Margie Rood , I Acre,
Olive.
Harrison Rood, Elva Rood
to Foster Rood, Parcels,
Olive.
David A. Smith, Violet M.
Smith to Kenneth E. Riggs ,
Judith A. Riggs, .57 Acres,
Olive.
Helen B. Mullen, dec. to
Howard B. Mullen, Cert of
trans., Pomeroy.

What's that you say, Dad?
, You don 't want anything at all?
' Just to have your family near and loving
·. Would make you happier, feel proud and taU?
• Oh, Dad, you looked so tired just then
~ With that far-away look in your eyes.
· I see all the years, tbe work, and the love,
They showed through, the feelings you try to disguise.
. I know you've wondered from time to time
If we'd ever be what you taught us to be,
·· If we'd be hard-working, honest and humble
All your high values would we ever see.
' Well, Dad, I want to thank God right now
·· For giving us to a great man like you,
" For no matter how often we let you down
~ You stood·proud with us to see us through.

..

:' Thank you, Dad, for having this talk together,
. ; For letting me say what was in my heart.
Please remember, Dad, I love you dearly,
And if I'm ever to find a gift Worthy of you, I'd better depart.
M. Dill

FEMALE ROBBERS
COLUMBUS (UPI) -, FBI
·agents arrested three
Columbus residents after two
women robbed theN. High St.
!ranch of the Huntington
National Bank of an undisclosed amont of money by
two women Monday,
The FBI picked up Frieda
Mae Van Gundy, 40, and
Anna G. lilgram, 25, on

federal bank robbery charges
and recovered part of tbe
loot. The women were held at
the Columbus Workhouse
pending a hearing today .
Also arrested was illersee
McGhee, 43, on charges of
being the driver of the car in
which the two women fled. He
was held in jail in lieu of
$50,000 bond:

Challie Greer, dec. Sybil
Ebers bach, Comm. to Grace
Greer, 7 Acres, Rutland. .
Jean Zirkle, dec'd., to Danny
S. Zirkle, Bruce R. Zirkle,
Cert. of Trans., Pomeroy.
Edwin McLeod, gdn., Lula
Wheaton Davis, Incomp : to
Dana Congo, Lot 58, Giggs
Add., Portland.
Harley E. Rice , Phyllis
E. Rice to Leonard F. Erwin,
Georgia Ruth Erwin. Lot 2,
Baum 's Sub., Chester.
Fred R. Beasley by Trus .,
Alice B. Hively by Trus.,
Virginia Holzer by Trus.,
Richard Holzer by Trus.,
John H. Fisher, Trus. to
Wade S. Hannah , Mabel
Hannah , Parcels, Scipio.
Ancil Burbridge , Louise
Burbridge to An cil Burbridge, . Louise Burbridge,
Lots 5, 6, 7. 8, Scipio •
Pageville.
·
Frank Herald Jr., Mary
Jane Herald to Stephen
Maynard, Rebecca Maynard,
.Sec. 12, Rutland.
Vera Mae Beegle, Robert
G. Beegle, Martha Lou
Beegle, to June Wickersham, Lot 20, Racine.
June Wickersham to
William K. Beegle, Robert G.
Beegle, Hopkins's Second.
Frances Russell Ewing to
Uoyd Harris, 5' Lot 41 , Lot 41,
Middleport.
Lester F. Thomas, Nora L.
Thomas to Ernest Davi,s,
Evelyn Davis, % Acre,
Salem.

'··~· · .

·FINEST MEAT SPECIALS
We Accept Federal Food Olupons
Monday thru Fri. 8-5, Sat. 9-4

Closed Sunday

BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••• ~~·. 7'
WIENERS •••• ~~ ••••••••••• ~,. 95~
RATH'S SMOKED

"GROUND 79~
BEEF LB.

This Coupon
Worth

On anv meat item

other than

t~ose

listed in this ad.

.
.
99~
HAMS
•••••
lb
..
SEMI BONE! ESS
14 to 17 lbs.

3 lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb. CHUCK ROAST .
2 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
2 lb. ROUND STEAK
3 lb •.PORK CHOPS
2 lb. SLICED BACON

D&amp;DMeal
Distributors

ONLY

•20

D&amp;D

MEAT DISTRIBUTOR
Oro The Hill Behind The Car Wash

830 E. Main, Pomeroy, Oh10
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News
, N0tes :~%:;:

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By Alma Marshall

~~

·:&lt;
0. L. (Tubby) FitzRandolph, president of Mountain Stat~· ·

Art and Craft Fair, welcomes everyone to the 1975 Fair July 2
through July 6 at Cedar Lakes.
·
He said : "This will be one of the most memorable experiences of your life. Almost as by magic, a community will
spring into life on the grounds of Cedar Lakes for five days,
m~rooming to a total of 20,000 to 30,000 people on a given
day, and 50,000 to 60,000 over all. In many respects this Is an
am~zing achievement unequalled anywhere else in West
Virginia. The stale's finest craftsmen, concessionaires, apprentices, Spe&lt;!ial exhibits, musicians, heritage programs, all
combme to create an atmosphere of authenticity of the rich
cultural heritage of these hills which visitors step into the
moment they enter the gate.
Welcome to our Mountain State Art &amp;Craft Fair.

•:::: ::: : :: ::: ::: ::: ::::::: :::: :: : : : :: :: : : : : :: :
EASY REAt:JING
Be an "Easy Reader"
.this summer by joining the
Libraries' Summer
Reading Club. Come to the
Middleport library Wed·
nesdays and the Pomeroy
library Thursdays. Takeoff time will be 10:30 a. in.
for kids from first grade on
up.
This week's program
· Includes making a reading
record book and. listening
to a story ahout "Ma, Pa,
Mary, Laura and Baby
Carrie," from "The Little
House on the Prairie." All
·area children are invited to
come and join in the fun.

Racine A·s run over Astros 17-3

MASON - Mason Cut Scout Pack 243 held a Bicycle Rodeo
Gallipolis. Ohio,
on Saturday, June 7, with 10participants at Mason's City Park.
June 1, 1975,
The scouts head 8in races on bicycles which were inspected by ·-· ·sALES REPORT OF
City Police and judged by scoutmasters Willis Bentley and
Ohio Valley Uvestock Co.
Kenneth Reynolds.
STOCKER CATTLE The bicycle rodeo was held 'in conjunction with Bopy STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 24
Scouts of American Safety Month .
to 33; 300 to 400 lbs. 32 to 35;
George Zuspan, Jr., Den II, won in the 9-10 year. old group 400 to 500 lbs. 20 to 34.50; 500
on his riding skill and Kip Pauley, Den I, won in the 7-8 year old to 600 lbs. 23 to 33; 600 to 700
group and also for riding the prettiest decorated bicycle.
. lbs. 21 to 35.50; 700 lbs. and
Participating in various activities while riding bicycles Ove~ 22 to 38.
included the winners, and Jami.e Bush of Den I, Norman
HEIFER CALVES - 250
Laudermilt, Michael Cloud, Keith Reynolds, Jamie Vaughan, to 300 lbs.;
20
to
Donny VanMeter, all of Den II, and Roger Bumgardner and 25.50; 300 to 400 lbs. 18 lo 26;
Nathan Roush of Den UI.
400 to 500 Ibs. 17 to 26.75; 500
to 600 lbs. 17 to 27; 600 to 700
LETART - MR. AND MRS. Robert Daniel Rogers, Rt. 2, lbs. 18 to 27; 700 lbs. and Over
Letart, W.Va. are announcing the birth of their second child, 21.50 to 34.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
Stephanie Lou, May 27 at Holzer Medical Center. She weighed
'l pounds 11 ounces. Stephanie was welcomed home by a nine (By The Head 1 - Stock Cows
year old brother, Robert Lee (Robbie). Surviving maternal 140 to 215; Stock Cows and
Calves 150 to 315; Stock Bulls
grandparent is Frank McDennitt, Rt.. 2, Letart.
JJ5 to 200; Baby Calves 10 to
POMEROY- MR. AND MRS. DANNY Wayne Robinson, 41. (By The Pound) - CanSr., Rt. 2, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of their second ' ners and Cutters Cows 17 to .
child, Marsha Ann, on May 29 at Holzer Medicvcal Center. She 21.50; Holstein Cows 20 to 25;
weighed 7 pounds and 5 ounces. Mr. ·and Mrs. Robinson also Commercial Bulls (1,000 Lbs.
and Over) 22.50 to 28.
have a 2\-', year old son, Danny Wayne, Jr. (little Danny).
VEAL CALVES -Tops 220
Maternal grandparent is Mrs. Marsha Capehart, Middleport; paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harrison lbs. to 250 39 to 43; Medium
Robinson, Jr., Clifton; Great-grandparents are Mrs. Eva 200lbs. to30025 to 33; Culls 25
Hysell, Harrisonville Rd., Pomeroy; Mrs. Clara N. Staaats, Down.
SHOATS - 15 to 42.50.
Mr. Harrison Robinson, Sr., Rt. I, Letart, and Frank McDermitt, Rt. 2, Letart.

PERSONAL MEN nON
Mrs. Glenn (Audrey) Shinn of Leon is in intensive care at
Pleasant Valley Hospital. She became ill at her home on
Sunday evening and was taken to the hospital by the
emergency squad. She is the mother of Mrs. Faye Smith, a
former New Haven Grade Scbool teacher.
Bill Calhoun, a graduate of Wahama High School, Marshall University and a seminar graduate of Methesco,
Delaware, Ohio will be ordained on Sunday at the conference
at West Virginia Wesleyan College. For the past two years he
has been serving as pastor of the Bellville Unite{! Methodist
Church while attending school. His parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Roscoe Calhoun and David, New Haven, Mary Lou Brabham,
Spencer, W.Va ., Mr . and Mrs. Neil Haymaker, New Haven,
plan to attend.
The Rev. Clarence McCloud preached his last sermon
Sunday at Mason Unit\!d Methodist Church before leaving for
his new assignment as Pastor at Weekly Memorial United
Methodist Chuirch, Tennessee Ave., Charlesl\)n. He has been
pastor at the Mason Church for three years. His wife, Myrtle,
has been active in church affairs as well as serving the community as City Clerk for for two years and water clerk for six
months. All tbe ministers in ihe area will be attending \be
conference at West Virginia Wesleyan College which starts on
Wednesday .
,
·
.
·
Mrs:· Irene McGrew fell on the campus of West Vireginla
Wesleyan College and broke her leg. She is a patient at St.
Joseph Hospital at Buckhannon. She had been visiting a
daughter there.
Stepben Scarberry, five year old grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Johnson Scarberry of New Haven, received a severe cut on his
neck Friday evening when he slipped on ·tbe floor at his home
and fell into the storm door. He was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital by the New Haven Emergency Squad. He reportedly
is getting along fine.
Recent guests of Rev. Mrs. Achsah Miller were Mrs.
Minnie Cochran, Mrs. Walter Kelly, both of Marietta, Ohio;
Mrs: Kathryn Goodwin and Letha Mae Kelly, New Haven, are
both patients at .Pleasant Valley Hospital; · Mrs. Edith
Bumgarner returned home Sunday from St. Josepb Hospital
where she had been a patient, and Mrs. Charles Yeager and
Mrs. George Carson, representing Mason United Methodist
Church, and-Mrs. Ray Fox of Pt. Pleasant United Methodist
Oturch will attend the Methodist conference at West Virginia
Wesleyan College at Buckhannon , The conference starts on
Wednesday.
Also, Mrs. Betty Ault, of Columbus visited over tbe
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Lester Johnson; Mrs. May Wamsley visited her daughter, Mrs. Sue Roush and Bonnie Wamsley ·
i!l Columbus
last week; Mr. and Mrs, Sherman Ford , Mason '
--visited their daughter and son-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Day and sons at Pickerington, Ohio, over the weekend; Harvey .
Newland is a patient at Holzer Medical Center; his room is 2%1;
He was to undergo surgery 'Tuesday; Mrs. Jessie Cart·
wrigh~, Clifton, visited Sunday with ber daughter, Mrs.
Marguerite Darst and family at Pt. Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs.
Johrj Curtis Roush, West Columbia, attended the graduation of
Brent Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mel Clark, from West Point ·
on June 5. They returned home Thursday; Mr. and Mrs. Clark
also attended their son's graduation; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Posey
are visiting relatives at Hagerstown, 'Md., and Mrs,r,\ndy
(Martina) VanMatre returned home Suriday from UniVersity
Hospital.
.1

TECH. SG'f, NICK AND MRS. NICHOLSON and daughter,
Amber, of i'YicGuire Air Force Base, N. J. are visiting his
'mother, Mts. Evelyn Nicholson, Mr. a'nd Mrs. Charl~s Cartwright at C3ifton; Mr. and Mrs. Earl Robinson and family,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Johri Curtis Roush and family, West
Colwnbia; Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bergdoll and three children at
O!llllcothe and other relatives.
.
,
.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel, Mason; Mr. and Mrs.
Calvin .McDaniel and family, Pt. Pleasant, visited on Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. James Loyd at Nashport, Ohio.
CARLSBAD,
CALIF . Tuesday the de3ignatlon of, ,
(UPI) - The World Hock~y Cleveland as the site for the
Association i Board
of 1975 AII.Star game, scheduled
Trustee s announced for Jan. p.

~ursing 'homes

.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Legislation extending until
next Jan. 1 the deadline for
· nursing homes to install fire
protection sprinkler systems
and setting a strict time
schedule for compliance has
cleared both cha mbers of the
Ohio General Assembly, but
m markedly different forms.
The House passed the bill
Tuesday; 53-39, but took out
an emergency clause and
·amended the measure so
extensively that a joint
conference committee is
·expected to have to iron out
differences between the two
chambers.
The bill cleared the House
only three votes more than
the 50 required for passage.
The emergency clause failed
by three votes.
Opponents claimed nursing
homes have had 30 months
since the original stale
deadline for installing the
sprinkler and fire alarm
systems, yet only 13 per cent
have them fully operating,
"With this bill, we 're

J)cuG ...

:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::

PT. PLEASANT - Priscilla M. N. Ryanna, 1974 In·
ternational student from Tanzania, who attends West Virginia
University, will attend the Mason County Homemakers Internation!!l Luncheon on June 213 at Appalachian .Power
Company Auditorium. The luncheion will be potluck.
Priscilla will tell the group about life in Tanzania.
The Homemakers will study Tanzania lor their July club
lesson.

'

In Racine • Syracuse little
Gelling hits for the winners ·
league action Monday the were Zane Beegle with 2
Racine ·As downed the tiiples and a double and •
Syracuse Astros 11·3. Kent Wolfe had 2 home runs and a
Wolfe pitched the entire triple. For the Astros, J.
game for the As, picking up Williams led at the plate with
the win while Tony Salser 2 singles. The As had 17 runs
was charged with tne loss. on 8 hits and the Astros had 3
Salser was relieved in the runs on 5 hits.
fifth inning.

PH. 992-2039

Rower Shop

106 Butternut
Mrs. Milla·rd VanMeter

98~ lb.
FRESH LEAN

GROUND BEEF•••....••..•. .'~:.
\b. S .

CUBE STEAK....•••••••••••••••••••.
IDAHO
· 10 lb. bag
BAKING POTATOES.••••••••••••••~ ••••

1

39

$1 29

·

CANTALOUPE •.•..•••.•..•.• ~:

··

the form of conflicting inspection requirements, and
that they were being
',~guuged" . by
sprinkler
system salesmen.
Under the bill, interim
safety precautions would
have to be taken in the

59

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HERE

NOW

Jury returns verdict
of guilt .a:(ter 1 hour

Asphalt Shingles

I
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REGULAR $}8.30

II
I

95

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i

e
1

PER· SQUARE

II
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I

(100 Square Feet)

240 lb. SELF-SEAL
AN ASSORTMENT OF COLORS
WE DELIVERI

.H OGG &amp; ZUSPAN
1
MATERIALS CO. . .
.
...
I _________________________
773-5554
MASON,.............
W. VA. _

..

16

oz. bots.

PAK

.

GRADED USDA CHOICE
100 ct. $}39

TEA BAGS ................................. Pkg .

53
POTTED MEAT......................
~;·

.ARMOUR'S

'5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE''

' CHEF BOY-AR-DEE

4
Macaroni-Cheese Dinner....... pk~:_z.

GOLDEN GRAIN

li;.

.

49~

First Cuts

$100

Center Cuts

·

BARBECUE SAUCE. ...........!~~~::en~~t. 49
PLOCHMAN'S

BES-PAK

TRASH

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00

'

15

Spaghetti Sauce/Beef.. ............ca:z·

Prices Effective June 11-18

OPEN
9til7

..

·

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··

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1 ~ ct-69~
BAGS. ............................ .P ~.

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6
CAT DINN.ER.........................
PURINA ASSORTED . ,

..

6112 oz.$1 00
cans .

•

Q.OSED SUNDAYS

Family Pack

oz. $} 00

cans

Right Rese[Ved to Limit Quantities
We Glad~ Accept' Fed. Food Stamps

79 e

BOLOGNA
2 lb~ tray ·

lb.$1.39

BOILED
HAM
lb.

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MEADOW GOLD

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.lb. 11.69

Bakerite

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Bread
Peak Navv Beans-..
Studio Facial Tissue

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cans 99c
. lo.a ves 89c'·
2lb. 49c
00 Ct. 49c

ICE CREAM
Y2 gal., _89e
'

LEMONS
Special

doz.

79~

1b.s1 •.19
lb. s1.29
lb. s1 .3 9

French City

WIENERS

$1~69

Summer Cooler

Mon.-Sat.

We Reserve Right To Limit Quantity

. '

8 $}19

7-UP

TENDER LEAF

'

Prices effective
Thursday thru Saturday ·

OHIOAN PICKED
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Rep. James V. .stanton , a
third-tenn Democrat from
Ohio, was picked Tuesday to
lead a subcomm ittee investigation into allegations
of illegal CIA activities at
home and abroad.

•---------------------·-·-

Saturday 9 to 9

TICKETS ON SALE

SOME PROGNOSIS
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Prospects for the nation 's
record winter wheat crop
remained virtually unchanged during May and
farmers are still expecting a
harvest big enough to begin
rebuilding reserve stocks, the
Agriculture Department
reports.

uao.

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

I
I

.....~ ..~~~:.~!.. 59 e

SPAM
12 oz. can
LUNCH EON MEAT••.•••••••••••••••••••

REAPPROACHMENT
KUALA LUMPUR (UP!)
- Prime Minister Kukrit
Pramuj of Thailand an nounced today his country
will es tablish diplomatic
relations with China next
month.

$12,883.75. Receipts and
expenditures, respectively, of•
each fund for the month and
the balance include: general, '
$9,341.32, $7 ,872.28, $25,1107.81;
cemetery, $1,061.25, "11.1!,
$266.31; fire equipment,
$83.86, $69.96; swimming
pool, no receipt, $145.11,
$6.70; planning colllllliasion,
no receipt, $67.65, $437.70;
street maintenance, $2,381.18, .
$2,430.06, $2.33; fire house :
cons truction, no receipt, no·.
disbursemeni, $11.99; federal:
revenue sharing, $6,112.58; .
In the village council
obligated fund which Ia the
general bond retirement
receipts totaled $5,850.67,
disbursement, $152.85leavlng
a balance of $26,257.90.
There was a balance ol
$186,848.92 in the obllsated
funds of the board of public
affairs as of May 31.
Receipts, disbursements and
the · balance in each fund,
respectively: sanitary sewer,
$4,106.58, $3,686.33, $38,530;
sanitary sewer escrow, $1$,
no disbursement, $12!,Ui.ot;
water, $6,390.19, $6,895.4&amp;,
$20,363.24; water meter
trusts, $200, $200, $6,610.111.
The bonded indebtedness of
the
community
Is
$1,481,443.75, or $523.13 per
capita.

r-----------------------'II

'

'

1

Middleport had a balance
of $:l3, ~1 5.43 in its expendable
fund s as of May 31 , according
to the monthly report of
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate.
Total disbursements from
the funds during the month
amounted to $11,515.85 while
receipts for the month totaled

