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Di;~~~~;t inel' Mid~~~~i~:~L?rr;~~;,:;,;;;.:)~::::t:~@:i: ili:;:i: : ~:iG: :t: :' : :~: t=~=: : : w:::M::: : ~;:;~:~;~ .:~T~;~:~~!!~~~ta~:~~~~;':@,:.WWUOO~~mmt~~~'l m:rg~~f~~~:~~r~r~~:~
•

Y0 llr Ho Sp}•tal
rep ort s

(Continued !rom I'"K" I) .
school lunch pr'Ol!l nm fnll n
Chef 's Pantry. Columbus. and
It was voted to eh:mge from
numerical grades to let!&lt;•t·
grades in the hi ~h school
Attending the meeung wert•
board member~ Davttl Nca~c,
Dennie Htll, Charles Pyles ,Jt.
llv llu~ h 1'. Kirk&lt;•l.
Charles Pyle· and1 Gt ovet
Exet;ut 11·t· \ ' II' &lt;' Pn•suknt
Salser, Jr., Supt . Bob On! and
llol l•' r~lt'd it' ail't·nlrr
principals James Adams, Btl!
A few "''"ks n~o. Holzer
Baer , James Wtckhne and Medical l'•'tli&lt;'r Sdwol of
Larry Wolfe.
Nw Sill~ Ct'it•b• alr&lt;i the 50th
Anntvl'tS.tl\ of tit•' fi rst
graduatm~ , l.tss. and alum nae
DIVORCJ:;S ASKED
f•·on all u1•or th&lt;' country
Fout suits for dh one hf1Vt1 l'durnt'd flH th~ 1('Un ion
been filed m Mctgs Counl) \\ t•t•kt.•nd u~ lrbt dLton
Common Pleas Court. The)
Jrwluctmg thl' mosl recent
wet·e by Dcbr.t B•wnfteld. cl.oss th.tl gruthtfllcd m .June,
Middl epol't
vs
Pa ln ck 727 youn~ ~~-ome n hlove comllrwnfteld. JJaufort, S C . pl('ted tllr1r trdL/11111{ in the
Naomt
Rulh
Don&lt;&gt;hue
Hosptlal's School of Nuosmg.
Pomeroy Rt. 4. vs Stephen Ra1
Studen ts come from uol only
Donohue, sa m e add 1e:-;s, and Oln o. bu l lh&lt;' suroounding
Charles C. Wnghl, Mtddlepot t, "''''' or \\ est Vorguua and
vs Carolyn Lee Wngltt. M•d· Kenlllckv even fro m as far
dlepor t, each duu gmg gross awav .~· N&lt;'\\ Y01k It is
neglect of duly and extreme n~lu;'&lt;11 thai .tfler rulftllmg
cruelty, and Thoma. K Woods. lhctr trann ng • eqn n eme nts
Middleport, vs Palrtcto ~
here '" Gu llo polls, the) may
Woods,
Howard.
Ohto, , elw n lo hosptutls wlhetr own
chargmg gross neglccl of duly
home towns, go on to the larger
ctttes m the Tt t-SI,ot e urea, or
even fwthc t """Y when opporluntt) presents otself
In facl, a student from
Greece, Ma ty Dcmetnadou,
entered the Holzet School ol

•

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SHIRT

FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In AI9- 0ut P.''

d6 E 2nd . Pom eroy

.

MEIGS THEATRE
Theatre Closed
Augu st 12 thru Augu st 23

AUGUST241hru 26
HEARTBREAK KID
Plu s

THE MAN
August 31 lhru Sept 4

BATTLE FOR THE
PLANET OF THE
APES
SHOWSTARTS7P.M.

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LARGE

Nurstng m Scplembct, 19$2,
graduates in 19;;, Ihen
returned lo Greece to !lCcepl "
responsible position on the
nursing staff 111 Thessalonikt
The SchOQI had twenty...,tght
in thtsyear's graduatmg class
Of tlus group, thirteen are
slaytng at Holze r Medi cal
Center as gl'aduate nurses,
which ls another tndtcation of
how imporl&lt;lnt tt ts lo have the
most modern medical racthty
so that our graduates wtll want
to remain here to provide the
finest pahent care. In turn,
patienls beneftl from lhe high
acadennc standards required
in our SchO\ll of Nursing.
The 13 who are slaying at
Holzer Medical Center include
Debbte Hemsworlh !rom
Lancaster and Wilma Rtfe of
Middleport. now a part of the
nursing team lor surgical
pa hents. Two graduates ,
Elame Jacobs of Wellston and
Joy Ktmble of Jackson, wtll be
10 the orthopedic, medical and
general surgtcal areas. Vtckt
Kaufman of New England In
West Vtrgmia, Sharon Pyles of

The disclosure was the first
by the Secret Servtce durmg
Nixon's presidency of a illreat
against his life. Only bare
del&lt;ltls were revealed by the
Secret Service, which also
asked New Orleans pohce to
pick up a former policeman
who trted to nttack Ntxon's
lunousine three years ago.
He was Edwin Michael
Gaudet Jr., 30. He was accused
in a federal warrant of makmg
the threat last Wednesday m
New Orleans. Gaudet, nicknamed "Punchy," was tracked
down 111 New Mexico Monday
night but fled from offtcers.
The Secret Service empha·
sized that Gaudet might not be
mvolved 10 the "posstble plot. "
Agenls 10 Washmgton and New
9rleans declmed further comment today.
Gaudet was located in a
hipptel commune near Arroyo
Hondo, N.M. ·When Secret
Servtce agents tried to arrest
him, Gaudet grabbed a htgh·
powered rifle, frred three shots
at the agents and escaped mto
the brush-eovered hills.
"We know he knows the area
•· and he's armed wtth a 30-06
rifle," satd a spokesman for
Taos County Shenff Arthur

WEDNESDAY ONLY

EGGS
IGA GRADE A

•

By llmtrd Press lnteruational '
The Secret Servtce's dtsclosure of a "possible consptracy"
to assass10ate Prestdent NIXon
rn New Orleans was generally
discounted toda y by pollee for
lack of evHlence The Prestdenl
lu mself called t he eptsode
"ridiculous "
The Secret Service made its
an nouncement Monday an
hour before Ntxon left Florida
for New Orleans to addtess the
Veterans of Fore rgn Wars
natt onal conventoon . Ntxon
refused to call off the tnp but
agreed to swrtch hJs motorcade
off famed Canal Street.

:oM
KRAFT
BUTTER
MINTS

•

¢
8 oz.

DELIVERY DRIVER
SALES

3.57 PER HOUR

1

DOZ.

FULL or PART TIME
No experience necessary,
must have car and willing to
learn. Phone 10 a.m. to 8
p.m. Tuesday thru Friday.

•

446-0677

IT'S t BED! "

S SLUMBER,
SEAT!

NOW YOI! KNOW
VIce President Aaron Burr
was divorced by his second
wife on ille day ol his death,
Sept. 14, 1836.

JR S ex11 ms to be given soon
CINCINNATI _ Persons
who are not eertifled public
La "•'•· or ••tlorney•" but
acrmut
want to qualify to repres•nl
ctlents in In matters oolore
ille lnlernal ){venue Service
. must submlllhelr examination
application ily Aug. 31 , 1973.
District Dirertor of Internal
Hevenu• Paul A. Schuster,
said tha t the Special
Enrollment Examination In the
Cincmnatl Dlstrtcl will be
given at Clllctnnali on Sep·

Pomeroy - Harold Norton,
Jerry
E
F 1e l ds, Frank
G1 rolam1 , Charles Salser.
William Radford, Howard
Logan . Delma Buck , Marv 1n
Keebaugh, Mar 1orle Reuter,
V 1rgll Wmdon , Gay Perrm ,
Mike Globak.ar , Jane Walton,
Robert Vaughan. Dwight
Goins, Kenneth E . Harn s, Don
Betzing, Leo vaughan. Mil dred
Hudson , Roy E M ill er , Sarah
G1bbs, Ola St
Cla1r, Ber
nadetle Anderson , Dorothy
Johnslon, Albert Rou sh , Gary
Sm1th, Homer Smll h , Norbert
Neutzl mg. Lloyd B l ~t c kwood .
Gene Holldash elt, Mary F •e lds ,
Barbara F 1elds, Margaret
Eskew : Rollin Radford . Marc1a
L Rogers, Margaret Slory ,
Wllllace Hatf •eld , Harlan
Whitlatch , Roy Sm•th , Mel 1sa
R1zer. Tommy Ray Reuter ,
Marvm Taylor
M iner sv ille - Sla cle Arnold
Racme - Floyd He ndr,cks ,
Fr •l z Buck, Phyllis Edward s
Marl i n Wi lc oxen. E m m a
Adams, Roy Van Meter Ed
ward O'Connor

-

Jo hn

F

Aelker, Li nda Hal ey, Wa yne
Oav1s, Dean Lutz, Robe rl
Kmg . Norma G W•lcox, J ane
M•l1er , Ida M
Mart in, Ed
Durst. Edward F 1scher , Clara
France. Charle s Searles. M ary
Bacon, William L•t lle . D.:H'\ •e l
Ray Ellis, Chester Erwm . Pal
Gress , Brenda T urner , Thoma s
E Weaver , Paul Haplonstall
Sarah Fowler. Georg e Harr is,
Milton Hood . Er1 c Pear ch
Karen Pnce .
Chester - Alben Mar li n
Syracuse - Mill ar d Ro ush,
Dorot h y Dougla s, Woo droo'l
Zwelllng , L a rr y Laven der ,
Donald Hendricks
L ong Bottom Ma cii l
Barton. Gr ella StJttl e, How ard
Parker . Henry Bahr
Reed sv i ll e James p
Rulland - Homer P Parker.
Adell L David son , l K W or ~
man. Rita M c Dan ie l , Co r a L
Lee , Donna Dav idson, ChB r hs
C Ki ng, Ro sell a Buchfle ld
HarriSO n v il le Rob er t

HUGH P. KIRKEL
'eflecll'&lt;l in scoring resulls on
the State Board Test Pool
Exarmnalton for Professional
Nuo·ses ; our sludenls have
scored.wtthm the upper to pet.
of schools m Ohro.
From all indicatiOns, over
ftfly students, whtch IS a record
\ugh, wtll be enrolled m the new
rres hman class at Holzer
Medtcal Center School of
Nursing, starting to September
of thts year. Thts is not only a
reflectron of our reputation for
academic excellence tn nurs·
ing educatton, but an
awesome challenge and
responstbthly to continue to
mamlam these htgh standards

Mason , W

Bumg~trner

5

119.00

va

w,c•h~I"

33" SeoJ Dep&lt;h 19 1t7" Seo t W •d &lt;o 26"
Oo~n ed· Bed w•d&lt;h 26" tg lh 76

De pth

Q,,. ••., .ons

DECORATOR WALL CLOCKS ... a very
interesting collection of dependable
qualtty wall clocks.

CUCKOO CLOCKS ... choice of several sizes
and styles. Battery operated.

DINETTE SETS ... 5, 7
and 9 piece dinette sets.
Stop in the Furniture
Department. 3rd floor.
see our fine lines of
furniture for every
room In your home.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

;

I

,

I ,

01

r,

'I

Joan Caullleld ·

Plus

BAKER

TWt LIGHT PEOPL E

FURNITUt'tt.
MIDDLE !&gt; O~~., ·.

0.

John Ashley
Pot Woodell

I Mettocolorl

lPG I

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,.

PASSBOOK SAVINGS
----------------~~

%
OOMPUTED QUARTERLY

r•

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3 MONTH CERTIFICATE

PAYABLE QUARTERLY

.

MINIMUM $1000

1 YEAR CERTIFICATE

PAYABLE QUATERLY
-,.INIMUM 11000
•

~

2·YEAR CERTIFICATE

%

PAYABLE QUARTERLY
MINIMUM 11000

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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE INQUIRE AT THE BANK

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
\ II ill
\I I~VI( I

I\t\ "JI&lt;

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Depos~ Insurance Corporation

trailer was removed.

At 10:30 p.m. on SR 124 m
Sutton Townshtp, James
Walker, Rl. I, Portland, had
pulled off the htghway oo the
rtght when a vehicle drtven by
Emory Cteed James, Rt. I
Portland, went off the highway
and struck the Walker vehicle.
There were no injuries .
There was ltghl damage to both
ve hicles, and no cttalions were
issued.
Air was reportedly left out of
tires on a compressor at Rock
Springs over the weekend. The
compressor belonged to Shelly
and Sands. A pavmg machine
was also struck by an unknown
vehicle located on old . county
road 25 below Salisbury School.

CINCINNATI - THE GREATER CINCINNATI Gasohne
Dealers Assoctation announced today its 400 members have
voted to close their servtce stations during the Labor Day
weekend to protest "the Cost of Ltving Counsil's bungling of
Phase IV.''

"•

I ,j I 1

Double Feature Program
THE DARING
DOBERMANS
Tim Con sid ine

,.

"

RATES

driving a tractor trailer, was
crossing the tracks when a
trailer pm came out leavmg the
trailer partllllly blocking the
tracks. The sheriff's depart·
ment cheeked with Hobson
Yards and a train was headed
south in the directionnof the
accident.
The sheo·ifl's department
stayed ot the scene until the

By United Press International
SAIGON - GUERRILLAS AMBUSHED a South Vtetnamese
militia patrol early today stx miles from Saigon m the closest
attack to the capital smce the Jan. 28 cease-fire. The South
Vietnamese military command said Commumsts htdden in the
surrounding jungle triggered a captured American claymore
mine as the militiamen were passing.
The command said one militiaman was killed and five were
wounded by the blast six miles northeast of Saigon. It was the
closet incident to the capital since Jan'. 28 when the Communists
hit the Tan Son Nhut air base on ille outskirts of Saigon with eight
rockets only two hours before the start of the cease .fire.

NEW SAVINGS INTEREST

MASON
.' ' DRIVE-IN
,,. .
Augu st 21

A CHAIR BY OAY
{l ~ EO P,v N'C.;·i..

Three men forced their way
Into a car driven by Ona E.
McKmney, Rt. I Shade,
Tuesqay aflernoon at 3 p.m. as
she pulled off County Road 26
ooto County Road 20, Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach 's
depar~ent reported today.
One•of the men drove the car
north on County Road 19, and
after traveling 2% ml(es threw
Mrs. McKinney out of her car.
The triO then apparently
turned the car around and
headed towards U. S. Rt. :l3.
The car was found by the
Sheriff's Department over an
embankment. There was light
damage to the car.
Mrs .
McKinney
was
unharmed.
The sheriff's department set
up a search for the three men
1n the Peach Fork area, but the
search was called off due to
darkness.
The department also investigated an
accident
Tuesday at 1:57 p.m. on the
railroad tracks on County Road
8, Rutland Township.
Jack Slate, Charleston,

•

Jarnu

-

TONIGHT ONLy

Dtmen!lons Closed . He &lt;gh&lt;32"

3 men take
over Shade
woman'scar

TROPHY CASES ... glass front cases, adjustable shelves, walnut finish.

Hemloclo; Gr o11e
ShL'I r on
Wiker .
Langsv ille E ll 1~ M yers

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'

GUN CABINETS . . . a fine new selec!lon of 6
and 10 gun sizes. Maple or walnut finishes.
Excellent quality.

CING

n~Cilf'i&lt;•s, businesses or news

selected to rl'&lt;elve one ol II m"tia for &lt;nlt~tundln~ I'On·
plaques b&lt;llng awarde-d In the lrtbutlons on a commwtlty on
Stat~ of Ohio to org1mtzattons, behalf ur senior cillzcns.

Just Received
Furoiture Department, 3rd Floor

Alk ~r e

• •• • • •

Titc Dally Sentlrwl hus bocrt

Blood

Con de

SLUMBER/SEAT

Daily Seniinel, four area residents, -will be honored at fair

!ember 24 and~. 1973.
Interested. persons can
secure appltcatlw and ad·
'""I r
dltlonal Informal1on 1rom~~
local IRS office, he s•ld. AP·
pllcatlons, accompllnled by a
fee of $25 payable to Ute In·
lerna! Revenue Service, should
be mailed by August 31, 1973, to
ille Director, Audit Division,·
Internal Revenue Service ,
Washington, D. C. 20224 ; At·
tentlon CP .A:C :T - SEE.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Trujillo.
Nmeteen law enforcement
officers spread throughout the
hills today in the search for
Gaudet
Secunty was extremely light
for Noxon's VFW appearance.
There were no incidents and He
Oew alter the 2-hour, 11-minule
vtsit to the Western While
House m San Clemente, Calif.
"The whole thmg was ndicu- DUBONNET WINNER
MONTICELLO, N.Y. (UP!)
lous," Noxon satd of the
- Bob Brannum, former.
possible conspiracy.
Boston Celtics star and now
head basketball coach at
Brandeis Umverstty, beat Jack
Marm of the Houston Rockels,
1-up on the rourill hole of
sudden deaill play Thursday to
(Continued from Page I)
by, Mary Nease, Jean Nease, win the $3,000 top prize m the
Jean Sayre, Juantta Sayre, forst Dubonnet Golf Classic.
Lulabetle Hampton, Martha
Lou Beegle, Beulah Strauss,
Emma Clatworthy, Marie
Barton, Elva Dailey, Elotse
White, Vernon Nease, Jane
Wagner and Doroilly Smith
Donations were given by ille
varoous organizations of the
Church of Christ, Quahty Print
Shop, Metgs Local Schools, the
Datly Sentinel, Athens Messenger, WMPO radio sl&lt;ltion,
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
and Veterans Memorial
Hospital

M•ddleporl

T'S A ·: HAIR!'

1

Jay•·coes will b&lt;l WedneS(!ay at 8
p.m ut the Pomeroy Vtll•ge
Hull Youu~: men between the
a~cs of 18 tmd :~. who are
cor•ccrn&lt;'&lt;l about their com.
muntly and want to be Involved
are welcome.

UNIT CALLED
The
Meigs
County
Emergency Medtcal Servtce
was called to Mormng Sl&lt;lr at
II · 50 a m. Saturday for Earl
Shuler. A medical patient,
Shuler was l&lt;lken to Veterans
Memortal Hospital where he
was admitted. AI 9·09 p.m.
Saturday , the servtce was
called for Wendell Barrett,
Danville. He was l&lt;lken to
Veterans Memortal Hospilal

SS Discounting plot

Use our Fr(o&lt;&gt; P" dwtq Lol

Robinson's Cleaners

•

,Ja•·k, un "'"' ' b&lt;•cn ussi~nL'&lt;ltu
nu•llil'nl putients and cardia&lt;'
patlt.•nts who are I'CCUIH'ratin..:
from ueut&lt;· phu,..s ol their
tllness. F:ula Crabtree ol
Lucasvtlle and Donnu Shaner
or Oak thll combine medical
1ind surgi cal patient care
dulics
Mary Hayes or Pomeroy
rotates between the Labor
Room. 08 and Nursery. These
whowtll work In Pediatrics are
Dorothy Neutding ol Pomeroy
and Penny Saunders or
Gallipohs Carol Daylleld from
PI Pleasant ts now a member
of Ute Intravenous Therapy
team.
We're p.-oud to welcome
illese competent and skilled
yowtg ~omen to our staff, and
hope their nursing association
wlth Holzer Med1cal Center
wtll be a
illing on .
Next year' Sen r Class
mcludes twenty-moe studenls,
and the followmg (1975) has
thtrty-etghl in the class. These
studenls are in school all
summer wtlh one week's
vacatron in June and a three
week break in September.
Mtss Beremce Skehan Is the
Dtrector of Nursmg Educatton
and 1s assisled by nine faculty
members who combine their
teaching sktlls to turn out the
!west nursing graduates
anywhere m the Sl&lt;lte of Ohro.
This top-notch mstruction is

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PHNOM PENH - CAMBODIA'S top mllttary man .said
today he expects Thailand and South Vtctnam to step m to
prevent a l'!orth Vietnamese takeover of Cambodia. Maj. Gen.
Sosthene Fernandez also told a news conference he plans to ask
the United States to resume bombing operallons if Hanoi refuses
to pull its troops out of his country.
"f don't think friendly countries hke South Vietnam and
Thailand will stand by and let Cambodta be overrun by the North
VIetnamese," Fernandez said. He said he was watting for the
North VIetnamese to pull out of Cambodia in accordance with the
Paris peace accords.
"If they don't, then we'll have to ask the United States why it
respects mternationalagreemenls when the other side doesn 't,"
he said. Fernandez, however, predicted his soldiers would turn
back Communist guerrltlas pressuring Phnom Penh wllhout any
outside help. "If they want to come and die against the defenses
of Phnom Penh, let them dte," he said.
SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF .-PRESIDENT Nixon's aides
acknowledged for the first ttme that he Is under tension and
strain as a result of Watergate revelations, but they 10sist that he
is capable of performing his presidential dulles. Meanwhtle there
wns speculation that Nixon's long-awaited press conference on
Watergate may be held this week, possibly today . Reporters
noted that the White House spokesman did not announce a
definite time or place for today's press briefing. Nixon has not
held a news conference since March 15.
"There is no question that during the past few months, there
have been periods of pressure on the President," Deputy Press
Secretary Gerald L. Warren said Tuesday. But he also told
reporters, "There is no question in the President's m10d, in the
minds of those around the President that he is not only capable of
performing tile dulles of his office, but he ts dotng Utis. He 1S
leadl~g the nation ."
DETROIT - THE UNITED AUTO WORKERS TueSday
chose Chrysler Corp., smallest of the "Big Three" auto makers,
as this year's strike "target." That means Chrysler will face a
strike In mid-September unless tt comes to terms with the uruon
on a new contract.
The UAW has made a good use of the "strike target"
strategy it dreamed up In 195510 put added pressure on one auto
company to agree to a pattern-&lt;~ettlng contract. In iL• simplest
terms, It means: "Give us an agreement we can take to our
members or be shut down while your competitors keep building

In nddtlinn, futu·

Mt' l ).\l't

())Unty residents l"'vc b""n
llillllf-d to rt(·(&gt;fvc l'crtifh•nw
awnnls given for euch cvunty
of Ohio. They ru·e'Mr. and Mrs.
W. P. l.ochury, High St.,
Pomeroy , as illc outst1mdlng
sc11lor citizen couple/ Miss
l.ucitlc Smith as the winner of
!he Qounly 's senior volunteer
service award, and C. J ,
Struble, the "Mr Senior
Cillzen Award ."
All of the awards, to be
presented Friday at the Ohio
State Fair, are spont!Ored by
the pivislon of Adminlstratton
on Agmg . Selection of The
Daily Sentinel for ille award

WASHINGTON - VICE PRESIDENT Spiro T. Agnew
bell~ves his qnemles are within the administration he serves and
he has struck back to slk'llce them. He accused Attorney General
Elllpt L. Richardson and U. S. Attorney George Beall Tuesday of
viollttlng their "legal duly" to prevent news leaks.
l!"heMl, he assorted, have bwn deSigned to Influence Ute
gra~d Jury which Is Investigating allcgatloos thai he acoopled
paypfls and ktckbackslrom consultina· englnwrs doing buslnes
(Conllnu~d on P11e 101
!'"';.

b,ookrnobile

supervi.Mor 1

compiled the scrapbook,
Tho county winners were
selecteq on the basis of
nomlnatwns which gave a
(Continued 011 page 20)

PATLOCHARY

MRS. PATLOCHARY

CLARENCE STRUBLE

LUCILLE SMITH

Devoted To Th.e Jnterutl Of 'I'M Meig1-Mawn Area
VOL XXV NO. 91

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OH 10

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1973

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

or ta es o ens
WASHINGTON (UP!) White House lawyer Charles
Alan Wnght charged today
that Watergate prosecutors
were trying to alter the
meaning of the Constitution in
an attempt to force Prestdent
Nixon to turn over tape
recordings bearing on the
scandal.
Wright made the opemng
arguments in a U.S. District
Court hearing on the battle
over the Nixon tapes. The case
ts expected to reach the
Supreme Court posstbly in a
matter of days.
Wright spoke ahead of
Watergate Special Prosecutor
Archibald Cox in a packed
courtroom before Chief U.S.
DIStrict Judge John J. Sirica at
a show-eause heanng on
whether Nixon should be
compelled to turn the tapes
over to the Watergate grand
jury.
The Prestdent's lawyer
argued that 18 months
ago
"no.
responsible
body
of
legal
opinton" would have contended
that any court had the power to
order a President to disclose
his most confidential communtcations.
Cox llstened impasstvely as

3 Fined
for DWI
Seven were find and four
defendants forfeited bonds 10
the court of Middleport Mayor
John Zerkle.
Fined $150 and costs and
given a three day jall·sentence
on conviction of driving while
Intoxicated was Francis J.
Baker, 40, Pomeroy; Leroy
Simpkins, 18, Mason, and
Harold Uttte, 36, Mtddleport,
fined $100 and costs and given
illree ilay jail sentences for the
same offense; Ralph Cundiff,
31, Middleport, ~ and costs,
op~rating a motor vehicle
without regard to safely;
Dennie E. Glaze, 18, Pomeroy,
inadequate brakes, fine
suspended, and Bob Ellis, 19,
Rutland, and Knneth D.
Mohler, 3$, $10 and costs each
on vandalism charges.
Forfeiting bonds were
Willard H. Mohler, 23, Piney
Flat, Tenn., $25, splnmng tires;
JohnS. Cleland, 22, Langsville,
$30, Intoxication; Michael C.
Custer, 20, Pomeroy, $30,
failure to yield right of way,
and Jeffrey L. Zerkle, 19,
Cheshire, $30, spinning tires .

new cars."
WJISHING'ION - SEN. GEORGE S. Mt'(JOVERN, O.S. D.,
said today President ' Nixon "almost leaves us no allernattve
except to consider Impeachment" of him over the Water~ate
scandal.
Mc'Govern said continued refusal by the President to give
Senate and federal lnvostigators access to White House tape
recordings and documents bearing on Watergate "makes It very
hard for Congress not to give serious c'Onsldorntlon lo an lm.
peachmont proceeding."

w:ui un tht · IW S, IM of a
munlnltlloll llfC[Iilrc&lt;l by Mrs.
l•:lchllOr ThOI!lOS, director or
lito Motgs &lt;:ounty Council on
Agrng lind Mrs. Pearl
Welker who I• In charge
~~ thr ·owtly c-ouncil's rct&lt;rcd
senior
volun·
leer program, and on accompanying scraJ&gt;book of
slortes and photogrnplt~ from
'fhc Scnhncl pertaining to
,.mtor citizens' activttics.
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja, local

Back on jobs
Union workers returned to
their jobs this morning at the
James M. Gavin Plant ncar
Cheshire .
Some 3,400 craft workers
walked off their Jobs Tuesday
morning honoring strike signs
posted by members of Local
981 of the lnternntlonal
Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers.
Local 981 roproscnts some
330 members In the Newark·
Zunesvllle operating dJvislon
und lransmlsslon section of the
Ohio Power Company . Its
members l~ove been on strike
Hl nre July I.

••

Wright spoke.
Nearly 100 reporters and 200
spectators were jammed mto
the so-ealled Ceremomal Court
Room on the 6th floor of the
Federal Court House where
Strtca conducted the trial of the
onginal seven Watergate defendants last January
Many persons were unable to
get mto the room and stood
pattenUy outside, hoping for a
chance to get in when someone
left
In his opening ~rguments,
Wnght went to the heart of the
White House contention- that
the President, not the courts,
has the power to decode what
matenal may be made public.
"The special prosecutor
asked two things," Wright
said . "First that the court's
judgment be substttuted for the
President of the United Slates
on whether it is contrary to the
public interest to disclose hts
most privileged documents;
and secondly, 1f the court

HE'LL SURRENDER
TAOS, N. M. I UP[) - A
former New Orleans
policeman wanted on a
federal
warrant
for
threatening the llle or
President Nixon agreed to
surrender today to Secret
Service agents.
Edwin Michael Gaudet Jr.,
30, told a relative he would
surrender, ending an In·
lensive manhunt around a
commune near this northern
New Mexico community.

Bus times
'lt

announceo.

concludes the Prestdent has
erred 10 hts judgment to
wtthhold them, whether court
has the power of compulsory
process to compel him to
produce them.
"The stmple fact ~f history ts
that m the 184 years of the
repuhlic, no court has ever
'

been asked to do either thing."
Should the judge order Nixon
to pt·oduce the tapes, Wnght
satd, it would set a precedent
for the 400 other federal district
Judges mille country who could
rule in later rases that they had
the power to override a
prestdenhal claim of privUege.

Wright lnststed the President
has the constotut10nal authortty
to keep secret anything he
chooses "m the public tn·
teres!." Cox contended earlier
t~at "no man 1s above the law"
and that Ntxon must produce
evidence sought by the grand
jury.

Cox is seeking the tapes of
nine Watergate-related phone
calls or meetings Nixon had
with hts aides beginning three
days after the June 17, 1972,
bugging arrests at the Democratic National headquarters
in the Watergate complex
along the Potomac River.

Promotion set for bond issue
Mrs. Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
and Mrs. Harry Davts were
named co·chairwomen for
promotion of a one-half mill
bond tssue for retarded school
children in Meigs County at a
citizens meeting held at Trimty
Church, Pomeroy, Tuesday
ntght.
Mrs. Daniel Thomas, ad-

ministrator of the Meigs
Community School, opened the
citizens meeting, pomtmg out
the need for a modern, onefloor bmldmg for the retarded .
Bestdes classrooms, the
building would house a
sheltered workshop plus
facilittes for speech and home
training.
Mrs . l}alph Welker was
named to head the telephone
commtttee for the promotiOn of
the bond issue whlch would
provide $250,000 for the constructton of the hew building
and would be matched wtth an
equal amount by the sl&lt;lte.
Working wtth her will be Bel&lt;!
Beta
Chapter, Ohio E"ta Pht
The Metgs County Board of
CommiSSIOners has received Chapter and Xi Gamma Mu
an overpayment of $152,512 in
federal revenue sharmg funds
accordmg to a letter from
Graham W. Watt, director of
the Office of Revenue Shartng.
WASHINGTON (UP! ) To adjust the overpayment,
gasohne
station
the offtce wtll deduct $61,189 Many
from the county 's next operators plan to shut down
allocallon and the com- over the Labor Day weekend to
missioners will be required to protest the government's
return via check $91,323 Smce Phase IV prtce controls, and
ille funds received have not some may do tt as early as this
been spent only earmarked for weekend.
'!'he American Automobtle
various projects, the proposed
plans to remodel and renovate Association m a weekly survey
the Meigs County Courthouse of gasoline supphes satd today
the shutdowns probably would
will be carried out.
be
"widespread."
Tuesday the commissioners
"Although tt ts still uncerlam
resolved to create a samtary
sewage district to include all of how thorough area shutdowns
will be if they do occur, one
Salem Twp.
The commissioners also state retatl dealers association
adopted a resolution to adopt said ot was conftdent 60 per
fees for minor subdtvisions. cent of Pennsylvania's 10,000
The fee for application is $5 ; dealers would close on cue
for prelimmary plat approval, from the assoCiation," AAA
base charge $20, plus $2 per lot. satd in the report.

County

overpaid

Chapter of the Beta Sigma Phi
soronty and the Mtddleport
Chtld Conservation League.
Mrs. Charles Goeglein will
head the pubhclty for the
promotion with the motto
bemg, "I Care." Mrs. Harold
Sauer wlll be in charge of the
financial aspects of the
campaign and her committee
includes Mrs. Hugh Roush,

Mrs. Paul Karr, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Diddle and Mr. and
Mrs. George Skinner.
Mrs. Nan Moore will head
the speakers' bureau and will
be assisted by John Krawsczyn, Mrs. Harold Wolf, and
Mrs. Thomas.
The official kickoff date lor
the campaign will be o.ct. I.

Public meeting set
MASON - A public meeting be used, town council, decided
has been scheduled Sept. 6 at Monday mght.
7:30 p.m. in the Mason city
In other actions council:
building to discuss how
Employed Mrs. Clarence
revenue sharing funds should (Myrtle) McCloud as a full
time water clerk at a salary of
$400 per month.
Created a planmng commission to review and orgmate
progressive ideas, which may
include state or federal funds.
AAA satd its nationwide
- Heard a first reading of a
survey showed that gasoline
curfew ordinance "perl&lt;llning
dealer associations 11 in many
to child welfare."
slates and cities" were
- Agreed to send registered
organizing closings, "some as letters to property owners not
early as the coming weekend
complying with lot clearance
but most planned to comcide
with the long Labor Day regulations, stipulatmg that if
lots are not cleared within a
weekend.''
reasonable-time, the town wilt
The protest will be aimed at
have
this done at the owners'
preftt margins allowed under
expense.
Phase IV price controls.
Two contracts, one with
Petroleum prices have been
Boron Oil Company for
one of the chief l&lt;lrgels of the
gasoline
and another wilh
federal anti-inflation program.
Appalachian Poweo· Cotnpany,
The AAA said its 12th weekly
wer€' renewed.
survey, whlch checked 3,984
Approval was also gtven a
service stations across the
trailer permtt for Alvle Perky
country, showed a continued
and Mayor Ira Atkinson asked
shght tmprovement 10 gasoline
permission for bonding five
supplies.
Mason cittzens for emergency
pollee work.
Councilmen attending In
addition to Mayor Atkinson
were : George Ray Van Matre,
Robert Roach and Dayton
Raynes.

Gas shutdown planned

The schedule of the three
buses for the Meigs Common·
tty School was announced
today. Classes at the school,
located in Ruland, wtll slart on
Aug. 28. The morning
schedules: Bus No 2, driven
by Ahce Wolfe :
· Bashan at 8:10, Keno at 8.21,
Long Bottom at 8:29, Reeds·
ville at 8:37, Tuppers Plains at
8:52, Chester at 9:05, Five
Points at 9:09, Rock Spnngs at
9.15.
Bus No. I, Dee Brown .
Racme at 8·15, Syracuse at
One or ille oldest 4-H clubs 10
8:22, Batley Run at 8:40, Meigs County is the Better
Danville at 9· 05, Rutla11d at Liveslock
Dairy
club,
9:25 .
or·gantzed In 1943, or 30 years
Bus No.3, Jean Wood :
ago.Itspresentadvtsor (for six
Rt. 681 at 8:05, Alfred at 8:25, years ) Is Roy Holter of ncar
Bookmobile at 8:55, Pomeroy Five Potnts who was a charter
at9,Middlepot·tat9 ·10, Rl.l43 member ll is sponsored by the
at 0:17, Rutland at 9·25
Pomeroy Nattonnt Bank and
Landmark Stores
In this. ils 3oth year the club
won Its ftr~t Datry SweepCALLED TWICE
sl&lt;lkes Award . Points were won
The Mtddleport E·R squad
was called twice Tuesday for on grndes on projects, number
of cattle In the dairy projecl
Ronnie Waltors, Middleport,
and In lhe show, the rank In the
first to 313 North ~cond at 1.32
p.m. for Walters who Wtls Ill breed champi on classes,
nnd again 11 :48 p.m. to a showmanship places, u barn
,Middleport tavern for Walters . inspection over a three day
He was taken to Veterans period by different judges, fair
Memorial Hospital where he conduct, and sportsmanshtp.
There were 18 donors for
was u•cated and released.
money and halters. They were :
Ja ckson Production Credit ,
Meigs Branch Athens Co .
LOCAL TEMPS
Snvlngs
nnd Loan, FultonThe temperature in down.
1'hompson
Tractor Sa les,
town Pomeroy nt II a.m.
Wedncsdny was 70 degr·ces Formers Bunk and Savings
Co., Clllzons National Bnnk,
under sunny skies.
'

Better Livestock club has
its

I

'

greates~

of all years

Carnahan Auction Servtce, Jtm
Carnahan and Dan Smith,
Racme Home National Bank,
Elbcrfelds Department Store,
Sugar Run Flour Molls, Keith
Goble I'Ot'd, City Ice and Fuel
Co , Chester Twp. Trustees,
Art Orr, Charles BISsell, and
Dnvtd Koblent&gt;; Don Smtill,
COil 1\ techntcian; Centra l
Soya of Ohio (Gallipohs),
Pomeroy N~ttlonal Bank,
Leland Pat·ker, A. I. Service;
Modern Supply , a nd Ohio
Valley lnduslrles, Mmersville.
Winners of 1973 Dairy
Sweeps takes weo·e (rank,
points and prize ):
1st, Mark Mora, 471, $50 and
show halter.
2nd, Jan Holler, ~67, $40 and
show hal ter.
3rd, Dcmse Dean , 465, $30
and show halter
41h, Eddie Holte r, 41i4, $2$
ond show hailer
5th, Robin Wlndland, 457, $20
and show halter
6th, Alan Hollet·. 425, $15 und
show halter

7th, Patty Parker, 418, $10
and show halter.
8th, Janis Carnahan, 417, $10
and show halter.
9th, Patty Pulhns, 416, $10
anti shew halter.
lOth, Kathy Parker, 407, $10
and show halter.
lith, Tony Carnahan, 404, $10
and tie halter .
12th, Stephanie Radford, 393,
$10 and toe halter .
13th, Mary Mora, 391, $10 and
tie halter.
Tony Carnahan had highest
score on barn inspection for all
three days.
The club thanks everyone
who made the sweepstakes
pOSSible, especially Phil and
Ann Radford, who helped
contact domn·s.
To·ophies in the bettor
livestock d"Jry show were won
by Denise Dean ; Best of Show,
wllh ~ Holstein cow, and by
Jants Carnahan, Reserve Best
of Show champion, with u
Guernsey cow.

•

DIVORCES ASKED
Two suits £or dtvorce have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court ancl
another was granted. Filing for
divorce were Sylvia Carman,
Pomeroy, Rt. 2, against Ivan
Carman, same address, and
Jeanie B. Blake, Long Bottom,
Rt. I, a minor, by her mother
Eileen Bahr, against Ricky Lee
Blake, Reedsville Rt. I, each
on charges of gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty .
Janke Mees wns granted a
dtvorce from Jim Mees on
charges of extreme cruelty, ·
PLAN SOCIAL
An lee cream social wlU be
held at 6:30p.m. Friday, at the
Rock Sprlni!It United !&gt;lethodiJt
Church with proeeL'&lt;ls to go Into
the building lund.
ME~:T'fONlGHT

Parents ol all pupils cnterlng
)(lndergarten In the Sout~rn
Local SchOQI Olalrlct thl.t fill
are to meet at 8 thla evenlnc In
the cafeteria ol the hlah tc:hool
In Racine.

•

�r

•
,•.·

2 :... The Dally Sentinel, Muldleport-Pomero)', 0 ., Aug. 22, 1973

···~···-;:~ . ·X.

BY JACK O'BRI.-\N
NO PANS FOR

..

Nixon Address

Thoughts

Lot of questions
still unanswered
In his second televised address to the nauon on the subject
of Watergate, President Richard M :\ixon nell her came out
fighting hard against his critics. as some had expected him
to. nor was he contrite ar.d penitent. as others had predicted .
Mr . Ni xon s truc k a dispass io nate. almos t emotio nless
course so mew here tiet.ween these extremes. Beca use he did .
the effecti veness o( his defense - and he is on the defens•ve
~ may not ha ve been a.s great as it might have been.
On balance. America ns .are left pretty much where they
have been for months - uncertain. unco nvinced. unsatisfied
as to the real truth about Watergate.
For those who believe that the best interests of the nation
necessitate giving the Pr~sident the benefit of every possible
doubt. there are a few thmgs to cling to.
On the most important point or all , his own involvement in
the affa ir. Mr. Nixon stated as unequivoca bly as he could
that he neither knew about nor condon ed the break-in of
Democratic headquarters. or the subsequent cover-up. That
was and is, he said . " the siinple truth'. "
As he emphasized, after weeks of hearings by the Senate
select co.mmittee and millions or words. or testimony by dozens or wunesses . there is nothing to contradict him save the
" impressions" of one witness. former White House co unsef
John Dean .
The Pres ident also went further than he had before in
acknowledging - and deploring - the fact that certain illegal or at best questionable things had been done. These included not only the Watergate break-in itself but a whole
spectrum of activities that ha\•e come to be embraced by the
term ·'Watergate."
·
He pledged to be more vigilant in the future to insure that
actions taken in defense of the freedom or Americans do not
in fact infringe upon those freedoms .
Nevertheless. any number or questions or allegations or
susp1c10ns remain. Although in a companion written statement Mr. . NIXon noted. for example, the testimony ol
forme r actmg F'BI D•rector L. Patrick Gray that he warned
the President as ea rly as the summer of 1!172 that some'of
his aides were attempting to ·'mortally wound " him . it still
•s not clear. how such a massive undertaking as the Watergate break-m and cover-up, InVOlving so many people and
such large sums of money, could have been carried out simplr by overzealous lower-echelon White House employes and
· Without the President having a glimmering of what wa s
going on until last spring.
The President's effort to link illegal acts by administration
subordinates to the antiwar violence of the 1960s was unper. suasive, as was his defense of his refusal to release tapes of
• White House conversations relating to Watergate .
Surely there is some compromise solution that would not
make public necessarily confiden tial presidential matters,
yet would allow the Senate committee to adjudge some of
the allegations 1t has heard . And su rely such a compromise
would not " cripple" all future presidents. Indeed . the presidency has already been cri ppled .
President Nixo n asked the help and supjJort of the American people to get the country out of tbe "mire " of Watergate
and to_stop dwelling on the past so that it could again address 1tself to the great goals before it. But the failure to
attain at least one of those goals the President mentions " prosperity without war or inflation " - has probably contnbuted as much to the recent drastic decline of confidence
in him as has Watergate.
Whether a rever!"'! ofthat decline will be shown by lorlhcommg polls remams to be seen. Whether Americans can or
want to put Watergate be hind them and to what extent
President Nixon has rallied or can rally them to that desire,
remams perhaps the b1ggest unanswered question of all .

A thought for the day :
American writer Bret Harte
said , "One big vice in a man is
apt to keep out a great many
smaller ones."

TIIISPUV'SWF..NDY
NEW YORK ~ Crown Matrimonial" at
U1e
Haymarket
in
London
is
a
marvelously adroit play, a poignant comedy,
gnpping In a fashion anyone knowing what its
plot is about beforehand might doubt; much all
we doubted bclore it opened that "1776," a
musictll based on the signing of the Declaration
ol lndepen!lence could ha,ve much in it that could
·grab anyone's full attention .
The new London play is simply about the
romanee and wedding of the Duke and Duchess
of Windsor - told from the point of view of the
Royal Family. Its major points might seem a
cinch to get blunted ; lbey aren 't. In fact, it's a
rich, deep, sharp rationalization of .vasl family
disappointment and frustration as the once and
tranSiently future king turns his romance Irom a
British disgrace and scandal into a touching
portrait o( a man insllfficient to his royal
family 's traditions because of his terribly true
loyally to the woman he loved.
It's a remarkable play - in which the
Duchess of Windsor is abient; its stately theme
told in warmly understandable intimacy, scaling
the glamor down to homely levels managing to
reduce, or expand if you will, the famous public
\'(lntrove.rsy to persuasive clarif)cation.
The play certainly is IBilhioned deep in
hypotheses of assorted sorts; the dialogue must
be approximated ; let's face it, gues$ed-at. Still it
has the sound ring of more than apocryphal
observation, for many reasons, primarily the
manner in which that fine protean actress
Wendy Hiller gently attack the personality and
;tubbom pride of the late Queen Mary.
Miss Hiller is no stranger to splendid · performances, but her Queen Mary may be her
finest. She looks 8/ltoundingly. like the indomitable grandn10ther of the present Queen
Elizabeth, has mastered all her ·most minute
mannerisms including the bit of a stammer, the
way she palled her hands nervously, above all th
magnificent private as well as public pride with
which she rejected the Prinee of Wales and then
ber son-king's frustrated intentions to make
Wallis Warfield Simpson his queen. The rare
statuesQue quality Queen Mary brought to her
austere
public
moments
isn 't
lost
for
all
th
credible
intimacy
of
the scenes, all set in Queen Mary's

~;o'
N

l:~·

By Bruce Biossat

~~

WASHINGTON !NEA l
One way to view President Nixon s lat es t comments about
Wate rgate is to accept at face value his a ssertions lhat he
had no prior knowledge of the matter . took no part in and
knew nothing of the cover·up. and

n~ither

authorized nor
f~hion .

the

listen ing Amer ican cit iz en mu st neces sarily bru s h aside
som e \le ry se rious questions which Mr . Nixon still leaves

unanswered.
Th e most critical of these surround s · his conversation on

July 6. t972 - just 19 days after the Watergate break-in with L. Patrick Gray . then acting director of !he FB I.
The President ha s told us anew that on that date he instructed Gray "to press forward vigorously with his own
investigation " into Watergate. This and his subsequent ap_pointment or Gray to be full FBI director suggests strong
cortfid.ence In the man.
·
But Gray has testified under oath before the Ervin Senate
Watergate committee that 0 n the aforementioned July 6 he
warned Mr . Nixon that ce rtain White House aide s were
trying to " mortally wound " the President by interfering with
both the FBI and the c.hief ov.erseas security agency, the
CIA .
Gray sa id the President made no specific response to his
warmng then. Nor . has he done so in any public utterance
since . (n his newest ·speech and an accompa nying 2,000-word

Here's the obligatory finesse

••

•

Quv.

&gt;

•

,

I

I Helen Help

Still no response
on Gray's warning ~ ·

enco uraged any illegal "campaign tac tics.' '
Yet to take m the Presiden t's message in this

Buckingham Palace sitting room. wh••t'l'
problems of stale were redu&lt;-ed to ftUttlly kl'"
Miss Hiller'5 Glory Increases lll•rt•lll • •V~t•
from hl'r great earlier days wheft Hh&lt;t W~ ~
George Bemard S.baw's favoritu herohMJ , ~k
Saint Joan and Ellla Doolittle, llCri!Olillll\1
..,leeted by the brilliant old curmudgeon ; l•l 'tl l~l
prouder today athis superb casting ability, hu1'11
wih the gift o( prescience, for in her HenUy tJIIit•l
fashion, Wendy Hiller indeed today may ~u th~
First Lady of all theater.
Peter Barkworth plays the future uud 1111Ht
king with charm and graceful authority d~!Jlltu
coosiderable inability to look like th~ Duko OX•
'cept in coloring. His nearly anu:image sho1t\dn't
have distracted us but it did; the Ottke Wll~
slighter, not so highly energetic, a lasclnuth'!l
royal gentleman who moved with more dlgnlllc&lt;l
and vaguely phlegmatic pace lhim &amp;rkworlh
affected ; but it's a quibble only. Had we nov •r
met the Ottke and spoken with him occasionally
perhaps the apocrypha might have been enough
for us to suspend disbelief.
The rest of the CliSI was superb, Miss Hiller
clear through the effective minor roles, Joan
Haylhorne notably as Mary's lady in waiting,
Andrew Ray as the Duke of York who became
king pn Edward's abdication, and Amanda Rlss
as the present queen's molher.
·
"Crown Matrimon.ial" also is a triumph for
author Royce Ryton: it is his very first play
produced in the West End, though he's written
for radio and TV and for off-West End as far
away as Berlin ; he has a magnificent future if
this warm, lucid, decent, dignified and
enlightening play is any sign.
Playwright Rytoo 's gifts of understanding
and graceful details, of artful construction, rich
and deep characterization and fascinating storytelli ng are superb herein. Queen Mary is perfect;
the quickly defined and implied persona I
character of Edward as Prince, then King and
later as Du)!.e is a gem of swift dissection of a
man more of personality than royal character.
His playboy leanings are suggested gently and
clearly without reducing him to a raffish cartoon; and while painting the continuing declining
portrait of the king 011 his way down, he doesn't
discard him to degradation, and his unr'equired
royal ambitioos are not given a galvanic
destroying wallop. The Duke keeps a dignity in
familial and national defeat perhaps he didn't
quite attain in real life.

o:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.::::::::::::::x:::::::::P"..::::::::::~::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::S::::::::~;:

Nixon's ·Watergate

brief, there is no reference to Gray's warning.
Now. the picture the President freshly paints of himself is
of a man continuously concerned not only in a '' thorough and
aggressive investigation'' of the Watergate break-in ; but of
the prospect that anyone in either his re-election comm1ttee
or his While House en tourage was involved,
·
He says he was repeatedly reassured by ali those he asked
that "no persons" other than the seven men indicted in the
Watergate break-in were involved.
Most specifically and most sweeping in its effect , the
President says that on Sept. 12, 1!172, Attorney General Richard Kie•nd•en st told him . the full Cabinet , senior White
House staff members and certain legislative leaders that no
"higher-ups " in the Wh ite House or the campaign committee
were •mplicated.
Mr. Nixon says also .that he had his personal counsel. John
Dean, monito rin g FBI and Justice Department. inquiries, and
that on Sept. 15 Dean told him there was " no reason " to believe that any others but the indicted seven were guilty of
Watergate involvement.
. The Preside_nt s_ays flatly he trusted the agencies conducl!ng the mvest•gatwn and believed the reports he was gelling
~ and so did not believe eontrary newspaper accounts.
Nevertheless, without any imputation of guilt directed at
~ NEWSPAPER £N TEAPR!SE ASSk
Mr . N1xon himself . the listening citizen may be legitimately
puzzled today - after numerous presidentl3! statements as to wh y he never asked L . Patrick Gray who he had in
WIN AT BRIDGE
mind when , on July 6, 1972, he said White House aides were
attempting to hurt him mortally.
In another report we'll e&lt;amine other questions the President's commen t raises. Not least is why he now believes that
John Dean , the young lawyer whose counsel he took as valid
r - - --------, many bnage players know it . at
lea st throu~h this March 21 , should he the one witness
NORTH
South is in . a pretty sound . before the Ervm group to "implicate" him in Watergate .
+ Q8
four-spade contract. He has to
!NEWSPAPER EHJERPIME AS S ~; i
9' AK 974
lose a tnck to the ace of clubs
t Q3
aN&lt;l barn ng a very bad trump
The Almanac
+ Q8S 2
b1 eak will untv lose two trum p
·
·
club
on
a
high
heart
an
d
co
ntricks
By
Uni
ted
Press Internallonal
WEST
EAST
cedes
a
trick
to
the
club
ace.
+ A4
+ J i0 9
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 22 ,
However. th ere is no ha r m
What about three no-trump? the 234tll day of 1!173 with 1.31 to
9' 652
9'Q J t08
makmg an ext ra tnck if 1! can
t JI0~85
t7 62
be scored an d the obligat ory Declarer would still try I he ob- ·rollow .
4 1094
4 AJ3
fi nesse will br ing it in thi s ligatory fine sse, but against a
The moon is between Its last
heart lead would have trouble
time .
..
SQUT H tDI
+ K7 6531
South win s the diamond in collecting more than nine quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
9' 3
h1s own hand and leads a spade tricks and no chance to score
11.
t AK4
toward dummy's queen. IL
Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
CNEWSPAPID=I EN T fFI~RI S E' ASSN I
4 K76
hold s the tri ck and he teads·a
The evening stars .are Venus
spade back. East plays either
No&lt;)h Soutb vulneraMe
and Jupiter
!Oor jack. It doesn't matter
w..t North Eo11 S.•lb the
Those bo;n on this date a
which beca use South simply
under
the sign of Leo.
re
plays a low.spade.
.
The bidding has been:
Pau %
.,
P;w 2+
French cotnposer Claude DeHe ka, noth ing to lose wlth Wti l
Norlh
fo:a~l
Pass ~+
Pan . 4+
Sl'luth
lh•s pla y If West holds both
Pan
PM..
P.ass
1+
Pas!!
34
hussy
was born Aug. 22, 1862.
m•s~
•ng tru mps he Is s ure or Pass
3•
Pass
4!\' T
On this da Y1n h'181ory ..
Qptnmgl ••J- t J
two trump tncks If E;ast held f'a..;s
b¥
Pa ~!5
In 1651, the U.S. yacht
'
!he trump ace he wo uld ha ve
Vov.South. hold
Amerl~a beat the British craft
By o... ald 1r JaiJIK la&lt;:ob) uu d 11 ~ capture the queen
+!I 8 G4 ! 9'! t A 4 4 A K J ! 7 Aurora off England to win ihe
. Agains t the actual holding
Whal do you do noW?
Silver Trophy. The race sin
- ~:Jatary IIAHsuhould Westmuat play the ace willy- A- Bid llvt no-lrump. You inl.end
ce
1111 c
a1110111 •Iement.ary nilly . l.ater on South picksup to ~t.amblt' on •e., en if your p.arcner has been known as the America
plaJtlllll,it It dollblM if very Eaat'slasttrump ; di!!Cardsone lltoWI l•o 11J1111.

•

THIN6S

Voice; along Br'Jf7ay

"Let's Throw Him a Bone! "

-

U·s. . .

By Helen Bottel

. -

::::

,•,•.

'!~

If

f
r.=

:::

3 - The Daily S.•ntinel, MldcUe(XIrt-l'omcroy, u.,

...

