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•

Rebels inflict
300 casualties

Question
{Continued from Page l l
QUL"Silon

I ~· ·m~ tiK"

cornmittt-e

is how much Nixon koow about
the Water~ate affair itself. the
break -in at Democratic
national heudquarters and the
effort to cover it up.
They argue that Watergate
now is but a s:ymbollor a far
grealer scandal, encompassing
campaign dirty tricks, perjury
and payoffs, among other
things.
.
Campaign "dirty tricks" and
financing will be two areas the
committee will explore this
fall .
. The Senate committee face
the chore of sorting out what is
fact in the face of missing
rtli.'Ords, shredded documents,
conflicting testimony · and
faulty memories of key witnesses.
GOD'S HANDIWORK, a girls' trio from The Cincinnati Bible Seminary, Cincinnati, will be
John W. Dean Ill, the former
singing at the Pomeroy parking lot , along the river, at7 :30 p.m. Wednesday, as a part of the
While
House counsel, gave his
Come Alive Singers. Members of the Trio are Cyndi Wagner, Youngstown; Shirley Smith,
version to the committee in
Canton;and Marilyn Hammond , Joliet, Ill. The Com~ Alive Singers is a 21-n1ember ensemble
June.
touring 15 states this ·swnmer. Their program includes contemporary sacred and secular
He told of collaborating with
music and is youth oriented. The progra mis free of charge. The public is invited to attend the
Mitchell,
White House chief of
Wednesday night presentation of the singers.
staff H. R. llaldeman ; John D.
Ehrlichman, Nixon's domestic
Mabel Raub, 71, affairs
adviser, and others in a
cover-up fol!Qwing the JWJe 17,
The Southeastern Ohio Hospital and admitted, and at died on Sunday
1972, Watergate arrests. He
Emergency Medical Service 8:30 p.m. Sunday Duane
Mabel Raub, 71, of !06 said the cover-up included
stationed in Pomeroy made Brickles, Darwin, was taken to
huge caSh payments to the
Holzer Medical Center with Condor St., Pomeroy, died at defendants, promises of
five runs over the weekend.
Saturday at 10:.15 p.m. severe headaches, and ad· her residence Sunday morning. executive clemency, atterllpts
She was preceded in death by
Emmett Hughes was taken milted.
to undermine the Senate
from the Syracuse Nursing
Monday at 12:20 a.m. Gladys her parents, Andy and Maria hearings, and attempts to
Home to Holzer Medical Center Cross, Rutland, was admitted Phillips Mitch .
Surviving her are her blame the CIA for the break-in.
Veterans
Memorial
where he was admitted. He to
They Deny Testimony
was
having
difficulty Hospital. She was having ·husband, Hobert, Pomeroy;
But when Haldeman and
,two sons, Kenneth Mankin,
breathing. Sunday at . 12 :55 difficulty breathing.
Ehrlichman
came before the
Pomeroy, and Fred Gardner,
a.m. the squad was called. to
Carroll, Iowa; nine grand- committee they denied · point
the home of Ernest Wells, 3rd
ch ildren, and two great- after point in Dean's testimony
St., Middleport, who was taken
grandchildren. Funeral ser- and accused him of being the
to Holzer Medical Center and
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
vices will be held Wednesday force behind the scandal.
admitted.
Chance of showers Thurs- at l p.m . at Ewing Chapel with Nixon said in a~·ctelevised
At 2:05a.m. Charles NelSon, day and Friday. Highs In the
the Rev . Richard E. Jarvis April 30 speech that he perSycamore St., Middleport, was
low 80s Wednesday rising to officiating. Burial will be in the sonally assumed responsibility
laken to Veterans Memorial
the upper 80s Thursday and Meigs Memory Gardens. for coordinating intensive news
Friday, Lows In the upper Friends may call after 6 p.m. inquiries into Watergate
50s and low 60s Wednesday today.
March 21 and ;,personally
rising to the low to mid 60s by
ordered those conducting the
Friday.
investigations to get all the
GRAVESIDE SERVICES
facts
and to report them
Gr.aveside services were
held Saturday afternoon at directly to me, right here in
Gravel Hill Cemetery for the this office."
But in the strongest testimostillborn son of Stephen and
Sandra Humphreys Hen- ny agairnl Nixon since Dean
derson , Middleport. Rev. had been on the stand, the
Richard Graham conducted three men most directly inservices. The baby is survived . volved with the Watergate
(Continued from Page I )
probe told the committee last
248, David D. Spence, Vienna, by paternal grand:nother, Mrs. week the President had given
W. Va., was traveling west and Agnes Henderson, Gallipolis them no such order.
Frank W. Smeeks, Coolville, and maternal grandparents, First was L. Patrick Gray
Rt. 2, was traveling east when Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hum· III, the former acting FBI
their autos collided In a curve. phreys, Middleport.
director who quit April27 when
Smeeks was cited to court for
it was disclosed he had
Pleasant Valley llospllal
failure to keep on right half or·a
destroyed
Watergate-related
Discharges: Charles Varian,
roadway.
Hartford; Mrs. Cha.rles documents; then Petersen;
There were no personal Kensler, son, Ashton; Mrs. and then former Atlorney
injuries, and medium damage James Tarbell, Henderson; Genera I Richard G. Kleinto both vehicles .
James Rice, Gallipolis; Ronald . dienst.
At 4:40p.m. on SR 7 near the Duck, Leon; Mrs. Dennis
Shake
Haven
Drive-in Kimes, Hartford; Woodrow
"When the insects take
Restaurant, three cars Kuhn, Cheshire; Homer Icard,
STATE OFFICES
over the world, lei's hope
c6UJMBUS
(UP!) - The
they remember with
collided.
Gallipolis; Hilda Bradshaw,
gratitude how. we look
Harry J. Kearns, West Point Pleasant; Scotlie Stover, first occupants of the new state
them along on all our
Columbia, W. Va.; George W. Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Arthur office building here will move
picnics."
Scholl, Vienna, W. Va., and Nease, son, Minersville; Hazel into the 41-story structure in
Patrick A. Engle, Lowell, Ohio, Siders, Henderson, and Mrs. December, officials anwere traveling south on Rt. 7. Wi)liam Burris, Apple G~ove . nounced.
I"$ no picnic when you
Kearns
slowed to make a right
More than 3,400 ·state
tackle a do -ll ·yourself
turn,
and
Scholl
following,
also
It' s Still Cheaper
workers will eventually occupy
project without the proper
tools and materials . See I be
slowed down, but Engle ,
More than 400,000 vessels offices in the $50 million
"FRIENDLY ONES" at
following Scholl, skiddes into have navigated the Panama building which will have 125
The PomerOy Cemen1
the rear of both vehicles to his Canal since 1914, paying an parking spaces.
Block Company before you
front. Kearns had completed average toll , based on ton·
begin. (You'll be glad you
nage , of $6,600. Many times
his· turn and was off Route 7 that
dtdll
amount can be saved in
when struck.
time and travel costs com- The tuberose has the strong·
There were no personal . pared to a trip around South est scent, with an almost sickeningly strong odor.
injuries. Engle was arrested on America.
charges of failure to stop
withiti assured clear distance.
There was medium property
damage to all the vehicles.

SEOEMS went on five calls

Cyclist

BILl. SIGNED
WASHINGTON (UPil President Nixon today
signed Into law a $23 billion
ex~nsfon of the highway act
Which permits highway trust
fund money to be spent for
the first lime on mass transit.
The President said in a
statement thai be was
"particularly pleased lo sign
Ibis legislation." He said It
represents "a significant
extension ond reform of the
federal highway progrum"
and·ealled II "an Important
step forward" in providing
better, more balanced trans·
porta lion.

HUNTING PERMITS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Con·
trolled waterfowl hunting per.
mits to allow one.day hunting
at Killdeer Plains and Mosquito Creek·Wildlife areas may
be applied for starting today
from the state division of wildlife.
Hunting dates have not been
set.

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a.m.
was 74 degrees under rainy
skies.

NOW

TWO EVENINGS
EACH WEEK

BUFFET
DINING
MONDAY EVENING
AND TUESDAY EVENING
l

to 9: 3G-A II you can ea t, (or AI a Carle).

MASON
DRIVE-IN
..
.
" ,,. "r.,,,,,,
TONIGHT, TUES.
AUGUST 1!-14
Ooube' Fealure Program

" WOMEN FOR SA~E "

( R)

Plus

"ANGELS
WILD WOMEN"
(RI

Dr inks and
Dessert Extra.

Wide Menu
Choice

MEIGS THEATRE
Theatre Closed
·August l2 thru AugustZJ
AUGUST241hru lj ·
HEARTBREAK KID
Plus
THE MAN

The MEIGS INN
PH. 992·3629
I

POMEROY

August ll thru Sept. 4
BATT~E FOR THE
PLANET OF THE 1
APES
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

I
'•

•

Dr. Herbert V. Prochnow,
l etired president of the First
National Bank of Chicago and
director of the Graduate School
of Banking since it was
organized in 1945, presented
the certificates. He told the
alumni that the object of the
program was to provide them
wlth an opportWlity \0 review
not only ,some of the more
fundamentals in banking,
economics and finance, but
also, more importantly' recent
trends and developments .
The post graduate course
was subslantially revised this
year to include a course with
the computer, strategic
planning and the computer,led
by Thomas G. Patterson, vlce
president, Continental Illinois
National Bank and Trlist Co. of
Chicago; 1\lOnetary and fiscal
policy , led by Mark H. Willes,
first vice president, Federal
Reserve Bank Of Phlladelphla;
General !lank Management,
led by L. M. Schwartz,
president, the Citizellll Slate
Bank Of Paola, Kansas, and
Loans and Bank Investment
Management, led by coleaders, Tilford C. Gaines,
senior vice president and
economist, Manufacturers
Hanover Trust.Co .. New York,
and Irving Seaman, Jr., chief
execuUve officer, National
Boulevard Bank of Chicago.
The tOO alumni from 23 states
were, on the average, 44 years
old and have been In baking
over 20 years. All were senior
officers of their banks, 35
holding the title of president
and-or chairman .

Prospects: grounded cars, cold oil-fueled homes

There will be less servk'Cin servlc~ stations. And there moy be

PHNOM PENH (liP!) - A refuge center from earlier
furious rebel assault Sunday fighting that cost them 300
drove Cambodian troops lrom a casualties, military sources
key northern town the govern- · said today .
·
ment soldiers had used as a ·The sources said that after
the government troops evauat- .
ed Skoun , a government bastion
at the junction of Highways 6
and 7, Cambodian aircraft
began bombing the rebel-held
town
but no details of the raids
Frank X. Grueser, 81 , Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, who. died this were available.
A u.S. pilot taking part In the
morning at the Holzer Medical
Cenoor, was the son of the lale strkes around Skoun said, "The
Jacob ond Barbora Wells situation Is grlm and untena·
Grueser. Also preceding him in ble.''
The sharp fighting was In
death were tWo brothers and
contrast to a lull ln activity
two sisters.
Survivors Include his wife, around Phnom Penh. Govern·
Mae Evans Grueser, Rt. 2, ment troops took advantage of
Pomeroy; three sons, Alfred, \lle letup to consolidate and
Rt. 2, Pomeroy; Bernard of expand the capital ~s defense
Trenton, and Gerald, of perlmeier in anticipation of the
Garden Grove, Calif.; one U.S. bombing halt less than 48
daughter, Mrs. Richard hours away.
(Gertrude) Flnlaw, Pomeroy ; Sihanouk's Remarks Monitored
But exiled Cambodian leader
two brothers, William, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, and Clarence, Rt. l, Prince Norodom Slhanouk'
Minersville ; nine grand- today said victory for his forces '
children;
six
great- in Cambodia "is already
grandchildren, and several practically achieved." North
Korea's semiofficial KCNA
nieces and nephews .
He was a charter member of news agency, monitored in
the Rock Springs Gr~nge , Tokyo, reported. Sihanouk's
veteran of World War I, a remarks at a farewell banquet
recipient of the Silver Star for in Pyongyang.
bravery, and the purple heart.
Early casualty reports said
Funeral services will be held at
the Ewing Chapel Wednesday government troops, who had
at 3 p.m. with ~the Rev. Robert sought refuge ln the town after
Kuhn officiating. Burial will be evacuating their positions farin the Rock Springs Cemetery. ther ncx:th three days ago, lost
Friends may call at the funeral about 300 casualties reaching •
home after 10 p.m. Tuesday. Skoun.

no service lor oll heated homes.

These facts seem to be Indicated by two factors, the energy
crisis, and the operation of Phase IV, wnh perhaps llle latter the
most threatening .
The survey of the Impact of the gasoline and oil shortage on
smaller buslne88 ordered by Wilson Johnson, president of the
National Federation of Independent Busine8!1 shows an erosion in
the service traditionally available to motorists, and now the
regulations for Phase IV indicate there will be even less gas
station service and perhaps no fuel oil servil-e.
The facts show that 59 pel. of the service stat.ions have been
cut back on their normal supplies of gasoline, for an average of 16
pet. per s(atlon.
In order to m~t this situation, 39 pet. of the stations have
laid off an average of two employees each, but 75.6 pet. or the
stations have reduced their buslnc$S hours by an average of 23
hours per week. This situation has btll.-ome quite familiar to
.

.

vacation drivers this summer seeking gasoline on Sundays or at
Wl1ile it perhaps can be anticipated lhat ihis will result in
night.
closing up many of the more than 220,1)()() service st11tions now in
In addition, about hall the stations lndk,te they raised
prices woffset the loss of revenu •, hut wHic•· Phose IVscrviec
By United Press International
stations arc under price controls.
Mcmben
of
the Greater Clnclnnall Gasoline Dealers
While buslnes.;;es with less than 60 employees are eJcmpt
Assoclalion
were
to meel at noon today to decide whethe.r to
from the controls, u specia l cluu!W removes service swtions from
cull for a massive shutdown of sevlce stations to protest the
this exemption .
current
gasoline shortage.
'
They can only add to the pric-e they paid for gasoline on
Other assoclallons In the state said they may follow the
August 12 of this year the differential they charged on January
Cincinnati
group's direction. Dealen In IIJtnols are eon·
10, 1973. In other words, if the spread between their buying cost
slderlng similar acllon. " Farmers are holding cattle oil the
and selling price was 6 cents per gallon on that date in January,
market to proteot the freeze on beef prices, so we eaQsay we
they Cllnonly currently add that to the price they now pay. This is
can
hold gasofl the market," said Mike Kunnen, president ol
a straight dollar and cents mark-up and cannot be figures on a •
1he Cincinnati group.
percentage mark-up.
No provisions are made for the service st11Uon operator
passing along any increases in rent, Interest or taxes which are operation, probably the biggest result \o be felt by motorists will
be a discontinu;.nce of extra services.
' not controlled, or for pasaing along any lnbor increases.

A

Devoted To The lntere~~ Of The· Meig•· Mmon Area
VOL. XXV NO. 85

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORt OHIO

TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1913

BY JO ELLEN DIEHL

The first large sacle apartment project in
Middleport in 20 years was begun Monday when
Tenth District U. S. Congressman Clarence Miller
spaded up the first earth with a shiny gold-plated
Shovel.
The event signaled what the developers called a
a new .~ra i~ the Meigs-Gallia area. Future years,
they satd, w1ll be marked by economic growth ·as a
single community.
"The 4ay will come," said Dean Circle, .later
Monday at a luncheon; "when housing, business and
industry will be located without a break from south
of Gallipolis in Gallia County to Racine in Meigs
County."

HOUSEWARES DEPARTMENT FIRST FLOOR

Complete Selection •••

Scented Candles by Candle-Lite, Inc.
byCandfe.Life.IDC.

FIRST DIRT MOVED - Dignitaries moved the first bil .
of dirt with a gold-plated shovel Monday morning in groimdbreaking ceremonies of Riverside Apartments located at
First ~nd Locust Streets in Middleport. From left are George
Ingels, president of Middleport Chamber of Commerce;
Bernard Fultz Meigs County prosecuting attorn~y; Eldon
Walburn, representing the Bricklayers and Cement Masons,
Local 32; Congressman Clarence Miller, John Allen.

manager of.. the Col~mbus · and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Gallia-Meigs District; Raymond G. (Tony) Barr, and Dean
Circle, builders of the complex; John Zerkle, Middleport
mayor, and Harold Hubbard, president of the Citizens'
National Bank. Construction, to begin immediately, will be
completed in about 8 months. Also present were Milton
Roush and Archie Stegall of F .H.A.

·vv;;,;;~=::T~lirief;i Fair opens under
:~:

ByUnltedPresslntemattonal
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON will proclaim his
innocence of any wrongdoing in the Watergate affair in a report
to the nation Wednesday or Thursday, White House aides said
today, The only concession Nixon will make, they said, is that in
"hindsight" he should have paid more heed to the warning
signals he received about the cover-up months ago and kept a
closer eye on White House officials acting in his name.
Mter four months under the shadow of the political scandal,
Nixon's strategy will include the issuing of a lengthy legal ''white
paper" attempting to refute point-by-point charges that he was
aware at an early date of the cover-up.
Nixon also was preparing a nationwide televised addreas to
answer accusations against him by former White House Counsel
John W. Dean Dl, but mostly to appeal for public support to help
get the country moving again after lhe paralysis of Watergate,
aides said. Dean claims Ni&lt;on knew of the involvement of White
House aides in attempts to silence Watergate defendants as far
back as Sept. 15. The President's public statements later this
week will be his first since Dean made the charges under oalh
before the Senate Watergate Investigating committee.

.

_,

Stop in right away on the 1st floor and
see this excellent line of candles. In·
eluding 3'' x 3" rounds, 3"x6" rounds,
3"x9" rounds and 12"tapered candles.

Amaryllis Candles
and Hobnail Gimes

In the . popular scents of orange, clover, cherry, blue skies, persian spruce.
bayberry. lime , cinnamon, lemon and vanilla .

Housewares Department on the 1st Floor

ELBERFELDS.IN POMEROY

TEN CENTS:

PHONE 992·2156

Cong. Clarence Miller moves
the first earth for a 20-unit
nmil rental program project

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SCENTED CANDLES

Some station! will probably convert to so-called self-service
operations, while others will dispenae with such extra services as
washlnR windshields, checking tire prellSures, checking
radiators, and kindred services.
While the motorist can probably sur\llve with len sen1ce,
ihe NFIB survey doe• nul Indicate such a recourae lor thole
who must either heat their homeo, or dry their farm crops
with fuel oil .
The data shos that 66 pet. of the fuel oil distributors report
they have been cut back by an average of 33 pet. of their supply,
while 69 pet. of the fuel oil retailers report cutbacks in their
supply. Now Phase IV puts fuel oil retailers under the same
restrictions as gasoline retailers.
Although there is great hope placed I ~ bumper crops this
year easing the food price situation, an early fall could create an
even greater demand by grain !&amp;rmers for fuel to dry corn and
(Conllnued on page 8)

en tine

..

•

Reed graduates
Theodore T. Reed, Jr .,
president of The Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., was
awarded . a certificate at
commencement exercises of
the Graduate School of
Banking at the Univ.ersity of
Wisconsin, Madison, Friday
for 100 bankers, all previous
graduates of the school,
following a special one week
post graduate course.
The school is sponsored by
the Central States Conference
of Bankers Assns. consisting of
bankers associations from 16
rnldwestern slates.

•

Frank Grueser
died Monday

MRS. VILMA PIKKOJA, supervisor of the MeigsJackson, Vinton Bookmobile Service, inspecl.'i one of the 54
new and 7'1' foot high book shelves received at the bookmobile headquarters in Pomeroy to help the staff organize
tities for distribution over the three-county area.

W~nter

••

COLUMBUS - THE STATE PUBLIC Welfare Department
has received a legislative go-ahead to initiate a new system Of ald
to dependent children (ADC) payments boosting monthly
payments by an average of $15 to $23.
The new system was approved. Monday by the state Controlling Board, 4·2, despite complainta by two Republican
senators that the proposal was not brought before the Senate
when the department's budget was under discussion. The cost of
lhe new system, $30 million over the next biennium, is to be
flnaneed through savings resulting from declining welfare
caseloads.
Charles W. Bates, department director, said housing, food
and clothing allowances will henceforth be made on a uniform
basis without regard to rent paid, number of rooms In the family
dwelling or geographic area of the residence.

·

cloudy·' wet skies

The !lOth Meigs County Fair
opened for the first of a five
day run this morning with light
rain falling .
Fair Board officials were
having light gravel placed on
the grounds this morning to
help alleviate problems caused
by the rain over the past two
days . By mid-morni~g,
however, skies appeared to be
clearing a bit and fair board
members were hopeful that It
'Viii be a ·s~nny skies' week.
The grandstand attraction
for tonight's fair, beginning at
7:30 p.m., will be the annual
pony pulling contest . Wednesday , youth night will be
observed at the grandstand
beginning with a dog show ai 6,
followed by the annual parade

Judging began at 10:30 this
morning, even though in many
cases, exhibits do· not have to
be in place until 4 this afternoon.
This morning, ~mestic arts
and paintings were judged and
this afternoon !ami crop
judging got underway.

New plant gets OK

In a letter to the Federal
Power Commission,
Washington, D. C., the Meigs
County Cornmissio!lers, today,
gave lheir approval to the Ohio
Power Company , Racine
Project No. 2570, " HydroElectric Generating Plant".
The letter read as follows,
"Alter
carefully readlnB the
MINERVA, OHIO
TEL.EPHONE SERVICE
Federal Power Commission's
11'8.11 disrupted temporayily . M,onday f!lornil!g when some 30
'Bureau
of Power final enpickets blocked entrances to the local offices of .the strike-bound
vironmental slatement on tho
General Telephone Co.
Although pickets left after about ·&amp;n hour; It took nearly five Racine Project No, 2670 Ohio hours to recall employes and resume business. 1'he company, West VIrginia report, we would
serving '10 Ohio counties, wus struck last month by members· or like to express our deepest
the eommunlca!ions Workers of America over wages. However, Utanks to your bureau and
most General Telephone employes here are represented by the various other agencies In·
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, which Is nol on volved, for the concern you
have for taking those much
.Uike.
needed and vllal steps lo insure
HOUSTON - FOUR MORE BODIES, the 24th, 25th, 26th and regions such as ours that our
(Continued on page 8)
.clllzeos,. their rights and
I

at 7. There will be the Junior
Fair Revue , achievement
awards, a garden tractor pull,
horse games and other games
and races for ykoung people.
Wednesday afternoon,
beginning at !, the annual
horse show will be held and the
first of two fiower shows will he
judged. Open class beef cattle
judging also takes place at l
p.m. Wednesday .

herita·gc have been safe
guarded .
Hydro-Electric generating Is
a key to both our energy crisis
and our environmental
problems. Further, thls would
relieve our .area and upgrade
our economic base. Under the
condllions outli ned in this
'Fina l Environmenta l
Stnlement', we can see no
reason why you should deny
Ute Ohio Power Company,
Racine Project No. 2570, Ohio
- West VIrginia applicallon.
We recommend its approval."
Attending . were Robert
Clark, Warden Ours , and
Henry Wells, commissioners;
Martha Chambers, clerk, and
James Roush, sanitation offleer and building inspector.

AMONG THE EAR!JER FMR goers on Monday were
Richard Dean, serving in the U. S. Air Force, Marquette,
Mich., and Yvonne Hernandez of San Antonio, Tex., who are
visiting in Meigs County . Here the couple admires one of the
many school exhibits already in place. Deadline for the
placement of exhibits was 4 p.m. today.

Costly problem

in Middleport

Middleport has a $2 million
sewage
problem, according to
The two-story colonial style apartment complex is being
built by Barr-CirCle Development, Inc., Gallipolis, of which a survey of il'l sewage facUlties
Raymond G. (Tony) Barr is president and Dean Circle, vice- prepared by Floyd G. Browne
and Assoc., Umited, consultpresident and secretary.
'
· Permanent financing will come through the rural rental lng engineers, of Canton. .
James M. Keavll of the firm
housing program of Farmers Home AdUunistration, and conmet
with 1offJclall! Monday
struction financing from Citizens National Bank, Middleport.
night to outline aspects of the
The estimated cost of the project is in e~cess of ,290,000.
·
eight-month
survey conducted
There will be to units on each floor of the brick and
aluminum structure, 12 with one-bedroom and 8 with two- by the firm at a cost of $3,000
bedrooms. Completely carpeted, it will be total electric and the which was ordered by the Ohio
newest techniques of soundproofing. Built-in kitchens will be Pollution Control Board. Ac·
color co-ordinated with ranges and refrigerators. Plans are cording to the discussion, the
being made for shrubbery, benches, picnic tables, and patio water pollution control board is
facilities. There will be parking facilities in the back and to the now non-existent and the
Environmental Protection
side for up to 32 cars.
Construction time for the project is set for approximately Agency has replaced it in
relation to sewage and ~ewage
eight months.
·
disposal
requirements.
Under the Federal Rural Rental Housing program there are
The survey points out that
reduced renlal rates for low-income and elderly. tenants. These
sewers
should be extended to
allowances are treated on a private and individual basis. The
Rural Rental program, however, is basically designed for serve the entire town . which
moderate income farnllies which generally dominate this section would cost about uas;oco.
lhe extended
of the Ohio Valley. All rental rates will include all utilities paid. through
program,
the
entire village
Ala luncheon atthe Meigs Inn following the ceremonies.-Mr.
Circle stressed that the time will come when Pomeroy, Mid- would have sanilary sewer
dleport, and Gallipolis will no longer be separate, but will exist service. The report also points
out that full separation of
together as one community.
sewers
"rnlghi be" desirable.
He thanked Bernard Fultz, prosecuting attorney, John Allen
of Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Company, Milton Roush That is, there would be storm
and Archie Stegall of F .H. A., Richard Owen, president of the sewers just for water and
Ohio Valley Publishing Co., and John Zerkle, mayor of Mid- sanitary sewers just for
dleport for their. cooperation and assistance in the planning sewage. The estimated cost of
this pro )eel would be $1,788,000,
phases of the project.
Barr showed plans of the complex and described the Keevil said.
However, he pointed out his
structure.lt will be built5 to 5'h feet above First St. which will be
above the level that the river reached in the 1948 flood.
firm Is not recommending this.
Congressman Miller remarked that when Gavin Power
Council members were not
Plant and mines are completed, an investment of $800 million particularly receptive to the
will have been made. He said that this project in his opinion.will · survey, which indicated that
launch the middle Ohio Valley region into the industrial age and costs could easily exceed $2
that with the addiUonal employment, related problems are million.
bound to arise. However, projects such as the Barr-Circle apart"You could buy the whole
ment project "will certainly help."
town for that!," one counChief material supplier of the. construction is Pease Com- cilman said.
pany of Hamilton, Ohio and Theodore Harder of !larder and
Keevil said that the report
Reed, A.I.A., Worthington, Ohio, was the architect. Ap- recommends that isolated
proximately 40 local business and civic leaders were guests at problems with the present
the luncheon.·
·
sanitary sewer system be

corrected and he Indicated that
it is now required that water
from dowi\spoutlng on homes
and buildings must run into
. separate sewers. However,
such water is permitted to run
through combination BBnitary
ahdstotm sewers, as this Js the
case in most lnslances in
Middleport, officials said. Kee·
vii said that the village should
pass an ordinance prohibiting
downspoullng to run into
sanitary sewers. Mayor Zerkle
said that he believes the vlllage
already has such an ordinance.
Richard Gress, a member of
the community's board of
public affairs, pointed out that
such regulations seem sen·
seless ln that If downspouting
were·arranged on homes of the
community to run onto the
ground, that same water would
go to the streets and then run
into the sanitary sewer catch
basins any way .
He also said thai he feels II
Is ul!fatr for state agencies to
expect such large sewage
projects in Middleport while
at the same time creeks
heavily ladened with acid
flow freely into the
Ohio River.
At any rate, as a delaying
move,ltwasagreed to have the
board of public affairs study
the survey for approval and
then to forward it to village
council for lts approval. The
report then will be forwarded
to the Ohio EPA lo show thai
the village has compiled with
the stste's order that the
sewage study be made .
Keevll pointed out that
grants up to 75 per cent are
available for such sewage
(Continued on page 8)

Title I is short ah»ut $50,000
Texaco, according to a Audrey Kunzman as a teacher,
Due to the recent cui in the
In other business the board
submitted
by Worley Haley as a bus driver;
nation's Tille I program, Meigs ·approved the school lunch report
·
Hargraves,
will
sell
for
the
one year leave of absence for
policy
with
the
followirtg
Local School District will be
short $49,854.61 to meet its prices : Grades 1-6, 35 cents; Ume being regular gas lit 17.82 Rosalie · Sayre, bus driver;
contra ctual obligations this grades 7-12, 40 cents, and single per gallon,' it was 15 cents last appointed as regular roule bus
school term .
meal, 35 cents, If a strip of five year, and high test 22.H per drivers, pending certification
This. 1\'as U1e report by tickets is bought; Individual gallon (19 cents last year). by the county board and proper
George Hargraves, superin- milk, 9 cents per lil·pint (8 These are current prices and licensing, Mlnnle Thornton,
tendent, at a . metltlng of the cents for white, 8111 cents for will be increased when and if Ella Mae Southern, Esther
board Monday night.
chocolate) and there Is no four their price increases, it was Black, and Harry Clark; appointed substitute bus drivers,
Hargraves , presenting a cent federal subsidy available noted.
The Insurance Is a full com- pending ,certlflcallon, Warreri
complete financial breakdown . In the past.
prehensive
plan on all motor Gerry Black, Thomas Weaver,
of the Tille I program, · obThe board awarded the
powered vehicles owned by the Cora Loftis, and Carl Morrie;
served that If It had not been following bids:
district.
·
r~quest of Mr . and Mrs .
Fire extinguishers, divided,
lor a "carry over balance" the
The board also approved an Charles Goegleln !or their
program would have been in wllh a portion going to Roy
the children \0 attend Meigs I.OCal" ·
worse condition. Commitments Ttacy and a portion to William agreement . with
ror 1973-74 school year total Brown ; tire bid, to the Meigs Rehabilitation Services &amp;;hools u lulllon student~;
$107,309.61, carry over 'balance Tire Center; insu.rance, Commission to serve as agent Gladys Foley as elementary
and resources total $57,555, to Downing-Childs and the to receive and expend lunda for vocal music tetlcher; accept.&lt;~,
leavin g a shortage of .oil bid to Texaco, Inc., Mid· students of RSC Work sealed bids on three uaed buNa
Programs.
until 4 p.m. on Tuellday, Stpt.
dleport.
$49,854.61.
Reports
and
recom- 4, being a 1962 GMC, a 1161
Board Member Mullen said,
Since no bid for gasoline was
by Inlernatlonal ~d a lee3 In"It just proves what he has submitted the board voted to mendations · made
ternalionall tranalerred •100 ol
always contended, that we continue purchasing from Hargraves approved were:
Accepted
the
ruignallon
of
must have funds ln reserve." Texaco.
(ConUnued on paRe 8)

,
.,

...

•

�3- rhe Onlly Senilool Mlddlcport·l'Omcroy 0 , AuMUSI 14 11!11

WIN AT BRIDGE

&amp; THINGS

Confusing, these cue bids
NOHTII !Ill
+ A42
'f 5

t K85

+ AQH4J2
\\f~T

EAST
• 109!3

'fK\I IGH

'fA 1642
• Q2

+ KJ 75
• J

1043

+106

+5
SOUTH
+Oti

.

