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I

.'
I

Volunteers make the Red Cross go
Red
Cr oss se rvices tl1 ruughout the
world e~re nwt.le poss ibl e by
the man y vo lunteers of all
age!'l &lt;.~nd from all sections of
the cummun1ty . In most
communities even the peup le
whu Sl' f\'f! i.I S f;'Xecut iw:s in a
Rf'd Cross urUce are a lso
vulunleers giv mg uf their
time both day and night.
From il&lt;; in eepti()n in 18Rl,
the Amer i c~ n 1\cd Cruss has
built upon the foun dal i()ll uf
volun leerism .
These pe ople ass ist in the
vHr ious se rvi ces Red Cross
offe rs whe ther it be a disaster
se rv ice, helpmg a se rvice
m a n ur providing blood
needs. t\11(1 eve n the blood
tha t t.he Red Cross provides

1
\ ..

Sequoia keeps
worled title
as biggest tree
SEQUOIA
NATI ONAL
PARK, Calif. ( UPI I - The
famed Genera l Sherman
Sequoia has ret ained its titl e
as the largest living thing on
earth.
Engineers said the tota l
volwne of General Sherma n,
a Sequoia National Par k
attraction, was 63,664 cubic
feet.
A challenger, a giant Redwood in the Sierra National
Forest known as Bull Buck,
measured 29,090 cubi c fee t.
Both trees are believed to
be about 2, 700 years old and

their base measuremen ts
were comparable, engineers
said.
The American Forestry As sociation initiated the contest
in the belief that Buli Buck ,
with a circumference of 84 .2
feet, might be a challenger to
the granddadddy of sequoias.

DRYER SHORTED
GALLIPOLIS
A
malfunction in an elec tri c
clothes dryer was ·blamed fur
a minor blaze at 6:44 p.m.
Friday at Steppe's Beauty
Salon located a t the Silver
Bridge Shopping Pl aza .
There was min or dam age lu
the dryer.

YOUr
NeigHBOr
CARROL K. SNOWDEN
Home 446-4518

See him for all your family
insurance needs.

lik• A
Good Neighbor,

· Stalt Farm
Is There

IHSURANtl

State Farm Insurance Com panies
Home Offi ces: Bloomingt on , Il li nois

P7302

btrthday anniversa ry. Nelson is pictured with his cake. a
gi ft presented fr om th e co-workers by Naom 1Brinker, and
r.;o me of those who gathe red to ma rk the occasion .

INSIGHT

progra m IS~ Willitml C.
Taylor , Coun cil MembershiiJ
Cha irman .
The Cub Scout program 1s a
family-cent.ered program fur
boys who have ccJmpleted the
second grade or who will be 8
thr ough 10 years of age. The)'
mee t weekly as a den under
the s upervision of H den
leader . Monthly, all the de ns
come together fo r a pa rt
meeti n~ led by a Cubmas ter.
Boys s tar t as Bobca ts a nd
through ac hieveme n ts ear n
Wolf, Bear , an d Arr ow of
Li gh t a ward s.
The Scout program is fur
boys who ha ve com ple ted the
fifth grade or who a re I I
thr ough l7 year s of age. It is
desi~ned
to
develo p
c ha ract er , m enta l and

ph ysicLII
fitness,
a nd
c itizenship tr a ining. T he
rocus 1s on roundmg out one's
physica l and mental fi tuess
through a vigorous progr am
of ac tivities.
Boys join patrols a nd elect
the ir own pa trol lea der . They
usuall y mee t once a wee k as a
tr oup under the guida nce or a
Scoutm aster . A boy joins as a
Sco u t and ca n ac hi e ve
Tenderfoot, Second Class ,
F irs t Class , Star, Life, a nd
Eagle progress awards.
Ad di tiona ! in forma tiu n
a bout the Scout a nd Cub
Scout programs is available
from th e Tr i-S tate Are a
Counci l Se rvice Ce nter , l!22
:!rd Ave nue in Huntington, W.
Va. or by phoning 1304 ) 5233408.

Jearn . Many of our Red Cross
volun teers who have been
wi th us s ince World War II
day are m oti va ted by these
yo un g p e opl e . It then
becomes the task of our long
term volun leers to train these
new
e xub e rant
young
citize ns. Frustrating ... well
s·ometimes, but it is rewarding and meani.ngful , one
volun teer s tated .
Every phase of the Red
Cross is volunteer direc ted,
[rom responsibilities of the
Na twn al Chairman and
Hoard uf Governors to their
coun te rpar ts in each chapter.
No Red Cross service or
prog ram in ea ch community
wou ld func ti on wi thout
volunteer s.
Nati onally. over 11/z mi .1ion
vo lun teers served in community programs, over 6
milli on students took part in
Red Cross se rvi ce programs
in the sc hools , and m ore than
3 m illion volunteers dona ted
their blood through the Red
Cross. F or this reason the
Tr i-S tate Bl ood Center
sa lutes its v olunteers and
ea ch c ommunity should be
grateful to these generous
people that make up the local
Red Cross prog ra ms.The Red
Cross can only be iden tified
as " The Good Neighbor"
bee a use it is the sum of
m illions of persons , each of
whom individually is a good
neighbor .
Each person is urged to
s upport a local Red Cross
program and become one o!
the millions who volunleer.
There is a place for each in
the " Good Neighbor" - The
Am e ri ca n National Red
Cross.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

KROEHLER

Payne, and Ernest Ga rnes, trustees.

.

AS MANY AS 1,600-2, 000 people have attended this
program at on e time . Places as fa r a way a s California have
been represented . As a ma tter of fact, the Emancipation
sometimes is thought of a s a "Homecoming" for this area .
Along with paying tribute and acknowledgement to the
freedom of Blacks, guests have gained much from seeing their
famil ies and friend,.
THE EMANCIPATION Proclamation was signed in 1863
by President Abraham Lincoln . This was the first legal
document that was dra wn up to grant Blacks thetr freedom .
However , l!2 years have passed and Blacks still have to go
through legal procedures and protection just to "grant" them
U1eir natura l inalienable rights. Isn't it about time we opened
our hearts instead of our law books?
Perhaps at this historical Emancipation which takes place
at the onset of the Bicentennial , we all can reaffirm our beliefs
in freedom and regenerate our beliefs in love !
Note: A prize will be given at the Emancipation to the
person holding the oldest Emancipation Program (dated
before 1950).

24 State St., Gallipolis
Phone 446-4290

Troops, packs invite boys to join

HUNTINGTON - Boys m
the Tri-State Coun ci l area,
&lt;~re 1nvited
to join Scout
troups or Cub Scout packs as
a par t of the &lt;::~ nn ual f&lt;::~ ll
..
membership program uf the
.
BAK ER WARM S TO IIO(' K Y Tri -Sta te Area Co uncil, Boy
Sc: uuts uf America .
BI RM I NG H AM.
Ala.
The Ruundu p will in clude
BY KAfHY CRAIG
::;
(
UPI'
Sen
.
Howard
Baker
,
Sc
hoo l Night fur Scoutin g,
l'iALIJ PC LIS - " l! 2 consecutive years 1 "
' R-Tenn ., sa id Fnclay Nels on P;Jck ;J nct Troup Ra ll y Nigh l,,
Per haps that phrase does not ring a bell with a lot of
Rocke felle r has become more Expl ore r Open Houses, and
people, but it shoul ct to anyone who knows anyth ing a bout the
Annual Emancipation Ce lebra tion which will tak e place at the moder ate since he becLime individual boy in vitations.
Dir ecting the mem bership
Gallia County Fairgrounds in Gallipolis on Sept. 21. This a rea v i ~·e presid ent one yeur agu .
"
I
think bein g VICe president
is the only area known to have consecutively honored the
has
bee n guod for Nelson
WINDOW BROK EN
Emanci pa lion Proclamation each year since it was made in
Rockefeller ," Bake r sa id at
GA LLI PO LIS - City police
1863.
news
co
nfere
nce
befo
r
e
here
Satw'day morning inNow that is qui te a notewor thy fact ; one of which all Gallia
s
pea
kin
g
to
an
Alabam&lt;:~
vestigated
a n act uf vancoun lians should be proud.
TilE CELEBRATION hegan on the 22nd of September, no Re p ublican fu nd ra ising da lis m at Jcans-N-Things on
matter which day of t he week it was. 1t was conducted in a dinn er . " Wor k ing w1 th S la te St. Offic e r s sa id
religious atmosphere . However, such fun activitie:; a s . President F ord has bee n good so m eo ne tlu ew a r oc k
breaki ng a rronl window.
ooseball , sack racing, hog ca lling, and grea sy pole climbing fo r Nelson Rockefelle r
were also included to stimula te the interest a nd maintain
en thu..c;iasrn. lt has been noted tha t a fi ddl er , Ed Blake, was
playing for the crowd and even though the stage fell in, he kept
right on fidd ling'. I Now that is a tru e performer!)
Such places a s Kerr Sta tion, Vinton ·'Bean Dinner" Park,
Bush Park at Bidwell-Porter , a nd the Ga llia County
Pairgrounds in .Gallipolis have had the privile ge of holding the
cele bratiou.
Mrs. Dorothy Thomas of Bidwell has been the President
since 1939 ! She also has the distinction of being the only woman
president of the Em ancipa tion. Her fa ther, the Rev. C. M.
Payne, held tha t same position 15 years himself. So between
the two of them, 51 yea r s of dedicated leadership have been in
their family. (Tha t is almost half the lime of the entire
duration of the Emancipation ) 1
Other presidents \\'ho have served are Monroe Johnson ,
Thurman Keels, and Merriman Howell .
Th e present offi cers are Flossie Ford, vice president ;
Be rnice Borden , secretary -treasu rer; Enunett Bunch , F orrest

CUSTODIAN HONORED - John Nelson, Rutla nd , a
custodian a t the Meigs Courthouse tn Pomeroy , was
honored by co-workers F riday when he marked h1s z:lrd

to the hos pitals has been
donated by volunteers wh o
come to give uf themselves to
he lp people they don't even
know .
Vo lunteers in the m;,.~l'1y Hed
Cruss services "' e people
fr om all walk o of life. Most
a r e wu rn f!n who, hav ing
reared a fmmly s till find a
need to be helpful.
Some vo lunteer s may be
mo thers w h (JSC t h!ldren arc
1n sch ool and they want to be
useful outside the horn e.
Women are in the m;.Jj unt y
whrn it comes to Red CriJS'i
vo lunteers but nu t a ll are
women .
Me n who arr e1the r relired
or with ext ra time on their
hand s volunleer for a variet v
of, dulles . One may teach a

course in fi rst aid or one may
serv.- a t a Veteran's Hospi tal
a nd f ur a nothe r man
delivering hloud to the
hos pitals ·in the region is a
rc ~~:ardi n g expenence.
.Rcg btcrcd and practical
nur ses vo lunteer eit her
t.ee~chin~ i:i hea lth cla ss or
wur ktn g at a bloodmobile
v1s1t. Some v1J!u nteer because
they like to k ee ~ the ir s kills
sha rp but do not desire
em plo yme nt and o thers
because they enjoy working
in Cl voluntee r program.
The n there a re the you th
vol untt'er s whe th er in a
Junwr Hed Cross progra m or
members uf teenage soc ia l
and c iv ir g roup s. T hese
:;uung pcvple bnng with them
ene rgy and a willingness to

ANOTHE R SHORTAGE
COLUMBUS I UP II
Liquor examin e r s in th e
offic e of s ta te Au di to r
Th omas Per gus un repurted
Friday a discovery of a n
$8,084.60 shortage in a state
liquor store a t Ri ttman in
Wa yne County , the second
s hortage unc overed in Ohio
this week .

Bicentennial Preview

STAR·SPANILBD
FURNITUIB SALB

for conferences
W A SHIN G TON
Con g r ess man Claren ce
Miller sa id his district office
staff will conduct regularly
sched uled
open
do or
meeti ngs throug hout southeastern Ohi o beginning in
September. The meetings are
designed to better serve and
communicate with area
r es iden ts whil e he is in

on

I

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

SALE INCLUDES: SOFA, SWIVEL ROCKER AND

-MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM

LOVE SEAT. COLONIAL DESIGN, WOOD TRIM,

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM

WIDE RANGE OF FABRICS AVAILABLE.

BE SURE TO SEE ALL THE OTHER FINE FURNITURE ON THE
THIRD FLOOR- NATIONALLY .KNOWN MAKES
EXCELLENT QUALITY

and m or e co mpl e x co m mercial and industrial accoun ts.
Nam ed cus tomer services
m an age r fo r P or tsm ou th
Division is R . B. Gowdy,
while V. L. Gilliland is the
cus tom er engineering services manager .
Gowdy was employed by
Ohio Power in 1946 as a
res ide nt ial sale s man at
P ortsmouth . He became
sales superv isor in 1967 and
had bee n residential services
manager since !971.
In addition , Carlini announc e d
that
J.
R.
Kling enberg er had been
promoted and transferred
to Ne wark a s customer
engineering
services
manager . Klingenberger had
been a power engineer at
Portsmouth the past year .

ELBERFELDS IN POM.EROY

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

Sunny loday and Tues da y.
Clear tonight , Lows tonight in
the low and mid 50s . Highs
Tuesday in the mid and upper
70s. Probability of rain 20 per
cent today and 10 percent
tonight and Tuesda y.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Scattered&gt; showers
Wednesday, ending Thursday and becoming lair
Friday. Highs in the 70s
north and upper 70s to low
80s south. Lows mostly In
the 50s,

\

' '

miner s
he ld
·weeke nd
meetings and voted to heed
Unit e d
Min e
Work er s
Presid e nt Arnold Mill e r 's
order t o r es um e co al
product ion.
" Return to work , but if
th ere are pickets out , return
home," UMW Loca L 1302
President Roger Thompson
told a gathering of miners
Sunday in Logan County,
where the strike started Aug.

NO . 102

discrimination here

any tines set up by strikers
who want a right-to.. trike
prov is ion in se rt e d in the
UMW contract.
Miller and other UMW
leade rs have m a inta ined the
ri g ht -to -s trik e
fac tio n
represent ed onl y 5 per cent or
th e union 's membership.
Tw o lea d in g s trik e a dvocates, Bruce Miller and
Skip Delano , were scheduled
to appear in U.S . District
Court her e today to answer
cont empt
c ha r ges
for
ignoring Judge K.K. Ha ll 's
back-to-work orders.
Thompson sai d he felt the
walkout ha d a ccomplish ed
one of its goa ls - to protest
use of c ourt injunctions by
coa l oper a tors to settle loca l
disputes. He predicted the
industry nnow would be more
willing to try to r esolve
grievan ces at the mine site
inst ead of in the courts.

ll .

Thompson said that a s far

as he w uld determine , all
locals in Charleston-ba sed
District 17 voted to end the
strik e.
In
neighborin g
District 29, headquartered in
Beckley, the same sentiment
was voiced by 50 of 86 locals.
Union officials cautioned
against wnfrontalions with
pickets . But some miner s
said they intended to cross

Devoted To Tir e
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Miners'· wives charge

lntere.~t.~

of' The

Wives of coal miners who have been on strike coo·
tlnued the ir effort s today to secure food stamps from the
Meigs County Welfare Dept.
A spokeswoman fo r the group sa id Saturday the
women had !lied an appeal with the State of Ohlo,
Department of Public Welfa re, Legal Affairs Office, In
Columbus askln ~ to receive the food stamps .
In a leiter the group sa id :
(' We, the coal mlners wives, feel that we are being
di scriminated again st by lhe Meigs County Well are Dep t.
because our hus ba nds are eoa l mi ners .
" We are request ing a fa lr he aring and-&lt;r r In·
vestl gation into why we a re be ing de nJed fuod stamps. We
would like a joint hea ring on this ma tter." __
lb e spokeswoman said the wives are being " put off,
da y to day" a t th e Meigs Welfare off ice In th eir requ es t for
foo d stamps.
Meantime, a spokesma n ut the South ern Ohlo Coal Co.
said today tha t as of mlda lght SWlday miners of all mines,
I, 2, and 3 ha d returned to their johs. Som e worke rs had
returned even earlier.
It was reported a t l l : 15 a .m . that wives of th e miners
wer e picketing the welfa re office In Middleport.

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

•

en tine
Meigs-M;t.~on

Areil

MONDAY. SEPT. 8. 1975

PRICE 15

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

Senate with Ford

BEIRUT, LEBANON - CHRISTIAN AND MOSLEM
gummen battled with bombs and bullets in the streets of
Tripoli today in religious warfare darkened by a bus massacre
and the hombardment of a hospital. The flareup of fighting this
morning·in Tripoli, 53 miles north of Beirut, came at the start
of a second week of escalating warfare in divided Lebanon.
At least 29 persons were killed and 73 injured Sunday in
clashes that included the massacre of 12 persons on a bus, tbe
torture slaying of a diplomat's son and the hombing of a
hospital , Two homb blasts and sporadic bursts of bullet fire
rocked Beirut Sunday night, touching off fears that the eightday-&lt;&gt;ld strlfe would spread to the Lebanese capital.

Weather

c re w workin g, a Wes tmore land spokesm a n sa id .
Th e large Keys tone No. I
mi ne in McDowell County
was repor ted workin g, but
three other McDowe ll mines
were s hut down . Lester said
he unders tood som e Mc Dow ell mines were shut duwn
by local issues and indi ca ted
the walkouts there we re nu t
an extension of the long
str ik e
" We' re all working,'' sa id
an Easlern Ass ociated Coal
Cor p . spokesma n a t Beckley .
No di s turba n ces wer e
reported by police age i•..:-ies
dur ing the night , a lthough
pi cke ts s howed up at a few
in s tallations on early s hif ts
today .
Weary or a montn.old
wildcat walkout which at one
time idled up to 60,000
workers , rank -and -file

y

'

.):·r
.,.
.,

MARILYN ROBBINSON

,t t
ed
A SSIS
an nrun
at b ranch bank
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs.
Marilyn Robinson has been
named assistant at the new
branch of the P omeroy
National Bank in Tuppers
Plains which opened fur
business today .
Mrs .
Robinson ,
the
daughter of Pearl Koehler of
Route I, Reedsville , and the
late Mrs . Ko ehler, is a
graduate of Eastern High
School and worked in
Columbus for th e Ohio Fuel
Co , for several years before
returning to Meigs County .
She will mark her third year
with Pomeroy National Bank
in November. Mrs. Robinson
has completed one course in
banking at the Parkers burg
Community College .
Mrs . Rubinson is married
to Wilbur Rubins on and the
coupl e and their
two
daughters , Lori, 9, and Lee
Ann , 6, who attends school
in Tuppers Plains, res ide at
Alfred .
Although the new branch is
open for business today, an
open house will nul be staged
until next Saturday , Sept . 13,
from 9 a .m . to 5 p.m.

RONALD REAGAN 'S CHIEF BOOSTER F1GURES
Reagan will make a run at President Ford before the
Republicans collect in Kansas City next year to choose their
presidential nominee. Ford apparently plans no campaign letup despite his confrontation in Sacramento with a gun-toting
young woman .
The GOP site selection committee S!IDday night
unanimously seiected Kansas City to host their 1976
nominating convention . The Democrats earlier chose New
York City for their convention. Ford, after a brush with a .45
caliber pistol in California, apparently has elected to stay on
the campaign trail with no change in his heavy travel
schedule.

Hou se

CLEVELANDER NAMED
CH!CKAGO fUPI ) - The
C h ic a g o
N e w s pap e r
Pu bli she r s As s oci a tion
Friday n a m ect,.~o hn Lang Jr .,
a n ind us tria( a nd lab or
relations executive for m ore
tha n 20 years, as its execut ive
sec. eta r y.

Customer service
is reorganized
Ohio Power Co. toda y
annoWlced a reorganization
of customer services fun ctions in its seven operating
divisions . The reorganization
is aimed at impr oved
customer service and more
efficient operations .
"What we have done, " sa id
Portsmouth
Division
Manager C. 0 . Carlini , " is
merge together nearly all
functions havin g dire ct
contact with customer s.'' Th e
merger affects c us tom e r
services and customer a ccounting activities .
The reorganiza ti on h as
resulted in the appointment
of a customer services
manager responsible for all
residential and small commercial accounts , and a
customer engineering ser vices manager, whose area of
responsibility includes large

CH ARLESTO N, W. Va.
i UPI J - A ma jor back-towork trend developed in the
southern Wes t Virginia coalfi e ld s toda y with little
pi c ke tin g
re po rt ed
by
diss ide nt miners who have
been demanding the rig ht to
s tr ike with out thr ea t of
federal court injunctions .
" It 's jus t about a full
return ,'' sa id r;tonald Les ter
of Bec kl ey, a s ubd istri ct
offi cer in the Uni ted Mi ne
Worker s Distri ct 29, largest
in the uni on .
How e ver, there we re
pockets of resis tance to the
r et urn -to -w ork sen tim e nt
voiced by UMW mem be rs
during the weekend .
Three Wes tmoreland Coal
Co. mines at Clothier in
Logan Cuun ty remained idle,
and the No. 117 mine at
F err e ll had only a partial

Vnl . XXVII

WASHINGTON - TREASURY SECRETARY William
Simon says the administration does not need to take any
special action to keep the economy on its righted course . He
said SliDday current monetary and fiscal policies can reduce
inflation and increase employment without additional steps by
the administration.
He also said it is too early to decide whether this year's
$22.8 billion tax cut should be extended into next year as
recommended by Labor Secretary John Dunlop. In a broadcast interview (NBC's Meet the Press), Simon said he is optimistic the nation will "wntinue to have positive real growth
in 1976 and a declining WJemployment rate, and it's going to
decline a lot faster than the budget projections ."

to hold hours

Was hi ngt on

SOME ON TilE LOOSE - All the monkeys aren 't in
the zoo, and all the nuts aren' t in California , as vandalism
on Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy , proved over the weekend .
Four large plate glass windows, two at the Ohio Power Co.
and two at the offices of the Crow, Crow and Porter legal
firm were damaged . All four of the windows have a small
hole in them from which extends shattered glass.
Pomeroy police are investigating . While the windows
appear to have been shot at, there were no bullets
recovered . It was thought that perhaps the large windows
were damaged by rocks. Tile window above is at the Ohio
Power Co. Fred Morrow,local power company manager ,
discovered the damaged windows about 5 p . m . Sunday.

By United Press International
LOUISVILLE , KY. - LOUISVILLE AND JEFFERSON
County, troubled by four nights of protests and arrests , began
the first full week of school busing today with armed guards on
each bus. There were no reports of any incidents during the
early busing ,
School officials said the number of white students who
showed up to be bussed remained small, while attendance of
blacks seemed to have increased. Several bus drivers failed to
report for their runs . School officials said there would be no
definite attendance figures until later in the day.

Miller's office

business.
Distric t
Th e
Te nth
Represe ntative said Gallia
and Meigs countains who
wish to communicate their
view s on national issues or
wh o
are
exp e ri en c ing
pr obl e m s involving the
F ederal Governmen t are
encourag ed to visit with his
s ta ff on the firs t Tuesday in
Gallipolis, l-3 p.m ., at the
Coun ty Commissioner s office
and on the second Wednesday
in Pomer oy, 10-12, in the
courthou se jur y room .

Miners return tO pits

WASHINGTON (UP! ) House Speaker Carl Albert
today predicted the Senate
would uphold President
Ford's veto of a six-month
extension of domestic oil
price controls .
Albert briefed reporter s
following Ford's White House
meeting with Democratic and
Republican congressional
leaders in tbe Cabinet Room
to discuss energy policy .
Ford met earlier with a group
of nine Senate Republicans on
the same subject.
Ford is expected to veto the

anticipated override . If the
Senate does vote to override ,
the House will also vote on the
issue, either Wednesday or
Thursday.
Albert agreed with two
Republican senators who
earller said the Senate would
uphold the veto . But he said if
the Senate does overnide, the
House probably would too .
Acwrding to Albert , House
leaders have tbe votes to
override but the Senate
leaders have not made
similar claims- "I assume
the Senate leaders don't have
the votes to override ."
Albert said he expected
some kind of compromise
between Congress and tbe

White House would be worked
out on a phase-&lt;&gt;ut of controls.
"The use of the meeting
(with the President ) was ... to
see if we w uld work out a
compromise, " Albert said .
" All we could do was talk
about a compromise."
·:·:·:=:·:=:-:::.:=:·:·:·:·:::.:=:·:·:::.;:;.:::::.:-:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:··-:::-:·

SECOND DERBY
The second annual fishing
derby for senior citizens will
be held on the bank of the
Ohio River across from the
Senior Citizens
C ent~r
Thursday
with
Glenn
six-month extension by midLambert and Willis Anthony
night Tuesday. The Senate
In charge. Fishing will be
have scheduled a session
from 8 a. m . to 4 p. m, and the
Wednesday to vote on the
rules state each fisherman
may have one pole wlth two
: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·.;:;·.::::::::::;:~::::;:::::::::::::~~:~~:~~~::~t:':':~oukl..,lg.L.Jhe, . 50 cent entry
=:;:
}
lee. Prize• will be awarded

): Bridge job speeded .:

?

:;::

Glenn Smith, deputy district engineer, Division 10,
:::: Ohio Department of Highways, lnlormed Sen , Oakley

:·:·:-:
;.;.

~j ~!~~~:t::::dn=~~v~l.~~: :~~e:;

::

·~

::

::;: a week work schedule for the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge,
Smith told Collins the district department stiU does
:=:- not have an analysis from the contractor which was
:} promised last week. When received, It Is hoped the
:;:: work can further be speeded up, Smith said,

~ :·

j

;:;:

··~

·:-:
:·:·
~-:

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

by the judges.
:;:::::::;:::::::::::::;:::::::::;:::::.::::·:=:·:·:-:·&gt;=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.

UNIT CALLED
RACINE - The Racin e
emergency squad wa s called
to Long Bottom at noon
Sunday for Sam Rairden , a
medical patie nt , who wa s
take n tu Ve teran s Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted .

Austerity ordered in Gallia schools
Due to increased salaries
brought by consolidation,
inOation, and very little new
income, the Gallia Coun ty
Local
School
District
Saturday night went into a
s tric t austerity program in an
effor t to avoid closing its
schools before the Christmas
vac ati on. The motion wa s
made by J . C. Mitchell,
seconded by Dale Rothgeb,
Jr.

Superintendent C. Comer utili ties, $74 ,59 2: in suran ce ,
Bradbur y and board clerk $23,853 .32;
buildin g inMr s. Naomi Be m a n ex- surance , $18,825; equipme nt ,
plained that under projected $2,915.36 ; ge neral operating,
figure s from Se ptember $1 25,000.
thr ou gh Dec ember , th e
To tal e x pe nditur es ,
distri ct will have a $351 ,613.31 $1,165,267 .64 lea ving a de fi ci t
of $35!,613.3 1.
deficit .
The district 's income in Supt .
Bra d bur y
was
cl uding loca l ta xes, s late author ized to go into an
foundation fund s, personal au s te rity pr og ra m an d
propert y taxes, Title fund s, c utd o wn on unnecessar y
Only
i te m s
and the balan ce as of Aug. 31, s pe ndi n g .
will total $81 3,654 .33 while the de fin itely n e ed ed will be
estimated e xpenditures were pur cha se d th e rest of 1975 .
Under
th e
a us terity
listed as follows·:
P ayroll
I8
ti m es 1 prog ram, f1eld trip s will be
$686,655.68; board bills as of
Aug . 31 , $83,426.28 ; debt to
bank, $150,000 plus in te rest;

Registration

Railings ripped for courses
out on US 33
in Art set

•l .

)~' ~

l " ' ·~
( . -· ' .

~.

!

'

..

.
' I

\

.

\

\

J

PRESSING THE FLESH - The late LY,don Baines
Johnson made the handclasped handshake a trademark of
the successful politician. He called it " pressing the flesh ."
Jay RDckefeller appear s to be well on his way of becoming
a master of the art above, clasping the hand of Forrest
Clark, Point Pleas ant and Gallipolis businessman, city
chairman of the Point Plea sa nt Democratic Party. Clark
was welcoming Con cord College Pre sident Jay
Rockefeller to a Democr at Ox Ro ast at the Mason County
FairgroWJds Sunday where over an estimated 400 persons
met the guest of honor . Rockefeller has said he will anno!IDce offi cially his ca ndidacy for Governor of West
Virginia Nov. 1.

.\
·'

I&lt;

·,

'

RECEIVE COMMENDATION ~ Gladys and Seth
Nicholson, Rt. I ; Rutland, have received the · commendation he holds from the General Assembly of the
State of Ohio, Ohio Senate, for their contribution to
" Heritage '76" . They were wmmended for their
generosity as the initial contributors to Heritage '76
project sponsored by the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society and for dedication and contributions to
the history of Ohio. The commendation was signed by
Richard F . Celeste, Lt. Governor and Oakley C. Collins,
senator of the 17th District.

The department of Sheriff
Robert Hartenback in ves tigated two accidents ov er
the weekend:
Saturday night a car driven
by John S. Cleland , Columbus, traveling north on Route
33, two miles north of
Pomeroy went out of control
and off the road on the right
tearing out some 40 feet of
guard railing before coming
to a stop. A tire blew out on
the vehicle , c ausing th e
accident . Damage to the car
was heavy. There wa s no
charges filed .
On Sunday in Chester
Township, a car driven by
Avice E . Spencer, 23, Route I,
Long Bottom, was bac king
out of a driveway at the Waid
Spencer r es ide n ce . Th e
vehicle hi t a parked car
owned by Esther F . Wright,
The Plain s,. Ther e we re
medium dam ages .

RIO
G RA NDE
Reg is tratio n opens in a week
for three basic .t\r t cour ses to
be taught here this fall by Le u
Hill of Racine at Rio Grand e
College- Commun ity College.
They are three of eight
courses in Art being offered .
R egist r at i o n for
Ph ot o g r a p h y ,
Ba s i c
Ceramics and Fundamenta ls
or Des ign on a fir s t com e,
first served basis will be
Munday, Sept. 15. Classes
begin Tuesda y, Sept. 16 . F or
m ore inform ation, con tact
the Office of Admissions, Rio
Grande College , Ri o Grande,
Ohio 45674 . Telephone 2455353.
Each c ourse requi res a
minimum of eight st udents
before it can be ofl ered . and
there is a m aximum limit of
15 per cour se due tu space
li mitations.

'

elim inated un til afte r the fir s t
of the year, the re will he no
ove r time
except
in
em ergencies.
profess iona l
meetings will be uut unl ess
paid under feder al programs ,
dupli cat1ng s uppli es w11l be
cut. build ings will nut be
opened un less necessary for
night meeti ngs , lung di stanre

ca lls will be el imi nate d
un less em ergencies exi st , the
use uf electr icity , water and
o the r uti lit ies must be
reduced, and onl y emerge ncy
supplies wi ll be purchase d.
It was pointed out that th e
fina nci a l crisis of Lhc di striet
\4 as
not du r
to a ny
t Continued on page 21

•

GOP m House
offers program
WAS HINGTON IUP I I House Republicans today
proposed
a
legislative
prograll) showi ng what they
would do il the GOP con·
trolled Congress.
It ca lle d for ne w ap ·
proaches to health insurance,
retirement income and job
tr a inin g , an d a ba la nce d
budget within three years.
House GOP leader .John
Rh ode s was to disclose
de tails of the pr ogr am, which
has been in the drafting
pr ocess since ear ly this year,
at a news conference today .
UP! obtained highlights of
th e proposal in advance.
Rhodes sa id the prog ram,
drawn up independently of
th e White Ho u se, was
designed not to put House
GOP members on a collision
course wi th a Republican
Pr eside nt bu t ra the r · ·'to
provide the American people
with a solid notion of what a
Republican -controlled
Congr ess would seek to accomplish ."
New proposa ls not yet mentioned by President Ford
in clud e a n un employment
be nefits prog ram that would

pick up when current jobless
benefiL"-: run out and ta x ince ntlvcs
for
private
r e ti r ement programs tha t
would be on top of soc ia l
security and private pension
be nefits.
The JObless proposal would
provide benefits pegged to
costof-l•vm g levels for an
undete rmined length of lime
tmt conditwned on a person's
willingness to lear n a new
trade if h1s old profession has
become obsolete.
Tax incentives are now
provided to persons who do
not qua lify for social security
benefit"-: or canno t enroll in
gro up pension plans and who
ea r mark some of t heir
earnings as a rr: tirement
fu nd. The GOP prog ram
would e xtend those incentives
to everyone who wa nted to
bolster social security or
gro up pension benefits with
an ind ivid ua l ret ir eme nt
income.
&lt; Ad di t i o n a lly,
the
Repu b lica ns ca ll ed for
revision of social security
regulations tha t would allow
for
unlim ited e a r nin gs
(Co ntinued on page 8)

•

�I

..-3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 Mnnda· '&gt;ept 8, 1975

2-The DailySentmel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday, Sept 8 1975

PRG holds hostages for U.S. recognition, aid
Edlton Alan Dawson, UPI
bureau manager In South
Vietnam, left Saigon on
sovernmeoc orders last
Wednesday Jfe had reported
on events in tbe country for
tbe past five years, Including
the Communist takeover on
April 30
BvALANDAWSON
BANG KUII.
Thailand
1UP! ) South V1etnam s
Communtst
government

wants Amertcan recogrut10n
badly - so badly It may be
holdmg the 50 or so
Amencans sttil m the country
as hostages to force negotla
ttons
We want normal relatwns
w1th the Umted States gov
ernment spokesmen te ll
anyone who asks
The reason ts stmple
eno ugh
the
nation s
economy, battered by 30
years of war and d isrupted by
the sudden Comm umst
takeover last Apnl needs
masstve transfuswns of
fore1gn 81d
And say the leaders of the
ProvlSional
RevolutiOnary
Government, It IS the Uruted

States that must come up
w1th the funds
It IS only natural ac
cordiDg w the h1story of
warfare, that the loser must
pay the wmner for the
damages
sa1d deputy
government adv1ser TriDh
Dinh Thao ID a recent m
ten tew
The U S government
however does n t see the
s•tuat10n m qu1te the same
hght It has so far refused to
recogmze the new Com
mumst reg1me and last
month vetoed a move to
adm1t South VIetnam to the
Uruted Natwns
lmtated by the brushoff
the PRG has apparently
(\ec1ded not w let Amencans
out of the country m what
could be a move to put
pressure on Washingoon
I was the only one allowed
w leave smce the U N vote
and my departure was held
up by a guard who showed me
an order ba rring a ll
Amencans from entermg the
Satgon a 1rport to board
outgomg fl1ghts
About a doze n Amencans
are under loose detention

sumewnere m Ule country

The others are free w roam
around Saigon as they please
Intelligence
officers
followmg their movements
are always friendly a nd
stress that Commumst
VIetnamese harbor no 1U
feeiiDJlS toward the American
people
We know that your people
have opposed your govern
ment s war on us a Foretgn
Muustry off1c1al sa1d last
week
Nevertheless,
the
Amertcans are convinced
they w11l become hostages m
a diplomatic maneuver w
prod Washmgoon to change
1ts stand on recogmhon
Unti l
that
happens
however t he South V1et
namese autho nhe s hav e
dec1ded to make se lf
sufficiency m food productiOn
their f1rst pr10r1ty launching
a campaign to move more
than half of Saigon's 3 5
mdhon people w the coun
trys1de
We must go backward
however regrettable that IS,
sa 1d Thao
We must

establish sell..sufflclency as marketplaces
Bank depositors can
the first pr10r1ty wrebuilding
the economy To do that, our receive only the eqwvalent of
people must go back w the $12 per month per family
member from their accounts,
farms and the fiShmg
because many of the plasters
boats
were
looted by bank offiCials
~o nr
about JUO ooo
already have been m oved before the American pullout
The r1ch are unhappy of
out But unhke th e Kluner
Rouge
m
ne1ghbonng course, and still ap
prehens1ve
about
the
cambodia, the South VIet
possibility
of
retaliation
The
namese Communists so far
have used persuaston not poor are st1il poor, but at
least are able w s1t on
force
Propaganda teams v1s1t comm it te es that discuss
each ward of the c1ty often w natwnai and local pohc1es
try w conviDce the Jobless
and the poor to go back w the
A few bands t&gt;f anll farms offermg them free Comm unt st soldiers who
land transportation food and fought for the former Sa1gon
money for the hrst stx government are still roaming
months
the Central Highlands area
Still the Commurusts are and parts of the Mekong
clearly worried about the Delta But most VIetnamese
shape of the economy and are have acce pted the PRG
domg what they can to repair VICWry and resistance w the
It
new government IS &lt;\ymg off
OffiCials of the defeated
What can those (soldiers )
Saigon regune fled w1th 24 do now'
asked Tha o
oons of gold - half the rheoorically They couldn't
nation s supply Most foreign
defeat us w1th half a million
currency also disappeared Amencans and U S a1d '
from the banks Imported
For those who have surrengoods are riSmg in pnce and dered the treatment has not
d•sappeanng fr om the been so harsh as expected
There certaiDiy ha s been no
bloodbath

Dallas will try to keep Ford safe
DALLAS (UP!) - Pollee
and Secret Service agents
have promiSed secunty
would be extremely light for
Prestdent Ford's second VISit
to the Cl ty w he r e John
Kennedy was assassiDated 12
years ago
The attempt on Ford s hfe
at Sacramenoo Calif will
not alter the Prestdent s VISit
Saturday to a meetmg of the
National FederatiOn of
Republican Women and a
convocation at Southern
MethodiSt Umvers1ty, h1s
national campaign director
S8ld Sunday
Walter Coughlin, Secret
Serv1ce spec1al agent m

charge, said th e agency
always works at maxunum
capac1ty, regardless of the
pohtiCal tenswn of the day
He sa1d there probably
would be additional agents at
the arrport and convention
center, although thiS was not
prompted by the Sacramenoo
IDCldent m wh1ch Manson cult
follower Lynette Fromme
pomted a loaded 45 caliber
pistol at the President
Campaign d1rector Bo
Callaway smd the President
would arr1ve m Dallas about
11 a.m Saturday and will
meet at the Trammel Crow
home wtth busmess and CIVIC

.
leaders makiDg

$1 000 con
tr1butwns w state Republican
coffers Ford IS scheduled w
talk to the GOP women at
1 15 p m
callaway saJd open campalgrung always briDgs elements of danger but you
don ' t want a PreSident
cooped up m WashiDgton '
The Callforma mc1dent
'means more alertness and

more concern, and Ule Pre&amp;
dent may be more protected callaway said
The President w1ll an
nounce a Texas campmgn
conuruttee, Callaway sa1d
Texas would be a key state m

w

' fanuly,' Bugliosl described
Squeaky" as 'the undisputed leader of the fanuly
while Charlie was ID ab-

sentia '
Fridays actaon was

'~com

pletely within the1r lifestyle
- w k1ll or attempt w kill
people and m such a way as
w shock the world I'm not
surprised Not at all "
Miss Fromme IS kept ID a
cell wtthout teleVISion surveillance, her Jailer said He
smd she turned down ]all
meals contammg meat
because of a vegetenan diet
"She's m good spirits She
had a peanut butter and Jelly
sandwich," he added
It was reported that Miss
Fromme and her roommate,
Sandra Good, 31, had tried
thiS year w get on the accepted viSitors list at San
Q.Jentm priSOn w see Manson, serviDg a life term for
influencmg Charles "Tex"
Watson and several young
women ID his sex and drugoriented cult to comnut at
least seven murders
Off1crals said Fromme and

the campaign because of
support for Ronald Reagan,
should the former California
Republican governor dec1de
oorun
Ford will be whisked un
mediately from the 2 000delegate conventiOn to meet
wtth the Texas supporters
unlll an afternoon talk at
Southern
MethodiSt
Uruves1ty He then hoards a
fltght to Midland, Tex
Reagan and V1ce Prestdent
Nelson Rockefeller are sche
duied w address the GOP
women Fr1day and John
Connally w11l be on the
speaker s platform Saturday
wtth the President

Miss Good tr1ed to get a
lawyer w help them obtam
v1sitmg pnv1leges
The
lawyer contacted pohce, who
warned the women poSSible
legal action could be taken
against them
There IS no eVIdence at
this time mdlcatmg a conspiracy' ID the threat to
Ford's life, sa1d US Atoorney Dwayne Keyes
Miss Good, released by
pollee after ques\Jonmg, said
Miss Fromme wrote every
day w Manson but that
Squeaky acted ootally of her
own volitiOn Manson d1dn t
order her to do this "
The FBI sa1d Sunday
agents had
questiOned
Ma· ·on at San QuentiD but
th&amp; he prov1ded no informatiOn
"He gave no information of
an evidentiary or lead
value," sa1d Paul YoWlg,
special agent ID charge of the
Sacramenoo FBI off1ce • He
was not responsive to specific

questions ''
Young sa1d at least" 50
agents are working on the
case

DR. LAMB

Vitamin claims are overblown
•

•
••

~

: By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
• DEAR DR LAMB - Could
, you please help me w1th a
• couple of v1tamm questwns'
, Is v1tamm B 2 the complexwn
: v1tamm a nd w1ll B-6 really
• help one keep h1s we1ght
down as I've been told'
• , DEAR
READER
"• V1tam1n B-2 1s r1boflavm Its
: most 1mportant role 1s m the
: complex enzyme system that
: enables you to tear down your
~ food mkl carbon dwnde and
" water to release energy
:! Vttam1ns are not energy
" sources, they functiOn to
; enable the body to release

..

