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Weuther

The Sundal' Tmu·s· O&lt;'nlmel, Swodax , Aug. W, 197:1.

.!~ Hearing date set First Meigs Fair likely before the Civil ~~!~~refullytamukelt ;
f-t::;;:;::~::~:~:.~!:.~::!:!:!:!:~;:::~::::.:~:::::~::::;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::-:..:::~-::::::;.;::~·~:·:·:·:-:·!·!·!·!·!•!•='!•:·:·:·:·~:~

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PT. PLEASANT - Ahearing
on charges against Bri~ht
McCa usland, Hannan liigh
School principal, has been set
lor 9 a.m. September 1 in the
ollice of Ule county board of
education.
The decision was reached
Saturday morning by the
Mason County Board of
Education on a split vote in a
brief special meeting. Board
member J,lill WIU!ers voted
against the motion that also
stipulated the hearing may be
held in executive session
provided that all parties
concerned agree. Favoring the
motion were &gt;Robert Adkins,
·Bill Brady, Ray Fields and
Harry Siders.
The board's action stems
from a list of 11 charges
compiled by a group of citizens
in the Hannan liigh Area.
Walter Villars and Mrs .
Nellie M. Preston represented

h

the citizens group in Presenlln ~
a written summouy to the
board . Villar•, who was
present lhis morn ing, askNI
the board to go over the
swnmory and if it fell lhcy had
grounds, to set a lime for
hearing lhc charges.
Supt. Charles Withers in·
formed the board president
liarry Siders and olhers' that he
load talked lo a state attorney
and was advised Saturday
morning 's session was an
illegal procedure, while Siders
stated he was advised by llle
Prosecuting Attorney's office
concern ing it.
The citizens grovp requested
the board to lake action to
dete rm ine if Bright Me·
Causland should be dismissed
from the Mason County School
System.
Villars, after questioning by
lhe board", assured the official
body that persons bringing
charges would support these at
the necessary time .

YOUr
GOOd
NeigHBOr
CARROL K. SNOWDEN
Park Central Hotel Bldg.
Second Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-4190
Home 446·4S 18
See him for all your fami ly
lnsurance needs.

likB A
Good Neighbor.

Sl8/r f•rm
1s rh.,.
State F'arm

INSUUH C(

lns t~raoce

Companies

Home Offke!.: Bloomington, Illi nois

p 7302

lly C. ~:. lllakrst"'
~:xt. A~&lt;·oll, Agrh•ul1urr

I

STATE PARK DEATH
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - A
stump pushed over a clirf at
nearGy Ash Cave in the
Hocking State Park Friday,
accidentally killed Debbie
Mason, 10, Lima. Officials said
the girl was standing under the
cliff when the stump hit her on
the head. The girl was
pronounced dead at a hospital.

PO~mHOY

11oc IlOth Meigs County ~·air is now hislury.
Ihow you wuod&lt;·•·~d how il ull b&lt;gnn . und what has lwppcowd
u\'t'l' lh 1· Vt'tll's'f
If"'' ·~o ba•·k t II) years, that wou ld be 1883, during the Civil
War. Our i n~ such " wnr invotvm~ so manJ• Meigs County
families 1over 500 men kill&lt;•d I it scews unlikely Uoat a fair would
h;ove developed-. so possibly the first fair would have been held
during Ihe I!!50s or even tht• Ia I&lt;' t840s.
What was Ihe fi;'!st fair • Was it a one.flay event '! Did seycral
fa rmers come together to show they lmd better livestock than
others'! Weo·c they trying to improve furmi r~ practices by
competition (Such as Ihe hal' show, livestock show, bilked and
canned ~oods of toda y)'!
We haw no definite facts on th ose early fairs, but we have

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INCREASE DENIED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Public Utilities Com.
mission has denied the 283 per
cent rate increase ofthe Valley
Utility Co. in Franklin County
north of here because "no
legitimate condition exists'; to
justify the hike.

For airline reservations around the corner ...
or around the world . . .

Call 446·0699

WORJ,D-WIDE
TRAVEL SERVICE

AMERICA'S LARGEST TRAVEL AGENCY

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ceul.'j

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chocolate. We received a 4 cent per half pint federal
subsidy lhen . We will not receive Ulis under the
present law, so we must raise the price to cover the
cost. We wiil be paying 8 cents for white and 8V.. cents
for chocolate . .
The price to us will increase V. cent wiUJ each 30
cenls·!Jer hundred weight raise in the cost of milk·. We
also have to cover the costs of record keeping, etc.
Consequently, the milk price is 9cents and we hope to
keep it at Ulat.
The public has been advised that we have Ulree
used school buses for sale. We will accept sealed bids
on any or all of thsse buses until4 p.m. Tuesday, Sepl.
4, 1973, in the clerk's office in Meigs Junior High
School building. The buses are a 1962 GMC, a 1959
International and a 1963 International. You can see

been Ule volWJteer workers, advisors, and board members who r,:
serve ~ithout pay·
.
~
ThiS 1s Ule strength of our fall'.
•

The

Ph ili p Sporn Plant.

YES, WE MUST CLOSE OUT THIS BUSINESS SO THE ESTATE OF THE
LATE BOB REES CAN BE SETTLED.

$60,000 STOCK
OF NEW AND USED CARS MUST
BE SOLD. ONLY A FEW LEFT!

·Keith L. Newman, Tria l
Exa m iner of the Board of
Review.
West
Vi rgin i a •
Deparlm ent of Employment
Secu rity , made this ruling in
the matter of Dav id G. Frye,
New Hav en.
In the de cisi on made August
14 by Newman, it was sta led
" The Cla imant was di scharged
lor gross misconduct in that
claimant assaulted lhe em plo yee of his employer at the
pla ce of employment of the
cl a iman t and is lheref or e
disqua lif ied for benefits until
he has worked again for at
leas t 30 working day s in
cover ed em ploy ment".
Central Operating Company,
the empl oyer. at the Phil 1p
Plea~a!ll'

July 20, which held

"Ciarmih~t eli gible. Claimant

not disqua lified. Disc harged
but not tor m lsconduct. "
New man sated the test imony

confl icting but tha i he finds.
in pari ; "That on July 1, ).973,

Is

THIS IS THE TIME TO BUY, COME IN PICK OUT
THE CAR OF YOUR CHOICE, GIVE US YOUR OFFER, IF AT All POSSIBLE • •
YOU'LL OWN THAT CAR.

WE STILL HAVE A FEW NEW CARS.
GET YOURS NOW AT BIG SAVINGS!

the claimant was not on picket

duty and lhat the claimant did

confront lhe employee who was
the assistant plant manager of
the employer and demanded
from him what he was c;lol ng
there. and that th-i s was done on
mor e than one occasions ; that
there were 5 to 17 men,
member s of the union. who
were stand ing aro und at the

lime ; thai lhe employee had a
bad heart ; lhal he had had a

coronary ; that he cou ld not
receive abrasions and con.
fusion s due l o I he fact thai he
was receiving blood thinner ;
that the age of the assistant
plant manager was 55 years of
age and that · I he claiman t was
24 year s of age a nd appeared to
be an extreme l y muscular
person ; therefor e due to the
above facts. this Examiner Is
ol the opinion tha t the cla imant
did In lacl , accost the assistant
plan! manage r ; that he
bumped him ; that getting no
satisfaction from the · plant

manager, lhal he did throw lhe

SORRY NO TRADE·INS - ALL SALES ARE FINAL

DON'T BUY ANOTHER CAR
UNTIL YOU
•
CHECK AT OUR LOT FIRST J YOU CAN
NAME YOUR OWN PRICE HEREI
OPEN' TIL
7 PM MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
.

BOB REES PONTIAC, INC.

bock with his loot."
New man noted lhal

if any
Pa'r fy named In tt)e decision
desires to take a further appeal, th is must be filed In

wrllf ng wllhln eight days or not
taler than August 23 . Raymond

G. Musgrave Is attorney for
cle iman t and Sa muel 0 . Lit.
llepage Is covnse l for the

Employee.

·

The Atlantic herring is one
or the world 's most popular

Phone 446-1su

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assistant pl ant man age r to the
ground ; and that he di d in tact
&lt;lck hi m In lhe small Of lhe

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fish .

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENT.S :

2153. Grades 7-ll, call 992-3058. Grades ~12, call 9922158.
IN JUsr A VERY FEW DAYS you will be seeing
lotS of school buses on the highways and side roads.
Let me in this column ask you to watch for these and
for the many youngsters who will be riding them ..
There wiD be clusters of kids ·gaUJered along busy
streets. There can be some pushfug and shoving and
one can easily jump into a car's path wiU!oul warning. Watch for those red blinkers. They mean STOP!
Your help will be needed, as always, to avoid
accidents.
NEWS &amp; NOTES - Don't forget that season
football tickets are now on sale. The price is $6 for
lour home games - Call 992-2158 - When you visit
the Fair, remember the Meigs Athletic Boosters food
booth - B.oard members plan to visit and ilL'jlect all
school buildings prior to the opening of school - Our
basic instructional staff is now completed for the
1973-74 school year - The 'first day ol school will be
Tuesday, August 28 - It will be a lull day - Lunch
will be served- Remember, in grades 7-12 you can
save 5cents per lunch by buying a strip of five tickets
for $1.75 - The single lunch cost will be 40 cents or $2
for five meals - Each student will be given 4n·
formation about free lunches on Ule first or second
day of school - Check it closely - The income chart
has been Increased considerably -If you are new to
Ule area and want to know the bus schedule, check
with the kids in our nei hborhood.

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Three persons were injured,
none seriously, In a rash of
lrafflc accidents thi8 weekend
In Gallla and Meigs Cowoties.
The Gallia County accident
occurred at 8:58a.m. Saturday
on the Bidwell-Rodney Rd.,
where, cars driven by Tyrus
Ankrom, 22, Circlevllle 1 and
Lester W. Hale, 81, Rl. 2,
Bidwell, collided at it.&lt;; intersectlon with Rt. 35. Hale was
charged wiUJ failure to yield
the right of way.
Bernard A. Wilson, 23 of Rt. 1
VInton, was slightly injured in
a single car accident at 12:20
p.m: Saturday on Rt. 325, one
tenth of a mile nortli of the
Gallla·Melgs County line.
The patrol said Wilson lost
control of his car which slid
Into an embankment. There
was moderate · , damaRe .
Two persons suffered body
lacerations in an accident at
8:40 a.m. Saturday on Rt. 7,
one mile nm:th of PomerOy.
Officers said cars driven by
Mildred L. Dains, . 63, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and Ivan B. Walker,
Jr., 18, of Tuppers Plains,
collided when Walker lost
control of his car after falling
aslew at the wheel. Walker's
car ~~:as demplished . while
tbere Wlif1iJI: heavy dam-

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In E
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urn1ture
artment ,
::

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By Unled Press International
KEY BISCAYNE, FLA . ., PRESIDENT Nixon makes a rare
public appearance today, but aides said he will ignore Watergate
and take the opportunity to accuse Congress of jeopardizing
·peace lnlndochiha by halting U. S. bombing In Cambodia.
Nixon's off-the-eutt remarks are to be delivered before the
Veterans of Foreign Wars (12:30 p.m., EDT) gathering at Ule
Rlvergate Convention Center on the edge of the French Quarter
In New Orleans. The President and a small contingent of senior
advisers spent the weekend at his palm·lined Florida compound
.preparing lor his first public appear~nce in six weeks.

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SOFAS
CHAIRS
LIVING ROOM SUITES
SECTIONALS
LOVE SEATS
'

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Selected From Our Regular Stock For Quick Sale.
Limited Quantity, .All First Quality. Well Known Makes.
Be '.fhrifty! Save All of
Your Saleslips From ..•

Elberfelds ln. Pomeroy

...•,-••••••••••••••••lllillf!l••llil•••••llf!l•lll•••••l!ll•

age to the other auto .
Walker was cited to Meigs
County Court for driving
left of center.
Joyce G. Johnston, 25, of Rt. 1
Vinton was cited for failure to
yield the right of way following
an accident at 1:35 p.m.
Saturday on Rt. 7 at the june·
tion to County Road G.
The patrol said Johnston's
car pulled into Ule highway
colliding with an auto operated
by Jennifer L. Menchini, 23, of
Pomeroy. The Impact knocked
the Menchini car into an auto
driven by Kenneth McElhin·
ney, 49, of Middleport.
Two persons were charged in
a three·vehicle accidentat7:30
p.rri. Saturday on Rl. 124, seven
tenth, of a mile west ol Rt. 7,
where an auto driven by Aries
D. Simpson, 75, Rt. I, Mid·
dleporl pulled !rom Ule benn
causing an auto driv~n by
Kenneth M. Romaine, 39, of Rt.
I, Rutland, to stop suddenly.
Romaine's car was struck in
Ule rear by an auto operated by
Thomas J. Werry, 30, of
Pomeroy.
.
Werrywascitedforfailure to
stop within Ule assured clear
distance while Simpson was
charged wilh failure to yield
the right of way.

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Three hurt

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On The 3rd Floor

.-

CEWARD CALVERT, POMEROY, a hameu race
owner, presented the blanket trophy for tbe first and fifth
races at the Meigs County Fair Saturday to Mr. and Mrs .

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:cr..·~
,_

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t

Sporn Plant appealed from the

decision of th e dep uty at Point

P~:no sylvania

I

,;.

overturned
PT. PLEASANT -

)(:nuwn U

blut"k Jmwder . 1l wa s used In
1861 to oren the country'• first
d ·cp oo w&lt;·lf a l Tllusvolle .

c"

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decision of a dep.u ty examiner
1$ set aside, and a claimant
seeking unem 'p loyment
benefits ha s been disqualified,
resulting from a strike ·at the

W&lt;J s gunpuwLIH

J

Ruling is

BOB REES PONTIAC, INC.

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORr, OHIO

Devoted To The lntere.ll Of 'I'M Meig•·Ma10n Area
MONDAY, AUGUSf 20, 1973

In •·fi er i the ror•l propel
lant or tb ' autnmohlle age

=

lhem at Ule garage in Rutland. You can obtain a bid
form in my office or submit ,your bid on your own
form . ff you use your own form, ·be certain to include
the bus number, year, m~ke and ·iden(jfication
number. The bus number is on the ~ide or lhe bus. The
identification number is on the front bumper.
YOU MAY BE AWARE of the shock Ulal Ule Title
1 federal program gave us lhis week. We planned on
receiving at least $110,000 Ulis year. We have been
receiving about this amount. The actual allocation
will be less lhan $43,000. Our planned program would
cost $107,000. This leaves us $64,000 short.
Fortunately, we have just under $15,000 left from
last year that we can "carry over ". This leaves us
short just under $50,000. We have contracts with
teachers that must be kept. As lhings now stand, we
have a $50,000 problem to be covered by our general
fund. Southeastern Ohio really was hit hard with this
one.
As I understand..;!, lhe change is Ule result of
federal action to go to Ule 1970 census data this ye~r
rather than next. We were aware that a change CQilld
come when lhis new 1970 census data replaced the old
1960census data. We just didn't expect to be hit with it
two weeks prior to the opening of school wilh contract
commitments to a dozen teachers and money to pay
less than half of them.
Let me repeat again lhe information about the
registration of new students. We have pic~ed up quite
a few in the last cou le of weeks. Grades K-6 call 992·

S[Jeaking of schools-No. 284

Nnw You Knm\

enttne

. VOL. XXV NO. 89

e

Students' lunch prices revised upward

milk charge was 4 cents for white anct

33 Court Street

l.t'On&lt;Ord and Mrs. Buena Grueser. Most of these lolks Indicated
Money was scarcej Yo d ou L'OUid drink for a nickel, or ~
the s1t•m11 powered mcrryi:O&lt;'OUIKI wn~ tho blg~cst alttaclion on . buy Ice &lt;·ream, all the emono e Y
~
the midw1oy. lt took two "steanos" to pull the merry-I!O-~Jround up ride the rnerry1!o-r~und. , athered wllh their relatives un, E
tto&lt;· hill : Uo~ en~ hoe nlwnys nt'&lt;.,ll'&lt;l water, and ihe steam whlstln . AT NOON THE F. AM!~·IES ~hat mother had worked,80 hard
mh.ll'\l w I he l'll Juymcnt.
.
hAd an enormous picnic umer
•
The bo ~ thi n to wi n on the noidway in lho:; • days was a whip or the day before to prepare.
psies who ~topped their =
1lh
II Cline' not Ihe h•ldy ""'" 01' big nninuols of Iuter yours.
You were worn~\ to ~\l'"f: ~ r:i~ They told your fort woe
Wl~t:ol 1 ea uoe to Meigs l'O Unty in Ule lute 31fi, the livestock wa~ons on the roads ea ng
e
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barns nnd pens were below the hUI with barns out be~ind for a glass of Jelly. G FEATURE f lhe early fair was a
Leifheit's and over towards Humphrey's. Tioose were the loglclll
. AN OUTSTAN~~ hole was du "early In the mornlnR: It =
places, right ncar the rock springs. You carried water by the ball~n asc~nslon .
~
t 1 The balloon slowly filled ~
11
bucket ill those days. we have had livestock water problems on was filled ~1th wood an a re sra~im~ the balloon"! rode Ule •
topofthe hllluntil acoupleofyearsago.
wolh hot uor, and at the prope
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Typically , inlhe old days, mother had to w0rk hard all day basket of the ball!Kin upwar~ll . 1 ould jump out of the •
before the visit to lhe fair,. rooking and baking for the picnic
At the proper lime the · ~;~~lew As he left Ule balloon, •
lunch Before 4 o'clock in the morning wagons and surreys basket and return to earUJ by par
·
b
1 11
woutct be creaking and rumbling towards the fairgrounds.
he pulled a ripcord on Ule b~t~~ so it1woutd n~ ~.~~\%·the next·~
The more adventurous )Joys would try-often succeeding- to . RACE HORSES 1\'ER . r ven ro~ :ere driven on foot to *'
scale the high board fe~ce around lhe grounds to avoid paying msteadof being trucked . Calli~ 1~ ~xh!b~ode! T Ford. It didn 't ,
the entrance fee On amval at the grounds Ule horses would be lhe fair. I once had a cow rWJ 111 Y ·
unhitched and ti~d to the wagon The big b~sket lunch could be hurl Ule cow, bullldidn 'thelptheradllltoroftheca~
t by :
checked In at the present Gra~ge Hall, which had a sawdust
The l.irst Jersey catue were brought 1l1to t coun Y
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Robert Hiland Mrs. Morgan's grandfaU!er.
,
oorThe
· predecessor. of lhe grange hall was a larger "Floral
b
b
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horse
being
stolen
draft
horse
and
Pretty a Y cones s, a .
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Hall" which burned in 1900. The present grange hall was built- ·l'oad horse judging, the Fall' Board President,
yo~l
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immediately after' but it wasn't until 1933that a floor was put in staying with loci people because he lived at Salem en er-a '::
the building. Rock Springs Grange was organized in 1933.
are memories of another day.
lights ~
The CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps) was housed at Camp
At dark all aci!Vltles ceased because there were no
..
Meigs on the fairgrounds from 1933 several years. The Corps put except kerosene lanterns.
.
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the floor in lhe grange hall built many erosion c"ntrol dams and
Nearly live generations have attended the Meigs 0 ~ Y ~
' trees· In the count.
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planted lhousands of forest
, Fa ir· nur·111g a11. oI this time Ule fair has served each generallon ,,
h "
In the early days thefair was a three.&lt;Jay event during
well, although 111 a different way.
September Oliring World War 1 a school fair was held with
Today, as for the last 110 lairs, Ule backbone of the 1a1r as

1he NEW in FAn M.ING
many people who know what fairs were like early in lhis century.
We checked with soo.ne of these people on their early recollections
and the stories they heard of earlier days.
FRED GOEGLE!N POINTS out Uoat the fairgrounds area
was an old Indian watering place from the spring behind where
his house was formerly located . His house was built In the 1830s
by Lronard Carlton, an ancestor of Homer, Sam, and Ward
Hndford, Norman Schaefer, and many others.
~"red 's grandfather, pr . Jacob Schaefer, a medical graduate
of Heidelberg Un iversity in Germany Who came to this countr~ in
the 18405 later acq ui1·ed this house.
Mrs. Homer Radford retailed her husband has attended
every day orthe fair since he was six years old.
Mrs. Gladys Morgan says he•· parents told her she was at
eveo·y fair since she was born. That 's 73 years of fair . She is still
exhibiti ng, winning two blue ribbons in the dog show and honors activities f~r the students. This must have been the earliest at·
in her vegetable exhibit in the '73 event.
·
tempt at a Junior Fair. One of the activities was a contest to see
Others helping out in these recollections were Mrs. Amos who could hiJch up a horse first.

By GEORGI' HARURA VES, Supt.
Meigs Local School District
This week Ule Meigs Local Board adopted its
lunch policy for 1973·74. You may have read a·bout
this earlier in lhe week in the account of the board
meeting. The student lunch price in grades 1-6 will be
35 cents. ln grades 7·12 it will be .40 cents for a single
lunch but 35 cents when five lunch tickets are pur.
chased for $1.75. We hope to hold this price, but food
costs may force an increase. The adult lunch was
Increased from 35 cent.&lt;; to 50 cents.
Tioe lunch price includes a half pink of milk.
Additional milk will cost 9 cents per half pint. The
milk for morning or afternoon student "breaks" will
also cost 9 cents per half pint: Last year this extra

•

Scatlered ahowero or
thundcrahowers In southeast
portion lhi• evening, followed
by parlin! clenrlns. Cooler
tonight. !.ow, in lower 60s
'l'uellday, lair and mild. High i~
UpMr 708 or low 60s.

WASHINGTON - SEN. GEORGES. McGOVERN says that
If President Nixon defies a court order to release tapes of his
Watergate-related conversations CongreSs will "have no other
recourse" but to consider imPeachment. McGovern said Sunday
he believed It was "premature" lor anyone in Congress to be
advocating impeachment at this time.
"But ... if Ule President remains steadfast In his refusal to
turn over the tapes, even II the courts hold that be has an
obligation to do so, lhen Ule Congress will have no other recourse
except to give serious consideration to impe~chment . "
McGovern said that when Nixon withheld the recordings and
other material he made it "very hard for us to accept the
argument he advances Ulat he had nothing to do either wiUJ the
cover-up of Ule Watergate incident or its original planning."
BIRMINGHAM, ALA. - GOV. GEORGE Wallace told
Samford University's summer graduates In a weekend soeech
that .hls generation accOillplished a lot ; but it was up to Ulem to
solve Ule problema of inflation and pollution. .
.
"Our generation has accomplished much," Ule governor said
Saturday. "We conquered polio and nazism, split the atom and
put a man on the moon . "YoUr challenge Is to solve the problems
f1l lnfiaUon and pollution, but you must take Ule middle ground
and not create more problems with your solutions."
BATON ROUGE, LA.- AsrATE HEALTH official said Ule
425 tons of lethalliquld chloroform spilled Into the Mississippi
River Sunday should remain hannles•ly submerged and
disappear Into Ule Gull ol Mexico within a couple of dllys. "r
don't think we're going to have much trouble," John Trygg,
aaslstanlslaw health offker for environment, said. "Bul that
doesn't mean we're nut watching."
A cargo barge being repaired for a hole al9ng Its waterline
buckled Sunday afternoon and sank alongside a whorl about two
mile• south or LoulslafVl Stllte University. !Ia cargo - 64,000
gallons or chloroform used in anesthesia - slid Into tlie sha llow
water.
WAQRAM, N.C. - STOREKEEPER J. T. ROII'ell had ad·
wttlsed for a woman from 20 to 46 year. of age, but he knew his
73-year~ld lllllll order bride was the right on~ for him the minute
he saw her. "God put UR toRothet," said ltowell, 73, a rcilred
(ConU nue~ ·on Page 6)

Richard Morgan of Belpre for their wina wiUJ "Marietta
Time'':.JJalv.ert .macle ,the presentation on behalf of Smith·
Nelson Motors where he is employed.
INFANT KILLED
, . COLUMBUS iUPI)- Fire
broke out in a home here
early today, killing a 14·
month-old boy and seriously
injuring three members of
this family. Columbus pollee
said Christopher Robin
Jordan was dead on arrival
at Riverside Hospital. The
boy's father, 'i'rlce Jordan,
27, was In serious cond.lflon
at the hospital.
A brother, Trice Ill, and a
sister, Danlelle, were In
critical
condition
at
Children's Hospital, The
children's mother, Sharon,
was treated for shock!
Authorities said the blaze
was apparently caused by a
faulty extension cord In a
first floor dlntng room .
Damage was estimated at
$3,800. .
'

cap

UTTLE KEN AND LAURA McCULLOUGH, children"ol,
Mr. and Mrs. Ken McCullough of Pomeroy, presented the
trophy blanket to Miss Sandy Hook owned by G. Riley of

eigs County Fair

eight.
The !lOth annual Meigs fair Saturday night.
Saturday
afternoon
the
final
In the first race, The Ohillco
County Fair closed Saturday
following a successful five day horse harness racing was held. Pace, "Marietta Time" took .
run.
Due to the large number of first place : Dillon Hill, owned
The gospe~ singing Speer pacers, non.winners of $1,ii00, by H. W. Heckrodt, Spring
Family was given a warm Ulerewere two divisions in Ulat Valley, N. Y., was second, and
reception by fans packing the class Saturday to bring Ule Regal Roman , .owned by
Merrill Elliott, Jackson, won
gr~ndstand in the finale of U1e race total for the afternoon to
third.
:~:~::::::::::~:;:;::~:!&lt;:::~!::=~~:::::~:::::~::::::::::::~=:~::::::::~:~:::::::::::::f;::::::::::::~:=~::::::::::;~:;:;:;:~;::;;:;~:;;::;:::::;
In tbe llfth race .for these
pacers, Regal Roman won
first: Marietta Time was
i11f
;.;.
.
-:-: second and Dillon Hill was
:;::
:;:: Ullrd. Best horse 'of the two
races, Marietta Time, owned
by Richard Morgan, Be)pre,
.i!l:
was awarded the trophy
::::
blanket provided by Smith·
Nelson Motors wiUJ Ceward
By Bob HoeDich
The 110th Meigs County Fair got off to a bad start what with lhe Calvert, also a race horse
owner, · making the presen·
heavy rains which struck the fairgrounds Tuesday night.
The race track and centerfield were not in Ule best of condition tall on.
anway due to the extensive digging done thre this swruner to
In the second and sixth races
lay huge tile in conjunction with the road project. The rains trot, first place went to Lead
really made the cen.terfleld a mess but' the show went on. The Nib ·owned by K. Henderson of
weaU!er tur:1ed out favorably after Tuesday and the fair was Jackson and second place in
crowded during the night hours especially for the remainder of boUl events to Kay Mon, owned
Ule week.
by Madaline Fisher, Nevada,
Ohio.
ANICE GESTURE by the fair board Saturday ni~ht tO\I'ards
Mrs. Elizabeth Wickham, IIJO:year.flld Chester resident. Durin~ .
the Speer Family show, representatives of the board sought out
Mrs. Wickham in Ule grandstand and presented her with a half
dozen roses and a blue ribbon. Surely, Mrs. Wickham IS a winner. She loved the Speer Family show.

Bad start but
l
.
Nixon's ~ goo_d endzng
II
life in
danger?
•'

NEW ORLEANS (UPI) The Secret Service disclosed it
had uncovered a possible plot
to assassinate President Nixon
during a New Orleans visit
today, compeling the cancela·
lion of a presidential motor·
cade through lhe downtown of
the city,
The FBI, who also had a
hand in an Investigation of the
reported plot, called it "a real
threat."
In Washington, a Secret
Service spokesman, Jack War·
ner, said "we have a lookout"
for a ·man identified as Ed·
mund "Punchy " Gaudet,
described as a former New
Orleans polfc~man. Warner
emphasized "I wouldn't draw
an inference that lhe two (lhe
reported assassination plot and
the lookout) are connected at
Ulis time."
Television Statton 'WWkTV
said it had,leafned pt:irt-Ut'th'e
lllleged plot involved Ule theft
of a pollee uniform and a car
assigned lo Police Superin·
tendent Clarence Giarrusso.
Giarrusso's car was found
abandoned in New Orleans'
lakefront district and another
car was reported to have been
stolen nearby, the television
station said.
The announcement came
less lhan an hour before Nixon
left Key Biscayne, Fla., to fly
to New Orleans for u speech lo
the .Veter~ns ol Foreign Wars.
A Secret Service spokesman
said the agency Blrongly
recommended that Nixon call
off his midday motorcade froo:n
International Airport outside
the city to the Rlvergnte
Convention Center on famed
Canal Street. The White House
romplll.'f! with the request.

Ironton at the Meigs County Fair Saturday. The horse was
first in Ule fourth and eighth races. The trophy was donated
by Swisher and Lohse Pharmacy, Pomeroy, of which the
senior McCullough is part owner .

THE FAIR BOARD SATURDAY returned to Charles Wills,
Eastern Band director, several dollars which band members had
paid at Ule gate to get onto the fairgrounds Ule day the band
played. Members of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority were given strict
instruction to require Ulat people pay the admission at the gates
and that tbey did including several band members who passed
Ulrough ·wiU!out any specilll passes. The lair board commended
the sorority members for stricUy watching the gates since it does
take dollars to operate the f~lr but did give the.admission paid by
lhe band people back to Mr. Wills when they learned ol the
situation.
'
·

Third in the second was M~· and driven by Sherry Indestad,
jor Fla•hy Creed owned by and lhird In U1e third was Mr.
Raymond Grant of Jack:lon Hot Time owned by Donald
while Scott Mac, owned by Barker and Gary Mlller or
William Miller, Piketon, was Kingston.
third in the sixth.
Scond in the sevenUJ was
Painters Dream, owned by Uttie Miss Echo owned :,y
Harry Rhoads, Coalton . was William and Julia Miller ol
first In both the Ulird and the Piketon and third was Recount,
seventh. Second in the third owned by ltodney Steele,
was Miss Mixlt owned by Waid Columbus.
Miss Sandy Hook, owned by
and Ed Humphrey, Pomeroy,
G. Riley, Ironton, was first In
both the fourth and the eighth
races. Second in the fourth and
BRADLEY IMPROVES
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A eighUJ was Silver Jl'right owned·
UCLA medical center spokes- by Larry Magel ol Portsmouth.·
man said Sunday Gen. Ornar Sissie Ross owned by Ross
N. Bradley is in satisfactory Bateffil!n, Athens, was third in
the fourth while Stormy Tony,
rondilion.
oWned
by Madaline Fisher,
Bradley, 80, hils "contint1ed
Nevada, was third in the
wimprove since l~st Friday," eighlh.
the day after he underwent an
operation to halt blood clotting
CONDITION SATISFACTORY ·
in his lungs.
BOSTON (UP!) ~ Heart
The nation's only living five·
starofflcerwasadmitted to Ule specialist Paul Dudley White
hospital nine days ago in was reported .Jn satisfactory
condition at Massachusetts
"serious" condition.
General Hospital Sunday,
where he underwent surgery
for a stroke.
White, who treated President'
Dwight D. Eisenhower after
the late president suffered a
critical heart attack In !955,
was operated on Friday to
remove a blood clot from his .
•
brain.
While, 87, survived o mUd ·
stroke in June and a slight
heart attack in 1971.

IIOitSE HARNESS RACING was one of the
THE SCHOOL EXHIBITS at the Meigs County Fair went
highlights
or the final day's activities at the 1lOth
well over 300 this year. It hasn't been too many years ago that the .
total was like !Bor 20. The lour exhibit areas showing work of Ule annual Meigs County Fair Saturday.
students were excellent. The school exhibit idea is an.excellent
one. Students arc competing against no one in the judging. The
judge can give every student a blue ribbon if she !eels Ulat the
work is up (Q a certain standard for lhe age or the student. In
. addition to ribbons, student.&lt;; receive a cash award which will be
sent to lh• respective school later on.

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Monday at l1 a.m.
was 73 degrees under rainy
skies.

THE "HURRICANE " a new ride which went up on Ule
midway after the fair opened was really up town. The ride, which
cost some $80,000, was used for the first time here;and it was well
patronized. It looked like a ,ball for those who had Ule courage.
DESPITE THE LACK of .air conditioned facilities In the fair
board office, Mrs. Mickey King, secretary, and her staff kept.
Uleir cool during fair week and ran a smooth operation. So much •
can happen so quickly to cause a turmoil. Wallace Bradford,
board president, was available and fair board members could be
• seen everywhere on the !lfounds assisting or conducting various
events. Wloatta job!
TONY KENNEDY, OON OF Mr. and Mrs. Junior Kennedy,
was given a nice reception as he eflcctively served as outrider
for the hurncss •acing program . Incidentally, Ule Kennedys
reside In Ule Tuppers Plains ~rea these days and have since
.December, last year.

fl. 0 . OAY OF MARIE'ITA was at Ule Meigs Fair to handle
DIVORCE ASKt;:O
Ronda
C.
Dempsey ,
Syracuse, has filed suit for
dl vorce In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against
Doll!llas M. Dempsey, same
address, chargin~ gross
neglect of duly und extreme
l'ruelly.

the sound system on the gro~nds . It was something like his 18th
year. Easy going, Day enjoys the Meigs Fair and tbe cooperation
he gets from the lOt;nl fair board. Oay will be returned to Meigs
County in November to handle Ule sound for the annual musical
ol the Big Bend Minstrel Association which may materialize
around Thllnkllglvlng Wt'Ckend.
r::DOAR VAlli INWAGEN , BATAAN DEATH MARCH
(Continued on Page 6)

'

I
.