"J9 3
t A976
+KJ 97
East Wes1 vulnerable
North
Eau So ulh
Wesc

Pass
Pass

I+
Pa ss

2+

Pass
Pass

3+

Pass
Pass

Pass

It

3+

3N T

1...,--------·...!:
Hartley, City Ice &amp; Fuel, E Bartow Jones, Two ltlver Motor
Co, Harley Hartley, City Ice &amp; Fuel, Lew Wiley, Mason
County lwJurance , Vance Jobuson, Johnson's Super Markel,
Wally Allbright, meal manager al Johnson's No 2 store and
Sharon Newberry, who sold the grand champion

Music association
names committees
The Southeastern Oh1o
Gospel Mus1c Assoc1ahon met
at Allen Hall, Rio Grande,
Monday evenmg to plan future
activihes and name com
llllttees
Association director,
LawrenceMcOraw,announced
that concerts are scheduled at
the Double R Ranch, Little
Hocking, Sunday, September 2,
w1th the Ramllos and at the
Lyne Center Thursday
November 8, featuring the
LeFebres
The Bissell Brothers, an area
grouP, w11l perform w1th the
Rambos at LitUe Hoelting
That I 30 ~ m concert will be
held outdoors and patrons are
asked to brmg their own lawn
cha1rs A ram shelter 1s
available m case of mclement
weather
December 13 14, IS and 16
are bemg held open for the
Rambos Christmas Special
wh1ch will be presented at four
locations in the southeastern
Ohio area
Named to cHall" the activities
Committee of the assoc1al!on
was Leslie Lemley H1s
comrruttee mcludes Larry and
JoAnne McCraw, Rita Boster
Julia W1semandle, Mr and

Mrs Roger B1ssell, Mr and

Mrs Dw1ght B1ssell and Mr
and Mrs Carolyn B1ssell
This COIIUDJttee wtll plan
var1ous events lor assoc1at1on
members w1th a pJCmc w1th the
Rambas at Utile Hock10g as
the first project
25
Saturday, August
members of the pubhc1ty
collllmttee will meet at the
Holzer Medical Center parking
lot at 9 a m to scatter posters
and promotion leaflets for the
smg at Little Hocking m the
area Members of the com
m1ttee are Nancy Walker,
Leslie Lemley and Mr and
Mrs McGraw Ariyone who
would hke to go along to help
w1th lhJS project should contact
a member of the committee
Tenatlve groups for concerts
next year mclude the Happy
Goodman
family
the
Dowmngs, the llambos The
Speer Famtly and the In
sptrallons
New members are still hemg
sought for the assocJatton
which IS devoted to the
promohon of gospel mus1c m
the southern Oh10 and northern
West V1rgtn1a area The fee
covers one year and only one
fee IS char~ed per famdy

Missionary society meets
Several new officers were
named at a recent meetilig of
the MissiOnary Soc1ety of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church
Mrs Mildred Jacobs was
elected to fill the position of
secretary follow10g the
res1gnallon of Mrs Esta W1se
who has moved to MtnJO June
tion Mrs Doris Buckley was
named m1ss1onary educatiOn
chairwoman
Mrs
Tma
Jacobs, the penny a day
and
Mrs
chairwoman
Marguente Lelfheit, the
director of stewardship and
prayer Circles
Mrs Jean Wnght presided at
the meeting openmg with two
')o&gt;~~~m~~ :::=~..: '&gt;"'N"' *'..-"-= :: ~
.jf
"

}

I
'

Pomeroy . . .
Personal Notes

'~

f

Mr and Mrs Robert Grunm

readmgs, ' Instant to Obey
and Make Me a Blessmg
Prayer was by Mrs Buckley 'A
report on the Free Methodist
conference was g1ven by Mrs
Wrtght and Mrs Iva Powell
read ' The Lord Is My
Banker'
Awards were
presented by Mrs Shirley
lor
misSIOnary
Fnend
educatiOn progress Attendmg
the meeting wh1ch closed With
prayer by Mrs Della Curtis
was Mrs Amber Lohn

Sttks-Craddock
vows exchanged

By Os,.ald &amp; James Jacoby
IMP matches are defJmtely
the best test of bndge sk1ll but
even her e there JS a tremen
dous element of luck
Noll take a good look at the
South hand You respond one
d1amond to your p~rtner s club
openm~ He reb1ds clubs you
raise htm to three and he b1ds
three spades
It 1s clear that h1s spade call
IS some sort of cue b1d Is he
suggesllng a slam askmg you
to b•d three no trump 1f you can
stop spades or maybe telling
you that he can stop spades and

L#B:I:li!MlN Il
The b1ddlng has b..n
w..t North Eou

1•

South
I+

Pass
Pass
l+
Pass
3+
Pass
Pass
4+
Pass
You South hold
+Q 8 6 4 Z
tA 4 +A K J 9 7
What do you do now

••,

•z

..,

At-Pass You. made a slam try

and your partner showed no inter

TODAY'SQUESTION
Instead of biddmg four spades

your partner has bid (our hearts

What do you do now'

' '::::&gt;.:::$: ""'='*".'::X:.._"~":-."&lt;:::: '""'*'"'"" : : :

»'W&gt; *-' &lt;:&lt;.W

~

Generation Rap

I

By Helen and Sue Bottel

,. .. .,'i&lt;j!l

I

Needed· A Club lor Shy People
Dear Helen and Sue
1m tembly shy and have no poise I'm 18 and still run when
youngmenJustlook at me-and they do look at me because I'm
not ugly
I m afra1d to go places or meet people, and I'm always
retreatmg to corners In school, I was "the bram," with no soclal
life It s awful to he so insecure you'd rather hide than chance
lookmg like a fool when you can't think of a thing to say
Would you bolleve, I was even afraid to send thia letter 1
Don't tell me I need a psyehlatrlst I know that, but can't
affordone -NONAMEINNEEDOFHELP

WINNER IN HORSE SHOW-Young Tony Kennedy, son
of Mr and Mrs Leo Kennedy, Jr , was winner of the Western
Pleasure Pony class (48 Inch and under) at lbe 1973 Mason
County Fair Horse Sbow held Saturday night A large attendance was on hand to v1ew the 11 events of the annual
horse show

Dear No Name
Group therapy IS much less expensive than priVate
psych1atr1c sessions, and the rtght group might help provide the
self.eonfldence you need But he careful some ol these ex·
perlmental "encounters" are viCIOus, they can tear a shy person
to p1eces ASk your doctor for tbe name of a reputable
psychologist, or, if you're In college, talk to a psycbology
professor you can trlillt
Meanwhile, look around for another shy person, and
RELATE DlScussmg your fears wtth one wbo baa similar
problema may provide you both with the courage to start
breaking down the walls - HELEN

+++

Letter to the editor
To The Ed1tor
AS the Me1gs County Fa1r Ill now upon us I would hke to say
something concermng the Regatta Every year at the Regatta
they have had Saturday set as1de as kidd1e day where you pay
one dollar and get your hand stamped wh1ch allowed you to nde
anything on the grounds foe this one amount This 1s fme and
gond as many a child wouldn t get to attend any other way They,
the Regatta president or whoever say they make money every
year and I think as the falf hegms Tuesday and as b1g as the
Me1gs County fatr 1s they could afford to run k1dd1e day m the
same way They have the ndes at 20 cents Well, 11 doesn t take
very long to use a dollar and if there IS a b1g family you can t
afford more than this
I think m saymg this I m speakmg for a lot of fam1hes that
will be attendmg the Me1gs County fa1r
Name withheld on request
Ed Note In recent years a day has been set as1de at the
fairgrounds when all r1des were at a reduced rate

NNINOH (And other shy people) '
What we need here Is a club or clasa for "shy ones" Most
timid people could benefit by everyday peycholol!Y, but they
don't need psychiatry They're afraid to inlx becaUBe they're
sure they'll goof it up and somebody will laugh If they could
meet others w1th the same problem, talking It out together :would
prove they are accepted, and increased self.eonfldence might
follow
Yes, I know "corner&gt;tiltters" aren't joiners, but if the club
were exelus1vely for shy persons, they might tum out
Anyway, 1t's an Idea, ill case some Interested and concerned
psychology teachers or counselors want to take a shot at lt
SUE

+++

NOTE FROM HELEN Overeaters Anonymous, Gamblers
Anonymous, A A - why not Shy Ones Anonymous (or maybe
The Shyners' Club")? All 1t would take Is a non-timid organlzer,
perhaps one who formerly had the problem but conquered it with
altttiehelpfrom)lJSorherfriends -H
,

+++

llap
We read that birth rates are now slightly below "Zero
Population Growth " If thia continues, won't we eventually just
die out, as some of the former :ivlllzatloliB did? - WONDERER

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS

Sealed propo sals w 11 b e
received by the Ohio Valley
Health Serv ces Foundat •on
In c
1 Blue Lane Avenue
Athens Oh10 at the off ce of the

Announcement 1s being
made of the February 6 Execut111e 0 rector on SEP
6 1973 un11 1 12
marriage at Peansburg, Va 0TEMBER
Clock Noon Eastern Day I ght
of Nma G Sliles, daughter of Sav ngs Time and at tha t t1me
II be opened publ ic ly and
Mr and Mrs Edward Sltles w
read tor the fur nish ng of a I
South Thtrd Ave , Middleport, labor and material necessary
tor t he turn sh ng and erectm g
to Earl M Craddock son of of
f1ve (5) Emergency Med cal
Sta ti OnS
jn
Mrs Earl Craddock, Rural Serv ce
Sou th eastern Ohio at Ironton
Route, Mason W Va and the Oak Hi ll Jackson Logan and
~omerov
All work sha ll be
late Mr Craddock
done accord ng to the draw ngs
Craddock IS employed by and specificat ons as prepared
lrby ConstructiOn Co at by Hayes Donaldson Witte
and Partners Architects
Letart W Va and Mrs myer
630 Sixth St Portsmouth Ohio
Proposal~ Will be rece 1ved for
Craddock works at Kay s
the Entire Work and the
Beauty Salon m Middleport butld1ng s can be b1d In
The couple res1de at Platter d v ldua lly or comb ned for all
f ive (5)
Proposets sh~ ll be
Apartments, Brownell Ave , submitted on proposal Form
conta1ned
1M
the
bound
Middleport

and fam1ly Columbus, spent
the weekend here vis1tmg Mr
and Mrs Dayton Phillips, and
Mr and Mrs Bert Grmun
Alexa Kramer left for home
at Plamv1ew, Texas Sunday
after VlSitilig with her grand·
parents, Mr and Mrs W 0
Barnitz She stopped here
enroute home after hemg in
Scranton Pa and W1lm10gton
Del visitilig schoollr~enda
SON BORN
Mrs W R H1ll, Foster
Mr
and
Mrs Marvm Star
Baker, Mr and Mrs Robert E
ford,
Syracuse
are announcmg
Hill, Dayton spent the weekend
with Mrs Geotge Hobstetter the birth or son August I at the
Holzer Medical Center,
Sr and other relaiJves
Mr and Mrs Donald L1sle, Galhpohs The e1ght pnwtd
Syracuse, spent a recent seven ounce infant has been
weekend at Virginia Beach, named Aridrew Charles Mr
Ya , VISited a niece and her and Mrs Stafford have another
family, Capt and Mrs John son, Deron Richard five
Uvra (Marilyn Harden) Grandparents are Mr and
Enroute home they VISited Mrs John Harrah, Mason, W
Va , and Mr and Mrs Hubert
WIUiamsburg
Stafford of lloute 4, Pomeroy
Creal-grandparents are l)lr
and Mrs Basil Harrah of
DAUGHTER BORN
Asbury, W Va , Mrs L1llte
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs Cwnmings, Rt 4, Pomeroy
Thomas M Theiss, Rt 1, are and Mrs L Roush, Letart, W
announcing the birth of a Va
daughter, Andrea Rae, August
8, wellhlng 7 lbs, 12 oz and
F&amp;AMTOMEET
1m Inches long Maternal
A special meeting of Mid·
8J'PC!parenll are Mr and Mre dleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, Will
Arlllur R Sylvester, and be held at 7 30 tonight There
Plternal 8fandparenll are Mr will be work In the Fellowcraft
•nd Mrs Charlee Theiss, Degree All Master Masons are
Ra.'ine
mvlted

wants you to try no Irump It
you can top hearls
At Table I In an 1mportant
team match South dec tded to
bid three no trump With his
near stoppers 1n both maJor
suits North thought 11 showed
a sure heart stopper and
passed
South was most unhappy
with the kmg of hearts lead He
d1dn t have to be East held JUSt
one high heart and no matter
when he took it the suit blocked
and only four heart tncks were
avaJiable to the defense '
AI Table 2 South dec1ded
agamst three no trump and
took h1s partner to f1ve clubs
East opened the 10 of spades
and declarer had to lose three
tncks
I NEWSP~PER ENTEAPRlS£ ASSN)

Openmg lead- YK

BUY SCHOLARSHIP BEEF - Four local busluesses,
Johnson's Market, Two River Motor Company, Mason
Coonly lwJuranee and City lee &amp; Fuel, repurchased the
grand champion beef when lt was sold for a second time Frl·
day Proceeds from the resale went Into the Citizens
National Bank Fatr Scholarship fund Pictured are Art

BY PAUL CRABTREJD

spec flcattons and Other con
tract
documents
wh ch
documents are on file at the
office of the Clerk of satd Agent
anct at the office of the Archltect
and are available to all
prospect i ve b dders dur ng
regular off1ce hours until the
closing of b ds
All Contractors agree that n
th e h ring of em ployees for the
performance ot work under thiS
contract or any sub contra c t he
anct
h is
subcontra~tor s
material suppliers or taborers
or any other person acting on
h ts behalf shall not by reason of
race
creed
or
color
discriminate aoa nst any cltlz.en
of the State In the employment
of taborers or worker s who are
qualified and available to
perform the work
and fur
thermore th s contractor agrees
that he shall not In any menn ~ r
d1scrimlnage aoalnst or in
t!mldate any employees l'jlred
for the performance of work
under this contract
'T'h Is contractor
further
agrees that Art icle 153 59 and

named above the Arch te et will
forward copies of btddlng
document s as named n the
preced ng paragraph SHIP

Wonderer
We'd have to maintain "Below ZPG" for at least one
PING CHARGES COLLECT generation before we'd see even a slightly lowered people.eount
Oepos t w II be refunded upon By that time, medicine, etc may be keeping us alive longer, so
the return of the plans and we'll probably be "above zero" again
spec fh:at 1ons In good condit1on
and wlth postage or express
If our clvUizatlon dies out it will be from pollution and bad
charges prepatd Wtfhm ten {10) managemen~ not birth control -SUE
days after the dale bids are

I

Television Log
TUESDAY, AUG 14 1973
• w-News3 4 8 10 1J 1&gt; Irumor Conseq 6 Sesame St ~0
Sportscope 33
6 30 - News 3 4, 6 8 10 15 I Dream Of Jeannie 13 Ltllas
Yoga &amp; You 33
7 00- What's My Ltne 8 I ve Got A Secret 13 Elec Co 20
Beneath The Clock 4 News 6 10 Untami!d World 13 Llvihg
33 Lee Trev&lt;no s Golf For Swingers 15 Glenn F.ord s
Summertime U S A 3
7 30 - To Tell The Troth 6 Price Is RightS 10 Beat The Cl~k
13 This Is Your Life 3 Circus 4 RFD 20 Charles Blalf's
Better World 15, Cancer Life or Death 33
•
8 00- Ohio This Week 20 Maude 8 10 Eventng at Pops 33
Temperatures Rising 6 13 Movies The Alamo 4 3 15 TMe
Killers 4
'
8 3()-Hawatl Five 0 8 Changtng Music 20 Movie The Gt Ms
of Huntington House 6 13
•
9 00- International Performance 20 33
9 30 - Virginian 8 The Maltese Blppy
10 00- Marcus Welby M 0 6 13 News 20

?&amp;
~

!'Dues nip Redlegs ~
~
:despite conflicts

~
q

&gt;

0

l!y FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
' The Pittsburgh Pirates
aren't letting their internal
•problems inhibit their drive to
the lop of the National I,eague
East
The Pirates' clubhouse has
• been the scene of some smallscale battles the last couple of
' days with Manager Bill VU"don
being involved In separate
' mcidents with third baseman
Rich Hebner and pitcher Dock
•Elbs
V1rdon s clash With Hebner
.came about 30 minutes after
&amp;mday's game m which Hebn.
er allegedly called the
manager a few obscene names
because Virdon had removed
his th1rd baseman from the
, game for deferislve purposes m
the ninth mning The two men
· narrowly missed eugagmg m
!JSticUfls
• Ellis and Vlrdon got mto a
disagreement recenUy when
the Pirate manager ordered
his pitcher to stop wearillg hrur
"curlers on the playmg !Jeld
durmg practice
' VlctQry Is Televised
" To the Pirates' credit howe·
~ver, the mc1dents haven t gone
boyond the clubhouse On the
"field the Pirates are playing
solid baseball as evidenced by
.. their nationally televised 3-2
" Mclory over the Cincmnat1
" Reds Monday night wh1ch
moved them to within two
" &gt;games of dlVIsion-leadmg St
•• LoulS
, In the only other scheduled
~ NL games, Houston blanked St
. LouiS, ~. Los Angeles topped
• Montreal, 8-5, and San D1ego
edged New York, 3-2
Oakland beat Boston, 3·1,
Baltimore downed Texas, 7-4,
DetrOit whipped Mmnesota, 9·
;'!,
New York blanked
• Cahforma 6-0, and Chicago
, defeated Milwaukee, 5-2 m
Amencan League games
'You have to let clubhouse
animosities stay m the club.
hnuse and concentrate on the
game," sa1d pitcher Nelson
Jlriles who heat the Reds w1th
8 1-3 mmngs of seven-hit pitclung ' Once you take the
tnCidents on the field you're 10
trouble This team 1s too loose

"

o

•

:

'
•
~

Sponsored By

•

Elberfelds in Pomeroy,

9 30- Elec Co 33 To Tell The Truth 3 Wild Wtld West :h

+++

,

more

!o

The Shoe Box,

in

Dale Warner Insurance

so

and Crow 's Steakhouse

110th Annual Meigs County Fair

br

gr:

1 "

21 21 410

Friend an~ MIN ~ine,
"Sheltered in the Annl ot
I

0 ~1~

45169 auttntu Olflti Phon
992 2156, l!dltorlol Phone 992
2151
Second cluo poolego pold tt

WEDNESDAY HIGHLIGHTS
9 15A M - Junior Fair Beet Showmanship and Judging
10 ooA M - 4 H Club Out.tandlng Class Awards
Conformation Show- Horses and Ponies
12 00 Noon- 4 H Flower Show Judging
Atlernoon Oemonstrattons- FljA
1 OOP M- Open Cla!S Beet Judging

PoN"'.effXn~r'•,dvortJotna

rtP(IItntotlve tolttnel f,
Gil oghor Inc 12 lilt 4lnd
SIS Ntw York City Nei!o,Vo~k
Del'i'v::e'l'fy"g;rrter' wthtt~o

&amp;~'AA~f~~ ~~u't~"~'nfr': c:tr,:r 8 30 - Banacak 3 4 15J Movie Duet 6 13
strvlce n&lt;tl •••lltblt Qno 9 00 - Den Augusta, 10 Musical Encounter 20 33
month 12 "&amp;V mtllln Ohio tnd 9 30 - Man Builds Man Dtslroyl 20 33
W
Vt • month
One \'r'
SIK 10 00
•-·rch 15 I
months
It 50l161
1 Thrt
w-or ldNewS20J
u 1 O..en
G Morshell6 13 Cannon B 10 ...
monthsl u 50, Jttwhtrt 11
n vertlty amn 3, 4 Free Stage Freddie King 33
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onrnt, •• ~UDICrtPilou 11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Or Jekyll &amp; Mr Hy~e 6 131
rice tncludtt lllftdty Tlmtt
Shoot out 11 Medicine Bend' 81 ' Carrie 10
entlnet
I 00 - Nowa 13 Man from U N C L E 4
2 00 - N"''t 4
II

J

Decors rna

1

- ews 6 10 Whets My Line 9 Truth or Conseq 31 8~1
the Clock 4 Anything You Can Do 13 Elec Co 201 Salnt15
Book Beat 33
1 30 - TheJudgelo Pollcesurgeon3, Beat the Clock 13,
Andy Griffith 15 How Do Your Children Grow 20 EpiiOde
Action 33 Protectors B
8 00 - Adam 12 3, 4J Whets The Big Idea? 33 1 Sonny &amp; Cher a
;~ Love Thy Nelghbor6 13, Purpose ol Punishment Effects

By MtlwJl Ri(hman
UI' I Sports Editor

convmced him how much good he could do there
&amp;'TOUCH I ON, Wls (UP!) - I am an alcoholic '
Film llelng Produced
llyne Duren says that slmply and openly
Rym Duren is dotng so much good that a documentary him
He lsn I trying to shock anybody 1 hal's not h1s purpose All about h1s hfe is being produced now hy the Umvers1ty of
an Infield out to lend the he's trying to do Is help someone else
Wi scon s J~ s telecommumcatlons umt
Dodgers to v1ctory over the
llyne Duren s big trouble In baseball always was control He
J.ast weekend ' Mister Magoo, ' as they us~'(] to call h1m
Expos The v1ctory Increased never could get the ball over the plate But he had a way of bemg beCBl1'lf of the thick eyeglasses he wears, went back to Yankee
the Dodgers lead over the dlred He dalways look you stra1ght In the eye when he talked to Sladmm lor the Old T1mers' get-together
second place Reds to 2Y, you He still does
He was delighted to see all h1s old teammates agam and they
games In the NL West Ken
Once you're an alcoholic, you're always an alcoholic, says were happy to sec h1m !here was a new respect among them for
Smgleton had a three-run the 44-year-(Jld former flreballer for the New York Yankees I 1\yne Duren It was subtle, but 1t was defmltely there
homer and Ha I Breeden a solo believe that 100 per cent J remember the flrsl time I got drunk I
Some years back after Duren had gone through a particularly
blnst for the Expos
was 13 years old and It was on wine I fellsJck as hell The next hornble mght, he remembers Mickey Mantle and Whitey ~"ord
Derrel Thomas atoned for an day I said I d never do 1t agam
commg to him so1tc1tously and telhng h1m he shouldn t drmk
eJghth-innlng error with a
No, I never did 11 again- much," Duren mocks h1mself "111e
Ryne Duren buttonholed the two this past Saturday
game-wlnmng double in the amount and frequency of my drtnkmg mcreased so I hardly
You know 110methlng• he sa1d to them, sm1hng You guys
ninth Inning as the Padres beat noticed It I d drmk before high school dances out of feelings of
were nght '
the Mets Thomas throwing 10fer10rity guilt feelmgs, anylhmg I ran scared all my hfe
error had allowed the Mets to
Pretty Far Down
push across the gfHihead run m
People a~ me how far down aleohol pushed me I II tell you
the e1ghth inmng, but h1s two- how far One lime It landed me in jail Another lime I wound uP tn
out double scored Dave Wm a mental hospital for nearly three months I worked tn the kitthat
oj
field to cap a two-run runth Jon chen there, so you could say I went from the b1g leagues to
Y"
Matlack went all the way for assistant pot scrubber m less than two years
pamt.
the Mets and was the hard luck
We II drop lh s suggesti on
I had a bus10ess, a serv1ce statiOn m San Antomo, and that
loser
to merchants - fire nsk s
collapsed on me My w1fe sued me for divorce Alcohol derued me
greater
Icy Sidewalks
the beauty of seemg my son, Steve, grow up I was a degraded
By FRED DOWN
Texas M1ke atellar allowed 10
mer
1nc.rease I ab1llly
person,a zombie a vegetable I hated penple and I hated myself
UPI Sports Writer
hits and walked three but went'
cnand1se stoc ks are h1gh
I wasn't really hvmg I was ex1stmg
That extra startmg pitcher the distance to ra1se h1s record
The Down ng Cht ld s
Agen cy offer s a free sur 11ey
Ryne Duren can talk thiS way freely now
for whom the Chicago While to 10.12 Tom Gneve h1t a twoof
your rlsks and pol1 c1es to
He hasn't taken a drink m more than fiVe years and hHl! Sox have been searching this run homer for the Rangers
assure adequate Insurance
rehab1htated himself so magruhcently that he has pulled himself season may have been on thetr
Bill Freehan s bases.f1lled
coverage
up to become one of baseball s most heaut1ful people
roster all the time
seventh-1nnmg smgle drove m
You can go even further You could say, m a sense he has
Unfortunately the diS· two runs and helped the East.
become the Dr Albert Schweitzer of baseball
covery ' of Terry Forster may DIVIStoll leadmg T1gers break
have come too late for the open !herr game at Mmnesota
He Isn't a Doctor
Ryne Duren 1sn t a Jloclor, but as Director of Alcoholic White Sox to get back 10l.o the and extend the Twms losmg
happened It s such a slulme
Rehab1htatJon
of small but effective Stoughton Commuruty Aniencan Leagues Western streak to seven games Woody
That s where you need the twoHospital here m suburban Mad1son he's helpmg many so-called DIVISion race For all Wilbur Fryman won h1s f1fth game and
pomt rule s6 y~ll ~b gill:! Ill' the
MIDDLEPORT 0
recovered alcohohcs l1ke hunself
Wood s enormous contnbotion John Hiller earned his 28th
WID
I
'! 1fffi 10! I I ' It s the very least I can do says the stocky one-t1me rebel
by working on a three-day
Pete Beathard directed the
ace I owe my life to others very s1m1lar to these people we have rotatwn smce the start of the
Chiefs until the f1nal dr1ve
when the 38-year-(J]d Dawson here m our program By the1r example they gave me the fa1th season the White Sox are m
thtrd place- 10 games behmd
saw h1s first action of the that I, too could overcome my Illness
'Alcoholism 15 a disease the same as heart trouble or any the first-place Kansas City
season
other An alcohohc IS no more to blame for his Illness than any Royals
The Cluefs proved 111 the other affhcted person One of the problems IS that alcoholism 1s a
Forster a 21 year old baby·
end they wanted to wln;'},paid stigma disease Nobody wants to say he s an alcoholic, nobody faced left-hander who made 62
Barney They put Dawfi(ln lh wants to say anybody in his family IS '
relief appearances for the
and he proved his worth He
moved the ball "
Duren put in time With the Onoles, Angels Plnlhes Reds and White Sox last season, was
Thevldorywasthesecond of Senators as well as the Yankees durmg h1s e1ght-and-abalf pressed mto serv1ce as a
starter Monday mght and
seasons m the maJorS
the exhibition season for th e
The one Thing
pitched h1s hrst complete
L1ons, while the Clnefs dropped
. ,.
to 1 1
The one th10g he always could do was throw ,.,rd ex· game smce he pitched for
traordmartly so His strikeout ratiO per mmng actually was Santana High School m Santee,
Greg Landry directed two better than such Hall of Famers as Walter Johnson Lefty Grove Calif -a 5-2 ftve h1t victory
Lions' sconng dr1ves 111 the
ed
second half He capped an 80- and Carl Hubbell, that s how hard he threw He p1tch 111 two over the Milwaukee Brewers
"A Lot of Fun"
yard, 15.play dnve Wllh a two World Senes and was named on four All-Star teams
It's great to see that our competitors are
Washmgton was the last club I played for tn 196ii says
' SU!rllng Ill a lot of fun
yard keeper for a touchdown, Duren , 1really hit the JUice hard after that Most people thought because you can make live or
beginning to care. We welcome them. Bethen led another assault that
s1x
mistakes
and
sttll
wm,
ended With a !6-yard field goal all 1t took was 2 or 3 beers to get me drunk, but actually you
cause caring is a great business. "We
by Errol Mann, Which proved genekrally saw me With f1ve tunes what you thought I was sa1d Forster Commg m w1th
care" has been Cooper's marketmg slogan
to he the l'(tnnmg pmqts
drm mg I was sneakmg the dnnks F1rst you d see me at one men on consJstenUy you can't
for the past several years. But the altitude
Landry hit 6 of 11 pa~ lor end ~f the bar then the other I'd have a dr10k gomg at each afford one miStake You also
1
have
to
use
your
best
pitches
of "We care" about our providing motor55 yards and gamed anoilier 38 1 end
all
the
time
and
can't
develop
Duren
remembers
one
mght
10
San
Antomo
It
was
New
Year
s
f h had t
t th
yar ds runnmg B1II Munson
Ists with real values has been at Cooper
completed 5 of 15 passes for 3¥ • mght and he felt hke celebrating the act e
n gone ou e new ones "
The Oakland A s defeated the
for over 58 years.
the first halF
before
Yards '"
1'1 evemng
Boston
Red
Sox,
3·1
the
~'
h
""
d·'·
"
hi
'
So
he
got
hunseH
all
mce
and
JUiced
up
staggered
somehow
to
Dawson m 1s one """ve, 1
k
Baltunore Ortoles heat the
7 of 13 a~ses for 57 ards
his car and drove It smack on to a railroad trac
Texas
llangers 7-4, the Detrmt
'!JUSt parked 1t and left 11 r1ght there,' he says I saw this
Detroit next plays ~aturday
guy runrung a sw1tch eng10e and sa1d to h1m, Go ahead and hlt Tigers routed the Mmnesota
rug ht m Memphis agalllSI the
a1
h
1ttl
Baltimore Colts, while the 11, ynu b1g bastard' You b1g guys are ways s ovmg us 1 e Twms 9-3, and the New York
Yankees downed the Cilliforma
Ch1efs play their thrrd straight guys around
Cops Came Along
Angels 6-0, mother AL games
home exhibition game, also
Natwnall.eague scores were
Pretty soon the cops came along and hauled ltttle" llyne
Saturday mght, agamst the
Houston 4 St Louis 0 Pills·
Duren, 6-2 and 200 pounds, off to Jail
Minnesota V1kmgs
4 ply polyester cord
Sometime later Duren entered San Antomo State Hospital and burgh 3C10c1nnatJ 2, San D1ego
3New York 2and Los Angeles 8
remamed there 82 days
I got out m March of 1966- JUSt 10 time for sprmg trammg, ' Montreal 5
cooPeR
Designated h1tter Carlos
he smtles wryly 1 stayed sober 11 months, then began drinkmg
agam I was fired as a heavy truck salesman 10 Milwaukee In no May drove m three runs With a
as low as
homer and a s1ngle to pace the
lime at all I became a basket case
The turnmg pomt for Ryne Duren came durmg the spnug of White Sox e1ght-tut attack
which dealt J1m Slaton his 10th
!968 He remembers the date, May 2
' 'rhat s the day I went mto DePaul Rehab11ltallon Hospital m loss Forster walked four and
struck out five as he raised his
Milwaukee, the same day I had my last drmk "he says
blaokwall
While m the hospital Duren began tra1mug as an alcoholism won lost record to 4-4 The
Plus $1 83 F E T
counselor He went to the Umvers1ty of W1sconsm, Milwaukee White Sox' v1ctory snapped the
S24 97 tor whtlewalls
ExtensiOn and took a number of psychology courses :Soon he Brewers f1ve-game wmnmg
o Bold and oleek
was workmg at the Noms Foundallon for Delinquent and streak
MOSCOW (UP!) - The Dependent Boys at Mukwonago, WJS , and a year ago the ad
o A real punishment Iaker
John Odom whose earlybounce bounce, .~~unCfl ol mlrustrator at stoughton Commumty Hospital came to h1m and season Ineffectiveness hurt the
o A real mileage giver
basketballs 'dfowneJ!i &amp;,~ 13 1he
A's badly, went 8 1-3 mrungs to
aura of frus'ir'aR~8 tOildf'WJ!Uh
wm his th~rd game of the
hwtg over the tJ g deiegall6h
season w1th the relief a1d of
of student-athletes holed up at es~lly after what happened attack
HolJie Fmgers D1ck Green
the heavily guarded University last year m Munich Alii know Crosby, a former NCAA drove m one run and scored the
of Moscow for the upcommg Ill, we're here to play basket. champion and wmner of eight other two for the A's Lws
World University Games
hall, not to get 10volved m medals m the 1971 Pan T1ant suffered h1s lOth loss
The tr1wnphant US basket- politics
American Games (mcludmg aga1nst 15 wms for Boston
124 Wo MAIN
ball team, which lui~, jljSI Badgers team alr~ady has three golds) was rushed to a
TbeBigBlow
completed a clean sweep 01 11 been playmg some kind of nearby hospital for an emerTommy Dav1s' two-run dou
Ph. 992-2848 POMEROY
games through Czechoslovakia baskethall, despite he1ng proha· gency operat1on
ble was the b1g blow of a four·
Poland and Bulgarl8, showed bly the youngest contingent
run fifth 10mng which earned
(average
19
years)
ever
sent
the
Onoles to their v1ctory over
surpnse-but
concef"over the heavyllttle
security
meas- overseas by the U S They
WAHAMA BOOSTER
ures that Sov1et authorities swept to three wins in Poland
MASON - Ray Tucker has
have mamtamed here
four more In CZechoslovakia announced that the Wahama
The cagers, last of the U S and another four m Bulgaria- Athletic Boosters will meet
contiligents to arrive went never allowing the opposition to In spedal sesswn at 7 this
straight to pr~ctlce on Monday come closer than 14 pomts
evemng in the Wahama
wh1le the rest of the American
While U S Embassy officials gymnas1wn All boosters are
athletes awaited the issuing of and some of lhe team sponsors to be prepared to work for an
special pas!les that would struggled to straighten out the hour on bleachers and
finally free them from the credentials problem, the Amert· equipment
university grounds and allow can team suffered a major
them lo gain access to the city setback be(ore ever leaving its
outside '
quarters when John Crosby, the
A rough untuned automobile eng1ne
This is qulte a new star of the gymnastic team, The gr1zzly bear is pictured
throws your money away -and throws
experience," said Ed Badger, was felled by an appendlll on Cahforma s state seal
Amenca s prec1ous energy supply
head coach of the basketball
away too
team from Wilbur Wright J C
Good dnv1ng habits save money and
in Chicago "We were able to
move freely with our visas In
REPRESENTING o • •
energy For example fast starts cah
all the other Iron Curtain
reduce gasoline mileage by as
countries
much
as 6 m1ies per gallon'
STATE AUTOMOBILE MUTUAL INS
' But rna be all this Is oodOHIO FARMERS INSURANCE CO
Amencans oa1 t afford to waste An~, rav I
AUTO-OWNERS
MUTUAL
INSURANCE
CO
There are many ways every Amencan
"Greenhouse Fresh"
can help save tt Wnte today for a free
copy of A Consumers GUJde to
"IPe Insure lfl S1tre Insurance "
EffJcJent Energy Use 1n the Home
11 s packed w1th 1deas that can save
We shall be moving as soon as the phone
energy and money
stnke IS settled to the former Elberfelds
store room , 102 W Mau• St, Pomeroy, 0
From

White Sox find
hurler too late

DOWNING •
CHILDS
AGENCY INC.

HERE'S PROOF:

"78 Sen·es"

Poly-Mark IV

$20~~&gt;13

MOORE'S

burn25%
more fuel

4

67 3~;;.~~·
;.~ 3~ 8
00 N

Sport Parade

of tune can

ot

I~;~~/'"s't"9 Pco".:'.~:;v

Today's

An engine out

slngill8

SII&amp;A ':)

save for Uoe 'J'Iger~ while llcrt
Blylevcn was ta~ged with his
12th defeat
Hoy Wh11Al homered !rom
each sJdc of the plate and nmde
a bnlhantcatch of Bob Oliver s
bid fo r a two-run homer as the
Yankees downed the Angels
behind t&lt;corge Medich's f1ve
hitter Medtch stru ck out four
and walked lour in winning his
mnth game Hudy May sui
fered hJs 12th loss compared to
seven wms

··1~::::::::::::::::::::::::::!:~-

6

'Young night '
obseroed at
laurel church

Cel

KANSASCITY,Mo (UP!) Seven-year pro Lem Barney
rwned an expected lle game
for 67 6?4 befuddled spectators
Monday mght and won another
game for lhe DetrOit L1ons
Seventeen year veteran Len
Dawson entered the game w1th
6 32left and gu1ded the Kansas
C1ty Chiefs 82 yards m 17 plays,
throwmg a fourth-down 10-yard
touchdown pass to Elmo
Wrtghl w1th I 18 remammg
All that remamed was for
Jan Stenerud to kicl,l the extra
pomt But Barney shot through
untouched and blocked the
kick, givmg the L1ons a 17 16
VICtory
' I JUSt shot straight m from
the left s1de and got 11 w1th my
left hand, sa1d Barney, who
earlter set up the Lions f1rst
touchdown with a 29-yard pass
mtercephon ~ the Chiefs' two
' M1ke Weger took Wendell
Hayes tn and I just went
arowtd hlffi ' sa1d Barney
Dawson, who was the holder
for the extra pnmt, sa1d, I
know where he (Barney) came
from , but I don't know what

7 PM TUESDAY
CABLE CHANNEL 5

Columbus Todav 4 Bible Answers 8 The Story 13
•
6 45 - Corncob Reports 3 Farmttme 10
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7 00- Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 News 6 Fllnlslones '3
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8 00 - Capl KangarooS 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame 51 a3
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ass-Newsll
:
9 00- Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Friendly Junction to
AM 3 Brady Bunch 6 Movte 8 Peyton Place 13 Mlst.r
Peyton Place 13

:;-x.....-.r; -v..z;,-;:;

Detroit blocks
p1..tf,4 T to beat KC

110th
MEIGS CO.
FAIR

'

-n~

to do that sort or thing
Willie Stargell belted his 34th
bomer and also scored anothe•
run to spark the PJrates
VICtory ovm the Heda, and the
VICtory put the Pirates only one
game beh1nd the Cardinal• m
U\e loss column
Eighth Consecutive Loss
Dave Roberts tossed a five
hiller and J1m Wynn hit his
18th homer as the Astros
handed the slumpmg Cardinals
the1r e1ghth loss In a row Once
agam poor defense haunted the
Cardinals as they committed
f1ve errors lloberts, boostmg
his record to 12-9, wa'lked only
one and struck out four
Will1e Crawford drove m four
runs w1th a homer, double and

OPENING DAY
ACTIVITIES

15 Chan Ese Way 33
00- News 3 4 8 13 15
30- Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Howard Cosell Wtlh The Mtarl\ 1
Dolphtns 6 13 Movtes Bunny O'Hare 8 Safari 10
•
I 00 - News 13 Men From UNCLE 4
2 00- Your Health 4
''
2 30- News 4

Paul Harvey 13

~..

~

11
11

6 25 6 30 -

$::

~

..

WEDNESDAY AUG IS 1973
6 00 - Sunnse Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Form Time 10
6 20 - Farm Report 13

,.

