<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16015" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/16015?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-07T02:56:30+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49139">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/bb75c2e9c6b2bff737b67a72753cf613.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2b1ba9a23cc80896c0d25bbf71801cb6</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="51261">
                  <text>-'

'

'· s

'

j,

.
•

28-The Sundav Times- Sentinel . Sunday, Au,;. 31, 1975

•.•:•.•'• ·:··· ,•, -:·. :· ,•, ·:·:·.·.· ,. :· ·:· ·:·:: :·:·.: : : : ·: : ::· : : ·:· .;... •·.· ·:· ·:· .· :·.· ··::·: ·: : ,:;.;:;.;: :;. :-.·:;: :•,·:·.·:·:·.·:-:·: :· : . :·:·:·:·: :·:·::: :::·:·.·:;.·:·.·.·=·· .·. :·.: :·: .·:·:·:-:·.·:.·:···:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·.·=·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;:

·::

Your -Wayne National Forest
ll)

r. Allan Woller.

O•s trkt Ranger
IRONTON - Many of the m en

rmd women I talk to

n uwad&lt;:~ys

ar.e

pretty mu eh .fed up w1th the enunmen!cd movement 1n t his
coun ty While most uf them still see

works hop I a m now able to tie musl

U1e need ror improvement m several
are~s. they a re JUst plam tired of
bemg rat led and lambasted from all
dlrCctwns With predi CtiOnS or doom
1f th1s nvcr Isn't cleailed up or that
srrwkestal k 1sn' t s hut off. They are
es pecially !Ired uf hea nn g It's "got
to be done ngh t now."
The re(lso ns for these uew at !J tudes a rc many Some see the loss
of Jobs from fact on es closed down as
tou h1 g h a pnce to pay for mstant
r lcan a1r Others see the 1mrnedwte
need for energy m the form of coal,
ud and gas and are willing to
sac nfi le so m e e nvironmenta l
quality at least for the shor t run .
Still others feel they ha ve be en
hoaxe r! b} the oil compames, anh pollutwn eqUipment on autom obiles,
unlea ded gas and d e te rg en t
phosphates They no longer see the
need to rush headlong mto a
corr ective actwn when the cure may
be worse then the bite .
Most of us are too busy and
perhaps lack the knowledge to
educa te our own, so we rely on
sc hools .
Do the teachers know the new
rules? Based on my expenence, l 'd
have to say most do not. They ~re,
however , extreme ly willing , able
and anxious to learn about ecology.
land use plannmg, sml , water ,
human and ammal communities,
and how man fits mto the environment.
['ve just returned from an environmental educat ion workshop
that I ass tsted wtth from lime to
time Thts one was given for 3
c redits at Eastern Connechcut State
College Over 100 l&lt;!achers from all
grades participal&lt;!d .
Ltsted below are some of their
co mm e nts after the five day
workshop , all dtrect quotattons
For the ftrst lime in my life I
learned about how not to take my
environment for granted.
Before I partictpated in lhts

Before I parLictpated m thts
workshop I wasn't sure of what
approach lo use but now I have an
excellent foundation for a prog ram
Bdore [ partu.:i pated m th ts
\Hwks hop I didn't fee l confident tn

VII

,.

GARY PARK, DIRECOOR
Pr . PLEASANT - Gary Park of Poml has been
appointed to the posttwn of Dtrector or Personnel and
Informational Service at Pleasant Valley Hospital
A native of Pomt Pleasant, he was graduated from
Point" Pleasant Htgh School and received ht s un dergraduate degree m Busmess Admirustration from
West Virginia University . He has also tak en a Masters
Degree in Public Administration from the West Virgirua
College of Graduate Studies in Charleston.
Before coming to Pleasant Valley Hospital, Park
spent two years as a management trainee and
management staff m~mber m marketing, purchasing and
personnel with McJunkin Corp. of Charleston . He is
;narrled to the former Cynthia Chambers who will be
teaching at North Point Elementary . They reside at 13
Wakefield Road in Point Pleasant

...

r -------------------------,I :::.. .

I

! ·Dateline

!: ,

I

I

' •'•

Gallia

1

I

By Hobart Wilson ]r.

·:·.

DURING THE past few days while on vacation, we had
time to breeze around Memonal Field and watch Coach
Willard (Buddy) Moore's 42-man GARS football team and
ROOney ToUiver's 122-piece band go about their tasks
preparing for the 1975 campaign under a hot boilmg August

:;.
,.

uf my tdcas of the environment
together .

my kn owledge of environment but
now I feel! could eastly lead a g roup
on sue. h a task
F'mally ther e are thane who feel
they have "done enough" and ar e

unwillm g to ma ke any
sac nhce

Whtle I dtsagree wtth som e, I
believe th1s ne w attitude ts hea lthy
Maybe tt 's ttme we listen to the beat
of a new drummer - one tha t says ,
"yes, we've s lill got man y senous
problems and "'e 're going tu solve
them , but not overmght "
Le t's take a look a t the long
haul
Mo st of our environmental
problems are the result of our
values If tt 's Important to us to have
two cars, then we're going to have
two cars H we enJoy the co nvemences that morlern techn ology
has gtven us, then by Jmgles we're
g omg to have them
Furny thing about values. They
are nearly as dee ply mgramed m us
as our attitud es and they're just not
easy to change
Values can be changed by force
- big cars plus gasolin e shortage
plus high prtces equals little cars
Look around
They can also be chan ged
through educatwn -six t 1me~ more
energy 15 reqmred to produce a
product from steel than wood , 39
hmes more if made from alwmnum.
Certainly education ts the least
patnful of the two ; tf we can see and
understand the folly of our ways. we
won't have to be clubbed into change
by such forces as the energy shortage.
As adults, our value s are entrenched behtnd many years or feast
and famme . How about the ktds ?
Are your children betng taught how

+++

NOW, a little more than two decades later, the dressing
rooms (built in 1953 by the Downtown Coaches Club) are not
only outdated but overcrowded. Visitmg teams must use the
old Washington l'chool Jockerroom facilities atop the hill.

+++

AND what used to be the best lighting system in southern
Ohio is now probably the worst. It'sabout the only footbaU field
in this region PoinTView Cable has trouble televising mght
games.

+++

, THE DUSTY GAHS track should be brought up to date
· ·with an all.plll'pose weather pavement like Rio Grande
.College, Waverly or Circleville . Part of the fence surrounding
the tennis courts is rusty, bent, cut or broken. New lights are
_needed there, too. And the baseball backstop is in similar
condition. In worse condition is the fence surrounding the
.entire complex. After 27 years service, it has seen its day.

+++

MEMORIAL Field attracts thousands of persons each
year from March through November with football games,
band shows, tennis matches, baseball and softball games,
track meets and many more through the summer recreation
program. It's not a place where people flock to watch football .
games four or five weeks out of the year.

+++

A thought for the day · Nazt
dictator Adolf Hitler said
"The great masses of th~
people .. . Will more easily fall
victims to a big lie than to a
small one."

Fnday he was presenl&lt;!d a
calculator, two gifts of money
from his ca-workers and a
check from the Employes
Beneftl F•tnd by Impertal
Electric. Mr. and Mrs. Dabo
reside on Uncoln Heights,
Pomeroy. They have a
daughter , Mrs. Tom Kelly ,
Middleport,
and
thre e
grandchildren .

POST LABOR DAY SALE

Gates Open - 4:00 P.M.
Horse Shoe Pitch ............ . ....... 5:00P.M.
Local Church Program .•.••..•.• 6-7 :30 P.M.
Alexander Band Concert.••••7:30-8:00 P.M.
Tractor Pulling and Powder Puff
Pulling ................................ 7:30P. M.
Miracle Aires Gospel Group, Logan,

FRIDAY,
SEPTEMBER 5, 1975

12x60 Castle, 2 BR total electric, very nice carpeting
throughout, all homes are total wr:apped in Fom -Cor for
maximum energy conservation.

Gates Open-12 Noon
Judging All Articles. ................ l:OO P.M.
Bic;:ycle and Tricycle Parade and Racesl:OO
Horse Shoe Pitch •••••••••••..•.••••• S:OO P.M.
Local Church Program. ......... 6-7:00 P.M.
BILLY WALKER (Grand Ole Opry
Show) ......................... 8:00-10:00 P.M.

WE HANDLE HOMES BY SKYLINE,
CASTLE AND MEMORY BY ELCONA.

' Stile flrnt

...,..,. Cotoponios
•

-OIIICII:
SIW,IIillll
I

lUll llllt.

A

IJIIU.&amp;NCI

Pomeroy

992-7034
ttrs.:.9to7 Mon.-Sat. Closed Sunda"
·or .... 11 for Appointment
Pearl Asli 992-3323, Ropr u JB 992-7671
\

I

~

~

,._

~b
POtneroy
natiohal

·::~

TUPPERS PLAt~s

of coal still crippled

~&lt;1
•

···
··:

entrance•

PRI CE 15'

Ford wants

(

. 'l '

Americans

BRA~CH

.·::
:::··:

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

•

In Sinai
.-

..

REGULAR $69.95 UPRIGHT
W1th REGULAR $19.95
CLEANING TOOLS. You

.:,= ..=,'

SAVE $28.851

-... ...
~

Buy Now!

NEW BRANCH BANK, established by the Pomeroy Natwnal Bank will ope n next
Monday for bustness m this modern fac ility m the heart of downtown Tuppers PlaulS

New branch bank will open
Monday in Tuppers Plains

• Pcwo.,~ ltd to dean on the ltoor
01 8bC~fl the floor wi th l lllrflr

atrohl
• Huge dlsponDie dust bag hn
$60 eu In ulflble eapaelty
• Ed\)11 KINI'1flr cle an• thl1 lut
tou~h I n ert along the
tHll!dl

By Bob Hoeflich
TUPPERS PLAINS - For
the first time it wa s latd out in
1840, Tuppers Platns will
have its own banking facthty
Monday , Sept 8.

REGULAR •79.95

.;

The new bank ts the second
branch of the Pomeroy
Nat iona l Bank , an earli er
branch
ha v ing
been
establ is hed tn
Rutland
several years ago

MODEL 1423 UPRIGHT

.·:
.;.
:·.

·'6995

SALE

R~G-

(RECEIVE

19.95 TOOLS FREE)

1

By UniledPretts International
COLUMBUS - STATE FAI R MANAGER John Evans has
threatened to restgn unless somet hing ts done to reduce the
number of free admiSsiOns to the Ohio State Fair. Evans, who
replaced Vtc Lucas as fair manager ear he r this year, satd at a
news conference on the !mal day of the 1975 exposttwn there
were " too many freebte s" bemg gtven out
"I think it 's being abused by elected officials, " satd Evans,
"and the fact is that I JUSt do not fe el I can contmue on as State
Fair manager under these kmds of ctrcumsta.nces.'' Evans
said that paid admisswns up to Sunday were 1,941,503 and the
free admisswns were 1,015,971.
"This what I'm really concerned about," he said ''Ther e
are too many freebies commg on the fatrgrounds."

SAVE '29.95
WE WILl BE CLOSED All DAY
MONDAY FOR LABOR DAY
Main Store, Annex and Warehouse Open
Tuesday through Thursday 9:30 to 5 p.m.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1975
HOMECOMING DAY
Gates Open-9:00 A. M.
Pet Show and Parade••••••••.•.•••• 9:00A.M.
Junior Fair Tractor Pull •.•••••.•.. 9:00A.M.
Junior Fair Garden Tractor Pull .... 12 Noon
CHI LOR EN MATIN EE. ••••.l: 00-4:00 P.M.
Free for all Garden Tractor Pull - Immediately following Jr. Garden Tractor
Pull
Light Wei!!ht Tractor Pull, 3,000 lbs. and
under.................. , ••••••••••••••• 2:00P.M.
All Garden Tractors and Drivers must
be Alexander School District Residents.
Adults and Junior Tractor Pull- 2 or more
drivers per tractor, entry fee each driver,
MULE JUMPING CONTEST. ••••• 2:00-3:00
Rules to be announced-Dophus Burke, -Chairman
Junior Fair Demonstrationsl:00-4:00 P.M.
Junior Fair Parade. .......... . ...... S:OO P.M.
Sloan Bros., Albany, Ohio. •• .S: 4S-6:45 P.M.
Pony Pull ••••••••••••••••••• : •••••••• 6:00P.M.
~!pine Harmonaires Polka Band, Colum bus, 0 .••••••••••••••••••••••••• 7:00--8:30 P.M.
Square Dance and Show-Frog and the
Greenhorns. . ........................ 8:30P.M.
FIREWORKS ...................... 10:30 P. M.

t

By Centennial

Floats •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 12 Noon

Ohio

All floats move promptly at noon
Horse Show••••••••••••.••••••••••••••l:OO P.M.

RIDES AND ENTERTAINMENTfQfl EVERYONE!_

COLUMBUS - TilE INDEPENDENT INSURAN CE
Agents Associatton of Ohio today launched a program m an
attempt to stem the number of traffic acctdents mvolvmg
school..age children. The program iS called " Don ' t Ktll A Kid 1 "
and is being endorsed by the State Highway Patrol.
Gov. James A Rhodes , who has also endorsed the
program, has proclaimed this week as "Don't Ktll A Kid 1 "
Week throughout the state. " Millions of Ohio children wtll be
returning to the classroom 111 September," Rhodes satd " All
motorists should be reminded of the additional need for
caution and awareness when dnvmg near school s,
playgrounds and bus-loading zones."
MIAMI - PRE'ITY STEWARDESSES WALKED pt cket
lines in slacks and Jeans today to keep National Airlines
grounded in a dtspul&lt;! over a n exptred work contract - the
airline's second maJor stnke in 10 months . Bargaimng between representahves of National and the Association of
Flight Attend~nts, which broke off Sunda y night , resumed al4
p.m. EDT Monday tn the Was hmgton offtces of the Nattona l
Mediation Board .
The strike began at one mmute afl&lt;!r midmght Monday
when about 1,200 of its flight attendant&lt;, less than 50 of whom
are male, set up ptcket lines . The strtkmg umon ts the
Association of Flight Atl&lt;!ndants whose afftbatton wtth the Atr
Line Pilots Association assured haltmg or the a trline's
operations. National operates 55 jets on 360 departures daily,
handling about 18,000 passengers It flies pr:marly between
Miami, the Northeast and Caiiforrua, with intermediate stops
KINSHASH, ZAIRE - SEVEN HIGH ranking army of ficers have been sentenced to death for trying to over throw
President Mobutu Sese Seko last June .
Seven other officers were acquitted While the other 27 of
the 41 persons accused in the plot were given pnson terms of
up to 20 years by the Military Council of State, which had been
dehveratmg the case since Aug . 20.
HERNANIO , MISS. - A YOUNG WOMAN wa s kiUed and
eight other persons serwusly mjured today when seven
gasoline storage tanks exploded, authorities said. The body of
what appeared to be a teen ..aged girl was fou nd in the charred
rubble of a small frame house across the lllin01s Central Gulf
Railroad tracks from the gasoline storage facility, which ts
owned by the Chevron Oil Company.
The house and a vacant one 11ext door exploded and bur ned
after flaming gasoline flowed under the railroad tracks and
into the homes. Three adults and fiv e children were taken to a
Memphis hospital where they were reported in se rioUS condition . Names of the dead and mjured were not tmmedtately
available.
WEATHER
sunshme today and clea.
tomght, lows in the mid 60s.
Mostly s unn y Wednesda y,
highs m the 80s. Probability
of rain 10 per cent today ,
tomgnt and Wedn esday

Now You l(now
Labor Da y holida y was
maugurated Dec 28, 1869 by
the Kmghts of Labor . an
orgamzati on fo1 rned Jn
Pluladelphta

Lo&lt;:ated on Route 7 in the
heart of Tuppers Plains, the
ha nk opera tiOn will be housed
m a new red brtck , colonia l
style, 26 by 52 foot stru cture
Thts all.electric butlding
will provtde a untque settmg
for banking Customers will
have easy access mcludin g
the converuence of the dnve up
wtnd ow
A
nt ght
deposttory service will be
provided by a recessed envelope deposttory
Customer serv1ce wtll be
strea mlined by a func ttona l,
well-planned tell e r a rea
Located m this area, directly
behind the three-sta tion teller
bnes, wtll be the drive-up
wtndow and the mght
depository receiving locker
Teller windows are done m
walnut formica with white
counters. The interwr IS done
tn walnut panelmg . A minivault holds sa fety deposit
b.Jxes for th e full service
bra nch.
The new fac thty mcludes a
manager 's offt ce, a OOokkeepmg area near the teller
stations, restrooms, a utility
room a nd a n employes'
lounge. Equtpment for the
bank iS from the LeFebure
Corp. , Columbus. Carpetmg
is in green. Landscaping has
been completed and a sign
placed
marktng
the
estabhs hment
Don E Nelson, an assistant
Vice p resident , •.ull be the

new branch manager. H1s
ass is tant wtll be Mrs
Marilyn Robmson
Hours of the nev. bank
wluch opens for busmess next
Monday "'til be 9 " m to 3
pm
Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday and Sat urday; 9
a m to 12 noon on Thursday
and fr om 9 a m. to 7 p m on
Fridav.
Groundbr ea k1n g
f'E' I l'mome s
for
the
ne\\
'structure were held Nov 11 ,
19i2 and the bank was ex·
peeled to be m ope rat ton tn
the sprin ~ of 1973 However,
t he
Environmental
Proteclion
Agency
Intervened because of a sewage
ban m the Tuppers Plams
area
Later , howeve r , 1t was
declared that the EPA had
been m e rror because plans
for the bank had been made
before the sewage ban had
go ne mto effec t So, constructiOn got unde rway
To mark the ope ning of t he
new branch, an open house
wtll be held from 9 a .m to 5
p.m . Saturday, Sept 13, with
emplo yes
of
P ome roy
Natwnal to host the event.
Preparing refreshments to be
served to vtsttors wtll be the
Tuppers Platns Cornrnumty
Club and the Rose Garden
Club There will be favors for
all vis itors and cash pnzes of
$50, $25 and $25 wtll be
awarded as do~r pnzcs
Speaktng on behalf of the
Pome roy Na tw na l Ba nk ·s
board of dtrector s. President
Edison Hobstetter, satd
''We have been sold on
the potentia l of eastern Metgs
County and look for.,.,ard to
provtdmg better customer
~ervtce through th1s ne",
modern facthty "

WASHI NGTON tU PI I Prestdent Ford turn ed to
Cong ress today for a uthonty
to place Amencan Clvihan
technicians In the Sinal
Desert. He sa id they wtll be a
Vi tal ingredlent of the latest
l s r ae ltEgypttan
peace

agreement .
Ant tctpa ltng CrlllCiSITI by
some leg islator s, Ford dtsm tssed sug gesttons the
American momtonn g team
- 100 to 150 ctvihans - might
form the openmg wedge for a
V1 etn amscale
U.S.
involveme nt tn the Middle
East.
But he also said that
with o ut congress10nal ap proval, the mterun Sinal
accord tntltaled Monday after
12 da ys of medtatwn by
Secretary of State Henry
J(jssinger might easily !aU
A local Oln o State Patrol
a pa rt , rl s km g renew ed
spokesm an commended
warfar e.
moton sl., m lht.&gt; Galha -Me1gs
The agreement was dearea today fo r the ir safe
nounc e d by Rep . Larry
dnvmg ove r the long Labor
Pressler, R -S D , a Vtetnam
Dil~ Weekend Unhke the rest
veteran and former legal
of th e s tale. no traffic
counselor to Kissmger In the
fatalities were recorded 1n
State Department
the tv. o-&lt;.:o unt ~ area
Before returnmg to the
The patrol. howe \'CI', mWhite House from a ramy
\ esli~a t ed 11 traffi c acholida y weekend at Camp
Cidents m which four persons
Davtd, Md , the Prestdent
were In JW'l'd. Officers made
telephoned congratulatiOns to
41 t~rresls, 50 warmng s and
Kissmger a nd Israeli Prune
ass1sted 36 molon sts.
Mtruster Ytlzhak Rabtn tn
One traffic m1.shctp was Jerusalem and Egypttan
1nve sl!gated c~t :J a.m
Prestdenl Anwar Sadat in the
Munday un
the Cora - Mediterranean
port of
Centerpumt Rd at the JUnc- Alexandna.
tion of Rt 325 where Sally
Ford called tt "a great
Culugar , 24, of Homestead achievement, one of the most
Falls, Ohi o, lost contr ol of her historic ... perhaps m this
ca r etfter fallin g to ~top fu r century " He assured Sadat
the mtersectwn
" you have my pledge that we
Her car ran off the high - wtll make sure that that
way, hit a fe nce, and went momentum keeps gomg."
Into a creek Th ere was
The Prestdent will open his
nu dl!ra te dama ge No charge campaign for endorsement of
\\ CIS filed
the agreemen t at a White
House meeting of Democratic
and
Republtcan
FERRY TIED UP
c on gressiO nal leader s
Due to the n se m the Ohw
Thursda y morning, the day
Rh c r , the fe rry boat
after Congres s returns from a
serv1ce brtY. et·n Pomero)
surruner recess.
a nd Mason, W. Va., \\ Cot
To dramatize hts support
out of operatiOn Saturday
for the third tntenm setmght and co ntinu ed out of
tl em ent
Ktssmger
h;1'i
operation today , Th e
negottated since the 19iJ
reports thi s morning "ere
Arab-Israeli war , Ford satd
that the rh'l'r "~ s stJJI on
he would be at Andrews Air
thl' nsl' etnd the rc rr}
For ce Base 1n su burban
scrV I(l' eannot lw r(•sumrd
Maryland Wednesday mght
until th&lt;' v.ater rN't•des.
to
perso nall y welcome
K1ssmger home .
Ktsstnger wtll attend the
White House m eetmg to brref
legislators on the accord
Among those mv1ted was
Senate Democratic Leader
conditioner
M&gt;ke Mansfteld, who says he
\1ean~o~htle, Galltpo lts Ct ty
op poses
use
of
US
Pollee lllveshgated the theft
techm c1ans tn the Stna t
of $:)0 from the Amoco Serbe c au se
Amencan
In \ Ice StatiOn on P1n e St Ofvol vement m the VIetnam
fleers sa1d someone entered
War began with a sm11lar,
the statwn by bre e~km g a
!united commttrnent
w1ndO\\ on Its sout heast s1de.
Twent~ dollars wa s taken
LOCAL T E MPS
fr om a cash r eg1st€r and $10
The
tem per ature
in
from
a
ciga rette
downtown
Pomeroy
at
11
machine Ray Pennington,
Rt I , Galltpolls, reported hts J uesday was 80 degrees
1975 GMC tru ck was s tol en under sunny ski es
from the Eagles Club parkmg
lot but the truck was la ter
rep,orted mvolved 1n an acctdent on Rt 141

Meigs-Gallia
area escapes
fatalities

Polite robber wanted
Ga lh a Cou nty she rtff 's
deput1es continued today
seekt ng a' polite" young man
described as In ht s 20s,
slender , 5-10, dressed tn blue
Jeans a nd a Jean Jac ket for
quest10mng In con nectiOn
w1 th an armed robbery ear ly
Monday at the Holid a y In n tn
Kanauga
Galli a County Shertff Oscar
Batrd satd a man entered the
lobb; to ask about a room. He
left, but returned, pulltng a
gur and demanded cash. in
bi ll s, but no change.
Davtd Schoonover , the
mght desk clerk, handed him

the cash reg1ster rece1pts
According to Dan Jan sa.
the Inn 's manager, the man
was "\e r y pol1te' ' a nd
apolog tzerl for robhtng the
Inn He left tn a small , foret gn
ptckup tr uck, ~o~htc h "llnesses satd apparently gave
hun trouble tn shtfttng gears
Deputies also wves tlga ted
a comp~amt of vandalism at
Green Elernentar·y Sc hoo l .
Clyde Porter. c &gt;ty schoo l
ma in tena nce s upervisor, sard
someone used fuse s to burn
plex1e glass windows and also
damaged etgh t g la ss Wtn·
dows, along w1th an ai r-

Accident toll -;vent up
In Alaska, 10 persons lost
their lives in an air crash.
It was only one of many
holiday tragedies that se nt
the acctdental death loll for
the weekend sptraling.
But mclemen t weather
apparently slowed motor
trafftc in some parts of the
co untry, a np may have
contribu ted to the trafftc
death count runmng below
eXpectatiOns.
However , the tota l number
of persons killed tn traffic

durmg the holiday penod wtll
not be known un ttllater today
because of late acci d ent
reports
A
Umted Press
International count at 3 a.m.
EDT today showed 360
persons had di ed in tra fftc
accidents , which remamed
under the Nattona l Safe!}
Counctl estuna te that between 460 and 560 persons
might die on tile nation 's
highway s during the threeday weekend

A Bidwell mc.n \\ d S hit 1r1
lhe rr g ht forea rm b) a
shu lgw1 blast at Meigs MmP
Nti 2 Monda} mght. Me tgs
County Shenff Hubert C
HartenbaC' h':-:; Dept 1epo rted
The lncicten t was part of a
flareup Of VI Olence as the
nunes Vr erc scheduled to
return to wor k at the midmgh t sh ift la st rught, but dJd
not
As of th1s mo rmng, thl'
s itua tiOn
remained
uncertain .
She nff 's deputies from
three coun lies and lhc Oh10
State Hi ghway Patrol "ere
ca lled Jnlo actwn befor e qu1et
settled over the nor thern
Meig s h1 lls
S h ertff H a r tenbach.
deputtes Robert Beeg le, Ra )
Manley and Ra nda ll Car·
penter receiv ed a call at 11 18
p m thai th er e w as H
dis turban ce at Mine 2
When they arn ved they
were met by approximately
30 to 35 masked men at the
gate and any distur ban ces
that may hav e been seemed
" to be under control "
The shenff talked to an
empl oye of the mme who said
a man had been shot but the
mjured man had left for home
m Bidwell Hts nam e , the
sheriff was told, was Samu el
Lee Morn s, 3o They dtd not
learn the tden tity of the tn ·
JUred man until later,
however
Whtle the she nff and hts
deputies were at Mme 2 they

\' ere called to assist VInton
Coun ty offi cers at Mme 3
The) went to MUle 3 along
with three shcnff 's cars from
Athens County and 12 offt ce rs
from Athens Coun ty and two
Athens Coun t} State Patrol
ca rs When they arnv ed,
there wa s no appar e nt
trouble. so they returned lo
Mme 2
In the meant ime, on County
Hoad 27, a state patrol offi cer
s topped a ca r of which the
drtver was Morns wh o had
gone home and was returnmg
to the mme wtth guns
MorTts. a member of the
Safety Co mmtttee, told
Shenff Har l&lt;!nbach t hat he
"enl mstde Mine 2 to see 1f
eve rythm g was a ll n g ht for
the n1en to return to work on
the m ldlll ght shift When he
came out of the gate, located
on property that goes to
Coun ty Road 27, the gate was
locked Morn s got out of hts
car to open the gate a nd the
sho t was hred . The wmdshleld of Morns' car was
damaged by the blast, from
which a r Jccochet apparently
h1 t Morns's ftfm
Mmcs 2 and 3 were to
return to Y. ork la st mght .
Howe ver. Di1vtd Ba ke r ,
personnel director , sa id all
workers were still out as of
thi s mornmg
Sheriff Ha rtenba ch e xl&lt;!nded hts thanks to Sheriff
Paul Brown of Athens and th'e
state patrol for
th e ir
assistance

Wildcat strike
•
gomg on, on
CHARLESTON ,
W.Va
(UP I) - Stnkmg Pennsylvania
coal
m1ners
returned to work today , but m
West Vtrgima, hotbed of a
wildcat stnke that has idled
60,000 miners in Appalachia,
there was no end m sight to
the cripplmg walkout de spite
a federal court order.
Nearly all the mmes in
western Pennsylvama, where
rovmg pickets shut down

Junior Miss
event under
new fonnat
Pr e limin a r y pla ns were
ann~urced today for the 197!0
Sout heast Ohw Jumor Miss
Scholarship Program, for merly know n CJS the Jun wr
Mi ss Pagea nt
The \\ Ord "pageant" was
dropped by Amenca Juntor
Mt ss, In c durtng the 1915
Jun wr M1ss fma ls m Mobile,
Ala. Also. the !11tss Personality Av.ard has been
changed tu the Junwr Miss
Sprnl A"ard .
The Sout heast Ohw flll als
wil l be Sunday Afle1noon,
Nov 2:1, at th e Me1gs .Jun10r
High School aud1to n um tn
Mtddleport.
All h1gh sc hool se ni or ~1rls
\\h o art! bono fide res idents of
the sla te of Ohw Interested m
e nter ing the J uni or Mts s
Program are mv1ted to wnte
to the Sout heast Oh10 Jumor
Mtss Program , P 0 Box 104
Pomeroy, Oh to, 457h9, for
fw-ther mforma twn

scores of mines, were back in
operation.
The ba c k-to-work
movement by about 10,000
Pennsylvania
miners
followed a vote by Uruted
Mine Workers umon locals.
Industry and umon officals
said the turnout was nearly
nonnal at the big operations
1n
Pennsylvania 's
Wa s hington , Greene and
Fayette counties
There were also reporl'i of
miners returnmg to work in
llltnots and Virgmia.
But UMW sources in West
Vtrgrnta, where the walkout
began Aug 11, S3ld local
umons 1n so ut hern We st
VIr gt m a
vo ted
near
unammously durmg the
weekend to keep th e strtke
ahve More than 40,000 West
Vtrguua mmers were In volved tn the strtke.
Th e UMW was fined
$500,000 by a federal ;udge for
con tempt of court for fatling
to get t he mmers back to
work
The sinkers demanded
illHOn funds to "feed our
b rothe r s" and t hr eatened
that, tf UMW Prestdent
Arnold Mtller "don't se nd tt
to us, \\e 'll come and get It "

ADC PAlO HE R E
State Aud itor Th omas E
Ferg uson's offi ce toda:
an nounded the September
d&gt;stnbut ton or $33,020,008 In
Aid to Depe nd ent Cluldren
1 ADC 1 to 173.27:! famth es tn
Oh w's 38 counties Me1 gs
Count) 's rece1ved $44,286 for
240 famli &gt;es

Wallace may get message

A breakdown of acctd ental
deaths Traffic 360
Drowmng 50 Plane 28 Other
40 Total 478
Cahform a counted 35 dead
in traff ic, North Ca rolin a had
28, Texas 23, Mtchtgan 20,
Wtsconsm 19 and V~rgmta 15
The worst smgle disaster of
the hohday penod was in
Alaska, where a plane
crashed ,mto a bluff on St
Lawrence Is land In the
~ering Sea, ktllln g 10 of the 33
persons aboard

WASHI NGTON (UP!) Under the Campatgn Reform
Act, George Wallace can earn
a ttdy sum that the, old
Corrupt Practtces Act would
have prohtbtted. ' Washmgton
may send hun a message.
The Alabama Governor is
expected to hear from the
Federal Electtons Commtssion that the arrangement
he has worked out wtth the
Walla ce
cam patgn
or ganizatton iS not illega lbut a_lso not very mce.
Wallace's own campatgn
organtzation asked for the
advisory optmon and sent
along a copy of the contract
under whrch Wallace agrees

"
'

hit in arm, production

TUtSDAY. SEPTEMBER 2 1975

bank

Gates Open -9:00 A.M.
Parade ,through Town -

SALES AND SERVICE

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT OHIO

Only

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1975

KINGSBURY MOBILE HOMES

enttn e

~

\

lltURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER 4, 1975

NO 98

For

1975 ALBANY COMMUNITY FAIR

14x56 Memory by Elcona, 3 BR, total electric, the very
best furniture in this one.

VOL XXVII

COMBINATION
lFFERFrom

:.:

of ' Trustees mclude Dr.
Samuel Goldman , Dean of the
College of Education, Ohio
Umversity, who will serve as
President of the Corporation;
Richard
J.
Murray,
President of Good Samaritan
Medical Cenl&lt;!r, Zanesville;
Dr. John J. Ught, President
of Hocking Technical College,
Nelsonville; Dr. Paul Hines,
President of Rio Grande
College, Rio Grande; Dr.
Henry G. Cramblett, Dean of
the Ohio State University
College
o'f
Medicine ,
Co lumbus ;
Jack
E.
Far ring ton,
Executive
Director of OVHS ; and Emon
H. Plwnmer, Comptroller of
OVHS.

We still have some '75 models in stock. Come in next
week and save hundreds of dollars on thse units.

CLOSED LABOR DAY

, Slllt flffllls Thlft.

REGULAR

Safety committeeman ·

I rt'il

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
·.
..
..

•

y

·:

.. · ·"' ........ ·. · · · ·... : ·.....,.. ·.· .......... · =·

Ohio .••••.••••.••••••••••.•.•••• B:00-10 : 00 P.M.

We also have several brand new 1976 models available
for your inspection. You can save money on these also.

likt A Good Ntigilbor,

NOW YOU KNOW
Suffolk County , N. Y .
produces more Peking ducks
than any other area of the
world, tncluding Peking .

...

··

I

Mary Faye Janey , 19, Langsville and WiUiam Franklin
'
Channels
Jr ., 20, Canton, and
Debra Jean Barber, 17,
Reedsville .

PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK

Daho retires at Imperial

-

Have a very enjoyable holt- ,
day, If your family holiday
plans Include aome driving,
make sure all of you are here
for the many holidays yet to
i;ome. PLEASE DRIVE WITH
CARE.

eca use par iCtpa e tn 1S
workshop, I now understand that
when people understand, they act
rightly. "
"I wtsh that more teachers from
my
s chool,
especially
admmistrators and gwdance counse lor s would take this class ."
" At this workshop I dts covered I
could to a lot of fun, self discovery ,
ecological activities wt th small
children .''
"Because I parltcipated m lhts
works hop I now understand a Jot
more about trees, sml , water, other
people. group dynamics - and me I"
'At lhts workshop for the first
time m my life I held a frog! I really
e nJoyed sc1ence."
The State of Conne cttcut employs 30,000 teachers

GALLIPOLIS - Hugh P. a wide vanety of programs posiltve health practices
Ktrkel , Execultve Vice for health personnel.
Emphasis wtll be placed on
President of the Holzer
Thetr continuing ml&lt;!rest advismg people through
Medical Center in Gallipolis, and ability to provtde quality Appalachia Ohio on how to
has been selected as a health care to the entire make effective use of health
member of the Board of regwn
requtres
the care resources, develop
Trusl&lt;!es of the Corporation cooperative efforts of both s ound preventiVe health
for " Health Education in educational and hPalth care practices and tmprove selfAppalachia Ohio" and to its mstttutions This called for help skills .
committee charged with the formation of the CorAt the same lime health
finding
an
Executive poratwn of Health Education care workers wtll be able to
Director of the Corporation. in Appalachia Ohio as a further
tmprove·- their
Ohio Valley Health Service se parate orgamzation to abihtles to plan and carry out
Foundation,
Inc.,
with address the needs for health contmmng public health
headquarters in Athens , IS educatwn on a regional basts. educatwn efforts
provldmg assistance wtth the
An addtl!onal grant will
Jn additwn to Kirkel from
milia! development of the enable the Corporation to the Holzer Medtcal Cenl&lt;!r,
Corporation and tts program employ a staff of skilled other members of the Board
efforts. Through OVHS, a professionals to asstsl local
special project grant was agenctes in developing and
developed
for
the implementing programs that
organizat ton of the Ohio will help area residents to
A P P a I a chi an
He a It h improve and expand their
Education Network to imtiate knowledge and sktl! in

MIDDLEPORT - Vincent
Dabo retired Friday from
Imperial Electrtc where he
had worked for the past 29
years.
Dabo was one of the first
employes of the plant when it
was opened in Middleport.
for many years he worked on
the shipping floor but for the
past two years he has worked
in the tool crib.

THE BLUE Devil Boosters Club is working on the improved dressing rooms project. However, they'll need some
help from the school, community and outside interests for a
program to bring Memorial Field back up to the
should be for the youngsters of today who will be our

·&lt;
:.
::
:·
::·
.·

ma k'~Bbetter u1se of1. t~e toudtd.oor1sh·." .:~.~: ~:

K zr
• kle ]Olns,
• • h ea lth •ed b oard

BELIEVE it or not,
Field is beginning to show
its age. It'll be 27 years old come Oct. 8. When dediCated on
that date in 1948, Memorial Field was the showcase of the
Southeastern Ohio League.

Holiday
with c;are

m ore
,

to live m tomorrow 's world? Will
they be a ble to compel&lt;! tf all the
rules are C'h . . . ,t\ed''
"Because I participa ted m this
workshop I now understand people
JUst that much more - Includin g
my se lf. "
" Bec~use I participated tn Lhts
\\ orks hop, I now understand (the)
c omplexity of environmental
problems ."
Before I participated 1n tlus
workshop I thoug ht about ecology in
sti lted tenns, bu t now I have a more
co mpr eh ens iv e att itud e abo ut
ec ology "
''Tn thi s works hop I learned that
II IS posstble to brmg the environm ent mto my classroom and how to
do it Fantastic 1 ' "
" At thts workshop I learned
there IS more to the environment
than JU St the s ubstance of a1r, water
and sml. "
" For the firs t time m m y ltfe I
realized lhat there were "layers"m
the sot I ( notteeable lay ers). Also I
have begun to understand a process
questwmng approach to the env Ironment. "
"Before I parllctpated in this
workshop, I considered man to be
more detrtmental but now I realize
we are also a part of our environmen! and all our changes may not be
bad ."
" Because I parttctpated m thts
workshop, I now am able to plan and

· ·

Me~:,~

sun.

work shOp I dtd not ex:phwe but now [
w11l I never felt adequate m tak1 11g
the children outs1de
Beca use I parlicipated in tin s

ASK TOWED
POMEROY George
Dtamond Lawson, 72, Racine ,
and Mabel Arizonia Taylor,
76, Racine; William Robert
Haptonstall, 24, Middleport,
and JeneUe Yay Cwn'ings, 20,
Pomeroy; Roy Thomas
Grueser. 47, Pomeroy, ahd
Opal Marie Offutt, 26,
Chester; Thomas Allan
Crisp, 21, Langsville, and

'

'

..

to furrush hts photograph ,
sig natur e
and
mm ted
likeness for use rn books,
watches or medalhon s In
return for exclu sive rtghts to
these, Walla ce can coll ect up
to $15,000 a year m royalttes
for 10 ye ars .
Ther e once was a ban on
deals m whtch a candtdate
ca n benefit flnanctally from
ht s
own
carnpa 1gn
orgamzatton
But
the
provi sion fr om the old
Corrupt Practices Act dtd not
make tt mto the reform btll,
although the Senate included
It
Dunn g a commiSsiOn

discussio n of the Wallace
campa tgn request for an
adv isor} dec1s1on, commission vice c harrm::~n Ne il
Stae bl er warned that the
group ought to at least say
something about the scheme .
" Thts ts the cand id ate
d ealing with h tmself. He
can not htde behind the
committee. If we open the
door to that kind of thing, we
can make qmte a ra cket out
of pohtics," Staebler said.
The commiSSIOn decided to
send the matter to its counsel
to draft language to put m a
message from Washington to
Wallace .

�..

,

3- The Daily Sent mel Mtddleport-Pomeroy, o, Sept 2, 1975

2- The D• •lv Sent mel Middleport Pomeroy. 0 '!Uesday, Sept 2, 1975___

I

RAY CROMI.EY

Ask not what your country can do for you , ask
what you can do for Lockheed , multinationals, Russia

Editorial comment,

Loopholes new
sunshine law

opinion, features
One survey does n ot settle an

By Ray Cromley
Tbe Senate lS up

wASIUNGTON to its tricks again It
has before lta blll, S 5, called a "sunshme" law which PUI'pOI:ta
to generall y open meetmgs of Senate and Hoose committees
and of certam selected government agendes to the public
The blll ls enthustastleally supported by Cormnon Cause and
other groups )lSted as 'pbulic 10terest "
In t th s 5 as f1rst mtroduced, had some measure of lntegn t~and so~e teet h As amended, 1! 1S a sham and facade,
an attempt to eonvmee voters the sponsors are mterested In
the pubhc s n ght to know But the Ieeth have been filed down to
the gums
The bJII start.s out, sectwn by secbon, m a straightforward
man ner It declares Senate eomnuttee meetings shall be open
~ stand10g, select or spee1al, and all sube~ttee meetings
House eomm1ttee meetlngs shall be open Jomt congressional
meetmgs shall be open The meetmgs of most of the Important
regulatory agene1es sba ll be open
Then come the exceptwns Each 1S reasonable ~Its face
Meetmgs can be closed to the public m the mterests national
defense, foretgn pollcy or law enforcement, for the rotect1on
of trade secrets, fmanc1al and commercial Information given
the government on a confl dentlal baslS, or to protect Informers
or law enforcement agents
They can be closed to protect lnfonnatlon which would be
an unw arranted mvaswn of pnvacy , or which would expose
some person to d1sgraee or public contempt, or which would
tend to cha rge" an lndlvtdual w1th cnme or llllSConduct,

•
ISSUe

Not smre a_..oewe ~ Defea ts Truman m 1948 have the sampler s of public opm10n come
under so much fHe and t he 1r polltn!-: me thod s been so questioned a s they have of late espccwlly
m the \.I let! a1 eas of env lfonmenlallsm CJnd consurnen sm
A case m po int 1s a"' Jclelv 1eported s ur \ e} b) the Op1n1on Hesedrch Co rp of Pnmeton N
J , whi ch found basnl on mterv 1ews of 2 0 ~8 people of voting age that 75 per cent of a ll
Amencans oppose the creation of an Indl'pendent fed era l Consumer Protec tiOn Agency Ac

corrhn g to th&lt; poll lht• publ1c Js genera II) sa lJsfJCd w1th the ccnsumcr protectwn efforts of
ex1stmg gO\ e1nment agenc1es
The sw-vev has been v1g01 ou slJ .attac ked bv s upporters of t he lcglslatwn wh ich wou ld se t
LVJ the superag("nq. who doun Lh.1t 1t:s qu e:stw ns \H r e slanted and load ed Th ey also p01nt out
Chat 1t wa s eo mrr11 ssto ned bv tllc Hmancss H o un dta ble a New York based association of
busm rss fir ms wluch along \\lth \ ;.u wus loca l chambers of commerce has been actavely
pubhc1zmg lhe fLndmgs
Now comes ano the r su1 ve) th&lt;Jt ts su1 ~ to be conl rovcrsaal t)us one bj the prest agwus
l.o u1 s Harns &amp; Assoc 1ates
Almost tv.o-th1rds of tile Ame n c&lt;:~n peopl e f&lt;.~o,.o1 the butlding of more nuclear plant s m the

Urul ed States

Js the maJol f10c1tng of tlus poll based on a eroS!l-:;ectwn of 1,537 households
ar oLmd the cou ntry SpeclfJc.tllr 63 per cent are smd to be m fm..or, 19 pe1 cent opposed ~::~nd 18
per l ent not sure
In add1t10n 1t \HlS detern un~ d th&lt;:~t the public endorses nuclear power plants more
strong!} than 1ts po htlcdl busmes~ ~::~nd env1ronmental leaders and the regulators of public

ulthlles beheve they do

There a re other exce phons

Some 201of these people were also polled

The Ha rns sun ey \\a s conumss1oned by Ebasco lndustnes, Inc

a maJor engmeermg

ccnstructwn and consultmg ftrm mvolved m the bulidmg of power plants of all types
11le news merna that roulmely report the fmdmgs of the constant stream of pubhc opmwn
polls and particula rly ed!toraal wnters Y.ho may base t hetr comments on them bea r a
rel:iponslbih ty f01 ascer tam mg the acc ura cy of the ir so urces of mformatton - though how they
~a n a1ways do this without conductmg su rvl'Y l:i of their own 1s not clear
But Y.htle mdn y people are suspiCIOlL':i of swecpmg generali ties ex tra polated from tht!
responses or a few thousand people out of 210 milhon, the sc lentlfJ c vahdit y of modern poll

i&lt;oking methods has been po etty &gt;~ell uphe ld O\er the )ears • Even the fa mous Dewe) fumble
was not so much the consequence ot fau lty pollmg as of the fact that the pollsters stopped m
terv1ewmg voters too earl} m the electwn campatgn )
What 1t seems to boll down to 1s the crediblht) of the pollsters Credib1hty JS thetr most
valuable asset, theJr stock tn trade They would be treadin g m dangerous•waters were they to
begm eomprom1smg theJr unpartJaht) m order to tell the sponsor of a partJeular ooll what he
wants to hedr - or e\ en be susp ected of dmng so

Yet JUSt as there Js an unresolved questw n as to whether teleVlslOn reportage of early
electwn results m the East tnfluenees votmg m the West, there 1s the very real poss1b1hty !hal
pubhc opmJon polls may go beyond their legtttmate mformatwnal functw n by 10lluenemg or
preJudiemg the optmons of people &gt;~ho read about them - a kmd of self-f ulfJJ hng, snowba ll
effect
Certa10 l) 1! would be fool hardy to let the adoptwn or nonadoptwn of natwnal pohe1es and
leglslallon m matters crueoal to the publ1c mterest be governed solely by the results of th1s one
survey or that

TOM TIEDE

A small incident
in Lafayette Park
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON
The
gentleman had a nuhtary
step, toes mward, knees st1ff,
30 mehes to the pace He

blle
A neighbor on the bench

strutted thus across Penn

crane ' He pla ced

sylvan1a Avenue and mlo
Lafayette Park where he
engaged m a ntual of sJttmg
down off w1lh the coal up
w1th the sleeves unhe the
shoelaces 'Gr and ' he sa1d,
\\ hlCh 1s a word almost no one

WICh on Jls paper I am an
Hutltonty on 1! He hcked
Jelly from h1s thumb In turn
he used a handkerchief to w1p
the ilck He also ble\1 h1s

anymore

TOKYO t UP! ) - In Far
Eas!Aefense matters, Japa n
and the Umted Sl&lt;otes are like
a d1sor gamzed baseball
team
The r e

o ne

Perhaps what we need to help m e\aluatmg the pubhc opmwn poll1s the a pphcalJOn of a
golden rule, to the effect that one survey does not an Jssue settle nor a consensus establish As
useful as tts " mput '1s m tellmg us what Arneracans want or don t want are warned about or
are hopeful about 1! tells only part of the story

says

Far East defense
disorganized

and

he

repeated 1! ' Grand '
It was m1dday Sunny and
hot Just oppos1te the Wh1te
House Ch1ldren were soaking
man open foun tam, k1ds were
fro hekmg under the shade
trees, and the gentleman
unfolded a wrapped sandw1ch
to eat One b1te T\' o Peanut
butler and Jell y from the look
of tt 'Do you know ' the
ge ntleman sa1d stoppmg rrud
phrase to swallow and then
to reach for a 1 hermos do
you know about the whoop1 ng
crane ?" He sm1led Anoth er

ltu

ned
Yes

the gentleman satd

poll lei ),

nose

' the

whoopmg
h1 s

sand -

And then contmued

For one thmg 1t JS the
largest b1rd on the North
Amen can continent By far

really Fully gr own t! sl&lt;onds
as l&lt;oll as a boy - a btg boy 1
Oh yes, And " mgspan S1x to

a nd

no m a nager

Amen ca

became

m1htary alhes 24 years ago
Tokyo newspapers say that

short "

The "rapper stopped agam
at the base or""the foun tam
whereupon a eh1ld crumpled
1! for use as a ball and qmckly
threw 1t mto the wate r where
1l floated on the wa ves and m

the foam generated by the
bathers
TourJsts passed b), thetr
cam eras a imed at the Wh1te
House, a gr ass s lam souvemr

occupied the rear of one
woman 's stretch shor ts Yak,
ya k, they sa1d Chck, chek
The gentleman was not
dtstr acted 'The bird 1s
whtte,' he wen t on , "always

\\h Jte, w1th black hps on the
"mgs and a rouge head And
welcome, a nd caught the the} don't whoop' that Js what
gentleman s lunch wrapper people thm , but Jt s wrong
b) surpn se It tumbled from They trumpet, very loud, hke
h1s lap, to the walk , snaggmg this oooomp , ooooooompl '
momenlanl y on the bench leg The tounsts turned to stare at
before dn ftmg over the grass the gentleman He contmued
to the fountam The gen- to trumpet For effect, he put
tleman appear ed not to hts hands to hts mouth and
noltce ' Whooper s," he said, ooomph m the d1rechon of the
that s what we call them for Wh1te House gate

seven fee t or m ore "
A breeze began , ever so

•

DR. LAMB.

ts

Nobody knows the battmg
order m ease a ga me has to
be played The catcher can t
l&lt;olk to the p1tcber because
they don't speak the same
language The left f1elder
doesn't want to play at all
Defense Secretary James
Schlesmger comes to Tokyo
today (Aug 28 ) to look mto
th1s s1tuatwn It has persiSted
most of the tune smee Japan

foreign news
commentary

M1e h10 Saka ta, director gener a l of J apa n's Se lfDefense Agency, wtll propose
that the U S and Japanese
defense mm1sters hold yea rly
meet mgs to dec1de overall
strategy
Nobody actually expects
Japan to be attacked At the
bottom of the Schlesmge rSakata talks ts the st1cky
questwn of how much help
the Uruted States could get
from Japan should another
war break out m Korea

There ts nothll1J! like Europe 's NATO defen!ll! structure,
where the roles of Amen can
and European forces have
been mapped out m del&lt;o1l
The lan guage bam er 1s

show they are " he sa1d ,
The gen tleman hfted off the
soa
rm g, ~c a tchmg lhe air
bench w1th hJs calls Then sat
down qmetly 'I m sorry,' he You kno&gt;~ th ey m1grate each
satd, 'l've made a £ool of spn ng from Canada to Texas
myse lf " He !Jmshed hts and go back aga m m the fall
sa nd\\ 1ch, except for the It Js a wonderful thmg to see
crusts, wh1ch he broke mto them m f11ght " The genpieces and tossed on th e grass tleman put on h1s coat a
for the sqmrrels He touched hght\\ eJght smt Jaekel, and
touched h1s fmgers to an oldthe ne1ghbor on the arm
fashioned
he Of course," he
The whooper ts a buzzard
they kn ow, by relatwn at saJd laughmg a httle, " I've
least
And
most never seen them m fh ght "
The gentleman searched
un gregarwus, too He w1ll
the
bench, !hen hls pockets
nest only 1f another whooper
1s not nestmg nearby They " l've lost my wrapper ," he
mate , but they do not flock saJd He felt under the bench
No body kn ows wh y My ' It must have blown awa y "
opmwn Js they don't hke each He rubbed hts face w1th h1s
other than well " The gen- hand and brushed the crumbs
tleman screwed the cap on fr om h1s trousers Then he
saw the wrapper m the
h1s Thermos
The noon hour was endmg foun !&lt;om "Mustn 't htter ," he
Brown bags were closmg all sa1d, dehghtedly, as he went
over the capli&lt;ol The gen- to the water 's edge, shd over
tleman stood to he h1s shoes the concre te hp, and waded m
and button h1s sleeves "What to retn eve the trash
Whe n he came out he shook
hunself, turned, and pausmg
only to ask a eh1ld 1f she knew
of the whoopmg crane, the
gentleman left the park and
walked back across Pennsylva nia Avenue w1th a now

How doctors check blood sugar
By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - W1ll
you please tell me how the
blood sugar Js cheeked ' I
thought 1t was m the blood
but a nurse told me that the
mam test was of the urme
She sa1d the amoun t of sugar
we have m the un ne

IS

what ts

1mportant
How h1gh does your blood
sugar have to be before ) ou
have to take shots'
DEAR READER - The
most rehable test 1s of the
blood When yo ur blood sugar
1s too h1gh sugar w1 ll sp1ll mto
the ur me For th1s reason
d1a beh es oft en test the 1r
W'tne as a da1ly gmde to how
well the1r d1abetes 1s eon
trolled
Many normal persons may
have a temporary peak of
blood sugar after eatmg a lot
of ~weets, and th1s may cause
a spill of sugarmto the ur me
But the bloodilevells only for
a short dural ton, and these

I

I. -

'I

people do not have d1abetes
A unne test showmg sugar
must always be followed up
w1lh careful blood tests to see
tf the perso11 ts really a
d1abet1c or not
Opmwns d1ffer on how h1gh
the blood sugar has to be
before yo u have to take msulm I usually prefer to see a
pallent who ts overwe1ght
lose wetght before dec1dmg
on msuhn t£ the elev.,atwn Is

not too much After we1ght
loss, tf the person still has
htgh blood sugar levels, then
msulm may be mdteated
Some doctors !Jke to control
the level of blood sugar to
near normal levels, others
settle fo r keepmg the level
low enough that no maJor
amoUllts of sugar are lost m
the urme
For m ore mformatwn on
testmg for d1abetes wnte to
me m care of th1s newspaper,

P 0 Box 1551 , Radw C1ty
Statwn , New York, NY

10019, send a long, stamped, be pleased
self addressed envelope and
A do ctor examines the
50 cents and ask for The abdomen to feel for any
Health Letter number 3-11 , ma sses or twnors and 1f
Dta betes
D1ag n os 1s, possible to feel the large
Preventi on
an d
artery that runs along the
Management
backbone Th1s 1s sometunes
DEAR DR LAMB - When d1fftcult m obese mdiv1duals
my husband was exammed Sometimes the large artery 1s
recently the doctor had h1m enlarged or may be parllally
on the exammmg table and ruptured
wa s feeling h1s stomach
In checking the e1rculatwn
Wha t I wan t to know ts why 1t 1s 1mportant to try to feel
the doc tor then felt h1s left the abdommal artery and
and the lower part of the leg then to check the pulsa twn ~
close to the foot What con- lower m the th1gh and leg
nection 1s there between a Doctors often go from the
person's s toma ch and the abdomen to the leg because 1t
person's lower leg' Does the 1s eas1er to do a good place to
leg show somethmg 1f the feel the ar ten es
perso n's
sto m ach
has
Whe ther a person ga ms or
somethmg wrong w1th 1!'
loses we1ght w1th a tumor
Also, I'd ll!:e to know 1f a depends on what type 1! 1s A
person's wetght goes up or bemgn tumor 1s JUst more
down when they have a tumor gr owth and may add to
or grow th ?
we1ght A maltgnant tumor
DE AR READER - Sounds may effect norm al body
ltke your husband got a good fun elton and commonly leads
exammahon, and you should to loss of we1ght

soggy 1mhtary step

BENGALS ffiADE
DETROIT (UPI ) - The
Detrott Lions obtamed two
fouryear Natwnal Football
League veterans m a trade
Monday w1th the Cinctnnall
Bengals and gave up an
und1sclosed future draft
chmce
The
L10ns
acqUired
defens1ve back Bernar d
Jackson and linebacker Tun
Kearney from the Bengals
They also released two
players on wa1vers to get
the1r roster to 55 The Ltons
must cut sut players today to
get down to tbe NFL limit of
49
Kearney, 24, who played for
Northern M1ch1gari, was
drafted m 1972 by Dallas,
then JOmed Cincinnati as a
free agent m 1973 Jackson,
25, who lS also a kickoff
return man, was drafted by
the Beugals m 1972

,

forrrudable and Japanese and
Ame n can ground troo ps
don' t ma neuve r together
Most of the burden of
protectmg the sea aroUlld
Ja pan and Korea fa lls on the
U S Seventh Fleet, operating
from Japanese bases
The fa ll of Amen ea nbaeked governments m Jndochma has worned Prune
MmlSter Talc eo M1k1 's rulmg
Li hera l Democralle Party It
1s basteally antJ-Commun1st
and works closely w1th
Japanese busmess leaders
It has hegun to fear for the
safety of the anti-Commurust
government of South Korea,
only 80 mlles away across the
Japan Sea Smee 1965 Japan
has pumped b11lions of dollars
of econom1c a1d and mvestment money mto South
Korea 10 hope of msurmg 1ts
surv1val as a non-Commumst
state
ThlS pohey has been fought
by Japan's two largest oppos lllon
parhes,
the
Soc1ahsts and the Commumsts
Both
favor
Ulliflcahon of Korea as a
Soctahst country Ullder the
leadership of North Korean
Pres1dent Kim II Sung
Both oppose the Amenean
r ole m the Far East,
espec1ally the bases m Japan
The hub of the problem lS
that any defense of Korea
would depend m part on U S
Air Force planes and on
bombers operating from U S
Navy earners based m
Japan The Air Force has
South Kor ean bases, but if
these were lost the questiOn
would be whether 1! cculd
operate over Korea from 1ts
bases m Japan proper
Mild and his predecessors
have always hinted that the
answer rrught be yes But
they ha ve also carefully
reserved the right for Japan
to make her own dec1s1on m
any future CrtSlS
In the past, suggestiOns
from
form er
Defense
Secretary MeiVln Laird and
other Amenean leaders that
Japan should "do more"
about defense have had btUe
result

Now Jt w11l easily be seen that while most, perhaps all, rf
these exee pttons have great ment, they are so broad In scope
that virtually any congresswnal eomnuttee meeting or session
of any unporl&lt;o nce could be closed to the public under these
proV1s1ons - wtth little or no recourse
The savmgs grace m the ongmal bill lay In a series of
paragraphs proVldmg that a fourth of the comnuttee or subeommlttee memhers could, 10 most cases, ralSe a pomt of
order w1thm two days, for emg a vote by Congress on throwing
the transcnpt of the contested closed meeting open to !be
general public
ThlS, of course, provided a means by which a decision to
close a meetmg or portions of a meeting could be kept
somewhat honest These paragraphs, however, were
elumnated from the bill
The e!imina bon of the safeguard means, m fact, that lf the
bJll becomes law, what the public will have access to will, as
now, be at the whun of tbe majorlty of those present at each
eomnuttee meetmg Which lS essentially no different from this
year or last or the year before, for most conuruttees.
Matter of fact, the listmg of "legitimate" bases for closing
meetmgs to the publle, and listing the bases m such detail, will,
if hiStory lS a gwde, make 1! eas1er to close crucial discussions
to the pubh c
The only meetings we shall be prlvy to m detail will be
those calculated to drwn up support at tbe next election for the
members of the comnuttee mvolved, or meetings so innocuous
no one cares whether they're public or not We shall not learn
the eruelal potentially embarrassmg op101ons and deCISions of
senators and represenl&lt;otives For some way will be found to
class1fy these an uunucal to the national mterest or unfairly
embarrassmg to some person or group
Though m Washington 1t lS customary to dende state
governments, 1t 1s to be noted that even Common Cause finds
that m opemng eorrumttee meetings to the public, the states
are now well ahead of the U S. Congreas Says Common
Cause "Wlth the passage of open meetings laws m West
V1rgm1a and MlSSISSlppl m 197~, only New York and Rhode
Island cling to the old ways of domg most of the public's
busmess behind closed doors "

Japanese autos
having big year
By ROBERT CRABBE
TOKYO
(UPI )
Amenea's auto mdustry may
be m the doldrwns, but
Japan's 1s domg !me
The busy factones of

business today
Toyota, NLSSan (Datsun) and
rune other eomparues turned
out 617,402 cars, trucks and
buses m July for the1r best
perfonnance of the year
It was a return to the levels
of production reached durmg
1973 m Japan's last burst of
mflated prospenty JUSt
before the start of tbe 011
CrtSlS
If the pace holds, 1975 could
be the Japanese car 10dustry 's
second
best
production year m history
The all-tune record was set m
1973
when
Japanese
manufacturers bUll! 7,082, 757
vehicles Last year the output
dropped to 6,551,840, but 1974
st1ll was Japan's second best
year ever

Although exports account
for about one third of Japan's
sales, most of tbe Industry's
prospenty thlS year comes
from a boom m passenger ear
The Daiij ser.tinal
sales m the Japanese market
DEVOTED TO THE
The pnee of gasoline m
INTEREST OF
Japan has mcreased from
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
about
62 cents a gallon before
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
the ml crlS1S, to about $1 42
C1ty Ed1tor
per gallon today Pleasure
Pu bl ts h e d dall y exce pt
Sa turday by Th e Oht O V all e v.
dr1vmg has declined, but the
P u b i 1Stt 1ng co mpa ny
111
Japanese continue to buy
Court Sl
P ome roy O h1 0
45769 B us m ese. Oft1ce Ph on
cars,
partly on the baslS of
99 '2 2156 Ed ttor1a l P h on e 992
2157
rumors that pnces will rlSe
Secon d cla ss postage pa td
rap1dly after the present
a t P am eroy Oh tO
Nal to n a l
a dve r lts tn g
recessiOn lS over
r e p ~ese n ta t tve
wa rd
In July, new veh1cle
Grifft l h Com pany
In c ,
Botttn ellt &amp; Ga ll.e9her Dtv
reg1strat1ons
of all types
757 Th trd Ave N ew York
N Y 10 017
reached 393,632, g1vmg tbe
S ubscr tp tt o n ra tes
mdustry
one of 1ts best
Deli ve r ed by ca r r ie r wher e
a va tlabl e 75 ce nts per w eek
domeslle sales months In
By .Ytotor Roule where
h1story A b1g spurt m
c arrier
s er v ~e: e
not
a v a tlabl e, On e month , Sl 2'5
passenger car sales account·
B y mallm Oh to and W Va
On e Ye ar
S22 oo
Snc
ed for the boost, Truck
mo n th s
Sl t 50
Th ree
m o n 1h s S7 00 E l se wh ere ) registrations were down.
26 00 year
Stx m on t h s
So far thiS year, exports to
13 50 thre e mont hs S7 50 I
u bsc npl 10n pr1ce fnc lud es
the Uruted States are off Tbe
unday T 11J1es Sent1ne l
Ja pan
Automobile

Manufacturers Association
says 1ts members shipped
374,000 vehicles to the United
States m the ftrst six month of
the year Shtpments to
Amer&gt;ea m the January-June
pertod of 1974 eame lo 548,000
un1ts
However, because of tbe
slwnp m American car sales, ,
the Japanese actually are
mcreasmg their market
share In J1me, both Toyota
and
N1ssan
outsold
Volkswagen to take over the
f1rst two places among
foretgn car exporters to tbe
Umted States
Japan and some European
eountnes now are under
mvesllgation on charges of
"dumpmg," or selling cars in
the Amencan market at
pnces below those charged In
Japan The accusation has
been demed by the Japanese
M1mstry of International •
Trade and Industry,
Both MITI and iiJdustry
leaders Insist the succeas of
Japanese cars m the United
states lS based on their low
gasoline consumption ~
Makers claim better than 30
miles per gallon f&lt;r most •
models
•
Although Detroit bas '
started to shift its attention to
economy cars, the Japanese :
hope to escape severe •
competition at least until the •
1977 model year.
'•
Up to now, the American
mdustry's attitude toward
small cars has been summed
up by the remark attributed
to Henry Ford n that ''mlni
cars mean mini profits,"
The hope m Tolr,yo Is tbat It
will take the Amerlca118 a
while longer to get started.

