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Debate opens tonight on impeachment question

8- The DaUy So!nlinol, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 23, 1974

•

Lawyers argue for Nixon's innocence
WASHING'i'ON ( UPI ) - The
evidence against President
Nbron does not justify his
Impeachment, two lawyers defending Nixon have argued.
One added that the yardstick is
not Nlxon 'a guilt but whether
hia removal Is In the public
Interest.
With. the House Judiciary
Committee scheduled to open
Ita impeachment debate this
week, · the lawyers - Nixon's
Watergate attorney James ·D.
St. Clair and the commlttee's
newly appointed Republican
counsel, Sam Garrison -made
their defense arguments on
op))')site sides or the continent
Monday.
In hopes of averting what
would be only lhe ·second lm·'
peachment.of al).S. president,
Garrison told members they
ahould base their judgment not
on whether Nixon appeared
guilty of "complicity of a
crime," but whether his im·

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight thru Thursday
July 23-25
NOT OPEN
Friday , Saturday. Sunday

July 26·27·28
AI Pacina in
"SERPICO"
(Technicolar)
AI Pacino, John Randolph

" R"
CARTOONS
Show S1arts 7 p. m.

Mason
Drive-In
Tonight
July23

Double Feature
"TEENAGE
HITCHHtt&lt;~~S"

. R.&amp;TE

11

R"

P·LUS
"THE HnCHHil&lt;ERS"
RATED"~"

Wednesday, Thursday ,
Friday

July 24·25·26
Double Feature
"S5SSSSS"
Plus
"THE BOY WHO CRt ED
WEREWOLF"
RATED"G"

peachment would be in the Ellsberg break·in case -ooe of
public interest . .
four charges 011 which Ehrlich.
Three thousand miles away man was convicted by a jury 10
In caJUornia, St. Clair told a days a~o .
news conference he believed - California l.t. Gov . Ed
the evidence "'does not indicate Reinecke took the stand in his
complicity on the part of the perjury trial and denied lying
President.''
to a Sentate committee about
The committee hoped to the ITT controversy.
.work out today the ground
rules for the debate of articles
of impeachment drawn up by
chief counsel John Doar. This
may delay start of the debate,
which is scheduled for Wednes·
day morning.
The conunittee voted over·
whelmingly to allow live
broadcast or its impeachment
MASON . W. Va. - The
debate, and the three teleVision
Mason
Senior
Citizens
networks announced they
wouJd ·rotate daily coverage of beginning Monday were to
keep their center open each
the proceedings.
day from 9:30a.m. untiJJ p.m.
so
that persons may quilt or
In other Watergate develop.
work on crafts. They are asked
ments :
to
bring a sack IWJch .
-U.S. District Judge
At the opening of a meeting
Gerhard A. Gesell acquitted·
Thursday
at the center, Mrs .
John D. Ehrlichman of lying to
the FBI in connection with the Maxine Arnold led devotions
and Mary Hilbert of the Mason
County Health Department
Mrs. Clara Evans
-checked each member's blood
·pressure .
Person!'i wanting information
dies in Kettering
in regards to the Southwestern
Mrs. Clara t Marguerite annual picnic Friday at
Hawkins) Evans, 71, Kel· Camden Park in Huntington is
teling, formerly of Middleport, asked to phone 773-5137. Senior
died Monday afternoon at the Citizens are always welcome.
Attending were Clara Staats ,
Kettering Memorial Hospital.
Pearl
Roush, Frances Stewart,
She was born July 9, 1903 in
Smith,
Lillian
Middlep&lt;irl, the daughter Of the Goldia
Murl
Megee,
Bumgardner.
late C. Ferd and Margaret
McDermit Hawkins'. She was Marie Goodwin, Josie Elias ,
also preceded in death in 1960 Mary Harris, Blanche -Jones,
by · her husband, Andrew Helen Elias, Katherine
(Jack) Evans, also formerly of Raynes, Clara Roush, Edna
Burris, Bertha Hall , Mary
Middleport.
Aumiller,
Rhoda Yeager,
Surviving are a daughter,
Mildred
Tripp,
Susie Brinker,
Mrs. Frank (Shirley ) Estep,
Dayton; a son, Roy, Canal Evelyn · Russell, Barbara
Winchester; two sisters, Mrs. McDaniel, Ella Ford and Erms
Carroll (Katherine) Swanson . Tumbull. Mrs. Maxine Arnold
and Miss Ruth Hawkins, both led devotionals.
of Middleport; four grand·
children and several nieces, HOSPITAL NEWS
nephews and cousins. Mrs .
Holzer Medical Center
"
Evans was a member of Heath
(Discharged, July 22)
United Methodist Church in
Lori Anderson, Mrs. Murrell
Middleport.
Bailey and daughter, Howard
Funeral services will be held Blazer, Josiah Bowles, Thelma
at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Case, MarilYn Cunningham,
Rawlings~oats Funeral Honie Mrs. David Dobbins, Jr., and
with the Rev. Robert sop, Sandra 'Downard, Davis
Bumgarner
officiati~g · Ehnnan, Frances Goodnite,
Friends may call at the fWJeral Mary Kalklosch, Mildred
home from 7 to 9 p.m. Wed· Lemley, Maria r.lees, Carter
nesday · · B~rial will be in Michael, Pamela Newsome,

Center is open

daily in Mason
for craftwork

r'==========~~R:iv:e:rv:ie:w~C:em:ete:ry~·--. .

Is there an .
antidote tor
new~ car·fever?·

A FULL

SERVICE

BANK &lt;lr

. Lova Tucker, Nada Wolfe.
(Births)
.
Mr. and Mrs. Emory Haggy,
a son, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Dewey Kelly, a son, South
Webster; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
McCoy, a daughter, Wellston;
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Smith,
daughter. Pedro; Mr. and Mrs.
James B. Howard, a son,
McArthur.

a·

Mo.r se chose death

Garrison, in a wide ranging Nixon al(les have been indicted
defense during a closed door In the Watergate cover-up is
session, said initially the proof that the President did not
EUGENE, Ore. (UPIJ evidence does not support conspire to cover up the Former Sen. ·w~yne Morse,
impeachment of the President. scandal.
who died Monday at the age of
· Addressing those members
- Nittm .slearly rejected 73, refused the use of a kidney
who believe there is evidence "blackmail".'paymenl$ to wa. dialysis machine tha~ · might
that Nixon violated the law, tergate burglar E. Howard have· prol011ged his life.
Garrison said they musi look Hunt In a taped White House
"It was a matter o! phllosobeyond Nixon's guilt or In· meeling March 21; 1973.
phy with him and the family
oocence.
- Facts brought out by the ' that if it was the only thing that
" It is not a narrow question impea chment panel con· would suslam hun for a whtle,
of what the President did on a cerning allegations of illegal he would prefer not to," said
particular date or whether wiretapping, Improper cam· Jun Miller, a spokesman for
there was complicity in a paign contributions from mllk Good Samaritan Hospital in
crime, but whetber the public producers and ITT and Portland, Ore .
interest ·will be served or political misuse of the IRS do
Miller said Morse and his
disserved by• removal of the · " not even come close to wife refused the use or the
President from Qffice," Garri- misconduct.''
machine during the weekend.
son argued in papers released
lat&lt;&gt;r by the· committee. ··
Garrison, a youthful looking
He added that the members lifelong Republican frorri Vir·
should not assume Nixon's ginia, was thrust into the
guilt just because he has conunittee spotlight over the
refused to turn over some of his weekend when the minority
White House tapes. His refusal named him to replace Albert .
ahould not be an impeachable ·Jenner. The Republicans reoffense, because Nixon is in placed Jenner because they
elfect exercising his Fifth said he had deserted them and
A court appointed attorney,
Amendment rights. ~ Garrison sided wilh Doar In calling for representing two Rt. 1
Nixon 's impeachment. .
Cheshire youUls, entered pleas
argued.
"'
Jenner addressed the com. of gwlly for both in Gallipolis
St. Clair, who wa~ in
California to meet with Nlxon mittee following Garrison's Mumcipal Court t.his mormng.
on the impeachment case, said presentation and told the 3B • Donald W. Prtce, 19, and
he disagreed with these views members he disagreed with his Charles L. Tate, 20, both
or Garrison, saying the evi- successor's conclusions.
.presently rn the U. S. Army,
dence 1 'does not indicate
Jenner noted that Nixon were charged July 7 with
complicity on the part of. the refused to yield some sub- possession. of an .hall~clnogen,
President.''
poenaed materials on the . and follow~g thetrgutlty pleas
Speaking publicly on the grounds they were not relevant this morn g, Mumclpal Thurt
evidence in the impeachffient to the inquiry. But he said when Judge Robert S. Betz lmed
proceeding lor the first lilne, the committee accidentally them $250 and costs each and
St. Clair said:
acquired some later, they se~tenced them to SLX months
- An impeachable offense found they o.:ere relevant · m jail.
.
.
However, smce both are m
was "a major .and serious evidence
crime" and "! don't think the
Becaus'e oJ that discrepancy, the armed services, Judge Betz
American people will accept Jenner said the committee suspended the jail term on the
anything else as a basis · for must assume other materials condltton that they are turned
,removing their President.."
being withheld are also signifi· over . to thetr respecti.Ye
-He would not comment on cant to the case " and certain ~pe:Jor off1cers . for further
what Nixon would do if the inferences must be drawn." dtsctplinary actton by the
Supreme Court orders him to
As to charges that he wasn't anned servJces.
turn over 64 While House tapes speaking for the President or
subpoenaed by Special Water- for Republicans, Jenner told
gate
Prosecutor
Leon reporters : 11 1 thlnk I'm speak~
Jaworski. .St. Clair said it ing for all the people or the
..
would be "highly improper". United States of America and
to discuss the case while it is the House of Representatives
pending In the court. The ruting who want to live lheir lives in
is expected soon.
happiness, and privacy and
- The fact that seven·former peace ..''
•

Cheshire you-ths
pleaded guilty

Ban wanted
Continued from page 1
try to secure permission to
change the speed limits on
streets around the community
park to 15 miles an hour . The
department must approve
such a lowering or speed
regulations .
The officials discussed the
need for additional income in
the town for road repairs and

mafntenance but came up with
no solution. A replacement for
Maintenan ce Supervisor
Harold Chase who has indicated that he would like to
retire was discussed.
Opening ·prayer was by Rev.
Dwight Zavitz , pastor of the
Middleport First Uniled
Presbyterian Church .

Army .to Perml•t·.
t·r easur·e hunt

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Geraldine
Keeton, Middleport; Richard
Burkhlmer, Pomeroy; Albert
Smith, Pomeroy; Barbara
Lyons, Mason ; Agnes Isaacs,
Coolville; Carmel Jowett,
SANTA FE, N.M. (UP!) - , program
of permitting
Rutland; Robert Leifheit,
Armed
with
Department
of
the
quaiUied
applicants
who claim
Shade.
DISCHARGED - Myrtle Army permission to look for a to know the exact location of
Edison, Virginia Hoy, David legendary treasure on the the treasure to enter lhe White
Rosenbaum, Kathy Gpuld, White Sands Missile Range, Sands Missile Range .under a
Gov. Bruce King said today he 48-hour license and close
Donald Eblin, Elmer Still.
wants a chance to Inspect a supervision of the commanding
'
.
gold bar as evidence the general" of the range.
treasure cache actually exists.
The Army said ·it needed
SEE MOUNTAii'!S
The Army sent word to King further information like for
Mr. and 1\tr•. Lee Baughman
Monday
that qualified appli· example, "What is your •plan
and Jeffrey, Middleport, have
returned home after spending cants who claun to know the for delraylng the cost of the
the weekend in the Smoky exact location of the treasure proposed activity?"
Mountains, Tennessee, North · would be allpwed a 48.hour
Carolina, Kentucky and West time period to locate it.
Virginia.
Attorney F. Lee Bailey
represents
a group of anonyWalk-Up Window and
mous
persons
whp are seeking
Continued from page 1
I)IVORCE ASKED
Auto Teller Window
·
Correspondent Keata said
Karen Brewer. Pomeroy, to recover the gold.
Open Fri. !'venings S To.7 P.M.
State officials have said Turkish· jets also blasted
. has filed suit for divorce in
Bailey
has signed an Nicosia Airport and dropped
Meigs County Common Pleas
WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
agreement
granting New explosives on a Greek Cypriot
Court, from John R. Brewer,
RGh . Pomeroy, charging gross Mexico 25 per cent of any artillery battery on the out·
neglect of duly and extreme treasure found by his group. skirts of the capital.
R~ts ?f a . treasure of
Greek Cypriot troops
cruelty.
buned Spanish gold, with value . reported shooting down five
eatlmates ranging . into the Turkiah warplanes during the
MENTO MEET
billions of dollars, have cJr. day and accuSed the iiivasion
The regular meeting of the culated for decades. It is Ioree or "merciless and inUnited Methodist Men will be supposed to be on Victorio discriminate bombing" o.f
·.
held at Heath Church In Peak on the mlssUe range In civilian targets.
Middleport at · 7:45 p.m . · southern New MeXIco, on state
BEL.i.ING SET
..,IDDLEPORT, .OHIO
Friday . Music and group land leased by the Army.
CHESTER
An old
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
singing ·will be held. Refresh·
AlthoUgh King asked Army fashioned belling will b&lt;i held
menta will follow a short Secretary ,Howard Cailaway for Mr. and Mrs . Gary
THJl FRIENDLY BANK
business se:·ssion.
last Wf!!k for permission for (Gruffy ) Smith at their home
. alate officials. to go onto the on Sumner Road this evening
missllerange m search for the at 10 p.m. All friends and
Sold, he aald he remained neighbors are welcome. Mrs.
$keptical about the exilltence of · Smith Is the former Charlotte
the trea~ure,
Snider.
The govemor said he might
personaUy travel to the missile
PLEASANT VALLEY
range to look ·tor the burled DISCI:IARGES - Curtis
gold If he Is presented some Connolly, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
proof It nlsta.' A represen- J . R. King, Point Pleasant;
tative of a groijp clalmlng to Eloise Hedrick , Culloden; ·
know •tlie location of t~e Vicki Campbell, Hartford :
treaaure said he would prnent Albert · Middleton, . Point
auch evidence In the form of a Pleasant; . Teresa Caynor,
gold har auegedly recOvered POint Pleasant; Helen Wallis,
from the aile.
Gallipolis Ferry: LindseY
'I')le Department of the Army Fergusen·, New . Haven i
said .In a statement Callaway William Harris, Buflalo ; Mrs.
"Ia adamantly opposed to Floyd . E. Rayburn , Point
nploratlon" for treasures on Pleasant.
r
millllry reeervatio111.
BIRTI1 - A girl to Mr. and
,
However, the statement oald, Mrs. Fred Marka, New Haven,
caUnay II "committed to a Monday.

JUST WHAT THE DOCTOR
ORDERED

'l'wo other person.!! charged
in the case, Douglas K.
Johnson, 21, Rt. I, _CIJeahire,
and Janice Marie Rouse, 20,
Highland Springs, Va., wiU not
be prosecuted because of lack
of evidence. Judge Belz said
both were found not to he in·
volved In lhe possession of the
hallucinogen.
In other Municipal Court
action this morning, Ellis
Burke, 23, 460 Third Ave.,
GaUipolis, forleited a ~ bond.
She had been charged with
shoplifting three packs or
cigarettes from the Kroger
Grocery Store at the Silver
Bridge Shopping Plaza.
Arnold B. Stump, Jackson
Pike, was fmed $21.93 and costs
for lorcible entry In iL suit filed
by Evans Enterprises.

Possible bridge
closure. voted

Yes, A
Citizens National
Auto·Loan

I-

Morse, gadlly of the Senate
for nearly a quarter-century,
will be burled here Thursday.
He was admitted to the hospital
a week ago with what was
believed to be a bad cold and
congestion. His Illness was
diagnosed the next day as a
urinary tract infecUon.
Morse wasiisted as seriously
ill but responding to antibiotics
until Sunday when kidney
failure placed him on the
critical list.
His wife, Mildred, whom he
married in 1924, was at his
bedside when he lapsed Into a

NEW HAVEN, W. Va . Motion on the possibility of
closing the bridge on old route
33anda·talkbyJoeRichardsof
Governor Moore 's commission
on safety highlighted New
Haven's Town Council meeting
' last night:
Councilmen passed a motion
to close the bridge unless
someone claims ownership of it
and necessary repairs are
rriade. The cotp1cil believes
that the state . owns the
structure.
Councilmen termed the
bridge as a definite traffic
hazard . The council set a time
limit of 30 days in which the
REA repairs have to be made
or they will take action to close
it down .
Joe Richards spoke to the
council about the tralfic
conditions in and around New
Haven.
He told councilmen about

coma early Monday and wllen
he died two hours and 20
minutes later.
Morse, who once held Ute
Senate lillbuster record, was
\liken Ill while campaigning far
a return to the Senate seat)le
held for 24 years.
.
He served in the Senate as
both a Repu.blican and a
Democrat, and was one of the
early opponenta or u.s. Jn.
volvement in Vietnam, a stand
many thought contributed to
his defeat in 1968 by a young
Republican state senat«, BOb
Packwood.
Sen. Mark Hatrleld, R.Ore.,
wbo beat Morse when )le tried
oo make a comeback two yetu:s
ago, -said Morse was •~a
politician from a unique mold
and an enigma oo many people.
nHls interest was substance
and his commitment to issues
produced a unique Morse style.
Those of us who fought for
nearly a decade to chqe
United States policy in Indochina owe a debt or gratitude to
Wayne Morse."
·

licensing radar for police use in
the area. In other business at
the council meeting Coun·
cilmanNeiiHaymakermadea
· motion to hire Dwain Russell
and Jimmy Parsons to clean
vacant lots in New Haven.
The council agreed to this
motion and will pay t!Je two at
$2 per hour. Mayor Charles '
Smith appointed town .recorder, Jane Russel1, as the town
treasurer.
CLOTHING OFFERED
Also present at the meeting
Free
clothing day will be
were Al.an Van Horn and Joe
Skinner. They are employes or held at the salvation Army' 115
. the VTN Engineering Finn ol Butternut, on Thursday, July
Charleston. They are in New 25, from 10 o'clock until noon.
Haven to work on the town 's All area residents are
welcome .
secondary sewer system.
WINS PRIZE
IN HOSPITAL
ST. PAUL, Minn. (UP!) MASON, ·w. Va. - Mrs.
"Portrait of a Railroad," Addie Mae Brown, Mason, is a
Burlington Northern's cor· patient In Holzer Medical
porate· flhn, won firSt prize in Center: Anyone desiring ttr
the documentary film category send cards or remember her in
of the International · Venice any way, may address them to
Film Festival.
room 336.

SALE! KIMBALL PIANOS
Furniture Department • 3rd Floor

Truce holds

S'f EE r: ,·--·

• • .the longer you oWn it.
the more you'll like the name

Baker Furniture
Middl~port,

Ohio ·
llll•llll•••••••••••••••lllil••••••••••l .

Ronald Ziegler, Nixon's press secretary, ~id 11 ... the
American society is not going to accept the removal of
their President from office In an impeachment proceeding

'

has no such evidence .

It was unlikely that Hogan's decision would start a
stampede among fellow conservatives In Congress. Since
each re&lt;.'Ognizes his vote. on impeachment will mark him
for the rest of his political career, each member is likely
to reach a deci.~ion on his own calculatioOs.
.
Hogan said he received several phone calls from the
White House before he announced his decillion but did not
return them. Vice President G&lt;lrald R. Ford telephoned,
but only "to question my timing" not challenge hill
judgemen\,l;logan said.
Rodioo · lost a procedural vote In the cornmittee
Tuesday. By 21·16, the panel decided to vote on each
impeaclunent article after it is debated -and not on all or
the proposed articles at the end of the debate.
Rep. JoShua Eilberg, D-Pa., said Rodino lavored a
single session of voting on all to shield Republicans and
southern Democrats from "torment" and "pressure."

•

Now You Know

enttn·e

'

. Partly cloudy tonight and
Thursday. Lows tonight mid
50s toiow 60s. Highs Thursday
80 lo 110.

mlttee for its. investigation .
Led by Rep. Charles E . Wiggiris, Jl.~alll., Republicans
wiU a.rgue that a president Should not be Impeached on
inferences or anything less than evidence or his own
personal criminal behavior . Wlggjns eays the cornmittee

based on anything other thari fad, and the facts are not
· there!'
Andrew Johnson, a Democrat who succeeded llle
1)1artyred Abraham l..int'Oin to the presidency and was
considered too lenient to the defeated South by radical
Republicans, is the only president ever impeached. But
the Senate vote was one vote abort ol the two-thirds
majority required and he was not removed !rom office.
Nlxon stands accused of abusing hill tMl'!t in an effort to
remain In oflice and of obstructing justice to conceal the
truth.
Reps. George E. Danielson. ().('.all! .. and .lack Bronk• .
D-Tex., said two artlcleaof imJ&gt;&lt;!alilmenl were likely to be
belore the committee -ooe alleging Nixon abused power
and the other that he obstructed justice.
The obstruction article would list the Watergate coverup, including the payment or huah money to assure lhe
continued silence of one of the Watergate wiretap con·
spiralors, E. Howard Hunt. Nixon also would be accuse&lt;~
of encouraging perjury to hide the truth .
The other article, alleging abuse of power, would in·
elude using the IRS for political purposes, diverting public
funds to enhance NixOn's East and West O&gt;ast homes,
using the CIA to mislead Watergal&lt;f investigators, and
refusing to hun over evidence subpoenaed by the com-

A ·flatfi sh can change its
spot.&lt;; .

