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12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo;t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 29, 197

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospitul
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- George Daylong, Middleport; Jam es l.lr a ley.
Pomeroy.
SATURDAY
DI SCHARGES - Helen Jenki ns.
Alfred Stitt, Deanna Cundiff,
William McKnight, Geor !}.e
Circle, Minnie John son, 13l'lty
' Donovan , My rtle Clar k .
Tammie Fergu son, J.ovi1'
Wals on , Arlan d F loyd,
Richard Duckworth. illar)
Van Meter, Sanil1 Wl'll s,
Clarence Spurrier .
SUN DAY AO:VII SSIONS
Ja mes Fugate . Po m e roy :
De bra Clel and. H.acint•;
Ber tha Garnes, Racine ;
Vinton J ones, l .ong Bottom :
Jimmy H.iffl e. Hac in e . Don-.s
Arn old, P om e ro y: Cla ra
I.avendar , Sy ral'U.se .
SUNDAY DISCHAHGI&lt;
Christine Branh am .
Plt"asant \'allry Hospital
Disc harges - Amy Housh,
Mason ; Mrs . .Jack Whe eler ,
Point Plea san t ; William
Robertson, Fraziers Bottom;
Bertha Russell. Pomeroy:
' Bessie Elrod , Ottawa, W.
Va .; Allen Jeffries, Point

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE thru TUES .
SEPT. 29 -30
THE GREAT
WALDO PEPPER
(Techn i co lo r)
Robert Redford and
Bo Sven son
Show Slarts at 7:00p .m .

P lea sa nt ;
Mrs .
Merl e
Ki gg ing:s, so n, Ga llip oli s
Ferry ; Mrs. David Chapman,
son, (; a lii polis Ferry; Mrs.
Hl'nry
Stewa r t ,
P oi nt
Pl easan t : Vene tl a Smith,
Point Pleasa nt; Mrs . Noah
Brf'wrr, Vinlon, 0 .: Pettricia
Nev ille, Point Pleasant .
Blrlh- i\ son to Mr . a nd Mr s.
Kenneth Knu ,-,h of New
II~iven. Sep te mber 29.
Unlzt·r ~lnli(· al Ccntf'r
1 Ilirths, S!'pt.Z6)
Mr. &lt;tnd Mrs. Paul ·sunJn{' rs, so n, (;allipolis.
I Sept. 211
!\1 r . a nd Mrs. Cla ren ce
San de rs . son. Callipoli s .
[Sept. 281
Mr . and Mrs. Cary Nee!.
son. (' hes hin:: .

Kr·:NOSH r\ , Wis. 1UPI1 The rcnovalcd Milwaukee
Rucks opened th eir preseason
trainin g ca·m p at the
Uni versity of Wi scons in l'ark side Sunday minu s two
veterans .
Guard .Jim Price is a
contract holdout nnd team
Captain Bob Dandridge, a
forward, is undt' rgoing
mt.&gt;dical lests . Veteran guard
Jon McGloc klin is a lso
hurtin g with a back injury
and his workout s ri~ht now
are limited to jogg ing.
Several of the new face s
around th e Bucks' camp
includ~ Elmore Smith, who
came to Milwa ukee from Los
Angeles in the dea l that sent
Kareem Abdu i-Jabbar to the
Lakers, and lop rookies Dave
Meyers of UCLA and Junior
Bridgeman of Louisville.

N. W.OPTOMETRIU
COMPTON. 0.0.

OFFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12, 21o 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.J - EAST COURT
ST .• POMEROY.

*
m~nfon

TEACHERS STRIKE
TROTWOOD, Ohio I UP!)
- Teac hers in the TrotwoodF'unefal services were he ld Madison school dis trict here
at the Bigony - Jordan went on strike today ina
Funera l Home in Albany for salary dispute . A spokesman
Ncv Ca rpenter, 97, well- for the leaf' hers sctid·between
known fo rmer Of this area. 80 and 90 per cent of the
Survivors
i nclude
two district's 250 teachers stayed
daught e rs. Mrs . Martha off the job . The district has
Mays . who lw s lived with her 5,400 s tudents. Schools were
par cnl":i und cared for them , opened and classes were
dur ing tlw past eight years,
tau ght by teachers who
&lt;Hld Mrs. Sidney Parker , crossed picket line s an d
Huberta. of Stra sburg , Ohio.
supervisory personnel.
He al so is s urvived by four
gret ndch ilclren , Albert · Ney
Qui vey, Dover, Ohio ; Robert
P~1 r ker . Middlenort. and
Anna Parker and Tummy
l' arkcr, both of Strasburg.
Ther e are rive g real grandl·hildren
Those fr om a distance here
fu r the funeral included Mrs.
Mar g aret Dai ley, sons ,
Thomas und David, Berne ,
Ind .: Phi l Baker, Decatur,
Ind . ;
De bbie
Lovell ,
Damage wa s set a t $12,000
Charleston. W. Va .; Don
in a hou se f ire at 1:20
Moore , Larry Moore and
today at the residence of Mr.
Debbie Wood , Hebron; Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Westfall, Rt .
and Mrs. Sidney Parker and
I, Gallipol is I BulavilleAnna, Mr . and Mrs. Tom
Addison Rd.).
Parker and family, Mr. and
Acc ording to Gallipolis
Mrs Raymond Margo and
Fire Chief James A. Northup,
Mr .
and
Mrs .
Pete
Mrs. Westfall and her sons,
Fli c ki nge r, Strasburg;
Jamie, 16, and Johnny , 13,
Den ny Zinsmoor, Cleve land;
were awakened by heavy
Mr . and Mrs. Albert Quivey,
smoke and heat coming from
Dover; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
the family room of the home.
Parker and Ney, Bobbie and
The blaze spread from the
Ci ndy, Middleport; Mrs.
family room to a utility room,
.Jessie Brooks, Mrs. Miller
livin g room and kitchen ·
and daugh ter, Coolville; Mr.
There wa s heavy smoke
and Mrs . Edwin Angle, Mrs.
damage to the hallways a nd
Esther Dai ley and Mr. and
light heat and smoke damage
Mrs. Ed Jirik, Columbus, and
to the bedrooms. Damages
Mrs. Eleanor Walters of
were set at $7,000 to the house
Guysville. Services were led
$5,000 to its contents.
and
by Rev : Howard Mayne and
Cause of the fire has not been
burial was in Temple
determined .
Cemetery.
Loss was set at $250 in a
truck fire at 6:15 p. m.
Saturday at the City Barn on
TO END MARRIAGE
Wanda M. Lyall of Rt. 1, Chestnut St. Cause of the
Patriot, and [rvin Lyall of blaze in a 1959 Dodge pickup
Waterloo have filed a petition truck owned by Richard
to dissolve their marriage of Bennett of Point Pleasant is
July 15, 1959. The couple has unkn own .
A gasoline leak was blamed
seven ch ildren.
for a $50 fire at 6:30 p. m.
Satw·day in a 1969 Ford
Torino owned by Rick
Lambert of Eureka Star Rt.
The fire occurred in front of
Bob Evans Drive In.
They were the 121st, 122nd
ana t~ord alarms of the year
for the Gallipolis voluntee rs.

Carpenter

Home is
damaged
by fire
a.m.

From a Great American Bank
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JOINING MRS. FWRENCE RICHARDS in the
receiving line at the American Legion Auxiliary reception
honoring her Sunday were , left to right, her sister, Mrs.
Kathryn Phillips, Columbus; a daughter , Mrs . Ann Angel,

Joseph

Middleport ; her husband, Arnold ; another daughter, Mrs.
Janice Smith, Columbus; and a grandson, Kevin Angel,
Middleport.

Reception

News .. in Briefs

LOS ANGELES 1 UPI) Vicente Saldivar of Mexico
City stretched hi s winning
streak to 17 Saturday night by
winning a unanimous l!lround decision over Claude
Durden of Los Angeles.
. Saldivar had Durden
pinned against the ropes in
the fourth round , but couldn't
finish his opponent off
because of Durden 's clever
defensive blocks. There were
no knockdowns in the bout.

1Continued from page I)

(Continued from page I)
United St"' es now seems to be acting " honorably" toward
ending the Middle East conflict hut he accused America of
sending te chnicians to help Jsrae. the 1973 war.

Those from out-of-the(Continued from page I)
county
here for the reception
Dr. Nyhan said victims
were Mrs. Lillian Kaiser,
become spast ic and inMrs . Janice Smith, Mrs.
variably become bedridden
Kathryn Phillips, and the
or confi ned to wheelchairs.
CLEVELAND - AS FEW AS 100,000 VOTERS, or a tur- Rev . Henry Key, Columbus;
Victims become unable to nout of about 40 per cent, was predicted for Tuesday's primary
control their muscles and as election whose top race is for the Democratic nomination for Mrs . Lenora Atkins, Mrs.
their condition deteriorates , mayor. Republican Ralph Perk, now in his second .term, was Undy Neff. Mrs. June Riffle .
they become susceptible to seen as one of the top two finishers in the non-parJisan primary Mrs. Marge Bush, Mrs.
all kinds of other ailments, · of which the top two finishers meet Nov. 4 in the general Marge Mains, Mrs. Bonnie
Morrison, Crooksville ; the
such as pneumonia.
election . .
Rev . Nyle Borden , Mrs.
The meeting was not all
Three Democrats, however, were felt to be running quite Mabel Brown , Mrs . Winnie
somber as the relatives tightly for the second spot and the question of how many voters
matched family albums , turn out, and which ones, was crucial to determining which Weatherholt, Gallipolis; Mr .
wedding
pictures
and would oppose Perk . Arnold Pinkney, the schoo l board and Mrs . Devon Tipple , Mrs.
Rhodes ,
Mrs.
momentos. Most had never president and a black, drew support fro{ll several Charita
Florence
Behrems,
Lanmet many of the others.
organizations and was editorially endorsed by the Cleveland caster; Mrs. Ellen Lieles,
The patriarch of the family,
Press as the ca ndidate whose personal qualities would Colorado Springs, Colo.; Mrs.
Antone Joseph, came to
probably do most for the city in the near future .
Verna Carroll, Mrs. Phyllis
Northern California from the
Young, Mrs. Erma Powers,
Azores around t he time of t he
WNDON - POLICE TODAY CALLED IN their airport Mrs . Madge McVay, Mrs.
gold rush .
antiterrorist chief to direct the s iege of three quarreling Gladys Lanning, and Mrs.
Rose Marie Silva, 43,
gunmen who have held seven Italians hostage in a restaurant Mildred Dollmatsch, Logan; .
Uvermore, Calif., a great- basement storeroom since 1:30 a.m. Sunday.
Mrs . Lillian Henderson, Mrs.
great-g randdaughter of
The arrival of Police Commander Christopher Payne, wbo
Joan
Ruth, Mrs. Bernard ·
Antone Joseph, said a brother
headed negotiations during a plane hijacking at London's Cooley, Mrs. Artia Moler,
was dying of th·e disease. She
Heathrow airport last January, sparked reports that the
wrote the National Genetic bandits had demanded a getaway car and a plane to take them Mrs. Louise Stewart, Mrs.
Helen Billings, and Mrs.
Foundation expressing
out of Britain. But Payne refused comment.
Hazel
Straw, Athens.
concern for two nieces who
"I cannot confirm reports that I was brought in becaU.'le of
had recently married and her
my previoU.'l ~xperience of dealing with terrorists," he said.
children .
"This is a long operation and it's just a question of changing
The t~ational Genetic
staff."
TWO HOSPITALIZED
Foundation became inRACINE
- The Racine ER
terested in the family J; plight
EARLY
WEIGH-IN
CAf'~RO FIRM
squad was called Sunday at
and Mrs . Silva was in All members of the Tops 1:15 a.m. for Sue Spaun, who
MIAMI (UP! ) - Cuban
strumental in contacting all
Premier Fidel Castro Sunday Club are to go to the was
having
difficulty
members of the family to set
criticized U. S. inaction in American Legion Hall in breathing . She was taken to
up the meeting.
ending an economic blockade Middleport at 6:30 p . m. Veterans Memorial Hospital.
against his country and Tuesday for an early weigh-in At 4:15 p. m. the squad was
warned Cuba did not intend to which precedes the meeting called to Rt. 2, Racine, for
" renounce
even
one" at 7: JO at the hall with Dr. James Riffle, Jr., who had
Marxist-Leninist principle to Hanek, Director of -Psy': a head injury. He was also
(Continued from page I)
bombs were found, but said, resume diplomatic relations chological Services of Ohio ·taken to Veterans Memorial
University, as speaker.
Hospital.
"We're looking like hell for with any nation .

REDS COUNTERED
LISBON, Portugal (UP!) Combat-equipped
troops
occupied Portugal's radio
and television stations today
in a go.vernment attempt to
wrench them from Communist control. The move
provoked immediate and
angry response from the far
left but no violence was
reported during th e first
hours of the occupation.

more .''
In addition to Gulf, Exxon
and Amoco, the other oil
companies that received
extortion letters were Union,
Philips,
Standard
and
Amoco, the FBI spokesman
said.
The letters demanded $6.5
mil1ion from each firm,
warning that explosives had
been set and would go off
unless the money was pai&lt;j,
the spokesman said.
The letters said the money
was being demanded on
behalf of a fictitious group
called
the
"Fighting
American Indians." It said
the money was being raised
for Indians in Wounded Knee ,
S.D., and other places.
There is no such group as
the Fighting Indians, the
spokesman said.

SURVEY MINI-PARK - Bill Pullins,left, of Pullins Excavating surveyed the Pomeroy ·
Park Development area, project of the Meigs Jaycees, Monday. Looking on is Bill Young,
Meigs County Jaycee Park Coordinator. The "mini park" will have two tennis courts, picnic
tables, a ktddleland and horseshoe pitch area . Students of the vocational class at Meigs High
School will make picnic tables and Preceptor Beta Beta sorority will donate a picnic table.
The tennis courts will be !Aha pe .

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OWNER HORACE KARR KEPT close check on the
progress of his P611ed Hereford sale Saturday at Royal
Oak Farm. The sale brought receipts totaling $121,110.

,,,,,,,,,~,,~,,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,~.,.,:,,,.,~:,,:,\,,,,;~;,~r:,,;,,,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,,t'

~News.

b )' permr «ron ul

1111 Ill I I ,\lA"-'- r\IU Jl l\'l

1777: Th e Stars and Stnpes un(llrl.
We carried the Unwn Jack into battle with
the Mother Cou ntry. Because we are, after
a ll, sti ll British . citizen s until we win this
war. But well changed that Union Jack a
bit . Added our own thirteen stripes, to
proudl y sy mbolize our t hirteen colonies. By
now. we've finall y dec lared our independence. And we're we ll into the war for it. It's
lime to lower the Union Jack and raise our
own colors. In Jun·e; Congress sets itself to
the task of determining just what our very
own fla g will look like. We'll keep our thirteen stripes. Red for courage. White for purity. But now , we'll replace the Union Jack
with thirteen sta rs on a field of blue, for
loyally . She 's a beauty , our Stars and
Stripes. Long may she wave. ~

WORK WEAR
SPORTSWEAR

WASHINGTON - THE SECRET SERVICE put special
arrangements into action today for President Ford's trip to
Chicago and Omaha, his first travel from Washington since
being shot at in San Francisco eight days ago.
White House officials said security reasons kept them
from detailing what new bodyguard arrangements but
acknowledged the trip has no scheduled appearances by Ford
in or near public crowds. All of Ford's scheduled appearances
in Chicago and Omaha will be indoors and with the names of all
guests and others on Secret Service lists.
In the past month two threats to Ford's life came from
open air crowds. In Sacramento Sept. 5 a young woman
pointed a pistol at hill) before being disarmed. In San Francisco a woman in a street crowd outside the St. Francis Hotel
fired a pistol and missed.

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
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Pomeroy, Ohio

40,000.0Q_tM.aximum Insurance

1

A FULL
SERVICE

l3ANK

for Eich ·beoositor
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

''Abou t all that remains to
be shocked these days is a
cor nfield'' ...

It may seem like "corn"
when we say that th e
" FRIE NDLY ONES" want
to make each cus t omer feel
he is tr uly important . (As
indeed he is!) Our bus iness
is ba se d on friendly, ·

co urleous se rvice .

POMEROY CEMENT
£LOCK CO.
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NOW YOU KNOW
The common garden snail
belongs to the same family as
the abalone, is suitable for
eating. low in calories, high in
protein and rich in miner~ls.

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D Pite·lined YI!St 6SV- The warmest vest made f!l Blanket lined )aclte16BU :_ For work plly II ~Oket lined
Rugged styling and warm Gl 'Pile-tined ranch coa1 34CB- luxuriou s pHt .lining lor. real ~te liJ ' Pile·tined
29~8 :- Warm and sturdy, yet l ~ght ~ Insulated qui111!ned jacket ~LJ - Light weight insulatirln gives ·yoq I'!IO~Iity
QUilt hned coat GQLC - Styling . With red nylon QUI!Img
Utihty pants 62W ...... lite. aH around work pant
lull back o~eralls 66FB - •Designed lor the professional craftsmen III] Full back bib overalls 6fB - A
dream, sna~ proot and wirld resistant
.Insulated · coveralls 996Q - Total Comfort and total warmth

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.snap·on hood - Mal&lt;:lllng hood available for all jicket, coat and coveraflstyles- matchin11 !nings too. ,

ACSTOMEET
A meeting of the Meigs Unit
of the American Cancer
Society will be held in the new
· headquarters at the ij!Jghes
Building on S .. Third St.,
Middleport, at 7:30 p. m.
Thursday. All board mem- 1
bers and the p!Jblic are invited.

as ruggel;:l es the men
who wear. them

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WASHINGTON- THE NATIONAL DISTRICT Attorneys
Association today urged prosecutors nationwide to begin a
crackdown on parents who dodge child support payments. The
association said taxpayers can get a return of at least $5.05 on
every dollar spent to track down runaway welfare fathers.
The Department of Health, Education and Welfare, which
is setting up a parent locater service to meet the .requirements
of legislation that took effect Aug. 1, estimates taxpayers could
save $1 billion a year in welfare payments under the new
program.
, Financial incentives for local prosecutors include federal
reimbursement of 75 per cent of the cost of estab lishing a child
support enforcement program and a 25 per cent share of
support payments collected during the first year for the local
county or political sub-division, the district attorneys' group
said.
MALTA, ILL. - MORE THAN 200,000 FARMERS from
throughout the nation are expected to attend the 23rd annual
Farm Progress Show, which opened today at the 1,000-acre
James Willrett farm about four··mi!es southwest of here. The
thr.~Y show designed by Prairie .Farmer l)l8gazine in'
eludes demonstrations of the latest elJwpment available to
farmers ·under actual working conditionS.
.
Some 600 acres of corn and 75 acr~hf soybeans,will be
harvested during the show, with half of the corn being dbopped
for silage and haH harvested as high moisture co'tn. The corn
then will be stored in ine airtight silos which hold 5,350 tons of
feed. Willrett finishes 1,200 beef cattle in two enclosed sheds on
i.he DeKalb Cpunty farm, and a third shed is being constructed.
The cattle are fed with automatic equipment, and visitors will
have a chance ~view the feeding oper!ltion.
WASHINGTON ~ PRESIDENT FORD IS expected to
decide this weekend whether to recommend an extension of
this year's personal income tax cut through .1976. Congress is
. li,kely to follow his advice - if he opts for an extension. An
: extension will be invisible to the average taxpayer. But his
paycheck would· shrink if trut;es were permitted to rise after
Jan. I to their old levels:
For the nation_, th_e decision has important ilnplications •
(Con~ued on page 12)

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
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By United Press International
CHICAGO - POLJCE SAID TODAY they received a
telephone call from a man who said he had knowledge of a plot
to assassinate President Ford upon his arrival in Chicago
today.
The unidentified caller told police he was not involved in
the plot, but that plans called for an attempt on Ford's life
when be arrived at the military side of O'Hare International
Airport. Police said the telephone call could not be traced, but.
tlie information had been turned over to the Secret Service.

Mary A. Parker
died Saturday
CHESTER - Mary A.
Parker, 45, Chester , died
Saturday
afternoon
in
Athens. Mrs. Parket was the
daughter of the late Chester
and Hildred Smith Will. She
was also·preceded in death by
a brother, Robert Will.
Surviving are an aWlt, Mrs.
Amy Hall of Zanesville, and
two uncles.
Funeral arrangements are
being made at the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home in
Middleport. Burial will be in
Chester Cemetery.

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Mandate coal substitution in current and new
oil and natural gas-fired
electric utilities and major
Policy Bili "a balance" and industrial boilers.
"a common sense approach,"
- Amend the Clean Air Act
Wampler insisted . it was by reducing "excessive
"merely coincidence" that regulation." '
most of the bill's 10 co- Require technological
sponsors fought strict strip and economic factors to be
mining standards and sup- considered jointly and fully
ported President Ford's vein with environmental conof the strip mine bill.
side rations In establishing air
To the chagrin of environ- · quality standards.
mentalists, the House later
- Allow electric utility
failed by a couple of votes in investment tax credits to
its . attempt to override the · effect conversion to coal.
presidentiaL veto .
- Allow assistance 19 railWampler said his bill "at- roads for hauling coal with
tempts to thrust coal into the low-cost federal loans, tax
energy debate now before credits, reduced schedules
Congress.
for amortizing new con" Oil is only one facet of the struction.
- Allow coal pipeline deveenergy equation," he said.
"Very little has been said or lopment with right of eminent
done about coal."
domain .
Among the bill's major
Wampler said he has had
provisions are :
indications of support from

labor, the coal industry and
public utilities.
He said the United Mine
Workers Union was the major
labor backing.
"We've had every indication they would support
the general concepts of the
bill," he said.
The other sponsors are :

Reps. Clarence E. Miller, ROhio; John J. Duncan, RTenn. ; Keith G. Sebelius, RKan .; Albert W. Johnson, RPa . ; Robert H. Michel, R-IlL ;
Tom Bevill, 0-Ala.; John W.
Slack, D-W.Va .. ; Carroll
Hubbard Jr. 0-Ky .; Tim Lee
Carter, R-Ky., and M.G .
Snyder, R-Ky.

Key indicators crest
WASHINGTON I UP! ) The nation 's index of leading
economic indicators leveled
off in AugU.'lt to end a fivemonth upward cycle, the
Commerce Department said
today .
Many economists say the
index sh9ws which direction
the economy will take in
future months. But the zero
change from July left the
next swing in question.
The index was unchanged
in January, 1973, before

moving downward to signal
the longest recession in postWorld War II eco nomic
history. But it was also flat in
June, 1972, before rising to
forecast a period of economic
prosperity .
Commerce said the index
was unchanged in August
because of mixed results
among the II available indicators. Five rose, five fell
and one - the worker layoff
rate - was unchanged.

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enttne
y

XXVII

NO. 117

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. :&gt;EPTEMBER

1975

PRICE 15'

Buyers come to
Royal Oak Farm
from 10 states

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Brawn·DuEk

a

emphasis on production of coal

Devoted To The lnterestli of The Meigs-Mason Al:ea

Complete Selection of Carhartt
Brown Duck Work Clothes.
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WASHINGTON (UP!)- In
an attempt to "thrust coal
into the energy debate" now
before Congress, Rep.
William C. Wample(, R-Va.,
has introduced a bill aimed at
doubling coal output over the
next decade.
Wampler told a news
conference Monday his bill
could cut foreign oil imports
3.8 million barrels a day by
1980 and tbat figure could be
boosted to 6.~ billion barrels a
day if it were accompanied
by an Increase in coal
production of 350 million tons
·
annually by 1985.
Wampler said his measure
seeks middle ground in the
strip mining controversy between surface coal operators
and environmentalists.
calling his National Coal

Virginia legulator argua-energy
crisis can be relieved with more

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Wampler bill
would .double
mining of coal

FBI looks

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•

BY BOB HOEFLICH
They came, they saw and they bought!
Those few words surrunarize a herd dispersal sale of
Polled Herefords staged Saturday at Royal Oak Farm, owned
by Mr. and Mrs. Horace Karr .
The farm - actually quite secluded about four miles north
of Pomeroy off the Flatwoods Road - took on a county fairlike atmosphere for the sale. A large tent, placed near the
farmhouse, held three sets of bleachers, packed with purchaser~ and, onlookers's l€1 head of cattle were moved
quickly tltrdiigh \hi!'!al~ring:- " - ~ · 'Buyers were 'OIT band ftom 10 states in'cluding Indiana ,
Wisconsin, Michigan, Tennessee, West Virginia, Maryland,
Pennsy~ania, Kentucky, New Jersey and Ohio plus Ontario,
Canada, and the previoll.'lly "depressed" state of the cattle
market was given an economic boost, as the sale closed with
proceeds totaling $121,110.
Owner Horace Karr kept a close eye on the sale as the .
chant of the auctioneer, Col. "Ham" Hamilton of Lewisburg,
W. Va. , outstanding in his job, moved the purchases right
along. Cars and trucks were parked in two large areas set
aside for the many visilllrs to the sale, one of the largest of its
kind in the history of the county.
·women of the Chester Fire Department Auxiliary kept
busy serving food.
Cattle offered for sale were numbered and moved along a
railed enclosure into the sale ring. Everyone involved was
more than busy; Meigs County Extension Agent John Rice who
was attending the sale as an interested observer, became a
volunteer cattle handler when he detected problems in' the
cattle moving along the designated route.
Eight bull lots brought a total of $6,700 for an average of
$837 each. A total of 153 cows sold for )114,410, an average of
$747. The average per a!limal was $7~2.
Volume buyers were from Cumberland View Farms in
Clinton, Tenn., which purchased 19lots ; Douglas Page Farm,
Riverfalls, Wis., which bought 15 lots ; Robinson's Polled
Herefords of Lewisburg which bought 15 lots; Dunwalk Farms
at Far Hills, N.J., which purchased 12lots, and Guy Swadley
of Guysville who purchased 10 lots.
The lllp selling cow went to Spring Creek Farms at Pier- (Continued on page 2J

Heist made of
drilling outfit
RACINE - Heavy drilling
equipment valued at $55,000
vanished here Sunday night.
Sheriff Robert C. .Hartenbach said today the
Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Ohio
Bureau of Criminal Investigation have been called
in and are on the scene.
Sheriff Harten bach said his
department received a call
from Roger Adams Monday
at 5:44 p.m . that equipment
owned by the Adams Drilling
Company of Racine, parked
over Sunday at the Roy
Proffitt Gas Station, was
taken. Its value was
estimated at $55,000. Adams,

.

over Monday, thought the
equipment was on the job .
Gone are .a 1975 Chevrolet,
.C-${) truck, maroon with·dark
blue winch bed with yellow
winch, Ohio registration 11-F540valuedat $12,000 ; one 1973
Haul-It low !loy valued at
$22,000, and a 1974, 35-0B
.rohn Deere dozer yellow,
black canopy, with limb
risers valued at $21,000.
Hartenbach said charges
are on file and anyone who
has any information is to
contact the sheriff. The FBI
and BCI are working with the
sheriff in trying to locate the
vehicles.

-

Wardens have fire
Permits are required for
burning in Meigs and Gallia •
Counties.
The Shade River Ranger
District
cautions
that
although there has not been a
frost, vegetation is starting to
die a nd leaves have started~~

fall, thereby increasing the
hazards of uncontrqlled fires .
"If you must burn, get your
permit from your local or
deputy fire warden and burn
in accordance with the instructions thereon", the
district office advises .

"'

MEIGS ODUNTY EXTENSION AGENT JOHN RICE
helped keep sale cattle in line at Saturday's Polled
Hereford sale at Royal Oak Farm. Rice attended the sale

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday
through
Saturday, fair and unseasonably cool with highs
In the upper 50s to the mid
60s and lows will be In the
30s to the mid 40s.

Suit asks

$108,019
A $108,019.13 damage suit
has been filed in Gallia
County Common Pleas Court
as a res ult of a traffic accident Sept. 29, 1973 at the
intersection of Rt. 35 and Rt .
160.
Harold A. Blair, of Centerville, Ohio, filed the action
against Hortense A. Epling,
First Ave., Gallipolis.
According to the complaint,
the defendant negligently
drove.her car in Ill the rear .of
Blair's vehicle. Blair claims
that as a result of the
collision, he has suffered
permanent injuries to the
cervical spine; has incurred
medical expenses totaling
$1,002.48; has lost $5,757.80 in
wages ; has paid out $1,158.58
for hired help, and·h as lost his
automobile due to the extent
of damages. He seeks
damages totaling $108,019.13
plus costs and demands a
jury trial.

as an observer but pitched in to help when ·he saw farm
employes having problems with the animals. Owner
Horace Karr wasn't aware of Rice~s services until near
the end _qf ~~~

Law is called in
The Meigs County Commissioners will see if the law
can help stop abuse of the
landfill pick up boxes located
throughout the county.
Meeting with the commissioners today were Otis

Knopp a nd Forrest VanMeter, Sutton Township
trustees, who reported that
abuse of the boxes, which has
been going on for sometime,
" is illilielieveable ."
Cement , fence posts, dead
animat... and automobile
parts, Ill name a few, have
Two injured
been placed in the boxes
making it almost impossible
for the truck to pick them up
in accident
and empty.
Mary Thompson, daughter
Charles Knight , assistant
of Mr · and Mrs. Bob prosecuting altorney, was
Thompson of Pomeroy, and called in to meet with the
her husband , Hugh Mitchell, commissioners in regard to
were reported confined to the situation. The comintensive
care
at
a missioners asked for Knight 's
Binghamton, N. Y., area advise in the matter who said
hospital w(lh injuries sur- he would have something
fered in a plane crash SWl- specific soon as to what can
day.
be done .
According to reports here,
Also meeting with the
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell and . commiss i oners were
Mrs. Mitchell 's daugtiter , members of the Records
Amy, 4, were trying out a new Commission . Ed McConnell,
plane whtch they had pur- field representative for the
chased. The plane crashed m Ohio Historical Society ex·
a rt ver m the Bmgham ton
area. According to the report
the child was drowned and ·
her body was not recovered
until yesterday. Mr. and Mrs.
Thompson have gone to
Binghamton .
Three suits for money, a

Money suit filed

suit for support, one divorce
action and a dissolution of
marriage have been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Cloudy tonight and WedLeo Morris, Rutland, filed
nesday, chance.... of showers
'
suit
for $10,000 against the
tonight and Wednesday. Lows
Cole Mfg. Co., Charlotte, N.
in mid 50s. Cooler Wednesday, highs in lower 70s . . C. and the Meigs Equipment
Co., Pomeroy, for improperly
Probability of rain 20 per cent
assembled
equipment
Wardens are:
today, 30 pei' cent tonight, 50
~ausing
complete
loss of a
Cheshire Twp. - Everett per cent Wednesday.
large corn crop.
'
McDaniel.
Harold
D.
Brown,
Morgan Twp. - Kenneth
LOCAL TEMPS
Pomeroy, filed suit against
Ward.
Temperature in dovlntown
Barbara Roush, · Hartford,
Bedford Twp . - Fred L.
Burson, R. V. Heilman , Mrs . Pomeroy at II a.m. Tuesday and Nationwide Mutual Inwas 65 under sunny skies .
. silrance Co., Huntington, for
\Continued on page 12)

p~rmits

plained the program. He
stated that he has taken an
inventory of ~u public
records and made a record of
what is valuable and what
records can be destroyed . It
is his duty to advise what
local records are of historical
importance and what can be
disposed of.
Discarding of useless
records will give all office
holde rs more space .
McConnell said he must
obtain permission from a ll
office holders before he can
begin his research . His fin dings are si!bt to the state
auditor and then to the Ohio
Hislllrical Society . Once a
system is set up , the office
holders can work accordingly.
Serving on the records
commission are Henry Wells,
Bernard Fultz, Howard
Frank , Eleanor Robson,
Larry Spencer and Martha
Chambers, secretary.

Weather

dental services in the an1ount
· of $566 and against Harry M.
and Marla McGinnis, Letart,
W. Va., for dental services in
the amount of $1,097.
Fred Allen Engle, Rt. I,
Middleport, filed suit for
divorce against Mary Sue
Engle,
McConriellsville ,
charging gross neglect of
duty 311d extreme cruelty.
Filing for support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Act
was Margie L. Smith, against
Lee Roy Spurgeon : Doris J.
Ha.y nes , Pomeroy and Basil
L. Haynes, Pomeroy, filed for
dissolution of marriage.

�,.

-·- "

r

3- The Dally Sentmel, M1ddl eoor t-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Sept. 30,1975

,Ohio State is
ran.k ed No. 1

RAY CROML.&amp;Y

The low cost"
of more security
By Ray Cromley
A friend m the electromc busmess, who
does constderable work lor the government , says that about
$15 000 to $20 000 worth of development should produce •a
podket-s1zed ferrous metal detector whtch Secret Service
agents could carry unobtrusively
Movmg sllghtly ahead of Prestdent Ford, they cvuld circulate along his path and ferret out handguns and other
suspiCIOUS objects, usmg the same ea r attachments as With the
rece1vers they now carry
The ong~na l gadgets - crash developed from current
knowledge, and made largely from on-the.;;helf parts, would
llkely have a range of around two to three feet W1th a little
add1lion al resea rch, my friend thinks, the rang e of these
detec tors could be doubled and tripled
Convemently small dev1ces that could sense out suspiCIOUs
obJects at somewhat longer distances , are theoret ically qmte
poSSible
These sensors would not have detected a Lee Harvey
Oswald, m the wmdow of a bmldmg so me d1stance off. But they
would likely have called attentiOn to a Sara Jane Moore or a
Lynette Allee Fromme m a crowd along the path of Mr Ford
The first sunple detectwn deVIces, after the mthal $15,000
to $20,000 developmental mvestment, would llkely cvst no more
than $1 ,000 each
These measures would not , of cvurse, be foolproof But
ta lks with spectallsts m the fteld convmce me there IS no other
;
practiCal method to proVIde protection for a Prestdent.
The d1ff1cult1es become understandable whe n one look:i
mto t he charactensttcs of current a nd past prestdentlal
assassms and would-be assassms
I have talked at length With doc•ors studymg these
demented people lnvartably they are strange, unpulsive
loners, livmg m worlds of thell' own, secretiVe and With a
tendency to self-dramatizatiOn Theil' mmds drift from one
enemy to the next They' re born losers, do not st1ck to one job
for long, and are mtensely mvolved w1th the belief of the
moment
Only rarely do they represent any group. A fracti9n
mamtam personal loyalties. They are usually , Infatuated with
the thought of a supreme , dramatiC public spectacle with
themselves at the center
It 1s unposstble to screen all nuts for arms, to tail all
" strange" people m and out of crowds gathermg around the
Pres1dent- or gtve tickets of admtsswn only to a selected few.
We can't force a ll unbalanced people to carry little electromc beepers to e nable the pollee, the FBI and the Secret
SerVIce to locate them easily m any crowd.
We ca n 't call out the Army and the Reserves to police
bystanders m a mass1ve protective sweep
We can't ctrculate the pictures of all the unbalanced
people many community durmg a prestdentlal vis1t m order to
alert the Citizenry And we can't lock up everyone who conceiva bly mtght be a threat
Yet the unbalanced people we are talkmg about are
walkmg bombs, ready to go off.
We can take a clue from our relative success In preventing
a trcraft hijackmg of late The screening of all passengers as
they boa rd has had dramatic effects

wASHINGJ'ON -

'---·

TilE CHANT OF AUCTIONEER Col " Ham Harm lton of L'"" ' bur g W Va , boomed
out over the crowd Saturday at Roya l Oak Farm 11 hen 1G1 hedd of registe red Polled
Hereford cattle were sold at a publlc sale

Buyers come from

trnel
DEVOTED TO THE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEHILL

Exec Ed .
ROBERT HOEFliCH

ten states to Meigs sale

Ct1y Edttor
Publ tS h e d dat ly excep t
Saturday by The Oh to Valley
Publ is hing com pan y , 111
Court St
Pomero v. O h to

4576'9 B us tness Off tee Phone
99-2 2156 Ed ttorto!JI Phone 99 '2

2157

Second class postage patd

at Porn eroy. Oh 10
N.at lo na l

ad vertlstng

repi"esentalt ve

Ward

Griffi t h Co m pa ny
Inc
Bort lnellt &amp; Glldlagher D rv
757 Third Ave . New York
N Y 10017
Subscrlp t ton
rl!ltes

Delivered by ca rrier where

available 75 cents per week
By

Motor

carr ier

~oute

service

wher-e

nCJ't

vallabll' , One month , S3 25
By mall In Oh io and W Va
ne
Year
S'l2 00.
S1x
onths ,
Sll SO ,
Three
onths , $7 00 Elsewhere
26 00 year, S1~ m onth s
13 50 , three months , S7 50
ubscrlptlon pr ice •nclu des
unday T1mes Sent1nel

I Contmu ed from pdgc 1)

pomt, Ohio for $2,500 wh 1le the lop sel ling bull went to Barb
Hensley of Warren , OhiO for $1,750 A one.quarler mterest 1n a
s1x-monlh-old bull c~lf su ed by Jus t mere Anxiety sold for
$1,500 to FairVIew Farms of Cadiz Th1s put a $8,000 ftg ure on
th e calf wtth Royal Oak F arm kee ~m g the remammg threefourths mterest
Mr. and Mrs Karr were "qUite pleased w1th the sale and
1ts results W1th them for the sale were 2 outstandmg rmgmen
Johnny Wmston, Kansas City, who IS with the 'Polled
Hereford World, " a publlcatwn on Hereford s, and Ed Huff,
Macon , Ga , of the " l.Jvcstock Breeders Journal " The Karr
sale \\Ill be a feature m a futur e cvpy of ' Polled Hereford
World."
In cidenta lly, don't fee l sorry for the Kar rs who gave up the
more than 160 head of Herefords They won 't get too lonel j
Even alter the sa le, they sti ll hav e !50 chm ce Hereford hetfcrs
roammg about the 1,250 acres a t Roya l Oak Farm
•

A breakthrough

THERE WAS A FULL HOUSE on hand for the Royal Oak Farm's public Polled
Hereford sale Saturday ThiS IS one of three sec twns of bleachers wh1ch were filled by
buyers and observers

Rio Grande College President witRessed
the grief of a Civil War sweetheart
ED NOTE When Norma Lee of Rutland received her copy recently of
the tssue of The Sentinel wh1ch enclosed the Rio Grande College supplement
on tts commg Centenrual, she was especially mterested as her husba nd 's
famtly knew one of the presidents, the late John DaVIS Where upon , she
recalled stor1es that had been handed down m Mr Lee's famil y, and decided
to send one of them to The Sunday Times-Sent me l. She had another reason to
be mterested m John Davis one of her aunts nursed hts daughter m her last
Illness.

A STORY OF A CIVIL WAR SOLDIER
When I read the news of Rw Grande College's commg Centenrua l, I
recalled a story whtch has been handed down m my husband's famtly , a
story m which the late John Dav1s (one tune pres1dent of Rio Grande ),
played a part
My husband's uncle, Henry Lee, of HarriSonville, a sold1er durmg the
Civ1l War, was taken pnsoner and spent the rest of his hfe m the mfamous
Andersonville PriSOn. It was there he experienced untold suffenng Ma ny
stortes have been told of the horrors of that rat-mfested place where ma ny
prisoners hterally starved to death
When the news of Henry Lee 's death reached Harrlsonvtlle, John Davts,
a teenager, was delegated to carry the message to Henry 's sweetheart
Afterward!!, he told the Lee family
"I dehvered the message to h1s sweetheart, and witnessed her gn ef "
Henry Lee's body WaJ! brought home and la1d to rest m the Shipman's
Cemetery near HarnsonVIlle, Oh10 where many of the older famtlles of this
area are burled.
At that tune many people had epitaphs carved m tombstones The
followmg epttaph was placed on Henry Lee's monument ·
" Rest, son and brother, rest.
Thy God hath called thee home
Thou now hast all the battles fought
And thou hast won thy crown "
More than 100 years has elapsed smce our beloved country was torn
apart by a long, bloody war It was a war m wh1ch many sold1ers of both
stdes lost !hell' lives or were crippled and mauned for hfe It was a war
where oftentunes brothers fought on opposmg stdes causmg great angmsh m
the hearts of thell' loved ones .
As we are on the eve of celebratmg the btcentenrual of the foundmg of
our country, may we pay homage to these brave men and women of another
generatton who suffered so much to keep our country uruted, under God
Norma A. Lee

Patty linked to
•
terronst group
By ROBERf SfRAND
SAN FRANCISOO (UP! ) Weapons, bomb components,
documents, cash and a green
sca rf found m two Symbwnese Liberation Army
' 'safe houses " may hnk
Patricia Hearst and thr ee
other members of the small
terrorist group With a bank
robbery ktllmg and several
San Francisco Bay area
bombmgs.
Thts was disclosed Monday
when the FBI flied m U S
D1stnct Court an mventory of
the 1tems agen).s found m the
two house s after they

TOM TIEDE

Self-defense is mutual
DR. LAMB

· By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - There
are heroes m evtl as well as m
good, as the French morali st
La Rochefoucald was fond of
reminding , thus an Amenca
gropmg for some hope m the
aftermath of assassmahon
attempts need look no further
That 1s also why your than an ex-Marine named
doctor dtdn 't see anythmg. Oliver Stpple .
The spasm comes and goes,
He IS the good c1tizen who
llke a muscle cramp. When was credtted m San Franyou see a person wtth this CISCO with having lunged at
problem and he doesn't have the would-be killer of Gerald
the spasm during the Ford to prevent further
exammatwn you can't see 11 gunplay and posstbly 1ts
or establish the dtagnosis. It success,
is like the intenmttent rattle
Actually, what Sipple dtd
in your car. It is always gone should not be constdered
when you get to the garage. herotc so much as obligatory.
Go back to your family It IS ; after all, the duty of
doctor and try agam. He may , each in society to police the
be lucky enough to get X ray good of the whole. Yet at a
or fluoroscopy studtes of you time when the consctence of
when you are in spasm. He many Americans seems to be
can also refer you to a mental ' In a comatose state, when
health clinic or psychologiSt people increasmgly are
for
some
professional responsible only to themcounseling. You probably selves, Oliver Sipple IS a
need to resolve some sources meddler of unfortunate
of conflict that are causmg rarity And so not only a hero
you amuety and tenston, and but perhaps also an object
you won ' t be able to do 1t lesson for those who WISh for
alone.
·
better times in the nahan
Just because somethmg is
It is not by acctdent that the
psychological IS no reason not country has arrived at a tune
to try to resolve it. The when not even 1ts President IS
problem is just as real as if safe on tis streets. The clear
you had an irritation m your
truth is, as nwnberless ofesopha~us
from
some
fiCials and academtcs are
dtsease Meanwhile, stop all
slowly begmnmg to confess,
Cigarettes, coffee, colas and
the thug ~ are winmng the war
tea
on crime because they out-

Salt won't affect constipation
valved but not difficult If you
wan t more detatls on con.
stipatwn, wnte to me m care
of th1s newspaper , P 0 Box
1551, RadiO City Statwn , New
York , NY 10019 Send 50
cents, a long, stamped, se lfaddressed envelope, and ask
for The Health Letter number
2-1, 1mtable or Spasttc Colon
and Consllpatwn
DEAR DR LAMB - I have
a stomach disorder wh1ch Is
driVIng me crazy
After
I eat
or
dnnk
almost anythmg I have
a heav y feelmg m my
stomach accompanted by
indigestion If left unattended
I usually end up belchmg up
undigested food for hours
Although not pamful , th is Is
very annoying To ehmma te
this dtscomfort I us ua ll y
drtnk a glass of water m1xed
with baking soda, belch up
the contents m my stomach,
and fmd immedtate rellef
I went to my doctor m
regard to !his approximately
three years ago. After
various tests were g1ven
lnl.nlng,
· , ( ulcer check , ' etc ) I was
'nle proceaa is fairly m- gtven a clean bill of hea lth
Last year I sepa rated from
'

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
50 years old and have been
bolbered with constipation
for a long time. I use a lot of
table salt on most everythmg
I
My husband says this IS
the reason for my conatlpatlon. Your opinion ,
pleue.
DEAR READER - No.
'lbe salt is absorbed from
your digestive tract and
eliminated through your
lddneys, as long as you have
good kidney function. Too
much salt, though, may be
harmful to your kidneys or
may even be related to
developing
high
blood
pt nure. Moderation In salt
- ill a good idea.
Cooltlpatlon is caused from
many factors. The problem IS
often related to Improper
eallnl habita, unwise use of
luatlvea and poor bowel
hablla. It Ia usually possible
to overcome these problems
by changing your way of
llviDg. 'l'hlllnvolves changes
Ill eating habita and bowel /

eat.

·'

•

-

my w1fe and w1thm days
these symptoms completely
di s appeared F1ve months
ago we \\ent back together
and - you guessed 1t - the
symptoms returned, although
our marriage seems much
better
Perhaps the problem 1s
psychological and m turn
c reatmg physiCal havoc on
m y system, but th1s IS an
unprofessiOnal guess, and
even If accurate, where do I
begm ? Please help'
DEAR READER - Your
unpr ofessiO na l guess IS
probably nght You are
dcs cnb1ng esop hageal or
ca rdi o-s pasm The spasm
occurs m the muscles m the
lower esophagus JUst where
th e esophag us JOi ns the
stomach
Why do I thmk so? Because
you sa1d you belched up
undigested foods hours later
If the food had go tten mto
your stomach and had been
there several hours It would
be a t lea st parttally dtgested
by the ac id digestive JUices m
the stomach

.·

number the forces marshaled
agamst them Attorney Gen
Edward Lev1 recently put the
blame for growmg cnme
squarely where 11 belongs, m
the apathebc la p of the
public . The law IS not enough,
Lev1 satd, public atlltude
bemg the ultunate anticrime
weapon
"We have a coilntry whtch
1s very tolerant and has been
Willing to take a degree of
lawlessness. The mam
problem ( wtth crime) 1s the
w11lmgness of the pubhc to
accept (cnme), because if we
are not willmg to accept it
law enforcement would be
much better . I suppose one
has to say that what we have ,
to do is change the attitude of
the public toward th1s kind of

tolerance of crtme "

There are, to be sure, some
good reasons why the public
attitude has waned For one
thmg , government hardly
encourages parbc1pahon by
1ts private ctbzens m matters
of public defense Domesllc
tranqual1ty IS the provmce of
police forces and outside
mterference ts not appreciated. One recalls
tllustrallvely the many news
accounts of rape and robbery
v1ctuns who, after defendmg
themselves vtoletly, have
been arrested for the use of
concealed arms
Beyond thts, natur ally,
there is the necessary
revuls iOn agams t vtgtlan-

t1sm One Ohver Stpple can
be condoned, even honored,
but a dozen of thts type ratse
seno us
quesllons
of
propnety The Ku Klux Klan,
after all, 1s merely an
organtzatwn of Amencans
who feel they are domg the
nght thmg, the right thmg
havmg occastonally resulted
m black men hangmg dead
from three lunbs
Yet 1f the public has forfeited 1ts nght to pubhc
defense for go od reason,
some kind of reexammatwn
of the consequences may be
mented " It IS a wt se
max:1m ," as a revolutlOmst
John Weatherspoon wrote ,
"to avoid those thmgs wh1ch
are enem1es w1sh us to
practice " There can be no
doubt that the natural
enemies of a stable nahon thugs, outlaws and assassms
- wish hard that Americans
wtll continue to witness the
streets as nonmvolved
bystanders.
Better the communtty be
less myop1c. It IS one thmg to
be overcome by lions , as
so meone has said, qUite
another to be devoured by
rats. A shot at the President ,
hke a muggmg of a man in
the park, IS a cnme against
all of us. The only defense,
therefore , ts a common
defense . Enter Oliver S1pple
as the for mstance; 1f one
private man can help save a
President, many of hts kind ,
advised and encouraged to
become mvolved, may help
aave others as well.
I

arrested M1ss Hearst, Wendy
Yoshunura, William Harris
and his Wife, Emily, on Sept
18 In San FranciSCO . Th,e
mventory was returned with
the FBI's search warrant.
In a related development,
attorneys for Miss Hearst,
made a formal request In
court for her transfer from
the San Mateo Co1mty Jail to
the
McAuley
Neuropsychiatric Institute at st.
Mary ' s Hospital m San
Franciscv . The motion said
cvnfmement m the jail was
''dangerous and hazardous to
her health."
M1ss Hearst, daughter of
San Francisco Exammer
President Randolph A
Hearst, was abducted by t¥
SLA Feb. 4, 1974. Later m
tape-recorded communiques
she renounced her past life
and satd she was jouung the
SLA
M1ss Hearst and Miss Yoshunura were staymg at a
house in the ctty's Mission
Distrtct at the tune of tbe
arrest and the HarriSes were
pte ked up nearby.
The 25-ilage inventory said
a 9rrun pistol and 31 live
rounds of ammunition,
$157.28 m currency and coins,
a green scarf and newspaper
clippings were among the
Items found In Miss Hearst 's
house
Found m the Harrises'
house were several guns.
three pipe bombs and the
cvmponents for bombs ~~
well as library books on
explosives.
.
On April21, a Crocker B&amp;nk
branch m Carmichael, Calif.·,
a suburb of Sacramento, was
robbed and a woman shot and
ktlled. The robbers got
$18,000.
Sources said the cash found
m the Hearst house Included
a packet of $1 bills With serial
numbers matching those on
bills taken m the holdup.
They also satd one of \he
robbers wore a greeq scarf.
And, they said, 9rrun ammunition was found at the
bank.
Agents dec'lined to comment on the inventory, but a
Sacramento ~ Sberiff's
spokesman sailf,""''rrrere ar~
some thmgs m the labs at tbe
FBI that could make a strong
case agam!ll them."