20 area games on tap this weekend
as '75 grid campaign gets underway
Twenty area h1gh school
football games are on l&lt;o p as
the 197~ gr~d eampa1gn gets
Wlderway thlS weekend
All Southeastern Oh10
League and Southe m Valley
Athlet1c Conference teams
will see acllon Ne1ghbormg
West Vlrgl!Ua and Kentucky
tea1ns opened their cam
pa1gns last week
Sev e nt ee n

gam es

are

scheduled Fr~day mgh t while
three area games are on tap
Saturday
The e1ght non..SEOAL
games are Pt Pleasant at
Me1gs, Mar~etta at Athens,
Rock Hill at GalhpollS, South
Pomt at Ironton, J ackson at
Portsmouth, Logan at New
Lexmgton, Waverly at
Wheelersburg and Wellston
at Federal-Hocking
One SV AC ga me ftn ds
Eastern at Hannan Trace
Other non-league games
mvolvmg SVAC teams are
Chesapeake at Sy mmes
Valley, Soutbem at Farrland,
GAHS reserves at Kyge r
Cr eek (Saturday mght ),
North Gallia at Waterford
(Saturday ) and
RossSoutheastern a t Southwestern
Four new foes or old opponents renewtng nva lr~e s

Double Team won
the featured $11,200 Greenville
Treaty Handicap Mooday at
Thistledawn raceway, going
the mile In 1:31 2-S.
(UP!) -

after lapses of several years
are on the gndiron schedules
of the eight Southeastern
Oh10 At hletic League teams
durmg the 1975 season, the
s tart or the co nfe r ence s
second hall century
In the full sebedule of 24
non conf er ence

con t ests

dun ng the three wee ks
leading up to the seven
stra1gh t weeks of "rollildrobm 'Iplay Portsmouth w11I
entertrun Jackson, NelsonVllle-York will be on the
Wells ton
and
Loga n
sched ules for the f1rst time
smce leav10g the conference ,
and Belpre w11l be new on the
Waverly eard
When Jackson goes to
Portsmouth m one of the
season openers Jt will be !herr
f1rst meet10g on the gr1diron
m nearly 50 yea r s Th e
TroJa ns ar e repl ac mg
Chilhcothe on the Jackson
schedule
Nelsonvtlle-York replaces
Wheelersburg on the Wellston
schedule and Bexley on
Loga n's and Belpre 1s a new
opponent for Wave rly's
Tigers m the place of Huntmgton Ross
. Two new head football
coaches wlll be on the sldelmes for the start of the ~lst

conference season, wtth J ohn

R Burchmal as the flfth
gndrron mentor at Waverly
m seven years and Willard
(Buddy) Moore m charge
after h ve yea rs as an
assistant at Gallipolis
Bur c htn a l , f orm e r
ass1stant va rsity football
coach and head tri)Ck and
wrestling coach at Portsmouth , replaces Bill Morgan ,
who res1gned after one year
at Waverly and returned to
Coal Grove
Moore, who was an allSoutheastern basketball and
football player at Middleport,
succeeds Johnny Ecker, who
res1gned after SlX years w1th
a 3().J8-2record and "coach of
the year' recogmtion wtth hlS
1970 ehamp1ons
Charles Chancey as tbe
dean of the Southeastern
coaches 1s startmg his mn th
year w1th Me1gs
Bob Lutz of Ironto n and Ron
Fenik of J ackson are on tberr
fourth seasons, Les Walker
and Jody Mlchael of Wellston
on the1r thrrd seasons and Bill
B1ggers 1s startmg his second
year at Logan
Ironton 1s the defending
ehamp10n and was followed
m the 1974 !mal standings by
GalhpollS, Athens, Jackson,

Wellston, Logan, Me1gs and
Waverly
!91 5 SOUTHEASTERN
SCHEDULE
11914 Scores in Parentheses )
Sep~ 5 - Man etta 114 1 at
Athens (0), Rock Hill (6) at
Galhpolis ( 14 ), Ironton ( 26 )
at South Pomt 10) , Jackson at
Portsmouth, Logan (0) at
New Lexmgton ( 34 ), Po10t
Pleasant (14 ) at Meigs (7),
Waverly (0) at WheelersburR
44 ) and Wellston (1 8 ) at
Federal Hocking
Sept 12 - La ncaster ( 21)
at Athens (0), Coal Grove (6)
at Galhpohs t 36 ), Portsmouth 113) at Ironton ( 13),
Oak Hill (6) at Jackson ( 38 ),
Logan (7) at HUilard I 17),
Me~gs 16) at Belpre I 15),
Waverly (0) at Portsmouth
West ( 13), and NelsonvilleYork at Wellston
Sept, 19 - Athens (7) at
Circleville (21 ), South Pomt
(8) at GallipollS (20), Ironton
113) at Ashland, Ky (14 ),
Jackson ( 42) at M1arru Trace
161, Logan at NelsonvilleYork, R1pley, W Va (0) at
Me1gs (31 ), Waverl y at
Belpre and Vmton County ( 8)
at Wellston ( 39 )
Sept , 26- Gallipolis ( 28 ) at
Athens ( 22 ) , Ironton ( 33 ) at
Wellslon (7), Jackson (42) at

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Wrller
The New York Mets popped
bottles of champagne early
Monday night - perhaps a
forecast of the future
There were many reasons

for them to celebrate Tom
Seaver had won h1s 20th game
and estabhshed a maJor
league record of e1ght eons e eutlve 200-s tnk eo ut
seasons And the team had
moved to wtthm four games
of the fli"Sii&gt;lace Pittsburgh
Pirates
Nobody sa1d so, outr1ght,
but the feelm g m th e
clubhouse was that the Mets
were balding a "practiCe
party" for an anllcpated
celebratwn for Wllllllllg the
Nallonal League's Eastern
Dmswn title
The odds still favor tbe
Pirates, of course, but odds
don 'I mean anythmg to Mets
They are thmking of !he
"rruracle fl!Ushes " of 1969
and 1973 - and they believe

Rook1e Mike Vail sent the
Mets off to a 1-0 lead when he
homered off John Candelana
m the f~rst mnmg The Mets
scored the1r other rllilS m the
s1xth on a smgle by FellX
M11lan , a forceout, Rusty
Staub' s double and Joe
Torre's smgle
st Loms defeated Clneago
&amp;-3, San D1ego shaded Cincmnatl 2-1, Montreal topped
Plnladelph1a 6-5, Los Angeles
downed San Frane1sco 3-1
and Houston beat Atlanta 5-3
m other Nallonal League
'games
In the Amencan League 1t
was Oakland 6 Califorma 3,
New York 4 Boston 2, Kansas
City over Ch1eago 3-1 after a
!0-8loss, Detroit 5 Milwaukee
4 and Mmnesota 5 Texas 4
Cleveland at Baltunore was
rruned out
Cardinals 6, Cubs 3
Lou Brock had three
smgles, stole three bases and
scored two runs m leading st
LoUls past Ch1eago Bob

.., thetr rtvals are , too

Seaver, who had an 11-11
record last season, ra1sed h1s
197~ mark to 20..7, ach~eved
his fourth 20-vlCtory season
and mcreased h1s strikeout
total to 204 when he beat the
Ptttsburgh Pirate s 3-0
Seaver prevwusly shared the
ma Jor league record of
strikmg out 200 batters m
seven

Allison
almost
lost race

consecutive seasons

DARLINGTON , S C (UP! )
w1th Hall of Famers Rube
Waddell and Walter Johnson - Bobby Allison came w1thm
"It's a long season and an eyelash of losmg the rameach VIctory 1S part of the delayed Southern 500 stock
season,'' satd Seaver m at· ear race Monday
" I came w1thin sut mehes of
temptmg to explam h1s
) Parsons when he
(Benny
feelmgs for both himself and
the team after the unportant wrecked on the second turn,"
v1etory " I don't try to Allison smd after the gruelmg
evaluate what I've done so 367-lap event It was hlS th1rd
far I will when the whole Southern 500 VIctory
"It's a ternble place to ~ et
season lS over It was a very
boned
I saw a lot of guys
emotional game for me
because of the 20th wm, the d01ng a tremendous JOb of
stnkeout record and the fact gomg by him "
Parsons had the lead m the
we were playmg the Pirates
'It was demanded of me 288th lap when his Chevrolet
that we wm th1s game It was hit a slick spot and spun out of
control Allison m hlS AMC
a fantasllc day "
Matador took advantage of
the rrushap and surged mto
first place w1th Rlehard Petty
hot on his tall He held on to
l&lt;oke a 25-second VIctory over
Petty
"It looks like we got beat
agam, or rather beat ourselves," sa1d Petty , who told
fnends before the nahan's
me now fora
oldest major stock car race
good car Insurance that a flu bug had him feeling
value
the worst he's ever felt before
a race
STEVE
" I think I had the best car
on the track today and he
SNOWDEN
,Aihson) had tbe best dr1ver
Bobby
drove hard and con1258 Powell 51
Middleport, 0
Sistently all day He JUS! kept
PH 9'12 7155
hangmg m tbere and some of
the rest of us got tired "
UATI
The race, which had a
hl&lt; e a good
$162,200
purse, saw 211 lead
neighbor
srate Farm
changes among etght dr1vers
JS there
and a rain-delay of 80 mmutes
at the end of the 268th lap Of
the maJOr pre-race contenders, only AlliSOn and
P71104 1
Petty completed the race

Forsch went 6 2-3 mnmgs to
wm his 13th game although AI
Hrabosky reheved and
earned hlS 20th save Andy
Thornton hit two homers for
the Cubs, whose B11l Bonham
suffered h1s 13th loss
Padres 2, Reds 1
Randy Jones allowed
Cinc10natl rune hits but went
the dJstance to rruse hlS
reccrd to I~ for San Diego
and remam Seaver 's ch1ef
nval for NL Cy Young Award
honors The Padres scored
therr wmnmg run m the SlXth
when Dave Wmf1eld doubled
and scored on John Grubb's
smgle
Expos 6, Phlllles 5
Tim Fob doubled home
Pete Maekanm wtth two out
10 the nmth mmng and scored
on a smgle by rel1ever Dale
Murray as Montreal dumped
Phlladelphla The Ph1ls
rallied for a run m the bottom
of the mnmg before Murray
retrred M1ke Sclunidt on a fly
to end the game w1th the
tymg run m sc~g posthon
Dodgers 3, GIAts 1
Burt Hooton gamed h1S
e1ghth stra1ght victory and
14th of the yer when he pltehed a SlX·Iutter for Los

Angeles agamst San FranCISCO Lee Lacy drove m what
proved to he the winning run
w1th an inf~eld roller m the
stxth and doubled home
another run In the e~ghth
Charlie W11liams dropped h1S
thlrd game agalllSt f1Ve wins
for the G1ants
Astros 5, Braves 3
Cesar Cedeno knocked m
three runs w1th a smgle and a
double as Doug Komeczny
went 7 1-3 mnmgs for his sixth
wm for Houston Atlanta's
Ralph Garr had a smgle and a
tr1ple to run h1s maJor league
career h1t total to an even
1,000 Jrume Easterly suffer ed h1s etghth Joss agamst
one VICtory

Linescores
Maaor League Results
Bv Un1ted Press International
National Leagu e
Ch cag o
000 011 10()-J B 0
Sl L OUIS
102 010 01x - 6 14 I
Bon ham
K nowle s (6)
P
Reusc hel
( 7)
and
SWISher
F o r sch Hra
M 1t1 erw ald ( 7)
bosk y (7 ) &amp;nd S1m mons W P
Forsc h ( 13 9) L P Bonham ( 11
lJ J
H Rs Th ornton
2 (11th
12th )
P 1ttsburg h
000 000 000- 0 4 0
N ew Y or k
100 002 OOx - 3 6 0
Can de lana T ek ulve ( 6) E lliS
{8) an d Sang ulll en Sea v er (20
7) and G r ot e L P Ca nd elana ( 7
5) HR Vall { 1St)
Sa n D1eg o
010 001 000- 2 ll 0
01 0 000 000- 1 9 0
Cm cmnar1
Jones ( 18 BJ and Kendal l
Dar c y Bor bo n (5) and P lu m
mer L P Borbon ( 8 51
LOS Ange les 000 011 Olo---3 13 0
San F r an cls c 000 01 0 ooo--- 1 6 2
H ooton (14 9 ) and Y ea g er
Barr W1l l1 am s (61 Lave lle (81
Hea verl o (9) an d Rad er L P
Will1 am s {53)
Atl anta
000 000 21o--3 8 3
Hous ton
102 200 OOx- 5 7 2
Easte rl y E Sosa (4) Od om
(5)
Dal
Can ton
( 7)
and
Pocoroba Ko n1eczn y Rober ts
(8 ) J N 1ek r o (9) a nd Joh nson
WP Kon ieczny ( 6 121 L P E ast
erl y (l 8)

( 1sl game)
Ka n sas C ty 3 11 020 1oo- 8 13 1
Ch1 cago
025 120 oo x- 10 12 3
Busby
Mc Dan 1e1
(Jl
McClure (5)
L 1t1 ell (6 ) and
M a rhnez Sim so n (71
Wood
Gossage
(5)
a nd
Down 1ng
V arn ey (41 W P Gossage (8 71
LP Bus b y { 15 11)
HR Me llon
( l l lh )
(2nd game)
Ka nsa s C1t y
000 100 020Ch1 cago
000 ooo 100Bnl es
B~rd (4) an d
t1 n ez. Osteen {7 131 an d
ney
W P Btrd
(9 5)
Killebrew ( 12th)

3 80
1 10 1
Mar
var
HR

-

Ma tor Leag ue Sta nd1ng s
By Unt ted Press lnt ernahonal
N at1 ona l L eague
East
w l pel
P 1flsb urgh
7 5 59 560
51 LOU IS
n 63 537 3
Ph il.&amp;delpti la
72 64 519
4
4
Ne-w York
72 64 529
Ch1 cago
61 75 45) 14 1 ~
Monlreal
SQ 75 44 0 16
Wesl

••

w

c

1

pet

EUGENE, Ore (UP!) Top offlclals of the Pacif1c
E1ght and B1g Ten athletic
confe r ences

anno u nce d

Sunday ccnference members
not gomg to the Rose Bowl
may compete 10 other post
season games

g b

nc nna1 1
90 46 662 Los An gel es
73 64 53 3 17 '
San F ranC ISCO 61 69 49 3 11
Sa n D1ego
67 75 153 28 1 ~
A tl anta
59 78 431 )JI
Houston
SJ 85 384 38
M ondays Res ult s
51 LOU IS 6 Chi Cago 3
New York 3 P liS burg h 0
San D •ego 2 C1 nc nnal1 1
Montreal 6 PnlladCiph a S
LOS An ge l es 3 San FranCISCO I
H ouston s Allan Ia 3
Tu esday s Gam es
(A ll Tt mcs EDT )
Los Ange les !Sullen 16 I ll at
San FranCISCO f Ha Ckl 8 11 )
4 05 p m
P1tt sbur gh (B r ett 7 51 at New
York ( Koosman II 11)
8 05

pm

Ch1cago (Burrs II 10 ) at Sl
LOU IS ( M eG olhen 14 9 ) 8 30

Vikes
tough
•

•

mwm

pm

Montreal ! Ca rrtt h e r~ 2 1J at
Ph il ade lph i a ((hr stenson 9 4)
7 35 p m
San D1ego t Spt lner S 11) at
C•ncmnat1 fGullell 11 3) 8 05

.,

.

Browns hold OJ, but
Bills win, 34--io 20
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - It
lS not true that to stop tbe
Buffalo Bills, all you have to
do lS stop 0 J Simpson
The Cleveland Browns held
the All-Pro runmng back to 22
yards total offense, but made
a couple rrustakes and got
blown out 34-20 Monday m a
preseason game before 31,155
fans
W1th the Browns trailing 2113 m the th1rd quarter, B11ly
Pr1tchett fumbled on the
Bills' one-yard line and Doug
Jones recovered for Buffalo
Four downs later tbe Browns
took a punt, marched right
back , and rook1e. Henry
Hynoskl fumbled on the Bills'
HARfMAN SECOND
ST PAUL, Mmn (UPI ) -

Butch Hartman , South
Zanesville, Ohio, was second,
just onehalf lap hehind Jeff
Bloom, Kalamazoo, Mieh , tn
the Mumesota Sl&lt;ote Fa1r's
Uruted State Auto Club 15().
lap late model stock car
feature race
Bloom passed !lie favored
Hartman on the 84th lap and
led the rest of the way
Hartman lS the current
leader m the pomt stanctlngs thls season

H eres an exc1 110 g 1n 1er v 1ew I
r ece n tly o ve rh eard at a space
r esc u e s1l e
Ca p la1n
how
does 11 feel to be the t ~rs l
a st r o n aut to go to Mars"'
Astro n a ut? 1 m no astronaut
l m rea l ly an 1ns u ra nc e man 1
iU SI d o t ht s as a hobby
When
y o u see me do n 1 lh mk o f
m su ran ce but when you th1nk
o f msv r ance see m e I m an
m sura n ce spec 1al1S I rea dy to
serve you

000 040 000- 4 11 2
100 000 AOx-5 11 0
Tr' &lt;.~v ers Aust 1n ( 7) M urph y
(7)
E
Rod n guez {7) anC:
P or te r R uhle Le mancy zk (51
a nd F r eehan W P A ust 1n (2 31
LP L emancyz k (2 4)
\4 0
92
and
and
15)

Mmn esota
00 1 01 3 0()()--5 14 4
Texas
010 ooo 201 - A 6 J
Bl yl ev en But le r (3) Camp
bell {7) John son (9 ) and Roof
Jenkms
Thom 3S
(6)
and
Sundber g
Fa hey
(8)
WP
El ut ler (3 4) L P Jen ki n s ( 16 141
HR Roof C61h l

arase "
" Both conferences are
ccmmitted to the principle of
creating no bowl game situatwns which ' would In the
slightest degree diminish the
prestige or stature of tbe
Rose Bowl as college football's prerruer attraction ,"
Hallock said
Th1s Week ' s Special

USED CARS

73 PLYMOUTH

AJRY Ill
4 dr sedan
power

v1 n y l

root

•2295

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You II L1ke Our Qual1 t y
Way o l Do1ng Bus 1ness

GMAC FINANCING
992 53 42
Pom e roy
Open Evenmgs 'ttl6 00
Toll p m Sat

WHEN YOU SEE ME
bON'T THINK OF
INSURANCE , . , BUT
WHEN YOU THINK OF
INSURANCE, SEE MEl

Milw aukee
D etro 11

N ew Yor k
021 001 Q00--4
Bos ton
000 000 2®-2
M ed1 ch
Mar t1n ez (81
D empse y More t P ol e {7)
Bl a ckwe ll WP Medtch (12
LP M or e l {113)

The Qnnouncement came
from
W1les
Hallock ,
executive director of the Pac8, and Wayne Duke, commlSSloner of the B1g Ten
Hallock was at the Unive rsity
of Oregon bere and Dulte at
Purdue UmverSlty at West
Lafaye tte, Ind
Hall oc k sa 1d fi na l a fflnnallon of the new policy
was una nimous by Pac..'l
member schools
Hallock sa1d the Pac..'l will
have no restr1cllons on bowl
partie1pation by 1ts members
except that the conference
w1nner wtll con tinue to play
m the Rose Bowl and no
memher may accept a bowl
b1d before the NCAA dedline
of 6 p m the th1rd Saturday In
November- Nov 15 th is
year
The B1g 10 w1U not permit
1ts members to accept bids
before Nov 26 and 1ts third
place school may not accept
or reJect a bid until the
second place school has acted
on any bowl b1ds 1! receives
The two conference offic ials sa1d talks aimed at
lift10g the conferences' ban
on other bowls for member
schools had been going on for
at least three years
Hallock said the "cooperallon , understandmg and
empathy of the Tournament
of Roses" had helped make
the change possible He said
NBCTV , wh1ch televises the
annual Jan I game, also was
' thor oughly r eceptive to
ccnd1tions" which Jed to the
change
He satd NBC's "Rose Bowl
teleVlBwn nghts and fees are
not affected by ltle new
policy "
He added, "Both the Pac..'l
and Btg Ten are pledged to be
respons1ve to concerns of tbe
Tournament of Roses wlltl
respect to specific bowl game
cond1t1ons which might

By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
A lot of people counted tbe
pm
Atlanta
(Sadeckl
2 3)
a! Mumesota V1kmgs out last
Houslon t York 2 2 ) 8 35 p m
January when they were
W edn es da y s Gam es
swamped by the Pittsburgh
P1t 1sburgh at New York n
Montreal at Ph 1l adelph 1a n
Steelers m the Super Bowl
Ch •cago at St Lou1s n
But Monda y mght the V1kings
Los Ange l es at C ncmnilltl n
San rranc1sco at Houston n
showed that tbey are far fr om
San D ego at At l anla n
out
A m enca n L eag ue
Looking hke the ram pagt ng
E ast
Purple
Gang of old, the
w l pel 9 b
Boston
79 55 590
Friday's games
V1klngs manhandled M1am1
Ba 111mor e
7) 60
5&lt;9
5' 1
New York
67 504 Jll ] quarterba ck Bob Gr~ese and
F t Gay a t Ha n nan
Cl eve l and
61
41J 1S 1 ~ completely throttl ed the
Pt P leasan t at M e1 g s
Milwaukee
59 77 434 1 I
W ayne a t W ahama
Dolphin offense on therr way
Detro t
53 8l 396 16
M a n e tt a at A the n s
W es t
to a 20-7 rout
Chesapeake
at
Symmes
wlpctgb
The fmal score nowhere
Oakl
and
82
54
603
Va ll ey
K ansas C1ly
73 6 1 545 8
Por t smouth Wes t at Coa l
tnd1cated
the one·&lt;ndedness of
Te)( as
67 70 489 15 1 J
Grove
the game M1am1 Coach Don
Chtcago
66 70 485 16
Sou the r n at Fa 1r land
M1nnesota
64 70 478 17
Slula
pulled many of his first
Rock Hill a t Gall1pol1s
Ca l 1t orn1a
62 74 456 ";10
strmg troops after Minnesota
East ern a t Hannan Trace
Monday 's Res ults
Xluth P o1n t a t Iron ton
Oakland 6 Call l or n 1a l
had surged to a 20-0 lead by
Ch tcago 10 Kansas C ly 8 l si
Iro nt on Sf
Jose at New
ccmpletely
dommatmg the
Kansas Ctly 3 Ch1cago 1 2nd
Boston t Silt J
'
New
Yor
k
4
Basion
2
game
Jackson at P o r tsmouth
Del ro t I 5 Milwaukee 4
GAHS
B a t Kyger Cr eek M1
Fran Tarkenton passed for
nneso1a 5 Texas 4
I Sa I I
Cleve a t Ba l t 2 ppd ra1 n
214 yards and two touchLogan at New Lex1ngton
Tue sday s Gam e s
downs
to spark the V1kings
N o rth Gall1a a t Wa terf ord
( All T1m es EDT)
Kansa s C1l y (F 112morr1s 13
ISa t I
over the preVIously Wlbeaten
101 at Ch•cago (Kaa l 19 101 9
Va ll ey a t Oak H ill
Dolphins He completed 15 of
pm
Ross S E a t Sout h wes t ern
Cl eve land ( E c kersley 10 5 and 21 passes and left In the th1rd
W aver l y at Wh eeler sbur g
B1b by
4 14)
al
Ba l ttmore
W ellston at F ed era l Hock1n g
quarter With the 20-0 lead
( Cuel lar 13 10 an d Alel'.ander 6
W 1n lie ld at Set h
7J2 530pm
Tarkenton threw four yards
Oa k land ( Holt zma n 15 11) at
Call f or n a (Tanana lJ 6 ) 10 30 to llght end Steve Crrug early
pm
m the game for a 6-0 lead and
Mm nesota ( Hug hes 12 12 1 a l
then hit Jun Lash on a 44Te)(as (Harg an B 8) 9 p m
OHIOAN ON LIS f
M il wa u kee { Col bo r n a 9 1 at yarder as the f1rst half ended
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Roger 0e1r01
1 (Co l eman 9 14) 8 p m
N ew Yor k ( Dobson 11 13) al It could have been worse but
Doane of Lorrun, Oh1o, was
( Cl eve land 9 9 1 7 30 Ed Marmara's fumble at the
20th among the pomt leaders pEloston
m
Mlanu three cost tbe Vtkings
m tbe World Champwnsh1p
W ednesd ay s Gam es
another scormg opportumty
Texas 81 Ca l 1for n•a n
Star Class yacht races sailed Kansas
C1t y a l Ch1 ca go n
m the second quarter
on Lake M1ch1gan this past C leve land at M tlwa ukee n
M1arru d1dn't score Ulltil
New York al De lro 11 n
week He had 250 points
Boston at Ba l li mor e n
early m the flnal perlod when
Norm Bulaich ran 53 yards
for a TD agrunst a makeshift
defenese
Gr1ese, meanwh1le, had hlS
problems, completmg only 1
of 8 passes for f1ve yards
before g~vmg way to Don
stroek
V1kmg Coach Bud Grant
3 Walt Patulsk1 recovered passmg game," Gregg sa1d
Ph1pps
was smd he would let h1s starters
and that led to a 31-yard Bills' Although
held goal by John Leypoldt, disappomted because Jt was go agamst M1am1 as long as
11
3 lost effort "
the Dolphins kept m therr
who then dr1lled a k1ckoff
Cleveland
took
a
7-0
lead
on
f1rst strmgers It d1dn 't last
between Greg Pruitt and
their first possesSion on much past the third perlod
Larry Poole
" It was 20-0 and they had
The ball d1ed 10 tbe end Pruitt 's seven-yard run , but
Buffalo's
Joe
Ferguson
threw
some substitutes 10 the game
zon e and they fmally
touchdown
passes
to
Paul
so we Jet some of ours get
remembered it had to be
Seymour
and
Ahmad
Rashad
some tune m, Grant satd
touched down and ran for 11,
We'll match them m
but the Bills' Tom Doncbez for a 14-7 lead after the ftrst
quarter
reserves
but we won 1t st art 1t
got there f1rst and recovered
Steve Holden pulled m a We would ha ve kept the
for a touchdown
t1pped
ball for a 13-yard regulars m longer 1f they (the
" I !bought the ball was
touchdown
completion, but Dolphins ) hadn't gone to the
going to bounce out of the end
wne ," Pruitt sa1d "Its speed Cleveland' s Don Cockroft bench "
and depth of angle made 1t m1ssed the eonvers10n
look like 1t had to go out, but 11 Donehez scored his first
touchdown on a one-yard run
stuck 10 the mud "
and
Buffalo led 21-13 at the
Browns ' coa ch Forrest
Gregg ealled 1! ' a mental half
Leypoldt's fleld goal and
lapse" and added, " that's an
error that never should be Donchez' k1ekoff recovery m
made by any footbaU team " the first mmute of the fourth
The outccme left tbe Bills 2- perlod made tt 31-13 before
2 m pre..se•son play and the Browns rall1ed for Hugh
Cl~=~v~=~laM ~~ !bnmmg a 20- McKinrus' one-yard touchfflf-Jl passmg performance down run, but the Btlls kept
by the Browns' Mike Phipps the ball away from them until
for 315 yards and one touch- the final mmute when
down, hts best day as a pro Leypoldt added another field
"We d1d have a good goal

Montrea l
100 102 002- 6 8 0
Ph 1lad el ph1a 000 ooo 3 11 - 5 12 2
Roger s
Murray
(13 J
and
101 002 02D--6 10 0
Car le r
S1mpson
H il gend orf O at~. 1cmd
300 000 OD0--3 4 1
(6) Mc Graw 18J Garber (9) Cal1forn1 a
Bl ue ( 18 10 1 and T enac e
and Ca l es WP M urra y ( 10 7)
F 1g uer oa ( 12 11 ) and E tchebar
LP Ga r ber (9 91
r en HR s St anl on ( 13t h) W ll
hams {20th ) Ja ckson I 30th)
Amer.can League
Cl evel an d
at
Ball 1m or e
2
ga m es
pp d
ra m and wet
grounJs

Pac-8, Big 10 agree
on other bowl tilts

BASEBALL

Logan 101, and Waverly (12)
at Me1gs 127)
Oct 3 - Me~gs 17) a1
Atbens ( 8 ), GaU1poi1S 114) at
Ironton (15), Logan 149) at
Waverly 16) and Wellston (8)
a! Jackson ( 12)
Oct 10 - Athens 17) at
Logan ( 7), Jackson (6) at
Ironton 112), Me1gs ( 8) at
Gallipohs ( 44 ) and Wa verly
I 20) at Wellston 140 )
Oct 17 - Ironton 143) at
Waverly (201, Jackson 17) at
Gallipohs t 16), Logan (7) at
Me1gs 101 and Wellston t 0) at
Athens !16)
Oct 24 - Athens (0) at
Ironton (20 ), Gall1poi1S (44 )
at Loga n (20) , M e~gs (7) at
Wellston 136) and Waverly
(6) at Jackson (51)
Oct. 31 - Galhpohs 146) at
Wa verly ' 121, Ironton !44 ) at
Me1gs 17), Jac kson ( 8 ) at
Athens 1191 and Wellston 114 I
at Logan I 8)
Nov 7 - At hens ( 27 ) at
Waverly (0), Logan (01 at
Ironton ( 35 ) , Me1gs ( 8) at
Jackson ( 22) and Wellston (6)
at Gallipohs (32)

Mets celebrate (early?)

fA~M

DOUBLE TEAM WINS
NORTH RANDAlL, Ohlo

•

~

Wolllam D

8 q She f
Reg Fre llcl Fnes
Tu rnover &amp;

La qP Sn tl Dr nk

C~olds

OOWrtlNG-QULDS
Mick Childs

AOUL T MEAl

'"AGENCY, INC.

MIDDL E PORT OHIO

PT PLEASANT
2325 J a ck ...,on Av e

FOR KIDS -

FUNMEAL1•

Fun Tray
Funburgo&gt; r
~ e ~ Fre1.1c h Fr1es
Surp(ise Pr ze
Reg Soft Or1nk &amp;
.a Sweel Tre at

�..

,

3- The Daily Sent mel Mtddleport-Pomeroy, o, Sept 2, 1975

2- The D• •lv Sent mel Middleport Pomeroy. 0 '!Uesday, Sept 2, 1975___

I

RAY CROMI.EY

Ask not what your country can do for you , ask
what you can do for Lockheed , multinationals, Russia

Editorial comment,

Loopholes new
sunshine law

opinion, features
One survey does n ot settle an

By Ray Cromley
Tbe Senate lS up

wASIUNGTON to its tricks again It
has before lta blll, S 5, called a "sunshme" law which PUI'pOI:ta
to generall y open meetmgs of Senate and Hoose committees
and of certam selected government agendes to the public
The blll ls enthustastleally supported by Cormnon Cause and
other groups )lSted as 'pbulic 10terest "
In t th s 5 as f1rst mtroduced, had some measure of lntegn t~and so~e teet h As amended, 1! 1S a sham and facade,
an attempt to eonvmee voters the sponsors are mterested In
the pubhc s n ght to know But the Ieeth have been filed down to
the gums
The bJII start.s out, sectwn by secbon, m a straightforward
man ner It declares Senate eomnuttee meetings shall be open
~ stand10g, select or spee1al, and all sube~ttee meetings
House eomm1ttee meetlngs shall be open Jomt congressional
meetmgs shall be open The meetmgs of most of the Important
regulatory agene1es sba ll be open
Then come the exceptwns Each 1S reasonable ~Its face
Meetmgs can be closed to the public m the mterests national
defense, foretgn pollcy or law enforcement, for the rotect1on
of trade secrets, fmanc1al and commercial Information given
the government on a confl dentlal baslS, or to protect Informers
or law enforcement agents
They can be closed to protect lnfonnatlon which would be
an unw arranted mvaswn of pnvacy , or which would expose
some person to d1sgraee or public contempt, or which would
tend to cha rge" an lndlvtdual w1th cnme or llllSConduct,

•
ISSUe

Not smre a_..oewe ~ Defea ts Truman m 1948 have the sampler s of public opm10n come
under so much fHe and t he 1r polltn!-: me thod s been so questioned a s they have of late espccwlly
m the \.I let! a1 eas of env lfonmenlallsm CJnd consurnen sm
A case m po int 1s a"' Jclelv 1eported s ur \ e} b) the Op1n1on Hesedrch Co rp of Pnmeton N
J , whi ch found basnl on mterv 1ews of 2 0 ~8 people of voting age that 75 per cent of a ll
Amencans oppose the creation of an Indl'pendent fed era l Consumer Protec tiOn Agency Ac

corrhn g to th&lt; poll lht• publ1c Js genera II) sa lJsfJCd w1th the ccnsumcr protectwn efforts of
ex1stmg gO\ e1nment agenc1es
The sw-vev has been v1g01 ou slJ .attac ked bv s upporters of t he lcglslatwn wh ich wou ld se t
LVJ the superag("nq. who doun Lh.1t 1t:s qu e:stw ns \H r e slanted and load ed Th ey also p01nt out
Chat 1t wa s eo mrr11 ssto ned bv tllc Hmancss H o un dta ble a New York based association of
busm rss fir ms wluch along \\lth \ ;.u wus loca l chambers of commerce has been actavely
pubhc1zmg lhe fLndmgs
Now comes ano the r su1 ve) th&lt;Jt ts su1 ~ to be conl rovcrsaal t)us one bj the prest agwus
l.o u1 s Harns &amp; Assoc 1ates
Almost tv.o-th1rds of tile Ame n c&lt;:~n peopl e f&lt;.~o,.o1 the butlding of more nuclear plant s m the

Urul ed States

Js the maJol f10c1tng of tlus poll based on a eroS!l-:;ectwn of 1,537 households
ar oLmd the cou ntry SpeclfJc.tllr 63 per cent are smd to be m fm..or, 19 pe1 cent opposed ~::~nd 18
per l ent not sure
In add1t10n 1t \HlS detern un~ d th&lt;:~t the public endorses nuclear power plants more
strong!} than 1ts po htlcdl busmes~ ~::~nd env1ronmental leaders and the regulators of public

ulthlles beheve they do

There a re other exce phons

Some 201of these people were also polled

The Ha rns sun ey \\a s conumss1oned by Ebasco lndustnes, Inc

a maJor engmeermg

ccnstructwn and consultmg ftrm mvolved m the bulidmg of power plants of all types
11le news merna that roulmely report the fmdmgs of the constant stream of pubhc opmwn
polls and particula rly ed!toraal wnters Y.ho may base t hetr comments on them bea r a
rel:iponslbih ty f01 ascer tam mg the acc ura cy of the ir so urces of mformatton - though how they
~a n a1ways do this without conductmg su rvl'Y l:i of their own 1s not clear
But Y.htle mdn y people are suspiCIOlL':i of swecpmg generali ties ex tra polated from tht!
responses or a few thousand people out of 210 milhon, the sc lentlfJ c vahdit y of modern poll

i&lt;oking methods has been po etty &gt;~ell uphe ld O\er the )ears • Even the fa mous Dewe) fumble
was not so much the consequence ot fau lty pollmg as of the fact that the pollsters stopped m
terv1ewmg voters too earl} m the electwn campatgn )
What 1t seems to boll down to 1s the crediblht) of the pollsters Credib1hty JS thetr most
valuable asset, theJr stock tn trade They would be treadin g m dangerous•waters were they to
begm eomprom1smg theJr unpartJaht) m order to tell the sponsor of a partJeular ooll what he
wants to hedr - or e\ en be susp ected of dmng so

Yet JUSt as there Js an unresolved questw n as to whether teleVlslOn reportage of early
electwn results m the East tnfluenees votmg m the West, there 1s the very real poss1b1hty !hal
pubhc opmJon polls may go beyond their legtttmate mformatwnal functw n by 10lluenemg or
preJudiemg the optmons of people &gt;~ho read about them - a kmd of self-f ulfJJ hng, snowba ll
effect
Certa10 l) 1! would be fool hardy to let the adoptwn or nonadoptwn of natwnal pohe1es and
leglslallon m matters crueoal to the publ1c mterest be governed solely by the results of th1s one
survey or that

TOM TIEDE

A small incident
in Lafayette Park
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON
The
gentleman had a nuhtary
step, toes mward, knees st1ff,
30 mehes to the pace He

blle
A neighbor on the bench

strutted thus across Penn

crane ' He pla ced

sylvan1a Avenue and mlo
Lafayette Park where he
engaged m a ntual of sJttmg
down off w1lh the coal up
w1th the sleeves unhe the
shoelaces 'Gr and ' he sa1d,
\\ hlCh 1s a word almost no one

WICh on Jls paper I am an
Hutltonty on 1! He hcked
Jelly from h1s thumb In turn
he used a handkerchief to w1p
the ilck He also ble\1 h1s

anymore

TOKYO t UP! ) - In Far
Eas!Aefense matters, Japa n
and the Umted Sl&lt;otes are like
a d1sor gamzed baseball
team
The r e

o ne

Perhaps what we need to help m e\aluatmg the pubhc opmwn poll1s the a pphcalJOn of a
golden rule, to the effect that one survey does not an Jssue settle nor a consensus establish As
useful as tts " mput '1s m tellmg us what Arneracans want or don t want are warned about or
are hopeful about 1! tells only part of the story

says

Far East defense
disorganized

and

he

repeated 1! ' Grand '
It was m1dday Sunny and
hot Just oppos1te the Wh1te
House Ch1ldren were soaking
man open foun tam, k1ds were
fro hekmg under the shade
trees, and the gentleman
unfolded a wrapped sandw1ch
to eat One b1te T\' o Peanut
butler and Jell y from the look
of tt 'Do you know ' the
ge ntleman sa1d stoppmg rrud
phrase to swallow and then
to reach for a 1 hermos do
you know about the whoop1 ng
crane ?" He sm1led Anoth er

ltu

ned
Yes

the gentleman satd

poll lei ),

nose

' the

whoopmg
h1 s

sand -

And then contmued

For one thmg 1t JS the
largest b1rd on the North
Amen can continent By far

really Fully gr own t! sl&lt;onds
as l&lt;oll as a boy - a btg boy 1
Oh yes, And " mgspan S1x to

a nd

no m a nager

Amen ca

became

m1htary alhes 24 years ago
Tokyo newspapers say that

short "

The "rapper stopped agam
at the base or""the foun tam
whereupon a eh1ld crumpled
1! for use as a ball and qmckly
threw 1t mto the wate r where
1l floated on the wa ves and m

the foam generated by the
bathers
TourJsts passed b), thetr
cam eras a imed at the Wh1te
House, a gr ass s lam souvemr

occupied the rear of one
woman 's stretch shor ts Yak,
ya k, they sa1d Chck, chek
The gentleman was not
dtstr acted 'The bird 1s
whtte,' he wen t on , "always

\\h Jte, w1th black hps on the
"mgs and a rouge head And
welcome, a nd caught the the} don't whoop' that Js what
gentleman s lunch wrapper people thm , but Jt s wrong
b) surpn se It tumbled from They trumpet, very loud, hke
h1s lap, to the walk , snaggmg this oooomp , ooooooompl '
momenlanl y on the bench leg The tounsts turned to stare at
before dn ftmg over the grass the gentleman He contmued
to the fountam The gen- to trumpet For effect, he put
tleman appear ed not to hts hands to hts mouth and
noltce ' Whooper s," he said, ooomph m the d1rechon of the
that s what we call them for Wh1te House gate

seven fee t or m ore "
A breeze began , ever so

•

DR. LAMB.

ts

Nobody knows the battmg
order m ease a ga me has to
be played The catcher can t
l&lt;olk to the p1tcber because
they don't speak the same
language The left f1elder
doesn't want to play at all
Defense Secretary James
Schlesmger comes to Tokyo
today (Aug 28 ) to look mto
th1s s1tuatwn It has persiSted
most of the tune smee Japan

foreign news
commentary

M1e h10 Saka ta, director gener a l of J apa n's Se lfDefense Agency, wtll propose
that the U S and Japanese
defense mm1sters hold yea rly
meet mgs to dec1de overall
strategy
Nobody actually expects
Japan to be attacked At the
bottom of the Schlesmge rSakata talks ts the st1cky
questwn of how much help
the Uruted States could get
from Japan should another
war break out m Korea

There ts nothll1J! like Europe 's NATO defen!ll! structure,
where the roles of Amen can
and European forces have
been mapped out m del&lt;o1l
The lan guage bam er 1s

show they are " he sa1d ,
The gen tleman hfted off the
soa
rm g, ~c a tchmg lhe air
bench w1th hJs calls Then sat
down qmetly 'I m sorry,' he You kno&gt;~ th ey m1grate each
satd, 'l've made a £ool of spn ng from Canada to Texas
myse lf " He !Jmshed hts and go back aga m m the fall
sa nd\\ 1ch, except for the It Js a wonderful thmg to see
crusts, wh1ch he broke mto them m f11ght " The genpieces and tossed on th e grass tleman put on h1s coat a
for the sqmrrels He touched hght\\ eJght smt Jaekel, and
touched h1s fmgers to an oldthe ne1ghbor on the arm
fashioned
he Of course," he
The whooper ts a buzzard
they kn ow, by relatwn at saJd laughmg a httle, " I've
least
And
most never seen them m fh ght "
The gentleman searched
un gregarwus, too He w1ll
the
bench, !hen hls pockets
nest only 1f another whooper
1s not nestmg nearby They " l've lost my wrapper ," he
mate , but they do not flock saJd He felt under the bench
No body kn ows wh y My ' It must have blown awa y "
opmwn Js they don't hke each He rubbed hts face w1th h1s
other than well " The gen- hand and brushed the crumbs
tleman screwed the cap on fr om h1s trousers Then he
saw the wrapper m the
h1s Thermos
The noon hour was endmg foun !&lt;om "Mustn 't htter ," he
Brown bags were closmg all sa1d, dehghtedly, as he went
over the capli&lt;ol The gen- to the water 's edge, shd over
tleman stood to he h1s shoes the concre te hp, and waded m
and button h1s sleeves "What to retn eve the trash
Whe n he came out he shook
hunself, turned, and pausmg
only to ask a eh1ld 1f she knew
of the whoopmg crane, the
gentleman left the park and
walked back across Pennsylva nia Avenue w1th a now

How doctors check blood sugar
By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - W1ll
you please tell me how the
blood sugar Js cheeked ' I
thought 1t was m the blood
but a nurse told me that the
mam test was of the urme
She sa1d the amoun t of sugar
we have m the un ne

IS

what ts

1mportant
How h1gh does your blood
sugar have to be before ) ou
have to take shots'
DEAR READER - The
most rehable test 1s of the
blood When yo ur blood sugar
1s too h1gh sugar w1 ll sp1ll mto
the ur me For th1s reason
d1a beh es oft en test the 1r
W'tne as a da1ly gmde to how
well the1r d1abetes 1s eon
trolled
Many normal persons may
have a temporary peak of
blood sugar after eatmg a lot
of ~weets, and th1s may cause
a spill of sugarmto the ur me
But the bloodilevells only for
a short dural ton, and these

I

I. -

'I

people do not have d1abetes
A unne test showmg sugar
must always be followed up
w1lh careful blood tests to see
tf the perso11 ts really a
d1abet1c or not
Opmwns d1ffer on how h1gh
the blood sugar has to be
before yo u have to take msulm I usually prefer to see a
pallent who ts overwe1ght
lose wetght before dec1dmg
on msuhn t£ the elev.,atwn Is

not too much After we1ght
loss, tf the person still has
htgh blood sugar levels, then
msulm may be mdteated
Some doctors !Jke to control
the level of blood sugar to
near normal levels, others
settle fo r keepmg the level
low enough that no maJor
amoUllts of sugar are lost m
the urme
For m ore mformatwn on
testmg for d1abetes wnte to
me m care of th1s newspaper,

P 0 Box 1551 , Radw C1ty
Statwn , New York, NY

10019, send a long, stamped, be pleased
self addressed envelope and
A do ctor examines the
50 cents and ask for The abdomen to feel for any
Health Letter number 3-11 , ma sses or twnors and 1f
Dta betes
D1ag n os 1s, possible to feel the large
Preventi on
an d
artery that runs along the
Management
backbone Th1s 1s sometunes
DEAR DR LAMB - When d1fftcult m obese mdiv1duals
my husband was exammed Sometimes the large artery 1s
recently the doctor had h1m enlarged or may be parllally
on the exammmg table and ruptured
wa s feeling h1s stomach
In checking the e1rculatwn
Wha t I wan t to know ts why 1t 1s 1mportant to try to feel
the doc tor then felt h1s left the abdommal artery and
and the lower part of the leg then to check the pulsa twn ~
close to the foot What con- lower m the th1gh and leg
nection 1s there between a Doctors often go from the
person's s toma ch and the abdomen to the leg because 1t
person's lower leg' Does the 1s eas1er to do a good place to
leg show somethmg 1f the feel the ar ten es
perso n's
sto m ach
has
Whe ther a person ga ms or
somethmg wrong w1th 1!'
loses we1ght w1th a tumor
Also, I'd ll!:e to know 1f a depends on what type 1! 1s A
person's wetght goes up or bemgn tumor 1s JUst more
down when they have a tumor gr owth and may add to
or grow th ?
we1ght A maltgnant tumor
DE AR READER - Sounds may effect norm al body
ltke your husband got a good fun elton and commonly leads
exammahon, and you should to loss of we1ght

soggy 1mhtary step

BENGALS ffiADE
DETROIT (UPI ) - The
Detrott Lions obtamed two
fouryear Natwnal Football
League veterans m a trade
Monday w1th the Cinctnnall
Bengals and gave up an
und1sclosed future draft
chmce
The
L10ns
acqUired
defens1ve back Bernar d
Jackson and linebacker Tun
Kearney from the Bengals
They also released two
players on wa1vers to get
the1r roster to 55 The Ltons
must cut sut players today to
get down to tbe NFL limit of
49
Kearney, 24, who played for
Northern M1ch1gari, was
drafted m 1972 by Dallas,
then JOmed Cincinnati as a
free agent m 1973 Jackson,
25, who lS also a kickoff
return man, was drafted by
the Beugals m 1972

,

forrrudable and Japanese and
Ame n can ground troo ps
don' t ma neuve r together
Most of the burden of
protectmg the sea aroUlld
Ja pan and Korea fa lls on the
U S Seventh Fleet, operating
from Japanese bases
The fa ll of Amen ea nbaeked governments m Jndochma has worned Prune
MmlSter Talc eo M1k1 's rulmg
Li hera l Democralle Party It
1s basteally antJ-Commun1st
and works closely w1th
Japanese busmess leaders
It has hegun to fear for the
safety of the anti-Commurust
government of South Korea,
only 80 mlles away across the
Japan Sea Smee 1965 Japan
has pumped b11lions of dollars
of econom1c a1d and mvestment money mto South
Korea 10 hope of msurmg 1ts
surv1val as a non-Commumst
state
ThlS pohey has been fought
by Japan's two largest oppos lllon
parhes,
the
Soc1ahsts and the Commumsts
Both
favor
Ulliflcahon of Korea as a
Soctahst country Ullder the
leadership of North Korean
Pres1dent Kim II Sung
Both oppose the Amenean
r ole m the Far East,
espec1ally the bases m Japan
The hub of the problem lS
that any defense of Korea
would depend m part on U S
Air Force planes and on
bombers operating from U S
Navy earners based m
Japan The Air Force has
South Kor ean bases, but if
these were lost the questiOn
would be whether 1! cculd
operate over Korea from 1ts
bases m Japan proper
Mild and his predecessors
have always hinted that the
answer rrught be yes But
they ha ve also carefully
reserved the right for Japan
to make her own dec1s1on m
any future CrtSlS
In the past, suggestiOns
from
form er
Defense
Secretary MeiVln Laird and
other Amenean leaders that
Japan should "do more"
about defense have had btUe
result

Now Jt w11l easily be seen that while most, perhaps all, rf
these exee pttons have great ment, they are so broad In scope
that virtually any congresswnal eomnuttee meeting or session
of any unporl&lt;o nce could be closed to the public under these
proV1s1ons - wtth little or no recourse
The savmgs grace m the ongmal bill lay In a series of
paragraphs proVldmg that a fourth of the comnuttee or subeommlttee memhers could, 10 most cases, ralSe a pomt of
order w1thm two days, for emg a vote by Congress on throwing
the transcnpt of the contested closed meeting open to !be
general public
ThlS, of course, provided a means by which a decision to
close a meetmg or portions of a meeting could be kept
somewhat honest These paragraphs, however, were
elumnated from the bill
The e!imina bon of the safeguard means, m fact, that lf the
bJll becomes law, what the public will have access to will, as
now, be at the whun of tbe majorlty of those present at each
eomnuttee meetmg Which lS essentially no different from this
year or last or the year before, for most conuruttees.
Matter of fact, the listmg of "legitimate" bases for closing
meetmgs to the publle, and listing the bases m such detail, will,
if hiStory lS a gwde, make 1! eas1er to close crucial discussions
to the pubh c
The only meetings we shall be prlvy to m detail will be
those calculated to drwn up support at tbe next election for the
members of the comnuttee mvolved, or meetings so innocuous
no one cares whether they're public or not We shall not learn
the eruelal potentially embarrassmg op101ons and deCISions of
senators and represenl&lt;otives For some way will be found to
class1fy these an uunucal to the national mterest or unfairly
embarrassmg to some person or group
Though m Washington 1t lS customary to dende state
governments, 1t 1s to be noted that even Common Cause finds
that m opemng eorrumttee meetings to the public, the states
are now well ahead of the U S. Congreas Says Common
Cause "Wlth the passage of open meetings laws m West
V1rgm1a and MlSSISSlppl m 197~, only New York and Rhode
Island cling to the old ways of domg most of the public's
busmess behind closed doors "

Japanese autos
having big year
By ROBERT CRABBE
TOKYO
(UPI )
Amenea's auto mdustry may
be m the doldrwns, but
Japan's 1s domg !me
The busy factones of

business today
Toyota, NLSSan (Datsun) and
rune other eomparues turned
out 617,402 cars, trucks and
buses m July for the1r best
perfonnance of the year
It was a return to the levels
of production reached durmg
1973 m Japan's last burst of
mflated prospenty JUSt
before the start of tbe 011
CrtSlS
If the pace holds, 1975 could
be the Japanese car 10dustry 's
second
best
production year m history
The all-tune record was set m
1973
when
Japanese
manufacturers bUll! 7,082, 757
vehicles Last year the output
dropped to 6,551,840, but 1974
st1ll was Japan's second best
year ever

Although exports account
for about one third of Japan's
sales, most of tbe Industry's
prospenty thlS year comes
from a boom m passenger ear
The Daiij ser.tinal
sales m the Japanese market
DEVOTED TO THE
The pnee of gasoline m
INTEREST OF
Japan has mcreased from
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
about
62 cents a gallon before
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
the ml crlS1S, to about $1 42
C1ty Ed1tor
per gallon today Pleasure
Pu bl ts h e d dall y exce pt
Sa turday by Th e Oht O V all e v.
dr1vmg has declined, but the
P u b i 1Stt 1ng co mpa ny
111
Japanese continue to buy
Court Sl
P ome roy O h1 0
45769 B us m ese. Oft1ce Ph on
cars,
partly on the baslS of
99 '2 2156 Ed ttor1a l P h on e 992
2157
rumors that pnces will rlSe
Secon d cla ss postage pa td
rap1dly after the present
a t P am eroy Oh tO
Nal to n a l
a dve r lts tn g
recessiOn lS over
r e p ~ese n ta t tve
wa rd
In July, new veh1cle
Grifft l h Com pany
In c ,
Botttn ellt &amp; Ga ll.e9her Dtv
reg1strat1ons
of all types
757 Th trd Ave N ew York
N Y 10 017
reached 393,632, g1vmg tbe
S ubscr tp tt o n ra tes
mdustry
one of 1ts best
Deli ve r ed by ca r r ie r wher e
a va tlabl e 75 ce nts per w eek
domeslle sales months In
By .Ytotor Roule where
h1story A b1g spurt m
c arrier
s er v ~e: e
not
a v a tlabl e, On e month , Sl 2'5
passenger car sales account·
B y mallm Oh to and W Va
On e Ye ar
S22 oo
Snc
ed for the boost, Truck
mo n th s
Sl t 50
Th ree
m o n 1h s S7 00 E l se wh ere ) registrations were down.
26 00 year
Stx m on t h s
So far thiS year, exports to
13 50 thre e mont hs S7 50 I
u bsc npl 10n pr1ce fnc lud es
the Uruted States are off Tbe
unday T 11J1es Sent1ne l
Ja pan
Automobile

Manufacturers Association
says 1ts members shipped
374,000 vehicles to the United
States m the ftrst six month of
the year Shtpments to
Amer&gt;ea m the January-June
pertod of 1974 eame lo 548,000
un1ts
However, because of tbe
slwnp m American car sales, ,
the Japanese actually are
mcreasmg their market
share In J1me, both Toyota
and
N1ssan
outsold
Volkswagen to take over the
f1rst two places among
foretgn car exporters to tbe
Umted States
Japan and some European
eountnes now are under
mvesllgation on charges of
"dumpmg," or selling cars in
the Amencan market at
pnces below those charged In
Japan The accusation has
been demed by the Japanese
M1mstry of International •
Trade and Industry,
Both MITI and iiJdustry
leaders Insist the succeas of
Japanese cars m the United
states lS based on their low
gasoline consumption ~
Makers claim better than 30
miles per gallon f&lt;r most •
models
•
Although Detroit bas '
started to shift its attention to
economy cars, the Japanese :
hope to escape severe •
competition at least until the •
1977 model year.
'•
Up to now, the American
mdustry's attitude toward
small cars has been summed
up by the remark attributed
to Henry Ford n that ''mlni
cars mean mini profits,"
The hope m Tolr,yo Is tbat It
will take the Amerlca118 a
while longer to get started.

20 area games on tap this weekend
as '75 grid campaign gets underway
Twenty area h1gh school
football games are on l&lt;o p as
the 197~ gr~d eampa1gn gets
Wlderway thlS weekend
All Southeastern Oh10
League and Southe m Valley
Athlet1c Conference teams
will see acllon Ne1ghbormg
West Vlrgl!Ua and Kentucky
tea1ns opened their cam
pa1gns last week
Sev e nt ee n

gam es

are

scheduled Fr~day mgh t while
three area games are on tap
Saturday
The e1ght non..SEOAL
games are Pt Pleasant at
Me1gs, Mar~etta at Athens,
Rock Hill at GalhpollS, South
Pomt at Ironton, J ackson at
Portsmouth, Logan at New
Lexmgton, Waverly at
Wheelersburg and Wellston
at Federal-Hocking
One SV AC ga me ftn ds
Eastern at Hannan Trace
Other non-league games
mvolvmg SVAC teams are
Chesapeake at Sy mmes
Valley, Soutbem at Farrland,
GAHS reserves at Kyge r
Cr eek (Saturday mght ),
North Gallia at Waterford
(Saturday ) and
RossSoutheastern a t Southwestern
Four new foes or old opponents renewtng nva lr~e s

Double Team won
the featured $11,200 Greenville
Treaty Handicap Mooday at
Thistledawn raceway, going
the mile In 1:31 2-S.
(UP!) -

after lapses of several years
are on the gndiron schedules
of the eight Southeastern
Oh10 At hletic League teams
durmg the 1975 season, the
s tart or the co nfe r ence s
second hall century
In the full sebedule of 24
non conf er ence

con t ests

dun ng the three wee ks
leading up to the seven
stra1gh t weeks of "rollildrobm 'Iplay Portsmouth w11I
entertrun Jackson, NelsonVllle-York will be on the
Wells ton
and
Loga n
sched ules for the f1rst time
smce leav10g the conference ,
and Belpre w11l be new on the
Waverly eard
When Jackson goes to
Portsmouth m one of the
season openers Jt will be !herr
f1rst meet10g on the gr1diron
m nearly 50 yea r s Th e
TroJa ns ar e repl ac mg
Chilhcothe on the Jackson
schedule
Nelsonvtlle-York replaces
Wheelersburg on the Wellston
schedule and Bexley on
Loga n's and Belpre 1s a new
opponent for Wave rly's
Tigers m the place of Huntmgton Ross
. Two new head football
coaches wlll be on the sldelmes for the start of the ~lst

conference season, wtth J ohn

R Burchmal as the flfth
gndrron mentor at Waverly
m seven years and Willard
(Buddy) Moore m charge
after h ve yea rs as an
assistant at Gallipolis
Bur c htn a l , f orm e r
ass1stant va rsity football
coach and head tri)Ck and
wrestling coach at Portsmouth , replaces Bill Morgan ,
who res1gned after one year
at Waverly and returned to
Coal Grove
Moore, who was an allSoutheastern basketball and
football player at Middleport,
succeeds Johnny Ecker, who
res1gned after SlX years w1th
a 3().J8-2record and "coach of
the year' recogmtion wtth hlS
1970 ehamp1ons
Charles Chancey as tbe
dean of the Southeastern
coaches 1s startmg his mn th
year w1th Me1gs
Bob Lutz of Ironto n and Ron
Fenik of J ackson are on tberr
fourth seasons, Les Walker
and Jody Mlchael of Wellston
on the1r thrrd seasons and Bill
B1ggers 1s startmg his second
year at Logan
Ironton 1s the defending
ehamp10n and was followed
m the 1974 !mal standings by
GalhpollS, Athens, Jackson,

Wellston, Logan, Me1gs and
Waverly
!91 5 SOUTHEASTERN
SCHEDULE
11914 Scores in Parentheses )
Sep~ 5 - Man etta 114 1 at
Athens (0), Rock Hill (6) at
Galhpolis ( 14 ), Ironton ( 26 )
at South Pomt 10) , Jackson at
Portsmouth, Logan (0) at
New Lexmgton ( 34 ), Po10t
Pleasant (14 ) at Meigs (7),
Waverly (0) at WheelersburR
44 ) and Wellston (1 8 ) at
Federal Hocking
Sept 12 - La ncaster ( 21)
at Athens (0), Coal Grove (6)
at Galhpohs t 36 ), Portsmouth 113) at Ironton ( 13),
Oak Hill (6) at Jackson ( 38 ),
Logan (7) at HUilard I 17),
Me~gs 16) at Belpre I 15),
Waverly (0) at Portsmouth
West ( 13), and NelsonvilleYork at Wellston
Sept, 19 - Athens (7) at
Circleville (21 ), South Pomt
(8) at GallipollS (20), Ironton
113) at Ashland, Ky (14 ),
Jackson ( 42) at M1arru Trace
161, Logan at NelsonvilleYork, R1pley, W Va (0) at
Me1gs (31 ), Waverl y at
Belpre and Vmton County ( 8)
at Wellston ( 39 )
Sept , 26- Gallipolis ( 28 ) at
Athens ( 22 ) , Ironton ( 33 ) at
Wellslon (7), Jackson (42) at

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Wrller
The New York Mets popped
bottles of champagne early
Monday night - perhaps a
forecast of the future
There were many reasons

for them to celebrate Tom
Seaver had won h1s 20th game
and estabhshed a maJor
league record of e1ght eons e eutlve 200-s tnk eo ut
seasons And the team had
moved to wtthm four games
of the fli"Sii&gt;lace Pittsburgh
Pirates
Nobody sa1d so, outr1ght,
but the feelm g m th e
clubhouse was that the Mets
were balding a "practiCe
party" for an anllcpated
celebratwn for Wllllllllg the
Nallonal League's Eastern
Dmswn title
The odds still favor tbe
Pirates, of course, but odds
don 'I mean anythmg to Mets
They are thmking of !he
"rruracle fl!Ushes " of 1969
and 1973 - and they believe

Rook1e Mike Vail sent the
Mets off to a 1-0 lead when he
homered off John Candelana
m the f~rst mnmg The Mets
scored the1r other rllilS m the
s1xth on a smgle by FellX
M11lan , a forceout, Rusty
Staub' s double and Joe
Torre's smgle
st Loms defeated Clneago
&amp;-3, San D1ego shaded Cincmnatl 2-1, Montreal topped
Plnladelph1a 6-5, Los Angeles
downed San Frane1sco 3-1
and Houston beat Atlanta 5-3
m other Nallonal League
'games
In the Amencan League 1t
was Oakland 6 Califorma 3,
New York 4 Boston 2, Kansas
City over Ch1eago 3-1 after a
!0-8loss, Detroit 5 Milwaukee
4 and Mmnesota 5 Texas 4
Cleveland at Baltunore was
rruned out
Cardinals 6, Cubs 3
Lou Brock had three
smgles, stole three bases and
scored two runs m leading st
LoUls past Ch1eago Bob

.., thetr rtvals are , too

Seaver, who had an 11-11
record last season, ra1sed h1s
197~ mark to 20..7, ach~eved
his fourth 20-vlCtory season
and mcreased h1s strikeout
total to 204 when he beat the
Ptttsburgh Pirate s 3-0
Seaver prevwusly shared the
ma Jor league record of
strikmg out 200 batters m
seven

Allison
almost
lost race

consecutive seasons

DARLINGTON , S C (UP! )
w1th Hall of Famers Rube
Waddell and Walter Johnson - Bobby Allison came w1thm
"It's a long season and an eyelash of losmg the rameach VIctory 1S part of the delayed Southern 500 stock
season,'' satd Seaver m at· ear race Monday
" I came w1thin sut mehes of
temptmg to explam h1s
) Parsons when he
(Benny
feelmgs for both himself and
the team after the unportant wrecked on the second turn,"
v1etory " I don't try to Allison smd after the gruelmg
evaluate what I've done so 367-lap event It was hlS th1rd
far I will when the whole Southern 500 VIctory
"It's a ternble place to ~ et
season lS over It was a very
boned
I saw a lot of guys
emotional game for me
because of the 20th wm, the d01ng a tremendous JOb of
stnkeout record and the fact gomg by him "
Parsons had the lead m the
we were playmg the Pirates
'It was demanded of me 288th lap when his Chevrolet
that we wm th1s game It was hit a slick spot and spun out of
control Allison m hlS AMC
a fantasllc day "
Matador took advantage of
the rrushap and surged mto
first place w1th Rlehard Petty
hot on his tall He held on to
l&lt;oke a 25-second VIctory over
Petty
"It looks like we got beat
agam, or rather beat ourselves," sa1d Petty , who told
fnends before the nahan's
me now fora
oldest major stock car race
good car Insurance that a flu bug had him feeling
value
the worst he's ever felt before
a race
STEVE
" I think I had the best car
on the track today and he
SNOWDEN
,Aihson) had tbe best dr1ver
Bobby
drove hard and con1258 Powell 51
Middleport, 0
Sistently all day He JUS! kept
PH 9'12 7155
hangmg m tbere and some of
the rest of us got tired "
UATI
The race, which had a
hl&lt; e a good
$162,200
purse, saw 211 lead
neighbor
srate Farm
changes among etght dr1vers
JS there
and a rain-delay of 80 mmutes
at the end of the 268th lap Of
the maJOr pre-race contenders, only AlliSOn and
P71104 1
Petty completed the race

Forsch went 6 2-3 mnmgs to
wm his 13th game although AI
Hrabosky reheved and
earned hlS 20th save Andy
Thornton hit two homers for
the Cubs, whose B11l Bonham
suffered h1s 13th loss
Padres 2, Reds 1
Randy Jones allowed
Cinc10natl rune hits but went
the dJstance to rruse hlS
reccrd to I~ for San Diego
and remam Seaver 's ch1ef
nval for NL Cy Young Award
honors The Padres scored
therr wmnmg run m the SlXth
when Dave Wmf1eld doubled
and scored on John Grubb's
smgle
Expos 6, Phlllles 5
Tim Fob doubled home
Pete Maekanm wtth two out
10 the nmth mmng and scored
on a smgle by rel1ever Dale
Murray as Montreal dumped
Phlladelphla The Ph1ls
rallied for a run m the bottom
of the mnmg before Murray
retrred M1ke Sclunidt on a fly
to end the game w1th the
tymg run m sc~g posthon
Dodgers 3, GIAts 1
Burt Hooton gamed h1S
e1ghth stra1ght victory and
14th of the yer when he pltehed a SlX·Iutter for Los

Angeles agamst San FranCISCO Lee Lacy drove m what
proved to he the winning run
w1th an inf~eld roller m the
stxth and doubled home
another run In the e~ghth
Charlie W11liams dropped h1S
thlrd game agalllSt f1Ve wins
for the G1ants
Astros 5, Braves 3
Cesar Cedeno knocked m
three runs w1th a smgle and a
double as Doug Komeczny
went 7 1-3 mnmgs for his sixth
wm for Houston Atlanta's
Ralph Garr had a smgle and a
tr1ple to run h1s maJor league
career h1t total to an even
1,000 Jrume Easterly suffer ed h1s etghth Joss agamst
one VICtory

Linescores
Maaor League Results
Bv Un1ted Press International
National Leagu e
Ch cag o
000 011 10()-J B 0
Sl L OUIS
102 010 01x - 6 14 I
Bon ham
K nowle s (6)
P
Reusc hel
( 7)
and
SWISher
F o r sch Hra
M 1t1 erw ald ( 7)
bosk y (7 ) &amp;nd S1m mons W P
Forsc h ( 13 9) L P Bonham ( 11
lJ J
H Rs Th ornton
2 (11th
12th )
P 1ttsburg h
000 000 000- 0 4 0
N ew Y or k
100 002 OOx - 3 6 0
Can de lana T ek ulve ( 6) E lliS
{8) an d Sang ulll en Sea v er (20
7) and G r ot e L P Ca nd elana ( 7
5) HR Vall { 1St)
Sa n D1eg o
010 001 000- 2 ll 0
01 0 000 000- 1 9 0
Cm cmnar1
Jones ( 18 BJ and Kendal l
Dar c y Bor bo n (5) and P lu m
mer L P Borbon ( 8 51
LOS Ange les 000 011 Olo---3 13 0
San F r an cls c 000 01 0 ooo--- 1 6 2
H ooton (14 9 ) and Y ea g er
Barr W1l l1 am s (61 Lave lle (81
Hea verl o (9) an d Rad er L P
Will1 am s {53)
Atl anta
000 000 21o--3 8 3
Hous ton
102 200 OOx- 5 7 2
Easte rl y E Sosa (4) Od om
(5)
Dal
Can ton
( 7)
and
Pocoroba Ko n1eczn y Rober ts
(8 ) J N 1ek r o (9) a nd Joh nson
WP Kon ieczny ( 6 121 L P E ast
erl y (l 8)

( 1sl game)
Ka n sas C ty 3 11 020 1oo- 8 13 1
Ch1 cago
025 120 oo x- 10 12 3
Busby
Mc Dan 1e1
(Jl
McClure (5)
L 1t1 ell (6 ) and
M a rhnez Sim so n (71
Wood
Gossage
(5)
a nd
Down 1ng
V arn ey (41 W P Gossage (8 71
LP Bus b y { 15 11)
HR Me llon
( l l lh )
(2nd game)
Ka nsa s C1t y
000 100 020Ch1 cago
000 ooo 100Bnl es
B~rd (4) an d
t1 n ez. Osteen {7 131 an d
ney
W P Btrd
(9 5)
Killebrew ( 12th)

3 80
1 10 1
Mar
var
HR

-

Ma tor Leag ue Sta nd1ng s
By Unt ted Press lnt ernahonal
N at1 ona l L eague
East
w l pel
P 1flsb urgh
7 5 59 560
51 LOU IS
n 63 537 3
Ph il.&amp;delpti la
72 64 519
4
4
Ne-w York
72 64 529
Ch1 cago
61 75 45) 14 1 ~
Monlreal
SQ 75 44 0 16
Wesl

••

w

c

1

pet

EUGENE, Ore (UP!) Top offlclals of the Pacif1c
E1ght and B1g Ten athletic
confe r ences

anno u nce d

Sunday ccnference members
not gomg to the Rose Bowl
may compete 10 other post
season games

g b

nc nna1 1
90 46 662 Los An gel es
73 64 53 3 17 '
San F ranC ISCO 61 69 49 3 11
Sa n D1ego
67 75 153 28 1 ~
A tl anta
59 78 431 )JI
Houston
SJ 85 384 38
M ondays Res ult s
51 LOU IS 6 Chi Cago 3
New York 3 P liS burg h 0
San D •ego 2 C1 nc nnal1 1
Montreal 6 PnlladCiph a S
LOS An ge l es 3 San FranCISCO I
H ouston s Allan Ia 3
Tu esday s Gam es
(A ll Tt mcs EDT )
Los Ange les !Sullen 16 I ll at
San FranCISCO f Ha Ckl 8 11 )
4 05 p m
P1tt sbur gh (B r ett 7 51 at New
York ( Koosman II 11)
8 05

pm

Ch1cago (Burrs II 10 ) at Sl
LOU IS ( M eG olhen 14 9 ) 8 30

Vikes
tough
•

•

mwm

pm

Montreal ! Ca rrtt h e r~ 2 1J at
Ph il ade lph i a ((hr stenson 9 4)
7 35 p m
San D1ego t Spt lner S 11) at
C•ncmnat1 fGullell 11 3) 8 05

.,

.