: energy

from

food ,

:: specifically carbohydrates,
~ fats and protems
• : When you have enough for
.. 1ts unportant role, taking
: addditional amounts w1ll do
: nothmg lor you at all It Is bke
; having enough matches w
: light a candle, an extra box
.:: won 't help once the candle is
.. lit
:
Deficiencies of r~hoflaviD
:Jll'e quite rare , because 1\ts so
plenliful m our d1et M1lk and
I~

~

m1lk products are a very ncb
sour ce Milk exposed to
sunlight loses part of 1ts
nhoflavm lt 1s also present
m meat of all kinds cereals
mcludmg enriched breads
flour
macarom
and
spag hetti, It IS m broccoli
collards and spmach It 1s
hard to eat anythmg like a
decent d1et w1thout gettmg
enough r1hoflavm
If a deficiency does occur 11
tends w affect the spec1al
areas of the skin, around the
eyes and the musous hnmgs
as around the bps
VItamin B-6, pyr1doxme,
also affects the skm and
complexiOn It IS mvolved m
enzyme systems used m
metabolism You get 11 m
meats, vegetables and
cereals, and 1\ IS almost
impossible to have a B-6
defiCiency 1! you eat anythmg
hke a balanced d1et or these
food groups
There IS absolutely no truth
m the statement that B-6
causes you to lose we1ght
The truth is that a deflc,ency

of 1t m1ght cause we1ght loss
because of mterfermg w1th
normal metabolism
Excess amounts of B-6 are
not soored m the body They
are rapidly eliminated so
taking large doses of B-6 JUSt
wastes your money I am
aware of the current highly
a dvertised fad of usmg B-6
m we1ght control regunes It
IS pure hokum
All of these
schemes work only from an
associated d1et that restr1cts
calortes one way or another ,
or because they cause you to
elimmate body water not
calor~es, or !molly because
they make you s1ck
For mformahon on we1ght
control wr•te to me m care of
th1s newspaper, P 0 Box
1551, RadiO City Statwn, New
York, NY 10019, send a long,
s tamped,
self addressed
envelope and 50 cents and ask
for The Health Letter number
4-7 We1ght Losmg Diet
DEAR DR LAMB - I read
,YOur column on split na1ls
and I could have Written an
•denllcal letter a few years

ago I tr1ed gelatm treatment
and all sorts of thmgs Then a
frtend tn a cosme tics shop
advised me to om1t na1l pohsh
altogether W1thm a few
weeks after 1 qwt usmg all
forms of polish my nalls were
m perfect cond1t10n , and I
have not had a split na1l
smce
DEAR READER -'!:hanks
you for sharmg your ex
penence w1th others We fmd
that lots of problems are
caused by reactions to a vast
array of chemicals And, we
are all different m our
reacllons lt certamly Will not
cause any harm to stop usmg
na1l pohsh So, those w1th
spht nail problems m1ght as
well try 11 I'd be mterested m
the resul Is from readers who
try thiS

You' II

tract

A ChroDJcle of America
Summer-Fall, 1775:
This is open season on royalsovemon Amolll tbe fallen
and falling on June 2 North carolina'• Governor Jotiah
Martin takes refuge at Fort Jolmlon on Cape Fear, 8lld escapes July 18 toHMS
beflnallydepartl tbecolony
alter the Battle of Moore s Creek BrldgeiJIPebruary,IT78
Vlrginlo s Governor John Murray Dunmore n- toHMS
Fowerat Yorktown on June 8, but awalll deteab at Great
Bridge on December 9 and at Gwynn lohmd on July 10,
1776 before leaving lor good In July, Governor Jolm
Wentworth of New Hampshire takes refuge aboard a
Bmlsh mon-o war similarly witb Sir William Campbell
of South Carolina on September 15 anctwlth WilliamTrycm
of New York on October 30 On November 7, tile Rhode
Island Provincial Congress deposes Governor Joeepb Wanton When the war begins only CoMecticut'o Jonathan
Trumbull - among all the royal governon- remaiM loyal
to the colonial cause

c.......,.,

1t

down
much f aster
w1 th

a

WANT AD

Detroit
Un Aug 16, U S District
Judge Robert DeMasc10
1ssued ruhng m school
desegregation case initiated

by the NAACP five years ago
DeMaSClo rejected massive
busing
to
achieve
desegregatiOn , saying busing
should be used as a hist

Gallia schools
(Continued from page I)
mismanagement on tbe part
of the administration or
board " When the raises were
given lost fall to end tbe
teachers ' and class ified
employees strike, we knew
that .. e entire district would
be hurting In the fall of 1975,"
Supt Bradbury stated
Expiammg the Situation
further
Bradbury and
Ass1stant School Supenn
tendent David C Campbell
pomted out that foilowmg
consolidation m Jan 1974 the
other three area, North
Gallla, Southwestern, and
Hannan Trace automallcally
went to the h1ghest salar1es
paid by the old Kyger Creek
District That meant a $500
mcrease for those teachers
Followmg negollatwns and
the stnke last fall the
teachers were mcreased by
$200 last September and
rece1ved an additwnal $300 m
Januar y Class1fled employees were also g1ven a new
salary mcrease In additwn
the board agreed to pay
hospitalization msurance for
ail 1ts employees
Along w1th the new wage
packages came h1gher costs
for gasoiiDe, fuel o1l, coal,
electriCity water and general
operational s upplies The
fmances were complicated
more when the d1s tr1ct was
forced w stay on the old state
school foundatiOn program
under the
Grandfather
Clause and by the reductwn
of the overall county tax
m1llage to 16 m1lls a figure
agreed upon by the State
Department of EducatiOn,
the Kyger Creek Power Plant
•nrl the former Gallia County
Board of Educatwn m 1973
It was pointed out that th&lt;1
dtstnct cannot borrow on
ant1c1pated mcome until after
Jan I, and that the State
Department of Education w11l
not advance the diStrict any
of 1ts state foundation funds
for !976
Tbe board agreed to continue all efforts to get additional financing II tbe
trend continues, tbe board
may bave to close its schools
two weeks to a month In

December
Other Business
In other matters the hoard
agreed to contmue half-a-&lt;lay
kindergarten sessions and w
attempt w get additional bus
dr1 vers to reduce the time
kindergarten children are on
the buses followmg classes
In some areas. pupils were
ndmg the bus over two hours
A delegation of parents was
present to d1scuss the kindergarten s1tuatwn
At Chesh1re-Kyger Mrs
Vwlet Russell has 70 kin
dergar ten pup1ls Smce the
board 1s m dire flnanc1al
straits an effort has been
made w secure the help of
two CAP workers to help Mrs
Russell as a1des
Tom Weaver, Gallipolis, a
graduate of GalllH Academy
High School and Morehead
State Umvers1ty, was em
ployed as Soctal Studtes
teacher at Kyger Creek
replacmg John C W1cklme
who retired
Substitute cooks employed
were Edna Mooney, Nancy
Tr1plett and Joyce M Clfrk,
Mar1lyn Halfhill was hired as
a parttune cook at BidwellPorter
J C ConstructiOn of
Gallipolis was awarded a
contract for $1,199 W remodel
a Title I Reme\lial Reading
room at Vmoon School The
JOb w1ll be pa1d by Title I
funds and will not cost the
board anythmg
The board transferred
$13,649 66 m Title I funds w
the General Fund
- Approved the payroll
deductions of OAPSE dues
- Granted supplemental
contracts to 1ts four band
direeoors, Bob Shaver, Dave
Danko , Cindy Thompson and
Carolyn Cogar
- Agreed to pay half of the
costs for a roll of wife lor
mstallahon between VmWn
School and a property owner
- Set the tuition rate at
~2 25 per month
- Added D1ana Slaughter,
Cheryl Sheard, Lyvoma
Bunce, John Wickline and
Charlotte Miller to the substitute teachers' list
- Approved Gerald Smith

Eas1
P ttsburgh
Sl LOUIS
Ph1l ade lph a
New Yor k
Chicago
Montreal

I I

''inaugurated" the bed Sbe
told a reporter, "You have
too give us time "
"I think 1t went over very
well," Rockefeller sa1d
"They realize that it's a true
work of art"
The Rockefellers threw the
first of nine housewanrung
parties at the new vice
prestdential1ll811S10n Sunday
night About 200 members of
the cab!Qet, Congress, tbe
diplomatic corps and other
dignitaries VIewed the bed
and other furnishmgs and
munched a buffet dinner that
mcluded lobster, shrimp,

x Cmcmnat
Los Angeles

74
73

68
68

521
5 18

7
7

67 76
61 79

469
436

14
19

~

~

W L
Pet G 8
95 47 669
75 68 5'24 20 2

San Fran ctsco 70 12
-By Ross Mackenrle &amp; Jeff Mac Nelly /e&gt;l975 Unlled Fearure Syndicate

San Dego
Atlant a
Hou ston
x Cl n ched dtv

493 25

64 79 448 311
63 80 441 32
55 89 382 41
s ..,n II li e

~
2

Saturday s Res ults

St LOUtS 6 New York 3

resort, and only after otber
techniques, such as changmg
school boundaries, were exhausted
The NAACP bas appealed,
and the U S SIXth Circwt
Court of Appeals m Cincinnati has set heariDgs for
Oct I
lndlaDapolla
The federal appeals court
ID Chicago recenUy granted a
stay of an order that would
have required the busing of
6,500 black students
e1ght
suburban districts and some
busmg wtthm the Indianapolis public school
system
Continwng IS an IDterun
plan begun wtth U S district
court approval ID 1973, under
which between 9,000 and
10,000 students are bused
withm the Indianapolis
system

w

Mlnneapolls-8t Paul
Mmnesota
has
a
reqUirement that no more
than 30 per cent of tbe
students m any school belong
to mmor1ty groups Minneapolis IS under federal
court order w have no more
than 35 per cent of students In
any school belong w nunor1ty
groups ThiS will be completed when school starts this
fall It has been done by
busmg, pairing, changmg
school zones and housmg
students according wgrades,
also by building new schools
St Paul Is expected
have
completed 1ts program by the
fall of 1976 Number of black
students m Minneapolis and
St Paul public schools
estimated at between ~and 8
per cent

w

Loalsvllle
Massive busing began Sept
4 ID Louisville and Jefferson

County, With about
50
percent
absenteeISID A federal appeals
court m ~.-wcmnati held In
July many schools In
Lou1sv1lle and Jefferson
County were still segregated
and ordered immediate
desegregallon A federal plan
IDcluded the busing of nearly
22,600 of the 130,000 students
m the newly merged
LouiSVillNefferson County
system
The
original
desegregation order included
a section prov1dlng for
designated areas near affected schools for peaceful
protest
Pblladelpbla
BusiDg for desegregatiOn
has not been ordered yet, but
a Commonwealth court which
had ordered tbe Philadelphia
school district and the state
Human Relations Commission to come up with a
busmg plan held bearings
several weeks ago on two
plans - one submitted by a
commiSston which dealt
prunarlly with desegregation
busmg Wlthm the c1ty and the
other by the school district
which calls for desegr~ation
by
mtegratlon
of
Phlladelpbla and suburban
schools One judge heard
testunony on both plans and
now must present it to other
judges of the court, which
then must set tbe date for
legal arguments It was
estunated Utis mlghl not be
until mid-October
The
district has 262,500 children of
which approximately 61 per
cent are btack
Oklaboma City
Public schools have begun
their fourth year of operatlm
under a federal court
desegregation plan which
resulted m busing of half tbe
system's 50,000 students
For the first year since Its
unplementation, no student
reassignments were
necessary to change the
racial balance of Individual
schools
'11!e school board has asked
the judge w declare the
district desegregated and
release It from the court's
supel'Vllllon
Outrlotte,N C

for trash haulmg at South
western High School
- Tabled a request by
Howard Neekamp for a
supplemental contract salary
as coordiDator of the Adult
Education Program
Approved home Instruction for five hours each
week for Billy and Gaynelle
Hutchmson
and
Scott
Arrowood Teachers will be
!icllOOIS openeu Aug 21
Sylv1a Humphreys and
wtthout
scrutiny from the
Wanda Ball
federal
courts
U S District
- Granted DPPF direct&lt;lr
Ruth George and her aides Judge James McMUian Utis
pemusswn w attend a con- swnmer placed the Olarlotte
desegregation case m an
ference m Athens
mactive status,

roast beef, turkey and ham
The bed Is the creation of
2oth century surrealist
American artist Max Ernst
The king-med bed, w1tn Its
inlnk cover, has cage~e
bars on both ends, two circular paintings and a large
modern painting on a screen
at one side
Hidden somewhere under
the poliahed wood base 18 a
complete
communications
system, lncludmg a concealed telepllone
"Never ask what anything
In modern art means," Mrs
Rockefeller said when asked
I

'

W l
Pet G 8
80 60 571
75 66 53/ 5 ]

West

Arty bed is Rockefeller party hit
WASIDNGTON (UPI)- A
$35,000 modern art bed was
the
hit
of
Nelson
Rockefeller's first party at
the nation's new ofllctal
res1dence for the VIce
president
President Ford S8ld be
thought the bed was
"tremendous " Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger raved
that it was ''marVelous " His
wife Nancy said less en·
thusast1cally 11 was ''very
pretty " First Lady Betty
Ford wouldn't comment on 1t
Happy Rockefeller adnutted she and the vice
president had not yet

get too excited , though, let
them be warned that Wat
son's pretty dark-haired wife
Linda won't be easy 00 deal
w1th
The $50,000, says Linda,
doesn t change a thiDg Hll far
as how much the Watsons will
pay for their first home or
what kiDd of house 1t wtll be
I ve got lots of calls " she
saJd, • and they say, 'Mrs
Watson, I've got a lovely
$22!;,000 house for you r just
hang up on them

AKRON, Ohio (UP!) _
Torn Watson 's Vlcwry Sun
day in tbe 14th World Series
of Goll has got w be good
news for Kansas C1ty
realtors
" It's going to put a good
down payment on a house ID
Kansas City if we can fmd
one," smd Watson , referrmg
w the $50,000 first prize he
collected for defeating Jack
Nicklaus, Tom WeiSkopf and
Lou Graham
Before all the KC realoors

B y U ntted Press I nternattona I
Nahonal L eague

School busing, nationwide: At a Glance

Attention coming onto Fromme now
Well you know," he
SACRAMENTO ,
Calif
quoted
her, 'when people
(UPI) - Lynette Allee
around
you
treat you like a
Fromme, leader m absentia
of the Manson cult, told a child and pay no attention w
jailer she had w try w the things you say you have
assassinate President Ford w do something
Federal mvest1gaoors sa1d
because nobody paid attenllon w what she was they had no eVIdence "at thiS
time" of a conspiracy m the
sayiDg
The tiny, red-llaired Miss assassmatlon attempt Friday
Fromme, 26, mcknamed at the state capitol Agents
"Squeaky • by convicted mterv1ewed Manson at San
mass murderer Charles Q.Jentm PriSOn after Miss
Fromme's attack but sa1d
Manson because of her high
.l"tched vmce, was held today Manson would not respond w
on $1 million bail ID an specific questiOns
The U S atoorney planned
iSolation cell at Sacramenoo
present full charges
to
Jail
a
She was reported m 'good against Miss Fromme
federal
grand
Jury
Wed~mts
and mamtammg a
nesday
vegetarian diet
Vmcent Bughos1, who
Miss Fromme pomted a 45
prosecuted
Manson and
caliber p1stol at Ford Friday
and became the first woman members of the ''family" for
ever w try to assassmate a the Tatll.aB1anca murders m
Prestdent The weapon did 1971, wid newsmen duriDg the
weekend Miss Fromme was a
not f1re
sort of ''executive officer' • for
A jailer wid of a con
versallon wtth the iHoot-3 Manson when the fanuly was
woman after she was ID full flower She was chief
wrestled to the ground by a spokeswoman during the
Secret Service agent when Manson tnal ID Los Angeles
In a book about the
she aimed the pistol at the
Prestdent

In fact, many of the senior
officials who opposed the V1et
Cong ID the past are walking
around Saigon free w come
and go as they please The
last two presidents of the
Republic of Vietnam - Tran
Van Huong and Gen Duong
Van (Big) Minh - live at
home a nd walk the streets
freely
Foret.gners, however , have
no place m the Vietnam of the
future, except for diplomats
and, probably a handful of
reporters
VIetnam IS for the VIetnamese now , satd Prestdent
Huynh Tan !'hat ID an in
terv1ew His deputy adVISer
Thao agreed
Foreign Investment 1s
welcome, but only on the
basis of t he government
owning ~~ per cent of the
mvestment," he sa1d
The U S embassy has
netther been occupted nor
desecrated A small VIet
Cong flag flutters from the
mam flagpole now, but the
building IS mtact
On the front wall IS a
handpamted sign
'Saigon
welcomes the forces w
liberate the capital c1ty " But
UlSide, all has been left unoouched

We Hold These Truths ...

to explain tbe bed
"Tremendous," President
Ford said when asked about
the creation that Rockefeller
bought for the master
bedroom of the Victorian
mansion as his "gift to the

country ''
"You girls have a one-track

mind," Kissinger said when a
group of women reporters
asked him what he tboUght
about the bed "I think It's

marvelom ''
Mrs F&lt;l'd refused OODI·
menton the controvenlal bed
but said she thought the new
home for tbe vice p-eaident
was ' 'telllly great "

Chtcago 7 Phtladelphta 6 n
San Otego 2 H ouston 1 n
Atla nta 3 Los Ange l es 2 n
P ttsburgh 12 Montreal s

nn n

11

Ctnclnnatl 3 San F ran cisco 2 n
Sund.ay s Results
St Lou s 12 New York 4
Chtcago 6 Phtladelph a 4
P ttsbur g h 6 Montreal 0

c ncmna t t 8 San Franctsco 4

Houston 3 5an D ego 2
Atlanta 5 Los Angeles 4
Monday s Games
(All Times EDT)
New York (Stone 3 2 and
Webb 6 6l at Montreal (Carr l th
ers 6 2 and Lan g 0 Ol 2 6 05
Pm
12 9 l at
St
Lou s tReed
Phtlade lph a !Underwood 13
10 ) 7 35 P m
Chr cago (P rall 0 OJ at PIts
burgh (Ells 7 7) 7 35 P m
Houston (R cha rd 10 9) at\
Atlanta (N ekr o 14 121
7 35
Pm
Cmcrnnall &lt;Nolan 13 8 ) at San
Otego (Mci ntosh a 13)
10 00
pm
San Franc sco (Montefusco
13 7) at Los Angeles (Messers
m1 th 15 141 10 30 p m
Tuesday s Games
St
Lou s
at
Ph ladelp h a
tw ltght
New Y ork at Montreal n
Ch cag o at. P ttsburgh n
Houston at A tlanta n
San F r anc rsco at Los Angeles
n
Crnc mnat "'' San Ot ego n

Amencan league St and mgs
East
W L Pet G B
Boston
84 57 596
Ball more
64 546
71 71 500
New York
13 '
67 70 489 15
Cle..,..eland
M !waukee
62 81 434 23
Detro I
54 67 363 30
West
W L Pet G 8
Oakland
85 56 603
80 61 567
5
Kansas C ly
69 75 479 17 '
Texas
68 74 479 11 '
Ch cago
M nnesota
66 72 478
65 78 455 21
Cal forn•a

n

'

r don't feel

that Torn and

J at 26 years of age need to
be livmg ID a luxury home
We have other things 00 think
about , like the future, she
said
Watson Never frailed
It wasn 1 the future but the
present Sunday on the 7,186yard
par -70
Firestone
Count ry Club course as
Watson , who qualified for the
Senes by wmmng the British
Open led a il the way
The former Stardord star
turned m a one-overilar 71
Sunday for a 36-lwle score of
140 two better than Masters
and PGA champion Nicklaus
who had a 70 sunday, five
ahead r of Weiskopf the
canadian Open champ1on
whoalso hadaclosmg70,and
seven better than U s Open
champiOn Gra ham who

fmi.shed with a 71
There were two occa 81 ons
on the back s1de, w1th
Nicklaus trailing by three
shots the Golden Bear had an
opport um ty to mount a
charge
0n each occasion however
Watson bent hiS back ge ttmg
1t up and down from the sand
m two 011 14 and 15 while
Nicklaus playmg m hiS lOth
Senes and seekmg his fifth
VICOOry failed 00 make b1rdie
putts
I gotta believe if [ get my
putts m 1t makes hiS a lot
oougher, smd Nicklaus the
on!} real challenger watson
had from the middle of
Saturday s round on
But
Tom scrambled well He got
1t up and down and that s
what you have 00 do 00 wm
Had it Won"

Watson
agreed
w1th
Nicklaus that 14 and 15 were
key ' holes addmg that
when I made that pull on 15
l thought I was m pretty good
pos1t1on w wm 1! I parred m
and when I drove 1t m the
fa~rway on 18 l knew 1 had It
won •
N•cklaus who saw hiS !mal
hope for victory vaniSh w1th a
bogey s•x on the 16th hole
flmshed wtth a flare though
knocking m a ~foot b1rdie
putl on the 17th and smiting
an 86-footer on the 18th He
had opened the day With a 6:;.
footer on the first hole
On the first hole I was
try mg but on the last hole I
couldn t have cared less
laughed Nicklaus W1th the
same result
We is kopf who vir tually
shot himself out of contention

w1th a f1ve-over 75 Saturday
never got any closer than four
shots from Watson
Graham who had been
flgntmg a VIrUS and possibly
a letdown after wmnmg tglhe
Open m June had to strug e
all the way and dldn t get his
first birdie until the 31nd hole
Nicklaus p1cked up $15,000
for his sec&lt;;"'di&gt;lace ftmsh
and WeiSkopf who won the
1973 WSG earned f7 !iOO lor
third Graham got $5,000 for
flmshing last
ThiS year marked the end
of the Senes as II has been
known for the past 14 years
w1th the wmners of the four
major tournaments com
petmg
Next year the Series will
feature as many as 28
players mcludmg oop foreign
players

•

Reds best m West

"'

CINCINNATI (UP!) Th1s IS crazy
s hou ted
champagne-&lt;lrenched
Cm
Saturday s Results
cmnati
Reds
pitcher
Fred
Oakland 2 Texas l
Cleve land 4 Detro I 2
Norman
'T h1 s IS ear ly
Bos ton 20M !wa ukee 6
September
'
Ch cage 5 Mmnesota 2 n
Balltmor e 7 New York 6 13
It was not only crazy 11 was
nn n
a record
Ka nsas c ty 4 Cal forn1a 3 lsi
fW&lt;
The champagn"i'artymg
Ka nsas C1ty 6 Caltforn a 3 2
no
Reds
set a record Sunday for
n
earliest
clinching of a t1tle ID
'
Sunday s Results
M nnesota 9 Ch cago 1
National League history
New York 2 Ball more 0
Boston 6 Mtlwaukee 3 lst
Cincumatt's a-. wm over
M !waukee 7 Boston 3 2nd
San FranCISCo , coupled With
Cl e\'eland 7 De tro t 2 lsi
Cleveland 9 De tr o t 0 2nd
Atlanta s 5-4 vlctt&gt;ry over Los
Kansas c ty 8 Cal torn a 7 11
•nn
Angeles, g uaranteed the
Oakland .J Texas 1 1st
Reds the National League
Oakland 7 Texas 3 2nd n
Western DIVISIOn cham
Mondays Games
(A ll T1m es E DTI
p10nsh1p a day earlier than
Boston (W se 18 Sl at Cleve
the
old Brooklyn Dodgers
tand ( Harr son 7 SJ 7 30 p m
oetro tl ( Lot ch 11 161 at New wrapped up the pennant on
York (May 12 10) a p m
Baltrmore {Torrez 16 9 ) at Sept 8, 1955
M I waukee (Slaton 11 17l a 30
The Reds have 20 more
pm
games w play and nearly a
Kansas C ty (Leonard 12 Sla t
Oakland ( H oltzman 15 12 )
1 month to wa1t before hostmg
p m
the first game of the Na\Jonal
Tuesday s Game s
Texas at M nnesota 2 tw ntght League playoffs Oct 4
Kansas C1! y at Oakland n
Although 1t's been evident
Cal tornta at Ch tcago n
Ball more at Mtlwaukee n
for several weeks Cincmnat1
Bos ton at Cleve land n
was gomg to handily wiD the
Oetrml at N ew York n
div1s10n the Reds delayed
their plane tr1p to San Diego

Sunday evenmg w Ulrow a
clubhouse celebration
After whippmg the Giants
w trun the 'magic number
for clinchmg the title to one
game, players patiently sat
around theJr lockers for 90
mmutes unt1l word came that
the Dodgers had lost to the
Braves
Then out came 48 bottles of
champagne
Reds
PreSidCJll
Bob
Howsam wandered moo the
clubhouse and p1tcher Oay
carroll promptly poured a
bottle of the spa rkiy over hiS
head
Howsam got IDio the mood
and before lon g he and
usually sedate Lou1s Nippert,
Reds chalrffian of the board
were
runmng
around
spraymg champagne on each
other

Players quick ly went
through the champagne,
most of tt sprayed and poured
on teanunates
dren ched
Champagne
manage r Sparky Anderson
who d1dn t figure the re would
be that much celebratmg
because of the comma nding
lead his team held much of
the sununer, satd
We've
been celebratmg a ll year
• ThiS 1s the best Reds team
1 ve ever managed added
Anderson who has been at
the helm smce 1970 It s the
best m every department
speed defense power and
p1tchiDg
Anderson saJd he mtends w
keep playmg his regulars
most of the remalniDg 20
games
Were gomg to keep trymg
w wm not at all costs of

course but we need to keep
good habits he sa1d
He smd a b1g reason for the
Reds success was George
Foster who has been playmg
regularly for the !Jrst time
th1s year and IS h1ttmg 315
Foster was the star of
Sunday s wm wtth four hits
and four runs batted m
It feels great w clinch 11
th•s early but we're only part
of the way there,' sa1d
Foster "!think we'VI! got the
best team ID the National
League but we ve still got w
prove 1\ I hope we get to play
Oakland ID the World Senes
and get some revenge '
Oakland whipped the Reds
m the 1972 World Series
Don Gullett, who wtll p1tcb
the !Jrst playt&gt;ff game for the
Reds, got his niDth straight
VICWry Sunday

Cincy has shot at modern
National League win mark

M~jor L1!~9ue Leaders
By Un1t&amp;d P-ress tnternat•onal
Lcad•ng Batters
(based on J' S at ba1SJ
Natrona! League
g ab r
h pet
Madlock Cht 123 489 ?6 177 36L
SmmnS St L 136 494 71 167 JJS
watson Hou 125 464 65 152 328
Morgan Cln 130 447 96 146 127
Joshua SF
115451 68145 322
Snglln P I
I 16 412 50 136 322
Gr fley C n 118 413 83 lJO 315
Foster em
11 9 409 65 129 315
Rose Cm
142 586 98 16 4 314
Garvey LA 141 582 70 182 313
Amencan League
g ab
r
h pet
Care w M n 127 475 83 174 366
Lynn Bos
128 465 89 152 327
Munson NY 139 527 76 166 315
R ce Bos
130 512 66 160 3 13
Orta Ch
124 &lt;~78 60 147 308
McRae KC
126480 58 147 306
Snglton Ba1 136 526 76 160 304
Wshngtn Ok 11'i' 50 11 155 304
Bravn M n
120 408 60111 '199
Brett K C
139 553 7J 165 296
Home Runs
National League
Sc hmidt
Phil 32
LUZ nsk
Ph I 31
K ngmM NY 30 Benc h C n
25 Fosler C n Cey LA and
St argell P tt 22
Amencan League Mayberry
KC 33 Jackson Oak 31 Sc oll
Mil
28
Bonds
NY
26
BurroughS lex 25
Runs Batted In
Nat onat L eague
Luz nsk~
Ph 1 107 Bench Cm 103 Perez
Cm
96
S aub
NY
94
S n mons St L 91
Amerrcan League R ce Bos
96 Lynn Bos 95 Mayberry
KC 94 Jackson Oak 93 Sco ll
M I 90
Stolen Basn
NatiOnal League Lopes LA
66 Morgan Ctn 54 Srock St L
53 Cedeno Hou 44 Cardenat
Ch 30
A m encan League
R vers
Cal 64 wash ngton Oak 40
0 s KC 31
Rem')l. Cal 32
Carew M nn 30
Ptfehmg
1 Based on mo st \llctoriesl
Nat1onat League Sei"\'er NY
21 7 Jones SD 18 9 Morton
Al l 17 15
Matla ck
NY and
Reuss Ptlt 16 10 Sutton LA 16
12
Amencan League
Pa l mer
Bait 20 10
Kaat
Ch
20 11
Hunter NY 20 1J W se Bos 18
8 Blue Oak 18 11

This week's
college games
Untted Press International

Ohto St at Mlch St
Toledo at Ball St
Bowl

Green

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
FOREsT mLLS, NY (UP!) - For those w1lling to roil up
their sleeves and dig and scratch a little America IS still the
land of the free and the home of sweet opporturuty, and if that
sounds like a plug for this country, you 're absolutely nght, 1t
IS
Two young tennis players from abroad diScovered that here
Sunday, one of them an affable 26-year-old Span1ard from
Barcelona and the other an 18-year-old Czechoslovakian gJrl
Manuel Orantes, the Spamsh stylist, drew a lot more atten\ton than Martma Navratilova, the Czech gJrl, d1d, and that
was completely understandable m the face of hiS startling 6-4,
6-3, 6-3 upset of defendmg champ1on Jumny Connors which
netted him the U S Open tennis IItle plus $25,000
Orantes sunply was too smart for Connors
He knew he couldn't slug w1th hun, so he let Connors wear
himsell out hitting all the heavy stuff while he went wtth the
soft delicate shots, usiDg the corners wtth such fmesse and
expertise that the match actually was no con test
Orantes made up h1s mind w break Connors' rhythm and he
did 1t perfectly
"I know he likes wh1t the ball hard," saJd the toothy, curlyhaired Spaniard I know if I g1ve him speed, he gonna kill me
He's so fast, he takes, the ball so early, that if you h1t 11 back
hard whun,1t g~ves him a much better chance So I h1t 1t easy,
make him do 11 all himself and he make nustakes
Connors certainly did
One of the mistakes he made was underestunatiDg Orantes
He called Forest Hills Saturday eveniDg
fmd out who he
was going to play m Sunday s !mal, and at the time he called 1t
looked as if 1t would be Argentma's Gmllermo V1las because
they oold him Vilas had taken the f1rst two sets agamst Orantes
and seemed a sure wmner
He didn 't know Orantes had come from behmd to wm his 3hour 44-minute match wtth Vilas until he got up Sunday
mornmg
"I'm ready, • he told his close fr1end and adVIsor, Bill Rior
dan, at breakfast 'I'll kill hun "
Not quite
Match pomt was typ1cal of the way Orantes played all day
Connors reached one of h1s passiDg shots and then headed w
the other side of the court, thinkmg Orantes naturally would go
that way, but the Sparuard fooled hun by returnmg the ball
straight down the line and that finished Connors
"I d1d 1t' I did it 1 " Orantes exclauned
Mart1118 Navratilova d1d 11, too, ID an entirely different way
Eliminated ID the senu-fmals Friday by ChriS Evert, she
made up her mmd not wreturn to Czechoslovakia but wseek
asylum in Utis country Instead
The deCISion wasn't an easy one because her mother and
father and s1ster are still back home and she nusses tbem
Pobtics had nothmg at all w do wtth~e Czech g~rl's actiOn
She simply wanted an opportumty top
more tenniS than she
was being allowed by the Czechoslova an Sports Federation
"Young people here m tbe Uruted States don 't know how
good they've got it,'' said Martina ' 'These demonstraoors,
they're crazy Any American who compiams about life m thiS
country should go w Europe, or any other place outside
America If they were citiZens of other countries, they'd see
the difference Why am I comiDg w Amenca ' I like 1t, and
hope to become an American citizen You have freedom here,
and there aren 't many other places m the world that have

w

that"

at

Br ig ham

PONTIAC M1ch I UP!) Rick. Forzano IS only half
serwus when he says 'maybe
l m ID trouble -but unless
his Detroit Uons perk up
soon, he could well be
Forzano blistered hiS team
during half tune of Saturday s
22-l._exhlblllon loss w the
Cincmnati Bengals for Its
lack of professiOnal pr1de
dearth of effort and sloppy
plaf
I m t1red of seeing them
play football like that For
zano sa1d
You don t play
football like that m the
National Football League
The team IS not excused for
1ts performance I m not
excused etther Maybe I m in
trouble '
Three Detrmt offens ive
linemen defected durmg
trammg camp (two later
returned) and there have
been player rumblings of
discontent over the coaching
methods of the likeable at
times easy goiDg Forzano
But while the rumors hav•
his strictness as the crux of
the problem t&gt;ne source sa1d
1t was just the other way
around- Forzano has not
cracked down hard enough or
soon enough m the right
spots
The Uons ha ve lost four of
their five exhibition games
conies ts which generally
mean nothmg once the
regular season begins The
Uons only pulled out the one
they won by scoriDg three
oouchdowns ID the last 8'h
mmutes

•

~'

•' 1

~~

•

\

4

f
"-(

Young In)

•

Ohto Unl v at Central M1 c h
Kent
Sf
at
Northeast
Lootslana
Marshall at M1am 1 (Ohm)
Akron at Western M1ch
Richmond at Cln
Dayton at Eastern Ky

Baldw in Walla ce at

Wit

tenberg

Cap1tal at Heidelberg (n)
Manetta at Denison
Muskmgum at Westminster
Otterbein at Man c hester
Woos fer at DePauw
Geneva at Mf Union
Ohio W es l eyan at Oh•o
Northern
Kenyon at Bet hany
Oberlin at Centre
F erns Stat Ashland (n)

Taylor at Bluffton In)
Thtel

Today's

Lions look
bad in loss

at

Case We s tern

By FRED DOWN
the Philadelph18 Phillies &amp;-1 Reserve
UPI Sports Writer
and the Houston Astros edged Centra\ S1 a1 Youngstown St
The Cmcmnat1 Reds have the San Diego Padres 3-2 ID Albion at Deftance
Fmdlay at Ear l ham
set one record - for the other NL games
John Carroll at H1ram
n - denot es n tght game
earliest ciiDching of a tttle m
P~rates 6, Expos 0
Jerry Reuss p1tched a four
Natwnal League htstory and now wanttoround out the hitter for hiS 16th wiD and tbe
season with one of the best Pirates hammered out mne
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
all-around performances m hit s mcludmg homers by AI
FOOTBALL RESULTS
booted
the
bail
then
turned
major league annals
Oliver and Dave Parker and
CHESHIR E
Kyger
United Press lnternattonal
around
p1cked
1\
up
and
The
Reds
clmched
the
NL
s
a three run double by Art R1verv1ew 19 Newcomer
Creek the defendin g 1974
Southern Valley Athletic scampered down the left Western DIVIsiOn title Sunday Howe The Expos pulled the town 6
Gar away 32 Conotton Valley l..
stdehnes for the score
when they defeated the San fourth triple play m their Dover 17 Cle John Hay 0
Conference football cham
Another senwr
Tom Franc1sco G1ants 6-4 and the history ID the fourth IDrung Col East a New Philadelphia 0
pwn tuned up for 1ts head on
Stum
p
threw
a
key
block
to Atlanta Braves beat the Los when Howe popped wshallow lndtan Valley South 20
battle Fnday mght at North
Norwayne 6
Galha w1th a convmcmg 43 0 spnng Sm1th Again Lucas hit Angeles Dodgers 5-4 The feat left h eld w1th two on Tun Lancaster F1sher 14 lanes
v1cWry here Saturday mght the upnghts for a 1Hl KC surpassed by one day the old Foil r unnmg backwards, ville Rosecrans 6
over the Gallipolis Blue Imps lead The Bobcats took a 21 0 Brooklyn Dodgers clmching made the catch relayed w Barnesville 3 New Concord
second
baseman
Pete J o hn Glenn 0
Earlier m the day , North lea d w1 th 21 seconds left m of the 1955 NL pennant
Man s Madtson
0 Trff 1n
W1th 95 VICOOrles and 20 Mackanm for the second out Colum bian 0
Gallla, the team expected to the half when Lucas scotted
g1ve the Bobcats the most over from two yards out He games to play the Reds have and he threw on w first
trouble thiS fall blasted th en kicked the extra po1nt a good shot at wmmng more baseman Jose Morales for
Kyger Creek s of fe nse games than any other NL the third out
Waterford 38 8 Saturday
Cardinals 12, Mets 4
mght s Bobcat wm snapped a broke loose for 15 more pomts teams except the 1906
m
the
third
canto
W1th
3
30
Chicago Cobs ( 116) and the J
Ted Sumnons drove m four
three-year 11 game wmmng
SEPT. 8
left
soph
omore
speedster
1909Pittsburgh
Pirates
(110)
nms
With three siDgles and
STATE FARM
streak for the Blue Imps
Marcus
Getger
zoomed
m
surpass
M1ke
Tyson
knocked
m
three
Th
ey
aren
t
hkeiy
to
Followmg th e opemng
TO SEPT. 13
kickoff GAHS moved the from 12 yards out Lucas the 1902 Pirates bulge of Z1% ID a JO-Int attack which
ball to midfield but had started to ki ck the extra pomt games at the end of the broug ht Lynn McGlothen hiS
For State Farm
From but a low snap forced h1m to season but 1f they retam their 14th wm agamst lllosses Jon
to g1ve It up
Nahonal
that pomt on
Kyger rWl 1t m The score folio"' ed present 20 112 game lead 11 will Matlack was tagged wr uve
Convent1on
Creek took charge w1th 1ts the th1rd penod k1ckoff and be the second highest m runs rn SIX mnmgs and lost hiS
INSURANCE
maJor leag ue hiStory The lOth game agamst 16 VIC
(I
controlled offense and stingy covered 88 ya rds
STEVE SNOWDEN
W1th I 10 remammg m the Amencan League record of tones
defense
MlddletX~rt, Ohio
Joe
Cubs 6, PhUIIes 4
Coach J1m Sprag ue s th1rd stanza Kyger s Chns 19 'h games 1s held by the 1936
New York Yankees
The Cubs wok advantage of
Bobcats reached payd1rt for Pres ton se mor tatlback
reached
the
goallme
on
a
SIX
had
four
hi
ts
four
ecrors mcludiDg two on
George
Foster
IN CASE OF EMERGENCY CALL THE
the first tune w1th 4 51 left m
yard
burst
Lucas
k1ck
and
drove
m
four
run
s
and
one
play
w
score
siX
runs
ID
GALLIPOLIS OFFICE, 446 4290
the •mllal penod A 12 yard
the siXth mniDg and hand the
pass fr om semor quarterbac k pushed 1t to 36-0 The !ma l Don Gullett went seven m
Tim Lucas to end J1m (Monk) Bobcat TD came with 2 39 rungs wraiSe his r ecord to 13- Phillies Wayne Twitchell his
Ward climaxed a 63 yard left m the game on Presoon s 3 1n Sunday s VICOOry Then lOth defeat Ray BurriS went
Reds
ongmaliy 7 2-3 mnmgs for his 13th
dr1ve m 13 plays Lucas four yard run Lucas kick the
hooted hiS first of fiVe extra pushed the !mal count to 43 0 scheduled to fly unmed1ately Vlcoory for the Cubs
Offensively
Kyger s w the West Coast, wmted 90
Astros 3, Padres Z
pomts on the mght g1vmg KC
Presoon was the game s top mmutes for the news that the
Danny Frisella cut loose
a 7-0 lead
112
yard
s
m
25
r
usher
w1th
elumnated
t
he
With
a wild p1tch With the
Braves
had
Midway through the second
attempts
Lucas
had
29
Dodgers before poppmg the bases filled and one out ID t he
penod Bobcat semor Rtck
yards
Ge1
ge
r
28
Ralph
cork&lt;
of 48 champagne runth mnmg , enabling Greg
Sm1th brought the crowd to
19
and
Todd
Taylor
Baylor
b.Jlue::s
Gross to scor e the wmrung
1ts feet w1th an electr1!ymg 77
27
Coac
h
Spra
g
ue
com
The
Dodgers
!Jed
the
score
nm for the Astros Gross had
yard ount return Sm1th
Classes Start Tuesday
mended h1s enllre defense for at 4-4 m the top of the nmth doubled w1th one out and
-~.- ....
SEPT 9th
IIUIICil
1ts hard-h1ttmg
but the Braves won m the advanced to th1rd on an m
DEVOTED TO THE
The Blue Imps managed bottom of the mniDg when tentwnal walk and an error
INTEREST OF
only three first downs and Marty Perez bases-filled by Wilhe McCovey Dick
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
reached
Kyger
Creek smgle w•th two out drove ID Sharo n homered for San
Exec Ed
tern tory JUSt tw1ce ali mght pmch-runner Rod Gilbreath D•ego and Doug Rader
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctty Ed1tor
Classes for all ages.
farthest penetratiOn The Braves had filled the con nected for Houston
The
Published da1l y except
Satu rda y by The Ohto Vatlev.
bases
on
a
walk,
a
smgle
by
followed a bad snap punt
Graded according to
Publtsl\ ng com pany
11 1
wmnmg pitcher Bruce Dal
attempt
OHIO COLLEGE
Court St
Pomeroy
Oh o
ag11tty
45 769 Bustnes.e. O tft ce Phon
FOOTBALL RESULTS
an
error
by
Canton
and
STATISTICS
992 2156 l!d1tor"ial Phone 99?
2157
Department GAHS"B" KC second baseman Lee Lacy
Untted Press lnternatlona I
Seco nd c lass postage pad
Ballet. Tap, Jazz and
19
The Pittsburgh P1rates de- Toledo 32 Western Carol na 31
3
F trst Downs
at Pomeroy O h io
Natrona!
adverttslng
Akron
20
Marshall
8
60 230 feated the Montreal Expos &amp;Gymnast1cs
Yards Rushmg
representattve
Ward
Yards Passmg
Grtffdh Company
Inc
0 93 o•the St Loms Cardmals wal- 7Western Ke'ntucky 27 Dayton
Bottrnell &amp; Ga llagh er D v
I Pre ~cnool Age I..! ass 1 uesdays 2 45)
60 323 loped the New York Mets 12- Jackson St 30 Central St 18
Total Yardage
757 Th1rd Ave
New York
N Y 10017
8 4, the Chicago Cubs oopped lnd 1ana Central 54 Ftndlay 8
2
Passes Attempted
Subscrtptton
rates
6
Passes Completed
0
De livered by earner w here
available 75 ce nt s per week
2
Fumbles
3
By NeQtor Route where
carrter
se rvi ce
n.ot
I
2
Fumbles Lost
avatlable One month S3 2'5
0
0
InterceptiOns
By ma •l tn Ohro and W Va
One
Year
S22 00
S1x
8-70
9-64
Instructor Glona Buck Wallace
Penalized
months
S1150
T hree
OFFICE HOURS • 9 30 to 12,2 ro 5 (CLOSE
ont h s 57 00 Elsewhere
By Quarters
Phone 992-7326
Pomeroy
AT NOON ON THURS l-EAST COURT
26 00 year
S tx months
1J 50 three months $7 50
GAHS B
0 0
0
ST, POMEROY
ubscr pf10n prtce ncludes
K Creek
7 14 15 7 43

Bobcats blank
Blue Imps 43-0

OFFICE CtOSED

·-

GLORIA'S

SOKlOL OF DANCE

AND BATON

ORCHID ROOM · E. MAIN ST.

unday T D'le~ Sent ne t

/

,./"'--

7

~

N. WoW~J:1~lt· .D.

GLO-ETTE BATON CORP

J

'•

�I

..-3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 Mnnda· '&gt;ept 8, 1975

2-The DailySentmel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday, Sept 8 1975

PRG holds hostages for U.S. recognition, aid
Edlton Alan Dawson, UPI
bureau manager In South
Vietnam, left Saigon on
sovernmeoc orders last
Wednesday Jfe had reported
on events in tbe country for
tbe past five years, Including
the Communist takeover on
April 30
BvALANDAWSON
BANG KUII.
Thailand
1UP! ) South V1etnam s
Communtst
government

wants Amertcan recogrut10n
badly - so badly It may be
holdmg the 50 or so
Amencans sttil m the country
as hostages to force negotla
ttons
We want normal relatwns
w1th the Umted States gov
ernment spokesmen te ll
anyone who asks
The reason ts stmple
eno ugh
the
nation s
economy, battered by 30
years of war and d isrupted by
the sudden Comm umst
takeover last Apnl needs
masstve transfuswns of
fore1gn 81d
And say the leaders of the
ProvlSional
RevolutiOnary
Government, It IS the Uruted