ROOFING SPECIAL

e.

~~~~~~~.~:.~..........~~~ ..~ 129
TROPICANA
. ,.
32 oz. bottle 3 9..,
ORANGE DRINK •••••.••••.••.

t

iri

30 arrests

PORK
SAUSAGE

MRS. FILBERrS
OLEOMARGARINE

diesel-powered subs

Police make

PURE

.

US to sell Iran three

during May

FRENDi CITY BRAN.D .

It

called lor inspections at least
quarterly by a local fire
depariment.
Quilter said the that inspections by local fire departments instead of a consultant
or the fire marshal's office
would enable the firemen ·to
learn the location · of water
supplies and exits in all areas
nursi~g homes.
Quilter's amendment also
puIs the burden on the fire
marshal's office io see that
the compliance schedule is
being followed. It forbids the
marshal to be lenient because
of a nursing home's financial
condition.
Reps. Corwin Nixon, R·
Lebanon , and Fred B.
Hadley, R-Deliance, attempted to exempt nursing
homes with 10 patients or Jess
from
the
sprinkler
requirement on grounds it
would cost too much and
smaller homes have closer
supervision of patients. Their
amendment failed on a 16-46
tie vote.
Aceept Social Service Fees
Meanwhile, the Senate
passed, ~9. and returned to
the House for concurrence in
amendments
a
bill

By ROBER r PENICK
in danger , he said "ll\ere was
CLEVELAND ( UPI)
a possibili ty, a real
Uoyd W. Thomas Jr .. who possibility, that I could be
fired his Ml rifle once in the injured in my mind. Some
air at Kent State five years real strange things hap·
-:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:
ago, said Tuesday he saw no pened." ·
reason for ftring at anyone.
Asked then if he saw any
However, he said, fellow reason to shoot anyone, he
Ohio National Guardsmen said "in my mind there
blocked his vision im · wasn't."
mediately before the burst of
A lew minutes before, when
gunfire that killed and the Guardsmen were on the
wounded students and so he practice football field at the
saw no charge of students hase of the hill, he said he saw
Walter
S.
Tomlinson,
POINT PLEASANT
such as other Guardsmen "a lot of Guardsmen" -hit by . The Middleport police Charles E. Meadows, Mason, Loretta M. Wriston, Jason
have testified to.
rocks and projectiles thrown made 30 arrests in May ac- was found guilty by 12 jurors M. Sturgeon, Jay M.
Thomas, North Canton, by demonstrators.
C.
cordi ng to the monthly report Monday for the breaking and Sturgeon, Sammie
Ohio, testified in the fourth
As they moved out, he said, of Chief J.' J. Crefneans. '•
Sturgeon,
Lyle
H.
Dunsmoor,
entering of the Mason
week of the $48 million civil "a large group was chanting,
Of the total, five persons Elementary School last James A. Anderson, Charles
trial brought by the wounded . "kill the pigs."
were charged with spinning February 16. Deliberations E. Adkins, Irene E. Roush,
students and the parents of
"As we retreated, the 5().100 tires, four allowing dogs to · began at 3:52 p.m. and the Shirley J . Hardin and Charles
those kllled against former real aggressive leaders run loose and four disturbing verdict.came in at 4:45 p.m. W. Aldridge.
Guardsmen and state of- seemed to gain strength," he the peace. There were three
In other court activity,
Meadows also faces a count
licials.
said. "There was definitely charged with disord'e rly of arson in connection with a Citizens National Bank of
As Guardsmen passed over more rock-throwing as we manner, two with driving fire the same evening he Point Pleasant filed four suits
the crest of Blanket Hill, he le!t the field ."
while intoxicated, and one broke into the school with two to collect unpaid balance
testified, he heard someone
KSU Professor Robert each for improper backing, other defendants, Shirley alleged due on promissory
say "stand and hold your Dyal, g teacher of philosophy running stop sign, running Barker, who earlier pleaded notes.
ground." '&gt;t.ey then moved and religion, said after the ~ed light, reckless operation, guilty to breaking · and enThe bank filed its largest
1().15feet back to the crest, he shooting he and other faculty operating vehicle without tering, and Wesley Fay Gibbs suit, f&lt;fr $818.97, against
said, and firing hroke out.
members collected 30th'i00 regard to safety. contributing who was found guilty last Michael C. McWilliams .
Within a couple seconds he "hysterical" students on tbe to the delinquency of minors, month by a jury on the same Others were for $304.19
heard someone say "fire over commons and tried to calm and two with speeding.
charge that Meadows was against Charles Pete Mctheir heads," he said, so he them down.
Dermitt, for $274 against
One case was referred to convicted of Monday.
fired once in the air and put
A bullhorn announcement county court and · charges
Timothy
L. Mayes and
Thirteen witnesses were
his rifle on safety.
from the Guard told them to were dropped in another,
Vaughan
against
Russell
called by the state in its case
Thomas said when he was disperse, he said; Guard·
The
department· in- against Meadows. One was Moore for $172.17.
able to see the students they smen and highway patrolmen vestigated seven accidents; Gibhs, who also testified in
were fleeing, but earlier be surrounded them ; and "we totaling parking 'meter the · Barker trial agai ns t
A $1,034.76 suit was filed
had looked over his shoulder knew what had happened collections were $956.60, and Barker.
against Buddy R, Egno, by
and saw the closest students only a few minutes before and the pQiice cruiser was driven
Sitting on the jury were Leo Greenburg of the West
20-45 feet behind the Guard. we got the hell out."
foreman Ted L. Swartz, Coast Credit Service.
5,249 miles.
Asked if he felt his life was

949-5772

.

them, 'get with it, or we're

going to get rid of you."'.
The legislature originally
mandated sprinkler systems
by Jan. I, 1974, and gave the
nursing homes two years to
comply.
Impossible to Enforce
Sponsors of the bill said Ia te
last year it would ·be impossible to strictly enforce
the original deadline without
closing down nursing homes
and "throwing thousands of
patients out into the streets."
They said nursing home
operators were the victims of
"bureaUcratic bunglilig"

home.
To qualify for an extension,
a nursing home would have to
hire an independent safety
engineer consultant to help
with plans. It would have to
set up interim safety
procedures and set an expected completion date.
Quarterly Inspections
A major amendment of·
fered on the House Hoor by
Rep. Barney Quilter, DToledo, and adopted, 83-8,

service fees from elien Is and
setting up a state Social
Services Advisory Committee.
The legisla tion would
conform Ohio to federal
welfare statutes, · place an
added burden on the state
Public Welfare Department
to supervise social service
programs ,and create the 29member advisory committee
to develop new social service
programs and administer
existing ones.
The House passed, 9().2, and
sent to the Senate a bill
prohibiting a person convicted of voluntary manslaughter, as well as murder,
from benefitting in any way
from the death.
The current law applies
bomber as rumored in the
WASHINGTON (UPI)
only to those convicted of
The United States has agreed Iranian press.
murder. and it does not
"They have given no into sell Iran three dieselprevent them from taking life
powered submarines to dication of interest in the
insurance
proceeds, money in
patrol oil delivery lanes in the Blt'' Sisco said.
a survivorship account or
Sisco asserted that the
Indian Ocean, administration
property set aside for the
United States had decided
·officials said Tuesday.
surviving spouse
Testifying before a House after Britain's withdrawal
The House also adopted
subcommittee on U.S. policy "East of Suez" in 1971 to seek
unanimously and sent to Gov.
in the Persian Gulf, Un- to promote stability and
James A. Rhodes a bill
dersecretary of State Joseph regional cooperation in the
providing for free Ohio
J. Sisco said the Shah of Iran area both through diplomatic
license plates to the state's
was concerned about "the means, and through arms
six Congressional Medal of
·
access routes pf his oil" and sales.
Honor winners.
that Tang-dass vessels would :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·:::::::::::::::·:::::::::·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·::: The House was to reconbe used apparently in the
vene at 1:30 p.m. today and
Indian Ocean.
Card shower for 'Cookie' Hoffman the Senate at 2 p.m.
Sisco said the submarines
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. -Friends and neighbors are
would not be able to operate
to give a card shower for a lady who wUI be 88
Invited
in tbe shallow waters of tbe
years
young
on June 15. She is Mrs. Sarah ''Noan" Hoff·
1
Persian Gulf.
man of New Haven, W.Va. (P0Box67).
I
· Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-lnd.,
'
lbere
are
many
friends
and
aeighbors
and
persons
I
asked Sisco if Iran was inwho
went
to
Broad
Run
School
who
remember
her
as
I
terested in purchasing tbe
"Cookie." Let's try to give her a card for each year.
I
projected U.S. Bl strategic
On June 15 there will be Open House lor Mrs. HoHman
I
at the home oJ Mrs. Ethel Moore between 2 p.m. and 4
I
p.m. It's the flrst house on the right on Broad Run Road
I
from Sporn plant. -Mrs. Henry Reltmlre.
I

the state lire marshal's office
would have to verify within 9.0
days that every home has a
contract for installing a
sprinkler system.
The bill expresses the legislature's intent that state
Medicaid payments be cut off
from any home which fails to
submit a plan for compliance.
Failure to meet the Jan. 1
. deadline for having a
sprinkler system operating

shootanyo~e

.WAID CROSS SONS
Pearl St.
STORE Racine, Ohio

NEW CROP

simply going to delay the
delay," said Rep. Norman A.
Murdock, R-Cincinnati. " It'.'
unacceptable and
un thinkable.·If history repeats,
we're going to give them
anotber extension and then
another. We ought to tell

Guardsman saw
no reason to

NATIONWIDE DHI VERY

Pome~

Middleport's
spendable
'
gain ·respite in both houses
homes. Periodic. inspections would close the nursing eliminated the extension as authorizing county welfare funds stand at $33,515
would have to be made, and
applied to fire alarms. also department to accept social
.

20 ct. .
pkg.

$1.29 ·

I :J ;I•l •III~

:t

CELERY
large
39~
bunch
'

.

GROUND
BEEF .

Any
Amount

.

lb.79•

Fresh Tasty

JW. CORN

5

for

69~
'

•

�.J

13 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., W•.•ctne~day , june 11 , f!l75

.'

\'

- Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middieport·Pooleroy,

Property
·'Transfers

THE SINGING HEMPIDU.S from Nashville Tenn.
will sing at tbe Rutland O!urch of the Nazar~ne thi;
Thursday at 7:30p.m, ·There will be no admission charge
but a free will offering will be received. Everyone i;
welcome.

the poet's corner
ATALK WlfH DAD
Hi, Dad, thought I'd have a talk with you.
You know, tomorrow is Father's Day,
That day is yours, Dad, and yours .alone.
It's a day to honor you in a special way.
Now I've thought and thought, on what gift to get
But what do you find for the grandest Dad of all?
Nothing, Ifind, seems to say what I feel,
Besides, you don't like gifts, as I recall.
You've always said everything should be earned
Accepting never anything for nothing,
But, Dad, how else can I say how I feel
If I ~on 't give you a gift of something?

May Beegle , dec. to
Charles C. Beegle , Frankie
McKelvey , Firn Gaul , Betty
Carpenter, Clifford Beegle,
Harry Beegle, Edward
Beegle, Paul Beegle, Pauline
Beegle, All. for trans .. Sutton .
Pauline Beegle , dec. to
Charles C. Beegle, All. of
trans., Sutton. ·
Sybil Ebersbach, Comm .
Charles C. Beegle, dec. to
Ann
Beegle ,
Frankie
McKelvey, Firn Gaul, Belly
Carpenter, Clifford Beegle,
Harry Beegle , Edward
Beegle, Paul Beegle, Sutton.
Ann
Beegle.
Frankie
M~Kelv ~y.
Robert
McKelvey, Firn Gaul, Betty
Carpenter. Clifford Beegle.
Mattie Beegle, Harry Beegle,
Edward Beegle, Hilda
Beegle, Paul Beegle, Helen
Beegle to Wesley Clark,
Geneva Clark, 5 Acres,
Duyyon.
John W. Arbaugh, Ethel
Arbaughto Donald Sprague,
Wanda Sprague, Lot 6, Ar·
baugh's 4th Tuppers Plains.
Harrison Rood, Elva Rood
to Margie Rood , I Acre,
Olive.
Harrison Rood, Elva Rood
to Foster Rood, Parcels,
Olive.
David A. Smith, Violet M.
Smith to Kenneth E. Riggs ,
Judith A. Riggs, .57 Acres,
Olive.
Helen B. Mullen, dec. to
Howard B. Mullen, Cert of
trans., Pomeroy.

What's that you say, Dad?
, You don 't want anything at all?
' Just to have your family near and loving
·. Would make you happier, feel proud and taU?
• Oh, Dad, you looked so tired just then
~ With that far-away look in your eyes.
· I see all the years, tbe work, and the love,
They showed through, the feelings you try to disguise.
. I know you've wondered from time to time
If we'd ever be what you taught us to be,
·· If we'd be hard-working, honest and humble
All your high values would we ever see.
' Well, Dad, I want to thank God right now
·· For giving us to a great man like you,
" For no matter how often we let you down
~ You stood·proud with us to see us through.

..

:' Thank you, Dad, for having this talk together,
. ; For letting me say what was in my heart.
Please remember, Dad, I love you dearly,
And if I'm ever to find a gift Worthy of you, I'd better depart.
M. Dill

FEMALE ROBBERS
COLUMBUS (UPI) -, FBI
·agents arrested three
Columbus residents after two
women robbed theN. High St.
!ranch of the Huntington
National Bank of an undisclosed amont of money by
two women Monday,
The FBI picked up Frieda
Mae Van Gundy, 40, and
Anna G. lilgram, 25, on

federal bank robbery charges
and recovered part of tbe
loot. The women were held at
the Columbus Workhouse
pending a hearing today .
Also arrested was illersee
McGhee, 43, on charges of
being the driver of the car in
which the two women fled. He
was held in jail in lieu of
$50,000 bond:

Challie Greer, dec. Sybil
Ebers bach, Comm. to Grace
Greer, 7 Acres, Rutland. .
Jean Zirkle, dec'd., to Danny
S. Zirkle, Bruce R. Zirkle,
Cert. of Trans., Pomeroy.
Edwin McLeod, gdn., Lula
Wheaton Davis, Incomp : to
Dana Congo, Lot 58, Giggs
Add., Portland.
Harley E. Rice , Phyllis
E. Rice to Leonard F. Erwin,
Georgia Ruth Erwin. Lot 2,
Baum 's Sub., Chester.
Fred R. Beasley by Trus .,
Alice B. Hively by Trus.,
Virginia Holzer by Trus.,
Richard Holzer by Trus.,
John H. Fisher, Trus. to
Wade S. Hannah , Mabel
Hannah , Parcels, Scipio.
Ancil Burbridge , Louise
Burbridge to An cil Burbridge, . Louise Burbridge,
Lots 5, 6, 7. 8, Scipio •
Pageville.
·
Frank Herald Jr., Mary
Jane Herald to Stephen
Maynard, Rebecca Maynard,
.Sec. 12, Rutland.
Vera Mae Beegle, Robert
G. Beegle, Martha Lou
Beegle, to June Wickersham, Lot 20, Racine.
June Wickersham to
William K. Beegle, Robert G.
Beegle, Hopkins's Second.
Frances Russell Ewing to
Uoyd Harris, 5' Lot 41 , Lot 41,
Middleport.
Lester F. Thomas, Nora L.
Thomas to Ernest Davi,s,
Evelyn Davis, % Acre,
Salem.

'··~· · .

·FINEST MEAT SPECIALS
We Accept Federal Food Olupons
Monday thru Fri. 8-5, Sat. 9-4

Closed Sunday

BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••• ~~·. 7'
WIENERS •••• ~~ ••••••••••• ~,. 95~
RATH'S SMOKED

"GROUND 79~
BEEF LB.

This Coupon
Worth

On anv meat item

other than

t~ose

listed in this ad.

.
.
99~
HAMS
•••••
lb
..
SEMI BONE! ESS
14 to 17 lbs.

3 lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb. CHUCK ROAST .
2 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
2 lb. ROUND STEAK
3 lb •.PORK CHOPS
2 lb. SLICED BACON

D&amp;DMeal
Distributors

ONLY

•20

D&amp;D

MEAT DISTRIBUTOR
Oro The Hill Behind The Car Wash

830 E. Main, Pomeroy, Oh10
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News
, N0tes :~%:;:

:&amp;t:::!~:i%"!.~:*:~~~~:::::~:::::::::::::.~::::::::~:;

.

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f 3S00

.::~

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:~-:::::..'"*~~

~::

By Alma Marshall

~~

·:&lt;
0. L. (Tubby) FitzRandolph, president of Mountain Stat~· ·

Art and Craft Fair, welcomes everyone to the 1975 Fair July 2
through July 6 at Cedar Lakes.
·
He said : "This will be one of the most memorable experiences of your life. Almost as by magic, a community will
spring into life on the grounds of Cedar Lakes for five days,
m~rooming to a total of 20,000 to 30,000 people on a given
day, and 50,000 to 60,000 over all. In many respects this Is an
am~zing achievement unequalled anywhere else in West
Virginia. The stale's finest craftsmen, concessionaires, apprentices, Spe&lt;!ial exhibits, musicians, heritage programs, all
combme to create an atmosphere of authenticity of the rich
cultural heritage of these hills which visitors step into the
moment they enter the gate.
Welcome to our Mountain State Art &amp;Craft Fair.

•:::: ::: : :: ::: ::: ::: ::::::: :::: :: : : : :: :: : : : : :: :
EASY REAt:JING
Be an "Easy Reader"
.this summer by joining the
Libraries' Summer
Reading Club. Come to the
Middleport library Wed·
nesdays and the Pomeroy
library Thursdays. Takeoff time will be 10:30 a. in.
for kids from first grade on
up.
This week's program
· Includes making a reading
record book and. listening
to a story ahout "Ma, Pa,
Mary, Laura and Baby
Carrie," from "The Little
House on the Prairie." All
·area children are invited to
come and join in the fun.

Racine A·s run over Astros 17-3

MASON - Mason Cut Scout Pack 243 held a Bicycle Rodeo
Gallipolis. Ohio,
on Saturday, June 7, with 10participants at Mason's City Park.
June 1, 1975,
The scouts head 8in races on bicycles which were inspected by ·-· ·sALES REPORT OF
City Police and judged by scoutmasters Willis Bentley and
Ohio Valley Uvestock Co.
Kenneth Reynolds.
STOCKER CATTLE The bicycle rodeo was held 'in conjunction with Bopy STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 24
Scouts of American Safety Month .
to 33; 300 to 400 lbs. 32 to 35;
George Zuspan, Jr., Den II, won in the 9-10 year. old group 400 to 500 lbs. 20 to 34.50; 500
on his riding skill and Kip Pauley, Den I, won in the 7-8 year old to 600 lbs. 23 to 33; 600 to 700
group and also for riding the prettiest decorated bicycle.
. lbs. 21 to 35.50; 700 lbs. and
Participating in various activities while riding bicycles Ove~ 22 to 38.
included the winners, and Jami.e Bush of Den I, Norman
HEIFER CALVES - 250
Laudermilt, Michael Cloud, Keith Reynolds, Jamie Vaughan, to 300 lbs.;
20
to
Donny VanMeter, all of Den II, and Roger Bumgardner and 25.50; 300 to 400 lbs. 18 lo 26;
Nathan Roush of Den UI.
400 to 500 Ibs. 17 to 26.75; 500
to 600 lbs. 17 to 27; 600 to 700
LETART - MR. AND MRS. Robert Daniel Rogers, Rt. 2, lbs. 18 to 27; 700 lbs. and Over
Letart, W.Va. are announcing the birth of their second child, 21.50 to 34.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
Stephanie Lou, May 27 at Holzer Medical Center. She weighed
'l pounds 11 ounces. Stephanie was welcomed home by a nine (By The Head 1 - Stock Cows
year old brother, Robert Lee (Robbie). Surviving maternal 140 to 215; Stock Cows and
Calves 150 to 315; Stock Bulls
grandparent is Frank McDennitt, Rt.. 2, Letart.
JJ5 to 200; Baby Calves 10 to
POMEROY- MR. AND MRS. DANNY Wayne Robinson, 41. (By The Pound) - CanSr., Rt. 2, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of their second ' ners and Cutters Cows 17 to .
child, Marsha Ann, on May 29 at Holzer Medicvcal Center. She 21.50; Holstein Cows 20 to 25;
weighed 7 pounds and 5 ounces. Mr. ·and Mrs. Robinson also Commercial Bulls (1,000 Lbs.
and Over) 22.50 to 28.
have a 2\-', year old son, Danny Wayne, Jr. (little Danny).
VEAL CALVES -Tops 220
Maternal grandparent is Mrs. Marsha Capehart, Middleport; paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harrison lbs. to 250 39 to 43; Medium
Robinson, Jr., Clifton; Great-grandparents are Mrs. Eva 200lbs. to30025 to 33; Culls 25
Hysell, Harrisonville Rd., Pomeroy; Mrs. Clara N. Staaats, Down.
SHOATS - 15 to 42.50.
Mr. Harrison Robinson, Sr., Rt. I, Letart, and Frank McDermitt, Rt. 2, Letart.

PERSONAL MEN nON
Mrs. Glenn (Audrey) Shinn of Leon is in intensive care at
Pleasant Valley Hospital. She became ill at her home on
Sunday evening and was taken to the hospital by the
emergency squad. She is the mother of Mrs. Faye Smith, a
former New Haven Grade Scbool teacher.
Bill Calhoun, a graduate of Wahama High School, Marshall University and a seminar graduate of Methesco,
Delaware, Ohio will be ordained on Sunday at the conference
at West Virginia Wesleyan College. For the past two years he
has been serving as pastor of the Bellville Unite{! Methodist
Church while attending school. His parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Roscoe Calhoun and David, New Haven, Mary Lou Brabham,
Spencer, W.Va ., Mr . and Mrs. Neil Haymaker, New Haven,
plan to attend.
The Rev. Clarence McCloud preached his last sermon
Sunday at Mason Unit\!d Methodist Church before leaving for
his new assignment as Pastor at Weekly Memorial United
Methodist Chuirch, Tennessee Ave., Charlesl\)n. He has been
pastor at the Mason Church for three years. His wife, Myrtle,
has been active in church affairs as well as serving the community as City Clerk for for two years and water clerk for six
months. All tbe ministers in ihe area will be attending \be
conference at West Virginia Wesleyan College which starts on
Wednesday .
,
·
.
·
Mrs:· Irene McGrew fell on the campus of West Vireginla
Wesleyan College and broke her leg. She is a patient at St.
Joseph Hospital at Buckhannon. She had been visiting a
daughter there.
Stepben Scarberry, five year old grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Johnson Scarberry of New Haven, received a severe cut on his
neck Friday evening when he slipped on ·tbe floor at his home
and fell into the storm door. He was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital by the New Haven Emergency Squad. He reportedly
is getting along fine.
Recent guests of Rev. Mrs. Achsah Miller were Mrs.
Minnie Cochran, Mrs. Walter Kelly, both of Marietta, Ohio;
Mrs: Kathryn Goodwin and Letha Mae Kelly, New Haven, are
both patients at .Pleasant Valley Hospital; · Mrs. Edith
Bumgarner returned home Sunday from St. Josepb Hospital
where she had been a patient, and Mrs. Charles Yeager and
Mrs. George Carson, representing Mason United Methodist
Church, and-Mrs. Ray Fox of Pt. Pleasant United Methodist
Oturch will attend the Methodist conference at West Virginia
Wesleyan College at Buckhannon , The conference starts on
Wednesday.
Also, Mrs. Betty Ault, of Columbus visited over tbe
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Lester Johnson; Mrs. May Wamsley visited her daughter, Mrs. Sue Roush and Bonnie Wamsley ·
i!l Columbus
last week; Mr. and Mrs, Sherman Ford , Mason '
--visited their daughter and son-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Day and sons at Pickerington, Ohio, over the weekend; Harvey .
Newland is a patient at Holzer Medical Center; his room is 2%1;
He was to undergo surgery 'Tuesday; Mrs. Jessie Cart·
wrigh~, Clifton, visited Sunday with ber daughter, Mrs.
Marguerite Darst and family at Pt. Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs.
Johrj Curtis Roush, West Columbia, attended the graduation of
Brent Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mel Clark, from West Point ·
on June 5. They returned home Thursday; Mr. and Mrs. Clark
also attended their son's graduation; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Posey
are visiting relatives at Hagerstown, 'Md., and Mrs,r,\ndy
(Martina) VanMatre returned home Suriday from UniVersity
Hospital.
.1

TECH. SG'f, NICK AND MRS. NICHOLSON and daughter,
Amber, of i'YicGuire Air Force Base, N. J. are visiting his
'mother, Mts. Evelyn Nicholson, Mr. a'nd Mrs. Charl~s Cartwright at C3ifton; Mr. and Mrs. Earl Robinson and family,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Johri Curtis Roush and family, West
Colwnbia; Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bergdoll and three children at
O!llllcothe and other relatives.
.
,
.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel, Mason; Mr. and Mrs.
Calvin .McDaniel and family, Pt. Pleasant, visited on Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. James Loyd at Nashport, Ohio.
CARLSBAD,
CALIF . Tuesday the de3ignatlon of, ,
(UPI) - The World Hock~y Cleveland as the site for the
Association i Board
of 1975 AII.Star game, scheduled
Trustee s announced for Jan. p.

~ursing 'homes

.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Legislation extending until
next Jan. 1 the deadline for
· nursing homes to install fire
protection sprinkler systems
and setting a strict time
schedule for compliance has
cleared both cha mbers of the
Ohio General Assembly, but
m markedly different forms.
The House passed the bill
Tuesday; 53-39, but took out
an emergency clause and
·amended the measure so
extensively that a joint
conference committee is
·expected to have to iron out
differences between the two
chambers.
The bill cleared the House
only three votes more than
the 50 required for passage.
The emergency clause failed
by three votes.
Opponents claimed nursing
homes have had 30 months
since the original stale
deadline for installing the
sprinkler and fire alarm
systems, yet only 13 per cent
have them fully operating,
"With this bill, we 're

J)cuG ...

:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::

PT. PLEASANT - Priscilla M. N. Ryanna, 1974 In·
ternational student from Tanzania, who attends West Virginia
University, will attend the Mason County Homemakers Internation!!l Luncheon on June 213 at Appalachian .Power
Company Auditorium. The luncheion will be potluck.
Priscilla will tell the group about life in Tanzania.
The Homemakers will study Tanzania lor their July club
lesson.

'

In Racine • Syracuse little
Gelling hits for the winners ·
league action Monday the were Zane Beegle with 2
Racine ·As downed the tiiples and a double and •
Syracuse Astros 11·3. Kent Wolfe had 2 home runs and a
Wolfe pitched the entire triple. For the Astros, J.
game for the As, picking up Williams led at the plate with
the win while Tony Salser 2 singles. The As had 17 runs
was charged with tne loss. on 8 hits and the Astros had 3
Salser was relieved in the runs on 5 hits.
fifth inning.

PH. 992-2039

Rower Shop

106 Butternut
Mrs. Milla·rd VanMeter

98~ lb.
FRESH LEAN

GROUND BEEF•••....••..•. .'~:.
\b. S .

CUBE STEAK....•••••••••••••••••••.
IDAHO
· 10 lb. bag
BAKING POTATOES.••••••••••••••~ ••••

1

39

$1 29

·

CANTALOUPE •.•..•••.•..•.• ~:

··

the form of conflicting inspection requirements, and
that they were being
',~guuged" . by
sprinkler
system salesmen.
Under the bill, interim
safety precautions would
have to be taken in the

59

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HERE

NOW

Jury returns verdict
of guilt .a:(ter 1 hour

Asphalt Shingles

I
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REGULAR $}8.30

II
I

95

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1

PER· SQUARE

II
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(100 Square Feet)

240 lb. SELF-SEAL
AN ASSORTMENT OF COLORS
WE DELIVERI

.H OGG &amp; ZUSPAN
1
MATERIALS CO. . .
.
...
I _________________________
773-5554
MASON,.............
W. VA. _

..

16

oz. bots.

PAK

.

GRADED USDA CHOICE
100 ct. $}39

TEA BAGS ................................. Pkg .

53
POTTED MEAT......................
~;·

.ARMOUR'S

'5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE''

' CHEF BOY-AR-DEE

4
Macaroni-Cheese Dinner....... pk~:_z.

GOLDEN GRAIN

li;.

.

49~

First Cuts

$100

Center Cuts

·

BARBECUE SAUCE. ...........!~~~::en~~t. 49
PLOCHMAN'S

BES-PAK

TRASH

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00

'

15

Spaghetti Sauce/Beef.. ............ca:z·

Prices Effective June 11-18

OPEN
9til7

..

·

· ·

··

,

e

1 ~ ct-69~
BAGS. ............................ .P ~.

. .

6
CAT DINN.ER.........................
PURINA ASSORTED . ,

..

6112 oz.$1 00
cans .

•

Q.OSED SUNDAYS

Family Pack

oz. $} 00

cans

Right Rese[Ved to Limit Quantities
We Glad~ Accept' Fed. Food Stamps

79 e

BOLOGNA
2 lb~ tray ·

lb.$1.39

BOILED
HAM
lb.

.

MEADOW GOLD

-..--..

-......

.lb. 11.69

Bakerite

_

'

••

Bread
Peak Navv Beans-..
Studio Facial Tissue

•

cans 99c
. lo.a ves 89c'·
2lb. 49c
00 Ct. 49c

ICE CREAM
Y2 gal., _89e
'

LEMONS
Special

doz.

79~

1b.s1 •.19
lb. s1.29
lb. s1 .3 9

French City

WIENERS

$1~69

Summer Cooler

Mon.-Sat.

We Reserve Right To Limit Quantity

. '

8 $}19

7-UP

TENDER LEAF

'

Prices effective
Thursday thru Saturday ·

OHIOAN PICKED
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Rep. James V. .stanton , a
third-tenn Democrat from
Ohio, was picked Tuesday to
lead a subcomm ittee investigation into allegations
of illegal CIA activities at
home and abroad.

•---------------------·-·-

Saturday 9 to 9

TICKETS ON SALE

SOME PROGNOSIS
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Prospects for the nation 's
record winter wheat crop
remained virtually unchanged during May and
farmers are still expecting a
harvest big enough to begin
rebuilding reserve stocks, the
Agriculture Department
reports.

uao.

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

I
I

.....~ ..~~~:.~!.. 59 e

SPAM
12 oz. can
LUNCH EON MEAT••.•••••••••••••••••••

REAPPROACHMENT
KUALA LUMPUR (UP!)
- Prime Minister Kukrit
Pramuj of Thailand an nounced today his country
will es tablish diplomatic
relations with China next
month.

$12,883.75. Receipts and
expenditures, respectively, of•
each fund for the month and
the balance include: general, '
$9,341.32, $7 ,872.28, $25,1107.81;
cemetery, $1,061.25, "11.1!,
$266.31; fire equipment,
$83.86, $69.96; swimming
pool, no receipt, $145.11,
$6.70; planning colllllliasion,
no receipt, $67.65, $437.70;
street maintenance, $2,381.18, .
$2,430.06, $2.33; fire house :
cons truction, no receipt, no·.
disbursemeni, $11.99; federal:
revenue sharing, $6,112.58; .
In the village council
obligated fund which Ia the
general bond retirement
receipts totaled $5,850.67,
disbursement, $152.85leavlng
a balance of $26,257.90.
There was a balance ol
$186,848.92 in the obllsated
funds of the board of public
affairs as of May 31.
Receipts, disbursements and
the · balance in each fund,
respectively: sanitary sewer,
$4,106.58, $3,686.33, $38,530;
sanitary sewer escrow, $1$,
no disbursement, $12!,Ui.ot;
water, $6,390.19, $6,895.4&amp;,
$20,363.24; water meter
trusts, $200, $200, $6,610.111.
The bonded indebtedness of
the
community
Is
$1,481,443.75, or $523.13 per
capita.

r-----------------------'II

'

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Middleport had a balance
of $:l3, ~1 5.43 in its expendable
fund s as of May 31 , according
to the monthly report of
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate.
Total disbursements from
the funds during the month
amounted to $11,515.85 while
receipts for the month totaled

ROOFING SPECIAL

e.

