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10- The Daily Sentinel: Middlepor_t:Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursdav . Aug

I

' :'-. '

'

'

End-of-·t he-Month Sale
RTS FRIDAY AT

EN(}.()f-THE-MONTH SALE

WOMEN'S
DRESSES

TERRY DEEM~

GALf.IPOI.IS FF.RRY -Appointment of James I..

Co111 munity College.
Yocwn, his wife Jane , and

Yocwn, personnel manager

two e hildre n are residents

porate position of ass istant a r ea in the ncar future.
manager of setlaried persone l
Te rry E . Deems in itiated
has been ann ounced by plan t his Goodyear career in Jun e,

manager, Michael T. Bucci .
Succeeding Yocwn at the
Point Pleasant plant wi ll be

1959 as a production squadron
trainee at Akron, Ohto . He
was promoted to the position

Terry E. Deems who is
transferring from the Akron

of
sq uadron tret ining
s truc tor in June , 1961.

of

In May, 1964, he assumed

manager of salary per sonnel

the pos t of Akron conference

policies and benefits planning. According to Bucci, the
appointments will become
effective October. 1.
A native of Mansfield . Ohio,
Yocum joined Goodyear's
factory office at Akron , Ohio
in October, 1965, after serving
two years with the US Army .
Yocum served on the
company 's squadron training
program from February, 1966
until his appointment as
squadron instructor in May,
1966.
In October, 1966, he transferred to the Point Pleasant
plant filling the position of
personnel staff and later as
industrial engineer. In
Novermber, 1970, he was
promoted to the position of
personnel manager of the
Poin t Pleasant plant.
Yocum was graduated
from Ohio University with a
degree in psychology. H~

leade r and in March, 1966, he
was advanced to manager of
staff squadron s.
After serving as manager
of Goodyear's training center
school and as manager of
corporate squadron training,
Deems was promoted in July,
· 1972 to the position of
manager. salaried personnel
policies and benefit planning .
A native of Dennison , Ohio
Deems is a graduate of
Wittenburg College. He also
holds a masters degree from
Akron University in Akron,
Ohio.

received his masters de~ree
in business administration

after completing graduate
studies ·at the Harvard
Business School in Boston,
Massachusetts and Ohio
University at Athens, Ohio.
In addition to his involvement in community
affairs, Yocwn is a member
and past president of the
American Society of Personnel' Administration
(ASP A1. He also serves on
the advisory council of the
Buckeye Hills Vocational
School and the Rio Grande

MEIGS THEATRE

SHIRTS AND BLOUSES
SALE

Firemen plan

Y2

PRICE

Studios, Jnc.

An 8 x 10 color portrait of a
family is being offered, a
$17.95 value, for $4. There will
be one certificate per family.
Parents must be in the picture with their children.
Couples may also have
pictures taken.
Pictures will be taken on
Sept. 27 at the Mason Fire
Station. All proceeds will go
to the Mason Fire Department. Anyone interested in
helping with the fund drive
may contact any Mason
Fireman or call Mason 7735574. Appointments will be set
up for those who have certificates .

TONITE
THURS., AUG. 28
NOT OPEN

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

2.69
3.99
4.49
4.99

YARD ----·--YARD--· - · · - ·
YARD- · · - · · - YARD- ---- ·- -

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

1.99
3.29
3.49
3.99

YD.
YD.
YD.
YO.

End-of-the Month Sale
Cannon Royal Fam'ily

II

BATH ENSEMBLES
And

SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES I
Big selection of iacqua rd s, sol id c,.olors, floral prints in I
matching bath towels , hand towel s and wash cloth s.
I
No.lron Percale or Muslin in fancies solid colors and
bleached. Twin. full . queen and king sizes. Flat or fitted .

SEE US FOR YOUR
WIRING NEEDS.
250 ft. '16.50

SWITCH BOX

Western Jackets
Cotton and polyester blends - brushed
denims. Famous make. True western
styling. Sizes 36 to 46. L ·ited quan tity.

REG. 5.99 30XSO
SALE 2.99
REG. 3.99 24X40 - - - - - - - - SALE 1.99
REG. 2.99 24X42 - - · - - - - - SALE 1.49
End-of- The Month Sale

SALE PRICES

'

Bargains at The Mechanic Street Warehouse.

12'xl8'.....'98.00
12'x15'.... ~88.00

12'x12' ......'68.00

Special
Sale Prices

On
Whirlpool
Washers
and

Reg. 28.90
Reg. 39.95
Reg. 45.00
Reg. 46.90
Reg . 59.95

Leisure
Leisure
Leisure
Leisure
Leisure

Suits
Suits
Suits
Suits
Suits

Sale 22.83
Sale 31.53
Sale 36.33
Sale37.13
Sale 47.43

END-OF-MONTH SALE ,

DRESS SOCKS
Regular $1.00 . Ole size fits all sizes 10 to 13.
Choose popular bulky knit orion or the banlon
panel. Big selection of colors .

REG. $110.95 ............... SALE ~5.99

CHEsTER, OHIO

Sale Prices

Mens and Young Mens

Only 3 to Sell

STAR SU'PPLY

Sizes small (14. J41h ), medium (15- 151/z ), large {16-16h).
extra large ( 17 · 17 1h ) . Bright prints . checks . solid colors .
novelties .

The new fall selection of styles and colors. Sizes 36 to 46 .
Buy what you need now during this sale.

Home Furnishings Annex in the middle block .

SENTRY 18" LAWN MOWERS

52~

MEN'S LEISURE SUIT SHIRTS

MEN'S LEISURE SUITS

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

For use with
wire. ( 1 02)

End-of-theMonth Sale

END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE

CARPET MILL ENDS

250ft. '24.95

'5.00

End-of- The Month Sale

END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE

12-2 ROMEX W /GROUND

Sizes 4, 6, 8 and 10. Heavy weight blue denim neat fitting. While they last.

•6.99

Home Furnishings Annex in the middle block.

Our entire stock of 8 track stereo tapes is
included in this sale.

12-2 ROMEX (NMP)

WESTERN JACKETS

Perfect for wear with leisure suits.

WHITE SALE PRICES

STEREO TAPES

OURET BOX

MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S
$13.95 AND $14.95

AREA RUGS
A thought for the day:
British
writer
Lytton
Strachey said, " Perhaps of
all the creations of man
langua ge is the most
'astonishing ."

'11.88
END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE
BOYS LEE '10.98
BLUE DENIM

END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE

Discontinued patterns from our regular stock.
FRI. thru SUN .
AUG. 29 -Jl
.gatha Christie's
MURDER ON THE
ORIENT EXPRESS
(Technicolorl

Sizes 36 to 48 in shorts. regulars and longs.
Choose popular grey, Fisher stripe cloth or
sturdy blue denim. Pleated - action back double action zipper. Plenty of roomy pockets.
Stock up now during this sale.

•9.88

Coordinate colors in solids. prints and cords.

87~

PAIR

ENO.OF·MONTli SALE

MEN'S TIES
A select group of regular $4.50
famous maker lies. Solid colors and
neat patterns .

Save $50.00
On Any
Whirlpool
Refrigerator
In Stock

2 FOR •4.50

MAIN STORE, HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX AND MECHANIC STREET WAREHQUSE OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8

E B

Ron

James

F.ELDS .IN,.. POMEROY

Meantime ,

th e

'

.

where some o£ the

fl ooring ha s been removed .
The three noted six m en
painting about midway un the

bridge .
They also vowed to take the
situation to the people and
plan a protest against the
lack of progress bemg made
on replacement of the bridge
fl oo r by the Co nn Co nstructi on Co., New Cas tle.
Pa., the contracting firm on
the project.

j

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f

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ON TilE WEST VIRGINIA SIDE of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge late Thursday mormng,
three Pomeroy businessmen view the la ck of any work whatsoever on replacement of the

bridge floor . They are Bill Anderson, Paul Chapman and Richard Jones.

Meig s

protes t:; again st the bridge
closing and the lack of
pr og re ss

in

makin g

the

necessa ry

r epairs. The
eommission will make its
complaints formal in a letter

ways as well as to Gov .

SIX PAINTERS WERE WORKING on parts of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge structure
late Thursday morning. Pictured are three of the men. However, no work whatsoever wa s
being carried out on replacement of the bridge's floor structure. Area businesses are suffering economically since the bridge was closed several weeks ago.

James Rhodes . Appointments also will be sought in
Mar ie tta to express the
complaints verbally .
Thursday morning three
Pomeroy businessmen, Bill
Anderson, Richard Jones and
Paul Chapman, walked the
bridge to view what progress

.,
THIS TRUCKLOAD OF STEEL grating apparently
for the new bridge floor between Pomeroy and Mason, W.
Va ., sat on the Ohio side of the river late Thursday mor·

ning when thiee Pomeroy businessmen walked across the
bridge to verify a report that absolutely no work was
being carried out on replacement of the bridge floor .

•

By Uolted Press International
DUBLIN - EAMON DE VALERA, LAST SURVIVOR of
the fiery band of revolutionaries who won independence for
Ireland, died in a Dublin nursing home today . He was 92.
New York-born de Valera, who defied British troops at the
head of a 136-man force in the Easter Rising of 1916, served two
seven-year terms as president of the republic he helped create .

enttne

MILUONS OF MOTORISTS, ANTICIPATING the end of
surruner, left town today to enjoy a myriad of festivals or quiet
picnics in the country as the nation observed the Labor Day
weekend, summer's last holiday fling.
The National Safety Council estimated 460 to 560 persons
could die and another 18,000 to 23,000 suffer disabling injuries
in traffic accidents during the weekend which begins at 6 p.m .
local time today and ends at midnight Monday. Police stepped
up patrols to curb traffic mishaps.
Thirty-six extra state police officers were ordered to duty
in Michigan to help patrols on state highways. At least two
state police helicopters also will be used .
MIAMI- LONGSHOREMEN HAVE REJECTED a bid by
lobstermen to boycott Bahamanian vessels in retaliation for a
ban on fishing on the Bahama shelf. Experts predict the ban
could crush the south Florida lobster industry . The International Longshoremen's Association said Thursday it
would not carry out the threatened boycott, requested by 1,200
area lobstermen.
"We have enough problems with the grain deal with the
Russians," ILA President Thomas Gleason said. "We don't
want people to think we're boycott crazy." U. S. -Bahamian
talks broke down Wednesday. The Bahamian goverrunent
refused .to lift the law prohibiting American fishermen from
taking catches on its continental shelf.
"This is the end of the road," said Capt. Gerbasio Guillen,
skipper of the 65-foot lobster boat Robby Dale. "If the State
Department could not get an agreement and the ILA will not
boycott, then there is nothing left for us in Ibis country."
DETROIT - VIOLA RIDDLE HOFFA, MOTHER of
missing former Teamsters boss James R. Hoffa, died Thursday without knowing her eldest son had been missing for
ahnost a month. She was 85. Doctors at Plymouth General
Hospital in Detroit attributed death to natural causes but a
close farnlly friend said Mrs. Hoffa died of "a broken heart,"
apparently because she had not seen her son .
"This poor woman died because of the tragedy," said
Murray Chodak, law partner of Hoffa's son, James P. Hoffa .
"She died of a broken heart. "
Chodak said Mrs. Hoffa was "very, very close to her son"
and asked about him every day. She said the family decided
not to tell her about Hoffa 's disappearance July 30 because
"they were hoping against hope he would show."
STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN - AMERICAN anthropologist
Margaret Mead described Western society Thursday as a
"screaming failure " and said the world's main aim must be

the prevention of war. "Our society is a flop and a screaming
failure," she told journalists, " but at least we are becoming
aware of the problems and starting tQ know what questions to
ask.
"This prevention of war is the basic thing which is
necessary if we are going to survive long enough to form a
better world," she said. "We must get rid of a society based on
the automobile and form a low energy society," Miss Mead
(Continued on page 12)

Weekend is full
A busy weekend is planned
by members of the Pomeroy
Fire
Department
and
Emergency Squad according
to Joe Struble .
Beginning Saturday at
11:30 a.m. a fish fry will be
held at the new fire station on
Butternut Ave., to be followed
by a dance at the Pomeroy
Junior High School from 9
p .m. to 1 a.m. Music will be
provided by " Sound InVestment".

On Monday, Labor Day,

parade units will assemble
behind the Pomeroy Junior
High School at 10:15 a.m. and
proceed west on Main Street
to Butternut, out Butternut to
Third onto Mechanic ,Street
parking lot where they will
disband .
At 11:30 a.m. firemen will
sell barbecued chicken from
their pit on the u])per parking
lot until all chickens are sold .
Proceeds will be used for the
building fund.

Devoted To The Interests of' The
VOL. XXVII

NO. 97

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Mei!{.~-M;wm

Are11

FRIDAY, AUGUST 29, 1975

PRICE 15'

Bridge repair •• 'ridiculous'
Two issues of strong local interest - proposed improvements to Page St. in Middleport and progress being
made in the repair of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge - were
brought before the Meigs County Regional Planning Commission Thursday afternoon meeting at the Farmers Bank
Building.
Presenting both matters was Edison Baker, co mmission
secretary.
Baker said Page St . in Middleport, the access road to the
Middleport Marina, was one of the projects scheduled under '
the State Issue I project funds established in 1969. He said that
$61,000 has been spent in surveying the site but the village of
Middleport is still without an improved street.
He stated that there is still on hand some $80,000 in State
Issue funds for the project. The costs at the present time are
expected to run almost twice the $80,000 figure. Baker said that
completion of the project should be pushed.
Meigs County Engineer Weslay Buehl said possibly other
money will be forthcoming that can be teamed with the $80,000
so that the project can be completed. The group agreed to
discuss with Mayor Fred Hoffman of Middleport the possibility
of applying for Appalachian Regional Commission funds so the

project can be completed.
Baker than brought up the bridge .
He said the present situation is the most ridiculous that
could be imposed upon an area from both the business and
social standpoints. He charged, " We are getting the run
around" on the bridge repair.
He pointed ·out that the bridge has been closed almost four
weeks and very little has happened. He criti cized the closing of
Route 33 and de!Qurs and signs which failed tQ note that ferry
service is available.
It was agreed to send a letter of protest to the division

office of the Ohio Department of Transportation and to Gov .
James Rhodes.lt was also agreed to follow up the letter with a
request for an appointment to talk the matter over with
Division Highway Department officials in Marietta.
The commission heard a report from C. E. Blakeslee,
executive director, stating that he has submitted three
Housing and Urban Development proposals which include a
county-wide recreational development study with a local cost
sharing provision of one third, a tax map proposal and a
proposal for the location of historical sites in the county .
There are no financial obligations involved at this point,

Blakeslee said .
The commission approved several proposals which have
been submitted by state agencies. One is a comprehensive
employment Training Act, Title ll proposal which would
provide $5,045,018 for 58 counties with 10 jobs to be provided in
Meigs County through the program.
James M. Jennings, head of the Jennings Associates Area
Economic Consultants, Colwnbus, spoke on housing and
nursing home facility surveys which his firm is conducting for
the commission. He displayed two forms which are being used
in the surveys.
He said that a meeting with the Ohio Valley Health Services in Athens was held and that the study on the nursing
home is being encouraged since the services recognize a need

in Meigs County . It was stressed, however, that even after the
study is made, the commission is not the action agency for the
construction of whatever nursing home facilities are recommended.
About SO of the survey forms are being mailed out to
doctors and others. However, upon the comment that the
number is limited , Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, local executive
(Continued on page 12)

.;.;.;. ;.;:;.;.::::::::::;:;.;:;:::::::;:: .:·:·::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;.;:;:

Governor asked
to ease problem
State Rep . Ronald Jam es
has asked Gov ernor Rhodes
to make efforts to rectify the
Pomer oy -Mason br idge
situation.

In a le tte r to Governor
Rhodes' office, James urged
the Governor to take a look at
the si tuatiQJ) in the areas of
speeding up work on the
bridge, doing the work one
lane at a time and improvements in ferry service

to landings.
James also asked that a
representative from the
Governor 's office be sent to a
meeting abo ut the situation to
be held in Pomeroy on September 2 at 7:30.
Here is the text of Jam es'
letter :

" I would urge that your
office make eff or ts to :
"-Have the work on the
bridge done one lane at a
time, so that one lane traffic
could be ma inta ined
"-"Speed up work on the
bndge 1there is currently
only one s mall crew
working ). Why not have
crews worki ng two or thre e
shift.s:

" - Acquire
fed eral
assistance for ferry service
and also make funds
available for ferry landing
imorovements

Coal dmnped
COAL GROVE, Ohio
I UP!) - About 250 coal
miners from West Virginia

and Kentucky dumped coal
at the entrance to th e
Addington Brothers Coal
Co. loading facility here
Thursday, halting the
operation for several
hours.

Police officials said the
mim~rs

came here in car s

Murder indictment is
brought by Meigs jury
Ele ve n persons were in.

dieted by the Meigs Co unty
grand jury that co nv ened
Thur sday at the Courthouse .
Charles Tyree , Jr ., 44 , wa s
indi c ted on a c harge of
murder ,

no

de g re e

and 10 to 12 trucks loaded
with coal. They soon left
with no other incidents
reported. The dumping
shut down the facility until
the coal could be cleared

designated. On June 19, at
12:35 a. m. Tyree alleged ly
shot Ruby Jarvis, 33, Middleport, three times with a
small caliber handgun, on ce

away.

in the hand , and twice in the

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

stomach .

Abel heads SEOEMS

The
appoint men t
of
" [ ur ge ntly request action
by your office concerning the Richard B. Abel as acting
Pomeroy-Mason bridge • director of the Southeast Ohio
situation. I am sure you are Emergency Medical Seraware that the bridge is vices, Inc ., ( SEOEMS ) was
unanimously
co mpletely
closed
for ap proved
Wednesday
by
the
repairs. As a result the people
1
of Meigs Coun ty are suffer ing organ iz~ tion 8 Bo3rd of
great hardships by having no Trustees at Wellston .
The action was taken
direct route to jobs in West
Virginia . The businesses of following acceptance of the
Meigs County are also suf- resignation of Director D.
fering because they cannot 1 Kenneth Morgan . Morgan
draw
Wes t
Virginia had submitted a letter of
r esignation to SEOEMS
customers.
' "There is currently one President James McLain, a
ferry ·operating, but in high Hocking
Co unt y Comwater it must shut down, missioner, on Friday, August
the re is then no way to cross 22 . Morgan noted in his letter
the river with out going to he would continue with the
•
nati on a l dem onst r atio n
Gallipolis.

project through September,
aiding staff in an orderly

of the organization 's records

transition . He has bee n the

an independent firm and a

had just been completed by

director since early 1973.
In other business, the
Board learned tha t an audit

report would be presented to
the Board at its September
meeting . The board also
voted to accept an advanced
EMT training program as
dev ised and recommended by
MEETING CALLED
a committee of si x area
A meeting will be held Sept. physicians.
3at 7:30p.m. at Jack's Place ,"
In another acti on , it
Pomeroy , to form an AM- · authorized President McLain
VETS Post of. Ameri can and acting-director Abel to
Veterans of World War II, contract with Lawren ce
Korea, and Vietnam . AM- County General Hospital , and
VETS
is
a
national other area hospital s, for
organization . For additional SEOEMS ph ysician agents to
information contact Jack conduct adv a nced EMT
on
hospita l
Ward located on the bypass training
intersection· of SR 7 and 143. premi ses .

•
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...

Co unty planning commission
meeting Thur sday voiced

•

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who

river

.,

MEN'S $14.95 COVERALLS

Polyester Double Knit Yard Goods

fund drive

Rep .

100 yard area of the bridge on
the West Virginia side of the

END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE

Long sleeves - snap front - snap close
cuffs - extra long shirt tails - 100 per
cent cotton. Neck sizes 14112 through 17.

End-of-The- Month Sate

MASON, W. Va . - The
Mason Fire Department is
holding a fund raising drive
in conjunction with Colortex

Foundations Dept., Second Floor

"LEE" and "WRANGLER"
$12.95 BLUE DENIM
WESTERN SHIRTS

End-of-the-Month Sale
WOMENS SUMMER

that no worker s were near the

to attend the meetin g.

Save up to $5.00 with cash refunds from
Playtex . Just buy the required amount
of Playtex styles. To get $5.00 iust buy
any 3 Bras or any 2 Girdles or any 2
Bras and 1 Girdle.

' END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE

SAVE OVER 50%

called by Pomeroy Village
Coun cil for Tuesday evening,
7:30 p.m., to form up a
protest against the delay in
repair and closing of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge .
Scheduled to attend the
meeting to be held at the
Pomeroy Elementary School

to the division office of the
Ohio Department of High-

1fz PRICE

Girls Summer Dresses

I

PLAYTEX SALE

While They Last

End-of-the -Month Sale

is being made . They noted

notifi ed Mrs. Jane Walton,
Pomeroy Village Clerk , that
he will be attending the
sess io n to discuss the
problems with the public
Me1gs Co unty resident:; and
any other persons affected by
the bridge closing are invited

I

FINAL TWO DAYS

Shorts - Tank Tops
Sleeveless Shirts
Long
Pants. Selected from our
regular stock. (All first
quality)

in·

A public m ee ting has been

is

ENO.OF-TliE-MONTli SALE

l
FAMOUS MAKER I
CHILDREN'S l
WEAR I
I

of t he Goodyear Point Gal lipolis, Ohio but wlll be
Pleasan t plant, to th e cor - relocat ing to the Akron, Ohio

l

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

EN~F-MONTH SALE

or

~

,I

SALE PRICES

SALE PRICES l
-----------------·l

Goodyear plant

position

Buy your Fall coordinates t.h is weekend
and save. Misse s. Womens and Junior
Sizes .

Our entire stock of Fall
Dresses in Misses and
Half Sizes is included .

Changes made at

corporate

9:30A.M.---·--~---~--------=-.,,.....
END-OF-THE-MONTH SAU

COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR

'

Protest grows
to easy pace
of bridge ·work

''

ELBERFELD$ IN ·POMEROY

JAMES YOCUM

'

~·

Tyree

wa s

taken

in to

and

Calvin

Mayle

for

cus tody by th e Mei gs Co w1ty
Sheriff 's Dept . and Middleport poli ce at .3: 12 a .m .

bu r g lary and posse~sion
· stolen goods. Th ey
were involved in
th is

Ruby Jarvis wa s taken to

week 's

Holzer Medical Center where
she died 18 da ys later .
Oth er s Indicted were
Gerald Hen dricks and Bobby

Goess l er

Patterson on a
receivin g s tolen

c har ~e

of
property:

Tony Bolen for theft , and
Danny Wal ker and Gene
Rup e for armed robbe ry.
Al so indicted were Larry
Phillips,
Ear l
Phelp s ,
Douglas Burns, Stev e Pullins

Otester will
have a parade

or

at

rob be r y
J e we lr y

t he

Stor e ,

Cour t St., Pomeroy.
Se r vin g on the grand jury
were Cecil Toban , Adr ian A.

Ca rso n. Marjorie Goett ,
Hobe rt Ha tfield, Barbara
Anth ony, Charles 0. Weber,
Rober t Beegle. Paul Voss,
Mary J. Wise. Daisy Blakeslee and Wa yne Wllson.

.........

.....

. . . . :- :-:.:.:-;·:-:.·

EXTENDED Ol!TLOOK
Sunday
through
Tuesday, warm and humid
with a chance of afternoon
thundershowers each day
of th e forecast period .

CHESTER - A parade at
Highs will be in the upper
I :30 p.m. will hi ghli gh t a
80s
to the lower 90s and
Labor Day celebrat io n
lows
will be 65 to 70.
Mond ay here by llle Cheste r
Volunteer Fire Dept.
::;:;:;.:.;:;.:·:·:-: ·.·.·.:.:.:.:.:.··:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:.·.·:·.·. ·.:::·&gt;
The parade will be followed
by contests at 2 p.m . incl udin g a water fight,
greased pole and two classes
of bicycle races. At 10 a .m.
Warm and hwn1d tOday and
there will be a garden trac!Qr o&gt;aturday, chance of showers
pulL At 11 :30 a.m . the depart- afternoon or evening. Highs
ment will s tart se rvin g Saturday 85 to 90, lows
barbecued spare ribs and tonight
lower
70s .
chicken . Homemade ice -·Probability of rain is 50 per
cream, pie and ca ke will also cent today, tonight and
be available .
Saturday .

Weather

'

�I

I

•
Ser.tmel Mlddlenort-P&lt;meroy, 0 , Friday,

2- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport Pomeroy, 0 Fnday, Aug 29 1975

'

Miners' strike spreading into Pennsylvania
CHARLESTON , W Va
( UPJ) - A major figure m a
mushroommg wildcat coal
str1ke was released from Jail
ThW"sday and prom1sed to try
to end 11 , but a retw-n to work
by the more than 60,000 •died
mmers unhl after Labor Day
appeared unlikely
The strike that began Aug
11 over the f1rmg of a mmer
spread for the first t1me
Wednesday mto ne1ghbormg
Pennsylvama, promptmg a
rash of new court sUJts and an

angry threat by g1ant US
Steel
Corp
to
seek
congressiOnal superviSion of
mme labor relahons
The walkout, sa1d US
Steel board cha irman E B
Speer was
a nalwnal
disgrace M1llions of tons of
coa l productiOn lost to the
economy Will hold us III
further hostage to fore1gn
energy sources addiiig to
inflatwn pressures
Speer accused the Uruted
Mtne Workers uniOn of

TOM TIEDE
Another bore on
the campaign trail
TICdl
DURHAM 'l C
1 he
trouble "1th Tern Sanford
says George Wa llace IS that
hell bore \ Ou stll v Qw te
n ght Ht s baste decency and
admirable pubh( se rvt ce
as tde the oneltme North
Carol tna gov ern or
nO\\
candidate for Presulent ha s
a dro" sy disposition
F orever
c loaked
1n
busmess dress , the kn ot of hts
he ttght agamst h1s neck the
man drones on about state
co o rdinator s
travel
a rr angemen ts
br oker ed
conventwns - the stuff of
h1gh poll t1cs to be sure but
11 s ever so dull
And 1t 's ever so common m
th1s benumbed campmgn for
the While House Sanford by
no means sh n es alone Ex·
ceptmg onl) Wallace "hose
char1sma 1s corrup ted by h1s
"'t the Democ rattc can
d1dates are a lackluster lot
Fred Harns for one has
been descnbed as the kind of
fellow who s here toda y and
here tomo rrow
as for
Henry Jackson the stor) ts
the last lime he spoke m
Miami the lide went out and
wouldn t return for nearly a
month
Not that the aspirants
aren t mter estmg men m
the1r own n ght Sanford for
mstance, has several cam
prugn pages or credential s
pnnted, you can be sure, wtlh
the proper umon bug World
War II paratrooper state
orf1eer, voltmteer do-gooder ,
author of two political books
fnend to John Kennedy and
now pre s tdent of Duke
Umvers1ty Impeccable And
so much for 1mpecca b1hty
Despt!e 11, accordmg to
polls Sanford's name IS
recogmzed by fewer than 20
per cent of the Ameri can
people H1s support to now
comes almost entirely from
pohtlcal ammals hke h1m
self the real people res1st
Terry Sanford 's campa1gn
With monotonous regularity
Defensively, Sanford says
he loses no sleep over the
populanty
1ss ue
The
pnmanes, after all are
seven months off, the e lec ti on
fifteen No candidate has yet
caught f1re w1th the pubhc he
ms1st s, becau se ' 11 s too
early for f1re watcher s " And
as a pomt of fact, candtdates
are not now cam pa1 gmng so
much for votes as they are for
orgamzat10n thus the ms1p1d
qual1ty of the entire matter
There s nothmg exc tlmg,

Sanford savs tn se tttng up
shop 1n Io" a
Yet the early date of tht,
presidential race does not
alone accowlt for 1ts lack of
mteres t tn the publi c sector
fhe tnabllll) of candidates to
move the masses IS also
ObVIOUS

E\ en at th1s most op
portune t1me
Y.hen a
pohtJcall) Sickened nahan IS
gra sptng for somethmg and
someone to believe m San
ford and his competitors are
not nsmg to the occaswn
F.ach of them condemns the
concept of pohtlcs as usual
but then proceeds to orfer
polihcs as us ual
Other than Fred Hams
guenlla ca mpa1gn
fr om
the wtndow of a pickup truck
the aspirants gnnd out the old
propaganda put the old bile
on the afnuent and tn general
con duc t the1r Imp ecca bl e
selves as 1f the pubhc knew no
be tter
Mr Sa nf ord IS yo ur
op iniOn form ed on a ll
Issues "
Yes 1t 1s
Are you pr epa red to
answer any question?'
Yes and I can answer any
quesllon m s1mple terms
Then "hat would you do
abou t nuclear proh£eratwn?
Well - pause That
questwn can t be eas1ly
answered
It 1s of cow-se not diffi cult
to ma ke fun her e of Tern
Sanford or Fred Harns or
Scoop Jackson One can take
any pohllca l quote or actwn
and bare 1ts mcon s1sle nc~e s
and selfish nature I Sanford
the bleedmg heart liberal
once raised the grocory tax m
North Ca r olina s poo r m
order to g1ve teac hers who
supported h1s gubernatonal
candidacy a mce salary tn
crease ) But the good gray
candidates, as ever mv1te
th e smckers
As have pohbcos forever,
they contmue to present
themselves as straight up
cosm opolitan
phenomena
They are thus bormg because
they are obvious and dated
Most
Amencans
have

outgrown such corn
So the campa1gn drags on
An a1de to Terry Sanford
remmds that a Southern
bor n one term gove rnor
turned college president can
neve r be discounted m
Democra t1 c
p o ll t1 cs ,
because remember that 's
what Woodrow Wilson was"

regularly' nauntmg 1t s
responsibility m the contract
A federal JUdge here , who
Wednesday lev1ed a $500,000
fme agamst the UMW m

ternat10nal , Thursday freed
Sim Howze, a local UMW
off1cer who went to Jail rather
than force h1s men to obey a
court order to end their

opznzon, features

Oearer perspective on the atomic bomb

Fund is at $1,173.59

LA's chief cop
wants new party

Care needed for hiatal hernia

•

and not have th1s problem, or
you can have a faulty closw-e
mechamsm Without the
hernta
A lot of management of a
h1a tal herma 1s directed
toward neutralmng the ac1d
m
the
stomach
and
preventmg leaking of the
contents backward These
measures help prevent the
heartburn There Is a good
reason to try to prevent
heartburn, because tl 1s a
symptom
of
c hem1cal
1rntat1on of the lower
esophagus The herma may
or may not get larger, but the
constant trrttatton of the
lower esophagus can cause 11
to contract and scar unlil 11
becomes difficult for food to
pass through the damaged
area mto the stomach
To
prevent
this
disagreeable compbcat10n, 11
1s tmportant that you follow
your doctor's dtrechons
carefully YoW' hvmg habits
are JUst as Important as yo ur
medJcmes, mcluding ealmg

CLEVELAND (UPI ) - Walter J Moore, S9, plans to
keep on ruruung hiS wrestling promollon business here
desptte havmg won the top $300,000 pnze m the
Buckeye 300 Lottery drawmg here Thursday rught
It won't make too much difference," Moore said
after th e drawmg " I'll he at work tomorrow marrung '
He's been m the wrestling busmess for 33 yM, and
also breeds registere&lt;\ Airedale dogs
Moore S3ld he buys a lottery ticket each week,
usually at an Akron supermarket, but for the last
month he got them at an Akron restaurant and
rughtclub
Other Buckeye 300 wmners , each getting $15,000,
were Frank J Schram, Pittsburgh, Pa , Vernon
Sandlin, Mtddletown W Earl Phillips, CliiCinnati,
Nadina M Hard, Grove City, and Mary Williams,
Cleveland
In the Lucky Bucky drawmg, Lile Mae Lumpkin, 52,
Garf1eld He1ghts, won $150,000 She 1s an employe of
the Center for Human SerVIces m Cleveland, IS
marr1ed and bas foW' children
James Stewart, Cleveland, won $75,000, Joseph
GoSClnskl, Avon, won $30,000, Cindy J Sefch1ck,
Parma Hetghts won $50,000 and Lloyd 0 Smith,
Dayton, won $25,000, m the Lucky Buck drawmg
ThiS week's wmnmg numbers m the Ohio lottery
Number 188 (one e1ght etghl) many box on ticket
WlilS $20
'
Numbers 894 ( e1ght rune four) and 331 (three three
one) m green and blue wms $500
Numbers 894 and 331 in blue boxes wms $1,000
Numbers 894 and 331 m green boxes eligible for
$300,000 drawmg and automatically wms $15,000
Lucky Buck Wl!Ulmg Numbers 712 (seven one two)
and 576994 (five ,seven s1x nme nme four)
Birthday bonus number 0755 (zero .seven five five)

•

small meals, not lymg down heart rests on the diaphragm
after eatmg, not wearmg any over the stomach like s1ttmg
constnctmg garmet or belt - on a pillow The chtlled water
around your wa1st and Will result m changes m the
avmdmg hendmg over
electrocardiogram (T wave
If you want more m- changes)
I have seen several cases of
formahon on h1atal herma
and how to manage yow- young men (one 21 and other
da1ly hvmg habits With tt, 24) who drank lots of cold
wri«! to me m care of th1s hqutds
after
vigorous
newspaper, P 0 Box 1551, exerc1se, as dw-mg a football
Radw C1ty Station, New game, who developed chest
York, NY 10019, send a long, pain thereafter and had a
stamped,
self-addressed heart attack I do not know
envelope and 50 cents and ask whether the attack would
for The Health Letter on have occW"red anyway or not
But With the knowledge that
h1atal hernta, number 4-8
DEAR DR LAMB - Do cold flwds chill the heart and
1ce-&lt;:old beverages like tea or knoWing that the artenes to
coke, or the eatmg of 1ce the heart can go mto spasm, I
cubes, have any adverse have always suspected that
effect on the heart, the heart the cold caused the attack
rate , h1gh blood pressure,
For thts reason, I thmk
anyone who IS very hot or has
emphysema or ulcers•
DEAR READER - Not been exerc1smg should not
usually, but I'm not con- drink cold liqwds, but should
vmced that c old flwds are drink hqwds that are only
entirely harmless If you ftll hghtly cool, as ordmary tap
the stomach w1th Ice water 11 water, at least unul after they
will ch11l the underneath have cooled down and rested
surface of the heart The from the exertwn

•

LOS ANGELES (UPI) Pollee Ch1ef Edward DaviS,
fummg at suggestwns by
Democratic leaders that hiS
temperament scared them
away from holdmg thetr
prestdentlal convention here,
res1gned from the party
ThW"sday
'I can't support a party
that ts agamst police chtefs of

lill·~~A
IICI
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Ed1tor
PubliShed da 1t y ! xce pt
Saturday by The Ohio Vallev.
Publ ls l\ tng company
111

Court

St

Pomeroy

Oh•o

45 769 Busme~ Office Phone99'2 2156 Ed•lor'ial Phone 992
2157
Second c lass postage pa1d
at Pomeroy Oh•o
Naf 1onal
adv ert iS i ng
representat1ve
Ward
Gr•fftth Company
Inc
Bott tnellt &amp; Gallagher D•v
757 Th•rd Ave
New York
N Y

10017

S ub sc rtpt.on rates
Deltvered by carr•er where

available 75 cents per week
By Motor R:oute where

earner

serv•ce

not

available One month $3 ?5
By mall m Ohio and W Via

One Year
$22 00
S tx
months
Sll 50
Thre e
onths S7 00 Elsewhere
2 6 00 year
Stx m onths
1J 50 three months S7 so
ubscr, pt• on pnce •nc l udes
tt'lday T rnes Sen t•n el

•

thts country speaking out,"
DaviS told a news conference
It 's veXIng to have the head
of my political party attack
me nationally and unproperly blame me," he satd,
referrmg to Democratic
Nattonal Committee
Chau-man Robert Strauss
"I'm gomg to be looking m
the first supermarket I go m
for some registrar of voters
and try to fmd some other
pohtical party," DaVIS satd
"Chtefs of police should not
be controlled by politicians "
DaviS has a reputatiOn for
controverSial statements and
tough, conservative stands
He recently blamed women's
lib for lllCreasmg juvenile
crune, urged ettizens to keep
guns for protection and
suggested gallows he built at
111rp0rts so hijackers could be
tr1ed and hanged on landing
Strauss
and
the
Democrallc s1te selection
corruruttee closely quest1&lt;med
Mayor Tom Bradley about
DaviS before awarding the
convention to New York Ctty
Strauss said one reason for
reJection of Los Angeles was

"tremendous concern" Davas
m1ght
" overreact
demonstrators "

'

on jQh though rich

a

Editorial comment,
•

'

Promoter will stay

Logan County, who had
served on ly SIX days of 60day contempt-o f-&lt;:ourt sentence
Howze d1sa vowed any
connectw ns
wit h
Appalachian mmers who have
turned the protest mto a
iemand for the nght to strike
over local gnevances Without
fear of court IIIJunctlOns
By Thursday the strike had
1dled about 40 000 m West
V•rgm1a, 6,000 m Pennsylvarua 5 000 m Kentucky
and smaller numbers m other
states mcludmg V1rgmla
~Alabama and Tennessee
!:&gt;&lt;:&gt;-o--c""'&gt;&lt;:""":&gt;&lt;:N?..--:&gt;.n-e&gt;-o-o-.c"-"&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;-..?-o-e&gt;-o--c""'&gt;-&lt;::&gt;&lt;~c? In add1t1on, about 10,000
nuners were 1dle m the
IllmoiS and Indiana coalfields
because of a dispute mvolvmg shift rotations at
It sa good thing the Umted States won the v.ar one wr1t er remarked on the JUSt-passed
30th anmversary of the surrender of Japan 10 1945 OtherwiSe the world m1ght be flooded today
mrnes Mmers there were not
w1th Hondas and Sonys
yet mvolved m the nght to
ThiS IS clever It also r eveals a seriOus rmsreadmg of what the Second World War was aU
stnke ISSUC
about as well as constitutes a gross libel agalllSt the Amenca n nation
Frank Clements, the
The U S fought the wa r not to block the peaceful economiC expanswn of Japan or of
UM W's executive board
Germany, nor to protect Amencan compames from competition, but to prevent the economic
member from Alabama,
1and political ) dommatwn by these countnes over their neighbors by virtue of nuiltary
blamed the walkout on 'left
conquest
leamng West V~rgm1ans
If Hondas and Sonys, not to mention Volkswagens, are flooding the world today, 11 IS
makmg a concerted effort "to
because people want to buy these products and not because they are forced to Far from
control the uruon for !hell'
suggestmg that World War II was a useless waste, thiS fac t demonstrates how successfully 1ts
own benefit "
lffiffiedlate aun was ach1eved
But another UMW source
Another wrtter observed that desp1te the passage of 30 years smce Amer~ca dropped atomic
S3ld 11 was 'a mistake for
bombs on H~roshuna and Nagasakt, " the moral angUish of those actions torments us still "
anyme to assume that 40,000
Now no doubt some Amencans are tormented with angUISh over H1roshuna and Nagasak i
mmers go out on strike m
West V1rgm1a because they
but the vast matorlty of them when they think about the atonuc bombmgs, which IS seldom,
have much the same feelings they have when they th,il!k about f1re bombmgs of HambW"g, have been mampulated
Dresden and Tokyo which IS also seldom These were terrible, terrible thmgs and possibly
Obvwusly
there
1s
even unnecessary , as we are now told But they were acts of war committed m the heat and
wtdespread dtscontent With
press of war a war which our enenues had brought down upon themselves
the role of the courts m labor
Fortunately the Japanese and Germans seem to have a clearer perspectiVe on World Wat
disputes "
II than some Americans do Both nations have accepted their responsibilities for starting the
As one mmer Sllld, I want
war , as well as the JUS\ consequences of havmg lost 11 F or Germany, thiS IS totally different
to work I've got to work Who
from the situatiOn m the 1920s and 1930s, when bitterness over the harsh VerSIIIIIes treaty
the hell doesn f? But coal
helped pave the way for the riSe of Hitler
mmers have taken 1! m the
One traveler to Japan a few years ago reported the perple:uty of Japanese scientiSts,
gut a long tune I'm not
government offtctals and others when told about the gUilt AmeriCans feel for havmg used the
leadng the strike, but I adBomb agalllSt them The Japanese would have done the same thing had positions been
mire the guys who are "
reversed, they satd
The strike already has cut
Much unreasonable suffering, to the people of Japan as well as to the Amer~cans and
mto the ra1lmdustry foretng
other peoples of the world," was caused by Japan's senseless InsiStence on fighting on for more
hundreds of layoffs U S
than a year after It became obvtous 11 had no hope of v1ctory, says Masatake Okum1ya a
Steel sa1d m West Vtrgmla
ret~red general of Japan's Air Self Defense Force
alone the str1ke already had
The Ignorance of the people about the true conditwns of the war, together w1th historical
cost $100 million m lost coal
factors - such as the expectatiOn of a "nuracle" like the d1vme wmd ( kanukaze) that saved
Japan from a Mongolmvaswn m the 13th century - prolon ged the conflict , he wr1tes m PHP
magazme, published by PHP (Peace, Happtness, Prospenty ) Institute, founded m 1946 by
ATHENS I,IVESTOCK
Japanese electromcs piOneer and philanthropiSt Konoskue Matsush•ta
SALES INC
Today there are 40 nullion more Japanese than there were at the end of World War II
Aug 28, 1975
Almost totally dependent upon foretgn countrtes for raw materials and energy, the Japanese
Slaughter Steers (go od)
realize that they need the fr1endsh1p, goodwill and cooperation of people all over the world
( 800-1050 lbs ) 38 75-43 50 ,
There IS no other way for Japan," says Okwmya 'For if there IS any lesson we have
learned from our expenence, 11 1s that we must not make war agam "
Feeder Steers ( 400-700 lbs )
When a Japanese nuhtary man, speaking for a nation that has been transformed m 30
20-28 50, Slaughter Heifers
years from marauder to model cttizen of the world commumty, can renounce the uses of war,
I good ) ( 700-1000 lbs ) 38 7f&gt;.42,
no Amencan need feel shame or gUilt for the thin gs that were done m war to make that
Feeder He1fers 1400-700 lbs )
possible
20-26
COWS - Utility 21 21 50,
Canner-Cutter 14-20 75
Bulls
24 50·25
Veal s
Zero Borders Route 2
Wellston Stella E Kloes ( chmce pnme ) 40-49, Hogs
Pomeroy, Joe Swam Route 58 25-58 30 Sows 50 50 50,
Boars 42-46, P1gs ( by the
A public fund drive for SIX- rece1vmg contribUtiOns to the I Racme Mrs John H
head)
2~35
year-old Lonme LeMaster public fund dr1ve at her off1ce Hi slop Columbus, Mr and
Route 2 Pomero) bram m the courthouse Checks are Mrs Carl Jenmngs , Route 3
surgery pallent at St Joseph to be made payable to the Pome roy Mr and Mrs
Hospital m Parkersburg
Lonni e
LeMast e r Wilham Grueser Route 2,
Pomeroy Adul t Class of the
reached $1 173 59 Thursday Hosp•tahzatwn Fund
Spnngs
Umted
Not only was the fnnd dr~ve
Lates t contributors mclude Rock
lnternat1onal League
Stand1ng s
Method1st
Church
and
the
tf!. a1d the parents, Mr and Richard Duckworth
Un•ted Press International
Mrs Edward LeMaster w1th Syracuse,
Dougla s
M Ump1re s Church Tour
w t pet g b
Rochester
82 64 603
hosp1tahzahon costs nsmg Swisher Columbus Mr and nament held m Syracuse
T•dewater
82 54 603
but there was other good Mrs Lawrence D Leonard
Sy racuse
71 62 534 9112
Charleston
70 66 515 12
news for the SIX year-old Route 2 Pomeroy, Mr and
MemphiS
63 73 463 19
COLLINS
DIES
Accordmg to a report from Mrs
Parker Goldnck
R chmond
61 7'l 459 19 112
COLUMBUS ( UPJ ) - State To l edo
60 76 441 22
the hospital abram tumor for Columbus, an anonymous
Paw t ucket
52 S4 382 30
Comm1sswner
Gerald
S
Tax
wh1ch the ch1ld underwent contrtbutwn from Plam City
Thursdays Results
Collins d1ed at Riverside T tdewat
er 8 R•chmond 4 1st 7
SW"gery was not malignant Mr and Mrs Homer Willard
Methodist Hospital here late mntngs
ahd he IS expected to be Route 2, Pomeroy Mr and
r 3 Richmond 2 2nd
Thursday mght followmg a 7Ttdewate
tnnmg s
released from the hospital m Mrs Edison Baker M1d
T o ledo 9 Rochest er 2
rela\ively bnef" Illness
about two weeks He IS able dleport , Mr and Mrs George
Syracuse 4 Charleston
hospital off1c1als sa1d He was MemphiS 6 Pawtu cket
now to walk a few steps and Conde, Syracuse Mr and
36
use a wheel cha1r
Mrs Harold "van&lt; Mlrl·
M1 ss Eleanor Robson
dleport, Mr and Mrs Don E
Me•gs County Recorder •s Rea, Pomeroy Mr and Mrs

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E Lamb, MD
,
DEAR DR LAMB - I have
' a h1atal herma which causes
severe heartbW"n and gas
When I swallow certam foods
I have very loud h1ccoughs
Can a hernta get larger? W1U
11 harm the hern1a to eat what
I please as long as I take
medicme at mealtune and
between meals?
DEAR READER A
hernJ.a of a porhon of the
stomach through an enlarged
hole in the diaphragm IS a
common occW"ence You can
demonstrate some degree of
this m as htgh as 50 per cent
of people over 50 years of age
The heartburn comes from
leaking acid stomach contents out of the stomach mto
the lower esophagus (food
, tube) where 11 jams the
stomach at the location
, where the stomach herniates
through the diaphragm
, The hern1a disrupts the
• normal closW'e mechamsm
• that
prevents
leakmg
stomach contents backward
You can have a h1atal hern1a

walkout, touch mg off a
march by mmers here last
week
' I II do all I can to obey the
court order ," Sllld Howze, of

'

to

Rhodes to visit
state fair today
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov
James A Rhodes was almost
certam to be at the 122nd Ohio
State Fall' today, as 1t's offietally deSignated Governor
and Legislators Day
While Rhodes has made 11 a
habit to take a few hours off
his statehouse duties dally to
get to the fatrgrounds, see
what 's gomg on and shake a
few hands, he did not appear
Thursday
He was m
Washmgton to tell PreSident
Ford about Ohto's energy
needs
The governor was expected
to return to his politicking at
the fall' grounds through the
remauung loW" days The
State Fall' winds up late
Labor Day
Attendance at the 122nd
State Fall' reached the I 5
million level Thursday as the
weatherman contmued to
cooperate
Officials satd 142,110
persons went through the

games ThW"sday , to boost the
total attendance to 1,517,192
A year earlier 142,165 went
through the same day ,
making the total t,467,230
The free grandstand entertamment changes today ~
Earth, Wmd and Fire, and
the FoW" Mints Bo Donaldson
and the Heywoods take over
Saturday, Bob Hope and La
Costa Sunday and the
Osmonds wmd up the fall'
Monday
The etght Budewlser champton Clydesdale horses appeared Thursday for the first
time this year They pulled a
large bt!er wagon through a
senes
of
mtr1eate
maneuvers
Mark Schlosser, 17, Grove
City, showed the champ10n
Duroc gilt of the largest
breeding swme classes of the
Ohto State Jwuor Fatr Thursday The reserve champton
gilt was shown by Billy
Baldwm, Rt I, Leesburg

'

Patients eating
insects charged
CINCINNATI (UPI) -The
preSident of the uruon that
represents 350 employes at
the Longvtew State Hospital
has charged that patients at
the facility "hve m filth, eat
wllh cockroaches" and
generally are subjected to
inhumane treatment
John Quigley, pres1dent of

Petitions to
go by canoe
COVINGTON,Ky (UP!)Petitions calling for the new
1-471 bndge across the Ohio
River to Cincinnati here be
named m honor of Boy Scout
founder Darnel Beard, who
grew up here, are to be
camed by canoe to Kentucky
Gov Julian carroll
One h1mdred Boy Scouts
and thelt leaders plan .to
paddle to Frankfort along the
Oh10 and Kentucky Rivers
from here with the petillons
havmg
some
20,000
Signatures
Plans call for the Scouts to
travel m 50 canoes, each
carrying a flag of one of the
states They are scheduled to
leave here Sep'l 6 and
estimate the journey will take
five days wttl)., !he Scouts
campmg along the way
The campaign to name the
!ridge after Beard ts sponsored by the Northern
Kentucky Convention and
Vtsttors
Bureau,
the
Chamber of Commerce,
Home BUilders Association,
the Hotel-Motel Assoctat1on
and the Dan Beard Council of
the Boy Scouts of America

Local 6600, Commurucatwns
Workers of Amertca, made
the charges m a news conference Thursday at the
hospttal for the mentally ill
which has about 1,000 employes, 1,400 pattents and an
annual budget of $12 7
null ton
Qtngley, displaymg a jar
With cockroaches m 11, sa1d,
"We- pahents and employes--eat With these " He
also showed a photograph of
dirt and filth on the floor
" ThiS IS what we live wtth,"
he said
He was jomed at the conference by Georgia Sanders,
a CWA staff representative
and Herschel Stgall, state
dtrector of Council 4455,
CWA
"We've been watchmg the
field of mental health mcreasmgly In the past
month,'1-S1gall said "It IS one
of contlnwng deteriorlahon
and one of the p:une offendets ts Longvtew "
Sigall said the Oh1o legislature has been asked to look
mto the situation
"I cannot believe that the
public or legislature would
tolerate filth, people not
receiving proper care (and)
people perhaps dymg
Thomas S Grogan Jr , who
was named acting superintendent at the hospital last
month, said he Is aware of the
woblems

"Yes,

we

have

cockroaches, just as any
large Institution does, "
Grogan said
"I mtend to shape thiS
hospital up and my p:lmary
mission-alway~ to help
the patients "

•

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN

Gullett great m
4-0 Card shutout

UPl Sports Editor
NEW YORK ( UPI )- Ever hear ofthe ballplayer who talked
himself out of the World Senes'
Dock Ellls may have, ard right now 1tlooks as if he has
The Pittsburgh Pirates must name thetr 25 elig1ble players
for the playoffs and World Senes by Sunday, and the question
now lS do they lift the mdefimte suspeDSlon they slapped on
their ~year-cld bad boy p1tcher last week or do they cut thetr
nose off to sptte thetr face, keep Ellis on the suspended list and
make him meligtble for the playoffs and the World Series?
It's a tough decwon, and the men who have to make 11 are
Pirates' general manager Joe Brown and manager DaMy
MW'Iaugh
Marvm Miller, head of the MaJor League Players' Assoc1a
lion, which IS fightmg Ellis' suspeDSlon, predicts the Pirates
will keep Ellls on the liSt, eliminatmg hun from postseason
play, and I think Marvm Miller's prediction IS nght on the
button "They're going to try to make him crawl " be says
'They're gomg to punish hun "
H that happens, Dock Ellis has only one person to blame
Himself What It'll amo1mt to IS that he talked himself out of
the playoffs and the World Senes, plus-and thiS 15 the part
that hurts--better than $50,000
It started Aug 13 m Atbmta when Ellis was knocked out m
the first uuung The followmg mght m Cincmnat1, Jerry ReuSJ!
got mto trouble and Ellis was asked to relieve but sa1d1ie
couldn't because his arm was still stiff from the day before
The next mght the Reds roughed up Pirate startel Jun
Rooker Murtaugh told Don Osborne, the Pirates' pttching
coach, to have Ellis go to the bullpen Agam Ellis refused
For that, Ellis was fmed $200 and suspended until he notil1ed
MW"taugh he was ready to pitch when the Pittsburgh manager
felt he should
Marvm Miller ISil 'I argumg that It 's what followed that he
feels IS completely Wl)US!ifted
A half hour after he was suspended, Ellis went to Murtaugh
and told him he was prepared to pttch Ellis then went to Jun
Rooker, the Pll'ates player rep, and requested a meeting With
the players He asked that Murtaugh and the coaches be
present, and all were
At the meeting Ellis ratsed Mw-taugh 's blood pressure by
saymg, "I've lost confidence m the manager "
Ellis told of another Pittsbw-gh player and sa1d Murtaugh
was "messing w1th hlS mind/' only he didn't say "messmg "
MW'laugh ts 58, nearly 30 years older than Dock Ellis, and
has had two heart attacks Nobody has more of that good old
fashioned Irish courage than he has
" You ' re gonna have to hght me to continue, ' he S3ld, con·
fronting Ellis face-to-face
"Man, you're losmg your cool," Ellis replied
Immediately coaches and players JUmped m to break 1! up
the way they do m baseball showdowns That's why nobody
ever gets hurt
Ellis sat down, and hiS suspension followed
Marvm Miller contends 1! was a umon meetmg and Murtaugh disrupted and termmated 11 He questiOns the degree of
discipline Ellis already has lost $14,1100 m salary and stands to
lose more if hiS suspension continues
"It's like hangmg a man for speyding, ' M11ler says

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Don
16) he was p1tchmg the best
Gullett put the CinCIDnah baseball I ve ever seen h1m
Reds one game closer to the p1tch,' sa1d Anderson afte r
western diV15lon title With hiS Gullett boosted h1s hfe-L1me
4-0 VIctory over the St LouiS record to 13-3 agamst the
Cards With h1s VIctory
cardinals Thursday mght
And Reds manager Sparky Thursday mght
Anderson pr ,ctlcally put
In
fact
continued
the way Don was
Gullett m baseba ll's Hall of Sparky
Fame as he heaped prmse p1tchmg before he was hurt
upon the 24-year-c\d lefty
and the way we were scormg
Darrel Chaney s second runs I d1dn t see how he was
homer of the season a solo gomg to lose a game
poke m the fifth ummg , and a
Four of Gullett s hfe-t1me
three run splurge m the VICtorieS over the cards have
seventh highllghted by Ken come thts season And m
Grllfey's boommg tnple to those four games he has
nght center gave Gullett h1s )lernutted them on ly one ru n
11th vtctory of the season
Heres a kid who JUS!
turned 24 not so long ago and
agalllSt three losses
1f he hadn t been hit With
The way Anderson sees 1t
Gullett could have eas1ly hepat1t1s back I" 1972 and
gone on to wm 25 vtctones suffered the broken thumb
and the Cy Young award thiS litis season could have close
season if he hadn't been to 100 VICtO rieS, pomted OUt
sidelined two months with a Anderson
Thursday mght s victory
broken left thumb
Wben he got hurt (June gave Gu llett a 76-40 life-tune
record smce hP JmnNi the

BASEBALL
Amcncan League Sl and•09!&gt;
By Un ted PreH tn l er-nat.onal
Eas t

w

I

78 52

BoSTOn
Oalt mo r e

72 511
be 65
60 68
51 7 5
51 80

N ew York
Cleve and
M lwa ukee
De ro 1
Oakland
Ka n'5as C ty
Texas
C h cago
M nne~ota
Cat t or n a

pel

g b

600
550

6 '

so•
,,.