Browns hold OJ, but
Bills win, 34--io 20
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - It
lS not true that to stop tbe
Buffalo Bills, all you have to
do lS stop 0 J Simpson
The Cleveland Browns held
the All-Pro runmng back to 22
yards total offense, but made
a couple rrustakes and got
blown out 34-20 Monday m a
preseason game before 31,155
fans
W1th the Browns trailing 2113 m the th1rd quarter, B11ly
Pr1tchett fumbled on the
Bills' one-yard line and Doug
Jones recovered for Buffalo
Four downs later tbe Browns
took a punt, marched right
back , and rook1e. Henry
Hynoskl fumbled on the Bills'
HARfMAN SECOND
ST PAUL, Mmn (UPI ) -

Butch Hartman , South
Zanesville, Ohio, was second,
just onehalf lap hehind Jeff
Bloom, Kalamazoo, Mieh , tn
the Mumesota Sl&lt;ote Fa1r's
Uruted State Auto Club 15().
lap late model stock car
feature race
Bloom passed !lie favored
Hartman on the 84th lap and
led the rest of the way
Hartman lS the current
leader m the pomt stanctlngs thls season

H eres an exc1 110 g 1n 1er v 1ew I
r ece n tly o ve rh eard at a space
r esc u e s1l e
Ca p la1n
how
does 11 feel to be the t ~rs l
a st r o n aut to go to Mars"'
Astro n a ut? 1 m no astronaut
l m rea l ly an 1ns u ra nc e man 1
iU SI d o t ht s as a hobby
When
y o u see me do n 1 lh mk o f
m su ran ce but when you th1nk
o f msv r ance see m e I m an
m sura n ce spec 1al1S I rea dy to
serve you

000 040 000- 4 11 2
100 000 AOx-5 11 0
Tr' &lt;.~v ers Aust 1n ( 7) M urph y
(7)
E
Rod n guez {7) anC:
P or te r R uhle Le mancy zk (51
a nd F r eehan W P A ust 1n (2 31
LP L emancyz k (2 4)
\4 0
92
and
and
15)

Mmn esota
00 1 01 3 0()()--5 14 4
Texas
010 ooo 201 - A 6 J
Bl yl ev en But le r (3) Camp
bell {7) John son (9 ) and Roof
Jenkms
Thom 3S
(6)
and
Sundber g
Fa hey
(8)
WP
El ut ler (3 4) L P Jen ki n s ( 16 141
HR Roof C61h l

arase "
" Both conferences are
ccmmitted to the principle of
creating no bowl game situatwns which ' would In the
slightest degree diminish the
prestige or stature of tbe
Rose Bowl as college football's prerruer attraction ,"
Hallock said
Th1s Week ' s Special

USED CARS

73 PLYMOUTH

AJRY Ill
4 dr sedan
power

v1 n y l

root

•2295

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You II L1ke Our Qual1 t y
Way o l Do1ng Bus 1ness

GMAC FINANCING
992 53 42
Pom e roy
Open Evenmgs 'ttl6 00
Toll p m Sat

WHEN YOU SEE ME
bON'T THINK OF
INSURANCE , . , BUT
WHEN YOU THINK OF
INSURANCE, SEE MEl

Milw aukee
D etro 11

N ew Yor k
021 001 Q00--4
Bos ton
000 000 2®-2
M ed1 ch
Mar t1n ez (81
D empse y More t P ol e {7)
Bl a ckwe ll WP Medtch (12
LP M or e l {113)

The Qnnouncement came
from
W1les
Hallock ,
executive director of the Pac8, and Wayne Duke, commlSSloner of the B1g Ten
Hallock was at the Unive rsity
of Oregon bere and Dulte at
Purdue UmverSlty at West
Lafaye tte, Ind
Hall oc k sa 1d fi na l a fflnnallon of the new policy
was una nimous by Pac..'l
member schools
Hallock sa1d the Pac..'l will
have no restr1cllons on bowl
partie1pation by 1ts members
except that the conference
w1nner wtll con tinue to play
m the Rose Bowl and no
memher may accept a bowl
b1d before the NCAA dedline
of 6 p m the th1rd Saturday In
November- Nov 15 th is
year
The B1g 10 w1U not permit
1ts members to accept bids
before Nov 26 and 1ts third
place school may not accept
or reJect a bid until the
second place school has acted
on any bowl b1ds 1! receives
The two conference offic ials sa1d talks aimed at
lift10g the conferences' ban
on other bowls for member
schools had been going on for
at least three years
Hallock said the "cooperallon , understandmg and
empathy of the Tournament
of Roses" had helped make
the change possible He said
NBCTV , wh1ch televises the
annual Jan I game, also was
' thor oughly r eceptive to
ccnd1tions" which Jed to the
change
He satd NBC's "Rose Bowl
teleVlBwn nghts and fees are
not affected by ltle new
policy "
He added, "Both the Pac..'l
and Btg Ten are pledged to be
respons1ve to concerns of tbe
Tournament of Roses wlltl
respect to specific bowl game
cond1t1ons which might

By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
A lot of people counted tbe
pm
Atlanta
(Sadeckl
2 3)
a! Mumesota V1kmgs out last
Houslon t York 2 2 ) 8 35 p m
January when they were
W edn es da y s Gam es
swamped by the Pittsburgh
P1t 1sburgh at New York n
Montreal at Ph 1l adelph 1a n
Steelers m the Super Bowl
Ch •cago at St Lou1s n
But Monda y mght the V1kings
Los Ange l es at C ncmnilltl n
San rranc1sco at Houston n
showed that tbey are far fr om
San D ego at At l anla n
out
A m enca n L eag ue
Looking hke the ram pagt ng
E ast
Purple
Gang of old, the
w l pel 9 b
Boston
79 55 590
Friday's games
V1klngs manhandled M1am1
Ba 111mor e
7) 60
5&lt;9
5' 1
New York
67 504 Jll ] quarterba ck Bob Gr~ese and
F t Gay a t Ha n nan
Cl eve l and
61
41J 1S 1 ~ completely throttl ed the
Pt P leasan t at M e1 g s
Milwaukee
59 77 434 1 I
W ayne a t W ahama
Dolphin offense on therr way
Detro t
53 8l 396 16
M a n e tt a at A the n s
W es t
to a 20-7 rout
Chesapeake
at
Symmes
wlpctgb
The fmal score nowhere
Oakl
and
82
54
603
Va ll ey
K ansas C1ly
73 6 1 545 8
Por t smouth Wes t at Coa l
tnd1cated
the one·&lt;ndedness of
Te)( as
67 70 489 15 1 J
Grove
the game M1am1 Coach Don
Chtcago
66 70 485 16
Sou the r n at Fa 1r land
M1nnesota
64 70 478 17
Slula
pulled many of his first
Rock Hill a t Gall1pol1s
Ca l 1t orn1a
62 74 456 ";10
strmg troops after Minnesota
East ern a t Hannan Trace
Monday 's Res ults
Xluth P o1n t a t Iron ton
Oakland 6 Call l or n 1a l
had surged to a 20-0 lead by
Ch tcago 10 Kansas C ly 8 l si
Iro nt on Sf
Jose at New
ccmpletely
dommatmg the
Kansas Ctly 3 Ch1cago 1 2nd
Boston t Silt J
'
New
Yor
k
4
Basion
2
game
Jackson at P o r tsmouth
Del ro t I 5 Milwaukee 4
GAHS
B a t Kyger Cr eek M1
Fran Tarkenton passed for
nneso1a 5 Texas 4
I Sa I I
Cleve a t Ba l t 2 ppd ra1 n
214 yards and two touchLogan at New Lex1ngton
Tue sday s Gam e s
downs
to spark the V1kings
N o rth Gall1a a t Wa terf ord
( All T1m es EDT)
Kansa s C1l y (F 112morr1s 13
ISa t I
over the preVIously Wlbeaten
101 at Ch•cago (Kaa l 19 101 9
Va ll ey a t Oak H ill
Dolphins He completed 15 of
pm
Ross S E a t Sout h wes t ern
Cl eve land ( E c kersley 10 5 and 21 passes and left In the th1rd
W aver l y at Wh eeler sbur g
B1b by
4 14)
al
Ba l ttmore
W ellston at F ed era l Hock1n g
quarter With the 20-0 lead
( Cuel lar 13 10 an d Alel'.ander 6
W 1n lie ld at Set h
7J2 530pm
Tarkenton threw four yards
Oa k land ( Holt zma n 15 11) at
Call f or n a (Tanana lJ 6 ) 10 30 to llght end Steve Crrug early
pm
m the game for a 6-0 lead and
Mm nesota ( Hug hes 12 12 1 a l
then hit Jun Lash on a 44Te)(as (Harg an B 8) 9 p m
OHIOAN ON LIS f
M il wa u kee { Col bo r n a 9 1 at yarder as the f1rst half ended
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Roger 0e1r01
1 (Co l eman 9 14) 8 p m
N ew Yor k ( Dobson 11 13) al It could have been worse but
Doane of Lorrun, Oh1o, was
( Cl eve land 9 9 1 7 30 Ed Marmara's fumble at the
20th among the pomt leaders pEloston
m
Mlanu three cost tbe Vtkings
m tbe World Champwnsh1p
W ednesd ay s Gam es
another scormg opportumty
Texas 81 Ca l 1for n•a n
Star Class yacht races sailed Kansas
C1t y a l Ch1 ca go n
m the second quarter
on Lake M1ch1gan this past C leve land at M tlwa ukee n
M1arru d1dn't score Ulltil
New York al De lro 11 n
week He had 250 points
Boston at Ba l li mor e n
early m the flnal perlod when
Norm Bulaich ran 53 yards
for a TD agrunst a makeshift
defenese
Gr1ese, meanwh1le, had hlS
problems, completmg only 1
of 8 passes for f1ve yards
before g~vmg way to Don
stroek
V1kmg Coach Bud Grant
3 Walt Patulsk1 recovered passmg game," Gregg sa1d
Ph1pps
was smd he would let h1s starters
and that led to a 31-yard Bills' Although
held goal by John Leypoldt, disappomted because Jt was go agamst M1am1 as long as
11
3 lost effort "
the Dolphins kept m therr
who then dr1lled a k1ckoff
Cleveland
took
a
7-0
lead
on
f1rst strmgers It d1dn 't last
between Greg Pruitt and
their first possesSion on much past the third perlod
Larry Poole
" It was 20-0 and they had
The ball d1ed 10 tbe end Pruitt 's seven-yard run , but
Buffalo's
Joe
Ferguson
threw
some substitutes 10 the game
zon e and they fmally
touchdown
passes
to
Paul
so we Jet some of ours get
remembered it had to be
Seymour
and
Ahmad
Rashad
some tune m, Grant satd
touched down and ran for 11,
We'll match them m
but the Bills' Tom Doncbez for a 14-7 lead after the ftrst
quarter
reserves
but we won 1t st art 1t
got there f1rst and recovered
Steve Holden pulled m a We would ha ve kept the
for a touchdown
t1pped
ball for a 13-yard regulars m longer 1f they (the
" I !bought the ball was
touchdown
completion, but Dolphins ) hadn't gone to the
going to bounce out of the end
wne ," Pruitt sa1d "Its speed Cleveland' s Don Cockroft bench "
and depth of angle made 1t m1ssed the eonvers10n
look like 1t had to go out, but 11 Donehez scored his first
touchdown on a one-yard run
stuck 10 the mud "
and
Buffalo led 21-13 at the
Browns ' coa ch Forrest
Gregg ealled 1! ' a mental half
Leypoldt's fleld goal and
lapse" and added, " that's an
error that never should be Donchez' k1ekoff recovery m
made by any footbaU team " the first mmute of the fourth
The outccme left tbe Bills 2- perlod made tt 31-13 before
2 m pre..se•son play and the Browns rall1ed for Hugh
Cl~=~v~=~laM ~~ !bnmmg a 20- McKinrus' one-yard touchfflf-Jl passmg performance down run, but the Btlls kept
by the Browns' Mike Phipps the ball away from them until
for 315 yards and one touch- the final mmute when
down, hts best day as a pro Leypoldt added another field
"We d1d have a good goal

Montrea l
100 102 002- 6 8 0
Ph 1lad el ph1a 000 ooo 3 11 - 5 12 2
Roger s
Murray
(13 J
and
101 002 02D--6 10 0
Car le r
S1mpson
H il gend orf O at~. 1cmd
300 000 OD0--3 4 1
(6) Mc Graw 18J Garber (9) Cal1forn1 a
Bl ue ( 18 10 1 and T enac e
and Ca l es WP M urra y ( 10 7)
F 1g uer oa ( 12 11 ) and E tchebar
LP Ga r ber (9 91
r en HR s St anl on ( 13t h) W ll
hams {20th ) Ja ckson I 30th)
Amer.can League
Cl evel an d
at
Ball 1m or e
2
ga m es
pp d
ra m and wet
grounJs

Pac-8, Big 10 agree
on other bowl tilts

BASEBALL

Logan 101, and Waverly (12)
at Me1gs 127)
Oct 3 - Me~gs 17) a1
Atbens ( 8 ), GaU1poi1S 114) at
Ironton (15), Logan 149) at
Waverly 16) and Wellston (8)
a! Jackson ( 12)
Oct 10 - Athens 17) at
Logan ( 7), Jackson (6) at
Ironton 112), Me1gs ( 8) at
Gallipohs ( 44 ) and Wa verly
I 20) at Wellston 140 )
Oct 17 - Ironton 143) at
Waverly (201, Jackson 17) at
Gallipohs t 16), Logan (7) at
Me1gs 101 and Wellston t 0) at
Athens !16)
Oct 24 - Athens (0) at
Ironton (20 ), Gall1poi1S (44 )
at Loga n (20) , M e~gs (7) at
Wellston 136) and Waverly
(6) at Jackson (51)
Oct. 31 - Galhpohs 146) at
Wa verly ' 121, Ironton !44 ) at
Me1gs 17), Jac kson ( 8 ) at
Athens 1191 and Wellston 114 I
at Logan I 8)
Nov 7 - At hens ( 27 ) at
Waverly (0), Logan (01 at
Ironton ( 35 ) , Me1gs ( 8) at
Jackson ( 22) and Wellston (6)
at Gallipohs (32)

Mets celebrate (early?)

fA~M

DOUBLE TEAM WINS
NORTH RANDAlL, Ohlo

•

~

Wolllam D

8 q She f
Reg Fre llcl Fnes
Tu rnover &amp;

La qP Sn tl Dr nk

C~olds

OOWrtlNG-QULDS
Mick Childs

AOUL T MEAl

'"AGENCY, INC.

MIDDL E PORT OHIO

PT PLEASANT
2325 J a ck ...,on Av e

FOR KIDS -

FUNMEAL1•

Fun Tray
Funburgo&gt; r
~ e ~ Fre1.1c h Fr1es
Surp(ise Pr ze
Reg Soft Or1nk &amp;
.a Sweel Tre at

�'·

.

I

I.

· I

I~.

(

'

I
I

•

.

..

..

I

.

'
5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., '1Ue8Wiy, .sept. 2, 1975 ·-

'

· QUANTITIES

'

'

RIGHTS RESERVED ·

. '

· ·400 BAGS OF GROCERIES TO BE
GIVEN .AWAY 100 A WEEK ~OR 4 WEEKS.

'

BROUGHTON'S

COTTAGE
CHEESE ~i
BROUGHTON'S
2% FORTIFIED

NOTHING TO BUY. JUST PICK UP YOUR FREE TICKET. WINN.I NG
'
NUMBERS WILL BE POSTED IN THE STORE EACH MONDAY.

**

.,KING OF STEAKS

PRIDE
SALTINE
CRACKERS

COUPON

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE
$ 189

PORTER HOUSE

2-LB. CAN
WITH COUPON

1

MILK $

GATe ...M'I'ItiWRQflf'f:i,&amp;+ 75

GA(

"""'v·f!i ~ ·~· ~·
iilll' ill' - ·~ ·- ·-·ill'~·~·-· n·.ill·I
.:.z::tt::ztiitif:±'?:!±&amp;:v.v.'·=
fl4·,.; •

LB.
786 NORTH 2ND AVE., MIDDLEPORT,O.
OPEN MON. -SAT. 9 A.M. T09 P. M.

T-BONE STEAK

PILLSBURY
CAKE MIX

s

SUPERMARKET

•

.

.,
LB .:~

•
______.........,

ROLLED
RUMP

~1

;.
· ·~

PRODUCE .S
LE
.
;· HEAD
LETTUCE
20 lb.
.

'

.

.P&amp;R THI.N SPAGHETTI, or

~

P&amp;R NOODLES, WIDE,
ffiRA WIDE AND MED.

___.49C
........._LB...... .~..
s
:

8 oz.

PACKAGE

SANDWICH
BAGS BONUS PAK

29(
.

TEEN QUEEN
SHORTENING$ 39

'

I

I

GOLDEN ISLE

PEPSI

·-

YELLOW
ONION··S

GOLDEN ISLE

3

OOUNI

WHOLE KERNEL CORN
17

CUT GREEN BEANS
PEAS 17 oz.
MUSHROOMS

FROZEN

COLA

'1

BAG

GLAD
FOOD STORAGE BAGS

N0.155

$

LIMIT ONE

75 COUNT

-68

~

WITH
OOUPON

TWIN£Bi\'~~lftly\y

2LB.

58~ .

PKG

·

LIMIT ONE

I J I, (J [ !t J

TWIN CITIES

JUMBO

SUPERMARKO

LIMIT ONE
68~ With
221f2 OZ.
· Coupon
BOX
·
.wJI 1 ~ME~~EWAY

•llfmrtlr\w~v

oz.

BRING THE FAMILY TO SEE "SMILEY"
THE CLOWN HERE THURSDAY AND
FRIDAY SEPT. 4TH AND 5TH

PILLSBURY BROWNIE MIX

PILLSBURY PANCAKE

oz.

,,

BRAWNY
ASSORTED TOWELS

AND
DEPOSIT
NO. 105

NO. 85

$139

oz.

1 GAL

·;ws TAX
'

15

BLEACH

. BOnLEs

BAG

21f2
POUND

1

GOLDEN ISLE

8- 16 OL

·

PEANUT
"'""''"R

CHOICE

7-UP
•

•.
. ..-

.

YOUR

OR

3-LB.

5 oz.

CREAM STYLE CORN
17

j

--

GOLDEN ISLE

'

3-LB. CAN

uhu

ROSE

GLAD

aiOICE

,.•~--

.

OR

24 SIZE

00

SOLID
LEMON

YOUR

~~-- .... -~~ ELBOW. MACARO_
N
I
.·
1-LB. SIZE

,.••

'

ARWICK

:i

,r

•

DOZ.
PKG.

LAZED DONUTS

~ :i

OLD FASHION

SIRLOIN
TIP· STEAK

FRESH
GATEWAY

••

~

%GAL.

5 1-LB. LOAVES

!i

c
9
CH U K
OLOG. ;N.

ASSORTED
FLAVORS

BREAD

/

.•

PKG.

STEA
49
'1 LB.

{(

MIX
OR
MATCH

WHITE AND YEU.OW

DAIRY LANE
ICE CREAM

GATEWAY
BRAND

•'·

FRAN·KIE
WI'ENERS

12 oz.

LB.

aiOCOI.ATE FUDGE,
GERMAN CHOCOlATE, .

•

--:::::

786 NORTH 2ND AVE., MIDDLEPORT,O.
OPEN MON. -SAT. 9 A. M. T09 P.M.

·''!

-- COUPON
-- _.

COUPON

.

PILLSBURY
PIE 'CRUST MIX
LIMIT 2
9lfz OZ.

2/78~
.

PACKA~~~~ BAY '

HUNGRY JACk
MASHED ·POTATOES

NO. 305 .

With

Coupon

LIMIT ONE 98~
With
32 OZ.
.
Coupon
BOX
.
.
. TWI~~IPM tti~AY

.

I •

..

..!.

~

PIN SOL
BATHROOM CLEANER
'

LIMIT ONE
17 oz.
.· BOlin.

6
.
.

g·

~

Efr!W!Mfin·

With

Coupon

-

PILLSBURY
.LIMIT ONE_
5LB. BAG

68~
.

·

. PillSBURY RIOt &amp;_IASY

,

. ·,

FROSTING

. ASSORTED FLAVORS
LIMIT ONE

1WIN~~$G~AY

l3 OZ.

58.

~

twtfEif\a ~AY

WITH ..
COUPON

NO. 305

NO. 155

FORMULA 409 CLEANER
-

LIMIT ONE
22 OZ.
BOTTLE

- 9~

5

EXPIRES ~-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

•

-

'

I

,,

•
\

.

•'

I

· HEINZ BABY FOOD
~

With

Coupon

NO. 75

JUNIOR

LIMIT 6

6/79
. .

With
I

TW1V~1,fis ~?~wAY

Coupon

KEEBLER CLUB
LIMIT ONE 59~
16 oz.
BOX

.
.

TWIN~~I&amp;SG~AY

With

Coupon

,..,

�'·

.

I

I.

· I

I~.

(

'

I
I

•

.

..

..

I

.

'
5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., '1Ue8Wiy, .sept. 2, 1975 ·-

'

· QUANTITIES

'

'

RIGHTS RESERVED ·

. '

· ·400 BAGS OF GROCERIES TO BE
GIVEN .AWAY 100 A WEEK ~OR 4 WEEKS.

'

BROUGHTON'S

COTTAGE
CHEESE ~i
BROUGHTON'S
2% FORTIFIED

NOTHING TO BUY. JUST PICK UP YOUR FREE TICKET. WINN.I NG
'
NUMBERS WILL BE POSTED IN THE STORE EACH MONDAY.

**

.,KING OF STEAKS

PRIDE
SALTINE
CRACKERS

COUPON

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE
$ 189

PORTER HOUSE

2-LB. CAN
WITH COUPON

1

MILK $

GATe ...M'I'ItiWRQflf'f:i,&amp;+ 75

GA(

"""'v·f!i ~ ·~· ~·
iilll' ill' - ·~ ·- ·-·ill'~·~·-· n·.ill·I
.:.z::tt::ztiitif:±'?:!±&amp;:v.v.'·=
fl4·,.; •

LB.
786 NORTH 2ND AVE., MIDDLEPORT,O.
OPEN MON. -SAT. 9 A.M. T09 P. M.

T-BONE STEAK

PILLSBURY
CAKE MIX

s

SUPERMARKET

•

.

.,
LB .:~

•
______.........,

ROLLED
RUMP

~1

;.
· ·~

PRODUCE .S
LE
.
;· HEAD
LETTUCE
20 lb.
.

'

.

.P&amp;R THI.N SPAGHETTI, or

~

P&amp;R NOODLES, WIDE,
ffiRA WIDE AND MED.

___.49C
........._LB...... .~..
s
:

8 oz.

PACKAGE

SANDWICH
BAGS BONUS PAK

29(
.

TEEN QUEEN
SHORTENING$ 39

'

I

I

GOLDEN ISLE

PEPSI

·-

YELLOW
ONION··S

GOLDEN ISLE

3

OOUNI

WHOLE KERNEL CORN
17

CUT GREEN BEANS
PEAS 17 oz.
MUSHROOMS

FROZEN

COLA

'1

BAG

GLAD
FOOD STORAGE BAGS

N0.155

$

LIMIT ONE

75 COUNT

-68

~

WITH
OOUPON

TWIN£Bi\'~~lftly\y

2LB.

58~ .

PKG

·

LIMIT ONE

I J I, (J [ !t J

TWIN CITIES

JUMBO

SUPERMARKO

LIMIT ONE
68~ With
221f2 OZ.
· Coupon
BOX
·
.wJI 1 ~ME~~EWAY

•llfmrtlr\w~v

oz.

BRING THE FAMILY TO SEE "SMILEY"
THE CLOWN HERE THURSDAY AND
FRIDAY SEPT. 4TH AND 5TH

PILLSBURY BROWNIE MIX

PILLSBURY PANCAKE

oz.

,,

BRAWNY
ASSORTED TOWELS

AND
DEPOSIT
NO. 105

NO. 85

$139

oz.

1 GAL

·;ws TAX
'

15

BLEACH

. BOnLEs

BAG

21f2
POUND

1

GOLDEN ISLE

8- 16 OL

·

PEANUT
"'""''"R

CHOICE

7-UP
•

•.
. ..-

.

YOUR

OR

3-LB.

5 oz.

CREAM STYLE CORN
17

j

--

GOLDEN ISLE

'

3-LB. CAN

uhu

ROSE

GLAD

aiOICE

,.•~--

.

OR

24 SIZE

00

SOLID
LEMON

YOUR

~~-- .... -~~ ELBOW. MACARO_
N
I
.·
1-LB. SIZE

,.••

'

ARWICK

:i

,r

•

DOZ.
PKG.

LAZED DONUTS

~ :i

OLD FASHION

SIRLOIN
TIP· STEAK

FRESH
GATEWAY

••

~

%GAL.

5 1-LB. LOAVES

!i

c
9
CH U K
OLOG. ;N.

ASSORTED
FLAVORS

BREAD

/

.•

PKG.

STEA
49
'1 LB.

{(

MIX
OR
MATCH

WHITE AND YEU.OW

DAIRY LANE
ICE CREAM

GATEWAY
BRAND

•'·

FRAN·KIE
WI'ENERS

12 oz.

LB.

aiOCOI.ATE FUDGE,
GERMAN CHOCOlATE, .

•

--:::::

786 NORTH 2ND AVE., MIDDLEPORT,O.
OPEN MON. -SAT. 9 A. M. T09 P.M.

·''!

-- COUPON
-- _.

COUPON

.

PILLSBURY
PIE 'CRUST MIX
LIMIT 2
9lfz OZ.

2/78~
.

PACKA~~~~ BAY '

HUNGRY JACk
MASHED ·POTATOES

NO. 305 .

With

Coupon

LIMIT ONE 98~
With
32 OZ.
.
Coupon
BOX
.
.
. TWI~~IPM tti~AY

.

I •

..

..!.

~

PIN SOL
BATHROOM CLEANER
'

LIMIT ONE
17 oz.
.· BOlin.

6
.
.

g·

~

Efr!W!Mfin·

With

Coupon

-

PILLSBURY
.LIMIT ONE_
5LB. BAG

68~
.

·

. PillSBURY RIOt &amp;_IASY

,

. ·,

FROSTING

. ASSORTED FLAVORS
LIMIT ONE

1WIN~~$G~AY

l3 OZ.

58.

~

twtfEif\a ~AY

WITH ..
COUPON

NO. 305

NO. 155

FORMULA 409 CLEANER
-

LIMIT ONE
22 OZ.
BOTTLE

- 9~

5

EXPIRES ~-75
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

•

-

'

I

,,

•
\

.

•'

I

· HEINZ BABY FOOD
~

With

Coupon

NO. 75

JUNIOR

LIMIT 6

6/79
. .

With
I

TW1V~1,fis ~?~wAY

Coupon

KEEBLER CLUB
LIMIT ONE 59~
16 oz.
BOX

.
.

TWIN~~I&amp;SG~AY

With

Coupon

,..,

�.,

-

I~

,J

I

'

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1975

Reds magic number nine
and holding after loss
C:INCINNATI (UP I ) George Foster has been with
the Cincinnati Reds since
being acquired from the San
Francisco Giants during the
1971 season.
Still, Foster considers _this
year his rookie season in the
major leagues.
"That ," he explained , "is
·-because I am getting a
chance to play regu larly for
the first time ."
Foster rapped out two of
the nine hits the Reds got in
losing to San Diego's Randy
Jones, 2-1, Monday night to
boost his a average to .308.
"Are you going to proclaim
yourself th e National Leag ue
Rookie of the Year?" Foster
was asked.
Foster grinned .
"Not me," he answered
emphatica lly. " Th e n, th e
club might want to pay me a
rookie 's salary."
Reds manager Sparky
Anderson c laims Foster and
Ken Griffey give the Reds the
best all around outfield in the
league .
"I say that ," said Anderson, "because Griffey and
Foster have improved so
much defensively and lor this

you can give George
Scherge r a lot of credit."
Sche rger , a Reds coach ,
has worn blisters on his hands

from throwing fly balls to
Foster and Griffey in prega me practice.
" He has them stretching
th e ir ar ms before eve ry
ga me," said Sparky . ''I think
th e improved throwing of the
two over last year has been
ver y obvious."
The score was tied 1-1 when

a double by Dave Winfield
a nd sing le by John Grubb
gave the Padres their win-

ning run .
Jones picked up his 18th
victory against eight losses
Monday night and Padre
mana ger John McNamara
ca lled it "a typical J ones
performa nce.''
Randy , mixing a sinker
with one of the best sl iders he
ha s had this season, r etired 17
batters on grou nds balls.
" I'm not a power pitcher ,"
said Jones. " If I tried tothrow my fastba ll past a
hitter, the ball would come
back to me fa ster than it left.
Finesse and control that 's
responsible for a big part of
my success."

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - "The timing was wrong. Everything's
all ironed out now , though. Everything's cool. I apologized, and
my apology was accepted."
Dock Ellis has emerged from his latest crisis , a bit poorer , a
bit wiser .
Technically, the crisis involved him and manager Danny
Murtaugh, but basically it was between him and the ball club
and followed closely the same general pattern as most of his
other crises since the Pittsburgh Pirates discovered him a
dozen years ago-an undisciplined, Wlinhibited 18-year-old kid
out of the Watts section of Los Angeles who threw a baseball so
hard sometimes it whlsUed.
This is Dock Ellis' eighth year with the Pirates and for every
season with them , he has had at least one adjective applied . He
has been called obstinate, stubborn, selfish, opinionated, intractable, mulish , unbending and bullheaded.
Other times, he also has been cited as the one individual on
the club who becomes most involved with others' problems,
the Pirates No. I morale booster and often their most effective
pitcher.
Danny Murtaugh has told me nobody on the e ntire Pittsburgh ball club has ever been more honest with him than
Dock Ellis.
What's the problem then?
Every now and then, it seems, Dock Ellis,like everyone else,
bas self doubts, some momentary pangs of insecurity. Nothing
wrong with that. It's normal enough with everyone. Understandably more so with someone like Dock Ellis considering his background and the fact he usually could look around
him growing up and see kids his age with a lot of things he
knew he could never have.
Now I'm not going to begin bleeding for Dock Ellis, but I do
understand the reason he over-reacts sometimes. He'does it
for the same reason everybody else does. He feels insecure.
Nobody is completely exempt from that feeling, not even Tom
Seaver, Jimmy Connors or Henry Kissinger .
The trouble is when Dock Ellis feels the need to assert
himself or show his individuality, other pjle sometimes
over-react to him.
Example: Dock Ellis finds his bed is too small in a San
Francisco hotel during the playoffs four years ago. He's offered another bed and he says that one is too small, too, and the
next thing you know it turns out to be a crisis.
Example : Dock Ellis shows up at the ballpark wearing his
hair in corn rows, and that also develops into a small crisis .
Yet Ernie Holmes, the Pittsburgh Steelers' defens ive tackle
gets his hair cut in a much more unique pattern and nQ fuss i~
made or objection raised.
Ellis refused to go to the bullpen when ordered to do on Aug.
IS and was fined $200 and suspended. The penalties were
justified. Ellis is being paid a decent salary by the Pira tes. He
knows what he'srequired to do for that money.
His second suspension was !In entirely different matter .
The Pirates lifted his first suspension a half-hour after it was
imposed because Ellis told both general manager Joe Brown
and Murtaugh he was ready to pitch again. He asked for a
meeting with the players and requested that Murtaugh and the
coaches be present as well. The meeting was arranged and it
was during it that Ellis got into more hot water by saying,
among other things, he had lost all his confidence in Murtaugh .
The indefinite suspension which followed came very close to
shelving the 36-year-old right-hander for the playoffs and
WQI'ld Series and finishing his c.areer with the Pirates. Had
thtl)' not removed him from the suspended list last Saturday,
he;"''uld have be.en ineligible for the playoffs and the Series,
but Joe Brown satd, morally, he felt it was the proper thing to
do ,
'!we did not anticipate that Dock would be back in a Pirate
unlJormin 1975," said Joe Brown. " However, as time elapsed
an4 as Dock privately indicated his sincere regret over his
acOons, a desire to apologize and a williJigness to return to our
te'9J! Wider o~ conditions, .we asked ourselves how lon g
sjl~d we contmue to punish him. Every religion that I know of
.teaches that to err is human and forgive is divine ."
Ellis must pay a substantial fine now although he will
reoelve the back salary he lost during his suspens ion. He
reillzes now he made some mistakes
',li should've met with Danny privaiely," he says . .
. ~I&gt;anny's a good man," he says about Murtaugh. " He's cool,
~~~~~ tile gang ,with me : Always has been, always will be . 1
apeloglzed to him and he accepted lt. We're' always described
as ~'one big Pirate family,' you know. Well, we're a family
~~ln. What I wanna do now is help the Pirates win the penDaiU w~nna watch Danny walk high. His 'Wor)d Series walk'
0

!?ock

1 ~!ill
-·. it."

...

Jones walked

none

.

and

stru ck out two Monday night.
He has averaged less than
two wa lks per game.

Pat Darcy sta rted the
ga me for the Reds and left
w1th the scored tied 1-1 after

developed a blister on the
forefinger of his pitching
ha nd. Pedro Borbon got the

four

loss.

in nings

when

he

Connors wins, finally
FOREST HILLS, N.Y . com ing off deuce. That was
(UPI ) - Jimmy Connors is 2.3 the last break he would need
years old today and it seemed to move into the quarterfinals
to take him a n entire year to where he will face unseeded
defeat Harold Solomon, 6-4, &amp;- Rhodesian Andrew Pattison
2, 5-7, &amp;-3 in a match that Wednesday.
began Monday rught and
" I wasn't really worried at
ended shortly after midnight. any one time,' ' Connor said .
Solomon, the 13th seed, " I had my chances in the
played his usual deliberate , third set but he played some
skillful c lay court game. good points. I'd have lik ed it
Although he never had the to go to a tiebreaker in the
defending champion in really third, but then you never
serious trouble, he appeared know how tiebreakers would
ready to play until dawn.
go.
Connors, however, had had
"So I played it one set at a
e nou gh, putting Solomon time - !hal's a ll yo u can do. I
away in the fourth set. They too k my time. It 's always a
exchanged servi ce breaks to long one when I play
start the final set and Con- Solomon. "
nors broke again in the third,
It was a long one again,

Joe O'Brien, ha s had a
sensationa l year.
Eleven of his 14 wins in 15
starts, including his last five,
have bee·n under two minute s,
with the top mark a I : 56 3-5 in
th e Ga ines Memorial a t
Vernon Downs.
Besides the Cane and the
Gaines, Nero has also won
The Adios at the Meadows in
I :57 3-5.
What a Ba ron, a Baron
Hanover colt owned by Mrs.
Peter Kukurin of East
McKeesport, Pa., has paced
eight sub two-minute miles.
Drive n by Lew Williams,
Whata Baron captured the
$25 ,100
Director
of
Agriculture Pace last week at
lhe Ohio State Fair in 1:59 3..'i
and has 10 victor ies in 14
starts this year with earnin gs
of $83,224.
Silk Stockings, a daughter
of Most Happy Fella, must
battle tradition as well as the
rugged field in her quest to
become the first filly to win
the Jug .
But, trained and driven by

CO LUMBUS
An
est im ated 2,283,644 young
I'&lt;' opJo will be enrolled in
Ohio's 4,170 public schools
and approximately 260,628
students wi ll be enrolled in
760 nonpublic sc hools during
the 1975-76 bicente nnial
school year, Supt. of Public
Instruction Martin W. Essex

stated today.
Both public and nonpubli c
schools have expe ri enced a
decrease in e nr ollme nt , attributed by Essex to the lower
birth rates of the 1960s.
Public school enrollment is
expected to be down 39,642
and nonpubl ic down about

"It's frustrati ng at times,"
Connors sa id , " but in the past
year I 've lea rned to be
patient. 1 have to play the
way I was taught. Attack."
Solomon said he wasn't
tired, although he looked

2.000 students.
Actual enrollme nt declin es
will be evid enced only in

The long day could have
been longer had not Chris ·
Evert raced through Wendy
Overton, 6-ll, &amp;-I in 40 minutes
before Connors and Solomon
took lhe court.
Bjorn Borg put down a ra lly
by Rod Laver, &amp;-1, 6-4, 2-&lt;i, &amp;-2,
and Eddie Dibbs, straightsetted Wimbledon winner Arthur Ashe, 6-4 , &amp;-2, &amp;-3.

30th running of Little
Brown Jug is Sept. 18
DELAWARE , Ohio (UP! )
- The Uttle Brown Jug, once
thought to be a battle for
second place, may turn into a
wide open al!air this year.
Three and possibly more
top three-year-old pacers are
fi gured to give the great
Nero, winner of 27 of 29
career starts, a challenge in
the $100,000-plus 3oth running
of the Jug Sept. 18 at the
Delaware County Fairgrounds.
Nero, which lost only once
last year and dropped his
only race this year when he
threw a shoe going into the
threequarter pole at Northfield Park, is still the horse
to beat.
But such not ables as Silk
Stockings,
the
world
champion filly, Whata Baron
and Albert's Star now appear
serious threats to the son of
Meadow Skipper who already
ha s won the first jewel of the
Triple Crown- the Ca ne
Pace.
Nero, co-owned and trained
by Jim Crane and driven by

Ohio's pupil count ·slumps

rWlning an even three hours.

weary.

Pre sto n Burris Jr ., Silk
Stockings has won 13 of 17
starts this yea r , including 12
in a row before losing a week
ago at Montreal to Albert 's
Star.
She won the Haswell Pace
at the New York State Fair in
I :55 2..'i, the second fastest
mile ever paced by a three year-old filly on a mile track.
Albert Star's win over Silk
Stockings last week in I :58,
quickly got him Jug attention.
Trained and driven by
former Jug winner Keith
Waples, Albert's Star has
also been under two minutes
in winning a division of the
Cane, the BatUe of Saratoga
a nd the Queen City at
Greenwood.
Bo Bo Arrow, winner of the
Hor seman's Futurity in 1:57
and I :58.2, heads the list of
other hor ses capable of
winning the Jug. That groups
also includes Shirley's Beau,
Br ei's Champ, Truxon
Hanover and Fast Knight.

7 - 'I'Ilf' Dallv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Tuesday, Sept. 2.'1975
'

elementary schools and some
junior high schools, Essex

sa is, adding, "Enrollment in
hi gh

schuol s,

voca tion a l

Major league Leaden
Bv United Pre ss Inter nati ona l
Leading Batter s
National League
g. ab r . h . pet .
Madlock , Chi117468
Smmns . Sl .l 131 474
Watson. H ou 11 9 443
Morgan , (in 175 432
Sa ngt n . P i t
111 402
Joshua , S F
109 474
Rose, Cin
136 564
Gr iffey . C in 116 409
Parker , Pi I! 121 455
Garvey , LA 136 562
Car dena!. Ch 130 492

73171365
67 159 335
63 147 312
9ot 142 329

46 130 .323
6'} 135 . 318
91 178 . 316

82129 315
61 143 314
69 176 313

72 154 .JlJ
Ameri c an League
g . ab r . h. pet .
Ca r ew , Minn 123 458 81 171 373
L ynn. Bos
123 445 85 147 330

M unson. N Y 132 4'i'7 71 157 316
Washg ln , O k 124 4'1'2 72 l54 .3 13
Rice. Bas
121484 83 151 .312
McRae. KC 126 480 58 147 .306
Or ta , Chi
118 455 56 139 .305
Si n g l tn , Bal
130 4'i'3 74 150 .304
Hargrov. T x 122 434 70 130 .300
Harrah , Tex 126 A35 70 130 .299

Hom e Run s
National L e agu~ :
Luzinski
and Schmidt , Ph il 31; K ingman,
N Y 28 ; Benc h , Cin 25 ; Cey, LA

12.
Am erican L ea gu e: Jackson ,
Oak 30: Mayberry, KC 29 ;
Sc ali , M il 27: Bonds. N Y 25 :
Burroughs, Te x 22.
Run s Baited In
National League : Bench, Cin
and Luzinski , Phi l 103 ; Perez ,
Cin 9&lt;:1 ; Sta ub , N Y 91 ; Cey, LA

"

Am erican League : Lynn , Bas
93: R i ce , Bas and Jackson, Oak
91 : Mayberry, K C 87: May,
Ba t! an d Scott, Mi l Bd.
Stolen Ba ses
National League : Lo pes, LA
61: Mor gan , Cin 54 : Broc k , SI .L
52 ; Cedeno, Hou A] ; Ca rd ena l.
Chi 27

American

League:

Rivers.

Ca l 6&lt;:1 ; Washington , Oak
Olis , KC 33 ; Remy, Cal
Carew. M inn 30.

&lt;:~0 ;

31 ;

Pitching ·
National League : Seaver , NY
20 -7: Jones. SD 18 -8 : Maflack,
NY 16 -8; Sutton , LA 16 -11 ;
Messers mith , L A 15 -13; Mort on ,
A ll 15 -15
Ameri ca n League: . Pal me r,
Ba it 20 -8 . K aat. Chi 19- 10; Blu e,
Oak 18 -10; Hunter. N Y 18 - 13;
Lee. Bas 17-7: Wise. Bos 17 ·8.

e duc at ion and habilitation
clas.'!es for the handicapped
will be up . "
Classes for handicap ped
youth wi ll serve an estimated
74 ,629 children thi s year
compared with 71,672 last
year . An additional 2]1,355
students will receive speech
and heari ng or individual
psychological · serv ices, a n
increase of 12,555 from last
year .
Projections indicate that
249,438 Ohio youth will be
enroll ed in over 200 different
ki nds

of

vocatio nal

preparation in 7, 442 classes
during the coming school
yea r , represe ntin g an in·
crease from last fall of 16,755
students.

MONDAY
RACINE CHAPTER 134
O.E.S. 8 p.m. at the hall . Pre:
registration
for
grand
chapter to be completed .

rome bird when you

cream , cake and pie with
serving starting 11:30 a.m .
Day sponsored by Chester
Volunteer Fire Department.
TUESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING ,
Southern Band Boosters, 7:30
p .m . at high sc hool; parents
of band members urged to
attend.
REGULAR MEETING,
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m .; all
Master Masons invited.
POMEROYCHAPTERIM,
O.E .S ., regular meeting, 7:45
p.m. at lhe Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.

!Wdided into that big .
tree the other
Fear not. Just wing

'

interconnection

of the stations will enable
s imulta neo us s t atewide
broadcasting .
The number of teachers,

super viso rs,

c ounselors , and super intendents this year will be
about 1224,700, down I ,800
from 1974-75.
The average investment for

I'll. tn-51:10

I'Dm_,

THE

·----------------I
Free Delivery Service

-~--·

1

I
I

II

West Columbia - Clifton - Mason - Hartford New Haven - Letart , W. Va .

I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I

PHONE 992-5428
We will pay the call for
pickup.

ROBINSON'S LAUNDRY and
DRY CLEANING, POMEROY, 0.

·---------------------

II
II
II
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

0

McAuliffe misjudged Walt
Williams' popup in the second
inning which led to two runs
as Rick Dempsey, Rick Bladt
and Fred Stanley all followed
with s ingles. New York
scored a third-inning run on a
single by Thurman Munson
and a double by I)empsey off
the glove of centerfielder
Lynn, and the Yanks added
another tinged run in the
sixth on a runscoring single
by Sandy Alomar that left
field e• Jim Rice got his glove
on but couldn't hold.
In other AL action, Oakland
topped California 6-3, Detroit
edged Milwaukee S-4, Minnesota beat Texas S-4 and
Kan sas
City
defeated
Chicago 3-1 after losing the
opener of a doubleheader 108. A scheduled doubleheader,
Cleveland a t Baltimore, was
rained out.
New York blanked Pittsburgh 3-il, St. Louis whipped
Chicago
6-3,
Montreal
defeated Philadelphia 6-5,
Houston beat Atlanta 5-3, Los
Angeles edged San Francisco
3-1 and San Diego nipped
Cincinnati 2-1 in National
League games.
A's 6, Angels 3
Vida Blue pitched a lourhitter to notch his 18th victory

and Reggie Jackson and Billy
Williams walloped two-run
homers to spark Oakland's
triumph over California. Blue
gave up a two-run homer to
Lee Stanton in the first , then
didn't allow another hit until
the eighth. Jackson 's homer
was his 30th, tops in the AL.
figers 5, Brewers 4
Gary Sutherland, Dan
Meyer , Willie Horton and Bill
Freehan each singled home a
run during a four-rlUI seventh
inning that Detroit its victory
over Milwaukee . Dave
lemancyck pitched 4 1-3
innings of shutout relief to
gain the win.
rwtns 5, Rangers 4
Phil Roof drove in three
rllns with a homer and a
single to lead Minnesota over
Texas. Roof hit a solo homer
to tie the score in the third
inning then singled home two
rlUls during a three-run sixth
that gave the Twins a S-1
lead. Bill Butler was the
winner in r e lief while
Ferguson Jenkins took the
loss .
Royals 8-3, While Sox 10-1
Blll Melton drove in ~ur
runs with a homer and a
sacrifice fly to lead Chicago
to victory in the opener

Oe\\'4etY Sernce
MAINTAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

Phone 773-5592
!\1\ASON FURNITURE .
HERMAN GRATE
W: VA.

FIREMEN'S AUXILIARY,
7:30 p.m . at the fire hall .
Hostesses are Kathy Caldwell
and Marilyo Epple.
THURSDAY
GALLIA COUNTY Salon
612, Eight and Forty, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Miss
Erma Smith, Pomeroy.
FRIDAY
HAPPY Harvesters Class ,
Trinity Church, 7:30p .m . in
the social room of the church.
SATURDAY
ICE
CREAM
Social,
Bashan Volun leer Fireme n
and Auxiliary members at
the firehouse with serving to
begin at 6 p.m .

Three information and
health programs will be held
this month at the Senior
Citizens Center, Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, director , has annoWJced.
On Sept. 15 Mrs . Maxine
Plummer, executive director
of the 648 Board will speak on
mental health at noon . On
Sept. 22, Miss Marta Guilkey,
home extension agent, will
speak on nutrl lion for senior
citizens during the noon hour,
and on Sept. 23 and 30, Mrs.
Lelah Weatherby a licensed
practical nurse, will offer
sessions on home nursing at'
10 :30 each day.
Mrs. Thomas advises that
plans are also being made
again this year through the
Meigs County Health Department for flu shots for senior
citizens.

Keep America
beaut!fut9 but keep
Amertca alive! ·
Some of America's most beautiful resort areas lie a long th e Atlantic Coast. And no
one wants to mar their beauty . .It's ·much too valuable a natural resource.
But, there's another tremendously valuable natural resourc~ over the horizon a lonll
the Atlantic Coast. Energy. Energy that is
needed to
ease

our nation's worsening energy crisis.
We must not sacrifice one resource for
the other.
And we needn't . Mod e rn techniques for
under-water drilling and delivery of fuel have
eliminated th e danger of permanent
e nviro nmental damage. An offshore drillin g
rig won't even be seen from the shore .
And offshore production will reduce tk
need fo r increased tanker traffic.
All domesti c sources of energy must be
· developed to meet our growing nat ional
fuel needs. The potential of the Atl a ntic o uter
continental shelf is grea t and ca n be realized
in an env ironmen tally safe manner.' The
Atl a ntic coast areas depend on a prosperous
America. And~ prosperous America
depends on energy.

Since 1968,
Columbia Gas has
been participating in
costly geophysical surveys
off I he Atlantic Coast . The tests
range from North Carolina to Nova
Scotia. We've also joined a 2S million
dollar drill ing exploration
prC' ·am off"Ca nada's east coast
a prOJ .ing ,source of clean, naturai
ga:; ~o help ease the energy crisis.

cA.uMBIAGAS
Gas I• procious, pure onerlD' , •.• uoe 11 - l 7.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs.' Herbert Roush
Mrs. Brenda Pettit, son
Jamie, Mrs. Juanita Justice
of Middleport, Mrs . Ethel
Sai'iions of Racine, Mr . and
Mrs. Carrole White, Darla ,
Deanna, Keith and Kevin
were dinner guests Sunday of
Mrs. Ruth Parsons and Edna.
Mrs. Mary Donohue, local,
Holly Friend of Syracuse
were married by the Rev .
Edward Griffith at his home
in Long Bottom Rt. I. Attending were Seth Friend,
Mr. and Mrs. Luke Friend.
Mr. and Mrs. Friend are
residing in Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush visited Mrs. Gladys
Shields Tuesday evening at
Racine.
Mrs. Edna Roush visited
her brother Olt Boston
Sunday.
Mr. · Pape spent Sunday
with Mrs. Shields and took
them home.

•.

'

" ·.

.. . . •.

"'

...·"...

~~~USDA Choice Beef ~

La7

GROUND~

r
r HAM SALAD

CHUCK LB. gge.
GROUND
1
l ROUN_D_~~ .,p9

~---

SUPERIORS

.

DUTCH

.

LOAF

. .. . .

.......

.

'•'

... ,
_

... ~'"'~

BONELESS '\~

-"""""._.,....-,....

-...-.....
-."""'...
....
....
-·-....

Ham Slices ,·)
l

)

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

'

;:

16 oz.
bottles

DIET RITE COLA

.

..,.....
,,...

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

~LB99e

,.

., d ...

SA TURDAV ONL V

... '
•t

.......

FAVORITE BREAD

KRAFT
MIRACLE WHIPPED
MARGARINE

4

8 • 16 OZ. BOTTlES

lvs. for

...
..

'"

;,

'1 00

....

,._

1-POUND PACKAGE

.. hO I

All Week Price

DAD'S
ROOT BEER
16 oz.
BOffiES

8

.,

..

DIET RITE
FLAVORS

PLUS TAX &amp; DEPOSIT

'"

'

$100
4
qts.

$139

Plus Tax &amp; Deposit

16 oz.

.. ' "
...

Friday Only

'

.

'"

GRADE "A" LARGE

_PURINA
PUPPY CHOW

~

CUCUMBER SLICES

2

2 4~~~ gge 4

16 Ol
JARS

JAR

HEINZ
STEAK SAUCE

HI-C
FRUIT DRINKS

5 Ol
BOffiES

$100

JOBO

LIQUID DETERGENT

DOG FOOD

48 Ol
BOTTLE

1

8

CANS

00

..

$} OQ

"' ..

...
FROZEN FOODS

2-LB. BOX

FRESH, CRISP

'" '

BANQUET
FRIED CHICKEff

·CELERY
PANTRV

29~NCH

PACK ®

15 Wrapped bars

YELLOW ONIONS
POUNDS

$}29

'
"

SANDWICH BAGS

IVORY

PRODUCE SPECIALS

3

.

sge ~=: 4/$1

18 Ol

DOZEN
DURKEE

GLAD BAG

KRAFT
GRAPE
JELLY

EGGS

$2.25 VALUE

69~

ONLY

"

$ 89

"'

$}99
BANQUET ·
TV DINNER ...........-........ 49~
SEALTEST

EACH

ICE cREAM .•...•........... 99~ lh

·~:

GAL ~~

~----------------~~ ·

,,

·I

.,

.

' t 'I

... ,, ,

.

Programs
planned

Red Sox begin slide
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The signs are ominous for
the Boston Red Sox, but the
club remains convinced that
the future will be much
brighter this season than it
was a year ago.
Last Aug 30 and Sept. I the
Red Sox los t successive
games and began· a slide .that
saw them blow a five-game
lead in the final month and
lose the American League's
Eastern Division tiUe to the
Baltimore Orioles .
Monday night th e first
phase of that collapse was
repeated as the Red Sox lost
to the New York Yankees 4-2
for their third s uccessive
defeat and watched their lead
over Baltimore dwindle to 51'.!
games.
Will the rest of the Red Sox'
season be a repeat performance of 1974? Members
of both the Red Sox and the
Yankees think not.
"We 'll bounce back • I'm
not worried, " said rookie
Fred Lynn , a main reason
why baseball men feel Boston
is not likely to fold again. " I
know . we're the better
ballclub. We're too good and
have too much depth. Last
year you could feel it on the
bench that the club was going
to lose . This year it's not that
way . I never played on a loser
lUI til I turned pro . This year is
going to be different. "
The Red Sox, however ,
didn't look anything like
championship material
Monday night as they fielded
rather shoddily and let the
Yankees take advantage of
their mistakes. Plays that in
past weeks had been routine
outs for Red Sox defen'd ers
turned Into base hits or errors
and allowed New Yvrk to
build an early leild.
Third
baseman Dick

Fresh Ground From
USDA Choice Beef.
It's Better!

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY LODGE 164
F&amp;AM, regular meeting, 7:30'
p.m , All Master Masons
invited.

INSURANCE
STORE

. ,..., ,

GROUND BEEF

OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, at
.. the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co . Cultural
report by Sharon Bailey,
hostesses to be last year's
pledges.

INSURANCE

.._.

..... ,,,

A REGULAR meeting of
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F &amp; AM, will be held at
7:30 p.m . All Master Masons
are invited.

@0

.,

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
.
PHONE 992·3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. w e reserve the right to rn;ut quantttt~. MIDOLE PORT, 0.

LB.

spare ribs, homemade ice

sc hools will be in operat ion,
bringi ng the state's total to tin down to the ex~'¢'
37, se r ving 376 schoo l llOJ~.OJe: your inc:tedistricts .
IJerldeJr~t insurance
The s tate superintendent
also noted that durin g the
We'refreetoplace
1975-76 school year, school
buses will travel more than IY9\u insurance with
132 million miles transport ing
of eeveraletzonr
1.3 million students ; and food
oompaniee.
service operations will se rve
more than 44 million lunches IIUI,awe're free to
and 8 million breakfasts.
li:h&lt;XIII8 the best poliIn
addition ,
Ohio
foryou.
educational te levis ion,
leading the nation wilh 13
broadcasting stations, will
serve more than 1,268,090
students . Beginning Sept. 22,
Reuter-8rogan
c ompletion of a two-way

principals,

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10

LABOR DAY celebration in
Chester starting with garden
tractor pull, 10 a.m .; parade.
I : 30 p.m. ; bicycle races
water fight, greased pole,
p .m. Barbecued chicke n and

"bid y.ou.~ you

•

.._
...

MIN UTE STEAK

:i

Six new join t vocationa l

microwave

VERY GOOD - NO WASTE

Social
Calendar

education per pupil will be
nearly $1,100. This compare~
to an es timated $1,058 per
pupil in 1974-75 and $969 in
1973-74.

....."".

'

'

�.,

-

I~

,J

I

'

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1975

Reds magic number nine
and holding after loss
C:INCINNATI (UP I ) George Foster has been with
the Cincinnati Reds since
being acquired from the San
Francisco Giants during the
1971 season.
Still, Foster considers _this
year his rookie season in the
major leagues.
"That ," he explained , "is
·-because I am getting a
chance to play regu larly for
the first time ."
Foster rapped out two of
the nine hits the Reds got in
losing to San Diego's Randy
Jones, 2-1, Monday night to
boost his a average to .308.
"Are you going to proclaim
yourself th e National Leag ue
Rookie of the Year?" Foster
was asked.
Foster grinned .
"Not me," he answered
emphatica lly. " Th e n, th e
club might want to pay me a
rookie 's salary."
Reds manager Sparky
Anderson c laims Foster and
Ken Griffey give the Reds the
best all around outfield in the
league .
"I say that ," said Anderson, "because Griffey and
Foster have improved so
much defensively and lor this

you can give George
Scherge r a lot of credit."
Sche rger , a Reds coach ,
has worn blisters on his hands

from throwing fly balls to
Foster and Griffey in prega me practice.
" He has them stretching
th e ir ar ms before eve ry
ga me," said Sparky . ''I think
th e improved throwing of the
two over last year has been
ver y obvious."
The score was tied 1-1 when

a double by Dave Winfield
a nd sing le by John Grubb
gave the Padres their win-

ning run .
Jones picked up his 18th
victory against eight losses
Monday night and Padre
mana ger John McNamara
ca lled it "a typical J ones
performa nce.''
Randy , mixing a sinker
with one of the best sl iders he
ha s had this season, r etired 17
batters on grou nds balls.
" I'm not a power pitcher ,"
said Jones. " If I tried tothrow my fastba ll past a
hitter, the ball would come
back to me fa ster than it left.
Finesse and control that 's
responsible for a big part of
my success."

