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Bu~

station decor returning
;- to Gov •.Rhodes work .offices
By J,EE LEONAJI.D
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS 1UP!)
When Gov. James A. Rhodes
walked into the Statehouse
\ast January after a four-year
absence, one of the legacies
left by the previous administration of Gov . John J .

PAY.
YOUR

OhiQ politics

TELEPHONE
BILLS
AT
DUTTON'S

DUTTON.
Drug Co.'
"Your
Prescription ·.
Drug Store"·

right on red Tuesday ·

. _M!idd.~ttL:o.

COLUMBUS - ''Don't
blow your horn or Jose yow·
cool. Give a ll drivers a
chance to become familiar
with Ohio's new right-turnon-red law," Highway Safety
Director Donald D. Cook
advised motorists today.
The highway safety official
said the new la w, effective
Tuesday, July I , is designed
to speed the flow of traffic
and to save gasoline by
eliminat in g unn ecessary
waiting at stop lights
"Not all drivers will know
about the law immediatelv "
Cook commented, "so I ~~k

~

Holiday
with Care
Have a very enjoyable holiday , Jf your family holiday

plans include some driving,
make sure all of you are he re
fo r the ma ny holidays )•et to

come. PLEASE DR IVE WITH
CARE.

-cARROL- K.
SNOWDEN
24 Slate 51 .
Gallipolis
446-4290

Home
446-45 IB

like A Good Neighbor,

Srare Farm Is There.
Farm

buffs helped obtain fur nishings and planned a
ta steful decor.
The project cost $1)0,000paid in full by the Commodores.
In 19i3, the complex was
dedicated by Gilligan as "a
gift to the people of Ohio ... a
room which possesses the
digni'ty and beauty of this
stately building housing the
seat of Ohio's government."
Gilligan said the atmosphere of "Early Bus
Station" had been removed
and the chamber "restored to

lu.,tell' and significance
bef1ltinl( th&lt;' great history it
symbolizes."
·
Last week, for $300 plus the
labor time of state buildin~s
and gro unds workers,
Williamsburg began to yield
to "Early Bus Station" once
more.
After six months, Rhodes
decided he wants the shape of
'the office back the way it
was, so a 5~'oot corridor
splitting the complex is being
partitioned into a pair of
offices for the governor's
secretaries.
The artwork and chandeliers will remain, according to the governor's
staff, but the Williamsburg
effect of the stately hallway is
being cut off by floor-toceiling panels with doorways
cut into them.
Awool broadloom runner of
federal blue, now badly
stained by spilled coffee, has
been removed and may not be
replaced.
High arched doorways,
stained a natwal cedar color
after the Commodores had 32
coats of paint removed, are to
be covered with white paint.
The cabinet room is exthe

Stay cool in turning

992-3106

S1~fe

Gilliga n was a refurbished
governor's office.
Gilligan and the Ohio Commodores, a non-partisan
group of 300 businessmen and
professionals, had remodeled
the executiv e suite and
cabinet room into a
Williamsburg-style replica of
the or iginal version of 1861.
Workmen. ...removed a century 's worth of paint and
dust; stained ancient wood ;
polished brass and marble.
Craftsmen inspected the
project daily with critical
eyes for fine details. History

SU Tf UIM

Insurance Compan ie s
Home Ofltces:
Bloom ington , lllir~o i 1

drivers to be patient until the
action becomes a reflex.
Dnvers should refrain from
irri tating fellow motorists by
blowing horns and possibly
se tting the stage for an accident
by
increasing
irritability''
However, Director Cook
advised caution in turning
righ t on red : "Not all intersectiOns will permit right
turn
on
red,
since
municipalities have the right
to pos t signs forbidding such
turns ," he explained. "Right
turns on red can be made only
when no prohtbitive sign is
posted, and when the turning
&lt;!river yields to pedestrians
Ellis returned
an&lt;' cross traffic."
The law will bring Ohio's
to Okinawa base Motor Vehicle Code into
Marine Private First Class closer conformity with the
Daniel R. Ellis, son of National Uniform Vehicle
Pleasan t A. .Ellis Jr., of Code.
Middleport, has completed a
fi ve-rnonth deployment with
the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine
Regime nt , and supporting
CLOSING JULY 4
units on various training
GALLIPOLIS
The
exercises in the western Holzer Medical Center Clinic
Pacific. Ellis took part in the will be closed Friday, July 4.
evac uation of U. S. citizens In case of an emergency
and foreign nationals from during the Holiday Weekend,
Cambodia and South Viei- physicians ·of the Holzer
nam.
Medical Center Clinic staff
He serves with the 3rd will be on duty in the
Marine Division on Okinawa. Emergency Room (Phone
A 1972 graduate of Meigs 4'46-5201) of the Holzer
High School, he joined · the Medical Center to handle
Manne Corps in August 1972. emergency cases only.

1t

'C;ib';, ;tiii ,r;;, ,d~;;;'"th";,,;~;;r"l
.

.

~

Ry HF.NRY KEYS
WMiiiiNI.TON iUPI) Cubc1' s

c.tnnouncern e nt

through · Sen.
f'reorg2
McGovern, D..S.O.. that it is
. willing to return $2 million in
high jack ransom money to an
American airline is unlikely
to speed a resumption of
trade or diplomatic relations
with Cuba.
A long, hard road must be
traveled before either

peeled tu r~tain iL• ·historical
decorations, but a century .
old oriental ru~. handmade in
Iran and said "to be one of the
longest wearing .of orientals"
by the Gilligan administration. is being retired.
" It just hasn't stood up,"
said a Rhodes staffer.
Many of the trappings will
be retained, and in fairness, a
governor should be able to ·
work in an office which suits
his style and work habits. IT
he·· needs space for more
employes, he should get it.
But it seems too liad that
the hallmark of a magnificent
colonial "gift to the pl:llple of
Ohio" should be obscured by
plaster .panels and rich,
ancient wood covered with
paint.
Little tangible evidence remains in the Statehouse to
show that Gilligan was ever
there, and to that, half of Ohio
may be crying "Amen!"
Nevertheless, history will
record that the -spoUing of a
gift began in 1975. 'Hopefully
there won't be 32 coats of
paint the next time, when
nobody will remember what a
bus station was.

Haggard coming
to Stale Fair
CO LUM BUS - Country
superstar Merle Haggard ,
mos t famous for his song
"Okie from Muskogee, " has
been signed at the 19i5 Ohio
S'tate Fair for two free
grandstand performances.
General Manager John F.
Evans said the Merle
Haggard Show will perform
at 4:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, Aug . 28.
Haggard, the country star
from Bakersfield,,Calif., who
served time in San Quentin
Prison, assembled the
Strangers Band which will
appear with him at the State
Fair.

Airman

s~arls

.

becomes ·a possibility.
Just how long and difficult
the journey will be was
spe lied out to a congressional
eommittcc by William D. ·
Rogers, assistant secretary
of state for inter-American·
affairs, when he testified
against a House bill that
would lift the emba rgo on
U.S. trade with Cuba.
Certainly, no gestures of

Washington
Window

reconciliation will be made
until th e Organization of
RUTLAND - Airman American States votes to lift
Wayne L. Searls, son of Mr·. sanctions against Cuba
and Mrs. Ray Searls of 235 adopted in 1964.
Depot St., Rutland, took part
The first occasion on which
in an Atlantic Command this will be a possibility will
jo int-service training be the meeting of the OAS
exercise in North Carolina . A Conference of Plenipotencommunications eqmpment tiaries in San Jose, Costa
repair specialist at Seymour Rica, July 16-28.
Johnson AFB, N. C., he i s ~... However, even if the
with the 2012th Com- conference lifts the sanctions,
munications Squadron which as seems li~ely , none of the
participated in the large- Latin Amencan states, or the
scale air; land and sea Umted States, will be
operation conducted near automatically obliged to
Camp Lejeune.
resume trade or relations
He was among· support with Cuba ..
forc es for Tactical Air
All tt wtll mean, Rogers
Command ( TAC 1 strike explained, is that each nation
groups that flew simulated
air sorties prior to the start of
ASK TOWED
mock battles involving Army
POMEROY
- Roger Ray
troops and Marine task force
La
they
,
26,
Langsville,
and
personneL
Lois
Ann
Lynd,
28,
ColumHe is a 1974 graduate of
Meigs High School in bus ; Max Clifford Kelley, 50,
Pomeroy. The airman~s wife, Mansfield a nd Maribelle
Debra, is the daughter of Mr. Ca rpenter , 45, Columbus;
and Mrs. Thomas A. Robert. Thomas Stewart, 21,
Schoonover, 99 Nelson Road, Rutland, and Tina Annette
Spires, 18, Rutland.
Rutland.

in &lt;.:om outfit

•

G/\ Rr,G E

S/\L E . Tues
&amp;
We d . 9 t!l 4, Ju ly 1 &amp; '2.
Pi e n 1c tables , one antique

dresser , o th er furniture
1tems. draperies. all sizes of
c lothinQ ,

toys,

baby

00

n eeds ,

dishes . and some
spe c 1al qifl an d craft il erns ,
on Bulaville Rd .. lUSt past
th e &gt;., hrine Club Ph . 446
OOAR
152 3
3

r /1MILY Yard Sa l e.

1 1 mi le
out Rt 21-A, July 1 2 3- 9to 5.
I 51 2

sal e. Rt

at Centenary ,
tur n left on H erman Nor
thup ~d Watch for sipns
T h urs , F r1, Sa t ., 9 to ?
/,n i 1Ques and 5 truckloads of
surpr1ses . Odds and en ds,
f urn ilure , e t c
I 50 3

YI\RD SALE

11\MILY
Yard
Sa le ,
Saturday, June 28, 9 1111 ?
Stat e Rt 118 ,1 mile from Rl
7 . C_lothi n q , q lassware, toys ,
antiques. Avons, appliances
and M1sc it ems .
I 50 2

J r /\M ILY Yard Sale , next to
£\1dw eH teed mill a t Bidwel l.
Jun e 30 thru Ju l y 5, 8 a m .
til l ? Used furnitur e, new
And used Avon bottles, 63
B UI Ck, $ 100 . Call 3!l8 8531 or
Jfl8 859·1
I 50 3

21 .

out Mill Creek Rd .
Cloth es, toys , ceram ,cs and
o ld cti shes . T ime 10 a . m . to 7
p 01 Can ce lled if r a1n Fr 1 .
and Sat .

SUNDAY thru SATURDAY
JUNE 29 THRU JULY 5

signs . Clothing , bo)l( springs
misc . 1tems . Thurs ..
r· r i and Sat 9 6.
149 6

Mobile Homes For Sale
FOR ~A LE - . 1972 Kirkwood
n•obrle home, 11')1(50. qas
heated , 2 BR, plus h ide a
bed . Air co n.d . &amp; many
e_xt r as . ~h arp Cond , bank
fmanc 1n9 $3, 000 $3595 . Ph ·
,j,J6 1·125
.

CHICKEN

Subst~utes

I 52 5

--

B&amp;SMOBILE HOMES ,

. Pt.. Pleasant, w. va.
197112x65 2 BR Concord tipoul
1969 12x65 3 BR Liberty

196? 12K60 2 BR . Buddy
1969 12x60 3 BR Bindal c Ex
panda
.·
1961 12x60 2 BR Champion

eROLL

IOS If
T ri - Str~ft&gt; Moh·ile Homl' S

·. · &amp;lyaltt
2nd &amp; OLIVE .SJ.

.

a nd

No
PIECES CHICKEN
e FRENCH FRIES

'

RIG YARD SALE about J mi
ou t Bulaville Rd . Watch lor

CHICKEN
SNACK BOX

e2

M 1

150 I

i'.~~ppr

:i

·1 ·

».

GALliPOLfs;

lli66 11x60 NMnco 3 br

nHin

FOR QUICK PICK-UP SERVICE PHONE 446-2682

'- 197 1 12x60 Covenfy ~ b r
1Yil712x60 Valicmt· 'J br
li)/11 IK fl . Travel Trail er
IQ] ') ?'J ft . Royal Kr'liqhl
1
'' ' ''
11 . ~&lt;l fari

n

10)( 17 f.lo-ycraft 1 br
fi x 1'1 1 rilv e fo 7 br
'i ) '~ Hxl'l 1 a i rlt1r1e 1 br.
1'1'0:' :: x ·= ·· ! rr:~v , ·. t o 'i b'r .
, ,, · "

.·. · ,~-:

~h .
H. ~"l nk

'

446-7572

Fil1itOc1nq

. DR. ROSS T. YOUNG, in picture at left, in association
With Dr. Paul E. Shockey will open veterinarian offices on
North Second Ave. in Middleport early next month. Dr.
Young displays one of two mobile units the doctors u8e in
treating large and small animals. Some 120 animals were
immunized against ral5fes ·or distemper Saturday at the ·
small animals clinic. Meigs County Humane Society
members assisting with clerical work at the clinic were
Clirolyn Smith, Nanga Roberts, Rita Lewis, Charlotte Wells,
Sandy Jannarelli, Lucy Amsbary, Peggy O'Brien, Dorothy
Fisher, and Susan Almasy.
-

.

..,_

'!:io~ ~.

.fi!'l'f('~ ..
~"

""' ,,....
:

'

.-

DOGS, DOGS, EVERYWHERE, and an occasional cat,
at right , was the scene Saturday as residents wait!ld with
their pets at the small animal clinic.
G. P. Gll.LENWATER OF LANGSVILLE lower left
was one of several residents who brought more tmn one pet
to the small animals clinic Saturday at the county garage on
the Rock Springs fairgrounds. His dogs half greyhound, are
used m coon f1eld trial racing and swimming. The dogs are
exercised six miles every morning by Gillenwater.

•

A BIG SELECTION OF MODELS AND SIZES. 15, 17 and 19.5 CU. FT.' - WHITE,
AOOCADO, HARVEST GOLD. SOME MOD.ELS WITH ICE-MAKER.

SQV·E '50

•o

ON ANY WHIRLPOOL
REFRIGERATOR, YOU SELECT

BE SU~E TO- SEE THE NEW 1976 M JDELS RCA
TELEVISION SETS AND STEREOS

1e have many model Whirlpool Washers and Dryers at Sale Price.
Open Monday through Thursday 9::lo to 5 P.M.
Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 8 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

VOL. XXVII NO. 54

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ANN ARBOR; MICH. '- YOGA INSTRUCOOR Robert
I I

/o...

~

MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1975 ·

PRICE 15'

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

•

...

.. '

enttne

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Ma.ooon Area

spending cutback "government."
ment
can and will continue to
"This I will not do," said
Rhodes. "To cut $100 million provide basic services" but
from a single program would added "they will be provided
be irresponsible and would in R manner that does not
destroy an essential service reqwre the imposition of
increased taxes_"
of government.
Rhode said he "recluc"The pressures for increased state spending at a tantly" approved the large
time of reduced growth of majority of the expenditure
· state income must be in the budget.
" It is a bill which fails to
resisted," he said. "If this
state is to maintain its fiscal provide good management of
stability without increasing state government and
the tax burden of our citizens, seriously impairs ow fiscal
reductions in expendihrres integrity," Rhodes said. .
The budget calls for a 10 ·
must begin July 1."
per
cent hike in state spenState Finance Director
Howard Collier, at a news ding without new or adconference where he went ditional taxes and contains
over the Rhodes' vetoes, said increases of $457 million for
the 2 per cent spending primary and secondary
reduction order was "much education, $174 million for
more responsible" than public welfare, $164 million
selecting certain agencies or for higher education and $35
programs · for
larger million for mental health and
retardation over curent
reductions."
"And there will not be any allocations.
Rhodes said although he
favored agencies," said
Collier in explaining that all agreed with the substance of
state agencies, must adhere some of the statements of
"legislative intent" he felt
to the cutback.
they
would establish an
Rhodes said despite the
"unfortunate" precedent.
"Under the separation of
powers
doctrine, one of the
EXTENDED FORECAST
major functions of the excutive branch is to adWednesday through
minister funds appropriated
Friday, warm and humid.
(Continued on page 8)
Fair Wednesday. Chance of
showers Thursday and
Friday. Highs in the upper
80s. Lows In the mid and
upper 60s.

Court gets

Schools grant
wins approval
The Meigs Local School
District has received word
from R. A. Horn, director of
the Divisi on of Federal
Assistance, that its application for library funds has
been approved.
This grant under Title II of
the
Elementary
and
Secondary Education Act
comes through tl)e Ohio State
Departm~n t' of Education.
The · grant of $5,813 will be
used to pwchase dictionaries
and
other
reference
materials for . the Meigs
Junior High School and the
elementary buildings at
Bradbury, Harrisonville,
Middleport,
Pomeroy ,
Rutland, Salem Centet and
Salisbury.

.'.'.'.!.:.'

.

;

•

at y

crush e d b y arms

4 family yard

325 in R1o Grande,
house next to 76

Wh1tc
Stat1on
Good var1ety of
Items . Mon . , Tu es. Wed .
I51 1

4

I

Demon strati•on

Y r, R D S ALE Very qood
cl oth,nq, a ll s i zes . Mon.
We d . Tc&gt;&lt;as Rd ., 9 s·Jo.
I51 3
Y/\RD SA LE -

' ,1

'

of "legislative intent" which
By JOHN T. KADY
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Gov. told state agencies how to
James A. Rhodes today spend their money and how
vetoed 72 items in the $10.6 much certain programs
billion budget passed by the should accomplish.
Rhodes, in his veto
Ohio General Assembly and
message,
said the budget sent
ordered state agencies to
to
him
by
the Democratic
institute spending cuts of at
controlled
General
Assembly
least 2 per cent over the next
two fiscal years to eliminate "contains promises that can
a $100 million deficit in the not be kept, wasteful
duplication, and unnecessary
state spending document.
expenditures.
Among the items which
"It has appropriated over
Rhodes line vetoed was a
$100
million more than
provision requmng. acavailable
cash and estimated
celerated corporate tax
said Rhodes and he
receipts,"
payments to furnish cash for
the state during low income added thatto sign the bill as it
was presented to him "would
periods.
Many of the items vetoed be to approve deficit
COLUMBUS - A DOZEN PERSONS from nine Ohio
by Rhodes were statements operation of state governcounties interested in forming a third polltlcal party Sunday
organized "The Constitutional party." Richard B. Kay,
Cleveland attorney who was au. s. Senate candidate in Ohio
on the American Independent party ticket in 1970 and as an ·
independent last year, said the organization meeting here was
the fu'st "for persons interested ill forming a third political
party.''
.
The group decided to defer setting the party's program
and philosophy until September when it was hoped there would
be a larger attendaiice. ·"We are not interested in attracting . NEW DELHI (UP! J unarmed teen-aged boys who
the extreme right or ex_treme left members of the political Hundreds of club-swingihg were not participating in the
philosophy,;; said Kay, who was an AlP presidential can- police have crushed . a demonstration, ramming
... .. .
didate In 1972.
demonstration against Prime nightsticks into their ribs and
':.We want people who are sincerely dedicated in restoring Minister_ Indira Gandhi, hitting them across the
some type of political sanity to the politics in this country and smashing
frightened shoulders and backs of knees.
to people who have no personal ax to grind.
protes_ters across the legs ~d " Police then grabbed the
· draggmg them _by the hall'. youths by the hair and
About 700 pollee, some on dragged them screaming to
WASillNGTON - THE SUPREME COURT ruled 6 to 3
today that a defendant has a constitutional right to act as his horseback, others w1th waiting paddy wagons a
own attorney' in a criminal case. The decision came on appeal bayonets. fixed on r~fles, block -away.
by Anthony Pasquall Faretta, convicted of grand theft after _a sw~ed mto the old c1ty of
Mrs. Gandhi imposed the
Delhi Sunday to oust about state of emergency last
jury trial in Los Angeles County Superior Court.
The judge at first agreed tq )et Faretta represent himself 500 protesters from the Thursday and arrested
at the trial but later withdrew permission and appoint!ld the groWtds of town hall.
hundreds of political oppubUc defender as defense attorney. Faretta was sentenced to
At lea~ 30 pe~sons were ponents for allegedly taking
10 years in prison as the law prescribes, but has since been arre_sted m the fll'st known part .in a ''widespread conwdemon- spiracy" to disrupt India's
pa roled.
an t 1gov~rnme~ t
strati~ m India since Mrs.
internal secwity.
BEIRUT- FIERCE ROCKET, MORTAR and machine Gandhi decl~ed a state of
The government has said
gun fire terrorized Beiruffor the eighth consecutive day today emergency five days ago. ·
that almost 900 persons have
The police waded into the been arrested since the
and a number of Americans and other foreigners began
moving their families out of the city.
crowd in front of town ~all crackdown began, but opShells began crashing into apartment houses and stores and chased the_ terrlf1ed position pariies said about
and Beirut Radio warned citizens that the entire city had protesters down Side streets, 3 500 persons were seized on
become a fighting zone. It said snipers have begun firing on swinging heavy wooden the first day alone.
ambulances and fire engines. A spokesman for the U. S. nightsticks at anyone in their
Opponents had called for
Emblissy said there were no planes at the moment for a .mass way.
.
.
Mrs. Gandhi •s' resignation
evacuation despite the bloodsh!ld that has closed banks,
Tile frightened demon- becafllle of her State Court
schools and storeS but said, "We have pernianent plans which strators took refuge !n con~on on June 12 for
we have dusted off .and looked at...
homes, shops and alleys m violating election laws during
the crowded old section. of the 1971 cilmpa,lgn. She has
MIAMI- AMY, THE FIRST TROPICAL storm of the Delhi, but police charged mto appealed the conviction to
season, bolster!ld Its top winds to 60 miles-per-hour during the the hideouts after them.
India's Supreme Court.
Ten police surrounded .two
night but contiilued to move away from land in the Atlantic
Ocean ofi the North Carolimi coast.
At 8 a.m. EDT today, the National' Hurricane Center
located the storm's center near latitude 35.7 north and
Apple Crate in Harrisonville
longitude 70.8 west, about 2lio miles· east-northeast of/ Cape
Hatteras. Amy had slowed Its northeasterly trek to ab!mt 8 ..•.
Tuesday, Rutland Wednesday
m.p.h., a speed l!lld direction forecasters expected to continue .. ::!t
today.
Obi lbUenfAI!'!.e Ccrate, thenfinEdobi!e reacJin&amp; qn of che
o
vel'lllty o11ege
ucatlon being operated
NORFOLK, VA. - THE U. S. NAVY is discarding a !i!i: thlnummerbylheMelplAicalreal;berCorps,wUibe
tradltlM - its century-old uniforms of bell-bottom trousers, ;:;t at llarrilonvBle Elementary School playground on
jumpers with neckerchiefs and white caps. Beginning ::;:~ fuesday aod the Rutland Community Park on Wed·
Tuetlday, most sailors will wear a coat arid tie ensemble with a. ;:;:: nesday. . 'l'lle schedule · for ·l'llundiay will be ao·
vilored cap similar to those worn by offlcel's. Open-coDar!ld ;!;!, nounced later.
white shirts with short sleeves will be a sununer option.
.:·.; _;:_.'
The air-conditioned van wm be open between the :;:;
But N
h ill be dlsch
d within
111 be
bo
19
nd 12
b
··
-"owed toacvymenontinueww
· oearingw their oaldrgwte"o-· aasyaerareminw.·der .:.!.:.:.•
un ~- :!:,mlr:a. ""bOon. It •• been stocked with 700 ::::
...
u· ...~
paper
cu om
...,giDnlng
reading
ta adult
level, :· :,.:'·_'.:,'
of the Navy's past, ensuring that the traditional
garb · will ··. :·. : .·, and
ill...
addition
ta relllllng,
gam~
and other
activities
· 1centenn1a1. · .
..::·:. ·- ~ conc111cted• I'lle vao toclay waa at the Mid die port
survlve at Ieast wt til the B
·'-· El
ta Scbool Ia
nd
·:·:

SALE I

Ir

I 51 3

~I

120 animals at
weekend clinic

..

By United Press International
NEW YORK -HE WAS ABOUT 20 YEARS old with dark
brown hair, but no one even knew his mime. He died in a coma
SUnday, pushing the death toll in last week's Eastern Airlines
crash to 112 - now the worst single-plane disaster in U. S.
history.
"John Doe," the only unidentified survivor of Tuesday's
Flight 66 from New Orleans, was the last hope for relatives and
\ friends that thelfloved one might have survived the crash. He
!lied at 6 p.m. Sunday in Jamaica Hospital from respiratory.
failwe.
The death toll exceeds.the previous high of 111 recorded in
the 1971 crash of an Alaska: Airlines Boeing 7'rl into a mountainside near Juneau, Alaska. A spokesman at Jamaica
Hospital said tentative identification of the latest victim was
made shortly after his death by a man from Clinada, who said
a scar on the dead man's foot was similar to one born by his
first cousin .

Warehouse .On Mechanic Street

·1 F"f\ M I LY Yard Sate . som e
old di shes, · Mon ., T ues .,
We d . 9 S ll Burkhar t Lan e

:9 I. ft
'

pen tng cuts or ere

ELBER:FELDS IN ·POMEROY

Yard Sale

oood

will be free to deCide for itself national-interest issues can
whether or · not to conduct only be addressed through a
trade and
diploma tic diplomatic proc~ss which can
deal with the total agenda,"
relations with Cuba .
Secretary of State Henry A. he said. "That process, at
Kissinger opened the door best, will be long and inonly a little when he noted tricate."
As a result of continuing
that Premier Fidel Clistro
media
speculation, more than
had recently moderated the
·
100
U.S.
companies have
tone of Cuban propaganda.
expressed
interest to the
" We are prepared to
Department
in
reciprocate CubaR moves, " State
prospects
for
trade
relations
Kissinger said. "We ~o 'qot
consider that an animosity with Cuba.
Rogers had a note of
toward Cuba is an essential
aspect' of our foreign policy." warning for them: "Our
That was by no means the reading of the situation leads
full story, however. Rogers us to caution on the imspelled it out in greater mediate prospects . The
legacy of over a decade of
detail.
antagonism
and diversion of
" When and if the
trade
relations
elsewhere,
multilateral measures
together
with
the
complex
against Cuba are repealed by
question
of
Cuba's
attitude
the OAS, there are a considerable number of issues on toward and respect for
botb sides," he said. "Trade private enterprise ... will
restrain any great expansion
is one.''
The U.S. issues, he said, of business."
But 'the most vexed
included family visits,
question
of all for the adprisoners in Cuban jails, the
ministration
is Cuba's lack of
return of aircraft hijack
respect
for
"human rights
ransom money, the question
of compensation for ex- and fundamental freedoms."
Rogers said that Cuban
propriated property, Cuba's
leaders
had been reticent
attitude about Puerto Rico
and whether Cuba is about the number of political
preP&lt;ired to follow a dear prisoners incarcerated in
practice of . nonintervention Cuban jails - including eight
everywhere
in
the Americans. Also, there were
765 American citizens and
hemisphere. .
1,177
Cuban national relatives
He said Cuba was not only
of
American
citizens
interested in resuming trade,
presumably
still
seeking
to
but also with the reinstilution of diplomatic leave Cuba.
"We continue to be conrelationships, the U.S. naval
cerned
with the condition of
base at Guantanamo and
human
rights in Cuba,"
expanding athletic and
Rogers said, "and to have a
cultural relations.
humanitarian
interest in
" This agenda of inseeing
families
reunited."
terrelated and sensitive

1,

...

.

(Continued on page 8) ·

.
~ ·

1!1!

th:~~ t~ near rut.~~I'OD

and will be returning

: ~:

Coffee offered
A coffee break station will
be set up on Route 33 at both
of the roadside parks; north
and south, near Darwin, on
. July 4, 5 and 6 for holiday
travelers . Free coffee, pop
aQd donuts will be served to
the motorists stopping liy the

. ·::,:,:,:,:,:::::::::::':::,:,:,:,:::::,:;:,:::::::':&gt;::::::::,:::,:,:::::::&gt;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'? ;
,,I

~~t:~;sB~h~~n~r~:f~~~~r·ed

five suits
Three suits for money, one
for divorce and one for
support have been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Myrtle Gardner, Rt. 1,
Rutland, filed suit in the
amount of $1,642.68 against
Wen'dell Allen Williams,
Minersville, for breach of
contraet in installing a water
line . American Hardware
Mutual Insurance Co., Cincinnati, filed a· suit asking
$939.5.9 from Smith Nelson
Motors, Pomeroy, and Edward Russell , Jr. , Mason, is
-suing Sarah E. Hendricks,
New Haven, W. . Va : for
$13,000 for damages and
injuries alleged due in an
automobile accident that
occurred- June 30, 1973, on
Pomeroy's West Main st.
near the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge.
Alice Ruth Roush Curtis,
Weston, W. Va., filed for
support under the Reciprocal
Agreement Act against
Donald Elmer r:oush,
Minersville .
·
·Patricia Roush, Rt .· 1,
Minersville, asks divorce
from John Wesley Roush,
Middleport, charging gross
. neglect of duty and· extreme
cruelty.
'

. ;

:;::::::::::=:·: ::;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;;;:;.:.:·:·:·:;:::·:;:::;::;:;:;:::·:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;.;:;.;:;::-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
~

~·

::::
:·:·
::::

:::

Ford deals Israeli ultimatum

/
{
}
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}

By United Press International
lsreali reports said today President Ford had
given Israel what amounted to an ultimatum in the
current Middle .East peace negotiations - accept
Egypt's conditions for an interim agreement or lose
American support at a reconvened Geneva peace
conference.
Sources close · to the Egyptian government said
today in Cairo that Egypt has rejected Israeli
proposals-- far a second-stage disengagement
agreement on the Slani front and that the Egyptlan
position has the support of the United States.
This was the first word from the Egyptian side on
the outcome of last week's Egyptian-Israeli diplomatic
exchanges through the United States.
·The Israeli reports said Ford issued the virtual
ultimatwn Friday to Israeli Ambassador Simha Dinitz
during an 11-minute meeting at the White House when
the United States passed on Egypt's counter-proposals
for an interim pact.

0:::

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:.:.;. :. :. :.:. :.:. :·: ·:.:.: ·=· :::;:;:;::::: ;:;: ;:;:;:;:;: ·=: :; :;:::::::;: ;:;:;:;:; :;: ::::::::;:::::: :·:&lt;::;:: :;.:-:· :· :::;:: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:.

.,.

Church history
relived ~Sunday
Articles of historical interest to the Middleport First United Presbyterian Church were
featured Sunday in a display at the 120th anniversary celebration of the church.
More than 200 persons , many from out of the
county, came in the morning for the day of
celebration which began with Sunday School and
concluded with an ice cream socia I on the church
lawn in the evening.
Guest speaker for th e Sunday school children, along
service of worship was the with banners which adorned
Rev. Hugh Bean Evans, the sanctuary doors.
Worthington, executive
Featured in the historical
plresbyter of the Scioto displays were several arValley Presbytery. Mrs. ltcles which date back to the
Everett
Bachner
was tim e of the ·church's
organist, Mrs. Harold Sauer organization in 1855. One
the vocal soloist, and Paul piece of the Royal Ironstone
Hap tons tall, violinist for ·tiie China used in those early
years remain. Several pieces
service.
Memorial flowers on the of the second set of chin·a
altar posts were presented by purchased by the church in
Ted and Nancy Reed in 1875 were on display, along
memory of the Calderwood with pieces of china given by
family; Mr. and Mrs. James Mrs. Warren Huddleston and
Clatworthy in 'memory of Mrs . Thomas Ferguson of the
(Continued on .-page 8) ·
Lawrence; Mayme Heiner
placed memorial flowers on
the piano, and there were
other flowers !n memory of
the Rev . Howard Ruppel!, a
former pastor of the chwch,
presented by friends.
In addi lion there were
Sleepiness · apparently
·memorial gif~ by Mr&amp;. Harry caused a single car accident
Hoagland and Miss Grave Sunday at 3:18a.m. on C!JWlty
Sauvage of Columbus in road 26 in Chester Tpw.
memory of Mrs. Hoagland's . The Meigs County Sheriff's ,
daughter, · Mary Grace; by . deputies said William Earl :·
· Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Moore Morris, 'l:l, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, ·
in memory o{ Mr. and Mrs. told them he was travellill ;.
Earl Lama ; Mr. and Mrs. north when he went to BleeP .
Ted Reed in memory of the at the wheel. The car left 'the
Calderwood family, and highway OQ the left and
Alma Ohlinger in memory of struck·a tree. The driver bad
Martiq Ohlinger family.
apparent injuries, but wu .
· A bi&lt;entennial theine was not jmm!ldiately 'treated,
. added to the observance ·· The car was demolllhed
·through posters made by the No citation was is8ued
'

Sleepy driver

runs off road

(I

.

}

~.

1

�"
r

,,

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, June 30, 1975
.sc ·

,,

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, features

·I

~ - ~""".:..

~

TOM TIEDE

We Hold These: Truths ...
A Chronicle: of America
•

The President as candidate

one, beheves t ·ord as a
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - Despite person is a dream : "Open,
:~tJ.~00:&lt;?-c:&gt;-.c&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;;&gt;&lt;_....:::&gt;-:::&gt;-&lt;?OoO-.c-.c&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;;&gt;&lt;:::&gt;-~c&gt;o-o-.c&gt;o&lt;:&gt;:&lt;:&gt;---,.....,_.r,-;l a II h1s sus pen se-c re a ti ng honest, commonsensical,
. .
efrcwts. Gerald Ford was unapologehcally patrwtic,
.. d uall y . the first of all mt .lectually unpretentious."
current candidates to put his But can he be elected" Not a
helmet
in
the
1976 chance, says she.
Luce 's negativism is rooted
pres1denbal rmg.
It certainly comes as no news to parents of college-bound and based students that the cost
in
personal misgivings about
Though he ort gmally sa1d
of higher education has been getting increasingly higher in recent years - and at a more rap1d
he would not seek the office the contemporary
rate than inflation has been jacking up prices in general.
on hts own, he changed his philosophies of Ford's party,
That's the bad news, and even worse is that there 1s nothing in the economy's prolonged
mind three days after her party, the GOP. She says
Inflation-recession dilemma to indicate any forthcoming change m this particular trend.
assumtng power last August. 1t has strayed widely from its
Both institutions and individuals are caught in the bind. Once flush or at least satisfactorily
He has apparently had third political reason for bemg solvent schools find endowments and legislative appropriations don't•go as far or aren't forththoughts smce then , in part the promotion of · concoming in the amounts required.
'
because of the health of h1s servative values - and has
Higher education remains a largely subsidized public activity. But inevitably the Impact of w1fe, in part because of the therefore lost the support of
higher costs has been passed on to the student population.
wisdom of it all . But those millions. With all his earthly
Various government assistance programs, expanded m recent years, and institutional
close to him insist he has in charm, she implies, Ford can
scholarships help. But it can still be tough going.
effect been campaigning now not nde 22 per cent of the
Good news in such a situation is any way to increase financial resources available to for almost a year.
voters to victory next year.
students, such as the program a Philadelphia bank has initiated which may be described as a
And if Luce is correct about
"And what you've seen,"
do-it-themselves scholarship program for its investors.
says a Ford ally in the House, Ford's fortunes in a sluggish
Under the First Pennsylvania Bank plan, purchase of a certificate of deposit also
"is what you will see. I don't
establishes a college scholarship. The CD pays the investor 5.5 per cent annual compound m- think the President is sud·
terest. The scholarship money comes from the difference between thiS rate and the maximum denly gomg to transform,
- 7.25 per cent- the bank is permitted to pay on four-year certificates.
presto, tnto a hard-charging,
Scholarships are payable to any accredited institution of h1gher learning m the United
finger-pointing presidential
States when the certificates are purchased. They range in size from $350 with a $5,000 CD up to aspiran I. I think he'il be an
$7,000 for a $100,000 purchase.
en thusmshc cand1date, but
While the certificates are available to individual purchasers, the program is especially from h1s own mold. I think
tailored for busmess, church, fraternal and sinular organizations which may wish to put the1r
that he 'll want to indicate to
reserve funds to work for the children of their employes or members.
the voters that when he ktsses By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
The bank is looking for something like $2() million to be mvested m the program, wh1ch
a baby he really wants to kiss
DEAR OR. LAMB - I'd
adds up to a lot of good scholarship news.
the baby.''
hke some basic information
No doubt credibility will be abo!Jt food and body
the major pursuit of the Ford chemistry. Just what does
ca mpa1 gn, for after 11 what do to what? There is
months m off1ce it has such an amount of inWhat hath weight wathing wrought?
A diminishing bottom line for one thing, according to chocolate manufacturers unhappily become the President's formation or mismformation
strongest suit. He can't very around about calories,
noting an apparent desweetening of the American tooth.
!ieightened diet consciousness in recent years is one reason cited m a National Geographic well sohcit votes on his cholesterol, saturated fats,
report for a decline in per capita consumption of chocolate from 20pounds per year in 1968 to 17 rec ord of legislative genius or unsaturated fats, protein,
intellectual creahvity. As a carbohydrates, and sooner or
poWlds currently.
Also a f~ctor- as where isn't it these days?- is inflation. Smaller bars at higher pnces Republican committee of- later, each substance 1s the
are the mevttable result, manufacturers say, of the rise in cocoa prices from an average 30 fleer says, "too many people ev1l one or the life saver
cents a pound to $1.30 in 10 years. Sugar in the same period jumped from 10 to 70 cents a pound. w1ll remember the 01l tariff depending on who is writing
.One ~t is that candymakers have turned to cheaper substitutes for the old company and Wh1p Jnflatwn Now." or talking about it. I am
rectpes. Wtth less and less of the real thing already in the familiar bars, chemical flavoring is Instead the task will be to completely confused
convince
people
that
now becoming a big thing.
I'd like to .know what are
whatever
he
does
1f
elected
the necessary substances ,
So if you've been thinking they don't make candy bars like they used to when you were a
will be done for them.
kid, you're absolutely right.
what are the beneficial ones,
Will it work? Many think and what are the harmful
not. Clare Booth Luce, for ones" Wh1ch ones build the
body" Which ones maintain
it? Which ones destroy it? Am
I correct m presummg that
unsaturated (vegetable fats)
are good fats and saturated
fats (animal fats) are the
harmful ones?
Is protein the body bwlder?

-·

party, others feel he similarly
has small chance of capturing votes outside the
Republican structure. Polls
testify that slightly more than
30 per cent of the electorate
sees 1tse!I as mdependent, but
there is little sign it aligns
itself with the President.
Explains a GOP congressman : "I think to a
high degree that independent
1s another word for conservallsm, and for all his
conservahve past Ford has
lost their interest. I think they
feel the President is too
wilbng to compromise with
liberals. I would guess, for
example, that Ford 's 1976
vote w1ll be in mverse
proportion to the budget
deficit."