11 '
17

•Jl 22
389

We st
w 1
79 53
70 S9

pet

66

67

64
63
61

68
69
72

"'

S98
543
496
485
477
J59

g b

7 1
13 '

15
16
18

1

Thursdays Re s ult s
Oa tt ntore '1 Ch cago 1 mght
NC'w Yor k 3 Oakland 2 n ghf

Fnday s Games

I A l l T1me s EOTI

M

( Co lbO r'n

twav~&lt;.e-e

8 91

at

Tex as ( H'Irgan B 71

9 p m
Ca ll tor n a ( 1 a na n a 12 61
De rott ( Lo t c h I I l J ) 8 p m
M nnesota t HuQ hes 11 ti l

Cle ¥eland ( Harr son 6 5
Ec ker s le y 0 51 7 30 p m
Ch cago IKaa t IB 10
at
more

(G r ms ey

•

Line key to win

9 111

at
at

or
8 &lt;~ 1

7 30

pm

Kansas C ty rr tuno rr s 13 10 1
a t New York l Mav I I 10 1 6
pm
Oakland

( Bosman
8 Sl
Bo ston IW se 16 8 1 7 30 p m
N atton&lt;~t

at

L e ague Sla ndmg s

By Un ted Press lnlernaltonal
East

w

P ttsburgh
St Lou s
Ph Ia de t ph a
New York
Ct cag o

Mon r eal

1

p et

74 57

S6S

7I

538

7I

61
61

10

62

60

7]
7J

56
Wes t

KENT, Oh10 ( UPI) - The
defense the fans hated the
old
prevent,
IS commg
back to the Cleve land
Browns
The coaches used to say
they used the prevent
defense, three lmemen and
four likebackers ln.,tead of
the usual 4-3, to keep the
other team from completmg
the
long
pass
whtle
sometunes allowmg the short
pass
Coach Forrest Gregg d•dn t
say so but Cleveland s dif
flcultmg m stoppmg Rand)
Johnson of the Washmgton
Redskin&amp; from completiiig
both va n et1es m a 23-14 loss
last we e k 1s probably
responsible for the return to
t he prevent
m some
Situations
I feel that ow- ends are

PHILADELPHIA (UPI ) Horst Muhlmann k1cked
three field goals agamst hiS
old teanunates and M1ke
Boryla, another former
Bengal, tossed two touchdown passes Thw-sday mght

to gtve t he Philadelphia
Eagles a 30-20 exh1blt10n
VICtory over Cin cmna 11
Boryla , obtamed by the
Eagles from the Bengals tn
1974, matched the two t ouch

Connors sure to
\ have big trouble

'TD'
ponent w1th h1s fist locked
hands, forearm or elbow nor
kiCk, knee or spear hun The
penalty 1s 15 yards and
disqualification ( spearmg
was added to th1s Just th1s
year)
The followmg are personal
fouls for 15 yards but not
dJsquahhcatJOn, unless
flagrant tr1ppmg , chppmg
p1hng on , hurdlmg wh1le he 1s
a runner, mvalid fa1r catch
s1gnal, pos11lomng hunself on
teammate to gam an ad¥antage, throwmg headgear
to tr1p an opponent, h1dmg
ball under Jersey mc1llng
roughness from unnecessary
contact and graspmg op
ponent s face protector
Unsportsmanhke conduct
also carnes a J5.yard
penalty, and mcludes any act
the offiCial deems po or
sportsmanship
Examples
are msultmg language or
gestures
or
anythmg
engendermg Ill Will Also
mcluded are mtenl!ally
kicking the ball, sptking 11 to
the ground, throwmg ball
h1gh m the a1r or from field of
play
For any player or non
player comm1ttmg an unfair
ac t not covered by a speclf•c
rule, the referee can enforce
any penalty he considers
eqUitable, mcludmg the
award of a score He could
also have the game forfeited
for repeated unfair acts
When a team commtls two
or more fouls m a down only
one foul IS penalized, except
for unsportsmanhke conduct
whtch can be penalized also
A hve ball foul 1s comnutted
durmg a down , whtle a dead
ball foul IS corrurutted bet ween downs (Example
pilmg on ts a dead ball foul )
If one team fouls dW"mg a live
ball and the other comm1ts a
dead ball foul , the penallles
are edmm1stered separately
and m the order of oc·

By BOB STEWART
UPI Sports Writer
FOREST HILLS, N Y
( UPI ) - ChriS Evert has the
U S Open tenms champiOnships at her mercy but
one-tune boy fnend Jlffiffiy
Connors IS gomg to have
trouble keepmg the Iitle he
won a year ago
MISS Evert demolished
Lesley Hunt, 6·1, 6-ll Thursday mght, the same M1ss
Hunt who had gtven her f1ts
on other occastons before
losmg here at Forest Hills
and at Wunbledon last year
Connors, on the other hand,
was extremely erratiC m h1s
&amp;.3, &amp;.3 opener agatnst Geoff
Masters, while Latm and
EW"opean clay coW't experts
BJOrn Borg of Sweden,
Guillenno Vilas of Argentina ,
Manuel Orantes of Spam and
Raul Ramtrez of Mex1co
moved up With fa~rly httle
difficulty

GlldemeJster of Ch1le, 6-2, 6-2
But to the everung crowd of
6,858, M1ss Evert's coo l
trouncmg of M1ss Hunt was
the f1rst maJor shot to a
champ10nsh1p she has sought
smce she was 16 Four tunes
she has gone as far as t he
semtfrnals Tins year , wtth
her favonte clay footmg and
the absence of Billie Jean
King, experts say this IS her
year
Second seed V~rgm1a Wade,
wumer of the first Open here
m 1968, plays her f1rst match
agamst Kate Latham and
should easily gam the second
round to JOin Martma Navralllova, Mar ga re t Court
Evonne Goolagong Cawley
Olga Morozaova , Francoise
Durr and Julie Heldma n- the
other seeds who moved up
Thursdays
Connors who already has
failed m defense of h1s
Austral18n and Wunbledon
Connors' comrade-m..anns, crowns, shrugs off the unpor
!Wmaman ll1e Nastase, fol- lance of clay here
lowed Connors pattern m
defeatmg Bob Lutz, &amp;.I, 6-2, m
the fmal match Thursday
rught
Connors opened today's
program agamst Br1tam s
hardboiled Roger Taylor and
was followed by hts Wunbledon conqueror , Arthur
Ashe, who meets the VtJay
HUNTINGTON W Va Amntra] of India
Rodenck R Rod 0 Don
Borg, who brushed aSide
nell a 27 vear-old nat"e of
Sandy Mayer, &amp;.2, &amp;.2, Thurs- nearby Ironton OhiO 1s the
day, appeared to have an new head track and cross
easy second rounder agamst
coWltry coac h at Marshall
M1ke Estep of Dallas, while
Umverstty
the second seeded Vilas was
Th e an nouncement was
m a mght encounter With made JOintly by Director of
little known Alvaro Betancur
Athletics J os peh H Me
of Colombta, who disposed of Mullen and Dr Robert L
NCAA
champiOn
Btlly Case cha 1rman of Marshall s
Martm, U, 6-4, &amp;.1
Health , Ph)Sical Ed ucatiOn
Vtlas, somewhat startled and RecreatiOn Department
by the camaraderie of Forest where 0 Donnell w11l be an
Hills fans gathered at an mstructor
outer court, chopped up Hans
0 Donnell comes to Mar
s hall from Rio Grande
College m R10 Grande, Oh10
currence
where he was head track a nd
Read th1 s paragraph cross count ry coach and
carefully 1 It 1s a double foul1f phys1cal
educat w n m
bo th teams comm1t foul s structor He replaces Andy
durm g the same hve ball Nameth, v.ho res1gned last
penod m whtch (a) there was month to become assastant
no
c hange
of
team prmc1pal at Ironton H1gh
possessiOn (b) there was a School
change of team possesswn
McMullen sa 1d 0 Donnell
and the team m possession a t IS a quality yo ung coach w1th
the end of the down had an outstandmg background
fouled pnor to fmal change of We want our track program
possessiOn , or (c) there was a to he as first rate as our new
change m possesSion and the track
and we r•lleve
team m fmal possesSio n 0 Donnell has the ab1hty to
accepted the penalty for 1ls do the JOb "
opponent's foul In (a). (b)
O'Donnell coached at Rw
or (c) the penallles cancel ' Grande College one year
and the down IS replayed
compllmg a 4 I record m
Well, t hiS IS my f1fth cross country and an &amp;-3 dual
co lumn on h1gh sc hool meet record m track
football I hope we have
Before commg to Rw
cleared up some thmgs for Grande, 0 Donnell coac hed
yo u and I hope you enJOY and taug ht fow- )ears at
your football more th1s year Caldwell IOhw ) H1 gh Sch ool

do" n passes of Cincmnah
quarterba ck Eagles J ohn
Reaves - a former Eagle III a bat tle of traded quar
terbacks m the f1rst half of
the game before 38,025 at
Veterans Stadium
Boryla s scormg tosses of
26 yards to Charles Young
and three to Harold Ca r
m1chael were only the fourth
and fifth touchdowns by the
Eagle offense
m
the
preseason m which they now
are 2-2
The Philadelphia defense
contmued to dom inate when
rookie linebacker Tom
Ehlers blocked a Bengal punt
on the Cincmnat1 14 and
defens1ve end W1ll Wynn
recovered m the end zone to
g1ve the Eagles a 21 I3 lead m
the third quarter
It "as the fourth touchdown
by the defense m the past two
games and helped gtve coach
M1ke McCormack h1s first
wm m four tnes agamst Paul
Brown h1s old coach w1th the
Cleveland Browns
Muhlmann, traded by t he
Bengals to the Eagles th1s
year for a draft choiCe put
the game out of re ach m the
fourth quarter with held
goals of 40, 24 and 44 yards
Reaves who had been a
back·up quarterbac k for the
Eagles, threw t" o scormg
passes of 20 a nd h ve to t1ght
end Bob Trumpy m the
second pe n od
Reaves d1d not play t he
second half as the Benga Is
went to rookJC Gary She1de

PRINCETON N J

538
SJO
JSI 1S
•31

'

'

"'

Ph l adelph a a San Franc sea J
Montreal
0 Sa n
D ego 8
t'o'nn Qhl
C nc nna t J St Lo u s 0 ntght
New York J Los Ange l es I

ntght
Fnday s Games
I All T1m es EDT )
A tlanta
\ Monon
15 \4)
r Bu rr s

10 I OJ

at
7 JO

pm

Hou s ton

Ptllsburgh

1D crker
( Reuss

1'1 IJ J
\4 9 J

at

a 05

pm
S
Lou s (McGlothen

c nctnnat

( Nolan

13 9 ) at
11 8l
a 05

pm

Nt?w York ( Matlack 15 8 1 at
Los Angeles (Messer sm th 14
13 1 10 JO p m
Montreal
Car r I h ers I I I at
San D ego (M c intosh 8 12) 10
pm
Ph

a d e ph a ( Chr stenson a 4 1
n San Franc sco ( Hal ck t a 10 1
11 05 p m
Thursday s Baseball

Untied Pre ss tnf e rnattonal
Na1 o n a t Le a gue
Ph lade lpht a 10 1 003 J OG-8 17 1
San Franct sc 300 000 002-3 14 2
L o n borg H l gendorf ( I l
McG raw (9) and Oates Ba rr
Ca dwelt
(6)
Will ams
(7)
H eaverlo (8 ) and Rader WP
H l genao rf { 63) LPBarr ( 11
11 1 HR Thor'nasson (5 1hl

Montreal
Sa n Ot e go

020 043 10G-10 13 2
011 5()0 001 ~ 8 18 2

traveled here by a1r and bus
today and then held one fina l
workout before their ftfth
preseaso n game Saturday
w1th the unbeaten New York
Giants
Quarterback
Terry
Hanratty, who stramed an
ankle agamst Oakland two
weeks ago, was m pads and
threw for the first t1me smce
his InJury, and running back
Reggte HarriSOn also put on
pads for the first tilne smce
sprammg a knee against the
Co llege All Stars Both ,
however , were listed as very
doubtful for Saturday's
game
Startmg defenSi ve tackle
Errue Holmes was the only
veteran not fully dressed for
Thursday's workout He also
was not expected to play
agamst the Giants

"How much
would it cost
to replace
~erything

myour
aparbnent ..?"
Se ~'~

rn p aho Jt S11

f'

fa n

n'ln t e (S lnSu r&lt;ln CP T he COS\
slo w ann the co•C' we

con

n che

s vc

Steve Snowden
1258 Powe ll 51
M1dd!eporl 0

PH 992 7155
Like a cood ........ .

nei&amp;hbor,
.A_
SrateFann _ , .
is there
l

IOdU OUO(I

STATE FARM FIRE
AND CASUAUY CO MPANY
!!Of
011
j!V I
CJ s

"

Quasar
100% Solid State
"Works in a_Drawer"
Color TV

Roge r s Tay lor ( 4 ) Scherman
DeMo a (6)
Murray (7)
an d F=oo te Car ter (6)
Jones
Gre f (6!
Joh n son {BJ an d
Ke ndall
WP Sc h er man
{3 4)
L P Jones ( 17 BJ
H Rs Colberf
( Hh ) M e Covey ( 1Sih I
fSJ

Sf LOUIS
000 000 OOD---0 S 0
C nctnnaft
000 010 30 x- 4 S 0
J- orsch
Garman (5)
Hra
bosky {ll
Parker (71 and
Rudolph
Gullett ( 11 31 an d
Ben ch LP Garman ( 4 .1) HR
Chancy ( 7nd J

Ne w York
000 0'20 201l-4 6 0
Lo s A ng eles
100 000 OOG-1 8 1
Koosman I 11 11) and Siearn s
Mar shal l
(7)
and
RllOden
Yeage r LP Rhoden ( 1 21 HR
Un ser ( B h )
Am encan League

s1

Chtcago

000 000 001 - 1

Balf m or e

010 010 OOx- 2 6 0

Nood ( 1318 ) and Downtng
Cuel ar ( 13 IOJ and Hendr tcks

O'Donnell named coach of
Marshall track, c-country
where hlS c ross cou nlry
teams never lost a dual mee t
m ~a challenges In 1973 the
Caldwell H1gh School cross
countr) team won the Oh10
State c hampw nsh lp Cald
well s track teams Wider
0 Donnell had a 27 14 record
0 Donn ell 1s a r unner
h1mself A distance man he
was the team h1gh scorer and
named m os t valuable per
former at Wtlmmgton I OhiO)
College "here he recel\ ed h1s
B S Deg ree m 1970 He
rece1ved h1s Master's Deg ree
m Educatw n from Ohw
Um verstt) 1n 1973
He
g r ad uated from Be lpr e
!OhiO ) H1gh School m 1966
H1s parents, Mr and Mrs
Robert 0 Donnell still res1de
m Belpre
The Mar shall pOsitiOn
offers a challenge
says
0 Donnell Fullowmg Coach
Name th w1ll be a tough
ass ignment He did a good JOb
for Marshall and the program
here 1s ready to blossom I
kn ow most of the young men
and I ve even ran agamst
some of the m But I m here to
wtn not to run
Dr Case also new to
Marshall m h1 s rol e as
depa r tment c halrm a n , IS
pleased wtth the additiOn of
O'Donne ll to h1s teachmg
staff
He II teach health
says Dr r Case
c lasses
He II be the type coach and
mstructor Y. ho can sho\\ as
well as tell them how to tram

I UPI)

'
' - The Pittsburgh Steelers

]
]

w 1 pet g b
C•nc n na ••
88 44 667
Los Ange l es
70 63 526 18' ~
San F ran c sco ~ 5 67 491 23
San D ego
~0
73 451 78 -.
1\tl o'lnta
58 75 J36 30 •
Hous on
51 84 37 8 38 ~

Ch c ago

commg along and will he able
to do the Jobs," Gregg said
We are thinkmg of the
three-man line only as a
Situation defense not a basic
I do feel that we have the
personnel to make 11 sue
cessful when we use 11, ' he
added
The offensive lme got has
rece1ved some good news
about guard Pete Adams, the
former Southern Cal star who
has been plagued by lnJW"les
since commg to the Browns
He has a herruated dtsc, but a
dec1s1on on surgery has been
put off for a week while
further e xammatwns are
made
I m encouraged by th1s
deciSion Gregg sa1d I still
be h eve there IS a possibility
that Pete could be ready for
our regular season opener "

g b

Thu n day s Results

Fine points of
rolling up TDs
By Tom Duncan
Well, here we are agam 1
To wm a football game,
someone must score They
score as follows
A touchdown (6 pomts) 1s
scored when the runner
advances from the f1eld of
play so that the ball touches
the opponent's goal hne
(verllcal plane ), or when a
loose ball 1s caught or
recovered behmd h1s op
ponent's goal lme Aller a
touchdown, the scormg team
IS permttted to try for-pomt
(one or two pmnts ) They
score two pomts from what
would be a touchdown (run
pass, fumble recovery) or
one pomt for a f1eld goal
(kick) or safety I Example
Team A fumbles, ball 1s
nearly at rest, and B acctdentally kicks or bats ball
mto end zone and recovers
g1vmg A a safely because
thetr new force put ball m the
end zone ) Whew 1D1d you get
that? I hope so I
A f1eld goal ( 3 pomts) IS a
drop-kick or place-kick and
shah not touch the ground or
any player of K beyond the
lme before passmg through
the goal The kick must pass
above the crossbar between
the verllcal upnghts or the
ms1de edgeS of the upnghts
extended
Did you know !hat the team
scored agamst by a touch
down or f1eld goal des1gnates
wh1ch team wtll kick off, but
after a safety the team g1vmg
up the safety automallcally
kicks off
A safety ( 2 pomts) IS scored
when a runner carries the
ball to or across h1s own goal
line, or forces a loose ball
across h1s go~l, and 11
becomes dead m h1s team's
possessiOn Thts would be a
rartty (although 11 happened
m the Gallipolis area tw1ce
last year), but 1f a player on
offense commits any foul for
whtch the penalty IS accepted
and measW"ement 1s from a
spot m hts end zone, then 1!
would he a safety
We Will now try to cover
some penalties, and w1ll start
wtth personal fouls No
player shall s tnke an op·

Reds as a teen.age rookie
phenom m 1970
Chaney s homer ca me off
M1ke Garman, a replacement
for starter Bob Forsch who
departed after four scorless
mmngs when he tore the skm
on the m1ddle fmger of hts
p1tchmg hand
The homer was Darrel s
seco nd m four days
Remmd you of the Chaney
\\ho h1t 23 homers for you at
Ashev1 ll e m 1968
Sparky
was asked
Darrel has done a heliU\a
JOb while he has been m there
at shortstop
replied Anderson
It s JUS! too bad
there's a guy like Davey
Concepc ion ahead of hun
Pete Roses mfield hit
Griffey s triple a wtld pitch
two walks and Johnnv
Bench's smgle accoun ted for
th e Reds three runs III the
seventh off Card relief ace Al
Bra bosky

Browns return
to some use of
prevent defense

Mediterranean Styhng
The Moo rt sh tn flu ence of ea rl y Spa n IS reflected m fh ts
c r edenza cab net fashtoned o f tempered hardboa rd
and sel ect hardwood soltds tn comb •nalt on w t h mol d ed
s tm u lat e d wood matena l tn Rtco P ec an gratn ftntsh
Con cea l e d cas t ers 100 per ce nt Soltd State Chass•s
lnsta M at c Col or Tun ng Matnx Plus P c ture Tube
Pus hbutton ( UH F Tunmg 6 x4 Speaker 30 H 35
W 18 e 0 (add 5 l or tube cap)

Mode l WU9188LP
1 YEAR LABOR WARRANTY

He can teach and coach by
example
Bes1des runmn g 0 Donnell s hobbtes are a ll sports
and readmg He and h1s Wife
the form er Cat hy Taylor of
Steubenville Ohw have bee n
mamed less than a year

WERNER
RADIO and T.V.
Middleport, Oh1o

TOP ENTERTAINMENT
FOR THE
LABOR DAY WEEKEND
SUNDAY- ONE DAY ONLY

* DOTIIE \VEST
AND THE

"CROSS COUNTR 't ..
LABOR DAY- COMPLETE NEW SHOW

THE
*REX ALLEN, JR.
FREE SHOWS
Sunday &amp; Labor Day
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OPENSATURDAY&amp;SUNDAYONLYAFTERLABORDAY

'

�I

I

•
Ser.tmel Mlddlenort-P&lt;meroy, 0 , Friday,

2- The Daily Sent mel, Middleport Pomeroy, 0 Fnday, Aug 29 1975

'

Miners' strike spreading into Pennsylvania
CHARLESTON , W Va
( UPJ) - A major figure m a
mushroommg wildcat coal
str1ke was released from Jail
ThW"sday and prom1sed to try
to end 11 , but a retw-n to work
by the more than 60,000 •died
mmers unhl after Labor Day
appeared unlikely
The strike that began Aug
11 over the f1rmg of a mmer
spread for the first t1me
Wednesday mto ne1ghbormg
Pennsylvama, promptmg a
rash of new court sUJts and an

angry threat by g1ant US
Steel
Corp
to
seek
congressiOnal superviSion of
mme labor relahons
The walkout, sa1d US
Steel board cha irman E B
Speer was
a nalwnal
disgrace M1llions of tons of
coa l productiOn lost to the
economy Will hold us III
further hostage to fore1gn
energy sources addiiig to
inflatwn pressures
Speer accused the Uruted
Mtne Workers uniOn of

TOM TIEDE
Another bore on
the campaign trail
TICdl
DURHAM 'l C
1 he
trouble "1th Tern Sanford
says George Wa llace IS that
hell bore \ Ou stll v Qw te
n ght Ht s baste decency and
admirable pubh( se rvt ce
as tde the oneltme North
Carol tna gov ern or
nO\\
candidate for Presulent ha s
a dro" sy disposition
F orever
c loaked
1n
busmess dress , the kn ot of hts
he ttght agamst h1s neck the
man drones on about state
co o rdinator s
travel
a rr angemen ts
br oker ed
conventwns - the stuff of
h1gh poll t1cs to be sure but
11 s ever so dull
And 1t 's ever so common m
th1s benumbed campmgn for
the While House Sanford by
no means sh n es alone Ex·
ceptmg onl) Wallace "hose
char1sma 1s corrup ted by h1s
"'t the Democ rattc can
d1dates are a lackluster lot
Fred Harns for one has
been descnbed as the kind of
fellow who s here toda y and
here tomo rrow
as for
Henry Jackson the stor) ts
the last lime he spoke m
Miami the lide went out and
wouldn t return for nearly a
month
Not that the aspirants
aren t mter estmg men m
the1r own n ght Sanford for
mstance, has several cam
prugn pages or credential s
pnnted, you can be sure, wtlh
the proper umon bug World
War II paratrooper state
orf1eer, voltmteer do-gooder ,
author of two political books
fnend to John Kennedy and
now pre s tdent of Duke
Umvers1ty Impeccable And
so much for 1mpecca b1hty
Despt!e 11, accordmg to
polls Sanford's name IS
recogmzed by fewer than 20
per cent of the Ameri can
people H1s support to now
comes almost entirely from
pohtlcal ammals hke h1m
self the real people res1st
Terry Sanford 's campa1gn
With monotonous regularity
Defensively, Sanford says
he loses no sleep over the
populanty
1ss ue
The
pnmanes, after all are
seven months off, the e lec ti on
fifteen No candidate has yet
caught f1re w1th the pubhc he
ms1st s, becau se ' 11 s too
early for f1re watcher s " And
as a pomt of fact, candtdates
are not now cam pa1 gmng so
much for votes as they are for
orgamzat10n thus the ms1p1d
qual1ty of the entire matter
There s nothmg exc tlmg,

Sanford savs tn se tttng up
shop 1n Io" a
Yet the early date of tht,
presidential race does not
alone accowlt for 1ts lack of
mteres t tn the publi c sector
fhe tnabllll) of candidates to
move the masses IS also
ObVIOUS

E\ en at th1s most op
portune t1me
Y.hen a
pohtJcall) Sickened nahan IS
gra sptng for somethmg and
someone to believe m San
ford and his competitors are
not nsmg to the occaswn
F.ach of them condemns the
concept of pohtlcs as usual
but then proceeds to orfer
polihcs as us ual
Other than Fred Hams
guenlla ca mpa1gn
fr om
the wtndow of a pickup truck
the aspirants gnnd out the old
propaganda put the old bile
on the afnuent and tn general
con duc t the1r Imp ecca bl e
selves as 1f the pubhc knew no
be tter
Mr Sa nf ord IS yo ur
op iniOn form ed on a ll
Issues "
Yes 1t 1s
Are you pr epa red to
answer any question?'
Yes and I can answer any
quesllon m s1mple terms
Then "hat would you do
abou t nuclear proh£eratwn?
Well - pause That
questwn can t be eas1ly
answered
It 1s of cow-se not diffi cult
to ma ke fun her e of Tern
Sanford or Fred Harns or
Scoop Jackson One can take
any pohllca l quote or actwn
and bare 1ts mcon s1sle nc~e s
and selfish nature I Sanford
the bleedmg heart liberal
once raised the grocory tax m
North Ca r olina s poo r m
order to g1ve teac hers who
supported h1s gubernatonal
candidacy a mce salary tn
crease ) But the good gray
candidates, as ever mv1te
th e smckers
As have pohbcos forever,
they contmue to present
themselves as straight up
cosm opolitan
phenomena
They are thus bormg because
they are obvious and dated
Most
Amencans
have

outgrown such corn
So the campa1gn drags on
An a1de to Terry Sanford
remmds that a Southern
bor n one term gove rnor
turned college president can
neve r be discounted m
Democra t1 c
p o ll t1 cs ,
because remember that 's
what Woodrow Wilson was"

regularly' nauntmg 1t s
responsibility m the contract
A federal JUdge here , who
Wednesday lev1ed a $500,000
fme agamst the UMW m

ternat10nal , Thursday freed
Sim Howze, a local UMW
off1cer who went to Jail rather
than force h1s men to obey a
court order to end their

opznzon, features

Oearer perspective on the atomic bomb

Fund is at $1,173.59

LA's chief cop
wants new party

Care needed for hiatal hernia

•

and not have th1s problem, or
you can have a faulty closw-e
mechamsm Without the
hernta
A lot of management of a
h1a tal herma 1s directed
toward neutralmng the ac1d
m
the
stomach
and
preventmg leaking of the
contents backward These
measures help prevent the
heartburn There Is a good
reason to try to prevent
heartburn, because tl 1s a
symptom
of
c hem1cal
1rntat1on of the lower
esophagus The herma may
or may not get larger, but the
constant trrttatton of the
lower esophagus can cause 11
to contract and scar unlil 11
becomes difficult for food to
pass through the damaged
area mto the stomach
To
prevent
this
disagreeable compbcat10n, 11
1s tmportant that you follow
your doctor's dtrechons
carefully YoW' hvmg habits
are JUst as Important as yo ur
medJcmes, mcluding ealmg

CLEVELAND (UPI ) - Walter J Moore, S9, plans to
keep on ruruung hiS wrestling promollon business here
desptte havmg won the top $300,000 pnze m the
Buckeye 300 Lottery drawmg here Thursday rught
It won't make too much difference," Moore said
after th e drawmg " I'll he at work tomorrow marrung '
He's been m the wrestling busmess for 33 yM, and
also breeds registere&lt;\ Airedale dogs
Moore S3ld he buys a lottery ticket each week,
usually at an Akron supermarket, but for the last
month he got them at an Akron restaurant and
rughtclub
Other Buckeye 300 wmners , each getting $15,000,
were Frank J Schram, Pittsburgh, Pa , Vernon
Sandlin, Mtddletown W Earl Phillips, CliiCinnati,
Nadina M Hard, Grove City, and Mary Williams,
Cleveland
In the Lucky Bucky drawmg, Lile Mae Lumpkin, 52,
Garf1eld He1ghts, won $150,000 She 1s an employe of
the Center for Human SerVIces m Cleveland, IS
marr1ed and bas foW' children
James Stewart, Cleveland, won $75,000, Joseph
GoSClnskl, Avon, won $30,000, Cindy J Sefch1ck,
Parma Hetghts won $50,000 and Lloyd 0 Smith,
Dayton, won $25,000, m the Lucky Buck drawmg
ThiS week's wmnmg numbers m the Ohio lottery
Number 188 (one e1ght etghl) many box on ticket
WlilS $20
'
Numbers 894 ( e1ght rune four) and 331 (three three
one) m green and blue wms $500
Numbers 894 and 331 in blue boxes wms $1,000
Numbers 894 and 331 m green boxes eligible for
$300,000 drawmg and automatically wms $15,000
Lucky Buck Wl!Ulmg Numbers 712 (seven one two)
and 576994 (five ,seven s1x nme nme four)
Birthday bonus number 0755 (zero .seven five five)

•

small meals, not lymg down heart rests on the diaphragm
after eatmg, not wearmg any over the stomach like s1ttmg
constnctmg garmet or belt - on a pillow The chtlled water
around your wa1st and Will result m changes m the
avmdmg hendmg over
electrocardiogram (T wave
If you want more m- changes)
I have seen several cases of
formahon on h1atal herma
and how to manage yow- young men (one 21 and other
da1ly hvmg habits With tt, 24) who drank lots of cold
wri«! to me m care of th1s hqutds
after
vigorous
newspaper, P 0 Box 1551, exerc1se, as dw-mg a football
Radw C1ty Station, New game, who developed chest
York, NY 10019, send a long, pain thereafter and had a
stamped,
self-addressed heart attack I do not know
envelope and 50 cents and ask whether the attack would
for The Health Letter on have occW"red anyway or not
But With the knowledge that
h1atal hernta, number 4-8
DEAR DR LAMB - Do cold flwds chill the heart and
1ce-&lt;:old beverages like tea or knoWing that the artenes to
coke, or the eatmg of 1ce the heart can go mto spasm, I
cubes, have any adverse have always suspected that
effect on the heart, the heart the cold caused the attack
rate , h1gh blood pressure,
For thts reason, I thmk
anyone who IS very hot or has
emphysema or ulcers•
DEAR READER - Not been exerc1smg should not
usually, but I'm not con- drink cold liqwds, but should
vmced that c old flwds are drink hqwds that are only
entirely harmless If you ftll hghtly cool, as ordmary tap
the stomach w1th Ice water 11 water, at least unul after they
will ch11l the underneath have cooled down and rested
surface of the heart The from the exertwn

•

LOS ANGELES (UPI) Pollee Ch1ef Edward DaviS,
fummg at suggestwns by
Democratic leaders that hiS
temperament scared them
away from holdmg thetr
prestdentlal convention here,
res1gned from the party
ThW"sday
'I can't support a party
that ts agamst police chtefs of

lill·~~A
IICI
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty Ed1tor
PubliShed da 1t y ! xce pt
Saturday by The Ohio Vallev.
Publ ls l\ tng company
111

Court

St

Pomeroy

Oh•o

45 769 Busme~ Office Phone99'2 2156 Ed•lor'ial Phone 992
2157
Second c lass postage pa1d
at Pomeroy Oh•o
Naf 1onal
adv ert iS i ng
representat1ve
Ward
Gr•fftth Company
Inc
Bott tnellt &amp; Gallagher D•v
757 Th•rd Ave
New York
N Y

10017

S ub sc rtpt.on rates
Deltvered by carr•er where

available 75 cents per week
By Motor R:oute where

earner

serv•ce

not

available One month $3 ?5
By mall m Ohio and W Via

One Year
$22 00
S tx
months
Sll 50
Thre e
onths S7 00 Elsewhere
2 6 00 year
Stx m onths
1J 50 three months S7 so
ubscr, pt• on pnce •nc l udes
tt'lday T rnes Sen t•n el

•

thts country speaking out,"
DaviS told a news conference
It 's veXIng to have the head
of my political party attack
me nationally and unproperly blame me," he satd,
referrmg to Democratic
Nattonal Committee
Chau-man Robert Strauss
"I'm gomg to be looking m
the first supermarket I go m
for some registrar of voters
and try to fmd some other
pohtical party," DaVIS satd
"Chtefs of police should not
be controlled by politicians "
DaviS has a reputatiOn for
controverSial statements and
tough, conservative stands
He recently blamed women's
lib for lllCreasmg juvenile
crune, urged ettizens to keep
guns for protection and
suggested gallows he built at
111rp0rts so hijackers could be
tr1ed and hanged on landing
Strauss
and
the
Democrallc s1te selection
corruruttee closely quest1&lt;med
Mayor Tom Bradley about
DaviS before awarding the
convention to New York Ctty
Strauss said one reason for
reJection of Los Angeles was

"tremendous concern" Davas
m1ght
" overreact
demonstrators "

'

on jQh though rich

a

Editorial comment,
•

'

Promoter will stay

Logan County, who had
served on ly SIX days of 60day contempt-o f-&lt;:ourt sentence
Howze d1sa vowed any
connectw ns
wit h
Appalachian mmers who have
turned the protest mto a
iemand for the nght to strike
over local gnevances Without
fear of court IIIJunctlOns
By Thursday the strike had
1dled about 40 000 m West
V•rgm1a, 6,000 m Pennsylvarua 5 000 m Kentucky
and smaller numbers m other
states mcludmg V1rgmla
~Alabama and Tennessee
!:&gt;&lt;:&gt;-o--c""'&gt;&lt;:""":&gt;&lt;:N?..--:&gt;.n-e&gt;-o-o-.c"-"&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;-..?-o-e&gt;-o--c""'&gt;-&lt;::&gt;&lt;~c? In add1t1on, about 10,000
nuners were 1dle m the
IllmoiS and Indiana coalfields
because of a dispute mvolvmg shift rotations at
It sa good thing the Umted States won the v.ar one wr1t er remarked on the JUSt-passed
30th anmversary of the surrender of Japan 10 1945 OtherwiSe the world m1ght be flooded today
mrnes Mmers there were not
w1th Hondas and Sonys
yet mvolved m the nght to
ThiS IS clever It also r eveals a seriOus rmsreadmg of what the Second World War was aU
stnke ISSUC
about as well as constitutes a gross libel agalllSt the Amenca n nation
Frank Clements, the
The U S fought the wa r not to block the peaceful economiC expanswn of Japan or of
UM W's executive board
Germany, nor to protect Amencan compames from competition, but to prevent the economic
member from Alabama,
1and political ) dommatwn by these countnes over their neighbors by virtue of nuiltary
blamed the walkout on 'left
conquest
leamng West V~rgm1ans
If Hondas and Sonys, not to mention Volkswagens, are flooding the world today, 11 IS
makmg a concerted effort "to
because people want to buy these products and not because they are forced to Far from
control the uruon for !hell'
suggestmg that World War II was a useless waste, thiS fac t demonstrates how successfully 1ts
own benefit "
lffiffiedlate aun was ach1eved
But another UMW source
Another wrtter observed that desp1te the passage of 30 years smce Amer~ca dropped atomic
S3ld 11 was 'a mistake for
bombs on H~roshuna and Nagasakt, " the moral angUish of those actions torments us still "
anyme to assume that 40,000
Now no doubt some Amencans are tormented with angUISh over H1roshuna and Nagasak i
mmers go out on strike m
West V1rgm1a because they
but the vast matorlty of them when they think about the atonuc bombmgs, which IS seldom,
have much the same feelings they have when they th,il!k about f1re bombmgs of HambW"g, have been mampulated
Dresden and Tokyo which IS also seldom These were terrible, terrible thmgs and possibly
Obvwusly
there
1s
even unnecessary , as we are now told But they were acts of war committed m the heat and
wtdespread dtscontent With
press of war a war which our enenues had brought down upon themselves
the role of the courts m labor
Fortunately the Japanese and Germans seem to have a clearer perspectiVe on World Wat
disputes "
II than some Americans do Both nations have accepted their responsibilities for starting the
As one mmer Sllld, I want
war , as well as the JUS\ consequences of havmg lost 11 F or Germany, thiS IS totally different
to work I've got to work Who
from the situatiOn m the 1920s and 1930s, when bitterness over the harsh VerSIIIIIes treaty
the hell doesn f? But coal
helped pave the way for the riSe of Hitler
mmers have taken 1! m the
One traveler to Japan a few years ago reported the perple:uty of Japanese scientiSts,
gut a long tune I'm not
government offtctals and others when told about the gUilt AmeriCans feel for havmg used the
leadng the strike, but I adBomb agalllSt them The Japanese would have done the same thing had positions been
mire the guys who are "
reversed, they satd
The strike already has cut
Much unreasonable suffering, to the people of Japan as well as to the Amer~cans and
mto the ra1lmdustry foretng
other peoples of the world," was caused by Japan's senseless InsiStence on fighting on for more
hundreds of layoffs U S
than a year after It became obvtous 11 had no hope of v1ctory, says Masatake Okum1ya a
Steel sa1d m West Vtrgmla
ret~red general of Japan's Air Self Defense Force
alone the str1ke already had
The Ignorance of the people about the true conditwns of the war, together w1th historical
cost $100 million m lost coal
factors - such as the expectatiOn of a "nuracle" like the d1vme wmd ( kanukaze) that saved
Japan from a Mongolmvaswn m the 13th century - prolon ged the conflict , he wr1tes m PHP
magazme, published by PHP (Peace, Happtness, Prospenty ) Institute, founded m 1946 by
ATHENS I,IVESTOCK
Japanese electromcs piOneer and philanthropiSt Konoskue Matsush•ta
SALES INC
Today there are 40 nullion more Japanese than there were at the end of World War II
Aug 28, 1975
Almost totally dependent upon foretgn countrtes for raw materials and energy, the Japanese
Slaughter Steers (go od)
realize that they need the fr1endsh1p, goodwill and cooperation of people all over the world
( 800-1050 lbs ) 38 75-43 50 ,
There IS no other way for Japan," says Okwmya 'For if there IS any lesson we have
learned from our expenence, 11 1s that we must not make war agam "
Feeder Steers ( 400-700 lbs )
When a Japanese nuhtary man, speaking for a nation that has been transformed m 30
20-28 50, Slaughter Heifers
years from marauder to model cttizen of the world commumty, can renounce the uses of war,
I good ) ( 700-1000 lbs ) 38 7f&gt;.42,
no Amencan need feel shame or gUilt for the thin gs that were done m war to make that
Feeder He1fers 1400-700 lbs )
possible
20-26
COWS - Utility 21 21 50,
Canner-Cutter 14-20 75
Bulls
24 50·25
Veal s
Zero Borders Route 2
Wellston Stella E Kloes ( chmce pnme ) 40-49, Hogs
Pomeroy, Joe Swam Route 58 25-58 30 Sows 50 50 50,
Boars 42-46, P1gs ( by the
A public fund drive for SIX- rece1vmg contribUtiOns to the I Racme Mrs John H
head)
2~35
year-old Lonme LeMaster public fund dr1ve at her off1ce Hi slop Columbus, Mr and
Route 2 Pomero) bram m the courthouse Checks are Mrs Carl Jenmngs , Route 3
surgery pallent at St Joseph to be made payable to the Pome roy Mr and Mrs
Hospital m Parkersburg
Lonni e
LeMast e r Wilham Grueser Route 2,
Pomeroy Adul t Class of the
reached $1 173 59 Thursday Hosp•tahzatwn Fund
Spnngs
Umted
Not only was the fnnd dr~ve
Lates t contributors mclude Rock
lnternat1onal League
Stand1ng s
Method1st
Church
and
the
tf!. a1d the parents, Mr and Richard Duckworth
Un•ted Press International
Mrs Edward LeMaster w1th Syracuse,
Dougla s
M Ump1re s Church Tour
w t pet g b
Rochester
82 64 603
hosp1tahzahon costs nsmg Swisher Columbus Mr and nament held m Syracuse
T•dewater
82 54 603
but there was other good Mrs Lawrence D Leonard
Sy racuse
71 62 534 9112
Charleston
70 66 515 12
news for the SIX year-old Route 2 Pomeroy, Mr and
MemphiS
63 73 463 19
COLLINS
DIES
Accordmg to a report from Mrs
Parker Goldnck
R chmond
61 7'l 459 19 112
COLUMBUS ( UPJ ) - State To l edo
60 76 441 22
the hospital abram tumor for Columbus, an anonymous
Paw t ucket
52 S4 382 30
Comm1sswner
Gerald
S
Tax
wh1ch the ch1ld underwent contrtbutwn from Plam City
Thursdays Results
Collins d1ed at Riverside T tdewat
er 8 R•chmond 4 1st 7
SW"gery was not malignant Mr and Mrs Homer Willard
Methodist Hospital here late mntngs
ahd he IS expected to be Route 2, Pomeroy Mr and
r 3 Richmond 2 2nd
Thursday mght followmg a 7Ttdewate
tnnmg s
released from the hospital m Mrs Edison Baker M1d
T o ledo 9 Rochest er 2
rela\ively bnef" Illness
about two weeks He IS able dleport , Mr and Mrs George
Syracuse 4 Charleston
hospital off1c1als sa1d He was MemphiS 6 Pawtu cket
now to walk a few steps and Conde, Syracuse Mr and
36
use a wheel cha1r
Mrs Harold "van&lt; Mlrl·
M1 ss Eleanor Robson
dleport, Mr and Mrs Don E
Me•gs County Recorder •s Rea, Pomeroy Mr and Mrs

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E Lamb, MD
,
DEAR DR LAMB - I have
' a h1atal herma which causes
severe heartbW"n and gas
When I swallow certam foods
I have very loud h1ccoughs
Can a hernta get larger? W1U
11 harm the hern1a to eat what
I please as long as I take
medicme at mealtune and
between meals?
DEAR READER A
hernJ.a of a porhon of the
stomach through an enlarged
hole in the diaphragm IS a
common occW"ence You can
demonstrate some degree of
this m as htgh as 50 per cent
of people over 50 years of age
The heartburn comes from
leaking acid stomach contents out of the stomach mto
the lower esophagus (food
, tube) where 11 jams the
stomach at the location
, where the stomach herniates
through the diaphragm
, The hern1a disrupts the
• normal closW'e mechamsm
• that
prevents
leakmg
stomach contents backward
You can have a h1atal hern1a

walkout, touch mg off a
march by mmers here last
week
' I II do all I can to obey the
court order ," Sllld Howze, of

'

to

Rhodes to visit
state fair today
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov
James A Rhodes was almost
certam to be at the 122nd Ohio
State Fall' today, as 1t's offietally deSignated Governor
and Legislators Day
While Rhodes has made 11 a
habit to take a few hours off
his statehouse duties dally to
get to the fatrgrounds, see
what 's gomg on and shake a
few hands, he did not appear
Thursday
He was m
Washmgton to tell PreSident
Ford about Ohto's energy
needs
The governor was expected
to return to his politicking at
the fall' grounds through the
remauung loW" days The
State Fall' winds up late
Labor Day
Attendance at the 122nd
State Fall' reached the I 5
million level Thursday as the
weatherman contmued to
cooperate
Officials satd 142,110
persons went through the

games ThW"sday , to boost the
total attendance to 1,517,192
A year earlier 142,165 went
through the same day ,
making the total t,467,230
The free grandstand entertamment changes today ~
Earth, Wmd and Fire, and
the FoW" Mints Bo Donaldson
and the Heywoods take over
Saturday, Bob Hope and La
Costa Sunday and the
Osmonds wmd up the fall'
Monday
The etght Budewlser champton Clydesdale horses appeared Thursday for the first
time this year They pulled a
large bt!er wagon through a
senes
of
mtr1eate
maneuvers
Mark Schlosser, 17, Grove
City, showed the champ10n
Duroc gilt of the largest
breeding swme classes of the
Ohto State Jwuor Fatr Thursday The reserve champton
gilt was shown by Billy
Baldwm, Rt I, Leesburg

'

Patients eating
insects charged
CINCINNATI (UPI) -The
preSident of the uruon that
represents 350 employes at
the Longvtew State Hospital
has charged that patients at
the facility "hve m filth, eat
wllh cockroaches" and
generally are subjected to
inhumane treatment
John Quigley, pres1dent of

Petitions to
go by canoe
COVINGTON,Ky (UP!)Petitions calling for the new
1-471 bndge across the Ohio
River to Cincinnati here be
named m honor of Boy Scout
founder Darnel Beard, who
grew up here, are to be
camed by canoe to Kentucky
Gov Julian carroll
One h1mdred Boy Scouts
and thelt leaders plan .to
paddle to Frankfort along the
Oh10 and Kentucky Rivers
from here with the petillons
havmg
some
20,000
Signatures
Plans call for the Scouts to
travel m 50 canoes, each
carrying a flag of one of the
states They are scheduled to
leave here Sep'l 6 and
estimate the journey will take
five days wttl)., !he Scouts
campmg along the way
The campaign to name the
!ridge after Beard ts sponsored by the Northern
Kentucky Convention and
Vtsttors
Bureau,
the
Chamber of Commerce,
Home BUilders Association,
the Hotel-Motel Assoctat1on
and the Dan Beard Council of
the Boy Scouts of America

Local 6600, Commurucatwns
Workers of Amertca, made
the charges m a news conference Thursday at the
hospttal for the mentally ill
which has about 1,000 employes, 1,400 pattents and an
annual budget of $12 7
null ton
Qtngley, displaymg a jar
With cockroaches m 11, sa1d,
"We- pahents and employes--eat With these " He
also showed a photograph of
dirt and filth on the floor
" ThiS IS what we live wtth,"
he said
He was jomed at the conference by Georgia Sanders,
a CWA staff representative
and Herschel Stgall, state
dtrector of Council 4455,
CWA
"We've been watchmg the
field of mental health mcreasmgly In the past
month,'1-S1gall said "It IS one
of contlnwng deteriorlahon
and one of the p:une offendets ts Longvtew "
Sigall said the Oh1o legislature has been asked to look
mto the situation
"I cannot believe that the
public or legislature would
tolerate filth, people not
receiving proper care (and)
people perhaps dymg
Thomas S Grogan Jr , who
was named acting superintendent at the hospital last
month, said he Is aware of the
woblems

"Yes,

we

have

cockroaches, just as any
large Institution does, "
Grogan said
"I mtend to shape thiS
hospital up and my p:lmary
mission-alway~ to help
the patients "

•

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN

Gullett great m
4-0 Card shutout

UPl Sports Editor
NEW YORK ( UPI )- Ever hear ofthe ballplayer who talked
himself out of the World Senes'
Dock Ellls may have, ard right now 1tlooks as if he has
The Pittsburgh Pirates must name thetr 25 elig1ble players
for the playoffs and World Senes by Sunday, and the question
now lS do they lift the mdefimte suspeDSlon they slapped on
their ~year-cld bad boy p1tcher last week or do they cut thetr
nose off to sptte thetr face, keep Ellis on the suspended list and
make him meligtble for the playoffs and the World Series?
It's a tough decwon, and the men who have to make 11 are
Pirates' general manager Joe Brown and manager DaMy
MW'Iaugh
Marvm Miller, head of the MaJor League Players' Assoc1a
lion, which IS fightmg Ellis' suspeDSlon, predicts the Pirates
will keep Ellls on the liSt, eliminatmg hun from postseason
play, and I think Marvm Miller's prediction IS nght on the
button "They're going to try to make him crawl " be says
'They're gomg to punish hun "
H that happens, Dock Ellis has only one person to blame
Himself What It'll amo1mt to IS that he talked himself out of
the playoffs and the World Senes, plus-and thiS 15 the part
that hurts--better than $50,000
It started Aug 13 m Atbmta when Ellis was knocked out m
the first uuung The followmg mght m Cincmnat1, Jerry ReuSJ!
got mto trouble and Ellis was asked to relieve but sa1d1ie
couldn't because his arm was still stiff from the day before
The next mght the Reds roughed up Pirate startel Jun
Rooker Murtaugh told Don Osborne, the Pirates' pttching
coach, to have Ellis go to the bullpen Agam Ellis refused
For that, Ellis was fmed $200 and suspended until he notil1ed
MW"taugh he was ready to pitch when the Pittsburgh manager
felt he should
Marvm Miller ISil 'I argumg that It 's what followed that he
feels IS completely Wl)US!ifted
A half hour after he was suspended, Ellis went to Murtaugh
and told him he was prepared to pttch Ellis then went to Jun
Rooker, the Pll'ates player rep, and requested a meeting With
the players He asked that Murtaugh and the coaches be
present, and all were
At the meeting Ellis ratsed Mw-taugh 's blood pressure by
saymg, "I've lost confidence m the manager "
Ellis told of another Pittsbw-gh player and sa1d Murtaugh
was "messing w1th hlS mind/' only he didn't say "messmg "
MW'laugh ts 58, nearly 30 years older than Dock Ellis, and
has had two heart attacks Nobody has more of that good old
fashioned Irish courage than he has
" You ' re gonna have to hght me to continue, ' he S3ld, con·
fronting Ellis face-to-face
"Man, you're losmg your cool," Ellis replied
Immediately coaches and players JUmped m to break 1! up
the way they do m baseball showdowns That's why nobody
ever gets hurt
Ellis sat down, and hiS suspension followed
Marvm Miller contends 1! was a umon meetmg and Murtaugh disrupted and termmated 11 He questiOns the degree of
discipline Ellis already has lost $14,1100 m salary and stands to
lose more if hiS suspension continues
"It's like hangmg a man for speyding, ' M11ler says

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Don
16) he was p1tchmg the best
Gullett put the CinCIDnah baseball I ve ever seen h1m
Reds one game closer to the p1tch,' sa1d Anderson afte r
western diV15lon title With hiS Gullett boosted h1s hfe-L1me
4-0 VIctory over the St LouiS record to 13-3 agamst the
Cards With h1s VIctory
cardinals Thursday mght
And Reds manager Sparky Thursday mght
Anderson pr ,ctlcally put
In
fact
continued
the way Don was
Gullett m baseba ll's Hall of Sparky
Fame as he heaped prmse p1tchmg before he was hurt
upon the 24-year-c\d lefty
and the way we were scormg
Darrel Chaney s second runs I d1dn t see how he was
homer of the season a solo gomg to lose a game
poke m the fifth ummg , and a
Four of Gullett s hfe-t1me
three run splurge m the VICtorieS over the cards have
seventh highllghted by Ken come thts season And m
Grllfey's boommg tnple to those four games he has
nght center gave Gullett h1s )lernutted them on ly one ru n
11th vtctory of the season
Heres a kid who JUS!
turned 24 not so long ago and
agalllSt three losses
1f he hadn t been hit With
The way Anderson sees 1t
Gullett could have eas1ly hepat1t1s back I" 1972 and
gone on to wm 25 vtctones suffered the broken thumb
and the Cy Young award thiS litis season could have close
season if he hadn't been to 100 VICtO rieS, pomted OUt
sidelined two months with a Anderson
Thursday mght s victory
broken left thumb
Wben he got hurt (June gave Gu llett a 76-40 life-tune
record smce hP JmnNi the

BASEBALL
Amcncan League Sl and•09!&gt;
By Un ted PreH tn l er-nat.onal
Eas t

w

I

78 52

BoSTOn
Oalt mo r e

72 511
be 65
60 68
51 7 5
51 80

N ew York
Cleve and
M lwa ukee
De ro 1
Oakland
Ka n'5as C ty
Texas
C h cago
M nne~ota
Cat t or n a

pel

g b

600
550

6 '

so•
,,.

11 '
17

•Jl 22
389

We st
w 1
79 53
70 S9

pet

66

67

64
63
61

68
69
72

"'

S98
543
496
485
477
J59

g b

7 1
13 '

15
16
18

1

Thursdays Re s ult s
Oa tt ntore '1 Ch cago 1 mght
NC'w Yor k 3 Oakland 2 n ghf

Fnday s Games

I A l l T1me s EOTI

M

( Co lbO r'n

twav~&lt;.e-e

8 91

at

Tex as ( H'Irgan B 71

9 p m
Ca ll tor n a ( 1 a na n a 12 61
De rott ( Lo t c h I I l J ) 8 p m
M nnesota t HuQ hes 11 ti l

Cle ¥eland ( Harr son 6 5
Ec ker s le y 0 51 7 30 p m
Ch cago IKaa t IB 10
at
more

(G r ms ey

•

Line key to win

9 111

at
at

or
8 &lt;~ 1

7 30

pm

Kansas C ty rr tuno rr s 13 10 1
a t New York l Mav I I 10 1 6
pm
Oakland

( Bosman
8 Sl
Bo ston IW se 16 8 1 7 30 p m
N atton&lt;~t

at

L e ague Sla ndmg s

By Un ted Press lnlernaltonal
East

w

P ttsburgh
St Lou s
Ph Ia de t ph a
New York
Ct cag o

Mon r eal

1

p et

74 57

S6S

7I

538

7I

61
61

10

62

60

7]
7J

56
Wes t

KENT, Oh10 ( UPI) - The
defense the fans hated the
old
prevent,
IS commg
back to the Cleve land
Browns
The coaches used to say
they used the prevent
defense, three lmemen and
four likebackers ln.,tead of
the usual 4-3, to keep the
other team from completmg
the
long
pass
whtle
sometunes allowmg the short
pass
Coach Forrest Gregg d•dn t
say so but Cleveland s dif
flcultmg m stoppmg Rand)
Johnson of the Washmgton
Redskin&amp; from completiiig
both va n et1es m a 23-14 loss
last we e k 1s probably
responsible for the return to
t he prevent
m some
Situations
I feel that ow- ends are

PHILADELPHIA (UPI ) Horst Muhlmann k1cked
three field goals agamst hiS
old teanunates and M1ke
Boryla, another former
Bengal, tossed two touchdown passes Thw-sday mght

to gtve t he Philadelphia
Eagles a 30-20 exh1blt10n
VICtory over Cin cmna 11
Boryla , obtamed by the
Eagles from the Bengals tn
1974, matched the two t ouch

Connors sure to
\ have big trouble

'TD'
ponent w1th h1s fist locked
hands, forearm or elbow nor
kiCk, knee or spear hun The
penalty 1s 15 yards and
disqualification ( spearmg
was added to th1s Just th1s
year)
The followmg are personal
fouls for 15 yards but not
dJsquahhcatJOn, unless
flagrant tr1ppmg , chppmg
p1hng on , hurdlmg wh1le he 1s
a runner, mvalid fa1r catch
s1gnal, pos11lomng hunself on
teammate to gam an ad¥antage, throwmg headgear
to tr1p an opponent, h1dmg
ball under Jersey mc1llng
roughness from unnecessary
contact and graspmg op
ponent s face protector
Unsportsmanhke conduct
also carnes a J5.yard
penalty, and mcludes any act
the offiCial deems po or
sportsmanship
Examples
are msultmg language or
gestures
or
anythmg
engendermg Ill Will Also
mcluded are mtenl!ally
kicking the ball, sptking 11 to
the ground, throwmg ball
h1gh m the a1r or from field of
play
For any player or non
player comm1ttmg an unfair
ac t not covered by a speclf•c
rule, the referee can enforce
any penalty he considers
eqUitable, mcludmg the
award of a score He could
also have the game forfeited
for repeated unfair acts
When a team commtls two
or more fouls m a down only
one foul IS penalized, except
for unsportsmanhke conduct
whtch can be penalized also
A hve ball foul 1s comnutted
durmg a down , whtle a dead
ball foul IS corrurutted bet ween downs (Example
pilmg on ts a dead ball foul )
If one team fouls dW"mg a live
ball and the other comm1ts a
dead ball foul , the penallles
are edmm1stered separately
and m the order of oc·

By BOB STEWART
UPI Sports Writer
FOREST HILLS, N Y
( UPI ) - ChriS Evert has the
U S Open tenms champiOnships at her mercy but
one-tune boy fnend Jlffiffiy
Connors IS gomg to have
trouble keepmg the Iitle he
won a year ago
MISS Evert demolished
Lesley Hunt, 6·1, 6-ll Thursday mght, the same M1ss
Hunt who had gtven her f1ts
on other occastons before
losmg here at Forest Hills
and at Wunbledon last year
Connors, on the other hand,
was extremely erratiC m h1s
&amp;.3, &amp;.3 opener agatnst Geoff
Masters, while Latm and
EW"opean clay coW't experts
BJOrn Borg of Sweden,
Guillenno Vilas of Argentina ,
Manuel Orantes of Spam and
Raul Ramtrez of Mex1co
moved up With fa~rly httle
difficulty

GlldemeJster of Ch1le, 6-2, 6-2
But to the everung crowd of
6,858, M1ss Evert's coo l
trouncmg of M1ss Hunt was
the f1rst maJor shot to a
champ10nsh1p she has sought
smce she was 16 Four tunes
she has gone as far as t he
semtfrnals Tins year , wtth
her favonte clay footmg and
the absence of Billie Jean
King, experts say this IS her
year
Second seed V~rgm1a Wade,
wumer of the first Open here
m 1968, plays her f1rst match
agamst Kate Latham and
should easily gam the second
round to JOin Martma Navralllova, Mar ga re t Court
Evonne Goolagong Cawley
Olga Morozaova , Francoise
Durr and Julie Heldma n- the
other seeds who moved up
Thursdays
Connors who already has
failed m defense of h1s
Austral18n and Wunbledon
Connors' comrade-m..anns, crowns, shrugs off the unpor
!Wmaman ll1e Nastase, fol- lance of clay here
lowed Connors pattern m
defeatmg Bob Lutz, &amp;.I, 6-2, m
the fmal match Thursday
rught
Connors opened today's
program agamst Br1tam s
hardboiled Roger Taylor and
was followed by hts Wunbledon conqueror , Arthur
Ashe, who meets the VtJay
HUNTINGTON W Va Amntra] of India
Rodenck R Rod 0 Don
Borg, who brushed aSide
nell a 27 vear-old nat"e of
Sandy Mayer, &amp;.2, &amp;.2, Thurs- nearby Ironton OhiO 1s the
day, appeared to have an new head track and cross
easy second rounder agamst
coWltry coac h at Marshall
M1ke Estep of Dallas, while
Umverstty
the second seeded Vilas was
Th e an nouncement was
m a mght encounter With made JOintly by Director of
little known Alvaro Betancur
Athletics J os peh H Me
of Colombta, who disposed of Mullen and Dr Robert L
NCAA
champiOn
Btlly Case cha 1rman of Marshall s
Martm, U, 6-4, &amp;.1
Health , Ph)Sical Ed ucatiOn
Vtlas, somewhat startled and RecreatiOn Department
by the camaraderie of Forest where 0 Donnell w11l be an
Hills fans gathered at an mstructor
outer court, chopped up Hans
0 Donnell comes to Mar
s hall from Rio Grande
College m R10 Grande, Oh10
currence
where he was head track a nd
Read th1 s paragraph cross count ry coach and
carefully 1 It 1s a double foul1f phys1cal
educat w n m
bo th teams comm1t foul s structor He replaces Andy
durm g the same hve ball Nameth, v.ho res1gned last
penod m whtch (a) there was month to become assastant
no
c hange
of
team prmc1pal at Ironton H1gh
possessiOn (b) there was a School
change of team possesswn
McMullen sa 1d 0 Donnell
and the team m possession a t IS a quality yo ung coach w1th
the end of the down had an outstandmg background
fouled pnor to fmal change of We want our track program
possessiOn , or (c) there was a to he as first rate as our new
change m possesSion and the track
and we r•lleve
team m fmal possesSio n 0 Donnell has the ab1hty to
accepted the penalty for 1ls do the JOb "
opponent's foul In (a). (b)
O'Donnell coached at Rw
or (c) the penallles cancel ' Grande College one year
and the down IS replayed
compllmg a 4 I record m
Well, t hiS IS my f1fth cross country and an &amp;-3 dual
co lumn on h1gh sc hool meet record m track
football I hope we have
Before commg to Rw
cleared up some thmgs for Grande, 0 Donnell coac hed
yo u and I hope you enJOY and taug ht fow- )ears at
your football more th1s year Caldwell IOhw ) H1 gh Sch ool

do" n passes of Cincmnah
quarterba ck Eagles J ohn
Reaves - a former Eagle III a bat tle of traded quar
terbacks m the f1rst half of
the game before 38,025 at
Veterans Stadium
Boryla s scormg tosses of
26 yards to Charles Young
and three to Harold Ca r
m1chael were only the fourth
and fifth touchdowns by the
Eagle offense
m
the
preseason m which they now
are 2-2
The Philadelphia defense
contmued to dom inate when
rookie linebacker Tom
Ehlers blocked a Bengal punt
on the Cincmnat1 14 and
defens1ve end W1ll Wynn
recovered m the end zone to
g1ve the Eagles a 21 I3 lead m
the third quarter
It "as the fourth touchdown
by the defense m the past two
games and helped gtve coach
M1ke McCormack h1s first
wm m four tnes agamst Paul
Brown h1s old coach w1th the
Cleveland Browns
Muhlmann, traded by t he
Bengals to the Eagles th1s
year for a draft choiCe put
the game out of re ach m the
fourth quarter with held
goals of 40, 24 and 44 yards
Reaves who had been a
back·up quarterbac k for the
Eagles, threw t" o scormg
passes of 20 a nd h ve to t1ght
end Bob Trumpy m the
second pe n od
Reaves d1d not play t he
second half as the Benga Is
went to rookJC Gary She1de

PRINCETON N J

538
SJO
JSI 1S
•31

'

'

"'

Ph l adelph a a San Franc sea J
Montreal
0 Sa n
D ego 8
t'o'nn Qhl
C nc nna t J St Lo u s 0 ntght
New York J Los Ange l es I

ntght
Fnday s Games
I All T1m es EDT )
A tlanta
\ Monon
15 \4)
r Bu rr s

10 I OJ

at
7 JO

pm

Hou s ton

Ptllsburgh

1D crker
( Reuss

1'1 IJ J
\4 9 J

at

a 05

pm
S
Lou s (McGlothen

c nctnnat

( Nolan

13 9 ) at
11 8l
a 05

pm

Nt?w York ( Matlack 15 8 1 at
Los Angeles (Messer sm th 14
13 1 10 JO p m
Montreal
Car r I h ers I I I at
San D ego (M c intosh 8 12) 10
pm
Ph

a d e ph a ( Chr stenson a 4 1
n San Franc sco ( Hal ck t a 10 1
11 05 p m
Thursday s Baseball

Untied Pre ss tnf e rnattonal
Na1 o n a t Le a gue
Ph lade lpht a 10 1 003 J OG-8 17 1
San Franct sc 300 000 002-3 14 2
L o n borg H l gendorf ( I l
McG raw (9) and Oates Ba rr
Ca dwelt
(6)
Will ams
(7)
H eaverlo (8 ) and Rader WP
H l genao rf { 63) LPBarr ( 11
11 1 HR Thor'nasson (5 1hl

Montreal
Sa n Ot e go

020 043 10G-10 13 2
011 5()0 001 ~ 8 18 2

traveled here by a1r and bus
today and then held one fina l
workout before their ftfth
preseaso n game Saturday
w1th the unbeaten New York
Giants
Quarterback
Terry
Hanratty, who stramed an
ankle agamst Oakland two
weeks ago, was m pads and
threw for the first t1me smce
his InJury, and running back
Reggte HarriSOn also put on
pads for the first tilne smce
sprammg a knee against the
Co llege All Stars Both ,
however , were listed as very
doubtful for Saturday's
game
Startmg defenSi ve tackle
Errue Holmes was the only
veteran not fully dressed for
Thursday's workout He also
was not expected to play
agamst the Giants

"How much
would it cost
to replace
~erything

myour
aparbnent ..?"
Se ~'~

rn p aho Jt S11

f'

fa n

n'ln t e (S lnSu r&lt;ln CP T he COS\
slo w ann the co•C' we

con

n che

s vc

Steve Snowden
1258 Powe ll 51
M1dd!eporl 0

PH 992 7155
Like a cood ........ .

nei&amp;hbor,
.A_
SrateFann _ , .
is there
l

IOdU OUO(I

STATE FARM FIRE
AND CASUAUY CO MPANY
!!Of
011
j!V I
CJ s

"

Quasar
100% Solid State
"Works in a_Drawer"
Color TV

Roge r s Tay lor ( 4 ) Scherman
DeMo a (6)
Murray (7)
an d F=oo te Car ter (6)
Jones
Gre f (6!
Joh n son {BJ an d
Ke ndall
WP Sc h er man
{3 4)
L P Jones ( 17 BJ
H Rs Colberf
( Hh ) M e Covey ( 1Sih I
fSJ

Sf LOUIS
000 000 OOD---0 S 0
C nctnnaft
000 010 30 x- 4 S 0
J- orsch
Garman (5)
Hra
bosky {ll
Parker (71 and
Rudolph
Gullett ( 11 31 an d
Ben ch LP Garman ( 4 .1) HR
Chancy ( 7nd J

Ne w York
000 0'20 201l-4 6 0
Lo s A ng eles
100 000 OOG-1 8 1
Koosman I 11 11) and Siearn s
Mar shal l
(7)
and
RllOden
Yeage r LP Rhoden ( 1 21 HR
Un ser ( B h )
Am encan League

s1

Chtcago

000 000 001 - 1

Balf m or e

010 010 OOx- 2 6 0

Nood ( 1318 ) and Downtng
Cuel ar ( 13 IOJ and Hendr tcks

O'Donnell named coach of
Marshall track, c-country
where hlS c ross cou nlry
teams never lost a dual mee t
m ~a challenges In 1973 the
Caldwell H1gh School cross
countr) team won the Oh10
State c hampw nsh lp Cald
well s track teams Wider
0 Donnell had a 27 14 record
0 Donn ell 1s a r unner
h1mself A distance man he
was the team h1gh scorer and
named m os t valuable per
former at Wtlmmgton I OhiO)
College "here he recel\ ed h1s
B S Deg ree m 1970 He
rece1ved h1s Master's Deg ree
m Educatw n from Ohw
Um verstt) 1n 1973
He
g r ad uated from Be lpr e
!OhiO ) H1gh School m 1966
H1s parents, Mr and Mrs
Robert 0 Donnell still res1de
m Belpre
The Mar shall pOsitiOn
offers a challenge
says
0 Donnell Fullowmg Coach
Name th w1ll be a tough
ass ignment He did a good JOb
for Marshall and the program
here 1s ready to blossom I
kn ow most of the young men
and I ve even ran agamst
some of the m But I m here to
wtn not to run
Dr Case also new to
Marshall m h1 s rol e as
depa r tment c halrm a n , IS
pleased wtth the additiOn of
O'Donne ll to h1s teachmg
staff
He II teach health
says Dr r Case
c lasses
He II be the type coach and
mstructor Y. ho can sho\\ as
well as tell them how to tram

I UPI)

'
' - The Pittsburgh Steelers

]
]

w 1 pet g b
C•nc n na ••
88 44 667
Los Ange l es
70 63 526 18' ~
San F ran c sco ~ 5 67 491 23
San D ego
~0
73 451 78 -.
1\tl o'lnta
58 75 J36 30 •
Hous on
51 84 37 8 38 ~

Ch c ago

commg along and will he able
to do the Jobs," Gregg said
We are thinkmg of the
three-man line only as a
Situation defense not a basic
I do feel that we have the
personnel to make 11 sue
cessful when we use 11, ' he
added
The offensive lme got has
rece1ved some good news
about guard Pete Adams, the
former Southern Cal star who
has been plagued by lnJW"les
since commg to the Browns
He has a herruated dtsc, but a
dec1s1on on surgery has been
put off for a week while
further e xammatwns are
made
I m encouraged by th1s
deciSion Gregg sa1d I still
be h eve there IS a possibility
that Pete could be ready for
our regular season opener "

g b

Thu n day s Results

Fine points of
rolling up TDs
By Tom Duncan
Well, here we are agam 1
To wm a football game,
someone must score They
score as follows
A touchdown (6 pomts) 1s
scored when the runner
advances from the f1eld of
play so that the ball touches
the opponent's goal hne
(verllcal plane ), or when a
loose ball 1s caught or
recovered behmd h1s op
ponent's goal lme Aller a
touchdown, the scormg team
IS permttted to try for-pomt
(one or two pmnts ) They
score two pomts from what
would be a touchdown (run
pass, fumble recovery) or
one pomt for a f1eld goal
(kick) or safety I Example
Team A fumbles, ball 1s
nearly at rest, and B acctdentally kicks or bats ball
mto end zone and recovers
g1vmg A a safely because
thetr new force put ball m the
end zone ) Whew 1D1d you get
that? I hope so I
A f1eld goal ( 3 pomts) IS a
drop-kick or place-kick and
shah not touch the ground or
any player of K beyond the
lme before passmg through
the goal The kick must pass
above the crossbar between
the verllcal upnghts or the
ms1de edgeS of the upnghts
extended
Did you know !hat the team
scored agamst by a touch
down or f1eld goal des1gnates
wh1ch team wtll kick off, but
after a safety the team g1vmg
up the safety automallcally
kicks off
A safety ( 2 pomts) IS scored
when a runner carries the
ball to or across h1s own goal
line, or forces a loose ball
across h1s go~l, and 11
becomes dead m h1s team's
possessiOn Thts would be a
rartty (although 11 happened
m the Gallipolis area tw1ce
last year), but 1f a player on
offense commits any foul for
whtch the penalty IS accepted
and measW"ement 1s from a
spot m hts end zone, then 1!
would he a safety
We Will now try to cover
some penalties, and w1ll start
wtth personal fouls No
player shall s tnke an op·

Reds as a teen.age rookie
phenom m 1970
Chaney s homer ca me off
M1ke Garman, a replacement
for starter Bob Forsch who
departed after four scorless
mmngs when he tore the skm
on the m1ddle fmger of hts
p1tchmg hand
The homer was Darrel s
seco nd m four days
Remmd you of the Chaney
\\ho h1t 23 homers for you at
Ashev1 ll e m 1968
Sparky
was asked
Darrel has done a heliU\a
JOb while he has been m there
at shortstop
replied Anderson
It s JUS! too bad
there's a guy like Davey
Concepc ion ahead of hun
Pete Roses mfield hit
Griffey s triple a wtld pitch
two walks and Johnnv
Bench's smgle accoun ted for
th e Reds three runs III the
seventh off Card relief ace Al
Bra bosky

Browns return
to some use of
prevent defense

Mediterranean Styhng
The Moo rt sh tn flu ence of ea rl y Spa n IS reflected m fh ts
c r edenza cab net fashtoned o f tempered hardboa rd
and sel ect hardwood soltds tn comb •nalt on w t h mol d ed
s tm u lat e d wood matena l tn Rtco P ec an gratn ftntsh
Con cea l e d cas t ers 100 per ce nt Soltd State Chass•s
lnsta M at c Col or Tun ng Matnx Plus P c ture Tube
Pus hbutton ( UH F Tunmg 6 x4 Speaker 30 H 35
W 18 e 0 (add 5 l or tube cap)

Mode l WU9188LP
1 YEAR LABOR WARRANTY

He can teach and coach by
example
Bes1des runmn g 0 Donnell s hobbtes are a ll sports
and readmg He and h1s Wife
the form er Cat hy Taylor of
Steubenville Ohw have bee n
mamed less than a year

WERNER
RADIO and T.V.
Middleport, Oh1o

TOP ENTERTAINMENT
FOR THE
LABOR DAY WEEKEND
SUNDAY- ONE DAY ONLY

* DOTIIE \VEST
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OPENSATURDAY&amp;SUNDAYONLYAFTERLABORDAY

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4- The Daily Sent[nel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 29, 1975

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how they ran ~=~=

~l

!iii

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Orioles recall the day Sm~~~~~~ ~J~Go~~
i';a!~~ h~.:C~;~~rri;,~
.
when the charge b egan

nor 's Cup Trot in straights }

:;:;

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days of harness racing ended )
at the 1975 Ohio State Fair.}
Cliff Huber drove the 3- :;::

&amp;seball Roundup
year a go .
By FRED DOWN
Of course th e Or ioles are
UPI Sports Writer
realists wh1 ch is why Paul
The Baltimore Oriole s Bla1r . a key fi gure in the 1974
remember the dat e - a nd drive . isn' t pred ic t ing a
they think the Bost on Red So x repeat pe rformance. Hinting ,
do too .
pe rhaps. but not predict ing.
It was Aug . 29 a year a go
·· we don 't JUSt have to play
when the Orioles mounted the goo d ba seba ll. ·· he said
charge that wa s to ca rry Thursday night alter the
them from eight games out of Or1oles defeated the O.icago
first place past the Red Sox l'llute Sox 2-1. ··we have to
and to th~ Ame rt c an play excellent ball a nd we
League ·s East ern Diviswn ha ve to get some he lp. What
title . They did it With a wa ve we do kn ow is that we have
of 28 win in 34 games.
th e personnel that won't g ive
Well , now it's Aug. 29 a gain up ."
and the Orioles and th eir fan s
Elrod Hendricks and Don
are playing games with arith- Ba ylor singled home the runs
metic . Inasmu ch as they"re which supp orted the live-hit
6 1 ~ games behind Boston
pitching ul Mike Cuellar and
now , it can be argued th at brought th e 38-year old leftthey are p ., games or 10 days hander his 13th win. Wilbur
better off t han they were a Wood suffered his 18th loss

Hilgendorf sure
Indians goofed
SAN FRANCISCO 1UP! )Tom Hilgendorf didn "t want
to tell the whole story but he
got in enough of it to suggest
that the Cleveland Indians
made a big mistake in
trading
him
to
the
Philadelphia Phillies .
" I was all set for a starting
job with the Indians this
Y&lt;lB r ," Hilgendorf said
Wednesday after pitch ing the
Pl.!illies to an lh'i victory over
the San Francisco Giants.
" And the nex t lhing I knew I
was traded .
, 'Naturally, I was disap·
p&lt;iinted at the time but in
looking back now, it 's the best
thing that ever happened to
me. I wasn 't going to be
ha,ppy there no matter what
and the fact the manager
didn 't care for me personally
only would have added lo my
problems and his ."
The manager Hilgendorf
refers to , of course, is Frank
Robinson .
"I wasn 't any ball of fire
last year ," Hilgendorf said,
" but I went to the Puerto
Rican Winter League after
the season was over and I
learned how to throw a forkball. I faced Robinson's team
( Santurce) and beat them
like a drum every time. Since
he saw me first hand with his
own eyes I figured I was all
set for Cleveland, but the
Indians unloaded me the first
chance they got. "
"As Hilgendorf :;aid, he 's
tic)ded to death now that they
did because he seems to have
started a whole new career in
the Phils' bullpen even
though he is 32 and has been
pitching professionally since

1960.
:'The forkball, that 's what
is _going to keep me in the big

leagues a few more years,"
he said . " It 's a difficult pitch
to master. but once you do,
it's a dandy . It loses all its
speed by the time it reaches
the plate and then it dips. You
can do only two things with a
pitch like that-either miss it
altogether or roll it on the

gro und ."
Hilgendorf got the Giants to
roll it on the ground lour
times for doubleplays that
kept him and the Phils in the
game after Jim Lon borg was
tagged for three runs in the
first inning.
Phi ladelphia finally got
Jim Barr out of the game and
went on to make it a rout I 17
hits off four pitchers). They
led 8-3 befo re the Giants
scored twice with two out in
the ninth .
The victory enabled . the
Phils to move to within 3 '-',
games of Pittsburgh in the
National League East race
and it was Hilgendorf's sixth
win in nine decisions.
In 82 2·3 innings Hilgendorf
has allowed only 6:&gt; hits,
struck out 40 a nd walked 29.
His ERA is a glittering 1.74.
!'hils Manager Danny Ozark
says flat out he doesn 't know
where the team would be
without him.