Au~ . 22, t97:1

STORE HOURS
TUES. - THRU
SATURDAY.
1 O'CLOCK TIL 9
SUNDAY 12-6
CLOSED

ttV t' l\111-&lt; 0 1 AHTREI
Ito•\ HI !1\l '~l\l oll I '1111 ~ J•M I lltl.II'J'J lllg
II '~ I; )II j' ''l•'l 1 k
\II in plliii&lt; Iilii" ~~JoJf_. the
pUflli'' h\~\1 \ \'I\ 1'~\ lh'\~H~\ ·~ tu \
ltll~\11\ ~~~~~~~~~~ · 1 " 1 ~~~:~~II 11•~•1 iitllllll~Willl•y•..
rl•l hW•
'
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!'tiS, ·h\11HdW•1h'&lt;l 1'11'1 1\ llt lj•ll'' , i l,ldi! ll !lti•~•JI'.4 · 1.
~~ ~~~~~II\\ ~~~~ IIIIII' (II~\,.,, \l~ij 1111111•1111 \I
\hi!
l •• 1"'-- &gt;
•....,.
1111 tl~•l\1 l"i' &gt;•'1111' lj.IHII.\ lih•ll•,
·111'11IIIII vo o u n~ 'r" ............. u
It
It
1'\ I l' h l'loi U\\\~'''.• l\\ ~11\ \' ~~Ill I li&lt;lt'llt llilfiiiHI I'V.ill'li\V•IIInllllg
"''''' \'~" 111•1 fll'~ll '"'~'"'" " ' 1111 wllllt ~~~ 11&lt;• llke a .ue
1111~ "'11'\ll'li&gt;l\1 I \'1~~ 11&lt;1• \'1~1\\1 Ill' IV
.
wl11n~r 1
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It ,, " 11 1 ~ 1 11 wllll~&lt; ~ ~ie
'1'\lt•~hill\' ~~ l'l'U·II "\ \IIU\~·· Ill " '
.
j I . ••
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'
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lfi!•UIOI' et II' u"'
l'ililll'l\ H• ~~~ ~rh&gt;l '" '"' ' ' ' 11
11 r ;JlJ J;!ll!fl:wi!e •Can
I .I If 1ft''"'' ~1\1~\1~1\,1 t\1\il' 111'1 ~~~ llll iiV
•
-~~~·k' !11\l~t.· 11\1 11"•1
~~~~I ' Ilh•~tl
~rlt-f' I I• IIIJ()(IIC
. d ... J ·~ry
.
I IIIll Jl'll"l'lllll
w
"'
'J'IJ~ 1\lt\~ \t 11\l\1111 ~ \ I
' n
"
.
Hll"ri 1'\111 wll\&lt;lirl" lUI ,-,, Nt"' · 4
,
•~
Ollll';l\wt Uml 1 lh·fl @" &amp; ( I \~ llmnll~, J·, l viR f"tes-, , and
'
111" •·k l'l'tl ll('iu n\lv ttppear on the
tho Al'l'lllillltl 11111~ \• tum11·s" " 1•··
PBS ·
1 • ;' ,
sctt;!lll t\"'''''11
'"'~'II ••1 Ill•• kt\1 111' ulrl ' 1'!1-'h~llJie I'" I'"~
.
' .
II l '111"11•• All tlll'li-11 ilil! • OWl .,.e J.uo
dt1s1xtn•h' il' tr) Itill 11• ~~ n"· " '
•
look \ltll')' · V111')' P\'\IH\1 ~~ ~ ~

I' ''

, '

.

l••

.

AT THE M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER

I I I
u111,,tlvw t•1111

1\00llll'l' !1\lllf&gt;''Jli'l'~
u f!wmi•r shady ~dy ,.ho
ulrou&lt;ly llns 11111111&gt; h f•~·htll\' ~~ kls~ IIIHI·ldlwukr• It big m show
buslnoss 'l
, • . th , . rii!Wer iJ yes
AAnin ·- wllh 01'1.'11•··~·~·t lllltM
t IllJIUI1 c u
. .
Xavlorn llulllll\\h't\ tl!\' 111U't'i&lt;·lltllilli"'Ostltute who earned a
mint with n cOII!llt• of l•·~t.,.~·llt••·~ ul!t•\lt lou!' •unorous.adl·.cnlures,
stuff Umt struck ltli' u&gt; M 'Y d\lst· til hlll'ii~·•JrO poruography (no,
! only r nd p11rtof (Ill\' ;1f Jltt't n 1, 1\(1\1 fuHdrs !JCrHI'if anothl'r kind
of entertnlncr.
And. who's lo ~uy Rh t''~ \HVl\f: 1 1ll'l' sonn4uHI-clarn:e albwn,
released In (;muulu whrnlJ, S, drlliN·s wt' I'C w~ ry, qwckly sold
out 50,000 coplosn ud w~n "!«•lid ~vlli " stnlus north of the border.
Now the 11 lbumls bo•ln~o: Jll'l'l"'~'''\l fur release do~n here. .
Well, at Jcnst. 1 kiiiiW mw ftunlb· which won t be buymg
Xaviera 's I~ tosl dlsplny Q[ t" lt·nl , i(. l!KI\'\'d, she hus any.
I I I

I've given up on "Music Count ry," tit~ Nashville show that is
replacing Dean Martin bl'i ~fly . I will not. ropeut not, watch this
monstrosity again.
The producers continue to tnke top urtists and the great
Nashville hits of the pnsl few yeu rs. (•mbnrrusslng the mustciiiS
and butchering the songs.
oh. each show has had 11 fl'" rrclceming moments, but
something snapped a week or so ago when they.cut Tom T. Hall
In the middle of his better songs. nnd did a rerun (a ref'\ln , get
this, In a seven-week series ) of OIIC artist performing a .;or-rent
~lt To heck with it.
•
+++
''
Speaking of Tom T. Hall, he appeared last weekend at a folk
festival at Glenville State College, not too far from here, but I
didn 't know about it in time to make plans to·lJttend. He's one of
the very good country writers, and performs in noteworthy
fashion, too.
+++
Returning to my starting place, PBS' fall line-up , I note that
a series of the epic "War and Peace" is on the schedule.
Produced in America1 No. Russia ' No. It's another o( those
British imports, and just judging by the past, should be excellent.

OPENS .THURSDAY AT 1 O'CLOCK
SALAD BOWLS
,..G-LA_ss_Es_ _ _4_F_oR_s_lo.....
o CEREAL BOWLS
CHAMPAGNE

PLASTIC
INFLATABLE

..

IDEAS

YOUR CHOICE

12" PILLOWS
16" BALLS
12".TIGERS -·

OVEN PROOF
WHITE

VEGETABLE

WITH COUPON

OR

FREE

SOUP BOWL

11 OZ. ANCHOR HOCKING

SMOKE GLASS

ASST. OF OTHER
REG. 88~ NOW ONLY

LIMIT 1 PER COUPON

8"

16 OR OLDER ONLY

EXP. 8-26

EACH

Tbe Miss, Mrs. or MB. Debate
Earlier this sununer I asked for youmte on the Ms. vs . Mrs .
or Miss controversy.
Predictably, the traditional "Miss" and "Mrs "won, but the
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 22, i973
count was closer than you might expect: 61 percent for Mrs. or
6 : 00 ~ News, Weather, Sports 3, 4. B. 10, 15 ; Tru fh or Con seq. 6;
Miss, and 39 percent for the new Ms., with several adding tbey
. Sesa me St. 20 ; Societies in Transiti on 3:3 .
really pre(erred no title at all - "Just call me Jane, or if you • 6:30 - NBC News 3, .4; News B. 10: Sesa me St. 20; I Dredm or
want to be lonna!, Jane Doe."
Jeannie 13; Lil ias. Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:00 - Truth or Co nseq. 3; Beai the Clock 4 ; Ncws 6. 10; What's
Here are some of the better arguments :
My Line 8; Anything You Can Do 13; Elec. Co. 20 ; Sa int 15;
Book Beat 33 .
... If women must proclaim their marital status, why not
7:30 - Episode: Action 33 ; The J·udge 10; Beatthe Clock 13 ; To
men ? You can call me "Mrs." when you call my husband "Mrd."
Te ll the Truth 6; How Do Your Chi ldren Grow? 20; Police
(short for "Married .")~ MS. RILEY
Surgeon 3, 4; Protectors 8.
8:00 - Adam-12 3. 4, 15;-Sonny &amp; Cher 8, 10; What's ihe Big
+++
Idea? 33; Love Thy Neighbor 6, 13; Meas ure For Measure 20·.
... "Miss" has sweetness, class and dignity; it is a definite
8:30 - Madigan 3, 4,; Movie "Goodnight, My Love" 6, 13:
person word. I don't like "Mrs." which is one step more in
Baseba ll 15.
redudng us to nonentities. It has a sad sound, like a sad ending ...
9:00 - Musical Encounter 20, 33 ; Dan August 8, 10.
9:30 - Man Builds. Man Destroys 20, 33.
a sound ollizzliilg.out -Mzzz ... - MISSS.G. ·
IO:OD
- Cannon 8; Owen Marshall 6. 13; News 20; World
t++
University Games 3, 4; Marian &amp; Jimmy McPartland 33.
... According to -etiquette, a divorced woman is still "Mrs." 11 :00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
(or was until " Ms. " came aloog ). When you are rele81led from 11 :30 - John ny Carson 3, 4, 15; Dick Cavetl6, 13; Come To the
prison, alter having paid your debt to society, you aren't
Fair 4; Movies "Side Street " 8; " Blood &amp; Sand" 10.
·
required to wear your prison number, or sign it after your name 11 : 45 - Joh nny Carson 4.
1:00 - Man from UNCLE 4; News 13.
as though to tell the world, ''Once I made a mistake." I'd take
2:00 - News 4.
·
back my maiden name, but it's too much hassle, changing acTHURSDAY, AUG. 12 , 1973
counts, etc. and there's my daughter to consider. So I .settle for
6: 00 - Sunrise Sem inar 4; Sacred Hea rt 10.
"Ms." - DIVORCED AND GLAD
6:15 - ·Farm Report 13.
6:25 - Pau l Harvey 13.
+++
6:45 - Corncob Rport 3.
... I'm a man who prefers Mills or Mrs., so l'U know where I
6:30
- Columbus Today 4: Bibl e Answers 8; Amei ca's
stand. Messing around with a Mrs. can be dange rous. - JULES
Problems 10; Patte rns tor Living 13,'
+++
6:45 - Corncob Reporl 3.
7: 00 - Today 3, 4,15; News6, 8, 10; Fl lntstones 13.
... There is no .law in our state which requires a woman to
- ~om per Room6 ; Rocky &amp; Bul lwinkle 13.
7:00
take her husband's name when they marry. Since men don't lose
8:00 - Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; New Zoo Rev ue 13; Sesame St. 33;
their identity al the altar wby should I? - MS. JONES
Lassie 6
8: 30 - Ja ck Lalanne 13 ; New Zoo Revu e 6.
MARRIED TO MR. SMITH
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue IS; Ben Casey 13 ; Peyton
+++
Place 13; Capl.~angaroo 8; Fri endl y Junct ion 10· AM 3·
... I'm proud to be the Mrs. of my beloved Mr. - 46 YEARS
Mister Roberts 33 ; Brad)l Bunch 6; Mov ie 8.
'
'
MARRIED
9 : 30 ~ T~ Tell the Truth 3; Peyton Place 13; Wild, Wild West.6; ·
Electn c Company 33 .
• +++
10:00
-;- Dick Van Dyke 13; Dinah Shore 3. 15&gt;Jo ker's Wild 8. JO;
' ... I prefer " Ms ." to keep 'em guessing. - WIDOWED
Lll•as, YO&lt;Ja &amp; You 33.
+++
10:30 - Baffle Gamel, 4,1 5; Mike Douglas 6; 11 0,000 Pyramid 8
10; Split Second 13; Living 33.
'
... I abhor " Ms ." as much as I dislike "committeeperson,"
I
1:00
--;~ambit
B
.
10
:
'Password
13;
W
iza
rd
at
Odds
3.
4.
IS
:
"chairperson," etc. When mail comes to me addressed "Ms." I
So~ 1 e t1 es m Trans1tlon 33.
.
refuse it . - MRS. T. C.
1I: 30 - Love of Life B. 10: Holl ywood Squares 3 4 IS· Brady
Bunch JJ ; Episode Action 33: eowllng 6.'
' ' '
+++
I I : 55 ~ CBS News 8; Dan 1mel' s World 1o.
... Tilles are the expression of respect to the individual. 12:00 - Jeopardy J, 15; Bob Braun's 50-50 Clu b 4; News 10 13 8 ·
Password 6.
'
Referring to the woman in tenns of her relationship to a man ~
12:30
3
W's3,
15;
Spill
Second6
;
Seilf
chtor
Tomorro
wS
10
or non-relationship as the caJJe may be - takes her personhood
12:55 - NB C News 3. 15.
' .
away. It's time women realized their worth. - FEMALE NON1:00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green Ac res 10: Nol For
APPENDAGE
. Women Only 15 ; Sewing Skills-Tai loring 33; Joker's Wild 8.
I. 30 - As the W?rld Turns 8. 10: J On A Matc h J , 4 15; Our
+++
Street 33: Leis Make A Dea l 6. 13.
... I prefer "Mills," so that interesting men will be more
2:00 ~ Days ot Ou r Lives 3 4, 15; Guid ing Light 8 10 ·
interested in ME. - WOULD RA TilER MIX THAN FIGHT
: Masterpiece Thea tre 33 : Newlv wed Ga me 6, 13.
' '
2.30Another
W
orld
J,
4.
15
;
General
Hosplla
l
6,
1)
;
Price
Is
+++
R•ght 8, 10 ; Musical Encounter 33.
·
..I think " Ms." was created for the Angry Woman - the one
3:30 - Return to Peylon Pla ce 3. 4, 151 One Lif e to Ll:.o 6 13·
who is unhappily single or Wlhapplly married. My marria~e has
Secre t Storm 101 Ph il Don.ahuc 41¥alch Game 73 8; Time tof
, Timothy 33.
never meant beiilg restrained, h!!mpered or "unllberated," but
4 : 00 ~ Mr. Cartoon 3; Love, Amerlcn n Styl e 13· Sesame St 33 •
only "enhanced" as a whole person. ~ MRS. FOREVER
. Somerset 15 ; Movie " The Lillie Fug itive" Ia.
· '
+++
4. 30 ~ Petticoat Junction 3 ; Mcrv Grill In 41 Abiloll &amp; Costello 8 ;
My Little Marg ie IS; F Troo p 6: Dok torl13
... AB a busin...,rnan, I was using "Ms." In letter salutations
5: oo ~ Mister Rogers 20, 33; Bonao11a 3 ; Hmel 8 · fll g Volley 6 ;
long bclore it became a cauae. When women sign themselves
Western Star Theatre IS
'
" Mary Smith" - no UUe ~ it's the only safe way to go. _
5:30 - Elec . Co. 33 ; Gomor Py le .13: Hodgopodge Lodge 20 :
Beverly Hillbillies 8: Trai ls West tS· Dick Von Dyke , . ·
EXECUTIVE
.
Electr ic Co. 33 .
·
'
+++
6:0MOI-I News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 ; rrulh or Conscq, 61 So some Sl. 70 ;
... I prefer "Mrs."becaUBe I am proud lhata man has chosen
. estones of PrO&lt;jress 33 1 ABC Nows 13.
me to be his lifetime mate and I want everyone to know I wear
6. 3COBS~'BC News.3. 4 15; I Dream of Jon nnlo IJ ; A~ C ill ws 6;
.
..ews 8, 10, Lilias, Yoga and Yov JJ.
the UUe as I would a crown. "Ms." denotes nolhl!!gness. _ MRS.
l .OOT - Truth or Conseq . 3; Be&amp;l the Clock , . Course of Qc
S.C.K.
imes 33; When My Line 8: News 6: Ei~c. Co ~o · •ol's
. Make A Deal 13; Ca ll qt lho Wosl )5.
· ' ~
++,+ ,
7 3
1
... My husband owns me by law . I ve been compelled 1o take
· 1~";""1 ~1°~ t;'$~d Tq~orcs 3; To Telll ho Truth 6; Wild Kingdom
his name, his credit. rating, h!J l.n.!ultlng remarks. I need
13 ; l1elp Wan¥.:? l 3o.ur ~ ~ L• HIH J Zoom 10 : oo~t lh Clock
a.
8:00PI ~ hMod Sq Vfld 13, •61 assle
S?mething to call my own. "Ms." gives me. at least a Utile InTho Wtiltons a. 10; lronalde ], 4 Il l
. •Y ouse New York Bl011rohy ?0, 33.
'
divlduallty. - MSFORTUN!tJ!+
9 . ~F~ Good Vlbraltons from Control PMk 61 13; MOvie&gt;
car 51rlk~ s Ou t" 81 " rhn ergo nl" 10
· 'f'1es e1'the r a wea 1thy, haughty career
... To me, "Ms. " s1gm
~ : 30 - Just J nTZ ?0, 33.
·
1
·
ld
ld
ho
do
't
t
woman or an o ma w
esn . wan anyone to know her
A~~s~c Co~ntry 3, •t, II; All Anwrlrnn I Oill lly 1'1; Nows
• w• poclnl 6, 13, Un n dr~ .t lv n! .t
man less status. ~ MRS . AVE.RAGE WOMAN
11 .. 00 -' "e
.,. ws 3, 4,6,9, 13, 15 ,
11 :30,.... Johnn_y Carson 3. 4, IS1 Jat k Pe •.r 6, IJ1 Como to ltto ~lr
,
,.
+++
. 34 • Movie• The Rose Tn lloo" 81 OM lrl1ol Tomor rt~w 10.
... Ms. sounde like the buulng of an trued, which Ia what
"
· .5- Movie " Wives &amp; Lov rl " o
·
these llberaUonlats are, buzzing around trying to change our
1
HS
Johnny
CersQn
A
·
God-given privilege to be protected by men. ~ AGAINST TilE
I:OO - Man Irom UN CL' dl Nowt 1 ~
MIZ-BlZ
2:00 - New1 4.

Television Log

1

THOUSANDS
OF
GLASSWARE
&amp;
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EACH

STEM
GLASSES_

LAZY
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ANCHOR HOCKING

24 PC. SET

•

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129.95

8 10-0Z. GLASSES, 8 TUMBLERS

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STAND
BOWL
18 CUPS
18 HOLDERS
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SET

WITH GLOBE

LARGE BOW~ SERVER,
6 SALAD BOWLS

IN
COLORS

$289

•1
\

69 SET

SHAKERS

99~ET

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WARE

EA.

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PLATES, BOWLS

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$

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WITH LIDS

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WITH
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LARGE ASST, OF

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�r

•
,•.·

2 :... The Dally Sentinel, Muldleport-Pomero)', 0 ., Aug. 22, 1973

···~···-;:~ . ·X.

BY JACK O'BRI.-\N
NO PANS FOR

..

Nixon Address

Thoughts

Lot of questions
still unanswered
In his second televised address to the nauon on the subject
of Watergate, President Richard M :\ixon nell her came out
fighting hard against his critics. as some had expected him
to. nor was he contrite ar.d penitent. as others had predicted .
Mr . Ni xon s truc k a dispass io nate. almos t emotio nless
course so mew here tiet.ween these extremes. Beca use he did .
the effecti veness o( his defense - and he is on the defens•ve
~ may not ha ve been a.s great as it might have been.
On balance. America ns .are left pretty much where they
have been for months - uncertain. unco nvinced. unsatisfied
as to the real truth about Watergate.
For those who believe that the best interests of the nation
necessitate giving the Pr~sident the benefit of every possible
doubt. there are a few thmgs to cling to.
On the most important point or all , his own involvement in
the affa ir. Mr. Nixon stated as unequivoca bly as he could
that he neither knew about nor condon ed the break-in of
Democratic headquarters. or the subsequent cover-up. That
was and is, he said . " the siinple truth'. "
As he emphasized, after weeks of hearings by the Senate
select co.mmittee and millions or words. or testimony by dozens or wunesses . there is nothing to contradict him save the
" impressions" of one witness. former White House co unsef
John Dean .
The Pres ident also went further than he had before in
acknowledging - and deploring - the fact that certain illegal or at best questionable things had been done. These included not only the Watergate break-in itself but a whole
spectrum of activities that ha\•e come to be embraced by the
term ·'Watergate."
·
He pledged to be more vigilant in the future to insure that
actions taken in defense of the freedom or Americans do not
in fact infringe upon those freedoms .
Nevertheless. any number or questions or allegations or
susp1c10ns remain. Although in a companion written statement Mr. . NIXon noted. for example, the testimony ol
forme r actmg F'BI D•rector L. Patrick Gray that he warned
the President as ea rly as the summer of 1!172 that some'of
his aides were attempting to ·'mortally wound " him . it still
•s not clear. how such a massive undertaking as the Watergate break-m and cover-up, InVOlving so many people and
such large sums of money, could have been carried out simplr by overzealous lower-echelon White House employes and
· Without the President having a glimmering of what wa s
going on until last spring.
The President's effort to link illegal acts by administration
subordinates to the antiwar violence of the 1960s was unper. suasive, as was his defense of his refusal to release tapes of
• White House conversations relating to Watergate .
Surely there is some compromise solution that would not
make public necessarily confiden tial presidential matters,
yet would allow the Senate committee to adjudge some of
the allegations 1t has heard . And su rely such a compromise
would not " cripple" all future presidents. Indeed . the presidency has already been cri ppled .
President Nixo n asked the help and supjJort of the American people to get the country out of tbe "mire " of Watergate
and to_stop dwelling on the past so that it could again address 1tself to the great goals before it. But the failure to
attain at least one of those goals the President mentions " prosperity without war or inflation " - has probably contnbuted as much to the recent drastic decline of confidence
in him as has Watergate.
Whether a rever!"'! ofthat decline will be shown by lorlhcommg polls remams to be seen. Whether Americans can or
want to put Watergate be hind them and to what extent
President Nixon has rallied or can rally them to that desire,
remams perhaps the b1ggest unanswered question of all .

A thought for the day :
American writer Bret Harte
said , "One big vice in a man is
apt to keep out a great many
smaller ones."

TIIISPUV'SWF..NDY
NEW YORK ~ Crown Matrimonial" at
U1e
Haymarket
in
London
is
a
marvelously adroit play, a poignant comedy,
gnpping In a fashion anyone knowing what its
plot is about beforehand might doubt; much all
we doubted bclore it opened that "1776," a
musictll based on the signing of the Declaration
ol lndepen!lence could ha,ve much in it that could
·grab anyone's full attention .
The new London play is simply about the
romanee and wedding of the Duke and Duchess
of Windsor - told from the point of view of the
Royal Family. Its major points might seem a
cinch to get blunted ; lbey aren 't. In fact, it's a
rich, deep, sharp rationalization of .vasl family
disappointment and frustration as the once and
tranSiently future king turns his romance Irom a
British disgrace and scandal into a touching
portrait o( a man insllfficient to his royal
family 's traditions because of his terribly true
loyally to the woman he loved.
It's a remarkable play - in which the
Duchess of Windsor is abient; its stately theme
told in warmly understandable intimacy, scaling
the glamor down to homely levels managing to
reduce, or expand if you will, the famous public
\'(lntrove.rsy to persuasive clarif)cation.
The play certainly is IBilhioned deep in
hypotheses of assorted sorts; the dialogue must
be approximated ; let's face it, gues$ed-at. Still it
has the sound ring of more than apocryphal
observation, for many reasons, primarily the
manner in which that fine protean actress
Wendy Hiller gently attack the personality and
;tubbom pride of the late Queen Mary.
Miss Hiller is no stranger to splendid · performances, but her Queen Mary may be her
finest. She looks 8/ltoundingly. like the indomitable grandn10ther of the present Queen
Elizabeth, has mastered all her ·most minute
mannerisms including the bit of a stammer, the
way she palled her hands nervously, above all th
magnificent private as well as public pride with
which she rejected the Prinee of Wales and then
ber son-king's frustrated intentions to make
Wallis Warfield Simpson his queen. The rare
statuesQue quality Queen Mary brought to her
austere
public
moments
isn 't
lost
for
all
th
credible
intimacy
of
the scenes, all set in Queen Mary's

~;o'
N

l:~·

By Bruce Biossat

~~

WASHINGTON !NEA l
One way to view President Nixon s lat es t comments about
Wate rgate is to accept at face value his a ssertions lhat he
had no prior knowledge of the matter . took no part in and
knew nothing of the cover·up. and

n~ither

authorized nor
f~hion .

the

listen ing Amer ican cit iz en mu st neces sarily bru s h aside
som e \le ry se rious questions which Mr . Nixon still leaves

unanswered.
Th e most critical of these surround s · his conversation on

July 6. t972 - just 19 days after the Watergate break-in with L. Patrick Gray . then acting director of !he FB I.
The President ha s told us anew that on that date he instructed Gray "to press forward vigorously with his own
investigation " into Watergate. This and his subsequent ap_pointment or Gray to be full FBI director suggests strong
cortfid.ence In the man.
·
But Gray has testified under oath before the Ervin Senate
Watergate committee that 0 n the aforementioned July 6 he
warned Mr . Nixon that ce rtain White House aide s were
trying to " mortally wound " the President by interfering with
both the FBI and the c.hief ov.erseas security agency, the
CIA .
Gray sa id the President made no specific response to his
warmng then. Nor . has he done so in any public utterance
since . (n his newest ·speech and an accompa nying 2,000-word

Here's the obligatory finesse

••

•

Quv.

&gt;

•

,

I

I Helen Help

Still no response
on Gray's warning ~ ·

enco uraged any illegal "campaign tac tics.' '
Yet to take m the Presiden t's message in this

Buckingham Palace sitting room. wh••t'l'
problems of stale were redu&lt;-ed to ftUttlly kl'"
Miss Hiller'5 Glory Increases lll•rt•lll • •V~t•
from hl'r great earlier days wheft Hh&lt;t W~ ~
George Bemard S.baw's favoritu herohMJ , ~k
Saint Joan and Ellla Doolittle, llCri!Olillll\1
..,leeted by the brilliant old curmudgeon ; l•l 'tl l~l
prouder today athis superb casting ability, hu1'11
wih the gift o( prescience, for in her HenUy tJIIit•l
fashion, Wendy Hiller indeed today may ~u th~
First Lady of all theater.
Peter Barkworth plays the future uud 1111Ht
king with charm and graceful authority d~!Jlltu
coosiderable inability to look like th~ Duko OX•
'cept in coloring. His nearly anu:image sho1t\dn't
have distracted us but it did; the Ottke Wll~
slighter, not so highly energetic, a lasclnuth'!l
royal gentleman who moved with more dlgnlllc&lt;l
and vaguely phlegmatic pace lhim &amp;rkworlh
affected ; but it's a quibble only. Had we nov •r
met the Ottke and spoken with him occasionally
perhaps the apocrypha might have been enough
for us to suspend disbelief.
The rest of the CliSI was superb, Miss Hiller
clear through the effective minor roles, Joan
Haylhorne notably as Mary's lady in waiting,
Andrew Ray as the Duke of York who became
king pn Edward's abdication, and Amanda Rlss
as the present queen's molher.
·
"Crown Matrimon.ial" also is a triumph for
author Royce Ryton: it is his very first play
produced in the West End, though he's written
for radio and TV and for off-West End as far
away as Berlin ; he has a magnificent future if
this warm, lucid, decent, dignified and
enlightening play is any sign.
Playwright Rytoo 's gifts of understanding
and graceful details, of artful construction, rich
and deep characterization and fascinating storytelli ng are superb herein. Queen Mary is perfect;
the quickly defined and implied persona I
character of Edward as Prince, then King and
later as Du)!.e is a gem of swift dissection of a
man more of personality than royal character.
His playboy leanings are suggested gently and
clearly without reducing him to a raffish cartoon; and while painting the continuing declining
portrait of the king 011 his way down, he doesn't
discard him to degradation, and his unr'equired
royal ambitioos are not given a galvanic
destroying wallop. The Duke keeps a dignity in
familial and national defeat perhaps he didn't
quite attain in real life.

o:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.::::::::::::::x:::::::::P"..::::::::::~::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::S::::::::~;:

Nixon's ·Watergate

brief, there is no reference to Gray's warning.
Now. the picture the President freshly paints of himself is
of a man continuously concerned not only in a '' thorough and
aggressive investigation'' of the Watergate break-in ; but of
the prospect that anyone in either his re-election comm1ttee
or his While House en tourage was involved,
·
He says he was repeatedly reassured by ali those he asked
that "no persons" other than the seven men indicted in the
Watergate break-in were involved.
Most specifically and most sweeping in its effect , the
President says that on Sept. 12, 1!172, Attorney General Richard Kie•nd•en st told him . the full Cabinet , senior White
House staff members and certain legislative leaders that no
"higher-ups " in the Wh ite House or the campaign committee
were •mplicated.
Mr. Nixon says also .that he had his personal counsel. John
Dean, monito rin g FBI and Justice Department. inquiries, and
that on Sept. 15 Dean told him there was " no reason " to believe that any others but the indicted seven were guilty of
Watergate involvement.
. The Preside_nt s_ays flatly he trusted the agencies conducl!ng the mvest•gatwn and believed the reports he was gelling
~ and so did not believe eontrary newspaper accounts.
Nevertheless, without any imputation of guilt directed at
~ NEWSPAPER £N TEAPR!SE ASSk
Mr . N1xon himself . the listening citizen may be legitimately
puzzled today - after numerous presidentl3! statements as to wh y he never asked L . Patrick Gray who he had in
WIN AT BRIDGE
mind when , on July 6, 1972, he said White House aides were
attempting to hurt him mortally.
In another report we'll e&lt;amine other questions the President's commen t raises. Not least is why he now believes that
John Dean , the young lawyer whose counsel he took as valid
r - - --------, many bnage players know it . at
lea st throu~h this March 21 , should he the one witness
NORTH
South is in . a pretty sound . before the Ervm group to "implicate" him in Watergate .
+ Q8
four-spade contract. He has to
!NEWSPAPER EHJERPIME AS S ~; i
9' AK 974
lose a tnck to the ace of clubs
t Q3
aN&lt;l barn ng a very bad trump
The Almanac
+ Q8S 2
b1 eak will untv lose two trum p
·
·
club
on
a
high
heart
an
d
co
ntricks
By
Uni
ted
Press Internallonal
WEST
EAST
cedes
a
trick
to
the
club
ace.
+ A4
+ J i0 9
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 22 ,
However. th ere is no ha r m
What about three no-trump? the 234tll day of 1!173 with 1.31 to
9' 652
9'Q J t08
makmg an ext ra tnck if 1! can
t JI0~85
t7 62
be scored an d the obligat ory Declarer would still try I he ob- ·rollow .
4 1094
4 AJ3
fi nesse will br ing it in thi s ligatory fine sse, but against a
The moon is between Its last
heart lead would have trouble
time .
..
SQUT H tDI
+ K7 6531
South win s the diamond in collecting more than nine quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
9' 3
h1s own hand and leads a spade tricks and no chance to score
11.
t AK4
toward dummy's queen. IL
Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
CNEWSPAPID=I EN T fFI~RI S E' ASSN I
4 K76
hold s the tri ck and he teads·a
The evening stars .are Venus
spade back. East plays either
No&lt;)h Soutb vulneraMe
and Jupiter
!Oor jack. It doesn't matter
w..t North Eo11 S.•lb the
Those bo;n on this date a
which beca use South simply
under
the sign of Leo.
re
plays a low.spade.
.
The bidding has been:
Pau %
.,
P;w 2+
French cotnposer Claude DeHe ka, noth ing to lose wlth Wti l
Norlh
fo:a~l
Pass ~+
Pan . 4+
Sl'luth
lh•s pla y If West holds both
Pan
PM..
P.ass
1+
Pas!!
34
hussy
was born Aug. 22, 1862.
m•s~
•ng tru mps he Is s ure or Pass
3•
Pass
4!\' T
On this da Y1n h'181ory ..
Qptnmgl ••J- t J
two trump tncks If E;ast held f'a..;s
b¥
Pa ~!5
In 1651, the U.S. yacht
'
!he trump ace he wo uld ha ve
Vov.South. hold
Amerl~a beat the British craft
By o... ald 1r JaiJIK la&lt;:ob) uu d 11 ~ capture the queen
+!I 8 G4 ! 9'! t A 4 4 A K J ! 7 Aurora off England to win ihe
. Agains t the actual holding
Whal do you do noW?
Silver Trophy. The race sin
- ~:Jatary IIAHsuhould Westmuat play the ace willy- A- Bid llvt no-lrump. You inl.end
ce
1111 c
a1110111 •Iement.ary nilly . l.ater on South picksup to ~t.amblt' on •e., en if your p.arcner has been known as the America
plaJtlllll,it It dollblM if very Eaat'slasttrump ; di!!Cardsone lltoWI l•o 11J1111.

•

THIN6S

Voice; along Br'Jf7ay

"Let's Throw Him a Bone! "

-

U·s. . .

By Helen Bottel

. -

::::

,•,•.

'!~

If

f
r.=

:::

3 - The Daily S.•ntinel, MldcUe(XIrt-l'omcroy, u.,

...

Au~ . 22, t97:1

STORE HOURS
TUES. - THRU
SATURDAY.
1 O'CLOCK TIL 9
SUNDAY 12-6
CLOSED

ttV t' l\111-&lt; 0 1 AHTREI
Ito•\ HI !1\l '~l\l oll I '1111 ~ J•M I lltl.II'J'J lllg
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pUflli'' h\~\1 \ \'I\ 1'~\ lh'\~H~\ ·~ tu \
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'
111" •·k l'l'tl ll('iu n\lv ttppear on the
tho Al'l'lllillltl 11111~ \• tum11·s" " 1•··
PBS ·
1 • ;' ,
sctt;!lll t\"'''''11
'"'~'II ••1 Ill•• kt\1 111' ulrl ' 1'!1-'h~llJie I'" I'"~
.
' .
II l '111"11•• All tlll'li-11 ilil! • OWl .,.e J.uo
dt1s1xtn•h' il' tr) Itill 11• ~~ n"· " '
•
look \ltll')' · V111')' P\'\IH\1 ~~ ~ ~

I' ''

, '

.

l••

.

AT THE M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER

I I I
u111,,tlvw t•1111

1\00llll'l' !1\lllf&gt;''Jli'l'~
u f!wmi•r shady ~dy ,.ho
ulrou&lt;ly llns 11111111&gt; h f•~·htll\' ~~ kls~ IIIHI·ldlwukr• It big m show
buslnoss 'l
, • . th , . rii!Wer iJ yes
AAnin ·- wllh 01'1.'11•··~·~·t lllltM
t IllJIUI1 c u
. .
Xavlorn llulllll\\h't\ tl!\' 111U't'i&lt;·lltllilli"'Ostltute who earned a
mint with n cOII!llt• of l•·~t.,.~·llt••·~ ul!t•\lt lou!' •unorous.adl·.cnlures,
stuff Umt struck ltli' u&gt; M 'Y d\lst· til hlll'ii~·•JrO poruography (no,
! only r nd p11rtof (Ill\' ;1f Jltt't n 1, 1\(1\1 fuHdrs !JCrHI'if anothl'r kind
of entertnlncr.
And. who's lo ~uy Rh t''~ \HVl\f: 1 1ll'l' sonn4uHI-clarn:e albwn,
released In (;muulu whrnlJ, S, drlliN·s wt' I'C w~ ry, qwckly sold
out 50,000 coplosn ud w~n "!«•lid ~vlli " stnlus north of the border.
Now the 11 lbumls bo•ln~o: Jll'l'l"'~'''\l fur release do~n here. .
Well, at Jcnst. 1 kiiiiW mw ftunlb· which won t be buymg
Xaviera 's I~ tosl dlsplny Q[ t" lt·nl , i(. l!KI\'\'d, she hus any.
I I I

I've given up on "Music Count ry," tit~ Nashville show that is
replacing Dean Martin bl'i ~fly . I will not. ropeut not, watch this
monstrosity again.
The producers continue to tnke top urtists and the great
Nashville hits of the pnsl few yeu rs. (•mbnrrusslng the mustciiiS
and butchering the songs.
oh. each show has had 11 fl'" rrclceming moments, but
something snapped a week or so ago when they.cut Tom T. Hall
In the middle of his better songs. nnd did a rerun (a ref'\ln , get
this, In a seven-week series ) of OIIC artist performing a .;or-rent
~lt To heck with it.
•
+++
''
Speaking of Tom T. Hall, he appeared last weekend at a folk
festival at Glenville State College, not too far from here, but I
didn 't know about it in time to make plans to·lJttend. He's one of
the very good country writers, and performs in noteworthy
fashion, too.
+++
Returning to my starting place, PBS' fall line-up , I note that
a series of the epic "War and Peace" is on the schedule.
Produced in America1 No. Russia ' No. It's another o( those
British imports, and just judging by the past, should be excellent.

OPENS .THURSDAY AT 1 O'CLOCK
SALAD BOWLS
,..G-LA_ss_Es_ _ _4_F_oR_s_lo.....
o CEREAL BOWLS
CHAMPAGNE

PLASTIC
INFLATABLE

..

IDEAS

YOUR CHOICE

12" PILLOWS
16" BALLS
12".TIGERS -·

OVEN PROOF
WHITE

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WITH COUPON

OR

FREE

SOUP BOWL

11 OZ. ANCHOR HOCKING

SMOKE GLASS

ASST. OF OTHER
REG. 88~ NOW ONLY

LIMIT 1 PER COUPON

8"

16 OR OLDER ONLY

EXP. 8-26

EACH

Tbe Miss, Mrs. or MB. Debate
Earlier this sununer I asked for youmte on the Ms. vs . Mrs .
or Miss controversy.
Predictably, the traditional "Miss" and "Mrs "won, but the
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 22, i973
count was closer than you might expect: 61 percent for Mrs. or
6 : 00 ~ News, Weather, Sports 3, 4. B. 10, 15 ; Tru fh or Con seq. 6;
Miss, and 39 percent for the new Ms., with several adding tbey
. Sesa me St. 20 ; Societies in Transiti on 3:3 .
really pre(erred no title at all - "Just call me Jane, or if you • 6:30 - NBC News 3, .4; News B. 10: Sesa me St. 20; I Dredm or
want to be lonna!, Jane Doe."
Jeannie 13; Lil ias. Yoga &amp; You 33.
7:00 - Truth or Co nseq. 3; Beai the Clock 4 ; Ncws 6. 10; What's
Here are some of the better arguments :
My Line 8; Anything You Can Do 13; Elec. Co. 20 ; Sa int 15;
Book Beat 33 .
... If women must proclaim their marital status, why not
7:30 - Episode: Action 33 ; The J·udge 10; Beatthe Clock 13 ; To
men ? You can call me "Mrs." when you call my husband "Mrd."
Te ll the Truth 6; How Do Your Chi ldren Grow? 20; Police
(short for "Married .")~ MS. RILEY
Surgeon 3, 4; Protectors 8.
8:00 - Adam-12 3. 4, 15;-Sonny &amp; Cher 8, 10; What's ihe Big
+++
Idea? 33; Love Thy Neighbor 6, 13; Meas ure For Measure 20·.
... "Miss" has sweetness, class and dignity; it is a definite
8:30 - Madigan 3, 4,; Movie "Goodnight, My Love" 6, 13:
person word. I don't like "Mrs." which is one step more in
Baseba ll 15.
redudng us to nonentities. It has a sad sound, like a sad ending ...
9:00 - Musical Encounter 20, 33 ; Dan August 8, 10.
9:30 - Man Builds. Man Destroys 20, 33.
a sound ollizzliilg.out -Mzzz ... - MISSS.G. ·
IO:OD
- Cannon 8; Owen Marshall 6. 13; News 20; World
t++
University Games 3, 4; Marian &amp; Jimmy McPartland 33.
... According to -etiquette, a divorced woman is still "Mrs." 11 :00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15.
(or was until " Ms. " came aloog ). When you are rele81led from 11 :30 - John ny Carson 3, 4, 15; Dick Cavetl6, 13; Come To the
prison, alter having paid your debt to society, you aren't
Fair 4; Movies "Side Street " 8; " Blood &amp; Sand" 10.
·
required to wear your prison number, or sign it after your name 11 : 45 - Joh nny Carson 4.
1:00 - Man from UNCLE 4; News 13.
as though to tell the world, ''Once I made a mistake." I'd take
2:00 - News 4.
·
back my maiden name, but it's too much hassle, changing acTHURSDAY, AUG. 12 , 1973
counts, etc. and there's my daughter to consider. So I .settle for
6: 00 - Sunrise Sem inar 4; Sacred Hea rt 10.
"Ms." - DIVORCED AND GLAD
6:15 - ·Farm Report 13.
6:25 - Pau l Harvey 13.
+++
6:45 - Corncob Rport 3.
... I'm a man who prefers Mills or Mrs., so l'U know where I
6:30
- Columbus Today 4: Bibl e Answers 8; Amei ca's
stand. Messing around with a Mrs. can be dange rous. - JULES
Problems 10; Patte rns tor Living 13,'
+++
6:45 - Corncob Reporl 3.
7: 00 - Today 3, 4,15; News6, 8, 10; Fl lntstones 13.
... There is no .law in our state which requires a woman to
- ~om per Room6 ; Rocky &amp; Bul lwinkle 13.
7:00
take her husband's name when they marry. Since men don't lose
8:00 - Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; New Zoo Rev ue 13; Sesame St. 33;
their identity al the altar wby should I? - MS. JONES
Lassie 6
8: 30 - Ja ck Lalanne 13 ; New Zoo Revu e 6.
MARRIED TO MR. SMITH
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue IS; Ben Casey 13 ; Peyton
+++
Place 13; Capl.~angaroo 8; Fri endl y Junct ion 10· AM 3·
... I'm proud to be the Mrs. of my beloved Mr. - 46 YEARS
Mister Roberts 33 ; Brad)l Bunch 6; Mov ie 8.
'
'
MARRIED
9 : 30 ~ T~ Tell the Truth 3; Peyton Place 13; Wild, Wild West.6; ·
Electn c Company 33 .
• +++
10:00
-;- Dick Van Dyke 13; Dinah Shore 3. 15&gt;Jo ker's Wild 8. JO;
' ... I prefer " Ms ." to keep 'em guessing. - WIDOWED
Lll•as, YO&lt;Ja &amp; You 33.
+++
10:30 - Baffle Gamel, 4,1 5; Mike Douglas 6; 11 0,000 Pyramid 8
10; Split Second 13; Living 33.
'
... I abhor " Ms ." as much as I dislike "committeeperson,"
I
1:00
--;~ambit
B
.
10
:
'Password
13;
W
iza
rd
at
Odds
3.
4.
IS
:
"chairperson," etc. When mail comes to me addressed "Ms." I
So~ 1 e t1 es m Trans1tlon 33.
.
refuse it . - MRS. T. C.
1I: 30 - Love of Life B. 10: Holl ywood Squares 3 4 IS· Brady
Bunch JJ ; Episode Action 33: eowllng 6.'
' ' '
+++
I I : 55 ~ CBS News 8; Dan 1mel' s World 1o.
... Tilles are the expression of respect to the individual. 12:00 - Jeopardy J, 15; Bob Braun's 50-50 Clu b 4; News 10 13 8 ·
Password 6.
'
Referring to the woman in tenns of her relationship to a man ~
12:30
3
W's3,
15;
Spill
Second6
;
Seilf
chtor
Tomorro
wS
10
or non-relationship as the caJJe may be - takes her personhood
12:55 - NB C News 3. 15.
' .
away. It's time women realized their worth. - FEMALE NON1:00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Green Ac res 10: Nol For
APPENDAGE
. Women Only 15 ; Sewing Skills-Tai loring 33; Joker's Wild 8.
I. 30 - As the W?rld Turns 8. 10: J On A Matc h J , 4 15; Our
+++
Street 33: Leis Make A Dea l 6. 13.
... I prefer "Mills," so that interesting men will be more
2:00 ~ Days ot Ou r Lives 3 4, 15; Guid ing Light 8 10 ·
interested in ME. - WOULD RA TilER MIX THAN FIGHT
: Masterpiece Thea tre 33 : Newlv wed Ga me 6, 13.
' '
2.30Another
W
orld
J,
4.
15
;
General
Hosplla
l
6,
1)
;
Price
Is
+++
R•ght 8, 10 ; Musical Encounter 33.
·
..I think " Ms." was created for the Angry Woman - the one
3:30 - Return to Peylon Pla ce 3. 4, 151 One Lif e to Ll:.o 6 13·
who is unhappily single or Wlhapplly married. My marria~e has
Secre t Storm 101 Ph il Don.ahuc 41¥alch Game 73 8; Time tof
, Timothy 33.
never meant beiilg restrained, h!!mpered or "unllberated," but
4 : 00 ~ Mr. Cartoon 3; Love, Amerlcn n Styl e 13· Sesame St 33 •
only "enhanced" as a whole person. ~ MRS. FOREVER
. Somerset 15 ; Movie " The Lillie Fug itive" Ia.
· '
+++
4. 30 ~ Petticoat Junction 3 ; Mcrv Grill In 41 Abiloll &amp; Costello 8 ;
My Little Marg ie IS; F Troo p 6: Dok torl13
... AB a busin...,rnan, I was using "Ms." In letter salutations
5: oo ~ Mister Rogers 20, 33; Bonao11a 3 ; Hmel 8 · fll g Volley 6 ;
long bclore it became a cauae. When women sign themselves
Western Star Theatre IS
'
" Mary Smith" - no UUe ~ it's the only safe way to go. _
5:30 - Elec . Co. 33 ; Gomor Py le .13: Hodgopodge Lodge 20 :
Beverly Hillbillies 8: Trai ls West tS· Dick Von Dyke , . ·
EXECUTIVE
.
Electr ic Co. 33 .
·
'
+++
6:0MOI-I News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 ; rrulh or Conscq, 61 So some Sl. 70 ;
... I prefer "Mrs."becaUBe I am proud lhata man has chosen
. estones of PrO&lt;jress 33 1 ABC Nows 13.
me to be his lifetime mate and I want everyone to know I wear
6. 3COBS~'BC News.3. 4 15; I Dream of Jon nnlo IJ ; A~ C ill ws 6;
.
..ews 8, 10, Lilias, Yoga and Yov JJ.
the UUe as I would a crown. "Ms." denotes nolhl!!gness. _ MRS.
l .OOT - Truth or Conseq . 3; Be&amp;l the Clock , . Course of Qc
S.C.K.
imes 33; When My Line 8: News 6: Ei~c. Co ~o · •ol's
. Make A Deal 13; Ca ll qt lho Wosl )5.
· ' ~
++,+ ,
7 3
1
... My husband owns me by law . I ve been compelled 1o take
· 1~";""1 ~1°~ t;'$~d Tq~orcs 3; To Telll ho Truth 6; Wild Kingdom
his name, his credit. rating, h!J l.n.!ultlng remarks. I need
13 ; l1elp Wan¥.:? l 3o.ur ~ ~ L• HIH J Zoom 10 : oo~t lh Clock
a.
8:00PI ~ hMod Sq Vfld 13, •61 assle
S?mething to call my own. "Ms." gives me. at least a Utile InTho Wtiltons a. 10; lronalde ], 4 Il l
. •Y ouse New York Bl011rohy ?0, 33.
'
divlduallty. - MSFORTUN!tJ!+
9 . ~F~ Good Vlbraltons from Control PMk 61 13; MOvie&gt;
car 51rlk~ s Ou t" 81 " rhn ergo nl" 10
· 'f'1es e1'the r a wea 1thy, haughty career
... To me, "Ms. " s1gm
~ : 30 - Just J nTZ ?0, 33.
·
1
·
ld
ld
ho
do
't
t
woman or an o ma w
esn . wan anyone to know her
A~~s~c Co~ntry 3, •t, II; All Anwrlrnn I Oill lly 1'1; Nows
• w• poclnl 6, 13, Un n dr~ .t lv n! .t
man less status. ~ MRS . AVE.RAGE WOMAN
11 .. 00 -' "e
.,. ws 3, 4,6,9, 13, 15 ,
11 :30,.... Johnn_y Carson 3. 4, IS1 Jat k Pe •.r 6, IJ1 Como to ltto ~lr
,
,.
+++
. 34 • Movie• The Rose Tn lloo" 81 OM lrl1ol Tomor rt~w 10.
... Ms. sounde like the buulng of an trued, which Ia what
"
· .5- Movie " Wives &amp; Lov rl " o
·
these llberaUonlats are, buzzing around trying to change our
1
HS
Johnny
CersQn
A
·
God-given privilege to be protected by men. ~ AGAINST TilE
I:OO - Man Irom UN CL' dl Nowt 1 ~
MIZ-BlZ
2:00 - New1 4.

Television Log

1

THOUSANDS
OF
GLASSWARE
&amp;
GifT

EACH

STEM
GLASSES_

LAZY
SUSAN

ANCHOR HOCKING

24 PC. SET

•

•1495

• REG.
129.95

8 10-0Z. GLASSES, 8 TUMBLERS

39 PC. SET
STAND
BOWL
18 CUPS
18 HOLDERS
LADLE

95

$

REB.

14.95

1

8 PC. GREEN

OIL LAMP

SALAD
SET

WITH GLOBE

LARGE BOW~ SERVER,
6 SALAD BOWLS

IN
COLORS

$289

•1
\

69 SET

SHAKERS

99~ET

.BROWN
STONE
WARE

EA.

10~

MADE IN USA

GLASS

SWANS

PLATES, BOWLS

DUCKS

$

00
EA.

ASH TRAYS

5~EA.

$

99
EA.

WHITE GLASS

.CAN NISlER SET
WITH LIDS

LAMPS
WITH
PLASTIC
SHADES

LARGE ASST, OF

CARNIVAL
GLASS

.

ELECTRIC

'%.

;

PUNCH BOWL
SET

GLASSES

WITH 4 CUPS

GLASSES

$100

WEXFORD

·wEXFORD
GOLD TRIM

SALT &amp; PEPPER

'

$169SET

INFLATED 25e

CUP
TREES .

BEER

SET OF 6

WITH 5 TRAYS

NOVELTY

L

18" HIGH

$149

HEAVY GLASS
12" ASH TRAYS

'125[!

22
EA.

�4 - T~ Dailv St•nlint'&amp;
. Middleport-Pom~roy. 0 .. Aug. 22, 1973

'I'll HF: U TV
tJnrta nnel . Curol O'Rri~n,

Frie-ndly Gardeners receive awards
RUTLAN D - Th~ Rullan&lt;l
Friendly Gardeners Club of
. Meigs Coun ty, Region II, was
named recipient of the Victor
Ries Outstanding Garden Club
Award for the state of Ohio at
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs' state convention ,
August 14-16, at Wooster
College. Winning this cash
award culmina led an intensive
program of projects over a
three year period for this club
of only 12 members.
During the three year
competition period, the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
have won regional and state
recognition and awards, ineluding: First, second and
honorable men tion, in garden
therapy, being invited to
display craft items at regional
and state meetings; firs t,
second, and honorable mention
in the sb te for publici ty book;
third in state for 1972 single
club flower show, "A Swnmer
Wedding"; third in state for"
1970-71 program book; "third in
slate for 1970 Sears Community
Involvement Proj ect; an d
second in state to member,
Mrs. James Carpenter, for
Kodachrome Slide Contest. A
lengthy_list of regional awards
has been accwnulated over
this period, in addition.
The Rutland Friendly
Gardeners have pr ovided
several regional officers and
chairwomen, including:'
Regional director, secretarY,
and publicity book , radio,
television and news release,

OAGC Publical!ons sales, and
OAGC tree s&gt;~les l'hairwumcn.
In the Meigs Count)• Garden
Club Association, the club has
provided garden therapy
chairwomen, ChrisllmlS and
· Regatta Flower Show tochairwomen , as well as
numerous committee memllers.
Among the requirements for
thy competition was the
organization· and sponsorship
of a new senior club, the
Homestead Garden Club of
Langsville, and a junior club,
the Rutland Merry Gardeners.
The club was required to
stage flower shows and enter
into competition, to enter the
various contests for publicity,
Sears Civic Improvement
Programs, · and program
books, have members attend
state conventions and give
demonstrations, displays and
speeches at county and
reg ional mee ti ngs, participate
in state workshops, tours and
clinics.
. Contrib utio ns to civic
projects are also considered
and it was noted tha i the club
members gave toward roadside and civic beautification
projects, and contributed to
Wahkeena, gave books to local
libra ri es , and worked in
various ca pacities with the
Leading Creek Conservancy
Distri ct and nationa l and
county plant and agriculture
societies.
Accepting the award at the
convention on behalf of the club

wcrr Mrs. Homer Purker and

Mrs . Jt\lllcs Carpenter.
Professor Victor Rics , in
presenlln~
the
check,
proclaimed his admiration of
tilC club and gave u resume of
lhe club's a!'livities . Th1•
presenlation was made al the

banquet attended b)• over 500

RiU'IIIC, duu~hler~

or Mr . nod

l.iJdies visit nursing home

Mrs, IJ&amp;rry O'Brien, uhln~ with
II y Guldlr C.:l•·•ulenln
tile Norris Quarter, will be 011
I'Oll'I'LAND - The Emma
tho Charles Norris television
OACiC lllt'lllbt•I'S ,
Smith Circle uf the 'b urch of
program "Christ is the AnThl."lllC o{ the cOil\irnltil!l 'I\ :IS
Jesus ChrJs t, Latte r Duy
swer!! ol 9:30 u,m,. Sunday.
"ilat• Off to 01\ ,L'", and Prof.
St•ints, wus t)rivileged lo meet
August 26 and September 2,
Hies •·nnchuil-d h1s n•11mrk.1 b)
with the folksJIJ tile Syr:•cusc
WI-:IINI-:SOAY
&lt;'ommcnting lhat tlw s tult
channel 13.
Nursing Home on Sunday , Au~ .
should lll'evnl " hats off .to tho
~MF: ll!CAN
Le~ion
12.
12 ~ner~(.\tic und dl•di('atrd Aux iliary, Feeney-Bennett
1 do not recall many names,
mem bers of lhl' Hull•nd Post 128.6:30 potluck supper al
except a Mrs. Young (sister of
Friendly Gardeners.''
the hall Wednesday ni~hl.
I'IIONF.S LISTED
'Eizu Walton) ; a Mrs. Jloss and
. Delegates lo Buckeye Gl~ls
I.ETART
FALLS ·
u 94-year-old lady In • wheel
Sl&lt;lte from both Meigs and · Hesldents of Letart Falls area chair who .didn 't seem nearly
Eastern High School will who are unable to reach lhe
old .
.
.
report on their experiences. nacine En unit may call Gary soAnother
lady in a wheel chilli'
M eetin~ at 1:30 p.m.
Wolfe at 241-240-t or Randall had only been there u few
treasurer, Martha Chapman.
Roberts
at 2'17-25al.
FEENEY-Bennett Post 128,
days; had been pianist at her
The dalr of the reunion Is Ameriean Legion ; 7: 30 p.m.
church until lately, and could
always the secpnd Sunday in Wedn esday at the hall .
sing all the old songs without a
August.
Members to join the auxiliary
book . They all seemed to be
for a potluck dinner at 6:30.
THURSDAY
well cared for .
But one could sympathize
A
SPEC
IAL
meeting
of
POMEHOY - MIDDLEPORT
Shade
River
Lodge
453,
r
and
with
these folks havmg had 10
Lions Club, noon, Meigs Inn .
All lions requested to allend. AM, will be held at B p.m. leave their own homes at this
Thursday at the temple. Work time in life, when home and
THURSDAY
The Daily Sentinel
MEIGS COUNTY Women 's will be in the FC Degree. familiar surroundings are the
DEVOTED TO THE·
Fellowship, Zion Church of · Refreshments will be served. mos t important things on
tNTEREs:T OF
MEIGS - MASON AREA
Christ, Thursday, at 7:30p.m. All Master Masons are urged to earth.
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
They promised to pral for us
f :(ec. Ed .
Members asked to take attend.
ROQERT HOEFLI CH,
TWIN CITY Shrinettes will and asked that we pray for
something for Bible College
·
City E d ltor
P Ub l iSI'I~d
d~ i iY
1\:..te~r
meet
Thursday at'8 p.m. al the them lo get to go home .lt was a
students wh(l are invited (o
Salui'd aY Di Tne Ohio Va l1 ey
home
of Clara Adams, Racine. sad parting for us, but a
PubJishhlQ Ci&gt;mpii11V • Ill
attend the meeting.
Cour t sr , Pomero'l' . Oh io,
rewarding afternoon.
45}69 - BU!. i nes OHi c e Phone
OPEN AIR Reviva l at
99~ 21S6. Editor ial Phone 991
FRIDAY
o n Sunday . morning our
Albany Riding Club Grounds,
1157
Second crus postage pa ra
PAST
Matrons
of
Evangeline
guests
were Dr. Ronald
Alliany, today, Friday and
at Pomeroy , 011 io
Chapter
OES,
picnic
at
6
p.m.
Nalional aaven is l ng
Gillilen, M.D., and his two sons
Saturday, 7:30 nightly. Special
represenl _a tive Bott tn el 1i
the
Middleport
Masonic
at
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Baer of
G&amp;l lagher , Inc .. 12 East 42n d
singers to be featu red.
St ., New York. , N ew York
Temple.
Bring
covered
dish
Pomeroy.
· SubHript , on rates,
Evangelist is the Rev. John L.
Deti~ered bV carrier wh er eo
and
own
table
service.
On Tuesday evening there
Elswick, Athens. The public is
avai lable SS cents per Wl'!.'k ,
Bv Mohlf Route wh,e r e
Husbands
invited.
was a wiener and marsh·
invited.
Cllrr ler
seni •C e
not
mallow roast on
lhe
available One morllh . $1. ev
m~ll in Ohio and w va , One.
back law n at the ch urch
SUNDAY
Year , i 16: 5\)( months . e SO ;
Three
mon ths .
SS 50
WILLING Workers Class,
with.
coffee, tea, Koo lSWARTZ
fa
mily
reunio
nElsewhere SIS 't'l! !l r ; s PJ(
Enterprise United Methodist will be held in the Woode Aid and potato chips by a .big
month£ 19 .50; t11rt•e montns ,
S6. Svbscrlptlon price in
Chw'ch, 7:30p.m. at the home Grove at. Alfred. Everyone wood fire. Guests were Dr.
etude s sv n day Time~
SenHMI. •
of Mrs . James Will.
welcome.
Gillilen, sons, and Brenda,
1

Trifamily reunion held
CARPENTER - About 60
and re latives of U1e
Green, Ogdin and Caster
families met Sunday at the
Columbia Chapel Church for a
basket dinner.
During the business meeting,
presided over by the president,
Mrs. Robert Hollida)', the
minutes were read by the
secretary, Mrs. Wesley Bobo,
Prizes were awarded to Miss
Viola Bobo, Mi.ller Cottage at
the V.i\. Center in Dayton as
tile oldest member present.
Miss Bobo Is 92 years young
and alert and active as usual.
The grandson of Mryl Bobo
was the youngest, and Mrs .
Robert Taylor, Cimarron, Kan .
"came the farthest.
The Rev . Willard Love ,
pastor of lhe •local church,
offered prayer.
The families presented $JO to
the church to be applied on the
building fund.
Officers for lhe coming year
will be president, Wesley Allen
(lgdin: vice president, Octa
Gillogly and secretary·
frlen&lt;!~

dauu~tcr of the Clarence

Jlrndfurds, "nd her husband,
Kelly, &lt;J( lndupmlence, r.(a.;
p0 ~gy Smith, Chester and
Miss Codner. of Pantlnnd, .
bride-to-be of Danny Prof!ltt,
whose wedding will be Friday
evenin~ at the church.
even though it was !lamp
ufl&lt;~r If/light shower, the moon
came out: we carried our
chairs out around lhe fire and .
sang songs led by Ronnie and
Brenda and Kelly, and clo!led
with a sente nce prayer,
sta ndin~ In a circle, holding
hands.
one sad note was that our
music director. Mercedes
condon, had to leave b~cause
asthma and U1e dampness.
Anna Cornell went with her.
. we had churc h services at
Forked Run Lake Park last
Sunday, followed by a basket
dinner Guests were Tom and
Pam Diddle and sons, and
Charles and Juan.lta Cozart
and Tami of Columbus. These
outings are good for all ; sort o'
back to nature, and closer to
God .

THREE-TIME WINNER
CAMP PERRY, OhiQ (UP[) .
- Ron Troyer of Williamsfield,
Oh io, is the first _thr,ee-time
winner in the Na!tonal High
Power Rifle Championships.
Troyer finished on~ point
ahead of Gary Anderson · o!
Ax tell, Neb., Thursd~y .
Troyer's total was one pomt
below the national record set in
1952.

5

.'
Thr Dully &amp;-nlhli'l, Mld•lleport· l'om~roy, 0 ., Au~ . 22, 1!!7:1

f!bserve anniversary '$700 netted for
An ob~ervance of the silver
wedding anniversury of the·
Rev. and Mrs, Robert Kuhn
was held Sut1day morning
fo llowing services ut the
· Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
On
behalf
of
the
congregation, Mrs. Elmer
Wickham prese nted the couple
with a sliver tray, and Orval
Wiles presented them wllh a

Hill of money .
A poem,

--ow·

Lives ur&lt;'
Songs", wus •·cud by M1·s.
Wickham und the Hev . Mr. and
Mrs. Kuhn relnted events Of
thetr weddhlg day . Mrs ,
Wickham suog two verses of
"0 Perfect Love", a sonij
played at the Kuh n wedding,
with the congregation jolnin~ ·
her for a verse .
'

.Church hosts conference
The Rev. Leo n Troy,
presld,ent of tbe Ohio Baptist .
Gen er~l Association, was guest
spea~e r at the concludin g
sesaion of the 139th Annual
Session of the Providence
Missionary Association held at
the Mount Moria h Baptist
Church.
"The Churches Response to
the Challenge of the 70's" was
· the general theme of the
sess ion which opened on
Wednesday. Representatives
of about 30 churches were
present for the meetings
Committees In charge were
Mrs. Ernest Bowles and Mrs.
John Moon, registration ; Mrs .
Ervin .Baumgardner and Mrs.
Julia WilUams, housing; Carl
Williams, Mrs. Campbell
Harper and Mrs. Arnold
Richards purchasing ; Kevin
Angel,' Arnold Richards, Ervin
Baumgardner, Carl Williams,
and John Moon, soft drinks;
Mrs . Ann Angel, Mrs. Henry

Key, Miss Carrie Ward , Mrs.
Henrietta Robinson, Mrs .
Pellas Stallworth, Angela and
Kim Payne, and J o Richard .
Keel, dining room; Phil and
Stanlord Moon, ge neral
assista nts; and Mrs. Carl
Williams and Mrs. Nellie Winston, kitchen chairpersons.
SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Davidson,
Morristown, ·, N. J . are announcing the birth of a son,
Charles Philip, born Aug. 16 at
th e Morristown Memorial
Hospital. Grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs . Walter
Emerson Jones, Mlddle,port,
and
Mr .
and
Mrs. Frank Davidson, t'airborn. Mr. and Mrs. Davidson
have a daughter , Ann
Elizabeth, five , and John
Andrew, four . Mrs . Jones left
today for Morristown to assist
the family.

Neurly S700 worth of quill• ,
home a~cel!llorles, and craft
llelll!l made by senior citizens
were sold duri n~ the Meigs
County ~'air at the ten I dlsplav .
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, Meigs
County Council on Aging
project director, advises that
all of the proceeds with the
exce plon of a small percentage
goos to the in~lvldua l who
made the ilem. This goes
towards the purchase ol additional materials for use at the
Senior Citize ns Ce!l!Air.
About 500 atte nded the
Second Annual Senior Citizens
Day observed on Thursday at
the fair. Both of the mini-buses
were used for transportation
and also assisting in this
respect were Mrs. Avice
Spencer, Mrs. Esther Mays
and Mrs. Mary Barn h!!rt of the
Young Wives Club, Chesler.
Entertainment was provided
by Mrs. Hazel Thomson who
played· an organ provided by
Brunlcardl, Gallipolis, Mrs.
Berni ce
Winn
led
in group sin ging; Mrs·
Edith · Jividen,
Mrs .
Nellie Trac y and Mrs.
Bertha Parker gave readings;
Darrell and Carol tay lor
provided the public address
system and entertained with
the guitar and violin ; Mr. and
Mrs . Dinsmore Boyles sang

Hl)ve&lt;·l•l selections as did Mrs.
Betty Will and Jean Windon .
1'he•·e was also en·
lertalnmentby Mari lyn Fought
and her Methodist youth group
of Barbara ~' ultz, Andy and
J.au1·a Hoover; and in strumental selections by
F'runcls Andrews, Richard
Boring and Brian Collins.
Among tho.e who visited the
tent we re Mrs . ·Elizabeth
Wickham, 100 years old last
month , Wilbur Logan and Mr.
and Mrs. Otto Iles, both 88, and
twenty over 80 years old. Ther·e
·was some Impromptu square
dancing and jigs
IS RELEASED
Mrs , Ed nah (,ewis, 84,
Akron, was released Monday
fro m the Holzer Medi cal
Ce nter in Ga llipolis. Mrs.
Lewis, in Middleport for the
!39th Am1ual Session of the
P r ovid e nce Mi ss ionary
Assocatio n at th'e Mount
Moriah Baptist Church, injured herself in a fall down the
stai rs at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Richards where
she was sta ying. Rho nda
Waller who was here with Mrs.
Lewis remained with the
Ri chard s family until her
discharge when a niece from
Akron came for them.

~
«

~

~l

•

•

Leifheit family has reunion

Middleport r,
Areunion nf ttw dt•SI·cmlanlii
~I Personal Notes 1
of lht• late August C1wrlw; and
~
.

Mr. and MrH. •)Wilt'S Criswell
und Mrs. Jiclcn M&lt;&amp;rtlll are
va!'atlonin~ m the Wcst1•rn
Htatc~.

The ' harle• Winebrenner
fumlly has returned from ~
2,1!00 rnllc trip to Florida. They
visiicd Disney World ~~
Orlando, spent tin'1e with Dale
Winebrenner in St. Petersburg
who took the family on a tour of
the attractions there, visited
Sarasota and went to Talflpa to
see the Busch Gardens.
ltctu rnin~ home bY, way of
Jacksonville they spen( a day
on the ocean.
Mr. and· Mrs. Bob Byer,
Larry and Mary Teresa drove
to .Holland, Mic h., for Mrs.T.
G. Hilldore and Julie Byer who
were there visiti ng Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Hilldore. Mrs.
Hilldore and Julie went
especially for the wedding of
l.ori Hiildore to Bill Notter.
'fhe Byer family and Mrs .
Hilldore also visited recently ih
Steubenville with Mr. and Mr s.
Frank Hilldore.
Mr s. Jo Richards Keel
returned to Denver, Colo.,
today after visiting here with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Hichards, for the past
three weeks. Her son, Brett
Bunton, will remain in Cincinnati for another week before
returning to Denver
Houseguests of Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Richards during the
13llth annual session of the
P ro vide nce Mi ss ion a r y

th•• l.&lt;•lww family and served turc-s were taken. Plans were
with the cvcniug meul. The day made for another reunion In
i•:nuua HcuWr Lciflwit WiJS was 'spent p1ayin~ gt~rnes, 1974, with the time and plactfto
l•'ld Sumlay at the Lehew :;wirl)lujng und ri~rting . 'Plc.:· be cmnounced Iuter .
trailer l'alll () at Mijplcw(XHl
Lake .
There was a basket dinner at
noon . Members of the furnily
atll~lding were Mrs. llarold
JohnSIIn (Alma I.A&lt;ifhclt) , Mr .
The annual p1cmc of the Robert Byer , Julie, Mary
and Mrs. Hichard l .&lt;:ifh ~it, Middleport firemen and their · Teresa, and Larry, Mr. and
Emma Jo and Kurt, Spring- families was held Sunday at Mrs. Dave Zirkle, Terri,
field ; Mr. and Mrs. Harr y the Tycoon Lake camp site of Debbie and Brenda, ~a ula
Davis (Veda Leifheit), Mr. and Mr . and Mrs. Pete Kloos.
Kloos, and the Kloos' grand·
Mrs. William Lehew, Cheryl,
/\\tending were Mr . and Mrs . Slln, Mallhew .
Ted, John and Bill, Pomeroy; Sidney nusscll, M. and Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert IA!hew, James Daniels, Mr . and Mrs.
PLI\N Pot LUC!'
Debra, Charlotte and !Wbin, Hobert Md&lt;:lhinncy, Mr . and
A get-acqu;.inted potluck and
Mrs . John Vroman and ,
Co l umb11~ .
wie~er roast will be held by the
Guests were Mrs. Willlarn grand&lt;;on , .John, Mr . and Mrs. Ohio Ba Phi Chepter of Beta
'fheuner, Syracuse; Mrs.
Sigma Phi Soro rity o·n
Ernest Bruley, Detroit, Mich.;
Tuesday, Aug. 28, at 6:30 at
ENJOY
VISIT
Mrs.
Homer
Hawkins,
. SYHACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. Royal Oak Park,lor members,
Pomeroy ; and Bill Slack,
Richard Holmes, Tammy and their husbands and Invited
Middleport .
guests. Those attending are to
A round-robin card was Bruce, Richlands, Va ., have take thei r own til ble service.
been
visiting
her
parents,
Mr.
signed for Miss Dorothy
and Mrs . Bernard Cook,
Leifheit who has been a bed
Syracuse.
Friday a picnic was
patient since October at the
held at the Middleport Marina
TO MEET
Orient Hospital.
attended
by
the
Holmes
family,
The Pomeroy Bowling.
Presented to the Davises at
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Bernard
Cook,
Association
will meet at 8 p.m.
the· reunion was a decorated
Eva
Mae
Phillips,
Syracuse;
Wed nesday at the Pomeroy
cake inscribed " Belated Happy
Mr,
and
Mrs.
Raymond
Ea
rl
Bowling Lanes. All league
Birthday, Veda and Harry ." It
Cook
anf
family,
Pomeroy;
secretaries are asked to be
was presented to the couple by
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Miller there to pick up their
and family, ill. 4 Pomeroy ; materials.
Mr. and Mrs. Rona ld Miller
and family, Pomeroy; Edna
SLATE REHEARSAL
Association held at the MI. Searles, Kyger Creek; Mrs.
A practice for the Meigs
Moriah Baptist Church were Peggy Dowell, Syracuse; and County Youth Choir ,has been
Mrs. Lucille Pauley, president Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dowell and scheduled for Sunday at the
of the Ohio Baptist Women, family, Racine. VIsiti ng Bradbury Church of Christ
Dayton; Mrs. Eleanor Keels, Sunday at the Cook home were from
3:30 p.m. Youth of
Oak Hill ; Mrs. Ednah Lewis Mrs. Ruth Darst and childre n, juni~r high age or above are '
and Rhonda Waller, Akron.
Terry and Chris, Colwnbus. invited to allen~.
1

Firemen have picnic

no

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Meigs seniors

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ALL EXCEPT BEEF &amp; HAM

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�4 - T~ Dailv St•nlint'&amp;
. Middleport-Pom~roy. 0 .. Aug. 22, 1973

'I'll HF: U TV
tJnrta nnel . Curol O'Rri~n,

Frie-ndly Gardeners receive awards
RUTLAN D - Th~ Rullan&lt;l
Friendly Gardeners Club of
. Meigs Coun ty, Region II, was
named recipient of the Victor
Ries Outstanding Garden Club
Award for the state of Ohio at
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs' state convention ,
August 14-16, at Wooster
College. Winning this cash
award culmina led an intensive
program of projects over a
three year period for this club
of only 12 members.
During the three year
competition period, the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
have won regional and state
recognition and awards, ineluding: First, second and
honorable men tion, in garden
therapy, being invited to
display craft items at regional
and state meetings; firs t,
second, and honorable mention
in the sb te for publici ty book;
third in state for 1972 single
club flower show, "A Swnmer
Wedding"; third in state for"
1970-71 program book; "third in
slate for 1970 Sears Community
Involvement Proj ect; an d
second in state to member,
Mrs. James Carpenter, for
Kodachrome Slide Contest. A
lengthy_list of regional awards
has been accwnulated over
this period, in addition.
The Rutland Friendly
Gardeners have pr ovided
several regional officers and
chairwomen, including:'
Regional director, secretarY,
and publicity book , radio,
television and news release,

OAGC Publical!ons sales, and
OAGC tree s&gt;~les l'hairwumcn.
In the Meigs Count)• Garden
Club Association, the club has
provided garden therapy
chairwomen, ChrisllmlS and
· Regatta Flower Show tochairwomen , as well as
numerous committee memllers.
Among the requirements for
thy competition was the
organization· and sponsorship
of a new senior club, the
Homestead Garden Club of
Langsville, and a junior club,
the Rutland Merry Gardeners.
The club was required to
stage flower shows and enter
into competition, to enter the
various contests for publicity,
Sears Civic Improvement
Programs, · and program
books, have members attend
state conventions and give
demonstrations, displays and
speeches at county and
reg ional mee ti ngs, participate
in state workshops, tours and
clinics.
. Contrib utio ns to civic
projects are also considered
and it was noted tha i the club
members gave toward roadside and civic beautification
projects, and contributed to
Wahkeena, gave books to local
libra ri es , and worked in
various ca pacities with the
Leading Creek Conservancy
Distri ct and nationa l and
county plant and agriculture
societies.
Accepting the award at the
convention on behalf of the club

wcrr Mrs. Homer Purker and

Mrs . Jt\lllcs Carpenter.
Professor Victor Rics , in
presenlln~
the
check,
proclaimed his admiration of
tilC club and gave u resume of
lhe club's a!'livities . Th1•
presenlation was made al the

banquet attended b)• over 500

RiU'IIIC, duu~hler~

or Mr . nod

l.iJdies visit nursing home

Mrs, IJ&amp;rry O'Brien, uhln~ with
II y Guldlr C.:l•·•ulenln
tile Norris Quarter, will be 011
I'Oll'I'LAND - The Emma
tho Charles Norris television
OACiC lllt'lllbt•I'S ,
Smith Circle uf the 'b urch of
program "Christ is the AnThl."lllC o{ the cOil\irnltil!l 'I\ :IS
Jesus ChrJs t, Latte r Duy
swer!! ol 9:30 u,m,. Sunday.
"ilat• Off to 01\ ,L'", and Prof.
St•ints, wus t)rivileged lo meet
August 26 and September 2,
Hies •·nnchuil-d h1s n•11mrk.1 b)
with the folksJIJ tile Syr:•cusc
WI-:IINI-:SOAY
&lt;'ommcnting lhat tlw s tult
channel 13.
Nursing Home on Sunday , Au~ .
should lll'evnl " hats off .to tho
~MF: ll!CAN
Le~ion
12.
12 ~ner~(.\tic und dl•di('atrd Aux iliary, Feeney-Bennett
1 do not recall many names,
mem bers of lhl' Hull•nd Post 128.6:30 potluck supper al
except a Mrs. Young (sister of
Friendly Gardeners.''
the hall Wednesday ni~hl.
I'IIONF.S LISTED
'Eizu Walton) ; a Mrs. Jloss and
. Delegates lo Buckeye Gl~ls
I.ETART
FALLS ·
u 94-year-old lady In • wheel
Sl&lt;lte from both Meigs and · Hesldents of Letart Falls area chair who .didn 't seem nearly
Eastern High School will who are unable to reach lhe
old .
.
.
report on their experiences. nacine En unit may call Gary soAnother
lady in a wheel chilli'
M eetin~ at 1:30 p.m.
Wolfe at 241-240-t or Randall had only been there u few
treasurer, Martha Chapman.
Roberts
at 2'17-25al.
FEENEY-Bennett Post 128,
days; had been pianist at her
The dalr of the reunion Is Ameriean Legion ; 7: 30 p.m.
church until lately, and could
always the secpnd Sunday in Wedn esday at the hall .
sing all the old songs without a
August.
Members to join the auxiliary
book . They all seemed to be
for a potluck dinner at 6:30.
THURSDAY
well cared for .
But one could sympathize
A
SPEC
IAL
meeting
of
POMEHOY - MIDDLEPORT
Shade
River
Lodge
453,
r
and
with
these folks havmg had 10
Lions Club, noon, Meigs Inn .
All lions requested to allend. AM, will be held at B p.m. leave their own homes at this
Thursday at the temple. Work time in life, when home and
THURSDAY
The Daily Sentinel
MEIGS COUNTY Women 's will be in the FC Degree. familiar surroundings are the
DEVOTED TO THE·
Fellowship, Zion Church of · Refreshments will be served. mos t important things on
tNTEREs:T OF
MEIGS - MASON AREA
Christ, Thursday, at 7:30p.m. All Master Masons are urged to earth.
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
They promised to pral for us
f :(ec. Ed .
Members asked to take attend.
ROQERT HOEFLI CH,
TWIN CITY Shrinettes will and asked that we pray for
something for Bible College
·
City E d ltor
P Ub l iSI'I~d
d~ i iY
1\:..te~r
meet
Thursday at'8 p.m. al the them lo get to go home .lt was a
students wh(l are invited (o
Salui'd aY Di Tne Ohio Va l1 ey
home
of Clara Adams, Racine. sad parting for us, but a
PubJishhlQ Ci&gt;mpii11V • Ill
attend the meeting.
Cour t sr , Pomero'l' . Oh io,
rewarding afternoon.
45}69 - BU!. i nes OHi c e Phone
OPEN AIR Reviva l at
99~ 21S6. Editor ial Phone 991
FRIDAY
o n Sunday . morning our
Albany Riding Club Grounds,
1157
Second crus postage pa ra
PAST
Matrons
of
Evangeline
guests
were Dr. Ronald
Alliany, today, Friday and
at Pomeroy , 011 io
Chapter
OES,
picnic
at
6
p.m.
Nalional aaven is l ng
Gillilen, M.D., and his two sons
Saturday, 7:30 nightly. Special
represenl _a tive Bott tn el 1i
the
Middleport
Masonic
at
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Baer of
G&amp;l lagher , Inc .. 12 East 42n d
singers to be featu red.
St ., New York. , N ew York
Temple.
Bring
covered
dish
Pomeroy.
· SubHript , on rates,
Evangelist is the Rev. John L.
Deti~ered bV carrier wh er eo
and
own
table
service.
On Tuesday evening there
Elswick, Athens. The public is
avai lable SS cents per Wl'!.'k ,
Bv Mohlf Route wh,e r e
Husbands
invited.
was a wiener and marsh·
invited.
Cllrr ler
seni •C e
not
mallow roast on
lhe
available One morllh . $1. ev
m~ll in Ohio and w va , One.
back law n at the ch urch
SUNDAY
Year , i 16: 5\)( months . e SO ;
Three
mon ths .
SS 50
WILLING Workers Class,
with.
coffee, tea, Koo lSWARTZ
fa
mily
reunio
nElsewhere SIS 't'l! !l r ; s PJ(
Enterprise United Methodist will be held in the Woode Aid and potato chips by a .big
month£ 19 .50; t11rt•e montns ,
S6. Svbscrlptlon price in
Chw'ch, 7:30p.m. at the home Grove at. Alfred. Everyone wood fire. Guests were Dr.
etude s sv n day Time~
SenHMI. •
of Mrs . James Will.
welcome.
Gillilen, sons, and Brenda,
1

Trifamily reunion held
CARPENTER - About 60
and re latives of U1e
Green, Ogdin and Caster
families met Sunday at the
Columbia Chapel Church for a
basket dinner.
During the business meeting,
presided over by the president,
Mrs. Robert Hollida)', the
minutes were read by the
secretary, Mrs. Wesley Bobo,
Prizes were awarded to Miss
Viola Bobo, Mi.ller Cottage at
the V.i\. Center in Dayton as
tile oldest member present.
Miss Bobo Is 92 years young
and alert and active as usual.
The grandson of Mryl Bobo
was the youngest, and Mrs .
Robert Taylor, Cimarron, Kan .
"came the farthest.
The Rev . Willard Love ,
pastor of lhe •local church,
offered prayer.
The families presented $JO to
the church to be applied on the
building fund.
Officers for lhe coming year
will be president, Wesley Allen
(lgdin: vice president, Octa
Gillogly and secretary·
frlen&lt;!~

dauu~tcr of the Clarence

Jlrndfurds, "nd her husband,
Kelly, &lt;J( lndupmlence, r.(a.;
p0 ~gy Smith, Chester and
Miss Codner. of Pantlnnd, .
bride-to-be of Danny Prof!ltt,
whose wedding will be Friday
evenin~ at the church.
even though it was !lamp
ufl&lt;~r If/light shower, the moon
came out: we carried our
chairs out around lhe fire and .
sang songs led by Ronnie and
Brenda and Kelly, and clo!led
with a sente nce prayer,
sta ndin~ In a circle, holding
hands.
one sad note was that our
music director. Mercedes
condon, had to leave b~cause
asthma and U1e dampness.
Anna Cornell went with her.
. we had churc h services at
Forked Run Lake Park last
Sunday, followed by a basket
dinner Guests were Tom and
Pam Diddle and sons, and
Charles and Juan.lta Cozart
and Tami of Columbus. These
outings are good for all ; sort o'
back to nature, and closer to
God .

THREE-TIME WINNER
CAMP PERRY, OhiQ (UP[) .
- Ron Troyer of Williamsfield,
Oh io, is the first _thr,ee-time
winner in the Na!tonal High
Power Rifle Championships.
Troyer finished on~ point
ahead of Gary Anderson · o!
Ax tell, Neb., Thursd~y .
Troyer's total was one pomt
below the national record set in
1952.

5

.'
Thr Dully &amp;-nlhli'l, Mld•lleport· l'om~roy, 0 ., Au~ . 22, 1!!7:1

f!bserve anniversary '$700 netted for
An ob~ervance of the silver
wedding anniversury of the·
Rev. and Mrs, Robert Kuhn
was held Sut1day morning
fo llowing services ut the
· Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
On
behalf
of
the
congregation, Mrs. Elmer
Wickham prese nted the couple
with a sliver tray, and Orval
Wiles presented them wllh a

Hill of money .
A poem,

--ow·

Lives ur&lt;'
Songs", wus •·cud by M1·s.
Wickham und the Hev . Mr. and
Mrs. Kuhn relnted events Of
thetr weddhlg day . Mrs ,
Wickham suog two verses of
"0 Perfect Love", a sonij
played at the Kuh n wedding,
with the congregation jolnin~ ·
her for a verse .
'

.Church hosts conference
The Rev. Leo n Troy,
presld,ent of tbe Ohio Baptist .
Gen er~l Association, was guest
spea~e r at the concludin g
sesaion of the 139th Annual
Session of the Providence
Missionary Association held at
the Mount Moria h Baptist
Church.
"The Churches Response to
the Challenge of the 70's" was
· the general theme of the
sess ion which opened on
Wednesday. Representatives
of about 30 churches were
present for the meetings
Committees In charge were
Mrs. Ernest Bowles and Mrs.
John Moon, registration ; Mrs .
Ervin .Baumgardner and Mrs.
Julia WilUams, housing; Carl
Williams, Mrs. Campbell
Harper and Mrs. Arnold
Richards purchasing ; Kevin
Angel,' Arnold Richards, Ervin
Baumgardner, Carl Williams,
and John Moon, soft drinks;
Mrs . Ann Angel, Mrs. Henry

Key, Miss Carrie Ward , Mrs.
Henrietta Robinson, Mrs .
Pellas Stallworth, Angela and
Kim Payne, and J o Richard .
Keel, dining room; Phil and
Stanlord Moon, ge neral
assista nts; and Mrs. Carl
Williams and Mrs. Nellie Winston, kitchen chairpersons.
SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Davidson,
Morristown, ·, N. J . are announcing the birth of a son,
Charles Philip, born Aug. 16 at
th e Morristown Memorial
Hospital. Grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs . Walter
Emerson Jones, Mlddle,port,
and
Mr .
and
Mrs. Frank Davidson, t'airborn. Mr. and Mrs. Davidson
have a daughter , Ann
Elizabeth, five , and John
Andrew, four . Mrs . Jones left
today for Morristown to assist
the family.

Neurly S700 worth of quill• ,
home a~cel!llorles, and craft
llelll!l made by senior citizens
were sold duri n~ the Meigs
County ~'air at the ten I dlsplav .
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, Meigs
County Council on Aging
project director, advises that
all of the proceeds with the
exce plon of a small percentage
goos to the in~lvldua l who
made the ilem. This goes
towards the purchase ol additional materials for use at the
Senior Citize ns Ce!l!Air.
About 500 atte nded the
Second Annual Senior Citizens
Day observed on Thursday at
the fair. Both of the mini-buses
were used for transportation
and also assisting in this
respect were Mrs. Avice
Spencer, Mrs. Esther Mays
and Mrs. Mary Barn h!!rt of the
Young Wives Club, Chesler.
Entertainment was provided
by Mrs. Hazel Thomson who
played· an organ provided by
Brunlcardl, Gallipolis, Mrs.
Berni ce
Winn
led
in group sin ging; Mrs·
Edith · Jividen,
Mrs .
Nellie Trac y and Mrs.
Bertha Parker gave readings;
Darrell and Carol tay lor
provided the public address
system and entertained with
the guitar and violin ; Mr. and
Mrs . Dinsmore Boyles sang

Hl)ve&lt;·l•l selections as did Mrs.
Betty Will and Jean Windon .
1'he•·e was also en·
lertalnmentby Mari lyn Fought
and her Methodist youth group
of Barbara ~' ultz, Andy and
J.au1·a Hoover; and in strumental selections by
F'runcls Andrews, Richard
Boring and Brian Collins.
Among tho.e who visited the
tent we re Mrs . ·Elizabeth
Wickham, 100 years old last
month , Wilbur Logan and Mr.
and Mrs. Otto Iles, both 88, and
twenty over 80 years old. Ther·e
·was some Impromptu square
dancing and jigs
IS RELEASED
Mrs , Ed nah (,ewis, 84,
Akron, was released Monday
fro m the Holzer Medi cal
Ce nter in Ga llipolis. Mrs.
Lewis, in Middleport for the
!39th Am1ual Session of the
P r ovid e nce Mi ss ionary
Assocatio n at th'e Mount
Moriah Baptist Church, injured herself in a fall down the
stai rs at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Richards where
she was sta ying. Rho nda
Waller who was here with Mrs.
Lewis remained with the
Ri chard s family until her
discharge when a niece from
Akron came for them.

~
«

~

~l

•

•

Leifheit family has reunion

Middleport r,
Areunion nf ttw dt•SI·cmlanlii
~I Personal Notes 1
of lht• late August C1wrlw; and
~
.

Mr. and MrH. •)Wilt'S Criswell
und Mrs. Jiclcn M&lt;&amp;rtlll are
va!'atlonin~ m the Wcst1•rn
Htatc~.

The ' harle• Winebrenner
fumlly has returned from ~
2,1!00 rnllc trip to Florida. They
visiicd Disney World ~~
Orlando, spent tin'1e with Dale
Winebrenner in St. Petersburg
who took the family on a tour of
the attractions there, visited
Sarasota and went to Talflpa to
see the Busch Gardens.
ltctu rnin~ home bY, way of
Jacksonville they spen( a day
on the ocean.
Mr. and· Mrs. Bob Byer,
Larry and Mary Teresa drove
to .Holland, Mic h., for Mrs.T.
G. Hilldore and Julie Byer who
were there visiti ng Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Hilldore. Mrs.
Hilldore and Julie went
especially for the wedding of
l.ori Hiildore to Bill Notter.
'fhe Byer family and Mrs .
Hilldore also visited recently ih
Steubenville with Mr. and Mr s.
Frank Hilldore.
Mr s. Jo Richards Keel
returned to Denver, Colo.,
today after visiting here with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Hichards, for the past
three weeks. Her son, Brett
Bunton, will remain in Cincinnati for another week before
returning to Denver
Houseguests of Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Richards during the
13llth annual session of the
P ro vide nce Mi ss ion a r y

th•• l.&lt;•lww family and served turc-s were taken. Plans were
with the cvcniug meul. The day made for another reunion In
i•:nuua HcuWr Lciflwit WiJS was 'spent p1ayin~ gt~rnes, 1974, with the time and plactfto
l•'ld Sumlay at the Lehew :;wirl)lujng und ri~rting . 'Plc.:· be cmnounced Iuter .
trailer l'alll () at Mijplcw(XHl
Lake .
There was a basket dinner at
noon . Members of the furnily
atll~lding were Mrs. llarold
JohnSIIn (Alma I.A&lt;ifhclt) , Mr .
The annual p1cmc of the Robert Byer , Julie, Mary
and Mrs. Hichard l .&lt;:ifh ~it, Middleport firemen and their · Teresa, and Larry, Mr. and
Emma Jo and Kurt, Spring- families was held Sunday at Mrs. Dave Zirkle, Terri,
field ; Mr. and Mrs. Harr y the Tycoon Lake camp site of Debbie and Brenda, ~a ula
Davis (Veda Leifheit), Mr. and Mr . and Mrs. Pete Kloos.
Kloos, and the Kloos' grand·
Mrs. William Lehew, Cheryl,
/\\tending were Mr . and Mrs . Slln, Mallhew .
Ted, John and Bill, Pomeroy; Sidney nusscll, M. and Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert IA!hew, James Daniels, Mr . and Mrs.
PLI\N Pot LUC!'
Debra, Charlotte and !Wbin, Hobert Md&lt;:lhinncy, Mr . and
A get-acqu;.inted potluck and
Mrs . John Vroman and ,
Co l umb11~ .
wie~er roast will be held by the
Guests were Mrs. Willlarn grand&lt;;on , .John, Mr . and Mrs. Ohio Ba Phi Chepter of Beta
'fheuner, Syracuse; Mrs.
Sigma Phi Soro rity o·n
Ernest Bruley, Detroit, Mich.;
Tuesday, Aug. 28, at 6:30 at
ENJOY
VISIT
Mrs.
Homer
Hawkins,
. SYHACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. Royal Oak Park,lor members,
Pomeroy ; and Bill Slack,
Richard Holmes, Tammy and their husbands and Invited
Middleport .
guests. Those attending are to
A round-robin card was Bruce, Richlands, Va ., have take thei r own til ble service.
been
visiting
her
parents,
Mr.
signed for Miss Dorothy
and Mrs . Bernard Cook,
Leifheit who has been a bed
Syracuse.
Friday a picnic was
patient since October at the
held at the Middleport Marina
TO MEET
Orient Hospital.
attended
by
the
Holmes
family,
The Pomeroy Bowling.
Presented to the Davises at
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Bernard
Cook,
Association
will meet at 8 p.m.
the· reunion was a decorated
Eva
Mae
Phillips,
Syracuse;
Wed nesday at the Pomeroy
cake inscribed " Belated Happy
Mr,
and
Mrs.
Raymond
Ea
rl
Bowling Lanes. All league
Birthday, Veda and Harry ." It
Cook
anf
family,
Pomeroy;
secretaries are asked to be
was presented to the couple by
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Miller there to pick up their
and family, ill. 4 Pomeroy ; materials.
Mr. and Mrs. Rona ld Miller
and family, Pomeroy; Edna
SLATE REHEARSAL
Association held at the MI. Searles, Kyger Creek; Mrs.
A practice for the Meigs
Moriah Baptist Church were Peggy Dowell, Syracuse; and County Youth Choir ,has been
Mrs. Lucille Pauley, president Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dowell and scheduled for Sunday at the
of the Ohio Baptist Women, family, Racine. VIsiti ng Bradbury Church of Christ
Dayton; Mrs. Eleanor Keels, Sunday at the Cook home were from
3:30 p.m. Youth of
Oak Hill ; Mrs. Ednah Lewis Mrs. Ruth Darst and childre n, juni~r high age or above are '
and Rhonda Waller, Akron.
Terry and Chris, Colwnbus. invited to allen~.
1

Firemen have picnic

no

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INSTANT

triad chicken
dlnf1ar

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OR

NO. 1
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STOCK

FOR

-

UP
NOW

RUSSET
POTATOES

·ed
·chicken
10 PIECES

CHICKEN

FULLY COOKED

OF

RED

THE SEA

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FLOUR

BANQUET

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vm1no.

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5-LB. BAG

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RIPE

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OFFER EXPIRES

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Daily &amp;nlinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .,

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes

7

Au~ . 22, 1973

Mason News

'rill' Dally S.ntincJ , Mlddleport·l'onwroy, 0 ., Au~. 22. 1~7:1

Two-out single breaks
•• up AL 's 5th no-hitter
•

••
•

Guests at the home of Mrs.
Garnette Hesson on S&lt;lturd"y
were Mr. and Mrs. Orban
fl~sson of Cabiu Creek,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Hesson , Lara, Tracy and
Berke of Vincentown, N.J.;
Mr.and Mrs. Carl Gibbs and
Carletlu of New Haven; Mr.
Wess Roush, Mr. and Ms. Bill
Lloyd and Jeremy Todd ; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Lathey, Jeff
and Melissa; Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Rickard and Maxie
and Mr. Edward Rickard, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Scott,
Corbet, Evan and Doris Ann of
GlenwoOd, were recent guests
at the home of Mrs. Etltel
Moore.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Kettmire, David Ray, Rheba
Virginia. Dorothy Renee' and
Michael of Jacksonville, Fla.
have spent a month visiting
with friends and relatives at
Letart Falls, 0., Pomeroy, 0 .;
Hartford, New Haven and
Letart. They also visited
Camden Park and the Mason
County Fair. They returned
home on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs . Larry Lathey,
Jeff and Melissa of Letart, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Lathey and
Jerimy Todd of Colwnbus, 0.
and Mrs. Mary Lathey of
Danville, 0. recently spent a
week visiting in the state · of
Florida. Some of the places
they
visited
were
Disneyworld, Cypress ·Gardens, and Daytona Beach.
Mr . Thomas Reitmire
visited with his family Mr. and
Mrs . Henry Reitmire on
Wednesday. He is currenUy
employed at Shoneys II at St.
Albanslmdis staying with Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Adkins and
family .

EASY WAYS TO .UY.

•
I

••

CASH, CHARGE,

Mrs . qarnet Harbrecht and
Debbie, Mrs. Florence Windon.
Mrs. Veda Davis were in
Lancaster recently to visit Mr.
and Mrs. Waller Boyer. Mr.
Boyer 92, remains ill at his
home.
Mrs. Ernest Bruley has
returned to Detroit, Mich. after
visiting here with Mrs. Homer
Hawkins and other reltives .
Mrs, Harold Johnson, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Leifheit and
family, Sprinifield, spent the
weekend in Pomeroy l'iSiting
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis and
other relatives .
. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer
and daughter, Kim, Columbus
were Monday overnight guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and Jayne.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Finlaw
and children, Heather and
Matthew, have returned from a
fishing trip to Michigan .
Weekend guests of Mrs.
Frances King were Albert
Coles, his son, Edward
J. Coles, aild a friend
of Akron. They also visited Mr. and Mrs. WiUiam
Marks and children, Chauncey.
Sunday evening visitors of
Mrs. King and her weekend
guesjs were Charles King and
daughter Susie, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward J. King and sons, Joe,
Michael,
and Tammy,
Harrisonville; Mr. and Mrs .
William King and daughters,
· Mary and Cindy, and Mr. and
Mrs. Jack King, Jackie, Jeffrey and Jenney.
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin King
and sons, Billy, Frank and
Rodney, Vincent, Mr. and Mrs.
William King, Mary and Cindy,
and Mrs. Frances King enjoyed a picnic recently at
Royal Oak Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack King and
!aniUy were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hudnell,
Albany .
·
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton
The annual Homecoming of
and John Fultz were ill Xenia the Hopewell C:hurch at !1ft.
Sunday to visit Col. Lyston Alto, will be held on Sunday.
Fultz; who remains In critical
The day will open with
condition at the Memorial Sunday School at the regular
Hospital there, Room 126 B.E. hour of 10:00 a.m. There will
Col . Fultz suffered a heart be morning worship at II :00
attack, a stroke and has a.m. Special singing during
pnewnonia.
the day will be by Sandy
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Foster, Richards and the Songsters of
Carol, Robin, Patty, Anthony, Parkersburg, the Hiltons of
Livonia, Mich. ; Mr. and Mrs. Evergreen
Hills,
the
T. M. CottriU, Jill, Joan and LighthouseTrio ofCharleston
Jennifer, Carroll; the Rev. arid and the Gospel Teams or'
Mrs. Carver Williams, Betsy Ripley.
' and Dawn, Kenton, Mr. and
There will he a be•ket
Mrs. John· Schri'Jdt and Ted, dinner at the noon hour.
Lancaster, and Miss Carla Rev. Earl Perkins, Pastor of
Schmidt, Carroll, have been the Church. of the Good
the recent guests of Mrs. J. Shepherd at Flatrock, will
Edward ~aster.
bring the message during the .
Mrs. Wilma Brady, Frost-- afternoon service. ·
proof, Fla., spen Tuesday with
A cordial welcome to attend
Miss Marcia Karr, Syracuse. is extended by the people of
Mr. and Mrs. John Richard ' the Hopewell Baptist Church,
Sauva~e have moved _
their Clarence B. Morton, Pastor.
moblle home from Point
Pleasant to a lot in Syracuse
adjoining his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Sauvage.
·

LAY· AWAY

.

5HOP EARLY WIIILE
OUANTIIIES LAST

3 BIG DAYS! THURS.-FRI.-SAT., AUG. 23-24.:25

GIRLS' 3 to 6X

MISSES' SHIRTS

SLACK SETS
SAVE 54'

Stan Bahnsen 's near nohitter last night for the Chicago
: White So~ was almo$t as poetic
• as hlll ~~pression of how he felt
: after 'le gave up his only hit, a
: single •to Walt Williams with
two out In l~e ninth innl~ g.
;
"It felt like the bottom fell
• out of the balloon I was riding "
: ,B~h""n said afrer settling r~r
.: a 4-ll, bne.hit victory over the
' Cleveltmd Indians and just
: missing
the
American
: League's flfih no-hlt!Alr this
year . ' "It was such an
• emotional thing 'til then, 1 just
• wan~e&lt;~ Williams to hit the ball
, on the ground and he did."
•
Willinms, who takes a short
'• stroke, rapped a ground ball on
•, a 2-1 pitch too hard and too far
: to the left for third baseman
: Bill Melton to nab. Bahnsen
1 who had pitched a pair of nO:
hitters the minors in 1!166 and
1967, stood gaz(ng Into centerfield for a few moments
before ,retiring the last hitter.
' ATough Hitler
; "I always wanted to pitch a
: "":"hitter in the big leagues,"
satd Bahnsen who won 21
: games .Jast year after c,..belng
: traded to tbe White Sox -from
: the Yankees. "l wish Williams
• would have ·pulled the ball a
little. He's a Iough hitter."
:
Bahnsen, who gave up a walk
; to Dave Duncan with two out in
the . second inning and then
retired 17 batters in order
, before walking Duncan again
: in the eighth, picked up his 16th
1 victory against
14 defeats.
•, . Second baseman Jorge ·orta
: drove in two runs for Chicago
: on three hits, including his
: thirdhomer,andalsosaved the
: no-hltte~ remporar~y when he
• went behind second base to
' make a tremendous stop and
, throw otit Buddy Bell in the
••• third.
In other American League
games ,' Baltimore nipped
Minnesota, 2-1, Boston out:
slugged Texas, 15-9, Kansas
City clipped New York, 5-4,
Detroit tripped Oakland, 6-4,
and Milwaukee downed

44

SIZES

6· 18

67

1

REG .
~ 2 . 99

Lang s!ccvcrl dmiSIC S
Wll hVOIIIIed prc J.pper

c

0

II

(I I

s

~.

0

I

I

d

colo• s ond pri n t'i.

REGULAR '3 ..98
Machine

s;l

cs 32

t 0

3 8.

woshob le

cotton. long sleeve
lops. MatChing corduroy flare pants.
Prinls

and

'

By Uqlled Preatlnlernatlonal

COTTON / POL VESTER BLENDS!

in

solids .

MISSES'

$9.

.t

Wide Leg PantS
MISSES ' &amp; WOMEN 'S

98 .

JUMPERS

Hopewell Baptist
Church Plans
Homecoming

•••

SAVE

.,.n

REGULAR '5.99

CHARGE

Wa shab le bonded 'Orion.&lt;!. acry lic
or Visco lon ocetofe. Sol id colors
p l aids a nd woven pattern s i ~

IT!

Genuine suede ond la tigo look
vinyl. Shou lder Strop or' top
handle. Browntones, black .

~-18; 14 v,·24
® DuPont Reg. TM

fa ll ,o lors.

1j,,

PAIR
Grea t school pants of brushed
co tton plaids , Popu la r wide
leg styling with cuff looks · 6r
fly fr ont. New f all colors.

.

,.•

180-DEGREE
PIVOT ARM

3 PC. SCHOOLMATES!

HI INTENSITY

JUNIOR BOYS'
SUCK SETS

DESK LAMP

''"

REG.
$6 .44

LARGE, GOLD FINISHED

.

:• Shade River to
: host coon hm1t

88 ·

584

INITIAL PIN

--..J

3

.

•

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REG.
54.98

SERVICE ouT
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)
Service to WOUB radio and
·
television and · O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital here was
disrupted late Tuesday when
REG. $6.98 .
· Check us for price and two General Telephone co.
' ~uallty.
·
lines wer~ cut. WOUB was off
SWEEP SECOND
~
the air briefly until adjustments could he made and
Electric Drowse Alarm
Main at Sycamore
other lines patched in. At the Lets you snooze
POMEROY. OHIO
hospital,onelinewascutat the an ex t ro 5 or 10
.....,~~::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;cJ'J entranCl'.
mi nut e s. Wh ; t e

JEANS
ARE lfERE

~!!~a~~~ c:.~~s~~~ll tS:~

:
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:

California, 11-2.
AI Bumbry's ninth-Inning
sacrifice fly scored Bobby
Grieb, who had doubled and
moved to third on a single by
Mark Belanger, with th•
winning run as the Oriol~!
extended thelr winning streak
to nine games by beating
Minnesota. Grant Juckson,,7.0,
earned the vlcwry in relief of
.Jim Palmer. Twlns' star!Alr
Bert Blyleven, 15-13, absorbed
the defeat although he went the
dlsllince for the 19th time.
Dwight Evans powered a 400.
foot two-run homer in the
second Inning and started a
five-run third inning and
Reggie Smith drove In five
runs to pace Boston over the
Rangers and give Roger Moret
hi&amp; eighth victory without a
defeat.
Lou Piniella's third single of
the game drove in Amos Otis,
who had doubled, with the tiebreaking run in the fifth inning
and lifted Kansas City past the
Yankees behind the excellent
relief pitching of Joe Hoerner.

. .. .When you buy
LAYTErTampon 30's

lOLA's

CHICAGO (UP!) - Avictory
to break a three-game losing
streak gave Chicago Cubs
pitcher Ferguson Jenkins less
satisfaction than the reaction
.of his teammates.
"The best satisfaction I got,"
Jenkins said, "is when people
smile after you win and people
.are happy you won. When my
teammares are happy I won,
I'm happy I won for them."
Tuesday he got his
satisfaction. He gave up his
31st home run, high in the
National League, to Joe
Morgan with Pete Rose on base
to tie the score with the Cin·
cinnati Reds 44 after seven
innings.
Then he stayed in the game
and ben!lfited frolll a run
scoririg single by Rico Carty,
his third single in four at bats,
and an· eighth Inning single by
Rico Cariy, his third single in
four at bats, and his own eighth
inning single to score a rWI to
produce a· 6-4 win.
"I don't get high every game
I win," Jenkins said. "l tend
not to be emotional and I hope I
can win some more. I expected
mixed emotions from the
crowd but I haven't pitched
good this year,
"i knew I had to go out and
blank .them another couple of
innings and I thought I had two
or three innings left. I hope I
can win some games going
down the stretch and if we get

SAVE S4.01

BOYS' NO IRON

FASTBACK
FLARE JEANS
REG.

USED CARS

'3.98

Special

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REG.
9 .3 '

PLAID JEANS
SAVE

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OUR LOTI

art! Ave.

'

Middleport

•

3"

Polyester/cotton.
Flore
leg . Belt loops. Navy,
brown, burgundy. 8· 16.

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PLAIIIC :
HOBBY kiTi l

REG. 14.98 BOYS'

IPound
Pu re sugar coated chocn·
la te. I lb. bog or bulk.

Sale Prices!

PAIR

Durable polyes ter/cotton
twi ll. 4 pockets. Blue,
green, bronze. 6 t&lt;J 20.,,

CHOCOLATE TREAT!

August

357

REG.
1

1.64

38 !
KIT

Fun •to· bulld outh•ntlc
&amp;cole , modelt. S.ltctlon
include! &amp;toe~ con •hi 1
plane•. military kits, fu~
cars, cloulet, drogtt•r•
dune buggies, mucll mor~J

OP AND SAVE THE EASY WAY•CHARG• ftW
SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING PLAZA - BOllt STORES IN GALLIPOLIS - POINT PLEASANT STORE

••

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'
:
I

l
:

:

••
•

•••

••
'j
'

:

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GENERAL TIRE SALES

I

II
(

••

I

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(

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~,'~
~
~:.

• ~ij~~
S~~~
WR

Hoerner worked out of 8 bases- ~;*~:

loaded jam with one out In the
sixth after relieving starter
Steve Mingorl and collected his
fourth save.
Mickey Stanley hit two
triples, a single and drove In
two runs . and John !filler pitched five Innings of two-hit
relief In leading Ute Tigers over
Oakland and snapping a nine:

-%

W*

i%

!i@
:::0

:;:~;l

..,.

;:i;::;:

Johnny Briggs doubled in
two runs and Bobby Mitchell
knocked in a pair with a homer
to account for a four-run sixth
inning as Brewers, behind the •
eight-hit pitching of Jim
Colpoin, beat the Angels.
Colborn struck out four and
walked none In winning his 16th
game. Nolan Ryan, 14-15, took
the loss after leaving In the
sixth.

close ,I think we'll have as good
a chance as anybody in our
division."
Jenkins, who last week was
fined $400 by League President
Chub Feeney for throwing four
bats on the field after he was
knocked out by Atlanta in his
previous appearance on the
mound, still expressed uncertain feelings about his
position with the Cubs. ·
"Nobody In his right mind,"
he said, "ever wants to be
traded. Only maybe if you're 40
and there's money in the other
league, you might say, 'send
me there so I can make more
money.'''
Otherwise, he said, he didn't
anticipate asking the Cubs to
trade him and he avoided
ans)Verlng qqestions as to
whether last week he expressed a desire to be traded.
"I'm not unhappy," he said,
"bl\1 I haven't been happy
pitching In this ball park. It's
small and the wind blows out. I
got one up against Morgan and
he hit It out."
It was only the third win for
the Cubs in the last 15 games,
and only the fourth loss for the
Reds in the last 13, but it was a
big victory.

'

e

sp o· rts
D es k
·

~.

·

ii:i!~

game
A's kept
winning
. ·rhe
trlwnph
tlie streak
Tigers
in
second pl$ce In the AL East,
3\1 games behind Baltimore,
and shaved Oakland's lead in
the AL West to two games over
the Royals.

992·7161

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"The way we're playing,"

Ugh thea vywelght title · for a
record 12th time, The decision
was unanimous and all three
cards were lopsided .
During the weigh-In Tuesday
the fighters had flared at each
other and Fourle had told
Foster, " tonight's the night,
boy."
Foster was Immediately
upset at Fourie's use of the
word uboy.''
"I'm going to knock him out
tonight for calling me boy,"
Faster said.
He Didn't Preis for KO
But once the fight began the
34-year-old Foster did not press
for a knockout. He was content
to stick his left jab In the face of
the challenger time after time
and use his reach to ward off
what Fourle had said would be
his "secret plan of attack."
"!wanted It to go the whole
16," said Foster, who won the
UUe .In 1968 from Dick Tiger
and has now defended It more
Urnes than any other boxer In
history. "I had him four or five
Urnes. He called me 'boy,' and
I don 1tlike anybody to call me
a 'boy.' Every time I hit him he
was hurt."
· After the fight, according to
Foster, Fourle came to the
champion's corner and
· apologized for the remark.
"l accepted the apology,"
said Foster, who was making
his first title defense before his
hometown fans .
Fourle Indicated he thought
Foster was using the weigh-In
Incident as an excuse lor not
being able to score a knockout.
It was only the second time
since Foster has won the crown
that he didn't knock out a
challenger.
"He didn't hurt me,'' said
Fourle1 who had a strlnR of 29
'

·'

~='~
*'''~
.. .

·.~-::.
:;• •;·n
~~~;.·

