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'
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 24, 1975 .

.

.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::)

Mea.ny, Forddisagree
By RICHARD HUGHES

UPI Business Writer
Most economists say they·
believe the recession has
ended. But said AFUJO
President Ge orge Meany,
when asked Monday if he
agreed : "No, sir , it won't be

over until people go back to
work .''

Using Meany 's yardstick,
the recession is going to
continue for a long time. .
.Using the indicators of
most economis ts , the
re cessio n bottomed out
sornetinne in the last few
weeks and the recovery
either has begun or is about to
begin.
Meany 's perception of the
economy is based on how
many people are out of work.
Most economists look at how
many people are working.

The uneri)ployment rate is
rising and will continu~ to
rise this summer, peaking at
9.5 per cent or higher - the
highest jobless rate since the
last days of the Great
Depression.
How can the recession be
over when 8.5 million to 9
million persons out of a job
force of about 92 million
cannot find work in any given
month this year?
How can it be over when the
jobless rate is twice what
once was considered normal
-4.5 per cent -and is expected to remain 2 or 3
'percentage points above
normal through 1977•
In this area, the recession
has followed the pattern of
past economic slumps. When
business begins to pick up,
employment increases but at

Th e one word
for the people
1 do business
with at

CITIZENS
NATIONAL
BANK

They' re helpful and cvncerned about my
banking needs. I always get warm smiles.
Wheth er I'm there to make a transaction,
apply for a loan .. . taking advantage of the
ma ny other services offered . See for
yourse lf how cooperative nice people can

bf&gt;

WALK -UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGSS To7 P.M.

''THE FRIF:NDLY BANK"

the same Iinne unemployment
rises.
There are several reasons:
- Businessmen, who were
sloW to layoff workers after
the recession began, are slow
to rehire after the recovery
has begun , They find it
cheaper to work employes
overtinne than to recall laidoff workers or hire new ones.
- Cor porations which
suffered profit slumps are
anxtoas to recoup by innproving productivity . In
addition, many used the
recession to trinn fat from
their blue and white collar
staffs and are reluctant to put
it back on agaip.
- The _ labor force grows
quickly when a r!!Covery is
under way. ThiS is because
hundreds of thousands of
persons who gave up looking
for work and were not
counted in government
unemployment statistics
perceive better times ahead
and return to the job market.
In addition, there is the
normal growth in the labor
market from graduating students.
Economists,
however,
attach more ·significance to
the number or persons employed. They have found
reason for optilriisrn in recent
trends.
" In April and May," said
Irwin Kellner of Manufactuers Hanover Trust, "the
number of people holding
jobs increased at a 4 per cent
annual rate. That was more
than twice the annual
average increase of l'h per
cent sL1ce World War II."
Charles Schultz, budget
director in the Johnson administration and now at the
Brookings Institute, agrees
the recession is over in termS
of an end to declining
production.
But, he added, "It is a little
bit misleading to say the
recession is over once it has
bottomed out because by
using that definition, the
Great Depression would have
been over. in 1933. That's
·when it bottomed out."
High unemployment lasted
until World War II.

t'ITTSBURGh
·'

lltbens /4ational

MEIGS 'THEATRE

-'"Cli{CIIINAT'I

TONITE THRU JUNE 26
NOT OPEN

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance t;Orporation
DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

JUNE 27-29
Walt Disney's
ESCAPE TO
WITCH MOUNTAIN

And Also
Wa II Disney's
CHIP AND DALE
FESTIVAL

WILD SCORING
Independent base ball
action Sunday saw Miners- ·
· ·ville defeat Pomeroy 22-21
in a wild scoring contest. .
For Minersville, Hendricks
was the winning pitcher, In
relief of Jed Will who
started. John Buck, the
losing pitcher for Pomeroy,
was the -sixth· to take the
mound. The winning run
came on a steal of home.
There was a total of 2
doubles hit for Minersville
and 4 for Pomeroy.

Leonard Barber
died Tuesday

REEDSVILLE , ~ Leonard
Barber, 80, Rt. I, Reedsville,
died early today at Veterans
Memorial Hospital following
an extended iUness.
Born in Meigs County, he
was the son of the late John
and Alice Blake Barber. He
attended Eden United
Brethren Church and was a
farmer and resident of the
Reedsville area the greater
;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;. part of his life.
Surviving are his wife,
Pauline Baxter Barber; four
sons, Robert L., Leonard L.
Barber, Jr., and Danny M.,
all of Reedsville, and Howard
L., Langsville; one daughter,
Mrs.
Ruby
Drake,
Ohio
;
-one
Miamisburg,
Holzer Medical Center
brother, Delbert Barber,
(Discharges, June 23)
Daniel Arthur, Mrs. Mark Reedsville; two sisters,
Bailey and infant son, Mary Martha Holsinger, ReedBeard, Delbert Becker, Ruth sville, and Bertha Reed,
Childrers, Lewis Cross, Empire, Ohio, and ten
Elaine Drake, Constance grandchildren.
In addition to his parents,
Evans, Grace Fisher, Hugh
Gaskins, Eva Head, Harry he was preceded in death by
Hughes, Elva Huntley, Mrs. two sons, a daughter, five
Carl Jeffers and infant brothers, three sisters and a
daughter, Ovida Johnson, grandson.
Funeral services will be
Chad McDaniel, Louise
Thursday
at 2 p. m. at the
Morse, Carol Mullens, Eunice
Eden
United
Brethren
Niehrn, Chris Oiler, Mary
Shuler, Ronald Sturgell, Church with the Rev. Eldon
Edward Thompson, Anna Blake officiating. Burial will
follow in the church
Tripp.
cemetery.
.
(Births)
Friends may call at the
Mr. and Mrs. Larry
White
Funeral Horne in
Barrett,
a
daughter,
Coolville
after noon WedLangsviUe ;· Mr. and Mrs.
.
nesday.
Todd Friisch, a son, Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Little,
a son, Middleport.

Paying for EMS
services-~No. 3
Ed. Note : This is the third
in a series "Paying for EMS
·service," titled, "Govern.
menl Insurance-State
Assistance.''

Security Office.
If you can 'I afford insurance and need help with
your medical bills, there are
certain types of public
assistance_ which may be
available to help you.
Medicaid, a public assistance
program run by your state,
pays hospital billS and doctor's bills and covers additional services as well, such
as emergency ambulance
transport.
If you are currently
receiving public assistance
payments, are receiving a
blind person, or if you are not
receiving welfare payments
but fall within certain income
limits, you may be able to
participate in Medicaid and
should contact your County
WeHare Department.
The
Ohio
Medical
As s istan ce Program
(Medicaid) is a joint federalstate program to provide for
the health care of needy
citizens.
Each eligible Medicaid
case receives a medical
assistance identification card
monthly. This card should be

shown to the SEOEMS
technicians if possible, at the
lime of your emergency
ambulance need.
The
Ohio
Medical
Assistance Program can
make payment for covered
services only after any other
insurance benefits are
exhausted, and ambulance
service ss covered only if
transportation by other ·
means would be detrimental
to the patient's health.