Cusick is
injured
Cl- .•UMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio
Stat• sophomore defensive
en~
Marty Cusick of
LJkewood was to undergo
knee surgery today and will
miss several football games
this season .
Cusick hurt the knee in
practice Monday and reinjured it the next day , as the
Buckeyes prepared for their
season-opener Sept. 13 at
Michigan State .
Ohio State held its first
contact work of the fall
pra ctice period Thursday and
freshman Tom Taylor was
bumped hard . He will be out
of action lor a couple days,
coach Woody Hayes said
later.
Hayes said he did not think
the Buckeyes worked too
hard , some progress had
been made and double daily
drills would continue for
another week.

10% DISCOUNT

••

,"i T l . f) F: /\' T

J)JS(OUNT CARH

•
••
•
•

· · Sign eo ____ ____ __ __ _____ ______________ _ ::

Good /or 1(1 % Di.~connr

•

THE SEWING LENTER

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT
·:-Jot Incl udin g Sale Meichandise

...........................
ALSO SIGN UP FOR FALL

Millipedes march
so who's caring?

'

THE SEWING CENTER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

1~~O.arcoal
~a~:~O.arlie
heats
Blackturned a
to

,.,
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,._,.•':_.,·:_ ,,_'•.

perfect trip in the $1 ,:&gt;00 3yearold Consolation Trot with ::;
a 2:10.1 performance.
,:;

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
! UP!) - Eatin' covered six
furlongs in I : 13 Thursday to
win the featured ninth race at
Thistledown and returned
$5.80, $4.00 and $2.40.
The 1().1 daily double of
Atoll 's Last and Vinces Princess was worth 1234.
Th e 4,476 fans bet $395,685.
CINCINNATI ( UP!) - Ca·
rionsa forged ahead in the
home stretch Thursday a
one len gth victory over
Patty's Page in the featured
eighth race at River Downs.
Doctor Mills wa s third.
The win paid $5.20, $4.20
and $3 .20.
The !Hl daily double of
Dusty Greek and Better Pac
had a 169 payoff.
The crowd of 4,421 wagered
$389,027.
COLUMBUS UP!)
Driver Russ Baldwin guided
Jerry MacPherson from the
pack to the lead at the threequarter pole here Thursday
and win the featured 8th pace
at Scioto Dovms by one and a
hall lengths.
Second was Wildwood
Storm and third was Arch
Berry as the winner paced
the mile in 2:03.3 and paid
$3.80, $2.80 and $2.40.
In the nightly double, Missy
Mouse 13) and Ca nadian
Meadow I 4) combined for a
$121.60 return.
The attendance was 4,297
and they bet $216,266.

e.

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•
UTTLE MISS OSPB. BEFORE AND AFTER - Katy Renner, 5, daughter of Columbus
Fire Captain and Mrs. Robert Renner, 1450Fullen Rd ., Columbus, is Little Miss OSPB, 1975.
Katy's " lazy eye" was discovered in a preschool vision screening last Fall sponsored by the
Ohio Society for the Prevention of Blindness with Ascension Lutheran Preschool, Columbus.
Her mirrored reflection shows Katy as she looked while she was being patched. Katy is the
official personality of the Ohio Society's direct-mail Sight-Saving campaign to raise $16!&gt;,000
to support its statewide programs . Mrs. Donald Hippenstee l, 201 Greenbriar Dr, Gallipolis
is development chairperson for Gallia County in September. No appointment in Meigs
County was announced .

DRIED
A.OWER
ARRANGEMENTS
$495

Split hunts
are ordered

••

Verdict brought tears

STANDARD
lESSON COMMENTARY
1974-1975

(allday)'

APPLIES GOD'S WORD
TO DAILY LIFE

1Hamburger
-and 1Order
French Fnes

The Middleport Book Store
: 9:30 to 12, 2 to s (CLOSE
THURS.l-EAST COURT

Middleport, Ohio

Pt. Pleasant
23~5

Jackson Av e .

Gallipolis
'lS03 Eastern Ave .

'
.

Because cancer research
funding is the international
project of the Ameri ca n
Legion Auxiliary, the unit of
Drew Webster Post 39 at a
meeting Tuesday night at the
hall in Pomeroy made
arrangements
to
send
representatives to a meeting
of the local Cancer Society
next Thursday .night.
The cancer meetin g will be
held at 7:30 p.m . in the
Hughes building on Third
Ave . in Middleport . The
Auxiliary has been asked to
assist in the cancer crusade .
Mrs . Grace Pratt presided
at the meeting during which~
several invitations wer e
read . A reception will be held
honoring
Mrs.
Arnold
Richards , Eighth District
president, Sept. 28 at the
Middleport Legion hall .
Arrangements were made for
the Pomeroy unit to make
ribbon sandwiches for the
reception .

PITTSBURGH (UPI ) Calling the Appala chian
wildcat
coal
strike

BEAUTIFUL

.

Auxiliary representatives
to attend cancer meeting

Miners called disgraceful

that its members work under urging the Federal Governthat agreement until the next ment t o oversee still another
phase of American life . But
negotiation .. .," he said.
" irresponsible~~
and a
" We are obliged lo proceed even all the disadvantages of
" national disgrace, " U.S. in court only beea use the more federal bureaucracy
Steel Board O.airman E.B. union refuses to honor its must be preferred to chaos in
Speer vowed Thursday to contract. .. Moreover, we will so vital a sector of our
And By The Way ...
·' My husband built a trench
fight the walkout in court and support new legislative ac- economy.''
FLOYDS KNOBS , Ind. around our place and filled it
to
support placement of mine tion to place coa l mine labor
ruPI ) - The millipedes are with oil and turpentine, and it
labor
relations
under relations
under
on the march and. although stopped 'em," she said. " It
congressional
control.
Congressional
control
as in
they've been stopped at the stopped 'em at the moat, but
Speer further accused the the Railway Labor Act."
moat. they're rallying their between the moat and the
United
Mine Workers leader·
The latest strike in West
forces for another assault. foundation, they are breeding
ship
of
consistently
letting
its
Virginia alone, Speer said,
The small, blackish "thou- in the grass. There are eggs
members violate the coal has cost the nation "$100
sand leggers" have invaded a all over the rail fence and in
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
contract signed after a long rniiJion worth of lost coal"
small area in Southern In- the grass.
I UP! ) - Hollywood B .
diana by the millions and
Mrs . Schroeder said she weathered the stretch battle strike last winter . " The and $22 million in wages.
Yet, he said, such wildcats
they're driving Mrs. Robert spurns any chemicals she and scored a neck win over UMWA cont ract .. . is the only
Schroeder buggy. But she believes are hannful to living Diaries Edward in the contract in the United States have been frequent.·
regularly flaunted by its
From
" Since the new contract
says no one else in Indiana creatures.
featured $1,700 ninth ·race trot
11
January 1, 1975, the situation
even cares.
Meanwhile, the bugs also at Northfield Park Thursday members, he said .
His
comments
came
as
a
almost unbelievable ,"
is
" I've been called from threaten the area 's important night before 3,558 harness
strike
that
began
wildcat
Speer said. "There have been
Louisville, Chicago, New Or- strawberry crop.
fans . Henny Hanover was
Colors to match any
over
the
firing
of
a
miner
in
1,400 wildcat strikes in the
leans, Los Angeles and the
Mrs. Schroeder says this third.
decor
.
Logan County, W.Va. swelled mines of the member coa l
New York Times did an ar- is one, of the nation's top
The 4-year-old , reined by
to encompass over 50,000 companies."
ticle," she said, "but nobody strawberry producing areas, William Irvine, was timed at
Appala c hian miners He concluded, "It is a sad day
in Indiana gives a damn. "
and that if the winter is too 2: IOfor the mile in scoring his
demanding
the right to strike when failure of private
The bu gs have invaded the mild to kill the millipede third win of the season, and
59 N. Second St .
over any grievance . Several responsibility by the United
land and home of Mrs. eggs, the problem could be returned $5.40, $4.20, $3.60.
Middleport, Ohio
U. S. Steel-owned mines in Mine Workers requires
Schroeder and her husband even worse next year .
The tenth race 1-2-3 big
Pennsylvania were affected.
and are plaguing neighbors.
triple combo returned $453.
A separate dispute over
They launched their assault
The
crowd
wagered
shift rotations idled 10,000
in July and have been
$299,232.
miners
in Illinois and In·
breeding at a high rate.
diana.
They now hold about 100
CLOSING MONDAY
"Millions of tons of coal
acres of land in this Southern
COLUMG US · Director
production
lost to the
Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio
Indiana region.
economy will hold us in
of
Liquor
The bugs certainly are Department
(;}
further
hostage to foreign
unsighlly - excepl, maybe, Control ha s announced all
energy sources, adding to
to other millipedes - and sta le liquor stores and
inflation pressures, " Speer
they present a health hazard. deparimental offices will be
COLUMBUS (UP!) -The said.
They emit a toxic gas - a closed Monday, September I, Ohio Wildlife Council has
" No other union negotiates
form of hydrogen cyanide . a legal holiday for state adopted 197:&gt;-76 · duck and
an
agreement and then
Mrs. Schroeder said the gas employees. All stores will goose hunting season dates,
made her sick and almost reopen Tuesday. September 2 both starting at noon Oct. 22 proceeds to so totally
disregard its one obligation in
killed her dog, Jethroe .
at their usual hours.
but having split periods, and
return - namely, to insure
approved the opening of a
new area on the south side of
Maumee Bay, adjacent to the
Cedar Point National Wildlife
Refuge, for hunting.
The 1,211-.acre area near
By UNifED PRESS IN· officer on the Kent State
You get a Su per Shef. a Big Shef,
1Super Shef"
WILMINGTON . DEL.
rERNA· fiONAL
University campus when four Oregon in Lucas County has
a Cheeseburger. a Hamburger
and 1Order
A civil court jury 's verdict students were shot and killed been added to the list of state- (UP!) -The United States'
and Four Orders or
French Fries
soccer team was eliminated
in the Kent State trial and nine others wounded by owned lands designated as
Regular French Fri es.
clearing 29 defendants of National Guard gunfire, said, public hunting areas. It was from 1976 Olympic competition
Thursday
night
when
liability in the Kent State " I feel regardlless of what the recently purchased by the
it dropped a 4-2 decision to
University shootings brought verdict would have been no state.
the North
The first duck season runs Mexico in
tears of relief to some of the one would have really
defendants.
to Dec. 3, and the second part American hemisphere chamchanged his views."
pionships.
" First of all, I cried," said
" My sy mpathies have Dec . 31-Jan.6. The goose
Tied 2-2 midway through
Mathew J . McManus, of West always been with those season goes through Dec. 23,
the
second hall, the Mexicans
1BigShef"
Salem, Ohio , one of the people," he said. "I felt sorry and the second portion wiD
captured
the
lead
when
Hugo
national Guardsmen. " I for the people affected and I nm Dec. 31-Jan. 6. ·
and 1Order
realized I'm 30 years old and feel that way now."
Dale Haney. chief of the Sanchez rebounded a hard
French
Fnes
shot by Hector Papia at 24: 11
these last five years have
"I think the deci.slon was a state Wildlife Division, said
been extremely hectic. It's a great support for our system the point system would be into the period .
The loss eliminated the
tragedy, but you have to · of jurisprudence and a great used again this year for the
Americans from Olympic
enforce, the will of the people . support
for
law
en- daily bag and possession
competition
, as the two game
We did that. We protected forcement," said Sylvester limits on ducks.
series
was
decided on total
lives. My only feeling was . Del Corso, head of the Guard
The season for coots will
that I wanted it (trial ) to last at the time.
coincide with the duck goals. Mexico outscored the
Americans 12-2.
as long as necessary to
Diaries E. Brown, one of season.
resolve it -once and for all ." the defense a ttorheys, said,
WiUiam F. E. Herschler, " Gentlemen, you have now
1Cheeseburger
Bu cy rus. Ohio, another heard the last word on Kent
and 1Order
Guardsman, said he and his State."
French
Fries
wife cried when they heard
Former
Kent
State
the verdict oo television. .
University Pre5ident Robert
"Maybe we will all live a I. White said he was " pleased
little freer and looser for and relieved" with the ver·
some time now," Herschler diet but said he was not
said. "This is. what we prayed . happy .
.,..
for. "
" It is not possible to be
Gen. Robert H. Can- happy," lJe said.'
terbury, the highest rankin~(

BASIC SJWING CLASSES NOW l
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of four for only

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•

Oa~~yea~a!~~: ~~~0

as Philadelphia pounded out
17 hits to beat San FranciscO .
Tom Hilgendorf took over
a ft e r Ji m Lonborg was
tagged for three runs in the
fir st and shut out the Giants
for 7 1-3 innings to win his
sixth game with th e ninthinning releif of Tu g McGraw.
Gary Thomasson homered
for the Giants.
1.
Expos 10, Padres 8
Run -scoring singles by Tim
F'oli and Gary Carter capped
Yankees 3, A's 2
a three-run sixth inning rally
Bobby Bonds drove in three
as Montreal beat San Diego.
run s with a double and a Fred Scherman, the third of
homer for New York as P at six Expos pitchers, got his
Dobson won his lith game third win while 17-game
against 13 losses. 15-game winner Randy Jones was the
winner Ken Holtzman lost loser. Willie McCovey hit his
and is now 15-11. Billy 450th career homer for the
Williams hi t a two-&lt;"un homer Padres.
for Oakland.
Mets 4, Dodgers I
Reds 4, Cardinals 0
Del Unser hit a two-run
Don Gullett pitched a five- homer in th e seventh inning
hitter agamst St . Louis to and New York scored two in
br ing his record to 11-3. It was the fifth with the help of an
the seven th win in a row for error as the Mets beet Los
the left-hander, who was Angeles. Jerry Koosman
bac ked by a fif th -inning evened his record at 11-11.
ho mer by Darrel Chaney and posting his lOth complete
a triple by Ken Griffey.
game and striking out 10.

.'_..:f_,__
' ,:.

Feed a family

AND CARRY IT WITH
YOU ALL THE TIME

+

PhiUies 8, Giants 5

year
old son
of B.F .and
Coaltown
to
times
of 2:09.4
2:1U {}
for the mile. after losing the }

Dudley's Florist

CLIP THIS COUPON
GOOD FOR

against 13 wins for the White
Sox. who were shut out until
the ninth when Pat Kelly
tripled and J org e Orta
singled .
New
York
defeated
Oak land 3-2 in the only other
Am eri can League game
while in the Na tional League,
Cincinnati beat St . Louis 4-!l,
Ph tl adelp hi a downed Sa n
Francisc o 8-5 , Montreal
trimmed San Diego IIJ-8 and
New York beat Los Angeles 4-

;.,
';';

5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer2y, 0., Friday, Aug. 29, 1975

WILMA COOK

Girl is 13
SYRACUSE - Mr . and
Mrs. Diaries B. Cook entertained Tuesday evening
with a birthday party at their
home in honor of their
daughter Wilma, 13. It was
the first birthday parly
V(ilma had ever had .
Ice cream and cake were
served to Mr. and Mrs. Ezra
Phillips, Walter Cook, Mrs.
June Cook, Kenny, Keith.
Karen and Kellie, Miss
Bonnie Haught and Becky
Koehler, all of Syracuse; Mr .
and Mrs. Russell E . Miller .
Tina and Timothy, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy ; Mrs . Bever!:·
Dowell , David, Dwayne
Angie and Lennie, Racine ;
Mr . and Mrs. Ronald Miller,
Carma, Traci, Eugenia and
Ronnie, Middleport , and
Marvin Friend of Rock
Springs.
She received several gifts.
~-

·-~ .,, ...••• ~:.e:::_:_c.o.LSG!»-=-·

Social
Calendar
SATURDAY
ICE CRE/'.M Social, 4 p.m.,
at Tuppers Plains Elementary School. Sponsored by
Tuppers Plains Boosters.
DANCE at Pomeroy Junior
High from 9 p.m. to I a .m .
Sponsored by Pomeroy Fire
Department amd Emergency
Squad . Music by " Sound
· Investment ." Admission $5 a
couple.
SUNDAY
HOMECOMING at Hazel
Community Church, off Rt.
124 between Long Bottom and
Portland . Dinner will be
served at noon . The Rev .
George Hoschar will be the
speaker. Dan Hayman and
the Country Hymntimers will
entertain in the afternoon.
ANNUAL Ours family
reunion,
Rock
Springs
Fairgrounds; basket dinner ,
I p.m.; everyone welcome.
MONDAY
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
O.E.S. 8 p.m. at the hall. Preregistration
for
grand
chapter to be completed.
'Tuesday
A REGULAR meeting of
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F &amp; AM, will be held at
7:30p.m. All Master Masons
are invited. ·
01f!O ETA Phi O.apter,
I Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, at
. the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. Cultural
report by Sharon Bailey,
hostesses to be last year's
pledges.

'

. '

Also read was an invitation
from Oscar McVa y Post
concerning a dinner party
honoring w. Dean Scholl ,
Department of Ohio commander at 6:30 p.m . Sept. 20
at the Fairfield Union High
SchooL
A comm unica ti on wa s read
from Frank L. Giffio ,
executive director of CARE ,
in regard to the Afri ca
droug ht and famine fund .
During the meeting plans
were made for a dinner at the
September meeting . Guests
will be t he Senior Citize ns
Choir directed by Mrs . Carrie
Neutzling with Mrs. Hazel
Thomson . pianis t.
Other guests will be Mrs.
Esther Tipple, past E ighth
District pre s id ent. Laocaster;
Mrs .
Arn old
Richard s . Eighth Dis tri c t
president ; Mr s. My rtle
Walker, a district offi cer ;
Mrs . Erma Hendric ks ,
president of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 Unit; Mrs. Julia
Norris, president of Racine
602 Unit; atid Mrs. Lula
Hampton , president of Lewis
Manley Post 263 Unit. Junior
auxiliary members will a lso
be present with the officers lo
be ins tolled by Pam Powers,
Eighth
Districl
junior
pres ident .
Mrs.
Faye
Wildermuth and Mrs . Neutz.
ling will be in charge of
dinner preparations .
A report on the department
convention held in Dayton
was given by Miss Erma
Smith and Mrs . Marjorie
Goett. delegates . They noted
that by-laws
are to be
changed every five years,
and that all chairpersons are
to report by May 1 in order
for the tJnit to receive credit

JEREMY RANSON

Birthday
observed
BRADBURY - The first
birthday of Jeremy Ranson,
son of Mr . and Mrs. Jeff

Ranson,

was

observed

recently with a party in the
Bradbury school yard.
Cake. h omemade ice
cream and lemonade were
served to Rodney and Rita
Bailey, Mr. and Mrs . Bill
Bailey. Kathy. Sherry and
Kevin King, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
King, Allen and Brian Shuler,
Mr . and Mrs. Richard Shuler.
Mary In , Beverly and Bryan
Wilcox , Desi Jeffers, Linda
Gerard, June Hutton, Sherrie
Barnhart, John Blake , Mike
Miller, David Cole, Randy
Raynes and Tammi Stanley.
Sending gifts were T. W.
Autherson, Mr. and Mrs. J .
W. Ranson, St. Albans, W.
Va .; Mrs . Lee Roten,
Mullens, W. Va .; Mr. and
Mrs .
James
Wallace,
Bluefield, Va .; Mr. and Mrs .
J . A.
Wallace, North
Tazewell , Va .; Mr . and Mrs.
A. B. Broyles, Groveland,
Fla.; Mr . and Mrs. Rick
Ranson, Chesapeake; Mr .
and Mrs . S teve Rans on ,
Grayson. Ky .

for the year's work.
A check was sent to Miss
Ann Eschelman, Department
of Ohio secretary, for 35
pounds of candy to be sent to
the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital.
A reception hor\ring Mrs.
Jack Balzhi7&lt; r, Mulford ,
department president, was
announced. Mrs . Pratt, Mrs .
Neutzling, Mrs . Richards and
Mrs. Hampton will attend .
It was noted that Leanna
Sallott, daughter of Mrs.
Nancy Sallot, a past depar tment president. is ill and
hospitalized . Mrs. Pat Riley ,
also a pas t department
pres ident, is confined to
Grant Hospital . , Columbus.
Also reported was the death
of Ella Mae Beaver's brother .
The unit voted to contribute
$5 to the Marie. Moore perpetual fund for the sons and
daug hters of deceased
veterans in lieu of sending
flower s
for
deceased
members . A card will be sent
to the family noting the
memorial contribution.
A school of instruction was
announced for Sept. 20 in
Columbus with Mrs . Pratt
and Miss Powers to attend.
The unit voted to pay $100 to
the post on the utility bills .
Mrs . Neutzling was appointed
to select appropriate gifts for
Mrs. Balzhizer and Mrs .
Richards for the receptions.
Mrs . Mary Marlin reported
on her visit to the National
Headquarters Museum in
Indianapolis while enroule
home from the Eight and
Forty national convention in
Minneapolis.
Mrs . Ellen Couch, card and
flower chairwoman, reported
that cards had been sent to
Mary
Beard
while
hospitalized and flowers to
her funeral. Cards were also
sent to Mrs . Riley, Mrs. Owen
Watson and Mrs. Frances
Bearhs.
Music by Mrs. Neutzling,
chairwoman, included the
hymn of tne month, "Have
Thine Own Way," a patriotic
selection, ' ' Columbia, the
Gem of the Ocean" and a
heritage number. "Home on
the Range."
Mrs . Pratt asked that all
cha irpersons make a report
each rhont h. Prayer and
singing of "America" closed
the meeting. Mrs . Ruby
Marshal and Mrs . Martin
were colorbearers. and
Cheryl Lehew the sergeant at
arms.
Mrs. Marshall and Mrs. Iva
Powell served a salad course
and fruit punch .

Couple wed
Mr . and Mrs . John A. Dean,
Pomeroy, announce the
marriage of their so n ,
Richard Dean, and Tussinee
Ploy Sanamtong of Udorn ,
Thailand.
The coupl e was married
April 15 in a private
ceremony at the Air Force
Base at Udorn ,.where Sgt.
Dean is stationed. Upon their
return to the United States,
Sgt. and Mrs.J)ean will have
a c hurc h ceremony . They are
presently living at Udorn Air
Force Base in Thailand.
:·:

. ·~,

DAVID CUSTER

Celebrates
birthday
MINERSVILLE - Mr . and
Mr s . Jerry Custer e ntertained recently with a
party honoring their son,
David Ray, on his third birthday .
A cake decorated in a clown
motif was served with Ice
cream and Kooi-Aid. Favors
were bracelets for the girls
and jacks for the boys, with
balloons for both.
Guests were Aleasha Renee
Custer. David 's sister; his
grandmothers, Mrs. Florence
Custer and Mrs. Carl Searls.
Mr . and Mrs. Diaries R.
Hysell, Jean and Barbara
Custer, Darla Custer, Mr .
and Mrs. Keith Searls and
Amy , Mrs . William Harris,
Mrs. Delton Fowler, Craig
and Michelle Brown and
Drenda Cunningham.

DEAR POLLY - I read the
directions given in the
column for making a beer can
hat and a friend saw a beer
can sweater on TV. l would
like the directions for the
sweater, please . Thank you.
- MRS. L.A.
DEAR MRS. L. A. - I learn
something every day. This Is
a new Idea to me but sure ly
some reader has made such a
sweater and, If so. we hope
she will tell us how she did it.
- POLLY .
DEAR
READERS
Bathrooms so often have such
a sterile look and are com·
pletely lacldng Interest and
Individuality. Our decorating
enthusiasm runs out by the
time we get to this often
neglected room and Its looks
fall nat.
Wallpaper can be a big ace
In the hole. Wttb the many
waterproof and easy·lo-apply
patterns there Is little excuse
for dullness. These usually
small rooms have ceilings
that look too high for the size
of the floor area so by all
means paper tbe ceiling, too.
This wlll also prevent the
common problem of too many
broken lines sucb as floor one
color, llle another, walls sttll
another and then perbaps a
Wblte ceiling. Permanent

fixtures and tile often make
paint selections a trial, but
wallpaper can solve that by
combining all the colors.
If such walls are newly
painted, but the effect is
uninspired. find an Important
..·allpaper border l some good
looking ones have paste
already applied and are just
put In water) and put it up at
the ceiling line, along the top
of the tile and up and over
windows and doors, too.
Curtains for th e window
and shower do not have to be
waterproof. Make them of a
pretty prlnted,bric til you
and then
need a patte
hang the show curtain over
your old one and the water
will not come through. A niee
touch is to add a valance from
the ceiling down over the
shower curtain rod. One of
my daughters-in-law had
walls and ceiling In her
bathroom covered with a
striking paisley design but
the smashing paper did not
come over with the desired
Impact since the glass shower
doors were seen from the
bathroom doorway. Quick as
a wink s he applied the
wallpaper to the glass In the
doors so It fit Inside the
aluminum frames and the
effect was a startling lm·
provemenl.
Do not be afraid to hang
pictures on plain walls In the
bathroom and framed posters
often look great. Splurge on a

Mrs . Harvey Van Vranken
entertai ned recentl y at he r
Spring Ave ., Pomeroy home
wi th a shower honoring Miss
Sharon Lovsey, bride-elect of
Mark Werry .
The wedding will be an
event of Sept. 6 at the Richland
Avenue
United
Methodist Ch urch, Athens .
The
gift
tabl e
wa s
decorated
with
white
strea m ers
and
bow s
sus pended
fr om
wh1te
wedding bells . The wedding
bell motif was ca rri ed out in
the
re fr es hm e nt
table
dec orations and featured a
cake decorated in orchid and
white The ca ke was served
by Miss Sandi e Ox ley and the
punch wa s poured by Mrs.
Jeff We rr y.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs . Cha rl es
Werr y, Mrs . John Werry and
Mrs . J eff Werry .
Attending and sendin g gifts
were Mrs. Paul Tay lor , Mrs .
Cha rl es We rry. Mrs . Kenneth
Mrs.
Eleano r
Romin e.
Werry , Mrs . Lucretia Werry.
Mrs . Jeff Werry. Mrs. Tracy
Whaley, Mrs. Marie Custe r .

Mrs . Trel Sc hoenleb, Mrs.
· Gladys Cuckler. Mrs . Walter
Werry, Mrs . Robert Arnold,
Mrs . Roy Smith , Mrs . Leon
McKnight , Mrs . Lillian
Gress , Mrs . Vera Buchanan ,
Mrs . Franklin Hepp, Miss
Myrtis Kay Parker, Mrs.
Dwight Parker, Mrs. Eugene
Clark, Mrs . Dale Smith, Mrs.
v . D . Ed
. war d s. Mrs .
Harrison Lovsey, Mrs. John
Bundy, Mrs. John Werry, Jan
Van vranken and Sandie
Ox ley .

FLOWERS
FQr All Occasions
We Wire Flowers
Everywhere

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs . Mill ar d Van M et er

Ph . 992 -'203 9

Ph . 991 -S78t

SAVE MONEY ON
FUEL THIS WINTER
With AStihl
CHAIN SAW

stylish set of "show" towels

Q. My mother was very Ill
re«ntly, and 1he- doctor had lo
come- to I he- house to treat her.
Will he-r MedicarY pay for hi s

visit, or does It only CO~Ver
to the doctor'
A M ed icare's medical in -

olfi~ ~Visils

suran~.:e h el ps pay fo r covered
ser vices your mother receives

from her docto r no matter
where she rece i ves them - in
her home , in his office . in a
h ospi t &lt;~. l or skilled nursing
facil it y, Or in any ot he r location
in th e U.S. Your Mediw re
Handbook. exp lains what doc·
tors' se rvices are covered, and
how medical insurance helps
puy for them . If your mother
d oes n't have a copy of th e
h andboo k, she c&lt;~n ge t o ne at
any soci&lt;~l set:u rity offit:c .

FIRST CHILD ARRIVES
Mr . and Mrs . Rodne y
Riggs, Pomeroy, announce
the birth of their first child, a
daughter , Courtney Denise.
Born Aug. 19 at the Holzer
Medical Center, the infant
weighted 7 lbs. , 11 oz.
Maternal grandmother is
Mrs. Gloria Malone, Rutland .
Great-grandmother is Mrs.
Bessie Malone, Columbus .
Paternal grandmother is
Mrs . Betty Musser, Rutland ,
and the grandfather is Earl
Riggs, Langsville .

..

Q. l'n just sold my house
and will be mo"ing into an

apartment on lhr first of nut
monlh . S hould I notify sod11 l

securil)' now. or waif until I'm
living at my ne-w address?
t\ _ You should noti ry '&gt;Ocia l
scu m ty now. Prompt notice
h e lp~ as~ urc llclivcry of your
c heck to you r new alldress
With o ut delay or mtcr rupt 1on
You can rcpo n ~· our move o n
the c hang e -of-ad d re o;s rorm
which IS printed 011 th e boK k or
th e enve lo pe you r chN' k is
delivered in . Be sure to gtvc
both you r o ld and new ad drc ss-i ndudlng ZIP (odesand th e social secu rit y claim
numher which a ppea rs on yo ur
soc1a l securi ty check

SON BORN
Mr . and Mrs . William R.
Capehart Jr., Rt. I, Mid·
dleport, announce the birlh of
their first child, a 10 lb., 7 oz.
son named William Russell,
Ill. The infant was born
Tuesday, Aug. 26 at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Jeffers,
Pomeroy, and the paternal
grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs. William Capehart, Sr.,
Rt. I, Middleport . Greatgrandparents are Mr . and
Mrs . Clifford Kauff, Mid·
dleport; Mrs . Eva Kauff,
Rutland;
Mrs.
Opal
Capehart, New Haven, W.
Va .; and Mrs. Lola Jeffers,
Mason , W. Va .

OESTOMEET
Racine O.apter 134, Order
of the Eastern Star, will meet
in regular session Monday at
8 p.m . Those persons planning to go to Grand Chapter
on the bus are asked to come
prepared to pre-&lt;"egister , and
to pay both the bus and dinner
fee at the meeting . Mrs. Cora
Webb has
of the lees.

.

Exciting.

to fit your new scheme a nd
use the "still good" ones for
family use. A washable, cut·
to-fit colorful carpet that
covers the entire floor will be
a great addition to the
bathroom that needs a lift out
of the doldrums. Let your
Imagination run riot and have
your bathroom the talk of the
town. - POLLY.

The lightes t
eas iest ha ndli ng AV -saw in th e wor ld .
For f arm e r s. gardeners a nd do-il -yourselfers . Also
g rea t l or limblng and l or felling smal l tim be r . 2 HP
lO IN ). 9.7 lbs. (4 kgs .) w ith 12" DOO em bar ) and
chain . Bar length!i : 12" and 14" (30 and 35 em) wit h
star no se· 12" and 14" tJOand 35 em )

STIHL
031 AV

~

Nog.me•. Notlmmla

Just Highest

Interest Rates
In The Area

51,4%
ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

... ...\,

~

....... i'j.

"' ' - , . . .

t,; .·-Another li ght and h a ndy chain
\!"

saw tor for estry and farming .
fel li ng a nd cu tting of
fl.,J..,.,_,rtll., :~f~i u m sized tim be r , for
'!:
lhinni ng ~nd lim bi ng . With an
especia ll y la rge muffler f a
mak e thi s saw very q u iet.
The STIHL 03 1 AV ca n be pu rchased wit h t he STIHL
" Quick -Stop " safe ty dev ice if so desired . 3. 2 H P (DIN),
14 .71bs . (6 .7 kg s ) w ith 15" ( 37 em ) bar and cha in . Bar
lengths : 14, 16, 18 and 20" (35. 40, 45 and 50 em ) with
star nose· 13, 15, 16 an d 18" (33, 37, ·Wand 45 cml .

\

STIHL
041 AV

' per cent vear paid en
eeular Paubook Savings.
o Minimum . IIJferest
11rom date of depuitto d•t•
withdrawal.

Interest

mpounded quarterly .

~BRANCH
.4')MC.IGS

The Athen• County
Savings &amp; Loan Co
296 Second 51.
Po meroy, Ohio

A mor e powerful. moderately light we ight chain saw . It
is used as a l im bing , th inning a nd fel l ing saw in small
a nd m edi um sized t i mber . The uni versal saw for
farm er s.

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

lnsurP.d
I C.

1/i:~

wiif

600 E. Main

Ph . 992 -2094

Pomeroy

3 Guys

'.

Exact.

::

·:

and A Gal

·: .

...

·.

.~:

·.

new
high
fashion

~PfllJELLe

ROOF
COAT

ct\T(

~&amp;ULO\Jf1

~ND D~Y

riUTOM~TIC

:·

BAUM'S TRUE
VALUE STORE
Chesler. Oh•o
985 JJOl

Bright wallpaper
perks up bathroom

·.

:::

FIBERED

$2395

.••

I!Y POLLY CR,\MER

::

ALUMINUM

5 GAL CAN

·. .

Polly's Pointers&gt; Miss Lovsey feted

.·

·.

r.,
.J

Put some excitement
on h 1s wri st. Give him
the time . day and ca1e.·:;:
And one of the
hand so mest 17 jewel
automatic's he' s
eve r seen .

The styling is high
fa shion. Colorful.
Imaginative. Wi th jet
black case and strap .

A golden·rimmed
dial, in geometries of
black and gold. Or
royal blue and black.

(1~ ,i

"TEMPERANCE"
FRIDAYand
The Meigs Inn
SATURDAY

PHONE 992-3629

~!I..!~.~ ,'L!::::1:0::00:::T:I::L:2::00::::;:!_ _.....;__

~-~....1

P_u_M_E_R_O_Y_,-0-H-10'

•

�I '

I

I

'.

.

4- The Daily Sent[nel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 29, 1975

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

how they ran ~=~=

~l

!iii

::1

Orioles recall the day Sm~~~~~~ ~J~Go~~
i';a!~~ h~.:C~;~~rri;,~
.
when the charge b egan

nor 's Cup Trot in straights }

:;:;

:;i

~.:;_,:_·

.-•

days of harness racing ended )
at the 1975 Ohio State Fair.}
Cliff Huber drove the 3- :;::

&amp;seball Roundup
year a go .
By FRED DOWN
Of course th e Or ioles are
UPI Sports Writer
realists wh1 ch is why Paul
The Baltimore Oriole s Bla1r . a key fi gure in the 1974
remember the dat e - a nd drive . isn' t pred ic t ing a
they think the Bost on Red So x repeat pe rformance. Hinting ,
do too .
pe rhaps. but not predict ing.
It was Aug . 29 a year a go
·· we don 't JUSt have to play
when the Orioles mounted the goo d ba seba ll. ·· he said
charge that wa s to ca rry Thursday night alter the
them from eight games out of Or1oles defeated the O.icago
first place past the Red Sox l'llute Sox 2-1. ··we have to
and to th~ Ame rt c an play excellent ball a nd we
League ·s East ern Diviswn ha ve to get some he lp. What
title . They did it With a wa ve we do kn ow is that we have
of 28 win in 34 games.
th e personnel that won't g ive
Well , now it's Aug. 29 a gain up ."
and the Orioles and th eir fan s
Elrod Hendricks and Don
are playing games with arith- Ba ylor singled home the runs
metic . Inasmu ch as they"re which supp orted the live-hit
6 1 ~ games behind Boston
pitching ul Mike Cuellar and
now , it can be argued th at brought th e 38-year old leftthey are p ., games or 10 days hander his 13th win. Wilbur
better off t han they were a Wood suffered his 18th loss

Hilgendorf sure
Indians goofed
SAN FRANCISCO 1UP! )Tom Hilgendorf didn "t want
to tell the whole story but he
got in enough of it to suggest
that the Cleveland Indians
made a big mistake in
trading
him
to
the
Philadelphia Phillies .
" I was all set for a starting
job with the Indians this
Y&lt;lB r ," Hilgendorf said
Wednesday after pitch ing the
Pl.!illies to an lh'i victory over
the San Francisco Giants.
" And the nex t lhing I knew I
was traded .
, 'Naturally, I was disap·
p&lt;iinted at the time but in
looking back now, it 's the best
thing that ever happened to
me. I wasn 't going to be
ha,ppy there no matter what
and the fact the manager
didn 't care for me personally
only would have added lo my
problems and his ."
The manager Hilgendorf
refers to , of course, is Frank
Robinson .
"I wasn 't any ball of fire
last year ," Hilgendorf said,
" but I went to the Puerto
Rican Winter League after
the season was over and I
learned how to throw a forkball. I faced Robinson's team
( Santurce) and beat them
like a drum every time. Since
he saw me first hand with his
own eyes I figured I was all
set for Cleveland, but the
Indians unloaded me the first
chance they got. "
"As Hilgendorf :;aid, he 's
tic)ded to death now that they
did because he seems to have
started a whole new career in
the Phils' bullpen even
though he is 32 and has been
pitching professionally since

1960.
:'The forkball, that 's what
is _going to keep me in the big

leagues a few more years,"
he said . " It 's a difficult pitch
to master. but once you do,
it's a dandy . It loses all its
speed by the time it reaches
the plate and then it dips. You
can do only two things with a
pitch like that-either miss it
altogether or roll it on the

gro und ."
Hilgendorf got the Giants to
roll it on the ground lour
times for doubleplays that
kept him and the Phils in the
game after Jim Lon borg was
tagged for three runs in the
first inning.
Phi ladelphia finally got
Jim Barr out of the game and
went on to make it a rout I 17
hits off four pitchers). They
led 8-3 befo re the Giants
scored twice with two out in
the ninth .
The victory enabled . the
Phils to move to within 3 '-',
games of Pittsburgh in the
National League East race
and it was Hilgendorf's sixth
win in nine decisions.
In 82 2·3 innings Hilgendorf
has allowed only 6:&gt; hits,
struck out 40 a nd walked 29.
His ERA is a glittering 1.74.
!'hils Manager Danny Ozark
says flat out he doesn 't know
where the team would be
without him.

Cusick is
injured
Cl- .•UMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio
Stat• sophomore defensive
en~
Marty Cusick of
LJkewood was to undergo
knee surgery today and will
miss several football games
this season .
Cusick hurt the knee in
practice Monday and reinjured it the next day , as the
Buckeyes prepared for their
season-opener Sept. 13 at
Michigan State .
Ohio State held its first
contact work of the fall
pra ctice period Thursday and
freshman Tom Taylor was
bumped hard . He will be out
of action lor a couple days,
coach Woody Hayes said
later.
Hayes said he did not think
the Buckeyes worked too
hard , some progress had
been made and double daily
drills would continue for
another week.

10% DISCOUNT

••

,"i T l . f) F: /\' T

J)JS(OUNT CARH

•
••
•
•

· · Sign eo ____ ____ __ __ _____ ______________ _ ::

Good /or 1(1 % Di.~connr

•

THE SEWING LENTER

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT
·:-Jot Incl udin g Sale Meichandise

...........................
ALSO SIGN UP FOR FALL

Millipedes march
so who's caring?

'

THE SEWING CENTER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

1~~O.arcoal
~a~:~O.arlie
heats
Blackturned a
to

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::;

,._,.•':_.,·:_ ,,_'•.

perfect trip in the $1 ,:&gt;00 3yearold Consolation Trot with ::;
a 2:10.1 performance.
,:;

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
! UP!) - Eatin' covered six
furlongs in I : 13 Thursday to
win the featured ninth race at
Thistledown and returned
$5.80, $4.00 and $2.40.
The 1().1 daily double of
Atoll 's Last and Vinces Princess was worth 1234.
Th e 4,476 fans bet $395,685.
CINCINNATI ( UP!) - Ca·
rionsa forged ahead in the
home stretch Thursday a
one len gth victory over
Patty's Page in the featured
eighth race at River Downs.
Doctor Mills wa s third.
The win paid $5.20, $4.20
and $3 .20.
The !Hl daily double of
Dusty Greek and Better Pac
had a 169 payoff.
The crowd of 4,421 wagered
$389,027.
COLUMBUS UP!)
Driver Russ Baldwin guided
Jerry MacPherson from the
pack to the lead at the threequarter pole here Thursday
and win the featured 8th pace
at Scioto Dovms by one and a
hall lengths.
Second was Wildwood
Storm and third was Arch
Berry as the winner paced
the mile in 2:03.3 and paid
$3.80, $2.80 and $2.40.
In the nightly double, Missy
Mouse 13) and Ca nadian
Meadow I 4) combined for a
$121.60 return.
The attendance was 4,297
and they bet $216,266.

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•
UTTLE MISS OSPB. BEFORE AND AFTER - Katy Renner, 5, daughter of Columbus
Fire Captain and Mrs. Robert Renner, 1450Fullen Rd ., Columbus, is Little Miss OSPB, 1975.
Katy's " lazy eye" was discovered in a preschool vision screening last Fall sponsored by the
Ohio Society for the Prevention of Blindness with Ascension Lutheran Preschool, Columbus.
Her mirrored reflection shows Katy as she looked while she was being patched. Katy is the
official personality of the Ohio Society's direct-mail Sight-Saving campaign to raise $16!&gt;,000
to support its statewide programs . Mrs. Donald Hippenstee l, 201 Greenbriar Dr, Gallipolis
is development chairperson for Gallia County in September. No appointment in Meigs
County was announced .

DRIED
A.OWER
ARRANGEMENTS
$495

Split hunts
are ordered

••

Verdict brought tears

STANDARD
lESSON COMMENTARY
1974-1975

(allday)'

APPLIES GOD'S WORD
TO DAILY LIFE

1Hamburger
-and 1Order
French Fnes

The Middleport Book Store
: 9:30 to 12, 2 to s (CLOSE
THURS.l-EAST COURT

Middleport, Ohio

Pt. Pleasant
23~5

Jackson Av e .

Gallipolis
'lS03 Eastern Ave .

'
.

Because cancer research
funding is the international
project of the Ameri ca n
Legion Auxiliary, the unit of
Drew Webster Post 39 at a
meeting Tuesday night at the
hall in Pomeroy made
arrangements
to
send
representatives to a meeting
of the local Cancer Society
next Thursday .night.
The cancer meetin g will be
held at 7:30 p.m . in the
Hughes building on Third
Ave . in Middleport . The
Auxiliary has been asked to
assist in the cancer crusade .
Mrs . Grace Pratt presided
at the meeting during which~
several invitations wer e
read . A reception will be held
honoring
Mrs.
Arnold
Richards , Eighth District
president, Sept. 28 at the
Middleport Legion hall .
Arrangements were made for
the Pomeroy unit to make
ribbon sandwiches for the
reception .

PITTSBURGH (UPI ) Calling the Appala chian
wildcat
coal
strike

BEAUTIFUL

.

Auxiliary representatives
to attend cancer meeting

Miners called disgraceful

that its members work under urging the Federal Governthat agreement until the next ment t o oversee still another
phase of American life . But
negotiation .. .," he said.
" irresponsible~~
and a
" We are obliged lo proceed even all the disadvantages of
" national disgrace, " U.S. in court only beea use the more federal bureaucracy
Steel Board O.airman E.B. union refuses to honor its must be preferred to chaos in
Speer vowed Thursday to contract. .. Moreover, we will so vital a sector of our
And By The Way ...
·' My husband built a trench
fight the walkout in court and support new legislative ac- economy.''
FLOYDS KNOBS , Ind. around our place and filled it
to
support placement of mine tion to place coa l mine labor
ruPI ) - The millipedes are with oil and turpentine, and it
labor
relations
under relations
under
on the march and. although stopped 'em," she said. " It
congressional
control.
Congressional
control
as in
they've been stopped at the stopped 'em at the moat, but
Speer further accused the the Railway Labor Act."
moat. they're rallying their between the moat and the
United
Mine Workers leader·
The latest strike in West
forces for another assault. foundation, they are breeding
ship
of
consistently
letting
its
Virginia alone, Speer said,
The small, blackish "thou- in the grass. There are eggs
members violate the coal has cost the nation "$100
sand leggers" have invaded a all over the rail fence and in
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
contract signed after a long rniiJion worth of lost coal"
small area in Southern In- the grass.
I UP! ) - Hollywood B .
diana by the millions and
Mrs . Schroeder said she weathered the stretch battle strike last winter . " The and $22 million in wages.
Yet, he said, such wildcats
they're driving Mrs. Robert spurns any chemicals she and scored a neck win over UMWA cont ract .. . is the only
Schroeder buggy. But she believes are hannful to living Diaries Edward in the contract in the United States have been frequent.·
regularly flaunted by its
From
" Since the new contract
says no one else in Indiana creatures.
featured $1,700 ninth ·race trot
11
January 1, 1975, the situation
even cares.
Meanwhile, the bugs also at Northfield Park Thursday members, he said .
His
comments
came
as
a
almost unbelievable ,"
is
" I've been called from threaten the area 's important night before 3,558 harness
strike
that
began
wildcat
Speer said. "There have been
Louisville, Chicago, New Or- strawberry crop.
fans . Henny Hanover was
Colors to match any
over
the
firing
of
a
miner
in
1,400 wildcat strikes in the
leans, Los Angeles and the
Mrs. Schroeder says this third.
decor
.
Logan County, W.Va. swelled mines of the member coa l
New York Times did an ar- is one, of the nation's top
The 4-year-old , reined by
to encompass over 50,000 companies."
ticle," she said, "but nobody strawberry producing areas, William Irvine, was timed at
Appala c hian miners He concluded, "It is a sad day
in Indiana gives a damn. "
and that if the winter is too 2: IOfor the mile in scoring his
demanding
the right to strike when failure of private
The bu gs have invaded the mild to kill the millipede third win of the season, and
59 N. Second St .
over any grievance . Several responsibility by the United
land and home of Mrs. eggs, the problem could be returned $5.40, $4.20, $3.60.
Middleport, Ohio
U. S. Steel-owned mines in Mine Workers requires
Schroeder and her husband even worse next year .
The tenth race 1-2-3 big
Pennsylvania were affected.
and are plaguing neighbors.
triple combo returned $453.
A separate dispute over
They launched their assault
The
crowd
wagered
shift rotations idled 10,000
in July and have been
$299,232.
miners
in Illinois and In·
breeding at a high rate.
diana.
They now hold about 100
CLOSING MONDAY
"Millions of tons of coal
acres of land in this Southern
COLUMG US · Director
production
lost to the
Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio
Indiana region.
economy will hold us in
of
Liquor
The bugs certainly are Department
(;}
further
hostage to foreign
unsighlly - excepl, maybe, Control ha s announced all
energy sources, adding to
to other millipedes - and sta le liquor stores and
inflation pressures, " Speer
they present a health hazard. deparimental offices will be
COLUMBUS (UP!) -The said.
They emit a toxic gas - a closed Monday, September I, Ohio Wildlife Council has
" No other union negotiates
form of hydrogen cyanide . a legal holiday for state adopted 197:&gt;-76 · duck and
an
agreement and then
Mrs. Schroeder said the gas employees. All stores will goose hunting season dates,
made her sick and almost reopen Tuesday. September 2 both starting at noon Oct. 22 proceeds to so totally
disregard its one obligation in
killed her dog, Jethroe .
at their usual hours.
but having split periods, and
return - namely, to insure
approved the opening of a
new area on the south side of
Maumee Bay, adjacent to the
Cedar Point National Wildlife
Refuge, for hunting.
The 1,211-.acre area near
By UNifED PRESS IN· officer on the Kent State
You get a Su per Shef. a Big Shef,
1Super Shef"
WILMINGTON . DEL.
rERNA· fiONAL
University campus when four Oregon in Lucas County has
a Cheeseburger. a Hamburger
and 1Order
A civil court jury 's verdict students were shot and killed been added to the list of state- (UP!) -The United States'
and Four Orders or
French Fries
soccer team was eliminated
in the Kent State trial and nine others wounded by owned lands designated as
Regular French Fri es.
clearing 29 defendants of National Guard gunfire, said, public hunting areas. It was from 1976 Olympic competition
Thursday
night
when
liability in the Kent State " I feel regardlless of what the recently purchased by the
it dropped a 4-2 decision to
University shootings brought verdict would have been no state.
the North
The first duck season runs Mexico in
tears of relief to some of the one would have really
defendants.
to Dec. 3, and the second part American hemisphere chamchanged his views."
pionships.
" First of all, I cried," said
" My sy mpathies have Dec . 31-Jan.6. The goose
Tied 2-2 midway through
Mathew J . McManus, of West always been with those season goes through Dec. 23,
the
second hall, the Mexicans
1BigShef"
Salem, Ohio , one of the people," he said. "I felt sorry and the second portion wiD
captured
the
lead
when
Hugo
national Guardsmen. " I for the people affected and I nm Dec. 31-Jan. 6. ·
and 1Order
realized I'm 30 years old and feel that way now."
Dale Haney. chief of the Sanchez rebounded a hard
French
Fnes
shot by Hector Papia at 24: 11
these last five years have
"I think the deci.slon was a state Wildlife Division, said
been extremely hectic. It's a great support for our system the point system would be into the period .
The loss eliminated the
tragedy, but you have to · of jurisprudence and a great used again this year for the
Americans from Olympic
enforce, the will of the people . support
for
law
en- daily bag and possession
competition
, as the two game
We did that. We protected forcement," said Sylvester limits on ducks.
series
was
decided on total
lives. My only feeling was . Del Corso, head of the Guard
The season for coots will
that I wanted it (trial ) to last at the time.
coincide with the duck goals. Mexico outscored the
Americans 12-2.
as long as necessary to
Diaries E. Brown, one of season.
resolve it -once and for all ." the defense a ttorheys, said,
WiUiam F. E. Herschler, " Gentlemen, you have now
1Cheeseburger
Bu cy rus. Ohio, another heard the last word on Kent
and 1Order
Guardsman, said he and his State."
French
Fries
wife cried when they heard
Former
Kent
State
the verdict oo television. .
University Pre5ident Robert
"Maybe we will all live a I. White said he was " pleased
little freer and looser for and relieved" with the ver·
some time now," Herschler diet but said he was not
said. "This is. what we prayed . happy .
.,..
for. "
" It is not possible to be
Gen. Robert H. Can- happy," lJe said.'
terbury, the highest rankin~(

BASIC SJWING CLASSES NOW l
'i '

=

of four for only

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

•

Oa~~yea~a!~~: ~~~0

as Philadelphia pounded out
17 hits to beat San FranciscO .
Tom Hilgendorf took over
a ft e r Ji m Lonborg was
tagged for three runs in the
fir st and shut out the Giants
for 7 1-3 innings to win his
sixth game with th e ninthinning releif of Tu g McGraw.
Gary Thomasson homered
for the Giants.
1.
Expos 10, Padres 8
Run -scoring singles by Tim
F'oli and Gary Carter capped
Yankees 3, A's 2
a three-run sixth inning rally
Bobby Bonds drove in three
as Montreal beat San Diego.
run s with a double and a Fred Scherman, the third of
homer for New York as P at six Expos pitchers, got his
Dobson won his lith game third win while 17-game
against 13 losses. 15-game winner Randy Jones was the
winner Ken Holtzman lost loser. Willie McCovey hit his
and is now 15-11. Billy 450th career homer for the
Williams hi t a two-&lt;"un homer Padres.
for Oakland.
Mets 4, Dodgers I
Reds 4, Cardinals 0
Del Unser hit a two-run
Don Gullett pitched a five- homer in th e seventh inning
hitter agamst St . Louis to and New York scored two in
br ing his record to 11-3. It was the fifth with the help of an
the seven th win in a row for error as the Mets beet Los
the left-hander, who was Angeles. Jerry Koosman
bac ked by a fif th -inning evened his record at 11-11.
ho mer by Darrel Chaney and posting his lOth complete
a triple by Ken Griffey.
game and striking out 10.

.'_..:f_,__
' ,:.

Feed a family

AND CARRY IT WITH
YOU ALL THE TIME

+

PhiUies 8, Giants 5

year
old son
of B.F .and
Coaltown
to
times
of 2:09.4
2:1U {}
for the mile. after losing the }

Dudley's Florist

CLIP THIS COUPON
GOOD FOR

against 13 wins for the White
Sox. who were shut out until
the ninth when Pat Kelly
tripled and J org e Orta
singled .
New
York
defeated
Oak land 3-2 in the only other
Am eri can League game
while in the Na tional League,
Cincinnati beat St . Louis 4-!l,
Ph tl adelp hi a downed Sa n
Francisc o 8-5 , Montreal
trimmed San Diego IIJ-8 and
New York beat Los Angeles 4-

;.,
';';

5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer2y, 0., Friday, Aug. 29, 1975

WILMA COOK

Girl is 13
SYRACUSE - Mr . and
Mrs. Diaries B. Cook entertained Tuesday evening
with a birthday party at their
home in honor of their
daughter Wilma, 13. It was
the first birthday parly
V(ilma had ever had .
Ice cream and cake were
served to Mr. and Mrs. Ezra
Phillips, Walter Cook, Mrs.
June Cook, Kenny, Keith.
Karen and Kellie, Miss
Bonnie Haught and Becky
Koehler, all of Syracuse; Mr .
and Mrs. Russell E . Miller .
Tina and Timothy, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy ; Mrs . Bever!:·
Dowell , David, Dwayne
Angie and Lennie, Racine ;
Mr . and Mrs. Ronald Miller,
Carma, Traci, Eugenia and
Ronnie, Middleport , and
Marvin Friend of Rock
Springs.
She received several gifts.
~-

·-~ .,, ...••• ~:.e:::_:_c.o.LSG!»-=-·

Social
Calendar
SATURDAY
ICE CRE/'.M Social, 4 p.m.,
at Tuppers Plains Elementary School. Sponsored by
Tuppers Plains Boosters.
DANCE at Pomeroy Junior
High from 9 p.m. to I a .m .
Sponsored by Pomeroy Fire
Department amd Emergency
Squad . Music by " Sound
· Investment ." Admission $5 a
couple.
SUNDAY
HOMECOMING at Hazel
Community Church, off Rt.
124 between Long Bottom and
Portland . Dinner will be
served at noon . The Rev .
George Hoschar will be the
speaker. Dan Hayman and
the Country Hymntimers will
entertain in the afternoon.
ANNUAL Ours family
reunion,
Rock
Springs
Fairgrounds; basket dinner ,
I p.m.; everyone welcome.
MONDAY
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
O.E.S. 8 p.m. at the hall. Preregistration
for
grand
chapter to be completed.
'Tuesday
A REGULAR meeting of
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F &amp; AM, will be held at
7:30p.m. All Master Masons
are invited. ·
01f!O ETA Phi O.apter,
I Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, at
. the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. Cultural
report by Sharon Bailey,
hostesses to be last year's
pledges.

'

. '

Also read was an invitation
from Oscar McVa y Post
concerning a dinner party
honoring w. Dean Scholl ,
Department of Ohio commander at 6:30 p.m . Sept. 20
at the Fairfield Union High
SchooL
A comm unica ti on wa s read
from Frank L. Giffio ,
executive director of CARE ,
in regard to the Afri ca
droug ht and famine fund .
During the meeting plans
were made for a dinner at the
September meeting . Guests
will be t he Senior Citize ns
Choir directed by Mrs . Carrie
Neutzling with Mrs. Hazel
Thomson . pianis t.
Other guests will be Mrs.
Esther Tipple, past E ighth
District pre s id ent. Laocaster;
Mrs .
Arn old
Richard s . Eighth Dis tri c t
president ; Mr s. My rtle
Walker, a district offi cer ;
Mrs . Erma Hendric ks ,
president of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 Unit; Mrs. Julia
Norris, president of Racine
602 Unit; atid Mrs. Lula
Hampton , president of Lewis
Manley Post 263 Unit. Junior
auxiliary members will a lso
be present with the officers lo
be ins tolled by Pam Powers,
Eighth
Districl
junior
pres ident .
Mrs.
Faye
Wildermuth and Mrs . Neutz.
ling will be in charge of
dinner preparations .
A report on the department
convention held in Dayton
was given by Miss Erma
Smith and Mrs . Marjorie
Goett. delegates . They noted
that by-laws
are to be
changed every five years,
and that all chairpersons are
to report by May 1 in order
for the tJnit to receive credit

JEREMY RANSON

Birthday
observed
BRADBURY - The first
birthday of Jeremy Ranson,
son of Mr . and Mrs. Jeff

Ranson,

was

observed

recently with a party in the
Bradbury school yard.
Cake. h omemade ice
cream and lemonade were
served to Rodney and Rita
Bailey, Mr. and Mrs . Bill
Bailey. Kathy. Sherry and
Kevin King, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
King, Allen and Brian Shuler,
Mr . and Mrs. Richard Shuler.
Mary In , Beverly and Bryan
Wilcox , Desi Jeffers, Linda
Gerard, June Hutton, Sherrie
Barnhart, John Blake , Mike
Miller, David Cole, Randy
Raynes and Tammi Stanley.
Sending gifts were T. W.
Autherson, Mr. and Mrs. J .
W. Ranson, St. Albans, W.
Va .; Mrs . Lee Roten,
Mullens, W. Va .; Mr. and
Mrs .
James
Wallace,
Bluefield, Va .; Mr. and Mrs .
J . A.
Wallace, North
Tazewell , Va .; Mr . and Mrs.
A. B. Broyles, Groveland,
Fla.; Mr . and Mrs. Rick
Ranson, Chesapeake; Mr .
and Mrs . S teve Rans on ,
Grayson. Ky .

for the year's work.
A check was sent to Miss
Ann Eschelman, Department
of Ohio secretary, for 35
pounds of candy to be sent to
the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital.
A reception hor\ring Mrs.
Jack Balzhi7&lt; r, Mulford ,
department president, was
announced. Mrs . Pratt, Mrs .
Neutzling, Mrs . Richards and
Mrs. Hampton will attend .
It was noted that Leanna
Sallott, daughter of Mrs.
Nancy Sallot, a past depar tment president. is ill and
hospitalized . Mrs. Pat Riley ,
also a pas t department
pres ident, is confined to
Grant Hospital . , Columbus.
Also reported was the death
of Ella Mae Beaver's brother .
The unit voted to contribute
$5 to the Marie. Moore perpetual fund for the sons and
daug hters of deceased
veterans in lieu of sending
flower s
for
deceased
members . A card will be sent
to the family noting the
memorial contribution.
A school of instruction was
announced for Sept. 20 in
Columbus with Mrs . Pratt
and Miss Powers to attend.
The unit voted to pay $100 to
the post on the utility bills .
Mrs . Neutzling was appointed
to select appropriate gifts for
Mrs. Balzhizer and Mrs .
Richards for the receptions.
Mrs . Mary Marlin reported
on her visit to the National
Headquarters Museum in
Indianapolis while enroule
home from the Eight and
Forty national convention in
Minneapolis.
Mrs . Ellen Couch, card and
flower chairwoman, reported
that cards had been sent to
Mary
Beard
while
hospitalized and flowers to
her funeral. Cards were also
sent to Mrs . Riley, Mrs. Owen
Watson and Mrs. Frances
Bearhs.
Music by Mrs. Neutzling,
chairwoman, included the
hymn of tne month, "Have
Thine Own Way," a patriotic
selection, ' ' Columbia, the
Gem of the Ocean" and a
heritage number. "Home on
the Range."
Mrs . Pratt asked that all
cha irpersons make a report
each rhont h. Prayer and
singing of "America" closed
the meeting. Mrs . Ruby
Marshal and Mrs . Martin
were colorbearers. and
Cheryl Lehew the sergeant at
arms.
Mrs. Marshall and Mrs. Iva
Powell served a salad course
and fruit punch .

Couple wed
Mr . and Mrs . John A. Dean,
Pomeroy, announce the
marriage of their so n ,
Richard Dean, and Tussinee
Ploy Sanamtong of Udorn ,
Thailand.
The coupl e was married
April 15 in a private
ceremony at the Air Force
Base at Udorn ,.where Sgt.
Dean is stationed. Upon their
return to the United States,
Sgt. and Mrs.J)ean will have
a c hurc h ceremony . They are
presently living at Udorn Air
Force Base in Thailand.
:·:

. ·~,

DAVID CUSTER

Celebrates
birthday
MINERSVILLE - Mr . and
Mr s . Jerry Custer e ntertained recently with a
party honoring their son,
David Ray, on his third birthday .
A cake decorated in a clown
motif was served with Ice
cream and Kooi-Aid. Favors
were bracelets for the girls
and jacks for the boys, with
balloons for both.
Guests were Aleasha Renee
Custer. David 's sister; his
grandmothers, Mrs. Florence
Custer and Mrs. Carl Searls.
Mr . and Mrs. Diaries R.
Hysell, Jean and Barbara
Custer, Darla Custer, Mr .
and Mrs. Keith Searls and
Amy , Mrs . William Harris,
Mrs. Delton Fowler, Craig
and Michelle Brown and
Drenda Cunningham.

DEAR POLLY - I read the
directions given in the
column for making a beer can
hat and a friend saw a beer
can sweater on TV. l would
like the directions for the
sweater, please . Thank you.
- MRS. L.A.
DEAR MRS. L. A. - I learn
something every day. This Is
a new Idea to me but sure ly
some reader has made such a
sweater and, If so. we hope
she will tell us how she did it.
- POLLY .
DEAR
READERS
Bathrooms so often have such
a sterile look and are com·
pletely lacldng Interest and
Individuality. Our decorating
enthusiasm runs out by the
time we get to this often
neglected room and Its looks
fall nat.
Wallpaper can be a big ace
In the hole. Wttb the many
waterproof and easy·lo-apply
patterns there Is little excuse
for dullness. These usually
small rooms have ceilings
that look too high for the size
of the floor area so by all
means paper tbe ceiling, too.
This wlll also prevent the
common problem of too many
broken lines sucb as floor one
color, llle another, walls sttll
another and then perbaps a
Wblte ceiling. Permanent

fixtures and tile often make
paint selections a trial, but
wallpaper can solve that by
combining all the colors.
If such walls are newly
painted, but the effect is
uninspired. find an Important
..·allpaper border l some good
looking ones have paste
already applied and are just
put In water) and put it up at
the ceiling line, along the top
of the tile and up and over
windows and doors, too.
Curtains for th e window
and shower do not have to be
waterproof. Make them of a
pretty prlnted,bric til you
and then
need a patte
hang the show curtain over
your old one and the water
will not come through. A niee
touch is to add a valance from
the ceiling down over the
shower curtain rod. One of
my daughters-in-law had
walls and ceiling In her
bathroom covered with a
striking paisley design but
the smashing paper did not
come over with the desired
Impact since the glass shower
doors were seen from the
bathroom doorway. Quick as
a wink s he applied the
wallpaper to the glass In the
doors so It fit Inside the
aluminum frames and the
effect was a startling lm·
provemenl.
Do not be afraid to hang
pictures on plain walls In the
bathroom and framed posters
often look great. Splurge on a

Mrs . Harvey Van Vranken
entertai ned recentl y at he r
Spring Ave ., Pomeroy home
wi th a shower honoring Miss
Sharon Lovsey, bride-elect of
Mark Werry .
The wedding will be an
event of Sept. 6 at the Richland
Avenue
United
Methodist Ch urch, Athens .
The
gift
tabl e
wa s
decorated
with
white
strea m ers
and
bow s
sus pended
fr om
wh1te
wedding bells . The wedding
bell motif was ca rri ed out in
the
re fr es hm e nt
table
dec orations and featured a
cake decorated in orchid and
white The ca ke was served
by Miss Sandi e Ox ley and the
punch wa s poured by Mrs.
Jeff We rr y.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs . Cha rl es
Werr y, Mrs . John Werry and
Mrs . J eff Werry .
Attending and sendin g gifts
were Mrs. Paul Tay lor , Mrs .
Cha rl es We rry. Mrs . Kenneth
Mrs.
Eleano r
Romin e.
Werry , Mrs . Lucretia Werry.
Mrs . Jeff Werry. Mrs. Tracy
Whaley, Mrs. Marie Custe r .