'J'HE RUTLAND NAZARF:N E CHURCH ha s emer ged as champiOn of the Me1gs County
' thurctl Soft ball League. and of Its recent tournament "lth a league record of 18-2 a nd 24-3
overall Other teams 1n the order of flru sh ml eague pl a ) were the Laurel Chff Methodist 1211, Chester Ch urch of God 12-ll. Syracuse Nazarene 12-ll, Mt Hermon E U B 0-15 and
' Pomeroy Chur ch of Ch mt 1-19 TI1e champs above, 1"1' , fir st row , are Don Hysell , M1ke
Grate , Ralph Sear ls, Ch arles Hall 0 Hnn) Edwards . and John Grate , second row, Gene
Wtse 1 Bob Gnmm , Denms Donohu e, Dav td Gr ate, Ket th Kenned} , and thir d ro". Bob
Hawkms, Gar) Hyse ll :11elvm Cre mea ns. C:harlle Neece . an d J ohnny Miller

Big 0 has

Today's

building

Sport Parade

firtn now

By MI LTON RICHM &lt;\N
UP! Spo rts Ed ito r
MANILA 1up1 )-When th ey 're off b) the mselves, huddled
touet her ta lkmg , !ra mer-adviSor Eddie ru tc h keeps ham., p
mermg home one word to J oe F'Iazte r. r epecJttng 1t over and
\Over until 1t sounds l1ke ~n m e b1okt.:&gt;n 1 ecord to the hstemng
challenger
The word ts " pressure
If Edd1e Futch ha s said It once m the pa st s1' wee ks, he has
smd ll 10,000 lim es so Joe Frazier has 11 fi r m!) fixed In his
m md that 1f there IS one means of be.tlmg Muhammad Ali for
the world heav yweig ht cha mrJOnship here 1lomghl U S tune ),
then this IS 1t
Edd1e Futch Is only 100 &lt;&gt;Ct cent n ght
Muhammad All has had 50 profess"ma l f1 ghls ,md m a ll
those fig hts only two of hiS oppone nt s eve r put an) real
!&gt;ressure on him One wa s Joe Fraz ier and the other was Ken
Norton
Both were schooled by Cdd1e r utc h who kept drummmg
that same wor d, pressure . mto t hem eac h tune the) went up
a~amst All
"My fi ghters have fought hr rn fo ur limes before and the)
Won two and lost two, " S&lt;I\ S F'utch No ma tt er whether he got
the dectswn or not, he 1 All l kne" ' he was m a life a nd death
struggle w1 th them each time "
There IS no question but that .J oe F1 a Zier \\Ill try to pressure
All n ght from the start th" time aga m
A 20-game wmner docsn t star t expenmcntmg with a ne "
pttch m the World Sen es . and Joe Fr·az ier tsn' l abo ut to turn
Fancy Dan m th1s one He knows his best shot ,s that murderous left hook of hiS deliv ere d a t short ra nge a nd nobodv
takes 1t and snules back , not e\ en Muharruna d Ali
. Eddie Futch hasn 't filled Joe FraZier 's hea d wtth a whole lot
_of_mumbo-Jumbo He ha s simp!) told h1m All ts not mv mcible,
~can be bea ten, and the way to do It IS kee p aft er him all the
"I.Jple, keep Up the prCSSW e , foul Up hiS tnmng and don 't give
lV:m the dtstance he likes so much Frazier under sta nds a ll
thiS
Alt ts foxy
" He ha s mad e fun of Fra"'er s heed •bemg n ght the re all the
time " He 'd lrke the c ha llenger to baL k off and try to box "1th
liim, but he m ight as well ask hi m to stand there m the nng and
rectte poetry
Ali makes a btg thmg a bout the co nditiO n he's m, but I think
Frazter ts m better condit on l vc seen F ra zter get knocked out
early by George Foreman, but I've n12ver seen htm ever tire as
inuc h as All has m most of ht s mo st rei en· fig hts
' ' I p1cked Ali to beat Sonny L1 slon " hen he \\as a n un derdog
i:lie f1rst tune they mel, and df.ulll when he \\enl 1n a ga1nst
1
Ceorge Forema n a yem Hgo 1n Z,11 re , but I like .J oe F razier m
.t lus one bv a de cisiOn
To beat Frazie r Ah " ould have lo catch !urn early, the way
'
F,'oreman did, a nd All Isn't a n especially quic k starter What's
!.I)Qre, he has a tende ncy to ttre ea sily desp ite all h1s talk about
i)flncmg all mght Those days a re gone 'I hey only ex1st m his

-

mfnn

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Instead of Oscar Robertson,
basketball player, 1t 's now
Oscar
Robertson , c on~1ructwn

company owner

Ro bertso n , dubbed th e
· B1g 0 " when he starred for
th e Umver s1ty of Cincmnah
m the late 1950s, announced
Monday he has formed Oscar
Robertson a nd Assoc~ates, a
con stru c tiOn firm to be
headquartered here
Robertson IS tna jor rl y
owner of the company , which
1s assoctated w1th another
large m idwestern constru ctiOn operatiOn, Frank
Messer and Sons Co
A native of Indianapolis,
Robertson dec1ded to make
h t s permanent home here
earller thas year
After coll ege, Oscar played
10 years wtth the Cincmnatl
Royals before bemg tra ded to
the Milwaukee Bucks, where
he fm1shed h1s basketball
ca reer
Robertson was a network
televtslOn commentator on
pro ba sketball telecasts last
sea son but was not rehtred
thi s season
Robertson , 36 , has a wtfe
and two children

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Ohw
State, With a noble asstst
from M1am1 of Flonda, is the
number one college football
team In the nation today
accvrdmg to the Umted Press
InternatiOnal Board of
Coaches
The unbeaten Buckeyes
displaced Oklahoma m the
thll'd week of ballotmg by the
cvaches after the Soo ne rs
stumbled ba dly agam st
M1am1 In th e Orange Bowl
last Fn da y - ekmg out a
narrow 20-17 wm aga1nst the
fl ve touchdown underdog
Hurrtcanes
OhiO State, embarking on
on e of Its to ughest schedules
m years has beaten Michigan
State and Penn State with
UCLA and Mtchtgan yet to
cvme. received 20 hrst place
votes from t he 42-&lt;:oach panel
to narrowly edge Okla homa
395-382. Oklah oma rcce1ved
17 ftrst place votes - a drop
of 18 from last week
So ut hern Cal1forma, UPI's
defendmg natiOnal champion,
rema med third with 315
pomts mcludlng two f1rst
place votes, while Missouri
and Nebraska were fourth
a nd fifth - g1vmg the
powerful Big E ight three
teams m the top fi ve
Southwest
Conf erence
powers Texas A&amp;M and
Texas were stxth and seventh
r espec ttv e ly , wh1le N olre
Dame was e1ghth Alabama,
s lowl )l gam m g back the
groun d It los t with It s
openmg-week defeat to Mlssou•• ,oved up two places to

BEULAH
GROVE CITY, Oh10 ( UP I )
- K1lloquoa Jr , off at even
money , was never senously
threatened m beatmg Whtzm
by t"o a nd one ·quarter
lengths m the feat ured $500
mnth race at Beulah Park
here Monday
Triple It showed
The wmner , ndden by Don
Kn ight , covered the 440 yards
m 22 29 and returned $4 20,
$2 60 and $2 20
Th e 11-3 dally double
c omb~natwn of Ch1ca Top and
Chance Breeze v.as worth
$1 7 80

Cheaper~~·

E HAVE THE GENUINE
Ebe!!bach Hardware, Main St., Pomeroy, 0.,

.~ ~ .n nsl

a

on a , - Football

Leagu e
Sland1ngs
By Unti ed Pr e!i s lnternat tonal
Amen c an Conf e ren ce
I'

Ea st
Buffal o
BAII•mo r l:'
M1 am1
N Y Je t s

w

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sl'd'-;111\ ,lf!d tf vo~ keep

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Ill

tJ H

l \~ . mt t \ t 1\ bod\ 111 t il L
eountr' to su · h 1s b&lt;Jll c \ub
&lt;~dtl sS p d t k\ ll Hikmg fo r\~ ,t Td

thl' clttC iltlt l1 h i S It' d ill
rece n e tim; \\ f'P ke nd
tO

Pet

IS

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1

0

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drcan1
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Ka n sas C• t y
0
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0
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Na11 onat Con f erenr:e
Ea st
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Wash ng1on
2 0 0 1000
Da ll as
2 0 0 1 000
51 LOUI S
I
I 0 500
N Y G1ants
1
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P hilad el ph ia
0 7 0 000
Central
W l
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2 0 01000
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Green Bay
0
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At l anta
0
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San Franc .sco
0
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New O r ~ean s
0
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Monday s Re sult
Denve r 23 Gr een Bay 13 n1gh t
Su nd ay Games
Bal limo r e a 1 L os Ange les
Ch •c ago at Mmnesot a
Cm c• nna t 1 at H ol:!s ton
D env er at Bu ff al o
M 1a m1 at Green Bay
New Orl ean s at A tl ant a
New En gl and at N Y Jets
N Y G1ants at St L OUI S
Oa klan d at San D•ego
P1ll sbu r g h at Cleveland
San F ran c.sc o at K ansas C•IY
washm gton at Ph l ade ! ph a
Monday 's Gam e
Da ll as at De t r o11 n ght

w

1/2

Vanilla &amp;

1/2

(;j -

ht•t· u some places m the

t

I); Ist s1 x \ Cc lrS. 01dds Sp arkv ,
\\hu so \ ~ he d ~hg ht s m the
l X{ Jt rme nt
su rroundm g

( ham pwnsh ip g,uu es
\m!Pr son pla yed on l: one
\ e.Ir m thf' m a jor lea g ue s~
1~59 \\ Ilh Ph1 ladelplu a H1s
pr lJ fess10nal pla\ mH, ca r ee r
st~u t ed m ~m t&lt;t Harbar a lP
1953 .md ended m To ron to In

World Ser u.· ~
Al though he h e~~ lt d the
Rr d s to di\ aswn t h.11n
pw nshaps fo ur of the s1x \ e, u s
he 's been here St"" k' ll . ~&lt;
not been " hi e lo ld ki• th&lt;·
World Sene s
The fa ns " a nt a \\ Orld
champ iO nshi p · he s~t} s
· 'The\ ' r ed amor mg for rt All
I can sa} n o" ts U1c1t th1 s 1s
th e be5t tea m w P'\1• hnd .m d
Jim ve r ) l'Hth used d1Xmt It '
Docs Spark ) \\ Oi l! ,1bout
hiS fa te If he bJO\\S ,mothP I
World Scnc s '

1%3

He
began
mn n ag m~
Tor onto the nex t ) ea r and up
lmtll seve n years ago he wa s
still m th e m m o r s~m ana gm g
~ s hev1 ll e
N C of the
So ulhern League
When he was named Heds
mc1nage r Oct 9, 1969, local

nc\\ sp&lt;lper headlmes asked
Spark \ Who''
Rut for Hetl!'i fdns , anxious
for , 1 world Lh amp1onsh1p, the
questiOn no\\

1s ,

'Sparky ,

"! w n ')

Morgan confident
NEW YORK 1LIP! _ With
l
a po ss ible
cont r over sy
loommg over t he Nat lond l
League s Most V,duab le
Player d\\ci rd C tnclnnati
Red s seco nd base man .lor
Mo r ga n Sdl d he fel l he
deserved the honor
Wat h t ean1mt1t es ro n~
Per ez and Johnny BPnrh sm l'
to be m the r unnlllg, Mor ga n
satd I feel I dcscn c 11 No
one has donr rnor e tu help ht s
tea m than I have
The outspoken Morgan sa id
th at P 1tts bur gh's Wil li••
St ~lr ge ll hdd beP rl ~llg h tPd m
th e pa st by nnt bet ng selected
for the awa r rl dcspHc the
Pira tes ' cont tnuou s strong
showm g tn lht• J" ,Il iO na l

I A'.~g ue Eas t m rece nt year ~ .

Th at was an mjustlce
Morgan srud
There harl been talk th at
Morgan If sel ected , might
not clcce pt the awa r d m llght
,,f Ius fee li ngs about Sla rge ll
bemg bypassed
\1 01 gan , here to accept a
Se\·e n Cr own s of Spor ts
d V.onl s.ll d the Reds v.ould
'.Itht' pl a ) Oak land tn the
Wor ld Sen es th an meet the
Ilo ston Red Sox
All of us " "' l to pl ay
O.I kiand a nd b•• ,[ them to
prO\ e \H' re the lH s t tea m tn
md JOr lea g ue ba se ba ll, "
Mor g,m said 'This would
also be 1 evenge for them
brat tm' us In the World Sen es
In 1072

Bench show is Friday
An Ohll1 Stat&lt; Fox Hun t
Bench Sho\1 will be he lei at 8
p m Fnd ay, Oct 4 al the
Gdlll a
Co unty
Jun tnr
F a irgr oun ds w1 t h t\\ n d:n
t r ial s

on

S ~ turr\ R \

.HHI

Sun day at "vl urto n s Wo•,d s tn

Ga llta Coun ty actotdln f.! 11J ri ll
a nnoun ce 111 ent t nclr~' b)
Rob ert Gordon
Dog o v,.n e r ~ fr Jil l • thn-'•
sl.3te area .i te cxpt \11! 1n

par trc1patc G,dllo ( JUnh s
Fox Ho u11d ,\ s&lt;,IJ~ ,d i ll] '"'
spnnsor mg tht {·. r ' ll I .Jfl
Wolft• of H~1r!J 1\11" \ 111• \ '
Va v.rll sen• ts h!..:I'I f1 &lt;, 1lcm
JUdge \\h il t J \ ' (, •1 ,1, 11 r,f
Sc ott De put \\ \ t 1 ~ lr•
Ma s te r nf I i IIJOth
f '&gt; 1r1
t'\ ssuf t o~ 1HIIt • ff
presid ent
John l ' " , ,,f
Ja ck scm ,HHI P ~ · ~J 1 • 1J'

,J ack son

"~t Jl

''Is y,our home

insured for
what it's
worth, or
just for what
it cost you ..?"

St elfe Sn ow d en
1758 PowP II 51
Mtd d le por t 0

P H 992 7155
Ltk&lt; • ~ oo d
netg.hbo r,
S( .UC Farrn
,., tht·rc

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~

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LWJ ch 1Alll bt '-,Ll\l l .t' tr
FliX Hunk-r s l clbt n s tlurdCI \
and Sun dd . fr on 1 J d m trJ
e vem ng

I' 74 c

REGUU\R TREAD

RECAPS

s

95

PLUS
RECA P PABLf,
CAS ING

In Cones, Qts. &amp; Pints

13 14 15 In c h
In Al l Pa ssenqer S1zes

------------~---- 1

Adolph's Dairy Valley

Hrs. : 10:00 A.M. Tilll :00 P.M- Sun. -Thur
10: 00 A.M. Til12 : 00 P. M. Fri. &amp; Sat.
POMEROY, 0

1\

post st tsnn

Choc.

992-2556

been

f or .~ gu ~ \\ ho spen t 16
\ l' ,trs m the m mu1 leag ues.

drecUll o f Ull lr\t IS \11 \\Ill I hL

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SO

lWIST ICE CREAM

W. MAIN

I don 1 loo k al it as the en d
of lh &lt;' worl d ," he says
Wt· I l' p r e par ed for the
phn off :l 1 m·ver go to t he
pa r k dn: am m!l, of ge ttmg
Hui If "c lose , I'll go
honw .1nd wot \Ike hell fo r
1it t:-&gt;bur ~h 111 the senes
\lot of peoplt sdy I can 't
\\ m the b1g ones
adds
\ndersun \\host' 1970 and
tll7 2 HPds lost In the Y. orld
St.· n ~ s
1 dnn t care wh .r~t
til t\ "&lt;~\ ,t bout me I uul v get
,mL;n tf lhC\ ha d mout h my
plt~\ t'l s ,md com hes
Althuugh the btg one has
1 lud1•d Spctlk \ herr he: mam-

Pi r tl tt's
l111s 1s the tx·st tl· un I 't'
ever seen
spark\ I H .t l s
..1bo ut th e 11115 tLh llnn of 'lit
Rt.&gt;(!S It s llh btsl I \t' f'\t'l
Sf'e n . 1 I t 1!! rl perfu 1111 fur , m

For d, Sten gel won 10
Ameri can Leag ue pennants
be tw een 1949 and 1960, and
seven World Senes , mcluding
flvc m a row
But after he was fired m
1960 at age 70 for be mg "too
old, " he stole the nation's
heart by commg ba ck as the
f1r st mentor of the hapless
New York Mets
Oh •o Coll ege Football
R ecord s
The Mels never got out of
Un1ted Press lnl ernaftonal
the ce llar m h1s fiVe years a s
M1d Am encan Co nf ere nc e
Con f ere nc e Overall
mana ger His exasperat ion
WLTWLT
provoked him mt o a rebuke to M1a m1
t 0 0 'J 1 0
N o rlh III 1Ml 1S
1 0 0 1 2 a
the players that became one O
h IQ u
7 0 I 2 0 1
of hiS most fa mous ut- Cen t M1 c h
2 0 I 'J 1 I
tera n ces " Can 't a nybody Bo wl 1n g G r ee n 0 a 0 2 0 a
Bal l State
1 2 0 2 2 0
here play this game ?"
Kent St a t e
0 I 0 7 1 0
0 2 0 I 3 0
And a lthough the Mets To l edo
W M 1Ch
0 2 0 0 4 0
practi ced
a
form
of x East M1 Ch
x x X ) I 0
m1s rea sance,
malfeasance x not c o m pe l n g l or 1d ie
Oh10 Conf er enc e
a nd no nf ea s ance on the
Red 0tV1 StO n
Co n v e ren c e Overall
diamond, the fan s loved
WLTWLT
them , turnmg out to see O tt e r be n
0 0 0 3 0 0
0 0 0 2 1 0
Stenge l's losers m greater B al d W alla c e
Mar 1etta
0 0 0 1 2 0
and mo r e profitable numbers W oos t er
0 0 0 1 2 0
0 0 0 0 3 0
than the com petent but H e •delbe r g
M us k 1ng um
0 0 0 0 3 0
dechmn g Yankees c ould
Blu e DIVI SIOn
Confere nce Overa ll
draw
WLTWLT
He gave the language a M t U n1 o n
0 0 0 3 0 0
0 0 0 ] 0 0
merciless drubbmg, an m- W•ttenbe r g
000 21 0
O h10 Wesl e yan
spired rest ructurmg and the De n tso n
0 0 0 \ 2 0
(J(JQ
1 20
wo rd
"Stengelese "
to Cap •lal
descnbe what he had done to xKenyon
xxx 120
)( Oh1o N o r th
)( x x 0 2 0
II
x n o t com p el mg f o r t 11e
Called
before
Sen
B1g T en
Conference Ov era ll
Kefauver 's
comm itt ee
WLT WLT
con s 1d e rrn g
organ 1zed Oh iO St
I 0 0 3 0 0
1 0 0 1 0 2
baseball's exemptiOn from M1c h gan
N o rthw es t ern
I 0 0 2 1 0
the antitrust laws, Stengel ln d 1a n a
1 0 0 7 1 0
1 (J 0 I 2 0
Il l inOI S
cla nfi ed the Situat ion
1( h 5 1
0 1 0 2 1 0
•As to why baseball wants M
0 1 0 2 I 0
M 1n neso t u
0 1 (J 1 '} 0
thiS b1 ll , I would say I would W ISC OnSin
ur d u e
0 1 0 0 3 0
not know, but I would say the PI owa
0 1 0 0 3 0
Hoo s 1e r Buck eye Cont
reason why they "ould want
Conf e ren ce O vera ll
It passsed IS to keep baseball
WLTW LT
gomg as the htghest pa1d ball Ha nover ( l nd l 7 0 0 2 0 0
T a y to r ( I nd )
1 1 0 7 I 0
th at has gone mto baseball
Anderso n ( ln d
1 I 0 I 2 0
1 2 0 1 2 0
" I am m the baseball Blu fll on
F m dlav
I 1 0 1 ] 0
busmess and It has been run w
lm •n gt on
1 1 0 1 1 0
cleaner than \\US ever put out E a rlh am f i nd ) 1 1 0 1 2 0
0 2 0 1 2 0
D et 1an ce
m 100 years at the present M
an (l nd l
0 2 0 0 3 0
Oth e r s
tune
W l T
In late r yea r s, Stenge l C n c •nnat1
3 0 0
3 I 0
enlive ned o ld ~ uners' games A kr on
2 I 0
Yo
un
g
s
St
"ea rmg on his uniform the As hl an d
2 I 0
I 2 0
emblems of a ll the teams he John Carro ll
I 2 0
H
1r
a
m
had been associated With m D a yton
I 3 0
h1s htston c career He qmt Ce n t r a l State
I 3 0
0
3 0
Ca
se
W
e
stern
baseball m 1965 on doctor 's
orders , but when he was
asked to s1gn a utographs, It
was clear where h1s heart s1gna ture
· Casey Stengel, New York
lay , desp1te h1s years as a
wmner , m the proud Mets , Hall of Fa rner "

WINDOW MATERIALS

-'45¢

her ('

j(l b

pJd\ Off o.:; \H Jl ,qn 1t

FOOTBALL
N

H1 s way of answermg th at
questiOn rs to reach for the
tele phone on his desk and
1m pi) 1t " ould be easy for
hun to get another mana gmg

By RI CK VAN SA'H
Cl NCINISA I I llJPII
Spa rky An deroo n Uunks hiS
Cincmnall Hed" .\r e th'' be ~t
and he " a nts the iJo &gt;ebal l
" orld to kn ow 1l
l' he l 1tt le v. httt'· h d ll rd
m ~m.t g er gPtS &lt;1 ( ht~nl t' to
prO\ e h1s bo,tst s S&lt;~turd~l\
\\ht·n thr H.cd s opPn the
r\ c~ t w n .t l Le ~ ~~~ ~ · p\ t\llft:-i

Up

Casey Stengel,
85, succumbs
GLENDALE, Caltf I UP! I
- Casey Stengel, who was
honored m Baseball's Hall of
Fame as the game's wmrungest ma nager but earned
tl\e nation's affectiOn for
captammg a band of enterta mtn g
losers
and
creatively d1smemberm g the
Enghsh language, died today
at age 85
Stengel, who won more
pennants and World Sen es
v1cto n es than any other
manage r , d1ed at I 58 a m
EDT m Glendal e Commumty
Hosp1ta l of cancer of the
lymph glands and abdomen
He was t he 104th man mducted mt o the Baseball Hall
of Fame m Cooperstown,
NY He, Roberto Clemente
and Lou Gehrig were the only
participants m the Na twn al
Pa stune for "hom orgamzed
ba s e ball wmved the rule
restnct mg a mche m the hall
to those who had been rettred
for at least fiv e )ears
He was born Charles Dtllon
stengel on July 30, 1890 m
Kansas C1ty, Mo
In his 55 years m baseball ,
Stengel played for ftve maJor
league teams and managed
four , w1th h1s greatest glory
commg as manager of the allNew
York
co nque nng
Yankees Bwldmg talent that
mcluded Joe D1Maggw,
Mtckey Mantle and Whitey

Reds are best
says Anderson

entire

T h e Uniled
Pr ess
In
le rn at 10nal Board of Co a c hes
to p 20 college fo ot ba ll t eam s
w 1th wo n lost reco r ds and
t rs t p l ac e vot es 10 par en
theses
Th •r d W e ek
Team
Po1nts
1 0ho St a t e
13 0 ( 20 \ 39 5
1 O k la h om a ( 30 1 ( 17 l 387
3 Sou t hern Cal t orn 1a
(] 0 ) ( 2 ) )15
4 N eb r aska
() 0 1 24 4
5 M ISSOur
{ 1 ( ) 0 1 226
6 T ex as A &amp; M
13 0 1 17 4
7 T exa s
IJ OJ 16 0
B N ot r e Da me
P11 0 1 13 7
9 Aia b ama
171 1
57
10 P e n n 51
( 3 1)
34
11 Ok la h o ma St
(J OJ
33
12 W est V 1r g n1a
(3 OJ
16
13 Ar.zo n a St
(] OJ
16
14 M ( h1Qc1n
{ I 0 2)
14
15Baylor
(1 Q 2)(i)
10
16 Col orado
( 3 Ol
9
17 A r tl on.e
( 7 0)
6
18 Sa n D1eg o 51
(4 0)
4
19UCL A
120 11
3
20 T enn e ssee
( 2 1I
2
N ote
By r~ qr ee m e nt wtlh
th e
A m er•can
F o o t ba l l
Coa ch es t e ams on p r: o b at•on
b y th e N C AA ar e tneltg lbl e
tor top 20 a n d n at tonal
ch amp ta n sh p co n s• derat•on
b y th e U P I B oar d o f Coa ch es
T hose teams on pr o bal to n for
1Q75 ar e
M SS SS• PP• Stat e
SM U Long Be a ch St at e an d
Sou t hw es tern Lou s ta na

Gnd fans were promised a ma te ur football team ex- the1r opportumty, punchmg defense held, then again
actwn a nd that 's exactl y ploded f01 60 yard s and a TD m thetr !1rst score halfway Bruce Harns raced 16 yards
'What they got Saturday mght on the ve r y fi rs t play enroute through the f1r st stanza on an to pay&lt;llct The two pomt try
·lis the Met g s War nors to a 2()-H wm ove r th e eight yard run by Steve Pratt failed an d the score was 14-12
The conversiOn run fa1led, Later m the quar ter, the
Was hingt on Count) 76e rs
offens ive h ne opened a gap
Har n s ,
s pee dy knottmg the score a t 6-6
Bru ce
for
fullback Ron Qutllen to
Then Pratt took the ball on
ta ilback, look P aul Aikma n's
handoff an d ra ced throug h a a spn nt 80 yards down the score and a two-pomt conlarge ga p 1n the nghl s1de of side The two pomter was version pass from Bob Werry
the line The PATklckwasoff successful and the 76ers to Ch1p Haggerty made 1t 2()to the left, lea ' mg the score 6- enj oyed a 14-6 advantage at 14 for the Me1gs Counlta ns
The last stanza developed
the half
0
mto
a defen stve ba ttle but
In the third the WarriOr
Then tt v-as the 76e rs turn ,
as they took a dvantage of offense marched after the action was not over
The 76ers ralhed for a f1rs t
down ms1de the Warnor :;
with less than three mmutes
left· m the game, but the
MAKE
strong
defensive untt of the
YO UR
Warrwrs
held firm Then a
WI NDOWS,
DOORS
face mask penalty agamst
PORCHES &amp;
TOP
QUALin
the 76ers after the ball was
BREEZE WAYS
Than
:::;,.;- PLASTIC
WIN TER· TIGHT
turned ove r to the Warnors
Glass l
,..
ORAFl FR EE I
on downs moved the Metgs
team out of trouble It was no
trouble for the Warnors to
then
run out the 54 seconds to
'
FlEXIBLE' SHATIERPROOF'
wm 2()-14. _
JUST CUT AND
Next week the 76ers take on
TACK ' ONI
\
the Gallla Disctples on the
EASY TO
Al
l
36"
W
ide
Onl y
Belpre
H S f1eld at 8 p m
INSTAll'
Cut w1U1
Saturday, and the Warnors
she ars
travel to Moundsville, W Va
tack
over
'Run Ft
0 00 1'screens
1 d J ti ' l' dq
to challe nge theW Va State
-· FLEX·O-GLASS 1s lhe only
Prtson Cougars at 1 30 p m
plastiC wmd o w mater ta l
Saturday, ms1de the pnson
guaranteed 2 years'
By Quarte rs
\ · ' At Hardw a re Lum be r &amp;
'
Bu1ld1ng Sup ply Slores
J Warnors
6 0 14 0--20
76ers
14
0 0 0-- 14
BROS. Ch•cago 606S1

WABP

FIRST PITCHES
CINCINNATI 1UPI 1
The ceremonial first pilc hes for the Natwnal
League playoff games l•err
Saturday and Sunda} \\Ill
be made hy Clnrlnnall
Mayor Theodore Berrj and
Nahonal League Preside nt
C hub
Fe e n e y
Berry "ill do honors for
Saturday's opening game
and Feen ey, president of
the league since 1970, \\lll
get Sunday' s ga m e slarted.
The Cincinna ti Reds ,
champions of the "'estern
division fou r of the last si x
jea rs, play a 4 p m gam e
each day against the Pills·
burgh Pirates. easter n
division king live of the last
s tx seaso ns

No 9 and Penn State completed the 10
Baylor, on the strength of a
lone fir st place vote, moved
mto th e No . 1:; spot
OhiO State , which boasts
one of the fmest offen sive
ground g am es 1n college
foo tball
hi s tor y,
wa s
awesome m rollm g up a 32-7
tnumph over Nor th Carolma
last Saturday and has given
up on ly 16 pomts m thr ee
games a gam sl lop com petitiOn
T)le Buckey e s
blanked Michigan State , 21-0,
m the1r opener and follo"ed
that up with a 17-9 tnwnph
over Penn Stat e before
whtppmg the Tar Heels

':W arriors rally to win by 20-14

I

j

1

FREE MOUN TING

GENERAL TIRE SALES
N. 2nd

992-7161

M1dd lepon

- Plon,leers In Plastics Fo r Q.,. er 50 Years

n

-··
•

'I

•
I

'

-

�,.

-·- "

r

3- The Dally Sentmel, M1ddl eoor t-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Sept. 30,1975

,Ohio State is
ran.k ed No. 1

RAY CROML.&amp;Y

The low cost"
of more security
By Ray Cromley
A friend m the electromc busmess, who
does constderable work lor the government , says that about
$15 000 to $20 000 worth of development should produce •a
podket-s1zed ferrous metal detector whtch Secret Service
agents could carry unobtrusively
Movmg sllghtly ahead of Prestdent Ford, they cvuld circulate along his path and ferret out handguns and other
suspiCIOUS objects, usmg the same ea r attachments as With the
rece1vers they now carry
The ong~na l gadgets - crash developed from current
knowledge, and made largely from on-the.;;helf parts, would
llkely have a range of around two to three feet W1th a little
add1lion al resea rch, my friend thinks, the rang e of these
detec tors could be doubled and tripled
Convemently small dev1ces that could sense out suspiCIOUs
obJects at somewhat longer distances , are theoret ically qmte
poSSible
These sensors would not have detected a Lee Harvey
Oswald, m the wmdow of a bmldmg so me d1stance off. But they
would likely have called attentiOn to a Sara Jane Moore or a
Lynette Allee Fromme m a crowd along the path of Mr Ford
The first sunple detectwn deVIces, after the mthal $15,000
to $20,000 developmental mvestment, would llkely cvst no more
than $1 ,000 each
These measures would not , of cvurse, be foolproof But
ta lks with spectallsts m the fteld convmce me there IS no other
;
practiCal method to proVIde protection for a Prestdent.
The d1ff1cult1es become understandable whe n one look:i
mto t he charactensttcs of current a nd past prestdentlal
assassms and would-be assassms
I have talked at length With doc•ors studymg these
demented people lnvartably they are strange, unpulsive
loners, livmg m worlds of thell' own, secretiVe and With a
tendency to self-dramatizatiOn Theil' mmds drift from one
enemy to the next They' re born losers, do not st1ck to one job
for long, and are mtensely mvolved w1th the belief of the
moment
Only rarely do they represent any group. A fracti9n
mamtam personal loyalties. They are usually , Infatuated with
the thought of a supreme , dramatiC public spectacle with
themselves at the center
It 1s unposstble to screen all nuts for arms, to tail all
" strange" people m and out of crowds gathermg around the
Pres1dent- or gtve tickets of admtsswn only to a selected few.
We can't force a ll unbalanced people to carry little electromc beepers to e nable the pollee, the FBI and the Secret
SerVIce to locate them easily m any crowd.
We ca n 't call out the Army and the Reserves to police
bystanders m a mass1ve protective sweep
We can't ctrculate the pictures of all the unbalanced
people many community durmg a prestdentlal vis1t m order to
alert the Citizenry And we can't lock up everyone who conceiva bly mtght be a threat
Yet the unbalanced people we are talkmg about are
walkmg bombs, ready to go off.
We can take a clue from our relative success In preventing
a trcraft hijackmg of late The screening of all passengers as
they boa rd has had dramatic effects

wASHINGJ'ON -

'---·

TilE CHANT OF AUCTIONEER Col " Ham Harm lton of L'"" ' bur g W Va , boomed
out over the crowd Saturday at Roya l Oak Farm 11 hen 1G1 hedd of registe red Polled
Hereford cattle were sold at a publlc sale

Buyers come from

trnel
DEVOTED TO THE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEHILL

Exec Ed .
ROBERT HOEFliCH

ten states to Meigs sale

Ct1y Edttor
Publ tS h e d dat ly excep t
Saturday by The Oh to Valley
Publ is hing com pan y , 111
Court St
Pomero v. O h to

4576'9 B us tness Off tee Phone
99-2 2156 Ed ttorto!JI Phone 99 '2

2157

Second class postage patd

at Porn eroy. Oh 10
N.at lo na l

ad vertlstng

repi"esentalt ve

Ward

Griffi t h Co m pa ny
Inc
Bort lnellt &amp; Glldlagher D rv
757 Third Ave . New York
N Y 10017
Subscrlp t ton
rl!ltes

Delivered by ca rrier where

available 75 cents per week
By

Motor

carr ier

~oute

service

wher-e

nCJ't

vallabll' , One month , S3 25
By mall In Oh io and W Va
ne
Year
S'l2 00.
S1x
onths ,
Sll SO ,
Three
onths , $7 00 Elsewhere
26 00 year, S1~ m onth s
13 50 , three months , S7 50
ubscrlptlon pr ice •nclu des
unday T1mes Sent1nel

I Contmu ed from pdgc 1)

pomt, Ohio for $2,500 wh 1le the lop sel ling bull went to Barb
Hensley of Warren , OhiO for $1,750 A one.quarler mterest 1n a
s1x-monlh-old bull c~lf su ed by Jus t mere Anxiety sold for
$1,500 to FairVIew Farms of Cadiz Th1s put a $8,000 ftg ure on
th e calf wtth Royal Oak F arm kee ~m g the remammg threefourths mterest
Mr. and Mrs Karr were "qUite pleased w1th the sale and
1ts results W1th them for the sale were 2 outstandmg rmgmen
Johnny Wmston, Kansas City, who IS with the 'Polled
Hereford World, " a publlcatwn on Hereford s, and Ed Huff,
Macon , Ga , of the " l.Jvcstock Breeders Journal " The Karr
sale \\Ill be a feature m a futur e cvpy of ' Polled Hereford
World."
In cidenta lly, don't fee l sorry for the Kar rs who gave up the
more than 160 head of Herefords They won 't get too lonel j
Even alter the sa le, they sti ll hav e !50 chm ce Hereford hetfcrs
roammg about the 1,250 acres a t Roya l Oak Farm
•

A breakthrough

THERE WAS A FULL HOUSE on hand for the Royal Oak Farm's public Polled
Hereford sale Saturday ThiS IS one of three sec twns of bleachers wh1ch were filled by
buyers and observers

Rio Grande College President witRessed
the grief of a Civil War sweetheart
ED NOTE When Norma Lee of Rutland received her copy recently of
the tssue of The Sentinel wh1ch enclosed the Rio Grande College supplement
on tts commg Centenrual, she was especially mterested as her husba nd 's
famtly knew one of the presidents, the late John DaVIS Where upon , she
recalled stor1es that had been handed down m Mr Lee's famil y, and decided
to send one of them to The Sunday Times-Sent me l. She had another reason to
be mterested m John Davis one of her aunts nursed hts daughter m her last
Illness.

A STORY OF A CIVIL WAR SOLDIER
When I read the news of Rw Grande College's commg Centenrua l, I
recalled a story whtch has been handed down m my husband's famtly , a
story m which the late John Dav1s (one tune pres1dent of Rio Grande ),
played a part
My husband's uncle, Henry Lee, of HarriSonville, a sold1er durmg the
Civ1l War, was taken pnsoner and spent the rest of his hfe m the mfamous
Andersonville PriSOn. It was there he experienced untold suffenng Ma ny
stortes have been told of the horrors of that rat-mfested place where ma ny
prisoners hterally starved to death
When the news of Henry Lee 's death reached Harrlsonvtlle, John Davts,
a teenager, was delegated to carry the message to Henry 's sweetheart
Afterward!!, he told the Lee family
"I dehvered the message to h1s sweetheart, and witnessed her gn ef "
Henry Lee's body WaJ! brought home and la1d to rest m the Shipman's
Cemetery near HarnsonVIlle, Oh10 where many of the older famtlles of this
area are burled.
At that tune many people had epitaphs carved m tombstones The
followmg epttaph was placed on Henry Lee's monument ·
" Rest, son and brother, rest.
Thy God hath called thee home
Thou now hast all the battles fought
And thou hast won thy crown "
More than 100 years has elapsed smce our beloved country was torn
apart by a long, bloody war It was a war m wh1ch many sold1ers of both
stdes lost !hell' lives or were crippled and mauned for hfe It was a war
where oftentunes brothers fought on opposmg stdes causmg great angmsh m
the hearts of thell' loved ones .
As we are on the eve of celebratmg the btcentenrual of the foundmg of
our country, may we pay homage to these brave men and women of another
generatton who suffered so much to keep our country uruted, under God
Norma A. Lee

Patty linked to
•
terronst group
By ROBERf SfRAND
SAN FRANCISOO (UP! ) Weapons, bomb components,
documents, cash and a green
sca rf found m two Symbwnese Liberation Army
' 'safe houses " may hnk
Patricia Hearst and thr ee
other members of the small
terrorist group With a bank
robbery ktllmg and several
San Francisco Bay area
bombmgs.
Thts was disclosed Monday
when the FBI flied m U S
D1stnct Court an mventory of
the 1tems agen).s found m the
two house s after they

TOM TIEDE

Self-defense is mutual
DR. LAMB

· By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - There
are heroes m evtl as well as m
good, as the French morali st
La Rochefoucald was fond of
reminding , thus an Amenca
gropmg for some hope m the
aftermath of assassmahon
attempts need look no further
That 1s also why your than an ex-Marine named
doctor dtdn 't see anythmg. Oliver Stpple .
The spasm comes and goes,
He IS the good c1tizen who
llke a muscle cramp. When was credtted m San Franyou see a person wtth this CISCO with having lunged at
problem and he doesn't have the would-be killer of Gerald
the spasm during the Ford to prevent further
exammatwn you can't see 11 gunplay and posstbly 1ts
or establish the dtagnosis. It success,
is like the intenmttent rattle
Actually, what Sipple dtd
in your car. It is always gone should not be constdered
when you get to the garage. herotc so much as obligatory.
Go back to your family It IS ; after all, the duty of
doctor and try agam. He may , each in society to police the
be lucky enough to get X ray good of the whole. Yet at a
or fluoroscopy studtes of you time when the consctence of
when you are in spasm. He many Americans seems to be
can also refer you to a mental ' In a comatose state, when
health clinic or psychologiSt people increasmgly are
for
some
professional responsible only to themcounseling. You probably selves, Oliver Sipple IS a
need to resolve some sources meddler of unfortunate
of conflict that are causmg rarity And so not only a hero
you amuety and tenston, and but perhaps also an object
you won ' t be able to do 1t lesson for those who WISh for
alone.
·
better times in the nahan
Just because somethmg is
It is not by acctdent that the
psychological IS no reason not country has arrived at a tune
to try to resolve it. The when not even 1ts President IS
problem is just as real as if safe on tis streets. The clear
you had an irritation m your
truth is, as nwnberless ofesopha~us
from
some
fiCials and academtcs are
dtsease Meanwhile, stop all
slowly begmnmg to confess,
Cigarettes, coffee, colas and
the thug ~ are winmng the war
tea
on crime because they out-

Salt won't affect constipation
valved but not difficult If you
wan t more detatls on con.
stipatwn, wnte to me m care
of th1s newspaper , P 0 Box
1551, RadiO City Statwn , New
York , NY 10019 Send 50
cents, a long, stamped, se lfaddressed envelope, and ask
for The Health Letter number
2-1, 1mtable or Spasttc Colon
and Consllpatwn
DEAR DR LAMB - I have
a stomach disorder wh1ch Is
driVIng me crazy
After
I eat
or
dnnk
almost anythmg I have
a heav y feelmg m my
stomach accompanted by
indigestion If left unattended
I usually end up belchmg up
undigested food for hours
Although not pamful , th is Is
very annoying To ehmma te
this dtscomfort I us ua ll y
drtnk a glass of water m1xed
with baking soda, belch up
the contents m my stomach,
and fmd immedtate rellef
I went to my doctor m
regard to !his approximately
three years ago. After
various tests were g1ven
lnl.nlng,
· , ( ulcer check , ' etc ) I was
'nle proceaa is fairly m- gtven a clean bill of hea lth
Last year I sepa rated from
'

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
50 years old and have been
bolbered with constipation
for a long time. I use a lot of
table salt on most everythmg
I
My husband says this IS
the reason for my conatlpatlon. Your opinion ,
pleue.
DEAR READER - No.
'lbe salt is absorbed from
your digestive tract and
eliminated through your
lddneys, as long as you have
good kidney function. Too
much salt, though, may be
harmful to your kidneys or
may even be related to
developing
high
blood
pt nure. Moderation In salt
- ill a good idea.
Cooltlpatlon is caused from
many factors. The problem IS
often related to Improper
eallnl habita, unwise use of
luatlvea and poor bowel
hablla. It Ia usually possible
to overcome these problems
by changing your way of
llviDg. 'l'hlllnvolves changes
Ill eating habita and bowel /

eat.

·'

•

-

my w1fe and w1thm days
these symptoms completely
di s appeared F1ve months
ago we \\ent back together
and - you guessed 1t - the
symptoms returned, although
our marriage seems much
better
Perhaps the problem 1s
psychological and m turn
c reatmg physiCal havoc on
m y system, but th1s IS an
unprofessiOnal guess, and
even If accurate, where do I
begm ? Please help'
DEAR READER - Your
unpr ofessiO na l guess IS
probably nght You are
dcs cnb1ng esop hageal or
ca rdi o-s pasm The spasm
occurs m the muscles m the
lower esophagus JUst where
th e esophag us JOi ns the
stomach
Why do I thmk so? Because
you sa1d you belched up
undigested foods hours later
If the food had go tten mto
your stomach and had been
there several hours It would
be a t lea st parttally dtgested
by the ac id digestive JUices m
the stomach

.·

number the forces marshaled
agamst them Attorney Gen
Edward Lev1 recently put the
blame for growmg cnme
squarely where 11 belongs, m
the apathebc la p of the
public . The law IS not enough,
Lev1 satd, public atlltude
bemg the ultunate anticrime
weapon
"We have a coilntry whtch
1s very tolerant and has been
Willing to take a degree of
lawlessness. The mam
problem ( wtth crime) 1s the
w11lmgness of the pubhc to
accept (cnme), because if we
are not willmg to accept it
law enforcement would be
much better . I suppose one
has to say that what we have ,
to do is change the attitude of
the public toward th1s kind of

tolerance of crtme "

There are, to be sure, some
good reasons why the public
attitude has waned For one
thmg , government hardly
encourages parbc1pahon by
1ts private ctbzens m matters
of public defense Domesllc
tranqual1ty IS the provmce of
police forces and outside
mterference ts not appreciated. One recalls
tllustrallvely the many news
accounts of rape and robbery
v1ctuns who, after defendmg
themselves vtoletly, have
been arrested for the use of
concealed arms
Beyond thts, natur ally,
there is the necessary
revuls iOn agams t vtgtlan-

t1sm One Ohver Stpple can
be condoned, even honored,
but a dozen of thts type ratse
seno us
quesllons
of
propnety The Ku Klux Klan,
after all, 1s merely an
organtzatwn of Amencans
who feel they are domg the
nght thmg, the right thmg
havmg occastonally resulted
m black men hangmg dead
from three lunbs
Yet 1f the public has forfeited 1ts nght to pubhc
defense for go od reason,
some kind of reexammatwn
of the consequences may be
mented " It IS a wt se
max:1m ," as a revolutlOmst
John Weatherspoon wrote ,
"to avoid those thmgs wh1ch
are enem1es w1sh us to
practice " There can be no
doubt that the natural
enemies of a stable nahon thugs, outlaws and assassms
- wish hard that Americans
wtll continue to witness the
streets as nonmvolved
bystanders.
Better the communtty be
less myop1c. It IS one thmg to
be overcome by lions , as
so meone has said, qUite
another to be devoured by
rats. A shot at the President ,
hke a muggmg of a man in
the park, IS a cnme against
all of us. The only defense,
therefore , ts a common
defense . Enter Oliver S1pple
as the for mstance; 1f one
private man can help save a
President, many of hts kind ,
advised and encouraged to
become mvolved, may help
aave others as well.
I

arrested M1ss Hearst, Wendy
Yoshunura, William Harris
and his Wife, Emily, on Sept
18 In San FranciSCO . Th,e
mventory was returned with
the FBI's search warrant.
In a related development,
attorneys for Miss Hearst,
made a formal request In
court for her transfer from
the San Mateo Co1mty Jail to
the
McAuley
Neuropsychiatric Institute at st.
Mary ' s Hospital m San
Franciscv . The motion said
cvnfmement m the jail was
''dangerous and hazardous to
her health."
M1ss Hearst, daughter of
San Francisco Exammer
President Randolph A
Hearst, was abducted by t¥
SLA Feb. 4, 1974. Later m
tape-recorded communiques
she renounced her past life
and satd she was jouung the
SLA
M1ss Hearst and Miss Yoshunura were staymg at a
house in the ctty's Mission
Distrtct at the tune of tbe
arrest and the HarriSes were
pte ked up nearby.
The 25-ilage inventory said
a 9rrun pistol and 31 live
rounds of ammunition,
$157.28 m currency and coins,
a green scarf and newspaper
clippings were among the
Items found In Miss Hearst 's
house
Found m the Harrises'
house were several guns.
three pipe bombs and the
cvmponents for bombs ~~
well as library books on
explosives.
.
On April21, a Crocker B&amp;nk
branch m Carmichael, Calif.·,
a suburb of Sacramento, was
robbed and a woman shot and
ktlled. The robbers got
$18,000.
Sources said the cash found
m the Hearst house Included
a packet of $1 bills With serial
numbers matching those on
bills taken m the holdup.
They also satd one of \he
robbers wore a greeq scarf.
And, they said, 9rrun ammunition was found at the
bank.
Agents dec'lined to comment on the inventory, but a
Sacramento ~ Sberiff's
spokesman sailf,""''rrrere ar~
some thmgs m the labs at tbe
FBI that could make a strong
case agam!ll them."