1
•

July 3, 1775:

~

After a 12-day ride !rom Philadelphia, Georae Wub·
ington arrives in Cambridge on July 2. His arrlvlll Is
unheralded among the men; James Stevens, a soldier on
duty, makes this b9red notation m his diary lor July 2"Nothing heppeng extroderly. We preaded three times."
The next day, on the Cambridge Common, Wublnatonusumes command of 14,:500 loosely knit militiamen dubbed
by Congress the Continental Army. He !inds no Wli!ied
command or organization, no plan for trainine, little discipline, and few supplies. In his first report toCongrm, he
writes: "The deficiencies in their numtlers, their. discipline, and stores can only lead to this concl111ion that
their spirit has exceeded their strength." Within a day, he
issues h1s f1rst extended orders. Under his hand, a true
army slowly begms to take shape By the end o! the year,
Congress is paymaster to about 27,:500 vastly improved
troops

i

What benefit are
food elements?

RAY CROMLEY

Still needed:
Inspiration

By Ray Cromley .
WASHINGTON- The U. S. presidency IS a curious mstitution. A president, in one sense, has tremendous power. He
can trip the nation into war, prolong a recession, or tear a
country apart in dissension.
But he cannot of himself, by this act or that, pull a country
out of a depression, either of the economy or of the spirit.
These things the people must do themselves of their own will.
The president can only be a symbol, someone who somehow
gives hope -so that men will be moved to inv~st, factories will
put the unemployed to work and consumers Will spend in the
confidence there will be a tomorrow.
! •
To rrovide that inspiration a president must prove himself, difficult for one who has been appointed and not elected.
And particularly difficult for a president known chiefly as a
ROBIN STEWART
nice, decent, friendly man.
To date, President Ford has been at work on this first step
- of proving himself.
Comn,entators talk of the Mayaguez showdown off
CommWlist Cambodia as the moment of truth, when Mr. Ford
showed his decisiveness, guts and leadership. '
Not so. Whether you approve or disapprove his stand on
spending, it is Mr. F(ord's month-in, month out record of hot
potato vetoes that demonstrate's what he's made of.
For Mr. Ford, the Democratic congressional leaders and
MASON - Robin Stewart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
_rresidential hopefuls all know these vetoes of popular spending Robert Stewart, has been chosen to represent Mason County
•bills which would mean money in the pockets of the unem- as a princess at the Black Walnut Festival at Spencer, W. Va.,
ployed and in purses of millions of others whose biils exceed October 9, 10, 11, of this year. Robin is sponsored by the
their incomes in this time of recession-inflation, ate pure gold Helping Hand Extension Homemakers Club of Mason.
for the Democratic opposition in 1976.
Eleven candidates for the honor were judged at the
Further, in clamping 'down on spending to curb the wor- Holiday Inn in the Cardinal Room at Parkersburg on June 22.
sening inflation he fears for 1976 and 1977, Mr. Ford could The queen is from Tyler County, two maids of honor were
prolong the recession unduly, make his election for another selected from Wood and Gilmer. Robin said she enjoyed
term exceedingly difficult. He knows this.
participating in the event with seven other princesses who will
My father worked on a cattle ranch in his youth. There was take part m the festivities. She was accompanied by her
something to the tales then told, whether fact or legend, that parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stewart.
carried a grain of truth stretching well beyond the cattle
Mter the judgntg, the young ladies and their parents were
country.
guests of honor at a dinner at the Inn.
A recipe I remember well was one for getting a
This lucky young lady is the eighth princess to attend the
recalcitrant horse back to home corral. Tie a mule to him, feshval.
the legend went. The stronger horse would puU the mule hither
Robm attends Wahama High School where she is a Senior
and yon- until he was tired. Then the determined mule would Board member of the Keytte Club and majorette of the
head for home. The horse, aroused, would pull and dash Wahama Band. She attends Mason United Methodist Church
erratically, dragging the mule - and tire . Again the mule and is president of the MYF. Following graduation, she plans
would head for home , Eventually, with the horse dashing in all to attend college. Her hobbies are sewing and crocheting.
directions and the mule heading only in one, the pair would
arrive - where the mule wanted to go.
So It is with President Ford and the U. S. Congress.
Under the American system, no Congress can have its way
The. baily Sentinel
against a president, if the president is determined. Senate and
DEVOTED TO THI:
H()Wie can win one round or another, or a dozen rounds for that INJURY DELAYS BOUT
INTER EST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
matter, but will be defeated in the end.
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI)
f HESTER L TANNEHILLi
Mr, Ford did not come to this knowledge by accident. - A knuckle injury to World ' .
Exec . Ed.
HOEFLICH
Franklin Roosevelt vetoed 635 bills, Harry Truman, 250, Boxmg Association bantam- .~ ROBERT
City Editor
1
Publ•shed dally except
Dwight Elsenbower 181. In the end, despite some notable weif~ht champion Alfonso
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
defeata, th- men had their way.
lmnora of Mexico has caused I 'Pubi1Sh1ng Company, 111
St, 'Pomeroy , Ohio
In the 10 months he has been in office, Gerald Ford has postponement of his first title 'Court
45769 Business Office Phone 1
~92 2156 Editorial Phone 992 ·
vetoed 32 bills, no mean monthly average.
defense.
at57
Mr. Ford, In the tradition set by these three predecessors,
His 15-round fight with · L' S•cond etas! postage pa,~
Pomef'\oy , Oh 10
has come a COIIIIiderable distance in establishing his leader- Thailand's Thanomjit 1att Na11onal
advert1S1n~
ship. But he seems to be stumbling on the second requisite - • Sukothai - set at the
rep r e sen fa f j V ~ vrard I
1ff1th Company Inc 1 J
bulldlni our confidence sufficiently to get the country going. Anaheim Convention Center Gr
Bottinelli &amp; Ga llagher Oiv 1'
Here we rim Into mlllh. Quick fixes. Hopeful statements. July 19-was rescheduled for
757 Th1rd Ave , New York
N Y 10017
______ _ _ _1 1
Plana In the making. A resistance to way-{)ut solutions. But Aug, 2 at the Forum here. An
Subscr iption rates :
little that would give ua the inner belief we are on our way. alternate Anaheim date was Del 1vered b y car rter where
available 75 cents per week;
Ught at the end of the tunnel euphorisms breed cynicism, not not available.
By Motor Route wher~
sePJ I Ce
not
~~ope :
'
lmnora, ,20, won his WBA "arrter
ova li able . One month , $3 25.
()Ia prelldenl or anoUler has captured the imagination 118-pound crown at the
1By ma11 in Ohio and W Va ,
iOne Year , 522 . 00 ; S 1 ~
will! clrlmatie 1111urea, however empty. Or with the force of For1lfil last March 14 by 'm
onttis ,
5 11 50 ,
Three
Ida I*'IQIII)Ity, or witb pi'OII'&amp;ms which, whatever their stopping Soo Hwan Hong ot months , $7 .00 Elsewhere
00 year , Six months
pncitlcal merlti or demerlta, illlpired the citizenry to act, South Korea in four rounds. 'S26
s 13 so ; three months , S7 so .
'lbele lll'e not the wayJ of Mr. Ford.
'
He has 20 knockouts in 20 Subsc npt !on pr1ce Includes
I~ unday T1mes Sentn·u 1
What then can, or will he do? As yet there is no sign. &gt;
professional sta rts.
~~ -·
'- ·.

-By Ross Mackenzie' Jeff MacNelly/Cil975, 'united FMture Syndicate

If so, what type of protein
food is available, low or
without cholesterol, which I
understand IS present in large
quantities m milk, cheese and
eggs, wh1ch are high protein
foods.
Along the same line, what
is the difference between
processed and unprocessed
foods , such as cheese and
·flour? And what exactly does
the term mean? Ice cream,
coffee, tea, salt, pepper,
gelatin, sugar - do these
substances
have
any
nutritional value? Do they
have any harmful effects?
Are there any guidelines
along which one could
discover just what has gone
mto a product, and this way
conclude for himself whether
the itern is beneficial or
harmful? I believe my
ignorance and confusion over
the subject 1s evident. Can
you inform me?
DEAR READER - The
first step to knowledge is

confusion. I can 't answer all
your questions in one column.
I will say that your letter
exemplifies the general
confusion of the public today.
I'm crusading, you might
say, for increasing people's
knowledge of health- the big
gap is in our educational
system. It does seem to me
that one of the most important things a person
should learn, to cope with
living, is how his own body
works and how to take care of
1t. What could be more
relevant, if I may use that
word? Most of our school
systems have httle time
devoted to this most Important basic knowledge. The
young people are interested,
too, I have learned from my
mail. They are like you and
can't get solid information.
The subject is large. You
will need to understand how
food is processed or, as you
say, what does what do to
what. I have written two

books on these topics. Don't
buy them, just go to the
library and ask for
"Metabolics : Putting Your
Food Energy to Work"
(Harper and Row, 1974) for
information on processing
your food, and "What You
Need to Know About Food
and Cooking For Health"
(V1king Press, 1973) for informahon on food values.
You will find most of the
questions you have raised
discussed in those two books
and the scientific reasons
involved.
c~
I would like to comment
that, while it is generally
believed that saturated fats
are more likely to cause a
rise in cholesterol levels, too
much fat of any kind is not
considered good. And, you
can use fortified skim milk or
low fat cottage cheese as a
good source of protein
without
getting
any
significant amoW!ts of fat or
cholesterol in your diet.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Proposed Plan for Social Services In Ohio
Th1s plan for Ohio has been developed tn accordance With Tit le XX of the Social Security Act,
enacted by Public Law 93-647, effe~ttve October 1, 1975.

.

Robin Stewart
festival princess

e

Purpose
The purpose of this plan IS to provtde tn Ohio ~ocial services that w1ll help residents of Ohto
to restore, maintain or 1mprove their capabtllltes for self-support, self-care, independent tivtng, to
strengthen fam tly life, and where necessary to prov1de improved institutional living.
Servtces tn the plan tnclude foster care for children, day care for ch ildren, family planntng,
1nformatton and referral, adoption services, training and employment services, comprehensive care
for adu lts, comprehensive protective care for children, guardianship servic~s, health-related ser·
vtces, counseling services, and certain other opt1onal serv1ces that counties may elect to offer
where there IS need and where resources are available.
·
·
Who II Eligible

Funding

Elig1ble Ohio residents wou ld tnc lude ·
(1) Aid for Dependent Chtldren (ADC) rectplents.
(2) Supplemental Secunty Income (SSI)
recipients.
(3) Medicaid (Title XIX) recipients.
(4)

Persons tn immediate danger, needing
soc1al protective services.

(5) low income familtes. (Example. Family
of 4 with not over $5,500).

Maximum federal allotment for Ohio at
this time would be about $127,000,000 annual ly with the availability of at least
$42,000,000 in state and local matching
funds. The state plan has the follow1ng proposals based on currently identifiable match·
ing State and Local funds .
Est tmated annual
expendtture
Federal
State and local

$73,687,000
$55,347,000
$18,340,000

'

t

By FRED DOWN
: UPI Sports Writer
Tug McGraw, author of the
i New York Mets' famou s
1 battle cry; · "You gotta
,I be)'1eve, " when they. stormed
; to the National League
: pennant in 1973, has a dif1 ferent point of view th1s
' season with the Philadelphia
Phillies.
: "When I look around this
i clubhouse and see all those
•, muscles," McGraw says, "I
t gotta believe.
: "This is the most powerful
: club I've ever pitched for, "

(6) Other eligibles to be determined as

matching funds become available.

McGraw said Sunday after
the Phillies defea ted the Mets
9-6 and 4-3 in 12 iniungs w1th
McGraw allowing a total of
one hit in seven innings of..
rehef pitching. "We've got
ability everywhere."
McGraw earned his e1ghth
save of the season with three
perfect innings m the opener
and came back to win his fifth
game with four shutout innings during wh'tch he
allowed one hit. With a 5-3
record and eight saves he has
re-estabhshed himself as one
of the game 's best rehef

•

!Evert favored
k, ~ep

By ROBERT MUSEL
WIMBLEDON, England
(UP!) - Biilie Jean Kmg has
painful knees. Margaret
Court is only just recovered
: from an injury. Betty Stove is
!... unseeded. Evonne Goolagong
Cawley is on her honeymoon.
Martina Navratilova is too
heavy for speed on grass.
Olga Morozova is erratic.
Virginia Wade never plays
her best at Wimbledon.
That thumbnail of the last
e1ght in the women's singles
of the $286,600 Wimbledon
Tennis Championships om1ts
only the top seed and
defending champion, Chris
Evert of Fort Lauderdale,
F1a . Only Miss Evert among
the quarterfinalists has no
obvious mental or physical
hangups that nught affect her
progress to the semifmals in
today's matches

title
The bookmakers, {rom
their busy tent on the
grounds, have taken all this
into account in naming the
American girl an even money
favonte to retain her title.
Mrs. King 1s 9-2, Mrs. Court 71, Mrs. Cawley 9-1, the 16().
pound Miss Navratilova 1().1,
Miss Wade 12-1, Miss
Morozova 25-1 and Miss Stove
1()().1.
On the basis of the form the
ladles have shown m the first
week of a tournament, wh1ch
has broken all records for
p~id admissions - nearly
200,000 in six days - Mrs.
Court seems to be undervalued. The big Australian has not dropped a set
and 1s convinced that she IS
completely recovered from
the mjury that had kept her
from the professional circuit
for some time.

Foyt $8·4 ,050
richer today
MT. POCONO, Pa. (UP!)
. _, A.J. Foyt IS. like a k1d
1
Singing in the rain today . He's
$84,050 richer and discovered
showers could be a man's
best friend.
Foyt won the rainshortened Pocono 425 Sunday, an event that marked
the second time USAC 's triple
crown of racing program was
terminated by inclement
weather. Bobby Unser won a
435-miler at Indianapolis last
month.
The entire day was a mass
of frustrations for dnvers,
traffic control directors, pit
crews and spectators. The
race was delayed two hours,
forcing a 3 p.m. start. Three
days of rain produced mud
that clogged the inside of the
Pocono International
Raceway,
But for Foyt, it was pennies
from heaven. A.J. averaged
only 140.712 mph as a winning
average speed in a race
slowed nine times by yellow
caution flags.
"But it was work, man, it
was work," Foyt explained.
"Firstly, I kept changing
tires after every pit stop and
finally got the combination
right. Then, when we saw the
rains coming in the distance,
I decided to push up the boost
and get all the daylight I
could when the yellow came

out."
Foyt and Wally Oall~bach
were the only drivers on the
same lap at the finish. BiU
Vukovich was third and
Roger McCluskey, who was'

Copies of the complete state plan and your
local county plan are available for review at
your local County Welfare DepartiTfent
Detailed sui'(! maries of the plan are available
by writing to the Social Services Dtvlsion,
Ohto Department of PubliC Welfare .

Comment•
Written comments on the plan may be made
to your County Welfare Department or to
the Social Services Division, Ohio Department of Public Welfare. Comments and requests may be sent to :
Mrs. Mildred Madry. Director
Social Services Division
'Ohio Department of Public Welfare
30th. Floor, 30 East Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215

This advertisement has been placecJ In compliance with federal regulations under Title XX.
James A. Rhodes
Governor
State of Ohio

season.
Larry Bowa's tnple and
Ollie Brown 's two-run homer
were the big blows of. the first
game in wh1ch the Phillies
scored seven runs in the first
two mmngs. Apparently
beaten by Tom Seaver after
eight innings of the second
game, Philadelphia tied the
score in the ninth and won it
m the 12th when Greg
Luzinsk1 hit his 19th homer of
the season.
The shakedown of the NL
East continued when the
Pittsburgh Pirates defeated
the Chicago Cubs 4-3 and 7-0.
The once-closely grouped six
teams are now strung out
w1th the Pirates holdmg a
three-game lead over the
Phillies, a 6'h game lead over
the Mets and on up to 11
games over the last place
Montreal Expos
The Pirates won the f1rst
game of their doubleheader
when AI Oliver hit a two-run
homer with two out m the
bottom of the ninth inning,
brmging reliever Dave Giusti
his th1rd win Jerry Reuss
pitched an eight-h1tter and

Raymond F. McKenna,
Director
Ohio Department of F!ubllc Welfare

,

leading on the last lap two
years ago when he ran out of
fuel and lost to Foyt, finished
fourth.
Wmning Pocono Sunday, of
course, was a great horior to
Foyt, "but it pleases me to
win any race, even a little
midget race."
Did he have any close calls
during the race ?
"I like to do what Gordy
(Johncock ) did. Hit the
wall."
Johncock was running
second to Foyt on the !40th
lap when he spun on turn 2
and struck the retaining wall.
He was shaken up, but
walked back to
the
recreational van where his
family was waiting after his
medical checlmp.
Dallenqacb wqs,,extremely
pleased with his second place
finish. He was leading Indy
when mechanical failure
forced him out late m that
race.
Wally elected to run w1th an
old Offy engine here , rather
than the new motor that his
teammate, Johncock, was
using.
Despite drawing 100 horsepower less than Gordie,
Dallenbach had the proper
motor to finish the race.
Could he have passed Foyt
at any time during the race?
"No. You saw everything I
had," said the Colorado cowboy, "I was handling
superbly, but my engme was
running like a pussycat, while
A.J .'s was going like a tiger."

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cmcmna 11 Reds lead the Los
Angeles DCldgers by seven
games in the National League
West today , despite splittmg
a Sunday doubleheader with
the San Diego Padres.
"No, I'm not Pleased," said
Reds' manger Sparky Anderson. "I don't like to lose ...
any time."
And Anderson especially
dislikes to lose when the
Dodgers do as they did in the
only game they played
Sunday.
"I wanna get out in front of
them as many games as
possible," said Anderson .
He knows the Reds will be

,.

fa cing the Dodgers at least
seven times--four here and
three in LA - before Don
Gullett's fractured thumb has
mended.
Homers by George Foster,
Joe Morgan and Merv Rettenmund powered the Reds to
a 4-1 victory in the opener as
Jack Billmgham notched his
sixth victory in a row and
ninth in 12 decisions.
Foster's second homer of
the day and the 13th of the
season was a two-run drive
over the left field fence in the
eighth Inning, accounting for
the Reds' final two runs in a 43 loss in the nightcap.
" I though sure we'd tie it up

Bored milk cow

shunnetl 8ench
By RICK VAN SANf
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A
strange weekend at River·
front Stadium saw a diSinterested cow shun "Farmer
John" Bench, a 47-year-{)ld
man conquer a 31-mile run
and more pictoral depictions
of the "Big Red Machine"
· than one cares to recall. •
It all started Saturday
rught when "Farmers Night" ·
at the Cincinnati Reds-San
Diego Padres game brought
out quite a . few people in
overalls.
But one partiCular fellow
wandering around the field
with his hands jammed into
his over&lt;tll pockets seemed to
stand out.
•
When he raised the brim of
his yellow farmer's cap, it
turned out to be none other
than Reds catcher Johnny
Bench.
•
Since the agenda cailed for
Bench to milk a cow before
the game, he decided to dress
appropriately.
Jiis baggy overails were
de cora ted with pictures of big
yellow chickens and the
words "Hee Haw," which just
happens to be Bench 's
favorite television show.
While Bench may have
. thought --he looked like a
farmer, the cow didn't. She
was indifferent and uncooperative,,
Still "Farmer John"

grabbed his pall, sat down
beside the cow and tried to go
to work -but he hardly got a
drop of milk.
About the only thing in the
pail turned out to be the cow's
foot from time to time.
A band tried to help out by
playing "Old MacDClnald 's
Farm," but the cow apparently knew she was at the
ballpark and not back in the
barn.
Disgusted, Bench went
around to the front of the cow
and had a face-to-face talk
with her.
" Look at th1s," he said,
pointing to the near-empty
bucket. But the cow just
batted her eyes, turned her
head and kept the milk to
herself.
Faring better than Bench
was 47-year-{)ld Tom Ward
who ran the 31 miles from his
Aurora, Ind. home to Sunday 's game.

Portland edges
Pomeroy 10 to 9

Por t land defeated
Pomeroy in independent
baseball action Sunday afternoon , IQ.9. Ricky Blake
was the wmning p1tcher for
Portland in relief of Ronme
Bachtel.
For the winners, hitters
were Red Walbrowri with a
tr1ple and a single with 2
RB!s, Ronnie Bachtel had a
singles; lu1d Dave Meadows smgle, Billy Pickens a
and Dan Hysell each had a double, single, and knocked
in the winning run in the ninth
single.
In the Middleport loop the inning; Keith Fitch had a
Braves and the Rutla'nd single and a walk, Billy
Dodgers, currently tied for Knapp a single, triple, a walk
the lead with identical 6-1 and an RBI. The umpire wasrecords, have not played each Eugene-Long.
other as yet-since their game
was rained out earlier. That Salisbury wins
gl'me, when played, will
decide the winner of the first
in junior loop
half of play.
League Standings
In Jr. Babe Ruth action the
WLGBH Salisbury team beat MidRutland Dodgers 6 1 0
dleport A-s 6-5 behind the
Midd. Braves
6 1 0
pitchmg of Randy Phillips
Harrison. B.Cats 6 2 'h with Steve Little taking over
Midd. Reds
5 3 l'k m the seventh inning .
Midd. Indians
3 5 3% Salisbury hitters were Randy
Chesh Tigers
3 5 3% Mar'$hall and Del Call with a
Midd. Mets
2 ' 6 4'h single each and Kelly Hawk
S.C. Pirates
2 6 41f.! ' and Randy Roach eacp had a
Rutland Reds
2 • 6 4h double.

.

Brav:es. .ho.ld off Indians 21 to 14
The Heiners Braves
downed the Indians in Middleport Youth League action
21·14 w1th relief pitcher Mike
Miller picking up his first win
of the season.
Jeff Wayland started on the
mound for the ' ' Braves ,
allowing 2 runs in 3 inning~ of
work. The fourth innihg,
which the Ind1ans scored 12
times, . almost spelled
d1~ster for the Braves. Mi~e
Miher came on in relief in the
fifth and went the rest of the
game, picking up the win .
Combined,. pitching for the
Braves fanned 15 and walked
. a whopping 20 batters, 10 in
the fourth inning.
On the mound for the In·
dians were April King who
started and relief pitchers
1-~teve Carson and Shane

Smith. Smith was lagged with
the loss. Indians pitching
combined to fan 8 and walk 8
Getting hits for the Indians
were Steve Carson with a
homerun and a double and
Shane Smith a single, accounting for the Indians' 3
hits.
For the winning Braves,
every batter in the hneup had
·at least 1 hit. Jeff Wayland
had hi~ first homerun of the
season, and a double and
single. Steve (Cannon ) Fifo
blasted his ninth homer of the
year, a grand slam in the
second innmg, and had a
double and single; Mike
Miller had 2 singles and a
double, Jim Boyer a double
and single, Nate Smith and
Terry Wayland each had 2
singles, R1ck Ebersbach 3
,I

.•

W1lhe Stargell had three hits,
includmg h1s 13th homer, m
the second game.
The San Diego Padres
defeated the Cincinnati Reds
4-3 after a 4-1 loss, the San
Francisco G1ants beat the
Los Angeles Dodgers 5-2, the
Expos walloped the St. Louis
Cardinals 7-3, and the Atlanta
Braves topped the Houston
Astros 3-1 , m other NL
ga mes .
In the American League, 1t
was Boston 3 New York 2,
Oakland 7 California 1,
Chicago 3 Kansas City 1,
Milwaukee 4 Cleveland 3,
Balt1more 2 Detroit I, and
Texas 9 Minnesota 7.
Reds 4-3, Padres 1-1
George Foster, Joe Morgan
and Merv Rettenmund hit
homers and Jack Billingham
won his ninth game with'
relief help from Will
McEnaney for the Reds in the
first game. Gene Locklear
doubled in two runs and
contributed a single to a
game-winning seventh inning
run in the nightcap when the
Padres gained the split. The
Reds played both games
without making an error to

BASEBALL

Ma1or Leagu e Slandmg s
extend the1r major league
By Untt cd Pr ess lntcrn att onal
Nah onal Lea gue
reco rd to 14 co nsecutive
Ea!&gt;t
errorless contests.
w. I pet g b
,,., 29 603
P rtlsburq h
Giants 5, Dodgers 2
Phrtad elph1a
·17 3J 560 J
Tom Bradley, with late- New
York
) 6 J,j 5 J4
61
JS 37 4!VJ
g1 ,
inning relief help from Randy ~ ~ L OUIS
Ch1 caqo
36 39 &lt;180
9
Moffitt, won liis first game Montreal
3 1 3R 4d9 11
W est
after returning from a twomonth stint in the mmors, as Cm c•nna t 1 w48 I28 pet637 g b
the Giants made 1t four in a Los A ngeles 47 36 5Ja 7
n F ranc1sco 37 39 487 11
row over the Dodgers. Derrel Sa
Sa n Dt e q o
36 110 47-1 12
37 4,3 427 151 1
Thomas drove in two runsior A tlanta
28 5 1 354 211 1
the Giant~&gt;, who dealt Don HoustonSa turda y's
Res ult s
Sutton his eighth loss against Ch •caqo 1 P1 tt sburqh o
N ew Yo r k 5 Ph1lad elpllia 7
11 VIctories,
San F ran c ,sco 2 L os Anqc tes 1
(inCin na ll 6 Sa n 01eqo .1
Expos 7, Cardinals 3
S t LOUIS 3 Montr ea t 1 10 1nn s
Homers by Barry Foote Aflanta
6 H ouston J
Sunda y's Results
and Nate Colbert were the b1g
1\rtan ta 3 Hous ton 1
blows of a five-run eighth- Montreal
7 5 1 LOUI S J
inning rally which lifted the San F ranc1sco 5 Los Angeles 2
1ttsburqh t1 Ch1cago 3, lSI
Expos to their win . Steve PP 1ttsburgh
7 Chtcago 0, 7nd
Renko, who had three hits C1ncmnat1 4 San D• ego t , tst
San D1ego 4 Cmc,nnatr 3, 2nd
and drove in two runs, ptt- Ph1lad
etphra 9 New Yo rk 6, 1st
ched a Ill-hitter for hiS third Phda 4 New York 3, 2nd , 12
VICtory while John Curtis was 11105Today's Probabl e Pttch er s
the Cardinals' loser.
(All T1m es EDT)
Ch1cago
(S Sl one 52) at New
Braves 3, Astros 1
York !G St one 1 1) 8 05 p m
Larvell Blanks' two-run Plltsburgh (Demery 3 2) at
tr ea l ( B la1r 58). 8 OS p m
double and Rowland Off1ce's Mon
H o us to n (Kon 1eczny d 8)
at
single drove m Atlanta's C1nc 1nn at1 (T Carro ll 2 0) , l:l 05
three rWls in the fourth mning Pill
LOUtS
( F zSr h
7 6 } at
enabling Carl Morton to PSfhdade
lph ta (Lon org 6 SJ, 8 15
square his record at 8-8. pm
San Dr ego ( Fol ers 3d) a t Los
W1ll1e Howard had three hits Ange les (Messe r sm1 lh 11 d),
10 30 p m
for the Astros
( On ly games sc h edule d )
I

Tu esda y's Games
( htcag o at New York , n rght
Houston at Ctnc1nna t 1 nrgh t
P tl tsburgh at Montreal, n1ght
Atlanta at San Franc 1sco, ntg ht
San Drego at L os Ange l es, nrg ht
St LOu tS at Phdade l ph ra, n1ght

Sparky wants 'em all

~

This.Social Services Plan has been developed with the cooperation of aja~ge~ nul'(lber of orgamzattons and tndlvtduals. A period for public rev1ew and comment is being provided from July
1 to August 15.
'
'
Review
Copl11

pitchers after a poor 1974

·'

Public Review and Comment

11

'

Phillies ·s ow muscle

to

DR. LAMB

'

'

3- The Daily Sentmel1 Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June 30, 1975

J

..

in the second game when
(Bill) Plummer led off the
ninth with a walk," said
Anderson. "And if we tied it, I
was sure we'd win ."
However pmch runner Ken
Griffey was stranded after
Doug Flynn sacrificed and
Padre lefty Brent Strom
retired pinch hitter Morgan
and Pete Rose.
The Reds have played 14
straight games without
commithng an error - a
major league record -and
Anderson says he can 't
complain.
Some of the regulars sat out
Sunday's game.
"I just have to believe that
it helps the regulars to sit
them out 10 to 15 games a
season," said Anderson.
He'll go with Griffey,
Foster and Dan Driessen m
tonight 's game with the
Houston Astros.
Tom Carroll wiU face Doug
Konieczny tomght.

''

American League Roundup
By United Press International
Boston leads the Amencan League East today. Before
Sunday's game, it was New York. The day before it was
Boston . The day before that it was New York.
Mter wh1pping the Yankees three times in four games this
weekend, the Red Sox are enjoying the pleasures that come
with bemg 10 first place, however briefthatmay be.
With Baltimore coming to town for three games in two days,
followed by six road games, the Red Sox know they may not be
in first place very long .
The AL East race seems to be shaping up into a four-team
dogfight w1fu the spread now 7% games from first to fourth.
A pair of doubles by Bernie Carbo and Rick Burleson in the
eighth inning Sunday helped Boston score a 3-2 win against
Catf1sh Hunter, who had put New York in first place w1th his
lith v1ctory last week. Sunday's loss , Hunter 's seventh, put the
Yanks 10 second by a half-game.
Roger Moret, mak10g his first start of the season, improved
his record to ~by holding the Yankees to six hits.
"I'd rather be a starter," sa1d Moret, who has been shuttled
m and out of the bullpen in his four maJor lea gue seasons. "But
we got a Iotta good pitchers and I'm happy just to be playmg
here."
"Moret was throwmg strong all the way," said Manager
Darrell Johnson, "and I never said anything to him because I
never saw hun get tired. I could tell from the dugout he had
good velocity all through the game."
Elsewhere in the American League, Oakland whipped California 7-1, Baltimore edged Detroit 2-1, Milwaukee rupped
Cleveland 4-3, Chicago beat Kansas City 3-1 and Texas held off
Minnesota 9-7.
In the National League, Atlanta beat Houston 3-1, Montreal
ripped St. Louis 7·3, San Francisco downed Los Angeles 5-2,
Pittsburgh defeated Ch1cago twice, 4-3 and 7-0, Cincmnati beat
San Diego 4-1 in the first game before losing 4-3 in the second
game and Philadelphia took a doubleheader from New York, 96 and 4-3 in 12 innings.
A's 7, Angels 1
Claudell Washington drove in four runs and Ken Holtzman
and Rolhe Fmgers combined for a two-l)itter as Oakland
gamed its eighth stra1ght victory. By sending California to its
seventh consecutive loss and beating Nolan Ryan, the world
champions mcreased their lead to 7'h games over second place
Kansas City in the West.
Orioles 2, Tigers 1
Lee May's eighth mning single scored Tim Nordbrook, who
had walked, w1th the wm_Jung run for Baltimore. Brooks
(Continued on page 8)

~~People a • ask if
I can~ them money

on car Insurance.

ns amazing how often

(All Time !; EDT)

Detrort (R uh le 6 J and Lagrow
4 7) at Cleve land ( Harrrson 1 2
and Eckers ley 5 1 l, 2, 5 30 p m
Ba tt rmor e (Pa l mer 12 4 and
Alexander 1 5 ) at Bos ton (Tra nt
11 6 and Pol e 1 4), 2, 5 00 p m
Cal tfor nr a (Ta nana
5 4l
at
M1nnesota CCorbm d 4 ), 9 oo
pm
Oak lan d
(Ba hn sen
5 6)
at
Chlcago ( Wood 5 11 J 900pm ,
N ew
York
(May
7 3)
aT
Milwaukee (Travers 3 0), 8 30

my

Pomeroy A
teams win
Syracuse ilefeated Letart 82 and the Pomeroy A-s
defeated Mason 6-2 in Pony
action last week. The win
puts Syracuse at 4-3 and
Letart at 8-1.
For Syracuse Danny Riffle
was the p1tcher as he wen t the
entire game fanning 4 and
walking 6. For Letart, Jimmy
Powell went one-th1rd of an
inning, giving up 2 walks ;
Chris Wolfe went four and
one-third innings, fanning 4
and walking 5; Ronnie Davis
fimshed up, striking out one
1n one and one-third inning.
Hitters for Syracuse were
Jack Duffy, Don Hendricks,
and Mark Forbes each a
double, and getting singles
were Kelly Winebrenner,
Forbes, and John Davis.
For Letart getting singles
were Chris Wolfe, Dave
Robinson , J1mmy Powell,
Jimmy O'Br1en and Todd
Roberts .
For the A-s against Mason,
Dale Browning went the
distance giving up 4 hits and
one walk. Getting singles
were
Browning,
Rick
Johnson, Greg Snuth, and
Bob McClure. For Mason,
Jackie Smith and Phil Hobbs
each had a double, and
sln.gles were hit · by David
Camp and Kenny Young. On
the mound for Mason was
John Van Meter who gave up
6 hits, 3 walks, and fanned 6.
The victory leaves the
Pomeroy A-s tied for first
place with the Cheshire
Blazers at 8-1 . Mason is at 3-6.

a_., is,•yes:"

At State Fnrm we have low m11ea ge rates ION rat es for
people wh o ve 1omed ca r po ols a tw o car d1scount
a safe bumpe r d rscou nt, diSCO unts for good students
and you ng dnvers \~h ove taken a dnver s 1ra1n1ng
cou rse 11 you want to knOI"I 11 I can save you money , JUSt
Ql .;e me a ca l l o r come n 8nd see me

pIl l

Syracuse,

COnly games scheduled)
Tu es day's Gam es
Oakland a t Ch1cago . n tght
Ba lt1rnore at Bos ton , n rght
Kansas C1 ty at Texas, n1ghT
D ctro1 f a t Cleveland , n1ghl
N ew York aT Mi lwa ukee, n1 gh t
Ca ltf at Mrnnesota , 2 tw1 n 1gh t

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell St., Middleport, 0.

Inte rnational L ea gu e
Sfandrng s
Un1ted Pr ess ln1e rn at ronal
w 1 pet g . b
Sy ra cus e
47 30 6 10
Ro ches t er
45 J2 584 2
T1dewater
43 J3 566 31 1
Cha rl eston
40 36 526 61 1
Richmo n d
35 39 473 101"
T o l edo
34 43 44 2 13
M e mphiS
33 41 429 14
Pawtucke t
28 48 368 JBi l

PH. 992-7155

W .. L
8 1
8 1
6
4

I
3

3

6

2
1
1

6
7
8

Uke a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.

H ATI , ....

STATE FfiRM MUTUAL
AUTOMOBI LE INSURANCE CO MPANY

Sunday's Res ult s

Mem phi S d Ttd ewater ~
R rchmond 9 Cha rl es ton 0
Ro ch es t er 2 P aw t uc k e t 1
Syra cuse 4 To led o 2, 11 1n
n mg s

Home OH1ce B!oom1nuton 1111no1s

p 7446

Reg. $4.35 Spalding

GOLF BALLS

3

FOR

$3.35

Spalding

TENNIS BALLS

3

FOR

$3.49
:0. EW SELECTION

TENNIS RACQUETS
CROQUET

CAMPING

SET~

BASEBALL GLOVES

Standings
Cheshire
Pomeroy :A-s
Racine
Syracuse
Mason
Hartford "'
Pomeroy Tigers
Letart ·

Amencan League
East
w. I. pet. g.b
Boston
,,0 30 571
New York
41 32 562
Milwa uk ee
J9 34 5J4
2' '
Balt 1mor e
3J 38 465
7' '
Cleveland
J O 41 42J J01 I
Detrot I
27 43 J86 13
We st
w 1 pet g.b
Oakland
46 26 6d9
Kansas Crty
41 34 547
71 ]
Texas
J6 39 &lt;'180 12' '}
Ch1cago
J4 JB 472 13
Mtnnesota
33 38 ,465 131 'l
Ca ltfornra
3d 43 4J2 15' •
Saturday 's R esult s
N ew Y_ork B Boston 6
Balt rmor e 7 Det r o1 t 4
Milwaukee 10 Cleveland 6
Mmnesota 5 Texas 3
Ch 1cago 5 Kansas C1ty J
Oakl and 10 Ca l1forn 1a A
Sunday 's Res ults
Boston 3 N ew Yo rk 2
Oak_~and 7 Ca l1 forn la 1
Ch1Gago ,~ K.t}Jl,Sas C1ty 1
Milwaukee 1 Cl eve l and 3
Bal t1 more 2 D etr o1t 1
Texas 9 Mtnnesota 7
T od ay's Probable P1fch ers

Boston regains
lead after win

.

BASEBALLS - SOFTBALLS

. GOLF BAGS

Marked Down

COTS

'16

95

UP

WITH MATIRESS

�"
r

,,

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, June 30, 1975
.sc ·

,,

Editorial comment,
• •
opznzon, features

·I

~ - ~""".:..