Mrs . Trel Sc hoenleb, Mrs.
· Gladys Cuckler. Mrs . Walter
Werry, Mrs . Robert Arnold,
Mrs . Roy Smith , Mrs . Leon
McKnight , Mrs . Lillian
Gress , Mrs . Vera Buchanan ,
Mrs . Franklin Hepp, Miss
Myrtis Kay Parker, Mrs.
Dwight Parker, Mrs. Eugene
Clark, Mrs . Dale Smith, Mrs.
v . D . Ed
. war d s. Mrs .
Harrison Lovsey, Mrs. John
Bundy, Mrs. John Werry, Jan
Van vranken and Sandie
Ox ley .

FLOWERS
FQr All Occasions
We Wire Flowers
Everywhere

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs . Mill ar d Van M et er

Ph . 992 -'203 9

Ph . 991 -S78t

SAVE MONEY ON
FUEL THIS WINTER
With AStihl
CHAIN SAW

stylish set of "show" towels

Q. My mother was very Ill
re«ntly, and 1he- doctor had lo
come- to I he- house to treat her.
Will he-r MedicarY pay for hi s

visit, or does It only CO~Ver
to the doctor'
A M ed icare's medical in -

olfi~ ~Visils

suran~.:e h el ps pay fo r covered
ser vices your mother receives

from her docto r no matter
where she rece i ves them - in
her home , in his office . in a
h ospi t &lt;~. l or skilled nursing
facil it y, Or in any ot he r location
in th e U.S. Your Mediw re
Handbook. exp lains what doc·
tors' se rvices are covered, and
how medical insurance helps
puy for them . If your mother
d oes n't have a copy of th e
h andboo k, she c&lt;~n ge t o ne at
any soci&lt;~l set:u rity offit:c .

FIRST CHILD ARRIVES
Mr . and Mrs . Rodne y
Riggs, Pomeroy, announce
the birth of their first child, a
daughter , Courtney Denise.
Born Aug. 19 at the Holzer
Medical Center, the infant
weighted 7 lbs. , 11 oz.
Maternal grandmother is
Mrs. Gloria Malone, Rutland .
Great-grandmother is Mrs.
Bessie Malone, Columbus .
Paternal grandmother is
Mrs . Betty Musser, Rutland ,
and the grandfather is Earl
Riggs, Langsville .

..

Q. l'n just sold my house
and will be mo"ing into an

apartment on lhr first of nut
monlh . S hould I notify sod11 l

securil)' now. or waif until I'm
living at my ne-w address?
t\ _ You should noti ry '&gt;Ocia l
scu m ty now. Prompt notice
h e lp~ as~ urc llclivcry of your
c heck to you r new alldress
With o ut delay or mtcr rupt 1on
You can rcpo n ~· our move o n
the c hang e -of-ad d re o;s rorm
which IS printed 011 th e boK k or
th e enve lo pe you r chN' k is
delivered in . Be sure to gtvc
both you r o ld and new ad drc ss-i ndudlng ZIP (odesand th e social secu rit y claim
numher which a ppea rs on yo ur
soc1a l securi ty check

SON BORN
Mr . and Mrs . William R.
Capehart Jr., Rt. I, Mid·
dleport, announce the birlh of
their first child, a 10 lb., 7 oz.
son named William Russell,
Ill. The infant was born
Tuesday, Aug. 26 at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Jeffers,
Pomeroy, and the paternal
grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs. William Capehart, Sr.,
Rt. I, Middleport . Greatgrandparents are Mr . and
Mrs . Clifford Kauff, Mid·
dleport; Mrs . Eva Kauff,
Rutland;
Mrs.
Opal
Capehart, New Haven, W.
Va .; and Mrs. Lola Jeffers,
Mason , W. Va .

OESTOMEET
Racine O.apter 134, Order
of the Eastern Star, will meet
in regular session Monday at
8 p.m . Those persons planning to go to Grand Chapter
on the bus are asked to come
prepared to pre-&lt;"egister , and
to pay both the bus and dinner
fee at the meeting . Mrs. Cora
Webb has
of the lees.

.

Exciting.

to fit your new scheme a nd
use the "still good" ones for
family use. A washable, cut·
to-fit colorful carpet that
covers the entire floor will be
a great addition to the
bathroom that needs a lift out
of the doldrums. Let your
Imagination run riot and have
your bathroom the talk of the
town. - POLLY.

The lightes t
eas iest ha ndli ng AV -saw in th e wor ld .
For f arm e r s. gardeners a nd do-il -yourselfers . Also
g rea t l or limblng and l or felling smal l tim be r . 2 HP
lO IN ). 9.7 lbs. (4 kgs .) w ith 12" DOO em bar ) and
chain . Bar length!i : 12" and 14" (30 and 35 em) wit h
star no se· 12" and 14" tJOand 35 em )

STIHL
031 AV

~

Nog.me•. Notlmmla

Just Highest

Interest Rates
In The Area

51,4%
ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

... ...\,

~

....... i'j.

"' ' - , . . .

t,; .·-Another li ght and h a ndy chain
\!"

saw tor for estry and farming .
fel li ng a nd cu tting of
fl.,J..,.,_,rtll., :~f~i u m sized tim be r , for
'!:
lhinni ng ~nd lim bi ng . With an
especia ll y la rge muffler f a
mak e thi s saw very q u iet.
The STIHL 03 1 AV ca n be pu rchased wit h t he STIHL
" Quick -Stop " safe ty dev ice if so desired . 3. 2 H P (DIN),
14 .71bs . (6 .7 kg s ) w ith 15" ( 37 em ) bar and cha in . Bar
lengths : 14, 16, 18 and 20" (35. 40, 45 and 50 em ) with
star nose· 13, 15, 16 an d 18" (33, 37, ·Wand 45 cml .

\

STIHL
041 AV

' per cent vear paid en
eeular Paubook Savings.
o Minimum . IIJferest
11rom date of depuitto d•t•
withdrawal.

Interest

mpounded quarterly .

~BRANCH
.4')MC.IGS

The Athen• County
Savings &amp; Loan Co
296 Second 51.
Po meroy, Ohio

A mor e powerful. moderately light we ight chain saw . It
is used as a l im bing , th inning a nd fel l ing saw in small
a nd m edi um sized t i mber . The uni versal saw for
farm er s.

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

lnsurP.d
I C.

1/i:~

wiif

600 E. Main

Ph . 992 -2094

Pomeroy

3 Guys

'.

Exact.

::

·:

and A Gal

·: .

...

·.

.~:

·.

new
high
fashion

~PfllJELLe

ROOF
COAT

ct\T(

~&amp;ULO\Jf1

~ND D~Y

riUTOM~TIC

:·

BAUM'S TRUE
VALUE STORE
Chesler. Oh•o
985 JJOl

Bright wallpaper
perks up bathroom

·.

:::

FIBERED

$2395

.••

I!Y POLLY CR,\MER

::

ALUMINUM

5 GAL CAN

·. .

Polly's Pointers&gt; Miss Lovsey feted

.·

·.

r.,
.J

Put some excitement
on h 1s wri st. Give him
the time . day and ca1e.·:;:
And one of the
hand so mest 17 jewel
automatic's he' s
eve r seen .

The styling is high
fa shion. Colorful.
Imaginative. Wi th jet
black case and strap .

A golden·rimmed
dial, in geometries of
black and gold. Or
royal blue and black.

(1~ ,i

"TEMPERANCE"
FRIDAYand
The Meigs Inn
SATURDAY

PHONE 992-3629

~!I..!~.~ ,'L!::::1:0::00:::T:I::L:2::00::::;:!_ _.....;__

~-~....1

P_u_M_E_R_O_Y_,-0-H-10'

•

�6 - T.h e Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Aug. 29, 1~75
I

Helen Help
Us ... By lidl'n Hottl'l

'Beacon Hill' begins TV climb
BY HEL EN IIOHN JOIWAN
··Ense m ble play ing is very
rare in this country, ~md it's
exeiting ," says Jncqu ie
Habbi n. produce r of " Betieon
Hi ll." CBS's pmed drama
s eries o f t he up co ming

rh e Readers Always Wrile
DEAR HELEN :
I'm shocked at your answer to " Disgusted With Graffiti ."
1 You said, "These days the 'writmg on thr 1 bcaeh bath r oo m J
walls' is sometimes more inte resting than pop psychology
fe l eVISifJIJ SCHSf)fl,
books, and often makes m ore sen:w.")
I think marring beaut iful public buildings, fences , cte . is
In spired
by
mult iple
outrageous. To deface otht• r peupl!' 's properly - l'Ven rocks
a nd subways - is a criminal ;.~ct an d s hould be pun is hed Fmllly - winn inJ.{ " Upstairs.
severely. It's costly. too . and makes our nt 1rs look like slums, P uwn stcurs. ,, " Beacon HilJ "
Besides. the langu age is disgracefully [J b ~&lt;·t• nt•
certain!) no prrmi e red o n the CBS ne twrJrk Mo n dt~y, Aug ust 25,
V1·' or k of art.
\\' llh &lt;-t
speci;:_d two-hou r
I've had a lot of respec t for ~~·u u\'l'r the ~L·n r s. 1··.1t th1 s 1s
too much! Surely you must not r t.'~tlly IJL" Ili' \ 'L' what you say prngr&lt;Jm 1 fJ-Il p.m . ETJ .
about graffit i, and arr sim ply try1n g tu pl~·.: tsl' the ,} ounger Th~ r ee~ ft e r , 11 will dir in the
gene ration by your "ilbe ra l " a tti tud\ ' I t'lld w1t h ;1 quote. "A 10-11 run slot T uesdays,
person 's ambition mus t be n•ry stn ;tll , w !H'Il he t ur she 1 llllL~ t beginning Septe m ber 2.
wr ite on a bathroom wall ."

FIUI ·: l), \

.J ac kie

UEAR FRIEDA :
I'm g lad yo u end ed yuur lettt•r "ith thl' 0"\\L Y kind of wall I
referred to in m y graff iti remarks. Four-lrttt&gt;r " ·orc.ls on
s ubways, rocks, a nd buildings (' hillml', hut I' ve u i'\\U ) ' S lnTn a
"bt•ac h bathroom reader. " L'Vl'll h:.wk in tht· clays "h&lt;•n tiH'
writing was more pungent than pifhy.
As for "tryi ng lu please tht• .~ ouugn gl'nl'ra tion with rnJ'
lilx•ral attitude" - tomt· off il. Frit'lb: I say what I ln• li t• \'l',

that 's all.
l'wo of my fa\•oritc people an· tlu· ('HHpll' vtlw turned tht•ir
ex tra bedroom inlo a "graffiti n• tr l'~tl." Each new guest is
given a heavy felt pen and asked to irt'icrilx· "whatever {'Urne s

to mind, whe rever there's a blauk spac·c•." Since they display
profound remarks frum quite a numbt•r of famous and infamou s persons. they ca n't bring themse lves tn paint, eve n
though the walls are getting prt•tty crowded . And they insist
there will ne\l'er be a divorce here, beca use- "we couldn 't
de ci de who would get cus tody of tho· graffiti r&lt;H&gt;m." -H .
DEAR HCLEN .
What do you thin~ about a nu rse who comes into the
hospital room while th e pa tient is hmong vts itor s of the opposite sex a nd blats out loud a nd clea r , " Mr . Smith, did you
have your bowel movement today '.'"
Shouldn't the nurse wait till after 1·isiting hours'' - W. P .
SHOCKED
DEAR W. :
Hospitals arc lor healing people. P.art of the treatment is to
keep check on physi cal functiort•. Nurses must make their
rounds , whether visitors arc presnt or not . And besides , what 's
so embarrassing about a perfectly normal sickroom question ?
Sorry, I can ' t share your shock. -H.

..

DEAR HELEN:
"Top Heavy" who wa nts a breast reducuon because she
has developed "from a size 32 to a s ize 36 in six mon ths , with no
weight change," might cha nge her mind if she'd sim ply buy a
size 32-DD, rather tha n a size 36. He r rib cage measurements
haven't changed, therefore only the cup size of the bra s hould
be considered. These larger cup-size br as have wider backs
and straps for greater support. They' ll tak e ca re of the pouter
pigeon look as well as possible backaches, poor posture, etc .
including a ching sho ulders.
Although her breasts won ' t flop around, she' ll still have to
get used to their being there, but most teenagers do in time.
When I run in to my large breasts playing golf, I know my
form' s off 1excuse the uninten tional pun J, and I correct for it.
A good lingerie salesperson will fit "Top Heavy" so that she
will accept her fi gure as a blessing in disguise.
COMFORTABLE TOP HEAVY .

•

•
•

Culture
course
offered

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•

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•
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•
I
• •,.

.. ,.-

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..,• ''...
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:
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~
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•,.
••

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... "'•

RIO GRANDE Rio
Grande College · Rio Grande
Community College is offering a four hour co ur se in
Appalachian Culture th is fal l
quarter . The class will meet
each Tuesday and Thur sday
evenin g fr om 6:30 until 8:30
p.m . Assistant professor of
Sociology, Fred Snuffer wh o
has been living , worlting, and
studying in the rural Appalachian area this stun mer,
will teac h the course .
In cl ud e d in the Ap·
palachian Culture Course will
be the soc1al and cultur a l
altitudes of the Appalachian
peop le and folk lo re. Appalac hian arts and crafts will
also be discussed .
Registration
fo r
fa ll
quarter IV'/5 at Kt o Grande
Co llege · Rto Grande Community College is Monday,
Sept. 15. The Appalachian
Culture Course will meet fo r
the first time Tuesda y
evening, Sept. 16 .
For m ore information on
how to register for thi s and
other college courses, contact
the Admissions Office, Rio
Grande College -Rio Grande
Comm un ity College, Rio
Grande,
Ohio,
45674 .
Telephone ( 6141 245-5353.

Ha h b1n

CJdm it s.

though she's not one given tu

fl vcrstatcmcnl and is
('i! Utious

m

u~u~Jlly

assessmg

the

s~·ries

she's bee n working tJn
Jun e uf 1974, at the
behcsl uf Be r yl Verlue.

SHH.:e

' Keryl - the \\()man with
the marvelou s name
"cquired the rights to · Upst airs. DownstC:~ ir s" for the
1 l.ondon-base d ) Ro ber t Stig ·
wo&lt;Jd Organi sation," J&lt;:tckie
exp la in s. "~ h e to o k t he
prope rl y to CBS. which was
interested , a nd then asstgned
wntcr Sidney Ca rroll to do an
Ame ri can ve r s ion . Th en
Hc r yl hi re d me. a nd I hired
everybod y else."

" Eve r y body"
in c lud es
Tony /\ward winner Tom H.
.John I "The Wiz" 1 as Art
Director, Academy Award
win ne r Marvin Hamliscfl
r··The Sting") for m us1c ,
J ose ph Aulis i fo r cos tume
desig n. an d an unus uall y
large ensem ble of acto rs, a ll

from lhe New York theater
and other American reper
tor y compa nies,
4

" When I say . 'Ante rican
ve r s ton
of
"U psta ir s,
Downstairs.·" I m ean it's
JUS t th e concept thai we're
burrO\I,' ing
fo r
'Beacon
Hill ,' .. produ cer Babbin
em ph asizes. " It's just th e
germ o f the idea t hat 's
similar : the peop le up s tairs
em pl oy the people downstairs . Rut tha t's where th e
sinu larily ends.
" We 'r e in Boston in the
ea rly 1920s - that's preFlapper, pre-roar in g
rea lly a tr ansition per iod be·

Cookery winners named
COLUMBUS - Beef d ishes
w ith names like "Scrwnp luous Beef," " Special Bee f
Stew," and "Braised Short
Ribs" were winners at the
1975 Budge t Beef Recipe
Con tes t al. the Ohi o State
Fair.
Mr s. Rose Bla ckburn,
Colwnb us, was the fir st place
wi nner with her dish of
"Scrump luous Beef" at $.55-

Long Bottom
News Notes
Thursd ay dinner g uests of

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkin
were Mr. and Mrs . Lorne
llalph of Nelsonvi lle. Ohio.
P.mmctt Stelltem was ta ken
to Sl .l nsc pll Hosp1tal a fe'l-\'
da ys ago , He is improv ing
slowly
Doug las Haube r came
home
fr om
Ch ild r en 's
Hosptlal a few days ago . He
h&lt;Jd s urgery a nd is much
bettt•r _
Denver C11r tis 1s v isit in g hi s
mother, Mary Pierce, who

lives at Long Bottom .
Sharon Fitchpatrick and
niece, Kathryn Fitchpatrick,
were weekend visitor s of
Ea rn estin e Ha y ma n an d
Keith Ridenour.
Elzi e and Sadie Larkins
were Sunday su pper g uests of
Mr . and Mrs. Virgil Boggard .

HUNNING THE I.A SS ITERS on " Beacon Hill " is the domestic staff of I from left),
Bea trice Stl'aight, 1\tchard Wa l'd , David Ro unds, Ba rry Snider and George Rose. Ne w CBSTV series features the upstair s-d ownstairs a ntics of a wealthy Boston Irish-American
family tn 1920.

, It 's a spPCii.lcU1&lt;Jr s hrJ\v ."

se rvin g. She wi ll be awarded
a prize of five lbs. of Por ter
House Steaks.
Mr s. D . M. Campbell,
Bexley, was the second place
winne r with her dish of
" Special Beef Stew" at $.58se rving. She will be awarded
a prize of five lbs. of T-bone
steaks.
Mr s.
Carol
Wag ner ,
Gahanna, was the third place
winner with her dish or
"Braised Short Ribs" at $.58se rving. He r prize will be five
lbs. of rib steaks.
Fiftee n
entries
were
submit ted for judging. Mrs.
Ruth A. Harvey, a hurne
economist of Delaware was
the official judge of the
conte st.
All prizes were a warded by
the Ohio Beef Marketing
ProgrmlL The three winners
were able to select their
prizes from their favorite
mea l markets.

BRITISH WOULD say it 's the "colonials' turn " as
CBS-TV kicks off the fall season with a new dra matic
series, "Beacon Hill." Nancy Marchand and Stephen
E lliott are th e Lassiters, heading an influential Boston
Irish-America n family and its staff circa 1920 .

Wolfpen
News Notes

twf'en the F:dw&lt;-~ r dlan era and day , Co nsequentl y, his neighour own time , Th e Lassitt'r burs virtually igno re h1m and
fam ily of ·Reacon Htll' IS Ius la rge famil y : wife Mary :
·rough and ready' - 1ery daugh ter s. Maude. Em ily ,
typ ical uf tb e Irish Cattlo hcs Fawn and Rosamond (th ree
who were on th e m ove in bea ut ies and a plain one I; son
Boston polilics during that Robert 1home fl'om World
period,"
War I m iss ing an arm).
Wr iter Sidney Ca!'l'oll chose
The fa ct tha t the l.assiters
Boston as th e sett ing for an a re not l'Ompletely accepted
American se ries deali ng with socially pr ovides better g rist
social s trata beca use ther e for the s tory tell er 's m ill than
were more clasx disti nctions a
typ ically
"p roper
the l'e tha n in othe r parts of Boston ian " fami ly " who had
the counlry in the 1920s. made it all the way," as
Though if the series were J ackie Babbin puts it .
takin g place ea l'liel' in the
The his toric facts of class
cent ury , pr odu cer· Babbin dis tin c ti on are dealt with
indi ca tes, the se tting nught adro itly and with hwnor on
have been San Francisco . '· " Beacon Hill ." What might
"New York , th e gce at be thought of as a touchy
melting put. had some class subjec t for te levision hasn't
dis tin cti on, " she points ou t, been a problem to handle,
"but not in the Boston se nse. however , beca use "this 1s an
with its Old Gua rd. Brahm ins American s how, and o ur
and Mayflower fainilies ."
class differe nces are not as
Be njarm n Lassiter, a se lf· distinct as t hose of the
made lawyer deeply mvolved British, "
according
to
in Boston politics. a Roman Jacqueli ne Babbin.
Catho li c a nd seco nd
Upward social mobi lity for
gene ra ti on Irishman. to boo t, the La ssiters cons ists, in
prese nts none of the "p rop er" part , of an impeccably run
reqtti sites for ow nership of a h ouseh old . F or this they
house on Beacon Hill 's Lou1 s- de pend on Hacker, an
berg Square . Boston's most Enghsh butler, and his wife ,
fa shiona ble address to thi s Mr s. Hack er, once "a

cake

•
Home of

was

Scenes of Modern
Woodmen's picnic

WOCJ/[l_ r.Lire
, ~'Nu('liC

heritage .house
Middleport, Ohio

GIVE HIM THE
COMFORT AND
CONVENIENCE OF
HIS OWN FEEDER.

ALWAYS READY!

-

,

L-R, RUSSELL GRIFFIS, GUYSVO..LE , is pleased
with Transistor Radio presented by Modern Woodmen ol
America Camp secretary, Ralph C. Henderson.

DOG

f

FEEDERS

By CLAY F. RICHARDS
WASHINGTON (UPl) President Ford and several of
his potential Democratic contenders got some bad news
from the Federal Election
Commission.
But
for
Alabama
Gov .
George
Wallace, the news was good .
The FEC took a series of
actions at its weekly meeting
Thursday that have a major
impact . on
the
1976
presidential election. It:
- Agreed when Ford campaigns aroWld the country for
local Republicans, 'the cost of
his travel and living will
count against either the
campaign spending limits of
the Presidenr or of the local
candidate.
Passed a guide.Iine
making it difficult for a
number of Democrats to
qualify for federal campaign
funds.
- Said there is nothing in
the law to prevent Wallace
from getting up to $150,000 in
royalities from permitting his

. •...
dogs is ava ilable as an indoor feeder (No, 072) and an
outdoo r fe-e-der ( No. 0726) , The outdoor m ode l ha s a
sw mg in g door w ith a hinge a t the top whic h the dog
sw ings i nw ard to ea L Food is prote cted against bird s,
weather and fltes . Feeders hold 40 to 50 lbs , of dry dog
food Convenient for pet owners , kennel operators and
breeders , Heavy galvanized stee l. both feeders are 32"
high, 12" wi de, 13" d eep.

P.S. DON'T fORGET
KITTY: He needs a
self-feeder, too.

Middleport

399 WEST MAIN STREET 992 - 216~ POMEROY, OHIO
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS
STABLES LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS
LAWNS- GAi{DENS

SAVE
BIG

LARRY'S

_. =""--Dot

r.oa~
F
....

Available In Bags &amp; Nuggets
25. &amp; 50 Lb~ Size~

Sugar Run Mills
. 992-2115

NOW

14x70 Kirkwood

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ruling, however, Ford 's campaign would have to pay only
first class airfare for himself ,
plus his personal living expenses .
The commission also said
that before a candidate can
qualify for federal campaign
funds, he must deduct the

Water detective
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picture to be used on T -£hirts,
watches and other campaign
souvenirs. But commission
members said they thought
this would violate the spirit of
election reform .
No formal ruling was made
on presidential travel expenses . But commission
counsel John Murphy said the
law clearly requires the
expenses be charged to Ford
or to the local candidate,
depending on which benefits
from the presidential appearance .
A formal ruling was
·delayed to determine if costs
could be divided between the
president and the lo ca l
candidate.
The FEC said in a draft

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CINCINNATTI - The Ohio
River
Valley
Wa ter
Sanitation Commission
(ORSANCO) is intensifying
its water pollution surveillance activities.
According to an announcement by Leo Weaver,
Executive Director of the
Commission, James Taft, a
biologist with graduate
credentials
in
Water
Pollution Control from the
University of Cincinnati, has
been employed as one of
ORSANCO's
first . surveillance specialists.
Taft will be responsible for
conducting field operations in
the middle reaches of the
river . His duties will involve
the collection of water
samples for physical and
chemical analysis, the
calibration of ORSANCO's
electronic monitors, and the
performance of specialized
biological observations.
· 'The surveillance program
is a recent amplification of
the overall water quality
monitoring strategy adopted
by niinois , Indiana, Kentucky , New York, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, West·Virginia,
and Virginia - the eight
states signatory to the
Commission
Compact.
Through the Commission 's
cooperative arrangement
with the U. S. Geological
Survey, most of the water
samples will be shipped to
their regional laboratories

(:. .""•

.,_..,.,'

L-R , RALPH HENDERSON, SECRETARY, M&lt;&gt;:lern
Woodmen of America, Camp 10900, Alfred, presents 50
year membership a nd service a wa rds lo Garner Griffin .
former secretary of camp .

The 73rd anniversary of
Modern
Woodmen
of
America , Camp 10900, was
celebrated at a picnic held at
Forked Run State Park
recently . The event coincided
with the fraternal insuranc-e
societies community service
recognition month .
Receiving recognition for
conscientious and dedicated
community service were the
William D. Welch family,
Coolville, and the Gerald D.
Meek family, Hockingport.
" Half-Century Oub" pins
and membership certificates

were received by Garner
Griffin, Alfred : Harold
Boggess, Warwi ck , R. !. , and
Arvel V. Swartz, Alfred.
Forty of the 215 current
members receive?. pins for 25
years membership, and 15
families received 100 percent
membership awards.
The pledge service was led
by C. Lee Henderson, Athens,
and the camp history was
read by Mrs. Harry Gutherie,
Alfred . Mrs. Edgar Pullins,
Reedsville , presented a
fe stive cake decorated with
Modern
Woodme n
of

Bad news to Ford, good to Wallace

...

1

MRS .
~: DGAR
PULLINS,
Re ed s ville,
presents Anniversary Cake
to Modern Woodmen of
' ' .. . ira , Camp I0900 ,
1'nred.

73rd anniversary
of lodge noted

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CLEVELA ND !UP!) - A could see U1is rush up the hill
member of the jury that at the Gua rd ," William s
decided for the defense in the added . He said the film
Ken t stale civil suit trial sa id convinced him.
Thur sday the jury never
" I figured the G uard
considered Ohio Gov. James panicked," he said, "wh ich ,
A. Rhodes lia ble for what according to the law, if they
happened on May 4, 1970 are in fea r of their li ves. they
when four Kent Students tan fire:·
were killed and nine were
The jury of six men and six
wounded in a hail of Ohio women voted 9-3to exonerate
National Guard gunfire.
Rhodes, former Kent State
Richard Williams of Cleve- University President Robert
land , a mechanic , also sa id a I. White and 27 current and
film of th e shootings fi gured former membe r s of the
importantly in the jury's Guard.
verdict.
The seenu n gly endless
Asked in an interview ( with Kent shoot ings litigation is
NBC News-Cleve land ) if now mov ing toward a n ap
Rhodes did what the law peal for a new trial of $46
required him to do, Williams million in c iv i l suits on ·
answered :
grounds U.S . Dtstrict Court
" Yes.
( Kent 1 Mayor Judge Don J . Young made
I LeRoy) Sa !rom asked them errors during the 14-week
I the Guard) to come in, the
trial.
prosecutor asked them to
" We are studying the legal
come in and the chief of aspects now and will have l&lt;l
police asked them to come make a motion within 10 days
in."
of the verdict," sa id Dav id
According to Willi ams, E ngdahl, attorney for one of
emotions were so ragged in the plaintiffs.
the jury room during the
l':ngdahl said Young erred
deliberations that every juror in disa llowing some evidence
cried at least once because of and not allowing the plaintiffs
the 1-nowledge that a decision to drop state claims of assault
either way would have a and battery , misconduct and
significant effect on the lives neg li gence against the
of many persons.
defendants.
He said film of the
He sa id th e claims had been
shootings convinced him that filed in case the judge threw
th e
defendants
were out th e main charge of denial
blameless.
of civil rights of the students
" We had a short film and killed and wounded when
two tsoundi tapes," he said . guardsmen unleased a 1:&gt;" In the tapes a few seconds second barrage of gunfire on
before the shooting you could demonstral&lt;Jrs protesting the
hear 'charge '' and several U.S. invasion of Cambodia .
times 'Lay down your guns . Young a llowed t he main
Yo u 're s urrounded , Go charge to stand .
home~ '
" By not allowing us to
"On this one film, it was simplify our case, the judge
very hard to see, but you created confusion, which only
worked for the defense,"
Engdahl said .

I

. MR. AND MRS .. DELBERT MORRIS, Athens, display
Picruc Carner rece1ved at Modern Woodmen of America
Recognition Picnic.

se rved with punch whi ch had
a floa ting lime green rose and
ribbon san dwic hes of pink .

14x64 Cameron

£ROW'S

SANDWICH

Cumi ngs.

Jury never figured Rhodes
liable for Kent ki11ings

Ben Neutzlng serve d th e
cake.
Guests were Mrs. William
Kin g, Kathy and Sherry , Mrs .
De nnis Hackett, Mrs. Henry
Wells, Mrs . Rex Cwnings ,
daughter, Amber , Mrs .
Durward Cwnings, Mrs. Mae
Cwnings, Carmel Murphy ,
Melanie Burl, Mrs. Paul
Hapto ns tall , Mrs . Edie
Zirkle, Pamela and Michelle
Mrs. David Cwnings, Mrs:
Riggs, Mrs. Neutzling and the
hostesses .

Mtss Janell e Cumings,
bride-e lect of Bill Hap to ns ta ll ,
was
honored
rece ntl y with a bridal shower
at the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Ray Riggs, Chester Road,
Pomeroy . Hostesses were
Mrs. Riggs' twin daughters,
Maralynn and Caraly nn
Tracy .
Games were played with
prizes won by Mrs. ·Dennis
Hackett, and Mrs. William
Km g. The refreshment table
wa s covered w1th a pink s C;~tin
floo r leng th clot h an d
feat ur e d a crysta l candelabra wtt h while tapers. a c ake ice d in
ptnk wit h while wed·
ding
bell
accen ts
made
b\
the
brid e Plect's m~ther, Mrs David

14x70 Kirkwood
YOUI OOG . DESaV!S
A SQUARE MEAL

TomBoy

shanty-Irish _ las!'~. '·
" Th e large pool of really
fine actor s in New York. ,,
s~tys Babbin , wa s a determimng ele m ent in the
decis ion to produce '' Beacon
Hill" in New York . This. in
turn. mfluence d the way the
seri es is hand led tech nically .
It is be ing vi deota ped , a
tech nique that "all ows you to
play right through a sce ne ,"
as
Reatrice
St r afg ht
descr ibes it. "You don' t have
to keep stopping, as in a fil m ,
And this gives th e scene
reality : i t produce s an
e moltonal build ."
Is "Beacon Hill " a bellwether or t he r etu rn or
telev ision dr ama production
to New York, as has been
speculated ?
Jacque lin e Babbin is un ·
derstandably cauti ous in her
answer . She hopes so. And
then . ·'This prod uction is
sim il ar to the way televis ion
sta rted out - in the good old ,
'gold en d ays,· when we did
plays written fo r televisi on,
rat her than c hopped up fiin1
scripts .
"But it 's a special kind of
show that won't appea l to
eve r ybody.
It 's
fair ly
sophist icated in it s hum or. I
think il 's going to be a slow
bui ld ."

Bride-elect honored

· AUTOM ATIC DOG F E EDER for lhe largest spec ies of

the Fabulous

of relatives in Akron.
Mr . and Mrs. Gene Slack
md family of Syracuse were
Sunday visitors of Mr . an d
Mrs. Harley Johnson.
Mr . a nd Mr s. Charley
Smith visited with Mr. and
Mrs . Harley Johnson Sunday
?vening .
Mr . and Mrs . Doyle Knaoo,
Kai l, Kevin and Charle s
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elam visited Sunday evening with
and family were Saturday Shirley Baity, Julie and Jill of
and Sunday visitors of his Lincoln Heights.
brothe~ Mr. and Mrs. Bill . J . R. Murphy and grandFouch and family of Hun- daughter Debbie Murph y
tington.
•
spent a week vacat ion with
Mr . and Mrs . Don~ld Mr. and M'r s. Robert Murphy
Russell were Sunday visitors of Davenport, Iowa.

7- Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Friday, Aug . 29, 1975

'

.

'

for analysis. In examing
time-sensitive samples,
ORSANCO surveillance staff
will be working closely with
state and local laboratory
specialists in the ORSANCO
Compact district.
Taft is based at a district
office of the Kentucky
Department of Natural
Resources
and
Environmental Protection at
2514 Dixie Highway, Ft .
Mitchell, Kentucky.

r

. .

'

'"

amount he spent on events
such as cocktail parties ,
chicken dinners and rock
concerts to raise his money .
Former Georgia Gov.
Jimmy Carter and Rep .
Morris Udall said they have
raised the $5,000 in each of 20
states in contributions of $250
or under needed to qualify for
federal funds. But both have
used cocktail parties to raise
the money and could fall

below the threshold when
those costs are deducted .
The ruling also may affect
ca ndidates who have said
th ey qualify: Ford , Wallace,
Se n Lloyd Bentsen, D-Tex .,
and Sen. Henry Jackson, DWash .
Wallace , who has spent $3
million on direct mail fund
raising which has brought in
about $4 million , would not be
affected.

Otristmas stamp
due for 3c hike
By ED ROGERS
WASHINGTON (UP!)
When the government puts a
price tag on its new Christmas stamps it likely will be
three cents more than last
year as a result of the latest
Postal Rate Commission
action .
The commission Thuusday
dismissed a complaint that
first class mail was subsidizing other mail as it fixed
a higher rate after two years
of deliberation.
The Postal Rate Commission, in a 4-1 vote, made
permanent the " temporary"
rates in effect since March,
1974. Under the law the Postal

Service can impose a new
temporary rate 30 per cent
higher than the permanent
base , after a three-month
waiting period.
Postmaster General
Benjamin Bailar said " the
Postal Service cannot continue to operate if necessary
rate adjustments cannot be

made until long after they are
needed . In an inflatiouary
period, more responsive ratemaking is imperative ."
Because of the uncertainty
about when a nd how the
commission would decide,
the Postal Service had begun
printing
two
special
Olristmas stamps without
price designations on them.
Technically, the commission ruling is advisory
and the Postal Service board
of governo rs could reject it by
a unanimous vote . This is
considered unlikely because
it would delay any increase
for a full new round of
hearings.
Commission
member
Frank Saponaro filed a
dissent. He favored 9 cents
instead of 10 cents for the first
ounce , limitipg the temporary rate to 12 cents.

The commission action
covered 39 rate categories,
including a reduction from 8
cents to 7 cents for postcards.

STEAMBOAT INN
· MEAT - Turkey &amp; Dressing, Roast Beef.
Flounder Fish, Hamburg er Steak , Ham.
VEGETABLES Lima Beans, Brussell
Sprouts, Noodles , Potatoes (backed ,
home fries, mashed)
SALAD Cottage Cheese. Slaw, Tossed
Peaches and Applesauce.
PIE -

Coconut Cream . Apple .
CLOSED LABOR DAY

Sunday, Aug. 31, Hrs. 8:00-2: 00
Weekdays 6: 00-8:30
3rd St.
Ph. 949-3551 Racine, Ohio

4

America E mblems. Contest
prizes were won by Mr , and
Mrs. Delbert Morris, Athens,
Russell Griffis, Guysville,
Mrs. Lee Henderson , Athens ,
William Lightfrit z, New
Marshfield, and Robert
Windl and, Plain City .
Youngest members prese nt
were Bradley Bentz, so n of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles M.
Bentz, Jr ., Coolville, and
Amy O'Neil. daughter of
Mr. a nd Mrs. James O'Neil,
Little
Hockin g.
Ca mp
secretary is Ralph C. Hen de rson, Coo lvi lle.
Receiving 25 year me mbership pins were Conrad
Bentz, Esmond Brandeberry,
Garrett Ch ri sty, Charles
Car r, Earl Dean , Arden
Depoy, Carl Findling , Ca rl
Findling, Jr ., Mar gare t Foilrod , J uhn Hayes, Clar ence
He nderson, Th e lma He nderson, Linda Sue William s,
Ralph C. Williams, Frances
Williams, Ambrose Howard,
Freida G. Morris, Freda M.
Ju st ice, Marjorie Ma lon e
Coa kl ey, Wilma O'Brien,
Margaret Parker, Donald H.
Robinson, Glenn Robinson,
Leah Snodgrass, Walt er
Snodgrass, Dorothy Sto ut,
Gerald Swartz, William
Hobart Swartz, Edward
White, Donald E. Windland,
C. L. Henderson, Osie Henderson , Grace Swartz, Robert
Windland , Charles Woode ,
Clair Woode, Delbert Yost,
Bill Carr and Iris Carr.
Meigs area families who
rece ived 100 percent certificates were William Carr,
Arvel Swartz, Alan Sparks,
Ca lvin Hawk, Delbert Yost,
Michael Burke, Clarence W.
He nd er so n, Dona ld VanMeter , Conrad Bentz, Car l
Findling, Garner C. Griffin,
C. Lee Hender s on , Myrl
Coa kley and Ralph He nderson.

WESTPORT, Conn. (UPli
- The verdict banning
damages in the Kent Slate
civil trial is an " incredible
miscarriage of justice ,'' a
member of the President's
Com mission on Campus
Unrest which investigated
the shootings, said Thursday.
"If this were a car accident, there isn 't a jury in
the world that wouldn't have
awardell ' damages, " James
F . Ahern. director of the
In suran ce Crime Prevention
Insilule, and former New
Haven police chief, said .
Four persons were killed,
nine wounded , including one
who will ne ver walk , when
Ohio National guardsmen
opened fi re on s tudent
demonstrators a t KSU May 4,
1970.

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The attorney said an appeal
will be made to the U.S. Sixth
Circuit Court of appeals in
Cincinnati should Young deny
his mot ion for a new trial.
The case would come up in
about six months .
" We think we can get an
appeal on reversa l, but we
are not optimistic about it at
the trial court level,"
Eng dahl said.

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�6 - T.h e Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Aug. 29, 1~75
I

Helen Help
Us ... By lidl'n Hottl'l

'Beacon Hill' begins TV climb
BY HEL EN IIOHN JOIWAN
··Ense m ble play ing is very
rare in this country, ~md it's
exeiting ," says Jncqu ie
Habbi n. produce r of " Betieon
Hi ll." CBS's pmed drama
s eries o f t he up co ming

rh e Readers Always Wrile
DEAR HELEN :
I'm shocked at your answer to " Disgusted With Graffiti ."
1 You said, "These days the 'writmg on thr 1 bcaeh bath r oo m J
walls' is sometimes more inte resting than pop psychology
fe l eVISifJIJ SCHSf)fl,
books, and often makes m ore sen:w.")
I think marring beaut iful public buildings, fences , cte . is
In spired
by
mult iple
outrageous. To deface otht• r peupl!' 's properly - l'Ven rocks
a nd subways - is a criminal ;.~ct an d s hould be pun is hed Fmllly - winn inJ.{ " Upstairs.
severely. It's costly. too . and makes our nt 1rs look like slums, P uwn stcurs. ,, " Beacon HilJ "
Besides. the langu age is disgracefully [J b ~&lt;·t• nt•
certain!) no prrmi e red o n the CBS ne twrJrk Mo n dt~y, Aug ust 25,
V1·' or k of art.
\\' llh &lt;-t
speci;:_d two-hou r
I've had a lot of respec t for ~~·u u\'l'r the ~L·n r s. 1··.1t th1 s 1s
too much! Surely you must not r t.'~tlly IJL" Ili' \ 'L' what you say prngr&lt;Jm 1 fJ-Il p.m . ETJ .
about graffit i, and arr sim ply try1n g tu pl~·.: tsl' the ,} ounger Th~ r ee~ ft e r , 11 will dir in the
gene ration by your "ilbe ra l " a tti tud\ ' I t'lld w1t h ;1 quote. "A 10-11 run slot T uesdays,
person 's ambition mus t be n•ry stn ;tll , w !H'Il he t ur she 1 llllL~ t beginning Septe m ber 2.
wr ite on a bathroom wall ."

FIUI ·: l), \

.J ac kie

UEAR FRIEDA :
I'm g lad yo u end ed yuur lettt•r "ith thl' 0"\\L Y kind of wall I
referred to in m y graff iti remarks. Four-lrttt&gt;r " ·orc.ls on
s ubways, rocks, a nd buildings (' hillml', hut I' ve u i'\\U ) ' S lnTn a
"bt•ac h bathroom reader. " L'Vl'll h:.wk in tht· clays "h&lt;•n tiH'
writing was more pungent than pifhy.
As for "tryi ng lu please tht• .~ ouugn gl'nl'ra tion with rnJ'
lilx•ral attitude" - tomt· off il. Frit'lb: I say what I ln• li t• \'l',

that 's all.
l'wo of my fa\•oritc people an· tlu· ('HHpll' vtlw turned tht•ir
ex tra bedroom inlo a "graffiti n• tr l'~tl." Each new guest is
given a heavy felt pen and asked to irt'icrilx· "whatever {'Urne s

to mind, whe rever there's a blauk spac·c•." Since they display
profound remarks frum quite a numbt•r of famous and infamou s persons. they ca n't bring themse lves tn paint, eve n
though the walls are getting prt•tty crowded . And they insist
there will ne\l'er be a divorce here, beca use- "we couldn 't
de ci de who would get cus tody of tho· graffiti r&lt;H&gt;m." -H .
DEAR HCLEN .
What do you thin~ about a nu rse who comes into the
hospital room while th e pa tient is hmong vts itor s of the opposite sex a nd blats out loud a nd clea r , " Mr . Smith, did you
have your bowel movement today '.'"
Shouldn't the nurse wait till after 1·isiting hours'' - W. P .
SHOCKED
DEAR W. :
Hospitals arc lor healing people. P.art of the treatment is to
keep check on physi cal functiort•. Nurses must make their
rounds , whether visitors arc presnt or not . And besides , what 's
so embarrassing about a perfectly normal sickroom question ?
Sorry, I can ' t share your shock. -H.

..

DEAR HELEN:
"Top Heavy" who wa nts a breast reducuon because she
has developed "from a size 32 to a s ize 36 in six mon ths , with no
weight change," might cha nge her mind if she'd sim ply buy a
size 32-DD, rather tha n a size 36. He r rib cage measurements
haven't changed, therefore only the cup size of the bra s hould
be considered. These larger cup-size br as have wider backs
and straps for greater support. They' ll tak e ca re of the pouter
pigeon look as well as possible backaches, poor posture, etc .
including a ching sho ulders.
Although her breasts won ' t flop around, she' ll still have to
get used to their being there, but most teenagers do in time.
When I run in to my large breasts playing golf, I know my
form' s off 1excuse the uninten tional pun J, and I correct for it.
A good lingerie salesperson will fit "Top Heavy" so that she
will accept her fi gure as a blessing in disguise.
COMFORTABLE TOP HEAVY .

•

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offered

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RIO GRANDE Rio
Grande College · Rio Grande
Community College is offering a four hour co ur se in
Appalachian Culture th is fal l
quarter . The class will meet
each Tuesday and Thur sday
evenin g fr om 6:30 until 8:30
p.m . Assistant professor of
Sociology, Fred Snuffer wh o
has been living , worlting, and
studying in the rural Appalachian area this stun mer,
will teac h the course .
In cl ud e d in the Ap·
palachian Culture Course will
be the soc1al and cultur a l
altitudes of the Appalachian
peop le and folk lo re. Appalac hian arts and crafts will
also be discussed .
Registration
fo r
fa ll
quarter IV'/5 at Kt o Grande
Co llege · Rto Grande Community College is Monday,
Sept. 15. The Appalachian
Culture Course will meet fo r
the first time Tuesda y
evening, Sept. 16 .
For m ore information on
how to register for thi s and
other college courses, contact
the Admissions Office, Rio
Grande College -Rio Grande
Comm un ity College, Rio
Grande,
Ohio,
45674 .
Telephone ( 6141 245-5353.

Ha h b1n

CJdm it s.

though she's not one given tu

fl vcrstatcmcnl and is
('i! Utious

m

u~u~Jlly

assessmg

the

s~·ries

she's bee n working tJn
Jun e uf 1974, at the
behcsl uf Be r yl Verlue.

SHH.:e

' Keryl - the \\()man with
the marvelou s name
"cquired the rights to · Upst airs. DownstC:~ ir s" for the
1 l.ondon-base d ) Ro ber t Stig ·
wo&lt;Jd Organi sation," J&lt;:tckie
exp la in s. "~ h e to o k t he
prope rl y to CBS. which was
interested , a nd then asstgned
wntcr Sidney Ca rroll to do an
Ame ri can ve r s ion . Th en
Hc r yl hi re d me. a nd I hired
everybod y else."

" Eve r y body"
in c lud es
Tony /\ward winner Tom H.
.John I "The Wiz" 1 as Art
Director, Academy Award
win ne r Marvin Hamliscfl
r··The Sting") for m us1c ,
J ose ph Aulis i fo r cos tume
desig n. an d an unus uall y
large ensem ble of acto rs, a ll

from lhe New York theater
and other American reper
tor y compa nies,
4

" When I say . 'Ante rican
ve r s ton
of
"U psta ir s,
Downstairs.·" I m ean it's
JUS t th e concept thai we're
burrO\I,' ing
fo r
'Beacon
Hill ,' .. produ cer Babbin
em ph asizes. " It's just th e
germ o f the idea t hat 's
similar : the peop le up s tairs
em pl oy the people downstairs . Rut tha t's where th e
sinu larily ends.
" We 'r e in Boston in the
ea rly 1920s - that's preFlapper, pre-roar in g
rea lly a tr ansition per iod be·

Cookery winners named
COLUMBUS - Beef d ishes
w ith names like "Scrwnp luous Beef," " Special Bee f
Stew," and "Braised Short
Ribs" were winners at the
1975 Budge t Beef Recipe
Con tes t al. the Ohi o State
Fair.
Mr s. Rose Bla ckburn,
Colwnb us, was the fir st place
wi nner with her dish of
"Scrump luous Beef" at $.55-

Long Bottom
News Notes
Thursd ay dinner g uests of

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkin
were Mr. and Mrs . Lorne
llalph of Nelsonvi lle. Ohio.
P.mmctt Stelltem was ta ken
to Sl .l nsc pll Hosp1tal a fe'l-\'
da ys ago , He is improv ing
slowly
Doug las Haube r came
home
fr om
Ch ild r en 's
Hosptlal a few days ago . He
h&lt;Jd s urgery a nd is much
bettt•r _
Denver C11r tis 1s v isit in g hi s
mother, Mary Pierce, who

lives at Long Bottom .
Sharon Fitchpatrick and
niece, Kathryn Fitchpatrick,
were weekend visitor s of
Ea rn estin e Ha y ma n an d
Keith Ridenour.
Elzi e and Sadie Larkins
were Sunday su pper g uests of
Mr . and Mrs. Virgil Boggard .

HUNNING THE I.A SS ITERS on " Beacon Hill " is the domestic staff of I from left),
Bea trice Stl'aight, 1\tchard Wa l'd , David Ro unds, Ba rry Snider and George Rose. Ne w CBSTV series features the upstair s-d ownstairs a ntics of a wealthy Boston Irish-American
family tn 1920.

, It 's a spPCii.lcU1&lt;Jr s hrJ\v ."

se rvin g. She wi ll be awarded
a prize of five lbs. of Por ter
House Steaks.
Mr s. D . M. Campbell,
Bexley, was the second place
winne r with her dish of
" Special Beef Stew" at $.58se rving. She will be awarded
a prize of five lbs. of T-bone
steaks.
Mr s.
Carol
Wag ner ,
Gahanna, was the third place
winner with her dish or
"Braised Short Ribs" at $.58se rving. He r prize will be five
lbs. of rib steaks.
Fiftee n
entries
were
submit ted for judging. Mrs.
Ruth A. Harvey, a hurne
economist of Delaware was
the official judge of the
conte st.
All prizes were a warded by
the Ohio Beef Marketing
ProgrmlL The three winners
were able to select their
prizes from their favorite
mea l markets.

BRITISH WOULD say it 's the "colonials' turn " as
CBS-TV kicks off the fall season with a new dra matic
series, "Beacon Hill." Nancy Marchand and Stephen
E lliott are th e Lassiters, heading an influential Boston
Irish-America n family and its staff circa 1920 .

Wolfpen
News Notes

twf'en the F:dw&lt;-~ r dlan era and day , Co nsequentl y, his neighour own time , Th e Lassitt'r burs virtually igno re h1m and
fam ily of ·Reacon Htll' IS Ius la rge famil y : wife Mary :
·rough and ready' - 1ery daugh ter s. Maude. Em ily ,
typ ical uf tb e Irish Cattlo hcs Fawn and Rosamond (th ree
who were on th e m ove in bea ut ies and a plain one I; son
Boston polilics during that Robert 1home fl'om World
period,"
War I m iss ing an arm).
Wr iter Sidney Ca!'l'oll chose
The fa ct tha t the l.assiters
Boston as th e sett ing for an a re not l'Ompletely accepted
American se ries deali ng with socially pr ovides better g rist
social s trata beca use ther e for the s tory tell er 's m ill than
were more clasx disti nctions a
typ ically
"p roper
the l'e tha n in othe r parts of Boston ian " fami ly " who had
the counlry in the 1920s. made it all the way," as
Though if the series were J ackie Babbin puts it .
takin g place ea l'liel' in the
The his toric facts of class
cent ury , pr odu cer· Babbin dis tin c ti on are dealt with
indi ca tes, the se tting nught adro itly and with hwnor on
have been San Francisco . '· " Beacon Hill ." What might
"New York , th e gce at be thought of as a touchy
melting put. had some class subjec t for te levision hasn't
dis tin cti on, " she points ou t, been a problem to handle,
"but not in the Boston se nse. however , beca use "this 1s an
with its Old Gua rd. Brahm ins American s how, and o ur
and Mayflower fainilies ."
class differe nces are not as
Be njarm n Lassiter, a se lf· distinct as t hose of the
made lawyer deeply mvolved British, "
according
to
in Boston politics. a Roman Jacqueli ne Babbin.
Catho li c a nd seco nd
Upward social mobi lity for
gene ra ti on Irishman. to boo t, the La ssiters cons ists, in
prese nts none of the "p rop er" part , of an impeccably run
reqtti sites for ow nership of a h ouseh old . F or this they
house on Beacon Hill 's Lou1 s- de pend on Hacker, an
berg Square . Boston's most Enghsh butler, and his wife ,
fa shiona ble address to thi s Mr s. Hack er, once "a

cake

•
Home of

was

Scenes of Modern
Woodmen's picnic

WOCJ/[l_ r.Lire
, ~'Nu('liC

heritage .house
Middleport, Ohio

GIVE HIM THE
COMFORT AND
CONVENIENCE OF
HIS OWN FEEDER.

ALWAYS READY!

-

,

L-R, RUSSELL GRIFFIS, GUYSVO..LE , is pleased
with Transistor Radio presented by Modern Woodmen ol
America Camp secretary, Ralph C. Henderson.

DOG

f

FEEDERS

By CLAY F. RICHARDS
WASHINGTON (UPl) President Ford and several of
his potential Democratic contenders got some bad news
from the Federal Election
Commission.
But
for
Alabama
Gov .
George
Wallace, the news was good .
The FEC took a series of
actions at its weekly meeting
Thursday that have a major
impact . on
the
1976
presidential election. It:
- Agreed when Ford campaigns aroWld the country for
local Republicans, 'the cost of
his travel and living will
count against either the
campaign spending limits of
the Presidenr or of the local
candidate.
Passed a guide.Iine
making it difficult for a
number of Democrats to
qualify for federal campaign
funds.
- Said there is nothing in
the law to prevent Wallace
from getting up to $150,000 in
royalities from permitting his

. •...
dogs is ava ilable as an indoor feeder (No, 072) and an
outdoo r fe-e-der ( No. 0726) , The outdoor m ode l ha s a
sw mg in g door w ith a hinge a t the top whic h the dog
sw ings i nw ard to ea L Food is prote cted against bird s,
weather and fltes . Feeders hold 40 to 50 lbs , of dry dog
food Convenient for pet owners , kennel operators and
breeders , Heavy galvanized stee l. both feeders are 32"
high, 12" wi de, 13" d eep.

P.S. DON'T fORGET
KITTY: He needs a
self-feeder, too.

Middleport

399 WEST MAIN STREET 992 - 216~ POMEROY, OHIO
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS
STABLES LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS
LAWNS- GAi{DENS

SAVE
BIG

LARRY'S

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r.oa~
F
....

Available In Bags &amp; Nuggets
25. &amp; 50 Lb~ Size~

Sugar Run Mills
. 992-2115

NOW

14x70 Kirkwood

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Reg. $11.300.00
Reg . $8,995.00
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Reg. $7.495.00

12x60 Governor

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'9,500

NOW

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Reg. $3,595.00
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Reg. Sl7,5oo.oo ,
NOW

15 OOO
I

.

These homes are all. total electric. If you are
shopping for a good price and a good home,

tbomtM

ruling, however, Ford 's campaign would have to pay only
first class airfare for himself ,
plus his personal living expenses .
The commission also said
that before a candidate can
qualify for federal campaign
funds, he must deduct the

Water detective
will check river

WHOLE LOT SALE

24x52 Crestridge Sect.

u,... .... ,.. ...........

picture to be used on T -£hirts,
watches and other campaign
souvenirs. But commission
members said they thought
this would violate the spirit of
election reform .
No formal ruling was made
on presidential travel expenses . But commission
counsel John Murphy said the
law clearly requires the
expenses be charged to Ford
or to the local candidate,
depending on which benefits
from the presidential appearance .
A formal ruling was
·delayed to determine if costs
could be divided between the
president and the lo ca l
candidate.
The FEC said in a draft

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\

3.91to 1 7.95

MODERN SUPPLY
ROYAL CROWN
BOTTLING COMPANY

you won't find a bett~r buyl So Stop Today!
Closed Sunday &amp; Monday, Aug. 31 &amp;
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"Yortr ·Complete ·Farm St,pplieli"'

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•

'

CINCINNATTI - The Ohio
River
Valley
Wa ter
Sanitation Commission
(ORSANCO) is intensifying
its water pollution surveillance activities.
According to an announcement by Leo Weaver,
Executive Director of the
Commission, James Taft, a
biologist with graduate
credentials
in
Water
Pollution Control from the
University of Cincinnati, has
been employed as one of
ORSANCO's
first . surveillance specialists.
Taft will be responsible for
conducting field operations in
the middle reaches of the
river . His duties will involve
the collection of water
samples for physical and
chemical analysis, the
calibration of ORSANCO's
electronic monitors, and the
performance of specialized
biological observations.
· 'The surveillance program
is a recent amplification of
the overall water quality
monitoring strategy adopted
by niinois , Indiana, Kentucky , New York, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, West·Virginia,
and Virginia - the eight
states signatory to the
Commission
Compact.
Through the Commission 's
cooperative arrangement
with the U. S. Geological
Survey, most of the water
samples will be shipped to
their regional laboratories

(:. .""•

.,_..,.,'

L-R , RALPH HENDERSON, SECRETARY, M&lt;&gt;:lern
Woodmen of America, Camp 10900, Alfred, presents 50
year membership a nd service a wa rds lo Garner Griffin .
former secretary of camp .

The 73rd anniversary of
Modern
Woodmen
of
America , Camp 10900, was
celebrated at a picnic held at
Forked Run State Park
recently . The event coincided
with the fraternal insuranc-e
societies community service
recognition month .
Receiving recognition for
conscientious and dedicated
community service were the
William D. Welch family,
Coolville, and the Gerald D.
Meek family, Hockingport.
" Half-Century Oub" pins
and membership certificates

were received by Garner
Griffin, Alfred : Harold
Boggess, Warwi ck , R. !. , and
Arvel V. Swartz, Alfred.
Forty of the 215 current
members receive?. pins for 25
years membership, and 15
families received 100 percent
membership awards.
The pledge service was led
by C. Lee Henderson, Athens,
and the camp history was
read by Mrs. Harry Gutherie,
Alfred . Mrs. Edgar Pullins,
Reedsville , presented a
fe stive cake decorated with
Modern
Woodme n
of

Bad news to Ford, good to Wallace

...

1

MRS .
~: DGAR
PULLINS,
Re ed s ville,
presents Anniversary Cake
to Modern Woodmen of
' ' .. . ira , Camp I0900 ,
1'nred.

73rd anniversary
of lodge noted

Your Thom 1'1\cAn Store

MAKE HIM FEEL
WANTED!

Elfl

i•

'

~ ~"1111.~ ~!!""'-

candle. Cara lynn Tra cy
poured the punch, and Mrs .

12x20 Vemco Add Room

•

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A breeze
on your feet .

green and ye ll ow, Placed on
th e serv1ng bar was a
hurricane lamp with a wlute

12x60 Governor

STEAK
HOUSE

Order by Phone
And Take Em Home
992-5432

Th e

CLEVELA ND !UP!) - A could see U1is rush up the hill
member of the jury that at the Gua rd ," William s
decided for the defense in the added . He said the film
Ken t stale civil suit trial sa id convinced him.
Thur sday the jury never
" I figured the G uard
considered Ohio Gov. James panicked," he said, "wh ich ,
A. Rhodes lia ble for what according to the law, if they
happened on May 4, 1970 are in fea r of their li ves. they
when four Kent Students tan fire:·
were killed and nine were
The jury of six men and six
wounded in a hail of Ohio women voted 9-3to exonerate
National Guard gunfire.
Rhodes, former Kent State
Richard Williams of Cleve- University President Robert
land , a mechanic , also sa id a I. White and 27 current and
film of th e shootings fi gured former membe r s of the
importantly in the jury's Guard.
verdict.
The seenu n gly endless
Asked in an interview ( with Kent shoot ings litigation is
NBC News-Cleve land ) if now mov ing toward a n ap
Rhodes did what the law peal for a new trial of $46
required him to do, Williams million in c iv i l suits on ·
answered :
grounds U.S . Dtstrict Court
" Yes.
( Kent 1 Mayor Judge Don J . Young made
I LeRoy) Sa !rom asked them errors during the 14-week
I the Guard) to come in, the
trial.
prosecutor asked them to
" We are studying the legal
come in and the chief of aspects now and will have l&lt;l
police asked them to come make a motion within 10 days
in."
of the verdict," sa id Dav id
According to Willi ams, E ngdahl, attorney for one of
emotions were so ragged in the plaintiffs.
the jury room during the
l':ngdahl said Young erred
deliberations that every juror in disa llowing some evidence
cried at least once because of and not allowing the plaintiffs
the 1-nowledge that a decision to drop state claims of assault
either way would have a and battery , misconduct and
significant effect on the lives neg li gence against the
of many persons.
defendants.
He said film of the
He sa id th e claims had been
shootings convinced him that filed in case the judge threw
th e
defendants
were out th e main charge of denial
blameless.
of civil rights of the students
" We had a short film and killed and wounded when
two tsoundi tapes," he said . guardsmen unleased a 1:&gt;" In the tapes a few seconds second barrage of gunfire on
before the shooting you could demonstral&lt;Jrs protesting the
hear 'charge '' and several U.S. invasion of Cambodia .
times 'Lay down your guns . Young a llowed t he main
Yo u 're s urrounded , Go charge to stand .
home~ '
" By not allowing us to
"On this one film, it was simplify our case, the judge
very hard to see, but you created confusion, which only
worked for the defense,"
Engdahl said .

I

. MR. AND MRS .. DELBERT MORRIS, Athens, display
Picruc Carner rece1ved at Modern Woodmen of America
Recognition Picnic.

se rved with punch whi ch had
a floa ting lime green rose and
ribbon san dwic hes of pink .

14x64 Cameron

£ROW'S

SANDWICH

Cumi ngs.

Jury never figured Rhodes
liable for Kent ki11ings

Ben Neutzlng serve d th e
cake.
Guests were Mrs. William
Kin g, Kathy and Sherry , Mrs .
De nnis Hackett, Mrs. Henry
Wells, Mrs . Rex Cwnings ,
daughter, Amber , Mrs .
Durward Cwnings, Mrs. Mae
Cwnings, Carmel Murphy ,
Melanie Burl, Mrs. Paul
Hapto ns tall , Mrs . Edie
Zirkle, Pamela and Michelle
Mrs. David Cwnings, Mrs:
Riggs, Mrs. Neutzling and the
hostesses .

Mtss Janell e Cumings,
bride-e lect of Bill Hap to ns ta ll ,
was
honored
rece ntl y with a bridal shower
at the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Ray Riggs, Chester Road,
Pomeroy . Hostesses were
Mrs. Riggs' twin daughters,
Maralynn and Caraly nn
Tracy .
Games were played with
prizes won by Mrs. ·Dennis
Hackett, and Mrs. William
Km g. The refreshment table
wa s covered w1th a pink s C;~tin
floo r leng th clot h an d
feat ur e d a crysta l candelabra wtt h while tapers. a c ake ice d in
ptnk wit h while wed·
ding
bell
accen ts
made
b\
the
brid e Plect's m~ther, Mrs David

14x70 Kirkwood
YOUI OOG . DESaV!S
A SQUARE MEAL

TomBoy

shanty-Irish _ las!'~. '·
" Th e large pool of really
fine actor s in New York. ,,
s~tys Babbin , wa s a determimng ele m ent in the
decis ion to produce '' Beacon
Hill" in New York . This. in
turn. mfluence d the way the
seri es is hand led tech nically .
It is be ing vi deota ped , a
tech nique that "all ows you to
play right through a sce ne ,"
as
Reatrice
St r afg ht
descr ibes it. "You don' t have
to keep stopping, as in a fil m ,
And this gives th e scene
reality : i t produce s an
e moltonal build ."
Is "Beacon Hill " a bellwether or t he r etu rn or
telev ision dr ama production
to New York, as has been
speculated ?
Jacque lin e Babbin is un ·
derstandably cauti ous in her
answer . She hopes so. And
then . ·'This prod uction is
sim il ar to the way televis ion
sta rted out - in the good old ,
'gold en d ays,· when we did
plays written fo r televisi on,
rat her than c hopped up fiin1
scripts .
"But it 's a special kind of
show that won't appea l to
eve r ybody.
It 's
fair ly
sophist icated in it s hum or. I
think il 's going to be a slow
bui ld ."

Bride-elect honored

· AUTOM ATIC DOG F E EDER for lhe largest spec ies of

the Fabulous

of relatives in Akron.
Mr . and Mrs. Gene Slack
md family of Syracuse were
Sunday visitors of Mr . an d
Mrs. Harley Johnson.
Mr . a nd Mr s. Charley
Smith visited with Mr. and
Mrs . Harley Johnson Sunday
?vening .
Mr . and Mrs . Doyle Knaoo,
Kai l, Kevin and Charle s
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elam visited Sunday evening with
and family were Saturday Shirley Baity, Julie and Jill of
and Sunday visitors of his Lincoln Heights.
brothe~ Mr. and Mrs. Bill . J . R. Murphy and grandFouch and family of Hun- daughter Debbie Murph y
tington.
•
spent a week vacat ion with
Mr . and Mrs . Don~ld Mr. and M'r s. Robert Murphy
Russell were Sunday visitors of Davenport, Iowa.

7- Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Friday, Aug . 29, 1975

'

.

'

for analysis. In examing
time-sensitive samples,
ORSANCO surveillance staff
will be working closely with
state and local laboratory
specialists in the ORSANCO
Compact district.
Taft is based at a district
office of the Kentucky
Department of Natural
Resources
and
Environmental Protection at
2514 Dixie Highway, Ft .
Mitchell, Kentucky.

r

. .

'

'"

amount he spent on events
such as cocktail parties ,
chicken dinners and rock
concerts to raise his money .
Former Georgia Gov.
Jimmy Carter and Rep .
Morris Udall said they have
raised the $5,000 in each of 20
states in contributions of $250
or under needed to qualify for
federal funds. But both have
used cocktail parties to raise
the money and could fall

below the threshold when
those costs are deducted .
The ruling also may affect
ca ndidates who have said
th ey qualify: Ford , Wallace,
Se n Lloyd Bentsen, D-Tex .,
and Sen. Henry Jackson, DWash .
Wallace , who has spent $3
million on direct mail fund
raising which has brought in
about $4 million , would not be
affected.

Otristmas stamp
due for 3c hike
By ED ROGERS
WASHINGTON (UP!)
When the government puts a
price tag on its new Christmas stamps it likely will be
three cents more than last
year as a result of the latest
Postal Rate Commission
action .
The commission Thuusday
dismissed a complaint that
first class mail was subsidizing other mail as it fixed
a higher rate after two years
of deliberation.
The Postal Rate Commission, in a 4-1 vote, made
permanent the " temporary"
rates in effect since March,
1974. Under the law the Postal

Service can impose a new
temporary rate 30 per cent
higher than the permanent
base , after a three-month
waiting period.
Postmaster General
Benjamin Bailar said " the
Postal Service cannot continue to operate if necessary
rate adjustments cannot be

made until long after they are
needed . In an inflatiouary
period, more responsive ratemaking is imperative ."
Because of the uncertainty
about when a nd how the
commission would decide,
the Postal Service had begun
printing
two
special
Olristmas stamps without
price designations on them.
Technically, the commission ruling is advisory
and the Postal Service board
of governo rs could reject it by
a unanimous vote . This is
considered unlikely because
it would delay any increase
for a full new round of
hearings.
Commission
member
Frank Saponaro filed a
dissent. He favored 9 cents
instead of 10 cents for the first
ounce , limitipg the temporary rate to 12 cents.