States that must come up
w1th the funds
It IS only natural ac
cordiDg w the h1story of
warfare, that the loser must
pay the wmner for the
damages
sa1d deputy
government adv1ser TriDh
Dinh Thao ID a recent m
ten tew
The U S government
however does n t see the
s•tuat10n m qu1te the same
hght It has so far refused to
recogmze the new Com
mumst reg1me and last
month vetoed a move to
adm1t South VIetnam to the
Uruted Natwns
lmtated by the brushoff
the PRG has apparently
(\ec1ded not w let Amencans
out of the country m what
could be a move to put
pressure on Washingoon
I was the only one allowed
w leave smce the U N vote
and my departure was held
up by a guard who showed me
an order ba rring a ll
Amencans from entermg the
Satgon a 1rport to board
outgomg fl1ghts
About a doze n Amencans
are under loose detention

sumewnere m Ule country

The others are free w roam
around Saigon as they please
Intelligence
officers
followmg their movements
are always friendly a nd
stress that Commumst
VIetnamese harbor no 1U
feeiiDJlS toward the American
people
We know that your people
have opposed your govern
ment s war on us a Foretgn
Muustry off1c1al sa1d last
week
Nevertheless,
the
Amertcans are convinced
they w11l become hostages m
a diplomatic maneuver w
prod Washmgoon to change
1ts stand on recogmhon
Unti l
that
happens
however t he South V1et
namese autho nhe s hav e
dec1ded to make se lf
sufficiency m food productiOn
their f1rst pr10r1ty launching
a campaign to move more
than half of Saigon's 3 5
mdhon people w the coun
trys1de
We must go backward
however regrettable that IS,
sa 1d Thao
We must

establish sell..sufflclency as marketplaces
Bank depositors can
the first pr10r1ty wrebuilding
the economy To do that, our receive only the eqwvalent of
people must go back w the $12 per month per family
member from their accounts,
farms and the fiShmg
because many of the plasters
boats
were
looted by bank offiCials
~o nr
about JUO ooo
already have been m oved before the American pullout
The r1ch are unhappy of
out But unhke th e Kluner
Rouge
m
ne1ghbonng course, and still ap
prehens1ve
about
the
cambodia, the South VIet
possibility
of
retaliation
The
namese Communists so far
have used persuaston not poor are st1il poor, but at
least are able w s1t on
force
Propaganda teams v1s1t comm it te es that discuss
each ward of the c1ty often w natwnai and local pohc1es
try w conviDce the Jobless
and the poor to go back w the
A few bands t&gt;f anll farms offermg them free Comm unt st soldiers who
land transportation food and fought for the former Sa1gon
money for the hrst stx government are still roaming
months
the Central Highlands area
Still the Commurusts are and parts of the Mekong
clearly worried about the Delta But most VIetnamese
shape of the economy and are have acce pted the PRG
domg what they can to repair VICWry and resistance w the
It
new government IS &lt;\ymg off
OffiCials of the defeated
What can those (soldiers )
Saigon regune fled w1th 24 do now'
asked Tha o
oons of gold - half the rheoorically They couldn't
nation s supply Most foreign
defeat us w1th half a million
currency also disappeared Amencans and U S a1d '
from the banks Imported
For those who have surrengoods are riSmg in pnce and dered the treatment has not
d•sappeanng fr om the been so harsh as expected
There certaiDiy ha s been no
bloodbath

Dallas will try to keep Ford safe
DALLAS (UP!) - Pollee
and Secret Service agents
have promiSed secunty
would be extremely light for
Prestdent Ford's second VISit
to the Cl ty w he r e John
Kennedy was assassiDated 12
years ago
The attempt on Ford s hfe
at Sacramenoo Calif will
not alter the Prestdent s VISit
Saturday to a meetmg of the
National FederatiOn of
Republican Women and a
convocation at Southern
MethodiSt Umvers1ty, h1s
national campaign director
S8ld Sunday
Walter Coughlin, Secret
Serv1ce spec1al agent m

charge, said th e agency
always works at maxunum
capac1ty, regardless of the
pohtiCal tenswn of the day
He sa1d there probably
would be additional agents at
the arrport and convention
center, although thiS was not
prompted by the Sacramenoo
IDCldent m wh1ch Manson cult
follower Lynette Fromme
pomted a loaded 45 caliber
pistol at the President
Campaign d1rector Bo
Callaway smd the President
would arr1ve m Dallas about
11 a.m Saturday and will
meet at the Trammel Crow
home wtth busmess and CIVIC

.
leaders makiDg

$1 000 con
tr1butwns w state Republican
coffers Ford IS scheduled w
talk to the GOP women at
1 15 p m
callaway saJd open campalgrung always briDgs elements of danger but you
don ' t want a PreSident
cooped up m WashiDgton '
The Callforma mc1dent
'means more alertness and

more concern, and Ule Pre&amp;
dent may be more protected callaway said
The President w1ll an
nounce a Texas campmgn
conuruttee, Callaway sa1d
Texas would be a key state m

w

' fanuly,' Bugliosl described
Squeaky" as 'the undisputed leader of the fanuly
while Charlie was ID ab-

sentia '
Fridays actaon was

'~com

pletely within the1r lifestyle
- w k1ll or attempt w kill
people and m such a way as
w shock the world I'm not
surprised Not at all "
Miss Fromme IS kept ID a
cell wtthout teleVISion surveillance, her Jailer said He
smd she turned down ]all
meals contammg meat
because of a vegetenan diet
"She's m good spirits She
had a peanut butter and Jelly
sandwich," he added
It was reported that Miss
Fromme and her roommate,
Sandra Good, 31, had tried
thiS year w get on the accepted viSitors list at San
Q.Jentm priSOn w see Manson, serviDg a life term for
influencmg Charles "Tex"
Watson and several young
women ID his sex and drugoriented cult to comnut at
least seven murders
Off1crals said Fromme and

the campaign because of
support for Ronald Reagan,
should the former California
Republican governor dec1de
oorun
Ford will be whisked un
mediately from the 2 000delegate conventiOn to meet
wtth the Texas supporters
unlll an afternoon talk at
Southern
MethodiSt
Uruves1ty He then hoards a
fltght to Midland, Tex
Reagan and V1ce Prestdent
Nelson Rockefeller are sche
duied w address the GOP
women Fr1day and John
Connally w11l be on the
speaker s platform Saturday
wtth the President

Miss Good tr1ed to get a
lawyer w help them obtam
v1sitmg pnv1leges
The
lawyer contacted pohce, who
warned the women poSSible
legal action could be taken
against them
There IS no eVIdence at
this time mdlcatmg a conspiracy' ID the threat to
Ford's life, sa1d US Atoorney Dwayne Keyes
Miss Good, released by
pollee after ques\Jonmg, said
Miss Fromme wrote every
day w Manson but that
Squeaky acted ootally of her
own volitiOn Manson d1dn t
order her to do this "
The FBI sa1d Sunday
agents had
questiOned
Ma· ·on at San QuentiD but
th&amp; he prov1ded no informatiOn
"He gave no information of
an evidentiary or lead
value," sa1d Paul YoWlg,
special agent ID charge of the
Sacramenoo FBI off1ce • He
was not responsive to specific

questions ''
Young sa1d at least" 50
agents are working on the
case

DR. LAMB

Vitamin claims are overblown
•

•
••

~

: By Lawrence E Lamb, M D
• DEAR DR LAMB - Could
, you please help me w1th a
• couple of v1tamm questwns'
, Is v1tamm B 2 the complexwn
: v1tamm a nd w1ll B-6 really
• help one keep h1s we1ght
down as I've been told'
• , DEAR
READER
"• V1tam1n B-2 1s r1boflavm Its
: most 1mportant role 1s m the
: complex enzyme system that
: enables you to tear down your
~ food mkl carbon dwnde and
" water to release energy
:! Vttam1ns are not energy
" sources, they functiOn to
; enable the body to release

..

: energy

from

food ,

:: specifically carbohydrates,
~ fats and protems
• : When you have enough for
.. 1ts unportant role, taking
: addditional amounts w1ll do
: nothmg lor you at all It Is bke
; having enough matches w
: light a candle, an extra box
.:: won 't help once the candle is
.. lit
:
Deficiencies of r~hoflaviD
:Jll'e quite rare , because 1\ts so
plenliful m our d1et M1lk and
I~

~

m1lk products are a very ncb
sour ce Milk exposed to
sunlight loses part of 1ts
nhoflavm lt 1s also present
m meat of all kinds cereals
mcludmg enriched breads
flour
macarom
and
spag hetti, It IS m broccoli
collards and spmach It 1s
hard to eat anythmg like a
decent d1et w1thout gettmg
enough r1hoflavm
If a deficiency does occur 11
tends w affect the spec1al
areas of the skin, around the
eyes and the musous hnmgs
as around the bps
VItamin B-6, pyr1doxme,
also affects the skm and
complexiOn It IS mvolved m
enzyme systems used m
metabolism You get 11 m
meats, vegetables and
cereals, and 1\ IS almost
impossible to have a B-6
defiCiency 1! you eat anythmg
hke a balanced d1et or these
food groups
There IS absolutely no truth
m the statement that B-6
causes you to lose we1ght
The truth is that a deflc,ency

of 1t m1ght cause we1ght loss
because of mterfermg w1th
normal metabolism
Excess amounts of B-6 are
not soored m the body They
are rapidly eliminated so
taking large doses of B-6 JUSt
wastes your money I am
aware of the current highly
a dvertised fad of usmg B-6
m we1ght control regunes It
IS pure hokum
All of these
schemes work only from an
associated d1et that restr1cts
calortes one way or another ,
or because they cause you to
elimmate body water not
calor~es, or !molly because
they make you s1ck
For mformahon on we1ght
control wr•te to me m care of
th1s newspaper, P 0 Box
1551, RadiO City Statwn, New
York, NY 10019, send a long,
s tamped,
self addressed
envelope and 50 cents and ask
for The Health Letter number
4-7 We1ght Losmg Diet
DEAR DR LAMB - I read
,YOur column on split na1ls
and I could have Written an
•denllcal letter a few years

ago I tr1ed gelatm treatment
and all sorts of thmgs Then a
frtend tn a cosme tics shop
advised me to om1t na1l pohsh
altogether W1thm a few
weeks after 1 qwt usmg all
forms of polish my nalls were
m perfect cond1t10n , and I
have not had a split na1l
smce
DEAR READER -'!:hanks
you for sharmg your ex
penence w1th others We fmd
that lots of problems are
caused by reactions to a vast
array of chemicals And, we
are all different m our
reacllons lt certamly Will not
cause any harm to stop usmg
na1l pohsh So, those w1th
spht nail problems m1ght as
well try 11 I'd be mterested m
the resul Is from readers who
try thiS

You' II

tract

A ChroDJcle of America
Summer-Fall, 1775:
This is open season on royalsovemon Amolll tbe fallen
and falling on June 2 North carolina'• Governor Jotiah
Martin takes refuge at Fort Jolmlon on Cape Fear, 8lld escapes July 18 toHMS
beflnallydepartl tbecolony
alter the Battle of Moore s Creek BrldgeiJIPebruary,IT78
Vlrginlo s Governor John Murray Dunmore n- toHMS
Fowerat Yorktown on June 8, but awalll deteab at Great
Bridge on December 9 and at Gwynn lohmd on July 10,
1776 before leaving lor good In July, Governor Jolm
Wentworth of New Hampshire takes refuge aboard a
Bmlsh mon-o war similarly witb Sir William Campbell
of South Carolina on September 15 anctwlth WilliamTrycm
of New York on October 30 On November 7, tile Rhode
Island Provincial Congress deposes Governor Joeepb Wanton When the war begins only CoMecticut'o Jonathan
Trumbull - among all the royal governon- remaiM loyal
to the colonial cause

c.......,.,

1t

down
much f aster
w1 th

a

WANT AD

Detroit
Un Aug 16, U S District
Judge Robert DeMasc10
1ssued ruhng m school
desegregation case initiated

by the NAACP five years ago
DeMaSClo rejected massive
busing
to
achieve
desegregatiOn , saying busing
should be used as a hist

Gallia schools
(Continued from page I)
mismanagement on tbe part
of the administration or
board " When the raises were
given lost fall to end tbe
teachers ' and class ified
employees strike, we knew
that .. e entire district would
be hurting In the fall of 1975,"
Supt Bradbury stated
Expiammg the Situation
further
Bradbury and
Ass1stant School Supenn
tendent David C Campbell
pomted out that foilowmg
consolidation m Jan 1974 the
other three area, North
Gallla, Southwestern, and
Hannan Trace automallcally
went to the h1ghest salar1es
paid by the old Kyger Creek
District That meant a $500
mcrease for those teachers
Followmg negollatwns and
the stnke last fall the
teachers were mcreased by
$200 last September and
rece1ved an additwnal $300 m
Januar y Class1fled employees were also g1ven a new
salary mcrease In additwn
the board agreed to pay
hospitalization msurance for
ail 1ts employees
Along w1th the new wage
packages came h1gher costs
for gasoiiDe, fuel o1l, coal,
electriCity water and general
operational s upplies The
fmances were complicated
more when the d1s tr1ct was
forced w stay on the old state
school foundatiOn program
under the
Grandfather
Clause and by the reductwn
of the overall county tax
m1llage to 16 m1lls a figure
agreed upon by the State
Department of EducatiOn,
the Kyger Creek Power Plant
•nrl the former Gallia County
Board of Educatwn m 1973
It was pointed out that th&lt;1
dtstnct cannot borrow on
ant1c1pated mcome until after
Jan I, and that the State
Department of Education w11l
not advance the diStrict any
of 1ts state foundation funds
for !976
Tbe board agreed to continue all efforts to get additional financing II tbe
trend continues, tbe board
may bave to close its schools
two weeks to a month In

December
Other Business
In other matters the hoard
agreed to contmue half-a-&lt;lay
kindergarten sessions and w
attempt w get additional bus
dr1 vers to reduce the time
kindergarten children are on
the buses followmg classes
In some areas. pupils were
ndmg the bus over two hours
A delegation of parents was
present to d1scuss the kindergarten s1tuatwn
At Chesh1re-Kyger Mrs
Vwlet Russell has 70 kin
dergar ten pup1ls Smce the
board 1s m dire flnanc1al
straits an effort has been
made w secure the help of
two CAP workers to help Mrs
Russell as a1des
Tom Weaver, Gallipolis, a
graduate of GalllH Academy
High School and Morehead
State Umvers1ty, was em
ployed as Soctal Studtes
teacher at Kyger Creek
replacmg John C W1cklme
who retired
Substitute cooks employed
were Edna Mooney, Nancy
Tr1plett and Joyce M Clfrk,
Mar1lyn Halfhill was hired as
a parttune cook at BidwellPorter
J C ConstructiOn of
Gallipolis was awarded a
contract for $1,199 W remodel
a Title I Reme\lial Reading
room at Vmoon School The
JOb w1ll be pa1d by Title I
funds and will not cost the
board anythmg
The board transferred
$13,649 66 m Title I funds w
the General Fund
- Approved the payroll
deductions of OAPSE dues
- Granted supplemental
contracts to 1ts four band
direeoors, Bob Shaver, Dave
Danko , Cindy Thompson and
Carolyn Cogar
- Agreed to pay half of the
costs for a roll of wife lor
mstallahon between VmWn
School and a property owner
- Set the tuition rate at
~2 25 per month
- Added D1ana Slaughter,
Cheryl Sheard, Lyvoma
Bunce, John Wickline and
Charlotte Miller to the substitute teachers' list
- Approved Gerald Smith

Eas1
P ttsburgh
Sl LOUIS
Ph1l ade lph a
New Yor k
Chicago
Montreal

I I

''inaugurated" the bed Sbe
told a reporter, "You have
too give us time "
"I think 1t went over very
well," Rockefeller sa1d
"They realize that it's a true
work of art"
The Rockefellers threw the
first of nine housewanrung
parties at the new vice
prestdential1ll811S10n Sunday
night About 200 members of
the cab!Qet, Congress, tbe
diplomatic corps and other
dignitaries VIewed the bed
and other furnishmgs and
munched a buffet dinner that
mcluded lobster, shrimp,

x Cmcmnat
Los Angeles

74
73

68
68

521
5 18

7
7

67 76
61 79

469
436

14
19

~

~

W L
Pet G 8
95 47 669
75 68 5'24 20 2

San Fran ctsco 70 12
-By Ross Mackenrle &amp; Jeff Mac Nelly /e&gt;l975 Unlled Fearure Syndicate

San Dego
Atlant a
Hou ston
x Cl n ched dtv

493 25

64 79 448 311
63 80 441 32
55 89 382 41
s ..,n II li e

~
2

Saturday s Res ults

St LOUtS 6 New York 3

resort, and only after otber
techniques, such as changmg
school boundaries, were exhausted
The NAACP bas appealed,
and the U S SIXth Circwt
Court of Appeals m Cincinnati has set heariDgs for
Oct I
lndlaDapolla
The federal appeals court
ID Chicago recenUy granted a
stay of an order that would
have required the busing of
6,500 black students
e1ght
suburban districts and some
busmg wtthm the Indianapolis public school
system
Continwng IS an IDterun
plan begun wtth U S district
court approval ID 1973, under
which between 9,000 and
10,000 students are bused
withm the Indianapolis
system

w

Mlnneapolls-8t Paul
Mmnesota
has
a
reqUirement that no more
than 30 per cent of tbe
students m any school belong
to mmor1ty groups Minneapolis IS under federal
court order w have no more
than 35 per cent of students In
any school belong w nunor1ty
groups ThiS will be completed when school starts this
fall It has been done by
busmg, pairing, changmg
school zones and housmg
students according wgrades,
also by building new schools
St Paul Is expected
have
completed 1ts program by the
fall of 1976 Number of black
students m Minneapolis and
St Paul public schools
estimated at between ~and 8
per cent

w

Loalsvllle
Massive busing began Sept
4 ID Louisville and Jefferson

County, With about
50
percent
absenteeISID A federal appeals
court m ~.-wcmnati held In
July many schools In
Lou1sv1lle and Jefferson
County were still segregated
and ordered immediate
desegregallon A federal plan
IDcluded the busing of nearly
22,600 of the 130,000 students
m the newly merged
LouiSVillNefferson County
system
The
original
desegregation order included
a section prov1dlng for
designated areas near affected schools for peaceful
protest
Pblladelpbla
BusiDg for desegregatiOn
has not been ordered yet, but
a Commonwealth court which
had ordered tbe Philadelphia
school district and the state
Human Relations Commission to come up with a
busmg plan held bearings
several weeks ago on two
plans - one submitted by a
commiSston which dealt
prunarlly with desegregation
busmg Wlthm the c1ty and the
other by the school district
which calls for desegr~ation
by
mtegratlon
of
Phlladelpbla and suburban
schools One judge heard
testunony on both plans and
now must present it to other
judges of the court, which
then must set tbe date for
legal arguments It was
estunated Utis mlghl not be
until mid-October
The
district has 262,500 children of
which approximately 61 per
cent are btack
Oklaboma City
Public schools have begun
their fourth year of operatlm
under a federal court
desegregation plan which
resulted m busing of half tbe
system's 50,000 students
For the first year since Its
unplementation, no student
reassignments were
necessary to change the
racial balance of Individual
schools
'11!e school board has asked
the judge w declare the
district desegregated and
release It from the court's
supel'Vllllon
Outrlotte,N C

for trash haulmg at South
western High School
- Tabled a request by
Howard Neekamp for a
supplemental contract salary
as coordiDator of the Adult
Education Program
Approved home Instruction for five hours each
week for Billy and Gaynelle
Hutchmson
and
Scott
Arrowood Teachers will be
!icllOOIS openeu Aug 21
Sylv1a Humphreys and
wtthout
scrutiny from the
Wanda Ball
federal
courts
U S District
- Granted DPPF direct&lt;lr
Ruth George and her aides Judge James McMUian Utis
pemusswn w attend a con- swnmer placed the Olarlotte
desegregation case m an
ference m Athens
mactive status,

roast beef, turkey and ham
The bed Is the creation of
2oth century surrealist
American artist Max Ernst
The king-med bed, w1tn Its
inlnk cover, has cage~e
bars on both ends, two circular paintings and a large
modern painting on a screen
at one side
Hidden somewhere under
the poliahed wood base 18 a
complete
communications
system, lncludmg a concealed telepllone
"Never ask what anything
In modern art means," Mrs
Rockefeller said when asked
I

'

W l
Pet G 8
80 60 571
75 66 53/ 5 ]

West

Arty bed is Rockefeller party hit
WASIDNGTON (UPI)- A
$35,000 modern art bed was
the
hit
of
Nelson
Rockefeller's first party at
the nation's new ofllctal
res1dence for the VIce
president
President Ford S8ld be
thought the bed was
"tremendous " Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger raved
that it was ''marVelous " His
wife Nancy said less en·
thusast1cally 11 was ''very
pretty " First Lady Betty
Ford wouldn't comment on 1t
Happy Rockefeller adnutted she and the vice
president had not yet

get too excited , though, let
them be warned that Wat
son's pretty dark-haired wife
Linda won't be easy 00 deal
w1th
The $50,000, says Linda,
doesn t change a thiDg Hll far
as how much the Watsons will
pay for their first home or
what kiDd of house 1t wtll be
I ve got lots of calls " she
saJd, • and they say, 'Mrs
Watson, I've got a lovely
$22!;,000 house for you r just
hang up on them

AKRON, Ohio (UP!) _
Torn Watson 's Vlcwry Sun
day in tbe 14th World Series
of Goll has got w be good
news for Kansas C1ty
realtors
" It's going to put a good
down payment on a house ID
Kansas City if we can fmd
one," smd Watson , referrmg
w the $50,000 first prize he
collected for defeating Jack
Nicklaus, Tom WeiSkopf and
Lou Graham
Before all the KC realoors

B y U ntted Press I nternattona I
Nahonal L eague

School busing, nationwide: At a Glance

Attention coming onto Fromme now
Well you know," he
SACRAMENTO ,
Calif
quoted
her, 'when people
(UPI) - Lynette Allee
around
you
treat you like a
Fromme, leader m absentia
of the Manson cult, told a child and pay no attention w
jailer she had w try w the things you say you have
assassinate President Ford w do something
Federal mvest1gaoors sa1d
because nobody paid attenllon w what she was they had no eVIdence "at thiS
time" of a conspiracy m the
sayiDg
The tiny, red-llaired Miss assassmatlon attempt Friday
Fromme, 26, mcknamed at the state capitol Agents
"Squeaky • by convicted mterv1ewed Manson at San
mass murderer Charles Q.Jentm PriSOn after Miss
Fromme's attack but sa1d
Manson because of her high
.l"tched vmce, was held today Manson would not respond w
on $1 million bail ID an specific questiOns
The U S atoorney planned
iSolation cell at Sacramenoo
present full charges
to
Jail
a
She was reported m 'good against Miss Fromme
federal
grand
Jury
Wed~mts
and mamtammg a
nesday
vegetarian diet
Vmcent Bughos1, who
Miss Fromme pomted a 45
prosecuted
Manson and
caliber p1stol at Ford Friday
and became the first woman members of the ''family" for
ever w try to assassmate a the Tatll.aB1anca murders m
Prestdent The weapon did 1971, wid newsmen duriDg the
weekend Miss Fromme was a
not f1re
sort of ''executive officer' • for
A jailer wid of a con
versallon wtth the iHoot-3 Manson when the fanuly was
woman after she was ID full flower She was chief
wrestled to the ground by a spokeswoman during the
Secret Service agent when Manson tnal ID Los Angeles
In a book about the
she aimed the pistol at the
Prestdent

In fact, many of the senior
officials who opposed the V1et
Cong ID the past are walking
around Saigon free w come
and go as they please The
last two presidents of the
Republic of Vietnam - Tran
Van Huong and Gen Duong
Van (Big) Minh - live at
home a nd walk the streets
freely
Foret.gners, however , have
no place m the Vietnam of the
future, except for diplomats
and, probably a handful of
reporters
VIetnam IS for the VIetnamese now , satd Prestdent
Huynh Tan !'hat ID an in
terv1ew His deputy adVISer
Thao agreed
Foreign Investment 1s
welcome, but only on the
basis of t he government
owning ~~ per cent of the
mvestment," he sa1d
The U S embassy has
netther been occupted nor
desecrated A small VIet
Cong flag flutters from the
mam flagpole now, but the
building IS mtact
On the front wall IS a
handpamted sign
'Saigon
welcomes the forces w
liberate the capital c1ty " But
UlSide, all has been left unoouched

We Hold These Truths ...

to explain tbe bed
"Tremendous," President
Ford said when asked about
the creation that Rockefeller
bought for the master
bedroom of the Victorian
mansion as his "gift to the

country ''
"You girls have a one-track

mind," Kissinger said when a
group of women reporters
asked him what he tboUght
about the bed "I think It's

marvelom ''
Mrs F&lt;l'd refused OODI·
menton the controvenlal bed
but said she thought the new
home for tbe vice p-eaident
was ' 'telllly great "

Chtcago 7 Phtladelphta 6 n
San Otego 2 H ouston 1 n
Atla nta 3 Los Ange l es 2 n
P ttsburgh 12 Montreal s

nn n

11

Ctnclnnatl 3 San F ran cisco 2 n
Sund.ay s Results
St Lou s 12 New York 4
Chtcago 6 Phtladelph a 4
P ttsbur g h 6 Montreal 0

c ncmna t t 8 San Franctsco 4

Houston 3 5an D ego 2
Atlanta 5 Los Angeles 4
Monday s Games
(All Times EDT)
New York (Stone 3 2 and
Webb 6 6l at Montreal (Carr l th
ers 6 2 and Lan g 0 Ol 2 6 05
Pm
12 9 l at
St
Lou s tReed
Phtlade lph a !Underwood 13
10 ) 7 35 P m
Chr cago (P rall 0 OJ at PIts
burgh (Ells 7 7) 7 35 P m
Houston (R cha rd 10 9) at\
Atlanta (N ekr o 14 121
7 35
Pm
Cmcrnnall &lt;Nolan 13 8 ) at San
Otego (Mci ntosh a 13)
10 00
pm
San Franc sco (Montefusco
13 7) at Los Angeles (Messers
m1 th 15 141 10 30 p m
Tuesday s Games
St
Lou s
at
Ph ladelp h a
tw ltght
New Y ork at Montreal n
Ch cag o at. P ttsburgh n
Houston at A tlanta n
San F r anc rsco at Los Angeles
n
Crnc mnat "'' San Ot ego n

Amencan league St and mgs
East
W L Pet G B
Boston
84 57 596
Ball more
64 546
71 71 500
New York
13 '
67 70 489 15
Cle..,..eland
M !waukee
62 81 434 23
Detro I
54 67 363 30
West
W L Pet G 8
Oakland
85 56 603
80 61 567
5
Kansas C ly
69 75 479 17 '
Texas
68 74 479 11 '
Ch cago
M nnesota
66 72 478
65 78 455 21
Cal forn•a

n

'

r don't feel

that Torn and

J at 26 years of age need to
be livmg ID a luxury home
We have other things 00 think
about , like the future, she
said
Watson Never frailed
It wasn 1 the future but the
present Sunday on the 7,186yard
par -70
Firestone
Count ry Club course as
Watson , who qualified for the
Senes by wmmng the British
Open led a il the way
The former Stardord star
turned m a one-overilar 71
Sunday for a 36-lwle score of
140 two better than Masters
and PGA champion Nicklaus
who had a 70 sunday, five
ahead r of Weiskopf the
canadian Open champ1on
whoalso hadaclosmg70,and
seven better than U s Open
champiOn Gra ham who

fmi.shed with a 71
There were two occa 81 ons
on the back s1de, w1th
Nicklaus trailing by three
shots the Golden Bear had an
opport um ty to mount a
charge
0n each occasion however
Watson bent hiS back ge ttmg
1t up and down from the sand
m two 011 14 and 15 while
Nicklaus playmg m hiS lOth
Senes and seekmg his fifth
VICOOry failed 00 make b1rdie
putts
I gotta believe if [ get my
putts m 1t makes hiS a lot
oougher, smd Nicklaus the
on!} real challenger watson
had from the middle of
Saturday s round on
But
Tom scrambled well He got
1t up and down and that s
what you have 00 do 00 wm
Had it Won"

Watson
agreed
w1th
Nicklaus that 14 and 15 were
key ' holes addmg that
when I made that pull on 15
l thought I was m pretty good
pos1t1on w wm 1! I parred m
and when I drove 1t m the
fa~rway on 18 l knew 1 had It
won •
N•cklaus who saw hiS !mal
hope for victory vaniSh w1th a
bogey s•x on the 16th hole
flmshed wtth a flare though
knocking m a ~foot b1rdie
putl on the 17th and smiting
an 86-footer on the 18th He
had opened the day With a 6:;.
footer on the first hole
On the first hole I was
try mg but on the last hole I
couldn t have cared less
laughed Nicklaus W1th the
same result
We is kopf who vir tually
shot himself out of contention

w1th a f1ve-over 75 Saturday
never got any closer than four
shots from Watson
Graham who had been
flgntmg a VIrUS and possibly
a letdown after wmnmg tglhe
Open m June had to strug e
all the way and dldn t get his
first birdie until the 31nd hole
Nicklaus p1cked up $15,000
for his sec&lt;;"'di&gt;lace ftmsh
and WeiSkopf who won the
1973 WSG earned f7 !iOO lor
third Graham got $5,000 for
flmshing last
ThiS year marked the end
of the Senes as II has been
known for the past 14 years
w1th the wmners of the four
major tournaments com
petmg
Next year the Series will
feature as many as 28
players mcludmg oop foreign
players

•

Reds best m West

"'

CINCINNATI (UP!) Th1s IS crazy
s hou ted
champagne-&lt;lrenched
Cm
Saturday s Results
cmnati
Reds
pitcher
Fred
Oakland 2 Texas l
Cleve land 4 Detro I 2
Norman
'T h1 s IS ear ly
Bos ton 20M !wa ukee 6
September
'
Ch cage 5 Mmnesota 2 n
Balltmor e 7 New York 6 13
It was not only crazy 11 was
nn n
a record
Ka nsas c ty 4 Cal forn1a 3 lsi
fW&lt;
The champagn"i'artymg
Ka nsas C1ty 6 Caltforn a 3 2
no
Reds
set a record Sunday for
n
earliest
clinching of a t1tle ID
'
Sunday s Results
M nnesota 9 Ch cago 1
National League history
New York 2 Ball more 0
Boston 6 Mtlwaukee 3 lst
Cincumatt's a-. wm over
M !waukee 7 Boston 3 2nd
San FranCISCo , coupled With
Cl e\'eland 7 De tro t 2 lsi
Cleveland 9 De tr o t 0 2nd
Atlanta s 5-4 vlctt&gt;ry over Los
Kansas c ty 8 Cal torn a 7 11
•nn
Angeles, g uaranteed the
Oakland .J Texas 1 1st
Reds the National League
Oakland 7 Texas 3 2nd n
Western DIVISIOn cham
Mondays Games
(A ll T1m es E DTI
p10nsh1p a day earlier than
Boston (W se 18 Sl at Cleve
the
old Brooklyn Dodgers
tand ( Harr son 7 SJ 7 30 p m
oetro tl ( Lot ch 11 161 at New wrapped up the pennant on
York (May 12 10) a p m
Baltrmore {Torrez 16 9 ) at Sept 8, 1955
M I waukee (Slaton 11 17l a 30
The Reds have 20 more
pm
games w play and nearly a
Kansas C ty (Leonard 12 Sla t
Oakland ( H oltzman 15 12 )
1 month to wa1t before hostmg
p m
the first game of the Na\Jonal
Tuesday s Game s
Texas at M nnesota 2 tw ntght League playoffs Oct 4
Kansas C1! y at Oakland n
Although 1t's been evident
Cal tornta at Ch tcago n
Ball more at Mtlwaukee n
for several weeks Cincmnat1
Bos ton at Cleve land n
was gomg to handily wiD the
Oetrml at N ew York n
div1s10n the Reds delayed
their plane tr1p to San Diego

Sunday evenmg w Ulrow a
clubhouse celebration
After whippmg the Giants
w trun the 'magic number
for clinchmg the title to one
game, players patiently sat
around theJr lockers for 90
mmutes unt1l word came that
the Dodgers had lost to the
Braves
Then out came 48 bottles of
champagne
Reds
PreSidCJll
Bob
Howsam wandered moo the
clubhouse and p1tcher Oay
carroll promptly poured a
bottle of the spa rkiy over hiS
head
Howsam got IDio the mood
and before lon g he and
usually sedate Lou1s Nippert,
Reds chalrffian of the board
were
runmng
around
spraymg champagne on each
other

Players quick ly went
through the champagne,
most of tt sprayed and poured
on teanunates
dren ched
Champagne
manage r Sparky Anderson
who d1dn t figure the re would
be that much celebratmg
because of the comma nding
lead his team held much of
the sununer, satd
We've
been celebratmg a ll year
• ThiS 1s the best Reds team
1 ve ever managed added
Anderson who has been at
the helm smce 1970 It s the
best m every department
speed defense power and
p1tchiDg
Anderson saJd he mtends w
keep playmg his regulars
most of the remalniDg 20
games
Were gomg to keep trymg
w wm not at all costs of

course but we need to keep
good habits he sa1d
He smd a b1g reason for the
Reds success was George
Foster who has been playmg
regularly for the !Jrst time
th1s year and IS h1ttmg 315
Foster was the star of
Sunday s wm wtth four hits
and four runs batted m
It feels great w clinch 11
th•s early but we're only part
of the way there,' sa1d
Foster "!think we'VI! got the
best team ID the National
League but we ve still got w
prove 1\ I hope we get to play
Oakland ID the World Senes
and get some revenge '
Oakland whipped the Reds
m the 1972 World Series
Don Gullett, who wtll p1tcb
the !Jrst playt&gt;ff game for the
Reds, got his niDth straight
VICWry Sunday

Cincy has shot at modern
National League win mark

M~jor L1!~9ue Leaders
By Un1t&amp;d P-ress tnternat•onal
Lcad•ng Batters
(based on J' S at ba1SJ
Natrona! League
g ab r
h pet
Madlock Cht 123 489 ?6 177 36L
SmmnS St L 136 494 71 167 JJS
watson Hou 125 464 65 152 328
Morgan Cln 130 447 96 146 127
Joshua SF
115451 68145 322
Snglln P I
I 16 412 50 136 322
Gr fley C n 118 413 83 lJO 315
Foster em
11 9 409 65 129 315
Rose Cm
142 586 98 16 4 314
Garvey LA 141 582 70 182 313
Amencan League
g ab
r
h pet
Care w M n 127 475 83 174 366
Lynn Bos
128 465 89 152 327
Munson NY 139 527 76 166 315
R ce Bos
130 512 66 160 3 13
Orta Ch
124 &lt;~78 60 147 308
McRae KC
126480 58 147 306
Snglton Ba1 136 526 76 160 304
Wshngtn Ok 11'i' 50 11 155 304
Bravn M n
120 408 60111 '199
Brett K C
139 553 7J 165 296
Home Runs
National League
Sc hmidt
Phil 32
LUZ nsk
Ph I 31
K ngmM NY 30 Benc h C n
25 Fosler C n Cey LA and
St argell P tt 22
Amencan League Mayberry
KC 33 Jackson Oak 31 Sc oll
Mil
28
Bonds
NY
26
BurroughS lex 25
Runs Batted In
Nat onat L eague
Luz nsk~
Ph 1 107 Bench Cm 103 Perez
Cm
96
S aub
NY
94
S n mons St L 91
Amerrcan League R ce Bos
96 Lynn Bos 95 Mayberry
KC 94 Jackson Oak 93 Sco ll
M I 90
Stolen Basn
NatiOnal League Lopes LA
66 Morgan Ctn 54 Srock St L
53 Cedeno Hou 44 Cardenat
Ch 30
A m encan League
R vers
Cal 64 wash ngton Oak 40
0 s KC 31
Rem')l. Cal 32
Carew M nn 30
Ptfehmg
1 Based on mo st \llctoriesl
Nat1onat League Sei"\'er NY
21 7 Jones SD 18 9 Morton
Al l 17 15
Matla ck
NY and
Reuss Ptlt 16 10 Sutton LA 16
12
Amencan League
Pa l mer
Bait 20 10
Kaat
Ch
20 11
Hunter NY 20 1J W se Bos 18
8 Blue Oak 18 11

This week's
college games
Untted Press International

Ohto St at Mlch St
Toledo at Ball St
Bowl

Green

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
FOREsT mLLS, NY (UP!) - For those w1lling to roil up
their sleeves and dig and scratch a little America IS still the
land of the free and the home of sweet opporturuty, and if that
sounds like a plug for this country, you 're absolutely nght, 1t
IS
Two young tennis players from abroad diScovered that here
Sunday, one of them an affable 26-year-old Span1ard from
Barcelona and the other an 18-year-old Czechoslovakian gJrl
Manuel Orantes, the Spamsh stylist, drew a lot more atten\ton than Martma Navratilova, the Czech gJrl, d1d, and that
was completely understandable m the face of hiS startling 6-4,
6-3, 6-3 upset of defendmg champ1on Jumny Connors which
netted him the U S Open tennis IItle plus $25,000
Orantes sunply was too smart for Connors
He knew he couldn't slug w1th hun, so he let Connors wear
himsell out hitting all the heavy stuff while he went wtth the
soft delicate shots, usiDg the corners wtth such fmesse and
expertise that the match actually was no con test
Orantes made up h1s mind w break Connors' rhythm and he
did 1t perfectly
"I know he likes wh1t the ball hard," saJd the toothy, curlyhaired Spaniard I know if I g1ve him speed, he gonna kill me
He's so fast, he takes, the ball so early, that if you h1t 11 back
hard whun,1t g~ves him a much better chance So I h1t 1t easy,
make him do 11 all himself and he make nustakes
Connors certainly did
One of the mistakes he made was underestunatiDg Orantes
He called Forest Hills Saturday eveniDg
fmd out who he
was going to play m Sunday s !mal, and at the time he called 1t
looked as if 1t would be Argentma's Gmllermo V1las because
they oold him Vilas had taken the f1rst two sets agamst Orantes
and seemed a sure wmner
He didn 't know Orantes had come from behmd to wm his 3hour 44-minute match wtth Vilas until he got up Sunday
mornmg
"I'm ready, • he told his close fr1end and adVIsor, Bill Rior
dan, at breakfast 'I'll kill hun "
Not quite
Match pomt was typ1cal of the way Orantes played all day
Connors reached one of h1s passiDg shots and then headed w
the other side of the court, thinkmg Orantes naturally would go
that way, but the Sparuard fooled hun by returnmg the ball
straight down the line and that finished Connors
"I d1d 1t' I did it 1 " Orantes exclauned
Mart1118 Navratilova d1d 11, too, ID an entirely different way
Eliminated ID the senu-fmals Friday by ChriS Evert, she
made up her mmd not wreturn to Czechoslovakia but wseek
asylum in Utis country Instead
The deCISion wasn't an easy one because her mother and
father and s1ster are still back home and she nusses tbem
Pobtics had nothmg at all w do wtth~e Czech g~rl's actiOn
She simply wanted an opportumty top
more tenniS than she
was being allowed by the Czechoslova an Sports Federation
"Young people here m tbe Uruted States don 't know how
good they've got it,'' said Martina ' 'These demonstraoors,
they're crazy Any American who compiams about life m thiS
country should go w Europe, or any other place outside
America If they were citiZens of other countries, they'd see
the difference Why am I comiDg w Amenca ' I like 1t, and
hope to become an American citizen You have freedom here,
and there aren 't many other places m the world that have

w

that"

at

Br ig ham

PONTIAC M1ch I UP!) Rick. Forzano IS only half
serwus when he says 'maybe
l m ID trouble -but unless
his Detroit Uons perk up
soon, he could well be
Forzano blistered hiS team
during half tune of Saturday s
22-l._exhlblllon loss w the
Cincmnati Bengals for Its
lack of professiOnal pr1de
dearth of effort and sloppy
plaf
I m t1red of seeing them
play football like that For
zano sa1d
You don t play
football like that m the
National Football League
The team IS not excused for
1ts performance I m not
excused etther Maybe I m in
trouble '
Three Detrmt offens ive
linemen defected durmg
trammg camp (two later
returned) and there have
been player rumblings of
discontent over the coaching
methods of the likeable at
times easy goiDg Forzano
But while the rumors hav•
his strictness as the crux of
the problem t&gt;ne source sa1d
1t was just the other way
around- Forzano has not
cracked down hard enough or
soon enough m the right
spots
The Uons ha ve lost four of
their five exhibition games
conies ts which generally
mean nothmg once the
regular season begins The
Uons only pulled out the one
they won by scoriDg three
oouchdowns ID the last 8'h
mmutes

•

~'

•' 1

~~

•

\

4

f
"-(

Young In)

•

Ohto Unl v at Central M1 c h
Kent
Sf
at
Northeast
Lootslana
Marshall at M1am 1 (Ohm)
Akron at Western M1ch
Richmond at Cln
Dayton at Eastern Ky

Baldw in Walla ce at

Wit

tenberg

Cap1tal at Heidelberg (n)
Manetta at Denison
Muskmgum at Westminster
Otterbein at Man c hester
Woos fer at DePauw
Geneva at Mf Union
Ohio W es l eyan at Oh•o
Northern
Kenyon at Bet hany
Oberlin at Centre
F erns Stat Ashland (n)