Hank drives in 3

~~·
m
~;

lly

ll'lt~:o t&gt;OWN

lJ I'I SpurtH Wrller
Eddie Mathe w~. Hank
Aaron 's long-time friend aod

I'.·
·

~. c1.1rrent mantjger, ha:J bt&gt;en
1

~
~

,,

Bv Denny Ji'11 be.~

1

f~

'0

· ··
The co4nldown is now at 16 days, and counting . Or·, if you
prefer, 3ll4 hours; or 23,040 minutes .
.
Or, if you're one of those fans who just can't wait for that
opening kickoff, you only have to wait t,;m;400 seconds before
Ute 1973 scholastic grid sea:;on begins.
The Southern Tornadoes, Eastern Eagles and Meigs
Marauders continue two-a~y drills under the boiling August
sun In the hope that they'll be ready for those ever so near
openers.
Southern mentor Bill Jewell is drilling his backs at 8 in Ute
morning, his linemen at 9:30 and then the whole team geL~
together at I In the afternoon.
E~stern, under the tutelage of first-year coach Lew
Berkhtmer, also works out in the morning, with the squad getting
together again aro und 3 in the afternoon.
Meigs coach Charley Chancey also has his players up with
the roo~ters, htttmg the practice field at 8, then returning for
mor~ drtUs at 1 p.m. Ahost of Marauder players, 11 in all, stalked
thestdehnes yesterday, resting varioua bumps and bruises. None
sho uld be oulfor any great length oftime, however.
Scrimmages will now start to dot teams' agendas and the
Eagles ' Berkhimer is looking for an opponent, from a 'school of
comparable·stze, to scrimmage this Saturday. Anyone interested
should contact him at the school, 985-3329 or at home, 378-6285.
In other announcements, all Meigs .Jr. High 7th and 8th
grade boys who are interested in going out for foo tball should
report to the junior high stadium in Middleport, Thursday, at 6
p.m.
Also, registration for the 1973 Punt, Pass and Kick program
he.gan Mond~y and the Ford Motor Company is expecting-over 1
million partiCipants again this year.
. Youngsters, aged 8 through 13, can register at most area
Ford dealerships, and must be accompanied by a parent or
guardian . The sign-up ends Sept. 28.
There is no entry fee and no special equipment is needed.
REDS NOTES - Sunday, Aug. 26, is the first-ever camera
dsy at Riverfront Stadium: Fans who bring their cameras will be
allowed on the f[eld prior to the game to take snapshots of their
favorite players.
The St. Louis Cardinals will provide the opposition for the
day.
.
.
' TRIBE TALK -"- Old Time Beer Night, one of very few
reasons to go to an Indians game, will be held Tuesday, August
28, at 6 p.m. in Clevelnd's Municipal Stadium, when the Tribe
meets the red hot Kansas City Royals.
Anyone 18 years or older who wants to sip a few will he able
to purchase 5 beers for the price of one.
HAMMERIN ' HANK - According to United Press International, an official of the Atlanta Braves has disclosed that
outfielder Henry Aaron regularly receives pplice protection
durmg road trips. Hopefully , the racial ignorance of some of
those who support the Babe 's record will not impede Hank's
progress in eclipsing the all-time home run mark.
.

Cub Manager Whitey Lockman
said, "I feel good. You can see
and feel the difference in our
team. We're starting to come."

i

,.

~

~

run double and Dave Johnson's
two-run homer.
Mike J.urn tied the score al7·
7 with a homer in the fifth and
the Braves went ahead 9-7
when Darrel! Evans and Aaron
followed with singles and
Baker hit his second two-run
double of the game. Aaron
&amp;iubled home another run in a
two-run sixth and then retired
from the game . Gary Neibauer
picked up his second win while
Ute loss was Wise's ninth.
'l11e Pirates crept to within
1% _game~ of the Cardinals in
NL East when rookie John

saying all season that the
Atlanta Braves slugger's No. 1
goal is not surpassing Babe
Huth's all-time rart'Cr home
run rct'O rd.
"SUre, Hank wants to. break
thcrccord," Mathews has been
telling anyone who would
listen . "But he won't salTifice
his value to the team by
swinging for homers in any
situation. He wants more than
anything else to play in one
more World Series. And that
means hitting io win games."
Willt 704 homers and the
QUITSWVAU
Braves out of the National
MORGANTOWN, W. Va .
League's Western Division
(UP!
) - Ron Weaver a fl.j)
race, Aaron is at a stage in his
assault on Ruth's mark of 714 sophomore forward from
career homers where he could Dayton, Ohio, has decided not
he excused if he swWtg for the to return to school at West
horizon every time he went to Virginia University this fall
and will continue working In
the plate ,
But true to Mathews' his hOmetown area. As a freshprediction, Aaron is "swinging man on the junior varsity team
for the team" - as he did here last year, Weaver
Tuesday night when he had a averaged 12.3 points and 10.1
double and two singles and rebounds a game .
drove in three runs .as the
Braves rallied from a 7~
deficit in the third · inning to
heat the St. Louis Cardinals, 11·
COACH REHffiED
7. The hom er less game,
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Atlanta's !28th game of the Cleveland Crusaders of the
season, left Aaron with a World Hockey Association
projection of eight more
have rehired Bill Needham as
homers this season and a total coach for another season.
of 712.
Contract terms were withheld.
Pittsburgh Defeats Houston
Pitt sburgh
defeated
Houston G-3, New York nipped
Los Angeles, 2-1, San Francisco beat Montreal, 3-1,
Chicago topped Cincinnati, 6-4,'and Philadelphia rallied fo r a ATTORNEY FILES SUIT
9-ll triumph over San Diego in
RENO, Nev. (UP!) - A
other NL games.
Reno attorney has filed a
American League scores were $100,000 dama~e suit aeain•t.
Baltimore 2 Minnesota 1, the Holiday Hotel 1 contendin~
Chicago 4 Cleveland 0, [\ansas · he was prevented !rom using
City 5 New York 4, Boston 15 his "legal foolproof" system to
Texas 9, Milwaukee 6 heat the roulette wheel.
California 2, and Detroit 6
Melvin Schaengold's federal
.oakland 4.
court suit said the botel's
Pitcher Rick Wise's gra nd owners and the State Gaming
slamhomerwas thebigblow of Control Board won't let him
the Cardinals' seven-run third· use free coupons in a system
inning outburst but the Braves that beats roulette legally. He
rallied for six runs in their half accused the hotel of depriving
of the frame on Aaron's two- him ol his right to gamble .
run single, Dusty Baker's two-

Morlan scattered nine hit! and
Gene Clines scored.the decisive
run on Don Wilson's third wild
pitch . WiUie Star&amp;ell drove In
two runs for the Pirates while
John Edwards homered lot
Houston .
Sadeckl Pitch eo Four·Hitler
Ray Sadecki pitched a four·
hitter, his first complete ~arne
since Sept. 13, 1971 8,!1 the MetA'
heat the Dodgers on John
Milner 's ninth-Inning single
which drove in Wayne Garrett.
The Mets, who had tbree hits
off 15-game winner Don Sutton
in the first seven Innings, tied
the score in the eighth on a
walk, a bunt single, a sacrifice
and Don Hahn's sacrifice fly.
Bill Russell homered for the
Dodgers.
Ron Bryant allowed five hits
and gained his 19th victory for
the Giants, ~ho dealt Mon·
treal's Steve Renko hls eighth
loss. Tito Fuentes had three
hits and Gary Matthews and
Bobby Bonds two each in San
Francisco's nlne-hit attack .
Dave Rader drove in two Giant
runs with Sllcrlflce flies.
Rico Carty singled home the
tie-breaking run for the Cubs In
the seventh inning and
Ferguson Jenkins went the
distance with a 1!1-hitter-for his
11th win against 12 defeats.
Carty and Don Kessinger had
three hits each for the CUbs
while Joe Morg~n had three
hits, including his 19th homer,
for the Reds.
Del Unser's three-run double
with two out in the ninth lifted
the Phils over the Padres, who
carried an 8-5 lead into the
ninth . Greg Llizinski hit his
22nd homer · for the· Phlllies
while Nate Colbert and '
Clarence Gaston homered for ·
San Diego.

Trojans top pick; Bucks third _,
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
University of Southern
California, a unanimous choice
as the No. I team in college
football last year, is expected
to captW'e that honor again this
season, according to the United
Press International's Board of
Coaches.
The UPI coaches board
didn't make the Trojans a
unanimous pick in the pre·
season ratings, but of the 29
coaches who participated in
the voting, 25 selected USC as

Foster romps after "slur"

SILVER BRIDGE ONLY

ON

~
~~,~ t h
'
t.J

to satisfy Jenkins

•

CANDY SPECIAL

~

Cubs top Reds .

trophies to be awarded. The
entry fee for the event Is $2.
The night hunt entries will
close at 9 p.m. The registered
entry fee is $6 and the grade
entry fee, $6. There will be a
grand champion trophy, a
champion trophy, 10 registered
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.
! trophies and five grade (UP!) - Bob Foster said he
: trophies In addition to six high wanled South African Pierre
: point breed trophies.
.
Fourie to suffer 15 rounds of
• Club members will judge the punishment for what he in·
terpreted as a racial slur.
: event and will not hunt.
' : Anyone wishing further
So, using his seven-inch
: Information can contact reach advantage to Its fullest
• Harold Boston , Reedsville extent, Foster jabbed away at
•• Route I, 3711-6341 or Oscar Fourie for the full 15 rounds
: Smith, Pomeroy Route 2, 992- before a delighted hometown
crowd Tuesday night and
: 5594.
successfully
'

Playtex will send you;~
~:---C-ash Refund of $1.00 when you
buy 2 boxes of 30's
_
~--~
(50¢ for one purchase).
~~~
See store coupon
for details.

Back To School

A UKC licensed wild coon
hunt and bench show will be
staged Saturday at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds by the
Shade River Coon HWtters
Association, Pomeroy.
A beneh show wilt be held at 3
p.m. with trophies and ribbons
to be awarded and an entry fee

;

79c

SIZES '''
B to 18

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

,,~W,:::?!f.m•ifi:W»l.:l~~f.~f:*Jfif~~~:rf.~:;~:~~f::rf:~;~=~~::::~
~....;,,~
·~:.c.. ~~-·..Y.............. :-:;~ (.(; 'i

wins in a row 6roken wlth the
loss. "If you have got the reach
and you know how to use it,
then you do have an advantage,
But an old man never likes to
go 15 roWldS. He likes to put
them away if he can." Fourie is
30,
No Insult Intended
Alan Toweel, Fourie's
manager, wanted it made clear
his fighter did not intend his
commeni to Foster during the
weigh-in as an insult.
"You , Yankees call each
other boy all the time," he said.
"So what's wron g with
somebody else doing lt."
Both Fourie and his manager
said they wanted a rematch;
Foster, who 'won his 50th
fight against six losses - all
against heavyweights - was
guaranteed $75,000 for the
fight, which was watched by
II ,OOOpersons In the University
of New Mexico Auditorlwn.
Fourie, now. 46-3, was
guaranteed $10,000:
Foster, who came in one
pound under the limit at 173
pounds, was awarded the fight
on the judges cards, 149-l:llt and
149·1~0. Referee Jim Cleary
had Foster Ute winner, 1411-128.
Foster not only had a reach
advantage, but he outweighed
Fourie by five p(iunds .

SHIRT
.FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In AI 9- 0ut At 5
U ~e O~ r- Fr_oe

Parking LOI

their No. I pick. The four other
first-place votes went to
Michigan, Ohio State, Texas
and Auburn.
Runnerup to the Trojans in
the balloting was perennial Big
Eight power Nebraska, the
1971 national champion. The
Cornhuskers received 175
points which was nine more
than the third-place finisher,
Ohio State, received.
Texas, defending Southwest
Conference champion, finished
fourth in the voting followed by
Alabama and Michigan. Then
comes Penn State, UCLA ,
Tennessee and Colorado to
round out the top 10.
Five ~oaches from each of

A men's sfo pitch . softball
tournament will he held Friday
through Sunday, Sept. 7-9, with
games beginning at 6:30 p.m.
at the Kyger Creek Power
Plant ball park.
The tourney is sanctioned by
Ute OVEC softball club and will
be conducted by Jim Camper's
softball club.
There will be first, second
and third place sponsors
trophies and first and second

216 E.lnd ,

Pomeroy

,,

G.E. SMALL APPIANCES
BARGAINS

Softball tourney slated
place Individual trophies ·for
the most hits and most homers.
There will also be best sportsmanship trophies awarded.
Entry fee Is $30 plus two
Dudley balls; Deadline for
entering is Sept. 3 at 9:30a.m.
Those wishing more information should call Larry
Grueser, Pomeroy, 992-2974 or
Jim Johnson: Mason, W. Va.,
773-550.1

''

'•

Celebrity

·'

STEAM AND DRY IRON Reg. sl2.9s $888

"

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15 95
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'

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PARTY GRILL _ _R_eg ._52-9' 9-5 _ $15 95

ANY SIZEGOODfYEAII .

PASSENGER TIRE
&lt;RIB TREAD)

9 95

Plus
Excise '· Tax
1
27c to 87c
With
Mounting No Charne
Recappable
•
Casing

ME.IGS TIRE·CENTER
700 E. Main St .

POMEROY, OHIO
"1·210i

ONEOf TilE lARGESTTIRE OULERS IN SOliiH£ASTERN
Ott tO
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G. E. Portable

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the seven geographical areas Schembechler, Michigan ; Bob
Blackman, Illinois.
ratings board. Each week they
Midlands: AI Onofrio
vote on the top 10 teams and Missouri; Don Fambrough.'
points are awarded on a I0-9-3- Kansas ; Vince Gibson, Kansas
7.j)..S-4-J..2-I basis for votes State; Hayden Fry, North
from first through lOth.
Texas State; Hayden Fry,
Here, by sections, are the North Texas Slate; Tom
coaches who comprise the Osborne, Nebraska.
United Press International
South:
Bear · Bryant,
Football Ratings · Board for Alabama ; Paul Dietzel, South
Universi.ty Division schools: Carolina; V(nce Dooley,
East : Tom Cahill, Army ; Georgia ; Bill Dooley, North
Be n Schwartzwalder, Carolina ; Doug Dieky, Florida.
Syracuse ; Joe Yuckika, Boston
College; Carmen Cozza, Yale;
George Welsh, Navy.
Midwest: Ara Parseghian,
Notre Dame; Alex Agase ,
Purdue; Bill Hess, Ohio U.; Bo
of the nation comprise the UPI

518_·9_
5
HAI.RDRYER _ _R_eg=-.._

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Reg . 51 4.9 5

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$1095

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W-Knife Sha_r_p_e n_e_r_ $1495.
Reg . $19.95

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ICE CRUSHER __R_:eg_.s_29_.94___:.$2294

;I;E~'w;BOWLS __sl2_.9_s _ _$2495
G. E. Del.uxe

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Electric

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W·Can Opener
Reg . $27 .95
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Daily &amp;nlinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .,

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes

7

Au~ . 22, 1973

Mason News

'rill' Dally S.ntincJ , Mlddleport·l'onwroy, 0 ., Au~. 22. 1~7:1

Two-out single breaks
•• up AL 's 5th no-hitter
•

••
•

Guests at the home of Mrs.
Garnette Hesson on S&lt;lturd"y
were Mr. and Mrs. Orban
fl~sson of Cabiu Creek,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Hesson , Lara, Tracy and
Berke of Vincentown, N.J.;
Mr.and Mrs. Carl Gibbs and
Carletlu of New Haven; Mr.
Wess Roush, Mr. and Ms. Bill
Lloyd and Jeremy Todd ; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Lathey, Jeff
and Melissa; Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Rickard and Maxie
and Mr. Edward Rickard, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Scott,
Corbet, Evan and Doris Ann of
GlenwoOd, were recent guests
at the home of Mrs. Etltel
Moore.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Kettmire, David Ray, Rheba
Virginia. Dorothy Renee' and
Michael of Jacksonville, Fla.
have spent a month visiting
with friends and relatives at
Letart Falls, 0., Pomeroy, 0 .;
Hartford, New Haven and
Letart. They also visited
Camden Park and the Mason
County Fair. They returned
home on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs . Larry Lathey,
Jeff and Melissa of Letart, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Lathey and
Jerimy Todd of Colwnbus, 0.
and Mrs. Mary Lathey of
Danville, 0. recently spent a
week visiting in the state · of
Florida. Some of the places
they
visited
were
Disneyworld, Cypress ·Gardens, and Daytona Beach.
Mr . Thomas Reitmire
visited with his family Mr. and
Mrs . Henry Reitmire on
Wednesday. He is currenUy
employed at Shoneys II at St.
Albanslmdis staying with Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Adkins and
family .

EASY WAYS TO .UY.

•
I

••

CASH, CHARGE,

Mrs . qarnet Harbrecht and
Debbie, Mrs. Florence Windon.
Mrs. Veda Davis were in
Lancaster recently to visit Mr.
and Mrs. Waller Boyer. Mr.
Boyer 92, remains ill at his
home.
Mrs. Ernest Bruley has
returned to Detroit, Mich. after
visiting here with Mrs. Homer
Hawkins and other reltives .
Mrs, Harold Johnson, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Leifheit and
family, Sprinifield, spent the
weekend in Pomeroy l'iSiting
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis and
other relatives .
. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer
and daughter, Kim, Columbus
were Monday overnight guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and Jayne.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Finlaw
and children, Heather and
Matthew, have returned from a
fishing trip to Michigan .
Weekend guests of Mrs.
Frances King were Albert
Coles, his son, Edward
J. Coles, aild a friend
of Akron. They also visited Mr. and Mrs. WiUiam
Marks and children, Chauncey.
Sunday evening visitors of
Mrs. King and her weekend
guesjs were Charles King and
daughter Susie, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward J. King and sons, Joe,
Michael,
and Tammy,
Harrisonville; Mr. and Mrs .
William King and daughters,
· Mary and Cindy, and Mr. and
Mrs. Jack King, Jackie, Jeffrey and Jenney.
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin King
and sons, Billy, Frank and
Rodney, Vincent, Mr. and Mrs.
William King, Mary and Cindy,
and Mrs. Frances King enjoyed a picnic recently at
Royal Oak Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack King and
!aniUy were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hudnell,
Albany .
·
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton
The annual Homecoming of
and John Fultz were ill Xenia the Hopewell C:hurch at !1ft.
Sunday to visit Col. Lyston Alto, will be held on Sunday.
Fultz; who remains In critical
The day will open with
condition at the Memorial Sunday School at the regular
Hospital there, Room 126 B.E. hour of 10:00 a.m. There will
Col . Fultz suffered a heart be morning worship at II :00
attack, a stroke and has a.m. Special singing during
pnewnonia.
the day will be by Sandy
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Foster, Richards and the Songsters of
Carol, Robin, Patty, Anthony, Parkersburg, the Hiltons of
Livonia, Mich. ; Mr. and Mrs. Evergreen
Hills,
the
T. M. CottriU, Jill, Joan and LighthouseTrio ofCharleston
Jennifer, Carroll; the Rev. arid and the Gospel Teams or'
Mrs. Carver Williams, Betsy Ripley.
' and Dawn, Kenton, Mr. and
There will he a be•ket
Mrs. John· Schri'Jdt and Ted, dinner at the noon hour.
Lancaster, and Miss Carla Rev. Earl Perkins, Pastor of
Schmidt, Carroll, have been the Church. of the Good
the recent guests of Mrs. J. Shepherd at Flatrock, will
Edward ~aster.
bring the message during the .
Mrs. Wilma Brady, Frost-- afternoon service. ·
proof, Fla., spen Tuesday with
A cordial welcome to attend
Miss Marcia Karr, Syracuse. is extended by the people of
Mr. and Mrs. John Richard ' the Hopewell Baptist Church,
Sauva~e have moved _
their Clarence B. Morton, Pastor.
moblle home from Point
Pleasant to a lot in Syracuse
adjoining his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Sauvage.
·

LAY· AWAY

.

5HOP EARLY WIIILE
OUANTIIIES LAST

3 BIG DAYS! THURS.-FRI.-SAT., AUG. 23-24.:25

GIRLS' 3 to 6X

MISSES' SHIRTS

SLACK SETS
SAVE 54'

Stan Bahnsen 's near nohitter last night for the Chicago
: White So~ was almo$t as poetic
• as hlll ~~pression of how he felt
: after 'le gave up his only hit, a
: single •to Walt Williams with
two out In l~e ninth innl~ g.
;
"It felt like the bottom fell
• out of the balloon I was riding "
: ,B~h""n said afrer settling r~r
.: a 4-ll, bne.hit victory over the
' Cleveltmd Indians and just
: missing
the
American
: League's flfih no-hlt!Alr this
year . ' "It was such an
• emotional thing 'til then, 1 just
• wan~e&lt;~ Williams to hit the ball
, on the ground and he did."
•
Willinms, who takes a short
'• stroke, rapped a ground ball on
•, a 2-1 pitch too hard and too far
: to the left for third baseman
: Bill Melton to nab. Bahnsen
1 who had pitched a pair of nO:
hitters the minors in 1!166 and
1967, stood gaz(ng Into centerfield for a few moments
before ,retiring the last hitter.
' ATough Hitler
; "I always wanted to pitch a
: "":"hitter in the big leagues,"
satd Bahnsen who won 21
: games .Jast year after c,..belng
: traded to tbe White Sox -from
: the Yankees. "l wish Williams
• would have ·pulled the ball a
little. He's a Iough hitter."
:
Bahnsen, who gave up a walk
; to Dave Duncan with two out in
the . second inning and then
retired 17 batters in order
, before walking Duncan again
: in the eighth, picked up his 16th
1 victory against
14 defeats.
•, . Second baseman Jorge ·orta
: drove in two runs for Chicago
: on three hits, including his
: thirdhomer,andalsosaved the
: no-hltte~ remporar~y when he
• went behind second base to
' make a tremendous stop and
, throw otit Buddy Bell in the
••• third.
In other American League
games ,' Baltimore nipped
Minnesota, 2-1, Boston out:
slugged Texas, 15-9, Kansas
City clipped New York, 5-4,
Detroit tripped Oakland, 6-4,
and Milwaukee downed

44

SIZES

6· 18

67

1

REG .
~ 2 . 99

Lang s!ccvcrl dmiSIC S
Wll hVOIIIIed prc J.pper

c

0

II

(I I

s

~.

0

I

I

d

colo• s ond pri n t'i.

REGULAR '3 ..98
Machine

s;l

cs 32

t 0

3 8.

woshob le

cotton. long sleeve
lops. MatChing corduroy flare pants.
Prinls

and

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By Uqlled Preatlnlernatlonal

COTTON / POL VESTER BLENDS!

in

solids .

MISSES'

$9.

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Wide Leg PantS
MISSES ' &amp; WOMEN 'S

98 .

JUMPERS

Hopewell Baptist
Church Plans
Homecoming

•••

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.,.n

REGULAR '5.99

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Wa shab le bonded 'Orion.&lt;!. acry lic
or Visco lon ocetofe. Sol id colors
p l aids a nd woven pattern s i ~

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Genuine suede ond la tigo look
vinyl. Shou lder Strop or' top
handle. Browntones, black .

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fa ll ,o lors.

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co tton plaids , Popu la r wide
leg styling with cuff looks · 6r
fly fr ont. New f all colors.

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PIVOT ARM

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HI INTENSITY

JUNIOR BOYS'
SUCK SETS

DESK LAMP

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$6 .44

LARGE, GOLD FINISHED

.

:• Shade River to
: host coon hm1t

88 ·

584

INITIAL PIN

--..J

3

.

•

:
:
:
•
,'
'
:
:

REG.
54.98

SERVICE ouT
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)
Service to WOUB radio and
·
television and · O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital here was
disrupted late Tuesday when
REG. $6.98 .
· Check us for price and two General Telephone co.
' ~uallty.
·
lines wer~ cut. WOUB was off
SWEEP SECOND
~
the air briefly until adjustments could he made and
Electric Drowse Alarm
Main at Sycamore
other lines patched in. At the Lets you snooze
POMEROY. OHIO
hospital,onelinewascutat the an ex t ro 5 or 10
.....,~~::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;::&gt;&lt;cJ'J entranCl'.
mi nut e s. Wh ; t e

JEANS
ARE lfERE

~!!~a~~~ c:.~~s~~~ll tS:~

:
:
:
:
:
•
:
:
:

California, 11-2.
AI Bumbry's ninth-Inning
sacrifice fly scored Bobby
Grieb, who had doubled and
moved to third on a single by
Mark Belanger, with th•
winning run as the Oriol~!
extended thelr winning streak
to nine games by beating
Minnesota. Grant Juckson,,7.0,
earned the vlcwry in relief of
.Jim Palmer. Twlns' star!Alr
Bert Blyleven, 15-13, absorbed
the defeat although he went the
dlsllince for the 19th time.
Dwight Evans powered a 400.
foot two-run homer in the
second Inning and started a
five-run third inning and
Reggie Smith drove In five
runs to pace Boston over the
Rangers and give Roger Moret
hi&amp; eighth victory without a
defeat.
Lou Piniella's third single of
the game drove in Amos Otis,
who had doubled, with the tiebreaking run in the fifth inning
and lifted Kansas City past the
Yankees behind the excellent
relief pitching of Joe Hoerner.

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LAYTErTampon 30's

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CHICAGO (UP!) - Avictory
to break a three-game losing
streak gave Chicago Cubs
pitcher Ferguson Jenkins less
satisfaction than the reaction
.of his teammates.
"The best satisfaction I got,"
Jenkins said, "is when people
smile after you win and people
.are happy you won. When my
teammares are happy I won,
I'm happy I won for them."
Tuesday he got his
satisfaction. He gave up his
31st home run, high in the
National League, to Joe
Morgan with Pete Rose on base
to tie the score with the Cin·
cinnati Reds 44 after seven
innings.
Then he stayed in the game
and ben!lfited frolll a run
scoririg single by Rico Carty,
his third single in four at bats,
and an· eighth Inning single by
Rico Cariy, his third single in
four at bats, and his own eighth
inning single to score a rWI to
produce a· 6-4 win.
"I don't get high every game
I win," Jenkins said. "l tend
not to be emotional and I hope I
can win some more. I expected
mixed emotions from the
crowd but I haven't pitched
good this year,
"i knew I had to go out and
blank .them another couple of
innings and I thought I had two
or three innings left. I hope I
can win some games going
down the stretch and if we get

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la te. I lb. bog or bulk.

Sale Prices!

PAIR

Durable polyes ter/cotton
twi ll. 4 pockets. Blue,
green, bronze. 6 t&lt;J 20.,,

CHOCOLATE TREAT!

August

357

REG.
1

1.64

38 !
KIT

Fun •to· bulld outh•ntlc
&amp;cole , modelt. S.ltctlon
include! &amp;toe~ con •hi 1
plane•. military kits, fu~
cars, cloulet, drogtt•r•
dune buggies, mucll mor~J

OP AND SAVE THE EASY WAY•CHARG• ftW
SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING PLAZA - BOllt STORES IN GALLIPOLIS - POINT PLEASANT STORE

••

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GENERAL TIRE SALES

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Hoerner worked out of 8 bases- ~;*~:

loaded jam with one out In the
sixth after relieving starter
Steve Mingorl and collected his
fourth save.
Mickey Stanley hit two
triples, a single and drove In
two runs . and John !filler pitched five Innings of two-hit
relief In leading Ute Tigers over
Oakland and snapping a nine:

-%

W*

i%

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;:i;::;:

Johnny Briggs doubled in
two runs and Bobby Mitchell
knocked in a pair with a homer
to account for a four-run sixth
inning as Brewers, behind the •
eight-hit pitching of Jim
Colpoin, beat the Angels.
Colborn struck out four and
walked none In winning his 16th
game. Nolan Ryan, 14-15, took
the loss after leaving In the
sixth.

close ,I think we'll have as good
a chance as anybody in our
division."
Jenkins, who last week was
fined $400 by League President
Chub Feeney for throwing four
bats on the field after he was
knocked out by Atlanta in his
previous appearance on the
mound, still expressed uncertain feelings about his
position with the Cubs. ·
"Nobody In his right mind,"
he said, "ever wants to be
traded. Only maybe if you're 40
and there's money in the other
league, you might say, 'send
me there so I can make more
money.'''
Otherwise, he said, he didn't
anticipate asking the Cubs to
trade him and he avoided
ans)Verlng qqestions as to
whether last week he expressed a desire to be traded.
"I'm not unhappy," he said,
"bl\1 I haven't been happy
pitching In this ball park. It's
small and the wind blows out. I
got one up against Morgan and
he hit It out."
It was only the third win for
the Cubs in the last 15 games,
and only the fourth loss for the
Reds in the last 13, but it was a
big victory.

'

e

sp o· rts
D es k
·

~.

·

ii:i!~

game
A's kept
winning
. ·rhe
trlwnph
tlie streak
Tigers
in
second pl$ce In the AL East,
3\1 games behind Baltimore,
and shaved Oakland's lead in
the AL West to two games over
the Royals.

992·7161

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"The way we're playing,"

Ugh thea vywelght title · for a
record 12th time, The decision
was unanimous and all three
cards were lopsided .
During the weigh-In Tuesday
the fighters had flared at each
other and Fourle had told
Foster, " tonight's the night,
boy."
Foster was Immediately
upset at Fourie's use of the
word uboy.''
"I'm going to knock him out
tonight for calling me boy,"
Faster said.
He Didn't Preis for KO
But once the fight began the
34-year-old Foster did not press
for a knockout. He was content
to stick his left jab In the face of
the challenger time after time
and use his reach to ward off
what Fourle had said would be
his "secret plan of attack."
"!wanted It to go the whole
16," said Foster, who won the
UUe .In 1968 from Dick Tiger
and has now defended It more
Urnes than any other boxer In
history. "I had him four or five
Urnes. He called me 'boy,' and
I don 1tlike anybody to call me
a 'boy.' Every time I hit him he
was hurt."
· After the fight, according to
Foster, Fourle came to the
champion's corner and
· apologized for the remark.
"l accepted the apology,"
said Foster, who was making
his first title defense before his
hometown fans .
Fourle Indicated he thought
Foster was using the weigh-In
Incident as an excuse lor not
being able to score a knockout.
It was only the second time
since Foster has won the crown
that he didn't knock out a
challenger.
"He didn't hurt me,'' said
Fourle1 who had a strlnR of 29
'

·'

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Hank drives in 3

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ll'lt~:o t&gt;OWN

lJ I'I SpurtH Wrller
Eddie Mathe w~. Hank
Aaron 's long-time friend aod

I'.·
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~. c1.1rrent mantjger, ha:J bt&gt;en
1

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Bv Denny Ji'11 be.~

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· ··
The co4nldown is now at 16 days, and counting . Or·, if you
prefer, 3ll4 hours; or 23,040 minutes .
.
Or, if you're one of those fans who just can't wait for that
opening kickoff, you only have to wait t,;m;400 seconds before
Ute 1973 scholastic grid sea:;on begins.
The Southern Tornadoes, Eastern Eagles and Meigs
Marauders continue two-a~y drills under the boiling August
sun In the hope that they'll be ready for those ever so near
openers.
Southern mentor Bill Jewell is drilling his backs at 8 in Ute
morning, his linemen at 9:30 and then the whole team geL~
together at I In the afternoon.
E~stern, under the tutelage of first-year coach Lew
Berkhtmer, also works out in the morning, with the squad getting
together again aro und 3 in the afternoon.
Meigs coach Charley Chancey also has his players up with
the roo~ters, htttmg the practice field at 8, then returning for
mor~ drtUs at 1 p.m. Ahost of Marauder players, 11 in all, stalked
thestdehnes yesterday, resting varioua bumps and bruises. None
sho uld be oulfor any great length oftime, however.
Scrimmages will now start to dot teams' agendas and the
Eagles ' Berkhimer is looking for an opponent, from a 'school of
comparable·stze, to scrimmage this Saturday. Anyone interested
should contact him at the school, 985-3329 or at home, 378-6285.
In other announcements, all Meigs .Jr. High 7th and 8th
grade boys who are interested in going out for foo tball should
report to the junior high stadium in Middleport, Thursday, at 6
p.m.
Also, registration for the 1973 Punt, Pass and Kick program
he.gan Mond~y and the Ford Motor Company is expecting-over 1
million partiCipants again this year.
. Youngsters, aged 8 through 13, can register at most area
Ford dealerships, and must be accompanied by a parent or
guardian . The sign-up ends Sept. 28.
There is no entry fee and no special equipment is needed.
REDS NOTES - Sunday, Aug. 26, is the first-ever camera
dsy at Riverfront Stadium: Fans who bring their cameras will be
allowed on the f[eld prior to the game to take snapshots of their
favorite players.
The St. Louis Cardinals will provide the opposition for the
day.
.
.
' TRIBE TALK -"- Old Time Beer Night, one of very few
reasons to go to an Indians game, will be held Tuesday, August
28, at 6 p.m. in Clevelnd's Municipal Stadium, when the Tribe
meets the red hot Kansas City Royals.
Anyone 18 years or older who wants to sip a few will he able
to purchase 5 beers for the price of one.
HAMMERIN ' HANK - According to United Press International, an official of the Atlanta Braves has disclosed that
outfielder Henry Aaron regularly receives pplice protection
durmg road trips. Hopefully , the racial ignorance of some of
those who support the Babe 's record will not impede Hank's
progress in eclipsing the all-time home run mark.
.

Cub Manager Whitey Lockman
said, "I feel good. You can see
and feel the difference in our
team. We're starting to come."

i

,.

~

~

run double and Dave Johnson's
two-run homer.
Mike J.urn tied the score al7·
7 with a homer in the fifth and
the Braves went ahead 9-7
when Darrel! Evans and Aaron
followed with singles and
Baker hit his second two-run
double of the game. Aaron
&amp;iubled home another run in a
two-run sixth and then retired
from the game . Gary Neibauer
picked up his second win while
Ute loss was Wise's ninth.
'l11e Pirates crept to within
1% _game~ of the Cardinals in
NL East when rookie John

saying all season that the
Atlanta Braves slugger's No. 1
goal is not surpassing Babe
Huth's all-time rart'Cr home
run rct'O rd.
"SUre, Hank wants to. break
thcrccord," Mathews has been
telling anyone who would
listen . "But he won't salTifice
his value to the team by
swinging for homers in any
situation. He wants more than
anything else to play in one
more World Series. And that
means hitting io win games."
Willt 704 homers and the
QUITSWVAU
Braves out of the National
MORGANTOWN, W. Va .
League's Western Division
(UP!
) - Ron Weaver a fl.j)
race, Aaron is at a stage in his
assault on Ruth's mark of 714 sophomore forward from
career homers where he could Dayton, Ohio, has decided not
he excused if he swWtg for the to return to school at West
horizon every time he went to Virginia University this fall
and will continue working In
the plate ,
But true to Mathews' his hOmetown area. As a freshprediction, Aaron is "swinging man on the junior varsity team
for the team" - as he did here last year, Weaver
Tuesday night when he had a averaged 12.3 points and 10.1
double and two singles and rebounds a game .
drove in three runs .as the
Braves rallied from a 7~
deficit in the third · inning to
heat the St. Louis Cardinals, 11·
COACH REHffiED
7. The hom er less game,
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Atlanta's !28th game of the Cleveland Crusaders of the
season, left Aaron with a World Hockey Association
projection of eight more
have rehired Bill Needham as
homers this season and a total coach for another season.
of 712.
Contract terms were withheld.
Pittsburgh Defeats Houston
Pitt sburgh
defeated
Houston G-3, New York nipped
Los Angeles, 2-1, San Francisco beat Montreal, 3-1,
Chicago topped Cincinnati, 6-4,'and Philadelphia rallied fo r a ATTORNEY FILES SUIT
9-ll triumph over San Diego in
RENO, Nev. (UP!) - A
other NL games.
Reno attorney has filed a
American League scores were $100,000 dama~e suit aeain•t.
Baltimore 2 Minnesota 1, the Holiday Hotel 1 contendin~
Chicago 4 Cleveland 0, [\ansas · he was prevented !rom using
City 5 New York 4, Boston 15 his "legal foolproof" system to
Texas 9, Milwaukee 6 heat the roulette wheel.
California 2, and Detroit 6
Melvin Schaengold's federal
.oakland 4.
court suit said the botel's
Pitcher Rick Wise's gra nd owners and the State Gaming
slamhomerwas thebigblow of Control Board won't let him
the Cardinals' seven-run third· use free coupons in a system
inning outburst but the Braves that beats roulette legally. He
rallied for six runs in their half accused the hotel of depriving
of the frame on Aaron's two- him ol his right to gamble .
run single, Dusty Baker's two-

Morlan scattered nine hit! and
Gene Clines scored.the decisive
run on Don Wilson's third wild
pitch . WiUie Star&amp;ell drove In
two runs for the Pirates while
John Edwards homered lot
Houston .
Sadeckl Pitch eo Four·Hitler
Ray Sadecki pitched a four·
hitter, his first complete ~arne
since Sept. 13, 1971 8,!1 the MetA'
heat the Dodgers on John
Milner 's ninth-Inning single
which drove in Wayne Garrett.
The Mets, who had tbree hits
off 15-game winner Don Sutton
in the first seven Innings, tied
the score in the eighth on a
walk, a bunt single, a sacrifice
and Don Hahn's sacrifice fly.
Bill Russell homered for the
Dodgers.
Ron Bryant allowed five hits
and gained his 19th victory for
the Giants, ~ho dealt Mon·
treal's Steve Renko hls eighth
loss. Tito Fuentes had three
hits and Gary Matthews and
Bobby Bonds two each in San
Francisco's nlne-hit attack .
Dave Rader drove in two Giant
runs with Sllcrlflce flies.
Rico Carty singled home the
tie-breaking run for the Cubs In
the seventh inning and
Ferguson Jenkins went the
distance with a 1!1-hitter-for his
11th win against 12 defeats.
Carty and Don Kessinger had
three hits each for the CUbs
while Joe Morg~n had three
hits, including his 19th homer,
for the Reds.
Del Unser's three-run double
with two out in the ninth lifted
the Phils over the Padres, who
carried an 8-5 lead into the
ninth . Greg Llizinski hit his
22nd homer · for the· Phlllies
while Nate Colbert and '
Clarence Gaston homered for ·
San Diego.

Trojans top pick; Bucks third _,
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
University of Southern
California, a unanimous choice
as the No. I team in college
football last year, is expected
to captW'e that honor again this
season, according to the United
Press International's Board of
Coaches.
The UPI coaches board
didn't make the Trojans a
unanimous pick in the pre·
season ratings, but of the 29
coaches who participated in
the voting, 25 selected USC as

Foster romps after "slur"

SILVER BRIDGE ONLY

ON

~
~~,~ t h
'
t.J

to satisfy Jenkins

•

CANDY SPECIAL

~

Cubs top Reds .

trophies to be awarded. The
entry fee for the event Is $2.
The night hunt entries will
close at 9 p.m. The registered
entry fee is $6 and the grade
entry fee, $6. There will be a
grand champion trophy, a
champion trophy, 10 registered
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.
! trophies and five grade (UP!) - Bob Foster said he
: trophies In addition to six high wanled South African Pierre
: point breed trophies.
.
Fourie to suffer 15 rounds of
• Club members will judge the punishment for what he in·
terpreted as a racial slur.
: event and will not hunt.
' : Anyone wishing further
So, using his seven-inch
: Information can contact reach advantage to Its fullest
• Harold Boston , Reedsville extent, Foster jabbed away at
•• Route I, 3711-6341 or Oscar Fourie for the full 15 rounds
: Smith, Pomeroy Route 2, 992- before a delighted hometown
crowd Tuesday night and
: 5594.
successfully
'

Playtex will send you;~
~:---C-ash Refund of $1.00 when you
buy 2 boxes of 30's
_
~--~
(50¢ for one purchase).
~~~
See store coupon
for details.