~~~~~~~.~:.~..........~~~ ..~ 129
TROPICANA
. ,.
32 oz. bottle 3 9..,
ORANGE DRINK •••••.••••.••.

t

iri

30 arrests

PORK
SAUSAGE

MRS. FILBERrS
OLEOMARGARINE

diesel-powered subs

Police make

PURE

.

US to sell Iran three

during May

FRENDi CITY BRAN.D .

It

called lor inspections at least
quarterly by a local fire
depariment.
Quilter said the that inspections by local fire departments instead of a consultant
or the fire marshal's office
would enable the firemen ·to
learn the location · of water
supplies and exits in all areas
nursi~g homes.
Quilter's amendment also
puIs the burden on the fire
marshal's office io see that
the compliance schedule is
being followed. It forbids the
marshal to be lenient because
of a nursing home's financial
condition.
Reps. Corwin Nixon, R·
Lebanon , and Fred B.
Hadley, R-Deliance, attempted to exempt nursing
homes with 10 patients or Jess
from
the
sprinkler
requirement on grounds it
would cost too much and
smaller homes have closer
supervision of patients. Their
amendment failed on a 16-46
tie vote.
Aceept Social Service Fees
Meanwhile, the Senate
passed, ~9. and returned to
the House for concurrence in
amendments
a
bill

By ROBER r PENICK
in danger , he said "ll\ere was
CLEVELAND ( UPI)
a possibili ty, a real
Uoyd W. Thomas Jr .. who possibility, that I could be
fired his Ml rifle once in the injured in my mind. Some
air at Kent State five years real strange things hap·
-:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:
ago, said Tuesday he saw no pened." ·
reason for ftring at anyone.
Asked then if he saw any
However, he said, fellow reason to shoot anyone, he
Ohio National Guardsmen said "in my mind there
blocked his vision im · wasn't."
mediately before the burst of
A lew minutes before, when
gunfire that killed and the Guardsmen were on the
wounded students and so he practice football field at the
saw no charge of students hase of the hill, he said he saw
Walter
S.
Tomlinson,
POINT PLEASANT
such as other Guardsmen "a lot of Guardsmen" -hit by . The Middleport police Charles E. Meadows, Mason, Loretta M. Wriston, Jason
have testified to.
rocks and projectiles thrown made 30 arrests in May ac- was found guilty by 12 jurors M. Sturgeon, Jay M.
Thomas, North Canton, by demonstrators.
C.
cordi ng to the monthly report Monday for the breaking and Sturgeon, Sammie
Ohio, testified in the fourth
As they moved out, he said, of Chief J.' J. Crefneans. '•
Sturgeon,
Lyle
H.
Dunsmoor,
entering of the Mason
week of the $48 million civil "a large group was chanting,
Of the total, five persons Elementary School last James A. Anderson, Charles
trial brought by the wounded . "kill the pigs."
were charged with spinning February 16. Deliberations E. Adkins, Irene E. Roush,
students and the parents of
"As we retreated, the 5().100 tires, four allowing dogs to · began at 3:52 p.m. and the Shirley J . Hardin and Charles
those kllled against former real aggressive leaders run loose and four disturbing verdict.came in at 4:45 p.m. W. Aldridge.
Guardsmen and state of- seemed to gain strength," he the peace. There were three
In other court activity,
Meadows also faces a count
licials.
said. "There was definitely charged with disord'e rly of arson in connection with a Citizens National Bank of
As Guardsmen passed over more rock-throwing as we manner, two with driving fire the same evening he Point Pleasant filed four suits
the crest of Blanket Hill, he le!t the field ."
while intoxicated, and one broke into the school with two to collect unpaid balance
testified, he heard someone
KSU Professor Robert each for improper backing, other defendants, Shirley alleged due on promissory
say "stand and hold your Dyal, g teacher of philosophy running stop sign, running Barker, who earlier pleaded notes.
ground." '&gt;t.ey then moved and religion, said after the ~ed light, reckless operation, guilty to breaking · and enThe bank filed its largest
1().15feet back to the crest, he shooting he and other faculty operating vehicle without tering, and Wesley Fay Gibbs suit, f&lt;fr $818.97, against
said, and firing hroke out.
members collected 30th'i00 regard to safety. contributing who was found guilty last Michael C. McWilliams .
Within a couple seconds he "hysterical" students on tbe to the delinquency of minors, month by a jury on the same Others were for $304.19
heard someone say "fire over commons and tried to calm and two with speeding.
charge that Meadows was against Charles Pete Mctheir heads," he said, so he them down.
Dermitt, for $274 against
One case was referred to convicted of Monday.
fired once in the air and put
A bullhorn announcement county court and · charges
Timothy
L. Mayes and
Thirteen witnesses were
his rifle on safety.
from the Guard told them to were dropped in another,
Vaughan
against
Russell
called by the state in its case
Thomas said when he was disperse, he said; Guard·
The
department· in- against Meadows. One was Moore for $172.17.
able to see the students they smen and highway patrolmen vestigated seven accidents; Gibhs, who also testified in
were fleeing, but earlier be surrounded them ; and "we totaling parking 'meter the · Barker trial agai ns t
A $1,034.76 suit was filed
had looked over his shoulder knew what had happened collections were $956.60, and Barker.
against Buddy R, Egno, by
and saw the closest students only a few minutes before and the pQiice cruiser was driven
Sitting on the jury were Leo Greenburg of the West
20-45 feet behind the Guard. we got the hell out."
foreman Ted L. Swartz, Coast Credit Service.
5,249 miles.
Asked if he felt his life was

949-5772

.

them, 'get with it, or we're

going to get rid of you."'.
The legislature originally
mandated sprinkler systems
by Jan. I, 1974, and gave the
nursing homes two years to
comply.
Impossible to Enforce
Sponsors of the bill said Ia te
last year it would ·be impossible to strictly enforce
the original deadline without
closing down nursing homes
and "throwing thousands of
patients out into the streets."
They said nursing home
operators were the victims of
"bureaUcratic bunglilig"

home.
To qualify for an extension,
a nursing home would have to
hire an independent safety
engineer consultant to help
with plans. It would have to
set up interim safety
procedures and set an expected completion date.
Quarterly Inspections
A major amendment of·
fered on the House Hoor by
Rep. Barney Quilter, DToledo, and adopted, 83-8,

service fees from elien Is and
setting up a state Social
Services Advisory Committee.
The legisla tion would
conform Ohio to federal
welfare statutes, · place an
added burden on the state
Public Welfare Department
to supervise social service
programs ,and create the 29member advisory committee
to develop new social service
programs and administer
existing ones.
The House passed, 9().2, and
sent to the Senate a bill
prohibiting a person convicted of voluntary manslaughter, as well as murder,
from benefitting in any way
from the death.
The current law applies
bomber as rumored in the
WASHINGTON (UPI)
only to those convicted of
The United States has agreed Iranian press.
murder. and it does not
"They have given no into sell Iran three dieselprevent them from taking life
powered submarines to dication of interest in the
insurance
proceeds, money in
patrol oil delivery lanes in the Blt'' Sisco said.
a survivorship account or
Sisco asserted that the
Indian Ocean, administration
property set aside for the
United States had decided
·officials said Tuesday.
surviving spouse
Testifying before a House after Britain's withdrawal
The House also adopted
subcommittee on U.S. policy "East of Suez" in 1971 to seek
unanimously and sent to Gov.
in the Persian Gulf, Un- to promote stability and
James A. Rhodes a bill
dersecretary of State Joseph regional cooperation in the
providing for free Ohio
J. Sisco said the Shah of Iran area both through diplomatic
license plates to the state's
was concerned about "the means, and through arms
six Congressional Medal of
·
access routes pf his oil" and sales.
Honor winners.
that Tang-dass vessels would :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·:::::::::::::::·:::::::::·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·::: The House was to reconbe used apparently in the
vene at 1:30 p.m. today and
Indian Ocean.
Card shower for 'Cookie' Hoffman the Senate at 2 p.m.
Sisco said the submarines
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. -Friends and neighbors are
would not be able to operate
to give a card shower for a lady who wUI be 88
Invited
in tbe shallow waters of tbe
years
young
on June 15. She is Mrs. Sarah ''Noan" Hoff·
1
Persian Gulf.
man of New Haven, W.Va. (P0Box67).
I
· Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-lnd.,
'
lbere
are
many
friends
and
aeighbors
and
persons
I
asked Sisco if Iran was inwho
went
to
Broad
Run
School
who
remember
her
as
I
terested in purchasing tbe
"Cookie." Let's try to give her a card for each year.
I
projected U.S. Bl strategic
On June 15 there will be Open House lor Mrs. HoHman
I
at the home oJ Mrs. Ethel Moore between 2 p.m. and 4
I
p.m. It's the flrst house on the right on Broad Run Road
I
from Sporn plant. -Mrs. Henry Reltmlre.
I

the state lire marshal's office
would have to verify within 9.0
days that every home has a
contract for installing a
sprinkler system.
The bill expresses the legislature's intent that state
Medicaid payments be cut off
from any home which fails to
submit a plan for compliance.
Failure to meet the Jan. 1
. deadline for having a
sprinkler system operating

shootanyo~e

.WAID CROSS SONS
Pearl St.
STORE Racine, Ohio

NEW CROP

simply going to delay the
delay," said Rep. Norman A.
Murdock, R-Cincinnati. " It'.'
unacceptable and
un thinkable.·If history repeats,
we're going to give them
anotber extension and then
another. We ought to tell

Guardsman saw
no reason to

NATIONWIDE DHI VERY

Pome~

Middleport's
spendable
'
gain ·respite in both houses
homes. Periodic. inspections would close the nursing eliminated the extension as authorizing county welfare funds stand at $33,515
would have to be made, and
applied to fire alarms. also department to accept social
.

20 ct. .
pkg.

$1.29 ·

I :J ;I•l •III~

:t

CELERY
large
39~
bunch
'

.

GROUND
BEEF .

Any
Amount

.

lb.79•

Fresh Tasty

JW. CORN

5

for

69~
'

•

�...
••
'

~IYMID~rn-lk./ ~~

Unscramblethe~eroorJumbl.,_

..

I

r-~-----_..~-·--...,.·--..-·-----..-..----..----..-._--

'
&amp;I.J -i~

- --· .....

.

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
2 SIGNS
Business
SerVices
I
Pomeroy l==--~---~~
-- ~~======~~~--~

®

I

one lttter to each square, to

Auto Sales

For Rent

form four ordinary "''ords.

FU~N I S HED

KILlERS BELIEVE
YOU DIED. LETS KEEP

LIZZ,
TO
AVOID ALL REPORTERS
AND TV PEOPl.E , OUR
"r."";;I-.., I BOYS ARE PLEDGED
"'--~ .~,- ,TO

THEM THAT WAY.

SECRECY.

apa rtment ,

1n M 1d dl e p or f

adult s onl y

P!lone 992 3874

3 15 lfc

TRl\ t LER Sp iiCC

I

PRIPE

Pon1eroy

I I I tJ I

rJ

l

MOP. I L E

rn en

I
I

I [J

Now lliTanre the circled letten1
to form the surpriae answer, u
~-=~:::;;;:~=~~==~-=••nested by the above cartoon.

'----"P=·
rill *=-:·
=-..:::::
RISl:.:::ANSWII~·~I

·I

ft-IIC"rdn 1

..

tory t~ir , t inted gla ss, r a d to, w hee l covers. good tires,
blk mtenor , sil ver grey f i nish Special.

1971 MATADOR

Lost

For Rent or Sale
MOEHL E ho me Wtth ntce lot.
new house f urnttur e and
pa t to gas heat. C1 ty water
Ava t lable
now
Phon e
Al bert Htll , Rac1ne , 9J9 2261
6 11 61C

Notice
P ASTURE for r en t near
Po me r oy , Oh to A lso Ul li tly
tractor for sale . -1 x 8, $75
Ph one 992 52J 7
6 11 31p

_, -

Employment Wanted
EXPERIENCED tn tak tng
Ccl r e of eld erly pat tents
Re f eren ces , Phon e (3 04 1
773 52 J9
6 11101 c

NOW se ll ing F uller Brush
Produ cts , phone 992 3410
1 24 -tfc
CH A MP I ON br ed Engl ts h
Setter 'at stu d SSO P lus one
4 yr ma r e pony , for sal e for
$50 Br tdle and halt e r~ m
eluded Phone 992 5961 ~
6 10 41p

CARPENTER work ~ cei l tng
pane l ing
f lo ortng . etc
Phon e 991 2759
6 10 10tc

-·-- - - - - --

I ~EMOD ELING .

Pl umb ing ,
h ea11ng and all t ypes of
gene ra l
repa.r
W or k
gua rante ed 20 years ex
pe r ience
Phon e 992 2d09
s 1 tf c

P ARASOL
Bou f tque
an
nounc es the addit ion of a
new
operator
Helen
N ewland Jun e Special Hot
01 1 condtt toner Reg S3 n ow
5150 d urmg the month of
Jun e Shop wtll be c losed on
Tuesday un ttl Au g 5 Open
Wednesday th r u Satur da y
Phone 985414 1
6 8 12tc

F LE A Market Thursday ,
F r tday ,
Satu rda y
and
Sunday , 10 a m to 6 p m at
the Cr ossroads on Rl 12a
6 11 Jtc

WEDDING

J tAMILY Yar d Sa l e, F r tday
and Sat ur day . 10 am at 4th
and Brm-..·n , Mason . W Va

PHOTOS

6 11 3tp

QUALITY WORK

GARAGE Sales across fr om
Br adb ury Sc hool s ta r t 1ng
J un e 10 throu g h J une 14
Lots of nt ce tl ems
6 10 Jtc

AT

LOW PRICES
Call
992-7453 In Ohio
882-2698 In W. Va .
C AS H patd for al l makes and
mode ls of mobile homes
Phone ar ea code 614 423

9531

d 13 tfc

J UN K autos , complete and
delivered to our yar d we
p tck up auto bod ies and buy
a ll ktndsof scrap metal s and
•ron . R 1der 's Sa l..,.age, St
Rt 124, Rt . 4, Pomeroy ,
Oh io Call 99 2 5468 .
10 17 -lfc
QUICK ,.,RINT by ma1t
camera r eady copy
pa ge $5 55 •fir st 100;
each addt t ional 100
to
c opy , check

P LU S.

from
On e
$1 15
Send
LET

72

YAR D Sale , Childr en 's game s
and c loth es . St Rt 14 3 abo ut
I mile out o f Ha r r isonv i ll e
to wa r ds Pome roy J une 10
and II
6 10 21c

T RAILER for 12 14 f t f i sh i ng
boat Phone 992 7422 o r 992

WA N T ED -· ha y , old or n ew
Phon e Eskey Ht 11 , Pomeroy

992 3885

6 8 31p

1964 A ND old er U . S Co tns .
Wtl l pay 24 1 ' for dtm es, 60c
for quar te r s, $ 1 20 for half
Call Roge r Wams l ey , 742

6· S· I2tc

L fE .;-Ca~ Was~ o n-R-;-~;;~t

3651

th e c ro ssroa ds S3 mstde and
out, Wa x jobs, $ 15 Phone
992 3180 F r ee p ~e kup and
deltve r y se r v tce
6 3 121c

6 6 121p

WA NTED old upright pianos
An y condition Paying $10 00
each Fi rst floo r only W rit e
-- - -· -and g tve d ~re el 1ons to Wt lten
P tano Co. Bo x 18 8, SardtS ,
FOR your " Oil ot Mmk "
Oh 10 d3946
Cosmetics
Phon e
6 -S 6lp
BROWN'S 992 5113

--- -----

1-7-tfc
------ ------ --

O LD furnitur e, ice bo xes,
bra ss bed s, or comple te
households Write M
D.
Miller , Rt 4, Pomeroy ,
EXPERIENCED sa l es help
Oh1 0 Ca ll 992 7760
wan ted . apply in person a t
10 7-74
Montg o me r y War d , 109
Coun St , Pom er oy
6-S-6tc

Help Wanted

Mobile Homes For Sale

TV

197 1 SK YLINE 12x60
992 5872

te chntei an Phone (614 ) 667 -

3653

Phone
6 11 6tp

61p

6 8 6tc

.

Only 43 lb
mod els
op sal e

For Sale
ME N' S WORK un i forms , and
other used me r chandtse 30&lt;1
Matn St at Old H &amp; R Block ,
locat ton Pomeroy
101 , r T self conlatned tru c k
c amp er Phon e (304 ) 773

S905

611Litc

. ,OMEROYLANDMARK
9._Jock W. Corny, Mtr. •
..,_.
Pbono "2-2111 ·

CB 's A n tenna s, f is hing batt ,
f1 Sh m9 suppl tes, guns and
ammo tnd ta n Joe 's Sports
an_d C B 's 308 Page St .
Mtd dle por t

5 18 30tc

- -

-

-

6-10 Sip
----- - -

---

~- -

newly

- 157

pamt ed

CARRIER
WANTED

·THE DAILY SENTINEL

3041

Home has 3 BR . living.
kit chen , utility , i s 1112 story
frame, barn and oth e r

-

WANT AD WAY
i

SEL L your mob de home for
cash 15 homes wanted , 19SB·
thr u 1972 mod els . Phone

-

(6141 446 1425, Gallipol is .
3-9 7811
-- - - - -·-~ ·- -~---

plant s.

potted

-

LOJE50ME" HOW

---------

TlW TElfV\5101'1 'SEl IS
A HO'it:'( - I C~ TUr4 E
IN OP1 ANY PI.ACE IN

Til' WOILDAMD WA"ICH

Al'tD USl~M , J UST AS IF
~WAS RKiHT THt:RE · tf:S
LIKE &amp;f'IH' lti't'IStBLE-

H.-.,· M-MIT'6 A lOT Of
FI.IH · I'l.MD IT'S
A G ADGET

1HA1 (At!
BE MIGI'ITY
IJ S E~UL. -

OH, I M\'5H 1T
BeiNG NOSf'( AND THERf

~RE

9«11 ASH IH
TH ' RM;R - t

K WCM(

CAUSE I

(AUGKT SOME -

.
ALLEY OOP

Carpeting
-501 NYLON
99 Square
Yard

HERE 11-lEN
COME,OOP.'

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING
Construction
and Plumbing

327 N. 2nd

Middleport
5-30-1 mo .

4 30 tfc

GADFRY! ! THINK
T'"E:Y'i&lt;!E' GONNA
RUN US DOWN!

AIN'T SLOWIN'
DOWN ANY,
ORVILLE'!

4

RUBBER BACK
We hav e hundre ds o~
carpet values Your job ce
be completed in 1 fa
weeks
No tong watting 1
per iod Our i n staller has 28
years experience . E xpert
tn sta llation . You ' ll l1fl:e
what you get

GASOLINE ALLEY

We're

out

of
wood~
ChLJQ.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-4211
I'(

- -

.

-

Who'd miss

Veah.Eve! There's an
We'll have to old shed
push this
overthere
thinq home'

a few rotten
old boards;&gt;

UL ABNER

F=~~~~----~~r-------------~------------------~
-THE WHOlE
THAT II-YEAR-OLD IS -50 UNLESS WE LI5Tt:N To
WORL-D
THE HIGH LUMP OF HIS ROO&lt; MUSIC, AND ONLY
LUMP/STAN- WE:
HIS - HE'LL Bl-OW UP THE'
GAVE HIM THE

6· S·12tc

;uN-shej;Md co~t;,;ctin9an d
Remod elmg Se r vice Who le
house
r em o de l i n g
Sp ec ialties kitchen and
bath . Phone (30 4) 77J -5346or
7J2 3664 day ·or even mg .
6-4 26tc

H- f3()V\f3 -

----·--

READY MIX CUNCRETE

·

2 BUSINESS R.OOMS - With 2

base ment s , att~cs, etc ,
Phon e 949 3221 or 742 -d441

--

·

5-18-26tc

-· - ----~----- - - ~

Real .Estate For S.
NEW 3 bedrm . all elec. home .
wall to wall car'pet, !i v ing
rm ., dining rm ., kitchen ,
bath, I car garage . Grey
alu,m . si d ing in fr ont with
black shutt ers . Phon e 992
243_2, \or see Ri c k Morris
-"
6115tc

3 BEDROOM house , walt to
wall carpeting , large kit chen and bath , ut i lity room ,
wa'sh
room ,
'"
acre ,
a lum inum . Siding , storm
wip dows, storag e building .
Phon e
742 4601.
W i ll
sa c; rif ice for quic k sa le .

5-25 lfc

BUT IF lHAT&amp; WHO I
7HINI&lt; IT 15 , WE'RE
IN 1ROUBLE !

16 - were
(seemingly)
2 ds
\, W .)
·19 Spahn and
- and Pray
for Rain"
22 Star in Cetus

24 Exceeded
25 Cheerio!
27 F tw
00 ~ar
29 ~.H. City
30 Silly person
31 French city
36 Vitality
37 Statute

yo u io da y. You may tool
yo urself , but no one else

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No•. 22)
Don't attempt tasks Involving
h1gh costs at th•s bme, unless
yo u know exactly what you 're
domg

SAG ITT ARtUS (No¥. 23-Dec.
21) Yo u' re on treac herous •
footmg today rn bus 1n ess
dealrngs. A wrong dects ton wtll
rnc ur htgher-than-usuallosses.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan.

TAURUS (April 20·May 20)

19) Mak mg maJor decisions

Don t place yourself between
dissentmg factton s today . If

you ta ke sides. you 'll w1nd up
catch 1ng it from both.

w1ll be d1ffocult Cor you today. If
you have doubts about your
reasonrng , stall for time so you

can th1nk mo re clearly

GEMINI (Mary 21-Juno 20)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

Treat possesstons you rs
and others - with the respect
they deserve today. Otherw1se,
you might haiJe to furn1sh a
costly rep lacement.

Don't make deCISions beyond
you r rank today Let tho se pa1d
to g1ve the ord ers ca l l the
shots.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

Yo u 're careless wit h your
resources today. so you 're not
m a po si t1 on to adv1se others .
They'll wtnd up tn !he m1ddle of
yo ur muddle.

others today . Be extra-

Yesterday's Answer

yo u re not wilt be dtsastrous for

duration

considerate

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) n·s f~ne
to be llelghborly, but don'i
overdo 1: today. Several people
are go1ng Ia lry to load their
respon s1btliiies on you .

PISCES (Feb. 2CJ-March '20)

-Your

"

\;11Birthday
June 11 , 1975

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ThiS
os noi a . day tor l1nancial
dealings with fr iend s. Have second lhoughts before borrow1hg tram or lendmg to a pa l.