'J'HE RUTLAND NAZARF:N E CHURCH ha s emer ged as champiOn of the Me1gs County
' thurctl Soft ball League. and of Its recent tournament "lth a league record of 18-2 a nd 24-3
overall Other teams 1n the order of flru sh ml eague pl a ) were the Laurel Chff Methodist 1211, Chester Ch urch of God 12-ll. Syracuse Nazarene 12-ll, Mt Hermon E U B 0-15 and
' Pomeroy Chur ch of Ch mt 1-19 TI1e champs above, 1"1' , fir st row , are Don Hysell , M1ke
Grate , Ralph Sear ls, Ch arles Hall 0 Hnn) Edwards . and John Grate , second row, Gene
Wtse 1 Bob Gnmm , Denms Donohu e, Dav td Gr ate, Ket th Kenned} , and thir d ro". Bob
Hawkms, Gar) Hyse ll :11elvm Cre mea ns. C:harlle Neece . an d J ohnny Miller

Big 0 has

Today's

building

Sport Parade

firtn now

By MI LTON RICHM &lt;\N
UP! Spo rts Ed ito r
MANILA 1up1 )-When th ey 're off b) the mselves, huddled
touet her ta lkmg , !ra mer-adviSor Eddie ru tc h keeps ham., p
mermg home one word to J oe F'Iazte r. r epecJttng 1t over and
\Over until 1t sounds l1ke ~n m e b1okt.:&gt;n 1 ecord to the hstemng
challenger
The word ts " pressure
If Edd1e Futch ha s said It once m the pa st s1' wee ks, he has
smd ll 10,000 lim es so Joe Frazier has 11 fi r m!) fixed In his
m md that 1f there IS one means of be.tlmg Muhammad Ali for
the world heav yweig ht cha mrJOnship here 1lomghl U S tune ),
then this IS 1t
Edd1e Futch Is only 100 &lt;&gt;Ct cent n ght
Muhammad All has had 50 profess"ma l f1 ghls ,md m a ll
those fig hts only two of hiS oppone nt s eve r put an) real
!&gt;ressure on him One wa s Joe Fraz ier and the other was Ken
Norton
Both were schooled by Cdd1e r utc h who kept drummmg
that same wor d, pressure . mto t hem eac h tune the) went up
a~amst All
"My fi ghters have fought hr rn fo ur limes before and the)
Won two and lost two, " S&lt;I\ S F'utch No ma tt er whether he got
the dectswn or not, he 1 All l kne" ' he was m a life a nd death
struggle w1 th them each time "
There IS no question but that .J oe F1 a Zier \\Ill try to pressure
All n ght from the start th" time aga m
A 20-game wmner docsn t star t expenmcntmg with a ne "
pttch m the World Sen es . and Joe Fr·az ier tsn' l abo ut to turn
Fancy Dan m th1s one He knows his best shot ,s that murderous left hook of hiS deliv ere d a t short ra nge a nd nobodv
takes 1t and snules back , not e\ en Muharruna d Ali
. Eddie Futch hasn 't filled Joe FraZier 's hea d wtth a whole lot
_of_mumbo-Jumbo He ha s simp!) told h1m All ts not mv mcible,
~can be bea ten, and the way to do It IS kee p aft er him all the
"I.Jple, keep Up the prCSSW e , foul Up hiS tnmng and don 't give
lV:m the dtstance he likes so much Frazier under sta nds a ll
thiS
Alt ts foxy
" He ha s mad e fun of Fra"'er s heed •bemg n ght the re all the
time " He 'd lrke the c ha llenger to baL k off and try to box "1th
liim, but he m ight as well ask hi m to stand there m the nng and
rectte poetry
Ali makes a btg thmg a bout the co nditiO n he's m, but I think
Frazter ts m better condit on l vc seen F ra zter get knocked out
early by George Foreman, but I've n12ver seen htm ever tire as
inuc h as All has m most of ht s mo st rei en· fig hts
' ' I p1cked Ali to beat Sonny L1 slon " hen he \\as a n un derdog
i:lie f1rst tune they mel, and df.ulll when he \\enl 1n a ga1nst
1
Ceorge Forema n a yem Hgo 1n Z,11 re , but I like .J oe F razier m
.t lus one bv a de cisiOn
To beat Frazie r Ah " ould have lo catch !urn early, the way
'
F,'oreman did, a nd All Isn't a n especially quic k starter What's
!.I)Qre, he has a tende ncy to ttre ea sily desp ite all h1s talk about
i)flncmg all mght Those days a re gone 'I hey only ex1st m his

-

mfnn

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Instead of Oscar Robertson,
basketball player, 1t 's now
Oscar
Robertson , c on~1ructwn

company owner

Ro bertso n , dubbed th e
· B1g 0 " when he starred for
th e Umver s1ty of Cincmnah
m the late 1950s, announced
Monday he has formed Oscar
Robertson a nd Assoc~ates, a
con stru c tiOn firm to be
headquartered here
Robertson IS tna jor rl y
owner of the company , which
1s assoctated w1th another
large m idwestern constru ctiOn operatiOn, Frank
Messer and Sons Co
A native of Indianapolis,
Robertson dec1ded to make
h t s permanent home here
earller thas year
After coll ege, Oscar played
10 years wtth the Cincmnatl
Royals before bemg tra ded to
the Milwaukee Bucks, where
he fm1shed h1s basketball
ca reer
Robertson was a network
televtslOn commentator on
pro ba sketball telecasts last
sea son but was not rehtred
thi s season
Robertson , 36 , has a wtfe
and two children

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Ohw
State, With a noble asstst
from M1am1 of Flonda, is the
number one college football
team In the nation today
accvrdmg to the Umted Press
InternatiOnal Board of
Coaches
The unbeaten Buckeyes
displaced Oklahoma m the
thll'd week of ballotmg by the
cvaches after the Soo ne rs
stumbled ba dly agam st
M1am1 In th e Orange Bowl
last Fn da y - ekmg out a
narrow 20-17 wm aga1nst the
fl ve touchdown underdog
Hurrtcanes
OhiO State, embarking on
on e of Its to ughest schedules
m years has beaten Michigan
State and Penn State with
UCLA and Mtchtgan yet to
cvme. received 20 hrst place
votes from t he 42-&lt;:oach panel
to narrowly edge Okla homa
395-382. Oklah oma rcce1ved
17 ftrst place votes - a drop
of 18 from last week
So ut hern Cal1forma, UPI's
defendmg natiOnal champion,
rema med third with 315
pomts mcludlng two f1rst
place votes, while Missouri
and Nebraska were fourth
a nd fifth - g1vmg the
powerful Big E ight three
teams m the top fi ve
Southwest
Conf erence
powers Texas A&amp;M and
Texas were stxth and seventh
r espec ttv e ly , wh1le N olre
Dame was e1ghth Alabama,
s lowl )l gam m g back the
groun d It los t with It s
openmg-week defeat to Mlssou•• ,oved up two places to

BEULAH
GROVE CITY, Oh10 ( UP I )
- K1lloquoa Jr , off at even
money , was never senously
threatened m beatmg Whtzm
by t"o a nd one ·quarter
lengths m the feat ured $500
mnth race at Beulah Park
here Monday
Triple It showed
The wmner , ndden by Don
Kn ight , covered the 440 yards
m 22 29 and returned $4 20,
$2 60 and $2 20
Th e 11-3 dally double
c omb~natwn of Ch1ca Top and
Chance Breeze v.as worth
$1 7 80

Cheaper~~·

E HAVE THE GENUINE
Ebe!!bach Hardware, Main St., Pomeroy, 0.,

.~ ~ .n nsl

a

on a , - Football

Leagu e
Sland1ngs
By Unti ed Pr e!i s lnternat tonal
Amen c an Conf e ren ce
I'

Ea st
Buffal o
BAII•mo r l:'
M1 am1
N Y Je t s

w

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sl'd'-;111\ ,lf!d tf vo~ keep

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Ill

tJ H

l \~ . mt t \ t 1\ bod\ 111 t il L
eountr' to su · h 1s b&lt;Jll c \ub
&lt;~dtl sS p d t k\ ll Hikmg fo r\~ ,t Td

thl' clttC iltlt l1 h i S It' d ill
rece n e tim; \\ f'P ke nd
tO

Pet

IS

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1

0

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drcan1
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Ka n sas C• t y
0
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0
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Na11 onat Con f erenr:e
Ea st
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Wash ng1on
2 0 0 1000
Da ll as
2 0 0 1 000
51 LOUI S
I
I 0 500
N Y G1ants
1
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P hilad el ph ia
0 7 0 000
Central
W l
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2 0 01000
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Green Bay
0
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At l anta
0
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San Franc .sco
0
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New O r ~ean s
0
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Monday s Re sult
Denve r 23 Gr een Bay 13 n1gh t
Su nd ay Games
Bal limo r e a 1 L os Ange les
Ch •c ago at Mmnesot a
Cm c• nna t 1 at H ol:!s ton
D env er at Bu ff al o
M 1a m1 at Green Bay
New Orl ean s at A tl ant a
New En gl and at N Y Jets
N Y G1ants at St L OUI S
Oa klan d at San D•ego
P1ll sbu r g h at Cleveland
San F ran c.sc o at K ansas C•IY
washm gton at Ph l ade ! ph a
Monday 's Gam e
Da ll as at De t r o11 n ght

w

1/2

Vanilla &amp;

1/2

(;j -

ht•t· u some places m the

t

I); Ist s1 x \ Cc lrS. 01dds Sp arkv ,
\\hu so \ ~ he d ~hg ht s m the
l X{ Jt rme nt
su rroundm g

( ham pwnsh ip g,uu es
\m!Pr son pla yed on l: one
\ e.Ir m thf' m a jor lea g ue s~
1~59 \\ Ilh Ph1 ladelplu a H1s
pr lJ fess10nal pla\ mH, ca r ee r
st~u t ed m ~m t&lt;t Harbar a lP
1953 .md ended m To ron to In

World Ser u.· ~
Al though he h e~~ lt d the
Rr d s to di\ aswn t h.11n
pw nshaps fo ur of the s1x \ e, u s
he 's been here St"" k' ll . ~&lt;
not been " hi e lo ld ki• th&lt;·
World Sene s
The fa ns " a nt a \\ Orld
champ iO nshi p · he s~t} s
· 'The\ ' r ed amor mg for rt All
I can sa} n o" ts U1c1t th1 s 1s
th e be5t tea m w P'\1• hnd .m d
Jim ve r ) l'Hth used d1Xmt It '
Docs Spark ) \\ Oi l! ,1bout
hiS fa te If he bJO\\S ,mothP I
World Scnc s '

1%3

He
began
mn n ag m~
Tor onto the nex t ) ea r and up
lmtll seve n years ago he wa s
still m th e m m o r s~m ana gm g
~ s hev1 ll e
N C of the
So ulhern League
When he was named Heds
mc1nage r Oct 9, 1969, local

nc\\ sp&lt;lper headlmes asked
Spark \ Who''
Rut for Hetl!'i fdns , anxious
for , 1 world Lh amp1onsh1p, the
questiOn no\\

1s ,

'Sparky ,

"! w n ')

Morgan confident
NEW YORK 1LIP! _ With
l
a po ss ible
cont r over sy
loommg over t he Nat lond l
League s Most V,duab le
Player d\\ci rd C tnclnnati
Red s seco nd base man .lor
Mo r ga n Sdl d he fel l he
deserved the honor
Wat h t ean1mt1t es ro n~
Per ez and Johnny BPnrh sm l'
to be m the r unnlllg, Mor ga n
satd I feel I dcscn c 11 No
one has donr rnor e tu help ht s
tea m than I have
The outspoken Morgan sa id
th at P 1tts bur gh's Wil li••
St ~lr ge ll hdd beP rl ~llg h tPd m
th e pa st by nnt bet ng selected
for the awa r rl dcspHc the
Pira tes ' cont tnuou s strong
showm g tn lht• J" ,Il iO na l

I A'.~g ue Eas t m rece nt year ~ .

Th at was an mjustlce
Morgan srud
There harl been talk th at
Morgan If sel ected , might
not clcce pt the awa r d m llght
,,f Ius fee li ngs about Sla rge ll
bemg bypassed
\1 01 gan , here to accept a
Se\·e n Cr own s of Spor ts
d V.onl s.ll d the Reds v.ould
'.Itht' pl a ) Oak land tn the
Wor ld Sen es th an meet the
Ilo ston Red Sox
All of us " "' l to pl ay
O.I kiand a nd b•• ,[ them to
prO\ e \H' re the lH s t tea m tn
md JOr lea g ue ba se ba ll, "
Mor g,m said 'This would
also be 1 evenge for them
brat tm' us In the World Sen es
In 1072

Bench show is Friday
An Ohll1 Stat&lt; Fox Hun t
Bench Sho\1 will be he lei at 8
p m Fnd ay, Oct 4 al the
Gdlll a
Co unty
Jun tnr
F a irgr oun ds w1 t h t\\ n d:n
t r ial s

on

S ~ turr\ R \

.HHI

Sun day at "vl urto n s Wo•,d s tn

Ga llta Coun ty actotdln f.! 11J ri ll
a nnoun ce 111 ent t nclr~' b)
Rob ert Gordon
Dog o v,.n e r ~ fr Jil l • thn-'•
sl.3te area .i te cxpt \11! 1n

par trc1patc G,dllo ( JUnh s
Fox Ho u11d ,\ s&lt;,IJ~ ,d i ll] '"'
spnnsor mg tht {·. r ' ll I .Jfl
Wolft• of H~1r!J 1\11" \ 111• \ '
Va v.rll sen• ts h!..:I'I f1 &lt;, 1lcm
JUdge \\h il t J \ ' (, •1 ,1, 11 r,f
Sc ott De put \\ \ t 1 ~ lr•
Ma s te r nf I i IIJOth
f '&gt; 1r1
t'\ ssuf t o~ 1HIIt • ff
presid ent
John l ' " , ,,f
Ja ck scm ,HHI P ~ · ~J 1 • 1J'

,J ack son

"~t Jl

''Is y,our home

insured for
what it's
worth, or
just for what
it cost you ..?"

St elfe Sn ow d en
1758 PowP II 51
Mtd d le por t 0

P H 992 7155
Ltk&lt; • ~ oo d
netg.hbo r,
S( .UC Farrn
,., tht·rc

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~

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LWJ ch 1Alll bt '-,Ll\l l .t' tr
FliX Hunk-r s l clbt n s tlurdCI \
and Sun dd . fr on 1 J d m trJ
e vem ng

I' 74 c

REGUU\R TREAD

RECAPS

s

95

PLUS
RECA P PABLf,
CAS ING

In Cones, Qts. &amp; Pints

13 14 15 In c h
In Al l Pa ssenqer S1zes

------------~---- 1

Adolph's Dairy Valley

Hrs. : 10:00 A.M. Tilll :00 P.M- Sun. -Thur
10: 00 A.M. Til12 : 00 P. M. Fri. &amp; Sat.
POMEROY, 0

1\

post st tsnn

Choc.

992-2556

been

f or .~ gu ~ \\ ho spen t 16
\ l' ,trs m the m mu1 leag ues.

drecUll o f Ull lr\t IS \11 \\Ill I hL

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SO

lWIST ICE CREAM

W. MAIN

I don 1 loo k al it as the en d
of lh &lt;' worl d ," he says
Wt· I l' p r e par ed for the
phn off :l 1 m·ver go to t he
pa r k dn: am m!l, of ge ttmg
Hui If "c lose , I'll go
honw .1nd wot \Ike hell fo r
1it t:-&gt;bur ~h 111 the senes
\lot of peoplt sdy I can 't
\\ m the b1g ones
adds
\ndersun \\host' 1970 and
tll7 2 HPds lost In the Y. orld
St.· n ~ s
1 dnn t care wh .r~t
til t\ "&lt;~\ ,t bout me I uul v get
,mL;n tf lhC\ ha d mout h my
plt~\ t'l s ,md com hes
Althuugh the btg one has
1 lud1•d Spctlk \ herr he: mam-

Pi r tl tt's
l111s 1s the tx·st tl· un I 't'
ever seen
spark\ I H .t l s
..1bo ut th e 11115 tLh llnn of 'lit
Rt.&gt;(!S It s llh btsl I \t' f'\t'l
Sf'e n . 1 I t 1!! rl perfu 1111 fur , m

For d, Sten gel won 10
Ameri can Leag ue pennants
be tw een 1949 and 1960, and
seven World Senes , mcluding
flvc m a row
But after he was fired m
1960 at age 70 for be mg "too
old, " he stole the nation's
heart by commg ba ck as the
f1r st mentor of the hapless
New York Mets
Oh •o Coll ege Football
R ecord s
The Mels never got out of
Un1ted Press lnl ernaftonal
the ce llar m h1s fiVe years a s
M1d Am encan Co nf ere nc e
Con f ere nc e Overall
mana ger His exasperat ion
WLTWLT
provoked him mt o a rebuke to M1a m1
t 0 0 'J 1 0
N o rlh III 1Ml 1S
1 0 0 1 2 a
the players that became one O
h IQ u
7 0 I 2 0 1
of hiS most fa mous ut- Cen t M1 c h
2 0 I 'J 1 I
tera n ces " Can 't a nybody Bo wl 1n g G r ee n 0 a 0 2 0 a
Bal l State
1 2 0 2 2 0
here play this game ?"
Kent St a t e
0 I 0 7 1 0
0 2 0 I 3 0
And a lthough the Mets To l edo
W M 1Ch
0 2 0 0 4 0
practi ced
a
form
of x East M1 Ch
x x X ) I 0
m1s rea sance,
malfeasance x not c o m pe l n g l or 1d ie
Oh10 Conf er enc e
a nd no nf ea s ance on the
Red 0tV1 StO n
Co n v e ren c e Overall
diamond, the fan s loved
WLTWLT
them , turnmg out to see O tt e r be n
0 0 0 3 0 0
0 0 0 2 1 0
Stenge l's losers m greater B al d W alla c e
Mar 1etta
0 0 0 1 2 0
and mo r e profitable numbers W oos t er
0 0 0 1 2 0
0 0 0 0 3 0
than the com petent but H e •delbe r g
M us k 1ng um
0 0 0 0 3 0
dechmn g Yankees c ould
Blu e DIVI SIOn
Confere nce Overa ll
draw
WLTWLT
He gave the language a M t U n1 o n
0 0 0 3 0 0
0 0 0 ] 0 0
merciless drubbmg, an m- W•ttenbe r g
000 21 0
O h10 Wesl e yan
spired rest ructurmg and the De n tso n
0 0 0 \ 2 0
(J(JQ
1 20
wo rd
"Stengelese "
to Cap •lal
descnbe what he had done to xKenyon
xxx 120
)( Oh1o N o r th
)( x x 0 2 0
II
x n o t com p el mg f o r t 11e
Called
before
Sen
B1g T en
Conference Ov era ll
Kefauver 's
comm itt ee
WLT WLT
con s 1d e rrn g
organ 1zed Oh iO St
I 0 0 3 0 0
1 0 0 1 0 2
baseball's exemptiOn from M1c h gan
N o rthw es t ern
I 0 0 2 1 0
the antitrust laws, Stengel ln d 1a n a
1 0 0 7 1 0
1 (J 0 I 2 0
Il l inOI S
cla nfi ed the Situat ion
1( h 5 1
0 1 0 2 1 0
•As to why baseball wants M
0 1 0 2 I 0
M 1n neso t u
0 1 (J 1 '} 0
thiS b1 ll , I would say I would W ISC OnSin
ur d u e
0 1 0 0 3 0
not know, but I would say the PI owa
0 1 0 0 3 0
Hoo s 1e r Buck eye Cont
reason why they "ould want
Conf e ren ce O vera ll
It passsed IS to keep baseball
WLTW LT
gomg as the htghest pa1d ball Ha nover ( l nd l 7 0 0 2 0 0
T a y to r ( I nd )
1 1 0 7 I 0
th at has gone mto baseball
Anderso n ( ln d
1 I 0 I 2 0
1 2 0 1 2 0
" I am m the baseball Blu fll on
F m dlav
I 1 0 1 ] 0
busmess and It has been run w
lm •n gt on
1 1 0 1 1 0
cleaner than \\US ever put out E a rlh am f i nd ) 1 1 0 1 2 0
0 2 0 1 2 0
D et 1an ce
m 100 years at the present M
an (l nd l
0 2 0 0 3 0
Oth e r s
tune
W l T
In late r yea r s, Stenge l C n c •nnat1
3 0 0
3 I 0
enlive ned o ld ~ uners' games A kr on
2 I 0
Yo
un
g
s
St
"ea rmg on his uniform the As hl an d
2 I 0
I 2 0
emblems of a ll the teams he John Carro ll
I 2 0
H
1r
a
m
had been associated With m D a yton
I 3 0
h1s htston c career He qmt Ce n t r a l State
I 3 0
0
3 0
Ca
se
W
e
stern
baseball m 1965 on doctor 's
orders , but when he was
asked to s1gn a utographs, It
was clear where h1s heart s1gna ture
· Casey Stengel, New York
lay , desp1te h1s years as a
wmner , m the proud Mets , Hall of Fa rner "

WINDOW MATERIALS

-'45¢

her ('

j(l b

pJd\ Off o.:; \H Jl ,qn 1t

FOOTBALL
N

H1 s way of answermg th at
questiOn rs to reach for the
tele phone on his desk and
1m pi) 1t " ould be easy for
hun to get another mana gmg

By RI CK VAN SA'H
Cl NCINISA I I llJPII
Spa rky An deroo n Uunks hiS
Cincmnall Hed" .\r e th'' be ~t
and he " a nts the iJo &gt;ebal l
" orld to kn ow 1l
l' he l 1tt le v. httt'· h d ll rd
m ~m.t g er gPtS &lt;1 ( ht~nl t' to
prO\ e h1s bo,tst s S&lt;~turd~l\
\\ht·n thr H.cd s opPn the
r\ c~ t w n .t l Le ~ ~~~ ~ · p\ t\llft:-i

Up

Casey Stengel,
85, succumbs
GLENDALE, Caltf I UP! I
- Casey Stengel, who was
honored m Baseball's Hall of
Fame as the game's wmrungest ma nager but earned
tl\e nation's affectiOn for
captammg a band of enterta mtn g
losers
and
creatively d1smemberm g the
Enghsh language, died today
at age 85
Stengel, who won more
pennants and World Sen es
v1cto n es than any other
manage r , d1ed at I 58 a m
EDT m Glendal e Commumty
Hosp1ta l of cancer of the
lymph glands and abdomen
He was t he 104th man mducted mt o the Baseball Hall
of Fame m Cooperstown,
NY He, Roberto Clemente
and Lou Gehrig were the only
participants m the Na twn al
Pa stune for "hom orgamzed
ba s e ball wmved the rule
restnct mg a mche m the hall
to those who had been rettred
for at least fiv e )ears
He was born Charles Dtllon
stengel on July 30, 1890 m
Kansas C1ty, Mo
In his 55 years m baseball ,
Stengel played for ftve maJor
league teams and managed
four , w1th h1s greatest glory
commg as manager of the allNew
York
co nque nng
Yankees Bwldmg talent that
mcluded Joe D1Maggw,
Mtckey Mantle and Whitey

Reds are best
says Anderson

entire

T h e Uniled
Pr ess
In
le rn at 10nal Board of Co a c hes
to p 20 college fo ot ba ll t eam s
w 1th wo n lost reco r ds and
t rs t p l ac e vot es 10 par en
theses
Th •r d W e ek
Team
Po1nts
1 0ho St a t e
13 0 ( 20 \ 39 5
1 O k la h om a ( 30 1 ( 17 l 387
3 Sou t hern Cal t orn 1a
(] 0 ) ( 2 ) )15
4 N eb r aska
() 0 1 24 4
5 M ISSOur
{ 1 ( ) 0 1 226
6 T ex as A &amp; M
13 0 1 17 4
7 T exa s
IJ OJ 16 0
B N ot r e Da me
P11 0 1 13 7
9 Aia b ama
171 1
57
10 P e n n 51
( 3 1)
34
11 Ok la h o ma St
(J OJ
33
12 W est V 1r g n1a
(3 OJ
16
13 Ar.zo n a St
(] OJ
16
14 M ( h1Qc1n
{ I 0 2)
14
15Baylor
(1 Q 2)(i)
10
16 Col orado
( 3 Ol
9
17 A r tl on.e
( 7 0)
6
18 Sa n D1eg o 51
(4 0)
4
19UCL A
120 11
3
20 T enn e ssee
( 2 1I
2
N ote
By r~ qr ee m e nt wtlh
th e
A m er•can
F o o t ba l l
Coa ch es t e ams on p r: o b at•on
b y th e N C AA ar e tneltg lbl e
tor top 20 a n d n at tonal
ch amp ta n sh p co n s• derat•on
b y th e U P I B oar d o f Coa ch es
T hose teams on pr o bal to n for
1Q75 ar e
M SS SS• PP• Stat e
SM U Long Be a ch St at e an d
Sou t hw es tern Lou s ta na

Gnd fans were promised a ma te ur football team ex- the1r opportumty, punchmg defense held, then again
actwn a nd that 's exactl y ploded f01 60 yard s and a TD m thetr !1rst score halfway Bruce Harns raced 16 yards
'What they got Saturday mght on the ve r y fi rs t play enroute through the f1r st stanza on an to pay&lt;llct The two pomt try
·lis the Met g s War nors to a 2()-H wm ove r th e eight yard run by Steve Pratt failed an d the score was 14-12
The conversiOn run fa1led, Later m the quar ter, the
Was hingt on Count) 76e rs
offens ive h ne opened a gap
Har n s ,
s pee dy knottmg the score a t 6-6
Bru ce
for
fullback Ron Qutllen to
Then Pratt took the ball on
ta ilback, look P aul Aikma n's
handoff an d ra ced throug h a a spn nt 80 yards down the score and a two-pomt conlarge ga p 1n the nghl s1de of side The two pomter was version pass from Bob Werry
the line The PATklckwasoff successful and the 76ers to Ch1p Haggerty made 1t 2()to the left, lea ' mg the score 6- enj oyed a 14-6 advantage at 14 for the Me1gs Counlta ns
The last stanza developed
the half
0
mto
a defen stve ba ttle but
In the third the WarriOr
Then tt v-as the 76e rs turn ,
as they took a dvantage of offense marched after the action was not over
The 76ers ralhed for a f1rs t
down ms1de the Warnor :;
with less than three mmutes
left· m the game, but the
MAKE
strong
defensive untt of the
YO UR
Warrwrs
held firm Then a
WI NDOWS,
DOORS
face mask penalty agamst
PORCHES &amp;
TOP
QUALin
the 76ers after the ball was
BREEZE WAYS
Than
:::;,.;- PLASTIC
WIN TER· TIGHT
turned ove r to the Warnors
Glass l
,..
ORAFl FR EE I
on downs moved the Metgs
team out of trouble It was no
trouble for the Warnors to
then
run out the 54 seconds to
'
FlEXIBLE' SHATIERPROOF'
wm 2()-14. _
JUST CUT AND
Next week the 76ers take on
TACK ' ONI
\
the Gallla Disctples on the
EASY TO
Al
l
36"
W
ide
Onl y
Belpre
H S f1eld at 8 p m
INSTAll'
Cut w1U1
Saturday, and the Warnors
she ars
travel to Moundsville, W Va
tack
over
'Run Ft
0 00 1'screens
1 d J ti ' l' dq
to challe nge theW Va State
-· FLEX·O-GLASS 1s lhe only
Prtson Cougars at 1 30 p m
plastiC wmd o w mater ta l
Saturday, ms1de the pnson
guaranteed 2 years'
By Quarte rs
\ · ' At Hardw a re Lum be r &amp;
'
Bu1ld1ng Sup ply Slores
J Warnors
6 0 14 0--20
76ers
14
0 0 0-- 14
BROS. Ch•cago 606S1

WABP

FIRST PITCHES
CINCINNATI 1UPI 1
The ceremonial first pilc hes for the Natwnal
League playoff games l•err
Saturday and Sunda} \\Ill
be made hy Clnrlnnall
Mayor Theodore Berrj and
Nahonal League Preside nt
C hub
Fe e n e y
Berry "ill do honors for
Saturday's opening game
and Feen ey, president of
the league since 1970, \\lll
get Sunday' s ga m e slarted.
The Cincinna ti Reds ,
champions of the "'estern
division fou r of the last si x
jea rs, play a 4 p m gam e
each day against the Pills·
burgh Pirates. easter n
division king live of the last
s tx seaso ns

No 9 and Penn State completed the 10
Baylor, on the strength of a
lone fir st place vote, moved
mto th e No . 1:; spot
OhiO State , which boasts
one of the fmest offen sive
ground g am es 1n college
foo tball
hi s tor y,
wa s
awesome m rollm g up a 32-7
tnumph over Nor th Carolma
last Saturday and has given
up on ly 16 pomts m thr ee
games a gam sl lop com petitiOn
T)le Buckey e s
blanked Michigan State , 21-0,
m the1r opener and follo"ed
that up with a 17-9 tnwnph
over Penn Stat e before
whtppmg the Tar Heels

':W arriors rally to win by 20-14

I

j

1

FREE MOUN TING

GENERAL TIRE SALES
N. 2nd

992-7161

M1dd lepon

- Plon,leers In Plastics Fo r Q.,. er 50 Years

n

-··
•

'I

•
I

'

-

�4-'-Tbe DailySentlilel,Mlddlepof\-Pomeroy; o., Tuesday, Sept. 30, 1975

UPI Sports Writer
DENVER (UPI) - Denver
Bronco quarterback Steve
Ramsey had to wait a long
time for his national
television debut but when the
chance came, he stole the
show.
Ramsey, the Broncos'
backup quarterback since
Charley Johnson arrived
from Houston In 1972, entered
Denver's game with Green
Bay early In the second
quarter Monday night when
Johnson spilt the Index finger
on his right hand.
The six-year veteran from
North Texas State made · the
most of his first appearance
on national television,
guiding the Broncos to a 23-13
win over the Packers.
Ramsey hit lk&gt;f-ll passes
for 99 yards, including a 10..
yard pass to Jack Dolbln for a
third quarter touchdown and
three In a row to set up !he
last of Jim Turner's three
field goals, a 32-yarder In the
fourth quarter.
"When I get the call aU I
can do is go out and do the
best I can. There's no
pressure," said Ramsey.
"When I'm on the sidelines,
I'm charting plays and
concentrating. You have to
stay in every game because
sometime that chance is
going to come."
'lbe Broncos also scored in
the closing seconds when
middle linebacker Randy
Gradishar ran 44 yards with
an Interception of a John
Hadl desperation paas.
The Packers scored In the
fourth quarter on a four-yard
Hadl to WID Harrell pass and
a ane-yard Jolm Brockington
lVI as Hadl began to click.
Hadl, who hit lk&gt;f-17 passes
for 80 yards In the first half,
drove !he Packers 59 yarda
for their touchdown, hitting
all six of his passes for 51 of
the yarda. And on the second
drive, Hadl, who finished the
night completing 23-of-36
pesus for 273 yards, com- .,
pleted S.Of~ for 72 of !he. 80
yarda.
But as good as a passer as

•

•

.

·

•

Uriitied PTen lnternatloaal
. 'rli.EmoN, N.J. {UPI) Representatives of two
groups aee!dng the release
from prison of former middleweight boxing contender
Rubin . "Hun:lcane" Carter
asked New Jersey Gov.

..

Bre~nT.~eM~yto
gran~

him

executl.ve

clemency.
A . r~tatlve of the
Rubin '':Hurricane"· Carter
DefeDSe C«nmlttee said i.t
was her Impression !hat
Byrne may make a· decision
.
.wilhln 14 days.
· Carter, 38, bali been In jaU
since .1966 when he was
.convicted ol the shooting
deaths of three persons In the
Lafayette Grill in Paterson.

NEW YORK {UP!)- Duke
Snider, former slugging
Brooklyn Dodger centerflelder who hit 407 career
home runs, has applied for
the manager's job of the New
York Mets; It was reported
Mooday.
· Snider, 49, played briefly
with the Met.s at the end ol his
17-year career and is
currenUy serving as .batting
coach and broadcaster for the
Montreal Expos• .
~·Ro)•· · · McMillan,
who
replaced Yogi Berra as lnterinl.manager of the·Met.s In
August, Is not expected to be
retalri'ed 'a fter falling to keep
the clUb In contention while
compiling a 26-27 won-lost

:~.

YO-RK-

tna.l,v~illl~ · plilytiJI ;IJonors

thia : z ~. Monday was
named the'l\metlcan League

· ' , jllaJIII' at · the
~~ ,tter
· hitting &lt;
ft.e, home 'ruQ. · 8l!d
. ciriVN Iii 1.3 nuiJ.ip·oolt-~

~-"tjtqliril,wllh.~
Jadll!ln al.·OaJt!anc! for', tQP
hOriGI:a:ln qu.t ..,_rtment .._
....~ .• · !Je&amp;gu~eadlng 1011
~tied-in. . · . ,
'

. • . I;I .,
Y~

~ -~.-~:
&lt;•,.

defense.'.'
Carpenter and his team•
matjlS . on defense were excited about Sunday's 21~
handling of the New Orleans
Saints. Just two weeks ago, in
the final exhibition game, the
Bengals whipped the Saints
20-0.
"You can't argue with a
shutout and we've had two in
three games," said Car-

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cincinnati Bengals defensive
tackle .Ron Carpenter says he
now has an answer for an oftasked question.
.
" Everybody was always
asking me before the season,
'How's the defense going to
be?" ' recalls carpenter.
" I think they've got the
answer," he says today. "I
think we've got a helluva

another good effort Saturday

.

il Mason County News Notes \t\

•

KA,NSASCITY,Kan. (UI?l}
-Only. a handful of highway

patrolinen, ~riff's deputies
and pOllee supervisors were
on duty today to do the job of
300 officers,. but Mayor Jack
Reardon promised public'
aafi!ty would be maintained
duHDg the city's first police

·•.•, •.•

'.

,

v~ted

tate

,1\!onday f.o strike until, c.onIJ-ac( arguments are resolved
over which officers are
cov~ by the union. Poljce
be!IBR striking three days

.. I

.(

told me 'Ah's gonna crawl
across the r~ on my hands
and knees and hand you the
championship belt if you win
this fight.'
"Well, ya know, I won but I
don't recall seein' Clay crawl.
Tomorrow he'll owe me two''
cuz tomorrow you'll have a
new champion."
Both fighters exuded confidence but oddamakers in
London, New York and Las
Vegasweremoreconfident in
Ali, making him a heavy
favorite by various odds of 21, 9-4 and 9--5.
Ali has been guaranteed •
$4.5 million for this third
meeting with Frazier who is
guaranteed $2 million.
Ali spoke about the
reported marital feud involving him, his wife,
Belinda, and girl friend
Veronica Porsche which
prompted' Belinda's sudden
departure forborne last week
only 12 hours after arriving in
Manila.
He insisted it was all a
publicity gimmick to fill up
the theaters in the United
States for closed circuit
television audiences.
"I'm the greatest person in
the history of sports to create
publicity. I lie down in my
room at night and say-what
do I do tomorrow?"

If

0

CINCINNATI {UP!) - A
13-acre temporary arena that
can accommodate 70,000
persons is expected to be
completed within 15 days for
the Oct. 25 performance by
motorcycle daredevil Eve!
Knievel.
Knievel will try to jmnp 14
buses lined up at nearby
Kings Island amusement
park.
Construction on the arena,
believed to be the largest
temporary seating facility
ever built in the country,
began Monday.
The lmnber and steel struc•
ture will seat 35,000 persons
and provide standing room
for another 35,000.
The structure will ,cover
560,000 square feet in a
par lUng lot in front of the
amusement-.ru!l'!lflucatecr
about 20 miles northeast of
here.
Knievel's jmnp area .will
measure 126 feet by 600 feet,
about the size of two football
40-foot trailer

0

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The other day I was walking
down the street, when this
voice called to me from a
parked car : "Hey mlshter.
( H ic) Are you by any chance .
an insurance man?" Why yes
1 am . What can I do for you?
"WelL some dirty thief stole
my steering wheel, my brake
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car . (Hie) Whatta ya' think
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loads of lwnber and steelenough material to frame a
25-unit apartment buildingis being used in the arena,
designed by the Jack Elrod
Co. of Indianapolis, Ind., a
firm which also has provided
seating for the 500 mile race.
Knievei 's jmnp is to be
telecast live by ABC-TV, but
Cincinnati, Columbus and
Dayton stations will be
blacked out.
Amusement park officials
are hawking tickets at $8 and
$12.

It's a big ,loan. Bigger than most.
But easy to get. And easy io repay.
Because it's·backed by an asset that
keeps ,growing.
You put money Into your house.
Why not get it out for the things you
need today?
•See The City Loan Company about
a HomeOwner Loan today.

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IDAHO BAKING POTATOES ••••••••

If you sold your home today. you
know you'd make money. Probably
lots of money
.
But there's another way to get your
money you 'Probably never even
thought of.
Tt'le City Loan Company has a
pian that lets you use the .money
in your home when you need it ...
The City Loan ·HomeOwner Loan

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AT GATEWAY

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in a non-title bout at Nassau
Coiisemn here Tuesday night.
Duran is scheduled to take on
Ken Buchanan in a championship match next spring.

HOUSTON (UP!) - Forearlier by calling in sick ;vith wards Owen Wells, a second
the "blue nu ...
year man, and Leon Johnson,
Most of the city's 323 police a rookie, were released
officers stayled home tod~y Monday by Houston Rockets
and said they would not of the National Basketball
return tO work until they have Association.
a written contract.
The cuts trimmed the
A . judge
Issued
a Rockets' roster to 15 players
resltainmg order against the with ,the team's first
walkout minutes after the preseason game at Norfolk,
city was adVised of the strike Va., set for Wednesday.
vote. But the order's only
Wells averaged three points
. immediate effect · was that in 33 games last season . He
strike · cOordinators stopped played nis college ball at the
picketing at city hail while University
of
Detroit .
th!!Y sought a legal opinion . Johnson was a first-year man
'from Centenary.

·. ,. :'

Evel to jump in front
of 70,000-seat stands

Seth Hill 53 - 200.
Nelsonville-York, Tim Pitts
41, Tim Coakley 40, Matt
Bunting 41, Greg Dewhurst
36, and Jeff Maden 45 (X) 160.
Wahama, Dave Reed 36,
Lance Oliver 36, Jay Lane 47,
Chuck Stanley 51 and Greg
Stadola 53 (X) - 174.

Last Friday at Pomeroy
Meigs reserves had 199 and
Warren Local reserves 241.
For Meigs reserves David
Burt shot 43, Bob Powers 49,
Ron Casci 52, Jeff Couch 55,
and Homer Smith 58. The
reseNes record is 2-1. They
will play at Nelsonville York
today.
Meigs varsity will play
Wednesday, Oct . I, at
Jackson against Jackson and
--Gallipolis.

'

touchdowns, but Brown said
that was oothing really to
brag about.
.
\
" Kenny had a good day, but
nothing super for him,"
Brown said of last year's top
NFL quarterback.
A couple of starters suffered injuries Sunday that
will sideline theri,J awhile . .
Tight enct Bob . Trumpy
pulled a hamString muscle
and is expected to miss at
least two games.
Safety Tommy casanova
sprained an ankle and
although X-rays showed
there was no fracture, doc-·
tors said it was hard to say
just how long he would be out .
The Bengals and Houston
Oilers match 2-() records next
Sunday in Houston .

penter, who got five
unassisted tackles arid a
quarterback sack SUnday .
Said linebacker
Jim
LeClair, who had six solo
tackles and intercepted a
pass, "there's good people
here working together."
"That's the key to it ,"
added LeClair. "It's just a
matter of time until we get a
smooth running machine.''
"Whenever you shut out a
National Football League
team you've accomplished
something," said coach Paul
Brown. " It's a shutout and
we're darned glad to get it. I
don't care who it's against. "
Cincinnati's offense also
purred SUnday.
Ken Anderson hit 17 of 22
passes for 203 yards and three

Buckeye go temn wms ne~~~-hteen

By

,&gt;gav.e.iibptiJ -~• ~- u.; • '''i;lfdef',oC pouce

..;•• .f&lt;J .t '...... . ·f

•

Bengals showing ·'helluva defense

Woody says OSU d_efense needs

i•

.

•

Title fight tonight

~- ~ -~....-.. ~~~.~· !;~!~• ~/ tc ~- &lt;~ ~ ~~k~. _' ~'
:~
...... rrlillitt's;,jater.biltUng· ~- ~ ~ the. Frale~

· ·, :r ~~:',:~. .

c

NEW YORK ( UPil ~ Two 11f the four
backs picked Monday in · United Press International's Backfield of the Week are rrom
Ohio schools.
Hadl may be, two inOhio State fullback Pete Johnson and
terceptions were the keys to
Miami
of Ohio tailback Rob Carpenter were
the Broncos' win. The first
one came when Had! set up a
joined by Kansas quarterback Nolan Crom- ·
screen to Brockington but the
well and running back Herb Lusk qf San Diego
fullback was knocked down
Slate for the honor.
and linebacker Jim O'Malley
Johnson, a 6-1, 246-pound junior fullback
ran 36 yards with the Infrom Long Reach, N. V., set a school record
terception to the Packer 12 to
with five touchdowns and also gained 148
set up Ramsey 's pass to
yards rushing while leading the Rue keyes to a
Dolbin.
Denver running back Otis
:12-7 rout Saturday of North Carolina . Johnson
Armstrong injured his ribs in
scored twice on run~ of two yards and. once
BY VICENfE MALIWANAG
the second quarter and
each un runs of one, three and five yards in
MANILA
(UP!)
missed the rest of the game .
Swapping final predictions on
pacing Ohio State tu its third straight triumph.
He may miss SUnday's game
·.:····:·:··::·····:::·:·::;:;:;:;:;:;::·:::·:·::··:·::····:·:·:·::;:;:;:;:-:·:;···:···::;:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-·-:-:- ·.·.·.·.·.·.'.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.· the eve of their heavyweight
at Buffalo as well.
._:-:-:_:_:_:_:;.;.·. -:;._:_:_:_:::::::::::::::::;:;.;:;.;.;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::.:-::::;:;:::::;:::::=:::::::=:::::=:::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::·:·;:::::::::::::: c hampionship fight,
Muhammad Ali proclaimed
himself an invincible warrior
with the power of God behind
him and Joe Frazier
promised to make Ali crawl
on the ring.
In the final hours before
their
third fight, scheduled at
.
10:45
A.M . Wednesday
COLUMBUS, Ohio {UPI) exceptionally good bail, " said under the lights Thursday
!Tuesday night U.S.) before
Ohio State coach Woody Hayes, " and we'll n~ed night.
!!ll
estimated fullhouse crowd
Hayes refused Monday to another goo.deffort this week.
" We don't worry a bout the
compare this year's top-rated They (UCLA) are an awfully sod and we' re not going to of 25,000 and a global
audience
of
Buckeye team to the one a good offensive team.''
waste our time working on television
year ago.
Hayes said the Buckeyes it, " said Hayes. " We have millions, Ali and Frazier
"No," was Hayes' answer would be up against the four had some injlJries in the past gave their final say.
The 33-year-old champion,
to the question of whether he Ts Saturday - time, tern- practicing on sod."
who
has variously described
Hayes , whose Buckeyes
could compare the two perature, turf and team .
Frazier.
as a "gorilla," a
teams, "and even if I could, I
The game against the will be meeting UCLA for
"robot" and a jjbwn '" said
wouldn't.
Bruins, to be nationally only the third time with the
"Each team is distinctive," televised, is scheduled for 9 series even at 1-1 against, "No, he's not really a bad
the 25-year Buckeye boss told p.m. ( EDT) in the Los said, " our fullbacking is guy . He just wants my job."
Then he intoned "I have the
his weekly press luncheon, Angeles Coliseum, which has more than satisfactory,"
but did add "our defense has a natural sod field .
referring to the outstandng power of God. That's why
come along a lot faster than
It will mark the first time work turned in so far by 246- Frazier looks so small to
we had any right to expect ." this year the Buckeyes have pound junior Pete Johnson . me."
Five miles away, in his own
'lbe Ohio State defense, played on natural sod and the
Johnson powered over the
hotel,
Frazier, two years
minus eight 1974 starters, first time since 1959they have goal line five times and
three
all- played at night, losing to rushed for 148 yards in the younger than Ali, sent down a
including
Americans, has allowed only Southern California 17~.
Buckeyes ' 32-7 win . over statement from his room
16 points and one touchdown
Hayes said, however, the North Carolina Saturday, saying "Clay will have to
in wins over Michigan State, Buckeyes would practice as giving him nine TDs in three crawl across the ring twice.
Ya know, he owes me one."
Penn State and North usual on the Ohio Stadimn games.
The challenger, who insists
carolina.
AstroTurf, possibly going
'lbe only thing which Hayes
on
calling Ali by his original
"Our defense has _played lightly on the natural sod and found wrong with the offense
name of Cassius Clay, said,
f''"'''''''&lt;·'':-:.:-:·::::::::::::::::::::~:::o.:::::::::;:*m:o:K«'&amp;-~::00::~~:;::::;:::::::::::::::::~~ in the North Carolina contest
was the length of time it'took " Before our first fight, Clay
it to get untracked.
"We went the first six
!X)Ssessions without a score,
Ahna Marshall
then scored on five of our next
MASON - The Mason Historical Society meeting' six," Hayes said . "That 's
GLOUSTER - NelsonvilleTuesday, September 23 at the VIrgil Lewis house was opened pretty good, but we've got to
York
High School defeated
by the president, Mrs. Catherine Smith, and reading of a poem, get going earlier."
Wahama and Southern 160
"A Friend", by Mrs. Bessie Ingels. Officers and committees
Hayes said the line strokes to 174 and 200
elected on Sept. 9 were confirmed as follows:
blocking against the Tar
Officers - Mrs. Smith, president; Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt Heels was "excellent," respectively Friday in a golf
and Mrs. Helen Barton, vice presidents; secretary, Mrs. Alma especially by guards Ted match at Glouster . The
scoring :
Marshall, and treasurer, Mrs. Doris Roberts.
Smith and Bill Lukens, who
Southern, Bob Roush 44,
Membership- Mrs. Ruth Walker, Mrs. Roy Harless, Mrs. both graded out over 75 per
Tim
Thoren 48, Dwight Hill
Ulah Zerkle. ·
cent.
55, Corky Cleek 60 (X) and
History - Mrs. Bessie Ingels, Mrs. Lilah Zerkle, Miss
Sophomore tackle Eddie
Lena Gibbs and Mrs. Alma Marshall.
Beamon, who had 13 par,
The treasurer gave her report. Charter members will ticipations against North
continue to be received until the date of open house, which has
Carolina. was named the
not been set at this ti!IJe. Charier membership fee is $1.
"buck of the week," the top
A "work day" was set for Thursday, October 2, all day to defensive player, while
prepare for Open House.
Wellston won a three-way
linebacker Ed Thompson,
Early hlatory of the town of Mason, schools and the who had 12 participations golf match played at
Methodist Church wer~ presented by ~s .. Evelyn Proffitt, against the Tar Heels, was Pomeroy Monday, Meigs
taken from the Church hiatory from the files ofVil'gil A. Lewis. lineman of the week.
shooting 168 and Ironton 175.
Also displayed were a copy of the program for the first annual
For Meigs, Chuck Follrod
The top offensive awards
commencement of Mason High School in 1881, and the com- for the North carolina game shot 38, Dale Browning 41,
mencements of 1902 and 1904; an invitation to a "Select went to Smith, a 6-foot, 240- Steve Bachner 44, Mark
Cotillion Party" in Independence Hall, Clifton 1869, a 1902 pound senior guard, and Gilkey 45 and Crenson Pratt
Sears Roebuck Catalog and other interesting items.
Johnson, whose 329 rushing 46. Meigs season record is 7-9
Anyone having old documents or pictures is urged to bring yards in three games is nine and league record 3-9.
theDJ to be displayed, particularly any of the books written by more than he had all last
For Wellston, .Barry Henry
Virgil A. Lewis.
shot 40, Dave Scott 41, Dan
year.
Attending the meeting were Catherine Smith, Jay
Scott 42, Jim Derrow 44, and
Foreman, Doris Roberts, Coral Alexander, Zelma Hunter,
Dean Billiken 50, total 167.
Bessie Ingels, Virginia Brown, Evelyn Proffitt and Mayor and
Mrs. 'Fred Taylor.
BOARD TO MEET
The Gailia-Meigs ComWElL, FOLKS, 'IHINGS seem to be looking up here: a munity Action Agency
new business was opened In Mason on Thursday, Sept. 25, executive board will hold its
known as the Novelty Fabric and Craft Shop. It is located on monthly meeting Thursday,
Second Street where the Neptune Fabric was. Mrs. Mary Oct. 2, beginning at 7:30p.m.
Martin of New Haven is manager. Free craft lessons will be in the central office,
given. The store will feature craft supplies, fabrics, thread, Cheshire. Personnel and
etc •. The owner is Evelyn Kronmiiler of Belpre, formerly of executive committees will
Sandyville, W. Va.
meet at 7 p.m.
MASON PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Jenks were called to Terra Alta, W.
Va . for the funeral of her sister, Mrs. Harlan (Mary) Shaffer
NEW YORK (UP!) who died from injuries suffered in a car accident the previous
Lightweight
champion
SUnday. The Shaffers were fanner residents of Mason.
Roberto Duran will meet
Mr.andMrs. Laurence Wolfe and son Timmy of Letart, W.
welterweight champion Jose
Va., visited his sister, Mrs. Elsie Roach and family Sunday. Napoles in late November or
Mrs. Olester Roush of Addison, Ohio, daughter-in-law of early
December,
a
Mrs. Darrell Jenks, sulmitted to major surgery last week at spokesman for Don King
Veterans Memorial Hospital. She is reported feeling better. Productions said Monday.
Mrs. Eunice Hart has returned to her home from the
Duran's manager Carlos
hospital and seems to be some Improved. She would appreciate Eleta said the match, which
cards from her friends.
will take place Mexico City,
Mrs. Carl {Elizabeth) Roush is a patient at Pleasant would depend on Duran's ;
Valley Hospital.
success against Edwin Viruet

Kansas City without
cuPI&gt; . _ ·protection of police

George &amp;colt; . slugging
MilwaUkee Brewers' first
ba8!lman whp ~ ~ted to
tie d1 ·~ . eandldate. for

\.