~

10
:
NBC Reports 3 4

opened Depos t will not be
10 00 - Dllll'h Shore 3 15 Wtld Wild West 6 Jokers Wild
refunded upon return of Wonderer
Dick Van Dyke 13 Lilias Yoga and You 33
•
documents at a la t~r date
10 30 - Baffle 3, 4 15 $10 000 Pyramid 8 10 Split Second &gt;'&gt;
All proposals must be ac
And I figure, now that we're awakened to our problems,
Mike Douglass 6 Ertca 33
"'
compa n1ed by a Bid Bond we ll have several thousand good years yet to go -which is
11
00
Love
American
Style
6
Gambit
8
10
Password
execu ted by a bon d ng company
Insight 33 Wizard oi Odds 3 4 15
•
licensed by the State of Oh io or than any of us will need
II
30
Hollywood
Squares
3
ol
15
Love
of
Life
a
10
Bowling
~
by a Cert fed Check drawn
Here's a prediction let's see lf I'm right I believe the birth
Brady Bunch 13 Book Beat 33
•
upon a solvent bank n the Ste le
sllghUy - In the next t:wo II 55-CBSNewsa Dan !mel sWorldlO
of Ohto payable to the order of rate w11l raise sllghtly - but ever
•
the Agent In an amount not less years Statistics don'tshow thla yet, buthoepltal maternity wings
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 5() Club 14
than ten ( 10) percent of the
News 13 News 10 8
•
amount of th e btd The bond or are less empty lately - and have you noUced the pregnant
12
30Search
for
Tomorrow
8
10
Split
Second
6
3
W
s
3
15
;
check shall be forfetted f the women m shopping centers' They're more prevlililnt than lait
1 00- News 3 All My Children 6 13 Jokers Wild 8 Gr.. n
blddtr falls to enter Into a
Acres 10 Not For Women Only 15 Chan Ese Way 33
-•
con tract with said Agent The year don't you think? - HELEN
1 30 - ThreeonoMatch3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal6 13 As the
bonds or checks of tht three
lowest bidd ers w ill be held until
World Turns 8 10 The Session 33
•
the execl)tion of the contract
2 00 - Days ot Our Lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13
Love",
and
congregational
and the furniShing of the
Guiding Light 8 10 International Performance 33
&gt;
requ1red performance bond
of Victor)' in JUUI"
2 30 - Docton3 4 15 Edge of Night B 10 Girl in My Llte6 1~
atfer whtch they w II be
The olferlns was received by 3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Price is
returned on demand
The
Right 8 10 Changing Music 33
•
Charles Dlehl and Ricky
Checks of other bidder s will be
3
30
Return
of
Peyton
Place
3
15
One
Life
to
Live
6
~
returned on demand lifter the
1
Friend Becky, Steve and
b ds are ca n¥assed
Secret Storm 10 Phil Donahue 4 Time tor Tlmoth 3l
A Performance Bond of 100
Lawrenct Eblill ung '"!'hank
Match Game 73 9
Y J
percent of the amount of the
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Love
God
I'm
Free",
and
Barton
con tract w th satlsfector y
American Style IJ Merv Grtlfln 4 Huckleberrv Hound ,.
moA~ the anMnnr.~~menll
sureties will be required from
Yogi Bear6 Secret Storm 8 Movie Lydia Bailey'' 10
th e suc:cessfu l bidders for IM
Young night waa observed
.,--~--'-~-~.
4
30
- PettlcOo'll Junction 3 Merv Griffin 4 F Troop 6 Abi!Jt
faithful performence of the
Sunday evening at the Lawel
work
on.. "-&amp;.
&amp; Costello 8 My Little Margie IS Daktarll3 Big Valley
URI 111111
Western Star Theatre 15
I
Flnanclel l!l&amp;slstance Is being Clllf Free Methodlat Church
1
received lor this ~rnprovement
DIVOTID TO THI
S 00 - Mr Rogers 33 BO&lt;tanza 3 ; Hazel 8 Bl V
'
I rom the Econom lc De¥elop with Bob Barton apeakln1 In
INJIRISl'O'
Western
Star
Theeter
15
g alley,6
ment Administration under e the absence of the Rev Robert
MilOS MASON ARIA
Public Works Impact Protect
CHISTU L TANNIHILL,
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 1~ Beverly Hillbillies B
B~ckley
who
1n1
called
out
Th e preferential hiri ng of th•
ROII~~~~OIId~LICH
Hodge)!Odge Lodge 20 Trails West IS
0
unemployed and the under town due to a death ill hla
City
._
or
5
S5
Ea'
r
l
Nightingale
15
I
11
em ployed within the target
~ubllshtd dolly ••copi 6 00 - TrulhorConseq 6 News3 4 8 10 15 SocletleslnTran
area which Is ,.. .. u,httastern lamlly
slllon 33
1
witt be
fa c tor In
Ohio
"OVer in the Glory Land" by Soturdoy by Tnt Ohio Vollt
determin ing the lowest end best
10 15 I Dream of Jeannie 3 Lilias
bid No bid will be consldered Mr and Mrs Steve Eblin and

unless tIs ""omponled bV lhe Becky, Terry Clarll Lawrenc:e
E~;~~~.·~: ~~.~~~!tt'us•:;ov~co! Eblin, Jean WrlJht, Rielly,
Cenl&lt;ro Soulheulern Ohio - 'Shirley and BeUnda Friend
EDA PROJECT 06 11 01043
Cha I
'
T~e rlghl t• re"rved
Jhe
r el Diehl, and Barblra
Agenl lo relect ony end ol bids Kline opened the ltrvlce
153 60 of the Oh io Revl•~o Code
~.·,b~a~~r~~Y0~ 1:~,%~w1 ~J! Barton bad prayer, llld Mr
Js hereby acknowledged and
understood lind shall
be days
and Mn Eblln Lawrence
followed u 11 herelo attached
By Order ot lhe Ohio Volley .,bll Bee
'
Copies
of
plans
and Health Services Foundellon "' n,
ky Eblin, Rlctj,
spsciflciHions and proposal Inc
Shirley and Bellnda Friend
bla,ks together with any fur
I Blvel&amp;ne Avenue una "Wby M , .., __
thel" tnformatton desired may
Athens Onlo •l701 ..,...,
t
...... IJU
be secured from the off tee of the
Mr ;ockFarrJngton scrlpturefromLUtelZbyMI'I
Arch itect upon depqslf of a
Execullye Dlr~c~o~ w"'ghl, a dual by Belinda
check fn the amovnt of SSO 00
made payable to the Architect
Upon receipt of e reques-t
ac com pan led by a deoo51f as

There s something new to do In the Trl-Counly area, and I
have tried It and found It fun
It s canoeing
over at Bob Evuns Farms between Gallipolis and Rio
Grande, enterprising S&lt;luls have established the Rac~~n Creek
Canoe Uvery where - for a modest fee, that came out to $1 50
per person in ~Y case - you can emulate the noble Redskin and
his btrchbark You can also get blisters, soaking wet, run
aground and one heckuva blast out of the adventure
Canoeing tsn t new to me, since I grew up practically on the
shores of Lake JackS&lt;ln near Oak Hill, and spent much of my
boyhood in the rowboats and canoes that &lt;lolled the lakeshore
But that was a long Ume ago, kiddies
Th~month , I decided to re.eslllblish my acquaintance with
the canoe and trekked mto the wilds of Gallia County, accompanied only by a sturdy son, Matthew 10 and a wld~yed
daughter, Shinybrlte 7
After Jogg1ng me m and life-jacketing the kids, the canoelivery people, trusting souls that they are, set us afi011t Matthew,
wbo'd never even been in a canoe handled the paddle forward
Shlnybrlte sat on a cushiOn midships, and I handled the stern
paddle, suddenly remembermg that I'd suddenly forgotten
everything about canoes
Down the beautiful, almost-dear waters of the creek we
paddled, with the trees grow1ug overhead, touching branches
most of the way, creating a tunnel effect, aiid w1th the frequent
shoals of swift currents addmg to the illusion of great velocity
lliusion JS the nght word Our progress was painfully slow
Matthew discovered 1t was eas1er to paddle from the left
side, and we managed to veer sharply starboard and mto the
right bank of the stream a hall-dozen times
Sh!nybr1te, who knows nothing of seamanship but is hoping
to become a WAC first sergeant when she grows up, started
shoutmg orders to Matthew about a subject neither of them knew
a blessed thing about
Matthew, IosJPg hiS rhythm and h1s cool simultaneously, and
getting a Utile dubious about the whole 1dea, managed to slap the
water enough to get me and Carole (Shlnybnte 's Christian
name) thoroughly dampened and ready for drip-dry
We got stuck on two sandbars, one log, and an anc1ent
automobile tire Three or four happy couples went sailmg past
us, to ihe df.smay of the kids, who deculed we were really yachtsmen, runnmg for the money m the America's atp races
Near journey'send, we had to navigate a riffle that llllght be
called a small waterfall - all of about !8 mches hJgh - and
Shmybr1te collapsed m terror, S9me of 1t simulated, I thmk
Matthew, whnse paddling was really gettmg better, found his
confidence getting worse, and grumbled that he never would get
the Idea of handling the darned thing
Finally, we reached the dock downstream about three miles
where the livery men load tbe passengers mto a truck, and the
canoes onto a trailer, for the tr1p back to the park1ug lot Safely
ashore and begmnmg to drY out from our splashmg, we stood on
the bailk as a middle-aged couple approached AS they touched
the ramp, something went wrong, and over they went - the wife
getting soaked to knees and elbows, and the husband gomg all the
way under, to surface wtth rruxed fury and laughter
It d1d wonders for all of us Mattbew knew he wasn't lhe
worst sailor on the waters that day, after all, and the couple along w1th several fnends - laughed about 1t all the way back
People who plow the Ohio and Kanawha m $al,OOO cabm
cru~sers with all accessories couldn't possibly have had more
fun Try 1t

·~:r.

•

Horoe Show
Flower Show Judging
1 OOP M - 4 H Decorama
2 00 4 OOP M- Demonstrations- Be•t ot Day
6 oo PM - Junior Fair Night
000 Show
x 7:00 PM - Parade moves
(St&amp;rt llntng up at 6 oo PM 1
I Immediately &amp;flor parade little Prince
and Princess Contest)
• 7 45 PM - Pre&amp;enletlon ol King and Queen
• 8t00 PM - Junior Fair Revue
• 8 25 P M - Achleveh1enl Awards- Special Awards
x a 35 P M- Gamn and Races for all youth
x 9 oo p M - Gorden Tractor Poll for youth
Horae Gomes
x GRANDSTAND ATTRACTIONS

FOLIAGE
GARDENS
•4.00

DUDLEY'S. A.ORIST
59 N 2nd Ava
Middleport, 0

Your Local Oil Companies

Dale C. Warner Ins. Agency
BOX 727'

992-7428

Ohio Petroleum Council
88 East Broad Slreel
Columbus, Ohio 43215

POMEROY, 0

'

�3- rhe Onlly Senilool Mlddlcport·l'Omcroy 0 , AuMUSI 14 11!11

WIN AT BRIDGE

&amp; THINGS

Confusing, these cue bids
NOHTII !Ill
+ A42
'f 5

t K85

+ AQH4J2
\\f~T

EAST
• 109!3

'fK\I IGH

'fA 1642
• Q2

+ KJ 75
• J

1043

+106

+5
SOUTH
+Oti

.

"J9 3
t A976
+KJ 97
East Wes1 vulnerable
North
Eau So ulh
Wesc

Pass
Pass

I+
Pa ss

2+

Pass
Pass

3+

Pass
Pass

Pass

It

3+

3N T

1...,--------·...!:
Hartley, City Ice &amp; Fuel, E Bartow Jones, Two ltlver Motor
Co, Harley Hartley, City Ice &amp; Fuel, Lew Wiley, Mason
County lwJurance , Vance Jobuson, Johnson's Super Markel,
Wally Allbright, meal manager al Johnson's No 2 store and
Sharon Newberry, who sold the grand champion

Music association
names committees
The Southeastern Oh1o
Gospel Mus1c Assoc1ahon met
at Allen Hall, Rio Grande,
Monday evenmg to plan future
activihes and name com
llllttees
Association director,
LawrenceMcOraw,announced
that concerts are scheduled at
the Double R Ranch, Little
Hocking, Sunday, September 2,
w1th the Ramllos and at the
Lyne Center Thursday
November 8, featuring the
LeFebres
The Bissell Brothers, an area
grouP, w11l perform w1th the
Rambos at LitUe Hoelting
That I 30 ~ m concert will be
held outdoors and patrons are
asked to brmg their own lawn
cha1rs A ram shelter 1s
available m case of mclement
weather
December 13 14, IS and 16
are bemg held open for the
Rambos Christmas Special
wh1ch will be presented at four
locations in the southeastern
Ohio area
Named to cHall" the activities
Committee of the assoc1al!on
was Leslie Lemley H1s
comrruttee mcludes Larry and
JoAnne McCraw, Rita Boster
Julia W1semandle, Mr and

Mrs Roger B1ssell, Mr and

Mrs Dw1ght B1ssell and Mr
and Mrs Carolyn B1ssell
This COIIUDJttee wtll plan
var1ous events lor assoc1at1on
members w1th a pJCmc w1th the
Rambas at Utile Hock10g as
the first project
25
Saturday, August
members of the pubhc1ty
collllmttee will meet at the
Holzer Medical Center parking
lot at 9 a m to scatter posters
and promotion leaflets for the
smg at Little Hocking m the
area Members of the com
m1ttee are Nancy Walker,
Leslie Lemley and Mr and
Mrs McGraw Ariyone who
would hke to go along to help
w1th lhJS project should contact
a member of the committee
Tenatlve groups for concerts
next year mclude the Happy
Goodman
family
the
Dowmngs, the llambos The
Speer Famtly and the In
sptrallons
New members are still hemg
sought for the assocJatton
which IS devoted to the
promohon of gospel mus1c m
the southern Oh10 and northern
West V1rgtn1a area The fee
covers one year and only one
fee IS char~ed per famdy

Missionary society meets
Several new officers were
named at a recent meetilig of
the MissiOnary Soc1ety of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church
Mrs Mildred Jacobs was
elected to fill the position of
secretary follow10g the
res1gnallon of Mrs Esta W1se
who has moved to MtnJO June
tion Mrs Doris Buckley was
named m1ss1onary educatiOn
chairwoman
Mrs
Tma
Jacobs, the penny a day
and
Mrs
chairwoman
Marguente Lelfheit, the
director of stewardship and
prayer Circles
Mrs Jean Wnght presided at
the meeting openmg with two
')o&gt;~~~m~~ :::=~..: '&gt;"'N"' *'..-"-= :: ~
.jf
"

}

I
'

Pomeroy . . .
Personal Notes

'~

f

Mr and Mrs Robert Grunm

readmgs, ' Instant to Obey
and Make Me a Blessmg
Prayer was by Mrs Buckley 'A
report on the Free Methodist
conference was g1ven by Mrs
Wrtght and Mrs Iva Powell
read ' The Lord Is My
Banker'
Awards were
presented by Mrs Shirley
lor
misSIOnary
Fnend
educatiOn progress Attendmg
the meeting wh1ch closed With
prayer by Mrs Della Curtis
was Mrs Amber Lohn

Sttks-Craddock
vows exchanged

By Os,.ald &amp; James Jacoby
IMP matches are defJmtely
the best test of bndge sk1ll but
even her e there JS a tremen
dous element of luck
Noll take a good look at the
South hand You respond one
d1amond to your p~rtner s club
openm~ He reb1ds clubs you
raise htm to three and he b1ds
three spades
It 1s clear that h1s spade call
IS some sort of cue b1d Is he
suggesllng a slam askmg you
to b•d three no trump 1f you can
stop spades or maybe telling
you that he can stop spades and

L#B:I:li!MlN Il
The b1ddlng has b..n
w..t North Eou

1•

South
I+

Pass
Pass
l+
Pass
3+
Pass
Pass
4+
Pass
You South hold
+Q 8 6 4 Z
tA 4 +A K J 9 7
What do you do now

••,

•z

..,

At-Pass You. made a slam try

and your partner showed no inter

TODAY'SQUESTION
Instead of biddmg four spades

your partner has bid (our hearts

What do you do now'

' '::::&gt;.:::$: ""'='*".'::X:.._"~":-."&lt;:::: '""'*'"'"" : : :

»'W&gt; *-' &lt;:&lt;.W

~

Generation Rap

I

By Helen and Sue Bottel

,. .. .,'i&lt;j!l

I

Needed· A Club lor Shy People
Dear Helen and Sue
1m tembly shy and have no poise I'm 18 and still run when
youngmenJustlook at me-and they do look at me because I'm
not ugly
I m afra1d to go places or meet people, and I'm always
retreatmg to corners In school, I was "the bram," with no soclal
life It s awful to he so insecure you'd rather hide than chance
lookmg like a fool when you can't think of a thing to say
Would you bolleve, I was even afraid to send thia letter 1
Don't tell me I need a psyehlatrlst I know that, but can't
affordone -NONAMEINNEEDOFHELP

WINNER IN HORSE SHOW-Young Tony Kennedy, son
of Mr and Mrs Leo Kennedy, Jr , was winner of the Western
Pleasure Pony class (48 Inch and under) at lbe 1973 Mason
County Fair Horse Sbow held Saturday night A large attendance was on hand to v1ew the 11 events of the annual
horse show

Dear No Name
Group therapy IS much less expensive than priVate
psych1atr1c sessions, and the rtght group might help provide the
self.eonfldence you need But he careful some ol these ex·
perlmental "encounters" are viCIOus, they can tear a shy person
to p1eces ASk your doctor for tbe name of a reputable
psychologist, or, if you're In college, talk to a psycbology
professor you can trlillt
Meanwhile, look around for another shy person, and
RELATE DlScussmg your fears wtth one wbo baa similar
problema may provide you both with the courage to start
breaking down the walls - HELEN

+++

Letter to the editor
To The Ed1tor
AS the Me1gs County Fa1r Ill now upon us I would hke to say
something concermng the Regatta Every year at the Regatta
they have had Saturday set as1de as kidd1e day where you pay
one dollar and get your hand stamped wh1ch allowed you to nde
anything on the grounds foe this one amount This 1s fme and
gond as many a child wouldn t get to attend any other way They,
the Regatta president or whoever say they make money every
year and I think as the falf hegms Tuesday and as b1g as the
Me1gs County fatr 1s they could afford to run k1dd1e day m the
same way They have the ndes at 20 cents Well, 11 doesn t take
very long to use a dollar and if there IS a b1g family you can t
afford more than this
I think m saymg this I m speakmg for a lot of fam1hes that
will be attendmg the Me1gs County fa1r
Name withheld on request
Ed Note In recent years a day has been set as1de at the
fairgrounds when all r1des were at a reduced rate

NNINOH (And other shy people) '
What we need here Is a club or clasa for "shy ones" Most
timid people could benefit by everyday peycholol!Y, but they
don't need psychiatry They're afraid to inlx becaUBe they're
sure they'll goof it up and somebody will laugh If they could
meet others w1th the same problem, talking It out together :would
prove they are accepted, and increased self.eonfldence might
follow
Yes, I know "corner&gt;tiltters" aren't joiners, but if the club
were exelus1vely for shy persons, they might tum out
Anyway, 1t's an Idea, ill case some Interested and concerned
psychology teachers or counselors want to take a shot at lt
SUE

+++

NOTE FROM HELEN Overeaters Anonymous, Gamblers
Anonymous, A A - why not Shy Ones Anonymous (or maybe
The Shyners' Club")? All 1t would take Is a non-timid organlzer,
perhaps one who formerly had the problem but conquered it with
altttiehelpfrom)lJSorherfriends -H
,

+++

llap
We read that birth rates are now slightly below "Zero
Population Growth " If thia continues, won't we eventually just
die out, as some of the former :ivlllzatloliB did? - WONDERER

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS

Sealed propo sals w 11 b e
received by the Ohio Valley
Health Serv ces Foundat •on
In c
1 Blue Lane Avenue
Athens Oh10 at the off ce of the

Announcement 1s being
made of the February 6 Execut111e 0 rector on SEP
6 1973 un11 1 12
marriage at Peansburg, Va 0TEMBER
Clock Noon Eastern Day I ght
of Nma G Sliles, daughter of Sav ngs Time and at tha t t1me
II be opened publ ic ly and
Mr and Mrs Edward Sltles w
read tor the fur nish ng of a I
South Thtrd Ave , Middleport, labor and material necessary
tor t he turn sh ng and erectm g
to Earl M Craddock son of of
f1ve (5) Emergency Med cal
Sta ti OnS
jn
Mrs Earl Craddock, Rural Serv ce
Sou th eastern Ohio at Ironton
Route, Mason W Va and the Oak Hi ll Jackson Logan and
~omerov
All work sha ll be
late Mr Craddock
done accord ng to the draw ngs
Craddock IS employed by and specificat ons as prepared
lrby ConstructiOn Co at by Hayes Donaldson Witte
and Partners Architects
Letart W Va and Mrs myer
630 Sixth St Portsmouth Ohio
Proposal~ Will be rece 1ved for
Craddock works at Kay s
the Entire Work and the
Beauty Salon m Middleport butld1ng s can be b1d In
The couple res1de at Platter d v ldua lly or comb ned for all
f ive (5)
Proposets sh~ ll be
Apartments, Brownell Ave , submitted on proposal Form
conta1ned
1M
the
bound
Middleport

and fam1ly Columbus, spent
the weekend here vis1tmg Mr
and Mrs Dayton Phillips, and
Mr and Mrs Bert Grmun
Alexa Kramer left for home
at Plamv1ew, Texas Sunday
after VlSitilig with her grand·
parents, Mr and Mrs W 0
Barnitz She stopped here
enroute home after hemg in
Scranton Pa and W1lm10gton
Del visitilig schoollr~enda
SON BORN
Mrs W R H1ll, Foster
Mr
and
Mrs Marvm Star
Baker, Mr and Mrs Robert E
ford,
Syracuse
are announcmg
Hill, Dayton spent the weekend
with Mrs Geotge Hobstetter the birth or son August I at the
Holzer Medical Center,
Sr and other relaiJves
Mr and Mrs Donald L1sle, Galhpohs The e1ght pnwtd
Syracuse, spent a recent seven ounce infant has been
weekend at Virginia Beach, named Aridrew Charles Mr
Ya , VISited a niece and her and Mrs Stafford have another
family, Capt and Mrs John son, Deron Richard five
Uvra (Marilyn Harden) Grandparents are Mr and
Enroute home they VISited Mrs John Harrah, Mason, W
Va , and Mr and Mrs Hubert
WIUiamsburg
Stafford of lloute 4, Pomeroy
Creal-grandparents are l)lr
and Mrs Basil Harrah of
DAUGHTER BORN
Asbury, W Va , Mrs L1llte
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs Cwnmings, Rt 4, Pomeroy
Thomas M Theiss, Rt 1, are and Mrs L Roush, Letart, W
announcing the birth of a Va
daughter, Andrea Rae, August
8, wellhlng 7 lbs, 12 oz and
F&amp;AMTOMEET
1m Inches long Maternal
A special meeting of Mid·
8J'PC!parenll are Mr and Mre dleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, Will
Arlllur R Sylvester, and be held at 7 30 tonight There
Plternal 8fandparenll are Mr will be work In the Fellowcraft
•nd Mrs Charlee Theiss, Degree All Master Masons are
Ra.'ine
mvlted

wants you to try no Irump It
you can top hearls
At Table I In an 1mportant
team match South dec tded to
bid three no trump With his
near stoppers 1n both maJor
suits North thought 11 showed
a sure heart stopper and
passed
South was most unhappy
with the kmg of hearts lead He
d1dn t have to be East held JUSt
one high heart and no matter
when he took it the suit blocked
and only four heart tncks were
avaJiable to the defense '
AI Table 2 South dec1ded
agamst three no trump and
took h1s partner to f1ve clubs
East opened the 10 of spades
and declarer had to lose three
tncks
I NEWSP~PER ENTEAPRlS£ ASSN)

Openmg lead- YK

BUY SCHOLARSHIP BEEF - Four local busluesses,
Johnson's Market, Two River Motor Company, Mason
Coonly lwJuranee and City lee &amp; Fuel, repurchased the
grand champion beef when lt was sold for a second time Frl·
day Proceeds from the resale went Into the Citizens
National Bank Fatr Scholarship fund Pictured are Art

BY PAUL CRABTREJD

spec flcattons and Other con
tract
documents
wh ch
documents are on file at the
office of the Clerk of satd Agent
anct at the office of the Archltect
and are available to all
prospect i ve b dders dur ng
regular off1ce hours until the
closing of b ds
All Contractors agree that n
th e h ring of em ployees for the
performance ot work under thiS
contract or any sub contra c t he
anct
h is
subcontra~tor s
material suppliers or taborers
or any other person acting on
h ts behalf shall not by reason of
race
creed
or
color
discriminate aoa nst any cltlz.en
of the State In the employment
of taborers or worker s who are
qualified and available to
perform the work
and fur
thermore th s contractor agrees
that he shall not In any menn ~ r
d1scrimlnage aoalnst or in
t!mldate any employees l'jlred
for the performance of work
under this contract
'T'h Is contractor
further
agrees that Art icle 153 59 and

named above the Arch te et will
forward copies of btddlng
document s as named n the
preced ng paragraph SHIP

Wonderer
We'd have to maintain "Below ZPG" for at least one
PING CHARGES COLLECT generation before we'd see even a slightly lowered people.eount
Oepos t w II be refunded upon By that time, medicine, etc may be keeping us alive longer, so
the return of the plans and we'll probably be "above zero" again
spec fh:at 1ons In good condit1on
and wlth postage or express
If our clvUizatlon dies out it will be from pollution and bad
charges prepatd Wtfhm ten {10) managemen~ not birth control -SUE
days after the dale bids are

I

Television Log
TUESDAY, AUG 14 1973
• w-News3 4 8 10 1J 1&gt; Irumor Conseq 6 Sesame St ~0
Sportscope 33
6 30 - News 3 4, 6 8 10 15 I Dream Of Jeannie 13 Ltllas
Yoga &amp; You 33
7 00- What's My Ltne 8 I ve Got A Secret 13 Elec Co 20
Beneath The Clock 4 News 6 10 Untami!d World 13 Llvihg
33 Lee Trev&lt;no s Golf For Swingers 15 Glenn F.ord s
Summertime U S A 3
7 30 - To Tell The Troth 6 Price Is RightS 10 Beat The Cl~k
13 This Is Your Life 3 Circus 4 RFD 20 Charles Blalf's
Better World 15, Cancer Life or Death 33
•
8 00- Ohio This Week 20 Maude 8 10 Eventng at Pops 33
Temperatures Rising 6 13 Movies The Alamo 4 3 15 TMe
Killers 4
'
8 3()-Hawatl Five 0 8 Changtng Music 20 Movie The Gt Ms
of Huntington House 6 13
•
9 00- International Performance 20 33
9 30 - Virginian 8 The Maltese Blppy
10 00- Marcus Welby M 0 6 13 News 20

?&amp;
~

!'Dues nip Redlegs ~
~
:despite conflicts

~
q

&gt;

0

l!y FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
' The Pittsburgh Pirates
aren't letting their internal
•problems inhibit their drive to
the lop of the National I,eague
East
The Pirates' clubhouse has
• been the scene of some smallscale battles the last couple of
' days with Manager Bill VU"don
being involved In separate
' mcidents with third baseman
Rich Hebner and pitcher Dock
•Elbs
V1rdon s clash With Hebner
.came about 30 minutes after
&amp;mday's game m which Hebn.
er allegedly called the
manager a few obscene names
because Virdon had removed
his th1rd baseman from the
, game for deferislve purposes m
the ninth mning The two men
· narrowly missed eugagmg m
!JSticUfls
• Ellis and Vlrdon got mto a
disagreement recenUy when
the Pirate manager ordered
his pitcher to stop wearillg hrur
"curlers on the playmg !Jeld
durmg practice
' VlctQry Is Televised
" To the Pirates' credit howe·
~ver, the mc1dents haven t gone
boyond the clubhouse On the
"field the Pirates are playing
solid baseball as evidenced by
.. their nationally televised 3-2
" Mclory over the Cincmnat1
" Reds Monday night wh1ch
moved them to within two
" &gt;games of dlVIsion-leadmg St
•• LoulS
, In the only other scheduled
~ NL games, Houston blanked St
. LouiS, ~. Los Angeles topped
• Montreal, 8-5, and San D1ego
edged New York, 3-2
Oakland beat Boston, 3·1,
Baltimore downed Texas, 7-4,
DetrOit whipped Mmnesota, 9·
;'!,
New York blanked
• Cahforma 6-0, and Chicago
, defeated Milwaukee, 5-2 m
Amencan League games
'You have to let clubhouse
animosities stay m the club.
hnuse and concentrate on the
game," sa1d pitcher Nelson
Jlriles who heat the Reds w1th
8 1-3 mmngs of seven-hit pitclung ' Once you take the
tnCidents on the field you're 10
trouble This team 1s too loose

"

o

•

:

'
•
~

Sponsored By

•

Elberfelds in Pomeroy,

9 30- Elec Co 33 To Tell The Truth 3 Wild Wtld West :h

+++

,

more

!o

The Shoe Box,

in

Dale Warner Insurance

so

and Crow 's Steakhouse

110th Annual Meigs County Fair

br

gr:

1 "

21 21 410

Friend an~ MIN ~ine,
"Sheltered in the Annl ot
I

0 ~1~

45169 auttntu Olflti Phon
992 2156, l!dltorlol Phone 992
2151
Second cluo poolego pold tt

WEDNESDAY HIGHLIGHTS
9 15A M - Junior Fair Beet Showmanship and Judging
10 ooA M - 4 H Club Out.tandlng Class Awards
Conformation Show- Horses and Ponies
12 00 Noon- 4 H Flower Show Judging
Atlernoon Oemonstrattons- FljA
1 OOP M- Open Cla!S Beet Judging

PoN"'.effXn~r'•,dvortJotna

rtP(IItntotlve tolttnel f,
Gil oghor Inc 12 lilt 4lnd
SIS Ntw York City Nei!o,Vo~k
Del'i'v::e'l'fy"g;rrter' wthtt~o

&amp;~'AA~f~~ ~~u't~"~'nfr': c:tr,:r 8 30 - Banacak 3 4 15J Movie Duet 6 13
strvlce n&lt;tl •••lltblt Qno 9 00 - Den Augusta, 10 Musical Encounter 20 33
month 12 "&amp;V mtllln Ohio tnd 9 30 - Man Builds Man Dtslroyl 20 33
W
Vt • month
One \'r'
SIK 10 00
•-·rch 15 I
months
It 50l161
1 Thrt
w-or ldNewS20J
u 1 O..en
G Morshell6 13 Cannon B 10 ...
monthsl u 50, Jttwhtrt 11
n vertlty amn 3, 4 Free Stage Freddie King 33
yttr; u montnosno , thrtt 11 OO - News3 • 6 8 10 13 15
onrnt, •• ~UDICrtPilou 11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Or Jekyll &amp; Mr Hy~e 6 131
rice tncludtt lllftdty Tlmtt
Shoot out 11 Medicine Bend' 81 ' Carrie 10
entlnet
I 00 - Nowa 13 Man from U N C L E 4
2 00 - N"''t 4
II

J

Decors rna

1

- ews 6 10 Whets My Line 9 Truth or Conseq 31 8~1
the Clock 4 Anything You Can Do 13 Elec Co 201 Salnt15
Book Beat 33
1 30 - TheJudgelo Pollcesurgeon3, Beat the Clock 13,
Andy Griffith 15 How Do Your Children Grow 20 EpiiOde
Action 33 Protectors B
8 00 - Adam 12 3, 4J Whets The Big Idea? 33 1 Sonny &amp; Cher a
;~ Love Thy Nelghbor6 13, Purpose ol Punishment Effects