~

TOM TIEDE

We Hold These: Truths ...
A Chronicle: of America
•

The President as candidate

one, beheves t ·ord as a
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - Despite person is a dream : "Open,
:~tJ.~00:&lt;?-c:&gt;-.c&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;;&gt;&lt;_....:::&gt;-:::&gt;-&lt;?OoO-.c-.c&gt;o&lt;::&gt;o&lt;;&gt;&lt;:::&gt;-~c&gt;o-o-.c&gt;o&lt;:&gt;:&lt;:&gt;---,.....,_.r,-;l a II h1s sus pen se-c re a ti ng honest, commonsensical,
. .
efrcwts. Gerald Ford was unapologehcally patrwtic,
.. d uall y . the first of all mt .lectually unpretentious."
current candidates to put his But can he be elected" Not a
helmet
in
the
1976 chance, says she.
Luce 's negativism is rooted
pres1denbal rmg.
It certainly comes as no news to parents of college-bound and based students that the cost
in
personal misgivings about
Though he ort gmally sa1d
of higher education has been getting increasingly higher in recent years - and at a more rap1d
he would not seek the office the contemporary
rate than inflation has been jacking up prices in general.
on hts own, he changed his philosophies of Ford's party,
That's the bad news, and even worse is that there 1s nothing in the economy's prolonged
mind three days after her party, the GOP. She says
Inflation-recession dilemma to indicate any forthcoming change m this particular trend.
assumtng power last August. 1t has strayed widely from its
Both institutions and individuals are caught in the bind. Once flush or at least satisfactorily
He has apparently had third political reason for bemg solvent schools find endowments and legislative appropriations don't•go as far or aren't forththoughts smce then , in part the promotion of · concoming in the amounts required.
'
because of the health of h1s servative values - and has
Higher education remains a largely subsidized public activity. But inevitably the Impact of w1fe, in part because of the therefore lost the support of
higher costs has been passed on to the student population.
wisdom of it all . But those millions. With all his earthly
Various government assistance programs, expanded m recent years, and institutional
close to him insist he has in charm, she implies, Ford can
scholarships help. But it can still be tough going.
effect been campaigning now not nde 22 per cent of the
Good news in such a situation is any way to increase financial resources available to for almost a year.
voters to victory next year.
students, such as the program a Philadelphia bank has initiated which may be described as a
And if Luce is correct about
"And what you've seen,"
do-it-themselves scholarship program for its investors.
says a Ford ally in the House, Ford's fortunes in a sluggish
Under the First Pennsylvania Bank plan, purchase of a certificate of deposit also
"is what you will see. I don't
establishes a college scholarship. The CD pays the investor 5.5 per cent annual compound m- think the President is sud·
terest. The scholarship money comes from the difference between thiS rate and the maximum denly gomg to transform,
- 7.25 per cent- the bank is permitted to pay on four-year certificates.
presto, tnto a hard-charging,
Scholarships are payable to any accredited institution of h1gher learning m the United
finger-pointing presidential
States when the certificates are purchased. They range in size from $350 with a $5,000 CD up to aspiran I. I think he'il be an
$7,000 for a $100,000 purchase.
en thusmshc cand1date, but
While the certificates are available to individual purchasers, the program is especially from h1s own mold. I think
tailored for busmess, church, fraternal and sinular organizations which may wish to put the1r
that he 'll want to indicate to
reserve funds to work for the children of their employes or members.
the voters that when he ktsses By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
The bank is looking for something like $2() million to be mvested m the program, wh1ch
a baby he really wants to kiss
DEAR OR. LAMB - I'd
adds up to a lot of good scholarship news.
the baby.''
hke some basic information
No doubt credibility will be abo!Jt food and body
the major pursuit of the Ford chemistry. Just what does
ca mpa1 gn, for after 11 what do to what? There is
months m off1ce it has such an amount of inWhat hath weight wathing wrought?
A diminishing bottom line for one thing, according to chocolate manufacturers unhappily become the President's formation or mismformation
strongest suit. He can't very around about calories,
noting an apparent desweetening of the American tooth.
!ieightened diet consciousness in recent years is one reason cited m a National Geographic well sohcit votes on his cholesterol, saturated fats,
report for a decline in per capita consumption of chocolate from 20pounds per year in 1968 to 17 rec ord of legislative genius or unsaturated fats, protein,
intellectual creahvity. As a carbohydrates, and sooner or
poWlds currently.
Also a f~ctor- as where isn't it these days?- is inflation. Smaller bars at higher pnces Republican committee of- later, each substance 1s the
are the mevttable result, manufacturers say, of the rise in cocoa prices from an average 30 fleer says, "too many people ev1l one or the life saver
cents a pound to $1.30 in 10 years. Sugar in the same period jumped from 10 to 70 cents a pound. w1ll remember the 01l tariff depending on who is writing
.One ~t is that candymakers have turned to cheaper substitutes for the old company and Wh1p Jnflatwn Now." or talking about it. I am
rectpes. Wtth less and less of the real thing already in the familiar bars, chemical flavoring is Instead the task will be to completely confused
convince
people
that
now becoming a big thing.
I'd like to .know what are
whatever
he
does
1f
elected
the necessary substances ,
So if you've been thinking they don't make candy bars like they used to when you were a
will be done for them.
kid, you're absolutely right.
what are the beneficial ones,
Will it work? Many think and what are the harmful
not. Clare Booth Luce, for ones" Wh1ch ones build the
body" Which ones maintain
it? Which ones destroy it? Am
I correct m presummg that
unsaturated (vegetable fats)
are good fats and saturated
fats (animal fats) are the
harmful ones?
Is protein the body bwlder?

-·

party, others feel he similarly
has small chance of capturing votes outside the
Republican structure. Polls
testify that slightly more than
30 per cent of the electorate
sees 1tse!I as mdependent, but
there is little sign it aligns
itself with the President.
Explains a GOP congressman : "I think to a
high degree that independent
1s another word for conservallsm, and for all his
conservahve past Ford has
lost their interest. I think they
feel the President is too
wilbng to compromise with
liberals. I would guess, for
example, that Ford 's 1976
vote w1ll be in mverse
proportion to the budget
deficit."

1
•

July 3, 1775:

~

After a 12-day ride !rom Philadelphia, Georae Wub·
ington arrives in Cambridge on July 2. His arrlvlll Is
unheralded among the men; James Stevens, a soldier on
duty, makes this b9red notation m his diary lor July 2"Nothing heppeng extroderly. We preaded three times."
The next day, on the Cambridge Common, Wublnatonusumes command of 14,:500 loosely knit militiamen dubbed
by Congress the Continental Army. He !inds no Wli!ied
command or organization, no plan for trainine, little discipline, and few supplies. In his first report toCongrm, he
writes: "The deficiencies in their numtlers, their. discipline, and stores can only lead to this concl111ion that
their spirit has exceeded their strength." Within a day, he
issues h1s f1rst extended orders. Under his hand, a true
army slowly begms to take shape By the end o! the year,
Congress is paymaster to about 27,:500 vastly improved
troops

i

What benefit are
food elements?

RAY CROMLEY

Still needed:
Inspiration

By Ray Cromley .
WASHINGTON- The U. S. presidency IS a curious mstitution. A president, in one sense, has tremendous power. He
can trip the nation into war, prolong a recession, or tear a
country apart in dissension.
But he cannot of himself, by this act or that, pull a country
out of a depression, either of the economy or of the spirit.
These things the people must do themselves of their own will.
The president can only be a symbol, someone who somehow
gives hope -so that men will be moved to inv~st, factories will
put the unemployed to work and consumers Will spend in the
confidence there will be a tomorrow.
! •
To rrovide that inspiration a president must prove himself, difficult for one who has been appointed and not elected.
And particularly difficult for a president known chiefly as a
ROBIN STEWART
nice, decent, friendly man.
To date, President Ford has been at work on this first step
- of proving himself.
Comn,entators talk of the Mayaguez showdown off
CommWlist Cambodia as the moment of truth, when Mr. Ford
showed his decisiveness, guts and leadership. '
Not so. Whether you approve or disapprove his stand on
spending, it is Mr. F(ord's month-in, month out record of hot
potato vetoes that demonstrate's what he's made of.
For Mr. Ford, the Democratic congressional leaders and
MASON - Robin Stewart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
_rresidential hopefuls all know these vetoes of popular spending Robert Stewart, has been chosen to represent Mason County
•bills which would mean money in the pockets of the unem- as a princess at the Black Walnut Festival at Spencer, W. Va.,
ployed and in purses of millions of others whose biils exceed October 9, 10, 11, of this year. Robin is sponsored by the
their incomes in this time of recession-inflation, ate pure gold Helping Hand Extension Homemakers Club of Mason.
for the Democratic opposition in 1976.
Eleven candidates for the honor were judged at the
Further, in clamping 'down on spending to curb the wor- Holiday Inn in the Cardinal Room at Parkersburg on June 22.
sening inflation he fears for 1976 and 1977, Mr. Ford could The queen is from Tyler County, two maids of honor were
prolong the recession unduly, make his election for another selected from Wood and Gilmer. Robin said she enjoyed
term exceedingly difficult. He knows this.
participating in the event with seven other princesses who will
My father worked on a cattle ranch in his youth. There was take part m the festivities. She was accompanied by her
something to the tales then told, whether fact or legend, that parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stewart.
carried a grain of truth stretching well beyond the cattle
Mter the judgntg, the young ladies and their parents were
country.
guests of honor at a dinner at the Inn.
A recipe I remember well was one for getting a
This lucky young lady is the eighth princess to attend the
recalcitrant horse back to home corral. Tie a mule to him, feshval.
the legend went. The stronger horse would puU the mule hither
Robm attends Wahama High School where she is a Senior
and yon- until he was tired. Then the determined mule would Board member of the Keytte Club and majorette of the
head for home. The horse, aroused, would pull and dash Wahama Band. She attends Mason United Methodist Church
erratically, dragging the mule - and tire . Again the mule and is president of the MYF. Following graduation, she plans
would head for home , Eventually, with the horse dashing in all to attend college. Her hobbies are sewing and crocheting.
directions and the mule heading only in one, the pair would
arrive - where the mule wanted to go.
So It is with President Ford and the U. S. Congress.
Under the American system, no Congress can have its way
The. baily Sentinel
against a president, if the president is determined. Senate and
DEVOTED TO THI:
H()Wie can win one round or another, or a dozen rounds for that INJURY DELAYS BOUT
INTER EST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
matter, but will be defeated in the end.
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI)
f HESTER L TANNEHILLi
Mr, Ford did not come to this knowledge by accident. - A knuckle injury to World ' .
Exec . Ed.
HOEFLICH
Franklin Roosevelt vetoed 635 bills, Harry Truman, 250, Boxmg Association bantam- .~ ROBERT
City Editor
1
Publ•shed dally except
Dwight Elsenbower 181. In the end, despite some notable weif~ht champion Alfonso
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
defeata, th- men had their way.
lmnora of Mexico has caused I 'Pubi1Sh1ng Company, 111
St, 'Pomeroy , Ohio
In the 10 months he has been in office, Gerald Ford has postponement of his first title 'Court
45769 Business Office Phone 1
~92 2156 Editorial Phone 992 ·
vetoed 32 bills, no mean monthly average.
defense.
at57
Mr. Ford, In the tradition set by these three predecessors,
His 15-round fight with · L' S•cond etas! postage pa,~
Pomef'\oy , Oh 10
has come a COIIIIiderable distance in establishing his leader- Thailand's Thanomjit 1att Na11onal
advert1S1n~
ship. But he seems to be stumbling on the second requisite - • Sukothai - set at the
rep r e sen fa f j V ~ vrard I
1ff1th Company Inc 1 J
bulldlni our confidence sufficiently to get the country going. Anaheim Convention Center Gr
Bottinelli &amp; Ga llagher Oiv 1'
Here we rim Into mlllh. Quick fixes. Hopeful statements. July 19-was rescheduled for
757 Th1rd Ave , New York
N Y 10017
______ _ _ _1 1
Plana In the making. A resistance to way-{)ut solutions. But Aug, 2 at the Forum here. An
Subscr iption rates :
little that would give ua the inner belief we are on our way. alternate Anaheim date was Del 1vered b y car rter where
available 75 cents per week;
Ught at the end of the tunnel euphorisms breed cynicism, not not available.
By Motor Route wher~
sePJ I Ce
not
~~ope :
'
lmnora, ,20, won his WBA "arrter
ova li able . One month , $3 25.
()Ia prelldenl or anoUler has captured the imagination 118-pound crown at the
1By ma11 in Ohio and W Va ,
iOne Year , 522 . 00 ; S 1 ~
will! clrlmatie 1111urea, however empty. Or with the force of For1lfil last March 14 by 'm
onttis ,
5 11 50 ,
Three
Ida I*'IQIII)Ity, or witb pi'OII'&amp;ms which, whatever their stopping Soo Hwan Hong ot months , $7 .00 Elsewhere
00 year , Six months
pncitlcal merlti or demerlta, illlpired the citizenry to act, South Korea in four rounds. 'S26
s 13 so ; three months , S7 so .
'lbele lll'e not the wayJ of Mr. Ford.
'
He has 20 knockouts in 20 Subsc npt !on pr1ce Includes
I~ unday T1mes Sentn·u 1
What then can, or will he do? As yet there is no sign. &gt;
professional sta rts.
~~ -·
'- ·.

-By Ross Mackenzie' Jeff MacNelly/Cil975, 'united FMture Syndicate

If so, what type of protein
food is available, low or
without cholesterol, which I
understand IS present in large
quantities m milk, cheese and
eggs, wh1ch are high protein
foods.
Along the same line, what
is the difference between
processed and unprocessed
foods , such as cheese and
·flour? And what exactly does
the term mean? Ice cream,
coffee, tea, salt, pepper,
gelatin, sugar - do these
substances
have
any
nutritional value? Do they
have any harmful effects?
Are there any guidelines
along which one could
discover just what has gone
mto a product, and this way
conclude for himself whether
the itern is beneficial or
harmful? I believe my
ignorance and confusion over
the subject 1s evident. Can
you inform me?
DEAR READER - The
first step to knowledge is

confusion. I can 't answer all
your questions in one column.
I will say that your letter
exemplifies the general
confusion of the public today.
I'm crusading, you might
say, for increasing people's
knowledge of health- the big
gap is in our educational
system. It does seem to me
that one of the most important things a person
should learn, to cope with
living, is how his own body
works and how to take care of
1t. What could be more
relevant, if I may use that
word? Most of our school
systems have httle time
devoted to this most Important basic knowledge. The
young people are interested,
too, I have learned from my
mail. They are like you and
can't get solid information.
The subject is large. You
will need to understand how
food is processed or, as you
say, what does what do to
what. I have written two

books on these topics. Don't
buy them, just go to the
library and ask for
"Metabolics : Putting Your
Food Energy to Work"
(Harper and Row, 1974) for
information on processing
your food, and "What You
Need to Know About Food
and Cooking For Health"
(V1king Press, 1973) for informahon on food values.
You will find most of the
questions you have raised
discussed in those two books
and the scientific reasons
involved.
c~
I would like to comment
that, while it is generally
believed that saturated fats
are more likely to cause a
rise in cholesterol levels, too
much fat of any kind is not
considered good. And, you
can use fortified skim milk or
low fat cottage cheese as a
good source of protein
without
getting
any
significant amoW!ts of fat or
cholesterol in your diet.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Proposed Plan for Social Services In Ohio
Th1s plan for Ohio has been developed tn accordance With Tit le XX of the Social Security Act,
enacted by Public Law 93-647, effe~ttve October 1, 1975.

.

Robin Stewart
festival princess

e

Purpose
The purpose of this plan IS to provtde tn Ohio ~ocial services that w1ll help residents of Ohto
to restore, maintain or 1mprove their capabtllltes for self-support, self-care, independent tivtng, to
strengthen fam tly life, and where necessary to prov1de improved institutional living.
Servtces tn the plan tnclude foster care for children, day care for ch ildren, family planntng,
1nformatton and referral, adoption services, training and employment services, comprehensive care
for adu lts, comprehensive protective care for children, guardianship servic~s, health-related ser·
vtces, counseling services, and certain other opt1onal serv1ces that counties may elect to offer
where there IS need and where resources are available.
·
·
Who II Eligible

Funding

Elig1ble Ohio residents wou ld tnc lude ·
(1) Aid for Dependent Chtldren (ADC) rectplents.
(2) Supplemental Secunty Income (SSI)
recipients.
(3) Medicaid (Title XIX) recipients.
(4)

Persons tn immediate danger, needing
soc1al protective services.

(5) low income familtes. (Example. Family
of 4 with not over $5,500).

Maximum federal allotment for Ohio at
this time would be about $127,000,000 annual ly with the availability of at least
$42,000,000 in state and local matching
funds. The state plan has the follow1ng proposals based on currently identifiable match·
ing State and Local funds .
Est tmated annual
expendtture
Federal
State and local

$73,687,000
$55,347,000
$18,340,000

'

t

By FRED DOWN
: UPI Sports Writer
Tug McGraw, author of the
i New York Mets' famou s
1 battle cry; · "You gotta
,I be)'1eve, " when they. stormed
; to the National League
: pennant in 1973, has a dif1 ferent point of view th1s
' season with the Philadelphia
Phillies.
: "When I look around this
i clubhouse and see all those
•, muscles," McGraw says, "I
t gotta believe.
: "This is the most powerful
: club I've ever pitched for, "

(6) Other eligibles to be determined as

matching funds become available.

McGraw said Sunday after
the Phillies defea ted the Mets
9-6 and 4-3 in 12 iniungs w1th
McGraw allowing a total of
one hit in seven innings of..
rehef pitching. "We've got
ability everywhere."
McGraw earned his e1ghth
save of the season with three
perfect innings m the opener
and came back to win his fifth
game with four shutout innings during wh'tch he
allowed one hit. With a 5-3
record and eight saves he has
re-estabhshed himself as one
of the game 's best rehef

•

!Evert favored
k, ~ep

By ROBERT MUSEL
WIMBLEDON, England
(UP!) - Biilie Jean Kmg has
painful knees. Margaret
Court is only just recovered
: from an injury. Betty Stove is
!... unseeded. Evonne Goolagong
Cawley is on her honeymoon.
Martina Navratilova is too
heavy for speed on grass.
Olga Morozova is erratic.
Virginia Wade never plays
her best at Wimbledon.
That thumbnail of the last
e1ght in the women's singles
of the $286,600 Wimbledon
Tennis Championships om1ts
only the top seed and
defending champion, Chris
Evert of Fort Lauderdale,
F1a . Only Miss Evert among
the quarterfinalists has no
obvious mental or physical
hangups that nught affect her
progress to the semifmals in
today's matches

title
The bookmakers, {rom
their busy tent on the
grounds, have taken all this
into account in naming the
American girl an even money
favonte to retain her title.
Mrs. King 1s 9-2, Mrs. Court 71, Mrs. Cawley 9-1, the 16().
pound Miss Navratilova 1().1,
Miss Wade 12-1, Miss
Morozova 25-1 and Miss Stove
1()().1.
On the basis of the form the
ladles have shown m the first
week of a tournament, wh1ch
has broken all records for
p~id admissions - nearly
200,000 in six days - Mrs.
Court seems to be undervalued. The big Australian has not dropped a set
and 1s convinced that she IS
completely recovered from
the mjury that had kept her
from the professional circuit
for some time.

Foyt $8·4 ,050
richer today
MT. POCONO, Pa. (UP!)
. _, A.J. Foyt IS. like a k1d
1
Singing in the rain today . He's
$84,050 richer and discovered
showers could be a man's
best friend.
Foyt won the rainshortened Pocono 425 Sunday, an event that marked
the second time USAC 's triple
crown of racing program was
terminated by inclement
weather. Bobby Unser won a
435-miler at Indianapolis last
month.
The entire day was a mass
of frustrations for dnvers,
traffic control directors, pit
crews and spectators. The
race was delayed two hours,
forcing a 3 p.m. start. Three
days of rain produced mud
that clogged the inside of the
Pocono International
Raceway,
But for Foyt, it was pennies
from heaven. A.J. averaged
only 140.712 mph as a winning
average speed in a race
slowed nine times by yellow
caution flags.
"But it was work, man, it
was work," Foyt explained.
"Firstly, I kept changing
tires after every pit stop and
finally got the combination
right. Then, when we saw the
rains coming in the distance,
I decided to push up the boost
and get all the daylight I
could when the yellow came

out."
Foyt and Wally Oall~bach
were the only drivers on the
same lap at the finish. BiU
Vukovich was third and
Roger McCluskey, who was'

Copies of the complete state plan and your
local county plan are available for review at
your local County Welfare DepartiTfent
Detailed sui'(! maries of the plan are available
by writing to the Social Services Dtvlsion,
Ohto Department of PubliC Welfare .

Comment•
Written comments on the plan may be made
to your County Welfare Department or to
the Social Services Division, Ohio Department of Public Welfare. Comments and requests may be sent to :
Mrs. Mildred Madry. Director
Social Services Division
'Ohio Department of Public Welfare
30th. Floor, 30 East Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215

This advertisement has been placecJ In compliance with federal regulations under Title XX.
James A. Rhodes
Governor
State of Ohio

season.
Larry Bowa's tnple and
Ollie Brown 's two-run homer
were the big blows of. the first
game in wh1ch the Phillies
scored seven runs in the first
two mmngs. Apparently
beaten by Tom Seaver after
eight innings of the second
game, Philadelphia tied the
score in the ninth and won it
m the 12th when Greg
Luzinsk1 hit his 19th homer of
the season.
The shakedown of the NL
East continued when the
Pittsburgh Pirates defeated
the Chicago Cubs 4-3 and 7-0.
The once-closely grouped six
teams are now strung out
w1th the Pirates holdmg a
three-game lead over the
Phillies, a 6'h game lead over
the Mets and on up to 11
games over the last place
Montreal Expos
The Pirates won the f1rst
game of their doubleheader
when AI Oliver hit a two-run
homer with two out m the
bottom of the ninth inning,
brmging reliever Dave Giusti
his th1rd win Jerry Reuss
pitched an eight-h1tter and

Raymond F. McKenna,
Director
Ohio Department of F!ubllc Welfare

,

leading on the last lap two
years ago when he ran out of
fuel and lost to Foyt, finished
fourth.
Wmning Pocono Sunday, of
course, was a great horior to
Foyt, "but it pleases me to
win any race, even a little
midget race."
Did he have any close calls
during the race ?
"I like to do what Gordy
(Johncock ) did. Hit the
wall."
Johncock was running
second to Foyt on the !40th
lap when he spun on turn 2
and struck the retaining wall.
He was shaken up, but
walked back to
the
recreational van where his
family was waiting after his
medical checlmp.
Dallenqacb wqs,,extremely
pleased with his second place
finish. He was leading Indy
when mechanical failure
forced him out late m that
race.
Wally elected to run w1th an
old Offy engine here , rather
than the new motor that his
teammate, Johncock, was
using.
Despite drawing 100 horsepower less than Gordie,
Dallenbach had the proper
motor to finish the race.
Could he have passed Foyt
at any time during the race?
"No. You saw everything I
had," said the Colorado cowboy, "I was handling
superbly, but my engme was
running like a pussycat, while
A.J .'s was going like a tiger."

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cmcmna 11 Reds lead the Los
Angeles DCldgers by seven
games in the National League
West today , despite splittmg
a Sunday doubleheader with
the San Diego Padres.
"No, I'm not Pleased," said
Reds' manger Sparky Anderson. "I don't like to lose ...
any time."
And Anderson especially
dislikes to lose when the
Dodgers do as they did in the
only game they played
Sunday.
"I wanna get out in front of
them as many games as
possible," said Anderson .
He knows the Reds will be

,.

fa cing the Dodgers at least
seven times--four here and
three in LA - before Don
Gullett's fractured thumb has
mended.
Homers by George Foster,
Joe Morgan and Merv Rettenmund powered the Reds to
a 4-1 victory in the opener as
Jack Billmgham notched his
sixth victory in a row and
ninth in 12 decisions.
Foster's second homer of
the day and the 13th of the
season was a two-run drive
over the left field fence in the
eighth Inning, accounting for
the Reds' final two runs in a 43 loss in the nightcap.
" I though sure we'd tie it up

Bored milk cow

shunnetl 8ench
By RICK VAN SANf
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A
strange weekend at River·
front Stadium saw a diSinterested cow shun "Farmer
John" Bench, a 47-year-{)ld
man conquer a 31-mile run
and more pictoral depictions
of the "Big Red Machine"
· than one cares to recall. •
It all started Saturday
rught when "Farmers Night" ·
at the Cincinnati Reds-San
Diego Padres game brought
out quite a . few people in
overalls.
But one partiCular fellow
wandering around the field
with his hands jammed into
his over&lt;tll pockets seemed to
stand out.
•
When he raised the brim of
his yellow farmer's cap, it
turned out to be none other
than Reds catcher Johnny
Bench.
•
Since the agenda cailed for
Bench to milk a cow before
the game, he decided to dress
appropriately.
Jiis baggy overails were
de cora ted with pictures of big
yellow chickens and the
words "Hee Haw," which just
happens to be Bench 's
favorite television show.
While Bench may have
. thought --he looked like a
farmer, the cow didn't. She
was indifferent and uncooperative,,
Still "Farmer John"

grabbed his pall, sat down
beside the cow and tried to go
to work -but he hardly got a
drop of milk.
About the only thing in the
pail turned out to be the cow's
foot from time to time.
A band tried to help out by
playing "Old MacDClnald 's
Farm," but the cow apparently knew she was at the
ballpark and not back in the
barn.
Disgusted, Bench went
around to the front of the cow
and had a face-to-face talk
with her.
" Look at th1s," he said,
pointing to the near-empty
bucket. But the cow just
batted her eyes, turned her
head and kept the milk to
herself.
Faring better than Bench
was 47-year-{)ld Tom Ward
who ran the 31 miles from his
Aurora, Ind. home to Sunday 's game.

Portland edges
Pomeroy 10 to 9

Por t land defeated
Pomeroy in independent
baseball action Sunday afternoon , IQ.9. Ricky Blake
was the wmning p1tcher for
Portland in relief of Ronme
Bachtel.
For the winners, hitters
were Red Walbrowri with a
tr1ple and a single with 2
RB!s, Ronnie Bachtel had a
singles; lu1d Dave Meadows smgle, Billy Pickens a
and Dan Hysell each had a double, single, and knocked
in the winning run in the ninth
single.
In the Middleport loop the inning; Keith Fitch had a
Braves and the Rutla'nd single and a walk, Billy
Dodgers, currently tied for Knapp a single, triple, a walk
the lead with identical 6-1 and an RBI. The umpire wasrecords, have not played each Eugene-Long.
other as yet-since their game
was rained out earlier. That Salisbury wins
gl'me, when played, will
decide the winner of the first
in junior loop
half of play.
League Standings
In Jr. Babe Ruth action the
WLGBH Salisbury team beat MidRutland Dodgers 6 1 0
dleport A-s 6-5 behind the
Midd. Braves
6 1 0
pitchmg of Randy Phillips
Harrison. B.Cats 6 2 'h with Steve Little taking over
Midd. Reds
5 3 l'k m the seventh inning .
Midd. Indians
3 5 3% Salisbury hitters were Randy
Chesh Tigers
3 5 3% Mar'$hall and Del Call with a
Midd. Mets
2 ' 6 4'h single each and Kelly Hawk
S.C. Pirates
2 6 41f.! ' and Randy Roach eacp had a
Rutland Reds
2 • 6 4h double.

.

Brav:es. .ho.ld off Indians 21 to 14
The Heiners Braves
downed the Indians in Middleport Youth League action
21·14 w1th relief pitcher Mike
Miller picking up his first win
of the season.
Jeff Wayland started on the
mound for the ' ' Braves ,
allowing 2 runs in 3 inning~ of
work. The fourth innihg,
which the Ind1ans scored 12
times, . almost spelled
d1~ster for the Braves. Mi~e
Miher came on in relief in the
fifth and went the rest of the
game, picking up the win .
Combined,. pitching for the
Braves fanned 15 and walked
. a whopping 20 batters, 10 in
the fourth inning.
On the mound for the In·
dians were April King who
started and relief pitchers
1-~teve Carson and Shane

Smith. Smith was lagged with
the loss. Indians pitching
combined to fan 8 and walk 8
Getting hits for the Indians
were Steve Carson with a
homerun and a double and
Shane Smith a single, accounting for the Indians' 3
hits.
For the winning Braves,
every batter in the hneup had
·at least 1 hit. Jeff Wayland
had hi~ first homerun of the
season, and a double and
single. Steve (Cannon ) Fifo
blasted his ninth homer of the
year, a grand slam in the
second innmg, and had a
double and single; Mike
Miller had 2 singles and a
double, Jim Boyer a double
and single, Nate Smith and
Terry Wayland each had 2
singles, R1ck Ebersbach 3
,I

.•

W1lhe Stargell had three hits,
includmg h1s 13th homer, m
the second game.
The San Diego Padres
defeated the Cincinnati Reds
4-3 after a 4-1 loss, the San
Francisco G1ants beat the
Los Angeles Dodgers 5-2, the
Expos walloped the St. Louis
Cardinals 7-3, and the Atlanta
Braves topped the Houston
Astros 3-1 , m other NL
ga mes .
In the American League, 1t
was Boston 3 New York 2,
Oakland 7 California 1,
Chicago 3 Kansas City 1,
Milwaukee 4 Cleveland 3,
Balt1more 2 Detroit I, and
Texas 9 Minnesota 7.
Reds 4-3, Padres 1-1
George Foster, Joe Morgan
and Merv Rettenmund hit
homers and Jack Billingham
won his ninth game with'
relief help from Will
McEnaney for the Reds in the
first game. Gene Locklear
doubled in two runs and
contributed a single to a
game-winning seventh inning
run in the nightcap when the
Padres gained the split. The
Reds played both games
without making an error to

BASEBALL

Ma1or Leagu e Slandmg s
extend the1r major league
By Untt cd Pr ess lntcrn att onal
Nah onal Lea gue
reco rd to 14 co nsecutive
Ea!&gt;t
errorless contests.
w. I pet g b
,,., 29 603
P rtlsburq h
Giants 5, Dodgers 2
Phrtad elph1a
·17 3J 560 J
Tom Bradley, with late- New
York
) 6 J,j 5 J4
61
JS 37 4!VJ
g1 ,
inning relief help from Randy ~ ~ L OUIS
Ch1 caqo
36 39 &lt;180
9
Moffitt, won liis first game Montreal
3 1 3R 4d9 11
W est
after returning from a twomonth stint in the mmors, as Cm c•nna t 1 w48 I28 pet637 g b
the Giants made 1t four in a Los A ngeles 47 36 5Ja 7
n F ranc1sco 37 39 487 11
row over the Dodgers. Derrel Sa
Sa n Dt e q o
36 110 47-1 12
37 4,3 427 151 1
Thomas drove in two runsior A tlanta
28 5 1 354 211 1
the Giant~&gt;, who dealt Don HoustonSa turda y's
Res ult s
Sutton his eighth loss against Ch •caqo 1 P1 tt sburqh o
N ew Yo r k 5 Ph1lad elpllia 7
11 VIctories,
San F ran c ,sco 2 L os Anqc tes 1
(inCin na ll 6 Sa n 01eqo .1
Expos 7, Cardinals 3
S t LOUIS 3 Montr ea t 1 10 1nn s
Homers by Barry Foote Aflanta
6 H ouston J
Sunda y's Results
and Nate Colbert were the b1g
1\rtan ta 3 Hous ton 1
blows of a five-run eighth- Montreal
7 5 1 LOUI S J
inning rally which lifted the San F ranc1sco 5 Los Angeles 2
1ttsburqh t1 Ch1cago 3, lSI
Expos to their win . Steve PP 1ttsburgh
7 Chtcago 0, 7nd
Renko, who had three hits C1ncmnat1 4 San D• ego t , tst
San D1ego 4 Cmc,nnatr 3, 2nd
and drove in two runs, ptt- Ph1lad
etphra 9 New Yo rk 6, 1st
ched a Ill-hitter for hiS third Phda 4 New York 3, 2nd , 12
VICtory while John Curtis was 11105Today's Probabl e Pttch er s
the Cardinals' loser.
(All T1m es EDT)
Ch1cago
(S Sl one 52) at New
Braves 3, Astros 1
York !G St one 1 1) 8 05 p m
Larvell Blanks' two-run Plltsburgh (Demery 3 2) at
tr ea l ( B la1r 58). 8 OS p m
double and Rowland Off1ce's Mon
H o us to n (Kon 1eczny d 8)
at
single drove m Atlanta's C1nc 1nn at1 (T Carro ll 2 0) , l:l 05
three rWls in the fourth mning Pill
LOUtS
( F zSr h
7 6 } at
enabling Carl Morton to PSfhdade
lph ta (Lon org 6 SJ, 8 15
square his record at 8-8. pm
San Dr ego ( Fol ers 3d) a t Los
W1ll1e Howard had three hits Ange les (Messe r sm1 lh 11 d),
10 30 p m
for the Astros
( On ly games sc h edule d )
I

Tu esda y's Games
( htcag o at New York , n rght
Houston at Ctnc1nna t 1 nrgh t
P tl tsburgh at Montreal, n1ght
Atlanta at San Franc 1sco, ntg ht
San Drego at L os Ange l es, nrg ht
St LOu tS at Phdade l ph ra, n1ght

Sparky wants 'em all

~

This.Social Services Plan has been developed with the cooperation of aja~ge~ nul'(lber of orgamzattons and tndlvtduals. A period for public rev1ew and comment is being provided from July
1 to August 15.
'
'
Review
Copl11

pitchers after a poor 1974

·'

Public Review and Comment

11

'

Phillies ·s ow muscle

to

DR. LAMB

'

'

3- The Daily Sentmel1 Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June 30, 1975

J

..

in the second game when
(Bill) Plummer led off the
ninth with a walk," said
Anderson. "And if we tied it, I
was sure we'd win ."
However pmch runner Ken
Griffey was stranded after
Doug Flynn sacrificed and
Padre lefty Brent Strom
retired pinch hitter Morgan
and Pete Rose.
The Reds have played 14
straight games without
commithng an error - a
major league record -and
Anderson says he can 't
complain.
Some of the regulars sat out
Sunday's game.
"I just have to believe that
it helps the regulars to sit
them out 10 to 15 games a
season," said Anderson.
He'll go with Griffey,
Foster and Dan Driessen m
tonight 's game with the
Houston Astros.
Tom Carroll wiU face Doug
Konieczny tomght.

''

American League Roundup
By United Press International
Boston leads the Amencan League East today. Before
Sunday's game, it was New York. The day before it was
Boston . The day before that it was New York.
Mter wh1pping the Yankees three times in four games this
weekend, the Red Sox are enjoying the pleasures that come
with bemg 10 first place, however briefthatmay be.
With Baltimore coming to town for three games in two days,
followed by six road games, the Red Sox know they may not be
in first place very long .
The AL East race seems to be shaping up into a four-team
dogfight w1fu the spread now 7% games from first to fourth.
A pair of doubles by Bernie Carbo and Rick Burleson in the
eighth inning Sunday helped Boston score a 3-2 win against
Catf1sh Hunter, who had put New York in first place w1th his
lith v1ctory last week. Sunday's loss , Hunter 's seventh, put the
Yanks 10 second by a half-game.
Roger Moret, mak10g his first start of the season, improved
his record to ~by holding the Yankees to six hits.
"I'd rather be a starter," sa1d Moret, who has been shuttled
m and out of the bullpen in his four maJor lea gue seasons. "But
we got a Iotta good pitchers and I'm happy just to be playmg
here."
"Moret was throwmg strong all the way," said Manager
Darrell Johnson, "and I never said anything to him because I
never saw hun get tired. I could tell from the dugout he had
good velocity all through the game."
Elsewhere in the American League, Oakland whipped California 7-1, Baltimore edged Detroit 2-1, Milwaukee rupped
Cleveland 4-3, Chicago beat Kansas City 3-1 and Texas held off
Minnesota 9-7.
In the National League, Atlanta beat Houston 3-1, Montreal
ripped St. Louis 7·3, San Francisco downed Los Angeles 5-2,
Pittsburgh defeated Ch1cago twice, 4-3 and 7-0, Cincmnati beat
San Diego 4-1 in the first game before losing 4-3 in the second
game and Philadelphia took a doubleheader from New York, 96 and 4-3 in 12 innings.
A's 7, Angels 1
Claudell Washington drove in four runs and Ken Holtzman
and Rolhe Fmgers combined for a two-l)itter as Oakland
gamed its eighth stra1ght victory. By sending California to its
seventh consecutive loss and beating Nolan Ryan, the world
champions mcreased their lead to 7'h games over second place
Kansas City in the West.
Orioles 2, Tigers 1
Lee May's eighth mning single scored Tim Nordbrook, who
had walked, w1th the wm_Jung run for Baltimore. Brooks
(Continued on page 8)

~~People a • ask if
I can~ them money

on car Insurance.

ns amazing how often

(All Time !; EDT)

Detrort (R uh le 6 J and Lagrow
4 7) at Cleve land ( Harrrson 1 2
and Eckers ley 5 1 l, 2, 5 30 p m
Ba tt rmor e (Pa l mer 12 4 and
Alexander 1 5 ) at Bos ton (Tra nt
11 6 and Pol e 1 4), 2, 5 00 p m
Cal tfor nr a (Ta nana
5 4l
at
M1nnesota CCorbm d 4 ), 9 oo
pm
Oak lan d
(Ba hn sen
5 6)
at
Chlcago ( Wood 5 11 J 900pm ,
N ew
York
(May
7 3)
aT
Milwaukee (Travers 3 0), 8 30

my

Pomeroy A
teams win
Syracuse ilefeated Letart 82 and the Pomeroy A-s
defeated Mason 6-2 in Pony
action last week. The win
puts Syracuse at 4-3 and
Letart at 8-1.
For Syracuse Danny Riffle
was the p1tcher as he wen t the
entire game fanning 4 and
walking 6. For Letart, Jimmy
Powell went one-th1rd of an
inning, giving up 2 walks ;
Chris Wolfe went four and
one-third innings, fanning 4
and walking 5; Ronnie Davis
fimshed up, striking out one
1n one and one-third inning.
Hitters for Syracuse were
Jack Duffy, Don Hendricks,
and Mark Forbes each a
double, and getting singles
were Kelly Winebrenner,
Forbes, and John Davis.
For Letart getting singles
were Chris Wolfe, Dave
Robinson , J1mmy Powell,
Jimmy O'Br1en and Todd
Roberts .
For the A-s against Mason,
Dale Browning went the
distance giving up 4 hits and
one walk. Getting singles
were
Browning,
Rick
Johnson, Greg Snuth, and
Bob McClure. For Mason,
Jackie Smith and Phil Hobbs
each had a double, and
sln.gles were hit · by David
Camp and Kenny Young. On
the mound for Mason was
John Van Meter who gave up
6 hits, 3 walks, and fanned 6.
The victory leaves the
Pomeroy A-s tied for first
place with the Cheshire
Blazers at 8-1 . Mason is at 3-6.

a_., is,•yes:"

At State Fnrm we have low m11ea ge rates ION rat es for
people wh o ve 1omed ca r po ols a tw o car d1scount
a safe bumpe r d rscou nt, diSCO unts for good students
and you ng dnvers \~h ove taken a dnver s 1ra1n1ng
cou rse 11 you want to knOI"I 11 I can save you money , JUSt
Ql .;e me a ca l l o r come n 8nd see me

pIl l

Syracuse,

COnly games scheduled)
Tu es day's Gam es
Oakland a t Ch1cago . n tght
Ba lt1rnore at Bos ton , n rght
Kansas C1 ty at Texas, n1ghT
D ctro1 f a t Cleveland , n1ghl
N ew York aT Mi lwa ukee, n1 gh t
Ca ltf at Mrnnesota , 2 tw1 n 1gh t

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell St., Middleport, 0.