Colby defends~_CIA secrecy

Most major medical in·
dividual and family health
insurance policies now terminate at age 65 or upon
eligibility of Medicare. Some
(Continued__frorn page 1)
disabled persons and those
petroleum products, control
with chronic kidney disease
equipment in short supply
are also eligible for Medicare
and long delivery Iinne for
which pays most but not all of
equipment are considered
tl)e emergency medical bills.
such circwnstances."
Medicare will pay it:
Wunderle noted that the
- The ambulance service'
inclusion of sulphur oxides in
is medically necessary and
the ·Compliance date change
reasonable.
is an inter inn one.
- The use of any other
"We anticipate new regula11jeans of transportation
lions for sulphur oxides in the
would endanger the patient's
near future, and we are
coildition .
working with the U.S. EPA to
Generally,
ambulance
write such regulations,"
service is only provided to the
Wunderle said.
nearest hospital or skilled
"When new sulphur oxide
nursing facility within the
regulations are finalized,
locality that has apthey will be submitted to the
propriate facilities for
U.S. EPA for approval. A
treatment of the patient's
rnaxinnum of three years
condition. (For SEOEMS this
from the approval date would
usually includes Columbus
reflect the final compliance .
and certain West Virginia
date for sulphur oxides."
Hospitals ). Generally ,
Medicare does not cover
ambulance service to a
doctor's office.
To fill the gaps, a Medicare
(Continued from page 1)
CALLED BACK
supplement may be needed.
homes
a
subsidized
7
per
cent
DETROIT (UP!) - Some
According to the Health
Insurance Institute, more mortgage which would rise to 4,950 Chrysler Corp. hourly
than 50 pet. of the people the going market rate in six workers who· h~ve been laid
covered by Medicare have years, or a $1,000 cash grant off since as far back as early
William Amberger such extra coyerage. Medical to help with the down- November, when industry
layoffs peaked, will be called
supplements are available payment.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
In
addition,
it
would
offer
back
to their jobs within thethrough most private inADMISSIONS - Leonard of Akron dies
loans
of
$250
a
month
for
24
next six weeks, the United
surance companies but the
Barber, Reedsville; Pearl
months
for
unemployed
Auto Workers union said
William Franklin Am· insurance industry advises
Scarberry, Mason; Harold
who
had
homeowners
today.
The recall involves
such policies be examined
Jeffers, Racine; Lawrence berger of Akron died at his very carefully for extent of received foreclosure notices. 2,500 workers at the HamHa rlinger, Middleport; residence Monday morning. coverage and "loopholes"
Despite
recent
im- tramck assembly plant; 1,900
Naomi Bentley, Rutland; He is survived by his wife, such as lengthy waiting provernent .in home building at the main Warren Truck
Alberta Linthicum, Reed- two daughters, a son and periods before benefits are activity, construction unions Plant and 550 at the No. 3
sville; Virginia Wolfe, several grandchildren. He payable.
and the influential National automaker's compact truck
Syracuse; Pauline Taylor, was preceded in death by his
If you are a Medicare Association of Horne Builders line in Warren.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Pomeroy.
patient, you will receive a bill have campaigned hard for
DISCHARGES - James Amberger, former Pomeroy from SEOEMS a few days the bill's approval. Labor
Russell, BOnnie Dailey, residents .
NO COMMENT .. F_uneral services will be after your emergency. A says it would create work for
Martha Searles, Ronald
400,000 men.
completed
Medicare
form
CLEVELAND
(UPI)
held at the Schlup Funeral
Bostic.
House
Speaker
Carl
Albert,
needing
your
signature
will
Bishop
.John
Burt
of the
Horne, Kenmore Blvd.,
in
an
apparent
rebuff
to
th.
e
be
included
with
this
bill.
Episcopal Diocese of Ohio
Akron, at I p. m. Wednesday
with burial to follow at Akron. Once it is signed it can either Democratic Whip, Rep. John said .Tuesday he won't
Local relatives of Mr. be mailed directly to McFall, Calif., who was comment on the Rev. L.
Amberger include Wallace Medicare or back to the sitting next to him, told Peter Beebe's continued
Amberger, Gerald Am- SEOEMS office . When the reporters Monday he was defiance of church law until
berger, Mrs. Paul Werner, ambulance service is covered taking personal command of the 30-day ·appeal period has
Mrs . Elias Stiles, Miss • by medicare, payment will be the effort to override the veto. expired.
Mrs .
Vivian
Helen Elizabeth Duffy and Mrs. made on the basis of 80 pet. of
(Leonard) Van Meter, 62, Rose Ginther.
the allowable ambulance
6860 East Bashar Rd.,
charge. For example :
Lakeside, Ohio, passed away
If your bill for an EMS
Tuesday morning in the Good
ambulance run is $25 and $25
Samaritan Hospital · in
is determined by Medicare to
Sandusky, Ohio, following an
be the allowable charge,
extended illness.
Medicare would pay 80 pet. or
Mrs. Van Meter is survived
$20 providing you have
by her husband, George, son ,
A trailer horne and all of its already met the $60 deducRobert W. Allensworth ,
®
contents were destroyed by tible for th~ year. You would
Sandusky, one stepson
fire in Pomeroy at I :47 p.m. need to pay the balance
Thomas E. VanMeter,
yourself or through an inMonday.
Eugene, Oregon ; a daughter,
surance
supplement. More
The mobile horne, owned
lftrs. Richard (Virginia)
and occupied by the George information on Medicare is
Kesterson, Lakeside, Ohio; 8
Bunce family, was located • available thorugh your Social
grandchildren; two sisters,
Mrs. Chappelle (Virginia) near the residence of
Talbott, Barnesville, Ohio, Franklin Rizer on East Main
Mrs. Noel (Shirley) Hysell, St. Cause of the blaze was
DONATIONS MADE
undetermined. roperty loss
Columbus, Ohio; niece~ and
Three more fraternal order
nephews and other rellltives. was set at $6,000 for the of police organizations in
trailer and contents of $2500.
Mrs. Van Meter was The fire is still under in· Ohio have responded to a
preceded in death by her
vestigation by the Pomeroy request to aid the Ryan
parents and one grandson,
Jeffers hospitalization fund,
Fire Dept.
David Michael Kesterson.
Ray Manley, secretary- Friends may call from 3-5
treasurer of the Gallia-Melgs
and 7-9 p. rn. Wednesday at
'THREE RUNS MADE
Fraternal Order of Police
the Andres-Tucker Funeral
The Pomeroy E-R squad said today. They are Toledo
Horne, 2001 Columbus Ave., making 3 runs Monday and Lodge 40, a contribution of
Sandusky, Ohio . Funeral this morning, at 11:36 a. m. $50; Stow Lodge 82, of $25;
services will be held 1:30 p. Monday went to Dr. and Wickliffe Lodge 15 of $50.
T-SHIRTS
Ridgway's office from where So far, II FOP organizations
they transported Sharon have contributed $760 to the
3 for
Smith to Veterans Memorial fund for young Jeffers who
,Hospital; at 2:30 p. rn. was injured in a power
Ohio. The family requests Monday to the Charles Allen mower accident recently.
that expressions of sympathy residence in Chester to
be sent to the Erie County. transport Mr. Allen to
STONE FLIPPED
Veterans Memorial and at
· BOXER
Cancer Society.
No
one was injured in a
-·
3: 16 a. m. today to 144
SHORTS
Mulberry Ave. to remove minor traffic accident at 10
a.m.
Monday
on
Rt.
124,
five
Christy Rose, 17, to Pleasant
3 for ·
tenths of a mile east of
Valley Hospital.
WANf"l'OENDIT
c'ollege
Rd.
in
Meigs
County.
Hazel
E.
Sprague,
The Gallia-Melgs Post" State
Pomeroy, and Paul H.
Highway
Patrol said an auto
TOO MUCH LIGHT
Obetz, Ohio, have
.
driven
by
Cloyce R. Martln,
Pomeroy
Police
infor dissolution of
36,
of
Alhl!ns,
flipped a stone
htull'rili2e. and William E. vestigated an accident at 9:56
Double-barrel performance
was granted a p. rn. Moodily on Mulberry ~reaking the windshield on an
lrom
HANES: Now long wear
from Joyce A. Ave. in which Merri Ault, 17,. auto operated by Cecil W.
plus
day-in.
day-out comfort.
Middleport, was traveling · , Roseberry, 40, · of Rt. I,
~~~~:n in Meigs County south when she was blinded Racine.
1This is the HANES brand ot ·
I&lt;
Pleas Court Mondependability.
by an oncoming vehicle's
The HANES boxer: '
beadllghts, causing her to
TWO ADDED
Preshrunk broadclolh is full cut
lose control of her vehicle.
with wider heat-resistan t ful l
Charles C. Kessinger, 66,
Her car struck a parked car Route 4, Pomeroy, has two
waistband and wide fly .
owned by William Snouffer, additional survivors not
· The HANES T-shirt
Pomeroy. There were no named in an original notice of
Year-round comfort in soft
injuries or citations, and his death. They are a 'halfabSorbent cotlon . .. tram the
HANES
family at tine underwear.
medium damage to both sister, Betty Wills, Pomeroy,
vehicles.
TONIGHT
and a step-sister, Leona
Martin, o{ Athens.
. Double Feature
CLOTHING
DAY
SET
" DEADLY WEAPONS"
Fre~ clothing day will be
Rated R
held at the Salvation Army,
Plus
WCALTEMPS
HE DESTRUCTORS"
Butte·rnut Ave ., Pomeroy,
The temperature in
Rated PG
Thursday from 10 a.m. until downtown. Pomeroy at II a.
noo.n. All area residents in !11· Tuesday. was 87 degrees
!"lanes Is a reglsterllll trldemark ol H• nas Corporttlon . Wlrttt~· 811fM . N C
need of clothing are w~lcolne. ·under sunny skies. ,
'
I.

HOSPITAL

NEWS.

·Utilities

nacer
below
.
rl

$561

.

VOL. XXVII NO. 51

'75 Mustang... s1420
. ·

·

below ·
Scirocco

Price comparisons based on sti c ker pri ces , excluding title and
I
·
iaxes. Destination charges and dealer prep. extra and may alter the ·.u
.:~
ni·
., ~f.....
~··
.

today reported today that contemplate using any means
Mafia figure John Roselli has - including assassination.
admitted working with the
During this period the CIA
CIA in the early 1960s on six in filtrat ed anti -Castro
· separate attempts to either Cubans into Cu ba, ·--enpoison or shoot Castro.
couraging them "to get rid of
Anderson said in a •Castro by any means they
televised commentary (on could," Ray S. Cline, a forABC's AM America) that he mer deputy director of the
interviewed Roselli Tuesday CIA, said in a telephone inafter the 69-year-old un - terview.
derworld operative testified
"There was no outrage then
for more than two hours in a about thinking of deposing a _closed session of the Senate self-styled dictator who had
intelligence committee , won power by revolution/'
which is probing the CIA.
Cline said.
A former high CIA official
The Senate Select Comat the same time confirmed mittee on Intelligence
A KITIEN IN THE MIDDLEPORT PARK is irispecting the carvings on a new picnic
that both the Eisenhower and sUmmoned to testify today
table at the park. Vandalism is a problem discussed at the Middleport Council meeting
Kennedy administrations anot her former CIA employe,
Monday night. Six new tables were placed there last week and already have been damaged.
wanted to overthrow Castro William Harvey, who sources
Kittens (or cats) don't go-'round destroying each others' eating dishes which must mystify
and allowed the CIA to
this little fellow.
(Continued on page 20)

•

Now You Know

at y

en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDN ESDAY, JUNE 25, 1975

Trailer home,
contents lost

pnzes
listed

Hanes

$4.49

PRI CE 15'

Lightning seen
striking big jet

•

By United Press Interuadonal
WASHINGTON - THE PRETIY MYTH THAT nice little
girls just mark time at school while they grow up to be wives
and mommies has gone poof.In today 's world, these little girls
wind up in Qte labor force for most of their adult lives, illequipped by an education system that discrinninates agairist
them because they weren't born men.
Plans for awarding prizes
That is how the National Organization for Women sees the ·to the best entries in the July
problem facing American wornenhood today. Its proposed 4th parade in Racine under
answer : Congress should endorse pending rules to ban sex the psonsorship of the Racine
discrimination from kmdergarten through college. Hearings Fire Department were made
on the proposed .rules - which go into effect July 21 unless Tuesday night.
dispaproved by Congress - continue today before a House
According to the plans, the
subcommittee.
dep;~rtrnent will present a $25
bond to the best float by a
LOURENCO MARQUES, MOZAMBIQUE - MOZAM- church group carrying out
BIQUE BECAME the world 's newest nation today, ending five the Independence Day theme.
centures of Portuguese rule with a fanfare of wild cheers, A $25 bond will also be
tribal dancing, cowhide drums and antelope horns.
presented to the best float on
· At a stirring post-midnight ceremony in the seaside the theme but is not the entry
capital, President Samora Machel pledged to erase all traces of a church group.
of Portugal's oolonial domination in his East Mricannation.
There will be a $15 cash
"" "We will . eJirnin~t the elite," the 42-year-&lt;~ld guerrilla prize for the best float
leader said. "Our motto will be: to each according to his work, carrying out any theme; the
from each acoording to his ability."
best marhcing unit will be
NEW YORK - BUSINESSMEN ARE SLOW to respond on presented a trophy, and three
theit own to the demands of oonsumers and employes to im- $5 cash prizes will be given
prove working conditions and products, a Harris survey for best decorated bicycles.
showed today. But when the govvernrnent steps in to satisfy
The parade will be at 10:15
these "quality of life" demands, the study said, businessmen a. rn. on the Fourth following
"recoil in shock and bitterness" because they are uninformed the flag raiSing at 10 a. rn. by
and out of touch .
Racine American Legion
"Pattly through not being in touch, partly by not having Post 602. The flag ceremony
proper information, and partly out of desire to tell the will be held at the Junior High
government to keep hands off the way business is run in all School where the parade wiil
iristances, business finds itself in an almost constant state of also form.
having innposed on it a whole spate of legislation and
At · II a. m. the fire
regulations," said pollster Louis Harris.
department will start servving a chicken barbecue at
HOUSTON - CRUSHING DEBTS OF $38 MILUON ha.ve the fire ~lion . Some 600
forced Judge Roy Holheinz to give up part of hiS control of the servings will be prepared and
Astrodome and his entertainment empire, officials say. Ford homemade ice cream and
Motor Credit Corp., one of the major lenders to the other ' refreshments will be
Astrodornain Corp., plans to commit severalmore rnilijons in available.
operating funds to help the debt-laden Holheinz, a Ford
At 2 p, m. there will be
spoke!inan said Tuesday.
games for young people at he
Ford, General Electric Credit Corp., and the HNC Realty junior high school. Prizes will
hold mortgage notes for $38 million and have been assigned be awarded. Among the
authority to run the sprawling complex, the Houston Chronicle contests will be the greased
reported in a copyrighted story. Astrodomain executive vice pole, the greased pig, sack
president Sidney Schlenker said Tuesday he, Hofheinz and races and bicycle races.
Astrodomain president T. H. Neyland have been named by the
Square dancing on the Main
creditors to run the operation.
Street of town will begin at 7
p. rn, There is no charge for
NAIROBI, KENYA - UGANDA RADIO SAID today two participation, but donations
British warships loaded with troops had arrived at a Kenyan will go to the emergency
port in preparation for an invasion of Uganda over the squad. At 10 p. m. there will
scheduled execution of a British lecturer,
be a fireworks display, again
A British spokesman denied the charge. He said a frigate
(Continued on page 20)
and fleet auxiliary vessel arrived in the port of Mornhasa .
earlier this month for normal repairs but neither ship had
troops or marines aboard. Uganda President Idi Arnin said
Tuesday the execution of ·Dennis Hill$ would go ahead as
scheduled July 4 unless British Foreign Secretary James
callaghan Dew to Kampala for talks.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Eastern Airlines 727 jet from
New Orleans, turning toward
Runway 22L at Kennedy
Inter na tional
Airport ,
cruised through heavy rain
and lightning. It seemed like
a normal landing despite the
weather.
Sudden ly, seve ral witnesses said later, bolts of
lightning appeared to hit the
heavily loaded blue and white
plane. A quarter-mile . from
the runway, it Snapped a
series of 35-foot )jght towers.

MARY SEAMAN AND MARY SKINNER, right,
· discuss plans for the Personal Advocacy program in
· which community citizens volunteer their time to become
a friend to retarded persons in the area. Mrs. Skinner is
coordinator of the program which Is located in the old
Meigs General Hospital. Mrs. Seaman is an advocate who
works with three retarded ladies.

The aircraft somersaulted,
hit the ground with a thunderous ex plosion and a
fireball that flashed up to 600
feet in the gray sky, and then
broke up across a marshy
field and a highway.
There were 123 men ,
women and children aboard

WASHINGTON - SEN. WENDELL H. FORD, D-Ky.,
rl!DDmmended Tuesday that the Appalachian Regional
Commission move its headquarters into the hills of Ap·
palachili. Ford made the 1suggestion to Sen. Jennings Randolph, D-W. Va., chairinan of the Senate Public Works Com·
mittee.
.
.
is
The committee, which has jurisdiction over the ARC,
currently oonsi4ering House-passed legWation to extend the
life of the commission program folD' more years. The ARC is a
· federaloState partnership, created in 1965, to funnel federal
money into poverty-etricken areas of Appalachia to help
develop the area ..

'""\

By Jo Ellen Diehl
"It's all about the friendship that they need and don't
have," said Mrs. Art (Mary )
Skinner about the Personal
Advocacy program in Meigs
County.
Mrs. Skinner is coordinator
of the program which places
community volunteers with
young people ·and adults who
have development a l
disabilities. This includes
those who are mentally
retarded, and who ha ve
cerebral palsy or epilepsy.
Presently Mrs. Skinner has
matched 20 advocates with as '
many proteges or "special
friends." Before the match,
the candidates for the advocacy
program
are

GEORGE M. COLLINS, MEIGS COUNTY
TREASURER, presents a check for $16,.70.48 to Mrs. Pat
Holter, president of the board of trustees of the libraries in
Meigs County. The check includes the tax on personal
intangible property collected during the first hall of this
year. The tax is. the source of income for tbe public
DETROIT - CHEVROLET MOTOR D~ION of General · libraries and pays for the operation of libraries in •
(Continued on page 20) ' .
·
Pomeroy and Middleport, the purcha;;e of ~ks. and

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

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EAL F1ight 66. Only 14 survived the crash Tuesday
afte rnoon . Two fli ght attendants miraculously
escaped serious injury and 12
passengers were in c~ilical
condition today.
The toll of 109 dead made
this the worst crash of a
single plane in the United
States since a 1971 disaster in
Alaska that killed Il l.
History's worst air tragedy
killed 345 persons aboard a
Turkish plane near Paris last

mile, 181-rninute trip from
Louisiana, the three-engine
jet wound up as a trail of
smoking debris and shattered
bodies stretched in a line
pointing at Runway 22L .
White shrouds covered a long
row of victinns thrown onto
the sodden ground .
Others asphyxiated by the
inferno that consumed the
fuselage were left strapped
into their overturned seats
while rescue workers searched for survivors.
year.
Several witnesses reported
Geor ge Van Epps, a they saw lightning strike the
supervisor for the National · plane before it smashed to the
Transportation Safety Board, gro und in a thunderous
said the veteran pilot, Capt. roar.
John IV. Kleven, never
Van Epps said a lightning
reported any trouble before bolt was a possible cause of
the plane crashed.
the disaster, but he said he
A few hundred yards from could not speculate on the
the end of its nonstop I ,200- exact reason the jet crashed
until the 727's "black box"
flight recorder and taped
records of the pilot's last
exchanges with air traffic
controllers are studied.
A 10-rnan NTSB "go team"
several notes of appreciation
fro m parents of the proteges, sent in !rom Washington
rriany expressing that their began an immediate inson or daughter is at last vestigation today,
"It was raining very hard
participa ling in activ iti es
at the Iinne," said gas station
ou tside of the family.
Live!~ Mrs. Mary Seaman, mechanic Neil Raitden, 23,
the oldest of the advocates at who was watching the plane
., e age of 72, is enthusiastic as it approached the runway
at 4:06p.m. " All of a sudden
about the whole program.
"I just think it's wonderful, there was lightning. I looked
and I'm enjoying it. I wish up· and all I saw was smoke
more people would gel in- and flames and no plane.
"I said 'Holy God !' I knew
volved because so ma ny have
that
plane had gotten hit by
the time to give ." Mrs.
Seaman has three special lightning," Rairden said. " It
(Continued on page 15 )
friends and devotes at least
three hours a week to each of
them .
The progra m, made
possible by a grant from the
Ohi o Devel opm e ntal

Program is all about friendship
screened and asked why they
want to work with the
di sa ~led and what their goals
would be. If they are acceptable, the new advocates
go throu gh two tra ining
sessions before meeting their
proteges. They are told what
to prepare for and given
helpful hints as to what activities they can do with the
special friends. .
"It's not a duplication of
services already offered by
counselors, social workers or
other professionals, " said
Mrs. Skinner. "Advoca tes do
not provide services; they
help the protege obtain the
services of these agency

help obtain professional help,
but especially they perform
the services of a friend .
Denta l a nd medical appointments are made, and
simple social entitles are
taught by going out into the
area.

Mrs. Skinn er rela ted the
story of one boy learning for
the first time of the custom of
tipping at a restaurant. And
another advocate said that
her friend t.as become accustomed to shopping in a
grocery store and is no longer
afraid of the many people
there.
Mrs. Skinner has kept a
scrapbook of ail material
personnel.''
. pertaining to the nine-month
"Not only do the advocates old program, and in it are

Parents on

Disabilities , Inc ., is an

SEOUL - SOUTII KOREA ALERTED ITS ARMED
forces today on tl1e 25th anniversary of the outbreak of the
Korean War. North Korea said there is "a grave danger of war
breaking out at any moment." .A South Korean defense
spokesman said the nation's ·625,000 member anned forces
went on "special alert" in observance of the anniversary.
· . South Korea .also canceled 'all leaves for its 600,000 .
government workers and ordered 20 per cent of the employes
to report for special duty during the day. . .
North Korea's Central News Agency, m a broadcast
monitored today in Tokyo, accused the United States and South
Korea of trying "to whip up a war atmosphere" on the divided
perilnsula.
"Owing to this, a grave danger of war breaking out at any
moment has been created in Korea," the news agency said.

~.29

The king and churn
salmons swinn more than
2,000 miles up the Yukon
River Alaska and the Yukon
Territory to spawn .

Devoted To The lnterests of The Meig~;-M&lt;lson Areu

Housing

·'75 Maverick... •1589 ~:!-iEE
below
Dasher 4-Dr.

the incomplete laws we have
today."
Colby immediately was
challenged b}' subcommittee
Chairman Bella S. Abzug, DN.Y., who asserted the CIA
had condu&lt;:led la rge-sca le
espionage on U.S. citizens
which should be exposed and
halted.
,
"!do not question the need
for an effective intelligence
capability by this country,"
she said. But she added, "It
(the CIA) .must never be
involved in the collection or
maintenance of files concerning the political a"tivities of American citizens.
The CIA has grossly overstepped its authority ."
Colutnnist Jack Anderson

Cloudy today,· tonight and
Thursday; chance of thundershowers, afternoon and
evening. Lows tonight wiil be
in the mid 60s. Highs Thursday will be in mid 80s.
Probability of rain 40 per cent
today, tonigh~ and Thurday.

"t
below
Rabbl
.,._--------------------:------------......1
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is to continue to be effective,
there must be limits to the
public exposure of its activities," Colby said.
"Exposing our clandestine
operations to the American
people also exposes them to
foreign nations who can th· wart them. Exposing our
technical intelligence
systems to the American
people also alerts closed
societies to the chinks we
have found in their armor."
Colby also indica ted he
favored tightening up federal
statutes to protec t intelligence, saying:
"! have on many occasions
pointed out the need for
better legal protection of our
intelligence secrets beyond

WP.ather

T·Shirt &amp; Boxer

'75 Pinto...

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.

By NICHOLAS DANILOFF
WASHINGTON (UP!) CIA Director William E.
Colby, again acknowledging
past mistakes by his agency,
warned today that without"
new legal limits on public
exposure of intelligence
activities foreign nations will
know·all "the chinks ... in otlr
-armor."
Colby's plea to a · House
subcommittee on government information and individual rights followed new
disclosures of several Central
Intelligence Agency plots
during the Eisenhower and
Kennedy administrations to
assassinate Cuban leader
Fidel Castro.
" H American intelligence

magazines and tl)e salaries of staff members, Bookmobile
service in Meigs County is also paid by this tax through an
annual subsidy of $8,600 which the local library board
pays to the state. This tax income allows library service
free of charge to the public. Looking on is Miss Susan
Fleshman, librarian of the Pomeroy-Middleport
Libraries.

'

agency of the Jackson-GalliaMeigs 648 Board. An advisory
committee serves in a consulting capacity to Mrs .
Skinner and is a resource in
publicity and promotions .
Nora Eason is chairman with
Jessie Might, Rhea Roush
and the Rev·. Robert
Bumgarner as members.
In the ma tch-ups, Mrs.
Skinner tries to get the advocate and protege from
about the same area so that
there will be no travelling
problem . She stresses that it
is
a
"normalization
program ," and tha t th e
proteges look forward to a
regular once per week
meeting. Advocates also have
a rap session monthly to
share their experiences and
ask for help if a problem
arises. _ .
Everyone interested in
joining the program either as
an advocate or a protege may
contact Mrs. Skinner at 9922192. As she said, "We can 'I
desert them."
LOCAL TEMPS

The temperature in
downtown Pomeroy at 11 a .
m. Wednesday was -86
·degrees under sunny skies.

probation
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith,
Middleport, were put on 30
days probation for their
daughter's alleged disorderly
conduct by Mayor Fred
Hoffman in court action
Tuesday night.
In other action, the mayor
forfeited the $150 bond of
Clifford Brown, Rutland, for
leaving the scene of an accident, and fined Mike A.
Bolen, 20, Middleport, and
John.L. Manley, $10 and costs
each for disorderly manner
(swinuning in pool while
ciosed); Larry ·. Neff, 18,
WUKesville, forfeited a $100
bond for theft; Robert C.
Rawlings, 27, Middleport, $50
and ~osts, destruction .of
property, and $10 and costs
disorderly manner.
Mayor Hoffman said today
the Riverview Cemetery will·
be closed each night at 9:30.
Also, he has ordered that
there be no . smoking in the
.caboose in - the Middlep&lt;'rt
park at any time . The
caboose is being painted by
Ken Gilkey and George
. Arnott and anyone damaging
· this property will be
prosecuted.

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·~~l:~I~;,~;i;iir::~:t~;~;, ~i~~'~:,~\:.~~:,~~~:~·::,~,;:..~~=~·~e.;.::,~ une 25, t975

2- The flailv ~ntmel. Mtddleoort-Pomercv, 0 , Wednesda)', JWJe 25, 1975

\J

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

RAY CROMLEY

White collar crime

I To.i~;:~ " " "~-'-1 Phils pull within 2 of Pirates
: ::: Sport .Parade
I :;.~;: :.;:-,: :;:-· · I

"Be right with you as soon as I take care of an
emergency!"

buck stops at top

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - The drive on whtte collar crune has
~-.o...-c~-"&lt;;&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;o&lt;o-o-o--o-o-o-c&gt;-.c""&lt;':,..,.,;;&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;-&lt;o-&lt;?-e&gt;-o-c"&lt;::o..::,..,.7 take n a masstve, shaky, step forward .
Under an expanded defmitwn developed by the courts,-a
company prestdent , for example, can be foWJd personally
gutlty of a crime resulting from negligence by subordmates ·
- Even if he can prove he had no cruninal intent ("The
The supposedly "veto-proof" 94th Congress apparently thmks tt ts voter-proof, too . That at
statute . . dispenses with 'conscwusness of wrongdoing."')
any rate ts the impresswn one gets from remarks made by House maJonty leader Thomas P.
~ Even if he had ordered correcttve actton. but dtd not
"Tip" O'Neill the other day
make
certain action was taken ("It was eno!!gh ... Utat 1 by
"The flowers that bloom m the spring wither in the fall ," chtrruped the Massachusetts
vtrtue of Ute relationshtp he bore to the corporatton, the agent
Democrat Commenting on President Ford's complaints about congresswnal dtlly-{jallying on
had the power to have prevented the act complatned of.")
energy and other matters, he promtsed that "beginmng about next September, we'll take off on
- Even if he had a system for checking on employes. In hts
him . The economtc woes of the natwn are gomg to fall on Jerry 's shoulders."
summation to the Jury, one prosecutor successfully argued
In other words , a heavily Democrattc Congress, whtch on paper commands more than
Utat the president of Ute company mvolved had to be held
enough votes m both houses to pass almost any program tt wtshes, has chosen to fiddle around
playmg politics while any number of tssues burn JUSt so it can point the fmger of blame at a responstble for Ute fact Utat hts system wasn 't workmg.
That is, responsible company offtctals may be !table for
Republican prestdent
and conviction even if they did not know anything
prosecutton
Heaven knows, Mr. Ford has mv1ted plenty of cntlctsm by such acttons as vetomg
_
the stnp-nuning bill and legislatwn to create 900,000 federally fmanced jobs and by hts m- was amiss ("The liabtlity of managerial officers ... (does) not
flation-fueling mcrease of the tariff on imported otl But at least he ts actmg on the basts of depend on their knowledge of, or personal participation in, Ute
act made criminal by the state.")
what he believes should or should not be done in these areas and it is not as tf Congress were
These pomts became clear m a recent Supreme Court
helpless m the face of overweenmg presidenttal au tltortty
Yet instead of gtrdmg itself to override the vetoes (at the risk of mcurring the onus if Ute dectston and a reaffu-mation of a 32-year~ld decision.
Thus far, the propositions noted above appear to be fully
nation 's energy or unemployment problems remained intractible), or coming up wtth
applicable
only to instances of neglect where the public mlegislation the President could accept, the Democrats seem to be congratulating themselves
terest
is
seriously
involved - prunarily where the santtary
Utat the worse Utings get, the better they'lllook
Maybe all this ts an WJfarr readmg of O'Netll's words But if enough voters get the tdea that condttion of food and its purity are the issue
But note that at a time courts are reducing the authority of
Utat's what ts gomg on dcwn in Washington, any Democratic hopes of cashing m at the polls
company
offtctals over employes, they are increasing the
next year at the expense of Ute Prestdent's party could evaporate as qmckly as dtd the fears
responstbtltty of company offtcials for the negllgence of
Utat a ·'veto-proof" Congress would ride roughshod over the executive.
subordmates.
The Supreme Court seems to recogntze this when tt says .
"The requirements of foresight and vigilance imposed on
responsible corporate agents are beyond question demanding,
and
perhaps onerous, but they are not more strmgent than the
Aside from all its other unplications, the Rockefeller ColllllllSSwn's report on tllegal acpublic
has a right to expect of those who voluntartly assume
tivities by the Central intelligence Agency has giVen new urgency to the "pnvacy tssue."
positions
of authority in business enterprises whose services
Thts is somethmg Utat concerns every cttizen, for few of us do not have our names, ranks
(mcome, educatwn , etc.) and serial numbers (Soctal Security, driver's ltcense, etc.) stored m .and products affect the healtlt and well-being of the public ... "
It must be noted here that we are talking about the pera mynad government and pnvate files.
sonal
crimmalliabiltty of a company prestdent or other high
So far , the only maJor legislahon 1s thts area, the Pnvacy Act of 1974, deals solely with the
government-&lt;:ompiled information. However, a broad-&lt;:overage btll has been mtroduced in the company offiCial - not the liability of a company. It has long
House of Representattves that would do for the prtvate sector what the Prtvacy Act did for the been establtshed that company negligence subjects a fu-m to
penalttes.
public sctor .
In Ute inunediate case at hand, the company had already
Commentmg on the proposed legislation, Dale H. Learn, president of lnformalton Sc1ence
guilt, or rather negligence - unsanitary conacknowledged
Inc., which claims to be the nation 's leadmg designer of "human resources systems," note~
mcluding
rat droppings, in a major warehouse in
dittons,
Utat legislation is clearly required to insure that the pn vacy of the individualts not transwhich
food
for
sale
was stored. The punishment given the
gressed and to prevent Ute unauthorized and WJwarranted use of dtssemmatton of employe
company prestdent was ltght, a fine of $50 on each of five
data . He suggests two ways Utts could be done :
1) By setting up ttght securtty systems for keeping files under lock and key , whetlter Utey counts for a total of $250.
But he could have been given a year's imprtsonment and
are computerized or manual.
fmed
up to $1,000 on each count for thts frrst offense. A second
2) By permittmg employes to see the mformahon m therr ftles so that they may review,
offense of negltgence would be a felony and could subject the
question and correct it if need be.
defendant
to three years in prison, $10,000 fine and depriv~ton
But as for the wtdespread impression- or fear- that a lot of Ute personal mformation
of
important
civil rights
con tamed m corporate and busmess ftles is unnecessary and irrelevant, tf not downrtght false
This interpretation of law is a forceful return to personal
Learn's experience has been that this ts not so
'
In the 10 years his company has been designing employe mformatwn systems for many ot responsibiltty. It says m essence that no company president or
the nation 's largest corporations, tt has never, he says, been asked to mclude such data as high offtctal can pass the buck downward dr hide behind his
politicial activities, standing wtth the Internal Revenue Service, credit ratings or the like. On company.
Up to now, so far as I can determme, the personal crimmal
Ute contrary, the mformatton kept on employes ts relevant to the jobs they hold and is "emresponstbility
for the acttons of others has not been much
ploye originated " for Ute most part.
enforced.
If
vigorously
carried beyond food, drugs and
The computer, Learn contends, may actually be the key to Ute "reperso~allzatwn " of
society. "The computer will enable the movement away from treatmg cttizens and employes m sanitation into, say, the safety of automobiles, buildings, toys
unpersonal mass groups and back toward the indlVldual assessment on Ute basts of and electrical appliances, it could perhaps have the same
revolutionary effects on mdustrial officials as tbe surge of
qualifications, capabihties and preferences."
malpractice
suits is having on doctors.
There ts a need to prevent erroneous information from bemg inunortalized m the computer, he admits, but the collectwn and use of employe information have httle if anything to do
wtth the right to prtvacy as long as appropriate secunty measures are observed.

Congress politics while voters burn

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Privacy, the law, and the computer

Dateline: 1775

Pennissive Soviet society
In this country, some people vtew the trend toward sexual permissiveness as part of a
Communist plot to sap the nation 's moral fiber . lnterestmgly, though, the puritannical Sovtet
Umon setms to be experiencing much the same phenomenon.
The magazine "Our Contemporary" reports that a survey tt conducted found sharp mcreases m premarttal sex, adultery and illegitimate births m Soviet soctety, as well as a rismg
number of unmarrted couples llvmg together and unreported separatwns .
lntervtews of Lenmgrad_students revealed that more than half of the men engaged m
premarital sex before the age of 18 and nearly 65 per cent of the women did so before age 21.
As another barometer of sexual permisstveness, the magazine says that 400,000 children
are born out of wedlock 1n the Sovtet Union each year, or nearly 10 per cent of all btrths m 1971.
In the city of Perm, every third child was illegJtunate.
"The conclusion of a legal marriage has stopped being the conditton of sexual life " the
magazine comments
'

DR. LAMB

Protein needs of a family
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M. D. a day m the refngerator
DEAR DR. LAMB - We before usmg for a beverage.
are on a low income food
A pound of separable lean,
budget, but do not want to raw meat, fish, or poultry,
resort to food stamps not counting bones, fat or skin
However, I am concerned ( the edtble portion ) will
about my children, ages 10 contam about 100 gran'ls of
through 14, and want to be protem Mature bean seeds
sure they get enough protem. are a good source of protem
We have a small amount of and wtth m1lk and meat part
meat every other day in time w1ll be adequate. One
stews, casseroles and an egg cup of drained, cooked Navy
or cheese dish or corn beans contain about 15 grams
chowder on the off day. We of protem.
have hot cereal w1th milk for
For more mformation on
breakfast and a peanut butter protems write to me m Gare of
or tuna sandwich and milk for Utis newspaper, P. 0 . Box
lunc_h.
Hi51 , Radio Ctty Station, New
How many grams of York, NY 10019, and ask for
protem a day do Ute children The Health Letter number 3~
need? How much would my on Protems. Send a long,
husband need ? He was stamped , self-addressed
1 moderately
acltve unhl envelope and 50 cents for
unemployment htt.
maibng and costs.
DEAR READER - Smce
DEAR DR . LAMB - I have
your children are entermg read several articles recently
Ute rapld growth age of 14 and tha t said some of the
over you should give them med1cmes used to treat high
and your husband about the blood pre9sure cause women
same amount, a minimum of to be more prone to breast
56 grams of good, complete cancer. Would you please tell
protein a day. You can me if either Esidrex or
estimate 10 grams of protem Valtum are in thts group
for each cup of mtlk (8 DEAR READER - Nettlter
ounces ). A good , cheap a re. The medicines conIOUI'te of -protein 1s non-fat, tammg reserpme or rawfoba
dry milk powder which you serpentm.a are the only ones
can use for cooking and m questwn on thts score.
drlniWlg. You can improve its Esidrex is pnmartlY, a
flavor by allowing it to stand diur~ttc pnd helps to

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ehmmate excess salt and
lowers blood pressure some.
Vahum is a tranqutllzer and
helps lower blood pressure m
some people by helping Utem
avoid excess emotional
~ n s10n .

Your queslton prompts me
to make two observations No
one should stop takmg
medtcme for h1gh blood
pressure on h1s own
mitiative, regardless of news
• stories. It is better to go to the
doctor am! let him change
your medicine tf he finds you
are takmg a large enough
amount Ill require a change.
There are a variety of
medtcmes that can be used
now, and tt ts possible to
swttch, 1f that is md1cated.
And, anyone takmg a
tranquilizer for any reason,
including treatment of high
blood pressure. should
eltmmate all calfeinecontaimng
beverages ,
specifically including coffee,
tea and colas. You can use
one of the decaffema ted
brands of coffee. The caffeine
tn coffee has essentially Ute
oppos1te
effect
of
tranqu1hzers. It doesn 't make
sense
to
buy
good
1ranqu1hzers and go home
and wash Utem down with
" liqwd go ptlls " in the form
of coffee or tea.

By United Press International
PHILADELPHIA, June 30
- Congress adopted Articles
of War to regulate the Continental Army. The colony 's
assembly appointed a
conuruttee of safety to plan
defense of the province with
Benjamin Franklin as head of
the 25-member group.

CHARLESTON, S.C., July
2 - The local secret committee forced the town
postmaster to turn over tbe
just-received mat! pouch
from London which contamed
secret mstructwns to several
southern royal governors .
The dispatches were 1mmediately sent to the Continental Congress in Philadelphia.

TOM TIEDE
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - Contrary
tr the worst fears of top
soldi ers, and others, the
defea t of U.S arms m
Southeast Asia has not
resulted m any lessening of
mfluence for the mtli tary.
Actually, as even a qwck tour
of Pentagon catacombs
assures, the armed forces
have emerged from the rwns
of 1ts Vtetnam poltcy wtth an
Amer rca seemmgiy more
dependent on tt than ever.
As Korea was a blessmg for
th e mrhtans ts- as Gen.
James Van Fleet satd at the
ltme, because rt landmmed
publtc torpor- so too has the
Indochtna debac le served
Utat purpose.
The hawks h ve. The
generals are sm11tng. All 's
well mstde the nation 's
defense apparatus. Nary an
odorous htppte ptcket can be
spotted
at
militar y
headquarters and there are
recessiOn-provoked watting
hnes at the enlistment
coWJters. Gone are the days,
obvtously, when the war
ana ylsis faced wtth a pubhc
weary of bloodletting and
moral atrocity had for the
sake of expedtency to assure
the nation "The Army wants
to JOin y ou "

The Pentagon mood ts
fetsty. Whereas Vietnam
par ttctpatwn necessrtated an
uncomfortable pohcy of
Dateline 1775
dtplomacy m the servtces- in
By United Press In- Datellne 1775
the latter years parltcularly,
ternational
By United Press Io- generals talked qutetly of
LONDON, July I - The ternatiooal
"mmimwn force, " "political
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., July objectives," and even "ingovernment ordered General
Gage to make every effort 3 - The American army ter naltonal dialo gue ""by land and sea" to subdue turned out in review for Gen. Vtetnam defeat has Jerked
the Amertcan uprtsing. His George Washmgton, who Ute soldters hack to form
plans for an expedition to offtclally assumed command. Phtlosophtcally, Pentagon
destroy arms and munitions Patriotic airs were played by people are rolling thetr
at Concord were questioned, fife and drum units and the faltgue sleeves back up to
however
day was described as "ex- show how thetr btceps bulge.
ceedingly pleasant," but The vogue again ts hard Ime.
Datelloe 1775
there ts no detailed public or
Defense Secretary James
By United Press In- pnvate account of the event Schlesinger has set the postternatiooal
extent.
Vtetnam pace . The lessons of
our failures, he satd recently,
underhne the mevitable
of
offensive
results
graduah&amp;m . If North Korea
were to attack southward this
afternoon, as example ,
Schlesinger says the only
proper response would be to
stnke at Ute heart · of her
power Such talk during
Vtetnam would have been
odd, and loudly questioned
Now, as the secretary ts
confident, the Amencan
majonty
agrees;
the
strategies of the Fifti.; thus
prevatl once more.
In fact, the Pentagon's
post-Vietnam missile rattlings go beyond the Cold War
familtartties .
At
Schlesmger's lead, planners
and commanders talk openly
of. first strike capabtlities,
mtldly camouflaged by the
term cOWJ~rforce, and hint
at several contingency
blueprmts whtch would have
Ute U.S. r~ tailate in the
nuclear to conventional
aggressiOn on frtendly
COWl tr1es. Schlessmger has
satd, tllustratively, that a
Russian foray into Western
Europe mtght provoke such
response, and others add
"I JUSt had a horrrble thought' Wh at 11 come
frankly
the threat IS there for
back as t~e mayor of New York City?" ,
any Commumst natton to
lhmk aboul .
••

Berry's World

Go ahead, C(Jmmie,
knock this chip uff
RALPH NOVAK

Teddy's ready
not to run
By Ralph Novak
"Teddy, why are you holding your breath ?"
"I'm holding my breath to prove that I'm not gomg to run
for President. Then I'm going to cross my heart for a while,
promtse honest InJun, give scout's honor, have a few affadivts
made up and take out an ad mall the papers."
"But you've already satd you aren 't going to run for
president. Why do people keep doubting you ?"
"It beats me. I go to California to make a speech and Utey
say they don 't belteve me. I make a fact-finding tour of the
Middle East and they say they don't believe me. I show up on a
few national television programs and they say th~y don't
believe me. I make a few comments about national policy and
they say Utey don't believe me. I go to a few fund-raising affatrs and they say they don't believe me.
"I can't tmderstand it."
"!can't either, Ted. I heard somebody say the other day
that a lot of people thought you were just bemg coy. But I'm
sure, tbough, that the chap was kidding."
"Cbappaquiddick ? Who said anything about Chappaquiddick? How can I complete my plans to not run for
President if everybody keeps talking about Cbappaquidd1ck ?"
"No, no , you misunderstood. I was just talking about all
those cynical people who think that you 're just pretending
you're not gomg to run so you can change our mindat the last
mmute m a fit of generosity."
"Who me ? Ha, ha. Ha ha ha ha. Ha. Ha ha. Ha ha ha. And
so on. It's so ridiculous, alii have to say is that if I run for
President, you Will run for vtce-pre,sident."
"Gee, Teddy, really? Why, thanks a lot. I'll try to fulfill the
duties the Constitution ... Or, that is, yes, that's prettv funnv.
all right. By the way, what are your real ambitions?"
"Well, as you know, those of us 'who have workef our way
up from the ranks always appreciate our positions, so I'm just
content to be a humble old senator, whiling away my years
making perceptive observalions and filling m the odd hours by
not rwming for President."
"I understand, though it's too bad, smce a lot of people
really think you should run, you know."
"Well, if you insist, I just happen to have my acceptance
speech right here. Uh, ha ha ha. Just kidding, of course. I
certainly was just kidding; I definitely won't run for
President."
"Right, Teddy, but there's just one thing Whenever you make the promise, you get Utis pained look on your face.Js it .;:
because your back hurts? Because of regret? Because you .!
hate to disappomt your countrymen?"
•
"You'd look pained, too, if you had to keep crossing your
••
toes all the time."

NEW YORK (UP!) - Muhanunad Air says he's quitting Oh,
sure. Same way he was going to gtve all his purses to poor
blacks Remember hrrn saying that ? They're sltll wattmg.. Ah
has a convement forgettery He says a lot of thmgs Monday he
forgets by Tuesday . Hts postfight statements after beatmg
George Foreman were even more tired than he was but after
he had won, Ali, with that fertile always-workmg mind of hts
publtcly announced that henceforth he was gomg to be "a ro~
ftghter," whatever Utat is ... He satd somethmg else the other
day . He was gomg to China A check 111Ut Pekmg shows no vtsa
has been tssued hun nor has any invtta lton been extended. The
vast majority of the Chmese have never ht'ard of Ah and
wouldn '.t know him if they met him on the street. What's more,
boxmg ts looked down upon m Chma as something needlessly
brutal. Usually, Alt ts ongmal m his thtnking. Not this time,
Utough. Jun Corbett "retrred" m 1900 and came hack three
years later to get knocked out by Jun Jeffnes. Jack Johnson
announced hts retirement in 1928 at Ute age of 50 and sttll was
ftghting as much as 17 years tater. And Jack Dempsey, who
celebrated his 80th btrthday Tuesday, qwt in 1932, changed hts
mmd, and fought three more tunes before retiring eight years
later
When he heard of Ah's 'retirement' announcement Joe
Fraz1er had blunt two-word comment which can't be repeated
m any family newspaper. Smokm' Joe sunply doesn't believe
tt, but he may tone down hts remark a btl for publicatton
because he'd dearly love to get Ali into the rmg agam where
he'd most likely beat him . The way I see it All doesn't actually
want to retrre anymore than Francisco Franco does Franco is
82 and still enJoys running Spam ..
The Ptttsburgh Prrates were having a prayer meeting in
thetr clubhouse Sunday and it remmded Danny Murtaugh of
the time Larry Shepard, a regular church worshtpper, finally
succeeded in.gettmg Pat Corrales, who wasn't, to attend a
service. Shepard had spent a long time gettmg Corrales to
come wttlt him, and when they stepped mstde the church,
Shepard suddenly stopped, looked upwards and said, "Lord,
this is Pat Corrales." ..
Walt Frazier explains why he ltkes kids and spends as much
tLme w1th them as he does . "They're real ," he says, " not
phony. You can't fool them. I remember playmg Julms Ervmg
on e~n ~ne and he beat me. A Iotta ktds were watching. Some
of Utem came over to me and sa1d 'you're sttll the best guard. '
They never said 'you sllnk' hke grownups would." .. .
Ne11 Orleans seems to be losing its fight for a major league
baseball franchtse. A move to rrnpose a spw.al tax on each
admisswn llcket that would help defray the expense of building
the Superdome IS discouragmg any prospective baseball
operators from seeking a franchise m the Crescent C1ty..
Philadelphia 76ers are having trouble sigmng George
McGmnis Hts agent ts asking for nearly $3 mtllion over stx
years. That's the trouble ..
Everytune the AU-Star game approaches, Joe DtMaggw
thtnks about the first one he ever played m at Braves Field m
Boston m 1936, his rookte year. The National League shaded
the Amen can, 4-3, that surruner and DiMag unammously was
voted the "goat. " He misplayed three balls m the outfteld,
certainly not typtcal of hun. "Ftrst I miSJUdged a fly ball," he
remembers. "Then I allowed a single to go for extra bases and
fmally I let a sinking lme drive by Gabby Hartnett get past me
for a triple " .. The Yankees' rookie centerftelder dtdn 't do too
badly the rest of the year, collectmg 206 htts, includmg 29
homers, drtvmg m 125 rWJs and fmtshmg with a .323 batting
average.
Steve Blass ts domg sales and promotional work for a
Jewelry chain, and doing well at it The former Pittsburgh
pitcher had one of the best personalities in the game. Does he
m1ss baseball? What do you think? .
Baseball players always feel managers pay undue attenhon
to their weight and that it's not that unportant But Hank
Aaron says that's how he got his start m the btg leagues wtth
the Milwaukee Braves - by another player bemg overwetght.
•'Most people belteve I got my chance wtth Ute Braves beca use
Bobby Thomson broke hts leg wtth Utem m the sprmg of 1954,
but that's not true, " says Aaron. "The mam reason I got a shot
was because Jun Pendleton reported more than 30 pounds
overweight. He had a great year for the Braves in 1953, hitting
300 or n ght around Utere, and they were figuring on him for
1954. When he came m so heavy, though, they sent him to
Waycross, Georgta, to get in shape, and that's how come a spot
on the club opened up for me "

Morgan's belt
trips Atlanta

Evenofft
e
,.... beaten pa rh,
State
·
•
I"

•'

Th~se Truths ...
A Chronicle of America

We Hold

....""',
•••

June

25, 1775:

General Thomas Gage, the Royal Governor of Massachusetts and the commander of all British forces m
the colontes, sends the Mtntstry m London his official account of the June 17 encounter with the colonists on Bunker
Htll " Thrs act ton has shown thesupertorltyof the King's
troops, who , under every dtsadvantage, attacked and
defeated above three ttmes their number, stronRIY posted.
and covered by breastworks " In a letter to Lord Dartmouth, Secretary for the Co tomes, accompanying the offi Cial report, Gage tndtcates a growing respect for the
Amerlcan.colontsts . "I wtsh most smcerely that (Bunker
Htll] had not cost us so dear. . We have lost some extremely good officers. The trials we have had show (that]
the rebels are not the desptcable rabble too many have
supposed them to be "

--'
...
110\)

" _.,
'"

""'

Insure the good times. too II
you've taken to off the road travel
for excitement &amp;J!d recreation,
you're likely to need the eKtra
protection ot our Aa,:reatlonal

Vehicle Polley Call or violt for all
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1258 POWE!l ST.
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State Farm Is there.

••

·-

J

- By Ross M111rkenr:1e A Jetr MacNelly/ &amp;1915 United Feature Syndicat e

,,

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---- A

UIITI ratM

ll&amp;n -

fiUTUil

' Home OffiCI

Bloomington, lll!nols

INIItiUNU

By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
ATLANTA (UP!) - Joe
Morgan has set a pretty high
goal for himself.
.
The Cmcmnati Reds second
baseman wants to keep on
playing the second half of the
season the same way he 's
played in the first half.
Morgan, who hit a threerun homer Tuesday night to
power the Reds to a ~ victory over the Atlanta Braves,
ts hatting .354 (just one pomt
off the National League lead)
with 48 RBis and 10 home

National League Roundup
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The "Whiz Ktds" are back
Tha t colorful mckname,
given to the 1950 Phtladelplita
Plulties' club which won the
Naltona l League pen nant ,
symboltzed the exuberance
and youth of-that surpn smg·
team and the label appears to
be appltcable to this yea, 's
version of the Philltes as well.
It certamly was Tuesday
rught as a couple of 21-yearold pitchers named Larry
Cltrtstenson and Tom Underw ood brought back
memories of Robm Roberts
and &lt;:;urt Sunmons by hurltng
Ute Philltes to a 6-3 and 8-1
doubleheader sweep of the
Pittsburgh Ptra tes.
The twin victory enabled
the Phtllies to move wtthm
two games of Ute dtvtstonlea dmg Ptrates in th e
Nattonal League East.
Clfristenson, a 6-foot-4, 210pound right-hander wtth a
blazing fastball, allowed the
heavy-httlmg Pirates only stx
hits m seven mnings of work

Braves in
second by
half game

the opener before glVlng
way to r·eltever Tug McGraw
Christenson has won two of
thr ee dectsions smce bemg
recalled from the mmors.
"The heat was really somethtng," Chrtstenson sa td. " I
changed my shtrt after every
tnnmg I've reached the pomt
now where I'm gomg to throw
as hard as I can, no matter
bow hot It 1s or how good a
team I'm fac mg."
Mtke Schmtdt and Olhe
Brown each doubled durmg a
three-run stxth mning whtch
enabled the Phtlhes to take a
4-2 lead. The Phtlhes added
two more rWJS m the etghth
on run scoring s mgles by
Jerry Martm and Mike Anderson
Underwood was stingter
than Chnstenson m the
mghtcap, allowmg only ftve
hits while postmg hts etghth
triumph m 13 decisions.
Underwood, a 5-11, 170-pound
left-hander who earned a
place on the roster with an
unpresstve show m sprmg
tratrung, srud hts fastball
tn

'Plains team
.
wzn a pazr zn
weekend action

Rtck Blake Ute loser.

there was no doubt Ladner
was among the vtctlms A
,body was found wearmg an
, Am e ri can Bas ke t ba l l
Assoctatwn champtonshtp
rmg , and hrs Nets traveling
hag, wttlt his number 4 embossed on tt, was among the
rubble of Eastern 's flight 66
from New Orleans to New
York.
Both Ladner's fa the r,
Aaron Ladner, and his coach,
Kevm Loughery, conf trmed
that the 6-foot-5, 220 pound,
ftve-year player was on the
plane.
"I was watching the stx
o'clock news and when they
said that ther e was a New
York Nets gym bag found m
the wreckage, I was m
shock," srud Loughery "I
!mew that Wendell was 1n the
New Orleans area "
The dea Ut ts espectally
tragtc to Nets fans who knew
Ladner, 26, a twtee-divorced
bachelor, as a man who ltved
with considerable gusto, both
on and off the court. The
muscular brawler sttll ts
remembered for the tune
when he dtved out of bounds
after a loose ball and colllded
wtth a water cooler, returning to the game JUSt etght
minutes later wtth 36 stitches

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through h1s ft rst two seasons
wtth Memphts and played m
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and 1972

Men and
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TIRE CENTER

JOHN F. FULTZ
POM EROY
992-2101

-......
B A " ~ ht E R IC AH tl

.•
•

OHIO

Cookout Time Specials
NORTHFIELD RESULTS
NORTHFI E LD , Ohr o
(UP! ) - Honey B. Good
sparkled m the mud before
3,149 fans at Nortltfteld Park
Tuesday mght, splashmg to a
I I', length victorv m the
fe atured $2,000 mnth race
The 4-yea r-old ma re,
retned by Dtck Wensel,
scored her thtrd wrn of the
seaso n tn 2 07 2-5 She
r eturned $5 40, $3 80 and
$3.40
Todd Prck was second and
Great Potenltal lhtrd The
Big Triple payoff tn the lOth
ra ce, on a 9-1-4 combmatwn,
was $282.60. The mu tual
handle handle was $270,575

.. GET MORE OUT OF YOUR CAR

~nd

New York acqurred hrrn
from the Kentucky Colonels
durmg the 1973-74 season,
~long wtth Mtke Ga le, m a
trade for John Roche The
trade turned out to be a key to
the Nets' ABA champtonshtp
th at year as Ladner's rough
defenstve play a nd sur pnsmgly effec tt ve out stde
shootrng played a key role m
the stretch dt tve
A nattve Mrss tssrppr an,
Lad ner starr ed at tir e
Un tve rstt y of Southern
Mtss tsslppt before bemg
drafted on the ftfth roWJd by
Memphis of the ABA m 1970.
He made the league's allrookte team that season
Tratled to Caroh na mrd11ay
through his second season, he
was traded n ght back to
Memphis for the last 15
games of that year He was
tr aded ag am In 1973 to
Kentucky and fmally m 1974
to New York
Though not a htgh scorer m

score the wmn mg run witlt
one out m the loth innmg'and
gtve the Padres the first
game over the Giants. Randy
Jones went all the way for
San Dtego to gam his lOth
vtctory m 14 dectstons and
Bobby Murcer homered for
San Fr ancisco. In th ~
mghtcap, Brent Strom tossed
a two-httter and Wtlhe MeCovey homered

rWJ homer and Ron Cey
fo llowed with a solo blast in
the ftrst innmg to trigger the
Dodgers' vtctory over the
Astros. Doug Rau pttched a
stx -h tttet m gomg the
distance for Los Angeles and
also collected thr ee ht ts .
Doug Rader htt a patr of
homers for Houston
Cubs 13, Expos 6
Tun Hosley sparked a 15-htt
attack 111Ut three smgles and
drove m three runs as the
Cub s spo tted Montrea l's
ce lebratto n of St John
Bapll st Day , Quebec's
nattonal hohda y
Bt ll
Bonham worked stx mnmgs
to recetve credtt for the
vtclory and also chtpped m
With a t11orun tnple
Padres 2-3, Grants 1.0
An error by second
baseman Derrell Thomas on
Ttto Fuentes' gro und er
enabled Enzo Hernandez to

New York Nets eager
among plane victims

NEW YORK (UP!) - Wendell Ladner, the veteran New
The Hetners Braves York Nets forward who
defea ~d Ute Salem Center sported
a
handleba r
Ptra te s tn Monda y mght mustache and a reckless
Middleport Youth League app roach to the game of
baseball action by the score basketball, was among 109
of 14-8 The wm makes the passengers who dted m the
Braves at 5-1 , a half game out crash of an Eastern Atrlmes
of ftrst place behmd the jetliner Tuesday.
league leadmg Harrtsonvtlle
Ladner was returnmg to
Bobcats. The Braves only New York from a two-week
loss was a fo rfe tl to the vacatton at his parents' home
Bobcats.
m Nerq use Crossmg, Mtss ,
Steve Ftfe, the Braves' not fflt• lrom New Orleans,
slugger, got back on the track when the Boemg 727 cra shed
agamst the Ptra~s as he attempting to land at John F.
smacked his eighth home run Kennedy In tet na tiona I
of the season and 3 singles Airport
Other httters for the Braves
Although postltve rdenwere Rrck Ebersbach wtth 2 tiftcatlon of the body wtll not
doubles and a smgle, Mtke be made at least unit I today,
Mtller had 5 smgles and
scored 4 ltmes, Dan Hysell,
Terry Wayland , and J tm
Boyer each had a patr of
•
• •
smgles
For the Ptrates stoney
Johnson and Walter Garnes
had 2 smgles each, Denms
Thornton a double, and Terry
Weekend r esults of inHutton a smgle.
dependent baseball actwn
In
pttchmg,
Terry
Tuppers Platn s swept a
Wayland starting for the
doubleheader from Portland
wmners fanned 5 and walked
on Sunday afternoon by
5. Jtmmy Boyd came on m
scores of 5-0 and 16-9 In the
rebel of Wayland and fanned
ft rst game, Jack Rood ptt7 whtle walkmg 2. Steve Fife
ched for Tuppers Plams to
relieved Boyer and put down
get the wm Gettmg ht ts for
a Pirate rally as he fanned
the wmners were Gary Durst,
the only man he faced m the
Terry Wllson and Steetha m
ftfth and then Ute side in the
wtth smgles. Steetham also
sixth Boyer got the wm for
had an RBI.
the Braves
For Portland , Ron Bachte l,
For the Pira~s Denms
Ricky
Blake ,
David
Shuler pttched a fme game,
Snodgrass
and
Red
fannmg 7 and scattenng 5
Wallbrown each htt smgles.
walks Shuler was tapped
In the second game gettmg
with the loss.
hits for Portland were Keith
YLSTANDINGS
Ft tch with a home run , Rtcky
W. L. GB
Blake, Brll Pickens, Kelly
Har'ville B'cats
619
McKenzte and Ron Bachtel
Mtd. Braves
5 1 '"' each had smgles For the
411
Rutland Dodgers
wmnmg Tuppers Plams team
432
Mtd. Reds
m the !male Tom Karr had 3
Mtd. Indians
343
f'iingles and a tnple wtth 2
343
Cheshtre Tigers
'VtBis, Durst had 2 smgles and
254
S. Center Pirates
2 RBis, and Jumor Barber
254
Rutland Reds
had a double. Mtke Bormg
Mtd Mets
165
was Ute wmning pitcher and

rught with two on and two out
Ntekro, who had already
walked Bill Plummer and
Pete Rose in the mniitg
quickly fell behind 3-and~.
He threw a fast ball for
strike one, then threw
another fast ball whtch
Morgan drilled into ·the rtght
field seats for the only runs in
runs.
the game.
He's also having a good
"H I'd been as smart as
year in the field and was m on Pbll Niekro, he'd probably
four double plays Tuesday gotten me out," said Morgan.
night.
"With a 3-1 coWJt, I should
"Yeah, I've done pretty have
been
thinking
good, so far," said Morgan. knuckleball. But, I wasn't
"H I can keep lt up until thinking at all, I was JUSt
October, I'll be happy."
swmging."
Reds Manager Sparky
Cincinnati rookie
Anderson feels there is m righthander Pat Darcy (2-4)
question that Morgan IS the sea tiered four singles over
top second baseman in the first seven innings, but .
baseball today.
when he gave up his fifth
"Not only did he win the walk to lead off the eighth,
Golden Glove' the past two Anderson quickly got him out
seasons, he also has been tire of there .
No. I offensive player at hiB
"I shouldn'thave let him go
posttion," sa1d Anderson. back out there in the eighth,"
"The way he's going at satd Anderson. "I could tell
present, you have to figure he was j!elting pretty tired.
he'll make that three years m Our best pitcher in spring
a row."
training, Darcy was bothered
Morgan
faced by a blister earlier in the
knuckleballer Phil Niekro in season and he hasn't gotten
Ute thtrd inning Tuesday Utat much work."

behaved dtfferently than tt
Mi lwa uk ee
took
a
normally does
doubleheader from Detrmt 5" The fas tb all wa sn't 0 and 4-2, Chicago edged
JUmpmg tomght as tt usually Texas 7-fl, Cleveland beat
does/' he sa1d " Ma ybe 1t was Boston 8-6, New York downed
the heat or something, but 1t Baltrrnore 3-1, Kansas Ctty
was smking "
defea ted Texas 5-4 m 11 mUnderwood was sta ked to a mngs and Oakland whipped
four-run fir st mmng lead as Mmnesota 6-4 m Amenca n
th e Philhes knocked · out League actton
Bruce Kison Ktson faced Retb 3, Braves 0
only ftve batters, wa lking
Joe Morgan 's three-run
four and glVIng up a two-run hom er m Ute Uttrd mnmg
smgle to Greg Luzmski. Thrrd carried the Reds to vtctory
baseman Rt chte Hebner over the Braves Pat Darcy,
booted Mtk e Schmtdt 's Fred Norman and Pedro
grounder [o let m Ute thtrd Borbon combmed on a si xrun and Underwood smgled hitter for Cmctnnati.
home the !mal run of the Mets 5, Cardinals 1
inning
Jerry Koosman pttched a
Bob Robertson accounted ft ve-hr tter
and
Dave
for Pittsburgh's only run of Kmgman hit a two-run homer
the second game wttlt hrs to spark Ute Mets' tnwnph
second homer of the season. ov~ r th e Cardmals. The
In other National League VJctory snapped the Mets' ,
games, Cmc,tnn att blanked seven-game losmg streak and
Atlanta 3-0,' New York a ftrst mnmg ru n ended a
defeated St Lows 5-1 , Los scoreless stnng of 35 mnmgs
Angeles topped Houston 8-3, Koosman's vtctory was the
Chicago routed Montreal 13~ tOOth of hi s career
and San Dtego swept San Dodgers 8, Astros 3
Franctsco 2-1 m 10 mmngs
Steve Garvey hrt a threeand 3-0.

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Smith Nelson Motors Inc.
SOO E. Main St.
Phone 992-2174
Pomeroy, Ohio
Service Hours· Mon .Fro 8-4:30, Saturdays 8·12 noon

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Super com pact ,
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and easy to use. Hinged
l ttipover fold ing legs. 4
l cook hei ghts. Chrom e·
plated gr id
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·~~l:~I~;,~;i;iir::~:t~;~;, ~i~~'~:,~\:.~~:,~~~:~·::,~,;:..~~=~·~e.;.::,~ une 25, t975

2- The flailv ~ntmel. Mtddleoort-Pomercv, 0 , Wednesda)', JWJe 25, 1975

\J

Editorial comment,
opinion, features

RAY CROMLEY

White collar crime

I To.i~;:~ " " "~-'-1 Phils pull within 2 of Pirates
: ::: Sport .Parade
I :;.~;: :.;:-,: :;:-· · I

"Be right with you as soon as I take care of an
emergency!"

buck stops at top

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - The drive on whtte collar crune has
~-.o...-c~-"&lt;;&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;o&lt;o-o-o--o-o-o-c&gt;-.c""&lt;':,..,.,;;&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;-&lt;o-&lt;?-e&gt;-o-c"&lt;::o..::,..,.7 take n a masstve, shaky, step forward .
Under an expanded defmitwn developed by the courts,-a
company prestdent , for example, can be foWJd personally
gutlty of a crime resulting from negligence by subordmates ·
- Even if he can prove he had no cruninal intent ("The
The supposedly "veto-proof" 94th Congress apparently thmks tt ts voter-proof, too . That at
statute . . dispenses with 'conscwusness of wrongdoing."')
any rate ts the impresswn one gets from remarks made by House maJonty leader Thomas P.
~ Even if he had ordered correcttve actton. but dtd not
"Tip" O'Neill the other day
make
certain action was taken ("It was eno!!gh ... Utat 1 by
"The flowers that bloom m the spring wither in the fall ," chtrruped the Massachusetts
vtrtue of Ute relationshtp he bore to the corporatton, the agent
Democrat Commenting on President Ford's complaints about congresswnal dtlly-{jallying on
had the power to have prevented the act complatned of.")
energy and other matters, he promtsed that "beginmng about next September, we'll take off on
- Even if he had a system for checking on employes. In hts
him . The economtc woes of the natwn are gomg to fall on Jerry 's shoulders."
summation to the Jury, one prosecutor successfully argued
In other words , a heavily Democrattc Congress, whtch on paper commands more than
Utat the president of Ute company mvolved had to be held
enough votes m both houses to pass almost any program tt wtshes, has chosen to fiddle around
playmg politics while any number of tssues burn JUSt so it can point the fmger of blame at a responstble for Ute fact Utat hts system wasn 't workmg.
That is, responsible company offtctals may be !table for
Republican prestdent
and conviction even if they did not know anything
prosecutton
Heaven knows, Mr. Ford has mv1ted plenty of cntlctsm by such acttons as vetomg
_
the stnp-nuning bill and legislatwn to create 900,000 federally fmanced jobs and by hts m- was amiss ("The liabtlity of managerial officers ... (does) not
flation-fueling mcrease of the tariff on imported otl But at least he ts actmg on the basts of depend on their knowledge of, or personal participation in, Ute
act made criminal by the state.")
what he believes should or should not be done in these areas and it is not as tf Congress were
These pomts became clear m a recent Supreme Court
helpless m the face of overweenmg presidenttal au tltortty
Yet instead of gtrdmg itself to override the vetoes (at the risk of mcurring the onus if Ute dectston and a reaffu-mation of a 32-year~ld decision.
Thus far, the propositions noted above appear to be fully
nation 's energy or unemployment problems remained intractible), or coming up wtth
applicable
only to instances of neglect where the public mlegislation the President could accept, the Democrats seem to be congratulating themselves
terest
is
seriously
involved - prunarily where the santtary
Utat the worse Utings get, the better they'lllook
Maybe all this ts an WJfarr readmg of O'Netll's words But if enough voters get the tdea that condttion of food and its purity are the issue
But note that at a time courts are reducing the authority of
Utat's what ts gomg on dcwn in Washington, any Democratic hopes of cashing m at the polls
company
offtctals over employes, they are increasing the
next year at the expense of Ute Prestdent's party could evaporate as qmckly as dtd the fears
responstbtltty of company offtcials for the negllgence of
Utat a ·'veto-proof" Congress would ride roughshod over the executive.
subordmates.
The Supreme Court seems to recogntze this when tt says .
"The requirements of foresight and vigilance imposed on
responsible corporate agents are beyond question demanding,
and
perhaps onerous, but they are not more strmgent than the
Aside from all its other unplications, the Rockefeller ColllllllSSwn's report on tllegal acpublic
has a right to expect of those who voluntartly assume
tivities by the Central intelligence Agency has giVen new urgency to the "pnvacy tssue."
positions
of authority in business enterprises whose services
Thts is somethmg Utat concerns every cttizen, for few of us do not have our names, ranks
(mcome, educatwn , etc.) and serial numbers (Soctal Security, driver's ltcense, etc.) stored m .and products affect the healtlt and well-being of the public ... "
It must be noted here that we are talking about the pera mynad government and pnvate files.
sonal
crimmalliabiltty of a company prestdent or other high
So far , the only maJor legislahon 1s thts area, the Pnvacy Act of 1974, deals solely with the
government-&lt;:ompiled information. However, a broad-&lt;:overage btll has been mtroduced in the company offiCial - not the liability of a company. It has long
House of Representattves that would do for the prtvate sector what the Prtvacy Act did for the been establtshed that company negligence subjects a fu-m to
penalttes.
public sctor .
In Ute inunediate case at hand, the company had already
Commentmg on the proposed legislation, Dale H. Learn, president of lnformalton Sc1ence
guilt, or rather negligence - unsanitary conacknowledged
Inc., which claims to be the nation 's leadmg designer of "human resources systems," note~
mcluding
rat droppings, in a major warehouse in
dittons,
Utat legislation is clearly required to insure that the pn vacy of the individualts not transwhich
food
for
sale
was stored. The punishment given the
gressed and to prevent Ute unauthorized and WJwarranted use of dtssemmatton of employe
company prestdent was ltght, a fine of $50 on each of five
data . He suggests two ways Utts could be done :
1) By setting up ttght securtty systems for keeping files under lock and key , whetlter Utey counts for a total of $250.
But he could have been given a year's imprtsonment and
are computerized or manual.
fmed
up to $1,000 on each count for thts frrst offense. A second
2) By permittmg employes to see the mformahon m therr ftles so that they may review,
offense of negltgence would be a felony and could subject the
question and correct it if need be.
defendant
to three years in prison, $10,000 fine and depriv~ton
But as for the wtdespread impression- or fear- that a lot of Ute personal mformation
of
important
civil rights
con tamed m corporate and busmess ftles is unnecessary and irrelevant, tf not downrtght false
This interpretation of law is a forceful return to personal
Learn's experience has been that this ts not so
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In the 10 years his company has been designing employe mformatwn systems for many ot responsibiltty. It says m essence that no company president or
the nation 's largest corporations, tt has never, he says, been asked to mclude such data as high offtctal can pass the buck downward dr hide behind his
politicial activities, standing wtth the Internal Revenue Service, credit ratings or the like. On company.
Up to now, so far as I can determme, the personal crimmal
Ute contrary, the mformatton kept on employes ts relevant to the jobs they hold and is "emresponstbility
for the acttons of others has not been much
ploye originated " for Ute most part.
enforced.
If
vigorously
carried beyond food, drugs and
The computer, Learn contends, may actually be the key to Ute "reperso~allzatwn " of
society. "The computer will enable the movement away from treatmg cttizens and employes m sanitation into, say, the safety of automobiles, buildings, toys
unpersonal mass groups and back toward the indlVldual assessment on Ute basts of and electrical appliances, it could perhaps have the same
revolutionary effects on mdustrial officials as tbe surge of