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Wellston winner in golf

Sparta Brleb
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Bl-oncos top · '~:::::"~:~:':=:::
Packers 23-13
By l'RACY RINGOLSBY

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�4-'-Tbe DailySentlilel,Mlddlepof\-Pomeroy; o., Tuesday, Sept. 30, 1975

UPI Sports Writer
DENVER (UPI) - Denver
Bronco quarterback Steve
Ramsey had to wait a long
time for his national
television debut but when the
chance came, he stole the
show.
Ramsey, the Broncos'
backup quarterback since
Charley Johnson arrived
from Houston In 1972, entered
Denver's game with Green
Bay early In the second
quarter Monday night when
Johnson spilt the Index finger
on his right hand.
The six-year veteran from
North Texas State made · the
most of his first appearance
on national television,
guiding the Broncos to a 23-13
win over the Packers.
Ramsey hit lk&gt;f-ll passes
for 99 yards, including a 10..
yard pass to Jack Dolbln for a
third quarter touchdown and
three In a row to set up !he
last of Jim Turner's three
field goals, a 32-yarder In the
fourth quarter.
"When I get the call aU I
can do is go out and do the
best I can. There's no
pressure," said Ramsey.
"When I'm on the sidelines,
I'm charting plays and
concentrating. You have to
stay in every game because
sometime that chance is
going to come."
'lbe Broncos also scored in
the closing seconds when
middle linebacker Randy
Gradishar ran 44 yards with
an Interception of a John
Hadl desperation paas.
The Packers scored In the
fourth quarter on a four-yard
Hadl to WID Harrell pass and
a ane-yard Jolm Brockington
lVI as Hadl began to click.
Hadl, who hit lk&gt;f-17 passes
for 80 yards In the first half,
drove !he Packers 59 yarda
for their touchdown, hitting
all six of his passes for 51 of
the yarda. And on the second
drive, Hadl, who finished the
night completing 23-of-36
pesus for 273 yards, com- .,
pleted S.Of~ for 72 of !he. 80
yarda.
But as good as a passer as

•

•

.

·

•

Uriitied PTen lnternatloaal
. 'rli.EmoN, N.J. {UPI) Representatives of two
groups aee!dng the release
from prison of former middleweight boxing contender
Rubin . "Hun:lcane" Carter
asked New Jersey Gov.

..

Bre~nT.~eM~yto
gran~

him

executl.ve

clemency.
A . r~tatlve of the
Rubin '':Hurricane"· Carter
DefeDSe C«nmlttee said i.t
was her Impression !hat
Byrne may make a· decision
.
.wilhln 14 days.
· Carter, 38, bali been In jaU
since .1966 when he was
.convicted ol the shooting
deaths of three persons In the
Lafayette Grill in Paterson.

NEW YORK {UP!)- Duke
Snider, former slugging
Brooklyn Dodger centerflelder who hit 407 career
home runs, has applied for
the manager's job of the New
York Mets; It was reported
Mooday.
· Snider, 49, played briefly
with the Met.s at the end ol his
17-year career and is
currenUy serving as .batting
coach and broadcaster for the
Montreal Expos• .
~·Ro)•· · · McMillan,
who
replaced Yogi Berra as lnterinl.manager of the·Met.s In
August, Is not expected to be
retalri'ed 'a fter falling to keep
the clUb In contention while
compiling a 26-27 won-lost

:~.

YO-RK-

tna.l,v~illl~ · plilytiJI ;IJonors

thia : z ~. Monday was
named the'l\metlcan League

· ' , jllaJIII' at · the
~~ ,tter
· hitting &lt;
ft.e, home 'ruQ. · 8l!d
. ciriVN Iii 1.3 nuiJ.ip·oolt-~

~-"tjtqliril,wllh.~
Jadll!ln al.·OaJt!anc! for', tQP
hOriGI:a:ln qu.t ..,_rtment .._
....~ .• · !Je&amp;gu~eadlng 1011
~tied-in. . · . ,
'

. • . I;I .,
Y~

~ -~.-~:
&lt;•,.

defense.'.'
Carpenter and his team•
matjlS . on defense were excited about Sunday's 21~
handling of the New Orleans
Saints. Just two weeks ago, in
the final exhibition game, the
Bengals whipped the Saints
20-0.
"You can't argue with a
shutout and we've had two in
three games," said Car-

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cincinnati Bengals defensive
tackle .Ron Carpenter says he
now has an answer for an oftasked question.
.
" Everybody was always
asking me before the season,
'How's the defense going to
be?" ' recalls carpenter.
" I think they've got the
answer," he says today. "I
think we've got a helluva

another good effort Saturday

.

il Mason County News Notes \t\

•

KA,NSASCITY,Kan. (UI?l}
-Only. a handful of highway

patrolinen, ~riff's deputies
and pOllee supervisors were
on duty today to do the job of
300 officers,. but Mayor Jack
Reardon promised public'
aafi!ty would be maintained
duHDg the city's first police

·•.•, •.•

'.

,

v~ted

tate

,1\!onday f.o strike until, c.onIJ-ac( arguments are resolved
over which officers are
cov~ by the union. Poljce
be!IBR striking three days

.. I

.(

told me 'Ah's gonna crawl
across the r~ on my hands
and knees and hand you the
championship belt if you win
this fight.'
"Well, ya know, I won but I
don't recall seein' Clay crawl.
Tomorrow he'll owe me two''
cuz tomorrow you'll have a
new champion."
Both fighters exuded confidence but oddamakers in
London, New York and Las
Vegasweremoreconfident in
Ali, making him a heavy
favorite by various odds of 21, 9-4 and 9--5.
Ali has been guaranteed •
$4.5 million for this third
meeting with Frazier who is
guaranteed $2 million.
Ali spoke about the
reported marital feud involving him, his wife,
Belinda, and girl friend
Veronica Porsche which
prompted' Belinda's sudden
departure forborne last week
only 12 hours after arriving in
Manila.
He insisted it was all a
publicity gimmick to fill up
the theaters in the United
States for closed circuit
television audiences.
"I'm the greatest person in
the history of sports to create
publicity. I lie down in my
room at night and say-what
do I do tomorrow?"

If

0

CINCINNATI {UP!) - A
13-acre temporary arena that
can accommodate 70,000
persons is expected to be
completed within 15 days for
the Oct. 25 performance by
motorcycle daredevil Eve!
Knievel.
Knievel will try to jmnp 14
buses lined up at nearby
Kings Island amusement
park.
Construction on the arena,
believed to be the largest
temporary seating facility
ever built in the country,
began Monday.
The lmnber and steel struc•
ture will seat 35,000 persons
and provide standing room
for another 35,000.
The structure will ,cover
560,000 square feet in a
par lUng lot in front of the
amusement-.ru!l'!lflucatecr
about 20 miles northeast of
here.
Knievel's jmnp area .will
measure 126 feet by 600 feet,
about the size of two football
40-foot trailer

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voice called to me from a
parked car : "Hey mlshter.
( H ic) Are you by any chance .
an insurance man?" Why yes
1 am . What can I do for you?
"WelL some dirty thief stole
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loads of lwnber and steelenough material to frame a
25-unit apartment buildingis being used in the arena,
designed by the Jack Elrod
Co. of Indianapolis, Ind., a
firm which also has provided
seating for the 500 mile race.
Knievei 's jmnp is to be
telecast live by ABC-TV, but
Cincinnati, Columbus and
Dayton stations will be
blacked out.
Amusement park officials
are hawking tickets at $8 and
$12.

It's a big ,loan. Bigger than most.
But easy to get. And easy io repay.
Because it's·backed by an asset that
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You put money Into your house.
Why not get it out for the things you
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•See The City Loan Company about
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If you sold your home today. you
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in a non-title bout at Nassau
Coiisemn here Tuesday night.
Duran is scheduled to take on
Ken Buchanan in a championship match next spring.

HOUSTON (UP!) - Forearlier by calling in sick ;vith wards Owen Wells, a second
the "blue nu ...
year man, and Leon Johnson,
Most of the city's 323 police a rookie, were released
officers stayled home tod~y Monday by Houston Rockets
and said they would not of the National Basketball
return tO work until they have Association.
a written contract.
The cuts trimmed the
A . judge
Issued
a Rockets' roster to 15 players
resltainmg order against the with ,the team's first
walkout minutes after the preseason game at Norfolk,
city was adVised of the strike Va., set for Wednesday.
vote. But the order's only
Wells averaged three points
. immediate effect · was that in 33 games last season . He
strike · cOordinators stopped played nis college ball at the
picketing at city hail while University
of
Detroit .
th!!Y sought a legal opinion . Johnson was a first-year man
'from Centenary.

·. ,. :'

Evel to jump in front
of 70,000-seat stands

Seth Hill 53 - 200.
Nelsonville-York, Tim Pitts
41, Tim Coakley 40, Matt
Bunting 41, Greg Dewhurst
36, and Jeff Maden 45 (X) 160.
Wahama, Dave Reed 36,
Lance Oliver 36, Jay Lane 47,
Chuck Stanley 51 and Greg
Stadola 53 (X) - 174.

Last Friday at Pomeroy
Meigs reserves had 199 and
Warren Local reserves 241.
For Meigs reserves David
Burt shot 43, Bob Powers 49,
Ron Casci 52, Jeff Couch 55,
and Homer Smith 58. The
reseNes record is 2-1. They
will play at Nelsonville York
today.
Meigs varsity will play
Wednesday, Oct . I, at
Jackson against Jackson and
--Gallipolis.

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touchdowns, but Brown said
that was oothing really to
brag about.
.
\
" Kenny had a good day, but
nothing super for him,"
Brown said of last year's top
NFL quarterback.
A couple of starters suffered injuries Sunday that
will sideline theri,J awhile . .
Tight enct Bob . Trumpy
pulled a hamString muscle
and is expected to miss at
least two games.
Safety Tommy casanova
sprained an ankle and
although X-rays showed
there was no fracture, doc-·
tors said it was hard to say
just how long he would be out .
The Bengals and Houston
Oilers match 2-() records next
Sunday in Houston .

penter, who got five
unassisted tackles arid a
quarterback sack SUnday .
Said linebacker
Jim
LeClair, who had six solo
tackles and intercepted a
pass, "there's good people
here working together."
"That's the key to it ,"
added LeClair. "It's just a
matter of time until we get a
smooth running machine.''
"Whenever you shut out a
National Football League
team you've accomplished
something," said coach Paul
Brown. " It's a shutout and
we're darned glad to get it. I
don't care who it's against. "
Cincinnati's offense also
purred SUnday.
Ken Anderson hit 17 of 22
passes for 203 yards and three

Buckeye go temn wms ne~~~-hteen

By

,&gt;gav.e.iibptiJ -~• ~- u.; • '''i;lfdef',oC pouce

..;•• .f&lt;J .t '...... . ·f

•

Bengals showing ·'helluva defense

Woody says OSU d_efense needs

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Title fight tonight

~- ~ -~....-.. ~~~.~· !;~!~• ~/ tc ~- &lt;~ ~ ~~k~. _' ~'
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...... rrlillitt's;,jater.biltUng· ~- ~ ~ the. Frale~

· ·, :r ~~:',:~. .

c

NEW YORK ( UPil ~ Two 11f the four
backs picked Monday in · United Press International's Backfield of the Week are rrom
Ohio schools.
Hadl may be, two inOhio State fullback Pete Johnson and
terceptions were the keys to
Miami
of Ohio tailback Rob Carpenter were
the Broncos' win. The first
one came when Had! set up a
joined by Kansas quarterback Nolan Crom- ·
screen to Brockington but the
well and running back Herb Lusk qf San Diego
fullback was knocked down
Slate for the honor.
and linebacker Jim O'Malley
Johnson, a 6-1, 246-pound junior fullback
ran 36 yards with the Infrom Long Reach, N. V., set a school record
terception to the Packer 12 to
with five touchdowns and also gained 148
set up Ramsey 's pass to
yards rushing while leading the Rue keyes to a
Dolbin.
Denver running back Otis
:12-7 rout Saturday of North Carolina . Johnson
Armstrong injured his ribs in
scored twice on run~ of two yards and. once
BY VICENfE MALIWANAG
the second quarter and
each un runs of one, three and five yards in
MANILA
(UP!)
missed the rest of the game .
Swapping final predictions on
pacing Ohio State tu its third straight triumph.
He may miss SUnday's game
·.:····:·:··::·····:::·:·::;:;:;:;:;:;::·:::·:·::··:·::····:·:·:·::;:;:;:;:-:·:;···:···::;:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-·-:-:- ·.·.·.·.·.·.'.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.· the eve of their heavyweight
at Buffalo as well.
._:-:-:_:_:_:_:;.;.·. -:;._:_:_:_:::::::::::::::::;:;.;:;.;.;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::.:-::::;:;:::::;:::::=:::::::=:::::=:::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::·:·;:::::::::::::: c hampionship fight,
Muhammad Ali proclaimed
himself an invincible warrior
with the power of God behind
him and Joe Frazier
promised to make Ali crawl
on the ring.
In the final hours before
their
third fight, scheduled at
.
10:45
A.M . Wednesday
COLUMBUS, Ohio {UPI) exceptionally good bail, " said under the lights Thursday
!Tuesday night U.S.) before
Ohio State coach Woody Hayes, " and we'll n~ed night.
!!ll
estimated fullhouse crowd
Hayes refused Monday to another goo.deffort this week.
" We don't worry a bout the
compare this year's top-rated They (UCLA) are an awfully sod and we' re not going to of 25,000 and a global
audience
of
Buckeye team to the one a good offensive team.''
waste our time working on television
year ago.
Hayes said the Buckeyes it, " said Hayes. " We have millions, Ali and Frazier
"No," was Hayes' answer would be up against the four had some injlJries in the past gave their final say.
The 33-year-old champion,
to the question of whether he Ts Saturday - time, tern- practicing on sod."
who
has variously described
Hayes , whose Buckeyes
could compare the two perature, turf and team .
Frazier.
as a "gorilla," a
teams, "and even if I could, I
The game against the will be meeting UCLA for
"robot" and a jjbwn '" said
wouldn't.
Bruins, to be nationally only the third time with the
"Each team is distinctive," televised, is scheduled for 9 series even at 1-1 against, "No, he's not really a bad
the 25-year Buckeye boss told p.m. ( EDT) in the Los said, " our fullbacking is guy . He just wants my job."
Then he intoned "I have the
his weekly press luncheon, Angeles Coliseum, which has more than satisfactory,"
but did add "our defense has a natural sod field .
referring to the outstandng power of God. That's why
come along a lot faster than
It will mark the first time work turned in so far by 246- Frazier looks so small to
we had any right to expect ." this year the Buckeyes have pound junior Pete Johnson . me."
Five miles away, in his own
'lbe Ohio State defense, played on natural sod and the
Johnson powered over the
hotel,
Frazier, two years
minus eight 1974 starters, first time since 1959they have goal line five times and
three
all- played at night, losing to rushed for 148 yards in the younger than Ali, sent down a
including
Americans, has allowed only Southern California 17~.
Buckeyes ' 32-7 win . over statement from his room
16 points and one touchdown
Hayes said, however, the North Carolina Saturday, saying "Clay will have to
in wins over Michigan State, Buckeyes would practice as giving him nine TDs in three crawl across the ring twice.
Ya know, he owes me one."
Penn State and North usual on the Ohio Stadimn games.
The challenger, who insists
carolina.
AstroTurf, possibly going
'lbe only thing which Hayes
on
calling Ali by his original
"Our defense has _played lightly on the natural sod and found wrong with the offense
name of Cassius Clay, said,
f''"'''''''&lt;·'':-:.:-:·::::::::::::::::::::~:::o.:::::::::;:*m:o:K«'&amp;-~::00::~~:;::::;:::::::::::::::::~~ in the North Carolina contest
was the length of time it'took " Before our first fight, Clay
it to get untracked.
"We went the first six
!X)Ssessions without a score,
Ahna Marshall
then scored on five of our next
MASON - The Mason Historical Society meeting' six," Hayes said . "That 's
GLOUSTER - NelsonvilleTuesday, September 23 at the VIrgil Lewis house was opened pretty good, but we've got to
York
High School defeated
by the president, Mrs. Catherine Smith, and reading of a poem, get going earlier."
Wahama and Southern 160
"A Friend", by Mrs. Bessie Ingels. Officers and committees
Hayes said the line strokes to 174 and 200
elected on Sept. 9 were confirmed as follows:
blocking against the Tar
Officers - Mrs. Smith, president; Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt Heels was "excellent," respectively Friday in a golf
and Mrs. Helen Barton, vice presidents; secretary, Mrs. Alma especially by guards Ted match at Glouster . The
scoring :
Marshall, and treasurer, Mrs. Doris Roberts.
Smith and Bill Lukens, who
Southern, Bob Roush 44,
Membership- Mrs. Ruth Walker, Mrs. Roy Harless, Mrs. both graded out over 75 per
Tim
Thoren 48, Dwight Hill
Ulah Zerkle. ·
cent.
55, Corky Cleek 60 (X) and
History - Mrs. Bessie Ingels, Mrs. Lilah Zerkle, Miss
Sophomore tackle Eddie
Lena Gibbs and Mrs. Alma Marshall.
Beamon, who had 13 par,
The treasurer gave her report. Charter members will ticipations against North
continue to be received until the date of open house, which has
Carolina. was named the
not been set at this ti!IJe. Charier membership fee is $1.
"buck of the week," the top
A "work day" was set for Thursday, October 2, all day to defensive player, while
prepare for Open House.
Wellston won a three-way
linebacker Ed Thompson,
Early hlatory of the town of Mason, schools and the who had 12 participations golf match played at
Methodist Church wer~ presented by ~s .. Evelyn Proffitt, against the Tar Heels, was Pomeroy Monday, Meigs
taken from the Church hiatory from the files ofVil'gil A. Lewis. lineman of the week.
shooting 168 and Ironton 175.
Also displayed were a copy of the program for the first annual
For Meigs, Chuck Follrod
The top offensive awards
commencement of Mason High School in 1881, and the com- for the North carolina game shot 38, Dale Browning 41,
mencements of 1902 and 1904; an invitation to a "Select went to Smith, a 6-foot, 240- Steve Bachner 44, Mark
Cotillion Party" in Independence Hall, Clifton 1869, a 1902 pound senior guard, and Gilkey 45 and Crenson Pratt
Sears Roebuck Catalog and other interesting items.
Johnson, whose 329 rushing 46. Meigs season record is 7-9
Anyone having old documents or pictures is urged to bring yards in three games is nine and league record 3-9.
theDJ to be displayed, particularly any of the books written by more than he had all last
For Wellston, .Barry Henry
Virgil A. Lewis.
shot 40, Dave Scott 41, Dan
year.
Attending the meeting were Catherine Smith, Jay
Scott 42, Jim Derrow 44, and
Foreman, Doris Roberts, Coral Alexander, Zelma Hunter,
Dean Billiken 50, total 167.
Bessie Ingels, Virginia Brown, Evelyn Proffitt and Mayor and
Mrs. 'Fred Taylor.
BOARD TO MEET
The Gailia-Meigs ComWElL, FOLKS, 'IHINGS seem to be looking up here: a munity Action Agency
new business was opened In Mason on Thursday, Sept. 25, executive board will hold its
known as the Novelty Fabric and Craft Shop. It is located on monthly meeting Thursday,
Second Street where the Neptune Fabric was. Mrs. Mary Oct. 2, beginning at 7:30p.m.
Martin of New Haven is manager. Free craft lessons will be in the central office,
given. The store will feature craft supplies, fabrics, thread, Cheshire. Personnel and
etc •. The owner is Evelyn Kronmiiler of Belpre, formerly of executive committees will
Sandyville, W. Va.
meet at 7 p.m.
MASON PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Jenks were called to Terra Alta, W.
Va . for the funeral of her sister, Mrs. Harlan (Mary) Shaffer
NEW YORK (UP!) who died from injuries suffered in a car accident the previous
Lightweight
champion
SUnday. The Shaffers were fanner residents of Mason.
Roberto Duran will meet
Mr.andMrs. Laurence Wolfe and son Timmy of Letart, W.
welterweight champion Jose
Va., visited his sister, Mrs. Elsie Roach and family Sunday. Napoles in late November or
Mrs. Olester Roush of Addison, Ohio, daughter-in-law of early
December,
a
Mrs. Darrell Jenks, sulmitted to major surgery last week at spokesman for Don King
Veterans Memorial Hospital. She is reported feeling better. Productions said Monday.
Mrs. Eunice Hart has returned to her home from the
Duran's manager Carlos
hospital and seems to be some Improved. She would appreciate Eleta said the match, which
cards from her friends.
will take place Mexico City,
Mrs. Carl {Elizabeth) Roush is a patient at Pleasant would depend on Duran's ;
Valley Hospital.
success against Edwin Viruet

Kansas City without
cuPI&gt; . _ ·protection of police

George &amp;colt; . slugging
MilwaUkee Brewers' first
ba8!lman whp ~ ~ted to
tie d1 ·~ . eandldate. for

\.

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Wellston winner in golf

Sparta Brleb
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Bl-oncos top · '~:::::"~:~:':=:::
Packers 23-13
By l'RACY RINGOLSBY

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Sani-AUsh

No. 155

59

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With
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BETSY ROSS
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Twin Cities Gateway

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7_ The Daily ~ntinel, Middleport-;E'ome_roy, 0 ., Tuesday , Sept. 30, 1975

Teen-agers may face adult .charges

}

•....•

Gallipolis; Carrie Horton, Oak Hill ; Genevieve Jasis,
Gallipolis; Barbara Jordan, Pomeroy ; Janet Kearn s,
Jackson ; Marceline Kerns, Nelsonville; Judith Love,
Gallipolis Ferry; Susan Morgan, Wellston: Paulette
Nibert, Gallipolis; Nancy Ohlinger, Ga llipolis Ferry;
Vicki Poetker, Ja ckson; Charlot te Queen, Pedro: Autumn
Reasor, Hamden ; Cathie Roseberry , Ja ckson; Rita
Sera berry, Jackson; Judith See, Pt. pleasant ; Tami
Snider, Wellston; Brenda Whitley, Middlepo rt; Dolores J .
Wilcoxon, Gallipolis: R.o1chel Willis, South Point.

TIURTY-FOUR STUDENTS graduated from the
Practical Nursing School of the Buckeye Hills Career
Center Friday. The graduates are (not pictured in order)
B. Kathryn Baker , Jackson; L. Gail Blane , Gallipolis
Ferry; Betty J. Boggs, Gallipolis; Ina Bradley, Pt.
Pleasant ; Hulda Brown, Gallipolis; Pamela J. Ca udill ,
Gallipolis; Vicki Conley, Jackson: Virginia Cooper,
Kettering; Imogene Crabtree, Jackson ; Cathy Darst,
Reynoldsburg; Eva D. DeLawder, Ironton; Terre Gandee, r&gt;ew Haven; Kandy . Gindlesberge r, Gallipolis;
Ja cqueline Halley , Crown City ; Marcella Harrison,

RIO G RANDE - The
Practical Nursing School of
the Buc~eye Hills Career
Center has moved to its new
location at the Gallia,
Jackson ,
Vinton
Joint
Vocational School in Rio
Grande. Classes began Oct. I,
with the enrollment of 45
s tudents
from
Gallia,
Jackson, Vinton, Meigs,
Lawrence, Mason, W. Va.
and Jackson, W. Va . Counties.
Helen Shields, R. N.,
Coordinator, will continue to
direct the school. Miss Joyce
Knight, R.N., and Mrs. Diane
Oiler, R.N., will continue as

THREE ARRESTED
Three pcrsuns were
arrested

The Practical Nursing
School graduated 34 students
out of an initial enrollment of

Ray claims
he was a
mile away

Hirohito, empress land
in Anchorage on visit
of a reigning Japanese
monarch to the United States.
Hirohito, 74, and Empress
Nagako, 72, received cheers
of ~~ banzai " from wellwishers in Tokyo as they left
on the historic, two-week trip.
The Japanese government
took unprecedented security
measures to prevent leftists
from disrupting the royal
couple's departure from
Tokyo airport.
Five thousand policemen
were mobilized to guard the
airport while 14,000 others
were stationed at key points
in Tokyo.
The Japan Airlines jet
carrying the emperor and
empress landed in Anchorage
at 2:49a.m. EDT on a brief
refueling stop during a flight
to Newport News, Va.
The royal couple will rest
up in Williamsburg, Va. for
two days before traveling to
Washington
to
meet
President Ford.
Hirohito, dressed in a grey
suit, walked finnly along the
red carpet laid on the tarmac
at Tokyo airport to bid
farewell to Japanese officials, including Prime
Minister Takeo Miki.
Following slightly behind
hiql in a pale green coat and
off-white hat was the smiling
empress.
As Hirohito turned to wave
to some 500 well-wishers who
were permitted to watch his
departure from the airport's
spectator deck, a roar of'
" banzai" - long life - arose.
Japan
Their special
airlines DC8 jetliner is
equipped with a two-room
suite with ivory walls·, a
wisteria-colored carpet and
yellow curtains.
The visit fulfills a 54-yearold wish of the emperor. He
planned to visit America as
crown prince in 1921, but
canceled the trip due to the ill
health of his father, Emperor
Taisho.

ANCHORAGE,
Alaska
(UP!) - Emperor Hirohito
landed in Anchorage today at
the start of the first state visit

r Bulova

! Accuquartz
!
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Digital

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Ught Years
Ahead In
Performance

on

shoplifting charges in and
around Gallla County.
Randy W. Phillips, 19,
Rt. 2, crown City, and Gary
Allen Lambert, 19, Rt. 2,
Crown City, were booked
for shoplifting at Jones
Boys on Pine St. in
Gallipolis whllr Paul David
Newsome,
20,
Point
Pleasant, was arrested for
allegedly taking a pack of
cigarettes at Kroger's
Super Store at Kanauga.

35 . The graduates have been
employed at the following
health age ncies: Holzer
Medical Center, Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Cabell and
St. Mary's Hospitals in
Huntington, Childr en's
Hospital in
Columbus,
Lawrence County General
Hospital, Ironton. Three of
the graduates have enrolled
in profe ssio nal nursing
programs at Nelsonvi lle and
Kettering Medical College,
Kettering.
Mrs. Shields said that
under the continued inspired
direction and leadership of
Clarence Thompson,
Superintendent, the program
will grow and become a great
asset to th e community:

instructors.

Monday

•

NEW YORK (U P! ) James Earl Ray says he did
not shoot Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. and was a mile !com
the scene at the time.
The civil rights leader was
shot to death in Memphis,
Tenn. , April 4, 1968. Ray
pleaded guilty at the time and
was sentenced to 99 years in
jail
for
King 's
assassination.
In an interview published in
The National Star, writer
Steve Dunleavy reported Ray
told him matter-of-factly: "I
personally did not. shoot Dr.
King. I might have been
partly responsible for his
death.
.,..
. .,;,;;
"But then the man who
made the rifle might have
been responsible in part, too.
"! was a mile from the
scene."
Ray has served more than
six years in solitary con·
finement in prison in Tennessee, but was recently
allowed to join the general
prison population. In 1974, he
claimed he was pressured
into pleading guilty to a
crime he did not commit, and
is now appealing the conviction .
"H I didn't kill him , then
someone else did . But that's
for the prosecution to find
out . I'm not a state witness
and don't intend to be," he
said. "There's a lot more
investigating to do into the
case, but I'mnot going to help
the authorities. "

Brooklyn, N.Y. There were 10
baptized at the gathering in
dedication of their lives as
subjects of God's Kingdom.

,
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CONCLUDE ASSEMBLY
Jehovah's Witnesses of the
Nliddleport area · resume
' "(~;_egularly scheduled ac·, tivities this week after altlmdlo~
their
circuit
Jewelry Store . assembly in London, Ohio
' ·.
:. "'wl)ere 806 per!lbns heard the
Court St.. Pom=~
adctress, " How the Kingdom
·
of God Affects Ybu", Sunday
~,....~~-·-·--~·
by John N. ' Stuefloten of

GOESSLER

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Heim said the second
suspect, also 16, could not be
. charged as an adult unless
charges of first-degree
murder and kidnapin g were
filed against him .
Authorities a lso co nfirmed

Brainwash

saw action in Vietnam, died arrested. A search tunled up
_the victim's body saturday
of cancer Sept. 11.
Police Capt. John Collins and a COI'oner's report said
said a key to an apartment lll,e girl had been struck on
near the girl's home was the head and apparently ,
found in one of the suspect's choked to death on her own
pockets when he was vomit .

.LEGAL NOTICE
P·ublic notice is hereby given that The Ohio Bell Tele'fhOD.I
Company haa filed with The Public Utilities Commieaion o Ohio
an Application stating that the Company ie entitled, because of
the reasons set forth In said Application, to reasonable and
equitable increases a:nd adjustments In ita rates and chargee for
exchange telephone service, lntraatate meai&amp;K'e toll telephone
:&lt;Jervice, intrastate mobile telephone service, intraatate private Un.,
services and int raBtate wide area telecommunications se"ice,
and to change the regulations and practice! affecting the aamef
and to revise ita Exchange Rate Tariff P.U .C.O. No.3~ ita Genera
Exc.hange Tariff P.U.C .O. No.4, its Message Toll Telephone Service Tariff P.U.C.O. No. 7, ita Mobile Telephone Service Tariff
P.U.C.O. No. 2, its Private Line -Service Tariff P.U.C.O. No. 2,
and its Wide Area Telecornmunicationa Service Tariff P.U.C.O .
No. 1, to effect such inc reases, adjustment~ and changee, all a1
more fully set forth in the Application on ftle with the Commialion and in the exhibits attached thereto and m&amp;de a part thereof.
The proposed revisions will effect increasea and adjustments in
rates and char~es a.nd changes in the regulations and practicea
affecting the same throughout the territory in which the Com~
pany operates.
,
The prayer of the Application requests the Commisaion to do
the following:
(a.) Approve t he proposed rates and charges and changea
'
applied for herein;
{b) Approve the tHing ot said proposed schedule aheetl con~
t&amp;ined in Exhibit "8" hereto, modified to reflect such reviaion1
th,ereof as may become effective pursuant to orders of your Commisllion, during the interim between the flling of this Application
and the date upon which 11aid proposed schedule sheets become
effective;
{c) Establish an effective date for said proposed schedule
sheets: and
(d) Grant such other and further relief as Applicant ia reaeon~
ably entitled to in the premises.
A copy of the Application, including a copy of the preeent and
proposed schedule sheets, a statement showing the amount of proposed increase or decrease in each changed rate or charge which
ia not affected by changea in regulations and practices, and a
statement describing the proposed changes in regulations and
practices affecting rates and charges, may be inspected by any
interested party at the office of the Commission, 111 North High
Street, Columbus, Ohio, and at any public business otfice of
t he Company .
~
This matter is scheduled for public hearing beginning on

CLEVELAND ( UPI 1 Thornburgh, assistant U.S.
The father of one of four Kent attorney general in charge of
State University students the Justice Department's
killed during a c~mpus an- criminal
division
in
tiwar disturbance has asked Washington, to reque st the
the Justice Department to probe .
investigate contradictions in
The contradi lions
in
the sworn testimony of Ohio Rhodes ' testimony were
Gov . James A. Rhodes during revealed in a copyright arthe recently concluded $46 ticle Sunday in The Plain
By JACK V. FOX
million civil damage trial Dealer .
LOS ANGE LES I UP! 1
out of the shootings.
arising
Patricia Hea rst's parents and
"They ought to start inArthur Kraus, Pittsburgh·, vestigating if Rhodes gave
lawyers arc tr}1ng to brainO&lt;tober 21, 1975, at 9:30 A.M., at the office of the
wash her into becoming "a whose daughter Alison was false testimony ," Krause Tuesday,'
Commjssion, Ul North High Street, Co lumbus, Ohio.
loyal upper class woman," killed May 4, 1970, by Ohio said in Pittsburgh . "He ought
The form of this notice has been approved by The. Public Utilisays
her
Symbionese National Guardsmen, called to be brought up on federal ties Commisaion of Ohio.
Liberation Army com- U.S. Attorney Frederick M. charges. But tha t won't THE OHIO BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
Coleman
in
Cleveland happen in Ohio."
Br- C. K. Eoler,
panions.
Vie"' Pr,aidn~t
William and Emily Harris Monday
and
Richard
also said Monday they will be
pained and disillusioned if
she abandons them .
The Harrise s said the
Hearst fortune has been
PUBLIC NOTICE
thrown behind a defens e
Final Plan for Social Services in Ohio
strategy that pits Miss Hearst
Ttle
pltln
tor
Otlm
has
been
developed
m
accordance wittl T1tle XX ot t~e Social Se[;IJrity Act. enacted by Public Law 93-647.
against them , portraying her
eflecl1ve October 1. 1975
.
not as their sta unch
Purpose
revolutionary comrade but as
The purpose of the plan rs lo provrde 1n Ohm sacral servrces thai w1ll ~elp resrdents at OhiO to restore . mamta1n or rmprove therr
capabrl 1tres for sel l-support (Goal I) . self·sufl rcrency {Goa l II). to prevent or remedy neglect . abuse . or elCplortatron. or to preserve
the victim of SLA brain"
ramrlre s (Goal Il l). to provrde communrty·based care IGoal IV) . and whe re necessary to prov1de rmproved mstitutronal care (Goal V). ·
washing and terror.
Local county welfare departments have elected to prov rde opt1onal sacral serv1ces whe re needs have been iden tified and where
"The two of us are the
resources are avarlable . Applicalion lor sacral serv1ces w111 be accepted by you r local County Wellare Department as listed be low.
sacrifice ... who will have to
PERSONS•
PERSONS'
struggle against the pain and
SOCIAL
SERVICE
SOCIAL
SERVICE
STATUS
ELIGIBLE
STATUS
ELIGIBLE
disillusionmen t that comes
- AdoptiOn
M
M
1.2.3 .4 Foste r Care for Children
1
from seeing a truly beautiful
Campcrsllr
p
M
0
Guard~anshro
1.2
woman
apparently
I ,2,3, 4
Chore
Heallh·Related SeiVICes
M
0
manipulat ed to the point
Consumer Educatron
Homemaker/Home Hea lth Aide
0
0
where the Hearst lawyers are
Counsel1na
M
1
Home
Delivered
(Conareaate
Meals!
0
denying her strength and
Home Management
M
1
Da~ Care tor Adults
0
commitment,' ' complained
Day
Care
lor
Chr
ldren
(no
n·WIN)
M
1.
2.4
Housrng
0
Mrs . Harri s in a tapeDa1 Care lor Cl11ldren IWIN I
M
I
lnlormatron and Refer ral
M
1.2.34,5
recorded message disLegal
l)_
a
z_c;"'
lor
Ch
rldren
TsOec.
Needs)
D
0
tributed by her lawyer.
Day Care lor Chrldren-(Protectrve)Ment Health/Retard Re lated
0
0
The Harrises, held for trial
Devetoemental Services for Adults
Nutritional
0
0
on 18 charges while Miss
Develo~men
t
al
Servrces
tor
Ch
rld
ren
Other
Educational
Services
0
0
Hearst undergoes psychiatric
Emergenc~ Shelter Care
Protective Pavee
M
I
0
examination in San FranI
1,2,3,
4,5
~_JQ~Qtment &amp; Trarnrn~ !non-WIN )
M
Protective
Services
for
Adults
M
cisco, lost a court attempt
M
I
Protective Services for Children
M
Emplozment &amp; Tramrng !WIN)
1,2,3,4,5
Mo.nday to be present with
Fam1 1 ~ L1fe Education
Re
sidential
Treatment
0
0
their attorneys at a grand
1
Famrly Planning
M
Soecial ServiCes lor the Blind
0
jury hearing against them .
Foste
r
Care
for
Adults
M
4
Transportation
1.2,3.
0
Regarding Mi&amp;S Hearst,
M - Mandatory services required to be offered rn 88 counties in Ohio to the persons eligible as listed .
Mrs. Harris said the
0
= Opt rona l servrce that one or more countres have ele cted to offer elrgrble pe rsons .
newspaper heiress' defense
"'Numbers m thrs column relate to numbers below 1n Who is Eligible as a mandated category {county option. other categorres).
strategy is a "sexist" ploy
that presents her as a fragile
Who Is Eligible
Explanation ol Differences Between the Proposed and Final CASP:
female not responsible for
Services
her own actions, Mrs. Harris
Ellgrble Ohro Res1dents Include
Added
Deleted
Modified
said.
1)
A
rd
fqr
Dependent
Ch
rldren
(AOC)
recrprents
Eme
rgency
Shelter
Care
Comprehensrve
Care
Adoption
"Since our capture the
Con st~ mer Education
for Adults in Crisis Chore
2) Supplementa l SectJrrty Income (SSt) recipients
Hearst empire has once again
3) Medrca1d recip ients who qualify under #4 or #6
Comprehensive
Counseling
and not1) or 2) They have ADC . or SSI program
Protective Care for Day Care for Children
put into motion all the power
relatedness. •·
Chrldren
Foster Care lor Children
and influence that blood
4) Income Eligible Status-hample · Family of lolJr
Community li ving
Home Delivered Meals
money can buy," she said .
wrth not. over $7.200.00 gross annlJal income :
Ser'11C€S
Homemaker/Home
free servrce. no fee
Substitute Care .
Health Aide
Calling Miss Hearst by her
Note : Increase lrom $5.500 to $7. 200 .00.
lo r Children
Hou smg
SLA name, she lashed out at
5) Persons in immediate danger needing protectrve
Information &amp; Referral
"the attempt to brainwash
servrces , and persons needrng tn for mat1on and Note: All services are alphaDetically
Legal
Referral Se rvice regardless of income level
Tania into becoming a loyal
M
ental Health/R elated
a ~ranged . no duplicated s~r·
6)
Persons
reQumng
day
care
.
homemakeut10me
Services
upper class woman or at the
v1ces are presented as seen rn
health a1de. or mental health-retardation related
Nutntional
Proposed CASP. Trtles of two
very least to label her as
services and pay a fee based upon tee schedule
Protectrve Services/
servtces
we re changed : from
(I ncome Elrgible Status-not over $11 .200 OC lor
Adults
insane ."
WIN Chrld Care to Day Care lor
family of folJ r as upper inc ome lim rt) .
Protective Serv1ces/
In an affidavit requesting
Children
(WIN
);
from
WIN
E
mNole : Fee Schedule and Schedule adjusting income
Chrldren
that she be allowed to go
ployment Services to Employlevel according to family srze included mFinal GASP.
Protective
Payee
menUTrarnrng {WIN)
home on bail while awaiting
Resident ial Treatment
.... This person is not eligible on tM baSls of inco me
trial , Miss Hearst was
mamtenance status but "50%rule " (228 .56) allows hrm Reasons : The changes shown above we re made in the Final Plan based
presented as saying that she
to be separately consrdered from 4) or 6)
upon .1) public comments: 2) need for enhancmg clarity of services:
was drugged and driven close
3) add1t1onal rnfo rmat10n was rece1ved re garding fund1ng resources. Detail
Funding
rn Final GASP.
to insanity by the terror of
her kidnap ordeal, and could
From
MaKimum Federal allotment tor Ohio at this time would Additional Changes
To (Final CASP)
remember little of her acbe about $127 .750.000 annually wrth 1he avarlabr lrty of t) Categories ol Who is Eligible:
tions or life as a fugitive. • ·
a) #4 Income Eligible Status $5 .500. (1amrly of 4) $7 .200 (tamily o14)
at least $42 .000,000 rn State and Local matching fund s.
The State Plan has the following estimates based on
b) #5 Pe rsons rn lmmedtate Pe rsons needrng
Persons needing incurrently ident rfiable matctnng State and Local lunds:
Dange r
protective services formatiOn and referral and protectrve
Estrma1ed Annual Exoendrture $1 70.333.333 .00
servrces
(FY 1976)
c) #6 Persons needing day None
Fees up to $11,200
.
care.
~omemaker
and
menFederal
$127.750 000 00
tal health/mental retarda· State
$ 25 .529,308.00
tion related services
2) Addition of fee schedules Summary of lnfor· Comprehe nsive
Local
$ 17.0.54.025.00
estrmated expendr tures and matron
Data Presentation
persons to be served.
under one
method of service de livery.
document
Estimated Expenditures for Trtle XX program yea r.
m eas~rable objectives by
10!1175 to 6130176 $142 .797.000.00
geographical area . more information on organizational
structure and mandated
service changes .

•
m
reverse
•
IS

charged

.IN NEW LOCATION

214 E. MAIN
Next Door to K&amp;C Jewelers -

Lay Away For
Christmas Now!

form."

they were questioning a
member of the victim's
family in the case, but
refused to identify the person ..
"We have a member of the
family in custody and we're
questioning him." a police
spokesman said. "That's
about all I can say."
The victim apparently was
killed Sept. 26, shortly after
she disappeared from her
home. A demand for $10,000
in ransom was received by
the girl's mother and the two
16-year-&lt;&gt;ld boy s
were
arrested when they appeared
at the Valley Hi Golf Course
to pick up the money. A th ird
suspect, 17, also was
arrested, but was later released.
Authorities said the ransom
apparently was to have been
paid with money from a life
insurance policy left by the
\ictim 's father. Pinter, a
retired Army sergeant who

Father demands probe

;&gt;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:: :::;:;:;:::;:;:··· :;:;:;: ;: :;:&lt;;:;:;:;::

Nursing school moves
to Rio Grande location

COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo. IUPI) - Authorities
want to file adult charges
aga inst one of two teen-agers
suspected of the kidnap killing of a 5-year-&lt;&gt;ld girl.
Deput y District' Attorney
Chuck Heun planned to ask a
grand jury today to charge a
16-year-old boy as an adult in
the death of Gloria Sue
Pinter , 5.
"We have decided to seek
to have one of the two
juveniles in custody treated
as an adult," Heim said
haven 't
Monday . " We
decided at thls time whether
the other juvenile held should
be charged and, if so, in what

• Same_Qualitv S:·rvice"

~EUlER-BROGAN

INSURANCE

General Summary on Reasons lor .Changes: The gene nit reasons lor the changes are 1) information rs easily readable, 2) changes
made to more closely conform to frnal federal requ rrements. 3) the Frnal Plan IS more comprehensive in scope &amp; 4) changes e e
made based upon publ rc comments and new funding rnformat ron.
'
wr

Social
Calendar
TUESDAY
MEIGS
COUNTY
Education Assn . fall meeting ,
Eastem High School, 6:30
p.m . dinner with Dr. Donald
Leigh ty of Ohio University, .
guest speaker.
MEIGS TOPS meeting ,
7:30 p.m. at the American
Legion Hall in Middleport
. with Dr . Hanek, director of
psycholog ical services at
Oh io University, guest
spea ker. Members urged to
attend and take a guest.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
. . Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. at the
nall . Louise McElhinny and
· . Janice Daniels, hostesses.
ALL PAST commanders·
and members of executive
committee of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
will meet at post home. A 7
p.m. dinner will be followed
by a business mee ling.
THURSDAY
MEIGS UNIT, American
Cancer Society, 7:30p.m . in
new quarters,
Hughes
building, S. Third Ave.
Drrectors and public invited.
CATHOLIC
WOMEN'S
Club, 7:30 p.m. at Sacred
Church
with
Heart
Philomena Follrod, Rhoda
Hackett, Diana Bartels and
Paula Goode, hostesses.
EV ANGELINE
Chapter
172, O.E.S., 7:30p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple .
Members are reminded to
pay their 1975-76 dues.
Election of officers. Annual
reports to be given.
BIG BEND Citizens Band
Radio Club Auxiliary, 7:30
p.m. in the Trustees Building
on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
COMMITTEE for the
· · Mentally Retarded will meet
at 7:30 p.m. in the Meigs
County court room.
OLD FASHIONED Revival
at Chester Church of the
Nazarene through Oct. 12 at
7:30p.m. nightly. The Rev.
'. Richard W. Jaymes of Belle:' fontaine
will
be
the
• evangelist. Special singing.
: Everyone welcome. The Rev.
Herbert Grate is the pastor.

,

James A. Rhodes
GovernoJ
State of Ohro

USDA CHOICt

We reserve the right to limit quantities .

GRADE A LARGE

64 e
SUPERIORS
FULL CUT

ROUND
STEAK

USDA CHOICE

RUMP
ROAST
USDA CHOICE

SIRLOIN
TIP ROAST
USDA CHOICE BEEF

GROUND
ROUND

MINUTE STEAK........... Ib. $}
VERY GOODNO WASTE

( ~-

''

.'
I .

GRANDSON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
gRiffith, Middleport, announce the birth of their first
grandson Sept. 25 at Mt.
Carm~l Hospital in Colwnbus. The eight poun&lt;l, nine
OWlce boy, Robert Allen, was
born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gtlfflth, ,Jr., Columbus.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. George Skeel of
Columbus.

GROUND
CHUCK

19

t-HIDA Y UNL Y

ON

HOME MADE

BABY BEEF

HAM
SALAD

LIVER

'109lb.

SALE lb. 99c

99~1b.

3
$} 00
TON E.................
ARMOUR'S BATH SOAP

MARK V BUYS

l,,,,,,

;iiiii!O
·nd~~d
111~ 1 111·
11!11111'
~,,.

bars

JENO'S
DOUBLE PIZZA
With Pepperoni

Box, Only

$}

•

CANDY SPECIAL

10 ct.

REESE CUPS. ••••••••••••
pkg.

09

GOLDEN GRIDDLE

With Cheese

Box, Only

99¢

89¢
•

6
COFFEE.. .'...........• r~ ....
CHOCK FULL Of NUTS INSTANT

9~

4 oz.

.

JOHNSON'S (NEWBORN)

$}4 9

box

DIAPERS.............~ 1z ••••
SPRAY WAX
$}29
PLEDGE.............. -~~..•

DAIRY BUYS
BROUGHTON'S

BLUE RIBBON

251b.

SATURDAY ONLY!

FAVORITE BREAD

4

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

$299

CHOCOLATE
MILK

$360
CHEWING TOBACCO••::;~n····
All BRANDS

Gallon

, ,

COUPON

--

.

.

.... .

·)

.I

:I
!
·, . f\

POTATO CHIPS

• .I'

.,,

59t

.

,

WITH
TWIN
COUPON
PACK
Good Only At Mar11 V Store
.Offer Expires .• ().4.75

)

·11
·I

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

COKE

-· NEW

ALL WEEI&lt; - -

~

LAY'S

CHUMMIE .

low fat

1.QO

loaves

---~ :--r~-!-.. · .:::;;,

-

DOG FO 0 D. •.......b~\ •••
$399
DOG FOOD........~;g:b~ .. .

BROUGHTON'S

-

24oi

49~

SYRU P. ................b~~ •••
HILi~ INSTANT
$}99
COFFEE ..•...•.....•. ~J:z~·· ·

JENO'S·
DOUBLE PIZZA

24 oz. 89~

ITEMS WANTED
RACINE ~ The Racine
PTO will hold a yard sale at
Racine Elementary School
Saturday beginning, at 9 a .m .
to raise funds for purchasing
items for the school. Anyone
having items they wish to
contribute may call 949-3927
or 949-5674 for pickup .
SALE PLANNED
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
United Pentecostal Church in
Middleport will hold a yard
sale Friday and Saturday
beginning at 10 a.m. both
days at 671 Front St.

USDA CHOICE BEEF

ALL PURE USDA CHOICE BEEF

COTTAGE
CHEESE

'

HERE!

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

BONELESS
ROUND STEAK

:;i•••·

.

PRICED

USDA CHOICE

lll•m,

' l . .. .

ITS LOW,LOW

, EGGS ......•.............•..•~~..