Inte rnational L ea gu e
Sfandrng s
Un1ted Pr ess ln1e rn at ronal
w 1 pet g . b
Sy ra cus e
47 30 6 10
Ro ches t er
45 J2 584 2
T1dewater
43 J3 566 31 1
Cha rl eston
40 36 526 61 1
Richmo n d
35 39 473 101"
T o l edo
34 43 44 2 13
M e mphiS
33 41 429 14
Pawtucke t
28 48 368 JBi l

PH. 992-7155

W .. L
8 1
8 1
6
4

I
3

3

6

2
1
1

6
7
8

Uke a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.

H ATI , ....

STATE FfiRM MUTUAL
AUTOMOBI LE INSURANCE CO MPANY

Sunday's Res ult s

Mem phi S d Ttd ewater ~
R rchmond 9 Cha rl es ton 0
Ro ch es t er 2 P aw t uc k e t 1
Syra cuse 4 To led o 2, 11 1n
n mg s

Home OH1ce B!oom1nuton 1111no1s

p 7446

Reg. $4.35 Spalding

GOLF BALLS

3

FOR

$3.35

Spalding

TENNIS BALLS

3

FOR

$3.49
:0. EW SELECTION

TENNIS RACQUETS
CROQUET

CAMPING

SET~

BASEBALL GLOVES

Standings
Cheshire
Pomeroy :A-s
Racine
Syracuse
Mason
Hartford "'
Pomeroy Tigers
Letart ·

Amencan League
East
w. I. pet. g.b
Boston
,,0 30 571
New York
41 32 562
Milwa uk ee
J9 34 5J4
2' '
Balt 1mor e
3J 38 465
7' '
Cleveland
J O 41 42J J01 I
Detrot I
27 43 J86 13
We st
w 1 pet g.b
Oakland
46 26 6d9
Kansas Crty
41 34 547
71 ]
Texas
J6 39 &lt;'180 12' '}
Ch1cago
J4 JB 472 13
Mtnnesota
33 38 ,465 131 'l
Ca ltfornra
3d 43 4J2 15' •
Saturday 's R esult s
N ew Y_ork B Boston 6
Balt rmor e 7 Det r o1 t 4
Milwaukee 10 Cleveland 6
Mmnesota 5 Texas 3
Ch 1cago 5 Kansas C1ty J
Oakl and 10 Ca l1forn 1a A
Sunday 's Res ults
Boston 3 N ew Yo rk 2
Oak_~and 7 Ca l1 forn la 1
Ch1Gago ,~ K.t}Jl,Sas C1ty 1
Milwaukee 1 Cl eve l and 3
Bal t1 more 2 D etr o1t 1
Texas 9 Mtnnesota 7
T od ay's Probable P1fch ers

Boston regains
lead after win

.

BASEBALLS - SOFTBALLS

. GOLF BAGS

Marked Down

COTS

'16

95

UP

WITH MATIRESS

�4 ~ The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday , June 30, 1975

-

v,'

•

'

-~

J0 h nson Iead s Wes.t-ern Deacons
OAK BROOK, Ill. (UP!) ~
The role of pace setter
midway through a top
tournament on the pro golf
tour is one George Johnson
never has experienced.
But tl!day he'll be there,
facing the pressure and the
heat of competltion from both
74 challengers and 91klegree .
temperatures in a 36-hole
double round to decide the
wmner of the $40,000 top pnze
in the $200,000 Weste rn
Open.
"· - ·
Johnson, ·though victor in
three second-tour events,
never has been this close in
one of the btg time tournaments. "I was second at
Philadelphia after the second
round, " he said "! didn 't do
too good 'the last two rounds "
Sunda y Johnson did well.
Playing m one of the last
threesomes in the second
round at Butler National goH
club, he had plenty of opporturuty to fold, and he
didn't.
He started the day one over
par, gamed one stroke on his
first nine and then carved out
five pars and four brrdies to
come from behind and pass
leader Hale Irwin. In the
stretch he hit birdie putts of
eight, 30 and 12 feel, and he
salvaged a par on one hole
when he used a mne iron out
of a trap, a sand wedge to the
green, and sank a 12 footer.
But the stroke which gave
him the lead carne on the last

hole.
"I drove m the left rough,"
he said, "and I started to chip
out to the fairway. But the
ball was sitting up htgh and I
had a little operung. It was
about 170 yards to the green,
so I took a six Iron and let fly.
"The ball _satled ltke I
expected, htt in front of the
green and rolled up 35 feet
from the hole. I wasn't really
trying to make birdie. I just
wanted to reach the front of
the green. Then I hit it and
when It was 10 feet from the
hole, I knew it was going in It
took a little curve and went on
in the hole."
Johnson wound up wtth the
second 66 ever shot on the par
71 7,002-yard course and a 36
hole total of 138, four under
par and one stroke ahead of
Irwin, the 1974 U.S. Open
winner who ranks thrrd in
earnings this year with a
tournament win at Atlanta
four weeks ago.
Irwm also came from
behind. He had a ftrst-round
71 and then shot a 74 Friday
before rain washed out all
scores. "I got a tremendous
break," he said of the 68 when
the round finally was played,
putting him into the lead until
Johnson took it away.
Irwin coUld have had a
better score but for a double
bogey on the 18th hole, the
same which Johnson birdied
to end his round. A tree
blocked Irwin's second shot,
and he hit a four iron "a little

thJn." It went into the water
and with the resultm g
penalty, he had to sink a
tliree-foot putt for a stx.
Johnson was four strokes m
front of Wally Mmstrong,
Gibby Gilbert , John Schlee,
and Tom Kite at par 142, and .
five ahead of Flor enttno
Molina, Jerry Heard, Miller
Barber, and Julius Boros.

yard 17t h hole Sunday,
sinking a 15-foot putt, while
Miss Mann missed her third
shot from about the same
distance and had to settle for
the $6,500 second pnze.
Both competitors had par
three's on the 175-yard 16th
hole, the ft·rst of the playoff.
They were at five under par
214 for 54 holes, forcing the
playoff.
The tourney victory gave
Mrs. Carner $46,518 thus far
for the 1975 LPGA tour. She
trailed the leading money
winner, Sandra Palmer of
Dallas.
Miss Palmer shot an even
par 73 Sunday to go with her
first two round scores of 74
and 75. Her 222 total earned
$567.50 to bring her 1975
winnings on the tour to
$55,279. Miss Mann moved
into third spot m money

it
To the thousan ds of em ploye rs wh o have
s• gned the Statemen t of Su pport for the
Guard and Reser ve, our s1ncere than ks.
To those who haven 't, please think it ove r.
It's one of the best investm ents you ca n
make. And a commitment to your own
conscience.
Today, this vtlal vo lunteer fo rce represents almost 30 % of our entire military
Pl'rsonnel- a't a cost oJ only 5% of our
enlrre defense budget. You, as an employer, can help keep the Gu ard and •
Reserve trained and ready. Th is means a//
emp l oyers ~the large, small, and those in
between. Everyo ne who knows and val ues
the freedom we l1 ve 1n.
Your signat ure on the Statement of
Support is a pledge to back your empl oyees who serve 1n the Guard and Re serve.
It 's an assurance that a couple of weeks
on milrtary duty won't limrt thei r job
opportunities. And for you , it means more
productive, more respo nsible employees.
To receive your Statement of Support,
or more information, write: EMPLOYER
SUPPORT, Arlington, VA 22202.

m easy
•

victory

" I'm not really excited,"

Johnsqn satd. "I might be a
little excited Monday afternoon if I'm in the same
position. Playmg 36 holes ts
tough both mentally" and
physically because you get
mentally drained out there m
thts hot weather. It stops you
from thinking. It's tough to
think on a golf course for 91h
or 10 hours .
Heard, one of five lightning
V!ctuns Frtday, played after
he was released from two
nights in the hospttal together
with Lee Trevino and Bobby
Ntchols. He came to play, and
said "I made quite a few
short pulls because honestly I
didn't give a danm." Trevino
and Ntchols went home to
rest before resuming competition later.
Seventy-five players with
scores of !51 and under madethe cut for today 's 36-hole
!male. Among those who
didn't was terrible tempered
Tom Weiskopf, who had an
84, including a nine on the par
four sixth hole, for !58.
Nobody asked how he got the
nine.

Carner plans week off
after Jackson victory
TORONTO ( UP! )~ Joann
Carner plans to take a week
off from the Lad ies
Professional GoH Associatwn
tour after winning the $12,000
first prize Sunday in the
$60,000 Peter Jackson
Classic.
Mrs. Carner, 36, from Lake
Worth, Fla ., won the threeday, 54-hole tournament at
the St. George 's Golf and
Country Club, defeating
LPGA President Carol Mann,
34, from Towson, Md., on the
second hole of a sudden death
playoff.
"I'm going to take a week
off and rest now," Mrs.
Carner said . " Don (her
husband) and I decided
before coming to Canada that
we would take a week off as
we have to buy a new
trailer."
She birdied the

•

winmngs. She now has
$36,526.
Mrs. Carner had nothing
but praise for the luscious
6,265-yard course.
"This golf course is so
wonderful I can't say enough
about," she said. " It certainly is better than any
course we have played including the U.S. Open. We all
have enjoyed playing here.
Everyone has been just
wonderful.
"My secret all week has
been my little weilge and
putter. I putted very well all
week. That was the strong
part of my game here. Carol
had tough luck on both her
putts (missing on two
possible birdies in the
playoff). The ball should have
gone in for her."

Trio
out of
hospital

COLUMBUS (UP! )
_There may be no end in sight
to Wake Forest's string of
NCAA goH championships.
The Deacons of WinstonSalem, N.C.locked up No.2 m .
a row Saturday at Ohio State
Umversity with a record 33stroke margin over runnerup
Oklahoma State and also won
the individual title for the
second straight year.
Jay Haas, a 21-year-&lt;Jld
junior from Bellevtlle, Ill.,
playing four rounds of par or
better golf, nipped Alabama's
Jerry Pate by one stroke, 282283, and finished two ahead of
teammate Curtis Strange,
who was medalist last year as
a freshman .
Haas, a nephew of professional Bob Goalby, is the old
man on fuzzy faced Wake
Forest team, which returns
all five players.
The Deacons will be further
bolstered by the addition of
Mark Tinder of Pebble
Beach, Calif., another in a
CLEVELAND (UP!) ~
long line of prized recruits
The Cleveland Indians meet
the Detroit Tigers here
plucked by Coach .;~se
Haddock. Tinder is contonight in a twi-ilight double
sidered the most soughtafter
header in an attempt to start
high school golfer m the
another winning streak after
country .
dropping two games to the
Strange and Haas Lead
hot Milwaukee Brewers over
Paced by a final round fivethe weekend.
under-par 67 by Strange and
Milwaukee defeated the Inand 70 by Haas, the Deacons
dians, who had won six in a
played the final round in four
row, 1()..6, Saturday night and
under 284 as a team .
won again, 4-3, in Milwaukee
"I felt we weren't playing
on Sunday.
as well as we could after 36
Cleveland Manager Frank
holes," said Haddock. " But I
Robinson will start Denms
felt all along we were No. 1 Eckersley, 5-l, and Rorie
and would get a chance to
Harrison, ~. in tonight's
prove tl. Overall, we played
twm bill.
super."
Milwaukee Manager Del
Haddock, who has been
Crandall says there's only
head coach at Wake Forest one thing his club can do
for 16 years, likes his team's now.after winning those two
chances for a third straigl!L •• games over the weekend.
title in 1976.
"We're playing good ball
" If the same team can win
now," he said after Sunday's
it two years in a row," he
win. "We'vejustgottogointo
those games this week consaid, "why not three. I don't
think our kids will get any ftdent, feeling we're going to
worse.
win.
Players ream Oriented
"We have to go out, play
"I'm very proud of our well and win that first one,
kids, not only because of the
then go into the next one the
way they play, but because same way."
they are very team orienThe Brewers, with the win
ted."
Sunday, climbed to within 21fz
Haas started the day one games of the lead in the
shot ahead of Pate, the American League East. The
defending
U.S.
Open two teams ahead of themchampion, and finished that New York and Boston-come
way. Strange, who was five here for five games in the
shots behind at the start of next four days in a pair of
the round, was the only other series that could make or
break the Milwaukee season.
player to challenge.
Tom Jones of Oklahoma
Bobby Mitchell, an ocState, who was one behind at casional player with the
the start of the day, skied to a Brewers, was Milwaukee's
77 to finish at 290 along with weekend hero. Mitchell,
teammate Lindy Miller and playing for the injured Bobby
Bob Byman of Wake Forest, Darwin, drove home four
and Craig Carson of Ohio runs in a 1().6 Milwaukee win
State, who also trailed by one Saturday night and then
going into the final round, but drove in two-including the
really had his troubles with a winnmg run in the ninth~
closing 81.
Sunday.
Florida's Phil Hancock finished in seventh place at 291, ITCHY,
BURNING TOES!
followed Todd Crandall of
EASE
FIERY PAIN
Florida State, Craig Stadler
IN O NE HOUR or yo u r 59c
of Southern Cal and Peter ba ck Ap ply QUICk dry,ng T 4
Jacobsen of Oregon at 292 and L strmq f unq1 C1d e, to qut e t
il ch , burn tn MINU T E S Als o
Mike Brannan of Brigham f tn e f or sw eaty , odo r ou s feet
T r y rt for happy relt e f 1 NOW
Young at 293.
at Ne l so n 's Dr ug Store

fight factor tonight

said.

Both Ali and Bugner said
they were prepared for the

UMBAUGH

"If you're going to win
anything in this game, it
takes performances like
those we've gotten from
Mitchell this year," Crandall
said. "You need help from the
guys sitting on the bench to
win."
George Scott led off the key
ninth with a double and took
third on Sixto Lezcano's sacrifice. Mitchell then lofted a
high fly ball to left and Scott
scored the winning run
easily.
"!just thought, if I can get
something started here, then
we won't have to go out for
the lOth," Scott said. "So I
just went out there to hit the
ball as hard as I could.
"I'd been feeling a little
sick, a little cold or
something," he said. "But
now I feel much better."
Scott was used as a
designated hitter Sunday as
Crandall gave him a rest in
the field and ·Hank Aaron a
complete rest.

heat, expected to be over 100
degrees in the ring, and the
humidity, which will cause
them to lose a pound or more
a round each. '
"I'm .African and I have
fought under severe heat
conditions in Africa," Ali
said. "It won't bother me.
Europeans can't stand heat.
I'll get to Bugner."
The 2$-year~ld Hungarianborn Briton, who holds the
European heavyweight
crown, went through a
special training program set
up by the Royal Air Force in
Great Britain before he carne
here to wind up his training
for his second match with Ali.
"That was more severe
than I have found it here,"
Bugner said. "So I'm well
acclimatized to conditions
here. I can stand it. I can go
the distance at whatever pace
Ali wants."
In addition to the heat and
the other normal pre-fight
pressures, the 33-year~ld Ali
also was under other
pressures connected with his
announced intention to retire
after the Bugner fight.
He said he was being
plagued by people pressing

him to continue fighting, at

least for a third fight with Joe
Frazier in Manila, which
could earn All $10 milllon or
more.
Frazier arrived for the
fight Sunday and began
taunting Ali, accusing him of
trying to run out on the
rubber rna tch in their personal fight series which
stands at one win each,

Good
students
earn a discount

II your 1on or daugl'aler tip
good ;tiOet-you mily ...,.

on aulo •n~M.~rtnc:t from
NIIIQnWI&lt;II Call I

N•honwtd,e agent lor

comp•t•

~Mtalla

P. J. PAULEY
307 Spring Ave., Pomeroy

PH. 992-2318

FREE

GAR.MENtf
SCJ'ORAG
Now you can ·~utve all YOur' fan and winter
garments dry cleaned and stortcl tree of
ch•rge until needed la..r.
Bring tllerllln NC)W, Then pick up letw end li'A y
ONLY 11'111 cleaning cl'lllrae.
.

INSURED FUR STORAGE·
For All Your Furs Available Here

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

Robinson's Ceaners
214 E . 2nd

992-5421

POMEROY

••
•

NoteS

•

Historicall y, Amcnca has been "the la nd of tlpporiunity" I
But "opportunity"' ts becomtng a tlucatcncd spcctes.
The opportuntty to work and ILl .t chicve a better ljltality of life is
threatened by the incredstng problem of ene rgy supply. . ,

' w

Columbia Gas is workirig·to help
so lve the energy citsi!'i. There
stil l n lot
n~tural gas dt:ep
underground in America.
Columbia is tcst·dnlling
to depths of nearly four
miles for thi~ clean ~ts
cncrg.y. Thts makes t~c cost
of cxpluratton and

or

Portland, 7:30 each evening;
ReY. Bud Hatfield in charge;
special singing each evening.

Polly's PoinrArc
KV

IS

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hart

Hart-Holley wed
in April ceremony
Ltnda Lou
Holley , daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Basil Holley, Rt. 2,
Galltpolis, and Arthur Jeffrey
Hart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur H Hart, New Haven ,
W Va. , were untied tn
marriage May 23, at 7:30 p.
m. The wedding took place at
the Elizabeth Chapel Church
with Rev. Ernest E. Baker
offictating .
The bride was alttred in a
lon g flowi ng gown in an off
wht te shade . She wore a
brown straw hat and carried
a white Btble wtth streamtng
yellow sweetheart roses and
GALLIPO LIS ~

porn pons.
Her maid of honor wa s
Tammy Hart, New Haven , W.
Va ., stster of the groom. Her
gown was aqua .trimmed tn
off white. She carried a
bouquet of yellow sweetheart
roses with yellow carnations
tn the middle dipped in aqua.
Best man for Hart was Bill
Gibbs, New Haven, W Va.
A receptiOn tmmedtately
following the ce remony was
held at the bride 's home.
The new Mrs Hart ts
employed at the Ohto Valley
Bank . Hart is employed at the
Jones Boys.

Mothers enjoy picnic
LETART, W. Va . ~ The
Mason Mothers Club held a
ptcntc re cently for members
and thetr fa mtltes at the
Ractne Locks and Dam here.
Mrs .
Nolan
( Lu ctll e)
Swackhamer, chairwoman of
the nominating commtltee,
presented the officers for the
coming year who are,
president, Gladdie Stewart;
v1ce prestdent, Phyllis
Knopp; secretary, Earlene
Bumgardn er, and treasurer,
Carol Proffitt.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Wtllis Bentley and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Rober t

Kincaid and Jason, Mr. and
Mrs . James Proffitt, Terri
and Angie; Mr . and Mrs .
Larry Noble , Chris and Jeff ,
Mrs. Robert Stewart and ,
Robin ; Mr. and Mr~ . Ge or ge
McFarland, Carla and Mary;
Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Fowler, Mark and David;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Yeager, Mr. and M_rs. Ralph
Ross and Shawn; Joe Lish
and Lisa; Mr. and M&lt;S,. Larry
Bumgardner and Emily,
Tom, Jeffrey and Rodney,
and Mr . and Mrs. Nolan
Swackham er

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEA R POLLY - Need we
tell an yone"tha t once a waffle
ir on has been seasoned the
gnds never need regreastng?
A frt end bor rowed my
wonderful waffle tron, a ktnd
that cann ot be replaced. and
greased the grids ~ now th ey
are dark , bw·ned looking and
smoke when heated. I would
certamly appreciate kn owtng
tf anythm g ca n be done to
restore them ~ Mrs. F .J .K.
DEAR MRS. J.K. ~ Grid s
to a waffle iron naturally
darken with age. You mi ght
clean the grids with a slightly
dampened steel wool pad to
remove that burned-on fat.
Brush out all loose particles
and then reseason. To do this
apply a small amount of
UNSALTED fat with a pastry
brush to get in all the
crevices. Close and turn on
low heat for 8 to 10 minutes,
turn off and wipe away all
excess fat with paper towels.
After each use brush grids
with a stiff brush to remove
crumbs or bits of burned-on
batter.~ POLLY.

Birthday
honored

l1tscm ery more expensive.
But, when you constdcr the
'1lternati ve ot: less energy,
we thmk you'll ugrce

Compare and Save!

LAFF- A- DAY

VISITED
Mrs . Harry E. Hoagland,
Miss Grace Sauvage, Mrs.
Ernest A. Jones and son,
Kenneth, all of Columbus,
were wekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry S. Moore.
They came especially for the
t "~ 4)~&lt;
~- =- !20th anniversary ob·
V J l I ~ ,·
--1-- servance of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
, ~.. ==::==
~.J..I
, ...;!JL
~ V'tr''" Church. Other re cent visitors
...
..
of Mr. and Mrs. Moore were
··Anu " h.tt 11 1 don "t \\ant to
Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Moore,
rt1.lk( •siH l1 1' \\ olll all .1 \\ nnd erful
Jr., Ashland, Ky.

_j

L

~\

' "V
'

~~ )-~
/

POMEROY Chapter 186,
O.E .S. 1 7:45 p.m . at

the

· ·· ·-·~- - ~

Pomeroy Masomc Temple . hu s h,UJd s om l'

d.t ~

~- -··-

' ·

Initiation with all officers to
wear formals.

!!! !!! ;;; e!!!!

,f,.lt..

the pnce is not too htgh.

"

or sena l plate defaced
'Warranty applies In Canada except for taxes, dut tes, and

1

ass essment s tev1ed at ltme of

St a ndi~g

still. or keeping things just as they
are , may be fine fur some people . But fm all
the rest whll stmc for t·he opportunity ltl
better thetr lives, we must h.t&gt;c more energy.
More gas, oil, clean-burning coal and
clectncal gcncr.tting c.tpacity
'
Gas is predous, pure enriJIY , , • use, It wisely,
to keep America 'the lan~l of opportunity.

~WMBIAGAS

I

/

FOR KIDS-'

ADULT MEAL

FUNMEALlM

B1g Shet·.

Play it aafe and· sure.
It may be time to
have your preaent
policy updated,

Fu n Tray,

Reg French Fries .
Turnover &amp;
L arge Soli Onnk

·.

DALE C. WARNER
992.2143

101 W Main

Pomeroy

IOWA

For las1 3 Days of June
ALL .AMANA
AIR CONDniONERS AT

Funbur g ~r ·,

Reg French Fnes

Surpnse Pr1ze,
Reg So ft Onnk &amp;
a Sweet Treat

l•t's Faile" Soon
OFFICE
RS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 I CLOSE
AT NOON -ON THURS.l-EAST COURT

""""~"""

5-YEAR WARRANTY

Amana warrants for tlve years from date of on g1nal purchase,
parts and related , lab or when pr oduc t ts used lo r n or ma l home
use Wilh tn the US and warranty serv tce p erfo rmed by an
auth onzed Am ana serv tcer
Owner's responsibility ts for servtce man 's trave l charges, loCal
cartage repl acement ol gaske ts, litte rs, ru bb er or pl asti c
parts tns tal lat1 o n k11 maten ar. appea ranc e tlern s and norma l
matntenance
' Warranly void wh ere product ts mtsused , damaged or al tered,

VISITED
Mrs. and Mrs. Fred S.
Shoenfelt and children,
Craig, Jeff, Michael, Janell,
and Matthew of Roaring
Spring, Pa., and Mrs. Eva
Kauffman, MartlnsbiU'g, Pa.
were the weekend guests or
Mr. and Mrs. Opha Offutt.

DEAR POLLY ~ My Pet
Peeve is with those small
articles of hardware that are
put m heavy plasttc packages
that must cost as much as the
article tlse lf. After struggling
to open them we sometimes
fm d the ttern does not fit.
Th ere is no chance of returntn g tl for the nght stze as that
pl as lt c ts broken .
HAROLD
DEAR POLLY ~ When you
splash paint on your eye
glasses don' t use paint
remover or gasoline to clean
tt off You mtght wreck
pl as lt c or even metallic
fr ames. I use toothpaste . It
removes any kind of paint
and leaves the le nses shiny
an d clear with no obJectio nabl e
odor.
MILDRED.
DEAR POL LY - My
Potn ter pertains to a toy my
husban d made for our daugh~r when she wa s small and
tha t she still uses Perhaps
other handy fathers would
like to try t t, too. He built a
pi~ wood stove that had a door
for the oven and a pot drawer
below that. Burners were
pai n~d on the top Besides
entertaimng her it was a neat
storage place for her tea sets.
Now tha l she ts too old for
this as a troy we have given it
a bnght new coat of paint
covenng up the "burners"
an d added a clear plastic
door knob and drawer pull.
Now it is her bedside table
an d holds books and records
inside and her lamp on top . ~
DONNA.
DEAR POLLY ~ Want a
safe and easy way to keep
your stainless steel sink or
stove top lookin g like new and
with no lime spots? Rub with
the cut side of a lemon, rinse
and wtpe dry . Wrap lemon
and save in the refrigerator
to be·used aga m. ~ MRS. E.

DARWIN ~ Mr. an d Mrs.
Jim Smith of Darwin honored
their daughter-in-law , Mrs.
Patty Smith wt lh a surprise
btrthday party recently.
Guests were Clarence
Story, Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Duncan , L a u~a Harrtso n,
Junior Dars t, Jam es H
Smith, Brian Smith, Glenna
Mayles, Nancy Smith, Pearl
Allen Smtih, Paul Smith and
Mr. and Mrs . Waide Smtih .
Homemade ice cream and
cake were served Unable to
attend, but sendtng a gift
was Rosalie Story.
K.

AMANA REFRIG

INJURED
Michael Goeglein, son of
Mr. and Mrs. . Charles
Goegl~in, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, is a
patient at · St. \wseph 's
Hospilal, Room 434.'-Michael
underwent surgery Sunday
morning to repair a severely
lacerated arm received when
he fell through a window
saturday afternoon.

Pi1U.Y CRAMt;K

Don't waffle the
iron cleaninR

MONDAY
EASTERN
Athletic
WEDNESDAY
' Boosters will meet at 7:30
REGULAR Meeting,
p.m. to make final plans for Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
their July 4th Chicken Bar-B- 7:30p.m. All Master Masons
Q and Pony Pull. Please invited.
attend.
REVIVAL at the Freewill
nJEsDAY
Bapltst Church on Ash St. in
STATE MEETING, Middleport beginning
Mjddle~rt Masonic Lodge tonight. Services will begin at
363, F&amp;AM,. 7:30 p. m. All 7:30 nightly. Everyone is
Master Masons· invited.
invited and special singers
REGULAR MEETING, are wanted.
MARC, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
INFORMING MARTHA'he may be late for supper,
Meigs Mental Health Center,
George Washington, bearing a startling resemblance to
236 W. Second St., Pomeroy,
The largest ctgars m the wu1rm.
actor Richard Basehart; chats in a telephone booth in
Everyone welcome,
two
feet, eight-and-a-quarter
Manhattan. Basehart was in New York filming a TV
REVIVAL , at
Hazel ches long, are made m Andotra
special, ,"Valley forge" in which he portr~ys Gen.
Washington. The program Is part of a Bicentenmal trilogy . Community Church off Route - one of the smallest countries in
124 between Long Bottom and the world
to be broadcast in November.

opport~~

It's ironic that the emphasb on natural gas
price rcgulution and demand s fot tmmediate
and far-rangtng environmental control. on otl
delivery dampen the very hope for a cleaner
cnvtronment. fot ~1dtcr l&gt;oust;tg. Because the
solutions to most of our other national
problems depend on havrng suflicicnt energy
to sol\e them.

Green
Thumb

Social
Calendar

Let's keep
America
the land of

The cnc1 gy en sis that seemed S&lt;; brg and vague
and fur away gets closer every day. Industry
especi,tlJy h,ts become acutely dWare of energy
shortages. And every business and industry
Ill Anrenca depends on .tn ampl e supply of
energy to provide job Llpportunities for a work
force that inercascs by mer a mtllion every year.

uS

.Pastor welcomed

Rev . Robert Hyaden was mtttee;
Mrs
Gerald
:~;~ offtctally welcomed as pastor Wild ermuth,
ftnanctal
\~
By Helen Bottel :;:; of the Ponieroy United secretary ; Mrs Boney
~:• • •
::;; Methodist Church at a Mitchell, Sunday School
..
fhe Three Faces of 'Me'
.;.: potluck dinner at the church treasurer ; Mrs. Roy Reuter,
DEAR HELEN ·
Sunday night.
prestdent of the United
That old question, "What does a woman want ?" is outServtn g as master of Methodtst Women ; Mrs. V,
dated, Taking ils place Is "What does society want out of a ceremomes for the dinn er D Edwards of the JOF Class,
woman?" And it 's a tough one'
party was C E Blakeslee, and David Edwards of the
Right now I have a real psychological war going on be- chairman of th e pa stor - Sunday school.
tween the "Three Me's"- the Feminine Me, the Female Me, pansh relation s commt ttee,
A response was given by
and the Femmist Me. (Defmitions: Femimne ~ swe et and wit h welc omes being ex- Rev. Mr. Hayden who was
girlish; Female - my real ''gut'' image of myself; Feminist ~ tended by Clarence Struble, ac companted to the dtnner by
my consciousness raised .)
lay leader; Allen Downie, his wtfe and son , Ttmmy.
I am a college graduate, married to a femme-female- chairman of administration Mrs. June VanVranken led tn
feminist sympathetic male _ can you grok it? and hard at board ; Kermtt Walton, group singing .
work on my career.
chairman of ftn ~ nce rom So I seem to be getting along pretty well with Female Me
(though she's too conscientious'and demands a lot of me) and • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
wtth Feminist Me right now. I have dignity, and I've ac- e
•
compltshed something!
•
And then Femimne Me pops up!
•
I thought I'd gotten her licked years ago when I learned •
•
that acting like Scarlett O'Hara ~ on a New England college •
campus ~ made me look and feel like an idiot. Still~
:
:
Feminine Me offers a lot of easy, un-stomach-upsetting •
•
outs. When I was job-hunting and having little success, SHE •
e
listened to all the older people who told Female Me, "It's your •
husband's job to support you!" (An idea that Female Me and •
•
Feminist Me razzed.)
•
•
Female Me and Feminine Me have some things m com- •
A weekly feature of Meta•
•
mon, like wanting a baby and taking a few years off to have • County Garden Club members.
•
one. But Female Me has responsibilities and priorities: work
fhe Rose Garden Club
hard, save for your future, get your much-needed advanced
fuppers Plains, Ohio
degree first. Feminist Me eggs her on: work also for the
By Maude E. Gray
glorification of yourself and all Womankmd. (Well, may he on a
·
small scale.)
.
ONE MEfHOD OF PRESERVING FWWERS
So, no matter what I do I'm in the doghouse with one of the
The miracle of preserving flowers is as old as time. There
Me's. I'm very" involved with my cweer and work long hours at are so many ways that it would be unpossible to try to explain
it. Feminine Me doesn't like that.
all of them in such a short space. So I will use the one that I use
l shop, cook, launder and do housework (which last, I most with the best results.
loathe). My man helps, but he isn't as thorough as Feminine
I use "Silica Gel" for which one of the trade names is
Me would want. Feminist Me says "Stow it: House Beautiful "Flower Dri." Silica Gel is a mixture of fine white granules
doesn't live here!" But Female Me wants a liveable en- and a small amount of coarser blue granules; the blue
vironment for we two.
branules turn pink or white when the compound has absoroect
If Feminine Me makes the other two Me's feel guilty now, ils maximum amount of moisture. After flowers have been
think what she'll do when the children come. Yet if I cave in to removed, the Silica Gel can be reactivated and used over and
her, the other two Me's will declare war.
over~ simply pour the mixture into a shallow pan and place in
Am I insane? Am I "normal"? Well, at least I know that a 300 degree oven until the granules turn blue again ~ seal in
I'm ~NOT A SUPERWOMAN
an airtight container and allow to cool before using again.
DEAR NOT:
Be sure and select your flowers when they are fresh , unThanks for a great letter!
blemished and dry. A pansy ~ or violet - or any flat flower is
You're normal! In fact, I'd say you're practically best to start with. Cut the flower from the stalk, leaving a !"
EVERYWOMAN) except for those who still have the "snug as stem. Push a 6" length of 22 or 26 gage green covered florist
a weevil in an oatmeal box" outlook on marriage).
wire mto the stem. Bend the wire to form a loop at the point
All of us who combine sallsfying careers with good that it attaches to the stem. This forms a little stand to hold the
marriages know (or sense) this fight between the "Three flower upright. The wire can be straightened and used as a
Me's," but most of us couldn't express it as well as you have . stem by covering with green floral tape.
Ideally, "Female Me" should incorporate " femine"
Cover the bottom of an airtight container with a I" or 2"
without the prissiness, and "feminist" without the militancy, layer of Silica gel. Push the wire stem with the flower face up
but tradition-versus-ambition still bats us back and forth in the layer of silica gel so that the petals will rest on the
between the two extremes .
compound, Carefully cover the flower with silica gel. This 1s
And maybe that's okay : it's more fun being three persons done by allowing the mixture to flow from your hand around
than one, and if we can learn to compartmentalize ourselves the edge of the container, not on the flower.
(giving each area of our lives ils rightful time) we can say When the silica gel is built up to!" or 2" high, gently tip"the
as I often do ~ "This is ME: wife, mother, careerist, container in all directions. This will allow the mixture to
housewifelllbut not necessarily in that order " (Though , trickle around the base of the flower. Build the mixture around
personally, housework is flat last and "enjoyed " only as a the flower before sifting the mixture on top of the flower. Keep
,
remedy for brain-fag. )
leveling it off until the flower is covered, then add I" silica gel
Women, l think, ar luckier than men because we aren't so on top.
one-directional. While society still programs married males
Cover the contamer tightly; tape the cover on if necessary
into the single role of breadwinner, we modern females can to keep air out. Put the container where it will not be moved.
have several widely different lives. And if we juggle them well, Most flowers take from three to four days to dry. Do not peek!
we may never get bored, even if our "Three Me's" seidom
To remove the flower, slowly pour off the silica gel until
allow- US much rest . ~H .
you can lift the flower out by its stem. Be very careful; some
flowers get verj brittle. If a petal falls off, replace it with clear
drying glue. Be sure and gently blow off exces silica gel. ·
These flowers may be used in an arrangement or mounted
on a card board covered with velvet or other material. Use a
very small amount of glue to mount flowers. Frame in a
• shadow box or any frame that has a convex glass so the glass
j doesn't touch the flower.
,Dry foliage the same way, but these can be laid flat and
· done in layers.
This is an interesting hobby, makes lovely gifts, and some
• people make them to sell.
Try your luck, and after you have experimented with a
few, you will find many ways of keeping your garden fresh
flowers for many years to come.
:~~

By CHARLES R. SMITH
KUALA LUMPUR (UP!)
~ The severe heat conditions
under which they wtll be
ftghting was much on the
minds of World Heavyweight
Champion Muhammad Ali
and challenger Joe Bugner as
the two fighters went into the
final hours before their ISround title match here
tonight.
"The heat is going to tell
tomorrow," said Ali 's
longtime ring doctor, Ferdie
Pacheco. "This is going to be
a survival of the fittest with
stamina under the heat being
a vital factor."
Bugner's trainer-manager,
Andy Smith, agreed.
" I doubt if there ever has
been a major title fight ever
held under more intolerable
heat conditions than we are
likely to encounter," Smith

0 ., Monday, June 30 1975

rH;i;=~·-·= ·u·;i== = = = = = = = = = = = =: : : : ;: : : : : :::~~
r
.·
p
~1:

100 degree plus temps

Tigers in twi -nighter

OAK BROOK, Ill. (UP!) ~
Lee Trevino, usually the
happy.ga-lucky Mexican on
the pro goH tour, thinks he
probably should have been
buried this morning about
10:30.
Instead, Trevino, Bobby
Nichols and Jerry -Heard
were released from Hinsdale
Hospital Sunday after two
days recovering from the
effects of lightning bolts
which struck near the three
golfers Friday.
Trevino and Nichols withdrew from the tournament
but Heard was back on the
course Sunday. He shot a 74
and wound up in a tie for
fourth at 143 going into
today's final 36 holes.
The three golfers app&lt;ared
at a news conftrence at the
hospital in nearby Hinsdale,
after which Trevino withdrew
and left for his home in El
Paso, Tex., where he plans to
rest a few days. If given the I
okay by his doctor, he "plans
to leave Saturday to play in
the British Open.
"I found out that a two-foot
side hiller is not the most 4/i!i!Adi!.i/il'i!i!!?""'"'~'' ._._•• ,.
important thing in the 1•' 1.; .'""'·~•N·n,;. ·
world," Trevino said. "I ~ay ""'"' i;'il@r~mralll&gt;';ifi!wtJhit those thmgs now Without
'
~
cleaning the ball. I thought by
all rights they should be • Lower cost per square foot
• Fast, tlllclent erection
putting me in the ground· at • Many standard sizes available
• Built by our trained crew•
10:30 Monday morning.
• Algid design prectlcee
• Field Planning service
"It wasn't quiterainifig and U!T .UMBAUGH I.(IAKE WAREHOUSING WORRY-FREE FOR YOU!
I sent the calldy up to get--------- .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - some soft drinks and the next
MAIL TO
0 Tell me more about t~ Umbaugn mettrRI(
thing I remember, it knocked UMBAUGH
Nom•
•
PIJI 3
me completely OUt of there" BUILDING SYSTEM Acdrth
-. .
"d "It
'
P..o Box 102
Tr evmo
sal ·
was a Mertett•. otuo 4S7SO L11y
state
0.
sensation I'd never felt ..,..,, '"·173-orlo
- - - - ____ _,.__
,
Phone No.:=========
before. My whole life . was
passing before me in about
two seconds. l really thought
BUilDING SYSTEM
it had me,"

0

:i - The ~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

Indians open against

I

•

Fencing thamplonships
LOS ANGELES (UP!) NewYork 's PeterWestbrook
has won hts second straight
sabre tttle in the U.S.
National Fencing Cham,
pionshtps .
The other major winners in
the seven.OOy competition
which concluded Saturday
Scott
Bozek,
wer e
Washington, D.C., epee ; Ed
Ballenger, New York , foil,
and Nikki Tomlinson,
Phtladelphta, women's foil .
They wtll head the U.S.
fencmg contingent that will
go to the Pan-American
Games at Mexico City thts
year. Bozek and Ballenger
each ~aplured their second
national crown m three years
while Tomlinson was a firstyear winner
NBA DONA fED $5,000
SPRINGFIELD, Mass.
(UP!) ~ The Basketball Hall
of Fame has been given a
$5,000 contribution by the
National Bask e tball
Association.
The funds will be used to
maintain and improve the
basketball shrine, Director
Lee Williams said. The
donation marked the eighth
consecutive year the NBA
has contributed to the Hall of
Fame.

