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I
'Cyclist
injured
SaturdJJy
0<.1 \' Icl L Hees. 22. Hi o
Gr andt•. a mo tor <"yehsL, was
Injured m a colh swn .1t 7.24 p
m Sunday on Ht. 554. e1gh t
tenths of a nule \\ PSI of l\t IGU
Aecotd in g to th e Gal l! a.
Meigs Post State JJ tg h\\ n~
Patro l, Rces' cycle lvas struck
by an auto oper c~ted by Gd r ) D
Dav1s, 26, of Umonport. Ohw
Tlwt e \HIS moderate d,un:tgr
Dm IS was ch:u ged wJ th f. uhu L'
to yteld the n ght of ''<lY Hces
Mrs Marv Hmu.· ll. 81.
Stu V l\' tn g
:u t'
1'•11 1'
Guysv tlk l: ou.lt• L ftH mrrl) of <l<~ u g h ! t' rs. Mrs
!. unlit•
C'util'l', ci h~ d Sund;ty aflt•nwon T.tvlor, S tcw,ll t. Mr s Ll'l.t
,1t lht• ()'R ir ll('Ss Hosptt<tl m 'l'.n·lu J. (; r t lvl~ Ctt'). Mr s
Atht• ns
Lo;use Wlnlt•, (; uysvJilt•, :trHI
Mrs 110\\ Cll v. ~1 s born tn Mrs M ~nrdt' W! t ~: lr t , Colum Atill' li S Ct1unty. the d c-J u~ hle r of bus. h\ 0 br othel s, 1\lll'fl und
tlw lc~ tc Charl es cwcl Hw r td t Ll's lt\ 1 Wl•a thetlJy , ,\tlt l•n :-;
Htll W C'.t tl u:~ I by Shl' w:t s H ft vc gntnd c ht ldr eJr. ~-;eve n
me mbt-'1 of the Ml Ltbl'l t} g1t•o~t - g l andcl nldr t•n ,
.tnd
Um!C'd Mcthotltsl ( hun h dt S(' VCI il l TIIC9CS d fld nephews
Cu lh.' r 45 vears.
l•'uner al scrv ":cs wtll bt• held
Prrcechtrg her m de;:rth wt> re at 2 p m Wcdncsd,t) at thl'
hC'r f.Hirrn ls, he r hus bc111 d Wlu te Fu nera l Home m
Honlt'r l-1 Bowe ll , 111 19H9 a Cool vi lle w1th ti ll' Rev E.arl
so n, Me lvin. two g1and- Snyder offt('Jattng BUI ut i wtll
cluldren, D.w 1d Wht te ~m d be tn tlw Coolvt lle Cemetery
Ha rolO Howell : t\\ u s tstt•r s. Frt ends may c,iJ II at the funcr ul
.IIHI a br uti H.' I
home at noo11 Tu csd t~y
was treated und r r lcHst:.•d at
Hol~e r Mcdwa l Cl'nte1
I h·
sufft:.• rcd ~t spr.t ined arm and
ki te~ abr ast ons
A cl~er \H IS ktlled m ~~
co11J swn at 6 42 a m Su ndd)
on Rt .15. one and s1x tent hs
nulcs 11cst of Rt. 160. The
anmutl r dn mto the path of a
car operated by Donn,l L
Crabtree, 20. of Vm ton 'I helL'
1"lr~. Man die!'; in nursiJ1g lwmt'
RAC INE - Mr s
Forr es t
Ma rr. 82, R:1cme. dr ed today HI
1\ l cMIW
Nurs mg Home
Olun ITnl vt•rsity f'n•sidl'nt •
1' 1 I'1.1-:ASi\NT
The
( lnudt• H. Stm h· today stood
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•
t•t 1ulc •• I t\ 1·rns 1111\ 1 IJI.'t ' rJ
hrm un h1s s urpri~t.' dl'c·ision
<~ ll!l (l urt~· c d tudd }' lo1 lh t:' (Jth
to n·sJI-(11 and said ('ham·t·s he
i\rrnu ;d .Juu FJ stwr . Paul
would c·h:mgc· his mind \\\'rt'
Wt'<l~l'
Mt' lll<lrld] Golr Tour·
''l'Xt't•t•diiiJ!I) n ·mnte .' '
ll.llllt'll
l
on Mcmur1;1l Day , Ht
Tht' school's Board or
lliddr
n
Valley
('ounli y Club
Tn.IStN'S :tskl'd :t1-(ain lnday
'11tc• Hl·IHJICC:V l 'lll IS OfM!n only
that So" It• n ·c·unstder his
to
llVCC ll ll'lllbt•rs who are 21
dt'dsion to n·slgn in the
or
uver and tu inv1tr.d guests
"akc of \\hat he callt•d
" insatu• <·cntditJOns" and
1
Coolv ille.
g1andcluldren
Mt s M<.Jrr wa s born /\ug 28.
W92, the da ughle! of the l.1le
Gem ge a nd S~1r a h Rteka rd
F:.H:cra l ~er v 1ces will be held
Wectnesduy at 2 p m. a t E \\o tng
runeral llomc w1lh the Rev
Free land Norris offlciatlllg
Bunal w1ll be m Letart Falls
Cemetery. Fnends may call at
1Con tmued [rum p"gc 1)
:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·!·!·!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-: Hecesswnal" and " Anetta For
W1mts" followin g the m.vocalton by Mr. Eugene Un-
HOSPITAL NEWS
SATUIWAY ADMISSIONS
- Hosernanc Fr;, M!d~l eport ,
Jo seph Bowland, M1ddlcpo1t ;
M!mne P1 ckens, Portland
SATUHDi\Y DISCHARG ES
- Sharon Jones
derwood, pastor of the Tuppc! s
Pl"ins Church of Chnst Paula
Hauber, presiden t of th e
Musicians
62 seniors
\
PLACE YOUR
MEMORIAL DAY
FLOWER
semo!'s, mtroduced the gues t
speaker. Howm d Caldwell, Jr.,
vice p1·es1denl of the board of
cduea twn, presented diplomas
Earli e r
Sund i:IY:
bac-
( ;uJfcts an• ~1dv1sed that the
HV euursc wtll be closed except
for tournament players until
;, ll have cleared lh<• No 10 tee
on llw hohday
i\11 HV members who mtend
to play mu't sign up at the
dubhouse before Thursday,
May 2:l. Pa1rmgs and lfe limes
>Hll be pubhshcd Friday, May
25, and be posted m the clubho!L'c Play w1ll begm at 7:30
a 111 w1th all golfers startmg on
the No. J.tee
Trophi es w1ll be awarded for
low gross, low net, low gross
rwmer-up, low net runner-up
and high gross. Additional
prizes Will be presented for the
best dressed golfer' most putts,
low putts and other prizes that
are or humorolL'i nature
Tom Fisher and Jun Wedge,
Both me n were re s pected
eommumty leaders , devoted
go lfers, imd acltve members of
HVC Club.
Most of the mvited guests are
long tune friends and golfmg
companiOns of the two
.
Market Report
BLOCK CO.
Open Weekdays 9:30 to S p . m .
,
"
tournament captams, sard
many golfers are coming from
CAMPAIGN CHAIRMAN AND CC BOARD OF
TRUSTEES - Charles Gaskill, left, chamnan of the "support the Commuruty College" campai gn, is pictured abtwe
Willi four members of the mne-member Commumty College
Our
Supply
lasts!
I
an unsafe manner.
He was not injured . There
was light damage
MEIGS THEATRE
Tomght thru Thursday
May 20-23
NOT OPEN
'
Fnday thru Tue sday
May 24 28
JESUS CHRIST
SUPERSTAR
Other Sizes Priced According~
ITechnlcolor)
Ted Nee!e y, a s Jes us Christ ;
Carl Anderson
J ud aS;
Yv Onn e
E l!iman ,
Mary
Ma gd .:~ l e ne
INGELS
FURNITURE
.p
MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-2635 '
(Gi
Also Shorts
Show Starts 7 p m.
c
VOL. XXVI
Jane
Colby
..
Jane Colb y lead s you into a wonderful way ol hie
for summCr with a checked V-neck ribbed trim
top and sohd coordinating nassau shorts.
Washable, they ' re k111lled in a blend ol colton
Council approved permits to
Kroger's and Powell's Super
Valu for the sale of wme and
beer. All members but Osborne
voted yes , Osborne reasoning
that he fel-t there are too many
places in town where alcoholic
beverages are available.
Ch1ef of Police Jed Webster
and Carl Hysell were granted
perlllission to work for three to
four davs evaluatwg the
parkwg ~eter situation in the
dowr.town area. They are to
repa1r or replace what IS
By Umted Press International
COLUMBUS - REPUBUCAN STATE headquarters an·
nounced Monday a series of eight GOP fund-raismg dinners thLS
spring in Ohio featuring' as guest speakers such promment
Hepublicans as Vtce President Gerald R. Ford, Gov. Ronald
Heagan of Cal1fornia and former Gov Nelson A. Rockefeller of
New York. Ford is to speak here June 5, Reagan at Akron June 5
and Rockefeller at Cleveland June 14.
Other speakers scheduled for the senes were Gov . Arch
Moore of West Vrrgima at Athens June 14, Cleveland Mayor
Ralph Perk at Marwn May 30, former Oh10 Gov James A.
Rhodes of Lima May 30, Gov. Winf1eld Dunn of Tennessee at
Dayton May 30 and Gov . James E. Holshouser Jr., of North
Carolma at Canton May 30. The dinners were to be co-sponsored
by the respective county GOP hnance committees and the state
Republican finance comrruttee to raise money for 1974 election
campa1gns, said a headquarters spokesman.
SPORTSWEAR, SECOND FL00R
Elberfelds In Pomeroy
WASHINGTON - JEB STUART MAGRUDER, once one of
the bnghtest stars of the Nixon administra tion and one of the
first to break his silence about the Watergate affair, faced
sentencing today for one count of conspiracy.
He was scheduled to appear before U. S. Distnct Judge John
J Sirica at 9:30a.m. EDT Magruder could get up to a maxunwn
penalty of f1ve years in pnson and a $10,000 fine. He pleaded
guilty last August to an Information filed by then Special
Prosecutor Archibald Cox. He has been op~ tmg a consulting
flrm m Washmgton 111 recent months.
10N THE DOLLAR
•
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Passage of a national health
insurance bill should be the
"h1ghest prionly 1tem" in the
closing mon~ of Congress,
Senator Russell D. Long, D·
La., said today.
Long, who as chamnan of the
Senate Finance Committee has
major influence on the future
of health insurance legislation,
made the statement in advance
of today's opemng of com·
nuttee hearmgs on the subJect.
"Just yesterday President
Nixon spo1te to the nallon on
the issue of health msurance
and said that 1974 can and
should be the year in which the
Congress passes national
heallli insurance legislation,"
Long sa1d. "I agreed completely with the President in
th1s regard ... "
lnnoculations made Saturday
THE FARMERS.BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
Pomeroy, Oh;o
... for Each Depositor
-
DEPOSIT
A FULL
SERVICE
l3ANK
'20,000 Maximum Insurance
HDfRAL
N~.URANCF
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(QF/PO !lAT 0 "'
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t
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01
h\ o courses could do so for
$10 to $:10 while a fuJl .(! mc
stud~nt could at tend for about
$585 u) ca r Many students w1ll
be elig ible for local, s tate and
1 Cunllnued on page 14 )
A rota l! OJJ of the Earth
measm eel by the sta rs 1s four
mrn utes shor ter than a day
mccJsured by the sun
Area
TUESDAY, MAY 21. 1974
PHONE 992 2156
needed.
Browme Troop No 76 got
perm1ss1on to lw ld the1r
summ er mee tJn gs 1n the
downstairs room of c1ty hall
due to t\'te closmg of school and
the1r regular meel1ng place
Mrs. James Soulsby was
authorized to conduc t busmess
solic1tal10ns Jun e 10 for the
Me1gs County Hear t F'und
Don Griffin of Sclenllfl c
Samat10n Inc . met w1th council
concernmg village pickup and
rates. Cour1crl mo\ eel to havl'
Gn ffm clnt\\ up <1 w1rttcn
agreeme nt for coun c!l to <~P·
prove rates. nncl rules c~n d
regu latJoils
TEN CENTS
'
\\ere the present s1tuatwn of
pollle officers an the vallage,•
the process rnvolved 1n pu r.
chasmg the Weed bmldlllg on
the corner of Second St and ·
Jane Walton , clc1k, an- Butternut Ave . and the up·
nount:ed ~hat the new police com1ng r ~attc1 co nt:e rnmg
cru1ser fo r the vtll;tge has police p1otectwn and clea nup
arnved and IS rn use .
Council member s attendtng
"I:he rreed for a retmmng '\all were Har f) D<~v l s , Wr lham
un the h1 ll of Osborne St was
disc ussed but tabled pend1ng
mspec twn
1
Oth er ma t ter s discussed
Snouffe1 . ' Halpl1 Werry , Lou
Osborne. Phil Globokar . Mu) 01
Da le Smnh. and Clerk Jane
Walton
1,; •
DWIG fiT MUTCHLER, natwnall y known artist, a nat1ve of Rutland and a retired Ohio
Umvers1 ty facully member, outlined early days on the Oh10 River, at a mee tmg of the Me1gs
County B1centenmal CommiSSion Monday night With h1m IS Mrs Jeanne Bowen, who introduced Mu tchler She IS holdmg a Ma rch 4, 1863 framed resolution fr om the Oh10 Legisla ture
eommendmg him (the "squ irrel hunters" ) of southern Ohio for their role m the Civ il War
Price of
River peoples'·
foods go history traced
.way down
•
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OFFICE HOUR S 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOS~
AT NOON ON THlJR S ) - EA,ST COURT .<;T.,
POMEROY.