qualifications, capabihties and preferences."
malpractice
suits is having on doctors.
There ts a need to prevent erroneous information from bemg inunortalized m the computer, he admits, but the collectwn and use of employe information have httle if anything to do
wtth the right to prtvacy as long as appropriate secunty measures are observed.

Congress politics while voters burn

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Privacy, the law, and the computer

Dateline: 1775

Pennissive Soviet society
In this country, some people vtew the trend toward sexual permissiveness as part of a
Communist plot to sap the nation 's moral fiber . lnterestmgly, though, the puritannical Sovtet
Umon setms to be experiencing much the same phenomenon.
The magazine "Our Contemporary" reports that a survey tt conducted found sharp mcreases m premarttal sex, adultery and illegitimate births m Soviet soctety, as well as a rismg
number of unmarrted couples llvmg together and unreported separatwns .
lntervtews of Lenmgrad_students revealed that more than half of the men engaged m
premarital sex before the age of 18 and nearly 65 per cent of the women did so before age 21.
As another barometer of sexual permisstveness, the magazine says that 400,000 children
are born out of wedlock 1n the Sovtet Union each year, or nearly 10 per cent of all btrths m 1971.
In the city of Perm, every third child was illegJtunate.
"The conclusion of a legal marriage has stopped being the conditton of sexual life " the
magazine comments
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DR. LAMB

Protein needs of a family
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M. D. a day m the refngerator
DEAR DR. LAMB - We before usmg for a beverage.
are on a low income food
A pound of separable lean,
budget, but do not want to raw meat, fish, or poultry,
resort to food stamps not counting bones, fat or skin
However, I am concerned ( the edtble portion ) will
about my children, ages 10 contam about 100 gran'ls of
through 14, and want to be protem Mature bean seeds
sure they get enough protem. are a good source of protem
We have a small amount of and wtth m1lk and meat part
meat every other day in time w1ll be adequate. One
stews, casseroles and an egg cup of drained, cooked Navy
or cheese dish or corn beans contain about 15 grams
chowder on the off day. We of protem.
have hot cereal w1th milk for
For more mformation on
breakfast and a peanut butter protems write to me m Gare of
or tuna sandwich and milk for Utis newspaper, P. 0 . Box
lunc_h.
Hi51 , Radio Ctty Station, New
How many grams of York, NY 10019, and ask for
protem a day do Ute children The Health Letter number 3~
need? How much would my on Protems. Send a long,
husband need ? He was stamped , self-addressed
1 moderately
acltve unhl envelope and 50 cents for
unemployment htt.
maibng and costs.
DEAR READER - Smce
DEAR DR . LAMB - I have
your children are entermg read several articles recently
Ute rapld growth age of 14 and tha t said some of the
over you should give them med1cmes used to treat high
and your husband about the blood pre9sure cause women
same amount, a minimum of to be more prone to breast
56 grams of good, complete cancer. Would you please tell
protein a day. You can me if either Esidrex or
estimate 10 grams of protem Valtum are in thts group
for each cup of mtlk (8 DEAR READER - Nettlter
ounces ). A good , cheap a re. The medicines conIOUI'te of -protein 1s non-fat, tammg reserpme or rawfoba
dry milk powder which you serpentm.a are the only ones
can use for cooking and m questwn on thts score.
drlniWlg. You can improve its Esidrex is pnmartlY, a
flavor by allowing it to stand diur~ttc pnd helps to

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ehmmate excess salt and
lowers blood pressure some.
Vahum is a tranqutllzer and
helps lower blood pressure m
some people by helping Utem
avoid excess emotional
~ n s10n .

Your queslton prompts me
to make two observations No
one should stop takmg
medtcme for h1gh blood
pressure on h1s own
mitiative, regardless of news
• stories. It is better to go to the
doctor am! let him change
your medicine tf he finds you
are takmg a large enough
amount Ill require a change.
There are a variety of
medtcmes that can be used
now, and tt ts possible to
swttch, 1f that is md1cated.
And, anyone takmg a
tranquilizer for any reason,
including treatment of high
blood pressure. should
eltmmate all calfeinecontaimng
beverages ,
specifically including coffee,
tea and colas. You can use
one of the decaffema ted
brands of coffee. The caffeine
tn coffee has essentially Ute
oppos1te
effect
of
tranqu1hzers. It doesn 't make
sense
to
buy
good
1ranqu1hzers and go home
and wash Utem down with
" liqwd go ptlls " in the form
of coffee or tea.

By United Press International
PHILADELPHIA, June 30
- Congress adopted Articles
of War to regulate the Continental Army. The colony 's
assembly appointed a
conuruttee of safety to plan
defense of the province with
Benjamin Franklin as head of
the 25-member group.

CHARLESTON, S.C., July
2 - The local secret committee forced the town
postmaster to turn over tbe
just-received mat! pouch
from London which contamed
secret mstructwns to several
southern royal governors .
The dispatches were 1mmediately sent to the Continental Congress in Philadelphia.

TOM TIEDE
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - Contrary
tr the worst fears of top
soldi ers, and others, the
defea t of U.S arms m
Southeast Asia has not
resulted m any lessening of
mfluence for the mtli tary.
Actually, as even a qwck tour
of Pentagon catacombs
assures, the armed forces
have emerged from the rwns
of 1ts Vtetnam poltcy wtth an
Amer rca seemmgiy more
dependent on tt than ever.
As Korea was a blessmg for
th e mrhtans ts- as Gen.
James Van Fleet satd at the
ltme, because rt landmmed
publtc torpor- so too has the
Indochtna debac le served
Utat purpose.
The hawks h ve. The
generals are sm11tng. All 's
well mstde the nation 's
defense apparatus. Nary an
odorous htppte ptcket can be
spotted
at
militar y
headquarters and there are
recessiOn-provoked watting
hnes at the enlistment
coWJters. Gone are the days,
obvtously, when the war
ana ylsis faced wtth a pubhc
weary of bloodletting and
moral atrocity had for the
sake of expedtency to assure
the nation "The Army wants
to JOin y ou "

The Pentagon mood ts
fetsty. Whereas Vietnam
par ttctpatwn necessrtated an
uncomfortable pohcy of
Dateline 1775
dtplomacy m the servtces- in
By United Press In- Datellne 1775
the latter years parltcularly,
ternational
By United Press Io- generals talked qutetly of
LONDON, July I - The ternatiooal
"mmimwn force, " "political
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., July objectives," and even "ingovernment ordered General
Gage to make every effort 3 - The American army ter naltonal dialo gue ""by land and sea" to subdue turned out in review for Gen. Vtetnam defeat has Jerked
the Amertcan uprtsing. His George Washmgton, who Ute soldters hack to form
plans for an expedition to offtclally assumed command. Phtlosophtcally, Pentagon
destroy arms and munitions Patriotic airs were played by people are rolling thetr
at Concord were questioned, fife and drum units and the faltgue sleeves back up to
however
day was described as "ex- show how thetr btceps bulge.
ceedingly pleasant," but The vogue again ts hard Ime.
Datelloe 1775
there ts no detailed public or
Defense Secretary James
By United Press In- pnvate account of the event Schlesinger has set the postternatiooal
extent.
Vtetnam pace . The lessons of
our failures, he satd recently,
underhne the mevitable
of
offensive
results
graduah&amp;m . If North Korea
were to attack southward this
afternoon, as example ,
Schlesinger says the only
proper response would be to
stnke at Ute heart · of her
power Such talk during
Vtetnam would have been
odd, and loudly questioned
Now, as the secretary ts
confident, the Amencan
majonty
agrees;
the
strategies of the Fifti.; thus
prevatl once more.
In fact, the Pentagon's
post-Vietnam missile rattlings go beyond the Cold War
familtartties .
At
Schlesmger's lead, planners
and commanders talk openly
of. first strike capabtlities,
mtldly camouflaged by the
term cOWJ~rforce, and hint
at several contingency
blueprmts whtch would have
Ute U.S. r~ tailate in the
nuclear to conventional
aggressiOn on frtendly
COWl tr1es. Schlessmger has
satd, tllustratively, that a
Russian foray into Western
Europe mtght provoke such
response, and others add
"I JUSt had a horrrble thought' Wh at 11 come
frankly
the threat IS there for
back as t~e mayor of New York City?" ,
any Commumst natton to
lhmk aboul .
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Berry's World

Go ahead, C(Jmmie,
knock this chip uff
RALPH NOVAK

Teddy's ready
not to run
By Ralph Novak
"Teddy, why are you holding your breath ?"
"I'm holding my breath to prove that I'm not gomg to run
for President. Then I'm going to cross my heart for a while,
promtse honest InJun, give scout's honor, have a few affadivts
made up and take out an ad mall the papers."
"But you've already satd you aren 't going to run for
president. Why do people keep doubting you ?"
"It beats me. I go to California to make a speech and Utey
say they don 't belteve me. I make a fact-finding tour of the
Middle East and they say they don't believe me. I show up on a
few national television programs and they say th~y don't
believe me. I make a few comments about national policy and
they say Utey don't believe me. I go to a few fund-raising affatrs and they say they don't believe me.
"I can't tmderstand it."
"!can't either, Ted. I heard somebody say the other day
that a lot of people thought you were just bemg coy. But I'm
sure, tbough, that the chap was kidding."
"Cbappaquiddick ? Who said anything about Chappaquiddick? How can I complete my plans to not run for
President if everybody keeps talking about Cbappaquidd1ck ?"
"No, no , you misunderstood. I was just talking about all
those cynical people who think that you 're just pretending
you're not gomg to run so you can change our mindat the last
mmute m a fit of generosity."
"Who me ? Ha, ha. Ha ha ha ha. Ha. Ha ha. Ha ha ha. And
so on. It's so ridiculous, alii have to say is that if I run for
President, you Will run for vtce-pre,sident."
"Gee, Teddy, really? Why, thanks a lot. I'll try to fulfill the
duties the Constitution ... Or, that is, yes, that's prettv funnv.
all right. By the way, what are your real ambitions?"
"Well, as you know, those of us 'who have workef our way
up from the ranks always appreciate our positions, so I'm just
content to be a humble old senator, whiling away my years
making perceptive observalions and filling m the odd hours by
not rwming for President."
"I understand, though it's too bad, smce a lot of people
really think you should run, you know."
"Well, if you insist, I just happen to have my acceptance
speech right here. Uh, ha ha ha. Just kidding, of course. I
certainly was just kidding; I definitely won't run for
President."
"Right, Teddy, but there's just one thing Whenever you make the promise, you get Utis pained look on your face.Js it .;:
because your back hurts? Because of regret? Because you .!
hate to disappomt your countrymen?"
•
"You'd look pained, too, if you had to keep crossing your
••
toes all the time."

NEW YORK (UP!) - Muhanunad Air says he's quitting Oh,
sure. Same way he was going to gtve all his purses to poor
blacks Remember hrrn saying that ? They're sltll wattmg.. Ah
has a convement forgettery He says a lot of thmgs Monday he
forgets by Tuesday . Hts postfight statements after beatmg
George Foreman were even more tired than he was but after
he had won, Ali, with that fertile always-workmg mind of hts
publtcly announced that henceforth he was gomg to be "a ro~
ftghter," whatever Utat is ... He satd somethmg else the other
day . He was gomg to China A check 111Ut Pekmg shows no vtsa
has been tssued hun nor has any invtta lton been extended. The
vast majority of the Chmese have never ht'ard of Ah and
wouldn '.t know him if they met him on the street. What's more,
boxmg ts looked down upon m Chma as something needlessly
brutal. Usually, Alt ts ongmal m his thtnking. Not this time,
Utough. Jun Corbett "retrred" m 1900 and came hack three
years later to get knocked out by Jun Jeffnes. Jack Johnson
announced hts retirement in 1928 at Ute age of 50 and sttll was
ftghting as much as 17 years tater. And Jack Dempsey, who
celebrated his 80th btrthday Tuesday, qwt in 1932, changed hts
mmd, and fought three more tunes before retiring eight years
later
When he heard of Ah's 'retirement' announcement Joe
Fraz1er had blunt two-word comment which can't be repeated
m any family newspaper. Smokm' Joe sunply doesn't believe
tt, but he may tone down hts remark a btl for publicatton
because he'd dearly love to get Ali into the rmg agam where
he'd most likely beat him . The way I see it All doesn't actually
want to retrre anymore than Francisco Franco does Franco is
82 and still enJoys running Spam ..
The Ptttsburgh Prrates were having a prayer meeting in
thetr clubhouse Sunday and it remmded Danny Murtaugh of
the time Larry Shepard, a regular church worshtpper, finally
succeeded in.gettmg Pat Corrales, who wasn't, to attend a
service. Shepard had spent a long time gettmg Corrales to
come wttlt him, and when they stepped mstde the church,
Shepard suddenly stopped, looked upwards and said, "Lord,
this is Pat Corrales." ..
Walt Frazier explains why he ltkes kids and spends as much
tLme w1th them as he does . "They're real ," he says, " not
phony. You can't fool them. I remember playmg Julms Ervmg
on e~n ~ne and he beat me. A Iotta ktds were watching. Some
of Utem came over to me and sa1d 'you're sttll the best guard. '
They never said 'you sllnk' hke grownups would." .. .
Ne11 Orleans seems to be losing its fight for a major league
baseball franchtse. A move to rrnpose a spw.al tax on each
admisswn llcket that would help defray the expense of building
the Superdome IS discouragmg any prospective baseball
operators from seeking a franchise m the Crescent C1ty..
Philadelphia 76ers are having trouble sigmng George
McGmnis Hts agent ts asking for nearly $3 mtllion over stx
years. That's the trouble ..
Everytune the AU-Star game approaches, Joe DtMaggw
thtnks about the first one he ever played m at Braves Field m
Boston m 1936, his rookte year. The National League shaded
the Amen can, 4-3, that surruner and DiMag unammously was
voted the "goat. " He misplayed three balls m the outfteld,
certainly not typtcal of hun. "Ftrst I miSJUdged a fly ball," he
remembers. "Then I allowed a single to go for extra bases and
fmally I let a sinking lme drive by Gabby Hartnett get past me
for a triple " .. The Yankees' rookie centerftelder dtdn 't do too
badly the rest of the year, collectmg 206 htts, includmg 29
homers, drtvmg m 125 rWJs and fmtshmg with a .323 batting
average.
Steve Blass ts domg sales and promotional work for a
Jewelry chain, and doing well at it The former Pittsburgh
pitcher had one of the best personalities in the game. Does he
m1ss baseball? What do you think? .
Baseball players always feel managers pay undue attenhon
to their weight and that it's not that unportant But Hank
Aaron says that's how he got his start m the btg leagues wtth
the Milwaukee Braves - by another player bemg overwetght.
•'Most people belteve I got my chance wtth Ute Braves beca use
Bobby Thomson broke hts leg wtth Utem m the sprmg of 1954,
but that's not true, " says Aaron. "The mam reason I got a shot
was because Jun Pendleton reported more than 30 pounds
overweight. He had a great year for the Braves in 1953, hitting
300 or n ght around Utere, and they were figuring on him for
1954. When he came m so heavy, though, they sent him to
Waycross, Georgta, to get in shape, and that's how come a spot
on the club opened up for me "

Morgan's belt
trips Atlanta

Evenofft
e
,.... beaten pa rh,
State
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Th~se Truths ...
A Chronicle of America

We Hold

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June

25, 1775:

General Thomas Gage, the Royal Governor of Massachusetts and the commander of all British forces m
the colontes, sends the Mtntstry m London his official account of the June 17 encounter with the colonists on Bunker
Htll " Thrs act ton has shown thesupertorltyof the King's
troops, who , under every dtsadvantage, attacked and
defeated above three ttmes their number, stronRIY posted.
and covered by breastworks " In a letter to Lord Dartmouth, Secretary for the Co tomes, accompanying the offi Cial report, Gage tndtcates a growing respect for the
Amerlcan.colontsts . "I wtsh most smcerely that (Bunker
Htll] had not cost us so dear. . We have lost some extremely good officers. The trials we have had show (that]
the rebels are not the desptcable rabble too many have
supposed them to be "

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Insure the good times. too II
you've taken to off the road travel
for excitement &amp;J!d recreation,
you're likely to need the eKtra
protection ot our Aa,:reatlonal

Vehicle Polley Call or violt for all
the dotalio

Steve SncMden
1258 POWE!l ST.
MIDOl£PORT

PH. 992·7155
L1ke a good netghbor,
State Farm Is there.

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- By Ross M111rkenr:1e A Jetr MacNelly/ &amp;1915 United Feature Syndicat e

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' Home OffiCI

Bloomington, lll!nols

INIItiUNU

By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
ATLANTA (UP!) - Joe
Morgan has set a pretty high
goal for himself.
.
The Cmcmnati Reds second
baseman wants to keep on
playing the second half of the
season the same way he 's
played in the first half.
Morgan, who hit a threerun homer Tuesday night to
power the Reds to a ~ victory over the Atlanta Braves,
ts hatting .354 (just one pomt
off the National League lead)
with 48 RBis and 10 home

National League Roundup
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The "Whiz Ktds" are back
Tha t colorful mckname,
given to the 1950 Phtladelplita
Plulties' club which won the
Naltona l League pen nant ,
symboltzed the exuberance
and youth of-that surpn smg·
team and the label appears to
be appltcable to this yea, 's
version of the Philltes as well.
It certamly was Tuesday
rught as a couple of 21-yearold pitchers named Larry
Cltrtstenson and Tom Underw ood brought back
memories of Robm Roberts
and &lt;:;urt Sunmons by hurltng
Ute Philltes to a 6-3 and 8-1
doubleheader sweep of the
Pittsburgh Ptra tes.
The twin victory enabled
the Phtllies to move wtthm
two games of Ute dtvtstonlea dmg Ptrates in th e
Nattonal League East.
Clfristenson, a 6-foot-4, 210pound right-hander wtth a
blazing fastball, allowed the
heavy-httlmg Pirates only stx
hits m seven mnings of work

Braves in
second by
half game

the opener before glVlng
way to r·eltever Tug McGraw
Christenson has won two of
thr ee dectsions smce bemg
recalled from the mmors.
"The heat was really somethtng," Chrtstenson sa td. " I
changed my shtrt after every
tnnmg I've reached the pomt
now where I'm gomg to throw
as hard as I can, no matter
bow hot It 1s or how good a
team I'm fac mg."
Mtke Schmtdt and Olhe
Brown each doubled durmg a
three-run stxth mning whtch
enabled the Phtlhes to take a
4-2 lead. The Phtlhes added
two more rWJS m the etghth
on run scoring s mgles by
Jerry Martm and Mike Anderson
Underwood was stingter
than Chnstenson m the
mghtcap, allowmg only ftve
hits while postmg hts etghth
triumph m 13 decisions.
Underwood, a 5-11, 170-pound
left-hander who earned a
place on the roster with an
unpresstve show m sprmg
tratrung, srud hts fastball
tn

'Plains team
.
wzn a pazr zn
weekend action

Rtck Blake Ute loser.

there was no doubt Ladner
was among the vtctlms A
,body was found wearmg an
, Am e ri can Bas ke t ba l l
Assoctatwn champtonshtp
rmg , and hrs Nets traveling
hag, wttlt his number 4 embossed on tt, was among the
rubble of Eastern 's flight 66
from New Orleans to New
York.
Both Ladner's fa the r,
Aaron Ladner, and his coach,
Kevm Loughery, conf trmed
that the 6-foot-5, 220 pound,
ftve-year player was on the
plane.
"I was watching the stx
o'clock news and when they
said that ther e was a New
York Nets gym bag found m
the wreckage, I was m
shock," srud Loughery "I
!mew that Wendell was 1n the
New Orleans area "
The dea Ut ts espectally
tragtc to Nets fans who knew
Ladner, 26, a twtee-divorced
bachelor, as a man who ltved
with considerable gusto, both
on and off the court. The
muscular brawler sttll ts
remembered for the tune
when he dtved out of bounds
after a loose ball and colllded
wtth a water cooler, returning to the game JUSt etght
minutes later wtth 36 stitches

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through h1s ft rst two seasons
wtth Memphts and played m
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and 1972

Men and
Womens

TIRE CENTER

JOHN F. FULTZ
POM EROY
992-2101

-......
B A " ~ ht E R IC AH tl

.•
•

OHIO

Cookout Time Specials
NORTHFIELD RESULTS
NORTHFI E LD , Ohr o
(UP! ) - Honey B. Good
sparkled m the mud before
3,149 fans at Nortltfteld Park
Tuesday mght, splashmg to a
I I', length victorv m the
fe atured $2,000 mnth race
The 4-yea r-old ma re,
retned by Dtck Wensel,
scored her thtrd wrn of the
seaso n tn 2 07 2-5 She
r eturned $5 40, $3 80 and
$3.40
Todd Prck was second and
Great Potenltal lhtrd The
Big Triple payoff tn the lOth
ra ce, on a 9-1-4 combmatwn,
was $282.60. The mu tual
handle handle was $270,575

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~nd

New York acqurred hrrn
from the Kentucky Colonels
durmg the 1973-74 season,
~long wtth Mtke Ga le, m a
trade for John Roche The
trade turned out to be a key to
the Nets' ABA champtonshtp
th at year as Ladner's rough
defenstve play a nd sur pnsmgly effec tt ve out stde
shootrng played a key role m
the stretch dt tve
A nattve Mrss tssrppr an,
Lad ner starr ed at tir e
Un tve rstt y of Southern
Mtss tsslppt before bemg
drafted on the ftfth roWJd by
Memphis of the ABA m 1970.
He made the league's allrookte team that season
Tratled to Caroh na mrd11ay
through his second season, he
was traded n ght back to
Memphis for the last 15
games of that year He was
tr aded ag am In 1973 to
Kentucky and fmally m 1974
to New York
Though not a htgh scorer m

score the wmn mg run witlt
one out m the loth innmg'and
gtve the Padres the first
game over the Giants. Randy
Jones went all the way for
San Dtego to gam his lOth
vtctory m 14 dectstons and
Bobby Murcer homered for
San Fr ancisco. In th ~
mghtcap, Brent Strom tossed
a two-httter and Wtlhe MeCovey homered

rWJ homer and Ron Cey
fo llowed with a solo blast in
the ftrst innmg to trigger the
Dodgers' vtctory over the
Astros. Doug Rau pttched a
stx -h tttet m gomg the
distance for Los Angeles and
also collected thr ee ht ts .
Doug Rader htt a patr of
homers for Houston
Cubs 13, Expos 6
Tun Hosley sparked a 15-htt
attack 111Ut three smgles and
drove m three runs as the
Cub s spo tted Montrea l's
ce lebratto n of St John
Bapll st Day , Quebec's
nattonal hohda y
Bt ll
Bonham worked stx mnmgs
to recetve credtt for the
vtclory and also chtpped m
With a t11orun tnple
Padres 2-3, Grants 1.0
An error by second
baseman Derrell Thomas on
Ttto Fuentes' gro und er
enabled Enzo Hernandez to

New York Nets eager
among plane victims

NEW YORK (UP!) - Wendell Ladner, the veteran New
The Hetners Braves York Nets forward who
defea ~d Ute Salem Center sported
a
handleba r
Ptra te s tn Monda y mght mustache and a reckless
Middleport Youth League app roach to the game of
baseball action by the score basketball, was among 109
of 14-8 The wm makes the passengers who dted m the
Braves at 5-1 , a half game out crash of an Eastern Atrlmes
of ftrst place behmd the jetliner Tuesday.
league leadmg Harrtsonvtlle
Ladner was returnmg to
Bobcats. The Braves only New York from a two-week
loss was a fo rfe tl to the vacatton at his parents' home
Bobcats.
m Nerq use Crossmg, Mtss ,
Steve Ftfe, the Braves' not fflt• lrom New Orleans,
slugger, got back on the track when the Boemg 727 cra shed
agamst the Ptra~s as he attempting to land at John F.
smacked his eighth home run Kennedy In tet na tiona I
of the season and 3 singles Airport
Other httters for the Braves
Although postltve rdenwere Rrck Ebersbach wtth 2 tiftcatlon of the body wtll not
doubles and a smgle, Mtke be made at least unit I today,
Mtller had 5 smgles and
scored 4 ltmes, Dan Hysell,
Terry Wayland , and J tm
Boyer each had a patr of
•
• •
smgles
For the Ptrates stoney
Johnson and Walter Garnes
had 2 smgles each, Denms
Thornton a double, and Terry
Weekend r esults of inHutton a smgle.
dependent baseball actwn
In
pttchmg,
Terry
Tuppers Platn s swept a
Wayland starting for the
doubleheader from Portland
wmners fanned 5 and walked
on Sunday afternoon by
5. Jtmmy Boyd came on m
scores of 5-0 and 16-9 In the
rebel of Wayland and fanned
ft rst game, Jack Rood ptt7 whtle walkmg 2. Steve Fife
ched for Tuppers Plams to
relieved Boyer and put down
get the wm Gettmg ht ts for
a Pirate rally as he fanned
the wmners were Gary Durst,
the only man he faced m the
Terry Wllson and Steetha m
ftfth and then Ute side in the
wtth smgles. Steetham also
sixth Boyer got the wm for
had an RBI.
the Braves
For Portland , Ron Bachte l,
For the Pira~s Denms
Ricky
Blake ,
David
Shuler pttched a fme game,
Snodgrass
and
Red
fannmg 7 and scattenng 5
Wallbrown each htt smgles.
walks Shuler was tapped
In the second game gettmg
with the loss.
hits for Portland were Keith
YLSTANDINGS
Ft tch with a home run , Rtcky
W. L. GB
Blake, Brll Pickens, Kelly
Har'ville B'cats
619
McKenzte and Ron Bachtel
Mtd. Braves
5 1 '"' each had smgles For the
411
Rutland Dodgers
wmnmg Tuppers Plams team
432
Mtd. Reds
m the !male Tom Karr had 3
Mtd. Indians
343
f'iingles and a tnple wtth 2
343
Cheshtre Tigers
'VtBis, Durst had 2 smgles and
254
S. Center Pirates
2 RBis, and Jumor Barber
254
Rutland Reds
had a double. Mtke Bormg
Mtd Mets
165
was Ute wmning pitcher and

rught with two on and two out
Ntekro, who had already
walked Bill Plummer and
Pete Rose in the mniitg
quickly fell behind 3-and~.
He threw a fast ball for
strike one, then threw
another fast ball whtch
Morgan drilled into ·the rtght
field seats for the only runs in
runs.
the game.
He's also having a good
"H I'd been as smart as
year in the field and was m on Pbll Niekro, he'd probably
four double plays Tuesday gotten me out," said Morgan.
night.
"With a 3-1 coWJt, I should
"Yeah, I've done pretty have
been
thinking
good, so far," said Morgan. knuckleball. But, I wasn't
"H I can keep lt up until thinking at all, I was JUSt
October, I'll be happy."
swmging."
Reds Manager Sparky
Cincinnati rookie
Anderson feels there is m righthander Pat Darcy (2-4)
question that Morgan IS the sea tiered four singles over
top second baseman in the first seven innings, but .
baseball today.
when he gave up his fifth
"Not only did he win the walk to lead off the eighth,
Golden Glove' the past two Anderson quickly got him out
seasons, he also has been tire of there .
No. I offensive player at hiB
"I shouldn'thave let him go
posttion," sa1d Anderson. back out there in the eighth,"
"The way he's going at satd Anderson. "I could tell
present, you have to figure he was j!elting pretty tired.
he'll make that three years m Our best pitcher in spring
a row."
training, Darcy was bothered
Morgan
faced by a blister earlier in the
knuckleballer Phil Niekro in season and he hasn't gotten
Ute thtrd inning Tuesday Utat much work."

behaved dtfferently than tt
Mi lwa uk ee
took
a
normally does
doubleheader from Detrmt 5" The fas tb all wa sn't 0 and 4-2, Chicago edged
JUmpmg tomght as tt usually Texas 7-fl, Cleveland beat
does/' he sa1d " Ma ybe 1t was Boston 8-6, New York downed
the heat or something, but 1t Baltrrnore 3-1, Kansas Ctty
was smking "
defea ted Texas 5-4 m 11 mUnderwood was sta ked to a mngs and Oakland whipped
four-run fir st mmng lead as Mmnesota 6-4 m Amenca n
th e Philhes knocked · out League actton
Bruce Kison Ktson faced Retb 3, Braves 0
only ftve batters, wa lking
Joe Morgan 's three-run
four and glVIng up a two-run hom er m Ute Uttrd mnmg
smgle to Greg Luzmski. Thrrd carried the Reds to vtctory
baseman Rt chte Hebner over the Braves Pat Darcy,
booted Mtk e Schmtdt 's Fred Norman and Pedro
grounder [o let m Ute thtrd Borbon combmed on a si xrun and Underwood smgled hitter for Cmctnnati.
home the !mal run of the Mets 5, Cardinals 1
inning
Jerry Koosman pttched a
Bob Robertson accounted ft ve-hr tter
and
Dave
for Pittsburgh's only run of Kmgman hit a two-run homer
the second game wttlt hrs to spark Ute Mets' tnwnph
second homer of the season. ov~ r th e Cardmals. The
In other National League VJctory snapped the Mets' ,
games, Cmc,tnn att blanked seven-game losmg streak and
Atlanta 3-0,' New York a ftrst mnmg ru n ended a
defeated St Lows 5-1 , Los scoreless stnng of 35 mnmgs
Angeles topped Houston 8-3, Koosman's vtctory was the
Chicago routed Montreal 13~ tOOth of hi s career
and San Dtego swept San Dodgers 8, Astros 3
Franctsco 2-1 m 10 mmngs
Steve Garvey hrt a threeand 3-0.

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'-The Daily Sentinel, Mtd&lt;Ueport-l'omeroy, v., vveunesuay' JWie ••• "'"

·r

4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesday , Jtmc :!a. 1975

Indians· knock Red Sox out of first place with 8-6 win
Linescores
Tuesday 's Baseba ii ' Rest.!hs
B y Un i t ed Pr·ess ln terna ti onill

National l eagu*.'
C:hica ~w

20602300(1
1315 'l
Mo n treal
010 007 020
6 9 0
Bonham . Knowles \7 1. Znrno
ra (9) and Ho!i. ley
Warrhen
Ta ylor (3) , D eMol a 16 ), Murray
(8) and Carter WP Ronh am
(7 5 ). LP - Warth en 13 11

11st Game l
Pif!SbUrQh
0 10 0 1000 1· J 80
Ph ilad lphia 100 003 01&gt;.
6 JJ 1
Reuss . G iu st1 (81 (lnd Sang ull
len . Oyer
(5 1
Chr 1s tenson
McGraw { 81 and !Joone WP
Christenson ( '2 I I
L P Reu55
( 8-5) HR - Par k er 113th l
{ 1nd Game )
000 100 000
1 5 1
P ittsburgh
Ph i ladlph i a ..no 00 1 02x
s 12 1
Kison . Mc Dowell 111. Hq
nandez (51 and Dyer
Under
wood (8 5) and Oa t es . LP Kison
(7 3 1
HR R.obcrtson
(2n d 1
Ci n cinnat i

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verlo IB' ,11H1 R.1c1.1r ".f r C'tll •7
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:'.I Mo1 1 I t- $ 1 and Porter
{2 nd Qilm£')
OllO ('1 10 !0(1
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H1l ll~ .· 17
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h;ln 1 r' nv r rs --; L11 e~nd Porter
LP L ~l GIOW ( . I ' \ HR :.lolt
( f1\J1 I
Detr o• !

Nc\\• Yor

0 10 200 000
3 7 (l
100 000 0 J0
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Hun H'r 1 11 6 1 and l\flun son
Tor rL'l :7 ~~ and Hcndr· c ~s HR
lo..

8 .1 1111 110rt•

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110 200 OO ..J
8 11 ;
Ros ton
.107 (100 o·~o
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Y c'lst r lPillS !o. i ( / 1t1 I

000 ooo a 10- 1 5 7
100100?0x
5101
Curtis , Terl ec k y ( 5 ). Garman
(7) and Strn mons : Koos1T'an 16
5 ) and Grote LP - Curt's { J 6 1
HR - - King man ( lOth )

T e xas
200 000 003
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bero Os tee r;. Goss aq c (9' and
Down1nq W P OsteerJ (2 6 ) LP
Perry. 16 Il l , HR Or ta (.1t tl \.

NewYor k

Los Ange les -10 3 010 ooo
g 11 o
Houston
020 0 10 000
3 6 l
Rau
( 7.6) and
Fer g uson ,
' Yeager (J l; Gri ff i n . Crawford
(J ), Forsc h (3 ). Cosgrove {9 J
and Johnson . LP - Griff in (J Bl.
HRS- -Garvey (9th \, Cey ( llth l,
Rader 2 ( Jth &amp; 5th l
(1s t , 10 innings)
San Fran
000 001 000 0-

1 11 1
San Diego 010 000 000 1· ? 8 o
Barr . Moffitt (7), Lave lle 19),
Williams ( 10) and Hill . Jone s
( I0 .4J and Kendall LP La vette
( 4 -J ). HR - Murcer ( 9th 1

BOSTON •l UP! I - Frapk
Robin,on says his Cleve land
Indians are ready to enier the
Ame ri can League East
pennant race.
Clevela nd , with an ·a-o
comeback win Tuesday night
over Boston, climbed past
Detroit into fifth place while
)·a nkin g the Red Sox out of
first in the six-team divisi~n .
·· [ feel if we can play the
type of ball that we have 1in
winning ) the last three
games. we can get up in the
middle of this !hiP " boforo fNJ

division. ''

Robinson 's optimism was
O..sed on the continued good
pitching of his young staff
and a beefed up offense.
George Hendrick provided
the power Tuesday with a
so lo homer in the first inning

and a gHmPwwinning threerun drive \~· ith two outs in the

'nintll.
Boston; loser of four of its
past s ix games, broke open a
4-4 game in the eighth inning
on Carl Yastrzemski 's tworun homer.
But when Fra nk Duffy led
the Indians' ninth with a
single, Boston Manager
Darrell J ohnson relieved
starter Bill Lee with another
lefty, Roger Moret.
Moret walked AI Ashby
then turned Duane Kuiper's
bunt into a fo rceout at third
on Duffy.

Johnson next brought in
right hander Dick Drago and
Robinson countered with left
· handed "pinch hitter Boog
Powell, who blooped a double
to l~ll scori ng one run. ·
Kuiper, trying to score from
first, was thrown out at tbe
plate as Powell huffed into
second base.
Drago, trying for the final
out, walked Dick Manning,
then yielded Hendrick's 14th
homer-'-ll twisting liner that
curled around the right field
foul pole.
Tom Buskey , who relievd

1

Atlanta
000 000 000 0 6 0
Da rcy . Nor man (81 . Aorbon
(9 ) and
P l ummer
Niekr ('l
House (9 1 and Pocoroba WP
Darcy ( 2 J l L P - N rekro (7 6 1
HR - Morgan ( lOth )

St Loui s

long," said Kobinson, .wliose
team trails firs~ place New
' York by II games.
" Everybody has had a hot
strea k but us; maybe this is
the beginning of our streak. It
would be an exce llent time
for one with all the teams
playing
within
thei r

By GIL P~: rF.RS
UP I Sports Writt'r

Lee 1\\orPt ( 9 ' Dra~ o 19 1 ClllC
r 1s k WP 8 u5 k C' ~ (.f Jl L P
D rnao ( 1 11 HR s H cndrtcl-. ~
t 13th
1.!111 1
Sp1 lo.. ('5
1?n d l

KC

000 300 000 02

5 1] 2

Col it

0\0000 20000

3 II 2

Leonard B1rd ( 8 1 and Stin
son Lanq e, K irkwood t81, Sco tt
( tO l and Et c hebar ren W P Bird ( 52 J. L P ScoTt ( l 1). HR
Et chebarren ( lSI '
Mi n n esot a
Oak land
Deck er ,

000 030 100· J 7 1
JOO 001 lOx 6 7 2
Albu ry
111 and
Borgm a nn . Bahnsen . Lindb lad
( 5 1. Todd (51 and Tenac c WP
Todd ( J ? I LP Decker l t 21
HR Ten ace ( 13th )

Yanks take over first in East
By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
The New York Yankees and
Jim Hunter finally hav e
made it to the top of the
American League's Eastern
Division - together.
That 's the way the Yankees
ha d it figured when they
signed Hunter to a record
$2 .8-million five-year contract - that he would lead
them to the promised land just as he had contributed
three 21l-victory seasons to
the Oakland -A's three consec uti ve
workl
championships.

If you believe in omens, the
Yankees' plans will work out
because they took over first
place in the AL East Tuesday
night when Hunter pitched a
four-hitter to beat the Baltimore Orioles 3-1. The victory raised Hun ter's record
to 11-{) compared to the 10-8
mark he had for the A's a
year ago at this time.
The Yankees took over first
place with a combination of
their victo ry over the Orioles
and the Cleveland Indians' 8-{)
triumph over the Boston Red
Sox. It marked the first time
this season the Yankees have

occupied the lop spot in their
division.
New York, which has been
hobbled by injuries a nd
hasn't had its "varsity" on
the field in weeks, scored its
fourth straight win behind
Hunter . Terr y Whitfield
drove in two runs with a
si ngle and a sacrifice fly and
Graig Neltles singled in the
other. Ken Singleton homered
for the Orioles in the fi rst
inning. ·

eOPENe
6 .DAYS
A WEEK
MON. thru SAT.

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

Jim Kern with one out in the
eighth, pitched I 2-3 innings of
two-hit, no-run bal_l -· to improve his record to 4-3. The
victDry was a pleasant finish
to an otherwise bad day for
the big right hander . .
"First I was trapped in the
elevator of our hotel then I
ripped my shirt getting out of
the cab at the ballpark," said

--

-

--·--- -

·-- -

the Cleveland reliever. " It
sort of set the trend for the
whole day."
Once on the mound, his luck
turned. He threw "a bad
pitch" to Rick Burleson with
a runner on first and two outs
in the ninth. "He had a good
chance to hit it out but he
missed it" said auskey of the
long fly to left that was
caught lor the final out.
The two clubs were to close
out.their series this afternoon
with Boston's Dick Pole, 1-3,
facjn~ Rorie Harrison, ~2.

SPECIAL

SUPERIORS

FRANKIE
WIENERS

SC'cond

amy CROCKER

POLISH SAU

WHITE
YELLOW

CAKE MIX

LB.

18Vz OZ.

SUNSHINE

COLD CUTS

liKE

DOG
FOOD

ALL VARIETIES

M1dd lcpor l

1 LB.

992 7161

25

Seventh-seeded Smith ousted
By ROBERT MUSEL
WIMBLEDON, England
(UP!) - It was the ltind of
day all tennis players dream
about but few achieve. It
came true as the evening
shadows were beginning to
close in on the Wimbledon
tennis championships
Tuesday for Byron Bertram, .

a 22-year-&lt;&gt;ld South Afncan
who lives in Chicago .
On the other side of the net
was Stan Smith, the seventh
seed and second ranking
American. Tha t didn ' t
ma tter . When the magi c
touches the racket it doesn't
matter who the opponent is or
that you are ranked only sixth

•

•

A-s .WID pair
of pony games .
The Pomeroy A-s downed
the Pomeroy Tigers in a
double header by scores of 111 and lll-3 in Meigs-MasoJt
Pony action Tuesday .
In the first game, Dale
Browning went 3 innings,
fa nni ng 4, walking 1, and
giving up 1 hit . Brian
Hamilton came on in relief to
finish the game, fanning 4
and walking 3, and allowing
the Tiger run . Browning got
the win.
F or the Tigers, Todd
Rawlings went the distance,
fannin g 4, walking 3, and
giving up 10 hits.
Getting hits lor the A-s
were Carl Carmichael with a
home run, trip le, and a
single, Hamilton had a triple
and 2 singles, Bob McClure a
single, Ron Snyder a double ,
Bob McClure a double and a
si ngle,
David
Harris ,
Browning, and Tim Hood
each a single.
For the Tigers Raymond
Andrews had a triple and a
single.
In the second game, Greg
Smith went the distance
striking out 11, walk ing 3, and
scat tering 5 hits. Mike
Triplett went the distance for
the Tigers fanning 3, walking
4, and giving up 11 hits.
For the A-s, Hamilton had a
pair of doubles , Carmichael a
home run, triple, double, and
2 singles, Bob McClure a
double , and getting singels
we,re Snyder, Smith, Rick
Johnson, Hood, Mark Mitch
and Rick Blaettnar.
For th.e Ti ge rs , Jeff
Grueser, Raymond Andrews,
Tom Hawley, and Chris Wood
hit singles, and Mike Tripplett had a triple.
In other Pony League
action Racine defeated
Syracuse at Syracuse in 10
innings by the score of 4-2. A
Mark Sayre homerun in the
top of the tenth and strong
relief pitching by Mike
Huddleston gave Racine the
hard-earned victory.
_
Also in the tenth; Richard
Teaford doubled,_stole third .
and scored on an infield hit to
give Racine an insurance
run. The win upped Racine 's
record to &amp;-I with three of the
wins going into extra innings .
Mark Sayre ' started for
Racine and gave up on_Iy 4
hils, walked' S and fanned 12
in the seven .innings he :pitched. Huddleston carne on in
the eighth to finish picking up

the win.

Huddleston gave up no
nms, no hits, walked 3, and
struck out 4 in the three innings he worked.
For Sy racuse Mark l" orbes
star ted going 5 innin gs.
striking out 4, walking :l. and
giving up 4 hils Kelly
Winebrenner came on for
Forbes and · finished the
game, getting tagged with the
loss. Winebrenner fanned l,
walked 2, and gave up 4 hits
in 5 innings.
Getting hits for the winners
were Sayre with a home run ,
triple, and a single; Teaford a
double , Bill Harris ahd
Huddleston eac h a single, and
Perry Hill had two singles.
SyracuS€ 's Forbes and
Winebrenn er eac h had 2
singles.
Racine
100010000 2- 486
Syracuse Oil 000 000 0'--2 4 I
Sayre , Huddlesto n t 81
(WP ) and Harris. Forbes ,
Winebrenner (6) ( LP ) and
Davis.

in your own country and
unseeded here.
Everything goes right. Big
Stan drilled over his famou s
serve and Bertram drilled il
right back with forehand or
backhand for placement winners. Smith tried every shot
in the book and few of them
worked. Bertram chopped,
sliced, volleyed and ha lfvolleyed, smashed, and
everything worked .
As he came sadly off court
after little more than an hour
Smith explainf4 his crushing,
6-1, 6-2, 6-1, defeat in simple
words.
" He play\'(1 very well, " he
said.
Bertram agreed it was an
exceptional gatne.
"It's the best I've ever
played in my life," he said.
He said he has played only
eight tournaments this year
because of an operation on his

LB.

BAG

serving arm.

"Everything I hit seemed
to come off. It was· one of
those freak matches when
everything goes well. I was
pretty confident though I
never really expected to
win. n
Second-seeded Arthur Ashe
advanced with a four set
victory over South African
Bob Hewitt.
In a voice as flat as her
fore hand, Chris Evert went
through the ritual post-match
recital Tuesday of how she
had demolished a nervous
Austra lian girl in opening her
defense of her singles title.

Bast'l~all I~~

game
ended at 30 to 9
ln little league action the
Rutland Reds took one on the
nose from the Chesh ire
Tigers as 'the Tigers downed
the Reds by a 30-9 count.
Mark Gilmore was the
winning pi tc her for the Tigers
and Tim Gore was the losing
pitcher for the Reds .
Hitting for the winners
were Tim Price with a home
run , double and single, Rusty
Layne, Sue McCoy and Jim
Fife each a single, while Mike
Swisher and Mark Price ea ch
ha d 2 singles. For the Reds ,
Tim Gore had a triple and a
single, Mike Wilford and
Dave Vance each a single.

Letart wins

5-3 pony game
I.e tart down ed Hartford in
Pony action last ni ght by the
score of 5-3. Dave Robinson
s!&lt;trted r on the mound fo r
Letart and worked 4 and
third innin gs, strik ing out 9
and wa lking 8. Jimmy Powell
came on to finish, walking 3
and fannin g 2.
War ren Fields was the
losing pitcher: for Hartford,
fanning 7 an d walking 4.
Getting hi ts for Letart were
Jim O'Brien a triple, Chris
Wolfe a double and a single,
Robinson a double and a
sing le, Dwight Hill a single,
Jimmy Powell and Eddie
Roush a single each.
For Hartford Fields had a
triple , David Roush a doub le,
Danny Fields, John McDan iel
and Doug Russell each a
si ngle.

••
\JI

79.eLB.

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SKINLESS WIEN.ERs ........ .?.I.~-.. s1.59
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Price Includes F . E . T. ~
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COLD BEER CARRY OUT

\

I

'

.

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,

.

.

...

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. ..
'-The Daily Sentinel, Mtd&lt;Ueport-l'omeroy, v., vveunesuay' JWie ••• "'"

·r

4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesday , Jtmc :!a. 1975

Indians· knock Red Sox out of first place with 8-6 win
Linescores
Tuesday 's Baseba ii ' Rest.!hs
B y Un i t ed Pr·ess ln terna ti onill

National l eagu*.'
C:hica ~w

20602300(1
1315 'l
Mo n treal
010 007 020
6 9 0
Bonham . Knowles \7 1. Znrno
ra (9) and Ho!i. ley
Warrhen
Ta ylor (3) , D eMol a 16 ), Murray
(8) and Carter WP Ronh am
(7 5 ). LP - Warth en 13 11

11st Game l
Pif!SbUrQh
0 10 0 1000 1· J 80
Ph ilad lphia 100 003 01&gt;.
6 JJ 1
Reuss . G iu st1 (81 (lnd Sang ull
len . Oyer
(5 1
Chr 1s tenson
McGraw { 81 and !Joone WP
Christenson ( '2 I I
L P Reu55
( 8-5) HR - Par k er 113th l
{ 1nd Game )
000 100 000
1 5 1
P ittsburgh
Ph i ladlph i a ..no 00 1 02x
s 12 1
Kison . Mc Dowell 111. Hq
nandez (51 and Dyer
Under
wood (8 5) and Oa t es . LP Kison
(7 3 1
HR R.obcrtson
(2n d 1
Ci n cinnat i

J

003 000 000

s0

(1 nd q,lm f'l
Siu i I r ~n
'·"' D •t'CIO

lJllll \ll)O Ol'l)
111 001) 00 1(
\\'1111&lt;'1111 5 \ r&gt; '

l'

• '

.\ ~ 0

f\r i'ld lt' i
H ('&lt;1
verlo IB' ,11H1 R.1c1.1r ".f r C'tll •7
I I 1111d H undl•· ~·
LP
PI adll'Y

10 11 H~

1\\ &lt;._(0 vl'Y

(i.lth '

Arn enc,ln Lt' olQUt'
(h i q.Hlll•l
QctrO II
000 QO(I 000
/\ \!1 \\ ilUio.. C't'
PO:" 110(11 '11;
Rilrt&gt; 12 t \ ~ n d

0 J 1
'-. lll(l

~\ocl...enfu~s

:'.I Mo1 1 I t- $ 1 and Porter
{2 nd Qilm£')
OllO ('1 10 !0(1
:' 8 I
r\\ 11 \\ ClU io.. ('C
Ll('10 0(11 .iOX
-1 6 :'
LaGrm'
H1l ll~ .· 17
.1nd f ~ cc
h;ln 1 r' nv r rs --; L11 e~nd Porter
LP L ~l GIOW ( . I ' \ HR :.lolt
( f1\J1 I
Detr o• !

Nc\\• Yor

0 10 200 000
3 7 (l
100 000 0 J0
I .1 0
Hun H'r 1 11 6 1 and l\flun son
Tor rL'l :7 ~~ and Hcndr· c ~s HR
lo..

8 .1 1111 110rt•

~.inq(('lQil

(.tth •·

Cl ev eland
110 200 OO ..J
8 11 ;
Ros ton
.107 (100 o·~o
6 11 o
~ern hus !..c y (tp and Ashby

Y c'lst r lPillS !o. i ( / 1t1 I

000 ooo a 10- 1 5 7
100100?0x
5101
Curtis , Terl ec k y ( 5 ). Garman
(7) and Strn mons : Koos1T'an 16
5 ) and Grote LP - Curt's { J 6 1
HR - - King man ( lOth )

T e xas
200 000 003
5 9 2
Ch, c aqo
2('1202 1 00 "'
7 1J::'
P er r y, K('l.;. ic t1 ( 6 1 nnd 'iund
bero Os tee r;. Goss aq c (9' and
Down1nq W P OsteerJ (2 6 ) LP
Perry. 16 Il l , HR Or ta (.1t tl \.

NewYor k

Los Ange les -10 3 010 ooo
g 11 o
Houston
020 0 10 000
3 6 l
Rau
( 7.6) and
Fer g uson ,
' Yeager (J l; Gri ff i n . Crawford
(J ), Forsc h (3 ). Cosgrove {9 J
and Johnson . LP - Griff in (J Bl.
HRS- -Garvey (9th \, Cey ( llth l,
Rader 2 ( Jth &amp; 5th l
(1s t , 10 innings)
San Fran
000 001 000 0-

1 11 1
San Diego 010 000 000 1· ? 8 o
Barr . Moffitt (7), Lave lle 19),
Williams ( 10) and Hill . Jone s
( I0 .4J and Kendall LP La vette
( 4 -J ). HR - Murcer ( 9th 1

BOSTON •l UP! I - Frapk
Robin,on says his Cleve land
Indians are ready to enier the
Ame ri can League East
pennant race.
Clevela nd , with an ·a-o
comeback win Tuesday night
over Boston, climbed past
Detroit into fifth place while
)·a nkin g the Red Sox out of
first in the six-team divisi~n .
·· [ feel if we can play the
type of ball that we have 1in
winning ) the last three
games. we can get up in the
middle of this !hiP " boforo fNJ

division. ''

Robinson 's optimism was
O..sed on the continued good
pitching of his young staff
and a beefed up offense.
George Hendrick provided
the power Tuesday with a
so lo homer in the first inning

and a gHmPwwinning threerun drive \~· ith two outs in the

'nintll.
Boston; loser of four of its
past s ix games, broke open a
4-4 game in the eighth inning
on Carl Yastrzemski 's tworun homer.
But when Fra nk Duffy led
the Indians' ninth with a
single, Boston Manager
Darrell J ohnson relieved
starter Bill Lee with another
lefty, Roger Moret.
Moret walked AI Ashby
then turned Duane Kuiper's
bunt into a fo rceout at third
on Duffy.

Johnson next brought in
right hander Dick Drago and
Robinson countered with left
· handed "pinch hitter Boog
Powell, who blooped a double
to l~ll scori ng one run. ·
Kuiper, trying to score from
first, was thrown out at tbe
plate as Powell huffed into
second base.
Drago, trying for the final
out, walked Dick Manning,
then yielded Hendrick's 14th
homer-'-ll twisting liner that
curled around the right field
foul pole.
Tom Buskey , who relievd

1

Atlanta
000 000 000 0 6 0
Da rcy . Nor man (81 . Aorbon
(9 ) and
P l ummer
Niekr ('l
House (9 1 and Pocoroba WP
Darcy ( 2 J l L P - N rekro (7 6 1
HR - Morgan ( lOth )

St Loui s

long," said Kobinson, .wliose
team trails firs~ place New
' York by II games.
" Everybody has had a hot
strea k but us; maybe this is
the beginning of our streak. It
would be an exce llent time
for one with all the teams
playing
within
thei r

By GIL P~: rF.RS
UP I Sports Writt'r

Lee 1\\orPt ( 9 ' Dra~ o 19 1 ClllC
r 1s k WP 8 u5 k C' ~ (.f Jl L P
D rnao ( 1 11 HR s H cndrtcl-. ~
t 13th
1.!111 1
Sp1 lo.. ('5
1?n d l

KC

000 300 000 02

5 1] 2

Col it

0\0000 20000

3 II 2

Leonard B1rd ( 8 1 and Stin
son Lanq e, K irkwood t81, Sco tt
( tO l and Et c hebar ren W P Bird ( 52 J. L P ScoTt ( l 1). HR
Et chebarren ( lSI '
Mi n n esot a
Oak land
Deck er ,

000 030 100· J 7 1
JOO 001 lOx 6 7 2
Albu ry
111 and
Borgm a nn . Bahnsen . Lindb lad
( 5 1. Todd (51 and Tenac c WP
Todd ( J ? I LP Decker l t 21
HR Ten ace ( 13th )

Yanks take over first in East
By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
The New York Yankees and
Jim Hunter finally hav e
made it to the top of the
American League's Eastern
Division - together.
That 's the way the Yankees
ha d it figured when they
signed Hunter to a record
$2 .8-million five-year contract - that he would lead
them to the promised land just as he had contributed
three 21l-victory seasons to
the Oakland -A's three consec uti ve
workl
championships.

If you believe in omens, the
Yankees' plans will work out
because they took over first
place in the AL East Tuesday
night when Hunter pitched a
four-hitter to beat the Baltimore Orioles 3-1. The victory raised Hun ter's record
to 11-{) compared to the 10-8
mark he had for the A's a
year ago at this time.
The Yankees took over first
place with a combination of
their victo ry over the Orioles
and the Cleveland Indians' 8-{)
triumph over the Boston Red
Sox. It marked the first time
this season the Yankees have

occupied the lop spot in their
division.
New York, which has been
hobbled by injuries a nd
hasn't had its "varsity" on
the field in weeks, scored its
fourth straight win behind
Hunter . Terr y Whitfield
drove in two runs with a
si ngle and a sacrifice fly and
Graig Neltles singled in the
other. Ken Singleton homered
for the Orioles in the fi rst
inning. ·

eOPENe
6 .DAYS
A WEEK
MON. thru SAT.

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

Jim Kern with one out in the
eighth, pitched I 2-3 innings of
two-hit, no-run bal_l -· to improve his record to 4-3. The
victDry was a pleasant finish
to an otherwise bad day for
the big right hander . .
"First I was trapped in the
elevator of our hotel then I
ripped my shirt getting out of
the cab at the ballpark," said

--

-

--·--- -

·-- -

the Cleveland reliever. " It
sort of set the trend for the
whole day."
Once on the mound, his luck
turned. He threw "a bad
pitch" to Rick Burleson with
a runner on first and two outs
in the ninth. "He had a good
chance to hit it out but he
missed it" said auskey of the
long fly to left that was
caught lor the final out.
The two clubs were to close
out.their series this afternoon
with Boston's Dick Pole, 1-3,
facjn~ Rorie Harrison, ~2.

SPECIAL

SUPERIORS

FRANKIE
WIENERS

SC'cond

amy CROCKER

POLISH SAU

WHITE
YELLOW

CAKE MIX

LB.

18Vz OZ.

SUNSHINE

COLD CUTS

liKE

DOG
FOOD

ALL VARIETIES

M1dd lcpor l

1 LB.

992 7161

25

Seventh-seeded Smith ousted
By ROBERT MUSEL
WIMBLEDON, England
(UP!) - It was the ltind of
day all tennis players dream
about but few achieve. It
came true as the evening
shadows were beginning to
close in on the Wimbledon
tennis championships
Tuesday for Byron Bertram, .

a 22-year-&lt;&gt;ld South Afncan
who lives in Chicago .
On the other side of the net
was Stan Smith, the seventh
seed and second ranking
American. Tha t didn ' t
ma tter . When the magi c
touches the racket it doesn't
matter who the opponent is or
that you are ranked only sixth

•

•

A-s .WID pair
of pony games .
The Pomeroy A-s downed
the Pomeroy Tigers in a
double header by scores of 111 and lll-3 in Meigs-MasoJt
Pony action Tuesday .
In the first game, Dale
Browning went 3 innings,
fa nni ng 4, walking 1, and
giving up 1 hit . Brian
Hamilton came on in relief to
finish the game, fanning 4
and walking 3, and allowing
the Tiger run . Browning got
the win.
F or the Tigers, Todd
Rawlings went the distance,
fannin g 4, walking 3, and
giving up 10 hits.
Getting hits lor the A-s
were Carl Carmichael with a
home run, trip le, and a
single, Hamilton had a triple
and 2 singles, Bob McClure a
single, Ron Snyder a double ,
Bob McClure a double and a
si ngle,
David
Harris ,
Browning, and Tim Hood
each a single.
For the Tigers Raymond
Andrews had a triple and a
single.
In the second game, Greg
Smith went the distance
striking out 11, walk ing 3, and
scat tering 5 hits. Mike
Triplett went the distance for
the Tigers fanning 3, walking
4, and giving up 11 hits.
For the A-s, Hamilton had a
pair of doubles , Carmichael a
home run, triple, double, and
2 singles, Bob McClure a
double , and getting singels
we,re Snyder, Smith, Rick
Johnson, Hood, Mark Mitch
and Rick Blaettnar.
For th.e Ti ge rs , Jeff
Grueser, Raymond Andrews,
Tom Hawley, and Chris Wood
hit singles, and Mike Tripplett had a triple.
In other Pony League
action Racine defeated
Syracuse at Syracuse in 10
innings by the score of 4-2. A
Mark Sayre homerun in the
top of the tenth and strong
relief pitching by Mike
Huddleston gave Racine the
hard-earned victory.
_
Also in the tenth; Richard
Teaford doubled,_stole third .
and scored on an infield hit to
give Racine an insurance
run. The win upped Racine 's
record to &amp;-I with three of the
wins going into extra innings .
Mark Sayre ' started for
Racine and gave up on_Iy 4
hils, walked' S and fanned 12
in the seven .innings he :pitched. Huddleston carne on in
the eighth to finish picking up

the win.

Huddleston gave up no
nms, no hits, walked 3, and
struck out 4 in the three innings he worked.
For Sy racuse Mark l" orbes
star ted going 5 innin gs.
striking out 4, walking :l. and
giving up 4 hils Kelly
Winebrenner came on for
Forbes and · finished the
game, getting tagged with the
loss. Winebrenner fanned l,
walked 2, and gave up 4 hits
in 5 innings.
Getting hits for the winners
were Sayre with a home run ,
triple, and a single; Teaford a
double , Bill Harris ahd
Huddleston eac h a single, and
Perry Hill had two singles.
SyracuS€ 's Forbes and
Winebrenn er eac h had 2
singles.
Racine
100010000 2- 486
Syracuse Oil 000 000 0'--2 4 I
Sayre , Huddlesto n t 81
(WP ) and Harris. Forbes ,
Winebrenner (6) ( LP ) and
Davis.

in your own country and
unseeded here.
Everything goes right. Big
Stan drilled over his famou s
serve and Bertram drilled il
right back with forehand or
backhand for placement winners. Smith tried every shot
in the book and few of them
worked. Bertram chopped,
sliced, volleyed and ha lfvolleyed, smashed, and
everything worked .
As he came sadly off court
after little more than an hour
Smith explainf4 his crushing,
6-1, 6-2, 6-1, defeat in simple
words.
" He play\'(1 very well, " he
said.
Bertram agreed it was an
exceptional gatne.
"It's the best I've ever
played in my life," he said.
He said he has played only
eight tournaments this year
because of an operation on his

LB.

BAG

serving arm.

"Everything I hit seemed
to come off. It was· one of
those freak matches when
everything goes well. I was
pretty confident though I
never really expected to
win. n
Second-seeded Arthur Ashe
advanced with a four set
victory over South African
Bob Hewitt.
In a voice as flat as her
fore hand, Chris Evert went
through the ritual post-match
recital Tuesday of how she
had demolished a nervous
Austra lian girl in opening her
defense of her singles title.

Bast'l~all I~~

game
ended at 30 to 9
ln little league action the
Rutland Reds took one on the
nose from the Chesh ire
Tigers as 'the Tigers downed
the Reds by a 30-9 count.
Mark Gilmore was the
winning pi tc her for the Tigers
and Tim Gore was the losing
pitcher for the Reds .
Hitting for the winners
were Tim Price with a home
run , double and single, Rusty
Layne, Sue McCoy and Jim
Fife each a single, while Mike
Swisher and Mark Price ea ch
ha d 2 singles. For the Reds ,
Tim Gore had a triple and a
single, Mike Wilford and
Dave Vance each a single.

Letart wins

5-3 pony game
I.e tart down ed Hartford in
Pony action last ni ght by the
score of 5-3. Dave Robinson
s!&lt;trted r on the mound fo r
Letart and worked 4 and
third innin gs, strik ing out 9
and wa lking 8. Jimmy Powell
came on to finish, walking 3
and fannin g 2.
War ren Fields was the
losing pitcher: for Hartford,
fanning 7 an d walking 4.
Getting hi ts for Letart were
Jim O'Brien a triple, Chris
Wolfe a double and a single,
Robinson a double and a
sing le, Dwight Hill a single,
Jimmy Powell and Eddie
Roush a single each.
For Hartford Fields had a
triple , David Roush a doub le,
Danny Fields, John McDan iel
and Doug Russell each a
si ngle.

••
\JI

79.eLB.

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Price Includes F . E . T. ~
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~

I

1

Kay Schaekel honored

Fun With Food
~y c,~ arl ene

Hoeflich

MASON. IV. Va . - A bridal
shower hunorng Kay B.
Schaekel was held recently at
the Mason United Methodist
Church.
Hostesses were Jean Da&lt;l!,is,
Sharon Wyatt and Clarice
Carson . Games were played
with prizes going to Mary
Berry a nd Linda Roush. The
door prize was won by Clarice
Wallace.
A blue and white color
scheme was carried out in the
decorations .· Ca ke, punc h,

When warm weather wilts your enthusiasm for cooking
and appetites request lighter meals, why not serve a spri ghtly
salad for skpper.
Salads can w ive sununer menu problems , particularly
when they are the type where meat is included .
~ And for a change from the usual chef salad of greens,
tomatoes, ham bits and cheese, you might try this recipe .
fROPICAL HAM SALAD
I to 1 ~. pounds cooked smoked ham , cut in julienne strips,
I can (13 ounces) pineapple chunks, '' medium canta loupe
cubed, I tbs . sugar , I tsp . cornstarch , I tbs. lemon juice, I egg
yolk, beaten, "• cup dairy sour cream , I avocaqo, sliced , I
banana , sliced, '• cup toasted slivered almonds .
Drain pineapple chunks, resen1ng juice. Combine with .-:·:·:::·:::::::::&gt;::::::::::::::::::.-:,.~~'&lt;':'::.%~·
cantaloupe and chill. Blend sugar and cornstarch in saucepan, ·.·
stir in '• cup reserved pineapple juice, lemon juice and egg /
yolk. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly until thickened. _:~·_'.:,
Coo k two minutes longer. Fold in wur cream and chill.
....
Dip avocado and banana slices in remaining pineapple ~-'-·'.·'.·
juice and combine with ham strips, pineapple, cantaloupe and
!;~:
almonds . ughtly stir in the chilled dressing.

Social
Calendar

···ulfee, mints and nuts were
served. Guests at the shower
besides those named were
Fannie Rousll , Kathy Zerkle,
Erma Turnbull, Betty Cadle,
Va le ri e Ca dle, June Van
Me ter , Margaret Pickens,
Godrux Schaekel, Lu cille
Swackhamer ,
Co nni e
Goodni te , Kandi Ca dl e ,
Vivian
F ry,
Frances

ma lee, Mrs. EJecta Sounders
and Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner.
. Attending were Mrs. Freda
Edwards , Mrs. Nellie Werner , Mrs. Gwinnie Whi te,
Mrs. Pearl Hoffman , Mrs.
Ruth
Johnson ,
Miss
Cat herine Wer ner, Mrs .
E lizabeth Gardner, Mrs .
Elizabeth Slavin, Mr s .
Parmalee, Mrs . Leora
Sigman , Mrs. Lettie Roush,
·Mrs . Isabelle Winebrenn er ,
Mrs . Beulah White a nd
guests , Mrs.
Fl ore nce
Hanna y a nd Mr s. Ruth
Schramm.

Club plans picnic

Polly's Pointers=··
Quest for cake plate

Picnic is

discussed

Cruise concert
to appear july 2

.

FUNNY BUSINESS

"'

Lozier, granddau ghter of
Mrs. Kelton. Mrs. Stewart
won the door prize. Others
attending
were
Mrs.
Margaret Rose a nd Mrs.
Gladys Cuckler .
Refreshments were served
by the hostess. The picnic will
be · held at the Route 33
roadside park next month.

"'.lii;..!..___l;;;;i~

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sebo
,have returned to their home
in Logan, W. Va. after
spend ing the past eight
months here with Uleir son
and daughter-in-law, Mr . and
Mrs. John Sebo. Spending
Father's Day with. the Sebos
were Mr. and Mrs. Glen Pratt
a nd · son, Greg, Mrs. Don
Conway, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Fugate and Michael , all of
Indianapolis, Ind.
leanne Sebo, a physical
therapist maj or a t Ohio State
University, is empl oyed at
Doctor 's
Hospital
in
Columbus for the summer.
Leanne will be a seni or at
State this fall.
Mr. and Mr s. Chester
Knight, accompanied by their
son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mr s. Dick Kni ght,
· Wint e rsvill e,
r etur ned
Monday from a nine-day trip
to Florida . Highlights of their
trip included visits to
Marineland, Cy pru s Gar de ns , a nd Disney World .
Enrou te home they stopped
a t Myrtle Beach. Chester
Kni ght enters Univ ersity
Hospi tal Thur sday for
surgery on Friday. His wife
will stay in Mari on ivith
another son and daughter-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Knight ,
during
his
hospitalization.
Paige Carr, Paris!J Carr,
a nd Jill Curnutt have
re turned to their home in
Irvine, Ky. after visiting here
with their grandparents, Mr ,
and Mrs. Melvin Bonecutter.
Mrs. Helen Cline, Akron,
has been here visiting Mrs.
Lillian Napper, Minersville,
Mrs. Myrtle Walker , Racine,
and Virgil Walker and
family, Racine, Route 2.

Maxine Griffith
attends training
Mr s . Maxin e Griffith,
cashie r of the Pom eroy
National Bank and secretary
of the bank's boa rd of
direc tors, attended her
second year of training at the
Stonier Graduate School cif
Ba nking held at Rutgers
University, June 8-20, New
Brunswick , N. J .
Top flight economists,
bankers and educators
served as instructors for the
tw o week school. Mrs.
Griffith was one of 15 female

lJ'ance se t

fior ]u/11
4
:J'
MASON, IV. Va. - The
second annual Firecracker
Ball will be held July 3 from
10 p.m. to 2 a.m. at the Mason
Fire Station under the
sponsorship of the Mason
Fire Department.
The band will be Red
Stewar t and the Ambassadors. Price is $6 per
couple and refreshments will
be available. The fire
department will also stage a
fireworks display on July 4th
at 9:30 p.m. at the Mason
Uttle league ball park.

CARDS REQUESTED
A card shower is being
staged for Mrs . Me tta
Benedum who will be 85
Sunday. Her address is
Reedsv.ille, Ohio.
CORRECTION
It was erroneously reported
that the owner of a bridal
dress, used in Heritage
Sunday, Mrs. Rhoda Yeager,
is the mother of James Diehl,
Pomeroy. She is the mother
of his wife , Ida Yeager Diehl.

PARADE PLANNED.
Parents lielonging to the
Racine PTO who wish their
children to participate in the
4th of July parade in Racine
should call one of the
· following persons : Libby

P.!"'""...----~iiiiiiiii

UMW gathers

Hewctson a nd Judy Dixon.
Presenting gifts to Miss
Sch aekel were Joan An derson, KaUlleen Reitmi're,
Joseph ine Miller, .Joyce ·
Hollon, E;lva Davis, Debbie
Roush, Ccl ine McGowan, Dr .
Kay
McGowan,
Betty
Thomas, Clara Redman,
Car olyn Barnett and Mrs .
Ray Ha rless .

Class members
have meeting

Busy Bee Class members of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church met Thursday night
at the home of Mr s.
Rosemary Lyons for a picnic.
WEDNESDAY
If desserts are a· favorite at your house, here 's one that's
Mrs. Julia Grimm gave
sure to please everyone.
POMEROY - Middleport
devotions using the topic,
Lions Club, noon, Meigs Inn.
TIPSY FRUIT PUDDING
OHIO Valley Commandry " An Oak or a Telephone
I can (29 or 30 ounce ) fruit cockta il, I package (3 ounc-e )
Pole", and read a prayer
instant lemon pudding mix, I baked commercial pound ca ke 24, Knights Templar, stated
poem , " If Thy Strength Be
111 ounce ), raspberry jam, 1 , cup whipping cream, whipped. conclave, 7:30 p.m. at the
Drain the fruit cocktail, reserve the syrup. Prepare Ma soni c Te mpl e for the Made Perfect ". A "come as
pudding mL' as directed on package label using the r eserved purpose of transacting all you are party" was pla nned
syrup for part of the required liquid .
business and election and for July . Games were played,
Cut the pound cake into one-half inch thick slices and then insta ll ation of offi ce rs. and the group sang "Happy
cut the slices in half. une bottom a nd sides of deep ~lass bowl Knights asked to take Uleir Birthday" to Miss Emma
Matthews, Mr s. _ Eloise
with cake slices. Spread with raspberry jam. Reserve about '• rituals .
Wilson, Mrs . Wilma Parcu p drained fruit cocktail for top; fold remaining fruit
THE Veterans of Foreign
.cocktail into pudding.
Wars will meet at 7:30p.m. at
Spoori o ne-third of fruit cocktail-pudding mixture over cake Jack Ward's Club.
slices in bowl. Cover pudding with 1f.&gt; of rema ining cake slices.
THURSDAY
Spoon 'r.! of the remaining fruit cocktail-puddin g mix over top.
FREE Clothing day will be
Repeat the process.
held from 10 a.m. until noon
Garnish the cake top with whipped cream and reserved fruit a t the Sa lvati on Army
A July picnic wa s planned
cocktail. Refrigerate at least two hours before serving.
Headquarter s, Butternu t at the Magnolia Club meeting
Ave., Pomeroy. All area held Thursday night at the
residents in need of clothing home of Mrs. Doris Grueser.
In tile absence of Miss Erna
invited.
ROCK Springs Grange, 8 Jesse, Mrs . Iris Kelton
:·
presided . The Lord's Prayer
p.m. Thursday a t the hall .
EXECUTIVE Committee, was given in unison. Mrs.
Meigs County Regional Grueser presented devotions
Planning Co mmission fr om the Upper Room.
meeting , 3 p.m. ASCS con- Games were played under the
BY POLLy LMMER
ference room , Farmer 's dir ec ti on of Mr s . Ethel
Bank Building.
Stewart, with prizes going to
WILDWOOD Garden Club, Mrs. Bertha Canaday, Mrs.
a p.m. at home of Mrs. · Georg ia Wa tson a nd J oan
Dorothy Smith.
FREE Clothing day for low
passed on to us consumers.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
income
perwns, 9 a .m. to 3
·
economical
but
For
an
DEAR POLLY - I have .
at
old high school
p.m.
looked in many stores in pretty tablecloth I buy white,
building
in Cheshire by
many states for a square colored or pr inted polyester
cake plate. I have found them fabric, 60-inches wide, on sa le Gallia-Meigs Community
on pedes ta l bases bu t that is for $1.50 or even less a yard. Action Agency.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
not practical for everyday For my table I just have to
a
p.m.
home of Mrs. Dorothy
use or for storing cakes. I own buy one required length a nd
numerous round ones but hem the two cut ends. The Smith.
FRIDAY
The·annual fam ily picnic of
what can I put a cake on that selvages are a ttr acti ve
PAST
Matrons,
Evangeline the Sew-Ri te-Sewin g Club
was baked in a square pan ? enough to use as is. This way
a two-yard cloth costs $3 or Chapter, O.E .S., 6 p.m ., was set for 2 p.m. on July 20
-CHAROLOTIE .
potluck, Masonic Temple .
at the Route 33 Roadside
DEAR CHARLOTIE - I less, can be thrown in the
think if you would look at washer and requi res no
AUCTION, St. Jose ph 's Park when club members
open stock china you would ironing. - MRS. T. R. IV .
Parish Hall, Mason, 7 p.m . met last week at the club
POLLY
All
my
DEAR
find some pattern with a
Refreshments, everyone house . Mrs. McK!)ight was
hostess.
square chop plate that would life I've had trouble taking welcome.
Mrs.
Ann
Browning
do. In the meantime why not pills: I was even punished for
SUNDAY
this
when
I
was
a
child.
As
I
presided
with
Mrs.
Betty
cover a square of heavy
THE RACINE First Baptist
grew
older
I
crushed
all
pills
cardboard with aluminum
Church Sunday School and Wehrung
gtvmg
the
foil and then put the .cooled a nd dissolved them in liquids. Bible school picnic· will be treasurer's report and Mrs.
Gilmore,
the
cake on that. What do you Now I've discovered that by Sunday at the Shrine Park at Evelyn
taking
a
bi
te
of
something
to
other readers do? - POLLY.
12 :30 p.m . All members of the secretary 's report. Mrs.
eat I can get the pill or
church and children who Wehrung received a birthday
.DEAR POLLY - Those capsule in my mouth a nd . attended Bible school and gift. Next meeting will be a
paper perfume samples tha t swallow both together. No
parents are invited to attend. wiener roast at the home of
come in bills or other mail as mor e prob}ems. I even use
Table se rvi ce will be Mrs. Mildred Wells.
Mrs. McKnight served a
provided.
advertisements to introduce this when giving pills to my
dog
I
put
one
in
a
bit
of
dog
dessert
c.o urse to those
new prod ucts a dd great
REUNION, family of
food
so
he
swallows
it.
fragrance to the contents of
Lorena Keyes Sloter and named and Mrs . Flo
my dresser drawers. Empty MARIE.
William Marion Sloter, 10 Stri ckland , Mrs. Ne ttie
DEAR POLLY - This past
perfume and cologne bottles
a.m., Burr Oak State Park, Boyer, Mrs. Pandora Collins ,
winter
I
needed
a
cover-all
do the same. Neither makes
picnic and swinuning area . Mrs. Martha Hoffman , a nd
Mrs. Shirley Baity .
clothes smell too strongly yet apron and had the inspiration
Take covered dish.
to make one out of a worn
they last for quite a while. ,
summer dress. This also
MRS . M.E .T.
DEAR POLLY - ryty Pet saved me from the risk ·of
Peeve is with cerea l getting a pattern I did not
manufacturers who have a like. I decided to use a pretty
special offer on the back of dark blue prin t dress made of
the box - the consumer ends " no iron " fabirc. I took the
up paying for such offers. sleeves out, sli t it all the way
With today's high pri ces I up the back and hemmed the
GALLIPOLIS
The July 2 from 1-5 p.m. The
would like to see such offers armholes and sides of the
" Pennsylvania '76 Bicen- concert will be July 2 at a:30
discontinued and the prices of back opening. A buttonhole
tennial Cruise" will perform p.m. at the Gallipolis park
the products reduced. Ac- was made at the top of the
newly
slit
ba
ck
and
large
in Gallipolis Wednesday , July front. There is no charge for
cording to an article I read in
2.
an a dverti sing magazine button sewn on. Ties were
the concert or tours. SpecTaking part in the concerts tators are advised to bring
ma nufa c tur ers spend 60 made for both sides and I was
are the Pittsburgh Youth lawn chairs to the concert.
million a year to buy trinkets in busi ness. I enjoy this apron
Symphony, singers Robert
for product promotions. I feel and it is really a coverup . Mosley and Irene Sirocca,
sure some or all of this is OLIVE .
and a 16-member chorus, the
They'll Do It Every Time
Renaissance City Singers ,
by
Robert
prepared
Shankovich, assistant dean of
music
at
Duquesne
TOATIENDSESSION
University.
Mrs.
Don
Thomas
! KNOW'fllf.
uncoln
Maazel
will
portray
daugHters, Becky and usa ,'
HIRING GW AI
Ben Franklin and entertain Merri Ault, and Mr . and Mrs.
CiMPG CO. !tt..
during
the , 90-minute Paul Darnell of Bethel 62
CA~t.. HIM RIGHI
program.
AWAY.. ·ME.AflfiMO.
Interna tiona! Order of Job'~
H&lt;.RE.!&gt; 601.-\EThe musical fare during the Daughters, will leave ThursWA~K I N&amp;-AI&lt;OIJND
program will be ' mostly day for Canton where they
MONE-Y·-patriotic .
will a !tend the Grand Session
. The barge will arrive in of _Job's Daughters. They will
Gallipolis July 1. Tours will return home Sunday. usa. is
be conducted on the barge honored queen of Bethel 62.

1.

··-~-

;

_6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pon1eroy, 0., Wednesday , June 25. 19i5
'

I

.•.

.

-

t

.. . . . . . .
~

1 '

Fisher at 949-3927; Barbara
Dugan at 949-5981 or Kay
Warden at 949-567 4.

students in the 355 members
of the second year class.
Some 1200 students from 44
states, Puerto Rico, Germany, Guam and the District
of Columbia made . up the
three years of class levels
taught at the school. Students
are assigned extensive
research problems to work
ou t between the annual
sessions and a thesis is
required for graduation at the
end of the third year.

REVIVAL SET
GOYSVJLLE - A revival
will be held from June 29 to
July 6 at the Guysville
Community Church with Rev .
Roy Deeter as evangelist.
The public is invited to the
services which will start at
7:30 each evening.

VISITED
Mrs.
Jane
Welker,
Gahanna , spent the weekend
in Middleport with her
parents , Mr . and Mr s .
Charles Sauer.

fhe Almanac
ByUPI
Today is Wednesday, June
25, the !76th day of 1975 with
189 to follow.
The moon is between its full
phase. and last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are
Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
French composer Gustave
Charpentier was born June
25, 1860.
On this day in history :
In 1876, Gen. George Custer
and his force of 208 men were
ambushed by Sioux Indians in
the battle of tittle Big Horn in
Montana.
In 1950, North Korean Communists invaded South
Korea .
In 1962, the U.S. Supreme
Court handed down a decision
interpreted as barring prayer .
in public schools.
In 1973, White House attorney John Dean told a
Senate committee President
Nixon joined in a plot to cover
up the Watergate break-in.

RETURNED HOME
Mrs. Esther Kissel, Middleport, has returned home
from Holzer Medical Center --;. A thought for the day:
for two months before she
British
· writer
John
goes to University Hospital in
Galsworthy said, "If you do
Columbus for open heart · not think about th,e future,
surgery.
you cannot have one."

Art", was sung.
Twenty-four sick and shutin ca ll s were reported.
Thelma Henderson displayed
greeting card samples, a nd it
was decided , to order
Christmas cards early at a
cheaper rate.
Dr. Theodore Townsend,
missionary to India, was

"

.•

.·..•

PRICES GOOD

·.·

..·.

...

THRU 6-28-75·

Parish Hall in Ma s""· is th,•
pla,•t• til~::o on Frid'l'·· .hntt'
•• t •
. . ' a ' p.nt. ~~mnn~ tht•
man)· ih•ms o1n• nagnn
\\'ht•t•ls. old t•oins and dt·.
Rl'frt•shnwnts will bL' suld.

,.
"

E\'t'ryont• is \H'It•onw.

"

Ohio youths
have big part

ARE DOCTORS WORST MATESO
Dear Helen:
My mother always said, "Marry a doctor," but I married
the man I fell in love with, who happened to be a teacher. My
best friend married a doctor. They were divorced last year.
From what she tells me . and from what I've heard , doctors
make the pOorest husbands, not only because of long hours and
overwork , but because they're so accustomed to giving
commands to nurses, and being waited on by them , that they
expect the same adject obedience at home.
Is it true that most doctors treat their wives as secondclass people? I'm personally interested because my sister is
very involved with an intern. -DOES MAMA KNOW BEST?
.DEAR DMKB :
Doctors are no more , or no less, human than teachers
...attorneys ...or mechanics ... editors. You 'll find good
husbands in any profession, and also the overbearing louts.