•

POMEROY·MIODLEPORT, OHIO

Devoted To 1'he Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Are&lt;l
WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1974

~~~~----~~~~~~----------~-=-

ATHENS - Frederick A.
Dixon, 66, Athens, died
WJexpectedly at his home of an
apparent heart attack Monday.
Mr. Dixon has been working in
Meigs County as a land sUr·
veyor.
He was a son of the late
Clinton Frederick and Clara
Dixon, and. a graudale of
Albany High School and Sehool
of Electtical Engineering at
Ohio University.
For the past five years he
had been se!f..,mployed as an
electricai engineer · and surveyor.
.
He is survived by his wife,
Louise; one son, Robert, and a
daughter, Linda Whitlatch ,
both of Columbus; four
grandchildren;. one brother,
Everett Dixon, Gnadenhutten,
and two sisters, Mrs. Edith ·
Whaley, Rl. 2, Albany, and
Mrs; Ruth Howell, canton.
Funeral services will be
Thursday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Hughes Funeral . Home,
Athens, with Rev, Robert
Hayden officiating. Burial will
be in Wells Cemetery at
Downington. Friends may call
at the funeral home Wed•
nesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to .9
p,m.

Elbenelds In ·Pomeroy

The real wrangling likely will com• later this week in
day and night sessions which chainn1n Peter W. Rodino
Jr., D·N.J., ill ~etermlned to cone ltd! by the end or the
week .
He hoped to complete work before the Supreme Court
hands down a decision that could enormously c'Om pllcate
the Houae's job.
.
The court announced It would meet today. That could
mean a ruling on whether Nixon legally IJ'•Joked executive
privilege in withholding S. tapes from the special
prosecutor. But a White House aide in San Clemente,
Calif., told newsmen he understood the court's action
today would be ori school busing in Detroit, not on
Watergate.
U the court rules against Nixon and he complies, there
will be Intense pressure on Congress to forestall an im·
peachmcnt vote to see what the tapes Show.
The process could take months. A Senate trial would be
delayed until the new Congress sita -creating further
impatience am0 ng, a population which wants Watergate
put behind it.

Weather

VOL. XXVI . NO. 7l

Frederick Dixon
dies in Athens

(Jiilens ,alional

F~LEX

W...SHINGTON (UPI) - The Houae Judiciary Com.
mlttee beg1!11 Ule debate tonight which ill almost certain to
result In a recommendation that President Nilloo be
Impeached by the House, tried by the Senate and" removed
from office.
·
At the outae.~ of 30 hours of televised debate,' only a
handful of the 36 commltlee members appeared to be st!U
undecided and genuinely troUbled over how to vote.
But there was little doubt about the outcome. The 21
Democrats were united. And the Democrats' strategy of
seeking to accOmmodate the RepubUcans whenever
wssible could result in a vote by a lwolo""'e or even a
thrt!No-one margin for recommending the first lm·
peachment of a president In • century.
Nixon's counter.Walegy of making the committee's
eflort appear to be a partisan Democratic exerctae suf·
fered a setback Tuesday.
Declaring that Nillon's own words on hill tapes were the
"body blow" that ahaped his view, RepubUcan Rep. Law·
renee J. Hogan of Maryland, a COIII!Orvatlve, announced
his decillion. that Nbron had "beyond • reasonable doubt
committed impeachable offenses."
.
Thelhreeohour committee session is to start at 7:30 p.m.
EDT, with 15 minute speeches by the most senior mem·
bers.

PHONE 992 2156 _________ _ _ _
TE_N_C_
EN_TS

Elections promised
...

·NICOSIA, Cyprus (UP!) Acting President Glafkos Cle·
rides said tllday new elections
"will be held within the next
few months" on Cyprus and
that ousted President Arch·
bishop Makarios · could run
for president.
·
There still was scattered
gunftre in the capital city of
Nlcosill today, threatening the
fragile cease-fire, but a U.N.
spokesman said the truce

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· violations were not serious.
Makarios was deposed last
week by the coup headed by
Nicoa Sampson, a onetime
teenage terrorist who resigned
Tuesday to make room for
Clerldes, the speaker of the
House of Representatives and
legal successor to M~karios
under the constitution.
Cl~rldes told a news conference that "every Cyprus
citizen has lhe right" to run for
president, and "there is no
reason why Archbiahop Ma·
kllrios could not stand" for
office.
He said the Important thing
on Cyprus now was to reduce
tensions and see th8t the ceaselire held. He was careful to
.
No personal injuries were take no sides and to steer a
reported in three . accidents neutral course between Cypriot
investigated by the ·Meigs ctJnuiLunttles .
Makartos, in New York, Sl1id
County
Sheriff's
Dept.
he
plans IIi return to lhe island
HoweVer, a deer was·killed and
nation within the next few
a car went into a creek.
weeks
and reassume office. ·
Ri~kie Causey, Rl. I, Reeds'
ville, backed ·his car into the
LOCAL TEMPS
parked car of James Bailey of
Temperatw-e
in downtown
Chester at 9:15 a.m. Tuesday.
The accident occurred on the Pomeroy Wednesday all! a.m.
Ed Humphrey Farm in Olive was 75 degrees Under cloudy
Twp., Reedsville. There was skies.
•
light damage.
At 1: 10 p.m. T~esday ,
Richard W. Salser, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, lost control of his car
on rain Slick pavement ort US
33. The car spun around
several times, broke off a
telephone pole and traveled
trav.eled ·backwards, coming to
.
.
. rest headed north in a creek.
There was severe damage,
CHARLESTON, W. Va .
with no citation issued.
(UPJ.) -A "massive" federal
A deer was struck and killed Investigation Is in progress at
as it ran Into .the pa,th of an auto the nearby South Charleston
driven by Paul David Mitchell, plant or Union carbide, In·
Langsville, who was driving spired by the second death of
along SR 124 in Salem TwP., at an employe ai\J'ibuted to a rare
12:35 a.m., today. There was farm of li- cancer, a city
moder1te ))I'OIM!I'I)' damqe.

.Car goes.
·in creek

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ONJ;: BIG FAMILYt ,,,. •Dii . ~q ~of aU fllde!'*l

agricultural agencies in Meigs County uiHILir one roor&amp;t ihe
Fanners Bank and Savings Co. building ·was offlclaUy
completed Tuesday. Ted Reed, Jr., and'!he board or directors
or the bank·eriiertalned local, district and state officials with
a luncheon at Ule Meigs Inn to mark the occasion. Attending
were, front, I to r, Ted Reed, Jr., president of lhe bank;
Georgene Childers, local, Fanners Home Administration
office; Lester Stone, state director of FHA; Harle Hicks,
stale executive director or the Agriculture Stabilization and .
Conservation Service; Vickie Harris, local, ASCS; George

.

AMy, U¥Mo&amp;'.a~.. w:.. ""-- ~; Y II'J1I Ama:, local committee
ASC$; second roll', Pam Calvert, local, FHA; David Parcy,
conservationist of lhe Meigs Soil and Waier Conservation
Service; Clarence Price, l&lt;ical, ...SCS; Don Mora, local,
ASCS; lhird row~ Archie Stegall, local, FHA; Milton Roush,
district FHA representative; Leota Young, SWCS, local; H.
E. (Pete) Shields, .local head of ASCS; Rita BucJYey, local,
ASCS; back row, I 'fo r, David Kobleritz, Reid Young, Roy
Miller, all of the local SWCS; Mrs. Lula Hampton, FHA,
local, and Thereon Johnson, associated with the SWCS office
and the hank.

vv~;;':~:~,r~-,~;;;i';/;lf· Meigs
.•,•

man killed

A 41-year-&lt;&gt;ld Meigs County
By United PressiDtematlonal .
.
man, a ·father of four children,
NICOSIA CYPRUS- SCA'ITERED GUNFIRE ERUPTED
was accidentally
killed
In the capital'of Nicosia today, lhreate!ling the fragile ceasefire
Tuesday afternoon \Vhen a tree
between Greek Cypriot national guardsmen and Turklah troops
he was cutting !ell on him.
on Cyprus. AU. N. spokesman eald the ahooting ''never slop.
According to the Gailia
ped." Hesaldmost oflheoutbreaksocclllTed In the Nicosia area,
County Sheriff's Department,
particularly the northern part of the city. He described the . Raymond Lee McCieUan, 41, oi
violations as seattered ahootlng or light weapons.
·
Rt. 1, Langsville, was cutting a
The outbreak of fighting came just hours after the U.N. tree on lhe Allie Stamper farm
Security Council passed a new resolution calling on bolh sides to
on Ward Rd., just off SR 554,
observe the cea ...rire imposed Monday. U. N. forces also vowed wben the tree feU on another
to keep their bold on Nicosia airport at aU costa, despite the tree and then landed on him.
threat of claahes with the Greek.Ied troops and the Invading
McC!ellaiL's body was taken
Turkish .·forces. He said the United Nationa had requested
to .the McCoy-Moore Funeral
relnlorcement8 and a contingent off!nniah troops was scheduled
Home.
to arrive Tuesday night at the Brltl8h air base at Akrotirl .
Mr. McClelland was born
July 6, 1933 at Guzzle, W.Va., a
WASHINGTON- THE SUPREME COURT was to return to son of Marion and Eliza
the bench today, til days after hearing arguments on whether Colegrove McClelland,
President Nb:on must sUlTender records and tapes of 64 con· Branchland, W. Va.
venations demanded for the Watergate cover-up trial.
The funeral will be at 11
Court spokesman Barrett McGUI'Il would not say whether a.m.; ·Friday, at the Upper
some action was eJqiected in liLaI historic case, or in a landmark United Baptist Church, 10 Mile
case Involving Detroit school busing, or both. These are the only Rd., Branchland, with Rev.
two pending matters. In San Clemente, ·calif., a White House Denver Dalley and Rev.
official said he understood the tapes case would not be decided. Gllbert Gue olficlating. Burial
. President Nbron's lawyer, 'James D. St. Clair, remained Iii San will be In Warrick CameterY at
Clemente, but was to return to Washington some time today.
10 Mile.
Surviving . besides his
.ISRAEL HAS LAUNCHED AIR . STRIKES AGAINST parents, are his wife, Avis
suspected Palestinian guerrilla bases In southern Lebanon lor Slone McClelland; four sons,
the first lime In more than a month, striking the outskirts or Terry Lee, Ricky Layile, F1oyd
villages six mUes north of the Iaraell·Lebanese border.
Daniel and Kenneth Edward,
Arab newsmen said four Israeli warplanes struck the out. aU at ·home: three brothers,
sklrta of the viUages 91 Khrelbe and Rachaya ei·Fakhar ip a 1~
minute attack Tuesday that damaged crops but apparently
caused no casualties, according to reports In Beirut. .
An Israeli military spokesman in Tel Aviv said lhe attacks
lasted only a few mlnul\!8, but gave no details. the raid on
targeta In the Lebaneee region known u Fatahland waslhe first
bOmbing run since 1..aell warplanes struck near the cities of
Deputies of the Meigs County
Sid!lll and Tyre on June 20, causing dozens of casualties in
Sheriff's
Dept., Monday •.trans·
Palestinian refugee camJI'l.
ported David Len Darst,
Middleport,
to the Chilllcolh~
SALT LAKE CITY - THE NAACP IS GOING to court to
battle a rule that black youths cannot rise to the lop rank In Boy CorrecUonal Institute to begin
Scout troops run by the Mormon church, Leaders of the Salt Lake serving hls term· ol not less .
Qty and Ogden NAACP chapters said Tuesday they would rue a than one year and not more
civil rlght811Ult agalnll Ute Boy Scouta of America and Ill major than live.'
Darst who appeared before
.Jocalsponsor- the Otutch of Jesus Olrlsl or Latter-day Salnt8.
Meigs
County tommon Pleas
. The cliW"Ch allqwa blacks to be&lt;:ome memben but denies
Utem the right to he trtelll. Motmon~nsored Scout ltooJI'l Judge, John G. Bacon, July 9
""""'e the poat of "10nlor patrol leader" lor the president of the on a bUJ. of lnlormatlon,
pleaded guilty to trespassing
local Monnon deacoos quorum.
. on March 27 by force , stealth or
FARMERS AND RANCHERS EYED THEm PARCHED deception In an unoccupied
str.ucture, namely, the Century
crop~ and livellock with Jirowlni eoncm~ today u hot, dry
)'ealhm: left the Pilllna on ll!e verl!ll of a killer drought. Nebr.aska Bar, In lending to commit a ,
·
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Continued on pate 10
· theft as defined in section

Ray and Troy, Cleveland and
Arvis, in · Georgiai seven
sisters, Mrs . Opal Lamp,
F1ortda; Mrs. Garnet Albright,
BranChland and Mrs. Nancy
Fulks and Mrs. Thelma Estle,
Ranger, W. Va.; Ella 1\!cCielland; Branchland; Mrs.
Dorlha Cline, Cleveland, and
Mrs. Pearl Lambert, Ranger.
The body Is at the Koontz
Funeral Home, Hamlin, W.
Va ., and will be taken to the
borne of ,the parents at I p.m.
Thursday where friends may
call.

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iii- Jumbo squid make landfall
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LOS ANGELES (lJPl) -Thousands of jumbo squid are
ashore along tiLe Soulbem caJHol'llill eout, .
):( chasing gruolon and at least one frightened little. girl • .
:} '''lbere are many .thousands of them out there," John .111tcb, ;
:;~; research director of tbe State Fisheries Laboratory Ill Long ,
~~: Beach, said Tuesday.
•
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\!i
The octopus-like creatures, usually lollDd In tiLe waten
~~ off Chile and Peru, have washed ashore from Ocemdlllllldeoo
:;l Polllt Dume, be said, a stretch of coutllne 100 ea 1ong,
., north aDd ·south of Los· Angeles.
.
"
"Most ol them are about 2 feet long and 2 to 3.polllld1,
:·:':
!i~ he said, but tiLe speclesli "known to get to ~ leet Ill l.euglll
j~ and can weigh loti to 200 pomLds." John Olguin, cUrector of
1:[ the cabrlllo Milseum lu San Pedro, uld a Uttle girl ra~
'?:: !rom the water there In fright, with a smallaq111d wrapJIOII
[ around tierleg.
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,:~ . ;,It didn't bite. her, and she w/'sjuat scared," be •al~.
~ The squid have long tentacles and BIDill beaD, llllo al11rd 1,
~ wbtch they use to catch LUJ!I eat IILeir prey, Flteb said 110
:~ examined some of the sauld "and tllev bad l!l'1Uikln In tbOir
:~ stomachs, so It's possible they chased a:ter tiLe grunion and
:::: stranded themselves on shore ,"
,
]~
Gnmion are small silvery flsh that liwbii 11bo.re to ~~ .
;i: spawn on nights or lull moon:
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Cancer probe pressed
at Union Carbide plant
newspaper reported · late
Tuesday.
The Charleston Gazette quol·
ed Richard Lemen, chief of
medical data at the Cleveland
office of the National Institute
. for Occupational Safely and
~ealtb,
that the probe

. NAMED BISHOP· AIDE
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI)
- Msgr. William A. Hughes,
vicar general ol the Youngs·
town Catholic Diocese has been
named auJ~illary bishop of
theiocese, it· was annoWJced
Tuesday .
CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy E·R squad
answered a call to Scipio
Township for Margaret Parcell
al3:25 a.m : Mrs. Parcell who
wa&amp; ill· was taken to ·Veterans
Memorial Hospi(jll .

posure to fumes created In the
conversion process and Inhaled
by plant workers.
InitiaUy, the danger signl
were hoisted earlier In tho
year, when B. F. Goodrich
plant at' Louillvllle aald f!vo of
Its workers died of the dtaeaoo,
the newspaper said. Concern
also was generated by .the
completion of new lludles on
tile controversy in Europe.

Choose a Kimball and you'll always be pleased. ·

S.ALEI KIMBALL PIANOS

Elberf~lds
J
n
Pomeroy
·
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29t3.0l o( the Ohio Revised
Code.
On July 18 Darsl pleaded
guilty in the same eour) to
entering an unoccupied
structure, Headquarters Bar lh
Middleport with the same
purpose on March 29.
The Investigation was
conducted by ·Middleport
Police Chief, J. J. Cremeans,
who made the arrest and obo
talnet.the confessions, and had
the sUbject before Bernard V.
Fult•;
Meigs
County
prosecuting attorney on a bill
Of information .

repre·sents "a monumental
task."
Involved Is the tracing of
some 42,000 persons who have
been on the plant's payroll
since the 1930's, in an attempt
to uncover any cases of
angiosarcoma, an unusual
cancer thought to be caused by
vinyl chloride fumes.
The Gazette quoted Lemen
as saying his agency hoped to
llnish Its work In Oecennber,
"although we may have to
extend it."
Lemen was further quoted u
saying the South ·Charleston
plant was among several that
deal with vinyl chloride which
the agency Is studying.
The Gazette said the rare
form of cancer can appear as .
late as 15 to 20 years ·after &lt;I·

Sentence begun

A brand new selection of fhie quality Kimball Pianos In
walnu_t, pecan and maple wood finishes. Early ·
Amer1can, Contemporary and Mediterranean styling
P~dd~d bench to match. You can really save now during
thts p1ano sale on the piano you select for yourself or yqur
famtly.
·

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but far from home shores

nus A'!TRACTIVE LINE ....-tng new WIUonN.will be !ranting the Meigs High School
milrchlng band at the Melp County Fair in August and also at the Meigs football games.
Making up the eorpo are Iron! row, 1... , Pam Nlclnsky, Kathy Werry., and Joyce Hutchison ;
back row, Judy Owen, B8bs Witte, f!eld cominander, and Jenny Chapman.
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·:··-:-:·······:-- ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.

TOURNEY SET
· A horseshoe touraament
. will be held beginning Aug. 5
at the tlllddleport pool aile,
Roger Braue~ aaaounced
today.
The enlry f~ Ia t1 1nd
entranlll muat he a rttldellt
of Melli COIIJity, Peninlereated may olp ap lillie
Middleport pool betw- l
and 5:31 P.lll· anytime belon
Aug. 3. For addlll.-1 t..
!ormation call .......

.

$iCW.."Wi/fJJD! I'"'"''1 IIIJIIIIJ

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1- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddlepo· • .,....,er.,y, 0 .• WedneSday, July 24, 1971
•J

Rozelle

st~ying

off..•br.~pUy on Monday.
ou&amp; talks, but at least there lw
HJ can't do otherwue,"' been cooununlcaUon, and the.
Rozelle said. "The leadership Management Council has alao
Football League Playert As- of the NFLPA has rnBde thl4 been in t.luch with me."
IOdation and owners reprenta· office and myself a rnBjor t..ue
Roze.Ue says he l.s just an
lives are counUng on Com· in the negotiations. I think that interested bystander.
mlaioner Pete Rozelle t.l setUe the federal mediator has done
"It is ~y unlnle to claim •
their 24-day old strike, they can a fine job in keeping the two that I am 'management 'a
forget it. He'sstaying out of the sides talking off and on.
man/" he said. ''111.e union
representatives
have never
negotiations.
"I've been keeping abreast
Rozelle made that clear of developments. I've talked t.l made such a charge. I am not
Tue~ay after talks liad broken Wlion representaUves, not seri· involved with • the NFL
BY JOE CARNICELU

· UPI Sports Writer
If the striking National

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Management Co~mcll; which Ia
repreoenUng the ownen, nor
am I Involved with the players'
w:dm."
No new taiks have been
scheduled.
'
Rozelle, faced with his
league's atart1ng the exhibition
IM!a!IOil with roolde and 'free
agent laden rosters, held
''informal'' conver.saUoos with
the thr.ee major ·television
networks regarding the f"""'

Annual practice tilt cancelled
Earlier in the week the
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP!)
picketers
had some competi·
- The annual Cincinnati
t!on.
Bengals training camp scrimAn old man showed up with
mage , scheduled for this
his
own sign and picketed the
Saturday, has fallen victim t.l
the NFL Players Association picketers.
Read the sign: "no fans-.no
strike and has been canceled.
Head Cosch Paul Brown money. no money-oo football.
made the announcement Tues- No football-go to work. We
day, saying that only quick are fans, not fools."
Meanwhile, the Bengals anSettlement of the strike could
nounced
Tuesday that tjcket
change his mind.
Brown only has 32 piByers- holders for the club's first! pre18 veterans and 14 rookies-in season game can get a refund if
camp and said he didn't want
Injuries to further thin the
ranks.
Five of the 31 striking
Bengals pi c~ eted Tuesday
morning's practice; but none
was around as the team went By United Press International
Unbeaten Central Divtidon
through afternoon drills.
I
powers Birmingham ~d
Memphis, gearing a gen e
"Southern rivalry /'
eet
tonight before what is expo ed
t.l be the largest World Fnotball League crowd to date .
Sunday School attendance
An estimated 60,000 fans are
July 21 was 45, the offering
due to fill Birmingh"l;,•s
$21.84. Worship services were
Legion Field when ~he
held at II a .m., with the Rev. hometown Americans ~ lsk
Meece speaking from Hebrews their z.o . reeord against the
6: "Jesus Christ Is Our Only
Soulhmen, also1 in
HOpe." Attendance was 21, the visiting
the WFL central which lso ·
offering $19.16, pledges $18.
features a third unbeaten ub,
The Cluster Hymn Sing will the Chicago Fire. The Fire Is
l&gt;e held at the Alfred Church on . the road against Porililnd.
this Saturday evening, July 27
·Other WFL action f~~~lres
from 7:30- 9 p.m. Everyone is Southern
Cillifronia at
welcome.
Jacksonville and Houston at
The Albert Young family · Florida while in the nat!&lt;Jtai
reuni.on will be held. on Sunday, TV Game Thursday night, ~ew
Aug. 4in the Woode grove here. York is at Pblladelphia.
Iris Carr-was retilrned t.l her
In addition to featurin~ a
home here Sunday afternoon
. after spending two weeks in ~o;·;•:.-;-;o;...•;•;........,."'·v:...........;,•••••••••,•.•••••••. •.. . ...
· Cleveland Clinic, by the White -~:;·~····~~~-~·;;~~~::;~····;·~·;····~;;·
ambulance. Her husband spent
the entire time with his wife interesting.
Mr. and Mts. Clair Edw..rd
and returned home with her.
Her sister, Sue Woode and . Follrod and family atter~ed
daughter, Conni, of Circleville Mrs . Follrod's "High Sc~ool
,. also came Sunday to be with class " reWlion, at Lancaster,
·Ohio last Sunday.
her a few days.
Mr . and Mrs . Rob~rt
Mrs. Wilber Parker attended
a bridal shower for her Robinson and family of Belfre
brother 's fiancee , Wave1ine and Mr. and Mrs. Otto Sw'flz
Voris, Saturday night . at the of. Shade, recentiy called 1en
home of Mrs. Davjd Russell, Nina Robinson and Clara Foilrod.
near Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Mr. and Mrs.. Ernest Taylor
accompanied the Lloyd WQode visited their cousips, ·
Dillihger family to London, Mr. and Mrs . John Hayes nt ar
Ohio, Saturday to visit their Chester Sunday afternoon. pn
sonr Mr. and Mrs. Charles the way back they visited t~eir
Taylor and family . The men cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Chanies
attended the "Steam Festival" A. Woode, in Chester. ·

they want.

become involved In a dispute
that Is not theirs," Bengals
officials said. "For this reason,
any holder of a ticket to this
game mBY ask for hl4 money
back with no effect ·on future
games nor on !Ieason ticket
priority.·•
If the strike COriUnues, preseason games apparently will
be played with mOstly rooldea
and free agents. Most NFL
teams have far less veterans in
camp than do the Bengals.

However, the Bengals said
the Aug. 3 game at Cincinnati's
Ri verfron t Stadium against
Miami would be played as
' .
scheduled.
That game, .!.s were all
Bengala' 1974 ga'l'es, has been
sold out long ago.
''The Bengals are in accord
wholeheartedly with the (National Football League) Management Council in the belief
that the faM should in no way

Unbeaten powe_rs to collide

Alfred
Social..Notes

Ray Cromley

Congress

i

To illustrate their point, JSeard and Horn go back t.l the 1950s
for two flagrant exilmple8. ln 1956, they say , Tborruis J . Lane (!).
MAw.) \llal! indicted for income tax evasion, convicted and lm·
priJoned for foilr month!!. After his release he was re-elected to
Concreu. James Michael Curley (J).Msss.) was indicted or
charge8 of using the U. s. malls to defraud. After a lengthy
deliYJn8 action spanning more than three years ·during whicp he
was ,.,-elected by a conslderabl.e margin, Curley was COl• ,JiJtea
th ' ,

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\t- ~tlrne (''

41

HOIIfit rnake any attem.,, tO O.lSCIIJ uue t,;l~rh· ,, or Lane. In n~...~ ·rn~.
Umea, proposals for more striqgent policln• rules are generall)·
lpnd.
.
.
.
'Ole New York Bar AsaoclatJon recommended investmen1'
· pollelellor congre11111011 which minimize coofi!Ctll of interest,
11'rAdeiM'• of llnanclal Interests In areas of committee respoQIIblUIIIt, ciYquallllclltion from official action on matters sf,
flellnl jlericiiiai lntftai, avoidance of suppleniental office 'futldlo

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pair of unbeaten teams from
co mpar S" tf ve l y
c lose
proximlties, the Birml.nghamMemphis game also wlll
showca!M! some of the fledgling
league's brightest stars.
Ex-NFL cast-offs John
Huarte of Memphis and George
Mira of Binningham, seem to
ha"'e folllld their niches as
quarterbacks in the WFL.
Mira, for example, last week
rallied his team from a 29-3

halftime deficit to vict.lry over
New York with three touchdown passes in the second half
and ' run for a fourth.
In addition to Mira, the
Americans also boast ex-NFL
running stars Paul Robinson .
and Charley Harraway while
the Soulhmen eounier with J .J.
Jennings, the rookie from
Rutgers who is being t.luted as
the most exciting runner in the
league.

P8)' for the rights
~ecast NFL games.

they

v

ASK US ABOUT

to

''The networks are piamlng
to go «head with their
schedules," Rozelle oald. "I
simply told them that we would
review the Bltuatlon later "" to
ratings of the *ames televlled
and if It seemed to be appropriate to make adjustment.
in right&amp;' fees, we would
discuss It and work something
out.
"You cannot project ratlngl,
You can't do that unW you
know If they (the networa)
have suffered any loss. Our
converatiOOB have been quite
informBI up to this time, but..,
have talked."
Roze.Ue goes to Canton, Ohio,
Saturday for the annual Hall of
Fame Ceremonies and game .
between Suffalo and St. Loul.s,
which Is scheduled for national
telecast. Tony Canadeo, Bill
George, Dick Lane and Lou
Gr0'/.11 are t.l be inducted.
The Bill$ and C8rdlnala will
use rooldes and free agents and
there is« threat of a picket line
by the NFLPA.
Would Rozelle cross a picket
line '
"I think that's aC~~dernic al
this time," he said. 111 wW
attend
the
illducllon
ceremonies and I intend to
attend the game as well."

--o-

·PR E-F·ABR ICATED

·wooD TRUSSE.S

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.tz
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If you've ever wondered what hilppens to old television cOm·
mercials, and you probably haven't, a lot of them are finding
useful retirement In Tucson, where the University of Arizona is
establishing an archive.
Advertising agencies and sponsors have already donated more
than 1,000 commercials t.l the collection. Spanning 2S years of
history and documenting the rise of the "affluent society,"
they're considered irreplaceable cultural artifacts and valuable
research material.
It gives one a good feeling to know that somewhere in this fair
land, thQse attractive people we once knew wil1 puff happily
away on cigarettes forever, on film or tape, anyway' - .lila!
future researchers will see just how America"' conquere~. the
scourges of underarm odor and st.lrnBch distress, that coming
generations will be able to share the joy of the rnicJ.2tJth.century,
prelib housewife in hCr sparkling kitchen floor and her triumph
over balky sink drains and stubborn dirt and stains, etc.

~uffers

WASIUNGTON - (NEA ) - "I've got two -(opponenls ) who
want to run agilinst me the ne~t time. O~e is ~ rich one, and\ I
don't know what the other one IS. Boy, will I fiX them! I'm n~
going to fix them during the campaign but I sure will fix the
afterwards. They'll wish they'd never run against me."- Fro
an interview. in an unpublished research study on the Congr..,..
Paul E. Beard and Stephen Horn while with the Brookin~
Institution obtained that quote from one of the 50 members of e
House of Representatives t.l whom they talked. They recei
written response tO questions from 43 oti.Or repre!M!ntatives.One thin)l that comes through loud and clear from reading ~
preliminary draft of this study Is that cover ups In Congress a
as thorough as cover ups at the White House - and more .
·
.
·
fective.
Normally the lid is ciBmped down quickly on .any reports dr
. wrongdoing by a member. There is a strong tendency in thb
House of Representatives, Beard and Horn found, to prote&lt;lt
members who step out of line. Members don't want scandal tj&gt;
become public because it hurts everybody.
Congressmen who attempt to expose and clean up corruptieh
- voting for _pay, illegal financing, blatant conflict of interest
·among their fellow members, and even those who mere!
criticize other members, get the freeze tre.iltinent. Their bills di ·
in committees. They don't get cooperation on votes for projonts
their districts need. They personally are ignored.
Time after time, congresSmen interviewed said something
aioll8 these , lines, "A guy's finsnces are . his oivn business',
providing thai they do not bring Congress as a whole inUl
disrepute."
The attitude io see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil. Action~
taken as in the case of the IBte Adam Clayton Powell only whe
there is a strong public outl!ry which-proves so embarrassing
Congress it cannot be ignored.
' Otherwise Beard and Horn found tha t on the whole, cthka\
starrJards as such appeared w he not that important to the
·
congressmen they talked to.

Olde•• StatthouM
seal of the Continent~ I Con· Expanded II. now hou_ • the
The Maryland State !louse, gress. The structure Is the offices or lhe governor and
buill in 1722, wu b~lefly the oldest state house still In use. the state legltlaturo.

out of talks

•

'·

a . servlce~

U1Cll . .t.;C luiW: ... Wl ti ~1 "1

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the functions of a bUBiness, from incorporation to llquldatlon and
distribution of 81\60ts. - ~ •
'·
Although the adult advilen are always there to provi!le
guidance and advice, each Junior Achievement com~ Ia run
and administered by , the studenll th~lves, pi'OIJ)erlng or
.f(IJllns by their 0\VJI er!orll - with no govt.mmel)l sublldy lcrba!l. ·

.tliem out.

lESS.

· ·

They capitalize the venture by offering stock. at tl a share.
Then, after purchasing raw materials, they manufacture and sell
their product to the conununlty, maintain recorda and pay
wages, oalarles and taxes.
A' •&gt;e e_nd o( • J(l.w&lt;•ck hu•fness cycl~ . tho AChte'rors fumlsb

~

FOR

an ethics shortage

and avoidance. of double-&lt;lome IBw practice assignments. Beard
·and Horn say none of these rnBtters has yet been incorporated in .
any rule of the House.
It Is clear, Beard and Horn conclude, pressure for change must
come from a public outcry that is loud and strong. They.hope the
Watergate shock waves will be powerful enough to prod action.
This may be more wish than reality.
More than 7,000 businesses across the nation closed up shop
within a few days of each other in May. Some 710,000 stockholders received their first and only annual report on the earnings and activities of these companies in which they had in- ·
vested. About 500,000 of the investors received a dividend 1n
.addition t.l their original inveslrnent, but many others .didn't
realize a cent. ·
This massive going-out-of-business event went unnoticed on
Wall Street. After aU,JthappeM at the end of every school year.
The 7,1100 companies closing their books were part of the
largest youth agency devoted to economic education - Junior
Achievement (JA).
The national lea.rn-by-doing program was started in 1919 by
businessman Horace Moses, who believed that urban and
suburban youth needed an or_ganizatlon to give them experience
and Insight into business in much the same way lhat t.H was
helping rural youth.
Today, 50 years later, more than 2.8 million people are involved with Junior Achievement, including 17~,000 "achievers"
(students) and 24,000 advisers in the United States and _six
foreign countries,
At national JA headquarters in New · York, educational,
promotional and funMa!alDg rnBterlals are develoPed and
distributed under the guidance of a IMknember board of dlrec·
tors. On the community level, JA advisers fr&lt;BII sponaorlng
businesses help organlie and supervise the miniature com·
panj.,., which n· c formed by aboui20 students at the beginning of
the rahol year.
The achievers, who have been recruited through schools,
churcbes and the news media. meet one evening each week lor
two hours. At the _heginl)lng of the annual program, they elect
officers and decide to manufacture some kind of product ,..- a
. household sadget; an Item of jeWelry, etc. ~ or perhaps provide

. N

32 oz.
jar
•

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1- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddlepo· • .,....,er.,y, 0 .• WedneSday, July 24, 1971
•J

Rozelle

st~ying

off..•br.~pUy on Monday.
ou&amp; talks, but at least there lw
HJ can't do otherwue,"' been cooununlcaUon, and the.
Rozelle said. "The leadership Management Council has alao
Football League Playert As- of the NFLPA has rnBde thl4 been in t.luch with me."
IOdation and owners reprenta· office and myself a rnBjor t..ue
Roze.Ue says he l.s just an
lives are counUng on Com· in the negotiations. I think that interested bystander.
mlaioner Pete Rozelle t.l setUe the federal mediator has done
"It is ~y unlnle to claim •
their 24-day old strike, they can a fine job in keeping the two that I am 'management 'a
forget it. He'sstaying out of the sides talking off and on.
man/" he said. ''111.e union
representatives
have never
negotiations.
"I've been keeping abreast
Rozelle made that clear of developments. I've talked t.l made such a charge. I am not
Tue~ay after talks liad broken Wlion representaUves, not seri· involved with • the NFL
BY JOE CARNICELU

· UPI Sports Writer
If the striking National

•

'

Management Co~mcll; which Ia
repreoenUng the ownen, nor
am I Involved with the players'
w:dm."
No new taiks have been
scheduled.
'
Rozelle, faced with his
league's atart1ng the exhibition
IM!a!IOil with roolde and 'free
agent laden rosters, held
''informal'' conver.saUoos with
the thr.ee major ·television
networks regarding the f"""'

Annual practice tilt cancelled
Earlier in the week the
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP!)
picketers
had some competi·
- The annual Cincinnati
t!on.
Bengals training camp scrimAn old man showed up with
mage , scheduled for this
his
own sign and picketed the
Saturday, has fallen victim t.l
the NFL Players Association picketers.
Read the sign: "no fans-.no
strike and has been canceled.
Head Cosch Paul Brown money. no money-oo football.
made the announcement Tues- No football-go to work. We
day, saying that only quick are fans, not fools."
Meanwhile, the Bengals anSettlement of the strike could
nounced
Tuesday that tjcket
change his mind.
Brown only has 32 piByers- holders for the club's first! pre18 veterans and 14 rookies-in season game can get a refund if
camp and said he didn't want
Injuries to further thin the
ranks.
Five of the 31 striking
Bengals pi c~ eted Tuesday
morning's practice; but none
was around as the team went By United Press International
Unbeaten Central Divtidon
through afternoon drills.
I
powers Birmingham ~d
Memphis, gearing a gen e
"Southern rivalry /'
eet
tonight before what is expo ed
t.l be the largest World Fnotball League crowd to date .
Sunday School attendance
An estimated 60,000 fans are
July 21 was 45, the offering
due to fill Birmingh"l;,•s
$21.84. Worship services were
Legion Field when ~he
held at II a .m., with the Rev. hometown Americans ~ lsk
Meece speaking from Hebrews their z.o . reeord against the
6: "Jesus Christ Is Our Only
Soulhmen, also1 in
HOpe." Attendance was 21, the visiting
the WFL central which lso ·
offering $19.16, pledges $18.
features a third unbeaten ub,
The Cluster Hymn Sing will the Chicago Fire. The Fire Is
l&gt;e held at the Alfred Church on . the road against Porililnd.
this Saturday evening, July 27
·Other WFL action f~~~lres
from 7:30- 9 p.m. Everyone is Southern
Cillifronia at
welcome.
Jacksonville and Houston at
The Albert Young family · Florida while in the nat!&lt;Jtai
reuni.on will be held. on Sunday, TV Game Thursday night, ~ew
Aug. 4in the Woode grove here. York is at Pblladelphia.
Iris Carr-was retilrned t.l her
In addition to featurin~ a
home here Sunday afternoon
. after spending two weeks in ~o;·;•:.-;-;o;...•;•;........,."'·v:...........;,•••••••••,•.•••••••. •.. . ...
· Cleveland Clinic, by the White -~:;·~····~~~-~·;;~~~::;~····;·~·;····~;;·
ambulance. Her husband spent
the entire time with his wife interesting.
Mr. and Mts. Clair Edw..rd
and returned home with her.
Her sister, Sue Woode and . Follrod and family atter~ed
daughter, Conni, of Circleville Mrs . Follrod's "High Sc~ool
,. also came Sunday to be with class " reWlion, at Lancaster,
·Ohio last Sunday.
her a few days.
Mr . and Mrs . Rob~rt
Mrs. Wilber Parker attended
a bridal shower for her Robinson and family of Belfre
brother 's fiancee , Wave1ine and Mr. and Mrs. Otto Sw'flz
Voris, Saturday night . at the of. Shade, recentiy called 1en
home of Mrs. Davjd Russell, Nina Robinson and Clara Foilrod.
near Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Mr. and Mrs.. Ernest Taylor
accompanied the Lloyd WQode visited their cousips, ·
Dillihger family to London, Mr. and Mrs . John Hayes nt ar
Ohio, Saturday to visit their Chester Sunday afternoon. pn
sonr Mr. and Mrs. Charles the way back they visited t~eir
Taylor and family . The men cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Chanies
attended the "Steam Festival" A. Woode, in Chester. ·

they want.

become involved In a dispute
that Is not theirs," Bengals
officials said. "For this reason,
any holder of a ticket to this
game mBY ask for hl4 money
back with no effect ·on future
games nor on !Ieason ticket
priority.·•
If the strike COriUnues, preseason games apparently will
be played with mOstly rooldea
and free agents. Most NFL
teams have far less veterans in
camp than do the Bengals.

However, the Bengals said
the Aug. 3 game at Cincinnati's
Ri verfron t Stadium against
Miami would be played as
' .
scheduled.
That game, .!.s were all
Bengala' 1974 ga'l'es, has been
sold out long ago.
''The Bengals are in accord
wholeheartedly with the (National Football League) Management Council in the belief
that the faM should in no way

Unbeaten powe_rs to collide

Alfred
Social..Notes

Ray Cromley

Congress

i

To illustrate their point, JSeard and Horn go back t.l the 1950s
for two flagrant exilmple8. ln 1956, they say , Tborruis J . Lane (!).
MAw.) \llal! indicted for income tax evasion, convicted and lm·
priJoned for foilr month!!. After his release he was re-elected to
Concreu. James Michael Curley (J).Msss.) was indicted or
charge8 of using the U. s. malls to defraud. After a lengthy
deliYJn8 action spanning more than three years ·during whicp he
was ,.,-elected by a conslderabl.e margin, Curley was COl• ,JiJtea
th ' ,

•

"" ' -r•

~~·

.; J• l·'

\t- ~tlrne (''

41

HOIIfit rnake any attem.,, tO O.lSCIIJ uue t,;l~rh· ,, or Lane. In n~...~ ·rn~.
Umea, proposals for more striqgent policln• rules are generall)·
lpnd.
.
.
.
'Ole New York Bar AsaoclatJon recommended investmen1'
· pollelellor congre11111011 which minimize coofi!Ctll of interest,
11'rAdeiM'• of llnanclal Interests In areas of committee respoQIIblUIIIt, ciYquallllclltion from official action on matters sf,
flellnl jlericiiiai lntftai, avoidance of suppleniental office 'futldlo

·'

'

pair of unbeaten teams from
co mpar S" tf ve l y
c lose
proximlties, the Birml.nghamMemphis game also wlll
showca!M! some of the fledgling
league's brightest stars.
Ex-NFL cast-offs John
Huarte of Memphis and George
Mira of Binningham, seem to
ha"'e folllld their niches as
quarterbacks in the WFL.
Mira, for example, last week
rallied his team from a 29-3

halftime deficit to vict.lry over
New York with three touchdown passes in the second half
and ' run for a fourth.
In addition to Mira, the
Americans also boast ex-NFL
running stars Paul Robinson .
and Charley Harraway while
the Soulhmen eounier with J .J.
Jennings, the rookie from
Rutgers who is being t.luted as
the most exciting runner in the
league.

P8)' for the rights
~ecast NFL games.

they

v

ASK US ABOUT

to

''The networks are piamlng
to go «head with their
schedules," Rozelle oald. "I
simply told them that we would
review the Bltuatlon later "" to
ratings of the *ames televlled
and if It seemed to be appropriate to make adjustment.
in right&amp;' fees, we would
discuss It and work something
out.
"You cannot project ratlngl,
You can't do that unW you
know If they (the networa)
have suffered any loss. Our
converatiOOB have been quite
informBI up to this time, but..,
have talked."
Roze.Ue goes to Canton, Ohio,
Saturday for the annual Hall of
Fame Ceremonies and game .
between Suffalo and St. Loul.s,
which Is scheduled for national
telecast. Tony Canadeo, Bill
George, Dick Lane and Lou
Gr0'/.11 are t.l be inducted.
The Bill$ and C8rdlnala will
use rooldes and free agents and
there is« threat of a picket line
by the NFLPA.
Would Rozelle cross a picket
line '
"I think that's aC~~dernic al
this time," he said. 111 wW
attend
the
illducllon
ceremonies and I intend to
attend the game as well."

--o-

·PR E-F·ABR ICATED

·wooD TRUSSE.S

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·-.cu = .cc
·-..... u
u

HOG.G·&amp; ZUSPAN

~

:::&gt;

"'·

0
0
N

Mason, W.Va.

.773-5554

.tz
- .... 0
·
0111
.,%
ZIU

c
a z
.,
:l
.c
..... ....

&gt;&lt;
::»
...

Built to Your ~specs.
Delivered ,to Job Site

0~

!
liS

AGAR

etl

IAr ·

3 lb.'tan ·
If you've ever wondered what hilppens to old television cOm·
mercials, and you probably haven't, a lot of them are finding
useful retirement In Tucson, where the University of Arizona is
establishing an archive.
Advertising agencies and sponsors have already donated more
than 1,000 commercials t.l the collection. Spanning 2S years of
history and documenting the rise of the "affluent society,"
they're considered irreplaceable cultural artifacts and valuable
research material.
It gives one a good feeling to know that somewhere in this fair
land, thQse attractive people we once knew wil1 puff happily
away on cigarettes forever, on film or tape, anyway' - .lila!
future researchers will see just how America"' conquere~. the
scourges of underarm odor and st.lrnBch distress, that coming
generations will be able to share the joy of the rnicJ.2tJth.century,
prelib housewife in hCr sparkling kitchen floor and her triumph
over balky sink drains and stubborn dirt and stains, etc.

~uffers

WASIUNGTON - (NEA ) - "I've got two -(opponenls ) who
want to run agilinst me the ne~t time. O~e is ~ rich one, and\ I
don't know what the other one IS. Boy, will I fiX them! I'm n~
going to fix them during the campaign but I sure will fix the
afterwards. They'll wish they'd never run against me."- Fro
an interview. in an unpublished research study on the Congr..,..
Paul E. Beard and Stephen Horn while with the Brookin~
Institution obtained that quote from one of the 50 members of e
House of Representatives t.l whom they talked. They recei
written response tO questions from 43 oti.Or repre!M!ntatives.One thin)l that comes through loud and clear from reading ~
preliminary draft of this study Is that cover ups In Congress a
as thorough as cover ups at the White House - and more .
·
.
·
fective.
Normally the lid is ciBmped down quickly on .any reports dr
. wrongdoing by a member. There is a strong tendency in thb
House of Representatives, Beard and Horn found, to prote&lt;lt
members who step out of line. Members don't want scandal tj&gt;
become public because it hurts everybody.
Congressmen who attempt to expose and clean up corruptieh
- voting for _pay, illegal financing, blatant conflict of interest
·among their fellow members, and even those who mere!
criticize other members, get the freeze tre.iltinent. Their bills di ·
in committees. They don't get cooperation on votes for projonts
their districts need. They personally are ignored.
Time after time, congresSmen interviewed said something
aioll8 these , lines, "A guy's finsnces are . his oivn business',
providing thai they do not bring Congress as a whole inUl
disrepute."
The attitude io see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil. Action~
taken as in the case of the IBte Adam Clayton Powell only whe
there is a strong public outl!ry which-proves so embarrassing
Congress it cannot be ignored.
' Otherwise Beard and Horn found tha t on the whole, cthka\
starrJards as such appeared w he not that important to the
·
congressmen they talked to.

Olde•• StatthouM
seal of the Continent~ I Con· Expanded II. now hou_ • the
The Maryland State !louse, gress. The structure Is the offices or lhe governor and
buill in 1722, wu b~lefly the oldest state house still In use. the state legltlaturo.

out of talks

•

'·

a . servlce~

U1Cll . .t.;C luiW: ... Wl ti ~1 "1

•

·u:l1 t epv rl,

.-. J ·

'·

: rnint;

39¢
.......
.

fORK LIVER

.

·. .

•. ·. .

.

•.

. ·. . .

..'' .
,,

lb.

~······

.

.

89¢·
79¢
POLISH SAUSAGE ······••···············•~•~ ·

.PURE PORK SAUSAGE ••••~••••~~:
.

.

.

~

0'

BANQUET FROZE~ -BEEF &amp; TIJR~EY

POT PIES
FRESH CRISP

' HEAD LETTUCE
•

25~HEAD

=
z:
c
=

lb.

&lt;.

8 oz.
' pkgs.

$

:::liE

- a:~

1.1.1

&gt;a:
a:

a.

:E
c 0::E
Ll.l
1.1.1
·. a::: ......

LA.!

cc
Z:.
cc '
z:
cc Cl)
t-

=

!

t-

-....
s
~

.'--0-=

AMERICAN
CHEESE

8
8

::1:

~

12 oz.

....

pkg,

Ll.l '

·a:::.
1.1.1

= z
0'
z z

NABISCO, • CHIPS AHOY

en a::
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&gt;a:: z

-u-~

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Ll.l =
&gt;co Q
Ll.l :.::: en
:.:: (.) ...... ::c
a::
c:c Cl')

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~ Q

·-

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=
.....
(.)

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ar:::

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3
BUNS
.DAYTIME
PAMP.ERS

'1 00

pkg.of8

30's

Q..
L&amp;.l
Q
Q

.....

.........

HAMBURGER OR .HOTDOG

2· 9~

..a

Ill

L:5
....

In

GOlfJEI ')LE

PEACHES

en
.... Ill
-

•

:.:::

plrg, '
FRESH

c.,)

:::::»
z
= z:

C.)

CH

lb.

en

KRAFT

a:-

$ 69

..... .'

:::&amp;

-

•

·

1.1.1

z:

-s

-...... .

8

y;;,

~

GOlDEN ISi.E Dill

Open
9ni7

t.. H

the functions of a bUBiness, from incorporation to llquldatlon and
distribution of 81\60ts. - ~ •
'·
Although the adult advilen are always there to provi!le
guidance and advice, each Junior Achievement com~ Ia run
and administered by , the studenll th~lves, pi'OIJ)erlng or
.f(IJllns by their 0\VJI er!orll - with no govt.mmel)l sublldy lcrba!l. ·

.tliem out.

lESS.

· ·

They capitalize the venture by offering stock. at tl a share.
Then, after purchasing raw materials, they manufacture and sell
their product to the conununlty, maintain recorda and pay
wages, oalarles and taxes.
A' •&gt;e e_nd o( • J(l.w&lt;•ck hu•fness cycl~ . tho AChte'rors fumlsb

~

FOR

an ethics shortage

and avoidance. of double-&lt;lome IBw practice assignments. Beard
·and Horn say none of these rnBtters has yet been incorporated in .
any rule of the House.
It Is clear, Beard and Horn conclude, pressure for change must
come from a public outcry that is loud and strong. They.hope the
Watergate shock waves will be powerful enough to prod action.
This may be more wish than reality.
More than 7,000 businesses across the nation closed up shop
within a few days of each other in May. Some 710,000 stockholders received their first and only annual report on the earnings and activities of these companies in which they had in- ·
vested. About 500,000 of the investors received a dividend 1n
.addition t.l their original inveslrnent, but many others .didn't
realize a cent. ·
This massive going-out-of-business event went unnoticed on
Wall Street. After aU,JthappeM at the end of every school year.
The 7,1100 companies closing their books were part of the
largest youth agency devoted to economic education - Junior
Achievement (JA).
The national lea.rn-by-doing program was started in 1919 by
businessman Horace Moses, who believed that urban and
suburban youth needed an or_ganizatlon to give them experience
and Insight into business in much the same way lhat t.H was
helping rural youth.
Today, 50 years later, more than 2.8 million people are involved with Junior Achievement, including 17~,000 "achievers"
(students) and 24,000 advisers in the United States and _six
foreign countries,
At national JA headquarters in New · York, educational,
promotional and funMa!alDg rnBterlals are develoPed and
distributed under the guidance of a IMknember board of dlrec·
tors. On the community level, JA advisers fr&lt;BII sponaorlng
businesses help organlie and supervise the miniature com·
panj.,., which n· c formed by aboui20 students at the beginning of
the rahol year.
The achievers, who have been recruited through schools,
churcbes and the news media. meet one evening each week lor
two hours. At the _heginl)lng of the annual program, they elect
officers and decide to manufacture some kind of product ,..- a
. household sadget; an Item of jeWelry, etc. ~ or perhaps provide

. N

32 oz.
jar
•

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'fllere's just nothing tastier !han • peanut butter cream pie,

and ii you and your family like peanut butter and haven't tried
011e of these pies, you're certainly missing a real treat.
Our good neighbor Clara Lochary brou~ht in a pie Saturday
made from the recipe provi~cd by Flo Orueser aod Claric'tl
Erwin, a peanut butter streusel pie, and it was absolutely
delicious. That recipe was printed in this colwnn last week.
The !I.J.'Tle recipe with only a slight variation, two-thirds c. of

Ill

sugar instead of If.!, was sent down by one of OUT Columbus
readers, Jeanne Hines, who says it is a specialty of the Bed Door

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R. D. Moore, George Curtis,
and Pamela Fry, Vincent ; Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Evans, Alicia,
Cindy and Ryan, Mr. and Mrs.
Leon Donahue, Esther Dailey,
Mr. and Mrs. Doc Dailey,
Brenda Lawrence, Ada Van
· Meter, and Missey Van Meter,
all of Portland; Mrs. Doris
Jacobsen and Howard , Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith and
Mr . and Mrs . Harry Wilford of
the Racine - Portland area
visited with the Van Meter
families in the afternoon.

~

•••

••

••
•

an- auto on Pomeroy's East

Second St., a couple of weeks
ago. Mrs . O'Donnell, before
· her retirement, was a linotype
operator for seve r~l newspapers in this area for many

••

•
••
•••

•

;'~"'='·-,~·~···-·~·~'~ye'ar's;·~Her

RUTLAND DEPARIMt.NI STORE· :

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SALAD. .

FRUZEN

·

PRUJJUL'E
VIRGINIA COBBLER

MORTON

3

79e

FOR

.descendants gather

FOLGER'S

. · COFFEE

M~RACLE

'

DRIP 3 lb $399
OR REG.
'

lb.

MARGARINE

sse

KRAFT • TWIN PAK

HI-C

AMERICAN CHEESE
ORANGE
- DRINK
. .
2

46 oz

---~~~~---•

KRAFT

.

heritage
house
Your Thorn MeAn
Store

Middleport, 0.

e

INDIVIDUAL
WRAPPED

24 oz. '

$139

. ..

The 13th reunion of the E. F .
and Mary Bolen family was
heldSundayatLake Almaneur
Wellston
· Atte~ding were Mr. and Mrs.
G. B. Stout and SU!ve Nelson,
Pomeroy ; Mr , and Mrs. Harold
•

Utilit will Issue
• Y ·
DeW Stock
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Toledo Edison Co. was granted

·--"'"11-------~--------I"PProval Tuesday by · the

Ice Cream Toppin.R
(YOUR CHOICE FLAVORS)
~
- 99~
If. FOR
CARNATION

C0 FFEE-M'ATE
16 OZ. jar •1.09 ·

STAR-KIST

TUNA

6Y2 oz.

59 e

.

PALMOLIVE

.LIQUID DETERGEN.T
32 oz. btl. 97~

YOUR FRIENDLY STORES
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT. POINT PLEASANT
.

'

•

9:30 a.m., Antique Ohio
Furniture (Mrs . Heissenbuttel).
11 :30 a.m ., Luncheon will be
served in the Dining Room .
1 p.m. 3 p.m ., Furniture
Workshop (refini shin g and
repair of items broughl in by
those attending seminar ).
The cost of the seminar is $5
per day which includes the cost
of the Iulu~heon. Reservations
should be in by Monday, Aug . 1
and are encouraged. Reservations are to be sent to Lt. CoL
George Grace, 334 Third Ave.,
, Gallipolis, 45631, or he may he
reached by telephone at 614446-0953.
Programs will be given out
at the reception desk as well as
name tags. Ail proceeds will be '
donated to the Samuel Jackson
Tandy Walker Memorial Fund.
This ftllld wa s created in
memory of Mrs . Heissen·
buttel's late father.
Co..chairwomen for the event
are Mrs. Beth Cherrington,
Mrs, Carl Bias and Mrs .
,Carolyn Hippensteel.
Ail those people who are
interested in antiques a nd
refinishing oft,fine ·o1d furn itwe
and its history are in for a n
enlightening two day session .
P1e~se contact your friends
and make your rescn'ations
early.

20 lb. bag
KRAFT 6 STICK

'

American
~ente
nnial

Antiques and Bi-Centenni al
Collectables.
Aug . 9: 9 a .m., Registration
• rut a galleries will be open fqr
viewing of th e a~tiq u e
displays.

POTATOES '

POT PIES

••
-

49

-;:::::::::::::::::::================::;~
1
p.m .,ry
I
Revolutiona

'

'

.

CHUCK WAGON

D

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.
..

RUTtAND, 0.

742-5543

White Buck with white
rubber sole. Sizes for
boys &amp; girls .

Antique seminar set ·

By LYNNE TAWNEY
There will be an antique
room nwnber is 130 . seminar Aug . 8 and 9, spon"oren &gt;w the French Ar t Colony
conducted by Mrs. Orva
's senbuttel , nationalJ y
kn&lt;&gt;wn lecturer, dealer and
exr&gt;ert on an tiques, as welJ as a
for antique oriented
mag3.zines.
'
Mrs . Heissen butte!
is
· PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JULY 27 fr
om
the
Gallipolis
- '
area.
is the fourth year for
the Antique Seminar which
began in 1971. The seminar will
be held at Riverby, home, of the
l"rench Arf Colony, 520 First
Avenue, Gallipolis.
The program will include:
Aug. 8: 9 a.m., Registt·ation
BY PC.69¢
will commence. Galleri es will
lb.
.
be open for viewing of the
heirlooms and other antiques
collected for. di splay fr om
SLICeD lb. 75$
persons in our area .
9:30 a.m., Antique Folk Art
lb.
~
cbondu cred bky · Mrs. Heissen1
1
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .
,utte (croc s, qui ts, woodcarvings, etc'.)
lb 79~
11 :30 a.m ., Luncheon will be
·
•••••••••••••••••, served in the dining room.

YOUR AUTHORIZED KEEPSAKE JEWELER

·---

BAND
SHOE

ANOTHER recipe for a pie made with vinegar, but called
" Mock Lemon Pie" was provided by Mae Romine. She recalls
that this was often a pie taken on family picnics in the hot
swnmertime, since there was little danger of spoiling.
MOCK LEMON PIE
To a pint of water add two or three eggs, beaten (this can be
both the yolks and whites or just the yolks, holding the whites for
a meringue), two-thirds c. sugar, 3 tsp. flour, and one tbsp .
vinegar. Cook, stirring constantly , until thickened .
Cool and pour into a baked pie shell.
·

80YEARSOLD
. Mrs . Christine O'Donnell will
. observe her BOth birthday
-F.i'tday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she has been
confined since being struck by

..•••

•

Shade;
Margaret Gans ,
Pom e r oy; B:eten Williams,

Hurl Hannahs.

••

Q
Q

"'"

AMERICA'S
OFFICIAL

CYCLE TESTS SET
The Gallia-Meigs Post, Ohio

Daniel R. PQrLcr. director o( State Highway Patrol ha s
the Ohio Historicat Society, ~nnoun c ecJ that motoi"'Cyc le
nominated the Putnar!l House tests wWI be admini stered
for the honor . James Smart, Monday, August 12, at the state
vice-president of Public highwity Karage on Route 7 in
llclations Ltd . of Philadelphia , Meigs County from 9 a.m. to 4
Pennsylvania announced the p.m.
Ohio selection recently.
SERVES AT CAMP
The Putnam House wa,C) buill
Alan Holter, son of Mr . and
in 1789 as part of the Campus Mrs. Roy Holter, Rt. 3,
Martius fortification that Pomeroy, served as a counprotected the communi~ of selor for the 4-H State
Marietta. The home now Leadership Camp held at
stands within the walls of the Camp Ohio near Uti ca
Campus Marti us Museum and recently . A junior at Ohio St.tc
was completely restored in University , he had attended the
1968.
camp as a 4-H member two
Ridge Homes of Con- years .ago. Going from here to
shohocken, Pa ., will release a Camp Ohio were Randy
portfolio of paintings this fall to Johnson and Neacil DeVoL

IV A STEWART, Rutland, had asked us to try to local~! a
recipe for a sugar pie, made witllout eggs, and one for vinegar
pie.
Mrs. Betty Pooler, Riverview Place, Middleport, seni along
her recipe for a vin~gar pie which she says is very old and came
from a Mrs. Silver Nails Cookbook. It was given to her by Mrs.