The meditation entitled 1~11m1
"One Nation Under God" by ~, 1 ,!ml!
Norman Vincent Peale was ·dl1ll!·
read by Mrs. Grace Fr.ench ~~~~; ,,
for devotions at the Friday ,,,~,,,,,
night meeting of the Past 'lllil
'Ill!
Ma trans of Evang~line :1.1!!1
Chapter, Order of the •llilllt,
Eastern Star.
1111.11111
11
Mrs . Katie
Anthony
presided and opened the -~~~~:
meeting with "A Few Golden !d!WI!
Nuggets" taken from the
Gold Star Family Album. A
Bible quiz was held with Mrs.
Mary Hughes winning.
Games were played and the
' prizes were won by Mrs.
Beulah Hayes, Mrs. Anthony
and Mrs. Helen Reynolds.
Mrs. Roma Hawkins served
refreshments to those named
and Mrs. Rosemary Lyons.

'

lb.1.19

We Accept Feder;~/ Food Stlllnps
PHONE 992-3480

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

••

SWISS
STEAl&lt;

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

meditation

.

WHAT'S YOUR

SUPERIORS

Chapter hears

Review of Public Con:'ments: Pub lic comments receive d .are availab le for review and will be reta ined for public review for the next
3 program years . Revrew can ~e arranged through the DIV!Sion of Social Services. Ohio Department of Public Welfare 30th Floor
30 E. Broad St .. Columbus. Ohro 43215 .
·
·
'
Public Review and Copies
.
,
.
Vis1t your local County Welfare Depa rtme nt listed below to view the Final Comprehensive Annual ServiceS Plan (GASP)
Te~ephone your local County Welfare Department to arrange lor purcnase of the Final CASP for the cost of $12.50 . ·
Meigs County Welfare Department
,.
175 Race Street, Box 191 Middleport, Phone: 992-2117
Raymond F. McKenna
Director
Ohio Department of Public Wellare .

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF!

::...:.~~~*:::::mw~;~~~~:~s~;:·

DIET RITE

RC

~./

AND

R. C. COLA

••

"

IN 64 OZ.
NO R£TURN BOTILES

..

·89¢

16 oz.
I

Dad's Root Beer
~

Diet Rite Cola
8 pak 1:19 6~psosi1

8 PAK

fl.l9

�I

I

'

I

7_ The Daily ~ntinel, Middleport-;E'ome_roy, 0 ., Tuesday , Sept. 30, 1975

Teen-agers may face adult .charges

}

•....•

Gallipolis; Carrie Horton, Oak Hill ; Genevieve Jasis,
Gallipolis; Barbara Jordan, Pomeroy ; Janet Kearn s,
Jackson ; Marceline Kerns, Nelsonville; Judith Love,
Gallipolis Ferry; Susan Morgan, Wellston: Paulette
Nibert, Gallipolis; Nancy Ohlinger, Ga llipolis Ferry;
Vicki Poetker, Ja ckson; Charlot te Queen, Pedro: Autumn
Reasor, Hamden ; Cathie Roseberry , Ja ckson; Rita
Sera berry, Jackson; Judith See, Pt. pleasant ; Tami
Snider, Wellston; Brenda Whitley, Middlepo rt; Dolores J .
Wilcoxon, Gallipolis: R.o1chel Willis, South Point.

TIURTY-FOUR STUDENTS graduated from the
Practical Nursing School of the Buckeye Hills Career
Center Friday. The graduates are (not pictured in order)
B. Kathryn Baker , Jackson; L. Gail Blane , Gallipolis
Ferry; Betty J. Boggs, Gallipolis; Ina Bradley, Pt.
Pleasant ; Hulda Brown, Gallipolis; Pamela J. Ca udill ,
Gallipolis; Vicki Conley, Jackson: Virginia Cooper,
Kettering; Imogene Crabtree, Jackson ; Cathy Darst,
Reynoldsburg; Eva D. DeLawder, Ironton; Terre Gandee, r&gt;ew Haven; Kandy . Gindlesberge r, Gallipolis;
Ja cqueline Halley , Crown City ; Marcella Harrison,

RIO G RANDE - The
Practical Nursing School of
the Buc~eye Hills Career
Center has moved to its new
location at the Gallia,
Jackson ,
Vinton
Joint
Vocational School in Rio
Grande. Classes began Oct. I,
with the enrollment of 45
s tudents
from
Gallia,
Jackson, Vinton, Meigs,
Lawrence, Mason, W. Va.
and Jackson, W. Va . Counties.
Helen Shields, R. N.,
Coordinator, will continue to
direct the school. Miss Joyce
Knight, R.N., and Mrs. Diane
Oiler, R.N., will continue as

THREE ARRESTED
Three pcrsuns were
arrested

The Practical Nursing
School graduated 34 students
out of an initial enrollment of

Ray claims
he was a
mile away

Hirohito, empress land
in Anchorage on visit
of a reigning Japanese
monarch to the United States.
Hirohito, 74, and Empress
Nagako, 72, received cheers
of ~~ banzai " from wellwishers in Tokyo as they left
on the historic, two-week trip.
The Japanese government
took unprecedented security
measures to prevent leftists
from disrupting the royal
couple's departure from
Tokyo airport.
Five thousand policemen
were mobilized to guard the
airport while 14,000 others
were stationed at key points
in Tokyo.
The Japan Airlines jet
carrying the emperor and
empress landed in Anchorage
at 2:49a.m. EDT on a brief
refueling stop during a flight
to Newport News, Va.
The royal couple will rest
up in Williamsburg, Va. for
two days before traveling to
Washington
to
meet
President Ford.
Hirohito, dressed in a grey
suit, walked finnly along the
red carpet laid on the tarmac
at Tokyo airport to bid
farewell to Japanese officials, including Prime
Minister Takeo Miki.
Following slightly behind
hiql in a pale green coat and
off-white hat was the smiling
empress.
As Hirohito turned to wave
to some 500 well-wishers who
were permitted to watch his
departure from the airport's
spectator deck, a roar of'
" banzai" - long life - arose.
Japan
Their special
airlines DC8 jetliner is
equipped with a two-room
suite with ivory walls·, a
wisteria-colored carpet and
yellow curtains.
The visit fulfills a 54-yearold wish of the emperor. He
planned to visit America as
crown prince in 1921, but
canceled the trip due to the ill
health of his father, Emperor
Taisho.

ANCHORAGE,
Alaska
(UP!) - Emperor Hirohito
landed in Anchorage today at
the start of the first state visit

r Bulova

! Accuquartz
!
!

Digital

I
!

Ught Years
Ahead In
Performance

on

shoplifting charges in and
around Gallla County.
Randy W. Phillips, 19,
Rt. 2, crown City, and Gary
Allen Lambert, 19, Rt. 2,
Crown City, were booked
for shoplifting at Jones
Boys on Pine St. in
Gallipolis whllr Paul David
Newsome,
20,
Point
Pleasant, was arrested for
allegedly taking a pack of
cigarettes at Kroger's
Super Store at Kanauga.

35 . The graduates have been
employed at the following
health age ncies: Holzer
Medical Center, Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Cabell and
St. Mary's Hospitals in
Huntington, Childr en's
Hospital in
Columbus,
Lawrence County General
Hospital, Ironton. Three of
the graduates have enrolled
in profe ssio nal nursing
programs at Nelsonvi lle and
Kettering Medical College,
Kettering.
Mrs. Shields said that
under the continued inspired
direction and leadership of
Clarence Thompson,
Superintendent, the program
will grow and become a great
asset to th e community:

instructors.

Monday

•

NEW YORK (U P! ) James Earl Ray says he did
not shoot Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. and was a mile !com
the scene at the time.
The civil rights leader was
shot to death in Memphis,
Tenn. , April 4, 1968. Ray
pleaded guilty at the time and
was sentenced to 99 years in
jail
for
King 's
assassination.
In an interview published in
The National Star, writer
Steve Dunleavy reported Ray
told him matter-of-factly: "I
personally did not. shoot Dr.
King. I might have been
partly responsible for his
death.
.,..
. .,;,;;
"But then the man who
made the rifle might have
been responsible in part, too.
"! was a mile from the
scene."
Ray has served more than
six years in solitary con·
finement in prison in Tennessee, but was recently
allowed to join the general
prison population. In 1974, he
claimed he was pressured
into pleading guilty to a
crime he did not commit, and
is now appealing the conviction .
"H I didn't kill him , then
someone else did . But that's
for the prosecution to find
out . I'm not a state witness
and don't intend to be," he
said. "There's a lot more
investigating to do into the
case, but I'mnot going to help
the authorities. "

Brooklyn, N.Y. There were 10
baptized at the gathering in
dedication of their lives as
subjects of God's Kingdom.

,
'

CONCLUDE ASSEMBLY
Jehovah's Witnesses of the
Nliddleport area · resume
' "(~;_egularly scheduled ac·, tivities this week after altlmdlo~
their
circuit
Jewelry Store . assembly in London, Ohio
' ·.
:. "'wl)ere 806 per!lbns heard the
Court St.. Pom=~
adctress, " How the Kingdom
·
of God Affects Ybu", Sunday
~,....~~-·-·--~·
by John N. ' Stuefloten of

GOESSLER

l
.J

~

r

)

Heim said the second
suspect, also 16, could not be
. charged as an adult unless
charges of first-degree
murder and kidnapin g were
filed against him .
Authorities a lso co nfirmed

Brainwash

saw action in Vietnam, died arrested. A search tunled up
_the victim's body saturday
of cancer Sept. 11.
Police Capt. John Collins and a COI'oner's report said
said a key to an apartment lll,e girl had been struck on
near the girl's home was the head and apparently ,
found in one of the suspect's choked to death on her own
pockets when he was vomit .

.LEGAL NOTICE
P·ublic notice is hereby given that The Ohio Bell Tele'fhOD.I
Company haa filed with The Public Utilities Commieaion o Ohio
an Application stating that the Company ie entitled, because of
the reasons set forth In said Application, to reasonable and
equitable increases a:nd adjustments In ita rates and chargee for
exchange telephone service, lntraatate meai&amp;K'e toll telephone
:&lt;Jervice, intrastate mobile telephone service, intraatate private Un.,
services and int raBtate wide area telecommunications se"ice,
and to change the regulations and practice! affecting the aamef
and to revise ita Exchange Rate Tariff P.U .C.O. No.3~ ita Genera
Exc.hange Tariff P.U.C .O. No.4, its Message Toll Telephone Service Tariff P.U.C.O. No. 7, ita Mobile Telephone Service Tariff
P.U.C.O. No. 2, its Private Line -Service Tariff P.U.C.O. No. 2,
and its Wide Area Telecornmunicationa Service Tariff P.U.C.O .
No. 1, to effect such inc reases, adjustment~ and changee, all a1
more fully set forth in the Application on ftle with the Commialion and in the exhibits attached thereto and m&amp;de a part thereof.
The proposed revisions will effect increasea and adjustments in
rates and char~es a.nd changes in the regulations and practicea
affecting the same throughout the territory in which the Com~
pany operates.
,
The prayer of the Application requests the Commisaion to do
the following:
(a.) Approve t he proposed rates and charges and changea
'
applied for herein;
{b) Approve the tHing ot said proposed schedule aheetl con~
t&amp;ined in Exhibit "8" hereto, modified to reflect such reviaion1
th,ereof as may become effective pursuant to orders of your Commisllion, during the interim between the flling of this Application
and the date upon which 11aid proposed schedule sheets become
effective;
{c) Establish an effective date for said proposed schedule
sheets: and
(d) Grant such other and further relief as Applicant ia reaeon~
ably entitled to in the premises.
A copy of the Application, including a copy of the preeent and
proposed schedule sheets, a statement showing the amount of proposed increase or decrease in each changed rate or charge which
ia not affected by changea in regulations and practices, and a
statement describing the proposed changes in regulations and
practices affecting rates and charges, may be inspected by any
interested party at the office of the Commission, 111 North High
Street, Columbus, Ohio, and at any public business otfice of
t he Company .
~
This matter is scheduled for public hearing beginning on

CLEVELAND ( UPI 1 Thornburgh, assistant U.S.
The father of one of four Kent attorney general in charge of
State University students the Justice Department's
killed during a c~mpus an- criminal
division
in
tiwar disturbance has asked Washington, to reque st the
the Justice Department to probe .
investigate contradictions in
The contradi lions
in
the sworn testimony of Ohio Rhodes ' testimony were
Gov . James A. Rhodes during revealed in a copyright arthe recently concluded $46 ticle Sunday in The Plain
By JACK V. FOX
million civil damage trial Dealer .
LOS ANGE LES I UP! 1
out of the shootings.
arising
Patricia Hea rst's parents and
"They ought to start inArthur Kraus, Pittsburgh·, vestigating if Rhodes gave
lawyers arc tr}1ng to brainO&lt;tober 21, 1975, at 9:30 A.M., at the office of the
wash her into becoming "a whose daughter Alison was false testimony ," Krause Tuesday,'
Commjssion, Ul North High Street, Co lumbus, Ohio.
loyal upper class woman," killed May 4, 1970, by Ohio said in Pittsburgh . "He ought
The form of this notice has been approved by The. Public Utilisays
her
Symbionese National Guardsmen, called to be brought up on federal ties Commisaion of Ohio.
Liberation Army com- U.S. Attorney Frederick M. charges. But tha t won't THE OHIO BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
Coleman
in
Cleveland happen in Ohio."
Br- C. K. Eoler,
panions.
Vie"' Pr,aidn~t
William and Emily Harris Monday
and
Richard
also said Monday they will be
pained and disillusioned if
she abandons them .
The Harrise s said the
Hearst fortune has been
PUBLIC NOTICE
thrown behind a defens e
Final Plan for Social Services in Ohio
strategy that pits Miss Hearst
Ttle
pltln
tor
Otlm
has
been
developed
m
accordance wittl T1tle XX ot t~e Social Se[;IJrity Act. enacted by Public Law 93-647.
against them , portraying her
eflecl1ve October 1. 1975
.
not as their sta unch
Purpose
revolutionary comrade but as
The purpose of the plan rs lo provrde 1n Ohm sacral servrces thai w1ll ~elp resrdents at OhiO to restore . mamta1n or rmprove therr
capabrl 1tres for sel l-support (Goal I) . self·sufl rcrency {Goa l II). to prevent or remedy neglect . abuse . or elCplortatron. or to preserve
the victim of SLA brain"
ramrlre s (Goal Il l). to provrde communrty·based care IGoal IV) . and whe re necessary to prov1de rmproved mstitutronal care (Goal V). ·
washing and terror.
Local county welfare departments have elected to prov rde opt1onal sacral serv1ces whe re needs have been iden tified and where
"The two of us are the
resources are avarlable . Applicalion lor sacral serv1ces w111 be accepted by you r local County Wellare Department as listed be low.
sacrifice ... who will have to
PERSONS•
PERSONS'
struggle against the pain and
SOCIAL
SERVICE
SOCIAL
SERVICE
STATUS
ELIGIBLE
STATUS
ELIGIBLE
disillusionmen t that comes
- AdoptiOn
M
M
1.2.3 .4 Foste r Care for Children
1
from seeing a truly beautiful
Campcrsllr
p
M
0
Guard~anshro
1.2
woman
apparently
I ,2,3, 4
Chore
Heallh·Related SeiVICes
M
0
manipulat ed to the point
Consumer Educatron
Homemaker/Home Hea lth Aide
0
0
where the Hearst lawyers are
Counsel1na
M
1
Home
Delivered
(Conareaate
Meals!
0
denying her strength and
Home Management
M
1
Da~ Care tor Adults
0
commitment,' ' complained
Day
Care
lor
Chr
ldren
(no
n·WIN)
M
1.
2.4
Housrng
0
Mrs . Harri s in a tapeDa1 Care lor Cl11ldren IWIN I
M
I
lnlormatron and Refer ral
M
1.2.34,5
recorded message disLegal
l)_
a
z_c;"'
lor
Ch
rldren
TsOec.
Needs)
D
0
tributed by her lawyer.
Day Care lor Chrldren-(Protectrve)Ment Health/Retard Re lated
0
0
The Harrises, held for trial
Devetoemental Services for Adults
Nutritional
0
0
on 18 charges while Miss
Develo~men
t
al
Servrces
tor
Ch
rld
ren
Other
Educational
Services
0
0
Hearst undergoes psychiatric
Emergenc~ Shelter Care
Protective Pavee
M
I
0
examination in San FranI
1,2,3,
4,5
~_JQ~Qtment &amp; Trarnrn~ !non-WIN )
M
Protective
Services
for
Adults
M
cisco, lost a court attempt
M
I
Protective Services for Children
M
Emplozment &amp; Tramrng !WIN)
1,2,3,4,5
Mo.nday to be present with
Fam1 1 ~ L1fe Education
Re
sidential
Treatment
0
0
their attorneys at a grand
1
Famrly Planning
M
Soecial ServiCes lor the Blind
0
jury hearing against them .
Foste
r
Care
for
Adults
M
4
Transportation
1.2,3.
0
Regarding Mi&amp;S Hearst,
M - Mandatory services required to be offered rn 88 counties in Ohio to the persons eligible as listed .
Mrs. Harris said the
0
= Opt rona l servrce that one or more countres have ele cted to offer elrgrble pe rsons .
newspaper heiress' defense
"'Numbers m thrs column relate to numbers below 1n Who is Eligible as a mandated category {county option. other categorres).
strategy is a "sexist" ploy
that presents her as a fragile
Who Is Eligible
Explanation ol Differences Between the Proposed and Final CASP:
female not responsible for
Services
her own actions, Mrs. Harris
Ellgrble Ohro Res1dents Include
Added
Deleted
Modified
said.
1)
A
rd
fqr
Dependent
Ch
rldren
(AOC)
recrprents
Eme
rgency
Shelter
Care
Comprehensrve
Care
Adoption
"Since our capture the
Con st~ mer Education
for Adults in Crisis Chore
2) Supplementa l SectJrrty Income (SSt) recipients
Hearst empire has once again
3) Medrca1d recip ients who qualify under #4 or #6
Comprehensive
Counseling
and not1) or 2) They have ADC . or SSI program
Protective Care for Day Care for Children
put into motion all the power
relatedness. •·
Chrldren
Foster Care lor Children
and influence that blood
4) Income Eligible Status-hample · Family of lolJr
Community li ving
Home Delivered Meals
money can buy," she said .
wrth not. over $7.200.00 gross annlJal income :
Ser'11C€S
Homemaker/Home
free servrce. no fee
Substitute Care .
Health Aide
Calling Miss Hearst by her
Note : Increase lrom $5.500 to $7. 200 .00.
lo r Children
Hou smg
SLA name, she lashed out at
5) Persons in immediate danger needing protectrve
Information &amp; Referral
"the attempt to brainwash
servrces , and persons needrng tn for mat1on and Note: All services are alphaDetically
Legal
Referral Se rvice regardless of income level
Tania into becoming a loyal
M
ental Health/R elated
a ~ranged . no duplicated s~r·
6)
Persons
reQumng
day
care
.
homemakeut10me
Services
upper class woman or at the
v1ces are presented as seen rn
health a1de. or mental health-retardation related
Nutntional
Proposed CASP. Trtles of two
very least to label her as
services and pay a fee based upon tee schedule
Protectrve Services/
servtces
we re changed : from
(I ncome Elrgible Status-not over $11 .200 OC lor
Adults
insane ."
WIN Chrld Care to Day Care lor
family of folJ r as upper inc ome lim rt) .
Protective Serv1ces/
In an affidavit requesting
Children
(WIN
);
from
WIN
E
mNole : Fee Schedule and Schedule adjusting income
Chrldren
that she be allowed to go
ployment Services to Employlevel according to family srze included mFinal GASP.
Protective
Payee
menUTrarnrng {WIN)
home on bail while awaiting
Resident ial Treatment
.... This person is not eligible on tM baSls of inco me
trial , Miss Hearst was
mamtenance status but "50%rule " (228 .56) allows hrm Reasons : The changes shown above we re made in the Final Plan based
presented as saying that she
to be separately consrdered from 4) or 6)
upon .1) public comments: 2) need for enhancmg clarity of services:
was drugged and driven close
3) add1t1onal rnfo rmat10n was rece1ved re garding fund1ng resources. Detail
Funding
rn Final GASP.
to insanity by the terror of
her kidnap ordeal, and could
From
MaKimum Federal allotment tor Ohio at this time would Additional Changes
To (Final CASP)
remember little of her acbe about $127 .750.000 annually wrth 1he avarlabr lrty of t) Categories ol Who is Eligible:
tions or life as a fugitive. • ·
a) #4 Income Eligible Status $5 .500. (1amrly of 4) $7 .200 (tamily o14)
at least $42 .000,000 rn State and Local matching fund s.
The State Plan has the following estimates based on
b) #5 Pe rsons rn lmmedtate Pe rsons needrng
Persons needing incurrently ident rfiable matctnng State and Local lunds:
Dange r
protective services formatiOn and referral and protectrve
Estrma1ed Annual Exoendrture $1 70.333.333 .00
servrces
(FY 1976)
c) #6 Persons needing day None
Fees up to $11,200
.
care.
~omemaker
and
menFederal
$127.750 000 00
tal health/mental retarda· State
$ 25 .529,308.00
tion related services
2) Addition of fee schedules Summary of lnfor· Comprehe nsive
Local
$ 17.0.54.025.00
estrmated expendr tures and matron
Data Presentation
persons to be served.
under one
method of service de livery.
document
Estimated Expenditures for Trtle XX program yea r.
m eas~rable objectives by
10!1175 to 6130176 $142 .797.000.00
geographical area . more information on organizational
structure and mandated
service changes .

•
m
reverse
•
IS

charged

.IN NEW LOCATION

214 E. MAIN
Next Door to K&amp;C Jewelers -

Lay Away For
Christmas Now!

form."

they were questioning a
member of the victim's
family in the case, but
refused to identify the person ..
"We have a member of the
family in custody and we're
questioning him." a police
spokesman said. "That's
about all I can say."
The victim apparently was
killed Sept. 26, shortly after
she disappeared from her
home. A demand for $10,000
in ransom was received by
the girl's mother and the two
16-year-&lt;&gt;ld boy s
were
arrested when they appeared
at the Valley Hi Golf Course
to pick up the money. A th ird
suspect, 17, also was
arrested, but was later released.
Authorities said the ransom
apparently was to have been
paid with money from a life
insurance policy left by the
\ictim 's father. Pinter, a
retired Army sergeant who

Father demands probe

;&gt;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:: :::;:;:;:::;:;:··· :;:;:;: ;: :;:&lt;;:;:;:;::

Nursing school moves
to Rio Grande location

COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo. IUPI) - Authorities
want to file adult charges
aga inst one of two teen-agers
suspected of the kidnap killing of a 5-year-&lt;&gt;ld girl.
Deput y District' Attorney
Chuck Heun planned to ask a
grand jury today to charge a
16-year-old boy as an adult in
the death of Gloria Sue
Pinter , 5.
"We have decided to seek
to have one of the two
juveniles in custody treated
as an adult," Heim said
haven 't
Monday . " We
decided at thls time whether
the other juvenile held should
be charged and, if so, in what

• Same_Qualitv S:·rvice"

~EUlER-BROGAN

INSURANCE

General Summary on Reasons lor .Changes: The gene nit reasons lor the changes are 1) information rs easily readable, 2) changes
made to more closely conform to frnal federal requ rrements. 3) the Frnal Plan IS more comprehensive in scope &amp; 4) changes e e
made based upon publ rc comments and new funding rnformat ron.
'
wr

Social
Calendar
TUESDAY
MEIGS
COUNTY
Education Assn . fall meeting ,
Eastem High School, 6:30
p.m . dinner with Dr. Donald
Leigh ty of Ohio University, .
guest speaker.
MEIGS TOPS meeting ,
7:30 p.m. at the American
Legion Hall in Middleport
. with Dr . Hanek, director of
psycholog ical services at
Oh io University, guest
spea ker. Members urged to
attend and take a guest.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
. . Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. at the
nall . Louise McElhinny and
· . Janice Daniels, hostesses.
ALL PAST commanders·
and members of executive
committee of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
will meet at post home. A 7
p.m. dinner will be followed
by a business mee ling.
THURSDAY
MEIGS UNIT, American
Cancer Society, 7:30p.m . in
new quarters,
Hughes
building, S. Third Ave.
Drrectors and public invited.
CATHOLIC
WOMEN'S
Club, 7:30 p.m. at Sacred
Church
with
Heart
Philomena Follrod, Rhoda
Hackett, Diana Bartels and
Paula Goode, hostesses.
EV ANGELINE
Chapter
172, O.E.S., 7:30p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple .
Members are reminded to
pay their 1975-76 dues.
Election of officers. Annual
reports to be given.
BIG BEND Citizens Band
Radio Club Auxiliary, 7:30
p.m. in the Trustees Building
on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
COMMITTEE for the
· · Mentally Retarded will meet
at 7:30 p.m. in the Meigs
County court room.
OLD FASHIONED Revival
at Chester Church of the
Nazarene through Oct. 12 at
7:30p.m. nightly. The Rev.
'. Richard W. Jaymes of Belle:' fontaine
will
be
the
• evangelist. Special singing.
: Everyone welcome. The Rev.
Herbert Grate is the pastor.

,

James A. Rhodes
GovernoJ
State of Ohro

USDA CHOICt

We reserve the right to limit quantities .

GRADE A LARGE

64 e
SUPERIORS
FULL CUT

ROUND
STEAK

USDA CHOICE

RUMP
ROAST
USDA CHOICE

SIRLOIN
TIP ROAST
USDA CHOICE BEEF

GROUND
ROUND

MINUTE STEAK........... Ib. $}
VERY GOODNO WASTE

( ~-

''

.'
I .

GRANDSON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
gRiffith, Middleport, announce the birth of their first
grandson Sept. 25 at Mt.
Carm~l Hospital in Colwnbus. The eight poun&lt;l, nine
OWlce boy, Robert Allen, was
born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gtlfflth, ,Jr., Columbus.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. George Skeel of
Columbus.

GROUND
CHUCK

19

t-HIDA Y UNL Y

ON

HOME MADE

BABY BEEF

HAM
SALAD

LIVER

'109lb.

SALE lb. 99c

99~1b.

3
$} 00
TON E.................
ARMOUR'S BATH SOAP

MARK V BUYS

l,,,,,,

;iiiii!O
·nd~~d
111~ 1 111·
11!11111'
~,,.

bars

JENO'S
DOUBLE PIZZA
With Pepperoni

Box, Only

$}

•

CANDY SPECIAL

10 ct.

REESE CUPS. ••••••••••••
pkg.

09

GOLDEN GRIDDLE

With Cheese

Box, Only

99¢

89¢
•

6
COFFEE.. .'...........• r~ ....
CHOCK FULL Of NUTS INSTANT

9~

4 oz.

.

JOHNSON'S (NEWBORN)

$}4 9

box

DIAPERS.............~ 1z ••••
SPRAY WAX
$}29
PLEDGE.............. -~~..•

DAIRY BUYS
BROUGHTON'S

BLUE RIBBON

251b.

SATURDAY ONLY!

FAVORITE BREAD

4

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

$299

CHOCOLATE
MILK

$360
CHEWING TOBACCO••::;~n····
All BRANDS

Gallon

, ,

COUPON

--

.

.

.... .

·)

.I

:I
!
·, . f\

POTATO CHIPS

• .I'

.,,

59t

.

,

WITH
TWIN
COUPON
PACK
Good Only At Mar11 V Store
.Offer Expires .• ().4.75

)

·11
·I

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

COKE

-· NEW

ALL WEEI&lt; - -

~

LAY'S

CHUMMIE .

low fat

1.QO

loaves

---~ :--r~-!-.. · .:::;;,

-

DOG FO 0 D. •.......b~\ •••
$399
DOG FOOD........~;g:b~ .. .

BROUGHTON'S

-

24oi

49~

SYRU P. ................b~~ •••
HILi~ INSTANT
$}99
COFFEE ..•...•.....•. ~J:z~·· ·

JENO'S·
DOUBLE PIZZA

24 oz. 89~

ITEMS WANTED
RACINE ~ The Racine
PTO will hold a yard sale at
Racine Elementary School
Saturday beginning, at 9 a .m .
to raise funds for purchasing
items for the school. Anyone
having items they wish to
contribute may call 949-3927
or 949-5674 for pickup .
SALE PLANNED
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
United Pentecostal Church in
Middleport will hold a yard
sale Friday and Saturday
beginning at 10 a.m. both
days at 671 Front St.

USDA CHOICE BEEF

ALL PURE USDA CHOICE BEEF

COTTAGE
CHEESE

'

HERE!

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

BONELESS
ROUND STEAK

:;i•••·

.

PRICED

USDA CHOICE

lll•m,

' l . .. .

ITS LOW,LOW

, EGGS ......•.............•..•~~..

The meditation entitled 1~11m1
"One Nation Under God" by ~, 1 ,!ml!
Norman Vincent Peale was ·dl1ll!·
read by Mrs. Grace Fr.ench ~~~~; ,,
for devotions at the Friday ,,,~,,,,,
night meeting of the Past 'lllil
'Ill!
Ma trans of Evang~line :1.1!!1
Chapter, Order of the •llilllt,
Eastern Star.
1111.11111
11
Mrs . Katie
Anthony
presided and opened the -~~~~:
meeting with "A Few Golden !d!WI!
Nuggets" taken from the
Gold Star Family Album. A
Bible quiz was held with Mrs.
Mary Hughes winning.
Games were played and the
' prizes were won by Mrs.
Beulah Hayes, Mrs. Anthony
and Mrs. Helen Reynolds.
Mrs. Roma Hawkins served
refreshments to those named
and Mrs. Rosemary Lyons.

'

lb.1.19

We Accept Feder;~/ Food Stlllnps
PHONE 992-3480

Corner Mill and Second Sts.

••

SWISS
STEAl&lt;

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

meditation

.

WHAT'S YOUR

SUPERIORS

Chapter hears

Review of Public Con:'ments: Pub lic comments receive d .are availab le for review and will be reta ined for public review for the next
3 program years . Revrew can ~e arranged through the DIV!Sion of Social Services. Ohio Department of Public Welfare 30th Floor
30 E. Broad St .. Columbus. Ohro 43215 .
·
·
'
Public Review and Copies
.
,
.
Vis1t your local County Welfare Depa rtme nt listed below to view the Final Comprehensive Annual ServiceS Plan (GASP)
Te~ephone your local County Welfare Department to arrange lor purcnase of the Final CASP for the cost of $12.50 . ·
Meigs County Welfare Department
,.
175 Race Street, Box 191 Middleport, Phone: 992-2117
Raymond F. McKenna
Director
Ohio Department of Public Wellare .

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE BEEF!

::...:.~~~*:::::mw~;~~~~:~s~;:·

DIET RITE

RC

~./

AND

R. C. COLA

••

"

IN 64 OZ.
NO R£TURN BOTILES

..

·89¢

16 oz.
I

Dad's Root Beer
~

Diet Rite Cola
8 pak 1:19 6~psosi1

8 PAK

fl.l9

�.,

'

'

, I

I.

::u- 'l'be LJatly sentinel, MiddleJX&gt;ri-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 30, 1975
~--

First of Christmas shows set
RUTLAND - The fir st of Garden Club members, there
several Christmas flow e r are several classes open for
shows in the county has been public or invitational exhibit.
announced by the Rutland
In the artistic arrangement
Garden Club.
· division the classes are
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis . "Down Through the Chimney
,.
is heading up the show which
has the th eme "Down
''Of t he Log Cabin,"
Through the Chimney with a rran gemen t s u si n g
Good St. Nick'' and will be weathered wood; "Of the
staged at Rutland Methodist Duplex," using two colors
Church on Nov. 15 and 16.
only; "Of the High Rise," a
modern floor arrangement;
While many of the classes "Of My House," interpretive
in the show are open for of your own home; "Of the
exh ibi t to on ly Rut la nd Homestead," traditio na l

Selectinns 'to·
Polly.'s Pointers hiRhlight.
Treatment for
BPW week

.A'

using Madonna with child.
The invitational classes on
the same theme are "Of the
School House," suitable for a
P. T.A. Christmas tea table
and "Of Grandma's House"
,
a favorite design . There is
also a junior artistic
arrangement class, "Of the
Doll House," the design to
include a doll figurine.
The horticulture division
has
three
classes,
houseplants, blooming and
foli age, and berried branches
with two classes for the junior
exhi bitors, house plants and a
collection of five stalks of
dried materials suitable for
arrangeme nts.
In the educational division,
the re are classes for collages,

'.'i

permanent preSS
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - How do I
get blood stains ou t of permanent press 'p illowcases ?

two-dimensiona] using some

The Goose Hangs High
Dear Rap:
I want to learn hang gliding, but my parents say it's too
dangerous. Are you with me or against me 1
THE GOOSE
WHO WANTS TO HANG HIGH
Dear Goose:
Hang gliding is dangerous, but so is surfin g ... or skiing ...
or even driving on the freeway. If you fo llow the rules, learn
before you leap, and avoid rocky ledges, hopefully you'll get no
more than sand-burns. But convincing your p3renL' of this is
another matter. Good luck! - HELEN
Dear Goose:
Maybe your parents are like mine: a dangerous sport
SOUNDS like great fun - for any other kid but theirs. Best
way to soften them up is : take them to a hang glide meet and
let them see the easy landings. They might even want to try it
themselves. - SUE

+++
Dear Helen and Sue :
·I met this girl through a friend who was dating her. Soon
they broke up, but I kept going over to her house just to talk.
We never dated, but we were the best of friends. We 'd help
each other with problems, etc., even though we were always
going with someone else.
Just about the time she took off for college in another state,
l discovered !love her.l 'd like to marry that girl some day, but
I have a bad feeling we'll never see each other again.
We promised to write (she still thinks of me as a good
buddy ), but if I keep up this pretense, it will make things all the
harder . Should I just break it off clean and try to forget' SORRY ABOUT LOSING A DREAM GIRL .
Dear LADG:
Good buddies make the best marriage partners! For
Pete's sake, write yolJr friend a letter and TELL her she's your
dream girl. What can you lose• - HELEN
SALADG:
You sound like the kind of guy who won't accept a good job
because "it would hurt so bad if I'm fired." A letter doesn't
take much courage. Write it ' - SUE

..

Rap :
This is a complaint. I'm dieting. It's darn tough . But when
those milk ads come on television, mentioning all the luscious
things you can snack on with that glas of milk, I just DIE.
They harmed cigarette ads because smoking may be injurious to your health . Well snacking is injurious to the health
of a fat person and when this beautiful, thin girl comes on and
practically orders you out to the kitchen to get that cupcake, or
piece of pie or whatever, with your glass of milk - it 's pure
murder.
Doesn't anyone else agree • - FATTY WITH NO WILL

POWER

..

Fatty:
You've got something there' Milk Advisory Board: please
take notice. - HELEN (who is also tempted by those darn
ads!)
Dear Fatty:
On the other hand, if we banned everything that might
cause problems for a certain group there'd be no TV advertising left. -SUE (who works for a TV station ).

Class makes pledge
..
to local missionaries
•

'

.
.'

A pledge of $10 a month for
the next 10 months was made
by the Loyal Women's Class
of the Middleport Church of
Christ for Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Steevers , Athens,
missionaries on the campus
of Ohio University .
j:' , Steevers was a speaker
.. 4 : recently at the Middleport
: · ··Church and at that time
discussed
the
campus
missionary work.
Plan s were made to
celebrate the birthdays of
those having birthdays
during the past three months
on the last Wednesday in
October. A dinner will be
served at noon during the
weekly sewing session of the
women. Two new. members
were welcomed during the
meeting, and reported ill
were Mrs. Mary Bailey,
home from the hospital; Mrs.
Martha Searls, a patient at
' St . Mary's Hospital in
Huntington and Mrs . Nina
Bland, Akron, suffering a
broken !IJlkle.
The class discussed flowers
for.ill and bereaved members
and it was decided to follow
the same rules as set down by
the Phllathea Women. ,
· Miss Mildred . Hawley
presided with Mrs. Martha
Childs giving devotions. She
used scripture from Luke 21 .
and read
poem, "Ufe's ·
Uttle Things" by Beatrice
.Piwn, along with excerpts
from the SYI)dicated colwnn
I

'

'

'

of Ben Burrough on "Finding
Real Contentment."
A dessert course was
served by the hostesses, Mrs.
Allee Robeson, Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds and Mrs . Childs
with Mrs . Freda Welling and
Mrs . Carrie Smith, contributing hostesses.

ANNUAL FESTIVAL
The annual fall festival of
the Middleport Elementary
School P.T.A. has been set for
Oct. 30, Mrs. "Joyce Blake,
ways and means chairwoman, announced today.
THAtJKS FOR

DROPPl~OFF

MY BOOKS.,
GUY.S--STJCK
A~UNPAND

WE'LL P1.AY
SCME CARD.S:

plant material; handcrafted
flower s from dri ed plant
material, a co llection or
three ,
and
evergreen
specin1ens.
There will also be two
special displays at the show ,
one from the bookmobile, and
the other of African Violets .

Mrs. ]ames E Cargill
Registration
deadline nears
The Bicentennial Perspective for Women in Ohio, a
program of the Business and
Professional Women 's Clubs,
will begin the weekend of Oct.
25 and 26 at Salt Fork State
Park, Cambridge.
Salt Fork is the newest and
largest state park in Ohio
with ·over 20,000 acres of
natural woodland and the
lodge accommodates four to
six people in each of the 148
guest rooms . There are also
54 lakeside cabins which
accommodate six persons
each. A variety of activities
has been planned for the
weekend by Mrs. Mary E.
Collins, Bicentennial
chairwoman and her committee.
Deadline for registration is
Oct. 1 with Mrs. Collins, 144
Idlewild Ave., Akron, 44313,
and the full cost is $18 which
includes three meals and
registration. ·
Middleport Club members
may contact either Mrs.
Collins or Miss Freddie
Houdashelt, president , for
further information or
regarding registration.

TO HOLD SALE
The Big Bend Citizens Band
Radio Club Auxiliary will
hold a bake sale at Krogers
beginning at 9 a.m. Saturday.

LETART FALLS - Room Johnson.
Third grade and special
mothers for the Letart Falls
Elementary School have been education class, Bill Downie,
Mrs.
Phyllis
announced by the PTO. They teacher;
O'Brien,
Mrs.
Sherlyn
Powell
are :
First grade taught by and Mrs. Catherine Wolfe .
Fourth grade , Mrs. Eileen
Barbara Lawrence : Mrs.
Bonnie Ransom, Mrs. June Buck, teacher; Mrs. Lynn
Stover, Mrs. Julia Combs, Crow, Mrs, Dee Spencer,
Mrs . Clarina Cooper and Mrs. Mrs. Belva Fisher and Mrs .
Sybil Riffle .
Unda Burnem.
Fifth grade, Roger Roush,
Second grade taught by
~acher:
Mrs. Nancy CumMrs. Jane Norris; Mrs.
Violetta Arnott, Mrs. Bev mins, Mrs. Opal Hupp and
Wickline and Mrs . Irene Mrs . Creslyn Hill.
Sixth
grade,
James
Wickline , teacher : Mrs.
Carrie Roush, Mrs . Florence
SALE PLANNED
Thornton and Mrs. Betty
A rummage sale will be Morris.
held Friday from 9 a.m. to 4
The school newspaper to be
p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran issued the second six weeks of
Church, Pomeroy, by the school has been named "The
women of the church. Good Newsy Blackhawk." Plans
used clothing will be for sale. are being furnished for the
fall festival scheduled for
Nov. 8. Door prizes will be
'
awarded
then.
MUCH IMPROVED
Lena Guth, Pomeroy , who
suffered a stroke in August, is
much improved according to
her sister Katie of Pomeroy .

I. , !
' '

'
Mrs. Gregory Nelson in blue .
Thomas O'Brien of Groton
was best man for the groom,
and Dale Green, Richard
Collier and Michael Shurtleff
were ushers .
For her daughter's wed·
ding, Mrs. Place was in a
pastel blue gown. Mrs .
Car gill wore a pastel green
gown, and both mothers had
rosebud corsages.
A buffet luncheon was
served in the church hall
following the ceremony, and
a reception was held later at
the
Groton
firehouse .
Following a wedding trip to
Cape Cod, Mass ., the couple
resides at 158 Cayuga St.,
Groton.
Mrs . Carg ill graduated
from Groton High School in ·
1973 and the TC3 nursing
program in 1974. She is
employed at Highgate Manor
Nursing Home, Cortland. Mr.
Cargill graduated from
Groton High School in 1974
and is employed by Barden
Homes in Homer.
The bride was honored with
pre-n uptial showers given by
Mary Ann Smith and Donna
Frost. The bridegroom was
honored at a stag party
hosted by his best man .
Mrs : Houdashelt, grandmother of the bride, and Miss
Freddie Houdashelt, an aunt,
Middleport, attended the
wedding.

Talk planned
LETART FALLS - Jim
Adams, principal of Southern
High School, and Ja ck Bostic,
vice president of the Southern
Local School District Boa rd
of Education, will spea k at
the Monday night meeting of
the Letart Falls PTO, 7:30
p.m.
The two will talk about the
levy on the November ballot
to finance an addition to
Southern High School. Also
expected to be at the meeting
are candidates for the school
board . There will be a
question and answer time .

Llk:E"TOOOAL IT fi..E OF

THAT, TOO!

mea t is packaged at the
market. I often pick up a
package and have blood run
down my arms and even onto

my clothes. - MRS. T. S.
DEAR POLLY - Some
household cleaner dnd hand
lotion bottles have pump
dispensers that do not reach
to the bottom of the bottle so
one cannot pump out all the
contents . Cut off a sec tion of a
plastic drinking straw and
slip it over the tube of the
pump . The bottom of the
bottle can be reached and
practically all the C&lt;Jnte nts
used. - MRS . A. L. M .
DEAR POLLY - Do tell
the reader who has trouble
clean ing her glass doors and
windows that I did, too, until I
started dissolvmg cornstarch
1yes, ordinary cooking cornstarch) in cool water until
about the consis~ncy of thin
custard. Rub this on the
glass, let dry, rub off and be
surp rised by the shine and
slippery feeling of the glass.
When dirt or dust settle on
them , just wipe off with a soft
cloth. - JOSEPHINE .
DEAR POLLY - When
making large quan tities of
macaroni, potato or any other
such salad for a large group,
make use of your punch bowl.
It makes a grea t salad bowl.
To help " tra in " a hanging
or cli mbing plant weigh the
ends of the limbs with twiston ties from bread wrappers
wrapped around one or two
nails placed where needed.
These· ties will not damage
th e pl ant when wrapped
loosely around it and thi s is a
good use for bent or rusted
naiis or screws. - MRS. F. G.

This Week's Special

OPEN DAlLY10T09
SUNDAY 1 TO?

-

USED CARS

'75 Olds Cut.
Salon Coupe

PUFFS

TOILET TISSUE
$ 33

Roll
Pkg

.__._Reg . 99c

3

Boxes

land au root, brown int. , 6wa.y power seat, air , 350 V -

L:

BIRTHDAY NEARS
COOLVILLE - James T.
Jackson, formerly of Dorcas,
will observe his 92nd birthday
Sunday, Oct. 5, at the Arcadia
Nursing Home, Coolville .
Cards may be mailed to him
in care of the Nursing Home.

::~..
_,

Heck's Reg .
1.22
Sporting

Heck's Reg . $1.57

gg~

Heck's Reg .
78c

WILKENSON

Heck's Reg .
$1.18

68 e

ss~

s13.88
Sporting Goods
REG.

Cosmetic Dept.

You ' ll Li ke Our Quality
Wa y o f Do ing Business.

Goose Neck

GMAC FtNANCIN.G
Pomeroy

992-5342

Open Evenings 'lil6: 00
Tii"Sp_. m. Sat.

10 Qt. Aluminum Pa

3.99 ... 2.39

Scott Placema

.53

.31

1.78

1.06

Set of 3 Skirt &amp; Trouser

1.64

.98

Set of 3 Dress

1.78

1.06

ungers._ __ __ _l.

1.99

GC)OD~

SALE

ITEMS

,
73

Sic

1.24

74C

Bright Side Shampoo,6

.94

· .7S

Baseball Glove'

,11 .99

6.00

Barbasol Shave Cream , 11

.58

.46

1.18

.94

Sucaryl, 3.5 oz

.29

.23

Woodbury Shampoo. 15

.89

.71

Urguntine Aerosol, 5

1.89

1.51

Flex Non Aerosol Hair

1.99

1.59

Hold &amp; Hold &amp; Hold Hair Spray, 8 o

1.68

1.34

s

.78

.62

Soft &amp; Dry Rollon Deod

.99

.79

Every Night Shampoo.8oz ~-----t 1.49

1.19

Wella. Balsam, 8 oz

1.78

1.42

Trac II Shave

1.19

.95

Wilkinson Stainless Steel Blades 1

1.18

.58

All Fishing TackiP __

_ _ ______ 33 One-Th . dOff

3. 19

1.91

1.13

.81

.48

Salmon · Et tes Bait

1.39

.93

Trophy Ba it Box

1.18

.79

6.7 4

4.52

4.58

3.07

Trophy Ta ckle Bov

18.88

12.65

UMCO Tac kle Box

4.89

· 3.91

.99

.66

Mepps Kit ler Lure•

1.68

1.13

Mepps Kil ler Lu re s

1.54

1.03

Panther M arlin Lures

1.22

.82

.99

.66

1.13

.85

. 99·

.66

3 Qt. Co
Plastic Tablewa
3'N' 1 Wall La

•

8. 99
2.72

5.39
1.63

.69

.41

6.99

4. 19

5.99

3.00
1.25

3 Pc. Chip &amp; Dip

2. 19

1.31

Icelandic Candy Dish

2.76

.1.65

2.76

1.65

Icelandic 10" Ca

2.76

1.65

Deluxe Houswhold Sea

2.11

1.26
2.13

Ass't. Color 3 pc. Salad

5.66

3.39

Iceland ic Salad Server

3.47

2.08

Anchor Hocking 5'12 oz. Footed

. 96

.50

83!4 " Fairfield Divided Serv . Oi

2.36

1.41

.96

.so

Anchor Hocking Milk

2.11

21.00

2.13

2.09

,-,· 8

t2 .99

MikesChe es· Eggs Bait Jar

2 Pc. Glass Lazy Susa

ALPHA·KERI
BATH OIL 8 oz.
Mfg. Lis1 $3 .69

Treasure Finder

.78

5 Pc. Ruby Chip &amp; Dip :&gt;ell- - - - - --1 3.55

RUMMAGE SALE
A rummage sale will be
held in the social rooms of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church Thursday and Friday
from 9 a .m . to 3 p.m. The
event is sponsored by women
of the church.

.68

1.17

Cartridge 9's
Mfg . Lis1 $2.39

1.8Zch

.99

Pork Rind Bait Jar

GILLETTE TRAC II

8

Softique Bath Beads, 17

2.76

.Icelandic 8" Pedestal Rd.

PAY BY MAIL
RACINE - Mae Cleland,
clerk of Racine Village, said
today until further notice
Racine water bills must be
paid by mail only. They may
be sent to Board of Public
Affairs, Racine, Ohio 45771.

· Off

4.61

.6S

Patio &amp; Lawn Decoratio

3.99

l.H

Green Mag

1.89

1.33

48" Record

19.99

Folding Step

8.00

· Collapsible Fishing Basket
Minnow Tr an

Boat Baile.r

Rooster T ails Lures, one-s ixteenth oz . _
Rooster T ails Lure!;, '14 oz
Rooster T ails Lures. one·sixth oz

.36

.24

Lazy Ike Lures.__

2.16

.145

Mr . Twist er Worm•

.87

.58

Eagle Cia w Snelled Fish Hooks

.49

.33

Plug-Nose Lure•

2.22

1.49

Hula· Popp er Lure•

2.22

1.49

Jitterbug Lure•

2.22

1.49

Heddon Lure•

1.99

1.52

Heddon Lure·

2.77

1.86

Heddon Lure•

2.52

1.69

Rapala Lu re•

2.79

. 1.87

ALL FISHING RODL_ _ _ _-c::-_ 33 One-Third Off
Berkley, Garcia, Eagle Claw. Johnny Walker, South

ALKA SELTzER
Blue 36's
Mfg . Lis1 $1.43

+ 30 FREE Aegu~r

sac

Mfg . List $2.59

Bend, Angler, Shakespear, True Temper and

$1.41

Wrrh Iron Mfg . List $2.89

97c

Sucaryl , 100 pac

Colgate Tooth Paste,

Miles Per . Gal. GuidE'"-- -- -- --1 2.95

1.97

Tr ig -A· Flow Oil

2.66

1.59

Electronic

6.99

3.50

Car Wash

2.99

1.44

Car Wash

3.99

1.88

Chise Lo

3.88

5.55

Ba r · B- Q G fl'II , 2

24.88

12 .0d

Bar · B-Q Grill,1

9. 88

3.99

Diston Shrub Trimm

21.99

15.80

Diston Garden Spraye ·

29.99 .