~I

'

�1- The O.l(y Sentlnol, Middleport-Pomeroy, o , .\Ug. 20,1973

2- The Dally &amp;nthwl 111ldtllcport-l'OIII\'roy, 0. Au~ 20,1971

A. rea garden clu~s
honored by state
Area gorden clubs ro.1ped LewiS, chulr\\ oman · and
llle fru1ts of their efforts ove• second place to the Galhpohs
ll1e past year when state Gorden Club fo1 Rlvo1 by at
awards were presented at the Chrlstinos, co.,hmred by M1s
annual convention of !he OhiO Luther Duyton, Mrs Kennclh
AssociallonofGardenClubs
FraZior, and Mr. Fred Car"Hats Off to OAGC" was the man
theme of the Augus t 14-16
Aga1n th1s year, Washington
convention held al Wooster County rec..1ved first place In
College
U1e state for lis Class C county
Heading the list of local fair show (less than 13 clubs 1n
recipients tn awards was U1e the county ) In !he Class B
Rulland Friendly Gardeners county fair shows I 13 to 18
Club, winner of the V1clor H clubs), the 1972 Me•gs County
Ries Outstanding Garden Club falf show headed by Mrs
Award, thi most valuable of Charles Lew1s, received
the assOCiation presentations honorable mention m the state
The club also received second The award was accepted by
•n the stale for 1ts publicity Mrs Gmther of the Chester
book Only one pomt separated Club
•
the flfst and second place
In the Sears Commllmty
winners The Rutland Fnendly Involvement project, one
Gardeners book was prepared winner from each region was
by Mrs Homer Parker announced, and from this hst a
ass•sted by Mrs James Car- state w1nner was chosen
penter
Wmner for Region 11 was the
Also on diSplay were the Rutland Friendly Gardeners
other top Region 11 publicity Club for a beautification
books by the Windmg Trail prOJect at the Forest Acres
Garden Club of Pomeroy, w1th Park, New Llma Road ,
- Mrs Robert Lewis, chaiT- Rutland of which Mrs Parker
woman, and the Rutland was the chairwoman Other
Garden Club w1th Mrs Robert SCIP books were on display
Canaday, chairwoman
mciuding ones by Windmg
Area clubs wmmng awards Trail and Bend 0 ' the River
m flower show competition
Regional
wmners
on
were as follows
program books displayed were
Class A, smgle club shows Rutland Garden Club, flfst,
w1th 53 entries Rutland French C1ty Garden Club,
Friendly Gardeners, th1rd, 1972 Galhpohs, second, Hill and
show, "A Swnmer Weddmg," Dale Garden Club, Marietta
headed by Mrs Homer Parker th1rd , and Wmdmg Trail ,
and Mrs Howard BlTchf•eld , Pomeroy, honorable mention
Chester
Garden
Club,
Mrs Richard Barton of the
honorable
mentiOn
for Chester Club, outstandmg
"Autwnn Magic," co-eha1red gardener for Regwn 11, was
by Mrs. Paul Baer and Mrs honored at a luncheon dur1ng
Horace Karr Mrs Parker convenllon act1V1t1es Mrs
accepted the award for the Barlon ra1ses and preserves
Rutland club, Mrs Richard many vaneties of vegetables
Barlon for the Chester club
for use by her family wh1ch
Class C, group ChriStmas mcludes a 14-year-oid son and
shows Me1gs County Garden three year old twms
Club Assoc•allon, lust place m Besides her Interest m
llle state for "It Happens floral arts, Mrs Barton runs an
Every Chmtmas" co-eha1red msurance agency at her Rt 1,
by Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, Long Boltom home
Bend 0' the R1ver Garden
Mrs Edward MIZlcko of the
Club, and Mrs Parker Richland Garden Club, Athens,
Rutland Fnendly Gardeners was rec1p1ent of awards m the
The show received 95 out of a OAGC shde contest The
possible 100 pomts on the regwnal shde contest chalTscormg
woman,Mrs MtZICkorecetved
Class C, group shows Meigs a second and two honorable
County
Garden
Club mentions She displayed at the
Association, th1rd place m the convention, garden therapy
state for the 1973 Regatta craft Items made by the Good
Show, "A Great Place to be In Luck Garden Club of the
'73," Mrs Richard Collins, Athens Mental Health Center,
Wmdmg Trail Garden Club, a therapy proJect serviced by
and Mrs Jack Hart, Walk-In clubs m Athens and Meigs
Garden Club, c&lt;"ChalrWomen Counties Mrs Jerome Fenske
The award was accepted for of the Ahens Garden Club
the county by Mrs OriS Gm- assisted Mrs M1z1cko
!her, Chester Garden Club
Convenllon-goers were
Two RegiOn 11 award flbbons entertamed and educated by
were diSplayed on local books the
outstandmg
floral
for s~ngle club Chflstmas demonstratiOn of Bill H1~on
shows first place to the who presented two programs,
Rutland Garden Club for 1ts " Eiectricism m Flower
1972 show, "Smg a Song of Arranging" and "Serendipity
Chf!Stmas," Mrs Charles and Schmaltz" His novel and
str1k1ng crea lions mcluded
arrangements that borrowed
heavily on the old-fashiOned,
sentimental type designs With
a modern slant for mterest and
FOR
his contamers were a meat
grmder, an 011 funnel, cooking
pans, a bird cage a wagon
wheel hub, and ev~ a child's
at
potty chair
The 1974 OAGC convention
w1ll be held July Jl, August 1-2,
8
at Stouffers Inn, Downtown,
Your Thom MeAn Store
MIOOLEPORT
Cincinnati

ThomMcAn
Shoes

BOYS &amp; GIRLS
heritage house

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
• OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS 9 30 TO 12. 2 TO 5 !CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS ) - EAST COURT &lt;,T,
POMEROY

i' SOCi3i':f rH~ien H~~~ " '

Television Log
Monday, A1~ 20, 1971
7 30

To Tell the Tru th 6

Hollywood Squ"res 4, TraH1c Court

10 Chan cse Woy 10 Epl&gt;odo Action 33 , Bobby Goldsboro 3,

It s Your Bet B Bea t th e Clock l3
8 00
Ounsmoke 8 10 . Brlseball World ol Joe Garaglola 3, 4,
1S Rook ies 6 Magic Circus ll Tr ibute to George Gershwin

20. JJ

Mov1e - " Rogue' s Grt ll ery ' 6, 13 Here' s LU&lt;:y 8 10

9 00

9 30

Oorls Day 8, 10 Book Boal33 20

10 00

Paul Nuchmls Jl Med1cal Center 8, 10, News 70.

10 IS - The Sllenl Years

~o

11 00 - NewsJ 4 6, 810, 13, 15
11 JO - Johnny Carson J, 4, 15, Jack Paar Tonite 6 13 M ovles

" Tiger Bay" 8. " Bebo's G I " 10
l 00 - Man From UNCLE ' News 13

'l 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
3 00 ........ News 4

TUESDAY, AUG ll , 1913
6 00 -

Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 lS - Concern &amp; Commen1 10
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 Columbus Today 4 B1ble Answers 8 Fa1th
6 45 - Corncob Report 3 Fa rmflme 10

for Today IS

Today 3, 4, IS CBS News 8 10 Flmtstones 13
30 - Romper Room6, Rocky&amp; Bullw1nklel3

7 00 7

8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Ttmmy and Lassie 6
8 30 - JacklaLanneJ NewZooRev ue6
8 55 - News IJ
9 00 - Paul Oucon 4 Friendly Junction 10 AM 3 Peyton
Place 13

Ph1l Donahue 15 M ister Roberts 33 Movte ' Off

LimitS" 8 , Brady Bunch 6
9 30 - To Tell The Truth 3 Pey1on Place l3 Elec Co 33 Wild
Wild West 6
9 ss - Chuck White Reports 10
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3 15 Joker s W1ld 10 D1ck Van Dyke 13
Summer Fest1val 33
10 30 - Baffle 3 4 IS 510 000 Pyramid 8 10 Spl1t Second 13
11

Zoom 33 , Mike Douglas 6
_
00 - Gambit a 10 Password 13 WIZard of Odds 3 4 IS

11

30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 IS Love of Life 8, 10, Brady

Travelvre 33

Bunch 13 , BO"vVIIng 6, Ep1sode Actton 33
ll ss- CBS News B Dan I mel s World 10
12 00 - Jeooardv J 15 Bob Braun 's 50 50 Club 4, Password 6
News 10, 8, 13 Sesame Sf 33
12 30 - 3 W' s 3 15 Split Second 6 Sea r ch For Tomorrow 8 10

12 ss - News 3 15
l 00 - News 3 All My Cnlldren 6 13, Green Acres 10 Not For
Women Only 15 Otsc:over Flying 33 Green Acres 10

1 30 - 30nAMatch3 4 IS TheWorldTurnsS 10 Lets Make
a Deal6 13, HowdoYourChlldrenGrowJJ
n.:~'J~ nf nt tr I ivP.~ :l
GUldin~ Ll~ht 8

'1 no -

4 l:'i

NP.wlvwed Game 4, 6J 1$

10 Woman J3
2 30 - Edge of Night 8 10 G1rl 1n My Life 13 Musical En

counter 33 Baseball 3 41 Doctors 15
3 00 - Another World 3, 15 General Hospital 6 13 Pnce Is
RIQht

a

10

Folklife Otscvss1on 33

3 31)-Return to Peyton Place

15

One L1fe to L1ve 6 13 Match

Game 73 8, Secret Storm 10 Mak1ng Thmgs Grow 33
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Love, Amencan Style 13 Huck &amp; Yog16
Somerset 15 Secret Storm 8 Sesame St 33 , Movte 'The
Marryrng King· 10
4 30- My Llttle Margte 15, Merv Gnffm 4 F Troop 6 Abbott &amp;
Costello 8 Oaktan 13
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Hazel 8 Big Valley 6,
Western Star Theatre 15 Mr&gt;rv Gnff1n 4
5 JO - Beverly H1llb1lltes 8 Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13

Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Trails West 15
- Earl Nightingale 15

s 55

6 00 - News 3 4 8, 10 15 I Dream of Jeannte 13 . L1has Yoga &amp;
You 33

00 - What's My Lme a Elec Co 20 BeafThe Cloc&lt;

4 News
Untamed World 13 lee Trevmo s Golf 15, Ltvmg 33
B1ghorn 3
7 30 - C~rcus 4 To Tell the Truth 6 New Pnce Is RightS , RFD
20 The New Price ts R1ght 10 Cancer Life or Death 33. Beat
the Clock 13 Charles Blatr s Better World 15
8 00 - Temperatures RISIOQ 6 13 Maude a. lO Eventng At
7

6 10

Pops 33, Ohio ThiS Week 20 Movie "The Ceremony" 3 4 To

be announced 15

8

30 - Mov1e The Couple Takes A W1fe 6, 13 Baseball 15

Five 0 8, 10 Folkhfe DISCUSS IOn 20
9 00 - lnternaltonal Performance 20 33
Hawaii

9 30 -

Vtrgmtan 8 Movre

Sa ndcastles 10

10 00 - Marcus Welby, MD 6 13 News 20 NBC Reports 3 4

To be announced 33
ll 00 - News l 4 8, 13

IS

11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4, 15 Jack Paar Ton1te 6, 13 , Movres
' M1ster Buddwtng ' 8 Gentleman's Agreement 10
1 00 - News 1~ Man from UNCLE 4
2 00 2 JO -

Your Health 4

News 4

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
The watergate hearings cost llle three cormneTCial networks
$10 rrullwn m lost revenue, produced an unexpected $1 million

windfall for the Public Broadcasting Servic.. (contrtbutions to
support prune-time reruns), and apparently produced a new
type of TV watcher
The Watergate addict
The typical Watergate addict IS a 47-year-old housewife, with
2 7 children, marned to a machiniSt and living m a suburb of
Dayton, Ohto. She watches televiSIOn an average of 7 1 hours a
day and voted for NIXon Let's g1ve her an origmal pseudonym as
well Mrs. Jane Doe
Typical of the addiction •s tbe deSife to see some of the
prmCipal players m the long-runmng Washington drama back on
the screen, now that the hearmgs are m recess. Mrs Doe experiences frequent such flashbacks, but let her tell you In this
conversation
"I was watching 'To Tell the Truth' on Channel 3 last week,
and I kept wantmg to see Bill Cullen and Kitty Carlisle go after
this one fellow on the show because he looked exactly like
Maurice Slans Or was It James McCord•"
"Isn't that a little unusual - to expect a guest on 'To Tellllle
Truth' to behave hke the Watergate winesses•"
"Not at all, Some of them have to he tellmg the truth, and
others Well, let me go on I thought "The Newlywed Game"
was going to feature Mr and Mrs James W Dean Ill one day,
and I almost cried when they weren't on "
"A lovely coople, Mrs. Doe But really, now, you're showmg
Signs of confusion at thiS pmnt in time "
"I know Oh, that phrase' When I hear someone say 'at this
pomt m time' II makes me ahnost inoperative, and my exact
recollections on that particular subject are naturally somewhat
vague "

TUESDAY ONLY

PORK
CHOPS
FIRST CUTS

PORTA
FILE

lb.

"You'reevldencmgthe classic symptoms of Watergate withdrawal, Mrs. Doe. Is there anythmg else•"
"Well, a contestant on 'Jeopardy' referred to his son last
week as 'that little chap,' and II took me right back to the hear~ng
room when John Wilson called Sen Inouye a nasty name "
"Understandable enough "
"And I woke up 1n the middle of the rnght screaming 'Don't
stop now - Sen We1cker hasn't fmiShed his question yet ' My
husban~ had to give me an alcohol rub to settle my nerves to get
hack to sleep, and then I drell(lled John Ehrlichman was pointing
~s fmger at me because I'd been usmg alcohol and sleepmg with
a man "

APPLE GROVE _ MI'S
Arnold Hupp, Mrs Bob
llhodes Mrs Jack Ables and
Mrs Robert smith were ap.
pointed to a nominating
committee for ll1e 1974 offlcei'S
at a recent meeUng of ll1e
United Methodbt women of the
Apple Grove Church
The corruruttee will present a
slate of offlcei'S at the Sep!ember meeting Plans were
made to begin a Christmas
fund and Mrs Dolly Wolfe wu
named chairwoman of that. It
was noted that the society is
now takmg orders for
housewares and anyone
desiring to place an order may
cail Mrs Dallas Hill, 247-2e64
Mrs Hill announced several
workshops in the districl.
Arrangements were made to
purchase a 35 cup percolator
for ll1e fellowship dinners
Devotional and program
leader was Mrs. Robert smith
whose topic was "Personal
MiSSIOns." The gr oup sa ng "I
Gave My Life for Thee" and
scr~pture was taken from I c'or
13 Mrs Dolly Wolfe and Vihln
Abl
t
d
th
es par IC1pa 1e 1n e
program Prayers were
requested for Floyd Norris,
Mrs Jesse Anderson and Mrs.
Beryl Wolfe, patients at
hospitals
Attendtng the meeting
beSides those named were Mrs
Alice Balser, Mrs Bess Parsons, Mrs Luctlle Rhodes,
, Mrs Donna Hill, Mrs Shirley
Ables, and Mrs Florence
Smith

MONDAY
REVIVAL at Hazael Com·

FRIENDLY Clrc~ of Trmity
, ChJII'~h, 1130,.'1;\lesdf!y night at
ll1e Globokar camp on the Ohio
River In the event of ram the
meeting will be held at the
church Anyone needing transportation IS to be at ll1e church
Mrs Carl Kautz will have the

program.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 6:30 potluck supper at
the hall Tuesday mght
Delegates to Buckeye G1rls
State from both Meigs and
Eastern High School will
report on the1r e:tper1ences
MeeUng at 7.30 p.m~ _
WOMEN'S Auxthary,
Veterans MemOrial Hospital,
annual picnic, 6 p m at the
Slate Park on Route 33 (left
side traveling toward Athens)
Wed Correction
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Postl28,6·30potlucksupperat
the hall Wednesday mghl
Delegates to Buckeye G1rls
State from both Metgs and
Eastern High School will
report on !hell' experiences
MeeUng at 7 30 p m

Star garden
club meets
"Daily Pleasures with Day
Lilies" was the topic used by
Mrs Virgil Atkins for the
programatarecentmeetingof
the Star Garden Club held at
lhe home of Mrs. Or1n Nebon.
Mrs Pearly Nelson's theme
was "Fiowei'S that Bloom 1n
August." Plans were made
durmg th meeting conducted
by Miss Ruby Diehl for the
Me1gs County FaiT exhibit It
was announced that new off1c..rs will be mstalled at the
next meeting at the home of
Mrs Grover Stout
Mrs. Stout won fll'st place for
her arrangement made m a
homemade contamer on
exh1b1 t at the meeting
Members gave the creed and
collect t8 open the meeting and
lllen answered roll call by
nammg a hly 1n bloom
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs C E
Stout, Mrs Nonnan Will, Mrs.
Douglas Chaney, Mrs Gerald
Minor, Mrs G A Radekin,
Mrs Henry Turner, Miss Hazel
Henson and Mrs Norma
Nicholson
-·

•
WEDNESDAY
FEENEY-BeMett Post 128,
American Legion, 7 30 p m
Wednesday at the hall.
Members to jom ll1e aUX!llary
for a poUuck dinner at 6 30
THURSDAY
WILUNG Workers Class,
Enterprise United MethodiSt
Church, 7:30p.m at the home
of Mrs James Will.

'

Party helii
A surprtse party was held
recenUy m observance of ll1e
biTthdays of Mrs Harry L
Bailey and her daughter, Mrs
Brenda Hysell, at the home of
Mrs Lyle Hysell.
Mrs Hysell celebrated her
27th biTthday She was born
August 13, 1946, ber mother's
27th b1rthday Attending ll1e
party were Lois Thompson, Ivy
Divol, Marcia Capehart, Susie
Robson and son, Danny, Unda
Riffle, Matt and Tina, Mrs
Eva Hysell and Donrue, Cindy
Thompson, Debble and Keith
Ba•ley, Gifts were presented to
the honored guests and
refreshments mcludlng two
birthday cakes were served

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By 114'14' .. Huth·l

•

e e

~

Dear Helen .
J am 34 a housewife and molhcr of • baby boy I'm deter' my children
'
mmed to bring
up to be honest, so I ma de up Ill)
mmd to have the "unforgetlllblc cxpericn•-e" of being a thief then I could teach them fiTsl-lland how awfnlii is
While shopping , 1took a paiT of sunglusscs 1Never in my life
have 1stolen before J was hopmg to get caught, and I was 1
At the security offiCe the people were very understandmg
which made me even more ashamed, upset and embarrassed I'll
oever forget the guilt I felt
My name w1H be kept on file for three years, but I'll
remember the awful mc1dcnt ail my hfe.
By haVIng this experience J can more capably show my
children the value of being clean and straight other parents
might shrug if their kid.!i )"ere caught shoplifting the first time
Never me' The lesson was worth 11 - UNFORGETTABLY
EXPERIENCED
Dear U E
Sorry I don't buy your line of reasoning If you msist a parent
can belter~msbll "nght" by exper~encmg "wrong" first-hand,
what happens when you teach him the commandment which
adjures "Thou shalt not k1U '" - H

+++

Dear Helen Our mamage was almost perfect for 28 of Its 31
years We were much m love (I still am) and we raiSed five fme
ch1ldre People still believe we're the happ!esl t'Ouple, but It's
put-on lhese days
I can count on one hand the t1mes my husband has kissed me
or srud "I love you" m J years Gone is the desu e he used to
have for me
He's quiet and morose We don't talk for days at a bme We
seldom go out - and he doesn't go out alone, so It 1sn't another
woman
I've asked htm many times what IS happemn~ to our
marr1age and he says ~"Th ere's nothing wrong "He won't see a
counsellor
If our love hadn't been so beaullful before, !might be able to
fac.. this better now , l feel rJected and alone, hke an unwanted
spinster What can be wrong• - DEPRESSED
Dear Depressed
I'd suspect your husband IS gomg through what some experts
tenn "the male climacteric" which IS largely menU!!, but often
the depressiOn 1s deepened by phys1cal problems
The 50s can he traumatic for an active, ambitious man who
suddenly realizes there's no clunb left for h1m but down He
worries - about hiS Job, his shortness of breath, hiS growmg
paunch and thinnmg hatr, ltttie aches and pams that aspmn
doesn't cure and he remembers all those goals he never qmte
reached and now he never will
Regrets and fears creep in, turmng his whole outlook old "
And then the final blow he fails In bed, because he has
programmed hunself for failure And he retires behmd a wall of
m1sery - for a man 's pride often won't let him discuss hiS lacks :
With anyone, especially hiS wife
•
Men grow out of the male climactene JUSt as women pull
through the menopause, but the trip can be shortened with good
adv1c.. and care from their family doctors, and a great deal of
understanding from thetr wives
Insist that your husband have a medical check-up, and
pnvately clue your doctor m on hiS overlong depresston W1th
luck and love, you'll have hun back soon - H

WIN AT BRIDGE

Four spades, one way to go
.---N-O-R-TH,.-----20.., · Oswald ' It might be de+ KJ 97
1cr1bed as the pnnc1ple of lead
,. 43
mg up to slrength ralher tha
t AK 9
away from 1t
•
+ t0143
J•m Wesl sta r ts out by'
WEST
EAST
leadmg high clubs South ruffs'
+&amp;%
+3
the th~rd club lead and draws
trumps He can afford to plat,
,. 31075
,.AQ 962
out a lol of trumps prov1ded he
U63
• 75 42
hangs on to atleastone Then:
+AKQJ
+ 962
he can play diamonds bur
SOUTH (01
evenlually he will have to lead"
+AQI0854
a heart,
8
,. K
Oswald When he does lead
t QJ IO
!hat heart he musllead 1t fro .U:
+ 85
dummy Once he does that he 1s'
East West vulnerable

South
I+
he IS sure becau se East holds
Pass 3+
Pass 4+
lhe hearta ce GiveWesttha ~
Pass Pass
Pass
card and South would have tO'
Opemng Jcad- •K
lose two tncks no matter how:
'-----------l he played the su1t
:
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
! NEWSPAPER ENTE RPR ISE ASSN J
West

North

sure to score ht s kmg or hearts.~
and make four spades That t s ~~

East

Jim ' How about a week or
really Simple hands•
Oswald ' Well heres one
South has a sound openmg
2Q
The btddtn g ha s been
spade b1d mciudmg a s•x-card
Nurth
East
South
,suit Norlh has a perfect hand We st
?
1+
Pass
for a hm1t JUmp raise to three
You Soolh hold
and most people would go so
far as to bid three spades even +Q 8 6 4 2 ,.2 t A 4 +A K J 9 7'
What do you do now?
,
If they ~layed 11 ~s absolutely
rorcmg '
A- Btd three clubs You Intend let
play
tn spades hut want to shoW
J1m "Some people m1ght
your
club
!ilrength flrlll
not gello !he spade game but
TODAY'S QUESIION
everyone would be playmg
some spade contra ct and the
Your partner rebids three
same pr1nc1ple of play IS gomg spades What do you do now 1
;
to apply "
Answer tomorrow

•

&lt;Xll.UMBUS, Ohio ( UPI) The Iateat chapter In Ohio'' pro
football rivalry turned oul to be
a "storm alter the ca~n" uf.
fair
Alter a llstleu first ha~ that
ended In a 3-3 lie on a sultry
&amp;mday, the Cleveland Browns
exploded in the second half to
whip the CinciMaU Bengals 246 In a pre-aeason game
It waa the ninth meeting
between lhe state riVals, with
Cleveland now holding a 11-3
edge in tbe series It was the
lint exhibition victory ever for
the Browns over the Bengals,
although the Browns bold a 5-1
regular season edge
What started out to be one of
llle dullest games of the year
turned Into a dfl!zling display
by the Browns which delighted
most of the 73,421 fans
gathered in Ohio Stadium on
ll1e campus of Ohio SUite
University
Until late in the third
quar1er, the only scoring had
been three fteld goals that gave
Cincmnati a 6-3 edge
Change&amp; in 1% Seconds
But In a span of 12 seconds,
Cleveland's Frank Pills unleased a sparkling 22-yard end
around for a touchdown and
Cliff Brooks lnterc..pted a pass
and dashed 23 yards down the
sideline for another TD and a
17-lllead.
Less than five minutes later,
Pitts teamed with backup
quarter~?ack Don Horn for a
breathtaking 76-yard touchdown pasa play Horn lofted the
bail about 50 yards and Pitts
took It on CinciMati's 30 yard
line, but bobbled and juggled
the ball the next 10 yard.!i while
running at full speed He

finally got firm CO!ltrol of the
ball und raced In for the final
IICore of the game.
Despite
the
acoriQ~
!lreworka, II was !he work of
Cleveland's defense that
plellSI!d ooach Nick Skorich
"Our defensive pasa ruah
was the best so far this year,"
enthused Skorlch after the
gsme. "We've been concerned
ubout tl!is all year "
Although Cincinnati quarterback Virgil Carter completed
17 of 22 passes, the Cleveland
defense kept most of hlo gains
short and Car1er was never
able to throw a bCimb
Carter played the entire
game because regular quarterback Ken Anderson was
slightly ailing wilh a minor
knee Injury
Cleveland's starting quarterback Mike Phipps completed
seven of his etght passes in the
first half, but It was Horn's
play m the second half that
Ignited the Browns and brought
praise from Skorich
"I was glad to see Horn move
the ball,'' Skorich said "He
m1xed his plays well and kept
the defense off balance all of
the second half "
Sad Day for Brown
It was an unpleasant homecoming for Paul Brown, the
veteran, 64-year-old Bengals
coach who p,revwusly guided
both the Browns and the Ohio
State Buckeyes, whose field
provtded the neutral turf for
the game
"I'm sorry we didn't make It
closer,'' said Brown "But the
outcome sometunes hinges on
httle th1ngs The b1g swmg
there today conSISted of three
plays "

Reds hoping to
end tail spin
NEW YORK (UPI) - Jack
Billingham got the call today to
try to get the Cinctnnati Reds
out of their little tall spm
Billingham will work today's
gsme against New York's Tom
Seaver In the finale of a fourgsme sertes
The Reds, who amved here
Friday winning six out of their
fiTSt seven games on this road
trip, dropped two out of the
first three games to the Mets,
12-1 Saturday and 2-1 Sunday
Th011e two !oases proved
costly as the Reds fell 2\'z
gsmes back of the Natlooal
League western division
leading Los Angeles l)odgor•

Person to person
health insurance
It can help pay
eoarlng hoepltal
and eurglcal bills.

Call me.
Sttpfltn C. Scuew•an
SSJ Rusul 51
(Greve! Hill)
MiddlePOrt, Ohi01

PH. m -7155

A Reds' wm today would enable them to piCk up a half
game on the Dodgers who are
Idle.
The Mets scored the winning
run Sunday m the eighth Inning
when Pete Rose misjudged
Bud Harrelson's fly to deep left
and Harrelson wound up with a
double to score Don Hahn
And II was Hahn Saturday
who proved troublesome for
the Reds and their starter Fred
Norman
Hahn had a three-run homer
to get lhe Mets started on thelf
rampage John Mtlner clouted
a grana slam homer m a sixrun fourth inning
The Reds have been relying
on the strong hitting of Rose
and Tony Perez to keep them
gomg on their drive for their
lhird pennant m four years
Rose continues to lead the
league In htttlng with a .342
average Perez is closing m on
Rose with a 315 average.
Perez got two doubles Sunday, giving him 136 hits for the
season. He had slarruned out
two hits In each of the Reds'
last ten games
Perez' hitUng has boosted
him to fifth m the RBI colwnn
in the league with 83, only six
behind teammate Johnny
Bench and Pittsburgh's Wiille
stargell who share the lead
with 89

EVERY

TV~SDI\'( WI6\\T

~t'ill't RIW Nl61tT

~1' 6V"17t.P. C.tl~f!