\
tleig~- MU$0n
medical laboratory tec hmc1an
I MLT 1 progra m. All but
clectromcs could be offered
Uns fall
Loce:d surveys m the four
co unty area will dcterm1ne
wh;.~t courses and programs
will be offered w the future.
Tu1t10n at the Com mumly
College 1s scheduled to be onl}
$10 per cr edr t hour· Th1s mea ns
thc-1t anyune wrs hmg to lake one
Now You Know
enttne
Of ThP
rece ntl y were a two-year
gencrul educa ta on program,
sec retarta l sc ie nce, ac ·
count1ng, electr onJcs an d
Top in Sizes S·M·L
Shorts m Sizes 7·17. 8· 18
Brought In anytime before June 1, 1974
I
)
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
lntere3~
Scptelllber
Ap proved by the rege nts
and polyester.
PENNIES
~OPTOMETRIST
\
Devoted To The
NO 27
Pomeroy village council
Monday mght granted a
contract to Shelly Sands Co. for
concrete and coaling to repair
town streets at a cost of $14,390
Citing several streets
needmg repmr , council d1d not
dec1de wh1ch had pnority
Streets under consideral!on
are Umon Ave , the bypass
under the Pomeroy-Mas on
Bndge, Butternut Ave. at the
foot of Lmcoln H1ll, Rmlrc•d
St, Condor St . and the
Cemetery roads.
Racme, WIS., 111 1882
N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
whut, when, where ani,] why,
•
at y
Long asks health act
WELFARE ROLLS
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Ohw's
work reg1s tra l10n program
con lnbuted greatly to removal
from the state's welfare roles
of :i,633 persons, durin g
January and February, state
Welfare director Charles Bares
sa1d today Bates satd 129
employable recipients of the
5,633' persons were <emoved
because the y refused to
register for work or accept
employment or training opportunities offered by the Ohw
Bureau of Employment SerVIces.
.
$14,390 street repairs. contract let
FOR •••
M EMIJU
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Vanable cloudiness tomght
and Wednesday Willi showers
likely mamly west tomght and
over state Wednesday. Lov. s
tomght upper 50s to m1d 60s
H1ghs Wednesday upper 70s
and low 60s
Sen. Howard Metzenbawn voted With the 50 Democrats and
Sen. Hobert Taft voted With the 31 Republicans on the 81-5 roll
call vote.
- -.\,.
_'
are Delbert Reese. Mrs Warn·n Sheets, Mmmmg Wt·thcr holt
anct Emon Plummer.
Weather
four years
AIR CONDITIONERS
While
Board of Trustees dunng Monday mght's campa ign kickoff
dinner in the Rto Grande College ra fetf'rta Trustee nwmbcr s
WASHINGTON- BOTH OHIO SENATORS voted Monday m
favor of the bill to extend federal a1d for education programs for
4,000 BTU
tile row -tount}
Ill
w11l be dSkcd to (lpprove .1 we fee l we can put It over," he
't·
WASHINGTON-SEN. EDWARDM. KENNEDY, D-Mass.,
sa1d Monday that the nation's political system is the finest money
can buy - and "a disgrace to every prmc1ple on which America
was foWJded .''
1f1 a speech at a meeting of the Mass Reta1ling Institute here,
Kennedy called on Congress to approve legLSiahon for public
financmg of elechons to end the current system.
--
Voters
d l'ec~
"l'
Dudley's Aorist
FEDDERS
.
onl. null la x lev y dUI rng . 01 continued
spt•c!dl elct:twr1 un Tuesday
Ca m p31gn workers al so
Tlwt 's hrJ\\ the p1LlJWsed Jyn e II ilpprox wlalely 18,000 hcd l cl rcmark!:i from Sum Nea l
Communll)
Co ll ege w;ts persons ~1 fl' ex pee ted to vote on cmd Mrs Peggy· Th oma s, co descr 1bed :\1 ond.ly mghl by th(· le vy next month
< oordma tors of the Communtty
Ch:1rles Gc~skllt, ge nera l
Gask ill sa ul, " If "'' all grl College
ch,urmctn of the' ~uppor l }OUI
out a nd \\ nrk,
(·.t n lw ,._I Neal smd or1e reason for last
C' urnmurntv Co llege" cmn,dSSUrNI o( a nl dJOI'I ty VOll'
mght's kickoff campa ign \\a s
p.ugn durrn'g a ki Ck·off dmnr r
f3\'or urg
tht s
ltlli qut•
to · m<:~ke sure we rea ch every
tn the H10 Grande College
prOJl'<l."
prcctru.: t tn tile fou r coun ty m ca
cafelertd
I oca l hus1ness and rndu str id l \\Jth truthf ul 1nfo rmat10n
· App roxuuately 100 bu siness lcdclet s have lOIIlt' up wrth ('O nce rnw g th e Co mmum ty
an d
Jnrlustl'lal
leade r s dJlJl ' oxnnately 120,000 out of College '
rL'prese ntmg fnur counttes ti!Cir OWn r>OCkel"i !U SU[)JHlf f
M1 S T llO ni dS Sclld the
Ga lll a , Me1gs. V1ntun drtd carnpa tgn li teratu re <lnd dd· ConHnurut) College 's grc.:Jtcst
J<:~ek su n - attended
vc1 IJ!:i lll g fur tht: CotrllllU!It!\ ~t ssct \\til he ·f! ex lbil lt} " She
"'J he Comrnun tty Col lr ~e College
~Hldcd th.t t ftvc pro~rcll11s hdve
Ro.1 rd of Tr ustees has done 1L'J
· T" o \\C e ks of l1rnd \~tJTk c1 h rady been approved b} thf'
JOb !'l1e Otn v Ru:u d of Hcgenl" should grve us :~ 11ldJUIII\ Oh1o ll oa1 d of T1cgenL< If
hH~ donr 1ls JOb Now tt's 0111
\ ole .
(_;c~ s k!ll
contllrued app1 O\ eclat the polls 1)\• voters
JOb to com ple te t ht s \\Orth\\ ll1I C' · Omt> the prog r;un rs t'X · June 11, d dS!)CS m foUl of th ose
proJeCt, ' Gask ill con tmued plcuned to mcltvldU.llS !h(' who, f1vc l Ollrscs \\Ill begm an
Vdllt.:~.gt' Of It'
Elberfeld$ In Pomeroy
ORDERS EARLY
POMEROY CEMENT
·'A gr ern t' !1ppnrtu 'n ty' f 01 bo lh
h1g h ·:-;chool g1adtwl~.:s C!nd
actulls \Vt._' !1\U SI takt.• dd-
..
other areas and from out of
state by special mv1tat10n.
No pairmgs or tee tunes can
be changed once announced
Defending challlplon IS Gary
Roush of New Haven and
prevwus champ1ons are Paul
processronal and retesswna l Somervtlle Jr., Bill Rardin,
v.ere by Teresa Buckley. The Bob Greene and Jim Reymond.
This tournament has come to
girls glee club presented,
be regarded as the start of the
"Prayer."
Graduates were William Hidden Valley Country Club
Amberger, Steven Anderson, season and IS the · one "fun
Larry Atherton , Rodn ey event" that area golfers look
Baker, Bonnie Bamnger, forward to playing in.
The Fisher-Wedge TourTimothy Baum, M1chael Bmg,
nament
IS sponsored by the two
'Bruce Bissell, Bermce Boggs,
youngest
sons of the late Jim
Sue Burke, Deborah Burns,
Lmda Calaway, Marte en a Fisher and Paul Wedge. Mr.
Caldwell, Ra·hard Carson , Fisher died unexpectedly m
Dame! Chaffee, Peggy Chaney, July, 1969whlle Mr. Wedge and
Teresa Chichester, Rosemary his w1fe were victims of the
Clark, Hoger Coates, Melissa 1967 Silver Bndge dtsaster.
Colema n, Dorothy Cremeans,
Steve D1ll, Jo Enevoldsen, William Salmons
Crys~1l Erwm, Steve Follrod,
Rhonda Fortney , Robin died on Sunday
Gainer, Jeffrey Gilland, Steve
Goebel, Patncia Grossmckle,
William Anderson Salmons,
Joy Grover , •Paula Hauber, Hamden, formerly of Mid·
Rickie
Hollon,
Ton ya dleport, died Stinday at the
Kccbaugh, Chryll K1mes, Holzer Medical Center.
Pam e l<.J Lanh am, Nancy
Mr. Salmons was employed
Miller, Tony Milhoan, Martha 10 years with the E. D. Salmons
Myers : Randy Orr, Gale Lwnber Co. at Hobson SurOsborne, Ra lph Parker, Ins vivors include his wife, Ida,
P1gott, Clair Reed, Sheha and these children, E. D.
Sampson, John Sheets, Lmda Salmons, Hamden; Wilham E.
Smith, David Sorden, David Garrison in Kentucky; Wilham
Weber , Jane Wlulehead , A Salmons, Jr., Colwnbus;
Deborah Wilson and Sheri Glenn, Earl and Emery, all of
Young.
Colwnbus; Ray in Indiana ;
Zelia Mae and Juanita, both of
Columbus;
Beatrice Law,
AUXILIARY TO MEET
The Women's Auxiliary of Spnngfield, and Helen Cors i,
Veterans Memonal Hospital Pomeroy.
Funeral services w1ll be held
w1ll meet at 7 30 p.m. Tuesday
at
1 p.m. Wednesday at the
at the hospital A program w1ll
Jenkms Funeral Home 111
follow the busmess sessiOn.
Wellston.
.
.
'
CC opportunity unique
deceased men or their ~ns.
Golfers from four states are
expected to parliClpate in ihis
6th Annual event. Anlllng ,th~
special guests will' be ijob
Dantels, head basketball CO\!Ch
at Marshall Umversity.
. "
,
ca laureate was held for the
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS class w1 th the Hev Robert L
Steven Bailey , Jr , Athens;
Meece, Nor theast Cluster
Bea lt 1ce F1nk , Middl eport ,
United
Method1st Church, as
Barbar:J
Hall ,
Vmtun;
s
peaker.
The Rev. Robert
Elizabetll Bartoc, Long Bot·
Km g, Shook gave tile inv oca twn and
tom; Edward P
bened 1cl10n
and
Pom eroy; Nonn,m Smtth , th e
Eden. She was also preceded 111
death by her husband , John
Marr. and two s1sters.
J\ smglc car L~Cc!den t ocShe IS survived by lh1 ee the fun eral home a fte1 7 tins
curred Sr~ttu ddy morn mg on daugh ters,
l~ uth
Lcw1s, evenmg.
Rt. ~5. oue nnd mne te ths Mass il lon, Huby Miller,
Pomeroy
rmles west of Rt 7 \\ hcJc Tuppers Pla1 ns, and Beulah
SUNDAY DISCHAHGES De nnis J
Ph1ll1ps, 17 , Ne!g ler·, Racine , two sons,
Joru1 Edwards, Clyde Ferrell,
Gallipolis. lost control of Ius Wayland , of La ncaster and
Fred Clm·k, Robert M1ll1ron .
em \\ h1ch ran off the left st de of
1Contmued from page 11
Pa ul of Hat'li!C. three brothers,
the htghway sh ilnng a thk h.
Pleasant Vallry Hnspital
Walter Eel en, Mt Sterling, Judv Radford , Cannel MUI'·
Challcs Fuller, 35, Proc·
Discharges
- John Elli ott,
Ja sper Eden, Letart, W. Va , phy: 1hchard Macomber , l.1sa
tot vJllt• , \\ as c1ted to Mtull eipal
Po1nt
Pleasa
nt, Yvonne
m1d Oe,ter Eden, Parkers- Thoma s . Tmnmy Mowery .
Cour t fo r OWl follow!llg an
burg three srs tcrs, Eva S101. Ang1e S1sson , Debbie Emley, W1lhams, Patn ot, 0 , Suzetta
acciden t Sat urday on Township
Eliza bet h, Pa .; Bea tn cc Jackie Ca1·sey, Ci ndy Eads, Burdette, Mt. Alto; Mrs.
Road oO, tlu ee tenths of a mile
G1lbe1 t Martm , Buffalo;
Mare Fultz, Karen Johnson , Emm<.J McCa rty, Henderson;
west of Rl. 7 Fuller s ca1 left
Km1 Jones, Mona Kmg, Dma Raymond Barnette, New
the highway stnkmg a ditch
Pratt, Teri Russell, Des i Haven; L1w Stephenson, Pomt
J~ ffe l'S, Tammy Offenbergcr,
Pleasant ; ~harl es Humph11es,
( Contmued from , Jge 1)
Vicky Moore, Cathy Werr; , New haven; Matt1e Rmgs, New
Beve rly Ha rt, Denn1s Hawk. Dave Ridgway , .Jeff Reuter, Haven; Mrs. Willa! d Leach,
Brend a Hayes, Jill Houdashel t, Vicky Hoffman, Joe Anthony,
Pomt Pleasa nt; Mrs John
Roc ky Hupp , John Jenk1n s,
Va ler ie John s on , V1c tor• a Dave Cole, Bnan K1zzee , Taylor, son, Bidwell; Robert
John s ton , Re becca Koun s. AutUillll Sayre, Julie Hamm , Darst. Pomt Pleasant ; Mrs.
Robert Laws on , Jr , Sidney Janice Young , pam Nicinsky
Earl Reyn olds, Gallipolis;
Man uel. Et1 sa McMill an, Caro l and Jackie Doxs1.
M1 cha e t CTh e1ss), Chr 1st y
Mrs
Kenn eth Mullins.