19.88

Black &amp; Decker Cordless Shrub

19.99

11 .99

Diston Cordless Hedge Tri

•

19.88

Dis ton Cordless Grass

7.79

iwa.

REELS
Garcia Reel GK
9.44
'
Zebco XRL40 "'"''L- = - - - - - - ---110 .99

ALLER EST
Allergy Tablets 24's
Mfg. List $1.69

.94

To $9.99 40

17 Qt. Dish Pa

1.09

1.18

All Ball Bat

2.66

Co

1.02

Polident Tablets,

4.44

s Qt.

1.28

5.00

Cookie

16 Qt. Covered

8

1.19

Gergens Dry Skin Lotion, 9
Lawn Bowling Gami!--- - - - - ---J10.99

Fishing Sin ker•

26 oz. Apothecary Jar

BUFFERIN
TABLETS 100's
Mfg . Lis1 $1 .95

CORYBAN
COLO CAPSULES
24's Mig. liS1 $1 59

FRIGIDAIRE
APPLIANCES

SPORTING

Heck's Reg . $11.99
Sporting Goods

ITEMS

SALE

42.99

5

$600

3.59

Ass't. Tea

FOR QUALITY

62'
BASE
BALL
GLOVES

BLADES
•

Heck's Reg .

Heck's Reg.

•5195
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

CRICKET LIGHTER
by G•llehe
Mig L

GAS CAN

Stainless
Steel

51!4' Candy

I

OOLGATE
TOOTMPASTE

wheP I!'&gt; a-n d radial ti r es .

from y•llll•orhood ASSOCIATHJ DRUGGISTS OCTOBER 1·7, 1975

O#r ~

One Gallon

CHAISE LOUNGE

ITEM

SS

$}33

OPEN DAILY 10 T09
SUNDAY 1 T07

TREASURE
FINDER

$}19

Heck's Reg . 55c

Cosmeltc !)ept .

Cannon coppe r with brown

P. B..

27 oz.
KLEAR
WAX

175 CT.

SOFTIQUE
~
BATH
OIL
BEADS

1[~:~~··

8, auto., P.S,

PRICES EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY OCT. 1 THROUGH SUNDAY OCT. 5

Meat

~~ -

BAKER
FURNITURE

·•

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the way some

Set of 6 Dress

YOUR HEADQUARTERS

6.00
8.00

Beckley 446

14.68

10.00

Beckley41Z

14.99

10.00

Shakespear 20SZN L

16 .00

Shakespear 2062NL

16.00

Mitchell300 ReeL--- - - - - - -1 9.99

15.00

Mitchel1204

10.00

Mitchell 206 Reel

5.99

13.00

VILLAGE,.PHARMACY

Middleport, 0.

a

'

GROTON, N. Y. - Miss
Rebecca Sue Place, daughter
of the Rev. and Mrs. Ronald
S. Place of Groton , N.Y. and
granddaughter of Mrs. Harry
Houd as helt,
Middleport ,
became the bride of James E.
Cargill, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Harold D. Cargill, Groton, in
a wedding ceremony Aug. 23
at the Groton Community
Church.
The father of the bride
officiated at the 11 a.m.
ceremony. Edward Heffron
was organist for the double
ring service and the Rev. Mr.
Place was soloist including
The Lord's Prayer in his
selections .
Escorted by her brother, R.
Gregory Place, the bride was
attired in a gown of white
organza over taffeta with a
cathedral length train. A
modified tiara headpiece of
appliqued satin held a
cathedral length illusion veil.
She carried a bouquet of
miniature roses, pompons
and baby's breath .
Margaret Louise Place of
Groton, maid of honor for her
sister, wore a peach double
knit gown with matching
jacket and carried a rainbow
bou!Juet of daisies, pompons,
carnations and bachelor
buttons.
The bridesmaids were
identically gowned with Miss
Lucy Scuderi in yellow, Mrs.
Robert Nicholas in green and

Room mothers named

CAr&lt;!DS!.'··UH--WE WE 5TOPPED6YiOcHEER
THOU6HT MAY&amp;E
HIM UP, DIDN'T WE~.' IF HE
)OU 1D 611/E US A
WANTS TO PLAY CARD.5,
LI FT WITH--UH-WE'LL PLAY--A~ 1 5IIJCE
I MEA~ MAYBE
WE DID E!loRII'JISHIM H15
WE COULD DO
HOMEWORK MAYSE HE 1D
O UR--UI-! ....

Wedding vows read

My children sometimes have
nose bleeds in the night so the
spots are qui te dry by morning. Soaking the stains in cold
water only seems to se t them.
What can I use? I know one is
not supposed to use bleach
on permanent press . Thank
you - MRS. B.
DEAR MRS. B. - One
laundry .authority suggests
that stains In permanent
press should be sponged as
soon as possible and most
stains such as wine, food
coloring, fresh fruit juice,
etc. treat ed as soon a s
possibl e with hydrog en
peroxid e or POWDERED
bleach. You might also try
soaking in cold water. And on
whiles, use a lfttle ammonia
or a solution of two
tablespoons salt to one
tablespoon water.
For average washablcs one
treatment Is to soa k thirty
minutes In cold water. U stain
remains , soak in warm
ammonia water t three
tablespoons ammonia to one

ga llo11 of water) for thirty
minutes or longer. If stain
still persists rub detergent In
and launder using a bleach
that is safe for the fabric. POLLY.

Highlights of BWJiness and
P-rofessional Women's Week,
Oct. 20-26, will Include
selection of a "Woman of the
Year "and a "Woman of the
Week" by the Middleport
BPW Club.
Ce lebration of BPW Week
will begin Oct. 12 at the
District 17 meeting at Lake
Hope with Mrs. Joan Wood,
Gallipolis, district director,
in charge.
.
On Oct. 20, the Middleport
Club will begin the week with
a dinner meeting at the Meigs
Inn . At that time the " Woman
of the Year" and the " Woman
of the Week" will be selected .
Mrs .
He len
Morrison,
McArthur, the district
legislation
representative,
will be a gues t. Reservations
for the dinner are to be turned
in to Mrs. Mary Kunzelman
by Oct. 15.
On Oct. 26, a tea will be held
at the South Third Ave. home
of Mrs. Marion Taylor with
prospective members as
gue sts. Mrs. Janet Korn ,
membership committee, is
handling arrangements for
the tea.

1- - -

\

271 N. 2ND

•• '

I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO..-=-.

·,

PH. 992-5759

If·'·

"' """"'"' '""·HI••

.

"•

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'.\

.

l'

'

..

.,

'

'

''

.,

�.,

'

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, I

I.

::u- 'l'be LJatly sentinel, MiddleJX&gt;ri-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 30, 1975
~--

First of Christmas shows set
RUTLAND - The fir st of Garden Club members, there
several Christmas flow e r are several classes open for
shows in the county has been public or invitational exhibit.
announced by the Rutland
In the artistic arrangement
Garden Club.
· division the classes are
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis . "Down Through the Chimney
,.
is heading up the show which
has the th eme "Down
''Of t he Log Cabin,"
Through the Chimney with a rran gemen t s u si n g
Good St. Nick'' and will be weathered wood; "Of the
staged at Rutland Methodist Duplex," using two colors
Church on Nov. 15 and 16.
only; "Of the High Rise," a
modern floor arrangement;
While many of the classes "Of My House," interpretive
in the show are open for of your own home; "Of the
exh ibi t to on ly Rut la nd Homestead," traditio na l

Selectinns 'to·
Polly.'s Pointers hiRhlight.
Treatment for
BPW week

.A'

using Madonna with child.
The invitational classes on
the same theme are "Of the
School House," suitable for a
P. T.A. Christmas tea table
and "Of Grandma's House"
,
a favorite design . There is
also a junior artistic
arrangement class, "Of the
Doll House," the design to
include a doll figurine.
The horticulture division
has
three
classes,
houseplants, blooming and
foli age, and berried branches
with two classes for the junior
exhi bitors, house plants and a
collection of five stalks of
dried materials suitable for
arrangeme nts.
In the educational division,
the re are classes for collages,

'.'i

permanent preSS
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - How do I
get blood stains ou t of permanent press 'p illowcases ?

two-dimensiona] using some

The Goose Hangs High
Dear Rap:
I want to learn hang gliding, but my parents say it's too
dangerous. Are you with me or against me 1
THE GOOSE
WHO WANTS TO HANG HIGH
Dear Goose:
Hang gliding is dangerous, but so is surfin g ... or skiing ...
or even driving on the freeway. If you fo llow the rules, learn
before you leap, and avoid rocky ledges, hopefully you'll get no
more than sand-burns. But convincing your p3renL' of this is
another matter. Good luck! - HELEN
Dear Goose:
Maybe your parents are like mine: a dangerous sport
SOUNDS like great fun - for any other kid but theirs. Best
way to soften them up is : take them to a hang glide meet and
let them see the easy landings. They might even want to try it
themselves. - SUE

+++
Dear Helen and Sue :
·I met this girl through a friend who was dating her. Soon
they broke up, but I kept going over to her house just to talk.
We never dated, but we were the best of friends. We 'd help
each other with problems, etc., even though we were always
going with someone else.
Just about the time she took off for college in another state,
l discovered !love her.l 'd like to marry that girl some day, but
I have a bad feeling we'll never see each other again.
We promised to write (she still thinks of me as a good
buddy ), but if I keep up this pretense, it will make things all the
harder . Should I just break it off clean and try to forget' SORRY ABOUT LOSING A DREAM GIRL .
Dear LADG:
Good buddies make the best marriage partners! For
Pete's sake, write yolJr friend a letter and TELL her she's your
dream girl. What can you lose• - HELEN
SALADG:
You sound like the kind of guy who won't accept a good job
because "it would hurt so bad if I'm fired." A letter doesn't
take much courage. Write it ' - SUE

..

Rap :
This is a complaint. I'm dieting. It's darn tough . But when
those milk ads come on television, mentioning all the luscious
things you can snack on with that glas of milk, I just DIE.
They harmed cigarette ads because smoking may be injurious to your health . Well snacking is injurious to the health
of a fat person and when this beautiful, thin girl comes on and
practically orders you out to the kitchen to get that cupcake, or
piece of pie or whatever, with your glass of milk - it 's pure
murder.
Doesn't anyone else agree • - FATTY WITH NO WILL

POWER

..

Fatty:
You've got something there' Milk Advisory Board: please
take notice. - HELEN (who is also tempted by those darn
ads!)
Dear Fatty:
On the other hand, if we banned everything that might
cause problems for a certain group there'd be no TV advertising left. -SUE (who works for a TV station ).

Class makes pledge
..
to local missionaries
•

'

.
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A pledge of $10 a month for
the next 10 months was made
by the Loyal Women's Class
of the Middleport Church of
Christ for Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Steevers , Athens,
missionaries on the campus
of Ohio University .
j:' , Steevers was a speaker
.. 4 : recently at the Middleport
: · ··Church and at that time
discussed
the
campus
missionary work.
Plan s were made to
celebrate the birthdays of
those having birthdays
during the past three months
on the last Wednesday in
October. A dinner will be
served at noon during the
weekly sewing session of the
women. Two new. members
were welcomed during the
meeting, and reported ill
were Mrs. Mary Bailey,
home from the hospital; Mrs.
Martha Searls, a patient at
' St . Mary's Hospital in
Huntington and Mrs . Nina
Bland, Akron, suffering a
broken !IJlkle.
The class discussed flowers
for.ill and bereaved members
and it was decided to follow
the same rules as set down by
the Phllathea Women. ,
· Miss Mildred . Hawley
presided with Mrs. Martha
Childs giving devotions. She
used scripture from Luke 21 .
and read
poem, "Ufe's ·
Uttle Things" by Beatrice
.Piwn, along with excerpts
from the SYI)dicated colwnn
I

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of Ben Burrough on "Finding
Real Contentment."
A dessert course was
served by the hostesses, Mrs.
Allee Robeson, Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds and Mrs . Childs
with Mrs . Freda Welling and
Mrs . Carrie Smith, contributing hostesses.

ANNUAL FESTIVAL
The annual fall festival of
the Middleport Elementary
School P.T.A. has been set for
Oct. 30, Mrs. "Joyce Blake,
ways and means chairwoman, announced today.
THAtJKS FOR

DROPPl~OFF

MY BOOKS.,
GUY.S--STJCK
A~UNPAND

WE'LL P1.AY
SCME CARD.S:

plant material; handcrafted
flower s from dri ed plant
material, a co llection or
three ,
and
evergreen
specin1ens.
There will also be two
special displays at the show ,
one from the bookmobile, and
the other of African Violets .

Mrs. ]ames E Cargill
Registration
deadline nears
The Bicentennial Perspective for Women in Ohio, a
program of the Business and
Professional Women 's Clubs,
will begin the weekend of Oct.
25 and 26 at Salt Fork State
Park, Cambridge.
Salt Fork is the newest and
largest state park in Ohio
with ·over 20,000 acres of
natural woodland and the
lodge accommodates four to
six people in each of the 148
guest rooms . There are also
54 lakeside cabins which
accommodate six persons
each. A variety of activities
has been planned for the
weekend by Mrs. Mary E.
Collins, Bicentennial
chairwoman and her committee.
Deadline for registration is
Oct. 1 with Mrs. Collins, 144
Idlewild Ave., Akron, 44313,
and the full cost is $18 which
includes three meals and
registration. ·
Middleport Club members
may contact either Mrs.
Collins or Miss Freddie
Houdashelt, president , for
further information or
regarding registration.

TO HOLD SALE
The Big Bend Citizens Band
Radio Club Auxiliary will
hold a bake sale at Krogers
beginning at 9 a.m. Saturday.

LETART FALLS - Room Johnson.
Third grade and special
mothers for the Letart Falls
Elementary School have been education class, Bill Downie,
Mrs.
Phyllis
announced by the PTO. They teacher;
O'Brien,
Mrs.
Sherlyn
Powell
are :
First grade taught by and Mrs. Catherine Wolfe .
Fourth grade , Mrs. Eileen
Barbara Lawrence : Mrs.
Bonnie Ransom, Mrs. June Buck, teacher; Mrs. Lynn
Stover, Mrs. Julia Combs, Crow, Mrs, Dee Spencer,
Mrs . Clarina Cooper and Mrs. Mrs. Belva Fisher and Mrs .
Sybil Riffle .
Unda Burnem.
Fifth grade, Roger Roush,
Second grade taught by
~acher:
Mrs. Nancy CumMrs. Jane Norris; Mrs.
Violetta Arnott, Mrs. Bev mins, Mrs. Opal Hupp and
Wickline and Mrs . Irene Mrs . Creslyn Hill.
Sixth
grade,
James
Wickline , teacher : Mrs.
Carrie Roush, Mrs . Florence
SALE PLANNED
Thornton and Mrs. Betty
A rummage sale will be Morris.
held Friday from 9 a.m. to 4
The school newspaper to be
p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran issued the second six weeks of
Church, Pomeroy, by the school has been named "The
women of the church. Good Newsy Blackhawk." Plans
used clothing will be for sale. are being furnished for the
fall festival scheduled for
Nov. 8. Door prizes will be
'
awarded
then.
MUCH IMPROVED
Lena Guth, Pomeroy , who
suffered a stroke in August, is
much improved according to
her sister Katie of Pomeroy .

I. , !
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Mrs. Gregory Nelson in blue .
Thomas O'Brien of Groton
was best man for the groom,
and Dale Green, Richard
Collier and Michael Shurtleff
were ushers .
For her daughter's wed·
ding, Mrs. Place was in a
pastel blue gown. Mrs .
Car gill wore a pastel green
gown, and both mothers had
rosebud corsages.
A buffet luncheon was
served in the church hall
following the ceremony, and
a reception was held later at
the
Groton
firehouse .
Following a wedding trip to
Cape Cod, Mass ., the couple
resides at 158 Cayuga St.,
Groton.
Mrs . Carg ill graduated
from Groton High School in ·
1973 and the TC3 nursing
program in 1974. She is
employed at Highgate Manor
Nursing Home, Cortland. Mr.
Cargill graduated from
Groton High School in 1974
and is employed by Barden
Homes in Homer.
The bride was honored with
pre-n uptial showers given by
Mary Ann Smith and Donna
Frost. The bridegroom was
honored at a stag party
hosted by his best man .
Mrs : Houdashelt, grandmother of the bride, and Miss
Freddie Houdashelt, an aunt,
Middleport, attended the
wedding.

Talk planned
LETART FALLS - Jim
Adams, principal of Southern
High School, and Ja ck Bostic,
vice president of the Southern
Local School District Boa rd
of Education, will spea k at
the Monday night meeting of
the Letart Falls PTO, 7:30
p.m.
The two will talk about the
levy on the November ballot
to finance an addition to
Southern High School. Also
expected to be at the meeting
are candidates for the school
board . There will be a
question and answer time .

Llk:E"TOOOAL IT fi..E OF

THAT, TOO!

mea t is packaged at the
market. I often pick up a
package and have blood run
down my arms and even onto

my clothes. - MRS. T. S.
DEAR POLLY - Some
household cleaner dnd hand
lotion bottles have pump
dispensers that do not reach
to the bottom of the bottle so
one cannot pump out all the
contents . Cut off a sec tion of a
plastic drinking straw and
slip it over the tube of the
pump . The bottom of the
bottle can be reached and
practically all the C&lt;Jnte nts
used. - MRS . A. L. M .
DEAR POLLY - Do tell
the reader who has trouble
clean ing her glass doors and
windows that I did, too, until I
started dissolvmg cornstarch
1yes, ordinary cooking cornstarch) in cool water until
about the consis~ncy of thin
custard. Rub this on the
glass, let dry, rub off and be
surp rised by the shine and
slippery feeling of the glass.
When dirt or dust settle on
them , just wipe off with a soft
cloth. - JOSEPHINE .
DEAR POLLY - When
making large quan tities of
macaroni, potato or any other
such salad for a large group,
make use of your punch bowl.
It makes a grea t salad bowl.
To help " tra in " a hanging
or cli mbing plant weigh the
ends of the limbs with twiston ties from bread wrappers
wrapped around one or two
nails placed where needed.
These· ties will not damage
th e pl ant when wrapped
loosely around it and thi s is a
good use for bent or rusted
naiis or screws. - MRS. F. G.

This Week's Special

OPEN DAlLY10T09
SUNDAY 1 TO?

-

USED CARS

'75 Olds Cut.
Salon Coupe

PUFFS

TOILET TISSUE
$ 33

Roll
Pkg

.__._Reg . 99c

3

Boxes

land au root, brown int. , 6wa.y power seat, air , 350 V -

L:

BIRTHDAY NEARS
COOLVILLE - James T.
Jackson, formerly of Dorcas,
will observe his 92nd birthday
Sunday, Oct. 5, at the Arcadia
Nursing Home, Coolville .
Cards may be mailed to him
in care of the Nursing Home.

::~..
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Heck's Reg .
1.22
Sporting

Heck's Reg . $1.57

gg~

Heck's Reg .
78c

WILKENSON

Heck's Reg .
$1.18

68 e

ss~

s13.88
Sporting Goods
REG.

Cosmetic Dept.

You ' ll Li ke Our Quality
Wa y o f Do ing Business.

Goose Neck

GMAC FtNANCIN.G
Pomeroy

992-5342

Open Evenings 'lil6: 00
Tii"Sp_. m. Sat.

10 Qt. Aluminum Pa

3.99 ... 2.39

Scott Placema

.53

.31

1.78

1.06

Set of 3 Skirt &amp; Trouser

1.64

.98

Set of 3 Dress

1.78

1.06

ungers._ __ __ _l.

1.99

GC)OD~

SALE

ITEMS

,
73

Sic

1.24

74C

Bright Side Shampoo,6

.94

· .7S

Baseball Glove'

,11 .99

6.00

Barbasol Shave Cream , 11

.58

.46

1.18

.94

Sucaryl, 3.5 oz

.29

.23

Woodbury Shampoo. 15

.89

.71

Urguntine Aerosol, 5

1.89

1.51

Flex Non Aerosol Hair

1.99

1.59

Hold &amp; Hold &amp; Hold Hair Spray, 8 o

1.68

1.34

s

.78

.62

Soft &amp; Dry Rollon Deod

.99

.79

Every Night Shampoo.8oz ~-----t 1.49

1.19

Wella. Balsam, 8 oz

1.78

1.42

Trac II Shave

1.19

.95

Wilkinson Stainless Steel Blades 1

1.18

.58

All Fishing TackiP __

_ _ ______ 33 One-Th . dOff

3. 19

1.91

1.13

.81

.48

Salmon · Et tes Bait

1.39

.93

Trophy Ba it Box

1.18

.79

6.7 4

4.52

4.58

3.07

Trophy Ta ckle Bov

18.88

12.65

UMCO Tac kle Box

4.89

· 3.91

.99

.66

Mepps Kit ler Lure•

1.68

1.13

Mepps Kil ler Lu re s

1.54

1.03

Panther M arlin Lures

1.22

.82

.99

.66

1.13

.85

. 99·

.66

3 Qt. Co
Plastic Tablewa
3'N' 1 Wall La

•

8. 99
2.72

5.39
1.63

.69

.41

6.99

4. 19

5.99

3.00
1.25

3 Pc. Chip &amp; Dip

2. 19

1.31

Icelandic Candy Dish

2.76

.1.65

2.76

1.65

Icelandic 10" Ca

2.76

1.65

Deluxe Houswhold Sea

2.11

1.26
2.13

Ass't. Color 3 pc. Salad

5.66

3.39

Iceland ic Salad Server

3.47

2.08

Anchor Hocking 5'12 oz. Footed

. 96

.50

83!4 " Fairfield Divided Serv . Oi

2.36

1.41

.96

.so

Anchor Hocking Milk

2.11

21.00

2.13

2.09

,-,· 8

t2 .99

MikesChe es· Eggs Bait Jar

2 Pc. Glass Lazy Susa

ALPHA·KERI
BATH OIL 8 oz.
Mfg. Lis1 $3 .69

Treasure Finder

.78

5 Pc. Ruby Chip &amp; Dip :&gt;ell- - - - - --1 3.55

RUMMAGE SALE
A rummage sale will be
held in the social rooms of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church Thursday and Friday
from 9 a .m . to 3 p.m. The
event is sponsored by women
of the church.

.68

1.17

Cartridge 9's
Mfg . Lis1 $2.39

1.8Zch

.99

Pork Rind Bait Jar

GILLETTE TRAC II

8

Softique Bath Beads, 17

2.76

.Icelandic 8" Pedestal Rd.

PAY BY MAIL
RACINE - Mae Cleland,
clerk of Racine Village, said
today until further notice
Racine water bills must be
paid by mail only. They may
be sent to Board of Public
Affairs, Racine, Ohio 45771.

· Off

4.61

.6S

Patio &amp; Lawn Decoratio

3.99

l.H

Green Mag

1.89

1.33

48" Record

19.99

Folding Step

8.00

· Collapsible Fishing Basket
Minnow Tr an

Boat Baile.r

Rooster T ails Lures, one-s ixteenth oz . _
Rooster T ails Lure!;, '14 oz
Rooster T ails Lures. one·sixth oz

.36

.24

Lazy Ike Lures.__

2.16

.145

Mr . Twist er Worm•

.87

.58

Eagle Cia w Snelled Fish Hooks

.49

.33

Plug-Nose Lure•

2.22

1.49

Hula· Popp er Lure•

2.22

1.49

Jitterbug Lure•

2.22

1.49

Heddon Lure•

1.99

1.52

Heddon Lure·

2.77

1.86

Heddon Lure•

2.52

1.69

Rapala Lu re•

2.79

. 1.87

ALL FISHING RODL_ _ _ _-c::-_ 33 One-Third Off
Berkley, Garcia, Eagle Claw. Johnny Walker, South

ALKA SELTzER
Blue 36's
Mfg . Lis1 $1.43

+ 30 FREE Aegu~r

sac

Mfg . List $2.59

Bend, Angler, Shakespear, True Temper and

$1.41

Wrrh Iron Mfg . List $2.89

97c

Sucaryl , 100 pac

Colgate Tooth Paste,

Miles Per . Gal. GuidE'"-- -- -- --1 2.95

1.97

Tr ig -A· Flow Oil

2.66

1.59

Electronic

6.99

3.50

Car Wash

2.99

1.44

Car Wash

3.99

1.88

Chise Lo

3.88

5.55

Ba r · B- Q G fl'II , 2

24.88

12 .0d

Bar · B-Q Grill,1

9. 88

3.99

Diston Shrub Trimm

21.99

15.80

Diston Garden Spraye ·

29.99 .

19.88

Black &amp; Decker Cordless Shrub

19.99

11 .99

Diston Cordless Hedge Tri

•

19.88

Dis ton Cordless Grass

7.79

iwa.

REELS
Garcia Reel GK
9.44
'
Zebco XRL40 "'"''L- = - - - - - - ---110 .99

ALLER EST
Allergy Tablets 24's
Mfg. List $1.69

.94

To $9.99 40

17 Qt. Dish Pa

1.09

1.18

All Ball Bat

2.66

Co

1.02

Polident Tablets,

4.44

s Qt.

1.28

5.00

Cookie

16 Qt. Covered

8

1.19

Gergens Dry Skin Lotion, 9
Lawn Bowling Gami!--- - - - - ---J10.99

Fishing Sin ker•

26 oz. Apothecary Jar

BUFFERIN
TABLETS 100's
Mfg . Lis1 $1 .95

CORYBAN
COLO CAPSULES
24's Mig. liS1 $1 59

FRIGIDAIRE
APPLIANCES

SPORTING

Heck's Reg . $11.99
Sporting Goods

ITEMS

SALE

42.99

5

$600

3.59

Ass't. Tea

FOR QUALITY

62'
BASE
BALL
GLOVES

BLADES
•

Heck's Reg .

Heck's Reg.

•5195
Karr &amp; Van Zandt

CRICKET LIGHTER
by G•llehe
Mig L

GAS CAN

Stainless
Steel

51!4' Candy

I

OOLGATE
TOOTMPASTE

wheP I!'&gt; a-n d radial ti r es .

from y•llll•orhood ASSOCIATHJ DRUGGISTS OCTOBER 1·7, 1975

O#r ~

One Gallon

CHAISE LOUNGE

ITEM

SS

$}33

OPEN DAILY 10 T09
SUNDAY 1 T07

TREASURE
FINDER

$}19

Heck's Reg . 55c

Cosmeltc !)ept .

Cannon coppe r with brown

P. B..

27 oz.
KLEAR
WAX

175 CT.

SOFTIQUE
~
BATH
OIL
BEADS

1[~:~~··

8, auto., P.S,

PRICES EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY OCT. 1 THROUGH SUNDAY OCT. 5

Meat

~~ -

BAKER
FURNITURE

·•

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the way some

Set of 6 Dress

YOUR HEADQUARTERS

6.00
8.00

Beckley 446

14.68

10.00

Beckley41Z

14.99

10.00

Shakespear 20SZN L

16 .00

Shakespear 2062NL

16.00

Mitchell300 ReeL--- - - - - - -1 9.99

15.00

Mitchel1204

10.00

Mitchell 206 Reel

5.99

13.00

VILLAGE,.PHARMACY

Middleport, 0.

a

'

GROTON, N. Y. - Miss
Rebecca Sue Place, daughter
of the Rev. and Mrs. Ronald
S. Place of Groton , N.Y. and
granddaughter of Mrs. Harry
Houd as helt,
Middleport ,
became the bride of James E.
Cargill, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Harold D. Cargill, Groton, in
a wedding ceremony Aug. 23
at the Groton Community
Church.
The father of the bride
officiated at the 11 a.m.
ceremony. Edward Heffron
was organist for the double
ring service and the Rev. Mr.
Place was soloist including
The Lord's Prayer in his
selections .
Escorted by her brother, R.
Gregory Place, the bride was
attired in a gown of white
organza over taffeta with a
cathedral length train. A
modified tiara headpiece of
appliqued satin held a
cathedral length illusion veil.
She carried a bouquet of
miniature roses, pompons
and baby's breath .
Margaret Louise Place of
Groton, maid of honor for her
sister, wore a peach double
knit gown with matching
jacket and carried a rainbow
bou!Juet of daisies, pompons,
carnations and bachelor
buttons.
The bridesmaids were
identically gowned with Miss
Lucy Scuderi in yellow, Mrs.
Robert Nicholas in green and

Room mothers named

CAr&lt;!DS!.'··UH--WE WE 5TOPPED6YiOcHEER
THOU6HT MAY&amp;E
HIM UP, DIDN'T WE~.' IF HE
)OU 1D 611/E US A
WANTS TO PLAY CARD.5,
LI FT WITH--UH-WE'LL PLAY--A~ 1 5IIJCE
I MEA~ MAYBE
WE DID E!loRII'JISHIM H15
WE COULD DO
HOMEWORK MAYSE HE 1D
O UR--UI-! ....

Wedding vows read

My children sometimes have
nose bleeds in the night so the
spots are qui te dry by morning. Soaking the stains in cold
water only seems to se t them.
What can I use? I know one is
not supposed to use bleach
on permanent press . Thank
you - MRS. B.
DEAR MRS. B. - One
laundry .authority suggests
that stains In permanent
press should be sponged as
soon as possible and most
stains such as wine, food
coloring, fresh fruit juice,
etc. treat ed as soon a s
possibl e with hydrog en
peroxid e or POWDERED
bleach. You might also try
soaking in cold water. And on
whiles, use a lfttle ammonia
or a solution of two
tablespoons salt to one
tablespoon water.
For average washablcs one
treatment Is to soa k thirty
minutes In cold water. U stain
remains , soak in warm
ammonia water t three
tablespoons ammonia to one

ga llo11 of water) for thirty
minutes or longer. If stain
still persists rub detergent In
and launder using a bleach
that is safe for the fabric. POLLY.

Highlights of BWJiness and
P-rofessional Women's Week,
Oct. 20-26, will Include
selection of a "Woman of the
Year "and a "Woman of the
Week" by the Middleport
BPW Club.
Ce lebration of BPW Week
will begin Oct. 12 at the
District 17 meeting at Lake
Hope with Mrs. Joan Wood,
Gallipolis, district director,
in charge.
.
On Oct. 20, the Middleport
Club will begin the week with
a dinner meeting at the Meigs
Inn . At that time the " Woman
of the Year" and the " Woman
of the Week" will be selected .
Mrs .
He len
Morrison,
McArthur, the district
legislation
representative,
will be a gues t. Reservations
for the dinner are to be turned
in to Mrs. Mary Kunzelman
by Oct. 15.
On Oct. 26, a tea will be held
at the South Third Ave. home
of Mrs. Marion Taylor with
prospective members as
gue sts. Mrs. Janet Korn ,
membership committee, is
handling arrangements for
the tea.

1- - -

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271 N. 2ND

•• '

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO..-=-.

·,

PH. 992-5759

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10 - The Da ily Senlinel, Middleport-Pomer oy, 0 , Tu esday , Sept :10. 1'17/i

Results Use The Seutinei Classifieds
Auto Sales

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r; A Ll.! P OLIS, OHIO,
Sept. 27 . 19;5

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Sale&gt; Report of
Ohio Vallrv Ll\ cstork l'o
STOCK r .H I A TT l F
STt. r:Hs - l 50 to :100 lbs 1i
to 27 50 , :wo to 400 lbs !G 50 to
29 75, 400 to 500 lbs 20 to ol
500 to 1:00 lbs. 20 to .11 50 , 600
to 700 lbs 22 to 'IS; 700 lbs . and
Over 22 to 18 50
HEIF' E R CA LVES - 250 to
.1110 lbs 15 to 21 :100 to 400 lbs .
15 to 2:1 50 , 400 to 500 lbs !5to
25, 500 to GOO lbs 17 to 28.50 :
600 to 700 lbs . 19 to 2 ~1 · 700 lbs
and Ove r 19 to :n
STOCK f OW S &amp; R U LI~~
1By The Hea&lt;l l --S tock Cow s
100 to 125. Stoc k Cows a nd
Calves 115 to 200 : Stock Rulls
90 to 175; Ba by Ca lves 5 lo Ill :
1By Th e Pound) - Canner s .t
Cullers Co ws 1:1 to 111 ,
Holste rn Cows 17 50 to 2.1,
Commel'ctal Bull s 11,000 lbs
and over 1 20 to 24.15.
VEAL CALVES - Tops no
lbs to 250 55 to 58, Medrwn
200 lbs to .100 38 to 48, Culls 18
to 27
SHOATS - 20 to ~4 .

The Almanac
By United
Pr e s s
Inlern atrun al
Today rs T u e sda ~ . Sept. :lO,
the 27:1rd dayo! 1975 wtlh 92 to
!oJiow
The moon rs appr oaching
tls new ph ase
The m or nin g s tar s ar e
Venus, Satw n, Maro and
Juprter
The evemn g st ar IS Me rcur y
Those born on lhts date ar e
under the sr gn of l 1br a

Amencan mdust1 H.ih!-5t Wilham Wngley J r was bmr1
Sept 10. 18b1 Th1s also rs
actr ess J){&gt;bor.h Kerr s 54 th
brrthda)
On thrs da\ m h~&lt; t o r y
In

1H4fi ,

a

Ch a r le :-;t o ~ n .

(]Pnllsl

1n

\ic~s~

, extr acted a tMth for th • f1rst
orne \\l lh t!i
d ld
of
an est hesia - etiH'J
ln 19:18, Gem '" . fr ance
Bntrun a nd !tal) 11 1Pl m

MWlich for a

f'Onfei en C'e ,

after whH h Bn lrsh Prrme
Mmr st cr :-le·. li lt· ('h amberlam prom 1setl pe are tn
our tune" That ' peace ' '
last ed 337 da ys befor e World
War II started
In 1972, Pr esrdent Rrchard
NIXon srgned a congressronal
resolutwn approvmg an rn tenm Sovre t-Ame n can of fensive arms a greement.
In
1974 ,
P ort uga l' s
President Antomo de Spmola
unexp ect ed ly r e sr g ned ,
warnrng tha t the country was
heading toward ch aos Also
that da y, the U. S Senate
voted to cut off a rd to Turkey
because of tls invasion of
Cyprus.

..

A thought for the day :
American playwright Louis
Kaufman Anspacher sard,
'"Marriage is that relatwn
between man and woman rn
which the independence is
equal,
t he
dep e ndence
mutual, and \he obligat iop

·reciprocal ."

VO'

101 '•\.1 vro)td 1T1 1n 1rn um
'"d' ( t o1 \\u r rJ J!..
BLIN D A DS
r 1 1 11 1 Otlc! l 7lc Cl1tl l ll (' per
: ct vr• t t J', • Plf'n t
OFFI CE HOUR S
A '1) 1 111 ' O; 00 fJ I l l !J ld y
1)
1 Ill
•o 12 00 Noon

Market Report

lol d c) y

Notice
NF 1J

Oil
Or
MIN K
p t oduct~ new c il t a l ogs Get
on 011 r q row, nq c us tom er
11s t Or n t a v b c you woul d
!1kc to 1~1 K1 • or (l ers ? Phon e
H e len 1 l:l t own
992 5 11 3
KOSCOT
I n d e p e nd en t
t;l 71 t tc

P I A N O lun1 nq L ,l nL' D iln !e l s
P hone 'WI 208 2
8 28 26tp

Walnuts Are Cash!
Start 1ng October 1 we
a r e b uy tng
B lack
Wal n uts at market
or1c e
Brtng your
Blac k Walnut s to

I
I

I_

Excelsior• Salt

Works, Inc.
Box 267
Po m eroy, Oh 1o

NOTICE OF

APPOI N TMENT
Ca:o e No 216 25
E s t a t e of
Cl~ra
R ee s
Dec e as ed
N o t 1c e 1S h ere by gtven that
Jose ph W Co ok of Pom eroy ,
Me 1g s Coun t y Oh1o, ha s been
du ly ap pomted A dmtnls~rator
o f t he E s t a t e at C 'ara Ree s.
dPcease d , lat e of Pomeroy ,
M e1g s Co unty O h 10
Cred itors ar e reQU ir ed to
hi e the1 r c latm s wtth sa 1d
ltd uc 1arv w1th 1n to ur months
Da ted Th1 s
17th
d~y
of
Se p tem b er 1975
M a n n1n11 D W ebste r
J udge
C9 l 23 30 (lO J 7, 3tc

NOT·ICE OF

POMEROY
·MOTOR
OPEN EVES. 8:0L

r.n

wanted

For Rent

Yard Sale

ll

y ~~ ,... .... ""' "' '-'S 8? 9 Soutt1 Thtrd

t've
M1d dl epo rt
t h ruur./11 J

Oct

I

RO OM hous e double c a r
4arag e, 1n Pom eroy
For
1nlormat 1on
c all 992 250 2
9 28 3tc

9 30 3t c
Yt.. RD Sa l es v, &lt;&gt; dnc sday from
9 a no till 'i p r'l1 and Thurs
day F nday and Saturday
fr om 9 1ill 9 21 ' m d ns east
ou t of Ches t er Walch S1gns
o n 248
9 30 4tp
YA RD Sa l e'i ~7 1 L aure l St ,
M1 ddlepor t 10 1111 5 Wed
nes day ,
T hu r s day
and
F r 1day
9 30 J tc

7 RM 1 story hou se 1n M1d
d l eport , furn1shed
Phone
(3Q,j \ 675 1831
9 25 6tc
TRAILER tot , good toc at1on,
close to schoo l bus ga s.
water
e l ec
Availabl e 1n
Middl epor t Phone 99 2 2866
9 24 6t c
~f--URNI S HE D

ap a rtment.
adult s only '" M1dd l eport
Ph one 992 387.!
3 75 lf c

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. _

~

Syracuse. Ohto

Ph 992 -3993

Ph

4 10 1 mo

318N 2nd
II

BOu

For Sale

1974 YAMAH A 360 MX , ex
cellenl condil1on , $800 Also .
8 channel Haii1Cratter C B
rad10.
$50
James
L
Chadwell Rt 1 Reedsvill e,
'Ohto 45772
9 25 5t c

I~

KNAPPSfiOES
SHEBOYGAN

197 5 CUl L A SS Supr e m e, 2 dr
p s
p b , s t ereo tap e a c
Pho n e 992 38 13
9 30 6t c

FUEL OI L F urna c e c om pl ete
w1th p1p es and re g 1:&lt;. tcr s
Kenmor e g as rang e and
dtshwash er
1918 Model T
Ford tru c k Phon e ( 6111 ) 985
A 118
9 75 6t c

M•ddl e port . 0

TEXAS WESTERN

9 30 3tc

1972 GMC 11 ton p1 c kup tru c k
sharp and 1n good c on d l11o n
Pnce $2 .000 or trad e for c ar
of eQual valu e P hon e 99 2
791 2,
Ste v f'
Bu rt o n
Pom eroy
9 30 61 p

WANTED
WILL PAY
.t: o •u t , • .., ..
dtmes
65 f or 1964
uters
0 for 196d
h
ves
$) 40 for 1935
do ll ar 'it

OFFICE SPACE
FOR RENT

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

~-,___

_____ _____ _

TWO H 78 x 14 Good ye ar Steel
b e lted snow t1re s Contact
Al b ert Hill at 949 2261
9 26 6tc
ONE SMITH and W ess on 44
Magnum. colo r blue , J mch
burre l , brand new, st1 ll 1n
box Call 992 3889
9 28 3tc

Real Estate for Sale

Mobile Homes for Sale

Employment Wanted

Be
o rd a1 n e d by the CA RPEN T RY
panel1ng ,
Co un c11 o f th e V1 1t age of
floormg and ce1hng Phone
V\1dOic port as fo l lows
99 2 2759
'"'c
I
Th a t the R1ver
9 17 26tc
l dnd1 n g fro m t h e ea s t er l y end
o f W al nut St re e t t o the low
Plumbmg,
wa!er rnarko f t h e OhtO R1ver , R'E M ODELING ,
h e.J t mq an d all types of
t1e an d 11 1S he r e by dedtcated
ge ne ral
repn1r
Wo r k
as a pub l c s trPe t , to be known
~ uarant ee d
20 years ex-'
as W a l nut St re et
p er1 enc e
Phon e 99 2 2409
Sec II BE I T FUR T HER
5 1 tfr;.
O RD A IN ED that t he r 1ver
l a ndm g ex te nd tng from the
ea s t e r l y end o f Coal Street t o
the 1U n CI 10 n wdh Wa ln u t
Wa~ted
St r"eet be and 11 tS hereby
d ed1 c a t ed as a pu bl i C street, to 1968 OR LATER rlio d e l VW
b e known as Co al Stree t
motor tn good s hape Earl
Sec Ill BE I T F URTHER
Ar1x phone 742 5867
O R DAI N ED t hat th1S Or
9 30 Jfc
d 1nan c e 1S d ecl ared to be an
Em e r q e ncy
a nd
il
I S, U S ED electriC typewriter
t he r efo r e orde r ed that the
Phone 949 4141. after 6 p m
ru l es
be
d is po s ed
w1th
30 Jtc
9 __.._
p r ov1 dtnQ 1t r ece1ves an af
f l rmi:ltJve vote o f two lh !rds of
the mem ber s o f Co unctt and SHtEEP su ppl ieS wanted
Phone 992 5547
shall ta k e ef f e c t at th e earl test
9 28 6tc
da l e all ow ed by l aw
Sec
IV
T h ts Ord1na n ce
Sh all t ake eff ec t and be tn ¢'LD turn1tu r e . 1ce boxes.'
for c e from and after Sep ' b rass beds , or comp l e te
te m ber 10, 197 5
hous eho ld s
Write M
D-:"'i
P ass ed th e lOth day of
~~ :~ erCal~ ~ ;· ~om e roy , ,
Sep t ember 1975
10-7 74
Marvtnl Kell 1
Pr es 1d ent of Council 1968 OR lat er n1oce t vw motor
A tt es1 Gen e Grat e
1n good shape Earl A n x,
Clerk
phone 742 5867
9 29 Jtc
(9 ) 23 30, 2tc

To Buy

____________

92 76

992 33 12

9 30 3tc
19 73 V IN DALE trailer and lot
loca ted tn T upper s Pla1ns,
Ohto Phone (6 14) 667 3817

9 30 12tc

USED CH"AIN saws, 498
Locust St , Mtdd l eport
Phone 992 3092
9 18 26tc
1971 K AWA SA KI 500 Call 247

2813

9 24 6tp
GREE N beans , ptck you , uw11
Andrew Cross. L etart Falls,
Ohto Phone 247 2852
9 28 61c
SAVE SAVE SAVE
Se ll 1ng out our stoc k of gu ns ,
bow s and ammo All guns
wdl be sold At 10 percen t
above
whol esa l e
,plus
shtppmg 870 Rem 1ngtons ,
Sl40 sa te wtll las t till a ll
guns are gone lnd1an J oe ' s
Spor ts and CB's, 308 Page
St , Mtddleport
9-28 !Ole

- ::::n.=- - - - - - - - - - -- '

1-N DA'ST 2J Channe l C1t1zen 's
Band tran sce i ver
am fm
mpx rad10 , B t ra ck s t ereo
Ca l l 992 3965
9 4 tfc

and

older

LARRY WHOBREY,

S EPT I C lf•NKS c l eane d
Modern Suntlatton 992 39 5~
or 99 2 7349
9 18 tfc

&lt;

2 ba th s, nat ~a s furnace a nd

IF YO U are tnlerested 1n
butldmg a new home or
havrn g your presen t home
remodeled , contact Roush
Co nstructton 992 7583, Greg
Roush
9 17 12tc

larg e lot $11,000
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms 1' '

1/vrr::. ·-"-e"- '""L'L.:: tn mobile
home fur nace r e pa1r Phone

Br~ck h omew•th

baths, hot w - 'er heat, garage
and n 1ce v1ew S/5,000

RAC INE

3

work shop $13 .500
RIVER COTTAGE

Dry
&amp;

3

bedrooms
drilled w e ll, 011
furna c e o n 124 A sk t ng $ 14,000
4

B R hom e

mod ba th , furn ace, e nc losed
porc h base ment and excellent
v 1ew $30,000

POME ROY -

3 B R hom e,

ba th , famtly r oom, Nat gas •
and city water for only $8,500

RA CI NE - 3 B Rhome. mod .
kit
d1n mg , nat gas fur nace
and l evel lot $19,000 or good
offer

POMEROY ·

5 BEDROOMS -

Mod

k1t

2

baths. one mod ,
JOO m
stu dy
f1rep races, gas furnace and 2

s~ mg

lots Now $27,000
LOTS -

Real Estate for Sale
3

I n a l l school d1stnct s

SISOO up
NEWLISTING - 2B R home
w 1th coral bath f 1xtur es, l1 k e
new
N G
furnace
Full
basement f or on l y SS,OOO

WORK
HA R D,
INV EST
WISELY , WILL MAKE YOU
WEALTHY

HOUSE . 51 ''1 act ~s tn t-'Ortlana

Call !6141 864 1876. alter 5

pm

9 24 12tc

5

RM
HOU SE , good lot.
natural gas furnace , carpet
and paneling
Phone 742
3964

9 30 61p

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

JO
ACRE
Fa rm ,
ap
prox 1matety 17 acres far
mtng ground Locate d one
mile back of Philip Sporn
Plant On blacktopped road
Ca l l ( 304 l 882 -2297 after S p .

m

9 25 6t c

HOUSE fo r sale, 128 Leure l
St, Pomeroy. Idea l for
couple or coup le with 1
ch d d
Large ba c k yard,
garden plot Wtll sell par
t 1ally furn iShe d , or wtlhout
One outbudd1ng on tot For
further mtormat 1on, call
992 3868
9 28 6tc

9 28 52tc

9 24 12tp

Heating Stoves
All Sizes on hand , pnces
start at $324 69
- 1 Wood Burmng Stove

CLIP THIS AD and bnng &lt;f
In for $ IS 00 di SCOunt

POMEROY LANDMARK
·-~ack W. Carsey, Mgc.
Aiill Phone 992-2181
USED J M g ra vtty bed , S275, A
New Idea No .7 corn p1ckers ,
S650
$675 , 3 g rav 1ty beds
and wagon s, $475 ea , Ford 9
N tractor $995, 3 corn
elevators $ 110
$140 5195,
l1me spreader, $150, New 4
ft and 5 ft
3 pi rotary
mower S365 5385 N ew draw
bars . $16 ea Ermet Lucken ,
Washmgton St. Albany ,
Oh to Phon e 698 ·3032 or 698
7881
9 ~8 Jtc

t:ALLlklb'?

Racine Plumbing
,,

&amp; Heating
Emergency
949-2211 or 992 -5700
Complete atr condttt0n1ng
sa l es and sennce . heating ,
plumbtng, roo f t ng and
genera l sheet metal work
Free Esttmates
9 1A 1 mo
' EXC AVAT t&gt;NG .
backhoe ,
dozer and d1tcher
Gas ,
e l ectr t c and water l1ne
bu nal . basemen t s, tooter s,
se pt1 c sys t ems and brush
cleanmg Wtll haul ttll d1rt ,
top so1 L sand and graveL
11mestonefor drtvewavs and
r o ads
Phone Charles R
Hatfteld , Bac khoe Se r vice.
Rt 1. Rutland , Oh10. 742

6092

7 11 90tc

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

~X L AVA ttN u, uozer , loader
and ba c khoe work. sepftc
ta nk s
1nstal led,
dump.
t r uc k s and lo boy s for h1re ,
w tll haul fill d1rt t op soil ,
ltmestone and gravel., Call
Bob or Roger Jeff ers, day
phone 992 7089 ntght phone
992 3525 or 992 ~232
2 11 tf c

l~l t A

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE
~ITTLE

I

ORPHA.K A.KKIE-OFF WITH THE OLD;

__

~\..

... ,lll'lt ..... ~·

ALLEY OOP
IT I..OOK5 Ll KC DOC PLIT
US ClOWN IN Tl·tlo 1~IG\-IT

..--..--

PLAO:,M~.