By MtlwJl Ri(hman
UI' I Sports Editor

convmced him how much good he could do there
&amp;'TOUCH I ON, Wls (UP!) - I am an alcoholic '
Film llelng Produced
llyne Duren says that slmply and openly
Rym Duren is dotng so much good that a documentary him
He lsn I trying to shock anybody 1 hal's not h1s purpose All about h1s hfe is being produced now hy the Umvers1ty of
an Infield out to lend the he's trying to do Is help someone else
Wi scon s J~ s telecommumcatlons umt
Dodgers to v1ctory over the
llyne Duren s big trouble In baseball always was control He
J.ast weekend ' Mister Magoo, ' as they us~'(] to call h1m
Expos The v1ctory Increased never could get the ball over the plate But he had a way of bemg beCBl1'lf of the thick eyeglasses he wears, went back to Yankee
the Dodgers lead over the dlred He dalways look you stra1ght In the eye when he talked to Sladmm lor the Old T1mers' get-together
second place Reds to 2Y, you He still does
He was delighted to see all h1s old teammates agam and they
games In the NL West Ken
Once you're an alcoholic, you're always an alcoholic, says were happy to sec h1m !here was a new respect among them for
Smgleton had a three-run the 44-year-(Jld former flreballer for the New York Yankees I 1\yne Duren It was subtle, but 1t was defmltely there
homer and Ha I Breeden a solo believe that 100 per cent J remember the flrsl time I got drunk I
Some years back after Duren had gone through a particularly
blnst for the Expos
was 13 years old and It was on wine I fellsJck as hell The next hornble mght, he remembers Mickey Mantle and Whitey ~"ord
Derrel Thomas atoned for an day I said I d never do 1t agam
commg to him so1tc1tously and telhng h1m he shouldn t drmk
eJghth-innlng error with a
No, I never did 11 again- much," Duren mocks h1mself "111e
Ryne Duren buttonholed the two this past Saturday
game-wlnmng double in the amount and frequency of my drtnkmg mcreased so I hardly
You know 110methlng• he sa1d to them, sm1hng You guys
ninth Inning as the Padres beat noticed It I d drmk before high school dances out of feelings of
were nght '
the Mets Thomas throwing 10fer10rity guilt feelmgs, anylhmg I ran scared all my hfe
error had allowed the Mets to
Pretty Far Down
push across the gfHihead run m
People a~ me how far down aleohol pushed me I II tell you
the e1ghth inmng, but h1s two- how far One lime It landed me in jail Another lime I wound uP tn
out double scored Dave Wm a mental hospital for nearly three months I worked tn the kitthat
oj
field to cap a two-run runth Jon chen there, so you could say I went from the b1g leagues to
Y"
Matlack went all the way for assistant pot scrubber m less than two years
pamt.
the Mets and was the hard luck
We II drop lh s suggesti on
I had a bus10ess, a serv1ce statiOn m San Antomo, and that
loser
to merchants - fire nsk s
collapsed on me My w1fe sued me for divorce Alcohol derued me
greater
Icy Sidewalks
the beauty of seemg my son, Steve, grow up I was a degraded
By FRED DOWN
Texas M1ke atellar allowed 10
mer
1nc.rease I ab1llly
person,a zombie a vegetable I hated penple and I hated myself
UPI Sports Writer
hits and walked three but went'
cnand1se stoc ks are h1gh
I wasn't really hvmg I was ex1stmg
That extra startmg pitcher the distance to ra1se h1s record
The Down ng Cht ld s
Agen cy offer s a free sur 11ey
Ryne Duren can talk thiS way freely now
for whom the Chicago While to 10.12 Tom Gneve h1t a twoof
your rlsks and pol1 c1es to
He hasn't taken a drink m more than fiVe years and hHl! Sox have been searching this run homer for the Rangers
assure adequate Insurance
rehab1htated himself so magruhcently that he has pulled himself season may have been on thetr
Bill Freehan s bases.f1lled
coverage
up to become one of baseball s most heaut1ful people
roster all the time
seventh-1nnmg smgle drove m
You can go even further You could say, m a sense he has
Unfortunately the diS· two runs and helped the East.
become the Dr Albert Schweitzer of baseball
covery ' of Terry Forster may DIVIStoll leadmg T1gers break
have come too late for the open !herr game at Mmnesota
He Isn't a Doctor
Ryne Duren 1sn t a Jloclor, but as Director of Alcoholic White Sox to get back 10l.o the and extend the Twms losmg
happened It s such a slulme
Rehab1htatJon
of small but effective Stoughton Commuruty Aniencan Leagues Western streak to seven games Woody
That s where you need the twoHospital here m suburban Mad1son he's helpmg many so-called DIVISion race For all Wilbur Fryman won h1s f1fth game and
pomt rule s6 y~ll ~b gill:! Ill' the
MIDDLEPORT 0
recovered alcohohcs l1ke hunself
Wood s enormous contnbotion John Hiller earned his 28th
WID
I
'! 1fffi 10! I I ' It s the very least I can do says the stocky one-t1me rebel
by working on a three-day
Pete Beathard directed the
ace I owe my life to others very s1m1lar to these people we have rotatwn smce the start of the
Chiefs until the f1nal dr1ve
when the 38-year-(J]d Dawson here m our program By the1r example they gave me the fa1th season the White Sox are m
thtrd place- 10 games behmd
saw h1s first action of the that I, too could overcome my Illness
'Alcoholism 15 a disease the same as heart trouble or any the first-place Kansas City
season
other An alcohohc IS no more to blame for his Illness than any Royals
The Cluefs proved 111 the other affhcted person One of the problems IS that alcoholism 1s a
Forster a 21 year old baby·
end they wanted to wln;'},paid stigma disease Nobody wants to say he s an alcoholic, nobody faced left-hander who made 62
Barney They put Dawfi(ln lh wants to say anybody in his family IS '
relief appearances for the
and he proved his worth He
moved the ball "
Duren put in time With the Onoles, Angels Plnlhes Reds and White Sox last season, was
Thevldorywasthesecond of Senators as well as the Yankees durmg h1s e1ght-and-abalf pressed mto serv1ce as a
starter Monday mght and
seasons m the maJorS
the exhibition season for th e
The one Thing
pitched h1s hrst complete
L1ons, while the Clnefs dropped
. ,.
to 1 1
The one th10g he always could do was throw ,.,rd ex· game smce he pitched for
traordmartly so His strikeout ratiO per mmng actually was Santana High School m Santee,
Greg Landry directed two better than such Hall of Famers as Walter Johnson Lefty Grove Calif -a 5-2 ftve h1t victory
Lions' sconng dr1ves 111 the
ed
second half He capped an 80- and Carl Hubbell, that s how hard he threw He p1tch 111 two over the Milwaukee Brewers
"A Lot of Fun"
yard, 15.play dnve Wllh a two World Senes and was named on four All-Star teams
It's great to see that our competitors are
Washmgton was the last club I played for tn 196ii says
' SU!rllng Ill a lot of fun
yard keeper for a touchdown, Duren , 1really hit the JUice hard after that Most people thought because you can make live or
beginning to care. We welcome them. Bethen led another assault that
s1x
mistakes
and
sttll
wm,
ended With a !6-yard field goal all 1t took was 2 or 3 beers to get me drunk, but actually you
cause caring is a great business. "We
by Errol Mann, Which proved genekrally saw me With f1ve tunes what you thought I was sa1d Forster Commg m w1th
care" has been Cooper's marketmg slogan
to he the l'(tnnmg pmqts
drm mg I was sneakmg the dnnks F1rst you d see me at one men on consJstenUy you can't
for the past several years. But the altitude
Landry hit 6 of 11 pa~ lor end ~f the bar then the other I'd have a dr10k gomg at each afford one miStake You also
1
have
to
use
your
best
pitches
of "We care" about our providing motor55 yards and gamed anoilier 38 1 end
all
the
time
and
can't
develop
Duren
remembers
one
mght
10
San
Antomo
It
was
New
Year
s
f h had t
t th
yar ds runnmg B1II Munson
Ists with real values has been at Cooper
completed 5 of 15 passes for 3¥ • mght and he felt hke celebrating the act e
n gone ou e new ones "
The Oakland A s defeated the
for over 58 years.
the first halF
before
Yards '"
1'1 evemng
Boston
Red
Sox,
3·1
the
~'
h
""
d·'·
"
hi
'
So
he
got
hunseH
all
mce
and
JUiced
up
staggered
somehow
to
Dawson m 1s one """ve, 1
k
Baltunore Ortoles heat the
7 of 13 a~ses for 57 ards
his car and drove It smack on to a railroad trac
Texas
llangers 7-4, the Detrmt
'!JUSt parked 1t and left 11 r1ght there,' he says I saw this
Detroit next plays ~aturday
guy runrung a sw1tch eng10e and sa1d to h1m, Go ahead and hlt Tigers routed the Mmnesota
rug ht m Memphis agalllSI the
a1
h
1ttl
Baltimore Colts, while the 11, ynu b1g bastard' You b1g guys are ways s ovmg us 1 e Twms 9-3, and the New York
Yankees downed the Cilliforma
Ch1efs play their thrrd straight guys around
Cops Came Along
Angels 6-0, mother AL games
home exhibition game, also
Natwnall.eague scores were
Pretty soon the cops came along and hauled ltttle" llyne
Saturday mght, agamst the
Houston 4 St Louis 0 Pills·
Duren, 6-2 and 200 pounds, off to Jail
Minnesota V1kmgs
4 ply polyester cord
Sometime later Duren entered San Antomo State Hospital and burgh 3C10c1nnatJ 2, San D1ego
3New York 2and Los Angeles 8
remamed there 82 days
I got out m March of 1966- JUSt 10 time for sprmg trammg, ' Montreal 5
cooPeR
Designated h1tter Carlos
he smtles wryly 1 stayed sober 11 months, then began drinkmg
agam I was fired as a heavy truck salesman 10 Milwaukee In no May drove m three runs With a
as low as
homer and a s1ngle to pace the
lime at all I became a basket case
The turnmg pomt for Ryne Duren came durmg the spnug of White Sox e1ght-tut attack
which dealt J1m Slaton his 10th
!968 He remembers the date, May 2
' 'rhat s the day I went mto DePaul Rehab11ltallon Hospital m loss Forster walked four and
struck out five as he raised his
Milwaukee, the same day I had my last drmk "he says
blaokwall
While m the hospital Duren began tra1mug as an alcoholism won lost record to 4-4 The
Plus $1 83 F E T
counselor He went to the Umvers1ty of W1sconsm, Milwaukee White Sox' v1ctory snapped the
S24 97 tor whtlewalls
ExtensiOn and took a number of psychology courses :Soon he Brewers f1ve-game wmnmg
o Bold and oleek
was workmg at the Noms Foundallon for Delinquent and streak
MOSCOW (UP!) - The Dependent Boys at Mukwonago, WJS , and a year ago the ad
o A real punishment Iaker
John Odom whose earlybounce bounce, .~~unCfl ol mlrustrator at stoughton Commumty Hospital came to h1m and season Ineffectiveness hurt the
o A real mileage giver
basketballs 'dfowneJ!i &amp;,~ 13 1he
A's badly, went 8 1-3 mrungs to
aura of frus'ir'aR~8 tOildf'WJ!Uh
wm his th~rd game of the
hwtg over the tJ g deiegall6h
season w1th the relief a1d of
of student-athletes holed up at es~lly after what happened attack
HolJie Fmgers D1ck Green
the heavily guarded University last year m Munich Alii know Crosby, a former NCAA drove m one run and scored the
of Moscow for the upcommg Ill, we're here to play basket. champion and wmner of eight other two for the A's Lws
World University Games
hall, not to get 10volved m medals m the 1971 Pan T1ant suffered h1s lOth loss
The tr1wnphant US basket- politics
American Games (mcludmg aga1nst 15 wms for Boston
124 Wo MAIN
ball team, which lui~, jljSI Badgers team alr~ady has three golds) was rushed to a
TbeBigBlow
completed a clean sweep 01 11 been playmg some kind of nearby hospital for an emerTommy Dav1s' two-run dou
Ph. 992-2848 POMEROY
games through Czechoslovakia baskethall, despite he1ng proha· gency operat1on
ble was the b1g blow of a four·
Poland and Bulgarl8, showed bly the youngest contingent
run fifth 10mng which earned
(average
19
years)
ever
sent
the
Onoles to their v1ctory over
surpnse-but
concef"over the heavyllttle
security
meas- overseas by the U S They
WAHAMA BOOSTER
ures that Sov1et authorities swept to three wins in Poland
MASON - Ray Tucker has
have mamtamed here
four more In CZechoslovakia announced that the Wahama
The cagers, last of the U S and another four m Bulgaria- Athletic Boosters will meet
contiligents to arrive went never allowing the opposition to In spedal sesswn at 7 this
straight to pr~ctlce on Monday come closer than 14 pomts
evemng in the Wahama
wh1le the rest of the American
While U S Embassy officials gymnas1wn All boosters are
athletes awaited the issuing of and some of lhe team sponsors to be prepared to work for an
special pas!les that would struggled to straighten out the hour on bleachers and
finally free them from the credentials problem, the Amert· equipment
university grounds and allow can team suffered a major
them lo gain access to the city setback be(ore ever leaving its
outside '
quarters when John Crosby, the
A rough untuned automobile eng1ne
This is qulte a new star of the gymnastic team, The gr1zzly bear is pictured
throws your money away -and throws
experience," said Ed Badger, was felled by an appendlll on Cahforma s state seal
Amenca s prec1ous energy supply
head coach of the basketball
away too
team from Wilbur Wright J C
Good dnv1ng habits save money and
in Chicago "We were able to
move freely with our visas In
REPRESENTING o • •
energy For example fast starts cah
all the other Iron Curtain
reduce gasoline mileage by as
countries
much
as 6 m1ies per gallon'
STATE AUTOMOBILE MUTUAL INS
' But rna be all this Is oodOHIO FARMERS INSURANCE CO
Amencans oa1 t afford to waste An~, rav I
AUTO-OWNERS
MUTUAL
INSURANCE
CO
There are many ways every Amencan
"Greenhouse Fresh"
can help save tt Wnte today for a free
copy of A Consumers GUJde to
"IPe Insure lfl S1tre Insurance "
EffJcJent Energy Use 1n the Home
11 s packed w1th 1deas that can save
We shall be moving as soon as the phone
energy and money
stnke IS settled to the former Elberfelds
store room , 102 W Mau• St, Pomeroy, 0
From

White Sox find
hurler too late

DOWNING •
CHILDS
AGENCY INC.

HERE'S PROOF:

"78 Sen·es"

Poly-Mark IV

$20~~&gt;13

MOORE'S

burn25%
more fuel

4

67 3~;;.~~·
;.~ 3~ 8
00 N

Sport Parade

of tune can

ot

I~;~~/'"s't"9 Pco".:'.~:;v

Today's

An engine out

slngill8

SII&amp;A ':)

save for Uoe 'J'Iger~ while llcrt
Blylevcn was ta~ged with his
12th defeat
Hoy Wh11Al homered !rom
each sJdc of the plate and nmde
a bnlhantcatch of Bob Oliver s
bid fo r a two-run homer as the
Yankees downed the Angels
behind t&lt;corge Medich's f1ve
hitter Medtch stru ck out four
and walked lour in winning his
mnth game Hudy May sui
fered hJs 12th loss compared to
seven wms

··1~::::::::::::::::::::::::::!:~-

6

'Young night '
obseroed at
laurel church

Cel

KANSASCITY,Mo (UP!) Seven-year pro Lem Barney
rwned an expected lle game
for 67 6?4 befuddled spectators
Monday mght and won another
game for lhe DetrOit L1ons
Seventeen year veteran Len
Dawson entered the game w1th
6 32left and gu1ded the Kansas
C1ty Chiefs 82 yards m 17 plays,
throwmg a fourth-down 10-yard
touchdown pass to Elmo
Wrtghl w1th I 18 remammg
All that remamed was for
Jan Stenerud to kicl,l the extra
pomt But Barney shot through
untouched and blocked the
kick, givmg the L1ons a 17 16
VICtory
' I JUSt shot straight m from
the left s1de and got 11 w1th my
left hand, sa1d Barney, who
earlter set up the Lions f1rst
touchdown with a 29-yard pass
mtercephon ~ the Chiefs' two
' M1ke Weger took Wendell
Hayes tn and I just went
arowtd hlffi ' sa1d Barney
Dawson, who was the holder
for the extra pnmt, sa1d, I
know where he (Barney) came
from , but I don't know what

7 PM TUESDAY
CABLE CHANNEL 5

Columbus Todav 4 Bible Answers 8 The Story 13
•
6 45 - Corncob Reports 3 Farmttme 10
:
7 00- Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 News 6 Fllnlslones '3
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"
8 00 - Capl KangarooS 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame 51 a3
~~e6
•
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•
ass-Newsll
:
9 00- Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Friendly Junction to
AM 3 Brady Bunch 6 Movte 8 Peyton Place 13 Mlst.r
Peyton Place 13

:;-x.....-.r; -v..z;,-;:;

Detroit blocks
p1..tf,4 T to beat KC

110th
MEIGS CO.
FAIR

'

-n~

to do that sort or thing
Willie Stargell belted his 34th
bomer and also scored anothe•
run to spark the PJrates
VICtory ovm the Heda, and the
VICtory put the Pirates only one
game beh1nd the Cardinal• m
U\e loss column
Eighth Consecutive Loss
Dave Roberts tossed a five
hiller and J1m Wynn hit his
18th homer as the Astros
handed the slumpmg Cardinals
the1r e1ghth loss In a row Once
agam poor defense haunted the
Cardinals as they committed
f1ve errors lloberts, boostmg
his record to 12-9, wa'lked only
one and struck out four
Will1e Crawford drove m four
runs w1th a homer, double and

OPENING DAY
ACTIVITIES

15 Chan Ese Way 33
00- News 3 4 8 13 15
30- Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Howard Cosell Wtlh The Mtarl\ 1
Dolphtns 6 13 Movtes Bunny O'Hare 8 Safari 10
•
I 00 - News 13 Men From UNCLE 4
2 00- Your Health 4
''
2 30- News 4

Paul Harvey 13

~..

~

11
11

6 25 6 30 -

$::

~

..

WEDNESDAY AUG IS 1973
6 00 - Sunnse Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Form Time 10
6 20 - Farm Report 13

,.

~

10
:
NBC Reports 3 4

opened Depos t will not be
10 00 - Dllll'h Shore 3 15 Wtld Wild West 6 Jokers Wild
refunded upon return of Wonderer
Dick Van Dyke 13 Lilias Yoga and You 33
•
documents at a la t~r date
10 30 - Baffle 3, 4 15 $10 000 Pyramid 8 10 Split Second &gt;'&gt;
All proposals must be ac
And I figure, now that we're awakened to our problems,
Mike Douglass 6 Ertca 33
"'
compa n1ed by a Bid Bond we ll have several thousand good years yet to go -which is
11
00
Love
American
Style
6
Gambit
8
10
Password
execu ted by a bon d ng company
Insight 33 Wizard oi Odds 3 4 15
•
licensed by the State of Oh io or than any of us will need
II
30
Hollywood
Squares
3
ol
15
Love
of
Life
a
10
Bowling
~
by a Cert fed Check drawn
Here's a prediction let's see lf I'm right I believe the birth
Brady Bunch 13 Book Beat 33
•
upon a solvent bank n the Ste le
sllghUy - In the next t:wo II 55-CBSNewsa Dan !mel sWorldlO
of Ohto payable to the order of rate w11l raise sllghtly - but ever
•
the Agent In an amount not less years Statistics don'tshow thla yet, buthoepltal maternity wings
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Brauns 50 5() Club 14
than ten ( 10) percent of the
News 13 News 10 8
•
amount of th e btd The bond or are less empty lately - and have you noUced the pregnant
12
30Search
for
Tomorrow
8
10
Split
Second
6
3
W
s
3
15
;
check shall be forfetted f the women m shopping centers' They're more prevlililnt than lait
1 00- News 3 All My Children 6 13 Jokers Wild 8 Gr.. n
blddtr falls to enter Into a
Acres 10 Not For Women Only 15 Chan Ese Way 33
-•
con tract with said Agent The year don't you think? - HELEN
1 30 - ThreeonoMatch3 4 15 Lets Make A Deal6 13 As the
bonds or checks of tht three
lowest bidd ers w ill be held until
World Turns 8 10 The Session 33
•
the execl)tion of the contract
2 00 - Days ot Our Lives 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 13
Love",
and
congregational
and the furniShing of the
Guiding Light 8 10 International Performance 33
&gt;
requ1red performance bond
of Victor)' in JUUI"
2 30 - Docton3 4 15 Edge of Night B 10 Girl in My Llte6 1~
atfer whtch they w II be
The olferlns was received by 3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Price is
returned on demand
The
Right 8 10 Changing Music 33
•
Charles Dlehl and Ricky
Checks of other bidder s will be
3
30
Return
of
Peyton
Place
3
15
One
Life
to
Live
6
~
returned on demand lifter the
1
Friend Becky, Steve and
b ds are ca n¥assed
Secret Storm 10 Phil Donahue 4 Time tor Tlmoth 3l
A Performance Bond of 100
Lawrenct Eblill ung '"!'hank
Match Game 73 9
Y J
percent of the amount of the
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Love
God
I'm
Free",
and
Barton
con tract w th satlsfector y
American Style IJ Merv Grtlfln 4 Huckleberrv Hound ,.
moA~ the anMnnr.~~menll
sureties will be required from
Yogi Bear6 Secret Storm 8 Movie Lydia Bailey'' 10
th e suc:cessfu l bidders for IM
Young night waa observed
.,--~--'-~-~.
4
30
- PettlcOo'll Junction 3 Merv Griffin 4 F Troop 6 Abi!Jt
faithful performence of the
Sunday evening at the Lawel
work
on.. "-&amp;.
&amp; Costello 8 My Little Margie IS Daktarll3 Big Valley
URI 111111
Western Star Theatre 15
I
Flnanclel l!l&amp;slstance Is being Clllf Free Methodlat Church
1
received lor this ~rnprovement
DIVOTID TO THI
S 00 - Mr Rogers 33 BO&lt;tanza 3 ; Hazel 8 Bl V
'
I rom the Econom lc De¥elop with Bob Barton apeakln1 In
INJIRISl'O'
Western
Star
Theeter
15
g alley,6
ment Administration under e the absence of the Rev Robert
MilOS MASON ARIA
Public Works Impact Protect
CHISTU L TANNIHILL,
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 1~ Beverly Hillbillies B
B~ckley
who
1n1
called
out
Th e preferential hiri ng of th•
ROII~~~~OIId~LICH
Hodge)!Odge Lodge 20 Trails West IS
0
unemployed and the under town due to a death ill hla
City
._
or
5
S5
Ea'
r
l
Nightingale
15
I
11
em ployed within the target
~ubllshtd dolly ••copi 6 00 - TrulhorConseq 6 News3 4 8 10 15 SocletleslnTran
area which Is ,.. .. u,httastern lamlly
slllon 33
1
witt be
fa c tor In
Ohio
"OVer in the Glory Land" by Soturdoy by Tnt Ohio Vollt
determin ing the lowest end best
10 15 I Dream of Jeannie 3 Lilias
bid No bid will be consldered Mr and Mrs Steve Eblin and

unless tIs ""omponled bV lhe Becky, Terry Clarll Lawrenc:e
E~;~~~.·~: ~~.~~~!tt'us•:;ov~co! Eblin, Jean WrlJht, Rielly,
Cenl&lt;ro Soulheulern Ohio - 'Shirley and BeUnda Friend
EDA PROJECT 06 11 01043
Cha I
'
T~e rlghl t• re"rved
Jhe
r el Diehl, and Barblra
Agenl lo relect ony end ol bids Kline opened the ltrvlce
153 60 of the Oh io Revl•~o Code
~.·,b~a~~r~~Y0~ 1:~,%~w1 ~J! Barton bad prayer, llld Mr
Js hereby acknowledged and
understood lind shall
be days
and Mn Eblln Lawrence
followed u 11 herelo attached
By Order ot lhe Ohio Volley .,bll Bee
'
Copies
of
plans
and Health Services Foundellon "' n,
ky Eblin, Rlctj,
spsciflciHions and proposal Inc
Shirley and Bellnda Friend
bla,ks together with any fur
I Blvel&amp;ne Avenue una "Wby M , .., __
thel" tnformatton desired may
Athens Onlo •l701 ..,...,
t
...... IJU
be secured from the off tee of the
Mr ;ockFarrJngton scrlpturefromLUtelZbyMI'I
Arch itect upon depqslf of a
Execullye Dlr~c~o~ w"'ghl, a dual by Belinda
check fn the amovnt of SSO 00
made payable to the Architect
Upon receipt of e reques-t
ac com pan led by a deoo51f as

There s something new to do In the Trl-Counly area, and I
have tried It and found It fun
It s canoeing
over at Bob Evuns Farms between Gallipolis and Rio
Grande, enterprising S&lt;luls have established the Rac~~n Creek
Canoe Uvery where - for a modest fee, that came out to $1 50
per person in ~Y case - you can emulate the noble Redskin and
his btrchbark You can also get blisters, soaking wet, run
aground and one heckuva blast out of the adventure
Canoeing tsn t new to me, since I grew up practically on the
shores of Lake JackS&lt;ln near Oak Hill, and spent much of my
boyhood in the rowboats and canoes that &lt;lolled the lakeshore
But that was a long Ume ago, kiddies
Th~month , I decided to re.eslllblish my acquaintance with
the canoe and trekked mto the wilds of Gallia County, accompanied only by a sturdy son, Matthew 10 and a wld~yed
daughter, Shinybrlte 7
After Jogg1ng me m and life-jacketing the kids, the canoelivery people, trusting souls that they are, set us afi011t Matthew,
wbo'd never even been in a canoe handled the paddle forward
Shlnybrlte sat on a cushiOn midships, and I handled the stern
paddle, suddenly remembermg that I'd suddenly forgotten
everything about canoes
Down the beautiful, almost-dear waters of the creek we
paddled, with the trees grow1ug overhead, touching branches
most of the way, creating a tunnel effect, aiid w1th the frequent
shoals of swift currents addmg to the illusion of great velocity
lliusion JS the nght word Our progress was painfully slow
Matthew discovered 1t was eas1er to paddle from the left
side, and we managed to veer sharply starboard and mto the
right bank of the stream a hall-dozen times
Sh!nybr1te, who knows nothing of seamanship but is hoping
to become a WAC first sergeant when she grows up, started
shoutmg orders to Matthew about a subject neither of them knew
a blessed thing about
Matthew, IosJPg hiS rhythm and h1s cool simultaneously, and
getting a Utile dubious about the whole 1dea, managed to slap the
water enough to get me and Carole (Shlnybnte 's Christian
name) thoroughly dampened and ready for drip-dry
We got stuck on two sandbars, one log, and an anc1ent
automobile tire Three or four happy couples went sailmg past
us, to ihe df.smay of the kids, who deculed we were really yachtsmen, runnmg for the money m the America's atp races
Near journey'send, we had to navigate a riffle that llllght be
called a small waterfall - all of about !8 mches hJgh - and
Shmybr1te collapsed m terror, S9me of 1t simulated, I thmk
Matthew, whnse paddling was really gettmg better, found his
confidence getting worse, and grumbled that he never would get
the Idea of handling the darned thing
Finally, we reached the dock downstream about three miles
where the livery men load tbe passengers mto a truck, and the
canoes onto a trailer, for the tr1p back to the park1ug lot Safely
ashore and begmnmg to drY out from our splashmg, we stood on
the bailk as a middle-aged couple approached AS they touched
the ramp, something went wrong, and over they went - the wife
getting soaked to knees and elbows, and the husband gomg all the
way under, to surface wtth rruxed fury and laughter
It d1d wonders for all of us Mattbew knew he wasn't lhe
worst sailor on the waters that day, after all, and the couple along w1th several fnends - laughed about 1t all the way back
People who plow the Ohio and Kanawha m $al,OOO cabm
cru~sers with all accessories couldn't possibly have had more
fun Try 1t

·~:r.

•

Horoe Show
Flower Show Judging
1 OOP M - 4 H Decorama
2 00 4 OOP M- Demonstrations- Be•t ot Day
6 oo PM - Junior Fair Night
000 Show
x 7:00 PM - Parade moves
(St&amp;rt llntng up at 6 oo PM 1
I Immediately &amp;flor parade little Prince
and Princess Contest)
• 7 45 PM - Pre&amp;enletlon ol King and Queen
• 8t00 PM - Junior Fair Revue
• 8 25 P M - Achleveh1enl Awards- Special Awards
x a 35 P M- Gamn and Races for all youth
x 9 oo p M - Gorden Tractor Poll for youth
Horae Gomes
x GRANDSTAND ATTRACTIONS

FOLIAGE
GARDENS
•4.00

DUDLEY'S. A.ORIST
59 N 2nd Ava
Middleport, 0

Your Local Oil Companies

Dale C. Warner Ins. Agency
BOX 727'

992-7428

Ohio Petroleum Council
88 East Broad Slreel
Columbus, Ohio 43215

POMEROY, 0

'

�I'

..

•

.

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Augusl 14, 1973

Mllkwt•ed was au bstltuted

;&lt;&lt;:;:~.::::::::::::~;&lt;:-::&gt;}'l'.&lt;.~,,~,,,,,~,,~~"'*'"""-''~·:·»"''"·;:~»}1':::&gt;;s;&lt;:::*'~

for kap&lt;Jk In life b It~ duriPI

~commun1·ty
l
·.: Mary Arnold Takes
1
1
.·
~ Honors Pot Home Team ICorner By Charlene Hoeflich I
""d
In Ladies Golflnvitationa!
~

•

'·

Center and Vi's Beauty Shop.
Women golfers from Hollow won for the visitors
The members of the Hidden
with a ~5. Low net honors went
' Gallipolis Pomeroy, Ohio and
Valley Golf Associlation exfrom Sleepy Hollow Gall Club to )Vinnie Morrow of H.V.C.C.
press their thanks to the local
with
a
70 and to Jeannine
at Hurricane, joined with the
firms for their cooperation in
Hidden Valley Ladies Golf Cunningham of Gallipolis with
helping make the lournament
Association at their annual a 71. Low putts in the second
a
success.
Invitational Golf Tournament flight were awarded to Sonia
Assisting in arrangements
; on Wednesday for an eighteen- Wellman of H.V.C.C. and Ruth
in addition to the goiters were
Carr
of
Sleepy
Hollow.
hole tournament.
Jean Somerville, Thelma
Third flight awards were
Three flights for visitors and
Gelwicks, Jean Rardin and
' ' home golfers were in con- · made to Reta Pauley of
Ruby Cappellari, and Karen
tention for . the top awards, H.V.C.C . and to Jo Ann
Jenkins.
Thompson of Gallipolis. Low
with Mary Arnold of H.V.C.C.
The local president, Lillian
net honors were held by
• and Helen Fenderbosch of
Lillian Greene cf H.V.C.C. and Greene, expressed her thanks
Gallipolis taking low gross Margaret Follrod of Pomeroy. to the Tournament Chairmen,
honors, with scores of 69 and
Lillian Hyer and Mary Arnold,
• 65, respectively. Low net Lot putts awards went to Kate
Somerville of H.V.C.C. and for their efforts, as well as to
, honors for the visitors went to Eloise Brown of Gallipolis.
the . other · committees
· ' Lou Carr of Sleepy Hololow
Awards for the longest drive · arranging the affair.
• with a net of 72 and to Sara
Visitors for the event were :
on No. 5 wre won by Sara
" Buffington of H.V.C.C. with a Buffington of H.V.C.C. and
Gallipolis Golf Club : Helen
net of 69. Awards 'for low putts
Helen Russell of Sleepy Fenderbosch, Jeannine
·: in the first flight went to Jeri
Hollow. Sara Buffington also · · CUnningham, Ellen Deweese,
Long of Sleepy Hollow and
won the prize for being-closest Eloise Brown, Elsie Lusk, Jo
Norsie Anderson of H.V.C.C.
to the pin on No. 7 and Lou Ann Thompson and Dlz
In the second flight, Alice
Carr of Sleepy Hollow for the Richards.
Icard of H.V.C.C. had low
Pomeroy Golf Club:
gross honors with a 93 and visitors.
Special awards wre made to Margaret Follrod, Audrey
Helen Russell of Sleepy
Anna Marie Martin of Hidden Betzing and Elizabeth Cutler.
&amp;~~~:.~~=~~=:~ Valley and Marge Morris of
Sleepy Hollow Golf Club:
Jeri
Long Mary Ellen
Sleepy Hollow.
••
All awards were inade at the Coleman, Barbara Hager, Lou
'
luncheon held at the Red Carr, Ann Rhodes, Ruth carr,
~::
::;. Carpet IM -following the .IS- Ann Turley, Helen Russell,
hole play. In addition to the Marge Morri s, and Kat
..•
prizes for their golfing skills, Kessell.
•
Hidden Valley: Mary Af.
•
door prizes were given which
nold,
Norsie Anderson, Sara
had lieen donated by the
TUESDAY
Buffington, Mary Ingels,
POMEROY CHAMBER of following local businesses:
Lillian
Hyer, Alice Icard,
Buffington · Greenhouse,
Commerce meeting, 12 noon
Citizen's National Bank, Sonia Wellman, Winnie
Tuesday, Meigs Inn.
People's Bank, Point Pleasant Morrow, Mary Adkins, Eva
Add Monday
.•
ROYAL OAK Park baton Building &amp; Loan Association, Bailey, Lillian Greene, Reta
•
class Monday, beginners, 10 City Ice &amp; Fuel, Fruth's Pauley, Anna Marie Martin
"• a.m.; corps, 11 a.m.; team Pharmacy, Shoppers' Mart:;, and Kate Somerville.
·: practice 12 noon. Judy Riggs, Tiffin Jewelers, Rardin's Shoe
'
instructor.
.
EIGHT AND FORTY, Meigs
County Salon 710, 7:30 p. m. at
the Racine American Legion
Hall. New officers to be in,. stalled and all partners urged
• to attend.
•
WEDNESDAY
•
'·••
PAST PRESIDENTS,
'· American Legion Auxiliary of
RACINE - "Remember a memorial time from child;; · Drew Webster Post 39, 6 p.' m.
,T
at the home of Dr . and Mrs. When" was the theme of the hood.
Rhoda program presented by Mrs.
The devotions by Mrs .
.• Ray Pickens. Mrs.
Hackett and Mrs. Mary Martin Bert,Grimm following a picnic William Stewart included a
will be hostesses for the of the Past Officers Club of personal commentary on
swimming party and meeting. Racine Chapter, Order of the impressions of a tour of
.•
Eastern Star, Thursday night Christus Gardens in Tennessee
at the Shriners Park, Racine. which she recently took. She
'r
REVIVAL MEETING
The program included . said that one left the scene with
A revival in progress at the several readings, "The Family · a feeling of awe and reverence
• Midway Community Church Doctor" by Mrs. Gretta at what has been portrayed
·• located on the Langsville- Simpson,
" Beauty
is there. Scripture was from Cor.
Dexter Road will continue each Everywhere" by Mrs. Wilson I.
evening at 7:30 p.m. through Carpenter; e~cerpts from the
Mrs. Ralph Webb presided at
Saturday night. Tbe evangelist Farmer's Almanac by William the business meeting using a
is the Rev. Norman Taylor, Stewart, and "The Old General reading, "The Road of the
• and the pastor is the. Rev. Store - a World Under One Loving Heart" as her opening.
Worley Haley. The public is Roof" by Mrs. Grimm. Each of She announced a meeting of
invited.
the members attended related Roberta Circle to be held
August 16 at Albany. It will
begin
with a covered dish
•
luncheon at noon at the
Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Ernest Wingett will host
the
October II mee tihg with
RACINE _ The Longworth Newco merstow n; Mr . and
family reunion was held Mrs. Harold Longsworth and Mrs. carpenter to have the
August 5 at the summer home son Steven, . daughters Beth, program, and Mrs. Clifford
of Mr . and Mrs. Gordon West. Rebecca and Mary, Syracuse, Morris the devotions.
The traveling gift brought by
Those
attending
the N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Miller
' celebration
were Col. and Mrs. and children, Dawn, Brian and Mrs. Webb was won by Wilson
Carpenter . Attending the
Thorne Longsworth and sons, Rebecca, Chester, W. Va .
Scott and Paul, Omaha, Neb. ;
Mr. and Mrs. Don Lemaster mee ting were Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Longs- and son, Donnie and da~ghter, Wilson Carpenter, Mr. and
worth and daughter Carol, son Rebecca, New Cumberland, W. Mrs. Clifford Morris, Mr . and
Brian, grandson Eric, Brecks- Va. ; Mrs. Tom Williams and Mrs. Ralph Webb, Mr. and
ville; John Longsworth, Sault children, Tommy, Melinda and Mrs.' Ernest Wingett, Mr. and
Ste. Marie, Mich.; Mr. and Eric, Hinton, W. Va.; Mrs. Sue Mrs. William SIJ!wart, Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Dobbins and Stewart and daughter Rhonda, Mrs Bert Grimm, Mrs. Simp·
granddau ghter, Sarah, Weirton, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. son and Miss Carol Foster.
Pawtucket, R.I. ; Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Cornell, Jr. and son Bill,
Paul McSwegin, New Cum· Racine; Mr. and MrS:. Gordon
berland, W. Va. ; Mrs. Esther West and children, Debra,
West, Rac ine; Mr. and Mrs. Rhonda, John and Melody,
Robert Dobbins and sons, Racine ; A. C. Bradford,'
Charles and James, Richmond, Racine.

I
.-.
.

Social

I

'

OES past officers

'Remember When '

,.

·.·

: Longsworth reunion held
..

Va.; Mr. and Mrs. John Me- ~-··--------.
Swegin and _sons, Paul and
MEN'S AND BOYS'
Allen, New Manchester, W.Va .
Mr. and Mrs. James Annstrong, daughter Kalina and
sons, Scott and Mike, cabin
For Fair or Back To School
Creek, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
This Week Only
Roy Posey and daughters,
LeeAnn and Kathy, Weirton,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Longsworth, Newcomerstown J
heritage house
Mr. and Mrs. James Dobson
and son Brad and daughters
Your Thom MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT
Sandra, Channa, Charlotte,
Newcomersto"n; Mn . . ,_ _ _ _ _ _ __ .
Therma Hickensboltom ,

""·l .

7

Wt• Atxt•pt 'Feder11l Food !!}tmnps
PHONE : 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. 'We Re.serve The Right To Limit Quantities"

stearn~hlp !ravels fasler In

laster In the cold elemenl

Cerva nt es

and

Shakespeare both died on
April
1616 ; yet they did
not die on lhe same day.
Why ? England and Spain
used.dllferent calen dars In
GARY FIELDS
the · seventeen th century.
Ther e was a difference of
l en da ys between lhe
u::.: /-f.t,~J) Julian calendar used by
England and the Gregorian
ca lendar adopted by Spain
. . . Psalm 51: 1-4 saved
more than 800,000 people
from execution between
1J50 and 1841. Any cri minal
Wahama High School and
under s.entence of death
cou ld plead lhe " benefit ol
Holzer Medical Center School
clergy" by r ead ing ihe four
of Nursing. She is employed as
verses . If he was unable to
a registered . nurse at lfolzer
r ead, he was out of luck.
Medical Center .
1\ took more th an lu ck to
The groom graduated from
bring you the benefit ol
Wahama High School and
Refined Wat er . Ca retul
desi gn
and
contlnu .
received an A. B. Degree in
lng.
dev
elo~
ment
assure
Education from Glenville
yo
u
of
the
most
modern
and
State College . He iS employed
effectiv e water refi ning
as a teacher and assistant
unit . Unpleasanllastes and
coach at Wahama.
odors of chlorine, acid, rust
and detergent residue are
r e. moved tran sferring
/ BEAUTIFUL
ordinary ta p water Into a
delicacy . Your family ,
horne and everything In II
will be clea ner because
" any cleanirig agent works
better with Relined Water .
Want to know more? Call
882-2525.

n

MR. AND MRS.

HUNT'S
TOMATO S.AUCE ·
'

MIDDLEPORT, 0:

RAISED,
SHOWN AND
SOlD
AT THE FAIR

12 oz.
can

S'r.Jaron
/A
Roach - Gary
Exchange Wedding .Vows

Mr. and Mrs. Eari'Harden of
Canton and grandson of Mrs.·
Florence Harden Potts,
Syracuse.
The wedding was held at the
Immaculate Conception
Church at Ravenna with a
reception following at the
American Legion Hall in
Deerfield.
Going from here were Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Lisle, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Harden and
Debbie, and Mrs. Florence
Harden Potts, Syracuse. Also
attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Kendall and Kathy of
Warren, Mich. The family
enjoyed a dinner on the Sunday
following the wedding at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Harden.

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur William
Nease, Jr., Minersville, R.D.,
are announcing the birth of a
son, Arthur Travis, at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital
August 9. The infant weighed 6
pounds, 14 ounces. Mr . and
Mrs. Nease have a daughter,
Jill Lyn, age five . Paternal
grandparents are Mr.'and Mrs.
Arthur Nease, Sr., Chester
Road, and. the maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
Harry Hayman, West Main St.,
Pomeroy . Mr. and Mrs. H. E.
Warner , Wolf Pen, are
maternal grandparents, and
paternal
great- , - - - , - - - - - - - - - .
the
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Nease, Minersville,
R.D.

.