Back To School

A UKC licensed wild coon
hunt and bench show will be
staged Saturday at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds by the
Shade River Coon HWtters
Association, Pomeroy.
A beneh show wilt be held at 3
p.m. with trophies and ribbons
to be awarded and an entry fee

;

79c

SIZES '''
B to 18

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

,,~W,:::?!f.m•ifi:W»l.:l~~f.~f:*Jfif~~~:rf.~:;~:~~f::rf:~;~=~~::::~
~....;,,~
·~:.c.. ~~-·..Y.............. :-:;~ (.(; 'i

wins in a row 6roken wlth the
loss. "If you have got the reach
and you know how to use it,
then you do have an advantage,
But an old man never likes to
go 15 roWldS. He likes to put
them away if he can." Fourie is
30,
No Insult Intended
Alan Toweel, Fourie's
manager, wanted it made clear
his fighter did not intend his
commeni to Foster during the
weigh-in as an insult.
"You , Yankees call each
other boy all the time," he said.
"So what's wron g with
somebody else doing lt."
Both Fourie and his manager
said they wanted a rematch;
Foster, who 'won his 50th
fight against six losses - all
against heavyweights - was
guaranteed $75,000 for the
fight, which was watched by
II ,OOOpersons In the University
of New Mexico Auditorlwn.
Fourie, now. 46-3, was
guaranteed $10,000:
Foster, who came in one
pound under the limit at 173
pounds, was awarded the fight
on the judges cards, 149-l:llt and
149·1~0. Referee Jim Cleary
had Foster Ute winner, 1411-128.
Foster not only had a reach
advantage, but he outweighed
Fourie by five p(iunds .

SHIRT
.FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In AI 9- 0ut At 5
U ~e O~ r- Fr_oe

Parking LOI

their No. I pick. The four other
first-place votes went to
Michigan, Ohio State, Texas
and Auburn.
Runnerup to the Trojans in
the balloting was perennial Big
Eight power Nebraska, the
1971 national champion. The
Cornhuskers received 175
points which was nine more
than the third-place finisher,
Ohio State, received.
Texas, defending Southwest
Conference champion, finished
fourth in the voting followed by
Alabama and Michigan. Then
comes Penn State, UCLA ,
Tennessee and Colorado to
round out the top 10.
Five ~oaches from each of

A men's sfo pitch . softball
tournament will he held Friday
through Sunday, Sept. 7-9, with
games beginning at 6:30 p.m.
at the Kyger Creek Power
Plant ball park.
The tourney is sanctioned by
Ute OVEC softball club and will
be conducted by Jim Camper's
softball club.
There will be first, second
and third place sponsors
trophies and first and second

216 E.lnd ,

Pomeroy

,,

G.E. SMALL APPIANCES
BARGAINS

Softball tourney slated
place Individual trophies ·for
the most hits and most homers.
There will also be best sportsmanship trophies awarded.
Entry fee Is $30 plus two
Dudley balls; Deadline for
entering is Sept. 3 at 9:30a.m.
Those wishing more information should call Larry
Grueser, Pomeroy, 992-2974 or
Jim Johnson: Mason, W. Va.,
773-550.1

''

'•

Celebrity

·'

STEAM AND DRY IRON Reg. sl2.9s $888

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1
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With
Mounting No Charne
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ME.IGS TIRE·CENTER
700 E. Main St .

POMEROY, OHIO
"1·210i

ONEOf TilE lARGESTTIRE OULERS IN SOliiH£ASTERN
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g. _s16_.4_9 _$1479
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the seven geographical areas Schembechler, Michigan ; Bob
Blackman, Illinois.
ratings board. Each week they
Midlands: AI Onofrio
vote on the top 10 teams and Missouri; Don Fambrough.'
points are awarded on a I0-9-3- Kansas ; Vince Gibson, Kansas
7.j)..S-4-J..2-I basis for votes State; Hayden Fry, North
from first through lOth.
Texas State; Hayden Fry,
Here, by sections, are the North Texas Slate; Tom
coaches who comprise the Osborne, Nebraska.
United Press International
South:
Bear · Bryant,
Football Ratings · Board for Alabama ; Paul Dietzel, South
Universi.ty Division schools: Carolina; V(nce Dooley,
East : Tom Cahill, Army ; Georgia ; Bill Dooley, North
Be n Schwartzwalder, Carolina ; Doug Dieky, Florida.
Syracuse ; Joe Yuckika, Boston
College; Carmen Cozza, Yale;
George Welsh, Navy.
Midwest: Ara Parseghian,
Notre Dame; Alex Agase ,
Purdue; Bill Hess, Ohio U.; Bo
of the nation comprise the UPI

518_·9_
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Reg . 51 4.9 5

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Reg . $19.95

Sunbeam Deluxe

ICE CRUSHER __R_:eg_.s_29_.94___:.$2294

;I;E~'w;BOWLS __sl2_.9_s _ _$2495
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Electric

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W·Can Opener
Reg . $27 .95
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992·2238

I

�---- --- ~- ~----~-----.------~--.....------:------r

•

9 - The U.lly ljenttnet, MIOCII Plll'l·t'Otneroy, u., ""~~· ""· ....

..

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Mid&lt;Ut•JXJrt .Pomeroy. 0 ., At~. 22, 197:t

•

'Skin at zt agazn

Swimmers bring
U. S. more gold
'

MOSCOW t UP II - The
embarrassment of track and
field behind them, U. S.
athletes were in t11e gold
medals' race at the seventh
World University Games loday
after a trio of firsts by the
swimmers and another victory
tly the men's basketball team.
But, however hard they try,
they can hope for no better
than second place behind the
runaway Russians.
Following gold medals by
Cathy Carr of Albuquerque, N.
M., in the women's 20Q.meter
, breaststroke , Sally Tuttle of
:. Ventura, Calif., i~ the women's
~ !()().mete freestyle and Allen
Poucher. of Jacksom·illu, Fla .,
in the men's !()().meter but·
lerfly, the U.S. cagers t·outed a
taller Czec hoslovakia leam,
110-59 to move closer to the
alm~t inevitable final mat·
chup with the Soviet Union.
Russians Add Five More
The Russians, meanwhile,
ignoring the first decisive U.S .
breakthrough in the gold medal
rush, added five more in
assorted sports to boost their
overall total to an unreachable
48. The United States, with five
golds now, moved into second
place and Romania dropped
back a n0tch to · third with
three.
"We had a day off on Monday
and it hur t us,", said u. s.
basketball Coach Ed Badger,
whose all·winning team plays
Cuba today. " It was a bit of a
letdown ."
The "letdown" was that the
Americans did not maintain
their 81).plus winning average
margin, but the Czechs were
never in the game after an

Major League Standings
NationAl I Mque
o;:i5f

'

'

W. l. Pet . G. B.

St . Louis

Pittsburgh
Montreat
Ch·icago·
Phi l adelphia

New York

63
60
59

62
62
65

.504
.492
.476

59

65

.476

Jlfl
3 11:2

58 66
56 67

.466
. 455

41h
6

Wes t

1112

'W , L. Pet . G . B.
Los An ge le s
77 48 .616
Cinc innati
76 .51 .598 2
San Francisco 69 55 .556 71 2
Houston
66 62 .516 12 1'1
Atlanta
61 67 .477 ll 1 2
San D ieg o
45 79 .363 31 1 2
Tuesday ' s Results
Chicago 6 Cincinnat i 4
San Fra ncisco 3 Montreal 1
Phila delphia 9 San Diego 8
New York 2 Los A n ge les 1
Atlanta 11 St . Louis 7
Pittsburgh 6 Houston 3

Today's. Probabl e Pitc hers

I All times EOTJ
Cincinnat i (Norm an 10-11) at
Chicago ( Pappils 5-lQJ. 2 : JO

p.m.

.

· San Francisco ( Bar' r 9-13 ) at

Montrea l (Rogers 4-2), 8 p .m .

Ameririlns with 21 points

The u.s swi mmers, led by a
record- breaking performance
m the g:aml'S by Miss Carr in
the 2()(J.metcr breast stroke
br.a vf'd a driving rainstorm
and chilling winds from the
Muscuw Hivcr, w1til'h bord~rs
the open-l1h' Lenin Stadium
swimming pool.
Pursued heal'lly by the
Soviet Union's Ludmila
Poruba iko, the two~time
Olympir champion Miss C{j rr
managed to m :lint~1in twr
fa ding lead Jown lhc fina l IOU
yards to win by a llalf·Stroke, in
2: 42.3.

BOBCAT RETURNING LETTERMEN - The Kyger Creek Bobcats hope to improve last
season's f&gt;.J ret'Ord behind the leadership of seven returning lettermen. They are, (front row,
left to right ), David Wise, Lawrence Tabor and Mike Rife. Back row, Clay Hudson, Dav1d Clay,
John Rumley and Rick Smith.

Taiwan gets no-hitter

WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. 1UP!)
- Little League World Series
Miss Tuttle also achieved a the last two years and on the
fi
first she took the 100· basis of Tuesday 's perfreestyle in '1:00.3. It was her formance, three in a row is a
initial triumph in international . distinct possibility.
Huang Ching.Hui, a name.
competition.
A clean sweep of the only throwing right·hander, pitched
four sw imming finals was a perfect game, striking out 16
foiled for the Americans when of 18 batters and Taiwan hit·
Vladimir Bure of the Soviet ters rapped out 13 hits, in·
Union surged off to an ex· eluding a record.tying four
cellent start and covered the homers, in· an !S..O pasting of
first 50 meters of the !()().meter Bitburg (Germany ) Air Force
freestyle event in a spectacular Base.
The opener in the series was
23.8.
no contest. It was 14.0 after
three innings and in the last
two frames, the Taiwan City
batters bunted to hold the score
down. Huang, who also leads
the club in hitting with a .531
average in tournament play,
hammered one of the club's
four homers.
American league
Home runs by Wang
East
Chingchung,
Lien Ying-shao
W. L. Pet . G. B.
Ba lt i more
70 51 .574
and Kuo Wen·lt enabled the
Detro it
68 57 .544 31 ''1
team to match the record of
Boston
67 57 . 540 4
New York
68 60 .531 5
fnur homers in one game set by
M i lw auke e
60 62 .492 1U
Momt1 rey, 1•• .:..-ico wtien it
Cl evelan·d
51 75 .405 21
West
won the Little League title in
W. l . P et , G. B.
1958.
Oakland
73 ii .584
Kansas City
72 55 . 567 2
The team from Tampa, Fla.
1

Minn eso ta
Ch ic ago
Cal ifornia
Texas

59
59
56
43

65
66
65

so

,47 6
.472
. 463
. 350

13
14
15
29

2'

wasn't quite as impressive as

the Chinese squad but the
Southern U.S. representative
still managed to overpower
Whalley, British Columbia, 11·

Tuesday ' s Results
Chicago 4 Clevelan d 0
Ba lt imor e 2 Minnesota 1
Boston 15 Texas 9
Kansas City 5 New York 4

2.

Quinton Kincey's grand-slam
ho mer in the fifth inning was

M il waukee 6 Ca liforn ia 2
De troit 6 OaKland 4
Today's Probable Pitc.h ers

AKRON, Ohio (UPI )- "It's
like seeing apple pie,
motherhood and the American
flag gri nding to a halt ,"
Summit County Prosecutor
Steven Gabalac said here
to day amid continuing
ramifications resulting from
the clisqualifica tion of last
Saturday's winner of the All·
American SOap Box Derby for
cheating.

Det r oit (Coleman 18 -11) at
San D iego (A rlin 7- lll at
Philadelph ia (Car lton JJ . J4 l, Oak la nd (Odo m 3·9) , 11 p .m .
7:3 0p .m .
Milwaukee {Slaton 8-11) at
Los Angeles (Messersmilt1 11 . Calif ornia (Sl nger 16-10), 11
.
8) ·at New York (S tone 7-3), 8 p .m .

p.m .

St . Louis (Clevela nd 12 -6 1 at
Atlanta (Schue ler 7.7), 8 p.m .
Pi ttsburg h (Moose 7-lll at
Houston (Rober ts 12 -9 ), 8 :30

p.m .

Thur ~ d ay's

Games
San Oelgo at Pt1i l a, nivhl
Los Ang at New Yorl&lt;. , night
Cincinnat i at Chica,go
(Only games schedu l ed)

· 115 W. Main

the big blow of the game.
Kincey and Broyce Mattox led
the winners • attack with three
hits apiece.
·
Pitcher Darryl Mitchell fired
a two-hitter and struck out 10,
but was touched for two runs in
the first inning when Whalley
ca tcher Terry Scramstead
homered with one man on.
In today's games, the

New Yo rk (Mc Do well 5·51 at
Kansas City (S pHttor ff 15 ·8L

8:30p.m .

Boston nia nt 15-1 01 at Texas

(Clyde A 4), 9 p .m .

Minnesota (W ood so n 10·8) at
Baltimore (Cue lla r 11 -HL 7: 30
p.m .
Thur ~day's

Games
Milw at Californ i a , night

{ On l y gam .e sched ul ed l

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Western and Eastern U. S.
representatives will meet when
Tucson , Ariz. takes on Colonie,
N. Y. The game will mark the
first appearance of an Arizona
team In World Series com·
petition.
In the second game, a learn
from Birmingham, Mich., the
Central representative, faces a
club from Monterrey, Mexico.

Squirrel season
.outlook is good
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Ohioans should have good
squ irrel hunting after the
season opens Sept. 7 as the
population now "is good or
better than last year in most of
the 88 counties," according to
state Wildlife Chief Dan C.
Armbruster.
Armbruster said field
reports from game protectors
indicate a large squirrel
population and a good nut crop
around Ohio now; except in
some areas of the southeast .
and southwest where the late
spring frost damaged some nut
producing trets.
The squirrel season runs
from Sept. 7 • Nov. 10 on
private lands and Sept. 7 ·Dec.
22 at state public hunting
areas.

X ·rays show ·cheating

. (AIITimesEDTJ
Ch i cag o 1 Forster .t ~ S) at
Clevelan d (Pe rry JJ . \6 ), 1 p .m .

James Gronen, 14, Boulder,
Colo ., won the 36th annual
event but was later disqualified
after Derby officials learned he
used an electromagnet to help
pull his car from the starting
gate.
The electromagnet, ac·
cording to Derby officials, was
discovered through X·ray
pictures taken of the racer
Monday after starters reported
Gronen 's racer consistently
obtained an edge over other
racers at ,the start of various
heats.
The X·rays showed the
magnet in the nose of the racer.
and an activating switch
operated by the boy's helmet.

The squirrel hunting outlook
by regions :
Central Ohio - Population
better than last year .
Pickaway County and eastern
half of Morrow County have
excellent populations.
Northwestern Ohio
Population reported same as
last year, which was very good.
Better counties are Allen,
Fulton, Sandusky and Seneca.
Northeastern Ohio
Population as good or better
than last year. Better counties
are . Ashtabula, Carroll,
Trumbull and Tuscarawas.
Southeastern Ohio
Population good in most
counties, but down in Belmont,
Gallia, Laivrence and Ross
Counties. Frost damage to
many nut trees in Guernsey,
Meigs, Noble and Ross
counties.
· Southweste,rn · Ohio
Population as good or better
than last year in all counties
except Adams and Brown
where down.

GIRLS
Back To School

JEAN SHOE
By
Connie l!o Thom MeAn

$1599
heritage house
to

Your THOM MeAN Store
Middleport, 0.

Pomeroy

69
lb.$1

'

99

''
I

$

.

$

79

FROZEN FOODS·

69~

2 lb.

BREADED FISH

I

Famous

I'
I

I

:

oz.

HOT DOG

Pkg .

SAUCE

2

Three fastener sc hool
brief covers In assorted
~~;rt.J colors . Save.

cans

BIC PENS .

STAR KIST

CHUNK
TUNA

91(. oz.
Can

79~

oz.

49'

Assort. Flavors

KOOL·AID

49~

65~

FLOUR

S· lb.

BOYS' POPULAR
FLARE
•

~:~..
, ~ " JJ j ·
I , I· ·I · 1

DENIM JEANS
Boys ' well made Maverick brand flare
denim jeans. Sizes 6 t o 16. Save at

MII/I

1

I

.

59t LJr

IFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

- S-TIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE

Stiffler's .

\ - STIFFLER'SBACKTOSCHOOL

64 COUNT CRAYOLA

SCHOOL PASTE

CRAYONS

I
I

,

'

~~"{,

"""'"~"" 19~TL

i'

~

school paste in

I
I

I
, II
I

'
'

e

lb.

SOFTWHI PPED

Iiiii 900

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU auY A . 1o.oz. JAR OF

-

.,_

..

$299
With Coupon
Rutland Dept,

·

Plums, Pineapple,

MAXWELL HOUSE~cOFFEE

AUTOMmC WATER SOFTENERS

Salmon and

AT SIMON'S MARKET _ _

Remove hardneti from all

1.09 '"'"

TIDE

your houtebokl water

CDUI'ON

MIDOUPORT, ~.

Store

MARGARINE
16 oz •
Bowl

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALESPECIAL BARGAIN FAMOUS

ELMER'S GLUE

GYM. OXFORDS
and women In white and colors.
American made. Moulded soles.

; - STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOLSALE: MEN'S • BOYS' · YOUTH's
~
'·

GYM. OXFORDS

Elm er's famous Glue-All lor school use.
Really save during our big back to

oxfords for gym wear. Men's, boys',

school sale .

and youth's sizes.

ers or gym oxfords for misses

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOO'-

Black or white lace lo the toe styfe ~

'1 ~!IR

-

LONG SLEEVE SPORT '

$219

.

- ST I FLER'SBACKTOSCHOOLSALE-

MEN'S PERM PR1:,

~:'SHIRTS ~·~ ~

Jar
.
With Coupon

Rutland
Dept. Store
Explrtl a.u.73

S1.19

'· .

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO
· MISSES &amp; LADIES
MOULDED SOLE

COFFEE
14 o.z.

REG.

BOX VALUE

II ..-;...........
..... ...••••·-,;:.•;o•·•·

.. ___ ,...

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT

PAIR

....

•.

BLUE BONNET

99

$

FAMOUS LePAGE'S WHITE
LePage's wh'i te

''

Bag

POMEROY STORE ONLY

For back lo school ll's famous

i

~-------------1
ROBIN HOOD

l lfz oz. Pkg.

FOR

ALUMINUM
FOIL

9~A.
-t ·

Famous "BtC" pens for school use. /
Package ol B. Medium point. They write
every time.

DICTIONARY

49~

$800

I

REG. $1.00. 8 COUNT PACK

OVER 5,000 ENTRIES • WEBSTER'S
10'12 oz.

PRICED FROM

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

·:::

CASTLEBERRY

SUPERIORS

campus classics ... assembled t)ere
selection . Suits, sweaters,
ja ckets ... pant s and sportive skirts.
In soft autumn co lors.· wa r m,
winsome fabricS . Come in now. Find
yours!
fo ~ yol!r

BRIEF COVERS

BAGS

I
l

SPORTSWEAR

College greats. The best ol the

REG. 29c 3 FAStENER

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALEFOR BACK TO SCHOOL . COLORFUL
VINYL

;QO.....

BOBBIE BROOKS &amp; RUSS TOGS
NEW FAU &amp; WINTER

..:..STIFFLER'S. BAC.K TO SCHOOL SALE-

99

•.

·:· - STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

19~. :

:·:·

I :--. .;o;

Pkg .

Fast. . M ai l

...

'

I
I

•

'7''·~~D

ru led paper. 85 sheets.

Smartly slyled. leather like viny l
In assorted colors. Reinforced.
Double handles.

'

PRICED FROM

•.

school lab!els. yellow

AND
UP

GYM~

:

choice of st yles. EconOmy priced at
Stiff ler's to save you a wee bit mor e. .

SCHOOL TABLETS

PRICED FROM

•I

:·. New Sa ndy McGee footwear In a wi de

as SHEET FAST MAIL

off winter's icy blasts, to top her class1c:
clothes, to keep her in comfort, nO matter :
what ihe weather. Sizes J to 6X and 7 to 14. :

BOOTH

OXFORDS

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

·A school girl needs a sturd y coa t to wa~d .

I

FOR THE MAN ABOUT CAMPUS
DASHING LOAFERS AND

AND
UP

. - STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

I
I

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

'7''

COATS

FRYERS

..:;

.PRICED FROM

. ~: ..

doz.

...

New f a ll footwear at economy prices
from Hi Brow a nd Cha rm Step. Shop .
::; Sti ffl er's far footwear and save.

GIRLS' NEW FALL

EGGS

EACH

FOOTWEAR

•s·· ''

99

$

STYLISH NEW FALL

AND
UP

Medium

$4''

20

.

FOR BACK TO SCHOOL

MAPLE LAWN

SIZES

LADIES HI· BROW AND CHARM STEP

PRICED FROM

LAURA LEE

$3''

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

FOOTWEAR

REG. 11.79

BUCKET OF 36 BAHS

... ·'··

STURDY NEW STYLES FOR
BACK TO SCHOOL

oz.$

GOLF BALLS

SIZES
7 to 14

a to

- STiFFLER' S BACK TO SCi~OC)L SALE-

"

I.

FAMILY SIZE

10 OZ. JAR ONLY

PRICED FROM •

I,

SPORT SHIRTS

lo 20 . Save al Sti llier's.

and patterns. Sizes 3 'to 6X and 7 to 12.

$

BOY.S' PERMANENT PRESS
LONG SLEEVE FANCY

;

,Sli P into some Mave ri ck fl ar e leg styl e
j(!ans. lt'S a whole new look to make
your ward robe swing . Sizes 7 to lA and .S

Pretty new dresses for fall and back to

46
cans

PRACTICE

1923
1973

~STIF,~L~R'~ B;C~ TO SC HOOL SALE-

:E.:_ ::

FLARE JEANS .

'*""""school wear . Made of easy ~are perm
press fabric s In a great choice of co lors

THURSDAY ONLY

HAWAIIAN
PUNCH

~ACKT~ SCHOOL

MISSES AND GIRLS
MAVERICK BRAND

DRESSES

.

14'12

75¢

INSTANT

Tuna Fish

I•

- ST IFFLER'S

GIRLS' BACK TO SCHOOL
PERMANENT PRESS

I ·:::::::::::;: '
•
I'

3 Cans

8 pak

. $}79

tH·" ··" TO SCHOOL SAL

Six Operators

BANANAS lb.1o~

oz . bois .

•,:•:

BACK TO SCHOOL SALE THIS
THURSDAY
FRIDAY SATURDAY AUGUST 23-24-25
.. .
·'

I

BEANS

JJunchml

•.

I .,

PORK&amp;

Packaqe of 17 lea d pencil s.
Numtwr two

A~so rtcd colors.
loA d. ~ave now !

•

KAY'S
BEAUTY
SALON

TURBANANA'S

YES,
Peaches, Pears,

WILMINGTON Ohio (UP!)
Brown also said Kenny
- Coach Paul' Brown has Anderson will start at quar·
released punter Ken Duncan terbaek against the UonaT~!
and wide re ceivr Steve Detroit Fr1day night . h ld
Kingman to cut the Cincinnati regular quarterback was e
· Bengals' roster to 56.
out of Sunday's game.
Brown also is looking around
to see which other players can
be dropped prior to the start of
the regular season.
Tile veteran mentor said
after Sunday's 24-6 loss to the
Browns that he is concerned
169 N. Second
about the capabilities of some
Middleport, Ohio
of his players and is t'On·
sidering which ones might be
trimmed.
·
Appointment not
Duncan and Kingman were
always
necessary .
the first to go Tuesday; and
more are expected in the
Phone 992-2725
coming days.

PRODUCE BUYS

RC COLA
16

. I•
'f.• Ge l ono I ur IJIICh \ IJ I)jf!C:
Dltlcrrn l otor cove r ~. 100

Bengals cut two ·

I

SHOW BOAT

SQiOOL PENCILS

COMPOSITION BOOKS
;hP(•t~•

.;

'

l
l

·WIENERS

t.e!

·'.

·:·

BACK TO SCHOOL SALE12 COUNT PACKAGE

MIDDLEPORT

'

REYNOLDS 18"x25'

USDA CHOICE .

We have canned

Thursday night and Clnclnnlltl
Is at Detroit on FridaY night.
AUanlll takes on Ceveland at
Knoxville, Tenn ., Oakland
plays Minnesota at 'Berkeley-,
Calif., Baltimore Is at
Washln~ton, New England at
New Orleans, Philadelphia at
San Diego and the New York
Jets at St. Louis on Saturday.

I

12

~

qunllly /lrlPd whU(• '
llJlPf'r , IJIIfH hPd ~, hnli&gt;, to Ill
:ill/ nol book- binder~ .

•'

LB.

~·

Hu~tl

.

BACK TO SCHOOL SALE
tOO COUNT VARSITY

~­
:-::

FILLER P

I

USDA CHOICE

SIRLOIN
STEAK

Ul'l Sports Writer
Duane Thomas won't get any
reprimands from the National
Football League for his alleged
refusal to heed the National
Anthem
at
pre·gam
ceremonies.
Thomas, the controversial
Washington . Redskin running
back
.
' touched off a controversy
last Friday night when he
supposedly walked around and
turned his back on the flag
during pre.game ceremonies
at Buffalo's Rich Stadium.
Buffalo fans began shouting
at Thomas and alter a thermos
bottle was thrown at him, he
charged the stands and had to
be restrained by teammates.
Thomas ' pre·game action
won't be chastised, however,
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
said Tuesday. Addressing a
meeting of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars in New Orleans,
Rozelle said tha t conduct
during the playing of the an.
them was up to the individual
club to police.
"I think it was an isolated
incident," Rozelle said.
Rozelle also said the 1975
Super Bo;,;l might be moved
from its scheduled site, the
Louisiana Superdome, if the
new stadium is not completed.
He said it probably would not
he transferred to the Tulane
University Sugar Bowl
Stadium.
"We would like to get into the
Superdome as soon as possible
and with the rotation syslem,il
New Orleans had the game in
1975, in Tulane Stadium, it
would be several years before
it could return," he said.
In news from the camps
Tuesday ,. th~ New Oleans
Saints put starting safety Hugo
Hollas on the injured· reserve
list and he'll. be out all season
and Cinciimatl cut punter !{en
Duncan and wide receiver
Steve Kingman . Houston
dropped four players - kicker
Mark Williams, linebacker Jim
Bishop, offensive lineman Sam
Holden and running back
Eddie Richardson.
New York Giant Coach Alex
Webster and reserve quar·
terback Randy Johnson jointly
announced that Johnson had·
not asked to be traded after
apparently. losing his battle to
unseat Norm Snead as No. 1
signal caller. Johnson said he
and the club had reached an
agreemen on his status and
that he would remain the rest
of the season.

MEAT SPECIALS

Open Mon .. Thurs. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.- Fridays 9 a. m. to 8 p.m . - Saturdays
9 a.m. to 8:30p.m.

ROUND
STEAK

Miami Coach · Don Shula
announced Ulllt {ijllback f..orry
Csonka, who hus missed all
lllree.pre.season gumcs since
the Dolphins' opening vlctury
against the College All.Stars,
will play against the Los
Angeles Rams Friday night.
. In other action scheduled for
this week, Dallas is at Houston

By JOE CARNICELU

openinA 20·2 U. S. surgt• .
Marvin Bctnu:-s of Pro\:tdem:e
was hi gh man for tht•

She's Gratefu l
"l l~aVen'l worked out since
school ended,'' she said, "and
I'm just grateful to win."
Poucher. a sophomore at the
University of Southern
Calif,ornia swam to a personal
all·time best of 56.4 in winning
the !{)()..meter butterfly by a
second over Byron MacDonald
of Canada.

•

~-:

(lACK 10 S(.'HOOL SALE
BIG 300 COUNT RULED

··'

•'

PRICED FROM
' Mom'• permanent press long sleeve

•hlrts In assorted · colors.
and styles from one ol the I
lamous m• kers.
&gt;AIIoorn•

99
EACH .

·)

$278

DRESS SLACKS
Large selecti on ol men 's name brand fall
and winter knit dress slacks In assorted .
colors anq patterns.

·

MEN'S WHITE KNIT $218
ATHLETIC SHIRTS
Pockaqe ol Three
l'loor MEN'S BROADCLOTH $315
BOXER SHORTS
.
't----1
Package of Three

...

FALL AND. WINTER KNIT

UNDERWEAR
MEN 'S KNIT BRIEFS
OR TEE SHIRTS
Package of Three

,

LARGE SELECTION - MEN'

FRUIT.OF-THE-LOOM

$209

·

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

FOR MEN AND BOYS · FAMOUS

B\)YS'S K
. NIT BRt.EFS
OR TEE SHIRTS
Pa~kag~ of 'T~ree.. ...

'

.

,

PRICED FROM

$
~

99
flAIR

:::I.I~IDWI~~~-~~~I!I!I~..~~---~:.~W~~~:&gt;.::,:j:~l:l:li&lt;l:l:lio~&lt;::l'~$'!.1\..I~.~IA!l-1~~~~::~~:::~ ·:,~~:::::,~;;;;;;::::::::· :·:·:,,;,,:::::::·~:: : : : ::,::: : ~,~:~::•·:,~:::: :...~: : : ~;'o,~: ;:;:;;::~::::::~~:~J:::e:::::: :;:;: .;: ;l: : ~:::o::: ;,: : :::::~:::f.~:~:::I&gt;::~~:W:I:~~~:;;::)~:::::l::::~:::r.:: : : : ; :) ···· ···;··.-.-........(t·~~.;o»:~y.y;v.w.o!«!«te«:e«:111!11-l!fft!JffllfJidbt'ltCIItlil

�---- --- ~- ~----~-----.------~--.....------:------r

•

9 - The U.lly ljenttnet, MIOCII Plll'l·t'Otneroy, u., ""~~· ""· ....

..

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Mid&lt;Ut•JXJrt .Pomeroy. 0 ., At~. 22, 197:t

•

'Skin at zt agazn

Swimmers bring
U. S. more gold
'

MOSCOW t UP II - The
embarrassment of track and
field behind them, U. S.
athletes were in t11e gold
medals' race at the seventh
World University Games loday
after a trio of firsts by the
swimmers and another victory
tly the men's basketball team.
But, however hard they try,
they can hope for no better
than second place behind the
runaway Russians.
Following gold medals by
Cathy Carr of Albuquerque, N.
M., in the women's 20Q.meter
, breaststroke , Sally Tuttle of
:. Ventura, Calif., i~ the women's
~ !()().mete freestyle and Allen
Poucher. of Jacksom·illu, Fla .,
in the men's !()().meter but·
lerfly, the U.S. cagers t·outed a
taller Czec hoslovakia leam,
110-59 to move closer to the
alm~t inevitable final mat·
chup with the Soviet Union.
Russians Add Five More
The Russians, meanwhile,
ignoring the first decisive U.S .
breakthrough in the gold medal
rush, added five more in
assorted sports to boost their
overall total to an unreachable
48. The United States, with five
golds now, moved into second
place and Romania dropped
back a n0tch to · third with
three.
"We had a day off on Monday
and it hur t us,", said u. s.
basketball Coach Ed Badger,
whose all·winning team plays
Cuba today. " It was a bit of a
letdown ."
The "letdown" was that the
Americans did not maintain
their 81).plus winning average
margin, but the Czechs were
never in the game after an

Major League Standings
NationAl I Mque
o;:i5f

'

'

W. l. Pet . G. B.

St . Louis

Pittsburgh
Montreat
Ch·icago·
Phi l adelphia

New York

63
60
59

62
62
65

.504
.492
.476

59

65

.476

Jlfl
3 11:2

58 66
56 67

.466
. 455

41h
6

Wes t

1112

'W , L. Pet . G . B.
Los An ge le s
77 48 .616
Cinc innati
76 .51 .598 2
San Francisco 69 55 .556 71 2
Houston
66 62 .516 12 1'1
Atlanta
61 67 .477 ll 1 2
San D ieg o
45 79 .363 31 1 2
Tuesday ' s Results
Chicago 6 Cincinnat i 4
San Fra ncisco 3 Montreal 1
Phila delphia 9 San Diego 8
New York 2 Los A n ge les 1
Atlanta 11 St . Louis 7
Pittsburgh 6 Houston 3

Today's. Probabl e Pitc hers

I All times EOTJ
Cincinnat i (Norm an 10-11) at
Chicago ( Pappils 5-lQJ. 2 : JO

p.m.

.

· San Francisco ( Bar' r 9-13 ) at

Montrea l (Rogers 4-2), 8 p .m .

Ameririlns with 21 points

The u.s swi mmers, led by a
record- breaking performance
m the g:aml'S by Miss Carr in
the 2()(J.metcr breast stroke
br.a vf'd a driving rainstorm
and chilling winds from the
Muscuw Hivcr, w1til'h bord~rs
the open-l1h' Lenin Stadium
swimming pool.
Pursued heal'lly by the
Soviet Union's Ludmila
Poruba iko, the two~time
Olympir champion Miss C{j rr
managed to m :lint~1in twr
fa ding lead Jown lhc fina l IOU
yards to win by a llalf·Stroke, in
2: 42.3.

BOBCAT RETURNING LETTERMEN - The Kyger Creek Bobcats hope to improve last
season's f&gt;.J ret'Ord behind the leadership of seven returning lettermen. They are, (front row,
left to right ), David Wise, Lawrence Tabor and Mike Rife. Back row, Clay Hudson, Dav1d Clay,
John Rumley and Rick Smith.

Taiwan gets no-hitter

WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. 1UP!)
- Little League World Series
Miss Tuttle also achieved a the last two years and on the
fi
first she took the 100· basis of Tuesday 's perfreestyle in '1:00.3. It was her formance, three in a row is a
initial triumph in international . distinct possibility.
Huang Ching.Hui, a name.
competition.
A clean sweep of the only throwing right·hander, pitched
four sw imming finals was a perfect game, striking out 16
foiled for the Americans when of 18 batters and Taiwan hit·
Vladimir Bure of the Soviet ters rapped out 13 hits, in·
Union surged off to an ex· eluding a record.tying four
cellent start and covered the homers, in· an !S..O pasting of
first 50 meters of the !()().meter Bitburg (Germany ) Air Force
freestyle event in a spectacular Base.
The opener in the series was
23.8.
no contest. It was 14.0 after
three innings and in the last
two frames, the Taiwan City
batters bunted to hold the score
down. Huang, who also leads
the club in hitting with a .531
average in tournament play,
hammered one of the club's
four homers.
American league
Home runs by Wang
East
Chingchung,
Lien Ying-shao
W. L. Pet . G. B.
Ba lt i more
70 51 .574
and Kuo Wen·lt enabled the
Detro it
68 57 .544 31 ''1
team to match the record of
Boston
67 57 . 540 4
New York
68 60 .531 5
fnur homers in one game set by
M i lw auke e
60 62 .492 1U
Momt1 rey, 1•• .:..-ico wtien it
Cl evelan·d
51 75 .405 21
West
won the Little League title in
W. l . P et , G. B.
1958.
Oakland
73 ii .584
Kansas City
72 55 . 567 2
The team from Tampa, Fla.
1

Minn eso ta
Ch ic ago
Cal ifornia
Texas

59
59
56
43

65
66
65

so

,47 6
.472
. 463
. 350

13
14
15
29

2'

wasn't quite as impressive as

the Chinese squad but the
Southern U.S. representative
still managed to overpower
Whalley, British Columbia, 11·

Tuesday ' s Results
Chicago 4 Clevelan d 0
Ba lt imor e 2 Minnesota 1
Boston 15 Texas 9
Kansas City 5 New York 4

2.

Quinton Kincey's grand-slam
ho mer in the fifth inning was

M il waukee 6 Ca liforn ia 2
De troit 6 OaKland 4
Today's Probable Pitc.h ers

AKRON, Ohio (UPI )- "It's
like seeing apple pie,
motherhood and the American
flag gri nding to a halt ,"
Summit County Prosecutor
Steven Gabalac said here
to day amid continuing
ramifications resulting from
the clisqualifica tion of last
Saturday's winner of the All·
American SOap Box Derby for
cheating.

Det r oit (Coleman 18 -11) at
San D iego (A rlin 7- lll at
Philadelph ia (Car lton JJ . J4 l, Oak la nd (Odo m 3·9) , 11 p .m .
7:3 0p .m .
Milwaukee {Slaton 8-11) at
Los Angeles (Messersmilt1 11 . Calif ornia (Sl nger 16-10), 11
.
8) ·at New York (S tone 7-3), 8 p .m .

p.m .

St . Louis (Clevela nd 12 -6 1 at
Atlanta (Schue ler 7.7), 8 p.m .
Pi ttsburg h (Moose 7-lll at
Houston (Rober ts 12 -9 ), 8 :30

p.m .

Thur ~ d ay's

Games
San Oelgo at Pt1i l a, nivhl
Los Ang at New Yorl&lt;. , night
Cincinnat i at Chica,go
(Only games schedu l ed)

· 115 W. Main

the big blow of the game.
Kincey and Broyce Mattox led
the winners • attack with three
hits apiece.
·
Pitcher Darryl Mitchell fired
a two-hitter and struck out 10,
but was touched for two runs in
the first inning when Whalley
ca tcher Terry Scramstead
homered with one man on.
In today's games, the

New Yo rk (Mc Do well 5·51 at
Kansas City (S pHttor ff 15 ·8L

8:30p.m .

Boston nia nt 15-1 01 at Texas

(Clyde A 4), 9 p .m .

Minnesota (W ood so n 10·8) at
Baltimore (Cue lla r 11 -HL 7: 30
p.m .
Thur ~day's

Games
Milw at Californ i a , night

{ On l y gam .e sched ul ed l

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Western and Eastern U. S.
representatives will meet when
Tucson , Ariz. takes on Colonie,
N. Y. The game will mark the
first appearance of an Arizona
team In World Series com·
petition.
In the second game, a learn
from Birmingham, Mich., the
Central representative, faces a
club from Monterrey, Mexico.

Squirrel season
.outlook is good
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Ohioans should have good
squ irrel hunting after the
season opens Sept. 7 as the
population now "is good or
better than last year in most of
the 88 counties," according to
state Wildlife Chief Dan C.
Armbruster.
Armbruster said field
reports from game protectors
indicate a large squirrel
population and a good nut crop
around Ohio now; except in
some areas of the southeast .
and southwest where the late
spring frost damaged some nut
producing trets.
The squirrel season runs
from Sept. 7 • Nov. 10 on
private lands and Sept. 7 ·Dec.
22 at state public hunting
areas.

X ·rays show ·cheating

. (AIITimesEDTJ
Ch i cag o 1 Forster .t ~ S) at
Clevelan d (Pe rry JJ . \6 ), 1 p .m .

James Gronen, 14, Boulder,
Colo ., won the 36th annual
event but was later disqualified
after Derby officials learned he
used an electromagnet to help
pull his car from the starting
gate.
The electromagnet, ac·
cording to Derby officials, was
discovered through X·ray
pictures taken of the racer
Monday after starters reported
Gronen 's racer consistently
obtained an edge over other
racers at ,the start of various
heats.
The X·rays showed the
magnet in the nose of the racer.
and an activating switch
operated by the boy's helmet.

The squirrel hunting outlook
by regions :
Central Ohio - Population
better than last year .
Pickaway County and eastern
half of Morrow County have
excellent populations.
Northwestern Ohio
Population reported same as
last year, which was very good.
Better counties are Allen,
Fulton, Sandusky and Seneca.
Northeastern Ohio
Population as good or better
than last year. Better counties
are . Ashtabula, Carroll,
Trumbull and Tuscarawas.
Southeastern Ohio
Population good in most
counties, but down in Belmont,
Gallia, Laivrence and Ross
Counties. Frost damage to
many nut trees in Guernsey,
Meigs, Noble and Ross
counties.
· Southweste,rn · Ohio
Population as good or better
than last year in all counties
except Adams and Brown
where down.

GIRLS
Back To School

JEAN SHOE
By
Connie l!o Thom MeAn

$1599
heritage house
to

Your THOM MeAN Store
Middleport, 0.

Pomeroy

69
lb.$1

'

99

''
I

$

.

$

79

FROZEN FOODS·

69~

2 lb.

BREADED FISH

I

Famous

I'
I

I

:

oz.

HOT DOG

Pkg .

SAUCE

2

Three fastener sc hool
brief covers In assorted
~~;rt.J colors . Save.

cans

BIC PENS .

STAR KIST

CHUNK
TUNA

91(. oz.
Can

79~

oz.

49'

Assort. Flavors

KOOL·AID

49~

65~

FLOUR

S· lb.

BOYS' POPULAR
FLARE
•

~:~..
, ~ " JJ j ·
I , I· ·I · 1

DENIM JEANS
Boys ' well made Maverick brand flare
denim jeans. Sizes 6 t o 16. Save at

MII/I

1

I

.

59t LJr

IFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

- S-TIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE

Stiffler's .

\ - STIFFLER'SBACKTOSCHOOL

64 COUNT CRAYOLA

SCHOOL PASTE

CRAYONS

I
I

,

'

~~"{,

"""'"~"" 19~TL

i'

~

school paste in

I
I

I
, II
I

'
'

e

lb.

SOFTWHI PPED

Iiiii 900

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU auY A . 1o.oz. JAR OF

-

.,_

..

$299
With Coupon
Rutland Dept,

·

Plums, Pineapple,

MAXWELL HOUSE~cOFFEE

AUTOMmC WATER SOFTENERS

Salmon and

AT SIMON'S MARKET _ _

Remove hardneti from all

1.09 '"'"

TIDE

your houtebokl water

CDUI'ON

MIDOUPORT, ~.

Store

MARGARINE
16 oz •
Bowl

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALESPECIAL BARGAIN FAMOUS

ELMER'S GLUE

GYM. OXFORDS
and women In white and colors.
American made. Moulded soles.

; - STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOLSALE: MEN'S • BOYS' · YOUTH's
~
'·

GYM. OXFORDS

Elm er's famous Glue-All lor school use.
Really save during our big back to

oxfords for gym wear. Men's, boys',

school sale .

and youth's sizes.

ers or gym oxfords for misses

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOO'-

Black or white lace lo the toe styfe ~

'1 ~!IR

-

LONG SLEEVE SPORT '

$219

.

- ST I FLER'SBACKTOSCHOOLSALE-

MEN'S PERM PR1:,

~:'SHIRTS ~·~ ~

Jar
.
With Coupon

Rutland
Dept. Store
Explrtl a.u.73

S1.19

'· .

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO
· MISSES &amp; LADIES
MOULDED SOLE

COFFEE
14 o.z.

REG.

BOX VALUE

II ..-;...........
..... ...••••·-,;:.•;o•·•·

.. ___ ,...

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT

PAIR

....

•.

BLUE BONNET

99

$

FAMOUS LePAGE'S WHITE
LePage's wh'i te

''

Bag

POMEROY STORE ONLY

For back lo school ll's famous

i

~-------------1
ROBIN HOOD

l lfz oz. Pkg.

FOR

ALUMINUM
FOIL

9~A.
-t ·

Famous "BtC" pens for school use. /
Package ol B. Medium point. They write
every time.

DICTIONARY

49~

$800

I

REG. $1.00. 8 COUNT PACK

OVER 5,000 ENTRIES • WEBSTER'S
10'12 oz.

PRICED FROM

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

·:::

CASTLEBERRY

SUPERIORS

campus classics ... assembled t)ere
selection . Suits, sweaters,
ja ckets ... pant s and sportive skirts.
In soft autumn co lors.· wa r m,
winsome fabricS . Come in now. Find
yours!
fo ~ yol!r

BRIEF COVERS

BAGS

I
l

SPORTSWEAR

College greats. The best ol the

REG. 29c 3 FAStENER

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALEFOR BACK TO SCHOOL . COLORFUL
VINYL

;QO.....

BOBBIE BROOKS &amp; RUSS TOGS
NEW FAU &amp; WINTER

..:..STIFFLER'S. BAC.K TO SCHOOL SALE-

99

•.

·:· - STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

19~. :

:·:·

I :--. .;o;

Pkg .

Fast. . M ai l

...

'

I
I

•

'7''·~~D

ru led paper. 85 sheets.

Smartly slyled. leather like viny l
In assorted colors. Reinforced.
Double handles.

'

PRICED FROM

•.

school lab!els. yellow

AND
UP

GYM~

:

choice of st yles. EconOmy priced at
Stiff ler's to save you a wee bit mor e. .

SCHOOL TABLETS

PRICED FROM

•I

:·. New Sa ndy McGee footwear In a wi de

as SHEET FAST MAIL

off winter's icy blasts, to top her class1c:
clothes, to keep her in comfort, nO matter :
what ihe weather. Sizes J to 6X and 7 to 14. :

BOOTH

OXFORDS

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

·A school girl needs a sturd y coa t to wa~d .

I

FOR THE MAN ABOUT CAMPUS
DASHING LOAFERS AND

AND
UP

. - STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

I
I

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

'7''

COATS

FRYERS

..:;

.PRICED FROM

. ~: ..

doz.

...

New f a ll footwear at economy prices
from Hi Brow a nd Cha rm Step. Shop .
::; Sti ffl er's far footwear and save.

GIRLS' NEW FALL

EGGS

EACH

FOOTWEAR

•s·· ''

99

$

STYLISH NEW FALL

AND
UP

Medium

$4''

20

.

FOR BACK TO SCHOOL

MAPLE LAWN

SIZES

LADIES HI· BROW AND CHARM STEP

PRICED FROM

LAURA LEE

$3''

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

FOOTWEAR

REG. 11.79

BUCKET OF 36 BAHS

... ·'··

STURDY NEW STYLES FOR
BACK TO SCHOOL

oz.$

GOLF BALLS

SIZES
7 to 14

a to

- STiFFLER' S BACK TO SCi~OC)L SALE-

"

I.

FAMILY SIZE

10 OZ. JAR ONLY

PRICED FROM •

I,

SPORT SHIRTS

lo 20 . Save al Sti llier's.

and patterns. Sizes 3 'to 6X and 7 to 12.

$

BOY.S' PERMANENT PRESS
LONG SLEEVE FANCY

;

,Sli P into some Mave ri ck fl ar e leg styl e
j(!ans. lt'S a whole new look to make
your ward robe swing . Sizes 7 to lA and .S

Pretty new dresses for fall and back to

46
cans

PRACTICE

1923
1973

~STIF,~L~R'~ B;C~ TO SC HOOL SALE-

:E.:_ ::

FLARE JEANS .

'*""""school wear . Made of easy ~are perm
press fabric s In a great choice of co lors

THURSDAY ONLY

HAWAIIAN
PUNCH

~ACKT~ SCHOOL

MISSES AND GIRLS
MAVERICK BRAND

DRESSES

.

14'12

75¢

INSTANT

Tuna Fish

I•

- ST IFFLER'S

GIRLS' BACK TO SCHOOL
PERMANENT PRESS

I ·:::::::::::;: '
•
I'

3 Cans

8 pak

. $}79

tH·" ··" TO SCHOOL SAL

Six Operators

BANANAS lb.1o~

oz . bois .

•,:•:

BACK TO SCHOOL SALE THIS
THURSDAY
FRIDAY SATURDAY AUGUST 23-24-25
.. .
·'

I

BEANS

JJunchml

•.

I .,

PORK&amp;

Packaqe of 17 lea d pencil s.
Numtwr two

A~so rtcd colors.
loA d. ~ave now !

•

KAY'S
BEAUTY
SALON

TURBANANA'S

YES,
Peaches, Pears,

WILMINGTON Ohio (UP!)
Brown also said Kenny
- Coach Paul' Brown has Anderson will start at quar·
released punter Ken Duncan terbaek against the UonaT~!
and wide re ceivr Steve Detroit Fr1day night . h ld
Kingman to cut the Cincinnati regular quarterback was e
· Bengals' roster to 56.
out of Sunday's game.
Brown also is looking around
to see which other players can
be dropped prior to the start of
the regular season.
Tile veteran mentor said
after Sunday's 24-6 loss to the
Browns that he is concerned
169 N. Second
about the capabilities of some
Middleport, Ohio
of his players and is t'On·
sidering which ones might be
trimmed.
·
Appointment not
Duncan and Kingman were
always
necessary .
the first to go Tuesday; and
more are expected in the
Phone 992-2725
coming days.

PRODUCE BUYS

RC COLA
16

. I•
'f.• Ge l ono I ur IJIICh \ IJ I)jf!C:
Dltlcrrn l otor cove r ~. 100

Bengals cut two ·

I

SHOW BOAT

SQiOOL PENCILS

COMPOSITION BOOKS
;hP(•t~•

.;

'

l
l

·WIENERS

t.e!

·'.

·:·

BACK TO SCHOOL SALE12 COUNT PACKAGE

MIDDLEPORT

'

REYNOLDS 18"x25'

USDA CHOICE .

We have canned

Thursday night and Clnclnnlltl
Is at Detroit on FridaY night.
AUanlll takes on Ceveland at
Knoxville, Tenn ., Oakland
plays Minnesota at 'Berkeley-,
Calif., Baltimore Is at
Washln~ton, New England at
New Orleans, Philadelphia at
San Diego and the New York
Jets at St. Louis on Saturday.

I

12

~

qunllly /lrlPd whU(• '
llJlPf'r , IJIIfH hPd ~, hnli&gt;, to Ill
:ill/ nol book- binder~ .

•'

LB.

~·

Hu~tl

.

BACK TO SCHOOL SALE
tOO COUNT VARSITY

~­
:-::

FILLER P

I

USDA CHOICE

SIRLOIN
STEAK

Ul'l Sports Writer
Duane Thomas won't get any
reprimands from the National
Football League for his alleged
refusal to heed the National
Anthem
at
pre·gam
ceremonies.
Thomas, the controversial
Washington . Redskin running
back
.
' touched off a controversy
last Friday night when he
supposedly walked around and
turned his back on the flag
during pre.game ceremonies
at Buffalo's Rich Stadium.
Buffalo fans began shouting
at Thomas and alter a thermos
bottle was thrown at him, he
charged the stands and had to
be restrained by teammates.
Thomas ' pre·game action
won't be chastised, however,
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
said Tuesday. Addressing a
meeting of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars in New Orleans,
Rozelle said tha t conduct
during the playing of the an.
them was up to the individual
club to police.
"I think it was an isolated
incident," Rozelle said.
Rozelle also said the 1975
Super Bo;,;l might be moved
from its scheduled site, the
Louisiana Superdome, if the
new stadium is not completed.
He said it probably would not
he transferred to the Tulane
University Sugar Bowl
Stadium.
"We would like to get into the
Superdome as soon as possible
and with the rotation syslem,il
New Orleans had the game in
1975, in Tulane Stadium, it
would be several years before
it could return," he said.
In news from the camps
Tuesday ,. th~ New Oleans
Saints put starting safety Hugo
Hollas on the injured· reserve
list and he'll. be out all season
and Cinciimatl cut punter !{en
Duncan and wide receiver
Steve Kingman . Houston
dropped four players - kicker
Mark Williams, linebacker Jim
Bishop, offensive lineman Sam
Holden and running back
Eddie Richardson.
New York Giant Coach Alex
Webster and reserve quar·
terback Randy Johnson jointly
announced that Johnson had·
not asked to be traded after
apparently. losing his battle to
unseat Norm Snead as No. 1
signal caller. Johnson said he
and the club had reached an
agreemen on his status and
that he would remain the rest
of the season.

MEAT SPECIALS

Open Mon .. Thurs. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.- Fridays 9 a. m. to 8 p.m . - Saturdays
9 a.m. to 8:30p.m.

ROUND
STEAK

Miami Coach · Don Shula
announced Ulllt {ijllback f..orry
Csonka, who hus missed all
lllree.pre.season gumcs since
the Dolphins' opening vlctury
against the College All.Stars,
will play against the Los
Angeles Rams Friday night.
. In other action scheduled for
this week, Dallas is at Houston

By JOE CARNICELU

openinA 20·2 U. S. surgt• .
Marvin Bctnu:-s of Pro\:tdem:e
was hi gh man for tht•

She's Gratefu l
"l l~aVen'l worked out since
school ended,'' she said, "and
I'm just grateful to win."
Poucher. a sophomore at the
University of Southern
Calif,ornia swam to a personal
all·time best of 56.4 in winning
the !{)()..meter butterfly by a
second over Byron MacDonald
of Canada.

•

~-:

(lACK 10 S(.'HOOL SALE
BIG 300 COUNT RULED

··'

•'

PRICED FROM
' Mom'• permanent press long sleeve

•hlrts In assorted · colors.
and styles from one ol the I
lamous m• kers.
&gt;AIIoorn•

99
EACH .

·)

$278

DRESS SLACKS
Large selecti on ol men 's name brand fall
and winter knit dress slacks In assorted .
colors anq patterns.

·

MEN'S WHITE KNIT $218
ATHLETIC SHIRTS
Pockaqe ol Three
l'loor MEN'S BROADCLOTH $315
BOXER SHORTS
.
't----1
Package of Three

...

FALL AND. WINTER KNIT

UNDERWEAR
MEN 'S KNIT BRIEFS
OR TEE SHIRTS
Package of Three

,

LARGE SELECTION - MEN'

FRUIT.OF-THE-LOOM

$209

·

- STIFFLER'S BACK TO SCHOOL SALE-

FOR MEN AND BOYS · FAMOUS

B\)YS'S K
. NIT BRt.EFS
OR TEE SHIRTS
Pa~kag~ of 'T~ree.. ...

'

.

,

PRICED FROM

$
~

99
flAIR

:::I.I~IDWI~~~-~~~I!I!I~..~~---~:.~W~~~:&gt;.::,:j:~l:l:li&lt;l:l:lio~&lt;::l'~$'!.1\..I~.~IA!l-1~~~~::~~:::~ ·:,~~:::::,~;;;;;;::::::::· :·:·:,,;,,:::::::·~:: : : : ::,::: : ~,~:~::•·:,~:::: :...~: : : ~;'o,~: ;:;:;;::~::::::~~:~J:::e:::::: :;:;: .;: ;l: : ~:::o::: ;,: : :::::~:::f.~:~:::I&gt;::~~:W:I:~~~:;;::)~:::::l::::~:::r.:: : : : ; :) ···· ···;··.-.-........(t·~~.;o»:~y.y;v.w.o!«!«te«:e«:111!11-l!fft!JffllfJidbt'ltCIItlil

�- '
10 - The Dailv S..linel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Au~. 22. l9T.l

.

'

Bishop Fenwick leased
by Gallia·M-R Board
CHESHIRE - A tentative
agreement was announced
loday which will allow the use
of the Bishop Fenwick High
School property at Cheshire by
Gallia County's training
programs for the mentally
retarded.
Acting upon a rnotion
presented by Mrs. Ann Bowers
and seconded by Bob
Mackenzie, the Gallia County
Board of Mental Retardation
has voted unanimously to
approve a four-year lease plan
with the Steubenville Diocese
of the Roman ca.tholic Church.
This plan is to be presented to
the Gallla County Commissioners for their approval.
Gary Barton, program ad·
mistrator, told the Tribune that
utilization of this Cheshire
property will allow the three
county programs to be unified
for the first time. These
programs include: a pre-school
class now located in the St.
Peter's Episcopal Church; the
Guiding Hand School now
operating in the Catholic Youth
Center, and the Gallia County
Adult Activity Center for the
Handicapped
which
i~
presently located at the
Gallipolis State Institute.
Barton stated that the move
would allow the acceptance of
a 12-month Title I (federal)
grant to employ an adaptive
. physical education instnJctor.
This program would not have
been possible at the present
training sites due to the lack of
facilities.
The Bishop Fenwick High
School was constructed by the
Steubenvllle Diocese in 1963.
The school was soon closed and
has been vacant for nearly 10
years. Vandals have destroyed
many lights, clocks, and
thermostats. · Parenta,
teachers, and friends of the
school are cleaning and
repairing the property and will
soon have their first complete

and modern school facility for
the county's mentally re tarded .
The school family's efforta
were enhanced by those of
several community members.
Barton expressed that the
efforts or Father A. J .
Golubiewski and Robert (Bob)
Marchi were espcially appreciated.

Join in the 4th Week

The school is locnted on io 2\lacre tral'l just north of the
Village or Cheshire. It was
designed to accommodate 250
pupils and has 20 rooms of
various siz.es, including a
gymnasium. It also has ita own
water supply and sewage
disposal systems as well as
some paved parking space.

n1n

ran

Celebration of Pomeroy

rstore

.~:~~~:·:·:·:·:·:::·:~:s:-:..~~::::::::::~::::::::::::::o:::::::::::.=::::::~::::::~::::::::::::::::::~::::::::.:·::::::::::::-~=:::::::::::::~·:~:::~

~i American, Cuban cage teams it

~~

fight bloody court battle

jjj

MOSCOW (UPI) - American and Cuban athletes
~:: fought a bloody, ZO.minute battle today before several
:ll hundred stunned Russian spectators at a World
;:; University G11111es ·tiasketball match. The CubaM swung
···· wooden !Qlding chairs atlhe Americans, who fought back
with their fists. One American was knocked unconscious,
and blood and broken glass Jittered the floor when
authorities finally got the situation under control.
The fight broke out just 90 seconds before the end of
the game, which the Americans won 98 to 70. An
unidentified Cuban player kicked Mitchell Dupchuk of
Brentwood, N.Y., and Kupchuk went down in front ·of the
M euban basket.
,.,
Kupchuk came up swinging, and the entire Cuban
·:1 bench poured onto the floor. American players swarmed

:!i

out
folding chairs onto
the floor, and started hitting the American players on the
head. U. S. trailer Wayne Wottzen of Sheboygan, Wise.,
was knocked unconscioua.
''These . , . bastards bit me three times," Woltzen
said afterward. "I put my arm up and then he hit me on
the back." He had a large lump on the back of his head
and had to be treated by a doctor.
At one point the Cuban coach, Emesto Diaz, chased·
American coach Ed Badger of Wilbur Wright Junior
College iri Chicago across the court and back again,
throwing puncbes all the way. Badger ran and did not
attempt to light back. ·

i\l

~

!·1

~····:

~~~t~~ ~~::, ~~~~ooden

i\\

"'
;:~

:,_~:;!:·.

·

:·::
::::
:.',:!.:,:

!~~~

····

::1
!f1

UPJIIIU

:(:

t•t riJht

X·

f
:&lt;·

ltiJ. llle l f0CII

t1

1"1

LADIES'

lttiU Ill. PfiCII
h1 . Itt~·
t-111 lw1. 25111, It ). We uuru
U

NON( SOLO

ro

l111it

1!UJIIII1t1S .

DULERS.

GIRLS'
BACK·TO·SCHOOL

FASHION
PANTS

Beef
Patties

Sizes 6-14.

:·&gt;

·:·:
;:;:
:_,l;,:.'!:'

!:l

·X

Cello Wrapped; Frozen

Turbot
Fillets

Shop Kroger's tor 111 Your
Meal leads ·Including Baal

lb.

LADIES' NYLON

Sliced

4 Varieties

Jiffy
Entrees

2

$149

;lb.
kg. . .

Krog er Sluffed Queen
(7036) or (7042)

Salad
Olives

HECK'S REG. '6.99
CLOTHING
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG •
$6.88

,:
\, :.::.!..,

Kwik Krisp

12·01.
Pkg.

·Bacon
'

,.
Mlgs. Suggested Retail 79c

$'139

·

wm c.., .. " j Pordom ,

Stamas

•"I'J' '' ruu

Kroger Ice Cream

BODY SUIT

LADIES'

Ill ~ lal. ¥111111 Datcll C~tctlltl, Chn~--,i,,
Ftllp lllht, ••n•r ''""• M••• Wala11, Wlltli llraw·

NYLON

,

.

Ideal top for pants and sk irts, flot knit and rib knit

King Size liquid

S.C.M.

Theme
Books

Lux

Detergent

green . Si~es: Sma ll, medium and lar:ge .

. T .

00 Extra fumps
PANTY .

Stock ~p lor bock to lthoOL One §ill!l
fih all. Co lori- beige, cin namon ,
Ioupe, brown .

WIUI C111111 ad Pwrcbst tf
3.Jb , Con Vac Padc Rtgulor, Drip or Eltctra P1rk

G-3

·50
Extra. . TopValue§
.
Stamps =
u•
Any Two Chlf Si11

Purdllt If

Kroger Spices

Wltfo. Coupon
Coupon f_.pir•t Augu11 25, 1973
"Subjed to opplicoble stole ond
loc:of talll 'fOIC"

August 25. Pick up your entry blank
at the Pomeroy Store. Enter now.
often.

HAS SURGERY
Charles Handley, Langsville,
underwent eye surgery today
at O'Bleness Memorial
HU"Jpital, Athens. His room
number is 217.

S'a ck l o school special. Pastel and hi shades .

--

Sizes 5 to 7.
HECK'S REG.
58' EA.
ClOTHIN(i DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 99' EA.
ClOTHflt(i DEPT.

BAYER ASPIRIN
100's

64e

CHEESE .·
SPREAD

Phone Us
Your Orclerl

M2-3502

~

$

. COSMETIC DEPT.

PROTEIN 21
SHAMPOO

HECK'S REG. 88 1

COSMETIC DIPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.
13 oz.

PLAYTEX

STYLAC

LIVING GLOVES

14 oz.

HECK'S R~G.
$1.48

HAIR LACQUER

HECK'S REG. $1.99

HECK'S.REG. 84'

COSMETIC DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

TOY
DOCTOR OR
NURSE KIT

Each
Fr11~

.Honeydew
Melons

$
Not 36.

®

BIKE
3 SPEED

.......
59

2....
Jar

COSMETIC DEPT.
ELECTROMIC
SUPER FLASH

HECK'S REG.
78'1A .

ror DII'T.

,.,,,.

DOLL HOUSE
FURNITURE
PLASTIC CONSTRUCTION

77~CH

74~EA.

HICK'S RIG. 92'

AIRPLANE

A tt nl !lflnll norplnn• llenyl dvll ~ '""'lru&lt;l,d ol ,, ,, g high·
ompij&lt; l plu olot , ,.,,h 14" IU'-'\Ih lt&gt;&lt;fti ~ll ••d '"lfiOI f .. cl rltGIIy
pe&gt;werld, pu•h bui!M cai\lo.olled op1rat11 o" 1 "0 " fl11 1h~ghl
bntieri• • i~dou " cr llwl. I ~ ',lulti(IQt. 6' ( nblt

6 STYLES

CHOICE

CHOIC.I

,

HECK'S REG.$ 1.19

BOYS'. 26"

Bartlett
Pears

END CUT PORK CHOPS ................... Ib. 1.09 ,
CENTER CUT PORK cHOPS ............... lb. 11.29

HECK'S REG • .
$1.58

HECK'S REG. 79'

135 Size

1

FOAMY

REGULAR, MENTHOL , LEMON -LIME

(

SIRLOIN STEAK
GROUND CHUCK
PORK CHOPS
BEEF LIVER
BULK SAUSAGE
LARGE FRANKS
HAM SALAD

lb . PORK STEAK
l lb . 'GROUND CHUCK
2 lb . ROUND STEAK
2 lb . SLICED BACON
3 lb . RIB STEAKS

oz.

11
GILLETTE

(

Jar

(316)

RAZOR

DEODORANT

J'.l ···s9;j

HAM SAlAD
AND

oz.

REGULAR , DRY &amp; OILY

loco's

HOMEMAOE

CLOTHINC DEPT.

RIGHT GUARD

COSMETIC
· DEPT.

AFTERSHAVE

Cl OTHIN' DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $5.99

TWIN PACK

HECK'S
. REG.
79'

4lf• oz.
OLD SPICE

HECK'S REG. $10.99

2 PAIR

SCHICK
LADY EVERSHARP

4

11111111111111111

the World's
Drive Detergent
Largest Bag ~ •••· · :~~- 99¢
of
Groceries
••
,'~ ''·42
To be given away this Saturday,

BIKINI PANTIES

$100

c..... h'lrll .....t Zl, 1tn

A plus fashion for girls . Skirts in acryllc knit polye~ter ond co tt on . In ossorted styles . Sizes 7 to 14 .

LADIES'

2 For

Kroger CoHee

SKIRTS

ClOTHING
DEPT.

. H·osr

00 Extra t!~"

Witlt Cllftl

FASHION

HECK'S REG. $4.88 ·

1

$

Newest thing for· fall! Button front tunic top,
elastic waist, cuffed pull on pants.

GIRLS'

c..,., El'l11i' hlllt B, 1111

Towels

PANTSUITS

WUfl C••••• 1111 rurc ..sa If
Ont 6.lb, 6-01 . Can Hano'f'er

Whole ~Potatoes

While or Decorator

GIRLS'
FASHION

short sleeve . Colo rs: Wh-ite, navy, brown and

Crocker

2 lb.
3 lb.
3 lb.
2 lb.
2 lb.
2 lb.
I lb.

SIMILAR TO
ILLUSTRATION

These adorable dresses are
all-permanent press. Available
in prints, solids, checks &amp; plaids.

:[(
....
::::

News • . . in Briefs

GROUND CHUCK
CHUCK ROAST
SLICED BACON
ROUND STEAK

FOR FALL

DRESSES

Toke th., long look lor loll in the"
ladies' fo $hion panii! In a~'Q rted wo v·
en plaids ....... poly (Olto n. Pull on woi i l
.,.,.ilh 2" culh . Size' in 8to 18.

::::

Marriage Ucense
Holzer Medical Center
Randy William Hand, 21, Rt.
(Discharged)
1 Reedsville, and Eleanor Dian
Carol Buck, Wilma Barlow,
Bailey, 19, Rt. I, Reedsville. Brenda Ben tty, Berne ice
Brucker, Geraldine Cochran,
WiiJie Cook, Ada England,
Okey Fowler, Wanda Henry,
Mrs. Larry R. Hoschar and
son, Jerry Lee Lewis, Thomas
McClain, Mary K. Miller, Ross
Norris, Mrs. Charles R.
Parsons and son, Jack Quinby,
Louise ; Mr. and Mrs. Harold John Sayre, Mrs. John Shaffer
Rose, Jeff, Harold and David; and daughter, Theodore R.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Weaver, Slinker, Essie Starcher, Corbet
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Drake, Tim, Stull, Dorsel Smith, Berniece
Tom and Carol;' Mr. and Mrs. Vanaman, WilliamM. Warner,
,_Charles Roush, Becky and Lucille Watson and Ernest
Joey ; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wells.
Grinstead, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
!Births)
Duncan, Cecil Jr. and Stephen;
Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith, Goodnight, a son, Mason; Mr.
Jay and Jackie ; Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. James Warner, a
Richard . Grinstead, Todd and daughter, Grimm's Landing,
Yvonne; Timmi Zerkle, Jane . W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Roush, Becky Gilmore, Judy W. Ragland ; a daughter, .
Ashcroft, Brenda Winning, Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs .
Debbie Fields, Ricky Powell, Charles W. Durst, a daughter,
Vicki Dowell, Sandy Kauffer · !J!tart.
Allen and Michael ; Johnny
Ridgway, Mrs. Clif( Roush,
Mrs. Bill McFarland, Mrs.
REVIVAL SLATED
John Smith, Mrs. Carrie
The Hazel Community
Oliver, Mrs. Helen Knapp,
Church will hold revival ser·
· Mrs. Frank Teft and sons, Mrs .
vices aJI week with the Rev.
Bill Gibbs and George, Mrs. George Hatcher as guest
Jack Flesher, . Mrs. Dor?thy speaker, Featured singers this
James, Jenme and Btlly,
evening are the Heavenly
Pastor Haeberle .
Highway Singers of Mid·
dleport. Services will be held at
7:30 nightly.

2 lb.
4 lb.
2 lb.
21b.

•

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN, AUG. 26, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

SUNDAY 1 TO 7

Foster Fried

~~::=J

(Continued on Page 1)
with Maryland while he served as Baltimore county executive,
governor and even vice presltlent. Beall denied his staff was the
source of the leaks. Richardson deplored them, too, and said he
was Investigating, as Agnew asked, and would discipline any
employe found to be the so•Jrce of the "unfair and inaccurate
publicity." Through a spokesman, President Nixon also decried
the news leaks.

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9

~

New Haven unit hosted
•
b
b
SWJm party,· ar eCUe
NEW HAYEN _ The E-R
squad of New Haven entertained the Fire Dept.,
and ita women's auxil·
1ary with a swinuning
party and chicken barbecue at
the swimming pool Saturday
evening.
Carrie Oliver, who just
recently closed her gas station,
was pleasantly surprised when
the department presented her
a watch. Since the. old Superior
Porcelain eo., better known as
the pottery, ceased blowing its
whistle, Miss Carrie has been
taking ftre and emergency
calls at her btalion. The Fire
Dept. Auxiliary and E-R squad
made it clear they really appreciate people like Mrs.
Carrie Oliver.
Enjoying the evening ·at the
pool were Mr. and Mrs. John
Fry, Mr. and Mrs. Ke!Uleth
Vickers, Ken and Rodney; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Grinstead, Anna

•

HECK'S REG. '60.97

HECK' S
REG.

EACH .

,,,,,,,

$3.38

ror

HECK'S REG. 96'

. TOYDEPT.

HECK'S REG. $1.12

DEPT.

,

Each

.. .

FOOD STII ~PS
•

'

j

L

)

I

�- '
10 - The Dailv S..linel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Au~. 22. l9T.l

.

'

Bishop Fenwick leased
by Gallia·M-R Board
CHESHIRE - A tentative
agreement was announced
loday which will allow the use
of the Bishop Fenwick High
School property at Cheshire by
Gallia County's training
programs for the mentally
retarded.
Acting upon a rnotion
presented by Mrs. Ann Bowers
and seconded by Bob
Mackenzie, the Gallia County
Board of Mental Retardation
has voted unanimously to
approve a four-year lease plan
with the Steubenville Diocese
of the Roman ca.tholic Church.
This plan is to be presented to
the Gallla County Commissioners for their approval.
Gary Barton, program ad·
mistrator, told the Tribune that
utilization of this Cheshire
property will allow the three
county programs to be unified
for the first time. These
programs include: a pre-school
class now located in the St.
Peter's Episcopal Church; the
Guiding Hand School now
operating in the Catholic Youth
Center, and the Gallia County
Adult Activity Center for the
Handicapped
which
i~
presently located at the
Gallipolis State Institute.
Barton stated that the move
would allow the acceptance of
a 12-month Title I (federal)
grant to employ an adaptive
. physical education instnJctor.
This program would not have
been possible at the present
training sites due to the lack of
facilities.
The Bishop Fenwick High
School was constructed by the
Steubenvllle Diocese in 1963.
The school was soon closed and
has been vacant for nearly 10
years. Vandals have destroyed
many lights, clocks, and
thermostats. · Parenta,
teachers, and friends of the
school are cleaning and
repairing the property and will
soon have their first complete

and modern school facility for
the county's mentally re tarded .
The school family's efforta
were enhanced by those of
several community members.
Barton expressed that the
efforts or Father A. J .
Golubiewski and Robert (Bob)
Marchi were espcially appreciated.

Join in the 4th Week

The school is locnted on io 2\lacre tral'l just north of the
Village or Cheshire. It was
designed to accommodate 250
pupils and has 20 rooms of
various siz.es, including a
gymnasium. It also has ita own
water supply and sewage
disposal systems as well as
some paved parking space.

n1n

ran

Celebration of Pomeroy

rstore

.~:~~~:·:·:·:·:·:::·:~:s:-:..~~::::::::::~::::::::::::::o:::::::::::.=::::::~::::::~::::::::::::::::::~::::::::.:·::::::::::::-~=:::::::::::::~·:~:::~

~i American, Cuban cage teams it

~~

fight bloody court battle

jjj

MOSCOW (UPI) - American and Cuban athletes
~:: fought a bloody, ZO.minute battle today before several
:ll hundred stunned Russian spectators at a World
;:; University G11111es ·tiasketball match. The CubaM swung
···· wooden !Qlding chairs atlhe Americans, who fought back
with their fists. One American was knocked unconscious,
and blood and broken glass Jittered the floor when
authorities finally got the situation under control.
The fight broke out just 90 seconds before the end of
the game, which the Americans won 98 to 70. An
unidentified Cuban player kicked Mitchell Dupchuk of
Brentwood, N.Y., and Kupchuk went down in front ·of the
M euban basket.
,.,
Kupchuk came up swinging, and the entire Cuban
·:1 bench poured onto the floor. American players swarmed

:!i

out
folding chairs onto
the floor, and started hitting the American players on the
head. U. S. trailer Wayne Wottzen of Sheboygan, Wise.,
was knocked unconscioua.
''These . , . bastards bit me three times," Woltzen
said afterward. "I put my arm up and then he hit me on
the back." He had a large lump on the back of his head
and had to be treated by a doctor.
At one point the Cuban coach, Emesto Diaz, chased·
American coach Ed Badger of Wilbur Wright Junior
College iri Chicago across the court and back again,
throwing puncbes all the way. Badger ran and did not
attempt to light back. ·

i\l

~

!·1

~····:

~~~t~~ ~~::, ~~~~ooden

i\\

"'
;:~

:,_~:;!:·.