FRESHMEN
Libby Gallipolis;
Mic hae l (R ous h). Robe rt
M1 s
Dav1d
Mtll er, Rom a Nease, Vern e Sanford, Keith Bailey, Bruce
Sullivan , !.eon ; Mrs Robert
Ord, Pi! tsy Proff1ft, Con stance
Bwngardner, Ronme Wood, Steele, Fra ziers Bottom, and
Rous h. Rex Roy , Mtc li'a el
Sa lser, D.:~ v •d Sayre, Phyll ts Danny Will, Darrell Puckett, Mrs Garland Bostic.:, Ga lltpohs
Spears (Cross), Connt e Smlitl Duane McLaughlin , Mark
(H11! ), Robert Sayre, Vtck •e Davis, Kellee Burdette, Becky Fe1ry
Sc hult z, Ho ward Sh1ve te y
Fa1lh Smith (Va~neyl. Terry Ful tz. Teresa Ellis, Ma l' Y
floller Medical Center
Sm1th, Terry Spence r, Roy Balettnar, Pam Offenbergcr ,
1B1rthsJ
Stea rn s. Glona Ta ylor, Barry Beth McKni ght. Cm·olyn
Fndav
Mr. and Mrs.
Th etss, Dav 1d Shu ler , Davt d
Charles, Melame Scaggs, Suzy Ernest ·Riffle, .lr,, daughter ,
The1ss, Robert Varian . Ma r:.y
Samuels, Trma Faulk, Faith Wellston : Mr and Mrs. Harry
Walker (Shoults) , Jill Warner,
Thoma s Warn er , Jame s Perrin , Pam North, Kathy
Carleton , son , Coolville; Mr.
Wd l1am s.
Davtd
Wolf e,
Patn c1a Woods and Susan Ann Haley, Vanessa Folmer, Ellen and Mrs Joseph Chandler,
Darst, Teresa Wildermuth, daughter, Jackson, and Mr .
Yos t
Jenny Grate, Debbie Taylor, and Mrs. l...awren('e Duv1son,
Shern Vm mg, Patti Warner, son, Gallipolis
Trudy
Roach ,
Tammy
Moosman, Debbie Hartenbach,
" A reck less dnver 1s
se ld om wr e-c kl e ss for
Becky Thomas , Beverly
long "
Wilcox, Opal Dyer, Debb1e
Osborne, Dwna Wheeler, K1m
Sebo , Becky Bego , Cheryl
Barnhart, Teresa Brown ,
GALLIPOUS,'olliO
let s make lh1s B wreck
Teresa
F1sh
,
Jean
Durst,
Paula
May 18, I974
less MEMORIA L DAY It
you must drive ~ dn ve like
E1chmger, Darlene Berrett,
SALES REPORT OF
Arllficial Bas l< ets
your fam ily ts tn the other
Hobm Dewhurst, Margaret
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Monument Markers
car
Provmce, Cathy Meadows,
STOCKER CATTLE
Arllficial Flower Pots
Beth
Vaughan,
Tammie
Smith
,
STEERS
- 250 to 300 lbs 45.25
Live Flower
Debbie Birchfield, June Wams- to 49.50; 300 to 400 lbs 41.50 to
Combmations
ley, Jane Van Meter, Sandy 43; 400 to 500 lbs. 38.50 to 42 50;
500 to 600 lbs. 36.50 to 42 ; GOO to
Garnes, and Pam Vaughan.
700 lbs. 34 50 to 38.75; 700 lbs.
and
Over 34 to 4o.
IN HOSPITAL
59 N. Second St.
HEIFER
CALVES - 250 to
n,,, 0f•p ,u lm(·nt Store nl
Joseph Bowland, Middleport.
Middleport,
0.
30G
lbs
44
to
46.50; 300 to 400
Auddil1q·.St.nce 1915 .
was taken by the Middleport E·
l ,. , ,~.: ~~.,lr~~' n d ..
lbs 41.50 to 45; 400 to 500 lbs.
R ~!lY~d to Veterans Memorial
36.50
to 38; 500 to 600 lbs. 35 to
f'I-+~H...,~...,...,......,~..,.,._..,.......,~ Hospital Saturday afternoon
37 75; 600 to 700 31.50 to 33; 700
after becoming ill at Jack 's
lbs and Over 30.50 l<> 34.
Dairy Bar He \\as admitted.
STOCK COWS & BUUl; IBy
the Head) -Stock Cows ,22:i to
325; Stock Cows and Calves 300
LOCAL TEMPS
to 440; Stock Bulls 285 to 400;
The temperature Ill down- Baby Calves 65 to 100; (By The
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Powld) - Canners & Cutters
Monday was 74 degrees under Cows 23 to 28.50; Holstem Cows
sunny skies
29.50 to 32.50;. Commercial
Bulls 11,000 lbs. and Over) 35 to
41.
.
SQUAD CALLED
LAMBS -Tops 90 lbs. lo 110
The Pomeroy ER squad was 44 to 50; Second~ 751bs. to 60 34
called Sunday at 7 p m. to take to 40; Lights 40 lbs. to 65 25 to
Norman Smith to Veterans ~I 50; Stock Ewes By the Head
Memorwl Hosp1k1l
30 to 40.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs- to 250 61 to 6:!.50; Mediun1
DRIVER CITED
200 lbs. to ~00 54 to 60; Calls 54
Pomeroy police mveshgated Down
a s1ngle car accident Saturday
on Nye Ave. Paul Re1tmire,
Pomeroy, was travelmg north
NOW YOU KNOW
when he went left of center and
Malted milk was origmally
hit an embankment. Re1tm1re named "Diastmd" when 11 was
was cited to court for driVIng in invented by William Horhck 1n
was modent te damage to her
car
Seniors told
' 's •·nsdt.· ss lltls." !Set•
t•arlit.• r story un pH gl' 21 .
Vclerans M4'111•1rt3l Hospital
Adams, Wellsburg, W. Va , and
Leafy Spemhoff. R1ple) : seven
~ ra ndc hild ren ,
11 g1e.1t·
HI
'6 th Fisher-Wedge tourney set
MI Nil MAllE Ul'
ATIIENS , Ohiu t t 'l'tl -
I
I
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,.
Approx1mately 200 animals extended a vole of thanks to
were lnnoc"ulated at the Rolland Crabtree and other
veterinar1an 's service clinic employes at the garage for
· sponsored by the Meigs Counly their
assistance
and
Humane Sociely Saturday at cooperation during the clime.
the State H1ghway Garage
:~::. uc u•: •• : ;w.: :8: J:.'W;;~
Dr. J. K. Bratton, Athens,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
was the 11etermarian m charge
Clearing Thursday. Fair
of the clinic. Volunteers of the Friday and Saturday. Highs
Humane Sociely assisting were in lhe 70s Thursday and in
R1ta Lewis, chairperson ; Mrs. tbe 60s Friday and Saturday.
Mary Seamon, Mrs . Betty Lows In !,he 50s and low 60s
Glass and daughter, Kim, Mrs. Thur~day and mostly In the
Betty Baronick, and Mrs. lOs Friday and Saturday.
Dorthea Fisher. The Sociely ~......
.........~~*.·~·
.• i ~~... J!.~~z-:.:;:.:;::;~.:=::;:; •
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POMEROY MAYOR DALE SMITH proclamterl Fnday and Saturday as Po ppy Days ;md
purchased the fir st poppy from Jennifer Cou ch. little "poppy pr mcess "F1 om left to 11ght',H e
front row, Mayor Smith , M1ss Couch Robm Lehew, li ttle ' M1ss Poppy', back row, MIS
Gerald Wildermuth, Poppy Day chairman, G1·ace Pratt. p1csulent of Drcv. Webstc1 Umt :m.
Ladies Auxiliary, and Paula Kloes, jumor "M1ss Popp)" All are members of Uml J9
Wake of Watergate
WASHINGTON IUPI ) - Jeb Stuart Magruder, who was No 2 offi cial m Pres1dent N!Xm; 's 1972
re -election orgamzatwn , was sentenced b~ Judge John J Smca today to a mmtmum of 10 months tn
a federal mmunum security mslltut10n fo r his part m the Wa tergate ease.
"My ambitiOn obscured my judgment," Magruder sa id in a sta temen t that he reatl as he stood
before Sirica pnor to sentencmg for his plea of guilty to a s1ngle count of conspu acy Mag ruder saul
that m the months smce he acknowledge d his role m the Watergate, he had seen "confusion m the
eyes of my children, heartbreak m the eyes of my v. 1fc, and contempt 111 the eyes of othe1s '
WASHINGTON (UP!) - James D. St. Clair md1cated today that President N1xon would defy lwo
subpoenas Issued last week by the House,.Judic1ary Comm1ttee m Its Impeachment mq u1ry. Sl
Oair, NIXon's chief Watergate lawyer , told reporters as he arrived for toda) 's closed scss1on of
committee that he knew of no change m. N!Xon's posit10n that the panel already poss,esses ·the ful l
Watergate story. "
The subpoenas set at 10 a.m. EDT Wednesday deadlin e fo r an answer One seeks 11 more
Watergate tape recordmgs and the othel' seekS entries from N1xon 's off1 cw l dwry for portions of
nine months in \ 972 and 1973. St. Clair sa id he would reply m wntmg later today to the committee's
reguest for 20 tapes dealing with the ITT affair and 46 tapes on m1lk producers' con lribul!ons v. luch
are alleged to have bought pohtical favors. The comm1ttee had asked for a reply by Monday
· A senior committee Republican , Hep. Tom Railsback, Ill , told reporters Monday that Nixon's
defiance of the subpoenas could cost hun vo tes "It 's go ing to be difficult for anyone to vote 10
exonerate 1f he doesn 't produce what 1s necessary,'' he sa1d of N1xon.
WASHINGTON (UP! )- V1ce President Gerald R Ford smd today he thmks the Supreme Coo rl
will ultunately dec1de tf Special Wa tergate Prosecutor Leo n Jaworski Will rece1ve 64 ta pcc
presidential conversatwns subpoenaed )ast month . In an exclusiVe interv1ew th1s mormng, Ford
also sa1d he thinkS 11 more important for Pres1dent Nixon to coope rate v. ilh the House Jwl!Clan
Committee than w1th Jaworski.
F'ord said he has always advised the Wh1 te House to cooperate, but, 'It IS more Important lo
cooperate with the House Judiciary Comm1ttee than w1th Jaworski since the committee 1s con-.
sidering impeachment. " The admmistrat10n 's legal strategy, however, has been to cast the d!Spule
·
m terms of an executive branch conflict ha\i ng nothing to do\\ llh the courts.
I'
Probation given four by court
Four persons arrested in !1_,
raid in search of illegal drugs
Friday were fined by Judge
Frank W. Porter 111 Me1gs
County Court Monday a fj
..
Cha rles Lee Ham pton and
tern oo n and placed on Robert Paul Dean, Fort Worth,
probal!on.
Tex as, plead ed gu1l ty to
The four , Ra lph Wesley , possessiOn. They were fmed
Me1ster, Rt. 1, Dexter, Rlc,hard '$100 and c o~ts and placed on
J Carusona , Langsvil le, two vears probatiOn
.
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have every local group carry
out
some actiVIty for the 200th
WASHINGTON - Consumer
birthday
of the nation. He
food pn ees showed the biggest
commended
George Memhart
drop of an; month 111 seven
fo r prov!dmg a post office box
yea rs m i\pnl, hclp mg slow the
fo
r the co mmission in
rece nt ra ptd Itse m Amen ca ns '
Pomeroy
The box nwnber
cost of li vmg, the government
appropnately
IS " 1776 "
reported today
the
Meigs
:\1 useu m Jn
Leo Story reported that plans
Even w1th the favorable Pomeroy
fo r a formal marking of the
figures on food, the overall
Mutchler, who pa mted the h1stoncal Chester Courthouse
consumer pnce mdcx. rose 0 6 mura l wh1ch IS a feature of the
on July 4 cannot be carried out
pet. m Apnl, however , because mterwr decoratwns a t the
and the marking w1ll have to he
of mc reases rn pn ces of Farmers Bank and Savmgs Co
gasoli ne, clothing, and other buildmg 111 Pomeroy, recalled pos loned Mrs Elizabeth
Hllfer ty said tha t gUidelines for
reta il goods.
the pla nmn g and many orga mzati ons partlcipatmg m
Sharply lower beef prices drawm gs v. h1ch first have to be
and dechnes tn the. super · completed before the actua l Ute B1centenmal will be set up
market cost of pork , poultry, pamtmg 'of a mural IS begu n m lne fa ll , along with a
eggs and fr es h vege tabl es He attempted to fit the Ohw spea kers' bureau tl> service
resulted in a 0 4 pet drop 111 R1ver and 1ts mdustry IIllo a mee t1n gs of orgamzatwns
mteres led in participating.
food pnces last month .
relahonsh1p w1lh ba nk1ng when
Mrs Jeanne Bowen reported
This was the first decline 111 he designed h1s bank mural,
lliat the Meigs chapter or the
food prices smce September Mutchler sa1d.
Amen
can Association of
aijd lhe b1ggest one·month
Always fascmated by the Umversity Women has enfalloff smce February, 1967, Oh10 River, Mutchler sa id he
the Burea u of Labor Sta t1shcs traveled [or many years from dorse d , th e Bicentennial
movement and will par, sa id.
Wheelin g to Ca1ro, Ill , always tici pate Gerald Powell asked
Although the overall rise was 1mpressed by the small towns
the smalles t in the closely along the nver as apart of the fo r more short stories for the
(Continued from page 14)
watched Consume r Pr ice roman tic past of the Oh io
Index smce a 0.3 pet riSe last R1ve r
He traced
the
September , prices Amen cans development of the stea mboat,
pay for reta11 goods still were the Sf ltlement of Bien;
10.2 pel. h1gher than a year nerhassett Island , and plans
MEET THURSDAY
ago.
,1
for the restoratiOn of that
A meeting of Ute Pomeroy
That is an unusually steep Island.