Wilma Davis.
VINEGAR PIE
2 eggs, Y, c. vinegar,% c. water, I c. sugar, 6'h tbsp . .flour,
pinch of salt, and 2 tbsp , butter.
Beat egg yolks and then add vinegar and water. Blend in the
sugar, flour and salt which have been mixed together: Cook in a
double boiler, stirring'' constantly until the mixture thickens,
Remove from s&gt;ove, add butter. Pour into a baked shell, and top
with meringue.

Pomeroy; Esther Lee, Middleport ; Cynthia 'w olfe,
Syracuse.
Dischaq,ed Bernard
Gilkey , Dorothy Greathouse,

----

-

Americ~n Homes.

include U1e Putnam House .
Other homes selectad for the
portfolio are The Adams
Mansion , Quincy, Mass. , The

Place in a bowl 1h c, peanut butter. Add gradually 'h c.
water. Beat until smooth. Add custard. Beat thoroughly. Chill
until slightly thickened, Beat 2 egg whites stiff, adding a tbsp.
sugar gradually . Fold the egg whites into the peanut butw
mixtw-e. Add 'h tsp. vanilla.
·
Pour mixture into a nine tnch baked pie shell. ChiU until
firm . Top with· whipped cream or topping mix.
Anna bsked this pie just a week or so ago and tells us that for
her family it just wasn't 11peanutty enough" and that the next
time she plans to use 34 c. of peanut butter rather than the 'h the
recipe calls for.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Maxine Dugan ,
Pomeroy; Lowell Collins,

·.--..

r-

("")

MARIETTA - The llufus
Putnam House In Marietta has
been selected as one or rour
hlsforl c homes to be Included in
the 1911 edition of the Bicentennial Collection of Historic

N. Y., and Tyron Palae.., New
Bern, N. C.

cooL
and Toby, Mr. and Mrs. John
Newell, .Jeff, Scott, and Mary
Pierce, Dennis ~ Long, Long
Bottom; Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Van Meter, Beverly ; Mrs. Ina
Van Meter and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Brewer and Tim,
Reedsville.
Mr . and Mrs. Hobart Newell,
Elmer and Shelia, Chester;
Mrs . Opal Van Meter, Jack,
Sally Jo, and Diane, Marietta ;
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Van
Meter and Buddy, Pomeroy ;
Mrs. Emma Van Meter, David,

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PORTLAND- The annual
Van Meter reunion was held
Sunday at the Portland Park.
Attending were Mrs, Susie
Cooley and son, Lewis, ·
Steubenville; Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Curtis and Cindy, Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Curtis,
Charleston, W. Va .; Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Van Meter, Becky
and Melanie, Laura Byers ,
Erma Wilson, Chester Van
Metl!r, arid Forrest Van Meter,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Larrf ..
Curtis, Tammy, Timmy, Terri .

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ANNA BLACKWOOD from out Sumner way sent along her
recipe for a peanut chiffon pie.
Soften !envelope plain gelatin in Yo c. cold water. Let stand,
Beat well 2 egg yolks, heat in 2 tbsp. sugar, and add Yo c. water
and 1h tsp. salt. Stir in the gelatin and cook over boiling water,
beating constantly until thick and fluffy . Remove from heal and

VanMeter reunirm held

~·

::1:

11IE "MONARCS," Woostl!r, gospel singerll, will be f~tured at Ute l.angaville Christian
Olurch, Saturday, July 27 at 7:30p.m. The public Is cordially invitl!d to attend.

,

'"

&lt;
,..
z

in Colwnbus.,
The recipe she provided called for meringue made from
three egg whites, "• tsp, cream of tartar, 'h c. sugar, an~ I tsp .
corn starch , Egg whites should he at room temperature . Beat
· WJtll foamy; add cream of tartar and heat until stiff. Add combined sugar and corn starch, a small amount at a time. Do not
under beat (this causes meringue to 11 Weep"). Then sprinkle Ule
peanut butter and confectioners sugar mixture over the
meringue and bake in a· 425 degree oven until lightly browned,
five or six minutes.

Putnam house is featured

HasbroU&lt;~ House, Newbur•h,

Public Utilities Commission of ,
Ohio to issue an addltional$10
million In $100 par value
preferred stock, .
The $1oo.par value stock will
have an 11 per cent dividend
rate. Approval was also granted for $40 million In 10 per cent
nrst mortgage bonds,. to
become due in 1982.
Both issues were to help
finance capital expenditures
amowiting to more than $229
million.

I .

Bolen, Mrs. Keith Weaver ,
Carl and Dee Weave r,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Max
Bolen, Reynoldsburg ; Mr. a nd
Mrs. Roger Bolen, Lon.
donderry ; Mr. and Mrs .
Bernard Allen, Bonnie, Judy,
· Boyd, Bruce and Jill Allen;
Mrs. c. E. Stout, Mr. and Mrs .
Rona ld Bolen, Lisa Bolen,
Albany; Mr. ahd Mrs. Albert
Bolen, Dexter; Mr-, and Mrs .
Kenneth Bolen, Dexter; Mr .
and Mrs. Ken neth Bolen,
Tuppers Plains ; Miss Sandy
Brake, Nashville, Tenn .;
Timothy and Patricia Casto,
Romulus, N. Y.,' and Airman 1C Kenneth Bolen who is home
on a leavo from the U. S. Air
Force following a tour of duly
in Thailand .
Single Swimming •
Unt i11901 in Great Brita in,
bathing beac hes were
scgre~a ted by sex. A Dorset
·propnetor wlls finecl in 1873
for allowing a ~usband and
wife to .swim togeth er .

FAMOUS BRANDS

..

A

/2·NOW!

1

OUR COMPLETE STOCK
.

.

.

OF LADIES
SPRIN·G AND SUMMER

•
.•
•
•
•

RED
WHITE
BEIGE
BLACK &amp; WHITE
BROWN &amp; WHITE

• PUMPS
•CASUALS
• DRESSY STY.LES
oi SANDALS

OFF
REG •

PRICI:
SHOP STIFFLER'S ·
/ ) AND SAVEl /
"•

•

•

•

�•

-:;~
•,-

.•.
;:;

Fun With Food

1~.•.·.,

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Ill

Ill

~

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... c
0 z
~ ...
,..."' -&lt;
Ut

JUMBO ROLL

.....
N

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~~

...:Ia
m
...

'fllere's just nothing tastier !han • peanut butter cream pie,

and ii you and your family like peanut butter and haven't tried
011e of these pies, you're certainly missing a real treat.
Our good neighbor Clara Lochary brou~ht in a pie Saturday
made from the recipe provi~cd by Flo Orueser aod Claric'tl
Erwin, a peanut butter streusel pie, and it was absolutely
delicious. That recipe was printed in this colwnn last week.
The !I.J.'Tle recipe with only a slight variation, two-thirds c. of

Ill

sugar instead of If.!, was sent down by one of OUT Columbus
readers, Jeanne Hines, who says it is a specialty of the Bed Door

--

-.-..

n
,.

·0

:c
m
m

N

-

.

."

n
0

N

...:a

..
I

,.,_

----·---

::&amp;::

rn

::a

R. D. Moore, George Curtis,
and Pamela Fry, Vincent ; Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Evans, Alicia,
Cindy and Ryan, Mr. and Mrs.
Leon Donahue, Esther Dailey,
Mr. and Mrs. Doc Dailey,
Brenda Lawrence, Ada Van
· Meter, and Missey Van Meter,
all of Portland; Mrs. Doris
Jacobsen and Howard , Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith and
Mr . and Mrs . Harry Wilford of
the Racine - Portland area
visited with the Van Meter
families in the afternoon.

~

•••

••

••
•

an- auto on Pomeroy's East

Second St., a couple of weeks
ago. Mrs . O'Donnell, before
· her retirement, was a linotype
operator for seve r~l newspapers in this area for many

••

•
••
•••

•

;'~"'='·-,~·~···-·~·~'~ye'ar's;·~Her

RUTLAND DEPARIMt.NI STORE· :

("")

z.....
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-•
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•

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-&gt;&lt;

:1:

......
.......
--' -..
••
.'-..', -..,..

a

BOLOGNA

Jowl BACON. . .

~

.HOME'M.ADE

~

~

..•...•.
......--....

--..

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•

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..--...
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....•...

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. .•.
:.
....•
·..••
'

I

'

.

'

'

-

SALAD. .

FRUZEN

·

PRUJJUL'E
VIRGINIA COBBLER

MORTON

3

79e

FOR

.descendants gather

FOLGER'S

. · COFFEE

M~RACLE

'

DRIP 3 lb $399
OR REG.
'

lb.

MARGARINE

sse

KRAFT • TWIN PAK

HI-C

AMERICAN CHEESE
ORANGE
- DRINK
. .
2

46 oz

---~~~~---•

KRAFT

.

heritage
house
Your Thorn MeAn
Store

Middleport, 0.

e

INDIVIDUAL
WRAPPED

24 oz. '

$139

. ..

The 13th reunion of the E. F .
and Mary Bolen family was
heldSundayatLake Almaneur
Wellston
· Atte~ding were Mr. and Mrs.
G. B. Stout and SU!ve Nelson,
Pomeroy ; Mr , and Mrs. Harold
•

Utilit will Issue
• Y ·
DeW Stock
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Toledo Edison Co. was granted

·--"'"11-------~--------I"PProval Tuesday by · the

Ice Cream Toppin.R
(YOUR CHOICE FLAVORS)
~
- 99~
If. FOR
CARNATION

C0 FFEE-M'ATE
16 OZ. jar •1.09 ·

STAR-KIST

TUNA

6Y2 oz.

59 e

.

PALMOLIVE

.LIQUID DETERGEN.T
32 oz. btl. 97~

YOUR FRIENDLY STORES
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT. POINT PLEASANT
.

'

•

9:30 a.m., Antique Ohio
Furniture (Mrs . Heissenbuttel).
11 :30 a.m ., Luncheon will be
served in the Dining Room .
1 p.m. 3 p.m ., Furniture
Workshop (refini shin g and
repair of items broughl in by
those attending seminar ).
The cost of the seminar is $5
per day which includes the cost
of the Iulu~heon. Reservations
should be in by Monday, Aug . 1
and are encouraged. Reservations are to be sent to Lt. CoL
George Grace, 334 Third Ave.,
, Gallipolis, 45631, or he may he
reached by telephone at 614446-0953.
Programs will be given out
at the reception desk as well as
name tags. Ail proceeds will be '
donated to the Samuel Jackson
Tandy Walker Memorial Fund.
This ftllld wa s created in
memory of Mrs . Heissen·
buttel's late father.
Co..chairwomen for the event
are Mrs. Beth Cherrington,
Mrs, Carl Bias and Mrs .
,Carolyn Hippensteel.
Ail those people who are
interested in antiques a nd
refinishing oft,fine ·o1d furn itwe
and its history are in for a n
enlightening two day session .
P1e~se contact your friends
and make your rescn'ations
early.

20 lb. bag
KRAFT 6 STICK

'

American
~ente
nnial

Antiques and Bi-Centenni al
Collectables.
Aug . 9: 9 a .m., Registration
• rut a galleries will be open fqr
viewing of th e a~tiq u e
displays.

POTATOES '

POT PIES

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1
p.m .,ry
I
Revolutiona

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CHUCK WAGON

D

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RUTtAND, 0.

742-5543

White Buck with white
rubber sole. Sizes for
boys &amp; girls .

Antique seminar set ·

By LYNNE TAWNEY
There will be an antique
room nwnber is 130 . seminar Aug . 8 and 9, spon"oren &gt;w the French Ar t Colony
conducted by Mrs. Orva
's senbuttel , nationalJ y
kn&lt;&gt;wn lecturer, dealer and
exr&gt;ert on an tiques, as welJ as a
for antique oriented
mag3.zines.
'
Mrs . Heissen butte!
is
· PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JULY 27 fr
om
the
Gallipolis
- '
area.
is the fourth year for
the Antique Seminar which
began in 1971. The seminar will
be held at Riverby, home, of the
l"rench Arf Colony, 520 First
Avenue, Gallipolis.
The program will include:
Aug. 8: 9 a.m., Registt·ation
BY PC.69¢
will commence. Galleri es will
lb.
.
be open for viewing of the
heirlooms and other antiques
collected for. di splay fr om
SLICeD lb. 75$
persons in our area .
9:30 a.m., Antique Folk Art
lb.
~
cbondu cred bky · Mrs. Heissen1
1
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .
,utte (croc s, qui ts, woodcarvings, etc'.)
lb 79~
11 :30 a.m ., Luncheon will be
·
•••••••••••••••••, served in the dining room.

YOUR AUTHORIZED KEEPSAKE JEWELER

·---

BAND
SHOE

ANOTHER recipe for a pie made with vinegar, but called
" Mock Lemon Pie" was provided by Mae Romine. She recalls
that this was often a pie taken on family picnics in the hot
swnmertime, since there was little danger of spoiling.
MOCK LEMON PIE
To a pint of water add two or three eggs, beaten (this can be
both the yolks and whites or just the yolks, holding the whites for
a meringue), two-thirds c. sugar, 3 tsp. flour, and one tbsp .
vinegar. Cook, stirring constantly , until thickened .
Cool and pour into a baked pie shell.
·

80YEARSOLD
. Mrs . Christine O'Donnell will
. observe her BOth birthday
-F.i'tday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she has been
confined since being struck by

..•••

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Shade;
Margaret Gans ,
Pom e r oy; B:eten Williams,

Hurl Hannahs.

••

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Q

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AMERICA'S
OFFICIAL

CYCLE TESTS SET
The Gallia-Meigs Post, Ohio

Daniel R. PQrLcr. director o( State Highway Patrol ha s
the Ohio Historicat Society, ~nnoun c ecJ that motoi"'Cyc le
nominated the Putnar!l House tests wWI be admini stered
for the honor . James Smart, Monday, August 12, at the state
vice-president of Public highwity Karage on Route 7 in
llclations Ltd . of Philadelphia , Meigs County from 9 a.m. to 4
Pennsylvania announced the p.m.
Ohio selection recently.
SERVES AT CAMP
The Putnam House wa,C) buill
Alan Holter, son of Mr . and
in 1789 as part of the Campus Mrs. Roy Holter, Rt. 3,
Martius fortification that Pomeroy, served as a counprotected the communi~ of selor for the 4-H State
Marietta. The home now Leadership Camp held at
stands within the walls of the Camp Ohio near Uti ca
Campus Marti us Museum and recently . A junior at Ohio St.tc
was completely restored in University , he had attended the
1968.
camp as a 4-H member two
Ridge Homes of Con- years .ago. Going from here to
shohocken, Pa ., will release a Camp Ohio were Randy
portfolio of paintings this fall to Johnson and Neacil DeVoL

IV A STEWART, Rutland, had asked us to try to local~! a
recipe for a sugar pie, made witllout eggs, and one for vinegar
pie.
Mrs. Betty Pooler, Riverview Place, Middleport, seni along
her recipe for a vin~gar pie which she says is very old and came
from a Mrs. Silver Nails Cookbook. It was given to her by Mrs.
Wilma Davis.
VINEGAR PIE
2 eggs, Y, c. vinegar,% c. water, I c. sugar, 6'h tbsp . .flour,
pinch of salt, and 2 tbsp , butter.
Beat egg yolks and then add vinegar and water. Blend in the
sugar, flour and salt which have been mixed together: Cook in a
double boiler, stirring'' constantly until the mixture thickens,
Remove from s&gt;ove, add butter. Pour into a baked shell, and top
with meringue.

Pomeroy; Esther Lee, Middleport ; Cynthia 'w olfe,
Syracuse.
Dischaq,ed Bernard
Gilkey , Dorothy Greathouse,

----

-

Americ~n Homes.

include U1e Putnam House .
Other homes selectad for the
portfolio are The Adams
Mansion , Quincy, Mass. , The

Place in a bowl 1h c, peanut butter. Add gradually 'h c.
water. Beat until smooth. Add custard. Beat thoroughly. Chill
until slightly thickened, Beat 2 egg whites stiff, adding a tbsp.
sugar gradually . Fold the egg whites into the peanut butw
mixtw-e. Add 'h tsp. vanilla.
·
Pour mixture into a nine tnch baked pie shell. ChiU until
firm . Top with· whipped cream or topping mix.
Anna bsked this pie just a week or so ago and tells us that for
her family it just wasn't 11peanutty enough" and that the next
time she plans to use 34 c. of peanut butter rather than the 'h the
recipe calls for.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Maxine Dugan ,
Pomeroy; Lowell Collins,

·.--..

r-

("")

MARIETTA - The llufus
Putnam House In Marietta has
been selected as one or rour
hlsforl c homes to be Included in
the 1911 edition of the Bicentennial Collection of Historic

N. Y., and Tyron Palae.., New
Bern, N. C.

cooL
and Toby, Mr. and Mrs. John
Newell, .Jeff, Scott, and Mary
Pierce, Dennis ~ Long, Long
Bottom; Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Van Meter, Beverly ; Mrs. Ina
Van Meter and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Brewer and Tim,
Reedsville.
Mr . and Mrs. Hobart Newell,
Elmer and Shelia, Chester;
Mrs . Opal Van Meter, Jack,
Sally Jo, and Diane, Marietta ;
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Van
Meter and Buddy, Pomeroy ;
Mrs. Emma Van Meter, David,

...-&lt; -,_---

Cit

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n

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zn

z

,..,.&lt;

.

rn

:;a

'

PORTLAND- The annual
Van Meter reunion was held
Sunday at the Portland Park.
Attending were Mrs, Susie
Cooley and son, Lewis, ·
Steubenville; Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Curtis and Cindy, Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Curtis,
Charleston, W. Va .; Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Van Meter, Becky
and Melanie, Laura Byers ,
Erma Wilson, Chester Van
Metl!r, arid Forrest Van Meter,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Larrf ..
Curtis, Tammy, Timmy, Terri .

,.,

en

-a

I
:oo"' ••::- z
-&lt;
-·~

n

ANNA BLACKWOOD from out Sumner way sent along her
recipe for a peanut chiffon pie.
Soften !envelope plain gelatin in Yo c. cold water. Let stand,
Beat well 2 egg yolks, heat in 2 tbsp. sugar, and add Yo c. water
and 1h tsp. salt. Stir in the gelatin and cook over boiling water,
beating constantly until thick and fluffy . Remove from heal and

VanMeter reunirm held

~·

::1:

11IE "MONARCS," Woostl!r, gospel singerll, will be f~tured at Ute l.angaville Christian
Olurch, Saturday, July 27 at 7:30p.m. The public Is cordially invitl!d to attend.

,

'"

&lt;
,..
z

in Colwnbus.,
The recipe she provided called for meringue made from
three egg whites, "• tsp, cream of tartar, 'h c. sugar, an~ I tsp .
corn starch , Egg whites should he at room temperature . Beat
· WJtll foamy; add cream of tartar and heat until stiff. Add combined sugar and corn starch, a small amount at a time. Do not
under beat (this causes meringue to 11 Weep"). Then sprinkle Ule
peanut butter and confectioners sugar mixture over the
meringue and bake in a· 425 degree oven until lightly browned,
five or six minutes.

Putnam house is featured

HasbroU&lt;~ House, Newbur•h,

Public Utilities Commission of ,
Ohio to issue an addltional$10
million In $100 par value
preferred stock, .
The $1oo.par value stock will
have an 11 per cent dividend
rate. Approval was also granted for $40 million In 10 per cent
nrst mortgage bonds,. to
become due in 1982.
Both issues were to help
finance capital expenditures
amowiting to more than $229
million.

I .

Bolen, Mrs. Keith Weaver ,
Carl and Dee Weave r,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Max
Bolen, Reynoldsburg ; Mr. a nd
Mrs. Roger Bolen, Lon.
donderry ; Mr. and Mrs .
Bernard Allen, Bonnie, Judy,
· Boyd, Bruce and Jill Allen;
Mrs. c. E. Stout, Mr. and Mrs .
Rona ld Bolen, Lisa Bolen,
Albany; Mr. ahd Mrs. Albert
Bolen, Dexter; Mr-, and Mrs .
Kenneth Bolen, Dexter; Mr .
and Mrs. Ken neth Bolen,
Tuppers Plains ; Miss Sandy
Brake, Nashville, Tenn .;
Timothy and Patricia Casto,
Romulus, N. Y.,' and Airman 1C Kenneth Bolen who is home
on a leavo from the U. S. Air
Force following a tour of duly
in Thailand .
Single Swimming •
Unt i11901 in Great Brita in,
bathing beac hes were
scgre~a ted by sex. A Dorset
·propnetor wlls finecl in 1873
for allowing a ~usband and
wife to .swim togeth er .

FAMOUS BRANDS

..

A

/2·NOW!

1

OUR COMPLETE STOCK
.

.

.

OF LADIES
SPRIN·G AND SUMMER

•
.•
•
•
•

RED
WHITE
BEIGE
BLACK &amp; WHITE
BROWN &amp; WHITE

• PUMPS
•CASUALS
• DRESSY STY.LES
oi SANDALS

OFF
REG •

PRICI:
SHOP STIFFLER'S ·
/ ) AND SAVEl /
"•

•

•

•

�I

'
I - '!be O.Uy Senlinol, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednellday, July
, 24, 111'14

•
8-: ThO; Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday . July 24, 1974

'Brigadoon

' ~captures

OU
.

For the next two weekends,
the F'orum Theater in Ohio
University's RTVC Building
will asswne the magic quality
or the Scottish highlands. [f
you 're wondering who is
responsible for th is tran sformation, ask Robert Winters
and his Ohio Valley Swnmer
Theater t OVST ) cast for
··Brigadoon ."
"Brigadoon,'' the beautiful

Scottish musical by Lel'tler and
I.Mwe, opened in the Forum
Theater July 17. The musical's
director , Rob ert Wi nte rs.
discussed this second show of
the OVST summer seaso n
yesterday .
" We're really using the
F'orwn in exciting ways," he
said. "The show's lighting will
create a good effect, and we're

putting the theater's

lon~

.'Corridors to use by having
some cast members sing in the
aisles."
But the musical 's real appeal
lies in its script.
''The fairy tale , romanti c
qual ity of "Brigidoon'' has
been tremendously interesting
to people for almost 25 years ,''
Winters explained .
And this show has several
very popular songs which well~
kn ov.'t1 toMlspeople will bring

of Ohio State and MiehiJ.!an

Zook is musiral direc.·~or .
OVST theate-rgoer s will also
see some excellent ·dancing,
.accordin~ to Winters.
.. There are no professional
dan('crs in the show, but the
cast
is awfully . wellrehearsed," ht&gt; said . ·•our
audien(~S will see some really
fanta s tic duncin g done by
Ath ens
residents
with
c h u reo~rap ll y

by

Slate, onL'&lt;' played the role of

Joan

the da cnin g is absolutel~'
supreme !"
Howeve r ,
there
arc
munerous behind-the-scenes
people who add their own
spe(.'iaJ touch to ' 'Brigadoon,"
· such as Carol Blanchard who is
the s how' s customer . Dcm
Wil helm , who designed sets for
last year's ;'Music Man," is set

••

.:!'
• t

~'

:~
••' •
:,

:!
•;
,,

"

.."

1

•

Bend to Me," while Bill York

Cosby is

respon sible for the show's
various lighting effects .
Winters, wh o is an alumnu s

Ca Iend ar

Wives gather

WEDNESDAY
' POME:ROY
Women's

plan picnic

Olristian Temperance Union,
annual picnic , noon at the
home . of Miss Lucretia
Genheimer , Mulberry . Ave.,

A picnic to be held at the
Belleville Locks and Dam,
Reedsville, Aug . 10, was

will be supplied by an orfaculty and local citizens. Ira

'74,

the

A f;.tmily get-lO!-'.Clhl'r wus..

FASHIOn

i11 c:eranucs, leather, textiles,
and wood, as well .as paintinst
dnt'A- lng, sc ulpture, and
jewelry m[tking . Indian
Swnmer Festival this year will
Ont·c at-tain have demonstrations and petformances by
co untry
c rartsm en and
musicians.

artists and craftsmen at work

~

•
SAN CLEMENTE ; Calif.
'" · (UPI ) - President Nlmn'a
.~ "pokeamen have reacted
,', sharply tAl the annoWlcement
' , by a conservative Republican
:, .•n the House Judictury
" Committee thaj he will vote lor
,,•

SUMMER CLEARANCE

This year, !Sf '74 is lill1iling
the nwtaber of artists to 75.
Space is being allotted on a
first come-first served basis, so

SUMMER KNITS ·

•

WIDE SELECTION

artists and craftsmen are
W"ged to s ubm it applications
without
delay.
For
8
prospectus write : Mrs.· Frank
D. Flanders, 511 Third Sl.,

FIREMEN PICNIC
RUTLAND - A picnic has
been planned by the Rutland

Lord 's Prayer to open the

p.m. at the Rutland Park. The
picnic is for all firemen, their
families, and all those who

THE FABRIC SHOP
992·22&amp;1

115 W. SECOND

McCAll'S &amp; SIMPLICITY
i

THURSDAY
TWIN City Shrinettes picnic,
6:30 p.m. 'at the Shrine Park,
Racine. Members are to take. a
covered dish , their own table
service and lawn chairs. The
picnic is for members only.

Mrs . Ruth McGrath, Mrs .
FREE clothing day. for low
Cathy Spencer, Mrs. Esther
income
families at the GalliaMays and Mrs. Sarah Bailey.
Meigs Community Center,

..

CASH, CHARGE,
LAY-AWAY
SHOP EAR lY WHilE
QUANTIT IES lAST

••
••

4 DAY

•

MODEL
G0/ 420

have · two

Beverly, age nine . Grand-

iinproved, was .

led by Nellie Parker. Helen
June Stearns. There were 15 Woode gave the closing prayer .
sick and shut-in calis reported.
The hostess , assisted b~ her
A Jetter was read !tom daughter, Kathy , and ot ers,
Gertrude Bloede of ''Red Bird served dehcw~s refreshments
Hospital Missions " as was during the SOCial hour .
another in regard to a
The ne~t meeting will be on
memorial to be erected to the Tuesday ev.ening, Aug. 20, at 8
black woman, Mary McCloud at the home of Nellie Parker
lletlume In the nation's'tapitQJ. with Isola Taylor the program
There are. six bottles of leader.
Attending ' besides those
v111illa yet for sale, and plenty
men.
tioned .·abqve were Clara
al napkins and greetiltg ca•ds.
A ~ment for the top Follrod, Emma finch, Thelma
. communion ta~Jecloth was . Henderson , Osle Henderson ,
Eleanor . Boyles and Florence
dlaculsed .
An interesting orO&lt;(ram on Spencer.
' 1
•

'59.99
Our own top qualitY mower at
a low sale price! It has all the
...features you see here, and it's
fully equipped with important
safety features , too. Powerful
3112 HP engine. Gives years of
dependable use. Buy now at
this low, low price .

Everyone welcome.

parents are Mr. and Mrs . A. W.
Hayes, Middleport, and Mrs . .
Marie Smith, Mason, W. Va.
ALFRED - The United public education, from the · Mrs. Sylvia Badgley, Mid·
Methodist Women of the Alfred book, " Uve· A New Life/' with dleport,· and Mrs . Bessie
· .U. M. Church met the evening n~adings and discussions on : Young, Letart, are grea t·
of July 16 at the home or Osie various phiises or Education grandmothers.
Mae F'&lt;lilrod, with 10 members then and now - with its many.
and one Visitor present. Nellie chan ges, with suggestions on
~e

•
REG.

REVIVAL starting Friday,
7: 30 each evening at MI.
Moriah Church of God with
Dayton speaker.
SATURDAY
HYMN SING at Ash Street
Freewill . Baptist Church,
Middleport,
7' 30
p.m.

Alfred UMW meets

how it might

)

business meeting followed by
refreshments.

daughters, Lisa, age four , and

Parker, president; presided,
and _the opening pray er was by

•

•10.00

Group singing, music, , s~o.rt

Haye S

GRANGES 1\!EET
RACINE _ !A! tart Falls Ohio
Valley Grange 2612 will visit
. Racine Grange today at 8 p.m.
Each ·member is to bring· a
. covered dish
·
CLOtHES DAY
, There will be a free clothing
day for low income families at
the Gallia·Meigs Community
Center in Cheshire, from 9 a.m.
tQ 3 p.m. Thur~ay. The Gallia·
Meigs Community Action
program sponsors the day.

before .''

Ljbrary to have copiers
•

Xetox copying lnuchincs will

f'O rnmilt.ees arc asked to make
be •vailable in both the an assignment ror the
Pomeroy and Middleport progrwn .
Public Libraries within a We&lt;!k ,
The speci al interest displays
it was noted at a meeting of the promoted hy the stud nts were
Meigs Library Board meeting also discussed and it was noted
Monday

the

Pomeroy

reported that the Qlachines will
be coin-operated and that the
cos t will be 10

cenis- 'a

copy .

Regular meetings or the board
were changed from the fourth
Monday evening of each month
to a luncheon mee tin g at Ute

·

bloody shame for Mr. Meigs Inn on the fourth
Hogan to sell out for his own 'Tuesday at t2 noon .
political sell interest withoul
Debbie Ohlinger and Becky
regard Jo the American people WiU, work study students at the
in recognition of this incredibly libraries, reported on the
good President," said Clawson. summer reading program and
"The Presldent Is content in
his resolve to remain in office,
and he believes he has committed no impeachable of·

Ulat this week there is one on

sports at the Middleport

Mrs. Pal Holter, president,

" I think lt 's a ·c rying

Humphrey's two campaigns
for president and one lor the
Senate.
Parr was not cbarged in
connection wtth any illegal
eoniributions to President
Nixon's 1972 re.eleotion cam·
paign.
He could get up to five years
In jaU and $10,000 in linea •
The one..count information
charged that Parr helped
arrange illegal contributions .
for six politlciana: Humphrey,
former Rep. Page Belcher, R·
Okla., unsuccessful House can·
didate Patrick V. HliJlng of
California, Sen. James Abou·
retk, 0-S.D., Rep. Wilbur D.
Mills, D'·Ark., and Sen.
Ricbard Clark, 0-Iowa.

&lt;Jt

Library.

spoke of organizing " Friends
of the Library." 1ndividuals

i'riterested

ar.e~·

invited to

contact either o! the student'
fense," Clawson said. " I and organizations with service

Library , and one on tra vel
using nu::1terials provided by

Mr. anU Mrs. Orin Smith,
Middleport, al the Pomeroy
Ubrary .
Anyone with a hQbby or
special materials suitable for a
display are invited to contact
one of the libi'aries.
Book loans for the month .of

.rune totaled 8,214 books, in-

LUXURY HOTEL, the Schloss Gllenicke in Berlin looks
pretty grim after seCurity peraormel erected barbed wire
barricadeiJ aroWld the ritzy hotel in jreparation for the
ChUean soccer team's stay here . Gennan hosts of till! recent
World Soccer Cup. matches ordered the barricades to in·
crease security, fearing a reprise of the 1972 Olympics
massacre of Israeli athletes.

cludin g both libraries and the
bookmobile circulation.
The retirement of Mrs. Jean
Hart was noted, and a
discussion was held on the
&lt;~ppointment of p libra rian for

the Pomeroy l.ibrary .

"Super-Right" Quality WHOLE

1=~ l=n.yen&amp;~

e

lb.

• . "'· 89• Fryer Thighs • • • ,•.&amp;Be Butt Portion •••••••••• ; '" 69• Center SliCe. • •

REGULAR 39.86

$1786

PHYSICAL
FITNESS SET .·
Silver

Only

"

HUFFY MOWER
26" CUT
$

POWERFUL 8 HP
BRIGGS AND STRAITON
ENGINE WITH A FUU
·26" CUT.
REGULAR '349.00

••

'"
•

CHARGE IT!

REGULAR

LAWN GYM
WITH ·SLIDE
Bright 6 leg gym set is great
for backyard fun! 7' side
entry platform slide has
safety steps. Two swings,
trapeze U bar.

Fir•'l' Cluali'l'y Al.,.ays

OUR
LOW
PRICE

'

OUR
LOW
PRICE
SIZES 32-ll

44
REG.

w.u

: wamed about

.: phony contests

.
:1o

..

•
•

"CHARGE IT"

~• BERRY'S WORLD

BRAND
REG.

11.94

Sausage ~~:n~~~ • ,
BraUIIChweiger -~~.t~·
Sliced Bacon Ends
A&amp;P Pimento.Cheese

•

DIAPERS ·

'HI' tu,,.,.,.,
Af 'fiN I l~W f'o IliA!

il;o. u~

$1.27

HAVE

ln.

,,

•

pttrpkf.

FROZEN PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE

00

$
boxes
of ZOO

•

CHUN KING FROZEN

•

FLEISCHMANN'S FROZEN

Egg Beaters • •. • . ~~~age
RICH 'S FROZEN
.
$100
.....
3
Coffee Rich . • •
$12'
5
Frimch Fries . • •

$100

3

A&amp;P BR.AND . 7 FLAVORS

48-ol.

Fruit Drinks . • • •
OUR OWN-With Lemen a"d
ggc
nstant Tea Mix . . • ·;;;:
CKnM

I

Sugar

Pam Vegetable Spray •

•

•

.....
,.... 99• '

...

lb..
lil,ll

Swee£
~-

65e ,

1•9

,

A'&amp;P FR.OZEN

Cloro,r Bleach
9•11··

.

r. o" "' I O Eo"79e

~.

A&amp;P BRAND

Spaghetti Sauce • •
INSTANT
Maxwell House Coffee

•• •

.:''1 --·-='1
••
••
•

••

Prices Effective Thru Sat.
July 27
AtA&amp;PWEO Store
Middleport. o.

• • •

••
•••
•

••

24•

With Th i1

.

'" 49c ,,
II

I

1111
~ ~~ 0

. I
I

~·t•.

With Thi1
Co~pon

.. •''' Folqe r' s Coffee

, . sp &gt;

AH
v A !o! &gt;lll ~

1~n
a 1r1

Jiffv
11
•• ~

Entree~

' \1"
,

Open Daily 9 to?

.

· co~o~l)on

Lux Dcterqt'nt

••

·DAYTIME 30'S
CRIB AND

llOW!t I

• • tb.Uc
• • lh•. , .
• •-;;::71&lt;
I
•

.....
$1
5
White Bread
.:...&amp;g·
Lambrecht Pizza . ......
Egg Rolls · .• • . · ~:~69c

···• Mr. Clean Clt'ancr

(CLOSED SUNDAYS)

· .: 89'
thr~

Sat .. J11ly 27th

A.t Atl A&amp;P WEO's.

•••

DISPOSABLE

·Turkey WingsQu•~,,~~~u!'
Sliced Beef Liver • •
Slusage P•Hies ~1~t!~ ':E~~~~y~
•e L1'nks ,w,,.., ,.,.,...
· Sau.a ft -

•
• ~~: 59c
. . . lb. sac
• • 3.~;. SF9
Spread •:.•~ .59•

•

Good

REGULAR 6Uf

e e • e e

RHODES FROZEN

.

•

AT MUWPHY 5.

Grut For
Bar.B.Quein9

Nestle's Semi-Sweet Morsels • •,;;·;:95•
Hunt's Manwich Sauce
• • '~-;:: . 4tc
........ $123
Tap Choice Dog Food
Heinz VInegar
• •
Nabl~co Chips Ahoy • ·

••
••

JUST s..&amp;v

OWN

'l.ool

$

;: Ohioans are

••

PANT
TOPS
hAVE

'86

~p=,---=~M~U::RP:"H::YtjS

SCREEN PRINT
POLYESTER

tinued at a record pace for both
the second quarter and half
year. Net income for the six
••
.months also increased about 4
••
per cent th~ second quarter
remained about the same level
as last year.
••
Net sales lor the sis montha
•
. were $51,568,593, up 6 per cent
over the ~vious records sales
of $48,663,308 for .the first six
••
months of last year. Net sales
•
'
in the second quarter were
$29,622,823, up 6.3 per cent from
•
the previous high of $27,8&amp;1,613
•
: . COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio in 1973. '
Net income for the six
: Attorney General William J.
: Brown today warned Ohloiii\S months ended June 30 was
• to beware of companies $949,597, an increase from tile
•• promoting phony contests $914,675of last year's first half.
a. Share basis, earnings at
! which offer free vacations at On
mid-year were equal to 62 cents
: glamorous resorts.
: .. Brown, ln a letter to county a share, compared with 59
: f@irs, amilsement parks, festi· cents a share last year baSed
• vals and restaiU'ant and gaso- on outstanding of $1,537,722 in
: une dealers association, both years.
Second quarter earnings
: cautioned officials to cbeck
were
about tbe same as last
: carelully.'anyone's credentials
•before allowing contest year :with $702,038 compared
· : diBplaya to be set up on t!ieir with $706,002 in tbe same 19'73
•
quarter.
::f!emlses.
Earnings per share were tile
• Brown said his warning was
: prompted by numerous com· same as in 1973 - 46 cents in
pla ints from conswners who the second quarter.
• entered nonexistent . "con~ . James Hoffman, president of
~tests.'' Winners were required the firm, said 'f?mpany operapay $15 or $20 registration Uon improved in tnOst areas
: tees, but too often arrived at but all increased profitability
' tlleir vacation resort. to lind no was lost by poor productivity in
"reservations
had .been made the finn's tire plant here.
.
Hoffman said the failure of
"for them.
: "These companies promote the long range program for
: their ginunlcks with attractive productivity improvements
!displays at heavily traveled has resulted in il decision to
:JM.Ibllcevents," Brown said. 11 A reduce production at the
•·few ·preventive measures can Mansfield tire plant and to
;a~op them from fleecing Ohio expand tire production in the
Tupelo, Miss., plant.
:COnswners.~'

: ·~ MANSFIELD, Ohio ('UP!) : The. Mansfield Tire &amp; Rubber
• ·Co. today annolD!ced sales con·

20 Inch Rotary
POWEll MOWER
sAVE

FRIDAY
MONTHLY meeting, United
Methodist Men , 7: 45 p.m.
Heath Church, Middleport.

Mrs .

·

20, t977. :tnd not a moment

will leave the White House Jan.

••

sponsored by the Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Program.

GOSPEL Sing, 7:30p.m., at
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the Big Three
automobile companies wbo still try to cram big cars down our Lailgsville Christian Church.
throats. We have bought the same.make medium..slzed car for 45 The "Monarcs" from WOoster
years but now H yo~ '!ant a iull..size car the length is so great that wjll be featured. The public is
you cannot get it in or out of a tight garage. [feel strongly that invited tQ attend .
SUNDAY
manufacturers should stick to the same 122-inch wheelbase but
REVIVAL
at Freedom
cut off about a •foot frllm the over-aU length. :I'he wheelbase is
what makes a cat ride like a pu~. When shortene.d it is like · Gospel Mission at Bald Knob
Sunday through Aug. 4, 7:30
riding a motorcycle,
I think this is why the companies arelosing b~:Jiness. I have p.m. Rev. 0 . G. McKinney,
switched even though I am a stockholder in one of the Big Three. Charleston, will be guest
I feel they do not listen to the public's demands. -MR. V.H.L. speaker. Special singing each
· DEAR POlLY - I had the same problem. as Barbara has evening . The public is invited .
ANNUAL Homecoming at
with the loose backing on ready-ll)ade bedspreads. I aolved it by
the
Long Bottom Methodist
Ullin~ an old sheet that had been washed 1118ny times, so no
shrinkage problems, and sewing it over the fiberfill backing. A Church; basket dinner at noon.
pennanenUy pressed sheet could be used and might be best but Everyone welcome.
should be washed before sewing it to the back of the spread just
MIDDLEPORT Firemen and
to be sure. I only sewed mine ao it covered the fiberfill and not the Auxiliary members annual
draped portion over the sides and ends. Do hope this belpo picnic, 2 p.m .. . Legion
Barbara and others, too. - ROBERTA.
Memorial Park next to the Post
DEAR POlLY - F~ women wbo sew are lucky enough to Office.
find patterns that fit without aome alterations. When using a
pattern that needs some changes I write on the pattern exactly
POSTPONE MEETING
bow mucb and where it was cbanged. I am saved a lot of ripping
A meeting of the Laurel Cliff
when using the gattern a second Ume and the job is much easier, Better Health Club scheduled
too. - BE'ITY C.
for Thur!day has been postDEAR POLLY - To get all the mascara out of a tulle bend poned Wllil Aug . 1 at the US 33
the brush end slightly. Then when it is inserted and turned it is roadside park. Time will be
coated with the mascara left on the sides of the tube. This tilted announced later .
end brush also make.s it easier to apply the mascara.- LAURA.
DEAR ·POJLY - Never throw away unuseable panty hose .
There are ao many uses for them. I cut the eta.lic off and use it in
SON BORN
skirts and slacks.! also cut out two-incb wide circles that I stitc~
PONTIAC, Ill. - Mr. and
on shorts or pajamas when they have stretched out. Stretch th~ Mrs . Gene Hayes, Pontiac, Ill .
panty bose circles as you stitch, The leg portion can be used to . are announ ~ ing the birth of a
stain paint or varnish, If YoU have a broom that is losing its shape
son, Charles ~Ugene . Hayes,
.double the leg over the broom after cutting off the root. The lega Jr., July tO at the O'Bleness
also can be cut up to make nice knitted IJf crocl1&gt;ted rugs. Hospital in Athens. Mr . and
ALICE.

fail.

guarBfltee you, Ule Prt'Sident

rTire
sales
stay
•
~•.•at
record
level
..

Cheshire , 9 a.m . to 3 p.m.,

By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - A used reirigerator I bought from a
f!'iend is like new except for the front, which has turned
off;white. I hope aome reader can tell me how to restore
this tQ its original white;- MRS. R. G.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
:; milk industry lawyer has
' pleaded guilty to setting up
•; illegal corporate contribuUona
political candidates, moatly
Democrats. Two-thirds of the
-!Doney was on behalf of Sen.
: : Hubert H. Humphrey.
• • Tuesday's plea by David L.
••
• . . Parr, speclal counsel to the
:;Associated Milk Producers
: : 1nc., was the first stenunlng
::from the investigation of
• "CCntributions by AMP! to
'
• ,political
campaigns .
: : He pleaded guilty to con·: )piracy to violate campaign
: , aws by arranging illegal
.: ~nations totaling $222,450 in
• •l968, 1970 anc,i 1972. Of that
.: :amount, $150,450 was for
•

LADIES Golf, Pomeroy Golf

By Polly Cramer'

Illegal money to

•

"

Course. Tee-off time 9 a.m. All
ladies invited.

Auto firms still
irk some buyers

Ckle caUed lt a "crylng

bloody tbame. u
~ _
Rep. Lawrence J . Hogan of
Maryland Tuesday became the
first ml!mber of the committee
Jo say he had made up his mind
to vote against the President.
The committee begins ft.
Impeachment debate before

~·

"...

P~TTERN S

recent years.

)nn .

Polly 's Pointers

:·.

the eonclusioo that Richard M.
NL•on hu, beyond a
rea1011oble doubt, committed
impeachable offenses whicb, in
my judgment, are of su!fici!!flt
magnitude that he llhould be·
removed from office."
"We are disappointed in
Congresaman Hogan's decilllon
and particularly in the maMer
of hls decl.sion ," said Presiden·
Ual Counselor Dean Burch.
Both Burcb and Ken W.
Clawson, White House director
of communications, cbarged
In making public his stand that Hogan's bid to be governor
Hogan said; "I have come to of Marylaod weighed heavily
in ibe congressman's decision.
Hogan bopes to unseat Democratic Gov. Marvin Mandel this

naUonwtd.e televlaioo tonlgllt.
A IIJIOl&lt;emum said Nixon wt11
oot be watching.
The Prosldent !ocuaed his
attention on the nation •• housIng problema today, sum·
monlng Housing Secretary
James T. L)'lln for a meeting
with other domestic adviaeri Jo
review the homebuilding
alwnp in preparsUon for his
economic addr ... Thursday in
Los Angeles before a gathering
of 'business leaders.

}Hubert Humphrey

firemen for Monday night at 6

. AMERICAN U!gion, FeeneyBennett Post 126, Middleport,
7:30 p.m. at the hall.
POMEROY • Middleport
Lions Club , noon at the Meigs

Mrs . Avice Sper1cer led in the

'

;,
;,
•
"'
•~
,.
;,
•n

"''
"'
"•
'"
"'

covered dish.

planned durin g a recent

impeachment.

v

Marietta, 45750.

Farnsworth, Long Bottom: and collected by the sponsoring have helped with the ThanksMrs. l&lt;~rry Wolfe andJamily. orga ni zations. Vis itors will g iving turkey dinners and
Miss Leda Mae Kraeuter and have an opportWlity to see Fourth of July ox roasts in
Eldon Kraeuter, Racine.

f R~action to defection sharp

Pomeroy. Everyone to take a

and Jennirer Scott, as Torn
Albright and Fiona M3claren, meeting. Members signed 3
will sing " Heather on the Hill " sympathy card for Mrs. Pam
and "What a Day This Has Hage r wh ose father di ed
Been". MW"iel Crook as Meg recently .
Mrs. Jill Holter' won the door
Brockiewip sing "My Mother's
prize . Refre shments were
Wedding Day".
served
to those named and
" These kids will dazzle yoW"
head with their s·inging," Mrs . Marilyn Spencer, Mrs.
Karen Young, Mrs. Lila Van
Winters sa
. id.
The music for " Brigadoon" Meter, Mrs. Sharon Louks,
chestra composed of students,

l&lt;'~stiv.al

: ··· so·c·iaT . . .~1:

to life.
Richard Cory as Charlie meeting of the Young Wives
; ;' · Dalrymple will thrill OVST Club held at the home of Mrs.
'" audiences with "Come to Me, Judy Starcher.

•• ' ·

SUinmer:

second
annu;.l
l'rHft s
exhibition, is be in).! h!!ld Sept.S.
held rt't'\'lllly •at the home of 8 at the Crovcr M . Hermann
Mr . and Mrs . Tom Nice. l''i ne Arls Center at Marietta
Cht•ster Hd .
'oll eKe, Marietta . Indian
"Hello Dolly."' "Man of I&lt;~
Mr . itnd Mrs. F:dgar J . 'sununer . J•'estival '74 Ls
Mancha" and " Fiddler on tho tlartung and son , Jed, of sponsored by Lhe Marietta
Roof."
Bry:m, Tmws mut Mr. and Mrs. Area Arts C'omlcil, Marietta
As a facult y member of OU's Kenn eth 1.. HBrh.i.nK and Area Arts &amp;. Crafts League, the
School of Theater, Win~ers da~hter , Heather , of Cin· Marietta College Art Departdirected " Ruddigore " la st cinnati, were weekend guests ment, the Mu rietta Area
spring.
or their mother and slt·p· Chamber of Commerce,
If you like music, dan cing father. ll was the first time Marietta Tourist and Co n;md the ma gic of love. you 're they had been together for vention Bureau and Retail
s ure to e nj oy the ovst about three years.
Merchan ts Association.
produc ti on of " Bri gadoon, ''
Other guests were Mr. and
En tries ror the show have
playing at the F'orwn Theater Mrs. Donald Va n Meter and been ;~rriving daily, according
July t7-21and 24-26 al6:30 p.m. family. Chester ; Ousty to Professor" Arthur Huw3rd
Williams, Youngstown ; Mr . Winer, Director or ISF '74 . The
and
Mrs. Ch3rTes .Eichinger festival is open to artists and
·.·.-~...................·.···································x··············
and da ughte r, Susie, and Mr. craftsmen fr om th e USA .
and Mrs. Alvin Ritchie and Original handcrafted work in
family, Columbus; Mrs . Mabel all media is accepted .
Van Meter , Mrs . Opal
A nomina l fe e will be
Eichinger, Laura Jean, Dennis charged for booth space in the
and
Dona ld , . Ches ter ; faully air conditioned building,
Josephine Ri tchie and Thelma and no commission will be
llr:
1111
Jeff DolJ.I;I:Ias in " Bri~~uloon ."
Since arri ving at OU in 1962, he
hos bet'n directing such OVST
produc ti ons ~ - la ~t ~tear' s

Wickstrom . In fact, some of

desig ner, John

Nice family Indian Summer show set
has reunion MARIET'I'A lmli•n

&lt;

Serve 20&lt;

I

·I

With Thi,
Coupon

Cheese Slice\
on

I' • "

'

' 79( ,. ..
,I'

.._11!!!!!!!!!~~!!!1!!'1!'!11--.!

~~-· ·-­

,1
I
I

Save.24&lt;

With Th it
Co~po n

Keeblers C. C. Biqq s

"' ' 6 '

"' '" '

• i:

•

••

..

•••
•

: .., can't wall/Or our pre-season football practices
:
start so that we can ao on strike, tool" .

·••
•.

'

"

ro

C hipO &gt;

P(n* Super Sug ar C r i\ p

..., 49'

. 9'

''"

•

•

'

�I

'
I - '!be O.Uy Senlinol, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednellday, July
, 24, 111'14

•
8-: ThO; Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday . July 24, 1974

'Brigadoon

' ~captures

OU
.

For the next two weekends,
the F'orum Theater in Ohio
University's RTVC Building
will asswne the magic quality
or the Scottish highlands. [f
you 're wondering who is
responsible for th is tran sformation, ask Robert Winters
and his Ohio Valley Swnmer
Theater t OVST ) cast for
··Brigadoon ."
"Brigadoon,'' the beautiful

Scottish musical by Lel'tler and
I.Mwe, opened in the Forum
Theater July 17. The musical's
director , Rob ert Wi nte rs.
discussed this second show of
the OVST summer seaso n
yesterday .
" We're really using the
F'orwn in exciting ways," he
said. "The show's lighting will
create a good effect, and we're

putting the theater's

lon~

.'Corridors to use by having
some cast members sing in the
aisles."
But the musical 's real appeal
lies in its script.
''The fairy tale , romanti c
qual ity of "Brigidoon'' has
been tremendously interesting
to people for almost 25 years ,''
Winters explained .
And this show has several
very popular songs which well~
kn ov.'t1 toMlspeople will bring

of Ohio State and MiehiJ.!an

Zook is musiral direc.·~or .
OVST theate-rgoer s will also
see some excellent ·dancing,
.accordin~ to Winters.
.. There are no professional
dan('crs in the show, but the
cast
is awfully . wellrehearsed," ht&gt; said . ·•our
audien(~S will see some really
fanta s tic duncin g done by
Ath ens
residents
with
c h u reo~rap ll y

by

Slate, onL'&lt;' played the role of

Joan

the da cnin g is absolutel~'
supreme !"
Howeve r ,
there
arc
munerous behind-the-scenes
people who add their own
spe(.'iaJ touch to ' 'Brigadoon,"
· such as Carol Blanchard who is
the s how' s customer . Dcm
Wil helm , who designed sets for
last year's ;'Music Man," is set

••

.:!'
• t

~'

:~
••' •
:,

:!
•;
,,

"

.."

1

•

Bend to Me," while Bill York

Cosby is

respon sible for the show's
various lighting effects .
Winters, wh o is an alumnu s

Ca Iend ar

Wives gather

WEDNESDAY
' POME:ROY
Women's

plan picnic

Olristian Temperance Union,
annual picnic , noon at the
home . of Miss Lucretia
Genheimer , Mulberry . Ave.,

A picnic to be held at the
Belleville Locks and Dam,
Reedsville, Aug . 10, was

will be supplied by an orfaculty and local citizens. Ira

'74,

the

A f;.tmily get-lO!-'.Clhl'r wus..

FASHIOn

i11 c:eranucs, leather, textiles,
and wood, as well .as paintinst
dnt'A- lng, sc ulpture, and
jewelry m[tking . Indian
Swnmer Festival this year will
Ont·c at-tain have demonstrations and petformances by
co untry
c rartsm en and
musicians.

artists and craftsmen at work

~

•
SAN CLEMENTE ; Calif.
'" · (UPI ) - President Nlmn'a
.~ "pokeamen have reacted
,', sharply tAl the annoWlcement
' , by a conservative Republican
:, .•n the House Judictury
" Committee thaj he will vote lor
,,•

SUMMER CLEARANCE

This year, !Sf '74 is lill1iling
the nwtaber of artists to 75.
Space is being allotted on a
first come-first served basis, so

SUMMER KNITS ·

•

WIDE SELECTION

artists and craftsmen are
W"ged to s ubm it applications
without
delay.
For
8
prospectus write : Mrs.· Frank
D. Flanders, 511 Third Sl.,

FIREMEN PICNIC
RUTLAND - A picnic has
been planned by the Rutland

Lord 's Prayer to open the

p.m. at the Rutland Park. The
picnic is for all firemen, their
families, and all those who

THE FABRIC SHOP
992·22&amp;1

115 W. SECOND

McCAll'S &amp; SIMPLICITY
i

THURSDAY
TWIN City Shrinettes picnic,
6:30 p.m. 'at the Shrine Park,
Racine. Members are to take. a
covered dish , their own table
service and lawn chairs. The
picnic is for members only.

Mrs . Ruth McGrath, Mrs .
FREE clothing day. for low
Cathy Spencer, Mrs. Esther
income
families at the GalliaMays and Mrs. Sarah Bailey.
Meigs Community Center,

..

CASH, CHARGE,
LAY-AWAY
SHOP EAR lY WHilE
QUANTIT IES lAST

••
••

4 DAY

•

MODEL
G0/ 420

have · two

Beverly, age nine . Grand-

iinproved, was .

led by Nellie Parker. Helen
June Stearns. There were 15 Woode gave the closing prayer .
sick and shut-in calis reported.
The hostess , assisted b~ her
A Jetter was read !tom daughter, Kathy , and ot ers,
Gertrude Bloede of ''Red Bird served dehcw~s refreshments
Hospital Missions " as was during the SOCial hour .
another in regard to a
The ne~t meeting will be on
memorial to be erected to the Tuesday ev.ening, Aug. 20, at 8
black woman, Mary McCloud at the home of Nellie Parker
lletlume In the nation's'tapitQJ. with Isola Taylor the program
There are. six bottles of leader.
Attending ' besides those
v111illa yet for sale, and plenty
men.
tioned .·abqve were Clara
al napkins and greetiltg ca•ds.
A ~ment for the top Follrod, Emma finch, Thelma
. communion ta~Jecloth was . Henderson , Osle Henderson ,
Eleanor . Boyles and Florence
dlaculsed .
An interesting orO&lt;(ram on Spencer.
' 1
•

'59.99
Our own top qualitY mower at
a low sale price! It has all the
...features you see here, and it's
fully equipped with important
safety features , too. Powerful
3112 HP engine. Gives years of
dependable use. Buy now at
this low, low price .

Everyone welcome.

parents are Mr. and Mrs . A. W.
Hayes, Middleport, and Mrs . .
Marie Smith, Mason, W. Va.
ALFRED - The United public education, from the · Mrs. Sylvia Badgley, Mid·
Methodist Women of the Alfred book, " Uve· A New Life/' with dleport,· and Mrs . Bessie
· .U. M. Church met the evening n~adings and discussions on : Young, Letart, are grea t·
of July 16 at the home or Osie various phiises or Education grandmothers.
Mae F'&lt;lilrod, with 10 members then and now - with its many.
and one Visitor present. Nellie chan ges, with suggestions on
~e

•
REG.

REVIVAL starting Friday,
7: 30 each evening at MI.
Moriah Church of God with
Dayton speaker.
SATURDAY
HYMN SING at Ash Street
Freewill . Baptist Church,
Middleport,
7' 30
p.m.

Alfred UMW meets

how it might

)

business meeting followed by
refreshments.

daughters, Lisa, age four , and

Parker, president; presided,
and _the opening pray er was by

•

•10.00

Group singing, music, , s~o.rt

Haye S

GRANGES 1\!EET
RACINE _ !A! tart Falls Ohio
Valley Grange 2612 will visit
. Racine Grange today at 8 p.m.
Each ·member is to bring· a
. covered dish
·
CLOtHES DAY
, There will be a free clothing
day for low income families at
the Gallia·Meigs Community
Center in Cheshire, from 9 a.m.
tQ 3 p.m. Thur~ay. The Gallia·
Meigs Community Action
program sponsors the day.

before .''

Ljbrary to have copiers
•

Xetox copying lnuchincs will

f'O rnmilt.ees arc asked to make
be •vailable in both the an assignment ror the
Pomeroy and Middleport progrwn .
Public Libraries within a We&lt;!k ,
The speci al interest displays
it was noted at a meeting of the promoted hy the stud nts were
Meigs Library Board meeting also discussed and it was noted
Monday

the

Pomeroy

reported that the Qlachines will
be coin-operated and that the
cos t will be 10

cenis- 'a

copy .

Regular meetings or the board
were changed from the fourth
Monday evening of each month
to a luncheon mee tin g at Ute

·

bloody shame for Mr. Meigs Inn on the fourth
Hogan to sell out for his own 'Tuesday at t2 noon .
political sell interest withoul
Debbie Ohlinger and Becky
regard Jo the American people WiU, work study students at the
in recognition of this incredibly libraries, reported on the
good President," said Clawson. summer reading program and
"The Presldent Is content in
his resolve to remain in office,
and he believes he has committed no impeachable of·

Ulat this week there is one on

sports at the Middleport

Mrs. Pal Holter, president,

" I think lt 's a ·c rying

Humphrey's two campaigns
for president and one lor the
Senate.
Parr was not cbarged in
connection wtth any illegal
eoniributions to President
Nixon's 1972 re.eleotion cam·
paign.
He could get up to five years
In jaU and $10,000 in linea •
The one..count information
charged that Parr helped
arrange illegal contributions .
for six politlciana: Humphrey,
former Rep. Page Belcher, R·
Okla., unsuccessful House can·
didate Patrick V. HliJlng of
California, Sen. James Abou·
retk, 0-S.D., Rep. Wilbur D.
Mills, D'·Ark., and Sen.
Ricbard Clark, 0-Iowa.

&lt;Jt

Library.

spoke of organizing " Friends
of the Library." 1ndividuals

i'riterested

ar.e~·

invited to

contact either o! the student'
fense," Clawson said. " I and organizations with service

Library , and one on tra vel
using nu::1terials provided by

Mr. anU Mrs. Orin Smith,
Middleport, al the Pomeroy
Ubrary .
Anyone with a hQbby or
special materials suitable for a
display are invited to contact
one of the libi'aries.
Book loans for the month .of

.rune totaled 8,214 books, in-

LUXURY HOTEL, the Schloss Gllenicke in Berlin looks
pretty grim after seCurity peraormel erected barbed wire
barricadeiJ aroWld the ritzy hotel in jreparation for the
ChUean soccer team's stay here . Gennan hosts of till! recent
World Soccer Cup. matches ordered the barricades to in·
crease security, fearing a reprise of the 1972 Olympics
massacre of Israeli athletes.

cludin g both libraries and the
bookmobile circulation.
The retirement of Mrs. Jean
Hart was noted, and a
discussion was held on the
&lt;~ppointment of p libra rian for

the Pomeroy l.ibrary .

"Super-Right" Quality WHOLE

1=~ l=n.yen&amp;~

e

lb.

• . "'· 89• Fryer Thighs • • • ,•.&amp;Be Butt Portion •••••••••• ; '" 69• Center SliCe. • •

REGULAR 39.86

$1786

PHYSICAL
FITNESS SET .·
Silver

Only

"

HUFFY MOWER
26" CUT
$

POWERFUL 8 HP
BRIGGS AND STRAITON
ENGINE WITH A FUU
·26" CUT.
REGULAR '349.00

••

'"
•

CHARGE IT!

REGULAR

LAWN GYM
WITH ·SLIDE
Bright 6 leg gym set is great
for backyard fun! 7' side
entry platform slide has
safety steps. Two swings,
trapeze U bar.

Fir•'l' Cluali'l'y Al.,.ays

OUR
LOW
PRICE

'

OUR
LOW
PRICE
SIZES 32-ll

44
REG.

w.u

: wamed about

.: phony contests

.
:1o

..

•
•

"CHARGE IT"

~• BERRY'S WORLD

BRAND
REG.

11.94

Sausage ~~:n~~~ • ,
BraUIIChweiger -~~.t~·
Sliced Bacon Ends
A&amp;P Pimento.Cheese

•

DIAPERS ·

'HI' tu,,.,.,.,
Af 'fiN I l~W f'o IliA!

il;o. u~

$1.27

HAVE

ln.

,,

•

pttrpkf.

FROZEN PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE

00

$
boxes
of ZOO

•

CHUN KING FROZEN

•

FLEISCHMANN'S FROZEN

Egg Beaters • •. • . ~~~age
RICH 'S FROZEN
.
$100
.....
3
Coffee Rich . • •
$12'
5
Frimch Fries . • •

$100

3

A&amp;P BR.AND . 7 FLAVORS

48-ol.

Fruit Drinks . • • •
OUR OWN-With Lemen a"d
ggc
nstant Tea Mix . . • ·;;;:
CKnM

I

Sugar

Pam Vegetable Spray •

•

•

.....
,.... 99• '

...

lb..
lil,ll

Swee£
~-

65e ,

1•9

,

A'&amp;P FR.OZEN

Cloro,r Bleach
9•11··

.

r. o" "' I O Eo"79e

~.

A&amp;P BRAND

Spaghetti Sauce • •
INSTANT
Maxwell House Coffee

•• •

.:''1 --·-='1
••
••
•

••

Prices Effective Thru Sat.
July 27
AtA&amp;PWEO Store
Middleport. o.

• • •

••
•••
•

••

24•

With Th i1

.

'" 49c ,,
II

I

1111
~ ~~ 0

. I
I

~·t•.

With Thi1
Co~pon

.. •''' Folqe r' s Coffee

, . sp &gt;

AH
v A !o! &gt;lll ~

1~n
a 1r1

Jiffv
11
•• ~

Entree~

' \1"
,

Open Daily 9 to?

.

· co~o~l)on

Lux Dcterqt'nt

••

·DAYTIME 30'S
CRIB AND

llOW!t I

• • tb.Uc
• • lh•. , .
• •-;;::71&lt;
I
•

.....
$1
5
White Bread
.:...&amp;g·
Lambrecht Pizza . ......
Egg Rolls · .• • . · ~:~69c

···• Mr. Clean Clt'ancr

(CLOSED SUNDAYS)

· .: 89'
thr~

Sat .. J11ly 27th

A.t Atl A&amp;P WEO's.

•••

DISPOSABLE

·Turkey WingsQu•~,,~~~u!'
Sliced Beef Liver • •
Slusage P•Hies ~1~t!~ ':E~~~~y~
•e L1'nks ,w,,.., ,.,.,...
· Sau.a ft -

•
• ~~: 59c
. . . lb. sac
• • 3.~;. SF9
Spread •:.•~ .59•

•

Good

REGULAR 6Uf

e e • e e

RHODES FROZEN

.

•

AT MUWPHY 5.

Grut For
Bar.B.Quein9

Nestle's Semi-Sweet Morsels • •,;;·;:95•
Hunt's Manwich Sauce
• • '~-;:: . 4tc
........ $123
Tap Choice Dog Food
Heinz VInegar
• •
Nabl~co Chips Ahoy • ·

••
••

JUST s..&amp;v

OWN

'l.ool

$

;: Ohioans are

••

PANT
TOPS
hAVE

'86

~p=,---=~M~U::RP:"H::YtjS

SCREEN PRINT
POLYESTER

tinued at a record pace for both
the second quarter and half
year. Net income for the six
••
.months also increased about 4
••
per cent th~ second quarter
remained about the same level
as last year.
••
Net sales lor the sis montha
•
. were $51,568,593, up 6 per cent
over the ~vious records sales
of $48,663,308 for .the first six
••
months of last year. Net sales
•
'
in the second quarter were
$29,622,823, up 6.3 per cent from
•
the previous high of $27,8&amp;1,613
•
: . COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio in 1973. '
Net income for the six
: Attorney General William J.
: Brown today warned Ohloiii\S months ended June 30 was
• to beware of companies $949,597, an increase from tile
•• promoting phony contests $914,675of last year's first half.
a. Share basis, earnings at
! which offer free vacations at On
mid-year were equal to 62 cents
: glamorous resorts.
: .. Brown, ln a letter to county a share, compared with 59
: f@irs, amilsement parks, festi· cents a share last year baSed
• vals and restaiU'ant and gaso- on outstanding of $1,537,722 in
: une dealers association, both years.