·

:·::
::::
:.',:!.:,:

!~~~

····

::1
!f1

UPJIIIU

:(:

t•t riJht

X·

f
:&lt;·

ltiJ. llle l f0CII

t1

1"1

LADIES'

lttiU Ill. PfiCII
h1 . Itt~·
t-111 lw1. 25111, It ). We uuru
U

NON( SOLO

ro

l111it

1!UJIIII1t1S .

DULERS.

GIRLS'
BACK·TO·SCHOOL

FASHION
PANTS

Beef
Patties

Sizes 6-14.

:·&gt;

·:·:
;:;:
:_,l;,:.'!:'

!:l

·X

Cello Wrapped; Frozen

Turbot
Fillets

Shop Kroger's tor 111 Your
Meal leads ·Including Baal

lb.

LADIES' NYLON

Sliced

4 Varieties

Jiffy
Entrees

2

$149

;lb.
kg. . .

Krog er Sluffed Queen
(7036) or (7042)

Salad
Olives

HECK'S REG. '6.99
CLOTHING
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG •
$6.88

,:
\, :.::.!..,

Kwik Krisp

12·01.
Pkg.

·Bacon
'

,.
Mlgs. Suggested Retail 79c

$'139

·

wm c.., .. " j Pordom ,

Stamas

•"I'J' '' ruu

Kroger Ice Cream

BODY SUIT

LADIES'

Ill ~ lal. ¥111111 Datcll C~tctlltl, Chn~--,i,,
Ftllp lllht, ••n•r ''""• M••• Wala11, Wlltli llraw·

NYLON

,

.

Ideal top for pants and sk irts, flot knit and rib knit

King Size liquid

S.C.M.

Theme
Books

Lux

Detergent

green . Si~es: Sma ll, medium and lar:ge .

. T .

00 Extra fumps
PANTY .

Stock ~p lor bock to lthoOL One §ill!l
fih all. Co lori- beige, cin namon ,
Ioupe, brown .

WIUI C111111 ad Pwrcbst tf
3.Jb , Con Vac Padc Rtgulor, Drip or Eltctra P1rk

G-3

·50
Extra. . TopValue§
.
Stamps =
u•
Any Two Chlf Si11

Purdllt If

Kroger Spices

Wltfo. Coupon
Coupon f_.pir•t Augu11 25, 1973
"Subjed to opplicoble stole ond
loc:of talll 'fOIC"

August 25. Pick up your entry blank
at the Pomeroy Store. Enter now.
often.

HAS SURGERY
Charles Handley, Langsville,
underwent eye surgery today
at O'Bleness Memorial
HU"Jpital, Athens. His room
number is 217.

S'a ck l o school special. Pastel and hi shades .

--

Sizes 5 to 7.
HECK'S REG.
58' EA.
ClOTHIN(i DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 99' EA.
ClOTHflt(i DEPT.

BAYER ASPIRIN
100's

64e

CHEESE .·
SPREAD

Phone Us
Your Orclerl

M2-3502

~

$

. COSMETIC DEPT.

PROTEIN 21
SHAMPOO

HECK'S REG. 88 1

COSMETIC DIPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.
13 oz.

PLAYTEX

STYLAC

LIVING GLOVES

14 oz.

HECK'S R~G.
$1.48

HAIR LACQUER

HECK'S REG. $1.99

HECK'S.REG. 84'

COSMETIC DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

TOY
DOCTOR OR
NURSE KIT

Each
Fr11~

.Honeydew
Melons

$
Not 36.

®

BIKE
3 SPEED

.......
59

2....
Jar

COSMETIC DEPT.
ELECTROMIC
SUPER FLASH

HECK'S REG.
78'1A .

ror DII'T.

,.,,,.

DOLL HOUSE
FURNITURE
PLASTIC CONSTRUCTION

77~CH

74~EA.

HICK'S RIG. 92'

AIRPLANE

A tt nl !lflnll norplnn• llenyl dvll ~ '""'lru&lt;l,d ol ,, ,, g high·
ompij&lt; l plu olot , ,.,,h 14" IU'-'\Ih lt&gt;&lt;fti ~ll ••d '"lfiOI f .. cl rltGIIy
pe&gt;werld, pu•h bui!M cai\lo.olled op1rat11 o" 1 "0 " fl11 1h~ghl
bntieri• • i~dou " cr llwl. I ~ ',lulti(IQt. 6' ( nblt

6 STYLES

CHOICE

CHOIC.I

,

HECK'S REG.$ 1.19

BOYS'. 26"

Bartlett
Pears

END CUT PORK CHOPS ................... Ib. 1.09 ,
CENTER CUT PORK cHOPS ............... lb. 11.29

HECK'S REG • .
$1.58

HECK'S REG. 79'

135 Size

1

FOAMY

REGULAR, MENTHOL , LEMON -LIME

(

SIRLOIN STEAK
GROUND CHUCK
PORK CHOPS
BEEF LIVER
BULK SAUSAGE
LARGE FRANKS
HAM SALAD

lb . PORK STEAK
l lb . 'GROUND CHUCK
2 lb . ROUND STEAK
2 lb . SLICED BACON
3 lb . RIB STEAKS

oz.

11
GILLETTE

(

Jar

(316)

RAZOR

DEODORANT

J'.l ···s9;j

HAM SAlAD
AND

oz.

REGULAR , DRY &amp; OILY

loco's

HOMEMAOE

CLOTHINC DEPT.

RIGHT GUARD

COSMETIC
· DEPT.

AFTERSHAVE

Cl OTHIN' DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $5.99

TWIN PACK

HECK'S
. REG.
79'

4lf• oz.
OLD SPICE

HECK'S REG. $10.99

2 PAIR

SCHICK
LADY EVERSHARP

4

11111111111111111

the World's
Drive Detergent
Largest Bag ~ •••· · :~~- 99¢
of
Groceries
••
,'~ ''·42
To be given away this Saturday,

BIKINI PANTIES

$100

c..... h'lrll .....t Zl, 1tn

A plus fashion for girls . Skirts in acryllc knit polye~ter ond co tt on . In ossorted styles . Sizes 7 to 14 .

LADIES'

2 For

Kroger CoHee

SKIRTS

ClOTHING
DEPT.

. H·osr

00 Extra t!~"

Witlt Cllftl

FASHION

HECK'S REG. $4.88 ·

1

$

Newest thing for· fall! Button front tunic top,
elastic waist, cuffed pull on pants.

GIRLS'

c..,., El'l11i' hlllt B, 1111

Towels

PANTSUITS

WUfl C••••• 1111 rurc ..sa If
Ont 6.lb, 6-01 . Can Hano'f'er

Whole ~Potatoes

While or Decorator

GIRLS'
FASHION

short sleeve . Colo rs: Wh-ite, navy, brown and

Crocker

2 lb.
3 lb.
3 lb.
2 lb.
2 lb.
2 lb.
I lb.

SIMILAR TO
ILLUSTRATION

These adorable dresses are
all-permanent press. Available
in prints, solids, checks &amp; plaids.

:[(
....
::::

News • . . in Briefs

GROUND CHUCK
CHUCK ROAST
SLICED BACON
ROUND STEAK

FOR FALL

DRESSES

Toke th., long look lor loll in the"
ladies' fo $hion panii! In a~'Q rted wo v·
en plaids ....... poly (Olto n. Pull on woi i l
.,.,.ilh 2" culh . Size' in 8to 18.

::::

Marriage Ucense
Holzer Medical Center
Randy William Hand, 21, Rt.
(Discharged)
1 Reedsville, and Eleanor Dian
Carol Buck, Wilma Barlow,
Bailey, 19, Rt. I, Reedsville. Brenda Ben tty, Berne ice
Brucker, Geraldine Cochran,
WiiJie Cook, Ada England,
Okey Fowler, Wanda Henry,
Mrs. Larry R. Hoschar and
son, Jerry Lee Lewis, Thomas
McClain, Mary K. Miller, Ross
Norris, Mrs. Charles R.
Parsons and son, Jack Quinby,
Louise ; Mr. and Mrs. Harold John Sayre, Mrs. John Shaffer
Rose, Jeff, Harold and David; and daughter, Theodore R.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Weaver, Slinker, Essie Starcher, Corbet
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Drake, Tim, Stull, Dorsel Smith, Berniece
Tom and Carol;' Mr. and Mrs. Vanaman, WilliamM. Warner,
,_Charles Roush, Becky and Lucille Watson and Ernest
Joey ; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wells.
Grinstead, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
!Births)
Duncan, Cecil Jr. and Stephen;
Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith, Goodnight, a son, Mason; Mr.
Jay and Jackie ; Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. James Warner, a
Richard . Grinstead, Todd and daughter, Grimm's Landing,
Yvonne; Timmi Zerkle, Jane . W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Roush, Becky Gilmore, Judy W. Ragland ; a daughter, .
Ashcroft, Brenda Winning, Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs .
Debbie Fields, Ricky Powell, Charles W. Durst, a daughter,
Vicki Dowell, Sandy Kauffer · !J!tart.
Allen and Michael ; Johnny
Ridgway, Mrs. Clif( Roush,
Mrs. Bill McFarland, Mrs.
REVIVAL SLATED
John Smith, Mrs. Carrie
The Hazel Community
Oliver, Mrs. Helen Knapp,
Church will hold revival ser·
· Mrs. Frank Teft and sons, Mrs .
vices aJI week with the Rev.
Bill Gibbs and George, Mrs. George Hatcher as guest
Jack Flesher, . Mrs. Dor?thy speaker, Featured singers this
James, Jenme and Btlly,
evening are the Heavenly
Pastor Haeberle .
Highway Singers of Mid·
dleport. Services will be held at
7:30 nightly.

2 lb.
4 lb.
2 lb.
21b.

•

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN, AUG. 26, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

SUNDAY 1 TO 7

Foster Fried

~~::=J

(Continued on Page 1)
with Maryland while he served as Baltimore county executive,
governor and even vice presltlent. Beall denied his staff was the
source of the leaks. Richardson deplored them, too, and said he
was Investigating, as Agnew asked, and would discipline any
employe found to be the so•Jrce of the "unfair and inaccurate
publicity." Through a spokesman, President Nixon also decried
the news leaks.

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9

~

New Haven unit hosted
•
b
b
SWJm party,· ar eCUe
NEW HAYEN _ The E-R
squad of New Haven entertained the Fire Dept.,
and ita women's auxil·
1ary with a swinuning
party and chicken barbecue at
the swimming pool Saturday
evening.
Carrie Oliver, who just
recently closed her gas station,
was pleasantly surprised when
the department presented her
a watch. Since the. old Superior
Porcelain eo., better known as
the pottery, ceased blowing its
whistle, Miss Carrie has been
taking ftre and emergency
calls at her btalion. The Fire
Dept. Auxiliary and E-R squad
made it clear they really appreciate people like Mrs.
Carrie Oliver.
Enjoying the evening ·at the
pool were Mr. and Mrs. John
Fry, Mr. and Mrs. Ke!Uleth
Vickers, Ken and Rodney; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Grinstead, Anna

•

HECK'S REG. '60.97

HECK' S
REG.

EACH .

,,,,,,,

$3.38

ror

HECK'S REG. 96'

. TOYDEPT.

HECK'S REG. $1.12

DEPT.

,

Each

.. .

FOOD STII ~PS
•

'

j

L

)

I

�OJIEIDAILY
10 TO 9

OHM DAILY
10 TO 9

OPIIIIAILY
10 TO 9

OHM DAILY
1010 9

AUG. 26 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
DICTIONARY
TWIN PACK

_a.-....._' ~
"~, D:.'

MARSHALLAN
3-TIER
Three

Twin pack 1ncludes Webster's compact ·
dictionar~ for school and olfice and a quick
reference pocket dictionary

UTILITY TABlE
~pocious s~e l ves,

Re cej:. to de at·

a. 5QT .ICE BUCKET

$5 .33

NOISIWA,l

24 OZ. GLORY FOAM

PARSON

HOI/SEWARE DEPT.

TABLES

CUFFED
JEANS
Boys' and Boy's cu ll ed den·

j,,
.tm ieon s 100% co ttO n sa ·n to r~
ized jeans 4 pocke ts.

· PLASTIC

Sizn:.4to

CRAYOLA

.

CRAYONS
64 COUNT
HECK'S REG. •3.99

NOUSEWARE
DEPT.

NOOSEWARE DEPT.

A. MEN'S HANES TEE SHIRTS
/ leintorced neckband

keeps its sha pe . Hanes is America 's
favorite T-shirt-size·fost, highly absorbent, onQ it'~ cut
long to stay t ucked in . Smoll , Medium , large ; Extra l a,rge.

7$299
AND

HECK'S
REG .
$4.99

$119

Heck's

Sizes: 8 to 18

B. MEN'S HANES ATHLETIC SHIRTS

$499

Reinforced straps make this Hones®

55~

C. MEN'S HANES BRIEFS

MENS' LONG SLEEVE
l o11g sleeve modeh with a
long pomt coll ar. Availo·
ble in p rints , solids al'ld
stripes. Sizes: S·M·l ·Xl.

'

Nothing to bind! Hones Givvies®are pre-shrunk ond

give
in the stretches. Two styles in sol id colors or stripes. 28· 44.

SHEETS

CHOICE

PLASTIC
.I

IUFFETIER

I

HECK'S REG. $3.99

.

'

CLOTHING DEPT• .

$100

JR. BO.YS' LONG SLEEVE

HECK'S
REG.

SPORT SHIRTS

69 1 •

CHOICE

long sleeve , permanent press Jr. Boys
spo rt shirt s. Ava ilable in bold prints
or bright solid co lors. Sizes 3 to 16.

WONDER CLOTHS

PIN
FOAM SPRAY

10'S

44c

BATHROOM CLEANER

WOODBURY

SOAP

59&lt;

23¢

REGULAR SIZE
LIMIT 5 BARS

6( BAR

HECK'S REG. 13' EACH

NOOSEWARE DEPT.

PINE-SOL

$500

NDUSEWARE
DEPT•
·&gt; .

lflilfJII:I:~ 1"!!11N-~

.· '-:'/'".' ,.· ~·~:

••

. .,'.··..

'

"Stop," tim ing m01k w~ i le engine is operating . Unit oper.•
ate~ directly from till battery.
0!'tecls worn di1tributor 1haft .

KENDALL SUPERB

MOTOR
OIL
10W30
LIMIT 5 QTS.

r .·.

He lp1 \ynchronize double
points , Hig h·i mpo cl plo~otic
free u1e. Bilrnoui proof ,

For all 8 cyl. cars. 2 lJ." face with illuminated
dial. Better than 2% accuracy. Dual jewelled.
Solid stole . 360' universal"""'";'';""'

HECK'S REG. 59' QT .

$17.99
AUTOMOTIVE

DEPT.

BAnERY TERMINAL
ENDS
PACKAGE OF 2

AUTOMOTIIIE DEPT.

.

PINT SNAP
CARBURETOR
CLEANER

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

SEALED BEAM BULBS
Sealed Beam Headlights 4001-4002
and 6006 &amp; 6014.

~..,

- HI'H PEIFWMAIICE

TIGER MUFFLER
HECK'S
REG.

free Red Lobel®brief or boxer short
when you buy any six Hones men's or bays' underwear items. Any
six. Any combination you like. Just send the package wrappers to
~licmes. And they' ll rush you your choice of brief or boxer short, free .
Stop in today at any HECK'S location and we'll give you your free
brief or boxer short coupon when you pick up six Hanes men's or
· boys' underwear items.
0

Makes you feel good all under.

MEN'S TEE SHI ITS
SIZES: S, M, L, XL.

$1 t 0
$1 ~~

MEN'S BRIEF$
SIZES: 2 8 to 40

Hanes

Hanes has a rdtle

BOYS1 PLAID FLANNEL

SPORT SHIRTS
GREAl FOR THE COLO
WEATHER AHEAD . SIZ·
ES 6· 16

for the boys,

$2'4

$7.99

. AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $2.99

CLOTNIN' DEPT.

INNER TUBES

MEN'S PLAID

SIZES TO FIT MOST CARS.

SPORT SHIRTS

FLANNEL

HANES MAKES THE KIDS FEEL GOOD
. ALL UNDER!
· The low price makes moms feel good too!

You con machine-wash and m0 chine-dry these T·shirts ;
they won't lose their original lit. Even the length is
shrink·co ntrolled , from top to tail. The neckband's
reinforced- it can't shrink or stretch . Of soft, highly
absorbent, combined cotton . No Ironing needed . Stock
·u.p now so he' ll hove pl enty lor sc hool.
Sizes 8 to 18. ·

·~

Hone!o underwaor has perfect fit and comfor t that
makes 111111ry bor feal good all under. And Ha nes
high qva li ty gives moms top valve for their dollor , too .
Here's undtrwtor that COI'I taketh• weor and tear
ot growi ng boys. Wosh ofter wash. Hontt keeps
ih shape and briljlht whitt finish. A.nd tht
Hanes lit a lways stays ,_,fed.
Sa pick vp same Hal'ltl today.
.Hal'les price wilt mokt your
budget fttl good all ur.dtr, tool
• 3 brlef_s, or 1·d't lrh. $2.79

GooU lookmg pla id ll onne l spor t

shirt t for the man ol !he hou ~e ,
Choo\e from ouor!l!d colou 11'1 ~h ·
on S,, M, l. nnd Xl ,

l t cam~ 1~~.
HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. •1.09 PKG.

This is underweor for fashion !eodtrl--Men who wont to
look al'ld fee l their b11t. You C.OI'I alwoyl count on Hones for
ptrftct tit ond Cornfort- ond now lite lottst in fl/'shiol'l,
tool

ClOTHING DEPT.

ble for most American make of ~a rs.

HECK'S REG. $13.99

Brief or Boxer. Get

MB1'S UNDBrCOLORS

HECK'S REG. $2.99 PAIR

First quality mufflers from the makers of lee Oil Fi lters.
Pointed witk bright ~t riking colors in o mod design . Avo ila·

QUART
HECK'S REG.

$500

RAC TACHOMETER

39(

OOu1ing for long-11rm, trouble·

\

Sele(tion indvdes de r~l m s, bnu k~d
denims and chambrays. All ' pe r~OI'Ient
press !obrics. Choose lrom regular or
slim in \i~e1 4 to 7.

3FOR

RAC TIMING LICHT (DC)·

•

WRANGLER
JEANS

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

,.,~~;!·.'
~•... :.""
•lf ·~
.
.

THE HANES FREE B.
JR. BOYS'

1·, ·'

.

OF3

ClOTNIN' DEPT.

$1.07

•

ANY PACKAGE

HECK'S REG. $2 .66 EACH

HECK'S REG.

HOI/SEWARE
DEPT.

REG. 28

3FOR

57'

89'
4

28 oz.

77(

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

~·

D. HANES FANCY BOXER SHORTS

300

30's

.

Reinforced supporting seams mok e Hane s~ double·pa nel
briefs a bigger buy thon ev~r! Knit from soft , (lbsorbent
cotton- white as white can be! Heat -resistant elastic in
waistband and leg openings . 28 to 44 .

SPORT SHIRTS

FILLER PAPER

HECK'S DETERGENT

4 FOR

undershirt vefy duro ·
ble , yet you poy no more ! Higkly absorbent combed cotton . Fu ll -cu t tQ stay tucked in . 5-M-l-XL

·;,,·.,y~.._

REG. TO

Reg. 96'

STAYFREE
MAXI OR MINI

oz.

BOYS '

TRASH .CAN

HECK'S REG . $1.61

31

QUALITY

10GALLON

Choose from C.ssorted colors.

FLOOR
SHINE

HOI/SEWARE DEPT.

. ClOTHING DEPT.

-----HOI/SEWARE DEPT.

FORMICA

HECK'S
REG.
$.2.99

$5.99

55(

HECK'S REG. 89'

Durable, sturdy table made of hard plastic .

32 oz.

AS SOli TED COL OilS

"FEEL GOOD
·All UNDER"

HECK' S REG.

HECK 'S REG. $7.99

AIR FRESHENER

HECK'S REG . $1.8 5

SKILLET

WITH THAT

DAYS EASE

Ill,.

RUG CLEANER

10 " TEFLON II

EACH

/IOIISIWAHDIPT.

A.

FOR MEN

$466'

$44.4

I. 2COMPARTMENT FOOD SERVER
C. 4COIIPARTMEIT FOOD SEAVER
D.TOSS·n·SEIVE SAUD BOWL

®UNDERWEAR

denim

rmm on the go. Sanforized.
Sizes 29 to ·42.

CHOICE

e DISHWA SHER SAFE

OWlCe

western style jeans for the

• KEEPS FOOD HOT OR COlD FOR HOURS
e SPECIAl FORMULA PLASTIC IS STAIN RESISTANT

HECK'S
REG.

$144

Rugged 13' '•

PLASTIC FOOD SERVERS

HECK'S ·
REG. $1.99

ec1a

WESTERN
JEANS

i

toched . Rugged and durable construction .

••

•

MEN'S DENIM

77'

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

•

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.57 ' .

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

•

$297 .
HECK'S REG. $3.99

. . AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

HECK'S REG .

$3.66

Cl OTIIIM DEPT.

'

.

II

.

,,

�OJIEIDAILY
10 TO 9

OHM DAILY
10 TO 9

OPIIIIAILY
10 TO 9

OHM DAILY
1010 9

AUG. 26 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
DICTIONARY
TWIN PACK

_a.-....._' ~
"~, D:.'

MARSHALLAN
3-TIER
Three

Twin pack 1ncludes Webster's compact ·
dictionar~ for school and olfice and a quick
reference pocket dictionary

UTILITY TABlE
~pocious s~e l ves,

Re cej:. to de at·

a. 5QT .ICE BUCKET

$5 .33

NOISIWA,l

24 OZ. GLORY FOAM

PARSON

HOI/SEWARE DEPT.

TABLES

CUFFED
JEANS
Boys' and Boy's cu ll ed den·

j,,
.tm ieon s 100% co ttO n sa ·n to r~
ized jeans 4 pocke ts.

· PLASTIC

Sizn:.4to

CRAYOLA

.

CRAYONS
64 COUNT
HECK'S REG. •3.99

NOUSEWARE
DEPT.

NOOSEWARE DEPT.

A. MEN'S HANES TEE SHIRTS
/ leintorced neckband

keeps its sha pe . Hanes is America 's
favorite T-shirt-size·fost, highly absorbent, onQ it'~ cut
long to stay t ucked in . Smoll , Medium , large ; Extra l a,rge.

7$299
AND

HECK'S
REG .
$4.99

$119

Heck's

Sizes: 8 to 18

B. MEN'S HANES ATHLETIC SHIRTS

$499

Reinforced straps make this Hones®

55~

C. MEN'S HANES BRIEFS

MENS' LONG SLEEVE
l o11g sleeve modeh with a
long pomt coll ar. Availo·
ble in p rints , solids al'ld
stripes. Sizes: S·M·l ·Xl.

'

Nothing to bind! Hones Givvies®are pre-shrunk ond

give
in the stretches. Two styles in sol id colors or stripes. 28· 44.

SHEETS

CHOICE

PLASTIC
.I

IUFFETIER

I

HECK'S REG. $3.99

.

'

CLOTHING DEPT• .

$100

JR. BO.YS' LONG SLEEVE

HECK'S
REG.

SPORT SHIRTS

69 1 •

CHOICE

long sleeve , permanent press Jr. Boys
spo rt shirt s. Ava ilable in bold prints
or bright solid co lors. Sizes 3 to 16.

WONDER CLOTHS

PIN
FOAM SPRAY

10'S

44c

BATHROOM CLEANER

WOODBURY

SOAP

59&lt;

23¢

REGULAR SIZE
LIMIT 5 BARS

6( BAR

HECK'S REG. 13' EACH

NOOSEWARE DEPT.

PINE-SOL

$500

NDUSEWARE
DEPT•
·&gt; .

lflilfJII:I:~ 1"!!11N-~

.· '-:'/'".' ,.· ~·~:

••

. .,'.··..

'

"Stop," tim ing m01k w~ i le engine is operating . Unit oper.•
ate~ directly from till battery.
0!'tecls worn di1tributor 1haft .

KENDALL SUPERB

MOTOR
OIL
10W30
LIMIT 5 QTS.

r .·.

He lp1 \ynchronize double
points , Hig h·i mpo cl plo~otic
free u1e. Bilrnoui proof ,

For all 8 cyl. cars. 2 lJ." face with illuminated
dial. Better than 2% accuracy. Dual jewelled.
Solid stole . 360' universal"""'";'';""'

HECK'S REG. 59' QT .

$17.99
AUTOMOTIVE

DEPT.

BAnERY TERMINAL
ENDS
PACKAGE OF 2

AUTOMOTIIIE DEPT.

.

PINT SNAP
CARBURETOR
CLEANER

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

SEALED BEAM BULBS
Sealed Beam Headlights 4001-4002
and 6006 &amp; 6014.

~..,

- HI'H PEIFWMAIICE

TIGER MUFFLER
HECK'S
REG.

free Red Lobel®brief or boxer short
when you buy any six Hones men's or bays' underwear items. Any
six. Any combination you like. Just send the package wrappers to
~licmes. And they' ll rush you your choice of brief or boxer short, free .
Stop in today at any HECK'S location and we'll give you your free
brief or boxer short coupon when you pick up six Hanes men's or
· boys' underwear items.
0

Makes you feel good all under.

MEN'S TEE SHI ITS
SIZES: S, M, L, XL.

$1 t 0
$1 ~~

MEN'S BRIEF$
SIZES: 2 8 to 40

Hanes

Hanes has a rdtle

BOYS1 PLAID FLANNEL

SPORT SHIRTS
GREAl FOR THE COLO
WEATHER AHEAD . SIZ·
ES 6· 16

for the boys,

$2'4

$7.99

. AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $2.99

CLOTNIN' DEPT.

INNER TUBES

MEN'S PLAID

SIZES TO FIT MOST CARS.

SPORT SHIRTS

FLANNEL

HANES MAKES THE KIDS FEEL GOOD
. ALL UNDER!
· The low price makes moms feel good too!

You con machine-wash and m0 chine-dry these T·shirts ;
they won't lose their original lit. Even the length is
shrink·co ntrolled , from top to tail. The neckband's
reinforced- it can't shrink or stretch . Of soft, highly
absorbent, combined cotton . No Ironing needed . Stock
·u.p now so he' ll hove pl enty lor sc hool.
Sizes 8 to 18. ·

·~

Hone!o underwaor has perfect fit and comfor t that
makes 111111ry bor feal good all under. And Ha nes
high qva li ty gives moms top valve for their dollor , too .
Here's undtrwtor that COI'I taketh• weor and tear
ot growi ng boys. Wosh ofter wash. Hontt keeps
ih shape and briljlht whitt finish. A.nd tht
Hanes lit a lways stays ,_,fed.
Sa pick vp same Hal'ltl today.
.Hal'les price wilt mokt your
budget fttl good all ur.dtr, tool
• 3 brlef_s, or 1·d't lrh. $2.79

GooU lookmg pla id ll onne l spor t

shirt t for the man ol !he hou ~e ,
Choo\e from ouor!l!d colou 11'1 ~h ·
on S,, M, l. nnd Xl ,

l t cam~ 1~~.
HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. •1.09 PKG.

This is underweor for fashion !eodtrl--Men who wont to
look al'ld fee l their b11t. You C.OI'I alwoyl count on Hones for
ptrftct tit ond Cornfort- ond now lite lottst in fl/'shiol'l,
tool

ClOTHING DEPT.

ble for most American make of ~a rs.

HECK'S REG. $13.99

Brief or Boxer. Get

MB1'S UNDBrCOLORS

HECK'S REG. $2.99 PAIR

First quality mufflers from the makers of lee Oil Fi lters.
Pointed witk bright ~t riking colors in o mod design . Avo ila·

QUART
HECK'S REG.

$500

RAC TACHOMETER

39(

OOu1ing for long-11rm, trouble·

\

Sele(tion indvdes de r~l m s, bnu k~d
denims and chambrays. All ' pe r~OI'Ient
press !obrics. Choose lrom regular or
slim in \i~e1 4 to 7.

3FOR

RAC TIMING LICHT (DC)·

•

WRANGLER
JEANS

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

,.,~~;!·.'
~•... :.""
•lf ·~
.
.

THE HANES FREE B.
JR. BOYS'

1·, ·'

.

OF3

ClOTNIN' DEPT.

$1.07

•

ANY PACKAGE

HECK'S REG. $2 .66 EACH

HECK'S REG.

HOI/SEWARE
DEPT.

REG. 28

3FOR

57'

89'
4

28 oz.

77(

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

~·

D. HANES FANCY BOXER SHORTS

300

30's

.

Reinforced supporting seams mok e Hane s~ double·pa nel
briefs a bigger buy thon ev~r! Knit from soft , (lbsorbent
cotton- white as white can be! Heat -resistant elastic in
waistband and leg openings . 28 to 44 .

SPORT SHIRTS

FILLER PAPER

HECK'S DETERGENT

4 FOR

undershirt vefy duro ·
ble , yet you poy no more ! Higkly absorbent combed cotton . Fu ll -cu t tQ stay tucked in . 5-M-l-XL

·;,,·.,y~.._

REG. TO

Reg. 96'

STAYFREE
MAXI OR MINI

oz.

BOYS '

TRASH .CAN

HECK'S REG . $1.61

31

QUALITY

10GALLON

Choose from C.ssorted colors.

FLOOR
SHINE

HOI/SEWARE DEPT.

. ClOTHING DEPT.

-----HOI/SEWARE DEPT.

FORMICA

HECK'S
REG.
$.2.99

$5.99

55(

HECK'S REG. 89'

Durable, sturdy table made of hard plastic .

32 oz.

AS SOli TED COL OilS

"FEEL GOOD
·All UNDER"

HECK' S REG.

HECK 'S REG. $7.99

AIR FRESHENER

HECK'S REG . $1.8 5

SKILLET

WITH THAT

DAYS EASE

Ill,.

RUG CLEANER

10 " TEFLON II

EACH

/IOIISIWAHDIPT.

A.

FOR MEN

$466'

$44.4

I. 2COMPARTMENT FOOD SERVER
C. 4COIIPARTMEIT FOOD SEAVER
D.TOSS·n·SEIVE SAUD BOWL

®UNDERWEAR

denim

rmm on the go. Sanforized.
Sizes 29 to ·42.

CHOICE

e DISHWA SHER SAFE

OWlCe

western style jeans for the

• KEEPS FOOD HOT OR COlD FOR HOURS
e SPECIAl FORMULA PLASTIC IS STAIN RESISTANT

HECK'S
REG.

$144

Rugged 13' '•

PLASTIC FOOD SERVERS

HECK'S ·
REG. $1.99

ec1a

WESTERN
JEANS

i

toched . Rugged and durable construction .

••

•

MEN'S DENIM

77'

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

•

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.57 ' .

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

•

$297 .
HECK'S REG. $3.99

. . AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

HECK'S REG .

$3.66

Cl OTIIIM DEPT.

'

.

II

.

,,

�... u.,

OPIUAILY
10 TO 9

OPII DAILY
10 TO 9

10 TO 9

OPEUAILY
10 TO 9

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN., AUG. 26,WHILE 0UANTinES
GENERAL ELECTRIC

REGINA

STEREO PHONOGRAPH

Does the work of o vacuum cleaner, carpet swee per,
du sl mop, broom and uphol stery brush.

99

$

AM-FM STEREO RADIO

Bvd t to toke to o l riend ' ~ hou ~ e . to 'i.Chool or
c~mp . .. CHI)' where yov 'd MuJ o;tereo ~ound .
Htgh. ,mpoct ca ~ e re~i ~ t .. ~eu l h . Big , 6" ovul
mo tdlCd 11pooken deiiYtr blight \terce mu'! ic.

ELECTRIK®BROOM
HECK'S REG .
$27'.88

SOUNDESIGN

.WITH S-TRACK TAPE PLAYER

5 ONLY

JEWELRY DEPT.

HECK'S R
$47.96

84516

Heck's Reg.

JEWELRY DEPT.

$119.96

·JEWELRY DEPT.

44J6-60tll0

SUNBEAM

PORTABLE MIXER
H

METAL

20'' BASE CABINET

METAL .

Hot

UTILITY CABINET
~in_:_~e~:re:atc~:sep S
88

Utility draw er- · 2 shelves-Spring
lock hinges- Gold flecked hea t &amp;
stain resistant plastic top with stai nle ss ste el tr im-Double pane l
door s-· Ar ct ic Wh it e Finish.
24"W x20"Dx36'' H.

Arctic White Finish.

30"Wxl2"Dx63"H.
/IAIDWAIE
DEPT.

PLASTIC

DROP
CLOTH
.
.

e

• Sturdy ~feel h_ordwore fittings

Fits mO$t door ~ ­

wood or metol • Hydraul ic Action e Miley Mite Closer.

·

HECK'S
REG.

28'

·"'

HARDWARE
DEPT.

/IARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

MASKING
TAPE

rt..y'••

t ~n,

.. o-r.,

3 FOR $100

HECK'S REG. 48' EACH

1111111d ond loa lu•o lull r11bH•
•tifllo ro:. d i" bo t~ lo r'4ol ond
M O l, klr l(w&gt;,., h iCI ffllftl ol r11~
p&lt;&gt;&lt;:k o ll, t w~ roor ~O&lt; ~th, O"iP
,..,,., /lop bltfli;Jn, 11ppor fly

HECK'S
REG.
$7.99

COLEMAI DELUXE

3-BURNER STOVE

lt..' .ro.... ramp.e11 tv•&lt;~ ro lor t ffo(i e&lt;&gt;l • t l•~blt ~ool!nv
~&gt;ulcluoo&gt; Tl&gt;e lrd and w1ru:l bafHu p rtWe ~ • d•aht. "' f~ V
call gtt ITt Odr , l!rO"'f heot Sraonl.n &gt;l n l bw!HI'fl h9~1
' "'la~y, lol~n ·l •uu a• ""'" o\11 lillhlw~!th l , e&lt;l&gt;r lo
t&lt;o tr y, ooty lu 101• f11r

$2488

HECK'S
REG .

SPOITS
DEPT.

$31.99

SPORTS

3 PIECE

GUN
RACK

'349
HECK'S
REG. 14.99

SIMilAR 10
IllUSTRATION

536

$499

COLEMAN

SLEEPING BAG

Colt"'llll b11~1 '"' op ~~~ ~ '" u ~~olwu11 ol wu&lt;..,lh oil n•gh t fonQ
Wh&lt;&gt; It co.,., 111 ti•~P'"9 (O"'f~t! autd~•. mare p.eople
thoalt Coltm11n r ~an ony othtr b• a nd

HECK'S
REG. '6.99

SC)99

HECK 'S

UG .
$15.99

DISPENSER

HE~:~~:!G.

$2388

SPORTS DEPT.

HEC~'5
UG.

28(
,

HUTCH

FOOTBALL
OUTFIT

HICK'SitEG .

JEWEliY
DEPT.

HWEI.R YDEI'T.

$9.96

Watid'! /P\011 JHIIIIIIOt fotll tf ~
~tld1tw1 ~"II wl
I..,! .. ,
lot 8 ~0•11. ~~~~ bu•" . l• f
' "'-Sol~ · ~ • ""'"''-• pro.d"'• • -• ""' t ov~&gt;t,
la O! ~ , 11 t... , muo •• la"'' •• aulrnorr fiiGIItlt&lt;

"""'-'0"

.,,,,

220

e

REMINGTON

3 fla p

D•l"•e m~tlel wi th font '-P'"Y fe111 J re '" dmnpen h11it b•lo•e 11rluoy Indud~•'
t! ) l"'~ ~! VI ~ (In&lt;.! two ccmb• ! ~ol 1n11p e a"l~ rn!Q ~ loco D""· '" "••• ""d 111,,,
hoi• mo• e he.gi!J foo 1h111 noluoul l&lt;'lo ~ E&gt;poC iQI Iy O•o fvllo• d• ylng onrl 11 ~h n9
between 1howm . FJ U bool.ltt ' The All at THE HO I COMB ' '"'l11ded

SOCKS

loorbo'll
thur yovr te~:1t11 to

Jul f "ft1t t~ in Q for i~Oie up toming

o.c mti. War( h a r.d

tomfort.
HECK'S REG. $1.44

.,. lttOty In

99
'

#~
HECK'S REG. 99'

$1]99

HECK' S REG.

$18.99

\

,.

ALARM CLOCKS

HECK'S REG.

$]99

29.96

HECK'S REG. '4.99

MUNSEY
SOLID ROD ELEMENT

HD - 3

BROILER

MAXFORMEN

JEWELRY DEPT.

f~\\,a

'.

' "'-

,.

•.......-

';:

J

....

TMI·C

HECK'S REG.
116.96

' '' !""'";"'"

IP~~rp! qui "'

''"'"'"\!

HECK'S REG . $17.96

JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT.

.4-CUP HOT POT ·
GOLD ROLLS ROYCE

.

R·70

RADIO

BALL &amp;CHAIN RADIO

This

Uor(! vt •phtli&lt;n l ' 'yling '' o biO hoi ,. ,,h ya url~ &lt;ol ~ """Y
api! OIIDfl llu1ll-ln le111lt cu&lt;t cn l ~nnll 7 1, f'M dynomr r
IJ,HIU ~ I' . N olf-d l 1 ~ lunlnlil o"d o()l""'f t OMi OII

SD1

CHAD MILLER

PANASONIC
HECK'S REG. $2.58

hanot• +'~'~"'''"''"II

HECK'S
REG.
$12.96

• Lei\ yov pic• lhe '"0~' lr&lt;,j hll!' "'" ~ ~· u~ to• u•\r ow'"'"" • 4
•epuoa le loght •en rng1 ()ny H~~~~~ f....,nong Olfoce •
Duuf ,.,,..,, nior0110 lot reyula r Of ma~ni' J HJI UIJ" • UIO\ ~
\lmldou+ lo ng lo1 1iro~ Cl flue•• •' '"' bulb• • on all .. ~ole w r lh
&lt;,told1olot oct e"'

' '"''"'-~~
'. t;:.
'\
·-: ~.
\ ··:~.
.. . - .-"t.- -

Ilor~ ''"Ycnmplor~

"' " '' '&lt;~ I ( hn u~ · A !lop ul lh• !h~ "'b &lt;MI"!JPI 1 11~ blo1IP lon~ th Oth ot o&lt;ero\\
o nrlud~ bln tl~ guoo('l , ret 5"11~ COoJ'I@ &lt;IOIJ (0'"1.&gt; OOI.d oh•'"'· 2 ulu'""'"'"'

MIRROR

('Qfl'll
.. . .
II'

moke ~

G. E. LIGHTED

~· ·- ~

\

The inique de\i9r1 of Mo~ the mini ho;r d ryer not o r~ l y
hair dry•ng lo ~ t . bl! l hair stylmg i ~ e~uy , 100 .
C onnb inolit- " styl111g comb and hair d rytr .

WAHL

PET CLIPPERS

JEWELRY
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $17.96

SPORTS

HECK' S
REG.

JEWEliY
DEPT.

ha nd~om e

replko ofthe f o 111o u ~ R o ll ~ Royce Ph on·

tom

II I! a ' collec tor'~ ite " l svre to be od &lt;11ired by
e veryo ne . Bui lt•il'l solid sto_te rodio operotes on ih a wu
bollc ry ( it~ d uded ) .

$1]99

Perleel lor hooting soup and hot
beverages on the cold days ahoad.

G. E.

.LADIES

$ ll

STYLING DRYER
400

wo ll ~

of

po wer , l wo

drying &amp; styling
hea t \etting\ -

high lor d ryil'lg , I&lt;Jw lo r ~ t yl1ng
Scq!ened 011 mtoke , long t on

touted

Heck's Reg.
$2.77

hondll! for eo\y reo ch.
att achment .

Sty ling Brvsh

JEWELIJY
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $19.88

JEWEliY DII'T.

IM·1

DIAMOND

10-B

STEREO NEEDLES
1 j!__

To fit
mo st
stereos

.177 CAL~
PELLETS

69(

MUNSEY

BROILETTE ·TOASTER
Medium size tooster·broiler toke s !t i,; homburg ·
en or four ~l i te$ of loo t!. Th e, de ep troy and
ro ck ar&amp;rtrnovobl e fo r easy cleaning . Detach ·
obln card Included .

HECK'S
REG •
$4.99

.

--~

'9"
HECK'S
REG.
$13.96

f'-.

HICK'S 1110. 99'

KODAK
SUPER 8

MOVIE FILM .

$199

•

HECK'S REG . $2.44

)

KODACOLOR

PRINT FILM
•

JEWELRY DEPT.

·'

CUCKOO TRAVEL
'•

5

HECK'S REG.
$13.96

HECK'S REG. $9.99

6PACK

'

$2499

u~lf wti g ~l llllftda t dl

COLEMAN
MANTLES

STADIUM CUSHION

BLENDERS

&lt;rolr \l" ·r ~ " ' rluUy.r•&gt;'&lt; •loo"l

M ~ d•ll w /I

!lllo&lt;hm•ql ra"'b' ntl nnd &lt;toD '""'"'"'9 bo&lt;l • l~ t •

Ru!Jijlfll , ••• '-'~'""'.,. u.,.. r 11lwu y1 rtady for an~
cOol!, a~r "'~~~' ' · Confa'"'' ''trldly lo aff ,.iot oi••

HECK'S REG. $3.88

•,. -

h. ,. ..,, ;y 1• 1. J l; .. ud•"l

99

MI$T STYLING COMB

$688

.,

WARING 14 SPEED

W""'

S,DITS DE,.

'GYM -

HECk'S REG. •28.88

rl e&lt;&gt;r n
oli Who b01t Ponm &lt;&gt; ni&lt; • ~viti onah n &lt;O&lt;Ioo yno ... ,.,. " ' &lt;&gt;
bt a«lel7 ~ 1''" ' 1o11d '' •~• • on loble o• d•• k i&lt;lc l+&lt;1h1w ~oohl + ~' eu•1 ~.. ocelel
co" ' '"\1 Bon•· ~ &lt;&gt;!&gt;~' " ''"" Surh on I'"''• '"'" ""'~'" m ') , PM dyom nroc
•peo 08&lt;

HECK'S REG . $12.99

SPORTS DEPT.

\.10 v.,&gt;\t A l

RADIO

BASKETBALL

$899

HECK'S REG. '16.99
SPORTS DEPT.

L•ul,,

JEWEliY #R 72
DEPT.
'

WILSON
MULTI-COLOR

SM.ty, hg hr.,oooh• lubi~ g . fuH lan01pod ·
ded 10nl ond bo&lt;~ rtll co ••••~ w1th
..., ,~oblo .,,.,.1 ' uld up fot n•~ c ~"~i "g
li••"t dwlf op d~ g clom p t o hog- o n
bl o.,&lt;hor

{(l o~ &lt;!.Me&lt;"'"'~ ''"

tl• ~tfl"

TOOT .. A-LOOP

SI'DITSDIP T.

STADIUM
SEAT

!l

''" f"'d

PANASONIC

$199

BOX

HECK'S
REG.
$29 .88

•.1\(J ..., lr.,hr ;.,jl" H o LI~ 4uuotl '""'h '.
u JJ o • t l . l ~~ l'' "l~t lr •&gt;" '" " ' &lt; l t· , ,;. , l ll"'" "~' &gt; l!u 1 &lt;r&gt;rrl '"l'

HECK'S
REG .
$1S.88

$3.49

HUNTING

RAIN
SUIT

'239

!~

~

~-

VINYL

SHELLS
#6 SHOT ONLY

lo&gt;•

NAIIWAIIDEI'T.

SMITH &amp; WESSON

SHOTGUN

•25''

l ii ~J W

h.Jol! ,,.

. . -·
...

HECK'S REG,

HANDY PAIL

pockets e rubber·
ized game pockeh
• Mariexi n water
repo•lllomt finish. 2
ply hea vy arm y
duck e -4 bu"on
fron t.

3500 BTU
FLAMELESS HEATER

'""" '·Q "' lh o

$19.96

COLEMAN
2-MANTLE
LANTERN

99

ou"'

DELUXE SHAVER

I MH W[ MIN r,!O N '

277

· SQUART ·
PLASTIC

39'

pockets

COLEMAN
HEATER

PING PONG SET

g·

$_

SHAVER

(Ontoiners.

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

512

$16

'23.99

$PDIITS DEPT.

LADIES'

Blazl! Orange or
brown • cordu roy
collare two muff

99

HECK'S REG .

HECK'S REG.

RA YEX HOT LATHER

COAT

Shooh Pel lets ond Darts ... Thi s ha rd-hit·
fing rifle has o grooved barr el wh ich g ive ~
ex cepti onal o ccurocy ond extended effec·
five ronge. Srock is polished hardwo od. The
recei ver is grooved to toke o sco pe With ti p·
ofL movnt. O pen rea r ~i gh t is fu lly ad iu sto ble. Bla de type fron t sig ht.

CLOCK RADIO

BROILER(!.,,OVEN

N ""' l "l•rf, ,,, • ~""'"g t ~ul~•~•,uid•d
f,,.,J•r ~~~~ol1 111•11 tlli!Ot· ~
noonu,! "" •• r"~ "P"'"' ·~" ~~ ~v• '"&lt;l'u"! "'''fl•"ll 1"~ fl·~r•o Ql j )1o p-1·1
'" fn "'.' f'"""' ' '"'" '''"'"" •I•· row•tl• .. M• 1o~ (~~~ 1l ~ 11CN AI

REMINGTON LADIES'

FiU all brands of
ae roso l shoving

HARDWARE DEPT. ·

.177 PELLET

· • ~fle ftt

HECK'S !lEG. $9.96

CLUTCH
PUitSES

99(

HECK' S
REG.
$1.66

CROSSMAN

w.i11M Army Oli&lt;k m M ~otord

HECK'S REG.
$33.88

3·PIECE

7 ONLY

IO IIQII 10 0~\fli 11 11 6 ! ~OVy ·

$699

NORELCO
MAN'S ADJUSTABLE·

SELF-CLEANING

AM

12.88

7 ONLY

l lo.l4 ct"'l~tl•blt- . ,o11rol o nd

3-Speed
White
handle.
Beaters
eject for
ea sy
cleaning .

1

HARDWARE DEPT.

-HUNTING ·
PANTS

.

$299

PAINTBRUSH
SET

~·J

HECK'S REG .
$3.99 .

HECK'S REG.

36"Wx 19"Dx63"H.

•

l!
j,

·

BUTANE LIGHTERS

ter bar.

HECK'S REG.
$·33.88

DOOR
CLOSER

9'x 12'

-·

.BENTLEY

$

Smooth Finish. • No cen-

.

liARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG .
$33.88

.

shelf - Magnetic

catches Sahara Walnut

88

$

.

METAL WARDROBE

-..

-;;-.

HECK' S
REG.
$4.88

JEWELRY
DEPT.

ex 126- 12

60MINUTE

RECORDING TAPE

99&lt;
HECK' S REG. $1.49

JEWELRY DEPT.

AUTOMATIC PHONO

�... u.,

OPIUAILY
10 TO 9

OPII DAILY
10 TO 9

10 TO 9

OPEUAILY
10 TO 9

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN., AUG. 26,WHILE 0UANTinES
GENERAL ELECTRIC

REGINA

STEREO PHONOGRAPH

Does the work of o vacuum cleaner, carpet swee per,
du sl mop, broom and uphol stery brush.

99

$

AM-FM STEREO RADIO

Bvd t to toke to o l riend ' ~ hou ~ e . to 'i.Chool or
c~mp . .. CHI)' where yov 'd MuJ o;tereo ~ound .
Htgh. ,mpoct ca ~ e re~i ~ t .. ~eu l h . Big , 6" ovul
mo tdlCd 11pooken deiiYtr blight \terce mu'! ic.

ELECTRIK®BROOM
HECK'S REG .
$27'.88

SOUNDESIGN

.WITH S-TRACK TAPE PLAYER

5 ONLY

JEWELRY DEPT.

HECK'S R
$47.96

84516

Heck's Reg.

JEWELRY DEPT.

$119.96

·JEWELRY DEPT.

44J6-60tll0

SUNBEAM

PORTABLE MIXER
H

METAL

20'' BASE CABINET

METAL .

Hot

UTILITY CABINET
~in_:_~e~:re:atc~:sep S
88

Utility draw er- · 2 shelves-Spring
lock hinges- Gold flecked hea t &amp;
stain resistant plastic top with stai nle ss ste el tr im-Double pane l
door s-· Ar ct ic Wh it e Finish.
24"W x20"Dx36'' H.

Arctic White Finish.

30"Wxl2"Dx63"H.
/IAIDWAIE
DEPT.

PLASTIC

DROP
CLOTH
.
.

e

• Sturdy ~feel h_ordwore fittings

Fits mO$t door ~ ­

wood or metol • Hydraul ic Action e Miley Mite Closer.

·

HECK'S
REG.

28'

·"'

HARDWARE
DEPT.

/IARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

MASKING
TAPE

rt..y'••

t ~n,

.. o-r.,

3 FOR $100

HECK'S REG. 48' EACH

1111111d ond loa lu•o lull r11bH•
•tifllo ro:. d i" bo t~ lo r'4ol ond
M O l, klr l(w&gt;,., h iCI ffllftl ol r11~
p&lt;&gt;&lt;:k o ll, t w~ roor ~O&lt; ~th, O"iP
,..,,., /lop bltfli;Jn, 11ppor fly

HECK'S
REG.
$7.99

COLEMAI DELUXE

3-BURNER STOVE

lt..' .ro.... ramp.e11 tv•&lt;~ ro lor t ffo(i e&lt;&gt;l • t l•~blt ~ool!nv
~&gt;ulcluoo&gt; Tl&gt;e lrd and w1ru:l bafHu p rtWe ~ • d•aht. "' f~ V
call gtt ITt Odr , l!rO"'f heot Sraonl.n &gt;l n l bw!HI'fl h9~1
' "'la~y, lol~n ·l •uu a• ""'" o\11 lillhlw~!th l , e&lt;l&gt;r lo
t&lt;o tr y, ooty lu 101• f11r

$2488

HECK'S
REG .

SPOITS
DEPT.

$31.99

SPORTS

3 PIECE

GUN
RACK

'349
HECK'S
REG. 14.99

SIMilAR 10
IllUSTRATION

536

$499

COLEMAN

SLEEPING BAG

Colt"'llll b11~1 '"' op ~~~ ~ '" u ~~olwu11 ol wu&lt;..,lh oil n•gh t fonQ
Wh&lt;&gt; It co.,., 111 ti•~P'"9 (O"'f~t! autd~•. mare p.eople
thoalt Coltm11n r ~an ony othtr b• a nd

HECK'S
REG. '6.99

SC)99

HECK 'S

UG .
$15.99

DISPENSER

HE~:~~:!G.

$2388

SPORTS DEPT.

HEC~'5
UG.

28(
,

HUTCH

FOOTBALL
OUTFIT

HICK'SitEG .

JEWEliY
DEPT.

HWEI.R YDEI'T.

$9.96

Watid'! /P\011 JHIIIIIIOt fotll tf ~
~tld1tw1 ~"II wl
I..,! .. ,
lot 8 ~0•11. ~~~~ bu•" . l• f
' "'-Sol~ · ~ • ""'"''-• pro.d"'• • -• ""' t ov~&gt;t,
la O! ~ , 11 t... , muo •• la"'' •• aulrnorr fiiGIItlt&lt;

"""'-'0"

.,,,,

220

e

REMINGTON

3 fla p

D•l"•e m~tlel wi th font '-P'"Y fe111 J re '" dmnpen h11it b•lo•e 11rluoy Indud~•'
t! ) l"'~ ~! VI ~ (In&lt;.! two ccmb• ! ~ol 1n11p e a"l~ rn!Q ~ loco D""· '" "••• ""d 111,,,
hoi• mo• e he.gi!J foo 1h111 noluoul l&lt;'lo ~ E&gt;poC iQI Iy O•o fvllo• d• ylng onrl 11 ~h n9
between 1howm . FJ U bool.ltt ' The All at THE HO I COMB ' '"'l11ded

SOCKS

loorbo'll
thur yovr te~:1t11 to

Jul f "ft1t t~ in Q for i~Oie up toming

o.c mti. War( h a r.d

tomfort.
HECK'S REG. $1.44

.,. lttOty In

99
'

#~
HECK'S REG. 99'

$1]99

HECK' S REG.

$18.99

\

,.

ALARM CLOCKS

HECK'S REG.

$]99

29.96

HECK'S REG. '4.99

MUNSEY
SOLID ROD ELEMENT

HD - 3

BROILER

MAXFORMEN

JEWELRY DEPT.

f~\\,a

'.

' "'-

,.

•.......-

';:

J

....

TMI·C

HECK'S REG.
116.96

' '' !""'";"'"

IP~~rp! qui "'

''"'"'"\!

HECK'S REG . $17.96

JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT.

.4-CUP HOT POT ·
GOLD ROLLS ROYCE

.

R·70

RADIO

BALL &amp;CHAIN RADIO

This

Uor(! vt •phtli&lt;n l ' 'yling '' o biO hoi ,. ,,h ya url~ &lt;ol ~ """Y
api! OIIDfl llu1ll-ln le111lt cu&lt;t cn l ~nnll 7 1, f'M dynomr r
IJ,HIU ~ I' . N olf-d l 1 ~ lunlnlil o"d o()l""'f t OMi OII

SD1

CHAD MILLER

PANASONIC
HECK'S REG. $2.58

hanot• +'~'~"'''"''"II

HECK'S
REG.
$12.96

• Lei\ yov pic• lhe '"0~' lr&lt;,j hll!' "'" ~ ~· u~ to• u•\r ow'"'"" • 4
•epuoa le loght •en rng1 ()ny H~~~~~ f....,nong Olfoce •
Duuf ,.,,..,, nior0110 lot reyula r Of ma~ni' J HJI UIJ" • UIO\ ~
\lmldou+ lo ng lo1 1iro~ Cl flue•• •' '"' bulb• • on all .. ~ole w r lh
&lt;,told1olot oct e"'

' '"''"'-~~
'. t;:.
'\
·-: ~.
\ ··:~.
.. . - .-"t.- -

Ilor~ ''"Ycnmplor~

"' " '' '&lt;~ I ( hn u~ · A !lop ul lh• !h~ "'b &lt;MI"!JPI 1 11~ blo1IP lon~ th Oth ot o&lt;ero\\
o nrlud~ bln tl~ guoo('l , ret 5"11~ COoJ'I@ &lt;IOIJ (0'"1.&gt; OOI.d oh•'"'· 2 ulu'""'"'"'

MIRROR

('Qfl'll
.. . .
II'

moke ~

G. E. LIGHTED

~· ·- ~

\

The inique de\i9r1 of Mo~ the mini ho;r d ryer not o r~ l y
hair dry•ng lo ~ t . bl! l hair stylmg i ~ e~uy , 100 .
C onnb inolit- " styl111g comb and hair d rytr .

WAHL

PET CLIPPERS

JEWELRY
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $17.96

SPORTS

HECK' S
REG.

JEWEliY
DEPT.

ha nd~om e

replko ofthe f o 111o u ~ R o ll ~ Royce Ph on·

tom

II I! a ' collec tor'~ ite " l svre to be od &lt;11ired by
e veryo ne . Bui lt•il'l solid sto_te rodio operotes on ih a wu
bollc ry ( it~ d uded ) .

$1]99

Perleel lor hooting soup and hot
beverages on the cold days ahoad.

G. E.

.LADIES

$ ll

STYLING DRYER
400

wo ll ~

of

po wer , l wo

drying &amp; styling
hea t \etting\ -

high lor d ryil'lg , I&lt;Jw lo r ~ t yl1ng
Scq!ened 011 mtoke , long t on

touted

Heck's Reg.
$2.77

hondll! for eo\y reo ch.
att achment .

Sty ling Brvsh

JEWELIJY
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $19.88

JEWEliY DII'T.

IM·1

DIAMOND

10-B

STEREO NEEDLES
1 j!__

To fit
mo st
stereos

.177 CAL~
PELLETS

69(

MUNSEY

BROILETTE ·TOASTER
Medium size tooster·broiler toke s !t i,; homburg ·
en or four ~l i te$ of loo t!. Th e, de ep troy and
ro ck ar&amp;rtrnovobl e fo r easy cleaning . Detach ·
obln card Included .

HECK'S
REG •
$4.99

.

--~

'9"
HECK'S
REG.
$13.96

f'-.

HICK'S 1110. 99'

KODAK
SUPER 8

MOVIE FILM .

$199

•

HECK'S REG . $2.44

)

KODACOLOR

PRINT FILM
•

JEWELRY DEPT.

·'

CUCKOO TRAVEL
'•

5

HECK'S REG.
$13.96

HECK'S REG. $9.99

6PACK

'

$2499

u~lf wti g ~l llllftda t dl

COLEMAN
MANTLES

STADIUM CUSHION

BLENDERS

&lt;rolr \l" ·r ~ " ' rluUy.r•&gt;'&lt; •loo"l

M ~ d•ll w /I

!lllo&lt;hm•ql ra"'b' ntl nnd &lt;toD '""'"'"'9 bo&lt;l • l~ t •

Ru!Jijlfll , ••• '-'~'""'.,. u.,.. r 11lwu y1 rtady for an~
cOol!, a~r "'~~~' ' · Confa'"'' ''trldly lo aff ,.iot oi••

HECK'S REG. $3.88

•,. -

h. ,. ..,, ;y 1• 1. J l; .. ud•"l

99

MI$T STYLING COMB

$688

.,

WARING 14 SPEED

W""'

S,DITS DE,.

'GYM -

HECk'S REG. •28.88

rl e&lt;&gt;r n
oli Who b01t Ponm &lt;&gt; ni&lt; • ~viti onah n &lt;O&lt;Ioo yno ... ,.,. " ' &lt;&gt;
bt a«lel7 ~ 1''" ' 1o11d '' •~• • on loble o• d•• k i&lt;lc l+&lt;1h1w ~oohl + ~' eu•1 ~.. ocelel
co" ' '"\1 Bon•· ~ &lt;&gt;!&gt;~' " ''"" Surh on I'"''• '"'" ""'~'" m ') , PM dyom nroc
•peo 08&lt;

HECK'S REG . $12.99

SPORTS DEPT.

\.10 v.,&gt;\t A l

RADIO

BASKETBALL

$899

HECK'S REG. '16.99
SPORTS DEPT.

L•ul,,

JEWEliY #R 72
DEPT.
'

WILSON
MULTI-COLOR

SM.ty, hg hr.,oooh• lubi~ g . fuH lan01pod ·
ded 10nl ond bo&lt;~ rtll co ••••~ w1th
..., ,~oblo .,,.,.1 ' uld up fot n•~ c ~"~i "g
li••"t dwlf op d~ g clom p t o hog- o n
bl o.,&lt;hor

{(l o~ &lt;!.Me&lt;"'"'~ ''"

tl• ~tfl"

TOOT .. A-LOOP

SI'DITSDIP T.

STADIUM
SEAT

!l

''" f"'d

PANASONIC

$199

BOX

HECK'S
REG.
$29 .88

•.1\(J ..., lr.,hr ;.,jl" H o LI~ 4uuotl '""'h '.
u JJ o • t l . l ~~ l'' "l~t lr •&gt;" '" " ' &lt; l t· , ,;. , l ll"'" "~' &gt; l!u 1 &lt;r&gt;rrl '"l'

HECK'S
REG .
$1S.88

$3.49

HUNTING

RAIN
SUIT

'239

!~

~

~-

VINYL

SHELLS
#6 SHOT ONLY

lo&gt;•

NAIIWAIIDEI'T.

SMITH &amp; WESSON

SHOTGUN

•25''

l ii ~J W

h.Jol! ,,.

. . -·
...

HECK'S REG,

HANDY PAIL

pockets e rubber·
ized game pockeh
• Mariexi n water
repo•lllomt finish. 2
ply hea vy arm y
duck e -4 bu"on
fron t.

3500 BTU
FLAMELESS HEATER

'""" '·Q "' lh o

$19.96

COLEMAN
2-MANTLE
LANTERN

99

ou"'

DELUXE SHAVER

I MH W[ MIN r,!O N '

277

· SQUART ·
PLASTIC

39'

pockets

COLEMAN
HEATER

PING PONG SET

g·

$_

SHAVER

(Ontoiners.

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

512

$16

'23.99

$PDIITS DEPT.

LADIES'

Blazl! Orange or
brown • cordu roy
collare two muff

99

HECK'S REG .

HECK'S REG.