Taylor at Bluffton In)
Thtel

Today's

Lions look
bad in loss

at

Case We s tern

By FRED DOWN
the Philadelph18 Phillies &amp;-1 Reserve
UPI Sports Writer
and the Houston Astros edged Centra\ S1 a1 Youngstown St
The Cmcmnat1 Reds have the San Diego Padres 3-2 ID Albion at Deftance
Fmdlay at Ear l ham
set one record - for the other NL games
John Carroll at H1ram
n - denot es n tght game
earliest ciiDching of a tttle m
P~rates 6, Expos 0
Jerry Reuss p1tched a four
Natwnal League htstory and now wanttoround out the hitter for hiS 16th wiD and tbe
season with one of the best Pirates hammered out mne
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
all-around performances m hit s mcludmg homers by AI
FOOTBALL RESULTS
booted
the
bail
then
turned
major league annals
Oliver and Dave Parker and
CHESHIR E
Kyger
United Press lnternattonal
around
p1cked
1\
up
and
The
Reds
clmched
the
NL
s
a three run double by Art R1verv1ew 19 Newcomer
Creek the defendin g 1974
Southern Valley Athletic scampered down the left Western DIVIsiOn title Sunday Howe The Expos pulled the town 6
Gar away 32 Conotton Valley l..
stdehnes for the score
when they defeated the San fourth triple play m their Dover 17 Cle John Hay 0
Conference football cham
Another senwr
Tom Franc1sco G1ants 6-4 and the history ID the fourth IDrung Col East a New Philadelphia 0
pwn tuned up for 1ts head on
Stum
p
threw
a
key
block
to Atlanta Braves beat the Los when Howe popped wshallow lndtan Valley South 20
battle Fnday mght at North
Norwayne 6
Galha w1th a convmcmg 43 0 spnng Sm1th Again Lucas hit Angeles Dodgers 5-4 The feat left h eld w1th two on Tun Lancaster F1sher 14 lanes
v1cWry here Saturday mght the upnghts for a 1Hl KC surpassed by one day the old Foil r unnmg backwards, ville Rosecrans 6
over the Gallipolis Blue Imps lead The Bobcats took a 21 0 Brooklyn Dodgers clmching made the catch relayed w Barnesville 3 New Concord
second
baseman
Pete J o hn Glenn 0
Earlier m the day , North lea d w1 th 21 seconds left m of the 1955 NL pennant
Man s Madtson
0 Trff 1n
W1th 95 VICOOrles and 20 Mackanm for the second out Colum bian 0
Gallla, the team expected to the half when Lucas scotted
g1ve the Bobcats the most over from two yards out He games to play the Reds have and he threw on w first
trouble thiS fall blasted th en kicked the extra po1nt a good shot at wmmng more baseman Jose Morales for
Kyger Creek s of fe nse games than any other NL the third out
Waterford 38 8 Saturday
Cardinals 12, Mets 4
mght s Bobcat wm snapped a broke loose for 15 more pomts teams except the 1906
m
the
third
canto
W1th
3
30
Chicago Cobs ( 116) and the J
Ted Sumnons drove m four
three-year 11 game wmmng
SEPT. 8
left
soph
omore
speedster
1909Pittsburgh
Pirates
(110)
nms
With three siDgles and
STATE FARM
streak for the Blue Imps
Marcus
Getger
zoomed
m
surpass
M1ke
Tyson
knocked
m
three
Th
ey
aren
t
hkeiy
to
Followmg th e opemng
TO SEPT. 13
kickoff GAHS moved the from 12 yards out Lucas the 1902 Pirates bulge of Z1% ID a JO-Int attack which
ball to midfield but had started to ki ck the extra pomt games at the end of the broug ht Lynn McGlothen hiS
For State Farm
From but a low snap forced h1m to season but 1f they retam their 14th wm agamst lllosses Jon
to g1ve It up
Nahonal
that pomt on
Kyger rWl 1t m The score folio"' ed present 20 112 game lead 11 will Matlack was tagged wr uve
Convent1on
Creek took charge w1th 1ts the th1rd penod k1ckoff and be the second highest m runs rn SIX mnmgs and lost hiS
INSURANCE
maJor leag ue hiStory The lOth game agamst 16 VIC
(I
controlled offense and stingy covered 88 ya rds
STEVE SNOWDEN
W1th I 10 remammg m the Amencan League record of tones
defense
MlddletX~rt, Ohio
Joe
Cubs 6, PhUIIes 4
Coach J1m Sprag ue s th1rd stanza Kyger s Chns 19 'h games 1s held by the 1936
New York Yankees
The Cubs wok advantage of
Bobcats reached payd1rt for Pres ton se mor tatlback
reached
the
goallme
on
a
SIX
had
four
hi
ts
four
ecrors mcludiDg two on
George
Foster
IN CASE OF EMERGENCY CALL THE
the first tune w1th 4 51 left m
yard
burst
Lucas
k1ck
and
drove
m
four
run
s
and
one
play
w
score
siX
runs
ID
GALLIPOLIS OFFICE, 446 4290
the •mllal penod A 12 yard
the siXth mniDg and hand the
pass fr om semor quarterbac k pushed 1t to 36-0 The !ma l Don Gullett went seven m
Tim Lucas to end J1m (Monk) Bobcat TD came with 2 39 rungs wraiSe his r ecord to 13- Phillies Wayne Twitchell his
Ward climaxed a 63 yard left m the game on Presoon s 3 1n Sunday s VICOOry Then lOth defeat Ray BurriS went
Reds
ongmaliy 7 2-3 mnmgs for his 13th
dr1ve m 13 plays Lucas four yard run Lucas kick the
hooted hiS first of fiVe extra pushed the !mal count to 43 0 scheduled to fly unmed1ately Vlcoory for the Cubs
Offensively
Kyger s w the West Coast, wmted 90
Astros 3, Padres Z
pomts on the mght g1vmg KC
Presoon was the game s top mmutes for the news that the
Danny Frisella cut loose
a 7-0 lead
112
yard
s
m
25
r
usher
w1th
elumnated
t
he
With
a wild p1tch With the
Braves
had
Midway through the second
attempts
Lucas
had
29
Dodgers before poppmg the bases filled and one out ID t he
penod Bobcat semor Rtck
yards
Ge1
ge
r
28
Ralph
cork&lt;
of 48 champagne runth mnmg , enabling Greg
Sm1th brought the crowd to
19
and
Todd
Taylor
Baylor
b.Jlue::s
Gross to scor e the wmrung
1ts feet w1th an electr1!ymg 77
27
Coac
h
Spra
g
ue
com
The
Dodgers
!Jed
the
score
nm for the Astros Gross had
yard ount return Sm1th
Classes Start Tuesday
mended h1s enllre defense for at 4-4 m the top of the nmth doubled w1th one out and
-~.- ....
SEPT 9th
IIUIICil
1ts hard-h1ttmg
but the Braves won m the advanced to th1rd on an m
DEVOTED TO THE
The Blue Imps managed bottom of the mniDg when tentwnal walk and an error
INTEREST OF
only three first downs and Marty Perez bases-filled by Wilhe McCovey Dick
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
reached
Kyger
Creek smgle w•th two out drove ID Sharo n homered for San
Exec Ed
tern tory JUSt tw1ce ali mght pmch-runner Rod Gilbreath D•ego and Doug Rader
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctty Ed1tor
Classes for all ages.
farthest penetratiOn The Braves had filled the con nected for Houston
The
Published da1l y except
Satu rda y by The Ohto Vatlev.
bases
on
a
walk,
a
smgle
by
followed a bad snap punt
Graded according to
Publtsl\ ng com pany
11 1
wmnmg pitcher Bruce Dal
attempt
OHIO COLLEGE
Court St
Pomeroy
Oh o
ag11tty
45 769 Bustnes.e. O tft ce Phon
FOOTBALL RESULTS
an
error
by
Canton
and
STATISTICS
992 2156 l!d1tor"ial Phone 99?
2157
Department GAHS"B" KC second baseman Lee Lacy
Untted Press lnternatlona I
Seco nd c lass postage pad
Ballet. Tap, Jazz and
19
The Pittsburgh P1rates de- Toledo 32 Western Carol na 31
3
F trst Downs
at Pomeroy O h io
Natrona!
adverttslng
Akron
20
Marshall
8
60 230 feated the Montreal Expos &amp;Gymnast1cs
Yards Rushmg
representattve
Ward
Yards Passmg
Grtffdh Company
Inc
0 93 o•the St Loms Cardmals wal- 7Western Ke'ntucky 27 Dayton
Bottrnell &amp; Ga llagh er D v
I Pre ~cnool Age I..! ass 1 uesdays 2 45)
60 323 loped the New York Mets 12- Jackson St 30 Central St 18
Total Yardage
757 Th1rd Ave
New York
N Y 10017
8 4, the Chicago Cubs oopped lnd 1ana Central 54 Ftndlay 8
2
Passes Attempted
Subscrtptton
rates
6
Passes Completed
0
De livered by earner w here
available 75 ce nt s per week
2
Fumbles
3
By NeQtor Route where
carrter
se rvi ce
n.ot
I
2
Fumbles Lost
avatlable One month S3 2'5
0
0
InterceptiOns
By ma •l tn Ohro and W Va
One
Year
S22 00
S1x
8-70
9-64
Instructor Glona Buck Wallace
Penalized
months
S1150
T hree
OFFICE HOURS • 9 30 to 12,2 ro 5 (CLOSE
ont h s 57 00 Elsewhere
By Quarters
Phone 992-7326
Pomeroy
AT NOON ON THURS l-EAST COURT
26 00 year
S tx months
1J 50 three months $7 50
GAHS B
0 0
0
ST, POMEROY
ubscr pf10n prtce ncludes
K Creek
7 14 15 7 43

Bobcats blank
Blue Imps 43-0

OFFICE CtOSED

·-

GLORIA'S

SOKlOL OF DANCE

AND BATON

ORCHID ROOM · E. MAIN ST.

unday T D'le~ Sent ne t

/

,./"'--

7

~

N. WoW~J:1~lt· .D.

GLO-ETTE BATON CORP

J

'•

�,.

.i

•

4 _: 'The Daily Sentinel, '''liddleoort-I&gt;omeroy, 0., Monday. Sent. 8, 1975

Grid Scores

Orantes surprises Connors
FOREST HILLS , N.Y.
(UP!)- Who is the Number
One tennis player in the
world ?
Manuel Orantes , th e
smiling Spaniard who took
Jinuny Connors' Forest Hills
title Sunday?
Arthur As he, who took
Jinuny Connors' Wimbledon
title by beating him in a four
set final?
John Newrombe, who took
Jimmy Connors' Australian
title by beating the American
in four sets in the final ?
Jimmy Connors, who
despite losing all three of the
titles he won in 1974, an. nihilated double grand slam
winner Rod Laver and his
Aussi e
c onqueror ,
. Newrombe, in the televised
. challenge rna tches?
· The
debate
among
. establishment
p eo ple ,
: Connors' supporters, and
: unallied fans can go on from
· now through the fall and
: winter .
But at this moment, it is
: Manuel Orantes who has
:captured the imagination, for

!

he wrote a permanent, impelling chapter in Forest
Hills history by coming from
three match points down, ll-5
in the third set under the
lights on Saturday against
Guillermo Vilas , to drive
through six str aight sets to
capt ure
th e
American
champion ship.
Manalo, who overcame a
nagging back difficulty by
resting during the winter, had
studied Connors' style long
and well . He employed the
l&lt;lctics used by Ashe at
Wimbledon to bring down
Connors, 6-4, 6-3, 6-3, Sunday
in one of the most mor e
stunnin g For est Hills finals in
recent yea rs.
This was against the same
Connors who had embarra sed
ancient Aussie Ken Rosewall
at Wimbledon and here last
year, but the surface this
year was clay, not grass.

Connors was no stranger to
clay, or Orantes. He had
beaten Orantes six times in
seven previous meetings on
all surfaces, but Orantes
Sunday denied him the op-

SATURDAY COLlEGE
FOOTBALl RESUl T5

portunity to .use his power,
But the gutty Orantes held,
United Press International
East
slow balling him to death, and was home free .
Ed inboro 21 W . Va . Wesleyan
never letting him attain his
" l wa s so excited after 7
ryt hm , and either passing beating Vilas ," he said, "that Fairmont St. 34 Bluefield St . 8
him or lobbing him with I didn 't feel tired. I rould Penn St . 26 Temp le 25
Pittsburgh 19 Georgi a 9
ex quisite precision .
have played four, even five Salem
24 W . Va . St. 17
The Spanish ace, only the sets."
Shepherd 28 Fr os tburg 0
second of his nation to win
Th e new champion had not Shippe nsbur g 17 W. Va . Tech
here - Man uel Santana won got te n to bed.until three in the 7
South
over Cliff Drysdale in 1965-- morning after beating VilasDela . St. 17 E l iz . City St. 7
approached the net as often a broken bathtub fix ture in Easf. Ken tu c ky 42 Wi s. as Cllris Evert does, and his hote l kept him awakeOs hkos h 7
a dmitted later he neve r but still sa id he had slept Fayetteville St. 45 Ft. Bragg 0
Frank l in 21 George town 17
soundly for eight hours, and Gu_ilford
really felt in danger.
21 Cor c ord 17
Connors had broken him at was more than ready for the Ky . St. 54 Wi s. -Piattevllle 20
love in th e very first game, challe nge Connors presented . Mars Hill 9 Emory &amp; Hen ry 0
But who is the Number One M aryland 41 Villan ov a 0
but fr om that poi nt on,
Mi ss. St. 17 M em phi s 7
Jimmy had his hands full, now·~
Morgan St. 17 Virg ini a St. 6
and was unable to cope with
In his three def enses, N. Car . 33 Wm &amp; Mar y 7
the deli cate touch , the Connors failed in the finals of N . Car . A&amp; T 25 Vi rg inia
Union 21
patience of his opponent .
each - to three different men. No. Ca r . St . 26 Eas t Car . 3
. There might have been one
Maybe no one is Number N E Loui si ana 3 Pacific J
other moment of danger, One th is year. Just as Jimmy SMU 14 Wake Forest 7
SW Louis iana 22 L ong Bea ch
Co nn ors was everybody's St.
Or antes admitted .
17
" In the third set, when Num ber One last year.
Southwest
Jimmy won three straight
He may no lon ger be Angelo St . 21 Svl Ross (Tex .)
games and had me at 31).40 for everybody's Number One, 0
s
St .
42
NW
break point in the sixth game, but perhaps' Chris Evert Arkansa
Loui sia na 0
that was an important mo- thinks he should be .
Ark. Tech 13 Arkansas - Pine
men t," Orantes said. "If he
She looked on in dismay as Bluff 6
Baylor 20 Mi ss issi pp i 10
had come throug h then, he he lost to Orantes . She had
E. Cent. Ok la . 16 McMu r ra y 7
would have ga in ed co n- capt ured the women's title in
E. New M ex . 52 Panhandle
fidence."
her fifth try by beati ng St. 6
Evonne Goolagong caw ley, :;. Hou ston 20 Lamar 3
Lan g ston 31 NW Oklahoma 10
7, 6-4, 6-2, on Saturday. She
N E Ok la homa 14 Cent. Ark.
12
made no secret of wanting
North Texas
27 Texas Jinuny to win too, just to
Arlington 14
match their "His and Her"
Pac ific J N E Lou is iana 3 ( tie )
third annual UJ!MA Charity championships a year ago at
W i&lt;: hita St. 13 Wes t Texas St.
7
Football Classic at Hartford, Wimbledon.
Conn.
Swick completed 26 of 37
•
pass attempts, going 19 for 27
Sha r p ( 1st) .
Sunday 's Baseball R es ults
in the second half to bring the
By United Press Internat ional
Rockets from a 2W deficit to
National L ea gu e
• /2 nd gamel
Ch icago
000 006 000- 6 6 o Boston
0 11 001 000-- 3 3 1
their first win of the season.
Philadelphl 100 000 OJO- 4 10 4 Milwaukee 001 030 OJx - 7 11 1
His rompletions surpassed
Burris, P, Reusch el (8 ) and
Pole , Wi ll oughby {5). Burton
Swi sh er ; Twi tchell , Mon tag ue 181 and Montgomery , Blackwell
the school record of 25 he set
/61, Rut hv en {7), H ilgen d or f (9 1 (5 1, Tr avers { 6 9 ) and Port er.
last year against Miami and Oates . WP Burr 1s ( 13 -10) LP - Pole (3 -5) HR s -Rice
LP - Tw i tchell {5 101 .
(12n d l, Scot t (28 th ).
(Ohio). With 10 games left in
his rollegiate career, he has S t LOUI S
000 20 1 4 11 ~ 9 14 1
030 00] 40 3 -- 1] 10 1 Mi n nesota
000 010 OOG-- I 9 1
00201000 1 4103 Chicago
completed 391 passes, better N ewYork
Hugh es { 14 121 and Bor g .
McGlothen ( 14 It ! and Sim
than the 388 Chuck Ealey
(7),
mon s, Rudo lph (9 ), Matlack , mann ; Os teen , Osborn
completed for the Rockets H all Ill , Ba ldw1 n (7) and Stoddard (81. Knapp (91 and
Downi ng . LP - Osteen
(7 -141 .
Gro te.
Stea rn s
(4)
LP between 1968 and 1971.
HR s Bry e 2 (7t h , 8th) .
Matlack
116 10) .
H Rs Tyson
t2n d l , Stau b (16th) ,
Un se r
Swick hit tailback Tim
I 1st Gamel
(9th)
Zimmerman with three
De troi t
000 200 000- 2 6 1
300 001 1 2x ~ 7 ll 0
scoring passes and tossed a
Pittsbur gh
300 000 030- 6 9 1 Cleve l and
Co l eman (9 16 ) and Wocken t rea l
000 000 000- 0 4 1
12-yard pass to Jim Roney Mon
Reuss (16 10) and Sanguillen , fuss, Bibby . Buskey {7) and
with the winning touchdown
B la ir, Sch erm an {6) , Taylor Ash by . WP - B ibby (6 -14 1. HR S181.
DeMo ! a 191 l and Fool e. LP Hendn cK (21s T1. Og livie ( lth l.
with 41 seconds left. He also
Bla ir
( 8 15 ).
HRs -O i iver Gamble ( 12t h ) .
hit Roney with a two-point
{ 17!hl , P ark er (21 st /.
(2nd Gamel
conversion to win the game.
000 000 000- 0 6 1
Sa n Fra n cisc 003 0 10 000- 4 12 2 Detr oit
500 31 0 OOx - 9 13 4
Western Kentucky scored Cinc inna t i 311 101 lOx 8 9 0 Clevel and
LaGr ow, Wa lker
(4)
and
F alcon e, Min ton (3 ), Williams
twice in the opening period
F reehan : P eTerson 112 71 a nd
(61, Heaverlo (7), Dress ie r (8)
against Dayton, which lost an d Hill , R&lt;td er tB J; Gu ll el t , Ashby . L P La G r ow(] 14 ). HR
Borb on ( B), C . Ca rro l l (9) and Gambl e (13th) .
six of eight fumbles.
Plummer . WP ~ Gullett (13 3 ).
Jackson State junior LP ~ Fa l c one (11 10 ) HR -J o ( 1 sl Gam e)
T exas
000 010 000- 1 53
quarterback
Jeremiah sh ua {7 th I.
Oa kl an d
002 020 00)1!, - 4 6 0
Wr1ght, Ke kich ( 5 ). Moore (7)
Tillman tossed three touch- Sa n D iego
0 11 000 000- 2 9 2
000 200 001 - 3 6 0 an d Sundberg ; Bosman , Tod d
down passes to lead his team Hau slan·
(6)
and FOsse, Ha ney (7J,
Spi llner . Tom lin fBI, F risella
to a come-from-behind vic- (8) an d H un dley , Dav i s {B): Tenace (9 ). WP - Bosman (9 -5) .
- Wrig ht (4-6) . HR -Spence r
tory over Central State, R obert s, York. {13) and May . LP
( 11th )
WP - York (3 2) L P- Fr isella
which held a 12-7 lead at ( 1-61 . HR s-Sharon (4 th ), Rad er
(2nd Gamel
halftime. CSU quarterback ( 12th ) .
Tex as
010 000 020- 3 6 0
Steve Thomas hit wide Los An geles 000 10 1 10 1- 4 9 3 Oak la nd
00 1 102 12)11. - 7 8 1
210 001 00 1- 5 7 0 Hargan , Th oma s 161 , Kek ich
receiver Willie Zachary with Atlan ta
(71. Fouc ault (8 ) and Fahey ,
Syt ton, Wa ll t6 l. Hough (81
two scoring passes in the first and Yeager ; Ea ster ly , Od om Sundberg (7 1; Siebert . Lindblad
(6), Todd (81. Fi ng er s { B) and
(51 , Sosa {]), Dal Ca nton ( 9 )
half.
Tenace WP - Siebe rl (4 -4) . LP
and Williams WP - D&lt;tl Ca nton
Steve Montgomery tied an (2 -5). LP -- Houg h (2 -51 .
H ar g &lt;tn (B 10)
HRs -Bur
ro ughs (25th) , W illiams (2 1sll
American League
Indiana Central record with
York
000 101 000- 2 6 1
four touchdowns in the win New
Ba ltimore
ooo ooo ooo~ o 6 o ( 11 innings)
Kanss Cty 010 203 00 1 01 - 8 14 3
over Findlay. Montgomery
Hunt er {20 -13 ) and Mun son ;
Ca l1forni 000 020 0 14 00- 7 13 0
Pa l mer (20 -10) and Hendricks .
srored on runs of 26, 19, 24
F itzmorri s, M c c 1 u r e . {B) ,
McDan iel
(8),
Sa decki
[9),
and one yards. Findlay's lone I 1st Game)
Boston
000 000 12 3 ~ 6 l3 1 Briles (9) , Li tte ll ( 10) , Mingori
score came on a W.yard pass Milwaukee 110 000 00 1 ~ 3 10 I I 11 I. T hr oop ( 11 l and St i nson ,
Martinez ( 11 l; Lange , M . Scott
from Gene Fernandez to
Clevel and , Lee (8 ). Drago (8)
(6), K i rKwood flll and Ro
and Fisk ; Colborn , Austin (8),
Bruce Martsolf on the final Rod ·: w ez 181 and Porter , driguez , Allietta (1 0). WP play of the game.
Mo1.. · (9) . WP - Cieve l an d ( 11 - Li ttell {I 1) . LP - M Sco lt (4 -21.

Akron trips Marshall

. United Press International
it.
: The opening day of Ohio
" They tri ed to whoop it up in
:college football was marred the tunnel, but they were
·by the death of an Akron bawling openly," he said.
:player whO suffered an apAngeloff was a 6-4, 22().
;parent heart attack in a game poWlder majoring in accoun·against Marshall.
ting.
; Junior tight end Chris
Akron recovered four Mar·Angeloff w Berea ran off the shall fumbles to -win the game
~field after a punt and fell face
20-8.
·forward on the sidelines in
In other Ohio ga mes,
:the' second period of the Toledo quarterback Gene
:game.
Swick, last year's leading
; Officials administered passer and offensive player
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation in the nation , set a school and
:and heart massage before an career record with 26 pass
;1\Jll®)ance took Angeloff to completions as he rallied the
;Akron City Hospital, where Rockets to a 32-31 win over
•doctors worked on him for Western Carolina in, the
:about one hour before he died closing minute, Western
;without regaining ronscious- . Kentucky swamped Dayton
·ness.
'l:/-7, Indiana Central romped
Ken MacDonald, Akron over Findlay 54-8 and
sports information director, Jackson
State downed
said the players dido 't know Central State 3().18 in the
.the outcome, but they sensed

R oyals close
•
zn on Oakland
By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Wilen Whitey Herzog first
· addressed his players after
: taking over as the Kansas
: City Royals' manager on July
:. 24, his message was plain and
·simple.
· "I told them that if we go
: Into Oakland in September
:five games or less behind the
·A's, we have a good chance to
'take the whole thing," Herzog
: recalled Sunday after Kansas
,City outslugged California 8-7
·with the help of five home
:nms -three by Tony Solalta
·and two by John Mayberry,
who leads the majors-to
creep within five games of
Oakland in the American
League West.
Like many things, the task
Is easier said than done. After
all, the Royals were IO'h
games behind the A's when
Herzog took over and, as
Reggie Jackson often has
said, Oakland doesn't start to
take its baseball seriously
.(which usually means a
clubhouse brawl) until things
get tight.
Well, somebody had better
call in a referee and two fight
officials real soon because
Kansas City has won 30 oflts
45 games under Herzog, and
the two teams begin a crucial
thr""1!ame series tonight in
Oakland.
"We played Oakland in
August and we took two out of
three-two shutouts, lost the
third one 6-5," Herzog said.
"They looked' awful tired.
They definitely can be had."

Especially if Solail&lt;l and
Mayberry rontinue to crush
baseballs the way they did
011 day.
,•olalla, the 28-year-old
"~amoan
Slrongboy,"
!lasted three consecutive
homers before his single
scored AI Cowens with the
winning run in the 11th inning.
"It was awfully tempting to
go for another one," Sola ita
said of his chance to join
seven other players who have
hit four homers in a game.
"However, in that situation,
you have to give in a little to
the pitcher . I just wanted to
make contact."
Mayberry , who suffered
through a haunting slump
earlier this season, belted his
32nd and 33rd homers. A
leading candidate for the
Most Valuable Player,
Mayberry is hitting a robust
.296 with 94 RB!s.
Elsewhere in the AL,
Oakland swept Texas 4-1 and
7-3, New York blanked
Baltimore 2-0, Boston split
with Milwaukee, winning 6-3
before losing 7-3, Minnesota
drubbed Chicago 9-1 and
Cleveland swept Detroit 7-2
and 9-0,
In the National League,
Cincinnati clinched the West
by defeating San Francisco 84 while Los Angeles was
losing to Atlanta 5-4. Other
scores were: St. Louis 12 New
York
4,
Chicago
6
Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh 6
Montreal 0 and Houston 3 San
Diego 2.

Linescores

9 ).

L P- Co l born

(l0 -10 ).

HR -

let's .Talk Soon

DALE ·c. WARNER
992-2143
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

-

Inadvertent Adultery?

Dear Helen :
Can I be divorced for "adultery by mistake"'
We were on a trip. My husband said he'd rest in the h t 1
room while I visited friends 1n my home town. 1 returned~~
found the door unlocked, undressed in the dark _ and got ~
very wann, receptive welcome in bed.
. It was only afterwards that I realized something wasn't
nght. Women sense those thin2s. Sure enough, light from a
ne.on Sl8ll across the way revealed I was in the wrong room!
(I dgotten off on the third instead of fourth floor .) Without
wakmg my now-&lt;tleeping companion, I departed fast _ and
you can be sure that when I reached our room I turned on the
light and checked!
'
I'd like to ronfess, but my husband is a very jealous man .
No on~ saw me.as the halls were empty, and the "other man"
doesn. t recogill2e me - he got on the elevator with us next
morru_ng. I could ha~e gone through the floor! (Will never
know if he was expecting someone, or just "accepting." 1
Do I tell or forget? - GUILTY BY ERROR (But somehow
I don 't feel guilty).
P .S. Knowing my husband , I must admit he'd find it very
hard to believe me.

How
Secure. ~
. .

-li ..,

\ '

,1.#

~ --J!

is your

..,...-car tnsurance
cove rage?
Your pr esen t policy may
contain dan~e r o~ s gaps.
ove rlaps or loos e ends.
Let your Nat ionwide A~ent
help revoew you r coverage.
Galt

P. J, PAULEY

307 Spring Av e., Pome . oy

PH . 992 · 2~18

~);~{~~~~~!
"'I T•o~wldt lo!u!uJ I

lfll u• trot• Co'"ptnv

&gt;&lt; omt Olloce Colurnb u1 . Ohi o

Dear G ByE:
Who wouldn't?
According to several legal opinions, a relationship based
on error or fraud Is not generally divorceable-type adultery .
But provmg your "mistake" would not be easy .
Why not keep this incident in your own private memory
bank? You'll bave to admit it's got fanl&lt;lsies beat ten ways to
Sunday! - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
Sev~ral months ~go I wrote asking whether marriage between first rouams 1B legally and socially acceptable. You
answered the "socially" part, hut how about the legality? STILL CURIOUS
Dear S.C.:
In your state (California), marriage between first cousins
Is legal. I have this on authority of our County Clerk, whose
office I called.
In other states? Some stm prohibit first cousin marriages,
many no longer do. For specific information, call or write to
the County Clerk in the area where you plan to marry. - H.
Dear Helen :
. Today I met a man who is 38 years old and a paraplegic.
ThiS nlce-lookmg fellow has no family and very few frienda. He
IS literally alone in the world, and he lives in a nursing home,
where he can only converse with the staff. He has a good mind
but, of course, he is limited in answering letters.
I thought that maybe some of your concerned readers
could write to him. He needs encouragement from the outside.
He is: Neil Gulliksen, Pompton Lakes Nursing Home, Inc., 261
Terhune Dr., Wayne, New Jersey, 07470.
Thanks for helping. - J. V.

FOR KIDS-

FUNMEAL.tt11
Fun Tray .
Funburg.~r .
Re'4 Fmwch Fr1es.
Su rp-frse P rrze.

Req Soft Onnk &amp;
&lt;1

Dear Readers:
Your letters to Neil Guilllksen will be appreciated. In
checking with the Nursing Home, I learn that he has assistance
from Medicaid caseworkers ln arranging for appropriate
rehabilitation, but it will be a long baul. His ability to reply will
be limited by tbe amount of volunteer time that can be
arranged. But rest assured: each piece of mail received will
be a blessing !
Thank you for the kindnesses I know will be forthcoming .
- H.

S;Nee t Tr ea t

------~---­

West

Fresno St. 49 Fulle r ton St. 7
Montana St. 35 Portland St .
34
San Diego
Pa so 10

St.

31 Texas-EI

PT . PlEASANT
2325 Jack~on Ave .

Santa Clara 47 St . Mary ' s 18

~S03

Eastern Ave . .

SW Louisiana 22 L ong Beach

St. 27

COLUMBUS - "Yesterday
Meets Today" is the theme of
the Southeast Ohio Farm
Bureau Women's Rally Sept.
22 at the Country Dinner
Playhouse.
The rally will feature
Patricia (Pat) Leimbach, a
nationally-known Vermilion
writer and farm wife who will
present an address entitled
"A Thread of Blue Denim."
In addition, Lucille Shearn
of Warsaw in Coshocton
County, chairwoman of the
planning committee, said the
rally will feature a style show
of historical costumes,
recognition of " Spirit of '76"
advisory councils, group
singing and special music
provided by the Sheridan
High School boy's octet.
Mrs. Leimbach, author of
" A Thread of Blue Denim," is
a .popular figure at farmoriented flinctlons with her
wry wit and a view of farm
life through the eyes of a
farm wife .
She authors a column
entitled "The Country Wife"
in the Elyria Chronicle

new SOttrCe
for gas.
One of the houe.•·r new sources tor natural gas is the frozen north .
America badly needs supplies of the clean gas energy available there
to help solve the ene:gy crisis .

-we're financing drilli~g programs •n
Alaska and Canada. including
on the far islands of the high Arctic.
-we've gotten the rights to purchase
substantial· gas reserves already
discovered on Alaska's North Slope.
Once the Alaskan oil pipeline gets
started, a natural gas !ine can also be
built from the North Slope. We can't
produce the gas until oil production is
underway.
·

81.32-

VILLAGE PHARMACY
~IDDLEPORT.

OHIO

·

w111 be buih with proper regard for
the_area they cross. A !iludy "grl:'up in
whtch ,Columbia participates has
operated comple~ tesl sites and .

RUTLAND - Ann Colwell,
Mary Colwell and Joy Sauer
were confirmed Sunday at
the
Rutland
U,nited
Methodist Church by Jeff
Gerber, student pastor, and
the Rev. Rob~rt Bumgarner.
The confirmation was
followed by Holy Communion
with the pastor giving a
meditation on the true
meaning of cnnflnnation and
conununion. At 12:30 p.m. a
carry-in dinner was held to"
welcome Pastor Gerber for
another year.
Mrs: Ruth Erlewlne had
charge of the program with
the Sunday school teachers
and president of the Board of
Trustees speaking in behalf
of their groups. Gifts were
presented' to Pastor Gerber,

conducted lenglhy field studies to"

examine the impact of a gas Une or
the land and waterways and the

wildlif~ that" inhabit them .

These studie!; are providin8 the
data necessary to meet grow1ng
e~rgy needs with minimum
.

·1

d1slurbance of the environment.

-we're participating in costly
~nvironmcntal and engineering
;tudics on how to build gas lines from
the frozen north to consumers in
Columbia's service area.
There's much work yet to do, but gas from
the far north will be coming along:
·
Columbia Gas is working hard Imlay to
ncct yor e ncrgynceds tomorrow.

'

Guio .,....Io,..,·pun •••rill' ..• - I t wloely.

.

I
..

.

~..;,.-:_:r

•· · • ·.=%:"::.: •••. )':'~888:-

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
MEIGS County Salon 710
will meet, 7:30p .m., at home
of Edith Fox, 2607 Garfield
Ave., Point Pleasant.

TUESDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter
53, DAY, meeting 7:30p.m. at
chapter home, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.
SPECIAL
MEETING
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, 7 p.m. Work in
entered apprentice degree;
all Master Masons invited.
RACINE
FIREMEN
Auxiliary will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the fire station.
RACINE Masonic Lodge
461 F&amp;AM at 7:30p.m. Work
in second degree. All master
masons invited .
RITES ATIENDED
EASTERN Band Boosters,
Mrs. Nancy Reed, Mrs .
7:30p.m . in band room.
Betty Hobstetter, Mrs.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Theima Campbell and Mrs .
Club, 8 p.m. at home of Mrs.
Clara Lochary were in
Faye Pratt. Mrs. Pat Holter
Athens recently for the
to demonstrate bread dough
graveside rites for Milo ·
flowers . Mrs. Cora Beegle to
Clapp , husband of Helen
have program on growing
Rathburn Young Clapp,
chrysanthemums for the
formerly of Rutland. Funeral
home garden.
services ·were conducted in
AMERICAN
Legion
Columbus with the body
Auxiliary,
Lewis
Manley
Post
being brought to the West
Union St. Cemetery in Athens 263, Middleport, home of Mrs.
Frank Washington ,
for interment.
Gallipolis, 2 p .m .
MEIGS Athletic Boosters,
7:30 p.m. at Meigs High
Telegram which provided the
material for her book. She
has also written articles for
many national magazines.
Tickets for the rally are
available
from
Farm
Bureau's women's committee members and at the
county Farm Bureau office.
The
Country
Dinner
Playhouse is located one mile
west of SR 256 on Tussing
Road, just south of Interstate
70 in Franklin County.

Confimzation
services held

N~tural gas pipeliiles from the Arctic

Two fund raising projects
have been planned for this
month at the Senior Citizens
Center with the proceeds to
go toward fimrncing the
program offered through the
Meigs County Council on
Aging directed by Mrs .
Eleanor Thomas.
On Sept. 20 a spaghetti
dinner will be held at the
center with serving from 4 to
7 p.m. Tickets for the dinner
are currently on sale and
may be purchased from a
se ni or citiU!n or at the center .
Following the dinner a square
dance will be held with music
from 8 to 11 p .m . by the
Stringdusters .
An auction will be held
Sept. 27, and the senior
citizens
are
c urren lly
gathering items for the
auction. While it is preferred
that articles not be brought to
the center before Sept. 20, it is
asked that those with items to
contribute telephone the
center so that some appraisal
can be made as to what will
be available . Mrs . Thomas
advises that only appliances
in working condition will be
accepted .
Donations toward suppor-t
of the Senior Citizen
programs continued to come
in during August with $282
being received from individuals and organization. It
is reported that at this time 62
senior citizens have pledged
$1 a month . Approximately
$23,000 must be raised this
year locally in order for the
center to qualify for federal
funds .
Organizations contributing
were the Emily Missionary
Circle of the Syracuse
Presbyterian Church, the
Busy Bee Class of the Middleport First Baptist Church
and the Harrisonville Senior
Citizens Club.

MEIGS High Girls Athletic
Assn. meeting, 7 p.m . at high
school.

Women 's rally planned

Columbia has gone to the Arctic to.
get·thisgas:

Pointer~ ·

H\' POLL)' CRAMEK

said . " I still want to teach on
the college level, but this Is
the start of everything. It
could open so manv rloors."

Hot·

!WR SPRAY
Regular or Extra Hold 13 oz.
Mfg. Usl $2.-49 !tach

It may he time to
have your present&gt;
policy upd~ted. .

talks to the Kennedy boys on
ATLANTIC CITY (UP! ) For years Tawny Elaine the phone but I wouldn't call
Godin had followed the . them personal friends. "
As for livin g together
televised pageant with her
before
marriage, Miss Godin
own imaginary wa lk down an
imaginary runway . This time . said " I dont know if I would
the walk and the runway do it or not. If people feel it's
were fo r real - and she was necessary and need to know
ea c h othe r and save a
Miss America !976.
Saturday night at Con· possible di vorce then let's do
vention Ha ll wa s the it.
"This shouldn't be taken
fulfillment of a dream the 18year-&lt;Jld brunette · from lightly, and I think it is."
Miss Godin, who measures
Sarasota, N.Y., had since
36-24-36,
is a sophomore at
childhood .
" Ever since she was rive Skidmore University. She ha s
years old she used to watch a perfect 4.0 average in
the Miss America Pageant on linguistics and impressed t he
television and would keep a judges Saturday during the
little list of who she thought wlent cumpetition with an
would win ," said her mother, original piano cumposition,
" Images In Pastels. "
Conni, 42.
Miss Godin, who won a
" And then she would !&lt;Ike
$1
5,000
scholarship in t he
anJplaginary wa lk down the
pageant , said she plans to
nmway ."
study
linguistics in France in
" I 've had one hour's
sleep," Miss Godin told a her junior year.
" I think my goals will be
breakfast news conference
the
same after this year,'' she
Sunday as she munched a
Danish and sipped orange
juice. "I sat up all night just
looking at the crown."
Miss Godin, who traces her
ancestors in America to 1661,
will wear the crown during
the nation 's bi ce ntennial
year.
The 5-foot-10 college coed,
the tallest Miss America in
the 54-year history of the
event, was the first Miss New
York to win the crown. Miss
America 1945, Bess Myerson,
entered
the
pageant
representing New York City.
The four runnersup were:
I. Miss North Carolina, Susan
Lawrence, 21, who will sefve
as Miss America if Miss
Godin is unable to; 2. Miss
California , Janet Carr, 21; 3.
Miss Ohio, Susan Banks, 21;
4. Miss Arizona, Stacey
Petersen, 24.
Miss Godin said she has six
or seven boyfriends and any
one of them could be "Mr .
America .''
Her mother said the new
ADULT MEAL
queen recently went to a
l B oq She t ·
party with Chris Lawford,
Reg r renc h Fr1es
·
T urnovcr 8.
son of actor Peter Lawford
L;;~rCJP Sn it Ormk
and
Patricia
Kennedy
Lawford, and added "She

Polly's

HRs -Mayberr y 2 02nd , 33rd ).
So laila 3 { 14th , 15th, 16th ) .

~DORN

Play it aare an.t.....,

Dream became reality

-

----.- -

Danwged ]ott
is returnable
POLLY'S PROBLEM
hobby shop (it comes in
DEAR POLLY - I have a various thicknesses 1. It can
200-foot-long roll of aluminum be cut to any desired size and
foil that got wet so the foil is shape. It is almost unstuck together. I cannot pull breakable and the plate will
the sheet toward the cutting last practically forever . - M.
edge on the box and I cannot R.
dig into the roll enough to get
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
the foil to tear evenly across. Peeve is with those drivers
Any ideas ? - CLAIRE.
who give little thought to
DEAR CLAIRE - The . pedestriahs, such as when
most widely known and they are tW"ning a corner
perhaps tbe largest maker of with no one behind them and
aluminum foil knows of no they don't turn on their signal
remedy lor this and suggests lights to let the pedestrians
that you return the loll to the know what they are going to
store where you bought it. do. I have waited and waited
They should accept It as to cross a street only to have
damaged material, give you car after car turn the other
a new roll and then the store way and I could have crossed
will be reimbursed by the minutes before if the driv ers
maker. Tbls seems to be a had been thoughtful enough
common practice and I to signal. I have driven a car
suggested the foil might have for years and know how easy
gotten wet after It was pur- this is to do and I know many
chased. Regatdless , the others who are irked by this
gentleman said to take It same thing . - ANGELA .
back since the company
As
DEAR POLLY
would not want a customer to " natural " jewelry is so in
keep sucb a long roll that was vogue I have found an
not useable. - POLLY.
inexpensive way to be in
style. Most of us have.,a pretty
DEAR POLLY - I want to seashell or two that we have
tell Charlotte how ! .solved the brought home from a trip.
square cake plate problem . Save shells with holes in the
Buy a plastic glass at a local top or make a small hole in
one with a needle. Buy a
cheap necklace at the dime
Those born on this date are store, remove the trinket
hanging on it and string a
under the sign of Virgo.
Ohio Republican Sen . pretty seashell on the chain .
Robert A. Taft was born Sept . Your own creation will be a
8, 1892. This is American beautiful "in" necklace .
Also, use denl&lt;ll floss and
comedian Sid Caesar's 5Jrd
telephone
wire to make an
birthday.
ingenious wall decoration
On this day in history :
In 1565, the first pennanent that will chime in the wind .
settlement of what is now tbe String a number of seashells
Continental United States from strands of the denl&lt;ll
was founded at the present floss and hang them from the
location of St. Augustine, Fla . wire that you have arranged
In 1900, more than 6,000 in spirals. Space the shells so
persons were killed when a they· will hit together when
hurricane and tidal wave touched by a breeze . Be
careful to use strong shells
struck Galveston, Tex.
that will not break easily . I
In 1974, President Gerald find both of these are terrific
gift ideas. - S. S.
Ford
granted
former
President Richard Nixon lull
pardon for all offenses he
may have committed during
his years in office.

_Meigs women attend reception
Seven
Meigs
Co un ty
wom en were in Milford .
Saturday ni ght for the
reception honoring Mrs . J ack
Ba l zhiz e r, newly insta lled
president of the Departmen t
of Ohio, Ameri can Legion
Auxiliary.
The reception, held by !he
Victor Stiner Post and Uni t
450 of Milford, was attended
by 350 wome n fr om all over
Ohio includi n~ Mrs. Arnold
Richards, Middlepor t, new
Eighth Di strict pr esi dent ;
Mrs . Ben Neutzling, Mrs .
Grace Pratt, Mr s. Lul a
Hampton , Mrs. Mary Marlin,
Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, Mrs . Pearl
Knapp an.d Mrs. Rhod a
Hackett .
The stea k dinner which was
served in a large Lent in the
recre ation area at lhe post
home was preceded by a
coc ktail hour . Mrs. J ohn
Hartman . president of th e
hos t unit, gave the welcome
with Mrs . La wrence Cooper.
a past District 4 president,
giving the invocation . Donald
Chandler, post commander,
brought greetings as did the
mayor of Milford.
Stuart Luginbuhl , pas t
department commander, was
met.ster of ceremoni es, an d
the Hon . William Harsha,
Distric t 6 Congressman , was
speaker for the reception .
Department of Ohio officers recognized were Mrs .
Henry F . Patro, firs t vice
president, Toledo; Mrs. Billie
E. Peebles, Bradford , second
vice president; and Miss Ann
Eschelman, secreta ry,
Zanesville .
Pa st
dep art m ent
presidents introduced were
Mrs .
Les te r
Merritt ,

Co lumbus; Mrs . Robe rt
Riley, Mt. Sterling ; Mrs.
Arthur Hraback, Maynard ;
Mrs . O.mald Miller, Alliance;
Mrs. Mary Miller , Portsmouth ; Mrs . Mary McElroy,
West Jefferson; Mrs. Ed
Ullum, Lebanon; Mrs. G. G.
McCkllister, Dayton ; Mrs .
George Sallott , Parma; and
Mrs .
Mariam
Junge,
Columbus.
Also presented were Mrs .
Ri c hards , E ighth District
president ;
Mr s . Devon
Tipple, Lan caster, Mrs. Ben
Neutz lin g, P omeroy, past
Eighth Dis trict presidents;
Mrs . Stacey Day, Portsmouth, Seventh Dist rict
president past; an d Mrs . Leo
Hun!, West Milton , Mrs. C. W.

Hea cock, Columbus, and
Mrs. John Frustover, Usbon,
all active in department
programs.
Following the dinner , a
dance was held with Jack
Yolk and his Orchestra
providlng the music.

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A thought for the day:
German philosopher Arthur
Schopenhauer said, "Hatred
comes from the heart. .. .
contempt from the head ...
and neither is quite within our

control."
In 1934, the U.S. llner
"Morro castle" burned off
Asbury Park, N.J., taking 137
lives.

School. All junior and senior
high parents and other interesLed persons urged to
attend .
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club, noon,
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stste
convocation, 7:30 p.m.,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
All R.A.M . urged to attend.
Bosworth Council 46, Royal
and Select Masters, will hold
state assembly following the
chap~r meeting at B: 30 p .m .
LETART FALLS United
Methodist Women, 7:30p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Ernest
Shuler.
WHITE Rose Lodge, I :30
p.m., American Legion Hall,
Middleport. Report of recent
international convention of
the Ladies Auxiliary, U.T.U.
to be given.
THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR Beta Bel&lt;!
Sigma Phi, 7:45p.m. at home
of Margaret Follrod.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. at the hall .
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Society, Middleport Village
Hall, 7:30 p.m.
PAST Officers Club, 7:30
p.m., Racine O.E.S., home of
Mrs . Bert Grimm.

QUALITY
and VALUE
Sales
Days

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PsAvE ENERGY
DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Morris announce the birth of
a daQghter, Sandra Earlene,
Aug. 29. She weighed 7lbs., 3
ozs. Mr. and Mrs. Morris
have two sons, Billy, 6, and
Mike, 4. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
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the paternal grandparents
, are Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
Morris, Pomeroy.