J---.....--

lt\IC~E

Set! O.,.,New

Fall and Back
To School Fashions
SUMMER
WEARABLES '12 PRICE

lOLA'S

Appomtment not
always necessary

Main at Sycamore

Phone 992-2725

POMEROY, OHIO

lpeolal femll~ 111111 prlcee after 4 p.m.
fl'or Adult•
fl'or Klda
~~~~

llhel"

Prtnoh l'rl••

DRIVE IN

Turnov•r ~nrl

for

Onlv

.,

Laroe 11111 Prink

GOOD FOOD

Funburg.r,M
renoh Frlt•
m-Il SQft Drink

and LQIIIpop

Only

800

the IMI five yard.!i
" It waa a had decision lo
throw !he bali then," said Carter "r )llllt felt an ursency to gel
rid of it. I think I was hit just as
r wa• lhrowlng it "
'l'he wln was Cleveland's first
of lhe exhibition season and
giVCfl them a 1-1-1 rnark em.
cimwtl ,. now 1-2.
Cleveland plays the Allanta
Falcons at Knoxville, Tenn,
next Saturday night, while Clncmrwtl plays at Detroit Friday
night

A's upJead to 3
' back Chicago, Z.l, St
By JOE FROHLINGER
turp~d
UPI Sports Writer
Loll\li,tripped up San Diego, 1-1&gt;,
Baseball has been called a ani!. , Houston
defeated
game of inches and a tape- Philadelphia, 5-3
measure would have been tn
I}Jll Lee finally won his 13th
order Sunday as Oakland gafllF-On h!' seventh try-as
reeled off its etghth straight Bos!on beat Kansas City and
victory, '114, 1over the uiH!nded the Royals their third
Mllwauk~ 'll~Jmod c "" -ro\51\•ght setback Luis ApariciO
Sal Sando rlbWw a iltwdltlln 1&gt;fllrJ!Ied In one run and scored
homer In the nintfi funlrllfYOr another to pace the Red Sox
the margm of victory after a\IJ1ck
Deron Johnson clobbered a
llpddy Bell slarruned a threegrand slam home run In the rup homer m Cleveland's f1rst
first mrung
game wm but wasn't around to
The Win mcreased Oakland's see the Indians score thelf
lead in 'tl!e&lt;&gt;lll\iel'\ciuilUI!ljne ~li'i'fl"'"g runs m the secood
West to three 'gltn\e's over ga,me smce he was ejected 1n
Kansas City, which lost a 4-3
first mrung for argumg a
deciSion to the Boston Red Sox c~p Leo Cardenas s~ngled
The homer was the 20th l\QI!le Jack Brohamer from
homer of the season for Sando !hlrd with two outs m the mnth
- five more than the A's ,:U.ing to wm It for the Indians
captam had all last year and deal the Twms a double
Johnson's shot was hiS 18th defeat
homer of the year but despite
WIJO!I Loses 18th
the surplus of h1ttmg talent,
Wilbur Wood lost his 18th
Sando credited p!lching as the game of the year to go With his
key to the A's recent success 20 wms as Merv Rettenmund
"We're playmg better now and Tommy Davis hit two-run
than we have all year and I'd singles m a f1ve-run second'
have to say the reason why IS ,T"1ng
outburst m Baltimore's
that our p!lchmg has been just fiOmP over the White Sox
great,'' he said
1, Bobby Murcer slammed his
Hunter Returns
,J9th homer of the year m the
Jun Hunter, returrung to the ~econd 1nmng and Gene Micha·
starting rotation for the f1rst ei added a two-run double m
ttmesmcehewasm)uredmthe ,\he same IMmg to spark the
All-star game July 24, pitched , Yankees to VIctory over Texas
four-hit ball and allowed three 1 Mickey Stanley, who
runs before leaving m the homered earlier, s~ngled with
sixth. Reliever Horac10 Pma J two outs m the lith mnmg and
picked up his sixth Win m mne raced home on a wild p1tch to
deCISions
giVe the T1gers a victory over
In other American League lhe Angels The vtctory ended a
contests, Detroit topped Callforma m 11 mnmgs, 4-3, New
York knocked_off _Texas, , G-2,
THISTLEDOWN
Cleveland beat Minnesota
CLEVELAND (UP!)
twice, 4-3 and 5-3, and Angenora won the $16,000 OhiO
Baltunore trounC&lt;!d Chicago, 8- Debutante
Stakes
at
2
Thistledown Saturday, flmshed
In the National League, one lenglll ahead of Round
Montreal downed Atlanta, 3-1, Bottom Spr~ngdrops won the
New York edged Cmcmnati, 2- fiTs! race and Honestly the
1, Pittsburgh stopped San second to return $1 on the daily
FranciSco, 5-0, Los Angeles double combmabon of 4 and 3

IJ!'

'

four-game losmg streak and
kept Detroit 2% games behmd
Baltimore m the tight American League East race
The Tigers, with Manager
B1ily Martin returning after
missmg two games due to
Illness, scored their firs! three
runs on homers -back-to-hack
sho~, by Stanley and Tony
Taylor m the third and a
leadoff homer by designated
hitler Frank Howard m the
eighth

By STU CAMEN
UP! Sports Writer
For the first time m nearly a
year, the Miami Dolphins know
how It feels not lo w1n a game
The Dolphins saw their mcred lble 21-game wmmng
streak come to an end Saturday rught when they were held
to a 9-9 he by the Chicago
Bears In a National Football
League preseason contest
No! smce Aug 31, 1972, wben
they were beaten by Washmgton 1n an exhibition game, had
the Dolphins failed to beat theiT
opponent
Before the tie agamst Chicago, the Dolphms had won three
exhibition games this year but
the deadlock by the Bears,
before a crowd of 80,050 m the
Orange Bowl, hardly seemed to
bother Dolpliins coach Don
Shula
" We're not feeling any
pressure," Shula emphasized
shortly after the last of Mac
Percival's three held goals
early m the fourth quarter
enabled llle Bears to gam thelf
deadlock "We realiZe that
every team that comes here IS
gomg to try to do just what the
Bears wanted to do We know
thai
"But our goal 1n the preseason IS mdiVIdual Improvement, which leads to
We're

getting ready to play San
FranciSco m the regular
season

MaJOr League Standings

Amencan League

East
By United Pren International
w I pet • b
National LeagUe
68 52 567
~l!tltlmore
East
67 56 545 21/:j&gt;
etrolt
w 1 pet g b
New
York
68 58 540 3
63 61 508
St Louis
6S 57 533
59 61 A92 2
Pittsburgh
~slon
59 62 488 Qlh
lwaukee
Montreal
59 63 484 3
51
408 191h
Chicago
58 65 472
~ Cleveland
West
Slh
Philadelphia 57 66 ~
55 (.1
• .lS
6Lh
w
I pet g b
New York
WP
Oakland
72 Sl sas
,, 1 pet g b Kansas C1tv
70
560 3
Los Angeles
7-,r 47 621
Mtnnesota
59 63 484 12 112
Cincinnati
75 50 603 21!2 Cellfornla
56 64 467 l4 lf"2
San Francisco 67 55 549 9
O~lcago
58 66 468 14 112
Houston
65 61 516 13
fex as
43 78 355 28
AtlAnta
60 67 472 Wh H
Saturday 1 S Results
San 01aao
A/· D"'•"•u 1;, Ph Bqpton 8 Kansas C1ty 5
SlturdfY '..
Oakland 6 Milwaukee 3
....
New York 1 1"f,~c i nn,j!l .,.J ,
Cleveland S Minnesota 0
1~ 1
~tlmore 5 Chicago 0
Chi cagQ ,11 1"""
.li'i'J••·
'"""" 1•1H v1ll1 -~
w York 5 Texas 3
1~ra~t~:~oM:nti~;:rJ,s J. ' ) !
'C Stttarnla 4 Detroit 1
P ittsburgh 6 San Fran s
C•)lfarnla 4 Detroit 1
Sunday's Results
Houston 3 Philadelphia 2
Sunday's Results
Cle'Ve 5 Minnesota 3, 1st
Pittsburgh 5 Sen Frenclsco 0
Clfve o4 Minnesota 3 2nd
New York 2 Cinclnnl!lll 1
O~kland 6 Milwaukee 4
Montreal 3 Atlantll 1
Bdston 4 Kansas City 3
Los Angeles 2 Chicago 1
Ba)llmore a Chlcaoo 2
Sl Louis 1 San Diego o
Detroit -4 Callf 3 1l Inns
Phlladelphla..5J:toustan 1
New York 6 Texas 2
Today's Pro bible Pitchers ~ ~ Today's Probable P•tEhers

•

"

ss

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sportl Writer
When a fellow lo young,
carefree and confident enough
II) request unlucky 13 as his
uniform number, he can say
things like this
"I believe I can he a better
catcher than Johnny Bench I
think I can hit with as much
power and for a higher
uvera~c

''

The speaker, on national TV
yet, was a guy named Joe-Joe
Ferguson of the Los Angeles
Dtxlgers-and he made the
sllllcment when he had played
In fewer than lOll major league
games
Well, the baseball world has
developed ii healthy respect for
the 26-year-&lt;&gt;ld native of San
Francisco
Ferguson won some more
respect Sunday when his tworun homer with two out m the
runth Inrung enabled the Dodgers to beat the Chicago Cubs, 21, and Increase thelf National
League Western DIVISion lead
over the Cinannati Reds to 2\'z
games 1 he blow spoiled a
bnlhant effort by RICk Reuschel, who had a no-hitter
through seven mmngs
Expos Defeat Brave•
The
Montreal
Expos

opener "

Eldlibi(IOil Halfway Mark
Three games Sunday
brought the exhibition campaign to Its halfway pomt Five
pass mtercept1ons helped the
New York Giants throttle the
New York Jets, 45-30, w1de
receiver Frank Pitts scored
two touchdowns for Cleveland

'

Meigs freshmen

begin practice

as the Browns whipped the
Cmcmnatl Bengals, 2M; and
San Francisco used four field
goals to beat the San Diego
Chargers, 19-7
In Saturday's games, Dallas
beat New Orleans, 24-14,
Oakland whipped Los Angeles,
16-3, Atlanta defeated New
England, 27-10, Denver tr1pped
St LoUis, 38-21, Balt1more
edged DetrOit, 32-211, Mmnesota
mpped Kansas City, 13-10, and
Green Bay crushed Houston,
33-14
The Giants broke open a
close game 1n the !mal quarter
when Carter Campbell and J1m
Files returned pass mterceptwns for touchdowns Spider
Lockhart's 77-yard run back of
another pass mtercept10n
helped set up the Giants' !mal
TD as the Jets saw star
quarterback Joe Namath
forced to the s1dehnes midway
1n the second quar1er wtth a
bruiSed elbow
Pitts hauled in a 711-yard pass
for the first of hiS touchdowns
and ran 22-yards on an end
around for his second m the
Browns' tr1wnph over Cmcmnal! as the Bengals were
!united to field goals of 28 and
35 yards by Horst Muhlmann
John Brodie's three-yard
scoring pass to Jtmmy Thomas
accounted for San Francisco's
only touchdown as the Forty
Nmers also used three field
goals by Tom Wittum and one
by Bruce Gossett to beat San
Diego The Chargers' touchdown came on a 10-yard pass
from John Umtas to Walt
GarriSon
Garo Boots Field Goat.
Garo Yeprerruan booted field
goals of 25, 53 and Ill-yards for
the Dolphins while Perctval
connected for the Bears from
18, 10 and 17 yard.!i; Roger
Staubach hit on seven of e1ght
passes 1n just one quarter of
work for 156 yards and two
touchdowns in Dallas' triUmph

Dale C. Warner lril Agency

BAKER FURNITURE

BOX 727

MHJtl(t~&amp;il, 0.

I

\

----'i __

over New Orleans, and George
Blanda, who will be 46 next
month, kicked three field goals
to help g1ve Oakland Its wm
over Los Angeles
D•ck Shiner Uu:ew scormg
passes of 13 and five yards and
direclcd two other scoring
drives to lead Atlanta past New
England , Floyd Little came off
the bench to score a palf of
touchdowns m the second half
and spark Denver over St
LouiS, and fullback Don Not.
tingham smashed one yard for
a touchdown In the clOSing
m~nutes to give Baltimore Its
VICtory over Detroit
Fran Tarkenton guided MmnesoU! to two scores in the
wanmg m~nutes, the last a 20yard field goal by Fred Cox
with 1 03 remalllUlg, foc a
come-from-behind victory over
Kansas City m a nationally
televtsed game, and Green
Bay rotted over Houaton with
Scott Hunter throw~ng a 46yard touchdown pass to Jon
staggers only four plays after
the openmg kickoff

NOW

Tho BEAUIIONO • D2211W

Grained Walnut color UHF
Ultramallc Channel Selector
and AFC on UHF Deluxe VIdeo
Range VHF Tuning Syatem Dl·
pole Antenna

FULL FEATURED/
• Cutfom "Pttm•Sef' VHF
Fine TMnlng
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INGELS FURNITURE
997 2635

Middleport

TWO EVENINGS
EACH WEEK

BUFFET

DINING
MONDAY EVENING
AND TUESDAY EVENING
s to 9 3D-All you can eat, (or Ala Carte)

r------------1
Here's the Man
To See For .•

THE

BEST

I Sears

L------·----

We shall be moving as soon as the phone

Middleport, o.

Allin Foster pitched a eevellhitter for the Cvdlnala, who
scored llle game's only run
wilh the help of a throwing
error by San Diego llhorlltop • '
Dwain Anderaon in the first
iMing Rake McBride scored
from second base on the error,
which tagged Bill Grell with
his 13th loss
Jerry Koosman pitched a
six-hitter and struck out six,
wiMing his nmlh game against
H losses for the Mets, and
handing Ross Grimsley his
seventh setback for ClnclnnaU
Bud Harrelson scored the
Mets' first run on Willie Mays'
sacrlflce fly and doubled in the
winning run in the eighth.
Jim Rooker pitched a fivehitter for his Sixth win for the
Pirates, who dealt San
Francisco's Juan Martchal his
ninth loss. Rich Hebner and
Manny Sanguillen each drove
m two runs for llle Pirates and
Al Oliver knocked In the fifth
run with a homer
Bill Robinson drove In five
runs with a grand slam homer
and a sacrtr1ce fly, enabling
Wayne Twitchell to raise his
record to 12-5 wtth an eight.
hitter for the PhUlles Jerry
Reuss suffered his ninth defeat
against 13 victories for the
Astros

Twenty-two freshmen began
Meigs Marauder grid practice
this morning, according to
freshman coach Roger Brauer
'
and Sam Crow, hiS assistant
Members of the 1973 freshman squad are Ch1p Brauer1
Wayne Cotterill, Ronald
Coates, Carl Carmichael,
Terry Clark, Jeff Dilcher,
Drlnkslmd
Wide Menu
Randy George, Rick George,
Dessert Extra
Chblce
Gene Hwnphrey, Rick John(A~11114\ BIJ(tl
tAll Times EDT)
son,
Dave Miller, Mike Owens,
Cl nclnnaff ' tEI'flllngham 168
New York (Stotflemyre 12 11)
1
Order our regular menu every nightS to 10
at New York (Sea&gt;~er 15 6} 2 at Kansas City (B usby ll ll) Jeff Patterson, Steven Ranlou
Osborne
pm
ewpm
San Francisco (Bradley 10 11)
Boston (Curtis ll 10 ) at Texas dolf, Ronme $nyder, Brmnley
at Montreal (Torrez 711) 8 (81bby67) , 9pm
Seth , Allan Stewart, Tim
p m
Detroit (J Perrv 11 10 ) at
Thomas, Rick Taylor, Ray
Pittsburgh (Ellis 11 11) at Oakland (Blue 13 71 11 P m
Houston (Richard 4 11, a IS
Minnesota (Ca mpbell l 1) at Willford, Duane Weber, and
SEARS
pm
Baltimore ( Aiexllndel" 6 6) 7 30
Jim Pockllngton
(Only games scheduled)
Pm(
Catalog Merchant
Tue1d1y'1 oames
(Only games scheduled)
1
SOAP BOX WINNER
220 E Moln
Pomoroy
San Fran at Montreal , night
Tuesd11v'• Games
San DleQO at Phlla night
Chicago a I Cleve, twilight
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - H1s
PH. 992-217 8
POMEROY
PH q92-3629
L.os Ang at New York. night
M lnM at Balt imore , night
friends
call
him
"Big
Jim"
and
Cincinnati at Chlceoo
New.,.York atKan City , n ight
St Louis at Atlanta, r"tlght
Bostbn at Texas, nfghl
although he stands only 4-foot. , - - . , - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . , . - - - - - - - - - - _ ; __ __
Pittsburgh al Houston , night
De troll at Oakland night
11, Jan1es Gronen lived up to
Mllwauket at Calif, night
his nickname Saturday The 14year-old from Boulder, Colo ,
defeated 11-year-old Bret
REPRESENTING .. ,.
Yarborough of Elk Grove,
Calif , in the final heat to
capture lhe 36th running of lhe
STATE AUTOMOBILE MU;fUAL INS.
All-Amer~can Soap Box Derby
OHIO FARMERS lNSUR,Gil!iiCE CO.

strike Is settled to the former Elberfelds
store room, 102 W. M•lll St,, Pomeroy, 0.

IIPI .AITlliN AVI.
QA~ I
I , HlO

defeated lhe AUanta Braves, 31, the St IJluis Cardmais
shaded the San O~ego Padres,
1-0, the New York Mets mpped
the Reds, 2-1, the Pittsburgh
Pirates blanke&lt;l the San
Francisco Giants, 5-0, and the
Philadelphia Pllllhes topped
the Houston Astros, s.J, m
other NL games
American J.eague scores
were Boston 4 Kansas City 3,
Oakland 6 Milwaukee 4, Cleveland over Minnesota, ~3 and 4·
J, Baltimore 8Cblcago 2, Texas
6 New Yock 2, and Detrml 4
California 3, in ll Innings
Fer~uson delivered his
game-winning blow
off
Reu~chel after a single by Bill
Buckner Ron Santo had given
Reuschel, who struck out 13, a
1-0 lead in the fifth inning when
he hit his 13th homer W11Ue
Crawford broke Reuschel's nohit spell with a single opening
the eighth 1nmng
Pepe Mangual's homer and
Ken Singleton's run-scoring
smgle were the big blows for
the Expos as Bator Moore won
his seventh game and Mike
,Marshall received credit for
his 25th save Darrell Evans
tripled home the Braves' run
as Ph1l N!ekro suffered his
sixth loss agamst 13 wms

Miami win streak ends

team Improvement

"We Insure In Sure.:' lusur11uce"

McCWRE'S
LOCUli

!lorn !'roves J'(aymoker
Horn guided Cleveland &amp;I
Ylirdsln ju8t ei~ht plays, two of
them lii'Bse/1 or 23 and 22 yards
'l'he IP.fl play In the series was
lhe snappy 2Z.yard end around
by Pitts that caught Clnclnllllti's defense off guard
After Cleveland's kiCkotr,
Carlcr went to the air on the
fint play, but Brooks stepped
in fr(/111 of Intended receiver
(,1larlle Joiner on the sideline
ond bn-ezed in for a 23-yard
~ore, adding Insult to injury
by strutting like a drom major

AUTQ.OWNERS MUTUAL INSURANCE CO.

Irina the fMi ly for ... .food, pro1111pt urvlc:t• •ol
llntiblt pr1cu.

4th&amp;

Brown ~~aid lhf game will
help him dooide who to koo p on
the roster
"We're going to have to do
some cutUng right away and
today I saw il(lveral players
U1at the ~arne of pro footboll
might he a little loo bi~ for,' ' he
said
After field goat. of 211 and 35
yards by Cincinnati's Horst
Muhlmarnl and a 37-yarder by
Cleyeland's Don Cockroft put
the score at 11-3 midway In the
third qllllrter, the Browns went
to work in earnest

•

wzns zn

VALUES

11

"Of coutse, bul if you heard Ehrlichman, I'm not sure "" u
approve - even if we are married "
"Watergate withdrawal can be painful, Mrs Doe, but you
understand you must get back to the real world, now the hearings
are recessed
" I've tried I've really tried But there's an intern on
'General Hospital' whO looks like Sen Baker, and I tltlnk that
young cop on 'Ad&amp;m·l2' looks like Bob Haldeman when he was
younger, and I think I saw Sen Ervin on a 'Beverly Hillbillies'
rerun today, and "
"It Will pass, Mrs. Doe. You must he bra\'f "
"How can you be so sute• After all, you don't get John
Mitchell confused with 'CSMon,' or belleVf that Sam Dash 11
really Mr SPQck from 'Star Trek' with an ear job, the way 1do"
"Oh, I'm stlre, all right You see, Mrs. Doe, 1 am a
poychiatrlst and I know about such things I had a patient a few
years back,'and he had a rough time, too, a nightmare, really,
but II worked out all right for him Interesting chap, too, name of
Eilsherg , "

*~

E&lt;perienc.. Nol D•·~t Teacher

munily Church 7·30 each
evening beginning Monday
with the Rev George Hoschar
evangelist Special music,
public Invited. Homecorrung ~II
day on Aug111t 26 with Barnett
Famlly providing music
THROUGH the week,
revival, Hazael Community
Church, off 124 between Long
Bottom
and
Portland
Evangelist GeorRe Fisher
Special Slllging every night
Homecoming, Aug 26. Barnett
family singers
MEIGS Chapter Order of
DeMolay, regular meeting,
7 30, Middleport Masomc
Temple; initiation, and
mothers club to meet in the
basement
TUESDAY
PUBLIC MEETING , 7 30
t Trinity Church
P
m
a
Pomeroy to infonn residents'
on 5 bon~ifMMI' be voted on ,
l'J•
~h ' ill provide
, .~v,.. 6 w
w
funds lor construction of
training center for mentally
retarded All citizens are Invited to attend.

,.

I~ Us

"But this was your husband, Mrs Doe, and it was rubbing
alcohol, I'm sure "

$ 19

Apple Grove
women meet 1~ Calendar ~~

992·7428

I

POMEROY, 0-

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut AI S
Use o.r Free Porklng Lol

Robinson's Cleaners
116 E

2nd,

Pomeroy

The MEIGS INN

�1- The O.l(y Sentlnol, Middleport-Pomeroy, o , .\Ug. 20,1973

2- The Dally &amp;nthwl 111ldtllcport-l'OIII\'roy, 0. Au~ 20,1971

A. rea garden clu~s
honored by state
Area gorden clubs ro.1ped LewiS, chulr\\ oman · and
llle fru1ts of their efforts ove• second place to the Galhpohs
ll1e past year when state Gorden Club fo1 Rlvo1 by at
awards were presented at the Chrlstinos, co.,hmred by M1s
annual convention of !he OhiO Luther Duyton, Mrs Kennclh
AssociallonofGardenClubs
FraZior, and Mr. Fred Car"Hats Off to OAGC" was the man
theme of the Augus t 14-16
Aga1n th1s year, Washington
convention held al Wooster County rec..1ved first place In
College
U1e state for lis Class C county
Heading the list of local fair show (less than 13 clubs 1n
recipients tn awards was U1e the county ) In !he Class B
Rulland Friendly Gardeners county fair shows I 13 to 18
Club, winner of the V1clor H clubs), the 1972 Me•gs County
Ries Outstanding Garden Club falf show headed by Mrs
Award, thi most valuable of Charles Lew1s, received
the assOCiation presentations honorable mention m the state
The club also received second The award was accepted by
•n the stale for 1ts publicity Mrs Gmther of the Chester
book Only one pomt separated Club
•
the flfst and second place
In the Sears Commllmty
winners The Rutland Fnendly Involvement project, one
Gardeners book was prepared winner from each region was
by Mrs Homer Parker announced, and from this hst a
ass•sted by Mrs James Car- state w1nner was chosen
penter
Wmner for Region 11 was the
Also on diSplay were the Rutland Friendly Gardeners
other top Region 11 publicity Club for a beautification
books by the Windmg Trail prOJect at the Forest Acres
Garden Club of Pomeroy, w1th Park, New Llma Road ,
- Mrs Robert Lewis, chaiT- Rutland of which Mrs Parker
woman, and the Rutland was the chairwoman Other
Garden Club w1th Mrs Robert SCIP books were on display
Canaday, chairwoman
mciuding ones by Windmg
Area clubs wmmng awards Trail and Bend 0 ' the River
m flower show competition
Regional
wmners
on
were as follows
program books displayed were
Class A, smgle club shows Rutland Garden Club, flfst,
w1th 53 entries Rutland French C1ty Garden Club,
Friendly Gardeners, th1rd, 1972 Galhpohs, second, Hill and
show, "A Swnmer Weddmg," Dale Garden Club, Marietta
headed by Mrs Homer Parker th1rd , and Wmdmg Trail ,
and Mrs Howard BlTchf•eld , Pomeroy, honorable mention
Chester
Garden
Club,
Mrs Richard Barton of the
honorable
mentiOn
for Chester Club, outstandmg
"Autwnn Magic," co-eha1red gardener for Regwn 11, was
by Mrs. Paul Baer and Mrs honored at a luncheon dur1ng
Horace Karr Mrs Parker convenllon act1V1t1es Mrs
accepted the award for the Barlon ra1ses and preserves
Rutland club, Mrs Richard many vaneties of vegetables
Barlon for the Chester club
for use by her family wh1ch
Class C, group ChriStmas mcludes a 14-year-oid son and
shows Me1gs County Garden three year old twms
Club Assoc•allon, lust place m Besides her Interest m
llle state for "It Happens floral arts, Mrs Barton runs an
Every Chmtmas" co-eha1red msurance agency at her Rt 1,
by Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, Long Boltom home
Bend 0' the R1ver Garden
Mrs Edward MIZlcko of the
Club, and Mrs Parker Richland Garden Club, Athens,
Rutland Fnendly Gardeners was rec1p1ent of awards m the
The show received 95 out of a OAGC shde contest The
possible 100 pomts on the regwnal shde contest chalTscormg
woman,Mrs MtZICkorecetved
Class C, group shows Meigs a second and two honorable
County
Garden
Club mentions She displayed at the
Association, th1rd place m the convention, garden therapy
state for the 1973 Regatta craft Items made by the Good
Show, "A Great Place to be In Luck Garden Club of the
'73," Mrs Richard Collins, Athens Mental Health Center,
Wmdmg Trail Garden Club, a therapy proJect serviced by
and Mrs Jack Hart, Walk-In clubs m Athens and Meigs
Garden Club, c&lt;"ChalrWomen Counties Mrs Jerome Fenske
The award was accepted for of the Ahens Garden Club
the county by Mrs OriS Gm- assisted Mrs M1z1cko
!her, Chester Garden Club
Convenllon-goers were
Two RegiOn 11 award flbbons entertamed and educated by
were diSplayed on local books the
outstandmg
floral
for s~ngle club Chflstmas demonstratiOn of Bill H1~on
shows first place to the who presented two programs,
Rutland Garden Club for 1ts " Eiectricism m Flower
1972 show, "Smg a Song of Arranging" and "Serendipity
Chf!Stmas," Mrs Charles and Schmaltz" His novel and
str1k1ng crea lions mcluded
arrangements that borrowed
heavily on the old-fashiOned,
sentimental type designs With
a modern slant for mterest and
FOR
his contamers were a meat
grmder, an 011 funnel, cooking
pans, a bird cage a wagon
wheel hub, and ev~ a child's
at
potty chair
The 1974 OAGC convention
w1ll be held July Jl, August 1-2,
8
at Stouffers Inn, Downtown,
Your Thom MeAn Store
MIOOLEPORT
Cincinnati

ThomMcAn
Shoes

BOYS &amp; GIRLS
heritage house

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
• OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS 9 30 TO 12. 2 TO 5 !CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS ) - EAST COURT &lt;,T,
POMEROY

i' SOCi3i':f rH~ien H~~~ " '

Television Log
Monday, A1~ 20, 1971
7 30

To Tell the Tru th 6

Hollywood Squ"res 4, TraH1c Court

10 Chan cse Woy 10 Epl&gt;odo Action 33 , Bobby Goldsboro 3,

It s Your Bet B Bea t th e Clock l3
8 00
Ounsmoke 8 10 . Brlseball World ol Joe Garaglola 3, 4,
1S Rook ies 6 Magic Circus ll Tr ibute to George Gershwin

20. JJ

Mov1e - " Rogue' s Grt ll ery ' 6, 13 Here' s LU&lt;:y 8 10

9 00

9 30

Oorls Day 8, 10 Book Boal33 20

10 00

Paul Nuchmls Jl Med1cal Center 8, 10, News 70.

10 IS - The Sllenl Years

~o

11 00 - NewsJ 4 6, 810, 13, 15
11 JO - Johnny Carson J, 4, 15, Jack Paar Tonite 6 13 M ovles

" Tiger Bay" 8. " Bebo's G I " 10
l 00 - Man From UNCLE ' News 13

'l 00 - Focus on Columbus 4
3 00 ........ News 4

TUESDAY, AUG ll , 1913
6 00 -

Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 lS - Concern &amp; Commen1 10
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 Columbus Today 4 B1ble Answers 8 Fa1th
6 45 - Corncob Report 3 Fa rmflme 10

for Today IS

Today 3, 4, IS CBS News 8 10 Flmtstones 13
30 - Romper Room6, Rocky&amp; Bullw1nklel3

7 00 7

8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8, 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Ttmmy and Lassie 6
8 30 - JacklaLanneJ NewZooRev ue6
8 55 - News IJ
9 00 - Paul Oucon 4 Friendly Junction 10 AM 3 Peyton
Place 13

Ph1l Donahue 15 M ister Roberts 33 Movte ' Off

LimitS" 8 , Brady Bunch 6
9 30 - To Tell The Truth 3 Pey1on Place l3 Elec Co 33 Wild
Wild West 6
9 ss - Chuck White Reports 10
10 00 - Dinah Shore 3 15 Joker s W1ld 10 D1ck Van Dyke 13
Summer Fest1val 33
10 30 - Baffle 3 4 IS 510 000 Pyramid 8 10 Spl1t Second 13
11

Zoom 33 , Mike Douglas 6
_
00 - Gambit a 10 Password 13 WIZard of Odds 3 4 IS

11

30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 IS Love of Life 8, 10, Brady

Travelvre 33

Bunch 13 , BO"vVIIng 6, Ep1sode Actton 33
ll ss- CBS News B Dan I mel s World 10
12 00 - Jeooardv J 15 Bob Braun 's 50 50 Club 4, Password 6
News 10, 8, 13 Sesame Sf 33
12 30 - 3 W' s 3 15 Split Second 6 Sea r ch For Tomorrow 8 10

12 ss - News 3 15
l 00 - News 3 All My Cnlldren 6 13, Green Acres 10 Not For
Women Only 15 Otsc:over Flying 33 Green Acres 10

1 30 - 30nAMatch3 4 IS TheWorldTurnsS 10 Lets Make
a Deal6 13, HowdoYourChlldrenGrowJJ
n.:~'J~ nf nt tr I ivP.~ :l
GUldin~ Ll~ht 8

'1 no -

4 l:'i

NP.wlvwed Game 4, 6J 1$

10 Woman J3
2 30 - Edge of Night 8 10 G1rl 1n My Life 13 Musical En

counter 33 Baseball 3 41 Doctors 15
3 00 - Another World 3, 15 General Hospital 6 13 Pnce Is
RIQht

a

10

Folklife Otscvss1on 33

3 31)-Return to Peyton Place

15

One L1fe to L1ve 6 13 Match

Game 73 8, Secret Storm 10 Mak1ng Thmgs Grow 33
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3, Love, Amencan Style 13 Huck &amp; Yog16
Somerset 15 Secret Storm 8 Sesame St 33 , Movte 'The
Marryrng King· 10
4 30- My Llttle Margte 15, Merv Gnffm 4 F Troop 6 Abbott &amp;
Costello 8 Oaktan 13
5 00 - Mr Rogers 20 33 Bonanza 3 Hazel 8 Big Valley 6,
Western Star Theatre 15 Mr&gt;rv Gnff1n 4
5 JO - Beverly H1llb1lltes 8 Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 13

Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Trails West 15
- Earl Nightingale 15

s 55

6 00 - News 3 4 8, 10 15 I Dream of Jeannte 13 . L1has Yoga &amp;
You 33

00 - What's My Lme a Elec Co 20 BeafThe Cloc&lt;

4 News
Untamed World 13 lee Trevmo s Golf 15, Ltvmg 33
B1ghorn 3
7 30 - C~rcus 4 To Tell the Truth 6 New Pnce Is RightS , RFD
20 The New Price ts R1ght 10 Cancer Life or Death 33. Beat
the Clock 13 Charles Blatr s Better World 15
8 00 - Temperatures RISIOQ 6 13 Maude a. lO Eventng At
7

6 10

Pops 33, Ohio ThiS Week 20 Movie "The Ceremony" 3 4 To

be announced 15

8

30 - Mov1e The Couple Takes A W1fe 6, 13 Baseball 15

Five 0 8, 10 Folkhfe DISCUSS IOn 20
9 00 - lnternaltonal Performance 20 33
Hawaii

9 30 -

Vtrgmtan 8 Movre

Sa ndcastles 10

10 00 - Marcus Welby, MD 6 13 News 20 NBC Reports 3 4

To be announced 33
ll 00 - News l 4 8, 13

IS

11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4, 15 Jack Paar Ton1te 6, 13 , Movres
' M1ster Buddwtng ' 8 Gentleman's Agreement 10
1 00 - News 1~ Man from UNCLE 4
2 00 2 JO -

Your Health 4

News 4

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
The watergate hearings cost llle three cormneTCial networks
$10 rrullwn m lost revenue, produced an unexpected $1 million

windfall for the Public Broadcasting Servic.. (contrtbutions to
support prune-time reruns), and apparently produced a new
type of TV watcher
The Watergate addict
The typical Watergate addict IS a 47-year-old housewife, with
2 7 children, marned to a machiniSt and living m a suburb of
Dayton, Ohto. She watches televiSIOn an average of 7 1 hours a
day and voted for NIXon Let's g1ve her an origmal pseudonym as
well Mrs. Jane Doe
Typical of the addiction •s tbe deSife to see some of the
prmCipal players m the long-runmng Washington drama back on
the screen, now that the hearmgs are m recess. Mrs Doe experiences frequent such flashbacks, but let her tell you In this
conversation
"I was watching 'To Tell the Truth' on Channel 3 last week,
and I kept wantmg to see Bill Cullen and Kitty Carlisle go after
this one fellow on the show because he looked exactly like
Maurice Slans Or was It James McCord•"
"Isn't that a little unusual - to expect a guest on 'To Tellllle
Truth' to behave hke the Watergate winesses•"
"Not at all, Some of them have to he tellmg the truth, and
others Well, let me go on I thought "The Newlywed Game"
was going to feature Mr and Mrs James W Dean Ill one day,
and I almost cried when they weren't on "
"A lovely coople, Mrs. Doe But really, now, you're showmg
Signs of confusion at thiS pmnt in time "
"I know Oh, that phrase' When I hear someone say 'at this
pomt m time' II makes me ahnost inoperative, and my exact
recollections on that particular subject are naturally somewhat
vague "

TUESDAY ONLY

PORK
CHOPS
FIRST CUTS

PORTA
FILE

lb.

"You'reevldencmgthe classic symptoms of Watergate withdrawal, Mrs. Doe. Is there anythmg else•"
"Well, a contestant on 'Jeopardy' referred to his son last
week as 'that little chap,' and II took me right back to the hear~ng
room when John Wilson called Sen Inouye a nasty name "
"Understandable enough "
"And I woke up 1n the middle of the rnght screaming 'Don't
stop now - Sen We1cker hasn't fmiShed his question yet ' My
husban~ had to give me an alcohol rub to settle my nerves to get
hack to sleep, and then I drell(lled John Ehrlichman was pointing
~s fmger at me because I'd been usmg alcohol and sleepmg with
a man "

APPLE GROVE _ MI'S
Arnold Hupp, Mrs Bob
llhodes Mrs Jack Ables and
Mrs Robert smith were ap.
pointed to a nominating
committee for ll1e 1974 offlcei'S
at a recent meeUng of ll1e
United Methodbt women of the
Apple Grove Church
The corruruttee will present a
slate of offlcei'S at the Sep!ember meeting Plans were
made to begin a Christmas
fund and Mrs Dolly Wolfe wu
named chairwoman of that. It
was noted that the society is
now takmg orders for
housewares and anyone
desiring to place an order may
cail Mrs Dallas Hill, 247-2e64
Mrs Hill announced several
workshops in the districl.
Arrangements were made to
purchase a 35 cup percolator
for ll1e fellowship dinners
Devotional and program
leader was Mrs. Robert smith
whose topic was "Personal
MiSSIOns." The gr oup sa ng "I
Gave My Life for Thee" and
scr~pture was taken from I c'or
13 Mrs Dolly Wolfe and Vihln
Abl
t
d
th
es par IC1pa 1e 1n e
program Prayers were
requested for Floyd Norris,
Mrs Jesse Anderson and Mrs.
Beryl Wolfe, patients at
hospitals
Attendtng the meeting
beSides those named were Mrs
Alice Balser, Mrs Bess Parsons, Mrs Luctlle Rhodes,
, Mrs Donna Hill, Mrs Shirley
Ables, and Mrs Florence
Smith

MONDAY
REVIVAL at Hazael Com·

FRIENDLY Clrc~ of Trmity
, ChJII'~h, 1130,.'1;\lesdf!y night at
ll1e Globokar camp on the Ohio
River In the event of ram the
meeting will be held at the
church Anyone needing transportation IS to be at ll1e church
Mrs Carl Kautz will have the

program.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 6:30 potluck supper at
the hall Tuesday mght
Delegates to Buckeye G1rls
State from both Meigs and
Eastern High School will
report on the1r e:tper1ences
MeeUng at 7.30 p.m~ _
WOMEN'S Auxthary,
Veterans MemOrial Hospital,
annual picnic, 6 p m at the
Slate Park on Route 33 (left
side traveling toward Athens)
Wed Correction
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Postl28,6·30potlucksupperat
the hall Wednesday mghl
Delegates to Buckeye G1rls
State from both Metgs and
Eastern High School will
report on !hell' experiences
MeeUng at 7 30 p m

Star garden
club meets
"Daily Pleasures with Day
Lilies" was the topic used by
Mrs Virgil Atkins for the
programatarecentmeetingof
the Star Garden Club held at
lhe home of Mrs. Or1n Nebon.
Mrs Pearly Nelson's theme
was "Fiowei'S that Bloom 1n
August." Plans were made
durmg th meeting conducted
by Miss Ruby Diehl for the
Me1gs County FaiT exhibit It
was announced that new off1c..rs will be mstalled at the
next meeting at the home of
Mrs Grover Stout
Mrs. Stout won fll'st place for
her arrangement made m a
homemade contamer on
exh1b1 t at the meeting
Members gave the creed and
collect t8 open the meeting and
lllen answered roll call by
nammg a hly 1n bloom
Refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs C E
Stout, Mrs Nonnan Will, Mrs.
Douglas Chaney, Mrs Gerald
Minor, Mrs G A Radekin,
Mrs Henry Turner, Miss Hazel
Henson and Mrs Norma
Nicholson
-·

•
WEDNESDAY
FEENEY-BeMett Post 128,
American Legion, 7 30 p m
Wednesday at the hall.
Members to jom ll1e aUX!llary
for a poUuck dinner at 6 30
THURSDAY
WILUNG Workers Class,
Enterprise United MethodiSt
Church, 7:30p.m at the home
of Mrs James Will.

'

Party helii
A surprtse party was held
recenUy m observance of ll1e
biTthdays of Mrs Harry L
Bailey and her daughter, Mrs
Brenda Hysell, at the home of
Mrs Lyle Hysell.
Mrs Hysell celebrated her
27th biTthday She was born
August 13, 1946, ber mother's
27th b1rthday Attending ll1e
party were Lois Thompson, Ivy
Divol, Marcia Capehart, Susie
Robson and son, Danny, Unda
Riffle, Matt and Tina, Mrs
Eva Hysell and Donrue, Cindy
Thompson, Debble and Keith
Ba•ley, Gifts were presented to
the honored guests and
refreshments mcludlng two
birthday cakes were served

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By 114'14' .. Huth·l

•

e e

~

Dear Helen .
J am 34 a housewife and molhcr of • baby boy I'm deter' my children
'
mmed to bring
up to be honest, so I ma de up Ill)
mmd to have the "unforgetlllblc cxpericn•-e" of being a thief then I could teach them fiTsl-lland how awfnlii is
While shopping , 1took a paiT of sunglusscs 1Never in my life
have 1stolen before J was hopmg to get caught, and I was 1
At the security offiCe the people were very understandmg
which made me even more ashamed, upset and embarrassed I'll
oever forget the guilt I felt
My name w1H be kept on file for three years, but I'll
remember the awful mc1dcnt ail my hfe.
By haVIng this experience J can more capably show my
children the value of being clean and straight other parents
might shrug if their kid.!i )"ere caught shoplifting the first time
Never me' The lesson was worth 11 - UNFORGETTABLY
EXPERIENCED
Dear U E
Sorry I don't buy your line of reasoning If you msist a parent
can belter~msbll "nght" by exper~encmg "wrong" first-hand,
what happens when you teach him the commandment which
adjures "Thou shalt not k1U '" - H

+++

Dear Helen Our mamage was almost perfect for 28 of Its 31
years We were much m love (I still am) and we raiSed five fme
ch1ldre People still believe we're the happ!esl t'Ouple, but It's
put-on lhese days
I can count on one hand the t1mes my husband has kissed me
or srud "I love you" m J years Gone is the desu e he used to
have for me
He's quiet and morose We don't talk for days at a bme We
seldom go out - and he doesn't go out alone, so It 1sn't another
woman
I've asked htm many times what IS happemn~ to our
marr1age and he says ~"Th ere's nothing wrong "He won't see a
counsellor
If our love hadn't been so beaullful before, !might be able to
fac.. this better now , l feel rJected and alone, hke an unwanted
spinster What can be wrong• - DEPRESSED
Dear Depressed
I'd suspect your husband IS gomg through what some experts
tenn "the male climacteric" which IS largely menU!!, but often
the depressiOn 1s deepened by phys1cal problems
The 50s can he traumatic for an active, ambitious man who
suddenly realizes there's no clunb left for h1m but down He
worries - about hiS Job, his shortness of breath, hiS growmg
paunch and thinnmg hatr, ltttie aches and pams that aspmn
doesn't cure and he remembers all those goals he never qmte
reached and now he never will
Regrets and fears creep in, turmng his whole outlook old "
And then the final blow he fails In bed, because he has
programmed hunself for failure And he retires behmd a wall of
m1sery - for a man 's pride often won't let him discuss hiS lacks :
With anyone, especially hiS wife
•
Men grow out of the male climactene JUSt as women pull
through the menopause, but the trip can be shortened with good
adv1c.. and care from their family doctors, and a great deal of
understanding from thetr wives
Insist that your husband have a medical check-up, and
pnvately clue your doctor m on hiS overlong depresston W1th
luck and love, you'll have hun back soon - H

WIN AT BRIDGE

Four spades, one way to go
.---N-O-R-TH,.-----20.., · Oswald ' It might be de+ KJ 97
1cr1bed as the pnnc1ple of lead
,. 43
mg up to slrength ralher tha
t AK 9
away from 1t
•
+ t0143
J•m Wesl sta r ts out by'
WEST
EAST
leadmg high clubs South ruffs'
+&amp;%
+3
the th~rd club lead and draws
trumps He can afford to plat,
,. 31075
,.AQ 962
out a lol of trumps prov1ded he
U63
• 75 42
hangs on to atleastone Then:
+AKQJ
+ 962
he can play diamonds bur
SOUTH (01
evenlually he will have to lead"
+AQI0854
a heart,
8
,. K
Oswald When he does lead
t QJ IO
!hat heart he musllead 1t fro .U:
+ 85
dummy Once he does that he 1s'
East West vulnerable

South
I+
he IS sure becau se East holds
Pass 3+
Pass 4+
lhe hearta ce GiveWesttha ~
Pass Pass
Pass
card and South would have tO'
Opemng Jcad- •K
lose two tncks no matter how:
'-----------l he played the su1t
:
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
! NEWSPAPER ENTE RPR ISE ASSN J
West

North

sure to score ht s kmg or hearts.~
and make four spades That t s ~~

East

Jim ' How about a week or
really Simple hands•
Oswald ' Well heres one
South has a sound openmg
2Q
The btddtn g ha s been
spade b1d mciudmg a s•x-card
Nurth
East
South
,suit Norlh has a perfect hand We st
?
1+
Pass
for a hm1t JUmp raise to three
You Soolh hold
and most people would go so
far as to bid three spades even +Q 8 6 4 2 ,.2 t A 4 +A K J 9 7'
What do you do now?
,
If they ~layed 11 ~s absolutely
rorcmg '
A- Btd three clubs You Intend let
play
tn spades hut want to shoW
J1m "Some people m1ght
your
club
!ilrength flrlll
not gello !he spade game but
TODAY'S QUESIION
everyone would be playmg
some spade contra ct and the
Your partner rebids three
same pr1nc1ple of play IS gomg spades What do you do now 1
;
to apply "
Answer tomorrow

•

&lt;Xll.UMBUS, Ohio ( UPI) The Iateat chapter In Ohio'' pro
football rivalry turned oul to be
a "storm alter the ca~n" uf.
fair
Alter a llstleu first ha~ that
ended In a 3-3 lie on a sultry
&amp;mday, the Cleveland Browns
exploded in the second half to
whip the CinciMaU Bengals 246 In a pre-aeason game
It waa the ninth meeting
between lhe state riVals, with
Cleveland now holding a 11-3
edge in tbe series It was the
lint exhibition victory ever for
the Browns over the Bengals,
although the Browns bold a 5-1
regular season edge
What started out to be one of
llle dullest games of the year
turned Into a dfl!zling display
by the Browns which delighted
most of the 73,421 fans
gathered in Ohio Stadium on
ll1e campus of Ohio SUite
University
Until late in the third
quar1er, the only scoring had
been three fteld goals that gave
Cincmnati a 6-3 edge
Change&amp; in 1% Seconds
But In a span of 12 seconds,
Cleveland's Frank Pills unleased a sparkling 22-yard end
around for a touchdown and
Cliff Brooks lnterc..pted a pass
and dashed 23 yards down the
sideline for another TD and a
17-lllead.
Less than five minutes later,
Pitts teamed with backup
quarter~?ack Don Horn for a
breathtaking 76-yard touchdown pasa play Horn lofted the
bail about 50 yards and Pitts
took It on CinciMati's 30 yard
line, but bobbled and juggled
the ball the next 10 yard.!i while
running at full speed He

finally got firm CO!ltrol of the
ball und raced In for the final
IICore of the game.
Despite
the
acoriQ~
!lreworka, II was !he work of
Cleveland's defense that
plellSI!d ooach Nick Skorich
"Our defensive pasa ruah
was the best so far this year,"
enthused Skorlch after the
gsme. "We've been concerned
ubout tl!is all year "
Although Cincinnati quarterback Virgil Carter completed
17 of 22 passes, the Cleveland
defense kept most of hlo gains
short and Car1er was never
able to throw a bCimb
Carter played the entire
game because regular quarterback Ken Anderson was
slightly ailing wilh a minor
knee Injury
Cleveland's starting quarterback Mike Phipps completed
seven of his etght passes in the
first half, but It was Horn's
play m the second half that
Ignited the Browns and brought
praise from Skorich
"I was glad to see Horn move
the ball,'' Skorich said "He
m1xed his plays well and kept
the defense off balance all of
the second half "
Sad Day for Brown
It was an unpleasant homecoming for Paul Brown, the
veteran, 64-year-old Bengals
coach who p,revwusly guided
both the Browns and the Ohio
State Buckeyes, whose field
provtded the neutral turf for
the game
"I'm sorry we didn't make It
closer,'' said Brown "But the
outcome sometunes hinges on
httle th1ngs The b1g swmg
there today conSISted of three
plays "

Reds hoping to
end tail spin
NEW YORK (UPI) - Jack
Billingham got the call today to
try to get the Cinctnnati Reds
out of their little tall spm
Billingham will work today's
gsme against New York's Tom
Seaver In the finale of a fourgsme sertes
The Reds, who amved here
Friday winning six out of their
fiTSt seven games on this road
trip, dropped two out of the
first three games to the Mets,
12-1 Saturday and 2-1 Sunday
Th011e two !oases proved
costly as the Reds fell 2\'z
gsmes back of the Natlooal
League western division
leading Los Angeles l)odgor•

Person to person
health insurance
It can help pay
eoarlng hoepltal
and eurglcal bills.

Call me.
Sttpfltn C. Scuew•an
SSJ Rusul 51
(Greve! Hill)
MiddlePOrt, Ohi01

PH. m -7155

A Reds' wm today would enable them to piCk up a half
game on the Dodgers who are
Idle.
The Mets scored the winning
run Sunday m the eighth Inning
when Pete Rose misjudged
Bud Harrelson's fly to deep left
and Harrelson wound up with a
double to score Don Hahn
And II was Hahn Saturday
who proved troublesome for
the Reds and their starter Fred
Norman
Hahn had a three-run homer
to get lhe Mets started on thelf
rampage John Mtlner clouted
a grana slam homer m a sixrun fourth inning
The Reds have been relying
on the strong hitting of Rose
and Tony Perez to keep them
gomg on their drive for their
lhird pennant m four years
Rose continues to lead the
league In htttlng with a .342
average Perez is closing m on
Rose with a 315 average.
Perez got two doubles Sunday, giving him 136 hits for the
season. He had slarruned out
two hits In each of the Reds'
last ten games
Perez' hitUng has boosted
him to fifth m the RBI colwnn
in the league with 83, only six
behind teammate Johnny
Bench and Pittsburgh's Wiille
stargell who share the lead
with 89

EVERY

TV~SDI\'( WI6\\T

~t'ill't RIW Nl61tT

~1' 6V"17t.P. C.tl~f!

J---.....--

lt\IC~E

Set! O.,.,New

Fall and Back
To School Fashions
SUMMER
WEARABLES '12 PRICE

lOLA'S

Appomtment not
always necessary

Main at Sycamore

Phone 992-2725

POMEROY, OHIO

lpeolal femll~ 111111 prlcee after 4 p.m.
fl'or Adult•
fl'or Klda
~~~~