RA YEX HOT LATHER

COAT

Shooh Pel lets ond Darts ... Thi s ha rd-hit·
fing rifle has o grooved barr el wh ich g ive ~
ex cepti onal o ccurocy ond extended effec·
five ronge. Srock is polished hardwo od. The
recei ver is grooved to toke o sco pe With ti p·
ofL movnt. O pen rea r ~i gh t is fu lly ad iu sto ble. Bla de type fron t sig ht.

CLOCK RADIO

BROILER(!.,,OVEN

N ""' l "l•rf, ,,, • ~""'"g t ~ul~•~•,uid•d
f,,.,J•r ~~~~ol1 111•11 tlli!Ot· ~
noonu,! "" •• r"~ "P"'"' ·~" ~~ ~v• '"&lt;l'u"! "'''fl•"ll 1"~ fl·~r•o Ql j )1o p-1·1
'" fn "'.' f'"""' ' '"'" '''"'"" •I•· row•tl• .. M• 1o~ (~~~ 1l ~ 11CN AI

REMINGTON LADIES'

FiU all brands of
ae roso l shoving

HARDWARE DEPT. ·

.177 PELLET

· • ~fle ftt

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PUitSES

99(

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REG.
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w.i11M Army Oli&lt;k m M ~otord

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$33.88

3·PIECE

7 ONLY

IO IIQII 10 0~\fli 11 11 6 ! ~OVy ·

$699

NORELCO
MAN'S ADJUSTABLE·

SELF-CLEANING

AM

12.88

7 ONLY

l lo.l4 ct"'l~tl•blt- . ,o11rol o nd

3-Speed
White
handle.
Beaters
eject for
ea sy
cleaning .

1

HARDWARE DEPT.

-HUNTING ·
PANTS

.

$299

PAINTBRUSH
SET

~·J

HECK'S REG .
$3.99 .

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36"Wx 19"Dx63"H.

•

l!
j,

·

BUTANE LIGHTERS

ter bar.

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$·33.88

DOOR
CLOSER

9'x 12'

-·

.BENTLEY

$

Smooth Finish. • No cen-

.

liARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG .
$33.88

.

shelf - Magnetic

catches Sahara Walnut

88

$

.

METAL WARDROBE

-..

-;;-.

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REG.
$4.88

JEWELRY
DEPT.

ex 126- 12

60MINUTE

RECORDING TAPE

99&lt;
HECK' S REG. $1.49

JEWELRY DEPT.

AUTOMATIC PHONO

�J

16

17 ;t:h\•Oolly S!&lt;nllnt•J, MlddlrJllll"t-Poom•rtly, o., 1\u~. 22, 19TJ

The O.Uv Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomerov, 0 .. Au~ . 22. 197]

... --

.·- .
....

S~nior ,Citizens in busy month

Ashbrook grades Nixon as failure

·,

.

--~"f.

-

WASII JNGTON I Ul'l I
kt•t•p us frt~~n tk&gt;ihg what we
Ht•p .lnhn 1\shbo·ook, J(.Qhio, 'were elected to do will not sucs;ud 't\oesd;oy President Nixon &lt;.'('{'d ...
lws fuilt'&lt;t.lo rhnng(,• thl' t·uurse
"While It is (rue that liberals
of government as he had arc tryinu Jo exploit Jhe situapmmised lnKI "the American tion, the President's own pppeople should not be deluded pointees operate under P
into thinking otherwise."
business as usu•l nttltude
AShbmok, in his monthly while he has made statements
calling for a change in the
newsl ctt~r , also SHid th e Pr~si·
dent "cannot avoid this respon- t'O urse of government," :said
. sibllity'' as fur as Watergate is Ashbrook.
'' The most abusive and
concerned.
Ashbrook noted how loy•~ the wasteful aspecl.s of the poverty
t•·esident'saides were to Nixon program go full speed ahead
and adde-d this could be the While he indicates he .is against
said
Ashbrook .
cause of nwnerous problems. it,"
"Proponenl.s of forced school
" ~1 such a climate, where
loyalty c'O mes first and prin- busing work within his adciples come last, abuse of ministration while he indicates
arrogant power can well lead to parents that he is against it.
to Watergate-type misad"Amceriea's military might is
v~ntures by subordinates," crippled by his SALT negotiaAshbrook said.
tors while he indicates he
"Richard Nixon himself and wants us to be strong and
his subordinates in particular capable of surviving any atare the reason why his admin- tack," he cont(nued.
istration has not done and does
"His own administration
not give evidence of doing what goes full speed ahead with the
it was elected to do," Ashbrook gua ranteed income program
said .
which will add millions to the
·Ashbrook pointed out that welfare rolls and billions In
Nixon,ln h.is address on Water- cost to the taxpayer while he
gate, said "I ask for your help indicates he wants to clear up
to insure that those who would the welfare mess," said t\.sh·
.
exploit Watergate in order to brook.

....

~..._

New Headqwrters of SEOEMS

SEOEMS. moves .quarters
southeast Ohio's EMS serves
Southeast Ohio's Emergency training will follow.
Medical Service (SEOEMS)
Most of the active squads the counties of Athens,
will be moving soon to Its"new have also been trained in the Hocking , Meigs, Vinton ,
headquarters building in maintenance of intravenous . Jackson, Gallia and Lawrence.
Gallipolis, above. Presently (l.V.) solutions, and care of the SEOEMS is a project of Ohio
located in Athens, new address spinal cord injury . Since Valley Health Services Inc.
-.' for the service will be 415 statistics from the American
Vinton Pike, across from Medical Association show that
Holzer Medical Center.
the average American ·will
Now into its sixth montll of need an ambulance twice in his
operation, the EMS has an- or her lifetime for a lile-orI!Wered over 1,000 calls within death crisis, the EMS is conthe seven-county service area. centrating heavily on all
A total . of nine ambulances tra uma related emergency
stations are open, located in training and high quality care.
Cut To Your
Logan, Nelsonville, Glouster,
Cost of the service is $25,
Order
At No
Athens, Pomeroy, Proc- perhaps more depending on
btro Charqe
!orville, Ironton, Gallipolis and mileage invojved, not to exceed
Gallia County . Fourteen a maximum charge of $50 in ·
On Your Pur~hase Of A
vehicles are presently in the seven-cOilnty area.
service. Stations began
Station coverage areas, as
WHOLE, SMOKED
opening on March 19 and defined by a pamphlet mailed
opened .approximately two a as each station opemid will
month since then, so total runs · .remain in effect until the
vary from station to station . communica lions system is
The conununlcations system .complete in the early part of
for EMS ls also In process of January.
being built, with towers · Those residents unsure of
20-lb.
presently located in Athens and which EMS station to call,
Average
Logan. Five more will soon be however can call the one
Wei gill
constructed with final plans for · nearest them and tlleir call will
one In each county. Radio be· taken care of.
equlpment Is being received
SEOEMS has
EMT's
and stored In Gallipolis. The available to give demonequipment is tested after it is strations; or speakers, films
built by Motorola Com- and slides lor clubs and
munlcations and EMS.
organizations In ihe comThe areawide hospital munity. Arrangemenl.s can be
communication system is also made by calling 592~6116 in
In process of being .built, with Athens.
towers and antennas already A non-profit organization,
lnatalled In area hospitals.
Vehicle to hospital communication may be possible
II Way to Go ·
within the next 15 days.
Science h• s fo und that the
The new headquarters most
eUi cient mean s of hu
building will be the dispatch man transportation is riding a
center for all seven counties. bicycle. Walking at four miles
Residents will then dial one an hour consumes about . I
toll-free nwnber, no matter horsepow er of ene rg y wh ile
where they live, for EMS bicycling two-and-a-half times
as fast uses only .15 horsepow·
service. Hiring of dispatchers er.
will begin soon with special
training to follow .
Over 400 residents of
$OUtheast Ohio have taken
the EMS basic trajning and are
now certified Emergency
Medical Technicians. Inhospital training is also
currently underway, with three
stations involved. One station,
composed of six full-time and
20 part-time EMT's has
finished the 20-hour course,
with some individuals earning
as much as 160 hours credit. Inhospital training for the
remaining squads as well as
defensive drivers training will
SEARS
be completed yet this year.
Catalog Merchant
Further training in para medical skills, telemetry or
cardiac care and psychiatric

00

$

$

s..,._,
'I

i!

'"ll&gt;c Pro••ld\•nl I" t"Orrt't't In
sayln~ot that hu hud u ,;ratn•luh.•

l)l •fiiiWTiil:i Ill l'flfl~ri'!..H .

"It hufl httt•u ltiWI.Irtud hy hi!'!

Unlled Pre.,lnlernatlooal
A Cost of Uvlng .Council
olflclal and an economist both
belief beef prices will not surge
upward when the freeze ends
next month.
Henry Perritt, executive
secretary of tlle council, said
Tuesday that since beef
producers are nQW withholding
meat, the market may be
flooded in September, keeping
the price down. The worst of
rising food prices Is over and
shoppers can look forward to a
leveling off, Perritt predicted.
Dr. James 0. Bray, an
economist for the Stanford
Research Institute, also
predicted the cattle available
would increase . .At the same

tune, he said, prices for other
Items would start rising, giving :
conswners less money lo spend :
on beef. He said beef prices :
may start declining by the end :
of tlle year.
,
Some food prices were lower ;
at supermarkets on Tuesday. &lt;
Chicken and pork prices :
were down dramatically ,at ::
A&amp;P stores In tlle New York
area. Center-cut pork ' Chops
were down 40 cents a 110und
from the high of two weeks ago. •
Frying chickens were 69 cenl.s
a pound, 20 cents cheaper tllan '
they were last week. ·
'
The safeway supermarkel.s .
in Chicago were selling•uncut '
fryers at 59 cents, down from a
peak of 83 cents.
I

$

Cut Into Pork · .,
~hops &amp; Roast
o Extra Charge J

At

Ori Your Purchase Of A 5·1b.

On Your Purchase Of A

WHOLE

.
.
.
.
,
.
.
i

.

:

l

,·-=···:-x·····~·~.- · ·. ,. ... .. ....
1
·
.
.................,...........
.,...........•.·:&gt;!.:·:·:·:·:.;:-:~~~·:·:~·:::·~:·:·::;·:·:·~·:·:·:.-'.t.•:·;·;o:·;·;o:·:·;~·;:;(,o;:;·;;;::·::;·;-;-;•,

·.~·

~

c

c

. . . . . . . . . . . ,, . . . . . . . .

Today's

·

•

.

lly Milton Richman

le HAN.

.--.
ltl.ltiii!IU

with coupon
below

•

"

with coupon
btl ow

I•Two taken to
~f"....

..

4

::Jbis _ yea~ .

.a

•

local hospit8I
RACINE -

The Racine

.~~::·' Emergency Squad answered a

.

-

Senior Cltlzellll Day ul the
lair was rea lly great this year,
the best ever. It JWCrned
like
the
weather,
young adult music makers and singers, and senior
cill~en enterla iners and all
worked together tc make it so.
To me there was a tinge of
,..dnes.~ as I neared the tent tc
register. Missing was the wellremembered smile and ~'heery
greeting of my new-found
friend of only one short year,

·;::;

::;!Jte aid of X-ray equipment, tlley found an Illegal electro""!'agnetic system. in the car and it didn't take them long at all to
:Iague out the devtce helped pull the car from the starting place.
:: "wtien young Gronen assumed tlle lay back drive position,
·::2Us metal helmet made the contact needed to rlin the system,"
:»aid Paul Livick, the Derby general manager. " It was only
:::;ptrough X-rays that we were able to discover the device."
... James Gronen was disqualified on Monday. Bret Yar:Lorough 'of Elk Grove, Calif., who finished second, will get the
:)7,500 scholarship which goes In ~~ m! Winer "sard'hrby officials.
:ii,500 scholarship which gO!.' ~.•• ~ ~~ ""Y lng me Gronen boy
;:tneated.
··
,.. They never said he did, but what else would you call it?
. . In.SoWder, Derby officials tbere described James Gronen as
:!•a good kid."l'm sure he is, but that doesn't change the fact he
::3vas trylpg to circumvent the rules to win.
.:
From what I gatller, the system in James Gronen's car was
:9ulte a sophisticated one, the kind you wouldn't ordinarily expect
,. 14-year-old to put together.
:
It Is not a good thing if he did it himself, and it's worse if he
:lad outside help from any grownups, but then, look at what
::Afames Gronen sees all around him. .
• He sees cheating going on in government and in sports as
:;,ell. Sometimes it's a subtle thipgs perhaps such as pivotman
:Lever really touching second base on a double play in baseball,
::)ndsometlms It's not so subtle such as tllat golfer from Colombia
;:hanging his score or all these basketball players jumping their
::p1ntracts.
- 'Ioong Gronen reads the papers, I'm sure. Actually what's to
:.top him from saying why are they getting all over me for putting
::71 lew wires in my. soap box racer when the President of tlle
::Jlnlted States feels it's perfectly okay to have them in his own
~flee?
.
•
It would seem to me James Gronen has been set a pretty poor
:txample by a great nwnber of persons, but I still don't think this
:lxcuses him. Apparently neither does Peter Revson, who drives
:!hose big racers and was the winner of tlle British Grand Prix

~""'

~ 111\lt!lll. ;mu

"

..•
UPI Sports Editor
·=·:
NEW YORI'; (UPI) - The rules are explicit.
. They are written so simply, even a 14-year-old boy can understand them.
Basically they are designed to make sure each competitor in
the All-American Soap Box Derby has an equal chllnce, a fair
chance, of winning.
MOll! every red-blooded bey In tlle country has tried putting
together a soap box racer of his own somewhere along the line.
It Isn't that hard.
You get yourself a two by six wooden plank, a pair of axles
off an old baby carnage and four wheels, Then you stick a soap
.-box .In ' the front - that's your "engine" - and you're
::hutcmatically In business. Down through the years, tlle racers or
:;·cars" ln the Soap Box,IJerby have become more refined.
:
Still, one of the first rules of the Derby, held each year in
~ron, Ohio, deals witll tlle start of the race: The rule is spelled
O&gt;Gut clearly.
:
"Cars must start by gravity from a standstill position
:Without any help."
:
The way that's done is fairly simple. The cars are lined up
~getheronan incline with a steel flap In front of them, and when
OOU\e flap comes down, all the cars start simultaneously.
:: That's the general idea anyway.
.
:
Bqt someihing happened in last Saturday's race.
:
At first, 14-year-old James Gronen of Boulder, Colo., was
::tudged tlle wiruter.
Sometljne later, officials made a shocking discovery. With

"r.

1111\\1\

.

• Sport Parade

I

·oo :·

aru VHcatlonlnK now, but
Charles Blakeokoe was abllllllt
becouse of illness. His willinA
and ·able cvntributlon• wore
missed .
'Ill recreation center WBII
bOzzln~ . gctlinA ready for the
lair. l'lwre lfCre qu!lts by Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hilton, Portllmd, and others, as well as
oolls, afghans, leather purses,
and others l(l() numerous to
mention.

'l'hls h111 been a buJy month
for Senior CIUzens. 110 many
nice lhlnK6 have happened that
amo1111 my IICI'&amp;bbled serlbbles
I would like to mllllllon a few of
then1, m~lnly lor folk unable to
attend the fair .
1
I mlued my RSVP day al the
bookmobile workshop this
Tuesday because of our
Council on Aging Committee
meetlng Monday . Many folk

Experts expecting
·firm beef prices '.

l '

"SUPER-RIGHT"

'11y G&lt;lldle Clendenin

frum tho Ameri•un JltlOJJh• tu !allure in lc•drrshlp •nd' his
'cloan~o · u.e dirC&lt;:tion of gnv- uwn fJPI ~IIIIli'US/' Naill ~hll •
ernmenl ," ·said A~hbrook . lwnn~ . ''"lllo Mncr)•·•n f&gt;I\'IJIIO
"This mandate has not been shuuld 11t1l h • ~C\udi!d Jnt11
tllwarted by Waterj{ate, UJe think In~ otherwi&gt;u."
F.rvln ('.1\onrnittce, or even the

call for Lucille Diehl, Elm St.,
at 8:20p.m. Monday. Suffering
abdominal pains, she was
ta~en to Veterans Memorlpl
Hospital where she was admitted.
Sunday at 9:15 a.m. the
squad was called for Howard
Largent, Syracuse, who was
having difficulty breathing. He
was taken to ·Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted. At 5:15 p.m.
Sunday, the squad went to the
Letart area for Paul Eakin who
was having stomach pains. He
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center.

· The average American eats
80 hot dogs a year. his or her
share of the 1,500.000,000 sold
across lhe na tion.

Mrs . Gcn •v:1
fJIIHSt'tl

yeur,

· It hu• uhout

YuleH, who

awny earlier ;11 · the

We. Specialize ·1n Pre-Fab

• •

LIQUID DETERGENT

Chiffon .~::.. • • •
•
49
Chiffon ,;~. . . . "~·
Folger's Coffee . . ....&gt;·lh. 99'
Frozen Lemonade • ~···19~
Frozen Limeade .
Micrin Mouthwash """·97"
Micrin Mouthwash ,~,. '129
Nescafe Coffee • • .... '207
Imperial Margarine ......,.,..,51 c
Crisco Shortening • ~...... $102
.

LIQUID DETERGENT

.

Tu•a,Hdpe~t~

2pk•··89e

TRUSSES

htl ,

VACUUM PACKED

MINUTE MAID

1 f'ln

MIN UTE MAIO

For Residential &amp;Farm Use

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

•

ALL TRUSSES. ARE
FHA APPROVED

hll.

;

WEO LOW PRICE

•

loll.

'

INSTANT

Wholesale Prices!

111-411 ,

KR.O,Pl

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

PURl YEGET AILE

.MATERIALS CO.
m-s5s4

Yen C•mp Bunte WHnHs • . ·~·· 29t
Good ~•son• Ill lien Kils . • ~· 21 c
E11y Off Oven Cluner .. . , • ';,':'.; 7!tt
N•blec;o Chlpa Allor . , . • , "~~~··

Mason, W. Va. :
•'

• I

if""" lik&lt;•s bt.;,ks ~nrl wants to

WAIHINQlON, 0 C 20UO

C0LIIId/JI row••IIIP

Df1'.AfiTMfHT OFlHE l lllfAIUfl'l'
ltoO ~tNNIYL... ~NIAAVE N W

h:ltrn . .._
It'• ull Uoc•·c f•1rthe taking or
itskin~ .
·

JULT I, lUi

AHD fNOINQ

JI..UII M, lth

IN Uti fOllO'NING MANN IIIII IA•t:O UI'Of' "N
l&amp;TIMATlO rOfAL OF

U .m

ACCOVNT NO.
NJ,UMI

Wl kl UI.'IUIIIIDOCING
AATI Of It Mo\JOIH.U.
WI U. MIVOO IHCIIIAUIN
MTIO,AW.UCIITU

, l~ rotwt mtdll 11tvtt b.,.,., adviMd thlt t 1 eompltll coP'/
01 thlot '"JW»l tlu IJMII publlthtd In tloctl I*Wtplplr al gerwlll
C~ C l!lll~n . I 11t... riCo!,. dcx:um"'"lnt lht tOflllllll ot lhil.

r~ar1

trod '""" "'

OPf~

kt! j)ubl io •1111 ntrWI m.dil

&amp;cnrliny, llf»o;;;;c,;,;;;;..,f;----+--3-01--.:::f--~

Til• D•lly

"

~"lllltlll tf loud Dl Trwolen
C.luftllrol• T..,."l~ l p TrWUUI

S•~ll"ll

tu.tiii'OJ . . .,."'. I

11\U.II , llliT

YOUII WOiflf I HEfT

'

TMI OOYIJIJNMIIIT 0,
DEPAAIMENl Of Tf-I E IHAS.u tn
O ~ri( E Or R( VENU l 5 1-'AAIN C
1900 PE NNSYLVAI'II A F&gt; V E N

Funds total $122,208 in Pomeroy

HAS USED IT S R(\I EI'IUE SflARING P"VMENT

ff'R THE PEIIIOO BEGINN! NG

WASHIN GI ON 0 C 1022 6

JAN . 1, 197.2

Village funds for the montll milled to Pomeroy Council Receipts, expenditures and
of July totaled $122,207.98 Monday night by clerk Jane balances respectively in the
active funds were : general,
according . to a report sub- Walton.
$4,208.14, $6,294.20, $7,926.16;
revenue sharing, $5,662, no
$15,123; water
1
i expenditures,
well improvement, no receipts,
rio .expenditures, $1,650; sewer
revenue, $5,256.54, $11,198.42,
I
I $7 ,549.9 1; fire dept., no
I
I receipts, $530,99, $4,831.60;
cemetery, $415.63, $408.76,
I,
By Clarence •• $825.31; street, $1 ,803 .75,
Miller
$1,613.34, $7,751.73; street highI
I
way , $146.25, $6, $4,179 .02 ;
nilated
legislation
...
and
this
wa ter operating, $8,518 .93;
The President recently
' proposed tlle creation of a new figure does not include $7,578.02, $3,052.19; guaranty
cabinet-level department to the joint committees, se- meter, $125, $165, $5,066.72;
committees
and water impr ovement, no
consolidate efforts on the lect
energy crisis. This action by various ad hoc bodies receipts, no expend!lures,
the President has demon- which have dealt witll the $15.61 ; parking meter, $850.50,
no expenditures, $15 ,051.80 ;
straied the Administration's energy problem.
willingness to give the energy
It's for certain that the utility, no receipts, $701.98,
shortage the high degree of volwne of energy • related $17,510.58.
Receipts, expenditures and
attention and priority it legislation certainly warrants
special attention to the issue - balances In the inactive funds
deserves.
more than 400 bills were : bond retirement, no
altogetller
In my opinion, tlle Congress
needs to act accordingly to Ue and resolutions on energy use, receipts, no expenditures,
bond
together tlle loose ends of r~search, conservation, and $27,510.10-; sewer
energy-related activities on policy have been submitted to retirement and repair, no
Capitol Hill. A joint committee the Congress for consideration. receipts, no expenditures,
The Congress must recognize $2,284.26 ; special street repair
on energy should be
established. At the present that a problem as monwnental fund, no receipts no ex,
time, 28 of the 38 standing as the energy problem can best pendltures, $1,880.01.
Receipts,
expenditures
and
I
be
·addressed
by
one
effective
committees of the Congress
have some degree of committee rather than a balances of all funds were: !
jurisdiction over energy- scattered mass of inefficient. $26,986 .74 , $28,496.7 1,
$122,207.98.
ones.·

10TAl .. AYM£N ,l OF

JUNE 30, 1973

!

$2,802

'
36 3 053 OOJ
.I.CCOUNT NO .

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

! Washington

ENDING

IN I tiE FOll OWING MANNt'R BASED UPON A

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
TWP . CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
ALBANY, OHIO 4S710
~RtYEN

lEO

EN~CIIN(I

A~ EW 'A~I () III~k

ACTUAL
EXPENOITUAU

Report

I I

AC:TUAL

~URP(!S(

(XPENDITUIIES

·IU

181

"'

s

101 TA US ! FUNQ REf'O~ f

2,039

1

Glenn Turner

.. s
5__!, 802.
. . . , S 2, 18,
· · S- 613 -

"""1

,, ,~... ,\o'ii_~«·"'""'"'"'''"' '"'"'

President ol
Board of Trus1ees
··~

-.,....-

~~· ~olumbi~ Townsh i p ·T rusf!es

•
~~Mi"i'lii'i'f' ict45r ""'" '
-ijl The Daily Senti nel

·--

__jii ~AMo Cif .rw~ruu

1

1-12-73

-----..~ -Oil! ·rv"'"' ~ /

lrHIS· IS YOUR COPr OF VCJUR ltEPORT · I'LfllrSE RETAIN/

·And Will Put It On Sale Sat., Aug. 25
Magic Sizing

r

OfFICI!O, flfVfHUE SH,.,!ING

TM' OOYitlfiiM.WT 0,

Phebe Bought Meigs Co. Fair Beef
SPRAY

Wt a.. At NGOII Slturdly

tllr.IN 1HII WOIJK SHflt

Wt•rk 1d lhl' HHukuw!Jih•
Wtll'kshup I~ r:J !-14:Irltlllfl~ Work.,

COLUMBIA .TOWNSHIP

.'

5th
.. and PEARL STS., RACINE
: "The Store With AHeart,
•

I -.
..
~

~ight

'

You, WE Ll KE"

reserved to limit quantities

..
.We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps
~rices Effective Aug. 22-29
..."'
Monday Thru Friday
•.
....
9:00 to 7:00
•.
•.
.•. Saturday 9 to. 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS .
••
..
•

••
•

LOW PRICES
GOURTEOUS SERVICE
••
•• FREE PARKING
•

...

••

Chapter and Sold At The
Meigs County Fair.

GROUND CHUCK
TENDER ROAST
PRIME STEAK

SPECIALS OF THE WEEK

Patronize your local groceiJ store.
Help your local FFA
and eat delicious beef now.
·

.

)'tlways .·..

Raispd by Donald Shaffer
of Southern High FFA

'

les, the meat cutler, will have a display
case of beautiful Charolais beef ...

.

And

llul Mr . !Ciarence 1 Struble
Mrs. "IJbrarlan," (Vilma
was . doin~ a good job. Once l'lkkoja) is a very dedic~ted
there were Uoto•e generations of Jltlrll(ln aud really knows ht'l'
wo,uen registering. Over 300 b10ks. II you Clln't find your
signed In and many came in · book, she orders it.
back of the tent .
I have two requests on the '
While the Taylors were SJJindle now, " You Can't go
playing music, a lady asked horne Again." I want to koow,
who they were. When 1 said, why not . I did, that 1s, come
"Darrell and Carol Taylor," home a~ain . .
she askc&lt;d if .they were twiM. Also "A Book of Poems" by
Most folk know by now they arc Grace M. Athey, on R.N. friend
a husband and wtfe team by of my daughter Anne Tipton of
their volunteer work iuuurslng C&lt;&gt;lumbUil. Gratoe's books ·is
homes.
illu.~tratl'&lt;i by a friend of hers,
We were enjoying the music from newborn infanf to
and singing. When a good tune grandparent yea;s. She has a
came up a lady carne down the house on Kelly s Island out
aisle "cutting the pigeon wing" from Cleveland where she
or something, folio wet! by Okey vacations and writes.
Paynter, Cora Hilton , Ethel
There are several volunteers
Johnson, the Taylors and at the workshop. More are
others, all dancing In the tent. needed to clean, cover, mend
Ones not dancing were and bind books. So, if you have
clapping, patting their feet, a free day (free transportation
swaying In their seat and and lunch is. furnished) you'd
singing, Volunteers were be Interested In spite of
passing out cookies, coffee and yourself.
iced tea; dozens and gallons
Miss Lucille Smith of Chester
and gobs of it.
suggests we have at least one
Our own Lebanon Golden shell of books on Meigs County
Age C)ul&gt; was well represented Histcry and Ecology. She has
there. The Charles Hiltons, some good leads to follow up on
Darrell Taylors, Darr ell 's early history. Anyone having
aunt, Mrs . Taylor, Garnet books, papers or information
Ervine, Dessie Patterson, along these lines, Is asked to
Okey Paynter, Roy Bush, Ethel share or contribute .
Johnson and myself.
Mrs. Etoill Cassell works on
I heard many nice things talking books and helps Trudy
about Mr. Eddy, Jr., the new Andrews and me on the
van, (Bookmobile) is really scrapbook - of clippings from
scrumptious with wall to wall newspapers.
carpeting, shelves lining both
The bookmobile Phone Ism
sides witll books to choose 5813 or Miss Lucille Smith,
from.
Chester.

~

BUILDING

t•wrytloln~ .

SPECIAL SALE
FRENCH CITY

WIENERS
20 count
PJCkage

1.79

--

GALA PAPER
TOWELS

SPECIAL SALE

Chef Boy-Ar-Dee

Hot Dog Buns

Hot Dog Sauce

3 ~:~~ 1.00

1

I PRODUCE B UY!
I
I
I

S"IZE
WITH

COUPON.
At Racine Food Mkt•

I
I
I

CELERY
LARGE .BUNCH

5

~~~L

1.00

PRODUCE BUY!

ONIONS
NOW 3 LB. FOR

----'

1··----------------·---~

GEORGIAN
10
TOILET TISSUE

Rolls

VAN CAMP'S
PORK &amp; iEANS

NESCAFE
•

INSTANT COFFEE
PAN PAL

I
I

2 pak

Jar

13 oz.

:Jtrosol

FRY WITHOUT FAT
I '

'

�J

16

17 ;t:h\•Oolly S!&lt;nllnt•J, MlddlrJllll"t-Poom•rtly, o., 1\u~. 22, 19TJ

The O.Uv Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomerov, 0 .. Au~ . 22. 197]

... --

.·- .
....

S~nior ,Citizens in busy month

Ashbrook grades Nixon as failure

·,

.

--~"f.

-

WASII JNGTON I Ul'l I
kt•t•p us frt~~n tk&gt;ihg what we
Ht•p .lnhn 1\shbo·ook, J(.Qhio, 'were elected to do will not sucs;ud 't\oesd;oy President Nixon &lt;.'('{'d ...
lws fuilt'&lt;t.lo rhnng(,• thl' t·uurse
"While It is (rue that liberals
of government as he had arc tryinu Jo exploit Jhe situapmmised lnKI "the American tion, the President's own pppeople should not be deluded pointees operate under P
into thinking otherwise."
business as usu•l nttltude
AShbmok, in his monthly while he has made statements
calling for a change in the
newsl ctt~r , also SHid th e Pr~si·
dent "cannot avoid this respon- t'O urse of government," :said
. sibllity'' as fur as Watergate is Ashbrook.
'' The most abusive and
concerned.
Ashbrook noted how loy•~ the wasteful aspecl.s of the poverty
t•·esident'saides were to Nixon program go full speed ahead
and adde-d this could be the While he indicates he .is against
said
Ashbrook .
cause of nwnerous problems. it,"
"Proponenl.s of forced school
" ~1 such a climate, where
loyalty c'O mes first and prin- busing work within his adciples come last, abuse of ministration while he indicates
arrogant power can well lead to parents that he is against it.
to Watergate-type misad"Amceriea's military might is
v~ntures by subordinates," crippled by his SALT negotiaAshbrook said.
tors while he indicates he
"Richard Nixon himself and wants us to be strong and
his subordinates in particular capable of surviving any atare the reason why his admin- tack," he cont(nued.
istration has not done and does
"His own administration
not give evidence of doing what goes full speed ahead with the
it was elected to do," Ashbrook gua ranteed income program
said .
which will add millions to the
·Ashbrook pointed out that welfare rolls and billions In
Nixon,ln h.is address on Water- cost to the taxpayer while he
gate, said "I ask for your help indicates he wants to clear up
to insure that those who would the welfare mess," said t\.sh·
.
exploit Watergate in order to brook.

....

~..._

New Headqwrters of SEOEMS

SEOEMS. moves .quarters
southeast Ohio's EMS serves
Southeast Ohio's Emergency training will follow.
Medical Service (SEOEMS)
Most of the active squads the counties of Athens,
will be moving soon to Its"new have also been trained in the Hocking , Meigs, Vinton ,
headquarters building in maintenance of intravenous . Jackson, Gallia and Lawrence.
Gallipolis, above. Presently (l.V.) solutions, and care of the SEOEMS is a project of Ohio
located in Athens, new address spinal cord injury . Since Valley Health Services Inc.
-.' for the service will be 415 statistics from the American
Vinton Pike, across from Medical Association show that
Holzer Medical Center.
the average American ·will
Now into its sixth montll of need an ambulance twice in his
operation, the EMS has an- or her lifetime for a lile-orI!Wered over 1,000 calls within death crisis, the EMS is conthe seven-county service area. centrating heavily on all
A total . of nine ambulances tra uma related emergency
stations are open, located in training and high quality care.
Cut To Your
Logan, Nelsonville, Glouster,
Cost of the service is $25,
Order
At No
Athens, Pomeroy, Proc- perhaps more depending on
btro Charqe
!orville, Ironton, Gallipolis and mileage invojved, not to exceed
Gallia County . Fourteen a maximum charge of $50 in ·
On Your Pur~hase Of A
vehicles are presently in the seven-cOilnty area.
service. Stations began
Station coverage areas, as
WHOLE, SMOKED
opening on March 19 and defined by a pamphlet mailed
opened .approximately two a as each station opemid will
month since then, so total runs · .remain in effect until the
vary from station to station . communica lions system is
The conununlcations system .complete in the early part of
for EMS ls also In process of January.
being built, with towers · Those residents unsure of
20-lb.
presently located in Athens and which EMS station to call,
Average
Logan. Five more will soon be however can call the one
Wei gill
constructed with final plans for · nearest them and tlleir call will
one In each county. Radio be· taken care of.
equlpment Is being received
SEOEMS has
EMT's
and stored In Gallipolis. The available to give demonequipment is tested after it is strations; or speakers, films
built by Motorola Com- and slides lor clubs and
munlcations and EMS.
organizations In ihe comThe areawide hospital munity. Arrangemenl.s can be
communication system is also made by calling 592~6116 in
In process of being .built, with Athens.
towers and antennas already A non-profit organization,
lnatalled In area hospitals.
Vehicle to hospital communication may be possible
II Way to Go ·
within the next 15 days.
Science h• s fo und that the
The new headquarters most
eUi cient mean s of hu
building will be the dispatch man transportation is riding a
center for all seven counties. bicycle. Walking at four miles
Residents will then dial one an hour consumes about . I
toll-free nwnber, no matter horsepow er of ene rg y wh ile
where they live, for EMS bicycling two-and-a-half times
as fast uses only .15 horsepow·
service. Hiring of dispatchers er.
will begin soon with special
training to follow .
Over 400 residents of
$OUtheast Ohio have taken
the EMS basic trajning and are
now certified Emergency
Medical Technicians. Inhospital training is also
currently underway, with three
stations involved. One station,
composed of six full-time and
20 part-time EMT's has
finished the 20-hour course,
with some individuals earning
as much as 160 hours credit. Inhospital training for the
remaining squads as well as
defensive drivers training will
SEARS
be completed yet this year.
Catalog Merchant
Further training in para medical skills, telemetry or
cardiac care and psychiatric

00

$

$

s..,._,
'I

i!

'"ll&gt;c Pro••ld\•nl I" t"Orrt't't In
sayln~ot that hu hud u ,;ratn•luh.•

l)l •fiiiWTiil:i Ill l'flfl~ri'!..H .

"It hufl httt•u ltiWI.Irtud hy hi!'!

Unlled Pre.,lnlernatlooal
A Cost of Uvlng .Council
olflclal and an economist both
belief beef prices will not surge
upward when the freeze ends
next month.
Henry Perritt, executive
secretary of tlle council, said
Tuesday that since beef
producers are nQW withholding
meat, the market may be
flooded in September, keeping
the price down. The worst of
rising food prices Is over and
shoppers can look forward to a
leveling off, Perritt predicted.
Dr. James 0. Bray, an
economist for the Stanford
Research Institute, also
predicted the cattle available
would increase . .At the same

tune, he said, prices for other
Items would start rising, giving :
conswners less money lo spend :
on beef. He said beef prices :
may start declining by the end :
of tlle year.
,
Some food prices were lower ;
at supermarkets on Tuesday. &lt;
Chicken and pork prices :
were down dramatically ,at ::
A&amp;P stores In tlle New York
area. Center-cut pork ' Chops
were down 40 cents a 110und
from the high of two weeks ago. •
Frying chickens were 69 cenl.s
a pound, 20 cents cheaper tllan '
they were last week. ·
'
The safeway supermarkel.s .
in Chicago were selling•uncut '
fryers at 59 cents, down from a
peak of 83 cents.
I

$

Cut Into Pork · .,
~hops &amp; Roast
o Extra Charge J

At

Ori Your Purchase Of A 5·1b.

On Your Purchase Of A

WHOLE

.
.
.
.
,
.
.
i

.

:

l

,·-=···:-x·····~·~.- · ·. ,. ... .. ....
1
·
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.................,...........
.,...........•.·:&gt;!.:·:·:·:·:.;:-:~~~·:·:~·:::·~:·:·::;·:·:·~·:·:·:.-'.t.•:·;·;o:·;·;o:·:·;~·;:;(,o;:;·;;;::·::;·;-;-;•,

·.~·

~

c

c

. . . . . . . . . . . ,, . . . . . . . .

Today's

·

•

.

lly Milton Richman

le HAN.

.--.
ltl.ltiii!IU

with coupon
below

•

"

with coupon
btl ow

I•Two taken to
~f"....

..

4

::Jbis _ yea~ .

.a

•

local hospit8I
RACINE -

The Racine

.~~::·' Emergency Squad answered a

.

-

Senior Cltlzellll Day ul the
lair was rea lly great this year,
the best ever. It JWCrned
like
the
weather,
young adult music makers and singers, and senior
cill~en enterla iners and all
worked together tc make it so.
To me there was a tinge of
,..dnes.~ as I neared the tent tc
register. Missing was the wellremembered smile and ~'heery
greeting of my new-found
friend of only one short year,

·;::;

::;!Jte aid of X-ray equipment, tlley found an Illegal electro""!'agnetic system. in the car and it didn't take them long at all to
:Iague out the devtce helped pull the car from the starting place.
:: "wtien young Gronen assumed tlle lay back drive position,
·::2Us metal helmet made the contact needed to rlin the system,"
:»aid Paul Livick, the Derby general manager. " It was only
:::;ptrough X-rays that we were able to discover the device."
... James Gronen was disqualified on Monday. Bret Yar:Lorough 'of Elk Grove, Calif., who finished second, will get the
:)7,500 scholarship which goes In ~~ m! Winer "sard'hrby officials.
:ii,500 scholarship which gO!.' ~.•• ~ ~~ ""Y lng me Gronen boy
;:tneated.
··
,.. They never said he did, but what else would you call it?
. . In.SoWder, Derby officials tbere described James Gronen as
:!•a good kid."l'm sure he is, but that doesn't change the fact he
::3vas trylpg to circumvent the rules to win.
.:
From what I gatller, the system in James Gronen's car was
:9ulte a sophisticated one, the kind you wouldn't ordinarily expect
,. 14-year-old to put together.
:
It Is not a good thing if he did it himself, and it's worse if he
:lad outside help from any grownups, but then, look at what
::Afames Gronen sees all around him. .
• He sees cheating going on in government and in sports as
:;,ell. Sometimes it's a subtle thipgs perhaps such as pivotman
:Lever really touching second base on a double play in baseball,
::)ndsometlms It's not so subtle such as tllat golfer from Colombia
;:hanging his score or all these basketball players jumping their
::p1ntracts.
- 'Ioong Gronen reads the papers, I'm sure. Actually what's to
:.top him from saying why are they getting all over me for putting
::71 lew wires in my. soap box racer when the President of tlle
::Jlnlted States feels it's perfectly okay to have them in his own
~flee?
.
•
It would seem to me James Gronen has been set a pretty poor
:txample by a great nwnber of persons, but I still don't think this
:lxcuses him. Apparently neither does Peter Revson, who drives
:!hose big racers and was the winner of tlle British Grand Prix

~""'

~ 111\lt!lll. ;mu

"

..•
UPI Sports Editor
·=·:
NEW YORI'; (UPI) - The rules are explicit.
. They are written so simply, even a 14-year-old boy can understand them.
Basically they are designed to make sure each competitor in
the All-American Soap Box Derby has an equal chllnce, a fair
chance, of winning.
MOll! every red-blooded bey In tlle country has tried putting
together a soap box racer of his own somewhere along the line.
It Isn't that hard.
You get yourself a two by six wooden plank, a pair of axles
off an old baby carnage and four wheels, Then you stick a soap
.-box .In ' the front - that's your "engine" - and you're
::hutcmatically In business. Down through the years, tlle racers or
:;·cars" ln the Soap Box,IJerby have become more refined.
:
Still, one of the first rules of the Derby, held each year in
~ron, Ohio, deals witll tlle start of the race: The rule is spelled
O&gt;Gut clearly.
:
"Cars must start by gravity from a standstill position
:Without any help."
:
The way that's done is fairly simple. The cars are lined up
~getheronan incline with a steel flap In front of them, and when
OOU\e flap comes down, all the cars start simultaneously.
:: That's the general idea anyway.
.
:
Bqt someihing happened in last Saturday's race.
:
At first, 14-year-old James Gronen of Boulder, Colo., was
::tudged tlle wiruter.
Sometljne later, officials made a shocking discovery. With

"r.

1111\\1\

.

• Sport Parade

I

·oo :·

aru VHcatlonlnK now, but
Charles Blakeokoe was abllllllt
becouse of illness. His willinA
and ·able cvntributlon• wore
missed .
'Ill recreation center WBII
bOzzln~ . gctlinA ready for the
lair. l'lwre lfCre qu!lts by Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hilton, Portllmd, and others, as well as
oolls, afghans, leather purses,
and others l(l() numerous to
mention.

'l'hls h111 been a buJy month
for Senior CIUzens. 110 many
nice lhlnK6 have happened that
amo1111 my IICI'&amp;bbled serlbbles
I would like to mllllllon a few of
then1, m~lnly lor folk unable to
attend the fair .
1
I mlued my RSVP day al the
bookmobile workshop this
Tuesday because of our
Council on Aging Committee
meetlng Monday . Many folk

Experts expecting
·firm beef prices '.

l '

"SUPER-RIGHT"

'11y G&lt;lldle Clendenin

frum tho Ameri•un JltlOJJh• tu !allure in lc•drrshlp •nd' his
'cloan~o · u.e dirC&lt;:tion of gnv- uwn fJPI ~IIIIli'US/' Naill ~hll •
ernmenl ," ·said A~hbrook . lwnn~ . ''"lllo Mncr)•·•n f&gt;I\'IJIIO
"This mandate has not been shuuld 11t1l h • ~C\udi!d Jnt11
tllwarted by Waterj{ate, UJe think In~ otherwi&gt;u."
F.rvln ('.1\onrnittce, or even the

call for Lucille Diehl, Elm St.,
at 8:20p.m. Monday. Suffering
abdominal pains, she was
ta~en to Veterans Memorlpl
Hospital where she was admitted.
Sunday at 9:15 a.m. the
squad was called for Howard
Largent, Syracuse, who was
having difficulty breathing. He
was taken to ·Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted. At 5:15 p.m.
Sunday, the squad went to the
Letart area for Paul Eakin who
was having stomach pains. He
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center.

· The average American eats
80 hot dogs a year. his or her
share of the 1,500.000,000 sold
across lhe na tion.

Mrs . Gcn •v:1
fJIIHSt'tl

yeur,

· It hu• uhout

YuleH, who

awny earlier ;11 · the

We. Specialize ·1n Pre-Fab

• •

LIQUID DETERGENT

Chiffon .~::.. • • •
•
49
Chiffon ,;~. . . . "~·
Folger's Coffee . . ....&gt;·lh. 99'
Frozen Lemonade • ~···19~
Frozen Limeade .
Micrin Mouthwash """·97"
Micrin Mouthwash ,~,. '129
Nescafe Coffee • • .... '207
Imperial Margarine ......,.,..,51 c
Crisco Shortening • ~...... $102
.

LIQUID DETERGENT

.

Tu•a,Hdpe~t~

2pk•··89e

TRUSSES

htl ,

VACUUM PACKED

MINUTE MAID

1 f'ln

MIN UTE MAIO

For Residential &amp;Farm Use

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

•

ALL TRUSSES. ARE
FHA APPROVED

hll.

;

WEO LOW PRICE

•

loll.

'

INSTANT

Wholesale Prices!

111-411 ,

KR.O,Pl

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

PURl YEGET AILE

.MATERIALS CO.
m-s5s4

Yen C•mp Bunte WHnHs • . ·~·· 29t
Good ~•son• Ill lien Kils . • ~· 21 c
E11y Off Oven Cluner .. . , • ';,':'.; 7!tt
N•blec;o Chlpa Allor . , . • , "~~~··

Mason, W. Va. :
•'

• I

if""" lik&lt;•s bt.;,ks ~nrl wants to

WAIHINQlON, 0 C 20UO

C0LIIId/JI row••IIIP

Df1'.AfiTMfHT OFlHE l lllfAIUfl'l'
ltoO ~tNNIYL... ~NIAAVE N W

h:ltrn . .._
It'• ull Uoc•·c f•1rthe taking or
itskin~ .
·

JULT I, lUi

AHD fNOINQ

JI..UII M, lth

IN Uti fOllO'NING MANN IIIII IA•t:O UI'Of' "N
l&amp;TIMATlO rOfAL OF

U .m

ACCOVNT NO.
NJ,UMI

Wl kl UI.'IUIIIIDOCING
AATI Of It Mo\JOIH.U.
WI U. MIVOO IHCIIIAUIN
MTIO,AW.UCIITU

, l~ rotwt mtdll 11tvtt b.,.,., adviMd thlt t 1 eompltll coP'/
01 thlot '"JW»l tlu IJMII publlthtd In tloctl I*Wtplplr al gerwlll
C~ C l!lll~n . I 11t... riCo!,. dcx:um"'"lnt lht tOflllllll ot lhil.

r~ar1

trod '""" "'

OPf~

kt! j)ubl io •1111 ntrWI m.dil

&amp;cnrliny, llf»o;;;;c,;,;;;;..,f;----+--3-01--.:::f--~

Til• D•lly

"

~"lllltlll tf loud Dl Trwolen
C.luftllrol• T..,."l~ l p TrWUUI

S•~ll"ll

tu.tiii'OJ . . .,."'. I

11\U.II , llliT

YOUII WOiflf I HEfT

'

TMI OOYIJIJNMIIIT 0,
DEPAAIMENl Of Tf-I E IHAS.u tn
O ~ri( E Or R( VENU l 5 1-'AAIN C
1900 PE NNSYLVAI'II A F&gt; V E N

Funds total $122,208 in Pomeroy

HAS USED IT S R(\I EI'IUE SflARING P"VMENT

ff'R THE PEIIIOO BEGINN! NG

WASHIN GI ON 0 C 1022 6

JAN . 1, 197.2

Village funds for the montll milled to Pomeroy Council Receipts, expenditures and
of July totaled $122,207.98 Monday night by clerk Jane balances respectively in the
active funds were : general,
according . to a report sub- Walton.
$4,208.14, $6,294.20, $7,926.16;
revenue sharing, $5,662, no
$15,123; water
1
i expenditures,
well improvement, no receipts,
rio .expenditures, $1,650; sewer
revenue, $5,256.54, $11,198.42,
I
I $7 ,549.9 1; fire dept., no
I
I receipts, $530,99, $4,831.60;
cemetery, $415.63, $408.76,
I,
By Clarence •• $825.31; street, $1 ,803 .75,
Miller
$1,613.34, $7,751.73; street highI
I
way , $146.25, $6, $4,179 .02 ;
nilated
legislation
...
and
this
wa ter operating, $8,518 .93;
The President recently
' proposed tlle creation of a new figure does not include $7,578.02, $3,052.19; guaranty
cabinet-level department to the joint committees, se- meter, $125, $165, $5,066.72;
committees
and water impr ovement, no
consolidate efforts on the lect
energy crisis. This action by various ad hoc bodies receipts, no expend!lures,
the President has demon- which have dealt witll the $15.61 ; parking meter, $850.50,
no expenditures, $15 ,051.80 ;
straied the Administration's energy problem.
willingness to give the energy
It's for certain that the utility, no receipts, $701.98,
shortage the high degree of volwne of energy • related $17,510.58.
Receipts, expenditures and
attention and priority it legislation certainly warrants
special attention to the issue - balances In the inactive funds
deserves.
more than 400 bills were : bond retirement, no
altogetller
In my opinion, tlle Congress
needs to act accordingly to Ue and resolutions on energy use, receipts, no expenditures,
bond
together tlle loose ends of r~search, conservation, and $27,510.10-; sewer
energy-related activities on policy have been submitted to retirement and repair, no
Capitol Hill. A joint committee the Congress for consideration. receipts, no expenditures,
The Congress must recognize $2,284.26 ; special street repair
on energy should be
established. At the present that a problem as monwnental fund, no receipts no ex,
time, 28 of the 38 standing as the energy problem can best pendltures, $1,880.01.
Receipts,
expenditures
and
I
be
·addressed
by
one
effective
committees of the Congress
have some degree of committee rather than a balances of all funds were: !
jurisdiction over energy- scattered mass of inefficient. $26,986 .74 , $28,496.7 1,
$122,207.98.
ones.·

10TAl .. AYM£N ,l OF

JUNE 30, 1973

!

$2,802

'
36 3 053 OOJ
.I.CCOUNT NO .

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

! Washington

ENDING

IN I tiE FOll OWING MANNt'R BASED UPON A

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
TWP . CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY
ALBANY, OHIO 4S710
~RtYEN

lEO

EN~CIIN(I

A~ EW 'A~I () III~k

ACTUAL
EXPENOITUAU

Report

I I

AC:TUAL

~URP(!S(

(XPENDITUIIES

·IU

181

"'

s

101 TA US ! FUNQ REf'O~ f

2,039

1

Glenn Turner

.. s
5__!, 802.
. . . , S 2, 18,
· · S- 613 -

"""1

,, ,~... ,\o'ii_~«·"'""'"'"'''"' '"'"'

President ol
Board of Trus1ees
··~

-.,....-

~~· ~olumbi~ Townsh i p ·T rusf!es

•
~~Mi"i'lii'i'f' ict45r ""'" '
-ijl The Daily Senti nel

·--

__jii ~AMo Cif .rw~ruu

1

1-12-73

-----..~ -Oil! ·rv"'"' ~ /

lrHIS· IS YOUR COPr OF VCJUR ltEPORT · I'LfllrSE RETAIN/

·And Will Put It On Sale Sat., Aug. 25
Magic Sizing

r

OfFICI!O, flfVfHUE SH,.,!ING

TM' OOYitlfiiM.WT 0,

Phebe Bought Meigs Co. Fair Beef
SPRAY

Wt a.. At NGOII Slturdly

tllr.IN 1HII WOIJK SHflt

Wt•rk 1d lhl' HHukuw!Jih•
Wtll'kshup I~ r:J !-14:Irltlllfl~ Work.,

COLUMBIA .TOWNSHIP

.'

5th
.. and PEARL STS., RACINE
: "The Store With AHeart,
•

I -.
..
~

~ight

'

You, WE Ll KE"

reserved to limit quantities

..
.We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps
~rices Effective Aug. 22-29
..."'
Monday Thru Friday
•.
....
9:00 to 7:00
•.
•.
.•. Saturday 9 to. 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS .
••
..
•

••
•

LOW PRICES
GOURTEOUS SERVICE
••
•• FREE PARKING
•

...

••

Chapter and Sold At The
Meigs County Fair.

GROUND CHUCK
TENDER ROAST
PRIME STEAK

SPECIALS OF THE WEEK

Patronize your local groceiJ store.
Help your local FFA
and eat delicious beef now.
·

.

)'tlways .·..

Raispd by Donald Shaffer
of Southern High FFA

'

les, the meat cutler, will have a display
case of beautiful Charolais beef ...

.

And

llul Mr . !Ciarence 1 Struble
Mrs. "IJbrarlan," (Vilma
was . doin~ a good job. Once l'lkkoja) is a very dedic~ted
there were Uoto•e generations of Jltlrll(ln aud really knows ht'l'
wo,uen registering. Over 300 b10ks. II you Clln't find your
signed In and many came in · book, she orders it.
back of the tent .
I have two requests on the '
While the Taylors were SJJindle now, " You Can't go
playing music, a lady asked horne Again." I want to koow,
who they were. When 1 said, why not . I did, that 1s, come
"Darrell and Carol Taylor," home a~ain . .
she askc&lt;d if .they were twiM. Also "A Book of Poems" by
Most folk know by now they arc Grace M. Athey, on R.N. friend
a husband and wtfe team by of my daughter Anne Tipton of
their volunteer work iuuurslng C&lt;&gt;lumbUil. Gratoe's books ·is
homes.
illu.~tratl'&lt;i by a friend of hers,
We were enjoying the music from newborn infanf to
and singing. When a good tune grandparent yea;s. She has a
came up a lady carne down the house on Kelly s Island out
aisle "cutting the pigeon wing" from Cleveland where she
or something, folio wet! by Okey vacations and writes.
Paynter, Cora Hilton , Ethel
There are several volunteers
Johnson, the Taylors and at the workshop. More are
others, all dancing In the tent. needed to clean, cover, mend
Ones not dancing were and bind books. So, if you have
clapping, patting their feet, a free day (free transportation
swaying In their seat and and lunch is. furnished) you'd
singing, Volunteers were be Interested In spite of
passing out cookies, coffee and yourself.
iced tea; dozens and gallons
Miss Lucille Smith of Chester
and gobs of it.
suggests we have at least one
Our own Lebanon Golden shell of books on Meigs County
Age C)ul&gt; was well represented Histcry and Ecology. She has
there. The Charles Hiltons, some good leads to follow up on
Darrell Taylors, Darr ell 's early history. Anyone having
aunt, Mrs . Taylor, Garnet books, papers or information
Ervine, Dessie Patterson, along these lines, Is asked to
Okey Paynter, Roy Bush, Ethel share or contribute .
Johnson and myself.
Mrs. Etoill Cassell works on
I heard many nice things talking books and helps Trudy
about Mr. Eddy, Jr., the new Andrews and me on the
van, (Bookmobile) is really scrapbook - of clippings from
scrumptious with wall to wall newspapers.
carpeting, shelves lining both
The bookmobile Phone Ism
sides witll books to choose 5813 or Miss Lucille Smith,
from.
Chester.

~

BUILDING

t•wrytloln~ .

SPECIAL SALE
FRENCH CITY

WIENERS
20 count
PJCkage

1.79

--

GALA PAPER
TOWELS

SPECIAL SALE

Chef Boy-Ar-Dee

Hot Dog Buns

Hot Dog Sauce

3 ~:~~ 1.00

1

I PRODUCE B UY!
I
I
I

S"IZE
WITH

COUPON.
At Racine Food Mkt•

I
I
I

CELERY
LARGE .BUNCH

5

~~~L

1.00

PRODUCE BUY!

ONIONS
NOW 3 LB. FOR

----'

1··----------------·---~

GEORGIAN
10
TOILET TISSUE

Rolls

VAN CAMP'S
PORK &amp; iEANS

NESCAFE
•

INSTANT COFFEE
PAN PAL

I
I

2 pak

Jar

13 oz.

:Jtrosol

FRY WITHOUT FAT
I '

'

�19

18

The Dally Senllnrl , Mtddlrporl-l'onwroy 0 , 1lng 22 1'171

•

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
IN F O~ MAT I ON

• DEA DLINES

5 P M .. Oa y Bef or t! Publ!ca l tM
Monda y Oeadt 1ne 9 a m

C:ance ll a l ton

Corr t'cl ic ns

WHl b e accepted unt d 9 a m for
Day of PvbtlcattOn '
R E GUL AT IONS

The P ublish e r reserv es t he
r ight to cd•l or re Ject a ny a d s
deemed
ob jec t• onal
The
publisher w tlf not be responsibl e

lor more fhBn one mc or r ect
ln5ert ion
RATES
Fo r Wan I Ad ScrV IC C
5 cents pe1 Word one msert Ion
Mm lm um Cha rg e 75c:
1' cant s per worct thr ee
consecu t i ve m• erl lons
18 ce nts per word StJ: con
secu !+ ve mscrt l on~
25 Per Cen t Dtscount on paiU
lldSMd a d s pa td w1lhln 10 day s
CA RD O F T HAN kS
&amp; OBITU ARY"
51 iO for 50 wor d m ln tmum
Ea ch add1t1 onaJ word 2c

@)
'

1970

Pom~roy

Roush , Pomerov

and tt e n l or med ol t he fun c
f 1on s ol your governm ent are
err bod1 ed 1n pu blic nolt ces II\
that se lf govern m ent charges
at l Cll tze ns to be 1nformed
tht s newspaper ur ges every
clt 1ze n to r ea d and stu dy t hese
noti ces We str ong ly ad vtse
those c 1t dens seek tng fu rther
mform at ton to excr c tse t he tr
r ig ht ol access to pu bl tc
r ecord s and publ1c m eetmgs

ORDINANCE
NO 998 73

...... --~------

Notice
YA RD Sa l e Wednesday , Thvrs
day A ugust 22 an d 23 County
Rd 5 Bra dbur y Watc h fo r
stg ns
8 22 2tc

-----------YAR D Sa le at restence of M r s

Ro b ert je ff er s , Rt
124
Syr acuse Aug 22. 23 and
2olth Sta rt mg at 10 a m Good
se l ect 1o n of c l ot h i n g and
d1shes Phone 99 2 3525
8 22 3tc

An Ordmance to v acate the
al ley extending from M ul ber ry YAR D Sal e, Fr 1ay August 24
Avenue to Ash Stree t between
Ra1n or Shm e 10 a m 387
Lots 89 and 77 on th e Norlh , an d
So uth Fourth Str eet M td d le
Lots 80 and 86 on the South
po rt
8 22 21 p
Be it ordatned by t he Coun c1 1
of the V tllage of Middleport as YARD Sal e Wedn esda y thr u
follows
Fr tday , at 838 South Second
Sec I That the alley ex.tend
Stree t , Mtdd le port
Old
lng from Mulberry Avenue on
dts hes, pott ery , stone tars old
the North to Ash Street on t he
r ecords old p:1ctu res and lots
South, and ly ing between Lot s
m sc
89 and 77 on the North and Lots
8 21 3tp
86 11nd 80 on the Soutp , be
vacated
ST E R you r own fur
Sec I I Thts Ord inan ce shall UPHOL
nttur
e
We have all th e sup
take effect and be tn for ce from
plies you wtl l need fab rrc s
and after August 13 1973
foa m f or cush 1ons and pad
Passed on th e llth da y of
dtng
We cut foam to an y s1 ze
August 1973
or shap e Sw 1vet bases cotton
burlap l eg s zipper , welt co rd ,
Attest Gen e Gra te
we
bbtng da cr on , cht p board
Cler k
plus man y other tte ms and
Dav1d W Oh ltnger
li¥lng r oom su 1tes at tow tow
Pres tdent of Council
pri ces Pomer oy Recov ery ,
622 E Ma tn P hone 992 75 54
18) 22 29 21C
7 19 30tc
---------~-----

KOSCOT KOSM ETICS

&amp;

WIGS

c upboa r ds. c he5 ts , old guM,
(lny condi t io n Also bl ue
d ecorated stonewMe Wr jte
p o Box •~ . Marti n s bu rg ,

ny lon pr1nt ma ter ia l with
wood tr i m Foam rever $l bl e
cus h ions Th is week only
Sl 89 95 c Uh an d c arr y

aft er 7 p m

M ain Stree t , Pomeroy Phone

-----------~!_~tc

--------------For Sale or Trade

For Rent

Wanted To Do
BA BYSIT TIN G m my home , 630
Pl um Street, Mon day t hrough
Friday Mtd dle por t Oh to
ac ro ss fr om C1t y Park In
tr ailer
B 22 31p

3975

e Aa YSITTER wanted for .t v~
days w ee k , pref er o¥er 21

--........
'

.,
.J

'

.,..
.....

..··.
&lt;•

..

8 22 31C

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

M AL E or fema le desk c lerk ,
musl be able to ltve m Appl y
1n person at th e Ohto Hotel
M iddleport
B22 6tc
--------------

Employment Wanted
EXPERIENCED patnter , Ill
tertor and e)(terior Call Don
van Meter 985 3951
8

l -4 x. 65 TRAILER 2 bedroom
very good cond it iO Phone 77 3

5805

1960 VtNDALE

$1,995 992 7081

f-. E SPON SIBLE w oman to
babySit In Rutland from 11 30
unlit 4 30, four days a week , I
ch tl d In ktn dergart en an d 1 tn
sch oo l C!l l 742 4426 after 6

pm

..

With hts gtrl whtle on the road
IS a buss dnvcr

F E M A LE to work as r ecep
t tont st
cler k and gen era l
dulte s of small b us tness
+ +
Some t yp ing M ust have good
Ch1 ck en 1n a bank vault h,1s
pe r son ality
Ex c ellent
rcplat ed c ht ~ k e n m a baskeL
work ing condi t ions 35 hours
per wee k
Send comp l ete
+ + +
re su m e to Bo x 7'2 9 A co The
Dally Se nt i n e l , Po m er oy
OhiO
8 l7 6t c

+

:·,.
,.
I
I

•
;;

Pr e t ze l s were or1 g1nated
by a mo nk in nor the1n Ita ly

'·

around 610 A D The World

••

~:

Alm anac says

1'he ftr s t

:
•

pretzels were made of dough
baked tn to little ftgu tes rep
resent tn g cht ldren with
arm s folded tn prayer Th e
monk called them preltola
,.. wht ch IS Lal tn for li ttl e
!l re~ a rd and gav e th em to
' · chi ldre n who learn ed thc11
""' catechtsm
CoM r~ 11

C

~

~

NewsiJnp~•

I

1

-.! I
.,. I

••

19 J

EnrQrf)r

J~ A~s"

---- ----------i

; .l
::i.\1

You' I I

tract It down

raster
With a
WANT AD
much

We,talk to you

like ~ person.
'

1

I
1
I
t

I
i
l---------------~

.,

8 21 3tc

A young ma n w ho smooc hes

••

;

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd
423 7521
BELPRE, 0
CA SH pa 1d for all makes and
models of mob t le homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
413tfc

For

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

+ + +

Sid e ha s br ead w a s on ce bu t -

Mtddleport Lawn mower aod
c ha1n saw repa tr Free pickup
and dell¥ery Phone 992 3092
A, tso Bng gs and Str atton and
Tec um seh part s
a 22 30tc

KNAPP shoes new fall and
w1nter sty les now out Ca ll

992 5324

814 tfc

-------------Invest ment Property for sate

LARGE , br1ck build ing on Main
Street, Pomeroy Conta ins 4
rentals , offer s appro)( lmatety
10 to 12 pet return on 1n
vestment Catt 992 2769

8 19 6(c

------------PON Y trombone , fr ee mitt en
paw k ittens, one St am ese cat
~ all

992 741 7

8 21 Jto

------------------1963 Mod el 971 3 plower trac tor ,
8 21 6tp

..7 000 wringer washer , wooden
table and c ha i r , Honda
m olorb tke , 65 mod el Home
llghl Cha i n saw Cart Dav id
Ha ggy 742 3303

tered on
N(W:)PAPf 'l

ENrEr1PR15E ASS"l

Dally Sentinel

--------------PAGEVI L LE , Oh tO Includes
house , 4 r oom s down , 1 up.
garage, workshop and ap
prox1mately 1112 acres Wtth
young orchard 1 block east of
Rt 692, S10 ,500 Information
at house
8 12 lfc

FAMILY HOME
2 story fram e 6 bedroom s
w1th larg e c losets 4112 balhs
Llvtng r oom 15 K3 1 wtth

Large TV room

l~repl ace

Utt1 1ty room Full basement
Hot wat er heat Large 2 ca r
garag e wtth workshop and
room over Large lot wlfh
lots of shr ubs Close to
shopp1ng

RACINE RURAL
35 wooded acre s fron tage on

both sides of lhe road, pond"
about 5 acres level an ex

cellenl buy SS.SOO00
GENUINE SACRIFICE
3 bedroom s. balh, ut ility
" "o m , lara r&gt; rP cre at 1on
room, for ced atr f ur,..~ c~&gt;
por ch es, cellar wtth storage

over. larg e lot, SB 500 00

33 ACRES

3 mtles out of Rutlan d About
10 tor c ult avat lon , th e
bala nce as pastur e Hom e

had 3 bedrooms TV roo m.
ni ce kitch en, for ced air heat ,
bath ,
ce llar ,
por c hes

_____ _________ _

In

can ce ll ed '
L os t
your
oper ator 's license Call 992

7428

6 15 lfc
WI L L T RIM or cu t trees ,
shrubbery Also patnt roofs
Phone 949 32 21 or 742 4441
7 18 30tc
----~- -

ELNA and White Se wing
Machtnes
Se rvtc e on all
makes Reasonab le ra tes
Th e Se w tn g Center M id
dl eport , Oh io

HOU SE for sale - Furn tsh ed
Now ren ted for SlOO month 1
acre land , shade tree s
rea sonable Call 992 72 25

8 21 Sic

992 298•

t3.57 PER HOUR
.

old A mce 2 bedroom frame
hom e, bath , convenient kttchen

w1th cook and bake unlls
Dtntng room, gas for ced atr
furna ce 1 car garage an large

lot at Darw1n
Asking
$16,000 00
NEW LISTING
BURLINGHAM - 3 bedroom
ho me, all on one floor Garag e
and large lot for mob1le hom e
or new house T P water
av atlabte soon Just SS 000 00

POMEROY
MULBERRY AVE

4

b edr oom s , bath new ga s
furnace , basement, and back

porch S10 500 00
SMALL FARM
30 ACRES - On Route 33
North 2 bedroom home, new
Henho use , corncrib, barn and
all mmer als Want $15, 000 00

NEW HOME
IN THE COUNTRY - 3
bedrooms, nice bath and kit
chen with electr ic range On
Oh 10 Power Full base ment

with garage Ask&gt;ng $20,000 Oil
, NEW HOME
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms,
l 'h baths, nice kllchen w1lh
S S cook and bake unlls
Carpeted Full basemenl w1th
garage Ask1ng $19.500 Oil
NEW LISTING
POMEROY
BuS&lt;ness
ve nt ur e for good 1ndustnous
person who ts willing to put In

DON T WASTE YOUR TIME
AND MONEY, LOOKING, OR
TRYING TO SE LL, OR TO
BUY SEE US, WE WILL DO
THE JOB PROFE SS IONALLY
AND SAV 6 YOU ALL TH E
TROUBL E

MIVtlt

Halo of Htll
orvtrt
Surround clothes
with gentl e, ev en
~ e at No hot spots
no overdry ln g
Pin e Mesh Lin t
F ilter
We Spect•flltln
1

138 SO or pay S5 p&amp;r month
Call 992 5331
..._
6 10 Jfc~

446-0677
......

____________

Swee pe rs

2984
____________
8_
20 6tc

~

Movtat

8 20 6tc

de lu xe model , comptete with
ell c1e"n1ng attachment s and
uses peper bags Slightly used
bu t c leans 1nd lOOKS li Ke new
Wi ll .se ll tor S37 25 u ch , or
terms &lt;I! Vei lable Phone 9?2

Big Ctp•clty

AutOMitiCI
2 speed operaf.!on
CJlo lce of wale
f'em p s
Auto
wat e r
!ev e
contro l
L in t
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator
Perlni-Prei•

Th is ma chine . darns 1 em
broiders, overcasts , button
holu
All
withou t
at .
ta chments Pay ba lance of

ELEC TROLU X

:,
'

"STRIPPERS"
We Slrlp Paint, Varnishes.
Elc from Furnllure
Anltques-Modern.Melals

992 ·2094
606 E. M~'" Pomero_y

OFFICE SUPPLIES

No rul('lous iyes or cau stics
used

;~nd

Ptck.Up Service
Avatlable
We Buy &amp; Sell Antiques
Dtck Seyler.Owner
Kerr Sl
Pomeroy, 0
Phone 992·2798

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Di~p!a'i·

ROOFING
Siding
Spouting
Remodeling
Plumbing
Heating. Complete
Building. Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding.