Last Year's Prices!

Ingels Furniture
PT. PLEASANT
2325 Jack&gt;on Ave.

GALLIPOLIS
!503 Eastern Ave .
,·, Cooyu[llll

1~75

6 ut g.t!l Chcl Syste ms Inc

'

•
r

Open Fri. ti 1a- Saturday til 5

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

e

�4 ~ The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday , June 30, 1975

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v,'

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-~

J0 h nson Iead s Wes.t-ern Deacons
OAK BROOK, Ill. (UP!) ~
The role of pace setter
midway through a top
tournament on the pro golf
tour is one George Johnson
never has experienced.
But tl!day he'll be there,
facing the pressure and the
heat of competltion from both
74 challengers and 91klegree .
temperatures in a 36-hole
double round to decide the
wmner of the $40,000 top pnze
in the $200,000 Weste rn
Open.
"· - ·
Johnson, ·though victor in
three second-tour events,
never has been this close in
one of the btg time tournaments. "I was second at
Philadelphia after the second
round, " he said "! didn 't do
too good 'the last two rounds "
Sunda y Johnson did well.
Playing m one of the last
threesomes in the second
round at Butler National goH
club, he had plenty of opporturuty to fold, and he
didn't.
He started the day one over
par, gamed one stroke on his
first nine and then carved out
five pars and four brrdies to
come from behind and pass
leader Hale Irwin. In the
stretch he hit birdie putts of
eight, 30 and 12 feel, and he
salvaged a par on one hole
when he used a mne iron out
of a trap, a sand wedge to the
green, and sank a 12 footer.
But the stroke which gave
him the lead carne on the last

hole.
"I drove m the left rough,"
he said, "and I started to chip
out to the fairway. But the
ball was sitting up htgh and I
had a little operung. It was
about 170 yards to the green,
so I took a six Iron and let fly.
"The ball _satled ltke I
expected, htt in front of the
green and rolled up 35 feet
from the hole. I wasn't really
trying to make birdie. I just
wanted to reach the front of
the green. Then I hit it and
when It was 10 feet from the
hole, I knew it was going in It
took a little curve and went on
in the hole."
Johnson wound up wtth the
second 66 ever shot on the par
71 7,002-yard course and a 36
hole total of 138, four under
par and one stroke ahead of
Irwin, the 1974 U.S. Open
winner who ranks thrrd in
earnings this year with a
tournament win at Atlanta
four weeks ago.
Irwm also came from
behind. He had a ftrst-round
71 and then shot a 74 Friday
before rain washed out all
scores. "I got a tremendous
break," he said of the 68 when
the round finally was played,
putting him into the lead until
Johnson took it away.
Irwin coUld have had a
better score but for a double
bogey on the 18th hole, the
same which Johnson birdied
to end his round. A tree
blocked Irwin's second shot,
and he hit a four iron "a little

thJn." It went into the water
and with the resultm g
penalty, he had to sink a
tliree-foot putt for a stx.
Johnson was four strokes m
front of Wally Mmstrong,
Gibby Gilbert , John Schlee,
and Tom Kite at par 142, and .
five ahead of Flor enttno
Molina, Jerry Heard, Miller
Barber, and Julius Boros.

yard 17t h hole Sunday,
sinking a 15-foot putt, while
Miss Mann missed her third
shot from about the same
distance and had to settle for
the $6,500 second pnze.
Both competitors had par
three's on the 175-yard 16th
hole, the ft·rst of the playoff.
They were at five under par
214 for 54 holes, forcing the
playoff.
The tourney victory gave
Mrs. Carner $46,518 thus far
for the 1975 LPGA tour. She
trailed the leading money
winner, Sandra Palmer of
Dallas.
Miss Palmer shot an even
par 73 Sunday to go with her
first two round scores of 74
and 75. Her 222 total earned
$567.50 to bring her 1975
winnings on the tour to
$55,279. Miss Mann moved
into third spot m money

it
To the thousan ds of em ploye rs wh o have
s• gned the Statemen t of Su pport for the
Guard and Reser ve, our s1ncere than ks.
To those who haven 't, please think it ove r.
It's one of the best investm ents you ca n
make. And a commitment to your own
conscience.
Today, this vtlal vo lunteer fo rce represents almost 30 % of our entire military
Pl'rsonnel- a't a cost oJ only 5% of our
enlrre defense budget. You, as an employer, can help keep the Gu ard and •
Reserve trained and ready. Th is means a//
emp l oyers ~the large, small, and those in
between. Everyo ne who knows and val ues
the freedom we l1 ve 1n.
Your signat ure on the Statement of
Support is a pledge to back your empl oyees who serve 1n the Guard and Re serve.
It 's an assurance that a couple of weeks
on milrtary duty won't limrt thei r job
opportunities. And for you , it means more
productive, more respo nsible employees.
To receive your Statement of Support,
or more information, write: EMPLOYER
SUPPORT, Arlington, VA 22202.

m easy
•

victory

" I'm not really excited,"

Johnsqn satd. "I might be a
little excited Monday afternoon if I'm in the same
position. Playmg 36 holes ts
tough both mentally" and
physically because you get
mentally drained out there m
thts hot weather. It stops you
from thinking. It's tough to
think on a golf course for 91h
or 10 hours .
Heard, one of five lightning
V!ctuns Frtday, played after
he was released from two
nights in the hospttal together
with Lee Trevino and Bobby
Ntchols. He came to play, and
said "I made quite a few
short pulls because honestly I
didn't give a danm." Trevino
and Ntchols went home to
rest before resuming competition later.
Seventy-five players with
scores of !51 and under madethe cut for today 's 36-hole
!male. Among those who
didn't was terrible tempered
Tom Weiskopf, who had an
84, including a nine on the par
four sixth hole, for !58.
Nobody asked how he got the
nine.

Carner plans week off
after Jackson victory
TORONTO ( UP! )~ Joann
Carner plans to take a week
off from the Lad ies
Professional GoH Associatwn
tour after winning the $12,000
first prize Sunday in the
$60,000 Peter Jackson
Classic.
Mrs. Carner, 36, from Lake
Worth, Fla ., won the threeday, 54-hole tournament at
the St. George 's Golf and
Country Club, defeating
LPGA President Carol Mann,
34, from Towson, Md., on the
second hole of a sudden death
playoff.
"I'm going to take a week
off and rest now," Mrs.
Carner said . " Don (her
husband) and I decided
before coming to Canada that
we would take a week off as
we have to buy a new
trailer."
She birdied the

•

winmngs. She now has
$36,526.
Mrs. Carner had nothing
but praise for the luscious
6,265-yard course.
"This golf course is so
wonderful I can't say enough
about," she said. " It certainly is better than any
course we have played including the U.S. Open. We all
have enjoyed playing here.
Everyone has been just
wonderful.
"My secret all week has
been my little weilge and
putter. I putted very well all
week. That was the strong
part of my game here. Carol
had tough luck on both her
putts (missing on two
possible birdies in the
playoff). The ball should have
gone in for her."

Trio
out of
hospital

COLUMBUS (UP! )
_There may be no end in sight
to Wake Forest's string of
NCAA goH championships.
The Deacons of WinstonSalem, N.C.locked up No.2 m .
a row Saturday at Ohio State
Umversity with a record 33stroke margin over runnerup
Oklahoma State and also won
the individual title for the
second straight year.
Jay Haas, a 21-year-&lt;Jld
junior from Bellevtlle, Ill.,
playing four rounds of par or
better golf, nipped Alabama's
Jerry Pate by one stroke, 282283, and finished two ahead of
teammate Curtis Strange,
who was medalist last year as
a freshman .
Haas, a nephew of professional Bob Goalby, is the old
man on fuzzy faced Wake
Forest team, which returns
all five players.
The Deacons will be further
bolstered by the addition of
Mark Tinder of Pebble
Beach, Calif., another in a
CLEVELAND (UP!) ~
long line of prized recruits
The Cleveland Indians meet
the Detroit Tigers here
plucked by Coach .;~se
Haddock. Tinder is contonight in a twi-ilight double
sidered the most soughtafter
header in an attempt to start
high school golfer m the
another winning streak after
country .
dropping two games to the
Strange and Haas Lead
hot Milwaukee Brewers over
Paced by a final round fivethe weekend.
under-par 67 by Strange and
Milwaukee defeated the Inand 70 by Haas, the Deacons
dians, who had won six in a
played the final round in four
row, 1()..6, Saturday night and
under 284 as a team .
won again, 4-3, in Milwaukee
"I felt we weren't playing
on Sunday.
as well as we could after 36
Cleveland Manager Frank
holes," said Haddock. " But I
Robinson will start Denms
felt all along we were No. 1 Eckersley, 5-l, and Rorie
and would get a chance to
Harrison, ~. in tonight's
prove tl. Overall, we played
twm bill.
super."
Milwaukee Manager Del
Haddock, who has been
Crandall says there's only
head coach at Wake Forest one thing his club can do
for 16 years, likes his team's now.after winning those two
chances for a third straigl!L •• games over the weekend.
title in 1976.
"We're playing good ball
" If the same team can win
now," he said after Sunday's
it two years in a row," he
win. "We'vejustgottogointo
those games this week consaid, "why not three. I don't
think our kids will get any ftdent, feeling we're going to
worse.
win.
Players ream Oriented
"We have to go out, play
"I'm very proud of our well and win that first one,
kids, not only because of the
then go into the next one the
way they play, but because same way."
they are very team orienThe Brewers, with the win
ted."
Sunday, climbed to within 21fz
Haas started the day one games of the lead in the
shot ahead of Pate, the American League East. The
defending
U.S.
Open two teams ahead of themchampion, and finished that New York and Boston-come
way. Strange, who was five here for five games in the
shots behind at the start of next four days in a pair of
the round, was the only other series that could make or
break the Milwaukee season.
player to challenge.
Tom Jones of Oklahoma
Bobby Mitchell, an ocState, who was one behind at casional player with the
the start of the day, skied to a Brewers, was Milwaukee's
77 to finish at 290 along with weekend hero. Mitchell,
teammate Lindy Miller and playing for the injured Bobby
Bob Byman of Wake Forest, Darwin, drove home four
and Craig Carson of Ohio runs in a 1().6 Milwaukee win
State, who also trailed by one Saturday night and then
going into the final round, but drove in two-including the
really had his troubles with a winnmg run in the ninth~
closing 81.
Sunday.
Florida's Phil Hancock finished in seventh place at 291, ITCHY,
BURNING TOES!
followed Todd Crandall of
EASE
FIERY PAIN
Florida State, Craig Stadler
IN O NE HOUR or yo u r 59c
of Southern Cal and Peter ba ck Ap ply QUICk dry,ng T 4
Jacobsen of Oregon at 292 and L strmq f unq1 C1d e, to qut e t
il ch , burn tn MINU T E S Als o
Mike Brannan of Brigham f tn e f or sw eaty , odo r ou s feet
T r y rt for happy relt e f 1 NOW
Young at 293.
at Ne l so n 's Dr ug Store

fight factor tonight

said.

Both Ali and Bugner said
they were prepared for the

UMBAUGH

"If you're going to win
anything in this game, it
takes performances like
those we've gotten from
Mitchell this year," Crandall
said. "You need help from the
guys sitting on the bench to
win."
George Scott led off the key
ninth with a double and took
third on Sixto Lezcano's sacrifice. Mitchell then lofted a
high fly ball to left and Scott
scored the winning run
easily.
"!just thought, if I can get
something started here, then
we won't have to go out for
the lOth," Scott said. "So I
just went out there to hit the
ball as hard as I could.
"I'd been feeling a little
sick, a little cold or
something," he said. "But
now I feel much better."
Scott was used as a
designated hitter Sunday as
Crandall gave him a rest in
the field and ·Hank Aaron a
complete rest.

heat, expected to be over 100
degrees in the ring, and the
humidity, which will cause
them to lose a pound or more
a round each. '
"I'm .African and I have
fought under severe heat
conditions in Africa," Ali
said. "It won't bother me.
Europeans can't stand heat.
I'll get to Bugner."
The 2$-year~ld Hungarianborn Briton, who holds the
European heavyweight
crown, went through a
special training program set
up by the Royal Air Force in
Great Britain before he carne
here to wind up his training
for his second match with Ali.
"That was more severe
than I have found it here,"
Bugner said. "So I'm well
acclimatized to conditions
here. I can stand it. I can go
the distance at whatever pace
Ali wants."
In addition to the heat and
the other normal pre-fight
pressures, the 33-year~ld Ali
also was under other
pressures connected with his
announced intention to retire
after the Bugner fight.
He said he was being
plagued by people pressing

him to continue fighting, at

least for a third fight with Joe
Frazier in Manila, which
could earn All $10 milllon or
more.
Frazier arrived for the
fight Sunday and began
taunting Ali, accusing him of
trying to run out on the
rubber rna tch in their personal fight series which
stands at one win each,

Good
students
earn a discount

II your 1on or daugl'aler tip
good ;tiOet-you mily ...,.

on aulo •n~M.~rtnc:t from
NIIIQnWI&lt;II Call I

N•honwtd,e agent lor

comp•t•

~Mtalla

P. J. PAULEY
307 Spring Ave., Pomeroy

PH. 992-2318

FREE

GAR.MENtf
SCJ'ORAG
Now you can ·~utve all YOur' fan and winter
garments dry cleaned and stortcl tree of
ch•rge until needed la..r.
Bring tllerllln NC)W, Then pick up letw end li'A y
ONLY 11'111 cleaning cl'lllrae.
.

INSURED FUR STORAGE·
For All Your Furs Available Here

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

Robinson's Ceaners
214 E . 2nd

992-5421

POMEROY

••
•

NoteS

•

Historicall y, Amcnca has been "the la nd of tlpporiunity" I
But "opportunity"' ts becomtng a tlucatcncd spcctes.
The opportuntty to work and ILl .t chicve a better ljltality of life is
threatened by the incredstng problem of ene rgy supply. . ,

' w

Columbia Gas is workirig·to help
so lve the energy citsi!'i. There
stil l n lot
n~tural gas dt:ep
underground in America.
Columbia is tcst·dnlling
to depths of nearly four
miles for thi~ clean ~ts
cncrg.y. Thts makes t~c cost
of cxpluratton and

or

Portland, 7:30 each evening;
ReY. Bud Hatfield in charge;
special singing each evening.

Polly's PoinrArc
KV

IS

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hart

Hart-Holley wed
in April ceremony
Ltnda Lou
Holley , daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Basil Holley, Rt. 2,
Galltpolis, and Arthur Jeffrey
Hart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur H Hart, New Haven ,
W Va. , were untied tn
marriage May 23, at 7:30 p.
m. The wedding took place at
the Elizabeth Chapel Church
with Rev. Ernest E. Baker
offictating .
The bride was alttred in a
lon g flowi ng gown in an off
wht te shade . She wore a
brown straw hat and carried
a white Btble wtth streamtng
yellow sweetheart roses and
GALLIPO LIS ~

porn pons.
Her maid of honor wa s
Tammy Hart, New Haven , W.
Va ., stster of the groom. Her
gown was aqua .trimmed tn
off white. She carried a
bouquet of yellow sweetheart
roses with yellow carnations
tn the middle dipped in aqua.
Best man for Hart was Bill
Gibbs, New Haven, W Va.
A receptiOn tmmedtately
following the ce remony was
held at the bride 's home.
The new Mrs Hart ts
employed at the Ohto Valley
Bank . Hart is employed at the
Jones Boys.

Mothers enjoy picnic
LETART, W. Va . ~ The
Mason Mothers Club held a
ptcntc re cently for members
and thetr fa mtltes at the
Ractne Locks and Dam here.
Mrs .
Nolan
( Lu ctll e)
Swackhamer, chairwoman of
the nominating commtltee,
presented the officers for the
coming year who are,
president, Gladdie Stewart;
v1ce prestdent, Phyllis
Knopp; secretary, Earlene
Bumgardn er, and treasurer,
Carol Proffitt.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Wtllis Bentley and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Rober t

Kincaid and Jason, Mr. and
Mrs . James Proffitt, Terri
and Angie; Mr . and Mrs .
Larry Noble , Chris and Jeff ,
Mrs. Robert Stewart and ,
Robin ; Mr. and Mr~ . Ge or ge
McFarland, Carla and Mary;
Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Fowler, Mark and David;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Yeager, Mr. and M_rs. Ralph
Ross and Shawn; Joe Lish
and Lisa; Mr. and M&lt;S,. Larry
Bumgardner and Emily,
Tom, Jeffrey and Rodney,
and Mr . and Mrs. Nolan
Swackham er

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEA R POLLY - Need we
tell an yone"tha t once a waffle
ir on has been seasoned the
gnds never need regreastng?
A frt end bor rowed my
wonderful waffle tron, a ktnd
that cann ot be replaced. and
greased the grids ~ now th ey
are dark , bw·ned looking and
smoke when heated. I would
certamly appreciate kn owtng
tf anythm g ca n be done to
restore them ~ Mrs. F .J .K.
DEAR MRS. J.K. ~ Grid s
to a waffle iron naturally
darken with age. You mi ght
clean the grids with a slightly
dampened steel wool pad to
remove that burned-on fat.
Brush out all loose particles
and then reseason. To do this
apply a small amount of
UNSALTED fat with a pastry
brush to get in all the
crevices. Close and turn on
low heat for 8 to 10 minutes,
turn off and wipe away all
excess fat with paper towels.
After each use brush grids
with a stiff brush to remove
crumbs or bits of burned-on
batter.~ POLLY.

Birthday
honored

l1tscm ery more expensive.
But, when you constdcr the
'1lternati ve ot: less energy,
we thmk you'll ugrce

Compare and Save!

LAFF- A- DAY

VISITED
Mrs . Harry E. Hoagland,
Miss Grace Sauvage, Mrs.
Ernest A. Jones and son,
Kenneth, all of Columbus,
were wekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry S. Moore.
They came especially for the
t "~ 4)~&lt;
~- =- !20th anniversary ob·
V J l I ~ ,·
--1-- servance of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
, ~.. ==::==
~.J..I
, ...;!JL
~ V'tr''" Church. Other re cent visitors
...
..
of Mr. and Mrs. Moore were
··Anu " h.tt 11 1 don "t \\ant to
Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Moore,
rt1.lk( •siH l1 1' \\ olll all .1 \\ nnd erful
Jr., Ashland, Ky.

_j

L

~\

' "V
'

~~ )-~
/

POMEROY Chapter 186,
O.E .S. 1 7:45 p.m . at

the

· ·· ·-·~- - ~

Pomeroy Masomc Temple . hu s h,UJd s om l'

d.t ~

~- -··-

' ·

Initiation with all officers to
wear formals.

!!! !!! ;;; e!!!!

,f,.lt..

the pnce is not too htgh.

"

or sena l plate defaced
'Warranty applies In Canada except for taxes, dut tes, and

1

ass essment s tev1ed at ltme of

St a ndi~g

still. or keeping things just as they
are , may be fine fur some people . But fm all
the rest whll stmc for t·he opportunity ltl
better thetr lives, we must h.t&gt;c more energy.
More gas, oil, clean-burning coal and
clectncal gcncr.tting c.tpacity
'
Gas is predous, pure enriJIY , , • use, It wisely,
to keep America 'the lan~l of opportunity.

~WMBIAGAS

I

/

FOR KIDS-'

ADULT MEAL

FUNMEALlM

B1g Shet·.

Play it aafe and· sure.
It may be time to
have your preaent
policy updated,

Fu n Tray,

Reg French Fries .
Turnover &amp;
L arge Soli Onnk

·.

DALE C. WARNER
992.2143

101 W Main

Pomeroy

IOWA

For las1 3 Days of June
ALL .AMANA
AIR CONDniONERS AT

Funbur g ~r ·,

Reg French Fnes

Surpnse Pr1ze,
Reg So ft Onnk &amp;
a Sweet Treat

l•t's Faile" Soon
OFFICE
RS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 I CLOSE
AT NOON -ON THURS.l-EAST COURT

""""~"""

5-YEAR WARRANTY

Amana warrants for tlve years from date of on g1nal purchase,
parts and related , lab or when pr oduc t ts used lo r n or ma l home
use Wilh tn the US and warranty serv tce p erfo rmed by an
auth onzed Am ana serv tcer
Owner's responsibility ts for servtce man 's trave l charges, loCal
cartage repl acement ol gaske ts, litte rs, ru bb er or pl asti c
parts tns tal lat1 o n k11 maten ar. appea ranc e tlern s and norma l
matntenance
' Warranly void wh ere product ts mtsused , damaged or al tered,

VISITED
Mrs. and Mrs. Fred S.
Shoenfelt and children,
Craig, Jeff, Michael, Janell,
and Matthew of Roaring
Spring, Pa., and Mrs. Eva
Kauffman, MartlnsbiU'g, Pa.
were the weekend guests or
Mr. and Mrs. Opha Offutt.

DEAR POLLY ~ My Pet
Peeve is with those small
articles of hardware that are
put m heavy plasttc packages
that must cost as much as the
article tlse lf. After struggling
to open them we sometimes
fm d the ttern does not fit.
Th ere is no chance of returntn g tl for the nght stze as that
pl as lt c ts broken .
HAROLD
DEAR POLLY ~ When you
splash paint on your eye
glasses don' t use paint
remover or gasoline to clean
tt off You mtght wreck
pl as lt c or even metallic
fr ames. I use toothpaste . It
removes any kind of paint
and leaves the le nses shiny
an d clear with no obJectio nabl e
odor.
MILDRED.
DEAR POL LY - My
Potn ter pertains to a toy my
husban d made for our daugh~r when she wa s small and
tha t she still uses Perhaps
other handy fathers would
like to try t t, too. He built a
pi~ wood stove that had a door
for the oven and a pot drawer
below that. Burners were
pai n~d on the top Besides
entertaimng her it was a neat
storage place for her tea sets.
Now tha l she ts too old for
this as a troy we have given it
a bnght new coat of paint
covenng up the "burners"
an d added a clear plastic
door knob and drawer pull.
Now it is her bedside table
an d holds books and records
inside and her lamp on top . ~
DONNA.
DEAR POLLY ~ Want a
safe and easy way to keep
your stainless steel sink or
stove top lookin g like new and
with no lime spots? Rub with
the cut side of a lemon, rinse
and wtpe dry . Wrap lemon
and save in the refrigerator
to be·used aga m. ~ MRS. E.

DARWIN ~ Mr. an d Mrs.
Jim Smith of Darwin honored
their daughter-in-law , Mrs.
Patty Smith wt lh a surprise
btrthday party recently.
Guests were Clarence
Story, Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Duncan , L a u~a Harrtso n,
Junior Dars t, Jam es H
Smith, Brian Smith, Glenna
Mayles, Nancy Smith, Pearl
Allen Smtih, Paul Smith and
Mr. and Mrs . Waide Smtih .
Homemade ice cream and
cake were served Unable to
attend, but sendtng a gift
was Rosalie Story.
K.

AMANA REFRIG

INJURED
Michael Goeglein, son of
Mr. and Mrs. . Charles
Goegl~in, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, is a
patient at · St. \wseph 's
Hospilal, Room 434.'-Michael
underwent surgery Sunday
morning to repair a severely
lacerated arm received when
he fell through a window
saturday afternoon.

Pi1U.Y CRAMt;K

Don't waffle the
iron cleaninR

MONDAY
EASTERN
Athletic
WEDNESDAY
' Boosters will meet at 7:30
REGULAR Meeting,
p.m. to make final plans for Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
their July 4th Chicken Bar-B- 7:30p.m. All Master Masons
Q and Pony Pull. Please invited.
attend.
REVIVAL at the Freewill
nJEsDAY
Bapltst Church on Ash St. in
STATE MEETING, Middleport beginning
Mjddle~rt Masonic Lodge tonight. Services will begin at
363, F&amp;AM,. 7:30 p. m. All 7:30 nightly. Everyone is
Master Masons· invited.
invited and special singers
REGULAR MEETING, are wanted.
MARC, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
INFORMING MARTHA'he may be late for supper,
Meigs Mental Health Center,
George Washington, bearing a startling resemblance to
236 W. Second St., Pomeroy,
The largest ctgars m the wu1rm.
actor Richard Basehart; chats in a telephone booth in
Everyone welcome,
two
feet, eight-and-a-quarter
Manhattan. Basehart was in New York filming a TV
REVIVAL , at
Hazel ches long, are made m Andotra
special, ,"Valley forge" in which he portr~ys Gen.
Washington. The program Is part of a Bicentenmal trilogy . Community Church off Route - one of the smallest countries in
124 between Long Bottom and the world
to be broadcast in November.

opport~~

It's ironic that the emphasb on natural gas
price rcgulution and demand s fot tmmediate
and far-rangtng environmental control. on otl
delivery dampen the very hope for a cleaner
cnvtronment. fot ~1dtcr l&gt;oust;tg. Because the
solutions to most of our other national
problems depend on havrng suflicicnt energy
to sol\e them.

Green
Thumb

Social
Calendar

Let's keep
America
the land of

The cnc1 gy en sis that seemed S&lt;; brg and vague
and fur away gets closer every day. Industry
especi,tlJy h,ts become acutely dWare of energy
shortages. And every business and industry
Ill Anrenca depends on .tn ampl e supply of
energy to provide job Llpportunities for a work
force that inercascs by mer a mtllion every year.

uS

.Pastor welcomed

Rev . Robert Hyaden was mtttee;
Mrs
Gerald
:~;~ offtctally welcomed as pastor Wild ermuth,
ftnanctal
\~
By Helen Bottel :;:; of the Ponieroy United secretary ; Mrs Boney
~:• • •
::;; Methodist Church at a Mitchell, Sunday School
..
fhe Three Faces of 'Me'
.;.: potluck dinner at the church treasurer ; Mrs. Roy Reuter,
DEAR HELEN ·
Sunday night.
prestdent of the United
That old question, "What does a woman want ?" is outServtn g as master of Methodtst Women ; Mrs. V,
dated, Taking ils place Is "What does society want out of a ceremomes for the dinn er D Edwards of the JOF Class,
woman?" And it 's a tough one'
party was C E Blakeslee, and David Edwards of the
Right now I have a real psychological war going on be- chairman of th e pa stor - Sunday school.
tween the "Three Me's"- the Feminine Me, the Female Me, pansh relation s commt ttee,
A response was given by
and the Femmist Me. (Defmitions: Femimne ~ swe et and wit h welc omes being ex- Rev. Mr. Hayden who was
girlish; Female - my real ''gut'' image of myself; Feminist ~ tended by Clarence Struble, ac companted to the dtnner by
my consciousness raised .)
lay leader; Allen Downie, his wtfe and son , Ttmmy.
I am a college graduate, married to a femme-female- chairman of administration Mrs. June VanVranken led tn
feminist sympathetic male _ can you grok it? and hard at board ; Kermtt Walton, group singing .
work on my career.
chairman of ftn ~ nce rom So I seem to be getting along pretty well with Female Me
(though she's too conscientious'and demands a lot of me) and • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
wtth Feminist Me right now. I have dignity, and I've ac- e
•
compltshed something!
•
And then Femimne Me pops up!
•
I thought I'd gotten her licked years ago when I learned •
•
that acting like Scarlett O'Hara ~ on a New England college •
campus ~ made me look and feel like an idiot. Still~
:
:
Feminine Me offers a lot of easy, un-stomach-upsetting •
•
outs. When I was job-hunting and having little success, SHE •
e
listened to all the older people who told Female Me, "It's your •
husband's job to support you!" (An idea that Female Me and •
•
Feminist Me razzed.)
•
•
Female Me and Feminine Me have some things m com- •
A weekly feature of Meta•
•
mon, like wanting a baby and taking a few years off to have • County Garden Club members.
•
one. But Female Me has responsibilities and priorities: work
fhe Rose Garden Club
hard, save for your future, get your much-needed advanced
fuppers Plains, Ohio
degree first. Feminist Me eggs her on: work also for the
By Maude E. Gray
glorification of yourself and all Womankmd. (Well, may he on a
·
small scale.)
.
ONE MEfHOD OF PRESERVING FWWERS
So, no matter what I do I'm in the doghouse with one of the
The miracle of preserving flowers is as old as time. There
Me's. I'm very" involved with my cweer and work long hours at are so many ways that it would be unpossible to try to explain
it. Feminine Me doesn't like that.
all of them in such a short space. So I will use the one that I use
l shop, cook, launder and do housework (which last, I most with the best results.
loathe). My man helps, but he isn't as thorough as Feminine
I use "Silica Gel" for which one of the trade names is
Me would want. Feminist Me says "Stow it: House Beautiful "Flower Dri." Silica Gel is a mixture of fine white granules
doesn't live here!" But Female Me wants a liveable en- and a small amount of coarser blue granules; the blue
vironment for we two.
branules turn pink or white when the compound has absoroect
If Feminine Me makes the other two Me's feel guilty now, ils maximum amount of moisture. After flowers have been
think what she'll do when the children come. Yet if I cave in to removed, the Silica Gel can be reactivated and used over and
her, the other two Me's will declare war.
over~ simply pour the mixture into a shallow pan and place in
Am I insane? Am I "normal"? Well, at least I know that a 300 degree oven until the granules turn blue again ~ seal in
I'm ~NOT A SUPERWOMAN
an airtight container and allow to cool before using again.
DEAR NOT:
Be sure and select your flowers when they are fresh , unThanks for a great letter!
blemished and dry. A pansy ~ or violet - or any flat flower is
You're normal! In fact, I'd say you're practically best to start with. Cut the flower from the stalk, leaving a !"
EVERYWOMAN) except for those who still have the "snug as stem. Push a 6" length of 22 or 26 gage green covered florist
a weevil in an oatmeal box" outlook on marriage).
wire mto the stem. Bend the wire to form a loop at the point
All of us who combine sallsfying careers with good that it attaches to the stem. This forms a little stand to hold the
marriages know (or sense) this fight between the "Three flower upright. The wire can be straightened and used as a
Me's," but most of us couldn't express it as well as you have . stem by covering with green floral tape.
Ideally, "Female Me" should incorporate " femine"
Cover the bottom of an airtight container with a I" or 2"
without the prissiness, and "feminist" without the militancy, layer of Silica gel. Push the wire stem with the flower face up
but tradition-versus-ambition still bats us back and forth in the layer of silica gel so that the petals will rest on the
between the two extremes .
compound, Carefully cover the flower with silica gel. This 1s
And maybe that's okay : it's more fun being three persons done by allowing the mixture to flow from your hand around
than one, and if we can learn to compartmentalize ourselves the edge of the container, not on the flower.
(giving each area of our lives ils rightful time) we can say When the silica gel is built up to!" or 2" high, gently tip"the
as I often do ~ "This is ME: wife, mother, careerist, container in all directions. This will allow the mixture to
housewifelllbut not necessarily in that order " (Though , trickle around the base of the flower. Build the mixture around
personally, housework is flat last and "enjoyed " only as a the flower before sifting the mixture on top of the flower. Keep
,
remedy for brain-fag. )
leveling it off until the flower is covered, then add I" silica gel
Women, l think, ar luckier than men because we aren't so on top.
one-directional. While society still programs married males
Cover the contamer tightly; tape the cover on if necessary
into the single role of breadwinner, we modern females can to keep air out. Put the container where it will not be moved.
have several widely different lives. And if we juggle them well, Most flowers take from three to four days to dry. Do not peek!
we may never get bored, even if our "Three Me's" seidom
To remove the flower, slowly pour off the silica gel until
allow- US much rest . ~H .
you can lift the flower out by its stem. Be very careful; some
flowers get verj brittle. If a petal falls off, replace it with clear
drying glue. Be sure and gently blow off exces silica gel. ·
These flowers may be used in an arrangement or mounted
on a card board covered with velvet or other material. Use a
very small amount of glue to mount flowers. Frame in a
• shadow box or any frame that has a convex glass so the glass
j doesn't touch the flower.
,Dry foliage the same way, but these can be laid flat and
· done in layers.
This is an interesting hobby, makes lovely gifts, and some
• people make them to sell.
Try your luck, and after you have experimented with a
few, you will find many ways of keeping your garden fresh
flowers for many years to come.
:~~

By CHARLES R. SMITH
KUALA LUMPUR (UP!)
~ The severe heat conditions
under which they wtll be
ftghting was much on the
minds of World Heavyweight
Champion Muhammad Ali
and challenger Joe Bugner as
the two fighters went into the
final hours before their ISround title match here
tonight.
"The heat is going to tell
tomorrow," said Ali 's
longtime ring doctor, Ferdie
Pacheco. "This is going to be
a survival of the fittest with
stamina under the heat being
a vital factor."
Bugner's trainer-manager,
Andy Smith, agreed.
" I doubt if there ever has
been a major title fight ever
held under more intolerable
heat conditions than we are
likely to encounter," Smith

0 ., Monday, June 30 1975

rH;i;=~·-·= ·u·;i== = = = = = = = = = = = =: : : : ;: : : : : :::~~
r
.·
p
~1:

100 degree plus temps

Tigers in twi -nighter

OAK BROOK, Ill. (UP!) ~
Lee Trevino, usually the
happy.ga-lucky Mexican on
the pro goH tour, thinks he
probably should have been
buried this morning about
10:30.
Instead, Trevino, Bobby
Nichols and Jerry -Heard
were released from Hinsdale
Hospital Sunday after two
days recovering from the
effects of lightning bolts
which struck near the three
golfers Friday.
Trevino and Nichols withdrew from the tournament
but Heard was back on the
course Sunday. He shot a 74
and wound up in a tie for
fourth at 143 going into
today's final 36 holes.
The three golfers app&lt;ared
at a news conftrence at the
hospital in nearby Hinsdale,
after which Trevino withdrew
and left for his home in El
Paso, Tex., where he plans to
rest a few days. If given the I
okay by his doctor, he "plans
to leave Saturday to play in
the British Open.
"I found out that a two-foot
side hiller is not the most 4/i!i!Adi!.i/il'i!i!!?""'"'~'' ._._•• ,.
important thing in the 1•' 1.; .'""'·~•N·n,;. ·
world," Trevino said. "I ~ay ""'"' i;'il@r~mralll&gt;';ifi!wtJhit those thmgs now Without
'
~
cleaning the ball. I thought by
all rights they should be • Lower cost per square foot
• Fast, tlllclent erection
putting me in the ground· at • Many standard sizes available
• Built by our trained crew•
10:30 Monday morning.
• Algid design prectlcee
• Field Planning service
"It wasn't quiterainifig and U!T .UMBAUGH I.(IAKE WAREHOUSING WORRY-FREE FOR YOU!
I sent the calldy up to get--------- .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - some soft drinks and the next
MAIL TO
0 Tell me more about t~ Umbaugn mettrRI(
thing I remember, it knocked UMBAUGH
Nom•
•
PIJI 3
me completely OUt of there" BUILDING SYSTEM Acdrth
-. .
"d "It
'
P..o Box 102
Tr evmo
sal ·
was a Mertett•. otuo 4S7SO L11y
state
0.
sensation I'd never felt ..,..,, '"·173-orlo
- - - - ____ _,.__
,
Phone No.:=========
before. My whole life . was
passing before me in about
two seconds. l really thought
BUilDING SYSTEM
it had me,"

0

:i - The ~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

Indians open against

I

•

Fencing thamplonships
LOS ANGELES (UP!) NewYork 's PeterWestbrook
has won hts second straight
sabre tttle in the U.S.
National Fencing Cham,
pionshtps .
The other major winners in
the seven.OOy competition
which concluded Saturday
Scott
Bozek,
wer e
Washington, D.C., epee ; Ed
Ballenger, New York , foil,
and Nikki Tomlinson,
Phtladelphta, women's foil .
They wtll head the U.S.
fencmg contingent that will
go to the Pan-American
Games at Mexico City thts
year. Bozek and Ballenger
each ~aplured their second
national crown m three years
while Tomlinson was a firstyear winner
NBA DONA fED $5,000
SPRINGFIELD, Mass.
(UP!) ~ The Basketball Hall
of Fame has been given a
$5,000 contribution by the
National Bask e tball
Association.
The funds will be used to
maintain and improve the
basketball shrine, Director
Lee Williams said. The
donation marked the eighth
consecutive year the NBA
has contributed to the Hall of
Fame.

Last Year's Prices!

Ingels Furniture
PT. PLEASANT
2325 Jack&gt;on Ave.

GALLIPOLIS
!503 Eastern Ave .
,·, Cooyu[llll

1~75

6 ut g.t!l Chcl Syste ms Inc

'

•
r

Open Fri. ti 1a- Saturday til 5

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

e

�'

.1::- The Daily Sentlru!l, Middleport-Pomeroy

• 6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer oy, 0 , Monw y, J une 30, 1975

{J1&amp;100ffi)1[;;; tkt ~,.... et.J.-J""'"
L'n~Cr&lt;lmblc l hl'Sl' fuurJumbles,

'

•

h• tt er to t&gt; ac h square, to
form four o rdinar) \\ o rds.
Oht&gt;

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Ill- l l ,,1
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b - .50

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as

J I I

I I

WILKINSON
SMALL ENG

keys
1 191

Rcwilr d

rI I I I I I I )

blk
PA I R of half f ra m e g lasses tn
M1 dd l epo rt Rewa r d Phon e
99 2 3133
6 24 61(

mten or , stl ve r gr ey f~ n 1 sh. Sp eo al

1971MATADOR

$1495

4 door , loca l car , a i r conditioned , f u ll equ i pment .

197 0 NOVA Y·8 Cpe.