The commission action
covered 39 rate categories,
including a reduction from 8
cents to 7 cents for postcards.

STEAMBOAT INN
· MEAT - Turkey &amp; Dressing, Roast Beef.
Flounder Fish, Hamburg er Steak , Ham.
VEGETABLES Lima Beans, Brussell
Sprouts, Noodles , Potatoes (backed ,
home fries, mashed)
SALAD Cottage Cheese. Slaw, Tossed
Peaches and Applesauce.
PIE -

Coconut Cream . Apple .
CLOSED LABOR DAY

Sunday, Aug. 31, Hrs. 8:00-2: 00
Weekdays 6: 00-8:30
3rd St.
Ph. 949-3551 Racine, Ohio

4

America E mblems. Contest
prizes were won by Mr , and
Mrs. Delbert Morris, Athens,
Russell Griffis, Guysville,
Mrs. Lee Henderson , Athens ,
William Lightfrit z, New
Marshfield, and Robert
Windl and, Plain City .
Youngest members prese nt
were Bradley Bentz, so n of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles M.
Bentz, Jr ., Coolville, and
Amy O'Neil. daughter of
Mr. a nd Mrs. James O'Neil,
Little
Hockin g.
Ca mp
secretary is Ralph C. Hen de rson, Coo lvi lle.
Receiving 25 year me mbership pins were Conrad
Bentz, Esmond Brandeberry,
Garrett Ch ri sty, Charles
Car r, Earl Dean , Arden
Depoy, Carl Findling , Ca rl
Findling, Jr ., Mar gare t Foilrod , J uhn Hayes, Clar ence
He nderson, Th e lma He nderson, Linda Sue William s,
Ralph C. Williams, Frances
Williams, Ambrose Howard,
Freida G. Morris, Freda M.
Ju st ice, Marjorie Ma lon e
Coa kl ey, Wilma O'Brien,
Margaret Parker, Donald H.
Robinson, Glenn Robinson,
Leah Snodgrass, Walt er
Snodgrass, Dorothy Sto ut,
Gerald Swartz, William
Hobart Swartz, Edward
White, Donald E. Windland,
C. L. Henderson, Osie Henderson , Grace Swartz, Robert
Windland , Charles Woode ,
Clair Woode, Delbert Yost,
Bill Carr and Iris Carr.
Meigs area families who
rece ived 100 percent certificates were William Carr,
Arvel Swartz, Alan Sparks,
Ca lvin Hawk, Delbert Yost,
Michael Burke, Clarence W.
He nd er so n, Dona ld VanMeter , Conrad Bentz, Car l
Findling, Garner C. Griffin,
C. Lee Hender s on , Myrl
Coa kley and Ralph He nderson.

WESTPORT, Conn. (UPli
- The verdict banning
damages in the Kent Slate
civil trial is an " incredible
miscarriage of justice ,'' a
member of the President's
Com mission on Campus
Unrest which investigated
the shootings, said Thursday.
"If this were a car accident, there isn 't a jury in
the world that wouldn't have
awardell ' damages, " James
F . Ahern. director of the
In suran ce Crime Prevention
Insilule, and former New
Haven police chief, said .
Four persons were killed,
nine wounded , including one
who will ne ver walk , when
Ohio National guardsmen
opened fi re on s tudent
demonstrators a t KSU May 4,
1970.

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The attorney said an appeal
will be made to the U.S. Sixth
Circuit Court of appeals in
Cincinnati should Young deny
his mot ion for a new trial.
The case would come up in
about six months .
" We think we can get an
appeal on reversa l, but we
are not optimistic about it at
the trial court level,"
Eng dahl said.

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BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

IN WHITE, GREEN,
OR COPPERTONE

RIDENOUR
· Chester, Ohio
Phone 985-3307

rv &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
Hrs. Mon. - Sat. 8-8

�r
•

POME
Rev
W
H
pastor
Roy Mayer
Sun da y schoo l
s u pt
Ch ur c t1 SChOOl
9 IS
am
wo r shtp servtce 10 2-1
a m
You th c h otr r ehearsal
Mond&lt;ly
3 30 p m
u nder
dt r ec tt o n o f Mary Sk.mn cr
sen tor c ho tr r ehearsal
7 JO
p m Tt1u rsday wt t h Mrs P a u l
N e q se d tr ec tor

POMEROY

CHURCH

OF

THE NAZARENE Cornt:r
Unton an d Mulberr y
R ev
Clyde V
H end t•r son pastor
Sunday sc hool lil 30 am Gle n
McC l ung
sup!
morntng
wo r Shtp 10 30 a rn
eventng
se r vtce
7 30
mtd week
se r v ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EP I SCOPAL - The
R ev
Harold Deeth
r ec tor
Chu r ch se r vtces 10 30 am
H ol y co mmun on hr st Sundily
o f manit
c hu r ch sc hool IU 30
am f or nurse r y t h r o uqh 12
POMEROY CHUR C H OF
CHRIST - T errell G r an nger
pastor
Btb l e sc hool
9 JU
am
worshtp
10 JO a 11
adult wo r shtp sen cr and
young peoples mee t mg 7 30
p m
Combtned B tble s tudy
and prayer meeltng
Wed
nesda y 7 3D p m
THE SALVA TI O N ARMY Envoy Roy w Wtn tnlJ off e n
til cha rg e Sunday
10 a rr
Hoi n ess meeltng 10 10 il n
Sun da y
Sch ool
Younq
Peoples LeQton
7 p m
Thursday 1 to 3 p n
Lad es
Home League 7 p m
Pr ep
c l asse s
ST
PAUL
LUTHERAN
C HUR C H
Corner
ol
Sycamore and Second Sis
Pom er oy Tl e R e v W1 I tam
M1d dl eswar !h Pa s tor ~ u n dily
Sch ool a ! 9 45 a m
and
Chu r rh Se r\1 ces 11 n m
SAt..RED HEART R ev
Fa th e r
P aul
D
Welton
pa s tor
Ph one
92 182S
Sa turday even tng MHs 7 J O
Sunday Mass 8 and 0 a m
Conf eSSIOn
Sarur d l't
7 7 30

pm
POMEROY
FIRST
BAP
TIST - R o b ert Kuh n pas tor
W ll1am
Wa t so "
Su n day
sc hool
u p t Su day school
QJOam
BYF 6 on
B b lf
STuoy
vvean es di'ly
7 p m
ChOir pra c t ce
Wedtn;;::&gt;udy
8 30 p rn

BURLINGHAM
C HURCH
- P asto r Jerry L ew s Sunday
5Choo l 2 30 p m wtth wo r Ship
ser v tce at 3 30 p rn
rn 1d
week servtce T uesday 7 30 p
m

..:~....,

._

LEY AN
C HUR C H
ilrrt s onvdle R ev
0 De ll
Man le y Pas tor Henry E bl ~
Sun d ily ~C tiOO I 'up t ') unday
Sc hool 9 JO u 1n
Evenmq
wors ht p! JO p n
Praye r und
Pra sc Sf'rv c~ l hursd.-.y 7 JO
p 111
SYRACI SE
FIR S T
C HURCH o · GOO R ('v
G(orq e Otlu "as tor ~ unday
schoo l
9 1~
t tn
mornt n g
p r e .:~ c htnq
11
am
evnnqel &lt;; lt c 5ervt cc 7 JO p m
Pre~y f'r
m(! t nq
Thur sday
1 JO p n
POMEROY
WESTS ID E
C HUR C H OF CH R IS T 200 W
Matn Sr
Je rry Pnul
m n t SI C'r
PhOn (' 997 7666
Con se rvi'lt vc
non
tn s trum c nt a l
&lt;" unday
wor
st1 p 10 ,-. m
Btblc &lt;; ludy 11
il n1
wor shtp 6 p m
~·. ed
nesdily B b l c s f u(lt 7 p tn
MIDW AY
COMMU NITY
C HU RC H
N on d(
no lttl\&lt;ll t011ll
L cl!\ (i SV t f
Ll c:-. llr
f.&lt;o1 d
1lt!Ofl
nurt11m
P•l&lt;..tor
u1 d.l y
~chool
tO 1 ' '
'vcntnu
v.or s h p
T 10 p n1
pr t ver
rt tll tl lll
lut~Clly
I JU p rn
youll1qroup I r d 1y ! \0 p nt
RUTLAND
FREEWILL
BAPTIST ~oqer
Tur n er
pa s tor
~ und~y
sch o o l
10
&lt;1 111
Su1 dcl y e v f' ntng Se rvi &lt;.C'
7 30 Wcdncs da f 13 btr&gt; stu(ty
7 JO p n
OLD
DEXTER
BIBLE
C HR ~S TIA N C HU RC H - Rev
Ron T ~.: rry
p JStor
Sunda {
school 10 a r
Mr 'S Wo rl ey
1'-r rln c t s
su p l.' rll; fcndenl
Mo rn nq wor s h p
II
a m
Sunday (' v (' 11 14 S€ rVI l£' 7 30
GRA H AM
UNIT E D
METHODIST Pr eac h n y
9 J O a rn
f r s t an d seco n d
Sun day s of e ach month lhtrd
and f ourt t1 Sundoys each
mo nth wors h tp serv ce ill 7 30
p rn W L•dne 5day even ngs a!
7 JO P rayer und B be Study
SEVE NTH DA Y
AD
VENTIST Mulberry Herqhts
Road
Pomrroy
Pa st or Ge rard
Se ron
Sa b
balh Sc hool Superm tenden t
R ra W hil e Sa l&gt;ba tt1 Sc hool
Stllu rday a fl ernoo n a r ? 00
w 111
worshtp
serv ce
tollowtn q at J I S
FIR S T
SOU TH E RN
BAPTIST 282 Mu l berry
Ave Pomeroy a fltll a t ed w t h
S B C
th e Rev
B rad l ey
THE
HILAND C H A PEL
George Ca s to pa st or Sunday
Sc llool
9 JO a n
eve n n g
worsh1p
7 30
Thursday
eve nmq p r ayer ser vtce 7 30
pm

the sermonette
A FORGIVING WVE
Corrte ten Boom, author of the best seller, "The Htding
Place," tells how she came face to fa ce wtth a former guard of
the Nazt concentratiOn camp where she had been tmprtsoned
Hts appearance, she srud, brought back a vtston of the place
where her stster had dted
"The huge room wtth tts harsh overhead hghts , the
pathe!tc pile of dresses and shoes m the center of the floor , the
shame of walkmg naked past thts man I could see my s tster 's
frail form ahead of me, rtbs sharp be neath parchment skm
Belste and I had been arrested for concea ling Jews m our
home during the Nazt occupatiOn of Holland "
The guard, who had been converted to Chrtst s mce the
war, satd to Miss ten Boom: "I know that God has forgtven me
for the cruel thmg.s I dtd there, but I would loke to hear ot from
your hps as well, Fraulem," (he held out his hand) "wtll you
forgiVe me 1 "
Remembering the suffermg m the camp, Mtss ten Boom
said she found 1t hard to forgtve a former gua rd But when she
srud, " Iforgtveyou,brother, wtthallmyheart 1"she felt God's
love more mtensely than she had ever known
lstJn 4 4-11 " Beloved, let us love one another; for love ts of
God· and every one that loveth ts born of God, and knoweth
God He that loveth not knoweth not God, for God IS love In
thts was manifest the love of God toward us, because that God
sent hts only begotten Son mto the world, that we mtght live
through him. Herem ts love, not that we loved God, but that he
loved us, and sent his Son to be the propttiation for our sms
Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought also to love one another ''
- Floyd F. Shook, pastor, Laurel Cliff Free Methodtst Church

Alfred
Social Notes
Sunday School attendance
on Aug 24 was 31, the offermg

- $16 86
Worshtp Servtces were held
at 11, wtth the Rev Meece
leading, and Duane Sydenstricker speaking on "Saved
through Fatth " Florence
Spencer and Howard Flan-

ders sang " Because He
Lives " - Attendance at th os
servtce was 22, the offermg -

$22 80

•
I

The Cluster (Northeast)
hymn smg wtll pe held at the
Alfred Church thts Saturday
evenmg, Aug 30 at 7 30-9 00
Anyone welcome
A meetmg of the Metgs
Partsh Steermg Coorumttee
on Evangelism wtll be held m
the church basement here at
7 Wednesday evenmg :or
comrmttee m embers
The " Mt Zwn Ladtes
Trw," of Mineral Wells, W
Va Will be spectal smgers for
the church homecommg here
on Sunday, Sept 21
• The Swartz Reun10n held
here m Woode Grove, Sunday, Aug 24, was attended by
a group of 45 relattves and
frtends .
Recent VISitors at the Wm
and Irts Carr home were her
ststers Ltlhan Penn of
Hillsboro , 0 and Donna
Ohlinger of Pomeroy, 0 .
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Swartz of
Shade, and Mr and Mrs
Gerald Swartz and family of
Macletta and Kathy Follrod
clllled on Nina Robmson and
Cl&amp;Fa Follrod, Sunday.
Call411f on Mr and Mrs
Hobart Swartz Sunday were

Bashan
News
Mtss Dawn Trussell of Mt
Vernon spent a week woth her
grandpare nts , Mr and Mrs
Stanley Trpssell and her

cousm, Renee Trussell and
attended the fatr
The Bashan Bunch 4-H Club
and advtsor , Mrs Pitzer and
Mrs Rose , were campmg for
two days a t Forked Run
Park
Mrs Maxte Walters of St
Pe tersburg , F l a , spent
Fnday afternoon woth Mr
and Mrs Stan ley Trussell
Also calhng durmg the week
were Mrs Ola Hysell of Long
Bottom and her daughter,
Mrs Shtrley Roberts and
Mehnda of Mt Sterhng, Ky ,
Mrs Ora Hill and daug hter,
Mr s
Shelba Foster of
Columbus, and Mrs Judy
Holter and c htldren and Mrs
Margaret Tut tle
Mr
and Mrs
Hollts
Walters have returned to
thetr home at St Petersburg,
F la , after s pendmg several
weeks at the tr tratler home at
Bashan
Scotty Trussell spent a
week woth hts aunt and uncle,
Mr and Mrs Donald Trussell
of Mt Vernon
The tee cream soctal and
dance at Royal Oak Park
Saturday mght s ponsored by
the ftre department and
auXlhary was well attended
Thanks to everyone for !hell"
hep m making 1t a s uccess

Mr and Mrs. Harold Swartz
and famtly of Wtlhamstown ,
W Va and the Gerald Swartz
famtly of Manetta

~ plnccr

T roy

pa ~ tor

Zw tll ltl fl '-Iun day sc hool s up!
Sundi!y ~ chool
'il JO a m
mo r n1nq
worsh t p
10 3 0
u neli!Y e vange l tSI c m ce tm~
I JO p m
Prayer mCe l trH~
W c dn e sdoy f 30 p m
MIDnLEPORT
Ml M ORI A H BAPTI)T Corner I ou rl h and Ma n
M ddl ! por t Rev H en ry Key
Jr
P&lt;l st or
S und&lt;~y
Se t ool
9 30
ant
Mrs
Ervn
l:3aurnqardner su p!
Morn nq
wo r st] p 10 JS a m
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES
l nrry C,trnahan prcstd ng
mtn &lt;&gt; trr
~ und.ly
B1ble
l ec tur e
9 JO v m
W.:l iCh
row e r &lt;;, t udy
10 JO am
Tuesdny
Otb l e s t udy
7 30
p n
Th urs day
m1n1slry
:,chool
7 JO p m
:?erv1ce
mec tnq tl JOpm
M I DDLEPO RT
CHURC H
OF C HRI ST IN C HRI ST IAN
U N ION - l .-.w r en ce Man e y
pa s l or
Mr s R us. sc ll Younq
&lt; undily
~c hoo l Sup !
Sunday
~c hool
9 30 am
Even ng
v.or s t1 p
7 30
Wedn esda y
prayrr m ec l tnQ 7 JD p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD Ractnc Rou t e 7 the
RC'v
J 1mcs
M
Muncy
pn s lor
&lt;., undcly o;c twol
9 45
1m
n orntnq wors ll tp
1I
c1 m
e vcnu1q wo r s h p 7 30
Pr.ly er meettnq
T ucsday
1 JO p n1
Younq p eoolc s
mect 1n g 7 30 p m Th u r sday
M IDDL EPORT
FIRST
BAPTIST - Corner StXIh and
Pulmer
the
R ev
Peter
G 1 .Jrtddl
pastor
Danny
Th o' p so n
s uperrntendcnr
\un day Sc ttool WMPO Rad 10
proqram 7 I ~ a n
Sunday
:S chool 9 I ':1 a m
Morn tnq
Wo r c. l1 1p
10 I S a m
Yout h
ilC t t 1es nnd l e l lowsh1p for
r un or
iln d
se n tor
t tgh
o;; tud enl s
6 p
m
Su n day
e ven nq wors h p 7 30 p m
M d week prayer ser vt ces
Wednes d a y 7 3D p m
C HUR CH
OF
C HRIST
M1dd l cport
St h and Man
Geo r qe
G l aze
m n ts t er
Ja 11e~
SheL l S
supertn
t end ent
B tb l e schoo l
9 30
a rn
morntnQ wor sh1 p 10 30
a m evenm g wors t1 p 7 30
prayer serv 1ce 7 p m
Wed
n es day
!'
MIDDLEPORT
Church
0 1
Tl1 c
N aza r e n e
Don
Co l e
pas
R ev
lor
M rs.
Mary
Lathey
Sun day Sc hoo l supt Sunday
schoo l lil 30 a m
morn n g
wor s h p
II
a rn
Sunday
e va 1ge l 1sltc mee l1n Q 7 30
p m
p ray e r
meel t ng
Wr d nesday 7 30 p rn
THE
UN! T E 0
PRE SBY TERIAN
MIN
I S TRY
OF
MEIGS
COUN T Y Dw tght L Zavtlz
P asto r D1rec to r
HARRISONVILLE
Sunday Ch urch Sc noo l 9 JO
a m Mr s Homer L ee Supt
Morn1ng Wo r Ship 10 30
M IDDL EPOR T Sun day
Ch ur ch Sc hool
9 30 a m
John F F ull z Supl
Morn1ng
Wor sh p 10 30
SYRAC U SE Morn1ng
Wor s ht p
9 am
Sunday
Church Sc hool 10 ~• m
Mr s
Samp son H al l Suot
R UT LA ND CHURCH
OF
GOO Oav 1d L
H enso n
pa5 t or
116 917 1
Su nday
morntnQ wor Ship 9 30 10 30
Sun day schoo l
10 30 11 30
Sunday eventng serv 1ce
5
P rn
f am il y wo r sht p Thurs
day 7 30 p rn
HJ.~. Lt:L
C OMMUNITY
C HUR C H
N ea r
Lo n g
Bott o m
Ed se l H art pas tor
Sunday s.c:hoo l
10 a m
Chur ch
7 30 p m
prayer
mee t ng 7 30 p m Thurs d ay

MIDDLEPORT

PEN

TECOSTAL - Th rd Ave th e
Rev W1l lr am Kn1 ll el pa s t or
Rona ld Duqan Su nday Sc h oo l
Su p t Cl asses t or .-:1 11 ages
even1ng se rv tce 7 30
B1b l e
W e dn esa day
7 30
s t udy
p m
yo uth se rv1 ces F r1day
7 30 p m

FREEWILL

----·-----------..-..
..._.__._......___.._. . __. .
Television log for easy viewing

9- The Daily Senhnel,Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 , Frtdav . AuR 29 1975

B- The Datly Sentmel. Moddlewrt -P ~mel'oy, 0 , l n&lt;'ay, Au g J.'J, ' " ,
~

1

BAPTIST

-

Corner Ash a nd Pt um M1d
d l e po r t
No e l
H err man
pa s tor
Sa t u r day eventng
servrce 7 p m Su nday sc hoo l
10 a m
Su nday even tn g
worst11p 7 c m
Mt: I GS
C OOPERATIV E
PARI SH
THE UNITED
METHODIST C HUR C H
Rob&lt;!rt T Bumgarner
Dtr e ctor
POMEROY CLUSTER
R e v Rob erl Hayman
H ev D Wm Syden stncker
CHESTER Worsh tp q IS
a m
Church Sc hoo l 10 a rn
E NTERPRI SE WorSh i p
9 a m
Chu r c l1 School lO '! m
FLATWOODS Worsh i p
II a m
Chur c h Sc hoo l
10

am
POMEROY Wo r Ship
10 30 a m Chur c h Sc hoo l 9 15
am
UMY F 6 30 p m
ROCKSPRINGS - WorShip
10 am Ch ur ch School9 am
UMYF630pm
MIDDLEPORT Cl U ST ER
R ev Roberl Bumgarner
HE A TH WorS hip 10 30
a Ill
Ct1urch Sc hoo l 9 30
a m
UM Y F 7 p m
R U TLAN 0 - WorSh i p 9 15
a m
Chu rch Sc h ool lO a rn
U MYF7 pm
SALEM
CENTER
Wo r s h rp 9 am
Chu r ch
Schoo l 10 am
UMYF Thurs
day 7 p m

SYRACUSE CLUSTER

R e v R1chard E Jarv1!.
ASBURY
Wo r sh tp
11
am
Chu r e,h Sc hool 9 so
am
WS C S 1s t Tues day
FOREST RU N - Wor s h p 9
am
Cl1u r c t1 Sc hool 10 am
w scs 3r d Wednesday 7 30
pm
M IN ERSVILLE - WorS hip
10 n m
Ch ur ch Sc hool 9 a m
W SCS Jr d Monday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE Ch ur ch
Schoo l
9 JO am
wor sl1t p
se rv rce 7 30 p m
SOUT HERN CLUSTER
R Pv Steven Wtlson
t&lt;~v Howard Sht veley
BET H ANY
( Oorcasl
Wo r sh1p 9 30 a m
ch ur ch
schoo l 10 30 ~ m
CARMEl - Worsh p 10 15
a m ever y Su nday chu r c h
sch ool 10 3Q a m
1 APPLE GR OVE Su n day
Sc l1ool 9 30 a m
wo r sh 1p
f r s l and thtrd Sundays 7 3D
p m
prayer
m ee t 1n g
Wednesday
7 30
p m
Fell ow shtp
s upp e r
f1rst
Saturday
6 p m
U M W
sec ond Tuesday 7 JO p m
EAS T LETART Sunday
sc h oo l 9 30 a m
worsh p
sec ond and fourth Sundays
7 30 p m
p rayer mee t tng
We dn es day
7 JO
p m
U M W f1r SI Wednes da y 7 30

,-. n l

PORTl/\NO
I 0 p m
Churc h

Worshtp
CliOOI 9 10

,, ll \

SU TTON
WO r Sh tp
II
il n
r vlry • u n dclY
t;hu r c: h
~c hoot
10 ,-. m
NORTHEAST C LUSTER
Rt v Rober t M '"~C£!
P,"l st or
D e nnr ~ Crccqor
A SSOC i ol i C M 1n 1!a t er
JOPPA - wor sht p 10 am
Cllu r c h ~ choo l 9 a m
Prayer
MN l tnq
Wt:: d nesd ,lY lj p m
LONG BOTTOM
Chur c l1
se rv c ~s
? a m
&lt; u n d ay
\ c t10ol 9 1\ a m
flo1bl c • t u dy
eve ry l hur sd a v 7 JO p n
NORTH
BET H EL
Worsh p I I a m
C h urcll
'&gt; choo t 10 a m
ALFRED - '-. unday sc hoo l
e rtch
Sunduy
9 JS ~l m
p r e a c h ng .:at 11 a m
each
Sund.1Y P r ~1ye r mceltnq 7 r5
p m
W t: dn~:? s day
W SC 'J
f1
p 111 on llttrd T u esday cac h
monlh
REEDSV ILL E Sunday
school 9 30 am
preach 111 g
7 JO p m
Sunday
praye r
mee 11n q 7 30 p n1 Tuesday
W SC'
7 30 frr s l
lhursday
e rt c h monlh
SIL V E R RIDGE - WorS ht p
o,, m Ch ur c h \c hoo t lila m
TUPP E R S
PLAINS
Worsh p 9 v rn
Chu r c h
School 10 il m
KE N O
C HUR C H
OF
CHR 1ST
Georqe I r cdcnck
_, u pt
".crvtce wu~ k l y
lil 10
n m on 'J und&lt;ty
Pr eac hmq
f trs t and lt1tr d Su ncl e ys ol
mont h by Cl ffo r d Sm ll h 9 30

a "'
HOB SO N

lUPPERS
PLAINS
C HRI ST I A N
C HUR C H
LU &lt;1&lt;'11 L IJH tl c rwrmd
p l sfor
I OWrl r cJ (u l d wc ll
J
' 1U11 dily
c t1nn l upt
l,u nduy ~ t ho o l
•1 Jll " "
Mo rnrnQ Serm on
10 !( I " 111
Sunday cventn g
nr&gt;J Cl
I p n1
LETART FALLS UNITED
B""ETHRE N
Rt v
r r ( t.: land Nor r t !J
pa !. tor
I loy d Norrt 5 !.upt
Sunday
~choo t
9 30 am
mo r nmg
ser mon
10 JO a m
Prayer
SC' rv ce W e dn es d a y 7 30 p m
C H ES HIR E C HUR C H OF
GOO OF PROPHECY - G P
&lt;., n , lh pas tor Sunday Sc hoo l
ID a m
ll.r thu r
Hen ~ on
&lt;., up I
Mo rn tng Wo r sh1p
II
d m
Younq P eop l es se r VIC('
7 p m
Eventng s. ervtce 7 30
p m
We dn es. ctay M1d Week
Pray e r ~ erv1ce
7 30 p m
Youth meert n g
6 30 p m
Ev enmg worsh1p
7 JO p m
C HE S TER CHURCH OF
T H E N AZARE NE
Rey
Her be r t
Grd le
pas. l or
No r s htp se r v tce 11 am and
7 30 p m
Sun day
Sunday
Sc hoo l
9 30 am
Rt cha r d
Barton s up t Pr aye r mce ltn g
Nedn esdav 7 30 p m
BRADFORD C HURCH OF
CHRIST Cltfford Sm th
mm Sler Sund.=ty School lil 3D
a m
mornmq c hu r ch ID JO
rt m
Sunday evenmg se r v 1ce
7 30 p m Wednesday scrvtce
8 p m
LAUR EL CL IFF FREE
ME THODI ST
Rev F loyd F
'::. hoo k p.J st or Llo yd Wrrghl
"' un d ay se t oo l su pt
Sunday
sc hool
9 JO a n t
Mo rn tng
worshtp 10 10 am
e v ~ ntn g
worShiP
7 30 p m
Wed
n eo;d ay
ChrtS !tan
Yo ur h
Crusade
6 30 p m
Cho r
p rac t tce T hursday 7 p m
DEXTER
CHURCH OF
CHR I ST Cha rl es R u sse ll
\ r m n1ster Norma n C Will
S l pt
Sund ay schoo l
9 30
a nt
wor shtp Sf' rv ce
10 30
a m
B ble stud y
T ues d ai
7 30 p m
REORGANIZED CHURC H
OF
JE S US
CHR I ST
OF
LATTER DAY
SAINTS Porlland
Ractne Road
Will 1am Roush pas lor Denny
Evans
Sunday
Sc ho ol
D1r ect or Sun day Sc hool 9 30
a 111 Mo rnrn Q worshtp 10 30
~ n1
Sund ay evenmg se r v ce
! p m
Wednesday event n g
pray er servrces 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev
Ear l Shuler
pa s tor
Worsh p servt ce 9 30 am
Sunday schoo l
10 30 am
B 1ble
s tudy
and
pray er
se r v tc e Thur sda y 7 30 p m

CHRIST I AN
UNION Da rr e ll Doddr tl l
pas ror
SundilY Sc hoo l 9 30
am
Le onard G lmorc f r st
cl d n
e ven1n4 5Crv cc ! JO
p 111
Wcdr cs day
pray e r
mef' ltng 7 30 p m
MT MOR I A H CHURCH OF
GOD Rae n e Rout e 2 The
Rev
Ch a rl es Ha nd
pas l or
~ unday
sc hoo l
9 11 5 a m
mo rn1 ng worsh1p
11
am
Ev en1n g
se rv ces
Tuesday
and F rtday 7 30 p m
BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
CHURC H OF C HRI ST
Doug
". eomon
111111 SI C'r
!1tb le
s tudy
9 10 a m
mo rn ng
wor s lt p I U !0 &lt;"t rn
e ven tnq
wo r s h p H p n
Wednesday
ntgl11 f1tb 1c s tudy B p m
MT
OLIVE C HUR CH Long Bo ttom Su nd ay Sc hoo l
10 am wllh W tll ard Pt go 1t
su pt
E&gt;Janq e l Sit e mes sage
eac h Sunday eve ntn g 7 30 by
El d er Ru sse ll Clt n e m tnt s ter
ot th e Apos t o li c F a1th B ble
CARLETON CHURCH Study Wednesday 7 30 p m
K mgsbury Road Gary K 1n g
STIVERSVI LL E
COM
pastor
Sundoy s chool
9 30
MUN IT Y CHURCH - Su nday
even m q worsh ip 7 30
a m
schOO l servtce
10 am
p m
P rayer meet 1n g
Wed
P rayer m ee tmq Thursday 7
nesday 7 30 p m
p m
Sun d ay evenmg serv rce
7 p m
LONG
BOTTOM
ZION C HUR C H OF C HRI ST
C HRISTIAN Mr
Robe r t
Pome r oy
Harr 1s onville
Wya tt pas to r Su nday Sc hoo l
Roa d Mr k.e G trt on
pa st or
su p!
Ronald Osborne B tb l e
Sl eve n St anl ey Sunday school
Sc hool 9 30 a m
p r each ng
s up!
Su nday sc hool
9 30
tO t5 am
Evenmg serv ces
am
mornm g worsh p and
7 30 o m
c ommun to n
10 J O am
HY SELL
RUN
FREE
Sund ay
even n g
you t h
MET H O DI S T C HUR C H Ch r1st ran end e avor 6 30 p m
Rev
Pau l N ev il l e
pa stor
wor sh p serv tCe
7 30 p m
Su n day Sc l1 ool 9 3 0 a m
Wednesday e ven1nq pr a y er
Mor ntn g se rvt ce 10 30 am
mee ltn g and B b l e s tudy 7 30
you t h se r v t ce
6 45 p rn
pm
Evange l tSi tc se rv ce 7 JO p m
ST
JOHN
L. U T H ERAN
P r a y er meettng
Tt1ursday
CHURCH
Pme G rov e
The
7 30 p m
Rev
Wt llt am Mtdd l es warth
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
Pastor Ch ur c h Se rvr ces 9 30
M I SS ION a t Bal d K nob Rev
am s un day Sc hool 10 30 am
E J Gr fl l h ~u p! of chu r ch
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
Rev
L
R
Gluese n c amp
CHRIS T B rb l e Sc hool 9 30 pas tor
R o~e r W ll ltr ed
Sr
am
morntng wor sh tp 10 30
Sunday School s up l
Sunday
am
Sun day evenrng wor sh tp sc ho ol
9 30 a m
praye r
serv1ce 7 p m
cho1r pra c tt ce meet ng Tu esd ay 7 30 p m
Weone sday 7 p m
R ev Je ff
youth mee t mg 6 p m Sunday
R an son Pa stor
l eaders A da Van M eter and
ANTIQU IT Y BAPTI ST G r e tta Su tt le Sunday even ng
R ev l= r ee l and Norr 1s pa s.to r
wo r s t11p
7 p m
throu g h
sc h oo l
10
a n1
S1.,1nday
w nt e r mo nths
Ch ur c t1
se rv ce
7
p m
MT
HERMON -cHURCH
THE
UNITED .
Wedne~day
B bte Study
7 OF

pm

BRETHREN IN CHRIST -

RACINE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev J ohn A
Cof f man
pastor
S unday
Sc hoo l 9 30 a
m
G eral d
Well~ su p r Morntng Wo r sh1p
Sunday e ventng
10 30 a m
wo\'" Sh1p
7 30
Pray e r
m ee t1ng Wednes day 7 30 p

R e v James H Leacn p as l or
Sun day sc h ool
9 30 a
m
Ru sse l l
Spence r
s upt
Wo r sh 1p se rv 1ce 10 &lt;I S a m
E venmg wor s h 1p alternat tn g
wtlh C E at 7 30 p m on
Su nday Praye r rne e t1ng 7 JO
p
rn
Wednes d ay
A llr ed
Wo lf e l ay lead er
WHITES
C HAP E L
CoolVIlle
RO
R ev
Roy
De eter p astor Sunday sc ho ol
9 30 a m
wors11 p se rv tee
10 JO a m
Bt b le study and
p r ayer se rv ce
Wednesday
7 30 p m

m

- Wa l t er P B 1kacsa n p astor
Ronn te Salser Sunday schoo l
su p !
Sunda y sc h ool
9 30
am mo r n 111g wor sh 1p 10 40
Sunday eve n 1n g w o r sh1p 7 30
Wednes d ay eve nm g B1bl e
st u dy 7 30
DANVILLE WESLEYAN R e v Le l on G l as ur e pa sto r
Sund ay Sc hoo l
1f 30 am
youth and 1Un10r yo uth ser
v ce
6 45 p m
eve nt ng
worsh1p
7 30 p m
p r aye r
and p r a rse Wednesday 1 30
pm

SI LVER
RUN
FREE
BAPTIST - R e v Ralph D e an
pa sto r
Sun day Sc h oo l
10
a m
Leon Miller
su p!
Ev en m g se rv 1ce 7 30 p m
P r aye r mee tmg
T hur s da y
7 30 p m
CHESTER C HURCH OF
GOO R ev
Da n Ayers
pa sto r
Sun day sc hoo l
9 30
am
worshtp serv a c~
11
am
even m g serv 1ce 7 30
youth serv1ce Wedne s day
7 30 p m
LANG SV ILLE CHRtSTIAN
C HUR C H
T ed
J ones
pa st or
Sun day sc h oo l
9 30
a m
Roy
S gman
su pt
morn ng
wor Sh i p
10 30
Sun day evenmg se r vtce 1 30
m d w e ek
se rv1ce
W ed
nesday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE
NAZARENE -Rev
Ho war d C B l a c k postor Bob
Moore Sun da y Sc h oo l Supt
Sunday Sc hoo l classes l or a ll
ages
9 30 a m
mo rnr ng
wo r shiP 10 45 N YPS Sunday
6 30 p m
ev ange lts t rc se r
v1ce Sunday 7 30 p m M td
week p ra y er meet1 n g
Wed
nesday 7 30 p m
M 1ssro n ary
meeltnq sec ond Wednesday
7 30 p m
UNIT ED
FAITH
NON
DENOMINATIONAl Rev
Robert Sm tfh pas t or Sunday
sc l1 oo l
9 30 a m
class
l ea de r
L eo Hill
worsh t p
serv 1ce 10 30 am
c h urc h
7 30 p m

EDEN

UNITEO

BRETHREN IN CHURIST E l de n
R
Blak e
p asto r
Su nday
Sc h oo l
10 a m
Howard
McCoy
s upt
Morn ng sermon
11 a m
Sunday
n1ght
se rv 1c es
Chr t sltan
E ndeavo r
7 30
p m
Song ser-v tce B p m
Pr eac hmg 8 30 p m
M 1d
Week
Prayer
mee t ang
Wednesday
1 p m
Ray
Adams l ay l ea d er

CHURCH

OF

JESUS

CHRIST
L ocate d
al
Rutland on N ew L1 m a Road
nexl 10 Forest Acre P a rk
Rev
Ray Ro u se
pa s tor
pm
Robert
Musse
r
Sunday
Schoo l
WESLEYAN ( Racine)
, su p l
Sun day sct1ool
lO 30
S unday sc hoo l
10 a m
worshrp 7 30 p m Brble
wor Ship I I am
B1ble study am
Thursday
7 p m
chotr study Wednesday 7 30 p m
Saturday nrgt1t praye r ser
praC t iCe TtiUrSday 8 p m
~e ll owsh1p
su pp er
f1 r st v 1ce 7 30 p m
HEMLOCK
GR OV E
Wednesday
6 30
p m
CHR
ISTIAN
Roge
r Wa t son
u M W fourth Monday 8 p m pastor Ray Wha l ey
s upl
GREA T BEND Wo r sh rp
Mo r n mg worsh tp 9 30 a m
I I a m 2n d and .t t h Sundays
Chu r c h ~ c hoo l
10 30 a 1n
Churc h Sc hoo l 10 a m
young p eo p les meettn g 6 30
LETART FALLS War
even 1ng wo r shtp 7 30
Shtp 10 am
Chur c h SC hOO l 9 p m
p
m
Brb
l e Study Wed n esday
a m
B 1ble s lud y 7 30 p m
7 30 p m
ever y T uesdoy
-v'lt uNION BAPfiST MORNING STAR War
CeG II
Cox
pas t or
sht p 9 30 am
Chur ch Schoo l Rev
Sunday L Sc h oo l s up t
Jo e
10 30 a m M 1d Week Se r11 tee
Sayr e
S"Un day sc hool
9 45
Wedn esday 8 p m
am
Sun day even mg war
MORSE
CHAPEL
Wo r '&gt; htp II a m
lsi and 3rd Sh1 p 7 30 Wed n esday prayer
'unduys
Church Sch oo l
10 and Btbl e s Tud y 7 30 p m

RUTLAND
' RUTLAND CHURCH

ROCI&lt;S THEI~ COFFINS.

I

CHURCH

--""THEPLA"'e; t5Aw Yo u~ 5-IGN AND
CACCED FOR HELP ' \/IE W~RE 5U MMO&gt;JED
IMMEDIATELY TO RE 5CuE YOU

RAD IO

SAFE-

l DOUe.T
VERY MUCH
THAT YOU CA&gt;J
TALK TO HIM.

lVE Gv f A
FEW TH I&gt;JG5
TO S A~ TO
M~ U!JCL E
PLATO

~AT U RA LLY

FRU 6 Y 1

z

l

• Q7

ronom}

!J1 tJII

FAIRVIEW

EAST
4 A97J
• QB
t J 109 05
4 16
SOUTH IDI

IV

~1 1t11l ew

THAT 'NAS
'I ~DI,t..,)..l

7 JJ 14

f UCS(/oi~

• Q

'"""~ CAt..t.." 1

M.1rk
I U 2 J 27

• &gt;J o32
• ~ K 83

... 9 J 2

W t&gt;fl flf! s rl &lt;H
11 ( on nthwns
l

l

Nt&gt; 1thc r vu l ner able

What rs home? A blend of memarres and mortar
walls and roof and
smells of breakfast cookrng
a place of rest ai the end of tile day
a leellng of possess ron of belongrng
a place of hales loves anger
center of Ihrngs llvrng

I)

f h111 sd.n
I uke
14 7

ro

\\ esl

2 .&amp;
Pass

Home may be a mansron on a hrll a cramped apartment, a farmhouse
a hovel a new suburban spllt·level the house Father burll
but only to
you and your famrly rs 1t home No one else may call rt that For home rs a
part of your

f ndi! y
Homu n s
1211 17

Sa turda y
Pro., c rbs
25 ~ 1U

ORPHAN ANN IE-SITTING BULL
LfAPit-1'

00€5 THAT
SIGHA"TURE
MEAI'I ~YTHl~G
TO 'IOU7 ' OlD
MASTERPIECE"BAH' IT'S BY THE

LIZARDS 1

Centurres ago a shepherd poei felt thrs Lonely seasons on the grazrng
slopes had taughl hrm to love
to long far
HOME

"THAT
LOOKS LIKE
A PITCHER

Bui he realized thai , through thrs lrfe and beyond the nearness of God
rs part of the sense of home Goodness and mercy would follow hrm all Ihe
days of hrs life And he would dwell rn Ihe house of the Lord forever•

O'VOU!

MIDWAY MARKET Pomeroy Ph 992 2582
BOB'S MARKET Ma son , Ph 773 5721

SAY, WHY DON'T
WE APVERTI$£
F'O~

Bakers or Good Bread
Hun longton , W Va

HU"'PII' I
SliO\llD - I
SAT FOR. TlfAT
PORTRAIT-

YEAH

AN ' A

SPEAKING OF SIGNS,

DISHWASHER,

A COOK'

"100 '

•,

DUDLEY'S

Ph 949 5772

Pomeroy

Ph 992 3486

100 E Maon

Moddleport, 0
Gallopohs, 0

59 N Second 51
46 Court St

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
We Frll

992 295S

All

Doctors Prescnpt 1ons
Pomeroy

.

You J€S' f1nds

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT
220 E Maon

Louts W Osborne
Pomeroy

th rs

pulls m!

all
r rqht?

1hei.j
happen1n· 'em off at
now
th' pass'
Joel?

What"s

th1n', Ruf:us~':-~~
?&amp;~~

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

Keepsake Dr amon d Rrngs

212 E

Is

a spot an'

Arn'i no brq

Ph 992 2178

Pomeroy

K&amp;C JEWELERS
Ph 992 3785

Mam Sf • Pomeroy

RUTH'S MARKET

Bakers ol Gay 90 Bread
Moddleport
Ph 992-3030

MARK V STORE

'

I Forme rl y Sad1e"s Market)
Ph 992 -3986

®

p

-:-.LI ICA
ABNE ~

course'
Th e answer os that the laws of
co ntr ac t bndge spec ofo ca ll y
prohobo! suc h a bod There are
varoou s pe naltoes but the one
really se roous one that would
requore a playe r who ha s bod
e ogh t hea rts over seven s pades
to b1d seve n notrump ha s been
lefl oul on the theory that 1t
would be

cruel and t nhuma n

puno s hment
roo you ha ve a questton for
1t1e Jacot,ys? Wnte Ask the
Jaco iJ ys
ca re o f th 1s
new s paper The most 1n
teres t1ng quest1ons wtll be
used u1 th1 s co lumn and
wnters w1ll rec e1ve cop1es of
JA COBY M O DERN I

Yesterday's Answer
16 Break
bread
19 Ceremony
21 Vocal

composotoon
22 Unfathng
23 Crossed
home
plate
24 - Sunda)
Morm ng'

26 Make
ca llous
28 Gaggle ' s
btrd.s
32 Celebes
ox
33 Betake
oneseU
35 Ltttle
Dorothy
36 Thnce
( preftx)

W1th Me"

CPEN~D ON~ 'r- IT

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

700 E Matn

Pomeroy

Doal992-2101

Hell ' Dealer

TH' RIGHT ONE 2

26

WAf\JTS ME TO RI'SK MAH LIFE
AG IN FO' '$25.00- CALL ME -

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
Mrddleport

Locust Sf
Doal992 5248

RAY'S T.V. &amp; HOME
ENTERTAINMENT tENTER
Sa les- Quasar- Se rvic e

Ph 949-3151

Rae me

Ractne

" The Fr1endly Folks"

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION
Ph 949 9591

Rae m e

GOEGLEIN READY MIX
Dlal992 3284

Moddleport

....- - - - - - - - -......- - BUT YOUR MOM AND I UNDERSTAND
EACH OIHER SHE KNOWS MY
LI~E IS !HE SEA .• AND HERS
IS HERE WIIH HER FAMILY;
HOME AND BUSINE551

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
SHES A WONDERFUL
LADY, WENDY, BUT I
AXYDLBAAXR
COU LDN'T GIVE
Is LONGFELLOW
HER "THE KIND
One letter somply stands for anothe r In th os sample A 11
UeE 5HE
NEEDS AND
used for the three L's. X for the two O's. etc Songle lellers
DESERVES I /-:=! apostrophes. the length and formall on of the wo rds are all
honts Eaeh day the code lette rs are dofferent

0"'

Pomeroy , Ohro

p

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

VBMN

JCA

p

DC

SM

H Z

H

H

GHAOME,

EMKCEZMN

SVD

L T H-

Moddleport . Ohoo
'

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

Meo~s

County Branch

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
'
Pomeroy
Ph 992-3863
29,6 W. Second

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.
, . 1100 E.

The Finest m Mob1le Homes
Pomeroy
Maon
Ph . 992-7034

BIBLE

WILKINSON'S
Small Engine Sales &amp; Service
Mrddleporl
Ph 992 -3092

498 Locust 51

.

GAUL'S MARKET

1 oo---11 Takes a Thief 4, Children's Film FestivalS, 10,
Speaking with Your Hands IS . Commanders 33
r Jl}---(ar and Track 3. Soul Train 6, other People,
Other Places 13 To Be Announced 15
2 oo---Bonanza 3, To Be Announced 4, 15. VIewpoint 8,
In the Know Al l Stars 10 Bill Dance Outdoors 13,
Film 33
2 15---To Be Announced 3
2 31)-F isherman 6. Ebony Altair 8, Bands tand 10,
Movie "'Circus World " 13 Valiant Years 33
3 oo---Baseba ll Warm up 4, 15. Let' s Make a Deal 6
Hambletonlan 8,10
3 31).-WIId Wild West 6 U S Open Tennis 8.10, To Be
Announced 33
4 oo---Maklng Things Grow 33
4 30-Greatest Sports Legends 6, NFL Championship
Games 13, Let' s Grow a Garden 33
5 oo---Bonanza 3, Wide World of Sports 6, 13, The
Romagnolls' Table 33
s 31)-To Be Announced 33
6 QO---News 3, 10, Grear Day at the Fair 4. Lawrence
Welk 8, , God has the Answer 15 Catch 33 33
6 30-NBC News 3 15 ABC New s 13 , News 4.6 , CBS
News 10, Lilies Yoga &amp; You 33
7 oo---Treasure Hunt 3 Lawrence Welk 4,15 .. Hee
Haw 6,8 , Firing Line 33 $25,000 Pyram id 10, Movie
' Is Paris Burning? " 13
7 31).-Jeopardy 3 Animal World 10
8 oo---Emergency 3, 15, Nlghl Slalker 6· Hour of Stars
4, All In lhe Fmlly 8 10 Philadelphia Folk Festival
33
8 30-Big Eddie 8,10
9 oo---NFL Football 3,4 15, SWAT 6. Mary Tyler Moore
8 10, No Hones lly 33
9 31)-Bob Newhart 8,10 Session 33
9 50-Movie "' Hombr e" 13
10 oo---Adam s of Eagle Lake 6 Dick Cavett 8,10 ,
Handfuls of Ashes 33
10 31).-Monty Python 's Flying Circus 33
11 oo---ABC News 6 News 8,10
11 15---Movle Rendezvous at Midn ight " 6
11 31)-Movle ' Ship of Fools' 8, Movie ' Home from
the Hill " 10
12 QO---News 3,4 Poll ee Surgeon 15
12 lO-News 13
12 31)-Movle " Wild and Wonderful • 3. Movie "'The
Last Sunsel ' 4 Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 15
1 oo---Don Kirshner' s Rock Concert 6
1 31).-Movle "Anything Can Happen' 10
2 30-Movle " Buys Riley s Bac k In Town" 4
3 31)-Movle A Man Called Dagger " 10
4 31)-Movle "'Out of S1ghl "' 4

Chester, Ohoo

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Natoonwlde Ins urance Co of Columbus 0
307 Sprong Ave
Pom~roy
Doal992 2318

jf

I
i

TELL HE~ I ONL'f
CHAR6E FIVE DOLLARS

SCORPIO (Oc1 24-Nov 22)

For Saturday Aug 30 1975

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Th1 s s one o f th ose d ay~ wl1en

21) You re lucKy 1o day t hroug h

Yes 1e rday you couldn t rely
u p on lr tends to back you To
day you r nfluence w11h you r
pee r group s &gt;Je r y stro ng

CANCER (June 21 July 221
One who 15 tmportan t to
someth1ng you re tnvolved 1n
w II be look n q ou l fo r your
wel fare 1oday Rela x The
bases are covered

LEO (J uly 23 -Aug 23) A frien d
has sorne valuabl e 1nformatro n
for yo u 1oday H o weve r when
you f tr st hear 1 you won 1 t ully
apprecaa1e ts w o rt h

VIRGO (Aug 23 -Sepl 221 To
day wtll work ou t ve ry advan.
tageously for you mater1 ally
an d rep u ta tron w 1se Luck sac
t ng fo r you beh1nd the scenes

LIBRA (Sep1

;

pose yo u II sh are w tt h a cohort
Just be s ure you r arms are syn
chrontzed
Your hand1ness ca n save you a
l atr p 1ec e o t c l1ange today
Yo u II s alv a ge s omethrng
o th e r s mt gh t 11av e thrown
away

23-0cl

23)

Someth ng w orthw h ile IS to be
ga1nec1 tod ay lr o rrl' an enter

.

1975

6 30-TV Classroom 8 Treehouse Club 10, Almanac
13
7 oo---Salurday Report 3, Matters of Life 6 Treehouse
Club 8 U S Farm Reporl 10. Kentucky Afield 13
7 31)-Jabberwocky 3 Farm Front 4 Eddie Saund&amp;rs
6 Abbott &amp; Coslello 8 Men from COS I 10, Korg
13 Sesame Sf 20
8 oo---Addam s Family 3,4 15 Yogi ' s Gang 6 13 , My
Favorlle Martians 8 Popeye 10
8 30--Wheelle &amp; lhe Chopper Bunch 3,~,15, Bugs
Bunny 6, 13. Speed Buggy 8, Mister Rogers 20
9 oo---Emergency Plus 4 3 4 IS Hong Kong Phooey
6, 13, Jeannie 8.1 0 Sesame Sf 209 30-Run Joe
Run 3,4 15 Adventures of Gilligan 13. Big Blue
Marble 6 Pebbles &amp; Bamm Bamm 8. 10
10 oo---Land ollhe Lost3,4 15, Devlin 13 Jabberwocky
6 Scooby Doo 8.10 Elec Co 20
10 30--Sigmund end he See Monsters H, 15 Shezem
8 10, Lassie 6, 13 , Mister Rogers 2020
II QO--- Pink Panther 3 ~ 15 Super Friends 6, 13, Valley
of the Dinosaurs 8, 10, Sesa m e Sl 20
11 31)-Siar Trek 3,4, 15, Hudson Brothers Renle
Dazzle Show 8, 10
12 QO---Jetsons 3 .~ 15 These are the Days 6, 13 Harlem
Globelrotters 8,1 0 Mister Rogers 20
12 31).-Soul Train 3 American Bends lend 6,13 Go
4, 15, Fa I Albert 8,10

You w1ll beneli t today from a
con!tden 11a l an&lt;l ngement well
screenf!'d fr o m pe r sons rot
darect1y 1nvolved

WINNIE

1 JU,

6 00-Summe-r Semessfer 10

TAURUS (April 20·May 20)

CRYPTOQUOTES

111 CouriSI

Two Lost Worlds " 10

GEMINI (May 21 June 20)

Pomerov 1 Ohto

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Movie

1 15---Wide World Spec ial 13
2 30-Star Trek 4
2 45---News 13
J 30-Movle F lully' 4
I 31).-Movle The Road to HonQ Konq ' •

you 11 be tar more ade pt at
ha nd l1ng larger tssues ! han
smulle r ones Th nk b g

The Store w1th A Heart
Ph 949 3342

'

POWEU'S SUPER VALU

Movie "A ll the Fine Young Cannibals" 8, Movie
" Shock Treatment" 10, Janak! 33
12 45--- News 13
1 QO---Midnlght Special 3 4,6 15 Wide World Special 6,

- Berntce Bede Osol

Wagered
Ethioptan
tttle
Before
Gresham' s

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Ftn e Food &amp; Serv tce

Lena of

50
Eyneg

Ph 949 5961

Thord Sf

,

r&gt;r- FULL 0
WE'""""'
J EWELS " - WAS-IT
1

YOUR LU CKY STAAS
IT WA S HERE '5
YOUR CHECK-

Sammy &amp; Company 6,

11 3()---Johnny Carson 3 4 15

AstroGrapt-l

"- Dance
- AH
~LI~L~====~~~~-;~~T\~~~~Ii~~~~~~rr~;;~0C~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---25
YOU CAN THANK
GCO'BYE:: FATSON .,-ANY TIME YO'

Middleport , Ohoo

Syracuse

w

Pass

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 - Rtllin g1 Latvtan
ton P lace
capttal
40 - hog
5 Pat , tap
8 Redact
DOWN
9 Extremely
I Actual
happy
2 At leos ure
13 Oklahoma
3 Approve
Cjty
(3 wd.s )
14 Esprtt de
4 One corps
llme
15 Actor,
i 2wd.s J
Chris5 Break m
topher rank
16 Schollander 6 By
of
oneseU
swunmmg
7 Exclude
fame
10 Accept
, 17 Egypttan
13 wd.s)
earth god
11 Ennoble
18 Unongmal 12 Argue
20 - Mane
pro and
con
Sa mt
21 Backbone
2.
22 Old card
game
23 On the
Beach'
a uthor
24 Retinue

Two Locations
GrocerieS &amp; Gen eral M e r c hand1 se

A Monnesota reader as ks If
my opponents bod a grand slam
ca n I bod eoght a nd play the
h a nd t h e re ' Doub l e d of

WI-!AT

MAYBE WE SHOULD
WOULroUH
CHANGE "THAT ONE
C~NGE
UP "THE~ ! ~-"- IT TO 7

•

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

South

ALLEY OOP

HEINER'S BAKERY

2 Conven1ent Localtons

~

I&lt; ast

By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby
The unluc ky e xpe rt had us
cornered aga on Thos tome he
was a ll smo les He chortled I
thonk I ve fonally broke n my
Jinx
He showed us the North and
South ca rd s a nd saod You are
on four hearts after a two club
overca ll by West He leads the
kong and ace of dubs East
echoes so he contonues wo th the
Whoc h one of dumm) s
IUIIIIU &gt; dO YO U ruff With '
We loo ked !he ha nd over
refully It was a close c hotce
kon g would be th e "onnong

With the hope ot wrll, rn some measure, foster and help sustain that
which osgood rn famoly and communoty life, this feature os sponsored by
• the busrness forms and organizations whose names appear below
FRESH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS

~orth

Pass
Pa ss
Openr ng lt.:ad - K ...

HARTFORD CHURCH OF

CHURCH, L eta rt W Va R t
1
Rev
George Ho sc har
pas tor
Sunday Sc hoo l 9 30
a m Pra ye r and B1ble study
7 30 p m
Co tt age Prayer
Se rvt c:e Tu es day
lD a m
WorSh iP Se r v1 ce ' Thu r sday
7 30 p m

... Q 8
\\ EST
4 1042
• 97
. 42
4 ,\ K J 10 &gt;4

ft /()

Mnnd

pl ay 1f Ea s t held Singleton
queen or queen s ma ll the 10
pl ay roght of II est held eother of
those holdtng s It was far more
lik ely 1f hea rts broke 3 I for
East !o be long so we rephed
The ten spotos the percentage
play
He sa od
I figur ed that out
alsp 11 was n t muc h better than
the kong plav Then I though!
abou l mv regul a r bad luck a nd
dec oded lo go agaonst th e
pe rcentag e I played dumm y s
k ong led lo w fone s.ed a nd
ma de my contract

29

20,33 , Movie "Shell Game' 1u
8 31}---(hlco &amp; the Man 3 , ~, 15, Wall Street Week 20,33
9 oo---Rocklord Flies 3,~, 15, Movie "Search lor the
Gods" 6, Se lling of Abe Lincoln 1976 20, Wash ington
Debates 33
9 31)-Movle "Kale McS hane·· 10
10 oo---Pollce Woman 3 4,15 - News 20 , Paul Nuchlms
33
II oo---News 3, 4,6,8, 10,15 Movie " The Wild One" 13,
ABC News 33

SA I U ru)A Y, AUGv;,

Unlucky Expert plays his luck

SiJJl(l.n

Moddleport, Ohoo

CHRIST 111 Chr 1s fl an Un10n The Re&gt;J Wlllram Cam pb el l
pastor
Sunday Sc hool 9 JO
a m
J ames Hughes su p !
evenm g se r v1ce
7 30 p m
Wednesday even 1n g prayer
mee trng
7 30 p m
Youth
prayer servrce each Tuesday

WIN AT BRIDGE

YOU HAVE NOT
Hi?AI&lt;D THE
NEWS.