ALL WEATHER
992-2550,

Short dlStance

Middleport, 0.

-

CON CRETE

EXCAVATJN{j Dozers, large
and small
Backhoes and
de l t¥ered rtght to your
loaders on track and tires,
proJect Fast and ea sy Free
Dump tru c,k ~ Lo boy ser
esltma t es Phone 992 32 84
vi ce Sept tc tanks Installed
Go egietn Ready Mi x Co ,
George (91111 Pull ins, phone
Mlddleaort Ohio
992 2478 or 992 7402
6 30 tfc
2 9 tfc

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

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED , REPAIRED
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART, OHIO PH 662
3035
10. II&lt;
SEWING MACHINES Repair

EXCAVATING , dozer, loader
and backhoe work, septic
t11n k s i nstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for htre, will haut
f1tl dtrt, top so tl. ltm estone
and gravel, Cell Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089 ,
night phone 992 3525 or 992
2 11 tfc

8 10 10tc

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

RUTLAND
741 ·4211

MAYTAG

FURNITURE'R~~~.~::·'
Arnold Grata.

Rutland

••

The Shop

!

l
'

"custom meat cutting"
Pleasant Rtdge Road
POMEROY, OHIO

(
/

,

~~.; -~~ "\

•

l'fllity

:

k' ,..•• "\ how to cui up.

-

1
1

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·---CUT • WRAPPED • FROZEN

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:
:
•

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TO YOUR SPECIFICATION

jN EWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASS N I

Inc.

\o',oi nln&lt;)

I ll till

l ' dtH ollt

d

VCdJ s

h l'l Ill S (.•

Ju..

:
:

~ low ay~

_,

b . 11J ol S l li S('

uld

ill hu ·

bv THOMAS JOSEPH

John louk nw on tht roa d "'lth

h , l VI' d I!,IJUd II If ~I rc

She .rnf.J John go t rn ,rrr ll'tl
.rnd h.rd fl d;.~ ught c r - t hynnu

I

ACROSS
ll urt

42 Subse-

quently

6 Nogg1n
10 To n ~o n al

43 Pr1n l1 nJ:

SCfVI ( C

style

ty pe

Oathc1
13 nofu gc

DOWN

II

I Ji'orcst

IT tlis

14 WW II

c.onrcr
cnce sttc

sta r
2

15 Befort•

Amulet
talisman

Yttilerday 's Answe r
3 Be a
Chuw I ts 5 and- 16 BolJvHm
ex port
blah hc rc r
•,n• t1.1lr now
and th n were
1~ Sheep
(4 wd s)
dtv&lt;mcd l'hcy arc sttll goorl
ttck
4
She
9 "Great
26 Pioneer
lrt cnd s and Mtchcllc al so ts 19 Fmc
neve
r
had
Expect
ation
s"
28 Born
good fncnds wtth .John s pre
shiT
a
mother
hcrome
(Fr )
sent wr fc Gc nc vr cvc and
net
5
".Jaw
12"
Depress
30
Auste r~
liiC tr yo un~ son
21 "That smtth"
11 Octopus'
31 DtsFeeling'
S ll c had neve r sung unt tl
6 • Home.
flu td
charged
22
Thtckct
Sweet
20.
Loca
hhes
35
Conlohn l""cltcal ly forced he' lo
of bushes
Home '
23 Extmct
stru cted
JOin t 1c group It wa s he who
writer
Hawaiian
31.- ·
oga111 urged her to start wn t 23 Symhul uf
stubbor n
1 Doctors'
bird
whtlh1ng s&lt;Jng s She s sll ll both
ness
org
24. Appear
kens&lt;
wn tmg and smgmg
24 Throw
8 Butt 1n
25. Hal Foster's 39 Nlgertan
out
Acltng IS now her btg pa s
( 4 wdS)
pnnce
trlbesma11
s10 n but she has set herse lf 26 "Pn ncc
~r,~~~
~~~rnof
some li mt tat tons She says she
Dark·
nnl ) wan ts to play sym pathel
ness"
tc parts
21 Htblical n
travelers
'!'hat s bec ause I m senst
uvc about\\ hal people thtnk 28 Jules
Verne
of me ' she says Some of
character
the lady go ssi p co lumn tst s
29.Dulch dtsease
30 Detonate
( 2 wds )
32. Rl\ er

1pronounced

~

What makes Michelle act?
By DICk Kl emer
11 l&lt;'l&lt; me do som ellung 1\ l or .t long li m e m M CXIt o
HOLLYWOOD - I N"A I - lt! ts me m.a kr money 1l helps
I le t m n t hf•t ci ted wh e n s he
J ohn Dtlltn g&lt;!r s gtrl ftt cnd me becom e lnmou s - walh Y.tJ S l1v c nnd he r f.tth c r a
wa nts to be nch 1 m ta lk ing one " tone
rn r t t h.tn t m ~ann e r l e ft lh c
about Mt chell c Plu liip s who
Mt &lt; he lie savs she \\ J ilted l o ~t 1 lo r.u c for l11s two d.mghplays Dtllmger s gtrl fn cnd tn he dn ~H. I r e~ s a ll u l on ,g .tn d ICI s
the la l est IHOVIC Vt' r S IOil Of the onlv got St !I C trillkC d 1nlo
li e rotS I'd us all by tum ga ngs ter s hfc Dtlhnget
s an ~ an g wh e n sh e ma rned
se ll
she s(t\ ~
H e wa :s J
MtSs Phtlhps - ~.&lt;ho u s e d to J ohn Ph !ll tp s w ho W&lt;~ s mn sl l good Jathet li e taugh t me all
be one ot l he M.1mas ~and th e on cntcd
o~h o ut sex b \1 Ute tt mcl · wa s
Pct pas - as domg h e r l t r s t
12 li e taug ht me to be al ra td
\~ h(•n I "a s 11
she SiJ Vs
re.tl "' tmg JOb 111 Dtl linger
ul
dt ugs - I vc never t rt ed
1 br t nl\ g 11l l rt c nd Sue
!She dtd a brt of c.tmeo tn
Dennts Hopper s torge ttablc I von t h r~ t I d bc·a t h(' t to ~h e
I he L.t st Movt e but th.ll sc.: r c t•n I sti ll O\H hc t $20
hat dl y countsI She makes no bCt'd use she bl'rl l ITl(' by ,thoul
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
bon es about her 1 e ,l sn ns tor l l vc.1rs
one letter to each square, to
starlm g an ac lm g career

~&amp;~!1m®"

!'he

I m amb1ttous

t he bc(tu -

ltlu l Mtchelle says
to

I d ltkc

be r tc h I ltk e a c ttn g be
ktiJS SCVCI :.1! b trds -

CCJ USe I t

lll Cl Jn 1 eJ ~o n ~ hr l u ~ l

::.::t::::;c

(Sp )

33. VIet-

form four ordmary word s.

namese
holiday
34 Cratchil's
son
36, Measure
J8 Ge ne

th&lt; I&gt;CI " '" lii &lt;l l she d1d nolh-

tn g c~b n ut he r £Jl l tn g t.l re(t m
S h ~; s.l\ ~ she \\a s to o sin ~1t
t he 11m e Bcs1d es sh e l1vcd

T ~e rn ey

'i Wl l(j

Word was rece1ved here
.Tuesday morning from Toledo
of the death of Charles
of
Htlewick,
formerly
Pomeroy
Survivors mclude hts wife,
Ahce, and two stepsons He
was preceded m death by hts
parents, first w1fe Carne
Brown HIIewtck, one brother.
and one stsler He served hts
country 10 World Warl and will
be remembered by many
relatives and fnends m this
area havmg hved on Condor
•
•

St many years
Funeral Sef\1CeS Will be held
Thursday at I 30 p m at the
Day-Edwat ds Funeral Home,
Toledo
1

I II &lt;.;f./'

NOW ONE GALLON
Mrs Margaret Eskew of
Pomeroy became a gallon
blood donor when the
t\men can Red Cross Bloodmobile vtstted m Pomeroy,
Monday

mov1e

II

II

Charles Hilewick died in Toledo

!I

40 Stage
dJrccl!O n

41 Did

'"

0
n

TOO EiTUPID
10 HAVE THE
Rlle&gt;HT AN6l..E

Now arranre the circled letter&amp;

I:===I·~:::·I::=:=.::=:~=~U~::_~•::u::r;rested

to font) the aurprilt anawer, as

L_~lftt
.::::1=.:SIRSE
11 ==AHSWIII
=~
=----'I

PEOPlE Ut&lt;e

[

by the above c:artoon.

I X1 I I )

wron g

BAILY CRYPTO(jUOTE - Here's ho11 lo

CHAP~

BICOME FORKED

S Jwk e ~l'f!arl' Ul mtr&gt; II flb1mt

nolhmg! - MUCH ADO

it :

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELlOW
One letter Simply sta nds for an other In thiS sample A IS
used for
three L 's X for t he t v. a 0 s etc Smgle l elters,
Is

the

apostr ophes , t he l ength and f or mallon o r t he \\ords arc all
hmts E ach d av t he code l etters are dtffe rc nt

CRYPTOQUOTES

(An1wen tomorrow)

Jun1hle• HUMID

ll!ll k

H SO

ST BR O L H

GKP

KQ

TZZ

~L

HB U DF A HK
ZK K N
PV LU
E SOF
U KV ' B O F K H - Elli'.ZDT X Q O THSOB

~ ER

Dal'T MIND NOT

HELPING, SANOY,

Cross to Henry
Doerf~r
Jr • Patty Ann
Doerfer, % A , Salisbury
Leonard L Barber, Jr ,
Shtrley J Barber to DannyM.
Barber, V1ck1e L Barber, I
and H A , Ohve
Clarence
E
Fraley,
Jacquelme F Fraley to Herman Eugene Massey, Eva
Joyce
Massey, Parcel,
Columbia
Ralph E Barton , dec'd , to
Hazel R. Barton, Greta Mae
Donaldson, Larry E Barton,
Aff. Trans , Olive .
Larry E Barton, Carolyn K
Barton McDale to Lelta A
Spencer, Lots, Reedsville
Letta A Spencer to Larry E
Barton, Carolyn K. Barton,
Lots, Reedsville.
Dale Adams, Bonme Adams
to Joseph R Cremeans, Lela
Cremeans, 'h A , Ohve
Homer P Roush to Ira Eblm, NINNIE WINKLE
Hope Ebhn, 118 A., Syracuse"
~ IM TERmtY SORRY,
Phylt ls J Hennessy, AfMl&amp;&amp; WINKLE. HAL
7Rfi!D TO IMKE IT. ..
hdavlet, Pomeroy
6UT 1HeRE WAS 'THIS
Law!on P. Seyfnend, Bertha
ACCIDENr.".
M. Seyfriend to Robert E
Dmley ,1 Carolyn A Dalley,
Parcels, Rutland

Veterall8 Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Rob ert
Newell, Middleport , Granville
Wamsley, Middleport; Kenny
Lunsford, Pomeroy , Audrey
Arnold, Minersville; Helen
Swartz, Coolville ; Ruby
Eynon, Reedsville, Clarence
McDaniel, Rutland , Jeffrey
Collier, New Haven , "Jay
Marple, Bayard.
DISCHARGED - Leshe
Carr, •Randell Friend, James
Sullivan, Barbaro McMahon,
Alvado Halfhill , Roso Deem,
Waller Becker, George Clonch,
Edith McKenzie , Kathryn
Cremeans, ltoliot•l Newell

RIVERSIDE APARTMENTS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RENTAL SURVEY
{Filling out and returning the below survey
DOES NOT OBLIGATE YOU, but only expresses your interest In possibly renting an
apartment. Reduced rents are available II you
qualify on the bas1s of income.)

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

I·
I
I

MARRIED

I

st utt 1 r 11\1 (' 1 1t ~ llh u u"h J'm
w·ttrnJ,: ht•l tf •r .

~~~

I'HE BORN W SER

rM 1\FRAID~ IN

DIP IT lmR CXCU~ l:l """i

FACT. ..HIO.~He..

NEVER HADA
CMIINCE.

'ttl 11-IAT ~ a: lllliM
-e;~~ ~ ~ooR

·---------------9·92···33·7·4·--

I NAME
I
I PRESENT ADDRESS
I1 SINGLE
I NO. OF CHILDREN

ll.ml numt 1 liJ

W ,I S

IHrn v. hl'n I \\d s 17
I II• g.tvt• rn• snmc p&lt;~rlmg
ulvu1 whu.~ h I thmk wus pret·
t y goo &lt;.! M1&lt; ht• ll c he s.ud ,
lht•r(' Ml' two thm~s it wom un
h,rs to •I n - kN'!l c.:ll•,tn and

Halhe

HOME repair or remodeling
Reasonable rates 1st class
work Call Bob or Bill, 992

5968

p.; ,,

... h_., !l,,y..

'LONG AG litE'(
COM£ UP WITH

6 22 lfc

8 21 IOtp

1'h1ll tp "

... . , •

V. lun ' 'H.' v. '" t.Jsl tr1 DJI
hnJ.;I r ~ lw " uttt d tu u ~( ht r
1}1 ,jl(h n Tl olllll '
(: ll ltu ln

111 11T .1n d wu s u n1u :-. 11 ran II &lt;"
J.:oi VC• 111 1 In s bh• s!-i rn g wJu n

Transfers

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

NIEGLER Butldlng Supply for
bulldtng hou ses Cal l Cv
Nelgler, Racme, Oh to

,,, 111HII tp ...

Property

ag e near Crossroads on St
Rt 124 , atl mechantc:al work
mcludmg automatic trans DOZER and back hoe work ,
mlsstons Monday Friday ,
ponds and septic tanks, dit
chlng service , top soil, fill
8 30 a m to 5 p m Saturday
- 8 30 to 12 noon - unless by
d i rt.
limestone
B&amp;K
appointment Phone 992 5682
Es.cavatlng Phone 992 5367 or
or 992 7121
992 3861
9 1 lfc
7 25 30tc

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

the

•

FOR FREE estimates on
alum lnum siding
Storm
Doors and Windows, Car
ports, Marquees and Railing,
Phone
Charles
Llsle ,
Syracuse, Ohlo Cart Jacob
Sales Representative V V
Johnson and Son , Inc

-------------OPEN - Roger Hysell's Gar

In

Meigs

3 29 If&lt;

5232

literally

op en space and enters the
• mouth of the tube Thts means
~ after the tubes are \ted, ovula
RECEIVE APPLICATION
110n contmues as 11 dtd before
• The egg s, however cannot
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - The
pa ss down the lube s so they Federal
Commumcallons
are literally absorbed by the CommisSion satd today 11 had
body they are not blocked up
received an apphcat10n for a
:
construcllon permtt for a new
FM radio stat10n at Castalia,
'
Ohio, on 97 7 mhz from the
Chnsllan fa1th Broadcastmg,

service, all makes 992 22Si
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Sates and
Service We Sharpen Scissors

Dick Vaughan

rented, and large lol Want
only $17 500 00

I

1

Pomeroy

Ph '992 2t74

long hou~~w LISTING
Mt DDLF
home
largPORT
e b&lt;r' h,- n 14
C:: bedroom..
"' ltchen,
pl us a one be droom apa r:,-: .., ,

:
'

:

..MOTORS. INC.

C BRADFORD , Auctioneer
Complete Servt &lt;&gt;e
Phone 949 3821
Rac 1ne , Ohio
Crltt Bradford
5 1 ftc

- - -- -- - - -- - - I
1973- Zig Za{l sew ing ma ch ine

___

SMITH NELSON

REA SONABLE rates Ph 446
4782, Galt tpolls John Russell ,
Owner and Operator
5 12 lfc

NEW LISTING
NE ARLY NEW - Just 3 years

\
,
~

1

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

READY MIX

Real Estate For Sale

~·

1

Dick's
Hoard House

--~---------~2_6_!_fc

CL OSE OUT on New 1 l gza ~
m !!lch lnet For sew ing stralc t
fa bric s, buttonho les, fan e•
designs etc Paint sllghtl
blem is hed Cho ice of carry lnl
case or se w ing stand $.49 8
cuh or term s available Phon i

DELIVERY DRIVER
SALES
•

'

-------------A UT OMOBILE Insur ance been

-'

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

All work guaranteed

M OBI LE home repa ir , Elec:
tr!ca t plumbtn Q and hea ti ng
Phone 992 5858
7 ~~fc
HARRI"soN·s T v - ser 111""Ze and
serv ice calls Phone 992 2522
2 9 ttc

Henr y Bottl e S. M ountain eer L...--------~--'
ladv Ph one 992 71 38
8 16 6t (

.

FULL or PART TIME
No experience necessary,
must have car and willing to
team. Phone 10 a.m to 8
p.m" Tuesday lhru Friday.

Ph. 742-6271

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

PHONE 992-7368

BulldolJ!r Radlalor lo the

balh. Iron! and back porches

GO ING AT JU ST SIS,OOO 00
WE HAV E BU YE RS FOR
......
8 21 3tP ALL TYPES PR OPERT Y,
LI ST TODAY
1 SN A RE dr um for sa le, l tk e
HENRY E CLELAND,
new Call 992 2888
BROKER
8 19 4tc
992·22!9
It no answer 992 2568
COL LE CTORS Item s, John

Middleport
HI£ES CAPTURED
NEW YORK (UP! ) - A
swann of 70,000 bees menaced
residents of a Brooklyn apa rtment butlding Thursday mght,
hove rmg arolUid the fourth
floor
A ftr e truck and an expert
from the Brooklyn Botarucal
Gardens were summoned to
the scene and sprayed the bees
Wtth a tranquthzer Then the
expert, Dr Wilham Lester,
scooped up the stunned bees,
depostted them mto a trash
can, and look them to th e
botarucal gardens

7 ROOM house w1th ba t h In
Rutland a1r conditioned ,
carpeted gas furnace, dtsh
washer , doubl e oven, rang e,
double garage , 111rge carport.
4 acres cleared and lenced ,
small
barn
and
other
build1ngs Phon e 614 742 68J4
5 JO tfc

WIL KI NSON small engmesales E. MAIN~----...
an d semce, 820 3rd Slret. POMERo·'y

1970 BSA 250 Call after 2 p m
Ca ll 985 : P19

A wr se man kn ows wh~e· h

For Free Estimate

·:
'

I
I
~ ma nes t Heater Cor'~

In the ovary ~ 111 ee they are
D&lt;ir Dr Lamb _ Thero n• leuscd as they alw,tys have
are •everu l ~trls tn uu r office been 1nlo the free space
WhO are CUriOUS about certatn
ThiS ar tu a ll y IS som wh al
tss ues of btr th cont ro l We dtff rent th.tn the va sec tomy
of( en' hear of wo men h .tv~n g tn the male )Y here there ts a
compl_llte hysterectcimtes tn· connecting tuhe between the
stead of tubal llga llons Thts body of th e l•st "·le to the
seems r.tther senseless to us prostate and potnl ol Ckil of
Why would th ey choose"a hys sperm cells Tymg off th e vas
tc rcctllmy over u tub.tl IJg,t does bloc k th e eniiSs lon of
tton'
sperm re lls bot tymg off the
When a woman h.ts her lub e tn a wom,tn does not
tubes l ied are th ere any std e block the emtss wn of ova
cfl ects' Wh at actu al ly hap
Not all doctors are wtllmg
pens'' Does th e ovary sto p to do tub al hgattons It Is
produ ctng eggs or does th e a~a m s l som e doc tor s re lilie pr~ve nt th e eggs from g10us code, and th e same can
reac h1n g the womb If th e be satd about some hospttals
eg~s ~re still prodUced does The only real way to ftnd out
thiS not cause som e damage •s to dtscuss 11 wtth your own
from tHe eggs bac ktng up tn doctor tf one has reaso n to
the \\ Qman s system
se nou sly constder such an
operalmn
How easy IS tt to obtam a
tubal llgatton &gt; Is 11 a matter
Dear Dr Lamb - Medtcalbe twe~p p~ lle nt and doctor, or ly spcakmg , what " moderate
are S&lt;tme hbspilals opposed to dnnkmg &gt; How many drmks a
•t'
da y'
Dear' Reader - Some wornDear Reader - A small
en have a hystere ctomy be- amount of liquor for a person
cause 1 th ev have oroblems , wtth underlymg bram damage
wtth lnetr uteru s, such as a can cause uncontrollabl e
tumor, or excesSi ve bleedm~ rages or abnormal behav10r
Thts of course also results tn In a sever e case ol ul cers •t
thetr bemg stenle The body may cause bleedmg Even tn a
of th e uteru s and the ce rvtK healthy person , the accumu ·
are frequent sties of cancer '" Ia ted affects can cause hver
the femal e The complete damage , bratn damage and
removal of th e uterus and other medtcal problems
cervtx eltmtnates the likeli
hood of thts problem m the
No one should form a habit
futur e Ty1ng th e tub es docs of hav1ng even one drink a
not
day and tl s tnadvtsabl e to
drtnk more !han four drtnk s
When the tubes are \ted lhts for any occasiOn These should
literall y removes the abthly be drunk no more raptdly than
of the ova to pass down the one drtnk per hour and you
tube tnlo th e uterus for tm should watt at least an hour
pl anta'twn and pregnancy after the last dnnk before
Thts has no elfect whatsoever dnvtng Drtnks should be hm
on the ovanes The ovanes 1ted to one Jigger ol whtskey
are anatomtcally separated or a stmtlar beverage m mak
from the mouth or openmg of mg a cocktail. or one bottle of
the tubes The egg ts released beer or a half a glass of
by the ovary pa sses a very wme

I By Lawrence E Lamb. MD.

Fr om the larae st

th

I I

\
1~

Healing
A1r Cond
Qr fnq eratton
Plumbtng
Elec lr tCdl Appthtm,.\!:. Auto
Alf Cond
Res td ential or
Commer cial

.t huul 11 11
t iiH "'''U I Wil.,. •..n
tml tl tnht lu r
'ill I wan t Jr,
lw lm (tl .uHIIIkt d ·

Ill lfl p! u Vt d ul ll lV ~tiHI~
" ll h luhn Ph ll lq ni &lt;.V(' n
l hou~ ll li 1•

I

Open ITII S
Monday thru Salurd•Y
606 E Main, Pomeroy, 0

215 N. Second
Phone 992-3509
24 Hour S~ rvic e

LARGE , conventent build ing
lots at Rock Spnngs Area
restncted for houses only
Tuppers Plam s &amp; Chester
water a¥atlabl e Call or see
Bill Witte, 992 2789
7 24 tfc

lAND
REALTY

B 21 6t c

For The

Hill ltvtng r oom. k•t chen,
bath and uttltty room , ex tra
large tot over I acr e Ha s.
dr1¥eway
$13,00()
Ca ll
Sunday aner 12 noon
on
weekdays after 5 p m , 992
3247
8 S lf c

BEAUTIFUL Wainut Stereo ra dto a track tape com
blnat !on . am fm rl!ldto , 4
speaker
sound
system
Balance $105 49 or use our
budg et terms Ca l l 1192 3965 ~~~--.,1111!~'!!!'!
_________ !_ 22 lfc I 608

Carriers Wanted
a steak

Spouting ,
Ro oftng ,
Porch Repatr, Com
plete
Home
Remodeling .

.....

Sale

P S diesel S1 ,300 Coli 843
245 1

An old-t tmer ca n remember

CONSTRUCTION

- -- --------- -3 BEDROOM house on Lincoln

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

WORLD ALMANAC ___________ _
By 1'1111. PASTORE r

8 22 Jlc

Co mpl et e mobtl e ho me
se n1 ce plu s glgant1 c
d1 splay ol mobtl e hom es
alw ay s ava il able at

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

HO US E K EEPE R to l1ve 1n,
d rt ¥e car , no c tg a r ette
sm oki ng Phone 992 2936

3 bedroo m,

Air Conditioners
Awnings
Underpmnlng

8 19 6tp

__ ____________

8 22 tfc

I

P AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR "

Real Estate For Sile

Mobtle Homes For Sale

I

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

10 Oailv. 8 liSa I

hul l ilt '-&gt;IJIIhu ..,,ud nu lh;~t
' '" "'''" luo V.t II t t~ l .thh , hf'£1

h. t VI Wrl l l t ll l l r 11hh• th1ng ~

lwru111 .llltl I nt Vt r wrll

vs. tied tubes

I

Moll Amtrlun Ctr•
- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

In the R H Rawlings Sons
Bulldmg
Middlepor t , 0

PRICE

AND 4 ROOM fur nished and
O' DELL WHEEL Alignment
unfurnished
apartments
locat ed al Crossroads , Rl 124,
Phone 992 5-434
ba c k to work Complete
now
4 12 t f c 83 ACRE FA RM , ga s water , 6
front end ser¥ 1ce tun e up and
room hou se tn Langs v111 e
bra k e
serv ic e
Wheels
area Phone 992 3530 or 7-4 2
BEDROOM farm house, 3
balanced
electronically
All
6675
quarter mtle f!.Orlhe! ~ t Of
work guaranteed Rea sonable
B
19
IOtp
De)(ter . Grass Run S7S cer
rate s Phone 7~2 3232
month
2 18 tfc
8 22 41p BRICK hOme, 4 bedroom s,
baths, basem ent , fireplace RON-SHEPA RD ,-Fioo ~-Wall
Low thirt tes Pomeroy Write
Remodeling Ceramtc til e
MOBILE home space
tn
J E Bayltss , 310 W High Sf 1
Syracuse Phone 992 5858
bath s eox 280 , Ru t land 742
Cr idersv il le, Oh10 -45806
6 21 lfc
817 6tp
3664
6 26 If&lt;

2 30tp

Help Wanted

MATERIALS CO
Muon, W Va.

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

3 n tfc

FE MAL E h el p wa nte d f or 3
Gl!l ul's Sha ke Hav en , Chester ,
Oh1o Referen ce prefer red 18
years or over
lnqu1re an
per son , no phone cal ls
8 22 -4t c ,

Spec ta ts dur 1ng Augu st are
Ko nce n tree, M o 1st K ate, SOMEONE to wallpaper about 4
NO 94.19 73
Kl
ea n smg Kr eam , One Day
ro oms 1 !1ve tn Harrl sonvtll e
An Ordm ance to H tre spec 1al
Sac het &amp; other s Pho ne Helen
area w rt te and state you r
crafts
Jane Brown 992 5113
pn ce and when you could
Be It ordatn ed by the Counc tl
B 2 tfc
come Mr s Raymon d Myers .
of the V tllag e of M tdd leport as
Rt 4 Pomeroy
follow s
8 21 3tc
Sec I That th e wages of WILL gtve awa y for goo d home
In the country fu l l blooded
Carp e nt e r s
Brt c kl ayers ,
Ge r ma n Pol iCe Dog 3 yea r s MA N - for reta il stor e wt th
Plumbers or any ot her spec tat
old gentle W1th ch tld ren
sa les ex per tence t nq u~re at
csrft sha ll be at a r ate not to
Reason for gt¥ tng away - dog
Ingels Fur ntlur e M tdd teporl
exceed the Local Wa g e Scate
has to be tied a nd would li ke
No age it ml t
Sec 1I That thi s Or d inance
to run loose Phone 992 3359
8 21 6t c
shell be r etroactl¥ e to July 15
8 17 Ole
1973
~------ ----CENTR AL DIV IS ION CON
Sec Ill Th ts th1S Or d mance --I GS SENI OR S Ma ke your
SO LIDATION COAL COM
ls hereby determ.med to be an ME
appo 1n tment now to have your
PA NY lmmedJa t e opentng s
emergency m easur e necessar y
SENIOR PORT RAI T taken
ar e a¥atlabte In th e fotlow1n g
for th e tmmed late pre se r va11on
D ate s fo r talt.t n g M E I GS
po sttto ns
Ma in t en an ce
of the pea ce, health saf ety and
SE NI ORS are Aug 22 23 24
F o r eman ( und ergro und )
general
we l far e
of
t he
and 25 atrd Sept I Ta ke
Assi stant Mine Fo r e man
Inhabitan t s of th e Vill ag e an d
advan ta ge of Specta l Sen tor
( und e r gr o u nd )
Sec t1on
for: the r eason tha t 1t tS
Prtces for these days o nly
F oreman , Surf ace M ine
necessar y thaf th1 s leg lSlat lon
Call GROVER S STUDIO
For ema n ,
Rec t amat ton
becom e 1m med1at ely effech¥e
M tddl eport , Oh io Phone 992
For eman Per son s apptymg
Se c I V Thts Or dm ance shall
24 75
should hold valtd toreman
take etfec l and be tn force fr om
....__
8 1 22 1C
certtftcatton pap er s (OhiO) or
and &amp;ft er Jul y 15, 1973
halJ e suff lctent expen ence to
Pa ssed th e lJth da y of Aug ust
YARD Sale Thur sday , Frtda y
apply lor Sta te exam mat 1on
1973
and Satur day , 10 am f tll
Salar y Commen sur ate wtth
da r k
Rees r es1 dence, 3r d
Ex p er t ence
E xcel l e n t
Attest Gene Gr at e
Str ee L
Rac me
Ant i Que
Benefll s TO APPL Y Wr tt e
Cl er k
dishes, bmg and gronda ht
or
Pho n e
Per sonne l
Davtd W Ohl i ng er
Royal c openhagen coll ector s
Dep art ment
Ce nl r at
Pr estdent of Co uncil
Cam br 1dge
p lat es
0 1v tslon , Consol1dat1on Coal
de pr ess ton , and R F Prvsst a
Com pan y Cad tz. Oh to 43907
IBI 22, /9. 7tc
Bnca br ac etc Old boo ks,
Teleph one 614 942 4512 AN
bo ttle s, lant ern s, andtrons
EQ U AL
OP P O R TUN I TY
new sch oo l clot hes , m&lt;my
EM PLOYER
other 1t em s fo r ever yone at
B 21 tfc
yard sale pr tces
~ ......
8 19 6tc CLEANIN G lady to w ork once
e¥er y 2 w eeks Ca ll 992 3686
FACTS
8 21 3tc

BARBS

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

CANNING
Tomatoe s
cu c umber s, mango e s, and
ROOMS furn ished apt R tght
cantalopes
Gera l dtn e
!n town Call 99 2 3658
Cl el and , Ra c tn e
8 16 6tc
7 31 lfc

o1

8•

m 5!54

,_~------

PRIVATE meeting room for
any organtzatlon . phone 992

ORDINANCE

..,.

_____

M•y

Cal l 992 3645

HOGG &amp; ZIJSPAN

I
I

Pomeroy Recovery . 62 2 E

99 2 755 4
8 16 6tc
.......
NO 1 Co pper, 60c , Ra diators ,....
30c , br ~n . 20c . ball er les , 90c BRU SH HOG S 4x5 It phone
each, clea n dr y Gi n sen g
992 5858
r o o ts , $~0 a lb Ye llow r oot. $.4,
715tfc
apple, SOc per lb M A
H al , R:eedS¥11te Ca ll 378 1973 14K7 0 M OBILE ho m e
61 49
w ashe r a nd dry~r , d i sh
7 31 ftc
wa sher sta in less steel sink .
o.a r bage d is posa l , eye l evel
WA N TE D
fO il
1!1 UCI 10n ,
ov en ra nge. dacron pol yeste r
househ ol d good ~ Tools most
ca rp et, large lot Ph one 742
en yth lno of valu e Will bu y or
3083
se ll on commiss ion WHI haul
7 18 tf
Call 99 2 335 .4 or 99 1 27 92
1 25 tfc
Hayman 's
G RO CER Y bu siness for sa te
Building for sale or lease
OL D furnltur~. oa k t a bl es,
Phon
e 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
cl ocks, Ice boxes brass beds,
to 10 p m for appo intm ent
dts he s
or
compl e t e
3 20 tf~
hou seholds Wr i te M
D
Mtller , Rt • · Pom er oy, Oh to, - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - - call 992 6271
REDU CE excess llt,lid s wit W
5 13 lfc
Fl utdex - Lose wei ght w it h
De x A Dtel
ca p sul es
at
Nel son Drug s
8 20 3tp
TW O tra iler lots tn M iddl epor t
11:2 dup lex In Br a db uy, phone EX C ELSIOR Salt Wor k s, E
Ma in Sl , Pom ero y A ll kinds
before 6 p m 992 5693
of salt water pe l lets wa t er
8 20 Stp
nugg e-ts, blo ck sail and own
Oh to Rtver Salt Phon e 99 2
ROOM S by the w eek , S18 up
3891
M eigs tnn , Pomer oy
6 5 tfc
1 12 ttc

CH E VROLET tru ck 131fl
ME IG S Coun ty n at 1ve wants 1969
f t dump body cheMe r axle
ac r ea ge for
re t tr eme nt
$4500 00 Phone 992 5951
Build ings not 1m por taht Send
8 16 6tp
tocar iOn and pr ice to Bo x
M 1n care of th e Oatly Sen
t net, Pomeroy , Oh to
8 22 6t c
1968 M ERCU Y Co m et 6 cyl
aut om atiC fo r sa l e or w tl l
t r ad e fo r p 1ck up
tl o yd
PARKVIEW Kenne ls Pood l es,
Johnson R I 68 I Tuooer s
I toy ma te and 1 fema le
Plams
8 22 3tp
Phone 99 2 54-4 3
7 15 ftc
~--~~

L------:--:--:-~

From rock to nches?
On et1mc M ama
Mtchelle Phtll tps
kn o w s exac tly wh al
she wan ls out of
Hollywood

I

On

II Right

Bullllo Your '$poc o
Dtllvertd to Job Silo

- . - - - - - - - - - - -- NEW 2 piece Early Am eri can
COR N ER c upboar d s, wall
liv ing room sulle In 100 pet

Pets For Sale

Your R1ght to Know

wt will

SHOWBEAT

I
I

·5~5

Ph one 991 2181

8 IS 91p

Auto Sales

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

Strut

Oh io, 43935 or ca ll 1 &lt;18 4 4440

It Mu!lt

Be Righi

POM EROY
Jac k W Carsev. Mg r

Mason , W Viii

OPEN EVES. 8:00 P"M
POMEROY, OHIO

nv

WOOD TRUSSES

I

EXPERT .
Wheel Alignment

Sl)tclt llst
Wheel
Alignment

ASK US ABOUT
PAE. FA8AICATED

.

~

l

Hysterectomy

~

bo-vs' regular jean s: &amp; c asual
1eans Good colors All sizes.

dt:t:Fhides dayold , pa ylno S7
Phone 773 S600, Grove r C

Motor Co.

Wanted

BIG YANK
SLACKS
50% OFF SALE

[DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Business Services

Bock to SchooJS•t•t

Men's, women's, girls' &amp;

Wanted To Buy

1139!

v

ltc
8 22

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

4 door
B au tom 21t1c power steering r ad io. good t trcs,
blue t 1ntsh spotl ess tntenor

8 30 a m fo 5 00 p m Daily
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

------------ -PUBLIC NOTICES

woods. 992 3-i89.

12195

PLYMO UTH FURY Ill

~ge

locate a (:aU:
~ItCh wit h Ihe lnllii!I IS. M ML F P on b ecll. llU Phon e
r s.

Flrt&gt;btrd Esprll. !oct~ I I owne r ca r ' 350A~ 8F~gm~ rrr:~
s:teenng &amp; autom a tic 11 ansmlsslon
ra 1
new whil e lettered ltr es 307 V 8, r C',' d lo, clean interior A
sharp one

O F FI CE H OURS

WE 0 ~ rKE to thank th g1rl s Of
X I Gamma Mo Sor or tt y an d
th eir hu sban ds fo r thet r f 1ne
coop er at 1on and hard wok at
th e M e1g s County Fa ir Thank.
yo u Te~ean n a and Judy
8 22 ltp

ears ot

12095

1970 PONTIAC

You C80

help 3 former residen t past 92

Coupe I owner car less than 33 000 mi les . brown trmsh
wi1h matchmg vmy l r oof, and vinyl Int erior , 302 V 8
engme standa rd transrmsslon, power steenng and
brakes, rf'dl o, r e ~ l l y sharp

Charg e per

Card of Thanks

OF
QUALITY

YOU C:A N WI N :S.IUU

Pomeroy
Motor Co.-

1971 FORDTOR INO SOO

BLI ND AOS

Additional 2Sc
Ad¥ ert 1sement

2 SIGNS

Lost

...

WAN T ADS

For Sale

'I Ill' Dnlly Sent ltlt&gt;l, Mld&lt;Urpori -P(n ll~l oy. U , Au~ . 22, llli.l

•

•

J 'L ABNER

ALLEY OOP
BUT DON'T

~00

UNDERSTAND"
THE. RI£AL
ZACK IS 1\
i"£AL APE "

I '~

GRATEFUL
!'OR ~001'&gt;.

COMP&lt;'.N'I " •

BARNEY

1
1
1

I

l------------------------J
Mall to Barr-C1rcle Development, Inc.
750 First Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Or for mote information call collect 446-3746.

.

J&gt;J,I'JASANT VAI.LEY
DlSCHAitGES
Carl
Ralrden, Hartford; Tholnton
Wood, Dun·ull J clfetles, Point
Pleasant, lvlt!. Kelsey Henry,
Golllpolls Ferry ; Mrs Wendell
Houck, Crown City , Mrs.
Ashabello Devault , Maaon t
Mrs
George
Johnson,
do ughtcr, MallOIT : Eva Duncun, 1r&gt;olnl pleasant; Eulah ·
I.ogg, Roucrtsburg, and Karen
"r~· G8111f111llft.
,

ELVINEY WUZ CLEANIN'
OUT HER ATTIC AN 6HE
GIVE Me THIS OLD
PlASTICAL BACK
SCRATCHER

'IE CAN TROT
RIGHT BACKOVER
'fONDER AN ,
GIVE IT 8A CI&lt;

' SCRf\TCHIN'
M'l
WIFNO
SECOND HAND HAND

M I AL'$0 DON'T THINK &lt;{Ot)
SHOULD GET '&gt;OMADAT ME
AFTE~ AlL, I'M :?TILL \'OUR
MA5TER . .\'OU'RE !tW COB

J~T REMEI.\6&lt; ~, ONE LlntE

PHONECALL AN DI COULD
HAVE 'IOU5ENHI6HT MCK
WHERE ~OU CAME FROM!

(

.

')

I..OOKi

�19

18

The Dally Senllnrl , Mtddlrporl-l'onwroy 0 , 1lng 22 1'171

•

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
IN F O~ MAT I ON

• DEA DLINES

5 P M .. Oa y Bef or t! Publ!ca l tM
Monda y Oeadt 1ne 9 a m

C:ance ll a l ton

Corr t'cl ic ns

WHl b e accepted unt d 9 a m for
Day of PvbtlcattOn '
R E GUL AT IONS

The P ublish e r reserv es t he
r ight to cd•l or re Ject a ny a d s
deemed
ob jec t• onal
The
publisher w tlf not be responsibl e

lor more fhBn one mc or r ect
ln5ert ion
RATES
Fo r Wan I Ad ScrV IC C
5 cents pe1 Word one msert Ion
Mm lm um Cha rg e 75c:
1' cant s per worct thr ee
consecu t i ve m• erl lons
18 ce nts per word StJ: con
secu !+ ve mscrt l on~
25 Per Cen t Dtscount on paiU
lldSMd a d s pa td w1lhln 10 day s
CA RD O F T HAN kS
&amp; OBITU ARY"
51 iO for 50 wor d m ln tmum
Ea ch add1t1 onaJ word 2c

@)
'

1970

Pom~roy

Roush , Pomerov

and tt e n l or med ol t he fun c
f 1on s ol your governm ent are
err bod1 ed 1n pu blic nolt ces II\
that se lf govern m ent charges
at l Cll tze ns to be 1nformed
tht s newspaper ur ges every
clt 1ze n to r ea d and stu dy t hese
noti ces We str ong ly ad vtse
those c 1t dens seek tng fu rther
mform at ton to excr c tse t he tr
r ig ht ol access to pu bl tc
r ecord s and publ1c m eetmgs

ORDINANCE
NO 998 73

...... --~------

Notice
YA RD Sa l e Wednesday , Thvrs
day A ugust 22 an d 23 County
Rd 5 Bra dbur y Watc h fo r
stg ns
8 22 2tc

-----------YAR D Sa le at restence of M r s

Ro b ert je ff er s , Rt
124
Syr acuse Aug 22. 23 and
2olth Sta rt mg at 10 a m Good
se l ect 1o n of c l ot h i n g and
d1shes Phone 99 2 3525
8 22 3tc

An Ordmance to v acate the
al ley extending from M ul ber ry YAR D Sal e, Fr 1ay August 24
Avenue to Ash Stree t between
Ra1n or Shm e 10 a m 387
Lots 89 and 77 on th e Norlh , an d
So uth Fourth Str eet M td d le
Lots 80 and 86 on the South
po rt
8 22 21 p
Be it ordatned by t he Coun c1 1
of the V tllage of Middleport as YARD Sal e Wedn esda y thr u
follows
Fr tday , at 838 South Second
Sec I That the alley ex.tend
Stree t , Mtdd le port
Old
lng from Mulberry Avenue on
dts hes, pott ery , stone tars old
the North to Ash Street on t he
r ecords old p:1ctu res and lots
South, and ly ing between Lot s
m sc
89 and 77 on the North and Lots
8 21 3tp
86 11nd 80 on the Soutp , be
vacated
ST E R you r own fur
Sec I I Thts Ord inan ce shall UPHOL
nttur
e
We have all th e sup
take effect and be tn for ce from
plies you wtl l need fab rrc s
and after August 13 1973
foa m f or cush 1ons and pad
Passed on th e llth da y of
dtng
We cut foam to an y s1 ze
August 1973
or shap e Sw 1vet bases cotton
burlap l eg s zipper , welt co rd ,
Attest Gen e Gra te
we
bbtng da cr on , cht p board
Cler k
plus man y other tte ms and
Dav1d W Oh ltnger
li¥lng r oom su 1tes at tow tow
Pres tdent of Council
pri ces Pomer oy Recov ery ,
622 E Ma tn P hone 992 75 54
18) 22 29 21C
7 19 30tc
---------~-----

KOSCOT KOSM ETICS

&amp;

WIGS

c upboa r ds. c he5 ts , old guM,
(lny condi t io n Also bl ue
d ecorated stonewMe Wr jte
p o Box •~ . Marti n s bu rg ,

ny lon pr1nt ma ter ia l with
wood tr i m Foam rever $l bl e
cus h ions Th is week only
Sl 89 95 c Uh an d c arr y

aft er 7 p m

M ain Stree t , Pomeroy Phone

-----------~!_~tc

--------------For Sale or Trade

For Rent

Wanted To Do
BA BYSIT TIN G m my home , 630
Pl um Street, Mon day t hrough
Friday Mtd dle por t Oh to
ac ro ss fr om C1t y Park In
tr ailer
B 22 31p

3975

e Aa YSITTER wanted for .t v~
days w ee k , pref er o¥er 21

--........
'

.,
.J

'

.,..
.....

..··.
&lt;•

..

8 22 31C

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

M AL E or fema le desk c lerk ,
musl be able to ltve m Appl y
1n person at th e Ohto Hotel
M iddleport
B22 6tc
--------------

Employment Wanted
EXPERIENCED patnter , Ill
tertor and e)(terior Call Don
van Meter 985 3951
8

l -4 x. 65 TRAILER 2 bedroom
very good cond it iO Phone 77 3

5805

1960 VtNDALE

$1,995 992 7081

f-. E SPON SIBLE w oman to
babySit In Rutland from 11 30
unlit 4 30, four days a week , I
ch tl d In ktn dergart en an d 1 tn
sch oo l C!l l 742 4426 after 6

pm

..

With hts gtrl whtle on the road
IS a buss dnvcr

F E M A LE to work as r ecep
t tont st
cler k and gen era l
dulte s of small b us tness
+ +
Some t yp ing M ust have good
Ch1 ck en 1n a bank vault h,1s
pe r son ality
Ex c ellent
rcplat ed c ht ~ k e n m a baskeL
work ing condi t ions 35 hours
per wee k
Send comp l ete
+ + +
re su m e to Bo x 7'2 9 A co The
Dally Se nt i n e l , Po m er oy
OhiO
8 l7 6t c

+

:·,.
,.
I
I

•
;;

Pr e t ze l s were or1 g1nated
by a mo nk in nor the1n Ita ly

'·

around 610 A D The World

••

~:

Alm anac says

1'he ftr s t

:
•

pretzels were made of dough
baked tn to little ftgu tes rep
resent tn g cht ldren with
arm s folded tn prayer Th e
monk called them preltola
,.. wht ch IS Lal tn for li ttl e
!l re~ a rd and gav e th em to
' · chi ldre n who learn ed thc11
""' catechtsm
CoM r~ 11

C

~

~

NewsiJnp~•

I

1

-.! I
.,. I

••

19 J

EnrQrf)r

J~ A~s"

---- ----------i

; .l
::i.\1

You' I I

tract It down

raster
With a
WANT AD
much

We,talk to you

like ~ person.
'

1

I
1
I
t

I
i
l---------------~

.,

8 21 3tc

A young ma n w ho smooc hes

••

;

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd
423 7521
BELPRE, 0
CA SH pa 1d for all makes and
models of mob t le homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
413tfc

For

WMP0/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

+ + +

Sid e ha s br ead w a s on ce bu t -

Mtddleport Lawn mower aod
c ha1n saw repa tr Free pickup
and dell¥ery Phone 992 3092
A, tso Bng gs and Str atton and
Tec um seh part s
a 22 30tc

KNAPP shoes new fall and
w1nter sty les now out Ca ll

992 5324

814 tfc

-------------Invest ment Property for sate

LARGE , br1ck build ing on Main
Street, Pomeroy Conta ins 4
rentals , offer s appro)( lmatety
10 to 12 pet return on 1n
vestment Catt 992 2769

8 19 6(c

------------PON Y trombone , fr ee mitt en
paw k ittens, one St am ese cat
~ all

992 741 7

8 21 Jto

------------------1963 Mod el 971 3 plower trac tor ,
8 21 6tp

..7 000 wringer washer , wooden
table and c ha i r , Honda
m olorb tke , 65 mod el Home
llghl Cha i n saw Cart Dav id
Ha ggy 742 3303

tered on
N(W:)PAPf 'l

ENrEr1PR15E ASS"l

Dally Sentinel

--------------PAGEVI L LE , Oh tO Includes
house , 4 r oom s down , 1 up.
garage, workshop and ap
prox1mately 1112 acres Wtth
young orchard 1 block east of
Rt 692, S10 ,500 Information
at house
8 12 lfc

FAMILY HOME
2 story fram e 6 bedroom s
w1th larg e c losets 4112 balhs
Llvtng r oom 15 K3 1 wtth

Large TV room

l~repl ace

Utt1 1ty room Full basement
Hot wat er heat Large 2 ca r
garag e wtth workshop and
room over Large lot wlfh
lots of shr ubs Close to
shopp1ng

RACINE RURAL
35 wooded acre s fron tage on

both sides of lhe road, pond"
about 5 acres level an ex

cellenl buy SS.SOO00
GENUINE SACRIFICE
3 bedroom s. balh, ut ility
" "o m , lara r&gt; rP cre at 1on
room, for ced atr f ur,..~ c~&gt;
por ch es, cellar wtth storage

over. larg e lot, SB 500 00

33 ACRES

3 mtles out of Rutlan d About
10 tor c ult avat lon , th e
bala nce as pastur e Hom e

had 3 bedrooms TV roo m.
ni ce kitch en, for ced air heat ,
bath ,
ce llar ,
por c hes

_____ _________ _

In

can ce ll ed '
L os t
your
oper ator 's license Call 992

7428

6 15 lfc
WI L L T RIM or cu t trees ,
shrubbery Also patnt roofs
Phone 949 32 21 or 742 4441
7 18 30tc
----~- -

ELNA and White Se wing
Machtnes
Se rvtc e on all
makes Reasonab le ra tes
Th e Se w tn g Center M id
dl eport , Oh io

HOU SE for sale - Furn tsh ed
Now ren ted for SlOO month 1
acre land , shade tree s
rea sonable Call 992 72 25

8 21 Sic

992 298•

t3.57 PER HOUR
.

old A mce 2 bedroom frame
hom e, bath , convenient kttchen

w1th cook and bake unlls
Dtntng room, gas for ced atr
furna ce 1 car garage an large

lot at Darw1n
Asking
$16,000 00
NEW LISTING
BURLINGHAM - 3 bedroom
ho me, all on one floor Garag e
and large lot for mob1le hom e
or new house T P water
av atlabte soon Just SS 000 00

POMEROY
MULBERRY AVE

4

b edr oom s , bath new ga s
furnace , basement, and back

porch S10 500 00
SMALL FARM
30 ACRES - On Route 33
North 2 bedroom home, new
Henho use , corncrib, barn and
all mmer als Want $15, 000 00

NEW HOME
IN THE COUNTRY - 3
bedrooms, nice bath and kit
chen with electr ic range On
Oh 10 Power Full base ment

with garage Ask&gt;ng $20,000 Oil
, NEW HOME
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms,
l 'h baths, nice kllchen w1lh
S S cook and bake unlls
Carpeted Full basemenl w1th
garage Ask1ng $19.500 Oil
NEW LISTING
POMEROY
BuS&lt;ness
ve nt ur e for good 1ndustnous
person who ts willing to put In

DON T WASTE YOUR TIME
AND MONEY, LOOKING, OR
TRYING TO SE LL, OR TO
BUY SEE US, WE WILL DO
THE JOB PROFE SS IONALLY
AND SAV 6 YOU ALL TH E
TROUBL E

MIVtlt

Halo of Htll
orvtrt
Surround clothes
with gentl e, ev en
~ e at No hot spots
no overdry ln g
Pin e Mesh Lin t
F ilter
We Spect•flltln
1

138 SO or pay S5 p&amp;r month
Call 992 5331
..._
6 10 Jfc~

446-0677
......

____________

Swee pe rs

2984
____________
8_
20 6tc

~

Movtat

8 20 6tc

de lu xe model , comptete with
ell c1e"n1ng attachment s and
uses peper bags Slightly used
bu t c leans 1nd lOOKS li Ke new
Wi ll .se ll tor S37 25 u ch , or
terms &lt;I! Vei lable Phone 9?2

Big Ctp•clty

AutOMitiCI
2 speed operaf.!on
CJlo lce of wale
f'em p s
Auto
wat e r
!ev e
contro l
L in t
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator
Perlni-Prei•

Th is ma chine . darns 1 em
broiders, overcasts , button
holu
All
withou t
at .
ta chments Pay ba lance of

ELEC TROLU X

:,
'

"STRIPPERS"
We Slrlp Paint, Varnishes.
Elc from Furnllure
Anltques-Modern.Melals

992 ·2094
606 E. M~'" Pomero_y

OFFICE SUPPLIES

No rul('lous iyes or cau stics
used

;~nd

Ptck.Up Service
Avatlable
We Buy &amp; Sell Antiques
Dtck Seyler.Owner
Kerr Sl
Pomeroy, 0
Phone 992·2798

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
Floor Di~p!a'i·

ROOFING
Siding
Spouting
Remodeling
Plumbing
Heating. Complete
Building. Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding.

ALL WEATHER
992-2550,

Short dlStance

Middleport, 0.

-

CON CRETE

EXCAVATJN{j Dozers, large
and small
Backhoes and
de l t¥ered rtght to your
loaders on track and tires,
proJect Fast and ea sy Free
Dump tru c,k ~ Lo boy ser
esltma t es Phone 992 32 84
vi ce Sept tc tanks Installed
Go egietn Ready Mi x Co ,
George (91111 Pull ins, phone
Mlddleaort Ohio
992 2478 or 992 7402
6 30 tfc
2 9 tfc

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

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
CLEANED , REPAIRED
MILLER SANITATION,
STEWART, OHIO PH 662
3035
10. II&lt;
SEWING MACHINES Repair

EXCAVATING , dozer, loader
and backhoe work, septic
t11n k s i nstalled dump trucks
and lo boys for htre, will haut
f1tl dtrt, top so tl. ltm estone
and gravel, Cell Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089 ,
night phone 992 3525 or 992
2 11 tfc

8 10 10tc

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

RUTLAND
741 ·4211

MAYTAG

FURNITURE'R~~~.~::·'
Arnold Grata.

Rutland

••

The Shop

!

l
'

"custom meat cutting"
Pleasant Rtdge Road
POMEROY, OHIO

(
/

,

~~.; -~~ "\

•

l'fllity

:

k' ,..•• "\ how to cui up.

-

1
1

l

I

·---CUT • WRAPPED • FROZEN

!
:
:
•

!

TO YOUR SPECIFICATION

jN EWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASS N I

Inc.

\o',oi nln&lt;)

I ll till

l ' dtH ollt

d

VCdJ s

h l'l Ill S (.•

Ju..

:
:

~ low ay~

_,

b . 11J ol S l li S('

uld

ill hu ·

bv THOMAS JOSEPH

John louk nw on tht roa d "'lth

h , l VI' d I!,IJUd II If ~I rc

She .rnf.J John go t rn ,rrr ll'tl
.rnd h.rd fl d;.~ ught c r - t hynnu

I

ACROSS
ll urt

42 Subse-

quently

6 Nogg1n
10 To n ~o n al

43 Pr1n l1 nJ:

SCfVI ( C

style

ty pe

Oathc1
13 nofu gc

DOWN

II

I Ji'orcst

IT tlis

14 WW II

c.onrcr
cnce sttc

sta r
2

15 Befort•

Amulet
talisman

Yttilerday 's Answe r
3 Be a
Chuw I ts 5 and- 16 BolJvHm
ex port
blah hc rc r
•,n• t1.1lr now
and th n were
1~ Sheep
(4 wd s)
dtv&lt;mcd l'hcy arc sttll goorl
ttck
4
She
9 "Great
26 Pioneer
lrt cnd s and Mtchcllc al so ts 19 Fmc
neve
r
had
Expect
ation
s"
28 Born
good fncnds wtth .John s pre
shiT
a
mother
hcrome
(Fr )
sent wr fc Gc nc vr cvc and
net
5
".Jaw
12"
Depress
30
Auste r~
liiC tr yo un~ son
21 "That smtth"
11 Octopus'
31 DtsFeeling'
S ll c had neve r sung unt tl
6 • Home.
flu td
charged
22
Thtckct
Sweet
20.
Loca
hhes
35
Conlohn l""cltcal ly forced he' lo
of bushes
Home '
23 Extmct
stru cted
JOin t 1c group It wa s he who
writer
Hawaiian
31.- ·
oga111 urged her to start wn t 23 Symhul uf
stubbor n
1 Doctors'
bird
whtlh1ng s&lt;Jng s She s sll ll both
ness
org
24. Appear
kens&lt;
wn tmg and smgmg
24 Throw
8 Butt 1n
25. Hal Foster's 39 Nlgertan
out
Acltng IS now her btg pa s
( 4 wdS)
pnnce
trlbesma11
s10 n but she has set herse lf 26 "Pn ncc
~r,~~~
~~~rnof
some li mt tat tons She says she
Dark·
nnl ) wan ts to play sym pathel
ness"
tc parts
21 Htblical n
travelers
'!'hat s bec ause I m senst
uvc about\\ hal people thtnk 28 Jules
Verne
of me ' she says Some of
character
the lady go ssi p co lumn tst s
29.Dulch dtsease
30 Detonate
( 2 wds )
32. Rl\ er

1pronounced

~

What makes Michelle act?
By DICk Kl emer
11 l&lt;'l&lt; me do som ellung 1\ l or .t long li m e m M CXIt o
HOLLYWOOD - I N"A I - lt! ts me m.a kr money 1l helps
I le t m n t hf•t ci ted wh e n s he
J ohn Dtlltn g&lt;!r s gtrl ftt cnd me becom e lnmou s - walh Y.tJ S l1v c nnd he r f.tth c r a
wa nts to be nch 1 m ta lk ing one " tone
rn r t t h.tn t m ~ann e r l e ft lh c
about Mt chell c Plu liip s who
Mt &lt; he lie savs she \\ J ilted l o ~t 1 lo r.u c for l11s two d.mghplays Dtllmger s gtrl fn cnd tn he dn ~H. I r e~ s a ll u l on ,g .tn d ICI s
the la l est IHOVIC Vt' r S IOil Of the onlv got St !I C trillkC d 1nlo
li e rotS I'd us all by tum ga ngs ter s hfc Dtlhnget
s an ~ an g wh e n sh e ma rned
se ll
she s(t\ ~
H e wa :s J
MtSs Phtlhps - ~.&lt;ho u s e d to J ohn Ph !ll tp s w ho W&lt;~ s mn sl l good Jathet li e taugh t me all
be one ot l he M.1mas ~and th e on cntcd
o~h o ut sex b \1 Ute tt mcl · wa s
Pct pas - as domg h e r l t r s t
12 li e taug ht me to be al ra td
\~ h(•n I "a s 11
she SiJ Vs
re.tl "' tmg JOb 111 Dtl linger
ul
dt ugs - I vc never t rt ed
1 br t nl\ g 11l l rt c nd Sue
!She dtd a brt of c.tmeo tn
Dennts Hopper s torge ttablc I von t h r~ t I d bc·a t h(' t to ~h e
I he L.t st Movt e but th.ll sc.: r c t•n I sti ll O\H hc t $20
hat dl y countsI She makes no bCt'd use she bl'rl l ITl(' by ,thoul
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
bon es about her 1 e ,l sn ns tor l l vc.1rs
one letter to each square, to
starlm g an ac lm g career

~&amp;~!1m®"

!'he

I m amb1ttous

t he bc(tu -

ltlu l Mtchelle says
to

I d ltkc

be r tc h I ltk e a c ttn g be
ktiJS SCVCI :.1! b trds -

CCJ USe I t

lll Cl Jn 1 eJ ~o n ~ hr l u ~ l

::.::t::::;c

(Sp )

33. VIet-

form four ordmary word s.

namese
holiday
34 Cratchil's
son
36, Measure
J8 Ge ne

th&lt; I&gt;CI " '" lii &lt;l l she d1d nolh-

tn g c~b n ut he r £Jl l tn g t.l re(t m
S h ~; s.l\ ~ she \\a s to o sin ~1t
t he 11m e Bcs1d es sh e l1vcd

T ~e rn ey

'i Wl l(j

Word was rece1ved here
.Tuesday morning from Toledo
of the death of Charles
of
Htlewick,
formerly
Pomeroy
Survivors mclude hts wife,
Ahce, and two stepsons He
was preceded m death by hts
parents, first w1fe Carne
Brown HIIewtck, one brother.
and one stsler He served hts
country 10 World Warl and will
be remembered by many
relatives and fnends m this
area havmg hved on Condor
•
•

St many years
Funeral Sef\1CeS Will be held
Thursday at I 30 p m at the
Day-Edwat ds Funeral Home,
Toledo
1

I II &lt;.;f./'

NOW ONE GALLON
Mrs Margaret Eskew of
Pomeroy became a gallon
blood donor when the
t\men can Red Cross Bloodmobile vtstted m Pomeroy,
Monday

mov1e

II

II

Charles Hilewick died in Toledo

!I

40 Stage
dJrccl!O n

41 Did

'"

0
n

TOO EiTUPID
10 HAVE THE
Rlle&gt;HT AN6l..E

Now arranre the circled letter&amp;

I:===I·~:::·I::=:=.::=:~=~U~::_~•::u::r;rested

to font) the aurprilt anawer, as

L_~lftt
.::::1=.:SIRSE
11 ==AHSWIII
=~
=----'I

PEOPlE Ut&lt;e

[

by the above c:artoon.

I X1 I I )

wron g

BAILY CRYPTO(jUOTE - Here's ho11 lo

CHAP~

BICOME FORKED

S Jwk e ~l'f!arl' Ul mtr&gt; II flb1mt

nolhmg! - MUCH ADO

it :

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELlOW
One letter Simply sta nds for an other In thiS sample A IS
used for
three L 's X for t he t v. a 0 s etc Smgle l elters,
Is

the

apostr ophes , t he l ength and f or mallon o r t he \\ords arc all
hmts E ach d av t he code l etters are dtffe rc nt

CRYPTOQUOTES

(An1wen tomorrow)

Jun1hle• HUMID

ll!ll k

H SO

ST BR O L H

GKP

KQ

TZZ

~L

HB U DF A HK
ZK K N
PV LU
E SOF
U KV ' B O F K H - Elli'.ZDT X Q O THSOB

~ ER

Dal'T MIND NOT

HELPING, SANOY,

Cross to Henry
Doerf~r
Jr • Patty Ann
Doerfer, % A , Salisbury
Leonard L Barber, Jr ,
Shtrley J Barber to DannyM.
Barber, V1ck1e L Barber, I
and H A , Ohve
Clarence
E
Fraley,
Jacquelme F Fraley to Herman Eugene Massey, Eva
Joyce
Massey, Parcel,
Columbia
Ralph E Barton , dec'd , to
Hazel R. Barton, Greta Mae
Donaldson, Larry E Barton,
Aff. Trans , Olive .
Larry E Barton, Carolyn K
Barton McDale to Lelta A
Spencer, Lots, Reedsville
Letta A Spencer to Larry E
Barton, Carolyn K. Barton,
Lots, Reedsville.
Dale Adams, Bonme Adams
to Joseph R Cremeans, Lela
Cremeans, 'h A , Ohve
Homer P Roush to Ira Eblm, NINNIE WINKLE
Hope Ebhn, 118 A., Syracuse"
~ IM TERmtY SORRY,
Phylt ls J Hennessy, AfMl&amp;&amp; WINKLE. HAL
7Rfi!D TO IMKE IT. ..
hdavlet, Pomeroy
6UT 1HeRE WAS 'THIS
Law!on P. Seyfnend, Bertha
ACCIDENr.".
M. Seyfriend to Robert E
Dmley ,1 Carolyn A Dalley,
Parcels, Rutland

Veterall8 Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Rob ert
Newell, Middleport , Granville
Wamsley, Middleport; Kenny
Lunsford, Pomeroy , Audrey
Arnold, Minersville; Helen
Swartz, Coolville ; Ruby
Eynon, Reedsville, Clarence
McDaniel, Rutland , Jeffrey
Collier, New Haven , "Jay
Marple, Bayard.
DISCHARGED - Leshe
Carr, •Randell Friend, James
Sullivan, Barbaro McMahon,
Alvado Halfhill , Roso Deem,
Waller Becker, George Clonch,
Edith McKenzie , Kathryn
Cremeans, ltoliot•l Newell

RIVERSIDE APARTMENTS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RENTAL SURVEY
{Filling out and returning the below survey
DOES NOT OBLIGATE YOU, but only expresses your interest In possibly renting an
apartment. Reduced rents are available II you
qualify on the bas1s of income.)

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

I·
I
I

MARRIED

I

st utt 1 r 11\1 (' 1 1t ~ llh u u"h J'm
w·ttrnJ,: ht•l tf •r .

~~~

I'HE BORN W SER

rM 1\FRAID~ IN

DIP IT lmR CXCU~ l:l """i

FACT. ..HIO.~He..

NEVER HADA
CMIINCE.

'ttl 11-IAT ~ a: lllliM
-e;~~ ~ ~ooR

·---------------9·92···33·7·4·--

I NAME
I
I PRESENT ADDRESS
I1 SINGLE
I NO. OF CHILDREN

ll.ml numt 1 liJ

W ,I S

IHrn v. hl'n I \\d s 17
I II• g.tvt• rn• snmc p&lt;~rlmg
ulvu1 whu.~ h I thmk wus pret·
t y goo &lt;.! M1&lt; ht• ll c he s.ud ,
lht•r(' Ml' two thm~s it wom un
h,rs to •I n - kN'!l c.:ll•,tn and

Halhe

HOME repair or remodeling
Reasonable rates 1st class
work Call Bob or Bill, 992

5968

p.; ,,

... h_., !l,,y..

'LONG AG litE'(
COM£ UP WITH

6 22 lfc

8 21 IOtp

1'h1ll tp "

... . , •

V. lun ' 'H.' v. '" t.Jsl tr1 DJI
hnJ.;I r ~ lw " uttt d tu u ~( ht r
1}1 ,jl(h n Tl olllll '
(: ll ltu ln

111 11T .1n d wu s u n1u :-. 11 ran II &lt;"
J.:oi VC• 111 1 In s bh• s!-i rn g wJu n

Transfers

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

NIEGLER Butldlng Supply for
bulldtng hou ses Cal l Cv
Nelgler, Racme, Oh to

,,, 111HII tp ...

Property

ag e near Crossroads on St
Rt 124 , atl mechantc:al work
mcludmg automatic trans DOZER and back hoe work ,
mlsstons Monday Friday ,
ponds and septic tanks, dit
chlng service , top soil, fill
8 30 a m to 5 p m Saturday
- 8 30 to 12 noon - unless by
d i rt.
limestone
B&amp;K
appointment Phone 992 5682
Es.cavatlng Phone 992 5367 or
or 992 7121
992 3861
9 1 lfc
7 25 30tc

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

the

•

FOR FREE estimates on
alum lnum siding
Storm
Doors and Windows, Car
ports, Marquees and Railing,
Phone
Charles
Llsle ,
Syracuse, Ohlo Cart Jacob
Sales Representative V V
Johnson and Son , Inc

-------------OPEN - Roger Hysell's Gar

In

Meigs

3 29 If&lt;

5232

literally

op en space and enters the
• mouth of the tube Thts means
~ after the tubes are \ted, ovula
RECEIVE APPLICATION
110n contmues as 11 dtd before
• The egg s, however cannot
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - The
pa ss down the lube s so they Federal
Commumcallons
are literally absorbed by the CommisSion satd today 11 had
body they are not blocked up
received an apphcat10n for a
:
construcllon permtt for a new
FM radio stat10n at Castalia,
'
Ohio, on 97 7 mhz from the
Chnsllan fa1th Broadcastmg,

service, all makes 992 22Si
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Sates and
Service We Sharpen Scissors

Dick Vaughan

rented, and large lol Want
only $17 500 00

I

1

Pomeroy

Ph '992 2t74

long hou~~w LISTING
Mt DDLF
home
largPORT
e b&lt;r' h,- n 14
C:: bedroom..
"' ltchen,
pl us a one be droom apa r:,-: .., ,

:
'

:

..MOTORS. INC.