llhel"

Prtnoh l'rl••

DRIVE IN

Turnov•r ~nrl

for

Onlv

.,

Laroe 11111 Prink

GOOD FOOD

Funburg.r,M
renoh Frlt•
m-Il SQft Drink

and LQIIIpop

Only

800

the IMI five yard.!i
" It waa a had decision lo
throw !he bali then," said Carter "r )llllt felt an ursency to gel
rid of it. I think I was hit just as
r wa• lhrowlng it "
'l'he wln was Cleveland's first
of lhe exhibition season and
giVCfl them a 1-1-1 rnark em.
cimwtl ,. now 1-2.
Cleveland plays the Allanta
Falcons at Knoxville, Tenn,
next Saturday night, while Clncmrwtl plays at Detroit Friday
night

A's upJead to 3
' back Chicago, Z.l, St
By JOE FROHLINGER
turp~d
UPI Sports Writer
Loll\li,tripped up San Diego, 1-1&gt;,
Baseball has been called a ani!. , Houston
defeated
game of inches and a tape- Philadelphia, 5-3
measure would have been tn
I}Jll Lee finally won his 13th
order Sunday as Oakland gafllF-On h!' seventh try-as
reeled off its etghth straight Bos!on beat Kansas City and
victory, '114, 1over the uiH!nded the Royals their third
Mllwauk~ 'll~Jmod c "" -ro\51\•ght setback Luis ApariciO
Sal Sando rlbWw a iltwdltlln 1&gt;fllrJ!Ied In one run and scored
homer In the nintfi funlrllfYOr another to pace the Red Sox
the margm of victory after a\IJ1ck
Deron Johnson clobbered a
llpddy Bell slarruned a threegrand slam home run In the rup homer m Cleveland's f1rst
first mrung
game wm but wasn't around to
The Win mcreased Oakland's see the Indians score thelf
lead in 'tl!e&lt;&gt;lll\iel'\ciuilUI!ljne ~li'i'fl"'"g runs m the secood
West to three 'gltn\e's over ga,me smce he was ejected 1n
Kansas City, which lost a 4-3
first mrung for argumg a
deciSion to the Boston Red Sox c~p Leo Cardenas s~ngled
The homer was the 20th l\QI!le Jack Brohamer from
homer of the season for Sando !hlrd with two outs m the mnth
- five more than the A's ,:U.ing to wm It for the Indians
captam had all last year and deal the Twms a double
Johnson's shot was hiS 18th defeat
homer of the year but despite
WIJO!I Loses 18th
the surplus of h1ttmg talent,
Wilbur Wood lost his 18th
Sando credited p!lching as the game of the year to go With his
key to the A's recent success 20 wms as Merv Rettenmund
"We're playmg better now and Tommy Davis hit two-run
than we have all year and I'd singles m a f1ve-run second'
have to say the reason why IS ,T"1ng
outburst m Baltimore's
that our p!lchmg has been just fiOmP over the White Sox
great,'' he said
1, Bobby Murcer slammed his
Hunter Returns
,J9th homer of the year m the
Jun Hunter, returrung to the ~econd 1nmng and Gene Micha·
starting rotation for the f1rst ei added a two-run double m
ttmesmcehewasm)uredmthe ,\he same IMmg to spark the
All-star game July 24, pitched , Yankees to VIctory over Texas
four-hit ball and allowed three 1 Mickey Stanley, who
runs before leaving m the homered earlier, s~ngled with
sixth. Reliever Horac10 Pma J two outs m the lith mnmg and
picked up his sixth Win m mne raced home on a wild p1tch to
deCISions
giVe the T1gers a victory over
In other American League lhe Angels The vtctory ended a
contests, Detroit topped Callforma m 11 mnmgs, 4-3, New
York knocked_off _Texas, , G-2,
THISTLEDOWN
Cleveland beat Minnesota
CLEVELAND (UP!)
twice, 4-3 and 5-3, and Angenora won the $16,000 OhiO
Baltunore trounC&lt;!d Chicago, 8- Debutante
Stakes
at
2
Thistledown Saturday, flmshed
In the National League, one lenglll ahead of Round
Montreal downed Atlanta, 3-1, Bottom Spr~ngdrops won the
New York edged Cmcmnati, 2- fiTs! race and Honestly the
1, Pittsburgh stopped San second to return $1 on the daily
FranciSco, 5-0, Los Angeles double combmabon of 4 and 3

IJ!'

'

four-game losmg streak and
kept Detroit 2% games behmd
Baltimore m the tight American League East race
The Tigers, with Manager
B1ily Martin returning after
missmg two games due to
Illness, scored their firs! three
runs on homers -back-to-hack
sho~, by Stanley and Tony
Taylor m the third and a
leadoff homer by designated
hitler Frank Howard m the
eighth

By STU CAMEN
UP! Sports Writer
For the first time m nearly a
year, the Miami Dolphins know
how It feels not lo w1n a game
The Dolphins saw their mcred lble 21-game wmmng
streak come to an end Saturday rught when they were held
to a 9-9 he by the Chicago
Bears In a National Football
League preseason contest
No! smce Aug 31, 1972, wben
they were beaten by Washmgton 1n an exhibition game, had
the Dolphins failed to beat theiT
opponent
Before the tie agamst Chicago, the Dolphms had won three
exhibition games this year but
the deadlock by the Bears,
before a crowd of 80,050 m the
Orange Bowl, hardly seemed to
bother Dolpliins coach Don
Shula
" We're not feeling any
pressure," Shula emphasized
shortly after the last of Mac
Percival's three held goals
early m the fourth quarter
enabled llle Bears to gam thelf
deadlock "We realiZe that
every team that comes here IS
gomg to try to do just what the
Bears wanted to do We know
thai
"But our goal 1n the preseason IS mdiVIdual Improvement, which leads to
We're

getting ready to play San
FranciSco m the regular
season

MaJOr League Standings

Amencan League

East
By United Pren International
w I pet • b
National LeagUe
68 52 567
~l!tltlmore
East
67 56 545 21/:j&gt;
etrolt
w 1 pet g b
New
York
68 58 540 3
63 61 508
St Louis
6S 57 533
59 61 A92 2
Pittsburgh
~slon
59 62 488 Qlh
lwaukee
Montreal
59 63 484 3
51
408 191h
Chicago
58 65 472
~ Cleveland
West
Slh
Philadelphia 57 66 ~
55 (.1
• .lS
6Lh
w
I pet g b
New York
WP
Oakland
72 Sl sas
,, 1 pet g b Kansas C1tv
70
560 3
Los Angeles
7-,r 47 621
Mtnnesota
59 63 484 12 112
Cincinnati
75 50 603 21!2 Cellfornla
56 64 467 l4 lf"2
San Francisco 67 55 549 9
O~lcago
58 66 468 14 112
Houston
65 61 516 13
fex as
43 78 355 28
AtlAnta
60 67 472 Wh H
Saturday 1 S Results
San 01aao
A/· D"'•"•u 1;, Ph Bqpton 8 Kansas C1ty 5
SlturdfY '..
Oakland 6 Milwaukee 3
....
New York 1 1"f,~c i nn,j!l .,.J ,
Cleveland S Minnesota 0
1~ 1
~tlmore 5 Chicago 0
Chi cagQ ,11 1"""
.li'i'J••·
'"""" 1•1H v1ll1 -~
w York 5 Texas 3
1~ra~t~:~oM:nti~;:rJ,s J. ' ) !
'C Stttarnla 4 Detroit 1
P ittsburgh 6 San Fran s
C•)lfarnla 4 Detroit 1
Sunday's Results
Houston 3 Philadelphia 2
Sunday's Results
Cle'Ve 5 Minnesota 3, 1st
Pittsburgh 5 Sen Frenclsco 0
Clfve o4 Minnesota 3 2nd
New York 2 Cinclnnl!lll 1
O~kland 6 Milwaukee 4
Montreal 3 Atlantll 1
Bdston 4 Kansas City 3
Los Angeles 2 Chicago 1
Ba)llmore a Chlcaoo 2
Sl Louis 1 San Diego o
Detroit -4 Callf 3 1l Inns
Phlladelphla..5J:toustan 1
New York 6 Texas 2
Today's Pro bible Pitchers ~ ~ Today's Probable P•tEhers

•

"

ss

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sportl Writer
When a fellow lo young,
carefree and confident enough
II) request unlucky 13 as his
uniform number, he can say
things like this
"I believe I can he a better
catcher than Johnny Bench I
think I can hit with as much
power and for a higher
uvera~c

''

The speaker, on national TV
yet, was a guy named Joe-Joe
Ferguson of the Los Angeles
Dtxlgers-and he made the
sllllcment when he had played
In fewer than lOll major league
games
Well, the baseball world has
developed ii healthy respect for
the 26-year-&lt;&gt;ld native of San
Francisco
Ferguson won some more
respect Sunday when his tworun homer with two out m the
runth Inrung enabled the Dodgers to beat the Chicago Cubs, 21, and Increase thelf National
League Western DIVISion lead
over the Cinannati Reds to 2\'z
games 1 he blow spoiled a
bnlhant effort by RICk Reuschel, who had a no-hitter
through seven mmngs
Expos Defeat Brave•
The
Montreal
Expos

opener "

Eldlibi(IOil Halfway Mark
Three games Sunday
brought the exhibition campaign to Its halfway pomt Five
pass mtercept1ons helped the
New York Giants throttle the
New York Jets, 45-30, w1de
receiver Frank Pitts scored
two touchdowns for Cleveland

'

Meigs freshmen

begin practice

as the Browns whipped the
Cmcmnatl Bengals, 2M; and
San Francisco used four field
goals to beat the San Diego
Chargers, 19-7
In Saturday's games, Dallas
beat New Orleans, 24-14,
Oakland whipped Los Angeles,
16-3, Atlanta defeated New
England, 27-10, Denver tr1pped
St LoUis, 38-21, Balt1more
edged DetrOit, 32-211, Mmnesota
mpped Kansas City, 13-10, and
Green Bay crushed Houston,
33-14
The Giants broke open a
close game 1n the !mal quarter
when Carter Campbell and J1m
Files returned pass mterceptwns for touchdowns Spider
Lockhart's 77-yard run back of
another pass mtercept10n
helped set up the Giants' !mal
TD as the Jets saw star
quarterback Joe Namath
forced to the s1dehnes midway
1n the second quar1er wtth a
bruiSed elbow
Pitts hauled in a 711-yard pass
for the first of hiS touchdowns
and ran 22-yards on an end
around for his second m the
Browns' tr1wnph over Cmcmnal! as the Bengals were
!united to field goals of 28 and
35 yards by Horst Muhlmann
John Brodie's three-yard
scoring pass to Jtmmy Thomas
accounted for San Francisco's
only touchdown as the Forty
Nmers also used three field
goals by Tom Wittum and one
by Bruce Gossett to beat San
Diego The Chargers' touchdown came on a 10-yard pass
from John Umtas to Walt
GarriSon
Garo Boots Field Goat.
Garo Yeprerruan booted field
goals of 25, 53 and Ill-yards for
the Dolphins while Perctval
connected for the Bears from
18, 10 and 17 yard.!i; Roger
Staubach hit on seven of e1ght
passes 1n just one quarter of
work for 156 yards and two
touchdowns in Dallas' triUmph

Dale C. Warner lril Agency

BAKER FURNITURE

BOX 727

MHJtl(t~&amp;il, 0.

I

\

----'i __

over New Orleans, and George
Blanda, who will be 46 next
month, kicked three field goals
to help g1ve Oakland Its wm
over Los Angeles
D•ck Shiner Uu:ew scormg
passes of 13 and five yards and
direclcd two other scoring
drives to lead Atlanta past New
England , Floyd Little came off
the bench to score a palf of
touchdowns m the second half
and spark Denver over St
LouiS, and fullback Don Not.
tingham smashed one yard for
a touchdown In the clOSing
m~nutes to give Baltimore Its
VICtory over Detroit
Fran Tarkenton guided MmnesoU! to two scores in the
wanmg m~nutes, the last a 20yard field goal by Fred Cox
with 1 03 remalllUlg, foc a
come-from-behind victory over
Kansas City m a nationally
televtsed game, and Green
Bay rotted over Houaton with
Scott Hunter throw~ng a 46yard touchdown pass to Jon
staggers only four plays after
the openmg kickoff

NOW

Tho BEAUIIONO • D2211W

Grained Walnut color UHF
Ultramallc Channel Selector
and AFC on UHF Deluxe VIdeo
Range VHF Tuning Syatem Dl·
pole Antenna

FULL FEATURED/
• Cutfom "Pttm•Sef' VHF
Fine TMnlng
• ~-81~~go /.F. Amp/Iller

• Aulometlc ..Frlno•Loek"
ClrcuH

INGELS FURNITURE
997 2635

Middleport

TWO EVENINGS
EACH WEEK

BUFFET

DINING
MONDAY EVENING
AND TUESDAY EVENING
s to 9 3D-All you can eat, (or Ala Carte)

r------------1
Here's the Man
To See For .•

THE

BEST

I Sears

L------·----

We shall be moving as soon as the phone

Middleport, o.

Allin Foster pitched a eevellhitter for the Cvdlnala, who
scored llle game's only run
wilh the help of a throwing
error by San Diego llhorlltop • '
Dwain Anderaon in the first
iMing Rake McBride scored
from second base on the error,
which tagged Bill Grell with
his 13th loss
Jerry Koosman pitched a
six-hitter and struck out six,
wiMing his nmlh game against
H losses for the Mets, and
handing Ross Grimsley his
seventh setback for ClnclnnaU
Bud Harrelson scored the
Mets' first run on Willie Mays'
sacrlflce fly and doubled in the
winning run in the eighth.
Jim Rooker pitched a fivehitter for his Sixth win for the
Pirates, who dealt San
Francisco's Juan Martchal his
ninth loss. Rich Hebner and
Manny Sanguillen each drove
m two runs for llle Pirates and
Al Oliver knocked In the fifth
run with a homer
Bill Robinson drove In five
runs with a grand slam homer
and a sacrtr1ce fly, enabling
Wayne Twitchell to raise his
record to 12-5 wtth an eight.
hitter for the PhUlles Jerry
Reuss suffered his ninth defeat
against 13 victories for the
Astros

Twenty-two freshmen began
Meigs Marauder grid practice
this morning, according to
freshman coach Roger Brauer
'
and Sam Crow, hiS assistant
Members of the 1973 freshman squad are Ch1p Brauer1
Wayne Cotterill, Ronald
Coates, Carl Carmichael,
Terry Clark, Jeff Dilcher,
Drlnkslmd
Wide Menu
Randy George, Rick George,
Dessert Extra
Chblce
Gene Hwnphrey, Rick John(A~11114\ BIJ(tl
tAll Times EDT)
son,
Dave Miller, Mike Owens,
Cl nclnnaff ' tEI'flllngham 168
New York (Stotflemyre 12 11)
1
Order our regular menu every nightS to 10
at New York (Sea&gt;~er 15 6} 2 at Kansas City (B usby ll ll) Jeff Patterson, Steven Ranlou
Osborne
pm
ewpm
San Francisco (Bradley 10 11)
Boston (Curtis ll 10 ) at Texas dolf, Ronme $nyder, Brmnley
at Montreal (Torrez 711) 8 (81bby67) , 9pm
Seth , Allan Stewart, Tim
p m
Detroit (J Perrv 11 10 ) at
Thomas, Rick Taylor, Ray
Pittsburgh (Ellis 11 11) at Oakland (Blue 13 71 11 P m
Houston (Richard 4 11, a IS
Minnesota (Ca mpbell l 1) at Willford, Duane Weber, and
SEARS
pm
Baltimore ( Aiexllndel" 6 6) 7 30
Jim Pockllngton
(Only games scheduled)
Pm(
Catalog Merchant
Tue1d1y'1 oames
(Only games scheduled)
1
SOAP BOX WINNER
220 E Moln
Pomoroy
San Fran at Montreal , night
Tuesd11v'• Games
San DleQO at Phlla night
Chicago a I Cleve, twilight
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - H1s
PH. 992-217 8
POMEROY
PH q92-3629
L.os Ang at New York. night
M lnM at Balt imore , night
friends
call
him
"Big
Jim"
and
Cincinnati at Chlceoo
New.,.York atKan City , n ight
St Louis at Atlanta, r"tlght
Bostbn at Texas, nfghl
although he stands only 4-foot. , - - . , - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . , . - - - - - - - - - - _ ; __ __
Pittsburgh al Houston , night
De troll at Oakland night
11, Jan1es Gronen lived up to
Mllwauket at Calif, night
his nickname Saturday The 14year-old from Boulder, Colo ,
defeated 11-year-old Bret
REPRESENTING .. ,.
Yarborough of Elk Grove,
Calif , in the final heat to
capture lhe 36th running of lhe
STATE AUTOMOBILE MU;fUAL INS.
All-Amer~can Soap Box Derby
OHIO FARMERS lNSUR,Gil!iiCE CO.

strike Is settled to the former Elberfelds
store room, 102 W. M•lll St,, Pomeroy, 0.

IIPI .AITlliN AVI.
QA~ I
I , HlO

defeated lhe AUanta Braves, 31, the St IJluis Cardmais
shaded the San O~ego Padres,
1-0, the New York Mets mpped
the Reds, 2-1, the Pittsburgh
Pirates blanke&lt;l the San
Francisco Giants, 5-0, and the
Philadelphia Pllllhes topped
the Houston Astros, s.J, m
other NL games
American J.eague scores
were Boston 4 Kansas City 3,
Oakland 6 Milwaukee 4, Cleveland over Minnesota, ~3 and 4·
J, Baltimore 8Cblcago 2, Texas
6 New Yock 2, and Detrml 4
California 3, in ll Innings
Fer~uson delivered his
game-winning blow
off
Reu~chel after a single by Bill
Buckner Ron Santo had given
Reuschel, who struck out 13, a
1-0 lead in the fifth inning when
he hit his 13th homer W11Ue
Crawford broke Reuschel's nohit spell with a single opening
the eighth 1nmng
Pepe Mangual's homer and
Ken Singleton's run-scoring
smgle were the big blows for
the Expos as Bator Moore won
his seventh game and Mike
,Marshall received credit for
his 25th save Darrell Evans
tripled home the Braves' run
as Ph1l N!ekro suffered his
sixth loss agamst 13 wms

Miami win streak ends

team Improvement

"We Insure In Sure.:' lusur11uce"

McCWRE'S
LOCUli

!lorn !'roves J'(aymoker
Horn guided Cleveland &amp;I
Ylirdsln ju8t ei~ht plays, two of
them lii'Bse/1 or 23 and 22 yards
'l'he IP.fl play In the series was
lhe snappy 2Z.yard end around
by Pitts that caught Clnclnllllti's defense off guard
After Cleveland's kiCkotr,
Carlcr went to the air on the
fint play, but Brooks stepped
in fr(/111 of Intended receiver
(,1larlle Joiner on the sideline
ond bn-ezed in for a 23-yard
~ore, adding Insult to injury
by strutting like a drom major

AUTQ.OWNERS MUTUAL INSURANCE CO.

Irina the fMi ly for ... .food, pro1111pt urvlc:t• •ol
llntiblt pr1cu.

4th&amp;

Brown ~~aid lhf game will
help him dooide who to koo p on
the roster
"We're going to have to do
some cutUng right away and
today I saw il(lveral players
U1at the ~arne of pro footboll
might he a little loo bi~ for,' ' he
said
After field goat. of 211 and 35
yards by Cincinnati's Horst
Muhlmarnl and a 37-yarder by
Cleyeland's Don Cockroft put
the score at 11-3 midway In the
third qllllrter, the Browns went
to work in earnest

•

wzns zn

VALUES

11

"Of coutse, bul if you heard Ehrlichman, I'm not sure "" u
approve - even if we are married "
"Watergate withdrawal can be painful, Mrs Doe, but you
understand you must get back to the real world, now the hearings
are recessed
" I've tried I've really tried But there's an intern on
'General Hospital' whO looks like Sen Baker, and I tltlnk that
young cop on 'Ad&amp;m·l2' looks like Bob Haldeman when he was
younger, and I think I saw Sen Ervin on a 'Beverly Hillbillies'
rerun today, and "
"It Will pass, Mrs. Doe. You must he bra\'f "
"How can you be so sute• After all, you don't get John
Mitchell confused with 'CSMon,' or belleVf that Sam Dash 11
really Mr SPQck from 'Star Trek' with an ear job, the way 1do"
"Oh, I'm stlre, all right You see, Mrs. Doe, 1 am a
poychiatrlst and I know about such things I had a patient a few
years back,'and he had a rough time, too, a nightmare, really,
but II worked out all right for him Interesting chap, too, name of
Eilsherg , "

*~

E&lt;perienc.. Nol D•·~t Teacher

munily Church 7·30 each
evening beginning Monday
with the Rev George Hoschar
evangelist Special music,
public Invited. Homecorrung ~II
day on Aug111t 26 with Barnett
Famlly providing music
THROUGH the week,
revival, Hazael Community
Church, off 124 between Long
Bottom
and
Portland
Evangelist GeorRe Fisher
Special Slllging every night
Homecoming, Aug 26. Barnett
family singers
MEIGS Chapter Order of
DeMolay, regular meeting,
7 30, Middleport Masomc
Temple; initiation, and
mothers club to meet in the
basement
TUESDAY
PUBLIC MEETING , 7 30
t Trinity Church
P
m
a
Pomeroy to infonn residents'
on 5 bon~ifMMI' be voted on ,
l'J•
~h ' ill provide
, .~v,.. 6 w
w
funds lor construction of
training center for mentally
retarded All citizens are Invited to attend.

,.