• Kl86 5
¥ K1064

BLUE &amp; GRAY RESTAURANT

SOUTHERN

MASON ASSEMBLY OF
GOD Dudd 1ng L an e Mason
w Va Chester T ennant
Pasto r
Sunday Sc h ool 9 45
a m
Childr en s Church 6 &lt;15
p m
Yo un g Peop l es Se n11c e
6 .4 5
p m
Evangel she
Serv rce 7 30 p m
W..ome n s
Mrss onary Council 10 am
ftr st and l h 1rd Tu es days
Pra ye r an d B 1bl e S tudy
We dn esday 7 JO p m

YOu ~RE

NO- !' JT

8 oo---Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, 15, NCAA Pre Season Report
6 NFL Footbal l 8 Washngton Week In Review

NORTH

Ph . 992 5130

MASON FIRST BAPTIST Secon d and Pomeroy Sts
St an Cr a tg pas t or
Sun d ay
school
9 &lt;~5 a m
wors h p
serv 1ce
II am
tra tn1ng
un 10n
6 30 p m
even 1ng
worsh tp se rv rce
7 30 p m
M td we e k p raye r serv1ce
Wed n esday 7 30 p m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST P 0 Box 487 Mrller
St
Mason
w Va Sun day
B rb l e Study 10 am
W o r s hrp
l l am and 7 p m B tbl e Stud y
Wednesday 7 p m
Voca l
mU SIC

pm

OF COuR,;E
NO DOUBT YO U
W l5 ~ TO NOTIF Y
"iOUR FAMILY

OH THANK
"IOU CA PTAI&gt;J
COUL D WE
U5 E YO UR

OF

BAPTIST - Co r ne r o f Seco nd
and A nder son Mason Pa st or
Walter Cloud Su nday sch ool
9 AS a m
wo r ship servtee 11
am and 7 JO p m
Weekly
B tb1 e study Wed n esday 7 30

Perspective on the News 33

CAPTAIN EASY

107 Sycamore Sf

MASON COUNTY

FIRST

FRIDAY , AUGUST 29, 1975
Smart 15, Elec Co 20,33
6 oo---News 3.~ , 8. 10, 13, 15, Sesame St 20, Jean
Shepherd's America 33
6 30-- N BC News 3,4 15. ABC News 13 Andy Grlttlth 6
CBS News 8, 10, Jody s Body Shop 33
7 oo---Truth or Cons 3 4, Bowllhg lor Dollars 6 WCHS
TV Report 8, Avlallon Wealher 20,33, News 10
Movie "Giant"" 13. Phil Donahue 15
7 30-Porler Wagoner 3, Pop Goes lhe Country 4 8,
New Can did Camera 6 Evening Edlllon with
Martin Agronsky '10 Treasure Hunl 10 Black

CHRIST
Rod
Kasle r
pasto r V H Bra l ey Sunday
schoo l sup!
Sun d ay sc hool
9 30 am
wors h1 p se r v1 ce
and co mmun on 10 30 am
yout h meellflg 6 p m
Sunday
eve n n g se rvt ce
7
re g u l a r
boa r d m ee ltng
thrrd Sa t ur
day 7 p m
I?UTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH -S unday
Sc h oo l
9 30 a m
Wo r sh1p serv tce 11
a m
We dn eas dy
praye r
meet 1ng
7 30 p m
Sunday
n1ght worsh rp 7 30 p m

RUTLAND

·-------~--

5 30-News 6. Andy Grllllth 8. Hogen &gt; neroes 13, Get

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

TH E NAZARENE Rev
L loyd 0 G r mm Jr
pasto r
Sunday sc hool
9 30 am
wo r sh rp se rv1 ce
10 30 am
b r oa d cas t l1 ve OYe r WM P O
young people s se rv tce 6 45
evang e l! SI IC SNVICe 7 30 p m
Prayer m ee ttng W ednesday
7 30
p m
M tss wnary
mee t 1ng
7 30 p m
f t rst
Wed n esday o f month

r=--~......::......___,- 1

AS LOW AS
I ' LL MAK!i THOSE

Rae me

OF

r-_.....--------~ ·

'

ALL SHE CAN PAl{
15 FIFW-CENT5

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 -Dec
per sons w 1t h wh om you s hare
a
close
one to o n e
rela t1o n sh1 p especta ll y 1n yo ur
soc al lite

CAPRICORN (Dec

22 -Jon

19) H el p w ill arr1 ve tn lhe ntck
o f It me so don I fret You won 1
be sl u c k wtth a c ho re you
w e r en t look ng forward to do
ng alone

AQUARIUS (Jan 20.Feb 19)
You 1t be rn a ver y soC iable
fr ame of m1nd tod ay especr aHy
lo wa r d even1 ng Brrgh t lights
mu stc and acttv rt y wr ll be yo ur
cu p or tea

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
You re gong to dtg 1nto you r
purse today lor som etht ng to r
the tamlly The money w 11 br
1n g olea su re to all

A

Your

~Birthday
Aug 30 1975
You r c areer prospec ts are €)(·
lr emely p rom 1s1ng thiS comt ng
yea r A rr se n p os rt1 0n s Ilk. e ly
It w 1ll be acco mpa n red by many
tmpo rtant t rrnge benefits
.._f- WSP AI'E II F :\'TE HPRlSE ASSN 1

FOR FIFT'I'·CENTS I'LL

CLEAN OUT TJ.!E 61.DYE
COMPA!i:TMENT

/
I

�r
•

POME
Rev
W
H
pastor
Roy Mayer
Sun da y schoo l
s u pt
Ch ur c t1 SChOOl
9 IS
am
wo r shtp servtce 10 2-1
a m
You th c h otr r ehearsal
Mond&lt;ly
3 30 p m
u nder
dt r ec tt o n o f Mary Sk.mn cr
sen tor c ho tr r ehearsal
7 JO
p m Tt1u rsday wt t h Mrs P a u l
N e q se d tr ec tor

POMEROY

CHURCH

OF

THE NAZARENE Cornt:r
Unton an d Mulberr y
R ev
Clyde V
H end t•r son pastor
Sunday sc hool lil 30 am Gle n
McC l ung
sup!
morntng
wo r Shtp 10 30 a rn
eventng
se r vtce
7 30
mtd week
se r v ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EP I SCOPAL - The
R ev
Harold Deeth
r ec tor
Chu r ch se r vtces 10 30 am
H ol y co mmun on hr st Sundily
o f manit
c hu r ch sc hool IU 30
am f or nurse r y t h r o uqh 12
POMEROY CHUR C H OF
CHRIST - T errell G r an nger
pastor
Btb l e sc hool
9 JU
am
worshtp
10 JO a 11
adult wo r shtp sen cr and
young peoples mee t mg 7 30
p m
Combtned B tble s tudy
and prayer meeltng
Wed
nesda y 7 3D p m
THE SALVA TI O N ARMY Envoy Roy w Wtn tnlJ off e n
til cha rg e Sunday
10 a rr
Hoi n ess meeltng 10 10 il n
Sun da y
Sch ool
Younq
Peoples LeQton
7 p m
Thursday 1 to 3 p n
Lad es
Home League 7 p m
Pr ep
c l asse s
ST
PAUL
LUTHERAN
C HUR C H
Corner
ol
Sycamore and Second Sis
Pom er oy Tl e R e v W1 I tam
M1d dl eswar !h Pa s tor ~ u n dily
Sch ool a ! 9 45 a m
and
Chu r rh Se r\1 ces 11 n m
SAt..RED HEART R ev
Fa th e r
P aul
D
Welton
pa s tor
Ph one
92 182S
Sa turday even tng MHs 7 J O
Sunday Mass 8 and 0 a m
Conf eSSIOn
Sarur d l't
7 7 30

pm
POMEROY
FIRST
BAP
TIST - R o b ert Kuh n pas tor
W ll1am
Wa t so "
Su n day
sc hool
u p t Su day school
QJOam
BYF 6 on
B b lf
STuoy
vvean es di'ly
7 p m
ChOir pra c t ce
Wedtn;;::&gt;udy
8 30 p rn

BURLINGHAM
C HURCH
- P asto r Jerry L ew s Sunday
5Choo l 2 30 p m wtth wo r Ship
ser v tce at 3 30 p rn
rn 1d
week servtce T uesday 7 30 p
m

..:~....,

._

LEY AN
C HUR C H
ilrrt s onvdle R ev
0 De ll
Man le y Pas tor Henry E bl ~
Sun d ily ~C tiOO I 'up t ') unday
Sc hool 9 JO u 1n
Evenmq
wors ht p! JO p n
Praye r und
Pra sc Sf'rv c~ l hursd.-.y 7 JO
p 111
SYRACI SE
FIR S T
C HURCH o · GOO R ('v
G(orq e Otlu "as tor ~ unday
schoo l
9 1~
t tn
mornt n g
p r e .:~ c htnq
11
am
evnnqel &lt;; lt c 5ervt cc 7 JO p m
Pre~y f'r
m(! t nq
Thur sday
1 JO p n
POMEROY
WESTS ID E
C HUR C H OF CH R IS T 200 W
Matn Sr
Je rry Pnul
m n t SI C'r
PhOn (' 997 7666
Con se rvi'lt vc
non
tn s trum c nt a l
&lt;" unday
wor
st1 p 10 ,-. m
Btblc &lt;; ludy 11
il n1
wor shtp 6 p m
~·. ed
nesdily B b l c s f u(lt 7 p tn
MIDW AY
COMMU NITY
C HU RC H
N on d(
no lttl\&lt;ll t011ll
L cl!\ (i SV t f
Ll c:-. llr
f.&lt;o1 d
1lt!Ofl
nurt11m
P•l&lt;..tor
u1 d.l y
~chool
tO 1 ' '
'vcntnu
v.or s h p
T 10 p n1
pr t ver
rt tll tl lll
lut~Clly
I JU p rn
youll1qroup I r d 1y ! \0 p nt
RUTLAND
FREEWILL
BAPTIST ~oqer
Tur n er
pa s tor
~ und~y
sch o o l
10
&lt;1 111
Su1 dcl y e v f' ntng Se rvi &lt;.C'
7 30 Wcdncs da f 13 btr&gt; stu(ty
7 JO p n
OLD
DEXTER
BIBLE
C HR ~S TIA N C HU RC H - Rev
Ron T ~.: rry
p JStor
Sunda {
school 10 a r
Mr 'S Wo rl ey
1'-r rln c t s
su p l.' rll; fcndenl
Mo rn nq wor s h p
II
a m
Sunday (' v (' 11 14 S€ rVI l£' 7 30
GRA H AM
UNIT E D
METHODIST Pr eac h n y
9 J O a rn
f r s t an d seco n d
Sun day s of e ach month lhtrd
and f ourt t1 Sundoys each
mo nth wors h tp serv ce ill 7 30
p rn W L•dne 5day even ngs a!
7 JO P rayer und B be Study
SEVE NTH DA Y
AD
VENTIST Mulberry Herqhts
Road
Pomrroy
Pa st or Ge rard
Se ron
Sa b
balh Sc hool Superm tenden t
R ra W hil e Sa l&gt;ba tt1 Sc hool
Stllu rday a fl ernoo n a r ? 00
w 111
worshtp
serv ce
tollowtn q at J I S
FIR S T
SOU TH E RN
BAPTIST 282 Mu l berry
Ave Pomeroy a fltll a t ed w t h
S B C
th e Rev
B rad l ey
THE
HILAND C H A PEL
George Ca s to pa st or Sunday
Sc llool
9 JO a n
eve n n g
worsh1p
7 30
Thursday
eve nmq p r ayer ser vtce 7 30
pm

the sermonette
A FORGIVING WVE
Corrte ten Boom, author of the best seller, "The Htding
Place," tells how she came face to fa ce wtth a former guard of
the Nazt concentratiOn camp where she had been tmprtsoned
Hts appearance, she srud, brought back a vtston of the place
where her stster had dted
"The huge room wtth tts harsh overhead hghts , the
pathe!tc pile of dresses and shoes m the center of the floor , the
shame of walkmg naked past thts man I could see my s tster 's
frail form ahead of me, rtbs sharp be neath parchment skm
Belste and I had been arrested for concea ling Jews m our
home during the Nazt occupatiOn of Holland "
The guard, who had been converted to Chrtst s mce the
war, satd to Miss ten Boom: "I know that God has forgtven me
for the cruel thmg.s I dtd there, but I would loke to hear ot from
your hps as well, Fraulem," (he held out his hand) "wtll you
forgiVe me 1 "
Remembering the suffermg m the camp, Mtss ten Boom
said she found 1t hard to forgtve a former gua rd But when she
srud, " Iforgtveyou,brother, wtthallmyheart 1"she felt God's
love more mtensely than she had ever known
lstJn 4 4-11 " Beloved, let us love one another; for love ts of
God· and every one that loveth ts born of God, and knoweth
God He that loveth not knoweth not God, for God IS love In
thts was manifest the love of God toward us, because that God
sent hts only begotten Son mto the world, that we mtght live
through him. Herem ts love, not that we loved God, but that he
loved us, and sent his Son to be the propttiation for our sms
Beloved, if God so loved us, we ought also to love one another ''
- Floyd F. Shook, pastor, Laurel Cliff Free Methodtst Church

Alfred
Social Notes
Sunday School attendance
on Aug 24 was 31, the offermg

- $16 86
Worshtp Servtces were held
at 11, wtth the Rev Meece
leading, and Duane Sydenstricker speaking on "Saved
through Fatth " Florence
Spencer and Howard Flan-

ders sang " Because He
Lives " - Attendance at th os
servtce was 22, the offermg -

$22 80

•
I

The Cluster (Northeast)
hymn smg wtll pe held at the
Alfred Church thts Saturday
evenmg, Aug 30 at 7 30-9 00
Anyone welcome
A meetmg of the Metgs
Partsh Steermg Coorumttee
on Evangelism wtll be held m
the church basement here at
7 Wednesday evenmg :or
comrmttee m embers
The " Mt Zwn Ladtes
Trw," of Mineral Wells, W
Va Will be spectal smgers for
the church homecommg here
on Sunday, Sept 21
• The Swartz Reun10n held
here m Woode Grove, Sunday, Aug 24, was attended by
a group of 45 relattves and
frtends .
Recent VISitors at the Wm
and Irts Carr home were her
ststers Ltlhan Penn of
Hillsboro , 0 and Donna
Ohlinger of Pomeroy, 0 .
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Swartz of
Shade, and Mr and Mrs
Gerald Swartz and family of
Macletta and Kathy Follrod
clllled on Nina Robmson and
Cl&amp;Fa Follrod, Sunday.
Call411f on Mr and Mrs
Hobart Swartz Sunday were

Bashan
News
Mtss Dawn Trussell of Mt
Vernon spent a week woth her
grandpare nts , Mr and Mrs
Stanley Trpssell and her

cousm, Renee Trussell and
attended the fatr
The Bashan Bunch 4-H Club
and advtsor , Mrs Pitzer and
Mrs Rose , were campmg for
two days a t Forked Run
Park
Mrs Maxte Walters of St
Pe tersburg , F l a , spent
Fnday afternoon woth Mr
and Mrs Stan ley Trussell
Also calhng durmg the week
were Mrs Ola Hysell of Long
Bottom and her daughter,
Mrs Shtrley Roberts and
Mehnda of Mt Sterhng, Ky ,
Mrs Ora Hill and daug hter,
Mr s
Shelba Foster of
Columbus, and Mrs Judy
Holter and c htldren and Mrs
Margaret Tut tle
Mr
and Mrs
Hollts
Walters have returned to
thetr home at St Petersburg,
F la , after s pendmg several
weeks at the tr tratler home at
Bashan
Scotty Trussell spent a
week woth hts aunt and uncle,
Mr and Mrs Donald Trussell
of Mt Vernon
The tee cream soctal and
dance at Royal Oak Park
Saturday mght s ponsored by
the ftre department and
auXlhary was well attended
Thanks to everyone for !hell"
hep m making 1t a s uccess

Mr and Mrs. Harold Swartz
and famtly of Wtlhamstown ,
W Va and the Gerald Swartz
famtly of Manetta

~ plnccr

T roy

pa ~ tor

Zw tll ltl fl '-Iun day sc hool s up!
Sundi!y ~ chool
'il JO a m
mo r n1nq
worsh t p
10 3 0
u neli!Y e vange l tSI c m ce tm~
I JO p m
Prayer mCe l trH~
W c dn e sdoy f 30 p m
MIDnLEPORT
Ml M ORI A H BAPTI)T Corner I ou rl h and Ma n
M ddl ! por t Rev H en ry Key
Jr
P&lt;l st or
S und&lt;~y
Se t ool
9 30
ant
Mrs
Ervn
l:3aurnqardner su p!
Morn nq
wo r st] p 10 JS a m
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES
l nrry C,trnahan prcstd ng
mtn &lt;&gt; trr
~ und.ly
B1ble
l ec tur e
9 JO v m
W.:l iCh
row e r &lt;;, t udy
10 JO am
Tuesdny
Otb l e s t udy
7 30
p n
Th urs day
m1n1slry
:,chool
7 JO p m
:?erv1ce
mec tnq tl JOpm
M I DDLEPO RT
CHURC H
OF C HRI ST IN C HRI ST IAN
U N ION - l .-.w r en ce Man e y
pa s l or
Mr s R us. sc ll Younq
&lt; undily
~c hoo l Sup !
Sunday
~c hool
9 30 am
Even ng
v.or s t1 p
7 30
Wedn esda y
prayrr m ec l tnQ 7 JD p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
GOD Ractnc Rou t e 7 the
RC'v
J 1mcs
M
Muncy
pn s lor
&lt;., undcly o;c twol
9 45
1m
n orntnq wors ll tp
1I
c1 m
e vcnu1q wo r s h p 7 30
Pr.ly er meettnq
T ucsday
1 JO p n1
Younq p eoolc s
mect 1n g 7 30 p m Th u r sday
M IDDL EPORT
FIRST
BAPTIST - Corner StXIh and
Pulmer
the
R ev
Peter
G 1 .Jrtddl
pastor
Danny
Th o' p so n
s uperrntendcnr
\un day Sc ttool WMPO Rad 10
proqram 7 I ~ a n
Sunday
:S chool 9 I ':1 a m
Morn tnq
Wo r c. l1 1p
10 I S a m
Yout h
ilC t t 1es nnd l e l lowsh1p for
r un or
iln d
se n tor
t tgh
o;; tud enl s
6 p
m
Su n day
e ven nq wors h p 7 30 p m
M d week prayer ser vt ces
Wednes d a y 7 3D p m
C HUR CH
OF
C HRIST
M1dd l cport
St h and Man
Geo r qe
G l aze
m n ts t er
Ja 11e~
SheL l S
supertn
t end ent
B tb l e schoo l
9 30
a rn
morntnQ wor sh1 p 10 30
a m evenm g wors t1 p 7 30
prayer serv 1ce 7 p m
Wed
n es day
!'
MIDDLEPORT
Church
0 1
Tl1 c
N aza r e n e
Don
Co l e
pas
R ev
lor
M rs.
Mary
Lathey
Sun day Sc hoo l supt Sunday
schoo l lil 30 a m
morn n g
wor s h p
II
a rn
Sunday
e va 1ge l 1sltc mee l1n Q 7 30
p m
p ray e r
meel t ng
Wr d nesday 7 30 p rn
THE
UN! T E 0
PRE SBY TERIAN
MIN
I S TRY
OF
MEIGS
COUN T Y Dw tght L Zavtlz
P asto r D1rec to r
HARRISONVILLE
Sunday Ch urch Sc noo l 9 JO
a m Mr s Homer L ee Supt
Morn1ng Wo r Ship 10 30
M IDDL EPOR T Sun day
Ch ur ch Sc hool
9 30 a m
John F F ull z Supl
Morn1ng
Wor sh p 10 30
SYRAC U SE Morn1ng
Wor s ht p
9 am
Sunday
Church Sc hool 10 ~• m
Mr s
Samp son H al l Suot
R UT LA ND CHURCH
OF
GOO Oav 1d L
H enso n
pa5 t or
116 917 1
Su nday
morntnQ wor Ship 9 30 10 30
Sun day schoo l
10 30 11 30
Sunday eventng serv 1ce
5
P rn
f am il y wo r sht p Thurs
day 7 30 p rn
HJ.~. Lt:L
C OMMUNITY
C HUR C H
N ea r
Lo n g
Bott o m
Ed se l H art pas tor
Sunday s.c:hoo l
10 a m
Chur ch
7 30 p m
prayer
mee t ng 7 30 p m Thurs d ay

MIDDLEPORT

PEN

TECOSTAL - Th rd Ave th e
Rev W1l lr am Kn1 ll el pa s t or
Rona ld Duqan Su nday Sc h oo l
Su p t Cl asses t or .-:1 11 ages
even1ng se rv tce 7 30
B1b l e
W e dn esa day
7 30
s t udy
p m
yo uth se rv1 ces F r1day
7 30 p m

FREEWILL

----·-----------..-..
..._.__._......___.._. . __. .
Television log for easy viewing

9- The Daily Senhnel,Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 , Frtdav . AuR 29 1975

B- The Datly Sentmel. Moddlewrt -P ~mel'oy, 0 , l n&lt;'ay, Au g J.'J, ' " ,
~

1

BAPTIST

-

Corner Ash a nd Pt um M1d
d l e po r t
No e l
H err man
pa s tor
Sa t u r day eventng
servrce 7 p m Su nday sc hoo l
10 a m
Su nday even tn g
worst11p 7 c m
Mt: I GS
C OOPERATIV E
PARI SH
THE UNITED
METHODIST C HUR C H
Rob&lt;!rt T Bumgarner
Dtr e ctor
POMEROY CLUSTER
R e v Rob erl Hayman
H ev D Wm Syden stncker
CHESTER Worsh tp q IS
a m
Church Sc hoo l 10 a rn
E NTERPRI SE WorSh i p
9 a m
Chu r c l1 School lO '! m
FLATWOODS Worsh i p
II a m
Chur c h Sc hoo l
10

am
POMEROY Wo r Ship
10 30 a m Chur c h Sc hoo l 9 15
am
UMY F 6 30 p m
ROCKSPRINGS - WorShip
10 am Ch ur ch School9 am
UMYF630pm
MIDDLEPORT Cl U ST ER
R ev Roberl Bumgarner
HE A TH WorS hip 10 30
a Ill
Ct1urch Sc hoo l 9 30
a m
UM Y F 7 p m
R U TLAN 0 - WorSh i p 9 15
a m
Chu rch Sc h ool lO a rn
U MYF7 pm
SALEM
CENTER
Wo r s h rp 9 am
Chu r ch
Schoo l 10 am
UMYF Thurs
day 7 p m

SYRACUSE CLUSTER

R e v R1chard E Jarv1!.
ASBURY
Wo r sh tp
11
am
Chu r e,h Sc hool 9 so
am
WS C S 1s t Tues day
FOREST RU N - Wor s h p 9
am
Cl1u r c t1 Sc hool 10 am
w scs 3r d Wednesday 7 30
pm
M IN ERSVILLE - WorS hip
10 n m
Ch ur ch Sc hool 9 a m
W SCS Jr d Monday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE Ch ur ch
Schoo l
9 JO am
wor sl1t p
se rv rce 7 30 p m
SOUT HERN CLUSTER
R Pv Steven Wtlson
t&lt;~v Howard Sht veley
BET H ANY
( Oorcasl
Wo r sh1p 9 30 a m
ch ur ch
schoo l 10 30 ~ m
CARMEl - Worsh p 10 15
a m ever y Su nday chu r c h
sch ool 10 3Q a m
1 APPLE GR OVE Su n day
Sc l1ool 9 30 a m
wo r sh 1p
f r s l and thtrd Sundays 7 3D
p m
prayer
m ee t 1n g
Wednesday
7 30
p m
Fell ow shtp
s upp e r
f1rst
Saturday
6 p m
U M W
sec ond Tuesday 7 JO p m
EAS T LETART Sunday
sc h oo l 9 30 a m
worsh p
sec ond and fourth Sundays
7 30 p m
p rayer mee t tng
We dn es day
7 JO
p m
U M W f1r SI Wednes da y 7 30

,-. n l

PORTl/\NO
I 0 p m
Churc h

Worshtp
CliOOI 9 10

,, ll \

SU TTON
WO r Sh tp
II
il n
r vlry • u n dclY
t;hu r c: h
~c hoot
10 ,-. m
NORTHEAST C LUSTER
Rt v Rober t M '"~C£!
P,"l st or
D e nnr ~ Crccqor
A SSOC i ol i C M 1n 1!a t er
JOPPA - wor sht p 10 am
Cllu r c h ~ choo l 9 a m
Prayer
MN l tnq
Wt:: d nesd ,lY lj p m
LONG BOTTOM
Chur c l1
se rv c ~s
? a m
&lt; u n d ay
\ c t10ol 9 1\ a m
flo1bl c • t u dy
eve ry l hur sd a v 7 JO p n
NORTH
BET H EL
Worsh p I I a m
C h urcll
'&gt; choo t 10 a m
ALFRED - '-. unday sc hoo l
e rtch
Sunduy
9 JS ~l m
p r e a c h ng .:at 11 a m
each
Sund.1Y P r ~1ye r mceltnq 7 r5
p m
W t: dn~:? s day
W SC 'J
f1
p 111 on llttrd T u esday cac h
monlh
REEDSV ILL E Sunday
school 9 30 am
preach 111 g
7 JO p m
Sunday
praye r
mee 11n q 7 30 p n1 Tuesday
W SC'
7 30 frr s l
lhursday
e rt c h monlh
SIL V E R RIDGE - WorS ht p
o,, m Ch ur c h \c hoo t lila m
TUPP E R S
PLAINS
Worsh p 9 v rn
Chu r c h
School 10 il m
KE N O
C HUR C H
OF
CHR 1ST
Georqe I r cdcnck
_, u pt
".crvtce wu~ k l y
lil 10
n m on 'J und&lt;ty
Pr eac hmq
f trs t and lt1tr d Su ncl e ys ol
mont h by Cl ffo r d Sm ll h 9 30

a "'
HOB SO N

lUPPERS
PLAINS
C HRI ST I A N
C HUR C H
LU &lt;1&lt;'11 L IJH tl c rwrmd
p l sfor
I OWrl r cJ (u l d wc ll
J
' 1U11 dily
c t1nn l upt
l,u nduy ~ t ho o l
•1 Jll " "
Mo rnrnQ Serm on
10 !( I " 111
Sunday cventn g
nr&gt;J Cl
I p n1
LETART FALLS UNITED
B""ETHRE N
Rt v
r r ( t.: land Nor r t !J
pa !. tor
I loy d Norrt 5 !.upt
Sunday
~choo t
9 30 am
mo r nmg
ser mon
10 JO a m
Prayer
SC' rv ce W e dn es d a y 7 30 p m
C H ES HIR E C HUR C H OF
GOO OF PROPHECY - G P
&lt;., n , lh pas tor Sunday Sc hoo l
ID a m
ll.r thu r
Hen ~ on
&lt;., up I
Mo rn tng Wo r sh1p
II
d m
Younq P eop l es se r VIC('
7 p m
Eventng s. ervtce 7 30
p m
We dn es. ctay M1d Week
Pray e r ~ erv1ce
7 30 p m
Youth meert n g
6 30 p m
Ev enmg worsh1p
7 JO p m
C HE S TER CHURCH OF
T H E N AZARE NE
Rey
Her be r t
Grd le
pas. l or
No r s htp se r v tce 11 am and
7 30 p m
Sun day
Sunday
Sc hoo l
9 30 am
Rt cha r d
Barton s up t Pr aye r mce ltn g
Nedn esdav 7 30 p m
BRADFORD C HURCH OF
CHRIST Cltfford Sm th
mm Sler Sund.=ty School lil 3D
a m
mornmq c hu r ch ID JO
rt m
Sunday evenmg se r v 1ce
7 30 p m Wednesday scrvtce
8 p m
LAUR EL CL IFF FREE
ME THODI ST
Rev F loyd F
'::. hoo k p.J st or Llo yd Wrrghl
"' un d ay se t oo l su pt
Sunday
sc hool
9 JO a n t
Mo rn tng
worshtp 10 10 am
e v ~ ntn g
worShiP
7 30 p m
Wed
n eo;d ay
ChrtS !tan
Yo ur h
Crusade
6 30 p m
Cho r
p rac t tce T hursday 7 p m
DEXTER
CHURCH OF
CHR I ST Cha rl es R u sse ll
\ r m n1ster Norma n C Will
S l pt
Sund ay schoo l
9 30
a nt
wor shtp Sf' rv ce
10 30
a m
B ble stud y
T ues d ai
7 30 p m
REORGANIZED CHURC H
OF
JE S US
CHR I ST
OF
LATTER DAY
SAINTS Porlland
Ractne Road
Will 1am Roush pas lor Denny
Evans
Sunday
Sc ho ol
D1r ect or Sun day Sc hool 9 30
a 111 Mo rnrn Q worshtp 10 30
~ n1
Sund ay evenmg se r v ce
! p m
Wednesday event n g
pray er servrces 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev
Ear l Shuler
pa s tor
Worsh p servt ce 9 30 am
Sunday schoo l
10 30 am
B 1ble
s tudy
and
pray er
se r v tc e Thur sda y 7 30 p m

CHRIST I AN
UNION Da rr e ll Doddr tl l
pas ror
SundilY Sc hoo l 9 30
am
Le onard G lmorc f r st
cl d n
e ven1n4 5Crv cc ! JO
p 111
Wcdr cs day
pray e r
mef' ltng 7 30 p m
MT MOR I A H CHURCH OF
GOD Rae n e Rout e 2 The
Rev
Ch a rl es Ha nd
pas l or
~ unday
sc hoo l
9 11 5 a m
mo rn1 ng worsh1p
11
am
Ev en1n g
se rv ces
Tuesday
and F rtday 7 30 p m
BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
CHURC H OF C HRI ST
Doug
". eomon
111111 SI C'r
!1tb le
s tudy
9 10 a m
mo rn ng
wor s lt p I U !0 &lt;"t rn
e ven tnq
wo r s h p H p n
Wednesday
ntgl11 f1tb 1c s tudy B p m
MT
OLIVE C HUR CH Long Bo ttom Su nd ay Sc hoo l
10 am wllh W tll ard Pt go 1t
su pt
E&gt;Janq e l Sit e mes sage
eac h Sunday eve ntn g 7 30 by
El d er Ru sse ll Clt n e m tnt s ter
ot th e Apos t o li c F a1th B ble
CARLETON CHURCH Study Wednesday 7 30 p m
K mgsbury Road Gary K 1n g
STIVERSVI LL E
COM
pastor
Sundoy s chool
9 30
MUN IT Y CHURCH - Su nday
even m q worsh ip 7 30
a m
schOO l servtce
10 am
p m
P rayer meet 1n g
Wed
P rayer m ee tmq Thursday 7
nesday 7 30 p m
p m
Sun d ay evenmg serv rce
7 p m
LONG
BOTTOM
ZION C HUR C H OF C HRI ST
C HRISTIAN Mr
Robe r t
Pome r oy
Harr 1s onville
Wya tt pas to r Su nday Sc hoo l
Roa d Mr k.e G trt on
pa st or
su p!
Ronald Osborne B tb l e
Sl eve n St anl ey Sunday school
Sc hool 9 30 a m
p r each ng
s up!
Su nday sc hool
9 30
tO t5 am
Evenmg serv ces
am
mornm g worsh p and
7 30 o m
c ommun to n
10 J O am
HY SELL
RUN
FREE
Sund ay
even n g
you t h
MET H O DI S T C HUR C H Ch r1st ran end e avor 6 30 p m
Rev
Pau l N ev il l e
pa stor
wor sh p serv tCe
7 30 p m
Su n day Sc l1 ool 9 3 0 a m
Wednesday e ven1nq pr a y er
Mor ntn g se rvt ce 10 30 am
mee ltn g and B b l e s tudy 7 30
you t h se r v t ce
6 45 p rn
pm
Evange l tSi tc se rv ce 7 JO p m
ST
JOHN
L. U T H ERAN
P r a y er meettng
Tt1ursday
CHURCH
Pme G rov e
The
7 30 p m
Rev
Wt llt am Mtdd l es warth
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
Pastor Ch ur c h Se rvr ces 9 30
M I SS ION a t Bal d K nob Rev
am s un day Sc hool 10 30 am
E J Gr fl l h ~u p! of chu r ch
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
Rev
L
R
Gluese n c amp
CHRIS T B rb l e Sc hool 9 30 pas tor
R o~e r W ll ltr ed
Sr
am
morntng wor sh tp 10 30
Sunday School s up l
Sunday
am
Sun day evenrng wor sh tp sc ho ol
9 30 a m
praye r
serv1ce 7 p m
cho1r pra c tt ce meet ng Tu esd ay 7 30 p m
Weone sday 7 p m
R ev Je ff
youth mee t mg 6 p m Sunday
R an son Pa stor
l eaders A da Van M eter and
ANTIQU IT Y BAPTI ST G r e tta Su tt le Sunday even ng
R ev l= r ee l and Norr 1s pa s.to r
wo r s t11p
7 p m
throu g h
sc h oo l
10
a n1
S1.,1nday
w nt e r mo nths
Ch ur c t1
se rv ce
7
p m
MT
HERMON -cHURCH
THE
UNITED .
Wedne~day
B bte Study
7 OF

pm

BRETHREN IN CHRIST -

RACINE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev J ohn A
Cof f man
pastor
S unday
Sc hoo l 9 30 a
m
G eral d
Well~ su p r Morntng Wo r sh1p
Sunday e ventng
10 30 a m
wo\'" Sh1p
7 30
Pray e r
m ee t1ng Wednes day 7 30 p

R e v James H Leacn p as l or
Sun day sc h ool
9 30 a
m
Ru sse l l
Spence r
s upt
Wo r sh 1p se rv 1ce 10 &lt;I S a m
E venmg wor s h 1p alternat tn g
wtlh C E at 7 30 p m on
Su nday Praye r rne e t1ng 7 JO
p
rn
Wednes d ay
A llr ed
Wo lf e l ay lead er
WHITES
C HAP E L
CoolVIlle
RO
R ev
Roy
De eter p astor Sunday sc ho ol
9 30 a m
wors11 p se rv tee
10 JO a m
Bt b le study and
p r ayer se rv ce
Wednesday
7 30 p m

m

- Wa l t er P B 1kacsa n p astor
Ronn te Salser Sunday schoo l
su p !
Sunda y sc h ool
9 30
am mo r n 111g wor sh 1p 10 40
Sunday eve n 1n g w o r sh1p 7 30
Wednes d ay eve nm g B1bl e
st u dy 7 30
DANVILLE WESLEYAN R e v Le l on G l as ur e pa sto r
Sund ay Sc hoo l
1f 30 am
youth and 1Un10r yo uth ser
v ce
6 45 p m
eve nt ng
worsh1p
7 30 p m
p r aye r
and p r a rse Wednesday 1 30
pm

SI LVER
RUN
FREE
BAPTIST - R e v Ralph D e an
pa sto r
Sun day Sc h oo l
10
a m
Leon Miller
su p!
Ev en m g se rv 1ce 7 30 p m
P r aye r mee tmg
T hur s da y
7 30 p m
CHESTER C HURCH OF
GOO R ev
Da n Ayers
pa sto r
Sun day sc hoo l
9 30
am
worshtp serv a c~
11
am
even m g serv 1ce 7 30
youth serv1ce Wedne s day
7 30 p m
LANG SV ILLE CHRtSTIAN
C HUR C H
T ed
J ones
pa st or
Sun day sc h oo l
9 30
a m
Roy
S gman
su pt
morn ng
wor Sh i p
10 30
Sun day evenmg se r vtce 1 30
m d w e ek
se rv1ce
W ed
nesday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
THE
NAZARENE -Rev
Ho war d C B l a c k postor Bob
Moore Sun da y Sc h oo l Supt
Sunday Sc hoo l classes l or a ll
ages
9 30 a m
mo rnr ng
wo r shiP 10 45 N YPS Sunday
6 30 p m
ev ange lts t rc se r
v1ce Sunday 7 30 p m M td
week p ra y er meet1 n g
Wed
nesday 7 30 p m
M 1ssro n ary
meeltnq sec ond Wednesday
7 30 p m
UNIT ED
FAITH
NON
DENOMINATIONAl Rev
Robert Sm tfh pas t or Sunday
sc l1 oo l
9 30 a m
class
l ea de r
L eo Hill
worsh t p
serv 1ce 10 30 am
c h urc h
7 30 p m

EDEN

UNITEO

BRETHREN IN CHURIST E l de n
R
Blak e
p asto r
Su nday
Sc h oo l
10 a m
Howard
McCoy
s upt
Morn ng sermon
11 a m
Sunday
n1ght
se rv 1c es
Chr t sltan
E ndeavo r
7 30
p m
Song ser-v tce B p m
Pr eac hmg 8 30 p m
M 1d
Week
Prayer
mee t ang
Wednesday
1 p m
Ray
Adams l ay l ea d er

CHURCH

OF

JESUS

CHRIST
L ocate d
al
Rutland on N ew L1 m a Road
nexl 10 Forest Acre P a rk
Rev
Ray Ro u se
pa s tor
pm
Robert
Musse
r
Sunday
Schoo l
WESLEYAN ( Racine)
, su p l
Sun day sct1ool
lO 30
S unday sc hoo l
10 a m
worshrp 7 30 p m Brble
wor Ship I I am
B1ble study am
Thursday
7 p m
chotr study Wednesday 7 30 p m
Saturday nrgt1t praye r ser
praC t iCe TtiUrSday 8 p m
~e ll owsh1p
su pp er
f1 r st v 1ce 7 30 p m
HEMLOCK
GR OV E
Wednesday
6 30
p m
CHR
ISTIAN
Roge
r Wa t son
u M W fourth Monday 8 p m pastor Ray Wha l ey
s upl
GREA T BEND Wo r sh rp
Mo r n mg worsh tp 9 30 a m
I I a m 2n d and .t t h Sundays
Chu r c h ~ c hoo l
10 30 a 1n
Churc h Sc hoo l 10 a m
young p eo p les meettn g 6 30
LETART FALLS War
even 1ng wo r shtp 7 30
Shtp 10 am
Chur c h SC hOO l 9 p m
p
m
Brb
l e Study Wed n esday
a m
B 1ble s lud y 7 30 p m
7 30 p m
ever y T uesdoy
-v'lt uNION BAPfiST MORNING STAR War
CeG II
Cox
pas t or
sht p 9 30 am
Chur ch Schoo l Rev
Sunday L Sc h oo l s up t
Jo e
10 30 a m M 1d Week Se r11 tee
Sayr e
S"Un day sc hool
9 45
Wedn esday 8 p m
am
Sun day even mg war
MORSE
CHAPEL
Wo r '&gt; htp II a m
lsi and 3rd Sh1 p 7 30 Wed n esday prayer
'unduys
Church Sch oo l
10 and Btbl e s Tud y 7 30 p m

RUTLAND
' RUTLAND CHURCH

ROCI&lt;S THEI~ COFFINS.

I

CHURCH

--""THEPLA"'e; t5Aw Yo u~ 5-IGN AND
CACCED FOR HELP ' \/IE W~RE 5U MMO&gt;JED
IMMEDIATELY TO RE 5CuE YOU

RAD IO

SAFE-

l DOUe.T
VERY MUCH
THAT YOU CA&gt;J
TALK TO HIM.

lVE Gv f A
FEW TH I&gt;JG5
TO S A~ TO
M~ U!JCL E
PLATO

~AT U RA LLY

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z

l

• Q7

ronom}

!J1 tJII

FAIRVIEW

EAST
4 A97J
• QB
t J 109 05
4 16
SOUTH IDI

IV

~1 1t11l ew

THAT 'NAS
'I ~DI,t..,)..l

7 JJ 14

f UCS(/oi~

• Q

'"""~ CAt..t.." 1

M.1rk
I U 2 J 27

• &gt;J o32
• ~ K 83

... 9 J 2

W t&gt;fl flf! s rl &lt;H
11 ( on nthwns
l

l

Nt&gt; 1thc r vu l ner able

What rs home? A blend of memarres and mortar
walls and roof and
smells of breakfast cookrng
a place of rest ai the end of tile day
a leellng of possess ron of belongrng
a place of hales loves anger
center of Ihrngs llvrng

I)

f h111 sd.n
I uke
14 7

ro

\\ esl

2 .&amp;
Pass

Home may be a mansron on a hrll a cramped apartment, a farmhouse
a hovel a new suburban spllt·level the house Father burll
but only to
you and your famrly rs 1t home No one else may call rt that For home rs a
part of your

f ndi! y
Homu n s
1211 17

Sa turda y
Pro., c rbs
25 ~ 1U

ORPHAN ANN IE-SITTING BULL
LfAPit-1'

00€5 THAT
SIGHA"TURE
MEAI'I ~YTHl~G
TO 'IOU7 ' OlD
MASTERPIECE"BAH' IT'S BY THE

LIZARDS 1

Centurres ago a shepherd poei felt thrs Lonely seasons on the grazrng
slopes had taughl hrm to love
to long far
HOME

"THAT
LOOKS LIKE
A PITCHER

Bui he realized thai , through thrs lrfe and beyond the nearness of God
rs part of the sense of home Goodness and mercy would follow hrm all Ihe
days of hrs life And he would dwell rn Ihe house of the Lord forever•

O'VOU!

MIDWAY MARKET Pomeroy Ph 992 2582
BOB'S MARKET Ma son , Ph 773 5721

SAY, WHY DON'T
WE APVERTI$£
F'O~

Bakers or Good Bread
Hun longton , W Va

HU"'PII' I
SliO\llD - I
SAT FOR. TlfAT
PORTRAIT-

YEAH

AN ' A

SPEAKING OF SIGNS,

DISHWASHER,

A COOK'

"100 '

•,

DUDLEY'S

Ph 949 5772

Pomeroy

Ph 992 3486

100 E Maon

Moddleport, 0
Gallopohs, 0

59 N Second 51
46 Court St

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
We Frll

992 295S

All

Doctors Prescnpt 1ons
Pomeroy

.

You J€S' f1nds

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT
220 E Maon

Louts W Osborne
Pomeroy

th rs

pulls m!

all
r rqht?

1hei.j
happen1n· 'em off at
now
th' pass'
Joel?

What"s

th1n', Ruf:us~':-~~
?&amp;~~

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

Keepsake Dr amon d Rrngs

212 E

Is

a spot an'

Arn'i no brq

Ph 992 2178

Pomeroy

K&amp;C JEWELERS
Ph 992 3785

Mam Sf • Pomeroy

RUTH'S MARKET

Bakers ol Gay 90 Bread
Moddleport
Ph 992-3030

MARK V STORE

'

I Forme rl y Sad1e"s Market)
Ph 992 -3986

®

p

-:-.LI ICA
ABNE ~

course'
Th e answer os that the laws of
co ntr ac t bndge spec ofo ca ll y
prohobo! suc h a bod There are
varoou s pe naltoes but the one
really se roous one that would
requore a playe r who ha s bod
e ogh t hea rts over seven s pades
to b1d seve n notrump ha s been
lefl oul on the theory that 1t
would be

cruel and t nhuma n

puno s hment
roo you ha ve a questton for
1t1e Jacot,ys? Wnte Ask the
Jaco iJ ys
ca re o f th 1s
new s paper The most 1n
teres t1ng quest1ons wtll be
used u1 th1 s co lumn and
wnters w1ll rec e1ve cop1es of
JA COBY M O DERN I

Yesterday's Answer
16 Break
bread
19 Ceremony
21 Vocal

composotoon
22 Unfathng
23 Crossed
home
plate
24 - Sunda)
Morm ng'

26 Make
ca llous
28 Gaggle ' s
btrd.s
32 Celebes
ox
33 Betake
oneseU
35 Ltttle
Dorothy
36 Thnce
( preftx)

W1th Me"

CPEN~D ON~ 'r- IT

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

700 E Matn

Pomeroy

Doal992-2101

Hell ' Dealer

TH' RIGHT ONE 2

26

WAf\JTS ME TO RI'SK MAH LIFE
AG IN FO' '$25.00- CALL ME -

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
Mrddleport

Locust Sf
Doal992 5248

RAY'S T.V. &amp; HOME
ENTERTAINMENT tENTER
Sa les- Quasar- Se rvic e

Ph 949-3151

Rae me

Ractne

" The Fr1endly Folks"

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION
Ph 949 9591

Rae m e

GOEGLEIN READY MIX
Dlal992 3284

Moddleport

....- - - - - - - - -......- - BUT YOUR MOM AND I UNDERSTAND
EACH OIHER SHE KNOWS MY
LI~E IS !HE SEA .• AND HERS
IS HERE WIIH HER FAMILY;
HOME AND BUSINE551

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
SHES A WONDERFUL
LADY, WENDY, BUT I
AXYDLBAAXR
COU LDN'T GIVE
Is LONGFELLOW
HER "THE KIND
One letter somply stands for anothe r In th os sample A 11
UeE 5HE
NEEDS AND
used for the three L's. X for the two O's. etc Songle lellers
DESERVES I /-:=! apostrophes. the length and formall on of the wo rds are all
honts Eaeh day the code lette rs are dofferent

0"'

Pomeroy , Ohro

p

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

VBMN

JCA

p

DC

SM

H Z

H

H

GHAOME,

EMKCEZMN

SVD

L T H-

Moddleport . Ohoo
'

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

Meo~s

County Branch

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN CO.
'
Pomeroy
Ph 992-3863
29,6 W. Second

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.
, . 1100 E.

The Finest m Mob1le Homes
Pomeroy
Maon
Ph . 992-7034

BIBLE

WILKINSON'S
Small Engine Sales &amp; Service
Mrddleporl
Ph 992 -3092

498 Locust 51

.

GAUL'S MARKET

1 oo---11 Takes a Thief 4, Children's Film FestivalS, 10,
Speaking with Your Hands IS . Commanders 33
r Jl}---(ar and Track 3. Soul Train 6, other People,
Other Places 13 To Be Announced 15
2 oo---Bonanza 3, To Be Announced 4, 15. VIewpoint 8,
In the Know Al l Stars 10 Bill Dance Outdoors 13,
Film 33
2 15---To Be Announced 3
2 31)-F isherman 6. Ebony Altair 8, Bands tand 10,
Movie "'Circus World " 13 Valiant Years 33
3 oo---Baseba ll Warm up 4, 15. Let' s Make a Deal 6
Hambletonlan 8,10
3 31).-WIId Wild West 6 U S Open Tennis 8.10, To Be
Announced 33
4 oo---Maklng Things Grow 33
4 30-Greatest Sports Legends 6, NFL Championship
Games 13, Let' s Grow a Garden 33
5 oo---Bonanza 3, Wide World of Sports 6, 13, The
Romagnolls' Table 33
s 31)-To Be Announced 33
6 QO---News 3, 10, Grear Day at the Fair 4. Lawrence
Welk 8, , God has the Answer 15 Catch 33 33
6 30-NBC News 3 15 ABC New s 13 , News 4.6 , CBS
News 10, Lilies Yoga &amp; You 33
7 oo---Treasure Hunt 3 Lawrence Welk 4,15 .. Hee
Haw 6,8 , Firing Line 33 $25,000 Pyram id 10, Movie
' Is Paris Burning? " 13
7 31).-Jeopardy 3 Animal World 10
8 oo---Emergency 3, 15, Nlghl Slalker 6· Hour of Stars
4, All In lhe Fmlly 8 10 Philadelphia Folk Festival
33
8 30-Big Eddie 8,10
9 oo---NFL Football 3,4 15, SWAT 6. Mary Tyler Moore
8 10, No Hones lly 33
9 31)-Bob Newhart 8,10 Session 33
9 50-Movie "' Hombr e" 13
10 oo---Adam s of Eagle Lake 6 Dick Cavett 8,10 ,
Handfuls of Ashes 33
10 31).-Monty Python 's Flying Circus 33
11 oo---ABC News 6 News 8,10
11 15---Movle Rendezvous at Midn ight " 6
11 31)-Movle ' Ship of Fools' 8, Movie ' Home from
the Hill " 10
12 QO---News 3,4 Poll ee Surgeon 15
12 lO-News 13
12 31)-Movle " Wild and Wonderful • 3. Movie "'The
Last Sunsel ' 4 Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 15
1 oo---Don Kirshner' s Rock Concert 6
1 31).-Movle "Anything Can Happen' 10
2 30-Movle " Buys Riley s Bac k In Town" 4
3 31)-Movle A Man Called Dagger " 10
4 31)-Movle "'Out of S1ghl "' 4

Chester, Ohoo

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Natoonwlde Ins urance Co of Columbus 0
307 Sprong Ave
Pom~roy
Doal992 2318

jf

I
i

TELL HE~ I ONL'f
CHAR6E FIVE DOLLARS

SCORPIO (Oc1 24-Nov 22)

For Saturday Aug 30 1975

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Th1 s s one o f th ose d ay~ wl1en

21) You re lucKy 1o day t hroug h

Yes 1e rday you couldn t rely
u p on lr tends to back you To
day you r nfluence w11h you r
pee r group s &gt;Je r y stro ng

CANCER (June 21 July 221
One who 15 tmportan t to
someth1ng you re tnvolved 1n
w II be look n q ou l fo r your
wel fare 1oday Rela x The
bases are covered

LEO (J uly 23 -Aug 23) A frien d
has sorne valuabl e 1nformatro n
for yo u 1oday H o weve r when
you f tr st hear 1 you won 1 t ully
apprecaa1e ts w o rt h

VIRGO (Aug 23 -Sepl 221 To
day wtll work ou t ve ry advan.
tageously for you mater1 ally
an d rep u ta tron w 1se Luck sac
t ng fo r you beh1nd the scenes

LIBRA (Sep1

;

pose yo u II sh are w tt h a cohort
Just be s ure you r arms are syn
chrontzed
Your hand1ness ca n save you a
l atr p 1ec e o t c l1ange today
Yo u II s alv a ge s omethrng
o th e r s mt gh t 11av e thrown
away

23-0cl

23)

Someth ng w orthw h ile IS to be
ga1nec1 tod ay lr o rrl' an enter

.

1975

6 30-TV Classroom 8 Treehouse Club 10, Almanac
13
7 oo---Salurday Report 3, Matters of Life 6 Treehouse
Club 8 U S Farm Reporl 10. Kentucky Afield 13
7 31)-Jabberwocky 3 Farm Front 4 Eddie Saund&amp;rs
6 Abbott &amp; Coslello 8 Men from COS I 10, Korg
13 Sesame Sf 20
8 oo---Addam s Family 3,4 15 Yogi ' s Gang 6 13 , My
Favorlle Martians 8 Popeye 10
8 30--Wheelle &amp; lhe Chopper Bunch 3,~,15, Bugs
Bunny 6, 13. Speed Buggy 8, Mister Rogers 20
9 oo---Emergency Plus 4 3 4 IS Hong Kong Phooey
6, 13, Jeannie 8.1 0 Sesame Sf 209 30-Run Joe
Run 3,4 15 Adventures of Gilligan 13. Big Blue
Marble 6 Pebbles &amp; Bamm Bamm 8. 10
10 oo---Land ollhe Lost3,4 15, Devlin 13 Jabberwocky
6 Scooby Doo 8.10 Elec Co 20
10 30--Sigmund end he See Monsters H, 15 Shezem
8 10, Lassie 6, 13 , Mister Rogers 2020
II QO--- Pink Panther 3 ~ 15 Super Friends 6, 13, Valley
of the Dinosaurs 8, 10, Sesa m e Sl 20
11 31)-Siar Trek 3,4, 15, Hudson Brothers Renle
Dazzle Show 8, 10
12 QO---Jetsons 3 .~ 15 These are the Days 6, 13 Harlem
Globelrotters 8,1 0 Mister Rogers 20
12 31).-Soul Train 3 American Bends lend 6,13 Go
4, 15, Fa I Albert 8,10

You w1ll beneli t today from a
con!tden 11a l an&lt;l ngement well
screenf!'d fr o m pe r sons rot
darect1y 1nvolved

WINNIE

1 JU,

6 00-Summe-r Semessfer 10

TAURUS (April 20·May 20)

CRYPTOQUOTES

111 CouriSI

Two Lost Worlds " 10

GEMINI (May 21 June 20)

Pomerov 1 Ohto

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Movie

1 15---Wide World Spec ial 13
2 30-Star Trek 4
2 45---News 13
J 30-Movle F lully' 4
I 31).-Movle The Road to HonQ Konq ' •

you 11 be tar more ade pt at
ha nd l1ng larger tssues ! han
smulle r ones Th nk b g

The Store w1th A Heart
Ph 949 3342

'

POWEU'S SUPER VALU

Movie "A ll the Fine Young Cannibals" 8, Movie
" Shock Treatment" 10, Janak! 33
12 45--- News 13
1 QO---Midnlght Special 3 4,6 15 Wide World Special 6,

- Berntce Bede Osol

Wagered
Ethioptan
tttle
Before
Gresham' s

RACINE FOOD MARKET

Ftn e Food &amp; Serv tce

Lena of

50
Eyneg

Ph 949 5961

Thord Sf

,

r&gt;r- FULL 0
WE'""""'
J EWELS " - WAS-IT
1

YOUR LU CKY STAAS
IT WA S HERE '5
YOUR CHECK-

Sammy &amp; Company 6,

11 3()---Johnny Carson 3 4 15

AstroGrapt-l

"- Dance
- AH
~LI~L~====~~~~-;~~T\~~~~Ii~~~~~~rr~;;~0C~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---25
YOU CAN THANK
GCO'BYE:: FATSON .,-ANY TIME YO'

Middleport , Ohoo

Syracuse

w

Pass

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 - Rtllin g1 Latvtan
ton P lace
capttal
40 - hog
5 Pat , tap
8 Redact
DOWN
9 Extremely
I Actual
happy
2 At leos ure
13 Oklahoma
3 Approve
Cjty
(3 wd.s )
14 Esprtt de
4 One corps
llme
15 Actor,
i 2wd.s J
Chris5 Break m
topher rank
16 Schollander 6 By
of
oneseU
swunmmg
7 Exclude
fame
10 Accept
, 17 Egypttan
13 wd.s)
earth god
11 Ennoble
18 Unongmal 12 Argue
20 - Mane
pro and
con
Sa mt
21 Backbone
2.
22 Old card
game
23 On the
Beach'
a uthor
24 Retinue

Two Locations
GrocerieS &amp; Gen eral M e r c hand1 se

A Monnesota reader as ks If
my opponents bod a grand slam
ca n I bod eoght a nd play the
h a nd t h e re ' Doub l e d of

WI-!AT

MAYBE WE SHOULD
WOULroUH
CHANGE "THAT ONE
C~NGE
UP "THE~ ! ~-"- IT TO 7

•

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

South

ALLEY OOP

HEINER'S BAKERY

2 Conven1ent Localtons

~

I&lt; ast

By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby
The unluc ky e xpe rt had us
cornered aga on Thos tome he
was a ll smo les He chortled I
thonk I ve fonally broke n my
Jinx
He showed us the North and
South ca rd s a nd saod You are
on four hearts after a two club
overca ll by West He leads the
kong and ace of dubs East
echoes so he contonues wo th the
Whoc h one of dumm) s
IUIIIIU &gt; dO YO U ruff With '
We loo ked !he ha nd over
refully It was a close c hotce
kon g would be th e "onnong

With the hope ot wrll, rn some measure, foster and help sustain that
which osgood rn famoly and communoty life, this feature os sponsored by
• the busrness forms and organizations whose names appear below
FRESH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS

~orth

Pass
Pa ss
Openr ng lt.:ad - K ...

HARTFORD CHURCH OF

CHURCH, L eta rt W Va R t
1
Rev
George Ho sc har
pas tor
Sunday Sc hoo l 9 30
a m Pra ye r and B1ble study
7 30 p m
Co tt age Prayer
Se rvt c:e Tu es day
lD a m
WorSh iP Se r v1 ce ' Thu r sday
7 30 p m

... Q 8
\\ EST
4 1042
• 97
. 42
4 ,\ K J 10 &gt;4

ft /()

Mnnd

pl ay 1f Ea s t held Singleton
queen or queen s ma ll the 10
pl ay roght of II est held eother of
those holdtng s It was far more
lik ely 1f hea rts broke 3 I for
East !o be long so we rephed
The ten spotos the percentage
play
He sa od
I figur ed that out
alsp 11 was n t muc h better than
the kong plav Then I though!
abou l mv regul a r bad luck a nd
dec oded lo go agaonst th e
pe rcentag e I played dumm y s
k ong led lo w fone s.ed a nd
ma de my contract

29

20,33 , Movie "Shell Game' 1u
8 31}---(hlco &amp; the Man 3 , ~, 15, Wall Street Week 20,33
9 oo---Rocklord Flies 3,~, 15, Movie "Search lor the
Gods" 6, Se lling of Abe Lincoln 1976 20, Wash ington
Debates 33
9 31)-Movle "Kale McS hane·· 10
10 oo---Pollce Woman 3 4,15 - News 20 , Paul Nuchlms
33
II oo---News 3, 4,6,8, 10,15 Movie " The Wild One" 13,
ABC News 33

SA I U ru)A Y, AUGv;,

Unlucky Expert plays his luck

SiJJl(l.n

Moddleport, Ohoo

CHRIST 111 Chr 1s fl an Un10n The Re&gt;J Wlllram Cam pb el l
pastor
Sunday Sc hool 9 JO
a m
J ames Hughes su p !
evenm g se r v1ce
7 30 p m
Wednesday even 1n g prayer
mee trng
7 30 p m
Youth
prayer servrce each Tuesday

WIN AT BRIDGE

YOU HAVE NOT
Hi?AI&lt;D THE
NEWS.

• Kl86 5
¥ K1064

BLUE &amp; GRAY RESTAURANT

SOUTHERN

MASON ASSEMBLY OF
GOD Dudd 1ng L an e Mason
w Va Chester T ennant
Pasto r
Sunday Sc h ool 9 45
a m
Childr en s Church 6 &lt;15
p m
Yo un g Peop l es Se n11c e
6 .4 5
p m
Evangel she
Serv rce 7 30 p m
W..ome n s
Mrss onary Council 10 am
ftr st and l h 1rd Tu es days
Pra ye r an d B 1bl e S tudy
We dn esday 7 JO p m

YOu ~RE

NO- !' JT

8 oo---Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, 15, NCAA Pre Season Report
6 NFL Footbal l 8 Washngton Week In Review

NORTH

Ph . 992 5130

MASON FIRST BAPTIST Secon d and Pomeroy Sts
St an Cr a tg pas t or
Sun d ay
school
9 &lt;~5 a m
wors h p
serv 1ce
II am
tra tn1ng
un 10n
6 30 p m
even 1ng
worsh tp se rv rce
7 30 p m
M td we e k p raye r serv1ce
Wed n esday 7 30 p m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST P 0 Box 487 Mrller
St
Mason
w Va Sun day
B rb l e Study 10 am
W o r s hrp
l l am and 7 p m B tbl e Stud y
Wednesday 7 p m
Voca l
mU SIC

pm

OF COuR,;E
NO DOUBT YO U
W l5 ~ TO NOTIF Y
"iOUR FAMILY

OH THANK
"IOU CA PTAI&gt;J
COUL D WE
U5 E YO UR

OF

BAPTIST - Co r ne r o f Seco nd
and A nder son Mason Pa st or
Walter Cloud Su nday sch ool
9 AS a m
wo r ship servtee 11
am and 7 JO p m
Weekly
B tb1 e study Wed n esday 7 30

Perspective on the News 33

CAPTAIN EASY

107 Sycamore Sf

MASON COUNTY

FIRST

FRIDAY , AUGUST 29, 1975
Smart 15, Elec Co 20,33
6 oo---News 3.~ , 8. 10, 13, 15, Sesame St 20, Jean
Shepherd's America 33
6 30-- N BC News 3,4 15. ABC News 13 Andy Grlttlth 6
CBS News 8, 10, Jody s Body Shop 33
7 oo---Truth or Cons 3 4, Bowllhg lor Dollars 6 WCHS
TV Report 8, Avlallon Wealher 20,33, News 10
Movie "Giant"" 13. Phil Donahue 15
7 30-Porler Wagoner 3, Pop Goes lhe Country 4 8,
New Can did Camera 6 Evening Edlllon with
Martin Agronsky '10 Treasure Hunl 10 Black

CHRIST
Rod
Kasle r
pasto r V H Bra l ey Sunday
schoo l sup!
Sun d ay sc hool
9 30 am
wors h1 p se r v1 ce
and co mmun on 10 30 am
yout h meellflg 6 p m
Sunday
eve n n g se rvt ce
7
re g u l a r
boa r d m ee ltng
thrrd Sa t ur
day 7 p m
I?UTLAND
COMMUNITY
CHURCH -S unday
Sc h oo l
9 30 a m
Wo r sh1p serv tce 11
a m
We dn eas dy
praye r
meet 1ng
7 30 p m
Sunday
n1ght worsh rp 7 30 p m

RUTLAND

·-------~--

5 30-News 6. Andy Grllllth 8. Hogen &gt; neroes 13, Get

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

TH E NAZARENE Rev
L loyd 0 G r mm Jr
pasto r
Sunday sc hool
9 30 am
wo r sh rp se rv1 ce
10 30 am
b r oa d cas t l1 ve OYe r WM P O
young people s se rv tce 6 45
evang e l! SI IC SNVICe 7 30 p m
Prayer m ee ttng W ednesday
7 30
p m
M tss wnary
mee t 1ng
7 30 p m
f t rst
Wed n esday o f month

r=--~......::......___,- 1

AS LOW AS
I ' LL MAK!i THOSE

Rae me

OF

r-_.....--------~ ·

'

ALL SHE CAN PAl{
15 FIFW-CENT5

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 -Dec
per sons w 1t h wh om you s hare
a
close
one to o n e
rela t1o n sh1 p especta ll y 1n yo ur
soc al lite

CAPRICORN (Dec

22 -Jon

19) H el p w ill arr1 ve tn lhe ntck
o f It me so don I fret You won 1
be sl u c k wtth a c ho re you
w e r en t look ng forward to do
ng alone

AQUARIUS (Jan 20.Feb 19)
You 1t be rn a ver y soC iable
fr ame of m1nd tod ay especr aHy
lo wa r d even1 ng Brrgh t lights
mu stc and acttv rt y wr ll be yo ur
cu p or tea

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
You re gong to dtg 1nto you r
purse today lor som etht ng to r
the tamlly The money w 11 br
1n g olea su re to all

A

Your

~Birthday
Aug 30 1975
You r c areer prospec ts are €)(·
lr emely p rom 1s1ng thiS comt ng
yea r A rr se n p os rt1 0n s Ilk. e ly
It w 1ll be acco mpa n red by many
tmpo rtant t rrnge benefits
.._f- WSP AI'E II F :\'TE HPRlSE ASSN 1

FOR FIFT'I'·CENTS I'LL

CLEAN OUT TJ.!E 61.DYE
COMPA!i:TMENT

/
I

�I I
·I:

I '

IQ ~ 'Fhe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

o,,, Friday, Aug. 29, 1975

Jtll~l1~® ~4c.d·M-'~~ For

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each squ are, to
fOrm fo ur ordin a r y wurd~ .

DEADLINES
S

PM

Day

Befo r e

Pub

lo c al ion
M ond ay Dcadl•n c 9 a m
C orr f'C !t on~
accept~ d un ! •l 9 am

Cnnce ll at1on
1/'.'tl l be

f o r Day o f Pub lrc arion

REGULATIONS

Th e Publi she r rese rv es the

YARDOP

t

RA T ES
For Want A d Se r vice
'l c enrs per word one tn ser tt on

CHALUN I

I I V:)l
:::========
L':"~:=·=~
r

I

I

RIVET

co n scc uttv e tn s rtt ons

Now arrange the drcled lette rs
to form the Hurprise a n swer, a."
SU!":Kt'sted by the above &lt;:artoon .

ID

Prill! die SURPIIISI ANSWER here
Jumt,1,· ~ .

ARRAY

a

MIDDAY

XI 1 I ]

GOPHE R

"'•""''.-: / 11 f!11 , /1/ Hir /1 i t \ 111/ ~fml l ~ monlt~ r /m I'll It, r

;.,,d, lu /1, rtf

lit~

fard Sale

YAR D . Baseme nt and Por c h
Sate s tarttng A ugus· 27
throu g t1 Sept 17 Everyday
excep t Su n day . An tt QUes ,
d tshes
f urn1 ·ure. bed r m
sets and m isc
a dult s'
c h ild r en's
an d
infant
c loth ing Sn oes some n ew
n ew
bed
s h eets
and
bl ankets. Blue show er st all
with seat fibe rg la ss, wllt! e
l avatory , grrl 's bike, o th e r
items too numerou s to
menl tOn Fo llow S1g ns from
L angsvtl t e,
J
m tl e fr om
T urner' s Sto r e on Co Rd . 10.
a 27 tf c
1

o/1,, r - MARRIAGE

Pets For Sale
Pt'krnqe".r• p tJP~I l"-&gt;
PllOn r&gt; P' P l('cl Sdl11 . 6 .'',

1\ f.. C R f'q
'!,

1 ',

SOlO
ll 19 I } t l

AK(
GE: r.:/1:1,1N
Sh e ph erd
pupptes, qood olood ltne s .
qent l e d tspo si tion . worm ed
and r ea dy to QO Phon e 9? i
5623
8 2 ,j 61 l

AKC R eg . P oodles. two blu e
and 1 choco l a te , 1 apnea!
Phon e (3 0-1 ) 887 3705
B 27 l7!p

..
;; GET YOUR MAN WITII A

''~

YARD SALE. Sunday and
Monday , Route 7 Pom e r oy ,
b elween Tal l Tt mbers and
She nan g Sprtngs
8 28 2tp

#Want Ad

76 ce nt s p e r word S tx LOn
~L'&lt;.U I • V L'

lf1 SC rltOn &lt;;

r Per Cen t o, sco unt o n pa•d

tid ~
d

rl

,1nd ad s

paid

wit hin

10

y &lt;;

CARD OF THA NK S
&amp; Ob ttu ary
'1&gt;2 00 for 50 word m ttlr.11um
Each a ddtltona t word 3c
. BLIND ADS
1\ ddil io nal 25 c Cha r ge per
i\ dv e rrrsem ent
OFF I CE HOUR S
8 3 0c~m lo S OOprn Du rl y
8 3 0 u n1
to
12 00 N oon
Satur-day

Notice
P IA N O Tuning , Lan e Daniel s,

Phone 992 2082
8 -28 -261p
R OO M
A ND
BOAR D
Prtvfl t c n tr co n dll toned
r oom , phone . TV
a ll
rnea l s tcundry p l us many
ex tru s Writ e Mr s . M
J
Mtller Box l OS Pomeroy.
O tli O
8 1 76 t p

Room an d t:3 oard
ROOM AND BOAR_D for
sen •or ct!•ze n s Low tn come
living very n •ce Phone 992
3509
8 24 261 c

Wanted
CAS H patd t o r all makes and
models crf mobtle homes
Phon e area co de 614.42 3
"9 53 1
.4 13 li e

PUBLIC NOTICE
August 28, 1975
The amount of Local Gove rnm e nt Ohio
Income Ta x Monies to be allocated to the
various sub-divi s ion s of Meigs County
Budget Commission at th e completion of
these meetings held in the County Auditor 's
office on August 4, 1975, showing per cent of
allocation, also the actual yearly amount is
as follows :
Townships- 30 Pel .
(as to Township Road Ml
Bedford
8 .16 Pet.
3672. 00
Chester
12 .17 Pet .
5476.50
columbia
7.31 Pet .
3289 .50
Lebanon
10.02 Pet.
4509.00
Letart
4.92 Pet .
2214.00
Olive
10.06 Pet .
4527.00
Orange
8.02 Pet .
3609.00
Rutland
9.21 Pet .
4144.50
Salem
9.15 Pet .
4117.50
Salisbury
6.03 Pet .
2713.50
Scipio
8.08 Pet .
3636.00
Sutton
6 .87 Pet .
3091.50

Wanted To Buy
P L AY E ~pia n o, need not ber n
work .ng cond •t •o n A l so.
wan te d ptano ro l ls Phon e
]I)] 562 5
8 26 6tc
.JLD turn tt u re , 1ce boxes ,
b rass bed s. o r co mplete
households . Wri t e M
0
Mi ll er , R!. 4, P o meroy,
Ohro Call 992 7760
10 7 74
tor
r 9oJ
Mu s tang. 6 cyt
m anual
shtfl . P hone 992 318 1.
8 -27 -4t c

TRAN SI'tl1I S~ ION

Employment Wanted
WILL. DO odd iobs, mow in g,
haulin g, painting or roof ing .
P h one 992 7409
8· 28-6tc
W ILL dO t:la b ySilling Ill my
hom e. 5 d ays p e r week
Monday thr o u gh F r1day ,
any age limi t. Phon e 949
340 5. Racine, Ohto .
B 26 6t c
t RY
tro o rtng ,
cetl tng &lt;tnd pa n e lt ng Phone

~1\ f·&lt;f·'EN

99 7 ?15 9

H I ? ?6tc

100.00 Pet.
$45,000.00
Corporations- 30 Pet.
(as per capita 1970)
Pomeroy
36 Pet .
16.200.00
Middleport
37 Pet .
16,650.00
Racine
07 Pet .
3,150.00
Rutland
09 Pet .
4,050.00
Syracuse
11 Pet.
4,950 .00
100 Pet.
County Government 40 Pet.
Total

$45,000.00
$60,000 .00
$ 150,000.00

Howard E. Frank
Meigs County Auditor
Clerk of Budget Commission

RUTLAND
BARGAIN CENTER
SEPTEMBER

Clearance Sale
Our Present Stock Used Furniture

10.00
269.95
100.00
139.95
5.00
3.50

2 Pc. living Room Suite
4 Pc. Velvet Sectional Suite

Sofa Bed and Chair
Love Seat , Traditional
Green Chair, now only

(New) Model112 Vaporizer
12- Good New nd Used
Bedroom Suites
14 Good Used Refrigerators
9 Good Used Desks
:

139.95 up
39.95 to 269 .95
19.95 up

Several Good U sed Chests &amp; Drawers
Arvin EJec . Heater, fan &amp; thermo .
Portable Washer &amp; Dryer, pair
Speed Queen Wringer Wa sher
Large Warm Morning Coal Heater
Gas &amp; Fuel Oil Heaters
Bookcases, Kitchen Cabinets , Cedar

25 .00 up
12 .00
lilO .OO
lil9 .95
225.00
25 .00 up
Chests , Bunk

Beds, Luggage, Bedspreads, Lamps, Mattresses, Nile
Stands, Many Other Items.

'

Rutland Furnit ure
742-4211

Mobile Homes for Sale
196 S HILL CRE ST , 10 x - SO ,
\7,495
r or
mor e
m
format •On ca ll 9-19 52 61
a '16 6tc

4 Dr. H. T., air, P.S., P. B., red. black viny l top. , •• ,

For Rent

Auto Sales

Rutland,

o.

See Herb, Dave or Mike Grate.
Also Gene Smith
9PEN UNTIL 9 P.M. SATURDAYS

WILL ba by Si t Ill
Phone 9n 76 47

my hom e .

a 24

7tc

REMO DELIN G.
Pi umbirlg .'
heat ing and al l t ypes of
general
r epair .
Work
guaran t eed
20 year.s ex '
pc ri ence
P hon e 992 240 9
5-1 If~.