·

Miss Sharon Roach, New
Haven, and Gary Fields,
Hartford, were un ited in
marriage, June 2 at Graham
Baptist Church by the
Reverend William Hatfield.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roach,
New . Haven, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs . Gerald Fields,
Hartford. Music was provided
by Miss Angela Fields,
pianist.
The bride , given in
marriage by her father, wore
a' floor length gown of silk
organza over taffeta With lace
trim. The chapel length train
was edged with venise lace.
She carried a bouquet of white
daisies and baby's breath
accented with roses.
The matron of honor was
Mrs. Rick Romig, Glenville,
(formerly Mary Jane Scites),

DRIED
FLOWER
ARRANGEMENTS
From

'3.49

DUDLEY'S. FLORIST
59 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

SAYRE

KRAFT DRESSING
MIRACLE WHIP

•

Kelvln.at:or

AIR
CONDITIONERS .
to

Mason Furniture

NORTHERN
PAPER TOWELS .

jumbo
rolls

FOAM ICE
CHEST WITH LID

POT PIES

quarts$
for

Our Own
Scot Pride

ICE MILK

SCOT. LAD

WAFFLES
FOR '$ 00

GRADE A
SMALL EGGS

WATERMELON SALE

~1]
-. -

gallon

only

SCOT LAD

RICH'E NON-DAIRY

ORANGE
JUICE

WHIPPED
TOPPING

.

RC COLA
•

Withou1

Coupon

PAK

S1.99

~ \O&gt;'()m)E~ I COAT

tiOUI!I I!' PAINf

16.oz.

--.~~'11111 )01-01 !lto,w•

~""

EVERYTHING
IS REDUCED
EXCEPT THE
QUALITY I

4' X 8' .

CARAVELLI•
DATI and DAY
AUTOMATIC
by BULOV.A
'

Oceana

89~

~--~--~'----P-~~----~--

ft.

BANANAS

AT MARK V SUPER MARKET

0

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Coca-Col

WELL HOllE•
COFFEE
$109
9-7-73

Big 32 oz. bots.

..."
.....

. Returnable Bottle

•

-

...

~

•

lb.

%" B&amp; D

~

DAD'S ROOT BEER

'7"

or DIET-RITE COLA

Carolina .Lumber &amp;Supply·Co.

Choice G.olden
Ripe Fruit

Phone 675-1160
&amp;th SL

....•
•

IIRIL~

Use Our Lay Away

Jewelry Stcre
Court St., PomiiiiJ

'617

·Average

IIIIIII

Alum.
21 ft. long

OZ. JAR ONLY

Only"w-

Goessler's

WMe

FRIDAY ONLY

17-lb.

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A.lO .OZ. JAR OF

by G-P

Tile ,.. C.rnelle Oelt and Dey tells all.
lilt preclu time, dey and dale. At a
llflllt pnce. Alltomltlcally. And tile dlle
mill lnstlntly wlllla click oltlle ClOWn.
OtlfiMIIp created for tht military, It's
dn1CM4 to llltt 1 lOt ol punishment. 17
Intis. Weier rnlstent. All slalnltu
liNt. Bulovi parantftd. The Ctrnellt
Dtll tlld Dey "T"
-

Plan For Back
To SchooL

FOR

POTATOES
32 oz.
bag 39~

\

LIQUID DETERGENT
SM
THIE

4

$219

can

WEDNESDAY ONLY

MADE BY MARX

CHICKENS

6 OZ.

FIRST CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stanley,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of their first
child, a girl, Kristen Mari. The
baby was born August 3 at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Pres Flores, Sunnyside,
Utah; and Mr. and Mrs.
Hanford SUjnley, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Cox,
Cheshire and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Stanley, Athens , are
great-grandparents.

RACER

BANQUET FROZEN

SCOT LAD
CRINKLE CUT

THE

MINI-MARX· 500 TYPE

BANQUET FROZEN
10 Pieces

w. va.

were
New Haven).
Miss Rebecca
The attendants
Burris, • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
New Haven, and Mrs. Daniel
Spencer, Racine, (Formerly
Linda Weaver of New Haven.)
John Smith, Hartford, was
best man. Ushers were Tony
Fields, Hartford, and Gary
Mitchell, Mason.
The receptiun was held at ·
6,000
the home of the bride's
pareni&amp;: ~ Moria Hanlon,
24,000 BTU
Letart,: andr.Cathy Lambert,
Have coo l clea n air
Gallipolis, presided. at the
tonight.
Total ven refreshment table . 'Miss
tilation .
Brenda Sue·Fields, Hartford,
· sister of the bridegroom,
PH. 173·5592
registered the guests.
MASON, W. VA.
The couple is now residing
·at Hartford.
The bride is a graduate of_

.llit YOUTH _../

Jar

HARDWARE
882-2525
NP I•' ~ ... vPn ,

ySALUTET~

JOE SMITH
MEAT MANAGE.R

REPEAT SPECIAL

Size 9x12x 12

Regular Low Prices!

cold wa ter than In warm
water . Steam condenses

DINGO BOOT
20% oH

On Sale This Week At Our

SUPER ·MARKET • Open Daily 9 to ·10 • Sun. 10 to 10

Old you know lhal . · · •

Hucovsky-Harden
vows exchanged
Local relatives were in
Canton August 5 for the wedding of Miss Paula Hucovsky
and E. Dale Harden II, son of

CHOICE MEAT FROM
GALLIA COUNTY JR. FAIR

.........

••

AND THE MEIGS County Fair is on The exhibits represent hours and hours of work on the part of
hundreds of people, young and old, so be sure to allow time when
you visit the fairgrounds to look aroundatthe displays.
See you there !

.•

JttiRACLES
DO .

~

DIDN'T KNOW UNTIL yesterday that Eric Chambers is in
Florida on a new job. He is employed as a resident inspection
engineer for the Construction Inspection Corp. and has his
headquarters at Kissimmee, just six miles from Disney World.
Eric has been there three weeks now and is pretty much settled
in a new apartment.

~ Calendarl

Prize Beef and Pork On Sale!

'

Mary
Don Lisle are home from a vacatiOn m Missouri,
Arkansas, and Kentucky, driving 2,200 miles and taking in the
sights along U1e way.
.
In the amphithealre on MI. Oberammergan in the Arkansas
ozarks they saw the impressive "Great Passion Play," a por·
trayal ~f the agony and the glory of the last week In the life or
Christ. They viewed the state of Christ of the Ozarks and visited
the Christ Only Art Gallery which includes a wide variety of
. pictures of Jesus Christ. They are all presented by the Elnll M.
Smilh Foundation founded by her husband, Gerald L. K. Smith.
From there 'Doi\ and Mary drove to Hardy, Ark, to see the
"Arkansas Traveler," a folk play and musical of the 19th century
also presented In an outdoor theatre. Just before the show on the
outdoor patio,'they had·the "squatlers dinner" which consisted or
spring river greens, corn bread, hill potatoes, beans and ham
hock, salt pork, mountain slaw and relish, cherry cobbler. and
iced sassafra tea . Quite nice.
.
The next stop on their trip was Dogpatch, U.S.A. which is an
amusemnt park featuring AI Capp comic characters. Quite a
thrill was the train trip down the mountain side into the park
area where variety shows were In full swing, the rides were
going, and fishing in lakes !ided with rainbow trout was
available.
·
After that the couple went to !lot Springs to visit the
Josephine Tussand Wax Museum, the Dryden Pottery, and even
took in a Oea market. At Little Rock they looked up an army
friend and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Riley Gill. Don and Gill. had
served in W. W. II together and hadn't seen each· otl)er for 26
years, although there had always been an exchange of cards at
Christmas.
Enroute home they visited at Bea\'81' Dam, Ky. with Mrs.
Velma Kendall, and at Bardstown, Ky. with Mr. and Mrs. Dannis
Miller.

•

World War 11 . IU j u1ce con·
tal ns small amounts of a rub·
bery sub•tun,.e

~

~

•

&amp;

.,.- ~

'

PAK

16 oz. bots.

...

...
•

--.
~

•'

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•

••...

.,.•
...

...

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..

•

.

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Augusl 14, 1973

Mllkwt•ed was au bstltuted

;&lt;&lt;:;:~.::::::::::::~;&lt;:-::&gt;}'l'.&lt;.~,,~,,,,,~,,~~"'*'"""-''~·:·»"''"·;:~»}1':::&gt;;s;&lt;:::*'~

for kap&lt;Jk In life b It~ duriPI

~commun1·ty
l
·.: Mary Arnold Takes
1
1
.·
~ Honors Pot Home Team ICorner By Charlene Hoeflich I
""d
In Ladies Golflnvitationa!
~

•

'·

Center and Vi's Beauty Shop.
Women golfers from Hollow won for the visitors
The members of the Hidden
with a ~5. Low net honors went
' Gallipolis Pomeroy, Ohio and
Valley Golf Associlation exfrom Sleepy Hollow Gall Club to )Vinnie Morrow of H.V.C.C.
press their thanks to the local
with
a
70 and to Jeannine
at Hurricane, joined with the
firms for their cooperation in
Hidden Valley Ladies Golf Cunningham of Gallipolis with
helping make the lournament
Association at their annual a 71. Low putts in the second
a
success.
Invitational Golf Tournament flight were awarded to Sonia
Assisting in arrangements
; on Wednesday for an eighteen- Wellman of H.V.C.C. and Ruth
in addition to the goiters were
Carr
of
Sleepy
Hollow.
hole tournament.
Jean Somerville, Thelma
Third flight awards were
Three flights for visitors and
Gelwicks, Jean Rardin and
' ' home golfers were in con- · made to Reta Pauley of
Ruby Cappellari, and Karen
tention for . the top awards, H.V.C.C . and to Jo Ann
Jenkins.
Thompson of Gallipolis. Low
with Mary Arnold of H.V.C.C.
The local president, Lillian
net honors were held by
• and Helen Fenderbosch of
Lillian Greene cf H.V.C.C. and Greene, expressed her thanks
Gallipolis taking low gross Margaret Follrod of Pomeroy. to the Tournament Chairmen,
honors, with scores of 69 and
Lillian Hyer and Mary Arnold,
• 65, respectively. Low net Lot putts awards went to Kate
Somerville of H.V.C.C. and for their efforts, as well as to
, honors for the visitors went to Eloise Brown of Gallipolis.
the . other · committees
· ' Lou Carr of Sleepy Hololow
Awards for the longest drive · arranging the affair.
• with a net of 72 and to Sara
Visitors for the event were :
on No. 5 wre won by Sara
" Buffington of H.V.C.C. with a Buffington of H.V.C.C. and
Gallipolis Golf Club : Helen
net of 69. Awards 'for low putts
Helen Russell of Sleepy Fenderbosch, Jeannine
·: in the first flight went to Jeri
Hollow. Sara Buffington also · · CUnningham, Ellen Deweese,
Long of Sleepy Hollow and
won the prize for being-closest Eloise Brown, Elsie Lusk, Jo
Norsie Anderson of H.V.C.C.
to the pin on No. 7 and Lou Ann Thompson and Dlz
In the second flight, Alice
Carr of Sleepy Hollow for the Richards.
Icard of H.V.C.C. had low
Pomeroy Golf Club:
gross honors with a 93 and visitors.
Special awards wre made to Margaret Follrod, Audrey
Helen Russell of Sleepy
Anna Marie Martin of Hidden Betzing and Elizabeth Cutler.
&amp;~~~:.~~=~~=:~ Valley and Marge Morris of
Sleepy Hollow Golf Club:
Jeri
Long Mary Ellen
Sleepy Hollow.
••
All awards were inade at the Coleman, Barbara Hager, Lou
'
luncheon held at the Red Carr, Ann Rhodes, Ruth carr,
~::
::;. Carpet IM -following the .IS- Ann Turley, Helen Russell,
hole play. In addition to the Marge Morri s, and Kat
..•
prizes for their golfing skills, Kessell.
•
Hidden Valley: Mary Af.
•
door prizes were given which
nold,
Norsie Anderson, Sara
had lieen donated by the
TUESDAY
Buffington, Mary Ingels,
POMEROY CHAMBER of following local businesses:
Lillian
Hyer, Alice Icard,
Buffington · Greenhouse,
Commerce meeting, 12 noon
Citizen's National Bank, Sonia Wellman, Winnie
Tuesday, Meigs Inn.
People's Bank, Point Pleasant Morrow, Mary Adkins, Eva
Add Monday
.•
ROYAL OAK Park baton Building &amp; Loan Association, Bailey, Lillian Greene, Reta
•
class Monday, beginners, 10 City Ice &amp; Fuel, Fruth's Pauley, Anna Marie Martin
"• a.m.; corps, 11 a.m.; team Pharmacy, Shoppers' Mart:;, and Kate Somerville.
·: practice 12 noon. Judy Riggs, Tiffin Jewelers, Rardin's Shoe
'
instructor.
.
EIGHT AND FORTY, Meigs
County Salon 710, 7:30 p. m. at
the Racine American Legion
Hall. New officers to be in,. stalled and all partners urged
• to attend.
•
WEDNESDAY
•
'·••
PAST PRESIDENTS,
'· American Legion Auxiliary of
RACINE - "Remember a memorial time from child;; · Drew Webster Post 39, 6 p.' m.
,T
at the home of Dr . and Mrs. When" was the theme of the hood.
Rhoda program presented by Mrs.
The devotions by Mrs .
.• Ray Pickens. Mrs.
Hackett and Mrs. Mary Martin Bert,Grimm following a picnic William Stewart included a
will be hostesses for the of the Past Officers Club of personal commentary on
swimming party and meeting. Racine Chapter, Order of the impressions of a tour of
.•
Eastern Star, Thursday night Christus Gardens in Tennessee
at the Shriners Park, Racine. which she recently took. She
'r
REVIVAL MEETING
The program included . said that one left the scene with
A revival in progress at the several readings, "The Family · a feeling of awe and reverence
• Midway Community Church Doctor" by Mrs. Gretta at what has been portrayed
·• located on the Langsville- Simpson,
" Beauty
is there. Scripture was from Cor.
Dexter Road will continue each Everywhere" by Mrs. Wilson I.
evening at 7:30 p.m. through Carpenter; e~cerpts from the
Mrs. Ralph Webb presided at
Saturday night. Tbe evangelist Farmer's Almanac by William the business meeting using a
is the Rev. Norman Taylor, Stewart, and "The Old General reading, "The Road of the
• and the pastor is the. Rev. Store - a World Under One Loving Heart" as her opening.
Worley Haley. The public is Roof" by Mrs. Grimm. Each of She announced a meeting of
invited.
the members attended related Roberta Circle to be held
August 16 at Albany. It will
begin
with a covered dish
•
luncheon at noon at the
Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Ernest Wingett will host
the
October II mee tihg with
RACINE _ The Longworth Newco merstow n; Mr . and
family reunion was held Mrs. Harold Longsworth and Mrs. carpenter to have the
August 5 at the summer home son Steven, . daughters Beth, program, and Mrs. Clifford
of Mr . and Mrs. Gordon West. Rebecca and Mary, Syracuse, Morris the devotions.
The traveling gift brought by
Those
attending
the N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Miller
' celebration
were Col. and Mrs. and children, Dawn, Brian and Mrs. Webb was won by Wilson
Carpenter . Attending the
Thorne Longsworth and sons, Rebecca, Chester, W. Va .
Scott and Paul, Omaha, Neb. ;
Mr. and Mrs. Don Lemaster mee ting were Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Longs- and son, Donnie and da~ghter, Wilson Carpenter, Mr. and
worth and daughter Carol, son Rebecca, New Cumberland, W. Mrs. Clifford Morris, Mr . and
Brian, grandson Eric, Brecks- Va. ; Mrs. Tom Williams and Mrs. Ralph Webb, Mr. and
ville; John Longsworth, Sault children, Tommy, Melinda and Mrs.' Ernest Wingett, Mr. and
Ste. Marie, Mich.; Mr. and Eric, Hinton, W. Va.; Mrs. Sue Mrs. William SIJ!wart, Mr. and
Mrs . Charles Dobbins and Stewart and daughter Rhonda, Mrs Bert Grimm, Mrs. Simp·
granddau ghter, Sarah, Weirton, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. son and Miss Carol Foster.
Pawtucket, R.I. ; Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Cornell, Jr. and son Bill,
Paul McSwegin, New Cum· Racine; Mr. and MrS:. Gordon
berland, W. Va. ; Mrs. Esther West and children, Debra,
West, Rac ine; Mr. and Mrs. Rhonda, John and Melody,
Robert Dobbins and sons, Racine ; A. C. Bradford,'
Charles and James, Richmond, Racine.

I
.-.
.

Social

I

'

OES past officers

'Remember When '

,.

·.·

: Longsworth reunion held
..

Va.; Mr. and Mrs. John Me- ~-··--------.
Swegin and _sons, Paul and
MEN'S AND BOYS'
Allen, New Manchester, W.Va .
Mr. and Mrs. James Annstrong, daughter Kalina and
sons, Scott and Mike, cabin
For Fair or Back To School
Creek, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
This Week Only
Roy Posey and daughters,
LeeAnn and Kathy, Weirton,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Longsworth, Newcomerstown J
heritage house
Mr. and Mrs. James Dobson
and son Brad and daughters
Your Thom MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT
Sandra, Channa, Charlotte,
Newcomersto"n; Mn . . ,_ _ _ _ _ _ __ .
Therma Hickensboltom ,

""·l .

7

Wt• Atxt•pt 'Feder11l Food !!}tmnps
PHONE : 992-3480
Corner Mill and Second Sts. 'We Re.serve The Right To Limit Quantities"

stearn~hlp !ravels fasler In

laster In the cold elemenl

Cerva nt es

and

Shakespeare both died on
April
1616 ; yet they did
not die on lhe same day.
Why ? England and Spain
used.dllferent calen dars In
GARY FIELDS
the · seventeen th century.
Ther e was a difference of
l en da ys between lhe
u::.: /-f.t,~J) Julian calendar used by
England and the Gregorian
ca lendar adopted by Spain
. . . Psalm 51: 1-4 saved
more than 800,000 people
from execution between
1J50 and 1841. Any cri minal
Wahama High School and
under s.entence of death
cou ld plead lhe " benefit ol
Holzer Medical Center School
clergy" by r ead ing ihe four
of Nursing. She is employed as
verses . If he was unable to
a registered . nurse at lfolzer
r ead, he was out of luck.
Medical Center .
1\ took more th an lu ck to
The groom graduated from
bring you the benefit ol
Wahama High School and
Refined Wat er . Ca retul
desi gn
and
contlnu .
received an A. B. Degree in
lng.
dev
elo~
ment
assure
Education from Glenville
yo
u
of
the
most
modern
and
State College . He iS employed
effectiv e water refi ning
as a teacher and assistant
unit . Unpleasanllastes and
coach at Wahama.
odors of chlorine, acid, rust
and detergent residue are
r e. moved tran sferring
/ BEAUTIFUL
ordinary ta p water Into a
delicacy . Your family ,
horne and everything In II
will be clea ner because
" any cleanirig agent works
better with Relined Water .
Want to know more? Call
882-2525.

n

MR. AND MRS.

HUNT'S
TOMATO S.AUCE ·
'

MIDDLEPORT, 0:

RAISED,
SHOWN AND
SOlD
AT THE FAIR

12 oz.
can

S'r.Jaron
/A
Roach - Gary
Exchange Wedding .Vows

Mr. and Mrs. Eari'Harden of
Canton and grandson of Mrs.·
Florence Harden Potts,
Syracuse.
The wedding was held at the
Immaculate Conception
Church at Ravenna with a
reception following at the
American Legion Hall in
Deerfield.
Going from here were Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Lisle, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Harden and
Debbie, and Mrs. Florence
Harden Potts, Syracuse. Also
attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Kendall and Kathy of
Warren, Mich. The family
enjoyed a dinner on the Sunday
following the wedding at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Harden.

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur William
Nease, Jr., Minersville, R.D.,
are announcing the birth of a
son, Arthur Travis, at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital
August 9. The infant weighed 6
pounds, 14 ounces. Mr . and
Mrs. Nease have a daughter,
Jill Lyn, age five . Paternal
grandparents are Mr.'and Mrs.
Arthur Nease, Sr., Chester
Road, and. the maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
Harry Hayman, West Main St.,
Pomeroy . Mr. and Mrs. H. E.
Warner , Wolf Pen, are
maternal grandparents, and
paternal
great- , - - - , - - - - - - - - - .
the
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Nease, Minersville,
R.D.

.

·

Miss Sharon Roach, New
Haven, and Gary Fields,
Hartford, were un ited in
marriage, June 2 at Graham
Baptist Church by the
Reverend William Hatfield.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roach,
New . Haven, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs . Gerald Fields,
Hartford. Music was provided
by Miss Angela Fields,
pianist.
The bride , given in
marriage by her father, wore
a' floor length gown of silk
organza over taffeta With lace
trim. The chapel length train
was edged with venise lace.
She carried a bouquet of white
daisies and baby's breath
accented with roses.
The matron of honor was
Mrs. Rick Romig, Glenville,
(formerly Mary Jane Scites),

DRIED
FLOWER
ARRANGEMENTS
From

'3.49

DUDLEY'S. FLORIST
59 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

SAYRE

KRAFT DRESSING
MIRACLE WHIP

•

Kelvln.at:or

AIR
CONDITIONERS .
to

Mason Furniture

NORTHERN
PAPER TOWELS .

jumbo
rolls

FOAM ICE
CHEST WITH LID

POT PIES

quarts$
for

Our Own
Scot Pride

ICE MILK

SCOT. LAD

WAFFLES
FOR '$ 00

GRADE A
SMALL EGGS

WATERMELON SALE

~1]
-. -

gallon

only

SCOT LAD

RICH'E NON-DAIRY

ORANGE
JUICE

WHIPPED
TOPPING

.

RC COLA
•

Withou1

Coupon

PAK

S1.99

~ \O&gt;'()m)E~ I COAT

tiOUI!I I!' PAINf

16.oz.

--.~~'11111 )01-01 !lto,w•

~""

EVERYTHING
IS REDUCED
EXCEPT THE
QUALITY I

4' X 8' .

CARAVELLI•
DATI and DAY
AUTOMATIC
by BULOV.A
'

Oceana

89~

~--~--~'----P-~~----~--

ft.

BANANAS

AT MARK V SUPER MARKET

0

.......

Coca-Col

WELL HOllE•
COFFEE
$109
9-7-73

Big 32 oz. bots.

..."
.....

. Returnable Bottle

•

-

...

~

•

lb.

%" B&amp; D

~

DAD'S ROOT BEER

'7"

or DIET-RITE COLA

Carolina .Lumber &amp;Supply·Co.

Choice G.olden
Ripe Fruit

Phone 675-1160
&amp;th SL

....•
•

IIRIL~

Use Our Lay Away

Jewelry Stcre
Court St., PomiiiiJ

'617

·Average

IIIIIII

Alum.
21 ft. long

OZ. JAR ONLY

Only"w-

Goessler's

WMe

FRIDAY ONLY

17-lb.

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A.lO .OZ. JAR OF

by G-P

Tile ,.. C.rnelle Oelt and Dey tells all.
lilt preclu time, dey and dale. At a
llflllt pnce. Alltomltlcally. And tile dlle
mill lnstlntly wlllla click oltlle ClOWn.
OtlfiMIIp created for tht military, It's
dn1CM4 to llltt 1 lOt ol punishment. 17
Intis. Weier rnlstent. All slalnltu
liNt. Bulovi parantftd. The Ctrnellt
Dtll tlld Dey "T"
-

Plan For Back
To SchooL

FOR

POTATOES
32 oz.
bag 39~

\

LIQUID DETERGENT
SM
THIE

4

$219

can

WEDNESDAY ONLY

MADE BY MARX

CHICKENS

6 OZ.

FIRST CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stanley,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of their first
child, a girl, Kristen Mari. The
baby was born August 3 at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Pres Flores, Sunnyside,
Utah; and Mr. and Mrs.
Hanford SUjnley, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Cox,
Cheshire and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Stanley, Athens , are
great-grandparents.

RACER

BANQUET FROZEN

SCOT LAD
CRINKLE CUT

THE

MINI-MARX· 500 TYPE

BANQUET FROZEN
10 Pieces

w. va.

were
New Haven).
Miss Rebecca
The attendants
Burris, • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
New Haven, and Mrs. Daniel
Spencer, Racine, (Formerly
Linda Weaver of New Haven.)
John Smith, Hartford, was
best man. Ushers were Tony
Fields, Hartford, and Gary
Mitchell, Mason.
The receptiun was held at ·
6,000
the home of the bride's
pareni&amp;: ~ Moria Hanlon,
24,000 BTU
Letart,: andr.Cathy Lambert,
Have coo l clea n air
Gallipolis, presided. at the
tonight.
Total ven refreshment table . 'Miss
tilation .
Brenda Sue·Fields, Hartford,
· sister of the bridegroom,
PH. 173·5592
registered the guests.
MASON, W. VA.
The couple is now residing
·at Hartford.
The bride is a graduate of_

.llit YOUTH _../

Jar

HARDWARE
882-2525
NP I•' ~ ... vPn ,

ySALUTET~

JOE SMITH
MEAT MANAGE.R

REPEAT SPECIAL

Size 9x12x 12

Regular Low Prices!

cold wa ter than In warm
water . Steam condenses

DINGO BOOT
20% oH

On Sale This Week At Our

SUPER ·MARKET • Open Daily 9 to ·10 • Sun. 10 to 10

Old you know lhal . · · •

Hucovsky-Harden
vows exchanged
Local relatives were in
Canton August 5 for the wedding of Miss Paula Hucovsky
and E. Dale Harden II, son of

CHOICE MEAT FROM
GALLIA COUNTY JR. FAIR

.........

••

AND THE MEIGS County Fair is on The exhibits represent hours and hours of work on the part of
hundreds of people, young and old, so be sure to allow time when
you visit the fairgrounds to look aroundatthe displays.
See you there !

.•

JttiRACLES
DO .

~

DIDN'T KNOW UNTIL yesterday that Eric Chambers is in
Florida on a new job. He is employed as a resident inspection
engineer for the Construction Inspection Corp. and has his
headquarters at Kissimmee, just six miles from Disney World.
Eric has been there three weeks now and is pretty much settled
in a new apartment.

~ Calendarl

Prize Beef and Pork On Sale!

'

Mary
Don Lisle are home from a vacatiOn m Missouri,
Arkansas, and Kentucky, driving 2,200 miles and taking in the
sights along U1e way.
.
In the amphithealre on MI. Oberammergan in the Arkansas
ozarks they saw the impressive "Great Passion Play," a por·
trayal ~f the agony and the glory of the last week In the life or
Christ. They viewed the state of Christ of the Ozarks and visited
the Christ Only Art Gallery which includes a wide variety of
. pictures of Jesus Christ. They are all presented by the Elnll M.
Smilh Foundation founded by her husband, Gerald L. K. Smith.
From there 'Doi\ and Mary drove to Hardy, Ark, to see the
"Arkansas Traveler," a folk play and musical of the 19th century
also presented In an outdoor theatre. Just before the show on the
outdoor patio,'they had·the "squatlers dinner" which consisted or
spring river greens, corn bread, hill potatoes, beans and ham
hock, salt pork, mountain slaw and relish, cherry cobbler. and
iced sassafra tea . Quite nice.
.
The next stop on their trip was Dogpatch, U.S.A. which is an
amusemnt park featuring AI Capp comic characters. Quite a
thrill was the train trip down the mountain side into the park
area where variety shows were In full swing, the rides were
going, and fishing in lakes !ided with rainbow trout was
available.
·
After that the couple went to !lot Springs to visit the
Josephine Tussand Wax Museum, the Dryden Pottery, and even
took in a Oea market. At Little Rock they looked up an army
friend and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Riley Gill. Don and Gill. had
served in W. W. II together and hadn't seen each· otl)er for 26
years, although there had always been an exchange of cards at
Christmas.
Enroute home they visited at Bea\'81' Dam, Ky. with Mrs.
Velma Kendall, and at Bardstown, Ky. with Mr. and Mrs. Dannis
Miller.

•

World War 11 . IU j u1ce con·
tal ns small amounts of a rub·
bery sub•tun,.e

~

~

•

&amp;

.,.- ~

'

PAK

16 oz. bots.

...

...
•

--.
~

•'

c -..
•

••...

.,.•
...

...

�' .

['s""e";;ii;;rCi~;;rj;,eds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!.
'
;

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
"'

D£AOLINES
S P .M,.Otv Before Publicat ion .