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - "The timing was wrong. Everything's
all ironed out now , though. Everything's cool. I apologized, and
my apology was accepted."
Dock Ellis has emerged from his latest crisis , a bit poorer , a
bit wiser .
Technically, the crisis involved him and manager Danny
Murtaugh, but basically it was between him and the ball club
and followed closely the same general pattern as most of his
other crises since the Pittsburgh Pirates discovered him a
dozen years ago-an undisciplined, Wlinhibited 18-year-old kid
out of the Watts section of Los Angeles who threw a baseball so
hard sometimes it whlsUed.
This is Dock Ellis' eighth year with the Pirates and for every
season with them , he has had at least one adjective applied . He
has been called obstinate, stubborn, selfish, opinionated, intractable, mulish , unbending and bullheaded.
Other times, he also has been cited as the one individual on
the club who becomes most involved with others' problems,
the Pirates No. I morale booster and often their most effective
pitcher.
Danny Murtaugh has told me nobody on the e ntire Pittsburgh ball club has ever been more honest with him than
Dock Ellis.
What's the problem then?
Every now and then, it seems, Dock Ellis,like everyone else,
bas self doubts, some momentary pangs of insecurity. Nothing
wrong with that. It's normal enough with everyone. Understandably more so with someone like Dock Ellis considering his background and the fact he usually could look around
him growing up and see kids his age with a lot of things he
knew he could never have.
Now I'm not going to begin bleeding for Dock Ellis, but I do
understand the reason he over-reacts sometimes. He'does it
for the same reason everybody else does. He feels insecure.
Nobody is completely exempt from that feeling, not even Tom
Seaver, Jimmy Connors or Henry Kissinger .
The trouble is when Dock Ellis feels the need to assert
himself or show his individuality, other pjle sometimes
over-react to him.
Example: Dock Ellis finds his bed is too small in a San
Francisco hotel during the playoffs four years ago. He's offered another bed and he says that one is too small, too, and the
next thing you know it turns out to be a crisis.
Example : Dock Ellis shows up at the ballpark wearing his
hair in corn rows, and that also develops into a small crisis .
Yet Ernie Holmes, the Pittsburgh Steelers' defens ive tackle
gets his hair cut in a much more unique pattern and nQ fuss i~
made or objection raised.
Ellis refused to go to the bullpen when ordered to do on Aug.
IS and was fined $200 and suspended. The penalties were
justified. Ellis is being paid a decent salary by the Pira tes. He
knows what he'srequired to do for that money.
His second suspension was !In entirely different matter .
The Pirates lifted his first suspension a half-hour after it was
imposed because Ellis told both general manager Joe Brown
and Murtaugh he was ready to pitch again. He asked for a
meeting with the players and requested that Murtaugh and the
coaches be present as well. The meeting was arranged and it
was during it that Ellis got into more hot water by saying,
among other things, he had lost all his confidence in Murtaugh .
The indefinite suspension which followed came very close to
shelving the 36-year-old right-hander for the playoffs and
WQI'ld Series and finishing his c.areer with the Pirates. Had
thtl)' not removed him from the suspended list last Saturday,
he;"''uld have be.en ineligible for the playoffs and the Series,
but Joe Brown satd, morally, he felt it was the proper thing to
do ,
'!we did not anticipate that Dock would be back in a Pirate
unlJormin 1975," said Joe Brown. " However, as time elapsed
an4 as Dock privately indicated his sincere regret over his
acOons, a desire to apologize and a williJigness to return to our
te'9J! Wider o~ conditions, .we asked ourselves how lon g
sjl~d we contmue to punish him. Every religion that I know of
.teaches that to err is human and forgive is divine ."
Ellis must pay a substantial fine now although he will
reoelve the back salary he lost during his suspens ion. He
reillzes now he made some mistakes
',li should've met with Danny privaiely," he says . .
. ~I&gt;anny's a good man," he says about Murtaugh. " He's cool,
~~~~~ tile gang ,with me : Always has been, always will be . 1
apeloglzed to him and he accepted lt. We're' always described
as ~'one big Pirate family,' you know. Well, we're a family
~~ln. What I wanna do now is help the Pirates win the penDaiU w~nna watch Danny walk high. His 'Wor)d Series walk'
0

!?ock

1 ~!ill
-·. it."

...

Jones walked

none

.

and

stru ck out two Monday night.
He has averaged less than
two wa lks per game.

Pat Darcy sta rted the
ga me for the Reds and left
w1th the scored tied 1-1 after

developed a blister on the
forefinger of his pitching
ha nd. Pedro Borbon got the

four

loss.

in nings

when

he

Connors wins, finally
FOREST HILLS, N.Y . com ing off deuce. That was
(UPI ) - Jimmy Connors is 2.3 the last break he would need
years old today and it seemed to move into the quarterfinals
to take him a n entire year to where he will face unseeded
defeat Harold Solomon, 6-4, &amp;- Rhodesian Andrew Pattison
2, 5-7, &amp;-3 in a match that Wednesday.
began Monday rught and
" I wasn't really worried at
ended shortly after midnight. any one time,' ' Connor said .
Solomon, the 13th seed, " I had my chances in the
played his usual deliberate , third set but he played some
skillful c lay court game. good points. I'd have lik ed it
Although he never had the to go to a tiebreaker in the
defending champion in really third, but then you never
serious trouble, he appeared know how tiebreakers would
ready to play until dawn.
go.
Connors, however, had had
"So I played it one set at a
e nou gh, putting Solomon time - !hal's a ll yo u can do. I
away in the fourth set. They too k my time. It 's always a
exchanged servi ce breaks to long one when I play
start the final set and Con- Solomon. "
nors broke again in the third,
It was a long one again,

Joe O'Brien, ha s had a
sensationa l year.
Eleven of his 14 wins in 15
starts, including his last five,
have bee·n under two minute s,
with the top mark a I : 56 3-5 in
th e Ga ines Memorial a t
Vernon Downs.
Besides the Cane and the
Gaines, Nero has also won
The Adios at the Meadows in
I :57 3-5.
What a Ba ron, a Baron
Hanover colt owned by Mrs.
Peter Kukurin of East
McKeesport, Pa., has paced
eight sub two-minute miles.
Drive n by Lew Williams,
Whata Baron captured the
$25 ,100
Director
of
Agriculture Pace last week at
lhe Ohio State Fair in 1:59 3..'i
and has 10 victor ies in 14
starts this year with earnin gs
of $83,224.
Silk Stockings, a daughter
of Most Happy Fella, must
battle tradition as well as the
rugged field in her quest to
become the first filly to win
the Jug .
But, trained and driven by

CO LUMBUS
An
est im ated 2,283,644 young
I'&lt;' opJo will be enrolled in
Ohio's 4,170 public schools
and approximately 260,628
students wi ll be enrolled in
760 nonpublic sc hools during
the 1975-76 bicente nnial
school year, Supt. of Public
Instruction Martin W. Essex

stated today.
Both public and nonpubli c
schools have expe ri enced a
decrease in e nr ollme nt , attributed by Essex to the lower
birth rates of the 1960s.
Public school enrollment is
expected to be down 39,642
and nonpubl ic down about

"It's frustrati ng at times,"
Connors sa id , " but in the past
year I 've lea rned to be
patient. 1 have to play the
way I was taught. Attack."
Solomon said he wasn't
tired, although he looked

2.000 students.
Actual enrollme nt declin es
will be evid enced only in

The long day could have
been longer had not Chris ·
Evert raced through Wendy
Overton, 6-ll, &amp;-I in 40 minutes
before Connors and Solomon
took lhe court.
Bjorn Borg put down a ra lly
by Rod Laver, &amp;-1, 6-4, 2-&lt;i, &amp;-2,
and Eddie Dibbs, straightsetted Wimbledon winner Arthur Ashe, 6-4 , &amp;-2, &amp;-3.

30th running of Little
Brown Jug is Sept. 18
DELAWARE , Ohio (UP! )
- The Uttle Brown Jug, once
thought to be a battle for
second place, may turn into a
wide open al!air this year.
Three and possibly more
top three-year-old pacers are
fi gured to give the great
Nero, winner of 27 of 29
career starts, a challenge in
the $100,000-plus 3oth running
of the Jug Sept. 18 at the
Delaware County Fairgrounds.
Nero, which lost only once
last year and dropped his
only race this year when he
threw a shoe going into the
threequarter pole at Northfield Park, is still the horse
to beat.
But such not ables as Silk
Stockings,
the
world
champion filly, Whata Baron
and Albert's Star now appear
serious threats to the son of
Meadow Skipper who already
ha s won the first jewel of the
Triple Crown- the Ca ne
Pace.
Nero, co-owned and trained
by Jim Crane and driven by

Ohio's pupil count ·slumps

rWlning an even three hours.

weary.

Pre sto n Burris Jr ., Silk
Stockings has won 13 of 17
starts this yea r , including 12
in a row before losing a week
ago at Montreal to Albert 's
Star.
She won the Haswell Pace
at the New York State Fair in
I :55 2..'i, the second fastest
mile ever paced by a three year-old filly on a mile track.
Albert Star's win over Silk
Stockings last week in I :58,
quickly got him Jug attention.
Trained and driven by
former Jug winner Keith
Waples, Albert's Star has
also been under two minutes
in winning a division of the
Cane, the BatUe of Saratoga
a nd the Queen City at
Greenwood.
Bo Bo Arrow, winner of the
Hor seman's Futurity in 1:57
and I :58.2, heads the list of
other hor ses capable of
winning the Jug. That groups
also includes Shirley's Beau,
Br ei's Champ, Truxon
Hanover and Fast Knight.

7 - 'I'Ilf' Dallv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Tuesday, Sept. 2.'1975
'

elementary schools and some
junior high schools, Essex

sa is, adding, "Enrollment in
hi gh

schuol s,

voca tion a l

Major league Leaden
Bv United Pre ss Inter nati ona l
Leading Batter s
National League
g. ab r . h . pet .
Madlock , Chi117468
Smmns . Sl .l 131 474
Watson. H ou 11 9 443
Morgan , (in 175 432
Sa ngt n . P i t
111 402
Joshua , S F
109 474
Rose, Cin
136 564
Gr iffey . C in 116 409
Parker , Pi I! 121 455
Garvey , LA 136 562
Car dena!. Ch 130 492

73171365
67 159 335
63 147 312
9ot 142 329

46 130 .323
6'} 135 . 318
91 178 . 316

82129 315
61 143 314
69 176 313

72 154 .JlJ
Ameri c an League
g . ab r . h. pet .
Ca r ew , Minn 123 458 81 171 373
L ynn. Bos
123 445 85 147 330

M unson. N Y 132 4'i'7 71 157 316
Washg ln , O k 124 4'1'2 72 l54 .3 13
Rice. Bas
121484 83 151 .312
McRae. KC 126 480 58 147 .306
Or ta , Chi
118 455 56 139 .305
Si n g l tn , Bal
130 4'i'3 74 150 .304
Hargrov. T x 122 434 70 130 .300
Harrah , Tex 126 A35 70 130 .299

Hom e Run s
National L e agu~ :
Luzinski
and Schmidt , Ph il 31; K ingman,
N Y 28 ; Benc h , Cin 25 ; Cey, LA

12.
Am erican L ea gu e: Jackson ,
Oak 30: Mayberry, KC 29 ;
Sc ali , M il 27: Bonds. N Y 25 :
Burroughs, Te x 22.
Run s Baited In
National League : Bench, Cin
and Luzinski , Phi l 103 ; Perez ,
Cin 9&lt;:1 ; Sta ub , N Y 91 ; Cey, LA

"

Am erican League : Lynn , Bas
93: R i ce , Bas and Jackson, Oak
91 : Mayberry, K C 87: May,
Ba t! an d Scott, Mi l Bd.
Stolen Ba ses
National League : Lo pes, LA
61: Mor gan , Cin 54 : Broc k , SI .L
52 ; Cedeno, Hou A] ; Ca rd ena l.
Chi 27

American

League:

Rivers.

Ca l 6&lt;:1 ; Washington , Oak
Olis , KC 33 ; Remy, Cal
Carew. M inn 30.

&lt;:~0 ;

31 ;

Pitching ·
National League : Seaver , NY
20 -7: Jones. SD 18 -8 : Maflack,
NY 16 -8; Sutton , LA 16 -11 ;
Messers mith , L A 15 -13; Mort on ,
A ll 15 -15
Ameri ca n League: . Pal me r,
Ba it 20 -8 . K aat. Chi 19- 10; Blu e,
Oak 18 -10; Hunter. N Y 18 - 13;
Lee. Bas 17-7: Wise. Bos 17 ·8.

e duc at ion and habilitation
clas.'!es for the handicapped
will be up . "
Classes for handicap ped
youth wi ll serve an estimated
74 ,629 children thi s year
compared with 71,672 last
year . An additional 2]1,355
students will receive speech
and heari ng or individual
psychological · serv ices, a n
increase of 12,555 from last
year .
Projections indicate that
249,438 Ohio youth will be
enroll ed in over 200 different
ki nds

of

vocatio nal

preparation in 7, 442 classes
during the coming school
yea r , represe ntin g an in·
crease from last fall of 16,755
students.

MONDAY
RACINE CHAPTER 134
O.E.S. 8 p.m. at the hall . Pre:
registration
for
grand
chapter to be completed .

rome bird when you

cream , cake and pie with
serving starting 11:30 a.m .
Day sponsored by Chester
Volunteer Fire Department.
TUESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING ,
Southern Band Boosters, 7:30
p .m . at high sc hool; parents
of band members urged to
attend.
REGULAR MEETING,
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m .; all
Master Masons invited.
POMEROYCHAPTERIM,
O.E .S ., regular meeting, 7:45
p.m. at lhe Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.

!Wdided into that big .
tree the other
Fear not. Just wing

'

interconnection

of the stations will enable
s imulta neo us s t atewide
broadcasting .
The number of teachers,

super viso rs,

c ounselors , and super intendents this year will be
about 1224,700, down I ,800
from 1974-75.
The average investment for

I'll. tn-51:10

I'Dm_,

THE

·----------------I
Free Delivery Service

-~--·

1

I
I

II

West Columbia - Clifton - Mason - Hartford New Haven - Letart , W. Va .

I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I

PHONE 992-5428
We will pay the call for
pickup.

ROBINSON'S LAUNDRY and
DRY CLEANING, POMEROY, 0.

·---------------------

II
II
II
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

0

McAuliffe misjudged Walt
Williams' popup in the second
inning which led to two runs
as Rick Dempsey, Rick Bladt
and Fred Stanley all followed
with s ingles. New York
scored a third-inning run on a
single by Thurman Munson
and a double by I)empsey off
the glove of centerfielder
Lynn, and the Yanks added
another tinged run in the
sixth on a runscoring single
by Sandy Alomar that left
field e• Jim Rice got his glove
on but couldn't hold.
In other AL action, Oakland
topped California 6-3, Detroit
edged Milwaukee S-4, Minnesota beat Texas S-4 and
Kan sas
City
defeated
Chicago 3-1 after losing the
opener of a doubleheader 108. A scheduled doubleheader,
Cleveland a t Baltimore, was
rained out.
New York blanked Pittsburgh 3-il, St. Louis whipped
Chicago
6-3,
Montreal
defeated Philadelphia 6-5,
Houston beat Atlanta 5-3, Los
Angeles edged San Francisco
3-1 and San Diego nipped
Cincinnati 2-1 in National
League games.
A's 6, Angels 3
Vida Blue pitched a lourhitter to notch his 18th victory

and Reggie Jackson and Billy
Williams walloped two-run
homers to spark Oakland's
triumph over California. Blue
gave up a two-run homer to
Lee Stanton in the first , then
didn't allow another hit until
the eighth. Jackson 's homer
was his 30th, tops in the AL.
figers 5, Brewers 4
Gary Sutherland, Dan
Meyer , Willie Horton and Bill
Freehan each singled home a
run during a four-rlUI seventh
inning that Detroit its victory
over Milwaukee . Dave
lemancyck pitched 4 1-3
innings of shutout relief to
gain the win.
rwtns 5, Rangers 4
Phil Roof drove in three
rllns with a homer and a
single to lead Minnesota over
Texas. Roof hit a solo homer
to tie the score in the third
inning then singled home two
rlUls during a three-run sixth
that gave the Twins a S-1
lead. Bill Butler was the
winner in r e lief while
Ferguson Jenkins took the
loss .
Royals 8-3, While Sox 10-1
Blll Melton drove in ~ur
runs with a homer and a
sacrifice fly to lead Chicago
to victory in the opener

Oe\\'4etY Sernce
MAINTAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

Phone 773-5592
!\1\ASON FURNITURE .
HERMAN GRATE
W: VA.

FIREMEN'S AUXILIARY,
7:30 p.m . at the fire hall .
Hostesses are Kathy Caldwell
and Marilyo Epple.
THURSDAY
GALLIA COUNTY Salon
612, Eight and Forty, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Miss
Erma Smith, Pomeroy.
FRIDAY
HAPPY Harvesters Class ,
Trinity Church, 7:30p .m . in
the social room of the church.
SATURDAY
ICE
CREAM
Social,
Bashan Volun leer Fireme n
and Auxiliary members at
the firehouse with serving to
begin at 6 p.m .

Three information and
health programs will be held
this month at the Senior
Citizens Center, Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, director , has annoWJced.
On Sept. 15 Mrs . Maxine
Plummer, executive director
of the 648 Board will speak on
mental health at noon . On
Sept. 22, Miss Marta Guilkey,
home extension agent, will
speak on nutrl lion for senior
citizens during the noon hour,
and on Sept. 23 and 30, Mrs.
Lelah Weatherby a licensed
practical nurse, will offer
sessions on home nursing at'
10 :30 each day.
Mrs. Thomas advises that
plans are also being made
again this year through the
Meigs County Health Department for flu shots for senior
citizens.

Keep America
beaut!fut9 but keep
Amertca alive! ·
Some of America's most beautiful resort areas lie a long th e Atlantic Coast. And no
one wants to mar their beauty . .It's ·much too valuable a natural resource.
But, there's another tremendously valuable natural resourc~ over the horizon a lonll
the Atlantic Coast. Energy. Energy that is
needed to
ease

our nation's worsening energy crisis.
We must not sacrifice one resource for
the other.
And we needn't . Mod e rn techniques for
under-water drilling and delivery of fuel have
eliminated th e danger of permanent
e nviro nmental damage. An offshore drillin g
rig won't even be seen from the shore .
And offshore production will reduce tk
need fo r increased tanker traffic.
All domesti c sources of energy must be
· developed to meet our growing nat ional
fuel needs. The potential of the Atl a ntic o uter
continental shelf is grea t and ca n be realized
in an env ironmen tally safe manner.' The
Atl a ntic coast areas depend on a prosperous
America. And~ prosperous America
depends on energy.

Since 1968,
Columbia Gas has
been participating in
costly geophysical surveys
off I he Atlantic Coast . The tests
range from North Carolina to Nova
Scotia. We've also joined a 2S million
dollar drill ing exploration
prC' ·am off"Ca nada's east coast
a prOJ .ing ,source of clean, naturai
ga:; ~o help ease the energy crisis.

cA.uMBIAGAS
Gas I• procious, pure onerlD' , •.• uoe 11 - l 7.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs.' Herbert Roush
Mrs. Brenda Pettit, son
Jamie, Mrs. Juanita Justice
of Middleport, Mrs . Ethel
Sai'iions of Racine, Mr . and
Mrs. Carrole White, Darla ,
Deanna, Keith and Kevin
were dinner guests Sunday of
Mrs. Ruth Parsons and Edna.
Mrs. Mary Donohue, local,
Holly Friend of Syracuse
were married by the Rev .
Edward Griffith at his home
in Long Bottom Rt. I. Attending were Seth Friend,
Mr. and Mrs. Luke Friend.
Mr. and Mrs. Friend are
residing in Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush visited Mrs. Gladys
Shields Tuesday evening at
Racine.
Mrs. Edna Roush visited
her brother Olt Boston
Sunday.
Mr. · Pape spent Sunday
with Mrs. Shields and took
them home.

•.

'

" ·.

.. . . •.

"'

...·"...

~~~USDA Choice Beef ~

La7

GROUND~

r
r HAM SALAD

CHUCK LB. gge.
GROUND
1
l ROUN_D_~~ .,p9

~---

SUPERIORS

.

DUTCH

.

LOAF

. .. . .

.......

.

'•'

... ,
_

... ~'"'~

BONELESS '\~

-"""""._.,....-,....

-...-.....
-."""'...
....
....
-·-....

Ham Slices ,·)
l

)

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

'

;:

16 oz.
bottles

DIET RITE COLA

.

..,.....
,,...

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

~LB99e

,.

., d ...

SA TURDAV ONL V

... '
•t

.......

FAVORITE BREAD

KRAFT
MIRACLE WHIPPED
MARGARINE

4

8 • 16 OZ. BOTTlES

lvs. for

...
..

'"

;,

'1 00

....

,._

1-POUND PACKAGE

.. hO I

All Week Price

DAD'S
ROOT BEER
16 oz.
BOffiES

8

.,

..

DIET RITE
FLAVORS

PLUS TAX &amp; DEPOSIT

'"

'

$100
4
qts.

$139

Plus Tax &amp; Deposit

16 oz.

.. ' "
...

Friday Only

'

.

'"

GRADE "A" LARGE

_PURINA
PUPPY CHOW

~

CUCUMBER SLICES

2

2 4~~~ gge 4

16 Ol
JARS

JAR

HEINZ
STEAK SAUCE

HI-C
FRUIT DRINKS

5 Ol
BOffiES

$100

JOBO

LIQUID DETERGENT

DOG FOOD

48 Ol
BOTTLE

1

8

CANS

00

..

$} OQ

"' ..

...
FROZEN FOODS

2-LB. BOX

FRESH, CRISP

'" '

BANQUET
FRIED CHICKEff

·CELERY
PANTRV

29~NCH

PACK ®

15 Wrapped bars

YELLOW ONIONS
POUNDS

$}29

'
"

SANDWICH BAGS

IVORY

PRODUCE SPECIALS

3

.

sge ~=: 4/$1

18 Ol

DOZEN
DURKEE

GLAD BAG

KRAFT
GRAPE
JELLY

EGGS

$2.25 VALUE

69~

ONLY

"

$ 89

"'

$}99
BANQUET ·
TV DINNER ...........-........ 49~
SEALTEST

EACH

ICE cREAM .•...•........... 99~ lh

·~:

GAL ~~

~----------------~~ ·

,,

·I

.,

.

' t 'I

... ,, ,

.

Programs
planned

Red Sox begin slide
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The signs are ominous for
the Boston Red Sox, but the
club remains convinced that
the future will be much
brighter this season than it
was a year ago.
Last Aug 30 and Sept. I the
Red Sox los t successive
games and began· a slide .that
saw them blow a five-game
lead in the final month and
lose the American League's
Eastern Division tiUe to the
Baltimore Orioles .
Monday night th e first
phase of that collapse was
repeated as the Red Sox lost
to the New York Yankees 4-2
for their third s uccessive
defeat and watched their lead
over Baltimore dwindle to 51'.!
games.
Will the rest of the Red Sox'
season be a repeat performance of 1974? Members
of both the Red Sox and the
Yankees think not.
"We 'll bounce back • I'm
not worried, " said rookie
Fred Lynn , a main reason
why baseball men feel Boston
is not likely to fold again. " I
know . we're the better
ballclub. We're too good and
have too much depth. Last
year you could feel it on the
bench that the club was going
to lose . This year it's not that
way . I never played on a loser
lUI til I turned pro . This year is
going to be different. "
The Red Sox, however ,
didn't look anything like
championship material
Monday night as they fielded
rather shoddily and let the
Yankees take advantage of
their mistakes. Plays that in
past weeks had been routine
outs for Red Sox defen'd ers
turned Into base hits or errors
and allowed New Yvrk to
build an early leild.
Third
baseman Dick

Fresh Ground From
USDA Choice Beef.
It's Better!

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY LODGE 164
F&amp;AM, regular meeting, 7:30'
p.m , All Master Masons
invited.

INSURANCE
STORE

. ,..., ,

GROUND BEEF

OHIO ETA Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, at
.. the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co . Cultural
report by Sharon Bailey,
hostesses to be last year's
pledges.

INSURANCE

.._.

..... ,,,

A REGULAR meeting of
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F &amp; AM, will be held at
7:30 p.m . All Master Masons
are invited.

@0

.,

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
.
PHONE 992·3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. w e reserve the right to rn;ut quantttt~. MIDOLE PORT, 0.

LB.

spare ribs, homemade ice

sc hools will be in operat ion,
bringi ng the state's total to tin down to the ex~'¢'
37, se r ving 376 schoo l llOJ~.OJe: your inc:tedistricts .
IJerldeJr~t insurance
The s tate superintendent
also noted that durin g the
We'refreetoplace
1975-76 school year, school
buses will travel more than IY9\u insurance with
132 million miles transport ing
of eeveraletzonr
1.3 million students ; and food
oompaniee.
service operations will se rve
more than 44 million lunches IIUI,awe're free to
and 8 million breakfasts.
li:h&lt;XIII8 the best poliIn
addition ,
Ohio
foryou.
educational te levis ion,
leading the nation wilh 13
broadcasting stations, will
serve more than 1,268,090
students . Beginning Sept. 22,
Reuter-8rogan
c ompletion of a two-way

principals,

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10

LABOR DAY celebration in
Chester starting with garden
tractor pull, 10 a.m .; parade.
I : 30 p.m. ; bicycle races
water fight, greased pole,
p .m. Barbecued chicke n and

"bid y.ou.~ you

•

.._
...

MIN UTE STEAK

:i

Six new join t vocationa l

microwave

VERY GOOD - NO WASTE

Social
Calendar

education per pupil will be
nearly $1,100. This compare~
to an es timated $1,058 per
pupil in 1974-75 and $969 in
1973-74.

....."".

'

'

�\

~ - The

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo.rt-Pomeroy , 0 .. Tuesday , Sept. 2, 1975

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o .. Tuesday , Sept. 2, 1975

Gardeners discuss

~~ARDWICK

home flowe·r show
Happy Birthday Germs"?
Dear Rap:
My little boy Is at the age when he's invited to many birthday parties. ! watch kids blow out the ca ndles on their birU1day
cakes, and I shudder. Think of all those germs they 'rc em.
bedding in (he frosting'
Why don 't you start a campHign to get this unsanitarv
tradition stopped' - WATCHFUL MOM
.
Dear Mom :
While we 're at it, shou ld we also cam paitjn tu stop kids
from breathing ?
. Sorry, you came to the wron g columnists. Blowing out
birthday cake candles may b~ unsanitary, bu t so is kissing and both are lovely tradition s. - HE lE N AND SUE
NOTE FROM HELEN: I read a recent doctor's column
which said, if the piece of cake is eaten immediatelv the
gastric juice will get rid of any ~emu; which might havC been
blown on it. Of c·ow-se, a few might lodge betwef'n the teeth a nd
multiply , bu t let's not go into that.
I -1 I

Dear Helen and Sue.
So you want to kn ow what "cardi gan" means, as in ~ fr om
amorous boy to hold out girl l, " Don't worry, I'll use a c:ardigan. ' '
.. -You were on t he right track, Sue. At c.~n y rate, my guess is
he was trying to "pull the wool " over her eves ' - YOUR
SISTER, KATHY
Dear Readers :
You can see why life is never dull around the Bottel house.
Our kids come "e-quipped'" - HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE : We come by it naturally . Otl1er day I
was taking Mom through an automatic car wnsh when my car
started to leak. Suggested Mom, "Why don't you open the dour
and let the water run out ?"
+ -H
Rap :
I really feel sorry for those people who wrote they get
upset over Italian jokes. I'm an Italian gir l, a senior in college,
and !love them.! bel I tell more Italian jokes than anyone else
in Texas.
Don ' t misunderstand: I 'm proud o( my heritage. I've
.studied everything available on Italy, ·cmd I also speak the
language. Bullet's face it : in a country whose goverrunenl has
collapsed 43 limes in 46 years, when you've lost your sense of
humor, you've lost everything '
. Why can't people learn the best way to take a sting out of a
JOke meant as an insult is to laugh at it' And since when have
we Italians gotten too big for a little teasing' The Poles didn't .
Now you see POIJSH POWER on bumpers everywhere.
I don 't see how anyone could be proud of his heritage when
he's so tense that a few teasing words ruin his whole day. To
such people I say : "Loosen up! Beat the jokers to the punch
line and top their jokes with better ones of your own!"
As Giovanni Boccaccio (Did you know Shakespeare and
Chaucer plagarized his "Decameron" heavily ?) said, "A man
is only as great as his ability to laugh at himself." 1I know a lot
of others said it too, but NATURALLY an Italian sa id itfirsl ! )
- NICKY MANZONI

Mrs. Davis entertained
Mrs. Michael Davis was
honored recently at her home
· with a layette shower with
Mrs . Dorothy Bryan and Mrs .
Sharon Neulzling, hostesses.
Mrs. Nancy Manley handled decorations for the show
using pink, blue and white
streamers which extended
from the ceiling to a bassinet .
Cake, ice cream, mints and
soft drinks were served.
Games were played with
prizes going to Avanell
George,
Gail
Darst,
Rosemary Hysell, Marie
Manley, Cathy Osborne,
Connie Seholderer, Delores
Tyree, Mary Burton, Sarah
Fowler and Glenna Little.
Others attending
the
shower were Freda Davis
Lucille King, Janet Harrison:
Marie
Steiner,
Tracy

Schulderer , Crystal and
Tracy Manley and Mickey
Davis .
Sendin g gifts were Mrs.
Hazel Burton, Kelly Tyree,
Eulonda Halley , Becky
Drenner, Ruxie Oiler, Marcia
Harrison, Mr . and Mrs . Art
Snyder and Dixie, Shirley
Gibbs ,
Grace
French,
Virginia Karr , Debbie Clonch
and Neva Wi se.
Gifts were als9 received
fr om Mr. and Mrs. John T.
Bryan, Travis City, Mich.;
Mr. and Mrs . Danny Bryan.
Springfield; Mr. and Mrs .
Albert Bryan , Reynoldsburg;
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bryan ,
Bellaire, Mich.; Mr. and Mr s.
Stanley Bryan, Carroll; Mr .
and Mrs. Lynn Housh ,
Lorain; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Hussell, Lorain.

Reedsville News Notes
By Mrs. I~ Balderson
Mrs. Eunice Sprague of
Arcadia Nursing Home,
Coolville, former resident of
ReedS'ville will celebrate her
98th birthday Sept. 3.
Mr . and Mrs. Ben Buckley
and Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Humphrey
and
Robin
recently spent a day at King's
Island in Cincinnati.
Patty Cro ss nickl e and
Robin Humphrey recently
vacationed in Florida, among
some of the sights they
visited were Daytona Beach,
Cape Canaveral, Walt Disney
World, Sea World, and Busc h
Gardens.
Miss Naomi Pickens, of
Athens spent a few day s wi th
the Walter Brown family . ·
Recent visitors of Mrs.
Ros~ Thomas were Mrs .
Gladys
Baughman
of
Gahanna, Frank and Jack
Cale of ColUfl.lbus. They were
here to celebrate the birthday
of Mrs. Thomas.

Mr . and Mrs. Gary Walker
visited Sunday with Mr . and
Mrs . Charles Humphrey and
Robin.
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Rose atte nded the Rose
Reunion at Can ton Sunday .
Mr . and Mrs. Gene Wilson
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Congrove and
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Me·
Nearney and son , Jason Eric
at Zanesville . Jason is Mr .
and Mrs. Wilson's new greatgrands on .
Mrs .
Nellie
Carvin ,
Parkersburg, ·W. Ya. visited
Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
Carl Buckley .

RUTLAND - Plans for a
home flower show to be held
s.!pt. 24 were made when the
Hutland Friendly Gardeners
1net recently at . the home of
Mrs. Man e Birchfield.
Mrs. Donna Willi(.lmson is
chairwonwn of the show
which will feature ~e v c ral

Willford to submit a colwri n
fur Sept. 19, and Sharon Barr
for December .
It wa s noted that Mrs . Bolin
and Mrs. Suzy Carpenter will
be attending a judges'
e xa mination in Co lu'm bus
next rnon th.
Plans wer e made for
c !H ss l' s with the t he me seve ral me111bers to attend
··Me ig s
County,
lY75." the C ardeners Day Out at
Arra ngernenlc; will he judged . Wooster Sept. 17 at the Ohio
Twu arnmgeml•nts will be A~ricultur e and Re sea rch
exhibited in eaf'h cla ss of the Development Center there.
show whi ch will be held at the Mrs. Carpenter thanke d Mrs.
home of Mr s. Ma rgaret Bolin. Mrs .- Birchfield and
Mrs . Judy Snowden for their
Ed w~1rds .
In pr e paration for the participation in the Meig s
show, Mrs . Janet Bolin made County Fair nower show . It
arr&lt;-tn~emenl s
to demon- wa s al so noted that the c lub
strate suitable entries in the had entl!re{l exhi bits in !he
Hegatta nower show held in
l"ia sses.
HcafJ at the meeting was an June .
Devotwns by Mr s. Birchinvi tation fr om the Bend 0'
the Hiv er Garden Club an- field included a po e m,
" Prayer of Thanks " fr om the
nouncin ~ an open meeting on
Sf-pt. 22 at \.,·hich time Mrs . Garden Path Mrs . Ca rol
Bert Gnmm. Mei gs County Wolfe won the tra ve ling
Contact Chairwoma n, will be prize , Mrs. Snowden, the door
prize . Both prizes were dried
honored.
Also read was a com- flowers provided by Mrs.
municat io n about Green Willford .
Refreshmen ts were se rved
Thumb Notes for The Daily
Sentinel w1th Mr s Charlott by the hostess .

Polly's Pointers
11Y

'

'

• .. canning Blld cooking
are easier with Hlll'llwick's
versitsl 3 in 1
.. .... .,
Griddle Kit!

NOW

-

l ____
America's ,,
Standard of .
·
Cooking
Excellence i
Since

-.

r

...

'.!!:

• ":t,;
_.
'·

-;,~'

'

1

1879

,,.

,.,

THE ONLY OTHER BAND to participate in Monday's Labor Day Parade in Pomeroy

i-'
Fu ll

3fi'

wt rJn t,

POLLY CI\AMEit

W ood CJt illn

POLLY'S PRORLEMS
DEAR POLLY - Please
tell me how to clean a tarnished copper pitcher . This
pitcher means a ~;: rea t deal to
me . My father who has
petssed away made it and I
want to use it to hold flowers
in his memory . - MHS. C. M.
DEAR MHS. C. M. - There
are very good commercial
copper ('leaners on th e
market. Or you might rub it
with a rut lemon that has
been dipped in salt Also, a
paste made of salt and
vinegar will remove stains
and corrosion. Be sure to
HINSE THOROUGHLY. Any
remaining cleaner will turn
green. Dry and rub pitcher
with a clean soft cloth. If a
higher luster is wanted rub
with a milk scouring powder
on a damp cloth and then
rinse well. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Mine is a
gardening Pointer that has
been most helpful to me. I
always had trouble getting
small seeds like lettuce and

100 attend
potluck dinner
Over 100 persons attended
the recent potluck dinner at
the Senior Citizens Center
where August birthdays and
anniversaries were observed
with recognition and flowers.
Presented flowers for being
over 80 were Lillian Gress
and Billy Beal, Pomeroy.
Others celebrating birthdays
were ~unie Brinker, Racine;
Vena Whaley, Hock Springs;
Willis Anthony, Middleport
and Jessie Dodderer , Tuppers Plains.
Peace
roses
were
presented to Seth and Gladys
Nicholson for their 60th
wedding anniversary, and
Orner and Dorothy Hess,
52nd.
Teresa Eyer gave a
r ea ding, " Growing Old," Bill
Hoselton entertained with his
·•one man band," and the
senior
c itizens
choir
presented several selections.

~·h

carrots sow n without their
being too thick. Now I mix
such seeds with wet coffee
grounds and plant them . ·I
have had such good results J
thought others might benefit
fr om this, too. - MHS. A.M .
DEAH POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the beauty
shops that charge for services not given. I like my h0:1ir
washed and rinsed better
than most shops do it so wash
it myself . Then I go to a shop
for a set and comb-&lt;Jut but
have to pay for the shampoo
as well . - MRS. P.L.C.
DEAR MRS. P.L.C. Doubtless the shampoo girl
has to be paid whether she is
used or not and is a part of the
shop's fixed overhead.. Have
you discussed this with the
owner of the shop? POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - In these
days of enforced thrift I find
that removing only half of
that seal over the performations in the top of a
cleanser can makes· the can
of powder last almost twice
as long. With all the holes
open it is hard to get out just a
small amount of powder so a
lot is wasted.
Also , since becoming so
energy-conscious it dawned
on me that I was turning on
my hot water faucet many
times when cold water would
have done just as well.
To remind me that hot water
is a " no-no " unless hot water
is really required I keep a cup
inverted over the round
handle on my faucet. On
other types of handles other·
reminder devices would have
to be used .
The lady who thought
manufacttrrers should make
notches in sewing machine
bobbins to keep the thread
from coming off and tangling
should keep them in a clean
round plastic pill bottle so
they cannot " mix" with their
neighbors. I do this and it is
so easy to check and see what
colors of thread are on the
bobbins . - LELA.

Avaliablf'

11 1

sponsored by the Pomeroy Fire Department and emergency squad was that of Eastern
High School.

~

·~--~

.

SOUTHEHN HIGH SC HOOL'S smartly stepping marching band participated in
Monday's parade in Pomeroy .

'.II·

Center

'

Pa n• ·l,

--

=

,,

·POMEROY'S PEE WEE BALL team, the Red Legs, took part in Monday's activities a s
they rode on top of a fire truck.

House values have d ou bl ed
m the last 20 ye ar s_ Unless
your cove, age has d01.1bled .

your hre 1ns urance may
only pay lor hall a house.

THREE IN ONE GRIDDLE KIT -M dd 'e G1iddle f or p a~ca ~e s ba c-.,r.
h ombu,g er~
(on•r• • •o f, 1th B u rn~&gt; r for c dd • t •onr~ l ho' •d "ly
n... ul, or fo, t he l''"'"n'l \f' n\on IJ ,&lt;. ( 0 ""' fo r nPd, • (H'ul w or~.~pacf'
I.A vaolo ble on ~OITl{' 36 " rt&gt; o d r l~ )

Available vm h
Cont.nuous Clean Oven

$329.95
JED STRUBLE drove the la st vehicle company unit - in the parade.

loday' s and lomorrow 'l
values As k a N;~t• on w u.le

agent lor det ails

P. J. PAULEY
307

Spring Ave., Pomerq_y

SMOKEY THE BEAR was on hand Monday as the parade moved down Pomeroy's West
Main Street onto Butternut Ave. There were not many spectators to view the parade due
partially to the fact that the ferry senice was not operating .

MR. AND MHS. ROY MILLER ride in one of their
antique autos in the Labor Day Parade, a part of the day's
celebration staged in Chester Monday.

Includes Canning Tips and
Money-Saving Instru ctions!

Cflardwi~•..

GJleauty at tts best.
Full 36" Width, 5th Burner. Tellun Gr1ddle. Gnd dle
Cover , Storage S1de With She l f. Full Porcelatn Oven
w1th Insulate d Ove n Bonom. Two Oven Racks , Two ·

P1ece Bror le r nnd Pan. Lilt Of l \11a1n Top, All Porce
la •n Exter1orl

CANNING SPECIAL THIS WEEK!

~
~

N ~ l ·on " !I~ ~ U!u ll F,tt 1~"'-'·•n c "
ITO""ft Of!1 Ct C&lt;llvmt&gt;~ ~ 0~•0

~
~

} 15 CU. FT. CHEST FREEZER ........................... ONLY *299.951
: 20 CU. FT. CHEST FREEZER ............. : ............. ONLY *349.95
.
,...~ 16 CU • FT• UPRIGHT FREEZER..........
.. ...... ONLY *329.95

Co

.

!
t*
~

! 18 CU. FT. UPRIGHT FREEZER ......~~~~~.~~~~... ONLY *344.95 : ·
•••****************************************************·'•'
HURRY IN TODAY FOR THESE GREAT CANNING-FREEZER SPECIALS!
36-QUART PLASTIC CONTAINERS- FREE WITH EVERY FREEZER

PH . 992-2318

rJ ;~;.~~~~~~.~

a fire

Strikes marked

.

Homeowner's Insurance
I rom Na 11on'w•d e •s designed
to prolect your home at

EVEN THOUGH THE FEHRY SERVICE was not operating Monda y because of high
water, the Mason rescue unit drove by way of Point Pleasant to participate in Monday's
Labor Day parade in Pomeroy .

eggs,

***************FREEZER SPECIALI~***************

tiome

.•

d l l colo rs!

Could you

at today's prices?

.,

LEADING THE LABOR DAY PARADE in Pomeroy
Monday was Frank Vaughan, a member of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion .

$

your

·•

t oulr' Pr

-·..

._.

~

•

.

.i'&gt;r-~·
~~- ..
. .

rebuild

•
'

Labor Day, a tzme or parades
'

lcllo n G· ddiH . :~r,cJfllf:l Co·:~r
S torfllj!~ :-.td (~ W i th c,hf'lf' J u ll
Porcela rn Oven w •t h II)S:..Jiated
oven h o 11 om. 1wo Uven J~ac k s.
Two -p 1P. c e Br olle · a nd par1, L tft
o ff rrt&lt;wt top , 1-\ I Po rc elatn
ex tenor. Ltgll tcd Ba rk r.:onel.
D tgttfll
C tork
and
ltrnrr.

Lemon and salt
cut tarnish

D.

'

•

1.

RUMMAGE SALE SET
CHILD BORN
A rummage sale will be
Mr. and Mrs. William held Wednesday at the home
Sellers announce the birth of of Mrs. Martha Hoffman, 148
a daughter, Kyle Renee , Aug. Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, by
24 . She weighed 7 lbs., 4 ozs. the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Jane and Juli Whithead Mrs. Paul Sellers, Portland ;
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mr s. Emmett
WORD RECEIVED
Terry Hoffman and daughter, Rawson, Middleport. Mr . and
Mrs . Robert Manley has
at Morehead, Ky .
Mrs. Eber Pickens, Portland received word of the recent
Barbara Henderson spent and Mrs K. atl·e R
.
awson, death of hef sister~in-law,
th e wee ken d Wl·th Mr . and Grove City
are great- Mrs . Ray Eblin, the former
Mrs. Ralph Henderson at_ grandparents:
Susan Russell , at Tr"v.
Portland.
Mis. Kathryn Dietz of
Belpre, and . Mrs . Lyle
Balderson and Kay have
returned home ailer spending ·
a few days at Virginia Beach,
OFFICE
RS:9 : 30to1 2toS(CLOSE
Va. They also spent a day at
AT
NOON
ON
THURS.l-EAST COURT
Williamsburg, visiting the
·l!isloric area.

'·

,,

I

992-2635

INGELS FURN.ITUREMIDDLEPORT
1

Reform proposed
in world economy
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
(UP!) - The United States
has called for a series
sweeping economic reforms
to narrow the gap between
"have" and ' 'have-not ' '
nations.
Ambassador
Daniel
Patrick Moynihan - subbing
for peaceshuttling Secretary
of State Henry Kissinger presented the wide-ranging
economic package Monday at
the opening of a special
session of the General
Assembly.
"We can offer our people
slogans or we can offer them
solutions," Moynihan said .
"We can deal in rhetoric or
we can deal in reality . My
govenunent has made its

choice."
The American ambassador
told the assembly "the fate of
1 billion people - half the
developing world and a
quarter of mankind - will be
affected by what we do or fail

to do."
The U.S. proposals include :
- Creation of a financing
agency to lend developing
countries up $10 billion to
offset
fluctuations
in
demands for their exports.
- Expansion of the capital
of the World Bank's International Finance Cor-

poration from $100 million to
at least $400 million.
- Creation of an Internationa l Energy Institute
energy
to
encourage
development.
- Creation of a n In ternational!nvestment Trust
Fund financed by private
investors to attract capital
for investment in developing
countries.
THE EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL BAND majorettes
Creation of an Instep out in front of the Eastern Band to add life to the
ternational Industrialization
Labor Day Parade staged in Chesler Monday afternoon. A
Institute to provide research
garden tractor pul1 , a water fight, and games and contests
on industrial .technology for
developing countries.
Although the plans call for
an outlay of billi ons of
dollars , U.S. experts said
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) $500,000 to be spent by the city
they did . not anticipate
largescale transfers of funds -- The Republican Site for physi ca l changes in
from the "haves" to the Selection Committee is to convention facilities and
meet Sunday to recommend a operating costs, not coWlting
"have nots."
th e $1 rental fee the
The U .N. economic debate convention site.
Kansas
City,
Mo., Republicans would have to
will last 12 days. Delegates
pay for use of four convention
Cleveland
and
Miami
Beach
from Iran, West Germany,
are front runners tor the 1976 facilities.
Norway, India and Argentina
But
Lt . Col. Bryce
were scheduled to speak this convention .
Thompson,
assistant police
But
city
officials
at
Kansas
morning and representatives
of China, Japan and . In~ City estimate the convention chief, said it would cost
could cost that city more than $600,000 to put police on 12donesia this afternoon.
Moynih3n's speech was . double the $500,000 it is hour workdays if the conwilling to pay, with no clear vention were brought here
notably nonpolitical, but he
ideas about where the money next August. That would
criticized the 1973 escalation
bring the total cost to $1.1
would come from.
of prices by oil-producing
million
.
A contingency contract becountries as a cause of world
The police were able to
tween Kansas City a nd the
economic troubles.
party calls for not more than obtain a la,st-m inut e grant

rounded out the ce lebration sponsored by the Chester
Volunteer Fire Department. Area fire department
equipment was a part of the parade.

GOP selection committee to meet Sunday
from the fede ral Law Enfor,ceme nt Assistance Adminis tration last December
when the Democral-3 held
their mid-term convention
here . Police officials said
they are unsure whether the
LEAA would come through
again.
The city council has proposed
to raise the $500,000 already
committed for the convention
by revising the city's occupational license tax for businesses, but Mayor Charles B.
Wheeler Jr. is trying to raise
$300,000of the total by private
contributions .

HARRELSON'S BACK
NEW YOHK (UP! ) - The
New York Mets Monday
reactivated Bud Harrelson
and promptly inserted the
veteran shortstop in the
starting line up for their
Labor Day contest with the
Pittsburg!, Pirates.
Mel-3' relief pitcher Ken
Sanders, who suffered a ruptured blood vessel in his right
eye Aug . 10 when struck by a
return throw while warming
up , also was placed on the
roster.
Harrelson , who underwent
s ur gery May 31 for the
removal of loose cartilage in
his right knee , had been
acting as first ba se coach for
the Mcts.

lahor"s holiday
By
United
Press
In·
temational
Perhaps it was an appropriate way to finish off
Labor Day - to honor the
workers of America.
- Firemen were on strike
in Berkeley, Calif., and Pine
Bluff, Ark .
- Flight attendants had
shut down National Airlines.
- Coal miners were in their
fourth week of a cripping
walkout.
- Teachers in the nat ion 's
three largest cities, New
York, Chicago and Los
Angeles, were threatening to
stay off the job .
Do ckworkers
in
Louisiana wererefusing to
load grain on ships bound for
Russia.
- Striking drivers had
halted bus service in
Louisville, Ky .
Union officials in Berkeley
predicted its week-&lt;Jld strike
could turn into an extended
walkout. "Negotiations have
completely broken down ,"
said Jack Rinne, president of
Fire Fighters Association
Local 1227. "We're gearing
for a long strike."
Firemen walked off the job
in Pine Bluff, Ark., Aug . 13.
The strikers were fired, and
Gov. David W. Pryor
mobilized
30
National
Guardsmen to staff the fire
stations. The slate AFL-CIO
held a rally Monday in
support of the firemen , and
its president, J. Bill Becker,
called on Pryor to help settle
the strike.
About 1,200 flight attendants grounded National
Airlines Monday with its
second major strike in less
than 10 months. But contract
talks resumed a few hours

later in Washington, the
union announced .
In Charleston , W. Va., the
United Mine Workers international union was hit with
a $500,000fine for contempt of
court today for failing to get
striking members back to
work. The strikers also
demanded union funds to
" feed
our
bro thers,"
threatening,
it
UMW
President Arnold Miller
"don't send it to us , we'll
come and get it."
A wildcat strike by 274
union bus drivers halted bus
service in Louisville for 12
hours Monday. The strike
started at midnight after
rejection of a tentative new
contract offer . A spokesman
said the walkout was not as
disruptive, with a curtailed
Labor Day schedule, as it
would have been on an ordinary work day . Negotiations were continuing.
Hawaii was faced with ·a
statewide dock strike at midnight Friday if contract talks
between the Longshoremen
and the stevedoring industry
do not reach settlement.
Federal and state mediators
have been involved in the
talks since last week.
In Reserve, La., about 10
miles up the Mississippi
River from New Orleans,
eight dockworkers walked off
the job Sunday night after
loading wheat bound for
Russia . A Longshoremen's
spokesman said the men had
been working as a result of a
misunderstanding and would
not return. The New Orleans
Steamship AssoCiation asked
a federal court last Friday to
order· the dockworkers to stay
on the job . The court
declined .

�\

~ - The

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo.rt-Pomeroy , 0 .. Tuesday , Sept. 2, 1975

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o .. Tuesday , Sept. 2, 1975

Gardeners discuss

~~ARDWICK

home flowe·r show
Happy Birthday Germs"?
Dear Rap:
My little boy Is at the age when he's invited to many birthday parties. ! watch kids blow out the ca ndles on their birU1day
cakes, and I shudder. Think of all those germs they 'rc em.
bedding in (he frosting'
Why don 't you start a campHign to get this unsanitarv
tradition stopped' - WATCHFUL MOM
.
Dear Mom :
While we 're at it, shou ld we also cam paitjn tu stop kids
from breathing ?
. Sorry, you came to the wron g columnists. Blowing out
birthday cake candles may b~ unsanitary, bu t so is kissing and both are lovely tradition s. - HE lE N AND SUE
NOTE FROM HELEN: I read a recent doctor's column
which said, if the piece of cake is eaten immediatelv the
gastric juice will get rid of any ~emu; which might havC been
blown on it. Of c·ow-se, a few might lodge betwef'n the teeth a nd
multiply , bu t let's not go into that.
I -1 I

Dear Helen and Sue.
So you want to kn ow what "cardi gan" means, as in ~ fr om
amorous boy to hold out girl l, " Don't worry, I'll use a c:ardigan. ' '
.. -You were on t he right track, Sue. At c.~n y rate, my guess is
he was trying to "pull the wool " over her eves ' - YOUR
SISTER, KATHY
Dear Readers :
You can see why life is never dull around the Bottel house.
Our kids come "e-quipped'" - HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE : We come by it naturally . Otl1er day I
was taking Mom through an automatic car wnsh when my car
started to leak. Suggested Mom, "Why don't you open the dour
and let the water run out ?"
+ -H
Rap :
I really feel sorry for those people who wrote they get
upset over Italian jokes. I'm an Italian gir l, a senior in college,
and !love them.! bel I tell more Italian jokes than anyone else
in Texas.
Don ' t misunderstand: I 'm proud o( my heritage. I've
.studied everything available on Italy, ·cmd I also speak the
language. Bullet's face it : in a country whose goverrunenl has
collapsed 43 limes in 46 years, when you've lost your sense of
humor, you've lost everything '
. Why can't people learn the best way to take a sting out of a
JOke meant as an insult is to laugh at it' And since when have
we Italians gotten too big for a little teasing' The Poles didn't .
Now you see POIJSH POWER on bumpers everywhere.
I don 't see how anyone could be proud of his heritage when
he's so tense that a few teasing words ruin his whole day. To
such people I say : "Loosen up! Beat the jokers to the punch
line and top their jokes with better ones of your own!"
As Giovanni Boccaccio (Did you know Shakespeare and
Chaucer plagarized his "Decameron" heavily ?) said, "A man
is only as great as his ability to laugh at himself." 1I know a lot
of others said it too, but NATURALLY an Italian sa id itfirsl ! )
- NICKY MANZONI

Mrs. Davis entertained
Mrs. Michael Davis was
honored recently at her home
· with a layette shower with
Mrs . Dorothy Bryan and Mrs .
Sharon Neulzling, hostesses.
Mrs. Nancy Manley handled decorations for the show
using pink, blue and white
streamers which extended
from the ceiling to a bassinet .
Cake, ice cream, mints and
soft drinks were served.
Games were played with
prizes going to Avanell
George,
Gail
Darst,
Rosemary Hysell, Marie
Manley, Cathy Osborne,
Connie Seholderer, Delores
Tyree, Mary Burton, Sarah
Fowler and Glenna Little.
Others attending
the
shower were Freda Davis
Lucille King, Janet Harrison:
Marie
Steiner,
Tracy

Schulderer , Crystal and
Tracy Manley and Mickey
Davis .
Sendin g gifts were Mrs.
Hazel Burton, Kelly Tyree,
Eulonda Halley , Becky
Drenner, Ruxie Oiler, Marcia
Harrison, Mr . and Mrs . Art
Snyder and Dixie, Shirley
Gibbs ,
Grace
French,
Virginia Karr , Debbie Clonch
and Neva Wi se.
Gifts were als9 received
fr om Mr. and Mrs. John T.
Bryan, Travis City, Mich.;
Mr. and Mrs . Danny Bryan.
Springfield; Mr. and Mrs .
Albert Bryan , Reynoldsburg;
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bryan ,
Bellaire, Mich.; Mr. and Mr s.
Stanley Bryan, Carroll; Mr .
and Mrs. Lynn Housh ,
Lorain; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Hussell, Lorain.

Reedsville News Notes
By Mrs. I~ Balderson
Mrs. Eunice Sprague of
Arcadia Nursing Home,
Coolville, former resident of
ReedS'ville will celebrate her
98th birthday Sept. 3.
Mr . and Mrs. Ben Buckley
and Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Humphrey
and
Robin
recently spent a day at King's
Island in Cincinnati.
Patty Cro ss nickl e and
Robin Humphrey recently
vacationed in Florida, among
some of the sights they
visited were Daytona Beach,
Cape Canaveral, Walt Disney
World, Sea World, and Busc h
Gardens.
Miss Naomi Pickens, of
Athens spent a few day s wi th
the Walter Brown family . ·
Recent visitors of Mrs.
Ros~ Thomas were Mrs .
Gladys
Baughman
of
Gahanna, Frank and Jack
Cale of ColUfl.lbus. They were
here to celebrate the birthday
of Mrs. Thomas.

Mr . and Mrs. Gary Walker
visited Sunday with Mr . and
Mrs . Charles Humphrey and
Robin.
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Rose atte nded the Rose
Reunion at Can ton Sunday .
Mr . and Mrs. Gene Wilson
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Congrove and
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Me·
Nearney and son , Jason Eric
at Zanesville . Jason is Mr .
and Mrs. Wilson's new greatgrands on .
Mrs .
Nellie
Carvin ,
Parkersburg, ·W. Ya. visited
Sunday with Mr . and Mrs.
Carl Buckley .

RUTLAND - Plans for a
home flower show to be held
s.!pt. 24 were made when the
Hutland Friendly Gardeners
1net recently at . the home of
Mrs. Man e Birchfield.
Mrs. Donna Willi(.lmson is
chairwonwn of the show
which will feature ~e v c ral

Willford to submit a colwri n
fur Sept. 19, and Sharon Barr
for December .
It wa s noted that Mrs . Bolin
and Mrs. Suzy Carpenter will
be attending a judges'
e xa mination in Co lu'm bus
next rnon th.
Plans wer e made for
c !H ss l' s with the t he me seve ral me111bers to attend
··Me ig s
County,
lY75." the C ardeners Day Out at
Arra ngernenlc; will he judged . Wooster Sept. 17 at the Ohio
Twu arnmgeml•nts will be A~ricultur e and Re sea rch
exhibited in eaf'h cla ss of the Development Center there.
show whi ch will be held at the Mrs. Carpenter thanke d Mrs.
home of Mr s. Ma rgaret Bolin. Mrs .- Birchfield and
Mrs . Judy Snowden for their
Ed w~1rds .
In pr e paration for the participation in the Meig s
show, Mrs . Janet Bolin made County Fair nower show . It
arr&lt;-tn~emenl s
to demon- wa s al so noted that the c lub
strate suitable entries in the had entl!re{l exhi bits in !he
Hegatta nower show held in
l"ia sses.
HcafJ at the meeting was an June .
Devotwns by Mr s. Birchinvi tation fr om the Bend 0'
the Hiv er Garden Club an- field included a po e m,
" Prayer of Thanks " fr om the
nouncin ~ an open meeting on
Sf-pt. 22 at \.,·hich time Mrs . Garden Path Mrs . Ca rol
Bert Gnmm. Mei gs County Wolfe won the tra ve ling
Contact Chairwoma n, will be prize , Mrs. Snowden, the door
prize . Both prizes were dried
honored.
Also read was a com- flowers provided by Mrs.
municat io n about Green Willford .
Refreshmen ts were se rved
Thumb Notes for The Daily
Sentinel w1th Mr s Charlott by the hostess .

Polly's Pointers
11Y

'

'

• .. canning Blld cooking
are easier with Hlll'llwick's
versitsl 3 in 1
.. .... .,
Griddle Kit!

NOW

-

l ____
America's ,,
Standard of .
·
Cooking
Excellence i
Since

-.

r

...

'.!!:

• ":t,;
_.
'·

-;,~'

'

1

1879

,,.

,.,

THE ONLY OTHER BAND to participate in Monday's Labor Day Parade in Pomeroy

i-'
Fu ll

3fi'

wt rJn t,

POLLY CI\AMEit

W ood CJt illn

POLLY'S PRORLEMS
DEAR POLLY - Please
tell me how to clean a tarnished copper pitcher . This
pitcher means a ~;: rea t deal to
me . My father who has
petssed away made it and I
want to use it to hold flowers
in his memory . - MHS. C. M.
DEAR MHS. C. M. - There
are very good commercial
copper ('leaners on th e
market. Or you might rub it
with a rut lemon that has
been dipped in salt Also, a
paste made of salt and
vinegar will remove stains
and corrosion. Be sure to
HINSE THOROUGHLY. Any
remaining cleaner will turn
green. Dry and rub pitcher
with a clean soft cloth. If a
higher luster is wanted rub
with a milk scouring powder
on a damp cloth and then
rinse well. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Mine is a
gardening Pointer that has
been most helpful to me. I
always had trouble getting
small seeds like lettuce and

100 attend
potluck dinner
Over 100 persons attended
the recent potluck dinner at
the Senior Citizens Center
where August birthdays and
anniversaries were observed
with recognition and flowers.
Presented flowers for being
over 80 were Lillian Gress
and Billy Beal, Pomeroy.
Others celebrating birthdays
were ~unie Brinker, Racine;
Vena Whaley, Hock Springs;
Willis Anthony, Middleport
and Jessie Dodderer , Tuppers Plains.
Peace
roses
were
presented to Seth and Gladys
Nicholson for their 60th
wedding anniversary, and
Orner and Dorothy Hess,
52nd.
Teresa Eyer gave a
r ea ding, " Growing Old," Bill
Hoselton entertained with his
·•one man band," and the
senior
c itizens
choir
presented several selections.

~·h

carrots sow n without their
being too thick. Now I mix
such seeds with wet coffee
grounds and plant them . ·I
have had such good results J
thought others might benefit
fr om this, too. - MHS. A.M .
DEAH POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the beauty
shops that charge for services not given. I like my h0:1ir
washed and rinsed better
than most shops do it so wash
it myself . Then I go to a shop
for a set and comb-&lt;Jut but
have to pay for the shampoo
as well . - MRS. P.L.C.
DEAR MRS. P.L.C. Doubtless the shampoo girl
has to be paid whether she is
used or not and is a part of the
shop's fixed overhead.. Have
you discussed this with the
owner of the shop? POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - In these
days of enforced thrift I find
that removing only half of
that seal over the performations in the top of a
cleanser can makes· the can
of powder last almost twice
as long. With all the holes
open it is hard to get out just a
small amount of powder so a
lot is wasted.
Also , since becoming so
energy-conscious it dawned
on me that I was turning on
my hot water faucet many
times when cold water would
have done just as well.
To remind me that hot water
is a " no-no " unless hot water
is really required I keep a cup
inverted over the round
handle on my faucet. On
other types of handles other·
reminder devices would have
to be used .
The lady who thought
manufacttrrers should make
notches in sewing machine
bobbins to keep the thread
from coming off and tangling
should keep them in a clean
round plastic pill bottle so
they cannot " mix" with their
neighbors. I do this and it is
so easy to check and see what
colors of thread are on the
bobbins . - LELA.

Avaliablf'

11 1

sponsored by the Pomeroy Fire Department and emergency squad was that of Eastern
High School.

~

·~--~

.

SOUTHEHN HIGH SC HOOL'S smartly stepping marching band participated in
Monday's parade in Pomeroy .

'.II·

Center

'

Pa n• ·l,

--

=

,,

·POMEROY'S PEE WEE BALL team, the Red Legs, took part in Monday's activities a s
they rode on top of a fire truck.

House values have d ou bl ed
m the last 20 ye ar s_ Unless
your cove, age has d01.1bled .

your hre 1ns urance may
only pay lor hall a house.

THREE IN ONE GRIDDLE KIT -M dd 'e G1iddle f or p a~ca ~e s ba c-.,r.
h ombu,g er~
(on•r• • •o f, 1th B u rn~&gt; r for c dd • t •onr~ l ho' •d "ly
n... ul, or fo, t he l''"'"n'l \f' n\on IJ ,&lt;. ( 0 ""' fo r nPd, • (H'ul w or~.~pacf'
I.A vaolo ble on ~OITl{' 36 " rt&gt; o d r l~ )

Available vm h
Cont.nuous Clean Oven

$329.95
JED STRUBLE drove the la st vehicle company unit - in the parade.

loday' s and lomorrow 'l
values As k a N;~t• on w u.le

agent lor det ails

P. J. PAULEY
307

Spring Ave., Pomerq_y

SMOKEY THE BEAR was on hand Monday as the parade moved down Pomeroy's West
Main Street onto Butternut Ave. There were not many spectators to view the parade due
partially to the fact that the ferry senice was not operating .

MR. AND MHS. ROY MILLER ride in one of their
antique autos in the Labor Day Parade, a part of the day's
celebration staged in Chester Monday.

Includes Canning Tips and
Money-Saving Instru ctions!

Cflardwi~•..

GJleauty at tts best.
Full 36" Width, 5th Burner. Tellun Gr1ddle. Gnd dle
Cover , Storage S1de With She l f. Full Porcelatn Oven
w1th Insulate d Ove n Bonom. Two Oven Racks , Two ·

P1ece Bror le r nnd Pan. Lilt Of l \11a1n Top, All Porce
la •n Exter1orl

CANNING SPECIAL THIS WEEK!

~
~

N ~ l ·on " !I~ ~ U!u ll F,tt 1~"'-'·•n c "
ITO""ft Of!1 Ct C&lt;llvmt&gt;~ ~ 0~•0

~
~

} 15 CU. FT. CHEST FREEZER ........................... ONLY *299.951
: 20 CU. FT. CHEST FREEZER ............. : ............. ONLY *349.95
.
,...~ 16 CU • FT• UPRIGHT FREEZER..........
.. ...... ONLY *329.95

Co

.