LONLRETE

del t.V ered r1 g ht to your
prorect Fast and easy Free
est1 mates P hon e 992 328 4,
Goeglem Ready M1x Co,
Mtddle port. Oh10.
6 30 ttC

PORTABLE
IUI Lt: •
RENT AL
Construcl t OI
Ou t door events
Phon
Ga ll i pOli S,
446 A78 i
Russell s Plum bt n g and
H eah ng
a 19 t f c

- - ----.- -

WILL TRIM or cur trees and
shrubbery . Phone 949 322 1
or 742 4441
9 7 24t c

__ ___________

-

~ ...
'ELWOOD aOWE RS REPAIR
'

Swee pers , toasters, tron !:.,
all sma ll appltanc es Lawn
mower , next to State Htgh
way Garage on Route 7·'1
Phone 985 3825
•
A 16tfc

(lASOLJNE AU.EY

l know

You
brouqht
the
moneu

~tke

thi

~ou

518 .500
WALK TO SHOP - Older 2
s t ory frame
( in good
condl tton) 3 BRs, 2 bath s,
dl ntng
R, utt11ty · R. ,

to save

stora ge bldg
BELOW
MARKET AT $8,300
5 MILE OUT - NEW 2 BR
bath,
carpeted,
full

repair
tm.J
screen,
Slim?

-

base m e nt
with
l ovely
recreat•on R, ca rp or t &amp;
storage l acre $22,500 .

Remoj

today through persons you
trust
Someth ing profitabl e
cou ld result

Italy
30 Choos in g
( 2 wds.)
-~-..,....=~=~~-:-~~=,.-:-~==-:-:--:-:---:-:7:~:-:"~---37 Nonchalant
SUMPTH
38 Itallan J'lVer
!!
39 Seaman's

RepC11rs , serv1ce, all makes
992 228A The Fpbnct Shop
Pomeroy AuthoHzed Smge1
Sa t es and Se rv 1ce
Wt
sha rp en SC ISSOrS
3 29 It\

MUCH
WORSE

BACK HOE for rent, hour or
contract
Reg
or
ex
cavating type Sepl/c ta nks
mstalled Bill Pu l!ms Phone
992 2478
8 27 tf c

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Ncw. 22)

For Wedneaday, Oct.

''cease 1 ''

f;+--Jf-+-f-+--f ARIES

40 Glut
41 Succmct
42 Trudge
DOWN
24
Heu&lt;s 1 Colleen
NON
2 Mideast
ElAPSE
country
( var . )
3 Neighbor of
Mauritama
4 Fmal word

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

De\\~etJ Serilte
AREYOJSURE
I GA.N'T HELP?

MAN(5 \&lt;\ORK!

11'5 AWFULLY KIND
OF 'rOLl 1D COME
OVER LIKE
Il-l I51

1HATBWHAT

TIME FOR A SHOWER, A
CHANGE AND DINNER

NEIGHBORS
ARE FOR l

ll-!15 EVENING HOLDS

NONSENoEi

IN

Phone 773-5592 ·.

?

''

j

'''

.MASON FURNITURE
IiERMAN GRATE
MASON, W.VA.

1=-1--+-+--1

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

TWKMN

CWXFYOW , VW

recently
k•tchen,

DFAAWK

heal. full base ment THIS
YOU MUST SEE $13,000
COUL D HAVE 2 APART·
MENTS - Large home m
good cond1hon 5 BRs, 2
baths, NG for ced a tr heat
Porch es Large att1c. JUST

$10,000
WE HAVE 4 FARMS CA LL
FOR
IN FORMATION . OR A LIST.
WANTED'
w_e ha ve Interested buyers
for your property (LIST

TODAY)
PH O'

0

1159

FOR 'GREAT COUNTRY
STEREO'
_..
!Tslen tOGeno Khan
Week Nights from 7:30 to
Mrdnrght
on
WMPO- FM STERE092

HOW DID 'IE FIND

TH' WEATHER OVER IN
TWIN FORt&lt;S,ELVINE'I?

JEST LIKE
~ORE '1ARB TEA,

COLD AS

A FROG

JYH

HDFT
LWH
JYK

F

Lady Luck Is pulling some
stnngs for you where your
work or career IS concerned
However. don't leave It all up to

her
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Deo.
21) A pos•t1ve attitude wtll work
wonders for you today Try It
on problems you thought you
had no tmmedlate solutions

lor
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jon.
19) You're luckier w1th partners
today than you would be In
play1ng a lone hand Stick. with
the wtnn 1ng combinations.

-..1.-.1..-..,.~ Good news today w•ll put some

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fib. 11)

extra zest m your s tep Th1s w111
be a busy day for you and a
pleasant one
CANCER (June ~ 1 .Jul 1 2.2 )

You're a good listener today.
You'll be able to piece together
to your advantage some thlnga
you PICk up from two sources.

Take action on lln anclal

PISCES (Fob. 20-Meroh 20)

hunches you get today The 111tie votce tnstde IS tl)' tnQ to put
you
an
t.o some t h 1n g
worthwhi le

Your material aspects are still
ve ry prom i s i ng today
Substan tial gams can c ome
from your W1ll1n gness to be

how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

OUTSTANDI NG BUY - 1
floor plan, 2 BR , balh, all
r eno vated
Ni ce
NG forced atr

Condlt1ons are devetop1ng 1n a
nol yet vlstble I hat w 1ll
contnbute to your feelings of
bas1c se cu r ity and well- bemg

b-1--+-+--1 manner

work lt:

One letter srmp!y stands lor another., In this .sample A Is
used for the three L's, X lor the two 0 s. ete Srn gle letters.
apostrophes, the len gth and formali?n of t he words are all
hints Eaeh day the eode letters are drfferent
CRYPTOQUOTES
LWTWKFRRN
VW
OXYRZH JKO
FKW
R WO O

(March 21-Aprlf 19)

&gt;=-1--.J.---4--1 TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

Is

AND WHO KNOWS WHAT

1, 1i75

You' ll come out on top
whenever you re 1n the dnver's
seal today Don I let others do
t hmgs you know you can d o
better yourself

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
NAW/THIB t&amp;

1

Today 4. Sunrise Semester 10

6 15-Folk bllerature 3

hole'

' And
. Pert ..

to

- --- - - - - - - - S EWING
MACH- INE

MAINTAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

6 · ~Columbus

.. .I'd do some·

OV ERLOOKS THE f&lt;IVt:R
'l story frame (recently
r enovnted) J l a rg e BR s, l 1/2
bath s, carpe ted , paneled,
hi e d NG for ced ai r h eat,
full
baseme nt,
2 ca r
garage, new s1 dmg O NLY

WEDNESDAY , OCTOBER!, 1975

6 ·25-F arm Report 13 .
6 3~New Zoo Revue 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8,
Farmllme 10. The Story 13
6 4()- 0unce of Prevenllon 10
6 45-Mornlng Reporl 3
6 55-Chuck White Reports 10. News 13.
7 ~Today 3.4,15. AM America 6,13, CBS News 8;
Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7 3~Schoolles 10
8 ~Lucy Show 6. Capt Kang~roo 8,10, Sesame St.
33
8 3~Blg Valley 6
9 ~A . M 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15 . Lucy Show 8: Mlke
Douglas 10, Morning wlth D J 13.
9 3~Nol For Women Only 3. One Life to llve 6:
Musical Ch~lrs 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
10·0()-(elebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Dinah 6, Glve·N·
Take 8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 · 3~Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15;, Price Is E lght 8,10
11 ~High Rollers 3.15; 1 Dream of Jeannie 4;
Gambit 8.10
Pass
Pass
Pass
11
·
3~Holtywood
Squ~res 3, 15 ; H~ppy D~ys 13,
Opemng load - Q t
Midday
4, love of Life 8, 10 , Sesame 51 20,33.
Thrs one is from Arkansas
Your partner doubles a three- 11 55-Take Kerr 8, Dan lmel ' s.world 10. 1
By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby
spade bid for takeout You hold · 12 oo-Magnlflcenl Marble Machine 3,JSr Sifowoffs 13;
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8,10.
Today's hand rs the same as 486~ •K962 tA10854 ...9
12 : 3~3 for the Money 3, 15 ; All My Children 6.13;
yesterday s except tt.~t Sou th What should you brd"
Search for Tomorrow 8,10
ha s the kmg-deuce mstead of Thrs Arkansas question rs a 12 ·45-Elec Co 33.
tough one We favor a btd of
the three-deuce of hearts
four hearts on the theory that 12 ·55-NBC News 3.15.
n&lt;ERf'5
lie strll responds one spade to even rf partner doesn 't hold 1 ~News 3; Ryan ' s Hope 6,13: Phil Donahue 8;
Al WA'f5 SO M ~
Young &amp; t he Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
PLACE WHERE YOU
hr s partner s club opemng. but four hearts we should hav
3~Days of Our lives 3,4,1 5: let's Make a Deal6, 13;
CAH BE HAPPY
wh~n ' "Nor th JUmps to three
·
e a
M' USEFJ!l IF
s th se e 5 that hish ace
play for that . contract Four
As the World Turns 8, 10.
d
YOU LOOt&lt; FOR L----- -11' ~ • •• spa es ou
r dramonds rs rnadequate, five 2 . ~$10.000 Pyramid 6, 13 ; Guiding Light 8, 10.
IT HARO ENOUGH,
of dramond s and kmg of ea ts dramonds an unwarranted over- 2 · 3~Doctors 3,4,15. Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13 ; Edge of
1 FKUERare extra hrgh cards m hrs brd
Night 8, 10.
hand The refore, m accorda nce
(Do yo u have a quest1on lor
3 · ~Another World 3,4,15, General Hospital 6,13;
wrth the rule of the ace and the the Jaco~ys? Wr~te Ask the
Match Game 8, 10; Kup' s Show 20
kmg,hersoneaceandonekmg Jacooys" care o l th1s
3 3Q-One Life to Live 13 ; Bewitched 6; Tattletales
a bove game and rs gomg to brd newspaper The most i n 8, 10.
a s lam . South could use rerest•ng questrons Will be
4 ~Mr. Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Black wood to check for aces. used w th1s colu mn and
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
but there IS no hurry about that wnrers wlfl rece1ve cop1es of
" Kung Fu " 10; Dinah 13
so South st mply starts s lam m- .JACOBY MODERN )__
4 3~Bew ltc hed 3; Mod Squad 6 ; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St 20.33. Get Smart 15.
5 ~Bonanza 3, Fami ly Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5 3~Adam · 12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Adam.J2 13
by THOMAS JOSEPH
6 OG-News 3,4,8,10,1 3,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Teaching Chllddren 33.
ACROSS
S lgruted
6 3~NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith
I C1ty in Oh10
again
6: Making I) Count 20; Bookbeat 33
S Pardon
6 "- go bragh"
7 ~Truth or Cons. 3, To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling
10 Composer
7 Blanc or
for Dollars 6, Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10;
KhachaSaint
Country Music Jubilee 13 ; Family Affair 15; Book
Beat 20, Know Your School 33.
tunan
Michel
7
.
3~LastoftheWIIdJ,
Name Tha1Tune4: Wild Wild
11 Eat
8 - of March
World
of
Animals
6,
Match Game PM 8: Evanlng
away
,
•9 - Husing
Yesterday's
ADiwer
Edition
wllh
Martin
Agronsky
20: The Judge 10; To
12 "Love for -" ' 13-0mrch
Tell the Truth 13, Episode Acllon 33.
13 Arranged in
feature
22 Anarchist
32 Ornery
s : ~Little House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; When Things
a row
(2 wds.)
color
fellow
Were Rotten 6,13. Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10;
H MtSers
15 Make
23 King beater 33 Pant
Philadelphia Folk Festival 20. Life &amp; the Structure
24 For each
k
of Hemoglobin 33
~------... 16 Milttary
out
34
command
17 Function as 26 Famous
GSpolden
8 ·3~That's My Mama 6,13, Man Builds. Man
35 o en
Quaker
Destroys 33
al!br .)
18 New (comb.
thinq about that (Cat
29
Do
the
Hans
rule
9·0G-Doctors
Hospital 3,4, 15 , Bare lla 6.13; Cannon
or goat
form )
Brinker
bit
preposition
8,
10,
Play
If
Again. Uncle Sam 20,33.
19 Afncan
mud
21 Place for
antelope
1"1-epare
36
_
the
line
10
O~Petrocelll
3,4,15 ; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; Kate
30
path
(confonned
'
McS
hane
8,
to
.
News 20; Say Brother 33
a sand .
20 A baseball
8
8
wedge
immortal
31 Bavarian
37 Alley
. ; : ~~~~~e ~:~~~ d~~:~~~~ ~~k~~~~:s ~~·13; Johnny
25 Dinner_
foil
21
river
prowler
Carson 3, 4,15 ; FBI 6; Banacek 8; Movie "Th•
table
Barkleys of Broadway" 10; Janak! 33
-' decoratton
12 3~Movle " The Girl Most Likely to ." 6
27 Pratse to
t ~News 13
[
the skres
1 30--Tomorrow 3,.4
28 Furmsh,
as aid

,_Q
-

1 00-- Tomorrow 3,.4, News 13

~~ ·l~~

Yovr Hetl Dealer
Thtrd St
R aetne, Ohto
Ph . '949-5961

.....,....

EW 3 bedrm home, bnck
rront. 1 ca r garage, modern
all e lec
1 m 1le out of
Chesler Call 949 A692 or 843
2667

FUEL OIL

21 30tc

9

9 16 1fc ~~~~

LOSE we1ght W1lh New Sh ape
Tablets and Hydre x Wate r
P1lls at
Dutton
Dru g
M tddl eport , and Ne lso n
Drug
9 30 31 p

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

I lv\A'I
Of?,. 1M'i t-m
BE: H~
~HO IS

--------- !. .

HOU SE for sale , reasonable
pr1ced, Phone 992 .7648

GUNS and Ammo O'!r fall
stock
tS
now
here
Comple t e 11ne of Rem
1nglon.
W 1n chester ,
lth1ca Savage Sl ug barrels
tn stock for most brand sh ot
g un s but 1n short supply
Get them whlle th ey l as t
Money short
lay a way
your fall h un ttng needs N ew
j::al l st ore hour s starttng
Sept 5, 10 a m to 9 p m ,
Monday Sa turday
V1llage
Gun Shopp e, 266 Mill St,
Phone 992 5177, t1n a n c 1ng
available
9 3 26tc

_ _ _ __ ___;___ __ ---, vesugatron by brddmg fourt.llRT II I Dl
30 dramonds
A K J3 2
When North accepts the slam
¥ A 97 6
I idea wrth hrs brd o l four hearts
t I
South wants to try for seven
A A K84
Hr s ftv e- heart brd s how s
II EST
EAST
second-round heart control and
A9
• 10 5
rs a sU! rt on the way to seven
• 10 8 5 J
• QJ4
No rth brds six dramonds to
• Q J 10 6
t K9732
show second-round dtamond
.. Q 9 53
A JIOS
control and an acceptance of
SOUTH
the rd ea of playmg at a grand
AAQ8 164
slam and that should be enough
¥ K2
lor South Hrs partner has opent A 85
ed
the brddmg. jumped , shown
.. 7 2
first-round heart and secondBoth vulnerable
round dramond control and m1 vrted seven
' He musl have the krng ·or
\\ en
Nort h Easl
South
spades and ace-kmg of clubs for
all
that bidding So South stmp1•
Pass
ly closes the brddmg at seven
Pass
3•
Pass
spades
Pass
4•
Pas~
Pass
6 t
Pass

BORN

Accountant
Phone 992 -6173

B EORM
home ,
lUSt
fm1shed , remode ltn g, Sa l em
St, Rut lan d Phone 742 -3615
after 4 p m or see Milo B
Hutch1son
9 23 tfc :;
M IOD ( EPORT ,
new tvUULD - yQu BELIEVE?
B u dd an all steel bulldmg at
d ecora t ed carpeted, gas
Pole Barn pnces? Golden
fo r ced a1r , 3 bedroom , 11!:;Gta nt A ll Stee l Butldtngs,
Sto ry cor n e r lot
s mgt e
Rt
4, Box 148, Waverly,
g arage, near sc hoo l and
Oh 10 Phone 9d7 2296
s hopptng ce nter , $17,500
7 24 lfc
992 7624
586 Ltncoln St
Middleport

3 B R hom e,

ba tt . nat gas furnace , m od
kitchen Full bosement N ea r
store $17,000
c hen

9-18 lfc

be droom

h o me
gar a g e

13 ACRES -

992 5858

1n good condtt1on Phone 992
2889 or see at 232 Sout h
F ourth St , Middleport
9 30 Al e

Stegler &amp; Monogram

For Sale

office supply service.

DOZER WORK Excavat 1n g
la nd c tear 1nQ, pond s and
ba se ments,
and
land
s c ap1nq
Pu llin S
Ex
c ava t 1ng , phone 992 2d78
8 26 30 1c

WIN AT BRIDGE
Extra king crowns grand slam

Collection systems,

o l der

WE DO aluminum
S lutt~y ,
gut t er
work ,
rooftng ,
pane l 1ng , pa1nling , plum
btng , We fix the whole
house At Tromm . 742 5081
9 24 tf c

r e novated
b ase m e nt.

OUT HERS!

S1 25 EACH

For Sale

2FAMI LY -

OF ANYTHIIoJG

BOOKKEEPING,
Tax Advisory Service,

and

12 00 Btll s - 53.25 each.
B 00 Gold cotns X F cond
$88 00
CALL 742-3651
RuTland - Roger W ams l e y

•

9 11 l mo

SILVER CERTIFICATES

9·1-1 mo

Sesame Sf. 20.33, Gel Smart 15
5 OG-Bonaqza :t; Family Alfalr 8, Star Trek 15
S 3~Adam 12 4; News 6 , Beve rly Hillbillies 8, Elec .
Co 20.33 . Anllques 20; Jean Shepherd's America
33
7 31l'-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal wllh 11 6,
$25,000 Pyramid 8, Evening Ed ition with Martin
Ag ronsky 20, To Tell the Truth 13. Pr ice Is Righi
_ 10. Wal ly ' s Workshop 15; Fam ily Thealre 33

POOR wA!7H: .. . He; PROBABLY
..JUSf DREAMED HS 5AW 50ME
W~IRD CRifTER AT THE WINDOw!

HMM ,.. l&lt;JO 515l&lt;J

Ph. 742·5081

older

BUFF A L 0 N I C K E L S S7 .00
A ROLL

Dan's Shoe Repair

free Estimates
AI Tromm

and

WHEAT BACK PENNIES
85A ROLL

Help Wanted

APPOINTMENT
Case No 21626
Estate of Wtlbur La wr e nce SOMEO NE to wash ou t s •de o f
sun porch and Wi ndows Al~n
M old C'Il De ce a sed
do fa l l c l ea n1n g R ef erences
Not1 c e 1S h er e by g1ven thnt
1t;l7 3 MOB I LE Home , 12 x 70,
r equ1red
P hon e 992 2677
Robe rt Molden o f Rout e 1
lolal etectr 1c Ca ll co ll ec t
9 28 41C
Dext er Oh10 has be en duly
after 6 p m Phon e (6 14) 6'f5
a p po1n t ed f'... d rn mt slra tor of
.J lSl
SOMI::lJ N r:. to 11ve tn lor room
I h e E stat e o f Wilbu r L awren ce
9 28 6t c
and board and sma ll sa lary
M olde n
d ec ea sed . late of
to help tak e care of elde rly
l;!oute
R u lland County
lady r eferences requ 1red ONE 1969 Cor 11 rn un 1ty Homes ,
Oh 10
(3 bedrm ) all e l ec tr 1c
Phone 992 3927
C r&gt;d• ' or s ar e r equ1r ed to
mobile home a nd 1 acre lot
9 30 Stc
lolf' •t1e1r c l a 1m s wt th sa 1d
ReaOy to l tve 1n
Pnce
' •ciuc1 ary wtf h1n l o ur mont h s
$9 , 500
2
m d es
fr om
Da te d t h ts
18th
da y o f COU P L E Wtlnour previOUS
Rutland Ca n be seen by
bu s 1n e ss cx.pe r 1e nc e, b ut
'J cp'Pm tJer 19 75
appt
b y call1ng 992 3537
M ann1ng D W eb st er
w1 l l tng to work a n d learn
afterSpm
J udg e
t og e ther
p l easant
9 23 tf c
pr o t 1t ab l e work Co nta c t
n n JO( \ Ol7 3t c
Am way D 1slr ,bu t ors Phone
1973. RICHARDSON mob1le
1 (614) 989 23 5 3 for 1n
home, ~ota l e l ec
2 full
ORDIN ANCE NO 103575
ba th s, 3 bedrms, 14 x 70,
9 29 51c
A n Or dtnance fo Oedtcate the
fully lurn ts hed , $7,000 215
M1 ddt e port Levy as Walnut
As h St, or see Ke1 lh Woods
Str eet

and older

- - - - FOR SALE-

Steel Toe Safety Shoes

REMINGTON , 1 100 auto ,
new 12 or 20 ga $172 50
Ftfe 5, Middleport , Oh10
9 30 36tc

6 F A MILY Y ard Sa l e Thurs
da y
tt-1 r o ug t1 Saturday
a n t 1qu es too l s, e t c , d1shes TRA ILER spac e for r ent Al l
r T H ACA- Mod;!J7 ~~~-P~ ;ew
a von s c loth1ng and rT'tSC
12 or 20 ga $129 95 , Fifes ,
Ui&lt;lll 1eS Phon e 992 55 35
3 1 , mile s off Rt l by pass ,
9 16 t f c
M i ddleport, Oh 10
L ead1ng Creek Road From
9 25 61 c
Rut l and turn a t Depot St
~COU
Nl
I-CY
M
Ob1l
f'
HomP
Watc h f or SIQO S II r a tn , Will
- r'ork f-Ct 11 te n 11o iiC' S no rt h
b e held follow1ng
week
ol Pon1 c r o y Lil rq c l o ' s w tfh WHOLESALE shot she ll s
Phone l.J'J i 10H
d ee r slugs , 22 lo ng r1fl e , 22
r oncre 1L' p.1t 1o9" Si d ewalk s
9 30 3t c
maQ
bear and Jenn 1ngs
r u nn e r ~
cl ll CI ott s tr e et
bows 40 pet off It S! F 1fe's ,
poHh 1/1 (1 r'l l0 r1 C 99,' / II "'
1
CA RPORT Sal e, Ra1n or
Middleport, Oh 10
17 3 1 ttc
shme , F r1day , O c t 3, 9 am
9 25 6tc
l 1ll 5 p m 9 t8 South Th1rd , 11\ NO I R O OM furn1 shed and
Middleport
In f a n ts , gtr l s
TWO BLACK POODLES . 1
rmi L1r n1 Sh ed
ilpartm e n! s
ilnd adult s c loth1ng , avons ,
male and 1 f emale AK C
Ptl o n e 99 ? s !3 1
furntture , m ISC
R eg 1ste r ed
Conn trumpet,
I 17 ll C
1 year o l d Ltke new Sea r 's
9 28 )!p
Ted Wtlltamson 's 7 1 &lt; h p
out boa rd motor , Sear's amp
G A RA G E Sale 1 m lie ou t 1A3,
for e l ec glJilar , 3 hookups
Go cart tools an d guns , B It
Phone (304) 882 3205
tru c k topper and other m 1sc
9 25 6t c
W e dnesday, Thursday and
Fr tday Phone 992 5146
COM PLETE D tsp 20 h ead of
9 30 2tc
ho rses,
R egt s tered
an d
MASONIC TEMPLE
g
rad
e,
show
dnd
pleasure
BUILDING
HUGE Yard Sa l e O c t
1
Phone (614) JSB 099 1 o r 367
POMEROY, OHIO
through ll, 9 to 6, Sta t e Rt
748 1
55d l 11 m1les from Ch eS hir e
CONTACT .
9 2d 6tC
01shes. dep r ess 1on g l ass ,
DALE E SMITH al 992 195.4 FERGUSON tractor w1th
new and used c l o fh es, g1rl's
5329
c lothes , rugs d rap es , baby
accessor1es Phone 843 756 1
or
92461C
c lothes
Someth rng
tor
everyo ne
THOMAS C EDWARDS at
9 28 6tc
TRAVEL TRAILER
Must
992 2052
sel l
1976 ,
28
ft
sel f
or
contam ed , prtv ate bedroom ,
TED REED JR . al 992-2052
fa cto ry
a1r ,
deluxe
2 FAMILY Yard Sale , Fr tday
throughout,
Will
take
and Saturday, Oc t 3 a nd 4
smaller trailer on trade
mObile home
Sew1ng mach1ne , ra d10. 2 BEDRM
Mrs D ev an e, H end erson
furniture , childre n and adu lt
Contact Albert Hill Phone
Trailer
Park,
Shad l e
949 2261
clot h es, and a t ot of m1sc
Br1dge
,
Hender
so
n
,
W
Va
394 Beech St , M tddleporL
9 26 61 c
9 30 6tc
Oh10
9 28 6tc NEW
V I L L AGE
Manor
EXTRA good wh1te Leghorn s
Apartments m Middl epor t 1
Lay1ng good
75c eac h
YARD Sa l e, Monday thru
b edro o rn apts from $104 p l us
F reeland N orr1s. Phone 949
Satu r day from
10 !til 5
elec Ca ll 992 3273 or see
3868
C l ot he s, dtshes, toy s books
Mrs
Keat ley , Apt
101.
-....._
9 30 61c
and m 1SC II e ms
Prtced
R 1vers1de Apa rtm ents
cheap Old Rt 33 turn at
8 28-26fp
ANTIQUE W dlt am and Mary
Hemlock Gr ove, or Pi3 SS
stenc1led
door.
ch tna
parks
on
n ew
h1gh
cab 1ne t Phon e 992 71A5
way
and
turn
r 1ght TRAILER space for re nt m
9 30 21 c
M rddle port Phone 992 5434
on R 1 68 1 above Darwm
8 29 26tc
5 1gn
Watch for s •g ns
FA RMALL Super A tractor, 50
James Cunn 1ngham
mode l . St o kerma tt c stove,
9 28 )lp t-'~1\1,._.,1'-- ~ .•~ t'lln9 room for
$150. etec Kenmore kttchen
any orqan1zat ton phone 99 7
st ove . $50 , Yardman garden
39 n
3 11 tic
!rae
5 h p
$150 , All

TO BUY

. 7:00-Changed Lives 5
7 : 3~Burke's Law star r ing Gene Berry 5.
8 · ~Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Dys 6, 13; Good Times
8.1 0. Hocking Volley Bluegrass 20; Graveyard
of the Gulf 33
B 3~Day llme Guest Joel Grey 5; Welcome Back,,
K~tfer 6, 13 . Joe &amp; Sons8, 10 ; Consumer Survival Kit
20.33
9 ;~ Pollce Story 3,4,15 , Rookies 6,13; Switch 8,10;
Ascent of Man 20. , 33
9 . 3~Zane Grey Theatre 5
10 ~Public Polley Forum Topic . Freedom of the
Press 5. Joe Forrester 3,4, 15; Marcus Wlby, M.D.
6.13; Beacon Hill 8.10, Ne ws 20. Interface 33.
10 3~ Woman 20,33
11 DO--News 3,4,6.8, 10,13,1 s. ABC News 33.
11 3~Jo hnn y Carson 3,4,15, Wide World Mystery 13;
FBI 6; Mov ie " Marlowe " 8, Movie "Adventure"
10. Janak \ 33
12 3~Wide World Mystery 6 .

Movte " Oh , Men' Oh , Women•" 10 ; Dinah 13
4 3~Bew•lc h ed 3, Mod Squad 6; Partndge Family 8,

We Paint Houses
We Paint Barns
We Paint Roofs
We Paint Anything

Pomeroy

~92 · 2114

U.S. COINS

Jobber In

I J , OUO
Ph o ne 99'1 77 2G

11/1 U :::&gt; 1/\ N L&gt;

m 1les $2,600
or 99 '1 JSB9

Nathan Btggs
Radtator Spectalt s t _

Dan's Shoe Repair

POMEROY, OHIO
•&lt;.~

From the larg est Tru c k or
Bu lldoze r R adtator to
e
~ !Ja llest Heater Core

lARRY LAVENDER
.

52095

1

C .O.R O O F TH A NK S

ATTENTION

?9 6 1C

fi.WI\ Y
7 pupp1 es f: f, :::, H prl1rj t or a ll rnak cs and
B e egl e
an_d__ pa rt
rn od e ls o'f mob il e ho mes
l\ll 1f t1rk Ph onr&gt; 9 &lt;~ 9 sTn
Pnon e art: a c ode 6 1 1 U l
'1 74 6t c
95 l I
t I J II C
10 (.~ IVE A oJVt... Y to a good
hOme no el.' pupp 1es
Phon e
99 7 ~ 30 7
9 30 Jtc
N E WL Y turn1 shed 'l bedrm
~ R EE ":.1 11 ens to a go od hom e
apl
modern kil chen, wall
lo n q h a 1r ed worm ed , and
to wall c arp e t Adult s only
h en t t h y Phon e 742.4406
n o c hild r en or pet s Phon e
9 30 61p
9 .:1 9 3783
9 28 6t c

roa r

STORM
WINOOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING-SOFF IT T
GUTTERS AWNING!

350 V 8 automat1 c tr a ns , power stPertng and brak es .
dark green f 1n1 sh. v1ny l roof, saddle b ucket seal s,
con sol e, rad1o , l 1k e new w w ftrP&lt;;

10 GIV [

I

'.
"

by
,1ppt t o ld s Beauty Sn l eon
Jo h n '.t
'1,r ra c u se a c r oss
l rorn :..&lt;h oo l l ot Phon e 99 7
tl t9
w, I Petlurf' M f' rlr

I

1 I iJ

f (

r
I 1 •, 1 '
"Ill&lt;\'

I 1

I

\!I ll

f
I
I
H
t&gt; ll L /l. T I 0 N

&gt;

)

r

I I '

'"
I I I'

!

1970 CHEV CAMARO

e v c nH1 9~

TR A IN E D
B ea g l es
/\l'iO p up s fr om 5 w ee k s t o 5
mon th s Ph one 7tJ2 Je 10 or
.t f l l r Oc t J 7.1 2 2521
9 26 61 p

1\ D S

Blown tnlo Walls &amp; Afftc s

$1850

1972 COMET 2 OR

.. r::t t

IN t ORM A l iO N
O ffiOL I N ES

Blown
ln s ulatton Services

6 c yl sld tra ns ra d to l1ke new w w t1r es blue fln1 sh
nt ce cil't wdh good f'COnomy

Pel$

JND I H\VI I( .Ill
\Vf1N I

r• r

I r lrl .-ly

.1n rl

FREE ESTIMATES

S5298

Cp e, les s than 7 000 miles de l uxe belts ftnf gla ss, atr
con d lfton ed . de l uxe bumper s and guard s. r e mot e LH &amp;
R H no1rr or , dOO AB 81 engtne, AM r adt o and tape a u x
l 1gh l 1ng, ca m forfllf w h ee l L1ke newiind a r eal shar p te

R cq
\ 20
r&gt;e r m .l n Pnt
Pe rf ec t
Tou ch ' &lt;;IS,
R eg
'!. 17 50
Pe r rn n ne nt Z o t o s , 'li l 7 .SO
O• an t LI:' Wt S has tOt n e d o ur
'&gt; ! .&gt;It '-. he~p ec t cll t t e s 1n b low
ruts
il nd
h t qh
!a s hton
s tvttn(j J o p e rt~l o r ".
D tan e
L e w1 s K &lt;Jr en L v o n s
lola
Domcwood O p e n TI1Ur s day

9

/~orlll/llll ol,

1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

PEC I /\ L S

WH I N N Y

&lt;I 1

Not tee
'

ouAuTY· Moto.r Co._

98"! \ I I H

'-OL SO'.'ETIME"::J

E.

3

I Jl

--::-

Business Services

TUESDAY, )EPTEMBER 30, 1975
3 3Q-One Llle to Lrve 13, Bewitched 6, Tattletales
8, 10. Romagno!IS' Table 20
4 ~ Mr . Cartoon 3; Merv Grrffln 4, Somerset 15.
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33,

llF

9 2B 3t c

H-4

m .-,w:_L

-

A DOPE-RING APPARATUS
\

Pomeroy

2 SIGNS

1 fi LL ::, pec ta ls t h r u Oc t 18
Ju l •e's
Be auty
Shop
C IH'S' P r O h 10 Ph o n E" ( 61d )

'

1• ... .:., T

I

W IL L C A RE for e l d ee r l y
t e m o3l e pat1 e nt 1n my ho m e
Pho n e ( 614 1 667 340 2
9 25 src

.!f- Tbe,.._~ily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomerov, 0 .. Tuesdav. Sept. 30, 197~

_DICit TJ:\1\CY

ZFQTHWKO
HJ

XDFTXW

TWYKJOWO.

-DWTKN
AJJKW
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: WHEN A THING IS FUNNY,
SEARCH IT FOR A HIDDEN TRUTH.- G. BERNARD SHAW

•

=Your

LEO (July 23-~ug. 22) Ideas ( hel plul
thai you II conceive today Will

be both IOQICBI and prom iSif"lQ ,
though you'll view thmgs on a

very grand scale Don 't lei thell
stze scare you

•

. VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You'll do very wet l tn bustness
affa1rs today 1f you let the other
guy make the overtures Play a

lillie hard to gel
LIBRA (Sepl . 23-0ct. 23)
Listen and evaluate carefully
mforma11on passed on to you

LOWEE'l'l--6

•.

B.

I rt hday

Oct. 1, 1175
Th ts comtng year you will establtsh a la sttng and beneficial
retat1onshtp wtth one oldet
than you both In age and expenance Th i s alltance will
have mulual advan tages
t NEWSPAPER ENn RPR lS E ASSN I

�~

I

-

10 - The Da ily Senlinel, Middleport-Pomer oy, 0 , Tu esday , Sept :10. 1'17/i

Results Use The Seutinei Classifieds
Auto Sales

Notice

r\.

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t h r u Oct ober

~VITH

THE

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'\ o \-1. lt rrnnK e the ('lrd cd letters
to fo rm th t.• t-:urpn~e answu, a.!!
~ugl{e~ h·d hy the ab ove- cartoon

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GET

r; A Ll.! P OLIS, OHIO,
Sept. 27 . 19;5

c ,l

Sale&gt; Report of
Ohio Vallrv Ll\ cstork l'o
STOCK r .H I A TT l F
STt. r:Hs - l 50 to :100 lbs 1i
to 27 50 , :wo to 400 lbs !G 50 to
29 75, 400 to 500 lbs 20 to ol
500 to 1:00 lbs. 20 to .11 50 , 600
to 700 lbs 22 to 'IS; 700 lbs . and
Over 22 to 18 50
HEIF' E R CA LVES - 250 to
.1110 lbs 15 to 21 :100 to 400 lbs .
15 to 2:1 50 , 400 to 500 lbs !5to
25, 500 to GOO lbs 17 to 28.50 :
600 to 700 lbs . 19 to 2 ~1 · 700 lbs
and Ove r 19 to :n
STOCK f OW S &amp; R U LI~~
1By The Hea&lt;l l --S tock Cow s
100 to 125. Stoc k Cows a nd
Calves 115 to 200 : Stock Rulls
90 to 175; Ba by Ca lves 5 lo Ill :
1By Th e Pound) - Canner s .t
Cullers Co ws 1:1 to 111 ,
Holste rn Cows 17 50 to 2.1,
Commel'ctal Bull s 11,000 lbs
and over 1 20 to 24.15.
VEAL CALVES - Tops no
lbs to 250 55 to 58, Medrwn
200 lbs to .100 38 to 48, Culls 18
to 27
SHOATS - 20 to ~4 .

The Almanac
By United
Pr e s s
Inlern atrun al
Today rs T u e sda ~ . Sept. :lO,
the 27:1rd dayo! 1975 wtlh 92 to
!oJiow
The moon rs appr oaching
tls new ph ase
The m or nin g s tar s ar e
Venus, Satw n, Maro and
Juprter
The evemn g st ar IS Me rcur y
Those born on lhts date ar e
under the sr gn of l 1br a

Amencan mdust1 H.ih!-5t Wilham Wngley J r was bmr1
Sept 10. 18b1 Th1s also rs
actr ess J){&gt;bor.h Kerr s 54 th
brrthda)
On thrs da\ m h~&lt; t o r y
In

1H4fi ,

a

Ch a r le :-;t o ~ n .

(]Pnllsl

1n

\ic~s~

, extr acted a tMth for th • f1rst
orne \\l lh t!i
d ld
of
an est hesia - etiH'J
ln 19:18, Gem '" . fr ance
Bntrun a nd !tal) 11 1Pl m

MWlich for a

f'Onfei en C'e ,

after whH h Bn lrsh Prrme
Mmr st cr :-le·. li lt· ('h amberlam prom 1setl pe are tn
our tune" That ' peace ' '
last ed 337 da ys befor e World
War II started
In 1972, Pr esrdent Rrchard
NIXon srgned a congressronal
resolutwn approvmg an rn tenm Sovre t-Ame n can of fensive arms a greement.
In
1974 ,
P ort uga l' s
President Antomo de Spmola
unexp ect ed ly r e sr g ned ,
warnrng tha t the country was
heading toward ch aos Also
that da y, the U. S Senate
voted to cut off a rd to Turkey
because of tls invasion of
Cyprus.

..

A thought for the day :
American playwright Louis
Kaufman Anspacher sard,
'"Marriage is that relatwn
between man and woman rn
which the independence is
equal,
t he
dep e ndence
mutual, and \he obligat iop

·reciprocal ."

VO'

101 '•\.1 vro)td 1T1 1n 1rn um
'"d' ( t o1 \\u r rJ J!..
BLIN D A DS
r 1 1 11 1 Otlc! l 7lc Cl1tl l ll (' per
: ct vr• t t J', • Plf'n t
OFFI CE HOUR S
A '1) 1 111 ' O; 00 fJ I l l !J ld y
1)
1 Ill
•o 12 00 Noon

Market Report

lol d c) y

Notice
NF 1J

Oil
Or
MIN K
p t oduct~ new c il t a l ogs Get
on 011 r q row, nq c us tom er
11s t Or n t a v b c you woul d
!1kc to 1~1 K1 • or (l ers ? Phon e
H e len 1 l:l t own
992 5 11 3
KOSCOT
I n d e p e nd en t
t;l 71 t tc

P I A N O lun1 nq L ,l nL' D iln !e l s
P hone 'WI 208 2
8 28 26tp

Walnuts Are Cash!
Start 1ng October 1 we
a r e b uy tng
B lack
Wal n uts at market
or1c e
Brtng your
Blac k Walnut s to

I
I

I_

Excelsior• Salt

Works, Inc.
Box 267
Po m eroy, Oh 1o

NOTICE OF

APPOI N TMENT
Ca:o e No 216 25
E s t a t e of
Cl~ra
R ee s
Dec e as ed
N o t 1c e 1S h ere by gtven that
Jose ph W Co ok of Pom eroy ,
Me 1g s Coun t y Oh1o, ha s been
du ly ap pomted A dmtnls~rator
o f t he E s t a t e at C 'ara Ree s.
dPcease d , lat e of Pomeroy ,
M e1g s Co unty O h 10
Cred itors ar e reQU ir ed to
hi e the1 r c latm s wtth sa 1d
ltd uc 1arv w1th 1n to ur months
Da ted Th1 s
17th
d~y
of
Se p tem b er 1975
M a n n1n11 D W ebste r
J udge
C9 l 23 30 (lO J 7, 3tc

NOT·ICE OF

POMEROY
·MOTOR
OPEN EVES. 8:0L

r.n

wanted

For Rent

Yard Sale

ll

y ~~ ,... .... ""' "' '-'S 8? 9 Soutt1 Thtrd

t've
M1d dl epo rt
t h ruur./11 J

Oct

I

RO OM hous e double c a r
4arag e, 1n Pom eroy
For
1nlormat 1on
c all 992 250 2
9 28 3tc

9 30 3t c
Yt.. RD Sa l es v, &lt;&gt; dnc sday from
9 a no till 'i p r'l1 and Thurs
day F nday and Saturday
fr om 9 1ill 9 21 ' m d ns east
ou t of Ches t er Walch S1gns
o n 248
9 30 4tp
YA RD Sa l e'i ~7 1 L aure l St ,
M1 ddlepor t 10 1111 5 Wed
nes day ,
T hu r s day
and
F r 1day
9 30 J tc

7 RM 1 story hou se 1n M1d
d l eport , furn1shed
Phone
(3Q,j \ 675 1831
9 25 6tc
TRAILER tot , good toc at1on,
close to schoo l bus ga s.
water
e l ec
Availabl e 1n
Middl epor t Phone 99 2 2866
9 24 6t c
~f--URNI S HE D

ap a rtment.
adult s only '" M1dd l eport
Ph one 992 387.!
3 75 lf c

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. _

~

Syracuse. Ohto

Ph 992 -3993

Ph

4 10 1 mo

318N 2nd
II

BOu

For Sale

1974 YAMAH A 360 MX , ex
cellenl condil1on , $800 Also .
8 channel Haii1Cratter C B
rad10.
$50
James
L
Chadwell Rt 1 Reedsvill e,
'Ohto 45772
9 25 5t c

I~

KNAPPSfiOES
SHEBOYGAN

197 5 CUl L A SS Supr e m e, 2 dr
p s
p b , s t ereo tap e a c
Pho n e 992 38 13
9 30 6t c

FUEL OI L F urna c e c om pl ete
w1th p1p es and re g 1:&lt;. tcr s
Kenmor e g as rang e and
dtshwash er
1918 Model T
Ford tru c k Phon e ( 6111 ) 985
A 118
9 75 6t c

M•ddl e port . 0

TEXAS WESTERN

9 30 3tc

1972 GMC 11 ton p1 c kup tru c k
sharp and 1n good c on d l11o n
Pnce $2 .000 or trad e for c ar
of eQual valu e P hon e 99 2
791 2,
Ste v f'
Bu rt o n
Pom eroy
9 30 61 p

WANTED
WILL PAY
.t: o •u t , • .., ..
dtmes
65 f or 1964
uters
0 for 196d
h
ves
$) 40 for 1935
do ll ar 'it

OFFICE SPACE
FOR RENT

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

~-,___

_____ _____ _

TWO H 78 x 14 Good ye ar Steel
b e lted snow t1re s Contact
Al b ert Hill at 949 2261
9 26 6tc
ONE SMITH and W ess on 44
Magnum. colo r blue , J mch
burre l , brand new, st1 ll 1n
box Call 992 3889
9 28 3tc

Real Estate for Sale

Mobile Homes for Sale

Employment Wanted

Be
o rd a1 n e d by the CA RPEN T RY
panel1ng ,
Co un c11 o f th e V1 1t age of
floormg and ce1hng Phone
V\1dOic port as fo l lows
99 2 2759
'"'c
I
Th a t the R1ver
9 17 26tc
l dnd1 n g fro m t h e ea s t er l y end
o f W al nut St re e t t o the low
Plumbmg,
wa!er rnarko f t h e OhtO R1ver , R'E M ODELING ,
h e.J t mq an d all types of
t1e an d 11 1S he r e by dedtcated
ge ne ral
repn1r
Wo r k
as a pub l c s trPe t , to be known
~ uarant ee d
20 years ex-'
as W a l nut St re et
p er1 enc e
Phon e 99 2 2409
Sec II BE I T FUR T HER
5 1 tfr;.
O RD A IN ED that t he r 1ver
l a ndm g ex te nd tng from the
ea s t e r l y end o f Coal Street t o
the 1U n CI 10 n wdh Wa ln u t
Wa~ted
St r"eet be and 11 tS hereby
d ed1 c a t ed as a pu bl i C street, to 1968 OR LATER rlio d e l VW
b e known as Co al Stree t
motor tn good s hape Earl
Sec Ill BE I T F URTHER
Ar1x phone 742 5867
O R DAI N ED t hat th1S Or
9 30 Jfc
d 1nan c e 1S d ecl ared to be an
Em e r q e ncy
a nd
il
I S, U S ED electriC typewriter
t he r efo r e orde r ed that the
Phone 949 4141. after 6 p m
ru l es
be
d is po s ed
w1th
30 Jtc
9 __.._
p r ov1 dtnQ 1t r ece1ves an af
f l rmi:ltJve vote o f two lh !rds of
the mem ber s o f Co unctt and SHtEEP su ppl ieS wanted
Phone 992 5547
shall ta k e ef f e c t at th e earl test
9 28 6tc
da l e all ow ed by l aw
Sec
IV
T h ts Ord1na n ce
Sh all t ake eff ec t and be tn ¢'LD turn1tu r e . 1ce boxes.'
for c e from and after Sep ' b rass beds , or comp l e te
te m ber 10, 197 5
hous eho ld s
Write M
D-:"'i
P ass ed th e lOth day of
~~ :~ erCal~ ~ ;· ~om e roy , ,
Sep t ember 1975
10-7 74
Marvtnl Kell 1
Pr es 1d ent of Council 1968 OR lat er n1oce t vw motor
A tt es1 Gen e Grat e
1n good shape Earl A n x,
Clerk
phone 742 5867
9 29 Jtc
(9 ) 23 30, 2tc

To Buy

____________

92 76

992 33 12

9 30 3tc
19 73 V IN DALE trailer and lot
loca ted tn T upper s Pla1ns,
Ohto Phone (6 14) 667 3817

9 30 12tc

USED CH"AIN saws, 498
Locust St , Mtdd l eport
Phone 992 3092
9 18 26tc
1971 K AWA SA KI 500 Call 247

2813

9 24 6tp
GREE N beans , ptck you , uw11
Andrew Cross. L etart Falls,
Ohto Phone 247 2852
9 28 61c
SAVE SAVE SAVE
Se ll 1ng out our stoc k of gu ns ,
bow s and ammo All guns
wdl be sold At 10 percen t
above
whol esa l e
,plus
shtppmg 870 Rem 1ngtons ,
Sl40 sa te wtll las t till a ll
guns are gone lnd1an J oe ' s
Spor ts and CB's, 308 Page
St , Mtddleport
9-28 !Ole

- ::::n.=- - - - - - - - - - -- '

1-N DA'ST 2J Channe l C1t1zen 's
Band tran sce i ver
am fm
mpx rad10 , B t ra ck s t ereo
Ca l l 992 3965
9 4 tfc

and

older

LARRY WHOBREY,

S EPT I C lf•NKS c l eane d
Modern Suntlatton 992 39 5~
or 99 2 7349
9 18 tfc

&lt;

2 ba th s, nat ~a s furnace a nd

IF YO U are tnlerested 1n
butldmg a new home or
havrn g your presen t home
remodeled , contact Roush
Co nstructton 992 7583, Greg
Roush
9 17 12tc

larg e lot $11,000
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms 1' '

1/vrr::. ·-"-e"- '""L'L.:: tn mobile
home fur nace r e pa1r Phone

Br~ck h omew•th

baths, hot w - 'er heat, garage
and n 1ce v1ew S/5,000

RAC INE

3

work shop $13 .500
RIVER COTTAGE

Dry
&amp;

3

bedrooms
drilled w e ll, 011
furna c e o n 124 A sk t ng $ 14,000
4

B R hom e

mod ba th , furn ace, e nc losed
porc h base ment and excellent
v 1ew $30,000

POME ROY -

3 B R hom e,

ba th , famtly r oom, Nat gas •
and city water for only $8,500

RA CI NE - 3 B Rhome. mod .
kit
d1n mg , nat gas fur nace
and l evel lot $19,000 or good
offer

POMEROY ·

5 BEDROOMS -

Mod

k1t

2

baths. one mod ,
JOO m
stu dy
f1rep races, gas furnace and 2

s~ mg

lots Now $27,000
LOTS -

Real Estate for Sale
3

I n a l l school d1stnct s

SISOO up
NEWLISTING - 2B R home
w 1th coral bath f 1xtur es, l1 k e
new
N G
furnace
Full
basement f or on l y SS,OOO

WORK
HA R D,
INV EST
WISELY , WILL MAKE YOU
WEALTHY

HOUSE . 51 ''1 act ~s tn t-'Ortlana

Call !6141 864 1876. alter 5

pm

9 24 12tc

5

RM
HOU SE , good lot.
natural gas furnace , carpet
and paneling
Phone 742
3964

9 30 61p

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

JO
ACRE
Fa rm ,
ap
prox 1matety 17 acres far
mtng ground Locate d one
mile back of Philip Sporn
Plant On blacktopped road
Ca l l ( 304 l 882 -2297 after S p .

m

9 25 6t c

HOUSE fo r sale, 128 Leure l
St, Pomeroy. Idea l for
couple or coup le with 1
ch d d
Large ba c k yard,
garden plot Wtll sell par
t 1ally furn iShe d , or wtlhout
One outbudd1ng on tot For
further mtormat 1on, call
992 3868
9 28 6tc

9 28 52tc

9 24 12tp

Heating Stoves
All Sizes on hand , pnces
start at $324 69
- 1 Wood Burmng Stove

CLIP THIS AD and bnng &lt;f
In for $ IS 00 di SCOunt

POMEROY LANDMARK
·-~ack W. Carsey, Mgc.
Aiill Phone 992-2181
USED J M g ra vtty bed , S275, A
New Idea No .7 corn p1ckers ,
S650
$675 , 3 g rav 1ty beds
and wagon s, $475 ea , Ford 9
N tractor $995, 3 corn
elevators $ 110
$140 5195,
l1me spreader, $150, New 4
ft and 5 ft
3 pi rotary
mower S365 5385 N ew draw
bars . $16 ea Ermet Lucken ,
Washmgton St. Albany ,
Oh to Phon e 698 ·3032 or 698
7881
9 ~8 Jtc

t:ALLlklb'?