2 SIGNS
• OF

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Wanted To Do

For Sale

B~~iness

Services

SE WIN G In m y home . Phone l9~3hj; Zl~!~~~~wl~~,'i;s~ch~';;;:
992-m6.
broiders, overcasls, bulton
8·12-Ji c holes . All wilhoul' ot. : Will be accepte-d vntll 9 a.m. lor
--------taehments. Pay balan~e of
•
Oa_v of Publication
,
A EGULATION 5
S38.50 or poy $5 per monlh .
Spetlallst
• The Publisher reserves the
Call 992-533 L
Wheel
'right to edrt or re[ect any ads
A
1911 CHEV RDLt I IMPALA
$269$
1 Ufo Sales
6-10-llc
: dum ed oblectionat . The
Alignment
Custom Coupe 1 loc~JI 1 oWner car , like ' new whlte•wall
1972 GO LD Grand Tori no, - .,-------'---:--:-:-"
• publisher will not be responsible
Sporl ; excellent condition. 1 KNAPP shoes new fall and
tires. factory air, automat ic transmi ssion, power steering
' ror more than one Incorrect
owner . Phone 2-47-2774.
wint er styles now ou t. Ca ll
lnstrtlon .
It Must
and brakes. Dark green finish with black vinyl roof.
Siding ·- Spouting
Remodeling
RATE$
992-5324.
s.9-61
c
Be
Right
spotless
interior,
radio.
Real
shl'trp!
.
•
Far Wut Ad Sftrvice
8-14-llc
Plumbing - Heating . Com.p~ete
or we will
5 cents per Word one insertion
1967
COME
T,
Runs
good,
body
Make
it
Right.
Building. Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Stdmg.
Minimum Charge 75c
1970PLY .~ URYIII
SU9S
r(;)l,H;Jh, no rust 2 r)ew front APA CHE Eagle Tent Camper,
, 12 cents per word three
4 Ooor, V-6, automatic, power steeri ng , cle-an Interior,
:
l
&gt;
leeps
4.
it
lso
custom
hitch
lor
tires. 2 new shOcks, rieW brake
consecutive Insert ions .
good tires, ro31dlo, blue finish .
'~
6) Chevrolet Phone 992-7151.
shoes on the rear . S200. Call
18 cents per word siX con ·
8-14--lltc
atcutNe Insertions .
99HOOO .
25· Per Cent Discount on pa id
8-14·liP
1968 OLDS TO RON ADO
, ._ ,$169S
8-4;30 Daily, 8-12 Sat.
ldJ and ads pa id within 10 d.!)'S.
WHIT E and yellow sweefcorn,
'
lu
tile R. H. Rawlings Sons.
Cpe
.,
sHver
grey
fin
ish
with
wh
ite
vinyl
roof,
clean
in
CARD OF THANKS
ca
ntalopes.
and
wa
term
elons.
1973
PONTIAC
Venlura
350,
2Midcileport,
Bu1ldmg
.
terior ; full powe r equ ipment Incl ud ing factory air, power
&amp; OBITUAR Y'&gt;
992-2550
Dave Yost, Great Bend . 843- ·.m .1101
door hatch back. Aulomotlc.
Middleport, 0 .
$1.50 tor 50 word min imum .
windows and tilt &amp; Tel. st. wheel. Local 1 owner car and
22 42.
Reosonable. Phone 7~2 - 6333.
Each add it ional word 2c.
8-14-61p
had regular se rvi ce.'
·
Also. se t of Beginners GolfBLIND ADS
Ad d itional 25c Che rge per
Clubs, like new. $40.
.
Adver t isement..
'
.
8-l -l21p MUST sell. 1973 Stereo Rad io
POMEROY
OFFICE HOURS .
Combinat ion with 8 track tape
8 :30a . m . Ia 5i00 p.m . Oa ii'W'
built-ln. Take over payme nt
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
HOME &amp; AUTO
1 :30 · 1) . m. to 12 . 00 Noo•
Mobile
Homes
fDf
Sale
of
$7 .55 per month or pay
Saturday.
POMEROY, OHIO
10 x 50 MOBILE Hom e, gOO!!_ $101.50. 992-5331.
992-2094
DUMP TRUCK
8·l0-6tc
condition.
Phone
742-5980.
606 E. Main Pomeroy
8-l0-6tc - - - - - - . , - :' In Memory
SERVICE
LEFT In layaway 1973 Zig Llg
Help Wanted
On Most American Cars
'
&gt;4 HOUR SERVICE
sewi ng
machi ne.
This
•,IN
LOVING memory of our
OFFICE SUPPLIES
STA RCRAFT, Close-out on all
machine
darns
,
em
·
: daughter, Jean K. Jones, one WAITRESS full and parft ime,
- GUARANTEED1973 models. Save Sl.263 on 24
and
bro ider ies, overcasts, all
n.o experience ne cessary . Ca.rriers Wanted
~~ year has passed and gone
ft . 7 inch, Save $1,100 on 22ft.
Phone 992-2094
wi t hout atta Chments. Pay
AP.ply In person, Blue Tar• since you left us : days of
1 Inch ; Save $975 on 20 ft . 7
FURNITURE
balance of $41 .50 or pay S6 per
tan. evening hours .
sadness still are with us, tears
inch : Save Sl154 on 18ft. Tinch.
Pomeroy Home &amp; Aulo ·
.
·
jOHN'
TUCKER
8-l2-6tc
mo.
992-5331.
of silence often flow , but you r
CA MP (ONLEY STAROpen 8 Til!
For The
Stop In and See Our
8-l0-6tc
Rt . 4, Pomeroy, 0 .
memory keeps you near us.
CRAFT SALES, Rt. 62 N. of
Monday
lhru Saturday
,, Sadly m!ssed by mother an d WA.ITRESS and cleaning
992-3954
Point Pleasant, behind the
Floor Displav
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
. ·-.
1 father, Mr. and Mrs . C. H. woman wanted, apply In per·
Red Carpet Inn. Phone (304) 11 ' x 15' LEE 'S Carpel with pad,
i Williams. sisters and son . Craw's Steak Hous e,
Dally Sentinel
675-5384.
$50, 12' x 12' nylon carpet, $25.
brothers.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
8-7-10tc
8-l3·4tc
p.f. rocker , $5, 3 pc. B.R.
8-14-ltc
Suite, S25, sewing machine,
In
:~~---RESPONSIBLE woman to
S20. 409 S. Sth Ave., Mid·
Air Conditioners
babysit In my home In Middleport , Phone 992-2718.
'
:Notice
Awnings
Middleport
Hoard House
CONSTRUCTION
dleport. 2 chi ldren of ages 6
8-8-6tp
· YARD Sale, Norman E. Hysell
Underpinning
months and 7 years. Work 5
"STRIPPERS"
Residence, , frida y and
day_s per
week, so me
NIC E six room house for sale in
We
Strip
Paint, Varnishes,
Saturday, 8 a.m. till 6 p.m. on
Roofing
,
Spouting,
Co mplete· moblle home
·From the .larcest
weekends within the 5 days.
Pomeroy . Ca ii992-397S or 992PHONE
992·7368
Etc.
from
Furniture.
County Rd . 76 near Veterans
se rvice - plus gigant ic
Porch Repair, ComReferences required . Mall
Bulldozer Radiator to the ·
2575.
Antiques-Modern-Metals
Hospital. Brass bell, antiques,
~mauesT Heater Core .
inquir ies to Box 166, Mid8-8-6tc p l e t e
dis play of mobile homes
Home
No ruinous lyes or caustlts
collector's Items, coins, etc.
Nathan Biggs
dleport , Ohio.
always available .at ...
used .
.
Remodeling .
8-l4-2tp
8-8-6tc Wanted To
Radiator
Specialist
19691 2 x 55 SC HULT trailer for
Pick-Up Service
_B_A_C_~__;y_a-.r-d_s_a_l~-.-23-4-W-.-Ma in
sale. 2 bedrooms. 1971 Datsun
MILLER
Available
COR NER cupboa rds. wa ll
Pickup with top. Call949-414l.
For Free Estimate
We Buy &amp; Sell Antiques.
cupboarQs,
chests,
old
guns,
Street, Pomeroy , Wednesd'ay
See behind Racine Post Of.
and Thursday , will start at 10
Dick Seyler-Owner
any cond ition . Also blu e
_
MOBILE HOMES
fice,
Richard Garten .
· !I"
Kerr St.
Pomeroy, 0 .
decorated stoneware. Write
a.m. Household goods of Eva
8-l0-8tc
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
Lletwller and gas stoves,
Phone 992-2798
P. 0. Box 44, Martinsburg,
1210 Washington Blvd.
misc. glass and china. Have
Ohio, 43935 or call l-484-4440
423 -7521
BELPRE, 0 . .
after 7 p.m.
3 BEDROOM house. Cal l after 6
no telephone.
MILBtRRY AVE. ·
Real Estate For 5ale
8-8-90tc
·.
8-l4-2tp
SAVE . SAVE. SAVE .on the . p.m. 992"7363 ·
8-l0-6tc
A$K US ABOUT
P AND J HOME
-V.,1L-:-L-:A-::G-::E-=F-a~
br-:-fc-s-, ""
Tu- ppers
AND VICINITY
"
SUPER
SARGAINS"
now
----------NO. 1 Copper. 60c, Radiators,
PRE-FABRICATED
available at Berry-Miller
Plolns, open Monday through
APPLY
AT
30c, brass, 20c. batteries, 90c
MAINTENANCE
.Mobile
Home
Sales.
We
have
BRUSH
HOGS,
4x5
tl.,
phone
Friday. 9a.m. till 5 p.m. Back
each , c lean , dr.y Ginseng
on our lot 51 ate model60 x 12 2 992-5858.
·
roots. 560 a lb. Yellow root, $4,
&amp; REPAIR
i ~~ci~~~ and tan shipment THE DAILY SENTINEL
7-15-tfc
May apple, soc, per lb. M. A. and 3 bedroom Mobile Homes
Heating
Air Cond .
8 13 3
Hall , Reedsville. Call 378- that will be sold on a first come- ------~-­
t;~Mriqeration
. Plumbing - - - - - - -- -_ · tp
Pomeroy
first served basis. If you want WE now have unf l nlsh~d fur ..' 3 BR. country house, six
6249.
Elecrncdl
· Applidm- ~~ - Auto
7-31-lfc an honest to goodness bargain nlture, dresser s, · chests . years old, with ap' KOSCDTXOSMETICS &amp; WIGS.
ONE 992 2156
Buiti to Your'Specs
Air Cond. - Residential or
: Specials during August are PH
"
on a good Mobile Home - shop
Boston roc kers , ca bine ts,
to Job Slit
Delivered
pr.oximately
10
acres~
near
Commercial .
• . Kolicentree , Moist Kate,
now at Berry-Miller Mobile
hutches, desks. Come in and
OLD
furn
iture,
oa
k
tabl
es,
or
Centerville
Thurman
~ ' Kleanslng Kream, One Day AGGRESSIVE debit insurance
Sales, 705 Farson Streej,
see our selection. Pomeroy
215 N. Second
clocks, ice boxes, brass beds, Home
, ' Sachet &amp; others. Phone Helen
Belpre,
Ohio,
phone
423-9531
Recovery, 622 E. Main St., which is 18 miles N. of
agent. Wanted tor Pomeroy .
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
dishes
or
complete
Phone
992-3509
Gallipolis. Priced $11,000.
Pomeroy . 992-7554.
closed Sundays.
,.•' . Jane Brown, 992-5113.
Middleport area. Mvst be able
households
.
Write
M.
D.
8-2-lfc to work on ow.n Initiative after
Owner R. E. Knotts. Will
8-9-6tc
24 Hour Service
· MATERIALS CO.
I
Miller, Rt . 4, Po meroy, Oh io, 8-9-6tc
consider
land
contract
with
713-5554
Mason, W. V•.
proper train ing. Some sales
call 992-6271 .
All work guaranteed.
12 x 60 MOBfLE Home, see 1973 l4 x70 MOBILE home, reasonable down payment.
~ GIFTS and novelties for all
experienc;e preferr~d . If in5-13-tfc
t occasions . All ;utlficlal
Helen Baer·, Syracuse.
. washer and dryer, d is h· Phone 44~-2911 .
send complete
1
flowers , 20 pet. off. Smalleys terested,
8-7-tfc washer, stainless steel sink,
resume to P. 0 . Box 1817, WANTED
EXCAVATING. Dozers , large READY -MIX
CONCRi:TE
for
auct ion,
'. Giff . Shop, Chester. Phooe Huntington, W. Va. Attn : Bil l
.
garbage
disposal
,
eye
level
and
small;
Backhoes
and
7
ROOM
house
with
·
bath
in
to your
delivered
r
ight
household goods. Tools, most
It 985-3537. .
'CASH paid for all makes and ' oven, range, dacron-polvester
Honaker.
loaders on track and tires;
Rutland, air conditioned,
pri:tject. Fast and easy. Free
anything
of
value.
Will
buy
or
~8·8·61c
models of mobil e hom es. carpet, large lot. Phone 7IJ·
S.S-Itc
La -boy
estimates. Phone 992-3284 .
carpeted, gas furnace. dish- Dump trucks sell on commission. Will haul.
Ph one area code 614-423-9531. . 3083.
-:c-----S.eptic t anks in se
rvice
.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co .,
washer,
double
oven,
range,
Call
992-3354.
Hay
man
's.
- UPHOLSTER your own fur·
Middleport,
~~~~-------·
~4~
1~
3
~
tf~
c
,
_______________
~
7~
l8tf
stalled.
George
I
Bill)
Pullins,
Ohio.
double
garage,
large
carport,,
7-2S-tfc
"Notice
nlture. We have all the supphone
992-i478
or
992-7402.
4
acres
cleared
and
fenced,
6-30-tfc.
;· plies you will need, fabrics, MEIGS SENIORS, Make your
For Sale
2-9-ttc
small barn and other
r foam for cus._ions and padappoin.tment now to have your
Pels for Sale
GROCE RY business for· sa le.' Real Estate For Sale
bu ildings. Phone 614-142-6834.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEAN~D
{ ding . We cut foam to any size· SENIOR
PORTRAIT taken .
Building for sale or ~ ease.
. :
, ...~ ·30- lfc SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446~ .or shape. Swivel bases, coHon1 Dates for taking MEIGS PARKVIEW Kennels . Poodles,
Ph one 773-56 18 from 8: 30p.m . LARGE, coovenlent buil!ling
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
• burlap legs, zipper, welt cord,
SEWAGE SYSTEMS . ONner
l loy male . and l female.
SENIORS are August 22, 23,
lots
at
Rock
Springs.
Area
to
10
p.m.
for
appoi
nlmenl.
and Operator .
~
~ . webbing, dacron, chip board
24 and 25, and Sept. l. Take ·--rohone 992-5443.
res tr ic ted for houses only. WELL PLANNED 3 bedroom, 2 CLEANED, REPAIRED.
·
3- 20~tfc
·
5•12-tfc
If plus many other ·items and
7-15-tfc
MILLER S:ANITATION ;
advantage of Special Senior
Tuppers Plains 1!. Chesler
bath home with
full
~ · living room suites at low, low
STEWART, OHIO. PH . 662·
Prices for these days only .
Water
available.
Call
or
see
2
car
garage
and
basement,
WELL PLANNED 3 bedroom, 2
i prices. Pomeroy Recovery , Cal GROVER 's ST UDIO,
3035.
.
family room ..· Priced in mid
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
bath hom e with
full . Bill Witte, 992-2789.
•· 622 E. Main, Phone 992-1554.
Business
Opportunities
Middleport,
Oh
io.
Phone
992·
7-24-ttc
20s,
plus
lot.
Located
on
larg~
10-4-tfc
Complete Service
7-l9-30tc
basement, 2 car ·gara9e and
2475.
WORLD
FAMOUS
BARDAHL
co
untry
lot
off
Rt.
7,
W
Phone 94N82l
fa
mily
room
.
Priced
rn
mid
~
-:B:cE::cD::-R::-OO=:cM
:
-h:o
u~se:-o-n-;-L:::i
n
co
ln
.
.
8-1-221c
3
min utes from Parkersburg SEWING MACHINES. Repair
DISTRIBUTORSHIP Now
Racine, Ohio
' YARD SALE Aug. 14, 15 and 15,
20's,
pl
us
Ia!.
Localed
on
large
Hill.
living
room
,
kitchen.
a nd 15 minutes from
service, all ma kes. 992-2284 1
a~w"ailable on local level serCrill
Bradford
. ,' at 829 ·south Third Ave .,
country
lot
off
Rt.
7
20
bath
and
utility
room
,
extra
Pomeroy . Financing already
The Fa bric Shop, Pomeroy.
vic ing Bardahl dealers. This
5-l-ffc
NOTICE
TO
BIDDERS
minutes from Parkersburg
large lot over 1 acre. Has
' Middleport.
arranged· wi th low down
Authorized Singer Sales and
service type busi ne~s can be
Sealed proposals will be
and
15
minutes
fr
om
driveway.
$13,000.
Call
8-l3-3tc received by ·the Board of
payment. Contac1 Pauline E. Ser vice. We Sharpen Scissors.
operated full or part time with
'
. EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
Pomeroy. Financing already
Sunday ~fter 12 noon ; on
no
selling
experience
Education
of
thf
Eastern
Loca
l
:· '- ----,----Cunningham Realty , phone '----~----3--2-9-_tfc
arranged
with
low
down
kd
ft
5
992
and backhoe work ; septic.
School District at the Easter n
necessary. Profit potential is
·
payment. Contact Paul ine E.
wee ays a er p.m .,
· 614-423-8690 co llect.
•
tanks installed ; dump trucks
High School office at Reeds unlimited .
Conservative
7
7-24-ttc FOR FREE estimates on
Cunn ingham Realty . Phone
324 .
and
lo- boys tor hire ; will haul
ville, Ohio, until twelve o'c lock
8-S-tfc
es timate of $95 for each day
aluminum siding. Starn Doors
(614) 423-8690 Collect.
(1'2:00) noon , prevai ling local
fill
dirt,
top soil, limestone
worked. A $3,495 Investment
and Windows , Carports,
7·19-tfc
time. September 11. 1973, and
Call Bobar Roger
and
gravel;
puts you in bus!ness. WRITE
opened immediately thereaft er ,
Marquees and Rolling , Phone
Jeffers,
day
phone 992-7089 ;
TODAY (Include phone
for· the furnlsh.lng of a ll
Charles Lisle, Syracuse. Ohln.
night
phone
992-3525
o~ 992number) : BARDAHL, INC.. .EXCELSIOR Salt Works , E.
materials and · performi ng all
Carl Jacob, Sales Rep 5232.
Your Right to Know
labor for the erect ion of :
MEDIA, Penna . 19063.
resentative. V. V. Johnson
Main St., Pomeroy. All kinds
'2-1) -tfc
ADDITIONS TO
8-l2-3tc
Son, Inc.
and
of
salt
water
pellets,
water
··and be informed of the tun e.
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
nuggets, block ·salt and own
tions of your government are
6-22-ttc HOME repair or remodeling .
REEDSVILLE, OHIO
4mbodled in public notices. In
Ohio
River Salt. Phone 992Plans and specifications ma)'
Reasonable rates. 1st class
thet ~.elf -government charge~
be obtained from the. Architect, Employment Wanted
3891.
work.
Call Bob or Bill. 992~'. all citizens to be informed ; ,
RON SHEPARD, Floor , Wall
Eeeslev, Ll~e &amp; Vargo, 326 Front EXPERIENCED painter, In·
6-5-ffc
5968.
608
~ this newspap-er urges ever~
Street, Marietta , Ohio, -45750,
Remodeling, Ceramic file
terior and exterior. Call Don
8-10-lOtc
: citizen to read and stildy th~se for a deposit of $25.00 which will
baths.
Box 28D, Rutland 742·
E.
MAIN--~.1
!972
TAG-A-LONG
.Travel
Van
Meter,
985-3951.
notices. We strongly ad¥tse be refunded lt the documents
3664.
8-2-30tp
Tra iler, 22 ft. sleeps 4, selfthose citizens, seeking furthe r ' are returned unmarked and in
POMEROY
ST~TEL Y BRICK
6-26-tfc O'DELL WHEEL Alignment
lnformatlorr, .to exert,ise thei1·~ oood condition with in ten days
contained. Exce llent · con- POMEROY - In good repair
right of aCcess t6 publlt after bid due da1e . Shou ld no Ilocated at Crossroads. Rl . 124,
· dillon. Call 992-7401.
JUST RENOVATED
records and public meeting s. proposal be submitted and the
now back to w:ork. Complete
8-12-6tc with a ll large room s. 3
2 bedrooms, living room , · DOZEc.l&lt; and back hoe work:
.drawings not returned five days
bedrooms, nice bath, open
front end service, tune up and
pond s and septic lanks , ditch- - -- - - kitchen, bath, all new floor
before the bid due date, the fu ll
brak.e
service. Wheels
stairs
frorn
living.
Gas
REDUCE
excess
fluids
with
Ing
service
!
top
soil
,
fill
dirt,,
amount of the deposlf will be
covering, almost new block
balanced
electronically. All
limestone
;
B&amp;K
Excava
tlnQ
.
Fluidex
Lose
weight
with
fireplace
in
dining.
All
air
forfeited .
build ing 25x29 wi th garage,
NOTICE OF
Phone 992,5367 or 992-3861. · work guaranteed. Reasonable ·
Dex-A-Diet capsules al. conditioned, and ce ntrally
Separate
blds
Will be received
APPOINTMENT
wrches. gas furnace, large
rates. Phone 742-3232.
·
9-l,tl c
Nelson Drugs.
heat ed. Only 125,000.
Case No . 20911 on:I. GENERAL CONTRACT
iev el lot. $8,500.00.
·
2-18-lfc
8-12-3fp
i1tat• of Frtnk G. Roush
11. PLUMBING CONTRACT
Ut't:N · Roger Hysell's ----------~----~-""·-u~
2'1• YEARS OLD
- - -- - DtCIIUd .
40 ACRES
Ill.
HEATING
8.
VEN
·
Garage
near
crossroads on St. SMALL additions , remodeling,
In new addition, 3 bedrooms,
• Notice Is hereby given that TILATING CONTRACT
1970 YAMAHA 360 Enduro. Call ON BLACKTOP - S bedrooms,
Rt
.
124;
all
mechonlcal
· work
·Frances W•ber of 8413 Grandon · IV . ELECTRICAL CO N ·
structural repair . Rough and
large closets, nice kitchen ,
after 5 p.m. 985·3918.
Avenu&amp; , Columbus, Ohio, has TRACT
including
aulomatlc
trans
fl nl s h carpentry antique
8-l2-6tp bath, large kllchen , nice
bath, utility spa ce, · all
boon duly appo inted Ad ·
gambrel root barn with shed, 3
Monday
-Friday,
miss
ions
.
repair. Reasonable prices.
All
proposals
must
conta
in
electric, carport, large lot,
mlnlstratrlx of t~e E5tate of the name of every person Jn.
8:30a.m. to 5 p.m . Saturday
Private carpenter. Call Scott
shed
and
bay
Implement
OLIVER
60
tractor
with
6
ft
.
Frink G. Roush. deceased , late teres ted therein , be su bmitted
hardwood floors , $20,000.00.
8:30
to
12
noon
unless
by
Ma
son, 992-7300 .
seve
ral
olher
bui
ldings
.
semi-mounted
niower
.
.
For
Of Minersville, Meigs County, on forms furn ished by the Ar ·
ON
YOUR
DIAL
appointment. Phone 992-5682
8-14-6tp
Ohio.
le
or
trade
for
cattle.
Phone
$16,500
.
sa
end the ·acco m. panled by ,
CLOSE IN
or 992-7121. .
· Dated thiS 9th day of August achllect
742-5322.
satisfactory Suret)' Bond or ·a
t '"'
ot::-f""o-n -,th:-e- r lg ht
1':36 acres, 4 bedrooms. bath,
•1973.
7-25·30tc -=a-=o-::W-:-:-L-:E::R::S:-g-e-:8-12-61c
Certified Check on ;, bank do ing
NEW HOME
foot
this
season
with a pair of
din ing room , 8 rooms In all.
FAMILY
ROOM
3
Mann ing D. Webster, business In the Sta te of Ohio, In
Knapp
aero
tread
cushlooed
AUTOMOBiLE
In
surance
been
carpeting
,
tile
,
paneling
,
RT. 124 at edge of Rvtland over bedrooms, 1112 baths, one enamount of s percent of lhe For Rent
Judge the
insole,
championship
grade
total
value
of
the
bid
.
Bid
can
.:::e
ll
ed?
LOs
t
vour
1!2
acre
of
lot.
3
bedroom,
part basement,
frame
Common Pleas Court,
bowling
shoes.
Bob
Kysell,
li
cense:·
Call
992·
operator's
utility, bath, 27 x 15 living and closed, vent fans In both . Lots
Probate Dlvlslo'Tl Security will be returned within TWO trailer lots in Middleport;
conslructlon . $9,500.00.
1428.
992-5324.
10 day s after contract for the
'h duplex In Bradbury ; phone.
Meigs County, 0~ io work
dining area with fireplace, of c losets, nice kitchen wllh
has
been
ex'!cuted
.
6-15-ttc
·
8-l4-6tc
(I) 14, 21 , 28, 3tc
stove.
Double
garage
in
the
wall
to
wall
carpeting,
new
before 6 p.m. 992-5693.
Failure of any bidder to enter
l FLOOR PLAN
basement.
dishwasher
and
disposer,
As
king
529,500.00.
----~----~===-------into and e..ecute a contract for
8-1J.Stc
3 bedrooms, bath, kitchen
ELNA and White Se wing "'0BfCE home repair, Elec~
patio and garage. Harold
the work covered by th e - - - - - - - - new
cabinets
and
S.S.
has
,
Machines ... Service on all
trlcal plumbing and hoofing.
Wolfe,
Call
742·4191
.
proposal he has subm itted, 3 AND 4 ROOM . furnis hed and
,UNION AVENUE
sink, dining room , TV roorn ,
makes . Reasonable rale s.
Phone 992' 5858 ·
B-l2-3tc POM EROY - 2 bedroom
within ten 00) days fo ll ow ing
unfurnished
apartments .
7-15-tfc
noti ce of award of such work to
Phone 992 _5434 .
ljOTICE ON FILING
ut ility room , lots at new floor
Th e Sewing Ce nte r , Mid OF INVENTORY
hlm,sh atlcaus e th ebi d security
_
.tfc
1
WALK-IN
cooler,~ x 12 with home, bath, basement, porch
dleport,
·Cover
ing
,
por
ches.
full
Ohi
o.
4 '12 , com pressor and condenser. and large lot. ·All utilities.
AND APPRAISEMI;NT
to become forfeited by 1he
11 -16-ltc
basement, double gara ge
r The State of Ohio, Melg t bidde r to t he Owner as -----~------"
Asking $7,500.00.
. This W~tk's SpecioJ
liqu
rdeted
damages
and
not
as
a
TRA
ILER
space
on
old
Route
Call
m
·5186
.
r County. Probate Court.
and work shop . Double lot. GENE ' S - B1:jljy
SHOP,
8-l2-31c
t
To the Executor Or Ad · penalty because of such fa ilure
33, 'h mil e from Meigs High
$13,000.00.
reasonable rates, work
NEW LISTING
~ mlnlatn~or . of the eataf&amp; ; to on Ihe pari ot the bidder .
School. Ca ll 992-2941.
Each
bidder shall
be
guaranteed . Lincoln Hill ,
such of the following as are
1s
·MIDD LE PORT - 10 acres for
PROPERTY IS GE TTING
25-lfc
•: residents of the State of Oh io, prepared , in the event he Is lh e - - - - - - - - -7-·
Pomeroy . Phone 992-$211 ,
Back to School Sale!
houses . All ut ilit ies by
L.
vis : - the surv iving spouse. the accepted bidder , to fu rn ish
HIGHER,
BUY
TODAY
8-5-14tc
property. A nice place for
t next of . kin. the blneflcler ies Surl!'ty Bond , in a form ROOMS by lhe week, 518 up ."·
AND
SAVE
,
: under the will ; and to the at. satiSfactory to the Owner , In the
apartments, mot el. super
I'Aelgs Inn, Pomeroy.
.
HENRY E. CLELAND
WILL 1 KIM
cut tref!ls,
r forney or attornys representing amount of 100 per cen t ot the
mark et, ice cr eam drive. in, or
7-1
2-tt
c
contract
pr]ce,
guaranteeing
BROKER
shrubbery.
Also
pain!
roofs.
eny of the atortmenfioned
qu ick food eslabllshment.
th&amp; successful com pletion of the
PlriOnl :
Phooe 949·3221 or 742·4441 ,
992-2259
.
Oren c . Wears, Route 2, work bid upon .
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
·
7-1B·3ofc
If no Answer 992-2561
, PomtrO)', Melgl County, Oh io,
Proposals may be malted or Park, Minersville. Phone 992NEW HOMES
ENJOY
THE
COUNTY
dellvered
.
lf
m·
a
lled
,
send
via
I COlt No. 20978 .
MODEL HOM E- 3 bedrooms,
.HARRI SON'S TV servi ce and
FAIR
V~kswagen
You tra hereby notified thillt registered me II In time for bid 1324·
8. 7.tfc
l'h baths with vent fans, Iaroe
service ca ll s. Phone 992-2522.
the Inventory and
Ap · opening .
BUY ONE PAIR AND
Bidders shell designate on lhe - - - - - - - - 2-9-lfo
closets In eac h bedroom .
pralstment of the 11tate of the
/ lfQrtmtntlontd, deceased, late envelope that It Is a sealed bid, TWO BEDROOM mobile home ,
G!:fONE PR. FREE .
Utlllly,
was
her
ond
(!ryer
hOOk
1 or &amp;old County. v/u tiled In this ind icate the prolect be ing bid.
ups. Ca rpeting , storm lloors, PAGEVILLE, Ohio ·lncludet
coodltloned and patio. All
I
Court. Sdd Inventory and the division upon wh ich he Is "air
utilities . pa id. Robert Will,
house, .-t rooms down, 1 up,
storm windows. Garage and
~ Appralllmtnt WIJI bit for bidding, the narTJe and addren
POMEROY
Only 1,000 ' m iles
Racine
,
949-3811.
garage,
workshop, anll ap.
of
bidder
and
addressed
to
:
hllrlno
before
thll
Court
on
the
neorly
an
acre
of
land
lor
only
1
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Eutern Local Board
proximately
1'12
acres
wlfh
21thdlyofAugult, 191J.ot 10:00
8-l0-61C
Nice llltlt car.
$22,000 .00 ..
Phone 992-2181
of Education
O'cloc~ A.M.
young orchard. 1 block out of
Eutern High School
Any person dlllrlng to file
Rl . 692, $10,500. lnformotlon
PRIVAJt: meermg room tor
, R.l ldSYIIIe , Ohio ~5772
HAVING TROUBLE
:.. IXCIPtiOr'!l fhtreto must file
a!
house.
any
organization
;
phone
9n
1
CA NNING
Toma to es, SELLING, CALL US, WE
, thtm II ltllt flvl days prior to The Owner reserves the righ t
8-12-tfc
~915 .
to accept ~nV bid, to wa ive any
cuc umber s, mangoes, and NEED LAROE HOUSES,
,· the elite ut tor htaring .
3-ll -ttc
t'·
Given undfr my hand and or all Informalities In bids and·
ca ntalope s . Gerald ine
LARGE FARM$,
LOTS, 2 BEDROOM home In Mid·
' ' Mil of told Court, th is lOth day or rtl.ct any or ali bids et hi •
Cleland, Racine.
~cit
dleport. Pantlllng, large
~ er Augu&amp;t 1973,
MO B! L E home space lo
discretion .
7-31 -tfc ACREAGE AND RIVER
living room; bath, nice kifNo bid may be wllhdrewn for
Syracuse. Phone 992-5858
"You'll Llkt Our Qual ltv ,
..
·
·
Manning o . Wtbllfr a period of 30 day1 .
chin
with slde ·by-sldt
Way
ot Doing Buslnno.'•
By
order
of
tl'1e
Elltern
Local
·
6-21:.-tfc
Judgt l~d .ex.olflclo
AT SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet,
refrigerator and lr .. zer,
GMAC
FINANCING
Clerk of S'!ld Court Board ot Educotlon, Rttdsv ille, ·FuR·N IS, H D
b
washer, dryer/ and range.
Oh·lo.
E , 2
edroom · Chesler, Ohio. Sliver Angels,
m
.sm
Pomeroy
39c,
3
for
a
dollar
,
10
ga!lon
Corpeted. Forced air furnace .
apartment, adults only .
I~ Jontl E. Morris
Open
lvtnlnge
'TIII:OO
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy:
se lvps, 110.
~one 992-2362.
C. O. Newlond, Middleport. Ca ll m .3874.
Chltf Dtpuly Clerk
TIIS P.M. hi.
Phone
tn-5421
r
8-12.6tc
8·1-13tc
fl) lA, II, Itt
,
Clor~
8'1-tfc_
(8) )4 , 21. 28 (9) •· ~lc
Monday Otadllne 9 e . m
Cancellation - Cor'rec: t.lc;ms

®

·QUALITY

BARNEY
OL! BULLET DRU6
ONE OF PAW'S SOCKS
OUT 0(11 TH' PORCH

AI\!' CHAWED ITTO
THR EA DS THIS
MORNII\I '

I BE.r
SNUFFY
PITCHED
A FJT!J

ROOFING

ALL WEATHER .

o.

~~~.~CLA~]:'IT!E~R-..., ''
T~O.Y MUST
~AVE ~AD SOME
RAB ID F'ANS
f.! ERE IN Tf.l E

WOW!

.o

!tll~ol'&lt;t ~ . l ..

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

Ill~~~

8 ..- /4-

Oil

0
BACK &gt;-lOM E, TH EY~E
U SUA ~L'I CONTENT TO TEAR
~OWN THE GOAL POSTS!.

COLOSSEU. H!.

j;o---------------l

Pomeroy Motor Co.

T._ l"

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

I THIHI(. You

MODERN
SANITATION

PRICE

;==========--,

Buy

CARRIER
WANTED

Ph. 742-6271

Tltt JACI'POT,
f.~Nif.

Dick's

SMITH NELSON
. MOTORS. INC.

HOUSE
FOR SALE

~

fiNAI.r..V HIT

1306, I .JUST GOT WORD
IHAT HAL MARTINS WAS
/({LlEO IN AN AUID
ACCIDENT

WOOD TRUSSES

,. ===---------

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

GASOUNE ALLEY

Mr. Wallet, what if 40u
were sic14 and called

doctor...

S61JciJT'I OOLLARS A. DA'/ WE'RE Sf'EWDit-11.:&gt; ON
SUNQl i~E' AIJD "'OU BUR'/ '-/0Jr&lt;6&amp;1..-F 1"-1 TH5 ~D!

4

.

LI'r.l'LE ORPHAN ANNIE
f " ' t OOtt' BELIEVE WHAT I'M Sf8fi• •••
BECAUSE I oat' WANTA BELIEVE IT!~

-

--- --

PUBLIC NOTICt:S

-==========,
We.talk to you
like a oerson.

WMP0/1390

- - - -- -

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1. Dross
5. German
city
10. Subside
11. Eddie of

DICK TRACY
SEND A
STRAIT

MV BRO'fl.lER WAS
A VICioUS CROOK!

IM GLAD HES

GONE!

------

AMANDA PANDA

ROBINSON'S

a.EANERS

r

'

writer,
Andre S. Kirghiz,
U.S.S.R.
city
7. Thomas
Mann

work
(3 wds.)

8. At t his

time ·

9. Negative
contracti on

MA'I., '/OIJ

&lt;?~EM

Putz L.£17.

WHAT A~E 'IOU
THINKING

Yesterday's Answer

11. Not make
it
15. Assailed
(2 wds.)
18. Red
brother's
shelte r
19. Nobleman
2l Skidoo!
~4 . Go
hungry

26. Immediately
( 2 wds.)
27.-- out
(beat)
28. P~~shed
29. Growing
outward
31. Asseverate
34. Opposite
of WSW
35. "C'Si Bon"

Ae&gt;oun

I SHAMC

II

auq

tll

I () I I I
I
I () I I I
UMPAKE

BLOTEG

a·..

Now lll'l'llnp the circled lttten
to form the ourprfM ..,.,...., u
. lUUetltd bf the obove cor1oon,

[,=s~~-~~~'!·~IIISWII~~·~·=~~ rx r rJ
_ _

.

l

.

(b••en l•m9r,.w)

lumhluo MOUSE GRIME TAMPER VANDAL

y tllcrd..r'•

Auw~ra

CaWf 9

011 a lin&amp;fe

condillon! -GOT MAIIIID

ant
o[one
of

17117 '/OU !SVE.R NOTiCE.
IH E. &lt;;EeDS OF1 A RASPBERI\Y

Jacob's

i

M E. IN? IP£, BuT WITH

;,

form four ordlnarr words.

28. De s~end·

A ?TRA~BE.R~'/
TH£'1 AI'!£ OllT "?

sons
30. Burmese
knife
31. Objective
32. Sine
qua -33. Feel
sorrow

35. Sicilian
city
36. Balanced
37. Religious
body
38. Postpone
39. Cornor

DAILY CltYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

2~HOUR

.

12. English
poet
13. Cling to
U. Greek
letter
15. Go apace
16, Barnyard
denizen
17. Intellectual
19. Gravy 20. Legal
document
21. Kitchen
staple
22. Evian
or
Vichy
23. Wall
24. Proof-

Unscramble these four Jumbler,
letter to ea,cti squ&amp;re, to

~ne

suffix

KG Coupe

(Upon Request)

~.Whipped

3. Dostoyev·
sky work
(3 wds.)
4, "Oh by
Jingo, Oh
by-"
5. French

word
25. Miss
.
Ponselle
27. Feminine

1970

CLEANING.

~lJJJJOOIDM;-u..t=~!..Jc

of bees

reader's··

or

SLACKS
"h PRICE SALE

DOWN

1. Multitude

song

--o=,-----,=~~

. BIG YANK

~

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for a~other. ln this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two 0 '•· etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each d•y the code letters are !liiTerent.

7695
Karr.&amp; Van

FJGP
HREQZ
FEW INCHe !&gt;
1\NP I'D ~Me
&amp;EeN Alfllf.•

BlllfNI'!

l'QiiP
BX

CRYPTOQUOTKS
FB SJ RI C, QF
FCP

1 -;;Q~~
QE

FCP

._r___ ....;~...-

EBRS .- JWBW

Yesterday'• Cryptoquote; IF YOU WANT TO LEARN
ABOUT TliE }liND 0~' A NATION. STUDY ITS RENTAL
LIBRARIES.- WILHELM HAUFF .
(® 197:1 'Kintr Fonluros !=! yndieate, Ine.'t

&gt;

,

'

�' .

['s""e";;ii;;rCi~;;rj;,eds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!.
'
;

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
"'

D£AOLINES
S P .M,.Otv Before Publicat ion .