You'l l pla ce a he av1er
emph as ts than usual thiS year
on acquiring material goods.
Your prospects look promi s·
tng , provided you don t take
too many fl yers.

LIBRA . (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Presum~n~ to be someihmg

tNEWSPAPERENTERPRISE ASSN l

WIN AT BRIDGE
Today, Queen reigns supreme

25 Scheduled
26 In balance
'/:1 Madras
lady's garb
28 Father of

,..-t-4--11---;::;:;:-----'J
was . " The queen :._ th ere are
NORTH
11 lots of play ers who just hate to

I
6

•
•
t
•

~

29 Congo
region
32
Pitcher's

asset

Q 10
AQ 8
10 9 6 3
K J 10 4

EAST
WEST
• 9 8 54
• K J 62
• 10 7 6
• J 9 43
• K 42
• A 85
...
7 52
.9 3
SOUTH (01
• A7 3
• K 52
• QJ 7

!r.-+-+.-+-

33 Last Spanish
queen
34- blimey!
35 Endured
:r1 Ovei:-the-hill ~.rl-+­

"'AQ 86

Both vulnerable

Is

Complete Air Condition· Opentional Check

A X y D L B A A X R
LONGFELLOW

Norlh

East

Pa ss
Pass

3 NT. Pass

••
'

Keep watching our ads for more money·savlng coupons,
com1ng your way weekly.

MAW!!FGTCH
M'-/ DADBURN

.

SUPPER 1!

SERVICE A CUT ABOVE THE BEST
eJ NIASE Certified Mechlnics
• 20 Yiers Service Management EKperltnce
• All Work Guarentttd
• Reasonable Rates
'
eVery Friendly hople

r

Pass

1i

The bidding has been :

Opening lead - 2 •

s

vzx

·Free Car W~sh with Use 01 this Coupon

South

One letter simply stan4.~...!9r another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for !he two O's. e(f. Single letters. By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
In acCQrdance with our policy
hints .. Each day the code letters are different.
of being kind to declarers most
of the time, we have given
CRYPTOQUOTES
South a sure thmg play at trick
G
X
H
J
R
one
West has led from the kingVZEGF
KXSG
MEOUV
jack of spades and he can play
V N either the queen or 10 from
EU
B N XU
KSG
KSOOEXB
. dummy with complete success .
This dido 't he(p the South who
F E _O J U actually played thiS hand in a
WOXVVR
GNVEQX
rubber bridge game . He
studied , cogitated, thought,
SFSEG. - XB
ZNHX
llesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS DIFFICULT TO SAY HOW finally took a coin out of his
MUCH MEN'S MINDS ARE CONCIUATED BY A KIND pocket, tossed it while saring,
"Heads I play the queen .'
MANNER AND GENTLE SPEECH. - CICERO
South asked wh1ch card we
would have played · Jil)l's reply
(~ 1975 Kin1 Featurq $)'ndJcate,lnc.)

vzx

- Includes : Checking Complete System for Leeks
Add Fr•on II Necessary
,
•Check Atr Condition for proper operation
Rog . Proce ... S13.50
Speci~I ...SlO.Scr Plus

' .

Wesl .

lead from a jac k-high su1 t
against notrump ; few who hate
to lead from a ktng."
Oswald 's re ply was longe r . It
was . "Forty years ago when
you were a baby the correct
play would have been the 10
spot. In those early days of
contract , playe rs were taught
not to lead from kmgs if they
co,uld lmd any ·other lead In
fact there was a bridge player 's
Hell where the poor smner was
1c&lt;mcmua ly on lead against the , ,
· while holding all four _
kin gs . Today , however t he
queen IS the better try "

I N.T.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

eV~f&lt; HAD,JANIE.

West

Norih

East

Soulb

1¥
Pass
2•
Pass
2•
Pass
2•
Pass
'
You, South hold :
• 2 • J 9 7 s '5 • A K Q J 4 • A 2
What do you do now ? £:
A - Bid three diamonds lo show
that your diamonds are very good.
TODAY 'S QUESTION

1
1
~
1
•

i

Your partner continues to three
hearts Whatdo youdo now?
1
Answer Tomorrow
Send $1 lot JACOBY MODERN '
book to: "Win at Btidge,'" (clo IIIII :
newspaper), P.O. Box 489, Radio I

l

1

CllyStsfJon, New York. N.Y. 1001Q. ,

•

TELL

I OHll(
THAT ARE
5TAHt?IN6 5TIU. !
HIM

~ CA~

....J

'

"'

.-

l '.

DO BUSINESS
WITH A LEADER
1
.

.
I

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc,.

'

:l

i'

'

500 E.·Miinst.'
Ph. ffl-2174
.,....tfOY,O.
Strvlct ~n.: \VHkdeystiii4:JO-Sat. ttl~

I

..

ITS ENABLED U510 PAY OFF
ALLI30NNA'Z DEB10 AND
BUILD UP A HEAL1HY
BANK ACCOUNT

•aoo
ON A

· bedroom apartment over. Has ___ - - -·- · ------- ~~tfc

LARGE GARDEN
3
bedroom home. bath , rural
water, front porch on hard
road in small villaQe. S15,000 .
DOZER work , land clearing
ANTIQUE FURNITURE :._
by the acre, hourly or
and a 5 room home,.one floor ,
c ontract.
F arm
ponds ,
r oa d s, etc Large dozer and
ntce ~ath , porch, block garage
operator with over 20 years
on large level lot. All for just
ex p erience . Pullin s E x
$15.000.00.
cavating , Pomeroy , . Oh io.
Phone 992 2478
PROPERTY IS SELLING
12-19-lfc
GOOD AND HIGH. PUT - ·--- -- --------YOURS IN OUR AGENCY. W ILL trim or cut tree s and
shrubb ery ,
c!ear
out
PHONE 992-3325.

®OPENING TH I&amp; &amp;10RE
PI&lt;OVED 10 BE ONE OF
1HE BEf&gt;T IDEA'3 WE

WORTH

Russet t. owner .

992 2284 . The Fabrtc Shop ,
Pom er oy . Author ized Si nger
Sales a nd Se rvi ce . We
sharpen Scissors
3 29 lfc

could cause a problem of long

chains

Ninth in a Series of Money-Saving_Coupons

Reas onab le R~TE S Phon e
4&lt;16 4782 Gall•pol• s John

modern ki tc hen, with stove S EWING ' MACHINE ,
and refrigerator : $10,500.00.
Repa tr s, service, all makes

Move slowly and cautiousl y today concer nrng major fam ily
tssues A lapse in judgment