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4 _: 'The Daily Sentinel, '''liddleoort-I&gt;omeroy, 0., Monday. Sent. 8, 1975

Grid Scores

Orantes surprises Connors
FOREST HILLS , N.Y.
(UP!)- Who is the Number
One tennis player in the
world ?
Manuel Orantes , th e
smiling Spaniard who took
Jinuny Connors' Forest Hills
title Sunday?
Arthur As he, who took
Jinuny Connors' Wimbledon
title by beating him in a four
set final?
John Newrombe, who took
Jimmy Connors' Australian
title by beating the American
in four sets in the final ?
Jimmy Connors, who
despite losing all three of the
titles he won in 1974, an. nihilated double grand slam
winner Rod Laver and his
Aussi e
c onqueror ,
. Newrombe, in the televised
. challenge rna tches?
· The
debate
among
. establishment
p eo ple ,
: Connors' supporters, and
: unallied fans can go on from
· now through the fall and
: winter .
But at this moment, it is
: Manuel Orantes who has
:captured the imagination, for

!

he wrote a permanent, impelling chapter in Forest
Hills history by coming from
three match points down, ll-5
in the third set under the
lights on Saturday against
Guillermo Vilas , to drive
through six str aight sets to
capt ure
th e
American
champion ship.
Manalo, who overcame a
nagging back difficulty by
resting during the winter, had
studied Connors' style long
and well . He employed the
l&lt;lctics used by Ashe at
Wimbledon to bring down
Connors, 6-4, 6-3, 6-3, Sunday
in one of the most mor e
stunnin g For est Hills finals in
recent yea rs.
This was against the same
Connors who had embarra sed
ancient Aussie Ken Rosewall
at Wimbledon and here last
year, but the surface this
year was clay, not grass.

Connors was no stranger to
clay, or Orantes. He had
beaten Orantes six times in
seven previous meetings on
all surfaces, but Orantes
Sunday denied him the op-

SATURDAY COLlEGE
FOOTBALl RESUl T5

portunity to .use his power,
But the gutty Orantes held,
United Press International
East
slow balling him to death, and was home free .
Ed inboro 21 W . Va . Wesleyan
never letting him attain his
" l wa s so excited after 7
ryt hm , and either passing beating Vilas ," he said, "that Fairmont St. 34 Bluefield St . 8
him or lobbing him with I didn 't feel tired. I rould Penn St . 26 Temp le 25
Pittsburgh 19 Georgi a 9
ex quisite precision .
have played four, even five Salem
24 W . Va . St. 17
The Spanish ace, only the sets."
Shepherd 28 Fr os tburg 0
second of his nation to win
Th e new champion had not Shippe nsbur g 17 W. Va . Tech
here - Man uel Santana won got te n to bed.until three in the 7
South
over Cliff Drysdale in 1965-- morning after beating VilasDela . St. 17 E l iz . City St. 7
approached the net as often a broken bathtub fix ture in Easf. Ken tu c ky 42 Wi s. as Cllris Evert does, and his hote l kept him awakeOs hkos h 7
a dmitted later he neve r but still sa id he had slept Fayetteville St. 45 Ft. Bragg 0
Frank l in 21 George town 17
soundly for eight hours, and Gu_ilford
really felt in danger.
21 Cor c ord 17
Connors had broken him at was more than ready for the Ky . St. 54 Wi s. -Piattevllle 20
love in th e very first game, challe nge Connors presented . Mars Hill 9 Emory &amp; Hen ry 0
But who is the Number One M aryland 41 Villan ov a 0
but fr om that poi nt on,
Mi ss. St. 17 M em phi s 7
Jimmy had his hands full, now·~
Morgan St. 17 Virg ini a St. 6
and was unable to cope with
In his three def enses, N. Car . 33 Wm &amp; Mar y 7
the deli cate touch , the Connors failed in the finals of N . Car . A&amp; T 25 Vi rg inia
Union 21
patience of his opponent .
each - to three different men. No. Ca r . St . 26 Eas t Car . 3
. There might have been one
Maybe no one is Number N E Loui si ana 3 Pacific J
other moment of danger, One th is year. Just as Jimmy SMU 14 Wake Forest 7
SW Louis iana 22 L ong Bea ch
Co nn ors was everybody's St.
Or antes admitted .
17
" In the third set, when Num ber One last year.
Southwest
Jimmy won three straight
He may no lon ger be Angelo St . 21 Svl Ross (Tex .)
games and had me at 31).40 for everybody's Number One, 0
s
St .
42
NW
break point in the sixth game, but perhaps' Chris Evert Arkansa
Loui sia na 0
that was an important mo- thinks he should be .
Ark. Tech 13 Arkansas - Pine
men t," Orantes said. "If he
She looked on in dismay as Bluff 6
Baylor 20 Mi ss issi pp i 10
had come throug h then, he he lost to Orantes . She had
E. Cent. Ok la . 16 McMu r ra y 7
would have ga in ed co n- capt ured the women's title in
E. New M ex . 52 Panhandle
fidence."
her fifth try by beati ng St. 6
Evonne Goolagong caw ley, :;. Hou ston 20 Lamar 3
Lan g ston 31 NW Oklahoma 10
7, 6-4, 6-2, on Saturday. She
N E Ok la homa 14 Cent. Ark.
12
made no secret of wanting
North Texas
27 Texas Jinuny to win too, just to
Arlington 14
match their "His and Her"
Pac ific J N E Lou is iana 3 ( tie )
third annual UJ!MA Charity championships a year ago at
W i&lt;: hita St. 13 Wes t Texas St.
7
Football Classic at Hartford, Wimbledon.
Conn.
Swick completed 26 of 37
•
pass attempts, going 19 for 27
Sha r p ( 1st) .
Sunday 's Baseball R es ults
in the second half to bring the
By United Press Internat ional
Rockets from a 2W deficit to
National L ea gu e
• /2 nd gamel
Ch icago
000 006 000- 6 6 o Boston
0 11 001 000-- 3 3 1
their first win of the season.
Philadelphl 100 000 OJO- 4 10 4 Milwaukee 001 030 OJx - 7 11 1
His rompletions surpassed
Burris, P, Reusch el (8 ) and
Pole , Wi ll oughby {5). Burton
Swi sh er ; Twi tchell , Mon tag ue 181 and Montgomery , Blackwell
the school record of 25 he set
/61, Rut hv en {7), H ilgen d or f (9 1 (5 1, Tr avers { 6 9 ) and Port er.
last year against Miami and Oates . WP Burr 1s ( 13 -10) LP - Pole (3 -5) HR s -Rice
LP - Tw i tchell {5 101 .
(12n d l, Scot t (28 th ).
(Ohio). With 10 games left in
his rollegiate career, he has S t LOUI S
000 20 1 4 11 ~ 9 14 1
030 00] 40 3 -- 1] 10 1 Mi n nesota
000 010 OOG-- I 9 1
00201000 1 4103 Chicago
completed 391 passes, better N ewYork
Hugh es { 14 121 and Bor g .
McGlothen ( 14 It ! and Sim
than the 388 Chuck Ealey
(7),
mon s, Rudo lph (9 ), Matlack , mann ; Os teen , Osborn
completed for the Rockets H all Ill , Ba ldw1 n (7) and Stoddard (81. Knapp (91 and
Downi ng . LP - Osteen
(7 -141 .
Gro te.
Stea rn s
(4)
LP between 1968 and 1971.
HR s Bry e 2 (7t h , 8th) .
Matlack
116 10) .
H Rs Tyson
t2n d l , Stau b (16th) ,
Un se r
Swick hit tailback Tim
I 1st Gamel
(9th)
Zimmerman with three
De troi t
000 200 000- 2 6 1
300 001 1 2x ~ 7 ll 0
scoring passes and tossed a
Pittsbur gh
300 000 030- 6 9 1 Cleve l and
Co l eman (9 16 ) and Wocken t rea l
000 000 000- 0 4 1
12-yard pass to Jim Roney Mon
Reuss (16 10) and Sanguillen , fuss, Bibby . Buskey {7) and
with the winning touchdown
B la ir, Sch erm an {6) , Taylor Ash by . WP - B ibby (6 -14 1. HR S181.
DeMo ! a 191 l and Fool e. LP Hendn cK (21s T1. Og livie ( lth l.
with 41 seconds left. He also
Bla ir
( 8 15 ).
HRs -O i iver Gamble ( 12t h ) .
hit Roney with a two-point
{ 17!hl , P ark er (21 st /.
(2nd Gamel
conversion to win the game.
000 000 000- 0 6 1
Sa n Fra n cisc 003 0 10 000- 4 12 2 Detr oit
500 31 0 OOx - 9 13 4
Western Kentucky scored Cinc inna t i 311 101 lOx 8 9 0 Clevel and
LaGr ow, Wa lker
(4)
and
F alcon e, Min ton (3 ), Williams
twice in the opening period
F reehan : P eTerson 112 71 a nd
(61, Heaverlo (7), Dress ie r (8)
against Dayton, which lost an d Hill , R&lt;td er tB J; Gu ll el t , Ashby . L P La G r ow(] 14 ). HR
Borb on ( B), C . Ca rro l l (9) and Gambl e (13th) .
six of eight fumbles.
Plummer . WP ~ Gullett (13 3 ).
Jackson State junior LP ~ Fa l c one (11 10 ) HR -J o ( 1 sl Gam e)
T exas
000 010 000- 1 53
quarterback
Jeremiah sh ua {7 th I.
Oa kl an d
002 020 00)1!, - 4 6 0
Wr1ght, Ke kich ( 5 ). Moore (7)
Tillman tossed three touch- Sa n D iego
0 11 000 000- 2 9 2
000 200 001 - 3 6 0 an d Sundberg ; Bosman , Tod d
down passes to lead his team Hau slan·
(6)
and FOsse, Ha ney (7J,
Spi llner . Tom lin fBI, F risella
to a come-from-behind vic- (8) an d H un dley , Dav i s {B): Tenace (9 ). WP - Bosman (9 -5) .
- Wrig ht (4-6) . HR -Spence r
tory over Central State, R obert s, York. {13) and May . LP
( 11th )
WP - York (3 2) L P- Fr isella
which held a 12-7 lead at ( 1-61 . HR s-Sharon (4 th ), Rad er
(2nd Gamel
halftime. CSU quarterback ( 12th ) .
Tex as
010 000 020- 3 6 0
Steve Thomas hit wide Los An geles 000 10 1 10 1- 4 9 3 Oak la nd
00 1 102 12)11. - 7 8 1
210 001 00 1- 5 7 0 Hargan , Th oma s 161 , Kek ich
receiver Willie Zachary with Atlan ta
(71. Fouc ault (8 ) and Fahey ,
Syt ton, Wa ll t6 l. Hough (81
two scoring passes in the first and Yeager ; Ea ster ly , Od om Sundberg (7 1; Siebert . Lindblad
(6), Todd (81. Fi ng er s { B) and
(51 , Sosa {]), Dal Ca nton ( 9 )
half.
Tenace WP - Siebe rl (4 -4) . LP
and Williams WP - D&lt;tl Ca nton
Steve Montgomery tied an (2 -5). LP -- Houg h (2 -51 .
H ar g &lt;tn (B 10)
HRs -Bur
ro ughs (25th) , W illiams (2 1sll
American League
Indiana Central record with
York
000 101 000- 2 6 1
four touchdowns in the win New
Ba ltimore
ooo ooo ooo~ o 6 o ( 11 innings)
Kanss Cty 010 203 00 1 01 - 8 14 3
over Findlay. Montgomery
Hunt er {20 -13 ) and Mun son ;
Ca l1forni 000 020 0 14 00- 7 13 0
Pa l mer (20 -10) and Hendricks .
srored on runs of 26, 19, 24
F itzmorri s, M c c 1 u r e . {B) ,
McDan iel
(8),
Sa decki
[9),
and one yards. Findlay's lone I 1st Game)
Boston
000 000 12 3 ~ 6 l3 1 Briles (9) , Li tte ll ( 10) , Mingori
score came on a W.yard pass Milwaukee 110 000 00 1 ~ 3 10 I I 11 I. T hr oop ( 11 l and St i nson ,
Martinez ( 11 l; Lange , M . Scott
from Gene Fernandez to
Clevel and , Lee (8 ). Drago (8)
(6), K i rKwood flll and Ro
and Fisk ; Colborn , Austin (8),
Bruce Martsolf on the final Rod ·: w ez 181 and Porter , driguez , Allietta (1 0). WP play of the game.
Mo1.. · (9) . WP - Cieve l an d ( 11 - Li ttell {I 1) . LP - M Sco lt (4 -21.

Akron trips Marshall

. United Press International
it.
: The opening day of Ohio
" They tri ed to whoop it up in
:college football was marred the tunnel, but they were
·by the death of an Akron bawling openly," he said.
:player whO suffered an apAngeloff was a 6-4, 22().
;parent heart attack in a game poWlder majoring in accoun·against Marshall.
ting.
; Junior tight end Chris
Akron recovered four Mar·Angeloff w Berea ran off the shall fumbles to -win the game
~field after a punt and fell face
20-8.
·forward on the sidelines in
In other Ohio ga mes,
:the' second period of the Toledo quarterback Gene
:game.
Swick, last year's leading
; Officials administered passer and offensive player
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation in the nation , set a school and
:and heart massage before an career record with 26 pass
;1\Jll®)ance took Angeloff to completions as he rallied the
;Akron City Hospital, where Rockets to a 32-31 win over
•doctors worked on him for Western Carolina in, the
:about one hour before he died closing minute, Western
;without regaining ronscious- . Kentucky swamped Dayton
·ness.
'l:/-7, Indiana Central romped
Ken MacDonald, Akron over Findlay 54-8 and
sports information director, Jackson
State downed
said the players dido 't know Central State 3().18 in the
.the outcome, but they sensed

R oyals close
•
zn on Oakland
By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Wilen Whitey Herzog first
· addressed his players after
: taking over as the Kansas
: City Royals' manager on July
:. 24, his message was plain and
·simple.
· "I told them that if we go
: Into Oakland in September
:five games or less behind the
·A's, we have a good chance to
'take the whole thing," Herzog
: recalled Sunday after Kansas
,City outslugged California 8-7
·with the help of five home
:nms -three by Tony Solalta
·and two by John Mayberry,
who leads the majors-to
creep within five games of
Oakland in the American
League West.
Like many things, the task
Is easier said than done. After
all, the Royals were IO'h
games behind the A's when
Herzog took over and, as
Reggie Jackson often has
said, Oakland doesn't start to
take its baseball seriously
.(which usually means a
clubhouse brawl) until things
get tight.
Well, somebody had better
call in a referee and two fight
officials real soon because
Kansas City has won 30 oflts
45 games under Herzog, and
the two teams begin a crucial
thr""1!ame series tonight in
Oakland.
"We played Oakland in
August and we took two out of
three-two shutouts, lost the
third one 6-5," Herzog said.
"They looked' awful tired.
They definitely can be had."

Especially if Solail&lt;l and
Mayberry rontinue to crush
baseballs the way they did
011 day.
,•olalla, the 28-year-old
"~amoan
Slrongboy,"
!lasted three consecutive
homers before his single
scored AI Cowens with the
winning run in the 11th inning.
"It was awfully tempting to
go for another one," Sola ita
said of his chance to join
seven other players who have
hit four homers in a game.
"However, in that situation,
you have to give in a little to
the pitcher . I just wanted to
make contact."
Mayberry , who suffered
through a haunting slump
earlier this season, belted his
32nd and 33rd homers. A
leading candidate for the
Most Valuable Player,
Mayberry is hitting a robust
.296 with 94 RB!s.
Elsewhere in the AL,
Oakland swept Texas 4-1 and
7-3, New York blanked
Baltimore 2-0, Boston split
with Milwaukee, winning 6-3
before losing 7-3, Minnesota
drubbed Chicago 9-1 and
Cleveland swept Detroit 7-2
and 9-0,
In the National League,
Cincinnati clinched the West
by defeating San Francisco 84 while Los Angeles was
losing to Atlanta 5-4. Other
scores were: St. Louis 12 New
York
4,
Chicago
6
Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh 6
Montreal 0 and Houston 3 San
Diego 2.

Linescores

9 ).

L P- Co l born

(l0 -10 ).

HR -

let's .Talk Soon

DALE ·c. WARNER
992-2143
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

-

Inadvertent Adultery?

Dear Helen :
Can I be divorced for "adultery by mistake"'
We were on a trip. My husband said he'd rest in the h t 1
room while I visited friends 1n my home town. 1 returned~~
found the door unlocked, undressed in the dark _ and got ~
very wann, receptive welcome in bed.
. It was only afterwards that I realized something wasn't
nght. Women sense those thin2s. Sure enough, light from a
ne.on Sl8ll across the way revealed I was in the wrong room!
(I dgotten off on the third instead of fourth floor .) Without
wakmg my now-&lt;tleeping companion, I departed fast _ and
you can be sure that when I reached our room I turned on the
light and checked!
'
I'd like to ronfess, but my husband is a very jealous man .
No on~ saw me.as the halls were empty, and the "other man"
doesn. t recogill2e me - he got on the elevator with us next
morru_ng. I could ha~e gone through the floor! (Will never
know if he was expecting someone, or just "accepting." 1
Do I tell or forget? - GUILTY BY ERROR (But somehow
I don 't feel guilty).
P .S. Knowing my husband , I must admit he'd find it very
hard to believe me.

How
Secure. ~
. .

-li ..,

\ '

,1.#

~ --J!

is your

..,...-car tnsurance
cove rage?
Your pr esen t policy may
contain dan~e r o~ s gaps.
ove rlaps or loos e ends.
Let your Nat ionwide A~ent
help revoew you r coverage.
Galt

P. J, PAULEY

307 Spring Av e., Pome . oy

PH . 992 · 2~18

~);~{~~~~~!
"'I T•o~wldt lo!u!uJ I

lfll u• trot• Co'"ptnv

&gt;&lt; omt Olloce Colurnb u1 . Ohi o

Dear G ByE:
Who wouldn't?
According to several legal opinions, a relationship based
on error or fraud Is not generally divorceable-type adultery .
But provmg your "mistake" would not be easy .
Why not keep this incident in your own private memory
bank? You'll bave to admit it's got fanl&lt;lsies beat ten ways to
Sunday! - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
Sev~ral months ~go I wrote asking whether marriage between first rouams 1B legally and socially acceptable. You
answered the "socially" part, hut how about the legality? STILL CURIOUS
Dear S.C.:
In your state (California), marriage between first cousins
Is legal. I have this on authority of our County Clerk, whose
office I called.
In other states? Some stm prohibit first cousin marriages,
many no longer do. For specific information, call or write to
the County Clerk in the area where you plan to marry. - H.
Dear Helen :
. Today I met a man who is 38 years old and a paraplegic.
ThiS nlce-lookmg fellow has no family and very few frienda. He
IS literally alone in the world, and he lives in a nursing home,
where he can only converse with the staff. He has a good mind
but, of course, he is limited in answering letters.
I thought that maybe some of your concerned readers
could write to him. He needs encouragement from the outside.
He is: Neil Gulliksen, Pompton Lakes Nursing Home, Inc., 261
Terhune Dr., Wayne, New Jersey, 07470.
Thanks for helping. - J. V.

FOR KIDS-

FUNMEAL.tt11
Fun Tray .
Funburg.~r .
Re'4 Fmwch Fr1es.
Su rp-frse P rrze.

Req Soft Onnk &amp;
&lt;1

Dear Readers:
Your letters to Neil Guilllksen will be appreciated. In
checking with the Nursing Home, I learn that he has assistance
from Medicaid caseworkers ln arranging for appropriate
rehabilitation, but it will be a long baul. His ability to reply will
be limited by tbe amount of volunteer time that can be
arranged. But rest assured: each piece of mail received will
be a blessing !
Thank you for the kindnesses I know will be forthcoming .
- H.

S;Nee t Tr ea t

------~---­

West

Fresno St. 49 Fulle r ton St. 7
Montana St. 35 Portland St .
34
San Diego
Pa so 10

St.

31 Texas-EI

PT . PlEASANT
2325 Jack~on Ave .

Santa Clara 47 St . Mary ' s 18

~S03

Eastern Ave . .

SW Louisiana 22 L ong Beach

St. 27

COLUMBUS - "Yesterday
Meets Today" is the theme of
the Southeast Ohio Farm
Bureau Women's Rally Sept.
22 at the Country Dinner
Playhouse.
The rally will feature
Patricia (Pat) Leimbach, a
nationally-known Vermilion
writer and farm wife who will
present an address entitled
"A Thread of Blue Denim."
In addition, Lucille Shearn
of Warsaw in Coshocton
County, chairwoman of the
planning committee, said the
rally will feature a style show
of historical costumes,
recognition of " Spirit of '76"
advisory councils, group
singing and special music
provided by the Sheridan
High School boy's octet.
Mrs. Leimbach, author of
" A Thread of Blue Denim," is
a .popular figure at farmoriented flinctlons with her
wry wit and a view of farm
life through the eyes of a
farm wife .
She authors a column
entitled "The Country Wife"
in the Elyria Chronicle

new SOttrCe
for gas.
One of the houe.•·r new sources tor natural gas is the frozen north .
America badly needs supplies of the clean gas energy available there
to help solve the ene:gy crisis .

-we're financing drilli~g programs •n
Alaska and Canada. including
on the far islands of the high Arctic.
-we've gotten the rights to purchase
substantial· gas reserves already
discovered on Alaska's North Slope.
Once the Alaskan oil pipeline gets
started, a natural gas !ine can also be
built from the North Slope. We can't
produce the gas until oil production is
underway.
·

81.32-

VILLAGE PHARMACY
~IDDLEPORT.

OHIO

·

w111 be buih with proper regard for
the_area they cross. A !iludy "grl:'up in
whtch ,Columbia participates has
operated comple~ tesl sites and .

RUTLAND - Ann Colwell,
Mary Colwell and Joy Sauer
were confirmed Sunday at
the
Rutland
U,nited
Methodist Church by Jeff
Gerber, student pastor, and
the Rev. Rob~rt Bumgarner.
The confirmation was
followed by Holy Communion
with the pastor giving a
meditation on the true
meaning of cnnflnnation and
conununion. At 12:30 p.m. a
carry-in dinner was held to"
welcome Pastor Gerber for
another year.
Mrs: Ruth Erlewlne had
charge of the program with
the Sunday school teachers
and president of the Board of
Trustees speaking in behalf
of their groups. Gifts were
presented' to Pastor Gerber,

conducted lenglhy field studies to"

examine the impact of a gas Une or
the land and waterways and the

wildlif~ that" inhabit them .

These studie!; are providin8 the
data necessary to meet grow1ng
e~rgy needs with minimum
.

·1

d1slurbance of the environment.

-we're participating in costly
~nvironmcntal and engineering
;tudics on how to build gas lines from
the frozen north to consumers in
Columbia's service area.
There's much work yet to do, but gas from
the far north will be coming along:
·
Columbia Gas is working hard Imlay to
ncct yor e ncrgynceds tomorrow.

'

Guio .,....Io,..,·pun •••rill' ..• - I t wloely.

.

I
..

.

~..;,.-:_:r

•· · • ·.=%:"::.: •••. )':'~888:-

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
MEIGS County Salon 710
will meet, 7:30p .m., at home
of Edith Fox, 2607 Garfield
Ave., Point Pleasant.

TUESDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter
53, DAY, meeting 7:30p.m. at
chapter home, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.
SPECIAL
MEETING
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, 7 p.m. Work in
entered apprentice degree;
all Master Masons invited.
RACINE
FIREMEN
Auxiliary will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the fire station.
RACINE Masonic Lodge
461 F&amp;AM at 7:30p.m. Work
in second degree. All master
masons invited .
RITES ATIENDED
EASTERN Band Boosters,
Mrs. Nancy Reed, Mrs .
7:30p.m . in band room.
Betty Hobstetter, Mrs.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Theima Campbell and Mrs .
Club, 8 p.m. at home of Mrs.
Clara Lochary were in
Faye Pratt. Mrs. Pat Holter
Athens recently for the
to demonstrate bread dough
graveside rites for Milo ·
flowers . Mrs. Cora Beegle to
Clapp , husband of Helen
have program on growing
Rathburn Young Clapp,
chrysanthemums for the
formerly of Rutland. Funeral
home garden.
services ·were conducted in
AMERICAN
Legion
Columbus with the body
Auxiliary,
Lewis
Manley
Post
being brought to the West
Union St. Cemetery in Athens 263, Middleport, home of Mrs.
Frank Washington ,
for interment.
Gallipolis, 2 p .m .
MEIGS Athletic Boosters,
7:30 p.m. at Meigs High
Telegram which provided the
material for her book. She
has also written articles for
many national magazines.
Tickets for the rally are
available
from
Farm
Bureau's women's committee members and at the
county Farm Bureau office.
The
Country
Dinner
Playhouse is located one mile
west of SR 256 on Tussing
Road, just south of Interstate
70 in Franklin County.

Confimzation
services held

N~tural gas pipeliiles from the Arctic

Two fund raising projects
have been planned for this
month at the Senior Citizens
Center with the proceeds to
go toward fimrncing the
program offered through the
Meigs County Council on
Aging directed by Mrs .
Eleanor Thomas.
On Sept. 20 a spaghetti
dinner will be held at the
center with serving from 4 to
7 p.m. Tickets for the dinner
are currently on sale and
may be purchased from a
se ni or citiU!n or at the center .
Following the dinner a square
dance will be held with music
from 8 to 11 p .m . by the
Stringdusters .
An auction will be held
Sept. 27, and the senior
citizens
are
c urren lly
gathering items for the
auction. While it is preferred
that articles not be brought to
the center before Sept. 20, it is
asked that those with items to
contribute telephone the
center so that some appraisal
can be made as to what will
be available . Mrs . Thomas
advises that only appliances
in working condition will be
accepted .
Donations toward suppor-t
of the Senior Citizen
programs continued to come
in during August with $282
being received from individuals and organization. It
is reported that at this time 62
senior citizens have pledged
$1 a month . Approximately
$23,000 must be raised this
year locally in order for the
center to qualify for federal
funds .
Organizations contributing
were the Emily Missionary
Circle of the Syracuse
Presbyterian Church, the
Busy Bee Class of the Middleport First Baptist Church
and the Harrisonville Senior
Citizens Club.

MEIGS High Girls Athletic
Assn. meeting, 7 p.m . at high
school.

Women 's rally planned

Columbia has gone to the Arctic to.
get·thisgas:

Pointer~ ·

H\' POLL)' CRAMEK

said . " I still want to teach on
the college level, but this Is
the start of everything. It
could open so manv rloors."

Hot·

!WR SPRAY
Regular or Extra Hold 13 oz.
Mfg. Usl $2.-49 !tach

It may he time to
have your present&gt;
policy upd~ted. .

talks to the Kennedy boys on
ATLANTIC CITY (UP! ) For years Tawny Elaine the phone but I wouldn't call
Godin had followed the . them personal friends. "
As for livin g together
televised pageant with her
before
marriage, Miss Godin
own imaginary wa lk down an
imaginary runway . This time . said " I dont know if I would
the walk and the runway do it or not. If people feel it's
were fo r real - and she was necessary and need to know
ea c h othe r and save a
Miss America !976.
Saturday night at Con· possible di vorce then let's do
vention Ha ll wa s the it.
"This shouldn't be taken
fulfillment of a dream the 18year-&lt;Jld brunette · from lightly, and I think it is."
Miss Godin, who measures
Sarasota, N.Y., had since
36-24-36,
is a sophomore at
childhood .
" Ever since she was rive Skidmore University. She ha s
years old she used to watch a perfect 4.0 average in
the Miss America Pageant on linguistics and impressed t he
television and would keep a judges Saturday during the
little list of who she thought wlent cumpetition with an
would win ," said her mother, original piano cumposition,
" Images In Pastels. "
Conni, 42.
Miss Godin, who won a
" And then she would !&lt;Ike
$1
5,000
scholarship in t he
anJplaginary wa lk down the
pageant , said she plans to
nmway ."
study
linguistics in France in
" I 've had one hour's
sleep," Miss Godin told a her junior year.
" I think my goals will be
breakfast news conference
the
same after this year,'' she
Sunday as she munched a
Danish and sipped orange
juice. "I sat up all night just
looking at the crown."
Miss Godin, who traces her
ancestors in America to 1661,
will wear the crown during
the nation 's bi ce ntennial
year.
The 5-foot-10 college coed,
the tallest Miss America in
the 54-year history of the
event, was the first Miss New
York to win the crown. Miss
America 1945, Bess Myerson,
entered
the
pageant
representing New York City.
The four runnersup were:
I. Miss North Carolina, Susan
Lawrence, 21, who will sefve
as Miss America if Miss
Godin is unable to; 2. Miss
California , Janet Carr, 21; 3.
Miss Ohio, Susan Banks, 21;
4. Miss Arizona, Stacey
Petersen, 24.
Miss Godin said she has six
or seven boyfriends and any
one of them could be "Mr .
America .''
Her mother said the new
ADULT MEAL
queen recently went to a
l B oq She t ·
party with Chris Lawford,
Reg r renc h Fr1es
·
T urnovcr 8.
son of actor Peter Lawford
L;;~rCJP Sn it Ormk
and
Patricia
Kennedy
Lawford, and added "She

Polly's

HRs -Mayberr y 2 02nd , 33rd ).
So laila 3 { 14th , 15th, 16th ) .

~DORN

Play it aare an.t.....,

Dream became reality

-

----.- -

Danwged ]ott
is returnable
POLLY'S PROBLEM
hobby shop (it comes in
DEAR POLLY - I have a various thicknesses 1. It can
200-foot-long roll of aluminum be cut to any desired size and
foil that got wet so the foil is shape. It is almost unstuck together. I cannot pull breakable and the plate will
the sheet toward the cutting last practically forever . - M.
edge on the box and I cannot R.
dig into the roll enough to get
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
the foil to tear evenly across. Peeve is with those drivers
Any ideas ? - CLAIRE.
who give little thought to
DEAR CLAIRE - The . pedestriahs, such as when
most widely known and they are tW"ning a corner
perhaps tbe largest maker of with no one behind them and
aluminum foil knows of no they don't turn on their signal
remedy lor this and suggests lights to let the pedestrians
that you return the loll to the know what they are going to
store where you bought it. do. I have waited and waited
They should accept It as to cross a street only to have
damaged material, give you car after car turn the other
a new roll and then the store way and I could have crossed
will be reimbursed by the minutes before if the driv ers
maker. Tbls seems to be a had been thoughtful enough
common practice and I to signal. I have driven a car
suggested the foil might have for years and know how easy
gotten wet after It was pur- this is to do and I know many
chased. Regatdless , the others who are irked by this
gentleman said to take It same thing . - ANGELA .
back since the company
As
DEAR POLLY
would not want a customer to " natural " jewelry is so in
keep sucb a long roll that was vogue I have found an
not useable. - POLLY.
inexpensive way to be in
style. Most of us have.,a pretty
DEAR POLLY - I want to seashell or two that we have
tell Charlotte how ! .solved the brought home from a trip.
square cake plate problem . Save shells with holes in the
Buy a plastic glass at a local top or make a small hole in
one with a needle. Buy a
cheap necklace at the dime
Those born on this date are store, remove the trinket
hanging on it and string a
under the sign of Virgo.
Ohio Republican Sen . pretty seashell on the chain .
Robert A. Taft was born Sept . Your own creation will be a
8, 1892. This is American beautiful "in" necklace .
Also, use denl&lt;ll floss and
comedian Sid Caesar's 5Jrd
telephone
wire to make an
birthday.
ingenious wall decoration
On this day in history :
In 1565, the first pennanent that will chime in the wind .
settlement of what is now tbe String a number of seashells
Continental United States from strands of the denl&lt;ll
was founded at the present floss and hang them from the
location of St. Augustine, Fla . wire that you have arranged
In 1900, more than 6,000 in spirals. Space the shells so
persons were killed when a they· will hit together when
hurricane and tidal wave touched by a breeze . Be
careful to use strong shells
struck Galveston, Tex.
that will not break easily . I
In 1974, President Gerald find both of these are terrific
gift ideas. - S. S.
Ford
granted
former
President Richard Nixon lull
pardon for all offenses he
may have committed during
his years in office.

_Meigs women attend reception
Seven
Meigs
Co un ty
wom en were in Milford .
Saturday ni ght for the
reception honoring Mrs . J ack
Ba l zhiz e r, newly insta lled
president of the Departmen t
of Ohio, Ameri can Legion
Auxiliary.
The reception, held by !he
Victor Stiner Post and Uni t
450 of Milford, was attended
by 350 wome n fr om all over
Ohio includi n~ Mrs. Arnold
Richards, Middlepor t, new
Eighth Di strict pr esi dent ;
Mrs . Ben Neutzling, Mrs .
Grace Pratt, Mr s. Lul a
Hampton , Mrs. Mary Marlin,
Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, Mrs . Pearl
Knapp an.d Mrs. Rhod a
Hackett .
The stea k dinner which was
served in a large Lent in the
recre ation area at lhe post
home was preceded by a
coc ktail hour . Mrs. J ohn
Hartman . president of th e
hos t unit, gave the welcome
with Mrs . La wrence Cooper.
a past District 4 president,
giving the invocation . Donald
Chandler, post commander,
brought greetings as did the
mayor of Milford.
Stuart Luginbuhl , pas t
department commander, was
met.ster of ceremoni es, an d
the Hon . William Harsha,
Distric t 6 Congressman , was
speaker for the reception .
Department of Ohio officers recognized were Mrs .
Henry F . Patro, firs t vice
president, Toledo; Mrs. Billie
E. Peebles, Bradford , second
vice president; and Miss Ann
Eschelman, secreta ry,
Zanesville .
Pa st
dep art m ent
presidents introduced were
Mrs .
Les te r
Merritt ,

Co lumbus; Mrs . Robe rt
Riley, Mt. Sterling ; Mrs.
Arthur Hraback, Maynard ;
Mrs . O.mald Miller, Alliance;
Mrs. Mary Miller , Portsmouth ; Mrs . Mary McElroy,
West Jefferson; Mrs. Ed
Ullum, Lebanon; Mrs. G. G.
McCkllister, Dayton ; Mrs .
George Sallott , Parma; and
Mrs .
Mariam
Junge,
Columbus.
Also presented were Mrs .
Ri c hards , E ighth District
president ;
Mr s . Devon
Tipple, Lan caster, Mrs. Ben
Neutz lin g, P omeroy, past
Eighth Dis trict presidents;
Mrs . Stacey Day, Portsmouth, Seventh Dist rict
president past; an d Mrs . Leo
Hun!, West Milton , Mrs. C. W.

Hea cock, Columbus, and
Mrs. John Frustover, Usbon,
all active in department
programs.
Following the dinner , a
dance was held with Jack
Yolk and his Orchestra
providlng the music.

WIDE SELECTION

OF

FALL
SHOES
heritage house
Your Thorn MeAn Store

Middleport, Ohio

~

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-BUCKET::.-510.12·15-21 PIECES
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A thought for the day:
German philosopher Arthur
Schopenhauer said, "Hatred
comes from the heart. .. .
contempt from the head ...
and neither is quite within our

control."
In 1934, the U.S. llner
"Morro castle" burned off
Asbury Park, N.J., taking 137
lives.

School. All junior and senior
high parents and other interesLed persons urged to
attend .
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club, noon,
Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, stste
convocation, 7:30 p.m.,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
All R.A.M . urged to attend.
Bosworth Council 46, Royal
and Select Masters, will hold
state assembly following the
chap~r meeting at B: 30 p .m .
LETART FALLS United
Methodist Women, 7:30p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Ernest
Shuler.
WHITE Rose Lodge, I :30
p.m., American Legion Hall,
Middleport. Report of recent
international convention of
the Ladies Auxiliary, U.T.U.
to be given.
THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR Beta Bel&lt;!
Sigma Phi, 7:45p.m. at home
of Margaret Follrod.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. at the hall .
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Society, Middleport Village
Hall, 7:30 p.m.
PAST Officers Club, 7:30
p.m., Racine O.E.S., home of
Mrs . Bert Grimm.

QUALITY
and VALUE
Sales
Days

NOR GE com merci al
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Hand -Crafted
T ransmission1 - -LUL...________JP
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PsAvE ENERGY
DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Morris announce the birth of
a daQghter, Sandra Earlene,
Aug. 29. She weighed 7lbs., 3
ozs. Mr. and Mrs. Morris
have two sons, Billy, 6, and
Mike, 4. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Eblin, Pomeroy, and
the paternal grandparents
, are Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
Morris, Pomeroy.

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�7- The DaUv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Mon~ , 1 , Sept. a, 1975
6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleroort-Pomerov. 0 ., Mon&lt;lav . Sept. 8, 1975
NOTICE F=OR !iERV I C E
BY PUBLICATION

COUNTY, MERCER
PUBLIC NOTICE
The lotlowmg documents
were rece•ved or prepar e d by
The Oh to
Enviro n ment a l
Protection Agency du r .ng t h e
prev•ous
week
Anyon e
aggneved or adv e rse l y af
fee ted by tssuance or ren e wal

of any permil {sL llcense( s),
or varian c e l s i m ay r equ est an

adtudt c al•on

heartng

by

wnnen request pur s uant to

Oh to Rev 1sed Co d e Sec ti on
3745 07 wtlh•n th •rty (3 0 ) da ys
of the dt r ector s propo se d

llctlon to •ssu e or de n y suc h
do c um en t s That st a t ut e do es
no t p r ov•de for
h e a n ng
requests to T h e OEP A on
appliCil lt o n s
r e vo c at iOnS

mod •fi c altons

c ompl a nt s

ve rtf led co mpl a •nt s
cer
l tf lca t •ons , tea se s or de r s or
f1nal action s
W 1lhm 30 day s o f pu b l• c al o n
o f lh1 S not•ce any per son may
also
11 l Su bm 1t wrlll e n
co m m en t s Telatmg to ac t 1on s,
pr opo se d a c t•on s co m p la •nts
or 11enf •ed compal 1n ts
(2 )
Requ es l a publi c meet 1ng
r egardm g p ropos ed act•o n s
and or O l R €'Ques t nolice ot
further
a c t1on s
on
proc eed 1ngs
Requ ests f or he ar~ngs on
fi n al act 1on s t o 1ssue de n v
mo d 1f y
r e ~ok e
o r r en ew
permtts l 1cen s es o r ~ar•a nces
tha t are not p re c ed ed b y
p ropo se d a c t 10 n s a nd so
•denllf 1ed '" t h1 s not• ce sho uld
be sen t 10 The En~ • ronm e nlal
Board of R ev•ew , Sull e 505 J3
North H1gh Slr e el Co l umbu ~
Oh iO .t321 5
Al l other requ est s tor a d
IUd1cat•on hearmgs and oth er
commun1 cattons
c on c ernm g
publ•&lt;.
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mee11ng s
adtud •c at•on
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kmd and regulalion s sh o uld
be addres s ed to Th e L ega l
R e cords Sect iOn , Ohto EP A
P 0
Bo)ll 1049 Columb us
OhiO 43216 , ( 6 14 ) 466 60 37
Unless otherwt se stated •n
pa r t1cu lar not•ces , all oth er
comm un1c at •ons ,
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meetmg s should be addre sse d
e1the r to The New Sou r c e A•r .
or NP DE S Permil Records
Sect•on, w h •c hever •S ap
propr•ate 'at The Oh1o EP A
P 0 Box 1049, Columbus .
Ohio 432 16
A ppll catton tor a•r perm1t to
operate
Mercer Co F B I nc Roc k
fo rd Plant
Rockford
Rockford , Ohto
No ( s )
A ppi iCal•on
035.t000 164 NOO'l
to
Propo sed
c ha ng e
reg1strat1on only stat u s
AVCO N e w Idea
.t20 South F •r s t
Ca.ldwaler Oh• O
No I s l
App lt cat•on
0354000104 P037
Bl ue R1bbon Feed M 1l l , In c
R No 2 Celma , Oh •O
Cart h agena , Oh •o
No ( s I
App l• calton
0354000176 POOl
51 A nthony Feed Mill
R R No J
F l Reco~ery . Oh• o
Appl•cat 10 n
No (s)
035 A000178 POOl
Tama Elevator &amp; Supply
R R No J
Cel•na , 0h •o
N o { s )
A pp l 1 cat1on
035.t0 101 75 POOl
De n1al o f var1ance fr om
sewer connec tlon ban
Knox , Hugh L
Fra nklm Twp
From Gra nd Lake St Ma rys
Connect1on
ba n
Fa mily
dwellmg
K nox , Hugh L
Franklin Twp
From Grand Lake St Mary s
Connect10n ban Publ•c rest
rooms f or golf course

TO H erm an G 1ll il an G l ady s
Co zar t Cha l mer G •lldan and
t he un k now n h e .r s d e v 1sees
and n e~e t o f km of V'lcsl c y G
G •ll• la n ill I o t w h ose pla c es o t
r cs •de n ce i'lr e un kn ow n an d
c anno t
wdh
r e a s onab l e
d 11 1gcn ce be a sc ena .ned
You a r e he r e by not •fl ed I ha l
you
have
b ee n
n am e d
de t e nd an l s •n a lega l a c t•on
e nt i1 1ed Mildr ed Gill• l a n
Ad m m 1s t ralr 1x o t th e E s ta tf
ot
we s l e y
G
G •ll il nn
dec ea sed
P l &lt;untllt
vs
Lawre n ce G ll ltl an
e t &lt;"I I
Dcte•1 d a n ts Th1 !\ act 10n t1a s
been ass ,gne d Case N o 21 377
and •s pendmQ 111 the Cour t o f
Co n1 m on
Pl eao.;
Probil l £
OIV1S.10n
o t M e •QS C oun ty
Porne ray Oh• O 1 ~ !69
Th e ob tc c t o f •he co m plo n t
IS t or ,- 1thor ty to ~ e ll t h e rei'! I
es ta t e a t lhe d ece d ent t o p ay
•he d ebt s nnd c os t s o f tHJ
rnm •s ter •nq n &lt;; cs liltc w r1 c h
r ea l f' &lt;. ta• e 1S dc s cr b ed as
fo l lo w s
T w cn ly f o ur '?~ ) a c r c5 o ff
lh e ea o;• end a t t h e f o ll o w n9
re al estr~le
t o w 1t
f arty
a c re s a t la n d o u t o f t h e we s t
h alf Of L ot N O 1? 1] In SeLt iOil
'} T o wn shtp 1 a n d Ranqc 11 •n
the Oh 10 Co m p any s P ur ~ h nsc
tn
L e ta r t T o wn sh •P M c1 q s
Cou n ty Oh10 sa1d 40 acre lot
be 1ng '" lhe n or th p a rt of th r&gt;
w est 11a11 of th e 160 nc r e lo t
abo ve ment•on cd un d be 1nq
th e same prop e rl y c on veyed
by N an c y P •c k, en s c t al
to
Josep h M ar t •n P1c k en5 b y
dee d da t edMur c h14 1937 a nd
r e c ord ed •n Boo k 140 a t P &lt;~ gc
S91 o f 1111~ D ee d R ec o r ds o f
M C• QS Co un t y Ohm (')II CCOI
to u r a c r es o ff th e we s t SIC!€.'
lh er eo r c onv eyed b y Jose ph
M .:. rt1 n
P •c k c n &lt;;, 'o
E l va
P c ken s Va r 1a n a n d Ro b ert P
Var1a n by d eed d ated Mnr c h
25 1937 and re c o r de d 1n Boo k.
1&lt;1 2 a t Pnq e ) ] 7 ot th e De ed
Reco r d s
le a v• n g
tw e n ty
ac r es c o n 11 e y ed h e r eb y
D e ed Re f er e n ce
Vol u m e
16/ Pnge 4&lt;19 M CI QS Co unty
Dee d Reco rd s
Y ou a r e r eq u1 r ed 1o a n sw er
l h C co m p lamt w il h1n 28 day s
a lt er th e l a s t publ cali o n o t
lh 1S not •ce , w h 1Ch will b e
pu b l• sh ed o n ce eac h wee k fo r
SIX SUCC('SS IV C w ee k s Th e l aS t
publi c a t i On will b e made on
Se ptemb e r 29 , 1975 a nd I he 26
d a y s t o r an swe r w il l co m
m e n ce o n th a t date
I n c a se of yo ur fa1 tur e 10
ans w er or o t he rw 1se resp o nd
a s r equ•re d by th e Oh• O Ru les
of C •v•l Pro cedur e JUdgm en t
by d e fault w il l be r e nd ere d
aga 1n s t you t o r t h e r et •e f
d em and ed 1n th e c om pl amt

For Fast Results Use The Seatinel Classifieds

D W ebs ter
J udg e and E x ofi •C IO
C l erk of lh e Common
Pl eas Co uri
Pro bate DIVI SIO n
M c 1g S County Ohto

M &lt;~n n mg

(8l 15 ( 9 ) 1 R 15 2 '1 29 6t c
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT, MEIG S
COUNTY , OHIO
A c count s and vou cher s of
the
fo ll ow 1ng
named
f • duCiar~es ha~e bee n filed •n
the Probate Court
Me1gs
County
OhiO . f or approva l
and se!lleme n t
CASE NO
11.620 Thtrly
N1nth Acco unt of Myrtle E
Car man , Guard •an o f Clyde
W
Carman an lncompeten l
Person
CA SE NO 18 ,899 F 1rst and
F1nal A cc o u nt of Althea
St rong a s Tr us tee un d er the
Trust Cr eat ed under I te m 6 of
Will o f Orrll l a Ho l l •day ,
Decesaed
CASE NO
20 121
S1xth
Annua l A cc ount of Fran k W
Por t er , J r, Tr ustee u nde r
Item V of the Last Will and
Testament of Jane Lou•se
Sm 1th, Deceased
CASE
NO
20,639
Th•rd
Curre n t Account of No rman F
Hoov er, G u ard1a n of the
Estate of Esmeralda Barbara
W il tS hire , In com p et ent
CASE NO 20,715 F1rst and
Fmal Account o f Mtldred
Bailey , Guard •an of the
Guardlansh•p Estate of James
Robert Betz . a m mor
CA S E NO
2097 3 Second
a nd F=•nal Account of Mild r ed
lh le
Guard•an of Lou1 s e
Bryan a n In competen t
CA S E NO 21 ,372 F1rst and
F• n al
Ac c oun t
of
Ma r y
Caro l yn W 1ley E&gt;teculr t&gt;t of
t he Estat e of Eleanor L
M rll er, Deceased

(9 } B. lie

Oterry Ridge
By Jane Reeves
A surprise birthday party
was held Saturday night,
August 30, for Julia Schultz.
Totally unsuspecting Julm
had prepared for bed when
classmates arrived at her
home bearing gifts and brrthday wishes . A beaullful
decorated cake and 1ce
cream was served by mother,
Faye, and s1ster, Alberta.
Guests mcluded Cathy
Maxey, Edna Boggs, Diana
Pullins , Carol Spurlock ,
Cheryl Benedum , Steve
Milhone and Jeff Holter
" Happy 17, Jul1a."
Bon Voyage to John and
Lonnie Hansen. Hurry back.
Weekend guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Doralllill were Mr . and
Mrs. Dorset DavlS of Akron ,
Kenneth Myers of Gillette,
Wyoming, and Joyce Myers
of South Webster, Oh10.
Guests of Pud and Jane
Reeves for the Labor Day
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Mike McKnight, Shane and
Amy of Dover, Ohio, and Mrs.
Lora Chandler of Columbus.