Yard Sale
PORCH sale , A ug 28 -30. 9:30
am 6 :3 0 p.m . C loth i n g.
men's. women's. som e large
s tze men ' s c l othin g, misc .
a rti c l es
378 Second St ,
Pomeroy, O h io
8 -24 -Sic
FAMILY Yard Sale,
F r i da y and Sat urday at
Ellen Tucker residence , 112
mile up Hysell Run Road off
124 toward Ru tlan d .
B-28 -2tc

FOUR ~

NOTICE OF PUBUb SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CON ·
CERN '

1966 GMC Van. good runn ing
cond i tton
Phone 992 2082
8-28 -3tp
19 70RAMBLER RE BE L .4d r
au to matic
tran s mi ss i o n ,
p s . phone 997 220 1
8-2 8-6fp
19 GML' to n ptckup tru c k
s t1a rp and •n ver y good
c ond •' •on Pri ce \ 71 350 Ca ll
f.l9 ? ?9 1'/ or see &lt;, t evc rlurton
8 I / I 7 1p

or Sale

PENNZOIL

by Land Contract
Office Butlding with 700 sq.
ft . of spa ce located on 107
Syca more St ., Pomeroy ,
Would sell on !.and contract
or renl. Gerald Re uter ,
Phone 992-2490 .

for Sale

for Sale
LET us se r vice your Yolk s
wagen
r euso nub l e rate s
M 1dd t ep or t P cn n zor l. North
~ cco nd Stre e t , Mtddleport
Phon e '19 7 99 73
8 19 ?6tc

for Rent

•

LASALLE

HOTEL . MID
DL~PORT . OHIO . ROOMS

a 24 61c

U P. S PE C IA L RATE S
BY WEEK O R MONTH

ONE COUCH ; t wo bedroom
tra iler , p ipe ideal for gates;
good hay
Phone 992 -7791
after 4 p m
8· 28-Jtc

TV AIR CO ND IT IONI'N G.
a 26 -26tc
------- -------A RO OM S and

Rutland
5858 .

area

19 !7 A RROW Campe r , pho n e
99 ? 5J68
8 I S ] 6t p
CANN I NG tom atoes . gre-en
and red p e pp ers
Cle- l and
Fa rm .), Geral dtn e C le l and ,
Ra c tn e P h one 9d9 d1?1
a 19 He
MODERN
wa rnut stereo
radto conso l e, am f m radio ,
.1 spee d c hang er
Balance
s10 1 7'1 or terms. Ca ll 991
396')
8 1? tfc

Stegler &amp; Monogram

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves
All sizes on hand , prices
start at $324.69.
- 1 Wood Burning Stove

Real Estate For Sale
SIX room house at 842 Pearl
St.. M iddlepor t, w -w c in sulated ,
paneled,
new
c eiling s, etc. Phone 992-2022 .
8-27 -7tc

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

NEAR
Pomeroy, new
3
bedroom , 11h baths , carport.
mud rm .• utility, sun deck ,
large liv ing room , k itc hen dining
area ,
pan e led ,
r e frigerator and Tappan
range included . Also, will
·help f i nance. Phone 992 -7790
after 6 p .m .
8278t c
-

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

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

TRAILER for r en t. 1., m i l e Off
R t 14 3 on K i ngs bu ry Rd
E ith er furnish e d or un
furn ished . Phon e 74/ 31?3
-- 8 70 t?t c
COU NT RY
Mobrl e Home
P a rk , R I 33, te n mi les north
of Pom e roy Large lots wrth
con crete pat io9' , Sid ewa lks ,
runn e r s. an d o ff s tr ee t
~a r ktn g
Phone 9lil2 7479
1231 tfc:

Noti ce i s he reby given that
on Se ptember 8th, 1975, at
10 : 00 A M a public sale wilr
b e hel d at
Smith Nelsor
Motor s, In c , Porn e roy, Ohio,
to sell for cash th e following
colla te ra l, to wit : 1970 Buick , 2
dr .
H.
T .,
Ser
No . ~U RNI S HEO
apartment
435370H 198806, said co ll at eral
adults only in Middleport
Phone 992 3874.
be i ng held to sec ure an
o bl i gation ar ts ing un der a
3 25 tfc
r etail i nstalment security
agreement held by General
Motors
Acceptance
Cor porat ion as se c ured party
Sa id publi c sale is to be con ducted according to the taw s
of the Sta te of w . Va. General
Motor s
Acceptance
Cor
poration reserv es t he right to
b id at this sale .
The co l lateral is presently
st or ed an d m a y be seen at
Smit h Net son Mo to rs, Inc .,
Po meroy, Ohio .

8·28-61p

1976 STAR CRAFT Trailers N '
Fold Downs in stock, all 1975
units cost plus SSO . Camp
Conley Slarcraft Sales , Rt .
62, N . of Pt Pleasant, W .

Va.

8·28-2tc

STEREO ' R A DIO ,
am -fm ,
console, .4 speed changer .
Balance S101 66 or terms .
Call 992 -3965
8 26-lfc

949-4917 or 992-5906.

1974 STARCRA F t fota -aown
camper with awning , sleeps

8. $1,900 Phone 992 25 14
a 26 61c

1976 CHRYSLER boats in
stock at 1975 pr i ce s. Also,
Chrysler fishing
boats .
Seve ra I used boats for sate
Longfellow Motors , Ravens
wood, w . Va Phone (304)
273 -3594
8 26 6tc
CA NNING t o mato es. Pick
your own. Also , melons,
A ndr ew Cros.s, Letart Falls,
Ohio Phone 247 -2852 .
8-26 -61c

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
Now under construction. 3
bedroom, rec. room, bath &amp;
112 , doUble garage, bi-level
home situated on an acre of
ground with all utilities, on

the Wild Wood

Estates.

located on flatwoods road ,
between Route 7, and 33 .

Will be ready to sell in 6
wks ., by owner.
George HobsteHer
Owner

Phone 985-4186

Beautiful Village Strout RealtJ
Manor

GENERAL MOTORS
ACCEPTANCE COR PORATION

( 8 ) 29, ltc

- - --- - - - - - - - - - -- NOTI C'E OF S A"LE The re al esta t e o f t h e l a t e
O rba E
St oul. D ece ased,
which is sit ua te d in th e Village
of
H ar r isonv il le,
Meigs
County, Ohio, will be offer ed
fo r sa l e at the offi ces of Crow ,
Crow &amp; Porter, At tor n eys at
L aw, Pomeroy , Oh io , at 1 00
PM
on Wednesday , Se p tembe r 3r d , 1975 Th e pr ope rty
may be seen by con ta c ting the
un ders ign ed at T he Fa rmer s
Ban k &amp; Sa v in gs Company,
Pomeroy , Oh ro T erm s of sa t ~
are c ash , an d t h e pr Ope rt y wilt
b e so ld subrect to the l i en f o r
r eal estate t axes f or 1975. T h e
right is r ese r ve d to r e j ec t any
and all bids

Theron Johnson.
Executo r of t he
L ast Wil l and Te s tam ent
of Orba E Stou t ,
Oe c easf)d
Crow , Crow &amp; Port er ,
A llorneys for Ex ec utor
fa 1 22 , 29. 2tc

Now Leasing For

NO. 133 - 3 BR older home

In town. Walking distance

of school &amp; stores, fully
insulated ,
new
•alum.
windows &amp; storm windows.

glassed in front &amp; back
porches. nice large rooms,

Immediate Occupancy
Located on Third &amp; Mill in Middleport,
these all electric suites, are carpeted with
free trash pickup and are convenient to
downtown.
MONTHLY LEASES FROM:

•1 04.00 Plus Electric For
One-Bedroom Apts.

bath &amp; half, $19,000,00.

S EW I NG
.I

608 E . , I
M.AIN
_
POMERO-Y.
5 MtLES OUT ON RT. 143
- NEW - 2 B.R.. bath.

o

ni ce
kitc h en,
full
basemen!, n rce rec. R. All
electric. ca rp ort , storag e, l

a cre. JUST $22,700.
TUPPERS PLAINS on Rt .
21n acres . Home ha s
n ew steel si ding , 2 B. R. ,
bath, dining R., own water
&amp; city water. garage, lot s

BACKHOE tor r enr. nour or
cont ract.
Reg.
or
ex
caval! ng type . Se pti c ta nk s
lnslaHed . Bill Pullins . Phon e
99 2-2478 .
B-27 -tf c
C U S T UM
F R AM IN G ,

PI C TURE
OR I G INA L
SEASCA P~
A ND LAND
SCA PE F'AINTIN GS. ' E .
J OYCE M ILLER , 997 7680
8- 10 7A ip

7 -

of building sites. 510,500 .
POMEROY - High on a
hill . 2 B.R., bath . n1ce
kit chen, utility R ., air '
con d ., nat gas h eat Tool
shed , 2 ca r garage, l 1/ 2 acre

very private. SACR IFICE
PRICE $13,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Older 2
story

home .

Good

con-

dition , 3 B.R , 2 baths,
utility R., dining
R .,
st orage bldg .. sma ll yard .
Cl ose to shopping . JUST

$8,300 .
FOR GOOD HOMES PRICED RIGHT - SEE
OR CALL US TODAY .
PHONE 992-2259

WELDING and cUtting ser vi ce s, Portable . Phon e 949 4114
a 24 -6tp

1971 DiEVY NOVA

7-24 ·1fc

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

HOU SE at 128 L aur e l St . ,
Pomeroy . For furth er •n
formation . call 992 -3866.
8-24 - lltp

EXCAVATING, doz er, IOoo er
an d backho e work . septic
t a nk s
installed ;
dump
tru c k s and lo boys for hire .
witt haul fill dirt. top soil ,
lim estone and grave l,.. Call
Bob o r Roger Jeffers, day
p hone 992 7069 . n ight phon e
992 3525 or 992 5232 .
2 11 lfc

- -- -- --

... -- - - - -

· E LWOUU BOWER S REPA I R
- · Swee p er s, toa st e rs , iron'S ,
all sm all appliances . Lawn
moWer, n ex t to State High
way Garage on Route 7·
Phone 985 3825
Solarium,
TV
room,
3
4 16 -ffc
bedrooms ,
1112
baths, - ··-- -------- - - - TOI LE ·,
basement and garage . Good PORlABL E
R ENT A L ,
Co n s truction '
residential area . $25,000.00.
Outdoor
eve nt s
Phone
MODERN - Nice 3 bedrooms
Gallipolrs,
446 A78t,
Russell's Plumbrng and,
with storage closets, large
Heat ing .
bath. basement . garage with
8 19 ffc
s hop and
J ;4
a cr e
I at .

$23,500.00.
26 ACRES - Near town, large
barn with concrete floor , ,..,d 7
room house, next to school.

Lli;T US DO IT! !

carpetiog
501 NYLON

Move right in . $31,500,00.
3 ACRE LOT - Near mine
with dug well. Will hold 2
trailers

and

then

$4500 .00.
POMEROY

some .

3

ni ce

499

bedrooms with closets, dining,
modern k itchen , full basement
near sc hool and
stores .

$17,500.00,
5 8 E DROOMS -

Renovated

older home with modern
kitchen and 2 baths. Large
porch and large corner lot

with alley. $34.500.00.
OLD BRICK - 10 rooms, 2
baths , natural ga s furn ace,
basement. city water and
large lot. Garden space. Only

$12,000.00. NEW LISTING
.t.Q_OK AT OUR PICTURES,
WE HAVE HERE AT THE
:OFFICE. DROP IN OR CALL
992-=1325.

Square
Yard

RUBBER BACK
e

have hundr.
values Your
pleted in
I~~:,~~~: No long
. Our installer
years experience .. Expert
installation. You'll like
what vou get. ·

I

CAL\. 742-4211 '

TALK TO WENDELL
GRJITE,
CARPETCONSULTANT

&amp; 1 yr . old heating system,
$11,500 .00.

3 BR, FHA

approved all elec. home on

1

Convt .. 6 c:yl., auto., P.s . .......... . ..............

SAVE -SAVE .
1968 MERCURY COMET2 DR .
1970 NOVA V-8 CPE .

51295

Blk . v inyl roof . grey finish, good tir es, autom atic ,
power stee ring , radio.

Th

Time

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel
'77-IANJ&lt; 7V

Chester, 0 .

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Relatives from a distance
here for the funeral services
of Wallace Hill were Ralph
Hill, Lebanon, Penn.; Mr.
and Mrs. Ira Hill, New
Waterford; Mrs. Goldie Shain
of Logan and her son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Walker of Junction
City.
Mrs. Linda Grimm had the
misfortune to faD at her
home, breaking her leg. She
is in traction at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs . Cord en
Randolph
and
Nondus
Hendricks of Racine and Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Braden of
Pomeroy attended the
funeral of Rufus Randolph
Saturday, Aug . 23, at
Baltimore, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs . .Tun Bracemoved their family and
hoUSE:hold goods to Crown
City.
Mrs. Phyllis Bailey was
hostess for the Ruth
Missionary Circle meeting
Thursday evening, August 21.
After a program and business
session, refreshments were
served by Mrs. Bailey to
Mary K . Yost, Nondus
Hendricks Barbara Gheen,
Marjorie 'Grimm, Caroline
Miller, Linda Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. George Moseley at
Dexter City and called on
friends in Marietta and
Belpre .
Mrs . Opal Diddle and Mrs.
Cora WEbb of Racine
Otapter O.E.S. attended the
Roberta Circle at McConnelsville on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ottie
Morris at St. Albans, W. Va.
Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. William

Loftis and David of Scott
Depot, W. Va., visited Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Brace
Tuesday evening, August 19.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hart
of Newark announce the birth
of a new daughter. Their
children, Rodney and Tracy
Hart, visited their grand. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
hart.
Mr . .and Mrs. Kenneth
Turley and Kenny spent
Sunday at Lake Ahna with
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ball and
children of St. Albans, W. Va.
who are camping there on
vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Horner of Richfield, Ohio
were overnight guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Elza Birch while
enroute home from a trip to
Kentucky.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
and Mrs. Jack Adams visited
Mr . and Mrs. Fred Brace at
South Shore, Ky. and also
visited at Greenup Locks and
Dam.
Irene Taylor, Beaver, Pa.,
Ruth Jene VanHorn, Beaver
Falls, Pa., and Grace
Helmick, New Brighton, Pa.,
were overnight
guests
Monday of Mrs. Hazel Carnahan.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris of
Springfield spent the afternoon Monday with Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Morris.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Wadswort)l and Debbie and
Diane, Dorothy Sayre and
Jane
Barrcaliff
of
Philadelphia, are guests of
Mrs. Edna Pickens. All were
supper guests Monday,
August 25, of Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Cozart.
Mrs. Loretta Wadsworth
and girls accompanied Mrs.
Barbara 'Roush and children
to Bowerston and spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.

4C!J

•
;

307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy
992-2298

'

CON'{ ACT :
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

.,'

v

1./ES,
U~
'SEE SOMETt-11 fo.lG
Iill A 1\'1/l.SCl)U/IlE

&amp;IRRY WAi. 'T£RS,
707

sa t 7,.,fiT

S'l' .JVSEPH, MO.

-(H~ IHE. INGID!:- Of
1liE. ROOM I ~ Q-IOWNBl&amp; E.NOUGH FOR
BASKE.fBAt..L. · • · ,

1971 FORD 6 CYL ...................... $1795
'h Ton P ick up , one ca refu l oWner . Shows good care .

USED CARS
/4 Cadillac S. DeVille, rad. tires, air...... '6500
7.1 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, pow., air.... :.- .. 15100
75 Chev. Caprice 4 door .................. ·'5595

74 Olds Salon Coupe,
power, air and vinyl roof... .............. .'4595
73 Monte Carlo, v-roof, pow., air.......... ,13995
73 P~. FuiJ 3 4 Dr., v-roof, air...........'2295
73 Olds Roy. 88fHT Cpe., air........... '3295
73 Olds 98 LS Sed., v-roof, air.......... ·'4395 ·
73 Nova ' 2 Dr., V-8 auto., P.S........... '2895
72 Olds Cut. Cpe., v-roof, pow., air ........'2895
72 Buick Elec. 225 HT Cpe., v-roof, air •• '2895
72 Chev. Imp. Cus. Cpe., pow., air ....... 12495
72 Ford Pinto Wagon, auto., radio....... 11895
72 Chev. Imp., 4 door, power, air ........ '2295
72 Dodge Swinger Cpe., V-8 auto. ....... '2095

Chester
News Notes
By Clarice Allen
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Weber
of Texas visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wolf and
other relatives.
Miss Barbara Jo Wilson,
Rochester, N.Y., spent a few
days with Mrs. Thomas
Weber.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom McNally
and Sharon Ann, Sandusky,
spent several days with Mr.
and Mrs. Roscoe Hollon.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark
and daughters have returned
from a vacation at Myrtle
Beach, S. C.
Virgil Wood, Springfield,
recently visited his mother
Mrs. Letha Wood.
Mrs. Roy Christy, Mrs.
Letha Wood, Mrs. Freda
Miller and Miss Lenora
Betzing called on Mr. and
Mrs. Don Betzing, Hemiock
Grove.
Miss
Lucille
Smith
received word that her sister
Elma Reuter, Akron, was
Injured In a car accident
there Monday and was
hospitalized for a broken arm
and several broken ribs.
Miss Marcella Hartman
spent a week with Mr. and
Mrs . Gene VanMeter ' and
family, Gahanna.
Miss Diana and Debbie
Cleland have returned to
their home at Ft. Sill, Okla.
after spending the summer
here with their' grandparents

Fred Sayre and family .
Teressa Brace of Crown
?\&lt;I NT
City spent a recent night with
her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Edison Brace.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve ·
Badgley and Kelll of
Colwnbus spent the weekend
1 ~~;.::~~ with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
•
· Badgley.

caf. Coe..

air.......... 12695
72 Olds 98 HT Sed. v-roof, power, air... ;•2895
71 Olds C.S. HT Coe., v-roof, air .......... '2595 .
71 Ford Count!} Squire, air ................ 11995
70 Chev. Monte Carlo Coupe ............. '2295
70 Dodge Monaco 4 Dr., a1r. ............. . '1595
70 Chev. El Camino, V-8 auto., P.S....... '1895
72 Pontiac

Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cleland.
Mrs. Cleland and son Vernon,
Colwnbus returned the girls
to their home and spent a
couple of days there with Mr .
and Mrs. Jerry Cleland. Mrs.
Jerry Cleland is improving
from recent surgery.
Mrs. Thomas fllenick, Tom
and Barbara Jean, Girard,
spent a recent weekend with
Mrs . Mabel Van Meter. Other
visitors have been Mrs.
Raymond Van Meter and son
Raymond, Youngstown.
David and Denna Williams,
Colwnbus, spent a week with
their grandparents Mr . and
Mrs. Ralph Keller .
Mrs. Annie B. Will, Jesup ,
Ga ., spent part of last week
with Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allep.
Mr . and Mrs. Henry
Hartman, Marcella and
Carla, recently visited at
Niagara Falls and also
visited with friends at In·
dustry, Pa .
, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Baker
Jr., sons Jim and Cle, Jesup ,
Ga ., spent a couple of days .
with Mr. and Mrs . Clayton
Allen .
Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Frietag, Canton, spent
several days with Miss
Lucille Smith_
Mrs
Eddie
Boyer,
Cleveland, spent several days
with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rice.
Mrs . David Tysinger,
Johnson City , Tenn., is
spending several weeks with
Mrs. Ross Cleland and other
relatives before going to
Hawaii where her husband
will be stationed with the
Army .
Miss Joyce Ann Bissen of
Alabama has spent .ever a!
weeks Wlth her parent~ Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Bissell and
family.
D. D. Cleland and Mrs.
Carpenter, Colwnbus, called
on Denzel Cleland , Sunday.
Mr. an'd Mrs. Charles
Eichinger and Suzannah,
Colwnbus, spent several days

•

One local owner , always on hard road . Light l oad s. 6 cyl.. std .

So ld new for over $6100 . Fu ll power, a ir . stereo. V -roof,
1. 500 miles . New Cadillac trade .

!~~o~·~·r ..................................$395
985-4100
:...ocaledon St. Rl. 7

I'

shift.

5395

V -8, std . trans ., radio .

PRESENT CAR WILl
NEVER BE WORTH MORE
EVERY CAR PRICED TO GO

~OUR

1972 DiEV. 1h TON PICKUP .......... $2195

SAVE

D a rk r e d , white vi nyl top , loaded wi th ex tras including
air cond ., tilt wheel, Cruise Control, cus to m interior ,
power &amp; reclining sea t, AM radio-t ape, radial w -s -w
tires, less than 4,500 m i les by local owner . SAVE -

owner .•••• ••••••••••

RIGGS USED CARS

•

Four wheel d r ive l/• ton P i ckup . Less than 39 ,000 easy miles
Power s tee ring , power brakes. 350 V -8 . Good tir es .

Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY · Motor Co.·

$
6
1
795
1969 MERC. COUGAR
$
2 Dr . h.t., auto., P.S, P.B., fac tor y tape .• , ..... 1Q95
cyl. sta nd tran s .. 4 dr . seda n ,

Clearance Sale

. 1973 DiEVROLEL ....................... $3995

•

1975 MONTE CARLO LANDAU

ALWAYS

GOOD BUY 75

Only $2995
price .
Only $2495
1971 CHEV. IMPALA 2 dr . H.T., air . P . S .,
1970 CHEV. 112 TON PICKUP, auto ., P . S.,
P. B., P . W., vinyl top . This has to be the
radio , also has a topper to match truck. O'lly
sharpest Chev. in town . New Buick trade-i n .
36 , 821 miles, I.Jcal owner . Good Buy at $~195
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~J~u~s~l~$~22~9~5~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~. .~. . . ...1

1967 DiEVY NOVA

till&gt;~ ~ HELP

-/

19J3 PLYMOUTH DUSTER, 2 dr . H. T., V-8 ,
auto ., P . S . , P . B., radio. a sharp yellow car .
This car has had the best of care. Extra low

~95

FUNNY BUSINESS

'I

19iJ- PONTIAC CATALINA, 2 dr . H. T., air
cond . We sold this car new . Extra low
mileage, local owner. Your fam!ly will love it.

l495

1968 DiEV. CAMARO

PieaSe .ca II if you want to
sell your farm.

•

$

4 Dr ., auto ., P .S . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

HAND LE TTERED SIGN S
AND PO STER S
F REE
ESTIMATES . CALL M . C.
C R A WFORD , 992 -76 80
B-7 26 1p

stores, includes gas range

Two-Bedroom Apts.

4

DOZER WORK , Excavating,
land c learing , ponds and
basements ,
and
land s caping .
Pullins
Ex cav al ing , phon e 992 2476 .
B '16 30tc

WOULD YOU BELIEVE?
Build an all steel building at
Pol e Barn pr ices? Golden
Giant AII .Steel Bu i ldings,
Rt . 4, Box 148, · Waverly,
Ohio . Phone 947 22lil6 .

$

1795
1971 DiRYSLER NEW YORKER $
Dr ., fact . air , P.S., P.B....................... 1495

MAC HIN E.

1974 V.W. BUG2 dr ., orange in color. 4 speed ,
loca l owner. This one won't last. Extra nice .
Priced at
Only $2895
1973 CHEV. MONTE CARLO, green with
green vinyl top, air, tape, cruise control, lilt
wheel. This is one sharp auto. Extra good buy
th is week .
$3795

........._

--' .-

POMEROY, OHIO

1974 PONTIAC VENTURA 6 cyl ., auto., P . S.,
low mileage, local owner . Extra nice , a gas
saver . Would make a nice family car .
Only $2895
1973 OLDS DELTA ROYAL, 2 dr . H.T., a ir
cond., one of the nicest Olds in the area. Refer
you to ow11 e r. Special this week. Only $3195

2495

Fully e quipped •••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••

se r vice, a ll makes .
992 2284 The Fab rit; Sh op ,
~omeroy Au lho1rl zed ' Singer
. a l es and Ser vi ce . We
, harp en Scissors .
3-29 lfc

NO. 136 - 2 BR older home
with full base., close fa

WE NEED farm listings.-

1971 T·BIRD COUPE

Rep ~i rs,

close by. 53.800.00.

•137.00 Plus Electric For

Appointments may be made by calling
Vickie Keatley at 992-3273, or by stopping at
Apt. 101 at Riverside Apts. on Front Street
in Middle;:~ort, Ohio . Equai Opportunity
Housing.

Real Estate for Sale

500 E. MAIN ST,

s

1973
PLYMOUTH SATELliTE
s
Se bring 4 dr. sedan . a uto .. P.S., P.B.••••• •.••••• 2195

D &amp; LJ TREE Trimming. "2"0
yea r s ex per ien ce. In su r ed ,
fr ee esttma t es Call 992 30 57 ,
Coo l vi ll e. Phone ( I ) .66 7
304 I.
4 30 lt c

Open Evenings Till
7 P.M. &amp; Sal. Til 5 P . M .
PH. 992-2174

2·SIGNS

1973 GMC SPRINT

Slop In Or

NO. 135 - 8.64 a , on paved

90xl20' lot in village of
Middleport, has 10x10
alum.
utility
bldg ..
$1a.soo.oo .

1971 BUICK RIVIERA
Auto ., fac t. a ir, P.S, P . B. ......................

road, J mi. from new mine
area, vacant. good fishing

NO. 138 -

2 Dr. H. T., fact. atr , P.S , P, B , vi nyl roof
1.~1;;,;,
.
.
~-········

Mt" CO N C RETE
Call992-7537 8-1·75
de l ive r ed right to your
p r o i ec t F a st a nd easy Free
es t imates Phon e 99 2 328-4. MOB IL E Crane serv ice and
Goeg t ein Ready Mix Co .
dozer work Phone 992 54 68 .
M• ~ d l epor l , Oh tO
8 -7 26tp
t.~ 30 HC

FOR SALE
3 acres of land, 2 mobile
homes, excellent well with
new deep well water pump .
Nice location in country.
Price reduced for quick
sale due to illness. See by
appointment
only
for
further information ca II

1972 FORD LID

Flatwoods, Ohio
Pomeroy , Ohio

. . ..~ack W. Carsey , Mgr .

CANNI N G p ea che s now thr u
Sep t e mber 10 . U S No . 1
gra d e ye ll ow F rees tone For
ca n ni n g or fr eezrng . $6 .49
busheL $3 49 1 ~ bus h el. $1.99
BRING
p ec k . P L EA SE
YOUR
OW N
CO N
TAINER S Peaches a r e o ur
sp ec ialty . Two conve ni ent
loc ations
Bob's Market ,
Mason , W Va Phone (30AJ
173 57 ? 1
an d
M rdway
Market , Pomeroy. O hi o
[61d) 99? ?58')
8 10 ?7 t c

Fully equipped ........................... . ..... ~2795

KUHL CAKE DECOR

POMEROY LANDMARK

19 14 ?0 FT
GOOSENECK
stoc k. trail er with 1974 Chevy
du al whee L 1 ton pickup
Can b e bou g ht togethe r or
se p arate Call 7.1? 3'167
B 10 r f c

1972 BUICK RIVIERA

Kitchen State Inspected
Licensed
Baker
and
Decorator .
Homemade
Noodles also featured .

- -- - - - - - - -

in for SlS .OO dtscount .

Phone 992-2181

4 Dr . Sedan, local I owner. fully oqu1pped .••••• ~2995

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

EXCAV"AT IN G.
ba ck h oe ,
dozer and -dt l cher
G_as,
elect ri c and water ltne
bur 1al . basements, foo ters,
se p tic systems and . br~sh
clea ning Will haul frll drrt ,
top s.oi t, sand and g r avel ,
l imestone for driveway s and
roads
Pnon e Charl es R
H atlte l d , Backhoe ~erv • ce,
Rt
1 , Rutland . OhtO , 742
609 ?.
7 11 90tc

CLIP THIS AD and bring it

~

1972 UNCOLN CONT.

Po mer,o"

Ph . 992 -2174

\E PTIL l ANK S c l eane d
Mod ern sanitatton 997 395
or 99? 7319
9 18 ttc

$2195

4 Dr . Sedan. fa ct a ir, P S., P .B.................

SMITH NELSON
M01'0RS, INC •.

mo .

4 10 1

s2495

green -green vinyl roof .•••••••

1973 OLDS DELTA 88

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Spe~ialist

Syracu se. Ohio

Ph. 992 -3993

tact . air. P.S., P. B.,

From the largest Truck or
B ulldozer Radiator to the '
s'}l a ll est H ea t er Cor e.

LARRY LAVENDER

~-----------,REA-D~

bath apt in .
Phon e 99 2- WHITEROCK and Babcock
hens, S2.50 each . Phone 9lil2 7407.
7 27-tfc

LI\URE:LANO A P AR TMENT ,
6t h and Geo r ge Sis., N ew
H aven ,
W · Va
IM
MEDIATE
OCCU PANCY
Se l ect
your
7 bedrm .
townhouse
B ea utiful n ew
ap t
compl ex
A pptran ces
furn is h ed.
co mp le t el y
carpe t ed. R e nt $1?8 and up
i ncluding utititt es . Call
r esident manager. Sa m or
Becky L on gana c r e. 1 304
1!82 25 67 . If no answ er, call 1
(304) 882 2788
8 19 12tc

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDtNG-SOFFITT
GUTTERS.AWNINGS

Tune - Ups • Batteries ·
Shock Absorbers • Tires •
Muffler-Ta i lpipes · Cooling
System s .
We
also
service
Volkswagens and other
foreign cars .
Wilbur Ward,
Mgr . &amp; Mechanic

fact. air, P.S.. P.B., viny l roo t .......... '14~f~.

1973 QiEVY IMPAlA 4 Dr . H T ,

Blown into Wall s &amp; A Hies

8·21 ·1 mo .

1969 CHEVROLET I mpa l a, 7
dr
custom
co upe
low
mt l caqe $8 50 Phone 985
-12.1 5. Ch es.te r
8 26 St c HUNTING Ltcense , Ni ght
c r aw le r s., meat worm s.
1971 F 0 R D 4 dr , a rr con
TACKLE , gu n s, am m o ,
ditioning. p s. p b 50.000
bows
arrows , c amp tn y
m li es Phone 992 3427
c qutp . C B' s and a ccess ory
India n Jo e·~. 308 Page St , ?
8 27 41p
s tr ee t s pa st Middleport
C:. w 1mm•ng Poo l
B lJ ?6tp
TR A IL ER. actu lt s on l y Ph one
• lm
19 75 H O N DA CB ?50
9913 181
maculate,
sho wro om
8 27 lie
co nditton
Buying - t ru ck
JA N D 4 ROOM lurnt sh ed a net
Fi r st Sl.69S Phone 99 2-7210
un tu rni Sh L'd
apartmf&gt;nl s.
8-29-3tc
Phon e 99 ? 5-13 4
4 17 t t c POTATOE S, Kennebe c and
cobblers . ve ry ni ce . No . 1
and 2 srze in SO lb . bag, ju st
TW O ru rn rshed a pt s
Ka y
dug . Also. c lean bat es of
Cecil. 87 South Sec ond Ave.
st r aw, nice fo r lands capin g
Midd l e p ort . O h io Phone
992 5'}67
and bed drng . Paul Sayr e,
R t . 338 1 m li e below Ravens
8 21 t f c
wood Fe rr y, G r eat Bend Rd .
N EW
VILLAGE
M anor
Phone 84 3-22 86
Apartment s i n Middleport , 1
6 -29 -3tc
bedroom apt s from $104 p l u s
elec Ca t 1 992 3273 or see P E R SO NAL elect r ic washer.
Mrs
Keatley, Apt
101 ,
Gene ral E l ec. sw iv e l type
Riverside Apartments .
s w eeper, u sed very littl e.
8-2B -26tp
Padded tron lng board on
stand, large . 22x22 ete c.
flo o r fan with co ntro ls.
MOBILE home space, 1 ac r e
Phon e 992 2358
m country Write Bo x 613 ,
Pomeroy , Oht O or call (6181
8 79 3tc
524 582 5.
8 29 l8t c ENG L IS H Shej:th erd p up s
Phon e (6 14} 698 4.499
_ ------------O NE trailer lo t , gas, water,
a 29 3tp
e l ec tr rcil y available. H rg h
St r eet, Middleport , Ohro . POTATOES , red , La Soda ,
Phone 992 2864 .
Kennebec , co bbler
Phon e
8-29 -3tc
Tom Sa y re, 843 249 1.
8 27 -3tp
TWO bedrm
mobile hom e,
phone lil92 342 9
LU MBER for sate, doors,
8 29 61p
wrndows, and all kinds. Call
after 5 p m 992 3658.
T R A IL ER space for re nt in
8-27 -6tc
Middlepor t Phone 992 5434
8 29 -26t c ELECTRIC ran ge in good
con d i t ion
Phone 992 -5302
8-27 3tc
2
BEDROOM
furnish e d
mobil e home No pets . Call
NEW cas co stroller , $25, two
992 7479
TV sets in good con dit ion ; 1
B 22 tf c
color, $75, 1 black and wh i te ,
$50 . Nin e yellow stamp
TRAILER s.pace for r ent
books, S3 each . Phon e 992
Phon e A l be rt Hi ll. 949 226 1
28lil7
8 26 7tp
a 27 -Atc
- -· - - - - - - - -- - 2 BE D ROOM trailer , ex t ra
A K C Brillainy $25 ; 80 lb
n •ce Phone 9'92 3324
Cro ssbow , $65, t wo storm
8-26 tf c
w indows , 28 x 36 , sa each.
Phone 992 7805 .
PRIVATE mee ting room for
8·27 ·6tp
any organ i zat i on , p hone 99 2
19 75
3 TO N central air conditioner
J 11 tf c
un it, Com fortaire . 36,000.
8 T U .'s, Phone 247 -3941
$5

Phone 992-9973
North 2nd Street

4 Dr . Sed .,

Blown
Insulation Service ~

SMITH. NELSON MOTORS

.$2495

1973 FORD GAL 500

FREE ESTIMATES

1?

1968
B I\ RR /1CUUA
P 5
au t oma t tc . Phone 949 2270
B 26. 6t c

1973 DiEVY IMPAlA

IS

OUR
PENCIL

ON ,-; ,-; USED CARS

f

For Rent or Sale

r iq hl l o edi t or reject ilny ads 1967 t- ALCO N station w agon
in e" c c tt ent cond i tton 790
deeme d
obiCCito nal
Th e
Map le St , Mtdd l eport , Ohio
publisher
wil l
n or
be
P hon e 992 2936
r f's ponsrb l e for m o r e th i'l n one
II 29 Jtc
tncor r E'c t m s(&gt; rlt o n

Mintmum Charge $ 1 00
11 ce nt s pe r wor d three
•

LABOR DAY SALE

W ANT A D S
I NFORMATION

I

~~~lm=-----~~~~::~-=~~-=~~~--------~

Fast Results Use The Sentinel .Classifieds

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC F I NANC lNG
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until6 : 00- Til~ p.m. SaJ.

News Notes
By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Aug. 24 at the Free Methodist
Church was 90. Choir
members present - 15.
Worship services were 134
and morning offering was
$95.:Jii.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr,
and Bertha Parker, attended
the Ohio State Fair Friday.
Mr . and Mrs. Ben Fox,
Zanesville, visited recently
with Mr . and Mrs. Harmon
Fox.
Mrs. Florence Stahl, Stockdale, visited recently with
Mr . and Mrs . Norman
Schaefer.
Vern Story, who is employed in Cotwnbus spent the
week with his wife Fern Dora
and son John.
Mark Stahl, Stockdale,

last week with Mrs. Opal
Eichinger and family .
Clarice, Opal and Margaret
appreciated the letter and
comments of a Daily Sentinel
reader in Florida.
Mrs. Joyce Baker of Texas
spent a couple of weeks with
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Myers .

J;,. Ton Pickup, one local farm tr uck , auto. tr ans ,
steering, power brakes, l ow mileage .

power

1970 GMC 1h TON V-8 PICKUP. ..... $1695
Extra sharp tru ck , au to . tr a n s., power s teering .

1965 FORD 1h TON PICKUP. ...... :..... '595
Worth more .

1973 FORD GRAN TORIN0............. $2795
A d r. Sedan . One ca reful loca l owner . Power st eering, a uto .
trans .

1972 PONTIAC V-8 CATALINA,. ....... $2195
2 Dr . Hardtop , air conditioned , fully equipped , d a r k green
with w hite top .

See Fred Blaettnar, Darrell Dodrill,
Pat Hill, or Dan Thompson
. . . . .111111

·~

DOW ••

68 Cadillac Sed. DeVille, pow., air ... ,..... '895
68 Chev. Imp. Custom Coupe ............. '595

Laurel Oiff

1971 FORD F250 ......................... $1995

Fritz Stahl, New Marshfield,
Paul Stahl, Colwnbus, Mrs.
Kriss Kerrick, son Paul,
Beaver, Ohio visited Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. N. E .
Shaefer.
Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Ball
Run, was hostess for 11
members of the Laurel Cliff
Health Club. Mrs. Huffman
and Mrs. Margie Goett was
welcomed into the club .
Refreshments of ice cream
and cookies were served.
Mr . and Mrs. Harmon Fox
entertained Sunday with a
family dinner and several
birthdays were celebrated.
Those present were Mr . and
Mrs. Gene Hines and Dana,
Mr . and Mrs . Michael
Douglas, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Howard and Jason,
Mrs. John Douglas, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Burke and Criss,
Earl Roush, Patty and
Mandy, Mrs . &lt;ltester Roush,
Stacy and Kraig, Mr. and
Mrs. Lennie Lyons and
Leslie, Mr . and Mrs. Larry
Walker, Mr . and Mrs. Roy
Howell and Jeff Howell.
Rev . and Mrs. Shook will
spend Labor Day weekend
with relatives in Penn, sylvania.
Rev . Morris Wolfe will be
guest speaker at the )ocal
church August 31.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise ,
McConnelsville , - attended
~

lly
• iE'l HOWAilD_ C. llACK

DON'f BE AFRAID TO BE A SQUARE
Many words of the English language have been a bused and
aometlmes made to mean that which was never originally
intended. The word "square" is an example. The basic
meaning of "square" is "to raise to the second power, to be
straight forward, honest". It is also descriptive of an object
having four equal sides with four right angles. The word IS
suggestive of strength and aolidity.
But, how many times is the word "square" used to mean
aomething else? It has been spoken in mockery, often
suggesting cowardice and weakness, or it has been said, implying an out-moded, old-fashioned idea . When someone hasn't
gone along with the crowd, or has taken an unr ' pular stand
concerning a particular situation, there are those who are
quick to label that person a "square".
Don't be afraid to be called a "square " . Remember that
the world needs people today who have strength of character.
When this world seems to be crumbling around us and many
people are "going to pieces" because of the mental strain,
anguish, and frustrations of Ieday's fastiJaced livmg, we need
men and women with a strength of character that makes them
solid, dependable citizens.
The world needs people who will walk uprightly and
straight forward. What we don't need are the scoffers and
those who take delight ridiculing others, making light of every
virtue that has been proven strong and true over the centuries
of time.
Don't be afraid to be called a "square" if you are made fun
of for old.fashioned morality and honesty. Don't be afraid to be
called a "square" for not going along with Ieday's so&lt;aUed
' 'new-morality" and changeable "situation ethics" of today .
There are still aome absolutes we need to live by , else we
perish.
The "squares" of our modern-&lt;lay society are not to be
taken lightly. They believe in God and try to live an ~pright
Christian life . They believe in and read the Bible seriOusly.
They believe in and practice the power of prayer. These
. modern-day "squares" don't "cut corners" and "goof. off".
They give an honest day's work for an honest day's pay . They
don't lie or cheat on the other person, or steal from him. They
believe ihat it Is more important to play fair than to win the
game. They are "square with the world" and wiD always give
you a " square deal" . You -can always depend on tbe
~ ~squares"!

When the wheel needs to be turned, the field dug, and the
mountains moved, the "squares" will do them. When dreams
need to be turned into realities, the "squares" will do it. When
things need to be done, the "squares" are the people who get
them done!
Don't be afraid to be a "square" !

services at the local church
Stmday.
Open house will be held at
the Methodist Church in
Pomeroy Aug. 31 for the 59th
Anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Karr, from 2 till 5
p.m .

TO CELEBRATE 64TH
Mr. and Mrs . Herman
Wolfe, Racine, will quietly
celebrate their 64th wedding
anniversary Sept. I. They
have one daughter, Mrs .
Daisy Sayre , several grandchildren,
greatgrandchildren and greatgreat-grandchilctren .

�I I
·I:

I '

IQ ~ 'Fhe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

o,,, Friday, Aug. 29, 1975

Jtll~l1~® ~4c.d·M-'~~ For

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each squ are, to
fOrm fo ur ordin a r y wurd~ .

DEADLINES
S

PM

Day

Befo r e

Pub

lo c al ion
M ond ay Dcadl•n c 9 a m
C orr f'C !t on~
accept~ d un ! •l 9 am

Cnnce ll at1on
1/'.'tl l be

f o r Day o f Pub lrc arion

REGULATIONS

Th e Publi she r rese rv es the

YARDOP

t

RA T ES
For Want A d Se r vice
'l c enrs per word one tn ser tt on

CHALUN I

I I V:)l
:::========
L':"~:=·=~
r

I

I

RIVET

co n scc uttv e tn s rtt ons

Now arrange the drcled lette rs
to form the Hurprise a n swer, a."
SU!":Kt'sted by the above &lt;:artoon .

ID

Prill! die SURPIIISI ANSWER here
Jumt,1,· ~ .

ARRAY

a

MIDDAY

XI 1 I ]

GOPHE R

"'•""''.-: / 11 f!11 , /1/ Hir /1 i t \ 111/ ~fml l ~ monlt~ r /m I'll It, r

;.,,d, lu /1, rtf

lit~

fard Sale

YAR D . Baseme nt and Por c h
Sate s tarttng A ugus· 27
throu g t1 Sept 17 Everyday
excep t Su n day . An tt QUes ,
d tshes
f urn1 ·ure. bed r m
sets and m isc
a dult s'
c h ild r en's
an d
infant
c loth ing Sn oes some n ew
n ew
bed
s h eets
and
bl ankets. Blue show er st all
with seat fibe rg la ss, wllt! e
l avatory , grrl 's bike, o th e r
items too numerou s to
menl tOn Fo llow S1g ns from
L angsvtl t e,
J
m tl e fr om
T urner' s Sto r e on Co Rd . 10.
a 27 tf c
1

o/1,, r - MARRIAGE

Pets For Sale
Pt'krnqe".r• p tJP~I l"-&gt;
PllOn r&gt; P' P l('cl Sdl11 . 6 .'',

1\ f.. C R f'q
'!,

1 ',

SOlO
ll 19 I } t l

AK(
GE: r.:/1:1,1N
Sh e ph erd
pupptes, qood olood ltne s .
qent l e d tspo si tion . worm ed
and r ea dy to QO Phon e 9? i
5623
8 2 ,j 61 l

AKC R eg . P oodles. two blu e
and 1 choco l a te , 1 apnea!
Phon e (3 0-1 ) 887 3705
B 27 l7!p

..
;; GET YOUR MAN WITII A

''~

YARD SALE. Sunday and
Monday , Route 7 Pom e r oy ,
b elween Tal l Tt mbers and
She nan g Sprtngs
8 28 2tp

#Want Ad

76 ce nt s p e r word S tx LOn
~L'&lt;.U I • V L'

lf1 SC rltOn &lt;;

r Per Cen t o, sco unt o n pa•d

tid ~
d

rl

,1nd ad s

paid

wit hin

10

y &lt;;

CARD OF THA NK S
&amp; Ob ttu ary
'1&gt;2 00 for 50 word m ttlr.11um
Each a ddtltona t word 3c
. BLIND ADS
1\ ddil io nal 25 c Cha r ge per
i\ dv e rrrsem ent
OFF I CE HOUR S
8 3 0c~m lo S OOprn Du rl y
8 3 0 u n1
to
12 00 N oon
Satur-day

Notice
P IA N O Tuning , Lan e Daniel s,

Phone 992 2082
8 -28 -261p
R OO M
A ND
BOAR D
Prtvfl t c n tr co n dll toned
r oom , phone . TV
a ll
rnea l s tcundry p l us many
ex tru s Writ e Mr s . M
J
Mtller Box l OS Pomeroy.
O tli O
8 1 76 t p

Room an d t:3 oard
ROOM AND BOAR_D for
sen •or ct!•ze n s Low tn come
living very n •ce Phone 992
3509
8 24 261 c

Wanted
CAS H patd t o r all makes and
models crf mobtle homes
Phon e area co de 614.42 3
"9 53 1
.4 13 li e

PUBLIC NOTICE
August 28, 1975
The amount of Local Gove rnm e nt Ohio
Income Ta x Monies to be allocated to the
various sub-divi s ion s of Meigs County
Budget Commission at th e completion of
these meetings held in the County Auditor 's
office on August 4, 1975, showing per cent of
allocation, also the actual yearly amount is
as follows :
Townships- 30 Pel .
(as to Township Road Ml
Bedford
8 .16 Pet.
3672. 00
Chester
12 .17 Pet .
5476.50
columbia
7.31 Pet .
3289 .50
Lebanon
10.02 Pet.
4509.00
Letart
4.92 Pet .
2214.00
Olive
10.06 Pet .
4527.00
Orange
8.02 Pet .
3609.00
Rutland
9.21 Pet .
4144.50
Salem
9.15 Pet .
4117.50
Salisbury
6.03 Pet .
2713.50
Scipio
8.08 Pet .
3636.00
Sutton
6 .87 Pet .
3091.50

Wanted To Buy
P L AY E ~pia n o, need not ber n
work .ng cond •t •o n A l so.
wan te d ptano ro l ls Phon e
]I)] 562 5
8 26 6tc
.JLD turn tt u re , 1ce boxes ,
b rass bed s. o r co mplete
households . Wri t e M
0
Mi ll er , R!. 4, P o meroy,
Ohro Call 992 7760
10 7 74
tor
r 9oJ
Mu s tang. 6 cyt
m anual
shtfl . P hone 992 318 1.
8 -27 -4t c

TRAN SI'tl1I S~ ION

Employment Wanted
WILL. DO odd iobs, mow in g,
haulin g, painting or roof ing .
P h one 992 7409
8· 28-6tc
W ILL dO t:la b ySilling Ill my
hom e. 5 d ays p e r week
Monday thr o u gh F r1day ,
any age limi t. Phon e 949
340 5. Racine, Ohto .
B 26 6t c
t RY
tro o rtng ,
cetl tng &lt;tnd pa n e lt ng Phone

~1\ f·&lt;f·'EN

99 7 ?15 9

H I ? ?6tc

100.00 Pet.
$45,000.00
Corporations- 30 Pet.
(as per capita 1970)
Pomeroy
36 Pet .
16.200.00
Middleport
37 Pet .
16,650.00
Racine
07 Pet .
3,150.00
Rutland
09 Pet .
4,050.00
Syracuse
11 Pet.
4,950 .00
100 Pet.
County Government 40 Pet.
Total

$45,000.00
$60,000 .00
$ 150,000.00

Howard E. Frank
Meigs County Auditor
Clerk of Budget Commission

RUTLAND
BARGAIN CENTER
SEPTEMBER

Clearance Sale
Our Present Stock Used Furniture

10.00
269.95
100.00
139.95
5.00
3.50

2 Pc. living Room Suite
4 Pc. Velvet Sectional Suite

Sofa Bed and Chair
Love Seat , Traditional
Green Chair, now only

(New) Model112 Vaporizer
12- Good New nd Used
Bedroom Suites
14 Good Used Refrigerators
9 Good Used Desks
:

139.95 up
39.95 to 269 .95
19.95 up

Several Good U sed Chests &amp; Drawers
Arvin EJec . Heater, fan &amp; thermo .
Portable Washer &amp; Dryer, pair
Speed Queen Wringer Wa sher
Large Warm Morning Coal Heater
Gas &amp; Fuel Oil Heaters
Bookcases, Kitchen Cabinets , Cedar

25 .00 up
12 .00
lilO .OO
lil9 .95
225.00
25 .00 up
Chests , Bunk

Beds, Luggage, Bedspreads, Lamps, Mattresses, Nile
Stands, Many Other Items.

'

Rutland Furnit ure
742-4211

Mobile Homes for Sale
196 S HILL CRE ST , 10 x - SO ,
\7,495
r or
mor e
m
format •On ca ll 9-19 52 61
a '16 6tc

4 Dr. H. T., air, P.S., P. B., red. black viny l top. , •• ,

For Rent

Auto Sales

Rutland,

o.

See Herb, Dave or Mike Grate.
Also Gene Smith
9PEN UNTIL 9 P.M. SATURDAYS

WILL ba by Si t Ill
Phone 9n 76 47

my hom e .

a 24

7tc

REMO DELIN G.
Pi umbirlg .'
heat ing and al l t ypes of
general
r epair .
Work
guaran t eed
20 year.s ex '
pc ri ence
P hon e 992 240 9
5-1 If~.

Yard Sale
PORCH sale , A ug 28 -30. 9:30
am 6 :3 0 p.m . C loth i n g.
men's. women's. som e large
s tze men ' s c l othin g, misc .
a rti c l es
378 Second St ,
Pomeroy, O h io
8 -24 -Sic
FAMILY Yard Sale,
F r i da y and Sat urday at
Ellen Tucker residence , 112
mile up Hysell Run Road off
124 toward Ru tlan d .
B-28 -2tc

FOUR ~

NOTICE OF PUBUb SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CON ·
CERN '

1966 GMC Van. good runn ing
cond i tton
Phone 992 2082
8-28 -3tp
19 70RAMBLER RE BE L .4d r
au to matic
tran s mi ss i o n ,
p s . phone 997 220 1
8-2 8-6fp
19 GML' to n ptckup tru c k
s t1a rp and •n ver y good
c ond •' •on Pri ce \ 71 350 Ca ll
f.l9 ? ?9 1'/ or see &lt;, t evc rlurton
8 I / I 7 1p

or Sale

PENNZOIL

by Land Contract
Office Butlding with 700 sq.
ft . of spa ce located on 107
Syca more St ., Pomeroy ,
Would sell on !.and contract
or renl. Gerald Re uter ,
Phone 992-2490 .

for Sale

for Sale
LET us se r vice your Yolk s
wagen
r euso nub l e rate s
M 1dd t ep or t P cn n zor l. North
~ cco nd Stre e t , Mtddleport
Phon e '19 7 99 73
8 19 ?6tc

for Rent

•

LASALLE

HOTEL . MID
DL~PORT . OHIO . ROOMS

a 24 61c

U P. S PE C IA L RATE S
BY WEEK O R MONTH

ONE COUCH ; t wo bedroom
tra iler , p ipe ideal for gates;
good hay
Phone 992 -7791
after 4 p m
8· 28-Jtc

TV AIR CO ND IT IONI'N G.
a 26 -26tc
------- -------A RO OM S and

Rutland
5858 .

area

19 !7 A RROW Campe r , pho n e
99 ? 5J68
8 I S ] 6t p
CANN I NG tom atoes . gre-en
and red p e pp ers
Cle- l and
Fa rm .), Geral dtn e C le l and ,
Ra c tn e P h one 9d9 d1?1
a 19 He
MODERN
wa rnut stereo
radto conso l e, am f m radio ,
.1 spee d c hang er
Balance
s10 1 7'1 or terms. Ca ll 991
396')
8 1? tfc

Stegler &amp; Monogram

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves
All sizes on hand , prices
start at $324.69.
- 1 Wood Burning Stove

Real Estate For Sale
SIX room house at 842 Pearl
St.. M iddlepor t, w -w c in sulated ,
paneled,
new
c eiling s, etc. Phone 992-2022 .
8-27 -7tc

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

NEAR
Pomeroy, new
3
bedroom , 11h baths , carport.
mud rm .• utility, sun deck ,
large liv ing room , k itc hen dining
area ,
pan e led ,
r e frigerator and Tappan
range included . Also, will
·help f i nance. Phone 992 -7790
after 6 p .m .
8278t c
-

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

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

TRAILER for r en t. 1., m i l e Off
R t 14 3 on K i ngs bu ry Rd
E ith er furnish e d or un
furn ished . Phon e 74/ 31?3
-- 8 70 t?t c
COU NT RY
Mobrl e Home
P a rk , R I 33, te n mi les north
of Pom e roy Large lots wrth
con crete pat io9' , Sid ewa lks ,
runn e r s. an d o ff s tr ee t
~a r ktn g
Phone 9lil2 7479
1231 tfc:

Noti ce i s he reby given that
on Se ptember 8th, 1975, at
10 : 00 A M a public sale wilr
b e hel d at
Smith Nelsor
Motor s, In c , Porn e roy, Ohio,
to sell for cash th e following
colla te ra l, to wit : 1970 Buick , 2
dr .
H.
T .,
Ser
No . ~U RNI S HEO
apartment
435370H 198806, said co ll at eral
adults only in Middleport
Phone 992 3874.
be i ng held to sec ure an
o bl i gation ar ts ing un der a
3 25 tfc
r etail i nstalment security
agreement held by General
Motors
Acceptance
Cor porat ion as se c ured party
Sa id publi c sale is to be con ducted according to the taw s
of the Sta te of w . Va. General
Motor s
Acceptance
Cor
poration reserv es t he right to
b id at this sale .
The co l lateral is presently
st or ed an d m a y be seen at
Smit h Net son Mo to rs, Inc .,
Po meroy, Ohio .

8·28-61p

1976 STAR CRAFT Trailers N '
Fold Downs in stock, all 1975
units cost plus SSO . Camp
Conley Slarcraft Sales , Rt .
62, N . of Pt Pleasant, W .

Va.

8·28-2tc

STEREO ' R A DIO ,
am -fm ,
console, .4 speed changer .
Balance S101 66 or terms .
Call 992 -3965
8 26-lfc

949-4917 or 992-5906.

1974 STARCRA F t fota -aown
camper with awning , sleeps

8. $1,900 Phone 992 25 14
a 26 61c

1976 CHRYSLER boats in
stock at 1975 pr i ce s. Also,
Chrysler fishing
boats .
Seve ra I used boats for sate
Longfellow Motors , Ravens
wood, w . Va Phone (304)
273 -3594
8 26 6tc
CA NNING t o mato es. Pick
your own. Also , melons,
A ndr ew Cros.s, Letart Falls,
Ohio Phone 247 -2852 .
8-26 -61c

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
Now under construction. 3
bedroom, rec. room, bath &amp;
112 , doUble garage, bi-level
home situated on an acre of
ground with all utilities, on

the Wild Wood

Estates.

located on flatwoods road ,
between Route 7, and 33 .

Will be ready to sell in 6
wks ., by owner.
George HobsteHer
Owner

Phone 985-4186

Beautiful Village Strout RealtJ
Manor

GENERAL MOTORS
ACCEPTANCE COR PORATION

( 8 ) 29, ltc

- - --- - - - - - - - - - -- NOTI C'E OF S A"LE The re al esta t e o f t h e l a t e
O rba E
St oul. D ece ased,
which is sit ua te d in th e Village
of
H ar r isonv il le,
Meigs
County, Ohio, will be offer ed
fo r sa l e at the offi ces of Crow ,
Crow &amp; Porter, At tor n eys at
L aw, Pomeroy , Oh io , at 1 00
PM
on Wednesday , Se p tembe r 3r d , 1975 Th e pr ope rty
may be seen by con ta c ting the
un ders ign ed at T he Fa rmer s
Ban k &amp; Sa v in gs Company,
Pomeroy , Oh ro T erm s of sa t ~
are c ash , an d t h e pr Ope rt y wilt
b e so ld subrect to the l i en f o r
r eal estate t axes f or 1975. T h e
right is r ese r ve d to r e j ec t any
and all bids

Theron Johnson.
Executo r of t he
L ast Wil l and Te s tam ent
of Orba E Stou t ,
Oe c easf)d
Crow , Crow &amp; Port er ,
A llorneys for Ex ec utor
fa 1 22 , 29. 2tc

Now Leasing For

NO. 133 - 3 BR older home

In town. Walking distance

of school &amp; stores, fully
insulated ,
new
•alum.
windows &amp; storm windows.

glassed in front &amp; back
porches. nice large rooms,

Immediate Occupancy
Located on Third &amp; Mill in Middleport,
these all electric suites, are carpeted with
free trash pickup and are convenient to
downtown.
MONTHLY LEASES FROM:

•1 04.00 Plus Electric For
One-Bedroom Apts.

bath &amp; half, $19,000,00.

S EW I NG
.I

608 E . , I
M.AIN
_
POMERO-Y.
5 MtLES OUT ON RT. 143
- NEW - 2 B.R.. bath.

o

ni ce
kitc h en,
full
basemen!, n rce rec. R. All
electric. ca rp ort , storag e, l

a cre. JUST $22,700.
TUPPERS PLAINS on Rt .
21n acres . Home ha s
n ew steel si ding , 2 B. R. ,
bath, dining R., own water
&amp; city water. garage, lot s

BACKHOE tor r enr. nour or
cont ract.
Reg.
or
ex
caval! ng type . Se pti c ta nk s
lnslaHed . Bill Pullins . Phon e
99 2-2478 .
B-27 -tf c
C U S T UM
F R AM IN G ,

PI C TURE
OR I G INA L
SEASCA P~
A ND LAND
SCA PE F'AINTIN GS. ' E .
J OYCE M ILLER , 997 7680
8- 10 7A ip

7 -

of building sites. 510,500 .
POMEROY - High on a
hill . 2 B.R., bath . n1ce
kit chen, utility R ., air '
con d ., nat gas h eat Tool
shed , 2 ca r garage, l 1/ 2 acre

very private. SACR IFICE
PRICE $13,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Older 2
story

home .

Good

con-

dition , 3 B.R , 2 baths,
utility R., dining
R .,
st orage bldg .. sma ll yard .
Cl ose to shopping . JUST

$8,300 .
FOR GOOD HOMES PRICED RIGHT - SEE
OR CALL US TODAY .
PHONE 992-2259

WELDING and cUtting ser vi ce s, Portable . Phon e 949 4114
a 24 -6tp

1971 DiEVY NOVA

7-24 ·1fc

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

HOU SE at 128 L aur e l St . ,
Pomeroy . For furth er •n
formation . call 992 -3866.
8-24 - lltp

EXCAVATING, doz er, IOoo er
an d backho e work . septic
t a nk s
installed ;
dump
tru c k s and lo boys for hire .
witt haul fill dirt. top soil ,
lim estone and grave l,.. Call
Bob o r Roger Jeffers, day
p hone 992 7069 . n ight phon e
992 3525 or 992 5232 .
2 11 lfc

- -- -- --

... -- - - - -

· E LWOUU BOWER S REPA I R
- · Swee p er s, toa st e rs , iron'S ,
all sm all appliances . Lawn
moWer, n ex t to State High
way Garage on Route 7·
Phone 985 3825
Solarium,
TV
room,
3
4 16 -ffc
bedrooms ,
1112
baths, - ··-- -------- - - - TOI LE ·,
basement and garage . Good PORlABL E
R ENT A L ,
Co n s truction '
residential area . $25,000.00.
Outdoor
eve nt s
Phone
MODERN - Nice 3 bedrooms
Gallipolrs,
446 A78t,
Russell's Plumbrng and,
with storage closets, large
Heat ing .
bath. basement . garage with
8 19 ffc
s hop and
J ;4
a cr e
I at .

$23,500.00.
26 ACRES - Near town, large
barn with concrete floor , ,..,d 7
room house, next to school.

Lli;T US DO IT! !

carpetiog
501 NYLON

Move right in . $31,500,00.
3 ACRE LOT - Near mine
with dug well. Will hold 2
trailers

and

then

$4500 .00.
POMEROY

some .

3

ni ce

499

bedrooms with closets, dining,
modern k itchen , full basement
near sc hool and
stores .

$17,500.00,
5 8 E DROOMS -

Renovated

older home with modern
kitchen and 2 baths. Large
porch and large corner lot

with alley. $34.500.00.
OLD BRICK - 10 rooms, 2
baths , natural ga s furn ace,
basement. city water and
large lot. Garden space. Only

$12,000.00. NEW LISTING
.t.Q_OK AT OUR PICTURES,
WE HAVE HERE AT THE
:OFFICE. DROP IN OR CALL
992-=1325.

Square
Yard

RUBBER BACK
e

have hundr.
values Your
pleted in
I~~:,~~~: No long
. Our installer
years experience .. Expert
installation. You'll like
what vou get. ·

I

CAL\. 742-4211 '

TALK TO WENDELL
GRJITE,
CARPETCONSULTANT

&amp; 1 yr . old heating system,
$11,500 .00.

3 BR, FHA

approved all elec. home on

1

Convt .. 6 c:yl., auto., P.s . .......... . ..............

SAVE -SAVE .
1968 MERCURY COMET2 DR .
1970 NOVA V-8 CPE .

51295

Blk . v inyl roof . grey finish, good tir es, autom atic ,
power stee ring , radio.

Th

Time

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel
'77-IANJ&lt; 7V

Chester, 0 .

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Relatives from a distance
here for the funeral services
of Wallace Hill were Ralph
Hill, Lebanon, Penn.; Mr.
and Mrs. Ira Hill, New
Waterford; Mrs. Goldie Shain
of Logan and her son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Walker of Junction
City.
Mrs. Linda Grimm had the
misfortune to faD at her
home, breaking her leg. She
is in traction at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs . Cord en
Randolph
and
Nondus
Hendricks of Racine and Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Braden of
Pomeroy attended the
funeral of Rufus Randolph
Saturday, Aug . 23, at
Baltimore, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs . .Tun Bracemoved their family and
hoUSE:hold goods to Crown
City.
Mrs. Phyllis Bailey was
hostess for the Ruth
Missionary Circle meeting
Thursday evening, August 21.
After a program and business
session, refreshments were
served by Mrs. Bailey to
Mary K . Yost, Nondus
Hendricks Barbara Gheen,
Marjorie 'Grimm, Caroline
Miller, Linda Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. George Moseley at
Dexter City and called on
friends in Marietta and
Belpre .
Mrs . Opal Diddle and Mrs.
Cora WEbb of Racine
Otapter O.E.S. attended the
Roberta Circle at McConnelsville on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ottie
Morris at St. Albans, W. Va.
Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. William

Loftis and David of Scott
Depot, W. Va., visited Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Brace
Tuesday evening, August 19.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hart
of Newark announce the birth
of a new daughter. Their
children, Rodney and Tracy
Hart, visited their grand. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
hart.
Mr . .and Mrs. Kenneth
Turley and Kenny spent
Sunday at Lake Ahna with
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ball and
children of St. Albans, W. Va.
who are camping there on
vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Horner of Richfield, Ohio
were overnight guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Elza Birch while
enroute home from a trip to
Kentucky.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
and Mrs. Jack Adams visited
Mr . and Mrs. Fred Brace at
South Shore, Ky. and also
visited at Greenup Locks and
Dam.
Irene Taylor, Beaver, Pa.,
Ruth Jene VanHorn, Beaver
Falls, Pa., and Grace
Helmick, New Brighton, Pa.,
were overnight
guests
Monday of Mrs. Hazel Carnahan.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris of
Springfield spent the afternoon Monday with Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Morris.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Wadswort)l and Debbie and
Diane, Dorothy Sayre and
Jane
Barrcaliff
of
Philadelphia, are guests of
Mrs. Edna Pickens. All were
supper guests Monday,
August 25, of Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Cozart.
Mrs. Loretta Wadsworth
and girls accompanied Mrs.
Barbara 'Roush and children
to Bowerston and spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.

4C!J

•
;

307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy
992-2298

'

CON'{ ACT :
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

.,'

v

1./ES,
U~
'SEE SOMETt-11 fo.lG
Iill A 1\'1/l.SCl)U/IlE

&amp;IRRY WAi. 'T£RS,
707

sa t 7,.,fiT

S'l' .JVSEPH, MO.

-(H~ IHE. INGID!:- Of
1liE. ROOM I ~ Q-IOWNBl&amp; E.NOUGH FOR
BASKE.fBAt..L. · • · ,

1971 FORD 6 CYL ...................... $1795
'h Ton P ick up , one ca refu l oWner . Shows good care .

USED CARS
/4 Cadillac S. DeVille, rad. tires, air...... '6500
7.1 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, pow., air.... :.- .. 15100
75 Chev. Caprice 4 door .................. ·'5595

74 Olds Salon Coupe,
power, air and vinyl roof... .............. .'4595
73 Monte Carlo, v-roof, pow., air.......... ,13995
73 P~. FuiJ 3 4 Dr., v-roof, air...........'2295
73 Olds Roy. 88fHT Cpe., air........... '3295
73 Olds 98 LS Sed., v-roof, air.......... ·'4395 ·
73 Nova ' 2 Dr., V-8 auto., P.S........... '2895
72 Olds Cut. Cpe., v-roof, pow., air ........'2895
72 Buick Elec. 225 HT Cpe., v-roof, air •• '2895
72 Chev. Imp. Cus. Cpe., pow., air ....... 12495
72 Ford Pinto Wagon, auto., radio....... 11895
72 Chev. Imp., 4 door, power, air ........ '2295
72 Dodge Swinger Cpe., V-8 auto. ....... '2095

Chester
News Notes
By Clarice Allen
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Weber
of Texas visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wolf and
other relatives.
Miss Barbara Jo Wilson,
Rochester, N.Y., spent a few
days with Mrs. Thomas
Weber.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom McNally
and Sharon Ann, Sandusky,
spent several days with Mr.
and Mrs. Roscoe Hollon.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark
and daughters have returned
from a vacation at Myrtle
Beach, S. C.
Virgil Wood, Springfield,
recently visited his mother
Mrs. Letha Wood.
Mrs. Roy Christy, Mrs.
Letha Wood, Mrs. Freda
Miller and Miss Lenora
Betzing called on Mr. and
Mrs. Don Betzing, Hemiock
Grove.
Miss
Lucille
Smith
received word that her sister
Elma Reuter, Akron, was
Injured In a car accident
there Monday and was
hospitalized for a broken arm
and several broken ribs.
Miss Marcella Hartman
spent a week with Mr. and
Mrs . Gene VanMeter ' and
family, Gahanna.
Miss Diana and Debbie
Cleland have returned to
their home at Ft. Sill, Okla.
after spending the summer
here with their' grandparents

Fred Sayre and family .
Teressa Brace of Crown
?\&lt;I NT
City spent a recent night with
her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Edison Brace.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve ·
Badgley and Kelll of
Colwnbus spent the weekend
1 ~~;.::~~ with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
•
· Badgley.

caf. Coe..

air.......... 12695
72 Olds 98 HT Sed. v-roof, power, air... ;•2895
71 Olds C.S. HT Coe., v-roof, air .......... '2595 .
71 Ford Count!} Squire, air ................ 11995
70 Chev. Monte Carlo Coupe ............. '2295
70 Dodge Monaco 4 Dr., a1r. ............. . '1595
70 Chev. El Camino, V-8 auto., P.S....... '1895
72 Pontiac

Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cleland.
Mrs. Cleland and son Vernon,
Colwnbus returned the girls
to their home and spent a
couple of days there with Mr .
and Mrs. Jerry Cleland. Mrs.
Jerry Cleland is improving
from recent surgery.
Mrs. Thomas fllenick, Tom
and Barbara Jean, Girard,
spent a recent weekend with
Mrs . Mabel Van Meter. Other
visitors have been Mrs.
Raymond Van Meter and son
Raymond, Youngstown.
David and Denna Williams,
Colwnbus, spent a week with
their grandparents Mr . and
Mrs. Ralph Keller .
Mrs. Annie B. Will, Jesup ,
Ga ., spent part of last week
with Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allep.
Mr . and Mrs. Henry
Hartman, Marcella and
Carla, recently visited at
Niagara Falls and also
visited with friends at In·
dustry, Pa .
, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Baker
Jr., sons Jim and Cle, Jesup ,
Ga ., spent a couple of days .
with Mr. and Mrs . Clayton
Allen .
Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Frietag, Canton, spent
several days with Miss
Lucille Smith_
Mrs
Eddie
Boyer,
Cleveland, spent several days
with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rice.
Mrs . David Tysinger,
Johnson City , Tenn., is
spending several weeks with
Mrs. Ross Cleland and other
relatives before going to
Hawaii where her husband
will be stationed with the
Army .
Miss Joyce Ann Bissen of
Alabama has spent .ever a!
weeks Wlth her parent~ Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Bissell and
family.
D. D. Cleland and Mrs.
Carpenter, Colwnbus, called
on Denzel Cleland , Sunday.
Mr. an'd Mrs. Charles
Eichinger and Suzannah,
Colwnbus, spent several days

•

One local owner , always on hard road . Light l oad s. 6 cyl.. std .

So ld new for over $6100 . Fu ll power, a ir . stereo. V -roof,
1. 500 miles . New Cadillac trade .

!~~o~·~·r ..................................$395
985-4100
:...ocaledon St. Rl. 7

I'

shift.

5395

V -8, std . trans ., radio .

PRESENT CAR WILl
NEVER BE WORTH MORE
EVERY CAR PRICED TO GO

~OUR

1972 DiEV. 1h TON PICKUP .......... $2195

SAVE

D a rk r e d , white vi nyl top , loaded wi th ex tras including
air cond ., tilt wheel, Cruise Control, cus to m interior ,
power &amp; reclining sea t, AM radio-t ape, radial w -s -w
tires, less than 4,500 m i les by local owner . SAVE -

owner .•••• ••••••••••

RIGGS USED CARS

•

Four wheel d r ive l/• ton P i ckup . Less than 39 ,000 easy miles
Power s tee ring , power brakes. 350 V -8 . Good tir es .

Pomeroy
OF
QUALITY · Motor Co.·

$
6
1
795
1969 MERC. COUGAR
$
2 Dr . h.t., auto., P.S, P.B., fac tor y tape .• , ..... 1Q95
cyl. sta nd tran s .. 4 dr . seda n ,

Clearance Sale

. 1973 DiEVROLEL ....................... $3995

•

1975 MONTE CARLO LANDAU

ALWAYS

GOOD BUY 75

Only $2995
price .
Only $2495
1971 CHEV. IMPALA 2 dr . H.T., air . P . S .,
1970 CHEV. 112 TON PICKUP, auto ., P . S.,
P. B., P . W., vinyl top . This has to be the
radio , also has a topper to match truck. O'lly
sharpest Chev. in town . New Buick trade-i n .
36 , 821 miles, I.Jcal owner . Good Buy at $~195
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~J~u~s~l~$~22~9~5~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~. .~. . . ...1

1967 DiEVY NOVA

till&gt;~ ~ HELP

-/

19J3 PLYMOUTH DUSTER, 2 dr . H. T., V-8 ,
auto ., P . S . , P . B., radio. a sharp yellow car .
This car has had the best of care. Extra low

~95

FUNNY BUSINESS

'I

19iJ- PONTIAC CATALINA, 2 dr . H. T., air
cond . We sold this car new . Extra low
mileage, local owner. Your fam!ly will love it.

l495

1968 DiEV. CAMARO

PieaSe .ca II if you want to
sell your farm.

•

$

4 Dr ., auto ., P .S . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

HAND LE TTERED SIGN S
AND PO STER S
F REE
ESTIMATES . CALL M . C.
C R A WFORD , 992 -76 80
B-7 26 1p

stores, includes gas range

Two-Bedroom Apts.

4

DOZER WORK , Excavating,
land c learing , ponds and
basements ,
and
land s caping .
Pullins
Ex cav al ing , phon e 992 2476 .
B '16 30tc

WOULD YOU BELIEVE?
Build an all steel building at
Pol e Barn pr ices? Golden
Giant AII .Steel Bu i ldings,
Rt . 4, Box 148, · Waverly,
Ohio . Phone 947 22lil6 .

$

1795
1971 DiRYSLER NEW YORKER $
Dr ., fact . air , P.S., P.B....................... 1495

MAC HIN E.

1974 V.W. BUG2 dr ., orange in color. 4 speed ,
loca l owner. This one won't last. Extra nice .
Priced at
Only $2895
1973 CHEV. MONTE CARLO, green with
green vinyl top, air, tape, cruise control, lilt
wheel. This is one sharp auto. Extra good buy
th is week .
$3795

........._

--' .-

POMEROY, OHIO

1974 PONTIAC VENTURA 6 cyl ., auto., P . S.,
low mileage, local owner . Extra nice , a gas
saver . Would make a nice family car .
Only $2895
1973 OLDS DELTA ROYAL, 2 dr . H.T., a ir
cond., one of the nicest Olds in the area. Refer
you to ow11 e r. Special this week. Only $3195

2495

Fully e quipped •••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••

se r vice, a ll makes .
992 2284 The Fab rit; Sh op ,
~omeroy Au lho1rl zed ' Singer
. a l es and Ser vi ce . We
, harp en Scissors .
3-29 lfc

NO. 136 - 2 BR older home
with full base., close fa

WE NEED farm listings.-

1971 T·BIRD COUPE

Rep ~i rs,

close by. 53.800.00.

•137.00 Plus Electric For

Appointments may be made by calling
Vickie Keatley at 992-3273, or by stopping at
Apt. 101 at Riverside Apts. on Front Street
in Middle;:~ort, Ohio . Equai Opportunity
Housing.

Real Estate for Sale

500 E. MAIN ST,

s

1973
PLYMOUTH SATELliTE
s
Se bring 4 dr. sedan . a uto .. P.S., P.B.••••• •.••••• 2195

D &amp; LJ TREE Trimming. "2"0
yea r s ex per ien ce. In su r ed ,
fr ee esttma t es Call 992 30 57 ,
Coo l vi ll e. Phone ( I ) .66 7
304 I.
4 30 lt c

Open Evenings Till
7 P.M. &amp; Sal. Til 5 P . M .
PH. 992-2174

2·SIGNS

1973 GMC SPRINT

Slop In Or

NO. 135 - 8.64 a , on paved

90xl20' lot in village of
Middleport, has 10x10
alum.
utility
bldg ..
$1a.soo.oo .

1971 BUICK RIVIERA
Auto ., fac t. a ir, P.S, P . B. ......................

road, J mi. from new mine
area, vacant. good fishing

NO. 138 -

2 Dr. H. T., fact. atr , P.S , P, B , vi nyl roof
1.~1;;,;,
.
.
~-········

Mt" CO N C RETE
Call992-7537 8-1·75
de l ive r ed right to your
p r o i ec t F a st a nd easy Free
es t imates Phon e 99 2 328-4. MOB IL E Crane serv ice and
Goeg t ein Ready Mix Co .
dozer work Phone 992 54 68 .
M• ~ d l epor l , Oh tO
8 -7 26tp
t.~ 30 HC

FOR SALE
3 acres of land, 2 mobile
homes, excellent well with
new deep well water pump .
Nice location in country.
Price reduced for quick
sale due to illness. See by
appointment
only
for
further information ca II

1972 FORD LID

Flatwoods, Ohio
Pomeroy , Ohio

. . ..~ack W. Carsey , Mgr .

CANNI N G p ea che s now thr u
Sep t e mber 10 . U S No . 1
gra d e ye ll ow F rees tone For
ca n ni n g or fr eezrng . $6 .49
busheL $3 49 1 ~ bus h el. $1.99
BRING
p ec k . P L EA SE
YOUR
OW N
CO N
TAINER S Peaches a r e o ur
sp ec ialty . Two conve ni ent
loc ations
Bob's Market ,
Mason , W Va Phone (30AJ
173 57 ? 1
an d
M rdway
Market , Pomeroy. O hi o
[61d) 99? ?58')
8 10 ?7 t c

Fully equipped ........................... . ..... ~2795

KUHL CAKE DECOR

POMEROY LANDMARK

19 14 ?0 FT
GOOSENECK
stoc k. trail er with 1974 Chevy
du al whee L 1 ton pickup
Can b e bou g ht togethe r or
se p arate Call 7.1? 3'167
B 10 r f c

1972 BUICK RIVIERA

Kitchen State Inspected
Licensed
Baker
and
Decorator .
Homemade
Noodles also featured .

- -- - - - - - - -

in for SlS .OO dtscount .

Phone 992-2181

4 Dr . Sedan, local I owner. fully oqu1pped .••••• ~2995

CAKE BAKING
WANTED

EXCAV"AT IN G.
ba ck h oe ,
dozer and -dt l cher
G_as,
elect ri c and water ltne
bur 1al . basements, foo ters,
se p tic systems and . br~sh
clea ning Will haul frll drrt ,
top s.oi t, sand and g r avel ,
l imestone for driveway s and
roads
Pnon e Charl es R
H atlte l d , Backhoe ~erv • ce,
Rt
1 , Rutland . OhtO , 742
609 ?.
7 11 90tc

CLIP THIS AD and bring it

~

1972 UNCOLN CONT.

Po mer,o"

Ph . 992 -2174

\E PTIL l ANK S c l eane d
Mod ern sanitatton 997 395
or 99? 7319
9 18 ttc

$2195

4 Dr . Sedan. fa ct a ir, P S., P .B.................

SMITH NELSON
M01'0RS, INC •.

mo .

4 10 1

s2495

green -green vinyl roof .•••••••

1973 OLDS DELTA 88

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Spe~ialist

Syracu se. Ohio

Ph. 992 -3993

tact . air. P.S., P. B.,

From the largest Truck or
B ulldozer Radiator to the '
s'}l a ll est H ea t er Cor e.

LARRY LAVENDER

~-----------,REA-D~

bath apt in .
Phon e 99 2- WHITEROCK and Babcock
hens, S2.50 each . Phone 9lil2 7407.
7 27-tfc

LI\URE:LANO A P AR TMENT ,
6t h and Geo r ge Sis., N ew
H aven ,
W · Va
IM
MEDIATE
OCCU PANCY
Se l ect
your
7 bedrm .
townhouse
B ea utiful n ew
ap t
compl ex
A pptran ces
furn is h ed.
co mp le t el y
carpe t ed. R e nt $1?8 and up
i ncluding utititt es . Call
r esident manager. Sa m or
Becky L on gana c r e. 1 304
1!82 25 67 . If no answ er, call 1
(304) 882 2788
8 19 12tc

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDtNG-SOFFITT
GUTTERS.AWNINGS

Tune - Ups • Batteries ·
Shock Absorbers • Tires •
Muffler-Ta i lpipes · Cooling
System s .
We
also
service
Volkswagens and other
foreign cars .
Wilbur Ward,
Mgr . &amp; Mechanic

fact. air, P.S.. P.B., viny l roo t .......... '14~f~.

1973 QiEVY IMPAlA 4 Dr . H T ,

Blown into Wall s &amp; A Hies

8·21 ·1 mo .

1969 CHEVROLET I mpa l a, 7
dr
custom
co upe
low
mt l caqe $8 50 Phone 985
-12.1 5. Ch es.te r
8 26 St c HUNTING Ltcense , Ni ght
c r aw le r s., meat worm s.
1971 F 0 R D 4 dr , a rr con
TACKLE , gu n s, am m o ,
ditioning. p s. p b 50.000
bows
arrows , c amp tn y
m li es Phone 992 3427
c qutp . C B' s and a ccess ory
India n Jo e·~. 308 Page St , ?
8 27 41p
s tr ee t s pa st Middleport
C:. w 1mm•ng Poo l
B lJ ?6tp
TR A IL ER. actu lt s on l y Ph one
• lm
19 75 H O N DA CB ?50
9913 181
maculate,
sho wro om
8 27 lie
co nditton
Buying - t ru ck
JA N D 4 ROOM lurnt sh ed a net
Fi r st Sl.69S Phone 99 2-7210
un tu rni Sh L'd
apartmf&gt;nl s.
8-29-3tc
Phon e 99 ? 5-13 4
4 17 t t c POTATOE S, Kennebe c and
cobblers . ve ry ni ce . No . 1
and 2 srze in SO lb . bag, ju st
TW O ru rn rshed a pt s
Ka y
dug . Also. c lean bat es of
Cecil. 87 South Sec ond Ave.
st r aw, nice fo r lands capin g
Midd l e p ort . O h io Phone
992 5'}67
and bed drng . Paul Sayr e,
R t . 338 1 m li e below Ravens
8 21 t f c
wood Fe rr y, G r eat Bend Rd .
N EW
VILLAGE
M anor
Phone 84 3-22 86
Apartment s i n Middleport , 1
6 -29 -3tc
bedroom apt s from $104 p l u s
elec Ca t 1 992 3273 or see P E R SO NAL elect r ic washer.
Mrs
Keatley, Apt
101 ,
Gene ral E l ec. sw iv e l type
Riverside Apartments .
s w eeper, u sed very littl e.
8-2B -26tp
Padded tron lng board on
stand, large . 22x22 ete c.
flo o r fan with co ntro ls.
MOBILE home space, 1 ac r e
Phon e 992 2358
m country Write Bo x 613 ,
Pomeroy , Oht O or call (6181
8 79 3tc
524 582 5.
8 29 l8t c ENG L IS H Shej:th erd p up s
Phon e (6 14} 698 4.499
_ ------------O NE trailer lo t , gas, water,
a 29 3tp
e l ec tr rcil y available. H rg h
St r eet, Middleport , Ohro . POTATOES , red , La Soda ,
Phone 992 2864 .
Kennebec , co bbler
Phon e
8-29 -3tc
Tom Sa y re, 843 249 1.
8 27 -3tp
TWO bedrm
mobile hom e,
phone lil92 342 9
LU MBER for sate, doors,
8 29 61p
wrndows, and all kinds. Call
after 5 p m 992 3658.
T R A IL ER space for re nt in
8-27 -6tc
Middlepor t Phone 992 5434
8 29 -26t c ELECTRIC ran ge in good
con d i t ion
Phone 992 -5302
8-27 3tc
2
BEDROOM
furnish e d
mobil e home No pets . Call
NEW cas co stroller , $25, two
992 7479
TV sets in good con dit ion ; 1
B 22 tf c
color, $75, 1 black and wh i te ,
$50 . Nin e yellow stamp
TRAILER s.pace for r ent
books, S3 each . Phon e 992
Phon e A l be rt Hi ll. 949 226 1
28lil7
8 26 7tp
a 27 -Atc
- -· - - - - - - - -- - 2 BE D ROOM trailer , ex t ra
A K C Brillainy $25 ; 80 lb
n •ce Phone 9'92 3324
Cro ssbow , $65, t wo storm
8-26 tf c
w indows , 28 x 36 , sa each.
Phone 992 7805 .
PRIVATE mee ting room for
8·27 ·6tp
any organ i zat i on , p hone 99 2
19 75
3 TO N central air conditioner
J 11 tf c
un it, Com fortaire . 36,000.
8 T U .'s, Phone 247 -3941
$5

Phone 992-9973
North 2nd Street

4 Dr . Sed .,

Blown
Insulation Service ~

SMITH. NELSON MOTORS

.$2495

1973 FORD GAL 500

FREE ESTIMATES

1?

1968
B I\ RR /1CUUA
P 5
au t oma t tc . Phone 949 2270
B 26. 6t c

1973 DiEVY IMPAlA

IS

OUR
PENCIL

ON ,-; ,-; USED CARS

f

For Rent or Sale

r iq hl l o edi t or reject ilny ads 1967 t- ALCO N station w agon
in e" c c tt ent cond i tton 790
deeme d
obiCCito nal
Th e
Map le St , Mtdd l eport , Ohio
publisher
wil l
n or
be
P hon e 992 2936
r f's ponsrb l e for m o r e th i'l n one
II 29 Jtc
tncor r E'c t m s(&gt; rlt o n

Mintmum Charge $ 1 00
11 ce nt s pe r wor d three
•

LABOR DAY SALE

W ANT A D S
I NFORMATION

I