Why not let your sister do her own "worrying" about the
intern? (! really doubt that she is.) - H.

..

RESERVED

COLUMBUS - More than
30,000 Ohio you ng people will
be actively participa ling in
the 1975 Ohi o State Fair, Aug .
21 through Labor Day, Sept.
I. In addition to a full slate of
livestock exhibits and sales.
17various
youth
organizations will have
displays in the Lausche
Building and Rhodes Youth
CeniA!r.
The displays , educational
and entertaining, will
represent an area of interest
and concern of each participating youth group.
The en try deadline for the
Junior Division is July 15.
Official entry forms and a list
of categories can be obtained
from the Ohio State Fair,
Junior
Fair
Division,
Columbus, 43211.

By Helen Bouel

...

QUANTITY RIGHTS

in state fair

Helen Help

Us • • •

.·

tu
go
to
.audiun~ ·:
Rt•nwmbt•r thi!i duh&gt;, plnn•
nnd tinlt' : Tht• St. ,Jost•ph'!ti

chosen by Genevieve Guthrie
and a birthday . card was
signed to be sent· to him.
Helen Woode accepted the
prayer calendar for July.
Osie Mae Follrod led the
pro gram , " Toward An
Honest conunitment," with a
scripture reading, song,
prayer, readings and com, _
ments, all found interesting
and ' timely, followed by an
inspiring worship service at
the close.
hostess
served
The
delicious refr eshments . The
next meeting to be at the
home of Osie Mae Follrod on
Tuesday evening, July 15.

ALFRED -;o The Alfred
Uni ted Methodist Women met
Tuesday evening, June 17, at
the home of Nellie Parker
with an attendance of nine
and Nellie ·P arker, presiden t,
in charge. Prayer was by
Eleanor Boyles , a nd the
hymn, " How Great Thou

298 Second St.
POMEROY, OHIO

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

SUPERIORS SLICED

BOILED HAM ....

~~:~.1

99

1

'

VIVA TOWELS •••••••••••• 2J~~L~ •1

.;

TROPICANA

Orange Drink. •••••••••••• 3 32 oz. •1-

BORDEN'S

Cremora •••••••••••••••••• ;:~z~ ..•l

Ohio man held

- .f.
DERA HELEN ;
My wife switched from cigarettes, which were bad enough,
to those small cigars. I don't smoke.
Our house stinka. The car stinks: Her breath stinka. I'm
tempted to get roaring drunk every night until she swears off.
Think it would change things ?-JAMES
DEAR JAMES:
Yes( You 'd add hangovers to your smoke blues.
If you can't live with a cigar-puffing mate, tell her so 1
(Maybe, she'll switch to snuff.). - H.

39

...

··•··

ARMOUR

on B&amp;E count

..•,•.···-·,..

POTTED MEAT•••••••••••• 6 3 oz. •1

PT. PLEASANT - · Two
men were arrested Monday
by the Point Pleasant Police
Department and charged
with the early Monday
morning breaking and entering of the First Church of
God on Jefferson Avenue.
They were Mark Schopis of
452 Hedgewood
Drive ,
Gallipolis, and Delmer C.
Cook, of Springfield, both 19.
Justice of the Peace
Charles "Sonny" Smith
Tuesday set bond !,or each at
$2,500. -·
According to police, entry
to the church was made by
breaking a door window and
unlocking a door .
Police chief Jim Gaskin
said that apparently nothing
had been taken. However,
damage to the church
building was estimated at
$130.

DEAR HELEN :
I wish someone would tell these parents who leave their
teenage children at parties and movies, but never pick them
up , that they're putting a big burden on other people .
I had to take two kids home at midnight last Saturday
because no one came after them. Almost every time I
chauffeur my own children,_ there are two or three others who
"need a ride home ." And often, it's several miles out of my
way, late at night.
What's with inconsiderate parents anyway ? -NOT
THEIR KEEPER
DEAR NOT :
They' re true believers - that someone else will take over the
care and busing of their kids. (And someone like you always
does.)
Since you can't leave young teenagers stranded on
deserted streets at midnight, my only suggestion is : call these
parents up next day. and insist THEY do the chauffeuring for
the next movie. (It's possible their children may be partly at
fault here. Sometimes they say they "have a ride home"
because permission to go c;omes easier that way.) - H.

KRAFT

_Is oz.

BBQ SAUCE ~·················

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WILSON'S CERTIFIED

BACON ...... ~!.~·.99e

"
"

...

WITH COUPON

'"

,.,

Mason gearing
BOARD TO MEET
The Administrative Board
of the United Methodi s t
Church, Pomeroy , will have a
special meetin g Sunday
following
the mornin g
worship service.

SEBO GRADUATES
. John David Sebo, son of Mr .
a nd Mrs. John Sebo,
Pomeroy, graduated June 7
from Ohio University. Attending commencement in
addition to his parents were
Mrs. Helen Sebo, Mrs. Glenn
Pratt and Greg, Indianapolis,
Ind.

POTLUCK PLANNED
A fa mily potluck for the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church congregation to be
held Sunda y at 6:30p.m. will
welcom e
Rev.
Robert
Hayden, new pastor of the
church.

...

MASON , W. Va. -,- This
town plans. to celebrate the
Fourth of July holiday with a
bang with a Firecreacker
BaD and fireworks .
The
second
annual
Firecracker Ball, sponsored
by the Mson Volunteer Fire
Department, will be held July
3 from 10 p. m . to 2 a . m. at
the fire stabon. Music will be
provided by Rod Stewart and
His Ambassadors. Admission
is S6 per couple .
The fireworks display will
take place on July 4th at the
Mason Ball Park beginning at
9:30p.m.

by Dick Tumer

CARNIVAL

"

up for Fourth

VISITORS LAST WEEK
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White,
Jr., Mr . and Mrs. Robert
White, Sr., and son, Mark,
and Mrs. Myrtle Watkins, a
friend , Ann , and her grandHOSPITALIZED
son, Marshall, all of Akron
John Terrell, Mulberry . were visitors last week of .
Heights , is a surgical patient Mrs. Beulah White and Mrs.
at the Holzer Medioal Center, Florence Hannay , Middleport.
Room 228.

'"

HOME GROWN

CABBAGE

CLIP THIS COUPON
BATH
BARS

$

LB.

FRESH

CLIP THIS COUPON

CUCUMBERS

INJUNCTION DENIED
MASON, W. Va. - Circuit
Court Judge James Lee
Thompson Monday ruled
against the town of Mason
which was seeking an injunction against Milton
Bartram, owner of Dot's
Restaurant to close it.

SAVE
MAXWEU HOUSE

ao~

$ 49

3 LB.

The Oailv Senti11el
UEIIOTEOTOTHE
INTERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
.

·

EllfC , Ed .

ROBERT HOEFLICH

. c.uv

Editor
Publ i shed daily exc ept
Saturday b'y The Ohio Valley
; Publ i shing CorT'!pan.v. 1! 1
Cour t 51., Pomer,ov. Ohto
· .,.S769. Business Off1ce _fhone

1

: 992 ,21S6 . E d itorial P hone 992
2117 .
. 'd
' Second ci 55S ~o sta g e pa1

It Pomeroy .

Oht O.

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ed.,.ert. • SI .~ ·f
' repre· ~entative
ward ·
Gr i ff i th Company . In c,
Bot11nelli &amp; Ga llagher O i v .,

,,,.

757 Th ird t..ye. New Yc..rk .

N Y 10017
t ul':l!lt r i p t i or.

. .
rates : .
0 _;1i \le r ed by ca rr i er where :

av-ailable 75 ce n ts per ·n r:r: k ; ;

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Notor

carri~r
· 1a•le

"Well, I'm all undressed for bed .... except for the knot in
this old shoe!"

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1

Kay Schaekel honored

Fun With Food
~y c,~ arl ene

Hoeflich

MASON. IV. Va . - A bridal
shower hunorng Kay B.
Schaekel was held recently at
the Mason United Methodist
Church.
Hostesses were Jean Da&lt;l!,is,
Sharon Wyatt and Clarice
Carson . Games were played
with prizes going to Mary
Berry a nd Linda Roush. The
door prize was won by Clarice
Wallace.
A blue and white color
scheme was carried out in the
decorations .· Ca ke, punc h,

When warm weather wilts your enthusiasm for cooking
and appetites request lighter meals, why not serve a spri ghtly
salad for skpper.
Salads can w ive sununer menu problems , particularly
when they are the type where meat is included .
~ And for a change from the usual chef salad of greens,
tomatoes, ham bits and cheese, you might try this recipe .
fROPICAL HAM SALAD
I to 1 ~. pounds cooked smoked ham , cut in julienne strips,
I can (13 ounces) pineapple chunks, '' medium canta loupe
cubed, I tbs . sugar , I tsp . cornstarch , I tbs. lemon juice, I egg
yolk, beaten, "• cup dairy sour cream , I avocaqo, sliced , I
banana , sliced, '• cup toasted slivered almonds .
Drain pineapple chunks, resen1ng juice. Combine with .-:·:·:::·:::::::::&gt;::::::::::::::::::.-:,.~~'&lt;':'::.%~·
cantaloupe and chill. Blend sugar and cornstarch in saucepan, ·.·
stir in '• cup reserved pineapple juice, lemon juice and egg /
yolk. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly until thickened. _:~·_'.:,
Coo k two minutes longer. Fold in wur cream and chill.
....
Dip avocado and banana slices in remaining pineapple ~-'-·'.·'.·
juice and combine with ham strips, pineapple, cantaloupe and
!;~:
almonds . ughtly stir in the chilled dressing.

Social
Calendar

···ulfee, mints and nuts were
served. Guests at the shower
besides those named were
Fannie Rousll , Kathy Zerkle,
Erma Turnbull, Betty Cadle,
Va le ri e Ca dle, June Van
Me ter , Margaret Pickens,
Godrux Schaekel, Lu cille
Swackhamer ,
Co nni e
Goodni te , Kandi Ca dl e ,
Vivian
F ry,
Frances

ma lee, Mrs. EJecta Sounders
and Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner.
. Attending were Mrs. Freda
Edwards , Mrs. Nellie Werner , Mrs. Gwinnie Whi te,
Mrs. Pearl Hoffman , Mrs.
Ruth
Johnson ,
Miss
Cat herine Wer ner, Mrs .
E lizabeth Gardner, Mrs .
Elizabeth Slavin, Mr s .
Parmalee, Mrs . Leora
Sigman , Mrs. Lettie Roush,
·Mrs . Isabelle Winebrenn er ,
Mrs . Beulah White a nd
guests , Mrs.
Fl ore nce
Hanna y a nd Mr s. Ruth
Schramm.

Club plans picnic

Polly's Pointers=··
Quest for cake plate

Picnic is

discussed

Cruise concert
to appear july 2

.

FUNNY BUSINESS

"'

Lozier, granddau ghter of
Mrs. Kelton. Mrs. Stewart
won the door prize. Others
attending
were
Mrs.
Margaret Rose a nd Mrs.
Gladys Cuckler .
Refreshments were served
by the hostess. The picnic will
be · held at the Route 33
roadside park next month.

"'.lii;..!..___l;;;;i~

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sebo
,have returned to their home
in Logan, W. Va. after
spend ing the past eight
months here with Uleir son
and daughter-in-law, Mr . and
Mrs. John Sebo. Spending
Father's Day with. the Sebos
were Mr. and Mrs. Glen Pratt
a nd · son, Greg, Mrs. Don
Conway, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Fugate and Michael , all of
Indianapolis, Ind.
leanne Sebo, a physical
therapist maj or a t Ohio State
University, is empl oyed at
Doctor 's
Hospital
in
Columbus for the summer.
Leanne will be a seni or at
State this fall.
Mr. and Mr s. Chester
Knight, accompanied by their
son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mr s. Dick Kni ght,
· Wint e rsvill e,
r etur ned
Monday from a nine-day trip
to Florida . Highlights of their
trip included visits to
Marineland, Cy pru s Gar de ns , a nd Disney World .
Enrou te home they stopped
a t Myrtle Beach. Chester
Kni ght enters Univ ersity
Hospi tal Thur sday for
surgery on Friday. His wife
will stay in Mari on ivith
another son and daughter-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Knight ,
during
his
hospitalization.
Paige Carr, Paris!J Carr,
a nd Jill Curnutt have
re turned to their home in
Irvine, Ky. after visiting here
with their grandparents, Mr ,
and Mrs. Melvin Bonecutter.
Mrs. Helen Cline, Akron,
has been here visiting Mrs.
Lillian Napper, Minersville,
Mrs. Myrtle Walker , Racine,
and Virgil Walker and
family, Racine, Route 2.

Maxine Griffith
attends training
Mr s . Maxin e Griffith,
cashie r of the Pom eroy
National Bank and secretary
of the bank's boa rd of
direc tors, attended her
second year of training at the
Stonier Graduate School cif
Ba nking held at Rutgers
University, June 8-20, New
Brunswick , N. J .
Top flight economists,
bankers and educators
served as instructors for the
tw o week school. Mrs.
Griffith was one of 15 female

lJ'ance se t

fior ]u/11
4
:J'
MASON, IV. Va. - The
second annual Firecracker
Ball will be held July 3 from
10 p.m. to 2 a.m. at the Mason
Fire Station under the
sponsorship of the Mason
Fire Department.
The band will be Red
Stewar t and the Ambassadors. Price is $6 per
couple and refreshments will
be available. The fire
department will also stage a
fireworks display on July 4th
at 9:30 p.m. at the Mason
Uttle league ball park.

CARDS REQUESTED
A card shower is being
staged for Mrs . Me tta
Benedum who will be 85
Sunday. Her address is
Reedsv.ille, Ohio.
CORRECTION
It was erroneously reported
that the owner of a bridal
dress, used in Heritage
Sunday, Mrs. Rhoda Yeager,
is the mother of James Diehl,
Pomeroy. She is the mother
of his wife , Ida Yeager Diehl.

PARADE PLANNED.
Parents lielonging to the
Racine PTO who wish their
children to participate in the
4th of July parade in Racine
should call one of the
· following persons : Libby

P.!"'""...----~iiiiiiiii

UMW gathers

Hewctson a nd Judy Dixon.
Presenting gifts to Miss
Sch aekel were Joan An derson, KaUlleen Reitmi're,
Joseph ine Miller, .Joyce ·
Hollon, E;lva Davis, Debbie
Roush, Ccl ine McGowan, Dr .
Kay
McGowan,
Betty
Thomas, Clara Redman,
Car olyn Barnett and Mrs .
Ray Ha rless .

Class members
have meeting

Busy Bee Class members of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church met Thursday night
at the home of Mr s.
Rosemary Lyons for a picnic.
WEDNESDAY
If desserts are a· favorite at your house, here 's one that's
Mrs. Julia Grimm gave
sure to please everyone.
POMEROY - Middleport
devotions using the topic,
Lions Club, noon, Meigs Inn.
TIPSY FRUIT PUDDING
OHIO Valley Commandry " An Oak or a Telephone
I can (29 or 30 ounce ) fruit cockta il, I package (3 ounc-e )
Pole", and read a prayer
instant lemon pudding mix, I baked commercial pound ca ke 24, Knights Templar, stated
poem , " If Thy Strength Be
111 ounce ), raspberry jam, 1 , cup whipping cream, whipped. conclave, 7:30 p.m. at the
Drain the fruit cocktail, reserve the syrup. Prepare Ma soni c Te mpl e for the Made Perfect ". A "come as
pudding mL' as directed on package label using the r eserved purpose of transacting all you are party" was pla nned
syrup for part of the required liquid .
business and election and for July . Games were played,
Cut the pound cake into one-half inch thick slices and then insta ll ation of offi ce rs. and the group sang "Happy
cut the slices in half. une bottom a nd sides of deep ~lass bowl Knights asked to take Uleir Birthday" to Miss Emma
Matthews, Mr s. _ Eloise
with cake slices. Spread with raspberry jam. Reserve about '• rituals .
Wilson, Mrs . Wilma Parcu p drained fruit cocktail for top; fold remaining fruit
THE Veterans of Foreign
.cocktail into pudding.
Wars will meet at 7:30p.m. at
Spoori o ne-third of fruit cocktail-pudding mixture over cake Jack Ward's Club.
slices in bowl. Cover pudding with 1f.&gt; of rema ining cake slices.
THURSDAY
Spoon 'r.! of the remaining fruit cocktail-puddin g mix over top.
FREE Clothing day will be
Repeat the process.
held from 10 a.m. until noon
Garnish the cake top with whipped cream and reserved fruit a t the Sa lvati on Army
A July picnic wa s planned
cocktail. Refrigerate at least two hours before serving.
Headquarter s, Butternu t at the Magnolia Club meeting
Ave., Pomeroy. All area held Thursday night at the
residents in need of clothing home of Mrs. Doris Grueser.
In tile absence of Miss Erna
invited.
ROCK Springs Grange, 8 Jesse, Mrs . Iris Kelton
:·
presided . The Lord's Prayer
p.m. Thursday a t the hall .
EXECUTIVE Committee, was given in unison. Mrs.
Meigs County Regional Grueser presented devotions
Planning Co mmission fr om the Upper Room.
meeting , 3 p.m. ASCS con- Games were played under the
BY POLLy LMMER
ference room , Farmer 's dir ec ti on of Mr s . Ethel
Bank Building.
Stewart, with prizes going to
WILDWOOD Garden Club, Mrs. Bertha Canaday, Mrs.
a p.m. at home of Mrs. · Georg ia Wa tson a nd J oan
Dorothy Smith.
FREE Clothing day for low
passed on to us consumers.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
income
perwns, 9 a .m. to 3
·
economical
but
For
an
DEAR POLLY - I have .
at
old high school
p.m.
looked in many stores in pretty tablecloth I buy white,
building
in Cheshire by
many states for a square colored or pr inted polyester
cake plate. I have found them fabric, 60-inches wide, on sa le Gallia-Meigs Community
on pedes ta l bases bu t that is for $1.50 or even less a yard. Action Agency.
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
not practical for everyday For my table I just have to
a
p.m.
home of Mrs. Dorothy
use or for storing cakes. I own buy one required length a nd
numerous round ones but hem the two cut ends. The Smith.
FRIDAY
The·annual fam ily picnic of
what can I put a cake on that selvages are a ttr acti ve
PAST
Matrons,
Evangeline the Sew-Ri te-Sewin g Club
was baked in a square pan ? enough to use as is. This way
a two-yard cloth costs $3 or Chapter, O.E .S., 6 p.m ., was set for 2 p.m. on July 20
-CHAROLOTIE .
potluck, Masonic Temple .
at the Route 33 Roadside
DEAR CHARLOTIE - I less, can be thrown in the
think if you would look at washer and requi res no
AUCTION, St. Jose ph 's Park when club members
open stock china you would ironing. - MRS. T. R. IV .
Parish Hall, Mason, 7 p.m . met last week at the club
POLLY
All
my
DEAR
find some pattern with a
Refreshments, everyone house . Mrs. McK!)ight was
hostess.
square chop plate that would life I've had trouble taking welcome.
Mrs.
Ann
Browning
do. In the meantime why not pills: I was even punished for
SUNDAY
this
when
I
was
a
child.
As
I
presided
with
Mrs.
Betty
cover a square of heavy
THE RACINE First Baptist
grew
older
I
crushed
all
pills
cardboard with aluminum
Church Sunday School and Wehrung
gtvmg
the
foil and then put the .cooled a nd dissolved them in liquids. Bible school picnic· will be treasurer's report and Mrs.
Gilmore,
the
cake on that. What do you Now I've discovered that by Sunday at the Shrine Park at Evelyn
taking
a
bi
te
of
something
to
other readers do? - POLLY.
12 :30 p.m . All members of the secretary 's report. Mrs.
eat I can get the pill or
church and children who Wehrung received a birthday
.DEAR POLLY - Those capsule in my mouth a nd . attended Bible school and gift. Next meeting will be a
paper perfume samples tha t swallow both together. No
parents are invited to attend. wiener roast at the home of
come in bills or other mail as mor e prob}ems. I even use
Table se rvi ce will be Mrs. Mildred Wells.
Mrs. McKnight served a
provided.
advertisements to introduce this when giving pills to my
dog
I
put
one
in
a
bit
of
dog
dessert
c.o urse to those
new prod ucts a dd great
REUNION, family of
food
so
he
swallows
it.
fragrance to the contents of
Lorena Keyes Sloter and named and Mrs . Flo
my dresser drawers. Empty MARIE.
William Marion Sloter, 10 Stri ckland , Mrs. Ne ttie
DEAR POLLY - This past
perfume and cologne bottles
a.m., Burr Oak State Park, Boyer, Mrs. Pandora Collins ,
winter
I
needed
a
cover-all
do the same. Neither makes
picnic and swinuning area . Mrs. Martha Hoffman , a nd
Mrs. Shirley Baity .
clothes smell too strongly yet apron and had the inspiration
Take covered dish.
to make one out of a worn
they last for quite a while. ,
summer dress. This also
MRS . M.E .T.
DEAR POLLY - ryty Pet saved me from the risk ·of
Peeve is with cerea l getting a pattern I did not
manufacturers who have a like. I decided to use a pretty
special offer on the back of dark blue prin t dress made of
the box - the consumer ends " no iron " fabirc. I took the
up paying for such offers. sleeves out, sli t it all the way
With today's high pri ces I up the back and hemmed the
GALLIPOLIS
The July 2 from 1-5 p.m. The
would like to see such offers armholes and sides of the
" Pennsylvania '76 Bicen- concert will be July 2 at a:30
discontinued and the prices of back opening. A buttonhole
tennial Cruise" will perform p.m. at the Gallipolis park
the products reduced. Ac- was made at the top of the
newly
slit
ba
ck
and
large
in Gallipolis Wednesday , July front. There is no charge for
cording to an article I read in
2.
an a dverti sing magazine button sewn on. Ties were
the concert or tours. SpecTaking part in the concerts tators are advised to bring
ma nufa c tur ers spend 60 made for both sides and I was
are the Pittsburgh Youth lawn chairs to the concert.
million a year to buy trinkets in busi ness. I enjoy this apron
Symphony, singers Robert
for product promotions. I feel and it is really a coverup . Mosley and Irene Sirocca,
sure some or all of this is OLIVE .
and a 16-member chorus, the
They'll Do It Every Time
Renaissance City Singers ,
by
Robert
prepared
Shankovich, assistant dean of
music
at
Duquesne
TOATIENDSESSION
University.
Mrs.
Don
Thomas
! KNOW'fllf.
uncoln
Maazel
will
portray
daugHters, Becky and usa ,'
HIRING GW AI
Ben Franklin and entertain Merri Ault, and Mr . and Mrs.
CiMPG CO. !tt..
during
the , 90-minute Paul Darnell of Bethel 62
CA~t.. HIM RIGHI
program.
AWAY.. ·ME.AflfiMO.
Interna tiona! Order of Job'~
H&lt;.RE.!&gt; 601.-\EThe musical fare during the Daughters, will leave ThursWA~K I N&amp;-AI&lt;OIJND
program will be ' mostly day for Canton where they
MONE-Y·-patriotic .
will a !tend the Grand Session
. The barge will arrive in of _Job's Daughters. They will
Gallipolis July 1. Tours will return home Sunday. usa. is
be conducted on the barge honored queen of Bethel 62.

1.

··-~-

;

_6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pon1eroy, 0., Wednesday , June 25. 19i5
'

I

.•.

.

-

t

.. . . . . . .
~

1 '

Fisher at 949-3927; Barbara
Dugan at 949-5981 or Kay
Warden at 949-567 4.

students in the 355 members
of the second year class.
Some 1200 students from 44
states, Puerto Rico, Germany, Guam and the District
of Columbia made . up the
three years of class levels
taught at the school. Students
are assigned extensive
research problems to work
ou t between the annual
sessions and a thesis is
required for graduation at the
end of the third year.

REVIVAL SET
GOYSVJLLE - A revival
will be held from June 29 to
July 6 at the Guysville
Community Church with Rev .
Roy Deeter as evangelist.
The public is invited to the
services which will start at
7:30 each evening.

VISITED
Mrs.
Jane
Welker,
Gahanna , spent the weekend
in Middleport with her
parents , Mr . and Mr s .
Charles Sauer.

fhe Almanac
ByUPI
Today is Wednesday, June
25, the !76th day of 1975 with
189 to follow.
The moon is between its full
phase. and last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are
Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
French composer Gustave
Charpentier was born June
25, 1860.
On this day in history :
In 1876, Gen. George Custer
and his force of 208 men were
ambushed by Sioux Indians in
the battle of tittle Big Horn in
Montana.
In 1950, North Korean Communists invaded South
Korea .
In 1962, the U.S. Supreme
Court handed down a decision
interpreted as barring prayer .
in public schools.
In 1973, White House attorney John Dean told a
Senate committee President
Nixon joined in a plot to cover
up the Watergate break-in.

RETURNED HOME
Mrs. Esther Kissel, Middleport, has returned home
from Holzer Medical Center --;. A thought for the day:
for two months before she
British
· writer
John
goes to University Hospital in
Galsworthy said, "If you do
Columbus for open heart · not think about th,e future,
surgery.
you cannot have one."

Art", was sung.
Twenty-four sick and shutin ca ll s were reported.
Thelma Henderson displayed
greeting card samples, a nd it
was decided , to order
Christmas cards early at a
cheaper rate.
Dr. Theodore Townsend,
missionary to India, was

"

.•

.·..•

PRICES GOOD

·.·

..·.

...

THRU 6-28-75·

Parish Hall in Ma s""· is th,•
pla,•t• til~::o on Frid'l'·· .hntt'
•• t •
. . ' a ' p.nt. ~~mnn~ tht•
man)· ih•ms o1n• nagnn
\\'ht•t•ls. old t•oins and dt·.
Rl'frt•shnwnts will bL' suld.

,.
"

E\'t'ryont• is \H'It•onw.

"

Ohio youths
have big part

ARE DOCTORS WORST MATESO
Dear Helen:
My mother always said, "Marry a doctor," but I married
the man I fell in love with, who happened to be a teacher. My
best friend married a doctor. They were divorced last year.
From what she tells me . and from what I've heard , doctors
make the pOorest husbands, not only because of long hours and
overwork , but because they're so accustomed to giving
commands to nurses, and being waited on by them , that they
expect the same adject obedience at home.
Is it true that most doctors treat their wives as secondclass people? I'm personally interested because my sister is
very involved with an intern. -DOES MAMA KNOW BEST?
.DEAR DMKB :
Doctors are no more , or no less, human than teachers
...attorneys ...or mechanics ... editors. You 'll find good
husbands in any profession, and also the overbearing louts.
Why not let your sister do her own "worrying" about the
intern? (! really doubt that she is.) - H.

..

RESERVED

COLUMBUS - More than
30,000 Ohio you ng people will
be actively participa ling in
the 1975 Ohi o State Fair, Aug .
21 through Labor Day, Sept.
I. In addition to a full slate of
livestock exhibits and sales.
17various
youth
organizations will have
displays in the Lausche
Building and Rhodes Youth
CeniA!r.
The displays , educational
and entertaining, will
represent an area of interest
and concern of each participating youth group.
The en try deadline for the
Junior Division is July 15.
Official entry forms and a list
of categories can be obtained
from the Ohio State Fair,
Junior
Fair
Division,
Columbus, 43211.

By Helen Bouel

...

QUANTITY RIGHTS

in state fair

Helen Help

Us • • •

.·

tu
go
to
.audiun~ ·:
Rt•nwmbt•r thi!i duh&gt;, plnn•
nnd tinlt' : Tht• St. ,Jost•ph'!ti

chosen by Genevieve Guthrie
and a birthday . card was
signed to be sent· to him.
Helen Woode accepted the
prayer calendar for July.
Osie Mae Follrod led the
pro gram , " Toward An
Honest conunitment," with a
scripture reading, song,
prayer, readings and com, _
ments, all found interesting
and ' timely, followed by an
inspiring worship service at
the close.
hostess
served
The
delicious refr eshments . The
next meeting to be at the
home of Osie Mae Follrod on
Tuesday evening, July 15.

ALFRED -;o The Alfred
Uni ted Methodist Women met
Tuesday evening, June 17, at
the home of Nellie Parker
with an attendance of nine
and Nellie ·P arker, presiden t,
in charge. Prayer was by
Eleanor Boyles , a nd the
hymn, " How Great Thou

298 Second St.
POMEROY, OHIO

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

SUPERIORS SLICED

BOILED HAM ....

~~:~.1

99

1

'

VIVA TOWELS •••••••••••• 2J~~L~ •1

.;

TROPICANA

Orange Drink. •••••••••••• 3 32 oz. •1-

BORDEN'S

Cremora •••••••••••••••••• ;:~z~ ..•l

Ohio man held

- .f.
DERA HELEN ;
My wife switched from cigarettes, which were bad enough,
to those small cigars. I don't smoke.
Our house stinka. The car stinks: Her breath stinka. I'm
tempted to get roaring drunk every night until she swears off.
Think it would change things ?-JAMES
DEAR JAMES:
Yes( You 'd add hangovers to your smoke blues.
If you can't live with a cigar-puffing mate, tell her so 1
(Maybe, she'll switch to snuff.). - H.

39

...

··•··

ARMOUR

on B&amp;E count

..•,•.···-·,..

POTTED MEAT•••••••••••• 6 3 oz. •1

PT. PLEASANT - · Two
men were arrested Monday
by the Point Pleasant Police
Department and charged
with the early Monday
morning breaking and entering of the First Church of
God on Jefferson Avenue.
They were Mark Schopis of
452 Hedgewood
Drive ,
Gallipolis, and Delmer C.
Cook, of Springfield, both 19.
Justice of the Peace
Charles "Sonny" Smith
Tuesday set bond !,or each at
$2,500. -·
According to police, entry
to the church was made by
breaking a door window and
unlocking a door .
Police chief Jim Gaskin
said that apparently nothing
had been taken. However,
damage to the church
building was estimated at
$130.

DEAR HELEN :
I wish someone would tell these parents who leave their
teenage children at parties and movies, but never pick them
up , that they're putting a big burden on other people .
I had to take two kids home at midnight last Saturday
because no one came after them. Almost every time I
chauffeur my own children,_ there are two or three others who
"need a ride home ." And often, it's several miles out of my
way, late at night.
What's with inconsiderate parents anyway ? -NOT
THEIR KEEPER
DEAR NOT :
They' re true believers - that someone else will take over the
care and busing of their kids. (And someone like you always
does.)
Since you can't leave young teenagers stranded on
deserted streets at midnight, my only suggestion is : call these
parents up next day. and insist THEY do the chauffeuring for
the next movie. (It's possible their children may be partly at
fault here. Sometimes they say they "have a ride home"
because permission to go c;omes easier that way.) - H.

KRAFT

_Is oz.

BBQ SAUCE ~·················

...

·:·
···:·

.· ·.·
•·•··

49··e

:··-·
,.,..
•.•.
·

..

....
•.·.·

"

'"

,__

WILSON'S CERTIFIED

BACON ...... ~!.~·.99e

"
"

...

WITH COUPON

'"

,.,

Mason gearing
BOARD TO MEET
The Administrative Board
of the United Methodi s t
Church, Pomeroy , will have a
special meetin g Sunday
following
the mornin g
worship service.

SEBO GRADUATES
. John David Sebo, son of Mr .
a nd Mrs. John Sebo,
Pomeroy, graduated June 7
from Ohio University. Attending commencement in
addition to his parents were
Mrs. Helen Sebo, Mrs. Glenn
Pratt and Greg, Indianapolis,
Ind.

POTLUCK PLANNED
A fa mily potluck for the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church congregation to be
held Sunda y at 6:30p.m. will
welcom e
Rev.
Robert
Hayden, new pastor of the
church.

...

MASON , W. Va. -,- This
town plans. to celebrate the
Fourth of July holiday with a
bang with a Firecreacker
BaD and fireworks .
The
second
annual
Firecracker Ball, sponsored
by the Mson Volunteer Fire
Department, will be held July
3 from 10 p. m . to 2 a . m. at
the fire stabon. Music will be
provided by Rod Stewart and
His Ambassadors. Admission
is S6 per couple .
The fireworks display will
take place on July 4th at the
Mason Ball Park beginning at
9:30p.m.

by Dick Tumer

CARNIVAL

"

up for Fourth

VISITORS LAST WEEK
Mr. and Mrs. Robert White,
Jr., Mr . and Mrs. Robert
White, Sr., and son, Mark,
and Mrs. Myrtle Watkins, a
friend , Ann , and her grandHOSPITALIZED
son, Marshall, all of Akron
John Terrell, Mulberry . were visitors last week of .
Heights , is a surgical patient Mrs. Beulah White and Mrs.
at the Holzer Medioal Center, Florence Hannay , Middleport.
Room 228.

'"

HOME GROWN

CABBAGE

CLIP THIS COUPON
BATH
BARS

$

LB.

FRESH

CLIP THIS COUPON

CUCUMBERS

INJUNCTION DENIED
MASON, W. Va. - Circuit
Court Judge James Lee
Thompson Monday ruled
against the town of Mason
which was seeking an injunction against Milton
Bartram, owner of Dot's
Restaurant to close it.

SAVE
MAXWEU HOUSE

ao~

$ 49

3 LB.

The Oailv Senti11el
UEIIOTEOTOTHE
INTERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
.

·

EllfC , Ed .

ROBERT HOEFLICH

. c.uv

Editor
Publ i shed daily exc ept
Saturday b'y The Ohio Valley
; Publ i shing CorT'!pan.v. 1! 1
Cour t 51., Pomer,ov. Ohto
· .,.S769. Business Off1ce _fhone

1

: 992 ,21S6 . E d itorial P hone 992
2117 .
. 'd
' Second ci 55S ~o sta g e pa1

It Pomeroy .

Oht O.

• .

. Nationetl
ed.,.ert. • SI .~ ·f
' repre· ~entative
ward ·
Gr i ff i th Company . In c,
Bot11nelli &amp; Ga llagher O i v .,

,,,.

757 Th ird t..ye. New Yc..rk .

N Y 10017
t ul':l!lt r i p t i or.

. .
rates : .
0 _;1i \le r ed by ca rr i er where :

av-ailable 75 ce n ts per ·n r:r: k ; ;

e~

Notor

carri~r
· 1a•le

"Well, I'm all undressed for bed .... except for the knot in
this old shoe!"

,,

Routr:
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where'
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8- The Dailv Se nt inel. Middleoort-Pomero\'. 0 .. Wf'fi n""'""

team
cited in communications

"Communica tion news" ,
na tiona! trade magazine of
the commu nica tio ns in dustry, in a fea ture story has
cited two so utheast Ohi o
programs as perhaps having
the "same "significance in
medicine as the advent of the
ste thoscope ."
·It reported that the communica tions networks of the
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Services and the
Ohio
Valley
Med ica l

Science today

•

Micr owave Ne twork are
joi ntly sharing ce rtai n
facilities as aids for the
solution of basic health care
problems in a remote area
a nd are importa nt links in
developing a comprehensive
medica l care system" fo r the
sta te of Ohio.
According to the magazine,
the networks are "offering
new opportuni ties for patien t
ca re continu ing medic a l
educa tion and para-medical
i nfo r matio n exc hange
overcoming the difficulties of
ti me and distance."
The magazine hail ed as
" uniq ue " the Medi cal
Micr owave Network as cosponsored by the Foundation
and Ohi o's Educa ti onal
Telev isio n Ne tw ork Co mmission. It noted that the twoway all(!io-visual linkage between Ohio State University
Hospi tal and three southeast
Ohio hospitals is intended to
"alleviate the acute shortage
of physicians an d other
health professionals in rural
areas."
" Th e need to upgrade
medical service in Appalachia became shockingly
apparent in 1970, when the
results of a study showed 65
percent of the physicians
serving this region were over
1

t

'

.,

..,.

'

'

Microwave-~EOEMS

I·

I.

.I

e qu ipm ~ n t

50 yea rs of age . t:ven more

conta in

alarming was the rapidly
growing number . of com-

vir tua ll y any emerge ncy
sit uation. Equipmen t includes buiiHn asp irator and
oxygen systems, specialty
lighting and complete radio
telemetry e qu ipme nt.
Through the radio telemetry

mUnities and even en tire

. counties lef t without a doctor
as aging physicians retired.
The report showed that the
number of
phy sicians
practicing in Ohio's sevencounty Appalachian Region
Health Demonstration Area
had severely decli ned in the
preceding four years, despitc
a · fairly active re&lt;'ruiti ng
prog1·am ."
The magaz ine obse rved
that the network was "the
na lion's first broadcast color
sys tem dedicated to inr.,ractive r.,Iemedicine ... an
ultra-modern system."
"" In addi tion to two-way
video and voice capabili ties,
the network is equi pped with
lwo " phys iolog ical" data
channels over which elec( EKG ),
troca rd iograms
hea r t sou nd s, a nd othe r
medica l data telemetry inform ation ca n be transmilled.
"One of the physiological
data channels is dedica r.,d to
SEOEMS .
A
project
pr oviding seven rur al
counties with a complete
emergency medical service
that is intended to service
residents with no more than
20 minutes wait.
"Prior to the establishment
ambulance
of SEOEMS,
ser vice in mos t of the
counties was provided by
funeral homes, using vehicles
that lacked even elementary
emergency equipment. Often
during the hours of a funeral,
police cars and fire trucks
had to perform ambulance

service.
" Ca lled Mo dul ances,
SEOE MS' tr uc k-li ke ambulances are actually mobile
emer gency r ooms , whi (: h

to mee t

system , the pa tient's life
signs a re transmitted , via

SEOEMS' own microwave
sys tem, to the closest
hospital, thus extending the
diagnosis and directi on of the
physician to the scene. By
interfaci ng with the Medical
Microwave System, life signs
ca n even be patched through
to the OSU hospital in
Columbus, Ohio, if required.
"The nine-hop microwave
sys tem
ori gi nates
in
Columbus and extends approximately 100 pa th-miles
southward to Gallipolis, Ohio.
The micr owave sig nal is
transmitted from the OSU
hospi tal to a repeater housed
in the ( ETV) Network
Commission headquarters , a
di stance of two miles.
From ETV headquarters,
the signal is relayed· four
miles across Columbus to the
top of the Sta te Office Tower,
and then another 30 miles to a
repeater site near Lancaster,
Ohio. The next link, from
Lancaster to the WOUB-TV
transmitter in Athens, Ohio,
is 30 miles long.
" A fi ber glass buildin g,
housin g fi ve microwa ve
transceivers, is located at the
WOUB-TV, and serves as a
hub
in
the ·medi ca l
' Spur
m .~er owa v e system.
routes .from this facili ty are
directed to the Mental Health
Cen ter and the O' Bleness
Memor ia l Hospita l from
WOUB-TV, the signal is also
beamed 30 miles to a repeater
site at Carmel Church, Ohio,
(Continued on page 9)

.;· ~ ,_
gton

' ·-·t .

By O arence

.

Miller

Ohio GOP will look for
candidates and m~agers

9 - Tbe' Daily Sentine1• M1·ddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, JW1e-2S,J 975

State GOP

The recently re leased
Roc kefe ll er Commi ssion
Report on the CIA and press
a ecounls of abuse s in
guve rn rne nt inte ll igence
ac li vities a t home and a broad

have focused attention on the
need for Congress to
strengthen · its oversight of
this sensiti ve area . At the
same time, it is crucial that
Congress do nothing to
compromise the overall effectiveness of our in telligence
agencies. In the adversary
world we live in, their smooth
fu1wtioning is necessary to
ward uff external dangers.
Last February I opposed
th e
resol ution
tha t
es tablished the House Select
Committee on In telligence.
Instea d, I favored th e
esta blishment of a single
bip arti san congressional
comm ittee to inves tiga te
abuses. The proliferation of
inte lli gen ce
ove rsig ht
committees - both a House
and Senate select comm ittee
plus numerous permanent
oversight subcommittees lends itself more to political
publicity contests than tthe
.ex tremely se ri ous fa ctfinding that is needed. The
rece nt in-fi ghti ng on the
House Selec t Comm ittee
illustrates what can happen.
In addition, over the last few
months CIA Director William
Colby has apparently spent
more time preparing and
giving tes timony on Capi tal
Hill than in running his
age ncy. A single commi ttee
to handle all of these inves ti ga ti ons wo ul d have
avoided this duplicati on of
eff or t
an d
drawn-out
proceedings.
I am also concerned that an
unnecessa rily pr olonged
investigation will lead to

Pre-Fabricated Trusses

"

Professional
Engineering ·

·Overhang
24 inches

SeiVice

'20.40

'22.10

l

propriation immediate!\·. He
said it might take three 'days,
but he was n ot specific.
Meshel sa id . he hoped
Rhodes would act on the .
budget before the end of the
week. The new fiscal period
begins next Tuesday and
lawmakers are plarming a 10day recess after this week.
May Work Overtime
"We can't stay aroWld here
Sunday and Monday to see if
he acts on the budget," said
Meshel, indicatin g th e
legislators might have to stay
Wltil Saturday to get the
transportation appropriation
passed.
.
The administration also
was playing it close to tbe
vest on when Rhodes would i
act on the budget. He .is expected to sign the 367-page
document, perhaps vetoing
items which which he
disagrees. The Democraticcontrolled legislature could
then attempt to override the
item vetoes.
Before passing the transportation appropriation, the
House turned back attempts
to require the state to spend
money on special projects in
Lorain, Trumbull and

w

l
Crow ' s Stea k House
d6 18
Team N o . 6
11 4 20
WM P O
44 20
Team No .4
28 36
Grueser &amp; Son
Pl umb .
18 46
Team No . 5
12 52
H_igh Series - Men : Eddie
W h 1tt 527 , P h i l M c Far la nd
443 ; Women : D ia na W h i tt 453
L en a How ar d 442
'
H.igh Game - Men : E d di e
W h 1tf 185, D o n Hupp 18 1;
Wo men · D1ana W h itl
172
Len a Howa rd 170.
'

'23.80

SS boost will raise
food stamp allocation

COLUMBUS - Denver L.
Wbite, Director of the Ohio
Department of Public
Welfare, today called atInt ern ation a l
tention of Social Security
. L eagu e Standing s
Un•ted Press International
recipients in Ohio to the fact
w. 1. pet . g .b. that July I changes in their
Syracuse
43 29
597
.Roc h ester
.42 30 .583 1
Social Security payments will
Ti d ewater
40 31 .563 2''z also ha vve an effect on food
Ch a r l est on
40 31 .563 21 1
Richmond
32 37 .46.4 9 11 stamp allotments.
T ol ed o
J 1 41 .431 12
Social Security payments
Mem phis
29 43
403 14
Pawtucket
28 43 .394 14' 7 will go up about eight percent
Tu es day's R es ults
for average cases on July 1.
Roc~es t e r 6 T ol edo o
Food stamp allotments are
Ch a f l es to n 3 Tid ewat er 2
Ric hmond 10 M em ph is 8
based on·U. S. Department of
Syra &lt;euse 2 Paw t ucKe t o
Agriculture (USDA) tables
for various family in.come
levels. The amount an inSHOW DATES SET
The second Annual Mid- dividual or family pays for
Ohio Valley Steam and An- stamps goes up as income
tique Power Show will be held goes up . The food stamp
Saturday and Sunday, July 5 , program is administered in
and 6, at ·the ~arlow , Ohio
fairgrounds in Washington
County. Tbe show is being cO.
sponsored by Fearing
Township Volunteer. Fire
Department and Barlow _( Continued from page 8)
Township Volunteer Fire
Department. Admission is $1, and then on to Galtipolis,
Ohio, some 15 miles distance.
children under 12 free .
"Throughout the system,
lifacilities are shared with the
JENNER ENTERS MEET ~TV and SEOEMS systems
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. where possible . Antennas and
(UPI) - Bruce Jenner, rated renectors are installed in the
the No. I decathlon per- existing towers at ETV
former in the world last yea r, headquarters, Lancaster,
will defend his National AAU WOUB-TV, and Carmel
championship at UC Santa Church."
Other towe rs in the
Barbara July 12-13.
that
JeMer, San Jose, Calif., SEOEMS system
eventually
may
be
used
for
won
his
AAU
title.
with
8
245
.
extending the Medical
pomt~ last year an!! also had
a world best of 8,308 points. Microwave network are
He finished lOth at the : located in Logan, McArthur,
Munich Olympics three years Pomeroy, Oak Hill and
Ironton.
ago.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

"7"_____..,:;:.;:.::.::!::~~~-----------J

Fantastic Savings! ·B_
eautiful Living Ro_
oms
by Burlington House!

'·

Senate plays game with DOT

, (Continued from page 8)
and local party workers will
By LEE LEONARD
be held followi ng the UPI Statehouse Reporter
re c ruitm e nt co m ~it tee
COLUMBUS (UP)) - The
mee tings. McCough satd one Ohio Senate has ~ received
of the goals of the seminar is from the House a $731 million
to "bring in new people who appropriation for · the state
ar e interested in th e Department
of
Tra nsRepublican Party and who portation for fiscal 1976-77
have not been active before ." and is prepared to act on it
Some of the projects to be late this week.
covered at the se minar will
However, majority Demobe "capsule views" o,f party crats in the Senate see m
fina nci ng, the method of ready to engage in a game of
selecting delegates to the 1976 "s h o wd o wn "
wit h
Rep ubli can Na tion al Co n- Republican Gov. James A.
,·ention , a discussion of the Rhodes by holding up the
activities of the various state transportation money until
GOP auxiliary groups and they see what he item vetoes
" how they work", a rev iew of out of the $10.6 billion state
the ' operation of the Ohio budget •they sent him last
General Assembly thus far week.
fr om a Republicim .member
The , transportation a pof the legislature, a summary propriation, approved 84-4 by
of the "Rhodes Program" th e House Tuesday, is tbe
and an u[J-Qa 'e on the State "other shoe" to tbe budget. It
Commi ttee's plans for the was left out of the general
balance of 1975 and 1976.
appropriatio ns bill wh en
Counties to be represented Democ ratic legisla tors
at the July 1 meeting in became dissatisfied with tbe
Lanca ster are Ath ens, answers they were receiving
Fairfield , Franklin, Gallia, from the DOT.
Hocking, Lawrence, Meigs,
Sen . Harry Meshel , DPerry a nd Vinton.
Youngstown, chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee
said he would start hearing~
FRID AY -NITE M IXED
June2D, 197 5
on the transportation apTeam Standi n g s

COLUMBUS - Republican Tuesday a Republican State dictates ·and campaign
harmful leaks of sensi tive State Chairman Kent B. Committee.;;ponsored pro- manager~ for the 1976
mater ials. Already the daily · McGo u g h a nn ounce d gra m to recruit ca n- legislative races will be held
at the Holiday Inn in Lannewspaper headlines compete to pmduce the most a nd abuses of its charter have correc tive steps. You may be caster Tuesday, July I.
Members of McGough's
sensational head lines, often been perpetrated by the CIA. sure that the re pressive
staff
and key Republican
I
condemn
these
violations
terror
tactics
of
the
Soviet
not backed by hard facts
legislative
leaders will visit
This type of sensationalism and strongly favor corrective KGB will never stand the
eight cities the last week of
serves no useful pu r lJOse in measu res. But to hear some li~h t of similar scrutiny.
June and the first week of
of
the
crys
of
the
cri
tics
one
The
time
has
come
for
the investigatiun of i n ~
July to orga nize campaign
would
beli
eve
the
United
·
Co~
g
r
ess
to
complete
its
telligence agency ;tbuses, but
most certain ly must give Sta tes was on the verge of . thorough investigation of the recruitment committees in
comfor t to our enemies becoming a police sta te. That secret power of the CIA, each area to specifically aim
abroad. Recent information just isn't so . It is a measure of decide upon the best method a t " captu r ing leg islative
indicates tha t some of thes~ th e strength of ou r of monitoring intelli ge nce districts now held by the
lea ks may even have come democracy that we can un- activities , a nd then allow the opposition.,,
In addition, McGough s ah~ .
from Members of Congress - cove r, much to our em- CIA to function in the best
a
two-hour seminar lor
barrassment,
unsa
nctioned
inte
res
ts
of
individu
al
all the more reason to move
Republlcan
countv leaders
with delibera te speed to conduct on the part of the CIA citizens and sound national
(Continued on page 9)
conclude the investigation, and then proceed to take security.
prefe r ably by a single
bipartisa n committee.
On the other hand , the
Roc kefeller Commission
Report was handled in a
highly professiona l manner.
It was far fro m the .
"whi tewash'' tha t some have
cla imed . The Commission
report recognizes 'that on
occasion na tional securi ty
and individual rights may not
move on parallel courses.
However it also recognizes
that some of the illegal
conduct of the CIA was due
not solely to its ow n
carelessness but also to the
pressures of Presidents in
bo th
De mocratic
and
Republican administrations.
24 foot 4
With this in mind, the
26 foot
28 foot
(4/12
COmmission made several
dozen recommendations for
pitch)
a dmini s tr a t ive
and
legisla tiv e actions. These
DELIVERED TO JOB SITE
proposals should be given
car efu l sc rutin y by the
Congress and then proper
acti on should be taken to
prevent future abuses .
It is importan t to keep all of
773-5554
MASON, W.VA.
these investigations in theirMATERIALS CO.
proper pe rspec tive. If is
obvious that illegal conduct .__ _ _ _

SEOEMS

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Ohio by the State Welfare
Departme nt and County
Welfare Departments.
"Individual cases will have
to be recalculated for Social
Security recipients ," Mr.
Wbite said .
He noted that an additional
complication Is the fact that
USDA changes its food stamp
eligiblity and allotments tales
as of July 1.
"The changes will not be
huge, but we want the Social
Security recipeints to be
alerted to the fact that there
will be changes in purchase
requirements," Mr. White
siad.
He .gave an example of a
two-member retired family
with a monthly gross income
of $340. Currently they are
getting $84 worth or food
stamps a month and paying
$62 for them. After July 1,
their monthly gross income
will go up to $366. Their food
stamp allotment will be $90
and they will pay $68. In this
case, the bonus amoWJt, or
difference between ·stamp
. value and payment, remains
the same, $22.
He gave another example
of a man on disability
retirement, with a wife and
two minor children and a
gross monthly income of $390.
Currently this family is
getting $154 w·orth of food
stamps monthly for a cost of
$83. with a bonus of $71. After
July 1, this family will have a
gross income of $421. • The
food stamp allotment will
increase to $162 at a cost of
$95, providing a bonus of $67.

Cuyahoga coWJties.
The measure includes $675
million for the division of
highways. Rep. Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville,
ch ief sponsor , said reapir and
mainte nance of roads have ,
been neglected in recent
years.
The bill also includes $10
million for urban mass
transit projects to attract
federal grants.
However, House . members
stripped the bill of language
which would have required
the expenditure of up to $1
million for completion of the
Warren outerbelt and another
$325,000 for an overpass at
Oak Point Road and Route 2
in Amherst, Lorain CoWlty.
Amendment Defeated.
Also defeated was an
amendment which would
have reqUired the I;JOT to
finish safety improvements
and landscaping on I-90 in
Cuyahoga and Lake COWlties.
Prior to passage, the
Hamilton County delegation
had language eliminated
from the bill which. would
have forbidden further work
and property acquisition.on 1275, 1-74 to U.S. 27, U.S. 127
from Colerain Ave. to
Hamilton Ave., and the Cross
County Highway, U.S. 27 to 175.
House Ma jority Leader
William L. Mallory, DCincinnati, said local officials
were satisfied that the
projects could proceed
without further review or
study :
The membership also gave
a go-ahead for construction
and acquisition of property
for the 1-471 slide project in
the Mt. Adams section of
Hamilton County.
Rep ,_ William G. Batchelder, R-Medina, urged
that the special projects be
removed from the bill to
avoid
establishing
a
precedent for "logrolling" in
highway appropriations.
Proponents of the Amherst
overpass argued it was
needed because a dangerous
grade level crossing had
caused 40 accidents and two
fatalities in the last year.
Help For Elderly
Rep. James W. Rankin, DCincinnati; was successful in
getting an amendment in the
bill . providing that if any
mass transit money is left
over, It must go for bus fare
assistance for the elderly,
Meanwhile, the Senate
refused to go along with a
joint conference committee
report on a bill outlawing slot
machines and roulette wheels
in Ohio.
The House earlier had
Wlanimously agreed with the
report, which would have
prohibited the gambling
devices in private homes for
recreational purposes,
But Sen. David L. Headley,
D-Akron, floor manager of
the bill designed to curb "Las
Vegas-style;;· gambling in.
northeastern Ohio, failed to
convince senators that all slot

machines should be banned.
Half the Democratic
senators joined a majorltyof
Republicans in defeating the
conference report, 20 to 13,
arguing that collectors should
\Ja ve the right to keep tbe
machines in their basements.
Head ley said a second
conference committee would
probably be requested. He
said the bill should be
rewritten to provide a method
for determining whether slot
machines in private homes
are being used for gambling
or for their intended purpose
as collectors' items.
The House passed, 61-24,
and sent to the Senate
legislat ion requiring boards
of election to notify by mail
all residents of a precinct
where a polling place is
changed.
Such notification may curbe
made
in
rently
new spape rs
in
non·
registration counties.
The House also brought up
for reconsideration and
pa sse d, 73-16, emergency
legislation providing an
additional method of adding
territory to a regional transit
authority.
·
The S e nat e -passed
measure, defeated by the
House last Thursday , is
aimed at authorizing an
August election in Dayton on
a regional transit authority.
Proponents said the bill
would allow the question to be
voted upon without obtaining
signatures for a referendum.
Opponents · maintained the
legislation would permit big
cities to "swallow up" small
municipalities in transit
authorites.
Both chambers were to
reconvene today at I : 30 p.m.

Point preparing

for parade
PT.
PLEASANT
Prepa rations are being made
for one of Point Pleasant's
bi gges t Fourth of Jul y
Pa rades ever held.
Charlie Wood, chairman,
promises this parade will
offer new ideas never before
seen in Point Pleasant.
Persons from all the COWlly
are invited to participate in
the parade which begins at 2
p. m. at First and Main
Streets. Units will move up
Main Street to Central School
before disbanding.
It is still not too late to
enter. Those desiring to do so
may call the Wood residence
at 675-3331 or 675-2313.
As parade marshal Wood is
making a special appeal for
antique car owners to join in
the big holiday evvent.
The re will be trophy
presentations for first and
second place holders.
'

M,l j_or l eague Sta ndings
By Umted P ress Intern at iona l
Nat ional Lea gue
Eas t
w . I. pet. g .b.
Pit tsb urgh
39 27 59 1
Ph l!adel phia
39 31 55 7 2
Chi cago
35 33 .5 15 5
New Yo r k
33 37 '508 5 111
~ 1 . Louis
32 34 485
7
Mon tr ea l
28 35 ' 44&lt;1
Wes t
w. I. pe t . g .b.
Ci ncinna t i
44 27 620 -Los Angeles
42 31 575 3
Sa n D iego
3&lt;~ 37 . 479 10
San Fr ancisco 33 38 465 11
1\llan ta
29 41
d i d 1.4 ''1
Hous ton
26 .48 . 351 19 11
Tuesday 's Results
Chicago 13 M ont r ea l 6
Ph~ lade l phia 6 Pi tt sburgh 3, Jst
Ph, ladel pi:Ji a 8 Pittsbur:.gh 1. 2nd
New York 5 Sl Lo uis 1
Cincinn a ti 'j At lanta o
Los Angeles 8 Houston 3
San Diego 2 SF 1, 1st. 10 inn .
San Diego 3 Sa n F r anc isco o,
2n d
T oda y 's P r obabl e Pitch er s
(All Time s E DT)
Pi tt sb urgh
!Moose
Q.2)
at
Ph iladel ph ia (Lonborg 6 5), 7 : 35
p .m .
Cinci nn at i (T . Carroll 1-0 ) at
Atlan ta (Morton 7.7), 7 : 35p .m .
St . Lou is ( Forsch 7 -5) at New
Yor k I Seaver 10-4), 8 :05p .m
Ch icago
! Reusc hel
4 -6 )
at
Montreal (B l air .4 -8), 8 : 05p .m .
Los Angeles ( Su tton 11-41 .at
Hous ton (Kon ieczny d -8 ), 8·35
p .m .
San Francisco (Caldwel l 4-6) at
San Dieg o ( Fol kers 2-4 J. 10 : 30
p .m .
Thur sday's Games
Chi cago J t Pi tt sburg h , n ight
Atl an t a at Houston, n ight
Los Angel es at Sa n Fran, n ight
( Onlv qames sch edul ed)
Am er ic-an League
Ea st
w. 1. pet. g .b.
39 29 57.4
New York
1h
37 28 .569
Bos to n
36 32 .529 3
Mi l wa ukee
30 36 455 8
Balti m ore
27 39 .409 11
Cleve land
26 39 .400 11lf1
Detroit
w es t
w. I. pet . g .b.
OaKland
44 26 .629
Ka nsas Ci ty
39 31 .557 5
Texas
34 35 .493 9 l;1
Cal i forn ia
34 38 ..472 11
Minneso ta
31 35 .470 11
Chi cago
29 38 .4 33 13 1' 1
T ue sday 's R es ults
Mi lwaukee 5 D et r oit 0, 1st
Mi l waukee A D et r oit 2, 2n d
Ch i cago 7 T exas 5
Clevelan d B Boston 6
New Yo rk 3 Bal timore 1
Oakland 6 M inneso t a 4
Kansas Cit y 5 Calif 3, 11 inn .
Toda y ' s Probable Pi'tcher s
{All T i m es EDT)
Cleveland ( Har r ison 0-2) at
Bos ton ! Pole l -3L 3 : 30 p .m.
New
Yo r k
(May
7-3)
at
Baltimor e (Pa l mer 12-3). 7: 30
p .m .
Detroi t (R uh le 6-3) at Mi l ·
wauke e ( Broberg 7.7 ), B&lt;IO
p .m .
T exas (Wrig h t Q.JJ at Chicago
( Kaa t l0 ·4l. 9: 00p .m .
Kansas City (B usby 10-SJ at
Ca li for nia (T an an a 5-4L 10 : 30

9''"'

·· . NOT EXACTLY appetizing but certainly valuable is
th1s sl1cky glob of BWlker C fuel oil - the residue of the
petroleum distillation process. Two resea rch scientists at
General Electric's Research and Development center in
Schenectady, N. Y., are investigating methods of converting the plentifu l tar-like substance to ine xppm;ive fuel
for marine gas turbines.

.,

'That 's our tax mon ev .·
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legislators informed

SOUTH BELOIT, Ill. (UPi) Education and Welfare for a
- The thing was, Rega l- study of why children fall off
Beloit Corp. and its employes tricycles.
Also listed were $70,000 to
didn't like the idea of their
tax dollars being spent on stud)'" the smel l of perstudies of the sex lives of sp irnti on givt'n off b\
Polish frogs or why kids fall Australi an aborigirlt:'s ;.m;J
$28,361 for an odormPasuring
off tricycles, and such.
That's ·why they sent the machine to he used in th&lt;·
feder al governme nt tha t st udy of aborigin'll pcl spiration. money --$3 billion.
And on and tm .
All play money.
- $6,000 to stud v PoHsh
The money went to Illinois
·
U.S. Sens. Adlai Stevenson bisexuallrogs.
$117.250
in
sala~ies
for a
and Charles Percy in a
symbolic protest of how the · bo ard of tea tasters.
- $5,000 to 1hr ;:mU10r of tl1P
government played away the
p .m .
M innesot a
(Corbin
4-3)
at same amount of tax dollars
une-\\'O t c! JlOt 111 · lr~J:, "
Oakl and (B ahnsen 5-6l. 11 p .m.
- $68 ,000 to the (,)ueun of
paid by the corporation and
Thur sday 's Gam es
Tex as at Ch icago
England for no~ ~nJw Jn!'
its employes.
·
Cl eveland at M il wa ukee
cotton
on her MissisSippi
In
a
letter
to
the
senators,
Kansas City at Ca l iforn ia
New Yo r k at Boston , night
plantation.
Regal-Beloit President TorDetroit at Bal1 imore . nig ht"
--$14,000 to the Ford MP''".
rence Hill said the company
(Only gam es sch eduled )
and its employes paid paid Co. for not planlint; whcJI.
- $20,000 to iii\".Sti ~atc the
SCIOTO RESULTS
approximately $2.82 million
German
cockroach.
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Kats in taxes and listed govern- $20,000 to s tud,v the blood
Brothers came from behind ment eXpenditures totaling
groups of Poli.&lt;h Zlotn ika ·
at the three-quarter pole to about the same amoWJt.
win the featured eighth race
The biggest expe nditure on pigs.
- $71,000 to compile tht•
at sCioto Downs Tuesday the list was $2 million - for a
ltistory
of comic twoks.
ya cht for Yugoslavia's
night.
$80,000
for a zero-gravity
The winner, who clocked Marshal Tito.
the mile in a lifetime mark of
Others listed were $375,000 toilet for the space prog1·am
2:03 4·5, paid $30.80, $8.60 and for a Pentagon study of the and $23,000 for environmcntHI
frisbee, $121,000 to find out testing of the conll aptwn.
$6.80.
- $34,314 for a potato &lt;'hip
Gusty Omaha was second why people use the word
and Quick tip finished third. "ain't," and $19,300 to the machi ne for lhe MoruceH nc.::.
- $17,000 for a tlry clea ni ng
In the seventh race an all- De partment of Health,
plan
t. to spru l"e up tile
time track record quinella of
dellabas ( lr1 n~ rotw.'- of lh1
$882.00 was paid on the six
Bedouins.
and eight combination. The
-.-and $5,000 ft&gt;r the
record erased the previous
analysis
of violin var m.sJl
high of $678.40 paid Aug. 21,
Tolbert Signs Contract
In the letter. Hill 1ermed
1968.
ST.
LOUIS
(UP!)Safety
the
expenditures "a source of
The nightly double comTolbert,
who
had
played
Jim
embarrassment
for us who
bination of Topland D 5 and
out
his
option
with
the
team,
would
like
to
tak
e
pride in the
My Lady Duke 5 was \Vorth
Tuesday signed a contract for responsible representali vcs
$30.
A crowd of 5,133 wagered 1975 with the St. Louis Car- and government we should
dinals.
have. "
$2~9,334 .

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SMUCKER'S

.,

(Creamy or Crunchy)

18 oz.

PEANUT BUTTER

89~

French City USDA Choice

CUBE STEAK

ft\OR.TON HOUSE CAN_NED

MEATS/GRAVY

•

~RION

.PORK .&amp;BEANS
II Burlington House

·"The Store With A Heart
You. WE LIKE" .

All 3 PIECES FOR .ONLY ............................:$599.95
YOUR SOFA &amp; CHAIR TRADE IN IS WORTH .................... }

00.00

$499.95

Prices Effective June 25

.

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Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9..

'

ANY SUITE IN THE STORE

CLOSED SUNDAYS

MAS
2
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&amp;akerite Shortening... :.... 3 lb. '1.69

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JO.BO DOG FOOD
-- 6 cans s1.00

W.Va.

Ma
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THANK YOU

CHERRY PIE FILLING

•.

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No. 259~
can

Pepsi - 7-Up
Hawaiian Punch
6 cans •1.29
2 lb. 49c
200 ct. 49c

CUCUMBERS

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9-11 CHOPS

15~

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BOILED
HAM

lb.

lb.

SEEDLESS .

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Each

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BOLOGNA .....

16 OL bots.

For Soladsl

Wtlson s Evap II
cans 99c
Favorite Bread' ---~ loaves 89c·
Peak Navy ·Beans _ ...
Studio FaciatTissue

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CHOPS
A LOIN
SLICED

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PORK,

2

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES

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Ju~

lb~

"Tastee"
Fami~

INSTANT COFFEE·

We Glad~ Accept Feet FoOd Stamos

YOU PAY ONLY •••••••••• , ••

WE,WILLGIVE
YOU liP TO. '100.00 TRADE IN ON
-

2

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Kight Reserved to Limit Quantities .

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No. 21h89~
cans

PAPER TOWELS

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CORONET

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE

. -- 149

"

New California

loog Wh~e

POTATOES
'

Ohill Valley

WIENERS

$.1.69

5

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10 lb. bag

$1.79

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8- The Dailv Se nt inel. Middleoort-Pomero\'. 0 .. Wf'fi n""'""

team
cited in communications

"Communica tion news" ,
na tiona! trade magazine of
the commu nica tio ns in dustry, in a fea ture story has
cited two so utheast Ohi o
programs as perhaps having
the "same "significance in
medicine as the advent of the
ste thoscope ."
·It reported that the communica tions networks of the
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Services and the
Ohio
Valley
Med ica l

Science today

•

Micr owave Ne twork are
joi ntly sharing ce rtai n
facilities as aids for the
solution of basic health care
problems in a remote area
a nd are importa nt links in
developing a comprehensive
medica l care system" fo r the
sta te of Ohio.
According to the magazine,
the networks are "offering
new opportuni ties for patien t
ca re continu ing medic a l
educa tion and para-medical
i nfo r matio n exc hange
overcoming the difficulties of
ti me and distance."
The magazine hail ed as
" uniq ue " the Medi cal
Micr owave Network as cosponsored by the Foundation
and Ohi o's Educa ti onal
Telev isio n Ne tw ork Co mmission. It noted that the twoway all(!io-visual linkage between Ohio State University
Hospi tal and three southeast
Ohio hospitals is intended to
"alleviate the acute shortage
of physicians an d other
health professionals in rural
areas."
" Th e need to upgrade
medical service in Appalachia became shockingly
apparent in 1970, when the
results of a study showed 65
percent of the physicians
serving this region were over
1

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Microwave-~EOEMS

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e qu ipm ~ n t

50 yea rs of age . t:ven more

conta in

alarming was the rapidly
growing number . of com-

vir tua ll y any emerge ncy
sit uation. Equipmen t includes buiiHn asp irator and
oxygen systems, specialty
lighting and complete radio
telemetry e qu ipme nt.
Through the radio telemetry

mUnities and even en tire

. counties lef t without a doctor
as aging physicians retired.
The report showed that the
number of
phy sicians
practicing in Ohio's sevencounty Appalachian Region
Health Demonstration Area
had severely decli ned in the
preceding four years, despitc
a · fairly active re&lt;'ruiti ng
prog1·am ."
The magaz ine obse rved
that the network was "the
na lion's first broadcast color
sys tem dedicated to inr.,ractive r.,Iemedicine ... an
ultra-modern system."
"" In addi tion to two-way
video and voice capabili ties,
the network is equi pped with
lwo " phys iolog ical" data
channels over which elec( EKG ),
troca rd iograms
hea r t sou nd s, a nd othe r
medica l data telemetry inform ation ca n be transmilled.
"One of the physiological
data channels is dedica r.,d to
SEOEMS .
A
project
pr oviding seven rur al
counties with a complete
emergency medical service
that is intended to service
residents with no more than
20 minutes wait.
"Prior to the establishment
ambulance
of SEOEMS,
ser vice in mos t of the
counties was provided by
funeral homes, using vehicles
that lacked even elementary
emergency equipment. Often
during the hours of a funeral,
police cars and fire trucks
had to perform ambulance

service.
" Ca lled Mo dul ances,
SEOE MS' tr uc k-li ke ambulances are actually mobile
emer gency r ooms , whi (: h

to mee t

system , the pa tient's life
signs a re transmitted , via

SEOEMS' own microwave
sys tem, to the closest
hospital, thus extending the
diagnosis and directi on of the
physician to the scene. By
interfaci ng with the Medical
Microwave System, life signs
ca n even be patched through
to the OSU hospital in
Columbus, Ohio, if required.
"The nine-hop microwave
sys tem
ori gi nates
in
Columbus and extends approximately 100 pa th-miles
southward to Gallipolis, Ohio.
The micr owave sig nal is
transmitted from the OSU
hospi tal to a repeater housed
in the ( ETV) Network
Commission headquarters , a
di stance of two miles.
From ETV headquarters,
the signal is relayed· four
miles across Columbus to the
top of the Sta te Office Tower,
and then another 30 miles to a
repeater site near Lancaster,
Ohio. The next link, from
Lancaster to the WOUB-TV
transmitter in Athens, Ohio,
is 30 miles long.
" A fi ber glass buildin g,
housin g fi ve microwa ve
transceivers, is located at the
WOUB-TV, and serves as a
hub
in
the ·medi ca l
' Spur
m .~er owa v e system.
routes .from this facili ty are
directed to the Mental Health
Cen ter and the O' Bleness
Memor ia l Hospita l from
WOUB-TV, the signal is also
beamed 30 miles to a repeater
site at Carmel Church, Ohio,
(Continued on page 9)

.;· ~ ,_
gton

' ·-·t .

By O arence

.

Miller

Ohio GOP will look for
candidates and m~agers

9 - Tbe' Daily Sentine1• M1·ddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, JW1e-2S,J 975

State GOP

The recently re leased
Roc kefe ll er Commi ssion
Report on the CIA and press
a ecounls of abuse s in
guve rn rne nt inte ll igence
ac li vities a t home and a broad

have focused attention on the
need for Congress to
strengthen · its oversight of
this sensiti ve area . At the
same time, it is crucial that
Congress do nothing to
compromise the overall effectiveness of our in telligence
agencies. In the adversary
world we live in, their smooth
fu1wtioning is necessary to
ward uff external dangers.
Last February I opposed
th e
resol ution
tha t
es tablished the House Select
Committee on In telligence.
Instea d, I favored th e
esta blishment of a single
bip arti san congressional
comm ittee to inves tiga te
abuses. The proliferation of
inte lli gen ce
ove rsig ht
committees - both a House
and Senate select comm ittee
plus numerous permanent
oversight subcommittees lends itself more to political
publicity contests than tthe
.ex tremely se ri ous fa ctfinding that is needed. The
rece nt in-fi ghti ng on the
House Selec t Comm ittee
illustrates what can happen.
In addition, over the last few
months CIA Director William
Colby has apparently spent
more time preparing and
giving tes timony on Capi tal
Hill than in running his
age ncy. A single commi ttee
to handle all of these inves ti ga ti ons wo ul d have
avoided this duplicati on of
eff or t
an d
drawn-out
proceedings.
I am also concerned that an
unnecessa rily pr olonged
investigation will lead to

Pre-Fabricated Trusses

"

Professional
Engineering ·

·Overhang
24 inches

SeiVice

'20.40

'22.10

l

propriation immediate!\·. He
said it might take three 'days,
but he was n ot specific.
Meshel sa id . he hoped
Rhodes would act on the .
budget before the end of the
week. The new fiscal period
begins next Tuesday and
lawmakers are plarming a 10day recess after this week.
May Work Overtime
"We can't stay aroWld here
Sunday and Monday to see if
he acts on the budget," said
Meshel, indicatin g th e
legislators might have to stay
Wltil Saturday to get the
transportation appropriation
passed.
.
The administration also
was playing it close to tbe
vest on when Rhodes would i
act on the budget. He .is expected to sign the 367-page
document, perhaps vetoing
items which which he
disagrees. The Democraticcontrolled legislature could
then attempt to override the
item vetoes.
Before passing the transportation appropriation, the
House turned back attempts
to require the state to spend
money on special projects in
Lorain, Trumbull and

w

l
Crow ' s Stea k House
d6 18
Team N o . 6
11 4 20
WM P O
44 20
Team No .4
28 36
Grueser &amp; Son
Pl umb .
18 46
Team No . 5
12 52
H_igh Series - Men : Eddie
W h 1tt 527 , P h i l M c Far la nd
443 ; Women : D ia na W h i tt 453
L en a How ar d 442
'
H.igh Game - Men : E d di e
W h 1tf 185, D o n Hupp 18 1;
Wo men · D1ana W h itl
172
Len a Howa rd 170.
'

'23.80

SS boost will raise
food stamp allocation

COLUMBUS - Denver L.
Wbite, Director of the Ohio
Department of Public
Welfare, today called atInt ern ation a l
tention of Social Security
. L eagu e Standing s
Un•ted Press International
recipients in Ohio to the fact
w. 1. pet . g .b. that July I changes in their
Syracuse
43 29
597
.Roc h ester
.42 30 .583 1
Social Security payments will
Ti d ewater
40 31 .563 2''z also ha vve an effect on food
Ch a r l est on
40 31 .563 21 1
Richmond
32 37 .46.4 9 11 stamp allotments.
T ol ed o
J 1 41 .431 12
Social Security payments
Mem phis
29 43
403 14
Pawtucket
28 43 .394 14' 7 will go up about eight percent
Tu es day's R es ults
for average cases on July 1.
Roc~es t e r 6 T ol edo o
Food stamp allotments are
Ch a f l es to n 3 Tid ewat er 2
Ric hmond 10 M em ph is 8
based on·U. S. Department of
Syra &lt;euse 2 Paw t ucKe t o
Agriculture (USDA) tables
for various family in.come
levels. The amount an inSHOW DATES SET
The second Annual Mid- dividual or family pays for
Ohio Valley Steam and An- stamps goes up as income
tique Power Show will be held goes up . The food stamp
Saturday and Sunday, July 5 , program is administered in
and 6, at ·the ~arlow , Ohio
fairgrounds in Washington
County. Tbe show is being cO.
sponsored by Fearing
Township Volunteer. Fire
Department and Barlow _( Continued from page 8)
Township Volunteer Fire
Department. Admission is $1, and then on to Galtipolis,
Ohio, some 15 miles distance.
children under 12 free .
"Throughout the system,
lifacilities are shared with the
JENNER ENTERS MEET ~TV and SEOEMS systems
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. where possible . Antennas and
(UPI) - Bruce Jenner, rated renectors are installed in the
the No. I decathlon per- existing towers at ETV
former in the world last yea r, headquarters, Lancaster,
will defend his National AAU WOUB-TV, and Carmel
championship at UC Santa Church."
Other towe rs in the
Barbara July 12-13.
that
JeMer, San Jose, Calif., SEOEMS system
eventually
may
be
used
for
won
his
AAU
title.
with
8
245
.
extending the Medical
pomt~ last year an!! also had
a world best of 8,308 points. Microwave network are
He finished lOth at the : located in Logan, McArthur,
Munich Olympics three years Pomeroy, Oak Hill and
Ironton.
ago.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

"7"_____..,:;:.;:.::.::!::~~~-----------J

Fantastic Savings! ·B_
eautiful Living Ro_
oms
by Burlington House!

'·

Senate plays game with DOT

, (Continued from page 8)
and local party workers will
By LEE LEONARD
be held followi ng the UPI Statehouse Reporter
re c ruitm e nt co m ~it tee
COLUMBUS (UP)) - The
mee tings. McCough satd one Ohio Senate has ~ received
of the goals of the seminar is from the House a $731 million
to "bring in new people who appropriation for · the state
ar e interested in th e Department
of
Tra nsRepublican Party and who portation for fiscal 1976-77
have not been active before ." and is prepared to act on it
Some of the projects to be late this week.
covered at the se minar will
However, majority Demobe "capsule views" o,f party crats in the Senate see m
fina nci ng, the method of ready to engage in a game of
selecting delegates to the 1976 "s h o wd o wn "
wit h
Rep ubli can Na tion al Co n- Republican Gov. James A.
,·ention , a discussion of the Rhodes by holding up the
activities of the various state transportation money until
GOP auxiliary groups and they see what he item vetoes
" how they work", a rev iew of out of the $10.6 billion state
the ' operation of the Ohio budget •they sent him last
General Assembly thus far week.
fr om a Republicim .member
The , transportation a pof the legislature, a summary propriation, approved 84-4 by
of the "Rhodes Program" th e House Tuesday, is tbe
and an u[J-Qa 'e on the State "other shoe" to tbe budget. It
Commi ttee's plans for the was left out of the general
balance of 1975 and 1976.
appropriatio ns bill wh en
Counties to be represented Democ ratic legisla tors
at the July 1 meeting in became dissatisfied with tbe
Lanca ster are Ath ens, answers they were receiving
Fairfield , Franklin, Gallia, from the DOT.
Hocking, Lawrence, Meigs,
Sen . Harry Meshel , DPerry a nd Vinton.
Youngstown, chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee
said he would start hearing~
FRID AY -NITE M IXED
June2D, 197 5
on the transportation apTeam Standi n g s

COLUMBUS - Republican Tuesday a Republican State dictates ·and campaign
harmful leaks of sensi tive State Chairman Kent B. Committee.;;ponsored pro- manager~ for the 1976
mater ials. Already the daily · McGo u g h a nn ounce d gra m to recruit ca n- legislative races will be held
at the Holiday Inn in Lannewspaper headlines compete to pmduce the most a nd abuses of its charter have correc tive steps. You may be caster Tuesday, July I.
Members of McGough's
sensational head lines, often been perpetrated by the CIA. sure that the re pressive
staff
and key Republican
I
condemn
these
violations
terror
tactics
of
the
Soviet
not backed by hard facts
legislative
leaders will visit
This type of sensationalism and strongly favor corrective KGB will never stand the
eight cities the last week of
serves no useful pu r lJOse in measu res. But to hear some li~h t of similar scrutiny.