Boys Lel!l!ue will be held at 7
climb by h1stoncal standards,
Mutchler stressed the· .in- p.m. Thursday at Pomeroy
and an md1cal!on that the fluence sounds along the n ver village hall Plan• will be made
natiOn IS still fightin g a severe had to Stephen C. Foster and for setting up the concession
mflaliQnary problem
~
h1s mus1c, and .of the ea rly stand at the Pomeroy alumni
The rtse m consumer prtces development of Cincmnati as a banquet Saiurday night.
has been even greater 111 the publishing center.
Committees will also be appast three months, 12.1. pet.
Following his talk Mutchler pomtect to assist in readying
Apn l's 0 6 Inc rease, 11 carried diScussed Oh10 River History the ball diamond. Managers,
over a full year . would coml and hts egpe nences as an Interes ted pal-e nts , other s
out to an annual nse of 7.2 pet. arhst
mteresled in the prog~am are
The CPI now stands al 144 0
C. E . Bla kes lee, vice asked to attend Ute meeting. It
compared to.a 1967 base of 100. cha im1a?· premded over the was reported thai about $450
This mea ns that a vanely of meeting, pomlmg out that it is was made on the recen,t Boys
I
(Contmued on p~ge 14 )
the aim of the COf11mission to League' tag day.,
I
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(,
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How people lived along the
banks of the OhiO R1ver was
desc n bed by arhst D111ght
Mutchler, formerly of Rutla nd ,
ret~red Ohi o UmverSl ty fac ulty
mem be r , wl1en the Me1gs
Co untv 8 1centen mal Comm lss! O~ met Monday mgh t at
',
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3- The Datly Sent10el, Mtddlcport-Pomeroy, 0 . Tuesday , May 21, 1974
•'
Toniados lose, 8-7; · Bobcats are SVAC champs
MEIGS
MARAUDER BASEBALL
4
AB
OFFENSIVE STATISTICS--1974
H
R
w
19
12
19 13
M. Nesaelroed 15 · 40
25,
11 11 10
Po Ault
21 8
D, l'lolt e
~ 55 20 1t!
13
H. Stobart
l6 51 15
9
c. 141rshall 16 53 9
12
9
.M. Ash
16 55
s.
M.
F.
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Ranger critical
of land policies
By DAVE BOWRING
Written for
United Press lnterna tiona I
IRONTON, Ohio - Land purchases which would
add to the acreage of both ranger districts of Ohio's
Wayne national forest have been sharply reduced,
according to Ironton district manager T. Allen
Wolter.
Wolter said his district's budget, reduced last
year from the year before, has been cut by nearly
$37,000 for fiscal 1975. Wolter places the blame
squarely on the Nixon administration .
"He (the President) is
cutting the country's throat
because land prices are going
up and much of the land now
available for Forest Service
purchase will be even more
expensive in the future,"
Wolter said.
Wolter said Washington bad
frozen funds made available
through the Office of Management and Budget from two
sources - the Land and Water
Conservation Fund, and the
Weeks Law. The cuts filter
down to the ranger district
level in several forms , he said.
Land AvaUable
"Two years ago we were
beating the bushes looking for
lands to buy. Now we have
people calling us with land to
sell, and we can't buy it because we don ' t have the
money," Wolter said this
meant
less
available
recreation lands for the public
m the future, and probably
fewer services made available
on existing nahonal forest
lands.
Besides far fewer land purchases, the budget cuts make
themselves felt in other areas
as well. When Wolter became
chief of tbe Ironton district in
1971, the district's annual bedget for wildlife habitant improvement was an inconsequential $50. By fiscal
1974, the amoWtt bad been
increased to $3,300 per year.
Wildlife funds have been cut to
$750 for the next fiScal year,
which begins in June.
"Fortunately we've been
getting a considerable amollllt
of help from state wildlife
people," Wolter said. "They've
helped us maintain 50 wildlife
openmgs on national forest
land, or we'd have virtually
·!l()thmg to show."
Budgetary cuts have reduced
the manpower loresters can
hire. The Forest Servtce has
been operating at 1962 manpower levels for two years. An
additional cut last summer
further reduced manmng
levels.
Money Problems A~ule
· SO acute are money matters
within the entire WayneHoosier national forest complex that priority lists have
been issued to the ranger
districts involved.
Items to be de-emphasized
include road construction,
building snowmobile trails and
the purchase of lands wtth
enVU'onmental problems. Such
lands mclude orphaned
(abandoned) strtp mmes which
seep acid waste during rainfall, reduce wtldlife habitat,
and present safety hazards for
the public.
The 20,()()().odd acres purchased two years ago by the
Athens ranger diStrict of the
Wayne, known as the Sunday
Creek tract, contams some 500
acres of such orphaned strip
mines.
Items gtven the green light
for implementation include
public safety, minerals
management, fire detection,
land use planning, equal
employment opportunity, and
environmental education.
"I don't think he (Nixon) can
continue to freeze approprl8ted
funds, at least not legally,"
Wolter said. But the stack of
budgetary directives under his
elbow says the President ts
wtthholding the funds, legally
or not.
interference
by White House
WASHINGTON (UP!) Spectal Watergate Prosecutor
Leon Jaworski has formally
complained to Congress that
President Nixon ts trying to
dictate to. him "when to
prosecute, whom to prosecute
and with what evtdence to
prosecute."
Pursumg the same issue over
whtch hts predecessor Archibald Cox, was fired ,
Jaworski wrooo the Senate
Judictary Committee that
Ntxon has lrted to deny htm the
right to sue the President to
obtain informahon
Sen. James 0. Eastland, DMiss. , chairman of that
committee, which oversaw the
creation of the prosecutor's
job, called an emergency
meeting for 2 p.m. EDT to
constder Jaworski's complamt
Jaworski and presidenllal
lawyer James D. St. Clatr were
invited to attend
"These are very dangerous
developments," said Judiciary
Committee member Charles
McMathias, R-Md. "It is a
sham to expect Mr. Jaworski to
do the job to which he was
appoinoodand at the same time
restrict hts access to the
evidence he thmks he needs."
Challenging Right
In his letter to the commttlee, Jaworski satd, "The
cructal pomt is that the
Prestdent, through. his counsel
is c~llenging my right to brmg
an action against him to obtam
evidence, or differently stated,
he conoonds that I cannot take
the Pr~tdent to court.
"Acceptance of his contention would sharply limit the
mdependence that I consider
essential tf I am to fulftll my
responsibihties . "
"As stated by COllllsel for the
Prestdent in the argiunent
before Judge John J. Strica, it
IS the President's contention
that he bas ultimate authonty
.'
to determtne when to
prosecute. whom to prosecute
and wtth what evtdence to
prosecute "
Jaworski satd those claims
were made by presidential
attorney James D. St. Clair 10
closed hearings before Judge
Strica last week, despite past
of
public
assurances
cooperatwn by the President
and a pnvate assurance from
Whtte House Chtef of Staff
Alexander M. Haig that
Jaworski could sue the
Prestdent for 10formation
Nixon fired former special
prosecutor Archibald Cox last
Oct, 20 whtle Cox similarly
pursued presidential mformation through the courts.
Strica on Monday upheld
Jaworskt's right to seek mformation from the Prestde~t
through the courts . He
dlSffiissed Ntxon's contenhon
as "a nullity" and refused to
quash a Jaworski subpoena for
tapes of 64 Watergate-related
discussiOns The Whtte House
said it wtll appeal
No Mandate
Vice Prestdent Gerald R.
Ford, questioned in Tacoma,
Wash., about Jaworskt 's
complaint satd that tf Nixon ts
asked for relevant matenal "tt
should be made available."
Ford said Jaworski has no
mandate to gp ~'beyond the
law,'' although he did not say
Jaworski bad exceeded the
law.
In other develop'ments :·
-The House Judtciary
Comrni ttee ts continuing to
hsten to presidential tapes
behind closed doors. The Whtte
House Monday fatled to meet
the committee's deadline on a
"request" for more material.
Said committee member Tom
Ratlsback, R-nt : "It's going to
be difficult for anyone to vote
to exonerate Ntxon if he doesn't
produce wbat 1s necessary."
t
"·
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l!
i:B.
One such medtcme, Questran
(cholestyramme), IS very new
and works by bmding the bi'e
salts 10 the bowel. Smce these
come from cholesoorol this
helps to use up the cholesterol
and lower the level As more
bile salts are formed and then
lost, the cholesterol is
gradually lowered You mtght
check wtth your doctor and see
if you are a candtdate for this
new medicme.
For more informalton about
cholesterol wnte to me m care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019, and ask for
the booklet on cholesterol. Send
The
~
Sentinel
DEVC11'ED TO THE
ll'ft1I:RI!:IT or
MEIG&IIIA80II AHA
CII!:III'EII L. T ANNEIIlLL,
ERe. Ed .
.OBI!:RTHOEFUm,
a., .......
PubllnddaUye_,_, by 111e
Olrlo Volloy ...- . . . - · lll
C<tart!lt'
- · Ol1lo,
..... 011ta.,_m.mo.
"'""""'.,_.,.
'"'
Clhio.
• -"{•
- - - .. POld el ......._....
I Mallo~ adnrtlaln1 repre1ent.1Un
Bnt*'nell& ;,a]laiher tne t1F'..U: and St.
M.
D.
J.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Not.c e t S he re by g t ven that
General Telephone Company of
Oh•o has filed w.th The Public
Uflltftes Comm•ssion of Ohio an
appi!Ca t •on statmg that the
50 cents to cover costs.
DEAR DR LAMB _ Is
aluminum foil harmful to one's
body when used to cover turkey
or to bake potatoes or other
raw vegetables in the oven?
DEAR READER - No. It is
perfectly safe . So are
aluminum cookmg utensils
Sales tax take
is up in April
Company •s enttfled , because of Mechantcstown
the reasons set forth 1n sa 1d
applt c at•on , to reasonab le and
equ ttabte tncreases and ad
justments '" 1ts rates and
charges tor local e)(change
telephone servtce , and to cancel
and wtthdraw certam sheets of
Jts exlst1ng tariffs and to sub
st l tute therefore Its proposed
rev1sed sheets of General
Exchange 'Tariff, P u co No
7, and •ts proposed rev.sed
sheets of Exchang e Rate Tanff ,
P U C 0 No 6, to effect such
•ncreasesand adjustments •n 1ts
rates and charges, all as more
fully set forth m the application
on fllew1th the CommiSSIOn and
m the ex h1b1ts thereto attached
and made a part thereof
The proposed schedule of
rates and charges and the
changes and rev1S10ns appl 1ed
for 1n the appllca t •on w 111. lf
approved by the Comm 1ss 1on,
prov1de the Company ap
proximately $13,536.603 1n
addif1ona1 annual revenue or a
6 62 pet rate of return on the
Company's rate base
The
proposed schedule of rates and
charges, 1f approved , Wil l result
m a 30 35 pet •ncrease 1n basic
exchange rates for reS i dential
serv1 c es and a 33 02 pet in
crease 1n local exchange rates
tor resldent•al serv •ces and a
JJ 02 pet mcrease ,,.., local
exchange rates for busmess
serv. c es
In add•t•on , the
Company proposes 1ncreases
and ad1us t ments In many other
of tt s communication serv1ces
L1st ed below are the Company's
present rates and proposed
rates by rate schedule and class
of servtee, and a c1ass1flcatlon
of ex changes by rate sc hedule
The proposed tar.tf revisions
W•ll effect •ncreases and ad
IUStments m rates and charges
throughout the territory In
which the Company operates A
copy of the Appl•cation in
c lud •ng a copy of the proposed
tariff rev•stons may be 1n
spec ted by any mterested party
at the off•ce of the Comm 1ssion ,
111
North
Htgh
street.
Columbus , and all public
business off1ces of the com
pany The form of th 1s not 1ce
has been approved by The
Public Ut ll 1t1eS Comm•ss•on or
Ohio
General Te l ephone Company
of Oh 1o
..
By Robert w Wopat ,
President
Adena
1
Albany
111
Amanda
IV
Amesv•lle
111
Amsterdam
1
Antwerp
1
Arlmgton
IV
Ashville
111
Athens
IV
Ba1t1c
IV
Balt•more
v
Beach C1ty
Beaver
Bergholz
Berlm
Bettsv •lie
Beverly
Blanchester
Bloomville
Bol1var
Bowerston
Bremen
Brewster
Brill1ant
Brookv111e
Bryan
Byesville
Cadiz
Caldwell
Cambndoe
Carro l l ton
Catawba
Celma
Chauncey
Chesapeake
C1rc lev 111e
Clarksville
Coldwater
Convoy
Cooperdele
Decatur
Dellroy
Dexter CttY
Dillonvale
Mt Pleasant
East Rochester
Edgerton
Ed on
Englewood
Evansport
Farmersville
Fayette
Felicity
FIUShmg
Forest
Forr Recovery
Freeport
Garrettsv•lle
Georgetown
Gibsonburg
General sales tax and motor
vehicle sale~ tax receipts for
Aprtl were up considerably
accordmg to .t~e monthly
report of Mrs. Gertrude
Donahey, state treasurer
General sales tax receipts
for April this year, totaled Gratis
Green Camp
$41,419.97 compared to receipts Greenfield
of $34,192.91 for April of last GuySville
Hamersville
year, an increase of 21.13 per Hanoverton
cent. Motor vehicle recetpts for Harlem Spr ings
Aprtl, this year, totaled Harpster
Helena
.$39,919.92 compared to HICkSVIlle
H •oglnsport
$33,447.66, lor April of last Homeworth
year, an tncrease of 19.35 per Idaho
Jackson
cent.
Jenera
Jewett
NewYort.:., NnrYorir: '
'
ft!:dan ntel DeUYend bJ ~
•
t
whm: M'lillbJe I) ctnta per week. By
Mow Roate wtaere cwrilr ..vtee not
ts
c.•.