~~~lm=-----~~~~::~-=~~-=~~~--------~

Fast Results Use The Sentinel .Classifieds

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC F I NANC lNG
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until6 : 00- Til~ p.m. SaJ.

News Notes
By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School attendance
Aug. 24 at the Free Methodist
Church was 90. Choir
members present - 15.
Worship services were 134
and morning offering was
$95.:Jii.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr,
and Bertha Parker, attended
the Ohio State Fair Friday.
Mr . and Mrs. Ben Fox,
Zanesville, visited recently
with Mr . and Mrs. Harmon
Fox.
Mrs. Florence Stahl, Stockdale, visited recently with
Mr . and Mrs . Norman
Schaefer.
Vern Story, who is employed in Cotwnbus spent the
week with his wife Fern Dora
and son John.
Mark Stahl, Stockdale,

last week with Mrs. Opal
Eichinger and family .
Clarice, Opal and Margaret
appreciated the letter and
comments of a Daily Sentinel
reader in Florida.
Mrs. Joyce Baker of Texas
spent a couple of weeks with
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Myers .

J;,. Ton Pickup, one local farm tr uck , auto. tr ans ,
steering, power brakes, l ow mileage .

power

1970 GMC 1h TON V-8 PICKUP. ..... $1695
Extra sharp tru ck , au to . tr a n s., power s teering .

1965 FORD 1h TON PICKUP. ...... :..... '595
Worth more .

1973 FORD GRAN TORIN0............. $2795
A d r. Sedan . One ca reful loca l owner . Power st eering, a uto .
trans .

1972 PONTIAC V-8 CATALINA,. ....... $2195
2 Dr . Hardtop , air conditioned , fully equipped , d a r k green
with w hite top .

See Fred Blaettnar, Darrell Dodrill,
Pat Hill, or Dan Thompson
. . . . .111111

·~

DOW ••

68 Cadillac Sed. DeVille, pow., air ... ,..... '895
68 Chev. Imp. Custom Coupe ............. '595

Laurel Oiff

1971 FORD F250 ......................... $1995

Fritz Stahl, New Marshfield,
Paul Stahl, Colwnbus, Mrs.
Kriss Kerrick, son Paul,
Beaver, Ohio visited Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. N. E .
Shaefer.
Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Ball
Run, was hostess for 11
members of the Laurel Cliff
Health Club. Mrs. Huffman
and Mrs. Margie Goett was
welcomed into the club .
Refreshments of ice cream
and cookies were served.
Mr . and Mrs. Harmon Fox
entertained Sunday with a
family dinner and several
birthdays were celebrated.
Those present were Mr . and
Mrs. Gene Hines and Dana,
Mr . and Mrs . Michael
Douglas, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Howard and Jason,
Mrs. John Douglas, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Burke and Criss,
Earl Roush, Patty and
Mandy, Mrs . &lt;ltester Roush,
Stacy and Kraig, Mr. and
Mrs. Lennie Lyons and
Leslie, Mr . and Mrs. Larry
Walker, Mr . and Mrs. Roy
Howell and Jeff Howell.
Rev . and Mrs. Shook will
spend Labor Day weekend
with relatives in Penn, sylvania.
Rev . Morris Wolfe will be
guest speaker at the )ocal
church August 31.
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wise ,
McConnelsville , - attended
~

lly
• iE'l HOWAilD_ C. llACK

DON'f BE AFRAID TO BE A SQUARE
Many words of the English language have been a bused and
aometlmes made to mean that which was never originally
intended. The word "square" is an example. The basic
meaning of "square" is "to raise to the second power, to be
straight forward, honest". It is also descriptive of an object
having four equal sides with four right angles. The word IS
suggestive of strength and aolidity.
But, how many times is the word "square" used to mean
aomething else? It has been spoken in mockery, often
suggesting cowardice and weakness, or it has been said, implying an out-moded, old-fashioned idea . When someone hasn't
gone along with the crowd, or has taken an unr ' pular stand
concerning a particular situation, there are those who are
quick to label that person a "square".
Don't be afraid to be called a "square " . Remember that
the world needs people today who have strength of character.
When this world seems to be crumbling around us and many
people are "going to pieces" because of the mental strain,
anguish, and frustrations of Ieday's fastiJaced livmg, we need
men and women with a strength of character that makes them
solid, dependable citizens.
The world needs people who will walk uprightly and
straight forward. What we don't need are the scoffers and
those who take delight ridiculing others, making light of every
virtue that has been proven strong and true over the centuries
of time.
Don't be afraid to be called a "square" if you are made fun
of for old.fashioned morality and honesty. Don't be afraid to be
called a "square" for not going along with Ieday's so&lt;aUed
' 'new-morality" and changeable "situation ethics" of today .
There are still aome absolutes we need to live by , else we
perish.
The "squares" of our modern-&lt;lay society are not to be
taken lightly. They believe in God and try to live an ~pright
Christian life . They believe in and read the Bible seriOusly.
They believe in and practice the power of prayer. These
. modern-day "squares" don't "cut corners" and "goof. off".
They give an honest day's work for an honest day's pay . They
don't lie or cheat on the other person, or steal from him. They
believe ihat it Is more important to play fair than to win the
game. They are "square with the world" and wiD always give
you a " square deal" . You -can always depend on tbe
~ ~squares"!

When the wheel needs to be turned, the field dug, and the
mountains moved, the "squares" will do them. When dreams
need to be turned into realities, the "squares" will do it. When
things need to be done, the "squares" are the people who get
them done!
Don't be afraid to be a "square" !

services at the local church
Stmday.
Open house will be held at
the Methodist Church in
Pomeroy Aug. 31 for the 59th
Anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Karr, from 2 till 5
p.m .

TO CELEBRATE 64TH
Mr. and Mrs . Herman
Wolfe, Racine, will quietly
celebrate their 64th wedding
anniversary Sept. I. They
have one daughter, Mrs .
Daisy Sayre , several grandchildren,
greatgrandchildren and greatgreat-grandchilctren .

�1

12-The Daily Sentinel, M!ddleporl-Pomeroy, 0 , Fnd"y, Aug 29,1975

Bri4ge
( Contmued from page 1)
director for the Meigs County Counc1l on Agmg, sa td that the
survey form - some !,BOO copies - can be sent out free of
charge to semor cttlzens for thetr opmions through the Semor
Citizens Center.
[t was reported aL'ia that cop1es of the comprehensive
plans for the counly can be duphcated by the Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Development Commisswn for JUSt
Ute cost of the paper involved Changes also can be made althc
time of the reprmtmg by Buckeye H1Us-Hocking Valley .
The commission heard a report from Mrs. F.d1lh Talberl ,
who is working w1th a survey of housmg in Middleport and
other parts of the county . She said the pubhc had bas1ca ll y
been recepllve to the survey form . However, she sa1d that
while young people needmg hom es are VItally mlerested in the
survey, older residents wh o have homes already arc umnterested.
Presiding over the meetmg Thursday was Thereon
Johnson, chairman Others HLLending were Naomi Brmker,
V1rg1l Teaford, F. F . Rob1nson, George Collins , Blakeslee ,
Baker, Jeff Burt and Harry Bumgarner of Buckeye HlllsHockmg Valley, Wesley Buehl, Mrs Thoma.s and two
representatives from Jenmngs Assoc iates

News •• in Briefs
(Continued fr om page 11
sa1d " We need mstltuttons to control the dtstnbution of
resources.''
CHICAGO-AN OUTBREAK OF mosqu1to-carned en cephalitis has reached ep1d em1c proportiOns m the Ch1cago
area Health off1ctals stepped up mosquito abatement
programs to try to stamp out the d1s ease
The disease, known as St. Louts encephalitis, ha s no known
cure, but 1ts v1ctuns usually recover naturally Slate health
off!c!als SBld the d1sease 1s suspected m two deaths In llhnms
Ut1s year - that of an 18-year-&lt;Jld man in Chicago's suburban
Oak Park and a 5:&gt;-year-&lt;&gt;ld man m Wayne County .
PORTLAND, ORE - THE NUMBER OF HEPATITIS
cases traced to two restaurants has n sen to 47 but a mediCal
expert says physlClanS have a lwo-week head star t agamsl a
potential epidenuc. Six more cases were reported Thursday by
doctors at a news conference held m the Hungry Horse, one of
two restaurants involved
The alerting of the health department by the restaurants'
management allowed the two-week head start, said Dr. Joseph
Srmth, a hepalltis expert of the Public Health Service. A
temporary clinic was set up m the restaurant to g!Ve gamma
globulin treabnent aga1nst possible hepat1tls. The other affected restaurant was Oliver 's London Pub

Wildcat strike bucked l ~ Area Deaths
I

CHARLESTON, W Va
About 1,800 Pennsylvarua coal mmers bucked
a wildcat strike and eturned
to work today , addmg w
press ure on over 60 ,000
mmers to end theLr walkout m
e1ght states
Uruted Mme Workers of1UPI) -

be held at lhe h1gh school at

Alfred Cotlenll. 24, Rl

7 30 p m Tuesday All band
parents are urged to attend

to wed are Marvm

, Rt

l MASON DRIVE-IN
'.'·,' , ,,

·~

3.

'/V V ,1

l ,,, lo•m Nrqhllv

Double Feature Show

Frr ., Sat , SUn .
Aug 29-31
TEEN AGE
PLAYMATES
( RaledRI
THE GIRLS OF
42ND STREET
I Raled Rl

I,

Rutland, and Rebecca Ann
Wrll , 20. Rt 3, Pomeroy, and
Ke tth Elmont Miller , 23 ,
Tuppers Pla1ns , and Pamela
Sue Balser, 20. Tuppers
Platns

A rummage sale planned
Saturday at the Doyle Hudson
residence for the benef1t of
the Freewill Bapti st Church
has been postponed until
further notice.

I

Pomeroy, and Bonnre Lou
Haugh t, 19, Sy ra cuse , Dan

I

Two suds for d1vorce and
one for support have been
f1led 1n Me1gs County Com
man Pleas Court Jesse L.
Buchanan, Rt 1, Reedsville,
f1 led agarnsl Elsa Buchanan ,
same address. and Betty
Paul rne Wyant , Al bany,
agatnsf Milford Curn Wyant,
Albany, each on charg es of
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty
Filing tor support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Act
was Janet G
Marcum,
Pomeroy, agarnst Dav1d W
Marcum, Flatstaff, Anz.
Mt
Hermon Women ' s
M1sston Assn will hold a yard
and bake sale at the corner of
SR 7 and Forest Run Road
Friday , Sept 5, from 10 a m
to 3 p m

•
OUR NIGHT DEPOSITORY IS always open,
24 hours a day, to rece1ve and safeguard
your deposits It s for you Use 1!1

1,800 miners, in the

to
1m t!al
the
By RICHARD H. GROWALD ready
agreement.
JERUSALEM ( UPI I The offlc1al told reporters
Isra el w1ll tnltial the interun
peace agreement w1th Egypt at the Foreign Mirustry daily
negutlated by Secretary of br~efmg he heheved Israel
Stale Henry K1ssinger, a w11l prob"bly m1t1al the
government offtc1al sa1d document followmg a &amp;mday
or Monday cabmet meetmg.
today
The pact - a two and a hail
It was the most d1rect
statement thus far by an page document wntten m
Israel! official that Kls· e1ght clauses w1th no
smger's mne-day efforts w preamble - sllll has to be
negotiate a cor nerstone pact worked on by Kissinger and
on wh1ch to bwld a Middle negotiators, Ute offic1al sa1d
But he sa1d the difficulties
East peace will be suc'Cessful.
Egypllan Pres1dent Anwar are not anything that could be
Sadat satd m Alexandna ca lled insurmountable.
Thursday night h1s country Is

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
James
Sears, M1ddleporl; Hubert
Stewarl , Middleport; Edward Capehart, Shade;
Tamm1 Dugan, Shade;
Cheryl Woods, Middleport;
W111iam Bush, Middleport;
R1chard Duckworth,
Syracuse ; Paul
Ables,
Racine; Martha Repp,
Middleport: Lester Lewis,
Cheshire.
DISCHARGED - Karen
Rhodes, John Taylor

PLEASANf VALLEY
DISCHARGES - James
Bell, Pmnl Pleasant; Doris
Car bit, Point Pleasant;
Grover Hazelwood, Pomt
Pleasant; Mrs. David Moore
and daughter, Northup; Mrs.
Mike Pollock, Patriot; Helen
Wheeler, West Columbia;
Robert
Darst,
Pomt
Pleasant; Mrs . Leddie
Doohllle, Pomt Pleasant;
Mrs. Dallas Sallis, Roberts·
burg; Bessie Slayton, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Willard
Luckydoo, Pomt Pleasant;
Eva Knopp, Mason ; Michael
McCarty , Pomt Pleasant;
Kevm
Hudson,
West
Columbia; Norman McBrair,
Point
Pleasant;
Carl
McKenzie,
Kitts
H11l;
Tammy Holley, Galhpohs,
and Virgmia Smith, Henderson .
SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
answered two calls to the
Riverside Apartments Thursday, at 10 49 a.m. for Eva
Bailey who suffered a
possible broken hip and was
taken to Holzer Med1cal
Center and at 7:18 p m. for
Martha Repp who req111red
oxygen . She was taken to
Veterans Memor~al Hospital
where she was adm1lled

At Your Fingertips

the

central and western parts of
Ute state, reported for the
m1dmght shift m response to
a federal court mjunctlon
1ssued m Pittsburgh by U S.
Judge Gerald Weber and to
p1ck up hohday pay for the

Israel will sign

Notices, local news, briefs
A spec1al meelmg of th e
Southern Band Boosters will

rtctals rn Pennsylvama sa id

BONDS GIVENUP
Forfeiting bonds m the
cour t of Pomeroy Mayor Dale
E. Smith Thursday night
were Carl Kla1ber, Pomeroy,
$250, posted for dnvmg while
mtoxica ted, and Gene Wolfe ,
Pomeroy, $50, posted for
d1sturbmg the peace

MEIGS lliEATRE
Tonrte thru Sunday
Aug 29 -31

Agatha Chnstte's

MURDER ON THE
ORIENT EXPRESS
(Techntcolorl

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Aug. 28)
Denver Adkms Jr , Pamela
Demse Bloomfield, Joy
Clary, Charle s Shernll
Cnner, De lena I Edwards,
Elsie I. Haddox, Golda M
Hanson, Maude E Henry ,
Earl I Howell, S1dney Edward Huddl eston Sr., Pamela
McGee, Sandra Lee Moore,
Dav1d E. Morga n, Edward ·
Dame! Myers, Forrest Amll
Payne. V1v1an J. Plwnmer,
Genevieve
Rhea,
Ltlly
Robertson, Wllham G. Shell,
Earl Wayne Snuth , Ph1hp
Allen Snyder, Margaret A
Souders. Charles A Stapleton
III , Frances Helen Tab1t,
Coella Thomas. Linda Sue
Thompson, Mickey W1lhams,
Deborah
Sue
Woolum,
George J Young, Geraldine
Mane Young.
I Births)
Mr. and Mrs. George
Osborne, a son, Jackson; Mr.
and Mrs. John W. Burdette, a
daughter, Leon, W. Va.

Mar or League Leaders
By Untted Press International

Leadtng Batters

(based on HO at bah)
Nallonat League
9 ab r
h pet.
Madlock , Chr
113 &lt;~52 68 163
36 1
Watsn , H 1\6 43 1 62 143
332

Srmmons, St L

127 460 66

\SO
138

326
326

106 392 44 127

J24

Mrgn, Cn 122 423 91
Sa n~ulllen ,

Prt

Josh, SF 105 408 60
Rose, Cn 132 545 89
Mrcr . SF 120 426 70

l31
174
l34

109 420 67

13 2

314

Amencan League
g ab r
h

pc1.

Prkr,Pt 119 443 60 139
Brock, St L

Crw , Mn 121

452 79

166

Lynn , Bs 119 430 82 141
Munson, NY

J2l

319

315
314

367
328

128 479 69 153
MeR, KC 121 461 57 143
Washrngton. Dilk
120 475 66 147
Smgleton, Bat
118 485 74 148
Orta , Ch r 114 439 54 134

319
310

Bs 119 469 78 142

303

Rrce

upcommg
Labor
Day
weekend.
Sim Howze, a UMW official
10 Logan County, W.Va .
vowed "''U do aU I can w
obey the court order," as he
emerged from Jail m
Charleston. He had served SlX
days of a 61klay sentence for
refusmg w lead his men back
to work in defiance of a
federal court order.
US Judge K K. Hall, who ·
lSSUed that order and freed
Howze when he promised to
try to end the strike, Thursday raised to $600,000 the
fme against the UMW. Hall
threatened to add $100,000
each day his back-to-work
order is dehed.
The str ike mushroomed
from a local protest Aug . 11
over the firing of a Logan
County miner mto a demand
throughout the Appalachians
for the right to strike over
local gr1evances without fear
of court tn}unchon.

NO PAPER MONDAY
fhere will be no paper
published Monday, Labor
Day, to permit employes
of the Ohlu Valley
Publishing Co. to take part
In the national holiday.

..

·;.;.:·· :.;.;.;.;.

Harrisonville
Society News
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Gibson
and Robm of Colwnbus spent
the weekend here and helped
h1s dad, Bob Alk~re ce lebrate
h1s b1rthday.
Mr and Mrs. Larry Clark
and frumly returned home
Saturday evemng from
Myrtle Beach, S.C. and
reported a joyous week
Mrs. Norma Lee had some
relatives who visited her and
took her across the river on
the ferr y which she thought
was q111te a treat
Mr. and Mrs. Dav1d R1ggs
and children attended the
state fa1r Monday
Those from here who "llended the state fair w1th the
Semor C1tizens were E. R.
Carr, Mr and Mrs. Henry
Turner, Minnie McGrath,
Nellie Borgan, Hazel Stanley
and Lulahelle Eshelman. All
report a nice time.
Mr and Mrs. Chnton
G1lkey of Albany v1s1ted h1s
mother Ava Gilkery Sunday
evemng.
Guy G1lkey of Colwnbus ,
son of Mrs Jane Gilkey was
marned last Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs . Darold
Graham and three children of
Newark and Mr . and Mrs
Harold Graham and three
children of Colwnbus were
guests of Mrs . Bess1e
Graham Sunday.
Mrs .
Carl
Sampson
ass1sled Mrs. Roy Wiseman
w1th her cleaning.

309

305
305

Hargro"¥e. Tex
118 420 68 127
302
Hrrh , Tx 122 423 69 127
300
Home Runs
Nat10nat League
Luzrnskt
and Schmrdl Phil 31, K mg man,
NY 27 , Bench , C1n 25 , Foste r ,
Crn 21
American Leag ue Mayberry,
KC 29 Jackson , Oak 28 , Scot t.
M 1l
27
Bonds,
NY
25 ,

Burroughs, Tex 22
Runs Baf1ed In
National League
Luzmsk1 ,
Ph tl 103 , Bench, Cm 102 , Perez.
C1n 91 ; Staub , NY 90 , Wa t son ,
Hou 83
Amencan League Lynn , Bos
91 , Rice, Bos and Mayberry,
KC 87, May, Ball 84, Sca li Mil
and Nettles, NY 82
Stclen Bases
Nat1onal League Lopes, LA
59 , Morgan , C1 n 52 Brock, St L
49 , Cedeno, Hou 42 , Cardenal ,
Ch 1 26
Amencan League
Rtvers.
Cal 64. WaShington, Oak 37 ,
Oils KC JJ, Remy. Cal 31 ,
Carew , Mmn and Bonds, NY 29
Pdchtng
(Based on most vtctonesl
Nat1onal League Seaver, NY
19 7 , Jones, SO 17 8, Sulton LA
16 10 .
Matlack .
NY
15 s.
Morton, All 15 14
Ame ncan League Palmer,
Ball 19 8. Kaat , Cnt 18 10 .
Hunter, NY IS 12 Lee. Bos 17
7, Blue, Oak 17 10

all

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

'

STRIKE PREVENT
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Officers of Un1ted M1ne
Workers D1strict 30 in
Eastern Kentucky were
expected w meet w1th coal
operators here today in an
effort to prevent mcidents
thallead to massive walkouts
by coal mmers

UN1TCALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad
was called Thursday for
Bernice Molden, Mulberry
Ave, at 4:08 p.m. who was
havmg chest pains. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hosp1tal.

NOW YOU KNOW
Reno, Nev. is further west
than Los Angeles.

,

! Gray c s
1

C. J . SCHOPPERT

County Memorial Hospital .

Charles Joseph Schappert,
5l,of S601 Germantown Road,

Mr Gotschall was born
Jan 21 , 1893 In Harrisonville.

Middletown . Ohto, formerly
the son of the late Charles A.
of Rutland, dted Saturday, and Emma E Carpenter
Aug . 23, at hts res 1dence
Gotschall A rettred painter.
Servtces '1ere held Wed
he was a member of the
nesday at 2 p m, Aug 27, at
Ltcking Bapt•sf Church .
the Oswald Funeral Home in
Besides his parents he was
a
Lebanon Burtal was m the preceded tn death by
Sout h Lebanon Cemetery
daughter .
He was a former employe
Surviving are hts wife,
of the Branch Fleming Coal
Ethel N ; three sons, William
Co
' C. Sr ., Columbus . R1chard
He IS surv 1ved by h 1s w 1fe,
N, Lake City , S C, and John
Kathleen De ton s Schappert;
L., of Hebron. eight grand
four
daughters ,
Mrs
ch1td ren and five great Cha rl otte Gosney, Lebanon,
grandchildren
three
Mrs Patnc 1a Holloway and
brothers. Charles V
and
Mrs
Cathy Herron, of
Harold D, both of Balt1more,
Middletown , and Carol at
Md , and Howard R of
home ; one son, Charles Jr..
Parkersburg, and a s1ster,
at home. a sister , Mrs
Mrs. Jesse E Swan of
Warren D Black of Rutland ,
Rutland
h1s step fa ther, Sidney w
Funeral se r v1ces wi ll be
Taylor of Rutland , and nme
held at 2 P m Sunday at the
grandchildren
Emerson -Newk 1rk
Funeral
Hom e in K~rkersville with the
Rev Raymond Marlow, the
ANNA JOHNSON
Rev Paul Simpson and the
Funeral servtces for Mrs
Rev
John Crane offlclatmg
Anna Johnson, 82, Route I,
Bur1a l wdl be tn l1ckmg
Dexter , who dted Wednesday
Cemetery. Frtends may call
even1ng
at
her
home
at
the funeral home fr om 2 to
followtng'a short Illness, will
be held ~~ 11 a m . Saturday at 4 and 7 to 9, both on Fnday
the Wilkesville Chapel of th e and Saturday
Walker Funeral Home
Mrs Johnson was born
LUCILE DAVIS HULL
Feb 9, 1893 in Ironton, the
Lucrle Oavrs Hull. 78.
daughter of the late James S
w1dow of Gen John E Hull.
and Mary Runyon Rowe .
former United States · and
Best des her parents she was
Unrted Nations commander
preceded m death by her f1rst
rn -c href in the Far East, died
husband, Frank Hayden.
Aug 22 at Walter Reed Army
four brothers, and three
Medical Center after a br ief
sts fers
illness. accordtng to the
Survtv1ng are three sisters,
Washington Post dated Aug.
Mrs. E V Chtlders and Mrs
25
Ber~ha Gannon. both
of
Mrs. Hut I I 1ved at 3331
Hunttngton, W Va, and Mrs
Connec l lcut
Ave
N'."
Gladys Cox. m Cal1fornia;
Washington , D C. Born
several step children and
Middleport. Ohio, she ,..,
severa l step -grandchildren,
fended schools there and Wd~
nieces and nephews
She
a
Phi Beta Kappa member of
marned Emory N Johnson
on May 8, 195-4, who also Ohio State University.
She marrred Gen Hull m
survives
1919.
Mrs Hull was active m
Offlclahng at the Saturday
Army wives groups and
services will be the Re v A 8
Maloy . Burial will be in the performed CLharity work at
the Army Distaff Home here
Mount Zion Ceme1ery 1n
Southshore, Ky · Friends may Gen. Hull died June 10.
The only local survivor Is a
ca ll at the Wilkesville Chapel
cousin, Elizabeth Davis
any ltme
Frsher of Middleport Mrs
Hull was the daughter of the
PHILLIP GOTSCHALL
late Thomas and Mary Davis
Phlll 1p Manley Gotschall,
of M1ddleport who operated
82. Route 1. Hebron, former
the Dav1s Ice and Coal Co
Harrrsonv1lle area restdent,
d1ed Thursday tn the l1 cking and a retail meat market in
Mtddlepor~ many years.

Property Oterry
Transfers

Ridge

Frankim D. Gheen, Donna
L. Gheen to Garnet Ervine,
By Jane Reeves
Ma:une Shain, .25A., Sutton.
The
third picnic of the
Opal R. W1ckham, John L.
W1ckham, Firn B Gaul, summer for residents of
Charles Franklin Gaul, Ruth Cherry Ridge and guests was
Ann J ohnson, Delores Gaul, held Saturday evening
Dale Johnson to Ro!!J!r L. August 23 at the home of Pud
B1ssell, Mary s. Bissell, Lot and Jane Reeves. Those
17, Chester.
· attending were Orner and
Roger L Bissell, Mary s. Dorothy Hess, Albert and
Bissell to Roy F Riffle, Faye &amp;hultz and daughters,
Frona K. Riffle, Lot, Chesler. Jul1a. and Alberta, John and
Carroll M. Fisher, Joan c. Lonme Hansen, Doral and
Fisher to Kenneth E. Beulah Hill, grandchildren,
Crabtree, 4.49A., Colwnbia. Wi~dy and Eric Cunningham,
Glona Kathleen Reynolds, Roger and Barbara Shultz,
Rhonda Sue Fetty David Jesse and Sandy Rodman and
Henry Fetty. Don~a Jean children, Tammy, Rachel
Johnson, Roy Wayne John- and . Shen~doah, C~therme
son, Thomas E. Wilson, Rob1son, Jllll and Kat1e Nally
Rhonda Jean W!ls.on to and daughter, Nancy, J 11l
Walter A w1ison, Betty Lou and Linda Schultz and
W1lson, Sec 12, Chesler.
daughter, Christine, and
Clyde Salser to Charles D. surprise guests, Vaughn and
Salser, .40 A., Sulton.
Ruth Fryar of Pensacola,
Charles D. Salser, Nora Fla.
Lowse Salser to Steve R .
Julia Schultz entered
Dailey, Rhonda L. Dalley, .40 Veterans Memorial Hospital
A., Sutton.
Sunday, Aug. 2~. to have
M1lo B. Hutchison , Betty A. minor surgery. Good luck,
Hutchison
to
Delmar Jul1a.
Larkins, Lot, Rutland.
Orner Hess had a surprise
c1 01 st E. Badgley, Flossie recently when one of h1s
F Badgley to Vtrgil E. spec1al cats, "a tom he
R~ush, Mary S. Roush, thought" had a litter of
parcels, Letart.
k1ttens. Better luck next
tune, Orner.

court meet
Judge Gordon B. Gray,
presiding judge of the Fourth
Dlsll'lct Court of Appeals, has
announced the Court will
convene Sept. 9 at 9:30 a.m .
m Galha County Courthouse
In addition to Judge Gray
of Athens, the court is
compnsed of Judge Homer
E . Abele or McArthur and
Judge Earl E Stephenson,
Portsmouth
The Court of Appeals
directly reviews all cases
heard or trted m lower courts
m wh1ch a decision is bemg
appealed. These cases may
have been tried m Common
Ple"s, Probate or Juvemle,
Mun1c1pal or County Courts,
and may be e1Uler civil or
crimmal cases.
The Fourth D1stnct Court
of Appeals serves 15 counties
in Southern Oh10. They are
Adams, Athens, Brown,
Galha, Highland, Hocking,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs,
Pickaway, Pike, Ross, &amp;ioto,
Vinton and Washmgton. The
case,
Randall
EdwarJ
Stanley and Ronnie A.
Stanley vs. Susan Stanley 1s
scheduled for hearing.
The court w1ll convene in
Me1gs County Cour thouse
Sept. 10 at 9· 30 a.m. The
following Meigs County cases
are scheduled: N1ta Jean
Rilch1e vs. Wilham J . Ritchie, Genevieve &amp;hneider, et
al, vs. Kroger Co., and Cheryl
Lee Fry vs. Jerry Leonard
Fry.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 30th
UNnL 5 PM

~:E-i.:r

"FAMILY OUTING"

the bank of
the cenlurr
tltabllllled 1172
All Accoun•s Insured to $40,000.00 by the
Federal Deposit lnsuranc&lt;? -.orporation.

BOOT AND SHOE WORKEKS
LOCAL UNION 385
OF
PORTSMOUTH, pHIO

CAMDEN PARK
U. S. 60 WEST

HUNTINGJON

Mrs. Betty Wr1ght and
children of Dublin, Va. spent
a week vis1ting her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Morris.
She returned home Sunday.
Sunday night dinner guest
of Mrs. Elvira Barr was her
children Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Barr. David and Michelle of
Rutland, Mr. and Mrs. Duane
Barr and Shawn of Oak Hill,
Ohio and Mr. and Mrs .
Michael Barr .
Jo Ellen Diehl of Pomeroy
was Friday evening dinner
guest of Mr. and Mrs .
MIChael Barr.
Mr . and Mrs. Danny
Gtllenwater of Charleston, W.
Va. spent the weekend with
his parents Mr. and Mrs. Gay
Gillenwater. Other weekend
visitors were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert
Thompson
of
Gahanna, Ohio, Mrs. Donna
Phillips and son, Mrs. Vicki
Russel and daughter and
Mrs. Freda Russel all of
Colwnbus, Ohio.
Mrs. Emma Ledlie and
brother, Mr . and Mrs.
Marcus Weaver, of Letart, W.
Va. and Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Rose and son of Racine, Ohio
and Mrs. Mary Brown of
Pomt Pleasant attended a
family reunion at Colwnbus
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr
and son Shawn called on his
mother Mrs . Alpha Barr
Saturday.

LOCAL TEMPS
The
temperature
in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a .m. Friday was 84 degrees
under cloudy skies.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

I ,

dothe same thing or else they feel that the
Wilhelms should undergo mental
examinations. However, the Wilhelms
aren't too much influenced by eiUter
opinion. Utey just feel like Utey are "doing
Utelr Utlng."
Enthusiastic about bicycle riding, Ute
Wilhelms came up with Ute Idea of the trip
as a way to really see America as it is. Too,
they wanted to do something quite special
as their personal role tn Ute nation 's
Bicentennial. They travel only about twice
as fast as horses did across the nation in
early times, so they feel Utat Utey're
seeing America as pioneers did except, of
course, tbat many changes have taken
place since that time.

courage '
,
Tim and Glenda Wilhelm of San Juan
Capistrano, Calif. stopped in Pomeroy
Friday mght with Uteir two children
Kirsten , 9, and 2k -year-&lt;&gt;ld Erik, a~
proximately 2,600 miles of their 3,000 bike
trek across the country behind them.
The W11helms 1n an interview Friday
evening sa1d that reactions to th.eir bike
trip appear to have no' happy medium.
E1ther people envy Utem and would like to

it all in trailer

behind bicycle
The farruly left San Juan Capistrano
on July 2. Now, 2,600 miles later, they feel
they "have it made."
Near the start of tbe trip, Tim, Ute
father, became ill for three days and it
appeared that the family might have to
return to their California home. However,
Ute health problem straightened out, and
Ute family moved on "full speed ahead."
lhe Wilhelms are behind schedule
however. Still, Utey will continue on thei;
trip even Utough Ute leave of Tim Wilhelm
from his duties as a police officer at the
University of Califorma is exha11sted. He's
hoping his police chief will he "understanding" and aUow him to return to
(Continued on page 2)

Weather

VOL 10

End-of-the-Month Sale

Women's and children's wear, coordinate sportswear, final 2 days
Playtex Sale, men's leisure suits, men's coveralls, men's western
wear, Cannon Royal Family bath ensembles. sheets and pillow
cases. Special Lawn Mower Sale at Mechanic Street Warehouse.
Buy what you need now and save Friday and Saturday.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

trailer, posed m Pomeroy Fr1day night w1th their bikes as
Utey stopped over on their 3,000 mile trip from Gallforrua to
Washington, D c

Your Invited liuest
Reachi11g More
1'ha11 12,000

tmts

Fmnilie.~

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio V111/ey

NO. 31

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY, AUGUST 31. 1975

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

100,000 expected at Bob Evans'
ole country October gathering
'

RIO GRANDE - More Ulan 100,000
visitors are expected to attend the fifth
annual Bob Evans Farm Festival to he
held Ocwber 10, 11, and 12 on Ute 1,10tH!cre
Bob Evans Farm at R10 Grande, Oh10
Admission, parking and entertainment are
all free.
Hosted by farmer Bob Evans, the three·
day "ole cowttry gathering" will feature
crafts, exhibits, field demonstrations and

entertammenl. Modern folks will have a
glimpse of the country's rural herilage,
from the ways ow- forefathers carried out
their day-to-day farm jobs to the ways they
relaxed when the long, hard workday
ended The permanent exh1b!ts at the Bob
Evans Farm, Including the farm museum
and craft barn , are open dally from May
through fesl!val tlme
DR. TIMOTHY MORITZ
The farm fesl!val was begun m 1971, and
that first year it attracted 12,000 people . In
1974, attendance reached 90,000.
In the past five years the fest1val has
grown in reputation as well as attendance,
and VIsitors come from around the U. S.
and Canada to enjoy this re-creat10n of the
way farm bfe used to be . The craftsmen
participahng m the festival come from as
far away as Mich1gan, and North Carolina.
GALLIPOLIS - The Community d1reci&lt;Jr of the county mental health,
Crafts to he demonstrated for the flrst
Mental Health and Mental Retardation mental retardation and alcoholism serhme th1s year mclude the pouring and
Board and Center Board of Galha, vices board for five and one-half years
pollshmg of pewter, lantern making, rail
Jackson , and M~igs Counties w1U have 1ts before h1s Ohio appomtment on January
splitting, barrel making and tintype
annual board dmner meetmg Thursday, 13, 1975. The Rockland Center offers photography
September II, at 6:30pm. allhe Hohday comprehensive services to the mentally
Inn in Kanauga.
111, mentally retarded, developmentally
VisltorsfrompreviOusyearswi:beable
Guest speaker w1ll be Timothy B. disabled, alcoholic and drug addicted m a
Montz, M.D , Director of the Ohio Depart- commWiity of 265,000 persons m a
ment of Mental Health and Mental suburban area near New York City, and is
Retardatwn, Columbus.
cons1dered one of the fmest in the nat10n .
Dr. G. Wilson Bowers, chairman. of the
As a result, the county had the lowes t
~ ' 648" Board, emphasized that this will be per capila utilizatwn rate m New York for
Ute first t1me the two boards have held a sUite mstitutions for the mentally relarded
combmed annual meeting. The meetmg is and the third lowest utihzatwn rate for the
open to anyone withm the catchment area. mentally 111 or 63 counties.
Reservations may be made by calhng
Dr. Montz also served as an attendmg
446-4950, Galli polls; 992-2192, Pomeroy, or consultmg psychtatrist at five area
COLUMBUS (Special) - Senator
and 286-5075, Jackson .
hospitals and as a consullant for the State
Dr. Moritz, director of the Ohw (.(New York and the U. S Dpeartmenl of Oakley C. Collins Saturday announced that
the Department of Transportahon has
Department of Menial Health and Mental Health, Education and Welfare.
Retardation,
believes
community
Born m Portsmomth, Ohio, Dr. Moritz 1ssued a change m orders effective th1s
programs to meet the needs of the men- grew up m Columbus, rece1ved his week doubhng shifts on certain operations
tally ill, mentally relarded, develop- bachelor of arts degree from Oh10 State at the construcl!on site of the Pomeroymentally disabled an d drug add1cted Umvers1ty and his med1cal degree from Mason Bndge.
According to Sen Collins, work crews
persons should be developed.
Cornell University Medical College m New
When he was appointed to h1s cabmet York City. In 1973, Dr. Moritz rece1ved the will be working long hours in expectalwn
post by Governor James A. Rhodes, Dr . additional appointment as unit chief for of shortemng the llme penod of the bndge
Moritz emphaSIZed h1s belief that m- lhe Rockland County Unit of Rockland hemg closed at least 30 days.
The same procedure w1ll be followed
stitutions are " more expensive, less ef- Slate Hospital in Orangeburg, N.Y. , which
fective, less acceptable and less humane" facihtated his efforts to mlegrate state and next year when the bndge is bemg
than using commumty ce nter s a nd local services into a unified system or repa1red. It was also reported that Glenn
res1dential fac1hlies.
serv ices . Rockland became one of only two Smith, District 10 Engineer, Ohio DepartFormer director of the Rockland counties approved to operate unlf1ed state- ment of Transportation, Will be present for
County Community Menial Health Center local serviCes systems under new the public hearing on Ute bridge situation
Tuesday evemng.
m New York State, Dr. Montz, 38, was also legislahon.

Director Moritz will
speak here at dinner

to agam enJOY flax scutching and spinnmg,
rug weavmg, q111lting, leathercrafting,
broom making, pottery makmg, and
d1splays of cornhusk and dried apple dolls,
and handcarved period wooden toys. Most
of the cr"ftsmen w11l sell the1r products
durmg the festival. There'll be h"ndmade
muzzle loading nfles to be seen, as well as
a frontier trading post
F1eld demonslralwns wlil mclude
sheepherdm g by Bradfords' Border
Collies, sheepshearing, champion horseshoe pitching and logrolling , plus a turn-&lt;&gt;flhe-eentury sawrmll and a steam-powered
wheat threshing machine like those used
on farm s in lhe " good old days. "
Free enlertammenl will be offe red all
day at the Outdoor Theatre, where festival
goers can rest a whlie. Headlimng the
program will he West Virgmia 's Cochran
Family mcludmg Frank Cochran and his
five ch1ldren, who w11l delight the aud1ence
with their toe-tappmg bluegrass music.

Other enterla inment will mclude a
choral group performing patnotic and oldhme songs; tr1ck mules; guitar and
harmonica players; a spmtual smger: a
Gay 90's band and square dancers.
There's always plenty of food available
at lhe Bob Evans Farm Festival, from
homemade pies and cornbread, bean soup,
sarsapanlla and 1ce cream to sausage
sandwiches. Festival goers can ptck up
freshly gro und cornmeal , just-made
sorghum molasses and apple butter to lake
home
Fnday, October 10, ha s been
designated Senior Citizens Day.
The festival hours are from 10 a m.
until 6 p.m. on Friday, from 9 'til 6 on
Saturday and from 9 'til 5 on Sunday.
Sunday's program at the Outdoor Theatre
begins with a 10 am. worship service.
For a complete program and schedule
of events, wnle to Bob Evans, Box 154, Rw
Grande, Ohw. 45674.

New teachers' salary

Work will to begin at $7,500
speed up

COLUMBUS - The appointment of wber, 1973. He replaced Dr. Zoltan J.
Dr. Kennelh L. Upp as acting med1cal Szepessy, who had asked to he relieved of

Special savings in the Main Store, Mechanic Street
Warehouse and Home Furnishings Annex.

TIM AND GLENDA WILJIELM AND THEIR children,
Kirsten , 9, and two-and-&lt;&gt;ne-l!alf'year-&lt;&gt;ld Erik In the bike

+

Showers
and
thun ~
dershowers Sunday Highs
from the mi? 70s to low 80s.
Mostly cloudy Sunday mght
and Monday, chance of
showers east Sunday night.
Lows Sunday mghl in low 70s.
Highs Monday in the 70s and
low 80s.

Dr. Upp of Athens appointed
GSI acting medical director

Open Friday and Saturday Til 8 PM

..

·'

lly Bob Hoenlcb
POMEROY - To take the children
showmg even in Utls day and age requires
some degree of fortitl!de. But to take Utem
on a 3,000 mile b1cycle trtp from California
to Washington, , D. C That takes real

Langsville

I

PARK RESERVED

California family
•
crossmg country at
speed of pioneers

director of Gallipolis State Institute for the
mentally relarded was announced Fnday
by Dr. Timothy B. Moritz, director of the
Ohio Deparlment of Mental Health and
Mental Retardation. The appointment is
effective Sept. 3.
Dr. Upp has been clinical director of
Athens Menial Health Center since Oc-

his duties as medical director, but will
remain at the institution as a physic1an at
his own request.
Dr. Moritz also announced that Dr.
Harry Chovnick, district manager for the
Division of Mental HeaiUt's Districts 7 and
8 in southeastern Ohio, will he providing
med1cal service to Gallipolis State on a
part-time basis.
Still more medical services will be
provided by Dr. Roger M. Cove, former
commissioner of the department's
Di.vision of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities and most
recently acting superintendent of
GALLIPOLIS - Two acts of vandalism Colwn\tus Statelnstitute. Dr, Gove w1ll be
were investigated here Saturday morning available as a consulting physician at the
by Gallipolis c1ty police.
institution several days per week, Dr
. Larry Phillips of Rt. 2, Crown City, Moritz said.
reported someone ripped the w1res off the
Dr. Upp, 50, has previously been
sparkplugs of his car which was parked director of emergency services at
near the B&amp;B Pizzeria Friday night. ,
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens
Harold Harrison of the Union 76 Service and Chillicothe Hospital in Chillicothe. He
Station, 447 Second Ave., said someone received his medical degree from the
broke a glass on c 1e of h1s gasolinb pumps. , University of Kansas in 1953., He and h1s

Wires ripped off

auto's spark plugs

wife Caroline reside in Athens.
Dr. Chovnick ha s been distnct
manager of the two service districts since
September, 1973. Prior to that he was
superintendent of Athens Mental Health
Center.
Moritz stressed that the department is continuing to attempt to attract
oUter fully certified physic1ans to the
Gallipolis staff. He explained that the plan
involving "crossover" help, with the use of
professionals working in the department's
Division of Mental Health, had evolved
because of Ute concern of the department
over Ute lack of qualified and certi!ied
medical help available at Gallipolis State.
Supennlendent of the institution, Dr.
Bernard Niehm, said Utat he was highly
p)eased with Ute moves, and hopeful they
woUld he the first step 10 implementing
better medical care for Gallipolis' 1,500
residents.
Dr. Moritz added negotiations to obtain a full time lahor relallons specialist
for thf institution are continumg, w1th a
tietctswn on the sttuatwn to be made next
week

or.

'

GALLIPOLIS - A new teachers' salary
schedule slarting at $7,500 per year for
begmmng teachers was adop~d here
Friday night during a special meeting of
the Galhpolis City Board of Educatwn.
According to Superintendent Don
Slaggs, the new salary schedule runs from
September through Jan . 1. 1976 Board
adoption also depends upon rahftcatton by
the Gallipohs Teachers Associatwn.
The new base is $500 h1gher than the
prevtous starting salary patd m the c1ty
school district.
Teachers w1th Bachelor's Degrees go
to $10,800 per year with 11 years of experience. Instructors with ov~r 150 hours
or five years will star t at $7,8.17 50 to he
m ~reased to $11,550 after 11 years Master
Degree teachers sU!rt at $8,625 to be h1ked
to $12,750 after 11 years of leachmg.
As part of the agreement, negot1atmg
teams Will get together agam in December
to discuss an mcrease based upon the new
formula developed under the State
Foundation Program a nd local momes
available.
Members of the negotiating team for
the board were board presiden l Dean R
Circle, Neal Clark, Nell Sanders, Ed
Stewart, and Supt. SU!ggs. Representing
teachers were Roy Sprague, Dean Mason,
Bess Canterbury and Darlene Carm1chael.
Four teachers were employed durmg
the special meeting.
They were Dolores McDonald,

Retirement to end
41 years on job
GALLIPOLIS- Al Shoemaker, vicepresident of the Commercial and Savings
Bank, announced Saturday that Mrs.
Helen M. West, C&amp;S bank employee for the
last 41 years has taken early rel!rement.
Mrs. West's retirement becomes ef~
fective Sept. 15. She became associated
with Ute bank in 1934. In 1951, she was
promoted to assistant cashier and m 1974
to assistant vice-president. She has served
in all departments of the bank smce her
graduation from high school. She has been
a member of the Natlonal Association of
Bank Women since 1954 .
Mrs. West and her husband , W. P .
West, a retired State Bank Exammer
reside at 119 Second Ave., Gallipohs .
'

•••

'·

Jackson, a graduate uf R10 Grande
College, elementary at R10 Grande
Elementary . Her employment w1ll perm1t
M1llard Cass1dy , pr~ncip al, to work
fulltime m administration
Supt. Staggs said th'e additional
teacher was needed due to the mcreased
enrollment at Rio Grande.
Sue Brandeberry, partllme kindergarten instructor at Rw Grande, was
placed on a fulltime contract.
Staggs announced that the distr1ct had
recently rece1ved two add1twnal EMR
uh1ts from the State Department of
Education. Followmg the transfer of Mrs.
Rosemary Evans, EMR instructor from
Green to Rio Grande, Anne Lahmers and
Jul1e Dragoo were h1red as new EMR
teachers
Lahmcrs, a graduate of Shppery Rock
Stale College, was ass1gned at Clay,
Elementary School wh1le Dragoo , a
graduate of Morehead Slate Umvemty,
will replace Mrs. Evans at Green .
Jon Rothgeb, Chesh~re, a graduate of
Kyger Creek H1gh &amp;hool and Marshall
Umvers1ty, was employed as OWA mstrucwr at Galha Academy replacmg Ed
Pauley who resigned .
Resignations accepted were those of
(Continued on page 2)

JAKE KOEBEL

Koebel appointed to
three-county board
GALLIPOLIS - John (Jake) Koebel
has been appomled a member of the
Gallia, Jackson, Meigs Commmty Menial
Health and Menial Retardation Board by
U1e Calha County Commissioners effective
for a penod of four &gt;·ears
Koebel, manager of the Galha-Me1gs
Counties Colwnbus Gas of Oh10, Inc , is a
director of the Galhpohs Chamber of
Commerce, member of the Galhpohs
Rotary Club, Pomeroy and Middleport
Chambers of Commerce, B.P O.E No 107,
Quarter Century Club of Columbia Gas
Distnbutwn Compames, Board of Gallla
County Chapter of Arnencan Red Cross ,
"nd of th e St Loms C"thohc Church
Koebel and h1s w1fe , Betty, have two
chtldren . They re stde at Centenar)

EMERGENCY ONLY
GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer Med1cal
Center Clinic will be closed Monday, Sept.
1, m observance of Labor Day. In case of
emergency durmg the holiday weekend ,
physic1ans of Ute Holzer Med1cal Cen\er
Clinic staff will be on duty m Ute
Emergency Room (Phone 446-5201) of the
Holzer Med1cal Cen t er to handle
emergency cases only Holzer Medical
Center Chnic wtll resume norma l
operations Tuesday mormng , September
2

Two coordinators for
youth debates named
GALLIPOLIS - Two Gallla teachers
have been appointed coordmators in their
communities for the upcoming Bicentenmal Youth Debates (BYDJ.
They are Lorene Johnston, a teacher at
North Gallla High &amp;hool, for Vinton, and
John Graham, for Rio Grande.
They w1ll be responsible for coordinating the schools m Utelr geographic
areas and · will host &lt;)1strict level BYD
tour naments.
The Bicentennial Youth Debates is a
school and community centered project.
High school and college age youth will
participate in Lincoln-Douglas Debales,
Extemporaneous Speaking and Persuasive speaking in contests during the
197:&gt;-76 academic year .
Students will advaoce through
District, Secttonal and Regional com.

.
•

petition to a fmal Nallonal Conference.
The events will he judged by members of
CIVIC organizations, commwuty leaders,
professional educators and a broad
spectmen of interes\ed citizens.
BYD offers every young person an
opportwtity to join in a meaningful
commemoration of our 200th year .
Th"' B1centennial Youth Debates is
supported by a grant from the National
Endowment for the Humanities, a federal
agency established by Congress to support
research, education and public activities
m the humamttes.
' The BYD is a project of the Speech
Communications
Association,
a
professional service organization created
to promote study, criticism, research ,
leaching and application ol the prmciples
of speech communication.

.

'

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