June and the first week of
of
the
crys
of
the
cri
tics
one
The
time
has
come
for
the investigatiun of i n ~
July to orga nize campaign
would
beli
eve
the
United
·
Co~
g
r
ess
to
complete
its
telligence agency ;tbuses, but
most certain ly must give Sta tes was on the verge of . thorough investigation of the recruitment committees in
comfor t to our enemies becoming a police sta te. That secret power of the CIA, each area to specifically aim
abroad. Recent information just isn't so . It is a measure of decide upon the best method a t " captu r ing leg islative
indicates tha t some of thes~ th e strength of ou r of monitoring intelli ge nce districts now held by the
lea ks may even have come democracy that we can un- activities , a nd then allow the opposition.,,
In addition, McGough s ah~ .
from Members of Congress - cove r, much to our em- CIA to function in the best
a
two-hour seminar lor
barrassment,
unsa
nctioned
inte
res
ts
of
individu
al
all the more reason to move
Republlcan
countv leaders
with delibera te speed to conduct on the part of the CIA citizens and sound national
(Continued on page 9)
conclude the investigation, and then proceed to take security.
prefe r ably by a single
bipartisa n committee.
On the other hand , the
Roc kefeller Commission
Report was handled in a
highly professiona l manner.
It was far fro m the .
"whi tewash'' tha t some have
cla imed . The Commission
report recognizes 'that on
occasion na tional securi ty
and individual rights may not
move on parallel courses.
However it also recognizes
that some of the illegal
conduct of the CIA was due
not solely to its ow n
carelessness but also to the
pressures of Presidents in
bo th
De mocratic
and
Republican administrations.
24 foot 4
With this in mind, the
26 foot
28 foot
(4/12
COmmission made several
dozen recommendations for
pitch)
a dmini s tr a t ive
and
legisla tiv e actions. These
DELIVERED TO JOB SITE
proposals should be given
car efu l sc rutin y by the
Congress and then proper
acti on should be taken to
prevent future abuses .
It is importan t to keep all of
773-5554
MASON, W.VA.
these investigations in theirMATERIALS CO.
proper pe rspec tive. If is
obvious that illegal conduct .__ _ _ _

SEOEMS

J'

.

.·

..

l'
.""!
:).n d'.mgs

Ohio by the State Welfare
Departme nt and County
Welfare Departments.
"Individual cases will have
to be recalculated for Social
Security recipients ," Mr.
Wbite said .
He noted that an additional
complication Is the fact that
USDA changes its food stamp
eligiblity and allotments tales
as of July 1.
"The changes will not be
huge, but we want the Social
Security recipeints to be
alerted to the fact that there
will be changes in purchase
requirements," Mr. White
siad.
He .gave an example of a
two-member retired family
with a monthly gross income
of $340. Currently they are
getting $84 worth or food
stamps a month and paying
$62 for them. After July 1,
their monthly gross income
will go up to $366. Their food
stamp allotment will be $90
and they will pay $68. In this
case, the bonus amoWJt, or
difference between ·stamp
. value and payment, remains
the same, $22.
He gave another example
of a man on disability
retirement, with a wife and
two minor children and a
gross monthly income of $390.
Currently this family is
getting $154 w·orth of food
stamps monthly for a cost of
$83. with a bonus of $71. After
July 1, this family will have a
gross income of $421. • The
food stamp allotment will
increase to $162 at a cost of
$95, providing a bonus of $67.

Cuyahoga coWJties.
The measure includes $675
million for the division of
highways. Rep. Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville,
ch ief sponsor , said reapir and
mainte nance of roads have ,
been neglected in recent
years.
The bill also includes $10
million for urban mass
transit projects to attract
federal grants.
However, House . members
stripped the bill of language
which would have required
the expenditure of up to $1
million for completion of the
Warren outerbelt and another
$325,000 for an overpass at
Oak Point Road and Route 2
in Amherst, Lorain CoWlty.
Amendment Defeated.
Also defeated was an
amendment which would
have reqUired the I;JOT to
finish safety improvements
and landscaping on I-90 in
Cuyahoga and Lake COWlties.
Prior to passage, the
Hamilton County delegation
had language eliminated
from the bill which. would
have forbidden further work
and property acquisition.on 1275, 1-74 to U.S. 27, U.S. 127
from Colerain Ave. to
Hamilton Ave., and the Cross
County Highway, U.S. 27 to 175.
House Ma jority Leader
William L. Mallory, DCincinnati, said local officials
were satisfied that the
projects could proceed
without further review or
study :
The membership also gave
a go-ahead for construction
and acquisition of property
for the 1-471 slide project in
the Mt. Adams section of
Hamilton County.
Rep ,_ William G. Batchelder, R-Medina, urged
that the special projects be
removed from the bill to
avoid
establishing
a
precedent for "logrolling" in
highway appropriations.
Proponents of the Amherst
overpass argued it was
needed because a dangerous
grade level crossing had
caused 40 accidents and two
fatalities in the last year.
Help For Elderly
Rep. James W. Rankin, DCincinnati; was successful in
getting an amendment in the
bill . providing that if any
mass transit money is left
over, It must go for bus fare
assistance for the elderly,
Meanwhile, the Senate
refused to go along with a
joint conference committee
report on a bill outlawing slot
machines and roulette wheels
in Ohio.
The House earlier had
Wlanimously agreed with the
report, which would have
prohibited the gambling
devices in private homes for
recreational purposes,
But Sen. David L. Headley,
D-Akron, floor manager of
the bill designed to curb "Las
Vegas-style;;· gambling in.
northeastern Ohio, failed to
convince senators that all slot

machines should be banned.
Half the Democratic
senators joined a majorltyof
Republicans in defeating the
conference report, 20 to 13,
arguing that collectors should
\Ja ve the right to keep tbe
machines in their basements.
Head ley said a second
conference committee would
probably be requested. He
said the bill should be
rewritten to provide a method
for determining whether slot
machines in private homes
are being used for gambling
or for their intended purpose
as collectors' items.
The House passed, 61-24,
and sent to the Senate
legislat ion requiring boards
of election to notify by mail
all residents of a precinct
where a polling place is
changed.
Such notification may curbe
made
in
rently
new spape rs
in
non·
registration counties.
The House also brought up
for reconsideration and
pa sse d, 73-16, emergency
legislation providing an
additional method of adding
territory to a regional transit
authority.
·
The S e nat e -passed
measure, defeated by the
House last Thursday , is
aimed at authorizing an
August election in Dayton on
a regional transit authority.
Proponents said the bill
would allow the question to be
voted upon without obtaining
signatures for a referendum.
Opponents · maintained the
legislation would permit big
cities to "swallow up" small
municipalities in transit
authorites.
Both chambers were to
reconvene today at I : 30 p.m.

Point preparing

for parade
PT.
PLEASANT
Prepa rations are being made
for one of Point Pleasant's
bi gges t Fourth of Jul y
Pa rades ever held.
Charlie Wood, chairman,
promises this parade will
offer new ideas never before
seen in Point Pleasant.
Persons from all the COWlly
are invited to participate in
the parade which begins at 2
p. m. at First and Main
Streets. Units will move up
Main Street to Central School
before disbanding.
It is still not too late to
enter. Those desiring to do so
may call the Wood residence
at 675-3331 or 675-2313.
As parade marshal Wood is
making a special appeal for
antique car owners to join in
the big holiday evvent.
The re will be trophy
presentations for first and
second place holders.
'

M,l j_or l eague Sta ndings
By Umted P ress Intern at iona l
Nat ional Lea gue
Eas t
w . I. pet. g .b.
Pit tsb urgh
39 27 59 1
Ph l!adel phia
39 31 55 7 2
Chi cago
35 33 .5 15 5
New Yo r k
33 37 '508 5 111
~ 1 . Louis
32 34 485
7
Mon tr ea l
28 35 ' 44&lt;1
Wes t
w. I. pe t . g .b.
Ci ncinna t i
44 27 620 -Los Angeles
42 31 575 3
Sa n D iego
3&lt;~ 37 . 479 10
San Fr ancisco 33 38 465 11
1\llan ta
29 41
d i d 1.4 ''1
Hous ton
26 .48 . 351 19 11
Tuesday 's Results
Chicago 13 M ont r ea l 6
Ph~ lade l phia 6 Pi tt sburgh 3, Jst
Ph, ladel pi:Ji a 8 Pittsbur:.gh 1. 2nd
New York 5 Sl Lo uis 1
Cincinn a ti 'j At lanta o
Los Angeles 8 Houston 3
San Diego 2 SF 1, 1st. 10 inn .
San Diego 3 Sa n F r anc isco o,
2n d
T oda y 's P r obabl e Pitch er s
(All Time s E DT)
Pi tt sb urgh
!Moose
Q.2)
at
Ph iladel ph ia (Lonborg 6 5), 7 : 35
p .m .
Cinci nn at i (T . Carroll 1-0 ) at
Atlan ta (Morton 7.7), 7 : 35p .m .
St . Lou is ( Forsch 7 -5) at New
Yor k I Seaver 10-4), 8 :05p .m
Ch icago
! Reusc hel
4 -6 )
at
Montreal (B l air .4 -8), 8 : 05p .m .
Los Angeles ( Su tton 11-41 .at
Hous ton (Kon ieczny d -8 ), 8·35
p .m .
San Francisco (Caldwel l 4-6) at
San Dieg o ( Fol kers 2-4 J. 10 : 30
p .m .
Thur sday's Games
Chi cago J t Pi tt sburg h , n ight
Atl an t a at Houston, n ight
Los Angel es at Sa n Fran, n ight
( Onlv qames sch edul ed)
Am er ic-an League
Ea st
w. 1. pet. g .b.
39 29 57.4
New York
1h
37 28 .569
Bos to n
36 32 .529 3
Mi l wa ukee
30 36 455 8
Balti m ore
27 39 .409 11
Cleve land
26 39 .400 11lf1
Detroit
w es t
w. I. pet . g .b.
OaKland
44 26 .629
Ka nsas Ci ty
39 31 .557 5
Texas
34 35 .493 9 l;1
Cal i forn ia
34 38 ..472 11
Minneso ta
31 35 .470 11
Chi cago
29 38 .4 33 13 1' 1
T ue sday 's R es ults
Mi lwaukee 5 D et r oit 0, 1st
Mi l waukee A D et r oit 2, 2n d
Ch i cago 7 T exas 5
Clevelan d B Boston 6
New Yo rk 3 Bal timore 1
Oakland 6 M inneso t a 4
Kansas Cit y 5 Calif 3, 11 inn .
Toda y ' s Probable Pi'tcher s
{All T i m es EDT)
Cleveland ( Har r ison 0-2) at
Bos ton ! Pole l -3L 3 : 30 p .m.
New
Yo r k
(May
7-3)
at
Baltimor e (Pa l mer 12-3). 7: 30
p .m .
Detroi t (R uh le 6-3) at Mi l ·
wauke e ( Broberg 7.7 ), B&lt;IO
p .m .
T exas (Wrig h t Q.JJ at Chicago
( Kaa t l0 ·4l. 9: 00p .m .
Kansas City (B usby 10-SJ at
Ca li for nia (T an an a 5-4L 10 : 30

9''"'

·· . NOT EXACTLY appetizing but certainly valuable is
th1s sl1cky glob of BWlker C fuel oil - the residue of the
petroleum distillation process. Two resea rch scientists at
General Electric's Research and Development center in
Schenectady, N. Y., are investigating methods of converting the plentifu l tar-like substance to ine xppm;ive fuel
for marine gas turbines.

.,

'That 's our tax mon ev .·
~

'•

legislators informed

SOUTH BELOIT, Ill. (UPi) Education and Welfare for a
- The thing was, Rega l- study of why children fall off
Beloit Corp. and its employes tricycles.
Also listed were $70,000 to
didn't like the idea of their
tax dollars being spent on stud)'" the smel l of perstudies of the sex lives of sp irnti on givt'n off b\
Polish frogs or why kids fall Australi an aborigirlt:'s ;.m;J
$28,361 for an odormPasuring
off tricycles, and such.
That's ·why they sent the machine to he used in th&lt;·
feder al governme nt tha t st udy of aborigin'll pcl spiration. money --$3 billion.
And on and tm .
All play money.
- $6,000 to stud v PoHsh
The money went to Illinois
·
U.S. Sens. Adlai Stevenson bisexuallrogs.
$117.250
in
sala~ies
for a
and Charles Percy in a
symbolic protest of how the · bo ard of tea tasters.
- $5,000 to 1hr ;:mU10r of tl1P
government played away the
p .m .
M innesot a
(Corbin
4-3)
at same amount of tax dollars
une-\\'O t c! JlOt 111 · lr~J:, "
Oakl and (B ahnsen 5-6l. 11 p .m.
- $68 ,000 to the (,)ueun of
paid by the corporation and
Thur sday 's Gam es
Tex as at Ch icago
England for no~ ~nJw Jn!'
its employes.
·
Cl eveland at M il wa ukee
cotton
on her MissisSippi
In
a
letter
to
the
senators,
Kansas City at Ca l iforn ia
New Yo r k at Boston , night
plantation.
Regal-Beloit President TorDetroit at Bal1 imore . nig ht"
--$14,000 to the Ford MP''".
rence Hill said the company
(Only gam es sch eduled )
and its employes paid paid Co. for not planlint; whcJI.
- $20,000 to iii\".Sti ~atc the
SCIOTO RESULTS
approximately $2.82 million
German
cockroach.
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Kats in taxes and listed govern- $20,000 to s tud,v the blood
Brothers came from behind ment eXpenditures totaling
groups of Poli.&lt;h Zlotn ika ·
at the three-quarter pole to about the same amoWJt.
win the featured eighth race
The biggest expe nditure on pigs.
- $71,000 to compile tht•
at sCioto Downs Tuesday the list was $2 million - for a
ltistory
of comic twoks.
ya cht for Yugoslavia's
night.
$80,000
for a zero-gravity
The winner, who clocked Marshal Tito.
the mile in a lifetime mark of
Others listed were $375,000 toilet for the space prog1·am
2:03 4·5, paid $30.80, $8.60 and for a Pentagon study of the and $23,000 for environmcntHI
frisbee, $121,000 to find out testing of the conll aptwn.
$6.80.
- $34,314 for a potato &lt;'hip
Gusty Omaha was second why people use the word
and Quick tip finished third. "ain't," and $19,300 to the machi ne for lhe MoruceH nc.::.
- $17,000 for a tlry clea ni ng
In the seventh race an all- De partment of Health,
plan
t. to spru l"e up tile
time track record quinella of
dellabas ( lr1 n~ rotw.'- of lh1
$882.00 was paid on the six
Bedouins.
and eight combination. The
-.-and $5,000 ft&gt;r the
record erased the previous
analysis
of violin var m.sJl
high of $678.40 paid Aug. 21,
Tolbert Signs Contract
In the letter. Hill 1ermed
1968.
ST.
LOUIS
(UP!)Safety
the
expenditures "a source of
The nightly double comTolbert,
who
had
played
Jim
embarrassment
for us who
bination of Topland D 5 and
out
his
option
with
the
team,
would
like
to
tak
e
pride in the
My Lady Duke 5 was \Vorth
Tuesday signed a contract for responsible representali vcs
$30.
A crowd of 5,133 wagered 1975 with the St. Louis Car- and government we should
dinals.
have. "
$2~9,334 .

,,

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SMUCKER'S

.,

(Creamy or Crunchy)

18 oz.

PEANUT BUTTER

89~

French City USDA Choice

CUBE STEAK

ft\OR.TON HOUSE CAN_NED

MEATS/GRAVY

•

~RION

.PORK .&amp;BEANS
II Burlington House

·"The Store With A Heart
You. WE LIKE" .

All 3 PIECES FOR .ONLY ............................:$599.95
YOUR SOFA &amp; CHAIR TRADE IN IS WORTH .................... }

00.00

$499.95

Prices Effective June 25

.

,•

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9..

'

ANY SUITE IN THE STORE

CLOSED SUNDAYS

MAS
2
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&amp;akerite Shortening... :.... 3 lb. '1.69

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JO.BO DOG FOOD
-- 6 cans s1.00

W.Va.

Ma
'

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THANK YOU

CHERRY PIE FILLING

•.

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No. 259~
can

Pepsi - 7-Up
Hawaiian Punch
6 cans •1.29
2 lb. 49c
200 ct. 49c

CUCUMBERS

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BOILED
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lb.

SEEDLESS .

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Each

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BOLOGNA .....

16 OL bots.

For Soladsl

Wtlson s Evap II
cans 99c
Favorite Bread' ---~ loaves 89c·
Peak Navy ·Beans _ ...
Studio FaciatTissue

RC

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CHOPS
A LOIN
SLICED

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PORK,

2

EVERYDAY LOW PRICES

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Ju~

lb~

"Tastee"
Fami~

INSTANT COFFEE·

We Glad~ Accept Feet FoOd Stamos

YOU PAY ONLY •••••••••• , ••

WE,WILLGIVE
YOU liP TO. '100.00 TRADE IN ON
-

2

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Kight Reserved to Limit Quantities .

. ,

French City

No. 21h89~
cans

PAPER TOWELS

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CORONET

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE

. -- 149

"

New California

loog Wh~e

POTATOES
'

Ohill Valley

WIENERS

$.1.69

5

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10 lb. bag

$1.79

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Ill-The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, U.. Wednesday ,_Juni• 25, !97J;
.,-· -·---~-·--·~-·--

Ohio State hosts 78th golf event
COLUMBUS,Ohio (UPI ) - · But Bean. ·who has capFor Andy Bean, the 78th tured fi ve collegiate tourannual NCAA Golf Cham- nament titles this season, is
pionship is a chance to confident his veteran team
will win this year's chamredeem himself.
Bean. No. I man on the top- pionship, which gets under
ranked University of Flohda way toda y on the 7,000-yard,
team, accepts the blame for · IJ'!r 72 Ohio State University
the Gators' two-stroke loss to Scarlet Course.
Wake Forest in last )lear 's
"We've got fo ur seniors on
NCAA event.
our team." said Bean, "and I
" I have to take the blame think we migh t want to win it
for last year's loss," says the just a little more than them
strapping, curly-haired Bean. (Wake Fbrest)."
"I'm just not supposed to go
The long ball-hitting Bean,
out and shoot a 79 the final who finished lith in the
round .''
NCAA last year after his bad

fin al round , played the
Scarlet course on one other
occasion, last October.
But the course was hard
and the weather cold and
Bean says there's no
sirniiarity between now and
then.
Bean has his sights set on a
280 score for the four rounds,
which may be a tall order on
the trei!-lined and difficult
Scarlet course .
"Uyou shoot 70fourdays in
a row on this course/' Bean
said, "you've really done
very well.
" U you spray the ball here,
that 's when you get in
trouble. You have to keep it in

,.

.

"

I
..

both were found guilty of
disobeying church rules.
Wendt was found guilty
earlier this month by an
Ecclesiastical Court of
disobeying th e "Godly admonition • of his bishop by
allow ing Mrs. Cheek to
celebrate Mass last fall .
The court recommended
that Rt. Rev. William F .
Crei ghton, bishop of the
Washington diocese , admonish Wendt and "forbid
him to permit any persons
whose ordination is not in
conformity with the Canon of
the church to exercise his or
her ministry ill his church."
Wendt is appealing the
court ruling.
,
Beebe was found guilty of
violating church law by
permitting Mrs. Cheek and
an other woman priest to
celebrate Communion in his
church.
Mrs. Cheek said her first
sacramental celebration at'
St. Stephen's will be irregular
beca use Bishop Creighton
refused her request for a
transfer from the diocese of
Virginia to the diocese of
Washington .
"I don't !mow if I will be
charged," she said, "but I
hope so. Then maybe we can
get a ruling from the church
court.
"Right now I 'm sort of in
limbo."

CARDS SIGN TWO
GRUEN SIGNS
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Kelly
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP I) Paris and David Oliver,
- Hard-hitting, high-scoring selected by the St. Louis
left winger Danny Gruen Cardinals earlier this month
signed a four-year contract in baseball's free agent draft,
Tuesday with the World - Tuesday signed contracts
Associat ion with the club.
Hoc key
Cleveland Crusaders.
Paris , a 17-year-old
Gruen , 23, played for the shortstop from Taft High
Detroit Red Wings hefore School in Woodland Hills,
jumping to Michigan of the Calif., was the Cardinals'
WHA, where he totaled 19 second choice in the draft.
goals, 47 points and 94 penalty
Oliver, an 18-year-old
minutes in 66 games.
righthanded pitcher from
Fairview Heights, Ill., at•
tended Belleville East High
School. He was 8-5 this year
B-W TO HOST MEET
with an earned ruh average
CLEVELAND (UPI)
The United States and Africa of 0.87 and 149 strikeouts in 89
will compete in a major track innings. He was named to the
and field competition at Illinois All-State baseball
Baldwin-Wallace College in team.
Both players will be
Berea, Ohio,- it- was anassigned
to the Sarasota
nounced Tuesday.
Ollan Cassell, executive team in the rookie Gulf Coast,.
director of the Amateur League.
Athletic Union and a former
Olympic gold medalist for the
United States, made the
announcement here.

dimactic (or him.
capable of wummg the in"This is it, " said Haas, dividual title, which Strange
''last week was just a little took by one shot last year
extra.
over Florida 's Gary Koch and
Haas, as do many others, · Phil Hancock .
believes this year's title will
Other teams mentioned by
be decided betw ee n his Haddock as possible winners
Deacons and Florida .
are
Oklahoma
State ,
But Wake Forest coach Houston , Southern Cal,
Jesse Haddock sees as many. Brigham Young, Georgia
as ten teams with a chance to Southern, Alabama and
win, and at least 20 to 25 Indiana . Haddock said he
particularly liked
the
Hoosiers' chances .

Racine A-s
in 2 wins

In Racine-Syracuse little
the fairway ."
league action Tuesday night
Southern California's Craig the Racine A-« blasted out 26
Stadler, one of fow- Walker hi ts and downed the Racine B
CUp playe rs and one of two squad 23-8. Jay Rees was the
U.S. Amateur champions in winning pitcher and helped
the field, sees it another way, his own cause by hitting two
however. ·
tripl es and two singles. Zane
Burly Craig, who won the Beegle had 2 homers and a
Amateur at lverness in triple , Bob Bill Lee a triple,
Toledo in his only other Ohio double , and two singles. while
appearance , says it's more Wayne Lyons had a home
important to hit the greens. run .
"The fairway rough isn't so
Melanie Wees was charged
bad," Stadler said, "but you with the loss for the B learn.
A perfect Keepsake diamond
aren't going to get close to the Hitters for the B squad were brilliant and beautiful foreve r.
hole out of that stuff around Pete Rubinson with a homer.
the green."
and J. Gheen had 2 singles.
Defending individual
In a makeup game the A-«
champion Curtis Strang e, defeated the B-s, 6-4. Hitters
who, along with Jay Haas for the B-« were C. Hupp with
leads Wake Forest's attempt a homer and a single, and
to defend its title, called the Kent Wolfe had 2 triples and a
Scarlet course "one of the single. The winning pitcher
longest and narrowest of any was John Porter and the
I' ve played."
losing pitcher was C. Hupp.
Haas, who tied with Alaba- With these two wins, the A-s&gt;
ma's Jerry Pate for low are tKl with 3 games left to
amateur honors in last play. Next game will be at
week's U.S. Open , insists the Syracuse against the Braves A~-------~
NCAA will not be anti - at 6 p. m . .
AII'ICII tr0111 1100 to 110,000

Church trial is
wanted by priest
ANNANDALE, Va. (UP!)
- The Rev. Alison Cheek, one
of 11 women whose ordination
into the Episcopal priesthood
is being challenged by church
elders, says she will
cele bra te Mass · at a
Washington church this
summer in hopes of receiving
a full church triaL
Mrs . Cheek said Tuesday
she will serve as a parish
priest at St. Stephen's
Episcopal
Church
in
Washington this summer.
and said she expects her
celebration of Mass to spur a
full hearing on her church
status.
"The case would go to the
church court and I would
finally get due process," she
said. "I don 't know if I would
win, but the church would
have to make itself clear if it
believes women are inferior .
"There is absolutely no
way to treat me as an inferior
being," she, added. "I was
made a full member when
baptized."
. The Episcopal Church has
not resolved the problem of
'women priests, and last
'July's ordination of the 11
:women was challenged by the
church's house of bishops.
The challenge resulted in
church trials for the rector of
St.. Stephen's, Rev. William
A. Wendt, and Rev. Peter L.
Beebe of Oberlin, Ohio, and

;

I

g . ab. r .
Mad lck. Ch 69

279
229
245
291
217
187
169
307
295

Morgn , Cn 66
Watson , Ho 66
Cash . Ph il 70
Sa n g ln , Pt 61
Bo w a . P hi l 4.:1
Smi th . St. L d7
Garvy. LA 73
Rose . Ci n 71
Gr iff ey . Cn 58 1~

42
48
31
49
23
21

27
.:12
46
.:10

h.
99
81
84
99
72
61
Sd
98
9A
58

Ca rw . Mnn 61 221 39
Lynn, Bas 60 220 45
Mu n s n . NY 65 255 40

·NAME BRAND SHOES

I

AUDITIONS
NATURALIZERS
FANFARES
JOLENE
VOGUE

I
I
j

I
II

DRESS &amp;CASUAL

I
I

PORTABLE
VALUES TO

II

Ha~ 3-way power , Play on e lectric
or battery or u~e in your ca r!
Auto-

e

H isle . Mnn 58 220 34
Yount. Mil 58 224 32

Wash . Oak 70 270 37

83 .307

Ha rgrv , Tx 60 206 39

.376
.345
. 341
.340
.3 14
.308

I

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES
t
BETTY OHLINGER

MUNSEY

•s••

BETTER
SHOES

PAIR

Values to $8.99 &amp; $9 .99
ladies' spring and summer
styles. Sandals. casual and
dress. Good run of sizes .
Save now.

Save 50 Pet. now,
clean up group Charm
Step. HI Brow ladles'
better footwear . Good
se lection of styles .
Broken sizes. Shop ..
early for best selec tion . Stiffler's can save

PR.

asst . styles . Shop early
for .best selection.

.......... . .

you money .

FOOTWEAR
1 OFF

,.,. ~Gym -. Ox~ords
, f\eg .
S3.99
value
American made· youths ·
boys . men's gym oxfords .
All sizes . Stock up no v at
this low . low Stl1fler
price. We can save you

REG.
PRICE

$19.96

150

e

$399

e

5

11''

HEC:K'5 REG.

4.96

G.E. BABY FOOD

WARMING DISH

e One step preparation- heats baby's dinner to serving
temperature. e Eliminates fussing with hot water- no
extra containers needed . Suction bottom helps avoid tipping . e Immersible, easy.Cieaning. e Detochable cord. e

JIWII.RY

•r.

·- ~-,_

$27.96

JIWEI.RY DEPT.

'I''

e

G.E. BABY FOOD
WARMING SET

• H1gh ve loci ty airflow

Heats baby'~ ~nti re meal automotically- ~ignol lr ght indicat e ~ whe_n
foo d i ~ heated .
Keep~ food wa rm all lhrough l~t:d1119 alter w rd ·~
detached.
Suction bottom nelp~ prevent spills.
lmm er ~i ble for easy
cleani ng.
Ciloice ol 3 coole r ~, blu~ . pink , o r yel low .

e

e

e

e

SJ]''

d e~ign plu~

700 wolh for lo; t drying ond ~ tyling , •

e Veoofile- - great lor th e en tire fa mily . e Stylmg Bru~h. Wide Comb
ond Regul"ar Comb Attochmenh . r 5ilopmg Comb A cte~~ory * ~n ap'
in to styli ng bru ~ n to form t r i · ~Cc ti o n flar e brvsh . e Two ·woy ileo t on d
air/low con tr"ol: '' Dry" ~e t t1ng lo1 high il eal and 011 Ilow . " Style" ~ett i n g
lor low ileal and gentle airflow . e Delivers mo re than 30 cubic lee1 ol a ir
per min ute . e Protective ~t r ecn in in loke grille.

-

15

5

HECK'S REG.

;'II\

99

HECK'S
REG.

$16.96
JIWII.RY DIJIT.

$19.96

JEWII.RY

D2

D4

.

HICK'S REG.

$3.99

JEWii.RY

HECK'S REG.

JEWELRY DEPT.

%PRICE
~~r~ur•r.

s1988

HECK'S
REG. '5.99

COSTUME JEWELRY
JEWELBOX
.
EAIIIICS-IKILACES-IIACII.m
Perfect place to put earringsc and rings

.99

OVEN-BROILER

Co mpact toaster-baker-broiler fits into countertop corners,
yet handles big hun gry· size jobs. Two heating ele m~n t s, top
a nd bottom. wi th respe&lt;tive cord connections_Two position
em.y-sl ide troy, variable thermo state to 500 degrees. Con·
Hnuous cleaning.

e

$11.96

·.I

SELF-CLEANING

ALARM CLOCK

HECK'S REG.

7558

MUNSEY

TRAVEL

Automatic " pop-up'' toast cor ·
rioge and wid e toa st slots fo r easy
removal ol loo~l or toaster pa ~·
tries.
Ad justable toa st color se t·
tings lor wide rongll" of loa! I color.
Swing ·open cru mb troy lor ea sy ·
cl ean ing .
Compact mode rn de ·
sign ~tyl e d in c.h rome wlih b la ck
end ponel~ .
To a~h one or lwo
sl ice~ of b read .

e

DH14

•r.

.

REBUILT
TELEPHONES

An extension dial phone in every r'oom ot every desk o nd
even outdoOrs ... One time cost and· th ose e ndless rental
charges ore eliminated , .. no mad dashes into the house, up
or down stairs, or the opposite end of th e home'or facto ry to
answer your phone!
...

sg••
HECK'S
REG.

$14.96

PDl

WRIST RADIO ·

Wear it like a watch . lightweight mini sjze (only 2" in

diameter). AM radio has exceptiona ll y fine tone. Rad io is
mounted on th e latest style rem ovable wide wrist bOnd.
Operates on 1 Penl ite battery (included) . Comes in block

only .

$7''

HECK'S REG.

$11.99

IEWII.Rr IIII'T.

PAIR

STIFFLER'S SHOE SALE

McCall's, Kwik - Se~, Simplicity Patterns
Pomeroy, Ohio

JEWELRY DEPT.

MEN'S, BOYS', YOUTHS', AMERICAN MADE

NEW SINGER ATHENA

992-2284

$1.29

PRICE

$129.96

JEWElRY DEPT. ·

JEWII.RY DIJIT.

sa••

HECK'S REG.

OFF
REG.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

Available in yellow.

REGULAR 3.99 VALUE ,

money .

The Fabric Shop

1

sgg••

, S - J~499

Tl7

SAVE 50% ON THIS LOTI

FOOTWEAR

DEHUMIDIFIER

Thi s G.E. Dehumidifier removes damag in g moisture from
th e a ir caused by excess hum idi_ty in the home. The cabinet is
steel wi th o b rown, poin ted cabinet wi th a w hite gri ll.

Handso me wa ll clock with 2
curio she lve s.

e

BIIUY IJ9T.

JEWEL BOXES

ONE LARGE GROUP LADIES'
CHARM STEP AND HI BROW

GENERAL ELECTRIC 14 PINT

SHELVES

TOASTER

·ANTIMONY

PAIR

brands. Cl ean up for summer.

SPECIAL CLEANUP GROUP

sizes t

Famous

Save big now. Be here early
for best selection.

SPRING &amp;SUMMER LADIES'

Big Clean-Up Group of
ch il dren, boys · girls.
footwear. Save 50 Pet .

footwear .

Charm Step and Hi Brow

DOESN'T INCLUDE FOREIGN FILM

JEWI.ERY DEPT.

WITH CURIO

G.E. 2-SLICE

$14.56

20 EXPOSURE

THIS OFFER IN EFFECT
THRU SUNDAY 13th ONLY
JEWELRY DEPT.

VW7C03

HECK'S REG.

$319

ONLY

WALL CLOCK

$11.96

F78W

Fash ion ladles' spring and
su mmer

VALUES TO $10.99 AND $11.99 .
SUMMER CLEARANCE GROUP

BOYS &amp; GIRLS
SPECIAL LOT

.99

~=-..
· - -----

$15.88

IEWII.RY DEPT.

· . ·;;···:rs~11"
f.::._ __ ---~

12 EXPOSURE

••

HECK'S
REG.

JIWII.RY IJ9T.

Two Iro ns in o ne--swi t&lt;he ~ from steam fa dry 01 o pnm ol o b utton.
DUREV ER' Cordse l- i~ heal residant, will not lroy, croc~ . or pf!el in
no rma l use, and has little tendency to ta ngle o r kink . 39 Stemm Vents - For
overall stea m distributio n- mo re iron ing eme. "Wrap &amp; Re 1ot" Heel Ba rIn creases iron stab ility on ironil)g board and double s a s o convenient
mean!. lor cord storage . Water Window- Shows water level a t a g lan ce.
Color styled in white with Blue GE Double Non- Slick coated soleplate.
Fa b ric Gu i de- aid~ in se lecting the proper fibe·r or Iabrie neat seth ng s

$219

Compocl sty lin~. Solid·stole design. 4" dynomic speak·

HECK'S REG.

G.E. STEAM IRON

ft ~b(_"-'
p
. '""}

•"

er . Woke-to-music contro l. Lorge, easy· to-read clock
face ,

$7,' '

JEWELRY DEPT.

ONLY

C242S

AM CLOCK RADIO

Fully automa tic. Turm itself off when the con is finished
cutting . Easy " click ' n clean" breakdown for deeming .

••

--

GENERAL ELECTRIC

AUTOMATIC CAN OPENER

HECK'S REG. •9.99

SPRING &amp; SUMMER LADIES'

SHOES

now . · ·sroken

SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE

••

VANWYCK

CADDY

VALUES TOWU9 AND $14.99
CLEANUP GRou·p

SPRitllG &amp; SUMMER

( Base d on mos1 victories)

YARD

: /· -..~I

Big 6 12 quort copocity wi lh
lih ·out deep fry bo~ket. Also
re mov a ble alumi num l• y well,
co n veni e nt pou ri ng ~ pau L
Tru ly one of tile mo~t versolile,
easy to clean, easy to use
cooker -lryers eve r de~gned .
Avocado in (o lor .

sa••

Starts Thurs. June 26

VALUES TO $8.99 AND $9.99
CLOSEOUT LOT OF LADIES'

Stolen Ba ses

2

-

DEEP FRYER

l . ~!~~~~-----· --------~~E~~Y, OHI,O I

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TIL 8 PM

National
League : MorQa n ,
Cin and Cedeno. Hou 31 ; L o~es ,
LA .26 ; Brock, St .L 25 ; Lint z,

98

$24 .99

JEWII.IRY DEPT.

Meet ihe Zip Polaroid . Adds convenience to the picture tak ing fun
The Zip u~e$o new eosy·to·use coo ·
te rten 1 bloc~ &amp; wh ite fi lm. fea ture &gt;
a photometer which ~oys " ye ~' ' . f or
li g ht selling ou ldooa &amp; on inex ·
p ensive Ag· 1 tl o~n bu lb for ind ean. C a m~ro IS complete with o
rich
gro •n finish .

LADIES SHOE SALE

KODACOLOR FILM
DEVELOPING

HECK'S REG .

$24.99

ZIP CAMERA

~a .

A large selection of heather
and printed colors. 60" wide .
Regul ar S3 .98 yard, now . .. . ·

HECK'S REG.

46F3

SUMMER CLEARANCE

Americ an Leag ue : Lynn, Bas
and Nett les, N Y 51 ; Horton ,
Det and Scott. Mil 48 : McRae,
t&lt; c 45 .

60" PRINTED
POLYESTER KNITS

eosy:to·read numerals on pointed forget. Bold hands accent the slyle.
Full swee p second hand . Ope rolt's up too lull year on one ''(" si2e
bo lle ry,

size bonery.

IEWII.RY DEPT.

2 PR. FOR $500

Starts Thurs., June 26

Runs Batted In
Nat ional 'Leag ue : Benc h . Cin
61 . Luzin ski, P h il 53; Simmons ,
St. L 49 ; Per ez, Cin and Watson ,

Blue , Oak 10-5 ; Tianl, Bos and
Rya n , Ca l 10 -6.

18 ~~ " high, l 5 !-';" w ide, 2 11~ " deep. Has o repl ica o l c lronlu~r gun
re~t ing 011 its pegs ne•t loa morhmonship meda l. Clock ha s lo"rge

SJ799 SJ799

TAPE

14 .

Nat iona l Lea gue ; Messer s ·
milh, L A 11 -3 ; Sutton. L A 11 -6;
Seaver , NY and Jones, SD 10..4 ;
Gu llett. G in 9-3 .
Americ an· L eague : Palm e r ,
Ball 12-3 ; Hunter . NY 1J .6 ;
Kaa t. Chi 10-4 ; Busby, K C and

"C~

HECK'S REG. $59.96

De l and Bur roughs, Tex 15 ;
L ynn , Bas and Hend r ick, Clev

Pitching

up to a full yea r on one

SAVE ON

WALL CLOCK

$11.96

P itt 13
Amer ican L ea gue : Bonds. NY
and J ackson . Oak 16 ; Horton ,

Mfl 17 .
American L eague : Rivers ,
Cal 39 : Ot is, KC 29 ; washing .
ton , Oak 26 : R em y , Cal and
Pa tek , KC and North , Oa k 19.

Ope rate ~

CF65

MeR a . KC 69 264 35 81 .307
Md d x.NY 55 2 18 36
67 .30 7
Whi te . N Y 58 215 44
66 .307
Home Runs
Nati onal League : Lu zinski.
Ph il 16 : Bench·. Cin 15 ; Bak er .
A tL Schmidt. P hil and Pa r ke r ,

Hou

WALL CLOCK

S47''

't

LADIES AND CHILDRENS

$300 PR. OR

e

FRONTIERSMAN

13" di amete r 4 ¥.'' deep . Ho ~ the look a nd teel 9f on o ld tapped ~ eg
heed . Bold numerals looll a s if they were burned into the borrelfwlad
large, easy-to-see ho ur and minute hand s. Full ~we ep ~e&lt;on d ha nd .

matic channel selector!
Slide rule
controls
Illumi nated chan nel lights!

I

ONE GROUP
OF
BROKEN SIZES

e

BARREL &amp; SPIGOT

HECK'S REG.

Values to $10.99 and $11.99
ladies' spring and summer
famous brand s, ladies'
footwear, good selection of
sizes and styles. Whites.
beige and other summer
colors.

W. Second

l

ONE GROUP OF LADIES SHOES
ONLY •5.00

FOOTWEAR

11 5

8-TRACK PLAYER
WITH AM-FM
RADIO
e

l

$22.00

.355
. 354
.3 43
.3 40
332
.326
)20
.319
.319
.3i9

83
76
87
70
69
69

years.
.'

II

pet.

American. L.ague
g . ab. r . h. pet.

Stop In For A Demonstration of the
fYREEGOES
Charles Tyree, convicted of.
feloneous assault, was
Q-ansported today from the
Meigs County Jiail to the
Chlllicothe
Correctional
Institution where he will
apend a sentence of 2 to 15

AT
9:00 A.M.

l
I

Major L eague L eaders
By Unit ed Press International
Leading Batters
I Ba sed on 150 at bats)
Nati Onal Le agu e

WEEKEND SALE!

l

SEMI-ANNUAL
OF

Keepsake"

'

SUITS FILED
One
dissolution
of
marmge, one divorce, and a
suit for money were filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
George W. Miller, Middleport, and Jane Miller,
Middleport, filed for a
dissolution of marriage, and
Charlene Kay Barton, Rt. 1,
Shade, filed suit for divorce
against Willlam Br11ce
Barton, Mason , charging
gross neglect of duty and ~
extreme cruelty. Carroll
Norris
Dodge,
Inc.,
Gallipolis,
filed
for
judgement In the amount of
P33.12 plus interest and costs
from Nancy L. Pope, Middleport.

1

SALE
STARTS
THURS.

(POMEROY STORE)

~I

'

.

.

·;
~:

STARTS
·THURSDAY

(MIDDLEPORT STORE)
'

I~

.'

�..
I_ -

Ill-The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, U.. Wednesday ,_Juni• 25, !97J;
.,-· -·---~-·--·~-·--

Ohio State hosts 78th golf event
COLUMBUS,Ohio (UPI ) - · But Bean. ·who has capFor Andy Bean, the 78th tured fi ve collegiate tourannual NCAA Golf Cham- nament titles this season, is
pionship is a chance to confident his veteran team
will win this year's chamredeem himself.
Bean. No. I man on the top- pionship, which gets under
ranked University of Flohda way toda y on the 7,000-yard,
team, accepts the blame for · IJ'!r 72 Ohio State University
the Gators' two-stroke loss to Scarlet Course.
Wake Forest in last )lear 's
"We've got fo ur seniors on
NCAA event.
our team." said Bean, "and I
" I have to take the blame think we migh t want to win it
for last year's loss," says the just a little more than them
strapping, curly-haired Bean. (Wake Fbrest)."
"I'm just not supposed to go
The long ball-hitting Bean,
out and shoot a 79 the final who finished lith in the
round .''
NCAA last year after his bad

fin al round , played the
Scarlet course on one other
occasion, last October.
But the course was hard
and the weather cold and
Bean says there's no
sirniiarity between now and
then.
Bean has his sights set on a
280 score for the four rounds,
which may be a tall order on
the trei!-lined and difficult
Scarlet course .
"Uyou shoot 70fourdays in
a row on this course/' Bean
said, "you've really done
very well.
" U you spray the ball here,
that 's when you get in
trouble. You have to keep it in

,.

.

"

I
..

both were found guilty of
disobeying church rules.
Wendt was found guilty
earlier this month by an
Ecclesiastical Court of
disobeying th e "Godly admonition • of his bishop by
allow ing Mrs. Cheek to
celebrate Mass last fall .
The court recommended
that Rt. Rev. William F .
Crei ghton, bishop of the
Washington diocese , admonish Wendt and "forbid
him to permit any persons
whose ordination is not in
conformity with the Canon of
the church to exercise his or
her ministry ill his church."
Wendt is appealing the
court ruling.
,
Beebe was found guilty of
violating church law by
permitting Mrs. Cheek and
an other woman priest to
celebrate Communion in his
church.
Mrs. Cheek said her first
sacramental celebration at'
St. Stephen's will be irregular
beca use Bishop Creighton
refused her request for a
transfer from the diocese of
Virginia to the diocese of
Washington .
"I don't !mow if I will be
charged," she said, "but I
hope so. Then maybe we can
get a ruling from the church
court.
"Right now I 'm sort of in
limbo."

CARDS SIGN TWO
GRUEN SIGNS
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Kelly
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP I) Paris and David Oliver,
- Hard-hitting, high-scoring selected by the St. Louis
left winger Danny Gruen Cardinals earlier this month
signed a four-year contract in baseball's free agent draft,
Tuesday with the World - Tuesday signed contracts
Associat ion with the club.
Hoc key
Cleveland Crusaders.
Paris , a 17-year-old
Gruen , 23, played for the shortstop from Taft High
Detroit Red Wings hefore School in Woodland Hills,
jumping to Michigan of the Calif., was the Cardinals'
WHA, where he totaled 19 second choice in the draft.
goals, 47 points and 94 penalty
Oliver, an 18-year-old
minutes in 66 games.
righthanded pitcher from
Fairview Heights, Ill., at•
tended Belleville East High
School. He was 8-5 this year
B-W TO HOST MEET
with an earned ruh average
CLEVELAND (UPI)
The United States and Africa of 0.87 and 149 strikeouts in 89
will compete in a major track innings. He was named to the
and field competition at Illinois All-State baseball
Baldwin-Wallace College in team.
Both players will be
Berea, Ohio,- it- was anassigned
to the Sarasota
nounced Tuesday.
Ollan Cassell, executive team in the rookie Gulf Coast,.
director of the Amateur League.
Athletic Union and a former
Olympic gold medalist for the
United States, made the
announcement here.

dimactic (or him.
capable of wummg the in"This is it, " said Haas, dividual title, which Strange
''last week was just a little took by one shot last year
extra.
over Florida 's Gary Koch and
Haas, as do many others, · Phil Hancock .
believes this year's title will
Other teams mentioned by
be decided betw ee n his Haddock as possible winners
Deacons and Florida .
are
Oklahoma
State ,
But Wake Forest coach Houston , Southern Cal,
Jesse Haddock sees as many. Brigham Young, Georgia
as ten teams with a chance to Southern, Alabama and
win, and at least 20 to 25 Indiana . Haddock said he
particularly liked
the
Hoosiers' chances .

Racine A-s
in 2 wins

In Racine-Syracuse little
the fairway ."
league action Tuesday night
Southern California's Craig the Racine A-« blasted out 26
Stadler, one of fow- Walker hi ts and downed the Racine B
CUp playe rs and one of two squad 23-8. Jay Rees was the
U.S. Amateur champions in winning pitcher and helped
the field, sees it another way, his own cause by hitting two
however. ·
tripl es and two singles. Zane
Burly Craig, who won the Beegle had 2 homers and a
Amateur at lverness in triple , Bob Bill Lee a triple,
Toledo in his only other Ohio double , and two singles. while
appearance , says it's more Wayne Lyons had a home
important to hit the greens. run .
"The fairway rough isn't so
Melanie Wees was charged
bad," Stadler said, "but you with the loss for the B learn.
A perfect Keepsake diamond
aren't going to get close to the Hitters for the B squad were brilliant and beautiful foreve r.
hole out of that stuff around Pete Rubinson with a homer.
the green."
and J. Gheen had 2 singles.
Defending individual
In a makeup game the A-«
champion Curtis Strang e, defeated the B-s, 6-4. Hitters
who, along with Jay Haas for the B-« were C. Hupp with
leads Wake Forest's attempt a homer and a single, and
to defend its title, called the Kent Wolfe had 2 triples and a
Scarlet course "one of the single. The winning pitcher
longest and narrowest of any was John Porter and the
I' ve played."
losing pitcher was C. Hupp.
Haas, who tied with Alaba- With these two wins, the A-s&gt;
ma's Jerry Pate for low are tKl with 3 games left to
amateur honors in last play. Next game will be at
week's U.S. Open , insists the Syracuse against the Braves A~-------~
NCAA will not be anti - at 6 p. m . .
AII'ICII tr0111 1100 to 110,000

Church trial is
wanted by priest
ANNANDALE, Va. (UP!)
- The Rev. Alison Cheek, one
of 11 women whose ordination
into the Episcopal priesthood
is being challenged by church
elders, says she will
cele bra te Mass · at a
Washington church this
summer in hopes of receiving
a full church triaL
Mrs . Cheek said Tuesday
she will serve as a parish
priest at St. Stephen's
Episcopal
Church
in
Washington this summer.
and said she expects her
celebration of Mass to spur a
full hearing on her church
status.
"The case would go to the
church court and I would
finally get due process," she
said. "I don 't know if I would
win, but the church would
have to make itself clear if it
believes women are inferior .
"There is absolutely no
way to treat me as an inferior
being," she, added. "I was
made a full member when
baptized."
. The Episcopal Church has
not resolved the problem of
'women priests, and last
'July's ordination of the 11
:women was challenged by the
church's house of bishops.
The challenge resulted in
church trials for the rector of
St.. Stephen's, Rev. William
A. Wendt, and Rev. Peter L.
Beebe of Oberlin, Ohio, and

;

I

g . ab. r .
Mad lck. Ch 69

279
229
245
291
217
187
169
307
295

Morgn , Cn 66
Watson , Ho 66
Cash . Ph il 70
Sa n g ln , Pt 61
Bo w a . P hi l 4.:1
Smi th . St. L d7
Garvy. LA 73
Rose . Ci n 71
Gr iff ey . Cn 58 1~

42
48
31
49
23
21

27
.:12
46
.:10

h.
99
81
84
99
72
61
Sd
98
9A
58

Ca rw . Mnn 61 221 39
Lynn, Bas 60 220 45
Mu n s n . NY 65 255 40

·NAME BRAND SHOES

I

AUDITIONS
NATURALIZERS
FANFARES
JOLENE
VOGUE

I
I
j

I
II

DRESS &amp;CASUAL

I
I

PORTABLE
VALUES TO

II

Ha~ 3-way power , Play on e lectric
or battery or u~e in your ca r!
Auto-

e

H isle . Mnn 58 220 34
Yount. Mil 58 224 32

Wash . Oak 70 270 37

83 .307

Ha rgrv , Tx 60 206 39

.376
.345
. 341
.340
.3 14
.308

I

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES
t
BETTY OHLINGER

MUNSEY

•s••

BETTER
SHOES

PAIR

Values to $8.99 &amp; $9 .99
ladies' spring and summer
styles. Sandals. casual and
dress. Good run of sizes .
Save now.

Save 50 Pet. now,
clean up group Charm
Step. HI Brow ladles'
better footwear . Good
se lection of styles .
Broken sizes. Shop ..
early for best selec tion . Stiffler's can save

PR.

asst . styles . Shop early
for .best selection.

.......... . .

you money .

FOOTWEAR
1 OFF

,.,. ~Gym -. Ox~ords
, f\eg .
S3.99
value
American made· youths ·
boys . men's gym oxfords .
All sizes . Stock up no v at
this low . low Stl1fler
price. We can save you

REG.
PRICE

$19.96

150

e

$399

e

5

11''

HEC:K'5 REG.

4.96

G.E. BABY FOOD

WARMING DISH

e One step preparation- heats baby's dinner to serving
temperature. e Eliminates fussing with hot water- no
extra containers needed . Suction bottom helps avoid tipping . e Immersible, easy.Cieaning. e Detochable cord. e

JIWII.RY

•r.

·- ~-,_

$27.96

JIWEI.RY DEPT.

'I''

e

G.E. BABY FOOD
WARMING SET

• H1gh ve loci ty airflow

Heats baby'~ ~nti re meal automotically- ~ignol lr ght indicat e ~ whe_n
foo d i ~ heated .
Keep~ food wa rm all lhrough l~t:d1119 alter w rd ·~
detached.
Suction bottom nelp~ prevent spills.
lmm er ~i ble for easy
cleani ng.
Ciloice ol 3 coole r ~, blu~ . pink , o r yel low .

e

e

e

e

SJ]''

d e~ign plu~

700 wolh for lo; t drying ond ~ tyling , •

e Veoofile- - great lor th e en tire fa mily . e Stylmg Bru~h. Wide Comb
ond Regul"ar Comb Attochmenh . r 5ilopmg Comb A cte~~ory * ~n ap'
in to styli ng bru ~ n to form t r i · ~Cc ti o n flar e brvsh . e Two ·woy ileo t on d
air/low con tr"ol: '' Dry" ~e t t1ng lo1 high il eal and 011 Ilow . " Style" ~ett i n g
lor low ileal and gentle airflow . e Delivers mo re than 30 cubic lee1 ol a ir
per min ute . e Protective ~t r ecn in in loke grille.

-

15

5

HECK'S REG.

;'II\

99

HECK'S
REG.

$16.96
JIWII.RY DIJIT.

$19.96

JEWII.RY

D2

D4

.

HICK'S REG.

$3.99

JEWii.RY

HECK'S REG.

JEWELRY DEPT.

%PRICE
~~r~ur•r.

s1988

HECK'S
REG. '5.99

COSTUME JEWELRY
JEWELBOX
.
EAIIIICS-IKILACES-IIACII.m
Perfect place to put earringsc and rings

.99

OVEN-BROILER

Co mpact toaster-baker-broiler fits into countertop corners,
yet handles big hun gry· size jobs. Two heating ele m~n t s, top
a nd bottom. wi th respe&lt;tive cord connections_Two position
em.y-sl ide troy, variable thermo state to 500 degrees. Con·
Hnuous cleaning.

e

$11.96

·.I

SELF-CLEANING

ALARM CLOCK

HECK'S REG.

7558

MUNSEY

TRAVEL

Automatic " pop-up'' toast cor ·
rioge and wid e toa st slots fo r easy
removal ol loo~l or toaster pa ~·
tries.
Ad justable toa st color se t·
tings lor wide rongll" of loa! I color.
Swing ·open cru mb troy lor ea sy ·
cl ean ing .
Compact mode rn de ·
sign ~tyl e d in c.h rome wlih b la ck
end ponel~ .
To a~h one or lwo
sl ice~ of b read .

e

DH14

•r.

.

REBUILT
TELEPHONES

An extension dial phone in every r'oom ot every desk o nd
even outdoOrs ... One time cost and· th ose e ndless rental
charges ore eliminated , .. no mad dashes into the house, up
or down stairs, or the opposite end of th e home'or facto ry to
answer your phone!
...

sg••
HECK'S
REG.

$14.96

PDl

WRIST RADIO ·

Wear it like a watch . lightweight mini sjze (only 2" in

diameter). AM radio has exceptiona ll y fine tone. Rad io is
mounted on th e latest style rem ovable wide wrist bOnd.
Operates on 1 Penl ite battery (included) . Comes in block

only .

$7''

HECK'S REG.

$11.99

IEWII.Rr IIII'T.

PAIR

STIFFLER'S SHOE SALE

McCall's, Kwik - Se~, Simplicity Patterns
Pomeroy, Ohio

JEWELRY DEPT.

MEN'S, BOYS', YOUTHS', AMERICAN MADE

NEW SINGER ATHENA

992-2284

$1.29

PRICE

$129.96

JEWElRY DEPT. ·

JEWII.RY DIJIT.

sa••

HECK'S REG.

OFF
REG.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

Available in yellow.

REGULAR 3.99 VALUE ,

money .

The Fabric Shop

1

sgg••

, S - J~499

Tl7

SAVE 50% ON THIS LOTI

FOOTWEAR

DEHUMIDIFIER

Thi s G.E. Dehumidifier removes damag in g moisture from
th e a ir caused by excess hum idi_ty in the home. The cabinet is
steel wi th o b rown, poin ted cabinet wi th a w hite gri ll.

Handso me wa ll clock with 2
curio she lve s.

e

BIIUY IJ9T.

JEWEL BOXES

ONE LARGE GROUP LADIES'
CHARM STEP AND HI BROW

GENERAL ELECTRIC 14 PINT

SHELVES

TOASTER

·ANTIMONY

PAIR

brands. Cl ean up for summer.

SPECIAL CLEANUP GROUP

sizes t

Famous

Save big now. Be here early
for best selection.

SPRING &amp;SUMMER LADIES'

Big Clean-Up Group of
ch il dren, boys · girls.
footwear. Save 50 Pet .

footwear .

Charm Step and Hi Brow

DOESN'T INCLUDE FOREIGN FILM

JEWI.ERY DEPT.

WITH CURIO

G.E. 2-SLICE

$14.56

20 EXPOSURE

THIS OFFER IN EFFECT
THRU SUNDAY 13th ONLY
JEWELRY DEPT.

VW7C03

HECK'S REG.

$319

ONLY

WALL CLOCK

$11.96

F78W

Fash ion ladles' spring and
su mmer

VALUES TO $10.99 AND $11.99 .
SUMMER CLEARANCE GROUP

BOYS &amp; GIRLS
SPECIAL LOT

.99

~=-..
· - -----

$15.88

IEWII.RY DEPT.

· . ·;;···:rs~11"
f.::._ __ ---~

12 EXPOSURE

••

HECK'S
REG.

JIWII.RY IJ9T.

Two Iro ns in o ne--swi t&lt;he ~ from steam fa dry 01 o pnm ol o b utton.
DUREV ER' Cordse l- i~ heal residant, will not lroy, croc~ . or pf!el in
no rma l use, and has little tendency to ta ngle o r kink . 39 Stemm Vents - For
overall stea m distributio n- mo re iron ing eme. "Wrap &amp; Re 1ot" Heel Ba rIn creases iron stab ility on ironil)g board and double s a s o convenient
mean!. lor cord storage . Water Window- Shows water level a t a g lan ce.
Color styled in white with Blue GE Double Non- Slick coated soleplate.
Fa b ric Gu i de- aid~ in se lecting the proper fibe·r or Iabrie neat seth ng s

$219

Compocl sty lin~. Solid·stole design. 4" dynomic speak·

HECK'S REG.

G.E. STEAM IRON

ft ~b(_"-'
p
. '""}

•"

er . Woke-to-music contro l. Lorge, easy· to-read clock
face ,

$7,' '

JEWELRY DEPT.

ONLY

C242S

AM CLOCK RADIO

Fully automa tic. Turm itself off when the con is finished
cutting . Easy " click ' n clean" breakdown for deeming .

••

--

GENERAL ELECTRIC

AUTOMATIC CAN OPENER

HECK'S REG. •9.99

SPRING &amp; SUMMER LADIES'

SHOES

now . · ·sroken

SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE

••

VANWYCK

CADDY

VALUES TOWU9 AND $14.99
CLEANUP GRou·p

SPRitllG &amp; SUMMER

( Base d on mos1 victories)

YARD

: /· -..~I

Big 6 12 quort copocity wi lh
lih ·out deep fry bo~ket. Also
re mov a ble alumi num l• y well,
co n veni e nt pou ri ng ~ pau L
Tru ly one of tile mo~t versolile,
easy to clean, easy to use
cooker -lryers eve r de~gned .
Avocado in (o lor .

sa••

Starts Thurs. June 26

VALUES TO $8.99 AND $9.99
CLOSEOUT LOT OF LADIES'

Stolen Ba ses

2

-

DEEP FRYER

l . ~!~~~~-----· --------~~E~~Y, OHI,O I

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TIL 8 PM

National
League : MorQa n ,
Cin and Cedeno. Hou 31 ; L o~es ,
LA .26 ; Brock, St .L 25 ; Lint z,

98

$24 .99

JEWII.IRY DEPT.

Meet ihe Zip Polaroid . Adds convenience to the picture tak ing fun
The Zip u~e$o new eosy·to·use coo ·
te rten 1 bloc~ &amp; wh ite fi lm. fea ture &gt;
a photometer which ~oys " ye ~' ' . f or
li g ht selling ou ldooa &amp; on inex ·
p ensive Ag· 1 tl o~n bu lb for ind ean. C a m~ro IS complete with o
rich
gro •n finish .

LADIES SHOE SALE

KODACOLOR FILM
DEVELOPING

HECK'S REG .

$24.99

ZIP CAMERA

~a .

A large selection of heather
and printed colors. 60" wide .
Regul ar S3 .98 yard, now . .. . ·

HECK'S REG.

46F3

SUMMER CLEARANCE

Americ an Leag ue : Lynn, Bas
and Nett les, N Y 51 ; Horton ,
Det and Scott. Mil 48 : McRae,
t&lt; c 45 .

60" PRINTED
POLYESTER KNITS

eosy:to·read numerals on pointed forget. Bold hands accent the slyle.
Full swee p second hand . Ope rolt's up too lull year on one ''(" si2e
bo lle ry,

size bonery.

IEWII.RY DEPT.

2 PR. FOR $500

Starts Thurs., June 26

Runs Batted In
Nat ional 'Leag ue : Benc h . Cin
61 . Luzin ski, P h il 53; Simmons ,
St. L 49 ; Per ez, Cin and Watson ,

Blue , Oak 10-5 ; Tianl, Bos and
Rya n , Ca l 10 -6.

18 ~~ " high, l 5 !-';" w ide, 2 11~ " deep. Has o repl ica o l c lronlu~r gun
re~t ing 011 its pegs ne•t loa morhmonship meda l. Clock ha s lo"rge

SJ799 SJ799

TAPE

14 .

Nat iona l Lea gue ; Messer s ·
milh, L A 11 -3 ; Sutton. L A 11 -6;
Seaver , NY and Jones, SD 10..4 ;
Gu llett. G in 9-3 .
Americ an· L eague : Palm e r ,
Ball 12-3 ; Hunter . NY 1J .6 ;
Kaa t. Chi 10-4 ; Busby, K C and

"C~

HECK'S REG. $59.96

De l and Bur roughs, Tex 15 ;
L ynn , Bas and Hend r ick, Clev

Pitching

up to a full yea r on one

SAVE ON

WALL CLOCK

$11.96

P itt 13
Amer ican L ea gue : Bonds. NY
and J ackson . Oak 16 ; Horton ,

Mfl 17 .
American L eague : Rivers ,
Cal 39 : Ot is, KC 29 ; washing .
ton , Oak 26 : R em y , Cal and
Pa tek , KC and North , Oa k 19.

Ope rate ~

CF65

MeR a . KC 69 264 35 81 .307
Md d x.NY 55 2 18 36
67 .30 7
Whi te . N Y 58 215 44
66 .307
Home Runs
Nati onal League : Lu zinski.
Ph il 16 : Bench·. Cin 15 ; Bak er .
A tL Schmidt. P hil and Pa r ke r ,

Hou

WALL CLOCK

S47''

't

LADIES AND CHILDRENS

$300 PR. OR

e

FRONTIERSMAN

13" di amete r 4 ¥.'' deep . Ho ~ the look a nd teel 9f on o ld tapped ~ eg
heed . Bold numerals looll a s if they were burned into the borrelfwlad
large, easy-to-see ho ur and minute hand s. Full ~we ep ~e&lt;on d ha nd .

matic channel selector!
Slide rule
controls
Illumi nated chan nel lights!

I

ONE GROUP
OF
BROKEN SIZES

e

BARREL &amp; SPIGOT

HECK'S REG.

Values to $10.99 and $11.99
ladies' spring and summer
famous brand s, ladies'
footwear, good selection of
sizes and styles. Whites.
beige and other summer
colors.

W. Second

l

ONE GROUP OF LADIES SHOES
ONLY •5.00

FOOTWEAR

11 5

8-TRACK PLAYER
WITH AM-FM
RADIO
e

l

$22.00

.355
. 354
.3 43
.3 40
332
.326
)20
.319
.319
.3i9

83
76
87
70
69
69

years.
.'

II

pet.

American. L.ague
g . ab. r . h. pet.

Stop In For A Demonstration of the
fYREEGOES
Charles Tyree, convicted of.
feloneous assault, was
Q-ansported today from the
Meigs County Jiail to the
Chlllicothe
Correctional
Institution where he will
apend a sentence of 2 to 15

AT
9:00 A.M.

l
I

Major L eague L eaders
By Unit ed Press International
Leading Batters
I Ba sed on 150 at bats)
Nati Onal Le agu e

WEEKEND SALE!

l

SEMI-ANNUAL
OF

Keepsake"

'

SUITS FILED
One
dissolution
of
marmge, one divorce, and a
suit for money were filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
George W. Miller, Middleport, and Jane Miller,
Middleport, filed for a
dissolution of marriage, and
Charlene Kay Barton, Rt. 1,
Shade, filed suit for divorce
against Willlam Br11ce
Barton, Mason , charging
gross neglect of duty and ~
extreme cruelty. Carroll
Norris
Dodge,
Inc.,
Gallipolis,
filed
for
judgement In the amount of
P33.12 plus interest and costs
from Nancy L. Pope, Middleport.

1

SALE
STARTS
THURS.

(POMEROY STORE)

~I

'

.

.

·;
~:

STARTS
·THURSDAY

(MIDDLEPORT STORE)
'

I~

.'

�.

•

'

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday,June 25,1975

·PLENTY
FREE
PARKING
OMO--

/

.. I

10 TO 9

- -

OF FREE

..

·'

'

''
'

''

: · ~-

(

...

SPORT

........

~ ~

LADIES' HANDBAGS

P,olod r&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;• dtno~• lo&lt; roo• lf&gt;'in9 ond '""'"''" o'vtl•••.
btodl!d hond bo91 in btoul1fyl (Oioll ond 1t)'lu

MEN'S .
I,

·~
··:. .-

St"""

1

ond

1 '

RTS

$2''

..,r+,

.HECK' S REG. $29 .88

To $3.99

$

on ~cu• •lloppinlj hi!. Sry~d

do~p &lt; onl~r Yl!nl ,

.n.,..,

&lt;DOI1 me

1ruly c bo•90•" ot r+.il to ... P•"•· -6"e•
36-.-e r.:QuiC" ond \Ome lon&lt;jll.

culotte~ with

botk zipper and bytt on fron t
a nd ha ll size5.

HECK'S REG.

Men' • polynt~ r doubl~ ln1l 1por_1 cool\ on
,,..0 rttd lor&gt;011 ond !Oiod&gt;, w•ll plto~
f'ft ')' 1'&lt;'1011

Polyester &amp; co rron

1soo

SPORT COATS

I

CULOTTES

or1d 35°·o

Co tto n in assorted Pn nh Sut!s S·M ·l

MEN'S
DOUBLE KNIT POLYESTER

~

P o lye ~let

LAWN MOWER

LADIES'
SLEEVELESS

Spnng' ~a good time . , . to &gt;po_r+ &lt;a suo I in

the 5e ~ por t shirts. 65%

n

s·.

~ly l e~. Mi\!&gt;e~

6''
HECK'S REG.

ClDTHIIC .
DEPT.

$9.99

SHIFT &amp; SHORTS
$ ,, ·

ladies' shift s 'n short~ ore
style d jmt lor you and sum-

5

mer sun. Sleeveleu wit IT
zi pper and bu tt on fro nt

HECk'S REG.
$8.99

styles. Misses ond half r.i z·

ClDTNIIIC Df/IT.

250Jo OFF
HECK'S REG. PRICE

JACKETS
•12.88

,,

$277a

MEN'S NOVELn T-SHIRTS.
Men's novelty print tee

p,;oh.

s;,., S·M·L·Xl.

s~ ir1s . Ant.

Heck's Reg. 111.99

Clothing
Dept.

s1''

BOYS'
Wodo o&gt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;l"'tM o! boy &lt;' k~olklp• (hoo\f
h o m ~rt !Jet~ lop 01 to..., top&lt;. !oly~•
w11h number1or jo(~ rd pri~" Sir• \ ~ - 7

HECK'S REG ,

ClDTNIIIC
DE/IT.

s100

KNIT TOPS

Heck's Reg. ·
'
1
3.88

ond8 ·1B.

To $2.99

tlOTH/1/C
DE/IT.

Clothing Dept.

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.99

v

d

SET OF 4 BOSCH

BOYS'
LEISURE

'·

AUTDDIPT.

SUITS
GIRLS'

BATHING

•

'

r .

Ah.

LADIES'

8-1 8.

$488
"

I
,.

HECK'S REG.

$7.88
ClDTI/IIIf DEPT.

I
II

•f

$319

00

Choose from a beautiful selectio n of boy-girl zipper &amp; snap front . Assorted colors- aqua, maize,
white, blue, mint, yellow. Sizes- Small 0 to 141bs.
80% acetate and 20% poly.

TO

s159

53''

HECK'S REG. '2.59

HECK'S
REG.

CLOTHIIIC
DEPT.

$2.49

Cl DTN/II' DE/IT.

$188

HECK'S
REG.

TRUCK MIRROR

HECK'S REG.

ClOTI/111&amp; /JBIT.

--

$9;99
AUTD.DEPT.

COIDITIOIER
e REGULAR
e EXTRA BOOY

99c.

MEIIEI
PUSHBUnOI

DEODORANT
e CREAM
e ROLL-ON
79c

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$1.78

$1.29

COSMITICIJPT.

COSMITIC . .T.

oz.

.SO'DRY
DEODORANT
e CREAM

e ROLL•ON
CHOICE .

39!cH

HECK'S REG • .
571 EACH

COSMITit IJPT.

80Z.

·COTY

COLOGNE

PACQUIN
HAND CREAM
Medicated a nd dry .

(

$1''

HECK'S REG.

$6.00

toSAriTIC MPT.

130Z.

BRECK
HAIRSPRAY
e REGULAR
• HARO·TO-HQLD ,
e UNSCENTED

• ULTIMATE HOLD

$1.09

69C

COSMITKJIItT.

99

'

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
1

co•TJt•r.

40Z.
MEIIEI

CLAIROL

HERBAL
SHAMPOO

Reg. -Oily- Delicate

$109 EA..
HECK'S REG.

$1.69

EA.

. . COSMETIC IJPT.

e REGULAR

' e LIME

• 49CIACH

HECK'S REG.

88 1

COSIIITIC MPT.

IIDUSIWA/Jl DEI/IT.

.

7 OZ. LYSOL

...... .u~·

SPRAY

77&lt;

IIDI/SIWA.

-1.

'

.

RURAL
( POST NOT INCLUDED)

$299
HECK'S REG. $6 .24

HARDWARE DEPT.

RALLY CONCENTRATE

VALVOLINE 10W40 OR
QUAKER STATE 10W30 SUPER BLEND

CAR WASH

MOTOR OIL

59&lt;

SJOO

HECK'S REG .

I:IECK'S REG.

99'
AUTO. DEPT.

$1.88
AUTDDEPT.

UNION CARBIDE

JOHNSONS

INTERIOR CLEANER

77&lt;

39&lt;

HECK'S REG. $1.09

FOR

AUTD.DEPT.

· 7 PC. TEFLON II SET
Here is new beauty in poppy and avocado for your
kitchen. You' ll en joy cooking with th e Teflon II, 7 piece
cookware set.

Heck's

Heck's
Reg. 59'

2

HECK'S REG. 89'

32 oz.

SJOO

OIL TREATMENT

.SJOO

BATHROOM TISS
2 ROLLPKG.

L.IT l ..GS. (610LLS)
3 PKGS.

(6 ROlLS)

$799

Pkg.
of
4

HECK'S
REG •

$16.88
.HDUSEWARE DEPT.

$ ~~~

...

,.,, ,

SETOF6 '

Housewares

MIRROR
TILE
'

The mirror tile comes m ploin mirror, gold
~ei" mirror, end ~moked gold vein mi rr or .

Dept.

$100

'

STEEL

HARDWARE DEPT.

3 PIS. (9 1415)

· HECK'S REG. $1 .04

HDUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $14.88

PACK Of llliS

..
•I

WITH APPLICATOR TOP
"THE HALF HOUR
C.A I WAX"

HICK'S RIG. 52' PKG.

DISINFECTANT

GALLON

HECK'S REG.
$6 .28 GAL.

MULTI-TORCH

12 oz.

RALLY CREAM WAX

3tor

HECK'S REG. $1.46

SKIN BRACER
ELECTRIC
PRE-SHAVE

$1.18
AUTD. DEPT.

Detergent

$119

');)0,

466

FLEXI-FIRE

AUTD. DEPT.

WALL WASHER
.) J ;) 0 0

2

79'
AUTD.DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 59 1

BIG WALLY
)

HECK'S REG.

POLISH

\

$

fh .. fl~" lo&lt; t 1.11 cont&lt;&gt;on\ Up·' '""' llcmo con
hoi •oloc ,. ,1~ onol&lt;led g rtp ( h ll., lbl• ko• ~
ho~ l cyl,nder •ci&gt;O ~~"I &lt;)l •nde&lt; "'"" l&lt;&gt;&lt;m
•uppnn Mot •~ · ~•eod pencol P'""l 1 p 8' '"'
od&lt;&gt;Pie• 1.,, •lund&lt;&gt;&lt;d ...,1.., 11p1

CHROME CLEANER

fih C~ mpeu, P ic~ ups, Step Vons, ele. Co mpe r 7"
wi de loo d extension orm incl uded . Fully o~~m · •
"led. Fih right or left side.
..,

•

--·
-

V.W. ASSORTED
FUSES

JOHNSONS ·

$566

$3.88

@

-...

HARDWA/Jl DEPr.

. HECK'S REG.

'

LO-MOUNT

Pcunt goe1 on w1th lrttle or no dnp pmg or
~pla !t e r Lo w p11n~d yet du ro i:Jie G1vl!s
un\u rp o;~ed proteclron ogarn~ t t he "II! ·
men!\ Whr le ond love colo r~

$899 .

AUTO. DEPT.

lodies love the comf~rtoble wear and good ·
looks of the multi-color embroidery tops.
Gr.eat for dres·s slacks or jeans, with the solid
color backgrOund. Round neck with short
deeve. Sizes S·M· l.

Cl.tJTI/IIIf /JBIT.

$10.99

$6.99
HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $5.99

T-SHIRTS

BABY
SLEEPERS

HECK'S REG.
To$14.99

c.:::.
.......

WELLA
BALSAM
I

yes~~'~ !~h ;I &lt;O~S $'

HECK'S REG.

o.::" .. K'S REG.

$299

LADIES'

200Z.

80Z.

I

GIRLS'
SHORTS

TAILPIPE KIT

NYLON

$644

ss44
V.W. OIL CHANGE
GASKET SET

HECK'S HOUSE PAINT

MAIL BOX

14 oz.

v.w.

Comfortable boys' denim lei·
sure suits with western styled
jacket ond je an pant s. Size
8-18.

~wimm ing and outdoor od1v1ly . Start
the semon off with o br ight, new bo·
thing suit. Heck\ ho~ bikini\ ond one
piece ~uits for g irl s in assorted styles
ond colors. Size\ 4 ·6~ a nd 8 · 14 .

FASHION PANTS
Cotton plaid, &amp; polyester knit. Styled
with puH on waist 8. zip lront~ . Si~e~

'

HECK'S REG.
$4.77 SET

HOUSEWAIIIDEPT.

TOOLBOX

48&lt;

$2?!.

4

GALLON

GALLON

$6.48
HAIDWA/Jl DEPT.

V.W. SPARK PLUGS

HECK'S REG.

$6.68 GALLON

MOBILE HOME
TRAILER
ROOF COATING

HECK'S REG.

'

.• ,,.,..,

HARDWARE DEPT.

$444

\

HECK'S PREMIUM WALL PAINT
$ 99

Tho '" P..n ol •~• lktl"" " ""' 11•d•"•· Q..(.ltty lot•• .. .,~
po1~1 (WQi lble rn " wrde ~•&lt;lion ol dt &lt;o r&lt;&gt;lo r rl\od.. .
pkn wM... to "''' oftyo.,.' l knlw . lh11 wn~ '""''"'" &lt;O'&lt;&lt;H
mol! &lt;nlorr w-h jUII o~~t coo t. porn!'" lht "'"'""'II· portr
rn lf&gt;o e''"'"ll· Cmnpn,. HE(I("S PUM IUM w~k ony
ort..r .,.,11 pornl ol on, prou ·. YOU wtll bo pltotoMir

GALLON

SCREW DRIVERS

:1

s299

eoily applied lat ex wall po1n t ... dvrol:. l ~: ,
o tt racti11e . . . your sa tisfac tion is guoron ·

8-PIECE SET

Heck's Reg. 117.99

Matching
Pants
•8.88

A "better i:Juy" a t Hec k's .. choose from
ten modern colon plus two whi t e~ in this

HECK'S REG.
$3.99 GAL.

Ladies

Cotton
Sleepwear

HECK'S LATEX WALL PAINT
"'d.

HARDWARE DEPT.

LEISURE SUIT
COORDINATES
,'

WHEELS

LADIES

�.

•

'

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday,June 25,1975

·PLENTY
FREE
PARKING
OMO--

/

.. I

10 TO 9

- -

OF FREE

..

·'

'

''
'

''

: · ~-

(

...

SPORT

........

~ ~

LADIES' HANDBAGS

P,olod r&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;• dtno~• lo&lt; roo• lf&gt;'in9 ond '""'"''" o'vtl•••.
btodl!d hond bo91 in btoul1fyl (Oioll ond 1t)'lu

MEN'S .
I,

·~
··:. .-

St"""

1

ond

1 '

RTS

$2''

..,r+,

.HECK' S REG. $29 .88

To $3.99

$

on ~cu• •lloppinlj hi!. Sry~d

do~p &lt; onl~r Yl!nl ,

.n.,..,

&lt;DOI1 me

1ruly c bo•90•" ot r+.il to ... P•"•· -6"e•
36-.-e r.:QuiC" ond \Ome lon&lt;jll.

culotte~ with

botk zipper and bytt on fron t
a nd ha ll size5.

HECK'S REG.

Men' • polynt~ r doubl~ ln1l 1por_1 cool\ on
,,..0 rttd lor&gt;011 ond !Oiod&gt;, w•ll plto~
f'ft ')' 1'&lt;'1011

Polyester &amp; co rron

1soo

SPORT COATS

I

CULOTTES

or1d 35°·o

Co tto n in assorted Pn nh Sut!s S·M ·l

MEN'S
DOUBLE KNIT POLYESTER

~

P o lye ~let

LAWN MOWER

LADIES'
SLEEVELESS

Spnng' ~a good time . , . to &gt;po_r+ &lt;a suo I in

the 5e ~ por t shirts. 65%

n

s·.

~ly l e~. Mi\!&gt;e~

6''
HECK'S REG.

ClDTHIIC .
DEPT.

$9.99

SHIFT &amp; SHORTS
$ ,, ·

ladies' shift s 'n short~ ore
style d jmt lor you and sum-

5

mer sun. Sleeveleu wit IT
zi pper and bu tt on fro nt

HECk'S REG.
$8.99

styles. Misses ond half r.i z·

ClDTNIIIC Df/IT.

250Jo OFF
HECK'S REG. PRICE

JACKETS
•12.88

,,

$277a

MEN'S NOVELn T-SHIRTS.
Men's novelty print tee

p,;oh.

s;,., S·M·L·Xl.

s~ ir1s . Ant.

Heck's Reg. 111.99

Clothing
Dept.

s1''

BOYS'
Wodo o&gt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;l"'tM o! boy &lt;' k~olklp• (hoo\f
h o m ~rt !Jet~ lop 01 to..., top&lt;. !oly~•
w11h number1or jo(~ rd pri~" Sir• \ ~ - 7

HECK'S REG ,

ClDTNIIIC
DE/IT.

s100

KNIT TOPS

Heck's Reg. ·
'
1
3.88

ond8 ·1B.

To $2.99

tlOTH/1/C
DE/IT.

Clothing Dept.

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.99

v

d

SET OF 4 BOSCH

BOYS'
LEISURE

'·

AUTDDIPT.

SUITS
GIRLS'

BATHING

•

'

r .

Ah.

LADIES'

8-1 8.

$488
"

I
,.

HECK'S REG.

$7.88
ClDTI/IIIf DEPT.

I
II

•f

$319

00

Choose from a beautiful selectio n of boy-girl zipper &amp; snap front . Assorted colors- aqua, maize,
white, blue, mint, yellow. Sizes- Small 0 to 141bs.
80% acetate and 20% poly.

TO

s159

53''

HECK'S REG. '2.59

HECK'S
REG.

CLOTHIIIC
DEPT.

$2.49

Cl DTN/II' DE/IT.

$188

HECK'S
REG.

TRUCK MIRROR

HECK'S REG.

ClOTI/111&amp; /JBIT.

--

$9;99
AUTD.DEPT.

COIDITIOIER
e REGULAR
e EXTRA BOOY

99c.

MEIIEI
PUSHBUnOI

DEODORANT
e CREAM
e ROLL-ON
79c

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$1.78

$1.29

COSMITICIJPT.

COSMITIC . .T.

oz.

.SO'DRY
DEODORANT
e CREAM

e ROLL•ON
CHOICE .

39!cH

HECK'S REG • .
571 EACH

COSMITit IJPT.

80Z.

·COTY

COLOGNE

PACQUIN
HAND CREAM
Medicated a nd dry .

(

$1''

HECK'S REG.

$6.00

toSAriTIC MPT.

130Z.

BRECK
HAIRSPRAY
e REGULAR
• HARO·TO-HQLD ,
e UNSCENTED

• ULTIMATE HOLD

$1.09

69C

COSMITKJIItT.

99

'

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
1

co•TJt•r.

40Z.
MEIIEI

CLAIROL

HERBAL
SHAMPOO

Reg. -Oily- Delicate

$109 EA..
HECK'S REG.

$1.69

EA.

. . COSMETIC IJPT.

e REGULAR

' e LIME

• 49CIACH

HECK'S REG.

88 1

COSIIITIC MPT.

IIDUSIWA/Jl DEI/IT.

.

7 OZ. LYSOL

...... .u~·

SPRAY

77&lt;

IIDI/SIWA.

-1.

'

.

RURAL
( POST NOT INCLUDED)

$299
HECK'S REG. $6 .24

HARDWARE DEPT.

RALLY CONCENTRATE

VALVOLINE 10W40 OR
QUAKER STATE 10W30 SUPER BLEND

CAR WASH

MOTOR OIL

59&lt;

SJOO

HECK'S REG .

I:IECK'S REG.

99'
AUTO. DEPT.

$1.88
AUTDDEPT.

UNION CARBIDE

JOHNSONS

INTERIOR CLEANER

77&lt;

39&lt;

HECK'S REG. $1.09

FOR

AUTD.DEPT.

· 7 PC. TEFLON II SET
Here is new beauty in poppy and avocado for your
kitchen. You' ll en joy cooking with th e Teflon II, 7 piece
cookware set.

Heck's

Heck's
Reg. 59'

2

HECK'S REG. 89'

32 oz.

SJOO

OIL TREATMENT

.SJOO

BATHROOM TISS
2 ROLLPKG.

L.IT l ..GS. (610LLS)
3 PKGS.

(6 ROlLS)

$799

Pkg.
of
4

HECK'S
REG •

$16.88
.HDUSEWARE DEPT.

$ ~~~

...

,.,, ,

SETOF6 '

Housewares

MIRROR
TILE
'

The mirror tile comes m ploin mirror, gold
~ei" mirror, end ~moked gold vein mi rr or .

Dept.

$100

'

STEEL

HARDWARE DEPT.

3 PIS. (9 1415)

· HECK'S REG. $1 .04

HDUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $14.88

PACK Of llliS

..
•I

WITH APPLICATOR TOP
"THE HALF HOUR
C.A I WAX"

HICK'S RIG. 52' PKG.

DISINFECTANT

GALLON

HECK'S REG.
$6 .28 GAL.

MULTI-TORCH

12 oz.

RALLY CREAM WAX

3tor

HECK'S REG. $1.46

SKIN BRACER
ELECTRIC
PRE-SHAVE

$1.18
AUTD. DEPT.

Detergent

$119

');)0,

466

FLEXI-FIRE

AUTD. DEPT.

WALL WASHER
.) J ;) 0 0

2

79'
AUTD.DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 59 1

BIG WALLY
)

HECK'S REG.

POLISH

\

$

fh .. fl~" lo&lt; t 1.11 cont&lt;&gt;on\ Up·' '""' llcmo con
hoi •oloc ,. ,1~ onol&lt;led g rtp ( h ll., lbl• ko• ~
ho~ l cyl,nder •ci&gt;O ~~"I &lt;)l •nde&lt; "'"" l&lt;&gt;&lt;m
•uppnn Mot •~ · ~•eod pencol P'""l 1 p 8' '"'
od&lt;&gt;Pie• 1.,, •lund&lt;&gt;&lt;d ...,1.., 11p1

CHROME CLEANER

fih C~ mpeu, P ic~ ups, Step Vons, ele. Co mpe r 7"
wi de loo d extension orm incl uded . Fully o~~m · •
"led. Fih right or left side.
..,

•

--·
-

V.W. ASSORTED
FUSES

JOHNSONS ·

$566

$3.88

@

-...

HARDWA/Jl DEPr.

. HECK'S REG.

'

LO-MOUNT

Pcunt goe1 on w1th lrttle or no dnp pmg or
~pla !t e r Lo w p11n~d yet du ro i:Jie G1vl!s
un\u rp o;~ed proteclron ogarn~ t t he "II! ·
men!\ Whr le ond love colo r~

$899 .

AUTO. DEPT.

lodies love the comf~rtoble wear and good ·
looks of the multi-color embroidery tops.
Gr.eat for dres·s slacks or jeans, with the solid
color backgrOund. Round neck with short
deeve. Sizes S·M· l.

Cl.tJTI/IIIf /JBIT.

$10.99

$6.99
HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $5.99

T-SHIRTS

BABY
SLEEPERS

HECK'S REG.
To$14.99

c.:::.
.......

WELLA
BALSAM
I

yes~~'~ !~h ;I &lt;O~S $'

HECK'S REG.

o.::" .. K'S REG.

$299

LADIES'

200Z.

80Z.

I

GIRLS'
SHORTS

TAILPIPE KIT

NYLON

$644

ss44
V.W. OIL CHANGE
GASKET SET

HECK'S HOUSE PAINT

MAIL BOX

14 oz.

v.w.

Comfortable boys' denim lei·
sure suits with western styled
jacket ond je an pant s. Size
8-18.

~wimm ing and outdoor od1v1ly . Start
the semon off with o br ight, new bo·
thing suit. Heck\ ho~ bikini\ ond one
piece ~uits for g irl s in assorted styles
ond colors. Size\ 4 ·6~ a nd 8 · 14 .

FASHION PANTS
Cotton plaid, &amp; polyester knit. Styled
with puH on waist 8. zip lront~ . Si~e~

'

HECK'S REG.
$4.77 SET

HOUSEWAIIIDEPT.

TOOLBOX

48&lt;

$2?!.

4

GALLON

GALLON

$6.48
HAIDWA/Jl DEPT.

V.W. SPARK PLUGS

HECK'S REG.

$6.68 GALLON

MOBILE HOME
TRAILER
ROOF COATING

HECK'S REG.

'

.• ,,.,..,

HARDWARE DEPT.

$444

\

HECK'S PREMIUM WALL PAINT
$ 99

Tho '" P..n ol •~• lktl"" " ""' 11•d•"•· Q..(.ltty lot•• .. .,~
po1~1 (WQi lble rn " wrde ~•&lt;lion ol dt &lt;o r&lt;&gt;lo r rl\od.. .
pkn wM... to "''' oftyo.,.' l knlw . lh11 wn~ '""''"'" &lt;O'&lt;&lt;H
mol! &lt;nlorr w-h jUII o~~t coo t. porn!'" lht "'"'""'II· portr
rn lf&gt;o e''"'"ll· Cmnpn,. HE(I("S PUM IUM w~k ony
ort..r .,.,11 pornl ol on, prou ·. YOU wtll bo pltotoMir

GALLON

SCREW DRIVERS

:1

s299

eoily applied lat ex wall po1n t ... dvrol:. l ~: ,
o tt racti11e . . . your sa tisfac tion is guoron ·

8-PIECE SET

Heck's Reg. 117.99

Matching
Pants
•8.88

A "better i:Juy" a t Hec k's .. choose from
ten modern colon plus two whi t e~ in this

HECK'S REG.
$3.99 GAL.

Ladies

Cotton
Sleepwear

HECK'S LATEX WALL PAINT
"'d.

HARDWARE DEPT.

LEISURE SUIT
COORDINATES
,'

WHEELS

LADIES

�r- -- -- ----

'
'.

t

1~..:.. The Daily Sentinel,.Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,

N&amp;W will

Picture taker
PLENTY

OPEl DAILY

By ROBERT PENICK

ZEBCO 33
ROD &amp; REEL
COMBO

TREASURE
FINDER
Jo in A m eri&lt;o ' s exciting

Tockle to toke pride

new

dirt , ~a nd , wood , wate r,
and e... en roc k with no Ia~~
o f powe r. Detects o pe n n ~

two-piece Zebco rod.
A perfec t co mb inat io n for all -arou nd

8'x10'
'·

COLORED
CONVERSE

come~

"COACH"
TENNIS SHOES

15''

5

$4988

" So ~.~nd Ofl' ' loud
~pe oker . Ve r y p owe rfu l,

with

CABIN TENT

pe r down center o f door; two e&gt;.: tra Iorge
docr on polyester screened window s.

$ 88

HECK'S REG.
$24.88

complete, ready to

go . All !t o rn ist or . li g ht ·
we igh t: 3 lbs_ One tuue r

SPORTS OEP T.

The mmt a dva nced in mo tor d e~ i gn ond
monula(tu re o f a ll ele(lr i( li ~h in g mo t or~
It prov ides mo re po we r than convention al
e lec tr i c ~ ond is espec:iolly effective . . on d
eo~y on the batt ery . a t the lo~ &gt;~e~ds
so l requenll)' ur.cd in trolling and 1n l• ~ h1n g
~ h e re lines, weedbeds an.d shallo w wa ter,
Stort i11g , slopping, reo.oe r~ ing , speed sc lcc ·
lion and 360" pivota l stee ring are monuul

$2588
HECK'S REG.
542.99

ope•o•;o"'.

RUBBER

EVEREADY "C

Berkley
Rods

KNEE BOOTS

·Grip tread •ole ond molded heel full y lined
with strong reinforced steel shank.

BALL BATS

$888

SPINN·ING REEL

$a••

Heck's

Reg.
$}4.68

HECK'S REG .
68' PKG.

Heck's Reg. To 114.68

SPORTS DIP T.

·aERKLEY

D" SIZE

39.!.

F-21

HECK'S QO. TO $6.99

SPORTS DEPT.

CHOICE

F-30

sa••

60s.

HECK'S REG.
$79.99

BATTERIES
2 PAK

8·10

These ore limi noted $olid bamboo boll bot$.

or

EXTENDED OUTLOOK

· Friday through Sunday,
fair Friday and Saturday
and a chance of showers
Sunday. Highs will be in the
80s and lows will be in the

$49''

SPORTS DEl' T. .

Sports Dept.

SPORTS DEPT.

TROLLING MOTOR

Heck's Reg.
$13.99 Pair

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

lOSPEED

co nt ro l

PAIR

HECK'S REG. $69 .99

ROLUCKING RIDE awaits asphalt tossed around in this giant dryer at an asphalt
plant in los Angeles. Nwnerous metal shelves inside the device lift an·d tumble loose
asphalt much the same as a clothes dryer does.

to 5 inches. Dete&lt;:h sharpl y

fres h-woter fishing.

Ad jus table outside iUspension fr ame ; zip ·

hob by - Treasure

Find in g . Works through

in. The tom ous Zeb co
33 sp i nc o s t reel ,
matched wi1h the 6'

SPORTS DEPT.

'I.PLAYa
MIKI'S DILUXI

CHEESE EGGS

BADMIITOI

sn

Includes four wood shoft rackets with multi -ply nylon strung

head,, and two-color tripl,
fWo sllunlecodr.1, st.tl poles,

stakes and rop. . Pa ckaged

with &amp;hrunk o..,..rwroP1 complete with rule1 and "inlfri.IC-

ggc

'·

tions.

,

popular closed -fac e ln,h ing •eel
ever mode! Seled -D•o l drag . . Dua l
onlo · r eve r &gt;f', flo~h· harde ne ~ gears.
Li tetime Se, vice Guoron lte.

)J~

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I

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'' ,t.;. ; l..'

:~

l

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SPORTS DEPT.

,.,

wm.

STAINLESS STEEL

CHOPPER '

I

Heck's Reg.
To

.

$10.99
~

MR.1WISTER

PLASTIC

WORMS
&amp;LURES
2FOR

s 100

Aklll;~

88c

ntiiwAIIf

HECK'S REG.

191.

To 89'
EACH

ftAllJATER

·--.::- z. /.
l~~'!l··..: ' ,i : ··
"

.'
1

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• JVIr-

t.v·

ENTERPRISE
ALUMINUM
6 QI,IART

i6C

HECK'S REG .

.'

SPOITS
DEPT.

SPOilT$
Dli'T.

SI'OIIr$ Dli'T.

HECK'S REG.

88'

NOUSEwAIII
IDT.

I

! -.
...

66~

66C

$4.28

REG.

APPLE CORER
AND PEELER

AND CHOPPER &amp;
-GARNISHER
CHOICE '

f
I

i

'

.FOOD
BLANCHER

HECK'S
REG.
88c
· lHOIISlwAIII

18'

NOUSEWAII
DEPT. .

FESCO
PLASJIC
elAUNDRY BASKET
e44 QT. HAMPER

. 28 quart

FOAM COOLER
Heck's
Reg: 11.66

I

$2~4
HECK'S
REG. •3.66

NOIJSIWAIIIJI/IT.

Housewares Dept.

SCOOP
CHAIRS

PICNIC BASKET

Beautifully consfru( ted picn ic basket. Eo~i ­
ly 1-lold ~ tl1e ite ms tho! you wo uld need 0 11
on outing

Superbly comfortable, light·
weight and durable molded of
tough polypropylene plastic that

$366

is ·s1ronger thon metal.

HECK'S REG. $6.11

WATER PAIL

' $2·~~
NOUSIWAIIIIJit.

14 Quart

10-QUART

CHOICE ·'

HECK'S RIG. To $(.11'

DISHPANS

Hfll/SEWARIIJIPT.

e40 QT. WASTE BASKET

~.

94e

"! saw this big flash of fire
like the atomic bomb going