CASE NO 21 ,334 Ftrsl and

F1 nal Account o f Edtson
Hobstetter
Executor of the
Estate of Ge r tr ud e Me Br1de
Deceased
CASE NO 21.448 F1rs t and
Fma t Account of Margery
Ferlet , E&gt;tecutr•x of the
Es tat e
of
Ade l 1n e
P
Brown lng , Deceased
Unl ess ex c ept1ons are filed
t hereto , satd acco un t s wil l be
fo r hear~ng before sa1d Court
on t he 7th day of Oc tober. 1975 ,
at Wh &gt;Ch t;me sa;d accouniS
Will be cons•dered and con
tmued fro m day t o day unlit
fmally dt sposed of
Any person •nterested may
Ide wntten exceptiOns to sa 1d
accounts o r Ia matte r s pe r
lam mg to the execut 1on of the
rrust, not l ess than f1ve day s
:) r1or to the date se t fo r
-. ear mg
MANNING D WEBSTER
JU D GE
COMMO N PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
( 9 ) 8 , lt c

~1!!J~lb~® 1kJ kAaw&amp;IJ .-1 ,..b'f HENRI AHNULO .onol BOB LEE

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

'

one letter to each square, to
form four ordanary words.

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5UR'PF:"I51N6 HOW
THEY' RE I&lt;AJ5EDI
Now arrange the cirded letters
to form t h e surpri se answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.

Cf~~~*~~~~~,.~~~~-~IKXXIIXXIJ

(An•wer• tomorrow)

I

~ARREL SIZZLE
,
An•wer: Khlle therC' i~r,lhere "lwp(• for th e

'Jumblrt: EXILE

~1bturd•v'•

'

•

,.: ·

2 SIGNS

LAND
out
WEST.

OF
QUALITY Motor Co.
' 972 COMJ:T 2 Ok
6 cyl s td tran 5, rad• o. l •k e n ew w w t1r es. blu e fln1 sh ,
n1 c e ca r w 1th good econo m y

mostcfNEW.MBX1W
only

qood t1r es. au tom"'t tc,

SMITH NELSON
MOJORS, INC.

$:16MD .UQ.N.

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Wanted

Auto Sales

or Sale

Mobile Homes for Sale
12 &gt;t 70 MA N HA T TA N 2
bed r m
2 full baths, ut11ily
buddmg , wash e r and dryer
cen tr al a 1r , deluxe fur
n1ture Call {J O.t l 882 3340 ,
af t er 5 pm
9 3 6tc

Yard Sale

For Sale

HUNT IN G L1c e n se
N1ghl
c rawler s
mea t worm s
TACKLE
gun s, a mmo
bow s
arrow s, c amp 1n g
equtp
CBs and accesso ry
l n d•an J oe s JOB Pa ge St , 1
s tr ee ts p a s t M1 d d l epor t
Sw1mmm g Po o l

r-

MOBILE hom e spac e , I acre
•n country Wr1te Box 613 ,
Pomeroy Oh 10 or call ( 6 1Bl
524 5825
8 29 18tc

SOMEONE needed to take
ove r paym e n ts on a mob 1le
home Phone 992 31 52
9 7 Jt c

PORCH
and
Yard
Sale
star l mg Monday a t 9 a m
thr u Thursday Lots o f good
1969 PMC 12&gt;t52 mobile h ome
Ch i ldren ' s
and
adult
c lothmg some new D •shes PRIVATE m ee tmg r oom t o r
mclud1ng two porches Call
an y ory an •za t •on pho n e 99 "2
and
other
tl em s
too
(614) 995 350&lt;1 If no answer,
39 7 'i
numerous to m en t•on . at !h e
992 5596
) I I tfc
9 4 6tc
J•m R1tf1e Res•dence, IUS!
abo~e Letar t Fa!ls
9 7 .ttc 2 BEDRM trailer , $27 pe r 1974 CASTLE
12 X 65 , 2
_
bedrm 2 full baths, total
week , All utiltl •es pa •d
elec furn•ture , washer and
YARD Basement and Porch
P h on e 992 332.t
Sale s tar11ng A u gust 27
dryer PhOne 9.t9 3655
9 7 He
9 4 6tc
lhrough Sept l7 E~eryday
e &gt;tcept Sunday
A nt 1ques .
2
B E DR O OM
fu r nts h ed
diShes , furn1ture
bedrm
mo b il e ho m e No p ets Cal l
se ts and m 1sc , ad u lts '
99 / 7479
c h t ldren s
and
mfant
8 n lie
c lot hmg Shoes some new
new
bed
sheets
and
blankets Blue showe r s tall 2 BEDROOM tra il er e&gt;ttra 19 77 A RR O W Cam pe r pho ne
99 ') 54 68
n 1Ce Phon e 992 3324
w •th seat f tberglass wh •te
8 15 ?61p
8 26 tfc
lavatory g1rl s b•ke, ot he r
ilems t oo numerous to
mentiOn Follow s 1gns f rom
C OUNTRY
Mobile
Home IN DASH 23 Chan n el C1 t 1zen's
Langsv ille
'14 mile fr om
Band transcetver, am fm
Park
Rt
])
t
en
miles
north
Turner's Sto re on Co Rd 10
mpx rad •o B tra c k stereo
of
Pom
e
roy
L
a
rg
e
lot
s
wdh
8 27 H e
Call 992 3965
conc r e t e pa l lOS",- Sidewalks
9 4 lfc
runn e r s and off st r eet
4 - FAMI LY- Ga~Q;-$--;Ie,
pa
r
k•n
g
Phon
e
992
7479
Thur sday and F r 1 da y, sept
12 3 1 I tt 6 DRAWER Dresser Wllh
11 and 12 9 am till 4 p m
mrrror , n ew 45 ca l 1bre
20 4 Lasley St, Pomeroy,
mu zzle loader , e1ect r1c logs
Oh •o Across from old Sugar NEW
V IL LAGE
Manor
W1fh h eater
Call 992 729 1
Ru n Schoo l
Dep r essiO n
Apartments tn M1cfdleport. 1
after 4 p m
g la s s and a f ew co l lector's
bedroom apts from Sl0 4 plus
9 4 t fc
11e m s V ery n 1ce c lothmg
elf'&gt;.. Cal l 992 3273 or see
M.
Keatley, A pt
101.
q 8 J t c.
5 FT BRUS H h og , 3 pi h•lch ,
R 1~ ers1de Apartme nt s
$225 Phone (614ll 985 359.t
8 28 · 26 tp
9 3 61p
TWO F urnis h ed ap t s
Kay
10 10 JO HN Deere dozer, n ew
Cec il B7 South Se co n d A~e ,
eng•ne , pa1nl,
stee r1ng
Middleport, Oh 10
Phone
c l u t ches, ca nopy , w1nch.
992 5261
PLAYER P•a no need not be tn
hydr au l iC blade, $4,500
8 21 tfc
work1ng co nd i tion , also
Phone (6 14) 985 359&lt;1
P•ano rolls Phon e 742 5625
9 ] 61p
9 7 6tc "'FURNISHED
a partm ~ n(
GU N S and Ammo Our fall
adults only 1n Middleport
t ul'"nilur e, •ce boxes.
stock
1S
no w
here
Phon e 992 J8H
brass beds
or complete
Complete l1n e of R e m
J 25 tfc
househo l ds
Wr 1t e M
o-,,
1ngto n,
W •n ches t er,
=-- .,..,.-_
Miller
Rt
4 Po m eroy
llh1ca Savage Slug barrels
Oh 10 Call 992 7760
, 4 ROOM S and bath apt m
m s to ck for most b rand shot
Rutland area
Phone 992
10 7 74
guns, but 1n short sup . ly
5658
Get them wh 1le they ld st
7 27 tfc
Money s hort , lay a way
your fall hunting n eeds N ew
Fal l sto r e hours start.ng
L ET 'S BE HON EST• I f you "2 BEDRM mobile ho me , a1r
Sept 5, 10 a m to 9 p m ,
condi t •o n ed nea r Pomeroy
w e ren I look mg for a new
Monda y Sa t urday
VIllage
Phone 992 5623
c areer - You wouldn't be
Gun Shop p e, 266 Mill St ,
9 .t 3tc
read 1n g t h ts ad
If we
Phone 992 5177
f1nanc m g
weren'llook1ng for someone - - - - - - - - - - - - - - availat:te
10 do a 10b thrs ad wou ld n t TRAILER space fo r r en t •n
9·3 261&lt;.
be here
You ca n earn
Middleport Phone 992 5.t34
$10,000 to $15,000 your f1rs t
8 29 26t c
1972 FORD sem • t ra c tor , .t72
yea r 1n sa l es We w111 send - - - - - - - - - - - -- cub1C 1nch gas eng1ne Less
you to sc hoo l for 2 weeks
LA S ALLE
H OTE L
M ID
than 5,000 m11es
Phone
expen ses pa1d, tra •n you m
D L EPORT , O HI O ROOMS
( 30.t ) 273 3079 Mrs G ordon
the field se lling and ser
$5 UP
SPE CIAL RATES
Staates , Sandyv ill e, W Va
v• c m g es labt•shed accoun ts
BY WEEK . OR MONTH
9 3 6tc
up to SBOO a mont h to s tar t
TV A I R CONDI TIONIN G
guaranteed
Must be 21
B 26 26 tc
years or ove r , goat or te nt e d .
CA NNI NG tomatoes , green
bomdab l e, amb 1t 1ous , and - - - - - - - - - - - and red peppers
C lela nd
sports
m1 nded
F=r1nge 4 ROOMS an d ba t h un
Farms , Gera ld •ne Clela nd ,
furn1 sh ed house , 1650 L •n
benefits offe r ed are ma1or
R ac •ne Phone 949 4121
coin Hts Phone 992 3B74
c o m pr e hens i ve med1ca1.
B 19 tfc
9 5 tic
pens ton , and savmgs plans
Call for ~ppo1n tm ent , Mr
S te~e Gur a
16141 592 2269
2 BEDR M mob1le home , a 1r
Monday
Tuesday . and
cond1 t10n•ng , RaCine area
Wednesday from 7 p m ti ll
BUSINESS FOR SALE
Phone 992 5858
10 p m
9 3 tf c
9 B 2t c
O(l e (1) Tavern completely
3 AND 4 RO O M furnished and
eCfulpped wlth D 1 and D 2
unfurn 1sh ed
apartments
l rcense located at 118 West
Phone 992 5434
Mam Street, Pomeroy ,
PORCH SA LE . Sept 10 and 11
.t 12 tf c
,Qh 10: also the real estate
at the Bailey res1dence, .t05
consistmg of the business
Grant Sl , Middleport, from
butldmg occup 1ed by th e
9tilt 5 pm
4 RM FU RN IS HED apt for
ta~ern
ment1oned above
9 8 2tc
r ent Phone 992 3658
9 3-tfc
Call 992·2116 or see Gu1d0
LAURELAND A P ART MENT ,
at the above 1ocat1on be6t h and Georg e Sts, New
tween the hours of 10 a m .
The Almanac
Haven,
W
Va
IM
and 5 p. m .

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

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

FRUIT

. af/IHI-""STILLLIFE""

,

NORTH

__:_::_:::.::::::::=~':::"'::8:::'13"::::2_'_'P--,

• 76 2

Insulation Services
Blown tnfo Wall&amp; &amp; AHtcl
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOD~S
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING.SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

All s 1zes on hand, pnces
start at $324 69
- 1 Wood Burnmg Stove

CLIP THIS AD and brtng tf
POMEROY LANDMARK

Wanted To Buy

p-r;;o-

---=- -----;.-- :--::--

Help Wanted

to follow.
The moon ls approaching
lis first quarter.
The morning stars are
Venus, Mars Jupiter and
Saturn.
The evening star is Mer' cury.

'

I

MEDIATE

OCCUPANCY

Se lect your 2 bedrm to wn
house , Beauttful new apt
comp l ex. appltances fur
n1shed, com pl et ely ca r
peled, Rent S128 up In
clud1ng
utrl1tres
Call
res •dent manager, Sam or
Becky Longanacre, 1 304
882 2567 If no answer. call 1

DID 'iOV JV$T bl\le NE A
011~1"'{

'/OJ ~
BCAA WITH THAI'WOK,'
Aff&lt;).JD

l.QOK I'SOf-1-ltJ- LAW z

/INJTHE;~

ll.oARI&lt;&gt;l-E.

(3041 882 2788

9 3 12tc

4 ROOM furn 1ShE'd apartment
w1th wall to wall carpet
Phone 992 5908
1
9 3 tfc

SOUTH

'iO\I ~ N-so 801&lt;~
WITH fi.. RO\TE;~ $~
OF HUMOR

ttoKQJ 75
• 94

t KQB

"'1054
Both vulnerable

- -4- 10 1 mo
West

SE W I N G
MA C H IN E
R e pl11rs , serv1 c e . a ll makes
" 9"2 2284 Th e F _abr1c:., ShOP
Pomeroy Aufhol"hed Smger
Sale s and Serv•ce
We
sharpen SCI SSOr S
3 29 lf c

DT

--

.

D TREE Tnmmmg , "10

'1-relL I ER I
NO - BU"Tl"D
COME AtOtlG,

FU~THERMORE, KE

~-J.&lt; C:Y

M I X CONcRE T E
de l t.Yered r1ght to your
pro tect Fas t and easy Free
es f•mates
Phone 992 J2a.t ,
Goe gte m Ready M•x Co ,
M•ddleporL Oh10

"lOOK ~onilHQ WITH HIM
BUT HIS BRA\11$ AND HIS
AMBlllOO- HE LEFT

MR . AM.

W\THOUl H0

BEHIND HIM A FORTUNE-

&lt;USS. 1F I

WAS VOU -

6 30 " '

Real Estate For Sale

~ E PTIC

HOUSE , J bedrooms
new
Sears ' ca bt nets
1ndoor
outdoor carpe t 1ng, c ha •n
link f ence ut il• tv butldmg 2
lots Washer , dryer, ref and
stove $12 500
Phone 992
7430
a 31 Mp

H 0 US E for sa I e .n Rut I and.
S6 500 PhOne 992 5B5B
J 1 tf c

NEAR
P om eroy , n ew
3
bedroom , 1'12 ba t hs , ca r port ,
mud rm , util• l y, sun deck ,
large l 1v mg room , k1tchen
dm1ng
area ,
paneled ,
refr•ge_rator an d Tappan
range m c lud ed
A l so, w111
he l p f!_!lance Phone 992 7790
afte .. 6 p m
H 8tc

:a

TANKS cleaned
Modern San1tatton 992 3954
o r 992 7349
9 1B tt c

ELWOOD BOWERSREPAIR

- Sweepers, toasters, lf"On~,
all s mal l app lia nces Lawn
mower nex t to State Hrgh
way Garage on Route 7•'
Phn,.,.., 985 3825
4 16 lie

EXCAVA TI NG ,
backhoe ,
dozer and dttche r
Gas ,
electr1c and wa t er l 1ne
bur.al. basements. footers ,
sept1c systems and brush
ciPan mg W1 ll haul fill d1rt ,
top so1 l , sand and gravel,
l 1m esto n e for dr 1veways and
roads
Phone Charles R
Hatfield , Backhoe Serv 1ce,
Rt 1 Rutland OhiO, 742
609'1
71 190t c.

2 "'

THIS AlN'T TH' WAY
THAT'S BECAUSE
MY STEW IS S'POSED MOUY ADDED HER
TO "TASTE! "THIS'S
SPECIAL TOUCH
AWFUL!
,.......~...--.., TO IT, JAKE!

ALL I

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Sports

I'M "TELLIN ' YOU,

ORVILLE, WE GOTTA
F\GGER A WAY
"T'KEEP HER OUTA
TH' Kl"TCHEN!

I Old style
pulpit
5 Blockade
10 French

official

Real Estate for Sale

LIM A BEANS and Gr 1mes
Go lden app l es Phone 949
2803 or 949 572 1
9 7 3tc

5823

9 7 Jtc
1933 JO HN D ee r e Model A
tractor, c omp l etely re bud!
Phon e 742 5625
9 7 6tc
4 X a UTILITY trader, S75
Id ea l for farm use Phone
992 52.t7
9 7 3tc
Mar1ne Sa le s
16 F T G LA ST RON boat, 45
h p motor, tra •f er
Phone
992 3296
9 7 Jtc

LET us se rv•c e you r Vo lk s
wagen
reasonable r ates
Middleport Pennzo.t No rth
Second Street. M•ddl e port
Phone 99'1 99 73
6 19 26t c

HAY for sa l e Phone B43 2524

9 5 3tp
1971 C HOPPE R motorcycle ,
650 Tr 1umph T1 ger Phone
992 3702
9 5 6tc

riuerl~.'Ri;efo,.
tletlelopment.

4¢PER.ACRE
CDiit.wt' .N. Bona,pvte

-----·

Rut\a;nd on
, 8 rooms. bath, porch,

POMEROY - 11h acres,
c lose m, 2 BR, bath. utility

garage

and

lot

for

ga rden $12,000

POMEROY - 2 77 acres,
lovely home . 3 BR, bath,

bedrooms. 1112 baths, nice
k it c hen , hot w ater heat .
basement
with
garage

n1ce
kttchen,
fu l l
basement. patio, carport ,
garage. 2 tra11er h ookup s

$28.000
ROUTE 681 -

135 acres,

c 1ty water avatlable, close
to State Park , mmerals

JUST $123 00 per acre
RUTLAND Recently
renovated, 2 BR . bath,
l!v1ng has f1repla:ce,
ches, ga ra ge . $9,500

por

TUPPERS
PLAINS
RlGHT ON RT. 7 - 211&gt;
ac res, home ha s 2 BR,
bath, d1n1ng
R , part
basement, lot s o f butl d1ng
s ttes $10 ,500

SCIPIOTWP. - 138 rolltng
acre5. lots of t1mber, old
house, good well , mmerals
$175 00 per acre

WHY
WA STE
TIME
WHEN YOU SELL - LET
US HELP YOU.

He took th'
one 1n th"car
ne)(t,too, Rufus!

speaker~

- Rorum
21 Frank

R , patto, garage, all '"
excellent condition $8,300

HOUSE , 3 bedrooms, new
Sea r s cabtnets , Indoo r
out doo r carpeftng, chatn
lmk fence . ut ti •IY build mg . 2
lots Washer , dryer, ref and
stove $12 •.500
Phone 992
7430
9 7 6tc

Oood &amp;...... I,...J,

Joel's
pulled
out an'
left!

MAIN
POtVIE ROY, 0

Doubt it.
M1ss Melba!
He took th'

detight
16 Haggard
Yes"m 1 Let·s mose4 17 novel
Name
b'fore thel.l see 1t"s
meaning
watchful
18 Wildcat
,..,-,r 20 Composer,

and 2nd butldtng
serv1ce stat 1on
1

used a s
acre for

$8,000
HARRISONVILLE -

""" .... -.......

2 FAMlLY

HOME -

11

apt $12,500
26 ACRES -

name
23 Hostile
feeling
24 Woo
%5 South
African
poUceman

27 Wretchedness
29 Potato,
country
style
30 Golf
score
34 American
ostrich
38 Where

thou?
37 Headwear

&lt;;alicg::_T.,_T:--r.:--

AIR GAS FURNA CE CALL

- -- --

AP '

9 7-Jtc

--------

4

STILL O\PAI3LE OF

I'IA NOT

ATTR'\CTING- ANY
MAN :?HE WAN75 I

GRAfE·

f ULl

how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

work

,,,..u
...,u..........
,......_
5 s.............

walt carpet, central air
Phone 992 -7030
8 31 6tc

OZG

UDA

UDF

AHAK

UDXK

OEG

V H A G N A E K

D

UNIGDXK ,

CHHS

~.. :~ :':~::o .~~ 1::"."'~;.~:.~~.···.:~~.:. t"'
""""'
~ .... r. '"............ _::~ ...."'"""""'
::J;:~~~~.!:~;: ::...i::J~.:·:·;.~.... ·-· .•.

I'f

I HATE ABOUT
6011\1' TO DOC
PRITCHART FER

Tueld•r. Sept. 9, 1875

\' t

I ...

You r e very c reattve at home
today Little tasks that are
usually a bore wtll prove to be
pleasant d •vers•ons
Much attentton w111 be centered
on you today Your company
w111 be sought by others You
m ay even get a surprtse lnvlta t •on

N A

Someth•ng •s st1rnng to make
bo th you and your tam1ly feel
more secure It could be that
ratse you ve been hoptng for

M N S S VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 221

N G

-VNVKZH
~es~eroay s t;ryptoquote: THE MINORITY IS SOMETIMES
~- . RIGHT, THE MAJORITY ALWAYS WRONG. - GEORGE
o BERNARD SHAW
"TH'ONETHJNG

Beacon Hill 8,10, Ne ws 20, Interface 33 .

10 3o-Woman 20,33
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, i3.15, ABC News 33
11 Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4.15; Wide World Myststery
13; FBI 6, Movie "'The Dirty Dozen"' 8; Movie
" Viva Villa" 10
12 Jo-W\de World Mystery 6

LEO (July 23 - Aug . 221

CRYPTOQUOTE
DAF

lHAT SOUNDS 6000..1(01.1
NOW, AND HA'IE '1tlURS...

You II be rece1vtng some good
news Yo u II be anx1ous to
share tl w tt h a fe w cho1ce
f nends It w111 come through a
un 1que channel

LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0ct. 23) This
should be a good day tor

You ha11e excellent leadership
qualtttes They 11 be very evldenttf"l •'"lm peer group today
Assurr:e greater responsrbtltty

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
21) You II be fortunate today 1n
dealings w tth t ho se 1n auth o r l·
ty Favors that would not be
granted to others w •ll be g•ven
10 you

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Thmgs w •ll work out today 11
you use 1magtnat1ve concepts
Do n t be afra id to test bold -new
•dea s

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 191
Cond1t1ons tha t have a dtrect
effect upon your standtng m
the eyes o l others are extremely favorab le Joday Your deeds
w•ll wm you potnls

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 A
s •luat•on that was out at har mony w111 be brought tnto focus
today The e n d result w11f
p l ease all con cerned

&amp;Your
WBirthday
s JPt. 9, 1Dn
More travel than usual IS hkely
tor you lh•s com ing year The
tnps won't be long ones, but
!hey w111 be tnlerest•ng and
pleasurable Keep a small suttcase packed

V nH

AFTER '1'00 oET BACK,
I'LL 60, AND HAVE MINE !

I-lOW ROMANTIC !

MI./ WEIGHT

PROBLEM --

-BABY
------------pig s. Call 949 56 15
'

9 7 6tc

------------1973 HUSKY .400 MX Good

condt t1on . $400
Also, one
wrecked 1963 Chevy dump
truck, complete Phone 992
5647
9 7 3tc

I.

.
'

13,

8, 10. When Television was Live 20,33

CANCER (June 21 -July 221

One letter atmply stands lor another. In lhia sample A II
used lor the three L"s, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and lormallon ol the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

J BEORM house w1fh wall to

That Tune

Jean Shepherd 's

8 Jo-Welcome back KoHer 6, i3 , Joe &amp; Sons 8, 10,
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33.
9 oo-Pollce Sfory 3,4, 15. Rookies 6, 13; Swltch 8.10.
Nova 20.33 .
lO.OG-Joe Forrester 3,4, 15, Marcus Wlby, M 0 6, 13,

GEMINI (Mar 21 -Juno 20)

YEB, AND roN'T WORRY ABOUT
D:)N 1T
MOM,WENDY: 5HE'B
THINK

Name

Antiques 20;

You t end to benefit today
through close assocrates or
partners You wt ll be let 1n on
something It w1ll prove much
to your l1kmg

P.ANO,IQIANCZ

At~,~"'~:~:,-:! o A.,,,... .... oil ioo:l ,.._..
I•• .... J..
s .. '"fl .... o k~ ,.. . ... n.,. I
........ '"'" .,, .. ..... .....a, holt , . ........ Or

News 10,

TAURUS (Ap1t1 20-May 201

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's

S"'"

8,

ARlES (March 21-Aprtl19) Ef·

a quote
35 Eastern
rite
Christian
37 Exalted

(M.,,

or Cons 3; To Tell the Truth .C; W\\d
Kingdom 6, Bowling for Dollars 6, Wilburn

forts 8)11pended o n behal f of
someone else w ill be rewarded
10 a most unusual fashron 1n
the near fu t u re

33 ''Hell,'' in

N.,...._ "'' ' ~ ., ... ~.,.., "'"'r 1.&amp;
........ ' _ , $1) .. . ....... jlo. "Lo... ,••
Aobooo~ ).( _ .,, N.... .,j s.,.n
N. Wo.U
..: .. .,. 01.1.-o ),(, .,.., ooaoo ol M,..,..,, oo O,..u
ol . ,, . . . . . . ... c..wM.
Aool ,.,,l&lt;..,podo . ......, • ol l!noP,o'oo
,......, a( • U..ol
• -o~• • u no! ~ ''"

oo--Truth

7 Jo-Hollywood Squares 3,4 , Let 's Deal with It 6,
$25,000 Pyramid 8. Evening Edition with Martin
Aoronsky 20; Price Is R\Qht 10, To Tell The Truth
13,_Scene One, Take One..33
8 oo-Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13, Good Time!

For

l'h BATH S, GARAGE, HOT

99 2 373 1
FOR
?OINTMENT

2 30-Doctors 3,4.15, Rhyme &amp; Reason 6.13; Edge of
Night 8,10
3·0G-Anothe• World, 3,4, 15; Gene•al Hospital 6, 13,
Match Game 8, 10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3()-()ne Life to Live 13, Bewitched 6; Tattletales
8,1 0; The Romagnolls" Table 20.
4 OG-Mr Cartoon 3, Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15,
Ml ckey Mouse Club 6.8, Sesame St 20,33. Movie
"'Off Limits"' 10; Dinah 13
4 Jo-Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6, Partridge Family 8,
Boanza 15
5 OG-Bonanza 3, Family Affair 8, Mister Rogers 20,33
5 3o-Adam 12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8, Adam
12 13, Get Smart 15 ; Elec Co 20,33

SCORPlD (Oc1 24-Nov. 221

sapiens

2 STORY FRAME HOU SE,
GOOD LOC AT ION ON
CO RNER LOT , 8 ROOMS ,

10 QO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15, Dinah 6; Give N
Take 8,10, Mike Douolas 13
lO·Jo-Wheel of Fortune 3.4.15; Price Is Right 8, 10
11 OG-High Rollers 3, 15 ; t Dream of Jeannie 4
11 3o-Ho\lywood Squares 3.15, Happy Days 13,
Midday 4. Love of Life 8,10
11· 5~Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10
12·0G-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Showoffs 13;
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4. News 6,8.10
12:3o-Jac kpot 3, 15. All My Children 6.13, Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 5 ~N BC News 3, 15
1 oo-News 3; Ryan 's Hope 6,13, Phil Donahue 8,
Young &amp; the Restless 10, No! for Women Only 15
1 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15, Let's Make a Deal 6, 13,
As the World Turns 8,10
2 OG-$10,000 Pyram id 6, 13 , Guiding Light 8, 10

where lh1ngs of a malerta l
nature are concer ned Be alert
for a c hance to 1111 your P•99Y
bank

32 Snake

INVESTERS BECOME '
WEALTHY . TRY US OR
CALL 992--332!

33

B·Jo-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M. 3, Phil Donahue 4,15, Lucy Show 8. Mlk&lt;
Douglas 10, Morning with D J 13
9 30-Not For Women Only 1, One Life to Live 6,

1· 00- Tomorrow 3,4,; News 13

31 Homo

Dnlled

veneer, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
marvelous ktt and din1ng with
s hdmg gla ss doors
Full
basement, 2 car garage

CONTRACT

9 SuppUcate
1% Mortal
16 Arctic
vehicle
19 fencing foU
22 Girl's

lashing

home

bedroom home, bath, ntce kit ,
basement wtth garage and 2
famil y rooms

13
6 &lt;5--Mornlng Report 3
6 5s-&lt;:huck White Repo•B 10, News 13
7 oo-Today 3.4, 15; AM America 6, 13, CBS News 8,
Popeye-Bugs Bunny 10
7 3o-Schoolles 10
B OG-L ucy Show 6, Cap! Kangaroo 8, 10, Sesa me St

America 33

Yesterday's ADBwer

wds.)
29 T&lt;&gt;ngue-

well , 2 ponds, bath, barn, dbl
garage and fenced $28,000
MODERN HOME Brick

539,000
LAND

Summer Semester 10

6 30--New Zoo Revve 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10, Rev Cleophus Robinson

Brothers

(2

Of ntce rolltng

land.
3 bedroom
recent ly redecorated

.c.

Report 13

Wrestling 15,

28"Dreamer''

ulNX !~-

rooms, 4 bedroom s , 2 baths,
and extra rooms for another

2~Farm

27 Extinct
Hawaiian
bird

WITHOUT YO'AH HAINT NO

and 3 bedroom 70x l4 mobtle
home wdh l 1h bath s, $17,500

6 00---Co lumbus Today

6

monetary
unit
[~~~~~~
r;;n 26 Noslree

( lt1!o .. Th o ~ho&lt;. .o T . . . .

acres

6

1 Woe is me!
Z Andrettl
of racing
fame
3 Great
friend
(2 wds.)
4 Three match
(2 wds.)
5 Tapping
device
6 Sheltered
bay
7 Greek letter
8 Ingratiate
oneself
(4 wds.)

23Prepared
for war
25 Polish

$20,000
NEW LISTING - 7 •ooms, 3
bedrooms. bath, drtlled well

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9,1 975

7

22 "- in
(2 wds.)

NEW LISTING - 8 rooms, 4

3,.C

CBS News 8,10, Your Future \sNow 33.

DOWN

mind
13 Venezuelan
copper
center
14 Nebraska
river

oo- Tomorrow

1 Jo-News 13

oo-News 3,4,8.1Q.n,15; ABC News 6 , Sesa me S!
20, Jody's Body Shop 33
6.3o-NBC News3,4,15 , ABC News13 , Andy Griffith 6

41 Tea genus

11 Have in

ll ·Jo-FB I 6, Untouchabgles 13
1

6

39 Salt tree
40 Vestibule

conunune

E.

Pass

,.

15 DevU's

1972 YAMA HA , 2 he l mets,
5, 000 m li es, very good
c onditi o n Contact la rr y
F1e ld s, Sy racu se, Oh10 992

Gift W rapped " 8, Movie " See Here, Private

Mus ical Chairs 8; New Zoo Revve 13.

SOutb

~~ ... ~

ALLEY

11 RM H OME , 2 baths, new
roof an..d. a l u m mum s1d1 n g m
Pomeroy
Phone 992 7556
9 5 6tc

ding House 33
10 oo-Medlcal Center 8, 10, News 20, Session 33
10 3o-Earthkeeplng 33
11 oo-News 3,4.8, 10.15. ABC News 33
Came

An Oregoman asks what sort
of hand South should ha ve
Pass
Pa ss
4•
Pass
North has opened one d1amond.
Dble
Pass
Pass
Pass
East has doubled and South has
Openmg lead - 6 'I
b1d one notrwnp
T he a ns wer to th1s one
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
depends on partnersh1p un It has been sa!d that bad der~tandmg , but !n common
cards make bad playe rs We w•th almost all experts and
are n' t s ure that thls lS so but bndge teachers we play the bld
we do know thai bad pl~yers to show e1ght or n1ne hlgh-ca rd
tend to do even worse with bad pomts. a ba lanced d1stnbut10n
ca rd s
and certa mly no hve·card rna·
West had one queen and no JOr sutt
s mgl eton and reSigned h1mself 10 o you h ave a questiOn 1or
to a 1oss th e moment he 1ook ed the Jaco h ys&gt; Wrtte ··Ask the
at h1 s hand
Jaco h ys '" care ol lh1 s
Thus, tt never occurred to newspape r Th e mos t m hlm that when his •partner b1d teres l mg questions w1/f be
a ll the way up to four clubs on used 1n th1 s col umn and
hts own that Four spades to the wnters w11l race1ve cop1es of
queen-10 would warrant a lour· .JACOBY MODERN)
spade btd
O~EWSPAPEH ENTERPRISE ASSN 1

~

BACKHOE fo r rent , hour or
cont r act
Reg
or
ex
cavat m g t ype Sepl •c ta nk s
msta l 1ed Bill Pull .n s Phone
992 2478
B 27 tf c

,. ,.
Eatl

North

3•

years exper1e n ce In sured
free est• mates Call 992 3057
COO l VIlle
Phone ( 1) .667
3041

MOBILE Crane serv•c e and
doz er work P h one 99 2 5468
8 7 26 1p

. . . . Phone 992 2181

n.,ll .... ,... ,,.,, '"' "'"''•

12 GAUG E pump Shotgun , $85
Phone 992 2244
9 7 31p

"'1093
• K 10 6
"'A 83

00 discount.

.• •~ack W Carse y , Mgr

EAST tO\

. 2
•AQJ8 5
• J 10 3
"'KQJ9

Ph. 992-3993

a

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves

WEST

• 9762

BORN LOSER

LARRY J.AY:U4_D_ER

Steg l er &amp; Monogram

tn for S1S

• 732
t A 54

Blown

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

9 3G-Maude 8, 10, International Women ' s 20 , Boar

11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Movie ''The Girl Who

Furthe rmore. West 's hand '
fulhlled one reqlllremenl for a
sacnhce b1d He was pretty
sure tha i South would make
four hea rts
South did JUSt that , but look
what would have happened if
West ha d pulled h1m self
together and bid four spades
North and South might have
gone on to f1ve hearts - down
one They m1ght have doubled
four spades or let East play
there If they had they would
have been sorry East would
make four spades w1th no trou
ble a t a ll

8

• A864

F,REE EstiMATES

For Sale

InBy United Press
tematlooal
Today is Monday, Sept. 8,
the 25lst day of 197:i with 114

Cons . 3; Don Amams Screen Test 4;

WIN AT BRIDGE
Thinking is wasted on North

9 2· 1 mo

HAND L ETTE:RED SI GN &lt;:
AND PO STER S
FRE£
ESTIM A TE S CALL M C
CRAW F ORD , 99 2 7680
B 7 761p

Pets For Sale

For Rent

or

To Tell the Truth 13; Untamed World 15; Mor&lt;O
Sportllte . Football 33.
B oo-Bobby Vinton 3; Barbary Coas1 6, 13; Invisible
Man 4,15, Gunsmoke 8, Ambassador College
Concert 20,33
8·30-We -Think You Should Know 3; Phyllis 10.
9 oo-Movle 3,4.15, College Football 6,13, All In the
Family B.lO.

Hargrove" 10

Dan's Shoe Repair

C U S T oM
P IC T U R E
rRAM IN G
ORI G IN AL
SEA SCAP,E A ND LAND
S C A PE fJ'A I ~ TIN G S E:
JO Y C E M I L L ER 99? 7680
B 10 / 4t p

by Land Contract

P IA N O Tun mg Lane Dan1el s,
Phone 99 2 20B2
8 28 26fp

~Truth

Bowling for Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8, News 10 ,
NewCandldCamera 13, Wally's Workshop 15; Man
Builds. Man Destroys 20, No-Honestly 33.
30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3, Matc h Game
PM 6, New Price Is Rlght 8, Evening Edition with
Mar!ln Aoronsky 20; Hlg!J Road to Adventure 10.

Syracuse. Ohio

For Rent or Sale

For Rent

A -K (
RtC
female
Da c hshund 2' ~ years old
had shots , spayed
Good
w1th c hildren , $65 Call (61.t)
985 41 1J
9 7 Jt c

Middleport, 0 .

TEXAS WESTERN
BOOTS
KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN
Steel~ Safely Shoes

D O ZER WUR r&lt;
t:)( c avat•ng ,
l and c lear •n g
pond s and
b as ement s
and
la n d
sc ap1n g
Pull •ns
f x
cav attng , phon e 992 2478
B 26 JQtc

Employment Wanted

Ro o m and Bo ard
R OO M
AND BOARD for
se n10r c 11 1l e n::. L o w •n co m c
l1v •n g v er y n• ce Phon e 99 2
]5 09
6 24 261c

7

Jobber In

._ XCAVA TIN G doze r lo ad er
a n d ba ckhoe wor k
sept •c
tan k s
•n s t a ll ed
du mp
tru c k s and l o bo ys l o r h1r e
w ill hau l 111 1 d1 rt , top sod
l 1m est on e and grave l.. Call
Bo b or Rog er Je tter! . d ay
p hon e 992 7089. n 1ght ph one
992 3525 or 99/ 5237
2 11 tf c

W O U L D YOU BE LIE V E "
Budd an al l s t ee l build• ng a t
Pole Barn pr 1c es' Gol den
G1 an 1 A l l Sl ee t Bu1ld1ng s
Rt
J
Box 148 , Wa v er ly ,
Oh 1o P ho n e 94 7 1'196
7 24 li e

WA NT ADS
P O RT A B LE
T O I LE T
INFORMATION
RENT /\L
C on s lru c l l"''"'
DEADLINES
O utdoor
eve nt s
Phon ooPM
D a v Befor e P ub .C A SH pa 1d tor all mak es and
Ga ll p o i1 S
116 4 7 B 7,
mod
e
l
s
0"1
rno
b
1l
e
ho
mes
loca l 1on
Ru sse ll ' s Plu m b1ng and
Ph one area c od e 6 14 42)
M onday D ea dlm e 9 a m
H eatmg
'95 3 I
( .'l n c f' ll al•on
Corre c t 10 n ~
8 19 li e
1
13
li
e
Wil l b e ac c epted unt 1 9 am
tor Day o f Pub l 1c a t•o o
WILL TRIM o r cut tre es and
REGULAT I ONS
shrubbery
P hon e 949 3211
Th e P ub liS he r r eser11es !h e
or 741 4441
r 1gh t to Cd 1t or re )ect any o'l('s
9 7 24 tc
d eem e d Ob i CCI Iona l
T l &lt;:
l loor •ng
p u bl i Sh e r
w il l
not
f_, e {_ 1\ RPE N I R Y
re il m g and pan (' l 1n q Pt1 o nc
r esp o n s1b l e fo r mo r e t ha n o n e
99 / J/')9
1n c or r ec1 •nse rt •on
B I? ? Id e
HT , Polara
1968 DOD G E
RATES
g re en 8 c y l
S600 Phone
For Want Ad Serv tc e
992 ] 350
5 ce n t s p er Wo rd on e m se rf •on R EM O D E LI NG
Pl Umb ng
9 7 Jtc
M •n •mu m Char ge $ 1 00
ll ea tm g an d all typ es o l
14 c ent s p er word thr ee
gen e r a l
r e p a 1r
W o rk
, on sec ut1v e m se rt• on s
guar ant eed
?0 y ea r s ex' 1970 PLYMOUTH .t40 GTX
26 c e nt s p er w ord s• ~e con
Phon e 99 2 2557
p cr1 en ce
Pho ne 991 2409
secu t 1v e 1nse rt• on s
9 5 61p
5 1 l f lj- ,
~ 5 P e r Cent D• sco unt o n p a •d
ad s and ad s patd w1t h 1n 10
WILL T A KE eld erly womeri"7n
d ays
1974 VW Bug , l1ke new , 14,000
my hom e Phone 992 3397
CARD OF THANKS
m il es Phon e 74 2 .t885
9 7 61c
&amp; Ob1tuary
9 7 Jt c
')2 00 fo r 50 w ord m •n •mum
E a c h ad d 1l1on a l wor d Jc
Off1ce Bu1ldtng wtth 700 sq
1967 PLYMOUTH F ury , 1965
BLIND ADS
ff of space located on 107
1
C he~
P1 c kup
2 to n truck
A dd i1 1o nal /5c Ch ar ge p er
A K C R eg P oodl es tw o blue
Sycamore Sf, Pomeroy
Phon e 949 JBJ l
/\d~e r l1se m ent
an d 1 c ho col at e 1 ap nc ot
9 5 Jlc
Would se ll on land contract
OFFICE HOURS
Pho n e ( 30 4 ) B8 1 3205
B 30 a m ro 5 00 p m Da ll y
or r ent
Gerald Reut e r ,
8 27 12 tp 1970 V O L KS WA G EN
need s
t o 12 00 N oon
8 30 a m
Phone
992-2490
starter S250 C al l 992 7658
Sa lurday
9 5 Jtc
F REE ca t s and smal l puppt es
Phon e 843 7876
9 5 6tc

Notice

I

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MOTOR CO.
1&gt;PE'NE-VES. 8:00 P:M"

5 OG-Bonanza 3, Famtly Affair 8; Mlster Rogers 20,33
5 30-Adam·12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies B. Adam
12 13; Get Smart 15.
6 OG-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15, ABC NewS6; Sesame St. 20,
Special Education JJ
6 Jo-NBC News3.4. 15. ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6 .
CBS News 8, 10.