I~ Us

"But this was your husband, Mrs Doe, and it was rubbing
alcohol, I'm sure "

$ 19

Apple Grove
women meet 1~ Calendar ~~

992·7428

I

POMEROY, 0-

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut AI S
Use o.r Free Porklng Lol

Robinson's Cleaners
116 E

2nd,

Pomeroy

The MEIGS INN

�4- Th• Dally &amp;&gt;ntuwl, Moddlepot t l'ono u "' , 0 , 1111~ . :!11, tq71

2 SIGNS

Wolfpt•n Nc.•w!'l, Nolc.·s
Mr and Mrs Foank lon
Russell or Moddlep(lr[ \\ Cir
Tuesda) evcnong vtsltors of
Mr. and Mrs Ltrocoln 1\ns.&lt;e \1
Mrs Paul Poerce and fatmly
or Mason "eoe Tucsdn)•
VISitors of Mrs l.ao ry Joln1&lt;1111
and Ianni) and Mrs Geneva
Shwnatc
Mr and Mos Howao d J'hom,o
returned home Tuesday afteo
opendmg a few da~s wolh Mr
and Mrs Frank Sao ver, John
and Eddoe of Brodgeman, Moch
Mr and Mrs Doyle Knapp,
Charles and Kevon and Mrs
Charley Smoth spent th e
weekend woth Mr and Mrs
Danoel Worley of Beckley, W
Va Ka1l Knapp retqrned home
woth parents after spendong the
weekend woth Mr and Mrs
Worley (awol and uncle )
Mr and Mrs BtU McEh oy,
Jeff of Columbus, were
weekend vosotors of hos
parents, Mr and Mrs Paul
McElroy and her parents, Mr
and Mrs Vernon Bong and
family
Mrs Clinton Gtlkey of
Albany was v1sotong woth her
parents, Mr and Mrs Loncoln
Russell Wednesday
Mr and Mrs Robert Russell
and Mr and Mrs Steve Haggy
were weekend vos1tors of Mr
and Mrs Ronald Russell,
Amanda of Fort Mead, Md

no.&gt;n of Sp11 ngfoeld ~ eo e
M vnrl~t) nne! t ucsddy vt::~tt m s
of Mt ,ond Mos r 11•d
l uckl!t m.ut

o~ntl

Mt .!lld

F:ugc nc H.uung. Rhonda .md
Homa lr\
Mo aud Mo s f),uuc t W !lolC)
of Brc kley, W Va '"' '
11cekend voslloo s of Mr .md
Mrs ClmriC) Smollo
Mo an d Moo D.ole nussell
and fanuh of Columbus 1\'t' l t'
t (•cent vts tlQt s of Mr and Mrs
l.oncoln Russell
Stmdav dinner guests of Mo
and Mrs Ch,ulev Snuth weoe
Mo and Mos Danwl Worlc)
and Mo and Mo s Do) le
Knapp Kao\ Kcvut and
Charles
Mt and Mrs D.moe\ Worlcv
an d Charles Knapp vosotcd her
grandparents Mo .ond Mrs
llarley T Johnson Suntla1
afternoon
Ka1l Lee Knapp ac·
companied h1s aunt, Mr and
Mrs Danoel Woole) home
Somday to spend the week
Mrs Laory Johnson and
famtly, Mrs Paul P1erce and
famoly, Mrs Doyle Knapp and
famoly and Mrs Geneva
Shumate enJoyed a pocno c
lunch at Fort Mmgs ruesday

Social Notes

News, Event
Mr and Mrs EmZie DaviS,
Parkersburg, W Va , were
recent guests of her brothers,
W. C and Paul Peck
Mr and Mrs Fred Whetnall,
Columbus, visited their mece
and family, Mr and Mrs
Wilham M1ller and daughters
Mr and Mrs John G1llogly
and sons attended the weddmg
of her sister, Jacqueline
Waggoner, on Saturday
Mr and Mrs Dorsey Jordan,
Vlrgm1a, R1cky and Ralph,
have returned from a vacatiOn
to Ann Arbor, Michigan, where
they VISited his brother-m-law
and s1ster, Mr and Mrs Max
McCallie (Velrrua Jordan) and
their daughters and famll1es in
that area They also called on
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Wose at
the State North Central
Research and Development
Center at Caslalia and viSited
relatives m Akron as they were
enroute home
'"';' Mr and Mrs Carl Caster
::z•were guests at the home of Mr
1 .., and Mrs Earl S\arkey The
$_...__Casters now hve in C1tra,
Flonda They v1s1ted other
~elabves here, also
Members of the Cooley
family held thetr annual
reun1on at Temple Chur,ch
Grove on Sunday.
o
Columbia Grange No 2435
held thetr monthly meeting on
Fr1day evemng The Lecturer,
Bertha Cnppen, presented a
· safety program Election of
offtcers will be held at the
September meeting
Mrs Cecil Gtllogly and son,
Steve, attended a Chroslian
Youth Fellowship Conference
at Lake Burr Oak State Park
Mr and Mrs Mendal Jordan
accompamed Mr and Mrs
Dwame Jordan and choldren to
Georgetown, Oh10, where they
attended th e Oh10 Vall ey
An toque Machmery Show at the
Brown County Fa~rgrounds on
Saturday
Mrs Nellie Dye and Mrs
Betty Cox, Columbus, VIStted
With Mr and Mrs Ney Carpenter and Martha Mays
Mr and Mrs Bob Gnm,
Poca, W Va , spent the
weekend w1th her brother,
William Lawson and famoly

!

f'rlends and neighbors were
sorry to hear of the death of
Clara Froend who d1ed at
Camden Clark Hospital ,
Parkersburg, W Va
Mr and Mrs M1ke B1ssell,
Colwnbus, and Mr and Mrs
Tun Bossell, PI Pleasant, W
Va , were vosolJng Mr and Mrs
Hank Holter
Leota Ferrell, Medway, 0 ,
IS vlsttlng with Leona Hensley
Mr and Mrs Fred Larkms
were vos1ttng 1elatoves al
Nelsonville, 0
Mr and Mrs Davod G
Srruth, Chester, and Mr and
Mrs David Sm1th and Dee Dee
were v1s1ting Mr and Mrs
Tom Drake, Reynoldsburg , 0
Mr and Mrs C B Hayman ,
Mr and Mrs Bob Fotzpatrock
and daughters, Columbus, Mr
and Mrs J1m Walls and son,
Mr and Mrs Elbert Fltz.
patn ck and family were
VlSttmg Ernestme Hayman
Mr and Mrs Joe Btssell, Mr
and Mrs Davod Simth and Mr
and Mrs Hank Holter were
vtsttlng Mr and Mrs Ted
Hayman and Mr and Mrs Don
Hayman who were campmg at
Great Bend, Oh10
Mr and Mrs Fred Larkms
were VlStlmg Mr and Mrs
Normar Weber, Tuppers
Platns
Mr and Mrs Lloyd McPeek,
Bellev11le, W Va , and Mr and
Mrs Joe B1ssell were v1sitmg
Leota Ferrell and Leona
Hen Isley
Mr and Mrs Bill Thurston,
Jr , Columbus , spent the
weekend woth Mr and Mrs Boll
Thurston, Sr
Mrs Donna Jean Bes t and
daughters, Fa1rflax, Va , were
VlSitmg Mr and Mrs Dav1d
Sm1th
V1s1ting Mr and Mrs Garth
Smtth were Frank Powell,
Cheston, W Va , V1rg1e Mora
and Olloe Youn g, Pomeroy ,
Claude Sm1th , Reedsville,
RIChard Smith, Akron, Ed
Sprague, Washmgton, Moke
Marlin, Chester, Lucolle
Atherton, Jame Brewer and
Pearl Powell
Mr and Mrs Garth Smtih
were vosoting Edith Osborn ,
Keno
- Violet Smilh

.

·

Highlights of the
llOth Annual

Meigs Co. Fair

.

7 P.M. MONDAY CABLE
I ••

CHANNEL 5
Spollsored by The Shoe Box,

:.

Elherfelds, in Pomeroy,

'

Mt !i

Long Bottom

Carpenter

Of

Mt ~m ll M1 £ lim l'udt~r.

QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Dale Wamer Insurance.

•

r•

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

CHEVROLET
SJIIS
' ' eal KIN GS WOOD WAGON 16 500 miles, by loc•l I

ownc-,. IIH:tor y l'rr l rnl ed glass 400 engine aulomllfh;:

power steerrng &amp; brakes. rad io luggag e
f't\C k gol d ll nls h wh1te wall ti n•$ Asharp clean car

m9S

Cvstom Coupe loca l I own er car li ke new whrfe wlllll
l rres l ttctory i\J r , R~ lomatl c t ransmi ssi on . po we r st cermg
&amp; brnkes Dar k g reen tlm sh wrth black vtny l rool spotless
rnlerror r(1d10

1911 FORO TORINOSOO

Sl09S

Coupe 1 owner car, less than 33 000 mrles br own fin ish
w1 th ma tchrng vinyl root and v inyl lntenor , 302 V 8
cngrne stand('lrd transmiss ion, power steer ing and
br akes ritdlo rea ll y sharp

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES 8 00 P. M
POMEROY, OHIO

Help Wanted

DayorPubllca!lon

l r~nsn)t SS. Io n ,

om CHEVROLET IMPALA

Employment Wanted

DEADLINES
5 P l\f1 Oav Ac&gt;for c Publlcarlon I E M All:: fQ work as recep
Mond.-ty Or.,dlln e 9 6 M
t lon•~t
clerk end ~·neral
Can c;elliUio" Correct ion s
dull•s of small bus l n&amp;ss
Will b e O(:C eplod until' am tor
Sorne typ ing Mus I hav e good

1911

REGULATIONS
Th e Pvbll sher reservrs the
rl9hf to edll or re ject anv ads
{'lee m~d
obl~tctronal
The
publ iSh er will not be r esponsible
tor rnor e than one Incorrect
Insert ron
RATES
For Wilnf Ad Senlct
s cent s per word one Insertion
Mrnunum ChllrliJe 75c
12 cent s per word three
con secutrv e Inser tions
IB ce nls per word si x con .
secutl ve Inser tions
25 Per Ce nt DrSCl Ount on paid
ads and ads p&amp; fd within 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl so tor 50 word minimum
Each additiOna l word 2c

porson .. lty .
EX&lt; elltnl
wQrklng co•'dhlons JS hours
per week
Send c omplll!te
resurne to Bo.c 729 A, c o The
Da l ly Ser'\l lnel , Pomerov .
Oh io
8 17 61C

------------Busmess Opportumties

U S POSTAGE STAMP S WE

~XPERISNCED palnlor

ForL~~roRs &amp;tt•m•.
John
c~enr v
Moun!l ln~er

In

801110

ter lor tnd exterior Call Oo n
va" Mtler . 9BS 39S1

tadv Phone 991 71 38

e '} JOip

-----------~-

-

------

6 16 6tt
""'t---

~9? 2d~

•
I

Phone

B1931P

PARKVIEW Kenn els PoOdles
1 tov male anQ 1 female
Ptlone 992 S•A3

-----------Auto Sales

1

Kingsbury News, Notes
Those attenctmg Semor Soble Mrs Roy Brlckles were Mr
Camp at Wollow Boble Camp, and Mrs Cecol Brockles of
Jackson, from Carleton Church Groveport
Mrs Neva Kong and Judy
were, Demse Hendrocks, Mary
and Gene Perkms, Rocharct Kmg spent a few days m
Saler, Tammy DeBord, Helen, Cmcm118tl Mrs Kmg viSited
Da\ld, Geneva and Mary Lou the Sandlans and Gerstners
Kmg Also Delores Kmg At· Judy v1s1ted Mr and Mrs
te ndmg Jr Camp were Lester Jerry Dockery
Mr and Mrs John Dean, Mr
Cote, Laurel Cole, Delores and
and
Mrs John Walter Dean
Geneva Kmg and Denose
Hendrocks Those from here and A-1st Class Richard Dean,
spendmg an aftern oon were K I Sawyer AFB, M&gt;chigan,
Neva and Judy King, Rev attended the weddmg or MISS
Joy ce Waggoner and J1m
W1lham Genhiemer
Mrs Faye Pratt, Bermce Haley at the Church of ChriSt,
Roffle and Scott Hamson Rutland, Sunday afternoon
v1stled recently w1th Mrs
Lowse Hamson
Mr and Mrs Steve Smith,

Langsville

Canuate, Oh1o, are announcmg
the arrival of a daughter
Granqparents are Mr and
Mrs Elmo Smoth
Recent VISitors of Mr and
Mrs John Dean and Mr and
Mrs John Walter Dean were
Mrs Walter Terre ll, Mrs
Eddte Weekly and daughter,
M1ssy of Pataskala, Mr and
Mrs Kenneth Markms of
Rae me, Mr and Mrs Garold
Golkey, Tammy, Cmdy and
Rock of Athens, Mr and Mrs
Boll Spaun of Pomeroy, AMN
1st Class R1chard Dean, K I
Sawyer AFB, M1ch1gan ,
Yvonne and Debb1e Herl18das
and Condy Romerus of San
Antomo, Texas, Mr a•d Mrs
Hobart Smalley of Chester
The Carleton Sunday School
had an attendance of 70, of.
fermg $158 Followmg Sunday
School the supermtendent,
Ralph Carl, presented pms for
perfect attendance to Floyd
Ross, Ed1th Ross, Juntor Ross
and Brenda for 10 years perfect
attendance
Weekend guest of Judy Kmg
were Gloroa Flack, Kankakee,
Ill , Loro Boyer, ReddiCk, Ill ,
and Barb Johnson of Colum·
bus
Mrs Lou1se Hamson and
Mrs Elizabeth Murray spent
several days w1th Mr and Mrs
Ph1lhp Hamson and Rodney m
Columbus
Recent v1sotors of Mr and

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

t5 tf c

M ALE-;.-;;~;-;u-;--;--;;n,hl

8 16 6fP

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

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

so

For sale

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath &amp;hool attendance
August 12 at the Free
MethodiSt Ch urch was 94
Offerong for mornmg serv~ces
was $77 87 iiO persons were
present for the worship ser·

.a

r

VlCC

Rev Robert Buckley was
called lo Akron by the death of
his great aunt, Mrs Bertha
Moorhead Rev Buckley of·
f1c1ated at the funeral wh1ch
was held Monday morning
Olin Rife of Columbus v1s1ted
w1th hos mother, Mrs Cora
Renshaw recently
Mr and Mrs Jack Stanley
have purchased the Lawrence
Ebhn property and have occupied same
Mr Lawrence A. Smith
remains Ill at h1s home here
Mrs Alma SchaeferGordon,
Delaware ts a pat1ent m a
hospotal there
Mrs Es\a W1se or near
Steubenville has been reported
11\ Mrs W1se os a former local
reSident
VIS IT COLUMBUS
Mr and Mrs Delmar
Canaday returned home
Saturday after spendmg a
week vosttong Mrs Moldred
Gamblin and .Mrs Edtth
Stewart m Columbus The four
visited Kmgwood Center at
Mansfteld, the Space Center at
Wapakoneta, and the Warren
G Harding home at Manon
On Saturday they attended the
Joe Ferguson p1cmc held at a
park In Columbus

MILBtRRY AVE.
AND VICINITY
APPLY AT
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Pomeroy
PHONE 992·2156
RESPONSIBLE woman to
babvslt In Rutland from 11 30
un til 4 30 four dayS a week , 1
child m kindergarten &amp;nd 1 In
school Call 742 4426 after 6

pm

RETl:RN HOME
Mr and Mrs John Weeks
and children, Tom and Mary
Beth, Gallipolis, ·and Mr. and
Mrs Eldon Weeks have
returned from a two week
vacallon at Wrighl.&lt;lvllle, N C

B19 61p

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

Be Righi

1

Washrngton St , Athens, Ohro
or by pt'lonlng 1 614 591 6606
Appl1 catrons or resumes must
be recerved no later than
August 24, 1973 Mad to
Southeast Ohro Emergency
Med 1cal Ser vice , In c 25 w
Wash lngton St
Box 917.
Athens Oh ro 45 701 Attn, Roy
E Rankrns

e 17 31c

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

Carriers Wanted

dillon S2 ooo Call 992 7407

AM FM stereo rad ro - 8 track
8 17 31p
tape com bination, 4 speaker
.....
sound
system
Balance COMPLETE set of Rogers
5103 79 or use our budget
Drums and Cymbals Like
terms Call 992 3965
new Phone 992 3132

- ---

8 IS 61c

----------

8 IS 61p

--------------erg Capac.,
Mavtag
AutomatiCS
2 spee rj operatJon
Qrotce of wa ter
t'emps
Auto
water
leve
control
LIn
Fi lter or Powe
Fin Agitator
Per\'na-Preu

MATERIALS CO
77l-SSS4
Muon, W V•

Dryers

Dally Sentinel
In

POMEROY
MU LBERR Y AV E

992 2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

No ruinous lyes or caustics

used

and

Pock-Up Service
Avatt1ble
We Buy &amp; Sell Antiques
Dick Seyler Owner
Kerr 51
Pomeroy, 0
Phone 992 2798
EXCAVATING Dozers large
and small
Backhoes and
loaders on track and tires
Dump truck - LQ boy ser
vrce Septic tanks Installed
George ( Bill ) Pullins, phone
992 2478 or 992 7402

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display .
O'DELL WHEEl Allgnmenl
located at Crossroads Rt 124
now back to work Complete
front end service t une up and
brake
service
Wheels
balanced electron ically Al l
work guaranteed Reasonable
rates Phone 742 3232
2 18 tic:

2 9 lfc
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS RON SHEPARD , Floor, Woll
CLEANED, REPAIRED
Remodeling, Ceram ic tlte
MILLER SANITA TION , baths
Box 2BD, Rutland 742
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3661
3035
6 26 lie
10 4 tfc
SEWING MACHINES R,palr

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

service, all makes 992 228,.
The Fabric Shop , Pomvroy
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service We Sharpen Sclnon

RACINE RURAl
35 woodefi clcres trontagc on

bo dr oo m s ba t h , n ew gas
tu r M ce basem ent a nd h~ck

3 bedroom s

bath
util ity
larg e r ec r ea tion
room for ced tu r furmu:;e
porches cellar wrth stor age

roo m

33
North 1. bedroom hom e new
bath fr ont c1nd bri ck porch es
Henhou se corn crrb barn an d
all mrnera ls Want \1 5 000 00

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 To I 5

NEW HOM E
IN THE COU NTR ~

Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam , Pom eroy , 0

10 l o r cu lt!v a lt o n , th e
balc1nce as pa stu r e Home
ha d 3 bedroom5 T V roo m
n1ce k rtchen forced air he at
bat h
cell ar
porch es

3

GO ING AT JU ST 115 00000
WE HAV E BUY ERS FO R
ALL TYPE S PR OPERTY
LIST TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER

Rad1a1or Spec1ahst

Ph ·m 2174

DOZER: and ba ck hoe work
ponds and sep,tlc tanks dlt
chrng serv1ce top soil !Ill
dirt
lrmestone
B&amp;K
Escavatrng Phone 992 5367 or

992 3861

9 1 tt c

HOME reparr or remodeling
Reasonable rates ls t c:tass
work Call Bob or Bitt , 992

S968

E X CEL SI OR Salt Works E
Marn 51 Pomeroy All krnd s
ot sail water pellets water
83 A CRE FARM ga s, water 6
nugg et s, block salt and own
room house In Lang sville
Oh lo River Sail Phone 992
ar ea Phone 992 J&gt;JO or 742
389 1
6675
6 5 tf c
8 19 lOOp

NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedroom

Pomeroy

onl y $17 500 00

Unsc ramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to

DO N T WASTE YOUR TIME
AND MONEY LOOK ING OR
TRYING TO SELL OR TO
BUY SEE US WE WILl DO
THE JOB PROFESSIONALLY
AND SAVE YOU AL L THE
TROUBLE

fo rm four ordmary words .

I

8 10 lOi c

AlliN(;

r

... . . .. . .

' ~".~.:::.\:::&gt;::· · ··

j(JNEY

D IIII

foot thts season w1th a pa ir of
Knepp aero tread cushioned
msole, champ1onshrp gr'ade
bowlrng shoes Bob Hy sell

1/J/NIJ\

8 lot 6tc

3 BEDROOM house on Lincoln
Hill, lrvrng room
krlchen
bath and utrlrly room. e)(fra
l arge lot ov er 1 ac r e Has
7428
dr 1vew ay
$13 000
Ca ll
6 15 tf c
Sunday after 12 noon
on
weekdays after 5 p m
992
Wll.L lRIM or c ut trees
3247
shrubbery Al so pa int roofs
a 5 tf c
Phone 949 3221 or 742 A441
1 18 30tc
LARGE convenrent bui ld ing
lots at Rock Sp r in gs Area
ELNA and White Se wing
restrrc ted for houses on l y
Machrnes
Service on all
Tupper s Plar ns &amp; Cheste r
makes Reasonable rat ~s
Water avarlable Call or see
The Sewing Center Mrd
Brll Wrlf e 992 27 89
dleport Ohio
7 24 tt c
11 \6 lfc

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
c ancelled?
Lost
your
operators l rcense Call 992

[]

UM'/'Il'AL

II

I I r]

Now arrange the ctrcled letters
to form the aurprtae anawer, aa

I I
;::=======~~:'._, sunested by the above cartoon.
"t I XI I I

r

(An•wen tomorrow)
Jun1hlt:e SLANT

AWARD

GRAVEN

PLOWED

Sa lurday 1
An~w~rr

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIE

abl e
moment

( 2 wds)
f) Ghst ened

1 Egy pt,.n

Chn stw.n

Yesterday'li Answer

K s nake
9 Ac tor Van

Cicci
10 Aver age

15 fltghcst

14 Rc

note

16 Bovouac

gressu) n

11 Keye 18 Frtctwn

n eed

11 Subsist
lR -

3. Avatar vf
V1 sh n u
4 Poe m
5 Unsu1t

Juana

21 Take for

!rom

burden
30 Trade
name
31. Equal
32 Howdy,

or
magnetic

granted

24 Alleviate
25 Bracer,
sttmulant

(sl )
(com
pound
wd)
21 Medoemal
planl
28 Glvcn to
scoffi ng
29 Quarrel
30, Jll humor
31. Soulh
Seas
canoe
32. My (fr )
35 ' The of the
Thlfd

34 Sun
Valley
sports
Item
35 Hebrew
teaching
master
36. Jsland
(Fr)
37. New
Mextcan
Indtan
31. Monk's
to tie

23. Freight
boat
2~. Fcncong
fotl
26. Free

19 czech
rlver
20 Ethereal
21. Armadotto
22 Farm
strqcturc

33. Other·
WlSe

1-,..-1-- +-+-+--

Re1ch"

(3 wds)
39 For·
clgner
40. Blot out
41. Mutton
chops
42 Appomted
DOW N
~~-4--~~1 Sugar
source
2. USSR
lake
DA fLY CRYPTO(IUOTE- Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter somply stands for another ln thos sample A IS
used for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formahon of the words are all
lunts Each dav the code letters are dtfferent
CRYPTOQUOTES

home large bath ntce kitchen,
plu s a one bedroom apartm ent
rent ed and larg e lot Want

BOWLERS gel ofl on !he right

992 5324

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

992 2259
If no answer 991 2568

venlur'e tor 1 good rndustnous
per son who Is wrllmg to p ut rn
long hou r s

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

-

11/' baths nrce k!t chen W! t h
S S c ook and bake untl s
Carpeted Full ba sement w rth

garage Askmg $19 500 00
NEW LISTING
POMEROY
Bu so oess

Nathan Boggs

WEL L PLA NN E D 3 bedroom '2
b ath
no me
w it h
fui J
base m ent 2 car garage an d
tam l ly r oom Pr lt ed m mrd
20 s plus lot LD c ated on larg e
country lot off Rt 7 20
m lnu l eS I rom Parkersburg
and
15
m rnut es
fr o m
Pom eroy Flnanc rng al ready
arranged wrth l ow down
pay me nt Cont act Paul ine E
Cunn ingham Rea lty Phon e
{ 614 ) 423 8690 Coll ec t
7 19 lfc

3 mll es ou t ot Rutl a nd Aboul

with garage Askong 120 000 00
NEW HOME
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms
From the laraest Tru ck or
Bulldoz.er Rad•ator to the
!)rna 1tes t Heat er Lore

-------------For Sale

over la rge lol \8 500 00
33 ACRES

bedr oom s, ni ce ba th and k. !t
chen w!th elecln c rang e On
Oh •o Power' Full ba se m ent

~

PAGEV I L L E Oh ro In clud es
house 4 roo m s down 1 t.~p ,
ga r age work sho p an d ap
prox lr'n ate ly 1117 ~c re s wrth
young or chard 1 bloc k ea st of
Rl 691 510 500 lnlor m&amp;tr on
at house
8 12 tf c

GE NUIN E SACR IFICE

porch 110 500 00
SMAll FARM
30 AC RES - On Roule

On Most American Cttrs

_... -------- ----

bo th srdeh ol the r oad pond
.1 boul 5 acres level ~"" e~~:
cell enl buy \5 500 00

4

ACROSS
I St John's
bread
6 Old West
war
trophy
1J Plowed
field
12 01'

The Ensluh anMncrtJI got
"drunk"-"AS A LORD'

A C HHGfS

TFKWBWNW

BK

JHBKV

RKENMBKV

NMRN

RJXH

NF

Gr'

GFHW

KFN

MDCN

'~NNMBRW

RKEFKH

HXWH -

TXRDGBDW

Yeoterday'o Cryptoquote: A PARENT MUST RESPECT THE
SPIRITUAL PERSON OF HIS CHILD, AND APPROACH IT
WITH REVERENCE -GEORGE MACDONALD
&lt;C 1171 Kine Jootuno Srndleaw, loe.)

DICK TRACY
POOII KID COUI.OIIT
llELP TI-IAT.

3 29 tfc

NAME WOP!,
LAST NAME

FOR FREE esll{nllfe5 on
aluminum Siding
Storm
Doors and Windows, Car
ports Mar quees and Rlllllng,
Phone
Charles
Llslt,
Syracuse, Oh io Carl Jacob
Seles Representative V V
Johnson and Son Inc

LE'Zl!

CAPTAIN EASY
IM AFRA fD

1 15 tfc

'r'OULI.. 5CJFF

IF I

MENT/0~

G.!!!2fl2,

Sit&lt;'

2 9 tft

READY MIX

CONCRETE

d eli vered right to your
project Fast and easy Free

esllmales Phone 992 328•

Goegleln Ready Mix Co,
Middleport. Ohio
6 30 tfc

--------------SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

REASONABLE rBIO$ Ph U6
4762 r Gallipolis, John Ru,.ell,

JAN I, 1913

~N OIN G

5 11 lfc

BUGS BUNNY

C BRADFORD Auclloneer

JUNE 30, 1973

Complete Service

PhOne 9•9 382 1

SO.VI IF 'II!It THAT
!lllOk!, HOW ARE 'lA
&lt;00~ MY FOR THIS

Racine Ohio
Crltt Bradford

$2,320

s 1 lfc
EXCAVATING dozer, loader

.l CCOlJNT NO

36 3 053

f""'~""'"-,

Owner and Operator

MAS US£0 TS A!II EI\IUE 5HAR NG r M MlN I
F" ATII E PER 0 0 BEGINN NCl

TOT .- L PA~M[N f 0f

009

RS'AC'IN'"

and backhoe work , septic
tank s Installed, dump trucks
and to boy !l for hire will tteul
fill dirt top soil limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089,

PHONE 992-7368
SALEM TOWNSHIP
TOWNSHIP CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
LANGSVILLE, OHIO 45741

RIVERSIDE APARTMENTS

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

"STRIPPERS"
We Strip Paint, Varnishes,
Etc from Furniture
Antiques-Modern Metal$

IN I ll( I Ol LOWINC MANNf'H BASEOlJPO N A

Middleport

hom e all on one floor Ga r age
M d largQ lot for m obile home
or new house
T P water
i'lv atl l'lb l ~ soon Just 115 000 00

S TV service and
service calls Phone 992 2522

SALEM TOWNSHIP
OfF ICE OJ HEVENUt SHARIN G ,
1900 PENNSYlVA NIA o\IJ f N W
WA SHINGTON 0 C 20226

Dick's
Hoard House

As k1 ng

by THOMAS JOSEPH

bo th
home
w it h
f ull
bnseme nl 2 c:a r gara ge an d
la mrl y r oom Pr iced Jn rnJ (l
20s _p l us lol Lo cat ed on l arge
co vn try lot off R 1 1
20
mlnu l es jro m Park er sbur g
and
15
m l n utes
fr om
Pomeroy Fi nan cing alrea dy
Brraog ed w it h l ow do wn
prophet
pa ym ent Contac t Pavll ne e
Cunn lnQh"m R ealtv ohon e 13 T erm f rJr
6 14 42-:J 8690
a SOQb
1 24 tf c
(2 wds)

HARRI~ON

THI OOVIRNMINT Or
DEPfliHMEN I OF l H[ TREASU RY

Ph. 742·6271

Phone 992 5858

,•

For The

215 N. Second
Phone 992-3509
24 Hour Servoce
All work guaranteed

Darwi n

trlcal plumbing and heating

Rutland

Arnold Grate.

Heat1ng
A1r Cond
q .., fnq erilhOn
PlumbtrJg
E.•ectrrcdl AtJPUdlll..t:::. Auto
Atr Cond
Res1dent1al or
Commercral

ga:; torced m r

1 car garRge on large

MOBILE homo repolr , Elec GASOLINE ALLEY

RUTLAND FURN ITUREIR~~~~~=e•
741 -4211

Modd leport, 0

at

6 bt-c:lrooms
wrth lll rtJC du:.cfl, 41 , hitths
Uvlng r'OOm l ~:r.31 wllh
!!replace Large T V room
Utility room Full ba5ement
Hot water hea l Large ? car
CJM39 wtlh workshop and
roo m ove r Large lot wrth
lots of sh r\J bS C l o~e to
Shopp1 ng

$16000 00
NEW LISTI NG
3 bedroom
AURLIN CHAM

P AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

For Free Estimate

1

Dini ng room
t v r nau~

Wf!L..L Pl.A NN E D 3 b;;~;;, 2

'J ~ l ory l r;:r m •

~

8 u 61p

c lothes
wrth gentle, even
heal No hot spots
no
overdrvl ng
Frne Mesh Unt
FIller
We Speclal11e In
MAYTAG
~urround

1220 Washmglon Blvd
423 7521
BELPRE, 0

992 2101

FAMILY HOME

A r~ lc.c 'I bedroom frame

R EDUCE exc:eu flui d s wll h G RO CE RY buli lness lor Ult
f-l ulde:c
Lo~e weigh t w llh
Bu il ding for Silt or I t t "
D ex A D iet
c:a psules
at
Phont 713 5618 from I 30 p m
10 lO p m tor eppo lntment
Nelson Oruus.
3 ,0 fie:
$ 10 31p

structural repair Roush and
finish
carpetry
antique
repplr
Reasonable prices
Private carpenter Call Scott
Mason 9927300

Moytag

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

Bu1ldrng

Roofing,
Spouting,
Porch Repair, Com
plete
Home
Remodeling

1

30 Dally, 8-IHal

home 4 t)e dr oDms
oaths ba se ment. f rr eplace
Lo w thirti es Pom er oy Wr iJe
j E Bs yll ss 310 W High St
Crldt~rsvl ll e Phlp 4!;806
8 17 61 f;l

For Sale

6 22 lfc
SMALL oddlllons, remodollng,

Halo of Heat

se rvrce plus g igantiC
d! splay of mob1le homes
always available at

84

IH~ I C K

hom e b ath con venien t ~l t ch"n
wll h coo k and ba k e.~ un i ts

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

In lhe A H Rawllnos Sons

CONSTRUCTION

1

old

- GUARANTEED-Phone 992 2094

PRICE

50% OFF SALE

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

Roghl

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

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

______

w11t

Buill to Your '$pocs
Dollvortd lo Job Site

BIG YANK
SlACKS

________

II Musl

or

n

-+-

Alignment

WOOD TRUSSES

Notice

ELEcTROLUX-s;;~;ers

Wheel

•

NEW LISTI NG
Nr All Y Nf W J"' l 3 yCM'

lo t

Specialist

was her dou bl e oven ran ge
dou bl e 9"rag e lo r QIJ ca rpor t
4 ac r e~ clea r ed i!lnd t ence d
-.m.,IJ
ba rn
a nd
ot h er
buildings Phon e 6 1.4 74 '1 683.4
5 JO lf c

Pomeroy, Ohio 457 69

Middleport, 0.

992-2550

ASK US ABOUT
PRE-FABRICATED

Wanted To Buy

Mr and Mrs Joe Phillips
and children of Owensborough,
Ky , called on Mr and Mrs
Larry Barr recently
Mrs Howard Thoma and
Mrs Elv1ra Barr were donner
guests at a cookout at the home
of their children, Mr and Mrs
For Rent
Larry Barr
Mrs Emma l.edlie went to
Poml Pleasant, W Va Sunday
to a f8II1lly reuruon and spent a
few days w1th her Sister and
husband, Mr and Mrs Howard
Brown
Mr and Mrs Larry Barr and
family and Mrs Alpha Barr
made a busmess tnp to
Gallipolis Wednesday
Mrs Melva Eblm and
children, Bolly and Kay, called
on Mrs Elvira Barr Saturday
evemng
Mrs John Lloyd and boys,
Tampa , Fla , and Mrs Ron
Wnght and children of Dublm,
Va , are VISiting their parents,
992 5858
Mr and Mrs Bruce Moms
8 16 tic
Help
Wanted
Mrs Ro511 Barnes, a former WORLD FAMOUS BARDAHL MOBILE home space In
resident of Langsville, age 99
DISTRIBUTORSHIP Now
Syracuse Phone 992 5858
available
on
local
level
ser
6 21 lfc
years, d1ed at her home m vrclng Bardahl dealers Thrs
Akron Her funeral was at the
servrce type business can be
operated
full or pari trme with Mobile Homes For Sale
Marton Funeral Home
no
sell rng
exper ren ce
M1chael Barr of GlenVIlle, W
necessary Prof1t potential Is CASH pa id for all makes anc
models of mobile homes
unlrm rted
Conservative
Va ,spent the weekend with hiS
Phone area code 6U 423 9531
est1mate of $95 for eac h dav
4 13 tfl
mother, Mrs Alpha Barr
worked A $3 495 rnvestment
puts
you
rn
business
WR
1TE
Sunday dmner guest was M1ss. TODAY 1Inc lud e phone 12x60 MOBILE Home se
Helen Baer Syracuse
Marge Riggs of Pomeroy
number)
BARD HAL INC
Medra
Penna
19063
Mrs Roy Sigman has
8 I9 3tp
returned home after spendmg
•
several weeks viSiting In APPLICATION S are now berng
r Cond1honers
acc:epted for the posrtlon of
Alabama and Toledo, Ohio
wmngs
Drspatcher
for Southeast
Mrs Erruna Ledhe and Mrs
Ohro Emergency Medical
derponmng
Service. In c Appl rc atrons
Roy S1gman called on Mrs
may be acquired at Central
Comp l ete mobile home
Alpha Barr Tuesday evenmg
Headquar te rs
25
W

CARRIER
WANTED

Rt 4, Pom1rov. o
f9H914

1 ROO M t'lout.e Wll h balh In
R u It and
a rr co nd ltl one d
u r o ro teci gas turn ace IJrsh

I 10 NlttMiliC: Str..t

ALL WEATHER

lOHN' TUCKER

old SIS Call 992 7614 1 19 , 6tc

St."

lrotwr

Sidmg · Spouting
Rem ode ling
Pl~mbing · Heatmg . Complete
Building. Vmyl &amp; Aluminum Siding .