2 SIGNS
• OF

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Wanted To Do

For Sale

B~~iness

Services

SE WIN G In m y home . Phone l9~3hj; Zl~!~~~~wl~~,'i;s~ch~';;;:
992-m6.
broiders, overcasls, bulton
8·12-Ji c holes . All wilhoul' ot. : Will be accepte-d vntll 9 a.m. lor
--------taehments. Pay balan~e of
•
Oa_v of Publication
,
A EGULATION 5
S38.50 or poy $5 per monlh .
Spetlallst
• The Publisher reserves the
Call 992-533 L
Wheel
'right to edrt or re[ect any ads
A
1911 CHEV RDLt I IMPALA
$269$
1 Ufo Sales
6-10-llc
: dum ed oblectionat . The
Alignment
Custom Coupe 1 loc~JI 1 oWner car , like ' new whlte•wall
1972 GO LD Grand Tori no, - .,-------'---:--:-:-"
• publisher will not be responsible
Sporl ; excellent condition. 1 KNAPP shoes new fall and
tires. factory air, automat ic transmi ssion, power steering
' ror more than one Incorrect
owner . Phone 2-47-2774.
wint er styles now ou t. Ca ll
lnstrtlon .
It Must
and brakes. Dark green finish with black vinyl roof.
Siding ·- Spouting
Remodeling
RATE$
992-5324.
s.9-61
c
Be
Right
spotless
interior,
radio.
Real
shl'trp!
.
•
Far Wut Ad Sftrvice
8-14-llc
Plumbing - Heating . Com.p~ete
or we will
5 cents per Word one insertion
1967
COME
T,
Runs
good,
body
Make
it
Right.
Building. Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Stdmg.
Minimum Charge 75c
1970PLY .~ URYIII
SU9S
r(;)l,H;Jh, no rust 2 r)ew front APA CHE Eagle Tent Camper,
, 12 cents per word three
4 Ooor, V-6, automatic, power steeri ng , cle-an Interior,
:
l
&gt;
leeps
4.
it
lso
custom
hitch
lor
tires. 2 new shOcks, rieW brake
consecutive Insert ions .
good tires, ro31dlo, blue finish .
'~
6) Chevrolet Phone 992-7151.
shoes on the rear . S200. Call
18 cents per word siX con ·
8-14--lltc
atcutNe Insertions .
99HOOO .
25· Per Cent Discount on pa id
8-14·liP
1968 OLDS TO RON ADO
, ._ ,$169S
8-4;30 Daily, 8-12 Sat.
ldJ and ads pa id within 10 d.!)'S.
WHIT E and yellow sweefcorn,
'
lu
tile R. H. Rawlings Sons.
Cpe
.,
sHver
grey
fin
ish
with
wh
ite
vinyl
roof,
clean
in
CARD OF THANKS
ca
ntalopes.
and
wa
term
elons.
1973
PONTIAC
Venlura
350,
2Midcileport,
Bu1ldmg
.
terior ; full powe r equ ipment Incl ud ing factory air, power
&amp; OBITUAR Y'&gt;
992-2550
Dave Yost, Great Bend . 843- ·.m .1101
door hatch back. Aulomotlc.
Middleport, 0 .
$1.50 tor 50 word min imum .
windows and tilt &amp; Tel. st. wheel. Local 1 owner car and
22 42.
Reosonable. Phone 7~2 - 6333.
Each add it ional word 2c.
8-14-61p
had regular se rvi ce.'
·
Also. se t of Beginners GolfBLIND ADS
Ad d itional 25c Che rge per
Clubs, like new. $40.
.
Adver t isement..
'
.
8-l -l21p MUST sell. 1973 Stereo Rad io
POMEROY
OFFICE HOURS .
Combinat ion with 8 track tape
8 :30a . m . Ia 5i00 p.m . Oa ii'W'
built-ln. Take over payme nt
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
HOME &amp; AUTO
1 :30 · 1) . m. to 12 . 00 Noo•
Mobile
Homes
fDf
Sale
of
$7 .55 per month or pay
Saturday.
POMEROY, OHIO
10 x 50 MOBILE Hom e, gOO!!_ $101.50. 992-5331.
992-2094
DUMP TRUCK
8·l0-6tc
condition.
Phone
742-5980.
606 E. Main Pomeroy
8-l0-6tc - - - - - - . , - :' In Memory
SERVICE
LEFT In layaway 1973 Zig Llg
Help Wanted
On Most American Cars
'
&gt;4 HOUR SERVICE
sewi ng
machi ne.
This
•,IN
LOVING memory of our
OFFICE SUPPLIES
STA RCRAFT, Close-out on all
machine
darns
,
em
·
: daughter, Jean K. Jones, one WAITRESS full and parft ime,
- GUARANTEED1973 models. Save Sl.263 on 24
and
bro ider ies, overcasts, all
n.o experience ne cessary . Ca.rriers Wanted
~~ year has passed and gone
ft . 7 inch, Save $1,100 on 22ft.
Phone 992-2094
wi t hout atta Chments. Pay
AP.ply In person, Blue Tar• since you left us : days of
1 Inch ; Save $975 on 20 ft . 7
FURNITURE
balance of $41 .50 or pay S6 per
tan. evening hours .
sadness still are with us, tears
inch : Save Sl154 on 18ft. Tinch.
Pomeroy Home &amp; Aulo ·
.
·
jOHN'
TUCKER
8-l2-6tc
mo.
992-5331.
of silence often flow , but you r
CA MP (ONLEY STAROpen 8 Til!
For The
Stop In and See Our
8-l0-6tc
Rt . 4, Pomeroy, 0 .
memory keeps you near us.
CRAFT SALES, Rt. 62 N. of
Monday
lhru Saturday
,, Sadly m!ssed by mother an d WA.ITRESS and cleaning
992-3954
Point Pleasant, behind the
Floor Displav
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0 .
. ·-.
1 father, Mr. and Mrs . C. H. woman wanted, apply In per·
Red Carpet Inn. Phone (304) 11 ' x 15' LEE 'S Carpel with pad,
i Williams. sisters and son . Craw's Steak Hous e,
Dally Sentinel
675-5384.
$50, 12' x 12' nylon carpet, $25.
brothers.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
8-7-10tc
8-l3·4tc
p.f. rocker , $5, 3 pc. B.R.
8-14-ltc
Suite, S25, sewing machine,
In
:~~---RESPONSIBLE woman to
S20. 409 S. Sth Ave., Mid·
Air Conditioners
babysit In my home In Middleport , Phone 992-2718.
'
:Notice
Awnings
Middleport
Hoard House
CONSTRUCTION
dleport. 2 chi ldren of ages 6
8-8-6tp
· YARD Sale, Norman E. Hysell
Underpinning
months and 7 years. Work 5
"STRIPPERS"
Residence, , frida y and
day_s per
week, so me
NIC E six room house for sale in
We
Strip
Paint, Varnishes,
Saturday, 8 a.m. till 6 p.m. on
Roofing
,
Spouting,
Co mplete· moblle home
·From the .larcest
weekends within the 5 days.
Pomeroy . Ca ii992-397S or 992PHONE
992·7368
Etc.
from
Furniture.
County Rd . 76 near Veterans
se rvice - plus gigant ic
Porch Repair, ComReferences required . Mall
Bulldozer Radiator to the ·
2575.
Antiques-Modern-Metals
Hospital. Brass bell, antiques,
~mauesT Heater Core .
inquir ies to Box 166, Mid8-8-6tc p l e t e
dis play of mobile homes
Home
No ruinous lyes or caustlts
collector's Items, coins, etc.
Nathan Biggs
dleport , Ohio.
always available .at ...
used .
.
Remodeling .
8-l4-2tp
8-8-6tc Wanted To
Radiator
Specialist
19691 2 x 55 SC HULT trailer for
Pick-Up Service
_B_A_C_~__;y_a-.r-d_s_a_l~-.-23-4-W-.-Ma in
sale. 2 bedrooms. 1971 Datsun
MILLER
Available
COR NER cupboa rds. wa ll
Pickup with top. Call949-414l.
For Free Estimate
We Buy &amp; Sell Antiques.
cupboarQs,
chests,
old
guns,
Street, Pomeroy , Wednesd'ay
See behind Racine Post Of.
and Thursday , will start at 10
Dick Seyler-Owner
any cond ition . Also blu e
_
MOBILE HOMES
fice,
Richard Garten .
· !I"
Kerr St.
Pomeroy, 0 .
decorated stoneware. Write
a.m. Household goods of Eva
8-l0-8tc
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy
Lletwller and gas stoves,
Phone 992-2798
P. 0. Box 44, Martinsburg,
1210 Washington Blvd.
misc. glass and china. Have
Ohio, 43935 or call l-484-4440
423 -7521
BELPRE, 0 . .
after 7 p.m.
3 BEDROOM house. Cal l after 6
no telephone.
MILBtRRY AVE. ·
Real Estate For 5ale
8-8-90tc
·.
8-l4-2tp
SAVE . SAVE. SAVE .on the . p.m. 992"7363 ·
8-l0-6tc
A$K US ABOUT
P AND J HOME
-V.,1L-:-L-:A-::G-::E-=F-a~
br-:-fc-s-, ""
Tu- ppers
AND VICINITY
"
SUPER
SARGAINS"
now
----------NO. 1 Copper. 60c, Radiators,
PRE-FABRICATED
available at Berry-Miller
Plolns, open Monday through
APPLY
AT
30c, brass, 20c. batteries, 90c
MAINTENANCE
.Mobile
Home
Sales.
We
have
BRUSH
HOGS,
4x5
tl.,
phone
Friday. 9a.m. till 5 p.m. Back
each , c lean , dr.y Ginseng
on our lot 51 ate model60 x 12 2 992-5858.
·
roots. 560 a lb. Yellow root, $4,
&amp; REPAIR
i ~~ci~~~ and tan shipment THE DAILY SENTINEL
7-15-tfc
May apple, soc, per lb. M. A. and 3 bedroom Mobile Homes
Heating
Air Cond .
8 13 3
Hall , Reedsville. Call 378- that will be sold on a first come- ------~-­
t;~Mriqeration
. Plumbing - - - - - - -- -_ · tp
Pomeroy
first served basis. If you want WE now have unf l nlsh~d fur ..' 3 BR. country house, six
6249.
Elecrncdl
· Applidm- ~~ - Auto
7-31-lfc an honest to goodness bargain nlture, dresser s, · chests . years old, with ap' KOSCDTXOSMETICS &amp; WIGS.
ONE 992 2156
Buiti to Your'Specs
Air Cond. - Residential or
: Specials during August are PH
"
on a good Mobile Home - shop
Boston roc kers , ca bine ts,
to Job Slit
Delivered
pr.oximately
10
acres~
near
Commercial .
• . Kolicentree , Moist Kate,
now at Berry-Miller Mobile
hutches, desks. Come in and
OLD
furn
iture,
oa
k
tabl
es,
or
Centerville
Thurman
~ ' Kleanslng Kream, One Day AGGRESSIVE debit insurance
Sales, 705 Farson Streej,
see our selection. Pomeroy
215 N. Second
clocks, ice boxes, brass beds, Home
, ' Sachet &amp; others. Phone Helen
Belpre,
Ohio,
phone
423-9531
Recovery, 622 E. Main St., which is 18 miles N. of
agent. Wanted tor Pomeroy .
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
dishes
or
complete
Phone
992-3509
Gallipolis. Priced $11,000.
Pomeroy . 992-7554.
closed Sundays.
,.•' . Jane Brown, 992-5113.
Middleport area. Mvst be able
households
.
Write
M.
D.
8-2-lfc to work on ow.n Initiative after
Owner R. E. Knotts. Will
8-9-6tc
24 Hour Service
· MATERIALS CO.
I
Miller, Rt . 4, Po meroy, Oh io, 8-9-6tc
consider
land
contract
with
713-5554
Mason, W. V•.
proper train ing. Some sales
call 992-6271 .
All work guaranteed.
12 x 60 MOBfLE Home, see 1973 l4 x70 MOBILE home, reasonable down payment.
~ GIFTS and novelties for all
experienc;e preferr~d . If in5-13-tfc
t occasions . All ;utlficlal
Helen Baer·, Syracuse.
. washer and dryer, d is h· Phone 44~-2911 .
send complete
1
flowers , 20 pet. off. Smalleys terested,
8-7-tfc washer, stainless steel sink,
resume to P. 0 . Box 1817, WANTED
EXCAVATING. Dozers , large READY -MIX
CONCRi:TE
for
auct ion,
'. Giff . Shop, Chester. Phooe Huntington, W. Va. Attn : Bil l
.
garbage
disposal
,
eye
level
and
small;
Backhoes
and
7
ROOM
house
with
·
bath
in
to your
delivered
r
ight
household goods. Tools, most
It 985-3537. .
'CASH paid for all makes and ' oven, range, dacron-polvester
Honaker.
loaders on track and tires;
Rutland, air conditioned,
pri:tject. Fast and easy. Free
anything
of
value.
Will
buy
or
~8·8·61c
models of mobil e hom es. carpet, large lot. Phone 7IJ·
S.S-Itc
La -boy
estimates. Phone 992-3284 .
carpeted, gas furnace. dish- Dump trucks sell on commission. Will haul.
Ph one area code 614-423-9531. . 3083.
-:c-----S.eptic t anks in se
rvice
.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co .,
washer,
double
oven,
range,
Call
992-3354.
Hay
man
's.
- UPHOLSTER your own fur·
Middleport,
~~~~-------·
~4~
1~
3
~
tf~
c
,
_______________
~
7~
l8tf
stalled.
George
I
Bill)
Pullins,
Ohio.
double
garage,
large
carport,,
7-2S-tfc
"Notice
nlture. We have all the supphone
992-i478
or
992-7402.
4
acres
cleared
and
fenced,
6-30-tfc.
;· plies you will need, fabrics, MEIGS SENIORS, Make your
For Sale
2-9-ttc
small barn and other
r foam for cus._ions and padappoin.tment now to have your
Pels for Sale
GROCE RY business for· sa le.' Real Estate For Sale
bu ildings. Phone 614-142-6834.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEAN~D
{ ding . We cut foam to any size· SENIOR
PORTRAIT taken .
Building for sale or ~ ease.
. :
, ...~ ·30- lfc SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC REASONABLE rates. Ph . 446~ .or shape. Swivel bases, coHon1 Dates for taking MEIGS PARKVIEW Kennels . Poodles,
Ph one 773-56 18 from 8: 30p.m . LARGE, coovenlent buil!ling
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell ,
• burlap legs, zipper, welt cord,
SEWAGE SYSTEMS . ONner
l loy male . and l female.
SENIORS are August 22, 23,
lots
at
Rock
Springs.
Area
to
10
p.m.
for
appoi
nlmenl.
and Operator .
~
~ . webbing, dacron, chip board
24 and 25, and Sept. l. Take ·--rohone 992-5443.
res tr ic ted for houses only. WELL PLANNED 3 bedroom, 2 CLEANED, REPAIRED.
·
3- 20~tfc
·
5•12-tfc
If plus many other ·items and
7-15-tfc
MILLER S:ANITATION ;
advantage of Special Senior
Tuppers Plains 1!. Chesler
bath home with
full
~ · living room suites at low, low
STEWART, OHIO. PH . 662·
Prices for these days only .
Water
available.
Call
or
see
2
car
garage
and
basement,
WELL PLANNED 3 bedroom, 2
i prices. Pomeroy Recovery , Cal GROVER 's ST UDIO,
3035.
.
family room ..· Priced in mid
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
bath hom e with
full . Bill Witte, 992-2789.
•· 622 E. Main, Phone 992-1554.
Business
Opportunities
Middleport,
Oh
io.
Phone
992·
7-24-ttc
20s,
plus
lot.
Located
on
larg~
10-4-tfc
Complete Service
7-l9-30tc
basement, 2 car ·gara9e and
2475.
WORLD
FAMOUS
BARDAHL
co
untry
lot
off
Rt.
7,
W
Phone 94N82l
fa
mily
room
.
Priced
rn
mid
~
-:B:cE::cD::-R::-OO=:cM
:
-h:o
u~se:-o-n-;-L:::i
n
co
ln
.
.
8-1-221c
3
min utes from Parkersburg SEWING MACHINES. Repair
DISTRIBUTORSHIP Now
Racine, Ohio
' YARD SALE Aug. 14, 15 and 15,
20's,
pl
us
Ia!.
Localed
on
large
Hill.
living
room
,
kitchen.
a nd 15 minutes from
service, all ma kes. 992-2284 1
a~w"ailable on local level serCrill
Bradford
. ,' at 829 ·south Third Ave .,
country
lot
off
Rt.
7
20
bath
and
utility
room
,
extra
Pomeroy . Financing already
The Fa bric Shop, Pomeroy.
vic ing Bardahl dealers. This
5-l-ffc
NOTICE
TO
BIDDERS
minutes from Parkersburg
large lot over 1 acre. Has
' Middleport.
arranged· wi th low down
Authorized Singer Sales and
service type busi ne~s can be
Sealed proposals will be
and
15
minutes
fr
om
driveway.
$13,000.
Call
8-l3-3tc received by ·the Board of
payment. Contac1 Pauline E. Ser vice. We Sharpen Scissors.
operated full or part time with
'
. EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
Pomeroy. Financing already
Sunday ~fter 12 noon ; on
no
selling
experience
Education
of
thf
Eastern
Loca
l
:· '- ----,----Cunningham Realty , phone '----~----3--2-9-_tfc
arranged
with
low
down
kd
ft
5
992
and backhoe work ; septic.
School District at the Easter n
necessary. Profit potential is
·
payment. Contact Paul ine E.
wee ays a er p.m .,
· 614-423-8690 co llect.
•
tanks installed ; dump trucks
High School office at Reeds unlimited .
Conservative
7
7-24-ttc FOR FREE estimates on
Cunn ingham Realty . Phone
324 .
and
lo- boys tor hire ; will haul
ville, Ohio, until twelve o'c lock
8-S-tfc
es timate of $95 for each day
aluminum siding. Starn Doors
(614) 423-8690 Collect.
(1'2:00) noon , prevai ling local
fill
dirt,
top soil, limestone
worked. A $3,495 Investment
and Windows , Carports,
7·19-tfc
time. September 11. 1973, and
Call Bobar Roger
and
gravel;
puts you in bus!ness. WRITE
opened immediately thereaft er ,
Marquees and Rolling , Phone
Jeffers,
day
phone 992-7089 ;
TODAY (Include phone
for· the furnlsh.lng of a ll
Charles Lisle, Syracuse. Ohln.
night
phone
992-3525
o~ 992number) : BARDAHL, INC.. .EXCELSIOR Salt Works , E.
materials and · performi ng all
Carl Jacob, Sales Rep 5232.
Your Right to Know
labor for the erect ion of :
MEDIA, Penna . 19063.
resentative. V. V. Johnson
Main St., Pomeroy. All kinds
'2-1) -tfc
ADDITIONS TO
8-l2-3tc
Son, Inc.
and
of
salt
water
pellets,
water
··and be informed of the tun e.
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
nuggets, block ·salt and own
tions of your government are
6-22-ttc HOME repair or remodeling .
REEDSVILLE, OHIO
4mbodled in public notices. In
Ohio
River Salt. Phone 992Plans and specifications ma)'
Reasonable rates. 1st class
thet ~.elf -government charge~
be obtained from the. Architect, Employment Wanted
3891.
work.
Call Bob or Bill. 992~'. all citizens to be informed ; ,
RON SHEPARD, Floor , Wall
Eeeslev, Ll~e &amp; Vargo, 326 Front EXPERIENCED painter, In·
6-5-ffc
5968.
608
~ this newspap-er urges ever~
Street, Marietta , Ohio, -45750,
Remodeling, Ceramic file
terior and exterior. Call Don
8-10-lOtc
: citizen to read and stildy th~se for a deposit of $25.00 which will
baths.
Box 28D, Rutland 742·
E.
MAIN--~.1
!972
TAG-A-LONG
.Travel
Van
Meter,
985-3951.
notices. We strongly ad¥tse be refunded lt the documents
3664.
8-2-30tp
Tra iler, 22 ft. sleeps 4, selfthose citizens, seeking furthe r ' are returned unmarked and in
POMEROY
ST~TEL Y BRICK
6-26-tfc O'DELL WHEEL Alignment
lnformatlorr, .to exert,ise thei1·~ oood condition with in ten days
contained. Exce llent · con- POMEROY - In good repair
right of aCcess t6 publlt after bid due da1e . Shou ld no Ilocated at Crossroads. Rl . 124,
· dillon. Call 992-7401.
JUST RENOVATED
records and public meeting s. proposal be submitted and the
now back to w:ork. Complete
8-12-6tc with a ll large room s. 3
2 bedrooms, living room , · DOZEc.l&lt; and back hoe work:
.drawings not returned five days
bedrooms, nice bath, open
front end service, tune up and
pond s and septic lanks , ditch- - -- - - kitchen, bath, all new floor
before the bid due date, the fu ll
brak.e
service. Wheels
stairs
frorn
living.
Gas
REDUCE
excess
fluids
with
Ing
service
!
top
soil
,
fill
dirt,,
amount of the deposlf will be
covering, almost new block
balanced
electronically. All
limestone
;
B&amp;K
Excava
tlnQ
.
Fluidex
Lose
weight
with
fireplace
in
dining.
All
air
forfeited .
build ing 25x29 wi th garage,
NOTICE OF
Phone 992,5367 or 992-3861. · work guaranteed. Reasonable ·
Dex-A-Diet capsules al. conditioned, and ce ntrally
Separate
blds
Will be received
APPOINTMENT
wrches. gas furnace, large
rates. Phone 742-3232.
·
9-l,tl c
Nelson Drugs.
heat ed. Only 125,000.
Case No . 20911 on:I. GENERAL CONTRACT
iev el lot. $8,500.00.
·
2-18-lfc
8-12-3fp
i1tat• of Frtnk G. Roush
11. PLUMBING CONTRACT
Ut't:N · Roger Hysell's ----------~----~-""·-u~
2'1• YEARS OLD
- - -- - DtCIIUd .
40 ACRES
Ill.
HEATING
8.
VEN
·
Garage
near
crossroads on St. SMALL additions , remodeling,
In new addition, 3 bedrooms,
• Notice Is hereby given that TILATING CONTRACT
1970 YAMAHA 360 Enduro. Call ON BLACKTOP - S bedrooms,
Rt
.
124;
all
mechonlcal
· work
·Frances W•ber of 8413 Grandon · IV . ELECTRICAL CO N ·
structural repair . Rough and
large closets, nice kitchen ,
after 5 p.m. 985·3918.
Avenu&amp; , Columbus, Ohio, has TRACT
including
aulomatlc
trans
fl nl s h carpentry antique
8-l2-6tp bath, large kllchen , nice
bath, utility spa ce, · all
boon duly appo inted Ad ·
gambrel root barn with shed, 3
Monday
-Friday,
miss
ions
.
repair. Reasonable prices.
All
proposals
must
conta
in
electric, carport, large lot,
mlnlstratrlx of t~e E5tate of the name of every person Jn.
8:30a.m. to 5 p.m . Saturday
Private carpenter. Call Scott
shed
and
bay
Implement
OLIVER
60
tractor
with
6
ft
.
Frink G. Roush. deceased , late teres ted therein , be su bmitted
hardwood floors , $20,000.00.
8:30
to
12
noon
unless
by
Ma
son, 992-7300 .
seve
ral
olher
bui
ldings
.
semi-mounted
niower
.
.
For
Of Minersville, Meigs County, on forms furn ished by the Ar ·
ON
YOUR
DIAL
appointment. Phone 992-5682
8-14-6tp
Ohio.
le
or
trade
for
cattle.
Phone
$16,500
.
sa
end the ·acco m. panled by ,
CLOSE IN
or 992-7121. .
· Dated thiS 9th day of August achllect
742-5322.
satisfactory Suret)' Bond or ·a
t '"'
ot::-f""o-n -,th:-e- r lg ht
1':36 acres, 4 bedrooms. bath,
•1973.
7-25·30tc -=a-=o-::W-:-:-L-:E::R::S:-g-e-:8-12-61c
Certified Check on ;, bank do ing
NEW HOME
foot
this
season
with a pair of
din ing room , 8 rooms In all.
FAMILY
ROOM
3
Mann ing D. Webster, business In the Sta te of Ohio, In
Knapp
aero
tread
cushlooed
AUTOMOBiLE
In
surance
been
carpeting
,
tile
,
paneling
,
RT. 124 at edge of Rvtland over bedrooms, 1112 baths, one enamount of s percent of lhe For Rent
Judge the
insole,
championship
grade
total
value
of
the
bid
.
Bid
can
.:::e
ll
ed?
LOs
t
vour
1!2
acre
of
lot.
3
bedroom,
part basement,
frame
Common Pleas Court,
bowling
shoes.
Bob
Kysell,
li
cense:·
Call
992·
operator's
utility, bath, 27 x 15 living and closed, vent fans In both . Lots
Probate Dlvlslo'Tl Security will be returned within TWO trailer lots in Middleport;
conslructlon . $9,500.00.
1428.
992-5324.
10 day s after contract for the
'h duplex In Bradbury ; phone.
Meigs County, 0~ io work
dining area with fireplace, of c losets, nice kitchen wllh
has
been
ex'!cuted
.
6-15-ttc
·
8-l4-6tc
(I) 14, 21 , 28, 3tc
stove.
Double
garage
in
the
wall
to
wall
carpeting,
new
before 6 p.m. 992-5693.
Failure of any bidder to enter
l FLOOR PLAN
basement.
dishwasher
and
disposer,
As
king
529,500.00.
----~----~===-------into and e..ecute a contract for
8-1J.Stc
3 bedrooms, bath, kitchen
ELNA and White Se wing "'0BfCE home repair, Elec~
patio and garage. Harold
the work covered by th e - - - - - - - - new
cabinets
and
S.S.
has
,
Machines ... Service on all
trlcal plumbing and hoofing.
Wolfe,
Call
742·4191
.
proposal he has subm itted, 3 AND 4 ROOM . furnis hed and
,UNION AVENUE
sink, dining room , TV roorn ,
makes . Reasonable rale s.
Phone 992' 5858 ·
B-l2-3tc POM EROY - 2 bedroom
within ten 00) days fo ll ow ing
unfurnished
apartments .
7-15-tfc
noti ce of award of such work to
Phone 992 _5434 .
ljOTICE ON FILING
ut ility room , lots at new floor
Th e Sewing Ce nte r , Mid OF INVENTORY
hlm,sh atlcaus e th ebi d security
_
.tfc
1
WALK-IN
cooler,~ x 12 with home, bath, basement, porch
dleport,
·Cover
ing
,
por
ches.
full
Ohi
o.
4 '12 , com pressor and condenser. and large lot. ·All utilities.
AND APPRAISEMI;NT
to become forfeited by 1he
11 -16-ltc
basement, double gara ge
r The State of Ohio, Melg t bidde r to t he Owner as -----~------"
Asking $7,500.00.
. This W~tk's SpecioJ
liqu
rdeted
damages
and
not
as
a
TRA
ILER
space
on
old
Route
Call
m
·5186
.
r County. Probate Court.
and work shop . Double lot. GENE ' S - B1:jljy
SHOP,
8-l2-31c
t
To the Executor Or Ad · penalty because of such fa ilure
33, 'h mil e from Meigs High
$13,000.00.
reasonable rates, work
NEW LISTING
~ mlnlatn~or . of the eataf&amp; ; to on Ihe pari ot the bidder .
School. Ca ll 992-2941.
Each
bidder shall
be
guaranteed . Lincoln Hill ,
such of the following as are
1s
·MIDD LE PORT - 10 acres for
PROPERTY IS GE TTING
25-lfc
•: residents of the State of Oh io, prepared , in the event he Is lh e - - - - - - - - -7-·
Pomeroy . Phone 992-$211 ,
Back to School Sale!
houses . All ut ilit ies by
L.
vis : - the surv iving spouse. the accepted bidder , to fu rn ish
HIGHER,
BUY
TODAY
8-5-14tc
property. A nice place for
t next of . kin. the blneflcler ies Surl!'ty Bond , in a form ROOMS by lhe week, 518 up ."·
AND
SAVE
,
: under the will ; and to the at. satiSfactory to the Owner , In the
apartments, mot el. super
I'Aelgs Inn, Pomeroy.
.
HENRY E. CLELAND
WILL 1 KIM
cut tref!ls,
r forney or attornys representing amount of 100 per cen t ot the
mark et, ice cr eam drive. in, or
7-1
2-tt
c
contract
pr]ce,
guaranteeing
BROKER
shrubbery.
Also
pain!
roofs.
eny of the atortmenfioned
qu ick food eslabllshment.
th&amp; successful com pletion of the
PlriOnl :
Phooe 949·3221 or 742·4441 ,
992-2259
.
Oren c . Wears, Route 2, work bid upon .
TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
·
7-1B·3ofc
If no Answer 992-2561
, PomtrO)', Melgl County, Oh io,
Proposals may be malted or Park, Minersville. Phone 992NEW HOMES
ENJOY
THE
COUNTY
dellvered
.
lf
m·
a
lled
,
send
via
I COlt No. 20978 .
MODEL HOM E- 3 bedrooms,
.HARRI SON'S TV servi ce and
FAIR
V~kswagen
You tra hereby notified thillt registered me II In time for bid 1324·
8. 7.tfc
l'h baths with vent fans, Iaroe
service ca ll s. Phone 992-2522.
the Inventory and
Ap · opening .
BUY ONE PAIR AND
Bidders shell designate on lhe - - - - - - - - 2-9-lfo
closets In eac h bedroom .
pralstment of the 11tate of the
/ lfQrtmtntlontd, deceased, late envelope that It Is a sealed bid, TWO BEDROOM mobile home ,
G!:fONE PR. FREE .
Utlllly,
was
her
ond
(!ryer
hOOk
1 or &amp;old County. v/u tiled In this ind icate the prolect be ing bid.
ups. Ca rpeting , storm lloors, PAGEVILLE, Ohio ·lncludet
coodltloned and patio. All
I
Court. Sdd Inventory and the division upon wh ich he Is "air
utilities . pa id. Robert Will,
house, .-t rooms down, 1 up,
storm windows. Garage and
~ Appralllmtnt WIJI bit for bidding, the narTJe and addren
POMEROY
Only 1,000 ' m iles
Racine
,
949-3811.
garage,
workshop, anll ap.
of
bidder
and
addressed
to
:
hllrlno
before
thll
Court
on
the
neorly
an
acre
of
land
lor
only
1
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Eutern Local Board
proximately
1'12
acres
wlfh
21thdlyofAugult, 191J.ot 10:00
8-l0-61C
Nice llltlt car.
$22,000 .00 ..
Phone 992-2181
of Education
O'cloc~ A.M.
young orchard. 1 block out of
Eutern High School
Any person dlllrlng to file
Rl . 692, $10,500. lnformotlon
PRIVAJt: meermg room tor
, R.l ldSYIIIe , Ohio ~5772
HAVING TROUBLE
:.. IXCIPtiOr'!l fhtreto must file
a!
house.
any
organization
;
phone
9n
1
CA NNING
Toma to es, SELLING, CALL US, WE
, thtm II ltllt flvl days prior to The Owner reserves the righ t
8-12-tfc
~915 .
to accept ~nV bid, to wa ive any
cuc umber s, mangoes, and NEED LAROE HOUSES,
,· the elite ut tor htaring .
3-ll -ttc
t'·
Given undfr my hand and or all Informalities In bids and·
ca ntalope s . Gerald ine
LARGE FARM$,
LOTS, 2 BEDROOM home In Mid·
' ' Mil of told Court, th is lOth day or rtl.ct any or ali bids et hi •
Cleland, Racine.
~cit
dleport. Pantlllng, large
~ er Augu&amp;t 1973,
MO B! L E home space lo
discretion .
7-31 -tfc ACREAGE AND RIVER
living room; bath, nice kifNo bid may be wllhdrewn for
Syracuse. Phone 992-5858
"You'll Llkt Our Qual ltv ,
..
·
·
Manning o . Wtbllfr a period of 30 day1 .
chin
with slde ·by-sldt
Way
ot Doing Buslnno.'•
By
order
of
tl'1e
Elltern
Local
·
6-21:.-tfc
Judgt l~d .ex.olflclo
AT SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet,
refrigerator and lr .. zer,
GMAC
FINANCING
Clerk of S'!ld Court Board ot Educotlon, Rttdsv ille, ·FuR·N IS, H D
b
washer, dryer/ and range.
Oh·lo.
E , 2
edroom · Chesler, Ohio. Sliver Angels,
m
.sm
Pomeroy
39c,
3
for
a
dollar
,
10
ga!lon
Corpeted. Forced air furnace .
apartment, adults only .
I~ Jontl E. Morris
Open
lvtnlnge
'TIII:OO
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy:
se lvps, 110.
~one 992-2362.
C. O. Newlond, Middleport. Ca ll m .3874.
Chltf Dtpuly Clerk
TIIS P.M. hi.
Phone
tn-5421
r
8-12.6tc
8·1-13tc
fl) lA, II, Itt
,
Clor~
8'1-tfc_
(8) )4 , 21. 28 (9) •· ~lc
Monday Otadllne 9 e . m
Cancellation - Cor'rec: t.lc;ms

®

·QUALITY

BARNEY
OL! BULLET DRU6
ONE OF PAW'S SOCKS
OUT 0(11 TH' PORCH

AI\!' CHAWED ITTO
THR EA DS THIS
MORNII\I '

I BE.r
SNUFFY
PITCHED
A FJT!J

ROOFING

ALL WEATHER .

o.

~~~.~CLA~]:'IT!E~R-..., ''
T~O.Y MUST
~AVE ~AD SOME
RAB ID F'ANS
f.! ERE IN Tf.l E

WOW!

.o

!tll~ol'&lt;t ~ . l ..

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
•5.55

Ill~~~

8 ..- /4-

Oil

0
BACK &gt;-lOM E, TH EY~E
U SUA ~L'I CONTENT TO TEAR
~OWN THE GOAL POSTS!.

COLOSSEU. H!.

j;o---------------l

Pomeroy Motor Co.

T._ l"

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED

I THIHI(. You

MODERN
SANITATION

PRICE

;==========--,

Buy

CARRIER
WANTED

Ph. 742-6271

Tltt JACI'POT,
f.~Nif.

Dick's

SMITH NELSON
. MOTORS. INC.

HOUSE
FOR SALE

~

fiNAI.r..V HIT

1306, I .JUST GOT WORD
IHAT HAL MARTINS WAS
/({LlEO IN AN AUID
ACCIDENT

WOOD TRUSSES

,. ===---------

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

GASOUNE ALLEY

Mr. Wallet, what if 40u
were sic14 and called

doctor...

S61JciJT'I OOLLARS A. DA'/ WE'RE Sf'EWDit-11.:&gt; ON
SUNQl i~E' AIJD "'OU BUR'/ '-/0Jr&lt;6&amp;1..-F 1"-1 TH5 ~D!

4

.

LI'r.l'LE ORPHAN ANNIE
f " ' t OOtt' BELIEVE WHAT I'M Sf8fi• •••
BECAUSE I oat' WANTA BELIEVE IT!~

-

--- --

PUBLIC NOTICt:S

-==========,
We.talk to you
like a oerson.

WMP0/1390

- - - -- -

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1. Dross
5. German
city
10. Subside
11. Eddie of

DICK TRACY
SEND A
STRAIT

MV BRO'fl.lER WAS
A VICioUS CROOK!

IM GLAD HES

GONE!

------

AMANDA PANDA

ROBINSON'S

a.EANERS

r

'

writer,
Andre S. Kirghiz,
U.S.S.R.
city
7. Thomas
Mann

work
(3 wds.)

8. At t his

time ·

9. Negative
contracti on

MA'I., '/OIJ

&lt;?~EM

Putz L.£17.

WHAT A~E 'IOU
THINKING

Yesterday's Answer

11. Not make
it
15. Assailed
(2 wds.)
18. Red
brother's
shelte r
19. Nobleman
2l Skidoo!
~4 . Go
hungry

26. Immediately
( 2 wds.)
27.-- out
(beat)
28. P~~shed
29. Growing
outward
31. Asseverate
34. Opposite
of WSW
35. "C'Si Bon"

Ae&gt;oun

I SHAMC

II

auq

tll

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I
I () I I I
UMPAKE

BLOTEG

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Now lll'l'llnp the circled lttten
to form the ourprfM ..,.,...., u
. lUUetltd bf the obove cor1oon,

[,=s~~-~~~'!·~IIISWII~~·~·=~~ rx r rJ
_ _

.

l

.

(b••en l•m9r,.w)

lumhluo MOUSE GRIME TAMPER VANDAL

y tllcrd..r'•

Auw~ra

CaWf 9

011 a lin&amp;fe

condillon! -GOT MAIIIID

ant
o[one
of

17117 '/OU !SVE.R NOTiCE.
IH E. &lt;;EeDS OF1 A RASPBERI\Y

Jacob's

i

M E. IN? IP£, BuT WITH

;,

form four ordlnarr words.

28. De s~end·

A ?TRA~BE.R~'/
TH£'1 AI'!£ OllT "?

sons
30. Burmese
knife
31. Objective
32. Sine
qua -33. Feel
sorrow

35. Sicilian
city
36. Balanced
37. Religious
body
38. Postpone
39. Cornor

DAILY CltYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

2~HOUR

.

12. English
poet
13. Cling to
U. Greek
letter
15. Go apace
16, Barnyard
denizen
17. Intellectual
19. Gravy 20. Legal
document
21. Kitchen
staple
22. Evian
or
Vichy
23. Wall
24. Proof-

Unscramble these four Jumbler,
letter to ea,cti squ&amp;re, to

~ne

suffix

KG Coupe

(Upon Request)

~.Whipped

3. Dostoyev·
sky work
(3 wds.)
4, "Oh by
Jingo, Oh
by-"
5. French

word
25. Miss
.
Ponselle
27. Feminine

1970

CLEANING.

~lJJJJOOIDM;-u..t=~!..Jc

of bees

reader's··

or

SLACKS
"h PRICE SALE

DOWN

1. Multitude

song

--o=,-----,=~~

. BIG YANK

~

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for a~other. ln this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two 0 '•· etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each d•y the code letters are !liiTerent.