but whai you hoped tor 11 you

.,.....;(~hyp..:...h.,...w_d.;..l_23 Defensible

~~~~~~::::~====~~~~::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f=;:~~~~~41Nautical

LOOK &amp; SAVE

mower . ne• t to Stal e Hig h

good hay . Small stream and " c &gt;'1 1C TANK S CLE ANEO
all minerals. $225 .00 per acre

I
Bemlce Bede Osot
For Wodnelday, June 11, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)

substance

Sweeper s, toasters , 1rons
a I I sma ll applia n ces . Law~
way Ga r age on Route 1
acres of fine wild , pr tvate, and
Pho ne 985 -3825 .
peace ful land for nature
&lt;1 16 -ttr
lovers. 12 acres of bottom in ~ - - - -- --~ ----- ---,

(2 wds.)
· 9 Ennoble
10 Having irritated orbs

,

AstroGrapt:t

try to 1mpose your wdl on

38 Thin scale
39 Example
40 Tooth

ELWOOD BOWER S REPA IR
97

1 Flaxen
2 Grapevine
product
3 Van Druten
play ( 3 wds.)
4 Husbands
5 Dissipate
6 Within
7 - beta
kappa
8 Hotchner
best seller

4 :3C&gt;-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4: Mod Squad 6:
M' k M
C
1c ey ouse tub 8; Bonanza 15.
5:00-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Ne igh borhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
5·3C&gt;-News6 ; Beverly Hillbillies a; Hodgepodge Lodg~
20; Get Smart 15; Villa Alegre 33.
6:00-News 3,4,0, 10,13, 15:' ABC News 6; Electric
Company 20; One Of A Kind 33.
6:3C&gt;-NBC News 3,4, 15: ABC News 13; Bew itched 6:
CBS News 0, 10; WVU Football Highlights 9; Zoom
20 33
•
7:00-TWrhuth orMConsequences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars
6;
at's Y Line? 8; News 10; Let's Make A Dea l
13; Jimmy Dean 15; Lock , Stock &amp; Barrel20; Nova
33.
7:3C&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4;
Ohio Lottery 6; New Price Is Right 0; Consumer
Survival Kit 20: Wild Kingdom 10: To Tell The
Truth 13: American Outdoorsman 15.
8:00-Sunsh1ne 3,4,15; Barney Miller 6,13 ; The Wallons
8.10; Bill Moyer's Journal International Report 20
Evening At Symphony 33.
B bc
3
a· C&gt;- 0 rane 3,4, 15; Karen 6, 13.
9:00-Movle " Pete ' n' Tillie" 3.4.15; Streets of San
Francisco 6,13 ; Movie "The Goddess" 8; Mov ie
"The Battle of the Villa Florila" 10; Mah ler' s First
Symphony 20,33 .
10:00-Harry o·6,13; News 20; Woman 33.
10 :3()-Horace Marshall 33.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Special
13, FBI 6. Movie "They Call Me Trinity" 8; Movie
"Baby, The Rain Must Fall " 10: Janaki 33.
12 :30-Wide World Special 6.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

The outcome wrll be any thing

G.I.

your
Free
3284 ,
Co ,

6 30 Jt c

FOREST AND GAME _

.11 11 Hail," to

DOWN

I

23 O.T. book

·

deltv er ed . r ig ht to
pro 1ec t Fa-s t an d easy
, es tim at es Phone 992
Goeglein R ea dy Mtx
M tddl eport, Ohio

ACROSS
1 Sombrero
feature
5 Long-handled cup
11 Enticement
12 Breathe in
13 Augur
14 Took a pot
shot at
15 - de guerre
16 Imitate

22 Boundary

-

Cal l 992 -7008

,

l

·
12 :3C&gt;-BiankCheck3,15; S~llt Second6,13; Search t-or
Tomorrow 0,10; ElectrJc Company 33.
12:5$-NBC News 3.A.15
.
1:00-News 3; All My Children 6,13, Ph il Donah ue 8;
Young and The Restless 10; Not For \Nomen Only
15; Zoom 33.
\
1·3C&gt;-Days Of Our Loves 3,4,15; ABC Afternoon
Playbreak 6,13; As The World Turns 8, 10; Episode
Action 33.
2.00-Guldlng Light 8, 10; Family At War 33
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; Edge of Night 8, 10.
3:00-Anolher World 3,4:15: General Hospital 6,13;
~r1ce Is Rig ht 8,10 ; Lilias. Yoga and You 20; Play
. hess 33.
.
.
.
3.3o-Qne Life To L1ve 13, Lucy Show 6, Match Game
8, 10; Feeling Good 20 ; Folk Gutlar 33
4 00-Mr: Cart?"n 3; I Dream of Jeannie~; Somerset
15; Gilligan ~.Island~: Tattletalo;~ 8: Sesame Street
2~J33 , Movie Where s Charley ? 10; M1ke Douglas

THURSDAY, JUNE 12,1975
6 .0C&gt;-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6 2$-Farm Report 13.
6:3u- Five Minutes to Live By 4; News· 6; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10; Patterns tor Living 13.
6: 3s-&lt;:otumbus Today 4.
6:45-Morning Report 3; Farmilme 10.
7:00-Today 3,4,15; A. M. America 13,6; CBS · News
8,10.
Captain Kangaroo 0; Schoolies 10;
8·00-Lass1e 6;
Sesame Street 33.
0:3()-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8:55-Chuck White Reports 10.
9:00-A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 15; Lucy
Show 8; Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning with D J .
13: Sefaring Farmer 33
9:3()-Not For Women On ly 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping
GourmetS; New Zoo Revue 13; Tin Lady 33.
10 :00-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Joker' s Wild 8,10:
Dinah! 13; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
10: 3()-Wheel Of Fortune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10; F rying
Pans West 33 ..
11 :00-High Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 6; Now You
See 118,10; In Performance at Wolf Trap 33 .
11 :3()-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15; Blankety Blanks 13:
News 4; Love Of Life 8, 10.
11 :5$-Graham Kerr 8: Dan lmel's World 10.
12:00-Jackpot! 3,15; Password 6,13 : Bob Braun's 5050 Club 4; ~ews 8,10 ; M1ster Rogers 33.

Pompey
18 Chiffonier
20 Loft
material
21 - order

utlana

WILL DU ne use -~~d -~oof
pai nting , tree estimates

wa ter supply . and c1ty
wa ter , gara ge . THIS YOU
MUST S EE . $8,900
ALL OF THE ABOVE ARE
NEW LISTINGS AND WE
F EEL ARE GOOD BUYS .
CALL TODAY .
992-2259

·

b.y THOMAS JOSEPH

CALL 742 -4211
TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE,
CAR PET CONSUL TANl

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2SSO

YEAH , BUT TH!;Y

\
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11,1975
· r
I 1 :3u-Days at uur Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make a Deal 6,13;
As the World Turns 0,10; Folk Guitar 33 .
2 00-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13. Guiding Light O,IO ; The
Way 11 Was 33.
2:3C&gt;-Doctors 3,4,15; Big Showdown 6, 131 Edge of
Night 8,10; Saga of Western Man 33.
3:00-Another World 3.4.15; Gene ral Hospital 6,13;
Price is Right 0,10 ; RFD 20.
3· 3o-Dne Life to Live 13 , Lucy Show 61 Match Game
0. 10; The Way It Wa s 20: Er ica 33 .
3. 4$-Theonie 33.
4:00-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of J ea nnie 4; Somerset
15; Gilligan's Is. 6: Tattletales 8; Sesame St . 20,33,
Movie :'Th~ Gi lj_ll~-~ Door" 10. Mike Douglas 13.
4:3C&gt;-Bewitched 3; Merv GrJffl n 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Cl.ub a: Bonanza 15
5:00-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mi ster Rogers' Neigh borhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
5:3u-News 6; Beverly Hillbil lies 8; Hodgepo~ge Lodge
. 20; Get Smart 15. 1 Elec. Co .. 33

~a1.'6td'

SEPTIC TANK S c le a n ed
Modern Sa nt!at io11 992 -3954
or 992 73&lt;1 9
9 18 lfc

c hen , d rn 1ng, utilrty, own

•

~

COULD t SE., Hflft?
~Y, llifflf 'S
SOMETH IH ' TO DO

5 13 261C

Shop) . Pr ice includes all
fi•tures, 2 BR , l!ath , kit-

992 5786.

. .

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE--THE LIFE OF (ANNIE) RILEY

and
haultng ,
cutltng ,
welding ,
ca rp en tr y,
plum b i ng , ele c maso nry
a nd general r e modeling
Ca ll S ~il Pool 992 5126

$133 per month , includes
tnterest . $ fl ,500 .
POMEROY - 1/2 mile from
Union Ave. Ph Acre. home
or
bus1ness,
(Beauty

plants , geraniums , azaleas ,
6-8-121c
petunias . porch
bo~ees ,
hanqinq bas~ ets . Cleland 's 5 RM
HOU SE wilh balh ,
Gr C'e n h,.ou se .
Ge raldine .
15 0x100
lot
Recently
Cl elan d . ~acin e Ohio -.15771.
r e nova te~
Phon e 992 578 6
5 18 lie
'
6 8 171 c

' I

-· -

l

Does your home
require any of these \
services?
I
WE DO:
'
Roofing
Siding
Complete
Home
Maintenance.

G I:::Nt: ~A L R e patr ,C~;n-up

.

BED DING

5-.J· 1 mo .

D &amp; 0 -T RE_E_ T r-;~~~g~ zo
year s ex p erren ce In sur ed
fr,ee es t imt:Jtes Ca ll 992 3057 ,
Coolvill e Phone ( 1) 667 :

Ac r es good clean ground

--

LITI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

LET US DO IT! !

Room AdditloM
anciGarlf"

5 9 261p

water tank EXCELLENT
AT S10,000 .
NEAR DEXTER 30

Pets For Sale

EVERYBODY
Shops the

Home Building

PR I Ct:
Co n s tru c lion
Co .
Roo ftng . Spouti ng, Ge mmi
tilt tn r e pl ace m ent , Wtn
dows , complete rem od el tng
Phon e 74 2 6273 or (30 4) 773
568·1

6 6-61p
- - -- - - N EED A n ew home buil t on

NEWSPAPER

Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211
or 992-5700

Ph. 915-4102

5-2 521p

building s. well and creel&lt;.
$3,500 down , ba la nce a t

TERRACE A nltQUe Shop
your lot? Contact M rl o B .
ret irtng fr om busi n ess. A ll
Hul c ht son , R utland , Oh10 .
Pho ne 742 36 15.
me r chandi se in stock wi ll b e
sold at a lar ge discount .
5 8 tfc
Ter ra ce
A nti ques.
108
Leg1on
Terrac e
Lee SER VI CE statio n and garage ,
RudtStll
m Rutland W tll fina nce or
l ease Phon e 7d2 5052
6-6-261p
5 14 26t c
1972 MACK
" Maxt dyn e-:;-tractor . COE Sleep er , 19 70 SEVEN ROOM S AN D BA TH
HOME IN Pom e r oy on
Hobbs trailer , 40ft Trans cold ·r e frigerator , un 1t
Butt ernut Ave ., Nic e kit
Lathem time clock with
c h en , n ew roof, iust 1n
car d hold e r and c ards .
s tall ed , pr tee d at S18,000 .
Seen by appointment Ca ll
Phone 992 3736, 8 to 4 30
P m Phon e 992 5938 after 5 · 992 2020
p m
6 3-121p

A_tr conditi_onlng, plum .
bmg , heattng, roofing ,
spouttng, general sheet
metal work.

EXCAVA TIN G. dozer , loa der
and backhoe work , sept tc
tanks
tnsta llcd ,
dump
!ru c ks and lo boys fo r hir e ;
w t! l ha ul f i ll dirt, top sotl.
ltm estone an d grave l , Ca ll
~ Bob - or Roger Jeffers, day
ph one 992 -7089 , ni ght ph on e
992 3525 or 99 2 5232
2-11 tf c

Chesttr, Ohio

EX CAVA f iN G ,
Doz er ,
B.:tckhoe . dtfcher , water
l1 n es, fo oter s, drams , roads
and br ush c l eantng No job
too sma l l, n o weathe r too
bad
Phone Ch ar l es R
Hatfield , Rt . 1, Rutland .
Oht o Phon e 74 2 6092

rang e, ref . and other
furniture inc luded, some
ca rpeting , new N . gas
for ced air furnace , ne w hot

T W? NEW 3 bed room homes
w tth 1 car gar age, carpe t ed ,
F H A or ba n k f tna n ctng
Phon e 74 2 361 5 or se e Milo
Hul chrnso n , R utland .
5 8 lfc

0

4·l ·75

Colistndion fA

R &amp; S Exca.vating , Back ho e
and li gh t ha uling serv i ces
Dr tv eway sla g delivere d .
P hon e 1304 ) 773 -5346 or 742 366&lt;1 d ay or even in gs
·
6-&lt;1 26 tc

outsid e. could have 2
apartments, 5 BR . 2 bath s,

Real Estate· For Sale

Racine Plumb~ng
&amp; Heating

I

outbuildings . one water

fram e,

HelL

Bi el · · -

On aluminum replacemenT
Windows. stdtng, sTorm
doors and windows. ra1hng ,
phone
Charles
L1s1e ,
Syracuse,
Ohio .
Carl
Jacob , Sales Represen·
tative .

supp ly . $7,600 do wn , bal
$290 per month includes
. interest. $38,000 .
POMEROY - 2'12 story

197 1 SUZU K I TM 400 an d 1973
Ya_maha SC500 d 1rl bi~e s
Pr tce d to se ll Phon e 985 'l L ARGE lot s, r ur al wat er
3938
av.atla b l e Har d r oa d , 3
5 30 121 p
m ti es f rom by pass on
Lead tng Cree k Road Phon e
742 3108
U S Go ld co 1ns - 21 7 dollars
5 9 30tc
?65 r; doll ars S88, 10 dollar s:
$1~ 0 . 20 do lla r s, 5250 , A ll
co1ps tn F or b ett er con - TWO BEDROOM house for
d tlion Will take oth er 1n or
sa l e Phon e 985 410 2
trade Call Rog er Wams ley
6 10 261C
742 -3651
'

- -- -

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

REALTY

DEXTER

ap

EVERY "'ltiUTE -

frame. 3 BR . barn and

-

3980

6-6-1 mo .

-Ac res - Land is clean and
lays nic e Home 2 stor y

GU N S A N D A MMO Our
s um me r s to c k t S no w
arr1 v 1ng Rtfles , shotg un s,
PI Sto l s, r e to adt ng eq u tp
22
scopes . ammunitaons .
MAG h p $3 per box . $2 7 so
per ca rton (500) 21 1 r h p
Sl 10 p er loop Get th em
w hil e they l as t Store ho ur s
eff ec tive May 19 Monday
Thur sda y 9 a m to 6 p m ,
Fr •da y and Sa t urda y 9 am
to 9 P m VI LLAGE GU N
S H O ~PE ,
266 Mil l St
Middl eport
'
5 18 30 tc

NOTI CE f rom Berry Mt!ler
M ob ile Home Sales ! H ere tS
a n ew l1s ting of th e uni ts we
now ha ve on our l ot du e to
the forec losu r e of anot her
WAI'TR ESS, apply tn p erson ,
Mobil e Home Dealer
Craw 's Steak Hou se .
60x 12 Schult . tot al el ec tri c,
6-11-6tc
2 bedrm
6-6 6tc
60x l 2 PM C. 3 bed r m
COR N ER lot at Intersec t ton of
60x 12 Et cona , 2 bedrm .
USEO llvu~ L I T ZER ORGA N
St ate Rt 7 33, and 124 About
60x 12 Tit an , 2 bedrm
HALF P. R I C E . Tak e ave~
P ~ acres Phone 992 5786
60x12 Dar ia n , 2 b edrm 2
pa yme n ts Wrde : CREDIT
6-8-12t c
baths~
DEPARTMEN T ,
210
60x 12 Na shua , 3 b ed r m
Broa dw ay Str eet, J ~ckson
8 R M house and 12 acres in
60x l2
Globemaster,
3
Oh iO 45640
I
• '
Middleport En c lased back
b edrm
por ch , wall to -wa l l car
6-5 6tc
60x 1? Broadlane . 2 bedrm
p eting , paneli ng, in kitchen
4X 12 ttpo ut
IN
bri c~
and paneling , 2
60Xl.4fNew Moon , 2 bedr m , HOT WAT ER heat er l 5 yr s.
old , "li ke new " elec or gas ,
bed rms paneled , b asement.
:
w as her dr ye r
w hol e house a c Phon e 992
JO ga l !on and 40 gal , S35 up .
M~SON
60x 12 Va 11anh 2 bedr m
3278 .
KU~L" S
BARGAIN
60x 11 PM c, J bedrm
6·8 -6t,c
C ENTER . TUPPER S
CONTACT
60x 12 Sh e'r:woo d P .:i rk , 3
• , _ - - - .!. ~
· -.--- - - PLAIN S, OHIO
bedrm
"tft"'"
35 x8 Glid er
6-5 151 c CORNER bnc k building in
Pomeroy Business Sect1on
35x8 Pa cemaker .
on a 40 ' x 85 ' lot Phone 992
Th ese are mos tl y all lat e MOD ERN Walnut ste reo
992-2156
57~6
r~dlo .. 8 track tape corn .
models { some ne ver lived
6 10 12tc
b1natton , am fm · rad i o .
tn l and wi ll b e liQu tda ted al
- -- - -·-- ·-··----· ·-..1
Bal an ce S10J .72, or terms
a very la r ge discount So if
Ca ll 992 3965 .
· BU SINES S bldg in downtQwn
, you ar e tn t ere st ed in a
Pomeroy si tuat ed on 25' x
6
A lfc
Mob1l
e
ljlQI')~.-el
a
hug
e
SI AM E SE kitt ens PhOne 949
75 ' lot. .presently occupied
sav.ng,
./~1
wait.
Stop
oi 114 .
Phone 992 5786
today . ...... Berry Mtller f L UTE , like new . S130. Phone
6 ll -31c
68 -121c
Mobil e Home Sa les, 705
992 3255
F." ahon St. , Belpre , OhtO,
6 8-6t p 31 ;o A CRE S in Pomeroy with
Ph 423 953 I
sewerage , c fly water . Phone
6-S-11fc
SOMEONE to cut grass fo r
home Ca ll 992 -777t.
6-10 3tc

NEAR

Pom eroY

Call Before 7: 30A.M.
Or Afler6 :00 P.M.
9q9-3604
5-7-1 mo.

992·2470 .

MAIN
POMEROY,O

QUART F ruit jars , 11 to 12 1 72 A CRE S land and locust
po s t s A l so , 19b5 Ford L TO
doz Phon e 247 2464 Letart
Phone 742 3656
Fails
5 23 521p
6 10 31c
CH EV R 0 L ET -;sa-;n-;f~; ; ith
Holl ey 4 barrel Phone 99 2

EXCAVATING

992-5786

608 E.

GUARA NT EEO

pltan ces R. n ~ _ fw nilllr'~
Ope n 9· 5 Wed . througn )bn .
Ph .: 667 · 3858 .
5 15 1 mo

We Build the Besl and
Repair the Rest.
-Cabinets Installed-

PULLINS

Reg . l j 9.95
139 9S
4,000 BTU
~ o ther

" B A RGAIN S are
our
middl e name" tn c l ean ,
u se d
furn1t ur e ,

Racine, Ohio

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

123 1ttc

t• PT l tkc new. 3 r ooms , w 1th
l ar ge bath . tabl etop range ,
larg e cl oset Eas t Main Sl,
P omeroy See to app r ec iat e
Phon e G all tpOitS durtng day ,
4J6 7699 eve n ings 446 953 9
« IU lf c

or

Septic Tanks Ins!a lied

PORTA·COOLTM
ROOM-to-ROOM

I

Hour

Regular and

ON
CORNER LOT IN
POMEROY
Business Section
Phone 992-3975 or

991 5565 or 991 1826

" At Caut1on L tght"

NEIGLER
Building Supp~

Excavator Type

40x85
Brick Building

·- -- - - -- - - -

Ph. 992 -2174

Contract Work.

FOR SALE!

R E G Polled H er efo r d b~l ~, 2
year lmg s, 1 4 yr old Al l
Rollo Mtxer Breed . P hon e·

COU N T 'RY
MObi l E Home
Pa rk . Rt 33, ten mtlesnort h
of Pome r oy La r g~ lo ts Wi th
conc r et e pa!tos , si dewa l ks ,
runne r s and of f st reet
parktng Ph.on e 992 7479

7178

6 10 51p

----------

PI CKI NG up pian o i n y~u r
area , look ing tor r esponsib le
to
tak e
ov er
pa rt y
paym cn t s
Ca ll
C r e dtt
Manager co l lect. {614 ) 772 5669 or wr 1te 260 E Mam St
Chil l tcothe , Ohio 45601.
.,
6 8 61C

B EDR M
fra i ler with
ut tllltes patd . partly fur
n ts hed i n trail er park on Rt
33, near Bur I ingham Phon e
99 ? 775 1
6 1 tf c

6-11 31p
- - - ·- - · - --- -----

Wanted To Buy

992 2221 .

6 6

3

PR'I VATE m eeting roo m for
anY organ rza l 1on , pho n e 99 2
39 75
3 1t tfc

PLUMB IN G, heating , r epatr
ap d tn stallafton , el ec t rica l ,
water pump r epa i r , roo fin g ,
ro of an d hou se painting ,
general repatr R ea sonable
rat es , fre e es t tm ates
15
yea r
ex p ertence
Cal l
Charles sr n c l a tr , 98 5 d12 1 or

--- - -

by

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER
Rf..:. ~ • TunnPn Ptams, 0 .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

BACKHOES
Rent

:'

Nathan B1gg_s
Rad1ator Specialist

5· 14-1 mo

For

,

'

! Television.log for easy viewing

6 00-N ews 3 ,4,8 ,1013
, .15; ABC News6; El ec . Ca . 20;
Bluegrass Music 33.
6· 3C&gt;-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8,10; Zoom 20,33.
7.00-Tr uth or Cons . 3,4; · Bowling for Dollars 6;
What's My Line 8; : News 1o1 Country M us ic
Jubilee 13; Phil Donahue. 13: Phil Donahue 15,
Feeling Good 20; You Owe It To Yourself 33.
7 3C&gt;-Police Surgeon 3; Name That T une 4 , Let's
Make a Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Book Beat 20:
The Judge 10; To Tell the Truth 13 ; Episode action
33.
8:00-Little House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; That 's My
Mama 6,13; Tony Orlando 8, 10. Feeling Good 33 ;
Old Folks Aren' t At Home 20.
8:3C&gt;-Movle "It Couldn't Happen to a Nicer Guy" 13:
Movie "Carter's Army" 6; ; Double Reed 33 .
, 9:00-Lucas Tanner 3,4,15: Cannon 8,10; Woman Alive
20: Masterpiece Theatre 33 .
10 :00-Petrocelli 3, 4, 151 Baretta 6, 13 , Best of
Magazine 0,10; News 20; Family at War 33 .
11:00-N ews 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Special 13;
FBI6: Movie " Gold of the Seven Saints" 8; Movie
" Paid In Full" 10: Janaki 33 .
12 :3()-Wide World Special 6.
1·00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

5·tl· t mo .

F r om the larg est T r uc k or
Bulldo2er Radiato r to thP
smallest Heater Co r e

Phone 992-5682 or
992 -7121

Real Estate for Sale

1967 TRIUMPH motorcy cle
650, pa rtiall y ch opp ed R u n~
good . Phone 247 279 1
6 8 6tc

FU RN
apart me nt
Ph one 992 3658 .
6 1 tfc

JFAM I LY Ya rd Sa l e, June 10,
l land12from9a m td/ J JO
P m at the Sh trley D ugan
r est d encc ,
tn
Ractne
Loca ted al corner of Main
and Broa dway
6 10 2tc

Un ton , At hens . Ohio Also .
10b pr tntmg
4 29-3Btp

E XP ERIEN CEO

in Mld
ON E D up l ex apt
d l epo rt I hous e tn Pom ero y
Call !30.J l 882 2050 . coll ect
5 n lfc

3 fi NO .! ROOM f ur n is hed an-d
un f urntshed
apar tmen ts.
Phone 992 543 4
4 12 tfc

YARD Sal e, June 11 throug h
J une l :l 9 am ttl I dark
rlalf mtle fr om D anv tll e on
R t 325 Phon e 7.t2 4402
6 10 Jtc

and
Automobile
Transmission
Repair

mob i I e home , '-'~----_::_.:..:.::..:..:...:_:__:.,:::_:~:__ _ __ _ _ __j
1 ,
ac .
m tle
ou t
of
1967 FORD pi c k up 1 1 ton w trn
H arr tsonvt lt e on Co Rd . 3
topp er Phon e 247 -2022
Phon e 7J? 580?
6 11 Jt c
6 6 6t c
CUSTOM foam grtp st eerin g 1967 FOR D conve rt ible, good
2 BEDROOM mobtl e ho m e
whee l and adap tors to Itt
car $450 Ph one 992 530 1
Ph one 992 7649
small Chrysl er produ c t or 69
6 8 6tc
6 6 6tc
or n ewer General Mo to r s
produ ct. $ 15 Phon e 949 2181
2 BEDRM trailer , $27 p er
19 70 P L YMOUT H , 6 c yt
or 949 .:1989
w ee k All utilif teS pai d
a utomat tc, $300 an d 1967 T
6
10
31p
Ph one 992 332 4
B tr d , S4 00 Phone 742 359"1
6 6 tfc
6 1a 2tc
OR DER any CB fro m lndtan
U N FURN I SHED 3 bed rm
Joe 's Sp or ts and CB 's at 10 1967 FOR 0 conv ertibl e, good
gar age apa rtm en t , SlO O per
car $d50 Phone 992 5301
p e t above cos! and ShtP
month , elec an d w at er patd
6 8 6tc
pm g 308 Pag e St , M td
353 Pal mer St , Mtd dl epor t
dleport
Call 997 7485
5 18 30tc
6 B 5tc

TRA I LER spac e for rent in
Mt dd l eport
Ca ll 992 2625
.t 27 -lf c

mo

EXPERI.ENC:ED
:. -.
Radiato
· Service - -:----

Roger Hysell's
Garage

CO.I(J:\
~

POMEROY, OHIO

E\ E D R 00 M

P ORCH Sa l es . 312 P ea rl 51..
Mid d leport , Ohto Thu r sday
and Frt day , 9 am . It t\ 5 p m
6 10 Jtc

W

POM E~~! E~E~~~~

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

5 1 I It c

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992-3993 _
4 10 I

OHo GOO O GRIEF, LJ~CLE PLATO~
DON 'T TELL ME YOU'RE G01~6 TO
START PESTERING ME A6AIN
TO GET MARRIED!'

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

slid ing rea r glass. chrome grille. bumper &amp; mldg s.

mob .te h ome ,
Harrtsonvtlle area , $ 135
month , ut tltl 1es fur n tsh ed
except ctec No p ets . 1 chtld
p ermitt ed Pho ne 7J2 3123
6-S 61p

a p t 5 room s and ba t h,
rH ce lar ge yard bath and t .,
390 South
S€' con d 5 1 ,
Mtddle po rt adults only
Phon E 991 5262 ev enm gs

lOlA'S
BEAUTY SALON

LARRY I,AVE~DER

Also Repairs On All
Riding Tractors
498 Locu st St.
Mtddleport , Ohio
59 _i

$3695

T on, Che yenn e, 350 V -8, power steermg &amp; brakes,
a utomatic . lactory air, 750x 16-6 ply frt ., 8 ply rear,

a RM

Yard Sale

Ground

31·1

BEO~OOM

f U RN

Blown 1nto Walls &amp; Allies'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
_ SIOING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS·AWNINGS

$1595

For Sale

RED bt l lfold Conten ts tnStde
ne eded Phon e 992 3.122
6 8 ff c

WI SH to thank everyone fo r
the tr cards and vtst ts wh ile 1
was m th e hospttal Thanks
to th e sta ff and nurs es at
Holzer and SEOEM S Your
thoug htfuln ess w ill a lways
be remem be r ed
Gladys
Mor gan
6 11 lt c

1n

Merle Norman
t:osmetics

Blown
Insulation Services

992-3092

less than 17 ,000 mi les, a real ni ce on e.

l ude11iah ft' ( ' l'ldt' tU'I ' uf .~ f n nyf It - "PROOF "

Card of Thanks

-

6 8 ll c

1973 CHEVROLET 8' FLEETS! DE

1

TE RSHOP

Phone

1974 CHEVELLE
· $3095
Malibu HT Cpe .. 350 V-8 eng1ne, power steer ing, fac-

D eposit re qu tr ed
N o c hi l dren or pets Phon e
?9? 2.tJ 1 etH er 5 30 p m
l'l 1o tfc

lumbt • ., FORTY AGONY COUPON INFLUX

··-

308

TWO b e dr oom mob il e hom e

'l

FREE ESTIMATES

Sales &amp; Service

hom e, s uttabl e for

Deposll r eqvtrcd

J-door . loca l car, a ir conditioned, fu ll equ i pment.

r xr rr x r

WILKINSON
SMALL ENG

Motor Co.

1 f:\ E DR M furn 1shed mob tle
hom e no p e ts Ca l l 992 7A 79
6 4 He

~-

- - -

s 2 ttc

~y racus e

(Anewrr• lon1orro"")

A n 1••r:

-

992 5858 ''

•

r]

TADISS

Phone

Page St , Middleport
99'] 3509

TRIED T O REDUCE
WHAT WAS EDITED
IN A MIX-UP.

OF
QUALITY

I m1le l r orn

. . . ---.. . . :, . . . . . -

j

.•'

'

I

I

!

..J.

�...
••
'

~IYMID~rn-lk./ ~~

Unscramblethe~eroorJumbl.,_

..

I

r-~-----_..~-·--...,.·--..-·-----..-..----..----..-._--

'
&amp;I.J -i~

- --· .....

.

For Fast Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
2 SIGNS
Business
SerVices
I
Pomeroy l==--~---~~
-- ~~======~~~--~

®

I

one lttter to each square, to

Auto Sales

For Rent

form four ordinary "''ords.

FU~N I S HED

KILlERS BELIEVE
YOU DIED. LETS KEEP

LIZZ,
TO
AVOID ALL REPORTERS
AND TV PEOPl.E , OUR
"r."";;I-.., I BOYS ARE PLEDGED
"'--~ .~,- ,TO

THEM THAT WAY.

SECRECY.

apa rtment ,

1n M 1d dl e p or f

adult s onl y

P!lone 992 3874

3 15 lfc

TRl\ t LER Sp iiCC

I

PRIPE

Pon1eroy

I I I tJ I

rJ

l

MOP. I L E

rn en

I
I

I [J

Now lliTanre the circled letten1
to form the surpriae answer, u
~-=~:::;;;:~=~~==~-=••nested by the above cartoon.

'----"P=·
rill *=-:·
=-..:::::
RISl:.:::ANSWII~·~I

·I

ft-IIC"rdn 1

..

tory t~ir , t inted gla ss, r a d to, w hee l covers. good tires,
blk mtenor , sil ver grey f i nish Special.

1971 MATADOR

Lost

For Rent or Sale
MOEHL E ho me Wtth ntce lot.
new house f urnttur e and
pa t to gas heat. C1 ty water
Ava t lable
now
Phon e
Al bert Htll , Rac1ne , 9J9 2261
6 11 61C

Notice
P ASTURE for r en t near
Po me r oy , Oh to A lso Ul li tly
tractor for sale . -1 x 8, $75
Ph one 992 52J 7
6 11 31p

_, -

Employment Wanted
EXPERIENCED tn tak tng
Ccl r e of eld erly pat tents
Re f eren ces , Phon e (3 04 1
773 52 J9
6 11101 c

NOW se ll ing F uller Brush
Produ cts , phone 992 3410
1 24 -tfc
CH A MP I ON br ed Engl ts h
Setter 'at stu d SSO P lus one
4 yr ma r e pony , for sal e for
$50 Br tdle and halt e r~ m
eluded Phone 992 5961 ~
6 10 41p

CARPENTER work ~ cei l tng
pane l ing
f lo ortng . etc
Phon e 991 2759
6 10 10tc

-·-- - - - - --

I ~EMOD ELING .

Pl umb ing ,
h ea11ng and all t ypes of
gene ra l
repa.r
W or k
gua rante ed 20 years ex
pe r ience
Phon e 992 2d09
s 1 tf c

P ARASOL
Bou f tque
an
nounc es the addit ion of a
new
operator
Helen
N ewland Jun e Special Hot
01 1 condtt toner Reg S3 n ow
5150 d urmg the month of
Jun e Shop wtll be c losed on
Tuesday un ttl Au g 5 Open
Wednesday th r u Satur da y
Phone 985414 1
6 8 12tc

F LE A Market Thursday ,
F r tday ,
Satu rda y
and
Sunday , 10 a m to 6 p m at
the Cr ossroads on Rl 12a
6 11 Jtc

WEDDING

J tAMILY Yar d Sa l e, F r tday
and Sat ur day . 10 am at 4th
and Brm-..·n , Mason . W Va

PHOTOS

6 11 3tp

QUALITY WORK

GARAGE Sales across fr om
Br adb ury Sc hool s ta r t 1ng
J un e 10 throu g h J une 14
Lots of nt ce tl ems
6 10 Jtc

AT

LOW PRICES
Call
992-7453 In Ohio
882-2698 In W. Va .
C AS H patd for al l makes and
mode ls of mobile homes
Phone ar ea code 614 423

9531

d 13 tfc

J UN K autos , complete and
delivered to our yar d we
p tck up auto bod ies and buy
a ll ktndsof scrap metal s and
•ron . R 1der 's Sa l..,.age, St
Rt 124, Rt . 4, Pomeroy ,
Oh io Call 99 2 5468 .
10 17 -lfc
QUICK ,.,RINT by ma1t
camera r eady copy
pa ge $5 55 •fir st 100;
each addt t ional 100
to
c opy , check

P LU S.

from
On e
$1 15
Send
LET

72

YAR D Sale , Childr en 's game s
and c loth es . St Rt 14 3 abo ut
I mile out o f Ha r r isonv i ll e
to wa r ds Pome roy J une 10
and II
6 10 21c

T RAILER for 12 14 f t f i sh i ng
boat Phone 992 7422 o r 992

WA N T ED -· ha y , old or n ew
Phon e Eskey Ht 11 , Pomeroy

992 3885

6 8 31p

1964 A ND old er U . S Co tns .
Wtl l pay 24 1 ' for dtm es, 60c
for quar te r s, $ 1 20 for half
Call Roge r Wams l ey , 742

6· S· I2tc

L fE .;-Ca~ Was~ o n-R-;-~;;~t

3651

th e c ro ssroa ds S3 mstde and
out, Wa x jobs, $ 15 Phone
992 3180 F r ee p ~e kup and
deltve r y se r v tce
6 3 121c

6 6 121p

WA NTED old upright pianos
An y condition Paying $10 00
each Fi rst floo r only W rit e
-- - -· -and g tve d ~re el 1ons to Wt lten
P tano Co. Bo x 18 8, SardtS ,
FOR your " Oil ot Mmk "
Oh 10 d3946
Cosmetics
Phon e
6 -S 6lp
BROWN'S 992 5113

--- -----

1-7-tfc
------ ------ --

O LD furnitur e, ice bo xes,
bra ss bed s, or comple te
households Write M
D.
Miller , Rt 4, Pomeroy ,
EXPERIENCED sa l es help
Oh1 0 Ca ll 992 7760
wan ted . apply in person a t
10 7-74
Montg o me r y War d , 109
Coun St , Pom er oy
6-S-6tc

Help Wanted

Mobile Homes For Sale

TV

197 1 SK YLINE 12x60
992 5872

te chntei an Phone (614 ) 667 -

3653

Phone
6 11 6tp

61p

6 8 6tc

.

Only 43 lb
mod els
op sal e

For Sale
ME N' S WORK un i forms , and
other used me r chandtse 30&lt;1
Matn St at Old H &amp; R Block ,
locat ton Pomeroy
101 , r T self conlatned tru c k
c amp er Phon e (304 ) 773

S905

611Litc

. ,OMEROYLANDMARK
9._Jock W. Corny, Mtr. •
..,_.
Pbono "2-2111 ·

CB 's A n tenna s, f is hing batt ,
f1 Sh m9 suppl tes, guns and
ammo tnd ta n Joe 's Sports
an_d C B 's 308 Page St .
Mtd dle por t

5 18 30tc

- -

-

-

6-10 Sip
----- - -

---

~- -

newly

- 157

pamt ed

CARRIER
WANTED

·THE DAILY SENTINEL

3041

Home has 3 BR . living.
kit chen , utility , i s 1112 story
frame, barn and oth e r

-

WANT AD WAY
i

SEL L your mob de home for
cash 15 homes wanted , 19SB·
thr u 1972 mod els . Phone

-

(6141 446 1425, Gallipol is .
3-9 7811
-- - - - -·-~ ·- -~---

plant s.

potted

-

LOJE50ME" HOW

---------

TlW TElfV\5101'1 'SEl IS
A HO'it:'( - I C~ TUr4 E
IN OP1 ANY PI.ACE IN

Til' WOILDAMD WA"ICH

Al'tD USl~M , J UST AS IF
~WAS RKiHT THt:RE · tf:S
LIKE &amp;f'IH' lti't'IStBLE-

H.-.,· M-MIT'6 A lOT Of
FI.IH · I'l.MD IT'S
A G ADGET

1HA1 (At!
BE MIGI'ITY
IJ S E~UL. -

OH, I M\'5H 1T
BeiNG NOSf'( AND THERf

~RE

9«11 ASH IH
TH ' RM;R - t

K WCM(

CAUSE I

(AUGKT SOME -

.
ALLEY OOP

Carpeting
-501 NYLON
99 Square
Yard

HERE 11-lEN
COME,OOP.'

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING
Construction
and Plumbing

327 N. 2nd

Middleport
5-30-1 mo .

4 30 tfc

GADFRY! ! THINK
T'"E:Y'i&lt;!E' GONNA
RUN US DOWN!

AIN'T SLOWIN'
DOWN ANY,
ORVILLE'!

4

RUBBER BACK
We hav e hundre ds o~
carpet values Your job ce
be completed in 1 fa
weeks
No tong watting 1
per iod Our i n staller has 28
years experience . E xpert
tn sta llation . You ' ll l1fl:e
what you get

GASOLINE ALLEY

We're

out

of
wood~
ChLJQ.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-4211
I'(

- -

.

-

Who'd miss

Veah.Eve! There's an
We'll have to old shed
push this
overthere
thinq home'

a few rotten
old boards;&gt;

UL ABNER

F=~~~~----~~r-------------~------------------~
-THE WHOlE
THAT II-YEAR-OLD IS -50 UNLESS WE LI5Tt:N To
WORL-D
THE HIGH LUMP OF HIS ROO&lt; MUSIC, AND ONLY
LUMP/STAN- WE:
HIS - HE'LL Bl-OW UP THE'
GAVE HIM THE

6· S·12tc

;uN-shej;Md co~t;,;ctin9an d
Remod elmg Se r vice Who le
house
r em o de l i n g
Sp ec ialties kitchen and
bath . Phone (30 4) 77J -5346or
7J2 3664 day ·or even mg .
6-4 26tc

H- f3()V\f3 -

----·--

READY MIX CUNCRETE

·

2 BUSINESS R.OOMS - With 2

base ment s , att~cs, etc ,
Phon e 949 3221 or 742 -d441

--

·

5-18-26tc

-· - ----~----- - - ~

Real .Estate For S.
NEW 3 bedrm . all elec. home .
wall to wall car'pet, !i v ing
rm ., dining rm ., kitchen ,
bath, I car garage . Grey
alu,m . si d ing in fr ont with
black shutt ers . Phon e 992
243_2, \or see Ri c k Morris
-"
6115tc

3 BEDROOM house , walt to
wall carpeting , large kit chen and bath , ut i lity room ,
wa'sh
room ,
'"
acre ,
a lum inum . Siding , storm
wip dows, storag e building .
Phon e
742 4601.
W i ll
sa c; rif ice for quic k sa le .

5-25 lfc

BUT IF lHAT&amp; WHO I
7HINI&lt; IT 15 , WE'RE
IN 1ROUBLE !

16 - were
(seemingly)
2 ds
\, W .)
·19 Spahn and
- and Pray
for Rain"
22 Star in Cetus

24 Exceeded
25 Cheerio!
27 F tw
00 ~ar
29 ~.H. City
30 Silly person
31 French city
36 Vitality
37 Statute

yo u io da y. You may tool
yo urself , but no one else

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No•. 22)
Don't attempt tasks Involving
h1gh costs at th•s bme, unless
yo u know exactly what you 're
domg

SAG ITT ARtUS (No¥. 23-Dec.
21) Yo u' re on treac herous •
footmg today rn bus 1n ess
dealrngs. A wrong dects ton wtll
rnc ur htgher-than-usuallosses.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan.

TAURUS (April 20·May 20)

19) Mak mg maJor decisions

Don t place yourself between
dissentmg factton s today . If

you ta ke sides. you 'll w1nd up
catch 1ng it from both.

w1ll be d1ffocult Cor you today. If
you have doubts about your
reasonrng , stall for time so you

can th1nk mo re clearly

GEMINI (Mary 21-Juno 20)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

Treat possesstons you rs
and others - with the respect
they deserve today. Otherw1se,
you might haiJe to furn1sh a
costly rep lacement.

Don't make deCISions beyond
you r rank today Let tho se pa1d
to g1ve the ord ers ca l l the
shots.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

Yo u 're careless wit h your
resources today. so you 're not
m a po si t1 on to adv1se others .
They'll wtnd up tn !he m1ddle of
yo ur muddle.

others today . Be extra-

Yesterday's Answer

yo u re not wilt be dtsastrous for

duration

considerate

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) n·s f~ne
to be llelghborly, but don'i
overdo 1: today. Several people
are go1ng Ia lry to load their
respon s1btliiies on you .

PISCES (Feb. 2CJ-March '20)

-Your

"

\;11Birthday
June 11 , 1975

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ThiS
os noi a . day tor l1nancial
dealings with fr iend s. Have second lhoughts before borrow1hg tram or lendmg to a pa l.

You'l l pla ce a he av1er
emph as ts than usual thiS year
on acquiring material goods.
Your prospects look promi s·
tng , provided you don t take
too many fl yers.

LIBRA . (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Presum~n~ to be someihmg

tNEWSPAPERENTERPRISE ASSN l

WIN AT BRIDGE
Today, Queen reigns supreme

25 Scheduled
26 In balance
'/:1 Madras
lady's garb
28 Father of

,..-t-4--11---;::;:;:-----'J
was . " The queen :._ th ere are
NORTH
11 lots of play ers who just hate to

I
6

•
•
t
•

~

29 Congo
region
32
Pitcher's

asset

Q 10
AQ 8
10 9 6 3
K J 10 4

EAST
WEST
• 9 8 54
• K J 62
• 10 7 6
• J 9 43
• K 42
• A 85
...
7 52
.9 3
SOUTH (01
• A7 3
• K 52
• QJ 7

!r.-+-+.-+-

33 Last Spanish
queen
34- blimey!
35 Endured
:r1 Ovei:-the-hill ~.rl-+­

"'AQ 86

Both vulnerable

Is

Complete Air Condition· Opentional Check

A X y D L B A A X R
LONGFELLOW

Norlh

East

Pa ss
Pass

3 NT. Pass

••
'

Keep watching our ads for more money·savlng coupons,
com1ng your way weekly.

MAW!!FGTCH
M'-/ DADBURN

.

SUPPER 1!

SERVICE A CUT ABOVE THE BEST
eJ NIASE Certified Mechlnics
• 20 Yiers Service Management EKperltnce
• All Work Guarentttd
• Reasonable Rates
'
eVery Friendly hople

r

Pass

1i

The bidding has been :

Opening lead - 2 •

s

vzx

·Free Car W~sh with Use 01 this Coupon

South

One letter simply stan4.~...!9r another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for !he two O's. e(f. Single letters. By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
In acCQrdance with our policy
hints .. Each day the code letters are different.
of being kind to declarers most
of the time, we have given
CRYPTOQUOTES
South a sure thmg play at trick
G
X
H
J
R
one
West has led from the kingVZEGF
KXSG
MEOUV
jack of spades and he can play
V N either the queen or 10 from
EU
B N XU
KSG
KSOOEXB
. dummy with complete success .
This dido 't he(p the South who
F E _O J U actually played thiS hand in a
WOXVVR
GNVEQX
rubber bridge game . He
studied , cogitated, thought,
SFSEG. - XB
ZNHX
llesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS DIFFICULT TO SAY HOW finally took a coin out of his
MUCH MEN'S MINDS ARE CONCIUATED BY A KIND pocket, tossed it while saring,
"Heads I play the queen .'
MANNER AND GENTLE SPEECH. - CICERO
South asked wh1ch card we
would have played · Jil)l's reply
(~ 1975 Kin1 Featurq $)'ndJcate,lnc.)

vzx

- Includes : Checking Complete System for Leeks
Add Fr•on II Necessary
,
•Check Atr Condition for proper operation
Rog . Proce ... S13.50
Speci~I ...SlO.Scr Plus

' .

Wesl .

lead from a jac k-high su1 t
against notrump ; few who hate
to lead from a ktng."
Oswald 's re ply was longe r . It
was . "Forty years ago when
you were a baby the correct
play would have been the 10
spot. In those early days of
contract , playe rs were taught
not to lead from kmgs if they
co,uld lmd any ·other lead In
fact there was a bridge player 's
Hell where the poor smner was
1c&lt;mcmua ly on lead against the , ,
· while holding all four _
kin gs . Today , however t he
queen IS the better try "

I N.T.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

eV~f&lt; HAD,JANIE.

West

Norih

East

Soulb

1¥
Pass
2•
Pass
2•
Pass
2•
Pass
'
You, South hold :
• 2 • J 9 7 s '5 • A K Q J 4 • A 2
What do you do now ? £:
A - Bid three diamonds lo show
that your diamonds are very good.
TODAY 'S QUESTION

1
1
~
1
•

i

Your partner continues to three
hearts Whatdo youdo now?
1
Answer Tomorrow
Send $1 lot JACOBY MODERN '
book to: "Win at Btidge,'" (clo IIIII :
newspaper), P.O. Box 489, Radio I

l

1

CllyStsfJon, New York. N.Y. 1001Q. ,

•

TELL

I OHll(
THAT ARE
5TAHt?IN6 5TIU. !
HIM

~ CA~

....J

'

"'

.-

l '.

DO BUSINESS
WITH A LEADER
1
.

.
I

Smith Nelson Motors, Inc,.

'

:l

i'

'

500 E.·Miinst.'
Ph. ffl-2174
.,....tfOY,O.
Strvlct ~n.: \VHkdeystiii4:JO-Sat. ttl~

I

..

ITS ENABLED U510 PAY OFF
ALLI30NNA'Z DEB10 AND
BUILD UP A HEAL1HY
BANK ACCOUNT

•aoo
ON A

· bedroom apartment over. Has ___ - - -·- · ------- ~~tfc

LARGE GARDEN
3
bedroom home. bath , rural
water, front porch on hard
road in small villaQe. S15,000 .
DOZER work , land clearing
ANTIQUE FURNITURE :._
by the acre, hourly or
and a 5 room home,.one floor ,
c ontract.
F arm
ponds ,
r oa d s, etc Large dozer and
ntce ~ath , porch, block garage
operator with over 20 years
on large level lot. All for just
ex p erience . Pullin s E x
$15.000.00.
cavating , Pomeroy , . Oh io.
Phone 992 2478
PROPERTY IS SELLING
12-19-lfc
GOOD AND HIGH. PUT - ·--- -- --------YOURS IN OUR AGENCY. W ILL trim or cut tree s and
shrubb ery ,
c!ear
out
PHONE 992-3325.

®OPENING TH I&amp; &amp;10RE
PI&lt;OVED 10 BE ONE OF
1HE BEf&gt;T IDEA'3 WE

WORTH

Russet t. owner .

992 2284 . The Fabrtc Shop ,
Pom er oy . Author ized Si nger
Sales a nd Se rvi ce . We
sharpen Scissors
3 29 lfc

could cause a problem of long

chains

Ninth in a Series of Money-Saving_Coupons

Reas onab le R~TE S Phon e
4&lt;16 4782 Gall•pol• s John

modern ki tc hen, with stove S EWING ' MACHINE ,
and refrigerator : $10,500.00.
Repa tr s, service, all makes

Move slowly and cautiousl y today concer nrng major fam ily
tssues A lapse in judgment

but whai you hoped tor 11 you

.,.....;(~hyp..:...h.,...w_d.;..l_23 Defensible