off," said Moe Friedmpn, an
airport employe who was
driving along Rockaway
Boulevard moments before
the jet crashed. He ·said the
flames leaped 500 to 600 feet.
Other people in the area
mistook the sound of the
crash for a thunderclap.
Although there was heavy
traffic in the area at the time,
no motorists were hit. A diner
waitresS said two middleaged couples who rushed into
the cafe "said they were the
· last car to get through before
the plane hit. They said they
saw it burning in the air ...
I
They were upset screaming, yelling, crying." .
Mary Mooney, 28, and
Robert Hoefler, 29, two of the
flight attendants, walked
away from thF wreckage.
They were in f•ir condition.
The other survivors, all in
critical condition, were
~verely burned. They suffered multiple fractures and
were nwnbed by shock.
The dead included the
Right Rev. Iveson B. Noland,
the Episcopal bishop of New
Orleans and Wendell Lad·
ner, the New York Nets
basketball player.
Also killed were Edgar
B!'ight Sr., a prominent New
Orleans Investment banker,
ud most of a group of 19
Norwegian seamen enroute
home for. a .vacation.
The crash site was a
~shy, unpopulated area
near the dty limits. Earlier
In Its approach pattern the jet
..ued low over a heavily
populated suburban
residential nelghborhoo4.
Pollee. Dremen and airport
employes wocked through the
mght to collect ~ remains of
the victims. They stuffed
fragments of bodies into bags

~LUMINUM

$599

HECK'S
REG • .
$9.63

DE/IT.

., :_

(Continued from page I)
just exploded and Shattered."
Paul Moran; an off~uty
policeman, said, "! saw
(lightning) hit the plane. It
hit the tail while the plane
was still in the air."
A doctor who spoke with
two of the survivors at a
"they
hospital
said
remember the plane went out
of control and it veered. Mter
that, all they remember is
they were in the hospital."

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
$5.88

HECK'S

Lightning

$288

S]33

.

1

HI&lt;:K'I RiO.
$6."

LANTERN HANGER

Attaches eosily to Colema n lanterns. Brig~t
s.toinles$ reflecto r engineered to reflect mox•mum light ovoiloble.

M o~t

IT ISN'T A NEW system for transporting eggs but a
recently~eveloped impact-absorbing cushion grid, part
of the molded plastic "soft" bumpber system designed by
General Motors. Following a low-speed collision, the
bumper pops back to it soriginal shape.

COLEMAN

LANTERN REFLKTOR

CENTURY REEL

I f "';..

.

SJ8i

Heck's Reg. 2.13

COLEMAN

JOHNSON 1008

HECK'S
REG~ •3.99
'

1101/SlWAll IIEI'T.

21. QT. CAllER

..

7 jOr Columbian porcelain wore cO"
ner. A muil for the hOme conn•rl

ss••

HECK'S RIG. $8.99

llfJIIUWAH /JEI'T. ·

.

i .
'

clean up

shot by Guard

OF FREE

10 TO 9

J

..'

I

and stored them in a yellow
morgue tent to await identification.
· Crowds of curious passersby jammed the site for hours
after the crash, clogging
some of the roads used by
rescue equipment. Five
people "considered potential
thieves" were arrested for
impersonating law officers.
Frank Bonnan, the former
astronaut who is president of
Eastern Airlines, flew in
from Boston to inspect the
scene.
"In my career in aviation,
which spans 32 years," he
said, "I've seen a lot of accidents. This plane was in
several pieces. It was a real
bad crash."
Van Epps, the NTSB supervisor, said there were only
two cases in commercial
airline history -both in the
early 1960s - in which
lightning had been determined as the cause of
crashes.
He said the jet's voice and
flight recorders, both of
which were recovered intact,
have been sent to Washington
for immediate analysis in an
NTSB laboratory.
MIAMI ( UPI ) - A list of
crew
members
and
passengers aboard Eastern
Airlines Flight 66 from New
Orleans which crashed in
New York, as furnished ~Y
the airline, includes:
Crew
Capt. John W. Kleven
First Officer · William S.
Eberhart
SecondOfficerG.M. Geurin
Senior Flight Attendant .
Maureeri Davis
Flight Attendant Robert M.
Hoefler
Flight Attendant Mary
Ellen Mooney
Flight Attendant Jackie
Lindsay
Passengers
I. M. Andre
2. Mrs. Andre
3. Alexandridis
4. D; Abbate
5. J. Alban
6. A. Aluned
7.Mr. Berlind
8. Mrs. Berlind
9. Berlind-ehild
'10. Berlind-ehild
. 11. E. Bright
12. Mrs. K Bright
13. Mr. Boyer
H. Mrs. Boyer
1s: E. Bijio
.16. R. Bijio

CLEVELAND (UP!)
Jolm R. Cleary was standing
by a metal sculpture on the
Kent State University
campus, deciding to take a
photograph of Ohio National
Guardsmen marching off
Blanket Hill, when several
Guardsmen wheeled and
fired.
One bullet struck him in the
left chest, inches from the
heart and lungs, he testified
Tuesday in the $4 7 million
Kent State civil trial.
Cleary, 24, of Pittsburgh,
was !he 27th witness called in
the nearly six-week-old triaL
He was the ninth and last of
the students wounded May 4,
1970, to testify.
Cleary testified he was not
politically involved and
merely went to a noon rally
on the commons area of the
KSU campus to see what
happened and take a few
pictures.
As Guardsmen marched
uphill after getting a heavy
barrage of rocks from
students around them on a
practice football field, he
said, "I felt most of the action
was over and wanted a picture before they crossed the

sculpture to avoid being hit
again. Mter the firing I attempted to get up and passed
.out."
· The bullet broke up inside
him, he said, and " there were

a lot of exit holes."
Cleary, now an architect,
also testified to seeing a
molotov cocktail thrown at
the campus ROTC Building
two nights before the
shootings and to trying to put
out fires and clean up vandalism during the May 1-4
weekend.
The molotov cockl&lt;lil broke
with igniting, he said. The
building later burned down
and he said he saw demonstrators pull hoses away from
firemen trying to extinguish
the blaze.
Immediately before the
shooting, Cleary said, there
were six or seven students
closer to the Guardsmen than
he was, and no roc::.;., were
thrown at them for the last 30
seconds before they fired.
Many Guardsmen have
testified to a rush or surge of
students toward the hilltop
which precipitated the
shooting in fear of their lives.
Earlier Tuesday the first
film of the trial was introduced. It showed a black
man with a briefcase chasing'
a photographer identified as
Terry Norman-believed to
have been an FBI infonnant
- behind the Guard line after
the shootings.
A witness had testified to
Norman's whipping out a
pistol and cracking a student
over the head with it when the
student objected io having his
picture taken.

its track
ROANOKE, Va . (UPI)
Norfolk and Western Railway
Co. has announced an inhouse clea n up campaign of
its 2, 700 miles of irack,
stretching &gt;rom the company 's headquarters in
Roanoke to Kansas City, Mo.
N&amp;W President-John Fish. wick
said
Tuesday
"Operation Clean Up" will '
begin July I, and said is an
attempt to improve the environment along the N&amp;W
system in 14 sl&lt;l tes.
"It will he a joint effort of
labor and management to
improve the appearance of
our railroad," Fishwick said.
"Employes from each craft
and in each loca tion
throughout our system will
make their own plans on what
activities to underl&lt;lke and
we hope every employe will
take part ."
A similar N&amp;W cleanup
campaign three years ago
brought in more than 5.6 tons
of dirt, metal, wood and
paper from along the tracks.
"While it will he impossible to
clean every mile of the
system or every closet in
company buildings in one
day,'' Fishwick said, "the
program will be a continuing
one."

17. Mrs. L. Behar
hill."
18. J. Cassata
When they reached the
19. M. Claudius
crest, he said, "they seemed
20. Chiasson
to turn in unison. I saw a
21. Chiasoon ·
pattern of gun barrels staring
22. H. Caldarera
down
at me. There was a
23. E. Caldarera
sporadic sort of firing. I was
24. Caldarera
hit in the left chest just below
25. S. Counts
the
heart and lung area about
26. H. Calvi!
the middle of the firing.
27. Christiansen
" It hit me with such impact
28. Dr. T. Drapanas
it
put
me in numbing shock. I
29. J. Dispenza
under the metal
crawled
30. J. Dispenza
•
31. J. Dispenza
32. J. Dispenza
33. C.B. Davis
34, 0 . Daha
35. J. Damelio
36. R. DeRudder
37. B. Davis
38. B. Domangue
39. J. Eggen
40. R. Ezell
CHARLESTON, W.Va. ministrator of the fund for the
41. K. Engenes
(UP!) - Coal mine pen- Olarleston-Beckley region ,
· 42. Mr. A. Gunther
sioners
and widows soon may indicated Tuesday that a
43. Gunther
enjoy
face-toface
service study reflected the largest
44 . S. Gravenn
Mine concentration of
with
the
United
4:i. J. Georgakis
Workers
Union's
Welfare
and beneficiaries in Beckley,
46. J. Gehrkin
Retirement Fund as it moves Logan and the mouths of
47. D. Giokas
into
the coal belt with Cabin and Paint creeks in
48. A. Grovehagen
satellite
offices .
Kanawha County, W.Va.
49. G. Guldsvaag
·
Two
offices
already
have
"One of the things we
50. Mrs. J . Hickey
in
Logan
and
Welch,
opened
wanted was to be close
51. Hickey
W.Va.,
and
a
third
is
being
enough
to the people that they
52. R. Herring
eyed
for
Nicholas
County,
could
deal
with us on a face53. F . Haug
W.Va.
to-face
basis,
rather than
54. Mr. Hadzis
One
major
step
in
progress
write letters to Washington,"
55. M. Hackett
is
the
phasing
out
of
its
Biesemeyer
explained.
56. A. Hynes
Charleston
office
and
the fund took
Last
January,
57. S. Horowitz
replacing
it
with
one
at
its
initial
steps
in
closing the
58. S. Henry
nearby Chelyan.
Charleston office as well as
59. L. Helll'ick
David ... -Biesemeyer, a seven of its 10 regional ·
60. B. Hansen
special aide to Dr. Donald branches in the nation and
61. J. Hansen
Chadwick, regional ad- shifting their duties and
62. W. Hansen
63. A. Jacobson
64. Mr. C. Jenkins
65. Jenkins
66. Jenkins
67. A. Jonasssen
68. Kristainsen
69. W. Ladner
70. E. Loftaas
71. R. Lelm
By MlKE FEINSU.BER
release of $2 billion in mor·
72. P ..Lepetit
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
tgage
purchase authority by
73. A. Marchesi
House Democrats, them- the Government National
74. Mr. Merkatis
selves
divided, concede they Mor.tgage Association, which
75. J. McCarthy
·
had
almost
no chance of buys mortgages from savings
76. R. Mattingly
overriding
President
Ford's and loan associations, per77. Mrs. Mendel
veto of a $1.35 billion housing mitting them to make new
78. J. Mobek
bill, an · antirecessior. mortgage conunitments.
79. Mr. Mahfoud
Ford asked Congress to
measure
with middleclass
80. Mrs. Mahfoud
appeaL
increase GNMA's authority
81. C: Manias
by
an additional $7.75 billion.
In
advance
of
today's
votes,
82. Mrs. Martinez
Democratic
strategists
said
He
said this would be a far
83. Mrs. M. Newsome
more
effective way of
.
the
effort
would
fall
about
32
84. I. Noland
votes short of the required stimulating activity in a
85. Dr. W. Norman
two-thirds majority.
housing industry suffering
86. Mrs. M. Olson
Speaker
Carl
Albert,
stung
depression-level
unem87. 0. Odegard
by
criticism
from
disenployment
of
20
to
40
per
cent.
88. S. Olsen
The vetoed bill would have
chanted freshmeri, worked
89. R. Pecquet
hard
to
produce
a
victory.
He
housing demand by .
produced
90. Priniotakis
made
about
100
•telephone
reducing
mortgage costs
91. E.-Pefanis
in
8n
effort
to
switch
through
interest
subsidies. It
calls
92. Mr. Porche
offered purchasers of new or
votes.
93. Mrs, Porche
of
the
calls
said
homes a choice of
existing
Recipients
94. R. Page
he
was
"tough."
$1,000
in
cash, a 7 per cent
95. 0. Raemussen
subsidized
mortgage or a 6
But some Democrats were
96. I. Skjelsvik
among the bill's severest per cent mortgage rising to
97. Schoenberger
critics. Rep. Thomas Ludlow the going market· rate over
98. E. Stratis
Ashley, Mhio, a member of six years.
99. Silvia
the House B,anking ComThe measure also would
100: W. Stream
mittee
which
handles
housing
have
offered loans of $250 a
101. F . Sarensen
legislation
,
said
Senatemonth
for 24 montlis to ·
102. A. Tsemetjis
unemployed
homeowners
the
added
amendments
made
103. R. Tobak
measure a "turkey" which who had received foreclosure
104. Mrs. Vauglm
would not fly or even waddle. notices . .
105. Miss Vauglm
Ford, in vetoing the
Democrats claimed fbe bill
106. N. Vanwinkle
would
have led to the con·
measure Tuesday, cited the
107. Mrs. Windbourne
108. Windhourne (child, 8) $1 billion which he said the struction of 400,000 houses
109. Windbourne (child, 3) bill would add to a projected and work for 800,000 jobless
1deficit of $60 billion to $80 workers.
llO. P. Walmsley
I billion. ·
The veto brought to 33 the
lll. Young
by Ford in his 10
nwnher
AFlrCIO
President
George
ll2. Mrs. D. Zazueta
months
in
the White House Meany
said
Congress
should
113 .. Zazueta
override
the
veto
to
end
what
exceeding
the five-year
114. Zazueta
he kalled "the .tyranny of records of Lyndon ,T ohni!on
115. J .s. McCullough
government
by veto."
and Richard Nixon .
116. R. Darocha
Ford also announced the

Miners' offices
go to coal belt

Override of veto
is not probable

CITY FINANCES
HONOLULU (UPI) - Loa
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley
says New York's financial
problems are In no way
unique. He told the National
Association of Counties
Conven'tion Tuesday many of
the nation's big cities are
"racing down a collision
course toward bankruptcy
and it's just a matter of
time. " Bradley said that if
federal revenue sharing were
not extended, some city halls
would have to lock their
doors.

-·-- - - - - staffs to smaller offices
closer to the coalfields.
An office in Welch followed,
under the overall supervision
of the fund office in Big Stone
Gap, Va. A second satellite
office also operates in
Virginia, along with three
others in eastern Kentucky.
Plans are being shaped up
for yet another satellite in
District 31 of northern West
Virginia, in Nicholas County,
but Biesemeyer was unable
to say when or where it would
open.
Biesemeyer inclicated the
Morgantown, W.Va., office
would operate a branch in
Bellaire, Ohio.
Royalty paid by coal
opera tors on· coal produced
goes into the fund, which
benefits more than 200,000
UMW members, their wives
and children.

INTEREST

BAD days ahead for onetime Soviet Secret Police
Chief Alexander N. Shelepin
who recently visited the U.
S. as the USSR's trade union
chief. Shelepin was ousted
from the Politburo upon his
return to Moscow then
removed as head of the AllUnion Counci l of Trade
Unions.

On.Certificates
Of De!Qit
$1,000 Minimum
30 Mo. Term
'

N;nety day interest perwtlly
if
withdrawn
before

matur i1y date .

Meigs Co. Branch

I,.

@
BETTER MINERS

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Legislation
to
provide
federal aid to community
colleges for better training of
coal miners has been introduced by Sen . Frank E.
Moss, D-Utah.
"

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loon Co.
296 Second St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

·-=---..

~~

ROOM AIR CONDITIONER
4,000 BTU
ONLY

$99
3 speed fan . full t hermostat control. 110
volts . Just plug in .

INGELS FURNITURE
992·2635

MIDDlEPORT-

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WHIPPED POTATOES ....................... ~~.~.~:.. 69~
MAZOLA OIL .......................................~~.~~·.. $1 09

~:O~~~~:O~fa~~~~on .. . . . . . .... . ~~. ~~: ..2/89~
INSTANT NESTEA .............................~.~~: ...$1 39
KRAFT GRAPE JELLY ...................... :.2..~~:. 99~
VELVEETA CHEESE ....................:.2..~~:.~~~••• . '1 69
·GREEN GIANT PEAS .......... ·-·····~~.~.1.: 2/69~
••

PALMOLIVE LIQUID.............~~~.(..~~~:.~~..~~: .. 69~
CAMPBELL'S CREAM OF
, oz.
10 12
CHICKEN SOUP. .........................•...............

3/69

~

HOME MADE HAM SALAD ~ ................................ 89' lb.
·SUPERIOR BOILED HAM .................... ~ ....... 1/2 lb. sus
TEETERS BOLOGNA ...................... By The Piece,75' lb.
·Sliced 79' lb.

~~o~~~~~=;~K.. . . . . . . . . . ~. . . . . .69¢
Mrs. Paul's
FISH CAKES
16

oz.

Box

79~

CALIFORNIA

ORANGE$

4 lb. bag

SUN KIST

LEMONS

'12 Doz.

i

39~

�r- -- -- ----

'
'.

t

1~..:.. The Daily Sentinel,.Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,

N&amp;W will

Picture taker
PLENTY

OPEl DAILY

By ROBERT PENICK

ZEBCO 33
ROD &amp; REEL
COMBO

TREASURE
FINDER
Jo in A m eri&lt;o ' s exciting

Tockle to toke pride

new

dirt , ~a nd , wood , wate r,
and e... en roc k with no Ia~~
o f powe r. Detects o pe n n ~

two-piece Zebco rod.
A perfec t co mb inat io n for all -arou nd

8'x10'
'·

COLORED
CONVERSE

come~

"COACH"
TENNIS SHOES

15''

5

$4988

" So ~.~nd Ofl' ' loud
~pe oker . Ve r y p owe rfu l,

with

CABIN TENT

pe r down center o f door; two e&gt;.: tra Iorge
docr on polyester screened window s.

$ 88

HECK'S REG.
$24.88

complete, ready to

go . All !t o rn ist or . li g ht ·
we igh t: 3 lbs_ One tuue r

SPORTS OEP T.

The mmt a dva nced in mo tor d e~ i gn ond
monula(tu re o f a ll ele(lr i( li ~h in g mo t or~
It prov ides mo re po we r than convention al
e lec tr i c ~ ond is espec:iolly effective . . on d
eo~y on the batt ery . a t the lo~ &gt;~e~ds
so l requenll)' ur.cd in trolling and 1n l• ~ h1n g
~ h e re lines, weedbeds an.d shallo w wa ter,
Stort i11g , slopping, reo.oe r~ ing , speed sc lcc ·
lion and 360" pivota l stee ring are monuul

$2588
HECK'S REG.
542.99

ope•o•;o"'.

RUBBER

EVEREADY "C

Berkley
Rods

KNEE BOOTS

·Grip tread •ole ond molded heel full y lined
with strong reinforced steel shank.

BALL BATS

$888

SPINN·ING REEL

$a••

Heck's

Reg.
$}4.68

HECK'S REG .
68' PKG.

Heck's Reg. To 114.68

SPORTS DIP T.

·aERKLEY

D" SIZE

39.!.

F-21

HECK'S QO. TO $6.99

SPORTS DEPT.

CHOICE

F-30

sa••

60s.

HECK'S REG.
$79.99

BATTERIES
2 PAK

8·10

These ore limi noted $olid bamboo boll bot$.

or

EXTENDED OUTLOOK

· Friday through Sunday,
fair Friday and Saturday
and a chance of showers
Sunday. Highs will be in the
80s and lows will be in the

$49''

SPORTS DEl' T. .

Sports Dept.

SPORTS DEPT.

TROLLING MOTOR

Heck's Reg.
$13.99 Pair

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

lOSPEED

co nt ro l

PAIR

HECK'S REG. $69 .99

ROLUCKING RIDE awaits asphalt tossed around in this giant dryer at an asphalt
plant in los Angeles. Nwnerous metal shelves inside the device lift an·d tumble loose
asphalt much the same as a clothes dryer does.

to 5 inches. Dete&lt;:h sharpl y

fres h-woter fishing.

Ad jus table outside iUspension fr ame ; zip ·

hob by - Treasure

Find in g . Works through

in. The tom ous Zeb co
33 sp i nc o s t reel ,
matched wi1h the 6'

SPORTS DEPT.

'I.PLAYa
MIKI'S DILUXI

CHEESE EGGS

BADMIITOI

sn

Includes four wood shoft rackets with multi -ply nylon strung

head,, and two-color tripl,
fWo sllunlecodr.1, st.tl poles,

stakes and rop. . Pa ckaged

with &amp;hrunk o..,..rwroP1 complete with rule1 and "inlfri.IC-

ggc

'·

tions.

,

popular closed -fac e ln,h ing •eel
ever mode! Seled -D•o l drag . . Dua l
onlo · r eve r &gt;f', flo~h· harde ne ~ gears.
Li tetime Se, vice Guoron lte.

)J~

..
I

,

~\.

-~..

'' ,t.;. ; l..'

:~

l

:

SPORTS DEPT.

,.,

wm.

STAINLESS STEEL

CHOPPER '

I

Heck's Reg.
To

.

$10.99
~

MR.1WISTER

PLASTIC

WORMS
&amp;LURES
2FOR

s 100

Aklll;~

88c

ntiiwAIIf

HECK'S REG.

191.

To 89'
EACH

ftAllJATER

·--.::- z. /.
l~~'!l··..: ' ,i : ··
"

.'
1

.

• JVIr-

t.v·

ENTERPRISE
ALUMINUM
6 QI,IART

i6C

HECK'S REG .

.'

SPOITS
DEPT.

SPOilT$
Dli'T.

SI'OIIr$ Dli'T.

HECK'S REG.

88'

NOUSEwAIII
IDT.

I

! -.
...

66~

66C

$4.28

REG.

APPLE CORER
AND PEELER

AND CHOPPER &amp;
-GARNISHER
CHOICE '

f
I

i

'

.FOOD
BLANCHER

HECK'S
REG.
88c
· lHOIISlwAIII

18'

NOUSEWAII
DEPT. .

FESCO
PLASJIC
elAUNDRY BASKET
e44 QT. HAMPER

. 28 quart

FOAM COOLER
Heck's
Reg: 11.66

I

$2~4
HECK'S
REG. •3.66

NOIJSIWAIIIJI/IT.

Housewares Dept.

SCOOP
CHAIRS

PICNIC BASKET

Beautifully consfru( ted picn ic basket. Eo~i ­
ly 1-lold ~ tl1e ite ms tho! you wo uld need 0 11
on outing

Superbly comfortable, light·
weight and durable molded of
tough polypropylene plastic that

$366

is ·s1ronger thon metal.

HECK'S REG. $6.11

WATER PAIL

' $2·~~
NOUSIWAIIIIJit.

14 Quart

10-QUART

CHOICE ·'

HECK'S RIG. To $(.11'

DISHPANS

Hfll/SEWARIIJIPT.

e40 QT. WASTE BASKET

~.

94e

"! saw this big flash of fire
like the atomic bomb going
off," said Moe Friedmpn, an
airport employe who was
driving along Rockaway
Boulevard moments before
the jet crashed. He ·said the
flames leaped 500 to 600 feet.
Other people in the area
mistook the sound of the
crash for a thunderclap.
Although there was heavy
traffic in the area at the time,
no motorists were hit. A diner
waitresS said two middleaged couples who rushed into
the cafe "said they were the
· last car to get through before
the plane hit. They said they
saw it burning in the air ...
I
They were upset screaming, yelling, crying." .
Mary Mooney, 28, and
Robert Hoefler, 29, two of the
flight attendants, walked
away from thF wreckage.
They were in f•ir condition.
The other survivors, all in
critical condition, were
~verely burned. They suffered multiple fractures and
were nwnbed by shock.
The dead included the
Right Rev. Iveson B. Noland,
the Episcopal bishop of New
Orleans and Wendell Lad·
ner, the New York Nets
basketball player.
Also killed were Edgar
B!'ight Sr., a prominent New
Orleans Investment banker,
ud most of a group of 19
Norwegian seamen enroute
home for. a .vacation.
The crash site was a
~shy, unpopulated area
near the dty limits. Earlier
In Its approach pattern the jet
..ued low over a heavily
populated suburban
residential nelghborhoo4.
Pollee. Dremen and airport
employes wocked through the
mght to collect ~ remains of
the victims. They stuffed
fragments of bodies into bags

~LUMINUM

$599

HECK'S
REG • .
$9.63

DE/IT.

., :_

(Continued from page I)
just exploded and Shattered."
Paul Moran; an off~uty
policeman, said, "! saw
(lightning) hit the plane. It
hit the tail while the plane
was still in the air."
A doctor who spoke with
two of the survivors at a
"they
hospital
said
remember the plane went out
of control and it veered. Mter
that, all they remember is
they were in the hospital."

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
$5.88

HECK'S

Lightning

$288

S]33

.

1

HI&lt;:K'I RiO.
$6."

LANTERN HANGER

Attaches eosily to Colema n lanterns. Brig~t
s.toinles$ reflecto r engineered to reflect mox•mum light ovoiloble.

M o~t

IT ISN'T A NEW system for transporting eggs but a
recently~eveloped impact-absorbing cushion grid, part
of the molded plastic "soft" bumpber system designed by
General Motors. Following a low-speed collision, the
bumper pops back to it soriginal shape.

COLEMAN

LANTERN REFLKTOR

CENTURY REEL

I f "';..

.

SJ8i

Heck's Reg. 2.13

COLEMAN

JOHNSON 1008

HECK'S
REG~ •3.99
'

1101/SlWAll IIEI'T.

21. QT. CAllER

..

7 jOr Columbian porcelain wore cO"
ner. A muil for the hOme conn•rl

ss••

HECK'S RIG. $8.99

llfJIIUWAH /JEI'T. ·

.

i .
'

clean up

shot by Guard

OF FREE

10 TO 9

J

..'

I

and stored them in a yellow
morgue tent to await identification.
· Crowds of curious passersby jammed the site for hours
after the crash, clogging
some of the roads used by
rescue equipment. Five
people "considered potential
thieves" were arrested for
impersonating law officers.
Frank Bonnan, the former
astronaut who is president of
Eastern Airlines, flew in
from Boston to inspect the
scene.
"In my career in aviation,
which spans 32 years," he
said, "I've seen a lot of accidents. This plane was in
several pieces. It was a real
bad crash."
Van Epps, the NTSB supervisor, said there were only
two cases in commercial
airline history -both in the
early 1960s - in which
lightning had been determined as the cause of
crashes.
He said the jet's voice and
flight recorders, both of
which were recovered intact,
have been sent to Washington
for immediate analysis in an
NTSB laboratory.
MIAMI ( UPI ) - A list of
crew
members
and
passengers aboard Eastern
Airlines Flight 66 from New
Orleans which crashed in
New York, as furnished ~Y
the airline, includes:
Crew
Capt. John W. Kleven
First Officer · William S.
Eberhart
SecondOfficerG.M. Geurin
Senior Flight Attendant .
Maureeri Davis
Flight Attendant Robert M.
Hoefler
Flight Attendant Mary
Ellen Mooney
Flight Attendant Jackie
Lindsay
Passengers
I. M. Andre
2. Mrs. Andre
3. Alexandridis
4. D; Abbate
5. J. Alban
6. A. Aluned
7.Mr. Berlind
8. Mrs. Berlind
9. Berlind-ehild
'10. Berlind-ehild
. 11. E. Bright
12. Mrs. K Bright
13. Mr. Boyer
H. Mrs. Boyer
1s: E. Bijio
.16. R. Bijio

CLEVELAND (UP!)
Jolm R. Cleary was standing
by a metal sculpture on the
Kent State University
campus, deciding to take a
photograph of Ohio National
Guardsmen marching off
Blanket Hill, when several
Guardsmen wheeled and
fired.
One bullet struck him in the
left chest, inches from the
heart and lungs, he testified
Tuesday in the $4 7 million
Kent State civil trial.
Cleary, 24, of Pittsburgh,
was !he 27th witness called in
the nearly six-week-old triaL
He was the ninth and last of
the students wounded May 4,
1970, to testify.
Cleary testified he was not
politically involved and
merely went to a noon rally
on the commons area of the
KSU campus to see what
happened and take a few
pictures.
As Guardsmen marched
uphill after getting a heavy
barrage of rocks from
students around them on a
practice football field, he
said, "I felt most of the action
was over and wanted a picture before they crossed the

sculpture to avoid being hit
again. Mter the firing I attempted to get up and passed
.out."
· The bullet broke up inside
him, he said, and " there were

a lot of exit holes."
Cleary, now an architect,
also testified to seeing a
molotov cocktail thrown at
the campus ROTC Building
two nights before the
shootings and to trying to put
out fires and clean up vandalism during the May 1-4
weekend.
The molotov cockl&lt;lil broke
with igniting, he said. The
building later burned down
and he said he saw demonstrators pull hoses away from
firemen trying to extinguish
the blaze.
Immediately before the
shooting, Cleary said, there
were six or seven students
closer to the Guardsmen than
he was, and no roc::.;., were
thrown at them for the last 30
seconds before they fired.
Many Guardsmen have
testified to a rush or surge of
students toward the hilltop
which precipitated the
shooting in fear of their lives.
Earlier Tuesday the first
film of the trial was introduced. It showed a black
man with a briefcase chasing'
a photographer identified as
Terry Norman-believed to
have been an FBI infonnant
- behind the Guard line after
the shootings.
A witness had testified to
Norman's whipping out a
pistol and cracking a student
over the head with it when the
student objected io having his
picture taken.

its track
ROANOKE, Va . (UPI)
Norfolk and Western Railway
Co. has announced an inhouse clea n up campaign of
its 2, 700 miles of irack,
stretching &gt;rom the company 's headquarters in
Roanoke to Kansas City, Mo.
N&amp;W President-John Fish. wick
said
Tuesday
"Operation Clean Up" will '
begin July I, and said is an
attempt to improve the environment along the N&amp;W
system in 14 sl&lt;l tes.
"It will he a joint effort of
labor and management to
improve the appearance of
our railroad," Fishwick said.
"Employes from each craft
and in each loca tion
throughout our system will
make their own plans on what
activities to underl&lt;lke and
we hope every employe will
take part ."
A similar N&amp;W cleanup
campaign three years ago
brought in more than 5.6 tons
of dirt, metal, wood and
paper from along the tracks.
"While it will he impossible to
clean every mile of the
system or every closet in
company buildings in one
day,'' Fishwick said, "the
program will be a continuing
one."

17. Mrs. L. Behar
hill."
18. J. Cassata
When they reached the
19. M. Claudius
crest, he said, "they seemed
20. Chiasson
to turn in unison. I saw a
21. Chiasoon ·
pattern of gun barrels staring
22. H. Caldarera
down
at me. There was a
23. E. Caldarera
sporadic sort of firing. I was
24. Caldarera
hit in the left chest just below
25. S. Counts
the
heart and lung area about
26. H. Calvi!
the middle of the firing.
27. Christiansen
" It hit me with such impact
28. Dr. T. Drapanas
it
put
me in numbing shock. I
29. J. Dispenza
under the metal
crawled
30. J. Dispenza
•
31. J. Dispenza
32. J. Dispenza
33. C.B. Davis
34, 0 . Daha
35. J. Damelio
36. R. DeRudder
37. B. Davis
38. B. Domangue
39. J. Eggen
40. R. Ezell
CHARLESTON, W.Va. ministrator of the fund for the
41. K. Engenes
(UP!) - Coal mine pen- Olarleston-Beckley region ,
· 42. Mr. A. Gunther
sioners
and widows soon may indicated Tuesday that a
43. Gunther
enjoy
face-toface
service study reflected the largest
44 . S. Gravenn
Mine concentration of
with
the
United
4:i. J. Georgakis
Workers
Union's
Welfare
and beneficiaries in Beckley,
46. J. Gehrkin
Retirement Fund as it moves Logan and the mouths of
47. D. Giokas
into
the coal belt with Cabin and Paint creeks in
48. A. Grovehagen
satellite
offices .
Kanawha County, W.Va.
49. G. Guldsvaag
·
Two
offices
already
have
"One of the things we
50. Mrs. J . Hickey
in
Logan
and
Welch,
opened
wanted was to be close
51. Hickey
W.Va.,
and
a
third
is
being
enough
to the people that they
52. R. Herring
eyed
for
Nicholas
County,
could
deal
with us on a face53. F . Haug
W.Va.
to-face
basis,
rather than
54. Mr. Hadzis
One
major
step
in
progress
write letters to Washington,"
55. M. Hackett
is
the
phasing
out
of
its
Biesemeyer
explained.
56. A. Hynes
Charleston
office
and
the fund took
Last
January,
57. S. Horowitz
replacing
it
with
one
at
its
initial
steps
in
closing the
58. S. Henry
nearby Chelyan.
Charleston office as well as
59. L. Helll'ick
David ... -Biesemeyer, a seven of its 10 regional ·
60. B. Hansen
special aide to Dr. Donald branches in the nation and
61. J. Hansen
Chadwick, regional ad- shifting their duties and
62. W. Hansen
63. A. Jacobson
64. Mr. C. Jenkins
65. Jenkins
66. Jenkins
67. A. Jonasssen
68. Kristainsen
69. W. Ladner
70. E. Loftaas
71. R. Lelm
By MlKE FEINSU.BER
release of $2 billion in mor·
72. P ..Lepetit
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
tgage
purchase authority by
73. A. Marchesi
House Democrats, them- the Government National
74. Mr. Merkatis
selves
divided, concede they Mor.tgage Association, which
75. J. McCarthy
·
had
almost
no chance of buys mortgages from savings
76. R. Mattingly
overriding
President
Ford's and loan associations, per77. Mrs. Mendel
veto of a $1.35 billion housing mitting them to make new
78. J. Mobek
bill, an · antirecessior. mortgage conunitments.
79. Mr. Mahfoud
Ford asked Congress to
measure
with middleclass
80. Mrs. Mahfoud
appeaL
increase GNMA's authority
81. C: Manias
by
an additional $7.75 billion.
In
advance
of
today's
votes,
82. Mrs. Martinez
Democratic
strategists
said
He
said this would be a far
83. Mrs. M. Newsome
more
effective way of
.
the
effort
would
fall
about
32
84. I. Noland
votes short of the required stimulating activity in a
85. Dr. W. Norman
two-thirds majority.
housing industry suffering
86. Mrs. M. Olson
Speaker
Carl
Albert,
stung
depression-level
unem87. 0. Odegard
by
criticism
from
disenployment
of
20
to
40
per
cent.
88. S. Olsen
The vetoed bill would have
chanted freshmeri, worked
89. R. Pecquet
hard
to
produce
a
victory.
He
housing demand by .
produced
90. Priniotakis
made
about
100
•telephone
reducing
mortgage costs
91. E.-Pefanis
in
8n
effort
to
switch
through
interest
subsidies. It
calls
92. Mr. Porche
offered purchasers of new or
votes.
93. Mrs, Porche
of
the
calls
said
homes a choice of
existing
Recipients
94. R. Page
he
was
"tough."
$1,000
in
cash, a 7 per cent
95. 0. Raemussen
subsidized
mortgage or a 6
But some Democrats were
96. I. Skjelsvik
among the bill's severest per cent mortgage rising to
97. Schoenberger
critics. Rep. Thomas Ludlow the going market· rate over
98. E. Stratis
Ashley, Mhio, a member of six years.
99. Silvia
the House B,anking ComThe measure also would
100: W. Stream
mittee
which
handles
housing
have
offered loans of $250 a
101. F . Sarensen
legislation
,
said
Senatemonth
for 24 montlis to ·
102. A. Tsemetjis
unemployed
homeowners
the
added
amendments
made
103. R. Tobak
measure a "turkey" which who had received foreclosure
104. Mrs. Vauglm
would not fly or even waddle. notices . .
105. Miss Vauglm
Ford, in vetoing the
Democrats claimed fbe bill
106. N. Vanwinkle
would
have led to the con·
measure Tuesday, cited the
107. Mrs. Windbourne
108. Windhourne (child, 8) $1 billion which he said the struction of 400,000 houses
109. Windbourne (child, 3) bill would add to a projected and work for 800,000 jobless
1deficit of $60 billion to $80 workers.
llO. P. Walmsley
I billion. ·
The veto brought to 33 the
lll. Young
by Ford in his 10
nwnher
AFlrCIO
President
George
ll2. Mrs. D. Zazueta
months
in
the White House Meany
said
Congress
should
113 .. Zazueta
override
the
veto
to
end
what
exceeding
the five-year
114. Zazueta
he kalled "the .tyranny of records of Lyndon ,T ohni!on
115. J .s. McCullough
government
by veto."
and Richard Nixon .
116. R. Darocha
Ford also announced the

Miners' offices
go to coal belt

Override of veto
is not probable

CITY FINANCES
HONOLULU (UPI) - Loa
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley
says New York's financial
problems are In no way
unique. He told the National
Association of Counties
Conven'tion Tuesday many of
the nation's big cities are
"racing down a collision
course toward bankruptcy
and it's just a matter of
time. " Bradley said that if
federal revenue sharing were
not extended, some city halls
would have to lock their
doors.

-·-- - - - - staffs to smaller offices
closer to the coalfields.
An office in Welch followed,
under the overall supervision
of the fund office in Big Stone
Gap, Va. A second satellite
office also operates in
Virginia, along with three
others in eastern Kentucky.
Plans are being shaped up
for yet another satellite in
District 31 of northern West
Virginia, in Nicholas County,
but Biesemeyer was unable
to say when or where it would
open.
Biesemeyer inclicated the
Morgantown, W.Va., office
would operate a branch in
Bellaire, Ohio.
Royalty paid by coal
opera tors on· coal produced
goes into the fund, which
benefits more than 200,000
UMW members, their wives
and children.

INTEREST

BAD days ahead for onetime Soviet Secret Police
Chief Alexander N. Shelepin
who recently visited the U.
S. as the USSR's trade union
chief. Shelepin was ousted
from the Politburo upon his
return to Moscow then
removed as head of the AllUnion Counci l of Trade
Unions.

On.Certificates
Of De!Qit
$1,000 Minimum
30 Mo. Term
'

N;nety day interest perwtlly
if
withdrawn
before

matur i1y date .

Meigs Co. Branch

I,.

@
BETTER MINERS

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Legislation
to
provide
federal aid to community
colleges for better training of
coal miners has been introduced by Sen . Frank E.
Moss, D-Utah.
"

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loon Co.
296 Second St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

·-=---..

~~

ROOM AIR CONDITIONER
4,000 BTU
ONLY

$99
3 speed fan . full t hermostat control. 110
volts . Just plug in .

INGELS FURNITURE
992·2635

MIDDlEPORT-

BORDENS

WHIPPED POTATOES ....................... ~~.~.~:.. 69~
MAZOLA OIL .......................................~~.~~·.. $1 09

~:O~~~~:O~fa~~~~on .. . . . . . .... . ~~. ~~: ..2/89~
INSTANT NESTEA .............................~.~~: ...$1 39
KRAFT GRAPE JELLY ...................... :.2..~~:. 99~
VELVEETA CHEESE ....................:.2..~~:.~~~••• . '1 69
·GREEN GIANT PEAS .......... ·-·····~~.~.1.: 2/69~
••

PALMOLIVE LIQUID.............~~~.(..~~~:.~~..~~: .. 69~
CAMPBELL'S CREAM OF
, oz.
10 12
CHICKEN SOUP. .........................•...............

3/69

~

HOME MADE HAM SALAD ~ ................................ 89' lb.
·SUPERIOR BOILED HAM .................... ~ ....... 1/2 lb. sus
TEETERS BOLOGNA ...................... By The Piece,75' lb.
·Sliced 79' lb.

~~o~~~~~=;~K.. . . . . . . . . . ~. . . . . .69¢
Mrs. Paul's
FISH CAKES
16

oz.

Box

79~

CALIFORNIA

ORANGE$

4 lb. bag

SUN KIST

LEMONS

'12 Doz.

i

39~

�I

16 - The Daily Senlin.el, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wrdnesday. JWJe 25, 1975

Firestone
•
names Its
new bosses

On thi.~ and the ;uljoini~l~
page 17 ilre ,l'iom e of th e M'elle.~
•
111UIJ1eople and th eir uctit'itie.~
during the Big Bend H egllltil
Weekend :rou 11'1111/d hure
witne.~i'ied hml you been
everyu·h ere &lt;II once 111'1 ; :•ere
The D&lt;~il,r Sentinel:~ plwtographerl'i
Hoeflich (Rob 1111d Charlene/,
)o Ellen Dit&gt;hl, 1\;llit&gt; Crmr
and ;lLel Creme/Ill!! Friday,
S11turd;n·
. and .Sund;n. ·
THE SYRACUSE ASBURY UNITED METHODIST
Church reminded parade viewers of who made the river
and urged folks to attend the church of their choice.

v,\.\GS

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Arthur
Roberts, Middleport; Harry
Pickens, Racin e; Betty
Persons, Little Hocking ; Len
Renee Sayre, Middleport ;
Juanita Lambert, Rutland;
Sharon McMillian , Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Kevin
Pummel, Grace Beaubout,
Ed Parfitt, Mary Smalley,
Paul White, Cheryl Moore,
Lawrence Wilson .

couNr;-

COMMUNITY
MENTAL HEALTH
CENT

-OUR FIRST--

AKRON, O!)io (UP!) Robert P. Beasley has been
ele.cted vice chairman of the
Firestone Tire and Rubber
Co. and Kenneth W. Reese
will succeed hun as executive
vice president-finance.
Raymond C. Firestone,
board chairman, announced
Tuesday Beasley and Reese
would report directly to
Chief
President
and
Executive Officer Richard A.
Riley beginning July I.
Reese, 44, former vice
president and treasurer, will
be the firm's chief financial
officer. His replacement as
treasurer will he announced
later.
Beasley, 61 , in the new staff
position, will serve as special
counselor to Riley on longrange corporation financial
planning and policy. He will
also represent Firestone on
specific assignments with
public, private and governmental nrganizations.

WORLD ALMANAC

I

FACTS

•

REGISTER FOR
ROOM OF
CARPET

FREE

A.

•79 95

7 PIECE DINETTE SET

THE SCENE ALONG the parade route on Mid·
dleport's South Second Street Friday before the parade

4 CUSHiON, EARLY AMERICAN
,LIVING ROOM SUITE - '319°0

says court
OVER COST

On All Wallpaper,
Vinyl Wall
ccWering and

OUt lAIN CHICK POLICY

.....~--

~

·

THE STAFF OF THE GaJlia.Jackson-Meigs Community Mental Health Center was
host to ~epresentallves of political and social service agencieS at a luncheon Friday afternoon m the Me1g.s Mental Health Center located in the old Meigs General Hospital. The
purpose of the meetmg was to inform each of the agencies of the operation of the center and
how best to utilize its services. Staff members are front, 1-r, Mary Skinner, personal advocacy coordinator; Marcy Kubbs, soc1al worker, and Mona Martin, mental health
techn1c1an ; back row , Da~e Ruhwedel, business administrator, Dr. George Greaves,
clm1cal psychologist and center director, an d Steve Dawson, Meigs Center supervisor.

IN CASE WE RUN OUT
.. btcav .. of 1he high

demand fot salt iltml
..REQI..EST A RAIN OEQ(
.. IOfferJood dufi"9
sale ~r i

SAVE ON REG. •3.77

REGUlAR $1.98

Pkg. of 60 Pinless
Disposable DIAPERS

-

'l?Jt

only )

MULTI-PURPOS~

STORAGE
CHEST

$ 19
l

OUR.
LOW

Super absorbent pinless diapers
have convenient self adhesive tabs .
Fit bo_bies 12-22 pounds.

$}57

PRICE

Iii

REG. •23.88 Black&amp; Deckef"•

71f4 IICH ·POWER SAW
.
THE APPLE CRATE , the mobile reading van sponsored by Ohio University's

;

: College of Education and the Meigs Local School District under the teachers corps reading
; project, made its first appearance in the Regatta parade. Driving the van underneath the
:: frog were John Redovian and Dave McWilliams.

·\513 $}}99

REG. $14.99-21 PC. SOCKET WRENCH SI:.T
Features easy-to-make bevel and depth ad justments,
1 horsepower motor. Exhaust keeps sawdust away
from cutt i ng line for better v is ibility. 4400 RPM.

REG. '19.96 GILLETTE'S ·

SUPER MAX .

1/ 4 and 3/ 8" drive sel, 14
sockets, spark plug socket,
ratchet, 2 _extensions, odaptor, tpinner bandle, case.

SA\1

$3

.

;

Reg. 116.95 Floor Model

T6:: arlu:n &amp; Sta•d
Adlntaltlo Molaturo Control

DRYER/STYLER
SAVE
$3.08

$}6~~...
IT

20" diameter pla sl1 c bowl - White
stand . 36" overall height . Bowl
seP,arates . into halves for easy

plant tendmg.

such."

'

''' .
•••

.....

~

••

When Rubin approved the
plan he described it as
"desegregatlve In Intent"
and one that would have "an
Integrative effect.''
The appellate court agreed
the plan was a "step toward
Integration" but pointed out
that the Constitution and
recent Supreme Court
decisions mandated quicker
and !Inner Integration ef.
forti.

'

•

••

•;•

A HALT IN THE PARADE STOPPED the Bratwurst Festival Queen Annette Hipsher of
Bucyrus
long enough to posse for a picture. She was drien by Randy Yates and Rich Bailey
[
• of Middleport.
·
..J..

.
•••

.;I;)EPARTMENY
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE ONLY

'

•
unserved residential ?nd
~nough gas IS
Pro,mi.sed· small
commercial premiSes
~

'

CINCINNATI (UP!)
School officials in l)ayton,
Ohio, must scramble this
sununer to come up with a
better integration plan before
school starts in September.
That is the impact of a
stern federal 'appeals court
declaration Tuesday that
current Dayton integration
~ns are not good enough.
In an unanimous decision,
three U.S. Sixth Circuit Court
of Appeals judges ruled that
the Dayton Board · of
Education plan-previously
approved by Federal Judge
carl Rubin-feU short of what
was needed.
The judges pointed out the
plan dismantled only two of
several segregated schools in
Dayton.
"Under the plan approved
by the district court, the basic
pattern of one-race· schools
will continue
largely
unabated," the appeals court
said. "The plan fails to
eliminate the continuing
effects of past segregation
Is,
therefore,
and
inadequate."
. The judges said the plan for
the 1971).76 school year was so
inadequate they wanted to
throw It completely out and
order a new one, but it was
too close to the start of school
to do that.
So, the court ordered the
plan ''modified" th!B sununer .
"so as to improve the racial
balance before Sept. 1 in as
many of the remaining
racially identifiable schools
In the Dayton system as
feasible."
Aside from a direct order
concerning one school, the
appellate court did not spell
out how the "modification" is
to be carried out, leaving that
up to Rubin's court to decide.
The judges also directed
Rubin's court to adopt a new
"system-wide" integration
plan for the 1976;-77 school
year. by Dec. 31, 1975. That
plan must be In effect in
September, 1976.
Besides closing 100 per cent
black Roosevelt High School
and "restructuring" all-black
Miami Chapel Elementary
. School, the key features of the
plan criticized by the appeals
court called for creation of
several "magnet" schools
throughout Dayton.
The "magnet" Sfhools
were designed to attract both
black and white students for
classes not offered at their
regular schools. However, for
all other instruction the
students wou\d remain at
their home schools.
Said the appeals court,.
"even if the magnet schools
are successful, the vast
majority of one-race schools
will remain Identifiable as

·

'

-~CO~UMBUS

(UPI) .llesiden tial and small
~ercial customers will
It able to obtain natural gas
rvice from the River Gas
. if applications are made
the firm before June 3(), the
-, bllc Utilities Commission
01
Ohio (PUCO) sa id
~esday .
• Any re&lt;idential or small

f

commercial applican t to
whom a written commitment
for service was by River Gas
before J uhe 30 will receive
service, according to an
interim
PUCO
order,
provided the applicant is
ready to receive service on·or
before Dec. 31.
River Gas must provide
·service to new and currently

'

which have been demolished
or otherwise destroyed, the
commission also ruled,
provided those premises
were being served within five
years of Tuesday's decision .
The PUCO, in an additional
· move to protect "impacted
areas," said gas service will
be provided for the
replacement of an · existing
industrial or la~ge commercial facility ..

REGUlAR .Sfi9.95

MODEL "190"
WINCHESTER WitH
4 POWER WEAVER SIDPE
22 Semi Automatic Rifle

·a .c. MURPHY
\
J

...

CHARGE
IT

SAVE
1
15

POLY
SCREEN HOUSE
Complete Wtih Rope
Slides and Stakes

CO. • Tlllii - F.I.NDLY

Classified Ads
bring you
utra cash
for
- shopping sprees

Rabies ,

For
Distemper

noculation s .

Dr .

ln -

Paul

Shockey, Veterinarian .
Saturday, June 28
1 To4 P.M.
County Garage

WANT AD WAY

Meigs Fairgrounds
Sponsored by

Meigs Co. Humane Society

INTRODUCING

J .&amp; W Mount
,

Cleaning Service
Phone 388-8865 or 388-8195
Bidwell, Ohio

SECOND PLACE WINNER in the non-commercial group was the Royal Crown entry .
The Regatta parade was viewed by huge crowds that lined both sides of the streets in both
Middleport and Pomeroy.

Complete Cleaning- Fire Damage
Carpet Shampoo- Interior Painting

HOST AND HOSTESS - Mr. and Mrs. Ferman Moore
who hosted the party for the news media at their attractive home on Lincoln Hill.

SLICED
SlAB BACON

¢

FRENCH CITY

99
7
9¢
SMOKED PICNIC HAMS •• !~·. .
69¢
GRAPEFRUIT •••••••••••••••

LIVER PUDDING •••••••••• ;~-.
CATHY OSBORNE, left, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
FIRST PLACE WINNERS - Ann Lewis and Mike
Owens were first place winners in their age divisions at
the casting derby. Pictured with them is Brian Simpson of
the Columbus office, Division of Wildlife, a former Racine
resident.

Lo Osborne of Pomroy, , was crowned first rWJnerup iri
the Big Bend Regatta Weekend Queen contest at the
Pomeroy High School Friday night by Miss Tanya

Keebaugh, last year's first runnerup. A well received
program by the Senior Citizens Choir under the direction
of Mrs. carrie Neutzllng preceded the coronation
ceremonies of the queen pa~eant.

Ruppert's dream
may come true
HAMILTON, Ohio (UP!) James Ruppert had a dream
H years ago he was being
wndemned to death in a
courtroom.
Ruppert is now trying to
keepthatdreamfromcoming
true.
Attorneys for the accused
mass murderer, who are
expected to rest their case
today, put a psychiatrist on
the starid Tuesdy who
disclosed Ruppert's dream.
The doctor said Ruppert
dreamed he was In a courtroom similar to the Butler
County Common Pleas Court
where he is now beihg tried.
"He even drew a sketch of
the court," said Dr. Glenn M.'
Weaver of Cincinnati. "He
showed where some of his
friends were sitting. Almost
as you see the cour:troom
today."
Ruppert dreamed he was
being sentenced to death "for
no known reason," said Weaver, who treated Ruppert
fi:om 196i to 1965.
No dream now, Ruppert
· ~ctually faces a possible
death sentence If convicted of
murdering 11 relatives last
. Easter Sunday- the largest
slaying of members of one
family.
Ruppert's attorney has
admitted in court his client
shot the relatives , but
Ruppert has pleaded innorent
by reason of insanity.
Ruppert's 1961 dream. was

described for his psychiatrist
in a three page note, accompanied by the conrtroom
sketch . Weaver said the
dream showed Ruppert felt
hopeless and figured "death
was no better than life."
Weaver testified Ruppert
had " masochistic" tendencies 10 years ago and is
now "psychotic and suffering
from
paranoia"
-an
outgrowth of his previous
condition.
The psychiatrist figured
Ruppert's paranoia began
about 10 years ago when he
started believing people were
conspiring to have him
labeled a "homosexual" and
a "ConunWJist."
Weaver was the seventh
psychiatrist or psychologist
to testify for the defense:
The defense Tuesday also
recalled Ruppert's aunt, Mrs.
Ruby Lee, and had her testify
again about a history of
mental illness in Ruppert's
. family.
Ruppert's attorneys also
tried to knock down previous
prosecution testimony that
Ruppert was a skilled quickshot marksman.
- Mr. and Mrs. ArthiD' Bauer
said they had been target
shooting with Ruppert and
. both testified tbat Ruppert
used only his left hand for
shooting.
A prosecution witness, who
termed Ruppert's shooting
"superior," had testified he

FRENCH CITY
WHITE

Sib. bag

Showboat Brand

·

PORK N' BEANS ••••••~:~~:.

~ G~l~~~~ J~~~~-~~ .~~~~~•

o• • • • • • •

JELLO GELATIN

3
Assorted Flavors , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . oz.

CREAM OF CHICKEN
AN OUTS'rANDING performance and one rarely seen
was given by carolyn Clark, Johnstown, Pa., Saturday at
the Big Bend Regatta twirling festival. Miss Clark, 16,
twirled four fire batons during the competition. ·"

49

·-·-

¢

98¢
19¢

sOUP 19~

~2~~~:~. ~IT~~........... ~2

~

.

Broughton's

.

89

$} 29

2% MILK ..............~~~ .

saw Ruppert firing with his
right hand.
However, Bauer conceded
Ruppert was a "fail'ly good
shot. ...
All of Tuesday afternoon's
testimony was taken up by
Dr. Leigh M. Roberts, a
psychiatrist from
the
University of Wisconsin, who
also
termed
Ruppert
"paranoid." .
Vnder cross-examination,
Roberts said his fee for
examining Ruppert five
times for the defense would
be $1,800.

.

'

''"'

95

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

'·

12 ft. X 12 ·ft.

Reg. 147.88

Small Animal
CLINIC

EVERYBODY
Shops the

By RICK VAN SANT

10% Discount

~~t

NEW HAVEN Cub Scout No. 256 sported a frog jack-in-the-box.

to scramble

PRE-NOUDAY
BARGAIN HUNTER'S

I

got underway. The picture was taken from~ pickup truck
as it slowly passed by the 100 entries.

Dayton has

Murals

'

Ann Franklin became the
first woman newspaper edi·
tor in the United States when
arter the death of her son, she
too k charge of his Newport
R.I. , Mercury newspaper and
its printing plant on Aug. 22,
1762 The Wor ld Almanac
say;. She wa s Benja min
Franklin's sister·in·law.

~k~~oz.~~

~1

19

bottles • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

TICKETS ON SALE
HERE
NOW

OPEN .
9til7
Mon.-Sat.·
Pnces effective
Thursday thru Saturday

�I

16 - The Daily Senlin.el, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wrdnesday. JWJe 25, 1975

Firestone
•
names Its
new bosses

On thi.~ and the ;uljoini~l~
page 17 ilre ,l'iom e of th e M'elle.~
•
111UIJ1eople and th eir uctit'itie.~
during the Big Bend H egllltil
Weekend :rou 11'1111/d hure
witne.~i'ied hml you been
everyu·h ere &lt;II once 111'1 ; :•ere
The D&lt;~il,r Sentinel:~ plwtographerl'i
Hoeflich (Rob 1111d Charlene/,
)o Ellen Dit&gt;hl, 1\;llit&gt; Crmr
and ;lLel Creme/Ill!! Friday,
S11turd;n·
. and .Sund;n. ·
THE SYRACUSE ASBURY UNITED METHODIST
Church reminded parade viewers of who made the river
and urged folks to attend the church of their choice.

v,\.\GS

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Arthur
Roberts, Middleport; Harry
Pickens, Racin e; Betty
Persons, Little Hocking ; Len
Renee Sayre, Middleport ;
Juanita Lambert, Rutland;
Sharon McMillian , Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Kevin
Pummel, Grace Beaubout,
Ed Parfitt, Mary Smalley,
Paul White, Cheryl Moore,
Lawrence Wilson .

couNr;-

COMMUNITY
MENTAL HEALTH
CENT

-OUR FIRST--

AKRON, O!)io (UP!) Robert P. Beasley has been
ele.cted vice chairman of the
Firestone Tire and Rubber
Co. and Kenneth W. Reese
will succeed hun as executive
vice president-finance.
Raymond C. Firestone,
board chairman, announced
Tuesday Beasley and Reese
would report directly to
Chief
President
and
Executive Officer Richard A.
Riley beginning July I.
Reese, 44, former vice
president and treasurer, will
be the firm's chief financial
officer. His replacement as
treasurer will he announced
later.
Beasley, 61 , in the new staff
position, will serve as special
counselor to Riley on longrange corporation financial
planning and policy. He will
also represent Firestone on
specific assignments with
public, private and governmental nrganizations.

WORLD ALMANAC

I

FACTS

•

REGISTER FOR
ROOM OF
CARPET

FREE

A.

•79 95

7 PIECE DINETTE SET

THE SCENE ALONG the parade route on Mid·
dleport's South Second Street Friday before the parade

4 CUSHiON, EARLY AMERICAN
,LIVING ROOM SUITE - '319°0

says court
OVER COST

On All Wallpaper,
Vinyl Wall
ccWering and

OUt lAIN CHICK POLICY

.....~--

~

·

THE STAFF OF THE GaJlia.Jackson-Meigs Community Mental Health Center was
host to ~epresentallves of political and social service agencieS at a luncheon Friday afternoon m the Me1g.s Mental Health Center located in the old Meigs General Hospital. The
purpose of the meetmg was to inform each of the agencies of the operation of the center and
how best to utilize its services. Staff members are front, 1-r, Mary Skinner, personal advocacy coordinator; Marcy Kubbs, soc1al worker, and Mona Martin, mental health
techn1c1an ; back row , Da~e Ruhwedel, business administrator, Dr. George Greaves,
clm1cal psychologist and center director, an d Steve Dawson, Meigs Center supervisor.

IN CASE WE RUN OUT
.. btcav .. of 1he high

demand fot salt iltml
..REQI..EST A RAIN OEQ(
.. IOfferJood dufi"9
sale ~r i

SAVE ON REG. •3.77

REGUlAR $1.98

Pkg. of 60 Pinless
Disposable DIAPERS

-

'l?Jt

only )

MULTI-PURPOS~

STORAGE
CHEST

$ 19
l

OUR.
LOW

Super absorbent pinless diapers
have convenient self adhesive tabs .
Fit bo_bies 12-22 pounds.

$}57

PRICE

Iii

REG. •23.88 Black&amp; Deckef"•

71f4 IICH ·POWER SAW
.
THE APPLE CRATE , the mobile reading van sponsored by Ohio University's

;

: College of Education and the Meigs Local School District under the teachers corps reading
; project, made its first appearance in the Regatta parade. Driving the van underneath the
:: frog were John Redovian and Dave McWilliams.

·\513 $}}99

REG. $14.99-21 PC. SOCKET WRENCH SI:.T
Features easy-to-make bevel and depth ad justments,
1 horsepower motor. Exhaust keeps sawdust away
from cutt i ng line for better v is ibility. 4400 RPM.

REG. '19.96 GILLETTE'S ·

SUPER MAX .

1/ 4 and 3/ 8" drive sel, 14
sockets, spark plug socket,
ratchet, 2 _extensions, odaptor, tpinner bandle, case.

SA\1

$3

.

;

Reg. 116.95 Floor Model

T6:: arlu:n &amp; Sta•d
Adlntaltlo Molaturo Control

DRYER/STYLER
SAVE
$3.08

$}6~~...
IT

20" diameter pla sl1 c bowl - White
stand . 36" overall height . Bowl
seP,arates . into halves for easy

plant tendmg.

such."

'

''' .
•••

.....

~

••

When Rubin approved the
plan he described it as
"desegregatlve In Intent"
and one that would have "an
Integrative effect.''
The appellate court agreed
the plan was a "step toward
Integration" but pointed out
that the Constitution and
recent Supreme Court
decisions mandated quicker
and !Inner Integration ef.
forti.

'

•

••

•;•

A HALT IN THE PARADE STOPPED the Bratwurst Festival Queen Annette Hipsher of
Bucyrus
long enough to posse for a picture. She was drien by Randy Yates and Rich Bailey
[
• of Middleport.
·
..J..

.
•••

.;I;)EPARTMENY
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE ONLY

'

•
unserved residential ?nd
~nough gas IS
Pro,mi.sed· small
commercial premiSes
~

'

CINCINNATI (UP!)
School officials in l)ayton,
Ohio, must scramble this
sununer to come up with a
better integration plan before
school starts in September.
That is the impact of a
stern federal 'appeals court
declaration Tuesday that
current Dayton integration
~ns are not good enough.
In an unanimous decision,
three U.S. Sixth Circuit Court
of Appeals judges ruled that
the Dayton Board · of
Education plan-previously
approved by Federal Judge
carl Rubin-feU short of what
was needed.
The judges pointed out the
plan dismantled only two of
several segregated schools in
Dayton.
"Under the plan approved
by the district court, the basic
pattern of one-race· schools
will continue
largely
unabated," the appeals court
said. "The plan fails to
eliminate the continuing
effects of past segregation
Is,
therefore,
and
inadequate."
. The judges said the plan for
the 1971).76 school year was so
inadequate they wanted to
throw It completely out and
order a new one, but it was
too close to the start of school
to do that.
So, the court ordered the
plan ''modified" th!B sununer .
"so as to improve the racial
balance before Sept. 1 in as
many of the remaining
racially identifiable schools
In the Dayton system as
feasible."
Aside from a direct order
concerning one school, the
appellate court did not spell
out how the "modification" is
to be carried out, leaving that
up to Rubin's court to decide.
The judges also directed
Rubin's court to adopt a new
"system-wide" integration
plan for the 1976;-77 school
year. by Dec. 31, 1975. That
plan must be In effect in
September, 1976.
Besides closing 100 per cent
black Roosevelt High School
and "restructuring" all-black
Miami Chapel Elementary
. School, the key features of the
plan criticized by the appeals
court called for creation of
several "magnet" schools
throughout Dayton.
The "magnet" Sfhools
were designed to attract both
black and white students for
classes not offered at their
regular schools. However, for
all other instruction the
students wou\d remain at
their home schools.
Said the appeals court,.
"even if the magnet schools
are successful, the vast
majority of one-race schools
will remain Identifiable as

·

'

-~CO~UMBUS

(UPI) .llesiden tial and small
~ercial customers will
It able to obtain natural gas
rvice from the River Gas
. if applications are made
the firm before June 3(), the
-, bllc Utilities Commission
01
Ohio (PUCO) sa id
~esday .
• Any re&lt;idential or small

f

commercial applican t to
whom a written commitment
for service was by River Gas
before J uhe 30 will receive
service, according to an
interim
PUCO
order,
provided the applicant is
ready to receive service on·or
before Dec. 31.
River Gas must provide
·service to new and currently

'

which have been demolished
or otherwise destroyed, the
commission also ruled,
provided those premises
were being served within five
years of Tuesday's decision .
The PUCO, in an additional
· move to protect "impacted
areas," said gas service will
be provided for the
replacement of an · existing
industrial or la~ge commercial facility ..

REGUlAR .Sfi9.95

MODEL "190"
WINCHESTER WitH
4 POWER WEAVER SIDPE
22 Semi Automatic Rifle

·a .c. MURPHY
\
J

...

CHARGE
IT

SAVE
1
15

POLY
SCREEN HOUSE
Complete Wtih Rope
Slides and Stakes

CO. • Tlllii - F.I.NDLY

Classified Ads
bring you
utra cash
for
- shopping sprees

Rabies ,

For
Distemper

noculation s .

Dr .

ln -

Paul

Shockey, Veterinarian .
Saturday, June 28
1 To4 P.M.
County Garage

WANT AD WAY

Meigs Fairgrounds
Sponsored by

Meigs Co. Humane Society

INTRODUCING

J .&amp; W Mount
,

Cleaning Service
Phone 388-8865 or 388-8195
Bidwell, Ohio

SECOND PLACE WINNER in the non-commercial group was the Royal Crown entry .
The Regatta parade was viewed by huge crowds that lined both sides of the streets in both
Middleport and Pomeroy.

Complete Cleaning- Fire Damage
Carpet Shampoo- Interior Painting

HOST AND HOSTESS - Mr. and Mrs. Ferman Moore
who hosted the party for the news media at their attractive home on Lincoln Hill.

SLICED
SlAB BACON

¢

FRENCH CITY

99
7
9¢
SMOKED PICNIC HAMS •• !~·. .
69¢
GRAPEFRUIT •••••••••••••••

LIVER PUDDING •••••••••• ;~-.
CATHY OSBORNE, left, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
FIRST PLACE WINNERS - Ann Lewis and Mike
Owens were first place winners in their age divisions at
the casting derby. Pictured with them is Brian Simpson of
the Columbus office, Division of Wildlife, a former Racine
resident.

Lo Osborne of Pomroy, , was crowned first rWJnerup iri
the Big Bend Regatta Weekend Queen contest at the
Pomeroy High School Friday night by Miss Tanya

Keebaugh, last year's first runnerup. A well received
program by the Senior Citizens Choir under the direction
of Mrs. carrie Neutzllng preceded the coronation
ceremonies of the queen pa~eant.

Ruppert's dream
may come true
HAMILTON, Ohio (UP!) James Ruppert had a dream
H years ago he was being
wndemned to death in a
courtroom.
Ruppert is now trying to
keepthatdreamfromcoming
true.
Attorneys for the accused
mass murderer, who are
expected to rest their case
today, put a psychiatrist on
the starid Tuesdy who
disclosed Ruppert's dream.
The doctor said Ruppert
dreamed he was In a courtroom similar to the Butler
County Common Pleas Court
where he is now beihg tried.
"He even drew a sketch of
the court," said Dr. Glenn M.'
Weaver of Cincinnati. "He
showed where some of his
friends were sitting. Almost
as you see the cour:troom
today."
Ruppert dreamed he was
being sentenced to death "for
no known reason," said Weaver, who treated Ruppert
fi:om 196i to 1965.
No dream now, Ruppert
· ~ctually faces a possible
death sentence If convicted of
murdering 11 relatives last
. Easter Sunday- the largest
slaying of members of one
family.
Ruppert's attorney has
admitted in court his client
shot the relatives , but
Ruppert has pleaded innorent
by reason of insanity.
Ruppert's 1961 dream. was

described for his psychiatrist
in a three page note, accompanied by the conrtroom
sketch . Weaver said the
dream showed Ruppert felt
hopeless and figured "death
was no better than life."
Weaver testified Ruppert
had " masochistic" tendencies 10 years ago and is
now "psychotic and suffering
from
paranoia"
-an
outgrowth of his previous
condition.
The psychiatrist figured
Ruppert's paranoia began
about 10 years ago when he
started believing people were
conspiring to have him
labeled a "homosexual" and
a "ConunWJist."
Weaver was the seventh
psychiatrist or psychologist
to testify for the defense:
The defense Tuesday also
recalled Ruppert's aunt, Mrs.
Ruby Lee, and had her testify
again about a history of
mental illness in Ruppert's
. family.
Ruppert's attorneys also
tried to knock down previous
prosecution testimony that
Ruppert was a skilled quickshot marksman.
- Mr. and Mrs. ArthiD' Bauer
said they had been target
shooting with Ruppert and
. both testified tbat Ruppert
used only his left hand for
shooting.
A prosecution witness, who
termed Ruppert's shooting
"superior," had testified he

FRENCH CITY
WHITE

Sib. bag

Showboat Brand

·

PORK N' BEANS ••••••~:~~:.

~ G~l~~~~ J~~~~-~~ .~~~~~•

o• • • • • • •

JELLO GELATIN

3
Assorted Flavors , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . oz.

CREAM OF CHICKEN
AN OUTS'rANDING performance and one rarely seen
was given by carolyn Clark, Johnstown, Pa., Saturday at
the Big Bend Regatta twirling festival. Miss Clark, 16,
twirled four fire batons during the competition. ·"

49

·-·-

¢

98¢
19¢

sOUP 19~

~2~~~:~. ~IT~~........... ~2

~

.

Broughton's

.

89

$} 29

2% MILK ..............~~~ .

saw Ruppert firing with his
right hand.
However, Bauer conceded
Ruppert was a "fail'ly good
shot. ...
All of Tuesday afternoon's
testimony was taken up by
Dr. Leigh M. Roberts, a
psychiatrist from
the
University of Wisconsin, who
also
termed
Ruppert
"paranoid." .
Vnder cross-examination,
Roberts said his fee for
examining Ruppert five
times for the defense would
be $1,800.

.

'

''"'

95

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

'·

12 ft. X 12 ·ft.

Reg. 147.88

Small Animal
CLINIC

EVERYBODY
Shops the

By RICK VAN SANT

10% Discount

~~t

NEW HAVEN Cub Scout No. 256 sported a frog jack-in-the-box.

to scramble

PRE-NOUDAY
BARGAIN HUNTER'S

I

got underway. The picture was taken from~ pickup truck
as it slowly passed by the 100 entries.

Dayton has

Murals

'

Ann Franklin became the
first woman newspaper edi·
tor in the United States when
arter the death of her son, she
too k charge of his Newport
R.I. , Mercury newspaper and
its printing plant on Aug. 22,
1762 The Wor ld Almanac
say;. She wa s Benja min
Franklin's sister·in·law.

~k~~oz.~~

~1

19

bottles • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

TICKETS ON SALE
HERE
NOW

OPEN .
9til7
Mon.-Sat.·
Pnces effective
Thursday thru Saturday

�'
'

'

-

18 - The Dail~ Sent mel, Middleport-Pome roy, 0 .. 1\'ed:"''"'"'. J '""' 2:!, 1 ~7:!
~
'

( t (1 \.~

~ ( 1 {
'.1 10 \t
l'rl V

I I

II

'- 1 1,1 1

,) 1 t

[J
by the above cartoon.

rxrr:x J

_:P:.:::
rinl:.=
llle:.::
SIII=Ptl=ISI"AN=
" sW!-=R=
hm::______J'
Jumhlu. QUAIL

RUST Y CIR CUS

An8 .. tr. f ur .~tot ~

s1111

I
'
I
I
J.

I

:I

i

fI

•I

I

,_

f

&lt;;~

1

, ,,

I

&lt;,ltlri ti'I 'S
(. Jl11 p{) )l!,
P l t(ll I' I ' l&gt;
I {\ !
Ill
I ,)1(' 1'

re urne .

c h •e Jar r ell rn L etart F all s
( Buc ktown J Wedn esday and

of Hamden called on Mr , and
Mrs . Franc1s Moms Tuesday
afternoon and were supper
guests at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Wickline . The
Rev Sellers is m oving to
Gilboa from Hamden where
he served for four years.
Rev . Sellers was a former
pastor of Racine-Syracuse
Charge.
Mr. and Mrs . J1mmy
Burleson (formerly Marilyn
Lyons ) and children, Kelly,
Yockey , Greg and Tma, of
Abilene, Texas, spent two
weeks visitmg their parents,
Mr . and Mrs . Alfred Lyons
and brothers.
Mrs. Alfred Lyons had the
misfortune to fracture her
foot. She is convalescmg -at
home.
Mrs. E. A. Wmgett·, Mrs .
Ann Coe and Mrs . Mary
Spencer spent several days
•isoting relatives m Mochigan
md were overmght guests of
'vir. and Mrs . Paul Spencer on
: olumbus.
Mrs . William Smith and
;on, Jeff, of Dayton were
~uests Sunday of Miss Edith
iayman.
Mrs. John Thomas and
daughter, Genevieve of Industry, Pa., called on friends
in Racine and were overnight
guests of Mr . and Mrs. Harry
Curtis.
Mr . a nd Mrs . Allen
Graham and family were
weekend guests of thei r
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Harry
Willford and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
and granddaughter, Terry
Brace, and Mrs. Jack Adams
visited Mr . and Mrs. Fred
Brace at Southshore, Ky .
,.,rrs
Jim Spaun and
daughter spent a week w1th
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Powell.
Mr. and Mrs. Ollie S~yre ,
Jr . of Long bottom visited
Mr . and Mrs . Jim Brace
Saturday.
' Mr . and Mrs . Gerald Hart
and children of Newark spent
a weekend with Mr . and Mrs ,
Ronald Hart.
Mr . and Mrs Bob Birch
and daughters of Bellevue
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs . Elza Birch and Mrs.
Emma Salser and her guests,
Mr . anp Mrs. Jim Thompson
of 'w'i arner Robins, Ga
Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan
Jlussell, Jr . and Paula of
Mason spent Sunday with Mr _
and Mrs . Kenneth Turley.
Kenneth Swart of Akron is
visiting his mother, Mrs _
James Swart.
Mr . and Mrs . Delbert
Morris of Athens and Mrs.
Marie Chapman of Pomeroy
VIsited Mr. and Mrs. Francis
Morris Sunday afternoon.

Thursdny

fro m 8 a m

Ju ne 25 and 26
ft ll J p m

of barga "' '

Lot s

6 25 l! c

YARD SAL E , eve r y Thurs
day F r1ctay and Sa turda y
q u a rt e r
m tie
'ro rn
L angsvil l e o ff De&gt;~,ter Road
Follow the Stgns Ph one 741
6273
6 25 tfc
YARD SA LE , We dn es day ,
Thursday and rr1day on 630
South T h1 rd Avenue . M1d
dl eport
o 25 Jtc
YARD SA LE , 810 Sou t h
Seco n d St , M1ddleport
lue s
W ed ,
and
Thu r sdr.ty
O ld
c lock s ,
stone 1ar s an t ,ques, d1shes,
old p1c tures and clo th es
6 74 J t c
Y A RD SAL E , Ju ne 26 an d 27
at Lau r el Clt ff ne x t to th e
old Laurel C t tft school. som e
ant 1q ues In case of ra 1n
wdl be hel d th e ne ro:t day
6 2 I 31C

YARD SALE
Bett Dawson going to
Florida, having yard
sale .

Friday and Saturday

$1495

R ew M d

H UU O.., E l Clr C]C
PllOIH.' 992 380 I

lhea p
6 25 3tp

O LD fur n itur e.
rce box es
bras s b eds , or comp let e
househo lds
Wrtl e M
0
!\.\ il l e r , Rt
-1. P ome r oy
Oh tO Call 99 1 7760
10 7 74

OPEN EVES. 8 : 00
POMEROY, OHIO

..W-------------~-19fl9
------------~
V W wdh Bf\.Jf\.
w, ,_.,_
t tres Good cond tl ton
99? ~M 3

1 R i VE I It ~ t ie r Int r epid 19
II
SICl'PS SIX
i1kC tiC'W
P hOII C' ot.l 17 11
6 19 Ol e

19 7 J I&lt; 1\ 1\ S 1\ K I , 35 0 B 1q horn
E nQ rliC 1n lo p sha pe qooti
rub b er and 3 brk. e tra 1ler
Ca ii9Y //I IU
6 22 6t c
1/v

TR IU MPH 650 m otorb1k e for
sa l e Phon e 992 3647
b 25 ,lfc
WALNUT desk. 1n good con
dtlt on , S35 PMne 99? 28 07
6 25 51p
NEW
IM P ROVE D '' Z 1p
pr es ' !he q r eat 1ron pdl no w
wdh V t!a m Ill C N e l son
Druq
6 25 lt p
ST ERE O
r adtO
mod e rn
d C5 tQn B tra ck t ap e AM F M
r ad1o com btna tt on Balan ce
S \02 99 or te r ms Call 992
] 965
6 25 tf c
TW O WH ITE Fa ce c ow s, 3
and 4 ye ars old Two bulls ,
W h 1te Face an d Charolat s, 1
and 2 yeo r s old Two b ull s ,
Whrt~
F a ce and 1 1
C harota1~ one 3 m ont hs old
and one 3 weeks old One
Bull , Wh11e t n ce and An g us.
1 y('ar old Phone 949 4724
6 2..t 31 p

3 179

M I DL A ND 23 Chann el CB
6 2&lt;1 6tp
b ase. S140 , an d a F rtg 1da •re
all
t empe ratur e
l arge
FUR NI SHED
apar t men t
cap ac1 ty dryer , S75 Phon e
992 7897
adults only rn Middle port
Phon e 992 387 1
6 24 J tc
3 25 tt c
I R COildi i iOn('d 1 1111~ c1nd
ba th sc r eened bcl CJ.. por ch
Sut lil b le l or Olt1rc or ~'l du l! s
E I ROb inSon PllOil(' 99 ?
7B t6
6 19 6t p
TR AIL ER spa ce. I mile t~om
Pom eroy
P hone 99 7 58~8

6 2d

J Oe

CONTACT

&gt;

IU If (

U J.?N ap t ':1 roo ms an d ba th .
n1ce tarqe y ard ba th and '
1
90
South
•.c co nd
', 1 ,
1\for ddl e po rr
adult s only
P hon e 997 52 62 eve n 1n Qs
r;; n rt t

992 -2156

L 1cense. Canadran
Nt te Crawlers , 50 dz Duq
worms . 3 doz 5 1 Other bart.
tackl r , qum s, a m mo cb' s .
l ndt an Joe ' s Sports
308
Paqc Sf , Phone 99 2 3509
6 20 61C

NEW Guns a t Used Prr ccs . 1:17 0
W I LL
be
a cce pt tn&lt;r
ap
J..l c nl rn QI On f u lf 30 ' VP
pl 1ca t 1ons a t t he
f\&amp; P
s 119 95 1200 w,nc h cstcr
13utldtnq tn Mtd dl c po rt ,
I u ti 20' VR . S139 95 . 11 00
We dn es day June 25. 11 t tl l 1
Ren11nq ton 1\ ut o, ~lEW V5, 17
p 111
l or
n1ra t c utters ,
W1nc hes tcr 1/ qn
s .795 .
c h cck.e r s . p roduce •ncfl ,
\ ava qe •110 '1 1nQIC , S,\.19 5,
s tock bo y s
R C11111Hl iO n !RP 'J i l W SC Op C
6 2? 11(
&lt;; I lQ 9', ~. a vaqc ')'}7, S99 95.
W 1nchcs t c r \1·1 Leve r 30 J O,

Trailer
Al~mmum , wtth air
co ndttlontng ,
pnva1e
bedroom
wtth
Sealy
mattress &amp; box spnngs,
ntce front room wrth Sealy
&amp; shag carpeftng, fold sofa
1
ou t dtnette, lots of mtrrors,
a ll se lf contamed.

1 ,All

C. 9f!9 ')

HOU SEKEEPER , mus t l tve
1n, fa r m home If mt erestcd ,
wr t t e to M r
H o ll i e E
St ar che r , R t 1, Box 114 ,
Portlan d , Oht o &lt;.~5 770
6 25 12t p
SOMEONE: to cu t my Qril SS
r eq ula r l y
Phon e 997 7774
6 '] .t ]IC

Ttl an )f!~. IJ CCii'l l /

1

" ,

~

!9 9~
Hopk1ns and ldl cn
Ci'!p rtnd na t I Tarq et 529 9),
\ pantsh 1? 70 Double /\r t ron
/,sI S '51'1 '&gt;0 Rav (: n ?~A uto
Ni ckle '5:l1 95 , RG 66
7.7
find 1'l Mas S'i'J 9 ~ p l u s to t s
of o th er new quns a! r cc p oc
' ii'Jrnqs at l nclta n Joe 's
\ po r t s , lOH Pr1 qe ~"
Phone
q9'/ ] 1•09
I

?f' l f ('

5- 14 1 mo

R egular and
Excavator Type

Real Estate for Sale

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

FOR SALE!
40x85
Brick Building

6-6- 1 mo

Bissell Bt.-tltiS

. . . . ...

.

'

MOMENT? OF

_ _ _.___ ,_._.. ______

i

Construdion Co.

Teaford Realty

Pll, 985-4102

Vorq II B , 5r .. Broker

STORES

3

SHOPPING
CENTER
LOCATION OF FOUR ACRES
AVAILABLE, ON ANY OF
THE ABOVE CALL 992 -3325.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON B. TEAFORD.
ASSOCIATES

I

CLELAND
608 E.
REALTY
MAIN
t'OMERov:·o-

I LEVEL ACRE - w:th
NEW HOM E 3 bedrooms,
colored bath, n1ce k1tchen,

utility R, fully carpeted :n
you r chotce of color s,
garage , ftn a nced to righ t

pa rty $20, 000
THE
UPSTAIRS
IS
DOWNSTAIRS Th is
ranch sty le w: ll e nd all tha t
c llm b:ng . 2 BR, bath ,
utrl1ty R, nice kitchen , part

r;---~---:-"

l

R eg 159 95
Ondgci
l y .tri~
3 l bu
J

•ther mode l s
on sale

;POMEROY LAND"MAitK

9. ~Jack W. C•n•y, M1r.
flllll:. Ph on t "2-2111 · .
I I f l. T I fl.~ E
C0 N C ~ E T E
I r ~!C [ P Q l, T' 1\ Cohc r e t e
tHI\t v.
11 0,.1 . 1 lt f C' l rru t• and
v,.. ll not r1 r;t or brn d ltkr a
'i lf('l flO\! ol l&gt;(l Wt ll • 10 1 ....IO t
r, L" ,1 v•oodcn po~! Pt101 r_·
99? .,A 11
6 72 Sip

I

l evel

acre

JU ST 113,500.

SA\JE

£JI.TRA\JM:.A.t..IT

M'i Bll&lt;n.JOi-.'1'?

11\AT

LITrLE ORPHAN ANNJF:

LITTLE ORPHAN
QH, 600PYf
I FIGGERED M~ .

ANNIE-GIANTS

I EXPERIEJjCED
t. . ....
/ Radiato
I
.
~
!
Service
.- '

AlLI GATORS '

WHY, ONE OF TI-IEM
WOULD EAT ALUG...TORS

AM. WOULD 86
ALON !,; PRETTY
SOON"' AH0'1' 1

MR.

SAME ~S WE EAT
SARDINE 'S- BUT ~EV
ONl.'Y LASTED .t.B OuT

"""'!

/to. ~UNORED MIL LION

YEA.RS- ll-4 0S E WERE

THE EXCITING DAY S-

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER
"At caut1on L1gh1 "
Rt. 7, Tupp er s Pfatns , 0 .

GUARA NT EED

20,33;

pl1ances &amp; n ew t urn1t ure
Open 9- S W ed thrOUgh Sun .
Ph . 667-3858
5 \ 5 1 mo

wt:LL , We've SEEN ~e EAST
COAST ANO DISNEYWORLD, OOC.. ,
SO WHAT 14A?PENS NC/IN ?' ~

5-30-1 mo
WO ULD YOU

Nathan Btggs
Radtator Specialist

Pom eroy

D &amp; D TREE Tr~ mm1 n g, 20
yea r s ex pertence In sured ,
free eslim ates Cal l 992 3057
Coo l vi ll e Phon e ( l l 667
JO.t 1
4 JO lf c
-~------·

f.? Ef\D Y M I X t....ONCRETE
ct e t rvL'r e d r1g h t 10 your
pro1ec t I a-st and eas y F ree
cs ttm a tes Ph on e 99 2 3284.
Goeg lem Read y Mtx Co ,
M1 d d lepor t . Oh tO
6 30 1f c
N EED A ne W hom e bu il t on
you r loP Con l ac: M ilo B
Hut c ht SOn, Rutl and, Ohro
Phon e 74 2 36 15
5 8 lf c

---

1(\JN ~ heparcf"Coniracl! ng and

Remode lrng Ser vtce W hole
ho use
remode l r n g,
spec 1a l tt es
k tl c hen and
ba t h Phone (JO&lt;ll 77J...5JJ6or
742 366 4 da y or ev ening
6 4 26tc

SE PTI C f-ANK SCLEANE D
R easonable RI\TE S P hone
1 t 6 J7B 2 Gallipolts
John
Ru sse ll , owner

'' 9 lfc
HOU SE a n d r oof pai nting a n d
repatr s ror fr ee es tt ma t es .
cal l 992 6190 or 99 2 5837
6 15 261c

--

- .

---~--

---

BELIEVE?

- - --- . ·-------

-

EXCAVA TING , doze r , load er
and backhoe work . sep t1 c
!anks
tns t a ll ed
dump
tru ck s an d to bo y s for h tr e
.,..,1 1 hau l f 1l l d 1rt . top soi l
l 1mcs tone and qrav el Cal l
rob or Roger Je ff er s. day
pt,one 992 70ll9 nt gh t phon e
&lt;.J •:; 3.)2'i or 99 '1 5232
2 1 I lf c

-

J

Butld an a ll s teel building at
Pole Barn prices? Golden
Gtan t All -Steel Bulldmgs
R t 4, Box 148, Waverly'
Otuo Phon e 9&lt;.~7 2296
'
6 24 26tc

ITH NELSON
OTORS, INC.

- -

I
Middleport I

327 N 2nd

From th e largest Tr uck or
Bull doze r R adrator to the
smallest H eater Core