$1295

V m y l r oof, g r ey fini sh , h 1g h mtlea ge, good t1 r e s,
a utom atiC, powe r ste er 1ng. ra d 1o, s i l ver f i n1sh Bl ack

Wanted To Do

Ground

Jumhl,-. NEWLY

GLEAM

HAU NCH

/ \ u·• r·r· Om rd lllll-,.,t fmu

NOTI CE OF
cop 1CS o f th e p rop o sed budoct
and eS I1n r a t c o l
cos t o f
operal 10 n o l t h e M c rqs Local

l ht• "'l llfft't•- A N ANGLE

T H f\N "- -. to all 111e tr tend s and
n cr qllbors who sen t fl owe r s
cllld CCH dS dU r tnq 111 (' Il ln ess
~nd d eat h o f 111 y m o th er
M rs Sr s WtSC Your kt nd
1' css was tlp pr ec ta!ed Mrs
fV1azt c Hannahs and Fa m 1l y
6 29 2t p

Mc tc;s
Coun t y of M1dd l cpo rt Qh,o
m c 1u&lt;11 nq tir e cost of operil t ,,,q
the publ1c sc hools o l sa1d
OIS i rtc l lor t he lt sc al ycur o f
1~ J M e on fil e rn the ofl rc e of
THE DAUG H TER S Of M r s
cle r k o f
the
E1oar d
of
Mab!C' Swtsher wts h to
Education at1d open to 111
express lllCir apprccta l ton
spect ton of th e pu b l1c pur suan t
o f tt1e ~o~ndness and h elpfu l
to th e rcq u,r cmc nts o f law
n e ss
dur1nq
t he
A oub li c llea r tnq on ttrc
llosp ,tal tlatton and d ea t h of
oropo sed bu dq et for the pu b l1c
thc tr n to l her the sta ff of
schools wil l b e hel d at the
Veter a n s
Memor1a l
Off1ce ol th e Su per ~tl tcndcnt ,
Ho!-&gt;pllal nu r ses Or Telle
M1ddleport , Oh10 , on July 8,
~11 1d Dr
P 1c kens
19 75 at 7 30 P M
M rs
Paul Nevrl te and
Mrs Gle n n Hansacn
L W M e Corn as
6 30 li e
Cl erk T r casurer
M e tQ S LocJI
School D 1str.cr
Board o t Educat ton
NOW sellmg F ull er Bru sh
(6 ) 30 , 17) 7, 2t c
Produc ts
phOne 992 34 10
1 24 lf c
Sc hool

D •sfr ,c t

of

Kuhl Cake Decor

Notice

Racine

NOTICE OF SA LE
Th e F ar m er s Ba n k
&amp; Sa v 1ng s Co , P l a tnldf

Events
By Mrs. Fran r1s Morris
Mrs. Ma n e Roy was
hostess at the home of Mrs
James Swar t for the Booster
Class of First Baptis t Church
School Friday evemng J une
20. The prog ram topic was
" Teac h Us to Pr ay "
by Hele n Simpson who
had a r eading on the top1c a nd
scr ipture Luke 11 ·1-3 A due t
·'Teach Me to PI'By' ' by Vera
Beegle and MarJOri e Gnmm
and a readmg m sel'en par ts.
"Instruction in Pra yer " were
pr ese nted. Other r·eadJng s
were A Fool's W1se Pra}er He Understand s - Be Strll,
Give Thanks to God, Prayers
are the Sta1rs to l~od Mrs
Stmpson closed the p•og ram
w1th prayer, followed with
group smging " Savior , Lrke a
Shepherd Lead Us" after
which a busin es session and a
quiz game wa s held . Dun ng
the fe llowship hour de hcious
refreshments wer e served to
12 members and one guest by
Mrs Roy assisted by Mrs.
Swar t and her daughter , Mrs.
Marg1e Crow.
Mr . and Mrs. Alan Cun mngham announce the brrth
of their fi rst c hild, a g1rl, 7
lbs., I oz. June 20 at Holzer
Medical Ce nte r , named
Oli v1a J o Ma ternal grandparents are Mr ani!, Mrs.
Robert Hart and Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
,Mrs. Raymond Cun ningham
pf
Syrac use.
Greatgt:andparents are Mr . an d
Mrs. Gerald Hayman of East
Letart an d Mrs. Be ula h
Roush of Middleport.
· Mr . and Mrs. Laurence
Gr1mm of Green Acres , Fla
ann ounce the btrth of a baby
boy on June 19. Mr . and Mrs
Roderi ck
Gr im m
ar e
paternal grandparents.
Mr . ~d Mrs . Dale Mancell
of Roc hester, Pa ., came to
visr t therr cousms, Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Powell and accompamed them on a trtp for
a week. Th ey went to
Evansvi lle and Madison , Ind .
then to Louisville and toured
several days on the Island
Queen . Mrs. Powell had the
honor of pla ymg the caliope
and Mr. Man cell jomed in the
orchestra . There "ere over
two hundred passengers and
seventy-fi ve attendants on
the boat.

35 09

6 29 61c

1968 CA M AR O , 6 c y l i n d er ,
a uto rna t 1c, w tth very lo w
m tl eage , $800 Ph on e 99 2
7689
6 '1.7 6tc

TWO 2 b ed room
mobil e
hom es , 1 fur n iS h ed , 1 un
fu r n 1s h ed H a rr 1s1b nvill e
197 1 P INTO, 4 s;o ~~q, 2000
Phon e 742 31 23
6 24 6.tp_ eng1ne , n ew v al ve s, p l ug s
~ __ ·---'----- _
il n d po1nt s, 44,000 a ctual
GA R J\G E SA LE 1 mil e fr om
nt des Phone 992 228 0 or 992
T WO
BR
Mobtl e H ome
Ba sh an on Co R d 32 toward
5771
D eposil re qutred Phon e 99 2
124 New an d used c toth 1nQ
6 29 3tp
3429
and o the r m •sc 1tem s Jun e
75th thr u J ul y 1
6 24 61p
19 67 DODG E V an, good
6 26 6lp TRA I L E- R-· s·pa;e~-; ~ -rn-;
con d .t ron $850 Phon e 98 5
n or th of Me tgs H 1g h Sc hool
3594
YA RD SA LE at t h e F r ed d y
on ol d R t 33 Phon e 99 2 294 1
6 29 7tp
Moore r est d en ce , 3 m il es
6
29
lt
c
so uth o f M iddl eport , Sun
1967 F O R D convert ible , g ood
d a y , Mon d ay and Tue sd ay
car $4 00 Ph on e 99 2 530 1
a p artm e n t
from 10 am . 11 11 6 p m In ~FUR NI S H E D
6 29 5t c
a du l ts onl y tn Mi d dl epon '
ca se of ra i n , w dl be po st
Phon e 992 387 4
paned
3 25 H e
6 29 lt c ---

Yard Sale

I;

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

Pets For Sale

Employment Wanted69B56 07

6 26 6tc
CAR PE NTRY

WORK

-

f,ND 1 ROO M furn1 sh c d an d
un f urniS hed
apart ment s
Ph on e 997 5 IJ4

l

J

12 ti c

PRI VI\ lE mee tm g r oo m for
an y or gt1 n,zat 1o n . p h on e 992
197S
3 11 ttc
1\ PT l 1ke n ew 3 roo ms , wil h
la rg e b ath , tabl e to p ran ge ,
larg e c loset Eas t M a tn St ,
Pome r oy See to ap prec 1a t e
P hone Ga lli po l iS dur i ng d a y ,
.146 7699 , eve nmgs 4d6 953 9
'I 10 lfc
5

RM
f ur n1 sh ed ap t
1n
M td dl epo r t Wash e r and
drye r , utilt t 1es pa 1d Phon e

992 2676

6 27 6tc

12 x '1 2 2 B E OR M t ra il er . re al
ll!Ce Phon e 992 J32.-1
6 19 tf c
T R AIL ER sp ace , 1 m i l e f r o m
Pom eroy
Phon e 992 585 8
5 2 tf c
TW O ho u ses 1n Pome roy , 210
an d 2 12 Condor S't Ca ll 99 2
2659
6 18 12t p

FQr Sale

C AB B AG E a nd
Ph on e 843 2495

197 1
25 0
CC
Yama h a
Tra tl b1ke, 6500 m il es $450
Phon e Roger Karr , 985 3538 ,
call or com e a ft er 5 p m
6 29 4f p
O N E 3 p1 ece b lOn de b edrm
SUtte, $ 100
Call 8d 32 111
Sun day or w ee kd a y s a ft er 7
pm
6 29 3t c
TWO
B E D RM
m o d ul a r ,
car p e ted , Ul1ill1 eS p a rd , no
ch ildr en o r p ets
Near
Pome ro y, n1c e to c a t ,o n
Av ai l a bl e now Phone 992
7666 or 99 2 7017

6 29 3tc

CO U NT RY M ob i l e Ho me
Pa r k , Rt 33, ten mil es nor th
of Po me roy Larg e tot s W1fh
conc r e te pa lios , s id e w~ll(s ,
runne r s a nd o ff s tr e e t
p a r lo..1 n q Phone 992 7479
12 3 I If(..
F

U RN apt 5 room s a n-d bal"h:
n1ce la rc:je ya rd , bath an d 1
390
South
Second
St
M td d l eport. a d ult s o nly
P hon e 992 52 62 ev en tng s
5 2 I I fc

For Sale

P.ORTA-COOL"'
ROOM-to-ROOM
/rliiiiii'=iiiiiiiii R e g b J • 95
139 95
- ,, OOOBT
U

c

--

On ly 13 lb
ther m od el s
on sale

iPOMEROY LANDMA'ItK
9. _J.ack W. Corsty, Mtr. ·
6il Phone 992·2111 · ,

- -- -

Man n mg D W ebster
Commo n Pl eas Cour t,
Pr ob at e D 1v 1s io n
Me1gs County , Oh 1o

16 ,

23,

30.

3tc

NOTICE OF
A PP O I NTME NT
Ca se No. 21479
E .. t &lt;-. t c
of
M ii r y
W CII 5
D ecease d
N01 1C€ rS he r eby QiVCn t hai
Joyce 1\ n a vrs o f Po me ro y ,
Oh10 . t; as b een duty appot n led
1\dn Hn,s tr a lr l x of the Es t a t e
o f A~My We ll s d ece as ed tate
of Me 1qs County Oh 10
Cr c dllor s art&gt; r cQutrect ro
f 1l(' !hctr
c lntms W1 f h sa1d
hdu c! ary w llhm four n1onths
Dated l ht5 lHlh dny o f Jun e
197 s

1tJ

1

Mannmq D Webs ter
Jud r::Je
l l, 30 O J 7 Jtc

Wanted
9531

4 13 tf c

-

-- - --- -

--- .

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

-Wanted To Buy
DOG HO USE Large, cheap
Phon e 992 3804

6 25 3tp

DEE P wa te r we l l
Phon e 742 477 2

-- - - -

p um p

27 Jtc
------- -6 --

6

29 71p

7494

6 29 6t c

CHEVROLET

1963 Em pala

Hdtp , 6 c y t , s t a n d ar d
tra n Smi SSIOn 20 M P G $27 5
Ph on e 992 7826

OLD f urn1t ur e, 1ce boxes ,
b ra ss beds , or comp lete
household s Wri te N.
0 - ----:.....:......:.....:...:·!::6;.:2e,:9.::·3::_t!:_p
M il l er , R t 4, Pome r oy·
Oh iO Ca ll 99 2 !760
' H&amp; N day old or sta rt e d
10-7-74
leg horn pull ets Bo th fl oor
or cage gro wn a vaal abl e.
Po u lt r y
ho us 1n g
and
au t oma t1 on
Mode rn
Poult r y , 399 W
Ma 1n,
P A RT TI ME
P erma n ent
Pomero y9 92 2164
6 29 lt c
loca l
wor k
c h eck 1n g
se r 1a i 1Zed mven to r y at reta i l - - - - - - --- -- - - ··
s to r e s
fo r
m a j ar
m an uf acture r s
No
1n ST EREO
radio ,
m od e r n
v estm ent l nvench ek , Bo x
d esig n, B track tape , A M F- M
766 80, Atl an ta , Ga . 30328
r adio combin at1on Ba l an ce
--- - 629-3tp $102 99 or te r ms Ca ll 992-

- ---------Help Wanted

-.--

~t~~:zhe~o

3965

:;r

T.~~l lie E . reRRA C E: . A nt 1qu e Sh op
Port1and ' Oh ' o 4'577 Qo x 114 •
r e t 1r mg from . bust ness All
'
,
merch an d1se 111 stock wtl l b e
_ ____ _
6·25 12tp
so ld a t a lar ge disc oUnt
- - ---· - ·T er r ace
Ant iQues ,
10 8
T err ace
Le e
L e gion
R Udi SIJI

For Rent

Poles, maximum dia. 10" on
largest end ...... •7.00 per ton
Bundled Slabs... !6.00 per ton
DELIVERED TO:

OHIO PALLET CO.
Ph , 992•2689

.'

TR /I IL E R spa ce, all utili fl es
ch ea p Phorte 991 5535 .
'
' 6 29 tf c
~

-.

.. .

BEDRM
h ous e,
un
furn 1sh ed 1\ lso , 1 rur n1 Sh Cd
apt P hon e 992 2180 or 99'1
3·132
6 29 tfc
T WO be droom m ob i le home in
'•y ra cuse D c po s1t r eq u ,red
No c h i ld ren or pe ts Phon e
99'1 2111 .:t it er 5· 10 om
6 10 tt c

fWE DO:
i Roofing

I

- Siding
jcomplete
Home
Maintenance.

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING
Construction
and Plumbina

6 6 261p
..... -· - .. -· --

.....

CHE'CK ou r P r i ces~ New ste el
to e work boo t s , leat h er
upper S16.95 Sl 9 95 , sizes 1
to l •l ~ew · r eg toe w ork
boots , tea t her up p er s 15 95
\ 17 95, s1zes 6 to 14 . Men's
used work cl oth es , shi r ts
99c, J,.ants , 51 09 New store
hour s, 9 00 l o 5 00 M onday
th r ouqh Satu r day
£1osed
Tll ursd ay an d s un d ay . 11
',' c ar s tn l h is loc~tf lon ,
fl &lt;ll i ey ' s Barg a i n Store ,
M1dd! eport.

6 26 6tp

STORAGE BUILDING - 2
stories with parking and 3 car
ga rage to rent, near the T In
Middl eport
.3 BUSINESS BUILDINGS - 2
1n Middleport, one with 4
apartm e nts

and

bu s in ess

room
2 FAMILY HOME - Reduced
for a real buy . 11 rooms, nat.
ga s, city water. Lot IOO'x100' .
WtLL TRADE - For camper,
mobile home, oickuo, bMt nr
what have you, that doesn't
eat.
NEW LISTING - On Rt 33.2
bedroom s, bath, 2 porches,
and ya rd.
POMEROY BUSINESS - In
good location on the upper
block.
BUILDING LOTS - Several
locations for hou ses or mob ile
homes. 51500.00 up.
ARE
YOU
HAVING ·
TROUBLE SELLING? SAVE
YOUR MONEY AND TtME . .

WIN AT BRIDGE
Use any excuse for game bid

"'\

any excu se at all "
J tm ;'So uth follow ed th1s
• 8i4
prmctple when he went to three
. AK876
notrump H1s reason was th at
t A 43
h1s ten-ru ne of hearts rrught just
... 6 2
help build up h1s par tner's heart
WEST
EAST
suit ..
AJ 96 5 3
4 Kl0
Oswa ld " Th ree not rum p
¥ Q4
•J 53 2
tsn' t a rea lly sound contract.
t QL0 7
• .1 962
but after the spade lead South
"' K 107
"' QJ 4 ., could count on lrve tn cks outSOUTH IDI
.
Side ttre heart su1 t "
A A Q2
J tm . " lt turned out that his
• 10 9
ten-nme of hearts were there to
t K85
gtve h1m fou r hea rt tncks m
... A9R53
sp1te of the 4-2 break. The sitght
pushmg bid paid oil we ll
NO RTH

-

. ·~t;t ~.

...

Clletltr, Olllo
1'

'""'15-4102
BORN LOSER

Home lullatftl

Room Adclltloos
MIIGII._ ·
5-5- 1 mo.

vLCOK ...-rn!:REIS WHERE. OUR
&amp;;..~.UTIFUL

LITILE fO,\E

~ STGro.

W5 ,II.(N€{)
/&gt;.. ~1 8\IAR~ Wi!Jb AtJDLA1~R '
ill~ i\OO€D N'OltieR WIN/&lt;&gt;
'e'I~~TUAWI .

" At Caution Laght"
Rt . 1, Tupp er s Pl ain s,

Radlato
Service

o.

.

--,-

Ph . 992·2174

327 N. 2nd

Middleport
5-30·1 mo .

Merle Nor man
Cosmetics

lOLA'S
BEAUTY SALON
John St•• Next To
Grade School
992-2549 Syracuse. 0 .
5·8·1 mo .

· Real Estate for Sale

FOR SALE!
40x85
Brick Building
ON
CORNER LOT IN
POMEROY
Business Section
Phone 992-3975 or
992-5786

FOR SALE
BY OWNER
Above

average,

6

room

house, 1 yr. old , garage,
near

mines,

util i ties,

located on Rt. 124 west of
Rutland , 2 acres of ground .

WaSher &amp; Diver
and
Small Appliance
Repair
Phone
992-3313

992 3525 or 99 2 5232

Ph one 742 627 3

Modern San i ta t io n 992 3954
or 99 2 73.:19

9 18 ttc

R &amp; S Excav ating , Back hoe
and li gh t hau lmg se r vices
Dr i veway sl ag deli ver P. t1

and

G·~O

GASOUNE ALLEY

Your sick
friend can't
be in here!

Phon e 13041 773 -534! or·74Z·

3664 day or evenmgs
6-4 .26 tc

- ----------

"vU LD YO U BE LIEVE&gt;
Build an all st eel building a t
Pol e Ba r n p ri c es? Gold en
G iant A ll St ee l Bui ldin g s
R t . 4, Box 148, W averl y;
Oh to Ph on e 9472296

6 24·26tc
- --- ---- -----Re pA~rs ,

MAC HIN!: ,

se r vice , a ll ma ~'es
992 2284 The F a br 1c Shop ,
Pome r oy Aut hor i zed Sing er
Sa l es a nd Ser vi c e
We
Shar pen SCISSO r S

D &amp; D T R E E Tr1mmi ng , ~0

yea r s ex p eri ence. In sur ed , D OZER wo r k , lan d clea r i ng
f r ee est tmat es . Ca ll 99 2 3057
by th e acre , hou rl y or
Coo l vi ll e Phon e ( 1) 667 :
c on t r ac t
F arm
po nds , .
304 1
road s , etc L arg e doze r and
op er a tor with ov er 20 ye ar s I
4.JQ.tfc
ex p er i en ce
Pu ll m s E x - '
cava fln g, Pome r oy, Ohio
R..EADY MIX CO NC l&lt;- 1: ~ E
Phon e 992 247B
d el 1v er ed r i g ht to y our
12 19 tf c
proj ect F a'S t and easy . 'F ree
es t, ma t es Ph on e 992 3284,
Goegl e1 n R ea dy M 1x. Co ., ELWOOD. BOWERS REPAI I&lt;·
Mid dl eport , Ohr o •
- Swee p er s, toas t er s, tr an s ,
all s m a l l app lia nces . Law n
6 3o "" · mower , n ex t to St ate Hig h
- ----· .:. y Gar ag e on Ro ut e 1·.
- - · -... NEE D A fie w
built
Phon e .985 382 ~
YOu r loP Con tact M t1o 8
4-16 tfc
Hutchi son , Rutland , Oh io·
Phone 742 36 15.
· R eplt ir Ser vi ce . Got
5·8·tfc H OME
p r oblem s With your ho me ?
Want II r ep aired fa st Call
VALU·E·
A I th e h ou se doc tor Ph on e

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

------tiom ~
0~

\c.::.;;;::.,

lhis old theater · ·
has beeh boarded
up fort.jears!

,O

H OM t
n tg • tast er n · Hig h
Sc hool { R lg g sc r es t M anor )
3 bedrm s , 2 bath s. full
base m ent, family roo m, 2
car g ara ge, fir ep lace in
l arge livm g r oom , l ar g e lot.
2 y ea r s ol d . Phone 985-3867 .

6·29 ltp

742·5081 .

6 17 12tc
Gt;,'NI:..f Ai:: Repa ir, clean up
' 1 f.~~;~.. tl a.u l inq . , , , c ut t in g,
ca rp e ntr y,

p ~umb i ng , el ea .1 m as dnry

an do&gt; lg en eral r ·emodel in g

Cal l Sk·ii Pool. Pho ne 992
5126.
•
6.1/ .tfc

--FOR-S~1..-~b;- own er-;- -:;bo-v e ---.----}-------a ve rag e home and g arage

I.'M LU,&lt;;:KY

10GETOUT
OF CENTRAL!
Ci1'Y WI1H
MY SKIN!

n ear m lnes on R t. 124, w es t WI L L T RIM or cut t;ees and
shrubbery and paint roofs .
of R utl and Phon e 742 J794 .
Phone 949·3221 or 7 42 · 44 ~1 .
6-24 4t c

--- .......-----

bid h ve nolrump

·
TODAY'S QUESTION
You do bid lrve notrump and your
partner responds SIX diamonds lo
show one kmg What do you do now'
Answer Tomorrow
Send $ 1 for JACOBY MODERN
book to " Wm at Br~dge," (c/o thts

newspaper), P 0 Box 489, RadiO
City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019

Yesterda~'s

11 One kind
of !ann
15 Camera

Answer

25 Be a mani·
kin
27 Humdinger
31 Opera
highlight
32 Imagine!
34 Manhattan
or
Brooklyn,
e.g. (abbr.)
35 Lay odds

feature

18 Army
%0 Primeval

21 - session
22 One in
sorrow

23 Soda pop
flavor

6·24·26tp

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

-~
·----

yo u r m ethods are over l y
aggress1ve to day tn deahng
wrth assoctates . re sults w!ll be

GILDH

Try tact a nd

und es ~r a bl e

ch arm rnstea d
You are lt ke ly to h ave a few
mo re res po n sl btl rttes to d ay
t ha n yoU can ma n·age .
De le g ate cho res to oth ers
wh ere poss1 bl e

JQ

HDJIYC

JGOHE

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) The
nex t few d ays . be partic ularly
prudent w tth your resources or
th e b udget yo u've set for th1 s
week won't stretch.

CANCER (June 21 ·July 22)
Early in the
becom e too
thm gs dor;J'I
flr sl Later,
prevatls

d'ay you're apt to
easily trritated 1f
g o yo ur way at
a ca lme r head
1

LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) H faced
wr th a problem wrth no ap -

JQ

DBJ

OH

DH

DS- pare nt Immediate solution, you

ZOACNW

DHT

AIYT

UDAGOQH . - DHDJQNC

UYDHBC
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHAT 00 YOU SEE? AND WHAT
WilL YOU 00 ABOUT WHAT YOU 00 SEE? - EDWARD
OLSEN
CC) lt75,Kins Featuz" SJ••IIcate, Inc, )

DADBURN

de al 1n g wtth f o r ceful rn d tvldua ls tod ay, don't re pl y tri
k tnd Us e your head , no t
heated words

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Nol a good day to try to get
ot he rs to do th ings you
should be do1ng . You're
better off not ask1 ng
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) There cou ld be some complicati ons sOc ial ly tod ay If
you 're not selec trve reg arding

compantons Be ca reful

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)

CltYPTOQUOTES
OA

of W~stP- rn M "'n 3:\

IO :QO-Marcus Welby. M D. 6, 13; Oral Roberts a'
Barnaby J ones 10; News 20.
10 :30;-Politi ca\ Tal k 3,4,15, Monty Python' s Flying
CirCUS 33.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News 33
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13 ;
FBI 6; Movie " The Dunwich Horror" 8; Mov1e
"Ride the High Country" 10, Janak \ 33.
12 :3G-Wide World Mystery 6.
1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

Bernice Bade Osol
For Tueodoy, July 1, 1975
ARIES (March 21 ·Apltt 19) If

;!
•·
OJ

6

8.00'-Lass \e 6; Captain Ka ngaroo 6, School\es 10;
Sesame Street 33
8:3G-Big Va ll ey 6, Popeye 10
6:55-C huck White Report s 10
9.00-A M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 15;
Muriel Stevens 8; Ca ptain Kangaroo 10; Morning
With D. J 13.
9 3G-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Gal loping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 13
IO :Oil:-Ce\ebr lty Sweepstakes 3, 4,15; Spin.Off 8, 10;
D1nah! 13; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
10 .3G-Wheel of Fortune 3.4, 15; Ga mbit 8,10; The
Romagno\i s' Table 33
11 ·00-High Rollers 3,4,1 5; O ne Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8,10
ll :3o-Hollywood Squares 3,6, 15, Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4; Love of L1fe a,10.
ll 55- Take Ker r 8. Dan \mel's World 10.
12 :0o-Jackpot! 3, 15; Sh owoffs 13; Bob Braun's 50-50
Club 4; News 6,8, 10; Mi ster Rogers 33.
12 ·3Q-B\an k Check 3,1 5: All My Chil dre n 6, 13; Search
For Tomorrow 8,10; Electr ic Compa ny 33.
12 :55-NBC News 3, 15.
I :oo-N'ews 3; Phil Donahue 8; Young and The
Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15, VIlla Alegre
33.
3G-Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Let' s Make A Deal
6,13; As The Wor ld Turns 6, 10; Episode Action 33
2:()()- 1$0,000 Pyram id 6, 13, Guiding Light 8,10;
Rachel, La Cubana 33
2·3o-D octors 3,4, 15; Big Showdown 6, 13; Edge Of
Night 8,10
3 : QO-Anoth~r World 3,4, lS; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is R1 ght 8,10. Lilias, Yoga and You 20.
3.3()-()ne Life to Li ve 13, Lucy Show 6, Match Game
6,10; The Romagnolls' Table 20: Folk Guitar 33 .
4:00-Mr. Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeann ie 4; Somerset
15, Gill ig an's Island 6; Musi cal Chai rs 6; Sesame
Street 20,33; Movie " Run Silent, Run Deep" 'to·
Mike Dougl as 13.
'
4.3o-Bewi ched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6 ;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonan za 15
5: 0G- FBI 3, Lucy Show 8; Mi ster Rogers' Neigh.
borhood 20,33, Ironside 13.
S:3o-News 6; Andy Griffith 6; Get Smart 15; Electri c
Com pany 20,33.
6:0o- News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame Street
20; Catch·33 33
6:3Q-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13, Bew itched 6;
CBS News 8,10, Lilias, Yooa and You 33 .
7 oo-Truth or Consequences 3, 4; Bowling for Dollars
6; What·s My Line? 8; News 10, Name That Tu ne
13; America n Life Style 15; Antiques 20; New
Music in Brass 33.
7:3o-Hol\ywood Squares 3, 4; Public. Affair s 6; Buck
Owens 6; New Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth
13, Ca r and Track 15; One Of A Kind 20; Ca r Care
33.
6:0o-Movi e "S hadow in the Street" 3,4; Happy Days
6,13; Basebal\15; Good Times 8,1 0; The Way \tWas
20,33.
8:3G-Movle " A Cry For Help" 13; Movie " The Monk"
6. M.A.S.H B, 10: World Press 20; Nova 33.
9:()()-H awa i\ Flve.o 8, 10.
9:3G-Police Story 3; Ora l Roberts 4, Woman 20; Saga

Grap~

/J
"

World 15; Wash ington Straight Telk 20; Episode
Ac tion 33
8 oo-Joe Garag\ola 3,4, 15; Rookies 6,13; Gunsmoke
8, 10; Rachel, La Cu ba na 33; Appalachian Green
Par ks Projec t 20.
_
P:I5-Baseba ll 3,4,15.
9 oo-s.w.A.T 6,13; Maude 8, 10; Ll g ~ te r than Air 20.
9:3o-Rhoda 8, 10; Eveni ng Compass-Spec ial Edition
20, One Of A Kin d 33.
.
'10:oo-&lt;:ar lbe 6, 13; Medica l Center 8, 10; N ew~ 20;
1
Washington Straig ht Talk 33
10:3o-Spotll ght On 33.
11:0()-News 3,4,6,8,10,1 3,15, ABC News 33.
11 3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wide Worl d Mystery 13;
F BI 6 ; Movi e "7 Faces of Dr. Lao" 8; Movie
" Brai nstor m" 10; Ja naki 33
12:3Q-Wide World Mystery " The House of Evil " 6.
1:()()-Tomorrow 3.4; News 13.
TUESDAY, JUL Y 1, 1975
6·oo-Sunrl se Semi nar 4; Summer Semester 10
6:25-Fa rm Report 13
6·3o- Five Minutes to L1ve By 4; News 6 ; Bible An swers 8; Concerns &amp; Com ments; Rev Cleophus
Rob rnson 13.
6:35-Colum bus Today 4
6.45-Morn lnc Reoort 3; Far mtl me 10.
7 : 0 ~Toda y 3, 4, 15; A M Amer ica 6,13, CBS News

Astro-

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for tbe three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Slncle letters,
apostrophes, the lenith anil formation of the words Ire all
hintS. Each day the code letters are dltrerent.

l

-------'--.C. . ----. W.:.tJeat ng ,

I•

Pass 3 ¥
Pass 4NT
Pass 5 ¥
Pass
You, South. hold
• 2 • K J 9 7 5 • A K QJ 4 "' A 2
What do you do now '
A _ Tbere arc scienllfic ways 10
find out if parrner holds both ace
and queen of hearts. Without those
JUSt guess bct, een si&lt; or sC\en or

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

------

R~I Estate~ For- sale---

South

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

-- ----

EROY PLUS - 3 bedrooms, bath,
nice kltchen·Wrange, some
carpeting, full basement,
con crete patio, nice lilrge
yard for the kids. JUST
$9,500.
POMEROY - HERE IS A
Dl LL Y - .69 a cre , 4
bedrooms, bath, kitchen
ha s lots ot cabinets,, ref.
range, dining area , utility
R.. 2 car garage, part
basement, F.A. heat, part
basement, lots of fruit trees
(bearing l. $20,000,
DEXTER - 30 acres, nice
lay ing ground, creek, home
ha s 3 BR , own water
sy) tem, barn and other
bul\d lhgs, cellar house ,
't3, ~00 down balance I
· rent. ,Total S17,SOO.
LIKE 'rQ FISH? Close to
river, la rge home with nice
ga rage, storage build ing.
own water !»stem , a bout t
acre ground/ LOOK ~UST
$4,700.
MANY
OTHER
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM - WHY
WAIT AND PAY MORE
NEXT YEAR . CALL
TODAY.
,
CALL 992-2259

Ea st

DOWN

1 Maintained
2
Brain
5 Friend of
child
Shylock .
3 Cordiality
10 Dutch
(3 wds.)
cheese
11 Collegiate
4 Hawaiian
baking pit
~
12 goal
Alpaca
5 Seed cover·
country
ing '
13 Off the ship &amp;How
=:...:o:.::!'-'~:::...:..::...::~...:!..:~ 14 "- o' Shanghastly!
ter''
7 Philadel15 Aglow
phia's
~ 16 Old French
stock
shooting
in trade
match
(2 wds.)
' li''~~!-'l- 17 One of the
8 Effected by
Cyclades
aircraft
19 "Bali-"
With
zo Not genuine 9 caution
%1 Tocsin, e.g.
22 Vulgar
'*-""~--~- 23 Partner of
Larry and
Moe
24 Split
1 25 " Sweet Malone"
~~ll:.:ill %t Somewhat
( suff.)
27 Mrs. Levi
28 Swruner
(Fr.)
!9 Muckraker
Tarbell
30 Ordinance
33 Workable
35 Tidal flood
36 Matriculate
37 Malevolent
38 Attempt
again
39 Shade of
blue

~!~~~~~~

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

S EWI N G

North

I Non-flyer

ExLAvAT I -NG ,
Do z er ,
B ac kh o e, dtt cher . wa t er
-S·E-PTIC- TA.NK SCLEANED
lin es , foote r s, dr ai n s, r oad s
an d bru sh c leani ng No job
Rea sonabl e R A Te s Ph on e
too small. no w ea t her too
44 6 4782 Ga ll 1p ot 1 s Jo h n
ba d
P ho n e Ch ar l es R .
R usse ll , owner
Haff1 eld , Rt
1. Rut l an d .
4 9 He .
Ohio P hon e 742 6092.
5·2 52tp
HO U SE and r oof p a in t in g and
r epa irs For free es t1m afes,

call 992 6190 or 992-5837
6 15.26tc
=--=- =-~-~- -- -- SEP TIC TANKS clea ned

West

30

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Roger Hysell's
Garage

, Phone 992-5682 or
992-7121

The bi ddi ng has been

atUs•~

6 25 26fp

"R"&lt;J""'N-=-s nepard Co~ trac ~n g ; nd
Rem od elin g Ser vic e W hol e
ho u se
r e mo de l t ng ,
k itchen and
Sp ec tat t ,es bath Phone 1304 1 77 3 5346 or
742 3664 d ay or evenmg
'
6 4-'1.6tc

Pass

'ACROSS

2 11 tf c

alUmi n Um and VIn y l S1d1ng ,
c o m pl e t e
r em o d e l 1n g

2N T

"'"'--'---'- - " ==

5-7. , m o: .

-

--- - -. ----·--ROO F IN G , S pout-i n g ,
'

...

\
1 NT
3 NT

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
.
Os wa ld "G ood btdd e r s
,.._ _ _,.,..._ _ _ _ _ shou ld overbid wh en they are
trymg to sco re a game or sla m
Thus. when your partner b1ds to
wtthtn one tnck of game you
should go on ~? game Wlth any
excuse a t all
J1m . " Looking at it another
way . two notrump may be the
rtght stoppmg place, but It IS
never a good one. Wtth good
brea ks you will make three ;
with bad breaks you may go
down at two "
Oswald . " The same thing
applies to contracts of three of
a maJor smt or lour of a mtnor
You want to continue on With

Pom efoV

6-18-1 mo.

-

Pass
Pass
Pass

.

Call Before 7:30A.M
Or After6:00 P.M.
949-3604

E XCA V A T(NG , doze r , l oad er
an d b a ckhoe w ork , sep t rc
tn statl e d ,
du m p
ta nk s
tru cks and to boy s for hire ,
Wi ll hau l f1 1l d1 rl , top soi L
li mes ton e an d gra ve l , Ca ll
,B ob or Rog er Jeff er s, d ay
phone 99 2 7089 , n 1g ht p hone

1.

~----'--------J

Racine, Ohio
We Build the Best and
Repair the Rest .
- Cabinets lnsta \led-

--

Pass

South

Openmg lead - 5 A

NEIGLER
Building Supp~

.

East

Pass
Pa ss

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

pli Cj n ces &amp; n.aw fu r n i tur e
Open 9-S W ed .. tnrou y u o{ U' "
Ph
667-3858
·
515 l mo

North

c

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Sp ecialist

ap

West

;

From th e largest Tru c k or
Bul ldoz er Rad-1ato r to th e
small est H eat er Core .

" BA R GA I N S are
ou r
mtd dl e name'' '" c l ean ,
furnit u r e ,
u se d

GUARA NT EE D

.•

EXPERJENCED
- ." .

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

30

Neit her vulnerabl e

~

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2550

PH. 742-3794

197 1 350 V John Dee r e do ze r , 6
fl
bla d e , ca nop y
a nd
, dr aw ba r
Di ese l , eng i n e,
good con d1110n $6500 Ph on e
9B5 359A

HOU SEKEEPER , must liv e
6 25 tfc
10 , farm h om ~ f Interes t ed , -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

CHIPWOOD

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

US ED m et al f 1Sh1n g boat, 12 L AR G E ca b m tent w it h f loor
ft Phon e 992 5535
A l so, sooo B T U a c, 1 small
6 29 tic
r e f r 1ge ra to r
P hon e 99 2

- -- - ----

WANTED!

-

6:0()-News 3,4,8,10.1 3,15; ABC New s 6; Sesa me Street
20; Spotlight On 33
6:3G-NBC News 3,4, 15 , ABC News 13; Bew1tched 6;
CBS New s 8, 10; Jody's Body Shop 33.
7:0()-Truth or Consequences 3,4, Bowling For Doll ars
6, Wha t's My Line? 8; News 10; New Candid
Camera 13; Wally' s Workshop 15; Ma king It Count
20; Lilias, Yoga and You 33
7: 3o-Th at Good Ole Nashville Music 3, Masquerade
Party 4, Police Surgeon 6, $25,000 Pyramid 8;
Mun icipal Court 10; To Tell The Tr uth 13; Untamed

r......adioll f,o

l

Real Estate for Sale

-- - ----

-·
..·

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

Does
your
home I
requ_ire any of these [
servtces?

~--

·' RM ap t w1 th wa ll to wa tt
ca r p e t, l OA Spr1n g A. v e,
Pom eroy Ca ll 992 5908
6 22 tf c

MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1975

If '"'' ,,,, _. '" "

....

Television log for easy viewinsz

I.UiiHA ~ST

6 29 3tc

CL AR IN E l , ve r y gooo con
d tl1on , $100 Ph on e 985 d236
6 29 31p

l
I

..
·.; ...
~ - ·. ' , , -'~ •'

On aluminum r epl a cement
w•ndow s, stdtng, storm
doo rs and w i ndows , ratling ,
phone
Charl e s
Lisle ,
Sy r acu s e,
Ohio .
Car1
J a c ob , Sa l es R epr e sen tat1v e.

4 2 75

pota t o es

1971 BLA ZER W1fh ro ll bar ,
w h 1l e spok e wh ee ls and b1g
l 1r es
Exce ll en t cond it 1on
Ph on e 992 7473
6 29 6tc

-

.