!
t*
~

! 18 CU. FT. UPRIGHT FREEZER ......~~~~~.~~~~... ONLY *344.95 : ·
•••****************************************************·'•'
HURRY IN TODAY FOR THESE GREAT CANNING-FREEZER SPECIALS!
36-QUART PLASTIC CONTAINERS- FREE WITH EVERY FREEZER

PH . 992-2318

rJ ;~;.~~~~~~.~

a fire

Strikes marked

.

Homeowner's Insurance
I rom Na 11on'w•d e •s designed
to prolect your home at

EVEN THOUGH THE FEHRY SERVICE was not operating Monda y because of high
water, the Mason rescue unit drove by way of Point Pleasant to participate in Monday's
Labor Day parade in Pomeroy .

eggs,

***************FREEZER SPECIALI~***************

tiome

.•

d l l colo rs!

Could you

at today's prices?

.,

LEADING THE LABOR DAY PARADE in Pomeroy
Monday was Frank Vaughan, a member of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion .

$

your

·•

t oulr' Pr

-·..

._.

~

•

.

.i'&gt;r-~·
~~- ..
. .

rebuild

•
'

Labor Day, a tzme or parades
'

lcllo n G· ddiH . :~r,cJfllf:l Co·:~r
S torfllj!~ :-.td (~ W i th c,hf'lf' J u ll
Porcela rn Oven w •t h II)S:..Jiated
oven h o 11 om. 1wo Uven J~ac k s.
Two -p 1P. c e Br olle · a nd par1, L tft
o ff rrt&lt;wt top , 1-\ I Po rc elatn
ex tenor. Ltgll tcd Ba rk r.:onel.
D tgttfll
C tork
and
ltrnrr.

Lemon and salt
cut tarnish

D.

'

•

1.

RUMMAGE SALE SET
CHILD BORN
A rummage sale will be
Mr. and Mrs. William held Wednesday at the home
Sellers announce the birth of of Mrs. Martha Hoffman, 148
a daughter, Kyle Renee , Aug. Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, by
24 . She weighed 7 lbs., 4 ozs. the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Jane and Juli Whithead Mrs. Paul Sellers, Portland ;
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mr s. Emmett
WORD RECEIVED
Terry Hoffman and daughter, Rawson, Middleport. Mr . and
Mrs . Robert Manley has
at Morehead, Ky .
Mrs. Eber Pickens, Portland received word of the recent
Barbara Henderson spent and Mrs K. atl·e R
.
awson, death of hef sister~in-law,
th e wee ken d Wl·th Mr . and Grove City
are great- Mrs . Ray Eblin, the former
Mrs. Ralph Henderson at_ grandparents:
Susan Russell , at Tr"v.
Portland.
Mis. Kathryn Dietz of
Belpre, and . Mrs . Lyle
Balderson and Kay have
returned home ailer spending ·
a few days at Virginia Beach,
OFFICE
RS:9 : 30to1 2toS(CLOSE
Va. They also spent a day at
AT
NOON
ON
THURS.l-EAST COURT
Williamsburg, visiting the
·l!isloric area.

'·

,,

I

992-2635

INGELS FURN.ITUREMIDDLEPORT
1

Reform proposed
in world economy
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
(UP!) - The United States
has called for a series
sweeping economic reforms
to narrow the gap between
"have" and ' 'have-not ' '
nations.
Ambassador
Daniel
Patrick Moynihan - subbing
for peaceshuttling Secretary
of State Henry Kissinger presented the wide-ranging
economic package Monday at
the opening of a special
session of the General
Assembly.
"We can offer our people
slogans or we can offer them
solutions," Moynihan said .
"We can deal in rhetoric or
we can deal in reality . My
govenunent has made its

choice."
The American ambassador
told the assembly "the fate of
1 billion people - half the
developing world and a
quarter of mankind - will be
affected by what we do or fail

to do."
The U.S. proposals include :
- Creation of a financing
agency to lend developing
countries up $10 billion to
offset
fluctuations
in
demands for their exports.
- Expansion of the capital
of the World Bank's International Finance Cor-

poration from $100 million to
at least $400 million.
- Creation of an Internationa l Energy Institute
energy
to
encourage
development.
- Creation of a n In ternational!nvestment Trust
Fund financed by private
investors to attract capital
for investment in developing
countries.
THE EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL BAND majorettes
Creation of an Instep out in front of the Eastern Band to add life to the
ternational Industrialization
Labor Day Parade staged in Chesler Monday afternoon. A
Institute to provide research
garden tractor pul1 , a water fight, and games and contests
on industrial .technology for
developing countries.
Although the plans call for
an outlay of billi ons of
dollars , U.S. experts said
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) $500,000 to be spent by the city
they did . not anticipate
largescale transfers of funds -- The Republican Site for physi ca l changes in
from the "haves" to the Selection Committee is to convention facilities and
meet Sunday to recommend a operating costs, not coWlting
"have nots."
th e $1 rental fee the
The U .N. economic debate convention site.
Kansas
City,
Mo., Republicans would have to
will last 12 days. Delegates
pay for use of four convention
Cleveland
and
Miami
Beach
from Iran, West Germany,
are front runners tor the 1976 facilities.
Norway, India and Argentina
But
Lt . Col. Bryce
were scheduled to speak this convention .
Thompson,
assistant police
But
city
officials
at
Kansas
morning and representatives
of China, Japan and . In~ City estimate the convention chief, said it would cost
could cost that city more than $600,000 to put police on 12donesia this afternoon.
Moynih3n's speech was . double the $500,000 it is hour workdays if the conwilling to pay, with no clear vention were brought here
notably nonpolitical, but he
ideas about where the money next August. That would
criticized the 1973 escalation
bring the total cost to $1.1
would come from.
of prices by oil-producing
million
.
A contingency contract becountries as a cause of world
The police were able to
tween Kansas City a nd the
economic troubles.
party calls for not more than obtain a la,st-m inut e grant

rounded out the ce lebration sponsored by the Chester
Volunteer Fire Department. Area fire department
equipment was a part of the parade.

GOP selection committee to meet Sunday
from the fede ral Law Enfor,ceme nt Assistance Adminis tration last December
when the Democral-3 held
their mid-term convention
here . Police officials said
they are unsure whether the
LEAA would come through
again.
The city council has proposed
to raise the $500,000 already
committed for the convention
by revising the city's occupational license tax for businesses, but Mayor Charles B.
Wheeler Jr. is trying to raise
$300,000of the total by private
contributions .

HARRELSON'S BACK
NEW YOHK (UP! ) - The
New York Mets Monday
reactivated Bud Harrelson
and promptly inserted the
veteran shortstop in the
starting line up for their
Labor Day contest with the
Pittsburg!, Pirates.
Mel-3' relief pitcher Ken
Sanders, who suffered a ruptured blood vessel in his right
eye Aug . 10 when struck by a
return throw while warming
up , also was placed on the
roster.
Harrelson , who underwent
s ur gery May 31 for the
removal of loose cartilage in
his right knee , had been
acting as first ba se coach for
the Mcts.

lahor"s holiday
By
United
Press
In·
temational
Perhaps it was an appropriate way to finish off
Labor Day - to honor the
workers of America.
- Firemen were on strike
in Berkeley, Calif., and Pine
Bluff, Ark .
- Flight attendants had
shut down National Airlines.
- Coal miners were in their
fourth week of a cripping
walkout.
- Teachers in the nat ion 's
three largest cities, New
York, Chicago and Los
Angeles, were threatening to
stay off the job .
Do ckworkers
in
Louisiana wererefusing to
load grain on ships bound for
Russia.
- Striking drivers had
halted bus service in
Louisville, Ky .
Union officials in Berkeley
predicted its week-&lt;Jld strike
could turn into an extended
walkout. "Negotiations have
completely broken down ,"
said Jack Rinne, president of
Fire Fighters Association
Local 1227. "We're gearing
for a long strike."
Firemen walked off the job
in Pine Bluff, Ark., Aug . 13.
The strikers were fired, and
Gov. David W. Pryor
mobilized
30
National
Guardsmen to staff the fire
stations. The slate AFL-CIO
held a rally Monday in
support of the firemen , and
its president, J. Bill Becker,
called on Pryor to help settle
the strike.
About 1,200 flight attendants grounded National
Airlines Monday with its
second major strike in less
than 10 months. But contract
talks resumed a few hours

later in Washington, the
union announced .
In Charleston , W. Va., the
United Mine Workers international union was hit with
a $500,000fine for contempt of
court today for failing to get
striking members back to
work. The strikers also
demanded union funds to
" feed
our
bro thers,"
threatening,
it
UMW
President Arnold Miller
"don't send it to us , we'll
come and get it."
A wildcat strike by 274
union bus drivers halted bus
service in Louisville for 12
hours Monday. The strike
started at midnight after
rejection of a tentative new
contract offer . A spokesman
said the walkout was not as
disruptive, with a curtailed
Labor Day schedule, as it
would have been on an ordinary work day . Negotiations were continuing.
Hawaii was faced with ·a
statewide dock strike at midnight Friday if contract talks
between the Longshoremen
and the stevedoring industry
do not reach settlement.
Federal and state mediators
have been involved in the
talks since last week.
In Reserve, La., about 10
miles up the Mississippi
River from New Orleans,
eight dockworkers walked off
the job Sunday night after
loading wheat bound for
Russia . A Longshoremen's
spokesman said the men had
been working as a result of a
misunderstanding and would
not return. The New Orleans
Steamship AssoCiation asked
a federal court last Friday to
order· the dockworkers to stay
on the job . The court
declined .

�I

.,..

~-··

...........

~,.~· ~

..

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

'

1.

11 - The Daily Se n\'l1le 1' Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesda ~, Sept. 2, 1975

tO - '!'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday. Sept . 2. 1975

B. uffalo Stops
Wahama, 28-14
___7&amp;Lt
. . ,... '"'!J

.... ,

Valerie Johnson); second row, Chip Haggerty, Terry Barrett, Steve
Young, Joe Seymour, Charlie Whittington, Tom Quillen, Harvey Hoffner ,
Mark Pierce; third row , Steve Wilson, Jim Ferguson, Tom Ingels, Harold
While, Paul Aikman, Bill Slack, Dickie Qualls , John Costanzo, Bruce
Harris, Charles Diehl , equipment manager, Clarence Mcintyre, playercoach and offensive. Absent were Mike Bareswilt, player a nd defens ive
coach, Steve Blackwell, Ke ith Fitch, Robert Qualls, Roger Turner, Terry
Pickens, Bob Werry, Andy E:nglish and Jack Oiler,.

INTRODUC!N(; THE: "ME:IGS WARRIORS" AND THEIR
CHE:EHLEADE:RS - A Meigs Independent Football team has been
formed to play in a league with teams from Ga llia, Wash ington a nd Meigs
Counties. To open the season the Me igs Warriors will play an exhibition
game Saturday, Sept. 6, at Middleport Stad iu m against the Washington
County '76ers at 4 p.m. There will be no admiss ion cha rge_. Team members and cneerteaders w111 be mtroduced. Members of the Warrior s and
cheerleaders shown arc, front row, 1-r, Susie Tillis, Tonya Keebaugh,
ca ptain, Becky Ebershach . an d Jane t Nease, cheerleaders (a bsent was

Sept. II - Me igs vs Gallia Oisciples at Gal lia at2 p.m.
Sept. 21 - Open.
Sept. 27 - Washington 76'e rs vs Meigs at Racine at 8 p.m.
Oct. 4 - Meigs vs West Virginia State Prison at Mowidsvtlle at 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 11 -Washington 76'ers vs Meigs at Belpre at 8 p.m.
Oct. l9 - Meigs vs. Ga llia at Racine at 2 p.m.
Oct. 25- Meigs vs Was hington at Warre n High School a t 8
p.m.
Nov. 1 - Open .
Nov. 9 - Meigs vs Gallia at Racine at2 p.m.
Sea•on tickets will go on sale this week a nd may be purchased from the cheerleaders or a team member. Season
tickets are $4 for all home games.

Picket lines awaited
students at schools
Press
By United
In ternatlonal
In many cities across the
nation it was back to school
today for children. In some,
picket lines awaited them.
The outlook for schools not
scheduled to begin classes
nnlil later U1is week or next
was no brighter, with severa l
cities facing the threat of
teachers, strikes.
In New York state, for
example, a third of some 750
school districts were still al
a n impasse today with
teache rs' unions as classes
were scheduled to begin.
Strikes were termed probable
in at least two major cities.
" I expect that there'll be
strikes in Schenectady and
Shenendehowa," said Daniel
McKillup, a staff maember of
the New York State United
Teachers.
Albert Shanker, head of the
Un ited
Federation
of
Teachers in New York City ,
said there is a ''10 to I "
chance of a strike by the
city's 80,000 teachers when
school begins next week .
Officials of the Chicago
Teachers Union had recommended Monday its 27,000
members strike the city's
school system. The action
followed a breakdown in '
ne gotiations. But on Monday
night a teachers nnion official

said the school board had
agreed
to
re sum e
negotiations Wednesday , the
day classes were scheduied to
·
begin.
Two other Illinois school
di stricts r emained on strike
today, affecting some 13,000
students. Also, the Illinois
E:ducation Association said
198 of its locals had failed to
reach agreements on new
contracts, and ca lled the
s ituations in 41 of those
"critical."
Ca lif ornia sc hools also
were running out of tlme to
solve their problems. With
the opening of classes set for
next week, at least six school
districts were locked in contract disputes with teachers
nnion s. One dispute centered
on the . Los Angeles school
system, the nation 's second
largest, which starts classes
a week from today.
A spokesman for the United
Teachers of Los Angeles said
there would be no strike
before the start of school, but
that one could come a few
days later.
The Los Angeles union was
seeking a 7. 5 per cent pay
raise which would cost the
sc hool district about $40
million . The distr ict had
offer ed a $30 million
packaged, but suggested cuts
in health benefits.

'

Greyhound passengers give
up $35,000 to two robbers
DE:TROIT {UP!) - One
man handed over $1,500 in
cash and an $8,000 coin
collection, and a Chicago
woma n surrendered $80 and a
wat ch she wore around her
neck on a tiny chain .
The two - and 36 other
passengers - were robbed by
two bandits in a 1975 version
of a stagecoach holdup.
Only this was on a
Grey hound bus traveling
from Chicago to Toronto
Sunday night.
"Sure , I was scared.'' Mrs.
Willie Burke of Chicago said.
" I e ven yanked the watch off
my neck myself because I
couldn't undo the clasp."
Donald Paul, 27, of Detroit
lost the $1,500 and the coin
collection .
¢
.
An
off-duly
Detro1t
policeman on the bus was
robbed of $600 in cash, his
badge and his service
revolver. Police said he did
not challenge the bandits
because of the risk to other
passengers.
Altogether, police said, the
holdup netted the bandits
possibly $20,000 in cash and
$15,000 in rings, watches and
other valuables.
A Greyhonnd . spokesman
said it was only the "third or
fourth" robbery of a bus in
recent company history. He
said he also believed it netted
bandits their richest haul in a
bus robbery.
The two men, described as
Teachers st rikes were
threatened in 14 Pennsylvania sc hool districts
today where students were
schedu led to return to
classes, according to the
Pen n sy l va nia
State
E:ducation Association. Two
other districts already were
on strike. If all strike threats
are carried out, . 50 ,000
stude nts would be affected.

" business types " weari ng
flowered shirts, boarded the
bus in Chicago.
Driver William Gorshe, 61,
said one man put a gun to his
head just after the bus made
a rest stop at Ypsilanti, about
25 miles southwest of Detroit,
and ordered him to drive on.
At the satne time, Gorshe
said, he ordered passengers
to close th eir eyes and put
their hands on top of their
heads.
11
Two or three" passengers
were struck on the hea d when
they failed lo deliver their
goods quickly enough, Gorshe
said.
When they finished the

robbery , the men orde red
Gorshe to stop at a Detroit
freeway exit. Police said they
believed an accomplice with
a car met them .
Despite efforts by federal,
state and local police, no
trace of the men had turned
up Monday.
The robbery sent poli ce
ba ck lo files they were
kee pin g from one week
earlier, when two bandits
again posing as passengers
commandeered a Greyhonnd
intersta te ex press in the
Detroit
area
a nd
systematica lly robb ed its
passengers of $831.

2,281,987 paid to get
into Ohio State Fair
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
record crowd of 2,281,987 paid
to get into the 1975 Ohio State
Fair this year, although the
number of'fairgoers who got
in free irritated John Evans,
fair manager.
At a news conference Monday, he said the number of
free admissions the first ten
days of the fair nearly
equalled the number of paid
admissions and he threatened
his
resignation
unless
something was done about
then umber of "freebies :"
Evans said he did not know
where all the free passes
came from, but said he would
check now that the fair is
over and report to the Ohio
Stale Fair Commission.
He said a majority of those
who got in free included
junior fair participants, fair
employes, members of the
news media and children
under 12 who were admitted
free daily until noon.
Evans said he was con-

cerned about increasing
revenue for the Commission
to make improvements on the
gronnds.
Fair officials said attendance was evenly spread
over the 12 days. This year's
attendance figures bettered
the 2,223,987 set in 1973.
Fair officials termed this
year's exposition a huge success and a smooth fair with
no big problems . Even the
weatherman cooperated,
even though it rained parts of
three days. Rain had been
predicted for many of the 12
days.
Rebecca Lawrence of
Marion, a 20-year-&lt;~ld senior
at the Grant Hospital School
of Nursing, was crowned the
1975 Ohio State Fair Queen
Sunday. She will represent
the Ohio State Fair at all fairrelated activities thoughout
the year and reign over the
festivities at the 1976 Ohio
Slate Fair.
The last day of the fair
drew 124,513visitors, many of
them teenagers who were
very vocal during the
grandstand performance of
the Osmond Brothers.

A charging he rd of Bisons
from Buffalo trampled a
fl nek of Falco ns fr om
Wahama on the offensive
line 3 and went on to win 2814, to han d a Mason Connty
footb all . team
another
season 's
opening
loss
Saturday evening .
From jubilation to despair
is what happened t o the
Falcons th at evenin g on
Buffalo's fi eld as they were
able to score th e first seven
pomls on a short pass from
Mike Goldsberry lo Scott
Housh and then relinguish
the ir lead within maher of
minutes on a couple quick
touchdowns by the Bisons.
This was not the end of th&lt;
Wahama team's troubles as
it lost its key defensive
player Scott Kehler on a
kn ee inj ury ea rl y in the
second quarter .
From that point on it
seemed it was a il downhill
for the Falcons a s the Bisons
were' able to add three more
touchdowns.
The in jury to Kebler came
on a key defensive play
shor(l y a ft er Wahama
fumble d the ball a way deep
in th e ir ow n t e rritory .
· Kebler put the tops to one of
Buffalo's runnin g ba cks
while double teamed but
after t he tackle he never got
off the ground. The sta r
defensive end was ca rried
off the fi eld on a stretcher
and ru shed lo Holzer
Medi cal Ce nt er where
doctors reported that he will
be out from one to three
weeks.
On the next play Buffalo
scored its second touchdown .
Prior to Kebler's injury
th e F alcons looked pretty
impressive as they stopped
Buffalo in th e first quarter
on four plays and then were
a ble to march from Buffalo's
45 ya rd lin e to score finally
on the Goldsberry to Roush's
touchdown pass. Roush then
added th e extra point to give
Wahama the early lead.
Shortly after the beginning
of the second quarter Buffalo
came right back on a '\ouchdown drive and made the
score 7-6.
When Wahama finally got
the bail back quarterback
Goldsberry fwnbled to help
set up Buffalo's next score.
They a dded two more on the
point after touchdown to take
a halftime lead of 14--7.
Wahama was able to score
again in the third period on
another Goldsbesrry to
Kebler pass with two

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - An
unemployment compensation
bill and a workmen's compensation bill became law
SUnday when Gov. James A.
Rhodes signed the two bills.
Rhodes said Ohioans were
observing Labor Day on a
somber oote.

a

" They were screaming and
yelling," one fair official 8aid
of the estimated 30,000 who
watched the grandstand
show.
The Ohio State Tractor Pull
attracted many tractors
Saturday with Kenny Smith
of caledonia winning the
9,000-Ponnd Super Class.
Other winners included
Gaylord Zechman of Green
Springs in the 9,000-Ponnd
Modified Class, former land
speed world record holder
Art Arfons of Akron the the
7,000-Pound Modified Class,
Bill Galfius of Hartsville,
Ind., the 5,000-Pound Super
Class and Roger Smith of
Lucasville the 5,000-Pound
Modified Class.

SUPER MUTf? No , this highjwnping hound is just
Showing off his_talents during Sl. Petersburg, Fla. 's annual "Mutt Show" held for doglovers by that city's Parks
Department.

He also hit Marty Holbrook
with three passes, Rick Dye
took another four and Tim
Sayre grabbeds three.
Holbrook also led Wahama
in ground gaining with 70
vards on ei2ht carries.
Goldsberry was second with ·
68 yards on nine carried
while Jiljl Oliver picked up
22 yards on three carries
besides a 17 yard punt
return. Dale Lewis had 16
yards on four carries while ·
Scott Kehler picked up 14
yards on two carries before
he was injured.

';.,
,
: . j"&gt;
•of, :· .
.~-!".'

Large Selection

.. ..

For

·-·..

..

•

•

Back To School

I
' '

.

..... -

.....

~- -•
•::.H

··~.f: .

~- ~

'. .
'

., ·l : .

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Mid~' : port,

Ohio

.., . . . .

,,

of unemployment compensation tax on employers
from 4.3 to 4.8 per cent of the
taxable payroll; and allows
those persons labeled " innocent bystanders" in labor
disputes to collect benefits in
certain situations.

...•

'

. . . .' :
;

,
........
.
~··
..-.
., ....
~·-

·..,_.....
.....,. ........ ..
"'l"-·j

~

ing hours whether
you're at home or
a way when you
use our conven-

ient Bank-by-Mail
service. We provide the fo rms,

envelopes to &lt;a''"""
you step s, time.
But remember,

you want to discus
your financ ial
needs, pay us a
visit. We'll b~

to advise

"

AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - The
Senate will try and override
Gov . J~mes A. Rhodes veto
last week of a portion of the .
equal school foundation
formula bill which provides
higher minimum teacher
salaries.
"I am confident we can
override in the Senate;:md I
hope the House will do the
same thing," said Senate
President Pro Tern Oliver
ADDING a little light
Oeasek,
D-Akron, last Saturon the subject, a helicopter
hoists one of four 1,500-watt day .
Rhodes vetoed seven line
Multi-Vapor lamps into
place at Forest Hills' West items in the bill, which
Side Tennis Club, site of the , passed the legislature last
U.S. Open Tennis Cham- month. Ocasek said the
p.ionship . • The lighting override measure in the
system will illuminate the Senate would be a " top
court for evening matches priority" when that body
during the competition convenes Sept. 10.
"We have tried to make
which ends Sept. 9.

Presidential
Savings Accounts
Money Orden .
Bill·Payi"9 Loano

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To7 P.M.

"THE FRIENDLY BANK"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BAKER FURNITURE

Member Federal Deposit lnsuram:e Corporatiolt .
DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

where Americans would be in
potential
combat
a

situation," he said.

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of America
August, 1775:
A 1771 graduate of Princeton. Philip Freneau begins
publishing the verse that shows him to be probably the first
American poet with outstanding talent. Throughout his
ca reer , he is known as a vigorous advocate of the colonial
cause. Following the Revolution, In whi ch he lights with
limited success aboard the Aurora - a privateer that he
builds and commands- he becomes a journalistic champion ol Jefferson, who
c redits him with saving the
na~ion
from monarchy ;
Washington refers to him
as "that rascal Freneau."
Freneau's satirical sting
can be lett In these lines :

When a certain great king
wlwse initial is G,
Shall jOTCe •tamps upon paper,
and folk• to drink tea;
When these folkl burn h.i8 tea
and •tamp paper, like stubble,
You may guess that th;. king
;. then coming to trouble.

The Workmen's Compensation bill raises the ceiling on
benefits from the current 66 23 per cent of the statewide
average weekly wage to 100
per cent.
It
also
exempts
homeowners
who
pay
household help less than $160
per quarter from paying
workmen's
compensation ,
establishes a temporary
ombudsman service in the
Bureau
of
Workmen's
Compensation and creates an
Ohio Rehabilitation Study
Commission to make a
co mpr e hensive s tudy of
Ohio's system to ret'tll'n ln·Jured workers to gainful
employment.
"These bills represent a
s trong consensus reached
during legislative hearings,"
Rhodes said . "They are good
for Ohlo working people ."
However, Rhodes continued, " ll is one thing to
proVIde protection for those
who through no fault of their
own are nnable to work . It is
another to put every resource
we have in Ohio to work
creating jobs and a strong
economy. We must minimize
the need for protections such
as Unemployment Compensation and Workmen's
Compensation ....

Glenn also commented on
the oil decontrol issue, saying
he thought Congress could
override a veto of the oil
- By R0!5 Mackenzie&amp;: Jeff MacNe l1y /Cl i97!&gt;. Uni t.: :i Fea iUre Syndicate.
decontrol extension. ·
"There are a lot of people
that feel we may now have
the votes in tbe Congress to
override a Presidential veto
and maybe keep the price of
domestic oil at $5.25 a barrel
no matter what the President
decides to do," he said.
Wexford House near PittCLEVELAND I UP!) "I hope it doesn't come to
Former Suburban Pavilion, sburgh.
that type of confrontation, but
According to the paper,
Inc., nursing home employe
if it does, it just hardens the
Darlene Fromm has copies of officials of Suburban Pavilion
line betwen the Congress and
financial records showing began mailing refuoo checks
the administration and
more than $35,000 in over- about a month ago when they
makes working out any
payments were withheld learned their financial
subsequent legislation more
were
being
from the families of 114 practices
difficult," he added.
checked. Six families said
Glenn said he agreed with Jllltlents of the nursing home they got refunds totaling
in North Randall , The
President Ford that the ftrst
(CleveIa nd) Plain Dealer re- $1,819 in the same week in
priority of Congress after it
July.
ported Monday .
returns from the Labor Day
Mrs. Fromm said she
Mrs. Fromm said she
recess was to enact an excess
celled
some families posing
worked for two months as a
profit tax legislation.
bookke eper for Sidney as a Blue Cross employe
"I agree that should be in
Garfield, owner of Suburban under another name to tell
place before any decontrol is
Pavilion and five other them they had refunds
considered," he said. H'That
nursing homes . She said her coming. The 12 families
was one of the difficulties and
she was told by her superiors called Suburban Pavilion to
I hope we can work that
not to refund overpayments ask for their refunds and
out.''
by families nnless they asked were paid within a short time .
"They would not have
for their money back .
known
they had refunds
Payments from such
sources
as
Medicaid, coming if I hadn't informed
Medicare and other in- them," Mrs. Fronun was
surance progra!TIS for the quoted as saying . She said
some improvements in the care of the patients involved she made the calls because
quality of education in Ohio. should have resulted in " .. .I just couldn't see these
The governor's vetoes have refunds to the families, the people not getting their
destroyed all that, " said paper said.
money.''
Osacek.
It was also alleged that
Oeasek said in addition he SUburban Pavilion got some
SERVICE SET
would consult the attorney familles to make under-theGraveside fWJeral services
general this week on the table payments to keep their
for Melissa Irene Sarson,
legality of Rhodes' partial relatives in the home despite
infant, who died Snnday at
veto.
the fact that their care was Pleasant Valley Hospital, will
"I think the power of the covered by Medicaid, a
be held at 2 p.m . Wednesday
governor's vetoes has to be breach of state welfare
at the Letart Falls Cemetery
challenged and we have to regula lions. In one instance,
with the Rev. Howard
settle once and for all if he the paper said state law may
Shiveley officiating . Th e
has the power to veto have been violated when
Ewing Fnneral Home is in
anything anytime he wants • double payments were made
charge.
to," he said.
for the care of an elderly
The law is designed to man.
equalize the value of real
SEARLS PROMOTED
The Cuyahoga County Welestate taxes in each of the fare Department and state
Seymour Johnson AFB , N.
state'S617 school districts for and federal agencies were C., has annonnced promotion
the purpose of calculating investigating Suburban of Wayne Searls to airman
state assistance.
Pavilion. Garfield refused to first class in the U. S. Air
talk to reporters, The Plain Force . Airman Searls, son of
Dealer said.
·
Mr . and Mrs . Ray G. Searls of
Garfield, in the nursing 235 Depot St., Rutland, is a
home business since the early commnnicalions equipment
1960, also owns Jones nursing repair specialist. He is a 1974
home here, Hanover House, graduate of Meigs High
Kemper of Kemper In- Inc., in Massillon, the Villa School. His wife, Debra, Is the
surance Co. He said Kemper Convalescent Center, Inc . daughter of Mr . and Mrs .
said he got the quote from an and Highland View nursing Thomas A. Schoonover of 99
editorial in the Steubenville, home in Troy, Ohio and Nelson Road, Rutland, Ohio .
Ohio, l;lerald.Star. Porter
said the Herald-star writer
has left the paper and the
paper could not authenticate
the quote.
Porter quoted Seidman as
saying "If the quote wasn 'I
said, it should have been
said." "But's he's sorry he
used it," Porter added. ,

Prot~!

offered families
of patients cheated

LORAIN, Ohio (UPI) - A
quote about the fragility of
democracy used by President
Ford's chief economic advisor in speeches around the
country cannot be authenticated by the White House or
independent researches, the
Lorain Journal reported
Saturday .
L. William Seidman quoted
an. alleged British historian
named AleJ!Bnder Tyler in a
cnlcinnati speech July 3 and
the newspaper began a
search for some record of
Ty)er.
'file quote read :
• A democracy cannot exist
as : a permanent form of
goverrunenl . It can only exist
nnUI the v~ters discover that
they can vote themselves
lafgess from the public
treasury. From that moment
bn: the majority always ~o.tes
for the candidates pronu~mg

quot~

THE POPULAR game of h01'1sesi1toes
asphalt where posts can't be driven in very easily,
recreation vehicle owners have developed a similar game
called " Holy Board ." Above , Lei! McKinney of Bartlesville, Okla. tosses a quoit during a campers' jamboree
in Mt . Kisco, N. Y. where over 200 RV owneJ'll
congrega ted, all members of the Travco Molorca~
Club's "See America" tour.

~

hang ups are bracelets
WOMEN'S IIOWUNG
LAS VEGAS , Nev . {UP!) The Brunswick $50,000 Showdown, first and richest challenge match in the history of
women 's bowling, will be held
as a single game Oct. 11
between the leading female
amateur and the country's
top femal e professional.
carolyn Anderton of Ft.
Worth, Tex ., currently is
rated the top U.S. amateur
with a 200-plus average. She
will meet either Judy Soutar
of Kansas City, Mo ., or
Vesma Grinfelds of San
Francisco' calif.' depending
on the outcome of a final rolloff .

It you're hung·up on something or someone special,
show It' There's a hang up bracelet for sports buHs,
music fans, and lovers. Twelve In all to choose from.
Gold fllled ·or sterling silver chain.

•

Goessler's Jewelry Store

SEND ALONG THE
DAILY SENTINEL
AND SUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL

FOR ONLY
'18.50
THEY WILl RECEIVE 9 MONTHS OF

THEIR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER
BY MAIL
OFFER GOOD AT
ANY COLlEGE IN THE UNITED STATES.

--------·

proves elusive

the most benefits from the
public . treasury, with the
result that a deomcracy
always collapses over loose
fiscal policy, always followed
by a dictatorship. The
average age of tbe World 's
great civilizations has been
200 years."
Seidman's administrative
assistant at the White House,
Roger Porter, acknowledged
in a telephone interview that
the quote could not be au then·
ticated. The journal said the
Oberlin College and Lorain.
libraries finally found a Scottish historian and judge
named Alexander Tyler, bllt
did not find the quote. And the
Oberlin librarian ~d'Such a
statement would Have been
out of character with the
Scot's remarks.
Porter said his boss ! old
him he got the quote from a
speech made by o J oseph

FOR THE
PROTECTION
YOU NEED-

GRIFFIN UNINJURED
BOSTON (UPI) - Boston
Red Sox second baseman
Doug Griffin, hit in the head
by a pitch SUnday, has been
given a clean bill of health.
Griffin, who was serlou$ly
injured by a beaning last
year, was struck by. a Dick
Bosman pitch in the eighth
inning of the Red SOx game
against the Oakland A's.

Play it safe and· eure
It may be \ime to
have your present
policy updated.

Let's .rallc s-n

DALE C. WARNER
9n2t4l
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

POMEROY

COURT ST.

COLLEGE BOUND

Veto in trouble

~

...,..ir'

All hours are bonk·

••a
I

'

.~

-~

··..-~.

Ytle're as close
as your nearest
mailbox

III.ET I.EIIAL III.ET
IAI.ITI.IIIIL

•

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Sen .
John Glenn, D.Ohio, said this
Labor Day Weekend the use
of American forces in the
Middle E:ast was inviting
trouble, especially if they
were carrying sidearms.
Glenn said he did not see
why Americans had to be
used to get technical inormation of people violating a
truce or a peace in the area .
"Why do they just have to
be Americans '" he asked.
"Why can't we have Swedes
and Norwegians and Poles
and anybody else down there
giving that information
operating this equipment and
putting it under the ausples of
the United Nations?
" If Americans are permitted to carry sidearms in
there, they are supposedly
carrying them to protect
themselves
from
something , "
he
said.
"Sidearms are only carried
where you will be in a
situation where you may
have to possibly shoot at
somebody.
"We have just gotten out of
Vietnam and I would hate to
see ourselves getting involved in another situation

HOLBROOK GAINS GROUND - Marty Holbrook
lead the Falcons in rushing against Buffalo with 70 yards
on eight carries.

IIu

Lavendar ; back row , Mona Black, Harold Black, Frank
·Imboden and Tim Imboden. Absent were Rich Arnold,'
Jim Imboden, Jeff Hubbard, Bub David, Rudy Stewart,
Hollie Stewart, and Jeff Davis.

working Ohioans," he said .
"On this Labor Day, 8.9 per
. cent of our work force is
unemployed. Energy shortages projected for the
coming winters mean that
this year arxl next, even more
Ohioans will suffer the
nrisery of unemployment.
" I will oot rest until we can
eliminate that misery and
frustration in Ohio," he concluded.
The
unemployment
compensation bill sets
benefits al 50 per cent of the
employe's average -.:eekly
wage, with higher maximum
benefits. A worker with three
or more dependents would be

Trouble invited

Ill

SECOND. PLACE WINNERS - The Syracuse
Nazarene Church took second place in the Meigs Connly
Church Softball League t his season . Front row, 1..-, the Rev.
Howard Black, Eber Pickens, Shel'man Cund,iff, Ralph

eligible for maximwn weekly
benefits of $150, up from $107.
It also calls for payment of
benefits for the first week of
unemployment,
lf
the
claimant is out of work for
thr ee consecutive weeks ;
increases the maximum level

;;We have new tllreats to

!.I I.ET I'EIIAL IAI.ET
......

-'related to employment

\

minute s and 45 seco nds
remain{ng in that period .
Roush kicked the extra point
again and the score was tied.
However Buffalo came
back quickly in the fourth
period with another touchdo wn and then scored again
on an interception thrown by
Goldsberry.
While the score seemed a
little lopsided Wahama out
gaine d in total yards with 336
to Buffalo's 245 total offensive yards.
Besides the loss of Kehler
and an untimely interception
and fwn ble Wahama was
assessed 65 penalty yards
which included three fifteen
yard penalties while on offense.
The le ft handed quarterback Goldsberry threw 24
passes and was able to
complete 15 for 146 yards on
the evening . His prime
target was Scott Roush with
five passes which included
the two touchdown passes
besides one for 31 yards, 13
yards an 18 yards and a
seven yard pass . Roush
fwnbled th e balraway on the
31 yard pass.

•

Governor signs 2 bills

Kebler Injured

f

I

. I

OFFER

EXPIRES
SEPT. 30, 1975

CLIP AND MAIL
---------- -....,...~---------------------------

The Daily Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NAME------------------------ -------ADDRESS-- ----------------------------·

CITY_______ __________________________ _
STATE_ ______________ ZIP COOL ___________ _

n

CHECK

n

AMT.___ _

MONEY ORDER

SORRY NO REFUND

•

I

'

�I

.,..

~-··

...........

~,.~· ~

..

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

'

1.

11 - The Daily Se n\'l1le 1' Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesda ~, Sept. 2, 1975

tO - '!'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday. Sept . 2. 1975

B. uffalo Stops
Wahama, 28-14
___7&amp;Lt
. . ,... '"'!J

.... ,

Valerie Johnson); second row, Chip Haggerty, Terry Barrett, Steve
Young, Joe Seymour, Charlie Whittington, Tom Quillen, Harvey Hoffner ,
Mark Pierce; third row , Steve Wilson, Jim Ferguson, Tom Ingels, Harold
While, Paul Aikman, Bill Slack, Dickie Qualls , John Costanzo, Bruce
Harris, Charles Diehl , equipment manager, Clarence Mcintyre, playercoach and offensive. Absent were Mike Bareswilt, player a nd defens ive
coach, Steve Blackwell, Ke ith Fitch, Robert Qualls, Roger Turner, Terry
Pickens, Bob Werry, Andy E:nglish and Jack Oiler,.

INTRODUC!N(; THE: "ME:IGS WARRIORS" AND THEIR
CHE:EHLEADE:RS - A Meigs Independent Football team has been
formed to play in a league with teams from Ga llia, Wash ington a nd Meigs
Counties. To open the season the Me igs Warriors will play an exhibition
game Saturday, Sept. 6, at Middleport Stad iu m against the Washington
County '76ers at 4 p.m. There will be no admiss ion cha rge_. Team members and cneerteaders w111 be mtroduced. Members of the Warrior s and
cheerleaders shown arc, front row, 1-r, Susie Tillis, Tonya Keebaugh,
ca ptain, Becky Ebershach . an d Jane t Nease, cheerleaders (a bsent was

Sept. II - Me igs vs Gallia Oisciples at Gal lia at2 p.m.
Sept. 21 - Open.
Sept. 27 - Washington 76'e rs vs Meigs at Racine at 8 p.m.
Oct. 4 - Meigs vs West Virginia State Prison at Mowidsvtlle at 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 11 -Washington 76'ers vs Meigs at Belpre at 8 p.m.
Oct. l9 - Meigs vs. Ga llia at Racine at 2 p.m.
Oct. 25- Meigs vs Was hington at Warre n High School a t 8
p.m.
Nov. 1 - Open .
Nov. 9 - Meigs vs Gallia at Racine at2 p.m.
Sea•on tickets will go on sale this week a nd may be purchased from the cheerleaders or a team member. Season
tickets are $4 for all home games.

Picket lines awaited
students at schools
Press
By United
In ternatlonal
In many cities across the
nation it was back to school
today for children. In some,
picket lines awaited them.
The outlook for schools not
scheduled to begin classes
nnlil later U1is week or next
was no brighter, with severa l
cities facing the threat of
teachers, strikes.
In New York state, for
example, a third of some 750
school districts were still al
a n impasse today with
teache rs' unions as classes
were scheduled to begin.
Strikes were termed probable
in at least two major cities.
" I expect that there'll be
strikes in Schenectady and
Shenendehowa," said Daniel
McKillup, a staff maember of
the New York State United
Teachers.
Albert Shanker, head of the
Un ited
Federation
of
Teachers in New York City ,
said there is a ''10 to I "
chance of a strike by the
city's 80,000 teachers when
school begins next week .
Officials of the Chicago
Teachers Union had recommended Monday its 27,000
members strike the city's
school system. The action
followed a breakdown in '
ne gotiations. But on Monday
night a teachers nnion official

said the school board had
agreed
to
re sum e
negotiations Wednesday , the
day classes were scheduied to
·
begin.
Two other Illinois school
di stricts r emained on strike
today, affecting some 13,000
students. Also, the Illinois
E:ducation Association said
198 of its locals had failed to
reach agreements on new
contracts, and ca lled the
s ituations in 41 of those
"critical."
Ca lif ornia sc hools also
were running out of tlme to
solve their problems. With
the opening of classes set for
next week, at least six school
districts were locked in contract disputes with teachers
nnion s. One dispute centered
on the . Los Angeles school
system, the nation 's second
largest, which starts classes
a week from today.
A spokesman for the United
Teachers of Los Angeles said
there would be no strike
before the start of school, but
that one could come a few
days later.
The Los Angeles union was
seeking a 7. 5 per cent pay
raise which would cost the
sc hool district about $40
million . The distr ict had
offer ed a $30 million
packaged, but suggested cuts
in health benefits.

'

Greyhound passengers give
up $35,000 to two robbers
DE:TROIT {UP!) - One
man handed over $1,500 in
cash and an $8,000 coin
collection, and a Chicago
woma n surrendered $80 and a
wat ch she wore around her
neck on a tiny chain .
The two - and 36 other
passengers - were robbed by
two bandits in a 1975 version
of a stagecoach holdup.
Only this was on a
Grey hound bus traveling
from Chicago to Toronto
Sunday night.
"Sure , I was scared.'' Mrs.
Willie Burke of Chicago said.
" I e ven yanked the watch off
my neck myself because I
couldn't undo the clasp."
Donald Paul, 27, of Detroit
lost the $1,500 and the coin
collection .
¢
.
An
off-duly
Detro1t
policeman on the bus was
robbed of $600 in cash, his
badge and his service
revolver. Police said he did
not challenge the bandits
because of the risk to other
passengers.
Altogether, police said, the
holdup netted the bandits
possibly $20,000 in cash and
$15,000 in rings, watches and
other valuables.
A Greyhonnd . spokesman
said it was only the "third or
fourth" robbery of a bus in
recent company history. He
said he also believed it netted
bandits their richest haul in a
bus robbery.
The two men, described as
Teachers st rikes were
threatened in 14 Pennsylvania sc hool districts
today where students were
schedu led to return to
classes, according to the
Pen n sy l va nia
State
E:ducation Association. Two
other districts already were
on strike. If all strike threats
are carried out, . 50 ,000
stude nts would be affected.

" business types " weari ng
flowered shirts, boarded the
bus in Chicago.
Driver William Gorshe, 61,
said one man put a gun to his
head just after the bus made
a rest stop at Ypsilanti, about
25 miles southwest of Detroit,
and ordered him to drive on.
At the satne time, Gorshe
said, he ordered passengers
to close th eir eyes and put
their hands on top of their
heads.
11
Two or three" passengers
were struck on the hea d when
they failed lo deliver their
goods quickly enough, Gorshe
said.
When they finished the

robbery , the men orde red
Gorshe to stop at a Detroit
freeway exit. Police said they
believed an accomplice with
a car met them .
Despite efforts by federal,
state and local police, no
trace of the men had turned
up Monday.
The robbery sent poli ce
ba ck lo files they were
kee pin g from one week
earlier, when two bandits
again posing as passengers
commandeered a Greyhonnd
intersta te ex press in the
Detroit
area
a nd
systematica lly robb ed its
passengers of $831.

2,281,987 paid to get
into Ohio State Fair
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
record crowd of 2,281,987 paid
to get into the 1975 Ohio State
Fair this year, although the
number of'fairgoers who got
in free irritated John Evans,
fair manager.
At a news conference Monday, he said the number of
free admissions the first ten
days of the fair nearly
equalled the number of paid
admissions and he threatened
his
resignation
unless
something was done about
then umber of "freebies :"
Evans said he did not know
where all the free passes
came from, but said he would
check now that the fair is
over and report to the Ohio
Stale Fair Commission.
He said a majority of those
who got in free included
junior fair participants, fair
employes, members of the
news media and children
under 12 who were admitted
free daily until noon.
Evans said he was con-

cerned about increasing
revenue for the Commission
to make improvements on the
gronnds.
Fair officials said attendance was evenly spread
over the 12 days. This year's
attendance figures bettered
the 2,223,987 set in 1973.
Fair officials termed this
year's exposition a huge success and a smooth fair with
no big problems . Even the
weatherman cooperated,
even though it rained parts of
three days. Rain had been
predicted for many of the 12
days.
Rebecca Lawrence of
Marion, a 20-year-&lt;~ld senior
at the Grant Hospital School
of Nursing, was crowned the
1975 Ohio State Fair Queen
Sunday. She will represent
the Ohio State Fair at all fairrelated activities thoughout
the year and reign over the
festivities at the 1976 Ohio
Slate Fair.
The last day of the fair
drew 124,513visitors, many of
them teenagers who were
very vocal during the
grandstand performance of
the Osmond Brothers.

A charging he rd of Bisons
from Buffalo trampled a
fl nek of Falco ns fr om
Wahama on the offensive
line 3 and went on to win 2814, to han d a Mason Connty
footb all . team
another
season 's
opening
loss
Saturday evening .
From jubilation to despair
is what happened t o the
Falcons th at evenin g on
Buffalo's fi eld as they were
able to score th e first seven
pomls on a short pass from
Mike Goldsberry lo Scott
Housh and then relinguish
the ir lead within maher of
minutes on a couple quick
touchdowns by the Bisons.
This was not the end of th&lt;
Wahama team's troubles as
it lost its key defensive
player Scott Kehler on a
kn ee inj ury ea rl y in the
second quarter .
From that point on it
seemed it was a il downhill
for the Falcons a s the Bisons
were' able to add three more
touchdowns.
The in jury to Kebler came
on a key defensive play
shor(l y a ft er Wahama
fumble d the ball a way deep
in th e ir ow n t e rritory .
· Kebler put the tops to one of
Buffalo's runnin g ba cks
while double teamed but
after t he tackle he never got
off the ground. The sta r
defensive end was ca rried
off the fi eld on a stretcher
and ru shed lo Holzer
Medi cal Ce nt er where
doctors reported that he will
be out from one to three
weeks.
On the next play Buffalo
scored its second touchdown .
Prior to Kebler's injury
th e F alcons looked pretty
impressive as they stopped
Buffalo in th e first quarter
on four plays and then were
a ble to march from Buffalo's
45 ya rd lin e to score finally
on the Goldsberry to Roush's
touchdown pass. Roush then
added th e extra point to give
Wahama the early lead.
Shortly after the beginning
of the second quarter Buffalo
came right back on a '\ouchdown drive and made the
score 7-6.
When Wahama finally got
the bail back quarterback
Goldsberry fwnbled to help
set up Buffalo's next score.
They a dded two more on the
point after touchdown to take
a halftime lead of 14--7.
Wahama was able to score
again in the third period on
another Goldsbesrry to
Kebler pass with two

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - An
unemployment compensation
bill and a workmen's compensation bill became law
SUnday when Gov. James A.
Rhodes signed the two bills.
Rhodes said Ohioans were
observing Labor Day on a
somber oote.

a

" They were screaming and
yelling," one fair official 8aid
of the estimated 30,000 who
watched the grandstand
show.
The Ohio State Tractor Pull
attracted many tractors
Saturday with Kenny Smith
of caledonia winning the
9,000-Ponnd Super Class.
Other winners included
Gaylord Zechman of Green
Springs in the 9,000-Ponnd
Modified Class, former land
speed world record holder
Art Arfons of Akron the the
7,000-Pound Modified Class,
Bill Galfius of Hartsville,
Ind., the 5,000-Pound Super
Class and Roger Smith of
Lucasville the 5,000-Pound
Modified Class.

SUPER MUTf? No , this highjwnping hound is just
Showing off his_talents during Sl. Petersburg, Fla. 's annual "Mutt Show" held for doglovers by that city's Parks
Department.

He also hit Marty Holbrook
with three passes, Rick Dye
took another four and Tim
Sayre grabbeds three.
Holbrook also led Wahama
in ground gaining with 70
vards on ei2ht carries.
Goldsberry was second with ·
68 yards on nine carried
while Jiljl Oliver picked up
22 yards on three carries
besides a 17 yard punt
return. Dale Lewis had 16
yards on four carries while ·
Scott Kehler picked up 14
yards on two carries before
he was injured.

';.,
,
: . j"&gt;
•of, :· .
.~-!".'

Large Selection

.. ..

For

·-·..

..

•

•

Back To School

I
' '

.

..... -

.....

~- -•
•::.H

··~.f: .

~- ~

'. .
'

., ·l : .

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store
Mid~' : port,

Ohio

.., . . . .

,,

of unemployment compensation tax on employers
from 4.3 to 4.8 per cent of the
taxable payroll; and allows
those persons labeled " innocent bystanders" in labor
disputes to collect benefits in
certain situations.

...•

'

. . . .' :
;

,
........
.
~··
..-.
., ....
~·-

·..,_.....
.....,. ........ ..
"'l"-·j

~

ing hours whether
you're at home or
a way when you
use our conven-

ient Bank-by-Mail
service. We provide the fo rms,

envelopes to &lt;a''"""
you step s, time.
But remember,

you want to discus
your financ ial
needs, pay us a
visit. We'll b~

to advise

"

AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - The
Senate will try and override
Gov . J~mes A. Rhodes veto
last week of a portion of the .
equal school foundation
formula bill which provides
higher minimum teacher
salaries.
"I am confident we can
override in the Senate;:md I
hope the House will do the
same thing," said Senate
President Pro Tern Oliver
ADDING a little light
Oeasek,
D-Akron, last Saturon the subject, a helicopter
hoists one of four 1,500-watt day .
Rhodes vetoed seven line
Multi-Vapor lamps into
place at Forest Hills' West items in the bill, which
Side Tennis Club, site of the , passed the legislature last
U.S. Open Tennis Cham- month. Ocasek said the
p.ionship . • The lighting override measure in the
system will illuminate the Senate would be a " top
court for evening matches priority" when that body
during the competition convenes Sept. 10.
"We have tried to make
which ends Sept. 9.

Presidential
Savings Accounts
Money Orden .
Bill·Payi"9 Loano

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To7 P.M.

"THE FRIENDLY BANK"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BAKER FURNITURE

Member Federal Deposit lnsuram:e Corporatiolt .
DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

where Americans would be in
potential
combat
a

situation," he said.

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of America
August, 1775:
A 1771 graduate of Princeton. Philip Freneau begins
publishing the verse that shows him to be probably the first
American poet with outstanding talent. Throughout his
ca reer , he is known as a vigorous advocate of the colonial
cause. Following the Revolution, In whi ch he lights with
limited success aboard the Aurora - a privateer that he
builds and commands- he becomes a journalistic champion ol Jefferson, who
c redits him with saving the
na~ion
from monarchy ;
Washington refers to him
as "that rascal Freneau."
Freneau's satirical sting
can be lett In these lines :

When a certain great king
wlwse initial is G,
Shall jOTCe •tamps upon paper,
and folk• to drink tea;
When these folkl burn h.i8 tea
and •tamp paper, like stubble,
You may guess that th;. king
;. then coming to trouble.

The Workmen's Compensation bill raises the ceiling on
benefits from the current 66 23 per cent of the statewide
average weekly wage to 100
per cent.
It
also
exempts
homeowners
who
pay
household help less than $160
per quarter from paying
workmen's
compensation ,
establishes a temporary
ombudsman service in the
Bureau
of
Workmen's
Compensation and creates an
Ohio Rehabilitation Study
Commission to make a
co mpr e hensive s tudy of
Ohio's system to ret'tll'n ln·Jured workers to gainful
employment.
"These bills represent a
s trong consensus reached
during legislative hearings,"
Rhodes said . "They are good
for Ohlo working people ."
However, Rhodes continued, " ll is one thing to
proVIde protection for those
who through no fault of their
own are nnable to work . It is
another to put every resource
we have in Ohio to work
creating jobs and a strong
economy. We must minimize
the need for protections such
as Unemployment Compensation and Workmen's
Compensation ....

Glenn also commented on
the oil decontrol issue, saying
he thought Congress could
override a veto of the oil
- By R0!5 Mackenzie&amp;: Jeff MacNe l1y /Cl i97!&gt;. Uni t.: :i Fea iUre Syndicate.
decontrol extension. ·
"There are a lot of people
that feel we may now have
the votes in tbe Congress to
override a Presidential veto
and maybe keep the price of
domestic oil at $5.25 a barrel
no matter what the President
decides to do," he said.
Wexford House near PittCLEVELAND I UP!) "I hope it doesn't come to
Former Suburban Pavilion, sburgh.
that type of confrontation, but
According to the paper,
Inc., nursing home employe
if it does, it just hardens the
Darlene Fromm has copies of officials of Suburban Pavilion
line betwen the Congress and
financial records showing began mailing refuoo checks
the administration and
more than $35,000 in over- about a month ago when they
makes working out any
payments were withheld learned their financial
subsequent legislation more
were
being
from the families of 114 practices
difficult," he added.
checked. Six families said
Glenn said he agreed with Jllltlents of the nursing home they got refunds totaling
in North Randall , The
President Ford that the ftrst
(CleveIa nd) Plain Dealer re- $1,819 in the same week in
priority of Congress after it
July.
ported Monday .
returns from the Labor Day
Mrs. Fromm said she
Mrs. Fromm said she
recess was to enact an excess
celled
some families posing
worked for two months as a
profit tax legislation.
bookke eper for Sidney as a Blue Cross employe
"I agree that should be in
Garfield, owner of Suburban under another name to tell
place before any decontrol is
Pavilion and five other them they had refunds
considered," he said. H'That
nursing homes . She said her coming. The 12 families
was one of the difficulties and
she was told by her superiors called Suburban Pavilion to
I hope we can work that
not to refund overpayments ask for their refunds and
out.''
by families nnless they asked were paid within a short time .
"They would not have
for their money back .
known
they had refunds
Payments from such
sources
as
Medicaid, coming if I hadn't informed
Medicare and other in- them," Mrs. Fronun was
surance progra!TIS for the quoted as saying . She said
some improvements in the care of the patients involved she made the calls because
quality of education in Ohio. should have resulted in " .. .I just couldn't see these
The governor's vetoes have refunds to the families, the people not getting their
destroyed all that, " said paper said.
money.''
Osacek.
It was also alleged that
Oeasek said in addition he SUburban Pavilion got some
SERVICE SET
would consult the attorney familles to make under-theGraveside fWJeral services
general this week on the table payments to keep their
for Melissa Irene Sarson,
legality of Rhodes' partial relatives in the home despite
infant, who died Snnday at
veto.
the fact that their care was Pleasant Valley Hospital, will
"I think the power of the covered by Medicaid, a
be held at 2 p.m . Wednesday
governor's vetoes has to be breach of state welfare
at the Letart Falls Cemetery
challenged and we have to regula lions. In one instance,
with the Rev. Howard
settle once and for all if he the paper said state law may
Shiveley officiating . Th e
has the power to veto have been violated when
Ewing Fnneral Home is in
anything anytime he wants • double payments were made
charge.
to," he said.
for the care of an elderly
The law is designed to man.
equalize the value of real
SEARLS PROMOTED
The Cuyahoga County Welestate taxes in each of the fare Department and state
Seymour Johnson AFB , N.
state'S617 school districts for and federal agencies were C., has annonnced promotion
the purpose of calculating investigating Suburban of Wayne Searls to airman
state assistance.
Pavilion. Garfield refused to first class in the U. S. Air
talk to reporters, The Plain Force . Airman Searls, son of
Dealer said.
·
Mr . and Mrs . Ray G. Searls of
Garfield, in the nursing 235 Depot St., Rutland, is a
home business since the early commnnicalions equipment
1960, also owns Jones nursing repair specialist. He is a 1974
home here, Hanover House, graduate of Meigs High
Kemper of Kemper In- Inc., in Massillon, the Villa School. His wife, Debra, Is the
surance Co. He said Kemper Convalescent Center, Inc . daughter of Mr . and Mrs .
said he got the quote from an and Highland View nursing Thomas A. Schoonover of 99
editorial in the Steubenville, home in Troy, Ohio and Nelson Road, Rutland, Ohio .
Ohio, l;lerald.Star. Porter
said the Herald-star writer
has left the paper and the
paper could not authenticate
the quote.
Porter quoted Seidman as
saying "If the quote wasn 'I
said, it should have been
said." "But's he's sorry he
used it," Porter added. ,

Prot~!

offered families
of patients cheated

LORAIN, Ohio (UPI) - A
quote about the fragility of
democracy used by President
Ford's chief economic advisor in speeches around the
country cannot be authenticated by the White House or
independent researches, the
Lorain Journal reported
Saturday .
L. William Seidman quoted
an. alleged British historian
named AleJ!Bnder Tyler in a
cnlcinnati speech July 3 and
the newspaper began a
search for some record of
Ty)er.
'file quote read :
• A democracy cannot exist
as : a permanent form of
goverrunenl . It can only exist
nnUI the v~ters discover that
they can vote themselves
lafgess from the public
treasury. From that moment
bn: the majority always ~o.tes
for the candidates pronu~mg

quot~

THE POPULAR game of h01'1sesi1toes
asphalt where posts can't be driven in very easily,
recreation vehicle owners have developed a similar game
called " Holy Board ." Above , Lei! McKinney of Bartlesville, Okla. tosses a quoit during a campers' jamboree
in Mt . Kisco, N. Y. where over 200 RV owneJ'll
congrega ted, all members of the Travco Molorca~
Club's "See America" tour.

~

hang ups are bracelets
WOMEN'S IIOWUNG
LAS VEGAS , Nev . {UP!) The Brunswick $50,000 Showdown, first and richest challenge match in the history of
women 's bowling, will be held
as a single game Oct. 11
between the leading female
amateur and the country's
top femal e professional.
carolyn Anderton of Ft.
Worth, Tex ., currently is
rated the top U.S. amateur
with a 200-plus average. She
will meet either Judy Soutar
of Kansas City, Mo ., or
Vesma Grinfelds of San
Francisco' calif.' depending
on the outcome of a final rolloff .

It you're hung·up on something or someone special,
show It' There's a hang up bracelet for sports buHs,
music fans, and lovers. Twelve In all to choose from.
Gold fllled ·or sterling silver chain.

•

Goessler's Jewelry Store

SEND ALONG THE
DAILY SENTINEL
AND SUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL

FOR ONLY
'18.50
THEY WILl RECEIVE 9 MONTHS OF

THEIR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER
BY MAIL
OFFER GOOD AT
ANY COLlEGE IN THE UNITED STATES.

--------·

proves elusive

the most benefits from the
public . treasury, with the
result that a deomcracy
always collapses over loose
fiscal policy, always followed
by a dictatorship. The
average age of tbe World 's
great civilizations has been
200 years."
Seidman's administrative
assistant at the White House,
Roger Porter, acknowledged
in a telephone interview that
the quote could not be au then·
ticated. The journal said the
Oberlin College and Lorain.
libraries finally found a Scottish historian and judge
named Alexander Tyler, bllt
did not find the quote. And the
Oberlin librarian ~d'Such a
statement would Have been
out of character with the
Scot's remarks.
Porter said his boss ! old
him he got the quote from a
speech made by o J oseph

FOR THE
PROTECTION
YOU NEED-

GRIFFIN UNINJURED
BOSTON (UPI) - Boston
Red Sox second baseman
Doug Griffin, hit in the head
by a pitch SUnday, has been
given a clean bill of health.
Griffin, who was serlou$ly
injured by a beaning last
year, was struck by. a Dick
Bosman pitch in the eighth
inning of the Red SOx game
against the Oakland A's.

Play it safe and· eure
It may be \ime to
have your present
policy updated.

Let's .rallc s-n

DALE C. WARNER
9n2t4l
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

POMEROY

COURT ST.

COLLEGE BOUND

Veto in trouble

~

...,..ir'

All hours are bonk·

••a
I

'

.~

-~

··..-~.

Ytle're as close
as your nearest
mailbox

III.ET I.EIIAL III.ET
IAI.ITI.IIIIL

•

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Sen .
John Glenn, D.Ohio, said this
Labor Day Weekend the use
of American forces in the
Middle E:ast was inviting
trouble, especially if they
were carrying sidearms.
Glenn said he did not see
why Americans had to be
used to get technical inormation of people violating a
truce or a peace in the area .
"Why do they just have to
be Americans '" he asked.
"Why can't we have Swedes
and Norwegians and Poles
and anybody else down there
giving that information
operating this equipment and
putting it under the ausples of
the United Nations?
" If Americans are permitted to carry sidearms in
there, they are supposedly
carrying them to protect
themselves
from
something , "
he
said.
"Sidearms are only carried
where you will be in a
situation where you may
have to possibly shoot at
somebody.
"We have just gotten out of
Vietnam and I would hate to
see ourselves getting involved in another situation

HOLBROOK GAINS GROUND - Marty Holbrook
lead the Falcons in rushing against Buffalo with 70 yards
on eight carries.

IIu

Lavendar ; back row , Mona Black, Harold Black, Frank
·Imboden and Tim Imboden. Absent were Rich Arnold,'
Jim Imboden, Jeff Hubbard, Bub David, Rudy Stewart,
Hollie Stewart, and Jeff Davis.

working Ohioans," he said .
"On this Labor Day, 8.9 per
. cent of our work force is
unemployed. Energy shortages projected for the
coming winters mean that
this year arxl next, even more
Ohioans will suffer the
nrisery of unemployment.
" I will oot rest until we can
eliminate that misery and
frustration in Ohio," he concluded.
The
unemployment
compensation bill sets
benefits al 50 per cent of the
employe's average -.:eekly
wage, with higher maximum
benefits. A worker with three
or more dependents would be

Trouble invited

Ill

SECOND. PLACE WINNERS - The Syracuse
Nazarene Church took second place in the Meigs Connly
Church Softball League t his season . Front row, 1..-, the Rev.
Howard Black, Eber Pickens, Shel'man Cund,iff, Ralph

eligible for maximwn weekly
benefits of $150, up from $107.
It also calls for payment of
benefits for the first week of
unemployment,
lf
the
claimant is out of work for
thr ee consecutive weeks ;
increases the maximum level

;;We have new tllreats to

!.I I.ET I'EIIAL IAI.ET
......

-'related to employment

\

minute s and 45 seco nds
remain{ng in that period .
Roush kicked the extra point
again and the score was tied.
However Buffalo came
back quickly in the fourth
period with another touchdo wn and then scored again
on an interception thrown by
Goldsberry.
While the score seemed a
little lopsided Wahama out
gaine d in total yards with 336
to Buffalo's 245 total offensive yards.
Besides the loss of Kehler
and an untimely interception
and fwn ble Wahama was
assessed 65 penalty yards
which included three fifteen
yard penalties while on offense.
The le ft handed quarterback Goldsberry threw 24
passes and was able to
complete 15 for 146 yards on
the evening . His prime
target was Scott Roush with
five passes which included
the two touchdown passes
besides one for 31 yards, 13
yards an 18 yards and a
seven yard pass . Roush
fwnbled th e balraway on the
31 yard pass.