~~~~~~::::~====~~~~::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f=;:~~~~~41Nautical

LOOK &amp; SAVE

mower . ne• t to Stal e Hig h

good hay . Small stream and " c &gt;'1 1C TANK S CLE ANEO
all minerals. $225 .00 per acre

I
Bemlce Bede Osot
For Wodnelday, June 11, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)

substance

Sweeper s, toasters , 1rons
a I I sma ll applia n ces . Law~
way Ga r age on Route 1
acres of fine wild , pr tvate, and
Pho ne 985 -3825 .
peace ful land for nature
&lt;1 16 -ttr
lovers. 12 acres of bottom in ~ - - - -- --~ ----- ---,

(2 wds.)
· 9 Ennoble
10 Having irritated orbs

,

AstroGrapt:t

try to 1mpose your wdl on

38 Thin scale
39 Example
40 Tooth

ELWOOD BOWER S REPA IR
97

1 Flaxen
2 Grapevine
product
3 Van Druten
play ( 3 wds.)
4 Husbands
5 Dissipate
6 Within
7 - beta
kappa
8 Hotchner
best seller

4 :3C&gt;-Bewltched 3; Merv Griffin 4: Mod Squad 6:
M' k M
C
1c ey ouse tub 8; Bonanza 15.
5:00-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mister Rogers' Ne igh borhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
5·3C&gt;-News6 ; Beverly Hillbillies a; Hodgepodge Lodg~
20; Get Smart 15; Villa Alegre 33.
6:00-News 3,4,0, 10,13, 15:' ABC News 6; Electric
Company 20; One Of A Kind 33.
6:3C&gt;-NBC News 3,4, 15: ABC News 13; Bew itched 6:
CBS News 0, 10; WVU Football Highlights 9; Zoom
20 33
•
7:00-TWrhuth orMConsequences 3,4; Bowling For Dollars
6;
at's Y Line? 8; News 10; Let's Make A Dea l
13; Jimmy Dean 15; Lock , Stock &amp; Barrel20; Nova
33.
7:3C&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4;
Ohio Lottery 6; New Price Is Right 0; Consumer
Survival Kit 20: Wild Kingdom 10: To Tell The
Truth 13: American Outdoorsman 15.
8:00-Sunsh1ne 3,4,15; Barney Miller 6,13 ; The Wallons
8.10; Bill Moyer's Journal International Report 20
Evening At Symphony 33.
B bc
3
a· C&gt;- 0 rane 3,4, 15; Karen 6, 13.
9:00-Movle " Pete ' n' Tillie" 3.4.15; Streets of San
Francisco 6,13 ; Movie "The Goddess" 8; Mov ie
"The Battle of the Villa Florila" 10; Mah ler' s First
Symphony 20,33 .
10:00-Harry o·6,13; News 20; Woman 33.
10 :3()-Horace Marshall 33.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Special
13, FBI 6. Movie "They Call Me Trinity" 8; Movie
"Baby, The Rain Must Fall " 10: Janaki 33.
12 :30-Wide World Special 6.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

The outcome wrll be any thing

G.I.

your
Free
3284 ,
Co ,

6 30 Jt c

FOREST AND GAME _

.11 11 Hail," to

DOWN

I

23 O.T. book

·

deltv er ed . r ig ht to
pro 1ec t Fa-s t an d easy
, es tim at es Phone 992
Goeglein R ea dy Mtx
M tddl eport, Ohio

ACROSS
1 Sombrero
feature
5 Long-handled cup
11 Enticement
12 Breathe in
13 Augur
14 Took a pot
shot at
15 - de guerre
16 Imitate

22 Boundary

-

Cal l 992 -7008

,

l

·
12 :3C&gt;-BiankCheck3,15; S~llt Second6,13; Search t-or
Tomorrow 0,10; ElectrJc Company 33.
12:5$-NBC News 3.A.15
.
1:00-News 3; All My Children 6,13, Ph il Donah ue 8;
Young and The Restless 10; Not For \Nomen Only
15; Zoom 33.
\
1·3C&gt;-Days Of Our Loves 3,4,15; ABC Afternoon
Playbreak 6,13; As The World Turns 8, 10; Episode
Action 33.
2.00-Guldlng Light 8, 10; Family At War 33
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; Edge of Night 8, 10.
3:00-Anolher World 3,4:15: General Hospital 6,13;
~r1ce Is Rig ht 8,10 ; Lilias. Yoga and You 20; Play
. hess 33.
.
.
.
3.3o-Qne Life To L1ve 13, Lucy Show 6, Match Game
8, 10; Feeling Good 20 ; Folk Gutlar 33
4 00-Mr: Cart?"n 3; I Dream of Jeannie~; Somerset
15; Gilligan ~.Island~: Tattletalo;~ 8: Sesame Street
2~J33 , Movie Where s Charley ? 10; M1ke Douglas

THURSDAY, JUNE 12,1975
6 .0C&gt;-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6 2$-Farm Report 13.
6:3u- Five Minutes to Live By 4; News· 6; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10; Patterns tor Living 13.
6: 3s-&lt;:otumbus Today 4.
6:45-Morning Report 3; Farmilme 10.
7:00-Today 3,4,15; A. M. America 13,6; CBS · News
8,10.
Captain Kangaroo 0; Schoolies 10;
8·00-Lass1e 6;
Sesame Street 33.
0:3()-Big Valley 6; Popeye 10.
8:55-Chuck White Reports 10.
9:00-A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 15; Lucy
Show 8; Captain Kangaroo 10; Morning with D J .
13: Sefaring Farmer 33
9:3()-Not For Women On ly 3; Dinah! 6; Galloping
GourmetS; New Zoo Revue 13; Tin Lady 33.
10 :00-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Joker' s Wild 8,10:
Dinah! 13; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
10: 3()-Wheel Of Fortune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10; F rying
Pans West 33 ..
11 :00-High Rollers 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 6; Now You
See 118,10; In Performance at Wolf Trap 33 .
11 :3()-Hollywood Squares 3,6,15; Blankety Blanks 13:
News 4; Love Of Life 8, 10.
11 :5$-Graham Kerr 8: Dan lmel's World 10.
12:00-Jackpot! 3,15; Password 6,13 : Bob Braun's 5050 Club 4; ~ews 8,10 ; M1ster Rogers 33.

Pompey
18 Chiffonier
20 Loft
material
21 - order

utlana

WILL DU ne use -~~d -~oof
pai nting , tree estimates

wa ter supply . and c1ty
wa ter , gara ge . THIS YOU
MUST S EE . $8,900
ALL OF THE ABOVE ARE
NEW LISTINGS AND WE
F EEL ARE GOOD BUYS .
CALL TODAY .
992-2259

·

b.y THOMAS JOSEPH

CALL 742 -4211
TALK TO WENDELL
GRATE,
CAR PET CONSUL TANl

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2SSO

YEAH , BUT TH!;Y

\
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11,1975
· r
I 1 :3u-Days at uur Lives 3,4, 15; Let's Make a Deal 6,13;
As the World Turns 0,10; Folk Guitar 33 .
2 00-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13. Guiding Light O,IO ; The
Way 11 Was 33.
2:3C&gt;-Doctors 3,4,15; Big Showdown 6, 131 Edge of
Night 8,10; Saga of Western Man 33.
3:00-Another World 3.4.15; Gene ral Hospital 6,13;
Price is Right 0,10 ; RFD 20.
3· 3o-Dne Life to Live 13 , Lucy Show 61 Match Game
0. 10; The Way It Wa s 20: Er ica 33 .
3. 4$-Theonie 33.
4:00-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of J ea nnie 4; Somerset
15; Gilligan's Is. 6: Tattletales 8; Sesame St . 20,33,
Movie :'Th~ Gi lj_ll~-~ Door" 10. Mike Douglas 13.
4:3C&gt;-Bewitched 3; Merv GrJffl n 4; Mod Squad 6;
Mickey Mouse Cl.ub a: Bonanza 15
5:00-FBI 3; Andy Griffith 8; Mi ster Rogers' Neigh borhood 20,33; Ironside 13.
5:3u-News 6; Beverly Hillbil lies 8; Hodgepo~ge Lodge
. 20; Get Smart 15. 1 Elec. Co .. 33

~a1.'6td'

SEPTIC TANK S c le a n ed
Modern Sa nt!at io11 992 -3954
or 992 73&lt;1 9
9 18 lfc

c hen , d rn 1ng, utilrty, own

•

~

COULD t SE., Hflft?
~Y, llifflf 'S
SOMETH IH ' TO DO

5 13 261C

Shop) . Pr ice includes all
fi•tures, 2 BR , l!ath , kit-

992 5786.

. .

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE--THE LIFE OF (ANNIE) RILEY

and
haultng ,
cutltng ,
welding ,
ca rp en tr y,
plum b i ng , ele c maso nry
a nd general r e modeling
Ca ll S ~il Pool 992 5126

$133 per month , includes
tnterest . $ fl ,500 .
POMEROY - 1/2 mile from
Union Ave. Ph Acre. home
or
bus1ness,
(Beauty

plants , geraniums , azaleas ,
6-8-121c
petunias . porch
bo~ees ,
hanqinq bas~ ets . Cleland 's 5 RM
HOU SE wilh balh ,
Gr C'e n h,.ou se .
Ge raldine .
15 0x100
lot
Recently
Cl elan d . ~acin e Ohio -.15771.
r e nova te~
Phon e 992 578 6
5 18 lie
'
6 8 171 c

' I

-· -

l

Does your home
require any of these \
services?
I
WE DO:
'
Roofing
Siding
Complete
Home
Maintenance.

G I:::Nt: ~A L R e patr ,C~;n-up

.

BED DING

5-.J· 1 mo .

D &amp; 0 -T RE_E_ T r-;~~~g~ zo
year s ex p erren ce In sur ed
fr,ee es t imt:Jtes Ca ll 992 3057 ,
Coolvill e Phone ( 1) 667 :

Ac r es good clean ground

--

LITI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

LET US DO IT! !

Room AdditloM
anciGarlf"

5 9 261p

water tank EXCELLENT
AT S10,000 .
NEAR DEXTER 30

Pets For Sale

EVERYBODY
Shops the

Home Building

PR I Ct:
Co n s tru c lion
Co .
Roo ftng . Spouti ng, Ge mmi
tilt tn r e pl ace m ent , Wtn
dows , complete rem od el tng
Phon e 74 2 6273 or (30 4) 773
568·1

6 6-61p
- - -- - - N EED A n ew home buil t on

NEWSPAPER

Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961
Emergency 949-2211
or 992-5700

Ph. 915-4102

5-2 521p

building s. well and creel&lt;.
$3,500 down , ba la nce a t

TERRACE A nltQUe Shop
your lot? Contact M rl o B .
ret irtng fr om busi n ess. A ll
Hul c ht son , R utland , Oh10 .
Pho ne 742 36 15.
me r chandi se in stock wi ll b e
sold at a lar ge discount .
5 8 tfc
Ter ra ce
A nti ques.
108
Leg1on
Terrac e
Lee SER VI CE statio n and garage ,
RudtStll
m Rutland W tll fina nce or
l ease Phon e 7d2 5052
6-6-261p
5 14 26t c
1972 MACK
" Maxt dyn e-:;-tractor . COE Sleep er , 19 70 SEVEN ROOM S AN D BA TH
HOME IN Pom e r oy on
Hobbs trailer , 40ft Trans cold ·r e frigerator , un 1t
Butt ernut Ave ., Nic e kit
Lathem time clock with
c h en , n ew roof, iust 1n
car d hold e r and c ards .
s tall ed , pr tee d at S18,000 .
Seen by appointment Ca ll
Phone 992 3736, 8 to 4 30
P m Phon e 992 5938 after 5 · 992 2020
p m
6 3-121p

A_tr conditi_onlng, plum .
bmg , heattng, roofing ,
spouttng, general sheet
metal work.

EXCAVA TIN G. dozer , loa der
and backhoe work , sept tc
tanks
tnsta llcd ,
dump
!ru c ks and lo boys fo r hir e ;
w t! l ha ul f i ll dirt, top sotl.
ltm estone an d grave l , Ca ll
~ Bob - or Roger Jeffers, day
ph one 992 -7089 , ni ght ph on e
992 3525 or 99 2 5232
2-11 tf c

Chesttr, Ohio

EX CAVA f iN G ,
Doz er ,
B.:tckhoe . dtfcher , water
l1 n es, fo oter s, drams , roads
and br ush c l eantng No job
too sma l l, n o weathe r too
bad
Phone Ch ar l es R
Hatfield , Rt . 1, Rutland .
Oht o Phon e 74 2 6092

rang e, ref . and other
furniture inc luded, some
ca rpeting , new N . gas
for ced air furnace , ne w hot

T W? NEW 3 bed room homes
w tth 1 car gar age, carpe t ed ,
F H A or ba n k f tna n ctng
Phon e 74 2 361 5 or se e Milo
Hul chrnso n , R utland .
5 8 lfc

0

4·l ·75

Colistndion fA

R &amp; S Exca.vating , Back ho e
and li gh t ha uling serv i ces
Dr tv eway sla g delivere d .
P hon e 1304 ) 773 -5346 or 742 366&lt;1 d ay or even in gs
·
6-&lt;1 26 tc

outsid e. could have 2
apartments, 5 BR . 2 bath s,

Real Estate· For Sale

Racine Plumb~ng
&amp; Heating

I

outbuildings . one water

fram e,

HelL

Bi el · · -

On aluminum replacemenT
Windows. stdtng, sTorm
doors and windows. ra1hng ,
phone
Charles
L1s1e ,
Syracuse,
Ohio .
Carl
Jacob , Sales Represen·
tative .

supp ly . $7,600 do wn , bal
$290 per month includes
. interest. $38,000 .
POMEROY - 2'12 story

197 1 SUZU K I TM 400 an d 1973
Ya_maha SC500 d 1rl bi~e s
Pr tce d to se ll Phon e 985 'l L ARGE lot s, r ur al wat er
3938
av.atla b l e Har d r oa d , 3
5 30 121 p
m ti es f rom by pass on
Lead tng Cree k Road Phon e
742 3108
U S Go ld co 1ns - 21 7 dollars
5 9 30tc
?65 r; doll ars S88, 10 dollar s:
$1~ 0 . 20 do lla r s, 5250 , A ll
co1ps tn F or b ett er con - TWO BEDROOM house for
d tlion Will take oth er 1n or
sa l e Phon e 985 410 2
trade Call Rog er Wams ley
6 10 261C
742 -3651
'

- -- -

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

REALTY

DEXTER

ap

EVERY "'ltiUTE -

frame. 3 BR . barn and

-

3980

6-6-1 mo .

-Ac res - Land is clean and
lays nic e Home 2 stor y

GU N S A N D A MMO Our
s um me r s to c k t S no w
arr1 v 1ng Rtfles , shotg un s,
PI Sto l s, r e to adt ng eq u tp
22
scopes . ammunitaons .
MAG h p $3 per box . $2 7 so
per ca rton (500) 21 1 r h p
Sl 10 p er loop Get th em
w hil e they l as t Store ho ur s
eff ec tive May 19 Monday
Thur sda y 9 a m to 6 p m ,
Fr •da y and Sa t urda y 9 am
to 9 P m VI LLAGE GU N
S H O ~PE ,
266 Mil l St
Middl eport
'
5 18 30 tc

NOTI CE f rom Berry Mt!ler
M ob ile Home Sales ! H ere tS
a n ew l1s ting of th e uni ts we
now ha ve on our l ot du e to
the forec losu r e of anot her
WAI'TR ESS, apply tn p erson ,
Mobil e Home Dealer
Craw 's Steak Hou se .
60x 12 Schult . tot al el ec tri c,
6-11-6tc
2 bedrm
6-6 6tc
60x l 2 PM C. 3 bed r m
COR N ER lot at Intersec t ton of
60x 12 Et cona , 2 bedrm .
USEO llvu~ L I T ZER ORGA N
St ate Rt 7 33, and 124 About
60x 12 Tit an , 2 bedrm
HALF P. R I C E . Tak e ave~
P ~ acres Phone 992 5786
60x12 Dar ia n , 2 b edrm 2
pa yme n ts Wrde : CREDIT
6-8-12t c
baths~
DEPARTMEN T ,
210
60x 12 Na shua , 3 b ed r m
Broa dw ay Str eet, J ~ckson
8 R M house and 12 acres in
60x l2
Globemaster,
3
Oh iO 45640
I
• '
Middleport En c lased back
b edrm
por ch , wall to -wa l l car
6-5 6tc
60x 1? Broadlane . 2 bedrm
p eting , paneli ng, in kitchen
4X 12 ttpo ut
IN
bri c~
and paneling , 2
60Xl.4fNew Moon , 2 bedr m , HOT WAT ER heat er l 5 yr s.
old , "li ke new " elec or gas ,
bed rms paneled , b asement.
:
w as her dr ye r
w hol e house a c Phon e 992
JO ga l !on and 40 gal , S35 up .
M~SON
60x 12 Va 11anh 2 bedr m
3278 .
KU~L" S
BARGAIN
60x 11 PM c, J bedrm
6·8 -6t,c
C ENTER . TUPPER S
CONTACT
60x 12 Sh e'r:woo d P .:i rk , 3
• , _ - - - .!. ~
· -.--- - - PLAIN S, OHIO
bedrm
"tft"'"
35 x8 Glid er
6-5 151 c CORNER bnc k building in
Pomeroy Business Sect1on
35x8 Pa cemaker .
on a 40 ' x 85 ' lot Phone 992
Th ese are mos tl y all lat e MOD ERN Walnut ste reo
992-2156
57~6
r~dlo .. 8 track tape corn .
models { some ne ver lived
6 10 12tc
b1natton , am fm · rad i o .
tn l and wi ll b e liQu tda ted al
- -- - -·-- ·-··----· ·-..1
Bal an ce S10J .72, or terms
a very la r ge discount So if
Ca ll 992 3965 .
· BU SINES S bldg in downtQwn
, you ar e tn t ere st ed in a
Pomeroy si tuat ed on 25' x
6
A lfc
Mob1l
e
ljlQI')~.-el
a
hug
e
SI AM E SE kitt ens PhOne 949
75 ' lot. .presently occupied
sav.ng,
./~1
wait.
Stop
oi 114 .
Phone 992 5786
today . ...... Berry Mtller f L UTE , like new . S130. Phone
6 ll -31c
68 -121c
Mobil e Home Sa les, 705
992 3255
F." ahon St. , Belpre , OhtO,
6 8-6t p 31 ;o A CRE S in Pomeroy with
Ph 423 953 I
sewerage , c fly water . Phone
6-S-11fc
SOMEONE to cut grass fo r
home Ca ll 992 -777t.
6-10 3tc

NEAR

Pom eroY

Call Before 7: 30A.M.
Or Afler6 :00 P.M.
9q9-3604
5-7-1 mo.

992·2470 .