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

W AL N U T d esk tn qood coO
d1liOn , SJ5 Phone 99 2 2807
6 25 51p

Ce tl mg , pan elm g , ft oor tng ,
Case No . 21.5'1 4
E stat e of J
etc Ph one 992 27 59
SK I Boat , 16 ft f tb r e gta ss 60 NEW H OME Jl ~ acres , 3
Paul G r u eser
Decea se d
h P rno tor Good cond 1t 1on
6 24 27 tc
Be droo ms,
11 :z
b a th s,
- - - - - ---- NOIIC C IS her eb y Q1ve n that
com ple te Ca ll after 5 p m '
Sund
eck
Phone
992 7790
985 3344
Bern ,ce G ru ese r of 516 Sou th
6 26 -6tc
4th St, Midd lepor t , Oh iO, ha s W ILL DO odd lOb S, pa1nt mg ,
- - - 6·29 2tp
h a ulmg
and
r o ofin g ,
been duly ap p o 1n t ed A d
------~-m ow m g Call 992 7409
mm ,s tral r tx of the\ E st ate of J
BROWNING Eag l e CB ba ;; 172 ACRE S l an d , and loc u st
6
25
6tc
Pau l Gr uese r , de c~ease d , tate
s tat 10n tor sale or tra d e for
po s ts Als o, 1965 F ord L TO
of M i ddlepo rt , Me1gs Count y
m oto r cyc le Ph one 99 2 53 48
Ph one 74'1. 3656
Oh10
' REMODELI N G ,
Plum b ing ,
6 26 6t c
5 23 52 tp
Credtlo r s a r e r eq ui r ed to
heatm g an d all ty p es of
--hie the1r cla1 m s Wl l h Sa •d
gen er a l
repa~r
Work ON E W est mghouse roast er
rw o B EDROOM hou se for
f •duc1a r y wrt h 1n fo u r months
guar-anteed
20 years ex
w 1th c ab and c loc k Ph on e
sa l e Phon e 985 4102
Dat ed th1 s 11th d a y of Ju n e
per1 ence
Ph one 992 2A09
992
2262
197 5
6 10 26 tc
5 1 tf c
6 29 ·31c

CAS H pa id fo r all m ak es an d
mod els of m obile homes
Phon e a r ea cod e 614 423

Rt . 2 Pomeroy

6 27 3tp

I an d 2 b ed r m mob il e ho rnes
dcp o s rf re q urr ed P hon e 99 2

HUGE 5 family yard sat e',
V5 .
J uly 3, 4 an d 5 Co ll ec tabl es.
R ober t L Co l e, et a !
bab y 1te m s , m1sc
Fran k
In
pursuance
to
an
Huds o n
r e s1 d ence
10
E xecu 11on tssued f r om t he .. Ra ctn e, ac r o ss fro m R~c m e
Corn man P leas Court of Metgs
r ood Ma rk e t
County Po me roy , OhiO , tn the
6 29 l tp
ca se of Th e F armers Ban k &amp;
Sav,ngs Co , Pia tnh f L vs 6 F 1\M IL Y Yar d Sal e, Ju l y 1, 2
Robert
L
Cole ,
e ta l ,
an d 3 at 711 South Th 1r d St
Defendan t , betng Case No
N ext
to
Spe e d
Qu ee n
15 SSJ m satd Court , 1 w1 ll o ff er
Laundrom at , Mrd d l eport 10
at publ1c au clion at th e fr on t
a n1 till d ark Phone 99 2
doo'" of th e Court House a t
7J9J
Pom eroy 1n sa1d County on t he
6 29 4lc
?6!h d a y at July , 1975 at 10 00
O 'Clock AM, t h e fOllOWing
GARAGE SALES, Tuesday
descr1bed r eal es ta te, to wr t
Wednesd ay and Th ursd ay'
Bernq tn Sec t ton No 1 J
from 9 am ,, 11 5 P m
Town .t Ran9 e 12 o f t he Oh 10
Com pany 's P ur c hase , a nd
Mi ner svil l e, on Ou t chtow~
comnre nctng tn t he cen t er of
Hil l Nt ce c lothmg tn CIUd ing
extra lar g e wo r k uni for ms
th e road lead1nQ from Tupp er s
P 1a 1n'i ro A lfr ed Post O ff 1ce a t
and women ' s clolhtng , r ugs ,
bed s pr e ads , sh ee t s, c. u r
the southeas r co rn er o f th e 74
ta,n s , d iS h es and othe r
ac r e tr a c t ot land owne d by
the Gra11tor , Robert L Co te as
arli c les fo o nu merou s to
ntenl1 00
descr,bed 1n Deed Reco rd ed m
V ol 163, paq e 658 ot the Dee d
6 30 31c
R ec ord s o f Me1gs County ,
Oh10 thence wes t along t he Y AR D SAL E . every Th ur s
south l me of the sa1d 74 a cre
day , Fr,day and Satur day ,
tract Of land 220 fee l to a po 1n l
qua r t e r
mt le
fr o m
th ('r ecn , which po1n t 1S a l so 1n
L an g sville o f f De x te r Roa d
tlw ce nter l1ne o f sa1 d r oad ,
F oll ow th e Si g ns Phon e 742 ·
th ence north ISO f ee l th ence
6273
east 220 fee t to the ea st ltn e of
6 25 ft c
sa 1d 74 acre trac t of l an d
thence sou t h 450 l eer to t h E
Yar d Sa l e,
50 3
pla ce o f b egmn, n g, conta m1 ng LA RGE
M i d d l e por t
B roa d way
2 2€ acres , mo re or l ess
Mo n day throu gh We ds,
To ge ther vnth the r 1g ht of w a y
st ar t,nq at 10 am
r ese rved oy Robe rt Cole rn
6 29 3t c
Deed Book 252 , Page 485
Reference Deed
V olu me
163, pa oe 658 of th e M e tQ S
County Deed Record s and V ol
252 , Pag e 481, and Vol 252,
Page 483 , Deed Reco r ds Me1 g s BOS TO N Terr ter ma te pup s
AK C bla c k $125 Phon e 99 2
Coun t y , Oh 10
76BO
The app r a,sed va l u e o f t he
6 29 4t C
real estate ts $3600 00
T er ms Of sale Cash 1n han d
uoon del1ve r y of d eed
Robert C Hartenba ch,
Sh er 1ff
Me1g s Cou nt y , Po rne r o y , Oh iO W I LL t ake C'ar e of 2 p ri v al e
pa t 1ent s rn m y home Phone
161 13, 30 , 171 7, 14, 21 51c

NOTI CE OF
APPO IN TMENT

For Rent

Flatwoods, Ohio
Pom eroy , OhiO
Stop In Or
Ca \1992-7537

1

1967 FO R D lh u nd er b i r d ,
au to ma tt c. all powe r tO g ood
condition
Phon e 99 2 2058
a ft er 5 p m

r

REAR, SAM AND
GROOVY A RRIVE AT
THE FRONT.

6·6·1 me.

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES
•

A1r co nd1t1oning, plum bing , he at i ng , ro ofing ,
spouting, g e neral s h ee t
m et a l Work .

"~Nw.T:mH~E'6TE~~~;i(~i;;;-~-;,~:oto~a:r~r51l

992·2478

4 10 1 m o

Racine Plumoing
&amp;Heating

KITCHEN
STATE INSPECTED
LICENSED BAKER
AND DECORATOR

Card of Thanks

BUDGE T H EAR IN G
Noi• CE' •S hNf' by qrven th at

111

- -- ~~

'

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 99~:~993

HEll

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

INNING

'

Regular and
Excavator Type
Septor Tanks Installed

lop

(A nllwl!'rl to m o rr o w )

'

For Rent by Hour or
Contract Work.

LARRY LAY_E~DER

Also R epairs On All
R1dmg Tra c to rs
498 l ocu st Sf .
Middl eport, Oh1o
59 1m

r.__..._.__.._.._...._._.._______..__.._.._______.-..--._.._.._..___

o: Monday J une 30 1975

BACKHOES~

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown onto Walls &amp;AHics'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOOR S
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SID\ NG.SOFF ITT
GUTTERS·AWNINGS

1974 CHEVELl. f=
53095
Ma libu HT Cpr-, 350 Y·6 eng me, power steenng, fac·
tory air , tmted glass, rad 1o, whee l cove rs, good tires,

Phon e 9&lt;19
6 29 6f c

~;~~ tu nhn ~

FREE ESTIMATES

Sales &amp; Service
992 -3092

suggested by the above cartoon.

c__:_:_
Pri::::_'
nt lft
= SUR::.:::
PRI:SI
::.:A
::.:
NS::.:.:
WI=.:
Rh:::.:
ere_JI

·B usiness)Services

2

'

.

'

" MALL stror l tra 1; do~, ~~~ t h
b lac k hcnd '" Rock s prm qs
c-trca Wcarmo col li\ r Ph on e
99~ 'llRQ
·
6 '19 li e

WA1TI N6 FOR BROKEN
BO NES TO JI'IEM 7.

URGETT

Auto Sales

R E D I 1\ G G E 0 key r rnQ w tt1 1 6

PE I&lt;SON Wf-10 '5

I

Fast ,R'esults Use Th~ Sentinel Classifieds

r

lO R your
Oil of M1n k "
- Ph o n e
C os met i cs
BRO WN 'S 99'15 113
1 7 tf c

A HOBBY FOR A

I ()

.

Notice

~TY~v-4·

I 01 I (J

.L' 0

j

[~

:r

H'Of\0\"K

D

DIC~TRACY

could get the answer

by walkIng away fro m it tor awhil e.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22)
Make 11 a po1nt not to im pose
upon fnend s tod ay an d
t o morr ow fo r an yth ing
matenal It's unlikely your re·
quests will be granted

LIBRA ' (S.pt. 23-0ct. 23) In

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) DomestiC demand s today
may be a b rt heavter t han
usua l Try to get other ta mtly
members to p1 tc h 1n

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 19)
Yo ur tem per 1s on an extre mely
short fuse . espec1ally where"
persons are dOH1Q wo rk fo r ,
you Don 't provoke them un necessanly.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
Keep your bu'dget buttoned
down th e next few d ays Buy

only 'what you need. when you·
need 1t
f"'
-

~Your

~Birthday
July 1, 1175

There w1 ll be some excelle nt
opport un 1t1es for yo u this year
to rece1ve recogn1tion and a d~ ·.
vance m ent from creative pro· ~
1ects P ut you r tdeas to wo rk . '~·

They'll prove prolltable.
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J

FEMALE

DRIVER!!

I

.
'

''

�'

.1::- The Daily Sentlru!l, Middleport-Pomeroy

• 6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer oy, 0 , Monw y, J une 30, 1975

{J1&amp;100ffi)1[;;; tkt ~,.... et.J.-J""'"
L'n~Cr&lt;lmblc l hl'Sl' fuurJumbles,

'

•

h• tt er to t&gt; ac h square, to
form four o rdinar) \\ o rds.
Oht&gt;

I

:~,(~: ~;K ~::- I

~~ll
Ill- l l ,,1
~J 1 1i r

tJ

1

L_)"-

b - .50

Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as

J I I

I I

WILKINSON
SMALL ENG

keys
1 191

Rcwilr d

rI I I I I I I )

blk
PA I R of half f ra m e g lasses tn
M1 dd l epo rt Rewa r d Phon e
99 2 3133
6 24 61(

mten or , stl ve r gr ey f~ n 1 sh. Sp eo al

1971MATADOR

$1495

4 door , loca l car , a i r conditioned , f u ll equ i pment .

197 0 NOVA Y·8 Cpe.

$1295

V m y l r oof, g r ey fini sh , h 1g h mtlea ge, good t1 r e s,
a utom atiC, powe r ste er 1ng. ra d 1o, s i l ver f i n1sh Bl ack

Wanted To Do

Ground

Jumhl,-. NEWLY

GLEAM

HAU NCH

/ \ u·• r·r· Om rd lllll-,.,t fmu

NOTI CE OF
cop 1CS o f th e p rop o sed budoct
and eS I1n r a t c o l
cos t o f
operal 10 n o l t h e M c rqs Local

l ht• "'l llfft't•- A N ANGLE

T H f\N "- -. to all 111e tr tend s and
n cr qllbors who sen t fl owe r s
cllld CCH dS dU r tnq 111 (' Il ln ess
~nd d eat h o f 111 y m o th er
M rs Sr s WtSC Your kt nd
1' css was tlp pr ec ta!ed Mrs
fV1azt c Hannahs and Fa m 1l y
6 29 2t p

Mc tc;s
Coun t y of M1dd l cpo rt Qh,o
m c 1u&lt;11 nq tir e cost of operil t ,,,q
the publ1c sc hools o l sa1d
OIS i rtc l lor t he lt sc al ycur o f
1~ J M e on fil e rn the ofl rc e of
THE DAUG H TER S Of M r s
cle r k o f
the
E1oar d
of
Mab!C' Swtsher wts h to
Education at1d open to 111
express lllCir apprccta l ton
spect ton of th e pu b l1c pur suan t
o f tt1e ~o~ndness and h elpfu l
to th e rcq u,r cmc nts o f law
n e ss
dur1nq
t he
A oub li c llea r tnq on ttrc
llosp ,tal tlatton and d ea t h of
oropo sed bu dq et for the pu b l1c
thc tr n to l her the sta ff of
schools wil l b e hel d at the
Veter a n s
Memor1a l
Off1ce ol th e Su per ~tl tcndcnt ,
Ho!-&gt;pllal nu r ses Or Telle
M1ddleport , Oh10 , on July 8,
~11 1d Dr
P 1c kens
19 75 at 7 30 P M
M rs
Paul Nevrl te and
Mrs Gle n n Hansacn
L W M e Corn as
6 30 li e
Cl erk T r casurer
M e tQ S LocJI
School D 1str.cr
Board o t Educat ton
NOW sellmg F ull er Bru sh
(6 ) 30 , 17) 7, 2t c
Produc ts
phOne 992 34 10
1 24 lf c
Sc hool

D •sfr ,c t

of

Kuhl Cake Decor

Notice

Racine

NOTICE OF SA LE
Th e F ar m er s Ba n k
&amp; Sa v 1ng s Co , P l a tnldf

Events
By Mrs. Fran r1s Morris
Mrs. Ma n e Roy was
hostess at the home of Mrs
James Swar t for the Booster
Class of First Baptis t Church
School Friday evemng J une
20. The prog ram topic was
" Teac h Us to Pr ay "
by Hele n Simpson who
had a r eading on the top1c a nd
scr ipture Luke 11 ·1-3 A due t
·'Teach Me to PI'By' ' by Vera
Beegle and MarJOri e Gnmm
and a readmg m sel'en par ts.
"Instruction in Pra yer " were
pr ese nted. Other r·eadJng s
were A Fool's W1se Pra}er He Understand s - Be Strll,
Give Thanks to God, Prayers
are the Sta1rs to l~od Mrs
Stmpson closed the p•og ram
w1th prayer, followed with
group smging " Savior , Lrke a
Shepherd Lead Us" after
which a busin es session and a
quiz game wa s held . Dun ng
the fe llowship hour de hcious
refreshments wer e served to
12 members and one guest by
Mrs Roy assisted by Mrs.
Swar t and her daughter , Mrs.
Marg1e Crow.
Mr . and Mrs. Alan Cun mngham announce the brrth
of their fi rst c hild, a g1rl, 7
lbs., I oz. June 20 at Holzer
Medical Ce nte r , named
Oli v1a J o Ma ternal grandparents are Mr ani!, Mrs.
Robert Hart and Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
,Mrs. Raymond Cun ningham
pf
Syrac use.
Greatgt:andparents are Mr . an d
Mrs. Gerald Hayman of East
Letart an d Mrs. Be ula h
Roush of Middleport.
· Mr . and Mrs. Laurence
Gr1mm of Green Acres , Fla
ann ounce the btrth of a baby
boy on June 19. Mr . and Mrs
Roderi ck
Gr im m
ar e
paternal grandparents.
Mr . ~d Mrs . Dale Mancell
of Roc hester, Pa ., came to
visr t therr cousms, Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Powell and accompamed them on a trtp for
a week. Th ey went to
Evansvi lle and Madison , Ind .
then to Louisville and toured
several days on the Island
Queen . Mrs. Powell had the
honor of pla ymg the caliope
and Mr. Man cell jomed in the
orchestra . There "ere over
two hundred passengers and
seventy-fi ve attendants on
the boat.

35 09

6 29 61c

1968 CA M AR O , 6 c y l i n d er ,
a uto rna t 1c, w tth very lo w
m tl eage , $800 Ph on e 99 2
7689
6 '1.7 6tc

TWO 2 b ed room
mobil e
hom es , 1 fur n iS h ed , 1 un
fu r n 1s h ed H a rr 1s1b nvill e
197 1 P INTO, 4 s;o ~~q, 2000
Phon e 742 31 23
6 24 6.tp_ eng1ne , n ew v al ve s, p l ug s
~ __ ·---'----- _
il n d po1nt s, 44,000 a ctual
GA R J\G E SA LE 1 mil e fr om
nt des Phone 992 228 0 or 992
T WO
BR
Mobtl e H ome
Ba sh an on Co R d 32 toward
5771
D eposil re qutred Phon e 99 2
124 New an d used c toth 1nQ
6 29 3tp
3429
and o the r m •sc 1tem s Jun e
75th thr u J ul y 1
6 24 61p
19 67 DODG E V an, good
6 26 6lp TRA I L E- R-· s·pa;e~-; ~ -rn-;
con d .t ron $850 Phon e 98 5
n or th of Me tgs H 1g h Sc hool
3594
YA RD SA LE at t h e F r ed d y
on ol d R t 33 Phon e 99 2 294 1
6 29 7tp
Moore r est d en ce , 3 m il es
6
29
lt
c
so uth o f M iddl eport , Sun
1967 F O R D convert ible , g ood
d a y , Mon d ay and Tue sd ay
car $4 00 Ph on e 99 2 530 1
a p artm e n t
from 10 am . 11 11 6 p m In ~FUR NI S H E D
6 29 5t c
a du l ts onl y tn Mi d dl epon '
ca se of ra i n , w dl be po st
Phon e 992 387 4
paned
3 25 H e
6 29 lt c ---

Yard Sale

I;

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

Pets For Sale

Employment Wanted69B56 07

6 26 6tc
CAR PE NTRY

WORK

-

f,ND 1 ROO M furn1 sh c d an d
un f urniS hed
apart ment s
Ph on e 997 5 IJ4

l

J

12 ti c

PRI VI\ lE mee tm g r oo m for
an y or gt1 n,zat 1o n . p h on e 992
197S
3 11 ttc
1\ PT l 1ke n ew 3 roo ms , wil h
la rg e b ath , tabl e to p ran ge ,
larg e c loset Eas t M a tn St ,
Pome r oy See to ap prec 1a t e
P hone Ga lli po l iS dur i ng d a y ,
.146 7699 , eve nmgs 4d6 953 9
'I 10 lfc
5

RM
f ur n1 sh ed ap t
1n
M td dl epo r t Wash e r and
drye r , utilt t 1es pa 1d Phon e

992 2676

6 27 6tc

12 x '1 2 2 B E OR M t ra il er . re al
ll!Ce Phon e 992 J32.-1
6 19 tf c
T R AIL ER sp ace , 1 m i l e f r o m
Pom eroy
Phon e 992 585 8
5 2 tf c
TW O ho u ses 1n Pome roy , 210
an d 2 12 Condor S't Ca ll 99 2
2659
6 18 12t p

FQr Sale

C AB B AG E a nd
Ph on e 843 2495

197 1
25 0
CC
Yama h a
Tra tl b1ke, 6500 m il es $450
Phon e Roger Karr , 985 3538 ,
call or com e a ft er 5 p m
6 29 4f p
O N E 3 p1 ece b lOn de b edrm
SUtte, $ 100
Call 8d 32 111
Sun day or w ee kd a y s a ft er 7
pm
6 29 3t c
TWO
B E D RM
m o d ul a r ,
car p e ted , Ul1ill1 eS p a rd , no
ch ildr en o r p ets
Near
Pome ro y, n1c e to c a t ,o n
Av ai l a bl e now Phone 992
7666 or 99 2 7017

6 29 3tc

CO U NT RY M ob i l e Ho me
Pa r k , Rt 33, ten mil es nor th
of Po me roy Larg e tot s W1fh
conc r e te pa lios , s id e w~ll(s ,
runne r s a nd o ff s tr e e t
p a r lo..1 n q Phone 992 7479
12 3 I If(..
F

U RN apt 5 room s a n-d bal"h:
n1ce la rc:je ya rd , bath an d 1
390
South
Second
St
M td d l eport. a d ult s o nly
P hon e 992 52 62 ev en tng s
5 2 I I fc

For Sale

P.ORTA-COOL"'
ROOM-to-ROOM
/rliiiiii'=iiiiiiiii R e g b J • 95
139 95
- ,, OOOBT
U

c

--

On ly 13 lb
ther m od el s
on sale

iPOMEROY LANDMA'ItK
9. _J.ack W. Corsty, Mtr. ·
6il Phone 992·2111 · ,

- -- -

Man n mg D W ebster
Commo n Pl eas Cour t,
Pr ob at e D 1v 1s io n
Me1gs County , Oh 1o

16 ,

23,

30.

3tc

NOTICE OF
A PP O I NTME NT
Ca se No. 21479
E .. t &lt;-. t c
of
M ii r y
W CII 5
D ecease d
N01 1C€ rS he r eby QiVCn t hai
Joyce 1\ n a vrs o f Po me ro y ,
Oh10 . t; as b een duty appot n led
1\dn Hn,s tr a lr l x of the Es t a t e
o f A~My We ll s d ece as ed tate
of Me 1qs County Oh 10
Cr c dllor s art&gt; r cQutrect ro
f 1l(' !hctr
c lntms W1 f h sa1d
hdu c! ary w llhm four n1onths
Dated l ht5 lHlh dny o f Jun e
197 s

1tJ

1

Mannmq D Webs ter
Jud r::Je
l l, 30 O J 7 Jtc

Wanted
9531

4 13 tf c

-

-- - --- -

--- .

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

-Wanted To Buy
DOG HO USE Large, cheap
Phon e 992 3804

6 25 3tp

DEE P wa te r we l l
Phon e 742 477 2

-- - - -

p um p

27 Jtc
------- -6 --

6

29 71p

7494

6 29 6t c

CHEVROLET

1963 Em pala

Hdtp , 6 c y t , s t a n d ar d
tra n Smi SSIOn 20 M P G $27 5
Ph on e 992 7826

OLD f urn1t ur e, 1ce boxes ,
b ra ss beds , or comp lete
household s Wri te N.
0 - ----:.....:......:.....:...:·!::6;.:2e,:9.::·3::_t!:_p
M il l er , R t 4, Pome r oy·
Oh iO Ca ll 99 2 !760
' H&amp; N day old or sta rt e d
10-7-74
leg horn pull ets Bo th fl oor
or cage gro wn a vaal abl e.
Po u lt r y
ho us 1n g
and
au t oma t1 on
Mode rn
Poult r y , 399 W
Ma 1n,
P A RT TI ME
P erma n ent
Pomero y9 92 2164
6 29 lt c
loca l
wor k
c h eck 1n g
se r 1a i 1Zed mven to r y at reta i l - - - - - - --- -- - - ··
s to r e s
fo r
m a j ar
m an uf acture r s
No
1n ST EREO
radio ,
m od e r n
v estm ent l nvench ek , Bo x
d esig n, B track tape , A M F- M
766 80, Atl an ta , Ga . 30328
r adio combin at1on Ba l an ce
--- - 629-3tp $102 99 or te r ms Ca ll 992-

- ---------Help Wanted

-.--

~t~~:zhe~o

3965

:;r

T.~~l lie E . reRRA C E: . A nt 1qu e Sh op
Port1and ' Oh ' o 4'577 Qo x 114 •
r e t 1r mg from . bust ness All
'
,
merch an d1se 111 stock wtl l b e
_ ____ _
6·25 12tp
so ld a t a lar ge disc oUnt
- - ---· - ·T er r ace
Ant iQues ,
10 8
T err ace
Le e
L e gion
R Udi SIJI

For Rent

Poles, maximum dia. 10" on
largest end ...... •7.00 per ton
Bundled Slabs... !6.00 per ton
DELIVERED TO:

OHIO PALLET CO.
Ph , 992•2689

.'

TR /I IL E R spa ce, all utili fl es
ch ea p Phorte 991 5535 .
'
' 6 29 tf c
~

-.

.. .

BEDRM
h ous e,
un
furn 1sh ed 1\ lso , 1 rur n1 Sh Cd
apt P hon e 992 2180 or 99'1
3·132
6 29 tfc
T WO be droom m ob i le home in
'•y ra cuse D c po s1t r eq u ,red
No c h i ld ren or pe ts Phon e
99'1 2111 .:t it er 5· 10 om
6 10 tt c

fWE DO:
i Roofing

I

- Siding
jcomplete
Home
Maintenance.

ALL-WEATHER
ROOFING
Construction
and Plumbina

6 6 261p
..... -· - .. -· --

.....

CHE'CK ou r P r i ces~ New ste el
to e work boo t s , leat h er
upper S16.95 Sl 9 95 , sizes 1
to l •l ~ew · r eg toe w ork
boots , tea t her up p er s 15 95
\ 17 95, s1zes 6 to 14 . Men's
used work cl oth es , shi r ts
99c, J,.ants , 51 09 New store
hour s, 9 00 l o 5 00 M onday
th r ouqh Satu r day
£1osed
Tll ursd ay an d s un d ay . 11
',' c ar s tn l h is loc~tf lon ,
fl &lt;ll i ey ' s Barg a i n Store ,
M1dd! eport.

6 26 6tp

STORAGE BUILDING - 2
stories with parking and 3 car
ga rage to rent, near the T In
Middl eport
.3 BUSINESS BUILDINGS - 2
1n Middleport, one with 4
apartm e nts

and

bu s in ess

room
2 FAMILY HOME - Reduced
for a real buy . 11 rooms, nat.
ga s, city water. Lot IOO'x100' .
WtLL TRADE - For camper,
mobile home, oickuo, bMt nr
what have you, that doesn't
eat.
NEW LISTING - On Rt 33.2
bedroom s, bath, 2 porches,
and ya rd.
POMEROY BUSINESS - In
good location on the upper
block.
BUILDING LOTS - Several
locations for hou ses or mob ile
homes. 51500.00 up.
ARE
YOU
HAVING ·
TROUBLE SELLING? SAVE
YOUR MONEY AND TtME . .

WIN AT BRIDGE
Use any excuse for game bid

"'\

any excu se at all "
J tm ;'So uth follow ed th1s
• 8i4
prmctple when he went to three
. AK876
notrump H1s reason was th at
t A 43
h1s ten-ru ne of hearts rrught just
... 6 2
help build up h1s par tner's heart
WEST
EAST
suit ..
AJ 96 5 3
4 Kl0
Oswa ld " Th ree not rum p
¥ Q4
•J 53 2
tsn' t a rea lly sound contract.
t QL0 7
• .1 962
but after the spade lead South
"' K 107
"' QJ 4 ., could count on lrve tn cks outSOUTH IDI
.
Side ttre heart su1 t "
A A Q2
J tm . " lt turned out that his
• 10 9
ten-nme of hearts were there to
t K85
gtve h1m fou r hea rt tncks m
... A9R53
sp1te of the 4-2 break. The sitght
pushmg bid paid oil we ll
NO RTH

-

. ·~t;t ~.

...

Clletltr, Olllo
1'

'""'15-4102
BORN LOSER

Home lullatftl

Room Adclltloos
MIIGII._ ·
5-5- 1 mo.

vLCOK ...-rn!:REIS WHERE. OUR
&amp;;..~.UTIFUL

LITILE fO,\E

~ STGro.

W5 ,II.(N€{)
/&gt;.. ~1 8\IAR~ Wi!Jb AtJDLA1~R '
ill~ i\OO€D N'OltieR WIN/&lt;&gt;
'e'I~~TUAWI .

" At Caution Laght"
Rt . 1, Tupp er s Pl ain s,

Radlato
Service

o.

.

--,-

Ph . 992·2174

327 N. 2nd

Middleport
5-30·1 mo .

Merle Nor man
Cosmetics

lOLA'S
BEAUTY SALON
John St•• Next To
Grade School
992-2549 Syracuse. 0 .
5·8·1 mo .

· Real Estate for Sale

FOR SALE!
40x85
Brick Building
ON
CORNER LOT IN
POMEROY
Business Section
Phone 992-3975 or
992-5786

FOR SALE
BY OWNER
Above

average,

6

room

house, 1 yr. old , garage,
near

mines,

util i ties,

located on Rt. 124 west of
Rutland , 2 acres of ground .

WaSher &amp; Diver
and
Small Appliance
Repair
Phone
992-3313

992 3525 or 99 2 5232

Ph one 742 627 3

Modern San i ta t io n 992 3954
or 99 2 73.:19

9 18 ttc

R &amp; S Excav ating , Back hoe
and li gh t hau lmg se r vices
Dr i veway sl ag deli ver P. t1

and

G·~O

GASOUNE ALLEY

Your sick
friend can't
be in here!

Phon e 13041 773 -534! or·74Z·

3664 day or evenmgs
6-4 .26 tc

- ----------

"vU LD YO U BE LIEVE&gt;
Build an all st eel building a t
Pol e Ba r n p ri c es? Gold en
G iant A ll St ee l Bui ldin g s
R t . 4, Box 148, W averl y;
Oh to Ph on e 9472296

6 24·26tc
- --- ---- -----Re pA~rs ,

MAC HIN!: ,

se r vice , a ll ma ~'es
992 2284 The F a br 1c Shop ,
Pome r oy Aut hor i zed Sing er
Sa l es a nd Ser vi c e
We
Shar pen SCISSO r S

D &amp; D T R E E Tr1mmi ng , ~0

yea r s ex p eri ence. In sur ed , D OZER wo r k , lan d clea r i ng
f r ee est tmat es . Ca ll 99 2 3057
by th e acre , hou rl y or
Coo l vi ll e Phon e ( 1) 667 :
c on t r ac t
F arm
po nds , .
304 1
road s , etc L arg e doze r and
op er a tor with ov er 20 ye ar s I
4.JQ.tfc
ex p er i en ce
Pu ll m s E x - '
cava fln g, Pome r oy, Ohio
R..EADY MIX CO NC l&lt;- 1: ~ E
Phon e 992 247B
d el 1v er ed r i g ht to y our
12 19 tf c
proj ect F a'S t and easy . 'F ree
es t, ma t es Ph on e 992 3284,
Goegl e1 n R ea dy M 1x. Co ., ELWOOD. BOWERS REPAI I&lt;·
Mid dl eport , Ohr o •
- Swee p er s, toas t er s, tr an s ,
all s m a l l app lia nces . Law n
6 3o "" · mower , n ex t to St ate Hig h
- ----· .:. y Gar ag e on Ro ut e 1·.
- - · -... NEE D A fie w
built
Phon e .985 382 ~
YOu r loP Con tact M t1o 8
4-16 tfc
Hutchi son , Rutland , Oh io·
Phone 742 36 15.
· R eplt ir Ser vi ce . Got
5·8·tfc H OME
p r oblem s With your ho me ?
Want II r ep aired fa st Call
VALU·E·
A I th e h ou se doc tor Ph on e

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

------tiom ~
0~

\c.::.;;;::.,

lhis old theater · ·
has beeh boarded
up fort.jears!

,O

H OM t
n tg • tast er n · Hig h
Sc hool { R lg g sc r es t M anor )
3 bedrm s , 2 bath s. full
base m ent, family roo m, 2
car g ara ge, fir ep lace in
l arge livm g r oom , l ar g e lot.
2 y ea r s ol d . Phone 985-3867 .

6·29 ltp

742·5081 .

6 17 12tc
Gt;,'NI:..f Ai:: Repa ir, clean up
' 1 f.~~;~.. tl a.u l inq . , , , c ut t in g,
ca rp e ntr y,

p ~umb i ng , el ea .1 m as dnry

an do&gt; lg en eral r ·emodel in g

Cal l Sk·ii Pool. Pho ne 992
5126.
•
6.1/ .tfc

--FOR-S~1..-~b;- own er-;- -:;bo-v e ---.----}-------a ve rag e home and g arage

I.'M LU,&lt;;:KY

10GETOUT
OF CENTRAL!
Ci1'Y WI1H
MY SKIN!

n ear m lnes on R t. 124, w es t WI L L T RIM or cut t;ees and
shrubbery and paint roofs .
of R utl and Phon e 742 J794 .
Phone 949·3221 or 7 42 · 44 ~1 .
6-24 4t c

--- .......-----

bid h ve nolrump

·
TODAY'S QUESTION
You do bid lrve notrump and your
partner responds SIX diamonds lo
show one kmg What do you do now'
Answer Tomorrow
Send $ 1 for JACOBY MODERN
book to " Wm at Br~dge," (c/o thts

newspaper), P 0 Box 489, RadiO
City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019

Yesterda~'s

11 One kind
of !ann
15 Camera

Answer

25 Be a mani·
kin
27 Humdinger
31 Opera
highlight
32 Imagine!
34 Manhattan
or
Brooklyn,
e.g. (abbr.)
35 Lay odds

feature

18 Army
%0 Primeval

21 - session
22 One in
sorrow

23 Soda pop
flavor

6·24·26tp

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

-~
·----

yo u r m ethods are over l y
aggress1ve to day tn deahng
wrth assoctates . re sults w!ll be

GILDH

Try tact a nd

und es ~r a bl e

ch arm rnstea d
You are lt ke ly to h ave a few
mo re res po n sl btl rttes to d ay
t ha n yoU can ma n·age .
De le g ate cho res to oth ers
wh ere poss1 bl e

JQ

HDJIYC

JGOHE

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) The
nex t few d ays . be partic ularly
prudent w tth your resources or
th e b udget yo u've set for th1 s
week won't stretch.

CANCER (June 21 ·July 22)
Early in the
becom e too
thm gs dor;J'I
flr sl Later,
prevatls

d'ay you're apt to
easily trritated 1f
g o yo ur way at
a ca lme r head
1

LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) H faced
wr th a problem wrth no ap -

JQ

DBJ

OH

DH

DS- pare nt Immediate solution, you

ZOACNW

DHT

AIYT

UDAGOQH . - DHDJQNC

UYDHBC
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHAT 00 YOU SEE? AND WHAT
WilL YOU 00 ABOUT WHAT YOU 00 SEE? - EDWARD
OLSEN
CC) lt75,Kins Featuz" SJ••IIcate, Inc, )

DADBURN

de al 1n g wtth f o r ceful rn d tvldua ls tod ay, don't re pl y tri
k tnd Us e your head , no t
heated words

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Nol a good day to try to get
ot he rs to do th ings you
should be do1ng . You're
better off not ask1 ng
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) There cou ld be some complicati ons sOc ial ly tod ay If
you 're not selec trve reg arding

compantons Be ca reful

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)

CltYPTOQUOTES
OA

of W~stP- rn M "'n 3:\

IO :QO-Marcus Welby. M D. 6, 13; Oral Roberts a'
Barnaby J ones 10; News 20.
10 :30;-Politi ca\ Tal k 3,4,15, Monty Python' s Flying
CirCUS 33.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News 33
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Wide World Mystery 13 ;
FBI 6; Movie " The Dunwich Horror" 8; Mov1e
"Ride the High Country" 10, Janak \ 33.
12 :3G-Wide World Mystery 6.
1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

Bernice Bade Osol
For Tueodoy, July 1, 1975
ARIES (March 21 ·Apltt 19) If

;!
•·
OJ

6

8.00'-Lass \e 6; Captain Ka ngaroo 6, School\es 10;
Sesame Street 33
8:3G-Big Va ll ey 6, Popeye 10
6:55-C huck White Report s 10
9.00-A M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 15;
Muriel Stevens 8; Ca ptain Kangaroo 10; Morning
With D. J 13.
9 3G-Not For Women Only 3; Dinah! 6; Gal loping
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 13
IO :Oil:-Ce\ebr lty Sweepstakes 3, 4,15; Spin.Off 8, 10;
D1nah! 13; Lilias, Yoga and You 33.
10 .3G-Wheel of Fortune 3.4, 15; Ga mbit 8,10; The
Romagno\i s' Table 33
11 ·00-High Rollers 3,4,1 5; O ne Life to Live 6; Tattletales 8,10
ll :3o-Hollywood Squares 3,6, 15, Brady Bunch 13;
Midday 4; Love of L1fe a,10.
ll 55- Take Ker r 8. Dan \mel's World 10.
12 :0o-Jackpot! 3, 15; Sh owoffs 13; Bob Braun's 50-50
Club 4; News 6,8, 10; Mi ster Rogers 33.
12 ·3Q-B\an k Check 3,1 5: All My Chil dre n 6, 13; Search
For Tomorrow 8,10; Electr ic Compa ny 33.
12 :55-NBC News 3, 15.
I :oo-N'ews 3; Phil Donahue 8; Young and The
Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15, VIlla Alegre
33.
3G-Days Of Our Lives 3,4,15; Let' s Make A Deal
6,13; As The Wor ld Turns 6, 10; Episode Action 33
2:()()- 1$0,000 Pyram id 6, 13, Guiding Light 8,10;
Rachel, La Cubana 33
2·3o-D octors 3,4, 15; Big Showdown 6, 13; Edge Of
Night 8,10
3 : QO-Anoth~r World 3,4, lS; General Hospital 6,13;
Price Is R1 ght 8,10. Lilias, Yoga and You 20.
3.3()-()ne Life to Li ve 13, Lucy Show 6, Match Game
6,10; The Romagnolls' Table 20: Folk Guitar 33 .
4:00-Mr. Cartoon 3, I Dream of Jeann ie 4; Somerset
15, Gill ig an's Island 6; Musi cal Chai rs 6; Sesame
Street 20,33; Movie " Run Silent, Run Deep" 'to·
Mike Dougl as 13.
'
4.3o-Bewi ched 3; Merv Griffin 4; Mod Squad 6 ;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonan za 15
5: 0G- FBI 3, Lucy Show 8; Mi ster Rogers' Neigh.
borhood 20,33, Ironside 13.
S:3o-News 6; Andy Griffith 6; Get Smart 15; Electri c
Com pany 20,33.
6:0o- News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame Street
20; Catch·33 33
6:3Q-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13, Bew itched 6;
CBS News 8,10, Lilias, Yooa and You 33 .
7 oo-Truth or Consequences 3, 4; Bowling for Dollars
6; What·s My Line? 8; News 10, Name That Tu ne
13; America n Life Style 15; Antiques 20; New
Music in Brass 33.
7:3o-Hol\ywood Squares 3, 4; Public. Affair s 6; Buck
Owens 6; New Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth
13, Ca r and Track 15; One Of A Kind 20; Ca r Care
33.
6:0o-Movi e "S hadow in the Street" 3,4; Happy Days
6,13; Basebal\15; Good Times 8,1 0; The Way \tWas
20,33.
8:3G-Movle " A Cry For Help" 13; Movie " The Monk"
6. M.A.S.H B, 10: World Press 20; Nova 33.
9:()()-H awa i\ Flve.o 8, 10.
9:3G-Police Story 3; Ora l Roberts 4, Woman 20; Saga

Grap~

/J
"

World 15; Wash ington Straight Telk 20; Episode
Ac tion 33
8 oo-Joe Garag\ola 3,4, 15; Rookies 6,13; Gunsmoke
8, 10; Rachel, La Cu ba na 33; Appalachian Green
Par ks Projec t 20.
_
P:I5-Baseba ll 3,4,15.
9 oo-s.w.A.T 6,13; Maude 8, 10; Ll g ~ te r than Air 20.
9:3o-Rhoda 8, 10; Eveni ng Compass-Spec ial Edition
20, One Of A Kin d 33.
.
'10:oo-&lt;:ar lbe 6, 13; Medica l Center 8, 10; N ew~ 20;
1
Washington Straig ht Talk 33
10:3o-Spotll ght On 33.
11:0()-News 3,4,6,8,10,1 3,15, ABC News 33.
11 3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Wide Worl d Mystery 13;
F BI 6 ; Movi e "7 Faces of Dr. Lao" 8; Movie
" Brai nstor m" 10; Ja naki 33
12:3Q-Wide World Mystery " The House of Evil " 6.
1:()()-Tomorrow 3.4; News 13.
TUESDAY, JUL Y 1, 1975
6·oo-Sunrl se Semi nar 4; Summer Semester 10
6:25-Fa rm Report 13
6·3o- Five Minutes to L1ve By 4; News 6 ; Bible An swers 8; Concerns &amp; Com ments; Rev Cleophus
Rob rnson 13.
6:35-Colum bus Today 4
6.45-Morn lnc Reoort 3; Far mtl me 10.
7 : 0 ~Toda y 3, 4, 15; A M Amer ica 6,13, CBS News

Astro-

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for tbe three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Slncle letters,
apostrophes, the lenith anil formation of the words Ire all
hintS. Each day the code letters are dltrerent.

l

-------'--.C. . ----. W.:.tJeat ng ,

I•

Pass 3 ¥
Pass 4NT
Pass 5 ¥
Pass
You, South. hold
• 2 • K J 9 7 5 • A K QJ 4 "' A 2
What do you do now '
A _ Tbere arc scienllfic ways 10
find out if parrner holds both ace
and queen of hearts. Without those
JUSt guess bct, een si&lt; or sC\en or

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

------

R~I Estate~ For- sale---

South

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

-- ----

EROY PLUS - 3 bedrooms, bath,
nice kltchen·Wrange, some
carpeting, full basement,
con crete patio, nice lilrge
yard for the kids. JUST
$9,500.
POMEROY - HERE IS A
Dl LL Y - .69 a cre , 4
bedrooms, bath, kitchen
ha s lots ot cabinets,, ref.
range, dining area , utility
R.. 2 car garage, part
basement, F.A. heat, part
basement, lots of fruit trees
(bearing l. $20,000,
DEXTER - 30 acres, nice
lay ing ground, creek, home
ha s 3 BR , own water
sy) tem, barn and other
bul\d lhgs, cellar house ,
't3, ~00 down balance I
· rent. ,Total S17,SOO.
LIKE 'rQ FISH? Close to
river, la rge home with nice
ga rage, storage build ing.
own water !»stem , a bout t
acre ground/ LOOK ~UST
$4,700.
MANY
OTHER
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM - WHY
WAIT AND PAY MORE
NEXT YEAR . CALL
TODAY.
,
CALL 992-2259

Ea st

DOWN

1 Maintained
2
Brain
5 Friend of
child
Shylock .
3 Cordiality
10 Dutch
(3 wds.)
cheese
11 Collegiate
4 Hawaiian
baking pit
~
12 goal
Alpaca
5 Seed cover·
country
ing '
13 Off the ship &amp;How
=:...:o:.::!'-'~:::...:..::...::~...:!..:~ 14 "- o' Shanghastly!
ter''
7 Philadel15 Aglow
phia's
~ 16 Old French
stock
shooting
in trade
match
(2 wds.)
' li''~~!-'l- 17 One of the
8 Effected by
Cyclades
aircraft
19 "Bali-"
With
zo Not genuine 9 caution
%1 Tocsin, e.g.
22 Vulgar
'*-""~--~- 23 Partner of
Larry and
Moe
24 Split
1 25 " Sweet Malone"
~~ll:.:ill %t Somewhat
( suff.)
27 Mrs. Levi
28 Swruner
(Fr.)
!9 Muckraker
Tarbell
30 Ordinance
33 Workable
35 Tidal flood
36 Matriculate
37 Malevolent
38 Attempt
again
39 Shade of
blue

~!~~~~~~

Automobile
Transmission
Repair

S EWI N G

North

I Non-flyer

ExLAvAT I -NG ,
Do z er ,
B ac kh o e, dtt cher . wa t er
-S·E-PTIC- TA.NK SCLEANED
lin es , foote r s, dr ai n s, r oad s
an d bru sh c leani ng No job
Rea sonabl e R A Te s Ph on e
too small. no w ea t her too
44 6 4782 Ga ll 1p ot 1 s Jo h n
ba d
P ho n e Ch ar l es R .
R usse ll , owner
Haff1 eld , Rt
1. Rut l an d .
4 9 He .
Ohio P hon e 742 6092.
5·2 52tp
HO U SE and r oof p a in t in g and
r epa irs For free es t1m afes,

call 992 6190 or 992-5837
6 15.26tc
=--=- =-~-~- -- -- SEP TIC TANKS clea ned

West

30

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Roger Hysell's
Garage

, Phone 992-5682 or
992-7121

The bi ddi ng has been

atUs•~

6 25 26fp

"R"&lt;J""'N-=-s nepard Co~ trac ~n g ; nd
Rem od elin g Ser vic e W hol e
ho u se
r e mo de l t ng ,
k itchen and
Sp ec tat t ,es bath Phone 1304 1 77 3 5346 or
742 3664 d ay or evenmg
'
6 4-'1.6tc

Pass

'ACROSS

2 11 tf c

alUmi n Um and VIn y l S1d1ng ,
c o m pl e t e
r em o d e l 1n g

2N T

"'"'--'---'- - " ==

5-7. , m o: .