Second quarter earnings
: cautioned officials to cbeck
were
about tbe same as last
: carelully.'anyone's credentials
•before allowing contest year :with $702,038 compared
· : diBplaya to be set up on t!ieir with $706,002 in tbe same 19'73
•
quarter.
::f!emlses.
Earnings per share were tile
• Brown said his warning was
: prompted by numerous com· same as in 1973 - 46 cents in
pla ints from conswners who the second quarter.
• entered nonexistent . "con~ . James Hoffman, president of
~tests.'' Winners were required the firm, said 'f?mpany operapay $15 or $20 registration Uon improved in tnOst areas
: tees, but too often arrived at but all increased profitability
' tlleir vacation resort. to lind no was lost by poor productivity in
"reservations
had .been made the finn's tire plant here.
.
Hoffman said the failure of
"for them.
: "These companies promote the long range program for
: their ginunlcks with attractive productivity improvements
!displays at heavily traveled has resulted in il decision to
:JM.Ibllcevents," Brown said. 11 A reduce production at the
•·few ·preventive measures can Mansfield tire plant and to
;a~op them from fleecing Ohio expand tire production in the
Tupelo, Miss., plant.
:COnswners.~'

: ·~ MANSFIELD, Ohio ('UP!) : The. Mansfield Tire &amp; Rubber
• ·Co. today annolD!ced sales con·

20 Inch Rotary
POWEll MOWER
sAVE

FRIDAY
MONTHLY meeting, United
Methodist Men , 7: 45 p.m.
Heath Church, Middleport.

Mrs .

·

20, t977. :tnd not a moment

will leave the White House Jan.

••

sponsored by the Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Program.

GOSPEL Sing, 7:30p.m., at
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the Big Three
automobile companies wbo still try to cram big cars down our Lailgsville Christian Church.
throats. We have bought the same.make medium..slzed car for 45 The "Monarcs" from WOoster
years but now H yo~ '!ant a iull..size car the length is so great that wjll be featured. The public is
you cannot get it in or out of a tight garage. [feel strongly that invited tQ attend .
SUNDAY
manufacturers should stick to the same 122-inch wheelbase but
REVIVAL
at Freedom
cut off about a •foot frllm the over-aU length. :I'he wheelbase is
what makes a cat ride like a pu~. When shortene.d it is like · Gospel Mission at Bald Knob
Sunday through Aug. 4, 7:30
riding a motorcycle,
I think this is why the companies arelosing b~:Jiness. I have p.m. Rev. 0 . G. McKinney,
switched even though I am a stockholder in one of the Big Three. Charleston, will be guest
I feel they do not listen to the public's demands. -MR. V.H.L. speaker. Special singing each
· DEAR POlLY - I had the same problem. as Barbara has evening . The public is invited .
ANNUAL Homecoming at
with the loose backing on ready-ll)ade bedspreads. I aolved it by
the
Long Bottom Methodist
Ullin~ an old sheet that had been washed 1118ny times, so no
shrinkage problems, and sewing it over the fiberfill backing. A Church; basket dinner at noon.
pennanenUy pressed sheet could be used and might be best but Everyone welcome.
should be washed before sewing it to the back of the spread just
MIDDLEPORT Firemen and
to be sure. I only sewed mine ao it covered the fiberfill and not the Auxiliary members annual
draped portion over the sides and ends. Do hope this belpo picnic, 2 p.m .. . Legion
Barbara and others, too. - ROBERTA.
Memorial Park next to the Post
DEAR POlLY - F~ women wbo sew are lucky enough to Office.
find patterns that fit without aome alterations. When using a
pattern that needs some changes I write on the pattern exactly
POSTPONE MEETING
bow mucb and where it was cbanged. I am saved a lot of ripping
A meeting of the Laurel Cliff
when using the gattern a second Ume and the job is much easier, Better Health Club scheduled
too. - BE'ITY C.
for Thur!day has been postDEAR POLLY - To get all the mascara out of a tulle bend poned Wllil Aug . 1 at the US 33
the brush end slightly. Then when it is inserted and turned it is roadside park. Time will be
coated with the mascara left on the sides of the tube. This tilted announced later .
end brush also make.s it easier to apply the mascara.- LAURA.
DEAR ·POJLY - Never throw away unuseable panty hose .
There are ao many uses for them. I cut the eta.lic off and use it in
SON BORN
skirts and slacks.! also cut out two-incb wide circles that I stitc~
PONTIAC, Ill. - Mr. and
on shorts or pajamas when they have stretched out. Stretch th~ Mrs . Gene Hayes, Pontiac, Ill .
panty bose circles as you stitch, The leg portion can be used to . are announ ~ ing the birth of a
stain paint or varnish, If YoU have a broom that is losing its shape
son, Charles ~Ugene . Hayes,
.double the leg over the broom after cutting off the root. The lega Jr., July tO at the O'Bleness
also can be cut up to make nice knitted IJf crocl1&gt;ted rugs. Hospital in Athens. Mr . and
ALICE.

fail.

guarBfltee you, Ule Prt'Sident

rTire
sales
stay
•
~•.•at
record
level
..

Cheshire , 9 a.m . to 3 p.m.,

By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - A used reirigerator I bought from a
f!'iend is like new except for the front, which has turned
off;white. I hope aome reader can tell me how to restore
this tQ its original white;- MRS. R. G.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
:; milk industry lawyer has
' pleaded guilty to setting up
•; illegal corporate contribuUona
political candidates, moatly
Democrats. Two-thirds of the
-!Doney was on behalf of Sen.
: : Hubert H. Humphrey.
• • Tuesday's plea by David L.
••
• . . Parr, speclal counsel to the
:;Associated Milk Producers
: : 1nc., was the first stenunlng
::from the investigation of
• "CCntributions by AMP! to
'
• ,political
campaigns .
: : He pleaded guilty to con·: )piracy to violate campaign
: , aws by arranging illegal
.: ~nations totaling $222,450 in
• •l968, 1970 anc,i 1972. Of that
.: :amount, $150,450 was for
•

LADIES Golf, Pomeroy Golf

By Polly Cramer'

Illegal money to

•

"

Course. Tee-off time 9 a.m. All
ladies invited.

Auto firms still
irk some buyers

Ckle caUed lt a "crylng

bloody tbame. u
~ _
Rep. Lawrence J . Hogan of
Maryland Tuesday became the
first ml!mber of the committee
Jo say he had made up his mind
to vote against the President.
The committee begins ft.
Impeachment debate before

~·

"...

P~TTERN S

recent years.

)nn .

Polly 's Pointers

:·.

the eonclusioo that Richard M.
NL•on hu, beyond a
rea1011oble doubt, committed
impeachable offenses whicb, in
my judgment, are of su!fici!!flt
magnitude that he llhould be·
removed from office."
"We are disappointed in
Congresaman Hogan's decilllon
and particularly in the maMer
of hls decl.sion ," said Presiden·
Ual Counselor Dean Burch.
Both Burcb and Ken W.
Clawson, White House director
of communications, cbarged
In making public his stand that Hogan's bid to be governor
Hogan said; "I have come to of Marylaod weighed heavily
in ibe congressman's decision.
Hogan bopes to unseat Democratic Gov. Marvin Mandel this

naUonwtd.e televlaioo tonlgllt.
A IIJIOl&lt;emum said Nixon wt11
oot be watching.
The Prosldent !ocuaed his
attention on the nation •• housIng problema today, sum·
monlng Housing Secretary
James T. L)'lln for a meeting
with other domestic adviaeri Jo
review the homebuilding
alwnp in preparsUon for his
economic addr ... Thursday in
Los Angeles before a gathering
of 'business leaders.

}Hubert Humphrey

firemen for Monday night at 6

. AMERICAN U!gion, FeeneyBennett Post 126, Middleport,
7:30 p.m. at the hall.
POMEROY • Middleport
Lions Club , noon at the Meigs

Mrs . Avice Sper1cer led in the

'

;,
;,
•
"'
•~
,.
;,
•n

"''
"'
"•
'"
"'

covered dish.

planned durin g a recent

impeachment.

v

Marietta, 45750.

Farnsworth, Long Bottom: and collected by the sponsoring have helped with the ThanksMrs. l&lt;~rry Wolfe andJamily. orga ni zations. Vis itors will g iving turkey dinners and
Miss Leda Mae Kraeuter and have an opportWlity to see Fourth of July ox roasts in
Eldon Kraeuter, Racine.

f R~action to defection sharp

Pomeroy. Everyone to take a

and Jennirer Scott, as Torn
Albright and Fiona M3claren, meeting. Members signed 3
will sing " Heather on the Hill " sympathy card for Mrs. Pam
and "What a Day This Has Hage r wh ose father di ed
Been". MW"iel Crook as Meg recently .
Mrs. Jill Holter' won the door
Brockiewip sing "My Mother's
prize . Refre shments were
Wedding Day".
served
to those named and
" These kids will dazzle yoW"
head with their s·inging," Mrs . Marilyn Spencer, Mrs.
Karen Young, Mrs. Lila Van
Winters sa
. id.
The music for " Brigadoon" Meter, Mrs. Sharon Louks,
chestra composed of students,

l&lt;'~stiv.al

: ··· so·c·iaT . . .~1:

to life.
Richard Cory as Charlie meeting of the Young Wives
; ;' · Dalrymple will thrill OVST Club held at the home of Mrs.
'" audiences with "Come to Me, Judy Starcher.

•• ' ·

SUinmer:

second
annu;.l
l'rHft s
exhibition, is be in).! h!!ld Sept.S.
held rt't'\'lllly •at the home of 8 at the Crovcr M . Hermann
Mr . and Mrs . Tom Nice. l''i ne Arls Center at Marietta
Cht•ster Hd .
'oll eKe, Marietta . Indian
"Hello Dolly."' "Man of I&lt;~
Mr . itnd Mrs. F:dgar J . 'sununer . J•'estival '74 Ls
Mancha" and " Fiddler on tho tlartung and son , Jed, of sponsored by Lhe Marietta
Roof."
Bry:m, Tmws mut Mr. and Mrs. Area Arts C'omlcil, Marietta
As a facult y member of OU's Kenn eth 1.. HBrh.i.nK and Area Arts &amp;. Crafts League, the
School of Theater, Win~ers da~hter , Heather , of Cin· Marietta College Art Departdirected " Ruddigore " la st cinnati, were weekend guests ment, the Mu rietta Area
spring.
or their mother and slt·p· Chamber of Commerce,
If you like music, dan cing father. ll was the first time Marietta Tourist and Co n;md the ma gic of love. you 're they had been together for vention Bureau and Retail
s ure to e nj oy the ovst about three years.
Merchan ts Association.
produc ti on of " Bri gadoon, ''
Other guests were Mr. and
En tries ror the show have
playing at the F'orwn Theater Mrs. Donald Va n Meter and been ;~rriving daily, according
July t7-21and 24-26 al6:30 p.m. family. Chester ; Ousty to Professor" Arthur Huw3rd
Williams, Youngstown ; Mr . Winer, Director or ISF '74 . The
and
Mrs. Ch3rTes .Eichinger festival is open to artists and
·.·.-~...................·.···································x··············
and da ughte r, Susie, and Mr. craftsmen fr om th e USA .
and Mrs. Alvin Ritchie and Original handcrafted work in
family, Columbus; Mrs . Mabel all media is accepted .
Van Meter , Mrs . Opal
A nomina l fe e will be
Eichinger, Laura Jean, Dennis charged for booth space in the
and
Dona ld , . Ches ter ; faully air conditioned building,
Josephine Ri tchie and Thelma and no commission will be
llr:
1111
Jeff DolJ.I;I:Ias in " Bri~~uloon ."
Since arri ving at OU in 1962, he
hos bet'n directing such OVST
produc ti ons ~ - la ~t ~tear' s

Wickstrom . In fact, some of

desig ner, John

Nice family Indian Summer show set
has reunion MARIET'I'A lmli•n

&lt;

Serve 20&lt;

I

·I

With Thi,
Coupon

Cheese Slice\
on

I' • "

'

' 79( ,. ..
,I'

.._11!!!!!!!!!~~!!!1!!'1!'!11--.!

~~-· ·-­

,1
I
I

Save.24&lt;

With Th it
Co~po n

Keeblers C. C. Biqq s

"' ' 6 '

"' '" '

• i:

•

••

..

•••
•

: .., can't wall/Or our pre-season football practices
:
start so that we can ao on strike, tool" .

·••
•.

'

"

ro

C hipO &gt;

P(n* Super Sug ar C r i\ p

..., 49'

. 9'

''"

•

•

'

�.
11 - The DIUy Senllnel, Middleport.Poulilroy, 0., Wednulay, July 24, 1974

10 - The DaUySentlnei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesda~ . July

News .. . in Briefs
Continut-&lt;1 fr om page 1
Gov. J. J . Exon p-edicled that the drought and depressed
UYHU&gt;ck prl&lt;ea could cost the state's agrieultw-al indostry a
mlnlmum of $1 billion this year.
· "At lout 50 per cent of Nebraska 'a dry agrlooltural cropland
has been !oat; and oo the irrigated land, farmers can elJ)ect a
bushel !lecline of 30percent frn!n last year," Exon said Tuesclay.
The state's rich Uvestock feeding west= range also was hard
hit.
"There are more cattle on ranges than in the past, but the
paotureland has been drying up," Exon said.

New York Clothing House

Semi-Annual ClearanceSTARTS FRIDAY, JULY 26

DOORS OPEN AT 9 AM FRIDAY - BE SURE TO SHOP EARLY!

KERM
GIVES BETTER

l

has caused his department to
patrol this area. He promised
that when the resolution has
become fully operative anyone
caught
on
the
1and
unauthorized will be arrested
and charged . .
Sheriff Hartenbach stated
lhat two juveniles will be taken
Into juvenile court for theft and
damage done to county
property.

Save as much as 1ft or more on most items. Remember we just have 2 sales a
year such as this . This is the one everyone looks for , Be here early and see all
your friends- They will be here, too . All Sales Cash . We reserve the right to limit
quantities.

SAVE UP TO

MEN'S SUITS % PRICE

MEN'S SPORT COATS % OFF

llflost of these are double knit fabr ics that
reall y hold a crease .. There are sports suits
with contrasting slacks in · this group.
Plaids, stripes and plain colors In shorts,
regulars, and longs . Sizes 35 to 50 .
P.eg . Price $65.00 to $110.00 Sale Price $32.50
toS55.00
Small charge for alterations.

A real'nice selection of styles and colors. All
from our regular stock of high quality sport
coats. You will certainly recognize the
name on these coats. Regulars, shorts and
longs.
Reg . Price $49.50 to $75.00

MEN'S KNIT DRESS SLACKS
%PRICE

Men's Casual Pants lf2 Price

I

I

inquiry as a ukansaroo

court,"
Republican National Chairman

ccmerenCe.

(UP!) -A

Lawrence County Common
Pleaa Court ; jury Tuesday
awarded Frank and Carrie
. Wagner, Fox ·Run, Lawrence
County, $250 in damages in
. tllelr $200,000 damage suit
against State Rep. Oakley Col·
l!na. his brother !!lid the former
Collins Mining Co. for slip mine
damage to their land.
Wagner and his wife teStified
tllat more than 1,500 tons of
t11111d and silt from the eolllnll ·
iltrlp mine .company ran off
onto their land in 1968, 69 and
70, . ' '
COI!Inll teatlfled that BDme
t11111d had run off onto the Wag·
.ners' farm, adjacent to the
stipmlned land but his finn had
cleared the debris off the land.
The Wagners teatlfled the
nmoff had ruined the value of
.their land.
NEW YORK (UPI) - An
Argentine Airlines jetliner with
80 per110111 aboard landed at
~ Airport at 9:27 a.m.
today, . llhortly after It wu
reporiA!d hijacked.
But aa the aircraft lazied to
an illolated area and was
surrounded by pollee, officials
said they still were un&lt;ertaln
whether a hijacking had taken ·
· place,aaearUerrepilrtedtothe
Federal Aviation Admlnistra-

WRONG NUMBER
SLEAFORD, England (UP!)
- ·Mathematics teachers at
Sleafotd Secondary Scfiool
have apologized to students for
awarding the arithmetic prize
to the wrong team in a school
competition. They said they
added up the scores wrong.

OOLUMBUS (UP!) -Rates coot of providing serviees to
paid by rural cuatomera of rural clll!omers was at leal!! .
Colwnbla Gas of Ohio In 50 equal to, if not greater, than
countlel wiU be railed to bring the coat of serving municipal
the tarllfl In tine With rates Cllllomers. . ·
paid by munlclpel cllltomera, · The PUCO ordered Columbia
lhe Public Utilities Com- Gu to file the new rates for
m!eefan of· Ohio (PUCO) an- each of the oounUea In question
tiDUIIC8d Tuelday.
·
"reflecting the rates In effect
'Die oommt•OI'IIki-Colum-~llrthe-neareat municipality as
bla OM, II! Ill rate lneraue of Aug. 1, 11173."
·
IIJP)Iaillaa, Uld the clllferent · The utility must notify at1'11&amp;11 dlarpd lllllll1dpll and !ectad Cllllomers of the higher
ao181t:Y Cllltomera · · were . atea through an Insert or at~lmlnltorJ lbice ratea In tach to the first bllllng
lllllllearporalld areu w•re following approval of the
1 I JIMIIIIJ Jllww IIIIa ralel
tariffl. The eflecUve date of
lllllln*IJIII-.
the new tariffs will be the
s•l•
malataiDed, ' second billing approval of the
..... PVOO fiNid, IIIII lbe new rates.

·&lt;

Suits &amp; Sport·Coats .
Values

to 35.00
1

$5

.Casual Jeans
to 11.98

MEN'S CORDUROY

CUFFED PANTS

All cotton &amp; Dacron &amp; cotton .
Round neck, V neck &amp; 3 button
front. and button all the way 4P
the front included in this lot. S. M,
L &amp; XL. Reg. $3.98 to $13.50.
Sale Price Sl.99 to $6.75

ODD LOT MEN'S

$3

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

KNIT SHIRTS
1f2 PRICE

DOORBUSTER1

1

You will have to be here early to
get these. They will go fast. S, M,
L &amp; XL. Reg. $5.88 to $8.98 . .
Sale Price 52.99 to. $4.49

A nice selection of styles &amp; colors
In S, M. L &amp; XL. Reg . $7.98 to
$9.~.
.
Sale Price $5.32 to $6:66
You will want -more -than oAe of.
these. ·

EA.

These have been around too long.
I al'[l g~tting tired of looking at
them. ·

Values

BANtON SHIRTS
lf3 .OFF

SPORT SHIRTS
·1f2· PRICE

EA.

All from our regular stock of high .
quality Dress Shirts. Both white
and color. Not every color in
every size. Sizes 14112 to 17. Reg .
$7.98 to· $11.98.
Sale Price $S.32 to $7.99

MEN'S

-Men's Short Sleeve

ODD LOT OF BOYS'

ODD

MEN'S

Y2
PRICE
You can always keep them for this
fall . Green, brown &amp; navy. Not
· every size In every color. , Reg.
$14.98.
. .
Sale Price $7.49

BOYS'. SHORT SLEEVE

BATHING SUITS

PAIR

· Y2 PRICE

SIZES ARE B~OKEN

DOOR BUSTER!
. .

Gasco's rural ·
rates going ·up

car

..

DISCHARGED Bias
Montez, Pliny; Mrs. John W.
Zimmerman, Point Pleasant
and Mrs. · Herbert Dunn and
son, Vinton.

NE1.80NS GATHER
The Nelson reunion wiU be
held Sunday at Forest Acres
Park.

$10

to 49.50

PLEASANT VALLEY

REUNION SET
The Cozart Reunion wiU be
Sunday at the roadside park on
the north side of US 33. Lunch
Will be served at 1 p.m.

Sale Price $3.32 to $5.99

SPORT COATS

Marriage Licenses
Richard AUen Gibnore, 24,
Pm:neroy, and Deborah Lynn
Avey, 20, Rt. 3, Albany.

IN HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to 566 S. Fourth
St. at 4:21a.m. Wednesday for
Malcobn Miller who was taken
to the Holzer Medical Center.

Sizes 14 to 17. A very good name in
shirts. Reg. $4.98 to $8.98.

2 MEN'S

1

OFF

1/3

0

KNIT SHIRTS

V3 OFF

-

Not a lot in this group bui this Is a
real good buy. Sizes are broken.
Reg. $3.98 to $7.98.
Sale Price $1.99 to '$3.99

Sizes 10 to 20. These are Ideal for
back to school. Reg. $2.98. to $5.98 .
Sale Price $2.00 to $3.99

ODD LOT MEN'S LONG SLEEVE

BOYS'

MEN'S NOVELTY

Grey T·Shirts
lf2 price

SPORT SHIRTS

'

ALL

Reg. •2.49, now •1.25

Many Other
Values
Too Numerous
•
To Mention ·
BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE

SPORT SHIRTS
lj3 OFF

A very' good name In shirts. Sizes
8 to 20 . Reg . $3.98 to $5.98. For 3
days only.
Sale Price 52.66 to $3.99

Y~

PRICE

SPORTS COATS

lf2 PRICE

SALES

S-M-L. There are a lot of large
. sizes in this group . Reg . price
$4.98 to sa. 98.
Sale Price $2.49 to $4.49

A very good name in sport coats.
Sizes 8 to 20. Reg. $22.50 to $35.00.
Sale PriceS11.25to$17.50

CASH!

ODD LOT

·MEN'S

•
·-~

'

·'

·LUGGAGE
lf3 OFF

BERMUDA SHORTS

A very good name in luggage. Not
every color In every size .. There Is
a complete set In one color.

BOYS'

BATHING SUITS
·
•
Y2 PRICE
Reg . •$2.98 to $A. 98
, •
Now Only S1.49to 52.49

V3 OFF
Sizes 28 to 3~. Reg. s2. 98 10 '58 .98 _
Satq Pr1ce $2.00 to $5.99

•

.LADIES' WEAR
'WEAR
•
.GIRLS' WEAR
•BOYS' WEAR

HURRY!
All QUANTITIES ARE
SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE

ALL SALIS fiNAL~NO RnuiNS·OR
. RIPUNDS

ODD
. LOT BOYS' .

.

.· PANTS &amp;. JEANS

Y2
PRICE
·Sizes are broken. Reg. $3 .98 to
$9.98.

•

KNIT DRESS SHIRTS
113 OFF
.

DRESS SHIRTS

DOORBUSTER!

Values

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

ON MOST ITEMS

. ,

IRONTON,' Ohio

,.

OR MORE

PRICES IN EFFECT
WHILE QQANnnES
LAST

Knits &amp; Dacron &amp; Cotton blends. Some of
these are cuffed.
Reg.S12.98toS18.98 Sale PriceS6.49toS9.49
Small charge for alterations.

Reg . $14.98toS26.00 .
SalePriceS7.49to$13.00
Small Charge for · alterations.

lion.
The plane had radioed U.S.
authorities that "a hijacking"
was in progress this morning,
but the aircraft then headed for
Kennedy Airport abnost on
~edule, FAA officials said.
The FAA in New York
confirmed that "a .(hijacking)

George Bush said Tuesday.
. "I know members on both
. sides and I just don't beUeve message'' was · received, ap.
that's the way those hearings parently from Aerollneas
are conducted," Bush said.
Argentinas flight 340, at about
· Despite the Watergate scan· 8:40am. But 4~ minutes later,
· dal, BliSh is hopeful the GOP an FAA spokesman said,
can do well In the November ''There is some doubt" the
House elections.
Boeing 7rfl ha4 been com"lsaythatlfwe hold our own mandeered.
it would : be a massive
The plane had · been
· recognition that we did. pretty ~eduled to land at Kennedy
well," Bush said at a news at 9:25 a.m. on a flight from Itio de Janlero.
Bush said, Republicans nope
to defeat Sen. George McGovNEW JOB BREWING ·
em In Soutfll&gt;akota and upset
LONDON (UPI)-'- Tbe,Bass ,
Rep. Wright Patman, !).Tex., · Charrington breWing combirie
head of the House Banking has announced the name of its
. Conunittee. ·
new company secretary. He is
R. F. Beer. '

Sale Price $24.75 toS37 .so

Both plain colors &amp; fan cy patterns·. Sizes 29 to 42 . Most
of these are completely washabl e.

the late roundup
DALLAS (UP!) - Presiden·
tlal press secretary Ron
Ziegler is wrong to characterize the House Judiciary
Committee impeachment

FANTASTIC

FRIDAY, SAT., MONDAY
JULY 26-27-29

Trespass to draw
I

FREE

KERM'S KORNER IN POMEROY, OHIO

DESPITE THE SWIRL OF IMPEACHMENT TALK ,
proposala to reshape the Inflation-beset economy are getting a lot
of attentioo both oo Capitol Hill and in San Clemente, CaUl.,
where President Nixon is preparing a speeeh oo the subject.
The Senate Tuesay pasaed a resolution urging Nixon to caU
together leading businessmen, union chiefs, members of
Congress and the administration for a summit meeting to form!llate a new ecooomic program. II was Introduced by live
freshmen senators and pasaed, ~"We are caught ill an economic quagmire," Sen. Dee Huddlellton,I).Ky., Sa.id, "and extricating ourselves from that quagmire is the foremost problem in our nation." Sen. James
Buckley, R·N .Y., proposed a series of measures to strl!ligthen the
economy, including.a $10 bUUon federal spel)dlng cut and~ plan
to subordinate all domestic programs to the goal of fighting inflation .

The Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday passed a
resolution providing . that .
una u th ori zed persons
trespassing on the county
landliU dump located on SR 143 ·
arrested and
can be
prosecuted.
Sheriff Robert C. Harten bach, reported that extensive damage to equipment,
buildings and theft of items,

PLENTY,.

.

Sale ~ice $1.99 to $4.99

'

BOYS' SUITS

ALL SALES MERCHANDISE MARKED
WITH RED TAG.
•
--- - --·

lf2 PRICE'
Reg. 529.50 to $39.50
Sale Price S14.75 to $19.75

au

I

...

.

-~

'

••

·,

•

�.
11 - The DIUy Senllnel, Middleport.Poulilroy, 0., Wednulay, July 24, 1974

10 - The DaUySentlnei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesda~ . July

News .. . in Briefs
Continut-&lt;1 fr om page 1
Gov. J. J . Exon p-edicled that the drought and depressed
UYHU&gt;ck prl&lt;ea could cost the state's agrieultw-al indostry a
mlnlmum of $1 billion this year.
· "At lout 50 per cent of Nebraska 'a dry agrlooltural cropland
has been !oat; and oo the irrigated land, farmers can elJ)ect a
bushel !lecline of 30percent frn!n last year," Exon said Tuesclay.
The state's rich Uvestock feeding west= range also was hard
hit.
"There are more cattle on ranges than in the past, but the
paotureland has been drying up," Exon said.

New York Clothing House

Semi-Annual ClearanceSTARTS FRIDAY, JULY 26

DOORS OPEN AT 9 AM FRIDAY - BE SURE TO SHOP EARLY!

KERM
GIVES BETTER

l

has caused his department to
patrol this area. He promised
that when the resolution has
become fully operative anyone
caught
on
the
1and
unauthorized will be arrested
and charged . .
Sheriff Hartenbach stated
lhat two juveniles will be taken
Into juvenile court for theft and
damage done to county
property.

Save as much as 1ft or more on most items. Remember we just have 2 sales a
year such as this . This is the one everyone looks for , Be here early and see all
your friends- They will be here, too . All Sales Cash . We reserve the right to limit
quantities.

SAVE UP TO

MEN'S SUITS % PRICE

MEN'S SPORT COATS % OFF

llflost of these are double knit fabr ics that
reall y hold a crease .. There are sports suits
with contrasting slacks in · this group.
Plaids, stripes and plain colors In shorts,
regulars, and longs . Sizes 35 to 50 .
P.eg . Price $65.00 to $110.00 Sale Price $32.50
toS55.00
Small charge for alterations.

A real'nice selection of styles and colors. All
from our regular stock of high quality sport
coats. You will certainly recognize the
name on these coats. Regulars, shorts and
longs.
Reg . Price $49.50 to $75.00

MEN'S KNIT DRESS SLACKS
%PRICE

Men's Casual Pants lf2 Price

I

I

inquiry as a ukansaroo

court,"
Republican National Chairman

ccmerenCe.

(UP!) -A

Lawrence County Common
Pleaa Court ; jury Tuesday
awarded Frank and Carrie
. Wagner, Fox ·Run, Lawrence
County, $250 in damages in
. tllelr $200,000 damage suit
against State Rep. Oakley Col·
l!na. his brother !!lid the former
Collins Mining Co. for slip mine
damage to their land.
Wagner and his wife teStified
tllat more than 1,500 tons of
t11111d and silt from the eolllnll ·
iltrlp mine .company ran off
onto their land in 1968, 69 and
70, . ' '
COI!Inll teatlfled that BDme
t11111d had run off onto the Wag·
.ners' farm, adjacent to the
stipmlned land but his finn had
cleared the debris off the land.
The Wagners teatlfled the
nmoff had ruined the value of
.their land.
NEW YORK (UPI) - An
Argentine Airlines jetliner with
80 per110111 aboard landed at
~ Airport at 9:27 a.m.
today, . llhortly after It wu
reporiA!d hijacked.
But aa the aircraft lazied to
an illolated area and was
surrounded by pollee, officials
said they still were un&lt;ertaln
whether a hijacking had taken ·
· place,aaearUerrepilrtedtothe
Federal Aviation Admlnistra-

WRONG NUMBER
SLEAFORD, England (UP!)
- ·Mathematics teachers at
Sleafotd Secondary Scfiool
have apologized to students for
awarding the arithmetic prize
to the wrong team in a school
competition. They said they
added up the scores wrong.

OOLUMBUS (UP!) -Rates coot of providing serviees to
paid by rural cuatomera of rural clll!omers was at leal!! .
Colwnbla Gas of Ohio In 50 equal to, if not greater, than
countlel wiU be railed to bring the coat of serving municipal
the tarllfl In tine With rates Cllllomers. . ·
paid by munlclpel cllltomera, · The PUCO ordered Columbia
lhe Public Utilities Com- Gu to file the new rates for
m!eefan of· Ohio (PUCO) an- each of the oounUea In question
tiDUIIC8d Tuelday.
·
"reflecting the rates In effect
'Die oommt•OI'IIki-Colum-~llrthe-neareat municipality as
bla OM, II! Ill rate lneraue of Aug. 1, 11173."
·
IIJP)Iaillaa, Uld the clllferent · The utility must notify at1'11&amp;11 dlarpd lllllll1dpll and !ectad Cllllomers of the higher
ao181t:Y Cllltomera · · were . atea through an Insert or at~lmlnltorJ lbice ratea In tach to the first bllllng
lllllllearporalld areu w•re following approval of the
1 I JIMIIIIJ Jllww IIIIa ralel
tariffl. The eflecUve date of
lllllln*IJIII-.
the new tariffs will be the
s•l•
malataiDed, ' second billing approval of the
..... PVOO fiNid, IIIII lbe new rates.

·&lt;

Suits &amp; Sport·Coats .
Values

to 35.00
1

$5

.Casual Jeans
to 11.98

MEN'S CORDUROY

CUFFED PANTS

All cotton &amp; Dacron &amp; cotton .
Round neck, V neck &amp; 3 button
front. and button all the way 4P
the front included in this lot. S. M,
L &amp; XL. Reg. $3.98 to $13.50.
Sale Price Sl.99 to $6.75

ODD LOT MEN'S

$3

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

KNIT SHIRTS
1f2 PRICE

DOORBUSTER1

1

You will have to be here early to
get these. They will go fast. S, M,
L &amp; XL. Reg. $5.88 to $8.98 . .
Sale Price 52.99 to. $4.49

A nice selection of styles &amp; colors
In S, M. L &amp; XL. Reg . $7.98 to
$9.~.
.
Sale Price $5.32 to $6:66
You will want -more -than oAe of.
these. ·

EA.

These have been around too long.
I al'[l g~tting tired of looking at
them. ·

Values

BANtON SHIRTS
lf3 .OFF

SPORT SHIRTS
·1f2· PRICE

EA.

All from our regular stock of high .
quality Dress Shirts. Both white
and color. Not every color in
every size. Sizes 14112 to 17. Reg .
$7.98 to· $11.98.
Sale Price $S.32 to $7.99

MEN'S

-Men's Short Sleeve

ODD LOT OF BOYS'

ODD

MEN'S

Y2
PRICE
You can always keep them for this
fall . Green, brown &amp; navy. Not
· every size In every color. , Reg.
$14.98.
. .
Sale Price $7.49

BOYS'. SHORT SLEEVE

BATHING SUITS

PAIR

· Y2 PRICE

SIZES ARE B~OKEN

DOOR BUSTER!
. .

Gasco's rural ·
rates going ·up

car

..

DISCHARGED Bias
Montez, Pliny; Mrs. John W.
Zimmerman, Point Pleasant
and Mrs. · Herbert Dunn and
son, Vinton.

NE1.80NS GATHER
The Nelson reunion wiU be
held Sunday at Forest Acres
Park.

$10

to 49.50

PLEASANT VALLEY

REUNION SET
The Cozart Reunion wiU be
Sunday at the roadside park on
the north side of US 33. Lunch
Will be served at 1 p.m.

Sale Price $3.32 to $5.99

SPORT COATS

Marriage Licenses
Richard AUen Gibnore, 24,
Pm:neroy, and Deborah Lynn
Avey, 20, Rt. 3, Albany.

IN HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to 566 S. Fourth
St. at 4:21a.m. Wednesday for
Malcobn Miller who was taken
to the Holzer Medical Center.

Sizes 14 to 17. A very good name in
shirts. Reg. $4.98 to $8.98.

2 MEN'S

1

OFF

1/3

0

KNIT SHIRTS

V3 OFF

-

Not a lot in this group bui this Is a
real good buy. Sizes are broken.
Reg. $3.98 to $7.98.
Sale Price $1.99 to '$3.99

Sizes 10 to 20. These are Ideal for
back to school. Reg. $2.98. to $5.98 .
Sale Price $2.00 to $3.99

ODD LOT MEN'S LONG SLEEVE

BOYS'

MEN'S NOVELTY

Grey T·Shirts
lf2 price

SPORT SHIRTS

'

ALL

Reg. •2.49, now •1.25

Many Other
Values
Too Numerous
•
To Mention ·
BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE

SPORT SHIRTS
lj3 OFF

A very' good name In shirts. Sizes
8 to 20 . Reg . $3.98 to $5.98. For 3
days only.
Sale Price 52.66 to $3.99

Y~

PRICE

SPORTS COATS

lf2 PRICE

SALES

S-M-L. There are a lot of large
. sizes in this group . Reg . price
$4.98 to sa. 98.
Sale Price $2.49 to $4.49

A very good name in sport coats.
Sizes 8 to 20. Reg. $22.50 to $35.00.
Sale PriceS11.25to$17.50

CASH!

ODD LOT

·MEN'S

•
·-~

'

·'

·LUGGAGE
lf3 OFF

BERMUDA SHORTS

A very good name in luggage. Not
every color In every size .. There Is
a complete set In one color.

BOYS'

BATHING SUITS
·
•
Y2 PRICE
Reg . •$2.98 to $A. 98
, •
Now Only S1.49to 52.49

V3 OFF
Sizes 28 to 3~. Reg. s2. 98 10 '58 .98 _
Satq Pr1ce $2.00 to $5.99

•

.LADIES' WEAR
'WEAR
•
.GIRLS' WEAR
•BOYS' WEAR

HURRY!
All QUANTITIES ARE
SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE

ALL SALIS fiNAL~NO RnuiNS·OR
. RIPUNDS

ODD
. LOT BOYS' .

.

.· PANTS &amp;. JEANS

Y2
PRICE
·Sizes are broken. Reg. $3 .98 to
$9.98.

•

KNIT DRESS SHIRTS
113 OFF
.

DRESS SHIRTS

DOORBUSTER!

Values

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

ON MOST ITEMS

. ,

IRONTON,' Ohio

,.

OR MORE

PRICES IN EFFECT
WHILE QQANnnES
LAST

Knits &amp; Dacron &amp; Cotton blends. Some of
these are cuffed.
Reg.S12.98toS18.98 Sale PriceS6.49toS9.49
Small charge for alterations.

Reg . $14.98toS26.00 .
SalePriceS7.49to$13.00
Small Charge for · alterations.

lion.
The plane had radioed U.S.
authorities that "a hijacking"
was in progress this morning,
but the aircraft then headed for
Kennedy Airport abnost on
~edule, FAA officials said.
The FAA in New York
confirmed that "a .(hijacking)

George Bush said Tuesday.
. "I know members on both
. sides and I just don't beUeve message'' was · received, ap.
that's the way those hearings parently from Aerollneas
are conducted," Bush said.
Argentinas flight 340, at about
· Despite the Watergate scan· 8:40am. But 4~ minutes later,
· dal, BliSh is hopeful the GOP an FAA spokesman said,
can do well In the November ''There is some doubt" the
House elections.
Boeing 7rfl ha4 been com"lsaythatlfwe hold our own mandeered.
it would : be a massive
The plane had · been
· recognition that we did. pretty ~eduled to land at Kennedy
well," Bush said at a news at 9:25 a.m. on a flight from Itio de Janlero.
Bush said, Republicans nope
to defeat Sen. George McGovNEW JOB BREWING ·
em In Soutfll&gt;akota and upset
LONDON (UPI)-'- Tbe,Bass ,
Rep. Wright Patman, !).Tex., · Charrington breWing combirie
head of the House Banking has announced the name of its
. Conunittee. ·
new company secretary. He is
R. F. Beer. '

Sale Price $24.75 toS37 .so

Both plain colors &amp; fan cy patterns·. Sizes 29 to 42 . Most
of these are completely washabl e.

the late roundup
DALLAS (UP!) - Presiden·
tlal press secretary Ron
Ziegler is wrong to characterize the House Judiciary
Committee impeachment

FANTASTIC

FRIDAY, SAT., MONDAY
JULY 26-27-29

Trespass to draw
I

FREE

KERM'S KORNER IN POMEROY, OHIO

DESPITE THE SWIRL OF IMPEACHMENT TALK ,
proposala to reshape the Inflation-beset economy are getting a lot
of attentioo both oo Capitol Hill and in San Clemente, CaUl.,
where President Nixon is preparing a speeeh oo the subject.
The Senate Tuesay pasaed a resolution urging Nixon to caU
together leading businessmen, union chiefs, members of
Congress and the administration for a summit meeting to form!llate a new ecooomic program. II was Introduced by live
freshmen senators and pasaed, ~"We are caught ill an economic quagmire," Sen. Dee Huddlellton,I).Ky., Sa.id, "and extricating ourselves from that quagmire is the foremost problem in our nation." Sen. James
Buckley, R·N .Y., proposed a series of measures to strl!ligthen the
economy, including.a $10 bUUon federal spel)dlng cut and~ plan
to subordinate all domestic programs to the goal of fighting inflation .

The Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday passed a
resolution providing . that .
una u th ori zed persons
trespassing on the county
landliU dump located on SR 143 ·
arrested and
can be
prosecuted.
Sheriff Robert C. Harten bach, reported that extensive damage to equipment,
buildings and theft of items,

PLENTY,.

.

Sale ~ice $1.99 to $4.99

'

BOYS' SUITS

ALL SALES MERCHANDISE MARKED
WITH RED TAG.
•
--- - --·

lf2 PRICE'
Reg. 529.50 to $39.50
Sale Price S14.75 to $19.75

au

I

...

.

-~

'

••

·,

•

�•
13- The O.Uy Sentinel, Mlddreport.Pomeroy,O., Wedne.oday,July 24, IW/4

WHILE
THRU SUNDAY,
JULY 28

VANWYCK

QUANTITIES
LAST

ELECTRIC KNIFE

New t Open ho!'ldlt lor to::ot of optotOiion, ldtal lor right or lth·hond •hc· "'~ ­
P~IhbiiiiOII blodt ttc(l•on. tlou'lltU 'l ltotl blodt11odltaftly in plot~ , ~110¥)'-d..ty
mo•o r lor utro po ...tr, btaUIII.;Il y balanud, ltn91rfip on-off control bvUon.

Heck's Reg.
,.
HECk'S REG. 19.99

.-ll0.96 .

Hardware Dept.

.

. JEWELRY DEPT.

VINYL BOATS
$
99

wAl'l

PET GROOMER

Ult wire

HECK'S REG. '24.99 .

.

•

LIGHTED
SHAVING ·
MIRROR
$588

JfWE~•r DEPT.

160Z.
PROFESSIONAL
STR.NGTH

SHAKESPEARE·

HE(I\. S REG. 68•

REEL

Toy Dept.

Jewelry Dept.
'

HECK'SREG. $17.96

44e

Heck's Reg. '9.96

o tto&lt;:hment to g room li nd.

$11 99

S-PORTING GOODS

PLAY BALl-

NORELCO

.1

br11~h

dl')' al the 1a lnt tim~. U1ing one;Ju lo r nmd e, dryer can be1tood uprioM to free y()l,jr
hondl for o l ~r grooming ckore1. Com·
ploo te with dryer and wire brush nou:le..

•

9'-h"

BEAT THE HIGH COST OF FOOD,

Simultoroeouli~ d ritl and 1.Yioes pef1 (OO't .

DUPONT_

.,1

'14

CENTENNIAL

·DAISY

RUBBING

99

69¢

Sporting Goods Dept. .

SPORTING GOODS .

19(
, I ...

NAHWA.I DII'T.

RATCHET BUMPER JACK
POLl DENT
TABLETS

1

66~

48's

78e

HECK'S REG. 97&lt;

mMITICDifiT.

PERSONA.

· PAILS

COOKER &amp;

f.E5_C:O PLASTIC

PAN

BLANCHER
$499

77,.

Heck's Reg. 16.83
. NDUSIWAIII DIPT.

HECK'S REG. 99'
NOUSIWAIII DEPT.

I Ie

I I

.

99e
HECK'S REG. •1.58

I

/

\

(

- . I
\

d

Toy Dept.

.'

"
'•

BOUNCING BOBBY

RAZOR
•

MITCHELL
SPINNING REEL

REG. '2.38

CHAISE &amp;

'24

BEACH
PADS·

99

. HECK'S REG. '34.55 .

$}99

Sporting Goods Dept.

.•

'

..._

·PULL TOY

..... 410

HECK'S

.

HECK'S REG. 2.99
1

66¢

SAUCE POT
.$

3''

HECK'S REG. 1.34
1

HECK' S REG. $6.66

TOY

ALUMINUM 10 QT.

,

WATER PAIL

$188

HECK'S REG . $2 .79

.WAHL VIBRATOR
HEAT MASSAGER

'i

10 QT.

ALUMINUM 20 QT.

POT

ALUMINUM 140'·

PIESE;219;KEnLE

$399

HECK' S REG . $5.22

HECK'S REG. '5.92

"" ROTARY
F~:~~~ESS J $
$5 .77

-~

:
1 -.,

18"x25'
·HEAVY DUTY

•••••

FniT JAR FUIIEL .

29(
HICK'S REG. 44'

'

(

•

·---"'

·HECK'S REG. '12.96
.
.
JEWELRY DEPT• . ·

'

I

rt f

10 QT.
PLASTIC .

~

DOUBLE

/IAHWAM 111/11.

Heck's Reg.
'1.99

.HECK'S REG. 14.12
TOY DEPT.

• ~ttcom.

$

Ball
Home Plate Set

'2''

I'(ECK'S REG. $1.09

CANNER

&amp;

*1"

"-.... _y
7-QUART SPAGHEITI

-7-JAR COLD PACK

Bat

. PlASTIC

RIDING
TRACTOR

•

.,. PINT SIZE

· ~.~~e
I·

HECK'S
$888
REG. '10.99
HARDWARE DEPT.

' ·•222
DOZEN

~. ~

NOXZEMA
MODEL
6-44102

CANNING .
JARS
· OllARTSIZE

1

. REGULAR
MENTHOL
l.IME

'

•

BALL ·

NOUSEWAIII DEPT.

H OZ.

~~

.
'.

·--

BOX

LIMIT£0 4 BOXES

..

SHAVICRIAA\

37•

STANDARD LIDS

HECK'S REG. $1.48

REG. '26.59

DIPPER

LIMIT£0 4 BOXES

99~

HECK'S

ALUMINUM

39&lt;. ~0X

PLASTIC FREEZER CONTAINERS

cop.

HECK'S REG. 89'
.
.. HARDWARE DEPT.

DEPT.

·2-PIKE CAPS

Stop s craw ling bugs in
their tracks ... kilts with
residual action , .. kills
even re sistant roaches.
. C o mes tw o . way .s ...
easy to use .aerosol with
tamper proof octuo for

COMPOUND

. HECK'S REG. 119.99

BB GUN

RAID
. ANT&amp;ROACH
KILLER

u ••.

NDUSIWA.I DIPT.

•
.

.

REYNOLDS WRAP

39~
.
.
HECK'S REG. 61' .

:I . . ..f;! /
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.

·""'
\

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...
ALUMINUM
'

--·

'

(

l..CUP MEASURING CUP

29&lt;

HECK'S REG. 44'

NO#JSIWAIII DIPt.

'

3

\ (
'
.

.

" '

.

. II·
- ~·

~

~UMIIIUM

.

4 - PIECE

MEASUIIIIG SPOOl sn

17&lt;

HICK' S RIG. 27•

NOUSIWAIII DIPT.

•

'

�•
13- The O.Uy Sentinel, Mlddreport.Pomeroy,O., Wedne.oday,July 24, IW/4

WHILE
THRU SUNDAY,
JULY 28

VANWYCK

QUANTITIES
LAST

ELECTRIC KNIFE

New t Open ho!'ldlt lor to::ot of optotOiion, ldtal lor right or lth·hond •hc· "'~ ­
P~IhbiiiiOII blodt ttc(l•on. tlou'lltU 'l ltotl blodt11odltaftly in plot~ , ~110¥)'-d..ty
mo•o r lor utro po ...tr, btaUIII.;Il y balanud, ltn91rfip on-off control bvUon.

Heck's Reg.
,.
HECk'S REG. 19.99

.-ll0.96 .

Hardware Dept.

.

. JEWELRY DEPT.

VINYL BOATS
$
99

wAl'l

PET GROOMER

Ult wire

HECK'S REG. '24.99 .

.

•

LIGHTED
SHAVING ·
MIRROR
$588

JfWE~•r DEPT.

160Z.
PROFESSIONAL
STR.NGTH

SHAKESPEARE·

HE(I\. S REG. 68•

REEL

Toy Dept.

Jewelry Dept.
'

HECK'SREG. $17.96

44e

Heck's Reg. '9.96

o tto&lt;:hment to g room li nd.

$11 99

S-PORTING GOODS

PLAY BALl-

NORELCO

.1

br11~h

dl')' al the 1a lnt tim~. U1ing one;Ju lo r nmd e, dryer can be1tood uprioM to free y()l,jr
hondl for o l ~r grooming ckore1. Com·
ploo te with dryer and wire brush nou:le..

•

9'-h"

BEAT THE HIGH COST OF FOOD,

Simultoroeouli~ d ritl and 1.Yioes pef1 (OO't .

DUPONT_

.,1

'14

CENTENNIAL

·DAISY

RUBBING

99

69¢

Sporting Goods Dept. .

SPORTING GOODS .

19(
, I ...

NAHWA.I DII'T.

RATCHET BUMPER JACK
POLl DENT
TABLETS

1

66~

48's

78e

HECK'S REG. 97&lt;

mMITICDifiT.

PERSONA.

· PAILS

COOKER &amp;

f.E5_C:O PLASTIC

PAN

BLANCHER
$499

77,.

Heck's Reg. 16.83
. NDUSIWAIII DIPT.

HECK'S REG. 99'
NOUSIWAIII DEPT.

I Ie

I I

.

99e
HECK'S REG. •1.58

I

/

\

(

- . I
\

d

Toy Dept.

.'

"
'•

BOUNCING BOBBY

RAZOR
•

MITCHELL
SPINNING REEL

REG. '2.38

CHAISE &amp;

'24

BEACH
PADS·

99

. HECK'S REG. '34.55 .

$}99

Sporting Goods Dept.

.•

'

..._

·PULL TOY

..... 410

HECK'S

.

HECK'S REG. 2.99
1

66¢

SAUCE POT
.$

3''

HECK'S REG. 1.34
1

HECK' S REG. $6.66

TOY

ALUMINUM 10 QT.

,

WATER PAIL

$188

HECK'S REG . $2 .79

.WAHL VIBRATOR
HEAT MASSAGER

'i

10 QT.

ALUMINUM 20 QT.

POT

ALUMINUM 140'·

PIESE;219;KEnLE

$399

HECK' S REG . $5.22

HECK'S REG. '5.92

"" ROTARY
F~:~~~ESS J $
$5 .77

-~

:
1 -.,

18"x25'
·HEAVY DUTY

•••••

FniT JAR FUIIEL .

29(
HICK'S REG. 44'

'

(

•

·---"'

·HECK'S REG. '12.96
.
.
JEWELRY DEPT• . ·

'

I

rt f

10 QT.
PLASTIC .

~

DOUBLE

/IAHWAM 111/11.

Heck's Reg.
'1.99

.HECK'S REG. 14.12
TOY DEPT.

• ~ttcom.

$

Ball
Home Plate Set

'2''

I'(ECK'S REG. $1.09

CANNER

&amp;

*1"

"-.... _y
7-QUART SPAGHEITI

-7-JAR COLD PACK

Bat

. PlASTIC

RIDING
TRACTOR

•

.,. PINT SIZE

· ~.~~e
I·

HECK'S
$888
REG. '10.99
HARDWARE DEPT.

' ·•222
DOZEN

~. ~

NOXZEMA
MODEL
6-44102

CANNING .
JARS
· OllARTSIZE

1

. REGULAR
MENTHOL
l.IME

'

•

BALL ·

NOUSEWAIII DEPT.

H OZ.

~~

.
'.

·--

BOX

LIMIT£0 4 BOXES

..

SHAVICRIAA\

37•

STANDARD LIDS

HECK'S REG. $1.48

REG. '26.59

DIPPER

LIMIT£0 4 BOXES

99~

HECK'S

ALUMINUM

39&lt;. ~0X

PLASTIC FREEZER CONTAINERS

cop.

HECK'S REG. 89'
.
.. HARDWARE DEPT.

DEPT.

·2-PIKE CAPS

Stop s craw ling bugs in
their tracks ... kilts with
residual action , .. kills
even re sistant roaches.
. C o mes tw o . way .s ...
easy to use .aerosol with
tamper proof octuo for

COMPOUND

. HECK'S REG. 119.99

BB GUN

RAID
. ANT&amp;ROACH
KILLER

u ••.

NDUSIWA.I DIPT.

•
.

.

REYNOLDS WRAP

39~
.
.
HECK'S REG. 61' .

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.

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ALUMINUM
'

--·

'

(

l..CUP MEASURING CUP

29&lt;

HECK'S REG. 44'

NO#JSIWAIII DIPt.

'

3

\ (
'
.

.

" '

.

. II·
- ~·

~

~UMIIIUM

.

4 - PIECE

MEASUIIIIG SPOOl sn

17&lt;

HICK' S RIG. 27•

NOUSIWAIII DIPT.

•

'

�•
"

-------------------------"
I

Th •!Hi' , ntin&lt;l, Mlddleporl-Pomero•·. 0 .• Wednesday, July 24, 1974

•

1

! Washington · !
Report nyM

G-' cutting hack
s~lt~wide

('(Instruction

progn:am. to

a\'oid

OOrrowing more money at current 13 pt'r cent
interest.
1~

•
~•

I

earn1n~s. ttcprec•at10n reserves and rte[errt:d
taxes wi11 bt' used ror expansion. Tilii[ IIC\'OunlS
for about half the corl~truelion pr~rarn . The
other half is accomplished throtq4h borrowed
money .

MARION - General Telephone Co. or Oh10
today announced a further curtailment of its

been instituted by the-company in June. 1913.
Today's action stems in part from the PUCO's

About $65 million was planned for 1974
expansion ut the beginning of thE&gt; yetlr, he said.
Approximately hall the budget has been used al
this stage. Wopat said the curtaiJment will exist
until the finan cial and ccononU.c picture im-

lack or response to a June 7 request by General

proves.

Robert M. Wopat of Marion , president. said
he has noti[ied the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio of this actiQn . An initial cutback had

The Congress has passed and
sen t to the Presldent the
Budget Rerorm Act - a bill
designed to help curb inflation
by PfOmoting more direct and
balanced legislative control or
the [ederal budge t.
One Significant factor contributing to the present inflat ionary spir al ·has been
undisciplined spending by the
Federal Government. Under
tr aditional approp r iations
procedures, Co ngr ess has
gJven consideration to each
appr opr iation and s pendi ng
proposal se parately. This has
been 'done without deter mining
an appropria!e level or total
spending or taking into account
overall effect or the federal
budg~ l on the economy.
From the 1930s to the Great
Society era to the present,
gov ernm ent spendin g for
defense, social welfare and
countless other programs has .
grown astronomical1 y. These
programs alone may not have ·
seemed to place an inordin ate
burden on the budge t. llut
grouped together , the sum of
the costs of the man y separate
federal defense, health , space,
and foreign aid programs has
placed a great strain on the
budget and added to infl ationary press ures which
pinch the pocketbook of every
American ramily.
In addition to the lack or
~;oord inatio n in appropriation
proced.ure:s, Congress has had

Action on General 's Dec. 27, 1972 $13.:-..
million rate request is not expected for some
lime, he (·ontinued. The June 7, $9.2 million
figure was requested as an advance of the 1972
case to tide the company over Wllil the PUCO
finalized it, he added.
terest," Wopat remarked.
" It appears now. since no action was til ken
"Ovel' the · long term the public gets hurt by
it," he continued . ''The projects being post- on the June 7 request, tha t the PUCO has
ignored il, " said Wopat.
poned must ultimately be carried out. And in
Most of the contract help will be gone by
Lhe future material costs will be even higher."
the end of the week, Wopat no ted. Laying o[f
He said General has $76.4 million in Short some regular employes wil l rollow. But it is not
term borrowings outstanding. Interest rates
.
known yet how many will go or when.
' 'ary from 12 to 131".! per cent. Much of it in
Postponement of construc tion projects will
"commercial paper' ' is discounted and cmTics
Don W. Swisher
an effective interest rate approaching 15 per .start soon. He said one, a training and
deve lopment center east or Marion, is to be set
cent.
back indefi nite!)•. Construction on it was to
"Now we will fall bnck and regroup, ·• said
have started early next year .
Wopat. "Every scheduled project will be
Another building in Marion, postponed in
examined. At this point we plan to complete
tlte
J
une, 1973 curtai lment, will be m oved back
only cri tical projects or those already in
even far thrr, he added. One-by-&lt;&gt;ne projects all
progress ."
ThiS will result In some dclcrlorntion of over tlie state wil1 be cut . Also, he said no new
company vehicles will be purchased for thC
service, he said. And upgraded sen icc, such as
Announcement has been made of the promotion of Don W.
a prh•at e line, wtll be unavaila ble in most
duration.
Swisher to the position of assistant vice president or the Peoples
In a letter to Edmun d J . Turk , chairm an of !lank of Potnl Pleasant.
ca ses.
.
·
the PUCO, Wopal explained lbe financial
Plans for cable expansion, install.?lion of
Swisher, a 1971 graduate of Marshall University with a
dilemma or the company.
additional call-swi tching equipment and other
degree in businesB management, was appointed to the post
''In an economic climate which permi ts
· improvement Projects will be deferred, he
during a meeting of the bank board of directors earlier this
declar ed. " Fur ther," Wopat added, ''a ll · interest payments ranging from 12 to 13 1 2 per
month.
cent, and a r eg ulatory climate which permits
contract help and some company personnel
Mr. Swisher, 25, was first Thunde ring Herd as a
earnings on capital of less than 8 per cent, ( we l
must be laid off." (The company uses conemployed
at the Peoples Bank sophomore. He was a member
do not feel that it would be prudent to continue
tractors to handle about a fourth of its conduring the summer aft er or the Sigma Phi Epsilon
to commit heavy expenditures which require
struction program . I
completion
of his junior year of Fraternity at MU .
outside fi nancing to support ," the letter stated.
" The cur tailment is necessary because we
Swisher, son of Mr. arid Mrs.
He w~n t on to explain General had planned college. He started working at
mu~ t dr as tically reduce the need for bo rrowing
the
bank
on
a
full
time
basis
in
Wayne
Swisher of Pomeroy,
pe rmanent financing of the short-term debt this
additional funds," he said. "When we are able
November . Beca use hig~ interest rates are June or 1971 and was later resides with his wife, the
to re adjust our program, it will be suppor ted
causing an unstable bond market , the company promoted, to assistant cashier former Elaine Davis of Mid- ·
only by internally generated ftmds."
dleport and their young son ,
and loan officer.
decided to wait until more favorable times.
This means only money derived fr om
SWisher is a 1967 graduate o[ Phillip, age 19 months, on
.
Pomeroy High School where he Birch Ave . in Point Pleasant.
was president of his cJasses all
The new Peo ples Bank
four years. He was also an assistant vice president, who
outstanding high school athlete also holds the position or being '
By United Presslntemalional
with his top achievement being secretary to the bank board of
TAlLAHAliSEE, FLA. - SEN. EDWARD GURNEY, R-FLA. said Tuesday he wiU not seek that he was selected as the
directors, is a member and
reelection because "there is no sensible or sound way" to conduct a statewide race and also go So utheastern Ohio Athletic vice president of the Point
through a major trial. Gurney was to ronnally withdraw as a candidate late Tuesday with officials in Leag ue's Most Valuable Pleasimt Lions Club and is a
·· the secretary of stale's office In Tallahassee, aide John Gardner said. The 6&amp;-year-&lt;&gt;ld Gurney, a Player in football in his senior member of Point Pleasant
slatmch supporter of President Nixon as a member or the Senate Watergate Committee, has pleaded year .
Moose Lodge No. 731.
irmocenlto the charges which stem from $223,160 in campaign funds wltich were raised in his behalf.
The Meigs County, Ohio,
He is a graduate of the West
The lndicbnentsQ! Gurney and six others charge that Florida builders were asked to contribute to the native then went to Marshall Virginia School of Banking and
fund in exchange for Gurney's influence in obtaining federal housing commitments.
University and was the star- is presently enrolled in the
ti ng qua rte r ~a c k for t he school of Bank Marketing in
COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. ·GIL!JGAN said Tuesday the Oltio National Guard has removed
Denver , Colorado.
nearly 80,000 rounds of live ammunition from its civil disturbance stockpiles. Gilligan said he had
been infonned by Ohio Adjutant General Dana L. Stewart that the guard'had also removed from the
·, civil disturbance stockpile nearly 20 ,000 chemical cartridges and grenades and 3,800 potmds or old·
by Neg Cochran ·
OUT OUR WAY
-· type chemical riot control agents.
.
' 1
The guard is equipped with non-lethal weapons and more modern chemical agents that permit
YEAH, REAPY·MAPE :
PRE T TY C ~ FT'i,
I. RACKED UP MY
1 'THI).JK. 'AlE :5HOUL C'
KNEE L A ST J.J I.5H.T,
15 1-J ''TH E?.' IF HE
troops to respo 0d adequately to any civil disturbance situation that might arise, the governor said.
6ET A PEEK A! ! HE
BEA'T5 US WITH A
B U'T I 'M 60"-lNA
The governor said Stewart recommended that the live ammtmllion be removed [rom the stockpile
JT ATR.'T,
E!&gt;.AD K/&gt;JE E , w E 'R E " 1/&gt;JJL.JRY BEFORE WE
B U.VCS-" IF WE B EAT PLAY· · WE I.NOU LDI&gt;J'T
and tha~he had concurred ''because we cannot conceive of any civil disturbance situation that might
WA ~T HIM T OAD·
h-r-=::Ji
i
c
=o\_
H IM HE'S GOT A
· arise thai would warrant sending large numbers of troops into the field with lethal weapons."
READY- .'v\AD E

Swisher Gets

Bank Promotion

l!

iUPr

1

.

,.

Oarc nl'&lt;'

1

11

for an intcril.n $9.2 million rate increase. ht:~
ssaid.
" TI1is sharply illustrates the fallacious
attitude of the PUCO and many politicians thlll
delaying rate increases is in the public in-

I

I
I

j_

mechanism to evaluate
executive spClldlng progrtllfi$.
The "power of the purse" is the
Constitutional responsibility of
the Congress. However, the
Congress has quite olten been.
in the position or having to rely
on studies and evaluations
supplied by the execu tive
branch in making budget
decisions [or that branch.
The Budget Rerorm Act is
designed to correct these
deficiencies. When fully Implemented in !976, the Act
should widen the Congressional
budget role and put federal
spending in to perspective.
The legislation establishes
budget committees in both the
House and the Senate and a
Congressional Budget Orrice to
make a thorough and compr ehensive eva lua tion of
budget tequests and to of[er
spending recommendations. A
new timetable would be put
into effe ct for the submission of
the -rederal budget proposal.
Ceilings would be set on the
various sections of the budget ,
and appropriations bills would
be reconciled to meet overal1
spending guidelines. To help
bring about more coherent
budget planning, five year
budget projections would be
re quired, and pilot program
would· be es tablished to
determi ne the practicality of
new Programs befo re they are
implemented in a more perman ent manner.

.. ·.· ..·.·
Today Is Wednesday, July 24,
the 205th day of 1974 with 180 to
follow.
111e moon is opproachlng Its
fi rst quarter.
•
The morn ing stars are
Mercur y. Venus, Jupiter and
Saturn.
The evening star Is Mars.
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of Leo.
American aviatrix Amelia
Earhart Putnam was born Jul y
24, 1898.
On this day in history :
· In 1679, New Hampshire
became a royal colony or the
British crown .
In 1929, President Herbert
Hoover signed the Kellogg Briand Treat y tmder which 43
nations agreed to denowtce
war a s an Instrument of
national policy.
,
In 1948, Henry Wallace and
Idaho Sen. Glen Gaylor were
nominated as the presidential
candidates of the Progre.,.ive
Par ty. ~
Jn 1969 Apollo II returned lo
earth after an historic moon
landing ,miSsion .

.

WRI''";~tiDDLE~_? R T. POINT PLEASANT -POMEROY

95~ LB. (493)

Hinds

t; x cu5E!

'

E.O.M. SALE!
K 0. M. SALE!

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
LADIES' BETTER QUALITY
SPRING AND SUMMER

the old mark of $43.3 billion set in 1972. The total does not include real estate aild. public utility
property taxes for Sandusky County estimated at $197.7million.
Ferguson said the Sandusky County auditor lost a recent appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court in
which he prptesled a state Board of Tax Appeals order thai increased county properly values by $20
million . His report will be much later. The counties of Harrison, Jackson , Jefferson, Paulding, Scioto
and Wood showed decreajes In property valuation in 1973.

Fronts
79~ LB.

(494)

Phone Us
Your Order!
SEEKERS OF THE T RUTH

Whole Kern e l
Cream Style

·

for

••• • •

lb.

CHUCK ROAST
STEW MEAT
CUBE STEAK
GROUND BEEF
SIRLOIN STEAK

WITH ONION

"The Store With A Heart
You, WE Ll KE".

NuMa_id Bowls

·Right Reserved to Limit Quantities
&gt;

~

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

&lt;

; Prices E~ective July 24-31
•''.

for

1---

~2

$

(49

~E.O.M.

SALE-CLEARANCE GROUP

'

''

Saturday 9 to 9

'J
,-'

CLOSED SUNDAYS

INSTANT FOLGER'S
OOFFEE CRYSTALS

•

l-Ib.

l.Ooz. •1.29

&gt;

j

l
'I

.
.
Wllh Coupon

iJIG VALUE

FABRIC SOFTENER
gallon 69$
'I

Limit
Good
Offer

1 cO~

per _cv~tomer.

at Racine Food Mkt.
7-ll -74

HOME GROWN
Tomatoes, Cabbage,
Sw. Peppers,

Potatoes,
Cucumbers
•

Our

CUBED

$

ALUMINUM ·
BAKEWARE
•

lb. SIRLOIN TIP STEAK
lb. GROUND CHUCK
lb. T- OONE STEAK
lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
3.tb. CENTER CUT PORK CH.OPS
2 lb. SUPERIORS WIENERS

$

PANTY HOSE

GLASS BAKEWARE

Fl,..t quality
Special clearance lot of
aluminum bakeware and
giass blkeware. Grouped
· for quick sale. See th is
group and save now. You
will want several pieces at

-

-....
.-

We acc ept

Ladles' 1st Quality
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
S;TRETCH NYLON

'AND

95

thlo low price .

Country

--.....

Town and

brand

stretch

nylon panty hose. One Slle
fits aU. Come In the

..., ..... best shades.

38.¢

·

~

PR;

-FIRST FLOO~-

STIFFLER STORES
--C LEARANCE- GROUP
MEN'S FAMOUS BR.ANDS
.VALUES TO $5.00

SPORT SHIRTS .

$1.29

'1.09

Ends &amp; Pieces

~ PEACHES

lb. __

· g·\¢
lb. ·2

NEW CROP

NECTARINES
. lb.

49¢

HAM

Legs &amp; Thighs

Be here earl y!

E.O.M.SALE::f
CLEARANC!i!

-

E . O.M. SALE

.

Men ' s &amp; Boys'
Spring and Summer

CAPS

American Made

&amp;HATS

'1.35

, FAM()US PEPPER!;~.!.. BR~NO
TWIN AND. FULL SIZE

NO-IRON
SHEETS
Nit
o1 iullenct
-lei
graup
twin
olu w h i t . - mUllin no-tron

1hooots wtlh m•tchlng pillow
ca.... Slatk Ut&gt; nowt
TWIN

SIZES

PILLOW

CASES

BOY - YOUTH·

VALUES TOSB.OO

AMERICAN MADE

SPECIAL GROUP
LADIES' PRINT

''

.

OFF
REG. ·
PRICE

OXFORDS

Reg ular v alues to $7.00
ea c h . · Spe cia l group of"
lad les' f anc y pr i nted
du ster s. Assorted sty les in

Reg. S3.99 Value. Am er ican
made, all sizes In blac k and
white, low cut gym ox ford s.
Buy now for back' to school .
Save at Stiffl er 's. ·

perm press 'fa bricS.

5

$299PAIR

GYM

..' . '

'

$ 00

REG. $15 .99 VALWI:

DOUBLEKNIT

JAMAICA .
SHORTS

AREA RUGS
~pecliil mill assortment of
better loop and shag eccent
decorator ·area rugs in
assorted colors, styles and
patterns .

.
Wide asst. of colors. Reg.
·: · -$2.99 value. Ladln nylon ·
doubleknlt Jamaica short$.
Good run of sizes . Priced

tor clearance. Be htrt