MAIN
POMEROY,O

QUART F ruit jars , 11 to 12 1 72 A CRE S land and locust
po s t s A l so , 19b5 Ford L TO
doz Phon e 247 2464 Letart
Phone 742 3656
Fails
5 23 521p
6 10 31c
CH EV R 0 L ET -;sa-;n-;f~; ; ith
Holl ey 4 barrel Phone 99 2

EXCAVATING

992-5786

608 E.

GUARA NT EEO

pltan ces R. n ~ _ fw nilllr'~
Ope n 9· 5 Wed . througn )bn .
Ph .: 667 · 3858 .
5 15 1 mo

We Build the Besl and
Repair the Rest.
-Cabinets Installed-

PULLINS

Reg . l j 9.95
139 9S
4,000 BTU
~ o ther

" B A RGAIN S are
our
middl e name" tn c l ean ,
u se d
furn1t ur e ,

Racine, Ohio

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

123 1ttc

t• PT l tkc new. 3 r ooms , w 1th
l ar ge bath . tabl etop range ,
larg e cl oset Eas t Main Sl,
P omeroy See to app r ec iat e
Phon e G all tpOitS durtng day ,
4J6 7699 eve n ings 446 953 9
« IU lf c

or

Septic Tanks Ins!a lied

PORTA·COOLTM
ROOM-to-ROOM

I

Hour

Regular and

ON
CORNER LOT IN
POMEROY
Business Section
Phone 992-3975 or

991 5565 or 991 1826

" At Caut1on L tght"

NEIGLER
Building Supp~

Excavator Type

40x85
Brick Building

·- -- - - -- - - -

Ph. 992 -2174

Contract Work.

FOR SALE!

R E G Polled H er efo r d b~l ~, 2
year lmg s, 1 4 yr old Al l
Rollo Mtxer Breed . P hon e·

COU N T 'RY
MObi l E Home
Pa rk . Rt 33, ten mtlesnort h
of Pome r oy La r g~ lo ts Wi th
conc r et e pa!tos , si dewa l ks ,
runne r s and of f st reet
parktng Ph.on e 992 7479

7178

6 10 51p

----------

PI CKI NG up pian o i n y~u r
area , look ing tor r esponsib le
to
tak e
ov er
pa rt y
paym cn t s
Ca ll
C r e dtt
Manager co l lect. {614 ) 772 5669 or wr 1te 260 E Mam St
Chil l tcothe , Ohio 45601.
.,
6 8 61C

B EDR M
fra i ler with
ut tllltes patd . partly fur
n ts hed i n trail er park on Rt
33, near Bur I ingham Phon e
99 ? 775 1
6 1 tf c

6-11 31p
- - - ·- - · - --- -----

Wanted To Buy

992 2221 .

6 6

3

PR'I VATE m eeting roo m for
anY organ rza l 1on , pho n e 99 2
39 75
3 1t tfc

PLUMB IN G, heating , r epatr
ap d tn stallafton , el ec t rica l ,
water pump r epa i r , roo fin g ,
ro of an d hou se painting ,
general repatr R ea sonable
rat es , fre e es t tm ates
15
yea r
ex p ertence
Cal l
Charles sr n c l a tr , 98 5 d12 1 or

--- - -

by

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER
Rf..:. ~ • TunnPn Ptams, 0 .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

BACKHOES
Rent

:'

Nathan B1gg_s
Rad1ator Specialist

5· 14-1 mo

For

,

'

! Television.log for easy viewing

6 00-N ews 3 ,4,8 ,1013
, .15; ABC News6; El ec . Ca . 20;
Bluegrass Music 33.
6· 3C&gt;-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Bewitched 6;
CBS News 8,10; Zoom 20,33.
7.00-Tr uth or Cons . 3,4; · Bowling for Dollars 6;
What's My Line 8; : News 1o1 Country M us ic
Jubilee 13; Phil Donahue. 13: Phil Donahue 15,
Feeling Good 20; You Owe It To Yourself 33.
7 3C&gt;-Police Surgeon 3; Name That T une 4 , Let's
Make a Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Book Beat 20:
The Judge 10; To Tell the Truth 13 ; Episode action
33.
8:00-Little House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; That 's My
Mama 6,13; Tony Orlando 8, 10. Feeling Good 33 ;
Old Folks Aren' t At Home 20.
8:3C&gt;-Movle "It Couldn't Happen to a Nicer Guy" 13:
Movie "Carter's Army" 6; ; Double Reed 33 .
, 9:00-Lucas Tanner 3,4,15: Cannon 8,10; Woman Alive
20: Masterpiece Theatre 33 .
10 :00-Petrocelli 3, 4, 151 Baretta 6, 13 , Best of
Magazine 0,10; News 20; Family at War 33 .
11:00-N ews 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Special 13;
FBI6: Movie " Gold of the Seven Saints" 8; Movie
" Paid In Full" 10: Janaki 33 .
12 :3()-Wide World Special 6.
1·00-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

5·tl· t mo .

F r om the larg est T r uc k or
Bulldo2er Radiato r to thP
smallest Heater Co r e

Phone 992-5682 or
992 -7121

Real Estate for Sale

1967 TRIUMPH motorcy cle
650, pa rtiall y ch opp ed R u n~
good . Phone 247 279 1
6 8 6tc

FU RN
apart me nt
Ph one 992 3658 .
6 1 tfc

JFAM I LY Ya rd Sa l e, June 10,
l land12from9a m td/ J JO
P m at the Sh trley D ugan
r est d encc ,
tn
Ractne
Loca ted al corner of Main
and Broa dway
6 10 2tc

Un ton , At hens . Ohio Also .
10b pr tntmg
4 29-3Btp

E XP ERIEN CEO

in Mld
ON E D up l ex apt
d l epo rt I hous e tn Pom ero y
Call !30.J l 882 2050 . coll ect
5 n lfc

3 fi NO .! ROOM f ur n is hed an-d
un f urntshed
apar tmen ts.
Phone 992 543 4
4 12 tfc

YARD Sal e, June 11 throug h
J une l :l 9 am ttl I dark
rlalf mtle fr om D anv tll e on
R t 325 Phon e 7.t2 4402
6 10 Jtc

and
Automobile
Transmission
Repair

mob i I e home , '-'~----_::_.:..:.::..:..:...:_:__:.,:::_:~:__ _ __ _ _ __j
1 ,
ac .
m tle
ou t
of
1967 FORD pi c k up 1 1 ton w trn
H arr tsonvt lt e on Co Rd . 3
topp er Phon e 247 -2022
Phon e 7J? 580?
6 11 Jt c
6 6 6t c
CUSTOM foam grtp st eerin g 1967 FOR D conve rt ible, good
2 BEDROOM mobtl e ho m e
whee l and adap tors to Itt
car $450 Ph one 992 530 1
Ph one 992 7649
small Chrysl er produ c t or 69
6 8 6tc
6 6 6tc
or n ewer General Mo to r s
produ ct. $ 15 Phon e 949 2181
2 BEDRM trailer , $27 p er
19 70 P L YMOUT H , 6 c yt
or 949 .:1989
w ee k All utilif teS pai d
a utomat tc, $300 an d 1967 T
6
10
31p
Ph one 992 332 4
B tr d , S4 00 Phone 742 359"1
6 6 tfc
6 1a 2tc
OR DER any CB fro m lndtan
U N FURN I SHED 3 bed rm
Joe 's Sp or ts and CB 's at 10 1967 FOR 0 conv ertibl e, good
gar age apa rtm en t , SlO O per
car $d50 Phone 992 5301
p e t above cos! and ShtP
month , elec an d w at er patd
6 8 6tc
pm g 308 Pag e St , M td
353 Pal mer St , Mtd dl epor t
dleport
Call 997 7485
5 18 30tc
6 B 5tc

TRA I LER spac e for rent in
Mt dd l eport
Ca ll 992 2625
.t 27 -lf c

mo

EXPERI.ENC:ED
:. -.
Radiato
· Service - -:----

Roger Hysell's
Garage

CO.I(J:\
~

POMEROY, OHIO

E\ E D R 00 M

P ORCH Sa l es . 312 P ea rl 51..
Mid d leport , Ohto Thu r sday
and Frt day , 9 am . It t\ 5 p m
6 10 Jtc

W

POM E~~! E~E~~~~

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

5 1 I It c

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992-3993 _
4 10 I

OHo GOO O GRIEF, LJ~CLE PLATO~
DON 'T TELL ME YOU'RE G01~6 TO
START PESTERING ME A6AIN
TO GET MARRIED!'

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

slid ing rea r glass. chrome grille. bumper &amp; mldg s.

mob .te h ome ,
Harrtsonvtlle area , $ 135
month , ut tltl 1es fur n tsh ed
except ctec No p ets . 1 chtld
p ermitt ed Pho ne 7J2 3123
6-S 61p

a p t 5 room s and ba t h,
rH ce lar ge yard bath and t .,
390 South
S€' con d 5 1 ,
Mtddle po rt adults only
Phon E 991 5262 ev enm gs

lOlA'S
BEAUTY SALON

LARRY I,AVE~DER

Also Repairs On All
Riding Tractors
498 Locu st St.
Mtddleport , Ohio
59 _i

$3695

T on, Che yenn e, 350 V -8, power steermg &amp; brakes,
a utomatic . lactory air, 750x 16-6 ply frt ., 8 ply rear,

a RM

Yard Sale

Ground

31·1

BEO~OOM

f U RN

Blown 1nto Walls &amp; Allies'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
_ SIOING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS·AWNINGS

$1595

For Sale

RED bt l lfold Conten ts tnStde
ne eded Phon e 992 3.122
6 8 ff c

WI SH to thank everyone fo r
the tr cards and vtst ts wh ile 1
was m th e hospttal Thanks
to th e sta ff and nurs es at
Holzer and SEOEM S Your
thoug htfuln ess w ill a lways
be remem be r ed
Gladys
Mor gan
6 11 lt c

1n

Merle Norman
t:osmetics

Blown
Insulation Services

992-3092

less than 17 ,000 mi les, a real ni ce on e.

l ude11iah ft' ( ' l'ldt' tU'I ' uf .~ f n nyf It - "PROOF "

Card of Thanks

-

6 8 ll c

1973 CHEVROLET 8' FLEETS! DE

1

TE RSHOP

Phone

1974 CHEVELLE
· $3095
Malibu HT Cpe .. 350 V-8 eng1ne, power steer ing, fac-

D eposit re qu tr ed
N o c hi l dren or pets Phon e
?9? 2.tJ 1 etH er 5 30 p m
l'l 1o tfc

lumbt • ., FORTY AGONY COUPON INFLUX

··-

308

TWO b e dr oom mob il e hom e

'l

FREE ESTIMATES

Sales &amp; Service

hom e, s uttabl e for

Deposll r eqvtrcd

J-door . loca l car, a ir conditioned, fu ll equ i pment.

r xr rr x r

WILKINSON
SMALL ENG

Motor Co.

1 f:\ E DR M furn 1shed mob tle
hom e no p e ts Ca l l 992 7A 79
6 4 He

~-

- - -

s 2 ttc

~y racus e

(Anewrr• lon1orro"")

A n 1••r:

-

992 5858 ''

•

r]

TADISS

Phone

Page St , Middleport
99'] 3509

TRIED T O REDUCE
WHAT WAS EDITED
IN A MIX-UP.

OF
QUALITY

I m1le l r orn

. . . ---.. . . :, . . . . . -

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'

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16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, JWle 11, 1975
THIS DAY
JWle 11, 1776 - On this cay
195 years ago the Continenwl
Congress appomted a committe e to prepare a
Delaration of Independence.
That commtttee included
Benjamin Franklin, Thomas
Jefferson and John Adams.
Some three weeks later, the
Declaration proclaiming
those freedoms for which the
Contmental Army was·
ft ghtin g became part of our
national history

.HOSPITAL NEWS

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Mabel
Swisher, Colum bus; Goldie
Pickens, Portland ; Charlotte
Hess, Pomeroy ; Sandra
Patterson, Racine; George
Condy, Syracuse; Edward
Wtllet, New Haven; Orvtlle
Allen, Pomeroy; Rebecca
Roush , Gallipolis
Discharges - Rebecca
Card, Mananne Thomas, Don
Eblin , Rosa Curry, Helen
Pickens, Hobart Raub andTony Chapel.

'

'' I

NEW CARRIER - Darla Wtlcox 1· 12-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs Kenneth Wilcox, Middleport, is
a new cam er for the Daily Sentinel Darla is just
beginning her route thts week and from all indications
likes being in business. She is a student at Metgs Junior
High School. She likes to read and swim.

24 seek M-iss Ohio
title at Mansfield
MANSFIELD, Ohio t UP! )
- The soWld of hammers,
drillS and saws greeted Mtss
Ohio Pageant contestan ts
here this week as the 24 yoWlg
women began rehearsing for
judging which
begins
Thursday at Malabar High
School.
The contestants , who won
the. rigbt to compete in the
Miss America prehrmary by
defeating hundreds of contestants in local pageants
across the state, are posing
for pubhctty pictures ,
reh earsin g pr oduction
numbers and pohshing thetr
talent routines.
The pageant ends Saturday
wtth the crowning "of a new
state winner by the 1975 title
holder, Lorrie Janet Kapsta
of Columbus.
D\lfing afternoon rehersals
Dennison Keller, producerdirector of the Miss Ohio
pageant , comforted the girls
who were rehearsing their
talent presentations to the
accomparurnent of the stage
crew's construction soWlds.
"U you think this is bad you
should see what it's like in
Atlantic city." said Keller.
"They have cra~es on stage,
lifting bleachers and risers in
place. The stage is crawling
with with TV technicians and
workmen."
Keller, a native of Ripley,
Ohio , ha s produced and

MEIGS THEAT8E
Ton1ghllhru Thursday
NOT OPEN

Fro. , Sal. &amp; Sunday
CHINATOWN
(Technicolorl
Rated " R"
AIso Cartoon
Show starts at 7. 00 p m.

DOUBLE FEATURE
WED.-THUR .- FRI.
" STREET GIRLS "

and
"DAGMAR ' S
HOT PANTS INC."

directed over 60 prelimianry
Miss America pageants. He
has recruited assistants from
all over the country to help
him stage the contest here
thts year.
Keller asked Benny Smith
to come from California to
work on pageant dancing.
Smith , a native of Wellsville,
Ohio, was the official
choreographer for the Mtss
America Pageant from 1965
to 1973.
Besides working on the
Mtss Califorma pageant
Smith has assisted the
choreographer of the Lido
show in Parts and has worked
on Sammy Davis' televiswn
specials.
Keller also recruited an old
friend Beryl Parsons, of Rock
H1ll, S.C., to work on this
year's show with htrn as
associate producer .
GRANGE TO MEET
LETART - Mrs . Mendal
Jord an wtll cond uct in·
spectwn when Ohio Valley
Grange 2612 mee ts at the hall
m· Letart at 8 Thursday
eve ntn g. Refr es hments of
sandwiches and potato salad
"' ill be served .
MEN FINED
Fmed tn the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday mght were
Mtke Smtth, 18, Mtddleport,
$2o and costs, petty the'ft, and
Tony W. Manley, 20, Mid·
dleport, $20 and costs, drivtng
in an unsafe manner .
COMMITTEE MEETS
The Pomeroy Citizens
Communtty Park Committee
will meet at 8:30 this evening
tn
the form er cou nc1l
chambers , f1rst floor of
village hall .
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to SR
143 near Harnsonvtlle at
11 :1o a.m. Tuesday for Or·
vtlle Allen, a medical patient
who was taken to Veterans
Memonal Hospital where he
was admitted .
ASK TOWED
James Harold Large, 21,
Vansant, Va. , and Carla Nell
Cnsp, 17, Rt. I, Langsville.

We Show and Tell

THE F·ACTS!
behind fine home
furnishings and
appliances
*QUALITY
AT THE
LQWEST
POSSIBLE
.PRICEJ

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio

Pleasant Valley Hospital
D,,c :.a rges - George
Greene, Hartford ; Norman
Lemaster, Mason; Katherine
Neal, Leon; Mrs. Neal Dilly,
Davtsvtlle, W. Va ; George
Ma yes , Hend erson ; Mrs.
James Parsons, Gallipohs ;
Phyllis Russell, Leon; Mrs. ·
Clean Cadle, Leon ; Lee
Wears, Gallipolis Ferry, and
Terr y Bonecut te r, Poin t
Pleasant.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, June 10)
Claude Bachtel, J oyce
Bishop, Herman Borland ,
Buell Brown, Joshua Cook,
James DeLon g, Marlin
Donley, Chester Elliott,
Debra Estep, Mrs. Randall
Gibbs and daughter, Ishmael
Gtllispte , Trilba Greenlee,
Anna Harnson , Freda
Heines, Nanme Hill, Edward
Ja cks on, Vickt Jeffers,
Bertha John so n, Matt
Johnson , Raym ond Jones ,
Juamta Ltvingston , Okey
Longfel)ow , Oral Malone,
Wade Maloy, Harold Mar·

.•.

.. .

CIA budget said
well kept secret
WASHINGTON (UP!) _
,
.
The CIA s budget, beheved to
run m the hundreds of
millions, perhaps more, has
been one of Congress' betterkept secrets.
The intelligence budget is
hidden in the budgets of other
agencies of government,
chiefly the $9~ billion defense
budget.
Sometimes, at hearings on
the Pentagon's budget
requests, a congressman will
question a particular item too
closely. The chairman is
likely to whisper to the
congressman. The congressman nods, and dropa that line
of questioning . Reporters
have seen that happen .
The Rockefeller Cornmission raised the question in

Pen stormed,
hostage dies
NEW WESTMINSTER, described it as "a good
B.C. (UP! ) - Guards today military maneuver, a sneak
stormed a granite-walled attack ."
"It was an tmpresstve
penitentiary vault and
captured three life termers, takeover," the source said.
The hostages had been kept
groggy from drugs and lack
in
a wrndowless vault in the
of sleep, who had held 15
old
priSOn that resembles a
persons hostage more than 40
hours in an aborted bid for medieval castle, with granite
walls and notched turrets.
freedom.
One woman hostage was Temperatures in the vault
slain. Two of the prisoners reached 90 degrees in
were
wounded,
one Tuesday's hot sun. The
prison, about 20 miles from
seriously.
Vancouver,
houses 500 inThe slain hostage was
mates
and
employs
250 staff
identified
as
Mary
Steinhauser, a social worker members.
at the British Columbta
penitentiary All of the
hostages were prison employes.
Radio newsman Gary Bannerman of station CKNW,
who acted as a go-between,
said that about 1 a .m. one of
the hostages seized a tripod
COLUMBUS - One of the
inside the vault and struck chief mdustries m southern
inmate Douglas Lucas, 20, on Ohio will feature a field day
the bead repeatedly in an Wednesday, June 18, 10 a.m
attempt to overpower the to 3 p.m., at th~ Oh10
prisoners and escape.
Agriculture and Research
"Lucas did not fall down," Development Center in
Bannerman said, "and he Ripley, Ohw (Route 621.
and inmate Andy Bruce, 26,
The cow-calf industry is the
armed with kitchen knives, fa stest • growmg mdustry in
went for the hostages.
southern Ohto where $17
"At this time Mary Stein- million is grossed from calf
hauser was asleep on a couch · sales generattng in excess of
by the entrance to the valilt. $50
million
to
the
The other hostages retreated economy
of
southbefore Lucas and Bruce into ern
Ohio,
Approxithe vault and slammed the mately 200,000 cows are
door.
kept on the farms found in the
"As tbey did, Mary Stein- 27 counties of the Eaton ,
hauser was stabbed," Ja ckson, and Washington
Bannerman said.
Court House Extension
At that moment the guards Areas, over a 50 pet. mcrease
since the 1969 census
rushed in shooting.
The as~ault ended the
The field day emphasizing
ordeal for the hostages by the ali aspects of the cow-calf
three prisoners -two servmg industry, especially that of
life terms for murder and one forage production , will have
for attempted murder - who exhibits of field storage
had demanded a helicopter eqwpment from nine difand safe passage to a foreign ferent manufacturers having
country. Officials already been invited, a standing
had diverted an army display of large round balers
helicopter from duties in and slackers, demonstration
northern British Columbia to plots using a Ztp seeder in
Vancouver International Air- permanent pasture and over
15 purebred and crossbred
port in case it was needed.
Forces animals together with
A Canadian
military source who first equipment for handling beef
reported the takeover cattle.
The afternoon program will
constst
of presentatwns by' Al
IN THE PROBATE

f

POINT PLEAsANT - Gov .
Arch A. Moore, Jr . Tuesday
announ ced approval of a
$175 ,000 Appalachian
Regional Council grant,
coupled with $200,000 in state
funds, for the construction of
a new library in Mason
County.
The proJect will provide
10,160 square feet of space
and increasing library
volume capacity from 8,272 to
48,000 books.
Seating capacity in the new
hbrary will be for 56 persons

College series
resumes today

its report 't'uesday ~hether it
would be posstble for
Congress "to some extent" to
reveal the CIA budget.
It quoted Article I, Section
9 Clause 7 of the Constitution : "No money shall be
drawn from the Treasury, but
in consequence of apIa

propria \ions made by w;
and a regular statement and
account of the receipts and
expenditures of all public
money shall be published
frOJII time to time."
" Con•gress should give
careful consideration to the
question whether the budget
of the CIA should not, at least
to some extent, be made
public," the commission said.
It did not discuss what
effect would result from
disclosure of the CIA budget.
The agency would probably
rests! on grounds disclosure
would enable the Soviet
Union to gauge the extent of
intelligence operations.
INFANTS DIE
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
bodies of IJ:VO infants, who
were tied up and placed on a
bedroom floor with a blanket
over them, were foWld in a
home here Tuesday. Pollee
said the children, Eva
Katherine . Mtlton , 2, and
Kimberly Annese Milton, 1,
daughter of Ida Louis M1lton ,
21 , apparently died of suf·
focation. Miss Milton and
Ernest Phelps, 28, whom they
identified as her common-law
husband, were charged with
two coWlts of involWltary
manslaughter and two coWlts
of endangering children.

OMAHA, Neb. (UP!) Arizona State and South
Carolina are scheduled to
meet tonight to see which one
will remain Wldefeated in the
29th annual NCAA College
World Series.
They were slated to settle
that question Tuesday mght
but had to postpone their
game because of rain.
The teams showed up at the
park and did some practicing
but when rains started falling
again at game time, tournament offictals decided to
reschedule the contest for
tonight.
It is the only game on tap
for tomght although Texas
and Oklahoma are still in the
double elimination series,
each with a record of 2-1.
South Carolina and Arizona
State are 2-0 in the playoffs.

COOKOUT SET
Modern Woodmen Camp
7230 of Burlingham will hold a
cookout this Saturday mght
at 7:30 p.m. at the roadside
park on SR 33 corning south
from Athens. Prizes will be
given m recognihon of all 25
year members. All members
and friends are cordially
mvited to attend.
TAKE BLACKMAIL
BANGKOK (UP! )- North
Vietnam satd today there can
be no search for the 2,500
m1ssing and dead Americans
m Indochina unless the
United States provides
postwar aid to North and
South Vtetnam. It said Hanoi
was ready to discuss the issue
with the United States.

Growing cow-calf industry
plans open house June 18

COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
IN THE M(&lt;TTER OF THE
CHANGE OF NAME OF
MARTIN RAYMOND VOLT
TO DALE MARTIN JACOBS

PUBLIC NOTICE
T h e T up p er s Plam s
Ch es l er Wa.ter Di s tr iCt 1S
ac:cepl ing b ids " for cl ean ing
and p a int 1ng the ms ide and
ou l si de o f two 12 1 ground
PU SLIC NOTICE stor age tank s and tour (4 )
M art1n Raym ond Volt, 90 Plev rtt ert t anks until Thur sday ,
So ,
Se c ond l\ven ue,
M 1d
J un e 26. at 12 · 00 n oon
d!e port. Ohio , h er eby g iv es
B 1dS are 10 b e sub mitt ed on
not1ce that h e wtll fil e h1 s r1 pe r s1ngl e tank ba s1s and
P ett11 0 n 1n th e Probate Courl also, all tan k s as a group
of
Me1 gs
Co u n ty, Oh 10
~ p cc 1fi c a li on s
and
in
pray i n g for an or der of sa1d stru clions for bidders with all
co urt aut hor •z,ng th e chan ge neces sa ry F arm ers Home
o f h•S na m e fro m Mar1 1n li d m in 1s trat io n contract
Raymond Volf to Dale M a r l m docu men ts a ~ ava1lable and
J ac ob s . that sa 1d P et 1f 10n w11 1 may be p1 cke d up 10 th e Off 1ce
b e h ear d on the llf h day of .i t Ches t er , Oh lp . Ma il ing
Ju ly , \975, at 10 00 o 'c lock ild dr css. Bo x 7, Che ster
tnspcct ton toun of th e t an ks
1\ fill or a.s soon th er ea ft er as
sai d court m ay h c.tr 11 .
Wtll INw e frorn the o ffi c:e at
10 rJn Mon d ays and r nd a ys
M ar tin Raymo nd Volt
f{.l 1 1 lt C
f h l I I . I I f"

,.

' .