I l'lailabJe ( f t mooth,
8)' mill In
CIUO and W V1., 0. YNr, SUI; .lb.
montb1, .Jt H, Three mon\h1, Sl
Ellew!wt QUO rear;* manthiSUIO,
.............. 11.10 ~ ~"
lndildel amdll7 '11Jnee..8entinel
. \;'
Fellpw we know tsn't an I!C· Lowell
countant but he's an expert at Lowe• Satem
bookkeepmg - ours
Lvnchburg
Malver"1
'
.\
Manchester
Mar1a Stem
Mar•on
Mart•nsvdle
McArthur
Mechanicsburg
Ill
II
11
1
Mendon
Mlllersrort
Mmera Ctty
Mmerva
Mmster
Montpelier
Morning SlJn
Morral
Mowrystown
Mt Blanchard
Mt Orab
Nevada
New Bremen
New Burl •ngton
New Concord
New Lebanon
New Marshfield
New Phila
New V 1enna
Ney
N Georgetown
North Star
Oak Hil l
Ohio Clfy
Oxford
P.ans
Payne
Peebles
PhillipSburg
P1keton
P•oneer
Plain City
Pleasantville
Pomeroy
Portland
Portsmouth
Port Wlll 1am
Prospect
Rawson
Republic
Resaca
R•chmond
Richwood
Russellvrlle
Sab rna
Sard inia
Scio
Scott
Seaman
Shade
Sinking Spnng
Smithfield
Spencerville
St Henry
St Marys
Strasburg
Sugarcreek
Summerf•eld
Sylvania
The Plains
Tiltonsville
Trotwood
Troy Tlpp City
Waldo
Warsaw
Watertown
Waverly
Wellston
W Alexandria
West Milton
West Union
West Unity
Wnartnn
WilkeSv i lle
Wllllamspott
WillShire Wren
Wllmlngton
Wilmot
Winona
Woodstock
Yorkshire
t
t
t
t
•"
~~
,
;
•
'
,
Ill
THE RACINE FIRE Department and its auxiliary unit - a
II
Ill busy bunch -will be holding a chicken barbecue Sunday at the
I
I ftre station. The proceeds will go towards the new emergency
I truck fund and the kitchen fwtd. Serving time starts at 11 :30 a.m .
Ill
II
IV
JEAN SEIDENABEL COMMENDS the custodtan of Beech
IV Grove Cemetery in gettmg the grounds m good condition for the
I
VII upcoming Memorial Day. However, the caretaker doesn't have
Ill time for close cuttmg around markers. She suggests that each lot
Ill
VIII owner handle thts himself and even reach nearby and clip around
IV
IV the markers of others if those lot owners are not going to be
ttl arolUld. Such a plan will improve the cemetery a great deal, Jean
IV suggests.
II
ttl
II
ROBERT JASON FIFE, year and a half old son of Mr. and
ttl
II
Mrs. Craig Fife, is a patient at the Holzer Medical Center. Tht
Ill room number is 514.
'
•
v
Ill
IV
IV
Ill
Ill
IV
I
II
Ill
II
I
•'
t
EXCHANGE AREAS AND
ASSOCIATED RATE SCHEDULES
Rate Schedule
Grade of
Serv1ce - Schedule 1 (1 -3,000
1 ma1n stations) , Residence.
1 Proposed, R 1, 19 40 , R 2, 18 45,
17 SO . R M 18 00;
111 R <,
R 2,
111 Present. R 1, S7 .35,
R 4 $5.60,
RM
VI $6 .40,
1 15.85, tncrease R 1 52.05,
IV R·2, 12.05, ~ 4 12 10, R M 1215,
tV Business, B 1. Proposed, 518 30,
IV B 2, $16 JO, B M S15 50, Present
IV B 1, $13 50, B 2, 111 75, B M
Ill StO 65: Increase B-1. $4.80, B 2
Ill 14 55, B·M $4 85.
Schedule I IJ,OOH,OOO main
1
Residence 1 st~tlons) 111 Proposed R·l $9 75, R 218 so, R
11 418 00, SR ·M S8 30; Present R 1
v $7 60, R 2 $6 75, R.4, $5 95 , R M
11 r S6 20 , Increase R 1 $2 15, R-2
111 $205, R·4 1205, R·M, $2.10,
VI Busmess- Proposed B·1 $19 .35,
11 r B 2 117 35, B·M $16 50 , Present,
111 B 1, SU 40, B.2 512 70, B-M
11 r Slt 75 , Increase 8.1 SA 95, B-2
'
Ill A.6S. B M U 75
Schedule Ill (6,001 12.000
Ill
Residence.
I. main stat•ons) 11 Proposed, R 1 $10 .05, R 2 $9 10,
11 R4S835,RMS865;PresentR 1
$790, R 2$7.10, R4 5620, AM
Increase
A
I S6 AS ,
tt 1S215,R2S200,RA,S2. 15,RM
ttl S2 20 , Business- Proposed B-1
ttl S20 15, B-2 $18.25, B M S17 .•u.
v Ill Present B·l 115.25. B 2113 SO, B
tt M $12 80; Increase B-1 $4 .90, B 2
Ill $4 75, B M SUS.
Rate Schedule . Grade of
I
I Service - Schedule tV C12,001 ·
I 24,000 main stat•ons)
I Residence, Proposed R -1 $10 40,
I R.2 19 45, R 4 18.70, R M 19 00,
I Present- R 1 $8 20, R-2 $7 35,
tl R 4 S6 45, R-M $6 70 ; Increase ttl R -1S2.20,R2S210,RAS225,R t M S2 30 , Business- Proposed,
Ill B-1 S21 30, B 2 519 AO, B M
IV $18 55; Business - Present B 1
tt S16 25, B-2 su.so, B-M S13.SO.
Itt Business - Increase B-1 $5.05 1
B 2 $4 90, B-M, $5OS
tt
kate Schedule · Grade of
tt
tt Service - Schedu le v u-4.
tt 001 48,000 main stattonslt Residence, Proposed, R -1
I 110.80, R·2 $9 85, R·4 $9 00, R·M
tl S9.30.Resldence- Present, R -1
tV 18.50, R 2 17 65, R 4 16.75, R·M
tt 57.00, Residence- Increase RIll 1$2.30, R·2, $2.20, R 4$2.25, R M
tV ~2 . 30; Business- Proposed 8 1
I S22 50,
B-2
$20.45,
B· M
tV S19 60;Buslness- Present. a 1
tV $17 25, B -2 S1S SO. B·M SlA AS ,
1
0
l
2
1
0
1
·O
0
0
11 10
3
2
3 3
0
2
l
2
2
0 .250
3 .2,36
0 • 200
9 12
2
12 11
3 l
9 11
2 1
10 1 0
6 1
6 . 15
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
15 3
5 0
0
0
2
1
2
1
0
1
2
l
2
1
0
•o.
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) Jmuny Wynn 's headache was
gone Monday night. Instead,
1
19.50
A78x 13
Up To
'32.00
.'29.00
L78xl5
L78x15
MOUNTING, BALANCING
FEDERAL EXCISE TAX
INCLUDED
BEND TIRE CENTER
.254
The 1974 Meigs County Pon y
League, the largest ever 10 thts
area, beg10s play May 31 \\tth
all 12 teams In ac tion
Foilowmg below ts the hst of
managers and thetr telephone
numbers, and thetr schedule
for the summer season
Pony league managers are
Lewis Harper, Harrisonville.
742-3875 , Tom Gru ese r ,
Pomeroy 13's, 992-3853.
Charl es
Wtn e br e nn er .
Cheshtre , 367-7552 ; Ke1th
Vanlnw ag en . Rutland , 9925708 :
Denms Ne\\land ,
Eastern , 667-6306 ; Jerry
Davenport , Mtddl e port
Amencans , 992-3675 ; Gary
Stsk Mason 882-2068, Dave
Dodson, Mtddleport A's, 9923235 , M1ke Stewart, Syracuse,
992-7196, Gene Mitch, Pomeroy
A's, 992-3478 , Hilton Wolfe,
Rac10e, 949-3211 , and Woody
Call, Pomeroy Ph1lhpes, 9923059 .
"
1 .191
0 .lll1
0 .150
0 .ooo
1 .ooo
0 .ooo
0 .ooo
0 .ooo
0 0
0 0
.ooo
.ooo
the Cmcmnatt Reds had one
from Wynn's bat.
As a result, the Los Angel~
Dodgers' lead m the National
League West over the defendmg diviswn champs was
seven games today.
Wynn homered twtce - his
13th and 14th of the young
season - to drive m four runs
as the Dodgers took the Reds 53 in the opener of an tmportant
three-game sertes
"I've never had a start like
thts," smiled the Dodgers' new
centerftelder " Everything 1s
working out better than I could
have hoped.
"I've always htt well at
Dodger Stadium m the past and
this time I have the fans on my
s1de, too. "
bt his 12th major league
season , Wynn leads the major
leagues m home runs, has
moved into a tie with the Texas
Rangers' Jeff Burroughs with
41 RB!s and ts hittmg 328.
A year ago, he batted 220
and drove m 55 rlllls He
homered 20 tunes.
"I'm JUSt swinging the bat
real well," said the former
Houston Astro "I JUSt hope I
can keep tt up ."
Willie DaVIS' replacement
Rose incensed
ON U.S. 33
IN MASON, W. VA.
in Dodgerland
If a
DISASTER
like this should strike our town ...
how well would u be
Most serious
about payment
of insurance claims are made by people who han not
insured their homes thru local, established agents
In liS Official Report on loss ad-
juslments made m the wake of
Hurricane Carla, the Comm1t1ee
of lhc Teus House of Representatives gave full cred1t for respon sible perforn,ance to ttlose c:omby
n ''"oendent
agents
How to protect yourself. Buy
msuranc:e for
your
home, car, or
Butkus hangs
Arnencans at Pomeroy I 13'sl
JUNE 28 - Cheshtre at
Mi dd lepor t A's , Pomeroy
( 13's 1 at Racme, Mtddleport
Americans at Syracuse
JULY 2 - Syracuse at
C1wshtre, Mtddleport A's at
Pomeroy (13's), R.acme at
Mtddleport Americans
JULY 5 - Make-up and
ramed-<> ut ga mes Champtonshlp-playolf - July 9 and
t2 between SOuth and North
BIG
Karr &Van Zandt
ORDERS EARLY
Arltftctal Baskets
Monument Markers
Arltftcial Flower Pols
Live Flowe r
Combmaltons
Dudley's Aorist
59 N. Second 51
ddlepor!, 0 .
FIRESTONE
MOWER
VALUES
THRIFTI·CUT
-- SPECIAL
ONE/NINE
$6333
•3 H P Bnggs and
St ratt on automa tiC
choke e ng~ne.
reco1l starter
• Ftngertlp throttle
control on e ng~ne
• 19" cut . cuttmg
hetght adJuStable
from 1" to 3· 1/ 4"
FAIRLAWN®
20"ROTARV
MOWER
OB 0 1 401 9
• Bnggs and Stratton 3 H P .
automatic choke eng1ne
• Handle-mounted throttle
control
• Adjustable cutttng hetghl
• Front and rear underdeck
baffles
'3895
POMEROY HOME & AUTO
Your Complete Tire Center
Pomeroy, 0.
606 E. Main
t
HfLLSCORES
DENVER (UP!) - Ed Htll,
67, ts nearly blmd but he says
he dido 't worry about losing
stght of hlB golf ball on the parthree !55-yard 13th hole of
Meadow Htlls Country Club
last weekend
Hill, who lost all pptic nerves
m hts left eye in 1967 and is
bothered by a blood clot in his
righi eye, scored a lfole-m-<>ne
- the ninth one he has
record~d 10 hts 56-year career
of playmg golf.
Spring Special For LP Gas
IN
IN
POINT PLEASANT
CONTACI'
DONNA
·HERMAN LYNCH
PHONE 675-2460
SANDWICHES
\)wiTH ALL THE EXTRAS
STEWART
992-2145
.MOBILE HOMES AND NEW CENTRAL HEATING AND
SPACE HEATERS
NOW OPEN
Sunday-10A.M.Io11 P.M.
CITY ICE &FUEL CO.
Mdn. thru Thurs.-9 A.M. toll P.M.
Sal
- 9 A.M.1to 1 A.M
992-2556
'
POMEROY,O.
W. MAIN
,.
' '
I
FLOWER
4.() in 2 days
Adolph's Dairy·Vall~y
Middleport, Ohio
PLACE YOUR
MEMORIAL DAY
Marc.hi's goes -
ADOLPH'S DAIRY VAllEY
Fn. &
Agency, Inc.
ttnrd Southern got back 10to
the ga me w1th three b1g tal hes
tn the second , two commg tn em
a s1ngle by Pete Sayre
Ge lling hits for the wm ners
were Raymund ('>llller, Jaye
Mye rs, Rodney Benn ett,
Ca rpenter, Terry Saunders and
Robmson
SOuthern httters were Sayre
wtth two htls , John Sa lser, two
"ngles, Dave Thetss, Greg
Dunmng and Vern Ord. one htt
each
Jaye Myers was the \\ tnn1ng
pttc her wh tle Sayre took th e
loss
Southern travels to Symm es
Va lley Wednesday tn the ftnal
ga me of the year for both
squads
Lmescore
SV
221 02 1 l'--8 7 I
FRAZIER WORKOliTS
Southern
031 102 l'--7 7 10
PHILADELPHI A (UPI)
Myers 1Wl and Pme Sayre
Joe
Fraz1er ,
fo rmer 1L) and Dunm ng
heavywetght boxmg champiOn .
completed h1s first week of
heavy workouts Monday tn
preparatiOn for Ius JlUle 17
bout wtth Jerry Quarry 10 New
Yo rk's Mad1 son Square
Garden
up his_cleats
A DV :
bus me ss from un independenl
agent Then, 1f disaster slrikes,
your mdependent msurance agent
1s on your s1de ready to help
t\s independent msurance
agents, we g1ve you the cpnunumg personal artent10n you need m
msurance protectiOn- The B1g Difference 1n car, home, or busmess
msurance Call us soon
Downing~ilds
,,
The league ts orgamzed thls
}ea t mt o North ern and
Southern Divisions It mcludes
JUNE II - Ph1lltpes at
Rutland , Harnsonvtll e a t
Pomer oy A's . Maso n at
teams from Met gs and Galha Eastern
Counti es m OhiO and Mason JUNE 14- Pomeroy A's at
Co unty, W Va
Phtlltes. Rutlahd at Mason .