early for best selection.

$199PAIR'

·STIFF-LER -ST ORES E.O. M. SALE
PLAIN AND FANCY
60 INCH POb¥f'STER

DOUBLE KNITS .
A gooa Mltcllon ol oolld-.
end Ioney pa-.. ·ln polynter doubl-.nlf - .....
fabrics . ~ hop Sttfflor'a lnd

powerful 20 Inch box
window fan s · by McGraw
· Edison. two speed motor . 1&lt; log
; 1ze Buv.
Big

seve.

$~S~ARD
- FIRST

SPORT SNEAKERS

COMPLETE STOCK
CHI LOREN'S SHOES
SPRING AND SUMMER

t~ble

SPECIAL SALE GROU'P
ASST. HANDY

FOOTWEAR
Our complete stock. (Jf

~ll.llltlnG

~Jidren

HOUSEHOLD
PLASTICS .
.,.n.. ..- ..,.
roundondcrvtl-

and ·

arul .z.ummif. foo"""'r.
Sonclels. Dressy Styles. Casuals. Be

of

l .ea d le$ ar'ld c h l ldr ~ n and girl s
American made i port oxford s. AU
'size$. Bu·y several pair now at this

Spout

here Early for best selection. Shop

Stiffler's First.

tow, low price al Slifll er·s.

·

•:.

1eundr'Y - ........
dlvldtll !lef

.........."" .......

OFF
REG.
'
PRICE

$}59 .
SHOE DEPT . .

Fi..Obll-

OU~

• LADIES - GIRLS . CHILDREN

. P~IR

LADIES NYLON

OFF
REC.
PRICE

STIFFLER'S E.O.M. SALE
FiRST Q\JALITY AMERICAN MADE

Reg . $1.99 V!lue, Iaroe

...

LOOP&amp;SHAG .
DECORATOR

.

HANDBAGS , BOX FANS

•

SPECIAL
ASSORTMENT

"" '
"

Mill Assortment

""

TWO SPEED VENTILATING
.

.WUillilllllli

E.O.M. SALE

- E.O.M. SALE-

.....

EACH

20 INCH McGRAW EDISON 2 Speed

- L:OME SEE .. COME SAVE AT STIFFLE~ ' S ­
OUR COMPLETE STOCK
LADIES SPRING AND SUMMER

·

Special group of m.,.•s t•ncy ,..,.,
short IIMVO ._t ihtm In ShE llod
parternoand colcwa. Sliel ~1..-XL,

...

STIFFLER STORES E.O.M. SALES

Ou ~ complete stock. of ladles spring
and summer handbag s. White ,
be ige, denims. strawS, vinyl . Out
the.y .go. Be here eftri Y ror best

·sPORT SHIRTS

· - SECOND FLOOR-

STIFFLER STORES E. O.M. SALE

FULL

SIZES

- E. O.M. SALE-

- E.O.M: ~ALE­

OXFORDS

low pr ice.

STIFFLER STORES
MEN' S SHORT SLEEVE
FANCY NO-IRON
REG . $4.00 VALUE

~

DUSTERS.

Re:g . $3 .99 men' s American
· . made gym oxford s. All
· si zes. Low cut . Stock up
· now for school at th is low
: low pri ce at Stiffle r's . We
can sa ve you money .

'

'

OFF

GYM

Our complete stoc;k Ot men
and boys su mmer sports
caps and hats. One large
group to clear. Golf caps;
· straw ~port hat,s, . sport
caps, Get yours now at thi s

1/3

Reg . $3.99 Men ' s

'

Ou r complete stock of m en's and
boys' summer swim wear . Large
table . Good selection of styles
and colors. Save 112 now at Sti ffler 's. We ca n sa Ve you m oney.

OFF
REG. ·
PRICE

MAIN FLOOR

SALAD
lb:

•

SWIM WEAR

Good run of sizes. Wid ~ se lect ion
of colors and styl es . Out they go.

For Sandwiches

CHICKEN ,

6 $289

Fresh Sweet

MEN'S . AND BOYS'

boys sum_m e r Wa lking shorts .

Ena 01 ·lftll'lln sate group Of m"n''l.
famous brands short sleeve sjl()rt
lhlrts In assorted styles, colors and .
patterns.

BACON

PORK
lb.

OUR COMPLETE STOCK

complete stock of m en and

'selection.

Great For.Sandwiches

STIFFLER STORES E .O.M. SALE

WALKING SHORTS

QFF
REGULAR
PRICE

-E.•O.M. SALE.'

BAR-B-QUE SPECIAL--

3
1;\o 3
"I 3
3

Monday Thru Friday
9:30 to 7:00

•,•

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

STIFFLER STORES E .O.M. SALE
OUR·COMPLETE STOCK
.,
MEN . AND BOYS

End of MOnth clearance group Of
children's sprlrig and summer'
sportswear In some of the latest
sty,loo· for boys and gtrfs . .

. Castleberry Hot Do!;!

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE

brown and white, be ige , red, na 11 y. Wide
Se lect ion . Good run o·f si ze$ . Buy se11eri!ll pair
now at this low, low pri ce at your Friendly
Stores.

SPORTSWEAR

FULLY COOKED

CHOICE

OU T THEY GO! Fam ous brand s Charm Steps ,
SiQe Show, William s. Sandals, dressy styles,
casuals, pumps in whites. black and white ,

Sti ffler's E.O.M. Sa le .

-E.O.M. SA.I..Fr-

$

1f2 SEMI BONELESS HAM
{7 -9 lb . average)
2 lb. SLICED BACON
3 lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb. PORK CHOPS
2 lb. ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT

992-3502

USDR

FOOTWEAR

wa rdrobe of famous brands
a nd save one' ha lf . Big
c lea r ance group of beft er
spr l,ng and sum mer st y les.

REGULAR
PRICE

iFFLER STORE§ E.O.M. SALE
CLEARANC-E GROUP-CHILDREN'S
SPRING AND SUMMER

HAM SLICES

5can:;$1
CORN • • •••• • • •• •
5 ca~s$1
SAUCE•••••••••••••••
59¢
MARGARINE •••••• :~:.
·DETERGDENT..... ~ ••3:!.:~· $1

Choose now,· a summer

OFF

' 'Of course 1 love you, Jill, but
I'm too young lo 1M&gt; tied down lo
one refrigerator."

-

.

SPRING! &amp;SUMMER

TO CHOOSE FROM!

.....

.

SPORTSWEAR

WIDE SELECTION

••

-

OUR COMPLETE STOCK
LADIES

SPRING &amp; SUMMER

A sensational group of better quality
dresses. Real high fashion designs for
the " Young at Heart ." Excellent
selection of the season's newest fabrics
.and patterns. · Junior, misses and half
sizes.

u

Joan of Arc .

CliARANCE

..

Prices
include
cutting, wr01pping
&amp; freezing. Bee f
sold at hanging
. weight .

MIDDLETOWN , OHiO - ARMCO STEEL CO ANNOUNCED Tuesday earnings of $48.6 million
for the second quarter of 1974 on sales of $804.6 million, both records. The earnings amounted to $1.58
per share, said Board Chairrilan William Verity in a speeeh prepared for delivery in Kansas City
where he announced two plant expansions. Second quarter earnings In the 1973 totaled $30.58 million
· on sales of $529.45 million , Verily said.
" During the period of recent price controls, Armco experienced very disappointing earnings,"
Verity said in his prepared remarks. "The dividend was reduced. and job creating capital investments were put aside because of low return. The combination of strong steel demand and a
mod~t but clearly defined upsWing in our return on sales and assets has convinced us that now is the
time to move ahead with some of our plarmed improvements,'' he sa id.

CLEARANCE GROUP
LADIES' FAMOUS BRAND

DRESSES

$1.09 LB. .

COLUMBUS - STATE AUDITOR JOSEPH FERGUSON annotmced Tuesday the value of all

·~ perilonal, real estate and public property in Ohio' rose to a record $44.7 billion in fiscal1973, eclipsing

SAVE NOW! '

WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY

b~~.:::::::-~.:x:::::~~~~N*:~:?.:oW#.U.(».:::~a::::o-////h:;o.:::X'~.«YR'/"'**~::!'«-:;:::w.«~/..«:::x-x~::--~:::~~.:'l.'i'.::::rL:m:;;;:&amp;:::X!:-».~~~=:::;::::-:-::x·:;:::;!::.:;~:;:::;:o««.:;:-.:;:~~?o-..?;~w..¥...!~.&amp;"~~W:WCI!'IIt

A thought for the day :
·American author Alber t
Terhune said, "Win without
boasting, lose without excuse."

3 lb. GROUND a ·EEF
2 lb. ROUND STEAK ·
2 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
2- FRESH CHICKENS

4 lb.
2 lb.
2 lb.
3 lb.
3 lb.

Thursday ·Friday · Saturday, July 25th-26th-27th

114

Semi-Boneless Hams ............. .lb. 89$
Ground ·Beef ....................... ~ .....lb. 85$

MEATS
Sides Beef

I

.

The Aimanae

Overnight, in briefs

(492)

·..·.·.·

By Unlled PrOf lnlemolloui

..

USDA
CHOICE

,'/,',

.

FAMOUS
BRANDS

YOUR

CHOICE

44$

lA.

�•
"

-------------------------"
I

Th •!Hi' , ntin&lt;l, Mlddleporl-Pomero•·. 0 .• Wednesday, July 24, 1974

•

1

! Washington · !
Report nyM

G-' cutting hack
s~lt~wide

('(Instruction

progn:am. to

a\'oid

OOrrowing more money at current 13 pt'r cent
interest.
1~

•
~•

I

earn1n~s. ttcprec•at10n reserves and rte[errt:d
taxes wi11 bt' used ror expansion. Tilii[ IIC\'OunlS
for about half the corl~truelion pr~rarn . The
other half is accomplished throtq4h borrowed
money .

MARION - General Telephone Co. or Oh10
today announced a further curtailment of its

been instituted by the-company in June. 1913.
Today's action stems in part from the PUCO's

About $65 million was planned for 1974
expansion ut the beginning of thE&gt; yetlr, he said.
Approximately hall the budget has been used al
this stage. Wopat said the curtaiJment will exist
until the finan cial and ccononU.c picture im-

lack or response to a June 7 request by General

proves.

Robert M. Wopat of Marion , president. said
he has noti[ied the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio of this actiQn . An initial cutback had

The Congress has passed and
sen t to the Presldent the
Budget Rerorm Act - a bill
designed to help curb inflation
by PfOmoting more direct and
balanced legislative control or
the [ederal budge t.
One Significant factor contributing to the present inflat ionary spir al ·has been
undisciplined spending by the
Federal Government. Under
tr aditional approp r iations
procedures, Co ngr ess has
gJven consideration to each
appr opr iation and s pendi ng
proposal se parately. This has
been 'done without deter mining
an appropria!e level or total
spending or taking into account
overall effect or the federal
budg~ l on the economy.
From the 1930s to the Great
Society era to the present,
gov ernm ent spendin g for
defense, social welfare and
countless other programs has .
grown astronomical1 y. These
programs alone may not have ·
seemed to place an inordin ate
burden on the budge t. llut
grouped together , the sum of
the costs of the man y separate
federal defense, health , space,
and foreign aid programs has
placed a great strain on the
budget and added to infl ationary press ures which
pinch the pocketbook of every
American ramily.
In addition to the lack or
~;oord inatio n in appropriation
proced.ure:s, Congress has had

Action on General 's Dec. 27, 1972 $13.:-..
million rate request is not expected for some
lime, he (·ontinued. The June 7, $9.2 million
figure was requested as an advance of the 1972
case to tide the company over Wllil the PUCO
finalized it, he added.
terest," Wopat remarked.
" It appears now. since no action was til ken
"Ovel' the · long term the public gets hurt by
it," he continued . ''The projects being post- on the June 7 request, tha t the PUCO has
ignored il, " said Wopat.
poned must ultimately be carried out. And in
Most of the contract help will be gone by
Lhe future material costs will be even higher."
the end of the week, Wopat no ted. Laying o[f
He said General has $76.4 million in Short some regular employes wil l rollow. But it is not
term borrowings outstanding. Interest rates
.
known yet how many will go or when.
' 'ary from 12 to 131".! per cent. Much of it in
Postponement of construc tion projects will
"commercial paper' ' is discounted and cmTics
Don W. Swisher
an effective interest rate approaching 15 per .start soon. He said one, a training and
deve lopment center east or Marion, is to be set
cent.
back indefi nite!)•. Construction on it was to
"Now we will fall bnck and regroup, ·• said
have started early next year .
Wopat. "Every scheduled project will be
Another building in Marion, postponed in
examined. At this point we plan to complete
tlte
J
une, 1973 curtai lment, will be m oved back
only cri tical projects or those already in
even far thrr, he added. One-by-&lt;&gt;ne projects all
progress ."
ThiS will result In some dclcrlorntion of over tlie state wil1 be cut . Also, he said no new
company vehicles will be purchased for thC
service, he said. And upgraded sen icc, such as
Announcement has been made of the promotion of Don W.
a prh•at e line, wtll be unavaila ble in most
duration.
Swisher to the position of assistant vice president or the Peoples
In a letter to Edmun d J . Turk , chairm an of !lank of Potnl Pleasant.
ca ses.
.
·
the PUCO, Wopal explained lbe financial
Plans for cable expansion, install.?lion of
Swisher, a 1971 graduate of Marshall University with a
dilemma or the company.
additional call-swi tching equipment and other
degree in businesB management, was appointed to the post
''In an economic climate which permi ts
· improvement Projects will be deferred, he
during a meeting of the bank board of directors earlier this
declar ed. " Fur ther," Wopat added, ''a ll · interest payments ranging from 12 to 13 1 2 per
month.
cent, and a r eg ulatory climate which permits
contract help and some company personnel
Mr. Swisher, 25, was first Thunde ring Herd as a
earnings on capital of less than 8 per cent, ( we l
must be laid off." (The company uses conemployed
at the Peoples Bank sophomore. He was a member
do not feel that it would be prudent to continue
tractors to handle about a fourth of its conduring the summer aft er or the Sigma Phi Epsilon
to commit heavy expenditures which require
struction program . I
completion
of his junior year of Fraternity at MU .
outside fi nancing to support ," the letter stated.
" The cur tailment is necessary because we
Swisher, son of Mr. arid Mrs.
He w~n t on to explain General had planned college. He started working at
mu~ t dr as tically reduce the need for bo rrowing
the
bank
on
a
full
time
basis
in
Wayne
Swisher of Pomeroy,
pe rmanent financing of the short-term debt this
additional funds," he said. "When we are able
November . Beca use hig~ interest rates are June or 1971 and was later resides with his wife, the
to re adjust our program, it will be suppor ted
causing an unstable bond market , the company promoted, to assistant cashier former Elaine Davis of Mid- ·
only by internally generated ftmds."
dleport and their young son ,
and loan officer.
decided to wait until more favorable times.
This means only money derived fr om
SWisher is a 1967 graduate o[ Phillip, age 19 months, on
.
Pomeroy High School where he Birch Ave . in Point Pleasant.
was president of his cJasses all
The new Peo ples Bank
four years. He was also an assistant vice president, who
outstanding high school athlete also holds the position or being '
By United Presslntemalional
with his top achievement being secretary to the bank board of
TAlLAHAliSEE, FLA. - SEN. EDWARD GURNEY, R-FLA. said Tuesday he wiU not seek that he was selected as the
directors, is a member and
reelection because "there is no sensible or sound way" to conduct a statewide race and also go So utheastern Ohio Athletic vice president of the Point
through a major trial. Gurney was to ronnally withdraw as a candidate late Tuesday with officials in Leag ue's Most Valuable Pleasimt Lions Club and is a
·· the secretary of stale's office In Tallahassee, aide John Gardner said. The 6&amp;-year-&lt;&gt;ld Gurney, a Player in football in his senior member of Point Pleasant
slatmch supporter of President Nixon as a member or the Senate Watergate Committee, has pleaded year .
Moose Lodge No. 731.
irmocenlto the charges which stem from $223,160 in campaign funds wltich were raised in his behalf.
The Meigs County, Ohio,
He is a graduate of the West
The lndicbnentsQ! Gurney and six others charge that Florida builders were asked to contribute to the native then went to Marshall Virginia School of Banking and
fund in exchange for Gurney's influence in obtaining federal housing commitments.
University and was the star- is presently enrolled in the
ti ng qua rte r ~a c k for t he school of Bank Marketing in
COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. ·GIL!JGAN said Tuesday the Oltio National Guard has removed
Denver , Colorado.
nearly 80,000 rounds of live ammunition from its civil disturbance stockpiles. Gilligan said he had
been infonned by Ohio Adjutant General Dana L. Stewart that the guard'had also removed from the
·, civil disturbance stockpile nearly 20 ,000 chemical cartridges and grenades and 3,800 potmds or old·
by Neg Cochran ·
OUT OUR WAY
-· type chemical riot control agents.
.
' 1
The guard is equipped with non-lethal weapons and more modern chemical agents that permit
YEAH, REAPY·MAPE :
PRE T TY C ~ FT'i,
I. RACKED UP MY
1 'THI).JK. 'AlE :5HOUL C'
KNEE L A ST J.J I.5H.T,
15 1-J ''TH E?.' IF HE
troops to respo 0d adequately to any civil disturbance situation that might arise, the governor said.
6ET A PEEK A! ! HE
BEA'T5 US WITH A
B U'T I 'M 60"-lNA
The governor said Stewart recommended that the live ammtmllion be removed [rom the stockpile
JT ATR.'T,
E!&gt;.AD K/&gt;JE E , w E 'R E " 1/&gt;JJL.JRY BEFORE WE
B U.VCS-" IF WE B EAT PLAY· · WE I.NOU LDI&gt;J'T
and tha~he had concurred ''because we cannot conceive of any civil disturbance situation that might
WA ~T HIM T OAD·
h-r-=::Ji
i
c
=o\_
H IM HE'S GOT A
· arise thai would warrant sending large numbers of troops into the field with lethal weapons."
READY- .'v\AD E

Swisher Gets

Bank Promotion

l!

iUPr

1

.

,.

Oarc nl'&lt;'

1

11

for an intcril.n $9.2 million rate increase. ht:~
ssaid.
" TI1is sharply illustrates the fallacious
attitude of the PUCO and many politicians thlll
delaying rate increases is in the public in-

I

I
I

j_

mechanism to evaluate
executive spClldlng progrtllfi$.
The "power of the purse" is the
Constitutional responsibility of
the Congress. However, the
Congress has quite olten been.
in the position or having to rely
on studies and evaluations
supplied by the execu tive
branch in making budget
decisions [or that branch.
The Budget Rerorm Act is
designed to correct these
deficiencies. When fully Implemented in !976, the Act
should widen the Congressional
budget role and put federal
spending in to perspective.
The legislation establishes
budget committees in both the
House and the Senate and a
Congressional Budget Orrice to
make a thorough and compr ehensive eva lua tion of
budget tequests and to of[er
spending recommendations. A
new timetable would be put
into effe ct for the submission of
the -rederal budget proposal.
Ceilings would be set on the
various sections of the budget ,
and appropriations bills would
be reconciled to meet overal1
spending guidelines. To help
bring about more coherent
budget planning, five year
budget projections would be
re quired, and pilot program
would· be es tablished to
determi ne the practicality of
new Programs befo re they are
implemented in a more perman ent manner.

.. ·.· ..·.·
Today Is Wednesday, July 24,
the 205th day of 1974 with 180 to
follow.
111e moon is opproachlng Its
fi rst quarter.
•
The morn ing stars are
Mercur y. Venus, Jupiter and
Saturn.
The evening star Is Mars.
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of Leo.
American aviatrix Amelia
Earhart Putnam was born Jul y
24, 1898.
On this day in history :
· In 1679, New Hampshire
became a royal colony or the
British crown .
In 1929, President Herbert
Hoover signed the Kellogg Briand Treat y tmder which 43
nations agreed to denowtce
war a s an Instrument of
national policy.
,
In 1948, Henry Wallace and
Idaho Sen. Glen Gaylor were
nominated as the presidential
candidates of the Progre.,.ive
Par ty. ~
Jn 1969 Apollo II returned lo
earth after an historic moon
landing ,miSsion .

.

WRI''";~tiDDLE~_? R T. POINT PLEASANT -POMEROY

95~ LB. (493)

Hinds

t; x cu5E!

'

E.O.M. SALE!
K 0. M. SALE!

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
LADIES' BETTER QUALITY
SPRING AND SUMMER

the old mark of $43.3 billion set in 1972. The total does not include real estate aild. public utility
property taxes for Sandusky County estimated at $197.7million.
Ferguson said the Sandusky County auditor lost a recent appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court in
which he prptesled a state Board of Tax Appeals order thai increased county properly values by $20
million . His report will be much later. The counties of Harrison, Jackson , Jefferson, Paulding, Scioto
and Wood showed decreajes In property valuation in 1973.

Fronts
79~ LB.

(494)

Phone Us
Your Order!
SEEKERS OF THE T RUTH

Whole Kern e l
Cream Style

·

for

••• • •

lb.

CHUCK ROAST
STEW MEAT
CUBE STEAK
GROUND BEEF
SIRLOIN STEAK

WITH ONION

"The Store With A Heart
You, WE Ll KE".

NuMa_id Bowls

·Right Reserved to Limit Quantities
&gt;

~

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

&lt;

; Prices E~ective July 24-31
•''.

for

1---

~2

$

(49

~E.O.M.

SALE-CLEARANCE GROUP

'

''

Saturday 9 to 9

'J
,-'

CLOSED SUNDAYS

INSTANT FOLGER'S
OOFFEE CRYSTALS

•

l-Ib.

l.Ooz. •1.29

&gt;

j

l
'I

.
.
Wllh Coupon

iJIG VALUE

FABRIC SOFTENER
gallon 69$
'I

Limit
Good
Offer

1 cO~

per _cv~tomer.

at Racine Food Mkt.
7-ll -74

HOME GROWN
Tomatoes, Cabbage,
Sw. Peppers,

Potatoes,
Cucumbers
•

Our

CUBED

$

ALUMINUM ·
BAKEWARE
•

lb. SIRLOIN TIP STEAK
lb. GROUND CHUCK
lb. T- OONE STEAK
lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
3.tb. CENTER CUT PORK CH.OPS
2 lb. SUPERIORS WIENERS

$

PANTY HOSE

GLASS BAKEWARE

Fl,..t quality
Special clearance lot of
aluminum bakeware and
giass blkeware. Grouped
· for quick sale. See th is
group and save now. You
will want several pieces at

-

-....
.-

We acc ept

Ladles' 1st Quality
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
S;TRETCH NYLON

'AND

95

thlo low price .

Country

--.....

Town and

brand

stretch

nylon panty hose. One Slle
fits aU. Come In the

..., ..... best shades.

38.¢

·

~

PR;

-FIRST FLOO~-

STIFFLER STORES
--C LEARANCE- GROUP
MEN'S FAMOUS BR.ANDS
.VALUES TO $5.00

SPORT SHIRTS .

$1.29

'1.09

Ends &amp; Pieces

~ PEACHES

lb. __

· g·\¢
lb. ·2

NEW CROP

NECTARINES
. lb.

49¢

HAM

Legs &amp; Thighs

Be here earl y!

E.O.M.SALE::f
CLEARANC!i!

-

E . O.M. SALE

.

Men ' s &amp; Boys'
Spring and Summer

CAPS

American Made

&amp;HATS

'1.35

, FAM()US PEPPER!;~.!.. BR~NO
TWIN AND. FULL SIZE

NO-IRON
SHEETS
Nit
o1 iullenct
-lei
graup
twin
olu w h i t . - mUllin no-tron

1hooots wtlh m•tchlng pillow
ca.... Slatk Ut&gt; nowt
TWIN

SIZES

PILLOW

CASES

BOY - YOUTH·

VALUES TOSB.OO

AMERICAN MADE

SPECIAL GROUP
LADIES' PRINT

''

.

OFF
REG. ·
PRICE

OXFORDS

Reg ular v alues to $7.00
ea c h . · Spe cia l group of"
lad les' f anc y pr i nted
du ster s. Assorted sty les in

Reg. S3.99 Value. Am er ican
made, all sizes In blac k and
white, low cut gym ox ford s.
Buy now for back' to school .
Save at Stiffl er 's. ·

perm press 'fa bricS.

5

$299PAIR

GYM

..' . '

'

$ 00

REG. $15 .99 VALWI:

DOUBLEKNIT

JAMAICA .
SHORTS

AREA RUGS
~pecliil mill assortment of
better loop and shag eccent
decorator ·area rugs in
assorted colors, styles and
patterns .

.
Wide asst. of colors. Reg.
·: · -$2.99 value. Ladln nylon ·
doubleknlt Jamaica short$.
Good run of sizes . Priced

tor clearance. Be htrt

early for best selection.

$199PAIR'

·STIFF-LER -ST ORES E.O. M. SALE
PLAIN AND FANCY
60 INCH POb¥f'STER

DOUBLE KNITS .
A gooa Mltcllon ol oolld-.
end Ioney pa-.. ·ln polynter doubl-.nlf - .....
fabrics . ~ hop Sttfflor'a lnd

powerful 20 Inch box
window fan s · by McGraw
· Edison. two speed motor . 1&lt; log
; 1ze Buv.
Big

seve.

$~S~ARD
- FIRST

SPORT SNEAKERS

COMPLETE STOCK
CHI LOREN'S SHOES
SPRING AND SUMMER

t~ble

SPECIAL SALE GROU'P
ASST. HANDY

FOOTWEAR
Our complete stock. (Jf

~ll.llltlnG

~Jidren

HOUSEHOLD
PLASTICS .
.,.n.. ..- ..,.
roundondcrvtl-

and ·

arul .z.ummif. foo"""'r.
Sonclels. Dressy Styles. Casuals. Be

of

l .ea d le$ ar'ld c h l ldr ~ n and girl s
American made i port oxford s. AU
'size$. Bu·y several pair now at this

Spout

here Early for best selection. Shop

Stiffler's First.

tow, low price al Slifll er·s.

·

•:.

1eundr'Y - ........
dlvldtll !lef

.........."" .......

OFF
REG.
'
PRICE

$}59 .
SHOE DEPT . .

Fi..Obll-

OU~

• LADIES - GIRLS . CHILDREN

. P~IR

LADIES NYLON

OFF
REC.
PRICE

STIFFLER'S E.O.M. SALE
FiRST Q\JALITY AMERICAN MADE

Reg . $1.99 V!lue, Iaroe

...

LOOP&amp;SHAG .
DECORATOR

.

HANDBAGS , BOX FANS

•

SPECIAL
ASSORTMENT

"" '
"

Mill Assortment

""

TWO SPEED VENTILATING
.

.WUillilllllli

E.O.M. SALE

- E.O.M. SALE-

.....

EACH

20 INCH McGRAW EDISON 2 Speed

- L:OME SEE .. COME SAVE AT STIFFLE~ ' S ­
OUR COMPLETE STOCK
LADIES SPRING AND SUMMER

·

Special group of m.,.•s t•ncy ,..,.,
short IIMVO ._t ihtm In ShE llod
parternoand colcwa. Sliel ~1..-XL,

...

STIFFLER STORES E.O.M. SALES

Ou ~ complete stock. of ladles spring
and summer handbag s. White ,
be ige, denims. strawS, vinyl . Out
the.y .go. Be here eftri Y ror best

·sPORT SHIRTS

· - SECOND FLOOR-

STIFFLER STORES E. O.M. SALE

FULL

SIZES

- E. O.M. SALE-

- E.O.M: ~ALE­

OXFORDS

low pr ice.

STIFFLER STORES
MEN' S SHORT SLEEVE
FANCY NO-IRON
REG . $4.00 VALUE

~

DUSTERS.

Re:g . $3 .99 men' s American
· . made gym oxford s. All
· si zes. Low cut . Stock up
· now for school at th is low
: low pri ce at Stiffle r's . We
can sa ve you money .

'

'

OFF

GYM

Our complete stoc;k Ot men
and boys su mmer sports
caps and hats. One large
group to clear. Golf caps;
· straw ~port hat,s, . sport
caps, Get yours now at thi s

1/3

Reg . $3.99 Men ' s

'

Ou r complete stock of m en's and
boys' summer swim wear . Large
table . Good selection of styles
and colors. Save 112 now at Sti ffler 's. We ca n sa Ve you m oney.

OFF
REG. ·
PRICE

MAIN FLOOR

SALAD
lb:

•

SWIM WEAR

Good run of sizes. Wid ~ se lect ion
of colors and styl es . Out they go.

For Sandwiches

CHICKEN ,

6 $289

Fresh Sweet

MEN'S . AND BOYS'

boys sum_m e r Wa lking shorts .

Ena 01 ·lftll'lln sate group Of m"n''l.
famous brands short sleeve sjl()rt
lhlrts In assorted styles, colors and .
patterns.

BACON

PORK
lb.

OUR COMPLETE STOCK

complete stock of m en and

'selection.

Great For.Sandwiches

STIFFLER STORES E .O.M. SALE

WALKING SHORTS

QFF
REGULAR
PRICE

-E.•O.M. SALE.'

BAR-B-QUE SPECIAL--

3
1;\o 3
"I 3
3

Monday Thru Friday
9:30 to 7:00

•,•

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

STIFFLER STORES E .O.M. SALE
OUR·COMPLETE STOCK
.,
MEN . AND BOYS

End of MOnth clearance group Of
children's sprlrig and summer'
sportswear In some of the latest
sty,loo· for boys and gtrfs . .

. Castleberry Hot Do!;!

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE

brown and white, be ige , red, na 11 y. Wide
Se lect ion . Good run o·f si ze$ . Buy se11eri!ll pair
now at this low, low pri ce at your Friendly
Stores.

SPORTSWEAR

FULLY COOKED

CHOICE

OU T THEY GO! Fam ous brand s Charm Steps ,
SiQe Show, William s. Sandals, dressy styles,
casuals, pumps in whites. black and white ,

Sti ffler's E.O.M. Sa le .

-E.O.M. SA.I..Fr-

$

1f2 SEMI BONELESS HAM
{7 -9 lb . average)
2 lb. SLICED BACON
3 lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb. PORK CHOPS
2 lb. ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT

992-3502

USDR

FOOTWEAR

wa rdrobe of famous brands
a nd save one' ha lf . Big
c lea r ance group of beft er
spr l,ng and sum mer st y les.

REGULAR
PRICE

iFFLER STORE§ E.O.M. SALE
CLEARANC-E GROUP-CHILDREN'S
SPRING AND SUMMER

HAM SLICES

5can:;$1
CORN • • •••• • • •• •
5 ca~s$1
SAUCE•••••••••••••••
59¢
MARGARINE •••••• :~:.
·DETERGDENT..... ~ ••3:!.:~· $1

Choose now,· a summer

OFF

' 'Of course 1 love you, Jill, but
I'm too young lo 1M&gt; tied down lo
one refrigerator."

-

.

SPRING! &amp;SUMMER

TO CHOOSE FROM!

.....

.

SPORTSWEAR

WIDE SELECTION

••

-

OUR COMPLETE STOCK
LADIES

SPRING &amp; SUMMER

A sensational group of better quality
dresses. Real high fashion designs for
the " Young at Heart ." Excellent
selection of the season's newest fabrics
.and patterns. · Junior, misses and half
sizes.

u

Joan of Arc .

CliARANCE

..

Prices
include
cutting, wr01pping
&amp; freezing. Bee f
sold at hanging
. weight .

MIDDLETOWN , OHiO - ARMCO STEEL CO ANNOUNCED Tuesday earnings of $48.6 million
for the second quarter of 1974 on sales of $804.6 million, both records. The earnings amounted to $1.58
per share, said Board Chairrilan William Verity in a speeeh prepared for delivery in Kansas City
where he announced two plant expansions. Second quarter earnings In the 1973 totaled $30.58 million
· on sales of $529.45 million , Verily said.
" During the period of recent price controls, Armco experienced very disappointing earnings,"
Verity said in his prepared remarks. "The dividend was reduced. and job creating capital investments were put aside because of low return. The combination of strong steel demand and a
mod~t but clearly defined upsWing in our return on sales and assets has convinced us that now is the
time to move ahead with some of our plarmed improvements,'' he sa id.

CLEARANCE GROUP
LADIES' FAMOUS BRAND

DRESSES

$1.09 LB. .

COLUMBUS - STATE AUDITOR JOSEPH FERGUSON annotmced Tuesday the value of all

·~ perilonal, real estate and public property in Ohio' rose to a record $44.7 billion in fiscal1973, eclipsing

SAVE NOW! '

WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY

b~~.:::::::-~.:x:::::~~~~N*:~:?.:oW#.U.(».:::~a::::o-////h:;o.:::X'~.«YR'/"'**~::!'«-:;:::w.«~/..«:::x-x~::--~:::~~.:'l.'i'.::::rL:m:;;;:&amp;:::X!:-».~~~=:::;::::-:-::x·:;:::;!::.:;~:;:::;:o««.:;:-.:;:~~?o-..?;~w..¥...!~.&amp;"~~W:WCI!'IIt

A thought for the day :
·American author Alber t
Terhune said, "Win without
boasting, lose without excuse."

3 lb. GROUND a ·EEF
2 lb. ROUND STEAK ·
2 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
2- FRESH CHICKENS

4 lb.
2 lb.
2 lb.
3 lb.
3 lb.

Thursday ·Friday · Saturday, July 25th-26th-27th

114

Semi-Boneless Hams ............. .lb. 89$
Ground ·Beef ....................... ~ .....lb. 85$

MEATS
Sides Beef

I

.

The Aimanae

Overnight, in briefs

(492)

·..·.·.·

By Unlled PrOf lnlemolloui

..

USDA
CHOICE

,'/,',

.

FAMOUS
BRANDS

YOUR

CHOICE

44$

lA.

�.

•

17

11-Tho Daily Smtinol, Middleport·POOJeroy,O., Wedfl&lt;'S&lt;iay, July %4, um

Agreements obtained On money, landlord hills
By KIT A SHADE
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio General Aasembly Tues·
day, after a series ()f caucuses,
~&amp;reed 1o conference com·
mlllee reporis for a $123.8
million supplemental ap·
proJX'Iations bUl and landmark
landlord-tenant legislation.
A third joint committee
report on probate relorin was
approved in the House but
failed to garner enough votes
for passage in the Senate.
.The spending plan, which
now g&lt;&gt;es to Gov. John J.
Gllllgan for signature, was
hammered out of the con-

'·

ference committee in time for

Tuesday's fioor session despite
attempts to
rearrange
educational appropriations.
Sen. Oliver Ocasek, [).Akron,
called the proposal a "peoples
bill" because of provisions for
tax relief, educational subsidies, pay raises for state
employes and pension benefits.
Dissentin g lawmaker s ,

mostly Republicans, said the
bill presented only token tax
relief,
re-enforced
the
philosophy of "spend, spend,
spend," and paved the way

toward annual budl!etlng.
employes.
NotAilAgrt't'
-$5 million is disaster relief
"Of course not everybody to tornado-stritken southagrees . with the bill," 5aid • western Ohio.
Ocasek after the 26-4 Senate
~2.1 million to provide
vote and 87-4 House approval. transportation for the trainable
·•But the ~iUs in the House and mentally retarded · and $2
Senate •·ere so different that million in mass transit subrecon ~ ilia tio n ... on every sidies for the elderly.
polnt... was not the easiest
--$800,000 to the school for
thin• to do."
the blind, most of it to finance
The bill, fi nanced by 180.S construction of a swinuning
$80.5 million in surplus funds pool.
and anticijl'ated lottery
proceeds provides:
~14.9 mUlion to. finance the
Vietnam bonus plan.
~million in pay raises fcir
state employes, ranging from
10 to . 30 cents an hour,
depending on current. salary
level.
-$45 million in additional
state assistance to schools,
amatmling to an extra $20 per
pupil.
~10. 5million in tax relief by
increasing exemptions on the
state Income tax to $650 for
each dependant.
~12.5 million to build VOCa·
tional-education complexes.
~$5 . 5 million ·in pension
benefits for retired state

-$50,000 to move a "litUe red swimming pool for the ochool

IIChool house" !rum Huron
County to Browllng Green
Slate university for use as a
museum.
" Its Christmas in July,"
criticized Sen. Thomu Van
Meter, R-Ashland.
"Santa Claus, Gilligan and
his six helpers (conferees) providins gifts for everyone ... a
little red school house (for
someone) to meditate ln~o a

for the blind."
Strike Pressure

Van Meter called the la.l
relief symbolic and said the
entire 180.5 In sw-plus funds
should be returned to tax•
payers. He said he also resent·
ed the confereea submitting to
the pressure of striking state
employes and granli!&gt;ll the pay
hikes.
. "This sets a very dangerous
precedence . for the . future~ ~)

I

'on are welromed. They should be less
than 300 wtvds h 1g (or be subject tQ reduction by the .

Letters of o•

·I ·
I

edJtor) a1.1d mus1 be signed with the signf!e's address.
Names n:ay be \o\ Jthheld upon publicatioft., However; on
i'equest, namt'S will be disclosed. Letters should be in good

:

I

1

tastf&gt;', addressiug iss~u es, not personalities.

I
I
I
I
I
I

EARTHQUAKE'S AFTERMATH ~)low natives describe this San Francisco apartment
house but that i.Sn 't the case at all. While some tenants complain the building "looks like
Dracula's castle'' or was'attacked by a group of Ollnese calligraphers practicing their art, it is
really the end result of Mother Nature. Windswept and ravaged by rain and sun, the building
developed thousands of tiny cracks and fissures. The building owner had the cracks covered
with rubber sealant thus crealing the "cra~ked egg" motil. Owners say the structure will be
painted but some tenants have indicated they'd like the building to stay as it is since it's such a
great conversation pieee.

I

Only God is called. reverend

)
J

July 22, 1974
Dear Sir:
I sln~rely appreciate the article concerning my nearing
departure from the Pomeroy area and the party in our honor at
Ravenswood, which appeared in the Sentinel on Friday, July 19,
1974. I .must make one correction to the article heading which
was supplied by the paper.
I am not, or haVe I ever been a 11 Pastor" of this churCh or of
any churc)l. I suspect the heading was supplied in the fashion it
was as a result of the common and erroneous application made of
the term and the office by most denominations today in our town
and aU ovet the world.
·
.'Jbe .term,· ''pastor;'' as well as "elde"r," "bishop,." "&amp;hep..
herd:' Is a tenn uSed in the New Testmanent to apply to those
nien who are overseers of a local congregation of sain\s. Their
authority Is restricted to the local Congregation, and in every
instance Where they are referred to in the New Testament, we
find each church which had "Bishops, Elders, Pastors " had a
plurality of them. Never were the saints of God overseen by ONE
man. There are congregations of people In the town of Pomeroy
which have an unscrlptural. arrangement whereby one man Is
"Pastor" and he does in fact oversee the work of those churches,
but not according to the Bible pattern.
F'llrther, the prerequisite quiillficatlons for holding the office
of "Pastor" o~ "Elder" or "Bishop" (they all refer to Ute same
office In the New Testament) are very clearly stated by our Lord,
· throUgh the revelatlo" of the Holy Spirit at the hand of the
Apostle Paul, in I Timothy 3:1"7, and Titus 1:6-9, and they are :
Blameless, Husband of one wife (eliminates women elders),
Vigilant, Sober, Of Good Behavior, Given to Hospitality, Apt to
Teach, -Not Given to Wine, No Striker, Not Greedy of Filthy
· Lucre, Patient, Not a Brawler, Not Covetous, Rules Well His Own
House, Children in Subjection (eliminates bac:.elors), Not a
Novice (ellnilnates young men), and Of Good Report of Them
Which are Without.
Any man who does not meet aU of these quatlf(cations cannot
be a upastor." There are "pastors" which serve in that capaicty
that do not have wives, or children, and thus are not quatlfied. A1J
· the article:stated, I am an el(angelist, a preacher, and not a
,·' pastor,. nor am I 11reverend," for only .God' is called
•'feverenc;i." (Psffi. lll :9).
. Loren T. Stephens, evangelist.
,

I

.

•

Meigs 4-H Club News
The Melga County Dairy Better Uvestock Club met July 17 at
the Denise Dean residence. Discussions inclu,ded donations ·ror
the dairy sweepstakes, the next meeting date, and a club trip 10

Canoes, kyaks will compete
DAYTON, Ohio - Competi·
live canoeists and kayak fans
wUl converge on Salt for state
park in mid·Angust from aU
over the U.S.; Canada· and
Mexico for the 1974 National
Canoe and Kayak champion·
'ships and the North American
Canoe and Kayak Regatta.
A total of 69 events wUl be
conducted during the three-day
nationals, scheduled for Aug.
16-18 on the park's 2,95~cre
lake. The weekend will mark
the first time the pre&lt;lelected
US. canoe and kayak teani wUl
be competing as a unit in
natiOnal competition. The team
was chosen earlier in the year
by the U.S. Olympic committee
to represent the U.S. in international competition and is
subject to challenges·by other
American teams.
'lb., Nortli : American cham·
pionshipa wUl pit the beat
paddlers from .the U.S.,
Canada and Mexico against
each other in Mexico City next

October. The North American bathing beach where . visitors
coml&gt;etition begins at 1:30 p.m. ean watch the action.
. Aug . 24, and from 9 a.m. untU
Campers interested in
noon the following day.
staying overnight in the park's
The nationals' preliminary campground should contact
heats start at 8 a.m. Aug. 16. A Ticktron, Inc. at local Sears
formal opening of events is set . stores for prior campsite
for 11:30 a.m. the same date, reservations. Early reser. ·followed by finals in 21 events. vations are recommended.
11ie public will he admitted
Salt Fork staie Park is lo-.
to both North American and . cated five miles northeast of
National events at no charge. Cambridge 'in Guernsey
The finish line for·all heats wUl County, near the intersection o(
he located near the lake's 1·70 and 1-77.

•••
.·-·
......

298 SECOND ST•
POMEROY, OHIO,

•• .. l f

!1 1"111

.,

':;r.J J ~I

.... .
:; ·.~ ·

hn •

9-11

l

CHOPS

..,,.,H.

..

•

'fll ~

-.

.

·PRICES EFFECTIVE

f ll 1 1

'

"'''"''

"'"

RIGHTS RESERVED

THRU

JULY 27TH .

\tt ll.l

direct some $380,000 Into subsi,
dizing joint vocational·
education school districts by
stipulaling $15 of the S20 .in
additional aid be funneled into
the system.
The landlord-tenant bill
accepted by both chambers
virtually was the same version
approved earlier by the House.
The measure prohibits
retaliatory evictions, regulates
security deposits, provides for
rent withholding and, for the
first time, defines the rights
and responsibilities of both
parties.
The bUl also pre-empts local
landlord-tenant ordinances and
dictates that no part of the
state proposal can be
bargained away in an
agreement between the two
parties.
"Oiallt step Forward"
"This is a giant step forward
in solving Ohio's housing JX'Oblems," said Rep. Michael Stinziano, sponsor of the original
legislation. "It Is very comprehensive !ll&lt;d I see no danger In
. pre,empting local statutes."
The only major changes by
the conferees, he said, included
an exemption of private

· sys tems

p~rformed

THE CHESTER FARM Boys met at the home of Gary
Nllllan·on July 10 with one advilor·and .ten members present.
Dllcuulona were held about the bottle cap collection, exhibit at
the lair, and a field trip to the Courthouse, Fire Station and
polllbly the jail house and the Royal Crown. BqtUing Plant.
~atlonl were given by· Todd Norion on home safety,
Jl'rtd Yoq on health, and Keith Krautter on )lirds of Ohio.
lllfrelhmentl......, aerved by Mtil. James Nelson, foUowed by
poup rtcre!dlon. The nu:t meetln~ wlll be August 2_at the h&lt;ine
II Keith Krlutlef. - Keith Wolfe.·
·
.
THE HOME OF Renae TruiiSel wu the meeting p)lice of the
BeahM llwlch +-H Club on July 10 .. Two advisors and eight
- " ' " were preaent whUe Reliae Trussel demonstrated how
111 lit a lillie. With refrellunents served to the membera by the
11N1111 a-decided that the next meeting would be July 17 at

Ill ltLJ Coatea home.

....._,were

· ·

.

ullod to bring their sewing projects. The
-•10M • Gl the Be.,.., Bunch, held at Barbara Coates' has
.......... aDd - ldvt.' ....-nt. It was noted that the
... JMII'II would be JuiJ •· TIMre was also a dllculsion about
pw fUll trip. DelaaMtratlona on -'ng and brMd
-tt-l· Refreahmenta were ser:ved~ the 4-lf'en by
_. l[aii!J Coat.. - Kim Bickers.

E

5.75 per ·cent per year
paid on 90 day Certificates of Deposit.
$1.000.00 ·Minimum .
Interest
F'ayab.ie

Quarterly.

ex-

FACIAL TISSUES

---PU-FF 5.............................~.......

Freezer
is a Big .9.4 Cu.. Ft •
.

SAVE!

St~ck

Up On
Super Ma·rket Speciols
&amp; Garden Vegetables

Pom•fOY. Ohlt~

(!.~~'~
,. . . "'
'-~
'.. .

.CAKE MIX

• Side-By-Side Refrigerator Freeier Mode.l SR-25N
25,4 cu . It ~ 3514" wide - Free-O '.fro•t

18%

COKE ...............................................4 QUARTS '1 00

oz.

'

•

.

PAR KAY

CARNATION

• Refrigerator within ·
a refrigerator just
for fresh meat
• Exclus'lve Convertl- ·
_ ~le Fresh FJ uit Bin
• · EXclusive Hi-HumldHy Compartment
• Amana Stor·Morfl ·
Refrigerator And
Freezer Doors
• Ama,a Power Saver Switch - energy
saver
• Amana Add-On Automa tic Ice Maker
(at e)Ctra cost)

~-MARGARIN E............
22

oz. $

09

'

PKGS.

..'

GRAPE

..'

FLOUR ................. 5 79~
LB.
BAG

3
$

e

1-LB.

MARTHA WHITE

WELCH'S

.

'

25-30 LBS.

1

.. . I

THE
SHOEBOX
'"Wh.ere Shoe• Are STILL S•ntlblr Priced''
·

FOR

HOT DOG SAUCE .................:.........................4 11 Ol $1

DRINK
:noz. $100

!

·----------------------~
Prlc•• Your Pocbfboo/4 Will Lore!
MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

•

'

• Two Automatic Cold
Contro ls - one In
r freezer and one in
refrigerator

*Women's . ..
CLOGS - SANDALS- DRESS
SANDALS ·:.._ SPEO ATORS - OXFORDS
MEN'S WORK SHOES &amp;
HUSH PUPPIES TIES &amp; SLIPONS

·

$

vtml

_Clearance of-Summer Shoes

: WHITE .SHOE CLEARANCE!
Tho Athens Couoty
Savjntt &amp; Lo•n Co:
2'6 Second St.

.

BISCUITS...............

DUNCAN HINES

25

CASH

WOMEN'.S MISS AMERICA
.

COUNT

Tl SSU E........................................~. ~~~--~-~~~: .......

&amp;

:I

3

•

200

.
3

WHITE . CLOUD

sAlES
FINAL .

··------.~------- - --~- --- .-

LB. $

•••••••••••••••••••••

ALL '

*

c

39

GAL.

BARBS

Certificates

Dyer. '

STEAK

PIUSBURY

•

COLUMBUS ~ Over 19,000
checks and educational entitle.ments toialing nearly
$8,000,000 were mailed last
Friday, according to John W.
Bush, Director of the Ohio

CHICKEN
L.IVERS
LB.

5.75%

~tty

____,.

LB.

$8 million mailed
for vets' bonuses

ceptionally, and td handle the
output all key staff personnel
were stuffing envelopes for
mailing, and even his wife and
sister helped as volunteers.
Vietnam Veterans .. Bonus
"We hope to have all sections
Commission.
of our program synchronized
"That was the day we began and our backlog caught up this
to put it all together," Bush week," Bush said, "so that
said. "With new help in our after next Friday's check
assembly-line
type
of production, we should be able
By PHIL PASTORET . operation, which generally -to project our weekly output
moves [rom Claims Examining with no Problem.''
If there were less taxes, you and Auditing·, to ' Residency
Bush said that . the com.
could afford more taxis.
Checking, to the Cash Bonus or mission haS received -ap_H ome·made Jam is what Educailonal
Assis tance proJtimately 235,000 ap·you get into when you give ·Department, then to Data plications and since the first
the frau th·e wrong alibi.
Processing and Check Writing, bonus payment wiis made June
some elements naturally tend ·1, about 54,000 checks and
to speed up or drop _behind educational entitlements,
occasionally."
totalin'g over $21,000,000, have
Director · B'ush stated , been written.
however, that last week all

the Jackion County Fair. Denise Dean gave a dmonstration on
An artist is an oddball until
the proper procedure of al!&amp;ching an ear- \ag,- Refreshments,
he oegi11s to sell~ then he's a
oetved by Denise Dean, and recreation wete enjoyed by all. The
Charming eccentric. ·
next meeting Is ICheduled Ali gust 3 at the Mark and Mary Mora
Simile: as smooth as a
home. - Mary Mora.
. used-car salesman.
THE MEMBERS of the Meigs County Shepherds 4-H Club
met July 18 at the Rock Springs .Fairgrounds. Arrangements for
making a fair boOth, Instruction on proper lamb grooming, and a
dl.lcuulon on the type of scales to be uSed at the fatr were among
the IOfllca of club ~uslness. Julia Johnson served refreshments.
'
Our Interest Is
Thona:t meeting Is scheduled August 12 at the Fairgrounds. Greater For You
Dan Dalley.
'
· THE IDLLBII..'LIES 4-H Club met July 19 at the Colwell
raldence. Judging procedures, completion of club projects and
1I8Uil club business wore among items on the agenda. A lesson
mille prepara~ of scrambled egp _was given by Mary Colwell. :
n.o monibers went on a hike and refreshments were served by
On 90'-Day
the ~Gh!ellt. The next meeting Is scheduled July 24 at the
Rulland Methodist CIJUrch where . judging wiU .take place. ~

"I've Mid It apln and
again," tem.rked !Up. J(lhn
Galbraith, R·Maumee. "For
every 1,000 bad Iandlotda, you
hllve have 1,000 bad tenanta."
The rejected probate reform
me.euro, ~nt to a· oommlttee
for further work, would have
streamlined the procedure• lor
admlni8terlntl an ellate and
speeded the proceu for awardins Inheritance•, especially
when no will was left.
!Up. Arthur WUkowakl, [).
Toledo, prodded the bW out of
the conference c&lt;mmiUee llote
TuesdaY afternoon, but lhe
measure went down lo defeat
in the Senaie by one vote.
The House and Senate adjourned until Sept. 10, when lhe
chambers wUl begin ltlOilthly
clean-up aesslons.

However, the bill does, re-

-- ------------------------~I

I

university property from the
rent withholding oectlon, and a
rewording of language so that
tenants with month-to-montb
leases may not be protected
· from retaliatory evlctioo.
Next year, Stlnzlano said he
plans to sulmlt legislation tAl
create special housing courts
to handle rent withhohllng
cases and another blll to fund
hou$1g inspectors. ·
Under the c.urrent pr&lt;lposal,
municipal courts would handle
rent withholding cases, deduct·
ing costs from the rent and
making necessary mortgage
payments for the landlord.
Opponents of the measure
JX'edict it will drive lnveslora
out of the middle-income rental
market and claim it Is weighed
in favor of the tenant.

Van Meter said, despite denials
by Senate leaders the confet1'&lt;'$
did not act under duress.
The last-minute trouble with
the edurational subsidy section
developed
when
Rep.
Frederick Young, O.DIIyton,
insisted conferees insert
language guaranteeing the
Cincinn~li school district
$700,000 in state aid.
Cincinnati, faced with a
declining enrollment, could
have lost $10 per pupil because
of the municipal overburden
formula .
.
After Young's success with
his demand, other lawmakers .
tried to persuade conferees to
extend municipal overburdens
to nine mid-aize city IIChool districts at a rate of $32.50 per
pupil. The attempt failed,

.

EACH

Ingels Furniture
"

ES ..................... ~.. ~-~~:.. ~~~...!. 100

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHT
992·2635 MIDDUPORT

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11-Tho Daily Smtinol, Middleport·POOJeroy,O., Wedfl&lt;'S&lt;iay, July %4, um

Agreements obtained On money, landlord hills
By KIT A SHADE
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio General Aasembly Tues·
day, after a series ()f caucuses,
~&amp;reed 1o conference com·
mlllee reporis for a $123.8
million supplemental ap·
proJX'Iations bUl and landmark
landlord-tenant legislation.
A third joint committee
report on probate relorin was
approved in the House but
failed to garner enough votes
for passage in the Senate.
.The spending plan, which
now g&lt;&gt;es to Gov. John J.
Gllllgan for signature, was
hammered out of the con-

'·

ference committee in time for

Tuesday's fioor session despite
attempts to
rearrange
educational appropriations.
Sen. Oliver Ocasek, [).Akron,
called the proposal a "peoples
bill" because of provisions for
tax relief, educational subsidies, pay raises for state
employes and pension benefits.
Dissentin g lawmaker s ,

mostly Republicans, said the
bill presented only token tax
relief,
re-enforced
the
philosophy of "spend, spend,
spend," and paved the way

toward annual budl!etlng.
employes.
NotAilAgrt't'
-$5 million is disaster relief
"Of course not everybody to tornado-stritken southagrees . with the bill," 5aid • western Ohio.
Ocasek after the 26-4 Senate
~2.1 million to provide
vote and 87-4 House approval. transportation for the trainable
·•But the ~iUs in the House and mentally retarded · and $2
Senate •·ere so different that million in mass transit subrecon ~ ilia tio n ... on every sidies for the elderly.
polnt... was not the easiest
--$800,000 to the school for
thin• to do."
the blind, most of it to finance
The bill, fi nanced by 180.S construction of a swinuning
$80.5 million in surplus funds pool.
and anticijl'ated lottery
proceeds provides:
~14.9 mUlion to. finance the
Vietnam bonus plan.
~million in pay raises fcir
state employes, ranging from
10 to . 30 cents an hour,
depending on current. salary
level.
-$45 million in additional
state assistance to schools,
amatmling to an extra $20 per
pupil.
~10. 5million in tax relief by
increasing exemptions on the
state Income tax to $650 for
each dependant.
~12.5 million to build VOCa·
tional-education complexes.
~$5 . 5 million ·in pension
benefits for retired state

-$50,000 to move a "litUe red swimming pool for the ochool

IIChool house" !rum Huron
County to Browllng Green
Slate university for use as a
museum.
" Its Christmas in July,"
criticized Sen. Thomu Van
Meter, R-Ashland.
"Santa Claus, Gilligan and
his six helpers (conferees) providins gifts for everyone ... a
little red school house (for
someone) to meditate ln~o a

for the blind."
Strike Pressure

Van Meter called the la.l
relief symbolic and said the
entire 180.5 In sw-plus funds
should be returned to tax•
payers. He said he also resent·
ed the confereea submitting to
the pressure of striking state
employes and granli!&gt;ll the pay
hikes.
. "This sets a very dangerous
precedence . for the . future~ ~)

I

'on are welromed. They should be less
than 300 wtvds h 1g (or be subject tQ reduction by the .

Letters of o•

·I ·
I

edJtor) a1.1d mus1 be signed with the signf!e's address.
Names n:ay be \o\ Jthheld upon publicatioft., However; on
i'equest, namt'S will be disclosed. Letters should be in good

:

I

1

tastf&gt;', addressiug iss~u es, not personalities.

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EARTHQUAKE'S AFTERMATH ~)low natives describe this San Francisco apartment
house but that i.Sn 't the case at all. While some tenants complain the building "looks like
Dracula's castle'' or was'attacked by a group of Ollnese calligraphers practicing their art, it is
really the end result of Mother Nature. Windswept and ravaged by rain and sun, the building
developed thousands of tiny cracks and fissures. The building owner had the cracks covered
with rubber sealant thus crealing the "cra~ked egg" motil. Owners say the structure will be
painted but some tenants have indicated they'd like the building to stay as it is since it's such a
great conversation pieee.

I

Only God is called. reverend

)
J

July 22, 1974
Dear Sir:
I sln~rely appreciate the article concerning my nearing
departure from the Pomeroy area and the party in our honor at
Ravenswood, which appeared in the Sentinel on Friday, July 19,
1974. I .must make one correction to the article heading which
was supplied by the paper.
I am not, or haVe I ever been a 11 Pastor" of this churCh or of
any churc)l. I suspect the heading was supplied in the fashion it
was as a result of the common and erroneous application made of
the term and the office by most denominations today in our town
and aU ovet the world.
·
.'Jbe .term,· ''pastor;'' as well as "elde"r," "bishop,." "&amp;hep..
herd:' Is a tenn uSed in the New Testmanent to apply to those
nien who are overseers of a local congregation of sain\s. Their
authority Is restricted to the local Congregation, and in every
instance Where they are referred to in the New Testament, we
find each church which had "Bishops, Elders, Pastors " had a
plurality of them. Never were the saints of God overseen by ONE
man. There are congregations of people In the town of Pomeroy
which have an unscrlptural. arrangement whereby one man Is
"Pastor" and he does in fact oversee the work of those churches,
but not according to the Bible pattern.
F'llrther, the prerequisite quiillficatlons for holding the office
of "Pastor" o~ "Elder" or "Bishop" (they all refer to Ute same
office In the New Testament) are very clearly stated by our Lord,
· throUgh the revelatlo" of the Holy Spirit at the hand of the
Apostle Paul, in I Timothy 3:1"7, and Titus 1:6-9, and they are :
Blameless, Husband of one wife (eliminates women elders),
Vigilant, Sober, Of Good Behavior, Given to Hospitality, Apt to
Teach, -Not Given to Wine, No Striker, Not Greedy of Filthy
· Lucre, Patient, Not a Brawler, Not Covetous, Rules Well His Own
House, Children in Subjection (eliminates bac:.elors), Not a
Novice (ellnilnates young men), and Of Good Report of Them
Which are Without.
Any man who does not meet aU of these quatlf(cations cannot
be a upastor." There are "pastors" which serve in that capaicty
that do not have wives, or children, and thus are not quatlfied. A1J
· the article:stated, I am an el(angelist, a preacher, and not a
,·' pastor,. nor am I 11reverend," for only .God' is called
•'feverenc;i." (Psffi. lll :9).
. Loren T. Stephens, evangelist.
,

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Meigs 4-H Club News
The Melga County Dairy Better Uvestock Club met July 17 at
the Denise Dean residence. Discussions inclu,ded donations ·ror
the dairy sweepstakes, the next meeting date, and a club trip 10

Canoes, kyaks will compete
DAYTON, Ohio - Competi·
live canoeists and kayak fans
wUl converge on Salt for state
park in mid·Angust from aU
over the U.S.; Canada· and
Mexico for the 1974 National
Canoe and Kayak champion·
'ships and the North American
Canoe and Kayak Regatta.
A total of 69 events wUl be
conducted during the three-day
nationals, scheduled for Aug.
16-18 on the park's 2,95~cre
lake. The weekend will mark
the first time the pre&lt;lelected
US. canoe and kayak teani wUl
be competing as a unit in
natiOnal competition. The team
was chosen earlier in the year
by the U.S. Olympic committee
to represent the U.S. in international competition and is
subject to challenges·by other
American teams.
'lb., Nortli : American cham·
pionshipa wUl pit the beat
paddlers from .the U.S.,
Canada and Mexico against
each other in Mexico City next

October. The North American bathing beach where . visitors
coml&gt;etition begins at 1:30 p.m. ean watch the action.
. Aug . 24, and from 9 a.m. untU
Campers interested in
noon the following day.
staying overnight in the park's
The nationals' preliminary campground should contact
heats start at 8 a.m. Aug. 16. A Ticktron, Inc. at local Sears
formal opening of events is set . stores for prior campsite
for 11:30 a.m. the same date, reservations. Early reser. ·followed by finals in 21 events. vations are recommended.
11ie public will he admitted
Salt Fork staie Park is lo-.
to both North American and . cated five miles northeast of
National events at no charge. Cambridge 'in Guernsey
The finish line for·all heats wUl County, near the intersection o(
he located near the lake's 1·70 and 1-77.

•••
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298 SECOND ST•
POMEROY, OHIO,

•• .. l f

!1 1"111

.,

':;r.J J ~I

.... .
:; ·.~ ·

hn •

9-11

l

CHOPS

..,,.,H.

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·PRICES EFFECTIVE

f ll 1 1

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"'''"''

"'"

RIGHTS RESERVED

THRU

JULY 27TH .

\tt ll.l

direct some $380,000 Into subsi,
dizing joint vocational·
education school districts by
stipulaling $15 of the S20 .in
additional aid be funneled into
the system.
The landlord-tenant bill
accepted by both chambers
virtually was the same version
approved earlier by the House.
The measure prohibits
retaliatory evictions, regulates
security deposits, provides for
rent withholding and, for the
first time, defines the rights
and responsibilities of both
parties.
The bUl also pre-empts local
landlord-tenant ordinances and
dictates that no part of the
state proposal can be
bargained away in an
agreement between the two
parties.
"Oiallt step Forward"
"This is a giant step forward
in solving Ohio's housing JX'Oblems," said Rep. Michael Stinziano, sponsor of the original
legislation. "It Is very comprehensive !ll&lt;d I see no danger In
. pre,empting local statutes."
The only major changes by
the conferees, he said, included
an exemption of private

· sys tems

p~rformed

THE CHESTER FARM Boys met at the home of Gary
Nllllan·on July 10 with one advilor·and .ten members present.
Dllcuulona were held about the bottle cap collection, exhibit at
the lair, and a field trip to the Courthouse, Fire Station and
polllbly the jail house and the Royal Crown. BqtUing Plant.
~atlonl were given by· Todd Norion on home safety,
Jl'rtd Yoq on health, and Keith Krautter on )lirds of Ohio.