7695
Karr.&amp; Van

FJGP
HREQZ
FEW INCHe !&gt;
1\NP I'D ~Me
&amp;EeN Alfllf.•

BlllfNI'!

l'QiiP
BX

CRYPTOQUOTKS
FB SJ RI C, QF
FCP

1 -;;Q~~
QE

FCP

._r___ ....;~...-

EBRS .- JWBW

Yesterday'• Cryptoquote; IF YOU WANT TO LEARN
ABOUT TliE }liND 0~' A NATION. STUDY ITS RENTAL
LIBRARIES.- WILHELM HAUFF .
(® 197:1 'Kintr Fonluros !=! yndieate, Ine.'t

&gt;

,

'

�•
8- The Dally Sentinel. Middleport-Pom~roy, 0 .. Au~ust 14. 1973

_D ebate is reaching far

Title I ·

Singers here
Car recovered
on Claire-E
by sheriff in
Wednesday at 8
'!'he COIJle Alive Singers will Meigs County

Hollon, Dean and Holter Meigs courity's best growers of hay

Winter prospects

(Continued lrom page 1)
(Continued from page I)
other crops.
WASHINGTON t UP!) - In a wrongdoing may have oc- the Seriate Waterga te hearings salary from Charles Downie
A respondent to the NFIB survey, a MHSSBchusetts fuel oil
revealed their existence . The to Sam Crow who is working
debate reaching to tho funda- curred."
d&lt;ialer who serves 6,000homeswlth65 employees reports that the
While
House declined to pro- with football until Downie
mentals of American govorn.
" Withholding the recor·
The Meigs County sherllf's rules established lor ,petroleum retailing totally ignore the need
ment , Special Watergate din gs, " Cox said, "may duce them. District Judge JOhn relllrna from the east, and perform at the Pomeroy levee
for percentage mark-up with the result that he and many of his
Prosecutor Archibald Cox con· frustrate prosecution of J . Sirlca has set Aug. 23for oral appointed as cooks, Florence at 8 p.m. Wednesday on The dept. recovered a 1971 t'OIIeagues in fuel oil retalllng may be forced to close up.
Clalre.E, a converted Ohio Chevrolet Monday which was
tends that the president of the w•·on~doers in high places ... arguments. 'fhe Supreme Barrell and Helen Hood.
This respondent writes, "The rollback of our mark-up to the
reported stolen some time
River packet boat.
United States is not a sovereign forcing the grand jury to rely Court is expected eventuallly
Pending approval of the
The llull of the Clalr~:-E was Saturday in Moundsville, W. January 10 J973level establishes our margi!IB below that of June ·
to decide the case.
monarch and cannot withhold on inforior evidence ... "
Disadvantaged Pupil Program
The now grand jury, sworn In Fund, the board employed as built by Dravo In 192&amp; and the Va . The case is still under 1971 by a~ost 5 pet. (This is due to the pricing lnstablllty .of
material evidence from a
Cox is seeking the tapes of
January 1973, wht&amp; temporarily reduced our margin to
criminal investigation .
nine meetings and telephone by Sirica Monday, wiU look into aides to work six hours per day boat saw service on the mid· investigation.
,·
Two · complaints were unusually low levels.)
Cox filed a 67.page brief in coversatlons Nixon held with alleged politica l espionage and for 182 days beginning Aug. '1:1 Western Rivers, primarily the
"Our
non.product
costs
are
about
45
pet.
of
our
total
costs.
received
by
the
department
Ohio
and
U.S. District Court Monday key aides, six of them involving sabotage during the 1972 (wage rate or $1.80 per hour ) Mississippi,
Monongahela.
When
new
she Monday concerning cruelly to These costs have risen 15-20 pel. since June 1971. The costs would
giving hls reasons why Presi· his former counsel, John W. presidential campaigns, a sub- Phyllis Dugan, Salem Center;
Include wages (up 18 pel.), fringe benefits (up 23 pet.) , lrl!Ck
dent Nixon should he required Dean lll, the only man who has ject which has been a side issue Nancy Clatworthy, Middleport was used as a packet In the animals. Apparently early costs (up 20· pel.), telephone costs (up 40 pet.), burner mainto turn over tape recordings of outrightly accused Nixon of in the Senate Watergate elementary; Donna Ohlinger New Matamoras-Wheeling Monday morning a horse tenance parts (up 15-25 pet.), taxes (up 26pcl.), etc.''
and two ponies own.
his office coversa tions to the complicity in the Watergate hearings. Sources said it will Salisbury; Myrvllle Brown, run.
"The use of the wholesale price of No. 2 fuel oil only on Aug.
Owned by Mr. and Mrs. Gene ed by Ruth Masters, Rt. 1.
also look at activities of .the Rutland, and Gertrude Casto,
federal grand jury in· cover-up.
12,
for
the estab!Wunent of ceiling price furth~ reduces our
Fitch, the boat was purchased Reedsville, got out of their
vestigating the Watergate
Dean Monday was named a White House ''plumbers,'' the Bradbury.
by the couple in 1965 from the pasture field onto Rt. 689 and margin by as much as 25-50 pet. That is, as the heating season
co-conspirato r, but not a group allegedly responsible for
affair.
The
board
set
the
rate
for
bus
approaches, more imported oil wlll be needed for assurance of
Meanwhile, a second federal defendant, in the New York the burglary of the psychiatrist drivers for kindergarten routes Seneca Towing Co. of walked down No.9 road. By ·the continued deliveries to hospitals, schools, and homes. This oil
grand jury was sworn in to conspiracy case against for· o( Pentagon papers defendant at $2.50 per hour and approved Cleveland and was taken to ilme Mrs. Masters found the will increase the average wholesale price of all oil.
Harmon's Landing at Fly, Ohio animals they had been shot in
investigate side · aspects of mer Attorney General John N. Daniel Ellsberg.
these
basketball
coaching
"Compare if you will, the cost today of imported No. 2 fue!
Cox, in his brief, said
where it was refitted . The the hind quarters and legs with
Watergate, including political Mitchell, former Commerce
changes, with head coach
oil in New York Harbor of about 22 cents per gallon with Exxon's
"dirty tricks" and the alleged Secretary Maurice Stans und President Nixon waived his Roger Brauer 's recom- name was officially changed to a shotgun by buckshot at close current price of 12.95 cents per gallon! Ev.en under the most
offer by Jnterrfational Tele- financier Robert Vesco, involv· right to secrecy when he let mendation, John Arnott from the Claire·E In 1968 from Its range. The sheriff's Dept. and favorable of conditions, we could experience a 2-3 cents increase
phone &amp;Telegraph Corp. (l'IT) ing alleged obstruction of a former aide H. R. Haldeman grade 9 to varsity assistant; foi'mer name, urhe Diesel.'' Meigs County Hwnane Society in the wholesale price this winter. This would represent a 33 pet.
listen to two of the tapes. The
Residents of the Big Bend . are investigating the incident.
to help finance the 1972 GOP securities case.
David
Jenklna
from
grade
7
to
An accident occurring early further reduction in margin. "
White House, in its brief,
area attending the Wednesday
co nvention in return for Cox Subpoenaes Tapes
grade
9,
and
Debnar
Haynes
to
While petrolewn product retailing furnishes an extreme
today on county road 5 In
favorable settlement of three
Cox
subpoenaed
the denied it waived any rights.
grade 7.
· concert, which Is free of chfirge Salisbury Twp., .4 of a mile example of government disregard of the essentials involved in
also will be given free tours on
presidential tapes Jnh• 2~ •Iter
antitrust cases.
The board commended
east of the .flt. 7 bypass in- business operation , many independent firms are expected to
the boat.
The President continued to
employes who had any part in
volved David E. Ellls, 21, suffer severe erosion of working capital, assuming wholesale
work on a Watergate statement
-the ·recent bus inspection,
Rutland, who was traveling ·prices continue to move upward, the Federation said. !Ji order to
he is expected to make to the
noting that they had done an
east on county road 5 when he maintain working capital, selling prices have to be based on the
American public Wednesday or
excellent job in getting the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
went off the road to the left and cost of replacing the goods sold, which Phase IV does not permit,
(Continued from page I)
Thursday.
buses ready.
ADMISSIONS - Gladys hit and broke a telephone pole. requiring instead that prices be based on the cost of goods at the
Not Above the Law
27th victims of a three-year homoSexual killing spree, were found
School building inspection at · Cross, Rutland; Mark Haley,
"The president is not above Mondsy on the shores of the Gult of Mexico. Police indicated Bradbury, Salisbury, Middleport ; Barbara Me· Hill vehicle was demolished. ilme of stocking,. the _federation concluded.
the law ," Cox said in his brief. today these could be the last ones recovered from the worst mass Pomeroy, Middleport and the Mahon, Middleport; William He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, treated
"Unlike a monarch, the presi- murder in modern U. S. history.
junior high will be done by Capehart, New Haven; Brian and released. He was arrested
dent is not sovereign."
"We will not do any more work today in Chambers County Frank
Porter,
board Jacobs, Middleport ; Paula for DWJ.
Instead, he said, sovereignty unless there is new information arising," Chambers County
president; Harrisonville by Joe Jean · Derenberger, Pomeroy;
RACINE - Six calls for help Martha Jay had taken an
rests with the people.
Sheriff
Louis
Otter
said.
The
four
bodies
discovered
Monday
Sayre
and
Salem
Center,
Roy
0.
Pearson,
Racine
;
11
Charles Thornton have been answered by the overdose of medication. She
' 40ur basic submis:;ion,
were unearthed in the Chambers County resort of High lsl!tnd as Rutland and the high school by Georgia Ervin, Middleport;
sald Cox, "is that the presidenl spectators including bikini clad girls watched. Most of the
Racine Volunteer E·R squad was removed to Veterans
Carol Pierce.
. ·
Nioka Zimmermali, Pomeroy. dies ip t~e East
since last Friday. They were: . Memorial Hospital.
of the United States, like lhe digging operations were handled by a yellow grading machine
Porter
suggested
that
John
DISCHARGES
Charles
Charles
M,
Thornton
died
Saturday at 7:30p.m. to the
humblest citizen, has an en- called a maintainer.
At I p.m. Friday to the Opal
Beaver director of trans· Eads, Jack Ginther,· Daisy Saturday at Hudson Hospital,
forceable legal duty not to
Taylor residence where Mrs. Clair· Boso residence in Great
Harrison,
N.J.,
at
the
age
of
57
portation,
.
be
told
to
lnatruct
Glassburn.
withhold from the grand jury
Taylor was suffering ab· Bend where a man was
AUTO AND STEEL MAKERS WERE FIRST IN LINE each bus driver to drive with
of
a
massive
stroke.
A
former
PLEASANTVALLEY
material evidence the produc: Monday for increases as price controls ended under Phase IV.
domina! pains. She was taken reported injured. He refused
resident
of
Pomeroy,
he
caution
at
the
new
intersection
Dtscharges:
Herbert
Tucker,
lion of which the court Chrysler Corp. asked the Cost of Uving Council for permission to
to Veterans Memorial Hospital treatment.
graduated
from
Pomeroy
High
of
highway
at
Routes
7
and
33.
Grimms
Landing;
Leonard
Saturday at 9:45 p.m. to the ·
determines to be In the public increase prices on 1974 models by an average of $71 . American
Saturday at 4:4~ P·tn·· to
School
in
1934.
The
following
substitute
Roush,
Letart;
Mrs.
Cbarles
Stringburg
ar~ where Gene
interest."
Jenny Watt Road where
Motors also applied to increase car prices an average of $55.
,
He
was
preceded
in
death
by
teachers
were
hired
as
Oliver,
Gallipolis
Ferry;
Mrs.
Lemley was suffering severe
The brief filed by the
Ford and General Motors were expected to apply for similar
by Robert Gary Bryan,
·
Crown C'ty
1 , 0 .; his parents, James M: (Pat)
President's own lawyers Aug. 7 increases for their models c;oming out in the fall. Under Phase recommended
palna of the abdomen. He was
Bowen,coun ty superintendent; William ~arker, Letart; and Ruth Thornton, and one
was in stark opposition to this. IV, prices can be increased only as much as higher dollar costs to
taken to Veterans Memorial
" ... the President is a!IBwera· the seller. Big companies, those with annual sales ol $100million Leo Kennedy, Sr., Falrle Cynthia Ury, Point Pleasant. brother, Maurice Thornton,
Hospital.
who was killed in an airplane
Partly cloudy west and a
ble to the nation but not to the or more, are required to give the council 30 days notice. before Kennedy, Grace Hawley,
Sunday 4:50 p.m. to the
in ,World War II.
crash
Suzanne
Wolfe,
Sandra
Holier Medical (;enter
chalice of thundershowers east American Legion Home for a
courts," it said, claiming that raising prices;bot the increases are automatic il the government
Luckadoo, Dana Kessinger,
Survivors include a brother, tonight. Lows In the low to mid two car accident. Injuries were
(Dlsebarged August 13)
under the ·doctrine of does not challenge them. ·
Robert,
Old Bridge, N. J., two 60s. Partly cloudy Wednesday, minor. Vlcilms were taken to
Corrine
Lund
and
Elizabeth
Grant Stanley, Mrs. Thomas
separation of powers. "The
Armco Steel Corp. said it was asking to reinstate price hikes Hilferty. ,
Mayes and daughter, Donald sisters, Ruth Reitman, Am· high in the 70s.
· Holzer Medical Center by
judicial branch lacks power to averaging 5 pet. on sheet steel products. These had been
The
board
entered
into
an
·Thornaberry, Roger Stafford, bier, Pa., and Rose Kelly' of
compel the President to scheduled for June, but were disallowed by the freeze . The ad·
private cars.
produce information that he miriistratlon would not give in on the freeze on beef that is agreement to participate in the Mrs. Thomas Hargett and Florida, and four nieces and
Monday, at I :45 a.m. to the
has determined it is not in the scheduled to last until Sept.l2. The meat industry, and disgrunt- National School Lunch daughter, Walter Buckley, seven nephews.
Goldie Swart residence, near
Program and to receive Stella Young.
LOCAL TEMPS
Funeral services will be
public interest to disclose."
the Masonic Temple where
led shoppers, have complained that this has don~ nothing but
commodities donated by the
Wednesday at I p.m. at the
Temperature in downtown Mrs. Swart had fallen and
Cannot Be Used
David
Wandling,
Wilma
·keep down the supply of beef.
United States Department of Wamsley, . Robert Tilton, Speer Funeral Home in Pomeroy Tuesd$y at II a.m. injured her back. She was
The President's brief said
Agriculture
and accepted James Sheets, Bessie Roberts, Columbus wl th burial to follow ·- was 78 degrees under Cloudy transported to Holzer Medical
the White House could not
cemetery board, ~.000 ; the responsibility for providing Charles Reimund, Mrs. Larry in Greenlawn Cemetery, skies.
function unless conversatlona
Cen(!lr.
coriununity pool, $21000, and free meals to eligible children Murray and son, Thomas
between the chief executive
and his advisers are secret.
(Continued from page I)
multi·pur,pose and general in the schools under its McClain, Deborah McGee',
Cox replied that this "veil of project updating but that government, $3,989.
jurisdiction. ·
William Howard, Mrs. David
placementon
the
priority
list
is
It
was
voted
to
advertise
for
Attending
)Vere
Hargraves,
confidentiality ... cannot be
Heaton and daughter, Mary
used as a clook when there is important. He recommended resurfacing approximately Porter, Don Mullen, Joe Sayre, Hamm, John Halliday, Angela
Substantial reason to believe that council approve the report $eVen town streets. Council Virgil King, and Carol Pierce, Garretson, Ernest Cllner,
that
serious
criminal when it is returned by the increased from so cents to $1 board members, and Lee Kessley Carnes,
Hazel
board 'of public affairs and per meal the amount paid Mrs. McComas, clerk.
Browning, Clyde Brown and
submit it to the ERA agency Marjorie Mullins for feeding
Paul Bell.
and, "see what happens."
prisoners . Mayor Zerkle
HITS DREAM SHOT
(Blrihs)
MASON DRIVE-IN
Council approved the report displayed a drawing in color of
George (Shorty) Hackett
Mrs. Jerry Tucker, a son,
of Mayor John Zerkle showing the new housing development made a hole-in.one Sunday at Buffalo, W. Va., Mrs. Jerry
' \,
' '
receipts of $1,748.35 in fines and at the corner of First and the Pomeroy Golf Course on Lambert,
a
daughter'
TONIGHT,
fees and $191 in merchant Walnut Sis. Ground was broken
Ewington and Mrs. James
195-yard hole No. I. His golfing . Ray, a daughter, Albany.
AUGUH 14
police collectiona for a total of on the project Monday .
$1,939.35 in July. The fire
Securing right-of-ways for partners were Paul Stmon and
Doube Feature Program
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
chief's report showed one fire the improvement of Page St. Sonny Gloeckner.
"WO/;I'EN FOR SAlE"
Discharges Aug. 10
(R\
call, 20 emergency runs (15 in by the slate was discussed and
WaHer Windsor.
Iva
Plus
town and five out of town ); 618 it was agreed to return the NOONE HURT
Thomas.
Mrs.
Greg
Robbins
"ANGELS
miles driven and 57 hours spent easement papers to the Stale
There were no Injuries in a and son, May Roach, Dale
WILD WOMEN"
Pearson, Robert Hamm, Joy
in
testing
fire
hose
and
trucks.
Highway
Department
in
two'
car accident Monday at Foreman,
tRl
Ray Wence, Patricia
Council transferred from the Marietta with the notation that 4:30p.m. on East Main St. in Shaffer, John Prall. Mary
general fund $1,500 to the fire town officials are not finan- · Pomeroy.
Jordan, Diane Hickman, Mae
equipment fund and gave the cially able to do the easement
According
to
police, Duffy, Mrs. Michael Chandler
son, Wilma Brown, Roger
third and final reading to an work.
Gary Snouffer, 17, Pomeroy and
Watson, Dorothy Spear, Chert
ordinance closing an alley at
o·fficlals attending the - was stopped on the old high Sisson, Sherry Queen, Samuel
Theatre Closed
the
rear
of
the
Ohio
Valley
meeting
we~ Mayor Zerkle, school road when Michael Pickens, Merrill Nibert, Clyde
· Augusl12thru August2J
Pauline Lewis, Jack '
Lumber Co.
clerk-treasurer Gene Grate, Cus~, 20, Pomeroy, turning McVay,
Hawley,
Betty Duncan, Mile
AUGUST24thru26
The Citizens National Bank Council Meptbers Mrs. Jeane Into a driveway 1 ran intO Dice. Shirley Bosler, Shirley
HEARTBREAK KID
was made the official Morgan, William Walters, Snouffer's vehicle. Custer was Albers .
Plus
Births Aug. tO
depository for active and Lawrence Stewart, Fred cited (or reckless operation.
THE MAN
Mrs. Ronald Dixon, son, New
inactive funds for the next two Hoffman and David Ohlinger; There was mediwn damage to Haven, W. Va .; Mrs. Bruce
August 31thru Sept. 4
Curtis, son, Rio Grande.
years effective Aug. 23. Council Pollee Chief J. J. Cremeans both car~.
BATTLE FOR THE
Discharges Aug. 11
discussed federal revenue and maintenance supervisor
PLANET OF THE
Eleanor
Sayre, Katie Roush.
sharing funds from July, 1973 Harold Chase.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
APES
Pamela Newell, Kathleen
to July, 1974, and agreed to
Harold Henry Hamm, -69, Moody , Thomas Jennings,
SHOW START.S7 P.M.
designate the $8,989 total to the
Pittsburgh, Pa., and Mildred Margaret Bragg. Mrs. James
Irene Schorn, 67, Pomeroy ; Blak e and son, Faye Ball,
HilL Della Hall .
Paul Edward Jones, 20, Rt. 1, Wanda
Richard Evans, Harold Davis,
••••,••••••'••••~..;,• ..,...
REUNION HELD
Athens, and Patricia Ann Ruth Cummins, Lola Crow,
1 The 23rd annual Hobstetter Walsh,
19, Rt. 3, Albany.
Gina Rutan, Mary Rutledge,
1reunion was held Sunday at
Harry Ray, George Pope,
I Royal Oak Park. Thirty-eight
Virginia McDaniel, Ralph
UNIT CALLED
Leach , Chri stoph er Howell ,
I persons attended. Officers The Middleport
E-R squad Janel Hinkle, Neva German,
elected were Russell Lee,
called at2:52 p.m. Monday Doris Fulks , Mrs. Larry
: II Hamilton, president; c. K. was
Dotson and daughter, Geneva
Nease,
Pomeroy ,
vice to the home of Georgia Ervin, Day, Larrue Caldwell, Yvonne
Iva Brown, Cecil Borber,
·I president; and · Mrs. Janet 324 Palmer St., who was taken Byrd.
Linda
Aikman, Richard Sweet,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
I Nease, secretary • treasurer . and
Steve
Wandling
. Belly Whaley,
admitted.
Ernest
Kirby.
I
Births Aug . 11
I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·• • • I ~:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;I'..::"GI'..::I'..::"'G&gt;..:;ooc.o-.o-.o-.c;:-..c;:-..c;:-..:&gt;&lt;,_ Mrs. Jerry Gollowayb son;
Crown City; Mr s.
ovid
I : CLOSED THURSDAY AFTERNOON : 1
Whaley, daughter, Oak Hill.
Discharges Aug. 12
I
AUGUST 16th FOR
• I
M•s. William Winters and
daughter, Lillian Smith, Mrs.
I
COUNTY FAIR.
:
Alex Schultz and daughter.
Roger Pa•lon, Albert Shifflet,.
Lido Durst, Mary Ward, Er·
ne•t
Halley, Jerem y Stone.
Auto Teller Window and
George Stamper, James

Tr&lt;1Phl"" were prt'lli'nll'&lt;l the
~P three huy growers of M~lgs
County folluwlng horticulture
and farm crop jud~inK
Tuesday ul the Meigs Coun ty
Fair ,
·
Winning the trophies
provtded by the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District
were Edison Hollon Minersville HI. I, the best in the 49
pet. or lesslegwne; Earl Dean,
Pomeroy Houle 3 all grass
hay. and Hoy Holle~, Pomeroy
Route J, for 50 pet. and over
legume.
. Second place in the category
won by Hollon went to Donald
Mora, Pomeroy Houle J, who
also won second placa In the
other two categories of hay.
Third place In the grass hay
went to Holter with Hollon
taking third also in the 49 pet.
or less legume hay. Besides the
trophies, the winners also
received cash awards and
ribbons.
firs t and ·second places,
respectively, in the farm crop
judging in other catetories
went to:
Dale ,Kautz, Pomeroy Route
3, and Ralph Lee, Racine Route
I, best six ears of yellow hybrid
corn; Richard Furbee, Racine
Route 2, Evelyn Hollon
Minersyille Route I, best si~
ears of yellow sweet corn·
Donald Mora, Edison Hollon'
best peck of wheal; Donald
Mora, best peck winter oats
first place only ; Edison Hollon,

News . . • in Briefs

Six calls for help answered ·

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UP!) - The Ohio Power Co.
was told Tuesday to clean up
emissions of sulphur oxides at
its Kammer plant, but to
continue using West Virginia's
high sulphur-content coal
The instructions were
handed down by the state Air
clean air standards at the
Moundsville area plant by 1976.
The cbmmisslon, however,
ordered the power company
not to resort to importing
western coal to achieve the low
emission standards, but to
improve tbe burning of West
Virginia 's resources .
Ohio Power officials, repre·
sen ted ~Y Charleston attorney
E. Glell!l Robinson, conlended
lecynology was not available to
use local coal and meet clean
air standards simultaneously.
Robinson said the firm may
appeal the decision to the
courts or reject its instructions
and m ~e t the compliance
schedul~ through the burning
of western coal.
Under the compliance schedule, the No. I unit' at the Kam·
mer plart must be brought into
compliance by Feb. I, 1976. The
No. 2 Uflit ~a s a May I, 1976
deadlin,, with the third unit's
deadline set for July 1, 1976.
In a lengthy session, the
commission aiso adopted
deadlines for attaining clean
air staqdsrds for the Mitchell
station of Ohio Power: two
stations of Monongahela Power
Co., and the Koppers Co., Inc.,
plant at Follansbee.
Colillllission Director Carl
Beard, JVho recommended the

See The Complete Selection

CARHARTT

MEIGS THEATRE

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Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.

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II lilbens ,ational
Tl

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Shawver, Earlene Saunders,

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Walk-up Window

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"IT'S TRUE"- - -

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Leslie Hoffman , Barbara
Carson, Doris Brewer.
Births, Aug. 12

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Mr s . Charles

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Fall and Back
To School Fashions

II

II Member FederalMIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
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Deposit Insurance Corporation I

son.

See Our New

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lhle,

Racine ; Mrs. William Mullins.
daughter, Gallipolis.
·

BAKER

PURNnURI

lOLA'S ,

Main at

Sycamore

POMEROY. OHIO

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. VICTOR SWAIN, Racine, w~s the proud wiMer of several blue ribbo!IB in the farm crops
JUdgmg at the Meigs County Fatr Tuesday. Swain, center, is presented his first place award for
a pi~ I.e of beets by Rex Shenefield, a fair board member in charge of farm crops tell and
Davtd Boothe, Vinton County agricultural agent, the judge.
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enttne
Devoted To The lntereat. Of The Meigs-Mmon Areca

Father, son save
3 men in cistern

action against Ohio Power,
said he realized the board had
no authority to order the firm ·
to burn West Virginia coal, but
supported \he move anyhow.
"I firmly believe that we
have proposed what should be
done," Beard said. "!think ihe
commission ought to order

Alfred and Jack Lyons of the
Racine E·R unit were credited
today. with having saved the
lives of three men overcome by
gas fumes in pumping out a
cistern on the Daniel Crisplip
property at Bashan Tuesday
evening.
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach, who came to
the scene, said Crisplip,Wilbur
Burke and Danny Kauff, all of
Long Boltom,.Rt. I, were using
a gasoline pump in a cistern.
The men went into the hole
with the ·pump without first

Robinson had argued that the
firm could not meel the clean
air standards without using
western coal, which would un.
· dermine West Wirginia's coal
industry.
"I submit to you now that the
evidence is overwhelming that
there's no such technology
available," Robinson said. ·
Robinson suggested the commission delay applying a dead·
line against the Kammer plant
because
new
modified
guidelines from the U.S. En·
vironmenlal
Protection
Agency may be forthcoming .
Later he suggested the agency
delay to see results of a new
test burn method near Pittsburgh.
Beard, however, said Ohio
Power could achieve the de.
sired results if it spent $36.45
million to modify its furnaces
and install scrubbers. With
such modifications, according
to Beard, the company still
could rely on West Virginia
coal.
·
The importation of western
coal, he said, would run $43
million,a year, while the use of
local resources would cost only
$19 million aMually.
"It is reasonable, it is economical and it ought to be
done," Beard added.

By United Press International
CAMP DAVID, MD. - PRESIDENT NIXON remained in
seclusiop today to complete the address he will make to the
nation tonight on the Watergate scandal. He will d ~ llver the half·
hour broodcasl starting at 9 p.m. EDT on all national networks
from hi$desk in the White House Oval Office.
Before he goes on the air, the White House will hand out a
, statement aimed at refuting some of the allegations, mainly
from former Whtte House counsel John W. Dean 111, that Nixon
discussed with his aides payment of hush money to an executive
clemency for Watergate defendants.
WA$HrNGTON - VICE PRESIDENT SPIRO T. Agnew has
offered lo tum over all his financial records and meet personally
with fe~eral prosC~Jutors looking into allegations that he accepted
kic kba ~ks from government contractors. His position was
ouUineq in a letter Tuesday to U. S. AttOrney George Beall in
Baltimore. "1 am prepared to do so immediately," said Agenew.
·A week ago he !old a news conference that the allegations were
"damned lies."
Tho Washington Post, quoting informed sources said today
prosecutors In Baltimore have been told by several Maryland
engineering contractors that they made regular cash payments
person~lly to Agnew In return lor choice state contracts while
Agneww&amp;s Maryland's governor. The riewspap~r also said It had
been to)d that since ·Agnew became vice president some funds
collected from businessmen ostensibly as campaign dona tiona
had been used to influence lhe awarding or federal contracts.
. HOlJSTON - WITH t~-iE NEED ~'OR A possible res~uc
night ~rowing more remote, Skylab's astronauts today kept
watch pver an aquurlurn which recordt!d the llrst birth In
SJ)acoO!ght history - o minnow .
The space agency Tuesday reset the rescue luw1ch - If
requlrod - to Sept. 24, two weeks later than previously unnounc•
(Continued on page II )

.

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AVANELHOLLIDAY, DEXTER a member of Laurel Grange stands at the attractive
Laurel Grange b~th which won first place and a $55 premium among four granges exhibiting
thts year atthe.Metgs County Flar. Second place and $50 went to Hio Valley Grange 26 12: third
and $45 to Racme, and fourth and $40 to Hemlock Grange. The fo ur gra nges were within 4' ·
pomts from the fourth to ftrst place m the judging, indica ling a close contest.

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~E~T 0~ SHOW in the IIJ!Ulteur painting competition at the Fair went to Mrs David Riggs
of Harnson¥1lie. Mother of SIX youngsters, Mrs. Rtggs pamted her first picture less than six
months ago after ~orne initial instruction in drawing from David Linas. Jack Slavin, pictured
here w1th Mrs. Rtggs, judged the show.
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Mrs. Riggs wzns
Mrs . David Riggs of
Harrisonville was top blue
ribbon winner In the amateur
painting competition at the
IIOih Annual Meigs County
Fair.
Jack Slavin, judge, awurdod
three blue ribbons lo Mrs .
Riggs for works in bll wiU• the
!lest of show award . ·
Premlwns and rlbhnns for
first and second places In the
· show , Ihe smallest in recent
years, were as follows:
OIL OR ACRYLIC, Land·
scape from nature, Mrs. Ri ggs,
Ill'S! ; Mrs. Delores Long,

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Pomeroy, second ; Portrait

fr~m life, Mrs. Riggs, first;

Murine Study.. Mrs. Riggs,
first; Mrs. Long , second, and
Flower study, Mrs. Elizabeth
Stumbo, Mlddlcp(&gt;l't.
DRAWINGS - Landscape
from nature, Mrs . Kate
Jarrell, Po me roy : Still Ll fe1
PatrlclaH. l.ochary, Pomeroy ,
first : Modern Art, Patricia H.
Lochary, Pomeroy, first.
William
Mayer
was
superintendent of the amateur
pointing division which had
nine entries.

Wealht·r

Partl y cloudy -west, chance
of showers cast today. High in
Ute mid to upper 70s. Clear
tonight. Low in the upper 50s to
the mid 60s. Sunny Thursday,
high in the upper 70s and low
60s.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Fair with highs In the 80o.
. Lows in the 60s.
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UN IT CALLED .
The Middleport E-R Unit was
called to the Howard Noble
residence at 8:09 a.m. Wednesd~y morning, to assist Ruth
West, who was ta ken to
Wteruns Men~ol'i ul Hospital.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Assistance
with
.the
Hospitalization Insurance
Program and reduction of Title
l remedial reading funds were
discussed Tuesday night by the
Eastern Local School District
Board of Education.
The board finally voted to
pay $10 toward the total Blue
Cross hospitalization insurance
of employes . It was reported
this will amount to about $500 a
month, but with the adoption or
the program, some employes
not now carrying the insurance
plan are expected to do so
which is expected to increas~
the costs.
According to the new for·
mula in Title I funds• the
Eastern district will receive
about $20,000 less than last
year. The amount last yea r
totaled about $24,000 while
during .the 1973-74 school year,
the district will receive only
$3,875. The board, to date, has
employed only one remedial
reading teacher under the Tille
I program .
Plans for the hiring of a
second teacher were scrapped
last night when the reduced
funds were reported . Willi this

I

year's grant and the carryover
funds from the past year, the
dlstric\ will not be hurt ·"too
badly," but the program win
be curtailed so that fewer
students will have the ad·
vantage of the remedial
reading program, Supt. John
Reibel said.
Contracts awarded by the
board, included school bus
insurance to Henry Beaver,
representing The Grange ; the
Pomeroy National Bank as the
official depository of ·active
funds' for the next two years;
City lee and Fuel, Middleport,
for fuel oil, and Standard Oil
for gasoline for the next year.
(Continued on page 20)

around the cistern when the
men went Into it discovered
almost at once something was
wrong when they . failed to
respond .to conversation
directed to them. The rescue
units were notified at once .
The men were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the .Racine and Pomeroy E·
R squads. Burke and Kauff .
were adml~ted.
On the way to the hospital
AHred Lyons, who was driving
the ER unil, was involved In a
minor automobile accident.
Halley Mitchell, Jr., ·Minersville, Rt. I had pulled off the
road and stopped to let the
Racine squad pass but as the
squad truck passed, it struck
the left side of Mitchell's car.
There was light damage but no
personal injuries.
The Sheriff's Dept. .was
notified or the incident at 7 p.m.
Assisting in addition to Racine
and Pomeroy units were the
Pomeroy and Bashan Fire
Departments.
·
The sheriff's department
also investigate(! a single car
accident at 7:15p.m. on SR 124
in Olive Township in which Blll
Edward Buchanan, R. 1,
Reedsville, was traveling south
when he lost control, going off
the highway into a fence on the
Harry Osborne property at
Reedsvllle.
There were no personal
injuries, light property
damage and no citation issued.

Youth Night games set
Games, races and contests
will be held tonight at the
Youth Night observance of the
Meigs County Junior Fair
beginning at 6:30 tonight in the
grandstand area.
The events wlll include
bicycle races by age groups,
pony races by pony size and
participants ' ages , greased
pole, automobile race, bucket

and cups game, water filled
llalloon toss, bubble gum
blowing contest, three-legged
race, sack race, the hwnan
wheel barrow race , nail
driving contest, a horse shoe
throw, a licorice eating con.
test, a )Valermelon eating
contest, and an egg toss .
Prizes will be cash, candy
and gum .

C of C favoring· bridge
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce Monday approved a
resolution favori ng a bridge
across the Ohio River near
Ravenswood tieing In Ohio SR
338, W. Va . Ht. 2 and U.S.
Routes 33 and 7. .
Earl Ingles, president,
presented a leiter to the
chamber from the West
Virginia Department of High·
ways which asked fo r com·
tnents on the. proposal. No
indication was given as to when
such 11 project tnay be undertaken.
Ingels reported that profits
from the Regatta totaled
$108.25. Receipts were $4,335.65
and expenses $4,227.41.
lngcls asked bus lnW~men
who have nol submitted letters
Indicating promotion dales for

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opening the vents on the pump.
Kauff entered the well first,
followed by . Crisplip and
Burke. All three of the men
were overcome.
Alfred Lyons went into the
cistern with a mask and tank
but was unable to see due to the
fumes . He managed to get
Crlspllp out, though almost
' overcome In doing so.
His son, Jack, went Into the
well and pulled the other two
men out.
According to Sheriff Har:
lenbach, the men observers

$20,000 cut off

JNews .. in Briefsi

ELBERFELDS IN POM E

MIOOLEPORT, 0.

First and second, respec·
lively, in vegetables went to :
Maxine Griffith , Gay F.
Johnson and Sons, Albany
Route 3, cabbage; Eva King,
first only, eggplant; Bo b
Lewis, Pomeroy, Earl Dean,
Tomatoes, red; FredB Smith,
Mary King, Middleport Route
I, tomatoes, yellow: Mrs Roger
Morgan, Middleport; Mrs.

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Mens Department
FIRST FLOOR

SUMMER
WEARABLES 112 PRICE

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~~~u~i;d~:d~~~ ~;:~is~~~~ :~mta~e~:ll ~~s~~~::~~

.~ E.LBE_RFELDS IN POMEROY

s

.3.

Wallace Bradford , Coolville Hollon, best plate green pod best plate yellow pod bush
Route I, best plate green pod bush beans; Mrs . Wallace beans; Bob Lewis, Mrs. Purley
pole beans; Earl Dean, Evelyn Bradford, Maxine Griffith,
(Continued on page 20)

coal okayed

Costly

·.

Donald Mora, best peck spring
oats; Mora, Hollon, hest peck
barley.
Blue ribbons for best
potatoes included Eva L. King,
Pomeroy Route 3; Maxine
Griffith, Pomeroy Route 3, and
Fred B. Smith, Pomeroy Route

· HANDSOME TROPHIES went to the tOp hay growers of Meigs County at the county fair
Tuesday. P~ese~tl ng the trophies on the left is David Parry, Meigs Soil and Water conservation DISirtct conservationist. Receiving awards from left were Mrs Pat Holter on
beha lf of husband, Roy , best 50 pel. or over legnme hay; Earl Deah, all grass hay, and F:dison
Hollon, 49 pet. and under legume.

H~od~s ~~=L=U=v=·=N0=·8=6=·==P=OM:E_RO_~M_ID~D=li~PO~~~.O~H~IO_ _~W~ED=NE~SD=AY~·~AU~GU~~~~~5.~19~73~---~~H!O~NE~9~92~~~~56~· ~-~T~EN~C~EN~~

Weather

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•

the balance of this year and p.m. at the Meigs Inn.
1974 to please do so at once. Of
Ja ck Kerr suggested a
the 108lettcrs mailed only four plaque be presented to the
have bl*&gt;n returned, he fltid. outstanding chamber member
of the year. No action was
Ingels also observe&lt;J that taken.
Gov. John Gilligan has chosen
Pat Meeker of Surveys
the month of August for "Let's Unlimited will meet with the
Hear it for Ohio" month. He chamber on Sept. 10 to explain
asked for volunteers to help the present survey being made
paint the chamber's office for the village of Pomeroy.
located on lhe ground floor of
Attending the noon-luncheoo
the court house.
meeting at the Meigs Inn were
It was also reported that 21J Ingels, Kerr, Bob Jacoba,
membership dues have been Wende ll . Hoov er , Virgil
received thus far with 14 still Teaford, Dale
Warner
.
outstanding. The annual dues Rlcbard Chambers, R!rhard
was Increased fr om $25 to $35. Poulin, Jim Roush , Jack
The board of directors will Ca rsey, John Koebel, Tim
meet Monday , Aug . 20, at noon Kerr, N. W. Compton, Rl!lph
at the Meigs Inn . The Christ· Graves, Thereon Johnaon,
mas Promotion Committee will Carolyn Thomas, ~~tcretary ,
meet Tueiiday, Aug . 21 at 7 Beulah Jones and Katie crow.

.

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