Th e lin eup has Cheshir e Harnsonvllle a t Eastern
JU NE 18 _ "• Ph1lli es at
ret urnm g to th e bas icall y
Me1gs league and mark s also Mason.Phtlltes Home Team ,
the return of Eastern and Eastern at Pomeroy A's
Mason to Pny ball after a bnef Harn sonv1lle at Rutland
lapse
J UNE 21 - Mason at
MEIGS 1974 PONY
Pomer oy A's, Rutland at
LEAGUE SCHEDULE
at
Phllhes
Easte rn ,
Northern Division
Harnsonvtlle-Ph1lhes Home
MAY 32 - Pomeroy A's at Team
Eastern , Pomeroy Phtlhes at
JUNE 25 - Pome1 oy A's at
Mason Merch, Rutland Reds at Rutland. Eastern at Ph tlhes,
Hijfnsonvlile
Mason at Harnsonv1lle
JUNE 4 - Pomeroy A's at
JUNE 26 - Rutland at
Ma son Merch, Easte rn at Philli es, Pome roy A's at
Rutland Reds. Ph1llies at Harn so nvill e, Easte rn a t
Hamsonville
Mason
JU NE 7 - Rutl and at
JU LY 2 - Philltes at
Pomeroy A's , Ph1llies a t Pomeroy A's, Maso n at
Easte rn , Harrt sonvtlle a t Rutl and ,
Eastern
at
Manon
Harnsonvtlle
JULY 5 - Make-up and
ra1n ed out games. Cham·
p1onsh1p play-<>lfs July 9 and 12
bet\\een North and South
'
Southern Division
MAY 31 - Syracuse at
Racme, Cheshtre at Pomeroy
here called the Dodgers' lith last 10 1-3 mnmgs, Dodger i 13's ), Mtddl eport A's at
Middleport Amencans
VICtory m 13 starts "an un- manger Walter Alston said
JUNE 4 - Racme at Mid"M1ke's been outstandmg for
portant wm ."
dlepo
r t A's, Sy racuse at
"Cincmnati is sllll the team us lately and he dtd another
Pomeroy
(1 3's), Middleport
to beat in our divtslon because great JOb tomght "
Amen
can
s
at Cheshire
The Dodgers now are three
they won last I year," Wynn
JUNE 7 - Middleport A's at
explamed. "They came m here for three agamst Cincmnatt
Syracuse,
Cheshire at Racme,
hot and it's mce to get a ltttle ttns year They'll try to make tt
Pomeroy
(13's
) at Middleport
more space bet ween them 10 lour for four tomght, sendmg
Doug Rau, 3-1, agamst Ro ger Amen ca ns
the standmgs."
JUNE II - Middleport A's at
The Toy Cannon, who sat out Nelson, 2-3
Cheshire
, Racme at Pomeroy
a 4-2 loss to Atlanta Sunday
Syracuse
at Mtddleport
113's)
,
because of a headache, exAmericans
ploded for both hts homers off
JUN E 14 - Cheshtre at
ex-Houston teammate Ja ck
Syracuse,
Pomeroy (IJ's ) at
Billmgham, both on 2-2 collllts.
Middleport
A's , Middleport
He hit a three-run shot mto the
Amencans at Racme
leftfteld pavtlion m the openmg
NEW
YORK
(UP!
)
The
JUNE 18 - Rac 1ne at
tnnmg and a solo homer deep
Natwnal
Football
League
has
Syracuse,
Pomeroy (13's) at
mto the leftfield stands m the
lost another ol Its playmg Ch es htre , Mtddl e port
Sixth
Mtke Marshall, the Dodgers' greats - but this time not to Amen cans at Middleport A's.
JUN E 21- Middleport A's at
other big offseason acqutst!lon, !he World Football League.
Dtck Butkus, generally Racme, Pomeroy ( 13) at
got his fourth save to preserve
veteran southpaw Tommy regarded as the greatest Syracuse, Cheshire at Mtd·
mtddl e linebacker m the dleport Arnencans.
John's first wm of May John,
JUNE 25 - Syracuse at
who set a Dodger club record game's history, announced hts
retirement Monday night after Mtddleport A's, Ractne at
by winnmg ftve games in April,
receiVIng the George Halas Ch es hire , Middl e p o rt
unproved hts record to 6-1
Award for courageousness
Of Marshall , who hasn't
fr om th e New York Pro
gtven up an earned run m his
Football Wnters.
Th1s Week ' s Spec1al
"There are two ways to
retire," the 31-year old Butkus
said, "etther of your own free
wtll or because you can't go on
anymore Unfortunately, the
second one is true m my case
The Marchi's Falls City Fast Although I love the game, tt
pitch softball team won four seems as if it's commg to an
games Saturday and Sunday abrupt end "
The team is made up of
mernber!'t frn:n Mt!1g:s t. . :ounty
and play home games at
Syracuse Park.
TWO SIGNED
On Saturday Falls City beat
KANSASCITY , Mo (UPI )V 8, a uto , P S, v1nyl roof,
Laurelville two games, 12 to 0 Rtght-handed pttcher David
fa ctor y a1r , 20,000 m 1les,
and 5 to 4. Sunday they went to Hasbach and left-handed
new Olds trade
Logan and beat Hockmg Honor pttcher Ken SOuza Monday
Camp two games, 15 to 2 and 14 stgned contracts wtth the
to 20.
Kansas City Royals Hasbach
Falls City now ts m hrst was Kansas City's top selection
place in the Hockmg Valley m the secondary phase of, the
" You'll L1k e Our Qual1ty
League, havmg won 6 and lost January free agent draft.
Way of Doing Bus• ness
0 Next Sunday they wtll play SOuza , from San Mateo, Calif.,
GMAC FINANCING
Circleville two games at Jumor College, was the club's 992 -5342 •
Pomeroy
Open Evemngs 'T1I6 . 00
Syracuse Park
No 1 chmce in the regular
T115 PM Sal
phase .
STOP AT···
William 0 . Childf
..
from a 441 defictt m the second
mnmg to tie the score at 5-5 m
the fourth then fell beh1nd :a-5
before closmg the gap to the
fmal 8-7 score
·
4 Door
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Pete Rose , the Nattonal
League'sMVPiast season, was
the target of a steady barrage
of abuse from the fans m the
leftfield pavthon at Dodger
Stadium Monday night and he
didn't like. it
" The vulgarity was unbelievable," the Cincmnati
Reds' hustlmg leftftelder satd.
"They were using words that in
no way should be used in
pubbc.
" How can people tall( like
that m front of women?" Reds'
manager Sparky Anderson was
incensed at the fans' actions
"The Dodgers have to take
care of this problem,'' An·
derson said. "People out there
were chanting profantlles at
Pete. I couldn't believe the
words they were usmg."
Durmg the game, the fans in
left field had to be warned over
the public address system to
stop throwing debris onto the
field.
-
says ~ eg 1 sl at1ve lnvest1gatm g Comm1ttee
pames represented
The V1k10gs won the !ltle tn
1972 and 1973 whtle the Bobcats
and Tornados fought tl out for
second place both years
Monday mght , with the
tn the second and one tn the
For Coa~h H1lton Wolfe 's
Tornados it was thetr second
stratght dtsappomtmg loss .
Last Fnday, Kyger Creek
' sole possessiOn of the
took
league's top spot w1th a 6-2
vtctory The Bobcats fl msred
league play wtlh a 10-2 mark
So uthern dropped to 8-3
nonday and must now battle
.he Vlktngs at W1llow Wood for
the second place spot tn the
•stahdlngs SV also has an 8-3
record
Monday mght . Sy mm es
Valley got two runs 111 t11e f1rst
mmng on a h1t batsman, stolen
base, walk and two out smglc
by Rodney Bennett
The Vtkm gs added two more
usEo cARs
73 OLDS
CutiaSs Supreme
at nasty fans
PHONE 773-5881
I
t;:apltol offenses are about
the only kind which are
' r~warded instead of
punished. sa:ys our resident
cynic.
DAYTON
PREMIUMH2
Up_to _
R
~·
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
Jl
0
0
pressure on, Southern ralh ed
Wynn wrecks Reds
A78x13
1
'/
4
champwnshtp
Expanded Pony ~eague
opens with full slate May 31 St
l 0 .lili.O
3 l .jth
1 0 .)~.3
16 1+50 ll5 127 112 125 110 25 9
16 42 8 78 117 84 100 76 24 3
'17.00
•
•
Michael (Vtrgmta) Shaw, as
choreographer, and Brant
Adams, arranger and accompanist.
btterviews and casting of the
various roles will be conducte'd
June 2 in the amphitheatre at
Bob Evans Farms, Rio
Grande, starting at 2 p.m. rain
or shine. Everyone interested
m all phases of the theatre is
mvtted. Backstage workers,
performers, singers, and
dancers
are still needed.
$2 50 , Business - Proposed. B 1'
S23 75, B·2 $21 60, B.M $20.85.
"Gallia Country" presented
Business - F'resent B 1 $18.10, the first time last year, drew
B 2Sl6 35, B·M $1540; Busmess
- Increase B 1 S5 65 , B -2 $5 25
huge
audiences
from
B M ss AS 1
'
surrounding
states
and
the
Rate Schedule . Grade of
Service-Schedule VII (96,001
Meigs-Gallla-Mason area.
192,000 main stations)
Critics were generous in praise
Residence , Proposed,
R-1
$11.65, R 2110 60, R-A S9 70, Fil -M
of the performances as well as
$10.00. Residence- Present, R
1 $9.15, R 2 18.1S, R 4 17 25, R·M the performers and over..all
~0. ReSidence- Increase R. production.
1$2 50, R·2 12.45, R 4$2 4S, R·M
Natural accoustics in the
S2 50, Business- Proposed, e 1
$24 85, B·2 $22 70. B M S21 95 , amphitheatre, combined with
Business - Present. B 1 519.00,
B-2 S1J 25, B M $16 25 . Business the beauty of the surrounding
-Increase, B·l S5 85, B·2 $5 45 scenery, provided a realistic
B M $5.70
'
Rate Schedule . Grade of setting for this hisioricalService Sct'tedule VIII dramatic pageant, an original
<192,001 384,000 n,am stations)
- Residence - Proposed , R 1 work of Lee Durieux of Mt.
S12.10, R 2 111 05, R.4 SlO os R Vernon, Ohio. Music, dialogue
M 510.35. Residence - Present
R 1 S9 50, R-2 S8 55, R-A $7 .50, R, and dancing combine to make
M S7 75 , Residence - Increase
the pageant entertainment for
R-1 $2 60, R 2 S2 50, R-A $2 55, R:
the entire family.
M S2.60; Buslnen - Proposed
s.1 126 20, B 2 S23 95, a.Ni
Performance dates are the
S23. 10; Business- Present, B -1
weekends
of July 5, 12 and 19.
$19.85 8.2 $18 10. B M $17 30 ·
Business- Increase, B 1 S6 35' Ticket sales information will
8·2 IS 85, B-M $5.80
'
Rate Schedule . Grade of be announced soon. For further
Service- Schedule tV CJ84,001 inlormation, call or write
lnd over main stattonsJ Residence, Proposed R·l $12 55 ' Thelma Elliott, Chamber of
R -2 Sll 45, R-ot SlO
R M Commerce office, State Street,
SlO 70 , Residence , Present, R
1 S9 80, ~ 2 58.90, R A $7 80, R M Gallipolis, Ohio.
'
1
MEDALLION
MARQUIS
,
First auditions for the Galha
Soc1ety
Dramatic · Arts
production, ' Gallia Country'',
were held May 18 in Jackson
and May 19 in Gallipolis t;
recruit prospective perfo~ers
10 this year's presentation.
More auditions wi~ be needed.
Murl H. Rush, Jr., who will
direct the overall production
again this year, has engaged E.
Kimball (Red) Suiter as
musical coordmator; Mrs.
VIII
II
IV
Ill $8 80 R 2 17.90, R·4 $6.95, R M B·2 16.05, B.M $6OS
I S7 .20; Resldenct- Increase. R VI 1 12 45, ~ · 2 12 35, ~·4 $2 45, R Mt 151 21 , 28 161 4, 3tc
2
3 0 .264
·
More auditions
t0
he announced
Business - lncretse B-1 SS.25,
B-2 SA 95, B-M SS 15.
S8 05, Residence- increase R
Rale Schedule . Grade of 1 S2 75, R ·2 5-2 .55, R A S2 60,
M
Sei'VIce- Schedule VI (48,001 - S2 65, Business- Proposed, B-1
96,000 main stallons l - 127 40, B·2 $25.05, B M 124 20 ,
Residence Proposed R 1 Business - Present. 8 1, •20 70,
$11 25, ~·2 110 25. R 4 SUO, R M B 2, 119 00, B·M 118 15 ·
S910;R811dence- Present R 1 Business - Increase. 8 1 S6 10'
0
t3
3
2
19 16
9 13
6 6
15 l7
MAY TIRE SALE NOW
IN PROGR!:SS
Ill
t
10
2 l .l.!-75
BEND TIRE CENTER.
I
',J
7
9
0
H,EAD COACH
RICHMOND, btd. (UPI )
George Waggoner, a member
of th e coachmg staff at
Westromster College m New
Wtlmington, Pa., the past four
years, Monday was named
head basketball coach at
Earlham College.