' "' ••,, • •,, ....

" ""' ~ ' "

W oll ool o

Pomeroy

Ph 992 7174

a .. . .... . , , ., 1 .... ,.,
n.

I ~OMEROY
[

Nathan B•ggs
R ad1ator Specialist

and ARIZONA.

$1295

Blk vmyl roo f. g re y t m 1sh
powe r st eer 1ng , rad1o

Phone ~92-9973
North 'lnd Street
Tune Up s
Battene s
Shock Absorbers . T1res
Muffler Tatlplpes Cooling
Systems
serv 1ce
We
also
Volk swage n s and other
fo re1gn cars
Wilbur Ward ,
Mgr &amp; Mechanic
8 21 1 mo

From t h e largest Tru c k or
Bu l ldozer Rad •ator to t he
sl)lallest H eater Core

Western OOLOBADO,

318 N 2nd

I

Rept~ir

Dan's Shoe

PENN2DIL

NEVADA, UTAH,

pow er steer.ng and brak es ,
d a rk gree n t m1 ;:.h v1nyl r oof , saddl e buck e t seats,
com .ol e, r ad to, l1k e n ew w w f1r es

1970 NOVA VB C PE

Ml

California,

$2095

350 V 8 ~Ju t oma l ~e tran s

~

J

I.

$1495
1971 MATADOR
4 door , local car cnr con d 1t1oned , lull e q u 1pme nt
1970 CHEV CAMARO

Business Services

Choio8

Notice

I BOREP

I I

-Pomeroy~!

I

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER I , 1975

�7- The DaUv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Mon~ , 1 , Sept. a, 1975
6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleroort-Pomerov. 0 ., Mon&lt;lav . Sept. 8, 1975
NOTICE F=OR !iERV I C E
BY PUBLICATION

COUNTY, MERCER
PUBLIC NOTICE
The lotlowmg documents
were rece•ved or prepar e d by
The Oh to
Enviro n ment a l
Protection Agency du r .ng t h e
prev•ous
week
Anyon e
aggneved or adv e rse l y af
fee ted by tssuance or ren e wal

of any permil {sL llcense( s),
or varian c e l s i m ay r equ est an

adtudt c al•on

heartng

by

wnnen request pur s uant to

Oh to Rev 1sed Co d e Sec ti on
3745 07 wtlh•n th •rty (3 0 ) da ys
of the dt r ector s propo se d

llctlon to •ssu e or de n y suc h
do c um en t s That st a t ut e do es
no t p r ov•de for
h e a n ng
requests to T h e OEP A on
appliCil lt o n s
r e vo c at iOnS

mod •fi c altons

c ompl a nt s

ve rtf led co mpl a •nt s
cer
l tf lca t •ons , tea se s or de r s or
f1nal action s
W 1lhm 30 day s o f pu b l• c al o n
o f lh1 S not•ce any per son may
also
11 l Su bm 1t wrlll e n
co m m en t s Telatmg to ac t 1on s,
pr opo se d a c t•on s co m p la •nts
or 11enf •ed compal 1n ts
(2 )
Requ es l a publi c meet 1ng
r egardm g p ropos ed act•o n s
and or O l R €'Ques t nolice ot
further
a c t1on s
on
proc eed 1ngs
Requ ests f or he ar~ngs on
fi n al act 1on s t o 1ssue de n v
mo d 1f y
r e ~ok e
o r r en ew
permtts l 1cen s es o r ~ar•a nces
tha t are not p re c ed ed b y
p ropo se d a c t 10 n s a nd so
•denllf 1ed '" t h1 s not• ce sho uld
be sen t 10 The En~ • ronm e nlal
Board of R ev•ew , Sull e 505 J3
North H1gh Slr e el Co l umbu ~
Oh iO .t321 5
Al l other requ est s tor a d
IUd1cat•on hearmgs and oth er
commun1 cattons
c on c ernm g
publ•&lt;.
hear1ngs ,
publ 1c
mee11ng s
adtud •c at•on
h earmgs c ompla 1n ts of any
kmd and regulalion s sh o uld
be addres s ed to Th e L ega l
R e cords Sect iOn , Ohto EP A
P 0
Bo)ll 1049 Columb us
OhiO 43216 , ( 6 14 ) 466 60 37
Unless otherwt se stated •n
pa r t1cu lar not•ces , all oth er
comm un1c at •ons ,
.n cl udm g
comments on proposed ac
!tons and reques t s for publ 1c
meetmg s should be addre sse d
e1the r to The New Sou r c e A•r .
or NP DE S Permil Records
Sect•on, w h •c hever •S ap
propr•ate 'at The Oh1o EP A
P 0 Box 1049, Columbus .
Ohio 432 16
A ppll catton tor a•r perm1t to
operate
Mercer Co F B I nc Roc k
fo rd Plant
Rockford
Rockford , Ohto
No ( s )
A ppi iCal•on
035.t000 164 NOO'l
to
Propo sed
c ha ng e
reg1strat1on only stat u s
AVCO N e w Idea
.t20 South F •r s t
Ca.ldwaler Oh• O
No I s l
App lt cat•on
0354000104 P037
Bl ue R1bbon Feed M 1l l , In c
R No 2 Celma , Oh •O
Cart h agena , Oh •o
No ( s I
App l• calton
0354000176 POOl
51 A nthony Feed Mill
R R No J
F l Reco~ery . Oh• o
Appl•cat 10 n
No (s)
035 A000178 POOl
Tama Elevator &amp; Supply
R R No J
Cel•na , 0h •o
N o { s )
A pp l 1 cat1on
035.t0 101 75 POOl
De n1al o f var1ance fr om
sewer connec tlon ban
Knox , Hugh L
Fra nklm Twp
From Gra nd Lake St Ma rys
Connect1on
ba n
Fa mily
dwellmg
K nox , Hugh L
Franklin Twp
From Grand Lake St Mary s
Connect10n ban Publ•c rest
rooms f or golf course

TO H erm an G 1ll il an G l ady s
Co zar t Cha l mer G •lldan and
t he un k now n h e .r s d e v 1sees
and n e~e t o f km of V'lcsl c y G
G •ll• la n ill I o t w h ose pla c es o t
r cs •de n ce i'lr e un kn ow n an d
c anno t
wdh
r e a s onab l e
d 11 1gcn ce be a sc ena .ned
You a r e he r e by not •fl ed I ha l
you
have
b ee n
n am e d
de t e nd an l s •n a lega l a c t•on
e nt i1 1ed Mildr ed Gill• l a n
Ad m m 1s t ralr 1x o t th e E s ta tf
ot
we s l e y
G
G •ll il nn
dec ea sed
P l &lt;untllt
vs
Lawre n ce G ll ltl an
e t &lt;"I I
Dcte•1 d a n ts Th1 !\ act 10n t1a s
been ass ,gne d Case N o 21 377
and •s pendmQ 111 the Cour t o f
Co n1 m on
Pl eao.;
Probil l £
OIV1S.10n
o t M e •QS C oun ty
Porne ray Oh• O 1 ~ !69
Th e ob tc c t o f •he co m plo n t
IS t or ,- 1thor ty to ~ e ll t h e rei'! I
es ta t e a t lhe d ece d ent t o p ay
•he d ebt s nnd c os t s o f tHJ
rnm •s ter •nq n &lt;; cs liltc w r1 c h
r ea l f' &lt;. ta• e 1S dc s cr b ed as
fo l lo w s
T w cn ly f o ur '?~ ) a c r c5 o ff
lh e ea o;• end a t t h e f o ll o w n9
re al estr~le
t o w 1t
f arty
a c re s a t la n d o u t o f t h e we s t
h alf Of L ot N O 1? 1] In SeLt iOil
'} T o wn shtp 1 a n d Ranqc 11 •n
the Oh 10 Co m p any s P ur ~ h nsc
tn
L e ta r t T o wn sh •P M c1 q s
Cou n ty Oh10 sa1d 40 acre lot
be 1ng '" lhe n or th p a rt of th r&gt;
w est 11a11 of th e 160 nc r e lo t
abo ve ment•on cd un d be 1nq
th e same prop e rl y c on veyed
by N an c y P •c k, en s c t al
to
Josep h M ar t •n P1c k en5 b y
dee d da t edMur c h14 1937 a nd
r e c ord ed •n Boo k 140 a t P &lt;~ gc
S91 o f 1111~ D ee d R ec o r ds o f
M C• QS Co un t y Ohm (')II CCOI
to u r a c r es o ff th e we s t SIC!€.'
lh er eo r c onv eyed b y Jose ph
M .:. rt1 n
P •c k c n &lt;;, 'o
E l va
P c ken s Va r 1a n a n d Ro b ert P
Var1a n by d eed d ated Mnr c h
25 1937 and re c o r de d 1n Boo k.
1&lt;1 2 a t Pnq e ) ] 7 ot th e De ed
Reco r d s
le a v• n g
tw e n ty
ac r es c o n 11 e y ed h e r eb y
D e ed Re f er e n ce
Vol u m e
16/ Pnge 4&lt;19 M CI QS Co unty
Dee d Reco rd s
Y ou a r e r eq u1 r ed 1o a n sw er
l h C co m p lamt w il h1n 28 day s
a lt er th e l a s t publ cali o n o t
lh 1S not •ce , w h 1Ch will b e
pu b l• sh ed o n ce eac h wee k fo r
SIX SUCC('SS IV C w ee k s Th e l aS t
publi c a t i On will b e made on
Se ptemb e r 29 , 1975 a nd I he 26
d a y s t o r an swe r w il l co m
m e n ce o n th a t date
I n c a se of yo ur fa1 tur e 10
ans w er or o t he rw 1se resp o nd
a s r equ•re d by th e Oh• O Ru les
of C •v•l Pro cedur e JUdgm en t
by d e fault w il l be r e nd ere d
aga 1n s t you t o r t h e r et •e f
d em and ed 1n th e c om pl amt

For Fast Results Use The Seatinel Classifieds

D W ebs ter
J udg e and E x ofi •C IO
C l erk of lh e Common
Pl eas Co uri
Pro bate DIVI SIO n
M c 1g S County Ohto

M &lt;~n n mg

(8l 15 ( 9 ) 1 R 15 2 '1 29 6t c
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT, MEIG S
COUNTY , OHIO
A c count s and vou cher s of
the
fo ll ow 1ng
named
f • duCiar~es ha~e bee n filed •n
the Probate Court
Me1gs
County
OhiO . f or approva l
and se!lleme n t
CASE NO
11.620 Thtrly
N1nth Acco unt of Myrtle E
Car man , Guard •an o f Clyde
W
Carman an lncompeten l
Person
CA SE NO 18 ,899 F 1rst and
F1nal A cc o u nt of Althea
St rong a s Tr us tee un d er the
Trust Cr eat ed under I te m 6 of
Will o f Orrll l a Ho l l •day ,
Decesaed
CASE NO
20 121
S1xth
Annua l A cc ount of Fran k W
Por t er , J r, Tr ustee u nde r
Item V of the Last Will and
Testament of Jane Lou•se
Sm 1th, Deceased
CASE
NO
20,639
Th•rd
Curre n t Account of No rman F
Hoov er, G u ard1a n of the
Estate of Esmeralda Barbara
W il tS hire , In com p et ent
CASE NO 20,715 F1rst and
Fmal Account o f Mtldred
Bailey , Guard •an of the
Guardlansh•p Estate of James
Robert Betz . a m mor
CA S E NO
2097 3 Second
a nd F=•nal Account of Mild r ed
lh le
Guard•an of Lou1 s e
Bryan a n In competen t
CA S E NO 21 ,372 F1rst and
F• n al
Ac c oun t
of
Ma r y
Caro l yn W 1ley E&gt;teculr t&gt;t of
t he Estat e of Eleanor L
M rll er, Deceased

(9 } B. lie

Oterry Ridge
By Jane Reeves
A surprise birthday party
was held Saturday night,
August 30, for Julia Schultz.
Totally unsuspecting Julm
had prepared for bed when
classmates arrived at her
home bearing gifts and brrthday wishes . A beaullful
decorated cake and 1ce
cream was served by mother,
Faye, and s1ster, Alberta.
Guests mcluded Cathy
Maxey, Edna Boggs, Diana
Pullins , Carol Spurlock ,
Cheryl Benedum , Steve
Milhone and Jeff Holter
" Happy 17, Jul1a."
Bon Voyage to John and
Lonnie Hansen. Hurry back.
Weekend guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Doralllill were Mr . and
Mrs. Dorset DavlS of Akron ,
Kenneth Myers of Gillette,
Wyoming, and Joyce Myers
of South Webster, Oh10.
Guests of Pud and Jane
Reeves for the Labor Day
weekend were Mr. and Mrs.
Mike McKnight, Shane and
Amy of Dover, Ohio, and Mrs.
Lora Chandler of Columbus.

CASE NO 21 ,334 Ftrsl and

F1 nal Account o f Edtson
Hobstetter
Executor of the
Estate of Ge r tr ud e Me Br1de
Deceased
CASE NO 21.448 F1rs t and
Fma t Account of Margery
Ferlet , E&gt;tecutr•x of the
Es tat e
of
Ade l 1n e
P
Brown lng , Deceased
Unl ess ex c ept1ons are filed
t hereto , satd acco un t s wil l be
fo r hear~ng before sa1d Court
on t he 7th day of Oc tober. 1975 ,
at Wh &gt;Ch t;me sa;d accouniS
Will be cons•dered and con
tmued fro m day t o day unlit
fmally dt sposed of
Any person •nterested may
Ide wntten exceptiOns to sa 1d
accounts o r Ia matte r s pe r
lam mg to the execut 1on of the
rrust, not l ess than f1ve day s
:) r1or to the date se t fo r
-. ear mg
MANNING D WEBSTER
JU D GE
COMMO N PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
( 9 ) 8 , lt c

~1!!J~lb~® 1kJ kAaw&amp;IJ .-1 ,..b'f HENRI AHNULO .onol BOB LEE

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

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one letter to each square, to
form four ordanary words.

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5UR'PF:"I51N6 HOW
THEY' RE I&lt;AJ5EDI
Now arrange the cirded letters
to form t h e surpri se answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.

Cf~~~*~~~~~,.~~~~-~IKXXIIXXIJ

(An•wer• tomorrow)

I

~ARREL SIZZLE
,
An•wer: Khlle therC' i~r,lhere "lwp(• for th e

'Jumblrt: EXILE

~1bturd•v'•

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2 SIGNS

LAND
out
WEST.

OF
QUALITY Motor Co.
' 972 COMJ:T 2 Ok
6 cyl s td tran 5, rad• o. l •k e n ew w w t1r es. blu e fln1 sh ,
n1 c e ca r w 1th good econo m y

mostcfNEW.MBX1W
only

qood t1r es. au tom"'t tc,

SMITH NELSON
MOJORS, INC.

$:16MD .UQ.N.

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Wanted

Auto Sales

or Sale

Mobile Homes for Sale
12 &gt;t 70 MA N HA T TA N 2
bed r m
2 full baths, ut11ily
buddmg , wash e r and dryer
cen tr al a 1r , deluxe fur
n1ture Call {J O.t l 882 3340 ,
af t er 5 pm
9 3 6tc

Yard Sale

For Sale

HUNT IN G L1c e n se
N1ghl
c rawler s
mea t worm s
TACKLE
gun s, a mmo
bow s
arrow s, c amp 1n g
equtp
CBs and accesso ry
l n d•an J oe s JOB Pa ge St , 1
s tr ee ts p a s t M1 d d l epor t
Sw1mmm g Po o l

r-

MOBILE hom e spac e , I acre
•n country Wr1te Box 613 ,
Pomeroy Oh 10 or call ( 6 1Bl
524 5825
8 29 18tc

SOMEONE needed to take
ove r paym e n ts on a mob 1le
home Phone 992 31 52
9 7 Jt c

PORCH
and
Yard
Sale
star l mg Monday a t 9 a m
thr u Thursday Lots o f good
1969 PMC 12&gt;t52 mobile h ome
Ch i ldren ' s
and
adult
c lothmg some new D •shes PRIVATE m ee tmg r oom t o r
mclud1ng two porches Call
an y ory an •za t •on pho n e 99 "2
and
other
tl em s
too
(614) 995 350&lt;1 If no answer,
39 7 'i
numerous to m en t•on . at !h e
992 5596
) I I tfc
9 4 6tc
J•m R1tf1e Res•dence, IUS!
abo~e Letar t Fa!ls
9 7 .ttc 2 BEDRM trailer , $27 pe r 1974 CASTLE
12 X 65 , 2
_
bedrm 2 full baths, total
week , All utiltl •es pa •d
elec furn•ture , washer and
YARD Basement and Porch
P h on e 992 332.t
Sale s tar11ng A u gust 27
dryer PhOne 9.t9 3655
9 7 He
9 4 6tc
lhrough Sept l7 E~eryday
e &gt;tcept Sunday
A nt 1ques .
2
B E DR O OM
fu r nts h ed
diShes , furn1ture
bedrm
mo b il e ho m e No p ets Cal l
se ts and m 1sc , ad u lts '
99 / 7479
c h t ldren s
and
mfant
8 n lie
c lot hmg Shoes some new
new
bed
sheets
and
blankets Blue showe r s tall 2 BEDROOM tra il er e&gt;ttra 19 77 A RR O W Cam pe r pho ne
99 ') 54 68
n 1Ce Phon e 992 3324
w •th seat f tberglass wh •te
8 15 ?61p
8 26 tfc
lavatory g1rl s b•ke, ot he r
ilems t oo numerous to
mentiOn Follow s 1gns f rom
C OUNTRY
Mobile
Home IN DASH 23 Chan n el C1 t 1zen's
Langsv ille
'14 mile fr om
Band transcetver, am fm
Park
Rt
])
t
en
miles
north
Turner's Sto re on Co Rd 10
mpx rad •o B tra c k stereo
of
Pom
e
roy
L
a
rg
e
lot
s
wdh
8 27 H e
Call 992 3965
conc r e t e pa l lOS",- Sidewalks
9 4 lfc
runn e r s and off st r eet
4 - FAMI LY- Ga~Q;-$--;Ie,
pa
r
k•n
g
Phon
e
992
7479
Thur sday and F r 1 da y, sept
12 3 1 I tt 6 DRAWER Dresser Wllh
11 and 12 9 am till 4 p m
mrrror , n ew 45 ca l 1bre
20 4 Lasley St, Pomeroy,
mu zzle loader , e1ect r1c logs
Oh •o Across from old Sugar NEW
V IL LAGE
Manor
W1fh h eater
Call 992 729 1
Ru n Schoo l
Dep r essiO n
Apartments tn M1cfdleport. 1
after 4 p m
g la s s and a f ew co l lector's
bedroom apts from Sl0 4 plus
9 4 t fc
11e m s V ery n 1ce c lothmg
elf'&gt;.. Cal l 992 3273 or see
M.
Keatley, A pt
101.
q 8 J t c.
5 FT BRUS H h og , 3 pi h•lch ,
R 1~ ers1de Apartme nt s
$225 Phone (614ll 985 359.t
8 28 · 26 tp
9 3 61p
TWO F urnis h ed ap t s
Kay
10 10 JO HN Deere dozer, n ew
Cec il B7 South Se co n d A~e ,
eng•ne , pa1nl,
stee r1ng
Middleport, Oh 10
Phone
c l u t ches, ca nopy , w1nch.
992 5261
PLAYER P•a no need not be tn
hydr au l iC blade, $4,500
8 21 tfc
work1ng co nd i tion , also
Phone (6 14) 985 359&lt;1
P•ano rolls Phon e 742 5625
9 ] 61p
9 7 6tc "'FURNISHED
a partm ~ n(
GU N S and Ammo Our fall
adults only 1n Middleport
t ul'"nilur e, •ce boxes.
stock
1S
no w
here
Phon e 992 J8H
brass beds
or complete
Complete l1n e of R e m
J 25 tfc
househo l ds
Wr 1t e M
o-,,
1ngto n,
W •n ches t er,
=-- .,..,.-_
Miller
Rt
4 Po m eroy
llh1ca Savage Slug barrels
Oh 10 Call 992 7760
, 4 ROOM S and bath apt m
m s to ck for most b rand shot
Rutland area
Phone 992
10 7 74
guns, but 1n short sup . ly
5658
Get them wh 1le they ld st
7 27 tfc
Money s hort , lay a way
your fall hunting n eeds N ew
Fal l sto r e hours start.ng
L ET 'S BE HON EST• I f you "2 BEDRM mobile ho me , a1r
Sept 5, 10 a m to 9 p m ,
condi t •o n ed nea r Pomeroy
w e ren I look mg for a new
Monda y Sa t urday
VIllage
Phone 992 5623
c areer - You wouldn't be
Gun Shop p e, 266 Mill St ,
9 .t 3tc
read 1n g t h ts ad
If we
Phone 992 5177
f1nanc m g
weren'llook1ng for someone - - - - - - - - - - - - - - availat:te
10 do a 10b thrs ad wou ld n t TRAILER space fo r r en t •n
9·3 261&lt;.
be here
You ca n earn
Middleport Phone 992 5.t34
$10,000 to $15,000 your f1rs t
8 29 26t c
1972 FORD sem • t ra c tor , .t72
yea r 1n sa l es We w111 send - - - - - - - - - - - -- cub1C 1nch gas eng1ne Less
you to sc hoo l for 2 weeks
LA S ALLE
H OTE L
M ID
than 5,000 m11es
Phone
expen ses pa1d, tra •n you m
D L EPORT , O HI O ROOMS
( 30.t ) 273 3079 Mrs G ordon
the field se lling and ser
$5 UP
SPE CIAL RATES
Staates , Sandyv ill e, W Va
v• c m g es labt•shed accoun ts
BY WEEK . OR MONTH
9 3 6tc
up to SBOO a mont h to s tar t
TV A I R CONDI TIONIN G
guaranteed
Must be 21
B 26 26 tc
years or ove r , goat or te nt e d .
CA NNI NG tomatoes , green
bomdab l e, amb 1t 1ous , and - - - - - - - - - - - and red peppers
C lela nd
sports
m1 nded
F=r1nge 4 ROOMS an d ba t h un
Farms , Gera ld •ne Clela nd ,
furn1 sh ed house , 1650 L •n
benefits offe r ed are ma1or
R ac •ne Phone 949 4121
coin Hts Phone 992 3B74
c o m pr e hens i ve med1ca1.
B 19 tfc
9 5 tic
pens ton , and savmgs plans
Call for ~ppo1n tm ent , Mr
S te~e Gur a
16141 592 2269
2 BEDR M mob1le home , a 1r
Monday
Tuesday . and
cond1 t10n•ng , RaCine area
Wednesday from 7 p m ti ll
BUSINESS FOR SALE
Phone 992 5858
10 p m
9 3 tf c
9 B 2t c
O(l e (1) Tavern completely
3 AND 4 RO O M furnished and
eCfulpped wlth D 1 and D 2
unfurn 1sh ed
apartments
l rcense located at 118 West
Phone 992 5434
Mam Street, Pomeroy ,
PORCH SA LE . Sept 10 and 11
.t 12 tf c
,Qh 10: also the real estate
at the Bailey res1dence, .t05
consistmg of the business
Grant Sl , Middleport, from
butldmg occup 1ed by th e
9tilt 5 pm
4 RM FU RN IS HED apt for
ta~ern
ment1oned above
9 8 2tc
r ent Phone 992 3658
9 3-tfc
Call 992·2116 or see Gu1d0
LAURELAND A P ART MENT ,
at the above 1ocat1on be6t h and Georg e Sts, New
tween the hours of 10 a m .
The Almanac
Haven,
W
Va
IM
and 5 p. m .

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

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

FRUIT

. af/IHI-""STILLLIFE""

,

NORTH

__:_::_:::.::::::::=~':::"'::8:::'13"::::2_'_'P--,

• 76 2

Insulation Services
Blown tnfo Wall&amp; &amp; AHtcl
STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOD~S
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING.SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

All s 1zes on hand, pnces
start at $324 69
- 1 Wood Burnmg Stove

CLIP THIS AD and brtng tf
POMEROY LANDMARK

Wanted To Buy

p-r;;o-

---=- -----;.-- :--::--

Help Wanted

to follow.
The moon ls approaching
lis first quarter.
The morning stars are
Venus, Mars Jupiter and
Saturn.
The evening star is Mer' cury.

'

I

MEDIATE

OCCUPANCY

Se lect your 2 bedrm to wn
house , Beauttful new apt
comp l ex. appltances fur
n1shed, com pl et ely ca r
peled, Rent S128 up In
clud1ng
utrl1tres
Call
res •dent manager, Sam or
Becky Longanacre, 1 304
882 2567 If no answer. call 1

DID 'iOV JV$T bl\le NE A
011~1"'{

'/OJ ~
BCAA WITH THAI'WOK,'
Aff&lt;).JD

l.QOK I'SOf-1-ltJ- LAW z

/INJTHE;~

ll.oARI&lt;&gt;l-E.

(3041 882 2788

9 3 12tc

4 ROOM furn 1ShE'd apartment
w1th wall to wall carpet
Phone 992 5908
1
9 3 tfc

SOUTH

'iO\I ~ N-so 801&lt;~
WITH fi.. RO\TE;~ $~
OF HUMOR

ttoKQJ 75
• 94

t KQB

"'1054
Both vulnerable

- -4- 10 1 mo
West

SE W I N G
MA C H IN E
R e pl11rs , serv1 c e . a ll makes
" 9"2 2284 Th e F _abr1c:., ShOP
Pomeroy Aufhol"hed Smger
Sale s and Serv•ce
We
sharpen SCI SSOr S
3 29 lf c

DT

--

.

D TREE Tnmmmg , "10

'1-relL I ER I
NO - BU"Tl"D
COME AtOtlG,

FU~THERMORE, KE

~-J.&lt; C:Y

M I X CONcRE T E
de l t.Yered r1ght to your
pro tect Fas t and easy Free
es f•mates
Phone 992 J2a.t ,
Goe gte m Ready M•x Co ,
M•ddleporL Oh10

"lOOK ~onilHQ WITH HIM
BUT HIS BRA\11$ AND HIS
AMBlllOO- HE LEFT

MR . AM.

W\THOUl H0

BEHIND HIM A FORTUNE-

&lt;USS. 1F I

WAS VOU -

6 30 " '

Real Estate For Sale

~ E PTIC

HOUSE , J bedrooms
new
Sears ' ca bt nets
1ndoor
outdoor carpe t 1ng, c ha •n
link f ence ut il• tv butldmg 2
lots Washer , dryer, ref and
stove $12 500
Phone 992
7430
a 31 Mp

H 0 US E for sa I e .n Rut I and.
S6 500 PhOne 992 5B5B
J 1 tf c

NEAR
P om eroy , n ew
3
bedroom , 1'12 ba t hs , ca r port ,
mud rm , util• l y, sun deck ,
large l 1v mg room , k1tchen
dm1ng
area ,
paneled ,
refr•ge_rator an d Tappan
range m c lud ed
A l so, w111
he l p f!_!lance Phone 992 7790
afte .. 6 p m
H 8tc

:a

TANKS cleaned
Modern San1tatton 992 3954
o r 992 7349
9 1B tt c

ELWOOD BOWERSREPAIR

- Sweepers, toasters, lf"On~,
all s mal l app lia nces Lawn
mower nex t to State Hrgh
way Garage on Route 7•'
Phn,.,.., 985 3825
4 16 lie

EXCAVA TI NG ,
backhoe ,
dozer and dttche r
Gas ,
electr1c and wa t er l 1ne
bur.al. basements. footers ,
sept1c systems and brush
ciPan mg W1 ll haul fill d1rt ,
top so1 l , sand and gravel,
l 1m esto n e for dr 1veways and
roads
Phone Charles R
Hatfield , Backhoe Serv 1ce,
Rt 1 Rutland OhiO, 742
609'1
71 190t c.

2 "'

THIS AlN'T TH' WAY
THAT'S BECAUSE
MY STEW IS S'POSED MOUY ADDED HER
TO "TASTE! "THIS'S
SPECIAL TOUCH
AWFUL!
,.......~...--.., TO IT, JAKE!

ALL I

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Sports

I'M "TELLIN ' YOU,

ORVILLE, WE GOTTA
F\GGER A WAY
"T'KEEP HER OUTA
TH' Kl"TCHEN!

I Old style
pulpit
5 Blockade
10 French

official

Real Estate for Sale

LIM A BEANS and Gr 1mes
Go lden app l es Phone 949
2803 or 949 572 1
9 7 3tc

5823

9 7 Jtc
1933 JO HN D ee r e Model A
tractor, c omp l etely re bud!
Phon e 742 5625
9 7 6tc
4 X a UTILITY trader, S75
Id ea l for farm use Phone
992 52.t7
9 7 3tc
Mar1ne Sa le s
16 F T G LA ST RON boat, 45
h p motor, tra •f er
Phone
992 3296
9 7 Jtc

LET us se rv•c e you r Vo lk s
wagen
reasonable r ates
Middleport Pennzo.t No rth
Second Street. M•ddl e port
Phone 99'1 99 73
6 19 26t c

HAY for sa l e Phone B43 2524

9 5 3tp
1971 C HOPPE R motorcycle ,
650 Tr 1umph T1 ger Phone
992 3702
9 5 6tc

riuerl~.'Ri;efo,.
tletlelopment.

4¢PER.ACRE
CDiit.wt' .N. Bona,pvte

-----·

Rut\a;nd on
, 8 rooms. bath, porch,

POMEROY - 11h acres,
c lose m, 2 BR, bath. utility

garage

and

lot

for

ga rden $12,000

POMEROY - 2 77 acres,
lovely home . 3 BR, bath,

bedrooms. 1112 baths, nice
k it c hen , hot w ater heat .
basement
with
garage

n1ce
kttchen,
fu l l
basement. patio, carport ,
garage. 2 tra11er h ookup s

$28.000
ROUTE 681 -

135 acres,

c 1ty water avatlable, close
to State Park , mmerals

JUST $123 00 per acre
RUTLAND Recently
renovated, 2 BR . bath,
l!v1ng has f1repla:ce,
ches, ga ra ge . $9,500

por

TUPPERS
PLAINS
RlGHT ON RT. 7 - 211&gt;
ac res, home ha s 2 BR,
bath, d1n1ng
R , part
basement, lot s o f butl d1ng
s ttes $10 ,500

SCIPIOTWP. - 138 rolltng
acre5. lots of t1mber, old
house, good well , mmerals
$175 00 per acre

WHY
WA STE
TIME
WHEN YOU SELL - LET
US HELP YOU.

He took th'
one 1n th"car
ne)(t,too, Rufus!

speaker~

- Rorum
21 Frank

R , patto, garage, all '"
excellent condition $8,300

HOUSE , 3 bedrooms, new
Sea r s cabtnets , Indoo r
out doo r carpeftng, chatn
lmk fence . ut ti •IY build mg . 2
lots Washer , dryer, ref and
stove $12 •.500
Phone 992
7430
9 7 6tc

Oood &amp;...... I,...J,

Joel's
pulled
out an'
left!

MAIN
POtVIE ROY, 0

Doubt it.
M1ss Melba!
He took th'

detight
16 Haggard
Yes"m 1 Let·s mose4 17 novel
Name
b'fore thel.l see 1t"s
meaning
watchful
18 Wildcat
,..,-,r 20 Composer,

and 2nd butldtng
serv1ce stat 1on
1

used a s
acre for

$8,000
HARRISONVILLE -

""" .... -.......

2 FAMlLY

HOME -

11

apt $12,500
26 ACRES -

name
23 Hostile
feeling
24 Woo
%5 South
African
poUceman

27 Wretchedness
29 Potato,
country
style
30 Golf
score
34 American
ostrich
38 Where

thou?
37 Headwear

&lt;;alicg::_T.,_T:--r.:--

AIR GAS FURNA CE CALL

- -- --

AP '

9 7-Jtc

--------

4

STILL O\PAI3LE OF

I'IA NOT

ATTR'\CTING- ANY
MAN :?HE WAN75 I

GRAfE·

f ULl

how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

work

,,,..u
...,u..........
,......_
5 s.............

walt carpet, central air
Phone 992 -7030
8 31 6tc

OZG

UDA

UDF

AHAK

UDXK

OEG

V H A G N A E K

D

UNIGDXK ,

CHHS

~.. :~ :':~::o .~~ 1::"."'~;.~:.~~.···.:~~.:. t"'
""""'
~ .... r. '"............ _::~ ...."'"""""'
::J;:~~~~.!:~;: ::...i::J~.:·:·;.~.... ·-· .•.

I'f

I HATE ABOUT
6011\1' TO DOC
PRITCHART FER

Tueld•r. Sept. 9, 1875

\' t

I ...

You r e very c reattve at home
today Little tasks that are
usually a bore wtll prove to be
pleasant d •vers•ons
Much attentton w111 be centered
on you today Your company
w111 be sought by others You
m ay even get a surprtse lnvlta t •on

N A

Someth•ng •s st1rnng to make
bo th you and your tam1ly feel
more secure It could be that
ratse you ve been hoptng for

M N S S VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 221

N G

-VNVKZH
~es~eroay s t;ryptoquote: THE MINORITY IS SOMETIMES
~- . RIGHT, THE MAJORITY ALWAYS WRONG. - GEORGE
o BERNARD SHAW
"TH'ONETHJNG

Beacon Hill 8,10, Ne ws 20, Interface 33 .

10 3o-Woman 20,33
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, i3.15, ABC News 33
11 Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4.15; Wide World Myststery
13; FBI 6, Movie "'The Dirty Dozen"' 8; Movie
" Viva Villa" 10
12 Jo-W\de World Mystery 6

LEO (July 23 - Aug . 221

CRYPTOQUOTE
DAF

lHAT SOUNDS 6000..1(01.1
NOW, AND HA'IE '1tlURS...

You II be rece1vtng some good
news Yo u II be anx1ous to
share tl w tt h a fe w cho1ce
f nends It w111 come through a
un 1que channel

LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0ct. 23) This
should be a good day tor

You ha11e excellent leadership
qualtttes They 11 be very evldenttf"l •'"lm peer group today
Assurr:e greater responsrbtltty

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
21) You II be fortunate today 1n
dealings w tth t ho se 1n auth o r l·
ty Favors that would not be
granted to others w •ll be g•ven
10 you

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Thmgs w •ll work out today 11
you use 1magtnat1ve concepts
Do n t be afra id to test bold -new
•dea s

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 191
Cond1t1ons tha t have a dtrect
effect upon your standtng m
the eyes o l others are extremely favorab le Joday Your deeds
w•ll wm you potnls

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 A
s •luat•on that was out at har mony w111 be brought tnto focus
today The e n d result w11f
p l ease all con cerned

&amp;Your
WBirthday
s JPt. 9, 1Dn
More travel than usual IS hkely
tor you lh•s com ing year The
tnps won't be long ones, but
!hey w111 be tnlerest•ng and
pleasurable Keep a small suttcase packed

V nH

AFTER '1'00 oET BACK,
I'LL 60, AND HAVE MINE !

I-lOW ROMANTIC !

MI./ WEIGHT

PROBLEM --

-BABY
------------pig s. Call 949 56 15
'

9 7 6tc

------------1973 HUSKY .400 MX Good

condt t1on . $400
Also, one
wrecked 1963 Chevy dump
truck, complete Phone 992
5647
9 7 3tc

I.

.
'

13,

8, 10. When Television was Live 20,33

CANCER (June 21 -July 221

One letter atmply stands lor another. In lhia sample A II
used lor the three L"s, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and lormallon ol the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

J BEORM house w1fh wall to

That Tune

Jean Shepherd 's

8 Jo-Welcome back KoHer 6, i3 , Joe &amp; Sons 8, 10,
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33.
9 oo-Pollce Sfory 3,4, 15. Rookies 6, 13; Swltch 8.10.
Nova 20.33 .
lO.OG-Joe Forrester 3,4, 15, Marcus Wlby, M 0 6, 13,

GEMINI (Mar 21 -Juno 20)

YEB, AND roN'T WORRY ABOUT
D:)N 1T
MOM,WENDY: 5HE'B
THINK

Name

Antiques 20;

You t end to benefit today
through close assocrates or
partners You wt ll be let 1n on
something It w1ll prove much
to your l1kmg

P.ANO,IQIANCZ

At~,~"'~:~:,-:! o A.,,,... .... oil ioo:l ,.._..
I•• .... J..
s .. '"fl .... o k~ ,.. . ... n.,. I
........ '"'" .,, .. ..... .....a, holt , . ........ Or

News 10,

TAURUS (Ap1t1 20-May 201

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's

S"'"

8,

ARlES (March 21-Aprtl19) Ef·

a quote
35 Eastern
rite
Christian
37 Exalted

(M.,,

or Cons 3; To Tell the Truth .C; W\\d
Kingdom 6, Bowling for Dollars 6, Wilburn

forts 8)11pended o n behal f of
someone else w ill be rewarded
10 a most unusual fashron 1n
the near fu t u re

33 ''Hell,'' in

N.,...._ "'' ' ~ ., ... ~.,.., "'"'r 1.&amp;
........ ' _ , $1) .. . ....... jlo. "Lo... ,••
Aobooo~ ).( _ .,, N.... .,j s.,.n
N. Wo.U
..: .. .,. 01.1.-o ),(, .,.., ooaoo ol M,..,..,, oo O,..u
ol . ,, . . . . . . ... c..wM.
Aool ,.,,l&lt;..,podo . ......, • ol l!noP,o'oo
,......, a( • U..ol
• -o~• • u no! ~ ''"

oo--Truth

7 Jo-Hollywood Squares 3,4 , Let 's Deal with It 6,
$25,000 Pyramid 8. Evening Edition with Martin
Aoronsky 20; Price Is R\Qht 10, To Tell The Truth
13,_Scene One, Take One..33
8 oo-Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13, Good Time!

For

l'h BATH S, GARAGE, HOT

99 2 373 1
FOR
?OINTMENT

2 30-Doctors 3,4.15, Rhyme &amp; Reason 6.13; Edge of
Night 8,10
3·0G-Anothe• World, 3,4, 15; Gene•al Hospital 6, 13,
Match Game 8, 10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3()-()ne Life to Live 13, Bewitched 6; Tattletales
8,1 0; The Romagnolls" Table 20.
4 OG-Mr Cartoon 3, Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15,
Ml ckey Mouse Club 6.8, Sesame St 20,33. Movie
"'Off Limits"' 10; Dinah 13
4 Jo-Bewitched 3; Mod Squad 6, Partridge Family 8,
Boanza 15
5 OG-Bonanza 3, Family Affair 8, Mister Rogers 20,33
5 3o-Adam 12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8, Adam
12 13, Get Smart 15 ; Elec Co 20,33

SCORPlD (Oc1 24-Nov. 221

sapiens

2 STORY FRAME HOU SE,
GOOD LOC AT ION ON
CO RNER LOT , 8 ROOMS ,

10 QO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15, Dinah 6; Give N
Take 8,10, Mike Douolas 13
lO·Jo-Wheel of Fortune 3.4.15; Price Is Right 8, 10
11 OG-High Rollers 3, 15 ; t Dream of Jeannie 4
11 3o-Ho\lywood Squares 3.15, Happy Days 13,
Midday 4. Love of Life 8,10
11· 5~Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10
12·0G-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Showoffs 13;
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4. News 6,8.10
12:3o-Jac kpot 3, 15. All My Children 6.13, Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 5 ~N BC News 3, 15
1 oo-News 3; Ryan 's Hope 6,13, Phil Donahue 8,
Young &amp; the Restless 10, No! for Women Only 15
1 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15, Let's Make a Deal 6, 13,
As the World Turns 8,10
2 OG-$10,000 Pyram id 6, 13 , Guiding Light 8, 10

where lh1ngs of a malerta l
nature are concer ned Be alert
for a c hance to 1111 your P•99Y
bank

32 Snake

INVESTERS BECOME '
WEALTHY . TRY US OR
CALL 992--332!

33

B·Jo-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M. 3, Phil Donahue 4,15, Lucy Show 8. Mlk&lt;
Douglas 10, Morning with D J 13
9 30-Not For Women Only 1, One Life to Live 6,

1· 00- Tomorrow 3,4,; News 13

31 Homo

Dnlled

veneer, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
marvelous ktt and din1ng with
s hdmg gla ss doors
Full
basement, 2 car garage

CONTRACT

9 SuppUcate
1% Mortal
16 Arctic
vehicle
19 fencing foU
22 Girl's

lashing

home

bedroom home, bath, ntce kit ,
basement wtth garage and 2
famil y rooms

13
6 &lt;5--Mornlng Report 3
6 5s-&lt;:huck White Repo•B 10, News 13
7 oo-Today 3.4, 15; AM America 6, 13, CBS News 8,
Popeye-Bugs Bunny 10
7 3o-Schoolles 10
B OG-L ucy Show 6, Cap! Kangaroo 8, 10, Sesa me St

America 33

Yesterday's ADBwer

wds.)
29 T&lt;&gt;ngue-

well , 2 ponds, bath, barn, dbl
garage and fenced $28,000
MODERN HOME Brick

539,000
LAND

Summer Semester 10

6 30--New Zoo Revve 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10, Rev Cleophus Robinson

Brothers

(2

Of ntce rolltng

land.
3 bedroom
recent ly redecorated

.c.

Report 13

Wrestling 15,

28"Dreamer''

ulNX !~-

rooms, 4 bedroom s , 2 baths,
and extra rooms for another

2~Farm

27 Extinct
Hawaiian
bird

WITHOUT YO'AH HAINT NO

and 3 bedroom 70x l4 mobtle
home wdh l 1h bath s, $17,500

6 00---Co lumbus Today

6

monetary
unit
[~~~~~~
r;;n 26 Noslree

( lt1!o .. Th o ~ho&lt;. .o T . . . .

acres

6

1 Woe is me!
Z Andrettl
of racing
fame
3 Great
friend
(2 wds.)
4 Three match
(2 wds.)
5 Tapping
device
6 Sheltered
bay
7 Greek letter
8 Ingratiate
oneself
(4 wds.)

23Prepared
for war
25 Polish

$20,000
NEW LISTING - 7 •ooms, 3
bedrooms. bath, drtlled well

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9,1 975

7

22 "- in
(2 wds.)

NEW LISTING - 8 rooms, 4

3,.C

CBS News 8,10, Your Future \sNow 33.

DOWN

mind
13 Venezuelan
copper
center
14 Nebraska
river

oo- Tomorrow

1 Jo-News 13

oo-News 3,4,8.1Q.n,15; ABC News 6 , Sesa me S!
20, Jody's Body Shop 33
6.3o-NBC News3,4,15 , ABC News13 , Andy Griffith 6

41 Tea genus

11 Have in

ll ·Jo-FB I 6, Untouchabgles 13
1

6

39 Salt tree
40 Vestibule

conunune

E.

Pass

,.