•

Governor signs 2 bills

Kebler Injured

f

I

. I

OFFER

EXPIRES
SEPT. 30, 1975

CLIP AND MAIL
---------- -....,...~---------------------------

The Daily Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NAME------------------------ -------ADDRESS-- ----------------------------·

CITY_______ __________________________ _
STATE_ ______________ ZIP COOL ___________ _

n

CHECK

n

AMT.___ _

MONEY ORDER

SORRY NO REFUND

•

I

'

�•'

'·

••

•

The
U.S. auto Industry r-··oudly,

Klan

•

IS

shucking
its robe
ATLANTA (UP!) - Imperial Wizard Robert ~elton
says members of the Ku Klux
Klan now wear business
suits, not robes, to conventlms. Robes and cross
burnings
are
mainly
ceremonial.
Imperial Wlzard James R.
Venable contends the Klan is
not much different from any
other secret society, such as
the MaSOIII or the Knights of
Columbus.
Klan leaders all insist they
are working through the
establishment fc.- goals they
thlnlt are needed to keep
America great. They even
have a candidate for
president, Dale Reusch of
Ohio.
But Ku Klux Klan
Uterature is as strident as
ever. The campeign against
blacka, Jews and catholics
has not changed.
For example, a book by
Venable, last updated in 1974,
lltateli: "One drop of Negro
blood In a white man's veins
does not create another white
man. It creates a Negro,
forever kinking the hair,
flattening the nose and
thlckeninl! the lips. Also, it
forever dulls the intellect ... "

·'

&gt;

..

,,

'

'

.

'

'

.•·

''

...

.,

' '

•......".;.. '

..
.. ....
•

• " II

....t"~il·'·"..
I ,. .. ,

,'-

,. I I

' •

..
'

'

formally and hopefully was
raising the curtain today on
its 1976 model show.
Ford Motor Co. led off the
annual ritUal, which mixes
show business and hard sell.
President Lee lacocea was
previewing the coming year's
prospects for the No. 2 car- ·
maker.
There are few surprises in
the 1976 cars. Executives
describe this as a year of
transition, both in the
national economy and in
Detroit, where 1977 will bring
a new generation of smaller

standard-sized cars com-

financial resources. The AOC
program is funded primarily
by federal and state .govemments.
Distributions thus far this
month to Gallia and Meigs
Counties were f59.493 or 317
cases, Gallla had S44,286 and
240 cases in Meigs.
Fairview

Smtt~ ,

now deceased . fr om

_admmlstralion, and that such
application will be heard on

the 9th day ot September. 1975,
at 10 : 00 O'Clock A .M .
Dale E . Sm i lh

(8) 26 I~) 2, 9, J tc

IN THE MATTER OF THE
ADOPTION
OF
CHRISTOPHER MATTHEW
McGRATH

Charles Millon McGrath . co

"

Boyle Vo lkswagon . Lake City.
Florida. w i ll t ake n o tice that a
petition has b ee n f ile d in the

Mrs. Debbie Tope and son
returned to their home at
Wheelersburg,
Sunday
after spending sometime !rilh
her grandmother, Mrs .
Glady• Shield• ll.fr

Common Plea s Cou rt . ProbatC'

o:

Division , Meigs County , Ohi o .
by Mickey R Hutt on . to adopt
C hristoph e r
Matthew
McGrath sta t ing th at you h ave
willful ly failed and neg lec1ct;J
for more than 1he pas! two
years t o prol.' ide the nece ss ary
supporl l or said child . t h a t
said petit io n lor ado ptio n will
be hea rd on Se pl e mbttr /0.
1915 at 10 · 00 am
in sai d
court .

19 , ?6" f.Ql ?. J t c

Manning D . Webste r
Judge
Court of Common P le as ,
Probate Di11ision
(BI 26 (91 2, 9, 3 tc

Carpenter
Personals

•

.-.

"
&lt;!"•

-·....

....-,....

:.~

-·"
...
..-·..
-·
••
...
-,..'
.•'.. ..,.,..
. i ;: :

· ~·

"

.:,,

~

~ ..,

~:

·r::··. .
~ e.
·;· 'A ~

..,.-''

...

~"

...
F

•

..

0

you
For the third year in a row we are
America's most efficient electric utility in
power generation-an achievement based
upon the use of the most advanced
technology available today and the
burning of coal.
At American Electric Power and all our
operating companies, striving for greater
efficiency is a never-ending process.
On the basis of latest industry reports, we
managed to squeeze more electricity out .
of the fuel burned than any other electric
power company in the U.S.A.

if 1be

' ,.

•

•

..... '·

..
..
......
••
l;t'

"

instead of best, we would have had to burn
3 million more tons of America's coal. An
expense of over $60,000,000 our customers
would have borne.
Or, looked at another way ... if we had been
burning oil instead of coal, America's fuel
saving would have been over 12,000,000
barrels!
That's conservation ... pure conservation
in keeping with Federal Energy
Administration goals. When anyone
conserves, all America benefits.
If every American will commit to conserve
through the.efficient use of energy ... and if

And the benefits are big.

·

..

If, for example, last year we were average

We're proud.

lletiaenl.
'
' Rtii;cb l8ld In December,

Ptoirllll-

Ferguson added that the
ADC distribution does not
reflect
food
stamp
allowances to the recipients.
The state welfare department
distributes food stamps, and
ADC payments to those
recipients choosing to receive
stamps are reduced accordingly.
Ferguson noted that the
main September distribution
included 486 more families
than the one in August but the
payment fell by $62,023.
ADC payments are made to
families with one parent or
one unemployed parent on
the basis of family size and

NOT ICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 21.597
Estate of LOUISE BRYAN ,
Deceased .
Notice is hereby gil.'en that
Bernard V Fultz, of Box 723.
Pomeroy , Ohio . has been duly
appointed Executor of . the
Estate ot L ou is e Bryan ,
deceased , lat e of Middleport ,
Meigs Counly , Ohio .
Creditors are required to
tile their claims wilh said
fiduciary w i thin tour months .
Dated this 23rd day of
Aug u~ t 1975

Kilflbti

t...

State Auditor Thomas E.
the first automaker to sell its
r
..:-rg
!•.~ !m 's office announced
1976 models - weeks ahead
today
the
September
of the traditional unveiling
and before Chrysler Corp. distribution of $33,020.008 in
Aid to Dependent Children
began building 1976s.
Sales this model year (ADC) to 173,273 families in
probably will hit about seven Ohio's 88 counties.
Ferguson said the amount
million, continuing ·the worst
sales s lump since the does not include the weekly
Depression of the 19~. Most ADC auxiliary payments
analysts feel 1976 sales will which will be made primarily
improve, if only because they to new recipients throughout
the month.
cannot get worse.
The auxiliary payments in
GM Chairman Thomas
August,
totaling $1 ,744,692 to
Murphy predicted a few
months ago sales in 1976 12,751 families, coupled with
would hit 9.5 million. But , the main August distribution
many analysts forecast 9.3 of $33,082,001, boosted the
August total of $34,826,723.
million at the most.

Dale Smith has filed an ap .
plication In the Probate Court
of . Meigs County, Oh io . to
reh~ve the estate of Claude L. .

(8\

Venable says there now are
42 aepilrate and distinct
otgiDIPtlona known as the
ioin In the United States. The
twb larjut are his group, the
National Knights of the Ku
Ki1JI! loan, and the United
ttlllill of America headed by
Blieltlril In Tusealoosa,. Ala .
., ~lidentlal candidate
Retildt II the Ohio grand
dragon ·of the United Klans
lrid .Scott Nelaon, · the candldllte for, vice president, is
lmpitrlil wizard of a group
llliollil u the Texas Fiery
of the KKK.
' ,'l'be J*l!Rnt poeltlon of the
Ktaii rellardlng Catholics
ifldlcateuomethlng of a dlsa-

"

price tags with increases
ranging up to $1,000 than two
years earlier.
Combined with the Arab oil
boycott and the recession,
millions of buyers were
scared away.
Only General Motors Corp.
has announced its new prices
- up an average $206 for cars
and $357 for trucks.
Because, GM sells more
than one-half the vehicles
built in the United States,
many
think
other
automakers' prices will fall
in the same price range. But
this is by no means certain.
Last month, GM became

Sm lth Estate :
·
You will take notice that

J B O' Or i c n
A llo rney lor
M ic key R Hut to n
100' Cou r t S•rcel
Pomeroy . Ohio J5 769

The book says that while
the Klan is not anti-Catholic,
"It pities all Catholics In their
foreign papal enslavement
111d prays that they may be
free of it."
Lumping some of the
enemies of the Klan In one
11e11tellce, Venable said, "We
now know that the greatest
group of salesmen we have
for our cause are the Kennedys, the Martin Luther
Klzl8s, the Jake Javitses, the
Goldwaters, 111d all the swine
rabbis of Jewism."
'!be Klan originally was
founded In 1889 In Tennessee.
Gen.
Nathan
Bedford
Forre!l, a Confederate Anny
veteran, was the grand
wl%ard
and
as
the
c.-gllll%atlon spread to other
state1 the state leaders,
known as Grand Dragons,
usu8l1y were men who had
been prominent Confederate
Army officers.
The purpose of the Klan In
those days was to control
former black slaves and to
offer jlrotectlon against white
carpetbaggers trying to
expiolt the South during the
days of reconstructioo. It
eventually was disbanded by
Forrert.
The Klan was revived In
1916 at SIAllle Mountain, Ga.,
with a rally on property then
owned by the Venbable
family, The original Klan had
the respect of many · In the
South but the revived Klan
and its offahoots have been
condelnned In all parts of the
cowill'y.
During the 192Qs It was
connected with lynchings and
whippings
of
blacks .
Sometimes
Jews
and
CathollCI were targets.
It II estimated as many as
four million Americans beImBed !AI the Klan in both the
SoUth lalci the North during
iti higb-water mark In the

*mounced bls candldie;l fiJI' president, that
::e~djlcan apply for
arid that In Ohio
ibcri·lliin ·oo per cent of the
metnben ate Catholics. •He
liilld , ttill was a national

bining size, luxury and fuel
economy.
Executives already have
written off the 1975 model
year as a disaster and,
despite some hopeful sounlls
in the boardrooms of the
industry, a lot of what happens in 1976 depends on
outside factors.
The nation's economic
health is the biggest factor .
The price of gasoline is
another.
Yet soother factor is car .
prices. Here, industry
ana lysts·say, Detroit plans to
move carefully. When the
1975s came out, they carried

PUBLIC NOTICE
TO · All creditors of Claude L.

i'

'

1920i.

.'

ADC payments reported

'76 model show opens today in nation
DETROIT (UP!) -

'

•,

'

our government will make a full commitment to coal, our most plentiful fuel,
America will have the basic ingredients
for solving our energy problem:

..

"

..

.,

Miss
Linda
Reedy,
Southside, W. Va ., spent a
few days with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Swett.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree and her mother,
Goldie Gillogly, were guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Crabtree• and sons for a family
gathering. Others present
were Mrs. Angie Hawk, Ruth
Hawk, Mr. and Mrs. Thatcher Hart, Bill, Kathy, and
John, Athens ; Mr . and Mrs.
Carl Hawk, Mr . and Mrs.
Dwaine Hawk, Mr. and Mrs.
Phil Hawk and Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Beitzel, Albany.
Mr.
William Combs,
Copley, and Mrs. Harold
Duncah, Medina were guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith,
and local, Mr . and Mrs.
Denver . Rawlings, Aibany,
this past week. They also
called on Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Starkey and went to the
Gillogly orchard for apples
while here.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Birchfield (Mona Hamon),
David, Shelia, Melissa,
Bobby and Richy, Dade City,
Florida, spent some time
here with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs . Noble Hamon and
other relatives. Those who
· joined the Birchfields and
Hamons at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Don
and Kathy, for a family
gathering included Mr . and
Mrs. Marvin Covey, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Hartman, Mrs.
Phillip Turley; Steven and I
Jennifer, South Charleston,
West Virginia; Mrs. Norman
Maynard, Paul and Donita,
Nolan, W.Va ., Mr . and Mrs.
William Hamon, Mr. and
Mrs. John Thompson, Karen
and Mary, Given, W. Va.,
Ray Mandeville, North
Carolina; Grace Hamon,
Charleston, W. Va., Mr . and
Mrs. Forrest Halderman.

0

NOTICE FOR SERVICE

Cozart . Chalriler Gi llilan . and .
the unkn o wn neirs , dev i sees
arid nexl of kin of Wesley G .
G i llilan . all of whose places of
residence are unknown and
c ann o t
w it h
reasonabl e
d i ligence be asce'rla i ned :
You are nereby notif ied !hat
you
hav e
b e en
nam ed
defend an Is in a le ga l ac lion
entille d M i ldred Gillilan .
Admi ni strat r ix o f the E st a1e
of
Wesley
G
Gill i l a n .
deceased .
Pla i ntiff .
vs
Lawrence Gillila n. el al ,
Defendan t s. Tnis (!(lion has
been assigned Case No 2 1.322'.
and is p endi ng in tne Court of
Co m m on
Pleas ,
Pr obate
D i 11ision . of Meigs Cou n ty ,
Pomeroy , Ohio . 45769 .
The obiec t o f t h e co mp la in t
is for autho ri ty to sell th e real
estate of the decedent to pay
t he deb ts and c osts of ad
minist e ring hi s estate . whi c h
r e al es tat e i s described as
follows ·
Twenty tour 1 24) acres ott
the eas1 end of the follow ing
real estate, to wit . Fa rly
acres of land o ut ot the west
halt of Lot No 12 12 in S,. ,. . ,.,,.,
2. T ow n shi p 2, and Ran ge . • ,,,
the Ohio Company 's Purchase
in Leta rt Township . Me-igs
County. Ohio , said 40 acre lot
be ing in tne north par t a t the
wesl hall of th e 160 acre lot
abol.'e mentioned . and b eing
•he same properly co n11e ye d
by Nancy P ic k ens . eo at , oo
Joseph Mart in P ickens by
de ed dated March 2.1. 1937 . and
recorded in Book 140. at Page
591 of the Deed Records or
Me igs Counly , Ohio ; e)(ceot
four acres oft the west side
thereof c on11 eyed by Jose ph
Martin
Pi cke n s
to
El11a
P ic kens Var i an and Robert P .
Varian by deed da t ed March
25 . 1917 . and recorded in Book
1.12.. at Page ]]7 of the Deed
Records , IE"al.' i ng
twenty
ac res con11eyed hereby .
Deed Referen ce : Volume
162 , Page dd9, Meigs Counly
Deed Records
Y o u ar e required to answer
•he compla i nt w i thin 28 days
after the last publication of
this no t ice . which "w ill be
published once each week tor
six successil.'e weeks . The la st
publication will be made on
September 29 , 19 75, and the 28
days tor answer w ill com
mence on that date .
In case of your lailure 10
answer or otherwise respond
as required by the Ohio Rules
o f Civil Procedure. judgmen t
by de fault will be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded in !he com pla int.

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P .M
Day Before
Pub
loc ation .
Monday Deadlin e 9 a .m
Ca n c ellat ion
Co rre ction!&gt;
W i ll be accepted until 9 a .m
tor Day of Publ ic ation
REGULATIONS
The Publisht!!r reserves !he
right to e d it or reje ct any ads
deemed
ob jecti onal
The
publ is her
will
not
be
respons i ble t or more t han one
incor r ct insertion
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one ins ertion
Minimum Charge \1 .00
14 CE"nls per word three
conseculil.'e insertion s
26 cents per word six c on
sec ul i11e insertion~
25 Per Cent Disc ounl on paid
ads and ads pa i d with i n 10
days
CAROOFTHANKS
&amp; Obituary
S7 00 f or SO w ord m ini mum
F ~(" 1 \ d d iliona ! word 3c
BLIND ADS
A dd itional 25c Charge per
Adve rt isemcn t .
OFFICE HOURS
8 · 10 a .m lo 5. 00 p .m . Da il y .
8 30 am . •o 1100 Noon
Sarurday

Manning D . Webster ,
Ju dge and Ex -officio
Cle r k of the Common
Pleas Court,
Probate Dil.'ision..
M e igs Cou nty , Ohio
{Sl 25 , (9) 2, 8, IS, 22 . 29 , 6! c

Greg, Susan, Brian and
Nickii; Betty Kirby, Todd
and Trent, Hamden; Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Speigel and
children, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs . Preston Hamon, Mark
and Steven, McArthur; Mr.
and Mrs . Gary Hamon,
Shawn and Amy, Pomeroy,
RD,
James
Cotterill,
Harrisonville; and Mr. and
Mrs. Rexie Cheadle, locaL
Reverend and Mrs. David
Wiseman
and
family,
Woodsfield were recent
guests of his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey.
Mr . and Mrs . Manford
Smith, Carroll were guests of
their son and daughter-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Smith. Other visitors were
Mr. and Mrs . Herb Hanaway,
Amanda.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Leist
and daughters, Gaithersburg,
Maryland, were weekend
guests of her mother, Lucy
' Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs . Rex Cheadle,
Don and Kathy entertained
with a wiener roast in honor
of her brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Birchfield and family, who
are are on vacation here from
their home in Florida. Others
present were Dan Cotterill
and 'Becky Will, Harrisonville, Mr. and Mrs. Rexie
Cheadle, Gary Hamon and
family, Betty Kirby and
children,
the
Forrest
Halderman family, Norma
Maynard and family, and
Noble Hamon .
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley
and Anna, Edison, were
weekend guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Lewis Smith and Anna
stayed for a weeks visit with
her grandparents.

Unseramble Lhese four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

lei!

m •.m 0 ry ,

us

a

•

·conserva~ion.

10
J I
DELNAH·I
I
I
~~LJ;:=;~·-:-::7"-:~L:;;:.L!~;::::;~·~;·u~r~r;•;•~ted
I ..=.t. I IN A "( X I l I ) t I

t

~

~. ~

YARD SALES, Se pt . 2, and l
Tuesday and. Wednesday
from 10 am . 1111 5 p m Nice
c l othi n g , used sofa , and
dinette set . 645 Broadway .
M i dd le po rt.
Charlolle
Hann i ng
-l 1 21c

·~ ~~

to fonn the aurpriae an1wtr, as
the above cartoon.

2.
II was earlv in the morning.
God opened His portals wide .
And the angels c ame to guide
h im,
Across the great dil.'ide .
Sadly m i ssed
by his
c hildren .
'11 -2- llp

1965 HILLCRE ST . 10 :-: SO.
S7 . 495
For
more
in
format io n ca l l 9dQ 526 1
8 26 6t c

Employment Wanted
WILL 00 babySitt ing in my
home . Phone 742 -4863 .
8· 31 -lt'(:

1n

NOTIFY

lilw a lt·rlure

19 l7 GMC ' ton pi ( k u p tru e "-. .
sharp and in 11ery good
c ond1l ion P ri ce S7 .l50 Call
99 ? 79 1? or see Stc ... e Bu rt on
B 1l l ?tp

3 ' BEDRM . house on 10 acres .
per
month
(pl us
S100
ul i lities ). Call { 614) 98S 3561
after 6 p .m
8 -l1 -2tc

Notice

________ __

ENGLISH She pherd pups .
Phone (614) 698 -4499 .
B-29 -3tp

2

BEDROOM
f urnished
mobile h ome . No pets Ca ll
992j479
8 22 -tfc

,,

19521NTERNATIONAL !ruck,
1 'Cn , 14 fl . flatb ed w ilh 190
rear end . S315 . P hone 742 67 5 1
8 -31 -6rc

1967 FIAT, S65 , engine bad.
Pnone 992 -7826 .
8 -J1 -3tp
1969 BONNEVILLE Pontiac .
a i r cond i tion i ng , power
bl"akes , steer i ng , window s.
and seats . Call 949 -5721 or
see Ben PetreL Ra c ine
8 -3 1 lie

For Sale
LUMBER t or sale. doors ,
windows, and all kinds . Call
after 5 p .m ." 992 -3658 .
B·27 -6tc
WHITEROCK and Babcock
hens, $2 . 50 each . Phone 992
7d07
8· 28-61p
CA NNIN G toma Toes , green
and red p epper s' C l eland
f-arms . Ge rald i ne C le la nd .
Racine Ph one 9.19 417 1.
B 19 tfc

BEDROOM trailer.
n i ce . Phone 992 -3324 .

exira
8 -26 -lfc

TRAILER , adUIIS only . Phone
992 -318 1
B-27 -tfC

1974 STARCRAFT told ·dOwn
campe r with awning , sleeps
B. $1.900 . Phone 992 2514
a 26 61c
1976 CHRYSLER
bOals 1n
stock at 197 S prices Also ,
Chrysler
fishing
boals .
Se11eral u 5·'c:1 bculs for sa le .
Longfellow Motor s. r"a'len s
wood, W . va . Phone t304l
273 3594 .
B-26 -6tc
CA NNING lomatoes . Pi ck
your own . Also , melon s ,
And rew Cross, Letart F all s ,
Ohio . Phone 247 -2852 .
8-26 -6t c

TWO Furnished apls . Kay
Cecil , 87 South Seco nd Ave .,
Middleport. Ohio . Phon e
992 -5262 .
a 21 .1fc

POMEROY

-

2

story

trame in exce llent con ·
dition . 3 BR . b a th . nice
kitchen
wi th
reng e.
d isposaL N.G hot w ater
heat , f u ll basement. por
c h es, close to school .

Dan's Shoe Repair

Lacgc

MIX CONCRETE
df' l• vcrcd r 1qht to your
pro tec t I a s t anQ &lt;'ilSY I re c
es timat es
Phone V9 'l J18d ,
Gocq tem R eady MiK Co .
M •Qdl eporl . 0 1110
6 )0 tf

.

D &amp; V TREE Trim ming. 20
years ex p erience tn s.ured .
tr ee es t imates. Cal l99 2 1057.
Phon e (1) 667
Cool11il l e
)Q.! 1

4 JO tt c
5 EW IN G
MIICH IN E .
Rcpll•r S. s&lt;&gt;r11ice . all makes .
997 228-1 The r,ab r ic, Shop ,
Pom&lt;&gt;roy Au th orl l cd S1 ngcr
&lt;., &lt;lt('s and Se r vice
We
sha r pe n Sc; isso r s
3 29 t l c
DoZER wO R K. ExCavat1ng~
1 ~1 nd
c l ea r i ng , ponds and
bao:.ements ,
and
lan d
sca pin g
Pull in&lt;;.
Ex
c avatin g. phone 99'1 2J78
8 26 30tc
H A N D L ETTERED SI G N S
A N D POSTER S.
F REE
ES IIM A TE S CALL M C
CRAW F OR D ,. "99 7 7680
8 ! ?6 tp

MIDDLE PORT
1°•&gt;
story , 3 BR , bath , nice

EXCAVA l~N G.

backhOe ,
doler and dilcher . Ga!.,
elect r ic and water line
bu r ia l , basements , footers,
se pt •c sys tems and brush
.~ lea n i ng . W i ll haul fill dirt.
lop soiL sand and gra"el ,
l i mestone tor dril.'eway~ and
ro ads
Phone Charles R.
Hatfield . Backhoe Service.
Rl. 1, Rutland , Onto , 7tll2 609'
7- 11 -90tc

EXCAVA TING , dozer , loader
a nd ba ck hoe work : septic
tnn to. s
in~ta ll ed ;
dump •
truc k s. lind to boys tor hire ;
will na ul t ill dirt. top soiL ·
t•mc~ tone an d gra11e l.; Call
!lob or Roger J effers , day ·
p hone 99' 7089. night phone
'J'-11 1~"15 or 992 52l2 .
2 1 I TIC

'

Real Estate for Sale

WO U LD YOU BE LIE VE ?
B uild an all steel b uil ding at
Pole Barn pr ices") Go ld en
Giant A ll St eel Buil d i ngs ,
Rt
J . Box 14!1. Waver ly,
Onio Phone 94 7 7796 .
7 ?4 r t c

2

$18.500 .

ErWoo o BOW ER s 'R EP/\tR
Sw ee p ers, to as Ter s. i r on'!:i .
all small app lian ces . La wn
mower . n elC I to Stal e Hiqh
w a y Gar~1 g e on Rout e 7·
Phon e 9A', ]B?'.i
4 16 tt c

kitchen , L .R . ha s fireplac e.
Full basem ent with uti lit y
R . Fruit trees All i n good
condition . $14 , 800 . O WNER

MOVING .
DEXTER ~ JO nice clean
acres (fenced) h ome has 3
BR . Living , k i t c hen . utility
Barn &amp; other building s.
good we! 1. $3.500 down ba I.
in c lud es int e re s t $133 . 00
per month for 15 yea r s.

NO INFLATION IN THE
PRICES OF THE ABOVE
PROPERTIES BUY
NOW
PHONE 992 -2259

For Rent or Sale
For Rent

Sale

by Land Contract
Office Building with 700 sq.
lt. of space located on 107
Sycamore St.,
Pomeroy .
Would sell on land contract
or rent. Gerald Reuter,
Phone 992:2490 .

~or

', EPTI(
TANKS c leaned .
Mod ern San 1tat i on 992 39S4
o r ?9'1 7) -19
9 16 tfc

c

-.

8 I ·IS

.

~ E A DY

story
fr ame ,
re ce ntly
reno vated , J BR , l' 1 baths,
dining R ., TV room . car
peted , paneled. tiled , new
NG . •forced air furnac e,
n ew s iding. lull ba se ment.
1 c ar garage. porches .

or

StOp In Or
~aii992 . 1SJ1

9 -2-l mo .

$17 ,000 .

POMEROY

Ftatwocxl\, Ohio
Pomeroy , Ohio

•

P O RTABLE
T O I LE T
RENT AL.
C on s t ructio n
Out do o r
e¥cn t s
P hon e
Galli P O l is
., .1(, .178?.
Rus~e l l's
Plumbiny cu 1d
H evt ing
B 19 tfc
BACKHOE tor rent , h our o r
con tra ct
R eg
or
ex .
cav al ing t yp e Se ptic tanks
installed . Bi ll Pull in s . Ph o ne
992 2&lt;178
8 27 lfc

-

C U ST UM
PI C l u~E
I R /I.M I NG ,
O R IG IN f,L
SEA SCA P£;
A N D LAN.O
SCAPE ~ AI NTIN G S. E
JOYCE M I LL ER . 99 7 1680
8 10 :'4 1p
MOBIL E Cra ne service and
doze r w ork. Phone 99? 5.168
8 7 ?6 t p

Real Estate For Sale
5 1X ro o m house at 842 P ear-l
St . • Middlepo r t, w we in
su ta red .
pane led .
ne w
ceil i ngs , etc Phon e 992 ?022
8 77 -71c
HOU SE for 3a te H I R ut la n d,
, ... S6.500 . Phon e 99? 5858
B l I 1tc

NEW LISTING - 20 acres and
all minerals . . '2 houses with
baths.
and
nice
barn .

$31.000 .00 .
NEW LISTING -

Brick home

of 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, nice
bath with shower. Modern kl1 . •
dishwasher , and disposal.

$12,000 .00.

ON

THE

RIVER

3

b edroom s,
2 bath s,
full
b aseme nt with garage and
la rge !of for year around
li v ing . $14,000 .00.

NEAR MIDDLEPORT -

4

bedr ooms , nice kit ., modern
balh. ut ility room , F . A . fur na ce, and l.'iew o f the mountain tops . $30 ,000 .00 .

NEW LISTING -

In town

on

quie1 stre e t , 3 bedrooms, beth,
l arg e !i11ing and family room
down . $8500 .00 .
RACINE - Jlarge bedrooms •
bath, mod . kit ., large d i ning
a nd li11i ng . Basement front
porch , ni ce lot for garden .
Offer welcomed .
5 ACRES ~ About 112 fenced .
Good building si te and garden
s pa ~e . Drilled welL 2 bedroom
mob ile home . $15.500 .00 .

BUILDING LOTS -

Meigs ,

Eas t e rn and Southern . Some
with uti li ties. $1500 .00 up .
WANTED - New brick home
with large bedrooms and

H OU SE , 3 bedrooms , new
Sea r s' c ab i net s , indoo r .
outdoor carpeting . c h a i n
l ink fence . utili ty bu ilding, 7
lo t s Ph on e 99'l 74 )0

Sale

HUNTIN G Li ce n"se. N ig h t
c raw le r s. me al
worm s,
T ACKLE , guns , ammo .
bows, arrows , c amp 1ng
equip , CR"s a nd accessory .
Indian Joe's. 308 Pag e St .'}
5 tr eets pa st Midd l e port
Swimming Pool
8 13 76tp
1975 HOND A Cl::l - t:,u . t m .
mac ulate,
s howr o om
condi ti on . Buying tru c k .
F irs t 51. 69 5 Phone 992-7210 .
8 29 3tc

........
... _ ..........
,....._rf &gt;u " c.,...,... .ro-.,
~..,

~~.

0

"''"00 ..,_..,. . . ~ .. "'""""
"'"'"'"'PO -Kt&lt;JI1 ""'qe
"""'"''"" ........,., "'""' l""""'
oht

. . . . fO ...... .., • •• , ....

FUEL OIL

Heating Stoves
All sizes on hand , priCe s
start at 5324 .69.
- 1 Wood Burning Stove

CLIP THIS AD and bring it
in for S15.00 discount.

3 /\ NOd ROOM furnist1ed and
unfu rn ished
apartmenls .
Phone 997 -54 34.
d 1? lfc

~'PO~'t,gQ:v ,_o

t9 i7 A RROW Camper . phon e
99 ? 546R
8 15 'l6tp

TRAILER space for renl .
Phone Albert Hill. 949 -2261 .
8 -26 -7tp
2

M,C.IN

!I I? !lc

STE REO -RADIO ,
am t m,
console , 4 speed c hanger
Balance S101 86 or lerm s .
Call 992 -1965.
8 26 tfc

REAL1l
_ .

.608 E.

KUHL CAKE DECOR

Steel Toe Satety ·Shoes

Q.ELAND

MODERN Walnut S.lereo
rad io con so te. am fm rad io .
'' spee d c h ange r
Oalan ce
\101 7? or ter ms Ca ll 99 7

Siegler &amp; Monogram

NEW
VILLAGE
Manor
Apartments in Middleport, 1
bedroom apts from 5104 plus
etec Catl 992 3273 or see
Mrs . Keatley , Apt. 101,
Riverside Apartments
8·26-26fp

A PEP TALK .

1968
BARR AC UD A
p .s .
au roma• ic PhoCie 949 2220 .
8 26 61 c

COUNTRY home , 7 rms . and
bath on F latwoods Road .
Phone ( 61A ) 985 -3846 .
8 l l lip 1974 V .W . Buc . low m il eage .
Phone 742 -4885 .
8 -3 1-3tc
MOBILE home space , 1 acr e
in cou ntry . Write Box 61],
Pomeroy , Ohio or c all (6 18 1 1970 PLYMOUTH 440 GTX ,
Phone 992 -2557
52 4-5825 .
8 -11 2t c

Sale

POCKET

!.lit ('IJ&lt;"f!ll/ -

8-28-6tp

TRAILER space for rent i,·,
Middleport . Phone 992 -5434
YARD SALE , 312 Pearl St .,
8 -29 -261c
Middleport . Thursday ,
F r i day and Saturday , Sept .
LA SA LLE
HOTEL , MID .
4, 5 and 6.
9 -2 -51c
DLEPORT , OHIO ROOM S
SS UP . SPECIAL RATE S
PORCH
SALE
starting
BY WEEK OR MONTH .
Monday · !ill ? A lot of old
T . V . AIR CONDITION IN G .
dishes, white uniforms , one
e 26 · 26tc
portable TV, a lot of other
misc. items . 144 Mulberry
4 ROOMS and balh apl . in
Al.'e .• starting at 10 a.m
Rutland area
Phone 992
8 -31 ·ltc
5858 .
-"
7-27 -tf c
YARD, Basement and Porch
Sa le starting August 27
th rough Sept . 17 . Everydev LA URELAND A P A RTMENT .
6th and George Sts .. N ew
except Su nday
Antique~ ,
Ha ven ,
W
Va .
IM
dishes, furniture , bedrm .
MEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
sets and misc ., adults'
Select
your
'l
bedr m
chi l dren ' s
and
infant
townhouse
Beau! itul ne w
clothing Sh oe s some new .
apt
compte)(
Appliances
new
bed
sheets
and
furnish ed ,
completely
blankets . Blue shower stall
carpeted , R en 1 $178 and up
with seal f iberglass, while
i ncluding u Ti l i ties
Cal l
lavatory , girl's b i ke . other
r esi dent manager. Sam or
ite ms too numerous to
Becky Longanacre, t JO ,f
mention . Follow signs from
882 -2567 . II no answer. call 1
Langsl.' i lle, 'l.o~ m i!e from
(304) 882 -2788 .
B 19 l'ltc
Turner's Store on Co. Rd . 10
8 -27 tfc
TRAILER tor rent , ' ·• m i le off
Rt
t4l on K i ngsbury Rd .
filher furni s h e d or un
furnisl1ed . Phone 74? J l 'lJ
a 10 l 'l t c
PIANO Tun ing, Lane Dan i els,
Phone 992 -2082 .
8-2 8-26t p 1= "URNISHED
apartment ,
adults only i n M iddleport .
Phone 992 -3874
ROOM
AND
BOARD
l -25 -lfc
Private air con di tio ned
room, phone , T V • all
meals , laundry plus many .COUNT R Y fl.·, obil e
H ome
extras . Write Mrs . M
J.
Park , Rt 33. ten mi l es north
MiHer , Box 105. Pomeroy ,
of Pomeroy . Larg e loi s w i th
Ohto .
concrete pal iO!f , side walk s.
r un ner s and off s treel
-·......, 8 1 26tp
~arking Phone 99 2 7479
,
Room and Board
12 31 lfc ,
ROOM AND BOARD tor
sen ior cit i zens. Low income
l iving, very nice . Phone 992 - PR(VATE meeting room for
any organization. pho!"'e 997
3509 .
39 7 5.
8-24 : 26tc
3 11 lf c

(1\J..Wl':r&amp; 'omorrow)

KAPOK

1970 RAMBLER REBEL . 4 dr
avtomalic transmission .
p .s .. phone 99 2 2201 .

WILL babysit
my hom e.
Phone 992 -7641... -·
8 -24 7tc
-~- ~-----~--- - - - -- -- ~~. ONE trailer lor, gas, water.
electr ic ity a11ailable
High
.-R EMODELING ,
1-"tUmbmg,
Street
,
Middleport,
Ohio
heating and all types of
Phone 992 -2864
general
repair . _ work
8 -29 -Jtc
guarant eed . 20 years ex '
perience . PhOn e 99 2 )409 .
TWO bedrm
mobi l e home ,
5 1 If~ .
phone 992 ·1479
8-29 -61p

Wanted To Buy

KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN

-

s•rvice

Kttchen State Inspected
and
Baker
ltcensed
Homem•de
De c orator .
Noodles. also featured .

TEXAS WESTERN
BOOTS

Auto Sales

7 RM . and bath br ic k home ,
448 South Se con d . Mid
dleport . Also , 7 rm . and b atn
home on Rt . 13 , 1 mite to 1 2
mile from grade sc hool and
high school. A ls o , f ur n ished ,
3 rooms and bath , ground
floor apt . near
Pomeroy
Br i dg e .
References
required Call i!lfler 6 p m .
992 -7022 or 992 -2050 .
8-31-4t c

.:..r.. RP- ENTRY .
floor ing,
ceil i ng and panel ing Ph one
99? 7159 .
8 1? 76tc

Jobber In

9 RM HOU SE i n M i ddleport.
large lot. Good ·n eigh
borhood Phone (6 14) 98S
1805 .
8 31 31c

ires

CAKE BAKJNd
WANTED

Middleport, 0

JIB N. 2nd

-

· Cooling

Volkswagens and other
foreign cars.
Wi Ibur Ward ,
Mgr . &amp; Mechanic
8-21 -1 mo.

Dan's Shoe Repair

ACRE tarm located •n
Co lumb ia Twp Phone ( 6 14 1
698 2"524 .
a 1 1 Jt p

ENGLI SH Se tters , L lewellin l BE DRM h o u se with wall to
AF Reg Phone 992 5170 .
wall carpe t , cenlral air
8 J 1 ll c
Phone 992 7030
B J t 6t c
AKC
REG . mate Cocker
Spaniel pupp ies . wormed
HOUS E al 178 La ur el ·" .
and Shors Phone 949 41 1l
Pomeroy
For f urth er in
B 3 1 lt p
l oi"mat ion . call 992 3868
- -- ---~-------8 2J lltp
TO GIVE AWAY : Very nic e
teml! l e Beagle dog . 4 5
months old
Needs gOQd NEAR
P om eroy , n ew
3
home . No hunters ne ed
bedroom . 1' 2 bath s, c arport,
apply . Call evenings . 992
mvd r m ., util i ty . sun dec tl. ,
5 427 o r 992 5910
Meigs
la rge living room , kit c hen
H uma ne Society .
dining
area .
pan eled ,
r ef r iger ator and T ap pan
B l 1-6t c
ran ge in c luded
Also , will
help finance Ph on e 997 7790
after _6 p m .
8 27 81c
1967 FALCON station wagon
· in excellent condition 790
Maple Sl .. Middl eport , Ohio
Ph o ne ~92 - 293 6
8 79 ltc

For Rent

WILL do babysitting in my
home , 5 days per week .
Monday thro ugh Frid ay .
any age limi t Phone 949
3405, Rac ine , Ohio .
8 26 61 c

I I I ]"

~

Real Estate For Sale
90

ock
wrbers
Muftler-Tatilpipes
Sys-tems .
We
also

Pomer.oV

Ph . n2 -2174

,, 10 1 mo

AKC Reg P oodles . two bl ue
and 1 c hoco !a l e . 1 apri c ot .
Phone (]0 41 88 2 1205
8 17 121p

Mobile Homes for Sale

AI&lt;". C Reg Pekinge se puppies .
ST5 . Phone P t . Pleasant, 675
50 30 .
R 19 \ ?lc

Now arran1e the circleclletten

by

Yefterd•,-'• \ An••er: Soutldlf

..

Yard Sale

-

Yai'd

Ph . 991.3993

CO.Ijj.\

PENN2DIL

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

l,~'o'E~OEII

_.,~

Phone 991 -9973
North lnd Straet
Tune- Ups · Batteries
Sh
Ab
T

Nathan Bigq s
Radiator Specialist

::,yracuse , Ohto

I

_

From the targes r 1rvc to. or
Bulldozer Radialor to The
sr;u tl ll es t Heater Co r&lt;&gt; .

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING- SOFFITT
GUTTERS -AWNINGS

Pets For Sale

Pets For Sale

Subsidiaries: Appalachian Power Co., Indiana &amp; Michigan Electric Co., Kentucky Power Co., Kingsport Power Co., Michigan Power Co., Ohio Power Co., Wheeling Electric Co.

\ '

~~------P~O~M~E~ROY, OH10

STA t&lt;TER for 1966 through
1969 Datsun . Phone 742 -5387 .
B-31 -3tc

Jumblr" BLESS

..

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

~"

-

EXPERJENC:ED
adiato
Service

Blown mto Walls &amp; Allies
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; OOORS

'4109

Clearance

a

I N LOVING memory of our
dear
Father,
Edward
Young , who passed away 10
years ago today , Se ptemb er

FREE ESTIMATES

---

iCe boxes,
brass beds , or comp l ete
households . Wr i te M . D .
M i ller , Rt. ~. Pomeroy,
Ohio . Call 992 -7760
10 -7-71

"::

'

List S48S4 -

~

-

LARRY

A sorrow loo great to be !old .
But for us who ha 11 e loved you
and lo~l you,
That memory will never grow
old
Sadly m i sst!!d by Husband ,
Henr
e ea ... er : o aug hi er,
Y
Sanna Sue: Son , Lowell -W:~nted
and Family ; Mother , Mrs . CASH paid to r all ma kes aM
Harry
All i son :
Sister ,
models Ctf mobile h omes .
AudrE"y Torrence ; Brolher.
Phone area code 614.123
Paul Allison and Maltie
""9S31 .
9 ·2 · 11C
4 11 tt c
----~~~~- ----­

•

'.

beautiful

Business Services
lnsulat~!~wS:rvices

I

B' ~leetside mirrors, H. duty sho c k s, st abilizer bar &amp;
spnngs . H. dut y p ower brakes, 350 V-8, turbo
h ydramatic powe r steer ing , AM radio , R. step bumper ,
5- L7B -t i res , foam sea t &amp; gauges .

,O.t.:t&gt; ···furniture.

Together they can further our country's .
magnificent production record, which will ...
make possible a fuller life for every
American·- especially the less privileged.

American Electric Power Company, Inc.

1975 C-1 0 % TON

PLAYEK piano , need not be in
working condit io n . Also ,
wan ted piano rolls . Phone
742-5625 .
8 -26 -6 t c

Together they can blunt the inflationary
effect of cartel produced foreign oil prices.

Show yo.u care.
Join the movement to coal and

You

.J_

,-----Po-me-roy-.~l[
OF
Motor Co. i -.
QUALITY

In MemOIJ
IN MEMORY of Navada
Beaver who passed a way
Sept . 2, 1967

S
·
t•
1
Cl
~+,· d ·
rte en zne· assz, ze s

rrL

2 SIGNS

W I LL DO Odd iobs , mow i ng .
haul ing, painting o r roofing
Phone 992 -7409 .
8-28-61c

~&amp;~M®IkJ M&gt;ouo&amp;l.J.-J ,_..

Coal and conservation.

R esu lts U:se

v
v
t
ro . ::::n ~:~~~~.:·. ;,advs_Ll or £as
8

"""

.

'
i
13-: The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport'Pomeroy, 0.,,Tuesday, Sept. 2, 19?5

12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .', Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1975
I

' '

I

POMEROY LANOMARK
.9 _J_ack W. Carsey, Mgr .
Phone 9'12-2181

M

HAY for sale . Phone 843 -2514 .
B-31 -21C
NOW cont ractin g club calves
for fall delivery . Both steers
and heifers . Call (624) 98 5·
1805 .
8-31 -ltc
GRAIN fed call.'eS . 85c lb . cut ,
wrapped , and froze Phone
{ 614 ) 985 -.!198 .
8 -31 -6t c

------

-~-----

«••• •~

POTATOE S. Kenneb ec and
cobblers , very nice . No . 1
and 2 size in 50 lb . bag, ius I
dug
A l so. clean bates ot
straw, nice for l andscaping
and bedding . Paul Sayre ,
Rt . 338 1 mile below Ra11en s
wood Ferry, Great Bend ~d .
Phone 843 · 2286 .
8 -29 -ltc
PERSONAL electr ic washer ,
Genera l E lec . swi11el 1ype
sweeper , used 11ery little
Padded ironing board on
St and . l arg e . 21)(22 elec .
floor fa n with controls
Phone 992 23S8.
8 29-llc

AKC Brittainy S25 ; 80 lb
Crossbow , 565 ; two s1orm
windows , 28 )( 36, sa each .
Phone 992 -7805 .
8-27 -61p
L ET u s service your Volk s
wa ge n . reasonable rat es
Middleport Pennzo i l . No r th
~eco nd Str eet . Middl epo rt
Ph on e 997 99 73
fl 19 ?6tc

tovv~

"n'

u~

""'

• ••II

•« th&lt;.....,.. •I I.,...,

GREAT COUNTRY STEREO
IN THE BIG BEND

WMPO-FM
STEREO 92.1
WITH
Craig R~msey, Mike Stevens, Genny
Turner and Brad Nogar from 6:00
A.M. Til Midnight .

..

L-------------~

�•'

'·

••

•

The
U.S. auto Industry r-··oudly,

Klan

•

IS

shucking
its robe
ATLANTA (UP!) - Imperial Wizard Robert ~elton
says members of the Ku Klux
Klan now wear business
suits, not robes, to conventlms. Robes and cross
burnings
are
mainly
ceremonial.
Imperial Wlzard James R.
Venable contends the Klan is
not much different from any
other secret society, such as
the MaSOIII or the Knights of
Columbus.
Klan leaders all insist they
are working through the
establishment fc.- goals they
thlnlt are needed to keep
America great. They even
have a candidate for
president, Dale Reusch of
Ohio.
But Ku Klux Klan
Uterature is as strident as
ever. The campeign against
blacka, Jews and catholics
has not changed.
For example, a book by
Venable, last updated in 1974,
lltateli: "One drop of Negro
blood In a white man's veins
does not create another white
man. It creates a Negro,
forever kinking the hair,
flattening the nose and
thlckeninl! the lips. Also, it
forever dulls the intellect ... "

·'

&gt;

..

,,

'

'

.

'

'

.•·

''

...

.,

' '

•......".;.. '

..
.. ....
•

• " II

....t"~il·'·"..
I ,. .. ,

,'-

,. I I

' •

..
'

'

formally and hopefully was
raising the curtain today on
its 1976 model show.
Ford Motor Co. led off the
annual ritUal, which mixes
show business and hard sell.
President Lee lacocea was
previewing the coming year's
prospects for the No. 2 car- ·
maker.
There are few surprises in
the 1976 cars. Executives
describe this as a year of
transition, both in the
national economy and in
Detroit, where 1977 will bring
a new generation of smaller

standard-sized cars com-

financial resources. The AOC
program is funded primarily
by federal and state .govemments.
Distributions thus far this
month to Gallia and Meigs
Counties were f59.493 or 317
cases, Gallla had S44,286 and
240 cases in Meigs.
Fairview

Smtt~ ,

now deceased . fr om

_admmlstralion, and that such
application will be heard on

the 9th day ot September. 1975,
at 10 : 00 O'Clock A .M .
Dale E . Sm i lh

(8) 26 I~) 2, 9, J tc

IN THE MATTER OF THE
ADOPTION
OF
CHRISTOPHER MATTHEW
McGRATH

Charles Millon McGrath . co

"

Boyle Vo lkswagon . Lake City.
Florida. w i ll t ake n o tice that a
petition has b ee n f ile d in the

Mrs. Debbie Tope and son
returned to their home at
Wheelersburg,
Sunday
after spending sometime !rilh
her grandmother, Mrs .
Glady• Shield• ll.fr

Common Plea s Cou rt . ProbatC'

o:

Division , Meigs County , Ohi o .
by Mickey R Hutt on . to adopt
C hristoph e r
Matthew
McGrath sta t ing th at you h ave
willful ly failed and neg lec1ct;J
for more than 1he pas! two
years t o prol.' ide the nece ss ary
supporl l or said child . t h a t
said petit io n lor ado ptio n will
be hea rd on Se pl e mbttr /0.
1915 at 10 · 00 am
in sai d
court .

19 , ?6" f.Ql ?. J t c

Manning D . Webste r
Judge
Court of Common P le as ,
Probate Di11ision
(BI 26 (91 2, 9, 3 tc

Carpenter
Personals

•

.-.

"
&lt;!"•

-·....

....-,....

:.~

-·"
...
..-·..
-·
••
...
-,..'
.•'.. ..,.,..
. i ;: :

· ~·

"

.:,,

~

~ ..,

~:

·r::··. .
~ e.
·;· 'A ~

..,.-''

...

~"

...
F

•

..

0

you
For the third year in a row we are
America's most efficient electric utility in
power generation-an achievement based
upon the use of the most advanced
technology available today and the
burning of coal.
At American Electric Power and all our
operating companies, striving for greater
efficiency is a never-ending process.
On the basis of latest industry reports, we
managed to squeeze more electricity out .
of the fuel burned than any other electric
power company in the U.S.A.

if 1be

' ,.

•

•

..... '·

..
..
......
••
l;t'

"

instead of best, we would have had to burn
3 million more tons of America's coal. An
expense of over $60,000,000 our customers
would have borne.
Or, looked at another way ... if we had been
burning oil instead of coal, America's fuel
saving would have been over 12,000,000
barrels!
That's conservation ... pure conservation
in keeping with Federal Energy
Administration goals. When anyone
conserves, all America benefits.
If every American will commit to conserve
through the.efficient use of energy ... and if

And the benefits are big.

·

..

If, for example, last year we were average

We're proud.

lletiaenl.
'
' Rtii;cb l8ld In December,

Ptoirllll-

Ferguson added that the
ADC distribution does not
reflect
food
stamp
allowances to the recipients.
The state welfare department
distributes food stamps, and
ADC payments to those
recipients choosing to receive
stamps are reduced accordingly.
Ferguson noted that the
main September distribution
included 486 more families
than the one in August but the
payment fell by $62,023.
ADC payments are made to
families with one parent or
one unemployed parent on
the basis of family size and

NOT ICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 21.597
Estate of LOUISE BRYAN ,
Deceased .
Notice is hereby gil.'en that
Bernard V Fultz, of Box 723.
Pomeroy , Ohio . has been duly
appointed Executor of . the
Estate ot L ou is e Bryan ,
deceased , lat e of Middleport ,
Meigs Counly , Ohio .
Creditors are required to
tile their claims wilh said
fiduciary w i thin tour months .
Dated this 23rd day of
Aug u~ t 1975

Kilflbti

t...

State Auditor Thomas E.
the first automaker to sell its
r
..:-rg
!•.~ !m 's office announced
1976 models - weeks ahead
today
the
September
of the traditional unveiling
and before Chrysler Corp. distribution of $33,020.008 in
Aid to Dependent Children
began building 1976s.
Sales this model year (ADC) to 173,273 families in
probably will hit about seven Ohio's 88 counties.
Ferguson said the amount
million, continuing ·the worst
sales s lump since the does not include the weekly
Depression of the 19~. Most ADC auxiliary payments
analysts feel 1976 sales will which will be made primarily
improve, if only because they to new recipients throughout
the month.
cannot get worse.
The auxiliary payments in
GM Chairman Thomas
August,
totaling $1 ,744,692 to
Murphy predicted a few
months ago sales in 1976 12,751 families, coupled with
would hit 9.5 million. But , the main August distribution
many analysts forecast 9.3 of $33,082,001, boosted the
August total of $34,826,723.
million at the most.

Dale Smith has filed an ap .
plication In the Probate Court
of . Meigs County, Oh io . to
reh~ve the estate of Claude L. .

(8\

Venable says there now are
42 aepilrate and distinct
otgiDIPtlona known as the
ioin In the United States. The
twb larjut are his group, the
National Knights of the Ku
Ki1JI! loan, and the United
ttlllill of America headed by
Blieltlril In Tusealoosa,. Ala .
., ~lidentlal candidate
Retildt II the Ohio grand
dragon ·of the United Klans
lrid .Scott Nelaon, · the candldllte for, vice president, is
lmpitrlil wizard of a group
llliollil u the Texas Fiery
of the KKK.
' ,'l'be J*l!Rnt poeltlon of the
Ktaii rellardlng Catholics
ifldlcateuomethlng of a dlsa-

"

price tags with increases
ranging up to $1,000 than two
years earlier.
Combined with the Arab oil
boycott and the recession,
millions of buyers were
scared away.
Only General Motors Corp.
has announced its new prices
- up an average $206 for cars
and $357 for trucks.
Because, GM sells more
than one-half the vehicles
built in the United States,
many
think
other
automakers' prices will fall
in the same price range. But
this is by no means certain.
Last month, GM became

Sm lth Estate :
·
You will take notice that

J B O' Or i c n
A llo rney lor
M ic key R Hut to n
100' Cou r t S•rcel
Pomeroy . Ohio J5 769

The book says that while
the Klan is not anti-Catholic,
"It pities all Catholics In their
foreign papal enslavement
111d prays that they may be
free of it."
Lumping some of the
enemies of the Klan In one
11e11tellce, Venable said, "We
now know that the greatest
group of salesmen we have
for our cause are the Kennedys, the Martin Luther
Klzl8s, the Jake Javitses, the
Goldwaters, 111d all the swine
rabbis of Jewism."
'!be Klan originally was
founded In 1889 In Tennessee.
Gen.
Nathan
Bedford
Forre!l, a Confederate Anny
veteran, was the grand
wl%ard
and
as
the
c.-gllll%atlon spread to other
state1 the state leaders,
known as Grand Dragons,
usu8l1y were men who had
been prominent Confederate
Army officers.
The purpose of the Klan In
those days was to control
former black slaves and to
offer jlrotectlon against white
carpetbaggers trying to
expiolt the South during the
days of reconstructioo. It
eventually was disbanded by
Forrert.
The Klan was revived In
1916 at SIAllle Mountain, Ga.,
with a rally on property then
owned by the Venbable
family, The original Klan had
the respect of many · In the
South but the revived Klan
and its offahoots have been
condelnned In all parts of the
cowill'y.
During the 192Qs It was
connected with lynchings and
whippings
of
blacks .
Sometimes
Jews
and
CathollCI were targets.
It II estimated as many as
four million Americans beImBed !AI the Klan in both the
SoUth lalci the North during
iti higb-water mark In the

*mounced bls candldie;l fiJI' president, that
::e~djlcan apply for
arid that In Ohio
ibcri·lliin ·oo per cent of the
metnben ate Catholics. •He
liilld , ttill was a national

bining size, luxury and fuel
economy.
Executives already have
written off the 1975 model
year as a disaster and,
despite some hopeful sounlls
in the boardrooms of the
industry, a lot of what happens in 1976 depends on
outside factors.
The nation's economic
health is the biggest factor .
The price of gasoline is
another.
Yet soother factor is car .
prices. Here, industry
ana lysts·say, Detroit plans to
move carefully. When the
1975s came out, they carried

PUBLIC NOTICE
TO · All creditors of Claude L.

i'

'

1920i.

.'

ADC payments reported

'76 model show opens today in nation
DETROIT (UP!) -

'

•,

'

our government will make a full commitment to coal, our most plentiful fuel,
America will have the basic ingredients
for solving our energy problem:

..

"

..

.,

Miss
Linda
Reedy,
Southside, W. Va ., spent a
few days with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Swett.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree and her mother,
Goldie Gillogly, were guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Crabtree• and sons for a family
gathering. Others present
were Mrs. Angie Hawk, Ruth
Hawk, Mr. and Mrs. Thatcher Hart, Bill, Kathy, and
John, Athens ; Mr . and Mrs.
Carl Hawk, Mr . and Mrs.
Dwaine Hawk, Mr. and Mrs.
Phil Hawk and Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Beitzel, Albany.
Mr.
William Combs,
Copley, and Mrs. Harold
Duncah, Medina were guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith,
and local, Mr . and Mrs.
Denver . Rawlings, Aibany,
this past week. They also
called on Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Starkey and went to the
Gillogly orchard for apples
while here.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Birchfield (Mona Hamon),
David, Shelia, Melissa,
Bobby and Richy, Dade City,
Florida, spent some time
here with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs . Noble Hamon and
other relatives. Those who
· joined the Birchfields and
Hamons at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Don
and Kathy, for a family
gathering included Mr . and
Mrs. Marvin Covey, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Hartman, Mrs.
Phillip Turley; Steven and I
Jennifer, South Charleston,
West Virginia; Mrs. Norman
Maynard, Paul and Donita,
Nolan, W.Va ., Mr . and Mrs.
William Hamon, Mr. and
Mrs. John Thompson, Karen
and Mary, Given, W. Va.,
Ray Mandeville, North
Carolina; Grace Hamon,
Charleston, W. Va., Mr . and
Mrs. Forrest Halderman.

0

NOTICE FOR SERVICE

Cozart . Chalriler Gi llilan . and .
the unkn o wn neirs , dev i sees
arid nexl of kin of Wesley G .
G i llilan . all of whose places of
residence are unknown and
c ann o t
w it h
reasonabl e
d i ligence be asce'rla i ned :
You are nereby notif ied !hat
you
hav e
b e en
nam ed
defend an Is in a le ga l ac lion
entille d M i ldred Gillilan .
Admi ni strat r ix o f the E st a1e
of
Wesley
G
Gill i l a n .
deceased .
Pla i ntiff .
vs
Lawrence Gillila n. el al ,
Defendan t s. Tnis (!(lion has
been assigned Case No 2 1.322'.
and is p endi ng in tne Court of
Co m m on
Pleas ,
Pr obate
D i 11ision . of Meigs Cou n ty ,
Pomeroy , Ohio . 45769 .
The obiec t o f t h e co mp la in t
is for autho ri ty to sell th e real
estate of the decedent to pay
t he deb ts and c osts of ad
minist e ring hi s estate . whi c h
r e al es tat e i s described as
follows ·
Twenty tour 1 24) acres ott
the eas1 end of the follow ing
real estate, to wit . Fa rly
acres of land o ut ot the west
halt of Lot No 12 12 in S,. ,. . ,.,,.,
2. T ow n shi p 2, and Ran ge . • ,,,
the Ohio Company 's Purchase
in Leta rt Township . Me-igs
County. Ohio , said 40 acre lot
be ing in tne north par t a t the
wesl hall of th e 160 acre lot
abol.'e mentioned . and b eing
•he same properly co n11e ye d
by Nancy P ic k ens . eo at , oo
Joseph Mart in P ickens by
de ed dated March 2.1. 1937 . and
recorded in Book 140. at Page
591 of the Deed Records or
Me igs Counly , Ohio ; e)(ceot
four acres oft the west side
thereof c on11 eyed by Jose ph
Martin
Pi cke n s
to
El11a
P ic kens Var i an and Robert P .
Varian by deed da t ed March
25 . 1917 . and recorded in Book
1.12.. at Page ]]7 of the Deed
Records , IE"al.' i ng
twenty
ac res con11eyed hereby .
Deed Referen ce : Volume
162 , Page dd9, Meigs Counly
Deed Records
Y o u ar e required to answer
•he compla i nt w i thin 28 days
after the last publication of
this no t ice . which "w ill be
published once each week tor
six successil.'e weeks . The la st
publication will be made on
September 29 , 19 75, and the 28
days tor answer w ill com
mence on that date .
In case of your lailure 10
answer or otherwise respond
as required by the Ohio Rules
o f Civil Procedure. judgmen t
by de fault will be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded in !he com pla int.

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P .M
Day Before
Pub
loc ation .
Monday Deadlin e 9 a .m
Ca n c ellat ion
Co rre ction!&gt;
W i ll be accepted until 9 a .m
tor Day of Publ ic ation
REGULATIONS
The Publisht!!r reserves !he
right to e d it or reje ct any ads
deemed
ob jecti onal
The
publ is her
will
not
be
respons i ble t or more t han one
incor r ct insertion
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one ins ertion
Minimum Charge \1 .00
14 CE"nls per word three
conseculil.'e insertion s
26 cents per word six c on
sec ul i11e insertion~
25 Per Cent Disc ounl on paid
ads and ads pa i d with i n 10
days
CAROOFTHANKS
&amp; Obituary
S7 00 f or SO w ord m ini mum
F ~(" 1 \ d d iliona ! word 3c
BLIND ADS
A dd itional 25c Charge per
Adve rt isemcn t .
OFFICE HOURS
8 · 10 a .m lo 5. 00 p .m . Da il y .
8 30 am . •o 1100 Noon
Sarurday

Manning D . Webster ,
Ju dge and Ex -officio
Cle r k of the Common
Pleas Court,
Probate Dil.'ision..
M e igs Cou nty , Ohio
{Sl 25 , (9) 2, 8, IS, 22 . 29 , 6! c

Greg, Susan, Brian and
Nickii; Betty Kirby, Todd
and Trent, Hamden; Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Speigel and
children, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs . Preston Hamon, Mark
and Steven, McArthur; Mr.
and Mrs . Gary Hamon,
Shawn and Amy, Pomeroy,
RD,
James
Cotterill,
Harrisonville; and Mr. and
Mrs. Rexie Cheadle, locaL
Reverend and Mrs. David
Wiseman
and
family,
Woodsfield were recent
guests of his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey.
Mr . and Mrs . Manford
Smith, Carroll were guests of
their son and daughter-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Smith. Other visitors were
Mr. and Mrs . Herb Hanaway,
Amanda.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Leist
and daughters, Gaithersburg,
Maryland, were weekend
guests of her mother, Lucy
' Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs . Rex Cheadle,
Don and Kathy entertained
with a wiener roast in honor
of her brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Birchfield and family, who
are are on vacation here from
their home in Florida. Others
present were Dan Cotterill
and 'Becky Will, Harrisonville, Mr. and Mrs. Rexie
Cheadle, Gary Hamon and
family, Betty Kirby and
children,
the
Forrest
Halderman family, Norma
Maynard and family, and
Noble Hamon .
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley
and Anna, Edison, were
weekend guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Lewis Smith and Anna
stayed for a weeks visit with
her grandparents.

Unseramble Lhese four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

lei!

m •.m 0 ry ,

us

a

•

·conserva~ion.

10
J I
DELNAH·I
I
I
~~LJ;:=;~·-:-::7"-:~L:;;:.L!~;::::;~·~;·u~r~r;•;•~ted
I ..=.t. I IN A "( X I l I ) t I

t

~

~. ~

YARD SALES, Se pt . 2, and l
Tuesday and. Wednesday
from 10 am . 1111 5 p m Nice
c l othi n g , used sofa , and
dinette set . 645 Broadway .
M i dd le po rt.
Charlolle
Hann i ng
-l 1 21c

·~ ~~

to fonn the aurpriae an1wtr, as
the above cartoon.

2.
II was earlv in the morning.
God opened His portals wide .
And the angels c ame to guide
h im,
Across the great dil.'ide .
Sadly m i ssed
by his
c hildren .
'11 -2- llp

1965 HILLCRE ST . 10 :-: SO.
S7 . 495
For
more
in
format io n ca l l 9dQ 526 1
8 26 6t c

Employment Wanted
WILL 00 babySitt ing in my
home . Phone 742 -4863 .
8· 31 -lt'(:

1n

NOTIFY

lilw a lt·rlure

19 l7 GMC ' ton pi ( k u p tru e "-. .
sharp and in 11ery good
c ond1l ion P ri ce S7 .l50 Call
99 ? 79 1? or see Stc ... e Bu rt on
B 1l l ?tp

3 ' BEDRM . house on 10 acres .
per
month
(pl us
S100
ul i lities ). Call { 614) 98S 3561
after 6 p .m
8 -l1 -2tc

Notice

________ __

ENGLISH She pherd pups .
Phone (614) 698 -4499 .
B-29 -3tp

2

BEDROOM
f urnished
mobile h ome . No pets Ca ll
992j479
8 22 -tfc

,,

19521NTERNATIONAL !ruck,
1 'Cn , 14 fl . flatb ed w ilh 190
rear end . S315 . P hone 742 67 5 1
8 -31 -6rc

1967 FIAT, S65 , engine bad.
Pnone 992 -7826 .
8 -J1 -3tp
1969 BONNEVILLE Pontiac .
a i r cond i tion i ng , power
bl"akes , steer i ng , window s.
and seats . Call 949 -5721 or
see Ben PetreL Ra c ine
8 -3 1 lie

For Sale
LUMBER t or sale. doors ,
windows, and all kinds . Call
after 5 p .m ." 992 -3658 .
B·27 -6tc
WHITEROCK and Babcock
hens, $2 . 50 each . Phone 992
7d07
8· 28-61p
CA NNIN G toma Toes , green
and red p epper s' C l eland
f-arms . Ge rald i ne C le la nd .
Racine Ph one 9.19 417 1.
B 19 tfc

BEDROOM trailer.
n i ce . Phone 992 -3324 .

exira
8 -26 -lfc

TRAILER , adUIIS only . Phone
992 -318 1
B-27 -tfC

1974 STARCRAFT told ·dOwn
campe r with awning , sleeps
B. $1.900 . Phone 992 2514
a 26 61c
1976 CHRYSLER
bOals 1n
stock at 197 S prices Also ,
Chrysler
fishing
boals .
Se11eral u 5·'c:1 bculs for sa le .
Longfellow Motor s. r"a'len s
wood, W . va . Phone t304l
273 3594 .
B-26 -6tc
CA NNING lomatoes . Pi ck
your own . Also , melon s ,
And rew Cross, Letart F all s ,
Ohio . Phone 247 -2852 .
8-26 -6t c

TWO Furnished apls . Kay
Cecil , 87 South Seco nd Ave .,
Middleport. Ohio . Phon e
992 -5262 .
a 21 .1fc

POMEROY

-

2

story

trame in exce llent con ·
dition . 3 BR . b a th . nice
kitchen
wi th
reng e.
d isposaL N.G hot w ater
heat , f u ll basement. por
c h es, close to school .