MODERN
SANITATION

1

l(lrt~ll-a:Tt~ford.

For Sale •

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

TEAFORD

ROOFING

14 HOiiif SERVICE

1 Secure locations. 1 Piece
Machines on Location , J 1957 FORO truck, uood con
Fu rn ish Supptlel
YOU .l 1
dillon Looks good and run s i97J.:iiQZaO;ew;g-;~hlnt
This ma chine dllrns , em
Put In Stamp s, 1 Takllt vut
good S300 Phone 992 3359
br'Oiders, overcuts
button
the Monev 3 Keeo 20 oct 4
8 iS 61c
holes
All wlthovt at
$1795 s10 oooworklng capital
t"'chments Pav balance ol
Req u ired - 100 Pet Refund
SJB
or p~v ss per month
able Send name Addre~s
Phone Number References to
Call 992 !33 I
6 10 He
Postage Stamps, Inc
JOO
&amp;LIND ADS
AUCTION
Interstate
North
N
w
Suite
Add 1t lonal H e Cha r ge per
TURDAY August 2S 1913,
328 Atli!mta , Ga 30339 (404 ) SA12
Adverl1sement
30 p M The follo wing
432 4439
mach In~" For sewi ng stretch
OFFICE HOURS
personal propertv w i ll be sold
8
19
31p
fflbrlcs buttonholes, tancv
8 30 a m to 5 oo p m Darty.
at mv res iden ce located on
designs
e l c Pi!l lnt slightly
8 JD a
m
to 11 00 Noon
Lim berger R ldge Road East
blemished Choi ce of carrvl no
Saturday
of Tuppers Pl ains leave
case or sewi ng stand 549 80
Route 7 East on 681 at the
c
ash or terms available Phone
ca ut ion \lgnt to the F ire
BEEFhides,dt~yold paving$7
Tower
lust
ofl
route
681
992
298.
8 20 61C
Phone 77J 5600 Grove r C
(F ollow Sa le arrows 1 Mite l
UP HO,.l.STER vour own fur
Roush , Pom erov Stree t
Ahtique Case Tractor Old
nlture We have all the sup
Mason , W Va
bottles and Slone Jars 7 pc
plies you will need fabrics ,
8 15 9tp
delu,;e model comc lete with
pink Berr y Set Iron Skil l ets 2
loam for cuShiOn s and pad - - - - - - - - - - - - - - all cleaning attachments end
Round Oak Tables, Admiral
ding Wecvtfollmtoanysize CO RNER cupboards , wall
uses paper bags Slightly osed
Gas
Range
,
M
ilk
Cans
or sh:ape Sw ivel bases cotton
cupboards 1 chests , Old guns ,
but cleans and looKs n~e;e new
H!ckorv
Bottom
Rocker
II
011
burlap legs zipper welt cord,
anv condition Also blue
w1 setl for S37 25 each, or
Lamps
Electric
Guitar
and
web brng dacron , ch ip board
dec orated stoneware Write
terms available PhOM 992
Ampllfr
er
3
Guns
(lvor
plus many other Item s and
P 0 Bo x 44 Martinsburg
Johnson)
Insulators
53
1984
living room suites afo low low
Ohio , -43935 or Cj,ll I 484 4440
8 20 6f t
Chevy (Disassembled ), 2 pc
prices Pomeroy Recovery r
Ofl~
p JT1
1()f
L rvlng Room Sul te , Old Ice
622 E Main Phone 992 75,5.1 ~'\ I
I
.,
8 8 90tc
POP cooler Coal Buckets 4
1 19 30tc
~11...----wagon
Wheel!! split Basket
Back lo School Sale I
----------~---NO l Copper 60c Radiators
c B Lafayette Rad io , Pink
KOSCOT KOSMETICS 8. WIG S
30c brass, 20c batteries 90C
Depression Glass
Brown
Spec 1a ls dur ing August are
each c lean drv Ginseng
Dishes Crocks, Old Cedar
Koncentree, Mo ist Kote ,
roots $60a lb Yellow roDt 54
Chest Tov Electric Train
Kleansrng Kream One Day
May app le, SOc per lb M A
with Track, cane Bottom
Sachet &amp; others Phone He len
Hall
Reedsville Call 378
Chairs
Avon cars and Bot
Jane Brown 992 511 3
6149
ties
J
Rallroed La nt erns
7
31
tfc
8 2 tfc
Steel
Guitar
She ll
Reloader
fo
r
12
and
WANTED
fQ
I
~
~c
llon
,
WILL g1ve awav for good home
1
16
Ga
,
Dated
Jars
householcl"aoods~iools, moso
rn the country full blooded
Men's, women's, girls' &amp;
(Quarts and Pints ), Maple
anythmg ol value Will buy or
German Poli ce Dog J years
Hutch
and
3
Maple
Cha
rrs
boys'
regular teans &amp; casual
sell
on
commission
Will
haul
old
gentle with chr ldr en
Bar Bells ~ Porch Swing 2
Call 992 3354 Hayman's
Reason for giving away - dog
1eans Good colors All sites.
Grind Stones, Antrque B~bV
7 2S tfc
has to be fred and would l1ke
Bed Metal) Miscellaneous
to run loose Phone 992 3359
Items not listed
Winnie ' ·
POMEROY
8 11 61C OLD furniture , oak tables
Holsinger
Owner
Terms
clocks lee boxes , brass beds
~ Jack W Carsey, Mgr.
Cash Not Responsibl e tor
d is hes
or
complete
MEIGS SENIORS Make your
Phone 992 2181
Accrdents Bradford Auction
households Write M
D
apporntment now to have your
company
Au
ctioneer
C
C
Miller, Rt 4, Pomeroy Ohio
SENIOR PORTRAIT taken
BradfDrd Sale Manager A NEW 2 piece Earlv Amerlclln
call 992 6271
Dates tor takmg MEIGS
l iving room sutte In 100 pet
C Bradford
5 13 tic
_..
SENIORS are Aug 22 23, 24
819 232tc
nylon print material with
and 25 and Sept 1 Take
wood tr im FQam reversible
advantage of Special Sen ror
Investment Property for sale
c uslllons Th i S week onlv
Pr ices for these days only
LARGE bnck burldt('lg on Marn
$189 95 c ash and carry
Call GROVER'S STUDIO ,
Street
Pomeroy
Cont
ams
4
Pomeroy Recovery , 622 E
TWO
trarler
lots
In
Mtddleport
Mrddl eport Ohto Phone 992
rental s offers Bpprox lma tel v
1h duplex In Bradbuy
Main Street , Pomeroy Phone
phone
WS
10 to 12 pet return on rn
992 7SS4
before 6 p m 992 5693
8 1 22tc
e 16 61c
vestme nt Call 992 2789
8
20
Sip
------~-------~
s 19 6lc
YARD Salt! Thursday, Friday
and Saturday, 10 am till ROOMS by the week, S18 up KNAPP - shoe;-;,;w- f;ii _._ and B~~s5~58HOGS otx5 ft' phone
dark
Reef res idence
Jrd
Mergs Inn. Pomeroy
wmter styles now out Call
7 !l ,.,
Street,
Racine
A(1tl qu e
7 12 ttc
992 5324
dr sh es brng and grondahl
a 14 lfc 1973 Hx70 MOBILE ho me,
Royal c open hagen co ll ec tor s PRIVATE meeting room for
--~-------"----washer and dryer, dish
p la te s
&lt;:ambridge
any organ rzatlon , phone 992 APACHE Eagle Tent Camper
washer , stainless steel sink ,
depress ron and R F Prussia,
397S
sleeps 4, also cuslom hitch for
garbage disposal eye leve l
Brrcabrac etc Old books
3 11 tt c
67 Chevrolet Phone 992 7157
oven range dacron polyester
bottles
lanterns, &amp;ndlrons,
8 14 6tC
carpet large lot Phone 7.42
new school cl othes manv 4 ROOMS furniShed opt Righi
]08]
oth er rtems tor everyone at
rn town Ca ll 992 3658
WHITE and yellow sweet corn
1 18 tf
yard sale prrces
8 16 6tc
cantalopes and watermelons,
8 19 6tc
Dave Yost Great Bend 843 BROWNING pollee scanner
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
2242
model XM 888 Phone 667
GA RAGE Sal Mt Olive Rrdge
unfurnished
r~partments
8 14 61p 3652
rn Long Bollom Mondav and
Phone 992 5434
8 17 lie
Tuesday 9 till 4 at the
-----------~~~fc
NICE srx room house for sale In
Casey German residen c e
Pomerov Catl992 3975 or 992 1972 TAG A LONG
Travel
Few old drshes, furn rtu re, gas TWO BEDROOM moblte home
2571
Trailer 22 ff sleeps 4 sell
heaters and mrsc rtem s
for rent rn the Racine area
S IS 61c co nta med E~~: ce ll ent con
8 19 31p
rnc:tudes air conditioning Call

Help Wanted

SEPTIC TANKS
· CLEANED
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

1969 CHEVROLEl tru ck , l 3 h
tt dump body , chellter u:le
S450o oo Phone 992 59S1

•

1

1971 YAMAHA 250 M'1.

l'etsfor Sal8

Real Estate For Sale

Business Services

•

~ 0;; 0~;-;;-;;~--;i;-;;Q

olghl phone 992 352! or 992 r
52)2

1 11 tfc

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.-c ttJ .t. L

E( ~E !'t 011 1JJU3

"'

RENTAL SURVEY

AllEY ODP
%

( F!lhng out and returnmg the below survey
DOES NOT OBLIGATE YOU, but only ex·
presses your mterest tn possibly rentmg an
apartment . Reduced renls are ava1lable if you
qua Illy on I he bas1s of mcome l

I~-----------------------,

I NAME _ _ _ _
I
I1 PRESENT AD~RESS-----I SINGLE- -,-:-__MARRIED - - 1
I

Crow's Steak House and

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results! :

5 'l'hc LJaUy &amp;&gt;nthoel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Au~ 20, una

1

NO. OF CHIWREN- --

-

%
%
%

%
%
%
%
%

-------------------------·
-..

-\

M'f)
11"/11-JG DAY T! II S 10

...__

WHIC H COULD BE
~ DA'/

COULD'I 1 ITCORN &amp;1DiiRI'I
Toi T~PE: 0 AC1

For Sale

'10 DO-

9 ACRES ground with 2 wtlll

Phone 992 7191

8

16 6tp

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

CA NNING
Tomalotl,
cucumbers manoou and
c tntllopes
Geraldlnt
Cleland Ra ci ne

7 31 lfc !i&gt;l:..,r-1

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

like a person

c

Mall to Barr· Ctrcle Development, Inc .
750 F1rst Avenue
Gallipolis, Oh1o 45631
Or for more mformat1on call collect 446-3746

_____________7 25 3DIC

We.talk to you

---

I LL REM EMBoR

WMP0/1390
DN YOUR DIAL

DOC PRITCHART!J

LOWEEZ.Y CAN
I BORRVYORE
U~BRELLER?

WHAT AREYE 0011\1'
WAt.KtN' AROUND
11\J TH'RA\Ni'

~AUGHHJ

'/
I

/

/I

'

(&amp;'

�4- Th• Dally &amp;&gt;ntuwl, Moddlepot t l'ono u "' , 0 , 1111~ . :!11, tq71

2 SIGNS

Wolfpt•n Nc.•w!'l, Nolc.·s
Mr and Mrs Foank lon
Russell or Moddlep(lr[ \\ Cir
Tuesda) evcnong vtsltors of
Mr. and Mrs Ltrocoln 1\ns.&lt;e \1
Mrs Paul Poerce and fatmly
or Mason "eoe Tucsdn)•
VISitors of Mrs l.ao ry Joln1&lt;1111
and Ianni) and Mrs Geneva
Shwnatc
Mr and Mos Howao d J'hom,o
returned home Tuesday afteo
opendmg a few da~s wolh Mr
and Mrs Frank Sao ver, John
and Eddoe of Brodgeman, Moch
Mr and Mrs Doyle Knapp,
Charles and Kevon and Mrs
Charley Smoth spent th e
weekend woth Mr and Mrs
Danoel Worley of Beckley, W
Va Ka1l Knapp retqrned home
woth parents after spendong the
weekend woth Mr and Mrs
Worley (awol and uncle )
Mr and Mrs BtU McEh oy,
Jeff of Columbus, were
weekend vosotors of hos
parents, Mr and Mrs Paul
McElroy and her parents, Mr
and Mrs Vernon Bong and
family
Mrs Clinton Gtlkey of
Albany was v1sotong woth her
parents, Mr and Mrs Loncoln
Russell Wednesday
Mr and Mrs Robert Russell
and Mr and Mrs Steve Haggy
were weekend vos1tors of Mr
and Mrs Ronald Russell,
Amanda of Fort Mead, Md

no.&gt;n of Sp11 ngfoeld ~ eo e
M vnrl~t) nne! t ucsddy vt::~tt m s
of Mt ,ond Mos r 11•d
l uckl!t m.ut

o~ntl

Mt .!lld

F:ugc nc H.uung. Rhonda .md
Homa lr\
Mo aud Mo s f),uuc t W !lolC)
of Brc kley, W Va '"' '
11cekend voslloo s of Mr .md
Mrs ClmriC) Smollo
Mo an d Moo D.ole nussell
and fanuh of Columbus 1\'t' l t'
t (•cent vts tlQt s of Mr and Mrs
l.oncoln Russell
Stmdav dinner guests of Mo
and Mrs Ch,ulev Snuth weoe
Mo and Mos Danwl Worlc)
and Mo and Mo s Do) le
Knapp Kao\ Kcvut and
Charles
Mt and Mrs D.moe\ Worlcv
an d Charles Knapp vosotcd her
grandparents Mo .ond Mrs
llarley T Johnson Suntla1
afternoon
Ka1l Lee Knapp ac·
companied h1s aunt, Mr and
Mrs Danoel Woole) home
Somday to spend the week
Mrs Laory Johnson and
famtly, Mrs Paul P1erce and
famoly, Mrs Doyle Knapp and
famoly and Mrs Geneva
Shumate enJoyed a pocno c
lunch at Fort Mmgs ruesday

Social Notes

News, Event
Mr and Mrs EmZie DaviS,
Parkersburg, W Va , were
recent guests of her brothers,
W. C and Paul Peck
Mr and Mrs Fred Whetnall,
Columbus, visited their mece
and family, Mr and Mrs
Wilham M1ller and daughters
Mr and Mrs John G1llogly
and sons attended the weddmg
of her sister, Jacqueline
Waggoner, on Saturday
Mr and Mrs Dorsey Jordan,
Vlrgm1a, R1cky and Ralph,
have returned from a vacatiOn
to Ann Arbor, Michigan, where
they VISited his brother-m-law
and s1ster, Mr and Mrs Max
McCallie (Velrrua Jordan) and
their daughters and famll1es in
that area They also called on
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Wose at
the State North Central
Research and Development
Center at Caslalia and viSited
relatives m Akron as they were
enroute home
'"';' Mr and Mrs Carl Caster
::z•were guests at the home of Mr
1 .., and Mrs Earl S\arkey The
$_...__Casters now hve in C1tra,
Flonda They v1s1ted other
~elabves here, also
Members of the Cooley
family held thetr annual
reun1on at Temple Chur,ch
Grove on Sunday.
o
Columbia Grange No 2435
held thetr monthly meeting on
Fr1day evemng The Lecturer,
Bertha Cnppen, presented a
· safety program Election of
offtcers will be held at the
September meeting
Mrs Cecil Gtllogly and son,
Steve, attended a Chroslian
Youth Fellowship Conference
at Lake Burr Oak State Park
Mr and Mrs Mendal Jordan
accompamed Mr and Mrs
Dwame Jordan and choldren to
Georgetown, Oh10, where they
attended th e Oh10 Vall ey
An toque Machmery Show at the
Brown County Fa~rgrounds on
Saturday
Mrs Nellie Dye and Mrs
Betty Cox, Columbus, VIStted
With Mr and Mrs Ney Carpenter and Martha Mays
Mr and Mrs Bob Gnm,
Poca, W Va , spent the
weekend w1th her brother,
William Lawson and famoly

!

f'rlends and neighbors were
sorry to hear of the death of
Clara Froend who d1ed at
Camden Clark Hospital ,
Parkersburg, W Va
Mr and Mrs M1ke B1ssell,
Colwnbus, and Mr and Mrs
Tun Bossell, PI Pleasant, W
Va , were vosolJng Mr and Mrs
Hank Holter
Leota Ferrell, Medway, 0 ,
IS vlsttlng with Leona Hensley
Mr and Mrs Fred Larkms
were vos1ttng 1elatoves al
Nelsonville, 0
Mr and Mrs Davod G
Srruth, Chester, and Mr and
Mrs David Sm1th and Dee Dee
were v1s1ting Mr and Mrs
Tom Drake, Reynoldsburg , 0
Mr and Mrs C B Hayman ,
Mr and Mrs Bob Fotzpatrock
and daughters, Columbus, Mr
and Mrs J1m Walls and son,
Mr and Mrs Elbert Fltz.
patn ck and family were
VlSttmg Ernestme Hayman
Mr and Mrs Joe Btssell, Mr
and Mrs Davod Simth and Mr
and Mrs Hank Holter were
vtsttlng Mr and Mrs Ted
Hayman and Mr and Mrs Don
Hayman who were campmg at
Great Bend, Oh10
Mr and Mrs Fred Larkms
were VlStlmg Mr and Mrs
Normar Weber, Tuppers
Platns
Mr and Mrs Lloyd McPeek,
Bellev11le, W Va , and Mr and
Mrs Joe B1ssell were v1sitmg
Leota Ferrell and Leona
Hen Isley
Mr and Mrs Bill Thurston,
Jr , Columbus , spent the
weekend woth Mr and Mrs Boll
Thurston, Sr
Mrs Donna Jean Bes t and
daughters, Fa1rflax, Va , were
VlSitmg Mr and Mrs Dav1d
Sm1th
V1s1ting Mr and Mrs Garth
Smtth were Frank Powell,
Cheston, W Va , V1rg1e Mora
and Olloe Youn g, Pomeroy ,
Claude Sm1th , Reedsville,
RIChard Smith, Akron, Ed
Sprague, Washmgton, Moke
Marlin, Chester, Lucolle
Atherton, Jame Brewer and
Pearl Powell
Mr and Mrs Garth Smtih
were vosoting Edith Osborn ,
Keno
- Violet Smilh

.

·

Highlights of the
llOth Annual

Meigs Co. Fair

.

7 P.M. MONDAY CABLE
I ••

CHANNEL 5
Spollsored by The Shoe Box,

:.

Elherfelds, in Pomeroy,

'

Mt !i

Long Bottom

Carpenter

Of

Mt ~m ll M1 £ lim l'udt~r.

QUALITY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Dale Wamer Insurance.

•

r•

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

CHEVROLET
SJIIS
' ' eal KIN GS WOOD WAGON 16 500 miles, by loc•l I

ownc-,. IIH:tor y l'rr l rnl ed glass 400 engine aulomllfh;:

power steerrng &amp; brakes. rad io luggag e
f't\C k gol d ll nls h wh1te wall ti n•$ Asharp clean car

m9S

Cvstom Coupe loca l I own er car li ke new whrfe wlllll
l rres l ttctory i\J r , R~ lomatl c t ransmi ssi on . po we r st cermg
&amp; brnkes Dar k g reen tlm sh wrth black vtny l rool spotless
rnlerror r(1d10

1911 FORO TORINOSOO

Sl09S

Coupe 1 owner car, less than 33 000 mrles br own fin ish
w1 th ma tchrng vinyl root and v inyl lntenor , 302 V 8
cngrne stand('lrd transmiss ion, power steer ing and
br akes ritdlo rea ll y sharp

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES 8 00 P. M
POMEROY, OHIO

Help Wanted

DayorPubllca!lon

l r~nsn)t SS. Io n ,

om CHEVROLET IMPALA

Employment Wanted

DEADLINES
5 P l\f1 Oav Ac&gt;for c Publlcarlon I E M All:: fQ work as recep
Mond.-ty Or.,dlln e 9 6 M
t lon•~t
clerk end ~·neral
Can c;elliUio" Correct ion s
dull•s of small bus l n&amp;ss
Will b e O(:C eplod until' am tor
Sorne typ ing Mus I hav e good

1911

REGULATIONS
Th e Pvbll sher reservrs the
rl9hf to edll or re ject anv ads
{'lee m~d
obl~tctronal
The
publ iSh er will not be r esponsible
tor rnor e than one Incorrect
Insert ron
RATES
For Wilnf Ad Senlct
s cent s per word one Insertion
Mrnunum ChllrliJe 75c
12 cent s per word three
con secutrv e Inser tions
IB ce nls per word si x con .
secutl ve Inser tions
25 Per Ce nt DrSCl Ount on paid
ads and ads p&amp; fd within 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl so tor 50 word minimum
Each additiOna l word 2c

porson .. lty .
EX&lt; elltnl
wQrklng co•'dhlons JS hours
per week
Send c omplll!te
resurne to Bo.c 729 A, c o The
Da l ly Ser'\l lnel , Pomerov .
Oh io
8 17 61C

------------Busmess Opportumties

U S POSTAGE STAMP S WE

~XPERISNCED palnlor

ForL~~roRs &amp;tt•m•.
John
c~enr v
Moun!l ln~er

In

801110

ter lor tnd exterior Call Oo n
va" Mtler . 9BS 39S1

tadv Phone 991 71 38

e '} JOip

-----------~-

-

------

6 16 6tt
""'t---

~9? 2d~

•
I

Phone

B1931P

PARKVIEW Kenn els PoOdles
1 tov male anQ 1 female
Ptlone 992 S•A3

-----------Auto Sales

1

Kingsbury News, Notes
Those attenctmg Semor Soble Mrs Roy Brlckles were Mr
Camp at Wollow Boble Camp, and Mrs Cecol Brockles of
Jackson, from Carleton Church Groveport
Mrs Neva Kong and Judy
were, Demse Hendrocks, Mary
and Gene Perkms, Rocharct Kmg spent a few days m
Saler, Tammy DeBord, Helen, Cmcm118tl Mrs Kmg viSited
Da\ld, Geneva and Mary Lou the Sandlans and Gerstners
Kmg Also Delores Kmg At· Judy v1s1ted Mr and Mrs
te ndmg Jr Camp were Lester Jerry Dockery
Mr and Mrs John Dean, Mr
Cote, Laurel Cole, Delores and
and
Mrs John Walter Dean
Geneva Kmg and Denose
Hendrocks Those from here and A-1st Class Richard Dean,
spendmg an aftern oon were K I Sawyer AFB, M&gt;chigan,
Neva and Judy King, Rev attended the weddmg or MISS
Joy ce Waggoner and J1m
W1lham Genhiemer
Mrs Faye Pratt, Bermce Haley at the Church of ChriSt,
Roffle and Scott Hamson Rutland, Sunday afternoon
v1stled recently w1th Mrs
Lowse Hamson
Mr and Mrs Steve Smith,

Langsville

Canuate, Oh1o, are announcmg
the arrival of a daughter
Granqparents are Mr and
Mrs Elmo Smoth
Recent VISitors of Mr and
Mrs John Dean and Mr and
Mrs John Walter Dean were
Mrs Walter Terre ll, Mrs
Eddte Weekly and daughter,
M1ssy of Pataskala, Mr and
Mrs Kenneth Markms of
Rae me, Mr and Mrs Garold
Golkey, Tammy, Cmdy and
Rock of Athens, Mr and Mrs
Boll Spaun of Pomeroy, AMN
1st Class R1chard Dean, K I
Sawyer AFB, M1ch1gan ,
Yvonne and Debb1e Herl18das
and Condy Romerus of San
Antomo, Texas, Mr a•d Mrs
Hobart Smalley of Chester
The Carleton Sunday School
had an attendance of 70, of.
fermg $158 Followmg Sunday
School the supermtendent,
Ralph Carl, presented pms for
perfect attendance to Floyd
Ross, Ed1th Ross, Juntor Ross
and Brenda for 10 years perfect
attendance
Weekend guest of Judy Kmg
were Gloroa Flack, Kankakee,
Ill , Loro Boyer, ReddiCk, Ill ,
and Barb Johnson of Colum·
bus
Mrs Lou1se Hamson and
Mrs Elizabeth Murray spent
several days w1th Mr and Mrs
Ph1lhp Hamson and Rodney m
Columbus
Recent v1sotors of Mr and

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

t5 tf c

M ALE-;.-;;~;-;u-;--;--;;n,hl

8 16 6fP

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

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

so

For sale

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath &amp;hool attendance
August 12 at the Free
MethodiSt Ch urch was 94
Offerong for mornmg serv~ces
was $77 87 iiO persons were
present for the worship ser·

.a

r

VlCC

Rev Robert Buckley was
called lo Akron by the death of
his great aunt, Mrs Bertha
Moorhead Rev Buckley of·
f1c1ated at the funeral wh1ch
was held Monday morning
Olin Rife of Columbus v1s1ted
w1th hos mother, Mrs Cora
Renshaw recently
Mr and Mrs Jack Stanley
have purchased the Lawrence
Ebhn property and have occupied same
Mr Lawrence A. Smith
remains Ill at h1s home here
Mrs Alma SchaeferGordon,
Delaware ts a pat1ent m a
hospotal there
Mrs Es\a W1se or near
Steubenville has been reported
11\ Mrs W1se os a former local
reSident
VIS IT COLUMBUS
Mr and Mrs Delmar
Canaday returned home
Saturday after spendmg a
week vosttong Mrs Moldred
Gamblin and .Mrs Edtth
Stewart m Columbus The four
visited Kmgwood Center at
Mansfteld, the Space Center at
Wapakoneta, and the Warren
G Harding home at Manon
On Saturday they attended the
Joe Ferguson p1cmc held at a
park In Columbus

MILBtRRY AVE.
AND VICINITY
APPLY AT
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Pomeroy
PHONE 992·2156
RESPONSIBLE woman to
babvslt In Rutland from 11 30
un til 4 30 four dayS a week , 1
child m kindergarten &amp;nd 1 In
school Call 742 4426 after 6

pm

RETl:RN HOME
Mr and Mrs John Weeks
and children, Tom and Mary
Beth, Gallipolis, ·and Mr. and
Mrs Eldon Weeks have
returned from a two week
vacallon at Wrighl.&lt;lvllle, N C

B19 61p

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

Be Righi

1

Washrngton St , Athens, Ohro
or by pt'lonlng 1 614 591 6606
Appl1 catrons or resumes must
be recerved no later than
August 24, 1973 Mad to
Southeast Ohro Emergency
Med 1cal Ser vice , In c 25 w
Wash lngton St
Box 917.
Athens Oh ro 45 701 Attn, Roy
E Rankrns

e 17 31c

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

Carriers Wanted

dillon S2 ooo Call 992 7407

AM FM stereo rad ro - 8 track
8 17 31p
tape com bination, 4 speaker
.....
sound
system
Balance COMPLETE set of Rogers
5103 79 or use our budget
Drums and Cymbals Like
terms Call 992 3965
new Phone 992 3132

- ---

8 IS 61c

----------

8 IS 61p

--------------erg Capac.,
Mavtag
AutomatiCS
2 spee rj operatJon
Qrotce of wa ter
t'emps
Auto
water
leve
control
LIn
Fi lter or Powe
Fin Agitator
Per\'na-Preu

MATERIALS CO
77l-SSS4
Muon, W V•

Dryers

Dally Sentinel
In

POMEROY
MU LBERR Y AV E

992 2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

No ruinous lyes or caustics

used

and

Pock-Up Service
Avatt1ble
We Buy &amp; Sell Antiques
Dick Seyler Owner
Kerr 51
Pomeroy, 0
Phone 992 2798
EXCAVATING Dozers large
and small
Backhoes and
loaders on track and tires
Dump truck - LQ boy ser
vrce Septic tanks Installed
George ( Bill ) Pullins, phone
992 2478 or 992 7402

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display .
O'DELL WHEEl Allgnmenl
located at Crossroads Rt 124
now back to work Complete
front end service t une up and
brake
service
Wheels
balanced electron ically Al l
work guaranteed Reasonable
rates Phone 742 3232
2 18 tic:

2 9 lfc
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS RON SHEPARD , Floor, Woll
CLEANED, REPAIRED
Remodeling, Ceram ic tlte
MILLER SANITA TION , baths
Box 2BD, Rutland 742
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3661
3035
6 26 lie
10 4 tfc
SEWING MACHINES R,palr

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

service, all makes 992 228,.
The Fabric Shop , Pomvroy
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service We Sharpen Sclnon

RACINE RURAl
35 woodefi clcres trontagc on

bo dr oo m s ba t h , n ew gas
tu r M ce basem ent a nd h~ck

3 bedroom s

bath
util ity
larg e r ec r ea tion
room for ced tu r furmu:;e
porches cellar wrth stor age

roo m

33
North 1. bedroom hom e new
bath fr ont c1nd bri ck porch es
Henhou se corn crrb barn an d
all mrnera ls Want \1 5 000 00

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open 8 To I 5

NEW HOM E
IN THE COU NTR ~

Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam , Pom eroy , 0

10 l o r cu lt!v a lt o n , th e
balc1nce as pa stu r e Home
ha d 3 bedroom5 T V roo m
n1ce k rtchen forced air he at
bat h
cell ar
porch es

3

GO ING AT JU ST 115 00000
WE HAV E BUY ERS FO R
ALL TYPE S PR OPERTY
LIST TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND
BROKER

Rad1a1or Spec1ahst

Ph ·m 2174

DOZER: and ba ck hoe work
ponds and sep,tlc tanks dlt
chrng serv1ce top soil !Ill
dirt
lrmestone
B&amp;K
Escavatrng Phone 992 5367 or

992 3861

9 1 tt c

HOME reparr or remodeling
Reasonable rates ls t c:tass
work Call Bob or Bitt , 992

S968

E X CEL SI OR Salt Works E
Marn 51 Pomeroy All krnd s
ot sail water pellets water
83 A CRE FARM ga s, water 6
nugg et s, block salt and own
room house In Lang sville
Oh lo River Sail Phone 992
ar ea Phone 992 J&gt;JO or 742
389 1
6675
6 5 tf c
8 19 lOOp

NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedroom

Pomeroy

onl y $17 500 00

Unsc ramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to

DO N T WASTE YOUR TIME
AND MONEY LOOK ING OR
TRYING TO SELL OR TO
BUY SEE US WE WILl DO
THE JOB PROFESSIONALLY
AND SAVE YOU AL L THE
TROUBLE

fo rm four ordmary words .

I

8 10 lOi c

AlliN(;

r

... . . .. . .

' ~".~.:::.\:::&gt;::· · ··

j(JNEY

D IIII

foot thts season w1th a pa ir of
Knepp aero tread cushioned
msole, champ1onshrp gr'ade
bowlrng shoes Bob Hy sell

1/J/NIJ\

8 lot 6tc

3 BEDROOM house on Lincoln
Hill, lrvrng room
krlchen
bath and utrlrly room. e)(fra
l arge lot ov er 1 ac r e Has
7428
dr 1vew ay
$13 000
Ca ll
6 15 tf c
Sunday after 12 noon
on
weekdays after 5 p m
992
Wll.L lRIM or c ut trees
3247
shrubbery Al so pa int roofs
a 5 tf c
Phone 949 3221 or 742 A441
1 18 30tc
LARGE convenrent bui ld ing
lots at Rock Sp r in gs Area
ELNA and White Se wing
restrrc ted for houses on l y
Machrnes
Service on all
Tupper s Plar ns &amp; Cheste r
makes Reasonable rat ~s
Water avarlable Call or see
The Sewing Center Mrd
Brll Wrlf e 992 27 89
dleport Ohio
7 24 tt c
11 \6 lfc

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
c ancelled?
Lost
your
operators l rcense Call 992

[]

UM'/'Il'AL

II

I I r]

Now arrange the ctrcled letters
to form the aurprtae anawer, aa

I I
;::=======~~:'._, sunested by the above cartoon.
"t I XI I I

r

(An•wen tomorrow)
Jun1hlt:e SLANT

AWARD

GRAVEN

PLOWED

Sa lurday 1
An~w~rr

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIE

abl e
moment

( 2 wds)
f) Ghst ened

1 Egy pt,.n

Chn stw.n

Yesterday'li Answer

K s nake
9 Ac tor Van

Cicci
10 Aver age

15 fltghcst

14 Rc

note

16 Bovouac

gressu) n

11 Keye 18 Frtctwn

n eed

11 Subsist
lR -

3. Avatar vf
V1 sh n u
4 Poe m
5 Unsu1t

Juana

21 Take for

!rom

burden
30 Trade
name
31. Equal
32 Howdy,

or
magnetic

granted

24 Alleviate
25 Bracer,
sttmulant

(sl )
(com
pound
wd)
21 Medoemal
planl
28 Glvcn to
scoffi ng
29 Quarrel
30, Jll humor
31. Soulh
Seas
canoe
32. My (fr )
35 ' The of the
Thlfd

34 Sun
Valley
sports
Item
35 Hebrew
teaching
master
36. Jsland
(Fr)
37. New
Mextcan
Indtan
31. Monk's
to tie

23. Freight
boat
2~. Fcncong
fotl
26. Free

19 czech
rlver
20 Ethereal
21. Armadotto
22 Farm
strqcturc

33. Other·
WlSe

1-,..-1-- +-+-+--

Re1ch"

(3 wds)
39 For·
clgner
40. Blot out
41. Mutton
chops
42 Appomted
DOW N
~~-4--~~1 Sugar
source
2. USSR
lake
DA fLY CRYPTO(IUOTE- Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter somply stands for another ln thos sample A IS
used for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formahon of the words are all
lunts Each dav the code letters are dtfferent
CRYPTOQUOTES

home large bath ntce kitchen,
plu s a one bedroom apartm ent
rent ed and larg e lot Want

BOWLERS gel ofl on !he right

992 5324

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

992 2259
If no answer 991 2568

venlur'e tor 1 good rndustnous
per son who Is wrllmg to p ut rn
long hou r s

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

-

11/' baths nrce k!t chen W! t h
S S c ook and bake untl s
Carpeted Full ba sement w rth

garage Askmg $19 500 00
NEW LISTING
POMEROY
Bu so oess

Nathan Boggs

WEL L PLA NN E D 3 bedroom '2
b ath
no me
w it h
fui J
base m ent 2 car garage an d
tam l ly r oom Pr lt ed m mrd
20 s plus lot LD c ated on larg e
country lot off Rt 7 20
m lnu l eS I rom Parkersburg
and
15
m rnut es
fr o m
Pom eroy Flnanc rng al ready
arranged wrth l ow down
pay me nt Cont act Paul ine E
Cunn ingham Rea lty Phon e
{ 614 ) 423 8690 Coll ec t
7 19 lfc

3 mll es ou t ot Rutl a nd Aboul

with garage Askong 120 000 00
NEW HOME
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms
From the laraest Tru ck or
Bulldoz.er Rad•ator to the
!)rna 1tes t Heat er Lore

-------------For Sale

over la rge lol \8 500 00
33 ACRES

bedr oom s, ni ce ba th and k. !t
chen w!th elecln c rang e On
Oh •o Power' Full ba se m ent

~

PAGEV I L L E Oh ro In clud es
house 4 roo m s down 1 t.~p ,
ga r age work sho p an d ap
prox lr'n ate ly 1117 ~c re s wrth
young or chard 1 bloc k ea st of
Rl 691 510 500 lnlor m&amp;tr on
at house
8 12 tf c

GE NUIN E SACR IFICE

porch 110 500 00
SMAll FARM
30 AC RES - On Roule

On Most American Cttrs

_... -------- ----

bo th srdeh ol the r oad pond
.1 boul 5 acres level ~"" e~~:
cell enl buy \5 500 00

4

ACROSS
I St John's
bread
6 Old West
war
trophy
1J Plowed
field
12 01'

The Ensluh anMncrtJI got
"drunk"-"AS A LORD'

A C HHGfS

TFKWBWNW

BK

JHBKV

RKENMBKV

NMRN

RJXH

NF

Gr'

GFHW

KFN

MDCN

'~NNMBRW

RKEFKH

HXWH -

TXRDGBDW

Yeoterday'o Cryptoquote: A PARENT MUST RESPECT THE
SPIRITUAL PERSON OF HIS CHILD, AND APPROACH IT
WITH REVERENCE -GEORGE MACDONALD
&lt;C 1171 Kine Jootuno Srndleaw, loe.)