15 DevU's

1972 YAMA HA , 2 he l mets,
5, 000 m li es, very good
c onditi o n Contact la rr y
F1e ld s, Sy racu se, Oh10 992

Gift W rapped " 8, Movie " See Here, Private

Mus ical Chairs 8; New Zoo Revve 13.

SOutb

~~ ... ~

ALLEY

11 RM H OME , 2 baths, new
roof an..d. a l u m mum s1d1 n g m
Pomeroy
Phone 992 7556
9 5 6tc

ding House 33
10 oo-Medlcal Center 8, 10, News 20, Session 33
10 3o-Earthkeeplng 33
11 oo-News 3,4.8, 10.15. ABC News 33
Came

An Oregoman asks what sort
of hand South should ha ve
Pass
Pa ss
4•
Pass
North has opened one d1amond.
Dble
Pass
Pass
Pass
East has doubled and South has
Openmg lead - 6 'I
b1d one notrwnp
T he a ns wer to th1s one
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
depends on partnersh1p un It has been sa!d that bad der~tandmg , but !n common
cards make bad playe rs We w•th almost all experts and
are n' t s ure that thls lS so but bndge teachers we play the bld
we do know thai bad pl~yers to show e1ght or n1ne hlgh-ca rd
tend to do even worse with bad pomts. a ba lanced d1stnbut10n
ca rd s
and certa mly no hve·card rna·
West had one queen and no JOr sutt
s mgl eton and reSigned h1mself 10 o you h ave a questiOn 1or
to a 1oss th e moment he 1ook ed the Jaco h ys&gt; Wrtte ··Ask the
at h1 s hand
Jaco h ys '" care ol lh1 s
Thus, tt never occurred to newspape r Th e mos t m hlm that when his •partner b1d teres l mg questions w1/f be
a ll the way up to four clubs on used 1n th1 s col umn and
hts own that Four spades to the wnters w11l race1ve cop1es of
queen-10 would warrant a lour· .JACOBY MODERN)
spade btd
O~EWSPAPEH ENTERPRISE ASSN 1

~

BACKHOE fo r rent , hour or
cont r act
Reg
or
ex
cavat m g t ype Sepl •c ta nk s
msta l 1ed Bill Pull .n s Phone
992 2478
B 27 tf c

,. ,.
Eatl

North

3•

years exper1e n ce In sured
free est• mates Call 992 3057
COO l VIlle
Phone ( 1) .667
3041

MOBILE Crane serv•c e and
doz er work P h one 99 2 5468
8 7 26 1p

. . . . Phone 992 2181

n.,ll .... ,... ,,.,, '"' "'"''•

12 GAUG E pump Shotgun , $85
Phone 992 2244
9 7 31p

"'1093
• K 10 6
"'A 83

00 discount.

.• •~ack W Carse y , Mgr

EAST tO\

. 2
•AQJ8 5
• J 10 3
"'KQJ9

Ph. 992-3993

a

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves

WEST

• 9762

BORN LOSER

LARRY J.AY:U4_D_ER

Steg l er &amp; Monogram

tn for S1S

• 732
t A 54

Blown

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

9 3G-Maude 8, 10, International Women ' s 20 , Boar

11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Movie ''The Girl Who

Furthe rmore. West 's hand '
fulhlled one reqlllremenl for a
sacnhce b1d He was pretty
sure tha i South would make
four hea rts
South did JUSt that , but look
what would have happened if
West ha d pulled h1m self
together and bid four spades
North and South might have
gone on to f1ve hearts - down
one They m1ght have doubled
four spades or let East play
there If they had they would
have been sorry East would
make four spades w1th no trou
ble a t a ll

8

• A864

F,REE EstiMATES

For Sale

InBy United Press
tematlooal
Today is Monday, Sept. 8,
the 25lst day of 197:i with 114

Cons . 3; Don Amams Screen Test 4;

WIN AT BRIDGE
Thinking is wasted on North

9 2· 1 mo

HAND L ETTE:RED SI GN &lt;:
AND PO STER S
FRE£
ESTIM A TE S CALL M C
CRAW F ORD , 99 2 7680
B 7 761p

Pets For Sale

For Rent

or

To Tell the Truth 13; Untamed World 15; Mor&lt;O
Sportllte . Football 33.
B oo-Bobby Vinton 3; Barbary Coas1 6, 13; Invisible
Man 4,15, Gunsmoke 8, Ambassador College
Concert 20,33
8·30-We -Think You Should Know 3; Phyllis 10.
9 oo-Movle 3,4.15, College Football 6,13, All In the
Family B.lO.

Hargrove" 10

Dan's Shoe Repair

C U S T oM
P IC T U R E
rRAM IN G
ORI G IN AL
SEA SCAP,E A ND LAND
S C A PE fJ'A I ~ TIN G S E:
JO Y C E M I L L ER 99? 7680
B 10 / 4t p

by Land Contract

P IA N O Tun mg Lane Dan1el s,
Phone 99 2 20B2
8 28 26fp

~Truth

Bowling for Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8, News 10 ,
NewCandldCamera 13, Wally's Workshop 15; Man
Builds. Man Destroys 20, No-Honestly 33.
30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3, Matc h Game
PM 6, New Price Is Rlght 8, Evening Edition with
Mar!ln Aoronsky 20; Hlg!J Road to Adventure 10.

Syracuse. Ohio

For Rent or Sale

For Rent

A -K (
RtC
female
Da c hshund 2' ~ years old
had shots , spayed
Good
w1th c hildren , $65 Call (61.t)
985 41 1J
9 7 Jt c

Middleport, 0 .

TEXAS WESTERN
BOOTS
KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN
Steel~ Safely Shoes

D O ZER WUR r&lt;
t:)( c avat•ng ,
l and c lear •n g
pond s and
b as ement s
and
la n d
sc ap1n g
Pull •ns
f x
cav attng , phon e 992 2478
B 26 JQtc

Employment Wanted

Ro o m and Bo ard
R OO M
AND BOARD for
se n10r c 11 1l e n::. L o w •n co m c
l1v •n g v er y n• ce Phon e 99 2
]5 09
6 24 261c

7

Jobber In

._ XCAVA TIN G doze r lo ad er
a n d ba ckhoe wor k
sept •c
tan k s
•n s t a ll ed
du mp
tru c k s and l o bo ys l o r h1r e
w ill hau l 111 1 d1 rt , top sod
l 1m est on e and grave l.. Call
Bo b or Rog er Je tter! . d ay
p hon e 992 7089. n 1ght ph one
992 3525 or 99/ 5237
2 11 tf c

W O U L D YOU BE LIE V E "
Budd an al l s t ee l build• ng a t
Pole Barn pr 1c es' Gol den
G1 an 1 A l l Sl ee t Bu1ld1ng s
Rt
J
Box 148 , Wa v er ly ,
Oh 1o P ho n e 94 7 1'196
7 24 li e

WA NT ADS
P O RT A B LE
T O I LE T
INFORMATION
RENT /\L
C on s lru c l l"''"'
DEADLINES
O utdoor
eve nt s
Phon ooPM
D a v Befor e P ub .C A SH pa 1d tor all mak es and
Ga ll p o i1 S
116 4 7 B 7,
mod
e
l
s
0"1
rno
b
1l
e
ho
mes
loca l 1on
Ru sse ll ' s Plu m b1ng and
Ph one area c od e 6 14 42)
M onday D ea dlm e 9 a m
H eatmg
'95 3 I
( .'l n c f' ll al•on
Corre c t 10 n ~
8 19 li e
1
13
li
e
Wil l b e ac c epted unt 1 9 am
tor Day o f Pub l 1c a t•o o
WILL TRIM o r cut tre es and
REGULAT I ONS
shrubbery
P hon e 949 3211
Th e P ub liS he r r eser11es !h e
or 741 4441
r 1gh t to Cd 1t or re )ect any o'l('s
9 7 24 tc
d eem e d Ob i CCI Iona l
T l &lt;:
l loor •ng
p u bl i Sh e r
w il l
not
f_, e {_ 1\ RPE N I R Y
re il m g and pan (' l 1n q Pt1 o nc
r esp o n s1b l e fo r mo r e t ha n o n e
99 / J/')9
1n c or r ec1 •nse rt •on
B I? ? Id e
HT , Polara
1968 DOD G E
RATES
g re en 8 c y l
S600 Phone
For Want Ad Serv tc e
992 ] 350
5 ce n t s p er Wo rd on e m se rf •on R EM O D E LI NG
Pl Umb ng
9 7 Jtc
M •n •mu m Char ge $ 1 00
ll ea tm g an d all typ es o l
14 c ent s p er word thr ee
gen e r a l
r e p a 1r
W o rk
, on sec ut1v e m se rt• on s
guar ant eed
?0 y ea r s ex' 1970 PLYMOUTH .t40 GTX
26 c e nt s p er w ord s• ~e con
Phon e 99 2 2557
p cr1 en ce
Pho ne 991 2409
secu t 1v e 1nse rt• on s
9 5 61p
5 1 l f lj- ,
~ 5 P e r Cent D• sco unt o n p a •d
ad s and ad s patd w1t h 1n 10
WILL T A KE eld erly womeri"7n
d ays
1974 VW Bug , l1ke new , 14,000
my hom e Phone 992 3397
CARD OF THANKS
m il es Phon e 74 2 .t885
9 7 61c
&amp; Ob1tuary
9 7 Jt c
')2 00 fo r 50 w ord m •n •mum
E a c h ad d 1l1on a l wor d Jc
Off1ce Bu1ldtng wtth 700 sq
1967 PLYMOUTH F ury , 1965
BLIND ADS
ff of space located on 107
1
C he~
P1 c kup
2 to n truck
A dd i1 1o nal /5c Ch ar ge p er
A K C R eg P oodl es tw o blue
Sycamore Sf, Pomeroy
Phon e 949 JBJ l
/\d~e r l1se m ent
an d 1 c ho col at e 1 ap nc ot
9 5 Jlc
Would se ll on land contract
OFFICE HOURS
Pho n e ( 30 4 ) B8 1 3205
B 30 a m ro 5 00 p m Da ll y
or r ent
Gerald Reut e r ,
8 27 12 tp 1970 V O L KS WA G EN
need s
t o 12 00 N oon
8 30 a m
Phone
992-2490
starter S250 C al l 992 7658
Sa lurday
9 5 Jtc
F REE ca t s and smal l puppt es
Phon e 843 7876
9 5 6tc

Notice

I

- --

, .~~ ~~ ... ,
l u o ll o ..O!o oO ' " "" v

"" " ' I " " N- .. ,., ,. ... ,
.,... ,
~
·~
'

MOTOR CO.
1&gt;PE'NE-VES. 8:00 P:M"

5 OG-Bonanza 3, Famtly Affair 8; Mlster Rogers 20,33
5 30-Adam·12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies B. Adam
12 13; Get Smart 15.
6 OG-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15, ABC NewS6; Sesame St. 20,
Special Education JJ
6 Jo-NBC News3.4. 15. ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6 .
CBS News 8, 10.

' "' ••,, • •,, ....

" ""' ~ ' "

W oll ool o

Pomeroy

Ph 992 7174

a .. . .... . , , ., 1 .... ,.,
n.

I ~OMEROY
[

Nathan B•ggs
R ad1ator Specialist

and ARIZONA.

$1295

Blk vmyl roo f. g re y t m 1sh
powe r st eer 1ng , rad1o

Phone ~92-9973
North 'lnd Street
Tune Up s
Battene s
Shock Absorbers . T1res
Muffler Tatlplpes Cooling
Systems
serv 1ce
We
also
Volk swage n s and other
fo re1gn cars
Wilbur Ward ,
Mgr &amp; Mechanic
8 21 1 mo

From t h e largest Tru c k or
Bu l ldozer Rad •ator to t he
sl)lallest H eater Core

Western OOLOBADO,

318 N 2nd

I

Rept~ir

Dan's Shoe

PENN2DIL

NEVADA, UTAH,

pow er steer.ng and brak es ,
d a rk gree n t m1 ;:.h v1nyl r oof , saddl e buck e t seats,
com .ol e, r ad to, l1k e n ew w w f1r es

1970 NOVA VB C PE

Ml

California,

$2095

350 V 8 ~Ju t oma l ~e tran s

~

J

I.

$1495
1971 MATADOR
4 door , local car cnr con d 1t1oned , lull e q u 1pme nt
1970 CHEV CAMARO

Business Services

Choio8

Notice

I BOREP

I I

-Pomeroy~!

I

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER I , 1975

�. '

'
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Momll!y, Sept. 8, 1975

Junior Miss rules set
Rules For the 1976 Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss Scholarship
Program hav e been arl nounced by the program
c ommiltee of t he Meigs
County Jaycees.
The ruJes are:
Contestant must be single

and

never

have

been

married , divorced or h&lt;-Jd
marriage annulled .

~~

Contestant must be u bona
fide high school scn i&lt;•r and

s hall nut graduate prior lu

May 1, 1976.
Contestant's age on March
1, 1976, shall 11ot be less than
16 or more than If! years of
age prior to May :il, 1976

Co ntes ta n t must be llf good
c haracte r and pus st'SS pui st:.
personality, in le lli genn·,
charm. attractive11css. and
guud grooming.
Co ntestant

must

fJOsse ss

a nd display a talent. This

· talent may take the form uf
sin ging. d&lt;o~nci n g, playing a

mu s i ca l instrument,
dramatic
reading ,
art
display. dress designing, ur
she may give Cl ta lk on a
subject of h~r choic e. It is
expre!3sly understoud thoJt
should any contestant's talent
routine at the Suuthee~st Ohio
finals exceed three and oneha lf ( 3 1·: !) minu tes, such
co ntestant
will
be
disqualified fr om rece i ving
any poin ts in t he c r eative ancl
performing arts categ or y.
No cuhtestaut sha ll be
denied the r ight to parti cipate

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE
SEPT. 9

Irwin Allen 's
THE TOWERING
INFERNO
( Technicolor l

Sherman Blessing died Sunday

I.ETAK'l', W. Va .
Sher man Blessin g, 89, Letar t,
contest be l ·au se uf race,
creed or eul or .
died Sunday at the residence
Cun lestant must be a bon&lt;J
or Charles Thomas of Letar t.
fide resident uf the State of
He was a retired farmer .
Ohi o.
Funeral se rvices will be held
Contestant must recognize
at 1:30 p. HI . Tuesday rrom
!.he F oglesong Funeral Home,
the ex istence of a supreme
Mason, and burial will follow
being . All .Junior Miss conte s tan ts a r c judged on the in th e Boards Cemetery. Fr .
George Werrick in char ge.
followin!-:
ca l.cguries:
sc hulastic achievement. 15
Call ing hour s at the funeral
hurnt.'
wi ll bt.' fr om 7 tu 9 p . m.
Judges;
conper c ent;
today . Horn in November ,
:15
percent.
fr n•nLT,
1885, he wa s a sun of the late
(·n·at i vc and perform in ~ &lt;.~rts,
20 percent; poise and ap- Thomas a nd Lucy Raybw·n
Blessi 1• ~- He is survived by
.
'
pear ann • r evenmg
guw n l . I .&gt;
percent. and yuuth fitn ess. 15
percent .
l11fon:Lal iun ca r1 l&gt;e obin lhc local , state ur natiun;.tl

Services set

l ~ti n cd

by writin g Southeas t

Oh io .Juniur" Miss Prugr&lt;o~m.
P. 0 . Bux 101. Pomeruy. Ohi o
·157ti9 .

Reports given
on children at
Guiding Hand
Tht• l'&lt;mun ittec fur the
:Yh·n tal ly Retarded m e t
T1Lur s dc1y night a t the Me igs
( 'oun ty eour tho usc to hear
re ports on the Meigs CoWl ty
c hildn!n n ow attendi ng t!H:.'
Cuiding Hantl School i n
(;allia County.
Reporting we re Mrs. Kate
Jarrell , a teacher at the

Guidin g
Hand
School;
Manning Webster. president
of the Meigs Cu un ty Buctrd of
Mcnl.t.tl Hel.ardatiun 169. an d
several of the parents who
desc nbed !h e ir ch ildl'en 's
reaction lu the program of fered .
It was deci ded thal th e
committee will continue to

meel on the firs t Thursday or
each munth to hea r reports on
the progress being made by

Mei gs
Cou n ty
toward
providing fur the education of
the Meigs County retard ed
children and adults .

for Tuesday
Fun era l services w111 be

hel d 11::!0 a. m. Tuesday at
ltutlierrurd-Corbin
Chapel,
515 Hi gh Street, Worthington,
fur Marjorie Ann Overturf,
Columbus, who was killed in
an automobi le accident in
Columb us Saturday .
Burial will be in Riverview
Ce metery , Middleport .
Graveside serv ices are
sc heduled ror 3 o. m.
friends may call at the
fwwral home between 7 and 9
this evening.
Mrs. Overturf, 33, is survived by her husband, Paul;
a daugh~r , Melodie Ann,
Columbus; her parents, Mr .
and Mrs. Henry J. Henneke ;:
paternal grandmother, Doris
M. Henneke ; maternal
grandmother, Mary J . Doyle;
brothers William Louis
Henneke and John Henry
He nneke, all or Columbus,
a nd two sisters, Mrs . Walter
S.
I Barbara)
Bower,
F'redericktuwn, Pa. ; Mrs.
Paul (Christina) Suhajda,
Law rence, Kan . A son, Paul
Jr., died April 2, 1974.
She was employed by the J .
C. Penny Distribution Cen~r,
Columbus.

lfjreat
From a Great American Bank

twu brothers , Park Blessing,
£udid. Ohio, a nd Charles
Cyri l Blessing , Cleve land
Heigh ts .

SEATILE, WasiL I UPI) Coach Forrest Gregg said
before the game that
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS the Cleveland offensive unit
Charles
McGraver,
jurt wasn 't ready to play
Rutland; Lov ie Watson, Sunday. So he substituted for
Albany; Sandra Hill , Wilkes- most of the First team and the
reserves
knocked
off
ville.
SAT U R D A V
D I Spreviously unbeaten New
CHARGF: S
Martha
York 24-20.
Rcpp,
Alicia
Sc hul e r ,
Gregg
said
Browns
Raymund Hartley , Beverly quarterbback Mike Phipps
Dowell, Gregory CundiFf.
"seemed to be the only one on
Robert Rawlings, Ruth oFFense ready Ill play" but
Wils on, Shelpa Gorad ia , even he was yanked .
Chester Mundry , Eric Knotts ,
"That New York defensive
Ralph Carl, freda Martin , line as all over Mike," said
Judy McNickel, Paul Simon. Gregg. "Phipps co uldn 't
raise hi s arm without
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Donald Pooler, Pomeroy ; somebody hitting him . So I
decided to put in a new unit.
Donna Wel ch, Coolv ill e;
Samuel Rairden,
Long They were kids with a Jot of
Bottom; Clara Radford, ,• desire.
Syracuse;
Ruby
Kin g ,
"Everybody came out but
Pomeroy; Ca rl Hubbard, the wide receivers- Reggie
Syracuse:
Lula
Bass, · Rucker and Steve Holden, "
Syracuse; Joey Pridemore, said Gregg. "( Hugh) Me
Middleport ; Sheryl Little, Kinnis and Larry Poole went
Pomeroy; Nancy Baker, into the backfield for Billy
Pomeroy; Alberta Schuler. Pritchett and Greg Pruitt.
Rutland.
·
SUNDAY DISCHARGES HEAD CORRECTED
T.errence Curlin, J ames
Barton , Arnold Bush .
The lull! I or a Fund drive For
Lonnie Lemaster, Route 2,
Pomeroy , six·year-old brain
Holzer Medical Center
surgery patien t, ha s reached
(Births, Sept. 5)
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo $1,362 .09 . A headline in
Burris, son, Gallipolis ; Mr . Sunday's edition reported the
and Mrs . Raymond Lieving , total at $3,362.
daughter, Bidwell.
(Sept. 6)
DIVORCE ASKED
Mr. arid Mrs . Richard
Charging gross neglect or
Kingery, daughter , Vinton .
duty and extre111e cruelty,
(Sept. 7)
Charles Norman CurFman ,
Mr . and Mrs. Carl Coffey, Route I, Racine, has riled suit
daugh~r , Jackson ; Mr. and
ror divorce from Irene CurfMrs . Phillip !son, daughter , man , Gallipolis, in the Meigs
Point Pleasant, W. Va. ; Mr. Cuun ly Common Pleas Court.
and Mrs . Charles Penick, Other entries include actions
son, Gallipolis.
ror support of children under
the States'
Reciprocal
Agreement riled by Linda
VISITS HERE
fay Dinguss, Hurricane, W.
SYRACUSE - William Va., against Lanny Gordon
Hayden , Indianapolis, was a Dinguss, Route I, Dexter, and
weekend visitor or Alice and Sharon Gail Albright, MidGeorge
freel an d
or dleport, against John Randy
Syracuse.
Albright, Mason , W.Va. , and
a judgment giving the J . B.
Plumbing Supply Co. the
right to collect $899.32 in its
suit ror money against the All
Weather Roofing Co.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport emergency
squad was called to Apt. 102,
Riverside Apts. at 4:39p.m.
Saturday for Susie Edwards
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

PTA TO MEET
The Pomeroy Elementary
School PTA will meet at 7:30
this evening at the school.

Now is the time to do that
painting chore you've been
putting off. Check with the
" FR I ENOL Y ONES" for
Work · Free PAINT and
brighten up any room in

A fire of linde~rmined
origi n at 9 p.m . Sunday
caused severe damage to a
car driven by John P . Barry,
19 of Patriot. The GalliaM~igs Post State Highway
Patrol investigated.
A deer was killed at 8:10
p.ln . Sunday on Rt. 33, two
and three tenths mile s north
of Rt. 7 in Meigs County. The
patrol reported the animal
ran into the path of a car
driven by Martha E. Lyons,
21, or Shade. There was
moderate damage.

Browns "to wm

Hospital News

there are
270,568,93.5 stars in the
universe, and he'tt believe
you . Put up a "fresh paint"
sign and he'll have to check
it for himself".

Auto damaged by fire

Subs pepped up

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Eastern High School
Athletic Boosters will meet at
the school at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.

SALE SET
The Freewill Baptist
Church will hold a yard sale
From 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday at the Doyle Hudson
residence on Route 124, one
half mile east or the Rutland
Village limits. All proceeds
will go toward the purchase
of a new piano for the church.

"The young people wanted
to gel the job done," said
Gregg. "You could see it in
their !aces. " I was worried
about this one after the pregame meal," said Gregg.
"You can tell who's inspired,
who's ready. I hadn't felt
good about he approach or
some people.
"You could see it in their
fa ces and hear it in their
talk " ·he said. " There was a
lack of mental preparation .
Gregg said that quarterback Brian Sipe went with
exactly the same game plan
I Continued From page I)
that Phipps had been using .
"We just weren 't getting without a cutback in henefits
the execution in the First as now required.
quarter," sa id Gregg.
They cited the current
But, he added, " Phipps will budget deficit of nearly $60
start the next game."
billion and predictions it will
Sipe completed 15 of 18 hi• $80 billion or more . The
passes for 143 yards and one p1 'ram
envisions
a
touchdmm after entering the bao" nced budget "in no more
game with the Browns than three years."
trailing 10-&lt;l.
The proposal on health
Me Kinnis led the rushing insurance sets a broad goal of
attack witth 98 yards for a 5.2 protection for the elderly
yard per carry average .
from "catastrophic" illness
The Cleveland scoring without details as to how it
came on a three-yard touch- would he achieved.
down run by Poole, a one
Other provisions of the
yard plunge by McKinnis a 7 program include reForming
yard pass from Sipe to rookie the food stamp program,
Greg Parris and a 34-yard- maintaining "a strong
field goal by Don Cockroft. national defense,"
strengthening laws to stop the
NFL Exhibition Standings
flow of illegal aliens inlll the
United Press International
country and improving the
American Conference
lax system.
East
w I I pel pf pa

House

Miami
NY Jels

4 1 0 .800 75 57
4 1 0 .BOO 105 93
Buffalo
3 2 0 .600 115 119
New England
3 2 0 .600 111 103
Baltimore 1 3 0 .250 J9 68
Central

w II pel pf pa
Houston

2 2 0
X·Pitts
3 3 0
Cincinnati 3 3 0
Cleveland· 2 3 0
West

.500 72 64
.500 liB 102
.500 119 106
.400 S5 100

w I I pet. pf pa

Oakland

5 0 0 1.000 151 69
Denver
2 3 0 .400 91 112
Kansas Ci ly
2 1 0 .400 90 74
San Di ego I 4 o .200 60 91
Nationa I Conference

East
w I I pet pf pa
NY Giants

4 I 0 800 110
3 2 0 .600 77
Wash .
3 3 0 .500 132
3 2 0 .600 63
St. Louis
Dalla s
1 ' 0 .200 77
Central
w II pet pf
Green Bay 2 3 0 .400 66
Chicago
2 3 o .400 55
Minn
2 3 0 .400 67
Detroi t l 4 0 .200
69

Phil a

72
93
112
46
121

pa
93
60
89
134

4 I 0 .BOO llB 50
Atlanta
2 3 o .400 60 71
New Orleans
2 3 0 .400 B1 81
San 1 ra n 2 3 0 .400 95 B7
x -inctudes College All -Star
result
Saturday's Results
Buffalo 16 Atlanta 14
Miami 21 Chicago 10
Cincinnati 22 Detroit 14
Kansas City Jl Green Bay 3
St. Louis 13 Minnesota 6
Los Agn. 35 Phila 0
Pittsburgh 24 New Orleans 13
Sunday's Results
New Eng land 31 Dan Diego 24
San Francisco 44 Denver 10
Cleveland 24 NY Giants 20
NY Jets 35 Washington 31
Monday's Games
Balt imore at Houston

R

SMITH PROMOTED
Berlin,
Germany
Frederick J. Smith Jr., 2Q,
whose father lives at 565 N.
Front St., Middleport, has
promoied to Army specialist
five 'While serving with the
Berlin Brigade here. Spec.
Smith received the promotion
through the Army's "Stripes
for Skills program.

ASK TOWED
Francis Raymond Andrews, 30, Long Bottom, and
Nguyen Thi Tam, 31, Long
Bottom.

1776: The words heard 'round the world.
We've already a nn ounced our independence .
On July 2nd , our Continental Congress
adopted a reso lution "that these United Colonies a re, and of right ought to be, free and
independent States." That announcem.ent,
says John Adams, will make July 2nd the
most memorable day in our history. But it's
not until two days la ter that we officially
explain th e rea~ons for our independence, in
the July 4th Declaration we'll always celebrate.Our Declaration of Independence
makes America unique. Never before has a
nation actually written down reasons why it
became a separate state. Our words stir the
world. And even inspire other peoples to defend their rights against tyrannical leaders.

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-

· ·--7

~..;-/

-:;::::: ~

Chloi-ine fear
quieted today
GALI,IPOUS FERRY, W.
Va. ( UP!) - Hundreds of
toWIIllpeople were forced Ill
spend the night in make-flhilt
quarters
after
being
evacuated from their homes
when clouds of chlorine gas
from a nearby plant pervaded the atmosphere.
By 7 a.m. today, however,
roadblocks were dismantled
and
residents
began
streaming back io their
homes following a restless
night at elementary schools,
youth centers or the National
Guard Armory.
"Everything's back Ill normal, " reported Mrs. Adalee
Hart, office deputy in the
Mason County Sheriff's headquarters.
The chlorine gas leaked
from the Stauffer Chemical
Co. following a fire late
Monday night, but a company
spokesman said there·was no
explosl\m as earlier reports
indicated.

Cause of the fire and
seeping gas was under investigation. There were oo
damage reports.
stauffer sald there were oo
Injuries at the plant and the
only individual needing
hospital care from exposure
to the chlorine gas was Bob
Casey of Gallipolis who was
treated for skin and eye
irritation.
Plant officials said the
poisonous gas mostly cai!Bed
discomfort and no danger
existed after it dissipates.
The evacuation of nearly
1,500 persons, ac~'Ompllshed
in a street-by...treet alann
spread by state troopers and
sheriff's deputies, was
precautionary, officials said.
Shortly after the gas began
leaking Into the atmosphere,
hospitals and other law enforcement agenices in nearby
lllwns were placed on alert.

Junior Sportswear
Second Floor

Clear antt COLI, wuJgnt, lows
'in the 40s. Cloudy Wednesday, highs in the upper 60s
to the low 70s . Probability of
rain near zero today, 10 per
cent tonight, 20 per cent
Wednesday.

POMEROY
I .

.. .

··.~
·' '
.

''

..

CHLORINE GAS - This fearsome cloud of chlorine gas escaping
!'rom the Stauffer Chemical Co. plant at Gallipolis Ferry, W. V• . had
thousands of trkounty residents frightened Monday night and Tuesday

morning . The seepage of gas followed a fire in which no one was injured
and which had been brought quickly under control. This time exposure
was taken at night by Rohert Wingett, puhHsher-&lt;&gt;ditor of the Poin1
Pleasant Register.

VOL. XXVII

NO. I03

Now You Know

entine
'·

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By United PreoslnternaUonal
CLEVELAND - PERSONS WHO HAD uay treatments
for such ailments as acne, ringworm, tonsl,l!tis and enlarged
thymus glands between 1930 ant\1960 were advised Monday by
the Cleveland Academy of Medicine to contact their doctors.
The academy said such x-ray treabnents of the hea(l and
neck have been linked to thyroid cancer. A past president of
the academy and t~ .qevetan.d . R'\(llolot!ical Society, Dr.
Theodore Castele, said the'treatni.dii:S were.lhought Ill be safe
at lite time they were administered. He said the treatments
were stopped about 15 years ago and the academy's warning
does not include ' 'norm.i.l x'ray pictures or radioactive iodine

~."

HONG KONG- ACI'OR MICKEY ROONEY said today he
has "found tge girl of my dreams" and will make her his
eighth wife\ialer this year, Rooney, in Hong Kong Ill begin
work on a new film, said his bride-to-be was Jan Chamberlain,
a 25-y~l!t,-old American singer~omposer who doesn't believe
in marriage.
"At long last I've found the girl of my dreams," Rooney
said as he relaxed in his hotel suite with Miss Chamberlain.
"I've got a bad case of the flu, but love can conquer anything."
Rooney will be 53 on Sept. 23.
"!don't believe In marriage myself, because it wrecks a
good relationship between people who truly love each other,"
said Miss Chamberlain. "But Mickey J?elieves so much in the
institution of marriage -and I can't disappoint him."
BOSTON- CITY OFFICIA!.S SAY they are pleased with
the opening of the second year of court-{)rdered busing despite
a rock-throwing battle with police, a firebombing, two injuries,
a fire at President John Kennedy's birthplace, and 40 per cent
school absenteeism.
"The opening day of school this year was better than last
year and better than a lot of people expected," Peter Meade,
an aide to Mayor Kevin White, said Monday.
LOUISVILLE, KY.- LOUISVILLE EXPERIENCED its
first calm night Monday since a massive couri-{)rdered busing
plan went into effect last week, but officials said strict security
will continue.
There were no major incidents reported at the 165 schools
Involved in the desegregation plan at the beginning of the first
full week of classes for 22,600 chlldren who are being bused
away from their neighborhood schools. Class attendance increased, although antibusing forces called for a boycott to
continue.
NEW YORK CITY'S 60,000 TEACHERS WENT on strike
against the nation's largest publ.(c school ~ystem tqday, forciJ)g up to 1.1 million more chlldren to do without normal classroom instruction. The New York strike, a continuing Chicago
wallrout and snialler strikes in nine other states left more than
two million students to enjoy extended vacations or sit In cold
or half-empty classrooms. San Francisco also faced a strike
threat.
Their contract expired at 12:01 a.m. EDT today and New
York teachers voted overwhelmingly to strike Ill protest
layoffs, increased class sizes and a longer work week.
•
HONG KONG- PRINCE NOROOOM Sihanouk ended five
and a haH years of exile and made a triumphant return Ill
Cambodia today, the Phnom Penh radio announced. The radio,
monitored In Bangkok, said Sihanouk and members of the new
administration arrived at Phnom Penh airport at 1
p.m. from Peking, where the prince pledged_ to help build a
''people's democrac;y" In his native land.

.,

The fir s t automobile race in
the United States , on
Thanksg iving Day, 1895 ,
between
Chi cago
and
Waukegan, Ill., was won with
an average s peed of 7V.! miles

Devoted 'l'u The lllfere.~t~ of The Meigs-M11s1m Area

UTl'LE ROCK, ARK. -REP. WILBUR MIIUl, D-Ark.,
wbo lost the chairmanship of the powerful House Ways and
Means Committee, has been expelled from the Masons, ac·
cording Ill a Jack Anderson column to be published today. The
expulsion came after Mills' Aug. 22 trial of at Lodge 874 In his
hometown of K,ensett. Arkansas Masonic Grand Master J . Lee
Overstreet of ·Texa~kana declined Ill confirm or deny Anderson's report.
Mills' Masonic trial reportedly gr~ out of the so-ca)l~
Tidal Basin incident when Mills was observed bleeding ll!ld
l!Ppare!ltly intoxicated emerging from his ca~ moments after a
woman leape&lt;. into the basin in Washington.

IN

"Everybody got the heck
out of here," one deputy said.
" That stuff just keeps rolling
and rolling, up and up, and
it's moving up the river."
Cross-river Gallipolis
warned its populace Ill shut
off air conditioners, stay off
the streets, and keep windows
closed all night. Some were
evacuated inlll rural areas of
the county away from the
river.
Later~ authorities said the
chemicals would only bother
persons
with
critical
respiratory ailments.
Police spread an alarm
throughout this sparselypopulated lllwn, and later
kept roving patrols to guard
homes, many of which were
left open or unlocked by the
frightened owners.
About 100 persons huddled
nervously on the lot of a
service station a few miles
out of town
(Conllnue&lt;t on page 10)

Weather

cambodian

ELBERFELDS

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES Densil
Byer, Leon; James Light,
Mason; Denver
Bates,
Gallipolis; Thomas Hunt,
Thurman;
Willard
Laudermilt, Jr., Mason;
Denise Sowards, Henderson;
lnhn
Harmon,
Point
.•!easant; Beulah Oliver,
Point Pleasant; Otis Randolph , Leon; Eva Bartrum,
Catlettsburg, Ky.; Lillian
Long, Gallipolis Ferry;
Robin
Gainer,
Point
Pleasant.
New Citizen, a son to Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Pollock,
Gallipolis.

~YfJOJt---Vickysporl plays the going

hy p t&gt; rmi ~s 10n o f THE BF 'ITMANN ARCH IVI

Werry hits
targets for
two TDs

Meet the Team Day was a
success for the Warriors
Saturday afternoon when
they defeated the 71Jers from
Washington County, 14-8, in
the Middleport stadium.
The Warriors struck early
in the second quarter on a
seven yard TD pass from
quarterback Bob Werry to
Chip li;lggerty. Then picking
Items stolen
up the momentum from an
interception, the Warriors
from iverby
marched 65 yards, capping
Gallipolis city police the drive with another pass
Saturday investigated a from Werry, this time to
breaking and entering at the Bruce Harris, for II yards
french Art Colony located at and a TO. Paul Aikman
Riverby on first Ave . kicked the PAT on both to
Someone apparently used a lead 14-0 at the half.
skelton key to open the rear
Midway in the fourth
door .
period, the 71Hors staged a 70
Missing was a pair of yard drive to paydirt. A two
electric hedge trimmers, 100 point conversion failed twice
foot extension cord, a tool
but two face mask penalties
box, hand tools, a hand drill · allowed them a third and
and several shovels. The successful attempt. The
intruder also entered the 76'ers' bid for another score
bathroom and wrote over the ended with a fwnble with 17
wail!.
seconds remaining in the
In another complaint, Mrs. contest.
Bobbi Roach, 215¥.. Second
Score by Quarters
Ave., repor~d the theft of two
Warriors
0 14 0 0-14
paintings from her home .
76'ers
0 0 0 0- 8

West
wttpclpfpa
Los Angeles

The first of two Saturday
accidents occurred at ! p.m .
on Mill Creek Rd. six tenths
of a mile south of Georges
Creek where cars driven by
Delores Young Donnell, 18,
Rl. 1 Gallipolis, and Karen
Bate;, 28, Rt. I, Gallipolis,
collided. There was moderate
damage . Mrs. Bates complained ur injuries but was
not treated .
Otto A: Marcinko, 26, or
Reedsville, was cited for
Failure to stop within the
assured c lear distance
Following an accident at 2: 30
p .m . Saturday on Rt . 7, four
~nths or a mile north or Rt.
35.
The patrol said an auto
driven by John T. Scherer II,
18 Point Pleasant, attempted
to' turn leFt and his car was
struck in the rear by the
Marcinko vehicle . John T.
Scherer, 44, a passenger in
the Scherer car was slightly
injured.

'

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1975

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UP!)- With two key figures
in the miners' month-long
wlldcat strike behind bars
today, only a few diehards
remained off their jobs as
thousands of miners returned
Ill the pits to reswne coal
production.
"We have a few diehards ,"

Ab use

per hour .

reported secretary-treasurer
Dennis Scarford of the United
Mine Workers District 31 in
Fairmont. " But we have just
practically
everybody
worklng in our district. ' 1
Scarford said only about
400 of the 10,000 men employed ln his district of
northern Wes t Vir~inia

remained off the job lllday.
He pinpointed the idle mines
as the Williams operation of
Consolidation Coal Co. and
the Barricksville mine of the
Eastern Associated Coal
Corp.
Canso! offlclala reported a
bOmb scare at its Christopher
Division near Morgantown

must he stopped

The Meigs County rural
solid waste collection system
could be . discontinued if
abuses .of it continue, the
board of county commissioners warned today.
The commissioners offered
the
following
(strong )
suggestions for operation of
the system:
- Materials such as stoves,
refrigerators and scrap
lwnber shall not be deposited
at the collection box sites.
- No materials are to be
deposited on the ground
surrounding the boxes.
Plastic bags are recommended for containing the

refuse placed into the boxes.
- Commercial solid waste
collectors are to transport
their loads directly to the
sanitary landfill and not use
the boxes. The boxes are
designed and placed for rural
domestic
solid
was te
collection .
- Under no circumstances
are contents or the boxes to be
set afire.
COMMISSIONERS indicated they are pleased with
the general operation of the .
rural solid was~ collec ti on
system but are concerned
that a few pers ons are
misusing the system, thus
crea ting problems ror the

Women
pi·cket
££
O • ce

majority or rural residents.
The commissioners remind
everyo ne that this system
with
e quipment runded
largely froni federal funds as
a demonstration, could be
terminated ir the box sites
a re continued to be littered
with large objects that the
sys tem is not designed for ,
and waste is scattered about
the boxes on the ground. The
months or September, October,
November
and
D€cember will be used to
determine ir the abuses or the
sys tem are corfected.
Also Tuesday the commi ss ione rs endorsed an
1Continued on page 10)

PRICE 15'

late Monday emptied the
mines of its hoot-{) WI shift, but
said the men returned to
work for the 8 o'clock shift
today .
"In essence, they're all
hack and in most cases it's a
good turnout," said Consol's
public relations supervisor
Rayburn Fraley.
The massive turnouts for
work followed the jailing
Monday of Lewis "Skip"
Delano and Bruce Miller,
leaders of the "right Ill
strike" cause which ignited
the walkout.
U.S. District Judge K.K.
Hall ordered them behind
bars after calling them a
"danger" to the coal industry
and the union.
''I really am nopeful that
you will recognize that you
are, in a sense, fighting
against the courts of the
United
States,"
Hall
declared. "If there are no
courts, there are no laws. If
there are no laws, there is no
government.
" I don't want to keep you in
jail, but for the safety of the
coal industry and the miners
themselves, you have to
either he phced in prison or

quit what you're doing. "
In Washington , a UMW
spokesman said the strike
was over .
"The men are returning to
work and only a few diehard
holdouts remain," he added.
At Beckley, the union's
District 29 said all of its men
were back on the job for the
Monday afternoon shirt, but
four large mines of Consolidation Coal Co . in northern
West
Virginia
remained closed after UMW
locals voted to slay out in
sympathy with southern miners. One or the Canso! mines

was Robinson Run , the
state's largest coal producer.
Hall told the men Ill pay
$500 fines Ill the Kanawha
Coal Operators Association ,
whose southern West Virginia
mines felt the brunt o! the
illegal work stoppage.
Miller and Delano were
sentenced to 179 days in jail,
but Hall indicated the terms
would end if they purged
themselves of strike activities.
Before making hi s decision,
Hall became encircled in a
controversy over the use of
news reporters as witnesses
in the Miller-Delano hearing
when Charleston Gazette
newsmen Andy Gallagher
and Rick Steelhammer
reFused to testify, saying the
court was putting them on
one side of a public issue.
They were jailed six hours,
then released with instructio ns to either appeal the
contempt charge in 10 days,
or purge themselves in seven.
Logan County miner Sim
Howze, a UMW local official
who was jailed six days in the
strlke's infancy, warned his
IContinu ea on page 10)

·--

1

Wives of coal miners who
have been on strik~ in Meigs
County picketed the Meigs
County Welfare office in
Middleport Monday in their
efforts Ill secure food stamps.
The picketing was in~rrupled in the early afternoon when the wives were
informed that a stale welfare
official had been contacted
and told local workers that
the miners should receive
food stamps for one month's
time, a spokeswoman of the
wives said. The amount they
.will pay for the food stamps
will be based upon the income
of each miner and his family
living expenses as provided
in State and Federal
regulations.
The spokeswoman ror the
wives said the group has been
assured that welfare workers
will work overtime in getting
the food stamps issued to the
miners' wives . However, she
added, that the picketing will
be ~eswned early 'F riday
morning if the wives have
heard nothin g from the
· welfare office by that time .

NEW RULES VOTED
WASHINGTON - The
International executive
board of the United Mine
Workers Union voted 22-2
Monday 1o Impose new
rulea, glvlng lt more power
to
clamp
down
on
unauthorlzled
work
stoppages.
The action came as a
month-long wildcat strike
the Idled as many as 60,000
miners was ending in many
coal producing stales.

FIRST PLACE HORSEMEN - Bill Cole, a law student at Cleveland
state, is pictured with Jet Reed, 11)-year-{)ld gelding which took first place
in the Appaloosa Pleasure Horse Show at the recent Ohio State Fair.
Owned by Cole Stables, Tuppers Plains, Jet Reed won a sllver tray,
rosette and $500 cash. Jet Reed also lllok se'cond in the Senior Appaloosa
Pleasure HQrse Show . .COnformation of the animals was a part of the
competition as was performance of the horse and rider in the ring. Cole
goes Wednesday Ill Columbus compete in the Ohio Western Horse Show
Assn . fall roundup , then vacation in Cape Cod for a week befor~ returning
Ill Meigs Count y fo r the fa!~ roundup of the Ohio Valley Horse Show Assn .
the weekend of SP pl. W-21.
·

HORSEMANSHIP WINNER - Gene Cole, 12, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Eugene Cole, Tuppers Plains, came home from the Ohio State
Fair with first place in horsemanship in the Ohio Junior Appaloosa
Pleasure Horse Show. This is Gene's fll'st season to ride in horse shows.
He is pictured on Tribal's Todd, a three year old gelding which he rode in
the fair competition. The junior horsemanship show is for riders 12 and
under. Cole won a silver tray and rosette. Tribal's Todd is owned by
Cole'sStables at Tuppers Plains. Gene is a seventh grader at the Eastern
Junior High School.

to

'

...

.

.,

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