Dan's Shoe Repair

Lacgc

MIX CONCRETE
df' l• vcrcd r 1qht to your
pro tec t I a s t anQ &lt;'ilSY I re c
es timat es
Phone V9 'l J18d ,
Gocq tem R eady MiK Co .
M •Qdl eporl . 0 1110
6 )0 tf

.

D &amp; V TREE Trim ming. 20
years ex p erience tn s.ured .
tr ee es t imates. Cal l99 2 1057.
Phon e (1) 667
Cool11il l e
)Q.! 1

4 JO tt c
5 EW IN G
MIICH IN E .
Rcpll•r S. s&lt;&gt;r11ice . all makes .
997 228-1 The r,ab r ic, Shop ,
Pom&lt;&gt;roy Au th orl l cd S1 ngcr
&lt;., &lt;lt('s and Se r vice
We
sha r pe n Sc; isso r s
3 29 t l c
DoZER wO R K. ExCavat1ng~
1 ~1 nd
c l ea r i ng , ponds and
bao:.ements ,
and
lan d
sca pin g
Pull in&lt;;.
Ex
c avatin g. phone 99'1 2J78
8 26 30tc
H A N D L ETTERED SI G N S
A N D POSTER S.
F REE
ES IIM A TE S CALL M C
CRAW F OR D ,. "99 7 7680
8 ! ?6 tp

MIDDLE PORT
1°•&gt;
story , 3 BR , bath , nice

EXCAVA l~N G.

backhOe ,
doler and dilcher . Ga!.,
elect r ic and water line
bu r ia l , basements , footers,
se pt •c sys tems and brush
.~ lea n i ng . W i ll haul fill dirt.
lop soiL sand and gra"el ,
l i mestone tor dril.'eway~ and
ro ads
Phone Charles R.
Hatfield . Backhoe Service.
Rl. 1, Rutland , Onto , 7tll2 609'
7- 11 -90tc

EXCAVA TING , dozer , loader
a nd ba ck hoe work : septic
tnn to. s
in~ta ll ed ;
dump •
truc k s. lind to boys tor hire ;
will na ul t ill dirt. top soiL ·
t•mc~ tone an d gra11e l.; Call
!lob or Roger J effers , day ·
p hone 99' 7089. night phone
'J'-11 1~"15 or 992 52l2 .
2 1 I TIC

'

Real Estate for Sale

WO U LD YOU BE LIE VE ?
B uild an all steel b uil ding at
Pole Barn pr ices") Go ld en
Giant A ll St eel Buil d i ngs ,
Rt
J . Box 14!1. Waver ly,
Onio Phone 94 7 7796 .
7 ?4 r t c

2

$18.500 .

ErWoo o BOW ER s 'R EP/\tR
Sw ee p ers, to as Ter s. i r on'!:i .
all small app lian ces . La wn
mower . n elC I to Stal e Hiqh
w a y Gar~1 g e on Rout e 7·
Phon e 9A', ]B?'.i
4 16 tt c

kitchen , L .R . ha s fireplac e.
Full basem ent with uti lit y
R . Fruit trees All i n good
condition . $14 , 800 . O WNER

MOVING .
DEXTER ~ JO nice clean
acres (fenced) h ome has 3
BR . Living , k i t c hen . utility
Barn &amp; other building s.
good we! 1. $3.500 down ba I.
in c lud es int e re s t $133 . 00
per month for 15 yea r s.

NO INFLATION IN THE
PRICES OF THE ABOVE
PROPERTIES BUY
NOW
PHONE 992 -2259

For Rent or Sale
For Rent

Sale

by Land Contract
Office Building with 700 sq.
lt. of space located on 107
Sycamore St.,
Pomeroy .
Would sell on land contract
or rent. Gerald Reuter,
Phone 992:2490 .

~or

', EPTI(
TANKS c leaned .
Mod ern San 1tat i on 992 39S4
o r ?9'1 7) -19
9 16 tfc

c

-.

8 I ·IS

.

~ E A DY

story
fr ame ,
re ce ntly
reno vated , J BR , l' 1 baths,
dining R ., TV room . car
peted , paneled. tiled , new
NG . •forced air furnac e,
n ew s iding. lull ba se ment.
1 c ar garage. porches .

or

StOp In Or
~aii992 . 1SJ1

9 -2-l mo .

$17 ,000 .

POMEROY

Ftatwocxl\, Ohio
Pomeroy , Ohio

•

P O RTABLE
T O I LE T
RENT AL.
C on s t ructio n
Out do o r
e¥cn t s
P hon e
Galli P O l is
., .1(, .178?.
Rus~e l l's
Plumbiny cu 1d
H evt ing
B 19 tfc
BACKHOE tor rent , h our o r
con tra ct
R eg
or
ex .
cav al ing t yp e Se ptic tanks
installed . Bi ll Pull in s . Ph o ne
992 2&lt;178
8 27 lfc

-

C U ST UM
PI C l u~E
I R /I.M I NG ,
O R IG IN f,L
SEA SCA P£;
A N D LAN.O
SCAPE ~ AI NTIN G S. E
JOYCE M I LL ER . 99 7 1680
8 10 :'4 1p
MOBIL E Cra ne service and
doze r w ork. Phone 99? 5.168
8 7 ?6 t p

Real Estate For Sale
5 1X ro o m house at 842 P ear-l
St . • Middlepo r t, w we in
su ta red .
pane led .
ne w
ceil i ngs , etc Phon e 992 ?022
8 77 -71c
HOU SE for 3a te H I R ut la n d,
, ... S6.500 . Phon e 99? 5858
B l I 1tc

NEW LISTING - 20 acres and
all minerals . . '2 houses with
baths.
and
nice
barn .

$31.000 .00 .
NEW LISTING -

Brick home

of 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, nice
bath with shower. Modern kl1 . •
dishwasher , and disposal.

$12,000 .00.

ON

THE

RIVER

3

b edroom s,
2 bath s,
full
b aseme nt with garage and
la rge !of for year around
li v ing . $14,000 .00.

NEAR MIDDLEPORT -

4

bedr ooms , nice kit ., modern
balh. ut ility room , F . A . fur na ce, and l.'iew o f the mountain tops . $30 ,000 .00 .

NEW LISTING -

In town

on

quie1 stre e t , 3 bedrooms, beth,
l arg e !i11ing and family room
down . $8500 .00 .
RACINE - Jlarge bedrooms •
bath, mod . kit ., large d i ning
a nd li11i ng . Basement front
porch , ni ce lot for garden .
Offer welcomed .
5 ACRES ~ About 112 fenced .
Good building si te and garden
s pa ~e . Drilled welL 2 bedroom
mob ile home . $15.500 .00 .

BUILDING LOTS -

Meigs ,

Eas t e rn and Southern . Some
with uti li ties. $1500 .00 up .
WANTED - New brick home
with large bedrooms and

H OU SE , 3 bedrooms , new
Sea r s' c ab i net s , indoo r .
outdoor carpeting . c h a i n
l ink fence . utili ty bu ilding, 7
lo t s Ph on e 99'l 74 )0

Sale

HUNTIN G Li ce n"se. N ig h t
c raw le r s. me al
worm s,
T ACKLE , guns , ammo .
bows, arrows , c amp 1ng
equip , CR"s a nd accessory .
Indian Joe's. 308 Pag e St .'}
5 tr eets pa st Midd l e port
Swimming Pool
8 13 76tp
1975 HOND A Cl::l - t:,u . t m .
mac ulate,
s howr o om
condi ti on . Buying tru c k .
F irs t 51. 69 5 Phone 992-7210 .
8 29 3tc

........
... _ ..........
,....._rf &gt;u " c.,...,... .ro-.,
~..,

~~.

0

"''"00 ..,_..,. . . ~ .. "'""""
"'"'"'"'PO -Kt&lt;JI1 ""'qe
"""'"''"" ........,., "'""' l""""'
oht

. . . . fO ...... .., • •• , ....

FUEL OIL

Heating Stoves
All sizes on hand , priCe s
start at 5324 .69.
- 1 Wood Burning Stove

CLIP THIS AD and bring it
in for S15.00 discount.

3 /\ NOd ROOM furnist1ed and
unfu rn ished
apartmenls .
Phone 997 -54 34.
d 1? lfc

~'PO~'t,gQ:v ,_o

t9 i7 A RROW Camper . phon e
99 ? 546R
8 15 'l6tp

TRAILER space for renl .
Phone Albert Hill. 949 -2261 .
8 -26 -7tp
2

M,C.IN

!I I? !lc

STE REO -RADIO ,
am t m,
console , 4 speed c hanger
Balance S101 86 or lerm s .
Call 992 -1965.
8 26 tfc

REAL1l
_ .

.608 E.

KUHL CAKE DECOR

Steel Toe Satety ·Shoes

Q.ELAND

MODERN Walnut S.lereo
rad io con so te. am fm rad io .
'' spee d c h ange r
Oalan ce
\101 7? or ter ms Ca ll 99 7

Siegler &amp; Monogram

NEW
VILLAGE
Manor
Apartments in Middleport, 1
bedroom apts from 5104 plus
etec Catl 992 3273 or see
Mrs . Keatley , Apt. 101,
Riverside Apartments
8·26-26fp

A PEP TALK .

1968
BARR AC UD A
p .s .
au roma• ic PhoCie 949 2220 .
8 26 61 c

COUNTRY home , 7 rms . and
bath on F latwoods Road .
Phone ( 61A ) 985 -3846 .
8 l l lip 1974 V .W . Buc . low m il eage .
Phone 742 -4885 .
8 -3 1-3tc
MOBILE home space , 1 acr e
in cou ntry . Write Box 61],
Pomeroy , Ohio or c all (6 18 1 1970 PLYMOUTH 440 GTX ,
Phone 992 -2557
52 4-5825 .
8 -11 2t c

Sale

POCKET

!.lit ('IJ&lt;"f!ll/ -

8-28-6tp

TRAILER space for rent i,·,
Middleport . Phone 992 -5434
YARD SALE , 312 Pearl St .,
8 -29 -261c
Middleport . Thursday ,
F r i day and Saturday , Sept .
LA SA LLE
HOTEL , MID .
4, 5 and 6.
9 -2 -51c
DLEPORT , OHIO ROOM S
SS UP . SPECIAL RATE S
PORCH
SALE
starting
BY WEEK OR MONTH .
Monday · !ill ? A lot of old
T . V . AIR CONDITION IN G .
dishes, white uniforms , one
e 26 · 26tc
portable TV, a lot of other
misc. items . 144 Mulberry
4 ROOMS and balh apl . in
Al.'e .• starting at 10 a.m
Rutland area
Phone 992
8 -31 ·ltc
5858 .
-"
7-27 -tf c
YARD, Basement and Porch
Sa le starting August 27
th rough Sept . 17 . Everydev LA URELAND A P A RTMENT .
6th and George Sts .. N ew
except Su nday
Antique~ ,
Ha ven ,
W
Va .
IM
dishes, furniture , bedrm .
MEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
sets and misc ., adults'
Select
your
'l
bedr m
chi l dren ' s
and
infant
townhouse
Beau! itul ne w
clothing Sh oe s some new .
apt
compte)(
Appliances
new
bed
sheets
and
furnish ed ,
completely
blankets . Blue shower stall
carpeted , R en 1 $178 and up
with seal f iberglass, while
i ncluding u Ti l i ties
Cal l
lavatory , girl's b i ke . other
r esi dent manager. Sam or
ite ms too numerous to
Becky Longanacre, t JO ,f
mention . Follow signs from
882 -2567 . II no answer. call 1
Langsl.' i lle, 'l.o~ m i!e from
(304) 882 -2788 .
B 19 l'ltc
Turner's Store on Co. Rd . 10
8 -27 tfc
TRAILER tor rent , ' ·• m i le off
Rt
t4l on K i ngsbury Rd .
filher furni s h e d or un
furnisl1ed . Phone 74? J l 'lJ
a 10 l 'l t c
PIANO Tun ing, Lane Dan i els,
Phone 992 -2082 .
8-2 8-26t p 1= "URNISHED
apartment ,
adults only i n M iddleport .
Phone 992 -3874
ROOM
AND
BOARD
l -25 -lfc
Private air con di tio ned
room, phone , T V • all
meals , laundry plus many .COUNT R Y fl.·, obil e
H ome
extras . Write Mrs . M
J.
Park , Rt 33. ten mi l es north
MiHer , Box 105. Pomeroy ,
of Pomeroy . Larg e loi s w i th
Ohto .
concrete pal iO!f , side walk s.
r un ner s and off s treel
-·......, 8 1 26tp
~arking Phone 99 2 7479
,
Room and Board
12 31 lfc ,
ROOM AND BOARD tor
sen ior cit i zens. Low income
l iving, very nice . Phone 992 - PR(VATE meeting room for
any organization. pho!"'e 997
3509 .
39 7 5.
8-24 : 26tc
3 11 lf c

(1\J..Wl':r&amp; 'omorrow)

KAPOK

1970 RAMBLER REBEL . 4 dr
avtomalic transmission .
p .s .. phone 99 2 2201 .

WILL babysit
my hom e.
Phone 992 -7641... -·
8 -24 7tc
-~- ~-----~--- - - - -- -- ~~. ONE trailer lor, gas, water.
electr ic ity a11ailable
High
.-R EMODELING ,
1-"tUmbmg,
Street
,
Middleport,
Ohio
heating and all types of
Phone 992 -2864
general
repair . _ work
8 -29 -Jtc
guarant eed . 20 years ex '
perience . PhOn e 99 2 )409 .
TWO bedrm
mobi l e home ,
5 1 If~ .
phone 992 ·1479
8-29 -61p

Wanted To Buy

KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN

-

s•rvice

Kttchen State Inspected
and
Baker
ltcensed
Homem•de
De c orator .
Noodles. also featured .

TEXAS WESTERN
BOOTS

Auto Sales

7 RM . and bath br ic k home ,
448 South Se con d . Mid
dleport . Also , 7 rm . and b atn
home on Rt . 13 , 1 mite to 1 2
mile from grade sc hool and
high school. A ls o , f ur n ished ,
3 rooms and bath , ground
floor apt . near
Pomeroy
Br i dg e .
References
required Call i!lfler 6 p m .
992 -7022 or 992 -2050 .
8-31-4t c

.:..r.. RP- ENTRY .
floor ing,
ceil i ng and panel ing Ph one
99? 7159 .
8 1? 76tc

Jobber In

9 RM HOU SE i n M i ddleport.
large lot. Good ·n eigh
borhood Phone (6 14) 98S
1805 .
8 31 31c

ires

CAKE BAKJNd
WANTED

Middleport, 0

JIB N. 2nd

-

· Cooling

Volkswagens and other
foreign cars.
Wi Ibur Ward ,
Mgr . &amp; Mechanic
8-21 -1 mo.

Dan's Shoe Repair

ACRE tarm located •n
Co lumb ia Twp Phone ( 6 14 1
698 2"524 .
a 1 1 Jt p

ENGLI SH Se tters , L lewellin l BE DRM h o u se with wall to
AF Reg Phone 992 5170 .
wall carpe t , cenlral air
8 J 1 ll c
Phone 992 7030
B J t 6t c
AKC
REG . mate Cocker
Spaniel pupp ies . wormed
HOUS E al 178 La ur el ·" .
and Shors Phone 949 41 1l
Pomeroy
For f urth er in
B 3 1 lt p
l oi"mat ion . call 992 3868
- -- ---~-------8 2J lltp
TO GIVE AWAY : Very nic e
teml! l e Beagle dog . 4 5
months old
Needs gOQd NEAR
P om eroy , n ew
3
home . No hunters ne ed
bedroom . 1' 2 bath s, c arport,
apply . Call evenings . 992
mvd r m ., util i ty . sun dec tl. ,
5 427 o r 992 5910
Meigs
la rge living room , kit c hen
H uma ne Society .
dining
area .
pan eled ,
r ef r iger ator and T ap pan
B l 1-6t c
ran ge in c luded
Also , will
help finance Ph on e 997 7790
after _6 p m .
8 27 81c
1967 FALCON station wagon
· in excellent condition 790
Maple Sl .. Middl eport , Ohio
Ph o ne ~92 - 293 6
8 79 ltc

For Rent

WILL do babysitting in my
home , 5 days per week .
Monday thro ugh Frid ay .
any age limi t Phone 949
3405, Rac ine , Ohio .
8 26 61 c

I I I ]"

~

Real Estate For Sale
90

ock
wrbers
Muftler-Tatilpipes
Sys-tems .
We
also

Pomer.oV

Ph . n2 -2174

,, 10 1 mo

AKC Reg P oodles . two bl ue
and 1 c hoco !a l e . 1 apri c ot .
Phone (]0 41 88 2 1205
8 17 121p

Mobile Homes for Sale

AI&lt;". C Reg Pekinge se puppies .
ST5 . Phone P t . Pleasant, 675
50 30 .
R 19 \ ?lc

Now arran1e the circleclletten

by

Yefterd•,-'• \ An••er: Soutldlf

..

Yard Sale

-

Yai'd

Ph . 991.3993

CO.Ijj.\

PENN2DIL

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

l,~'o'E~OEII

_.,~

Phone 991 -9973
North lnd Straet
Tune- Ups · Batteries
Sh
Ab
T

Nathan Bigq s
Radiator Specialist

::,yracuse , Ohto

I

_

From the targes r 1rvc to. or
Bulldozer Radialor to The
sr;u tl ll es t Heater Co r&lt;&gt; .

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING- SOFFITT
GUTTERS -AWNINGS

Pets For Sale

Pets For Sale

Subsidiaries: Appalachian Power Co., Indiana &amp; Michigan Electric Co., Kentucky Power Co., Kingsport Power Co., Michigan Power Co., Ohio Power Co., Wheeling Electric Co.

\ '

~~------P~O~M~E~ROY, OH10

STA t&lt;TER for 1966 through
1969 Datsun . Phone 742 -5387 .
B-31 -3tc

Jumblr" BLESS

..

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

~"

-

EXPERJENC:ED
adiato
Service

Blown mto Walls &amp; Allies
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; OOORS

'4109

Clearance

a

I N LOVING memory of our
dear
Father,
Edward
Young , who passed away 10
years ago today , Se ptemb er

FREE ESTIMATES

---

iCe boxes,
brass beds , or comp l ete
households . Wr i te M . D .
M i ller , Rt. ~. Pomeroy,
Ohio . Call 992 -7760
10 -7-71

"::

'

List S48S4 -

~

-

LARRY

A sorrow loo great to be !old .
But for us who ha 11 e loved you
and lo~l you,
That memory will never grow
old
Sadly m i sst!!d by Husband ,
Henr
e ea ... er : o aug hi er,
Y
Sanna Sue: Son , Lowell -W:~nted
and Family ; Mother , Mrs . CASH paid to r all ma kes aM
Harry
All i son :
Sister ,
models Ctf mobile h omes .
AudrE"y Torrence ; Brolher.
Phone area code 614.123
Paul Allison and Maltie
""9S31 .
9 ·2 · 11C
4 11 tt c
----~~~~- ----­

•

'.

beautiful

Business Services
lnsulat~!~wS:rvices

I

B' ~leetside mirrors, H. duty sho c k s, st abilizer bar &amp;
spnngs . H. dut y p ower brakes, 350 V-8, turbo
h ydramatic powe r steer ing , AM radio , R. step bumper ,
5- L7B -t i res , foam sea t &amp; gauges .

,O.t.:t&gt; ···furniture.

Together they can further our country's .
magnificent production record, which will ...
make possible a fuller life for every
American·- especially the less privileged.

American Electric Power Company, Inc.

1975 C-1 0 % TON

PLAYEK piano , need not be in
working condit io n . Also ,
wan ted piano rolls . Phone
742-5625 .
8 -26 -6 t c

Together they can blunt the inflationary
effect of cartel produced foreign oil prices.

Show yo.u care.
Join the movement to coal and

You

.J_

,-----Po-me-roy-.~l[
OF
Motor Co. i -.
QUALITY

In MemOIJ
IN MEMORY of Navada
Beaver who passed a way
Sept . 2, 1967

S
·
t•
1
Cl
~+,· d ·
rte en zne· assz, ze s

rrL

2 SIGNS

W I LL DO Odd iobs , mow i ng .
haul ing, painting o r roofing
Phone 992 -7409 .
8-28-61c

~&amp;~M®IkJ M&gt;ouo&amp;l.J.-J ,_..

Coal and conservation.

R esu lts U:se

v
v
t
ro . ::::n ~:~~~~.:·. ;,advs_Ll or £as
8

"""

.

'
i
13-: The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport'Pomeroy, 0.,,Tuesday, Sept. 2, 19?5

12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .', Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1975
I

' '

I

POMEROY LANOMARK
.9 _J_ack W. Carsey, Mgr .
Phone 9'12-2181

M

HAY for sale . Phone 843 -2514 .
B-31 -21C
NOW cont ractin g club calves
for fall delivery . Both steers
and heifers . Call (624) 98 5·
1805 .
8-31 -ltc
GRAIN fed call.'eS . 85c lb . cut ,
wrapped , and froze Phone
{ 614 ) 985 -.!198 .
8 -31 -6t c

------

-~-----

«••• •~

POTATOE S. Kenneb ec and
cobblers , very nice . No . 1
and 2 size in 50 lb . bag, ius I
dug
A l so. clean bates ot
straw, nice for l andscaping
and bedding . Paul Sayre ,
Rt . 338 1 mile below Ra11en s
wood Ferry, Great Bend ~d .
Phone 843 · 2286 .
8 -29 -ltc
PERSONAL electr ic washer ,
Genera l E lec . swi11el 1ype
sweeper , used 11ery little
Padded ironing board on
St and . l arg e . 21)(22 elec .
floor fa n with controls
Phone 992 23S8.
8 29-llc

AKC Brittainy S25 ; 80 lb
Crossbow , 565 ; two s1orm
windows , 28 )( 36, sa each .
Phone 992 -7805 .
8-27 -61p
L ET u s service your Volk s
wa ge n . reasonable rat es
Middleport Pennzo i l . No r th
~eco nd Str eet . Middl epo rt
Ph on e 997 99 73
fl 19 ?6tc

tovv~

"n'

u~

""'

• ••II

•« th&lt;.....,.. •I I.,...,

GREAT COUNTRY STEREO
IN THE BIG BEND

WMPO-FM
STEREO 92.1
WITH
Craig R~msey, Mike Stevens, Genny
Turner and Brad Nogar from 6:00
A.M. Til Midnight .

..

L-------------~

�•

I~ .

I

,I

I

I '

I .
I.

14 - -Tlle Daily ~ntioel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesd•y, Sept _~. 1 ··'

Apple Grove

_DlCIC TRACY
B EST TH AT

CAN BE

BUT HOW FUTILE
CAN TWO LIVE S

SA I D~

THEIR FUTURE
VICTIMS WILL. :___
~=-5=--;PARED.

BE? -

---:::-

Suffolk, Va . and camped at
Cape Hatter, North Carolina
with the Bearhs .
Mr . and Mrs . Roger Roush,
Mr. and Mrs . Herhert Roush
By Mrs. Ht·rbcrl Kuu s h
at Silver
were shopping
Mr . and Mrs. Lee Wright
Bridge Plaza.
and sons, Keith and J ose ph,
Mr. and Mrs . Dor5el Wilson
of
Parkersbur g
were
and sons of Sissonville, W.
S.turd•y night guests ol Mr.
Va . spent Sunday wi th Mrs.
and Mrs. Rober t .Spencer
Erma Wilson .
Tracy and Doug and attended
Mr . a nd Mrs . Ed wa rd
a wiener roast a t Purlland
Morris and famil y or Nash·
Park given by the loca l
ville,
Tennessee
were
Methodis t Church .
weekend guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Cora Birch, Racine ,
Mrs
. Alex Wheeler .
Jea n Ashley , Ra venswood ,
Mr . and Mrs. Russell S.yre
Mrs. Goldie Wyant, Mrs.
and
Mr . Sayre's sister.
Webb uf Salem Ce nter were
Bertha
, of U!&lt;ih spe nt Friday
all rece nt visit ors of Mrs.
with their cous in, Mr . a nd
M•rgi e Hunt .
Mrs. Floyd Norris .
Mr . and Mr s.
Hoyt
Fergerson ol Pt. Plea san l
visited Mr. and Mrs . Homer
Warner and Mr . and Mrs.
Floyd Norris a lew days .
Mr. and Mrs . Woody
~-------------, c lub king If South pl ays low. Brown , Mr . _and Mrs , Hoyt
,\'OR Til
East win s tri ck one with the Fergerson vlstted Mr · and
8
4
• .- \
kiog aod leads th e su1t bac k. Mrs. Floy d Norris Thursday . .
: ~ 6\ \ Then when Westdgels iobhe whill The Browns !ell lor thetr
" Q 10 :l
cash enough spa es to ea t t e winter home in Ft. Pierce,
contrac t. ,.
Fla.
WES T
EAST
Oswald
:
"
II
South
rises
with
Mr . and Mrs. Everette
.-, q 1075:!
• K 9
c.lummy ·s ace of spades and It Parsons and daughters,
¥ J82
¥ (,11053
turn s out tht West has led
• 9 R3
• Q !07 4
fourth bes t I rom a live-ca rd Negley ' 0 ., spe nt from
4K 7
... 6 4 2
s uit he aded by king -quee n, S.turday till Thursda y at
SOUTII jiJJ
South
will wish he had played their larm on Ta nners Run
• J ~2
secuod
ha od low. Such a lea d is and visited Mrs. Ruth Par¥ A 7G
far more unli kely than one from s ons, Mrs . Edna Parsons a nd
t A K
jus t one of tho se two pic ture Mark -Preston Parsons .
... .,J98 5
cards
so Lhe ace pi a~. is both other' guests ol the Parsons
North -So ulh vulnf' r ab le
correc t and a wwner.
were Ivan Powell, R.:icine ,

DEGRADING THE
YOUNG WITH DOPE,
ONLY TO EN D UP A S
A PILE OF A S H ES ON
A HI LLSID E.

News Notes

"

CAPTAIN EASY

1 CAN; ... YOU'D

T H5 HOSPITAL REPORTS THA T
YOU R UNCLE'S CO NDITION IS
ST ILl- VER':r' CRAVE, SE N HORllA~

BECOME THE
~ICHEST

IN nJE

Mr . and Mrs. Roger Roush,
Mr. aod Mrs . Charles
Michael , Becky and Chuck
were s hopping at the Grand
Central Mall at Parke rsburg .
Er ne st
Grimm
wa s
···-' lUi .t'! d to University
Hospil&lt;il , Columbus Tuesday
by his granddaughters, Mrs .
Patty Tarr , Mrs. Barbara
Ba r trum.
Mr s. Bessie Stitt spent two
weeks with her daughter,
Mrs . Rene
My ers at
Colwnbus .
Mrs. Marge Burri, Bolivar
Dam , Mrs. Kathryn Hun t,
Mrs. Beverly Wickline a nd
sons, Scott and Kyle , spent
nine days vacation with Mr .
""d Mrs . Pete Bearhs at

611lL

wornv:

WIN AT BRIDGE

Think 2nd time at trick No. 1

llORN LOSER

W MF3 QN, 'IOU MA~ IT
I)JKi\T W/&gt;--S ON IT ... C:H58Sf
At-JD Wt-1/&gt;--T EL-SE' ?

U!HATE'VI;;R WAS ON
1115 i&lt;IT/':f-\BI-l FILOR ...
l Df?DPPfD IT

1

Norlh

W es t

Easl

South

l
Pa :-.:s

Pas~

3 NT.

~T.

P&lt;ISS

Pass
Opening lead - 5 A

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

""',"'""'

LITTr.~

,...,,..~,.. _ ..... ,..

IN DIG EN Tf[c~R~I~C~Hrr;~~~;E

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald . " lo planning your
pl
ay at notrum p you mus t look
WHY, TE' N
CHANGE,
BILLION
ACCOR DIHG TO ahea d to see which opponent i.s
IS SO
'1RI'IAiiCIAL
lik e ly to gain the lead . Then
MUCH IT
WIZARDS'' WHO
work it out so wh en he gai ns th e
STAuGERS
NEVER HAD
lea d. he won't be able to hurt
ME. 10
OVER TEN
THINK OF JT
DOLL. ARS A T you _
ONE
Jim : " Every declarer 's first
thought at trick ooe is to play
_;.,.•low lrom dummy . This time he
should think a second tim e and
'th d
,
,.
go up WI .. umm y s ace . .
Oswald II East has the kmg
:~~~\~=:::. .~ of clubs _everythtng wtll work
'-"''--L.L.O'-'.....:-- out beaut tlully. II Wes t ha s the
kmg of clubs he is going to ga in
t he lead with that card ."
Jim : " Wes t does ha ve the

~~~~S~F=o=R~BA~T=TI~NG7=A~H~E~Y=E~--,

LEAPIJ'I'

lllARDS~ I
CAN'T GET

WflL, IT WOULD BE A

PlEAS URE TO HAND A

FEW BIRDS A BAT IN THE
EYe FOR THEIR F¥\RT IH
THE MATTER -

OVI'R ITTO LOSE TEJ'I
BILLION

OOLLARSAND
NOT EVEN BAT
AN EYE-

I'LL

~ ~~~

Robin Fortune , Wiley and
Audrey Ours. Mr . and Mrs .
An Iow a re a der want s to Lawrence Donohue, Katrina ,
know what yo u should ·opeo Lorena and Barbi or
w1th :
Harrisonville and Donna
"' A J 3 2 ., K 9 6 + A B 4 Fortune.
"' Q 7 2.
. s tan- Mr s . E rma W'ls
1. on spen t
Th e ans wer .IS th a t m
dard American , J acoby modern fr~m Tuesday llll Monday
or a ny normal system you wtth her daughte~, Mr . and
s hould ope n ooe cl ub . This Mrs . Charles Burn at Bohvar
makes your rebidding problem Dam .
a cinch. You bid one spade over Mr . and Mrs. E . R.
one hear t or diamond , two Donohue of Intercession City,
spades ove r ooe spade aod pass Fla ., Mr . and Mrs . Everette
to e ither two clubs or one Parsons, Ruth, Karen , Cathy,
notrump. II partner responds Ka
r N
ere
by Jumping to three clubs yo u _ Y 0 · eg 1ey •
· w
bid three notrump .
dtnner guests of Mrs. Edna
D
h
Parsons, Mrs . Ruth Parsons
.
( o you ave a qu es 110n 1or
d f .1
th e Jaco oys? Write "Ask the an
amt YJ 8 c 0 h y s.. care 0 1 1his
Dean Hill, who acnewspape r . The most in- companied Mr . and Mrs.

o

teres ling questions w"l be
used in th is co lu m n an d
write rs wdl receive copies of
.JACOBY MODERN)

Dale Hill home to Moore
Haven , Fla . was met
in Colwnbus S.turday eve·
nin g
by
his
par·
ents , Mr . and Mrs. Dallas
Hill and brought home. Dean .
new to Columbus by plane .
Mr . and Mrs. Dallas Hill
enjoyed a vacation through
the new England sl&lt;ites.
Mr . and Mrs. David S.yre
·a nd granddaughters , Shelia,
Sharon, Beverly and Terri
enjoyed Thursday at Kings
Island . Enroute home they
visited Mrs . Peggy Gregory
at Columbus and visited the
Columbus Zoo.

-15- The ~lly Sef!tlnel. Middleport-Pom.;,.oy, 0. Tuesdav, Sept, 2, 1975
_DI~ TltAev ~
·
.

cury.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Virgo.
Ame rican poet Eugene
Field was born Sept. 2, 1850.
On this day in history :
!n 1935, one of the worst
hurricanes to hit the U.S.
mainland ripped through the
F1orida Keys, killing more
than 365 persons.
In 1945, Japan signed an
unconditional
surrender
aboard the U.S . battleship
Missouri in Tokyo Bay, ending World War II.
In 1964, World War I hero
Sjl;t. Alvin York died at the
age of 76.
In 1968, _the death toll of
earthquake in Iran was fixed
at 12,000.

AN'/ CHA'lEoE IN
UNCLe PLATO'S
f

"shark"

Mean·
Miss Melba
qoin' t' qit

'ier
foot,
Hoot!

_---- --., ,

You two
eatin'
a lot'

Y"

:&gt;--'-l~"----._

A person
qd; hunqru

popcorn.

Use
yer

... lookin' at.
the snack
bar all
th' time'

Joel!

foot!

14 Have high
hopes
15 Silkworm
16 Likely
17 Townsman
18 Cloak
20 Card game
21 Bridge
charge
22 - d'Azur
23 Like some

I Automaton
of Jewish
legend
2 Greek marketplace
3 Obvious
(4 wds. )
4 Ending lor
velvet
5 " In the in the Moonlight"
6 In a maze
7 Snake
8 Be obvious
(4 wds.)
9 Arranged in

a series

For Tuesday, Sep1. 2, 1975

¥ A94
• J 6 52
... Q lO 5

BORN LOSER

WEST
EAST
4 K975 3
• QJ
¥ .I B 2
¥ Q 1053
+ 9B 3
t Q 10 7 4
4 K7
... 6 4 2
SO UTH lll i
• 10 6 2
" K76

+ AK

Yesterday's Aoswer
award
16 Confederate
19 Castle
feature
20 Skidoo!
23 Supplies
24 Type of story
25 Civil wrong

UTl'LE

ORP~

.
MA'-1 NOT"
;1:3ELIEVE THIS, MA'NI,

1588
3% In medias

;BUT AH JEST E ARNED

A SOFT"
25.00 ?'----1'

33 Insect

L~~====~~-=~~==~----~~~::~::::~====~~~~~~·1
®"1 STILL CAN'T
BELIEVE SHANGHAI
JUST UPPED AND

'!'-FT.

WHY NOT?
HE'B A FREE
MAN .

YOU INVITED HIM HOME ID
MEET YOUR FAMILY ... WHICH
HE DID . f-\E WA5 UNDEP
NO OBLIGATION TO
STAY INDEFINITELY.

~UT

YOU 010
LIKE HIM.
DIDN'T YO U

HE WAS EVERYTl-I ING
YOU SAID HE WA7 .. .
AND MORE!

34 Recruits
35 Gridiron
nwnber
'!I High·
pitched
sound
38 Rohe
feature

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simplY stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

Pa ss

3 N.T .

Pass

Pa ss

A Utah reader wants to know

ACROSS

3 Theater box

19) Your one -to -one re lat ions
wt ll cause you a few headac hes
today Even an o ld all y m ay
make some unreasonab le
demands

d
¢'o/'/-..;:;C:;'

Oreg.
Girl Now"
6 Blaze
(2 wds.)
11 Sweet smell 5 Distant
12 " Two
6 Soda lounWomen"
lain treat
Oscar
7 Banking
service
winner
13 Palatable
8 M.C. Baker
yesterday's Aoswer
(hyph. wd.) 9 Caddoan
21 Mountain
3% Hindu dei~
15 Uncle, in
Indian
pass, in
33 Engll.sh
Dundee
10 Objective
India
school
16 King of
14 Scaled
22 Meander
34 Body of
comedy
( 2 wds.)
23 Celebes ox
water
17 Ridicule
17 Subsequently _Z4 Nervoll5
35 Weep
18 Wee drop 18 Heroic
Z6 Menu phrase
aloud
21 Choreoparrative
(3 wds.)
36 Jerome
grapher . -. 19 Czec h
30 Change
Kern song
Martha
31 Father
'¥/ Attention
river
24 Assuage
38- Aviv
(Fr .)
20 s . htl
25 The rate!
png y
(2 wds.)

C~~~~~ 27

~Birthday

,., .. ., .......
...
'"" •... •...

C28 Band
leader

BUT" IT'D COS!

- AH'D GIVE MAH
LIFE: TO 6EE /VIAH
FRIENDS THAR

ME /vi.AH LIFE IF
THSY SEEN/VIE

Larry
29- biscuit
30 "Queen for
- " (2 wds.)
31 Choice item
32 Necktie
fabric
35 Ocarina
(2 wds.)
39 Chicago's
airport
40 Fiend
41 Shipwonn
4% Alrican
antelope

-AN' \f-./AS MMED!!II;s ALL YOUR
FAULT, LI'L ~--­

GRAY CLCXJD-

FIRST,..,.,.._r

1rr

b

l. ~ IN K SHE'&amp;
DISAPPOINTED

f-\A5 SHE GIVEN YOU
UP A&amp; A HOPELESS
CASE ? . r-------

~AT HER

..,

IFONTIY I

I KJ

'MATCH'' Dl DN'T

ON "Tl-'E CONTRARY. SHE
&amp;AY.B SHE WON'T REST
UNTIL SHE MARRIES
. ME OFF- ·/E'\,.,,.,.-1,

OH_.~E

YOU~

JW

KJWT

XRWSJ

QBLWMAP

Y X M M B X D P. - G B F F

JUGHAID!!GRR8

EVER.'T HIN ~i

Tf-\AT NEEDS WASHIN' AN'
FETCH IT HER E !!

JZP

WUFV

BK

JW

,,_llltSIIIPIISUNSWIIIIIn !A

KJWT'I

(An•were tomorrow)

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: I USED TO BE A LAW l.'ER, BUT
NOW I AM A REFORMED CHARACTER. - WOODROW
WILSON

Jumhlr~ :

WEIGH

An~wer1

Mix ing ole and yin migllt maA·e you

QUARTZ

Saturday'•
/Jti~j- '' GENIAL"

HOW MAN'I 'S

KIDS,
TEACHE~5.
NOISE.

IT AL~

STARTS

CONF0510N ..

A6AIN

"THIS WAS
THE LAST

.. AND THE
WO~ST

'•

!i

MOI&lt;NINt:i

THING
OF ALL .,..

I COVI.D
SLEEP
LATE'

·i

-. ·•••

,,..••

HE GOT?

DID '-IE

KNOW OUR NEW

DURNED
IF I

·

KNOW--

t:vt·f&lt;

..

8,10.

11 :3&lt;&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,6, 15; Happy Days 13 ;
M idday 4; Love of Life 8, 10.
IL55-Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel's World 10.
12:DO-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,4,15; Showoffs ., ,
13; Bob Braun' s S0-50 Club 4; News 6,8,10.
12 :3&lt;&gt;-Jackpot! 3, IS; All My Children 6,13; Search For •
Tomorrow 8,10.
,
12 : 55-NBC News 3, 15.
•
11 :DO-News 3; Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8; • !
Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women Only .:,.!
15 .
h t
1: 30-Days Of Our Lives 3.4,15; Let 's Make A Deal
6,13 ; As thge World Turns 8.1 10.
2 :D0-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Guldlog Light 8,10.
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme and Reason 6,13; Edge of ', ::
Night 8, 10.
"
3:DO-Anothet World 3,4,15; . General Hospital 6, 13; • ", .
Match Game 8,10; Caught In the Act 20.
' "
""
3 :3G-Ooe Lite to Live 13; Bewitched 6 ; TaHietales
8,10; Jeanne Wolf with ... 20.
'. ' '
4: CIO-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
'"
15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Musial Chairs 8; Sesame , '',
Street 20,33; Movie "The Cowboy aod the Lady" 10;
- '
Dinah I 13.
• •
4: 3&lt;&gt;-Bewltched 3; Merv Grlflln A; Mod Squad 6;
: :
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15; FBI 6
_ ,· ,
5,DO-FBI 6; Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh - ' .,
borhood 20,33.
~: ':
5: 30-News 6; Andy Grlfllth 8; Adam -12 13; Get Smart • • ·
15; Electric Company 20.33.
. '*"
6 :DO-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame Street
.
20; Teaching Children 33.
6 :3&lt;&gt;-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6; , .. ,
CBS News 8.10; Jodv's Bodv Shoo 33.
7:DO-Truth or Consequences 3,A; Billy Graham
Crusade 15; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My · --·
L\oe? 8; News 10; Movie "ihe King and I" 13;
Book Beat 20; The Romagnolls' Table 33.
,- .. 7 : 3~ollege Footba\1'75 3; Name That Tune 4; Lest's · 0c
Make A Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Evening
.
Edltloo with Martin AGronsky 20; The Judge 10; - ··
Episode Action 33.
"
8 :DO-Rich LIHie 3,4, 15; That's My Mama 6; Billy '
Graham Crusade 8; Feeling Good 20.33; Movie
" Giant" 10.
8 :3&lt;&gt;-Bl\ly Graham .Cru..de 6; Mao Builds, Man
Destsroys 33; Philadelphia Folk Festival 20.
9:oo-Sandburg's Lincoln 3,4,15; Canhon 8; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
9,3&lt;&gt;-Movie " Starsky and Hutch" 6; J ean Shepherd' s - ~
Amer ica 20.
· .-:

- .'

'"

,,

9:45-Movle " The Harder They Fall " 13.
10 :oo-Petrocelli 3,.4; Oral Roberts In At,.ska 15;
American Parade 8; News 20 ; Conversa tion with ' '
So l Hurok 33.
_
'
10: 3!1-Hocklog Valley Bluegrass 20.33 .
·' '
11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8,15; ABC News 33 .
11 : 3&lt;&gt;-Johnny Carson 3, 4.15 ; FBI 6; Movie
" Gargoyles" 8; News 10 ..
t:l : ~Movie " Law of the Lawless" 10; News 13.
12 :3(}- Wide World Spec ial 6,13.
l :OQO-Tomorrow 3,4.
2:DO-News 13.

.

--

-.

w ay to handle a frustrat tng
srlu atronwitlnowbelo u nd The
methdds you"ll u se w ill be bol d
and un 1qu e

how

to work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

AYR

MZL

LUCQRL

ux

YARU

QYJQ

TIME I START COUNTIN.
iH'CR ITTERS I FALL
ASLEEP ---

YO

KLYPR

J G R 0 0 F Z L W . - •U XU C Z T R

ALKALI

SNUFFY- -

TOMORROW

''

LOONY

'

.:

19) It wou ld be d tlf tcu tt to p~
one over on you toda'i_:
busmesswrse Pr o fit fr om yo~ •
dealtng s IS very l1kely
~.:

GEMINI (Ma~ 21-Juno 20) You AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 -Fob. 19_) ,
wil l be the rec1p ten t of some in- You have the r~b tlll y to see both" .
Jo rm a t1 0n that you ' ll use s1des o l 1ss ues today quile ...
profitably Ac t promp tl y be fore clea rl y 8Ctse your acts upon
you lose 1nteres 1.
you r 1mpress 1ons
CANCER (Ju~e 21-July 22) PISCES (Fob. 20-March 201-

cz

Your matertal _prospects are
ext remely encourag1ng today .
G tve malters r elattng to income
or f tnances top prtor1ty

LEO

(Jul~

ORC

GKZX

M LUX P R
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I GUESS ABOUT TilE ONLY WAY
TO STOP DIVORCE IS TO STOP MARRIAGE. - WILL
ROGERS

There are bon u ses 1n store l Or
you tl you ·re entcrons1ng Do....an ex tr a good 1ob for th e bo sS
today
.

23-Aug. 22) Olhe'5 ( } ( )

will be loo k tn.g lo you tod ay to
take the lead Be asserltve and
exerctse yo ur tnttt attve.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep!. 22)

STUOtl FRENCH, L1STEN TO

"WAR AND PEACE"AND START
Ml( OIIIN VE6ETP.i!l.£ GAI&lt;DfN __

·

':
.

Your
8 I•r thd ay

A

profita ble opportun ity cou ld
com e your way tod ay through a
very unusual c han nel. Be alert.
A lamtly . membe r may have a
hand 1n 1'LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct 23) !wo
frien d s are almost as anxro us
as you are 1o see you ge t

BARTOK Q\JA~TETS . READ

NEIGHBOR UP ON
PINE'/ RIDGE
RAISES SHEEP

2~)

TAURUS (April 20-Ma~ 20) A CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan;

CRYPTOQUOTE

[XXJ [XXI)

M WDP -M K

-

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dei: .
ARIES (March 21-April 19) 21) Takr&gt; the lo nq-ran ge vte':""
Th 1s wtll be a pleasurable day if tod ay . r ath er thn n the 1m you d o th1ngs as your urges tn - merlta tP one
S ubstantoa l
d1ca1e . Break- up rout 1ne wtth a b eneftt s will co mc- tater fr om
fun activity
plans wet t- latd now

Is

cz
u

--

..'

0 1sreg ard th e odds Pu r sue
your goals toct ny I! you ·re
tenJCIOU S eno ugh th e vJcton;
1S your s

Qne letter simply stands lor ano\her.. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X lor the two 0 s, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

to form the surprise anawer, u
suggeated by the above cartoon.

GXV

....

b+-+-+-+-t-

1

50UND5 LIKe A
L.eCiLJRE ON ENeR$Y.

•

.....

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

TAKE .

'

can

2 Old World
plant

ETERNAL
OPTifiAIBM

-·..
. . •.
§
.

some th1 ng you ·ve been hoping.:
ror They"ll help where lhe,Y7""

DOWN
1 Instance

I POKKA
I ()

.. '

6:55-Chuck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:DO-Today 3.4,\S; A.M . America 6 , 13; CBS News 8;
~
Popeye-Bugs Bunny 10.
'
-'
7: 30-Schoolles 10.
8 :0G-Lucy Show 6 ; Captain Kangaroo 8, ~ 0; Ses.ll me
Street 33.
8 :3&lt;&gt;-Big Valley 6.
9 :DO-A .M . 3; Phil Donahue 4.15; Muriel Slovens 8;
Mike Douglas 10; Morning wllh D.J. 13.
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; Dlnahl 6; Galloping "'
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
10 :00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, IS; Spin -Off 8, 10;
Mike Douglas 13.
10 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8.10.
ILDO-High Rollers 34,15; One Life to live 6 ; Gam\1

Les or

~

__. - DOGPATCH ~1

English
river

Now arrance the circled letters

DSPKK

(Do you have a q~eslion lor
the Jaco b ys? Write "Ask the
Ja coh ys " ca re of thi s
new s paper . The most in teres ting questions will be
used in th is column and
wri ters will receive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

1 Neighbor of 4 "- Big

CRYPTOQUOTE
B

one to five notrump.
It should he an invita tion to
seven. Opener should bid seven
with a maximum notrump
opening ; otherwise he should
treat it as lour-suit Stayman
aod b1d s ix of his lowest lourca rd suit. We will show this bid
in action in tomorrow's arlicle.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

form four ordinary words.

390therwise
40- up (fed
the kitty)

South

~':11!'6t~

6.-+-+-~ Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
f--+-+-~

East

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Today 's haod is almost the
same as yesterday· s. South ha s
opened a t5-point ootru mp ,
eith er beca use he likes to live
dan ge rous ly or beca use he
counts an extra point for the
firth cl ub .
The final cont ract is a good
ooe. It will make against a 4-3
spa de break il the club lioesse
w ork s or if a spade is n' t opened
However , a spade is opened.
South lo oks at dumm y's 11
points plus !().spo t and wonders
how he will explain la1 lure il
the gam e does not ma ke.

21) Be very car e fu l tod ay how
you ~andle prop erty o f o th e r s.
Don I ask to horrow your
l rtend ·s ca r to run err ands .

,_

North

South hops up with dummy's
ace of spades . East drops an
ho nor a nd busi ness has picked
up . South loses the club finesse
but oo harm has been done . The
spade suit has blocked itsell .

the meaning of a jump raise of

JAKE SAID HE'D
HUNT US UPA
COUPLE OF
GOOD DISH WASHERS !

You're goi ng to meet oppositiOn today regar ding an issue
you feel very strong ly abo ut
Neither p arty wtll yield

JJ&amp;W00!1~®1k.i4DO~w&amp;JJ_,J

We!it

LITTL.C ORPHAN ANNIE-AND HE

A thought for the day:
American Gen . Douglas
MacArthur said, "It is fatal
to enter any war witbout the
wil1 to win it."

Someo ne you're l and of might
Sept. 2, 1975
put you on th e spot tod ay by
You ' ll be o ff ered a couple ol rnma kmg a re q ues t th at will cost
t e r es tt n g
business
you o ut -o f- pocKet if you compp
r
oposttro
ns
thi
s
co
mtng ye ar
ly
throug h new acquain tances
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) T his Screen them carefully - one
co uld b e a 1oug h day for you r1as promise . the o1her"s a
res p onsr bt lr 1y - w ise. yet you loser

C

Opening lead - 5 4

~Your

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

Th e re I S a s light ex tra
chance . II East holds two spade
honors South can justify his 15·
point notrump and make his
partne r happy instead of mad .

P ass

ANNIE

responsi bi ht1es

tops
25 Less
mendacious
26 "It's Good
-Alive"
{2 wds.)
27 Ruminant
28 Above
29 Fleet of

w ron~ ?

I N.T .

0

today ttla t have ltltle chance o f
pay1ng off Sttck wtt h su r e
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22) In o r der th tnas
to be a good g uy yo u·re apt to
make some prom1ses today
you won "! rea lly mean . They 'll
be d if11cu lt to fulf 1ll

mountain

Is there any thing he can do to
make the hand il it is fourth
of ri ve and the club finesse is

Nor 1h-South vulnerable

27 Acquired GEMINI (Ma~ 21-Juno 20) It' s
30 Compact a bad time to assume ad - AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Your wbrk h ab it s a re l1kely to
31 Theatrical dilional fin anctal ob ligatio n s be a bi t sloven ly to day esL tve Wtlhtn your mea ns. or
backer
you'll be ro bbing Pe ter to p ay pec tR. IIy tl yau ·re as ked to do
33 Granular
some thtng you thi n k ts be neath
Paul
you
snow
CANCER (June 21-July 22) II
36 Rover's
you expec t anything done right PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
medico
to d ay yo u're going to h ave to You·re pr one to e1ther be ex'!I Vigor
do 11 Don 't all empt to d elegate tra vag::mt o.r take m aterial risks

12 Athlete's

a nd makes the pessimistic decis ion that it is. fourth besl of fiv e .

4 AJ983

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Its CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
not a good day to tack le trying
menta l tasks. Yo ur thoug ht s
won "t be well-organtzed . Major
m tsl akes will result
·

2

• A. 8 4

ARIES (March 21-Apr\l 19) SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 -0ec.
Oon ·t tr y to att end to seve ral
tmport ant m atter s today at the
same t tm e. Yo u'll wind up with
an eve n bi gger m uddle.

6 :oo-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Su mmer Sem ester ~0 .
6 ' 25-Farm Report 13.
6 :3&lt;&gt;-Five Mlnules to Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8; Farmtlme 10; The Story 13 .
6:35-Columbus Today 4.
6' 4&lt;&gt;-Publlc Affairs 10.

He looks at the live or spades
NORTH

8
.....
""""

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1975

Ace causes serious blockage

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)

41 Skin
DOWN

1:oo-Tomorrow 3,.4.

6:.4.5--Mornlng Report 3.

ALLEY

by THOMAS JOSEPH

9 :30-Pollce Story 3,4, 15;; Evening on Miam i Beach 6
10:DO-BIIIy Graham - Crusade 6; Beacon Hill 8,10;
News 20; Interface 33.
10:30-Woman 20,33; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; FBI 6; Movie "Your
Money or Your Wife" 8; Movie " Time Runnllljjl
-Out" 100; News 13.
12 :DO-Wide World Mystery 13.
12 : 3&lt;&gt;-Wide World Mystery 6.

WIN AT BRIDGE

~

-..
'"""

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1975
6: CIO-News3,.o4,e, UJ,13,1S; AtR. news o; ..:tesame Sf. 20 ;
Catch-33 33.
6 :30-ABC News 13 ; NBC News 3,4, \S; Andy Griffith 6 ;
CBS News 8.10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33 .
7:DO-Truth or Coos. 3; Smoking 4; Billy Graham
Cr usade IS; Bowling for Dollars 6; What' s My Line
8; News 10; Movie "Cat Ballou " 13; Antiques 20;
Jean Shepherd's America 33.
1: 3&lt;&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal with It 6;
Buck. Owens 8;
Evening Edition with Martin
Agronsky 20; TV -tO Reports 10; Scene, Take One
33.
8: 00--Movle " The I nvlslble Man" 3,-4, 1S; Movie
" Mobile Two " 6 ; Good Times 8; When Television
Was Live 20,33; Movie " Three Godfa1hers" 10.
8:3&lt;&gt;-Mash 8; Consumer Survival Kit 20,33.
9:00-- 811\y Graham Crusade 8 ;; Movie " From Here to
Eh~'r nlty '' lJ; Nova 20.33.

5TRAI5HT TO THE
HOSP I TAI-o JAMES!

rhe Almanac
By
United
Press
In·
ternatiooal
Today is Tuesday , Sept. 2,
the 245thday or !975 with 121l
to follow .
The moon is approaching
its new phase .
The morn ing stars are
VenUll, Mars, Jupiter and
Saturn .
The evening star is Mer~

-,
:~

.....

.:;&gt;
•

must meet obl1ga t tons hea d on Oon"t sweep any th1ng unde r the rug

SAY ...

ACROSS
1 Show astonistunent
5 Graduating
group
10 Flirt
11 Inn
13 Kind of

Television log for easy viewing

BUT WHO WERE
TI-lEY WOR!&lt;ING FOR

HE's BEEN IDENTIFIED
A

.-' .

. ___.,

Sept . 3, 1975
Dame Fortune has some ace~
up her sleeve for you this com ....- '
ing year Benefits that yo u we te._~
entitled to. bu f were deprived "
o f. w tlt be comtng your w ay. _ , ,
l NEWSPA PERF.NTERPIUSEASSN 1

ACTUALl'(, I SPENT THE
WHOLE SUMME~ WATCHING /
6AME SHOW5 ON TV ! •·

FER A

LtV IN'?

'I

. .. ,,l

' '-

I

�•

I~ .

I

,I

I

I '

I .
I.

14 - -Tlle Daily ~ntioel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesd•y, Sept _~. 1 ··'

Apple Grove

_DlCIC TRACY
B EST TH AT

CAN BE

BUT HOW FUTILE
CAN TWO LIVE S

SA I D~

THEIR FUTURE
VICTIMS WILL. :___
~=-5=--;PARED.

BE? -

---:::-

Suffolk, Va . and camped at
Cape Hatter, North Carolina
with the Bearhs .
Mr . and Mrs . Roger Roush,
Mr. and Mrs . Herhert Roush
By Mrs. Ht·rbcrl Kuu s h
at Silver
were shopping
Mr . and Mrs. Lee Wright
Bridge Plaza.
and sons, Keith and J ose ph,
Mr. and Mrs . Dor5el Wilson
of
Parkersbur g
were
and sons of Sissonville, W.
S.turd•y night guests ol Mr.
Va . spent Sunday wi th Mrs.
and Mrs. Rober t .Spencer
Erma Wilson .
Tracy and Doug and attended
Mr . a nd Mrs . Ed wa rd
a wiener roast a t Purlland
Morris and famil y or Nash·
Park given by the loca l
ville,
Tennessee
were
Methodis t Church .
weekend guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Cora Birch, Racine ,
Mrs
. Alex Wheeler .
Jea n Ashley , Ra venswood ,
Mr . and Mrs. Russell S.yre
Mrs. Goldie Wyant, Mrs.
and
Mr . Sayre's sister.
Webb uf Salem Ce nter were
Bertha
, of U!&lt;ih spe nt Friday
all rece nt visit ors of Mrs.
with their cous in, Mr . a nd
M•rgi e Hunt .
Mrs. Floyd Norris .
Mr . and Mr s.
Hoyt
Fergerson ol Pt. Plea san l
visited Mr. and Mrs . Homer
Warner and Mr . and Mrs.
Floyd Norris a lew days .
Mr. and Mrs . Woody
~-------------, c lub king If South pl ays low. Brown , Mr . _and Mrs , Hoyt
,\'OR Til
East win s tri ck one with the Fergerson vlstted Mr · and
8
4
• .- \
kiog aod leads th e su1t bac k. Mrs. Floy d Norris Thursday . .
: ~ 6\ \ Then when Westdgels iobhe whill The Browns !ell lor thetr
" Q 10 :l
cash enough spa es to ea t t e winter home in Ft. Pierce,
contrac t. ,.
Fla.
WES T
EAST
Oswald
:
"
II
South
rises
with
Mr . and Mrs. Everette
.-, q 1075:!
• K 9
c.lummy ·s ace of spades and It Parsons and daughters,
¥ J82
¥ (,11053
turn s out tht West has led
• 9 R3
• Q !07 4
fourth bes t I rom a live-ca rd Negley ' 0 ., spe nt from
4K 7
... 6 4 2
s uit he aded by king -quee n, S.turday till Thursda y at
SOUTII jiJJ
South
will wish he had played their larm on Ta nners Run
• J ~2
secuod
ha od low. Such a lea d is and visited Mrs. Ruth Par¥ A 7G
far more unli kely than one from s ons, Mrs . Edna Parsons a nd
t A K
jus t one of tho se two pic ture Mark -Preston Parsons .
... .,J98 5
cards
so Lhe ace pi a~. is both other' guests ol the Parsons
North -So ulh vulnf' r ab le
correc t and a wwner.
were Ivan Powell, R.:icine ,

DEGRADING THE
YOUNG WITH DOPE,
ONLY TO EN D UP A S
A PILE OF A S H ES ON
A HI LLSID E.

News Notes

"

CAPTAIN EASY

1 CAN; ... YOU'D

T H5 HOSPITAL REPORTS THA T
YOU R UNCLE'S CO NDITION IS
ST ILl- VER':r' CRAVE, SE N HORllA~

BECOME THE
~ICHEST

IN nJE

Mr . and Mrs. Roger Roush,
Mr. aod Mrs . Charles
Michael , Becky and Chuck
were s hopping at the Grand
Central Mall at Parke rsburg .
Er ne st
Grimm
wa s
···-' lUi .t'! d to University
Hospil&lt;il , Columbus Tuesday
by his granddaughters, Mrs .
Patty Tarr , Mrs. Barbara
Ba r trum.
Mr s. Bessie Stitt spent two
weeks with her daughter,
Mrs . Rene
My ers at
Colwnbus .
Mrs. Marge Burri, Bolivar
Dam , Mrs. Kathryn Hun t,
Mrs. Beverly Wickline a nd
sons, Scott and Kyle , spent
nine days vacation with Mr .
""d Mrs . Pete Bearhs at

611lL

wornv:

WIN AT BRIDGE

Think 2nd time at trick No. 1

llORN LOSER

W MF3 QN, 'IOU MA~ IT
I)JKi\T W/&gt;--S ON IT ... C:H58Sf
At-JD Wt-1/&gt;--T EL-SE' ?

U!HATE'VI;;R WAS ON
1115 i&lt;IT/':f-\BI-l FILOR ...
l Df?DPPfD IT

1

Norlh

W es t

Easl

South

l
Pa :-.:s

Pas~

3 NT.

~T.

P&lt;ISS

Pass
Opening lead - 5 A

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

""',"'""'

LITTr.~

,...,,..~,.. _ ..... ,..

IN DIG EN Tf[c~R~I~C~Hrr;~~~;E

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald . " lo planning your
pl
ay at notrum p you mus t look
WHY, TE' N
CHANGE,
BILLION
ACCOR DIHG TO ahea d to see which opponent i.s
IS SO
'1RI'IAiiCIAL
lik e ly to gain the lead . Then
MUCH IT
WIZARDS'' WHO
work it out so wh en he gai ns th e
STAuGERS
NEVER HAD
lea d. he won't be able to hurt
ME. 10
OVER TEN
THINK OF JT
DOLL. ARS A T you _
ONE
Jim : " Every declarer 's first
thought at trick ooe is to play
_;.,.•low lrom dummy . This time he
should think a second tim e and
'th d
,
,.
go up WI .. umm y s ace . .
Oswald II East has the kmg
:~~~\~=:::. .~ of clubs _everythtng wtll work
'-"''--L.L.O'-'.....:-- out beaut tlully. II Wes t ha s the
kmg of clubs he is going to ga in
t he lead with that card ."
Jim : " Wes t does ha ve the

~~~~S~F=o=R~BA~T=TI~NG7=A~H~E~Y=E~--,

LEAPIJ'I'

lllARDS~ I
CAN'T GET

WflL, IT WOULD BE A

PlEAS URE TO HAND A

FEW BIRDS A BAT IN THE
EYe FOR THEIR F¥\RT IH
THE MATTER -

OVI'R ITTO LOSE TEJ'I
BILLION

OOLLARSAND
NOT EVEN BAT
AN EYE-

I'LL

~ ~~~

Robin Fortune , Wiley and
Audrey Ours. Mr . and Mrs .
An Iow a re a der want s to Lawrence Donohue, Katrina ,
know what yo u should ·opeo Lorena and Barbi or
w1th :
Harrisonville and Donna
"' A J 3 2 ., K 9 6 + A B 4 Fortune.
"' Q 7 2.
. s tan- Mr s . E rma W'ls
1. on spen t
Th e ans wer .IS th a t m
dard American , J acoby modern fr~m Tuesday llll Monday
or a ny normal system you wtth her daughte~, Mr . and
s hould ope n ooe cl ub . This Mrs . Charles Burn at Bohvar
makes your rebidding problem Dam .
a cinch. You bid one spade over Mr . and Mrs. E . R.
one hear t or diamond , two Donohue of Intercession City,
spades ove r ooe spade aod pass Fla ., Mr . and Mrs . Everette
to e ither two clubs or one Parsons, Ruth, Karen , Cathy,
notrump. II partner responds Ka
r N
ere
by Jumping to three clubs yo u _ Y 0 · eg 1ey •
· w
bid three notrump .
dtnner guests of Mrs. Edna
D
h
Parsons, Mrs . Ruth Parsons
.
( o you ave a qu es 110n 1or
d f .1
th e Jaco oys? Write "Ask the an
amt YJ 8 c 0 h y s.. care 0 1 1his
Dean Hill, who acnewspape r . The most in- companied Mr . and Mrs.

o

teres ling questions w"l be
used in th is co lu m n an d
write rs wdl receive copies of
.JACOBY MODERN)

Dale Hill home to Moore
Haven , Fla . was met
in Colwnbus S.turday eve·
nin g
by
his
par·
ents , Mr . and Mrs. Dallas
Hill and brought home. Dean .
new to Columbus by plane .
Mr . and Mrs. Dallas Hill
enjoyed a vacation through
the new England sl&lt;ites.
Mr . and Mrs. David S.yre
·a nd granddaughters , Shelia,
Sharon, Beverly and Terri
enjoyed Thursday at Kings
Island . Enroute home they
visited Mrs . Peggy Gregory
at Columbus and visited the
Columbus Zoo.