-

--- - -. ----·--ROO F IN G , S pout-i n g ,
'

...

\
1 NT
3 NT

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
.
Os wa ld "G ood btdd e r s
,.._ _ _,.,..._ _ _ _ _ shou ld overbid wh en they are
trymg to sco re a game or sla m
Thus. when your partner b1ds to
wtthtn one tnck of game you
should go on ~? game Wlth any
excuse a t all
J1m . " Looking at it another
way . two notrump may be the
rtght stoppmg place, but It IS
never a good one. Wtth good
brea ks you will make three ;
with bad breaks you may go
down at two "
Oswald . " The same thing
applies to contracts of three of
a maJor smt or lour of a mtnor
You want to continue on With

Pom efoV

6-18-1 mo.

-

Pass
Pass
Pass

.

Call Before 7:30A.M
Or After6:00 P.M.
949-3604

E XCA V A T(NG , doze r , l oad er
an d b a ckhoe w ork , sep t rc
tn statl e d ,
du m p
ta nk s
tru cks and to boy s for hire ,
Wi ll hau l f1 1l d1 rl , top soi L
li mes ton e an d gra ve l , Ca ll
,B ob or Rog er Jeff er s, d ay
phone 99 2 7089 , n 1g ht p hone

1.

~----'--------J

Racine, Ohio
We Build the Best and
Repair the Rest .
- Cabinets lnsta \led-

--

Pass

South

Openmg lead - 5 A

NEIGLER
Building Supp~

.

East

Pass
Pa ss

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

pli Cj n ces &amp; n.aw fu r n i tur e
Open 9-S W ed .. tnrou y u o{ U' "
Ph
667-3858
·
515 l mo

North

c

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Sp ecialist

ap

West

;

From th e largest Tru c k or
Bul ldoz er Rad-1ato r to th e
small est H eat er Core .

" BA R GA I N S are
ou r
mtd dl e name'' '" c l ean ,
furnit u r e ,
u se d

GUARA NT EE D

.•

EXPERJENCED
- ." .

KUHL'S
BARGAIN CENTER

30

Neit her vulnerabl e

~

Free Estimates
PH. 992-2550

PH. 742-3794

197 1 350 V John Dee r e do ze r , 6
fl
bla d e , ca nop y
a nd
, dr aw ba r
Di ese l , eng i n e,
good con d1110n $6500 Ph on e
9B5 359A

HOU SEKEEPER , must liv e
6 25 tfc
10 , farm h om ~ f Interes t ed , -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

CHIPWOOD

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

US ED m et al f 1Sh1n g boat, 12 L AR G E ca b m tent w it h f loor
ft Phon e 992 5535
A l so, sooo B T U a c, 1 small
6 29 tic
r e f r 1ge ra to r
P hon e 99 2

- -- - ----

WANTED!

-

6:0()-News 3,4,8,10.1 3,15; ABC New s 6; Sesa me Street
20; Spotlight On 33
6:3G-NBC News 3,4, 15 , ABC News 13; Bew1tched 6;
CBS New s 8, 10; Jody's Body Shop 33.
7:0()-Truth or Consequences 3,4, Bowling For Doll ars
6, Wha t's My Line? 8; News 10; New Candid
Camera 13; Wally' s Workshop 15; Ma king It Count
20; Lilias, Yoga and You 33
7: 3o-Th at Good Ole Nashville Music 3, Masquerade
Party 4, Police Surgeon 6, $25,000 Pyramid 8;
Mun icipal Court 10; To Tell The Tr uth 13; Untamed

r......adioll f,o

l

Real Estate for Sale

-- - ----

-·
..·

V. V. JOHNSON
AND SON, INC.

Does
your
home I
requ_ire any of these [
servtces?

~--

·' RM ap t w1 th wa ll to wa tt
ca r p e t, l OA Spr1n g A. v e,
Pom eroy Ca ll 992 5908
6 22 tf c

MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1975

If '"'' ,,,, _. '" "

....

Television log for easy viewinsz

I.UiiHA ~ST

6 29 3tc

CL AR IN E l , ve r y gooo con
d tl1on , $100 Ph on e 985 d236
6 29 31p

l
I

..
·.; ...
~ - ·. ' , , -'~ •'

On aluminum r epl a cement
w•ndow s, stdtng, storm
doo rs and w i ndows , ratling ,
phone
Charl e s
Lisle ,
Sy r acu s e,
Ohio .
Car1
J a c ob , Sa l es R epr e sen tat1v e.

4 2 75

pota t o es

1971 BLA ZER W1fh ro ll bar ,
w h 1l e spok e wh ee ls and b1g
l 1r es
Exce ll en t cond it 1on
Ph on e 992 7473
6 29 6tc

-

.

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

W AL N U T d esk tn qood coO
d1liOn , SJ5 Phone 99 2 2807
6 25 51p

Ce tl mg , pan elm g , ft oor tng ,
Case No . 21.5'1 4
E stat e of J
etc Ph one 992 27 59
SK I Boat , 16 ft f tb r e gta ss 60 NEW H OME Jl ~ acres , 3
Paul G r u eser
Decea se d
h P rno tor Good cond 1t 1on
6 24 27 tc
Be droo ms,
11 :z
b a th s,
- - - - - ---- NOIIC C IS her eb y Q1ve n that
com ple te Ca ll after 5 p m '
Sund
eck
Phone
992 7790
985 3344
Bern ,ce G ru ese r of 516 Sou th
6 26 -6tc
4th St, Midd lepor t , Oh iO, ha s W ILL DO odd lOb S, pa1nt mg ,
- - - 6·29 2tp
h a ulmg
and
r o ofin g ,
been duly ap p o 1n t ed A d
------~-m ow m g Call 992 7409
mm ,s tral r tx of the\ E st ate of J
BROWNING Eag l e CB ba ;; 172 ACRE S l an d , and loc u st
6
25
6tc
Pau l Gr uese r , de c~ease d , tate
s tat 10n tor sale or tra d e for
po s ts Als o, 1965 F ord L TO
of M i ddlepo rt , Me1gs Count y
m oto r cyc le Ph one 99 2 53 48
Ph one 74'1. 3656
Oh10
' REMODELI N G ,
Plum b ing ,
6 26 6t c
5 23 52 tp
Credtlo r s a r e r eq ui r ed to
heatm g an d all ty p es of
--hie the1r cla1 m s Wl l h Sa •d
gen er a l
repa~r
Work ON E W est mghouse roast er
rw o B EDROOM hou se for
f •duc1a r y wrt h 1n fo u r months
guar-anteed
20 years ex
w 1th c ab and c loc k Ph on e
sa l e Phon e 985 4102
Dat ed th1 s 11th d a y of Ju n e
per1 ence
Ph one 992 2A09
992
2262
197 5
6 10 26 tc
5 1 tf c
6 29 ·31c

CAS H pa id fo r all m ak es an d
mod els of m obile homes
Phon e a r ea cod e 614 423

Rt . 2 Pomeroy

6 27 3tp

I an d 2 b ed r m mob il e ho rnes
dcp o s rf re q urr ed P hon e 99 2

HUGE 5 family yard sat e',
V5 .
J uly 3, 4 an d 5 Co ll ec tabl es.
R ober t L Co l e, et a !
bab y 1te m s , m1sc
Fran k
In
pursuance
to
an
Huds o n
r e s1 d ence
10
E xecu 11on tssued f r om t he .. Ra ctn e, ac r o ss fro m R~c m e
Corn man P leas Court of Metgs
r ood Ma rk e t
County Po me roy , OhiO , tn the
6 29 l tp
ca se of Th e F armers Ban k &amp;
Sav,ngs Co , Pia tnh f L vs 6 F 1\M IL Y Yar d Sal e, Ju l y 1, 2
Robert
L
Cole ,
e ta l ,
an d 3 at 711 South Th 1r d St
Defendan t , betng Case No
N ext
to
Spe e d
Qu ee n
15 SSJ m satd Court , 1 w1 ll o ff er
Laundrom at , Mrd d l eport 10
at publ1c au clion at th e fr on t
a n1 till d ark Phone 99 2
doo'" of th e Court House a t
7J9J
Pom eroy 1n sa1d County on t he
6 29 4lc
?6!h d a y at July , 1975 at 10 00
O 'Clock AM, t h e fOllOWing
GARAGE SALES, Tuesday
descr1bed r eal es ta te, to wr t
Wednesd ay and Th ursd ay'
Bernq tn Sec t ton No 1 J
from 9 am ,, 11 5 P m
Town .t Ran9 e 12 o f t he Oh 10
Com pany 's P ur c hase , a nd
Mi ner svil l e, on Ou t chtow~
comnre nctng tn t he cen t er of
Hil l Nt ce c lothmg tn CIUd ing
extra lar g e wo r k uni for ms
th e road lead1nQ from Tupp er s
P 1a 1n'i ro A lfr ed Post O ff 1ce a t
and women ' s clolhtng , r ugs ,
bed s pr e ads , sh ee t s, c. u r
the southeas r co rn er o f th e 74
ta,n s , d iS h es and othe r
ac r e tr a c t ot land owne d by
the Gra11tor , Robert L Co te as
arli c les fo o nu merou s to
ntenl1 00
descr,bed 1n Deed Reco rd ed m
V ol 163, paq e 658 ot the Dee d
6 30 31c
R ec ord s o f Me1gs County ,
Oh10 thence wes t along t he Y AR D SAL E . every Th ur s
south l me of the sa1d 74 a cre
day , Fr,day and Satur day ,
tract Of land 220 fee l to a po 1n l
qua r t e r
mt le
fr o m
th ('r ecn , which po1n t 1S a l so 1n
L an g sville o f f De x te r Roa d
tlw ce nter l1ne o f sa1 d r oad ,
F oll ow th e Si g ns Phon e 742 ·
th ence north ISO f ee l th ence
6273
east 220 fee t to the ea st ltn e of
6 25 ft c
sa 1d 74 acre trac t of l an d
thence sou t h 450 l eer to t h E
Yar d Sa l e,
50 3
pla ce o f b egmn, n g, conta m1 ng LA RGE
M i d d l e por t
B roa d way
2 2€ acres , mo re or l ess
Mo n day throu gh We ds,
To ge ther vnth the r 1g ht of w a y
st ar t,nq at 10 am
r ese rved oy Robe rt Cole rn
6 29 3t c
Deed Book 252 , Page 485
Reference Deed
V olu me
163, pa oe 658 of th e M e tQ S
County Deed Record s and V ol
252 , Pag e 481, and Vol 252,
Page 483 , Deed Reco r ds Me1 g s BOS TO N Terr ter ma te pup s
AK C bla c k $125 Phon e 99 2
Coun t y , Oh 10
76BO
The app r a,sed va l u e o f t he
6 29 4t C
real estate ts $3600 00
T er ms Of sale Cash 1n han d
uoon del1ve r y of d eed
Robert C Hartenba ch,
Sh er 1ff
Me1g s Cou nt y , Po rne r o y , Oh iO W I LL t ake C'ar e of 2 p ri v al e
pa t 1ent s rn m y home Phone
161 13, 30 , 171 7, 14, 21 51c

NOTI CE OF
APPO IN TMENT

For Rent

Flatwoods, Ohio
Pom eroy , OhiO
Stop In Or
Ca \1992-7537

1

1967 FO R D lh u nd er b i r d ,
au to ma tt c. all powe r tO g ood
condition
Phon e 99 2 2058
a ft er 5 p m

r

REAR, SAM AND
GROOVY A RRIVE AT
THE FRONT.

6·6·1 me.

FOR FREE
ESTIMATES
•

A1r co nd1t1oning, plum bing , he at i ng , ro ofing ,
spouting, g e neral s h ee t
m et a l Work .

"~Nw.T:mH~E'6TE~~~;i(~i;;;-~-;,~:oto~a:r~r51l

992·2478

4 10 1 m o

Racine Plumoing
&amp;Heating

KITCHEN
STATE INSPECTED
LICENSED BAKER
AND DECORATOR

Card of Thanks

BUDGE T H EAR IN G
Noi• CE' •S hNf' by qrven th at

111

- -- ~~

'

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 99~:~993

HEll

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

INNING

'

Regular and
Excavator Type
Septor Tanks Installed

lop

(A nllwl!'rl to m o rr o w )

'

For Rent by Hour or
Contract Work.

LARRY LAY_E~DER

Also R epairs On All
R1dmg Tra c to rs
498 l ocu st Sf .
Middl eport, Oh1o
59 1m

r.__..._.__.._.._...._._.._______..__.._.._______.-..--._.._.._..___

o: Monday J une 30 1975

BACKHOES~

Blown
Insulation Services
Blown onto Walls &amp;AHics'
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOOR S
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SID\ NG.SOFF ITT
GUTTERS·AWNINGS

1974 CHEVELl. f=
53095
Ma libu HT Cpr-, 350 Y·6 eng me, power steenng, fac·
tory air , tmted glass, rad 1o, whee l cove rs, good tires,

Phon e 9&lt;19
6 29 6f c

~;~~ tu nhn ~

FREE ESTIMATES

Sales &amp; Service
992 -3092

suggested by the above cartoon.

c__:_:_
Pri::::_'
nt lft
= SUR::.:::
PRI:SI
::.:A
::.:
NS::.:.:
WI=.:
Rh:::.:
ere_JI

·B usiness)Services

2

'

.

'

" MALL stror l tra 1; do~, ~~~ t h
b lac k hcnd '" Rock s prm qs
c-trca Wcarmo col li\ r Ph on e
99~ 'llRQ
·
6 '19 li e

WA1TI N6 FOR BROKEN
BO NES TO JI'IEM 7.

URGETT

Auto Sales

R E D I 1\ G G E 0 key r rnQ w tt1 1 6

PE I&lt;SON Wf-10 '5

I

Fast ,R'esults Use Th~ Sentinel Classifieds

r

lO R your
Oil of M1n k "
- Ph o n e
C os met i cs
BRO WN 'S 99'15 113
1 7 tf c

A HOBBY FOR A

I ()

.

Notice

~TY~v-4·

I 01 I (J

.L' 0

j

[~

:r

H'Of\0\"K

D

DIC~TRACY

could get the answer

by walkIng away fro m it tor awhil e.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22)
Make 11 a po1nt not to im pose
upon fnend s tod ay an d
t o morr ow fo r an yth ing
matenal It's unlikely your re·
quests will be granted

LIBRA ' (S.pt. 23-0ct. 23) In

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) DomestiC demand s today
may be a b rt heavter t han
usua l Try to get other ta mtly
members to p1 tc h 1n

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 19)
Yo ur tem per 1s on an extre mely
short fuse . espec1ally where"
persons are dOH1Q wo rk fo r ,
you Don 't provoke them un necessanly.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
Keep your bu'dget buttoned
down th e next few d ays Buy

only 'what you need. when you·
need 1t
f"'
-

~Your

~Birthday
July 1, 1175

There w1 ll be some excelle nt
opport un 1t1es for yo u this year
to rece1ve recogn1tion and a d~ ·.
vance m ent from creative pro· ~
1ects P ut you r tdeas to wo rk . '~·

They'll prove prolltable.
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J

FEMALE

DRIVER!!

I

.
'

''

�·&gt; '

..
R-

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Monday., June 30, 1975

..

Miller calls for cooperation
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) Area miners were urged
Sunday by Arnold Miller,
president of the United Mine
Workers of America Union, to
work together in solving their
problems, including helping
electing suitable political
candidates.
"The only way we can
resolve the problems we have
is for us to get together,"
Miller said at ceremonies
here commemorating the
85th anniversary of the
founding of the UMW A. The
union was founded at
Columbus, Ohio, on Jan. 25,

have in the fuel energy
program.
"I think it is equally important today that we the
peopfe get together and bring
the national government
back to the people. Elect

1890.

Albert Baer, Florence E.
Baer to Edwin G. Ash,
Martha Ash, Parcels, Sutton.
Jean Louise Summerfield,
John W. Frank to Jacob M.
Gaul, Mildred L. Gaul, %
acre, Chester.
Mary Ellen Miller to
Lawrence D. Brogan ,
Patricia J. Brogan, Lot,
Pomeroy.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee
to Darlene Jeffers, Lot,
Syracuse.
Donald. H. Miller, Violet J .
-Miller to Jaymar Coal Co.,
Parcels, Salisbury.
Barr-Circle Development
Inc. to Cadron Estates Ltd.,
Lots, Middleport.
Ancil B. Cross, Wanda
cross to Amos Cross, Sr.,
Gladys Cross, 4.9 Acres,
Salem.
Matt Taylor dec' d. to Ethel
Larkins, Mabel Taylor, Aff.
of Trans., Lebanon.
Ethel Larkins to Mabel
Taylor, 19 Acres, Lebanon~
Mabel Taylor to Larry
Hoffman, Danette Hoffman,
19 Acres, Lebanon.
Donald F. Dixon, Judith D.
Dixon to Sybil Ebersbach,
Parcels, Salisbury.
Sybil Ebersbach to Donald
F. Dixon, Judith D. Dixon,
Parcels, Salisbury.

"We cannot, ·based on past'
history, look for someone to
solve the problems we have
unless we participate and can
contribute what we can .
Sometimes we are so obsessed with the things we
want to do ourselves that are
. important to us that we lose
sight of tlie fact that we must
face the problems that we
have and face them collectively."
He noted that "a significant
number" of coal miners
suffering from black lung are
receiving benefits.
"It's tragic that they had to
suffer but I thi!lk it's
significant that they are now
being compensated," he said,
adding that he had been in
one mine where the dust
hazard was abolished.
"Hopefully, people in this
country will recognize miners
for what they are, as good,
honest, taxpaying citizens
who work in a most hazardous occupation in this
country, who have a right for
the benefits that we're going
to be demanding. And I say
when the people in this
country recognize that in a
realistic way, that we'll get
on with the problems that we

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Church history

,

someone_w.ho will represent
the people, that will take on
the problems that we have
and be mindful of. And we
ought to recognize anyone
who aspires to be a political
candidate for what he is.
Let!s-.elect someone who is
concerned about the people
.and about the principles this
goverment was founded
upon."
James Kidd, president of
the Southeastern Ohio Black
Lung Association, outlined
the black Jung program and
what benefit his group seeks
in opening the meeting. Also
speaking briefly · were
Thomas Stark, retired international UMW board
member, and John Guzek,
UMW District 6 president
who introduced Miller.
The afternoon program at

HOSPrfAI~

NEWS r
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS, June 28 . Garnett Killen, Wilkesville;
Edith McCoy, Syracuse;
George Bates, Middleport;
Hobart Templeton, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Gay
Fields, Harold Jeffers,
Alberta Linthicum, Paul
Mako.
ADMISSIONS, June 29Donna Eblin, Rutland ; Opal
Tyree , Middleport ; David
Decker, Reedsville; Nellie
Hanlon, Letart, W. Va.;
Edward Parfitt, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Ava
Gilkey, Pearl Scarberry,
Virg'inia Wolfe, Cathy White.
Holzer Medical Center
(Births, June 27 )
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Scherer,
a
daughter,

Spending
(Continued from page 1)
by the l.Teneral Assembly;'
said Rhodes. " Legisative
intent statements are an
upon
the
intrusion
of
the
prerogatives
executive."
Among the items vetoed by
Rhodes was legislation which
would have :
- Permitted the state
Department of Education to
distribute any excess subsidy
appropriations without
review or control by either
the Office of Budget and
Management or the Controlling Board.
- Allowed the state Controlling Board to administer
the new employee compensation plan which Rhodes
said should be handled by the
Department of Aministrative
Services.
-Qeated a Mental Health
and- Mental Retardation
Review Committee. Rhodes
said it would duplicate the
wbrk of other organizations.
- Sent Medicaid · reimbursements directly to the
institutuions which were to
get the money.
- Provided operating funds
for the Ohio Development
Center. Rhodes said the
center sh'ould be abolished
and its duties assumed by the
Department of Economic and
Community Development.
-Granted new authority to
the Emergency Board to
review and approve personal
service contracts. Rhodes
said he felt the Emergency
Board should also be
eliminated with its duties

Eleanor, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Ward, a son,
Middleport.
taken over by the Controlling
(June 2S)
Board, the attorney general
Mr. and Mrs. David and stat!U!Uditor.
Raynor, twins, son and
Rhodes, in explaining his
daugliter, Gallipolis.
veto of the prov1s1on
(June 29)
,.,..,._.".. .. requiring accelerated. corMr. and Mrs. William proate tax paym~nts, sBid the
Salmons a son Wellston· propoal ~.s .merlt but sh~uld
'
'
' not be m1t1ated at a tune
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Stump,
h 't
ld dd to th
a daughter Rodney.
w en 1 wou a
. e
'
burdens of Ohio's JOb
producers. ·
·
SQUAD TO MEET
"The climate for business
RACINE- All members of in Ohio is not good,". said
the Racine Volunteer E-R Rhodes. "Our efforts must be
squad are asked tO be at the directed at keeping existing
fire station Wednesday and · industry and attracting new
Thursday, July 2 and 3 at 6 industry to Ohio.
p.m. ~o work on the float for
"The corporations that
the 4th of July Parade:--'L... would be required to prepay
· their corporate franchise tax
POPCORN FOR SALE
are the same corporations
RACINE
Racine that provide thousands of
members of the E-R squad jobs for our citizens," he said.
will be selling popcorn on the "To take from them the ca;;h
streets in Racine July 3 they need to meet paY!'olls
beginning at 9 a.m . All and other operating costs is to
donations will be ap- take from them their ability
preciated.
to provide jobs."

MASON DRIVE-IN '
1

I!

ill

/0

•

I

\i)

I

I ,

Boston
"'

o

.AT THE
LOWE$T

POSSIILE
PIICB

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio
.·.::-:.-'

LOCAL TEMPS
The
temperature
in
· do\yntown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Monday was 84 degrees
under sunny skies.

FOOlWEAR
For
........ The..·Entire Family

heritage !louse
Your Thom Me An Store
Mi!ldleport, Ohio

Thelma B. Wiley
Blazing New Trails. Three parts perfect from
. Action Place, the on-the-move Sportswear with plenty
of fashion action. Color-flecked tw~ed blazer with
front y~ke gathers, poly/silk double hit.
Easymoving, pull-on pants, polyester double knit,
Nature lovers' print shirt, long sleeves with turn-back
cuffs, acetate/nylon jers!'y .. ·
All machine wash/
dry .. AII Navy I0-20.

Claude E. Boothe

RACINE - Freda Deeter,
former school teacher arid
resident of the Racine area, is
a patient at St. Anthony
Hospital, Columbus. Cards
may be addressed to St.
Anthony Hospital, Hawthorne
St., Columbus, Ohio, Room
,912.

Sportswear
Second Floor

Co.

Funeral services wil l be
held at 3: 30 p.m. Tuesday at
the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev . Freeland
Norris officiating . Burial will
be in Beech Gro~we Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home
y time.

J

HARDING DIES
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Dr.
Warren GaUialiel Harding II,
prominent area physician
and humanitarian, and
nephew of President Warren
G. Harding, died Saturday
after suffering from an
inoperable brain tumor. He
was 69.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

From a Great American Bank

SHAFFNER NAMED
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Sam Schaffner of Baltimore
in Fairfield County was
elected commander of the
Ohio chapter of the Veterans
of Foreign Wars Sunday at
the group's convention here.
NOW YOU KNOW
The first public demonstration of color television
was held by the Bell
Telephone Laboratories in
New York City June 27, 1929.
ASK TOWED
Robert Anthony Murphy,
24, Johnstown, Ohio, and
Martha Sue Provo, 28,
Syracuse; Jeffrey Allen
Jones, 20, Racine, and Paula
Sue King, 18, Racine.

by perm iss ion of THE BETI1\1A NN ARCHIVE

1770: The street fight of the century.

It isn'tjust taxes that rile us. We hate seeing British soldiers
in our streets, our public buildings, even our homes. We
haven't rebelled, and we don't need soldiers to watch us. Our
. townspeople can't hold their tongues any longer. We jeer the
soldiers. Call them ."lobster backs.'.' Get the ruf(ians cm1fused. One March day, we get them too confused. Tl:iey fire
on a Boston crowd, kill five of tis and wound several ,more.
Sam Adams calls it the "Boston Massacre" and makes martyrs of the victims. We arrest the soldi~rs and try them for ·
murder. But more important, we get the regiments out of

behind fine home
furnishings and
appliances

CANVAS

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOI!JSE
0PENWEEKDAYS9:30 To 5:00

Omar C. Lemley

THE F·ACtS!

*QUALITY

noon on Wednesday when the
body will be taken to the
church .

Medical Center .
Mrs. Thelma B. Wiley, 72,
Mr . Lee was born Feb . 21,
retired teacher, died Sunday
1896. He was preceded in at her home on Seventh Ave.
death by his wife, Roberta,
in Middleport.
two sisters, and two brothers .
Mrs. Wiley was born Oct. 9,
Surviving are a son , Robert
1902 at Crooksville, the
E . Lee,
Racine ;
two daughter of the late David
daughters , Mrs . Dwight and Blanche Allen Hooper.
(Ruth) Swepston, Columbus,
She was preceded also In
and Mrs. James (Evelyn) death by her husband,
Lawrence (Dick) Wil~y In
.LPgram, Columbus ; nine
. grandchildren , and seven
1973.
grandchildren.
Surviving are two .. sons,
Mr. Lee was a lifelong
Larry L. Wiley , New Haven,
member of the Sutton United W. Va., and David R. Wiley ,
Methodist Church , formerly Washington ; W.. Va.; three
Lee's ·chapel.
. sisters, Mrs. Harold (Gladys)
Funeral services will be Showers, Dorothy Jane
held at 2 p.m . Tuesday ·at the Hooper, both of Crooksville,
Sutton United Methodist and Mrs. Mildred Hooper
Church with burial in the Meloy, Zanesville ; a brother,
Sutton Church Cemetery.
Harold William Hooper of
Friends may call at the
Potstown, Pa. , and three
funeral home at any lime. In grandch·i I dren,
Arthur
lieu of flowers, friends may William Wi ley and Jennifer
contribute to the Sutton
Caroline Wiley, both of New
Church .
Haven, and Angel Rae Wiley,
Washington, W. Va .
Mrs. Wiley was a member
of the Middleport Church of
Christ where she taught the
Omar Carl Lemley, 73 ,
intermediate girls class
Middleport, died Sunday at
several years . She was a
the Area dis Nursing Home at
retired elementary schoo l
Coolville where he resided
teacher, having taught at
the past three years .
Bradbury and McCluney.
Mr. Lemley was born Aug.
Funeral services will be
30, 1901. at Poplar Ridge, the
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the
son of the late George and
Middleport Church of Christ
Li llian Winegar Lemley. He
with Mr. George Glaze ofwas also preceded in death by
ficiating . Burial will be in
a daughter, Isabella, in 1972.
Riverview
Cemetery .
and two sisters. Mr. Lem ley
Friends may call at the
had been emp loyed as a car
Rawlings . Coats
Funeral
repairman for the New York
Home until noon Tuesday
Central Railroad before his
when the body will be taken to
retirement .
. the church.
Surviving are a son, Roy ;
two daughters, Mrs. Mark
(Inez) Hammond, Mrs.
Robert (Sonja) Campbell, all
of Columbus ; a sister, Mrs.
RACINE - Charles EdIna Rife, Kenton, five
ward Boothe, ' 81, died
grandchildren, and three
Saturday at his Route 1.
great-grandchi ldren .
Racine residence.
Funeral services will be
The son of the late Edward
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
and Hulda Dve Boothe. he
the Old Kyger Freewi l l was also preceded in death
Baptist Church with the Rev .
by his wife, Pearl.
Chesler Lemley officiating .
Surviving are a son, Olin,
Burial will be in the Gravel
Pomeroy; three grand Hil l Cemetery at Cheshire .
children, Dennis Boothe,
Friends may call . at the
Racine; Cody, of Eureka, and
Raw l ings -Coats
Fu.neral
Resa Sawyers, Racine, and
Home from 2 to 4 and from 7
four great -grandchildren .
to 9 p.m .. Tuesday and until
Before his retirement Mr .
Boothe was employed as a
night watchman with the
FREDA DEETER ILL
Parkersburg Rig and Reel

We Show and Tell

SQUAD CALLED
The·Middleport E-R squad,
answering one call over the
weekend on Saturday at 3:20
p.m ., transported Sherry
Clark, 18, ' to Holzer Medical
Center, as a medical patient.

:·, Elberfelds In Pomeroy
I

the Athens Convocation
Center was ·sponsored by
RACINE - Ralph E. Lee,
District 6 and local unions 79 , Rt. 1, Racine . died
Saturda ·' at the · Holzer
1340, 1886, 1890 and 1957.

News •• in Briefs

•

Area Deaths

Ralph 1!-'. /.,ee

(Continued from page 1)
Grant International Heiner. Several pieces of
AuXiliary of the Brotherhood china used in years past at
church
socials
were
of Railway Engineers.
indisplayed
with
these
Program books of the early
cluding
a
sugar
and
creamer
women's organizations of the
church, newspaper clippings, marked "Compliments of W.
and the early recordings of H. Woodward, dealer in
the Presbyterian Sessions Fancy Groceries, Midwere included in the exhibit, dleport" and an antique bowl,
'· of the late Sara Dobbs.
along with pictures of several gift
An art exhibit featuring 30
former
pastors
and
pieces
painted by · Mrs.
prominent .church families .
Marvene
Lowery was
Also in the display was ~n
antique candelabra given by displayed in the Sunday
Grace Downing over 50 years school room for viewing by
ago and brass vases those attendi!'lg the anpresented to the church in niversary celebration.
Among the out-of-county
memory of L. J. and Mayme
persons attending the observance were Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Woodyard and Angela,
Pickerington; Margaret and
Madelynne Sauer, Dayton;
' TONIGHT
Berke Alan Lyons, Gallipolis; .
Wdll Disney's
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sigman
ESCAPE TO
and Andy, Coolville; Mr. and
(Continued from page 1)
WITCH MOUNTAIN
Mrs. Bill Stewart, Athens; Antoscyck had told friends he was deliberately going to try to
· (Techni·color)
Naomi
Chase Howell, project his soul from his body. He was found dead in his room
Plus
CHIP'NOALE '
Gallipolis; Harold and Lettie - on his back, his thumbs between his index and middle
CARTOON FESTIVAL
Roush, Chauncey; Mr. and fingers.
Show starts 7: 00p.m.
Mrs. John Orr and Marcy,
Antosczyk, 29, apparently died in a position a yogi uses
Crown Point, Ind.; Mr. and only in deep meditation. Just why he died has authorities
Mrs. Bill Grate, South baffled. Apathologist says Antosczyk, in a self-induced trance,
Charleston, W.Va.; Mr. ·and somehow may have managed to slow his heart to the point
Mrs. Edgar Tuckerman, where his brain received too little blood - in essence, death
Athens ; Mrs. Harry E. from excessive meditation.
Hoagland,
Miss Grave
'.~
Sauvage, Mrs. Alice Lama
;, L
I 11 N q h,
Jones, Columbus ; The Rev.
and
Mrs. L. Stebbins,
Double Feature
Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. John
Tonight and Tuesday
(Continued from page 3)
Walker, Kanauga; Mr. and
Robinson's
run-scoring
single in the fifth inning gave winning
Mrs. Claude Durgee, Pitts"THE SISTER IN LAW"
burgh, Pa.; Mrs. Delmar pitcher Mike Cuellar a 1~ lead. Willie Horton's sixth inning
Plus
Haynes, Jackson; and Mr. single drove in Gary Sutherland, who had doubled, with the
"SUPER CHICK"
and Mrs. Lawrence Mitchell tying run.
· Brewers 4, Indians 3
and Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Bobby Mitchell's . sacrifice fly in the bottom of the ninth
Mitchell, Glenford.
scored George Scott with the winning run. Scott opened the
ninth with a double. Sixto LezC8!10 sacrificed Scott to third.
After Darrell Porter was walked intentionally, Mitchell hit a
long sacrifice fly to left field to score Scott.
White Sox 3, Royals 1
.
.
Bill Melton homered and recently-acquired left-hander Dave
Hamilton turned in his third fine relief performance in the last
four games to preserve Jim Kaat's 12th victory as the White
Sox won their eighth consecuUve game.
Rangers 9, fwlns 7
Mike Cubbage's three-run homer helped Texas score eight
and take an~ lead in the fourth, but the Twins rallied back to
make it close by scoring seven in the sixth, four of them on
Tony Oliva•s·grand slam. Mike Baczik won his first game in
the majors, going 5 2-3 inning!! for the Rangers.

MEIGS THEATRE

----------------------------1

· town.~

"No matter who you invite
to a picnic, you can most
usually depend on some
ants showing up" ...
The "FRIENDLY ONES"
wish all our customers safe
and sane FOURTH . OF'
JULY.

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO .
. ,, , ,
&gt;I

, ,.

,r

THE FARMERS BANK . .
AND SAVINGS
co~ .
Pomeroy, ·Ohio

S£J~V ICE

s40,000.00 Maximum Insurance

8/\NK

A fULL

. ror t.:ach Depositor
M/Mh/1-:

f![J/J-'111

[i//0 '..11
~~~\ UJiA~~(f
~.1f...: --

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