Racine Plumbing
,,

&amp; Heating
Emergency
949-2211 or 992 -5700
Complete atr condttt0n1ng
sa l es and sennce . heating ,
plumbtng, roo f t ng and
genera l sheet metal work
Free Esttmates
9 1A 1 mo
' EXC AVAT t&gt;NG .
backhoe ,
dozer and d1tcher
Gas ,
e l ectr t c and water l1ne
bu nal . basemen t s, tooter s,
se pt1 c sys t ems and brush
cleanmg Wtll haul ttll d1rt ,
top so1 L sand and graveL
11mestonefor drtvewavs and
r o ads
Phone Charles R
Hatfteld , Bac khoe Se r vice.
Rt 1. Rutland , Oh10. 742

6092

7 11 90tc

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

~X L AVA ttN u, uozer , loader
and ba c khoe work. sepftc
ta nk s
1nstal led,
dump.
t r uc k s and lo boy s for h1re ,
w tll haul fill d1rt t op soil ,
ltmestone and gravel., Call
Bob or Roger Jeff ers, day
phone 992 7089 ntght phone
992 3525 or 992 ~232
2 11 tf c

l~l t A

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE
~ITTLE

I

ORPHA.K A.KKIE-OFF WITH THE OLD;

__

~\..

... ,lll'lt ..... ~·

ALLEY OOP
IT I..OOK5 Ll KC DOC PLIT
US ClOWN IN Tl·tlo 1~IG\-IT

..--..--

PLAO:,M~.

LONLRETE

del t.V ered r1 g ht to your
prorect Fast and easy Free
est1 mates P hon e 992 328 4,
Goeglem Ready M1x Co,
Mtddle port. Oh10.
6 30 ttC

PORTABLE
IUI Lt: •
RENT AL
Construcl t OI
Ou t door events
Phon
Ga ll i pOli S,
446 A78 i
Russell s Plum bt n g and
H eah ng
a 19 t f c

- - ----.- -

WILL TRIM or cur trees and
shrubbery . Phone 949 322 1
or 742 4441
9 7 24t c

__ ___________

-

~ ...
'ELWOOD aOWE RS REPAIR
'

Swee pers , toasters, tron !:.,
all sma ll appltanc es Lawn
mower , next to State Htgh
way Garage on Route 7·'1
Phone 985 3825
•
A 16tfc

(lASOLJNE AU.EY

l know

You
brouqht
the
moneu

~tke

thi

~ou

518 .500
WALK TO SHOP - Older 2
s t ory frame
( in good
condl tton) 3 BRs, 2 bath s,
dl ntng
R, utt11ty · R. ,

to save

stora ge bldg
BELOW
MARKET AT $8,300
5 MILE OUT - NEW 2 BR
bath,
carpeted,
full

repair
tm.J
screen,
Slim?

-

base m e nt
with
l ovely
recreat•on R, ca rp or t &amp;
storage l acre $22,500 .

Remoj

today through persons you
trust
Someth ing profitabl e
cou ld result

Italy
30 Choos in g
( 2 wds.)
-~-..,....=~=~~-:-~~=,.-:-~==-:-:--:-:---:-:7:~:-:"~---37 Nonchalant
SUMPTH
38 Itallan J'lVer
!!
39 Seaman's

RepC11rs , serv1ce, all makes
992 228A The Fpbnct Shop
Pomeroy AuthoHzed Smge1
Sa t es and Se rv 1ce
Wt
sha rp en SC ISSOrS
3 29 It\

MUCH
WORSE

BACK HOE for rent, hour or
contract
Reg
or
ex
cavating type Sepl/c ta nks
mstalled Bill Pu l!ms Phone
992 2478
8 27 tf c

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Ncw. 22)

For Wedneaday, Oct.

''cease 1 ''

f;+--Jf-+-f-+--f ARIES

40 Glut
41 Succmct
42 Trudge
DOWN
24
Heu&lt;s 1 Colleen
NON
2 Mideast
ElAPSE
country
( var . )
3 Neighbor of
Mauritama
4 Fmal word

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

De\\~etJ Serilte
AREYOJSURE
I GA.N'T HELP?

MAN(5 \&lt;\ORK!

11'5 AWFULLY KIND
OF 'rOLl 1D COME
OVER LIKE
Il-l I51

1HATBWHAT

TIME FOR A SHOWER, A
CHANGE AND DINNER

NEIGHBORS
ARE FOR l

ll-!15 EVENING HOLDS

NONSENoEi

IN

Phone 773-5592 ·.

?

''

j

'''

.MASON FURNITURE
IiERMAN GRATE
MASON, W.VA.

1=-1--+-+--1

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

TWKMN

CWXFYOW , VW

recently
k•tchen,

DFAAWK

heal. full base ment THIS
YOU MUST SEE $13,000
COUL D HAVE 2 APART·
MENTS - Large home m
good cond1hon 5 BRs, 2
baths, NG for ced a tr heat
Porch es Large att1c. JUST

$10,000
WE HAVE 4 FARMS CA LL
FOR
IN FORMATION . OR A LIST.
WANTED'
w_e ha ve Interested buyers
for your property (LIST

TODAY)
PH O'

0

1159

FOR 'GREAT COUNTRY
STEREO'
_..
!Tslen tOGeno Khan
Week Nights from 7:30 to
Mrdnrght
on
WMPO- FM STERE092

HOW DID 'IE FIND

TH' WEATHER OVER IN
TWIN FORt&lt;S,ELVINE'I?

JEST LIKE
~ORE '1ARB TEA,

COLD AS

A FROG

JYH

HDFT
LWH
JYK

F

Lady Luck Is pulling some
stnngs for you where your
work or career IS concerned
However. don't leave It all up to

her
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Deo.
21) A pos•t1ve attitude wtll work
wonders for you today Try It
on problems you thought you
had no tmmedlate solutions

lor
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jon.
19) You're luckier w1th partners
today than you would be In
play1ng a lone hand Stick. with
the wtnn 1ng combinations.

-..1.-.1..-..,.~ Good news today w•ll put some

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fib. 11)

extra zest m your s tep Th1s w111
be a busy day for you and a
pleasant one
CANCER (June ~ 1 .Jul 1 2.2 )

You're a good listener today.
You'll be able to piece together
to your advantage some thlnga
you PICk up from two sources.

Take action on lln anclal

PISCES (Fob. 20-Meroh 20)

hunches you get today The 111tie votce tnstde IS tl)' tnQ to put
you
an
t.o some t h 1n g
worthwhi le

Your material aspects are still
ve ry prom i s i ng today
Substan tial gams can c ome
from your W1ll1n gness to be

how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

OUTSTANDI NG BUY - 1
floor plan, 2 BR , balh, all
r eno vated
Ni ce
NG forced atr

Condlt1ons are devetop1ng 1n a
nol yet vlstble I hat w 1ll
contnbute to your feelings of
bas1c se cu r ity and well- bemg

b-1--+-+--1 manner

work lt:

One letter srmp!y stands lor another., In this .sample A Is
used for the three L's, X lor the two 0 s. ete Srn gle letters.
apostrophes, the len gth and formali?n of t he words are all
hints Eaeh day the eode letters are drfferent
CRYPTOQUOTES
LWTWKFRRN
VW
OXYRZH JKO
FKW
R WO O

(March 21-Aprlf 19)

&gt;=-1--.J.---4--1 TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

Is

AND WHO KNOWS WHAT

1, 1i75

You' ll come out on top
whenever you re 1n the dnver's
seal today Don I let others do
t hmgs you know you can d o
better yourself

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
NAW/THIB t&amp;

1

Today 4. Sunrise Semester 10

6 15-Folk bllerature 3

hole'

' And
. Pert ..

to

- --- - - - - - - - S EWING
MACH- INE

MAINTAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

6 · ~Columbus

.. .I'd do some·

OV ERLOOKS THE f&lt;IVt:R
'l story frame (recently
r enovnted) J l a rg e BR s, l 1/2
bath s, carpe ted , paneled,
hi e d NG for ced ai r h eat,
full
baseme nt,
2 ca r
garage, new s1 dmg O NLY

WEDNESDAY , OCTOBER!, 1975

6 ·25-F arm Report 13 .
6 3~New Zoo Revue 4, News 6, Bible Answers 8,
Farmllme 10. The Story 13
6 4()- 0unce of Prevenllon 10
6 45-Mornlng Reporl 3
6 55-Chuck White Reports 10. News 13.
7 ~Today 3.4,15. AM America 6,13, CBS News 8;
Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7 3~Schoolles 10
8 ~Lucy Show 6. Capt Kang~roo 8,10, Sesame St.
33
8 3~Blg Valley 6
9 ~A . M 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15 . Lucy Show 8: Mlke
Douglas 10, Morning wlth D J 13.
9 3~Nol For Women Only 3. One Life to llve 6:
Musical Ch~lrs 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
10·0()-(elebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Dinah 6, Glve·N·
Take 8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 · 3~Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15;, Price Is E lght 8,10
11 ~High Rollers 3.15; 1 Dream of Jeannie 4;
Gambit 8.10
Pass
Pass
Pass
11
·
3~Holtywood
Squ~res 3, 15 ; H~ppy D~ys 13,
Opemng load - Q t
Midday
4, love of Life 8, 10 , Sesame 51 20,33.
Thrs one is from Arkansas
Your partner doubles a three- 11 55-Take Kerr 8, Dan lmel ' s.world 10. 1
By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby
spade bid for takeout You hold · 12 oo-Magnlflcenl Marble Machine 3,JSr Sifowoffs 13;
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8,10.
Today's hand rs the same as 486~ •K962 tA10854 ...9
12 : 3~3 for the Money 3, 15 ; All My Children 6.13;
yesterday s except tt.~t Sou th What should you brd"
Search for Tomorrow 8,10
ha s the kmg-deuce mstead of Thrs Arkansas question rs a 12 ·45-Elec Co 33.
tough one We favor a btd of
the three-deuce of hearts
four hearts on the theory that 12 ·55-NBC News 3.15.
n&lt;ERf'5
lie strll responds one spade to even rf partner doesn 't hold 1 ~News 3; Ryan ' s Hope 6,13: Phil Donahue 8;
Al WA'f5 SO M ~
Young &amp; t he Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
PLACE WHERE YOU
hr s partner s club opemng. but four hearts we should hav
3~Days of Our lives 3,4,1 5: let's Make a Deal6, 13;
CAH BE HAPPY
wh~n ' "Nor th JUmps to three
·
e a
M' USEFJ!l IF
s th se e 5 that hish ace
play for that . contract Four
As the World Turns 8, 10.
d
YOU LOOt&lt; FOR L----- -11' ~ • •• spa es ou
r dramonds rs rnadequate, five 2 . ~$10.000 Pyramid 6, 13 ; Guiding Light 8, 10.
IT HARO ENOUGH,
of dramond s and kmg of ea ts dramonds an unwarranted over- 2 · 3~Doctors 3,4,15. Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13 ; Edge of
1 FKUERare extra hrgh cards m hrs brd
Night 8, 10.
hand The refore, m accorda nce
(Do yo u have a quest1on lor
3 · ~Another World 3,4,15, General Hospital 6,13;
wrth the rule of the ace and the the Jaco~ys? Wr~te Ask the
Match Game 8, 10; Kup' s Show 20
kmg,hersoneaceandonekmg Jacooys" care o l th1s
3 3Q-One Life to Live 13 ; Bewitched 6; Tattletales
a bove game and rs gomg to brd newspaper The most i n 8, 10.
a s lam . South could use rerest•ng questrons Will be
4 ~Mr. Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Black wood to check for aces. used w th1s colu mn and
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
but there IS no hurry about that wnrers wlfl rece1ve cop1es of
" Kung Fu " 10; Dinah 13
so South st mply starts s lam m- .JACOBY MODERN )__
4 3~Bew ltc hed 3; Mod Squad 6 ; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St 20.33. Get Smart 15.
5 ~Bonanza 3, Fami ly Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5 3~Adam · 12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Adam.J2 13
by THOMAS JOSEPH
6 OG-News 3,4,8,10,1 3,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20; Teaching Chllddren 33.
ACROSS
S lgruted
6 3~NBC News 3, 4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith
I C1ty in Oh10
again
6: Making I) Count 20; Bookbeat 33
S Pardon
6 "- go bragh"
7 ~Truth or Cons. 3, To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling
10 Composer
7 Blanc or
for Dollars 6, Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10;
KhachaSaint
Country Music Jubilee 13 ; Family Affair 15; Book
Beat 20, Know Your School 33.
tunan
Michel
7
.
3~LastoftheWIIdJ,
Name Tha1Tune4: Wild Wild
11 Eat
8 - of March
World
of
Animals
6,
Match Game PM 8: Evanlng
away
,
•9 - Husing
Yesterday's
ADiwer
Edition
wllh
Martin
Agronsky
20: The Judge 10; To
12 "Love for -" ' 13-0mrch
Tell the Truth 13, Episode Acllon 33.
13 Arranged in
feature
22 Anarchist
32 Ornery
s : ~Little House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; When Things
a row
(2 wds.)
color
fellow
Were Rotten 6,13. Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10;
H MtSers
15 Make
23 King beater 33 Pant
Philadelphia Folk Festival 20. Life &amp; the Structure
24 For each
k
of Hemoglobin 33
~------... 16 Milttary
out
34
command
17 Function as 26 Famous
GSpolden
8 ·3~That's My Mama 6,13, Man Builds. Man
35 o en
Quaker
Destroys 33
al!br .)
18 New (comb.
thinq about that (Cat
29
Do
the
Hans
rule
9·0G-Doctors
Hospital 3,4, 15 , Bare lla 6.13; Cannon
or goat
form )
Brinker
bit
preposition
8,
10,
Play
If
Again. Uncle Sam 20,33.
19 Afncan
mud
21 Place for
antelope
1"1-epare
36
_
the
line
10
O~Petrocelll
3,4,15 ; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; Kate
30
path
(confonned
'
McS
hane
8,
to
.
News 20; Say Brother 33
a sand .
20 A baseball
8
8
wedge
immortal
31 Bavarian
37 Alley
. ; : ~~~~~e ~:~~~ d~~:~~~~ ~~k~~~~:s ~~·13; Johnny
25 Dinner_
foil
21
river
prowler
Carson 3, 4,15 ; FBI 6; Banacek 8; Movie "Th•
table
Barkleys of Broadway" 10; Janak! 33
-' decoratton
12 3~Movle " The Girl Most Likely to ." 6
27 Pratse to
t ~News 13
[
the skres
1 30--Tomorrow 3,.4
28 Furmsh,
as aid

,_Q
-

1 00-- Tomorrow 3,.4, News 13

~~ ·l~~

Yovr Hetl Dealer
Thtrd St
R aetne, Ohto
Ph . '949-5961

.....,....

EW 3 bedrm home, bnck
rront. 1 ca r garage, modern
all e lec
1 m 1le out of
Chesler Call 949 A692 or 843
2667

FUEL OIL

21 30tc

9

9 16 1fc ~~~~

LOSE we1ght W1lh New Sh ape
Tablets and Hydre x Wate r
P1lls at
Dutton
Dru g
M tddl eport , and Ne lso n
Drug
9 30 31 p

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

I lv\A'I
Of?,. 1M'i t-m
BE: H~
~HO IS

--------- !. .

HOU SE for sale , reasonable
pr1ced, Phone 992 .7648

GUNS and Ammo O'!r fall
stock
tS
now
here
Comple t e 11ne of Rem
1nglon.
W 1n chester ,
lth1ca Savage Sl ug barrels
tn stock for most brand sh ot
g un s but 1n short supply
Get them whlle th ey l as t
Money short
lay a way
your fall h un ttng needs N ew
j::al l st ore hour s starttng
Sept 5, 10 a m to 9 p m ,
Monday Sa turday
V1llage
Gun Shopp e, 266 Mill St,
Phone 992 5177, t1n a n c 1ng
available
9 3 26tc

_ _ _ __ ___;___ __ ---, vesugatron by brddmg fourt.llRT II I Dl
30 dramonds
A K J3 2
When North accepts the slam
¥ A 97 6
I idea wrth hrs brd o l four hearts
t I
South wants to try for seven
A A K84
Hr s ftv e- heart brd s how s
II EST
EAST
second-round heart control and
A9
• 10 5
rs a sU! rt on the way to seven
• 10 8 5 J
• QJ4
No rth brds six dramonds to
• Q J 10 6
t K9732
show second-round dtamond
.. Q 9 53
A JIOS
control and an acceptance of
SOUTH
the rd ea of playmg at a grand
AAQ8 164
slam and that should be enough
¥ K2
lor South Hrs partner has opent A 85
ed
the brddmg. jumped , shown
.. 7 2
first-round heart and secondBoth vulnerable
round dramond control and m1 vrted seven
' He musl have the krng ·or
\\ en
Nort h Easl
South
spades and ace-kmg of clubs for
all
that bidding So South stmp1•
Pass
ly closes the brddmg at seven
Pass
3•
Pass
spades
Pass
4•
Pas~
Pass
6 t
Pass

BORN

Accountant
Phone 992 -6173

B EORM
home ,
lUSt
fm1shed , remode ltn g, Sa l em
St, Rut lan d Phone 742 -3615
after 4 p m or see Milo B
Hutch1son
9 23 tfc :;
M IOD ( EPORT ,
new tvUULD - yQu BELIEVE?
B u dd an all steel bulldmg at
d ecora t ed carpeted, gas
Pole Barn pnces? Golden
fo r ced a1r , 3 bedroom , 11!:;Gta nt A ll Stee l Butldtngs,
Sto ry cor n e r lot
s mgt e
Rt
4, Box 148, Waverly,
g arage, near sc hoo l and
Oh 10 Phone 9d7 2296
s hopptng ce nter , $17,500
7 24 lfc
992 7624
586 Ltncoln St
Middleport

3 B R hom e,

ba tt . nat gas furnace , m od
kitchen Full bosement N ea r
store $17,000
c hen

9-18 lfc

be droom

h o me
gar a g e

13 ACRES -

992 5858

1n good condtt1on Phone 992
2889 or see at 232 Sout h
F ourth St , Middleport
9 30 Al e

Stegler &amp; Monogram

For Sale

office supply service.

DOZER WORK Excavat 1n g
la nd c tear 1nQ, pond s and
ba se ments,
and
land
s c ap1nq
Pu llin S
Ex
c ava t 1ng , phone 992 2d78
8 26 30 1c

WIN AT BRIDGE
Extra king crowns grand slam

Collection systems,

o l der

WE DO aluminum
S lutt~y ,
gut t er
work ,
rooftng ,
pane l 1ng , pa1nling , plum
btng , We fix the whole
house At Tromm . 742 5081
9 24 tf c

r e novated
b ase m e nt.

OUT HERS!

S1 25 EACH

For Sale

2FAMI LY -

OF ANYTHIIoJG

BOOKKEEPING,
Tax Advisory Service,

and

12 00 Btll s - 53.25 each.
B 00 Gold cotns X F cond
$88 00
CALL 742-3651
RuTland - Roger W ams l e y

•

9 11 l mo

SILVER CERTIFICATES

9·1-1 mo

Sesame Sf. 20.33, Gel Smart 15
5 OG-Bonaqza :t; Family Alfalr 8, Star Trek 15
S 3~Adam 12 4; News 6 , Beve rly Hillbillies 8, Elec .
Co 20.33 . Anllques 20; Jean Shepherd's America
33
7 31l'-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal wllh 11 6,
$25,000 Pyramid 8, Evening Ed ition with Martin
Ag ronsky 20, To Tell the Truth 13. Pr ice Is Righi
_ 10. Wal ly ' s Workshop 15; Fam ily Thealre 33

POOR wA!7H: .. . He; PROBABLY
..JUSf DREAMED HS 5AW 50ME
W~IRD CRifTER AT THE WINDOw!

HMM ,.. l&lt;JO 515l&lt;J

Ph. 742·5081

older

BUFF A L 0 N I C K E L S S7 .00
A ROLL

Dan's Shoe Repair

free Estimates
AI Tromm

and

WHEAT BACK PENNIES
85A ROLL

Help Wanted

APPOINTMENT
Case No 21626
Estate of Wtlbur La wr e nce SOMEO NE to wash ou t s •de o f
sun porch and Wi ndows Al~n
M old C'Il De ce a sed
do fa l l c l ea n1n g R ef erences
Not1 c e 1S h er e by g1ven thnt
1t;l7 3 MOB I LE Home , 12 x 70,
r equ1red
P hon e 992 2677
Robe rt Molden o f Rout e 1
lolal etectr 1c Ca ll co ll ec t
9 28 41C
Dext er Oh10 has be en duly
after 6 p m Phon e (6 14) 6'f5
a p po1n t ed f'... d rn mt slra tor of
.J lSl
SOMI::lJ N r:. to 11ve tn lor room
I h e E stat e o f Wilbu r L awren ce
9 28 6t c
and board and sma ll sa lary
M olde n
d ec ea sed . late of
to help tak e care of elde rly
l;!oute
R u lland County
lady r eferences requ 1red ONE 1969 Cor 11 rn un 1ty Homes ,
Oh 10
(3 bedrm ) all e l ec tr 1c
Phone 992 3927
C r&gt;d• ' or s ar e r equ1r ed to
mobile home a nd 1 acre lot
9 30 Stc
lolf' •t1e1r c l a 1m s wt th sa 1d
ReaOy to l tve 1n
Pnce
' •ciuc1 ary wtf h1n l o ur mont h s
$9 , 500
2
m d es
fr om
Da te d t h ts
18th
da y o f COU P L E Wtlnour previOUS
Rutland Ca n be seen by
bu s 1n e ss cx.pe r 1e nc e, b ut
'J cp'Pm tJer 19 75
appt
b y call1ng 992 3537
M ann1ng D W eb st er
w1 l l tng to work a n d learn
afterSpm
J udg e
t og e ther
p l easant
9 23 tf c
pr o t 1t ab l e work Co nta c t
n n JO( \ Ol7 3t c
Am way D 1slr ,bu t ors Phone
1973. RICHARDSON mob1le
1 (614) 989 23 5 3 for 1n
home, ~ota l e l ec
2 full
ORDIN ANCE NO 103575
ba th s, 3 bedrms, 14 x 70,
9 29 51c
A n Or dtnance fo Oedtcate the
fully lurn ts hed , $7,000 215
M1 ddt e port Levy as Walnut
As h St, or see Ke1 lh Woods
Str eet

and older

- - - - FOR SALE-

Steel Toe Safety Shoes

REMINGTON , 1 100 auto ,
new 12 or 20 ga $172 50
Ftfe 5, Middleport , Oh10
9 30 36tc

6 F A MILY Y ard Sa l e Thurs
da y
tt-1 r o ug t1 Saturday
a n t 1qu es too l s, e t c , d1shes TRA ILER spac e for r ent Al l
r T H ACA- Mod;!J7 ~~~-P~ ;ew
a von s c loth1ng and rT'tSC
12 or 20 ga $129 95 , Fifes ,
Ui&lt;lll 1eS Phon e 992 55 35
3 1 , mile s off Rt l by pass ,
9 16 t f c
M i ddleport, Oh 10
L ead1ng Creek Road From
9 25 61 c
Rut l and turn a t Depot St
~COU
Nl
I-CY
M
Ob1l
f'
HomP
Watc h f or SIQO S II r a tn , Will
- r'ork f-Ct 11 te n 11o iiC' S no rt h
b e held follow1ng
week
ol Pon1 c r o y Lil rq c l o ' s w tfh WHOLESALE shot she ll s
Phone l.J'J i 10H
d ee r slugs , 22 lo ng r1fl e , 22
r oncre 1L' p.1t 1o9" Si d ewalk s
9 30 3t c
maQ
bear and Jenn 1ngs
r u nn e r ~
cl ll CI ott s tr e et
bows 40 pet off It S! F 1fe's ,
poHh 1/1 (1 r'l l0 r1 C 99,' / II "'
1
CA RPORT Sal e, Ra1n or
Middleport, Oh 10
17 3 1 ttc
shme , F r1day , O c t 3, 9 am
9 25 6tc
l 1ll 5 p m 9 t8 South Th1rd , 11\ NO I R O OM furn1 shed and
Middleport
In f a n ts , gtr l s
TWO BLACK POODLES . 1
rmi L1r n1 Sh ed
ilpartm e n! s
ilnd adult s c loth1ng , avons ,
male and 1 f emale AK C
Ptl o n e 99 ? s !3 1
furntture , m ISC
R eg 1ste r ed
Conn trumpet,
I 17 ll C
1 year o l d Ltke new Sea r 's
9 28 )!p
Ted Wtlltamson 's 7 1 &lt; h p
out boa rd motor , Sear's amp
G A RA G E Sale 1 m lie ou t 1A3,
for e l ec glJilar , 3 hookups
Go cart tools an d guns , B It
Phone (304) 882 3205
tru c k topper and other m 1sc
9 25 6t c
W e dnesday, Thursday and
Fr tday Phone 992 5146
COM PLETE D tsp 20 h ead of
9 30 2tc
ho rses,
R egt s tered
an d
MASONIC TEMPLE
g
rad
e,
show
dnd
pleasure
BUILDING
HUGE Yard Sa l e O c t
1
Phone (614) JSB 099 1 o r 367
POMEROY, OHIO
through ll, 9 to 6, Sta t e Rt
748 1
55d l 11 m1les from Ch eS hir e
CONTACT .
9 2d 6tC
01shes. dep r ess 1on g l ass ,
DALE E SMITH al 992 195.4 FERGUSON tractor w1th
new and used c l o fh es, g1rl's
5329
c lothes , rugs d rap es , baby
accessor1es Phone 843 756 1
or
92461C
c lothes
Someth rng
tor
everyo ne
THOMAS C EDWARDS at
9 28 6tc
TRAVEL TRAILER
Must
992 2052
sel l
1976 ,
28
ft
sel f
or
contam ed , prtv ate bedroom ,
TED REED JR . al 992-2052
fa cto ry
a1r ,
deluxe
2 FAMILY Yard Sale , Fr tday
throughout,
Will
take
and Saturday, Oc t 3 a nd 4
smaller trailer on trade
mObile home
Sew1ng mach1ne , ra d10. 2 BEDRM
Mrs D ev an e, H end erson
furniture , childre n and adu lt
Contact Albert Hill Phone
Trailer
Park,
Shad l e
949 2261
clot h es, and a t ot of m1sc
Br1dge
,
Hender
so
n
,
W
Va
394 Beech St , M tddleporL
9 26 61 c
9 30 6tc
Oh10
9 28 6tc NEW
V I L L AGE
Manor
EXTRA good wh1te Leghorn s
Apartments m Middl epor t 1
Lay1ng good
75c eac h
YARD Sa l e, Monday thru
b edro o rn apts from $104 p l us
F reeland N orr1s. Phone 949
Satu r day from
10 !til 5
elec Ca ll 992 3273 or see
3868
C l ot he s, dtshes, toy s books
Mrs
Keat ley , Apt
101.
-....._
9 30 61c
and m 1SC II e ms
Prtced
R 1vers1de Apa rtm ents
cheap Old Rt 33 turn at
8 28-26fp
ANTIQUE W dlt am and Mary
Hemlock Gr ove, or Pi3 SS
stenc1led
door.
ch tna
parks
on
n ew
h1gh
cab 1ne t Phon e 992 71A5
way
and
turn
r 1ght TRAILER space for re nt m
9 30 21 c
M rddle port Phone 992 5434
on R 1 68 1 above Darwm
8 29 26tc
5 1gn
Watch for s •g ns
FA RMALL Super A tractor, 50
James Cunn 1ngham
mode l . St o kerma tt c stove,
9 28 )lp t-'~1\1,._.,1'-- ~ .•~ t'lln9 room for
$150. etec Kenmore kttchen
any orqan1zat ton phone 99 7
st ove . $50 , Yardman garden
39 n
3 11 tic
!rae
5 h p
$150 , All

TO BUY

. 7:00-Changed Lives 5
7 : 3~Burke's Law star r ing Gene Berry 5.
8 · ~Movln' On 3,4, 15; Happy Dys 6, 13; Good Times
8.1 0. Hocking Volley Bluegrass 20; Graveyard
of the Gulf 33
B 3~Day llme Guest Joel Grey 5; Welcome Back,,
K~tfer 6, 13 . Joe &amp; Sons8, 10 ; Consumer Survival Kit
20.33
9 ;~ Pollce Story 3,4,15 , Rookies 6,13; Switch 8,10;
Ascent of Man 20. , 33
9 . 3~Zane Grey Theatre 5
10 ~Public Polley Forum Topic . Freedom of the
Press 5. Joe Forrester 3,4, 15; Marcus Wlby, M.D.
6.13; Beacon Hill 8.10, Ne ws 20. Interface 33.
10 3~ Woman 20,33
11 DO--News 3,4,6.8, 10,13,1 s. ABC News 33.
11 3~Jo hnn y Carson 3,4,15, Wide World Mystery 13;
FBI 6; Mov ie " Marlowe " 8, Movie "Adventure"
10. Janak \ 33
12 3~Wide World Mystery 6 .

Movte " Oh , Men' Oh , Women•" 10 ; Dinah 13
4 3~Bew•lc h ed 3, Mod Squad 6; Partndge Family 8,

We Paint Houses
We Paint Barns
We Paint Roofs
We Paint Anything

Pomeroy

~92 · 2114

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Jobber In

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Business Services

TUESDAY, )EPTEMBER 30, 1975
3 3Q-One Llle to Lrve 13, Bewitched 6, Tattletales
8, 10. Romagno!IS' Table 20
4 ~ Mr . Cartoon 3; Merv Grrffln 4, Somerset 15.
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33,

llF

9 2B 3t c

H-4

m .-,w:_L

-

A DOPE-RING APPARATUS
\

Pomeroy

2 SIGNS

1 fi LL ::, pec ta ls t h r u Oc t 18
Ju l •e's
Be auty
Shop
C IH'S' P r O h 10 Ph o n E" ( 61d )

'

1• ... .:., T

I

W IL L C A RE for e l d ee r l y
t e m o3l e pat1 e nt 1n my ho m e
Pho n e ( 614 1 667 340 2
9 25 src

.!f- Tbe,.._~ily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomerov, 0 .. Tuesdav. Sept. 30, 197~

_DICit TJ:\1\CY

ZFQTHWKO
HJ

XDFTXW

TWYKJOWO.

-DWTKN
AJJKW
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: WHEN A THING IS FUNNY,
SEARCH IT FOR A HIDDEN TRUTH.- G. BERNARD SHAW

•

=Your

LEO (July 23-~ug. 22) Ideas ( hel plul
thai you II conceive today Will

be both IOQICBI and prom iSif"lQ ,
though you'll view thmgs on a

very grand scale Don 't lei thell
stze scare you

•

. VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You'll do very wet l tn bustness
affa1rs today 1f you let the other
guy make the overtures Play a

lillie hard to gel
LIBRA (Sepl . 23-0ct. 23)
Listen and evaluate carefully
mforma11on passed on to you

LOWEE'l'l--6

•.

B.

I rt hday

Oct. 1, 1175
Th ts comtng year you will establtsh a la sttng and beneficial
retat1onshtp wtth one oldet
than you both In age and expenance Th i s alltance will
have mulual advan tages
t NEWSPAPER ENn RPR lS E ASSN I

�.

'
•

I,

" I

I

.,'

. '

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo~t-Pomeroy ,0. , Tuesday, Sept. 30, 1975

•

1

Four escaped .convicts still at large
MOUNDSVILLE,
W.Va.
( UPI) - . Four escaped
convicts remained at. l~r~e
today and the West VJ.rgJma
Peni\enitary staff here admittedly was without any
strong leads to follow.
"We don 't have a thing to
go on," one official declared.
"There's absolutely no new
information we can work
with."
One of the inmates, 19· year-{)ld Paul J . Moore,
Ravenna, Ohio, held for the
murder of two elderly town
residents, recently told
prison officials he was afraid
other inmates in the
penitentiary would kill him .
Acting ~rden Arthur
McKenzie suggested Monday
the weekend escape might be
attributed to negligence by
one or more guards.
The other fugitives were
Leonard H. Hottle, 19, serving 1-to-5 years for voluntary manslaughter; Gary M.
Saunders, 22, sentenced to 10
years for armed robbery, and
Bobby Kermit Gibson, 35,
serving a life term for armed
robbery.
The inmates fled early
Sunday after sawing their
way through bars on windows
in
the
penitentiary 's
psychiatric ward section,
McKenzie said.
Three of the fugitives had
work assignments at the
ward, while Moore was being
kept there for protection after
.reporting he had been
threatened.
"He was moved there after
he came to us three weeks
ago and told us his life was in
danger," McKenzie said.
"We felt at the time he was
running a game on us ... and
we put him in the ward where
we could more or less keep an
eye on him."
wrore was serving two life

MEIGS THEATRE
TONITE
TUESDAY
SEPT. 30
THE GREAT
WALDO PEPPER

(Technicolor)
Robert Redford and
Bo Svenson

Show Starts at 7:00p .m .

sentences for the slayings of
two Moundsville residents· Carlton H~ris, 84, and his 80year-{)ld sister, Dorothy .
According to the acting
warden, the
prisoners
escaped from the living
. quarters for inmates nurses

POMEROY - Dwight Goins, Meigs Instrumental
director, is Interested In forming a conununity band.
Everyone 18 to 80 in Meigs County (all three school
districts) and Mason, W. Va . Interested Is asked to
contact Goins at the high school, at his home at 9927132, or fll1 out the coupon below and mall to him at
Meigs High School, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

Name ______________________________
Ad~ess.

____________________________

Phone _______________________________
Type of Instrument ______________________

News .. in Briefs
_(.Continued from page 1)
about inflation, unemployment, economic growth. When
Congress passed a $25 billion tax cut in March, the largest In
history, the purpose was to stimulate the economy to shake off
the deepest recession since the 1930s.
Satisfied that the recession is ending even faster than they
had hoped, but worried about a stubborn rate of inflation, most
presidential advisers will probably urge Ford to ask Congress
to let the "temporary" tax cut expire.
ZARAUZ, SPAIN - TENS OF THOUSANDS of Basques
l!!ading international protests against the execution of five
guerrillas have paralyzed parts of northern Spain with strikes
and anti-government activities.
At the United Nations, Mexico called on the Security
Council Monday to recommend the suspension of
Generalissimo Francisco Franco's government. Spain called
the demand "intolerable interference" in its domestic affairs.
International demands for Spain's diplomatic and economic
isolation rose and 12 European countries recalled their Madrid
ambassadors for "consultations."
. But a senior U. S. government official in New York said
Washington does not plan any official protests.
NOW YOU KNOW
·The game of push ball,
played with a six-foot ball,
was invented by M. G. Crane
of Newport, Mass., in 1894.
The game found favor at
Harvard the following year,
but never became a major
sport.
'
"..

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died on Monday .

in the psychiatric unit.
parently began sawing."
negligence by one or more
"They had been up working
McKenzie said the guard on officers " McKenzie said
most of. the night and sup- duty thought the irunates . He ~id an investigation
posedly entered the room to were sleeping "and didn't was being made and that
go to bed at 4:30 in the make his visual" check ofthe names of the guards would
morning," McKenzie said. quarters.
not be released until the
"That's the time they ap"It could be a case of gross probe was complete.
;
~

Leftist station
cut off the air

Band players wanted

By DAVID D. PEARCE
LISBON, Portugal (UPI)Commandos invaded the
suburban
transmitting
facilities of a far-left radio
station today and cut it off the
air after mutinous army
troops defied orders to oust
its employes.
The commandos launched
their operation against Radio
Renascenca as government
leaders met through the night
at the presidential palace to
discuss the ordered takeover
of Portugal's Communistcontrolled broadcast stations.
Prime Minister Jose
Pinheiro de Azevedo placed
the Portuguese armed forces
on alert and vowed to crush
the "escalating political,
economic and social instability" that left the
country on the brink of
anarchy.
"The events of the last few
days have surpassed all the
limits of tolerance and are
threatening the continuation,
not only of efficient authority,
but of any authority and even
our national Independence,"
Azevedo said.
·
The conunandos were ordered into action after the
troops sent to take over Radio
Renascenca rebelled against
their officers and allowed the
leftist workers to broadcast
attacks against the government.
. Soldiers occupying another
leftist station-Radio Club,~

also defied orders to take
over that station, but no
action was taken against its
transmitting facilities.
A newscaster at the
government-{)wned Emissora
Nacional, the only major
radio station remaining in
army hands, described the
situation as "very confusing
and complicated."
Azevedo and Military
Security Chief Gen. Otelo
Saraiva de Carvalho met
throughout the night with
representatives of far-left
splinter groups to discuss the
situation.
The splinter groups, who
form a loose alliance known
as the Revolutionary United
Front, responded to the start
of the occupations Monday
with calls for a general
strike, mass protests and
military rebellions.
Today's crisis came on the
first anniversary of Gen.
Antonio
de
Spinola's
resignation as Portugal's
first president after half a
century of rightwing dietatorship. In his resignation ·
speech, Spinola warned that
Portugal was heading for
chaos and anarchy.
Azevedo used the similar
terms when he ordered the
armed forces to take over the
major radio and television
stations in Lisbon Monday to
halt a "provocative campaign" by the Communistrun media.
,
-- -

Delmer ·G. Cubbison, 81,
Coolville, died Monday night
at Selby General Hospital in
Marietta following an extended illness.
Mr. Cubbison was born in
Troy Twp., Athens County,
the son of the late Jonathan
and Ida Thorpe Cubbison. He
had been a Troy Twp. farmer
the greater part of his life.
Surviving are a sister, Mrs.
Clyde
(Sylvia)
Smith,
Coolville, and several nieces
and nephews. He was
preceded in death by seven
brothers and four sisters in
addition to his parents.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
White Funera'l Home In
Coolville with the Rev.
Walter Carney officiating.
Burial will be In the Ireland
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home any time
after noon Wednesday.

SERVICE SET
CHESTER Funeral
services for Mary A. Parker,
45, Chester, who died
Saturday in Athens, will be
held at 11 a.m. Wednesday at
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home in Middleport with the
Rev . Herber~ Grate officiating. Burial will be in
Chester Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
any time.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Thelm~
Berry, Middleport; Virginia
King, ,· Pomeroy; Louise
DeLong, Racine; Dorothy
Wells, Long Bottom; Grace
Roberts, Rutland ; James
Roush, Hartford; Lillian
Duffy, Syracuse; Marcus
Chambers, Middleport ;
James fickens, Racine;

Two fined, two
forfeit bonds
SYRACUS-E
Two
defendants were fined and
two others forfeited bonds in
Syracuse · Mayor Herman
London's Court Monday
night.
Fined were Arland C. King,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, for
failure to keep weeds under
control, and ordered to
reimburse the village for
having the weeds cut and
Shelby Pickens, Pomeroy:
was fined $19 and costs for
speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were
Timothy
D.
Michael,
Pomeroy, and· Dilford W.
Ferrell, Syracuse, $250 each,
driving under the influence of
alcohol. Police Chief Milton
Varian was the arresting
officer.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

See our fine selection of boys jackets in
juvenile sizes 3 to 7 and regular boys sizes 8
to 20.

Editorial comment,
)

opin·ion,

fe~tures

·;,lax-suppor{ed .c ulture .grows
.On

Septembe~

29, 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law a bill establishing a

National. Foundation for the Arts and Humanities, thereby launching the federal government
for the first time on a course of large-scale, sustained support and encouragement of the
nation's cultural life.
Distinguished Americans are gathering for an arts symposium at the LBJ Library in
~ustin, Tex. to offici~lly observe the lOth anniversary of the National Endowment for the Arts,
Sister agency of National Endowment for the Humanities also created under the act and to
celebrate what nearly all observers hail as one of the most successful public-private partnerships in the nation's history.
The National Endo~ent for the Arts "has been the confinnation of the idea that government support for the arts IS a necessary and legitimate function" and "has demonstrated that
~e fed~ral governm.~nt can advance national cultural Interests in a responsible (and undictatorial) manner, says Florence Lowe, assistant to the Endowment's chainnan Nancy
Hanks.
From its inception, the major goals of the Endowment have been "to make the arts more
widely available to millions of Americans, to preserve our cultural heritage for present and
future · generations, to strengthen cultural organizations and to encourage the creative
development of the nation's finest talent."
·
This has been done primarily through a variety of programs of matching grants and
,assistance -to architects and urban planners, touring dance companies, community-l;lased
arts organizations, professional symphony orchestras and opera companies - as well as
fellowships for writers, playwrights and poets, to name only a few of the Endowment's activities.
Some of the Endowment's specific accomplishments over the last 10 years include:
-An Artists-in-&amp;hools program now supporting over 2,000 professional artists working in
5,000 elementary and secondary schools in 50 states.
-Community arts agencies have Increased six.fold in number to a total of nearly 600.
- Resident professional dance companies have increased from 10 to 40 and the dance
audience nationally has grown from one to 15 million.
-Resident professional theater organizations totaled 15 in 1965; the number is now 50.
The degree of support the National Endowment for the Arts has won from successive
administrations and Congresses, credited In large measure to the vigorous leadership of Nancy
Hanks, is reflected In the fact that the Endowment's Initial funding of only $2.5 million or a
little more than a permy for"every American, had grown to $74 million in the last fiscal yea~.
Furthermore, In fiscal 1966, less than two dozen states collectively appropriated $2.7
million for the arts within their boundaries. Last year, all the states and territories devoted $59
milllonoto the arts, demonstrating the "seeding" effect of Endowment activities- or a cultural
chain reaction, as one writer puts it. .
SALE PLJ\NNED
Combined fejeral and state funding_for the arts thus now· stands at about $133 million:
The Happy Harvesters Since the majority of grant recipients must match each grant with money from other sources,
Class will stage a rummage and since a conservative estimate is an average match of three to one, it is apparent that
sale in the Trinity Chw:ch publicly su~rteq c~ture has becom~ a. $400-mlllion industry in America.
·
basement, Pomeroy, from 9
. Even so,~ Americans were_ proVIding the same pro~onate support as Great Britain,
a.m. to 3 p.m., on both. Thurs- With a population a quarter the Slze of ours and a _gross natiOnal product one-twelfth as big, the
··
annual budgetfor the arts would be on the order of$1.2 billipn.
day and Friday
·
That's a goal the National Endowment for the Arts mav' want to shoot for the next 10 '
years:

PLAYING NITEL Y

·"THE FRIENDLY. BANK"
TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY

GEO• HALL
TUES.· THURS.
8:30-l:OO

FRI. &amp; SAT.
8:30-2: 00

The MEIGS INN
. 992-3629

Pomeroy
Best In
Live Entertainment

-.i .

:' '

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES :
Mrs.
A~ian Lathey, Letart; Mrs.
Charles Stanley, Mason;
Bryan Dabney, Henderson;
Okey Jordan, Henderson;
Mrs. James Meadows, Long
Bottom; Mrs.
William
Blaine, Gallipolis Ferry;
Mulfrod Lyvere, Point
Pleasant; Johnny Lynch,
Point Pleasant; Robert
Scherer, Point Pleasant, and
Catherine Green, Point
Pleasant

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Sept. 29)
Mrs. Harold Adams and
son, James Allie, William
Arthur,
Carol
Bailey,
Frances Burns, Joseph
Clendenin, Irene Cook,
Elizabeth Evans, Patricia
Evans, David Frisby, Shelia
Harmon, Phyllis Hemetek,
Kathy Jenkins, Mrs. Jack
Jonas and son, David L.
Jonas, Jr., Joe Lindamood,
Michl!el Lynch, Florence
Michael, Marilyn Miller,
Thomas Miller, Inez Monroe,
Susan Myers, Melissa Nance,
Clifford Queen, Jr., Joyce
Redman, Donald Schilling,
Mrs. Clarence Sheward and
daughter, Freda Smith,
HOMECOMING SET
Eleanor Sowards, Lester
HEMLOCK GROVE - A Thompson.. Becky Vanco,
homecoming will be held Thomas Wright.
Sunday at the Hemlock Grove
( Births, Sept. 29)
Christian Church. A basket
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H.
dinner will be held at noon McCarley, son, Vinton; Mr.
with an afternoon program to and Mrs. Herbert Reffitt, son,
get underway at 1:30 p.m.
Hamden.

.'

BOY'S "JOE COLLEGE"
COACHER JACKET

in

trALit-.UP TICLIR·WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW-OPEN
. FRI. EVENINGS5To7P.M.

Daniel Talt:ott, Portland.
·DISCHARGES - Alva
Holsinger, Georgia Deem,
James Braley, Ross Morrl1,
Oswell Durham, Nellie Dunn.

SQUAD CALLED
.
The Middleport E-R squad
was called at 4:56 p.m. , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Monday for Marcus Chambers who was ill at his home
at 243 North Fourth Ave. He
was taken to Veterans
MEN'S and BOYS' DEPARTMENT, 1st FLOOR
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.

--~ -

Wardens
(Continued from page 1)
W. A~ King, John Meeks,
Richard Sargent, Ernest
Wood.
Chester Twp. - George C.
Genheimer, Mary V. Kautz,
Wayne S. Michael, Vercia N.
Stout, Rexal T. Summerfield,
Ralph Trussell.
Columbia Twp. - Reed
Jeffers, Dorsey Jordan.
Lebanon Twp. - Ruda
Durst, Clinton E. Johnson,
Harold G. Roush.
Letart Twp. - Thereon
Johnson, Eula Wolfe.
Olive Twp. - Paul F.
Andrews, Frank H. Bise,
Gordon R. Collins, C. Ed
Humphrey, Willard Pigott,
Glenna J. Sanders, Doyle N.
Smales.
Orange Twp. - Harold
Barnhart, Paul G. Buckley,
Dorothy Robinson, James R.
Stout.
Rutland Twp. -Rose Ellen
Carson, Leodell Davidson, W.
D. Musser, James W.
Nicholson, Wayne Turner.
Salem Twp. - John F.
Colwell, Jack W. Crisp,
Gerald K;. Grate, Lauren
Hoffman, Eugene Holliday.
Salisbury Twp. - Nathan
Pearl Briggs, Howard A.
Dailey, Philip Globaker.
Scipio Twp. - Wayne
Chase, Raymond R. Cotterill,
Edwin Oberholzer, Myrtle H.
Stanley, Mrs . . Gath Townsend, R:enneth Welsh.
Sutton Twp. - Lawrence
Beegle, Harold Carnahan,
Clifford Morris, Verl!on
Nease, Edson E. Roush,
Marion Sloter, Wo~ow .T.
Zwilling.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Delmer Cubbison

MONEY RECOVERED
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The
FBI Monday said a search of
the Park Towers Apartments
.in Columbus turned up $973
allegedly taken in the June 9
robbery of the Huntington
National Bank here.
One of the three people
arrested In connection with
the robbery,
Udersee
McGee, is a former employe
of the apartment building.
She was sentenced last
·; week to 20 years in prison for
" her connection---in the .robbery. A second person, Anna
Robinson, Columbus, also

pleaded guilty to the robbery.
A third suspect, Fretla Van
Gundy, Columbus, is being
. held for questioning.

MILI.JONAmE DRAWING
CLEVELAND (UPI) The ·Ohio Lottery Commission Monday said its sixth
Millionaire drawing will be
held Oct: 2811t the Cincinnati
Convention Center and
televised statewide by WC-

PO-TV.

Jacket Style 2978
Tough nylon flite satin makes this jacket
perfect for play or school. It breezes
through those tough scrimmages in the
backyard, ~s well as serying as a durable
school jacket. Handsome embroidered
_chest insignia of his favorite college compliments the accent stripes on the comfortable raglan sleeves. Knit cuffs help keep
your" Joe College" warm all winter. Sizes 8
to 20.
Green with white trim, maroon with gold
trim, gold with black trim·· and red . with
white trim .'·

,

Elberfelds In Pom·eroy:

It will be the first televised
. Millionaire drawing.

'·
·,

'.

,,

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