~~~74

WE GOING HOME?

~--

Roar l N G.
Spo u11ng ,
a lum rn u m and vmy l Siding ,
c omp l ete
remod e l rn g .
Phone 742 62 73
6 25 261p

-

" o. '

t: .o.Lav-a trng , -sack hoe
an d l tg ht ha uling se rv rces
Drtveway slag deltvered
Ph one {3 0&lt;1 ) 773 53&lt;16 or 742
3664 day or even mg s
6 &lt;1 26t c

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

S EW IN G

MACH INE ,

Repatrs . se rvt ce. all ma kes
992 2'l8 J The Fabr tc S~o p ,
P omeroy /\u lh tJrized Sm'ger
'i ,1 1cs a nd Se r v 1ce
We
sharpen SC ISS Or S

3 29 Ol e
DOZER work. , l and clearmg
by th e a cre
hou r l y or
c ont ra c t
F arm
ponds
r oa d s, etc L ar ge dozer anc
oper ator w• th over 20 yea r ~
expe r tenc e
Pul l 1n s F.x
cavahng , P omer oy, Ohio
Phon e 992 2.1 78
12 19 ttc
ExcAVA T I NG .
DoL ~ , .
Back ho e, ddch er , water
lrne s. footer s, d ra rn s, road s
and brush c tea n 1ng N o 10b
too small, n o wea th er t oo
ba d
Phone Ch ar l es R
Half teld , R1
I. Rutland,
Oh ro Phone 742 6092

s 2 521 p

---- -· -------

HOME R epa 1r' Service - Go t
proble ms wllh you r hom e?
wan1 ' ' r ep a1red f as1 Call
A I the house doctor Phone

GASOUNE ALLEY

I'll a\wat.JS heed
somebod4!

ULABNER

LET US DO IT! !

.Carpeting

501 NYLON
99

4

THEY~

I HATE 10 LJSE THE P.OWER
i

I!IJ

Pel"RIFIE;:D
IN MIDAIR!!-

OF A DOtJeLE WHAMMY FeR
PRKTICE, BUT I GOTTA
WOIK MY WA'Y LJP !!-

I,
•

Square
Yard

RUBBER BACK

6 17 -l2tc
G ENERAL Repair . c l ean up
and
h a l.l li ng ,
cutt i ng ,
w e I d rn g ,
c a r pen t r y.,
plumbrng , elec ma son ry
and gen e r a l r e model i ng
Cal l Sk l l Poo l Phone 992

5126
-

6 17 ttc
r

-

-

- - - - - - -- -

ELWOOD so\•iER-5 .R.EPAIR
Sw ee p ers , toas ters , irons ,
a lt sma ll a pplr ances • Lawn
mower , n ex. t t o Stat e Htgh
way Garage on R out e 7
Phone 985 3825
4 16.tfc

We have hundreds of
carper val ues Your iob can
be completed in l to 2
weeks
No long wa iting
pertod Our tnsta!ler has 28
vears exper ience . Exper1
t n~tallation
You ' ll like
what you get

borhood 20.33 , lron s:de 13
5. 3D-News 6, Beverly Hrl lbi ll1es. 8. Gel Smcu t 15

ElectriC Co . 20, V:lla Alegre 33
6 OQ---News 3,4,8, 10,13 , 15, AB C New' 6 S;:some So ?0
One of a K:nd 33

, CALL 742 -4211
TJ\LI&lt; TO WENDELL
GRATE ,
-

I DON'T" EVEQ WANT 1D
SEE OQ HEAR TliE
,'! NAME WINNIE WINKLE
AGAIN , IF I .CAN

wERE READY
GETUNDEQ
WAY, BIQ 1

HELP IT !

.,.
'•

Mobile Homes For Sale

",

'

-~

-

'

.-

r oom , tHr cond .• washe r &amp;
dry er, tn good cond ition

cash 15 homes wante d , 1958
thru 1972 m odels
Phon e
( 6 14 ) 446 1425, Gallipoli s
J -9 -78tf

-· .--------------

ASKING $4,500

Real Estale For Sale

JUG~~AID!!' WHAT

RUTLAND -

I 77 1\.. CRE S l and and loc us ;
posts A lso , 1965 r:ord L TO
Phon e 7-12 3656

UP THAT TREE FER?

2 BR. bath,

liv ing h as fireplace.

ca r

peled, tiled, paneled, All in
good condition . ASKING
$9,500 . MUST
SELL.
MAKE US AN OFFER .
FOR
GOOD
HOMES
PRICED RIGHT SEE US
TODAY.
CALL992 22S9

1

5 23 521p

roR SA LE by owner , aboVe •
avera ge home and garage
near mines on Rt 124 , west
l&gt; f R ut l an.d Phone 7&lt;12 -3794
6-24 4tC
_.._

_____

~--

TWO l"\ EOROOM hOUSe fOr
sa! c Phon e 985 J 102
6 10 261c

· ·1"'" 1···· ·

-

,I ' .

.. ..

'

.. -

~

~

'

ARE 'l.E CLIMB IN'

I'M GOIN' AFTER
MY KITE I AUNT
,,,,1r~

LOWEEZV
7_,-----J""I

GO GIT TH'

New

Evening at Symphony 33
8:3Q---Texas Wheelers 6,13
9- 0o--Str ee t s of San F rancrsc o 6, 13. MO'· tP 'Corr,
m anch e St at ron" 8. Hollyw ood Telp vr•,ton Th Pntrro
20.33 , Mov te " Th e McK enr te Brea k
IC

9.3Q-Mov:e "Target Ri sk" 3,4, 15
10 :00-Harry 0 6,13. N ews 20, , New!'&gt; 10

Wrrrnzw t:l

10 ·3Q---Horace Marsha ll 33
11 OQ-News 3, 4,6,8, 10,13,15, ABC New &gt; 13
11 Jo-Joh nn y Carson 3,4,15 , W 1de W orld Sp,...,crol 1"
~

FB I 6 , M ovie " T he M cKenzie Break·

Movtr:•

" The lusty Men " 10, J anaki 33
12·3Q---Wide World Spee&gt;a l 6
1

oo-Tomorro w

3,4 ; N ews 13

AstroGrapt:l
&amp;

Bemoce Bede ')sol

For Thursday, June 26. 1975

ARIES (March 21-Aprol 19)
Yo u sho uld be able to pull
th 1ngs toge ther now and get
coo per at1on that has been unob tatnabl e 1t1e past fe w days

TAURUS (Aprol 20-May 20)
f;wor ec wh ere ac ' ~Clncem en t of
you r wo rk or career rs con, ,e rn-

ec

nPw&lt;; ,,•

Crea trv1ty IS your fortP todAy
Choo se ac t rvrtre s t lltlt
chR II enge yor1r rmngr nR I IOfl
when you work Wt1 h your hnnds
ilnc! m1nc!

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Foll ow o ff beat ler:~d s to tmd
mercha nc!tse you wrln t You re
good at r oo ttn g~out barg a1ns
You can sco re '

Yesterday's. Answer
LEO ( July 23-Aug . 22) You can
12 More pro25 Stet's anto- ell ec\tvely dtrect other s tod av
found
thesos
anC help th em sort OLtl lhl"tr Af·
tatrs Tt1 ey won t r ealtze th ey re
16 Neutrons"
27 Scottish
bernq manaqed
and
port
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) L' l·
29 Devil
electrons
ti e th1ngs mean a lot 10 y011r
19 Perfectly
30 One of
career t odr~y Heed sma l l
( 3 wds.)
Lear's
Cetails - yOLIII see llow Impor 22 Thunderclap
daughters tant 1\ wa s la ter
23 Machination 34 CombustiLIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) r,
24 Frank
ble heap
sp tn-o tt fr om the soc.tal whrr!
Dempster
36 Rumaman
Sherman
coin
poem
37 Time
( 3 wds.)
period

t'' ·

1 •

I'

'4

SCORP IO (Oct
Ynu 11'.111 ('' r, •
iliiJI ' I ,, , I
1 t1n 1\
,r• 1 r
10

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,

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11

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SA G ITT AR IIJS (Nov
2 1) lf 1f' &gt;' 1 °1 +
f•vr·&lt;1'1n•
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CAP RIC ORN

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GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

1,

Nlll 1 rq

f111

The aspects are tn you r corner
t oday You re e spe c1ally

1 \
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?:J.fcb

Ym1tl '
\I t1 • " • '
(I

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PlSC ES (Feb

20 M:tr cll 20 1

1€df-.l11 lj

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e Your

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hanutr tq l11•

.oun~2~r~'~'day

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Game force makes grand bid
NORTH
4AK QYflb '!

2.~

1 .1 sn!td sp.1d1 '-Il l ! r·trlllf'!

tno m.r n\ h1glt

1

BREAK '&lt;ORE

1

n

,1·d:-;

I' lr'I!H'I 11 \(Ill
pt .. tlr-J1, ['t fttrt~ !Jt, I ,l!r·
('(I I\ :-,,t1hltt•d 111
llltl .I

It ,dso Scll1 1

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&lt;1

WEST
-+-1---11 • 10 74

E,\SJ
"' :l
'I IU 97bS
t (/ IOG 2

'I -

- + - f - + - i l t K J R 54
• Q 10 7 4 3
• K .I ;,
SOUTH lUI
• J2
'I KQJR4 2
t A73
• A9
Eas t West vul neruhlt·
We st

North

E.tst

Sou t h

Pas s

2•

Pa ss

:1.,

PM S
Pa ss
Pa ss

4•
5¥
Pass

Pa ss
Pass

4N 1
7 :"' 'If

, I)J(I.tl-., ·,td-.td,ti!S, ,t Jlh ..
tnt lin n liP srrnpl\
IJic!d\W (Itld lour nP!Illlnp
' 1 \'1HIIt
IHJ\\I'd lhP twn
I! St n ~ dt't~-. -.,IJU!h r·n:ntlt'd 111
IC'ilsl I !1Jp 1!11 k' Jl, lid !Itt&gt;
llllliJ1J IJI!lfl)lr llhl' IHI O!H•
'l!ld trunqr ·'ll1 np''!l"l~: lc·rd
1 hr &lt;II'' t•,ttiP Ill tilt d tl(l l to b1
t \'l'r\' WI'L' 'JJI''
t•'.1 t ,. 1 h ,,
t:-; \\ 1111 ld tH'd' 1/li' r11 L!!.rr,d
.\ lr, .111 IP.rrl lt\ I· .t'·'
lrP d ,, -.;1 !'l· f' ,urd ,) rn
d

1'1

to

work it:

P,tss

Opi'nmg l ead - 4 A

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

"' "uth

••

One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A is By Oswald &amp; James J acoby
' t
! ' c~r;;s
2V
"·""
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
On
the
oppos:te
end
of
the
b:d
P"
"
.!
A
I'""
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
dmg spectrum from t he s tgn~of f You Snt! l h hold
hints. Each day the code letters are dilferent.
ts the game force When a ~ 2 v K .J 9 7 :, • \ I\ (/ J 1 .a. \ 1
CRYPTOQUOTES
player makes a gam e-for cmg \\ h~t do \ lfll dr ' 11(1\\ '
FJV

ZKX

WNIKBZ

FJNF

MKB

~'K

KXWG

HVZFBKG

DFZ

C BK M V

D X U V
FJV

z..
z_

btd ,

the partnerShip

IS COffi·

A-

'oUt tJ:u ln ~·t lm' "htm 11 ,,

m1t ted to keep btddmg unL1l m,,xm1um he.1r1 nil !'It' \\11 h tlw tH,

ga me is reached
North 's two-spade response
to the opemng heart bod was a

ot

~pari es

lu o; l

bul

" l' hl',rrh

To t&gt;1y·~ 1111,:S'III&gt;"'
·

.

ga me force. South 's three-heart lnstt';.td n!·hnldlng llll ('l' p.rd r.8 V N- reply merely revealed that he your pmtrH'! lw s Jumpt·d 1" !uP"~

held a reb1dda ble heart s Ui t lt 11 ;~ns O\rt'r \ IJ IH th~r·t • rlt~nnnndo..
V P D Z F V X U V • saod nothmg about how good tus 11 h,JI 0" 1 "" &lt;I&lt;' "''"
'

z

_ S N0 V
I BG UV
Yesterda 's Cry t uote· HATE SHUTS HER SOUL WHEN
y
p oq
'
DOVE-EYED MERCY PLEADS. -CHARLES SPRAGUE
(C)t&amp;a Klna FeatYres Syndicate, Inc.)

hand was
In the language ol b1ds ol that
particular pa rtnership. North 's
JUmp to four spades conveyed
the message that h:s game·
(orc mg b:d was ba sed large!)

A n" \'~'' rumnno\\
_ ___._____
Send $r lor ,//I CORY MODLRN

book to W•o ·" 8/ldqe, (c/o ""•'
newspaper) r
Box 489, Rad',
C•ly Siat•on New York N Y 1001'·

o

LADDER SO '1E
WON'T FALL AN '
,TOMFOOL NECK

t,

fOmO/ r OW IP A rff 11 lh11 r, hl'f'(l

WIN AT BR IDGE

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

ZNXFWG ·

.

What'..,
J•rn"''

Ktngdom 10, I o Te ll th e Truth 11, Amettcan
Ou tdoor sman 15
.a · oo--Mov ie " The Spec1ali sl s" 3,4,15, 8dr~,ey N'ttllfl 1
6, 13, The Walton s 8, \0 , In Search ol a Mae-;tro ?0

t 9

ZDKX

'

Rpw tctw1l I

Price is R:ght 8, Consum er Sur•mal K&gt;t ?0 Wild

'I R 6 2

OVHDUDXV:

'

13

Dean IS. Making It Coun nt 20, Nova 33

r••PETCONSULTA~ll

RUTLAND
.FURNITURE
742-4211
. Rullooi

New~

7 3D-Holl ywood Sq uares 3, ,4, Ohto Lo1tery 6

10:3Q-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10; Fry:ng
Pans West 33.
11 :OQ-Hlgh Rollers 3,4, 15, One Life to Live 6, Tat
tletales a, 10.
11 .JQ---Hollywood Squares 3,6,15; B lankety Blanks 13,
News 4; Love of Life 8,10
11 :55-Take Kerr 8: Dan Imel's World 10.
12 :00-Jackpot 3, 15; Password 6, 13; Bob Braun's 50-50
Club 4; News 8, 10; Mister Rogers 33
12 3D-Blank Check 3,15; Split Second 6,13, Search for
Tomorrow 8.10; Etec. Co. 33.
12 55-NBC News 3, 15.
1· oo-News 3: All My Ch lldren 6, 13; Phil Donahue B;
Young &amp; the Restless 10. Not For Women Only 15,
To Be Announced 33.

Is

SELL your mobile home for

12&gt;60 MOBILE HOME - 3
BR , ba th, Expando living

6 3Q--N BC N ews 3,4,15 . ABC

7 · 0Q--Tr u th or Con s 3,11 Bowl1 ng fot D olla r s 6
Myltne8; N ewslQ , Lei's Make a Deal 13

~i,U."Oifj;~~iJJJI'&lt;- 29 More
abundant
31 Misjudge
32 Ending for
serpent
33 Lenin's New
Economic 1-::-::-+-t-Policy
(abbr.)
35 Worked like i-::-;,--+--+a dog
11 Nervous
:ltl Early JewIT'LL MAKt;
ish ascetic
A NICE l5URISI
39 Construct
N-41&lt;:".J&gt; 7 ATTRACnON -

G.o:~ "lS"

Mtkf'

4 3Q--Bewttched 3. M erv Grrff1n J, Mod Squ.Jd ft.
Mtckey Mouse C l ub 8, Bonanza 15
5 ·DO--FBI 3; Andy Grtffdh 8; Mtsl er Roqer s Ne tql!

6·QO-Sunrise Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6.25-Farm Report 13 13 .
6:31)-Five Minutes to l:ve BY 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10; Patterns for living 13.
6 35-Columbus Today 4.
6 45- Morning Report 3; Farmtlme 10
7.00-Today 3,4, 15; A.M America 13,6 , CBS News
8, 10 .
. a.oo-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, Schoolles 10,
Sesame St. 33.
8.30-B:g Valley 6, Popeye 10.
8.55-Chuck White Reports 10.
9·QO-A M 3; Ph il Donahue 4,15; lucy Show 8, Capt.
Kangaroo 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9·31)-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Rvue 13
'

I Wild party
p1ece
41
"
Rule
5 Irritate
Britanma"
10 Earthen·
composer
ware Jar
11 Jog the
DOWN
memory
1 Nonsense!
13 Repneve
2 Holy place14 Punish by
3 Rebuff
!me
m1ldly
15 Gen.
(3 wds.)
Arnold's
4 Kind of
nickname
fever
16 Rosary
5 Cowardly
bead
6 Rugged
17 That
guys
woman
(hyph .
18 Decaying
wds.)
20 Knock-7 Soul (Fr.)
21 Koestler's
8 No hardened
"Darkness
crimmal
at -"
(2 wds.)
22 Stance
9 Carve on
23 Pressureretief
cook
25 Pay respect to
26 Market
price
27 UnwiUing

10

CBS New s B. 10, Zoom 33

listen
~~~~~~~~ .28 totoConunand
a horse

742 1081

-

:-o EP T I C T I\NK S c leaned
Mod ern ~, an t l a!mn 99') 395d
or 99:1 7J .t9
9 18 tt c

---

W I LL TRIM or c ut tr ees and
shr ubbery an d p a1n t roof s
P hone 9tl 9 3221 or 742 -444 1
.,
6 2426tp

Starting
even rng
cou r se
in
UP.holsterrng and tur ntture repa tr Thrs is a
skill tha1 can be a very
en1oyable h obby and
save you hund reds of
dollars by re -butlding ,
re u p h ols t er mg
a nd
r epa1r1ng
you r
own
furnrtur e Class will b e
conducted on e even tng
each w eek for a period
of ten weeks by R . E .
Knotts, a profess,onal
upho ls t e r e r f or more
than tw enty years F or
reser vatrons to auend a
demonst ratr on
c la ss,
Wh1 ch will be fr ee of
charge an d w tthout
oblt ga tJon , wrile at once
to Knott s Upholstertng ,
Sec ona
Ave . ,
116 3
Gatltpolt s, Ohio 45631 or
call 446 29 17
At the
demons t r a tton
session
we Wtl l answer all of
your
qu es tto ns
and
explain the d e1ails.

"The B r o t hers. O'Toole '

Movte

Dougla s 13

by THOMAS JOSEPH
40 Musical
ACROSS

ap

I

8,10, Feeling Good 20 , Folk Gu:tar 33

~-'H4'

BARGAI N S
are
our
m tddl e name " tn clean,
used
f u rn 1 tur e.

Free Est1ma1"~
PH. 992-2550

~

I

IN THOSE DAYS

l

4 oo-Mr . Cartoon 3, I Drea m of Jeann te 11 Somerset
15; Gtlligan ' s I s 6. Musical Charr s 8 SPsome ~1

IO:fli)-Ce lebrity Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Spin -Off 8,10;,
Dinah 13; Lilias, Youga &amp; You 33.

Construction
and Plumbing

~------

ba sem en t ,

I

All-WEATHER
ROOFING

.&gt;-5-1 mo.

I

PORTA-COOL'"
ROOM-to-ROOM

AND S()N, INC;

Does
your
home I
require any of these •
I
serv1ces?
1

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages

110 Mr·ch,lntc St
PPnlf'roy, Ohto

NEAR

V. V. JOHNSON

WE DO:
I
Roofing - Siding
, Complete
Home
' Maintenance.

Chest,r, Ohio

I DIDIJ 'T

~ou \IVIJ~F-uL-,

.,_....._....,....__.._.,.._._..l

3 3o-Gne Life to Live 13, Lucy Show 6; Mntch Gdnte

12 3D-Wide World Special 6.
I oo-Tomorrow 3.4, News 13.
THURSDAY, JUNE 26.197S

P.. OIAMOND Rl~~ ~CXJ C&gt;.JU'&lt;'I"
Mf3 /&gt;. Dt~D Rlt.IIP FOR

..-._

I 3Q---Days of Our ~ :ves3,4, 15. Let's Make A Deal6 , 11.
As the World Turns 8, 10, Ep:sode Act:on 33
2.00-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13 , Gu•d:ng L:gh l B, lO .
Family at War 33
2.3Q---Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6, 13 . Edge of
N:ght 8,10
3 DO-Another Wor ld 3,4, 15, General Hosp: tal 6, 13,
Pri ce is Right 8. 10, Lil :as Yoga &amp; You 20. Pla y
Chess 33

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2S, 1975
7 oo-Truth or Cons. 3 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6,
What 's My Line 8: News 10; Country Music Jubilee
13; Race for Profess ionals IS, Feeling Good 20,
You Owe It To Yourself 33
7·3Q--- Police Surgeon 3, Name That Tune 4, Let's
Make a Deal 6, Baseball 15; Wilburn Brothers 8,
Boo!&lt; Bea't 20; The Judge 10, To Tell the Truth ll;
Ep :sode Action 33
a ·oo-Uttle House on the Prairie 3,4; That's My Mama
6,13, Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10. Feeling Good 33,
What Makes a Good Father 20.
8.3Q-Movie " Only w:lh Married Men" 13; Movie
"Co me Spy w w:th Me" 6: Another Look at Appalach:a 33
9.DO-Lucas Tqnner 3,4; Cannon 8,10, The Good T:mes
a re Killing Me 20; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
IO ·QO-Petrocelli 3,4 , 15; Barel! a 6, 13; Dan Augusta, 10;
News 20; Family AI War 33
11 :OQ-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, IS, ABC News 33.

" Prranha , Prranha " 10, Janakt 33

BORN LOSER

~.._

Television log for easy viewing

11 : 3Q---Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Special 13,
FBI 6; Movie "To the Shores of Hell " 8: Movie

wtndows, stding, storm
doors and wmdows , raihng ,
phone
Charles
Lisle ,
Syracu se,
Ohto .
Carl
Jacob, Sat es Represen tattve.

I

I

'

'

H-tt:lot: HE. 60E6, 51&lt;1eeo • ... "'"''"' "'
ON 5 CHEDL!LE:- YOU
OFF ANY T IME~

on aluminum replac ement

r --- -------·- - --- '

\..·

.

MEANWHILE '
HE HOPE$ THI G
VfHriiGE 8U88LY
WI LL HELP TO
LIGHTEN YOUR

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961 Emergency 949-2211
or 992 -5700
- 4 2-75

992-2478

ON
CORNER LOT IN
POMEROY
Business Section
Phone 992 -3975 or
992 -5786

Ph . 992-3993
-·, 10-1 mo .

Atr conditioning, ptum btng , heattng , roofing,
spout1ng, general sheer
m etal work .

Septic Tanks Installed

I

Ca II Rutland Fur niture 742 - 4211 or
Arnold Grate 7425501'

Hour

LAV_E~DER

Syracuse, Ohio

HElL
Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

BACKHOES
For R e nt by
Contract Work.

LARRY

Also Repa1rs On All
Riding Tractors
498 Locu st St
Mrddt eport, Ohro
59 1

992 -7121

1966 CAD ILL AC, SJ9 500, a tr
c ond llton e d . qood t t r es
MI. OOO mil es Pho ne 99 2 5949
6 25 41p

stocked pond and smal l barn

~

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown :nto Watts &amp; Allie:
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; ODORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SDFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Sales &amp; Service
992-3092

• Phon e 992 5082 or

1%1:1 C H EVROL ET 1 J ton
ptckup ne w patnl , phon e
742 -1848 or co n t act Joe N
~. ayre , Rt
1
Rutland
6 25 3t c

NEW LISTING -5 acres. ha lf

1 l '&gt; H IN G

The Dai~ Sentinel

196 7' FORD 4 dr
V8 st d
53 00 Good work car P hone
992 2776
6 25 4tp

fenced , 2 bedroom, 14x6 8
mobile home, dril led well.

U '- EO Guns at c, aVIIlQ S
20
qa s1 no le barr e l. '1129 95 J c
H1Q Q1n s
16 ga botl , 525
l., a vaqe 410 22 over and
u n der
55 9 95 , Rem
66 7'1 M I N I M /\G.-,, S2 25 bO X 22
Nylon
SJB 50
Sav age 22
Maxt Mags $] bOX 30 JO
r oll S29 95, Marlr n 22 £l.o l t,
W m c h . $5 25 box 22 Rem
SJO Mos sb c rq 11 qa bol t.
s 1 50 bo x ?2 250 Rcrn $5
5'17 ~0 we won' t sca l p you at
box Buy you r sho tqu n sh ells
l nd 1an Jo e s
On l y your
before the pn ce 1nc r ease
ln d1Jn Joe s 308 P a qc 5 1 ,
wampum
lnd1n n
Joe's
.:. ports . JOB Paqe f, t 99 2 ]509
M1dd lep orl
6 19 71 (
6 20 71c

SYRACUSE

CAP!'AIN EASY

FREE ESTIMATES

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

6 22 6tp

-- --be droom s, bath , basement,
REFRIGERATOR
,
S50
Two
panel1ng, carpetrng , 2 porches
! / X 12 7 r . E DRM lr udu r (' fl l
box spr , ngs and ma 1tr ess, and f enced ya rd
t11ce Phon e 99? l 1?
S.1 5 Washe r and dry er , $S 5
REASONABLE - 2 bedroom
G 19 t t c
Two recaooed snow t1re s,
srz e H 78 15 $ 10 ea ch Ca ll hom e, bath, dtning, por ch,
I RM apt V111l h v.. a l! l o Wdll
992 3.1 93
ba sem e nt. new gas furnace
ca rp et , 10-1 Sp rtnq 1\ve,
6 2.1 tf c near stores
Pomer o y
~-- NICE - 3 bedroo m s, 2 ba ths,
6 ?? 1f c
1 ERR r cE
!\ ntiQu c
Shop m od ernkrt , dtntng r oom , nat
re1tr1nq f rom bus m ess f\.11 ga s fur n ace, 2 porches a nd
T WO houses •n Pornc r oy . :no
me r chan d iSe tn ~ l oc k wtl l be block garage
an d 212 Condor St Call 992
sot d at a larg e d 1SC OU!1!
CABIN - Large IoI a t For ked
26~9
Ter ra ce
1\ nt t ques ,
108
b 18 \71 p
Leqton
Terra ce
Lee · Run Lake Wat er a nd e lectrt ctty ava il able
Ru dt SIII
6 6 261p RESTAURANT - Would you
( ( I N 1 f.:"
Mo ht l('
II Oill('
F',l rk f~t ,.., t en mtlcs no rth
lt ke se lf employmen t wrth a
0/\/ C 1961 Tr t hau l boat . 90 rea sonab le 1ncome
o f Po n1e r ov l a r qc• lot s W1 th
D-1 2 3 5
h P
rnboard
ou tboar d
COII(retc Pil l l OS
S ICil'WiJ I~ S
l
tcen
ses
new nrotor H ew t1011rs 0 11
rv11n c rs
ilnd o f f s tr(•t 1
11 1 1963 Hrnvy du t y GMC MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom
P M ~ 1nq
PI• one 9Q~· 7 '19
tr,l tlcr Phone 997 7737
home, 2 bath s, l am rly room
l ?J I!fc
6 19 61 C .and n1 ce v 1ew of rtver
TWO bedroom mobt le ho me tn
NEW LISTING- 12 acres of
Syr acuse De po Stl r equ 1red
lan
d, good 3 bedroom home.
9x I? oo ld
No c h rldr en o r p et s Pho n e r \~/0 c arp et s 1
rlnct I
12ro: 15 av oca do pad s ca rpet:ng, paneled and til ed.
992 2JJ 1 a f t er 5 30 p m
Phon e 997 7 132
tn c lud cd
Nat gas furn ace , cera mi c t ile
6 10 1f r
6 19 61( bath

" PT l1kc new 1 room s w1l h
larqe bctt h litb let op r anqc,
larq e c loset EdS I M~l r n t
Pome r oy ~ec to ap pr r c 1atc'
P hnnc Ga lf ,po lt s dur tny day
11 6 l699 e v enmg s t, t6 9539

WILKINSON
SMALL

and

Phon e -

A LMO S1 NEW 8 h p r 1d1ng
lawn mower , 32" cut Ca ll
992 5J42 a ft er 5 p m
NEW LISTING - Ne at 2,
6 24 Jlc bedroom modern home, new
kt t c h e n
wi th s to ve and
ROUND B AL E S ot hay 1n
r
etngerator
, bath, basement,
h eld , 70c per bal e Also ,
glass cannrng 1ars Phon e ga s furnace, and n ice concrete
949 3718
front porch .

5 '} 11c

For Sale .

IN

· Racine, Ohio
We Build the Best and
Repaor the Rest.
- Cabinets InstalledCatl Before 7: 30A.M
Or Afler6:00 P.M .
949-3604

k.tl ,

For Sale

] 11 t t c

CARRIER
WANTED

NEIGLER
Building Supp~

6-18-1 mo~ - ' - - -- - - -- 5-..,7_-l_m
_ v_. -'

Roger Hysell's
Garage

•,

PRIVfdE lllCCI1 nq r oom t o r
any or qan11a tto n phonC' 992
\Q 7 ')

WE HAVE a man r e tl rt n Q and
m ust have a r ep lacemen t
for h rrn If you can t al k to
peop le and ar e ca pabJ e o f
se t11ng . we have th e 10b you
ha ve bee n wat1rng to r Thts
loca l , no ov er ntgh t tr avel
Must own a c ar , sa lary plus
c orn rn1Ss rons
and
c ar
allowanc es
all
frtnge
benet 1t s Send res um e t o box
677 Pomeroy, Oh10
6 24 ]l p

Phone
992-3313

5-81 mo

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

I I:' I f C

Help Wanted

NO-

Phon r

unturn tS hf'd
apartrncn rs
~1 honC' 997 5 111

Wtppel Rd , Ft ve Points

DtSC.UISE S· ·

l

.__,.__..~_.._.._.

WAIT ING!

' I f'.J l• t ROOM l urn rS hf'd and

Good Buys

John St., Next To
Grade School
992 -2 549 Syracuse, 0.

1911 FORD LTO 4 DR .
11895
Locc1 lly own ed , cl ec1n inl er ror . s tlver grey exter 1or,
l ~ c to r y orr, nutomatrc , p owe r steer tng &amp; btak~s. radro ,
good trres

Lost

l'()(,

')on f\ etztn q Clnd r amdy
M rs Darn H ea ton
Mrs Edward Bo er
6 25 ll c

Washer &amp; Dryer
and
,
Small Appliance
Repair

lOLA'S
BEAUTY SALON

.I door , loca l c c1r, arr co ndrltoned , lull equrpment

•WE NEE:D

-----~-------------------~---------------"

Merle Norman

S3095

IYilM ATADOR

Wanted To Buy

da u g htpr

'

M riltb u HT Cpe, 350 V-8 engrne, power s t een ng , l ac
tory r11r, ttn t ed gla ss, rad ro, w hee l cove r s, good trres,
bl k rnte rtor , s tl ver gre y· fmt sh Spccr al

6 2 1 6t c

Audrey P.c t z ~r 1q
~ O y A ct z1nq

OF
QUALITY

"" CHEVELLE

o

,- , ...

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

SORRY I FORGOT
YCU. D ID T HJ\T H OT
TOWEL BURN-UM "i"

P t. II.: o l llclll fta me qtasses 111

WE WI'Hto C':c:press our mos t
S1ncNe thanks to 1'11 of ou r
tr 1en d s
nC'10hhors
and

and SIS l er

Business S.e.r vices

Cosm elics

OQ?

relat1ves tor f lo w ers ca rds
Jnd the m an y ~mdncsses
shO \\'n us ill the toss of o ur

mm g on an

I@

mod els of mobtlt:' bomc~
P hon e ar ea codr 6 1-r J]J
'i531
J 1J 1t c

"''' ddl eport
\ 11)

PLAQUE

Card of Thanks

Monday, June 23.
Rev. and Mrs . Paul Sellers

,)

I

'

'tl'l \ 1

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Employment Wanted
Rev. and Mrs Howard
CA RPENTRY WORK
CE'ilrnq pane l tnq floorrnq ,
Shiveley and family a ttendetc Phon e 99 2 7759
Notice
ed West Ohio Annual Con6 2J 27 t c
ference at Lakes1de . Rev. NO W sel !mg Fui!N Brus h
phone 992 JJ 10 W I L L D O odd tab~ . patnttnq ,
P roduct s
Shoevvely was appomted as
roo ftnq ,
h aultnQ
and
t :Z&lt;l r f c
IHOWI Il Q Call 9'n 7 109
pastor of the Racme Clrcut t
6 25 6t c
Oil of M111k
and co-o rdwat or of the f-OR your
Co s mei 1CS
Phone
Southern Cluster and began
BROWN 5 997;11 3
R E MOO ELI NG
P l umb tnq ,
1 7 lf c
h1 s fourth yea r 1n thos
IH?atmg and a ll t ypes o f
q ene rill
rep a, r
Wo1 lo:.
position, June 15.
&amp;
5cwtng
SW EEPER
quaran t ee d
20 -,: ea r s e x
Machtnes Rcpn1 r Parts and
Rev. and (\Irs . Howard
p er1ence
Phon e 99') ?-lOY
Supplres
Davts Va c uum
5 1 lfc"
Shiveley and fam1ly attended
Clean er 1 m de up Geo rq e 5
Creek
R
ct
o
ft
q
at
e
Rout
e
7
commencement exercises at
'.' l l l pam t hou ses ancl roo f s
Phon e 116 029-1
1 rC'r es tlnlotc s Pho ne 99?
Whitehall Yearling Hig h
6 25 -ltc
'9 70
School, Columbus, Sundav
l 19 7 t p
eve nm g , Mrs Shiveley 's
Yard Sale
nephew , Michael Sewe!l, was
For Rent
among the graduates . Mrs. YARD SAL E on Lark 1n's St TR A ILER lo t Ph one 992 7897
Ru t land
Oh10
Thu r sday
6 1!l t fc
Shiveley 's mo the r, Mrs .
Frtday and Sa t urc:lay . 10
speed b tk e
S20 . ~pee d TWO 'l b edroom
Myrtle Loumenhouser acrn ob 1l e
Queen
washer ,
S 10 ,
homes I f urn tShed 1 un
companied the Shi vele ys
Fr t gtda~r e
S25
L awn
furntshed
Ha rr 1sonvr ll e
cha1rs dtshes el£&gt;c gu1 t ar
home and spent a few days
Phone 1121 12 3
and a mpl1he r Call 712 496J
6 2·1 61p
The Sh1veleys spent a short
6 25 31c
vacation with relatives_ lit
1 wo
BR
Mobile
Hom e
d
t
d 5 F.!'.M IL Y Yard Sal t: at A r
Deposil requtred Ph one 992W-1 ' t
I

·1

C tl l l , ( ,t

l

2 SIGNS

I\ 'l ' \\'1 1' (1

I

11 nf/111 fu1d - SALUTES

Events

.I

t' 1'1

CA.-, H p a1 d t or all m a k es &lt;)n et

dCM WI I C r1 lOiher

II

ol• , • l l ' ''dV I

Wanted

Social
I

1

"'

( /{' I ll

(An•wrn lomorro'"')

I

l l )ll

{I l'(l&lt;,oltO I I

1•' 1 ' 'I ll\

No w arrangr thr mclrd !titers
~o form the surpnse an!!lwer. as

I
Racine

I

. IJ""'' ... ,

V' X ~ I I
I~==l::::-~::::L1~~~·=.::~·
~~_:_'::":.:':.:':•:._
._••:::;ed

'rf'llf'rd• y' •

11\ ~ 1\ -,

1 '' 0~f)1' ( 1 1 Vo

REBDU'f I

1L_

' '''~ ,..,,.

I ' ,Jtulo
dl!oll
I('
-,, 11 00 1 ) • )I
11

ID I I

Yf,'KTUR

1t 11

"

d' I Ii' ' &lt;:,O i l

o'lf) J 'I~

1_.._,.._.,_.._._..._.._.._.._ _,.._ __

fS IS YOUR BROTHER,
Ct·ULLY. LOOK , NELLIE ,
THINGS ARE Har AND - '

Auto Sales

Help Wanted
' , I I j., L .._._

I

Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

}"'o_
r fl1 st

Unscn mble these four Jumhl e~.
one lttler to earh square. to
form four ord1nary words.

'

19.- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u.. Wcdne"day, June 25, 1975
DICK TRACY

I'M JU5T CHEERIN6 FOR
M'i HERO... HE'S THE NEIJJ

MANA6ER OF THE TEAM ...

ALL HE'!i DOING 15
1AKtto~6 THE

LINEUP OUT

TO THE UMPIRE!

C'MON,JOE! '{OU
CAN D0 IT!!

�'
'

'

-

18 - The Dail~ Sent mel, Middleport-Pome roy, 0 .. 1\'ed:"''"'"'. J '""' 2:!, 1 ~7:!
~
'

( t (1 \.~

~ ( 1 {
'.1 10 \t
l'rl V

I I

II

'- 1 1,1 1

,) 1 t

[J
by the above cartoon.

rxrr:x J

_:P:.:::
rinl:.=
llle:.::
SIII=Ptl=ISI"AN=
" sW!-=R=
hm::______J'
Jumhlu. QUAIL

RUST Y CIR CUS

An8 .. tr. f ur .~tot ~

s1111

I
'
I
I
J.

I

:I

i

fI

•I

I

,_

f

&lt;;~

1

, ,,

I

&lt;,ltlri ti'I 'S
(. Jl11 p{) )l!,
P l t(ll I' I ' l&gt;
I {\ !
Ill
I ,)1(' 1'

re urne .

c h •e Jar r ell rn L etart F all s
( Buc ktown J Wedn esday and

of Hamden called on Mr , and
Mrs . Franc1s Moms Tuesday
afternoon and were supper
guests at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Wickline . The
Rev Sellers is m oving to
Gilboa from Hamden where
he served for four years.
Rev . Sellers was a former
pastor of Racine-Syracuse
Charge.
Mr. and Mrs . J1mmy
Burleson (formerly Marilyn
Lyons ) and children, Kelly,
Yockey , Greg and Tma, of
Abilene, Texas, spent two
weeks visitmg their parents,
Mr . and Mrs . Alfred Lyons
and brothers.
Mrs. Alfred Lyons had the
misfortune to fracture her
foot. She is convalescmg -at
home.
Mrs. E. A. Wmgett·, Mrs .
Ann Coe and Mrs . Mary
Spencer spent several days
•isoting relatives m Mochigan
md were overmght guests of
'vir. and Mrs . Paul Spencer on
: olumbus.
Mrs . William Smith and
;on, Jeff, of Dayton were
~uests Sunday of Miss Edith
iayman.
Mrs. John Thomas and
daughter, Genevieve of Industry, Pa., called on friends
in Racine and were overnight
guests of Mr . and Mrs. Harry
Curtis.
Mr . a nd Mrs . Allen
Graham and family were
weekend guests of thei r
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Harry
Willford and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
and granddaughter, Terry
Brace, and Mrs. Jack Adams
visited Mr . and Mrs. Fred
Brace at Southshore, Ky .
,.,rrs
Jim Spaun and
daughter spent a week w1th
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Powell.
Mr. and Mrs. Ollie S~yre ,
Jr . of Long bottom visited
Mr . and Mrs . Jim Brace
Saturday.
' Mr . and Mrs . Gerald Hart
and children of Newark spent
a weekend with Mr . and Mrs ,
Ronald Hart.
Mr . and Mrs Bob Birch
and daughters of Bellevue
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs . Elza Birch and Mrs.
Emma Salser and her guests,
Mr . anp Mrs. Jim Thompson
of 'w'i arner Robins, Ga
Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan
Jlussell, Jr . and Paula of
Mason spent Sunday with Mr _
and Mrs . Kenneth Turley.
Kenneth Swart of Akron is
visiting his mother, Mrs _
James Swart.
Mr . and Mrs . Delbert
Morris of Athens and Mrs.
Marie Chapman of Pomeroy
VIsited Mr. and Mrs. Francis
Morris Sunday afternoon.

Thursdny

fro m 8 a m

Ju ne 25 and 26
ft ll J p m

of barga "' '

Lot s

6 25 l! c

YARD SAL E , eve r y Thurs
day F r1ctay and Sa turda y
q u a rt e r
m tie
'ro rn
L angsvil l e o ff De&gt;~,ter Road
Follow the Stgns Ph one 741
6273
6 25 tfc
YARD SA LE , We dn es day ,
Thursday and rr1day on 630
South T h1 rd Avenue . M1d
dl eport
o 25 Jtc
YARD SA LE , 810 Sou t h
Seco n d St , M1ddleport
lue s
W ed ,
and
Thu r sdr.ty
O ld
c lock s ,
stone 1ar s an t ,ques, d1shes,
old p1c tures and clo th es
6 74 J t c
Y A RD SAL E , Ju ne 26 an d 27
at Lau r el Clt ff ne x t to th e
old Laurel C t tft school. som e
ant 1q ues In case of ra 1n
wdl be hel d th e ne ro:t day
6 2 I 31C

YARD SALE
Bett Dawson going to
Florida, having yard
sale .

Friday and Saturday

$1495

R ew M d

H UU O.., E l Clr C]C
PllOIH.' 992 380 I

lhea p
6 25 3tp

O LD fur n itur e.
rce box es
bras s b eds , or comp let e
househo lds
Wrtl e M
0
!\.\ il l e r , Rt
-1. P ome r oy
Oh tO Call 99 1 7760
10 7 74

OPEN EVES. 8 : 00
POMEROY, OHIO

..W-------------~-19fl9
------------~
V W wdh Bf\.Jf\.
w, ,_.,_
t tres Good cond tl ton
99? ~M 3

1 R i VE I It ~ t ie r Int r epid 19
II
SICl'PS SIX
i1kC tiC'W
P hOII C' ot.l 17 11
6 19 Ol e

19 7 J I&lt; 1\ 1\ S 1\ K I , 35 0 B 1q horn
E nQ rliC 1n lo p sha pe qooti
rub b er and 3 brk. e tra 1ler
Ca ii9Y //I IU
6 22 6t c
1/v

TR IU MPH 650 m otorb1k e for
sa l e Phon e 992 3647
b 25 ,lfc
WALNUT desk. 1n good con
dtlt on , S35 PMne 99? 28 07
6 25 51p
NEW
IM P ROVE D '' Z 1p
pr es ' !he q r eat 1ron pdl no w
wdh V t!a m Ill C N e l son
Druq
6 25 lt p
ST ERE O
r adtO
mod e rn
d C5 tQn B tra ck t ap e AM F M
r ad1o com btna tt on Balan ce
S \02 99 or te r ms Call 992
] 965
6 25 tf c
TW O WH ITE Fa ce c ow s, 3
and 4 ye ars old Two bulls ,
W h 1te Face an d Charolat s, 1
and 2 yeo r s old Two b ull s ,
Whrt~
F a ce and 1 1
C harota1~ one 3 m ont hs old
and one 3 weeks old One
Bull , Wh11e t n ce and An g us.
1 y('ar old Phone 949 4724
6 2..t 31 p

3 179

M I DL A ND 23 Chann el CB
6 2&lt;1 6tp
b ase. S140 , an d a F rtg 1da •re
all
t empe ratur e
l arge
FUR NI SHED
apar t men t
cap ac1 ty dryer , S75 Phon e
992 7897
adults only rn Middle port
Phon e 992 387 1
6 24 J tc
3 25 tt c
I R COildi i iOn('d 1 1111~ c1nd
ba th sc r eened bcl CJ.. por ch
Sut lil b le l or Olt1rc or ~'l du l! s
E I ROb inSon PllOil(' 99 ?
7B t6
6 19 6t p
TR AIL ER spa ce. I mile t~om
Pom eroy
P hone 99 7 58~8

6 2d

J Oe

CONTACT

&gt;

IU If (

U J.?N ap t ':1 roo ms an d ba th .
n1ce tarqe y ard ba th and '
1
90
South
•.c co nd
', 1 ,
1\for ddl e po rr
adult s only
P hon e 997 52 62 eve n 1n Qs
r;; n rt t

992 -2156

L 1cense. Canadran
Nt te Crawlers , 50 dz Duq
worms . 3 doz 5 1 Other bart.
tackl r , qum s, a m mo cb' s .
l ndt an Joe ' s Sports
308
Paqc Sf , Phone 99 2 3509
6 20 61C

NEW Guns a t Used Prr ccs . 1:17 0
W I LL
be
a cce pt tn&lt;r
ap
J..l c nl rn QI On f u lf 30 ' VP
pl 1ca t 1ons a t t he
f\&amp; P
s 119 95 1200 w,nc h cstcr
13utldtnq tn Mtd dl c po rt ,
I u ti 20' VR . S139 95 . 11 00
We dn es day June 25. 11 t tl l 1
Ren11nq ton 1\ ut o, ~lEW V5, 17
p 111
l or
n1ra t c utters ,
W1nc hes tcr 1/ qn
s .795 .
c h cck.e r s . p roduce •ncfl ,
\ ava qe •110 '1 1nQIC , S,\.19 5,
s tock bo y s
R C11111Hl iO n !RP 'J i l W SC Op C
6 2? 11(
&lt;; I lQ 9', ~. a vaqc ')'}7, S99 95.
W 1nchcs t c r \1·1 Leve r 30 J O,

Trailer
Al~mmum , wtth air
co ndttlontng ,
pnva1e
bedroom
wtth
Sealy
mattress &amp; box spnngs,
ntce front room wrth Sealy
&amp; shag carpeftng, fold sofa
1
ou t dtnette, lots of mtrrors,
a ll se lf contamed.

1 ,All

C. 9f!9 ')

HOU SEKEEPER , mus t l tve
1n, fa r m home If mt erestcd ,
wr t t e to M r
H o ll i e E
St ar che r , R t 1, Box 114 ,
Portlan d , Oht o &lt;.~5 770
6 25 12t p
SOMEONE: to cu t my Qril SS
r eq ula r l y
Phon e 997 7774
6 '] .t ]IC

Ttl an )f!~. IJ CCii'l l /

1

" ,

~

!9 9~
Hopk1ns and ldl cn
Ci'!p rtnd na t I Tarq et 529 9),
\ pantsh 1? 70 Double /\r t ron
/,sI S '51'1 '&gt;0 Rav (: n ?~A uto
Ni ckle '5:l1 95 , RG 66
7.7
find 1'l Mas S'i'J 9 ~ p l u s to t s
of o th er new quns a! r cc p oc
' ii'Jrnqs at l nclta n Joe 's
\ po r t s , lOH Pr1 qe ~"
Phone
q9'/ ] 1•09
I

?f' l f ('

5- 14 1 mo

R egular and
Excavator Type

Real Estate for Sale

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

FOR SALE!
40x85
Brick Building

6-6- 1 mo

Bissell Bt.-tltiS

. . . . ...

.

'

MOMENT? OF

_ _ _.___ ,_._.. ______

i

Construdion Co.

Teaford Realty

Pll, 985-4102

Vorq II B , 5r .. Broker

STORES

3

SHOPPING
CENTER
LOCATION OF FOUR ACRES
AVAILABLE, ON ANY OF
THE ABOVE CALL 992 -3325.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON B. TEAFORD.
ASSOCIATES

I

CLELAND
608 E.
REALTY
MAIN
t'OMERov:·o-

I LEVEL ACRE - w:th
NEW HOM E 3 bedrooms,
colored bath, n1ce k1tchen,

utility R, fully carpeted :n
you r chotce of color s,
garage , ftn a nced to righ t

pa rty $20, 000
THE
UPSTAIRS
IS
DOWNSTAIRS Th is
ranch sty le w: ll e nd all tha t
c llm b:ng . 2 BR, bath ,
utrl1ty R, nice kitchen , part

r;---~---:-"

l

R eg 159 95
Ondgci
l y .tri~
3 l bu
J

•ther mode l s
on sale

;POMEROY LAND"MAitK

9. ~Jack W. C•n•y, M1r.
flllll:. Ph on t "2-2111 · .
I I f l. T I fl.~ E
C0 N C ~ E T E
I r ~!C [ P Q l, T' 1\ Cohc r e t e
tHI\t v.
11 0,.1 . 1 lt f C' l rru t• and
v,.. ll not r1 r;t or brn d ltkr a
'i lf('l flO\! ol l&gt;(l Wt ll • 10 1 ....IO t
r, L" ,1 v•oodcn po~! Pt101 r_·
99? .,A 11
6 72 Sip

I

l evel

acre

JU ST 113,500.

SA\JE

£JI.TRA\JM:.A.t..IT

M'i Bll&lt;n.JOi-.'1'?

11\AT

LITrLE ORPHAN ANNJF:

LITTLE ORPHAN
QH, 600PYf
I FIGGERED M~ .

ANNIE-GIANTS

I EXPERIEJjCED
t. . ....
/ Radiato
I
.
~
!
Service
.- '

AlLI GATORS '

WHY, ONE OF TI-IEM
WOULD EAT ALUG...TORS

AM. WOULD 86
ALON !,; PRETTY
SOON"' AH0'1' 1

MR.

SAME ~S WE EAT
SARDINE 'S- BUT ~EV
ONl.'Y LASTED .t.B OuT

"""'!

/to. ~UNORED MIL LION

YEA.RS- ll-4 0S E WERE

THE EXCITING DAY S-

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER
"At caut1on L1gh1 "
Rt. 7, Tupp er s Pfatns , 0 .

GUARA NT EED

20,33;

pl1ances &amp; n ew t urn1t ure
Open 9- S W ed thrOUgh Sun .
Ph . 667-3858
5 \ 5 1 mo

wt:LL , We've SEEN ~e EAST
COAST ANO DISNEYWORLD, OOC.. ,
SO WHAT 14A?PENS NC/IN ?' ~

5-30-1 mo
WO ULD YOU

Nathan Btggs
Radtator Specialist

Pom eroy

D &amp; D TREE Tr~ mm1 n g, 20
yea r s ex pertence In sured ,
free eslim ates Cal l 992 3057
Coo l vi ll e Phon e ( l l 667
JO.t 1
4 JO lf c
-~------·

f.? Ef\D Y M I X t....ONCRETE
ct e t rvL'r e d r1g h t 10 your
pro1ec t I a-st and eas y F ree
cs ttm a tes Ph on e 99 2 3284.
Goeg lem Read y Mtx Co ,
M1 d d lepor t . Oh tO
6 30 1f c
N EED A ne W hom e bu il t on
you r loP Con l ac: M ilo B
Hut c ht SOn, Rutl and, Ohro
Phon e 74 2 36 15
5 8 lf c

---

1(\JN ~ heparcf"Coniracl! ng and

Remode lrng Ser vtce W hole
ho use
remode l r n g,
spec 1a l tt es
k tl c hen and
ba t h Phone (JO&lt;ll 77J...5JJ6or
742 366 4 da y or ev ening
6 4 26tc

SE PTI C f-ANK SCLEANE D
R easonable RI\TE S P hone
1 t 6 J7B 2 Gallipolts
John
Ru sse ll , owner

'' 9 lfc
HOU SE a n d r oof pai nting a n d
repatr s ror fr ee es tt ma t es .
cal l 992 6190 or 99 2 5837
6 15 261c

--

- .

---~--

---

BELIEVE?

- - --- . ·-------

-

EXCAVA TING , doze r , load er
and backhoe work . sep t1 c
!anks
tns t a ll ed
dump
tru ck s an d to bo y s for h tr e
.,..,1 1 hau l f 1l l d 1rt . top soi l
l 1mcs tone and qrav el Cal l
rob or Roger Je ff er s. day
pt,one 992 70ll9 nt gh t phon e
&lt;.J •:; 3.)2'i or 99 '1 5232
2 1 I lf c

-

J

Butld an a ll s teel building at
Pole Barn prices? Golden
Gtan t All -Steel Bulldmgs
R t 4, Box 148, Waverly'
Otuo Phon e 9&lt;.~7 2296
'
6 24 26tc

ITH NELSON
OTORS, INC.

- -

I
Middleport I

327 N 2nd

From th e largest Tr uck or
Bull doze r R adrator to the
smallest H eater Core

~~~74

WE GOING HOME?