I
lit
15 40
3
l
u 18
Holllfl Runs : S tob al' t, George, English, Nesse1road each
1. Meigs 4. opponent! 2 •
••
•
•
S!?EAKING OF SENIOR CITIZENS, the group has been
influenllal in pushing children's books as a bookmobile service.
The consensus among the senior group commtltee was to
promote the interest m children's reading. Inctdentally, Mrs.
Vilma Pikkoja, bookmobile supervisor, points out that she would
consent to some senior citizen being assigned as many as 200
books if he or she would like to open their residence to yollllgsters
at certain times for reading. If interested, just let Mrs Pikkoja
know- she'll let no grass grow llllder her feet in getting the plan
rolling.
II
II
7 11
9
3
~ - - - --
Three-base hits: Ault 2 1 Wolfe l, Prioe 1, Stoba1·t l,
Davenport 1. Meigs 6, opponents 2.,
•
Of the Bend _£,/,
IV
16 47
J
-SO RBI SB SH AVE.
Two-base hits: Ault 2, Ash 3, Stcbart 3 1 Nes se1road ),
Davenport 3 1 Marshall 2 1 Georga 1.
Meigs 19, opponents 15.
tt
tt
IV
IV
VI
I
By Bob Hoeflich
•
ttl
ttl
IV
I
Seruor Citizens, mostly from Meigs County, bad a ball
IV
II Saturday afternoon when tbey boarded the Chaperone for a
Ill crutse on the "Old Ohto."
I
II
Of the 328 making the trtp, 275 were from the Meigs County
I
Senior
Citizens group with the remainder coming from Mason,
IV
Ill Vmton and Gallia Counties.
IV
Armand made the trip with the group providing organ music
Ill
II for singing and dancing, including squares. Armand donated his
IV talent for the excursion and really added life to the party.
I
II
Friday evening, the Meigs Senior Citizens held a square ~
Ill dance at the junior htgh auditorium in Pomeroy and $182 was .~
Ill
VI cleared for the citizens fund. The Hilltoppers donated their •
I
II servtces for that event. More pubhc square dances are being '
IV planned for the benefit of the Semor Cttlzens program.
''
II
II
I
lli
8 12 l
16 38 10
9 5 2
Meigs
Upponents
~
·~
Beat. ..
IV
Itt
11
II
I
II
II
II
s.
are Gary Hoffman who was escort for Miss Weaver,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Weaver of Letart, second
from left ; Tun Roush, escort for the prom queen; Miss
Lewts, Mr. Zell, Miss Fields, daughter of Mr. and Mrs
Leonard Felds of Hartford and escort, Jeff Harbrecht.
PROM ROYALTY- Cheryl Lewis, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Lewis of Letart, seated, was crowned the 1974
Wahama High School Prom Queen Saturday night by
Prmctpal John Zell. Vicky Weaver and Kim Fields, also
semors, were attendants for MlSS Lewis. Pictured, from left,
BARLOW
Lecithin won't lower cholesterol
intestinal wall it is no longer
lecithin.
The lecithin m our bloodstream is correlated ·with
cholesterol levels, and there is
some evtdence that if tt is high
xou will have less tendency to
fatty depostts m the artenes.
HOWEVER, and tt is a btg
however, the lectthm in the
blood ts manufactured by the
liver. Its level is mfluenced by
the many factors, even the
raho of male and female
hormones .
If you needed choline in your
dtet then lectthin would be
helpful This substance helps
protect the hver from fatty
degeneration that can occur m
fasting and other probleDIS.
But, many common foods in a
normal diet contain abundant
amounts of c)loline, such as
lean meats. lf you needed
choline you should be taking
choline, not lectthin or more
fat.
I do think you probably could
profit from taking some
. medicine for your persistent
high cholesterol levels, particularly if you have been oh a
proper diet and h4tve controlled
your weight. There is medicme
available specifically for
lowering the cholesterol m
' prople who can't accorqplish
this with diet. But tt is not
lecithin and mu~t be
prescribed by a1doctor.
A.
M.
Jaworski cites
DR. LAWHENCE E. LAMB
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am 4a
years old, five-feet-seven, and
. weigh 135 pounds. I have a
cholesterol count of about 330
reduced by diet from 395.
A recent magazine arhcle
said that lecithin reduces the
cholesterolm a person's blood.
Does lectthin really reduce the
count as they say? Thank you
for any help you provtde.
DEAR READER- I wtsh it
didn, but tt doesn't. The only
people who could posstbly
benefit from lectthin are a few
wl)o have a dietary deftciency
In polyunsaturated fats You
can solve that problem with a
proper diet that mcludes about
a third of the fat in your diet as
polyunsaturated fat as you get
in corn oil, safflower otl or
products made wtth these oils.
Excess amounts of these oils
won't help etther.
There is a lot of untrue
promotional material in
magazines about lecithin. It is
another fat. The difference is
that It contains some
phosphate
and
ts
a
phosopholipid. And, It is
1 connected to choline. Now that
is all fairly complex so let me
say that the lecithin particle is
broken dqwn by the digestive
llll)'llleS in the digestive tract
Into the choline, the fatty acids,
1
ud then absO..f?ed. In other
wards, once it gets thro~~h the
G,
bas been entered In the National Register of Historic Places.
The National Register is the official schedule of the nallon's
histortc property.
THE INDIAN burial mound to the nght m tHe ptcture
above of the Molllld Cemetery near Chester m Metgs Collllty
Prioe
Da'llenpor t
BUI'ney
George
English
Magnotta
1/.cKinaey
M'; on
Hamilton
Richards
Vaughan
Cremeans
Bsc hner
Defend10g Southern Valley
Athletic Conference champ,
Symm!] Valley , edged
Southern fl.7 Monday evemng
gtvmg Kyger Creek the 1974
undtsputed SVAC Base ball
POINT PLEASANT W,"VA.
-
I
'
I '
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
'
1
/'
..
"
�'
•'
3- The Datly Sent10el, Mtddlcport-Pomeroy, 0 . Tuesday , May 21, 1974
•'
Toniados lose, 8-7; · Bobcats are SVAC champs
MEIGS
MARAUDER BASEBALL
4
AB
OFFENSIVE STATISTICS--1974
H
R
w
19
12
19 13
M. Nesaelroed 15 · 40
25,
11 11 10
Po Ault
21 8
D, l'lolt e
~ 55 20 1t!
13
H. Stobart
l6 51 15
9
c. 141rshall 16 53 9
12
9
.M. Ash
16 55
s.
M.
F.
'
Ranger critical
of land policies
By DAVE BOWRING
Written for
United Press lnterna tiona I
IRONTON, Ohio - Land purchases which would
add to the acreage of both ranger districts of Ohio's
Wayne national forest have been sharply reduced,
according to Ironton district manager T. Allen
Wolter.
Wolter said his district's budget, reduced last
year from the year before, has been cut by nearly
$37,000 for fiscal 1975. Wolter places the blame
squarely on the Nixon administration .
"He (the President) is
cutting the country's throat
because land prices are going
up and much of the land now
available for Forest Service
purchase will be even more
expensive in the future,"
Wolter said.
Wolter said Washington bad
frozen funds made available
through the Office of Management and Budget from two
sources - the Land and Water
Conservation Fund, and the
Weeks Law. The cuts filter
down to the ranger district
level in several forms , he said.
Land AvaUable
"Two years ago we were
beating the bushes looking for
lands to buy. Now we have
people calling us with land to
sell, and we can't buy it because we don ' t have the
money," Wolter said this
meant
less
available
recreation lands for the public
m the future, and probably
fewer services made available
on existing nahonal forest
lands.
Besides far fewer land purchases, the budget cuts make
themselves felt in other areas
as well. When Wolter became
chief of tbe Ironton district in
1971, the district's annual bedget for wildlife habitant improvement was an inconsequential $50. By fiscal
1974, the amoWtt bad been
increased to $3,300 per year.
Wildlife funds have been cut to
$750 for the next fiScal year,
which begins in June.
"Fortunately we've been
getting a considerable amollllt
of help from state wildlife
people," Wolter said. "They've
helped us maintain 50 wildlife
openmgs on national forest
land, or we'd have virtually
·!l()thmg to show."
Budgetary cuts have reduced
the manpower loresters can
hire. The Forest Servtce has
been operating at 1962 manpower levels for two years. An
additional cut last summer
further reduced manmng
levels.
Money Problems A~ule
· SO acute are money matters
within the entire WayneHoosier national forest complex that priority lists have
been issued to the ranger
districts involved.
Items to be de-emphasized
include road construction,
building snowmobile trails and
the purchase of lands wtth
enVU'onmental problems. Such
lands mclude orphaned
(abandoned) strtp mmes which
seep acid waste during rainfall, reduce wtldlife habitat,
and present safety hazards for
the public.
The 20,()()().odd acres purchased two years ago by the
Athens ranger diStrict of the
Wayne, known as the Sunday
Creek tract, contams some 500
acres of such orphaned strip
mines.
Items gtven the green light
for implementation include
public safety, minerals
management, fire detection,
land use planning, equal
employment opportunity, and
environmental education.
"I don't think he (Nixon) can
continue to freeze approprl8ted
funds, at least not legally,"
Wolter said. But the stack of
budgetary directives under his
elbow says the President ts
wtthholding the funds, legally
or not.
interference
by White House
WASHINGTON (UP!) Spectal Watergate Prosecutor
Leon Jaworski has formally
complained to Congress that
President Nixon ts trying to
dictate to. him "when to
prosecute, whom to prosecute
and with what evtdence to
prosecute."
Pursumg the same issue over
whtch hts predecessor Archibald Cox, was fired ,
Jaworski wrooo the Senate
Judictary Committee that
Ntxon has lrted to deny htm the
right to sue the President to
obtain informahon
Sen. James 0. Eastland, DMiss. , chairman of that
committee, which oversaw the
creation of the prosecutor's
job, called an emergency
meeting for 2 p.m. EDT to
constder Jaworski's complamt
Jaworski and presidenllal
lawyer James D. St. Clatr were
invited to attend
"These are very dangerous
developments," said Judiciary
Committee member Charles
McMathias, R-Md. "It is a
sham to expect Mr. Jaworski to
do the job to which he was
appoinoodand at the same time
restrict hts access to the
evidence he thmks he needs."
Challenging Right
In his letter to the commttlee, Jaworski satd, "The
cructal pomt is that the
Prestdent, through. his counsel
is c~llenging my right to brmg
an action against him to obtam
evidence, or differently stated,
he conoonds that I cannot take
the Pr~tdent to court.
"Acceptance of his contention would sharply limit the
mdependence that I consider
essential tf I am to fulftll my
responsibihties . "
"As stated by COllllsel for the
Prestdent in the argiunent
before Judge John J. Strica, it
IS the President's contention
that he bas ultimate authonty
.'
to determtne when to
prosecute. whom to prosecute
and wtth what evtdence to
prosecute "
Jaworski satd those claims
were made by presidential
attorney James D. St. Clair 10
closed hearings before Judge
Strica last week, despite past
of
public
assurances
cooperatwn by the President
and a pnvate assurance from
Whtte House Chtef of Staff
Alexander M. Haig that
Jaworski could sue the
Prestdent for 10formation
Nixon fired former special
prosecutor Archibald Cox last
Oct, 20 whtle Cox similarly
pursued presidential mformation through the courts.
Strica on Monday upheld
Jaworskt's right to seek mformation from the Prestde~t
through the courts . He
dlSffiissed Ntxon's contenhon
as "a nullity" and refused to
quash a Jaworski subpoena for
tapes of 64 Watergate-related
discussiOns The Whtte House
said it wtll appeal
No Mandate
Vice Prestdent Gerald R.
Ford, questioned in Tacoma,
Wash., about Jaworskt 's
complaint satd that tf Nixon ts
asked for relevant matenal "tt
should be made available."
Ford said Jaworski has no
mandate to gp ~'beyond the
law,'' although he did not say
Jaworski bad exceeded the
law.
In other develop'ments :·
-The House Judtciary
Comrni ttee ts continuing to
hsten to presidential tapes
behind closed doors. The Whtte
House Monday fatled to meet
the committee's deadline on a
"request" for more material.
Said committee member Tom
Ratlsback, R-nt : "It's going to
be difficult for anyone to vote
to exonerate Ntxon if he doesn't
produce wbat 1s necessary."
t
"·
~
!;
'
l!
i:B.
One such medtcme, Questran
(cholestyramme), IS very new
and works by bmding the bi'e
salts 10 the bowel. Smce these
come from cholesoorol this
helps to use up the cholesterol
and lower the level As more
bile salts are formed and then
lost, the cholesterol is
gradually lowered You mtght
check wtth your doctor and see
if you are a candtdate for this
new medicme.
For more informalton about
cholesterol wnte to me m care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019, and ask for
the booklet on cholesterol. Send
The
~
Sentinel
DEVC11'ED TO THE
ll'ft1I:RI!:IT or
MEIG&IIIA80II AHA
CII!:III'EII L. T ANNEIIlLL,
ERe. Ed .
.OBI!:RTHOEFUm,
a., .......
PubllnddaUye_,_, by 111e
Olrlo Volloy ...- . . . - · lll
C<tart!lt'
- · Ol1lo,
..... 011ta.,_m.mo.
"'""""'.,_.,.
'"'
Clhio.
• -"{•
- - - .. POld el ......._....
I Mallo~ adnrtlaln1 repre1ent.1Un
Bnt*'nell& ;,a]laiher tne t1F'..U: and St.
M.
D.
J.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Not.c e t S he re by g t ven that
General Telephone Company of
Oh•o has filed w.th The Public
Uflltftes Comm•ssion of Ohio an
appi!Ca t •on statmg that the
50 cents to cover costs.
DEAR DR LAMB _ Is
aluminum foil harmful to one's
body when used to cover turkey
or to bake potatoes or other
raw vegetables in the oven?