C BRADFORD , Auctioneer
Complete Servt &lt;&gt;e
Phone 949 3821
Rac 1ne , Ohio
Crltt Bradford
5 1 ftc

- - -- -- - - -- - - I
1973- Zig Za{l sew ing ma ch ine

___

SMITH NELSON

REA SONABLE rates Ph 446
4782, Galt tpolls John Russell ,
Owner and Operator
5 12 lfc

NEW LISTING
NE ARLY NEW - Just 3 years

\
,
~

1

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

READY MIX

Real Estate For Sale

~·

1

Dick's
Hoard House

--~---------~2_6_!_fc

CL OSE OUT on New 1 l gza ~
m !!lch lnet For sew ing stralc t
fa bric s, buttonho les, fan e•
designs etc Paint sllghtl
blem is hed Cho ice of carry lnl
case or se w ing stand $.49 8
cuh or term s available Phon i

DELIVERY DRIVER
SALES
•

'

-------------A UT OMOBILE Insur ance been

-'

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

All work guaranteed

M OBI LE home repa ir , Elec:
tr!ca t plumbtn Q and hea ti ng
Phone 992 5858
7 ~~fc
HARRI"soN·s T v - ser 111""Ze and
serv ice calls Phone 992 2522
2 9 ttc

Henr y Bottl e S. M ountain eer L...--------~--'
ladv Ph one 992 71 38
8 16 6t (

.

FULL or PART TIME
No experience necessary,
must have car and willing to
team. Phone 10 a.m to 8
p.m" Tuesday lhru Friday.

Ph. 742-6271

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

PHONE 992-7368

BulldolJ!r Radlalor lo the

balh. Iron! and back porches

GO ING AT JU ST SIS,OOO 00
WE HAV E BU YE RS FOR
......
8 21 3tP ALL TYPES PR OPERT Y,
LI ST TODAY
1 SN A RE dr um for sa le, l tk e
HENRY E CLELAND,
new Call 992 2888
BROKER
8 19 4tc
992·22!9
It no answer 992 2568
COL LE CTORS Item s, John

Middleport
HI£ES CAPTURED
NEW YORK (UP! ) - A
swann of 70,000 bees menaced
residents of a Brooklyn apa rtment butlding Thursday mght,
hove rmg arolUid the fourth
floor
A ftr e truck and an expert
from the Brooklyn Botarucal
Gardens were summoned to
the scene and sprayed the bees
Wtth a tranquthzer Then the
expert, Dr Wilham Lester,
scooped up the stunned bees,
depostted them mto a trash
can, and look them to th e
botarucal gardens

7 ROOM house w1th ba t h In
Rutland a1r conditioned ,
carpeted gas furnace, dtsh
washer , doubl e oven, rang e,
double garage , 111rge carport.
4 acres cleared and lenced ,
small
barn
and
other
build1ngs Phon e 614 742 68J4
5 JO tfc

WIL KI NSON small engmesales E. MAIN~----...
an d semce, 820 3rd Slret. POMERo·'y

1970 BSA 250 Call after 2 p m
Ca ll 985 : P19

A wr se man kn ows wh~e· h

For Free Estimate

·:
'

I
I
~ ma nes t Heater Cor'~

In the ovary ~ 111 ee they are
D&lt;ir Dr Lamb _ Thero n• leuscd as they alw,tys have
are •everu l ~trls tn uu r office been 1nlo the free space
WhO are CUriOUS about certatn
ThiS ar tu a ll y IS som wh al
tss ues of btr th cont ro l We dtff rent th.tn the va sec tomy
of( en' hear of wo men h .tv~n g tn the male )Y here there ts a
compl_llte hysterectcimtes tn· connecting tuhe between the
stead of tubal llga llons Thts body of th e l•st "·le to the
seems r.tther senseless to us prostate and potnl ol Ckil of
Why would th ey choose"a hys sperm cells Tymg off th e vas
tc rcctllmy over u tub.tl IJg,t does bloc k th e eniiSs lon of
tton'
sperm re lls bot tymg off the
When a woman h.ts her lub e tn a wom,tn does not
tubes l ied are th ere any std e block the emtss wn of ova
cfl ects' Wh at actu al ly hap
Not all doctors are wtllmg
pens'' Does th e ovary sto p to do tub al hgattons It Is
produ ctng eggs or does th e a~a m s l som e doc tor s re lilie pr~ve nt th e eggs from g10us code, and th e same can
reac h1n g the womb If th e be satd about some hospttals
eg~s ~re still prodUced does The only real way to ftnd out
thiS not cause som e damage •s to dtscuss 11 wtth your own
from tHe eggs bac ktng up tn doctor tf one has reaso n to
the \\ Qman s system
se nou sly constder such an
operalmn
How easy IS tt to obtam a
tubal llgatton &gt; Is 11 a matter
Dear Dr Lamb - Medtcalbe twe~p p~ lle nt and doctor, or ly spcakmg , what " moderate
are S&lt;tme hbspilals opposed to dnnkmg &gt; How many drmks a
•t'
da y'
Dear' Reader - Some wornDear Reader - A small
en have a hystere ctomy be- amount of liquor for a person
cause 1 th ev have oroblems , wtth underlymg bram damage
wtth lnetr uteru s, such as a can cause uncontrollabl e
tumor, or excesSi ve bleedm~ rages or abnormal behav10r
Thts of course also results tn In a sever e case ol ul cers •t
thetr bemg stenle The body may cause bleedmg Even tn a
of th e uteru s and the ce rvtK healthy person , the accumu ·
are frequent sties of cancer '" Ia ted affects can cause hver
the femal e The complete damage , bratn damage and
removal of th e uterus and other medtcal problems
cervtx eltmtnates the likeli
hood of thts problem m the
No one should form a habit
futur e Ty1ng th e tub es docs of hav1ng even one drink a
not
day and tl s tnadvtsabl e to
drtnk more !han four drtnk s
When the tubes are \ted lhts for any occasiOn These should
literall y removes the abthly be drunk no more raptdly than
of the ova to pass down the one drtnk per hour and you
tube tnlo th e uterus for tm should watt at least an hour
pl anta'twn and pregnancy after the last dnnk before
Thts has no elfect whatsoever dnvtng Drtnks should be hm
on the ovanes The ovanes 1ted to one Jigger ol whtskey
are anatomtcally separated or a stmtlar beverage m mak
from the mouth or openmg of mg a cocktail. or one bottle of
the tubes The egg ts released beer or a half a glass of
by the ovary pa sses a very wme

I By Lawrence E Lamb. MD.

Fr om the larae st

th

I I

\
1~

Healing
A1r Cond
Qr fnq eratton
Plumbtng
Elec lr tCdl Appthtm,.\!:. Auto
Alf Cond
Res td ential or
Commer cial

.t huul 11 11
t iiH "'''U I Wil.,. •..n
tml tl tnht lu r
'ill I wan t Jr,
lw lm (tl .uHIIIkt d ·

Ill lfl p! u Vt d ul ll lV ~tiHI~
" ll h luhn Ph ll lq ni &lt;.V(' n
l hou~ ll li 1•

I

Open ITII S
Monday thru Salurd•Y
606 E Main, Pomeroy, 0

215 N. Second
Phone 992-3509
24 Hour S~ rvic e

LARGE , conventent build ing
lots at Rock Spnngs Area
restncted for houses only
Tuppers Plam s &amp; Chester
water a¥atlabl e Call or see
Bill Witte, 992 2789
7 24 tfc

lAND
REALTY

B 21 6t c

For The

Hill ltvtng r oom. k•t chen,
bath and uttltty room , ex tra
large tot over I acr e Ha s.
dr1¥eway
$13,00()
Ca ll
Sunday aner 12 noon
on
weekdays after 5 p m , 992
3247
8 S lf c

BEAUTIFUL Wainut Stereo ra dto a track tape com
blnat !on . am fm rl!ldto , 4
speaker
sound
system
Balance $105 49 or use our
budg et terms Ca l l 1192 3965 ~~~--.,1111!~'!!!'!
_________ !_ 22 lfc I 608

Carriers Wanted
a steak

Spouting ,
Ro oftng ,
Porch Repatr, Com
plete
Home
Remodeling .

.....

Sale

P S diesel S1 ,300 Coli 843
245 1

An old-t tmer ca n remember

CONSTRUCTION

- -- --------- -3 BEDROOM house on Lincoln

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

WORLD ALMANAC ___________ _
By 1'1111. PASTORE r

8 22 Jlc

Co mpl et e mobtl e ho me
se n1 ce plu s glgant1 c
d1 splay ol mobtl e hom es
alw ay s ava il able at

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

HO US E K EEPE R to l1ve 1n,
d rt ¥e car , no c tg a r ette
sm oki ng Phone 992 2936

3 bedroo m,

Air Conditioners
Awnings
Underpmnlng

8 19 6tp

__ ____________

8 22 tfc

I

P AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR "

Real Estate For Sile

Mobtle Homes For Sale

I

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

10 Oailv. 8 liSa I

hul l ilt '-&gt;IJIIhu ..,,ud nu lh;~t
' '" "'''" luo V.t II t t~ l .thh , hf'£1

h. t VI Wrl l l t ll l l r 11hh• th1ng ~

lwru111 .llltl I nt Vt r wrll

vs. tied tubes

I

Moll Amtrlun Ctr•
- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

In the R H Rawlings Sons
Bulldmg
Middlepor t , 0

PRICE

AND 4 ROOM fur nished and
O' DELL WHEEL Alignment
unfurnished
apartments
locat ed al Crossroads , Rl 124,
Phone 992 5-434
ba c k to work Complete
now
4 12 t f c 83 ACRE FA RM , ga s water , 6
front end ser¥ 1ce tun e up and
room hou se tn Langs v111 e
bra k e
serv ic e
Wheels
area Phone 992 3530 or 7-4 2
BEDROOM farm house, 3
balanced
electronically
All
6675
quarter mtle f!.Orlhe! ~ t Of
work guaranteed Rea sonable
B
19
IOtp
De)(ter . Grass Run S7S cer
rate s Phone 7~2 3232
month
2 18 tfc
8 22 41p BRICK hOme, 4 bedroom s,
baths, basem ent , fireplace RON-SHEPA RD ,-Fioo ~-Wall
Low thirt tes Pomeroy Write
Remodeling Ceramtc til e
MOBILE home space
tn
J E Bayltss , 310 W High Sf 1
Syracuse Phone 992 5858
bath s eox 280 , Ru t land 742
Cr idersv il le, Oh10 -45806
6 21 lfc
817 6tp
3664
6 26 If&lt;

2 30tp

Help Wanted

MATERIALS CO
Muon, W Va.

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

3 n tfc

FE MAL E h el p wa nte d f or 3
Gl!l ul's Sha ke Hav en , Chester ,
Oh1o Referen ce prefer red 18
years or over
lnqu1re an
per son , no phone cal ls
8 22 -4t c ,

Spec ta ts dur 1ng Augu st are
Ko nce n tree, M o 1st K ate, SOMEONE to wallpaper about 4
NO 94.19 73
Kl
ea n smg Kr eam , One Day
ro oms 1 !1ve tn Harrl sonvtll e
An Ordm ance to H tre spec 1al
Sac het &amp; other s Pho ne Helen
area w rt te and state you r
crafts
Jane Brown 992 5113
pn ce and when you could
Be It ordatn ed by the Counc tl
B 2 tfc
come Mr s Raymon d Myers .
of the V tllag e of M tdd leport as
Rt 4 Pomeroy
follow s
8 21 3tc
Sec I That th e wages of WILL gtve awa y for goo d home
In the country fu l l blooded
Carp e nt e r s
Brt c kl ayers ,
Ge r ma n Pol iCe Dog 3 yea r s MA N - for reta il stor e wt th
Plumbers or any ot her spec tat
old gentle W1th ch tld ren
sa les ex per tence t nq u~re at
csrft sha ll be at a r ate not to
Reason for gt¥ tng away - dog
Ingels Fur ntlur e M tdd teporl
exceed the Local Wa g e Scate
has to be tied a nd would li ke
No age it ml t
Sec 1I That thi s Or d inance
to run loose Phone 992 3359
8 21 6t c
shell be r etroactl¥ e to July 15
8 17 Ole
1973
~------ ----CENTR AL DIV IS ION CON
Sec Ill Th ts th1S Or d mance --I GS SENI OR S Ma ke your
SO LIDATION COAL COM
ls hereby determ.med to be an ME
appo 1n tment now to have your
PA NY lmmedJa t e opentng s
emergency m easur e necessar y
SENIOR PORT RAI T taken
ar e a¥atlabte In th e fotlow1n g
for th e tmmed late pre se r va11on
D ate s fo r talt.t n g M E I GS
po sttto ns
Ma in t en an ce
of the pea ce, health saf ety and
SE NI ORS are Aug 22 23 24
F o r eman ( und ergro und )
general
we l far e
of
t he
and 25 atrd Sept I Ta ke
Assi stant Mine Fo r e man
Inhabitan t s of th e Vill ag e an d
advan ta ge of Specta l Sen tor
( und e r gr o u nd )
Sec t1on
for: the r eason tha t 1t tS
Prtces for these days o nly
F oreman , Surf ace M ine
necessar y thaf th1 s leg lSlat lon
Call GROVER S STUDIO
For ema n ,
Rec t amat ton
becom e 1m med1at ely effech¥e
M tddl eport , Oh io Phone 992
For eman Per son s apptymg
Se c I V Thts Or dm ance shall
24 75
should hold valtd toreman
take etfec l and be tn force fr om
....__
8 1 22 1C
certtftcatton pap er s (OhiO) or
and &amp;ft er Jul y 15, 1973
halJ e suff lctent expen ence to
Pa ssed th e lJth da y of Aug ust
YARD Sale Thur sday , Frtda y
apply lor Sta te exam mat 1on
1973
and Satur day , 10 am f tll
Salar y Commen sur ate wtth
da r k
Rees r es1 dence, 3r d
Ex p er t ence
E xcel l e n t
Attest Gene Gr at e
Str ee L
Rac me
Ant i Que
Benefll s TO APPL Y Wr tt e
Cl er k
dishes, bmg and gronda ht
or
Pho n e
Per sonne l
Davtd W Ohl i ng er
Royal c openhagen coll ector s
Dep art ment
Ce nl r at
Pr estdent of Co uncil
Cam br 1dge
p lat es
0 1v tslon , Consol1dat1on Coal
de pr ess ton , and R F Prvsst a
Com pan y Cad tz. Oh to 43907
IBI 22, /9. 7tc
Bnca br ac etc Old boo ks,
Teleph one 614 942 4512 AN
bo ttle s, lant ern s, andtrons
EQ U AL
OP P O R TUN I TY
new sch oo l clot hes , m&lt;my
EM PLOYER
other 1t em s fo r ever yone at
B 21 tfc
yard sale pr tces
~ ......
8 19 6tc CLEANIN G lady to w ork once
e¥er y 2 w eeks Ca ll 992 3686
FACTS
8 21 3tc

BARBS

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

CANNING
Tomatoe s
cu c umber s, mango e s, and
ROOMS furn ished apt R tght
cantalopes
Gera l dtn e
!n town Call 99 2 3658
Cl el and , Ra c tn e
8 16 6tc
7 31 lfc

o1

8•

m 5!54

,_~------

PRIVATE meeting room for
any organtzatlon . phone 992

ORDINANCE

..,.

_____

M•y

Cal l 992 3645

HOGG &amp; ZIJSPAN

I
I

Pomeroy Recovery . 62 2 E

99 2 755 4
8 16 6tc
.......
NO 1 Co pper, 60c , Ra diators ,....
30c , br ~n . 20c . ball er les , 90c BRU SH HOG S 4x5 It phone
each, clea n dr y Gi n sen g
992 5858
r o o ts , $~0 a lb Ye llow r oot. $.4,
715tfc
apple, SOc per lb M A
H al , R:eedS¥11te Ca ll 378 1973 14K7 0 M OBILE ho m e
61 49
w ashe r a nd dry~r , d i sh
7 31 ftc
wa sher sta in less steel sink .
o.a r bage d is posa l , eye l evel
WA N TE D
fO il
1!1 UCI 10n ,
ov en ra nge. dacron pol yeste r
househ ol d good ~ Tools most
ca rp et, large lot Ph one 742
en yth lno of valu e Will bu y or
3083
se ll on commiss ion WHI haul
7 18 tf
Call 99 2 335 .4 or 99 1 27 92
1 25 tfc
Hayman 's
G RO CER Y bu siness for sa te
Building for sale or lease
OL D furnltur~. oa k t a bl es,
Phon
e 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
cl ocks, Ice boxes brass beds,
to 10 p m for appo intm ent
dts he s
or
compl e t e
3 20 tf~
hou seholds Wr i te M
D
Mtller , Rt • · Pom er oy, Oh to, - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - - call 992 6271
REDU CE excess llt,lid s wit W
5 13 lfc
Fl utdex - Lose wei ght w it h
De x A Dtel
ca p sul es
at
Nel son Drug s
8 20 3tp
TW O tra iler lots tn M iddl epor t
11:2 dup lex In Br a db uy, phone EX C ELSIOR Salt Wor k s, E
Ma in Sl , Pom ero y A ll kinds
before 6 p m 992 5693
of salt water pe l lets wa t er
8 20 Stp
nugg e-ts, blo ck sail and own
Oh to Rtver Salt Phon e 99 2
ROOM S by the w eek , S18 up
3891
M eigs tnn , Pomer oy
6 5 tfc
1 12 ttc

CH E VROLET tru ck 131fl
ME IG S Coun ty n at 1ve wants 1969
f t dump body cheMe r axle
ac r ea ge for
re t tr eme nt
$4500 00 Phone 992 5951
Build ings not 1m por taht Send
8 16 6tp
tocar iOn and pr ice to Bo x
M 1n care of th e Oatly Sen
t net, Pomeroy , Oh to
8 22 6t c
1968 M ERCU Y Co m et 6 cyl
aut om atiC fo r sa l e or w tl l
t r ad e fo r p 1ck up
tl o yd
PARKVIEW Kenne ls Pood l es,
Johnson R I 68 I Tuooer s
I toy ma te and 1 fema le
Plams
8 22 3tp
Phone 99 2 54-4 3
7 15 ftc
~--~~

L------:--:--:-~

From rock to nches?
On et1mc M ama
Mtchelle Phtll tps
kn o w s exac tly wh al
she wan ls out of
Hollywood

I

On

II Right

Bullllo Your '$poc o
Dtllvertd to Job Silo

- . - - - - - - - - - - -- NEW 2 piece Early Am eri can
COR N ER c upboar d s, wall
liv ing room sulle In 100 pet

Pets For Sale

Your R1ght to Know

wt will

SHOWBEAT

I
I

·5~5

Ph one 991 2181

8 IS 91p

Auto Sales

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

Strut

Oh io, 43935 or ca ll 1 &lt;18 4 4440

It Mu!lt

Be Righi

POM EROY
Jac k W Carsev. Mg r

Mason , W Viii

OPEN EVES. 8:00 P"M
POMEROY, OHIO

nv

WOOD TRUSSES

I

EXPERT .
Wheel Alignment

Sl)tclt llst
Wheel
Alignment

ASK US ABOUT
PAE. FA8AICATED

.

~

l

Hysterectomy

~

bo-vs' regular jean s: &amp; c asual
1eans Good colors All sizes.

dt:t:Fhides dayold , pa ylno S7
Phone 773 S600, Grove r C

Motor Co.

Wanted

BIG YANK
SLACKS
50% OFF SALE

[DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Business Services

Bock to SchooJS•t•t

Men's, women's, girls' &amp;

Wanted To Buy

1139!

v

ltc
8 22

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

4 door
B au tom 21t1c power steering r ad io. good t trcs,
blue t 1ntsh spotl ess tntenor

8 30 a m fo 5 00 p m Daily
8 30 a m
to 12 00 Noon
Saturday

------------ -PUBLIC NOTICES

woods. 992 3-i89.

12195

PLYMO UTH FURY Ill

~ge

locate a (:aU:
~ItCh wit h Ihe lnllii!I IS. M ML F P on b ecll. llU Phon e
r s.

Flrt&gt;btrd Esprll. !oct~ I I owne r ca r ' 350A~ 8F~gm~ rrr:~
s:teenng &amp; autom a tic 11 ansmlsslon
ra 1
new whil e lettered ltr es 307 V 8, r C',' d lo, clean interior A
sharp one

O F FI CE H OURS

WE 0 ~ rKE to thank th g1rl s Of
X I Gamma Mo Sor or tt y an d
th eir hu sban ds fo r thet r f 1ne
coop er at 1on and hard wok at
th e M e1g s County Fa ir Thank.
yo u Te~ean n a and Judy
8 22 ltp

ears ot

12095

1970 PONTIAC

You C80

help 3 former residen t past 92

Coupe I owner car less than 33 000 mi les . brown trmsh
wi1h matchmg vmy l r oof, and vinyl Int erior , 302 V 8
engme standa rd transrmsslon, power steenng and
brakes, rf'dl o, r e ~ l l y sharp

Charg e per

Card of Thanks

OF
QUALITY

YOU C:A N WI N :S.IUU

Pomeroy
Motor Co.-

1971 FORDTOR INO SOO

BLI ND AOS

Additional 2Sc
Ad¥ ert 1sement

2 SIGNS

Lost

...

WAN T ADS

For Sale

'I Ill' Dnlly Sent ltlt&gt;l, Mld&lt;Urpori -P(n ll~l oy. U , Au~ . 22, llli.l

•

•

J 'L ABNER

ALLEY OOP
BUT DON'T

~00

UNDERSTAND"
THE. RI£AL
ZACK IS 1\
i"£AL APE "

I '~

GRATEFUL
!'OR ~001'&gt;.

COMP&lt;'.N'I " •

BARNEY

1
1
1

I

l------------------------J
Mall to Barr-C1rcle Development, Inc.
750 First Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Or for mote information call collect 446-3746.

.

J&gt;J,I'JASANT VAI.LEY
DlSCHAitGES
Carl
Ralrden, Hartford; Tholnton
Wood, Dun·ull J clfetles, Point
Pleasant, lvlt!. Kelsey Henry,
Golllpolls Ferry ; Mrs Wendell
Houck, Crown City , Mrs.
Ashabello Devault , Maaon t
Mrs
George
Johnson,
do ughtcr, MallOIT : Eva Duncun, 1r&gt;olnl pleasant; Eulah ·
I.ogg, Roucrtsburg, and Karen
"r~· G8111f111llft.
,

ELVINEY WUZ CLEANIN'
OUT HER ATTIC AN 6HE
GIVE Me THIS OLD
PlASTICAL BACK
SCRATCHER

'IE CAN TROT
RIGHT BACKOVER
'fONDER AN ,
GIVE IT 8A CI&lt;

' SCRf\TCHIN'
M'l
WIFNO
SECOND HAND HAND

M I AL'$0 DON'T THINK &lt;{Ot)
SHOULD GET '&gt;OMADAT ME
AFTE~ AlL, I'M :?TILL \'OUR
MA5TER . .\'OU'RE !tW COB

J~T REMEI.\6&lt; ~, ONE LlntE

PHONECALL AN DI COULD
HAVE 'IOU5ENHI6HT MCK
WHERE ~OU CAME FROM!

(

.

')

I..OOKi

�Nixon won't resign

:/AI - 'J'hto Daitv Srnt tnl'l. Mtddl~port-l'omeroy. 0 . Au~ 22. 1\l73

-Cost of driving your car is going up
DETROIT t \!Pil - The cost
of b~yms. owmng and operatIng a car- hke just about
everything el:!e- ts gomg up
The operatmg costs have
risen 14 per cent m the last four
years and automakers are
planning new prtce hikes on the
1974 models that go on sale m
September
Ford ts seeking the htghest
boost--an average $106 per car
and truck- with Amertcan Motors looking for the smallest
hike, $55 Chrysler wtll charge
an average $71 more for tis 1974
models white General Motors
will shift tis 1974 prices up by
$102
And that's not the end of the
price spiral thts year While the
ftrst set of price mcreases wtll
be blamed on the addtllon of
safety equtpment, mamly the
new seat bell-lgmtwn mterlock, the automaker. wtll be
back In Washtngton later this
year to seek mcreases to cover
the higher costs of paymg thetr
workers and supphers
Wtlh the trend towwd small
cars growing, the Amertcan
Automobtle AssoctattOn
recently put together some

~md

nutomah\ t1 ,uL'inuss•on
the ~ost came to 4 2 c-ents per
nule

ftgures that show they really
ar~ more econonucal
l1te report shows the toto!
per.tmle operatmg cost for on
etghl-&lt;Oyhner, standard size car
equipped wtth automahc
transnusston. power ~teeruiJl,
power brakes and radto came
to 5 25 cents
For an mtermediate car
stmtlarly eqwpped the cost
was 4 95 cents per mile, and for
a compact eqmpped wtth radto

When you ftgure 111 the ftxed
costs ( lnsurltnce, dcpredolton
and llc.&gt;nse fet&gt;s ), the •verage
motortsl 111 a standard-stzed
car wtll shell out $1 .647 m 1973
if he dnves about 10,000 nules
That's a rtsc of apprmamately
$200 m the last four years and
comes to about 16 5 cents a
mtle, says AAA

Awards made
The Da lly Sentinel have
rec eived mu c h commun1ty
support whtch Is nec;;essary for
the progress of any organtzed
group

resume of the acttVIbes of
those selected
The nommatton which won
the award for The Datly
Sentmel reads
NOMINATION
FOR
COMMUNITY SERVICE
AWARD - 1973
The Dally Sentinel of Metgs

The Dally Sentinel Is locally
a dally
paper except for Saturday On

owned and publishes

Sunday, If 1s combmed w1th the

Galltpolls TrtbLne fo become

the Times Sentinel

The Da il y Sent inel was

purchased m 1951 by the Ohio

and Gall la count1es for sup

portmg

oews

stortes (

In 1959 the Olllo Valley
PubliShing Company pur
The GallipoliS
and publish ing the week ly chased
asslstmg

1n

raising local funds,

Tnbune and purchased ' The
Potnt Pleasant Regtster' ' tn

calendar' of ad1vlt1es
Robert Hoeflich, c1ty editor,

1969 Presently three dallies

and Charlene Hoefltch, socletr,
edtlor of "The' Dally Senltnel '

two weeklies, a Su nday paper

are published

AUGUST241hru 26
HEARTBREAK KID
Ptu•
THE MAN
August 311hru Sept 4
BATTLE FOR THE
PLANET OF THE
APES
SHOWSTARTS7 P.M.

Senttne l

every protect promoted by the
Senter

Ctf tzens

of

Metgs

frtpled

They acttvely supported the
funding of the Metgs County

\

\

'
'
If

l&lt;l

I

'

r--.1&lt; 1\fl

Tonight, Thur, Fr•

Aug 22·23·24

KANSAS CITY
BOMBER
Raquel Welch
(Color)
Plus
SKY JACKED
I Color)
Charlton Heston
Yvette Mimteux

(Color)
(PG)

Aging Committee MiSs Smith

was one of the f1rst to see the
need for programs for the
dgmg 1n the area She has been
chairman of the Per sonnel

Committee tor the Mfl!gs
County Council on Agtng for
two year s
Mt ss Smi th ha s been a
member of a ft ve coun ty area
Task Force on Agmg for the

past two years She was 1972
Chatrman of the Nomlnaltng
Committee for the Areawide
Task For ce on Ag~ng a

of the outstandtng sentor

the news

PROMINENT SENIOR
CITIZEN AWARD - MEIGS member of the Ta sk Force
COUNTY, Mr and Mrs RSVP Advisory Commtttee tn
Patrick Lochary
1973. and ts Chatrman of the

cit i zens categones falloWs

med•a

and

the

committee's effort. $2.000 was

raised 1n two weeks to help
finance the ·survey of 9,700
senior ctt iZens m M etgs

An
outstandmg
Clf1zen couple

instrumental

1n

followed the survey
One of the programs

the

IS

Sen 1or

MF Lochary has been a
member of the Meigs County

County The Datly Senttnel was

also

Council on Agtng

sinct;

1ts

formation tn 1971 He was
formerly Postmaster of
Pomeroy , Oh10

a

He has been a leader

co unty wide Sentor Cttlzens
Comprehensive Prog r am
which consists of an 1n
formation
and
referral
program, transporfatton

tn

the

development of a muse um for
the Me1gs County P1oneer and

Historica l Soctely !oldest

soctety In Ohto) of whtch he 1s
currently
archivist
facilities , recreattonal and 1
He Is a member of the vestr y
craft activtttes and cove rs any
phase of interest to the sen1or of Grace Eptscopal Church

Pomeroy
He recetved hiS 50 year

clhzens of Me1gs County
The Dally Senltnel also
covers the progress of the

(PG

Resum ~s submttfed on the
activities of the county winners

on t he Metgs Coun ty Council on

Council on Agmg , the first

group to recognize the needs of
the aging In lhtS area Through

Senior C1t1 zen programs whtch

.

now

IS

Sunday In 1951 the clrculahon

launchtng and success of the

MASON DRIVE-IN

Cir culatiOn

was about 2 000, whtch shows
that circulation has almost

coveraae of each event

.

The Dail y

5.900 dally and over 12,000 on

County
They not only
photog raph but also wnle very
detailed and appropnate

Theatre Closed
August 12 thru August 23

Owen , ltves 10 Middl eport

photographs of acl lvlltes ,

are always available to cover

MEIGS THEATRE

operating all cars are gotng up,
automak ers contend that
today's .tutomobtle still ts a
bargam It takes a worker less
hme now to earn the money for
a new car than for a comparable automobtle 10 years
ago, they say
Ford
provtdes
some
StatiStics on how prtces have
changed m 10 years
A1963 Falcon two-door sedan
With automatic !r9nsmtsston,
rad10 and whitewall tires had a
ltst price of $2,321 9Q The
average media n famtly tncome
that year was $6,249 and tt took
37 per cent of that medtan
yearly mcome to buy the
Falcon- Ford's small car
Since 1963, the Falcon has
dtsappeared It grew btgger

Valley Publlshtng Company
the PubliSher, RIchard S

the Meigs Counfy

Council on Aging through

regular

l oti:tlw.')ts for tlntn.tt)rnwdt - anu b tg~''' t~ nd !malty hod no
•'1 1' would bt• $218 luwet thun rnnrkcl In tl~ place. Ford put
the standard model und $430 the Mavcrtck It's larger than
Lht ~ ~~b~ ompu(•t Ptnto and the
les.• for the compact
Willie the costs of owmng and mv~ l ~ losrly comllarablo to' the

Rettred

Senter

Masonic Pm m 1973
He Is one of t he founders of

Volunteer

Metgs County lzaak Walton

Program (RSVP), sponsored
by the Metgs County Counctl on
Agtng ThiS program enables

League

He was acltve In the Boy

Scouts of Amertca organtzatJon
1n the past and was a Boy Scout
CommiSSIOner for fi ve years
Mrs Lochary has been a
plano teacher for SO years and
a promoter of culture tn Metgs

senior Citizens over the age of
60 to ma lntam a rec09 nrzed
role in thetr comm un tty 1n
ret1rement
Sentor ctftzen programs
which have been promo ted by

County She Is sltll teachtng

p1ano

She IS organist of Grace
Episcopal Church. Pomeroy

She IS a member of the
Acqu1S1t1ons Commtftee of
Metgs County P1oneer and

Caravelle®
Back To School Watches By
lulova

Histori cal Society
She IS currently Chairman of
the

Advisor y

Comm1ttee

Meigs County Retired Sentor
Volunteer Progr am
She IS a member and former

Regent of

Daughters of

Amer1can Revolution,
cludmg state offices

She

IS

1n

a member of the

Dioce sean Board , Southern

Diocese of Ohioan Chrtsltan
Education Episcopal Church

Start At 10.95 and Never Stop Pleasing

She was a member tor SIX
tears of Southern Ohto
D1ocese, Church Women

She IS currently on the Board
of Dtrectors of Metgs Cou nt y
Chapter of the Amer 1c an

RSVP Personnel

Commttfee
for Areawtde Task Force 10

1973

The ach ievement wh1ch se t
her m the forum statew1de was

fhe Vtgor tn Mafurtty (VIM)
Proaram
w1th the

tn
cooperation
Rettred Teachers

Assoctatton held af fhe Metgs
County Semor C1t1zens' Center

beginning Aprll27. and runn ing
for four consecuttve weekly
meetings

Following Is the list of the
many and varted respon
St blilfte s and offt ces M1 ss

Luctlle Smtih has carrted wtlh

the h1ghest honor

Protect FIND for the Red
Cross
Volunteer
1972 ,
Secretary for the Metgs County
Tu berculosis and Health
Assoctat1on , Meigs Co unty
Heart
Cha1rman
1968 ;

PreSident Retired Teachers

Assoctat1on tn Metgs County

1969 1973, Coordtnafed the VIM
(Vtgor tn Mafurtly) Program
1973 RSVP Volunteer, Regent
DAR, Return Jonathan Metgs
Chapter , VI ce PreSident and
Prooram
Presi dent
Teacher s
Member

Chatrman 1971 73
Southeastern Ohto
Assac1at1on 1963 64
Execut 1ve Board

Classroom Teachers of Ohto
1958 66 Member Chester
Untied Methodist Church, Past
PreSi dent
Delta
Kappa
Gamma
lnternaftonal
Honor ary Soctety for Women
Teachers , Secretary
Metgs
County P1oneer and Histoncal

Society
MR SENIOR CITIZEN
AWARD - MEIGS COUNTY,
Clarence J Sfruble

" I apprec1ate what we are
doing with sen1or Citizens more

than almost anything else Clarence J Stroble
Mr Struble was the foundtng

cha1rman of the Metg s County

Council on AQing, prtor to the

Cancer Society
She 1s a member of the
Retired Teachers Association
She IS a member of the

form mg of tfle Council there
were no program s for the ag 1ng
m t he coun ty He has served as

Board, Tri County Commun1ty
Concerts

the pr esent time

SENIOR VOLUNTEER
SERVICE AWARD - MEIGS
COUNTY. Miss Lucille Sm1lh
Meigs County is proud to
have kept one outstanding
scholar from leav tng the

Chatrman of the Metgs County
Counctl on Aging from 1971 to

now defun ct

Carleton College m the early

twenties, befor e she even had
her degree After acqwnng her

degree she then continued to
teach tn Rutland, Middlepor t,
and Cheshire In Gall Ia County
Thanks to Miss Smtfh many

students have acqu1red a vast

knowledge of the Engl iS h
Language, which tllo&lt;frates

her great abtltty and much of

~:

a five county area Currently
he 1s a member of the

•••

Area w ide

the R10 Grande Area prog ram

1973
He has been a member of the
Pomeroy Uni ted Method iSt
Church from 1946 73. and has
served on all committees and

Ill

Board ol Tru stees

Currently

he Is Lay Leader and a
member of th e Fmance
Committee
He was a member of a

member following heart at1ack
In
1966,
and
curren tly

secretary Treasurer 1967- 1973
He Is

a m em ber of many

Masonic Orders - Lancaster,
Olllo since 1943, Pomeroy
Ohio, si nce 1958

He will be

elected Prior of York, Cross of
Hon6r Ohio Priory No 18,
Stale of Ohio th is fall
Currenfty he Is Secretary,
Pomeroy Chapter No 80,
Royal Arch Masons , Recorder,

BOsworth Council No 46, Royal
and Select Masters Recorder,
Ollio Valley Commendery No
24 Knight Templar , Secrelarr,·
Treasurer, Pomeroy Mason c
Temple Association , Deputy
Preceplor, Holy Royal Arch
Knighl Templar Priests, State
at Olllo, Direc tor, Scottish Rite
· Valley of Columbus, and Life
Membershi p, Ma so nic
Veterans Association
Curren tl y a member of Tall

Call U.~
Today
Qulllty 501 nylon
wllh heav y toam
rubber pad txptrt
Choice
of colon All work guaranteed
Wendell
Grate for th iS buy or free estlm11te on any carpet
1"stellat jon

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
74 241)1

WENDELL GRATE
RUTLAND, 0

~::

Protect on Aging wht ch covers ;:;

ittee wh ic h made
the student's success can be comm
arrang em ents for a health
attributed to her
team to hold a Health Fatr '"
in recent years retirement to
Counfv th is vear This
Miss Smith has meant lust the Mel~s
Fai r was the first of 1ts k10d to
opposite of what II should have be held In this area and was
meant
She
has
g1ven
successf ul
generously of herself to her very
He
Is a member of the Lions
comm un1ty and fellowmen
Club
of Pomeroy Middleport ,
She hes served for two years Cha rter
Member
1949,
President 1954 made honorary

CARPET SPECIAL!

_i.,~. -

Model

Grande

Cedars of Lebanon In Ohio
Masonic Sec retar y and
Recorders Association State of
Oh•o s Grand Council Knight
Masons of Dublin, Ireland, and
the Province of United Stales
of
America.
Chapter
Research , Grand Chapt er
Royal Arch Masons of Ohio,
and Knight Templar Eye
Fou.1dai 10n

soc I•a1

~?~#««¥'*?.•:0:1-:&amp;V~·:·: :»·: :·:~· "l·::
$

Mr Struble was also the ··
founding chairman for the Rto !i!

Areawid e Task Force on
homegrounds In search of Agtng
fortune and fame els~;~where
Mr Struble was host to a
Miss Smith, a descendanl of fore
tgn visitor from Egypt to
a prominent pioneer famil y In learn about the Senter Citizen
Chester Township, started as a prog ram In Meigs County and
teacher in the

Fa!ton
Ote 1973 Maverick. two-door,
sedan wtth automattc Iran-'
Slntsstons, radio and white wall
tires lists at $2,538 That's
$216 10 more than the Falcon
cost 10 years ago But there
have been some changes
Under goverrunent orders,
the automakers have added
seal and shoulder belts, backup
hghts, padded dash and vtsers,
electrtc wipers, headrests ,
emtsslon control devtces,
emergency flasher systems,
outstde rear view mtrror and
mslde non.glare mtrror as well
as many unseen safety tlems
The average famtly medl8n
mcome IS now about $l1,300 It
took 23 per cent of that to
purchase the 1973 Mavertck
rather than the 37 per cent to
buy the Falcon 10 years ago
"Value for the dollar ts an
important factor in the conSWller's purchasmg process,"
says John B Naughton, Ford
vtce prestdenl for sales
"Today's automobtle ts actually qmte a bargam "
He mtght get an argument,
however, from many of the
nation's motoriSts who fmd
the1r gas tanks emptymg at a
fast rate because of the
emlSStons control eqwpment
ordered by the federal government
There's been a stgniftcant
reduction smce 1970 when cars
averaged 14 miles per gallon
Part of that can be blamed on
extra wetght
•
The current Chevrolet, for
example, has grown seven
mches m length and added 502
pounds smce 1968
But General Motors expects
to reverse the trend of the last
ftve years when 1t mtroduced
tis 1975-model cars m the fall of
1974 Tests have shown the fuel
economy of one model has
decreased durmg the last ftve
years from 13.7 mtles per
gallon to 10 5 m p g m ctty
drtvmg
The addihon of the catalyllc
converter, a muffler-like
deVIce wtth chemtcals that
convert harmful emtsstons mto
harmless gases and water,
should brmg mtleage back up
to 12 8 m p g for that model
"The great advantage of the
catalytic converter for exhaust
emtsston control ts that the
engme can be tuned to achteve
better fuel economy whtle the
converter keeps the system m
compliance wtth emtsston
standards," says Dr Cratg
Marks, a techmcal asststant to
the vtce prestdent of the GM
Engmeermg Staff.
"Although all of our cars
may not expenence this gam,"
says Marks, "we hope, across
our product !me to approach
the pre-control, 1968 fuel
economy levels "

~

Ml88 LIZ

BEATY PROMOTED - Bill G Beaty, rtghl, above, who has been vtce president of the
Charleston ]j,etail DIVISion of Kroger Food Stores, has been promoted to vice prestdent of the
company's lndianapohs, lndtana dtviston Succeeding Beaty, as Charleston Otvislon vtcc
prestdent, wdl be Edwm A Stevekmg, who formerly held the same post 10 Toledo

SEOEMS aids at fairs
7

-~

There ts somethmg new
happening at the fatrs and
festivals m the area this year
ltrst a1d ts avatlable durmg the
busy hours Southeast Ohto's
Emergency Medtcal Servtces
has treated well over 1110
persons at vartous fairs and
fesUvtlles m tts seven county
servtce area so far thts summer
Not all such functions have
had ftrst atd avatlable at the
scene 10 years past, and those
that dtd were covered only
sporadtcally dunng peak
hours
Ftrst atd coverage 1s a free·

servtce of the emergency
medical servtce No charges
are made unless transportation
to the hospital Is necessary
Much apprectalton has been
expressed by fatr board
members and pubhc offtctals
for the ftrst aid servtce, and
such acllvtlles have been
almost continuous smce mtdJuly
The Athens EMS statton
(Richland Avenue) has been
espectally busy, treating over
ij() people at the Athens County
Fatr, and helpmg in
Metgs County at the fair and

Battle underway
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - The
Whtte House and the
Watergate prosecutors ftght
the ftrst round today of a
Supreme Court-bound battle
over Prestdent Ntxon•s cructal
tape-recorded conversaltons
on the scandal
At tssue ts whether, for the
!trst lime m the natton's
htstory, the JUdtctary can force
a prestdent to comply wtth a
subpoena lor evtdence sought
by a grand Jury
Adversanes m the htstonc
confrontallon are spectal
Watergate prosecutor Ar·
chtbald Cox, who contends " no
man ts above the law," and
While House lawyer Charles
Alan Wnght, who mslSts the
prestdent has the right to keep
anythmg he chooses secret "10

the pubhc 10terest "
They were to appear at a
mtdmorning hearmg before
Chtef U S District Court
Judge John J. Smca, who has
ordered NIXon to show cause
why he should not comply wtth
a Cox subpoena for the tapes of
mne Watergate-related phone
calls or meetings wtth hts atdes
begmmng three days after the
June 17, 1972, buggmg arrests

Wrong Defmtlton
Purple fmches aren t really
pur ple The male suggests a
sparrow dtpped m raspberry
JU tce wh1le the female ts a
drab brown Na tive to north
ern eve rgr een for es ts , the
btrds wtng as far south as
Texas and Flonda tn wmter

Open Both Friday and
Saturday 9:30 to 9 pm

:::

Calendar ~ Special Purchase

In 1941, Nazi troops adva nced
to the outskirts of Leningrad,
Russia, during World War II.

and Sale!

HOOVER
Convertible Cleaners
and
Cleaning Tools

• A Hooverthe worlds fmest
cleaner.
• Extra Iarge
throw-away bag holds more dttl change less oftenl
• Vtnyl outer tacket
- never a dusty odor
Wtpe clean wtlh a
damp cloth
• 4-post!ton rug
adJustment . tndoot·
outdoor floor covenngs
to deep shag rugs.
• Two speed motor 50% more suct1on
wtth cleantng tools,
automatically'
• Cleaner rolls
on wheels- gets all
the dtrt, you Just
gu;de t!.
• Headltghl see where you're
cleantng

••

•

''
....

•

Convertible Cleaner
SALE

role In the scandal
lie hel(an the se881on by
announdng tlle rcstgnatlon of
Secretary of State William P
Hogen and the llppointrnent or
foreign policy adviser Henry A
Kisalf18er as hi:! succesll(lr,
effective Sept 3
Anger Jlarely Concealed
The President's voice trem·
bled when he lashed out with
barely concealed anger at his
critics In the press and
Congress and "those who
would use the Wall!rgate affair
to destroy me "
He said he would "impute no
lrnproper motives" to "some
political figures, some members of the press, and some
!Ilembers of the television"
Industry wbo would exploit the
Issue
But he added, "I thmk they
would prefer !bat I fat! "
"On the other hand," he
declared forcefully , "I am not
going to fail, I am here to do a
job and I am gomg tD do the

hcst I can ."
At the flllme time, when
ask&lt;&gt;d I•Jw IJIUCh "personal
blame" he a cepted for the
abuses, he replied "I accept 11
all ' '
"When you say, do I consider
resigning, the answer is no, I
shall not resign " he satd
At the no-holds-barred session , Nixon ~lao said
spedfically
- He did not recall former
actmg FBI Director Patrick
Gray warning htm in a July 6,
1972 telepbone call that some of

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Variable doud~_, and
chance of scattered ohowen
durlog the period. High
temperatvres averaging In
upper 708 and 80s. Low• at
night In upper 50&amp;and 608.

Nixon's closest Whlll! House
aides were trymg to "mortally
wound" htm by not c-ooperating
In the Watergate Investigation.
Confidence Is Strengthened
- Ills confidence In VIce
President Spiro T Agnew's
Integrity was not only unchanged but "strengthened"
despite Agnew's investigation
for
possible
criminal
violations Nixon vigorously
denounced "outrageous" news
leaks about the Inquiry lntD
posstble kickbacks and
promised to fire whoever wu
respunsible
- He told former White
House Counsel John Dean last
March 21, and Dean agreed,
that It would be wrong to raiJe
as much as $1 million for Ute
Watergate conspirators or to
grant e&lt;ecullve clemency
Throughout the period
following the June 17, 1972,
break-m at the Democrallc
Party headquarter. he would
(Continued on Page 7)

SOMEBODY GOOFED - Pomeroy cab driver cart
Sampson noticed a uruque set of Ohio license plall!s on a
vehtcle parked on West Main St Wednesday .The numbers on
the set of truck licenses were In good order However,
prlntmg below aod above them was u]l6ide down on both
plates

•

Miss Uz Blaettnar, daughter Chapter Bert Moshier of
of Mr. and Mrs. John William Galllpolls was appointed vice
Blaet\nar,
Wright
St., prestdent of the Southern
Pomeroy, was named first Region State R D Club and a
l'llll~r-up among 17 district member of the Buckeye
flnaU.ta competing for the Ohio Priory
State Swettheart title when the
Metgs Chapter was awarded
slate conclave of the Order of first place m several combmed
DeMolay was held recently at chapter acllvlties and received
the University of Akron . a check for $100 lor thts Tim
Miss Blaettnar was ftrst King, past master councilor of
selected as sweetheart of the Meigs Chapter, accepted thiS
Meigs Chlipter of DeMolay award In the absence of Jon
whtch entitled her to compete Bunce who was til
In District 11. She won the
Mrs Delmar Qutckel wtll
dlatrlct title which made her agam serve as state
eligible for the slate event representallve of the Ohto
Miss Blaettnar presented a Federation of Mothers' Clubs.
plano solo, "Rhapsody In Anyone with quesltons or mBlue," for her talent m the formallon about the club may
competition, a phase counting contact Mrs. Qutckel or Mrs
20 pet. A personal interview Robert Kmg, prestdent of the
wtth a panel of three judges local club
On Sunday eveninR a
counted 50 pet.; potse and
receptwn
was held at the state
personality counted 10 pet. and
the vote of the boys attendmg event honormg Mtss Blaettnar
the slate £onclave counted the and Qutckel by distrtcl 11. The
alfa1r was held in the faculty
remaining 10 pet
The Meigs DeMolay Chapter dining room of the untverstty.
also won other honors at the Hostesses for the event were
Mrs. Ben Roberson, wife of the
slate meeting
Bill Quickel was appointed 11th dl:!trict governor, Mrs
and Installed as state seruor Sarah Moshier of Gallipohs,
deacon. He is the son of Mr Mrs. Qwckel and Mrs. King
In addition to those named
and Mrs. Delmar Quickel of
Chesbjre and Is also state above, others attending the
priory, standard · bearer, an conclave were Dad Robert
officer In the Buckeye Prior of King, assistant governor of the
Colwnbus and Is scribe of the distrtcl and local chapter
Meigs Chapter Jon Bunce was advisor; Ken Gilkey, Don
appointed resident offtcer of Vaughan, Gorge Stewart.
the nth diStrict. He ts the Mtddleport, Mike Norton,
hospllalar In the state priory, Mmersvtlle; Mike Henderson,
an officer m the Buckeye Kanauga; Don Gabntsch, Jeff
Priory, Columbus, and is Gabritsch and Van Windsor, all
master counctlor of Metgs of Pomt Pleasant
.•• : • : .....;. ···:::·:·::::.·:::·:·:...-:-:-:· ::·:·.:.·:·:-...•• ·~· ·:-'· •··.··,-:

ews .. in Briefs!~

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - TilE SECRET SERVICE and FBI are
wor~ing hard to discover the roots of a "a very real" plot to kill
President Nixon durmg his vlBit to New Orleans Monday
Sources told UPI that the agenctes are workmg lntenstvely
on what they consider "a very real thmg," but the Secret Service
wd Wednesday that former New Orleans policeman Edwin
Mlcbael Gaudet Jr ., arrested m northern New Mextco for
allegedl)' threaterung Nixon's life, probably was not part of the
consptracy Gaudet, 30, surrendered to a posse of Secret Servicemen near Taos, N. M , Wednesday, two days afrer he eluded
heavily armed federal agents who sought to arrest him on a
warrant near the "Mormng Star" commune

enttne
Devoted To 17ae lntera" Of 17ae Meigi·M(JIIOn Area
THURSDAY, AUGUST

VOL. XXV NO 92

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

DRIVERS TO MEET
A meellng of all Meigs
Connty acbool bus drivers
will be held at 8 this evening
at the Meigs Junior High
School cafeteria In Mid·
dleport, County Superln·
tendent of School&amp; Robert
Bowen announced.
A representative 1ol the
State Highway Patrol will
discuss safety In bus
operation. Local superln·
tendents are also expected to
be present.

Couple jailed
The Metgs County Shertff's
Department disclosed today
the arrest of two persons
Monday, Larry Bryan Wyatt,
34, and Margie Mae Wyatt, 41,
both of Rutland, who are
charged wtth grand larceny
and breaking and entermg m
the night season.
Accordmg to the shenff's
offtce, Deputy Shertf! Ray
Manley was crutsmg the
Racme area when he stopped
Wyatt and charged him wtth
drivmg whtle mtoxlcated

n

1973

Youths warned

Young people In Mid·
dleport riding bicycles are
Manley, after noltcmg some expected to obey the same
unusual merchandise in the laws as motor vehicle
Wyatt auto, contacted Shertff drivers, Pollee Chief J . J
Hartenbach, who had just Cremeana said today.
learned of a break-m at a
Cremeans said that young
business uwned by Dale bicyclists often violate laws
Lawson In Lebanon
aod thereby endanger their
The items found m the auto own safety. Running through
reportedly match Lawson's stop signs and traffic Ugbts
descnphon of the stolen Is a common offense by
merchandise
bicyclists, the chief said. He
The Wyatts are presently m urged parent• to streu
the custody of Shertff Har- bicycle safety to their
U!nbach
children.

Car sinks
Lukens will
~chool
kells
will
in lake
issue
ring out Tuesday take
•
A car drl ven by Donald C.
Sbaffer, Rt 1, Racine, went out
of control and sank in Royal
Oak Lake Wednesday afternoon at 2.20 p.m
Shaffer was driving up a hiU
when the drive shaft broke on
hts car, causing It to dnft back·
wards He cut to the rtght, and
when he trted to stop the car,
Shaffer diScovered the brakes
had gone out. The vehtcle was
headed m the direction of the
lake and Shaffer, unable to
control the car, JWllPed clear.
The car submerged m 12 to 15
feet of water.
Shaffer was not tn)ured, and
no cttatton was Issued.
At 5 40 p m. Wednesday, on
SR 143, Robert Eugene
Schipper, 17, Rt. ;!, Albany,
went off the road on the right
and down a ditch line Schipper
tried to drtve hts truck out of
the ditch when tt fltpped over
Schipper was not mjured ;
however, a passenger, Scott
McComas, Jr.1 Rt 3, Albany,
clauned mjurtes but was not
immedtately treated
l')o cttahon was tssued

School bells will rtng out
Tuesday, Aug. 28 at all schools
m Metgs county for the openmg
day of classes for the 1973-74
school year
There wtll be full day of
classes tn all diSirtcts. Lunches
wtll be served at noon.
At Eastern High School a
teachers meeting wtll be held
Monday at 10 a.m at the high
school Teachers wtll report at
their respective schools m the
afternoon.
At Southern Htgh SchD&lt;'I
Monday refreshments will be
served from 9 to 10 a.m , a
general meeting will be held
from 10 to 11 a m and the
teachers wtll meet with thetr

prlnctpals at thetr respecttve
schools at 12·30 p m.
At Metgs the prmctpals w1ll
meet at the high school at 9
ll m and the teachers at 10
a.m All teachers wtll report to
thetr respecllve schools at J
pm
On Monday, Sept 3, all
schools tn the county wtll be
closed In observance of Labor
Day

Mayor fines 5;

4 forfeit bond

Four defendants forfetted
bonds and live others were
fined Wednesday mght m the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Don
Collins
Forfeiting bonds were
Two questioned
Claude Smtih, Jr , Potnt
Two Mtddleport juvemles Pleasant, $25, runmng a red
were turned over to Mason ltght, Roger Rogers, CoiWll·
PHNOM PENH - CAMBODIAN TROOPS bave recaptured
City offtctals early Thursday bus, $50, falling to have vehtcle
three Communist-held postttons on the outsktrts of Kompong
mormng after being questioned under control; Samuel Rhodes,
(Continued on page 10)
by Patrolman George Hicks of Mansfield, $25, littermg, and
the Pomeroy Pollee Depart- Wade Little, Pomeroy, $25,
ment
intoxlcallon
The two youths were walking
Fined were Gary Gmther,
near the Pomeroy-Mason Beverly, $5 and costs, running
Bridge at \ •45 am this a red light , Neal Bonecutter,
By MIKE FEINSILBER
would be succeeded by a from five localltgures Wednes- morning when they were · Pomeroy, $10 no oparator's
WASHINGTON (UP!)
tainted vice president.
day, the first witnesses to • stopped by Patrolman Htcks license, and $5 and costs for
President Nixon altered guard- "HeDIIlassoclatea Himself... " appear except for Internal for questlomng. The youths falling to transfer a motor
ed support of his vice president Asked about the story, Revenue Service officials
allegedly had packages of vehtcle, Donald Lovett,
Wednesday, praising Spiro T Thompson said "The vice
Among the Five
clgaretres and other Items Pomeroy, $10 and costs, mAgnew's "Integrity" but stop.. prestdent dl:!associates himself
Among the five was Wtlllam stuffed inside their shtrts The toxlcation ; Richard Lewts ,
ping short of declaring absolute from anything so critical of the Fornoff, former county ad- two were turned over to Pomeroy, $10 and costs, tn·
belief in his Innocence of President especially, and cer- minlstrator under Agnew and Mason City ofltcials because a toxlcatlon , and Wilham
complicity In Maryland corrup- talnly of his colleague In the Dale Anderson, the Democrat breaking and entering at the Buchanan, Pomeroy, $5 and
!Jon.
ladinlnlstration, the attorney who succeeded Agnew as VIsta Service Station In lower costs and $10 and costs on two
A spokesman for Agnew said general."
county executive Fornoff bes Mason had been reported counts ollntoxlcallon
the vice presiljent welcomed Meantime, there were Indica· pleaded guilty to serving as
Nixon's support-and found it lions the grand jury in 1conduit between contractors
unsurprislng.
Baltimore, Investigating kick· who paid bribes and kickbacks
The spokestlllln, Agnew's backs and shakedowns since and ofllclal:! who aceepll\d
STOLEN CAR FOUND
press secretary Marsh Thomp- January, was close to Indicting them He is expected to give
A
1967 car, stolen from the
WEST COLUMBIA, W Va .
1011, also diamlssed a atory In local Democrats of suburban slate's evidence when the case
Pomeroy
Motor
Co.
some
time
- The Clair Lee Cottrill, Jr
the Chicago Sun-Times which Baltimore County.
reaches trial. He testified 38
afler
8
p.m
Wednesday,
~as
farm of West Columbia has
U.S Attorney George Beall minutes
1181d "vicious, Kremlln·like Inrecovered
by
Pomeroy
Pollee
been named the Conservation
fighting" has broken out haS ' said the jury has heard
Also heard were Ross B
at
2.47
am
today.
The
vehicle,
Farmer winner of the Western
between Agnew on the one hand nothing Involving Agnew and Diffenderffer, a real estate
and Nixon and Attorney Gener- nothing would be heard before agent and appraiser who served which was not damaged, was Soil Conservation District by
al EWot L. Rlchard3on on the Labor Day.
as Anderson's campaign found parked on Lincoln Wayne Hughes, Chairman of
other
Before then, Richardson must manager In liNMl and 1870; Heights and was returned to the SCD Board
Thl:! farm will be judged
The atory was attrlbutw only ijecide whether information Donald B Sheeley central the company.
along with 13 other district
to lll1 "auoc!Jte" of Agnew not about Agnew's activities as services director for Baltimore
winners and a state winner will
on the government payroll. The Baltimore County executive and County, Morton Klassmelr,
be selected from this group.
NO PARKING
auuclate accused Richardson governor of Maryland will be Anderson 's administrative asMotorists
in
Middleport
are
Judging
of the Conservation
~ falllng to atop news leaks presented to the grand jury. slslant, and Daniel L Coloslno,
about the Agnew lnvesUaatlon There Is a conaUtutional quea- Anderson'aexecutlve secretary asked to refrain from parking Farmer was today The state
becawte Rlchlrdlon wants to be Uon about whether a president Agnew's campaign to stem on North and South Second winner will be announced In
Prtaldent. The aiiOCiale also or vice president can be the damaging newa reporta Ave , Mill Sl. and South Third early November
In 1966 the Cottrill fann was
Aid lhe lealtl .erve Nixon by Indicted or first must be springing from the Investigation Ave , from 5 a.m to 7:30 am
Friday
so
that
the
venlcles
will
the
District winner and went
dlverUngattentlon from Water- Impeached, convlcled and Intensified with publication of
not
be
In
the
path
of
the
street
ahead
to place third in West
pte .00 making Nixon's removed from office.
his letter of protest to
Virginia
sweeper
Impeachment remote since he The jurors heard testimony
(Continued on page 10 )

Support up to a point

Regular 189.95

mto courts

COLUMBUS (UPI) - In an
attempt to get the federal
courts to declare hun ehgtble
to run for public office again,
state Sen. Donald M "Buz"
Lukens, R·Mtddletown, flied
candtdacy papers Wednesday
to run for the U S. Senate tn
1974
The pelthons were 1mmediately
rejected
by
Secretary of Slate Ted W.
Brown. Earher lhts year
Brown dtsquahfted Lukens
from running for public office
for five years because his 1972
campaign e&lt;pense statement
was not received by the Butler
County Board of Elections by
the Dec 22 deadline
Lukens said he would file suit
m U S. DIStrtct Court here late
Wednesday or Thusday,
argulng the Ohio campaign
reporting statute and penslty
for violations does not apply to
nattonal office
Lukens said he wtll go to the
U S Supreme Court 1!
oecessary He appealed the
diSQualification to the Ohto
Supreme Court this sprmg, but
that court ruled agamst htm.
Lukens mdlcated he was
mainly Interested m running
for a statewide offtce, and was
!tUng for the Senate "lD set up a
purely federal tssue" for
challenge m the courts

PHONE 992·2156

--·-

Regular '14.95

CLEANING TOOLS
Sale •8.77
Free Customer Parkin&amp; on Second Street and
at Our Mechanic Street Warehouse.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
I

••

'
TEN CENTS•

Man killed
by tractor
myre, went to check and found
him. Mrs Facmyre was able to
flag down a Buckeye Rural
Electric Company truck. The
driver notified the sheriff's
department
The accident apparently
occurred some Urne between 10
a.m and I p m when the
tractor's left lire struck or
caught on a hillside tree
causing the tractor tD spin
around and roll over.
The Pomeroy ER squad and
Mr. Facmyre went out tD the the EMS untt from Athens
tractor and brush hOS at a answered the cell. The body
normal hour In the morning was taken to the Strong
and when he did not return by Funeral Home at Wilkesville
I 30 p m lor dinner, his family At the scene were the sheriff,
became concerned Jack Cook, Capt Robert Beegle and
who resided with Mr Fac- Deputy Deckard

A Rt, 3 Albany man is
believed to have been killed
Instantly Wednesday In a
tractor accident, Shertff
Robert C Hartenbach's Dept.
repoted
He Is Sills Webster Facmyre,
55, who was operating a tractDr
pulling a brush hog tn
Columbia Twp. In a pasture
owned by the deceaseds
nephews, Gene and Dennis
Facmyre.

State Fair opens
for two week run

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov. John J. Gtlligan cut a red, while
and blue rtbbon at 6 07 a.m today to offlctally open the 1973 Ohio
State Fatr which IS expected to attract more than two miUion
Ylsttors before It closes Labor Day.
Keith Robmette, 13, and Darrell Thompson, 14, who bad been
camped outside the main gate since Aug. 9, were the first visttors
and were given a stuffed anunal and a season ticket tD the fair
The fair offers attractions for
Dionne Warwlcke, the Fifth DIevery age group.
Chtldren will be entertained mensiOn, The Jackson Five, AI
datly by the H R Pufnstuf Green, Don McLean, Rare
characters and Ronald Me· Earth and a Grand Old Opry
Donald from a fast-food chain. show with Charlie Pride
Spectal programs will be
Many cooking demon strations
wiU be offered, Inheld dally for and by the semor
citizens from around the state. cluding foods from different
An opening day htghllght IS countries, and a special
the marching band competition demonstration on economical
meals to be presented by the
with 49 bands entered
Free entertainment m the Cooperattve Extension Sergrandstand opening day will be vice
New to the grounds thiS year
Helen Reddy and Mac Davis
ts
a $1 1 million swine barn,
Other grandstand entertainment Includes Sonny and Cher, replacing barns which were
the Osmonds, Doc Severtnsen, destroyed last fall by fire.
Other livestock will be boused
m pens be9eath railroad
viaducts on the west side of the
Cloudy and scattered grounds
showers tonight and Friday.
LOCAL TEMPS
Other top attractions Include
The temperature m down- Not so cool tomght, low In the sixth annual National Ama·
town Pomeroy at 11 a m upper 50s and lower 60s Htgh teur Boxing Tournament with
Thursday was 69 degrees, Friday In upper 70s and lower some competitors, and the
80s
under sunny skies
Ohio State Tractor Pull with a
purse of more than $13,000.
Providing
dally
entertainment will be the AllOhio Boys Band and the Nl·
Ohio Youtl) Choir
They
have
shown
prize
The farm consists of 158
Fair manager VIc l.Aicas eJacres, all of which is bot- winning purebred. Holstein pects attendance to run around
tomland Conservation cattle at many fairs In fact, two million, Including both
practices which they have Mrs Cottrill says that, "Fit- patd and free admissions
carried out Include 18,575 feet Ung and showing dairy cattle is
of tile drainage, crop residue one of our chief recreational
use of 81 acres, pasture and activities ."
Their children, Timmy, age
CURFEW BEGINS
hayland planting on 37 acres,
15,
and
R01tanne,
age
14,
also
An
ordinance
providing lor a
mlnunum tillage on 53 acres,
take
an
active
interest
In
lhe
curfew for young people In
crop rotation system on 117
farm
.
Each
of
them
has
a
cow
Pomeroy goea Into effect lhla
acres, and the installation of
m
the
mtlklng
herd
and
is
evening, and for the llrat t1mt,
two walenng troughs for their
allowed
to
keep
a
profit
from
tonight at 11, the town alren
cattle
The Cottrllls' have earned its production. They both show will sound to mark the
many other awards In their and sell dairy heifers In the beginning of the curfew
The ordinance reqllirH •ll
farm ing operation In 1970 dairy heifer Junior Division at
the
Mason
County
Fair
This
young
people illlder 11 to be off
their farm was chosen al the
top Farmers Home Ad· year R011anne's heifer wu the atreetl alter II p.m. The
ministration farm family In Grand Champion and Timmy's siren will aound at 11 *"II'Y
was Reserve Champion
night
West VIrginia for that year

Weather

Cottrill farm is best

Regular 124.95

CLEANING TOOLS
Sale '18.77

ILL QUICKEL ,
Cheshire, waa named lo a
alate office lor the Oblo
Order of DeMolay at the
recent slate conclave In
Akron.

Miss Blaettnar
first runnerup

MII'MII'~,.~m".&lt;·~··,"··~.;:·.·

_i..=.'.

WEDNESDAY
MEIGS County Jaycees bt·
mon thly mee hng, Pomeroy
VtUage Hall at 8 p m Youn'g
men between ages of 18 and 35
are mvtled to attend
PARENTS of kindergarten
students in Southern Local
School Dtslrtcl to meet at 8
p m at htgh school cafeterta
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrineltes meet
8 p m home of Clara Adams,
Racme
DIRECTORS of Amertcan
Cancer Soctety meet at 7 30
p m at local offtce.
SHADE River Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, wtll meet m spectal
session at 8 p.m at temple
Work m Fellowcraft degree,
refr eshments All Master
Masons mvlted
FRIDAY
REVIVAL In progress this
week through Sunday at
Church of Christ in Chnsttan
Unton, Pearl Street, Middleport, 7 30 ~ . m mghtly The
Rev George Scott, Columbus,
guest speaker
FISH FRY by the Middleport
Fire Department at the Mill St
headquarters with serving to
begin at 4p m Take out orders
only
SATURDAY
ICE CREAM Social, Bashan
firehouse, serving to begin at 6
p m Sponsored by the firemen
and the auxiliary
Entertainment

durmg "River Boat Days "
"Arnold the Ptg" is ltsled
among the users a~ well as
vtctims of dog and horse bites
and more routine emergency
needs Several serious cases
have also been ltsted.
The Galha and Lawrence
County EMS quads have
participated in fatrs and activities 10 their counties as well
as ones m Jackson and Vmton
counties
This week, first atd and
demonstrations wtll be
available at the Parade of the
Hdls 10 Nel:!onvtlle, liandled by
the Nelsonvtlle EMS squad,'
The ambulance wtll be located
on the south end of the public
square on the pavement and
wtll be open for mspection.
Emergency medtcal
techructans (EMT's) wtU be on
duty from 6 to 10 p m each
evemng
The Glouster EMS untt w!U
be glYlng ftrst atd and
demonstraltons durmg aC·
tivtttes surrounding the Old
Settlers Reunton in Jacksonville
The Athens EMS station w!U
be parltctpatmg 10 the fair at
Albany 10 September Other
Future events to be covered by
EMS mclude the Hockmg
County fatr, the Jackson Apple
Festival and Bob Evans farm
festival 10 Galllpohs
EMT's of these communtties
who serve as part-tune employees or volunteers have
made thts pubhc servtce
possible The EMS Is staffed py
over 350 EMT's 10 the sevencounty service area

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Shop Thursday
9:30 to 5 pm

.

Bl.eltllr,
Pomeroy, waa aamed lint
ruoaer-up aa tbe Oblo
Swetlhettr1 of DeMolay In
Akroa rec:ently. Seventeen
flnllllll compeled In lhe
alate compeltllon.

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
t lJPI) - Pretildent Nl110n told
1111 emotionally charged newa
conference Wednellday he Ia
not going to restgn and 1111ld "I
would have blown my alack" If
he had been tDid the illegal and
"very, very embarraasing"
facts In the Watergate case by
former Atiorney General John
Mltcheil.
'
He also predicted thai two
former top atdes, H R
Haldeman and John D
Elllrllchman,
will
be
exonerated "when they have
an opportunity to have their
case heard in court," an In·
dlcatlon he expects them tD be
indicted
' '
, ,,
The President dl splaye~
pent-up anger during his ~
minute televised press con·
terence on the lawn of the
Western Whtte House, but was
m command when faced with a
volley of questions whtch
amounted to a cross
exammatlon of his personal

1\

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