lllfrelhmentl......, aerved by Mtil. James Nelson, foUowed by
poup rtcre!dlon. The nu:t meetln~ wlll be August 2_at the h&lt;ine
II Keith Krlutlef. - Keith Wolfe.·
·
.
THE HOME OF Renae TruiiSel wu the meeting p)lice of the
BeahM llwlch +-H Club on July 10 .. Two advisors and eight
- " ' " were preaent whUe Reliae Trussel demonstrated how
111 lit a lillie. With refrellunents served to the membera by the
11N1111 a-decided that the next meeting would be July 17 at

Ill ltLJ Coatea home.

....._,were

· ·

.

ullod to bring their sewing projects. The
-•10M • Gl the Be.,.., Bunch, held at Barbara Coates' has
.......... aDd - ldvt.' ....-nt. It was noted that the
... JMII'II would be JuiJ •· TIMre was also a dllculsion about
pw fUll trip. DelaaMtratlona on -'ng and brMd
-tt-l· Refreahmenta were ser:ved~ the 4-lf'en by
_. l[aii!J Coat.. - Kim Bickers.

E

5.75 per ·cent per year
paid on 90 day Certificates of Deposit.
$1.000.00 ·Minimum .
Interest
F'ayab.ie

Quarterly.

ex-

FACIAL TISSUES

---PU-FF 5.............................~.......

Freezer
is a Big .9.4 Cu.. Ft •
.

SAVE!

St~ck

Up On
Super Ma·rket Speciols
&amp; Garden Vegetables

Pom•fOY. Ohlt~

(!.~~'~
,. . . "'
'-~
'.. .

.CAKE MIX

• Side-By-Side Refrigerator Freeier Mode.l SR-25N
25,4 cu . It ~ 3514" wide - Free-O '.fro•t

18%

COKE ...............................................4 QUARTS '1 00

oz.

'

•

.

PAR KAY

CARNATION

• Refrigerator within ·
a refrigerator just
for fresh meat
• Exclus'lve Convertl- ·
_ ~le Fresh FJ uit Bin
• · EXclusive Hi-HumldHy Compartment
• Amana Stor·Morfl ·
Refrigerator And
Freezer Doors
• Ama,a Power Saver Switch - energy
saver
• Amana Add-On Automa tic Ice Maker
(at e)Ctra cost)

~-MARGARIN E............
22

oz. $

09

'

PKGS.

..'

GRAPE

..'

FLOUR ................. 5 79~
LB.
BAG

3
$

e

1-LB.

MARTHA WHITE

WELCH'S

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25-30 LBS.

1

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THE
SHOEBOX
'"Wh.ere Shoe• Are STILL S•ntlblr Priced''
·

FOR

HOT DOG SAUCE .................:.........................4 11 Ol $1

DRINK
:noz. $100

!

·----------------------~
Prlc•• Your Pocbfboo/4 Will Lore!
MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

•

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• Two Automatic Cold
Contro ls - one In
r freezer and one in
refrigerator

*Women's . ..
CLOGS - SANDALS- DRESS
SANDALS ·:.._ SPEO ATORS - OXFORDS
MEN'S WORK SHOES &amp;
HUSH PUPPIES TIES &amp; SLIPONS

·

$

vtml

_Clearance of-Summer Shoes

: WHITE .SHOE CLEARANCE!
Tho Athens Couoty
Savjntt &amp; Lo•n Co:
2'6 Second St.

.

BISCUITS...............

DUNCAN HINES

25

CASH

WOMEN'.S MISS AMERICA
.

COUNT

Tl SSU E........................................~. ~~~--~-~~~: .......

&amp;

:I

3

•

200

.
3

WHITE . CLOUD

sAlES
FINAL .

··------.~------- - --~- --- .-

LB. $

•••••••••••••••••••••

ALL '

*

c

39

GAL.

BARBS

Certificates

Dyer. '

STEAK

PIUSBURY

•

COLUMBUS ~ Over 19,000
checks and educational entitle.ments toialing nearly
$8,000,000 were mailed last
Friday, according to John W.
Bush, Director of the Ohio

CHICKEN
L.IVERS
LB.

5.75%

~tty

____,.

LB.

$8 million mailed
for vets' bonuses

ceptionally, and td handle the
output all key staff personnel
were stuffing envelopes for
mailing, and even his wife and
sister helped as volunteers.
Vietnam Veterans .. Bonus
"We hope to have all sections
Commission.
of our program synchronized
"That was the day we began and our backlog caught up this
to put it all together," Bush week," Bush said, "so that
said. "With new help in our after next Friday's check
assembly-line
type
of production, we should be able
By PHIL PASTORET . operation, which generally -to project our weekly output
moves [rom Claims Examining with no Problem.''
If there were less taxes, you and Auditing·, to ' Residency
Bush said that . the com.
could afford more taxis.
Checking, to the Cash Bonus or mission haS received -ap_H ome·made Jam is what Educailonal
Assis tance proJtimately 235,000 ap·you get into when you give ·Department, then to Data plications and since the first
the frau th·e wrong alibi.
Processing and Check Writing, bonus payment wiis made June
some elements naturally tend ·1, about 54,000 checks and
to speed up or drop _behind educational entitlements,
occasionally."
totalin'g over $21,000,000, have
Director · B'ush stated , been written.
however, that last week all

the Jackion County Fair. Denise Dean gave a dmonstration on
An artist is an oddball until
the proper procedure of al!&amp;ching an ear- \ag,- Refreshments,
he oegi11s to sell~ then he's a
oetved by Denise Dean, and recreation wete enjoyed by all. The
Charming eccentric. ·
next meeting Is ICheduled Ali gust 3 at the Mark and Mary Mora
Simile: as smooth as a
home. - Mary Mora.
. used-car salesman.
THE MEMBERS of the Meigs County Shepherds 4-H Club
met July 18 at the Rock Springs .Fairgrounds. Arrangements for
making a fair boOth, Instruction on proper lamb grooming, and a
dl.lcuulon on the type of scales to be uSed at the fatr were among
the IOfllca of club ~uslness. Julia Johnson served refreshments.
'
Our Interest Is
Thona:t meeting Is scheduled August 12 at the Fairgrounds. Greater For You
Dan Dalley.
'
· THE IDLLBII..'LIES 4-H Club met July 19 at the Colwell
raldence. Judging procedures, completion of club projects and
1I8Uil club business wore among items on the agenda. A lesson
mille prepara~ of scrambled egp _was given by Mary Colwell. :
n.o monibers went on a hike and refreshments were served by
On 90'-Day
the ~Gh!ellt. The next meeting Is scheduled July 24 at the
Rulland Methodist CIJUrch where . judging wiU .take place. ~

"I've Mid It apln and
again," tem.rked !Up. J(lhn
Galbraith, R·Maumee. "For
every 1,000 bad Iandlotda, you
hllve have 1,000 bad tenanta."
The rejected probate reform
me.euro, ~nt to a· oommlttee
for further work, would have
streamlined the procedure• lor
admlni8terlntl an ellate and
speeded the proceu for awardins Inheritance•, especially
when no will was left.
!Up. Arthur WUkowakl, [).
Toledo, prodded the bW out of
the conference c&lt;mmiUee llote
TuesdaY afternoon, but lhe
measure went down lo defeat
in the Senaie by one vote.
The House and Senate adjourned until Sept. 10, when lhe
chambers wUl begin ltlOilthly
clean-up aesslons.

However, the bill does, re-

-- ------------------------~I

I

university property from the
rent withholding oectlon, and a
rewording of language so that
tenants with month-to-montb
leases may not be protected
· from retaliatory evlctioo.
Next year, Stlnzlano said he
plans to sulmlt legislation tAl
create special housing courts
to handle rent withhohllng
cases and another blll to fund
hou$1g inspectors. ·
Under the c.urrent pr&lt;lposal,
municipal courts would handle
rent withholding cases, deduct·
ing costs from the rent and
making necessary mortgage
payments for the landlord.
Opponents of the measure
JX'edict it will drive lnveslora
out of the middle-income rental
market and claim it Is weighed
in favor of the tenant.

Van Meter said, despite denials
by Senate leaders the confet1'&lt;'$
did not act under duress.
The last-minute trouble with
the edurational subsidy section
developed
when
Rep.
Frederick Young, O.DIIyton,
insisted conferees insert
language guaranteeing the
Cincinn~li school district
$700,000 in state aid.
Cincinnati, faced with a
declining enrollment, could
have lost $10 per pupil because
of the municipal overburden
formula .
.
After Young's success with
his demand, other lawmakers .
tried to persuade conferees to
extend municipal overburdens
to nine mid-aize city IIChool districts at a rate of $32.50 per
pupil. The attempt failed,

.

EACH

Ingels Furniture
"

ES ..................... ~.. ~-~~:.. ~~~...!. 100

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHT
992·2635 MIDDUPORT

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II- The DIIUy Sent mel Mtddlepol'\ Pomeroy , 0 , Wed.neodav , July 24 1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get
NotiCe
WILL

do

roofmo

ht&gt;allng

2 SIGNS

repa r

plumb ng and etec
tnco'lll work
Phon£' Char les
S nc-la lr 985 4121

Of

111 1tc

QUAUTY

AUCTION
Fr diiV ('vi!' '
q
Jut-y 26 bf'g nn ng at 7 p m
~ponsored

b'l' !Me Orange
Townsn p Volun eer F re
Dept
T upers P ia ns Oh c

0 reclly a cross Rt

Mit fro n

r..,ppers P ta ns Sc hool In!&gt; de
Jr
Kennedy s barn
One
65 OOU B tV lennoK f urnace
w th du c t s 55 000 overhead

furna ce seve r a beds 1 v nq
room su te T v qas range
(J bur 1er gas ranqe l rad QS
hot wat er heater g.:ts
baby

beds

b dby

heo;~tcrs

furn l ure

la mps chars lawn t urn l ure

storm doors floo r tamps
w 1dow s a d s&lt;:reens
ro
record

s nk

k erosen t

l antern
games
c oth r19 I re s a d f

t oys
s h3f\d

pl~yer

'

c rank forge ladder hoo k s
ron ng bo ard
fl Ood ligh t

ant.que 1CllS and oth er ten s
too nun erous to me 11 on
Au ct oneer
Sner dan s
Auct on
Se rv cc
Not
respons b e for ac e dents
7 21 51c
KOSCOT
KOSMET CS
&amp;
WIGS For a good I ne of
Cosme! cs fr endly se rv ce
a nd someone to ch at w 111
g ve me a rail He en Jane
Bro wn 992 ~11J
3 19 He
~~------

A TO Z Mart

-----

usee I urn shed
appt ances cl o th ng d Shes
a nd m sc Rt 33 oppos te
Ira ler court Harford . W

Va

4

10 tfc

M E GS Coun ty Hu na ne Soc ely
Thr I Shop open 10 a m t 1
J 30 p m
every Fr day and
S r~ turday
Ne..., used s tocK
arr v l Q week ly Clo th ng
co lee ! b tes
a p p an c es
tr ea su res recor ds p cturcs
boo lo: s lam ps toys Loc aiE'd
a c ros s fr om Po ne roy Post
Ott ce
5 12 t fc

19740PEN MANTA
$2995
1 Ooor 4 s peed tran s bvck. ef sea ts ra d to Sold new 1n
April and less t h~1n 5 000 m1 les o ange l m sh with btk
m te r •or
1973CHEVROLET IMPALA
$389$
J Door lig ht g rn In sh green v my ll op used as Co ol
f cal car n eve r t itled b at of war r J nt)' loaded wdh
extras mcludang fa ctory alf rad•o &amp; tape w w ttres
guards &amp; all th e fin e accesso n es
1912 FORD GRAN TORI NO
S244S
301 V 8 e ng me au fomahc tra ns power steer ng like n e w
w w t res low m ileage b ljt v ny l lnte nor beautitul red
hn 1sh w1th blk vmyl top rad o wh co~o~e rs de lu xe
equt pment A sharp car

"'"Y'

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

Cilrd of Thanks

Not1ce

WE W SH o express our ha 1k!&gt;

and apprec a t on to t he
fr ends of our late unc;le
Albe rt W Hug h es A so o h e
Rawl ngs Coa t s
Funera
Home and Rev HerbHI
G rate tor the r hel p
Mrs George Hood Mr s
Raymond Freeman

lost
----------I W SH
exp r ess
he a rt f e lt L G H T
to

my

t ha nK s t or t he help a nd
sy mpa thy a t th e t me of d ea n
o f n y husban d
Er nes t
La lla n ce To the Doc tors a nd
Nur ses a t Holze r Med ca l
Cen ter l he Loyal Wome n s
Class ne g hbors the ca ll s
car ds a nd fl owe rs lo Rev
Geo r ge Gaze
R a w! n gs
Co al s Fune ra l Home May
God b ess each one Mrs
E rn es t La lan ce
1 '2 4 lf p

Not1ce

_____

...__~---~-

Wanted To Buy

PUBLIC NOTICE
Brown Pasteboard Sheet
Sealed b ds w 11 be r ec e ved
Iron
Refngerators Hot
by the Me gs Local :, choo l
Water Tanks Auto bod1es
D str ct Board of Educat on at
w1thout motors Scrap Iron
th e r off ce •n the Me gs Jun or
Cast Iron Copper Brass
High School Bu ld •n g South
Th rd Avenue M ddleport
Alummum Auto Batfenes
Oh o far sc hool bus t res unt l
Auto Rad1ators Sell to
12 00 o cl o c k noon Easte r n
Da y ligh t Sav ng T m e on
August 12 197.11 ai wh ch I me
the b ds Will be opened TMe t re
.b ds are far schoo l bus t res 10
be pur c hased for a per od of one
year to e .. te d unt 1 J ul y 25
Athens Ohio We close each
1975
Frtday at noon for balance of
The b d pri ce 1s to 1nct ude the
week
pr ce of demount ng the old I re
and mount ng lh e new or
recapped t re on the t re wheel s
nm and the atta ch ng of the JUNK AUTO S comp e te and
comb ned t1re and r m on to the
de l vered to our yard we
buss whee l
p c kup auto bod es and bu y all
Spec f ca t•om and b d sheet
k nds of scrap m e tal s and
form s may be rece ved by
ron R der s Sa lvag e Slal e
calling 992 5650 or fr om the
R l 124 R I 4 Pomer oy Oh o
clerk s off ce
Phone 99 2 5.t68
Th e Me gs Local Sch-ool
6 26 26tp
Dlst.rtc t Board at Ed ucat on
reserves th e r ght to reJe ct any
and all b1dS
CASH paid for all ma1&lt;es and
models of moblle homes
Me gs Local
Phone area code 61d 42 3 953 1
Schoo l 0 stnct
4 13 tfc

The Rosenberg Co

(1)

YARD SALE
nclude s old
a 11 que d shes on Bash;m
Road 1ear Ei'lg c R dqe
Chur c h
7 22 31c

7 2-1 li e

PUBLIC NOTICE
Seated b ds w II be re ce ved
by the Me gs Loc a Sc hoo l
D str ct Board of Edu cat on at
the• rOoff ce m the Me gs Ju n or WE HA VE a ll you r u ph olstery
H gh School
South Th rd
nee ds
Bu r a p
de n m
Avenue Midd leport Oh o lor
cam b r c foa m &gt;glu e z pp e rs
gasol ne and ant freez e fo r
ta c K ng s tr p spr n gs and
Schoo buses unt I 12 00 o c lock.
c l ps
c h pboard
buttot"'
Eastern Dayl ght Savmgs T me
tw n e se w ng thr ead le gs
on August 12 1974 at wh ch
u phol s tery book s da cr on
t me the b ds wilt be opened
webb ng spr ng tw ne tacks
The b ds are for gasotme and
welt cord cotton sw ve l
ant freeze wh ch will be for one
bases and foam foam toam
year to extend to July 25 1975
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
Two sepa rate b ds quotat ons
Man St
Pomeroy
Oh o
are requested as follows
Pnone 99 2 7554
Request No 1 - A regu lar
7 24 261 C
grade gasol ne
The gasoline bid n cJ udes the
furniSh ing of tanks and pumps I WIL L prose c ute anyone found
gu ty ot burn ng the ns de of
at f ve (5) storage plas;es The
my outs de to le t
TtH:'
pr ce quotat on s to nclude th e
property belongs to the State
turn shlng of an a r compressor
o f Oh o
Ern es t (R nk )
and a pressure g reas ng gun
Dav dso n
13 Eben e zer St
and other greas ng equ pment
Pomeroy
for the Bu s Ma ntenance
7 24 121p
Garage
Motor .o I quotat ons by quart YARD Sa e Today 1st road to
conta ners and by the drum
left on Rt 124 off Rt 7 Cal l
Please g ve brand name and
528 2
992
grade of o I m quo tat on 0 I to
7 24 31c
be 20 40 we ghl
-----------Request No 2 - Permanen t
anh freeze n gallon can s ze SWEEPER Rep a r Parts and
S upp es
Da v s Vacuum
containers
Plea se cert fy
Cleaner ? m le up Geo r ges
brand na me
Creek Road off State Rt No
The Me gs Loca l Sc hool
7 Phone 446 0294
D stnct reserves th e n ght to
7 24 He
ret e c t any and all b ds
70
Me gs Local GIGA NTIC Flea Marke
yard
sal
es
All
concen
tra
t
ed
Schoo l D stnct
at one pla ce 2 m e out Spring
Avenue ofl Rt 7 Man Sl
L W McComas
Pomeroy Oh o F ree ad
Clerk
m ss on plen ty of parkmg
(7) 10 l7 24 31 4tc
res trooms and refreshmen ts
Inside and out s de Contact
Fredd 1e Ttl abet 773 5651 after
5 p m every Satu rd ay and
Sunday Everyone welcome
PUBLIC NOTICE
7 1B tfc
Sealed b 'ds w II be re ce ved
by the V•llage of Syracuse at
YARD Sale at 870 Sout h Second
the off ce of th e Clerk. unt
St M ddleport Fro m 9 10 5
12 00 Noon August 1 1974 for
p m daly Lo ts of n ce tems
furn shlng one f re truck and
7 23 6t c
equ1pment accord ng to the
spec•f cat Qns on f te n sa•d
12 FAMILY yard s a te for a
off ce
c hurc h group from 10 30 to 3
Sepllrate b1d s a re sol c ted as
J ul y 26 and 27 610 Four th
follows
St r eet New Haven W Va
B ds for c;::Mss •s o n ly
7 23 4f C
B ds for F re Apparatus
only
B d sfo r Opt onal Equ pme nt YARD Sa le rest of week Come
see al l day long and e ven ng
only
At the res dcn ce of Howard
Each b d shall conta n the fu 1
Russell Wo lf Pen Road tust
name of each person f rm or
off Rt 143
corporal on nterested m same
7 23 4tc
and shall be accompan e d by
a Certified Ch ec k or B d Bond
n the amount of 5 pet of the $50 REWARD lor l'l'format on
teadmg to th e arres t and
total b d and be drawn n favor
conv c t on of Ihe person or
of tt'le V•llage of Syrac use Oh o
person s who s tole a hood off a
All Bid envelopes shall be
1Y66
Plymo u th
fr o m
pta nly marked
B d tor
R 1vers 1d e Auto Wre c k. ng
Chass s or B d for F re Ap
Wes t Co umb a W Va Phon e
-paratus or B1d for Opt1onal
773 5890
Equ pment
7 23 Jtc
The Vfltage of Sy r ac us.e
reserves t,IH! n ght to re tec t any
or a ll b ds and tn SP iec t the best YARD Sa le 829 South Th rd
b•d for th e purpose
Avenue M ddleport Oh•o
By Order of th e v llage
Monday th rough Thursday
Council
7 21 At e
Kathryn H Crovy
Cle rk
(7) 10 17 24 3tc

L W McComas
Clerk
10 17 24 31 4t C

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

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

OLD fur.n.ture oak table~
c locks Ice bo)l.es brnss beds
d•shes desks or compete
households Wr t e M D
Miller R I 4 Pom erov Oh o
call 992 7760
5 13 tiC

BR OW N b !fo ld n
Kroge r park ng lo t P ho ne
773 59 15
Ro n a ld Roush
Rf.&gt; wa rd
7 n 31c

Employment Wanted
W L L d o b aby s 11 ng tor
work n g no lh e r s n my homP
Phon e 99 2 6865 "or 992 5669
236tc

Bus1ness Opportumhes

CAN YOU WORK
WITHOUT SUPERVISION?
We need man or woman to
sell full I ne of Advert1stng
Spectalt•es Calendars and
Gtfts tn the Pomeroy area
Must be able to plan own
ltme and work Wllh a
mmtmum of supervtston
All accounts are protected
Repeat orders are protected
H1gh Commtss•on s payable
when orders are passed for
credit
The Adverttstng Spectalty
Ltne ts the most extenstve 1n
the Industry Calendars are
manufactured at our Red
Oak plant
Wnte Bob McKenzte Sales
Manager The Thos
0
Murphy Company 110 So
Second Street Red Oak
Iowa 51566

Help Wanted
Appliance serv1ce mao wtth
knowledqe of refrtgerat1on .
Vacation &amp; travel pay
Galha Refrtgerafton Co
Phone 446 4066

Re~'f1ts!
For Sale
A ~ E pic k ng up a plltno In
vour- area and would 11ke
.some respon$ ble p.lrh to
trtke ovE'r p&amp;yme •HS Call
Cr ed1 t Manager (614 ) 17'1
5669 or wr te 260 a~t Ma n
S trr~"' Cl llllc othe Oh o &lt;l5601
4 7 tf c

WE

J.l,f(hi /\. IO N Al

'&lt;I

jJIInl

a qollct pt~y lhJ
prlc..cd rt'II'SOI b!v
Pi\rt 1 11 work
tutt 11 , •
arn nqo;. Pt OfH' 9&lt;~9 IMO'l
I 14 411,
v

vn

tHJ&lt;.,j

(

1 10 1

~

Mobde Homes For Sale
o~

11

11

M O O II

r

ho 11r 1
v mJ ro(HI
00 11 s c lr

bedroom O&lt;llh 1
rtn(f 1 bt (f
PtOI(' '19 '} IH!

fHII
UCI (t

Y ll

l

MO-b I('

I LIJI-!OOM
ll O 111 0 l
I or

n 1n lie

W 1d!&gt;or

flUe Of
'or e
n
1

q o HI
SI NGtR Automat c Z ig lag
tor nrt l on t.~l 991 J~18
Se w nq Ma c h ines ln ~e w l nq
} 1) 61C
labte Ma lo. cs bunonh otcs
sews on buttons bl nd hems 1964 [ LCONI\ 5S-.10 w lh I povt
etc Top 'otch condll on Pav
I. t r he&gt;•
&lt;t r1
1 v • ~ roo
\51 or te r ns ava table Pt o 1c
'S.1 HOO Pho c 10
ll1 5.t~8
997 1653
' 11 61(
7 16 lf c

EXCELSIOR Sat Works E
Man St Pome roy All k n ds
ot salt wa t er pelle ts wa t er
nug g e ts blo c k sa I a n d own
Oh 10 R ver Sa I Phon ef 992
3891
6 5 lf c

Aut&lt;1 Sales
197 1 TRtUMFJH 6onnev te 650
T qer qold 1 good con d ton
\875 Phone 992 3710
7 1tl 12tp
19 12 MG M I DG ET Convert b lc
qood co nd I on and tow
m te aq e Call 94Y 39,55
7 2J 6tc

PAt N I DAMAGE t97d Z g Zag
SEW IN G MACH NES STI LL
or g na car tons No at
ta chments 1ccded as our
con trols are bu It n Sews 1969 CHEVY Townsman s ta t on
waq on St 19~ qood cond 1f on
w lh 1 or 2 nee d les makes
f'J t 0 lC 992 76?0
but tonholes sew on bu ttons
5 14 11C
monograms and bl nd h em
S l rc h Fu l cash pr H;: e 1.38 50
VE GA
Hatchba c k
or budge t p a 1 ava Iab le 1971
Phone 99 7 265 3
Chcvro et J :; peed
42 000
1 tes 9 r een co lor And at so &lt;~
7 16 lf c
965 Ford 6 cyl ndc r eng e
also an au to ma t c trans
m iss on Phone I 1304 ) 882
SO LID
205?
VINYL S IDIN G
7 18 6tc
Produ ced fr o n a s pec al
v ny co n pou n d mad e by B
F Go od r ch a nd Monsa nt o 5
1 mes thi Cker tha n me tal
s d ng W H not d en t c h p
r ot rus t or
cra c k peel
cha k

1966 FO RD
lo n p c k up
r1utoma c
rr a c;; 11 ss o n
Good 1 r es Can per Spec at
Pho e Harold Brewe r Lo q
So l o 11 98 5 355
7 23 fc

FREE HOME ESTIMATES

Real Estate For Sale

.,.RO CERY bu sn es s for sale
Bu d ng for sa le or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo ntmen t
3 20 lie

HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS
4,000 BTU

'109.95
These s1zes also ava !able
5 000 6 000 B 000 10 000 and
12 000 BTU
POMEROY LANDMARK
•- Jack W Carsey Mgr
• A""d
Phone 992 2181
CANN N G tomatoes lor ~ a te
P ck your own S2 bu s h el Call
247 22 41
7 23 3t p
LIV NG room su te wh te
velv et cou c h w l h go ld vetv e
mal c h ng char s 2 la mp s an d
cent er p ece s •n c uded Ca I
991 3~ 81 or can be se en a 975
Map e Sl M ddleport Bes t
off er buys 1
7 23 5tc
195 3 F ERGU SON 30 new t rt' S
new p&lt;u nt n ew motor S I 500
Phone 9a5 3 ~94
7 23 St c
--~----.---~---

CLELAND
608 E
REALTY
MAIN
POMEROY

0

RUTLAND
AREA
- 60
acres
abou t
20
for
cu lt vat on or lovely bu 1l dmg
s 1tes P 2 story frame home
3 bedroom s bath ut I ty
s ome carpe t ng panel ng
and t le Garag e Barn and
other b\JIId ng 8 168 sq ft 2
water well s 1 gas we ll s
pond
AS K ING
J UST
$43 000 00
POMEROY - Ranch type
(modern ) 2 BR bath n ce
k tc h en lots of cab n ets
range &amp; oven large LR w th
f replace carpe t ed
fu ll
basement
w th
uhi ty
garage 51 5 000
BRADBURY 1 2 stor y
frame 4 BR bath d n ng R
lots of carpe t ng new FA gas
furnace do\Jble o t w th
trader
hookup
smal l
base m ent
w th
ut!l ty
$12 900
POMEROY
Bustness
room w th lots of park ng
and apartmen t over for
ncome has garage Th1 s JS
an excel len t buy A~k ng 1ust
$16 500 00
TIME NOW TO BUY AND
GET SETTLED BEFORE
SCHOOL STARTS CALL
TODAY FOR YOUR NEEDS
IN REAl ESTATE
992 2259 or 992 2568

For Rent

-----

_..___________

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

-.,.-------

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

___ ___ ______

DITCHING SERVLCE

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

•

~..
~

Free Est m a tes

742-5293

HOME
DECORATING

SE PTI C T A NK S
A R O B IC
SE WA G E
S Y S TEM S
CL EANED
REPA I RED
MI LL ER
S AN I TAT I ON
ST EWART OHIO PH 662

------r

C BRAD F ORD Auqoneer
Comolete Serv.ce
Phone 949 382 or 949 3161
Rae ne Oh o
Cr tt Bradford
5 1 tfc
0 DELL AI nement located
beh nd Rutland Grade School
complete front end serv ce
bra kes and tuneups wheels
ba a nced e lectronically Open
8 lo 8 da ly Call 7.t 2 3232 on
S unday for appt
7 16 tfc

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

S EW IN G MACHINES Repa r
se rv ce a II makes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Au thor zed S n~er Sa tes and
Serv ce We Sharpen Sc ssors
3 29 tfc

AUTOMOBIL E nsura n ce been
cancelled""
Lost
your
operat or s 1 cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc
CREMEAN S CO N CRETE
del ve r ed Monday t h ro ugh
Saturday and even ngs
Phone 446 1142
6 1J tfc

------ -

EXCAVAT ING rln7Pr tn.=~rl e r
and backhoe work
se pt•c
tanks nstalled dump tr uc ks
and lo boy s for h re w II ~au I
f II d rt top so I limesto ne
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffe rs day phone 992 7089
n gh t phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc
...____

_____ _

Real Estate For Sale

TEAFORD
V1rqd A TP.lforrl
BrokPI

Mt'ch,llllr Sllr·1·t
PomProy, Oh10 1)760
11(1

NEWLISTING -2 1evel lots tn
Syracuse 1 block off 124

I OION T
KNOWl'HAT
when area dealers
lh·om Kuht s Bargam Cente•rl
reta I pr ce then
you r e gett ng
I bare&gt; a n from us
EXTRA SPECIAL
Harvest Go ld 30 el&lt;!ctr;cl
range - 1 ke new
you me n! on th s
otherw se l
OTHER GOODIES
46
Broyh II P rem er s
Bra s I a walnut br eakfa s t
ch na w th glass and base
Now S169 95

NEW FURNITURE nc tude s
2 pc I v ng rooms n nylon
herculon velvet v nyl and
Sco tc hgar d cotto ns from
$199 maple 3 pc table set
S34 95 3 pc m aple f n1sh
bedroom $132 50 4 drawer
maple ches ts $30 pat ch &amp;
floral sw1ve1 rockers from
$69 95 v nyl r ecli ne r s (re~
S70 $45 ( •f you men! on th s
ad - thru July or wh le
supplv las ts )

NEW LISTING - 1 ca mp ng
tra ler Bx25 gas heat operates
on AC or DC and a new moon
12x60 w th cen tr a l a r J
bedrooms washer dryer and
ut I ty bu•ldmg
NEW LISTING home
c losets master has
room lSxJO Nat
f\Jrnace Garage
shop
b~droom

Modern 3
all la rge
two L v ng
gas
FA
w th n1ce

MAJOR APPLIANCES (all
w fh money back guaran
eesl Electr c 8. gas ranges
refr gerators
(a
great
selechon now - some frost
fre e)
auto &amp; wr nger
washers dryers
USED FURNITURE - We
have lt 1 Also many s mall
a ppl iances
TV s
phonog raphs
reel ta pe
playe rs { 1 casse tt phono
I ke new by Co lumba made
for the langua ge student)
Oster coo l m st hum d f er
handm1 xer
ha.r dryer
"'"'"· ·skit le t toasler bro fer
I
ron s and elect

COUNTRY HOME - Modern 2
bedroom home cook and bake
un t s F ull basement w 1h
garage
MONEY WORTHLESS THEN
BUY REAL ESTATE IT HAS
BEEN GOING UP FOR
YEARS
LOOK
WHAT
OTHERS HAVE DONE
Olf•u•??; 311~

HF I IN L TEAFORI)
'i? :) /

! iii

KUHL'S

GOh&gt;DONR T[f,FOf.?[)
&lt;J?]

J61'J

A')50CIA Tf&lt;.,

BARGAIN CENTER

THREE homes n Rutland 2
new Phone 742 62 54
" 7 216tr;:

-------------3 BEDR OOM hou se wall to wa l t
carp e t n ~ lar ge k lc hen and
ba th ut Il ly room •;4 a cre
a l um num s d ng
s torm
w ndows
s torage bu ld lng
Phon e
74 2 460
Own er
mo v in g to Flor ida
wJ II
sa cr 1f ce for qui c k s a te
7 21 61 1:;

Arnold Gral.t

HI

1

luppl'r~ f'lolltl'• ,

I

0

Pr ice ncludes lns1o311atlon
and free padding Talk to
G rat e
car pet
Wende ll
Consultant
- We hav e hundreds of
ca rpet values Yovr lob can
be compl e te d In 1 to 2 weeks
No long waiting period

Perma Pl'en
Milly tag

SPECI ALl

I ~oil Condy Slrlpo wh~
rubber b•ck 3 99 s.q yd
N1te for bedroom• dtns

kttcl'lens etc

11I· I
I

~----~--------------~----~------~------_u

'

T\W'. OH 11 '.1111

•7.95 Sq Yd

A9lt~tor

1&lt;u11ana

&lt;.i 7.

( C lov•d Mo11d.1 y ·,

REGULARS9 9S

81g Capacl.ty
Maytag
AutomatiC S
2 speed operat1on
rholce o f Wl'ler
temps Avto water
le ... el cont rol Lint
FIller or Power F tn

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Op•·ll

CARPOING
501 NYLON

~--'--~---- ---

Halo of Heat
Dryer s
Surround
c lothe!
with gen tl e even
hUt No tliJ f spots
no O\lel'drytng F ltie
Mesh Lin t Filter
We Spec:i•llze In
MAYTAG
Red Carpet
Service

•

behmd Rvtland Grad e Sc hool
comp le te front and tuneup
and brake serv ce Pho11e 742'J
3232 Open 8 to 8 dally Su.ti
days by appt only
7 14 tk
JOBS contract ed P hone 742
3074 or wr te Box 23 Langs
vlleOho

7 23 26ft

GREAT
COUNTRY

WIN AT BRIDGE

•

South can handle East's lead

STEREO

Walnut trad tonally
cupboard w th ~~~\il
g~~':,., top door
a s1
l
- S99 7 8 9 pc I ng
rrn
te s cr afted In wood
tno modern plaSt iCS) pecan
walnut oak maple from
S125

')r

•

DELLAiinem;n-; -j~-~te('J

------ - - - - DOZER work land clear ng

by
the acre hourly or contra ct
farm pond s ro ad s e tc Large
dozer a n d operator w th over
20 years exper~ence Pull ns
E I&lt;Ca vat ng Porn eroy Oh o
Phone Y92 2478
12 19 tfc

0

WILL tr •m or cut trees a n d
shrubbery Also clean oUt
basements all cs etc Phone
949 3221 or 742 4441
' t&gt;r
7 14 26tc
0

RUTLAND

FURNITURE
741 4211

Rullond 0

92.1
WMPO-FM
Mtddleport Pomeroy

"

••

SERVICE!
READY NOW!
••

Luxurtous new 2 000 sq ft:
b level w1th .4 bedrooms 2
baths huge paneled famtly
room and double car garage
Ideally located on large 1 /4
acre wooded lot n exclusive
Riggscrest Manor
1usf
South of Tuppers Pia n:t.
Redu ce d for tmmed atJ •
sale' Now $33 800
Don' '
mtss 1t t
...~

BEST LOCATION
FOR SCHOOLS
IN COUNTY•

'I C.o Do Without

Readers All
ll a tile swnmer doldrum&amp; So let s take a holiday from
heavy problems and Instead Hot ( as a group of us did at a r ecent
get-together) things we don t need any more of hke
The cheerful Have a nice day t from a traffic cop who h as
just g 1ven you a ticket that wlll coot you lunch money for a
month
Ditto from tile supennarket clerk Its not her fault pnce s go
up each week but must she ask you to en)Oy them '
Paying 35 cents for a soft drink tlwt s four hfths1ce'
Watergate mania Sure, many are gmlly a purge was
needed but wtth the Kissinger Incident have we perhaPII ~tarte d
a witch hunt' I winder If history books may yet record the
summer of 74 as the second coming of McCarthy though w1th
a difference In McCarthytsm, government chopped down
writers (among others) and m Watergatlsm writers (amon g
others) appear bent on ch 0pplllg down government
Non-11pray111g spray cans'
Syrupy TV commercials repeated so often you want to throw
up
The big clwse scene In almost every good g uy bad buy show
Couldn t the crunlnal be ca ught just once Without reels of run
nlng through werrd bwld1ngs or minutes of wildly careemng

cars?
Hard French rolls m restaurants' That make you look like
Henry VDI gnawmg a bone - even when you break them m
small p1eces ( tf you can )
Clerks who c all you Young lady - when you obvmusly

aren't
Direct-maU over-50' ads Whose busmess 1s 1t 1f I

m gettmg

on'
Telephone salespeople who start Congratulations You re
one of a selected few myour area lo be offered.
Hoher41wn-thou types who yell What's the world commg
to' yet cheat m busmess deals and wouldn t help a bhnd man
across the street
Young people who accuse elders of polluting the coun try but
leave !herr rally halls littered Wlth trash Or call parents
prejudiced, 'but only mix With thelf own little crowd
Self-sealmg glue oottles Can t SOMEBODY mvent one that
won t clog up'
Comparues whose bills mclude wmdow-envelopes for your
return check Has anyone ever stuffed the bill m rtght the frrst
time around'
And finally, my cat who will only drmk water from the bath
tub, and oowls to get out when he 'sln , and m when he s out Survive a Marr iage 3 15 Episode Action 33 Donahue 4
.4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Huck &amp; Yo~
6 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Tattletales a Mov te Postman s
Knock 10
4 30 - Gilligan s Is 6 Green Acres 3 Bonan za 15 Jackpot 4
Vlrglntan 8 OanJel Boone 13
5 oo-Bonanza 3 Merv Gr fftn 4 Big Valley 6 Mr Rogers 20
33
S 30 - Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Elec Co 33 Hogans He roes 13
Western Star Theater 15
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 ABC News 15 Truth or Conseq 6
Sesame S1 20 Lollas Yoga &amp; You 33
6 30 - NBC News 3 .t1 15 ABC News 6 CBS News B 10 Room
222 13 Flower Show 33
7 00- Truth or Conseq 3 Beallhe Clock 4 Whal s My L ne 8
News 6 10 Let s Make A Deal 13 Sports Desk 15 Eleclr c
Company 20 Man Builds Man Destroys 33
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 Wild Kingdom 10 Beat the Clock
13 Zoom 20 Dealers Choice 4 To Tell the Truth 6 Ozz1e s
Girls 8 To Be Announced 15 Music of the People33
8 00 - Mac Davis 3 • Evening a1 Pops 20 33 Kopykats a
Temperatures R1slng 6 13 Movie The Fall of the Roman
Emp~re 10

•

Someone n the group s aptlo
rub you the wrong way
SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22)
A clever maneuver you have
dev sed 10 lut lhe your a1ms
w1ll back fi re f you put It o lhe
tes l Keep everyth ng out m Ihe
open

SAGITTARIUS !Nov 23
Dee 21 I Don t lr y to se ll
ot hers on an 1dea you ve heard
about II rna y not work and
could ca use compt c ah ons
CAPRICORN ( Dec 22
Jan 19) In you r bus ness deal
ngs t woul (1 be tool sh to el
your guar d d own An unex
pe e ted co nd t on w II suddenly
g•ve your compe tito r the upper
hand
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
A fe w ll chosen word s ma y be
all It takes to at enate a n a ly
wo rlh hav ng Be cons de ale
of c ompan o ns
PISCES !Feb 20 Morch 20)
B e extra c a reful today lf work
ng w lh el e c tr c at tools or ne w
ga dgets !hat you re no t tam ar

Fo r Thursday July 25 HH4
ARIES (Mar ch 21 Apnl 19)
1, yo~:~ r-dcal nqs you 11 be con

Iron !I d b ~ o u who ha s more
t UihO tly 0 a s tro nger pos I 0
than you T JcUully bac k oH
TAURUS (Ap"t 20 May 20)
II m 1y 1rove w1ser 1 the long
un to e 1111 1 expu Is lo t)e fo rm
d ~e v ce lo you r:\ lhcr than
try ng to (lo I you self
GEMINI !May 21 June 20)
Do1 1 buck the odds at 1h s
lime t so meth 19 you e n
valved haS a poor c hance of
w n g d op I
CANCER !June 21 July 22)
You t~ rc 1 kety to open your
Du so ~ 11 1 oo w de and e t
mosl o l you I ouse ho1 d budge t
e::,c&lt;.'l c ) one b g b J st If you
clo you J rcgre I
LEO !July 23 Aug 22) II
yo\J re a II e too heads trong
and uny el d ng you II be hurt
mg you sell mo e than anyone
e se Loose n up a b I
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22)
Don 1 buy any th ng s g ht un
seen It you re mak ng a ma1o r
pu r ch~se
exam n e th e
me cha• d s e n pe son
LIBRA (Sep l 23 Oct 23)
Th s s not yo ur day for c lub o
organ zat ana ac 11 v t e s

w th

oo

someone .said 'Don t try Just pass it on someday when you
up and another person Is 'down ' " - M D

ACROSS
I Industrial
reg1on of
Europe
5 Ribter and
tokay
11 To be
( Lat )

INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY•
We spec •alt ze n new 3 unti
ran ch to rent Exceptional!¥
hi gh re turns growth and 1
protect on Call or w nte fol'
exac t de tail s
INTERBSTED
IN RENTING ..
Available soon New rancfC I
sty le apartments Large ~
bedroom living room ~11 ).l 1
&lt;'
bath carpellng an~
~ . t an ces
Ca ll or write
today
to

"

'

Goegletn

Fred B
General Contractor
GREAT
AMERICAN HOMES "
For more lnform•flon e~tl"
or wnte our Pomeroy offit..
m W SO&lt;;ond It Coli
l976 Thundoys 10 Ia 11
SOturdoyo t to tt Evonlngo

South

Pass

2•

Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass

If you can keep your eyes
qff the East and West cards
you w1ll see that you are m
(lie same spade game as
yesterday w1th exactly the
same cards and openmg lead
There IS one great d1f
ference You are playmg m
~he World s champ10nsh1p
agamst Belladonna and Gar
tozzo of Italy the best patr m
!the world
,You wm the dtamond lead,
draw trumps strtp the hand
Othearts JUSt as declarer dtd
yo;sterday and throw Gar
itozzo m w1th a dtamond
He takes hts two diamond
tncks JUSt as East d1d yester
day and sh1fts to the s1x of
~lubs
Agamst a good player you
j\'Quld play low and make
your contract 1f he has made
tl\e m1stake of leadmg the stx

~

We are a full service com
pany now building new
homes In Meigs County fro
$21 soo lo $100 ooo

East

The bidding has boon

24

w..t

North

Eatl

South

Pa81

2•

f'au

••

Pau
Pass

3•
'

••

call 7~2 ~4 or Cllf our 21i•
numbtt.t

,

1

Wh1l do you do now?
, A-llld rive dla.,.ndo Yo•
jo'ont lot moke .. mhlam try btll
yo.r porlner needt both mojor
kl"l• olnco ol&gt;vlouoly he

+utt

d - 1 I hstvo lhe ICO Of elubo

DOWN

I Inaugurate
(2 wds )

commwte

around
U Sapient
15 Mexican
tree

3 Mlchaelmas
datBy
4 Caddoan
Indian
5 Granular
6 Re
ad)ust
7 Likely

16 Recline
17 Intimidate
18 Augury
20 Once blue moon
(2 wds )
Zl Some
22 Agitate
23 Malay
archipelago
!Bland
26 Assault
(2 wds )
27 Encourage

8 Dearth
9 Iron
Curtain
country

Yesterday'a ADower
10 GleM
Miller
tn the
mov1es
16 Singer
Zavaroru
19 High strung
22 Maxim
23 Breastwork
24 Texas
City
25 Green or
stuffed

geslma

28 Obstruct
30 Prolonged
attack
31 The - at,
an Aching
Heart '
32 Poet
33 Principle
36 Not

unagmary
38 Krazy -

wrongdoing

July 25 1974
Th1s year o ffers exc •hng and
unexpected c hanges Don I lei
events s weep you off your
feet For best results thmk all
moves through carefully

accommodaUon

34 Lofty
mountain

l: n scra mbl ~ t hese four Jumbl e!,
o ne letter to eac h square to
form four ordmar-y word s

an
eyeful
39 Colleens
land
40 Get

..

~·; ·,':! ;-~~..,;·
~

:n Got

one's

I I

goat

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

I I

I

II

\I-'ELE1:S ~

II

L'{IN o

l
I I

rI I

Antw~r

FOCUS

PLACID

work

lt:

CRYPTOQUOTF.'l
MK

NYUWOK

QURKO

X)

CP

(AIM•ert to•orrow)

Jumbln BOOTH

to

AXYDLBAAX.
LONGFELLOW

PURPOSES&gt;

ENBAUT
Now arrance the circled !etten
n
to form the aurprlae anawer, aa
\
;:=====~=========~:=~~·=u~rr~•:•~::~bytheUKwecartoon
IL -~P~IInl:::lh::::eSU::::RPR&lt;.:::ISE::;A::::NSW::.::Eil:.:.:liln=--_JI

how

One letter simply stands lor another In lhio sample A II
used for the three L s X lor the two 0 s etc Single letten
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are aU
hints Each day the code tellers are different

FI&lt;:AME;ot:&gt; FO!':

I [)

Y r.ttr.rd• y s \

%6 Qu.adra -

28 Fell
29 SWider
30 Misdeed
31 Sleepmg

GO

JVUJ

JVK

MKKN
JPP

CYUQUJWOJ

JVK

PBWPB

-VKWBYWLV

MVP
LUB

VKWBK

Yesterday's Cryploquole A CHANGE IN THE WEATHER IS
ENOUGH TO RENEW THE WORLD AND OURSELVES.MARCEL PROUST
(@ 1914 Klnr Pe•tures Syndicate lne)

LOCALE

What the nreet peddler 1 merchandue
waa- SOLD "OUT'

60SHJ At.ID L &amp;.L.
&lt;SUR'E MMtS ALL OF
~OU WHEIJ cA~Y

AND! TAKE
OFF

1111 BORN LOSER

M?W'11'15 5
WHAT I CALL
mAVELING
IN eTYLE: I

•

AI LEY DOP

I SEEN LE ADiN
DOGS LIFE
EVER SINCE

43

In

CAPTAIN EASY
POP AN SAGV 5PL1N
GLOBE T~~E WHE~E
GO PIO:ETTY NUTSY

from 10 8 6 or Jack 8 8
Agamst Garrozzo th1s JUSt
hasn t happened He would be
sure to lead the e1ght !rom •
e1ther of those holdmgs
' Then what has he led from'
He 1s Garrozzo but you are
playm~ m the Worlds cham
p10nsh1p also and you see that
he must have led from 1ack·
ten· stx You play your mne
and make the contract
Why d1dn t Garrozzo lead
the !O' Because he was sure
tliat you would recogmze that
lalsecard lead play low and
(1nesse agamst h1s Jack on the
n~xt turn Suppose his lead
was top of nothing? lp that
~ase you were a dead btrd tn
any case
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASS/Il l

You South hOld
.AQ6st,AQU4+AK.2

"r

GASOLINE ALLEY

w~o

experiments
Latvian

2 Italian

,.

West North

U Hartebeeet.e
42 One

1Z Food
13 Lug

~WJWID!1J£ ;- tkot -...u.J ..-J ,_.

0

re

by THOMAS JOSEPH

35 Butt In

I ADECK

a

Friends and neighbors rallled round ave her locleln&amp;, t.ooll
up &lt;olledionsof clothtng and money, fed her weD - and lrilhln a
week the girl was her way back home, with an adequate warclrobe luggage and a Uttle extra c~ for emeraencles
How can I ever tlwnk you' she asked at the bull atop, 111d

.flTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

OWN YOUR
OWN LOT?
We Will bu ld your dream
house to fit your lot and your
pocketbook For a ftrst han(t
look at some beau ttful new
hom e plans call or wr te•

•••1

Answer Tomorrow

Us. • •

By II t'lt•n Bo lto·l

Dear Helen
Unm volvemcnt tTlllkes the headlmes more oftefl wt,
bciJcve me, c.1rmg is alive and welJm our neighborhood
A fncnd of ours s aw a young gu-1 weavmg on too hlgbwuy,
trymg 1o thumb a r id e He thought she was IU or doped and
stop ped to he lp Turns out she was hungry
She d com e tToss~ountry to marry a fellow who dwnped
he r she had no money , her parents wouldn t take her back but
slw to uld have a hom e with an aunt - if she could find 2 000 miles

of free tranoportatloo

Opemng lead -10+

Deluxe 3 bedroom,. 2 h ba1tl
fam ly room 2 car garag~ n·
Perfect location tn Rook
Spr ngs tust 1 h miles Norttr
of Pomero y between Meigs
High School and Sa h sburlf
Elem Drtve by and see foTU 1
yo urself'
'

Columbus

'

a l ways 1n tile tnlddl e of liM! night •
&amp;&gt; wha t s YOUH favorite Thm g you don t need any more
of • Jt sa good pa rlor gam e 1! you d on t get 1oo personal - H

East West vulnerable

SAVE 14,000

hour

TODAY S QUESTION
You b1d five diamonds Your
partner contmues to f1ve hearts
What do you do now'~

NORm
• J 863
• A93
• 783
.K75
WEST
EAST
• 92
• 74
'J62
.QI0875
+t0982
+KQJ
.A842
.JI06
soummJ
• AKQI05
• K4
+A 54
.Q93

'
"
·-=NEW=-::-:-:H=oM-=E~•. :

lnytlm• 1 llt

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
Country &amp; Western
Comed y
Superstar

THURSDAY JUL Y25 1974
6 00 - Sunrise Semi nar 4 Summer Semester 10
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30 - Bible Answers 8 News 6 Five Minu tes to Live By .4
Patterns for Li v ing 13 Sacred Heart 10
6 35- Coii,Jmbus Todny .4
6 -45 - Farmtlme 10 Morntng Report 3
7 00 - Today 3 • IS News 8 10 Olck Van Dyke 13 Make A
Wish 6
7 30- New Zoo Revue6 Tennessee Tuxedo 13
8 00 - Captain Kangaroo 8 Jeff s Collie 6 New Zoo Revue 13
Sesame St 33 Blastoff • 10
8 25- Jack LaLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6 Green Ac res 10
a 55 - News 13 Chuck White Reports 10
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue IS AM 3 Abbo113. Costello
8 Wild Wild West 6 Captain Kangaroo 10 Movie The
Music Man {cone I ) 3 Community of Living Things 33
9 30 - To Tell the Truth 3 I Love Lucy 8
9 35 - MaHer of Fact 33
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3 IS Jokers Wild 8 10 Company 6 An
llques 33
10 30 - Winning Slr~ak 3 4 15 Gambit 8 10 Wheels K Ins and
Clay 33
p 00 - PasswordJ Mike Douglas 6 High Rollers 3 .4 15 Nlw
You See lt8 10 Community ot Living Things 33
11 30 - Brady Bunch 13 Love of Llfe8 10 Hollywood Squares 3
4 IS
11 35 - Matler of Facl 33
11 ss - CBS News 8 Dan I mel s World 10
12 00 - Bob Braun s 50 so Club 4 News e 10 13 Password 6
Jackpo1 3 15 Mister Ro&lt;lers 33
12 JI)-Spllt Second 6 Search tor Tomrrow 8 10 Celebr lly
Sweepstakes 3 15 Afternoon with DJ 13 Electric Company
33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 No! For Women Only 15
Hazel8 ; What s My Line 10 Lets Grow A Garden 33
l 30 - AsfheWorldTurns8 10 JeopardyJ 4 15 LetsMakeA
Deal 6 13 Flower Show 33
2 00 - Days ol Our Loves 3 4 15 Guiding Llghl8 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13 Book Beat 33
2 30 - Doctors IS Girl In My Life 6 13 Edge of Night 8 10
Hollywood Television Theatre Doctors 3 4
.-3 00- Another World 15 3 4 General Hospital 6 13 Prtce 1s
• Righi 8 10
'3 30 --, Ooe Life to Live 6 13 New Match Game 8 10 How lo

..

located on lrd Street iit :
Racme Oh10
_ ;'
Hour s 9 6 Weekdays
9 9 Wee kends

PHONE 992-5476
FUk t-t.: Et: est mates nn
a urn num
replacement
w ndows s d ng s term doors
and w•ndows RaIng Phone
Charles L sle Syracuse Oh o
Car l
J a cob
Sa les
Representat ve
V
V
Johnson and Son 1nc
4 30 tfc

7&gt;'.10 p m s ~ lO p m 9 30 p m -

Arms trong Ltnoleum
Wall Paper
Vtnvl Wall Fabrtc
.,
Spectal 1 On Carpet Rem....,
nants Free Esttmates
··v

ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

cl eaned
~9 2 3954 or

R E ADY MIX
CONCRETE
d el v e r e d r g hl to your
p ro ee l Fa s t and easy Free
es t mat es Phon e 992 3284
Go e gl e n Ready M•x Co
M dd eport Oh o
6 JO tfc

For Sale

742 4211

tfc

•

WILl'S CARPET •
&amp; INTERIORS ·~:

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

10 23 He

---- ~ -

I 30 V'ies Scream Pretty Peggy 1J
The P ineon 4
Boboctulvarl 20 33
•
9 00 - Cannon 8 10 Hollywood Telev ision TheBfer Jl Movie
The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid 3 4 1s Joyce Chen s
China 20
•o 00 - Kojak 8 10 News 20 Doc: Elliott 6 13 Music of the
Peopl e 33
'
10 30 - Day at Nlghl 33
11 OO - News3 • 6 8 10 13 IS Janakl33
P 30 - Johnny Carson 3 .If 15 Mission Impossible 6 Un
touchable5 13 Movies S 0 5 Pacific 8
Knock On Any
Door 10
12 30 - WIId WlldWest6 WldeWorldSr.eclal 13
00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Take Fl ... e for Ll e 15
~ 00 News .4 13

:

Next to Htghway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

' 8 10 15 Room 222 13 ABC News 6 1 J our""y

!tron~4

All Small Appliances.
Lawn Mowers ' '

Now Open for Bus1ness

SE PT C TANK S c eancd
reas onab le r ~ t es P h 446
.t782 Ga I po t s Joh n Russell
owner and ope rator
5 12 lf c

S EPT IC TANK S
Modern San tat on
992 734Y

'

MANAGER

BOWERS
REPAIR

~Ja~~·3 ~

7 00 - l'olews6 10 WhaJ 1 My L ine 8 Tr~th or Cons J Beat th~
Clock • Elec Co 20 J immy Deam 13 1 Spy 15 zoom 31
1 30- To Tell the Truth 6; Sale at the Century a BNt the Clock
13; Pollee Surgeon 3 Anllques 20 Eplso&lt;l• Acllon 33 0o lh
Money ' The Judge 10
e
8 00 - The Cowboys 6 13 Chast 3 1S Tony Orlando Dawn a
10 Consumer Game 20 Unto the Hills 33 Garner Ted Arm

'

BENNY BRANHAM

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY

• Lawn Boy
• Tec\Jmse h
• Kohle r
• w sconsln
• All o th e r
ma kes

4

6

E MAIN ST R EET
POMEROY
Ill 95
- Wash&amp; War.
9 so
- Lube Oil Filler
16
f$ 0
- Tvf\e Up

vour
lea)l;•ng?
Co npare our pr ices 10 any
others We il g ve you a
pro tess onal roof lo r less
Ca II 992 69Sl For
E s.t1ma1 cs of Any T ype

Moved to Rutl and 3 ... m I~
ms de c tv I m t on nght
co rn er B ~r ck Sl a nd Rf 12A

10

•

l!i.

Wtlkmson Small Eng me
992 3092
Pomeroy 0
399 W Ma n
Lout ed at Mod e rn Supply
S m1111 E ng1n e Repilllr

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

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

\

w.'"''-""H
·w~~.,""e
-"""l=e
""A&lt;')n
"""'"'"'"' ,H.•"'" elp

WE ON£5 DAY JU~ y 24 lt7&lt;
6 00 - Newo J A 8 10 lJ AB C Nows IJ Sosame 51 20 Ca l h
33 Jl Truth or Cons 6
c

•

See or Ca II
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
Nlght992 3525
or 992 5232

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

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

Rout ~ 1

('!i.hlled

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

•

WILSON'S
PENNZOIL

Witt e r Ltn es atld Pow er
Lmus All work done by thQfoot or coutrrtd Al so dozer
wo• k and seplt c tank s m

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

--..o:....------------1.

K&amp;H ROOFING

The DIUy Stntlnel Mlddl•port POitW"oy, 0, Wednesday, July 24 1974

. Television Log

Business Services

~--

1950 F ERGU SO N 20
new
eng ne Phon e 98 5 3594 In
good cond I on and pr ced a
NEED someone to ca re for 2
s 1 000
ch•ldr en schoo l age L ve n f
7 23 Stc
poss ble 5 day s a week Work
1674
wh1le mother works
L nco n Hgt s Ca at 992 288 1 GREE N beans g een p e pper s
even n gs
cucumbe r s
tomatoes
7 21 5t c
Cle land Farms Gerald ne
Clc and Ra e n e Oh o
7 17 He
$150 WEEK nd1v dual nee d ed
car necessa ry ca 1 99 2 2046
7 22 3tc
S E - S xroomsandbath]
REDUCE sa fe a nd fa s t w th HOU
b
e
droom
s
w a 1 to wall
GoBese Tab le ts &amp; E Vap
carpet Larg e yard $1 1 700
water pIts
Nelson Dr ug
Se e al 235 So Fourth Av e
7 24 lie
M ddt e port Phone 99 2 5546
7 15 ti c
SMALL mob•le home daub e ST EREO rad o am fm 8 rra ck
tape
comb
nat
on
4
speaker
w de 2 bedrooms furn shed
soun d
s yst e m
Balan ce 5 ROOM house and ba h w th
utI t es
pa1d
Adu lt s
shower 2 large lot s and new
$105 39 or ea s y ter m s Ca 1
preferred Phone 992 7017
ut I ty bu d ng
n Ra c n e
992
3965
7 24 3tc
Oh o Ca I 949 52 85
7 24 lf c
-~--~7 16 12tc
2 BEDROOM trailer carpet
an d
a nd a r cond t10n ng Phone TA PE S Roc k Gospel
Country &amp; Western $2 75 ea c h STORE b u ld ng apt and
992 3509
garage 75 fl frontag e larg e
or
2 tor S5 Open da IV ex cept
7 24 4I C
park ng a rea Pnc e $1 5 000
Sunday 9 a m to 5 p m
E Man S
Pomeroy Oh o
Pomeroy
Re
cov
e
ry
622
E
NICE 3 t oom s and bath at
Wr te P 0 B.o x 243 Syra c us e
Man
St
Pomeroy
Phon
e
elect n c apar tm ent Table top
Oh o
992 7554
range wall oven r eal n ce
7 18 He
7
24
)IC
('lpartment Phone 44 6 7699 or
even ngs at 446 Y5J9
1969 T RIUM PH 500 motor c ycle OL D house w th 2 n ce lo ts n
7 -18 6tc
Chopped ex ce l ent cond ton
Syra cuse Sd 000 P ho e 992
Ca l 9?2 7439
5898
COUNTRY Mob te Hom€' Park
7 23 5tc
7 24 n c
Rt 33 ten m les north of
Pomeroy Large lots w th TAPPAN Eye Level oven and 3 OEOROO M ba l h k tch e
t oncrete pat.os Sidewalk s
sur face range ha rv es t gold
I v q
room
and
fu
runners and off s tr e et
Gas
Br a nd Ne w
co or
basen c n l Io r g e lot Ma rt n
De lux e Model Se ll ng b e ow
park ng Also
s pa ces lor
St Mason Ph one 773 5J04
sma ll Ira ters Phone 992 7479
cos t S11 5 f'hone La rry s
7 13 6 p
Mob le Ho m es 992 7777
7 11 He
1 24 6tc
5 ROO M ho use on 1 ac re ot and
f-- URN I S HED
ap a rtment
-----~--- .........
Ph one 991 72 65
NEW I vmg room su te s tn
ad ults only n M ddl e porl
7 22 6tcMod e rn M e d t e rran e an
Ph one 992 387&lt;t
Ear ly Amer can an d So an sh
5 12 ti c
Se r v1ce
Si a l on
Styles Your c ho cc of colo rs CA R SO N
Gar age
50~~:60
bu ld ng
n vel vet or nylon w th Sco tch
TRAILER Brown s Tra e r
gard Start nQ as ow as
Ce m en t dr veway P t on e 7 42
505 2
Cou r t Pom er'oy Phone 992
$J49 95 Pomer oy Rec ov e ry
3324
622 E Ma n Sf Po mero y
7 16 lf c
7 18 lf c
P hone 99 2 7554
7 24 7t c LOTS for sate tralle r or house
All ut I t es Phone 7 42 3615
3 AND 4 ROOM turn shed and FO AM to f II you r old cou c h an d
Ru tl a nd Ohi o
un 1urn shed
apartmenls
cha r c ush1on s as low as
7 16 lf c
Phone 992 5434
$10 95 uph ols te ry okk s on ly - - - - - 4 12 ti c
50c 4 nc h cove red foam 3 B E DRO OM home 1500 Clown
mattr ess es for s ta ndard s ze
and 1. 80 pe r mon th 2 bedr oom
PRIVATE meetng room for
bed
$29 95
Po me ro y
Ira ler on same t na nc n g
any o rga nlzat on phone 992
Recovery 621 E Ma n St
Ph on e 992 3975
3975
Pomeroy Oh o Phon e 99 2
7 16 tt c
___.
_,_
3 11 !fc
755d
7 24 26tc
--'---...--~-BUS INE SS room 12 )( 80 23 4 E
UPHOL STERY fabn cs by the
Man St
Pomeroy Olrlo
yard 54 n c hes w de as low a s
Phone 992 5786 or 99 2 3975
$2 49 per yard Ve lvet s es ow
6 " tf c
as S5 25 Imported v e tve ts
$9 60 We also ha'¥e nyl on
her c ut o n
colto n pr ints
TWO 5 room and bath apts In
v ny!s and remnants by the
Middleport For •nformat on
~iH'd or bV the piece Pomeroy
Cjl ll 992 2550 or 742 65$1
"ecovery 622 E Ma ln Sl
7 3 ttc
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
7 '24 26tc
MOBILE HOME n M ddteport
------- -----~.41-dulls only Phone 992 5592
6 25 lf c
i' "t

-----'--....------ -

"
r

J OJS

T OTAL l" leclr c 3 bedroom
S UPERIOR
h ome
Har dw oo d fl oo r s
VINYL PRODUCTS
breezew ay and ga ra ge lo l
180 Arb a
S
00)(420
Call Collect I 591 5544
Tupp
ers
P
lan
s
W II ta ke
Athe ns Oh1o
$5 000 down and fake over
pay 1 e nt s P ho n e 667 6386
7 24 ate
200 BALE S oa st ra w Ph one
949 5953
7 19 61 C

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed b ids will be r e ce ived
by the Vtllege of Syra c use at REAR e nd and axle for 1952
the offi ce of the Clerk unfll
BLA CK and wh it e
Dodge a" ton truc k R ct'lard DO U BLE
it lr
cond 1 oned
12 00 noon August 1 1974 for
Husky blve e y es
Qunlts Pomeroy Ohio
sleep ng room w th kUchen
furnishing 200 tons more or
sp11yed 3 yrs Oc t Wonderful
7 21 3tp
pr vdege Phone 992 S.t40
less of State Speclflcet on 40.4
pel for c h Hdr en Re asonable
7 23 31c
asphaltic hot muc n pll!t ce on 6 OR 7 ft drag type brush hog
to lam lly to tur f'11 SI'l gooct
various streetl!i of the village
home Mus1 ha"'e 6 fl fenced
Ph one 843 2353
4 ROOM fu rnish ed apt Phone
The Vlttaue of Syracuse
•n yard
C
E
Wh• t e
1 21 :ltc
992 5908
rtltrves the right to rele ct anv
Murraysv.lle W Va 26153
7 ~J 61 C
or 111 bids
7 l3 6tp
8v order of the Village $5 tor tunk autom obiles we w 11
p c k up
Rlvers•de Auto 4 ROOMS and bath home for AKC Toy POOdle pupp i es
Council
Wre c k•ng Phone (304) 773
S amese I{ lien$ Ir ish Setter
ren t n R uti and Ph one 992
Katfiry'n H Cr ow
5890
pups Kennels of Cnlhovn 1
5858
1 5 tiC
Cterk
1 56 6247
7 14 ttc
U) 10 17 2A ltc
1 18 26t c

---..----

Fot Sale

11 -

IT WAS A GIRL ' SHE
WANT5 ME TO 500VER10
HER HOIIOE SO SHE CAN
AI\)L06tZE TO ME 1~ PER50N'

�•

•
n•

II- The DIIUy Sent mel Mtddlepol'\ Pomeroy , 0 , Wed.neodav , July 24 1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get
NotiCe
WILL

do

roofmo

ht&gt;allng

2 SIGNS

repa r

plumb ng and etec
tnco'lll work
Phon£' Char les
S nc-la lr 985 4121

Of

111 1tc

QUAUTY

AUCTION
Fr diiV ('vi!' '
q
Jut-y 26 bf'g nn ng at 7 p m
~ponsored

b'l' !Me Orange
Townsn p Volun eer F re
Dept
T upers P ia ns Oh c

0 reclly a cross Rt

Mit fro n

r..,ppers P ta ns Sc hool In!&gt; de
Jr
Kennedy s barn
One
65 OOU B tV lennoK f urnace
w th du c t s 55 000 overhead

furna ce seve r a beds 1 v nq
room su te T v qas range
(J bur 1er gas ranqe l rad QS
hot wat er heater g.:ts
baby

beds

b dby

heo;~tcrs

furn l ure

la mps chars lawn t urn l ure

storm doors floo r tamps
w 1dow s a d s&lt;:reens
ro
record

s nk

k erosen t

l antern
games
c oth r19 I re s a d f

t oys
s h3f\d

pl~yer

'

c rank forge ladder hoo k s
ron ng bo ard
fl Ood ligh t

ant.que 1CllS and oth er ten s
too nun erous to me 11 on
Au ct oneer
Sner dan s
Auct on
Se rv cc
Not
respons b e for ac e dents
7 21 51c
KOSCOT
KOSMET CS
&amp;
WIGS For a good I ne of
Cosme! cs fr endly se rv ce
a nd someone to ch at w 111
g ve me a rail He en Jane
Bro wn 992 ~11J
3 19 He
~~------

A TO Z Mart

-----

usee I urn shed
appt ances cl o th ng d Shes
a nd m sc Rt 33 oppos te
Ira ler court Harford . W

Va

4

10 tfc

M E GS Coun ty Hu na ne Soc ely
Thr I Shop open 10 a m t 1
J 30 p m
every Fr day and
S r~ turday
Ne..., used s tocK
arr v l Q week ly Clo th ng
co lee ! b tes
a p p an c es
tr ea su res recor ds p cturcs
boo lo: s lam ps toys Loc aiE'd
a c ros s fr om Po ne roy Post
Ott ce
5 12 t fc

19740PEN MANTA
$2995
1 Ooor 4 s peed tran s bvck. ef sea ts ra d to Sold new 1n
April and less t h~1n 5 000 m1 les o ange l m sh with btk
m te r •or
1973CHEVROLET IMPALA
$389$
J Door lig ht g rn In sh green v my ll op used as Co ol
f cal car n eve r t itled b at of war r J nt)' loaded wdh
extras mcludang fa ctory alf rad•o &amp; tape w w ttres
guards &amp; all th e fin e accesso n es
1912 FORD GRAN TORI NO
S244S
301 V 8 e ng me au fomahc tra ns power steer ng like n e w
w w t res low m ileage b ljt v ny l lnte nor beautitul red
hn 1sh w1th blk vmyl top rad o wh co~o~e rs de lu xe
equt pment A sharp car

"'"Y'

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY OHIO

Cilrd of Thanks

Not1ce

WE W SH o express our ha 1k!&gt;

and apprec a t on to t he
fr ends of our late unc;le
Albe rt W Hug h es A so o h e
Rawl ngs Coa t s
Funera
Home and Rev HerbHI
G rate tor the r hel p
Mrs George Hood Mr s
Raymond Freeman

lost
----------I W SH
exp r ess
he a rt f e lt L G H T
to

my

t ha nK s t or t he help a nd
sy mpa thy a t th e t me of d ea n
o f n y husban d
Er nes t
La lla n ce To the Doc tors a nd
Nur ses a t Holze r Med ca l
Cen ter l he Loyal Wome n s
Class ne g hbors the ca ll s
car ds a nd fl owe rs lo Rev
Geo r ge Gaze
R a w! n gs
Co al s Fune ra l Home May
God b ess each one Mrs
E rn es t La lan ce
1 '2 4 lf p

Not1ce

_____

...__~---~-

Wanted To Buy

PUBLIC NOTICE
Brown Pasteboard Sheet
Sealed b ds w 11 be r ec e ved
Iron
Refngerators Hot
by the Me gs Local :, choo l
Water Tanks Auto bod1es
D str ct Board of Educat on at
w1thout motors Scrap Iron
th e r off ce •n the Me gs Jun or
Cast Iron Copper Brass
High School Bu ld •n g South
Th rd Avenue M ddleport
Alummum Auto Batfenes
Oh o far sc hool bus t res unt l
Auto Rad1ators Sell to
12 00 o cl o c k noon Easte r n
Da y ligh t Sav ng T m e on
August 12 197.11 ai wh ch I me
the b ds Will be opened TMe t re
.b ds are far schoo l bus t res 10
be pur c hased for a per od of one
year to e .. te d unt 1 J ul y 25
Athens Ohio We close each
1975
Frtday at noon for balance of
The b d pri ce 1s to 1nct ude the
week
pr ce of demount ng the old I re
and mount ng lh e new or
recapped t re on the t re wheel s
nm and the atta ch ng of the JUNK AUTO S comp e te and
comb ned t1re and r m on to the
de l vered to our yard we
buss whee l
p c kup auto bod es and bu y all
Spec f ca t•om and b d sheet
k nds of scrap m e tal s and
form s may be rece ved by
ron R der s Sa lvag e Slal e
calling 992 5650 or fr om the
R l 124 R I 4 Pomer oy Oh o
clerk s off ce
Phone 99 2 5.t68
Th e Me gs Local Sch-ool
6 26 26tp
Dlst.rtc t Board at Ed ucat on
reserves th e r ght to reJe ct any
and all b1dS
CASH paid for all ma1&lt;es and
models of moblle homes
Me gs Local
Phone area code 61d 42 3 953 1
Schoo l 0 stnct
4 13 tfc

The Rosenberg Co

(1)

YARD SALE
nclude s old
a 11 que d shes on Bash;m
Road 1ear Ei'lg c R dqe
Chur c h
7 22 31c

7 2-1 li e

PUBLIC NOTICE
Seated b ds w II be re ce ved
by the Me gs Loc a Sc hoo l
D str ct Board of Edu cat on at
the• rOoff ce m the Me gs Ju n or WE HA VE a ll you r u ph olstery
H gh School
South Th rd
nee ds
Bu r a p
de n m
Avenue Midd leport Oh o lor
cam b r c foa m &gt;glu e z pp e rs
gasol ne and ant freez e fo r
ta c K ng s tr p spr n gs and
Schoo buses unt I 12 00 o c lock.
c l ps
c h pboard
buttot"'
Eastern Dayl ght Savmgs T me
tw n e se w ng thr ead le gs
on August 12 1974 at wh ch
u phol s tery book s da cr on
t me the b ds wilt be opened
webb ng spr ng tw ne tacks
The b ds are for gasotme and
welt cord cotton sw ve l
ant freeze wh ch will be for one
bases and foam foam toam
year to extend to July 25 1975
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
Two sepa rate b ds quotat ons
Man St
Pomeroy
Oh o
are requested as follows
Pnone 99 2 7554
Request No 1 - A regu lar
7 24 261 C
grade gasol ne
The gasoline bid n cJ udes the
furniSh ing of tanks and pumps I WIL L prose c ute anyone found
gu ty ot burn ng the ns de of
at f ve (5) storage plas;es The
my outs de to le t
TtH:'
pr ce quotat on s to nclude th e
property belongs to the State
turn shlng of an a r compressor
o f Oh o
Ern es t (R nk )
and a pressure g reas ng gun
Dav dso n
13 Eben e zer St
and other greas ng equ pment
Pomeroy
for the Bu s Ma ntenance
7 24 121p
Garage
Motor .o I quotat ons by quart YARD Sa e Today 1st road to
conta ners and by the drum
left on Rt 124 off Rt 7 Cal l
Please g ve brand name and
528 2
992
grade of o I m quo tat on 0 I to
7 24 31c
be 20 40 we ghl