-15- The ~lly Sef!tlnel. Middleport-Pom.;,.oy, 0. Tuesdav, Sept, 2, 1975
_DI~ TltAev ~
·
.

cury.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Virgo.
Ame rican poet Eugene
Field was born Sept. 2, 1850.
On this day in history :
!n 1935, one of the worst
hurricanes to hit the U.S.
mainland ripped through the
F1orida Keys, killing more
than 365 persons.
In 1945, Japan signed an
unconditional
surrender
aboard the U.S . battleship
Missouri in Tokyo Bay, ending World War II.
In 1964, World War I hero
Sjl;t. Alvin York died at the
age of 76.
In 1968, _the death toll of
earthquake in Iran was fixed
at 12,000.

AN'/ CHA'lEoE IN
UNCLe PLATO'S
f

"shark"

Mean·
Miss Melba
qoin' t' qit

'ier
foot,
Hoot!

_---- --., ,

You two
eatin'
a lot'

Y"

:&gt;--'-l~"----._

A person
qd; hunqru

popcorn.

Use
yer

... lookin' at.
the snack
bar all
th' time'

Joel!

foot!

14 Have high
hopes
15 Silkworm
16 Likely
17 Townsman
18 Cloak
20 Card game
21 Bridge
charge
22 - d'Azur
23 Like some

I Automaton
of Jewish
legend
2 Greek marketplace
3 Obvious
(4 wds. )
4 Ending lor
velvet
5 " In the in the Moonlight"
6 In a maze
7 Snake
8 Be obvious
(4 wds.)
9 Arranged in

a series

For Tuesday, Sep1. 2, 1975

¥ A94
• J 6 52
... Q lO 5

BORN LOSER

WEST
EAST
4 K975 3
• QJ
¥ .I B 2
¥ Q 1053
+ 9B 3
t Q 10 7 4
4 K7
... 6 4 2
SO UTH lll i
• 10 6 2
" K76

+ AK

Yesterday's Aoswer
award
16 Confederate
19 Castle
feature
20 Skidoo!
23 Supplies
24 Type of story
25 Civil wrong

UTl'LE

ORP~

.
MA'-1 NOT"
;1:3ELIEVE THIS, MA'NI,

1588
3% In medias

;BUT AH JEST E ARNED

A SOFT"
25.00 ?'----1'

33 Insect

L~~====~~-=~~==~----~~~::~::::~====~~~~~~·1
®"1 STILL CAN'T
BELIEVE SHANGHAI
JUST UPPED AND

'!'-FT.

WHY NOT?
HE'B A FREE
MAN .

YOU INVITED HIM HOME ID
MEET YOUR FAMILY ... WHICH
HE DID . f-\E WA5 UNDEP
NO OBLIGATION TO
STAY INDEFINITELY.

~UT

YOU 010
LIKE HIM.
DIDN'T YO U

HE WAS EVERYTl-I ING
YOU SAID HE WA7 .. .
AND MORE!

34 Recruits
35 Gridiron
nwnber
'!I High·
pitched
sound
38 Rohe
feature

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simplY stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

Pa ss

3 N.T .

Pass

Pa ss

A Utah reader wants to know

ACROSS

3 Theater box

19) Your one -to -one re lat ions
wt ll cause you a few headac hes
today Even an o ld all y m ay
make some unreasonab le
demands

d
¢'o/'/-..;:;C:;'

Oreg.
Girl Now"
6 Blaze
(2 wds.)
11 Sweet smell 5 Distant
12 " Two
6 Soda lounWomen"
lain treat
Oscar
7 Banking
service
winner
13 Palatable
8 M.C. Baker
yesterday's Aoswer
(hyph. wd.) 9 Caddoan
21 Mountain
3% Hindu dei~
15 Uncle, in
Indian
pass, in
33 Engll.sh
Dundee
10 Objective
India
school
16 King of
14 Scaled
22 Meander
34 Body of
comedy
( 2 wds.)
23 Celebes ox
water
17 Ridicule
17 Subsequently _Z4 Nervoll5
35 Weep
18 Wee drop 18 Heroic
Z6 Menu phrase
aloud
21 Choreoparrative
(3 wds.)
36 Jerome
grapher . -. 19 Czec h
30 Change
Kern song
Martha
31 Father
'¥/ Attention
river
24 Assuage
38- Aviv
(Fr .)
20 s . htl
25 The rate!
png y
(2 wds.)

C~~~~~ 27

~Birthday

,., .. ., .......
...
'"" •... •...

C28 Band
leader

BUT" IT'D COS!

- AH'D GIVE MAH
LIFE: TO 6EE /VIAH
FRIENDS THAR

ME /vi.AH LIFE IF
THSY SEEN/VIE

Larry
29- biscuit
30 "Queen for
- " (2 wds.)
31 Choice item
32 Necktie
fabric
35 Ocarina
(2 wds.)
39 Chicago's
airport
40 Fiend
41 Shipwonn
4% Alrican
antelope

-AN' \f-./AS MMED!!II;s ALL YOUR
FAULT, LI'L ~--­

GRAY CLCXJD-

FIRST,..,.,.._r

1rr

b

l. ~ IN K SHE'&amp;
DISAPPOINTED

f-\A5 SHE GIVEN YOU
UP A&amp; A HOPELESS
CASE ? . r-------

~AT HER

..,

IFONTIY I

I KJ

'MATCH'' Dl DN'T

ON "Tl-'E CONTRARY. SHE
&amp;AY.B SHE WON'T REST
UNTIL SHE MARRIES
. ME OFF- ·/E'\,.,,.,.-1,

OH_.~E

YOU~

JW

KJWT

XRWSJ

QBLWMAP

Y X M M B X D P. - G B F F

JUGHAID!!GRR8

EVER.'T HIN ~i

Tf-\AT NEEDS WASHIN' AN'
FETCH IT HER E !!

JZP

WUFV

BK

JW

,,_llltSIIIPIISUNSWIIIIIn !A

KJWT'I

(An•were tomorrow)

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: I USED TO BE A LAW l.'ER, BUT
NOW I AM A REFORMED CHARACTER. - WOODROW
WILSON

Jumhlr~ :

WEIGH

An~wer1

Mix ing ole and yin migllt maA·e you

QUARTZ

Saturday'•
/Jti~j- '' GENIAL"

HOW MAN'I 'S

KIDS,
TEACHE~5.
NOISE.

IT AL~

STARTS

CONF0510N ..

A6AIN

"THIS WAS
THE LAST

.. AND THE
WO~ST

'•

!i

MOI&lt;NINt:i

THING
OF ALL .,..

I COVI.D
SLEEP
LATE'

·i

-. ·•••

,,..••

HE GOT?

DID '-IE

KNOW OUR NEW

DURNED
IF I

·

KNOW--

t:vt·f&lt;

..

8,10.

11 :3&lt;&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,6, 15; Happy Days 13 ;
M idday 4; Love of Life 8, 10.
IL55-Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel's World 10.
12:DO-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,4,15; Showoffs ., ,
13; Bob Braun' s S0-50 Club 4; News 6,8,10.
12 :3&lt;&gt;-Jackpot! 3, IS; All My Children 6,13; Search For •
Tomorrow 8,10.
,
12 : 55-NBC News 3, 15.
•
11 :DO-News 3; Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8; • !
Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women Only .:,.!
15 .
h t
1: 30-Days Of Our Lives 3.4,15; Let 's Make A Deal
6,13 ; As thge World Turns 8.1 10.
2 :D0-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Guldlog Light 8,10.
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme and Reason 6,13; Edge of ', ::
Night 8, 10.
"
3:DO-Anothet World 3,4,15; . General Hospital 6, 13; • ", .
Match Game 8,10; Caught In the Act 20.
' "
""
3 :3G-Ooe Lite to Live 13; Bewitched 6 ; TaHietales
8,10; Jeanne Wolf with ... 20.
'. ' '
4: CIO-Mr. Cartoon 3; I Dream of Jeannie 4; Somerset
'"
15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Musial Chairs 8; Sesame , '',
Street 20,33; Movie "The Cowboy aod the Lady" 10;
- '
Dinah I 13.
• •
4: 3&lt;&gt;-Bewltched 3; Merv Grlflln A; Mod Squad 6;
: :
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Bonanza 15; FBI 6
_ ,· ,
5,DO-FBI 6; Lucy Show 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh - ' .,
borhood 20,33.
~: ':
5: 30-News 6; Andy Grlfllth 8; Adam -12 13; Get Smart • • ·
15; Electric Company 20.33.
. '*"
6 :DO-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame Street
.
20; Teaching Children 33.
6 :3&lt;&gt;-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6; , .. ,
CBS News 8.10; Jodv's Bodv Shoo 33.
7:DO-Truth or Consequences 3,A; Billy Graham
Crusade 15; Bowling for Dollars 6; What's My · --·
L\oe? 8; News 10; Movie "ihe King and I" 13;
Book Beat 20; The Romagnolls' Table 33.
,- .. 7 : 3~ollege Footba\1'75 3; Name That Tune 4; Lest's · 0c
Make A Deal 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Evening
.
Edltloo with Martin AGronsky 20; The Judge 10; - ··
Episode Action 33.
"
8 :DO-Rich LIHie 3,4, 15; That's My Mama 6; Billy '
Graham Crusade 8; Feeling Good 20.33; Movie
" Giant" 10.
8 :3&lt;&gt;-Bl\ly Graham .Cru..de 6; Mao Builds, Man
Destsroys 33; Philadelphia Folk Festival 20.
9:oo-Sandburg's Lincoln 3,4,15; Canhon 8; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
9,3&lt;&gt;-Movie " Starsky and Hutch" 6; J ean Shepherd' s - ~
Amer ica 20.
· .-:

- .'

'"

,,

9:45-Movle " The Harder They Fall " 13.
10 :oo-Petrocelli 3,.4; Oral Roberts In At,.ska 15;
American Parade 8; News 20 ; Conversa tion with ' '
So l Hurok 33.
_
'
10: 3!1-Hocklog Valley Bluegrass 20.33 .
·' '
11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8,15; ABC News 33 .
11 : 3&lt;&gt;-Johnny Carson 3, 4.15 ; FBI 6; Movie
" Gargoyles" 8; News 10 ..
t:l : ~Movie " Law of the Lawless" 10; News 13.
12 :3(}- Wide World Spec ial 6,13.
l :OQO-Tomorrow 3,4.
2:DO-News 13.

.

--

-.

w ay to handle a frustrat tng
srlu atronwitlnowbelo u nd The
methdds you"ll u se w ill be bol d
and un 1qu e

how

to work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

AYR

MZL

LUCQRL

ux

YARU

QYJQ

TIME I START COUNTIN.
iH'CR ITTERS I FALL
ASLEEP ---

YO

KLYPR

J G R 0 0 F Z L W . - •U XU C Z T R

ALKALI

SNUFFY- -

TOMORROW

''

LOONY

'

.:

19) It wou ld be d tlf tcu tt to p~
one over on you toda'i_:
busmesswrse Pr o fit fr om yo~ •
dealtng s IS very l1kely
~.:

GEMINI (Ma~ 21-Juno 20) You AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 -Fob. 19_) ,
wil l be the rec1p ten t of some in- You have the r~b tlll y to see both" .
Jo rm a t1 0n that you ' ll use s1des o l 1ss ues today quile ...
profitably Ac t promp tl y be fore clea rl y 8Ctse your acts upon
you lose 1nteres 1.
you r 1mpress 1ons
CANCER (Ju~e 21-July 22) PISCES (Fob. 20-March 201-

cz

Your matertal _prospects are
ext remely encourag1ng today .
G tve malters r elattng to income
or f tnances top prtor1ty

LEO

(Jul~

ORC

GKZX

M LUX P R
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I GUESS ABOUT TilE ONLY WAY
TO STOP DIVORCE IS TO STOP MARRIAGE. - WILL
ROGERS

There are bon u ses 1n store l Or
you tl you ·re entcrons1ng Do....an ex tr a good 1ob for th e bo sS
today
.

23-Aug. 22) Olhe'5 ( } ( )

will be loo k tn.g lo you tod ay to
take the lead Be asserltve and
exerctse yo ur tnttt attve.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep!. 22)

STUOtl FRENCH, L1STEN TO

"WAR AND PEACE"AND START
Ml( OIIIN VE6ETP.i!l.£ GAI&lt;DfN __

·

':
.

Your
8 I•r thd ay

A

profita ble opportun ity cou ld
com e your way tod ay through a
very unusual c han nel. Be alert.
A lamtly . membe r may have a
hand 1n 1'LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct 23) !wo
frien d s are almost as anxro us
as you are 1o see you ge t

BARTOK Q\JA~TETS . READ

NEIGHBOR UP ON
PINE'/ RIDGE
RAISES SHEEP

2~)

TAURUS (April 20-Ma~ 20) A CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan;

CRYPTOQUOTE

[XXJ [XXI)

M WDP -M K

-

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dei: .
ARIES (March 21-April 19) 21) Takr&gt; the lo nq-ran ge vte':""
Th 1s wtll be a pleasurable day if tod ay . r ath er thn n the 1m you d o th1ngs as your urges tn - merlta tP one
S ubstantoa l
d1ca1e . Break- up rout 1ne wtth a b eneftt s will co mc- tater fr om
fun activity
plans wet t- latd now

Is

cz
u

--

..'

0 1sreg ard th e odds Pu r sue
your goals toct ny I! you ·re
tenJCIOU S eno ugh th e vJcton;
1S your s

Qne letter simply stands lor ano\her.. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X lor the two 0 s, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

to form the surprise anawer, u
suggeated by the above cartoon.

GXV

....

b+-+-+-+-t-

1

50UND5 LIKe A
L.eCiLJRE ON ENeR$Y.

•

.....

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

TAKE .

'

can

2 Old World
plant

ETERNAL
OPTifiAIBM

-·..
. . •.
§
.

some th1 ng you ·ve been hoping.:
ror They"ll help where lhe,Y7""

DOWN
1 Instance

I POKKA
I ()

.. '

6:55-Chuck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:DO-Today 3.4,\S; A.M . America 6 , 13; CBS News 8;
~
Popeye-Bugs Bunny 10.
'
-'
7: 30-Schoolles 10.
8 :0G-Lucy Show 6 ; Captain Kangaroo 8, ~ 0; Ses.ll me
Street 33.
8 :3&lt;&gt;-Big Valley 6.
9 :DO-A .M . 3; Phil Donahue 4.15; Muriel Slovens 8;
Mike Douglas 10; Morning wllh D.J. 13.
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; Dlnahl 6; Galloping "'
Gourmet 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
10 :00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, IS; Spin -Off 8, 10;
Mike Douglas 13.
10 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8.10.
ILDO-High Rollers 34,15; One Life to live 6 ; Gam\1

Les or

~

__. - DOGPATCH ~1

English
river

Now arrance the circled letters

DSPKK

(Do you have a q~eslion lor
the Jaco b ys? Write "Ask the
Ja coh ys " ca re of thi s
new s paper . The most in teres ting questions will be
used in th is column and
wri ters will receive copies of
JACOBY MODERN.)

1 Neighbor of 4 "- Big

CRYPTOQUOTE
B

one to five notrump.
It should he an invita tion to
seven. Opener should bid seven
with a maximum notrump
opening ; otherwise he should
treat it as lour-suit Stayman
aod b1d s ix of his lowest lourca rd suit. We will show this bid
in action in tomorrow's arlicle.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

form four ordinary words.

390therwise
40- up (fed
the kitty)

South

~':11!'6t~

6.-+-+-~ Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
f--+-+-~

East

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Today 's haod is almost the
same as yesterday· s. South ha s
opened a t5-point ootru mp ,
eith er beca use he likes to live
dan ge rous ly or beca use he
counts an extra point for the
firth cl ub .
The final cont ract is a good
ooe. It will make against a 4-3
spa de break il the club lioesse
w ork s or if a spade is n' t opened
However , a spade is opened.
South lo oks at dumm y's 11
points plus !().spo t and wonders
how he will explain la1 lure il
the gam e does not ma ke.

21) Be very car e fu l tod ay how
you ~andle prop erty o f o th e r s.
Don I ask to horrow your
l rtend ·s ca r to run err ands .

,_

North

South hops up with dummy's
ace of spades . East drops an
ho nor a nd busi ness has picked
up . South loses the club finesse
but oo harm has been done . The
spade suit has blocked itsell .

the meaning of a jump raise of

JAKE SAID HE'D
HUNT US UPA
COUPLE OF
GOOD DISH WASHERS !

You're goi ng to meet oppositiOn today regar ding an issue
you feel very strong ly abo ut
Neither p arty wtll yield

JJ&amp;W00!1~®1k.i4DO~w&amp;JJ_,J

We!it

LITTL.C ORPHAN ANNIE-AND HE

A thought for the day:
American Gen . Douglas
MacArthur said, "It is fatal
to enter any war witbout the
wil1 to win it."

Someo ne you're l and of might
Sept. 2, 1975
put you on th e spot tod ay by
You ' ll be o ff ered a couple ol rnma kmg a re q ues t th at will cost
t e r es tt n g
business
you o ut -o f- pocKet if you compp
r
oposttro
ns
thi
s
co
mtng ye ar
ly
throug h new acquain tances
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) T his Screen them carefully - one
co uld b e a 1oug h day for you r1as promise . the o1her"s a
res p onsr bt lr 1y - w ise. yet you loser

C

Opening lead - 5 4

~Your

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

Th e re I S a s light ex tra
chance . II East holds two spade
honors South can justify his 15·
point notrump and make his
partne r happy instead of mad .

P ass

ANNIE

responsi bi ht1es

tops
25 Less
mendacious
26 "It's Good
-Alive"
{2 wds.)
27 Ruminant
28 Above
29 Fleet of

w ron~ ?

I N.T .

0

today ttla t have ltltle chance o f
pay1ng off Sttck wtt h su r e
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22) In o r der th tnas
to be a good g uy yo u·re apt to
make some prom1ses today
you won "! rea lly mean . They 'll
be d if11cu lt to fulf 1ll

mountain

Is there any thing he can do to
make the hand il it is fourth
of ri ve and the club finesse is

Nor 1h-South vulnerable

27 Acquired GEMINI (Ma~ 21-Juno 20) It' s
30 Compact a bad time to assume ad - AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Your wbrk h ab it s a re l1kely to
31 Theatrical dilional fin anctal ob ligatio n s be a bi t sloven ly to day esL tve Wtlhtn your mea ns. or
backer
you'll be ro bbing Pe ter to p ay pec tR. IIy tl yau ·re as ked to do
33 Granular
some thtng you thi n k ts be neath
Paul
you
snow
CANCER (June 21-July 22) II
36 Rover's
you expec t anything done right PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
medico
to d ay yo u're going to h ave to You·re pr one to e1ther be ex'!I Vigor
do 11 Don 't all empt to d elegate tra vag::mt o.r take m aterial risks

12 Athlete's

a nd makes the pessimistic decis ion that it is. fourth besl of fiv e .

4 AJ983

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Its CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
not a good day to tack le trying
menta l tasks. Yo ur thoug ht s
won "t be well-organtzed . Major
m tsl akes will result
·

2

• A. 8 4

ARIES (March 21-Apr\l 19) SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 -0ec.
Oon ·t tr y to att end to seve ral
tmport ant m atter s today at the
same t tm e. Yo u'll wind up with
an eve n bi gger m uddle.

6 :oo-Sunrlse Seminar 4; Su mmer Sem ester ~0 .
6 ' 25-Farm Report 13.
6 :3&lt;&gt;-Five Mlnules to Live By 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8; Farmtlme 10; The Story 13 .
6:35-Columbus Today 4.
6' 4&lt;&gt;-Publlc Affairs 10.

He looks at the live or spades
NORTH

8
.....
""""

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1975

Ace causes serious blockage

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)

41 Skin
DOWN

1:oo-Tomorrow 3,.4.

6:.4.5--Mornlng Report 3.

ALLEY

by THOMAS JOSEPH

9 :30-Pollce Story 3,4, 15;; Evening on Miam i Beach 6
10:DO-BIIIy Graham - Crusade 6; Beacon Hill 8,10;
News 20; Interface 33.
10:30-Woman 20,33; ABC News 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; FBI 6; Movie "Your
Money or Your Wife" 8; Movie " Time Runnllljjl
-Out" 100; News 13.
12 :DO-Wide World Mystery 13.
12 : 3&lt;&gt;-Wide World Mystery 6.

WIN AT BRIDGE

~

-..
'"""

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1975
6: CIO-News3,.o4,e, UJ,13,1S; AtR. news o; ..:tesame Sf. 20 ;
Catch-33 33.
6 :30-ABC News 13 ; NBC News 3,4, \S; Andy Griffith 6 ;
CBS News 8.10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33 .
7:DO-Truth or Coos. 3; Smoking 4; Billy Graham
Cr usade IS; Bowling for Dollars 6; What' s My Line
8; News 10; Movie "Cat Ballou " 13; Antiques 20;
Jean Shepherd's America 33.
1: 3&lt;&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal with It 6;
Buck. Owens 8;
Evening Edition with Martin
Agronsky 20; TV -tO Reports 10; Scene, Take One
33.
8: 00--Movle " The I nvlslble Man" 3,-4, 1S; Movie
" Mobile Two " 6 ; Good Times 8; When Television
Was Live 20,33; Movie " Three Godfa1hers" 10.
8:3&lt;&gt;-Mash 8; Consumer Survival Kit 20,33.
9:00-- 811\y Graham Crusade 8 ;; Movie " From Here to
Eh~'r nlty '' lJ; Nova 20.33.

5TRAI5HT TO THE
HOSP I TAI-o JAMES!

rhe Almanac
By
United
Press
In·
ternatiooal
Today is Tuesday , Sept. 2,
the 245thday or !975 with 121l
to follow .
The moon is approaching
its new phase .
The morn ing stars are
VenUll, Mars, Jupiter and
Saturn .
The evening star is Mer~

-,
:~

.....

.:;&gt;
•

must meet obl1ga t tons hea d on Oon"t sweep any th1ng unde r the rug

SAY ...

ACROSS
1 Show astonistunent
5 Graduating
group
10 Flirt
11 Inn
13 Kind of

Television log for easy viewing

BUT WHO WERE
TI-lEY WOR!&lt;ING FOR

HE's BEEN IDENTIFIED
A

.-' .

. ___.,

Sept . 3, 1975
Dame Fortune has some ace~
up her sleeve for you this com ....- '
ing year Benefits that yo u we te._~
entitled to. bu f were deprived "
o f. w tlt be comtng your w ay. _ , ,
l NEWSPA PERF.NTERPIUSEASSN 1

ACTUALl'(, I SPENT THE
WHOLE SUMME~ WATCHING /
6AME SHOW5 ON TV ! •·

FER A

LtV IN'?

'I

. .. ,,l

' '-

I

�1.

,
•••
16 - The Da'ily Sentine l, Middleport-Pom eroy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1975

Tontado edges Lancers 1-0
RA CIN E
Sat urday
morn in g ,
t he So uthe rn
Tornados e n tc r ta m ed the
Federal Hockmg Lc111cers 111
the fin al pre~season scn mmage of the year for both
teams. The game \\'as closr,
but the Tornados came out un
top , Hl.
The game was totally a
Coach
de fe ns ive battle
J ewell said he was pleas(•d
wtlh his team 's performcmce
"Our team looked pretty
good ," says Je \\ el l " Till'
defensive un it looked exce ptionally Ioug h I was
really ple&lt;:tsetl with them "
This was the f1rst scnmmage of the vea r for the
Torn ados, and, as ca n be
e xp ected,
there
were
mista kes made.
"Our offense nwdc ::1 fe w
mista kes ," sa id J ewell. · Rut
1t was the first scn mmagc of
the year a nd you can't expect

the m to be per fect - yet "
"We'n• s till lr ytng to fil l
positions." says .Jewell. " I' ve
s til l go t two or three
prospects for the q u&lt;H terbackmg posit ion and a few
spots on our line st ill need
h lled. So, I'm not sure who
ow· slct rter.s v.. ill IJc rts uf
now
F'nclav rughl. the Tor nados
tran~l
Proctorville to ta ke
on the Oh1u Va ll ey Conference
T ri -Champton
f&lt;w·land Dr agons I .as t ye ar.
the Dr agons defeatPd tlw
Torna dos at Haeme.
Coac h Jewe ll feels that hts
tcalll wt ll be r eady

t;,

" I lh tnk our !Joys will be
ready," says J ewell . " They
ar e all in sha pe a nd they ha ve
prac ticed ha rd . They want to
get started as soo n as
pos~ 1b le We fi gure we owe
Fairlanc one fr om lasl year
any \\ ay

~&lt;&gt;-&lt;&gt;--c.

t;x-n :N II E U OUTLOOK
Thur s day
throu g h
Saturday
&lt;·han ee
of
shn'o'- c rs Thursday and
Friday a nd fair Saturday.
Highs will be in lht· upper .·
70s to the 80s and lows Y.ill
hl' in the uppe r 50s lu th ~
60 s.

HOSPITAL NEWS
\' ctc r a ns Mc murial Hospital

I Aug. 301

Mr
a nd Mr s
Roge r
SAT UH DA Y i\ DMI SSIONS
Hube r t Dce rrter. Syrac use : Dt ngess, a son, Rutla nd.
I Aug. :11 I
Mi chae l Harn s, Mtddlepor t;
Mr . and Mr s. Da ve Btshop,
l. or CJ in e Wi lson, Hemlock
G r ove; Ca llie M&lt;.~ t h e n y, a dtmg hler , J ac kson
I Sep t II
J·:w1ngtun.
Mr and Mrs. Rouah.l Kapp ,
SATURDAY
IHSC HAHGES - Earl Kauff, a son, P omt P leasant, W. Va.
Vt
cto,· Han nahs. Ada Clark ,
CE LE RR ATt: 30th
Sylvan · Cle lan d, Alexander
PLEASANT VALLEY
SAIGON, South VIetnam
Ma
y,
Wil
ham
Bush,
Eunice
Disc harges Mrs. William
UP I
North a nd South
Hal
sey,
Cha
rles
Eads
,
Anna
Pomt Pleasant;
Wamsley,
Vietnam today ce l dJre~te d the
lla rtenbach,
Ed ward Rosa E ll io tt, Point Pleasant ;
:lOth ann iversary of Ho Chi
Donald Parsons, Gallipolis;
Mt nh 's dec la ra tiOn uf HI- Ca pehart
SUN DA Y ADMISSIONS Mr s. Raymond Pope , Biddependence follm" mg World
Pamela Bowers , Reed sville; we ll ; Vinton Cossm , Leon ,
Wa r II ft was the fl rs t ti me
the eoun tnes wer e at pea ec Penny l.anders, Pomeroy ; Le wt s Lut ton , Ga llip oli s;
D1 x1e Baldwin, Racin e; Mrs. ChC::trles Vanan , Clifton ;
dun ng the holi day
Victur Rou s h, Pomer oy; Mrs. Charles Km g, Pomt
Ton 1t e thru Thurs .
Le wt s Dav ts , Wa shington , W Pleasa nt ; Willi a m Nil es,
SEPT. "
!HJM F.l"OMIN(; SOON
Va ; ~· l oyd Bu• h. Le tart , W l.el&lt;!r l; Mrs. Rober t Mille r,
NOT OPEN
H.ACINF: - Hacwe Gr &lt;Jn ge
Va
son, J~nnt Pleasant ; Mrs
will hold a home com ing at the
SUNDAY DISCHARG ES Dona ld Kapp , d a ug hte r ,
furme r Oa k Grove M. E. Vida n
J ohnson , Cher yl Po ant Pl easa nt ; Robert
Fn . thru Tu esd.1y
Sept ' 5-9
Church Se pl . 7. There will be
Woods."
Harper , Pomt Pleasa nt; Roy
trwm All e n 's
a dmne r at noo n followed by
MONDA Y ADMISSIONS Ba rr . Leo n~ Mrs
Re x
THE TOWERING
a n aftern oon program Those Raym ond Hartley, Ractnc; VanFoss on, MI . Alto ; Ollie
INFERNO
a ttendmg are tu take th eir Margaret J ohnson, Racine ; Caudill , Gallipoli s; John
( Te chntcolor)
own table servt ce.
Lilli a n S tewart , Mason ; Weekly, Ma son , Ehzabeth
Dona ld Gosney, Middleport. John son , Pomt Pl e asan t;
MONDAY DISCHARGES Mrs. Charles Blake , Racine ;
- Law·a Arn old , J ack Gin- John
Gr e gory,
Wes t
Now FeJituring
ther II, Le wis Davts, Harold Columbia ; Oge n Ha zlett ,
Campbe ll, Martin Cun- Apple Grove ; Mrs. Wtllie
nin gha m , Edwa rd La uder- Co ok ,
Pom eroy ;
Mr s.
mtlt .
Raymond Mount , Hender son;
Mrs. Jack Roush, son , Pomt
Pl e a s an t; Mr s. Charles
Holler Medical Center
Turn er , Poin t Pleasan t; Mrs.
1Btrlhs , Aug . 29)
Aa r on Wea ve r, Letart ;
-~----------~---Mr . a nd Mr s. William
\' '•lliam J ones, Albany , 0 .
Can trell , a daughter , Bidwell ; Mr . and Mrs . Wtlltam
F1na1 International
E. Morn s , a daught e r ,
Hrs.: !O:OOA.M. Tilll:OO P.M. Sun.-Thur.
League Sland•ng s
Untt e d Pr ess lnte rnat•onal
Pomeroy ; Mr and Mrs. Glen
10:00 A.M. Til 12:00 P. M. Fri. &amp; Sat.
w . 1. pet . g . b .
Sha w, a son, Oak Htll; Mr.
992 -2556
y Roc h es ter
ss ss 607
d e w a t er
85 55 607
W. MAIN
POMEROY, 0 . I an d Mrs Robert Sigman , a ySyrTiacuse
7"l b4 529 11
' son , Btdwell
Ch a rl esto n
72 67 5 18 12 ' }

MEIGS THEATRE

FRESH PEACH SUNDAES
AND MILK SHAKES

Adolph's Dairy Valley

Memphis
R1c h mon d

65 75
62 75

46J 20
453 21' }

T ole d o

6'1 7B

44 3 23

Pa wtu cket

53 87

379 32

y m ee l tn one ga m e
pla y off tom or r ow
Monday ' s Re sult s

Ttdewal e r 5 R tC hmo nd 1
T oledo 15 M e mphi s 6
R oc h es l e r 6 S yr ac u se 0
Pawtu c k e ' 7 Ch ar •es ton 6

From a Great American Bank
MEET THURSDAY
The Children' s Home
Citizens Advisory Committee
will meet Thursday, Sept. 4,
at noon at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church .
Cynthia Mills will di scuss
Christma s plans for t he
children.

TWO CARS HIT
Two cars were damaged
and the driver of one was
arrested on charges of
drivmg wh1le mtoxicated as
the result of an accident on
West Main St. , Pomeroy , at
9:25p.m . Monday . Pomeroy
police said a car driven by
Charles S. Snider, Pomeroy,
pulled into the path of a westbound car driven by Joan
Clark, Pomeroy, The cars
received mediwn damages
and Snider was arrested on
DWI charges. There were no
injuries .

1776: Wurds lor~er than the poper th ey're t.t•n tten on.

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

40,000.00 Maximum Insurance
for Each Depositor

1

-

-~~MH!~ .

'

'

,,

-

-

r~_FRAl

-

DEPOSIT

IP:MW .folANC [

Planntng a pat io, garage,

A FULL
SERVICE
BANK
---~----

---

C ORP.Q.RATION

aga1nst the Hann a n Trace
By Gary Phillips
CA LDW E Ll.
l.a,t Wildca ts a t Meree r ville
Satu rd ay, th e Ca ld we ll Coach Birkh ei mer loo ks for 1t
R eds ktn s defe a te d
th e to be a good game
Eas tern Eagles here 3-0 1n a
" We're looking fo r wa rd to
game,"
sa Jd
pr e-season foo tb a ll scri m - tha t
Rirkh ei mer. ·' J1's g01ng to be
mage.
'' We d tdn' t look good," said close lou. Ne tLher team is a
Eag le
Coac h
Sp tkc 'powerhouse' sO I look for It to
Burkhetm cr. "Our boys just be a low sconn g co ntest.
didn't pla y ba ll . I wasn't the Mis takes will pl ay a bi g pa r t
least btl plea sed wi th uur tn 11. J ust hope that we don't
make too man y ''
play ."
The Ea ~ l es JUSt couldn't
Coac h H1rkhe amer has a
see m to get thi ngs toge th er proba ble s l.artin g ltne up But
Sa turday . ''There see med lu h e add s that t h1s cou ld
be ~ la ck of organi za tt on," cha nge.
sa 1d Hirkh c1me r
" Our
Pr oba ble sta r ters ar c :
lim ing was uff , our lin e didn't
OfFENSE - John Evans,
bl ock , we m1 sse d tac kl es. We Cente r: Dave Watson a nd
just cuu ldn ' t ~cl lln n gs Bud dy
Dr a ke, G uar ds;
together "
Ra nd y Bos ton a nd Da ve
Many of the troubles that Ha nn um , Ta c kl es; Mike
th e Eag le s e xperi e nce d Smith and Kev in Bar to·
Sa turd ay can be attnbuted to F.nds; Bob McC lure, Qu ai
sickness on the team
terback ; Dav td Mtll s, Full" We ha ven' t had the ent1re back; and Don F:ich1n ger and
team here fur a praeti ce for J oe Kuhn , Ha lfbacks.
d a ys," send Birkh e1m er
DEFENSE - John Eva ns
'' Ev ery day someone will and Tim Kuhn , E nds; Davtd
come bac k from bcmg Sick Mi lls an d Kev in Ba-r ton ,
an d no sooner do they re turn Ou tsi de L1n e m e n ; Dave
Lhan someone else gets s ick Hannwn and Dave Watson,
and they ha ve to leave That's Tackles; Buddy Dra ke and
why our limm g IS off so Ma rk
Lawso n,
In s id e
Linemen; Dun E ichinger and
muc h.''
Thi s Fnd ay nt gh t th e J oe Kuhn , Ha lfb acks , a nd
Eagles open gnd1ron actio n Bob McClure , Safe ty .

addi t1on or home
1mpr ove m eQ t ?
The
'FRIENDLY ONES" are
beck and c all with
s, materiat s and adv ice
need it).

-'

...-

ALEXANDRIA,
Egypt doubt of a nation turning to
(UP!) - Secretary of State diploma cy a fter trusting the
Henry Kissmger set out today sword for 28 years , watched
on a campaign to convince silently Monday afte rnoon as
other Arab nations to join aides initialed the accord in
Egypt in settling their dif- Jerusalem .
ferences with Isra el.
Kissinger planned a day of
whirlwind visits to Saudi
Arabia, Jordan and possibly
ON CARLE TONIGHT
Syria after guiding Israel and
Ov er Channel 5 Cable TV
Egypt to an mterim peace this evenin g will be sho wn the
agreement in th e Sinai gam es of the Pom eroy Gtants
Desert.
versus Rutland Dodgers at 7
The accord, if approved by p.m . and the Middleport
Congress, would send up to Me ts and th e Hartford
200 American volunteers to Hornets at 8: 15 p.m . Wedthe tank~ittered sands of the nesday at 7 p.m . the Syracuse
Sinai to run electronic surAstros and
Middl e port
veillance stations between Braves game is scheduled.
the opposing armies.
Kissinger was scheduled to
fly back to Washington on his
Air Force jet Wednesday
night at the successhd end of
his loth Middle East peace
mission.
I sraeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin , h1s face
mirroring the agonizing

her husband , Albert Karr ;
two son s , James and
Ric hard , and a br o ther ,
Robert Saul .
Surviving are a daughter ,
Mrs. Tom .( Mary ) Bowen ; a
sun Bur t Karr , Fairlawn , N.
J .;' three grandchildren,
three
great-grandchildren
and three nieces . Mrs. Karr
was a member of Trinity
Church in Pomero y.
Burial was in the Gilmore
Ce mete ry ..

Services today for Mr. Ponn
Fune ral serv1ces for James
H Ponn , 52, Mam St , Wilkesville, who dted Sa turday at
the Vete ran s Adm 1mstratwn
Hospil&lt;!l tn Chi lli cothe, we re
he ld at 2 p.m . today at U1e
Wtlkesville Cha pel of the
Wal ker Fun era l Home wtth
the Rev . A B Mal oy offJ ciat ang.

Eliz~eth

Mr Ponn was ,born Feb . 2,
23
19 10 Clarion . He is s urvived
by an a unt, Mrs . Lizzie
Btsho p
of
Wilke sville
whom he made his home . Mr.
Ponn was a veteran of World
War II and was a member of
the Wilkesville Post of the
Americ an Legion . Burial was
in the Wtlkesville ce metery.

Riebel dies

Mrs. Elizabeth Riebel , 72,
Rt. I , Long Bo ttom, d ted
earl y Monday m ornin g at the
Arca dia Nur sing Home, Coo lville, following a bn ef illness.
Mrs. Ri ebel, bor n in Roane
Coun ty, W Va., was the
daughter or the la te Edward
and Lilly Short While. She
was also preceded m death by

CLUB TO MEET
The Catholic Women 's Club
will meet at Sacred Heart
Church at 8 p .m . Thursday.
A
7 : 30
p .m .
ma ss will precede the
meetmg. Hostesses for the
sesswn are Doris Fisher,
Janet Duffy, Rita Hamm, and
Helen Handley . The club will
hold a rummage sale a t the
chlU'ch a uditonum , al so on
Thur sday , from 9 a .m . to 3
p .m.
MEET TONIGHT
Th e
Mei gs
County
Association f or Retarded
Citizens will meet at the
former
Me igs
Ge neral
Hospital building at 7:30 this
evening .

a daugh ter , a sis ter and two
br others.
She wa s a m ember of the
Hurncan e Baptis t Church ,
Roane County although she
s pent must of her hfe m the
Ches ler- Lon g Bottom area.
She is survtved by her
hus band , Elber L. Riebel ;
two sons , Leo William Riebel,
Can t on , and Roger Ira
-Riebel, Rt. I, Long Bottom;
one daughter , Mrs. Wilbur
( Eileen ) Monroe , Chillicothe;
six sisters, Ethel Wilbur,
Hin sdale , N . Y . ; Lucy
Mewell, Della Monroe and
Ruby
Bearhs,
all
of
C hillicothe; Ollie
C hr i stopher , Mariett a ;
Dor othy Christopher, Belpre;
two brothers, Robert White,
Long Bottom and Ronnie
While, Coolville ; six granddaughters, and a grandson.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesady at 2 p.m. at
the White Funeral Home in
Coolville with the Rev .
Freeland Norris officiating .
Burial wtll be in Chester
Cemetery . Friends may call
a t the funeral home at any
time .
GOSNEY ILL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to 271 South
Sixth at 3:28 Monday for Don
Gosney who was ill. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
HospitaL

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
SALE! BASSETT CRIBS

ASK TOWED
Arthur Ellsworth De tray,
Jr. , 61 , Toledo, and Cleo Ma y
Weber Smith, 46, Chesler .
DIVORCES WANTED
Three divorce actions have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court, ea ch
on charges of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.
They were b) Gloria Jean
Starcher, Long Bottom, from
James H. Starcher, Birch
River, W. Va. ; Brenessa
Wright, Middleport, from
Charles R. Wright, APO, N.
Y ., and Gary Simpson,
Pomeroy , from Sue Ann
Simpson , Middleport.

RACINE - The Racine
emergency squad answered '
four calls Monday and
Tuesday morning. Monday at
9 a.m . the squad went to
Racine Route 2, for Buzz
Sloler who had back and neck
pains. He was taken to the
Holzer Medical Center. At
11 : 50 a.m. the squad took
Raymond Hartley, Racine, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He ' was having difficulty
breathing. At 8: 30 p.m .
Monday, the squad went to
Route 2, Racine for Shannon
Pierce, who got a throat
mjury in a fall on a penciL He
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospi 1&lt;11.
At 5:35 a .m . Tuesday, the
sq'uad took Larry Spencer,
Racine, to Pleasant Valley
HospitaL Spencer had back
and stomach pains . The
Racine squad will be on the
streets of Racine all day
Wednesday
to
r ece ive ,
donations for operati on of the
~¥~it.

-

Fun eral services for Mrs.
Clara Ka rr, 84, who died
Sunday at th e home of Mr.
and Mrs Tom Bowen, near
Pomeroy, were he ld at 2 p.m .
today a t the Ewmg Funera l
Home with the Rev W. H.
Perr in offici ating
Mr s.
Karr
was
the
daughter of the 1 lale Robert
and Eliza bet h Htld e brant
Sa ul . Besides her parents,
she was preceded tn death by

CHILD AIDED
The Pomeroy E-R squ ad
wen t to 118 Laurel St ., at 9: 40
a .m . Monday for a child,
Mark Hal ey, who was injured
in a fall . He was taken to
Ve terans Memorial Hospi tal.

Kissinger turns
to other Arabs

and Tuesday

easier to

Mrs. Karr of Pomeroy dies

Eagles hurt 3-0
in grid warmup

Racine unit
busy Monday

Ri cha rd He nry Lee officta ll y sta rts it.. Jun e 7th , he proposes
for hi s Virgini a delega ti on to th e Con ti nen tal Con g ress that
"these united wloni es a re and of ri ght ought to be free and
inde pe ndent states ... ·· U ntil now , we've bee n fi g hting for
our rights as Bn tis h s ubj ects. Now , we' re ready t o fi ght for
freedom. We've kn ow n it was coming. But we face it with
awe. Wh o ca n wn te th e word s for our Decl ara tion of Independe nce? Word s which we kn ow will be h allowed in history? John Ad a ms is br illi a nt, bu t h a rd for most of us to
understand . Be n Fr a nklin would proba bly be te mpted to put
in a joke or two . We choose Tom J e fferson . We under stand
hts message. So does th e Kin g. And th e world . !l

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.

I

I

Help promised to
speed bridge work
A plea of help - ma de
necessar y by lhc closing or
the Pom eroy-Mason Bndge
on Aug. 4 - was ra ised to
sl&lt;!te officials at a pubhc

has been tn touch with the
con tractor to wor k out a n what the co ntracto r is to do,
director of transpo rtat ion a nd
ea rlie r completion date on however , to speed up the
the governor's office 111 try in g
bo th the first and second wor k. The contractor has
to bri ng about an E'ar lier phases of the bridge repair .
been Hsked to submtl several
comp letion date uf t he 'le ind icted that the conrecommendations un how the
rneetm g Tuesday night at the project. He sl&lt;lted tha t it wtll
tr actor wall have to receive " ork could be sp~e ll ed up,
Pomeroy Elemenl&lt;lr y Sc hool. cost m ore money to negotiate
more money 1f he is to employ along \\lth addi twnal cos~
- ..... .
Well over 150 busmess a nd an earli er hme on the comworkers fo r longer pertod s. ur th at a re to be mvolvect an
commw11 ty leaders a nd In- pl e tion .
to run two sht fts a day.
'
employing m ore people.
terested citizens turn ed out to
He urged eve ryone to work
Smith said tha t lh e Conn puttm g on two slu fts . or
the mee tin g sponsored by toge ther in getting the job
Constru ctton Co. 1s ahead of wor kmg e mploye s Iunger
~·- .
•
Pomeroy Village .off1c1als, to done .
sc hedul e in its work on the ho ur s .
air their views of the clostng,
Re p J ames sa id he also farst
phase.
He
said
GLENN SMITH , DIST RICT DEPUTY DIRECTOR of
pict ured as they flelrted questwns tram well O\'er 150
Sm1th stressed th cl! the
of the fe rry sen·1ce, and to has been 1n to uch wtlh the
the !Jepa rtm ent of Transportation , Ma n et ta, Lar ry Co le,
1 hop e full y 1 some dectston lnghwa} d ep::~ r t m ent checks
business
and community leaders on the Pomt'ru} - ~\1 nson
see k he lp.
go\'ernor 's offi ce J and the
dist rict brtdge engtncer, and Sen . Oa kley Coll tn• are
wtll be made this week on
Bndge problems at a pubhc meetmg m Ponwroy Tu esdH~
Several persons •poke of de partment of tra nsporta tiOn
tContmued on page !61
mght.
problems being encountered. abO ut th e problem, of Meigs
Som e drew ent hu swstlc County. He s tated that he Is
appla use from the au di ence, adv1sed tha t it is not feasi ble
man y of wh om &lt;:t pparently to try to keep the brtdge open
have bee n havmg s imi lar to one wa} traffi c dur1ng the
ex peri ences.
repair work from the safety
State Senator Oa kle; standpOint.
Col h ns
and
State
James
sa1d
tha t
Representa tive Run Ja mes negotiat ions a re und erway
hste ned to the com plaints. 1 hopeful ly) lo ge l th e ftrsl
Both vowed their full eff ort to phase of the work done
VOL XXVII
come up with solut ions.
NO. 99
POMEROYMI DDLEPOR T OHIO
ea rlier than rhe Dec. 1 conWE DNESDAY. SEPTEM BER 3, 1975
PR ICL
Glenn Sm 1th , Dtvision tO tract date . He al so satd th a t
----~- - ~- -depu ty d irector of htghways he ts invesltgat ing th e
in Marie tta , ind icated steps poss ib ility of securin g state
are being l&lt;l kcn to help .
fund s for bette r ferry se rv1ce
Accompanyin g Srruth was
or development of more fe rry
Larry Coll er , district brid ge serv1ce between Me igs and
engin ee r .
Ma ri ett a .
a Maso n
Co un ties
T he
re presenl&lt;lti ve of the Con n possibilily of s ec urin g federa l By RICHARD H. GROWALD
negoti at ed bet wee n Egy pt
"I
e xplained
the covered "outstanding issues
Construction Co., Ne w Cas tle, funds so that ferry use rs
UPI Senior Editor
an d Israel.
significance of the recently bet wee n our two countries ."
Pa. , which ha s the contract could ride at a less expens1ve
DAMASCUS, Syria (UP! )
Earlier , in Amman , the
concluded ag reem ent whtch " We will be a ble to overcome
for the brid ge work an d oth er charge is also be in g in - - Secret ary of State Henr y secretary admitted that " a
is a further progress towards our difficulties," he said
division e mployes.
A. Kis sin ger arrived in fe w problem s" e xiste d pea ce in th e Mid dle East and
vestigated .
Kissinger satd th at he was
Sen. Collins, addressin g th e
Smi th out lined procedures Damascus today for a
between the United State s
th e U.S vtews on the mat- " ho pe ful" t hat Cong ress
crowd , said he is personally that had l&lt;l ke n place in meeting
wtth
Syria n and J orda n, whi ch also wa nts ter ," Ki ssmge r said .
wo uld gt ve a favo rable
tr yin g to expedi te the brid ge leadtng to a dects ion that the President Hafez Assad to lay Israel to cede territ ory on the
Rifa i, addressmg reporter s dec1s1on on the Hawk mtss ile
repairs. He sa td the Ohi o bridge re pair s hould be done. some of the gr oundwork for a
West Bank that was ca ptured
brtefly , sai d the dtscussion' tss ue
legislat ure is a ware of the Smit h sa id the id ea ts to second-&lt;ltage Golan Heights in the 1967 Middle East war .
problem . Howe ve r , he eliminate any problem before truce similar to the on e he
Ki ssinger held a t wo-ltour
stressed that the repair of the it ha ppens.
meet ing wtth King Hu ssein
bridge mu st be a good job
and other Jordania n offictals
He
a ls o
sat d
th at
because of the danger of nego ti at ions ar e underway
in Amman to revaew the
bridges collapsing. He sa id he be twee n the state and th e
r ecently concluded Israe li Egy ptian Stna t peace accord .
::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;.;.;:;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.:-:·:·:-:·:·:·:·.·:·:·:···:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:::·:·:::·:::;:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
He ts expected to fly bac k to
Washington tonight ot repor t
CHARLE STON, W Va. Vi r g int a, K e n tuc k y,
Largely routine business to Pr esident ford on his
misssion .
(U P! I - Despit e a growmg Ala bama , lllinois and Inwas condu cteu by the Metgs
:-:
Re la t ions betw ee n the
ba c k-towork m ovem ent m diana .
County Commissioner s m a
bne f
sess iOn
Tue s day United Sta tes and Jordan th e coalfields , Wildcatting
E ven some soutbern West
By United Press International
wer e discussed a t len gth , West Virginia m iners today
morning.
Virginia m ines reopened, and
ANN ARBOR , MICH. - OFFICIALS AT THE Veterans
Commi ss ioner Henry Wens particularly Hussein 's an ge r continued a stubborn fi ght for Pa trick predicted a gradual
Administration Hospital here say another patient - t he lith in
at the lack of congressiona l th e '·right to stnke " th at was return to work in that area
put in the record that people
a baffling case that spurred an FBI murder hunt - has died
approval
for the sale to costtng their uruon $100,000 a
continue to a buse use of the
"over the next several days."
af~r suffering a respiratory failure. The hospital identified the
Jordan of Hawk missiles .
day.
tras
h
con
tainers
loca
te
d
But
signs of waning support
latest victim as Robert Antil, 41, a jobless Detroit steelworker.
'"There
are
a
few
probl
ems
Th
e
cont
empt
fin
e
against
appare ntly did not so ften the
Dr. S . Martin Lindenauer, hospital chief of staff, said there through out the county . One
eve n wa s se t afire, he sa id . which exist , but they ar e not the United Mine Workers rebel miners ' r esolve.
was "grave suspicion" when Anti! suddenly stopped breathin2
of the maktng of the two union rose to $900,000 under
Wells sa id that people a re
Th ey barr ed repor te r s
Aug . 4. Since then, he had been kept alive with a breathing
go vernments," Kissinge r told U.S . Distri c t Jud ge K K
fr om meetings appar ently
apparatus. Antil's r espiratory failure was one of more t han 50 placing tra s h outside empty
containers, whi ch is contrary reporter s after the meetin g. Hall 's plan to keep raismg the used to map out new stnke
cases reported between July I and Aug . 15 - the day the
" We ar e doing our best and penalty until it reached $1.5 strateg y.
to the stated pra cti ce.
failures ended and the day the FBI entered the case.
our uim ost to recttfy the million or the mmers were
Jim Gilbray, a southe rn
Atlendtn g wer e ' Wells,
situation. "
back
at
work
.
West Virgini a st nke lea der ,
Warden Ours, and Bernar d
JERUSALEM - PRIME MINISTER Yitzhak Rabin urged
Jordanian Premier Ze id
Th
e
judge
wa
s
pla
ce
d
miners. " If you don 't
told
the U. S. Congress today to approve sending American watch- Gtlkey, comrmsswners , and
Rifat , siltin g by Kissmge r ' '
under
24-hour
guard
by
strike now you needn't strtke
Ma rtha Cha mbers , clerk .
dogs to the Sinai Desert to guard the Israeli-Egyptian interim
side, nodded approvingly.
marsha
ls
Tuesday
federal
an ymor e in, th e UM W
peace settlement and promised it would not result in Vtetnamafter
a
threat
was
made
on
be cause it won't do any
like involvement.
his
life,
apparen
tly
in
congood."
Speaking to the Israeli parliament at a session called to
nection with h1s sanctwns
Bul a veteran miner st.11d,
approve the recently negotiated E gyptian-Israeli second stage
against
the
m
ine
rs
who
began
"Some of the pi ckets at my
disengagement pa ct in the Sinai Peninsula, Rabin said
in
th
e
state's
the
strike
mme
a re drtnkin g beer and
American civilians in the area will be free to leave if a new
Civil Cour t cases in Me1gs pe nal lies, and 14 ce r tiftcd
southern
coalfields
Aug.
II
JUst rais in ' plain old hell ."
w'
round of fighting breaks out. Political sources said the 121l- Coun ty se t a modern day copies.
Nea
rly
half
of
the
60,000
Hall
berated
both
the
UMW
member Israeli parliament was virtually certa in to approve
record 111 Aug ust accordm g to
Total fees collected were bit uminous co al mmers tdled
WHAT PR ICE BEAUTY ? Tht s 12-week-{)ld lloxer.
and coal operators Tue sday
the pact today despite vo cal opposition from the rightist Likud
Nellie Brown, de pul y clerk of $2,197 50; dtv1ded as foll ows,
through the Labor Day wee k- over thell' failure to idt r' ,fy
" D. J." owned by Mtss Sharon Wilson isn't 1he clown of
bloc .
courts.
co un ty $1,777, a nd slate, end return ed to their jobs
th e dog world; thi s !s his ap pearance a s the result of
pi
c
kets
and
strike
lea
•.
Th e r e we r e 21 divorc e $420.50 There wer e 106 auto
a nd
UM W saymg he had seen a num ber
gettmg h1 s ears cropped Both ears are stitched around
Tu esday,
TRENTON , N. J . - A \Ill-MILLION-GALLON reservoir
ac tton s
ftl ed ,
four In s pect ions
for
whi ch Secr etaryTreas ur er
the edge and adhesiv e tape and the styrofoam cup out the
Harry
of
them
named
and
quoted
in
ran dry today because of a filter plant breakdown , forcing
dts s olution s of marri age, co ll ectw ns tot al e d $3 18.
proced ur e. The results Wi ll be ''unve il ed" 'IllUrsda\.
Pa
trick
d
eclar
ed
in
th e news media.
250,000area residen ts to conserve water by giving up baths and
se ven j ud g me n ~ . and .two coun ty rece1vmg $26.50.
Washington it was a "m ajor
UMW offietals have warned
laundry .
miscellan eous ca ses .
There were 21 boat ltlles back-lo-work trend ."
the strike and the court fines
School children, government workers and an estimated
Other ac tivt ties tncluded Iss ued, 20 applicat iOns made,
Mmers
who
had
stru
ck
m
cou
ld ruintheunion , and Rep
10,000 industrial work ers recei ved the day off under
ts sutn g 836 ce r tificate of a n d two ce rtlf1 ed CO pi es
s;mpa
thy
w1th
th
e
West
VirKen
Hec hier , D-W.Va., satd
declarations of emergency by authorities in Trenton a nd four
l1lles, 282 notation of li ens, 150 tss ued Thts bro ught tn $:lJ;
ginians' demand for th e free- "radtcal hoth eads" had engi suburban municipalities and Gov . Brendan T . Byrne.
memo copies, 5 salvage titles, $27.75 tu the county, $5 25 to
dom to strike wtthout fea r of neered the strik e at the ex889 affida vits, assignme nts the slate.
co urt tn junctwn were back to pense of th e rank -and-ftle
OOLUMBUS - OHIO 'S MOURNiNG DOVE huntin g
a nd
a ppli ca tion s,
59
wor k 10
Pen nsy lvama,
season has been s uspended by the Department of Natural

.,

-.--

•

e

•

y

enttne

lS

Hussein, Assad are playing it cool
-. ""

fiNews . . •in Briefs\:\

Miners won't
quit fighting

Rural trash
boxes still
are misused

Court busier in August

II
I

I

II

1~ '
I

'

I

McElroy marker

.-J
REG . $89 .00
Double drop sides, adjustable spring height, steel reenforcing coils on each side, 2
inch ca sters .

REG. $23.00
Kantwet Vita Vent Mattress with F'irm-()-Flex innerspring unit. Dura-Lam fabric
covering, tear resistant and washable. Meets all federal requirements for full-&lt;lize
crib.

Resources until the full Supreme Court of Ohio determines
whether the Division of Wildlife exceeded its authority in
placing the animal on the game btrd list .
" We ask that all sportsmen in the state immediately
comply and cooperate with the temporary suspension ... until
this matter may be properly considered by the full membership" of the court, said the department in a statement
Thesday .

Community fair opens on Thursday
Entertainment, contests,
and just plain old fun for
everybody are the order for

all four days of the annual
Alb anv Comm untty Fa tr thi s
wee k Th ursday thr oug h

REG. $10.50
Kantwet all-&lt;tround crib bumper, water repellent and easily wiped clean.

COMPLETE 3-PIECE SET
SALE

00

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT, THIRD FLOOR
MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE
OPEN WEDNESDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

POMEROY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL PATROL Taking over duties the first day of school after being
sworn in by Police Chief Jed Webster were members of
Pomeroy's Elementary School Patrol. Mrs. Pamela Crow
is advisor. Patrol members are, front row , 1-r , Shawn
Gilmore, Brent Houdashelt , Heinz Coats , Paul Sprague,
Randy Murray, Joyce Lawso~ , Melinda Thomas, Melanic

Dillard, co-eaptain, Barbara Whitlatch, Behnda Grinun ,
Kristin Anderson , Jeff Nash , Mrs . Crow; back row , Chief
Webster, Jack Braley, Mark Mattox , Angelia Curtis ,
Connie Smith , Ricky Smith , Brian Harden , Leondus Lee,
J. R. Wams ley , Ronnie Richards, Lect a B~ sh, Greg
Thomas, co-ea ptain, Bill Colm er , Kim Mulford , Tammy
Eichtnger , and Kim Pa tterson .

Sunday.
2, c. mule Jwn pmg contest \\'I ll
Gates will open at 4 p m
be held and a l 3 p.m the re
Thur sday wit h eve nts to wt ll be Junwr fa1r dernonmcl ud e a horse s hoe pitc h al5 stralto ns foll owed by the
p .m . ; local chur ch prog ram JuniOr parad e a t 5 p m :\
fr om 6 to 7·30. p.m ; pony pull wt ll be fea tured at 6
Alexan der ban d conce r t, 7 · :w p.m. and from 7 to 8 30 pIll.
to 8; tra&lt;lor pulling and the Alp ine Harmo na1r es
powder puff pulling events, Polka Band , Columb us, wtl l
7:30 p.m . and mus1c by the pl ay. A square da nce and
Mtracle Atres Gospel Gro up, s how wtll be featured at B 30
Logan, from 8 to 10 p .m .
p.m
conc lu ded w ith a
Gates Will open at 12 n(Jon ftr eworks dtspl ay a t 10:30
on Frtday with judgmg or
At 12 noon on Sunday, when
entnes to star t a t 1 p m
~ates open a t 9 a m. , th ere
There will be a btcycle and will be a para de throug h town
tn cycle parade an d races w1th fl oats feat unng (:1
begmn in g at 3 p.m and a bicentennial theme . At 1 p.111
contmuation of the horse shoe there wi ll be a hor se show
p1ich al 5 p.m . A loca l church Rtdes and en tertainment Will
prog ram wtll be from 6 to 7 be on the grounds for the four
p .m . an d Billy Wal ker of the day s.
Gr and Old Opry Show wtll
a ppear fr om 8 to 10 p m
Gates open at 9 a.m. on
E XTENDED OUTLOOK
Sa turday wi th a pe t show and
Friday throu gh Sunday.
pa rad e a nd a Juni or fa1r
fa
ir
and mild throu gh th e
tractor pul l begin ni ng al so at
for ec a st period with high•
that hour. There will be a
in th e 70s to th e low 80s a nd
ga rd en tractor pull also tn thP
lows in the 50s to the loy,
afternoon and all tractors and
60s.
dn ve rs mus t be frum the
Alexander Sthool D1stnct At

. ·:·· :· :

'

-

:: ::.:. :. ·: :;. ::· :=: ·=:

to be dedicated

HA CINE
- 'J he ~1et gs
Coun ty BI C'l' rt ten m al Co m.
rmss wn e~nd the i\.1r t ~s CtJLJn ty
Pwncc r a nd
H1st c·nc a l
Soca: ty wtll s ponsor the
dedicalitln here of the Oht o
hi ston ca l marker hununng
Capt Jose ph C :VIc Elroy at 2
p .m on Sundoy, Sept 14. at
the Greenwo(Jd Cen,cter y
Capt M c l-:lro~·. 18.1!-1907,
was one of eight ch ildren born
to J ohn &lt;J nd Kathcnne
Wagner McE lroy He worked
as a farm hand on the Luci us
Cross far m , attended school
1n Rac ine, and went t(J the
Cahforma go ld ft el ds ut the
age of 18.
He se rv ed on R8c inc
Village Counc1 l and ra1 sed a
m1 htia unit 111 Hacme dunn g
the Civi l Wa r . He v,as
promoted to captain ~t the
Battle of Cht ckama uga.
He later Y. as shenff of

M etgs Co tmt\ , \\o~S

1'lL• tpri t

the Oht o C•·nert.!l 1\ ,..,,o...,·r ni&lt;J~
aprotn ted b,
tltr·
gove rn()!' of 011HI to "L' J'\' t' ;1~
se c retary -trea sur n 11f rh•·
Olnu Comm tsston f•JI' ~ht•
Ch ac kama uga
\alt!fl nal
Mili tary Park . ll c srn·nl l \
) ears m the U s I l 1·u:~~' r.r
Hepresc nlil tavcs m till' !lfflo. ·
of 1ts pos tm a .'-. tN
.John (' Rw e , chcurrn an d
the Me 1g s Cou n t} HJc Pnten ntal Co mrm ~swn. w!ll
serv e
as
n t a~l~·r
of
ce renllJn\ es
for·
the
dediCation The !{('\' Howard
Shivel e}, Ric~ctne Urutrd
Mrthodt s t Churctl . \\Jl! gn·t
the im· ocatton e~ n d 1he Hacme
Amen can l A'~IOn P o~t 602,
Elmer P tcken~. cornrnandf' r.
will prrsent the roloro: Kyl e
L. Allen \\111 t.;l\e '[', f the
Colors".
A reccpt wn v.1ll bl' t' dd at
the home uf Mr . t:~ nd Mr s.
Paul Houston in Syra cu ~e.
They own the home of Capt.
Partl y clo~dy tonight, lows McF. lroy's daughter whi c h
m the m1d 60s. Sunnv con- wa s frequent!~ ns1ted b)
tin ued wa rm Thursda)·,·lughs Capt. McElroy dunn ~~ his
t en ur ~
of
of flC'f'
in
1n the low 90s . Probabilil\ of
rain near zero tod ay. IO. pcr Washtn g lon . D C The
cent ·tomght an d Thtu sdav Housto ns ha\·r t t·st m ed th e
. ' hunw .

Weather

I.

and

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="768">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11168">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="51263">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51262">
              <text>September 2, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="558">
      <name>karr</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5444">
      <name>ponn</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="303">
      <name>riebel</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