~--

Roar l N G.
Spo u11ng ,
a lum rn u m and vmy l Siding ,
c omp l ete
remod e l rn g .
Phone 742 62 73
6 25 261p

-

" o. '

t: .o.Lav-a trng , -sack hoe
an d l tg ht ha uling se rv rces
Drtveway slag deltvered
Ph one {3 0&lt;1 ) 773 53&lt;16 or 742
3664 day or even mg s
6 &lt;1 26t c

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

S EW IN G

MACH INE ,

Repatrs . se rvt ce. all ma kes
992 2'l8 J The Fabr tc S~o p ,
P omeroy /\u lh tJrized Sm'ger
'i ,1 1cs a nd Se r v 1ce
We
sharpen SC ISS Or S

3 29 Ol e
DOZER work. , l and clearmg
by th e a cre
hou r l y or
c ont ra c t
F arm
ponds
r oa d s, etc L ar ge dozer anc
oper ator w• th over 20 yea r ~
expe r tenc e
Pul l 1n s F.x
cavahng , P omer oy, Ohio
Phon e 992 2.1 78
12 19 ttc
ExcAVA T I NG .
DoL ~ , .
Back ho e, ddch er , water
lrne s. footer s, d ra rn s, road s
and brush c tea n 1ng N o 10b
too small, n o wea th er t oo
ba d
Phone Ch ar l es R
Half teld , R1
I. Rutland,
Oh ro Phone 742 6092

s 2 521 p

---- -· -------

HOME R epa 1r' Service - Go t
proble ms wllh you r hom e?
wan1 ' ' r ep a1red f as1 Call
A I the house doctor Phone

GASOUNE ALLEY

I'll a\wat.JS heed
somebod4!

ULABNER

LET US DO IT! !

.Carpeting

501 NYLON
99

4

THEY~

I HATE 10 LJSE THE P.OWER
i

I!IJ

Pel"RIFIE;:D
IN MIDAIR!!-

OF A DOtJeLE WHAMMY FeR
PRKTICE, BUT I GOTTA
WOIK MY WA'Y LJP !!-

I,
•

Square
Yard

RUBBER BACK

6 17 -l2tc
G ENERAL Repair . c l ean up
and
h a l.l li ng ,
cutt i ng ,
w e I d rn g ,
c a r pen t r y.,
plumbrng , elec ma son ry
and gen e r a l r e model i ng
Cal l Sk l l Poo l Phone 992

5126
-

6 17 ttc
r

-

-

- - - - - - -- -

ELWOOD so\•iER-5 .R.EPAIR
Sw ee p ers , toas ters , irons ,
a lt sma ll a pplr ances • Lawn
mower , n ex. t t o Stat e Htgh
way Garage on R out e 7
Phone 985 3825
4 16.tfc

We have hundreds of
carper val ues Your iob can
be completed in l to 2
weeks
No long wa iting
pertod Our tnsta!ler has 28
vears exper ience . Exper1
t n~tallation
You ' ll like
what you get

borhood 20.33 , lron s:de 13
5. 3D-News 6, Beverly Hrl lbi ll1es. 8. Gel Smcu t 15

ElectriC Co . 20, V:lla Alegre 33
6 OQ---News 3,4,8, 10,13 , 15, AB C New' 6 S;:some So ?0
One of a K:nd 33

, CALL 742 -4211
TJ\LI&lt; TO WENDELL
GRATE ,
-

I DON'T" EVEQ WANT 1D
SEE OQ HEAR TliE
,'! NAME WINNIE WINKLE
AGAIN , IF I .CAN

wERE READY
GETUNDEQ
WAY, BIQ 1

HELP IT !

.,.
'•

Mobile Homes For Sale

",

'

-~

-

'

.-

r oom , tHr cond .• washe r &amp;
dry er, tn good cond ition

cash 15 homes wante d , 1958
thru 1972 m odels
Phon e
( 6 14 ) 446 1425, Gallipoli s
J -9 -78tf

-· .--------------

ASKING $4,500

Real Estale For Sale

JUG~~AID!!' WHAT

RUTLAND -

I 77 1\.. CRE S l and and loc us ;
posts A lso , 1965 r:ord L TO
Phon e 7-12 3656

UP THAT TREE FER?

2 BR. bath,

liv ing h as fireplace.

ca r

peled, tiled, paneled, All in
good condition . ASKING
$9,500 . MUST
SELL.
MAKE US AN OFFER .
FOR
GOOD
HOMES
PRICED RIGHT SEE US
TODAY.
CALL992 22S9

1

5 23 521p

roR SA LE by owner , aboVe •
avera ge home and garage
near mines on Rt 124 , west
l&gt; f R ut l an.d Phone 7&lt;12 -3794
6-24 4tC
_.._

_____

~--

TWO l"\ EOROOM hOUSe fOr
sa! c Phon e 985 J 102
6 10 261c

· ·1"'" 1···· ·

-

,I ' .

.. ..

'

.. -

~

~

'

ARE 'l.E CLIMB IN'

I'M GOIN' AFTER
MY KITE I AUNT
,,,,1r~

LOWEEZV
7_,-----J""I

GO GIT TH'

New

Evening at Symphony 33
8:3Q---Texas Wheelers 6,13
9- 0o--Str ee t s of San F rancrsc o 6, 13. MO'· tP 'Corr,
m anch e St at ron" 8. Hollyw ood Telp vr•,ton Th Pntrro
20.33 , Mov te " Th e McK enr te Brea k
IC

9.3Q-Mov:e "Target Ri sk" 3,4, 15
10 :00-Harry 0 6,13. N ews 20, , New!'&gt; 10

Wrrrnzw t:l

10 ·3Q---Horace Marsha ll 33
11 OQ-News 3, 4,6,8, 10,13,15, ABC New &gt; 13
11 Jo-Joh nn y Carson 3,4,15 , W 1de W orld Sp,...,crol 1"
~

FB I 6 , M ovie " T he M cKenzie Break·

Movtr:•

" The lusty Men " 10, J anaki 33
12·3Q---Wide World Spee&gt;a l 6
1

oo-Tomorro w

3,4 ; N ews 13

AstroGrapt:l
&amp;

Bemoce Bede ')sol

For Thursday, June 26. 1975

ARIES (March 21-Aprol 19)
Yo u sho uld be able to pull
th 1ngs toge ther now and get
coo per at1on that has been unob tatnabl e 1t1e past fe w days

TAURUS (Aprol 20-May 20)
f;wor ec wh ere ac ' ~Clncem en t of
you r wo rk or career rs con, ,e rn-

ec

nPw&lt;; ,,•

Crea trv1ty IS your fortP todAy
Choo se ac t rvrtre s t lltlt
chR II enge yor1r rmngr nR I IOfl
when you work Wt1 h your hnnds
ilnc! m1nc!

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Foll ow o ff beat ler:~d s to tmd
mercha nc!tse you wrln t You re
good at r oo ttn g~out barg a1ns
You can sco re '

Yesterday's. Answer
LEO ( July 23-Aug . 22) You can
12 More pro25 Stet's anto- ell ec\tvely dtrect other s tod av
found
thesos
anC help th em sort OLtl lhl"tr Af·
tatrs Tt1 ey won t r ealtze th ey re
16 Neutrons"
27 Scottish
bernq manaqed
and
port
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) L' l·
29 Devil
electrons
ti e th1ngs mean a lot 10 y011r
19 Perfectly
30 One of
career t odr~y Heed sma l l
( 3 wds.)
Lear's
Cetails - yOLIII see llow Impor 22 Thunderclap
daughters tant 1\ wa s la ter
23 Machination 34 CombustiLIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) r,
24 Frank
ble heap
sp tn-o tt fr om the soc.tal whrr!
Dempster
36 Rumaman
Sherman
coin
poem
37 Time
( 3 wds.)
period

t'' ·

1 •

I'

'4

SCORP IO (Oct
Ynu 11'.111 ('' r, •
iliiJI ' I ,, , I
1 t1n 1\
,r• 1 r
10

• 1

No; n&gt;
,

1 •

11

'

, ',
'II''

"''I

r.~.

SA G ITT AR IIJS (Nov
2 1) lf 1f' &gt;' 1 °1 +
f•vr·&lt;1'1n•
SP ''

..

'

"

I

So"•"'' ····
CAP RIC ORN

19 )

n ''"'

(Pt:!l..:
t

r

(I

I

N
r

'"J

'

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

1,

Nlll 1 rq

f111

The aspects are tn you r corner
t oday You re e spe c1ally

1 \
I ('

t

AO UA~liUS (.l&lt;i n

?:J.fcb

Ym1tl '
\I t1 • " • '
(I

11

I

r 1

•

WCP"

q•"'l

I

1
j

I

1

r

01

-••''
1

1

PlSC ES (Feb

20 M:tr cll 20 1

1€df-.l11 lj

I

'•

1I

f"

I

e Your

I

I

/J•

t

.-

hanutr tq l11•

.oun~2~r~'~'day

-

1''1

Yotll
~I

,}I

II'

,_,

\

fl ' I I

ltfti'·P·
I. ( I ,

t

I'

f ( (H'

&lt;

l

,

I

o

'

.'

Game force makes grand bid
NORTH
4AK QYflb '!

2.~

1 .1 sn!td sp.1d1 '-Il l ! r·trlllf'!

tno m.r n\ h1glt

1

BREAK '&lt;ORE

1

n

,1·d:-;

I' lr'I!H'I 11 \(Ill
pt .. tlr-J1, ['t fttrt~ !Jt, I ,l!r·
('(I I\ :-,,t1hltt•d 111
llltl .I

It ,dso Scll1 1

., ,, :!

&lt;1

WEST
-+-1---11 • 10 74

E,\SJ
"' :l
'I IU 97bS
t (/ IOG 2

'I -

- + - f - + - i l t K J R 54
• Q 10 7 4 3
• K .I ;,
SOUTH lUI
• J2
'I KQJR4 2
t A73
• A9
Eas t West vul neruhlt·
We st

North

E.tst

Sou t h

Pas s

2•

Pa ss

:1.,

PM S
Pa ss
Pa ss

4•
5¥
Pass

Pa ss
Pass

4N 1
7 :"' 'If

, I)J(I.tl-., ·,td-.td,ti!S, ,t Jlh ..
tnt lin n liP srrnpl\
IJic!d\W (Itld lour nP!Illlnp
' 1 \'1HIIt
IHJ\\I'd lhP twn
I! St n ~ dt't~-. -.,IJU!h r·n:ntlt'd 111
IC'ilsl I !1Jp 1!11 k' Jl, lid !Itt&gt;
llllliJ1J IJI!lfl)lr llhl' IHI O!H•
'l!ld trunqr ·'ll1 np''!l"l~: lc·rd
1 hr &lt;II'' t•,ttiP Ill tilt d tl(l l to b1
t \'l'r\' WI'L' 'JJI''
t•'.1 t ,. 1 h ,,
t:-; \\ 1111 ld tH'd' 1/li' r11 L!!.rr,d
.\ lr, .111 IP.rrl lt\ I· .t'·'
lrP d ,, -.;1 !'l· f' ,urd ,) rn
d

1'1

to

work it:

P,tss

Opi'nmg l ead - 4 A

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

"' "uth

••

One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A is By Oswald &amp; James J acoby
' t
! ' c~r;;s
2V
"·""
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
On
the
oppos:te
end
of
the
b:d
P"
"
.!
A
I'""
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
dmg spectrum from t he s tgn~of f You Snt! l h hold
hints. Each day the code letters are dilferent.
ts the game force When a ~ 2 v K .J 9 7 :, • \ I\ (/ J 1 .a. \ 1
CRYPTOQUOTES
player makes a gam e-for cmg \\ h~t do \ lfll dr ' 11(1\\ '
FJV

ZKX

WNIKBZ

FJNF

MKB

~'K

KXWG

HVZFBKG

DFZ

C BK M V

D X U V
FJV

z..
z_

btd ,

the partnerShip

IS COffi·

A-

'oUt tJ:u ln ~·t lm' "htm 11 ,,

m1t ted to keep btddmg unL1l m,,xm1um he.1r1 nil !'It' \\11 h tlw tH,

ga me is reached
North 's two-spade response
to the opemng heart bod was a

ot

~pari es

lu o; l

bul

" l' hl',rrh

To t&gt;1y·~ 1111,:S'III&gt;"'
·

.

ga me force. South 's three-heart lnstt';.td n!·hnldlng llll ('l' p.rd r.8 V N- reply merely revealed that he your pmtrH'! lw s Jumpt·d 1" !uP"~

held a reb1dda ble heart s Ui t lt 11 ;~ns O\rt'r \ IJ IH th~r·t • rlt~nnnndo..
V P D Z F V X U V • saod nothmg about how good tus 11 h,JI 0" 1 "" &lt;I&lt;' "''"
'

z

_ S N0 V
I BG UV
Yesterda 's Cry t uote· HATE SHUTS HER SOUL WHEN
y
p oq
'
DOVE-EYED MERCY PLEADS. -CHARLES SPRAGUE
(C)t&amp;a Klna FeatYres Syndicate, Inc.)

hand was
In the language ol b1ds ol that
particular pa rtnership. North 's
JUmp to four spades conveyed
the message that h:s game·
(orc mg b:d was ba sed large!)

A n" \'~'' rumnno\\
_ ___._____
Send $r lor ,//I CORY MODLRN

book to W•o ·" 8/ldqe, (c/o ""•'
newspaper) r
Box 489, Rad',
C•ly Siat•on New York N Y 1001'·

o

LADDER SO '1E
WON'T FALL AN '
,TOMFOOL NECK

t,

fOmO/ r OW IP A rff 11 lh11 r, hl'f'(l

WIN AT BR IDGE

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

ZNXFWG ·

.

What'..,
J•rn"''

Ktngdom 10, I o Te ll th e Truth 11, Amettcan
Ou tdoor sman 15
.a · oo--Mov ie " The Spec1ali sl s" 3,4,15, 8dr~,ey N'ttllfl 1
6, 13, The Walton s 8, \0 , In Search ol a Mae-;tro ?0

t 9

ZDKX

'

Rpw tctw1l I

Price is R:ght 8, Consum er Sur•mal K&gt;t ?0 Wild

'I R 6 2

OVHDUDXV:

'

13

Dean IS. Making It Coun nt 20, Nova 33

r••PETCONSULTA~ll

RUTLAND
.FURNITURE
742-4211
. Rullooi

New~

7 3D-Holl ywood Sq uares 3, ,4, Ohto Lo1tery 6

10:3Q-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Gambit 8,10; Fry:ng
Pans West 33.
11 :OQ-Hlgh Rollers 3,4, 15, One Life to Live 6, Tat
tletales a, 10.
11 .JQ---Hollywood Squares 3,6,15; B lankety Blanks 13,
News 4; Love of Life 8,10
11 :55-Take Kerr 8: Dan Imel's World 10.
12 :00-Jackpot 3, 15; Password 6, 13; Bob Braun's 50-50
Club 4; News 8, 10; Mister Rogers 33
12 3D-Blank Check 3,15; Split Second 6,13, Search for
Tomorrow 8.10; Etec. Co. 33.
12 55-NBC News 3, 15.
1· oo-News 3: All My Ch lldren 6, 13; Phil Donahue B;
Young &amp; the Restless 10. Not For Women Only 15,
To Be Announced 33.

Is

SELL your mobile home for

12&gt;60 MOBILE HOME - 3
BR , ba th, Expando living

6 3Q--N BC N ews 3,4,15 . ABC

7 · 0Q--Tr u th or Con s 3,11 Bowl1 ng fot D olla r s 6
Myltne8; N ewslQ , Lei's Make a Deal 13

~i,U."Oifj;~~iJJJI'&lt;- 29 More
abundant
31 Misjudge
32 Ending for
serpent
33 Lenin's New
Economic 1-::-::-+-t-Policy
(abbr.)
35 Worked like i-::-;,--+--+a dog
11 Nervous
:ltl Early JewIT'LL MAKt;
ish ascetic
A NICE l5URISI
39 Construct
N-41&lt;:".J&gt; 7 ATTRACnON -

G.o:~ "lS"

Mtkf'

4 3Q--Bewttched 3. M erv Grrff1n J, Mod Squ.Jd ft.
Mtckey Mouse C l ub 8, Bonanza 15
5 ·DO--FBI 3; Andy Grtffdh 8; Mtsl er Roqer s Ne tql!

6·QO-Sunrise Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6.25-Farm Report 13 13 .
6:31)-Five Minutes to l:ve BY 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8; School Scene 10; Patterns for living 13.
6 35-Columbus Today 4.
6 45- Morning Report 3; Farmtlme 10
7.00-Today 3,4, 15; A.M America 13,6 , CBS News
8, 10 .
. a.oo-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, Schoolles 10,
Sesame St. 33.
8.30-B:g Valley 6, Popeye 10.
8.55-Chuck White Reports 10.
9·QO-A M 3; Ph il Donahue 4,15; lucy Show 8, Capt.
Kangaroo 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9·31)-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah 6; Galloping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Rvue 13
'

I Wild party
p1ece
41
"
Rule
5 Irritate
Britanma"
10 Earthen·
composer
ware Jar
11 Jog the
DOWN
memory
1 Nonsense!
13 Repneve
2 Holy place14 Punish by
3 Rebuff
!me
m1ldly
15 Gen.
(3 wds.)
Arnold's
4 Kind of
nickname
fever
16 Rosary
5 Cowardly
bead
6 Rugged
17 That
guys
woman
(hyph .
18 Decaying
wds.)
20 Knock-7 Soul (Fr.)
21 Koestler's
8 No hardened
"Darkness
crimmal
at -"
(2 wds.)
22 Stance
9 Carve on
23 Pressureretief
cook
25 Pay respect to
26 Market
price
27 UnwiUing

10

CBS New s B. 10, Zoom 33

listen
~~~~~~~~ .28 totoConunand
a horse

742 1081

-

:-o EP T I C T I\NK S c leaned
Mod ern ~, an t l a!mn 99') 395d
or 99:1 7J .t9
9 18 tt c

---

W I LL TRIM or c ut tr ees and
shr ubbery an d p a1n t roof s
P hone 9tl 9 3221 or 742 -444 1
.,
6 2426tp

Starting
even rng
cou r se
in
UP.holsterrng and tur ntture repa tr Thrs is a
skill tha1 can be a very
en1oyable h obby and
save you hund reds of
dollars by re -butlding ,
re u p h ols t er mg
a nd
r epa1r1ng
you r
own
furnrtur e Class will b e
conducted on e even tng
each w eek for a period
of ten weeks by R . E .
Knotts, a profess,onal
upho ls t e r e r f or more
than tw enty years F or
reser vatrons to auend a
demonst ratr on
c la ss,
Wh1 ch will be fr ee of
charge an d w tthout
oblt ga tJon , wrile at once
to Knott s Upholstertng ,
Sec ona
Ave . ,
116 3
Gatltpolt s, Ohio 45631 or
call 446 29 17
At the
demons t r a tton
session
we Wtl l answer all of
your
qu es tto ns
and
explain the d e1ails.

"The B r o t hers. O'Toole '

Movte

Dougla s 13

by THOMAS JOSEPH
40 Musical
ACROSS

ap

I

8,10, Feeling Good 20 , Folk Gu:tar 33

~-'H4'

BARGAI N S
are
our
m tddl e name " tn clean,
used
f u rn 1 tur e.

Free Est1ma1"~
PH. 992-2550

~

I

IN THOSE DAYS

l

4 oo-Mr . Cartoon 3, I Drea m of Jeann te 11 Somerset
15; Gtlligan ' s I s 6. Musical Charr s 8 SPsome ~1

IO:fli)-Ce lebrity Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Spin -Off 8,10;,
Dinah 13; Lilias, Youga &amp; You 33.

Construction
and Plumbing

~------

ba sem en t ,

I

All-WEATHER
ROOFING

.&gt;-5-1 mo.

I

PORTA-COOL'"
ROOM-to-ROOM

AND S()N, INC;

Does
your
home I
require any of these •
I
serv1ces?
1

Home Building
Room Additions
and Garages

110 Mr·ch,lntc St
PPnlf'roy, Ohto

NEAR

V. V. JOHNSON

WE DO:
I
Roofing - Siding
, Complete
Home
' Maintenance.

Chest,r, Ohio

I DIDIJ 'T

~ou \IVIJ~F-uL-,

.,_....._....,....__.._.,.._._..l

3 3o-Gne Life to Live 13, Lucy Show 6; Mntch Gdnte

12 3D-Wide World Special 6.
I oo-Tomorrow 3.4, News 13.
THURSDAY, JUNE 26.197S

P.. OIAMOND Rl~~ ~CXJ C&gt;.JU'&lt;'I"
Mf3 /&gt;. Dt~D Rlt.IIP FOR

..-._

I 3Q---Days of Our ~ :ves3,4, 15. Let's Make A Deal6 , 11.
As the World Turns 8, 10, Ep:sode Act:on 33
2.00-$10,000 Pyramid 6,13 , Gu•d:ng L:gh l B, lO .
Family at War 33
2.3Q---Doctors 3,4,15, Big Showdown 6, 13 . Edge of
N:ght 8,10
3 DO-Another Wor ld 3,4, 15, General Hosp: tal 6, 13,
Pri ce is Right 8. 10, Lil :as Yoga &amp; You 20. Pla y
Chess 33

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2S, 1975
7 oo-Truth or Cons. 3 3,4; Bowling for Dollars 6,
What 's My Line 8: News 10; Country Music Jubilee
13; Race for Profess ionals IS, Feeling Good 20,
You Owe It To Yourself 33
7·3Q--- Police Surgeon 3, Name That Tune 4, Let's
Make a Deal 6, Baseball 15; Wilburn Brothers 8,
Boo!&lt; Bea't 20; The Judge 10, To Tell the Truth ll;
Ep :sode Action 33
a ·oo-Uttle House on the Prairie 3,4; That's My Mama
6,13, Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10. Feeling Good 33,
What Makes a Good Father 20.
8.3Q-Movie " Only w:lh Married Men" 13; Movie
"Co me Spy w w:th Me" 6: Another Look at Appalach:a 33
9.DO-Lucas Tqnner 3,4; Cannon 8,10, The Good T:mes
a re Killing Me 20; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
IO ·QO-Petrocelli 3,4 , 15; Barel! a 6, 13; Dan Augusta, 10;
News 20; Family AI War 33
11 :OQ-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, IS, ABC News 33.

" Prranha , Prranha " 10, Janakt 33

BORN LOSER

~.._

Television log for easy viewing

11 : 3Q---Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Wide World Special 13,
FBI 6; Movie "To the Shores of Hell " 8: Movie

wtndows, stding, storm
doors and wmdows , raihng ,
phone
Charles
Lisle ,
Syracu se,
Ohto .
Carl
Jacob, Sat es Represen tattve.

I

I

'

'

H-tt:lot: HE. 60E6, 51&lt;1eeo • ... "'"''"' "'
ON 5 CHEDL!LE:- YOU
OFF ANY T IME~

on aluminum replac ement

r --- -------·- - --- '

\..·

.

MEANWHILE '
HE HOPE$ THI G
VfHriiGE 8U88LY
WI LL HELP TO
LIGHTEN YOUR

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES

Free Estimates
Phone 949-5961 Emergency 949-2211
or 992 -5700
- 4 2-75

992-2478

ON
CORNER LOT IN
POMEROY
Business Section
Phone 992 -3975 or
992 -5786

Ph . 992-3993
-·, 10-1 mo .

Atr conditioning, ptum btng , heattng , roofing,
spout1ng, general sheer
m etal work .

Septic Tanks Installed

I

Ca II Rutland Fur niture 742 - 4211 or
Arnold Grate 7425501'

Hour

LAV_E~DER

Syracuse, Ohio

HElL
Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

BACKHOES
For R e nt by
Contract Work.

LARRY

Also Repa1rs On All
Riding Tractors
498 Locu st St
Mrddt eport, Ohro
59 1

992 -7121

1966 CAD ILL AC, SJ9 500, a tr
c ond llton e d . qood t t r es
MI. OOO mil es Pho ne 99 2 5949
6 25 41p

stocked pond and smal l barn

~

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown :nto Watts &amp; Allie:
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; ODORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SDFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Sales &amp; Service
992-3092

• Phon e 992 5082 or

1%1:1 C H EVROL ET 1 J ton
ptckup ne w patnl , phon e
742 -1848 or co n t act Joe N
~. ayre , Rt
1
Rutland
6 25 3t c

NEW LISTING -5 acres. ha lf

1 l '&gt; H IN G

The Dai~ Sentinel

196 7' FORD 4 dr
V8 st d
53 00 Good work car P hone
992 2776
6 25 4tp

fenced , 2 bedroom, 14x6 8
mobile home, dril led well.

U '- EO Guns at c, aVIIlQ S
20
qa s1 no le barr e l. '1129 95 J c
H1Q Q1n s
16 ga botl , 525
l., a vaqe 410 22 over and
u n der
55 9 95 , Rem
66 7'1 M I N I M /\G.-,, S2 25 bO X 22
Nylon
SJB 50
Sav age 22
Maxt Mags $] bOX 30 JO
r oll S29 95, Marlr n 22 £l.o l t,
W m c h . $5 25 box 22 Rem
SJO Mos sb c rq 11 qa bol t.
s 1 50 bo x ?2 250 Rcrn $5
5'17 ~0 we won' t sca l p you at
box Buy you r sho tqu n sh ells
l nd 1an Jo e s
On l y your
before the pn ce 1nc r ease
ln d1Jn Joe s 308 P a qc 5 1 ,
wampum
lnd1n n
Joe's
.:. ports . JOB Paqe f, t 99 2 ]509
M1dd lep orl
6 19 71 (
6 20 71c

SYRACUSE

CAP!'AIN EASY

FREE ESTIMATES

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

6 22 6tp

-- --be droom s, bath , basement,
REFRIGERATOR
,
S50
Two
panel1ng, carpetrng , 2 porches
! / X 12 7 r . E DRM lr udu r (' fl l
box spr , ngs and ma 1tr ess, and f enced ya rd
t11ce Phon e 99? l 1?
S.1 5 Washe r and dry er , $S 5
REASONABLE - 2 bedroom
G 19 t t c
Two recaooed snow t1re s,
srz e H 78 15 $ 10 ea ch Ca ll hom e, bath, dtning, por ch,
I RM apt V111l h v.. a l! l o Wdll
992 3.1 93
ba sem e nt. new gas furnace
ca rp et , 10-1 Sp rtnq 1\ve,
6 2.1 tf c near stores
Pomer o y
~-- NICE - 3 bedroo m s, 2 ba ths,
6 ?? 1f c
1 ERR r cE
!\ ntiQu c
Shop m od ernkrt , dtntng r oom , nat
re1tr1nq f rom bus m ess f\.11 ga s fur n ace, 2 porches a nd
T WO houses •n Pornc r oy . :no
me r chan d iSe tn ~ l oc k wtl l be block garage
an d 212 Condor St Call 992
sot d at a larg e d 1SC OU!1!
CABIN - Large IoI a t For ked
26~9
Ter ra ce
1\ nt t ques ,
108
b 18 \71 p
Leqton
Terra ce
Lee · Run Lake Wat er a nd e lectrt ctty ava il able
Ru dt SIII
6 6 261p RESTAURANT - Would you
( ( I N 1 f.:"
Mo ht l('
II Oill('
F',l rk f~t ,.., t en mtlcs no rth
lt ke se lf employmen t wrth a
0/\/ C 1961 Tr t hau l boat . 90 rea sonab le 1ncome
o f Po n1e r ov l a r qc• lot s W1 th
D-1 2 3 5
h P
rnboard
ou tboar d
COII(retc Pil l l OS
S ICil'WiJ I~ S
l
tcen
ses
new nrotor H ew t1011rs 0 11
rv11n c rs
ilnd o f f s tr(•t 1
11 1 1963 Hrnvy du t y GMC MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom
P M ~ 1nq
PI• one 9Q~· 7 '19
tr,l tlcr Phone 997 7737
home, 2 bath s, l am rly room
l ?J I!fc
6 19 61 C .and n1 ce v 1ew of rtver
TWO bedroom mobt le ho me tn
NEW LISTING- 12 acres of
Syr acuse De po Stl r equ 1red
lan
d, good 3 bedroom home.
9x I? oo ld
No c h rldr en o r p et s Pho n e r \~/0 c arp et s 1
rlnct I
12ro: 15 av oca do pad s ca rpet:ng, paneled and til ed.
992 2JJ 1 a f t er 5 30 p m
Phon e 997 7 132
tn c lud cd
Nat gas furn ace , cera mi c t ile
6 10 1f r
6 19 61( bath

" PT l1kc new 1 room s w1l h
larqe bctt h litb let op r anqc,
larq e c loset EdS I M~l r n t
Pome r oy ~ec to ap pr r c 1atc'
P hnnc Ga lf ,po lt s dur tny day
11 6 l699 e v enmg s t, t6 9539

WILKINSON
SMALL

and

Phon e -

A LMO S1 NEW 8 h p r 1d1ng
lawn mower , 32" cut Ca ll
992 5J42 a ft er 5 p m
NEW LISTING - Ne at 2,
6 24 Jlc bedroom modern home, new
kt t c h e n
wi th s to ve and
ROUND B AL E S ot hay 1n
r
etngerator
, bath, basement,
h eld , 70c per bal e Also ,
glass cannrng 1ars Phon e ga s furnace, and n ice concrete
949 3718
front porch .

5 '} 11c

For Sale .

IN

· Racine, Ohio
We Build the Best and
Repaor the Rest.
- Cabinets InstalledCatl Before 7: 30A.M
Or Afler6:00 P.M .
949-3604

k.tl ,

For Sale

] 11 t t c

CARRIER
WANTED

NEIGLER
Building Supp~

6-18-1 mo~ - ' - - -- - - -- 5-..,7_-l_m
_ v_. -'

Roger Hysell's
Garage

•,

PRIVfdE lllCCI1 nq r oom t o r
any or qan11a tto n phonC' 992
\Q 7 ')

WE HAVE a man r e tl rt n Q and
m ust have a r ep lacemen t
for h rrn If you can t al k to
peop le and ar e ca pabJ e o f
se t11ng . we have th e 10b you
ha ve bee n wat1rng to r Thts
loca l , no ov er ntgh t tr avel
Must own a c ar , sa lary plus
c orn rn1Ss rons
and
c ar
allowanc es
all
frtnge
benet 1t s Send res um e t o box
677 Pomeroy, Oh10
6 24 ]l p

Phone
992-3313

5-81 mo

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

I I:' I f C

Help Wanted

NO-

Phon r

unturn tS hf'd
apartrncn rs
~1 honC' 997 5 111

Wtppel Rd , Ft ve Points

DtSC.UISE S· ·

l

.__,.__..~_.._.._.

WAIT ING!

' I f'.J l• t ROOM l urn rS hf'd and

Good Buys

John St., Next To
Grade School
992 -2 549 Syracuse, 0.

1911 FORD LTO 4 DR .
11895
Locc1 lly own ed , cl ec1n inl er ror . s tlver grey exter 1or,
l ~ c to r y orr, nutomatrc , p owe r steer tng &amp; btak~s. radro ,
good trres

Lost

l'()(,

')on f\ etztn q Clnd r amdy
M rs Darn H ea ton
Mrs Edward Bo er
6 25 ll c

Washer &amp; Dryer
and
,
Small Appliance
Repair

lOLA'S
BEAUTY SALON

.I door , loca l c c1r, arr co ndrltoned , lull equrpment

•WE NEE:D

-----~-------------------~---------------"

Merle Norman

S3095

IYilM ATADOR

Wanted To Buy

da u g htpr

'

M riltb u HT Cpe, 350 V-8 engrne, power s t een ng , l ac
tory r11r, ttn t ed gla ss, rad ro, w hee l cove r s, good trres,
bl k rnte rtor , s tl ver gre y· fmt sh Spccr al

6 2 1 6t c

Audrey P.c t z ~r 1q
~ O y A ct z1nq

OF
QUALITY

"" CHEVELLE

o

,- , ...

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

SORRY I FORGOT
YCU. D ID T HJ\T H OT
TOWEL BURN-UM "i"

P t. II.: o l llclll fta me qtasses 111

WE WI'Hto C':c:press our mos t
S1ncNe thanks to 1'11 of ou r
tr 1en d s
nC'10hhors
and

and SIS l er

Business S.e.r vices

Cosm elics

OQ?

relat1ves tor f lo w ers ca rds
Jnd the m an y ~mdncsses
shO \\'n us ill the toss of o ur

mm g on an

I@

mod els of mobtlt:' bomc~
P hon e ar ea codr 6 1-r J]J
'i531
J 1J 1t c

"''' ddl eport
\ 11)

PLAQUE

Card of Thanks

Monday, June 23.
Rev. and Mrs . Paul Sellers

,)

I

'

'tl'l \ 1

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Employment Wanted
Rev. and Mrs Howard
CA RPENTRY WORK
CE'ilrnq pane l tnq floorrnq ,
Shiveley and family a ttendetc Phon e 99 2 7759
Notice
ed West Ohio Annual Con6 2J 27 t c
ference at Lakes1de . Rev. NO W sel !mg Fui!N Brus h
phone 992 JJ 10 W I L L D O odd tab~ . patnttnq ,
P roduct s
Shoevvely was appomted as
roo ftnq ,
h aultnQ
and
t :Z&lt;l r f c
IHOWI Il Q Call 9'n 7 109
pastor of the Racme Clrcut t
6 25 6t c
Oil of M111k
and co-o rdwat or of the f-OR your
Co s mei 1CS
Phone
Southern Cluster and began
BROWN 5 997;11 3
R E MOO ELI NG
P l umb tnq ,
1 7 lf c
h1 s fourth yea r 1n thos
IH?atmg and a ll t ypes o f
q ene rill
rep a, r
Wo1 lo:.
position, June 15.
&amp;
5cwtng
SW EEPER
quaran t ee d
20 -,: ea r s e x
Machtnes Rcpn1 r Parts and
Rev. and (\Irs . Howard
p er1ence
Phon e 99') ?-lOY
Supplres
Davts Va c uum
5 1 lfc"
Shiveley and fam1ly attended
Clean er 1 m de up Geo rq e 5
Creek
R
ct
o
ft
q
at
e
Rout
e
7
commencement exercises at
'.' l l l pam t hou ses ancl roo f s
Phon e 116 029-1
1 rC'r es tlnlotc s Pho ne 99?
Whitehall Yearling Hig h
6 25 -ltc
'9 70
School, Columbus, Sundav
l 19 7 t p
eve nm g , Mrs Shiveley 's
Yard Sale
nephew , Michael Sewe!l, was
For Rent
among the graduates . Mrs. YARD SAL E on Lark 1n's St TR A ILER lo t Ph one 992 7897
Ru t land
Oh10
Thu r sday
6 1!l t fc
Shiveley 's mo the r, Mrs .
Frtday and Sa t urc:lay . 10
speed b tk e
S20 . ~pee d TWO 'l b edroom
Myrtle Loumenhouser acrn ob 1l e
Queen
washer ,
S 10 ,
homes I f urn tShed 1 un
companied the Shi vele ys
Fr t gtda~r e
S25
L awn
furntshed
Ha rr 1sonvr ll e
cha1rs dtshes el£&gt;c gu1 t ar
home and spent a few days
Phone 1121 12 3
and a mpl1he r Call 712 496J
6 2·1 61p
The Sh1veleys spent a short
6 25 31c
vacation with relatives_ lit
1 wo
BR
Mobile
Hom e
d
t
d 5 F.!'.M IL Y Yard Sal t: at A r
Deposil requtred Ph one 992W-1 ' t
I

·1

C tl l l , ( ,t

l

2 SIGNS

I\ 'l ' \\'1 1' (1

I

11 nf/111 fu1d - SALUTES

Events

.I

t' 1'1

CA.-, H p a1 d t or all m a k es &lt;)n et

dCM WI I C r1 lOiher

II

ol• , • l l ' ''dV I

Wanted

Social
I

1

"'

( /{' I ll

(An•wrn lomorro'"')

I

l l )ll

{I l'(l&lt;,oltO I I

1•' 1 ' 'I ll\

No w arrangr thr mclrd !titers
~o form the surpnse an!!lwer. as

I
Racine

I

. IJ""'' ... ,

V' X ~ I I
I~==l::::-~::::L1~~~·=.::~·
~~_:_'::":.:':.:':•:._
._••:::;ed

'rf'llf'rd• y' •

11\ ~ 1\ -,

1 '' 0~f)1' ( 1 1 Vo

REBDU'f I

1L_

' '''~ ,..,,.

I ' ,Jtulo
dl!oll
I('
-,, 11 00 1 ) • )I
11

ID I I

Yf,'KTUR

1t 11

"

d' I Ii' ' &lt;:,O i l

o'lf) J 'I~

1_.._,.._.,_.._._..._.._.._.._ _,.._ __

fS IS YOUR BROTHER,
Ct·ULLY. LOOK , NELLIE ,
THINGS ARE Har AND - '

Auto Sales

Help Wanted
' , I I j., L .._._

I

Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

}"'o_
r fl1 st

Unscn mble these four Jumhl e~.
one lttler to earh square. to
form four ord1nary words.

'

19.- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u.. Wcdne"day, June 25, 1975
DICK TRACY

I'M JU5T CHEERIN6 FOR
M'i HERO... HE'S THE NEIJJ

MANA6ER OF THE TEAM ...

ALL HE'!i DOING 15
1AKtto~6 THE

LINEUP OUT

TO THE UMPIRE!

C'MON,JOE! '{OU
CAN D0 IT!!

�~

I.

'

•
l

I

I

'

'T''h ..ee mo ..e' added' *o
~ j

• '

£1

• ,

centennial committee
Two persons have been
charged and warrants have
· been issued against three
others In connection with a
breaking and entering at
Kyger Creek High School.
Gallia Co unty sheriff 's
deputy Sid Vance said
Kenneth Eugene Sowards, 20,
Rt. 1, Gallipolis, and a 17year-old juvenile were taken
into custody Tuesday night on
charges of B&amp;E. Vance said
two adults and three
juveniles were involved.
Taken from the school's
audio-visual aid room were
two Sony tape recorders, a
microphone, and a lectern .
The intruders also entered

the school's athletic equipmen! room by using a football
helmet to lireak the glass. ·
Once inside, the room was
ransack ed and football
helmets, a lripod, and piece
of copper tubing were used to
break glass. There was ex'
tensive damage to the room.
Missing were
several
basketball jerseys. The
jerseys and one tape recorder
have been recovered..
Deputies are also continuing an investigation into
·the theft of a Gravely garden
lractor valued at $2,000 taken
Sunday night from the
property of George Hout on
Rt. 160.

Colby

I
l
~

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1

,.

I
I

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED - Jeffery
Hall, Point Pleasant; Sabrina
Blankenship, Leon; Hattie
Roush, New Havven; Bonnie
Devault, Leon; Mrs. Jasper
Eden, Letart ; Mrs. Homer
Whittington , Point PleaS&amp;nt;
Glen Adkins, Gallipolis ;
Eldon Vanscoy, Point
Pleasant; Mrs . Delbert
Milam, Middleport ; Orin
Hanna, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Michael Edwards, daughter,
Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Carrie
Alexandria, Gallipols; Mrs.
Leon Thompson, Point
Pleasant; Ralph Spencer,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Clyde
Tucker, Leon ; Mrs. Alvin
Whittington, Buffalo ; Mrs.
William Litchfield, Point
Pleasant, and Homer Reed,
Point Pleasant.

(Continued from page 1)
said was involved in infiltrating Cuban agents onto
the Carribean island.
"Many would have applauded," Cline said, "if one
of these anti-Castro teams
had managed to bump off
Castro. "Mter all," he added,
"a 1,600-man invasion force
was sent in 1961 to destroy
Castro in an undeclared war
at the Bay of Pigs."
Cline served as CIA deputy
director from 1962 to 1966.
In dther developments:
- Senate com mittee
sources said staff members
.failed Tuesday to reach a
satisfactory agreement with
the White House staff for
turning
over
secret
documents of the National
Security Council relating to
assassinations and papers of
a White House Special Group
relating to cove rt actions of
the CIA.
- The
Senate
panel
Tuesday
heard
testimony
TONIGHT-THURS.
from John Roselli, a reputed
NOT!)PEN
underworld figure from the
JUNE 27.29
Chicago days of AI Capone.
Walt Disney's
He was asked about one
ESCAPE TO
alleged 1961 plot to poison
WITCH MOUNTAIN
Castro, his brother Raul, and
And Also
Cuban leader Che Guevara.
Walt Di sney 's
' Roselli apparently
CHIP AND DALE
FESTIVAL
cooperated with the com..............._ _ __. mittee . Chairman Frank
Church, D-Idaho, declined to
discuss the substance of his
account.
But
Church
MASON DRIVE-IN repeated
his claim the Senate
'' •
11 \V
~ 1
panel ·has hard evidence of
; , ( 1t &lt;~o11N1ql1th
aSSassination plots in which
the CIA has been involved.
TONJGH,Tihru FRIDAY
"! find it reprehensible,"
Cburch said , " that any
" TRIP WITH
agency of the United Slates
THE TEACHER"
should ever have engaged in
Plus
an assassination attempt
"POLICEWMMEN"
against the leader of a
country with which we had
peaceful relations."

MEIGS THEATRE

I
I)I

I.

20 ~ Th4i Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jtme 25 , 1975

1

293 to win $1,675.
Green, who ranked third In
money winning with $211,709
last year, was 32nd heading
Into the Western with $Ml,647
this year. And 23 of those with
larger earninga will be In the ;
Western field of 156 proli.
Most notable absentees
By ED SAINSBURY
287 in winning the Western at Butler and will play a third · were leading money winner
UP! Sports Writer
Butler a year ago. Medinah round today in the pro-am. Jack Nlcldaus and runnerup
OAKBROOK, lli. (UPI) carries a course rating of 75.3 ." That ought to be enough," Johnny Miller. Gene Uttler,
Hubert Green prefers to play and Butler 76.2.
he said.
who is seventh In earnings,
"a difficult golf course more
Green has played Butler
Green's best round in the Graham, and Pat Fitzsimons,
than an easy one," so for the · twice and makes no com- U.S. Open was a 68 on In the top 20, alao will be
second straight week he 'll get parison of the two courses. Saturday and it lifted him missing.
that chance in the Western
" It 's like comparing a into contention, ,(ive strokes
Thus Watson, Mahaffey,
Open.
man's wife," he said, "and behind pacesetter Frank Tom Weiskopf, who tied for
The 28,-year-old pro from you don't do that unless you Beard . But Sunilay, he second a year ago, and Lee
Binningham, Ala., was In want to fight or can run fast . sagged to a 78 and finished in Trevino, were leading
contention in the U.S. Open at
"This course has some a six-way tie for 18th place at favorites.
Medinah, Ill. , last week until tough holes, and the wind is
the final day and this week going to make a difference. H
his test will come on another it' s blowing like it was
long par 71 ·course, Butler Tuesday, it'll change · the
National.
course.
(Continued .from page 1)
The $200,000 Western Open
'.'The greens are soft and
will pay the winner $40,000, holding approaches, and Motors Corp. today began offering owners of 1975 Vega, Monza
equalling the U.S. Open prize. they're a little slower than and Panel Express models an "engine guarantee" of 60,000
Perhaps the winner's score they were at Medinah, but if miles for vehicles equipped with the 140 cubic inch forwill be higher than the three- the wind dries them out, cyclinder alumlnwn engine,
southern District, at 949-4854. overpar 287 at which Lou they'll get much faster. Most
The guarantee would awly to the 1975 models equipped
with
the engine and delivered on or after June 25, according to
Graham and John Mahaffey of the effect of the winds will
R,
&gt;ert
D. Lund, vice president of GM and general manager of
tied after 72 holes in the Open be on the greens, but tbey can
to set up an lft.hole playoff affect some tee shots and Chevrolet. Lund said the guarantee was offered to aaaure
WEED PAYS
which Graham won.
approaches, too. U anybody customers of the "quality and durability" of the engine.
The engine guarantee will cost a maximum of $48 at a rate
BERKELEY, Calif. (UP!)
Tom Watson equalled the can shoot four sub-par
of
$1
for each additional 1,000 miles of coverage remaining
- Stevven Weed, former
rounds, he ought to win."
beyond
the original 12,000 mile warranty up to the 60,000 mile
fiance of Patricia Hearst, has
Green practiced both
Frame
home
paid a freelance writer
Monday . and Tuesday at limit.
$15,000 in an out of court
settlement of a legal dispute taken by fire
over a book about the Hearst
LONG BO'ITOM - Fire
kidnaping. Weed originally destroyed a two-story frame
sued writer Roger Rapoport home owned by Don
for $450,000, charging the Meadows Tuesday morning
writer was sensationalizing a on County Road 31 in
book on which the two were Lebanan Township.
collaborating about the inThe Racine Fire Departcident . Rapoport coun- ment received the call at
tersued, charging Weed had 11 :02 a.m. and was assisted
breached the contract by by the Bashan and Chester
failing to pay the writer for · Depts. The fire, of un· work done.
determined origin, began in
the kitchen area. Losses
sustained were estimated at
$12,000 on the home and $3,000
on its contents. No one was
home at the time of the fire.

RN wanted by
two districts
for next tenn

Ashbr·o ok

opposmg
·busm"g ki·d s

~~t~:~~rfulfilled any of
its supposed goals," Ashbrook said in his weekly
newsletter. " It is ulso an
example of the federal
government forcing its own
view on local school districts
which have many differing
situations and problems.
"Perhaps more people in
this country are learning that
supposed federal solutions
sometimes
make
the
problems that they were
supposed to solve even worse.
"School busing was painted
by its advocates as a cure-aU
that was going to improve
both the quality and the scope
of education," Ashbrook said.
"As numerous cities can
testify, it as done neither.
Instead, it has resulted in
more problems in education .
Costs have continued to rise
and quality has gone down."

SWEEP GOES ON
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)
F;'ederal agents and sherif's
deputies late Tuesday were
continuing their grand sweep
of drug peddlers iri Swrunit,
Wayne and Portage counties.
Twenty-seven arrests have
been made and more could be
expected.

I

HOOVER
CUSTOM
UPRIGHT
Regular '69.95
Sale Price

~··

BAKER
FURNITURE
Middleport ·
Ohio

News •• in Briefs

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

to Jefferson Co.
George Hargraves, the first
and only superintendent. that ·
the Meigs Loca l Scho ol
District has had, res igned
Wednesday night.
Hargraves came to Meig.s
Local School District July 4,
1966, to assume duties as
superintendent of the new
school district made up of the
school districts of Pomeroy
and Middleport exempted
village sc hools, Bedford,
Salisbury and the Northwestern District.
During his administration
the new high school at Rock
Springs was constructed and
occupied on April 13, 1970. A
junir high school was se t up in
buildings at Middleport.
Hargraves has been active in
community and civic affairs
as well as busy administering
the Meigs Local District.
Hargraves has accepted
the position of superintendent
of the Jeffe rson County Joint
Vocational School. The school
still under construction, will
open in September. The new

school is located a few miles
west of Steubenville and will
serve all distri cls in Jefferson
County .
Hargraves' contract in the
new school is for two years
with the first year's salary

being $23,000 and the second
year's $24,000 . The contract
signed Tuesday night calls
for Hargraves . to begin his
new assignment on August L
He will conclude his work in
the Meigs Local District the
last day in July.
Last week the Meigs Local
Board of Education which
was ca lled ·into special
session Wednesday night to
be informed of Hargraves'
res igna ti on, emp loye d
Charles Dowler, principal of
the B idw e ll - Porter
Eleme ntary School ir\ Gallia
County,
as
assis tant

superintendent in the district.
Hargraves had performed
the work of the superintendent and the assistant
superi ntendent sin ce the
death of Larry Morrison.
A member of the Trinity
Church
in
Pomeroy ,
Hargr aves serves on the
Stale Vocational Advisory
Committees for evaluation
and for planning . He has
served as a member of the
Stale Voca tional Advisory
CounciL He is a member of
the Board of Directors of the
Appalachia
Ed ucational
(Continued on page 10)

Rhodes
vetos

•
THESE young people were some of the volunteers
who .pitched in to clean up and paint at the Middleport
park Wednesday following acts of vandalism there. Picnic

•

at y

•

VOL. XXVII

GEORGE HARGRAVES

NO. 52

Ford will be
in Cincinnati
on July third
CINCINNATI (UP II President Ford will be in
Cincinnati July 3 to participate in a " White House
conference on dom estic
Presidential aide confirmed here today . .
Wllliam J. Baroody Jr.,
assistant to the President
for public liaison, also said
Ford will attend th e
dedication of a new en·
vironmental r,esearch
center here at noon th e
same day. After his appearances here, the
President is scheduled to
fly to Cleveland the
evening of July 3 to address
a Cuy ahoga ''County
Republican fund raising
dinner.

given approval

Parade

The Meigs County Commissioners approved the pia t
of . Clair-Mar Estates, a
subdivision proposed for
Rutland Township in their
regular meeting Tuesda y
morning.
The commissioners are
also checking prices of air
co nditioners following a
request by Robert Bowen,
county school superintendent, for air conditioning
at the Board of Education's
office . In other action, the
board acted on routine
business.

MUSEUM OPENS
The J»eigs County Museum
will be o'Pen throughout the
week to continue the Heritage
Sunday display from Regatta
Weekend.
A special attraction of· this .
year's show featured wedding gowns through the
decades. Hours will be
Thursday and Friday evvenings from 7:30 until 9 and
Saturday and Sunday afternoons from 2 to 4 p. m. Tbe
mlJ!Ieum is located on Butternut Ave., POmeroy.

Reg. $28900, ·7-Piece Set, 42" Round
Table with 2-12" Leaves,. 6 Side Chairs

Sale s239

00

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

Weather

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

Reg. $19800, 5-Piece Set, 36" Round
Table With 1-12" Leaf, 4 Side Chairs

As tempera lures climbed well above the. 90 degree
mark, area children dipped into tbe cooling waters of

::::

FumHure Depa~ment, Third Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SUMMER

Over ~00 Pairs Ladies'
·DR~SS SHOES .&amp; SANDALS
to

1250

-----

1·-----~~------·-----------~-~--··-· ---------

1 Group Ladies' Shoes

Dress &amp; Sandals
'
White and Colors
PR.
Reg. 9.99 to 20.9,9
..... ..._.._..........._..
~---.~----------·-------·

.

2- •10
__

~·

,C hapman's Shoes

_

:::1

ROME - THE HEAD OF THE U. N. FOOD and
Agricultural Organization says 500 million persons "live In the
constant grip of hunger and malnutrition" around the world.
Addeke Boerma, the Dutch-born director general of FAO, said
there's little hope of the world's hungry feeding themselves
despite international efforts.
"To speak frankly, it is dear that such a transformation
cannot be brought about within the next decade," he said
Wednesday at ihe first meeting of the newly formed World
Food Council. He said the world's major grain-growing
countries will have to provide "a considerable increase in food
aid" over the next 10 years to avertwidespread famine.
NEW DELHI -_ PRIME MINISTER INDIRA Gandhi
declared a state of emergency in india today and ordered a
roundup of opposition'leaders In a crackdown against critics.
In a nationwide radio addreSs, the prime minister accused
oppastion political parties of a "widespread conspiracy" that
threatened the nation's internal security .
Political sources said polife in New Delhi arrested about
20 politicians and newspaper publishers, including popular
opposition leader Jayakprash Narayan, an advocate Of
peaceful revolution. Narayan's arrest came hours after he told
a rally of 10,000 persons that Mrs. Gandhi should resign
becaiise of ber conviction on charges of campaign corruption.

SALE STARTS THURSDAY MORNING

. 769

.

By United Press International
COLUMBUS - HOUSE-APPROVED LEGISLATION
authorizing employes of local school boards to serve in the
state legislature was passed by the Ohio Senate 29 to 2 Wednesday and sent to Gov. James A. Rhodes .
The bill would permit state Sen. Oakley C. Collins, RIronton, to become superintendent of Lawrence County schools
at an annual salary of $21,000. Most debate over the. bill centered around that issue. "This is a blatant conflict of interest,"
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, R-Ashland, said. He pointed out
that Collins would be voting on school legislation affecting his
district.
·

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse Open Thursday 9:30 to 5

MISS AMERICA
CONNIES
Reg. 9.99 to 19.99

Middleport pool. This shows the number of swimmers at
the pool just minutes after it opened Wednesday.

. r;v;=;;,;===:=·='=' =·~·=·=·= =:··=i·;=:=:=·n;i;f;~\ Fo~d .would

Sale s159oo .

COLUMBUS -RURAL COUNTIES CONTINUED in .May

.1 GROUP LADIES'

= 1h

to record tbe highest unemployment rates In Ohio with Adams
County showing 19.5 per cent of the civllian labor force
un$1ployed compared with the statew'ide average of 8.3 per
cent, It was announced today.
The Ohio Bureau Of Employment Services said other rural
counties with high' uriemp!Qyment tales included Scioto, 15. 7.;
Hocking ~5.1; Knox, 14.8; Union 12.4; Pike, 12.2; Portage, 12.3
and BuUer, 12.
Other southeastern Ohio counties and their rates were
Athens, 6.5; Fairfield, 7.5; Gallia, 9.2; Jackson 9.4; Lawrence,
.,
(Continued on page lO)

PRICE

MAIN STRIIT
POMEROY,
. OHIO '

.
r

.,

Cloudy tonight and Friday ,
chance of showers. Highs
Friday mid 80s, and lows
tonight in
mid
60s .
Probability of rain 40 per cent
today, tonight and Friday .

·use nukes

By HELEN THOMAS
Kennedy had declared: "Our
UPI White House Reporter
arms will never be used to
W~HINGTON (UPI). strike the first blow in any
Prestdent Ford has dechned attack."
to rule out first use.of nuclear
The " military p os tur e ~ ·
weapons by the Umted States statements in which the
in a future conflict.
Pentagon each year asks
He told reporters that a Congress for its budget have
news conference m 91-{iegree for years described the U.S.
heat on the White House lawn arsenal of strategic nuclear
Wednesday was not the place weapons - missiles based on
to say ~hether ~e United land and in submarines, and
States mtght be ftrst to use long-range bombers - as
etther long-range strategic weapons of retaliation, and
nuclear weapons or so-called therefore of deterrence .
tactical nuclear weapons,
However, past adrninistrawhich are stored m Europe lions and the current defense
and South Korea.
secretary,
Jaines
R.
The President was more Schlesinger, have made clear
willing to discuaa domestic · that tactical nuclear weapons
problems:
might be used in response to
-:-He said Americans may massive nonnuclear attacks
have to suffer high unem- in either Europe or Korea.
ployment "for a short period
Ford left U.S. policy on
of time" to avoid another
round of inflation.
- He declared that a
threatened $2 to $4 a barre.! oil
price increase by producing
na lions next fall would be
"very disruptive and totally
unacceptable."
WASHINGTON, D. C. - In
- He said he would cona
letter
to U. S. Rep , Clarence
sider recommending an
Miller,
the Chairman of the
extension to 1976 of the tax
In
terstate
Commerce
cut for Americans if the
economy isn't moving, if the · Commission has said that
. current tax cut appears to be "an oral hearing will be held
working and if the ,lleflcit can locally in the near future " on
the C&amp;o plan to abandon
be kept in bounds.
In 1961, President John F. approximately 83 miles of
track servin g Hocking,
-Vinton, Gallia and Meigs
.':::::;:: :::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::;:::::::;:;· Counties .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
The let ter from ICC
Saturday through Chairman George Stafford
Monday, chance of showers was in response to Miller's
Saturday and Sunday and formal protest of the line
fair Monday. Highs will be
which serves 18 rail stations
in the 60s and lows will be and commun ities in the four
in th'e 60s.
• • county area. ·
··
Miller's letter of April 30 to
.:: :':':·:':·:·:·:=:~: ':::::::;:::;:::: :::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·
the ICC underscvred the

both strategic and tactical
weapons unclear.
"ldon'tthinkitisappropriate for me to discuss in a
press conference what our
utilization will be of our
tactical
or
strategic
weapons," he said. " .. .!don't
believe under these circumstances that I should
discuss how when or what
kind of we~pons should be
used."
Asked specifically whether
he would order use of tactical
nuclear weapons if North
Korea attacked South Korea,
Ford said: "I am not either
confirming it or denying it."
Military forces will be used,
he said as national interest

warran~.

Fred Harris, former Ok(Continued on page 10)

Sound-off promised on

· t
C&amp;O rail aband0fiffiefi
importance of the line to local
economic growth and pointed
out the severe problems
which would arise if the
abandonment were permitted
in light of the possible
abandonment of local Penn
Central lines under the
Regional Rail Reorganization
Act.
· ICC ha s told Miller that iIs
environmental impact study
on the matter bas been
compl eted
with
"no
signifi cant impact" · noted.
The ICC review process now
moves· to a public hearing .
Miller has asked the ICC to
give local rail users adequate
lead time in announ cing. a
hea rin~ date.

., ..

. .. ...
'

PRICE 15'

•

times
•
are coming
00

WASHINGTON (UP!) The government's index of
leading economic indicators
released today r~se in May
for the thtrd st ratght month,
virtually assuring that the 18month long recession has
ended.
At no time since World War
II has a three-month rise in
this closely watched index
failed to signal an end to bad
Urnes and a return to
economic prosperity.
In May, the index rose 2.1
per cent following increases
of 3 per cent and 1.1 per cent
in April and March.
The upturn ended a slump
in the index that began in
mid-1913, several months

before the economy entered
the worst of the six post-war
recessions.
Through the years, shifts in
the index has foreshadowed
similar movement in the
overall economy.
This spring, the Commerce
Department issued a revised
formai to eliminate the
distorting effects of inflation.
The redesigned index, when
applied to past business
cycles, has had a perfect
record of forecasting when a
recession is about to end.
The index is made up of 12
sensitive indicators from
various sectors of the
economy. Figures for 10 were
available for the May report

and eight of these moved up ,
the government said.
Those increasing were
building permits, new orders
for manufacturing and
co nsumer products and
materials, the money supply,
stock prices, contractors
orders for plant and equipmen!, changes in wholesale
commodity prices, change in
total liquid assets and
delivery performance by
vendors.
Two other indicators - tbe
length of the average workweek for blue collar
production workers and the
employment layo()ff rate in
manufacturing industries were unchanged from April.

Oil hit by law suits
By DONALD B. THACKREY
SAN FRANCISCO (U P!) The State of California wants
oil companies in the oil
business and gasoline compani,es selling gasoline.
The
state
a ttorney
general's office Wednesday
filed a multimilliono{iollar
antitrust damage suit against
11 major oil companies that
produce about half the
nation's gasoline.
In addition to unspecified
treble damages for the slate

and all its political subdivisions, the suit asks that the
companies be ordered to
divest themselves of their
interest in crude oil
production.
" We want to see free
market forces u;x;rate," said
Michael I. Spiegel, one of the
deputy attorneys general who
filed the suit in federal
district court. "Let the people
who drill the wells sell to
whomever they want and let
those who do the refining sell

the final product."
" The present system
doesn't pennit free market
forces to operate," he added .
Named in the suit were:
Standard Oil Company of
California, Texaco Inc.,
Union Oil Company of
California , Atlantic Richfield , Continental Douglas
Oil, Exxon, Getty Oil, Gulf
Dil, Mobil Oil Company of
(Continued on page 10)

Hole-in -one

Presbyter ·Evens

contest set

to speak Sunday

on July 28

The Rev . Hugh Bean
Evans, executive presbyter
of the Presbytery of Scioto
Valley, wi ll be guest speaker
at the !20th anniversary
celebration at the Middleport
Presbyterian Church Sunday,
June 29 at 10: 30 a.m.
Rev. Evans, a native of
Ohio, assumed his present
position Jurie I, 1974. after
servi ng five years · as
executive secretary of the
Ge neral Assembly's
Department of Ministerial
Relations . In that position he ·
served ministers and churches
of
the
United
Presbyterian Church in the
U.S.. A. by providi ng information for use in assisting
chur ches ~.electi ng and
and
calling ministers
ministers seeking relocation.
Rev.. Evans, born in
Gallipolis, grew up in Dayton.
He attended Prince ton
Un iversity and Prince ton
Theological Seminary, and
was ordained to the Christian
Ministry by the Presbytery of
Dayton. He served the Second ·
Presbyterian Church of
Philadelphia, Pa . five .years
before being called as pastor
of the Seventh Presbyteriar.

REV. HUGH EVANS
Church in Cincinnati wher£
he served nearly 23 years.
In Cincinnati, Rev. Evan~
was active in church and
community life, and since
comi ng to Colwnbus ha.s been
a part of the ministry of the
national church. He lives in
Worthington. He is married
and . the fa ther of three
children .

The an nual hole -in-one
contest wil be held the week
· of July 28, it was announced
when the Lions Club met
Wednesday at noon at the
Meigs Inn. Ralph Graves,
committee member, reported
on the club's annual fund
raising golfing contest.
Fred Blaettnar spoke to the
cluh about the progress of the
community and pointed out
obstacles confronting the
area, and its advantages.
Mr. Blaettnar displayed
dozens of pictures of floods Of
many years and Of the Meigs
Mines. On the theme,.
"Progress " he maintained
the county's economic future
is brightened by the impact of
the mines on the area. His
pictures included coal
moving on the beltiines to the
Gavin plant, of the , Sporn
Plant, and many scenes at
the coal mining operations.
Guests were Mall Tawney
of Gallipolis with member
Karl Krautter, and ·Dan
·StOdola, Mason, and Den
Berendsen, Green Bay ,
Wise., with member Paul
Stodola . Lou Osborne
'president, presided over th~
meeting.

..

,IV
•"

'

enttne

:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;.

Clair-Mar plat

COLUMBUS (UP! ) -A bill
to place an estimated 1,000
state employes, many of
them Democrats, under the
protection of classified ccivil
service, was vetoed Tuesday
by Gov. James A. Rhodes.
Rhodes, in a veto message,
(Continued from page I)
called the bill "a blatant
at the junior high.
attempt to give a small group
Pete Simpson , parade of state employes the protectchairman, is welcoming lion of certified civil service
entries into the parade. with no regard for their
Entries are coming In well, qualifications for
the
he reported, but more are
positions they occupy.
needed. Simpson is to be
"Many of those receiving
advised by phone, 949-4292, or
the special benefit provided
by writing Box 444 at Racine
by the bill would probably not
of participannts. All ar~
hold their present positions if
welcome.
required to take competitive
examinations ,"
said
Rhodes.
Authored ·by state Rep.
John D. Thompson Jr., DCleveland, the measure
cleared the legislature along
partisan lines. Democrats
favored it, and they can
override Rhodes' veto with a
two-thirds vote in each
chamber.
Democrats have a twothirds majority in the Senate
but fall one vote short in tbe
House.
Certain employes of the
state Lottery Commission,
Industrial Commission
.
'
Public Utilities Commission,
Industrial
Relations
Department and state
university library employes
would be placed under classified civil service by the
legislation.
Classified civil .service requires that an employe
qualify . through
an
examination score. It also
means special provisions and
rights for
promotion,
suspension, demotion, firing
and layoffs.
·
Rhodes said tbe bill would
"disregard both .the purpose
and spirit of the civil service
system" by skirting requirements for competitive
examination and
classification of skills and
locking current employes into
jobs "for which thousands of
other state employes have
been required to take competitive examinations to
prove their qualifications."
Republican legislators had
maintained the bill would
. "create a Gilligan government in exile" and be an
"unprecedented padding of
the public payroll."
Democrats said the bill
would put political appointees
"under civil service where
.we can get some control over
their political activities and
get them to be loyal to this
state rather tban to an:,o
political party."

•

THURSDAY, JUN~ 26, 1975

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

and economic affairs," a

os·rh ill

tables which had been carved up were restained and the
shelters painted. J. J . Cremeans, police chief, provided
refreshments for the young workers.

Devoted To The lntere.&lt;&gt;ts of The Meig.o;-Masnn Area

Sale! Maple Dinettes

HOOVER
SPECIAL BUY
,I'

•

Hubert Green pr~fers
tough golf-- course

PETE
Pete WRONG
Simpson,
not Pete
'
Sisson, is heading lhe ,annual
.July 4th parade which is
being· revived in Racine this
year, All types of entries are
welcome anct invited, Simpson said . Anyone wishing to
The Eastern and Southern
participa te is asked to call Local School Districts are
Simpson at 949-4292 or write seeking the services of a
him at P.O. Box 444 in registered nurse for the nex t
Racine.
school year.
During the past sc hool
year. the two districts and the
Meigs Local School District
shared in the services of a
school nurse. However, the
Meigs Local District will
0
employ a full time nurse next
term. Eastern and Southern
. will combine to employ a
nurse who will divide her
lime between the tw o
WASHINGTON (UP!) _ districts. .
..
.
F
db .
f ho 1 hi!
Any regtstered nurse morce .,. usmg 0 sc 0 . c · teresled in the position may
dren ts one other liber~l apply by calling John Riebel,
pana~ea that has shown m superintendent of the Eastern
practtce to be worthless," District, 9115-4292, or Bobby
Rep. John Ashbrook, R..Ohio , Ord, superintendent of the

'

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