-----------Request No 2 - Permanen t
anh freeze n gallon can s ze SWEEPER Rep a r Parts and
S upp es
Da v s Vacuum
containers
Plea se cert fy
Cleaner ? m le up Geo r ges
brand na me
Creek Road off State Rt No
The Me gs Loca l Sc hool
7 Phone 446 0294
D stnct reserves th e n ght to
7 24 He
ret e c t any and all b ds
70
Me gs Local GIGA NTIC Flea Marke
yard
sal
es
All
concen
tra
t
ed
Schoo l D stnct
at one pla ce 2 m e out Spring
Avenue ofl Rt 7 Man Sl
L W McComas
Pomeroy Oh o F ree ad
Clerk
m ss on plen ty of parkmg
(7) 10 l7 24 31 4tc
res trooms and refreshmen ts
Inside and out s de Contact
Fredd 1e Ttl abet 773 5651 after
5 p m every Satu rd ay and
Sunday Everyone welcome
PUBLIC NOTICE
7 1B tfc
Sealed b 'ds w II be re ce ved
by the V•llage of Syracuse at
YARD Sale at 870 Sout h Second
the off ce of th e Clerk. unt
St M ddleport Fro m 9 10 5
12 00 Noon August 1 1974 for
p m daly Lo ts of n ce tems
furn shlng one f re truck and
7 23 6t c
equ1pment accord ng to the
spec•f cat Qns on f te n sa•d
12 FAMILY yard s a te for a
off ce
c hurc h group from 10 30 to 3
Sepllrate b1d s a re sol c ted as
J ul y 26 and 27 610 Four th
follows
St r eet New Haven W Va
B ds for c;::Mss •s o n ly
7 23 4f C
B ds for F re Apparatus
only
B d sfo r Opt onal Equ pme nt YARD Sa le rest of week Come
see al l day long and e ven ng
only
At the res dcn ce of Howard
Each b d shall conta n the fu 1
Russell Wo lf Pen Road tust
name of each person f rm or
off Rt 143
corporal on nterested m same
7 23 4tc
and shall be accompan e d by
a Certified Ch ec k or B d Bond
n the amount of 5 pet of the $50 REWARD lor l'l'format on
teadmg to th e arres t and
total b d and be drawn n favor
conv c t on of Ihe person or
of tt'le V•llage of Syrac use Oh o
person s who s tole a hood off a
All Bid envelopes shall be
1Y66
Plymo u th
fr o m
pta nly marked
B d tor
R 1vers 1d e Auto Wre c k. ng
Chass s or B d for F re Ap
Wes t Co umb a W Va Phon e
-paratus or B1d for Opt1onal
773 5890
Equ pment
7 23 Jtc
The Vfltage of Sy r ac us.e
reserves t,IH! n ght to re tec t any
or a ll b ds and tn SP iec t the best YARD Sa le 829 South Th rd
b•d for th e purpose
Avenue M ddleport Oh•o
By Order of th e v llage
Monday th rough Thursday
Council
7 21 At e
Kathryn H Crovy
Cle rk
(7) 10 17 24 3tc

L W McComas
Clerk
10 17 24 31 4t C

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

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

OLD fur.n.ture oak table~
c locks Ice bo)l.es brnss beds
d•shes desks or compete
households Wr t e M D
Miller R I 4 Pom erov Oh o
call 992 7760
5 13 tiC

BR OW N b !fo ld n
Kroge r park ng lo t P ho ne
773 59 15
Ro n a ld Roush
Rf.&gt; wa rd
7 n 31c

Employment Wanted
W L L d o b aby s 11 ng tor
work n g no lh e r s n my homP
Phon e 99 2 6865 "or 992 5669
236tc

Bus1ness Opportumhes

CAN YOU WORK
WITHOUT SUPERVISION?
We need man or woman to
sell full I ne of Advert1stng
Spectalt•es Calendars and
Gtfts tn the Pomeroy area
Must be able to plan own
ltme and work Wllh a
mmtmum of supervtston
All accounts are protected
Repeat orders are protected
H1gh Commtss•on s payable
when orders are passed for
credit
The Adverttstng Spectalty
Ltne ts the most extenstve 1n
the Industry Calendars are
manufactured at our Red
Oak plant
Wnte Bob McKenzte Sales
Manager The Thos
0
Murphy Company 110 So
Second Street Red Oak
Iowa 51566

Help Wanted
Appliance serv1ce mao wtth
knowledqe of refrtgerat1on .
Vacation &amp; travel pay
Galha Refrtgerafton Co
Phone 446 4066

Re~'f1ts!
For Sale
A ~ E pic k ng up a plltno In
vour- area and would 11ke
.some respon$ ble p.lrh to
trtke ovE'r p&amp;yme •HS Call
Cr ed1 t Manager (614 ) 17'1
5669 or wr te 260 a~t Ma n
S trr~"' Cl llllc othe Oh o &lt;l5601
4 7 tf c

WE

J.l,f(hi /\. IO N Al

'&lt;I

jJIInl

a qollct pt~y lhJ
prlc..cd rt'II'SOI b!v
Pi\rt 1 11 work
tutt 11 , •
arn nqo;. Pt OfH' 9&lt;~9 IMO'l
I 14 411,
v

vn

tHJ&lt;.,j

(

1 10 1

~

Mobde Homes For Sale
o~

11

11

M O O II

r

ho 11r 1
v mJ ro(HI
00 11 s c lr

bedroom O&lt;llh 1
rtn(f 1 bt (f
PtOI(' '19 '} IH!

fHII
UCI (t

Y ll

l

MO-b I('

I LIJI-!OOM
ll O 111 0 l
I or

n 1n lie

W 1d!&gt;or

flUe Of
'or e
n
1

q o HI
SI NGtR Automat c Z ig lag
tor nrt l on t.~l 991 J~18
Se w nq Ma c h ines ln ~e w l nq
} 1) 61C
labte Ma lo. cs bunonh otcs
sews on buttons bl nd hems 1964 [ LCONI\ 5S-.10 w lh I povt
etc Top 'otch condll on Pav
I. t r he&gt;•
&lt;t r1
1 v • ~ roo
\51 or te r ns ava table Pt o 1c
'S.1 HOO Pho c 10
ll1 5.t~8
997 1653
' 11 61(
7 16 lf c

EXCELSIOR Sat Works E
Man St Pome roy All k n ds
ot salt wa t er pelle ts wa t er
nug g e ts blo c k sa I a n d own
Oh 10 R ver Sa I Phon ef 992
3891
6 5 lf c

Aut&lt;1 Sales
197 1 TRtUMFJH 6onnev te 650
T qer qold 1 good con d ton
\875 Phone 992 3710
7 1tl 12tp
19 12 MG M I DG ET Convert b lc
qood co nd I on and tow
m te aq e Call 94Y 39,55
7 2J 6tc

PAt N I DAMAGE t97d Z g Zag
SEW IN G MACH NES STI LL
or g na car tons No at
ta chments 1ccded as our
con trols are bu It n Sews 1969 CHEVY Townsman s ta t on
waq on St 19~ qood cond 1f on
w lh 1 or 2 nee d les makes
f'J t 0 lC 992 76?0
but tonholes sew on bu ttons
5 14 11C
monograms and bl nd h em
S l rc h Fu l cash pr H;: e 1.38 50
VE GA
Hatchba c k
or budge t p a 1 ava Iab le 1971
Phone 99 7 265 3
Chcvro et J :; peed
42 000
1 tes 9 r een co lor And at so &lt;~
7 16 lf c
965 Ford 6 cyl ndc r eng e
also an au to ma t c trans
m iss on Phone I 1304 ) 882
SO LID
205?
VINYL S IDIN G
7 18 6tc
Produ ced fr o n a s pec al
v ny co n pou n d mad e by B
F Go od r ch a nd Monsa nt o 5
1 mes thi Cker tha n me tal
s d ng W H not d en t c h p
r ot rus t or
cra c k peel
cha k

1966 FO RD
lo n p c k up
r1utoma c
rr a c;; 11 ss o n
Good 1 r es Can per Spec at
Pho e Harold Brewe r Lo q
So l o 11 98 5 355
7 23 fc

FREE HOME ESTIMATES

Real Estate For Sale

.,.RO CERY bu sn es s for sale
Bu d ng for sa le or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo ntmen t
3 20 lie

HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS
4,000 BTU

'109.95
These s1zes also ava !able
5 000 6 000 B 000 10 000 and
12 000 BTU
POMEROY LANDMARK
•- Jack W Carsey Mgr
• A""d
Phone 992 2181
CANN N G tomatoes lor ~ a te
P ck your own S2 bu s h el Call
247 22 41
7 23 3t p
LIV NG room su te wh te
velv et cou c h w l h go ld vetv e
mal c h ng char s 2 la mp s an d
cent er p ece s •n c uded Ca I
991 3~ 81 or can be se en a 975
Map e Sl M ddleport Bes t
off er buys 1
7 23 5tc
195 3 F ERGU SON 30 new t rt' S
new p&lt;u nt n ew motor S I 500
Phone 9a5 3 ~94
7 23 St c
--~----.---~---

CLELAND
608 E
REALTY
MAIN
POMEROY

0

RUTLAND
AREA
- 60
acres
abou t
20
for
cu lt vat on or lovely bu 1l dmg
s 1tes P 2 story frame home
3 bedroom s bath ut I ty
s ome carpe t ng panel ng
and t le Garag e Barn and
other b\JIId ng 8 168 sq ft 2
water well s 1 gas we ll s
pond
AS K ING
J UST
$43 000 00
POMEROY - Ranch type
(modern ) 2 BR bath n ce
k tc h en lots of cab n ets
range &amp; oven large LR w th
f replace carpe t ed
fu ll
basement
w th
uhi ty
garage 51 5 000
BRADBURY 1 2 stor y
frame 4 BR bath d n ng R
lots of carpe t ng new FA gas
furnace do\Jble o t w th
trader
hookup
smal l
base m ent
w th
ut!l ty
$12 900
POMEROY
Bustness
room w th lots of park ng
and apartmen t over for
ncome has garage Th1 s JS
an excel len t buy A~k ng 1ust
$16 500 00
TIME NOW TO BUY AND
GET SETTLED BEFORE
SCHOOL STARTS CALL
TODAY FOR YOUR NEEDS
IN REAl ESTATE
992 2259 or 992 2568

For Rent

-----

_..___________

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

-.,.-------

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

___ ___ ______

DITCHING SERVLCE

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

•

~..
~

Free Est m a tes

742-5293

HOME
DECORATING

SE PTI C T A NK S
A R O B IC
SE WA G E
S Y S TEM S
CL EANED
REPA I RED
MI LL ER
S AN I TAT I ON
ST EWART OHIO PH 662

------r

C BRAD F ORD Auqoneer
Comolete Serv.ce
Phone 949 382 or 949 3161
Rae ne Oh o
Cr tt Bradford
5 1 tfc
0 DELL AI nement located
beh nd Rutland Grade School
complete front end serv ce
bra kes and tuneups wheels
ba a nced e lectronically Open
8 lo 8 da ly Call 7.t 2 3232 on
S unday for appt
7 16 tfc

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

S EW IN G MACHINES Repa r
se rv ce a II makes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Au thor zed S n~er Sa tes and
Serv ce We Sharpen Sc ssors
3 29 tfc

AUTOMOBIL E nsura n ce been
cancelled""
Lost
your
operat or s 1 cense Call 992
7428
6 15 tfc
CREMEAN S CO N CRETE
del ve r ed Monday t h ro ugh
Saturday and even ngs
Phone 446 1142
6 1J tfc

------ -

EXCAVAT ING rln7Pr tn.=~rl e r
and backhoe work
se pt•c
tanks nstalled dump tr uc ks
and lo boy s for h re w II ~au I
f II d rt top so I limesto ne
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffe rs day phone 992 7089
n gh t phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc
...____

_____ _

Real Estate For Sale

TEAFORD
V1rqd A TP.lforrl
BrokPI

Mt'ch,llllr Sllr·1·t
PomProy, Oh10 1)760
11(1

NEWLISTING -2 1evel lots tn
Syracuse 1 block off 124

I OION T
KNOWl'HAT
when area dealers
lh·om Kuht s Bargam Cente•rl
reta I pr ce then
you r e gett ng
I bare&gt; a n from us
EXTRA SPECIAL
Harvest Go ld 30 el&lt;!ctr;cl
range - 1 ke new
you me n! on th s
otherw se l
OTHER GOODIES
46
Broyh II P rem er s
Bra s I a walnut br eakfa s t
ch na w th glass and base
Now S169 95

NEW FURNITURE nc tude s
2 pc I v ng rooms n nylon
herculon velvet v nyl and
Sco tc hgar d cotto ns from
$199 maple 3 pc table set
S34 95 3 pc m aple f n1sh
bedroom $132 50 4 drawer
maple ches ts $30 pat ch &amp;
floral sw1ve1 rockers from
$69 95 v nyl r ecli ne r s (re~
S70 $45 ( •f you men! on th s
ad - thru July or wh le
supplv las ts )

NEW LISTING - 1 ca mp ng
tra ler Bx25 gas heat operates
on AC or DC and a new moon
12x60 w th cen tr a l a r J
bedrooms washer dryer and
ut I ty bu•ldmg
NEW LISTING home
c losets master has
room lSxJO Nat
f\Jrnace Garage
shop
b~droom

Modern 3
all la rge
two L v ng
gas
FA
w th n1ce

MAJOR APPLIANCES (all
w fh money back guaran
eesl Electr c 8. gas ranges
refr gerators
(a
great
selechon now - some frost
fre e)
auto &amp; wr nger
washers dryers
USED FURNITURE - We
have lt 1 Also many s mall
a ppl iances
TV s
phonog raphs
reel ta pe
playe rs { 1 casse tt phono
I ke new by Co lumba made
for the langua ge student)
Oster coo l m st hum d f er
handm1 xer
ha.r dryer
"'"'"· ·skit le t toasler bro fer
I
ron s and elect

COUNTRY HOME - Modern 2
bedroom home cook and bake
un t s F ull basement w 1h
garage
MONEY WORTHLESS THEN
BUY REAL ESTATE IT HAS
BEEN GOING UP FOR
YEARS
LOOK
WHAT
OTHERS HAVE DONE
Olf•u•??; 311~

HF I IN L TEAFORI)
'i? :) /

! iii

KUHL'S

GOh&gt;DONR T[f,FOf.?[)
&lt;J?]

J61'J

A')50CIA Tf&lt;.,

BARGAIN CENTER

THREE homes n Rutland 2
new Phone 742 62 54
" 7 216tr;:

-------------3 BEDR OOM hou se wall to wa l t
carp e t n ~ lar ge k lc hen and
ba th ut Il ly room •;4 a cre
a l um num s d ng
s torm
w ndows
s torage bu ld lng
Phon e
74 2 460
Own er
mo v in g to Flor ida
wJ II
sa cr 1f ce for qui c k s a te
7 21 61 1:;

Arnold Gral.t

HI

1

luppl'r~ f'lolltl'• ,

I

0

Pr ice ncludes lns1o311atlon
and free padding Talk to
G rat e
car pet
Wende ll
Consultant
- We hav e hundreds of
ca rpet values Yovr lob can
be compl e te d In 1 to 2 weeks
No long waiting period

Perma Pl'en
Milly tag

SPECI ALl

I ~oil Condy Slrlpo wh~
rubber b•ck 3 99 s.q yd
N1te for bedroom• dtns

kttcl'lens etc

11I· I
I

~----~--------------~----~------~------_u

'

T\W'. OH 11 '.1111

•7.95 Sq Yd

A9lt~tor

1&lt;u11ana

&lt;.i 7.

( C lov•d Mo11d.1 y ·,

REGULARS9 9S

81g Capacl.ty
Maytag
AutomatiC S
2 speed operat1on
rholce o f Wl'ler
temps Avto water
le ... el cont rol Lint
FIller or Power F tn

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Op•·ll

CARPOING
501 NYLON

~--'--~---- ---

Halo of Heat
Dryer s
Surround
c lothe!
with gen tl e even
hUt No tliJ f spots
no O\lel'drytng F ltie
Mesh Lin t Filter
We Spec:i•llze In
MAYTAG
Red Carpet
Service

•

behmd Rvtland Grad e Sc hool
comp le te front and tuneup
and brake serv ce Pho11e 742'J
3232 Open 8 to 8 dally Su.ti
days by appt only
7 14 tk
JOBS contract ed P hone 742
3074 or wr te Box 23 Langs
vlleOho

7 23 26ft

GREAT
COUNTRY

WIN AT BRIDGE

•

South can handle East's lead

STEREO

Walnut trad tonally
cupboard w th ~~~\il
g~~':,., top door
a s1
l
- S99 7 8 9 pc I ng
rrn
te s cr afted In wood
tno modern plaSt iCS) pecan
walnut oak maple from
S125

')r

•

DELLAiinem;n-; -j~-~te('J

------ - - - - DOZER work land clear ng

by
the acre hourly or contra ct
farm pond s ro ad s e tc Large
dozer a n d operator w th over
20 years exper~ence Pull ns
E I&lt;Ca vat ng Porn eroy Oh o
Phone Y92 2478
12 19 tfc

0

WILL tr •m or cut trees a n d
shrubbery Also clean oUt
basements all cs etc Phone
949 3221 or 742 4441
' t&gt;r
7 14 26tc
0

RUTLAND

FURNITURE
741 4211

Rullond 0

92.1
WMPO-FM
Mtddleport Pomeroy

"

••

SERVICE!
READY NOW!
••

Luxurtous new 2 000 sq ft:
b level w1th .4 bedrooms 2
baths huge paneled famtly
room and double car garage
Ideally located on large 1 /4
acre wooded lot n exclusive
Riggscrest Manor
1usf
South of Tuppers Pia n:t.
Redu ce d for tmmed atJ •
sale' Now $33 800
Don' '
mtss 1t t
...~

BEST LOCATION
FOR SCHOOLS
IN COUNTY•

'I C.o Do Without

Readers All
ll a tile swnmer doldrum&amp; So let s take a holiday from
heavy problems and Instead Hot ( as a group of us did at a r ecent
get-together) things we don t need any more of hke
The cheerful Have a nice day t from a traffic cop who h as
just g 1ven you a ticket that wlll coot you lunch money for a
month
Ditto from tile supennarket clerk Its not her fault pnce s go
up each week but must she ask you to en)Oy them '
Paying 35 cents for a soft drink tlwt s four hfths1ce'
Watergate mania Sure, many are gmlly a purge was
needed but wtth the Kissinger Incident have we perhaPII ~tarte d
a witch hunt' I winder If history books may yet record the
summer of 74 as the second coming of McCarthy though w1th
a difference In McCarthytsm, government chopped down
writers (among others) and m Watergatlsm writers (amon g
others) appear bent on ch 0pplllg down government
Non-11pray111g spray cans'
Syrupy TV commercials repeated so often you want to throw
up
The big clwse scene In almost every good g uy bad buy show
Couldn t the crunlnal be ca ught just once Without reels of run
nlng through werrd bwld1ngs or minutes of wildly careemng

cars?
Hard French rolls m restaurants' That make you look like
Henry VDI gnawmg a bone - even when you break them m
small p1eces ( tf you can )
Clerks who c all you Young lady - when you obvmusly

aren't
Direct-maU over-50' ads Whose busmess 1s 1t 1f I

m gettmg

on'
Telephone salespeople who start Congratulations You re
one of a selected few myour area lo be offered.
Hoher41wn-thou types who yell What's the world commg
to' yet cheat m busmess deals and wouldn t help a bhnd man
across the street
Young people who accuse elders of polluting the coun try but
leave !herr rally halls littered Wlth trash Or call parents
prejudiced, 'but only mix With thelf own little crowd
Self-sealmg glue oottles Can t SOMEBODY mvent one that
won t clog up'
Comparues whose bills mclude wmdow-envelopes for your
return check Has anyone ever stuffed the bill m rtght the frrst
time around'
And finally, my cat who will only drmk water from the bath
tub, and oowls to get out when he 'sln , and m when he s out Survive a Marr iage 3 15 Episode Action 33 Donahue 4
.4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Huck &amp; Yo~
6 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Tattletales a Mov te Postman s
Knock 10
4 30 - Gilligan s Is 6 Green Acres 3 Bonan za 15 Jackpot 4
Vlrglntan 8 OanJel Boone 13
5 oo-Bonanza 3 Merv Gr fftn 4 Big Valley 6 Mr Rogers 20
33
S 30 - Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Elec Co 33 Hogans He roes 13
Western Star Theater 15
6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 ABC News 15 Truth or Conseq 6
Sesame S1 20 Lollas Yoga &amp; You 33
6 30 - NBC News 3 .t1 15 ABC News 6 CBS News B 10 Room
222 13 Flower Show 33
7 00- Truth or Conseq 3 Beallhe Clock 4 Whal s My L ne 8
News 6 10 Let s Make A Deal 13 Sports Desk 15 Eleclr c
Company 20 Man Builds Man Destroys 33
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 Wild Kingdom 10 Beat the Clock
13 Zoom 20 Dealers Choice 4 To Tell the Truth 6 Ozz1e s
Girls 8 To Be Announced 15 Music of the People33
8 00 - Mac Davis 3 • Evening a1 Pops 20 33 Kopykats a
Temperatures R1slng 6 13 Movie The Fall of the Roman
Emp~re 10

•

Someone n the group s aptlo
rub you the wrong way
SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22)
A clever maneuver you have
dev sed 10 lut lhe your a1ms
w1ll back fi re f you put It o lhe
tes l Keep everyth ng out m Ihe
open

SAGITTARIUS !Nov 23
Dee 21 I Don t lr y to se ll
ot hers on an 1dea you ve heard
about II rna y not work and
could ca use compt c ah ons
CAPRICORN ( Dec 22
Jan 19) In you r bus ness deal
ngs t woul (1 be tool sh to el
your guar d d own An unex
pe e ted co nd t on w II suddenly
g•ve your compe tito r the upper
hand
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
A fe w ll chosen word s ma y be
all It takes to at enate a n a ly
wo rlh hav ng Be cons de ale
of c ompan o ns
PISCES !Feb 20 Morch 20)
B e extra c a reful today lf work
ng w lh el e c tr c at tools or ne w
ga dgets !hat you re no t tam ar

Fo r Thursday July 25 HH4
ARIES (Mar ch 21 Apnl 19)
1, yo~:~ r-dcal nqs you 11 be con

Iron !I d b ~ o u who ha s more
t UihO tly 0 a s tro nger pos I 0
than you T JcUully bac k oH
TAURUS (Ap"t 20 May 20)
II m 1y 1rove w1ser 1 the long
un to e 1111 1 expu Is lo t)e fo rm
d ~e v ce lo you r:\ lhcr than
try ng to (lo I you self
GEMINI !May 21 June 20)
Do1 1 buck the odds at 1h s
lime t so meth 19 you e n
valved haS a poor c hance of
w n g d op I
CANCER !June 21 July 22)
You t~ rc 1 kety to open your
Du so ~ 11 1 oo w de and e t
mosl o l you I ouse ho1 d budge t
e::,c&lt;.'l c ) one b g b J st If you
clo you J rcgre I
LEO !July 23 Aug 22) II
yo\J re a II e too heads trong
and uny el d ng you II be hurt
mg you sell mo e than anyone
e se Loose n up a b I
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22)
Don 1 buy any th ng s g ht un
seen It you re mak ng a ma1o r
pu r ch~se
exam n e th e
me cha• d s e n pe son
LIBRA (Sep l 23 Oct 23)
Th s s not yo ur day for c lub o
organ zat ana ac 11 v t e s

w th

oo

someone .said 'Don t try Just pass it on someday when you
up and another person Is 'down ' " - M D

ACROSS
I Industrial
reg1on of
Europe
5 Ribter and
tokay
11 To be
( Lat )

INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY•
We spec •alt ze n new 3 unti
ran ch to rent Exceptional!¥
hi gh re turns growth and 1
protect on Call or w nte fol'
exac t de tail s
INTERBSTED
IN RENTING ..
Available soon New rancfC I
sty le apartments Large ~
bedroom living room ~11 ).l 1
&lt;'
bath carpellng an~
~ . t an ces
Ca ll or write
today
to

"

'

Goegletn

Fred B
General Contractor
GREAT
AMERICAN HOMES "
For more lnform•flon e~tl"
or wnte our Pomeroy offit..
m W SO&lt;;ond It Coli
l976 Thundoys 10 Ia 11
SOturdoyo t to tt Evonlngo

South

Pass

2•

Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass

If you can keep your eyes
qff the East and West cards
you w1ll see that you are m
(lie same spade game as
yesterday w1th exactly the
same cards and openmg lead
There IS one great d1f
ference You are playmg m
~he World s champ10nsh1p
agamst Belladonna and Gar
tozzo of Italy the best patr m
!the world
,You wm the dtamond lead,
draw trumps strtp the hand
Othearts JUSt as declarer dtd
yo;sterday and throw Gar
itozzo m w1th a dtamond
He takes hts two diamond
tncks JUSt as East d1d yester
day and sh1fts to the s1x of
~lubs
Agamst a good player you
j\'Quld play low and make
your contract 1f he has made
tl\e m1stake of leadmg the stx

~

We are a full service com
pany now building new
homes In Meigs County fro
$21 soo lo $100 ooo

East

The bidding has boon

24

w..t

North

Eatl

South

Pa81

2•

f'au

••

Pau
Pass

3•
'

••

call 7~2 ~4 or Cllf our 21i•
numbtt.t

,

1

Wh1l do you do now?
, A-llld rive dla.,.ndo Yo•
jo'ont lot moke .. mhlam try btll
yo.r porlner needt both mojor
kl"l• olnco ol&gt;vlouoly he

+utt

d - 1 I hstvo lhe ICO Of elubo

DOWN

I Inaugurate
(2 wds )

commwte

around
U Sapient
15 Mexican
tree

3 Mlchaelmas
datBy
4 Caddoan
Indian
5 Granular
6 Re
ad)ust
7 Likely

16 Recline
17 Intimidate
18 Augury
20 Once blue moon
(2 wds )
Zl Some
22 Agitate
23 Malay
archipelago
!Bland
26 Assault
(2 wds )
27 Encourage

8 Dearth
9 Iron
Curtain
country

Yesterday'a ADower
10 GleM
Miller
tn the
mov1es
16 Singer
Zavaroru
19 High strung
22 Maxim
23 Breastwork
24 Texas
City
25 Green or
stuffed

geslma

28 Obstruct
30 Prolonged
attack
31 The - at,
an Aching
Heart '
32 Poet
33 Principle
36 Not

unagmary
38 Krazy -

wrongdoing

July 25 1974
Th1s year o ffers exc •hng and
unexpected c hanges Don I lei
events s weep you off your
feet For best results thmk all
moves through carefully

accommodaUon

34 Lofty
mountain

l: n scra mbl ~ t hese four Jumbl e!,
o ne letter to eac h square to
form four ordmar-y word s

an
eyeful
39 Colleens
land
40 Get

..

~·; ·,':! ;-~~..,;·
~

:n Got

one's

I I

goat

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

I I

I

II

\I-'ELE1:S ~

II

L'{IN o

l
I I

rI I

Antw~r

FOCUS

PLACID

work

lt:

CRYPTOQUOTF.'l
MK

NYUWOK

QURKO

X)

CP

(AIM•ert to•orrow)

Jumbln BOOTH

to

AXYDLBAAX.
LONGFELLOW

PURPOSES&gt;

ENBAUT
Now arrance the circled !etten
n
to form the aurprlae anawer, aa
\
;:=====~=========~:=~~·=u~rr~•:•~::~bytheUKwecartoon
IL -~P~IInl:::lh::::eSU::::RPR&lt;.:::ISE::;A::::NSW::.::Eil:.:.:liln=--_JI

how

One letter simply stands lor another In lhio sample A II
used for the three L s X lor the two 0 s etc Single letten
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are aU
hints Each day the code tellers are different

FI&lt;:AME;ot:&gt; FO!':

I [)

Y r.ttr.rd• y s \

%6 Qu.adra -

28 Fell
29 SWider
30 Misdeed
31 Sleepmg

GO

JVUJ

JVK

MKKN
JPP

CYUQUJWOJ

JVK

PBWPB

-VKWBYWLV

MVP
LUB

VKWBK

Yesterday's Cryploquole A CHANGE IN THE WEATHER IS
ENOUGH TO RENEW THE WORLD AND OURSELVES.MARCEL PROUST
(@ 1914 Klnr Pe•tures Syndicate lne)

LOCALE

What the nreet peddler 1 merchandue
waa- SOLD "OUT'

60SHJ At.ID L &amp;.L.
&lt;SUR'E MMtS ALL OF
~OU WHEIJ cA~Y

AND! TAKE
OFF

1111 BORN LOSER

M?W'11'15 5
WHAT I CALL
mAVELING
IN eTYLE: I

•

AI LEY DOP

I SEEN LE ADiN
DOGS LIFE
EVER SINCE

43

In

CAPTAIN EASY
POP AN SAGV 5PL1N
GLOBE T~~E WHE~E
GO PIO:ETTY NUTSY

from 10 8 6 or Jack 8 8
Agamst Garrozzo th1s JUSt
hasn t happened He would be
sure to lead the e1ght !rom •
e1ther of those holdmgs
' Then what has he led from'
He 1s Garrozzo but you are
playm~ m the Worlds cham
p10nsh1p also and you see that
he must have led from 1ack·
ten· stx You play your mne
and make the contract
Why d1dn t Garrozzo lead
the !O' Because he was sure
tliat you would recogmze that
lalsecard lead play low and
(1nesse agamst h1s Jack on the
n~xt turn Suppose his lead
was top of nothing? lp that
~ase you were a dead btrd tn
any case
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASS/Il l

You South hOld
.AQ6st,AQU4+AK.2

"r

GASOLINE ALLEY

w~o

experiments
Latvian

2 Italian

,.

West North

U Hartebeeet.e
42 One

1Z Food
13 Lug

~WJWID!1J£ ;- tkot -...u.J ..-J ,_.

0

re

by THOMAS JOSEPH

35 Butt In

I ADECK

a

Friends and neighbors rallled round ave her locleln&amp;, t.ooll
up &lt;olledionsof clothtng and money, fed her weD - and lrilhln a
week the girl was her way back home, with an adequate warclrobe luggage and a Uttle extra c~ for emeraencles
How can I ever tlwnk you' she asked at the bull atop, 111d

.flTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

OWN YOUR
OWN LOT?
We Will bu ld your dream
house to fit your lot and your
pocketbook For a ftrst han(t
look at some beau ttful new
hom e plans call or wr te•

•••1

Answer Tomorrow

Us. • •

By II t'lt•n Bo lto·l

Dear Helen
Unm volvemcnt tTlllkes the headlmes more oftefl wt,
bciJcve me, c.1rmg is alive and welJm our neighborhood
A fncnd of ours s aw a young gu-1 weavmg on too hlgbwuy,
trymg 1o thumb a r id e He thought she was IU or doped and
stop ped to he lp Turns out she was hungry
She d com e tToss~ountry to marry a fellow who dwnped
he r she had no money , her parents wouldn t take her back but
slw to uld have a hom e with an aunt - if she could find 2 000 miles

of free tranoportatloo

Opemng lead -10+

Deluxe 3 bedroom,. 2 h ba1tl
fam ly room 2 car garag~ n·
Perfect location tn Rook
Spr ngs tust 1 h miles Norttr
of Pomero y between Meigs
High School and Sa h sburlf
Elem Drtve by and see foTU 1
yo urself'
'

Columbus

'

a l ways 1n tile tnlddl e of liM! night •
&amp;&gt; wha t s YOUH favorite Thm g you don t need any more
of • Jt sa good pa rlor gam e 1! you d on t get 1oo personal - H

East West vulnerable

SAVE 14,000

hour

TODAY S QUESTION
You b1d five diamonds Your
partner contmues to f1ve hearts
What do you do now'~

NORm
• J 863
• A93
• 783
.K75
WEST
EAST
• 92
• 74
'J62
.QI0875
+t0982
+KQJ
.A842
.JI06
soummJ
• AKQI05
• K4
+A 54
.Q93

'
"
·-=NEW=-::-:-:H=oM-=E~•. :

lnytlm• 1 llt

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
Country &amp; Western
Comed y
Superstar

THURSDAY JUL Y25 1974
6 00 - Sunrise Semi nar 4 Summer Semester 10
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30 - Bible Answers 8 News 6 Five Minu tes to Live By .4
Patterns for Li v ing 13 Sacred Heart 10
6 35- Coii,Jmbus Todny .4
6 -45 - Farmtlme 10 Morntng Report 3
7 00 - Today 3 • IS News 8 10 Olck Van Dyke 13 Make A
Wish 6
7 30- New Zoo Revue6 Tennessee Tuxedo 13
8 00 - Captain Kangaroo 8 Jeff s Collie 6 New Zoo Revue 13
Sesame St 33 Blastoff • 10
8 25- Jack LaLanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6 Green Ac res 10
a 55 - News 13 Chuck White Reports 10
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue IS AM 3 Abbo113. Costello
8 Wild Wild West 6 Captain Kangaroo 10 Movie The
Music Man {cone I ) 3 Community of Living Things 33
9 30 - To Tell the Truth 3 I Love Lucy 8
9 35 - MaHer of Fact 33
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3 IS Jokers Wild 8 10 Company 6 An
llques 33
10 30 - Winning Slr~ak 3 4 15 Gambit 8 10 Wheels K Ins and
Clay 33
p 00 - PasswordJ Mike Douglas 6 High Rollers 3 .4 15 Nlw
You See lt8 10 Community ot Living Things 33
11 30 - Brady Bunch 13 Love of Llfe8 10 Hollywood Squares 3
4 IS
11 35 - Matler of Facl 33
11 ss - CBS News 8 Dan I mel s World 10
12 00 - Bob Braun s 50 so Club 4 News e 10 13 Password 6
Jackpo1 3 15 Mister Ro&lt;lers 33
12 JI)-Spllt Second 6 Search tor Tomrrow 8 10 Celebr lly
Sweepstakes 3 15 Afternoon with DJ 13 Electric Company
33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 No! For Women Only 15
Hazel8 ; What s My Line 10 Lets Grow A Garden 33
l 30 - AsfheWorldTurns8 10 JeopardyJ 4 15 LetsMakeA
Deal 6 13 Flower Show 33
2 00 - Days ol Our Loves 3 4 15 Guiding Llghl8 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13 Book Beat 33
2 30 - Doctors IS Girl In My Life 6 13 Edge of Night 8 10
Hollywood Television Theatre Doctors 3 4
.-3 00- Another World 15 3 4 General Hospital 6 13 Prtce 1s
• Righi 8 10
'3 30 --, Ooe Life to Live 6 13 New Match Game 8 10 How lo

..

located on lrd Street iit :
Racme Oh10
_ ;'
Hour s 9 6 Weekdays
9 9 Wee kends

PHONE 992-5476
FUk t-t.: Et: est mates nn
a urn num
replacement
w ndows s d ng s term doors
and w•ndows RaIng Phone
Charles L sle Syracuse Oh o
Car l
J a cob
Sa les
Representat ve
V
V
Johnson and Son 1nc
4 30 tfc

7&gt;'.10 p m s ~ lO p m 9 30 p m -

Arms trong Ltnoleum
Wall Paper
Vtnvl Wall Fabrtc
.,
Spectal 1 On Carpet Rem....,
nants Free Esttmates
··v

ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

cl eaned
~9 2 3954 or

R E ADY MIX
CONCRETE
d el v e r e d r g hl to your
p ro ee l Fa s t and easy Free
es t mat es Phon e 992 3284
Go e gl e n Ready M•x Co
M dd eport Oh o
6 JO tfc

For Sale

742 4211

tfc

•

WILl'S CARPET •
&amp; INTERIORS ·~:

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

10 23 He

---- ~ -

I 30 V'ies Scream Pretty Peggy 1J
The P ineon 4
Boboctulvarl 20 33
•
9 00 - Cannon 8 10 Hollywood Telev ision TheBfer Jl Movie
The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid 3 4 1s Joyce Chen s
China 20
•o 00 - Kojak 8 10 News 20 Doc: Elliott 6 13 Music of the
Peopl e 33
'
10 30 - Day at Nlghl 33
11 OO - News3 • 6 8 10 13 IS Janakl33
P 30 - Johnny Carson 3 .If 15 Mission Impossible 6 Un
touchable5 13 Movies S 0 5 Pacific 8
Knock On Any
Door 10
12 30 - WIId WlldWest6 WldeWorldSr.eclal 13
00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Take Fl ... e for Ll e 15
~ 00 News .4 13

:

Next to Htghway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

' 8 10 15 Room 222 13 ABC News 6 1 J our""y

!tron~4

All Small Appliances.
Lawn Mowers ' '

Now Open for Bus1ness

SE PT C TANK S c eancd
reas onab le r ~ t es P h 446
.t782 Ga I po t s Joh n Russell
owner and ope rator
5 12 lf c

S EPT IC TANK S
Modern San tat on
992 734Y

'

MANAGER

BOWERS
REPAIR

~Ja~~·3 ~

7 00 - l'olews6 10 WhaJ 1 My L ine 8 Tr~th or Cons J Beat th~
Clock • Elec Co 20 J immy Deam 13 1 Spy 15 zoom 31
1 30- To Tell the Truth 6; Sale at the Century a BNt the Clock
13; Pollee Surgeon 3 Anllques 20 Eplso&lt;l• Acllon 33 0o lh
Money ' The Judge 10
e
8 00 - The Cowboys 6 13 Chast 3 1S Tony Orlando Dawn a
10 Consumer Game 20 Unto the Hills 33 Garner Ted Arm

'

BENNY BRANHAM

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY

• Lawn Boy
• Tec\Jmse h
• Kohle r
• w sconsln
• All o th e r
ma kes

4

6

E MAIN ST R EET
POMEROY
Ill 95
- Wash&amp; War.
9 so
- Lube Oil Filler
16
f$ 0
- Tvf\e Up

vour
lea)l;•ng?
Co npare our pr ices 10 any
others We il g ve you a
pro tess onal roof lo r less
Ca II 992 69Sl For
E s.t1ma1 cs of Any T ype

Moved to Rutl and 3 ... m I~
ms de c tv I m t on nght
co rn er B ~r ck Sl a nd Rf 12A

10

•

l!i.

Wtlkmson Small Eng me
992 3092
Pomeroy 0
399 W Ma n
Lout ed at Mod e rn Supply
S m1111 E ng1n e Repilllr

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

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

\

w.'"''-""H
·w~~.,""e
-"""l=e
""A&lt;')n
"""'"'"'"' ,H.•"'" elp

WE ON£5 DAY JU~ y 24 lt7&lt;
6 00 - Newo J A 8 10 lJ AB C Nows IJ Sosame 51 20 Ca l h
33 Jl Truth or Cons 6
c

•

See or Ca II
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
Nlght992 3525
or 992 5232

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

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

Rout ~ 1

('!i.hlled

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

•

WILSON'S
PENNZOIL

Witt e r Ltn es atld Pow er
Lmus All work done by thQfoot or coutrrtd Al so dozer
wo• k and seplt c tank s m

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

--..o:....------------1.

K&amp;H ROOFING

The DIUy Stntlnel Mlddl•port POitW"oy, 0, Wednesday, July 24 1974

. Television Log

Business Services

~--

1950 F ERGU SO N 20
new
eng ne Phon e 98 5 3594 In
good cond I on and pr ced a
NEED someone to ca re for 2
s 1 000
ch•ldr en schoo l age L ve n f
7 23 Stc
poss ble 5 day s a week Work
1674
wh1le mother works
L nco n Hgt s Ca at 992 288 1 GREE N beans g een p e pper s
even n gs
cucumbe r s
tomatoes
7 21 5t c
Cle land Farms Gerald ne
Clc and Ra e n e Oh o
7 17 He
$150 WEEK nd1v dual nee d ed
car necessa ry ca 1 99 2 2046
7 22 3tc
S E - S xroomsandbath]
REDUCE sa fe a nd fa s t w th HOU
b
e
droom
s
w a 1 to wall
GoBese Tab le ts &amp; E Vap
carpet Larg e yard $1 1 700
water pIts
Nelson Dr ug
Se e al 235 So Fourth Av e
7 24 lie
M ddt e port Phone 99 2 5546
7 15 ti c
SMALL mob•le home daub e ST EREO rad o am fm 8 rra ck
tape
comb
nat
on
4
speaker
w de 2 bedrooms furn shed
soun d
s yst e m
Balan ce 5 ROOM house and ba h w th
utI t es
pa1d
Adu lt s
shower 2 large lot s and new
$105 39 or ea s y ter m s Ca 1
preferred Phone 992 7017
ut I ty bu d ng
n Ra c n e
992
3965
7 24 3tc
Oh o Ca I 949 52 85
7 24 lf c
-~--~7 16 12tc
2 BEDROOM trailer carpet
an d
a nd a r cond t10n ng Phone TA PE S Roc k Gospel
Country &amp; Western $2 75 ea c h STORE b u ld ng apt and
992 3509
garage 75 fl frontag e larg e
or
2 tor S5 Open da IV ex cept
7 24 4I C
park ng a rea Pnc e $1 5 000
Sunday 9 a m to 5 p m
E Man S
Pomeroy Oh o
Pomeroy
Re
cov
e
ry
622
E
NICE 3 t oom s and bath at
Wr te P 0 B.o x 243 Syra c us e
Man
St
Pomeroy
Phon
e
elect n c apar tm ent Table top
Oh o
992 7554
range wall oven r eal n ce
7 18 He
7
24
)IC
('lpartment Phone 44 6 7699 or
even ngs at 446 Y5J9
1969 T RIUM PH 500 motor c ycle OL D house w th 2 n ce lo ts n
7 -18 6tc
Chopped ex ce l ent cond ton
Syra cuse Sd 000 P ho e 992
Ca l 9?2 7439
5898
COUNTRY Mob te Hom€' Park
7 23 5tc
7 24 n c
Rt 33 ten m les north of
Pomeroy Large lots w th TAPPAN Eye Level oven and 3 OEOROO M ba l h k tch e
t oncrete pat.os Sidewalk s
sur face range ha rv es t gold
I v q
room
and
fu
runners and off s tr e et
Gas
Br a nd Ne w
co or
basen c n l Io r g e lot Ma rt n
De lux e Model Se ll ng b e ow
park ng Also
s pa ces lor
St Mason Ph one 773 5J04
sma ll Ira ters Phone 992 7479
cos t S11 5 f'hone La rry s
7 13 6 p
Mob le Ho m es 992 7777
7 11 He
1 24 6tc
5 ROO M ho use on 1 ac re ot and
f-- URN I S HED
ap a rtment
-----~--- .........
Ph one 991 72 65
NEW I vmg room su te s tn
ad ults only n M ddl e porl
7 22 6tcMod e rn M e d t e rran e an
Ph one 992 387&lt;t
Ear ly Amer can an d So an sh
5 12 ti c
Se r v1ce
Si a l on
Styles Your c ho cc of colo rs CA R SO N
Gar age
50~~:60
bu ld ng
n vel vet or nylon w th Sco tch
TRAILER Brown s Tra e r
gard Start nQ as ow as
Ce m en t dr veway P t on e 7 42
505 2
Cou r t Pom er'oy Phone 992
$J49 95 Pomer oy Rec ov e ry
3324
622 E Ma n Sf Po mero y
7 16 lf c
7 18 lf c
P hone 99 2 7554
7 24 7t c LOTS for sate tralle r or house
All ut I t es Phone 7 42 3615
3 AND 4 ROOM turn shed and FO AM to f II you r old cou c h an d
Ru tl a nd Ohi o
un 1urn shed
apartmenls
cha r c ush1on s as low as
7 16 lf c
Phone 992 5434
$10 95 uph ols te ry okk s on ly - - - - - 4 12 ti c
50c 4 nc h cove red foam 3 B E DRO OM home 1500 Clown
mattr ess es for s ta ndard s ze
and 1. 80 pe r mon th 2 bedr oom
PRIVATE meetng room for
bed
$29 95
Po me ro y
Ira ler on same t na nc n g
any o rga nlzat on phone 992
Recovery 621 E Ma n St
Ph on e 992 3975
3975
Pomeroy Oh o Phon e 99 2
7 16 tt c
___.
_,_
3 11 !fc
755d
7 24 26tc
--'---...--~-BUS INE SS room 12 )( 80 23 4 E
UPHOL STERY fabn cs by the
Man St
Pomeroy Olrlo
yard 54 n c hes w de as low a s
Phone 992 5786 or 99 2 3975
$2 49 per yard Ve lvet s es ow
6 " tf c
as S5 25 Imported v e tve ts
$9 60 We also ha'¥e nyl on
her c ut o n
colto n pr ints
TWO 5 room and bath apts In
v ny!s and remnants by the
Middleport For •nformat on
~iH'd or bV the piece Pomeroy
Cjl ll 992 2550 or 742 65$1
"ecovery 622 E Ma ln Sl
7 3 ttc
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
7 '24 26tc
MOBILE HOME n M ddteport
------- -----~.41-dulls only Phone 992 5592
6 25 lf c
i' "t

-----'--....------ -

"
r

J OJS

T OTAL l" leclr c 3 bedroom
S UPERIOR
h ome
Har dw oo d fl oo r s
VINYL PRODUCTS
breezew ay and ga ra ge lo l
180 Arb a
S
00)(420
Call Collect I 591 5544
Tupp
ers
P
lan
s
W II ta ke
Athe ns Oh1o
$5 000 down and fake over
pay 1 e nt s P ho n e 667 6386
7 24 ate
200 BALE S oa st ra w Ph one
949 5953
7 19 61 C

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed b ids will be r e ce ived
by the Vtllege of Syra c use at REAR e nd and axle for 1952
the offi ce of the Clerk unfll
BLA CK and wh it e
Dodge a" ton truc k R ct'lard DO U BLE
it lr
cond 1 oned
12 00 noon August 1 1974 for
Husky blve e y es
Qunlts Pomeroy Ohio
sleep ng room w th kUchen
furnishing 200 tons more or
sp11yed 3 yrs Oc t Wonderful
7 21 3tp
pr vdege Phone 992 S.t40
less of State Speclflcet on 40.4
pel for c h Hdr en Re asonable
7 23 31c
asphaltic hot muc n pll!t ce on 6 OR 7 ft drag type brush hog
to lam lly to tur f'11 SI'l gooct
various streetl!i of the village
home Mus1 ha"'e 6 fl fenced
Ph one 843 2353
4 ROOM fu rnish ed apt Phone
The Vlttaue of Syracuse
•n yard
C
E
Wh• t e
1 21 :ltc
992 5908
rtltrves the right to rele ct anv
Murraysv.lle W Va 26153
7 ~J 61 C
or 111 bids
7 l3 6tp
8v order of the Village $5 tor tunk autom obiles we w 11
p c k up
Rlvers•de Auto 4 ROOMS and bath home for AKC Toy POOdle pupp i es
Council
Wre c k•ng Phone (304) 773
S amese I{ lien$ Ir ish Setter
ren t n R uti and Ph one 992
Katfiry'n H Cr ow
5890
pups Kennels of Cnlhovn 1
5858
1 5 tiC
Cterk
1 56 6247
7 14 ttc
U) 10 17 2A ltc
1 18 26t c

---..----

Fot Sale

11 -

IT WAS A GIRL ' SHE
WANT5 ME TO 500VER10
HER HOIIOE SO SHE CAN
AI\)L06tZE TO ME 1~ PER50N'

�Judging time
here for 4-H

30 _ TbO O.Uy Sentlnol, Mlddleport-Pomtroy, 0 ., W«&lt;.nesdlly, July 24. 1971

Meigs

Little Chinese needles can kill
By David Hcndln
(
NEA Science Editor
1Third In a strlfSI
NEW YORK ( NEAl - Some
pseudo-acupuncturists claim
that use of the ancient Oriental

n•'&lt;!dles pia""&lt;! imprup.rly can
cause !r(reat harm by up.st.1 tlin ~
the balarll't' cf Yin and Yang

In a rc(·t:nl issue ,,r the
Jl•urnul o£ th(' Amencan

more than illness otlreact)'

needle therapy is harmless

ronnation, one is hard put to
understand why ~h)• sicians
who thcmsel"es are not ex~
perts in c1assical acuptya:ture
techniques are so ready and

ant"sthesiHII,I!ist 01·. John
Bonil'a , l' ht~irman of the Ad
J-lv(' ("unnn ittt•(" on A(·upunt··
IUTr of the Nationnl lnslilutes
nf Hoalth and u,e American
Sodety of Anc s thesl o lo~ls ls.
lll&lt;-~de important c·onclusions
&lt;tftcr intensive study nf the

even when used incorreclly.
But hard medical evidence
shows that in the wrong hands

acupuncture can be very
dangerous indeed.
Students of &lt;:lassical
acupuncture who h'ave studied
in the Orient have practiced on
themselves for many .years and
have pricked their own skins a

thousand times to perfect their
form .
11oday, however, some
physicians think they can do a
quick study of .acupuncture in
three-or four~day Courses .
which offer no practical e~­
perience, and then use it on
patients safely and s ue·

cessfully . one such course,
given by the Los Angeles based American Institut e of
Hypnosis recently in New

York, attracted some 96
doctors , their assistants and

others not affiliated with the
medical profession.
During this course the
'

dangers of acupuncture were

drastically downplayed .
possibly lulling the audience
into a false sense of security
regarding -its own· new-found
ability to use the needles to
bl!lance the body's energies as
the Chinese have for thousands

i'

has,'' Duke says.
In light of this kind of in-

willing to ur~e their colleagues
to pradice the information

they pass along.
One answer may lie in a point
Dr. Shirley, a self-styled expert
in ·' Acupunc-ture America n
Style,'' made in a lecture : "I
find my patients are much

more eager to try acupuncture
than maybe their doctors are,"
he said. ·

Dr. Shirley. who comes rrom
Jennings, La., goes onto tell or
a pregnant woman patient who
wan ted to induce her labor
using acupuncture. ·'( let her
talk me into it because (
wanted to.use Spleen 6 1a point

above the ankle where needle
insertion is supposed to induce
labor ) anyway .n
This seems tantamount to a
physic-ian allowing the patient
to talk him into taking out an
appendi~. even though the
doctor doesn't think the
operation is necessary.
"One reason they have me at
these courses." Dr. Shirley
said, "is lhal I'm not so big on
all these long theories . I tell
something you ca n use
tomorrow.'
The physicians who have
been chosen to evaluate
acupuncture al the, highest
mediCal levels aren't as sure as
Dr. Shirley and Dr, Saita that
inexperien ced
use
of.
acuptmctW'e can 't hurt anyone.

MNin·a l

Asso .

sub je_c t. An1on~ them :
" The
mi suses of
therapeutic acupunctw-e is Rn

important health p ro bl~m .
- ··The widespread clinic.ul
use of acupWlctlU'e ls tul ·
warranted t~t th e present
lime."
The same issue of the J AMA
gave case histories of various
complications or acupunctute
rangtng
fr om
therapy
damagt"d nerves and arteries
to puncture of the lung and at
least one death caused by H
blood leak in the hc&lt;1rt after
needling in the area by an
acuptmctw·ist.
Many people believe th&lt;-Jt
acupuncture therapy is a
panacea for all ills and that
doctors oppose it because it
would put them out of business.
When acuplUlcture is criticized
these defenders say, " Then
how come it has been practiced
so successfully for thousands of
years in China "! ''
The point is debatable . Dr .
Bonica notes that "for centuries before lhe 1949 com. mWlist revolution, China had
had one of the highest mortality rates and lowest life
expectancies in t~e world ."
And even Dr . Ching Yuen
Ting, a China.trained classical
acupun cturist who lives in New
York sa id, " In the book of
acuplUlcture it says it can cure

of years . .·
''I can give you ways you can
start using acupuncture right
away with results," general
practitioner Dr. Louis E.
Shirley said in a lecture at the
AIH "course. " He added that
"I had a phone call just the
other day from somebody who
took this course and uses !he
treatment and is yet to have his
first failure."
· And Dr. Harold S. Salta, an
osteopath and acupuncturist
from West Vancouver, B.C.
•told the group, 11 That 's one
beauty of acupuncture. Treat
the wrong place and 'there's no .
eflec! at all."
HOUSTON . (uP!) - Each virgin material."
This is in direct conflict with
Browning-Ferris and the
classical acupuncture theory year Americans throw out 130
mllllon
tons
of
garbage
in
·designer,
Bruce Monical, gathas espoused by almost all of its
students. . in the book · various forma. This Is a vast ered the recycled !Dalerials
''Acupuncture,'' China-scholar resource for Industrial and from New York, Georgia,
Marc Puke explains that manufacturing materlala that · South Carolina, Ohio, Texas,
Colorado and california.
"Each of the (acupuncture) Is largely ignored.
To show how garbage can be
Broken beer bottles went into
points is one-tenth of an inch in
a
· table top, melted down
dianieter, and some of them
automobile cylinders formed
are that close to Important
aluminum
frames for ·chairs,
blood vessels ·and nerves. A
slip, ever so slight, ·and the . turned Into useful objects, used paper tubing added
acupuncturist can Injure . a Browning-Ferris ·Industries of support to the walls an&lt;! broken
patient seriously.' or cau~e Houston buUt a totally recycled Windshields became ashtrays.
Monical found the design
pennanent nerve damage - 8 ofttce complete with furniture
good reason not to allow from discarded beer bottles, challell8ing. In four months
anyone but a qualified used automobile parts, _paper :-work, he learned the materials
were both durable and easy to
professional to puncture your and cloth.
. "We're hoping through this · work with,
skin with his slim needles.
"I was Intrigued by the
''Chinese acupuncturists exhibit to be able to visually
believe ' that even without and dcamatlcally demoostrate idea," M011ical said. "But this
hitting an artery or nerve, that here are producla that are was just a drop iii the bucket to
good looking and that are what can be &lt;lone and
acceptable," aaid John Van- ultimately what will have to be
· derveld Jr., a senior vice done.
president of the company,
"Sooner or later, we're going
''The general public must to have•to begin subotitliting
· recognize that 'Waste' is · a and realize there is a resouree
ToniGht, Thursday,
misnomer because once a there and it has to be put to use
Friday
matertalls used it is still there. by business and the conIt's just changed forms. So you swner."
July 24·25-2.6
put lt back in a form that
Vander vel d sa I d
must
Double Feature
&lt;ian be. reused. And the cost as manufacturers must recognize
"SSSSSSS"
we see It is comparable It not that vast amounts of energy
Plus
less than things made ~f could be saved and rapidly
"THE BOY WHO CRIED
·original
material."
diminishing natural resources
WEREWOLF"
.
The
15
by
40
foot
offiCe
has
16
more judiciously through
RATED "G"
wall panels, a desk and chair, widespread use of recycled
three ~""P chairs, a sofa, two materials.
lounge chairs, a coffee table,
But unW IIUinufacturers eretwo end tables with lampe, ate a demand for the recycled
several decorative pieces and a mater ala, ·he said, its producnyk•f carpet.
lion will lag.
Tonight and Thursday
And it's all made from irash.
"It would oe nice if we could
·July 24-2S ·
"The
material
for
the
sofa
ease
Into this and understand
NOT OPEN
was made from 95 per cent · it," Monical said, "because
reprocessed wool by a manu- eventually we're going to be a
friday, Saturday, Sundily
facturer who produces It all the
July 24-27-28
AI Patino in
time," Vanderveld said. "But
"SERPICO"
be's afraid to tell the general
1
-~. (TechnicolorJ
public that it's reprocessed .
AI Pacino, John Randolph
.. R...
wool because the general
public will say that there m~ ·
CARTOONS '
· Show Starts 7 p. m.
be IIOIDething wrong with II.

*t~~ :::~~::.~:3-:.\&gt;.$;_o\:~~

it Lh;tl ;1 lnl &lt;Jf people still die
th(•rc ? If the buok were riAht ,

un ueupundurisl would be able
to balance tho Yin and the
Yun~, llx lhc cireulalin r\.
which is very irnpurl11nl , and
no une would ~el old and die.''
Many physiclons have also
pointed oul that acupuncture,
OSp&lt;'cially when Jll'ac ticed on
Uw " production line m ethods"
ulfer" l by inany a(·upun eture
f'linics tod11y. cnn seriously
delay a person from ~etling
life-!lavin~ medico! or surgical
treatment.
Say a woman ha s a pain in
th.e belly, and she ~oes lo an
acupunctw·ist. He alleviates
the pain and it slays away for
weeks or months.
But theil the pain returns,
worse than befOre. This time

acupunctlU'e is not effective
and the woman seeks other
medical
help .
Upon
examination the physician
finds widespread clm&lt;;e r of the
in testine, or perh aps the uterus
- a cancer that wo uld have
been far more localized and
easily removed many weeks
before when the pain first
occurred. But the "quackuplUlctw-ist" didn 't give the
patient a complete physical
exam and thus missed the
cancer completely.
With acupWlctlU'e , then, as
wit.h anything else, lhe " buyer
tnust bewa re." The buyer
should particula1·1y beware of
those
who
pra ct i ce
" Acupun ctur e American .
Style."
t NEXT: Who Teaches . lb t•
Courst'?)

garbage, hut recycled

Mason
Drive-In

MEIGS THEATRE

recycled society in many
respects."

WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
Washington author has a c~
. cused Supreme Cow-t Justice
William H. Rehnquist with
""etbical short-sightedness'' for
casting the deciding vote in a
case he was involved with
before his elevation to the
court.
In 'B new book, ''The Ap·
pearance of Justice," John P.
MacKenzie urges Congress to
legislate standards
for

SHOP THUilSDAY 9:30 -TO 5 PM

FINAL CLEARANCE SALE
SAVE UP TO 75%.

.
2195

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ONLY

PC·78· NW-VY-TL
L78x!S

$

4

Ply

Whlto Walls ·

tor large c.r owners ·

Fed. Exc. Tax
(a,.,,n~ . ln:-~t;un

.' -'·!"'llilil"l
.ruu lttlju,.f:

'3.13

ZSPEED 110101 .

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EXTRA ·
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h fl.·at,, .\!i It
f'

I. ..., ' ',

.Eiberfelds In Pomeroy

AUGUST 13-.14-15-16-17

Al&amp;o.r.&amp;

St1"1T..,. :\~

Jmnes E. McCI.uin , Margaret
McClain , James Samuel
BY AGNESC. HIU., TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
Rucker, Connie Hope Rucker
Not all the history 01 America's two centuries is to be found 1n sch~l bo!&gt;lta and bOOks on llbral')l
\0 John ~'. Cook, Peggy Cook, shelves. Modern Americans can learn very much aboutllfe in an earlier lime from the records and
13 Acres. Olive.
diaries of ordinary men and women whO lived and worked then. Such a diary was kept by John H..
Ralph Welker, Pearl Welker Parker of Tuppers Pla!n4 from May, 1845 ,to January , 1890. In his diary. or day bOOk, he recorded
to Jack Welker, Sharon Mae recipes for soap and other household compouhds, listed events important to hunself a!ld lhe
Welker , 8.9853 Acres, Bedford.' country, and kept track of wages and prices paid for household goods and services. Abo, he listed
Anna M. Ryther, Com ., John the names of 148 people with whom he conducted business dc :ing those 45 years. Oddly enough,
Warner. dec. to Evelyn M. Utere are 14 people named Parker on the list
.
Warner, Eleanor Louise Well .
Among lhe recipes in the book are two for making grafting salve. For stump grafting he
Zelda Joan Kaldor, Helen,Reah · recommends a mixture of five pounds of 1'08in (his spelling) to three pounds oj beeswa&lt; and one
Gipson , Donna Jean Cobb, pound of tallow. For slope grafting he used two pounds of tallow to one pound beeswu and one
Clelilh Eileen Brogan, John teaspoon of spirits of turpentine. He dl)ted these recipes and signed them on AprlllO, 1853.
Warner, Glada Faye Camp.
Relrigerators and freezers have simplified tbe task of preservtn~ food today, ~t a century ago
bell, Dana Herbert Warner. very different methods had to be used . John Parker's recipe for keeptng beef contamed a mixture oj
Gary Lee Warner, Tery Ray sugar and salt to be used as a preservative . He directed thalfor every one hundred pounds of beefi
Warner. Mary Edna Warner, one pound of salt and two pounds of brown sugar be diSsOlved with one.quarter ounce of salt petre in
Pomeroy.
enough water to cover the beef. Let the meat stand in the water for two weeks, then the brine should
Christine Branham to Ernest be drained off and replaced with a fresh mixture made the same as the first. His notes tndicate thai
E. Imboden, Wanda J. Im- this method would keep the beef the season through.
boden, l.ol, Salisbury .
Supermarket shelves loaded with scented soaps, deodorant bars, and an endless array of
Sybil Ebersbach , Comm ., laundry products fortified with bleacbes and brighteners may satisfy the modern shopper.
Elbert Williams Jr .• dec. to However for John Parker and family tbe choices were simpler. They made therr own soap from
Alice L. Williams, Richard L. a mlxlure of lye, grease,and sal sodl!, His recipe for hard soap says to put twenty pounds of grease
Williams, Michael R. Williams, and two gallons of lye in a kettle and boil for one hour over a slow fire . Then put two more gallons oi
Stephen W. Williams, Parcels, lye into the kettle and boil for another half hour. Finally add one gallon of water and three pounds of
Sutton-Rutland.
sal soda and boil a half hour longer. Let it stand for one dl!y . By adjusting the amounts of waterand
.
Richard L. Williams, Sharon sal soda, a milder soft soap could be made.
Willianis, Michael R. Williams, .
In anotbet part of his book he listed what he called remarkable evenis, These are some of hiS
Dorothy Williams, Stephen W. entries. ·
.
Williams,- Vicky Williams to
May 29, 11145: Hard frost In Meigs County, Ohio.
Alice L. Williams, Parcels,
June 5, 1859: Frost that killed wheat, corn, potatoes.
Sutton-Rutland.
.
July 19,1863 : Battle fought at Buffington Island, Meigs County, Ohio, A part of Rebel Morgan 's
Laura J . Douglas to Flora forces captured. About lOS killed between seven and nine o'clock by General Hobson .
Mae Osborne, 66.18 Acres,
July 26, 1863: The remainder of Morgan's command captured and Morgan himself in ColuniScipio.
biana County, Ohio at two o'clock by Major Rue.
·
'
G~nevieve B. Meinhart to
May4, 187J:Themerwrystoodateightbelowzero,
·
April!, 1874: The Ohio River did notfreeze over in the winter ofl873 and 1874.
Sybil Ebersbach, Lot 7,
Pomeroy ·
Aprif 7, 1.880: Moved from Orange to Olive Township,
Sybrl
Ebersbach
to
March '!0, 1885: George Buck moved to Missouri.
Genevieve B. Meinhart, Erma
A list of priees and wages kepi in another section of his day book provides an interesting
J . Smith , Lot I , Pomeroy .
glimpse ofllfe then. The average wage paid for mill work, plowipg In the field, or construction of
buildings was listed as one dollar per day. on May 17, 1851, John Parker paid John Hobert sixty
cents for shearing sheep. on March '1:1, 1852 be bought two bushels of cow feed for a quarter from
Lawrence Hoffman, and three weeks later he bought a hundred pounds of flour from the.same IIUiil
SECOND CHILD BORN
for $1.62'h . Also in 1852 he paid Milton Parker $2.17 for a barrel of salt. Modern shoppers caught in
Mr . and Mrs. Alfred Roush, the grasp of inflation might be aiiUIZed and envious to find that beef COSt three and a half cents
Middleport, are announcing pound in Meigs County in 1851, and John Parker bought 108 pounds of meat for $3.78, according to
the birth of a .daughter, Amy his notes. He might be aiiUized to find out that now one good steak costs more than that. In 1854 he
Dawn, at the Pleasant Valley paid a quarter for two gallons of vinegar.
Hospital, Pojnt Pleasant, July
He abo noted that Ebenezer Young commenced to learn the carpenter trade from him on AprU
13. The infant weighed 6lbs., 2 ·. 20, 1852, and that a year later Benajah Parker commen""&lt;' to work on Aprill9, 1853, at $8.35 I -.'I per
ozs . Grandparents are Mr. a.nd Ill!lnth. -John Parker's book, with its Interesting and very human look atlife in Meigs County a
Mrs. Harry C. Roush, Sr., century ago, is now owned by Everett Parker of Reedsville, Ohio.
,.. '
Mason, and Mr. and Mrs.
Frank G. Smith, Vinton. Mr.
Marriage Licenses .
and Mrs. Roush have a son,
Mobile · homes aren't new
•
Alfred Lewis, foilr .
- they're been around in
PT. PLEASANT - The Hudson, 50, Point Ple_asantj
tornado country for a couple following applications for Alan Jay Ray, 22, Kingman,
hundred years.
·
marriage li"!'nses have been Ind., and · Deborah Lynn
ftled in the . office of Mason capebart, 22, Leon.
County Clerk L. W. _Getty:
the anguish of the 1969 forced · · •Donny Lee ·Robertson, 20,
resignatign of former Justice Henderson and Pamela Sue
Abe Forlas, lhe attempt to Wiseman, !!I, Henderson; John
.
. impeach
Justice William 0. Norman Mash, 25, Buffalo and
aCtion in a memorandum, Douglas and . the agonizing Brenda Sue Bletner, 27, Leon;
which McKenzie finds " a hearings before the Senate Reginald Steven Gl!lispie, 20,
monument both of RehnquiSt's refused to confirm Clement F. New HaVen .and Joyce May
technical ability and to his Haynesworth Jr . and G. Harold Roush, 20, Letart; Robert Lee
Carswell to seats on the high Saunders, 21, Gallipolis and
ethical short-sightedness.
" If the standards set forth in coutt.
Connie Jean Saunders, 18,
If the road to you-know" It is not enough that justice Gallipolis; Ricky Allison where is paved with good inthe memorandum are allowed
lo stand for Supreme Court merely appear to be done; but casto, 18, Mason and Kathryn tentions, we have a prime
,..;
justices or for the lower federal the appearance·of justice is an Ruby Bush, 17, Henderson; contractor in mind.
indispensable
element
of
judiciary,'' he says, Americans
There is '"•-gas shortage
Scott McDermott, Jr., 53,
will have·learned nothing from justice itself," the book says. Henderson and Mary Donna about the gas shortage.
'

disqualification
of He
federal
judges from cases.
also r--~----------""'!'·------------------------..;.-~~
.recommends that federal
judges be compelled to report
their investment inc_pme, their
real estate holdings and most
of their debts.
MacKenzie, who covers the
•
Supreme Court for the
Pos t, sa id
Washington
Rehnquist's
failure
to
disqualify himself in a case,
challenging Army spying on
civilians was "one of the most ·
serious ethical lapses in the
. court's hi~tory . "
Rehr\quist as an assistant
attorney general had given his
view~ ;earlier to a Sena.te
subcollll":t.tee. · The Supreme
Court thr~1)· the case oUt by a
five to four vote, with
Rehnquist in the majority.
'
Later Rehnquist took the
unusual ·step of justifying his

Local Meigs County Fair

actually it's as good as

Transfers

POMEROY, OHIO
"2-2101

Of TMf INIGl$1 lltl£ DUI.US Ill SOIHASit!IW

FURNITURE

OHIO

JOHN FULTZ,

· -EPOIJ, 0.

OWNER
•

•

.

By Charlene lloenlch

It's that time of year when Meigs E:ounty 4-Hers
after weeks of work get it all togethEl' to put their
creative skills on the line before a judgtng panel.
...,
While the project grade de!ermines the
premium , all projects are exhibited at the Meigs
County Fair, Aug . 13-17, climaxing 4-H club work
for the year. Judging is no easy task .

VANESSA f'OUriZR !Doll lilt fasdtan re!lnJ!IIU.
project and shows here the small cbest built by a cousin more
than 50 years ago for her mother, Mrs. Mary Fobner, of
Pomeroy. Vane88a removed the black finish of the chest and
restored It to a natural finish .

Road open
to intpeach

Court justice's ethics
questioned in new book

Attend and Support Your

~--------.1 ~t

.·

Notes from John H.
Parker's diary

ED. NOTE: Note• from
Parker's dl•rY puhr'lll hecl
two week• agu Ia r•
here wllh eorrectlunt. -- ·;
passages.
~~~~