DICK TRACY
POOII KID COUI.OIIT
llELP TI-IAT.

3 29 tfc

NAME WOP!,
LAST NAME

FOR FREE esll{nllfe5 on
aluminum Siding
Storm
Doors and Windows, Car
ports Mar quees and Rlllllng,
Phone
Charles
Llslt,
Syracuse, Oh io Carl Jacob
Seles Representative V V
Johnson and Son Inc

LE'Zl!

CAPTAIN EASY
IM AFRA fD

1 15 tfc

'r'OULI.. 5CJFF

IF I

MENT/0~

G.!!!2fl2,

Sit&lt;'

2 9 tft

READY MIX

CONCRETE

d eli vered right to your
project Fast and easy Free

esllmales Phone 992 328•

Goegleln Ready Mix Co,
Middleport. Ohio
6 30 tfc

--------------SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

REASONABLE rBIO$ Ph U6
4762 r Gallipolis, John Ru,.ell,

JAN I, 1913

~N OIN G

5 11 lfc

BUGS BUNNY

C BRADFORD Auclloneer

JUNE 30, 1973

Complete Service

PhOne 9•9 382 1

SO.VI IF 'II!It THAT
!lllOk!, HOW ARE 'lA
&lt;00~ MY FOR THIS

Racine Ohio
Crltt Bradford

$2,320

s 1 lfc
EXCAVATING dozer, loader

.l CCOlJNT NO

36 3 053

f""'~""'"-,

Owner and Operator

MAS US£0 TS A!II EI\IUE 5HAR NG r M MlN I
F" ATII E PER 0 0 BEGINN NCl

TOT .- L PA~M[N f 0f

009

RS'AC'IN'"

and backhoe work , septic
tank s Installed, dump trucks
and to boy !l for hire will tteul
fill dirt top soil limestone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089,

PHONE 992-7368
SALEM TOWNSHIP
TOWNSHIP CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
LANGSVILLE, OHIO 45741

RIVERSIDE APARTMENTS

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

"STRIPPERS"
We Strip Paint, Varnishes,
Etc from Furniture
Antiques-Modern Metal$

IN I ll( I Ol LOWINC MANNf'H BASEOlJPO N A

Middleport

hom e all on one floor Ga r age
M d largQ lot for m obile home
or new house
T P water
i'lv atl l'lb l ~ soon Just 115 000 00

S TV service and
service calls Phone 992 2522

SALEM TOWNSHIP
OfF ICE OJ HEVENUt SHARIN G ,
1900 PENNSYlVA NIA o\IJ f N W
WA SHINGTON 0 C 20226

Dick's
Hoard House

As k1 ng

by THOMAS JOSEPH

bo th
home
w it h
f ull
bnseme nl 2 c:a r gara ge an d
la mrl y r oom Pr iced Jn rnJ (l
20s _p l us lol Lo cat ed on l arge
co vn try lot off R 1 1
20
mlnu l es jro m Park er sbur g
and
15
m l n utes
fr om
Pomeroy Fi nan cing alrea dy
Brraog ed w it h l ow do wn
prophet
pa ym ent Contac t Pavll ne e
Cunn lnQh"m R ealtv ohon e 13 T erm f rJr
6 14 42-:J 8690
a SOQb
1 24 tf c
(2 wds)

HARRI~ON

THI OOVIRNMINT Or
DEPfliHMEN I OF l H[ TREASU RY

Ph. 742·6271

Phone 992 5858

,•

For The

215 N. Second
Phone 992-3509
24 Hour Servoce
All work guaranteed

Darwi n

trlcal plumbing and heating

Rutland

Arnold Grate.

Heat1ng
A1r Cond
q .., fnq erilhOn
PlumbtrJg
E.•ectrrcdl AtJPUdlll..t:::. Auto
Atr Cond
Res1dent1al or
Commercral

ga:; torced m r

1 car garRge on large

MOBILE homo repolr , Elec GASOLINE ALLEY

RUTLAND FURN ITUREIR~~~~~=e•
741 -4211

Modd leport, 0

at

6 bt-c:lrooms
wrth lll rtJC du:.cfl, 41 , hitths
Uvlng r'OOm l ~:r.31 wllh
!!replace Large T V room
Utility room Full ba5ement
Hot water hea l Large ? car
CJM39 wtlh workshop and
roo m ove r Large lot wrth
lots of sh r\J bS C l o~e to
Shopp1 ng

$16000 00
NEW LISTI NG
3 bedroom
AURLIN CHAM

P AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

For Free Estimate

1

Dini ng room
t v r nau~

Wf!L..L Pl.A NN E D 3 b;;~;;, 2

'J ~ l ory l r;:r m •

~

8 u 61p

c lothes
wrth gentle, even
heal No hot spots
no
overdrvl ng
Frne Mesh Unt
FIller
We Speclal11e In
MAYTAG
~urround

1220 Washmglon Blvd
423 7521
BELPRE, 0

992 2101

FAMILY HOME

A r~ lc.c 'I bedroom frame

R EDUCE exc:eu flui d s wll h G RO CE RY buli lness lor Ult
f-l ulde:c
Lo~e weigh t w llh
Bu il ding for Silt or I t t "
D ex A D iet
c:a psules
at
Phont 713 5618 from I 30 p m
10 lO p m tor eppo lntment
Nelson Oruus.
3 ,0 fie:
$ 10 31p

structural repair Roush and
finish
carpetry
antique
repplr
Reasonable prices
Private carpenter Call Scott
Mason 9927300

Moytag

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

Bu1ldrng

Roofing,
Spouting,
Porch Repair, Com
plete
Home
Remodeling

1

30 Dally, 8-IHal

home 4 t)e dr oDms
oaths ba se ment. f rr eplace
Lo w thirti es Pom er oy Wr iJe
j E Bs yll ss 310 W High St
Crldt~rsvl ll e Phlp 4!;806
8 17 61 f;l

For Sale

6 22 lfc
SMALL oddlllons, remodollng,

Halo of Heat

se rvrce plus g igantiC
d! splay of mob1le homes
always available at

84

IH~ I C K

hom e b ath con venien t ~l t ch"n
wll h coo k and ba k e.~ un i ts

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

In lhe A H Rawllnos Sons

CONSTRUCTION

1

old

- GUARANTEED-Phone 992 2094

PRICE

50% OFF SALE

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

Roghl

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

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

______

w11t

Buill to Your '$pocs
Dollvortd lo Job Site

BIG YANK
SlACKS

________

II Musl

or

n

-+-

Alignment

WOOD TRUSSES

Notice

ELEcTROLUX-s;;~;ers

Wheel

•

NEW LISTI NG
Nr All Y Nf W J"' l 3 yCM'

lo t

Specialist

was her dou bl e oven ran ge
dou bl e 9"rag e lo r QIJ ca rpor t
4 ac r e~ clea r ed i!lnd t ence d
-.m.,IJ
ba rn
a nd
ot h er
buildings Phon e 6 1.4 74 '1 683.4
5 JO lf c

Pomeroy, Ohio 457 69

Middleport, 0.

992-2550

ASK US ABOUT
PRE-FABRICATED

Wanted To Buy

Mr and Mrs Joe Phillips
and children of Owensborough,
Ky , called on Mr and Mrs
Larry Barr recently
Mrs Howard Thoma and
Mrs Elv1ra Barr were donner
guests at a cookout at the home
of their children, Mr and Mrs
For Rent
Larry Barr
Mrs Emma l.edlie went to
Poml Pleasant, W Va Sunday
to a f8II1lly reuruon and spent a
few days w1th her Sister and
husband, Mr and Mrs Howard
Brown
Mr and Mrs Larry Barr and
family and Mrs Alpha Barr
made a busmess tnp to
Gallipolis Wednesday
Mrs Melva Eblm and
children, Bolly and Kay, called
on Mrs Elvira Barr Saturday
evemng
Mrs John Lloyd and boys,
Tampa , Fla , and Mrs Ron
Wnght and children of Dublm,
Va , are VISiting their parents,
992 5858
Mr and Mrs Bruce Moms
8 16 tic
Help
Wanted
Mrs Ro511 Barnes, a former WORLD FAMOUS BARDAHL MOBILE home space In
resident of Langsville, age 99
DISTRIBUTORSHIP Now
Syracuse Phone 992 5858
available
on
local
level
ser
6 21 lfc
years, d1ed at her home m vrclng Bardahl dealers Thrs
Akron Her funeral was at the
servrce type business can be
operated
full or pari trme with Mobile Homes For Sale
Marton Funeral Home
no
sell rng
exper ren ce
M1chael Barr of GlenVIlle, W
necessary Prof1t potential Is CASH pa id for all makes anc
models of mobile homes
unlrm rted
Conservative
Va ,spent the weekend with hiS
Phone area code 6U 423 9531
est1mate of $95 for eac h dav
4 13 tfl
mother, Mrs Alpha Barr
worked A $3 495 rnvestment
puts
you
rn
business
WR
1TE
Sunday dmner guest was M1ss. TODAY 1Inc lud e phone 12x60 MOBILE Home se
Helen Baer Syracuse
Marge Riggs of Pomeroy
number)
BARD HAL INC
Medra
Penna
19063
Mrs Roy Sigman has
8 I9 3tp
returned home after spendmg
•
several weeks viSiting In APPLICATION S are now berng
r Cond1honers
acc:epted for the posrtlon of
Alabama and Toledo, Ohio
wmngs
Drspatcher
for Southeast
Mrs Erruna Ledhe and Mrs
Ohro Emergency Medical
derponmng
Service. In c Appl rc atrons
Roy S1gman called on Mrs
may be acquired at Central
Comp l ete mobile home
Alpha Barr Tuesday evenmg
Headquar te rs
25
W

CARRIER
WANTED

Rt 4, Pom1rov. o
f9H914

1 ROO M t'lout.e Wll h balh In
R u It and
a rr co nd ltl one d
u r o ro teci gas turn ace IJrsh

I 10 NlttMiliC: Str..t

ALL WEATHER

lOHN' TUCKER

old SIS Call 992 7614 1 19 , 6tc

St."

lrotwr

Sidmg · Spouting
Rem ode ling
Pl~mbing · Heatmg . Complete
Building. Vmyl &amp; Aluminum Siding .

MODERN
SANITATION

1

l(lrt~ll-a:Tt~ford.

For Sale •

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

TEAFORD

ROOFING

14 HOiiif SERVICE

1 Secure locations. 1 Piece
Machines on Location , J 1957 FORO truck, uood con
Fu rn ish Supptlel
YOU .l 1
dillon Looks good and run s i97J.:iiQZaO;ew;g-;~hlnt
This ma chine dllrns , em
Put In Stamp s, 1 Takllt vut
good S300 Phone 992 3359
br'Oiders, overcuts
button
the Monev 3 Keeo 20 oct 4
8 iS 61c
holes
All wlthovt at
$1795 s10 oooworklng capital
t"'chments Pav balance ol
Req u ired - 100 Pet Refund
SJB
or p~v ss per month
able Send name Addre~s
Phone Number References to
Call 992 !33 I
6 10 He
Postage Stamps, Inc
JOO
&amp;LIND ADS
AUCTION
Interstate
North
N
w
Suite
Add 1t lonal H e Cha r ge per
TURDAY August 2S 1913,
328 Atli!mta , Ga 30339 (404 ) SA12
Adverl1sement
30 p M The follo wing
432 4439
mach In~" For sewi ng stretch
OFFICE HOURS
personal propertv w i ll be sold
8
19
31p
fflbrlcs buttonholes, tancv
8 30 a m to 5 oo p m Darty.
at mv res iden ce located on
designs
e l c Pi!l lnt slightly
8 JD a
m
to 11 00 Noon
Lim berger R ldge Road East
blemished Choi ce of carrvl no
Saturday
of Tuppers Pl ains leave
case or sewi ng stand 549 80
Route 7 East on 681 at the
c
ash or terms available Phone
ca ut ion \lgnt to the F ire
BEEFhides,dt~yold paving$7
Tower
lust
ofl
route
681
992
298.
8 20 61C
Phone 77J 5600 Grove r C
(F ollow Sa le arrows 1 Mite l
UP HO,.l.STER vour own fur
Roush , Pom erov Stree t
Ahtique Case Tractor Old
nlture We have all the sup
Mason , W Va
bottles and Slone Jars 7 pc
plies you will need fabrics ,
8 15 9tp
delu,;e model comc lete with
pink Berr y Set Iron Skil l ets 2
loam for cuShiOn s and pad - - - - - - - - - - - - - - all cleaning attachments end
Round Oak Tables, Admiral
ding Wecvtfollmtoanysize CO RNER cupboards , wall
uses paper bags Slightly osed
Gas
Range
,
M
ilk
Cans
or sh:ape Sw ivel bases cotton
cupboards 1 chests , Old guns ,
but cleans and looKs n~e;e new
H!ckorv
Bottom
Rocker
II
011
burlap legs zipper welt cord,
anv condition Also blue
w1 setl for S37 25 each, or
Lamps
Electric
Guitar
and
web brng dacron , ch ip board
dec orated stoneware Write
terms available PhOM 992
Ampllfr
er
3
Guns
(lvor
plus many other Item s and
P 0 Bo x 44 Martinsburg
Johnson)
Insulators
53
1984
living room suites afo low low
Ohio , -43935 or Cj,ll I 484 4440
8 20 6f t
Chevy (Disassembled ), 2 pc
prices Pomeroy Recovery r
Ofl~
p JT1
1()f
L rvlng Room Sul te , Old Ice
622 E Main Phone 992 75,5.1 ~'\ I
I
.,
8 8 90tc
POP cooler Coal Buckets 4
1 19 30tc
~11...----wagon
Wheel!! split Basket
Back lo School Sale I
----------~---NO l Copper 60c Radiators
c B Lafayette Rad io , Pink
KOSCOT KOSMETICS 8. WIG S
30c brass, 20c batteries 90C
Depression Glass
Brown
Spec 1a ls dur ing August are
each c lean drv Ginseng
Dishes Crocks, Old Cedar
Koncentree, Mo ist Kote ,
roots $60a lb Yellow roDt 54
Chest Tov Electric Train
Kleansrng Kream One Day
May app le, SOc per lb M A
with Track, cane Bottom
Sachet &amp; others Phone He len
Hall
Reedsville Call 378
Chairs
Avon cars and Bot
Jane Brown 992 511 3
6149
ties
J
Rallroed La nt erns
7
31
tfc
8 2 tfc
Steel
Guitar
She ll
Reloader
fo
r
12
and
WANTED
fQ
I
~
~c
llon
,
WILL g1ve awav for good home
1
16
Ga
,
Dated
Jars
householcl"aoods~iools, moso
rn the country full blooded
Men's, women's, girls' &amp;
(Quarts and Pints ), Maple
anythmg ol value Will buy or
German Poli ce Dog J years
Hutch
and
3
Maple
Cha
rrs
boys'
regular teans &amp; casual
sell
on
commission
Will
haul
old
gentle with chr ldr en
Bar Bells ~ Porch Swing 2
Call 992 3354 Hayman's
Reason for giving away - dog
1eans Good colors All sites.
Grind Stones, Antrque B~bV
7 2S tfc
has to be fred and would l1ke
Bed Metal) Miscellaneous
to run loose Phone 992 3359
Items not listed
Winnie ' ·
POMEROY
8 11 61C OLD furniture , oak tables
Holsinger
Owner
Terms
clocks lee boxes , brass beds
~ Jack W Carsey, Mgr.
Cash Not Responsibl e tor
d is hes
or
complete
MEIGS SENIORS Make your
Phone 992 2181
Accrdents Bradford Auction
households Write M
D
apporntment now to have your
company
Au
ctioneer
C
C
Miller, Rt 4, Pomeroy Ohio
SENIOR PORTRAIT taken
BradfDrd Sale Manager A NEW 2 piece Earlv Amerlclln
call 992 6271
Dates tor takmg MEIGS
l iving room sutte In 100 pet
C Bradford
5 13 tic
_..
SENIORS are Aug 22 23, 24
819 232tc
nylon print material with
and 25 and Sept 1 Take
wood tr im FQam reversible
advantage of Special Sen ror
Investment Property for sale
c uslllons Th i S week onlv
Pr ices for these days only
LARGE bnck burldt('lg on Marn
$189 95 c ash and carry
Call GROVER'S STUDIO ,
Street
Pomeroy
Cont
ams
4
Pomeroy Recovery , 622 E
TWO
trarler
lots
In
Mtddleport
Mrddl eport Ohto Phone 992
rental s offers Bpprox lma tel v
1h duplex In Bradbuy
Main Street , Pomeroy Phone
phone
WS
10 to 12 pet return on rn
992 7SS4
before 6 p m 992 5693
8 1 22tc
e 16 61c
vestme nt Call 992 2789
8
20
Sip
------~-------~
s 19 6lc
YARD Salt! Thursday, Friday
and Saturday, 10 am till ROOMS by the week, S18 up KNAPP - shoe;-;,;w- f;ii _._ and B~~s5~58HOGS otx5 ft' phone
dark
Reef res idence
Jrd
Mergs Inn. Pomeroy
wmter styles now out Call
7 !l ,.,
Street,
Racine
A(1tl qu e
7 12 ttc
992 5324
dr sh es brng and grondahl
a 14 lfc 1973 Hx70 MOBILE ho me,
Royal c open hagen co ll ec tor s PRIVATE meeting room for
--~-------"----washer and dryer, dish
p la te s
&lt;:ambridge
any organ rzatlon , phone 992 APACHE Eagle Tent Camper
washer , stainless steel sink ,
depress ron and R F Prussia,
397S
sleeps 4, also cuslom hitch for
garbage disposal eye leve l
Brrcabrac etc Old books
3 11 tt c
67 Chevrolet Phone 992 7157
oven range dacron polyester
bottles
lanterns, &amp;ndlrons,
8 14 6tC
carpet large lot Phone 7.42
new school cl othes manv 4 ROOMS furniShed opt Righi
]08]
oth er rtems tor everyone at
rn town Ca ll 992 3658
WHITE and yellow sweet corn
1 18 tf
yard sale prrces
8 16 6tc
cantalopes and watermelons,
8 19 6tc
Dave Yost Great Bend 843 BROWNING pollee scanner
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
2242
model XM 888 Phone 667
GA RAGE Sal Mt Olive Rrdge
unfurnished
r~partments
8 14 61p 3652
rn Long Bollom Mondav and
Phone 992 5434
8 17 lie
Tuesday 9 till 4 at the
-----------~~~fc
NICE srx room house for sale In
Casey German residen c e
Pomerov Catl992 3975 or 992 1972 TAG A LONG
Travel
Few old drshes, furn rtu re, gas TWO BEDROOM moblte home
2571
Trailer 22 ff sleeps 4 sell
heaters and mrsc rtem s
for rent rn the Racine area
S IS 61c co nta med E~~: ce ll ent con
8 19 31p
rnc:tudes air conditioning Call

Help Wanted

SEPTIC TANKS
· CLEANED
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

1969 CHEVROLEl tru ck , l 3 h
tt dump body , chellter u:le
S450o oo Phone 992 59S1

•

1

1971 YAMAHA 250 M'1.

l'etsfor Sal8

Real Estate For Sale

Business Services

•

~ 0;; 0~;-;;-;;~--;i;-;;Q

olghl phone 992 352! or 992 r
52)2

1 11 tfc

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.-c ttJ .t. L

E( ~E !'t 011 1JJU3

"'

RENTAL SURVEY

AllEY ODP
%

( F!lhng out and returnmg the below survey
DOES NOT OBLIGATE YOU, but only ex·
presses your mterest tn possibly rentmg an
apartment . Reduced renls are ava1lable if you
qua Illy on I he bas1s of mcome l

I~-----------------------,

I NAME _ _ _ _
I
I1 PRESENT AD~RESS-----I SINGLE- -,-:-__MARRIED - - 1
I

Crow's Steak House and

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results! :

5 'l'hc LJaUy &amp;&gt;nthoel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Au~ 20, una

1

NO. OF CHIWREN- --

-

%
%
%

%
%
%
%
%

-------------------------·
-..

-\

M'f)
11"/11-JG DAY T! II S 10

...__

WHIC H COULD BE
~ DA'/

COULD'I 1 ITCORN &amp;1DiiRI'I
Toi T~PE: 0 AC1

For Sale

'10 DO-

9 ACRES ground with 2 wtlll

Phone 992 7191

8

16 6tp

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

CA NNING
Tomalotl,
cucumbers manoou and
c tntllopes
Geraldlnt
Cleland Ra ci ne

7 31 lfc !i&gt;l:..,r-1

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

like a person

c

Mall to Barr· Ctrcle Development, Inc .
750 F1rst Avenue
Gallipolis, Oh1o 45631
Or for more mformat1on call collect 446-3746

_____________7 25 3DIC

We.talk to you

---

I LL REM EMBoR

WMP0/1390
DN YOUR DIAL

DOC PRITCHART!J

LOWEEZ.Y CAN
I BORRVYORE
U~BRELLER?

WHAT AREYE 0011\1'
WAt.KtN' AROUND
11\J TH'RA\Ni'

~AUGHHJ

'/
I

/

/I

'

(&amp;'

�I - Tilt Daily Senti nel. Mlddleport·Pomeroy, u.. Au~ 'lO. 1973

Offensive begins
PHNOM PENH iUPf l Large insurgent forces began
moving today toward two
provincial capttals a nd
terrorist bombings 111slde
Phnom Penh coupled with new
fighting outside the ci ty
.,gnaled the apparent start of
the long.feared rebel offenstve
in the C&lt;IUIItry.
MiU!ary sources satd three
rebel regtments to taling
roughly 4,:;oo men .have approached to wtthm six nules o!
Kompong Cham on the Mekong
River 50 mtles northeast o!
Phnom l'enh
Kompong Cham ts Cam·
bodla's lhtrd maJor ctly alter
Phnom Penh and Battambang
Its prewar poputatton o! 30,000
has swelled to double or trtple
lltat number wtth the mflux of
refugees
Near Komp ong Speu, 30
nules southwest of the capt tal,
a company o! about 100
government troops three mtles
north of town was reported
under attack by about 300
rebels led by a Hanm-tramed
Cambodian rebel named Chau
Sary, mthlary sources satd
Government armored
vehicles were en route !rom
Phnom Penh to the battle stte
near Kompong Speu , the
sources satd
Three terronst bombtngs
Sunday hit crowded downtown
Phnom Penh, qutet smce last
week's US. bomb halt, and
field reports said fresh fighting
broke out when a battalion of
guerrilla troops advanced to
withlit five miles of the capital.
The situation raised fears tl)e

•
•

MEIGS THEATRE
Thealre Closed
August 121hru August 23

AUGUST241hru26
HEARTBREAK KID

Plus

THE MAN

August 31 thru Sepl. 4
BATTLE FOR THE
PLANET OF THE
APES
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M

MASON DRIVE-IN
r

,

,

r'

Ton&gt;ghl&amp; Tuesday

Aug 20 21

Double Feature Program
THE DARING
DOBER MANS

T1m Cons1dlne

Joan Coull&lt;eld
Plus
TWiLIGHT PEOPLE

John Ashley
Pal Woodell
( Melrocolor 1

(PGJ

rebel dme to take the c1ty
appeared under way.
The bomb blas ts, which
ktlted four pers ons and
wounded IH others, were the
ftrst Insurgent ratds wttlun the
Cambodtan capital smce the
United States ended its 4;,-

year tur war over the country
Wednesday .
Ha ~h t.:Omrnand sources suad

neither Knmpong Cham nor

Kompung Speu appeared m
lmmed1ato da nger of capture
desp1 te U~e Iorge msurgenl
!orces
threatemng
the
prov mcial capilats.

VIENTIANE (UP! ) - The
former ('ommander of the
Laollan atr for ce was killed
loday leading an abortive plot
against the 13-year-old govern·
me nt of Pr mce Souvanna
!'houma, who sa1d his forces
smashed the coup seven hours
after tt started
'The dead leader o! the futile
rebellion. tden1tf1ed by the U S
Embassy as Bng Gen Thao
Ma, was satd to oppose concessions the Souvanna regime
has offered the proCommuntSt
Pathet Lao tn estabhshing a
coalition government m Laos
Peace talks between the two
sides have been m progress

•

•

P'l' l'LEASAN'f - Mason a.m on opening day at Point
County's school term begms Pleasant Junior High In the
Aug 28 when teachers report general meeting, with an "In·
Cor a gencflj l t.achers' meelng Serv k'&lt; Day" on Wednesday
The next three days have been The next two days, Aug. 30,
set nside Cor t.achers affatrs 31, previously set aside as In·
w1th U1e students not reporting Serv1ce days, have been
until Tuesday, Sept. 4, accord· rescheduled as "WVEA Days,"
tng to Supt Charles Wtthers. subjec t to bOard approval
Sep 3, Labor Day, will be
Teachers are to meet at 9
observed as a holiday and the
next day, Tuesday, students
w1ll report for one-half day of
school , The afternoon 15
scheduled for ln-5ervtce by
unmedtately determ10ed.
teachers.
Vientiane's Airport Seized
The flrslfull day of school for
illthough the coup attempt students Will be WeQnesday,
lasted only abcut seven hours, Sept. 5, when hot lunches will
Ma 's followers- who began
be served
thetr drtve half a nule away
Alter the term begins, the
across the Mekong Rtver 10 ftrsl Ume off wtll be observed
Thmland- managed brtefly to for one-half day when teachers
setze Vtenllane's Wattay Air· lake ln-5ervtce traimng and
port, the radio statton and Ute
classes are diSmiSSed on Sept.
natwnal bank They also
surrounded Souvanna's of!tctal 21 November 6, eirction day,
restdence at one po10t wtlh wtll be the ftrst holiday, to be
tanks
Most of the rebels were followed by Records Thy, Nov
9, and another holiday
reported to have fled back
November 12 and Thanks·
across the Mekong when the
gtvmg
November 22 and 23
government crushed the

wtthout result smce February
When the ftghtlng eQded, the
72-year-otd Souvanna went on
offtcal radio to tell hts natton.
"The govermnent o! hts majes·
ly the ki ng (&amp;wang Valthaua)
is shU !unctiomng, lltdudmg
all of il.&gt;l numsters" and vowed
to "deal scnously wtth the
rebels to mamlatn the
ktn gom 's md ependence,
neutrality, soveretgnty and
W1ity "
A U.S. Embassy spokesman
satd Ma dted m the crash or his
propeller.&lt;Jrtven T28 ftghterbomber as he flew over
Vlenltane observ10g hts troops
Cause of the crash was not upriStng

0

Agnew future bleaker
WASHINGTON (UP!) Time magazme reports that a
federal grand Jury, actmg on
remforced allegations he recetved ktckbacks on government contracts, IS expected to
mdtct Vtce P)"esldent Spiro T
Agnew next month
The magazrne satd Sunday tt
had learned !rom sources a
thtrd Maryland contractor has
told the Justice Department he
gave kickbacks to Agnew
The contractor was tden·
lifted as Allen I. Green, 49,
prestdent of a Maryland
engmeermg ftrm He was
reported to have told investigators that he gave kick·
backs to Agnew about ftve
times a year while Agnew was
governor of Maryland lit 1961·
68 and on a reduced scale after
Agnew became vtce prestdent
m 1969
Time said the grand jury "ts
expected to vote an rndictment
next month chargmg Agnew
wtth, among other thmgs,
brtbery and extortwn " It
quoted a Justtee Department
official as saying "the depart.
ment has no chotce At least
three w1tnesses have told of
diverllng cash payments to
Agnew. The evtdence IS so
strong that the case must he
taken to trtal "
Agnew Appears al Rally
Agnew has descrtbed the
allegations made agamst him
as "damned ltes." Saturday
mght he appeared at a polttical

Are you
missing
some
tax ae-ducts"
by paying cash
instead of
writing checks?

•

JOil company te'chnician finds dancing's her thing
By Chartcnt•llodllcl&gt;
B~comlng u pro[e"slonal dancer ond
an lnsiJ'uctor or ja,z, modern and ethnic
dance didn't even ct·osa t1Qsctta Jo
Richards' mind when she graduated 12
years ago !rom Middleport High School.
The fact of the mailer Is she had
never had a dance lesson
•
But today, Jo, now Mrs Joseph Keei
Ia a member of the Cleo Robinson Dance
Ensemble In Denver, Colo , Is assistant
Instructor at Cleo's Studtos tltere and this
fall will be leaching \Ju ee classc; u day In
dance at the Manual High School
Jo and her son, Brett Bunton, 10. have
spent the past three weeks in Middleport
visiting her parent,'!, Mr and Mrs. Arnold
Richards, but will return to Denver next
week She restgned her job as a research
technician with Oil Shale In Denver""arher
tins year so that she could devote all her
time to performmg and giving dance m·
1trucUon.

Laotian coup smashed

rally at CentrevtUe, Md., and
pledged he would ftght w
establish hts mnocence. He
also chasttsed anonymous
news sources for improperly
leaking reports on the tn·

Tax ·deducnble expenses are not
overlooked and are more eastly
proved tf ques[ioned

when you

have cancelled checks to show
for them .

vestlgatwn
"They have no hesttancy at
all about vwlating my ciVIl
rtghl.&gt;l or my constltulwnal
rtghts- but I'll have more to
say about that later," Agnew

By Mrs. L. Balderson
Mrs Opal Randolph, Mrs.
May Humphrey, Mrs. Dorotha
Riebel and Mrs Rose Thomas
spent a day recently at
Columbus
Mr and Mrs. Don Coleman
and famtly of Columbus vtStted
wtth hts mother, Mrs Helen
Archer
Mrs Gladys Baughman and
MarJorte l'oggelt of Columbus
vtstted wtth Mrs Rose
Thomas
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
Whttehead, Jane and Juh, have
returned
home
from
vacationmg at Myrtle Beach,

Fairview
By Mrs. Herber! Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Miller of
Bellville spent a weekend wtth
her parents, Mr and Mrs
Charles Lawson and !mmly
Harold Lawson ts a medtcal
patient ai Pleasant Valley
Hospttal
Mr. and Mrs Herbert Sayre
vtstted thetr mece, Mr. and
Mrs Weldon Kenny at
Brohard, W. Va., recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs Herbert Sayre
and son, David, Mrs Dorothy
Glenn and grandchildren o!
Sprmg!leld, 0 , Mrs. Peggy
Gregory of Dayt&lt;&gt;n attended
the Sayre reunion at the
Shrmers park at Racme
Sunday
Mrs. Chester Durst of Ntles,
0 , Mrs Herbert Roush, Mrs
Russell Roush, Mrs. Anna
Scarberry, Mrs. lcie Tucker
vlstted Mrs Ruth Parsons al
the home of Mr. and Mrs
Dorsa Parsons Tuesday.

!