.,

shall, George McCain, Grace
Mercer, . Jerry Morgan ,
W1lli am Orr, Marjorie'
Robinson, Mary Rose, Ellen
Schop1s, Lois Shaver, Alice
Smith , Raymond Smith,
Pearl Swart, Mrs. Himy
Walker and daugh ter, Henry
Weaver
(Births)
Mr . and Mrs . Ricky Brady,
a daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Childers, a son,
a daughter, Ray; Mr ·
Wellston ; Mr . and Mrs. Mver~
' Mrs.
' Carl Preston, a son,
and
Rayman Critser, twin sons,
Bidwell ; Mr. and Mrs David Galhpolis; Mr . and Mrs .
Eggers, a daughter, Oak Hill ; Kenneth Rizer, a son , PortMr. and Mrs. Wilham L. land.

$375,000 assured library ,

Baxter, Area Agronomist, on
no-ltll establishment of
pasture and forage crops; Dr.
Robert
Van
Keuren,
Professor,
Agronomy,
OARDC, on the management ·
of mulched pastures; Dr .

Jimmy Jones, Professor,
Veterinary Science, OARDC,
on cow-calf health, and Dr.
Nolan Hartwig, Extension
Veterinarian, The Ohio State
University, wtth an update on
beef cow management.

in the public reading rooms
and for 100 in public meeting
areas. The new library, to
be constructed' at a yet to be
annoWlced Iocat1on in Point
Pleasant, will allow Mason
County to supervise and
administer its own COWl·
tywide program, Gov. Moore
satd . Heretofore, services to
the county were supervised
by the Western Counties

Regional Ubrary in HWltington.
.
In additiQn to the $175,000
ARC grant and the $200,000
coming from state fund,
another $5,000 will be
provided by the Federal
Ubrary Service and Con:struction Act, and through
local sources.
Total cost of the project is
eslimated at '$or.. million.

cinnati; Mrs. Pauline Evans,
Mrs. Azelline Smith, both of
Parkersburg; four brothers,
Herbert Patterson, Parkersburg; Delbert, Ted and
James Patterson, all of Portland .
Services will be at 11 a .m.
Friday at the Chamber
Funeral Home, Ravenswood,
with Rev. Freeland Norris
officiating. Burtal wtll be in
Ravenswood Cemetery.
Frtends may call at the
fWleral home any time after
10 a.m. Thursday.

CIA found guilty
( Coqtlnued from page I)
the CIA director, disclosure "to some ·extent" of the CIA budget, an end to opening domestic mail e~tcept in wartime
and resistance in the agency to improper directives -even if
they come from the President.
The report said former President Johnson wanted the CIA to
keep tabs on "growing domestic disorder" and that Nixon
"insisted that the CIA turn over to the President highly
classified files ... to serve the President's personal political

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
vote in last week's Common Market referendum, Wilson
removed Anthony Wedgwood Benn Tuesday night from the key
post of industry secretary. Benn, the W.year-olddarling of the
Labor party's left wing and outspoken critic of Common
market membership, switched jobs with Energy Secretary
Eric Varley.

Father's Day Gift Suggestion
PORCH, LAWN OR
PATIO FURNITURE

· By Richard C. Longworth
LIBREVILLE , Gabon
(UP!) - The Organization of
Petroleum Exporting
Countries has put the world's
industrial nations on notice oil prices are going up in
three months.
Oil ministers of the 13
OPEC nations ended a threeday conference Wednesday
by announcing plans to increase fuel prices and sever

Denial is
received
The Interstate Contrnerce
Commtssion in Washington,
D. C., has denied a request
for an enivronmental study in
conjWlction with the abandonment of the Chesapeake
and Ohio Railroad between
Pomeroy and Logan.
George Arnott, of the Meigs
County
Rail
Service
Committee formed recently
to protest proposed railway
abandonments, dtsclosed this
morning the denial had been
received from the commission. He said the study
had been requested to show
the environmental effects the
abandonment would h~ve on
the area from the standpoint
of more vehicles, particularly
big trucks, which would be on
the highways tf the abandonment is approved.
In denying the study , the

comm1ss10n considered
protests ftled by John David
Gerard, the
Pomeroy ·
Chamber of Commerce-, Rep.
Ron James and The Meigs
CoWlty Regional Planning
Commission and ignored
EASTERN - Four new
protests from Rep . Claire
teachers
were employed
Ball, Jr., Senator Oakley
Collins, Cong. Clarenc~ Wednesday night when the
Miller, Middleport Mayor Eastern Local School District
Fred Hoffman, the Meigs Board of Educa lion met m
County Farm Bureau, recessed sesston.
Hired were Tom Gumpf, an
Midwest Steel, the Local Rail
Ohio
University graduate, for
Service Committee and City
the
fourth
grade at Tuppers
Ice and Fuel.
Residents are asked to Plams; Mike Will, an Ohio
votce their resentment of the University graduate with
study refusal by writing at three years teachmg exonce to Kenneth A. Tuggle, perience tn the Warren Local
Interstate Commerce School District, to teach the
Commission, Washington, D. third grade at Chester;
C., 20423, and are to refer to Christy Caldwell, a graduate
Docket AB-18, Subject 10 in of Rio Grande College, for the
first grade at Chester. and
their contrnWlications.

I

petroleum's link to the dollar - in exchange for Western
on Oct. 1.
concessions to get stalled
But the delegates decided international energy talks
to wait until a Sept. 24 .started.
meeting in Vienna to decide
But others suggested a
the size of the increase, possible 30 per cent price hike
leaving time for bargaining to match what they claim is
between exporting and the rate that Western inconsuming nations.
flatiQn has eroded oil income
Some ministers dropped over the past year.
hints that OPEC might be
Econormsts say a 30 per
willing to settle for a small cent price rise would add
increase - maybe 10 per cent about $30 billion to the
world's already crushing oil
bill and threaten to slow down
the West's recovery from
recession.
Western experts argue that
Susan Thompson, Gallipolis,
OPEC
sales would fall off
as girls' physical education
sharply
if recession worsens
instructor and as girls'
in
the
West
and both exathletic coach in volley ball,
track and basketball. Miss porters and consumers would
Thompson has a rnaster's lose out in the end.
Some OPEC nations, like
degree and while at
Algeria
and Iran, need peMorehead State University,
worked as an assistant in- trodollars for development
and want as big an increase
structor in girls' sports.
as
possible. But others, such
The board named Archie
and Saudi Arabia,
as
Kuwait
Rose as assistant football
coach and Rose and Larry have overflowing treasuries
Hemes as assistants in the and may accept a symbolic
basketball program. Carol rise.
Oil prices, whtch have risen
King was named cheerleader
400 per cent over tbe past
advisor .
(Continued on page 8)

•

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•

VOL. XXVII

NO. 42

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~~~::;:;:;:;~::~:::::::~::;:::;.:.;:;.;.:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:::·:·::::m~:~:::&lt;::::::&lt;:~::::::::::::::l~ ''

r

FINISHING TOUCHES- For the 11 years that Mrs. Judy Fraser has been presenting
dance recitals w1th her Mid-Porn School of Dancing, her father, Dale M. Jacobs has been
creating novel stage settings. This year he has made panels featuring geometric designs in
fluorescent colo_rs w1t~ colored flashing lights at the base, carrying out the "Kaleidoscope"
theme. Jacobs 1S pictured here adding finishing touches to panels which wtll be used at
Friday night's recital at the Meigs Junior High School auditorium, 8 p.m.
(See Charlene Hoeflich's story on page 7)

en tine

OPEN WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5 PM FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC' STREET

E.~~~.R._F_E_LD....,.S_I_N_P_O;..;M~
· E;;.;R.;.;:O;..:Y;....~_.

SUMMON SQUAD
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Mtnersville at 11:10 p,m. Wednesday
for Harry Kiser, who was ill.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

::,
~News. . . in Briefri
~~

By United Press International
LONDON- BRITAIN HAS BEGUN pumping oil from the
North Sea after a year of frustrating delays, taking the first
step toward self-6Ufficiency in fuel. Oil workers opened the
valve on a flat-topped rig off the Scottish coast at noon Wednesday and petroleum began surging up from the seabed into a
tanker moored nearby.
By the end of the day, the American-based consortium
running the operation pumped 2,000 tons of oiiout of the Argyll
Field, 225 miles east of Edinburgh, brightening the prospects
of Britain's troubled economy. Oil expa:ts predicted that
Britain wt!uld pump 130_milllon tons a year t'rorn the North Sea
by 1980, enough to turn the nation from an importer into an
exporter of fuel.

PRICE 15'

«

...

Indira Ghandi in deep trouble

:::\

NEW DEIJII (UPI) - In a surprise ruling, an ·, ·

:~:: ~O::o:~~~:r::c~~e~e~u:~ e?:C~'!:

CIA probe boycotted

:.::
,:::
.· campaign. lbe move could cost her the leadership of ,':,,:\, By DANIEL F. GILMORE
:::
India.
,•,
WASHINGTON (UP!) -A
:':
Justice J.J .I. Sinha of the Allahabad ffigh Court :;:; House subcommittee inthe
CIA
:::: ruled Mrs. Gandhi violated the law by UBlng her per- :::: vestigating
suspended
testimony
by
its
sonal
secretary
to
campaign
for
her
In
Uttar
Prndesh,
·:·:
:::·
;.;.
her home state.
··· director William E. Colby
because
three
::::
lbe judge, ruling from the Uttar Pradesh capital .·:.,.: , : today
Republicans boycotted the
\ of Alahabad, said she also UBed government officials to
::; arrange el~loo meetings.
.·.· session after Rep. Lucien N.
?
Sinha's rulhtg from Alahabad, 400 miles southeast .!!._!'.; Nedzl, D-Mich., resigned as
committee chairman.
:':: of New Delhi, held that hill both actloas were corrupt
Subcommittee chairman
:{ and illegal.
}
COLUMBUS - SENATE DEMOCRATS, SEEKING to :·:·:·:::·: :·:-:·:·: ;.;.;.;.;.;.·.;.: : ;.•.•.;.; ;.;.;.·.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·::::·:·:::::::::·:·::;:;:;.;'::·:·:;.;:;:•:•:•.;:·:·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·.·.;:: . James V. Stanton, D-Ohio,
avoid any tax increases, today prepared to draft amendments ·
apologized to Colby and
asked him to keep himself
cu.tt~g the House-pas~ed $10.7 billion state budget by $94
p~olnosed
ready for testimony on the
million before passing II out of the Senate Finance Committee
'"'e~.
• I r
Friday for a floor vote next week.
operations of the Central
A general discussion on lot near the former Imperial Intelligence Agency since he
Sen. Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, conunittee chairman,
said Wednesday night he had all but abandoned plans to fur- what actions can be taken by Electrtc Co. Building. The took over as director in 1973.
ther consider any tax increases to balance the $94 million residents in improving the group also discussed exColby has testified in
deficit now projected by the Legislative Budget Office for Middleport CommWlity Park pansion of activities at the private a number of times
was held when the Middleport park.
fiscal 1976-77.
·
on CIA activity but today was
Citizens
Recreation ComThe committee has $500 to be his first public
"It looks like we're going to have to make the cuts," said
Meshel following•a Finance Committee meeting at which 55 mittee met Wednesday night available to start with in testimony. It followed by two
amendments were proposed. One of the f!llljor reductions at Middleport Village Hall. carrying out an expanded days the public release of the .
Allen Lee King , the recreation program . Another Rockefeller Commission's
hinted at by Meshel would be a $40 million to $5o million cut in
representative
from Village meeting was set for 8:30p.m. report en the CIA.
the proposed ,allocation for basic educalion. The Ho'USe
CoWlcil
who
has
been active Monday at Village Hall, the
Nedzi resigned as chairprovided for a $502 million Increase In the current budget for
in
the
formation
of
the
former
council
chambers,
man of the overall inprimary ancj secondary education. Meshel indicated this would
citizens group, presided over and anyone wishing to telligence committee of seven
be trimmed.
the meeting. The group present ideas or suggestions Democrats and
three
discussed
additional
land
on
the
park
program
is
Republicans
after
he
was
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO SENATE HAS taken some of
whtch
might
be
available
for
cordially
invited
to
attend.
voted down 6-1 Wednesday
the steam out of a plan to link Ohio's major cities with
highspeed rail service, but the House appears ready to answer recreation uses as welt" as a
night in a dispute involving
Nedzl's selection of the CIA
a major objection by acting on financing provisions for ' the
subcommittee.
plan. The measure, which would establish a five-member Ohio
But three Republican
Rapid Transit Authority to write a plan within nine months for
members boycotted this
two high-6Jleed rail systems, cleared the Senate on a 20-11 vote
Wednesday.
RACINE - Two teachers Spurlock and Mary Ann morning's session, keeping
Colby waiting at the witness
However, an emergency clause fell two votes short of resigned and four others. were Slone.
table for more than a half
pa581!ge, sending the measure back to the House, which had hired when the Southern
Teachers hired were
cleared it with emergency priority last April 15. Both cham- Local Board of Education Michael Boring as teacher hour before Stanton adbers must agree on a priority. Meanwhile, the chief sponsor, met in special session and junior high football journed tbe session.
The
three
absent
Rep. Arthur R. Wilkowski, D-Toledo, said the House would Wednesday night.
coach, Patricia !hie and
Republican
members
were
vote today on a rewritten version of a constitulional aml)ndThe board accepted the Catherine Simpson, as Title I
Robert Kaston, R-Wis.;
rnent allowing the state to participate In financing the rail resignation of Mrs. Jannie
reading teachers; James
systems.
Simpson as Vo-ag teacher
and Angela Fields as
MIAMI - AS EAsTERN AIRUNES' new president,
business office education
former astronaut Frank Borman has a tough job -persuading
teacher.
the airline's 32,000 employes to accept PI!Y cuts ranging from 3
The board will meet again
to 8 per cent.
in regular session Monday,
NORTH VERNON, Ind.
Under Borman's signature, letters went to each employe
JWle
23,
at
7:30
p.m.
(UPI)
_To the people of this
yt)lr
proposing the salary reductions take effect July 1 for a period
Attending were Jack southeastern Indiana comof 18 months. But he said the cut "will not be adopted unless it
Joe
Haning,
District
13-K
Bostick,
Robert Sayre, rnunity, Richard J. Runyan
is approved by the majority of our people." The Borman letter.
Governor,
assisted
by
Grover
Salser,
Jr., and David was a model citb.en -Boy
predicted hard times for Eastern for ano,ther three years.
Charles
Gettle,
district
Nease,
board
members, . Scout · leader, civil defense
Borman also was the man reSponsible for a belt-tightening
move last year that saw 4,000 Eastern employes furloughed or cabinet secretary, installed Bobby Ord, superintendent director, sheriff's deputy.
new officers when the and Jane Wagner, clerk.
diamlssed.
.
,~' Pomeroy-Middleport t.ions
INSTALLATION SET
BOSTON-WITHTHESTATETEETERINGontheverge Club met for a l~cheon
The Meigs Chapter, Order
of bankruptcy, the Massachusetts Senate is in a state of Wednesday at the Meigs Inn. of Demolay, will hold its 12th
Whitney Ingraham, for · susP,ended animation while leaders try to round up votes to
Installed w~re the Rev· semi-annual installation of
merly
of Pomeroy, is the new
paua S497million deficiency budget. The budget, and bonding Wtlhall! Mlddleswarth, officers Friday evening.
authorization attached to it, were defeated early Wednesday prestdent; ~rry Brogan, There will be a dinner at 6 organization director for the
Farm
Bureau
when the Senate failed to muster the two-thirds vote required ftrst vtce prestdent; Gordon followed by installation at Ohio
in
Stark,
Portage
Federation
Teaford,
second
vice 7:30 and a reception at 9:30
under the state coastltutiQIJ.
and Summit Counlies, Glenn
The S497 Dlillionls neces881"Y to finance ballooning costs president; James ~nner, p.m. The public,is invited.
that gutstrlpped costs In the state's e:1pe11se general expense thtrd
vice
prestdent ;
Officers to be installed are Pirtle, farm bureau vice
budget. Citing a "deadly serious" financial situation, Senate Clarence Struble, secretary- Scott Reuter , Middleport, president for field services
President Kevin Harrington put lawmakers on an around-the- treasurer; Ralph Graves, N· master councilor; Mike annoWlced today.
Ingraham, the farm
clock recesa Wednesday night. Harrington said he would W. Compton and Paul Hendrickson Cheshire
reconvene the Senate whenever he fee"'lhere are enough votes Stodola, ~!rectors; Karl · senior councll~r, and cari biD"eau's field representative
for the budget-bond bill.
_,
Krautter, ~il twtster, and the Meyers, Cheshire, junior in eight Soulhern Ohio
Counties since 1973, succeeds
1
Rev. Dwtght Zavttz, hon COWlcllor
are forecast lor Saturday tamer. The new officers will
· ·
Timothy Radachi who has
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
lh~ougb Moaday. lflghs
begin their duties on July 1. A
LOCAL TEMPS
returned to full-time farming.
Saturday through
will be from the mid 70s to guest of Rev. Zavitz was
TemperaiiD"e In downtown
As organization director,
Moaday, temperatures will
the low 80s and lows will be Maurice Mitchell who Is Pomeroy today at II a.m. Ingraham will coordinate
be aear aormal aad ocIn .the upper 50s aod low assisting Rev. Zavitz for .the was 77 degrees Wlder sunny farm bureau activities in the
caslolllll scattered showel'!l
60s.
summer.
skies.
three counties and serve as

Biuo:er park

Two teachers resigned

Dav1d Treen, R-La ., and
Robert McClory, R-Ill.
The subcomm1 ttee is
looking only into the CIA,
including charges that the
agency was involved m
foreign assassination plots.
The Rockefeller Commission
did not go into that matter but
handed over information
about it to congressional
committees and President
Ford.
Stanton said today he had
knowledge of succeessful
assassinations involving the
CIA. He was asked on the
CBS Morning News program
about a copyright story m the
Cleveland Plam Dealer
quoting him as saying he •

knew of at least one foreign
leader killed in a CIA
assassination plot.
"The question was 'do you
know of any successful
assassination plots,"' Stanton
said. "I responded 'yes ."'
He did not Identify the
victims
or
further
elaborate.
Before the session began,
Rep. Michael Harrington, DMass., who has been at
loggerheads with Nedzi
during the three month
formation of the committee,
said he regretted the dispute
"but we are proceeding
forward " wtth the Colby
hearing.
He said the dispute over
Nedzi's selection of the CIA

subcommittee from which
Harrington was excluded was
"only part of the matter."
The comnuttee of seven
Democrats
and
three
Republicans has been torn by
disputes even before it heard.
its first witness . Members
objected to the fact that Nedzi
as a member of the House
military committee had been
one of those privileged to be
briefed by CIA offices in the
past as part of that body's
"oversight" function.
Nedzi opponents charged
that he never called for an
mvestigation of the CIA
despite allegedly receiving
information that the agency
broke rules against domestic
spying and other activilies.

Monopoly at airports
charged car renters
-- -

By MICHAEL J. CONLON
keep potenlial competitors
WASHINGTON (UP!) - out of airports, harassed
The Federal Trade Com- smaller competitors and
mission today accused the made deals with the big three
country's three biggest car auto companies for adrenters - Hertz, Avis and vertising payoffs which
National -of monopolizing helped shore up their
the airport car rental monopolies.
business, causing consumers
The three companies had
to pay substantially higher combined operating revenues
prices as a result.
of $1.16 billion during 1973,
the FTC said. During that
An antitrust complaint same year they controlled 96
issued by the 'agency sald the per cent of the nation's at-thethree ftrms had fixed prices, airport rent-a-car business.
Hertz is owned by RCA
entered into a conspiracy to

Corp., and is the nation's
largest car renter. The
second largest in the field is
Avis, which until recently
was owned by Internalional
Telephone and Telegraph
Corp. National is a wholly
owned
subsidiary
of
Household ~inance Corp.
Since at least 1968, the ,
complaint said, the companies have rigged a noncompetitive market structure
"by employing qational
coordinated programs."

.)

Model citizen proved a thief
Now police say Runyan
apparently is the thief who
plagued the town for three
years.
RWlyan appeared· in court
Wednesday on burglary
chargt!S stemming from the

froni
locked
theft of some $100,000 in pearing
buildings, but it is hard to
merchandise.
' Authorities
said
he suspect a· guy like Runyan."
Runyan was a Boy· Seoul
awarded some of the loot leader,
the Jennings CoWltY'
watches and rings -to his
scout troop members as Civil Defense director, a
parttirne special sheriff's
prizes.
North Vernon Police Chief deputy, and, as a merchants'
Wallace Leaheig said Runyan pohceman, had keys to most
"admitted all of the bur- contrnercial and public buildings.
glaries."
Police said most of the
The loot included a popcorn
liaison between the COWlty
farm biD"eaus and lhe state machine taken from a high items were taken from stores
federation.
school.
Other
Items and schools Runyan had been
, Ingraham,
now
of recovered either at Runyan's paid to protect in this city al
Columbiana County, is a residence or .at a warebouse aroWld 5,000 persons.
veteran of 35 years of service included an !Moot boat with · Authorities said Runyan
to the Farm Bureau and its a 100-borsepower engine, was believed to have sold
marketing affiliate, Land- tape players, refrigerators, only one article during the
mark, Inc. He and his wife, freezers, copper wire, canned three years -a small tool.
Runyan, 45, was arrested
June, live in Usbon.
food and jewelry.
"He had a pretty good Monday night. He was
Bruce 0. Benedict is the
new
Southern
field memory about where it all released on $10,000 bond
representative replacing came from," Leahelg said. Wednesda:· after hla apIngraham. The Southern "The discovery jUBt about , pearance for arraignment
Field area 1s comprised of clears up all of our local was delayed in Jemlinga
Athens, Meigs, Vinton, Pike, burglaries in the last three Circuit Court. He was given
his temporary freedcm while
Jackson, Gallia, Scioto and years.
"We were always puzzled his attorney prepares hil
Lawrence counties.
at how things kept disap- plea.

Ingraham is promoted

-SALE PRICES

•

THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1975

~

'

11

:-.;:::·:·:·.·.·:·:·:·:::·:·:·::.·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·,·:·:·:·:·:·:·: ::::::: :,:;:::::::: :;':'::·: ::····:·:·:·:··::·:&lt;: :'::·:·:·:....·:·:·:···:·:·:·:

new club

sure to please him. All fine quality summer furn"ure. A good selectiiln.

•
,..
*'
•

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

officers for

'

.

Now You Know

at y

Lions install

~ive Dad a folding chair - Chaise Lounge - Glider this year and you're

&gt;

Teachers employed

Clear tonight, lows in the
upper 50s. Sunny Friday,
h1ghs m the upper 70s.
Probability of precipitation is
10 per cent this afternoon,
tonight and Friday.

ends."
Specifically, the report told of these operations : ·
-O&gt;ntrolling human behavior.
For lOyears, from 1953 to 1963, the CIA te~ted LSD and other
hallucinatory drugs, sometimes on unsuspecting subjects. The
purpose was to counter possible use of behavior-influencing
drugs administered by an enemy.
In 1953, an Army employe was dosed without his knowledge
while attending a meeting of CIA people working on the
project, He developed side effects and was sent to New York
psychiatric treatment. "Several days later, he jumped from a
lOth story window of his room and died ." Testing ended in 1967.
The CIA used other methods to study ''possible means for
controlling human behavior." These explored the effects of
radiation, electric shocks, psychology, psychiatry, sociology
and "harrassrnent substances." No details were given.
-Keeping tabs on dissidents.
Over six years, a special group known as "Operation
Chaos," a staff that ultimately numbered 52, complied 13,000
files , including files on 7,200 Americans, and including tbe
names of 300,000 persons and organizations In a computerized
index. The purpose was to find out if foreign forces financed
the antiwar movement. Utile evidence of foreign involvement
was found.
One "Operation Chaos" agent became involved as an adviser in a congressional election campaign and furnished
headquarters with reports on behind-thucenes campaign activities.
"Operation Chaos" was isolated in a vaulted basement area
of CIA headquarters at Langley, Va., under security measures
which "were extreme, even by normally strict CIA standards."
With the information it gathered, the CIA prepared 3,500
memoes for internal use, 3l000 for the FBI and 37 for the White
House. The operation was terminated by CIA Director William
Colby on March· 15, 1974.

'•

Oil prices will go up

Mrs. Stigliano died on Tuesday
PORTLAND - Mrs. Ada
Patterson Stigliano, 59, Rt. 1,
Portland, died Tuesday
evening at her home
following an extended illness.
Mrs. Stigliano was born
Aug. 11, 1915 in Jackson
CoWlty, W. Va .,andshewasa
retired employe of the
American Can Co., New
Jersey.
Surviving are her mother,
Mrs . Dessie Archer Pat(, •on , Portland; five sisters,
1\h s. Ann Boso, Portland;
Mrs. Susie Leep, Cincinnati;
Mrs . Lucy Rexroat, Cm-

. ... ' ,.. .,
... ..
•
)"., .
("
:•
~· ~~· ~
,.
.. ...' ..
'
.

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