a

Future will look like.

science today

Property

:uty disease.•. Rut !fit c..·uuld, no
unta "•mld di(• in China. Why is

~JAMAl

~;·-

Bi..Centennial
Notes
.

MEN'S AND BOYS SHIRTS
SALE Y2 .PRICE
.·

.

.

GIRLS SPORTSWEAR
SAVE UP TO .7 5%
- MAIN STORE AND WAREHOUSE OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY .UNTIL 8

Elberlelds In Pomeroy

/ ..

I

Marta Gullkey, Meigs
County edension agent, home
economics, has soHcited the
aSsistance of ~ven others to
help so that all judging can be
completed by the middle of
next week.
Giving
helping hand on
judging several hundred
projects of the 23 clubs are
Becky Will, 4-H s ummer
assistant ; Joan Lan caster,
home d~monstration agent for
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., Athens ; Palsy
Glass, area home economics
agent with the E~tension
Service ; Gale Stoll, Vinton
County agent, Bev Donahey ,
Hocking County agent, Belly

WASHINGTON (UPl) therewere27likelyvolesinthe
Democrats on the House committee for r.ecommending
Judiciary Committee -with that the House impeach the
the support of some a2onized President and that the Senate
Republicans - have laid try him and convict him. There
befyre the people the . were 11 likely votes against
pro!Josition that President impeachment. Of the 17
Nixon ought to be impeached Republicans, six were confor
conducting
himself sidered likely .to support im·
11 contrary
to his trust as peachment.
.
President ... to the subversion
The Supreme Court decision
or constitutional government.!! Wednesday I ordering Nixon to
The President's supporters surrender 64 tapes to the
on the committee ·struggled special prosecutor and Nixon's
today In debate to defeat or at decision · to comply, had no
least soften the Democratic effect here , None of the 21
attack and to overcome the , Democrats and only half the
apparent defection of two Republicans seemed to favor a
important
Republican Republican proposal that an
members, both from Dlinols - Impeachment vote be delayed
Robert McClory, second -,-perhaps for months -until
ranking Republican, and Tom an effort was made to obtain
Railsback, influential among· and hear the tapes. .
fellow moderates..
Nixun announced 1n a stale;When Wednesday night's ment read by his attorney, ,
three-hour opening debate James D. St. clair, in San
ended, the congressmen Clemente, calif., that be would·
leaving the Rayburn Building comply with the court's fl.ll
encouiltered hundreds of decislori in all respects.'' But
neatly dressed presidential StClair added there.would be
supporters standing in · th e a "time-consumIn g " process 0f
humid
night,
singing . prepadng tl)e ·material for
prayerfully and . waving rele~se to U.S. District Court
American 'flags.
Judge John J, Sirlca. Tbe tapes
With 8;,..eral debate to nm were subpoenaed for use in the
morning, afternoon and night September Watergate cover-up
all this week, the pace tr1al.
Vtce President Gerald R.
suggested the first impeach·
men! vote could come as early Ford said Nixon's decision to
as Fridl!y night.
comply "demonstrated his re- ·And a UP! survey indicated
Continued on page 2

By United Press InterQBtlonal
LOS ANGELES - A BLONDE WOMAN AND a telephone
hoaxer fooled pollee and Ute Hearst family Wednesday night into
believing renegade heiress Patricia Hearst was surrounded In an
apartment and ready to surrender peacefully. Police who entered the apartment found only a cat.
.
"It was a hoax," said a police spokesman, Lt. Dan Cooke. It
was one dozens of similar false alarms in one of Ute most intensive pollee searches in modern times, the hunt for Miss
Hearst -first as the kidnap victim of the Symbionese Liberation
Army, beginning Feb. 4, and then as an SLA 'fugitive herself,
aought on 21 stale and federal charges.
Wednesday night's incident was the most dramatic,
however, marked by a teleJX!one call to police - after heavily
armed officers surrounded a North Hollywood apartment hOWIII
- from a woman identifying herself as Miss Hearst. "I want to
surrender. 1:11 give up to Uncle ~rge," police quoted . the
woman as saying,

or

a

Reese, Athens County Agent,
Dar1ene Lambert, Jackson
County agent, llJld Susie Miller
or Pomeroy, a former home
economics agent.
In addition to having her
projects judged, each club
member· Is interviewed by the
DARLENE 11IOftlll'l'()t ~the lrilll ~ Oub 9f
judge, and her project books · '
near
Salem Center modeled ber bib overalls constructed or
are evaluated. Grades of A, B,
blue
kettlecloth
with a large red appllqued apple In the center
or Care given on each project.
of the bib, for Marta GuUkey, Meigs County Extension Agent,
Those with clothing proje cl~
home economics, Wednesday during a judging session at the
will participate in the annual
Rutland United Methodist Church.
~ tyle revue to be held this year
on Aug . 6 at Meigs High School,
7:30p.m. A judging panel will
At the Meigs County Fair nutrition projects may par·
select the top winner in each there will also be a style revue ticipate in nutrition interviews
class and these top winners will ·on Youth Night, which is Ute and demonstrations dw-ing the
make up the Ohi9 State Fair Wedn esday of fair week . fair .
team from Meigs County .
Members with food and

en tine
Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXVI · NO. 72,

.POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WASlfiNGTON(UPI) - The
Supreme ·Court today in a
Detroit case ·rejected large
scale busing across county
lines to bring about racial
integration of black inner city
and white surburban schoola.
The :&gt;-4 opinion reveraed
lower federal court orders that
have caused a social furor in
Detroit, with elections turning
on the candidates' attitude
toward scbool busing,
The opinion-the last of the
current court session- had
been awaited for rna. ny weeks
.both in Detroit and In .such
other major cities as Indtanapolis, Louisville ~nd

Atlanta. Cross-district consolidation of schools has
become a major issue since the
desegregation cont•oversy
!Jlovr~away from the South.
In an opinion by Chief Justice
Warren E. Burger, the court
held that desegration must be
confined to the limits of the
schools district unless some
sort of "interdistrict vio1ation"
is proved.

Lions to sell
light bulbs
door-to-door
The Pomeroy - Middleport
Lions Club will sell light bulbs
door-to-door with proceeds
going to the club's eye saving
program .
The members will start the
sale at 7 p.m. on Thursday,
Aug . 1, it was reported when
the club met for its luncheon
meeting at the Meigs Inn
Wednesday.
Lou Osborne : new president,
reviewed events of the group
and outlined the program. A
board meeting was set for July
25. It was announced that
trophies for the dub's annual
hole-in-one contest had beerf
donated by Jack and Neacil.
Carsey of the . Pomeroy
Bowlin&amp; IADea.

:::::::::::::::::::::::•:::::i; ~:;;;;::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::;:;:;:::::

TEENAGER MISSING
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department reported that
Miss Edith· May Woodard,
16, Rutland, Rl. I, has been
missing from her home since
last. Friday.
The girl is 5'·7", weighs 190
pounds, has long brown hair,
and was wearing blue jeans
and a ·smock. Her mother,

Hattie Woodard, reported
her disappearance to the
sheriff's office about noon
Wednesday. Anyone having
any information Is asked to
call the sheriff's office at 992·

Detroit's area-wide desegregation order encompassing 53
dlstrlcla was iS$ued by the late
u.s. District Judge Stephen J .
Roth on June 14, 1972. He was
affirmed with some modifica·
tion on June 12, 1973 by the 6th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals,
Roth's ruling reassigned
pupils from Detrqtt's schools,
which are 65 per cent black, to
the white suburban . schools
wiUt a total pupil population of ·
7801000 •
The opinion said boundary
lines may be bridged in circwnstances where there has
been a constitutional violation
calling for interdistrict relief
but that school district lines
may not be causually
ignored or treated as a mere
administrative convenience.
Development of a metropolitan ~ea plaii which, upon
implementation, would leave
11
nO school, grade, or
classroom ... sustimtlally
disproportionate to tbe overall
pupil racial composition" of
the area as a whole.

Autos collide
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept investigated an accident
Wedneaday a17 :30 p.m. on TR
34 in Salem Twp.
David Lee Shule., 17, Langsville, was traveling south and
G~ace Ann Colwell,. l7, Rt. 1,
Vmton, was traveling north .
Both vehicles were reportedc,
left of center and collided in a
curve. There was moderate
danlage, with no injuries or

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI )-A
u.s. Supreme Court decision
rejecting metropolitan · area
busing In Detroit as a way of
achieving racial Integration in
schoola will awarently affect
live slmluir cases in Ohio in·
volvlng . almost
400,000
students, a spokesman for the
state Department of Education
said today.
The high court,ln a :&gt;-4 dec!·
sion, held that desegregation
must be COI!ftned to the limits
of the school's district unless

T-8HIRTS FOR SAU:SLADIES -

Mart-a of XI

Gamma Mu Olapli!r of Beta Slgrna Pill who will sell tickets
all five days at the galea of tho Meigs County Fair will be
WYrlng these speclally prepared T-Mlrts. Olarlotte Haning,
pt~tured,lll hand-painting the Gmlt letters of the I!Oforlty on
30 llhlrts to be worn by the Ucltetsellers. Also working oo tile
painting pr~jecl Ia Carol McCUllough. Proceeds from the
group's ticket selling aeUvltiea go to the chapter teasury,
•

••

CHARLESTON - West
Virginia's Air Pollution Control
Commission (APCC ) has been
Informed . th&amp;t Philip Sporn
Power Plant located in Mason
county wlll be unabl e to
comply with federal clean air
standards by July, 1975 as
ordered.
The plant's quarterly report
Indicated it would take until
August, 1977 to have installed
required parti c ulate
abatement equipment on all
four units.
APCC Director Carl Beard
tenned it a "blatant violation "
of the earlier commiiment the
utility had made to meet the
July !975 federal clean air
deadline. He suggested the
commission hold a hearing and
take testimony under oath
from Philip Sporn officials and
''find out what's ..happening."
The power plant is operated
by Central Operating Co., a
subsidiary of the American
. Electric Power System . .

some aort of •'•tnterdlstrlct violation" is proved.
· "It appears that. .. (the decision) confines the question in
all five of tbe (Ohlo) cases to
whether or not there Ia unconstitutional se,gregation within
the lndl vidual school ·diS·
tricts " said Or. Robert
Bowe;s, assistant superintendent of instruction. ·
"In most of these cases the
plaintiff has requested a
metropolitan solution to the
. problem of segregation," said

-

Bowers,
"In other worda the plaintiffs
here have requested the same
type of remedy by crOIIing
llchool !ilstrlct lines," Said
Bowers. "NoW I~ appears from
the decision that the question of
a metropollll!..-solution to thla
IIUitter Ia riot liD ~ !'
The five school dlatrlcts with
· cases simllar to the Detroit
litigatlor. filed In federal courta .
are Cleveland with 136,106
students; · Columbus with
Continued on page 8

Youth hit riding
hike
.
.

Three auto mishaps, two in
Meigs County'and one In Gallia
County, were investigated
Wednsday byothe Gallia-Meigs
Post, Ohio State Highway
Patrol. In one of the.m , a youth
on a bicycle was hit but not
:!d ::.:;t;area':'u":. injured by a car.
standl!rds is that the dismanAI 5:10 p.m,, on New Lima
tling of a dual school system
does not require any particular
racial balance,
"No single tradition in public
education is more deeply
rooted thln local control over
the operation of schools," the
opinion said.
"Local autonomy has long
been thought essential both fOI'
the maintenance of community
concern and support for public
schools and to quality of the
educational process."

controlling
Sp0m~ smoke

Old enemies talk

•
USID

400,000 bu,sed zn Ohio

•
Delay seen rn

•

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

•

......ta.

reports oi any violations of the ceasefire."
The spokesman sald · neither Turkish forces nor Greek
Cyprjots had attempted to wrest COI!trol of Nicosia airport from
U.N. troops. Turkey agreed Wednesday night to keep troope
OUTTOUndlng the airfield from launching.an attack, Shops opened
in Nicosia and other parts of 111e country, but stocks of gasoline
and food were low. The cease-fire was imposed Monday, but
blazing battles on the Island sharply had restricted movement.

...

.

:,,::,,:,;;:;;;:;;:::;:::;8::::&lt;':&lt;&lt;m;:;::::::::::m::~~ sa!:So~

NICOSIA - FIGHTING DIED OUT on embattled CypniS

By United Prall Interaatlolllll . in 1967, waited in l.oodon Ill
Greece and Turkey brought . hopes of being summoned from
. the ezploolve CyprtlB crisis to extle to play a role in !3reece'l
the coli terence table today, and future.
the llhaky lhre&amp;&lt;lay,old ceaseA U.N. spokesman 011 C)')!nt
fire on the Mediterranean reported "all Ia quiet" m •
Llllnd appeared to be laking island. ·~AI the moment, thin
bold.
·
are no reports of any violauIn Greece, where the eyprua· of the ceue.fire," the IJX"tF7
warfare toppled a seven-year- man said.
old milltary regime, the new
FIREMEN CALLED
CivWan fiOVSnullent moved to
The Middleport Fire Dept.
free hundred• of political was clllled to the Kyger area on
prllonerl and welcone IICOI'OS a !alae alarm at 2:24 p.m .
of prGinlnenl exiles back to Wednesday .. fl trailer was
·I ll* )lopleland.
reported on fire when the call ,
was received at village hall . _
·DepolldKin&amp;Conatinlino
who led an abortive attempt to However, firemen answering
0111t the mPitary dlctatanlllp · the call found no fire.

THUR SDAY, JULY 25,
. 1974

anssome

. . . ourt

today and r,elnforcentents arrived to bolster U. N. forces holding
the key Nicosia airport. from encircling Turkish forces, "All !a
quiet," au, N. spokesman said.· "At the moment, there are no

,n,

PAULA I!:JCHINGER AMD .J1.lNE WAMSLEY rJ. IIIe
Pomeroy Uve Wires 4-H Club have been involved in clothing
and photography projects. Here Pallia, left, shows a shoulder
hag which she made In conjunction with her clothing compliments project, and June modela her sports ensemble. Both
girls have had five years of 4-H work.

Rd. in Meigs Colinty, tlie patrol

citation was issued.
investigated an accident inAt 11:40 p.m., on County
volving a SO-year-old Rutland Road I In Meigs County,
man and a juvenile. According George Hawley, 21, Midto the patrol, Charles Chilgren, . dleport, w~s northbound when
56, Rutland, attempting to · his car collided m a cw:ve .w1th
enter New Lima Rd., failed to a southbound auto \h"tven by
yield the right of way, causing Ruby Prime!, 26, Athens. ,
a collision between his auto and
No one was injtir~d. but the
one driven by the juvenile .
Hawley car had slight damage,
No injuries were reported, and the Prime! auto moderate
both cars had moderate damage. Hawley was .cited for
damage and Chilgren was cited failure to yield the right of way.
lor failure to yield.
An auto-bicycle mishap was
reported at 2:10 p.m. on
Township. Road II, better
Partly cloudy tonight and
ltnown as Brick School Rd., in
Friday
with a chance of
Gallia · County .
David
Freeman, 19, Cheshire, east· showers and thundershowers
bound, began passing a entire state . LowS tonight in
juvenile on a bicycle as the the lower to mid 60s. The high
Friday again in the lower to
youth cut to his left,
No one was injured and no mid 80s.

Weather

Two pt•ograms
at
'
.

MANDIE ROllE

college approved

·Beef queen - Board
•RIO ofGRANDE
- The Ohio
Regents has approved
the first two degree programs
1•S named
for the new Rio Grande

14 in the United States that has
been accredited by the
National Accrediting Agency
for Clinical Laboratory '
Community College . to open Sciences and the American
LONG BOTTOM - Mandie this faiL
'
Medical Association. ·
Rose , 16, daughter of Mr . and - They are a two year , Regents . Chairman jo~.n
Mrs. John Rose, RD I, Long Associate of Arts program and . Mar~~~~ Briley has called a
Bottom, has been selected the · a two year. Associate of Applied special, meeting for August .23
Meigs County Beef Queen for Science in Medical Laboratory to dlicuss capital expendliUfe
197!. Mandie, busy in 4-H work Technology (MLT) ·program. requests for the next three
for 10 years, is president of the
When the regents meet bienniums. ·AI this meeting,
Meigs County Better Livestock September 20, they will con- Rio Grande · Community
Club, recreation leader Of lhe sider two additional two year CQllege Wlll present propOOIIB
Bashan Bunch 4-H Club. and associate degree programs for .for a new Career Science ·
co-vice president of the Junior .. Community Colleg~ this year. Building, a Student Life
Leade1shlp Club.
Additional programs will be .Center, an addition to the
She was also a delegate to the outlined and presented to the library, and additional parking
Citizenship Short Course at lhe Regents for future years. Rio faclliUes on .CQJIIpus to .be
· National 4-H Center in Grande Community College . constructed during the ne~t six
Washington, D. C. july 7-13.
officials Bllid they wlll·be open years, If state funding lo
Miss
Rose
will
be to suggestions from Individuals avallal&gt;le,
representing Meigs County in 1n thec.onununltyfor programs
Attending ",iday's ..-una
the Buckeye Cow Belles Queen in which they have an Interest. lor RIO&lt;GJ'Inde were Prlll~ent
or Beef Contest on August 3 at The twg-year MLT program, . Alphua R;Chriotensen Uld Dr.
the Ohio Beef Marketing Office already in existence at Rio George Ossman, anlstanl
. in Worthington,
Grande College, is one ol only cleail for 1'1101-7- Pl'otlramtl

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          <elementText elementTextId="37501">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="37500">
              <text>July 24, 1974</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1916">
      <name>mcclellan</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