JJJ

satd "Just let me say I 111tend
to ftght to establish my mnocence of any wrongdomg "
He spoke at a rally for a
Republican congressiOnal candidate
-

I

BRIAN TANNEHILL, 4, seated front left, ill host to 10 other children Friday evening
at the bome of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Tannehlll, Enterprise for a ptcnlc of the Ohio
Valley ,o.dllpta Child Today (ACT) chapter. To Brian's left arouod the table and sealed and
A~awljng are Nancy Grim, Leeanne PariSeau, who IS holdlitg Dame! Par1seau, Don Grim,
Steve Musser Andrew Pariseau Mary Grtrn, Shannon Grim, Joe Gnm and Junmy Thomas
(on bike). Sru;nnon Grtm ts fro~ an Alaskan lndtan tribe near the Arctic Circle, and Don,
Mary, and Joe Grtm are of an i\Jeutian trtbe, all o! destitute ctrcumstances. The Gruns
adopted four children, then Nancy, a natural ch1ld, arnved

ji \eT·interest growing

What once was largely a
hope or a prayer by many
couples - a funchomng
0 CS
er"adoption r~source exchange"
South Carolina
- ts a reahty today.
Recent vtsttors of Mrs Bess
And southeastern Ohio
Larktns were the James
~or
counties' welfare agencies are
Carruthers fapuly o! Louts·
.[1
begmrung to reevaluate thetr
ville, and the Bert Scrimsher
chtld avatlablhly sltuatwns
famtly of Columbus.
which should result m local
Mr and Mrs. Roy Hannum,
adoption of local children by
Susan, Teresa and Davtd of
local couples.
Long Bottom, Mrs Kathryn
Thts was welcome news
Dtelz of Belpre, and Mr and
Fnday evemng delivered by
Mrs. Lyle Balderson and Kay • WASHINGTON (UP!) Mrs. Martha Grmt of Wellston,
attended a Cmclnnali Reds Rep. Robert Mollohan, OW. secretary of the Ohto Valley
baseball game at Cmcmnah Va., has urged the West Vtr· ACT chapter, to members of
They also vtstted the Zoo and gmia Department of Highways the Ohto Valley ACT chapter at
Kmg's Island
to replace the Parkersburg, W, a famtly ptcnic at the home m
Mr and Mrs. Denver Weber Va.·Belpre, Ohto, bridge over Enlerpnse of Mr. and Mrs.
and Davtd were vacattomng m the Ohto River as soon as pas- Mark Tannehill
Canada Whtle there they stble because the present
The adoption resource ex·
VISited wtth Mr and Mrs structure "Is the ftfth least safe
Donald Myers who were also m brtdge Ill the Umted Stares."
Canada
The congressman cttlng an
Mr. and Mrs. Len stone of "obVIous need" for construeCleveland spent a few days lton of a new bridge as soon as
wtlh her mother, Mrs. Earl proper plans can be made, sent
'
Humphrey
a statement to the department
Mtchael Martm of Alexan- mdtcating hiS backing for tt,
dria, va , VISited wtth his "The necesstly for a new
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs brtdge was further underline
Grant Bormg and Mtke Cor a earher thts year m tesliiDony
Robert Sleven Burson, 19,
few days.
be lore the House ColiUillttee on
Pubhc Works," Mollohan satd. Shade, Rt I, was hosptlabzed
"It was revealed at these wtth patnful but apparently not
veterans Memorhil Hospital
Saturday Admisstons - hearmg~ that the Parkersburg- senous tnjunes after a
Emma Hayman , Syracuse; Belpre brtdge 18 the fifth least motorcycle acctdent Saturday
Carnie Young, Hart!ord; Earl safe bridge m the Umted at5 .30 p.m., the Shertf!'s Dept.
said today.
Shuler, Rac10e; Joseph Sayre, States.
Burson, dnvmg a motorcycle
"It is obVIous, therefore, that
Reedsvtlle ; Raymond Hartley,
uphill
m a large fteld, collided
Racme , Donald Greene, the question now Is not whether
the brtdge should be built but wtth another motorcycle,
Racme.
Saturday DIScharges -Alva how construchon can be ex- driver of which has not been
Identified.
Swtck, ChriS Bostick, Ntcholas pedited and still conform to
Burson and the other driver
Bostick, W!lber Burke, Ava of the necessary planmng and
Gtlkey, Anesltne Carsey, preparation requirements." were taken to Holzer Medtcal
Mollohan urged planners to Center by the Pomeroy ER
Wtlma
Wells,
Bertha
Schreiber, Helen Blake, see that construction blend m squad. Burson was belteved to
Raymond Rtdgway, f'reda wtth urban renewal develop- have su!Cered a fractured leg
ment m downtown Parkers· and arm and had several
Grate, Jimmy Bailey
lacerations of one hand. The
burg.
Sunday Admtsswns
The congressman satd c&amp;or· other driver was reported to
Christine Musser, Pomeroy;
Howard Largent, Syracuse; dinated plannrng was essential have suffered a fractured foot.
The department also inWtlma Reece, Pomeroy; Carl wassure "mimmal short and
vesltgaled
a minor acetdent at
long-term disruption of trafftc
Pullins, Pomeroy.
Sunday Dtscharges - Conme patterns and econo1111c ac- the Meigs County Fairgrounds
France, Eber Gtllilan, Letgh tivities m the central ctty Saturday at 2 p.m . when An·
nalee Redman backed from a
area" (o! Parkersburg).
Ann Chne, Donald Eblin
pa~¥#nqpa ff mto the path of
an umd~ntilted car moving
down htll. There were no tn·
junes or arrest, and "very
light damage" to the cars
(Continued from Page I)
Sunday at I :20 am. on
farmer "The minute I saw her at too bus slalton somethmg JUSt County Road 52 Samuel Keiths,
1
spoke wme hke a splntthat satd, 'That's your wife ' "
! I '' 1/'jJt •
Rowell, who placed an ad In a Southern l'lnes newspaper m
search of a wife, the former Lucy Bell Hulett m Bennettsville, s
C last week The couple respoke their vows lit a small country
church near here Sunday. "I just feel I'm more cloaer to Heaven
with my marriage than I would have been if I had just let tt went
m front o! the jusltce of the peace," Mrs Rowell said after
Sunday 's ceremony. "!twas simple, but il was just right "

Ree ds VI•11 e News, N l

'

•

SchQol day set

L aWIDak
calls

new span

change - which never has
funcltoned
before
tn
southeastern Ohio - IS more
than anythmg else a
wtlhngness of the wel!are
department staff people whose
respoliSibtlily It ts to cooperate
tn bnngmg together and
assisting the mfant or child
needing agood home to be
adopted by parents wanting a
chtld.
Ways to tmprove these
procedures were dtscussed at a
business meeting !allowing
dinner by Mary Helen Graham
ol the Athens County Chtld
Servtce Board.
Mrs. Grim, wtfe of Jerry
Gnm, dtrector of the diStrict
library, reported one Infant has
been place~[ wtth par-

Youth injured
in cycle crash

au

News. • • in 'Briefs

of

Parson,

Kansas,

was

IN POMEROY

Just received another big shipment

SANTA CRUZ, CALIF - HERBERT V. MULLIN, 26, a htgh
school honor student who turned to drugs and myslletsm and
bcheved murder was an "act of love," stood up calmly to be
manacled Sunday after a jury pronounced him guilty o! 10
slaymgs Mullm , wearing an orange prison Jumpsuit, said
nothing and was ted quietly to hts jail cell to await a Sept. 18
A carpenter can haJnm•orl sentencmg on the fmdill€S of two counts o! Clrst degree murder
home hts argument, but
and etght o! second degree murder
wtte always knows how

MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S

natl htm

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

Eoch Oeposllor

c.M'embeP Fedel"al Resel"ve System
Dlf C'. tf

--

IN~liiiANCE

-

li ttl e adv 1ce and the right
toots and mater ials from the
" FR I ENDLY ONE S" ca n
wor th a tr y don 't you thmk ?

'20,000.00 Maximum Insurance For-

fllllo:Al

pert to do a tab Poss•bt y a

get you ott the hook It's

POMEROY, OHIO

II-

Is you r w•fe try ing to nai l
you to the wa ll over a l ittle
repa 1r rob' In m o st cas.es l
you don ' t ha ve to be an, eM

~

-

CORPOAATION

-

-- ----

Bad start, good finish
(ConUnued !rom Page I)
survivor, was one of the most faithful of Drew Webster Post 39
American Legion, members to be at the lair handling traffl~
control Charles Swatzerl annually serves as chairman of the
tra!Ctc control for the post And that's a big job too
TIJERE WAS NO PARA-MUTUEL betting at the
fairgrounds during the racing program this year I'm told that
the gentleman who headed the operation was Ill and so the bet.
tlng port&gt;on of the racmg was dropped
ANO SO ANOTHER FAIR has c-ome to an end.
Congratulations and thanks to everyone - and It takes so many
rlgitt down lo each ~Xhtbttor - for making It a~aln another succcs~ful ~wn t

'

•

Gladys Crow Berry o!
Clearwater, Fla , dted f'riday
!allowing a long tllness. She
was preceded In death by her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. 0 .
Crow.
Mrs Berry was a graduate b!
Racine High School and Ohio
Umverstty and before her
marriage was a teacher in
Metgs C01111 ty Schools.
'
Mrs Berry Is survtved by
her husband, LewiS Berry,
Clearwater; one sister, Mrs.
Paul (Grace) Eich, Tripoli,
Lybia; an uncle, Dr. T. H.
Crow, Pomeroy, and several
cousins. Funeral services were
held today at Moss Lake
Funeral Home at Clearwater.

JEANS
Mens and Boys Department . 1st floor.
Buy your back -to-school needs now. Regular Flare Leg
Jeans · sizes 29 to 44 waist. Heavy 14 ounce blue denim .
western styling.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

..
Rosetta Jo Richa rd•

SPECIAL MESSAGE - Ben F Turner of Mtddleport
holds a special congratulatory message sent to htm and Mrs
Turner by the Ohio General Assembly in lrtbute to the couple
recently observtng thetr 50th weddmg anmversary Signmg
the spectal communication on behalf of the Assembly were
John W Brown, Lt Governor, and Sen. Harry L. Armstrong,
17th Senatortal DIStrtct. Mr. Turner served as representative
from Metgs County to the 95th and 97th General Assemblies
in the late 1940s

By United Pressl~ternatlonal
AKRON_, OffiO - OFFICIALS OF the illl-Amelcan Soap Box
Derby want wtalk to llff!wlnner of Saturday's 36tlll1ll1nlllg of the
contest. They want to Inform him he tsn't the champton any
more. James H. Gronen, 14, of Boulder, Colo., made dubious
Derby hiStory Monday when he became the ftrst wmner ever to
be dtsqualllled.
Derby officials satd the boy was "somewhere m the Umted
States vacationing wtth hiS parents, celebrating hts vtctory "
Offtetals dlsqualifted James after an mspectwn of hts green
racher showed he had mstalled an electro-magnetic device which
would enable his car "to he pulled from the slartmg place "
COZUMEL, MEXICO - SKIPPERED BY a buxom Swedtsh
blonde, a raft carrymg a group of bare-chested men and blktm·
clad women who expenmented for 100 days w1th "group and
sexual behavtor" ended its 5,01l().mile Atlantic odyssey Monday.
The five men, all sportmg beards, and stx women, each
displaym~ liberal amounl.&gt;l of suntanned skm, were tmmediatelv
isolated rn a hotel on this Yucatan l'emnsula tounst island for
debriefing on their physical and mental reacltons lo crossing the
Atlanttc together on the 39-by-22-foot raft Acali, captamed by
Marta Bjornstam. Looking healthy and happy after their 3'h·
month voyage from the Canary Islands, the II mariners were
protected from the outs1de world by armed guards placed oul.&gt;ltde
the hotel
WASHINGTON - A REL'ORT THAT Prestdent Nlxpn 's re·
election committee "laundered" $2 mtlhon m tlle ~ ll con·
lrtbutlons through banks m the Bahamas ts bemg mvesltgated by
the Senate Watergate committee
I
Charles "Bebe" Rebozo, the busmessman who ts a close
fnend of the President, either used or owned some or the banks
But committee sources satd Monday the1e was "nothm~ at this
pomt to mvolve" Rebozo.
WASHINGTON - DEFYING CRITICS, the Pentagon has
posted a new regulallon specifically authorlzmg admtrals and
generals to use enhsted men as servants The Defense Depart.
ment made pub he the regula bon Monday, saymg the enlisted
personnel, as long as they are volunteers may be used a valets,
soctal secretaries, cooks, wmtcrs and errand runners.
The directive tssued by Deputy Defense Scretary Wtlham P
Clements also authorized the armed forces wrequest the defense
secretary to assign enhsted aides to offtcers below the rank o!
general and admiral "where representatiOn requtrements
dlclate" Sen Wtlllam Proxmtre, D-Wts , who unmcdiately
spoke out against the dtrecUve, satd he would mtroduce next
month an amendmnt to prohlbtt the use of enltslcd servants by
officers
VIENTIANE, LAOS - GOVERNMENT TROOPS searched
ride paddles outside Vletianc today for the lnsl of the rebels m
Monday's abortive coup and called on ne&lt;ghbonng Thailand to
seize any plotters managing to cross Ute bci d&lt;•r
Government spokesmen said troops had ca ~turc d 14 ol the
rebels, Including Col. Pony Phounlhltsavnn, a deputv leader of
the attempted rightist coup against Premier Souvanna
Phouma's neutralist regime

An ordmance to mcrease
wages of the pollee, street, and
cemetery employes was ap·
proved in tis thtrd and final
readmg by Pomeroy Council
Monday night.
The ordmance sets wages as
follows: pollee department,
pohce chief, one to three
months, $440, three to stx
months, $465; Sgt , $440;
patrolmen, one to three
months, $362; after three
months, $425; meter man, one
w three months, $361, after
three months, $400; diSpat·
chers, one to three months,
$321, after three months, $375;
extra dispatcher and meier·
man, $2 per hour; part time
dtspatcher, $1.80 per hour :

Sporn PI ant
cables cut
NEW HAVEN - Several
acts of sabotage at Central
Operating Company's Phthp
Sporn Plant over the weekend
Jeopardtzed electric service
provtded by the plant ac·
cordmg to H. M. Gloss,
manager
The vandalism ranged from
the cuttmg of all com-•
muntcat10ns into and out of the
plant to attempting to knock
out of service the plant's transmtsslon substation
Gloss said that the company
ts continwng tl.&gt;l offer of $35,000
reward for mformatton leading
to the arrest and conviction of
anyone mjurlng or destroymg
company facihlles The plant
has been under strike smce
July I by members of the
Utility Workers of Amertca,
Local 426
Gloss deplored the con.
tinutng Incidents of valdahsm
at the plant and the jeopar·
dlzmg of electric service, The
weekend mcldents followed
others on Friday which had

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Danny
Jenktns, Charleston, W. Va .,
Philip Donovan, Syracuse ,
Alma McMillen, Vinton, Or·
ville Napper, Middleport,
Edward Laudermllt, Racine,
David Donahue, Racine;
Lucille Dtehl, Racine
DISCHARGED - Tammy
Ferguson , Tracy Manley ,
Danny Jenkins, Margaret
Gans

Crash hospitalizes 1
One driver was hospitalized
and a second treated and
released at Velerans Memorlnl
Hospital following a two-ear
accident at 7:30 p.m. Monday
tn l.ctart Twp .• Sheriff Robert
C Hartenbach's Dept said
· Admitted was Edward R.
Laudermllt, Racine, reported
today In satisfactory condllion.
The accident occurred on
Twp. Road 9~, one milo north of
SR 338. William E. Eakins,
Racine Rt. 2, was traveling
northeut and Laudermltt
aouthwest when t.audermlll

'

street commissioner, one to stx months, $2 30 per hour, after
stx months, $2.65; all street
crew and cemetery ·employes,
$2.25 per hour.
Counctl also approved the
second readmg of an ordinance
whtch permits the village to
enter mto a contract wtlh
Syracuse defming territorial
boundaries of both for water
customers. The contract wtll
defme the rights and habthties
of the village of Pomeroy In
connection wtth the proposed
water system.
Council dtscussed at length
the condtlton of Beech Grove
Cemetery, agreemg finally to
ask Max Edmundson of the
CAP to htre men under htm to

resulted 111 servtce mterruptwn
to 1,100 customers.
Saturday, telephone cables
between the plant and tts
transmtsston substalton were
cut On Sunday, equtpment m
the substatton yard was
damaged although customer
servtce was not affected.
Early Monday mornmgcables for all commumcattons
10 and out of the plant were cut
m two places, affecllng
the
plant's
operattons
and
tts
abthty
to
momlor other facthctle s
whtch could affect electric
service .
Repatrs to all equipment are
underway, and law en·
forcement officials are tnvestlgatmg the mctdenls

81 Pints
donated
The Metgs County Bloodmobile stopped at the Pome1oy
Elemenary School Monday,
from I-ll p m., wtth 81 pmts of
blood being donated
There were nine Ctrsl-tune
donors, and a total of 98 per·
sons offered blood dutmg the
f1ve-hour stop .
Hitting the six gallon mm k m
doat10ns was Robert Vnu ~h an ,
white Robert King lo~pcd the
lour gallon mark, 1lown1d
Logan three gallons nnd .J1me
Walton , Sarah Fowtct·. and ttny
Smtlh each Ctmshed o!f !heir
first gallon
Nurses aidmg we&lt;e ChUl lcs
Vaughan, I,PN , Mary A&lt; mer,
LPN; Naomi London, LPN;
and Barbara Van Meter, !IN.
Doctors 1n churgc we1C:
Aaron Boonsue, MD , John
Ridgway, DO ; Raymond
Boice, MD, and Ray Pickens,

rounded a curve left of center crossed the rood Into a ditch,
and sO uck Euktns' vehicle. breaking off two gas hnes
Both men wm c utken to the belonging to the Rutland f'uel
hospital by prlvote car
Co There were no Injuries or
t.audorrnllt wns oiled for arrests •
00,
Culluro to drive on right half of
The canteen was s••rv·
At 7 p.m. on county road 10, ed
roudwuy und operating a
by
the
Lo) ul
vehicle without license plates Columbia Twp., five tenths of a Bereans Class of the
Both
vehicles
were mile north o! Mt. Union Church Middleport Church or Chnst,
Robert W Alexander, Chagrin
dernollshc&lt;l
while Boy Seoul Troop No 219
Ou Sll t2l , Uu ce quarters of Falls, traveling south and under the direction nr seoul·
11 mile cust of nutlt!Od at 4.30 Dennis Tolley, Albany Rt. 3, master Cleland, loaded nnd
p.m Monday, Ruben A Mejia, traveling north collided In a tmloadod
Middl eport , wu ~ driving a curve. Th~re were no Injuries
Clerical work was ~rovldcd
truck cost on 124 when he lost or arrests. There was medium
IContinued on Page 8)
contrul 011 tim wet highway, damaRe to bolh vehicles .

,

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1973

•
OUDCI

•••

died Friday

IJe~an

•

VOL. XXV. NO. 90

••

~

takmg cla~~es from her her son , Brett, IS " f&lt; ne dancer and still
lle&lt;o~ m, l ng th •l&lt;llent uf her stud c11t, Mbs cnouKh of a ch&lt;ld s•J as to be uninhibi ted.
HnlwJ&lt;on rctmncd .Jo u~ a part-time ln- lie has performed seve&lt;al times with the
Cleo f&gt;.mccrs and, as his mother explains,
Mir 111 lot
Nul (ml y doos Joe pcr!orrn rc~u l urly has " II erncnd nu s understanding o!
with lhc Clc&lt;• Jlnbmson Dunce F.mJCmblc theater and what Jw p1wns backstage since
but sill· :tsstHts with the chorco~r:.~phy , ~ he he has always acr ompanled her to
ht Hi taken w,u;tcrs dasses ut the Oi.intc 1 ehcanmls and pcrhmuunces.
As for her c•rcer m chemistry, Jo says
Symposium at the Umvcrslty of Wtchlta ,
·she
wtll neve1 cornplctely gtve that up,
und ts cw 1cntly scrvmK as vice president
or D.Ul cC Theatre, Inc Ill Denver l .&lt;~st although for now she wtll concentra te on
year she taugh t crcnttve dance to ch&lt;ldren dance
He r husband " a jazz musician who
at Ute Stud w, and "'" ' worked m dnnce
wr1
tes,
arrunges &lt;Jild records He Is
the• ttpy wrlh rctardcd youn~slcrs. She has
wmk1·d w&lt;th mmorl ly groups Includ ing currently the rnuskHI director for "The
SCIIHW Cit'"'"' at the workshop of Cultural Warehouse," a Denver night club
While reseal ch chemist and jazz
ilrLs '" Dcnvc1
dancer
may seem worlds apart to others ,
PcJCeptwn , li ming and ClJ(JfUII!atlon
arc llrotl ud') of movement, ex plai ns Ja, lo Jo they are qut te related for as she puts
who feels llld t there ts not enough em- tl, "bo th unfold new ~orld s, both are a
phasiS un dan ce wh1ch she dcscrtbes as pursutl of the soul , rrnnd and body."

ami

Devoted To 'The lntere~u Of The Meigs- MillOn Area

••
•••
••
•

••
••

(.;lc•u lloiJ m~o n , tt danu:r und tnstrucll1r, "l&lt;llking throu gh movements." She says

enttne

••

traveling west when he went
off the highway on the right
and siJ'uck an embankment.
There were no personal tn·
juries, but heavy damage to
the car. No citatlon was Issued.
Marriage License
Sunday at 3:30 a.m. on
Davtd Eugene Hysell, 20,
County Road 35 m Lebanon
Twp., Wttliam Gregory Mtd· Mtddleporl, R. I, and Diana
dleswart, Portland Rl I, was Lynn Black, 18, PorUand, Rt. I.
traveling east when he struck a
car stopped crossways m the
SALES REPORT .
highway The car belonged to
Ohio Valley Uvesloek Co.
Okey Kiser. Racine, Rt. 2.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mtddleswart could not see
Salurday, Aug.lB, lf73
the Kiser car m time due to
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 48.50
heavy fog Ktser was arrested
to
50.10, 220 to 250 lbs. 50 to
on a charge of drivmg while
52.50, Ught 44 to 48.50, f'at
101&lt;&gt;xlcated.
Sows 47 to 49.75, Stags 41 down,
Boars 41 to 45, Pigs 26.ii0 to 35,
At 5:30 a.m Sunday on Shoat,'! 35.50 to 45 40.
County Road 12, Barbara
CATTLE - Steers 48.ii0 to
Harshbarger, St Albans, went 62.ii0, Heifers 39 75 to ~ . so;
off the road on the right over a Baby Beef 55 to 79 75, Fat Cows
sleep embankment and struck 36.75 to 42.75, Cannen 27 to
a fence on the Harold Erlewine 38.75, Bulls 43 lo SO, Milk Cows
property at Dexter, Rt I. The 225 to 530,
drtver was cited to court on a
VEAt. CALVES - Taps 77.50
charge of failure to keep her to 85, Seconds 65 to 12 40
car on the rtght side of the Medlwn 50 to 70, Com &amp; Hvs::
highway . There were no 55 to 77,40, Culls 55 down • '
personalmjurtes.
'
Baby Calves 45 to 107.50

~· 'ECBlERFELDS

two yews •llC lc!t Ohio Univ&lt;•rslty for
employment with Proct&lt;&gt;r and Gamble ln
Ci ncinnati She enrolled al xa vier
Unlver•lty to contiJlu•• her education,
while dancing lc••ons ~ave her the needed
ct19nge ol pace
In 1008, Jo took the job as a resear&lt;h
technician with 0 11 Shale In Denver She
worked there rour years with other
chemists trylnu to rind the bost and moat
ef!lclent way of e~trac tln~ oil from the
shale ruck, the last two years becoming
more and more Involved In professional
dancing and dance instruction.
Jo says her "lucky break" came
when she answered an advertisement in •
Denver newspaper Aman from New 'i ork
was commg to Denver to produce a show
and would be auditioning dancers.
Jo aud1tioned, got a part, and wae
thrown into contact with numerous
proCessiOnals. About that ttme she met

•••
••
••
••

ents
o!
the
are&amp;
and another ts promised:
as a result of new 10ter.eountt;
cooperation with ACT
:
Other families atlendlng th'i,;
picnic were Mr and Mrs.
•
Denny Partseau, Wellston; Mr,.
and Mrs John Musser:
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mr(
James R. Thomas, Pomer&lt;l)'j;
and II children (see picture )t

Gladys Berry

Ju's ~oul whun sh ~ru d ua l l'd !rum
Middleport Hl ~ h &amp; hool wus to become a
chem ical tcchn ld~n tmd when • he
rcgi•WrC!I In the ltt ll uf lOO t ut Ohio
Uni versity her coutll!l selections wefll
directed In thut dlrettion
f'or an electi ve, •he enrolled In
moder n dune'&lt;
"I had a dance mstruct&lt;&gt;r who reall y
turned me on," commenwd Jo, who took
lime to go to Athens du ring her vlstl here
m an effort to seek her out While the
leucher is no longer at OU, she conversed
and danced with a number of other lnstructon and as a result has an invitation
to return to Ohto m October to conduct a
masters class in dance as a part of the
Black Studies Curriculum
Despite Jo's enthustosm for dance
whtle she was tn college, she never considered making tl her major Her mterest
was always In chemical technology After

s
clean up the cemetery
Numerous complamts have
been ftled wtth local offtctals
about cemetery condtltons
Counctlmen Ralph Werry
and Harry Dav&lt;d reported that
ulthly poles cannot be moved
and money to wtden Sprmg
Ave ts not avatlable, as
proposed recently by Fred
Blacttnar, as a safety
measure
Counctl 111 other busmess
approved placmg before voters
a renewal levy of one mtll on
the November ballot for the
operatton o! the fire department.
Jane Walton, clerk, ts to
noti!y all department heads
that all orders that exceed $25
must be presented to counctl
members for thetr approval
before purchases can be made
Meetmg wtth counctl was
Charles Legar, lite chlef, who
satd that numerous complitints
have been 'recetved from
restdents on East Main St

a

about three houses that have
weeds growwg up around
them He added tt has been
suggested that the properhes
be condemned Counctl took no
aclton
The Standard Oil Co plans
no early constructwn on West
Mam St at the Shamrock
Motel stte, Mrs Watton
reported.
Counctiman Jtrn Mees satd
Mrs JuniOr Wtlson has been
htred as tamtor at the vtilage
hall.
The mayor's report Cor July
showmg recetpts of $1805 30
was approved. Pohce Chtef Jed
Webster' s report for July
showed 24 acctdents tn·
vesttgated, 66 arrest,'! made,
1,043 trafftc tickets tssued and
the crutser drtven 5,097 miles
Atlendmg were Mayor Don
Colhns, Ralph Werry, ·Wilham
Snou!fer, Jim Mees and Harry
Davis, counctl inembers, and
Mrs Walton, clerk

t

;

replaced by

'

'"'

\lt ,LHI\JJ; ill

1111.11 '1

'

Tom Cleland and his project

Two scouts
will gain
l

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

Dill resigns, is

TEN CENTS·

Coliseum Eagle award
approved

Tom Cleland and John Mark
Matson, both of Langsvtlle, wtU
commissioners
be awarded the highest honor
10 scoutmg Sept 2 10 a double
The Meigs County com·
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A presentatton at the Forest
missioners today accepted
hearmg exammer Cor the Ohto Acres l'ark near Rutland at 3
the resigpatlon o! Gary Dill,
pm
of Chesler as dog "arden Envtronm ental Protectwn
After Cleland complered a
and named to replace him Agency recommended the
servtce proJect he lacked three
Alfred Frank o! the Texas state approve construcllon of a
men t badges, whtch he
area. Sheba Hicks, deputy cohseum m Summtl county as
completed Cor the requtred 21.
auditor, submitted' her proposed by sportsman Ntck
Hts project was the stgn ptcresignation e!lectlve Aug. 31. Mtlell .
Harvey Rosenzwetg approv- tured above Cleland ts the son
The commissioners were
of Wayne Cleland, Langsvtlle,
\o open bids on the ed Mtlell's plans for a sewage
and Anna Cleland, Columbus
treatment
plant
to
serve
the
reno~atlon o! the courthouse
He wtll be a scmor at Metgs
at noon today. Attending the cohseum
Htgh School this fall where he
Rose
nzwetg
said
the
meeting were Robert Clark,
Cuyahoga Valley Assoctallon
Warden Ours and Henry
Wells, commissioners and whmh opposes the conMartha Chambers, clerks. struclton, fatled to show m
pubhc hearmgs that the area
·=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·. ·:.. ··:·:·:·:!·!·!·!·! !·!·!•! :-:·:·:·:·: waul be adversely affected by
the proposed development
Miss Joy Btgler, a graduate
The coliseum wtll cost $18
mtllton and wtll be located m of Loutstana Tech Umverstty,
was htred as the new marching
Rtchfteld Township between
Cleveland and Akron. It will band dtrector of the Southern
Local School Dtstrtct by the
probably be the home of the
A work stoppage appare ntly Cleveland Cavaliers of the board of education Monday
halted cons truclton tlus Nutt o nal Basketball mghl.
A nallve of Canton , Ohto ,
mormng at Ute James M AssociatiOn and the Cleveland
Gavin Plant at Cheshire Umon Crusaders of the World Hockey M&lt;ss Btglcr recetved her BA
crafl.&gt;l reported to work but Assoctabon , both owned by degree In mustc from
walked off thetr jobs shortly Mtleh.
LouiSiana Tech
The Southern band wtll slart
afterwards tl was reported
El'A Dtrector Ira Whttrnan
Ohw Elec tnc Company hns 10 days In which to accept practice at 6 30 each evemng
offtctals were m a meeting thts or reject the exammer's ftnd· at the htgh school m Racme
The board accepted the
mormng and could not be mgs
restgnatton
of Beverly Prtce, a
reached for commenl.
The recommendations were
Approximately 3,000 persons based on evtdence presented lit Syrucuse Elementary School
are currently employed at the a June 19 hearing m which the 1euc hc1
Jocelyn Baer was employed
generatmg plan The plant's assoctatlon fa1led to present
!lrst unll ts scheduled Cor ora"l testimony stating tts as a Bustncss and Ofhce
completion In 1974
Education Ins tructor at the
objccltons
Aller Wlutman makes his ht gh school and William
final ruhng, opponents of the Downie, J1 , and Ra chel
plan can appeal to a three-man Do• me were employed to
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
teach two or the three classes
Chance of showen ThurN· envu onmental board of revtew
tf they want to conlmue their for the educable mentally
day and again Saturday
rc1J1rded (EMI() Ill the dtstrlcl
Dally highs avcroglng In the opposthon
Last year the d&lt;s trlct had only
upper 70s and lo"er 80s.
one
EMH class The hst of
Lows at night In upper SOs
MAN INJURli;D
and lower 60s.
Robert Newell, 27, Mid· subslltute teachers us provtded
:·.·&gt;:·:::·:·::&lt;:::·:.,:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·. :·:·.·:·:·..- .:. ,., ··: dleport, was In a satisfactory by th e county board of
but guard ed condlhon at education and substitute bus
Veterans Memorial Hosullltl dt ivcrs was upproved.
Lilts morning from lnjurl~!
The bOal d voted that
Partly cloudy and cool today suffet·ed when his car struck a students purchosmg an extra
with highs 70 to 80 Clear and ' utility pole on West Main St. clll·ton of nulk 11l lunch time
cool tonight with lows In 50s. Pomeroy pollee said Newell dunng the next school year wtll
locally In upper 40s Wed· was traveling cast when his pay 10 cents lor that second
nesday, Increasing ctoudmcss velucle slntck and broke off a ( Ill tOri
and hlgha tn mid to upper 70s pole There was heavy
Nmncd to coac h the
LOCAL TEMPS
_ damages to the car Newell buskctbntl tcoms were Jim
The lemperatUJ e tn down- was llt~cn to the hospital by the Wickline, ninth grade, John
town Pomeroy at 11 a 111 . Pomeroy E·R squad lie will be Dudding, etghth grade, and
Tuesday was 11 undct· clundy cited on reckless operation Jnmcs i;tll wncc, seventh
A mee ting wus ptnnned beskies.
c hat~c s , pollee said .
l
•

has heen an honor student.
Matson, son of r,tr, and Mr~.
Kenneth Matson, Langsville,
completed as hts servtce
project, a table cabinet
combinatiOn for a duplicating
machme at the Langsville
Chnstian Church whtch
sponsors Explorer Post 239 to
which both boys belong.
Cleland 1s president of Ex·
plorer Post 239, ofwhtch James
C Council ts adviSor.
Tom entered scoulmg In
May 1969. He was awarded the
"God and Country Award" m
Aprtl, 1972. He is also a
member of the "Order of the
Arrow.'' Along with 13 other
scouts he hiked the 19.5 mile
Adaht Tratl. Tom Is the ft!th
scout to recetve the Eagle
Seoul Award under the
leadership of Jtm Counctl The
presentation ceremony IS open
to anyone who would like to
attend

Director hired

Work stopped
at Gavin job

Weather

tween the board and bus
drivers to work out scheduhng
for kmdergarl&lt;!n pupils thts
year All parents of children
enrering kindergarten are to
meet at the h1gh school at 8
tomorrow mght
The board accepted a
negoltaltons agreement be·
tween the board and OAL'SE
Chapter 453 , non -certified
employes A dress code and
attendance p1 ogram were also
approved
The board agreed to pur·
cho se a part of the meat for the
(Contmued on Page 8)

COURT
NEWS

Three
persons
were
arratgned before Meigs County
Common Pleas Judge John C.
Bacon today. Eric Ritter and
Rebecca Jane Chatfield, bottt
of Carpenter, apprehended by
Sheriff Robert C Hartenbach's
Dept. on June t1 and charged
with cultivating marijuana,
pleaded not gullt.y Trial date
was set for Sept 5 In conunon
pleas court.
Danny Berry, Middleport,
who wos apprehended June 10
by Middleport Pollee on
cltarges of breaking and en.
terlng of the H&amp;R Flrettone
Store In Middleport, alao
pleaded not guilty . Trl~l will be
set later

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