DEAR READER - No. It is
perfectly safe . So are
aluminum cookmg utensils
Sales tax take
is up in April
Company •s enttfled , because of Mechantcstown
the reasons set forth 1n sa 1d
applt c at•on , to reasonab le and
equ ttabte tncreases and ad
justments '" 1ts rates and
charges tor local e)(change
telephone servtce , and to cancel
and wtthdraw certam sheets of
Jts exlst1ng tariffs and to sub
st l tute therefore Its proposed
rev1sed sheets of General
Exchange 'Tariff, P u co No
7, and •ts proposed rev.sed
sheets of Exchang e Rate Tanff ,
P U C 0 No 6, to effect such
•ncreasesand adjustments •n 1ts
rates and charges, all as more
fully set forth m the application
on fllew1th the CommiSSIOn and
m the ex h1b1ts thereto attached
and made a part thereof
The proposed schedule of
rates and charges and the
changes and rev1S10ns appl 1ed
for 1n the appllca t •on w 111. lf
approved by the Comm 1ss 1on,
prov1de the Company ap
proximately $13,536.603 1n
addif1ona1 annual revenue or a
6 62 pet rate of return on the
Company's rate base
The
proposed schedule of rates and
charges, 1f approved , Wil l result
m a 30 35 pet •ncrease 1n basic
exchange rates for reS i dential
serv1 c es and a 33 02 pet in
crease 1n local exchange rates
tor resldent•al serv •ces and a
JJ 02 pet mcrease ,,.., local
exchange rates for busmess
serv. c es
In add•t•on , the
Company proposes 1ncreases
and ad1us t ments In many other
of tt s communication serv1ces
L1st ed below are the Company's
present rates and proposed
rates by rate schedule and class
of servtee, and a c1ass1flcatlon
of ex changes by rate sc hedule
The proposed tar.tf revisions
W•ll effect •ncreases and ad
IUStments m rates and charges
throughout the territory In
which the Company operates A
copy of the Appl•cation in
c lud •ng a copy of the proposed
tariff rev•stons may be 1n
spec ted by any mterested party
at the off•ce of the Comm 1ssion ,
111
North
Htgh
street.
Columbus , and all public
business off1ces of the com
pany The form of th 1s not 1ce
has been approved by The
Public Ut ll 1t1eS Comm•ss•on or
Ohio
General Te l ephone Company
of Oh 1o
..
By Robert w Wopat ,
President
Adena
1
Albany
111
Amanda
IV
Amesv•lle
111
Amsterdam
1
Antwerp
1
Arlmgton
IV
Ashville
111
Athens
IV
Ba1t1c
IV
Balt•more
v
Beach C1ty
Beaver
Bergholz
Berlm
Bettsv •lie
Beverly
Blanchester
Bloomville
Bol1var
Bowerston
Bremen
Brewster
Brill1ant
Brookv111e
Bryan
Byesville
Cadiz
Caldwell
Cambndoe
Carro l l ton
Catawba
Celma
Chauncey
Chesapeake
C1rc lev 111e
Clarksville
Coldwater
Convoy
Cooperdele
Decatur
Dellroy
Dexter CttY
Dillonvale
Mt Pleasant
East Rochester
Edgerton
Ed on
Englewood
Evansport
Farmersville
Fayette
Felicity
FIUShmg
Forest
Forr Recovery
Freeport
Garrettsv•lle
Georgetown
Gibsonburg
General sales tax and motor
vehicle sale~ tax receipts for
Aprtl were up considerably
accordmg to .t~e monthly
report of Mrs. Gertrude
Donahey, state treasurer
General sales tax receipts
for April this year, totaled Gratis
Green Camp
$41,419.97 compared to receipts Greenfield
of $34,192.91 for April of last GuySville
Hamersville
year, an increase of 21.13 per Hanoverton
cent. Motor vehicle recetpts for Harlem Spr ings
Aprtl, this year, totaled Harpster
Helena
.$39,919.92 compared to HICkSVIlle
H •oglnsport
$33,447.66, lor April of last Homeworth
year, an tncrease of 19.35 per Idaho
Jackson
cent.
Jenera
Jewett
NewYort.:., NnrYorir: '
'
ft!:dan ntel DeUYend bJ ~
•
t
whm: M'lillbJe I) ctnta per week. By
Mow Roate wtaere cwrilr ..vtee not
ts
c.•.
I l'lailabJe ( f t mooth,
8)' mill In
CIUO and W V1., 0. YNr, SUI; .lb.
montb1, .Jt H, Three mon\h1, Sl
Ellew!wt QUO rear;* manthiSUIO,
.............. 11.10 ~ ~"
lndildel amdll7 '11Jnee..8entinel
. \;'
Fellpw we know tsn't an I!C· Lowell
countant but he's an expert at Lowe• Satem
bookkeepmg - ours
Lvnchburg
Malver"1
'
.\
Manchester
Mar1a Stem
Mar•on
Mart•nsvdle
McArthur
Mechanicsburg
Ill
II
11
1
Mendon
Mlllersrort
Mmera Ctty
Mmerva
Mmster
Montpelier
Morning SlJn
Morral
Mowrystown
Mt Blanchard
Mt Orab
Nevada
New Bremen
New Burl •ngton
New Concord
New Lebanon
New Marshfield
New Phila
New V 1enna
Ney
N Georgetown
North Star
Oak Hil l
Ohio Clfy
Oxford
P.ans
Payne
Peebles
PhillipSburg
P1keton
P•oneer
Plain City
Pleasantville
Pomeroy
Portland
Portsmouth
Port Wlll 1am
Prospect
Rawson
Republic
Resaca
R•chmond
Richwood
Russellvrlle
Sab rna
Sard inia
Scio
Scott
Seaman
Shade
Sinking Spnng
Smithfield
Spencerville
St Henry
St Marys
Strasburg
Sugarcreek
Summerf•eld
Sylvania
The Plains
Tiltonsville
Trotwood
Troy Tlpp City
Waldo
Warsaw
Watertown
Waverly
Wellston
W Alexandria
West Milton
West Union
West Unity
Wnartnn
WilkeSv i lle
Wllllamspott
WillShire Wren
Wllmlngton
Wilmot
Winona
Woodstock
Yorkshire
t
t
t
t
•"
~~
,
;
•
'
,
Ill
THE RACINE FIRE Department and its auxiliary unit - a
II
Ill busy bunch -will be holding a chicken barbecue Sunday at the
I
I ftre station. The proceeds will go towards the new emergency
I truck fund and the kitchen fwtd. Serving time starts at 11 :30 a.m .
Ill
II
IV
JEAN SEIDENABEL COMMENDS the custodtan of Beech
IV Grove Cemetery in gettmg the grounds m good condition for the
I
VII upcoming Memorial Day. However, the caretaker doesn't have
Ill time for close cuttmg around markers. She suggests that each lot
Ill
VIII owner handle thts himself and even reach nearby and clip around
IV
IV the markers of others if those lot owners are not going to be
ttl arolUld. Such a plan will improve the cemetery a great deal, Jean
IV suggests.
II
ttl
II
ROBERT JASON FIFE, year and a half old son of Mr. and
ttl
II
Mrs. Craig Fife, is a patient at the Holzer Medical Center. Tht
Ill room number is 514.
'
•
v
Ill
IV
IV
Ill
Ill
IV
I
II
Ill
II
I
•'
t
EXCHANGE AREAS AND
ASSOCIATED RATE SCHEDULES
Rate Schedule
Grade of
Serv1ce - Schedule 1 (1 -3,000
1 ma1n stations) , Residence.
1 Proposed, R 1, 19 40 , R 2, 18 45,
17 SO . R M 18 00;
111 R <,
R 2,
111 Present. R 1, S7 .35,
R 4 $5.60,
RM
VI $6 .40,
1 15.85, tncrease R 1 52.05,
IV R·2, 12.05, ~ 4 12 10, R M 1215,
tV Business, B 1. Proposed, 518 30,
IV B 2, $16 JO, B M S15 50, Present
IV B 1, $13 50, B 2, 111 75, B M
Ill StO 65: Increase B-1. $4.80, B 2
Ill 14 55, B·M $4 85.
Schedule I IJ,OOH,OOO main
1
Residence 1 st~tlons) 111 Proposed R·l $9 75, R 218 so, R
11 418 00, SR ·M S8 30; Present R 1
v $7 60, R 2 $6 75, R.4, $5 95 , R M
11 r S6 20 , Increase R 1 $2 15, R-2
111 $205, R·4 1205, R·M, $2.10,
VI Busmess- Proposed B·1 $19 .35,
11 r B 2 117 35, B·M $16 50 , Present,
111 B 1, SU 40, B.2 512 70, B-M
11 r Slt 75 , Increase 8.1 SA 95, B-2
'
Ill A.6S. B M U 75
Schedule Ill (6,001 12.000
Ill
Residence.
I. main stat•ons) 11 Proposed, R 1 $10 .05, R 2 $9 10,
11 R4S835,RMS865;PresentR 1
$790, R 2$7.10, R4 5620, AM
Increase
A
I S6 AS ,
tt 1S215,R2S200,RA,S2. 15,RM
ttl S2 20 , Business- Proposed B-1
ttl S20 15, B-2 $18.25, B M S17 .•u.
v Ill Present B·l 115.25. B 2113 SO, B
tt M $12 80; Increase B-1 $4 .90, B 2
Ill $4 75, B M SUS.
Rate Schedule . Grade of
I
I Service - Schedule tV C12,001 ·
I 24,000 main stat•ons)
I Residence, Proposed R -1 $10 40,
I R.2 19 45, R 4 18.70, R M 19 00,
I Present- R 1 $8 20, R-2 $7 35,
tl R 4 S6 45, R-M $6 70 ; Increase ttl R -1S2.20,R2S210,RAS225,R t M S2 30 , Business- Proposed,
Ill B-1 S21 30, B 2 519 AO, B M
IV $18 55; Business - Present B 1
tt S16 25, B-2 su.so, B-M S13.SO.
Itt Business - Increase B-1 $5.05 1
B 2 $4 90, B-M, $5OS
tt
kate Schedule · Grade of
tt
tt Service - Schedu le v u-4.
tt 001 48,000 main stattonslt Residence, Proposed, R -1
I 110.80, R·2 $9 85, R·4 $9 00, R·M
tl S9.30.Resldence- Present, R -1
tV 18.50, R 2 17 65, R 4 16.75, R·M
tt 57.00, Residence- Increase RIll 1$2.30, R·2, $2.20, R 4$2.25, R M
tV ~2 . 30; Business- Proposed 8 1
I S22 50,
B-2
$20.45,
B· M
tV S19 60;Buslness- Present. a 1
tV $17 25, B -2 S1S SO. B·M SlA AS ,
1
0
l
2
1
0
1
·O
0
0
11 10
3
2
3 3
0
2
l
2
2
0 .250
3 .2,36
0 • 200
9 12
2
12 11
3 l
9 11
2 1
10 1 0
6 1
6 . 15
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
15 3
5 0
0
0
2
1
2
1
0
1
2
l
2
1
0
•o.
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) Jmuny Wynn 's headache was
gone Monday night. Instead,
1
19.50
A78x 13
Up To
'32.00
.'29.00
L78xl5
L78x15
MOUNTING, BALANCING
FEDERAL EXCISE TAX
INCLUDED
BEND TIRE CENTER
.254
The 1974 Meigs County Pon y
League, the largest ever 10 thts
area, beg10s play May 31 \\tth
all 12 teams In ac tion
Foilowmg below ts the hst of
managers and thetr telephone
numbers, and thetr schedule
for the summer season
Pony league managers are
Lewis Harper, Harrisonville.
742-3875 , Tom Gru ese r ,
Pomeroy 13's, 992-3853.
Charl es
Wtn e br e nn er .
Cheshtre , 367-7552 ; Ke1th
Vanlnw ag en . Rutland , 9925708 :
Denms Ne\\land ,
Eastern , 667-6306 ; Jerry
Davenport , Mtddl e port
Amencans , 992-3675 ; Gary
Stsk Mason 882-2068, Dave
Dodson, Mtddleport A's, 9923235 , M1ke Stewart, Syracuse,
992-7196, Gene Mitch, Pomeroy
A's, 992-3478 , Hilton Wolfe,
Rac10e, 949-3211 , and Woody
Call, Pomeroy Ph1lhpes, 9923059 .
"
1 .191
0 .lll1
0 .150
0 .ooo
1 .ooo
0 .ooo
0 .ooo
0 .ooo
0 0
0 0
.ooo
.ooo
the Cmcmnatt Reds had one
from Wynn's bat.
As a result, the Los Angel~
Dodgers' lead m the National
League West over the defendmg diviswn champs was
seven games today.
Wynn homered twtce - his
13th and 14th of the young
season - to drive m four runs
as the Dodgers took the Reds 53 in the opener of an tmportant
three-game sertes
"I've never had a start like
thts," smiled the Dodgers' new
centerftelder " Everything 1s
working out better than I could
have hoped.
"I've always htt well at
Dodger Stadium m the past and
this time I have the fans on my
s1de, too. "
bt his 12th major league
season , Wynn leads the major
leagues m home runs, has
moved into a tie with the Texas
Rangers' Jeff Burroughs with
41 RB!s and ts hittmg 328.
A year ago, he batted 220
and drove m 55 rlllls He
homered 20 tunes.
"I'm JUSt swinging the bat
real well," said the former
Houston Astro "I JUSt hope I
can keep tt up ."
Willie DaVIS' replacement
Rose incensed
ON U.S. 33
IN MASON, W. VA.
in Dodgerland
If a
DISASTER
like this should strike our town ...
how well would u be
Most serious
about payment
of insurance claims are made by people who han not
insured their homes thru local, established agents
In liS Official Report on loss ad-
juslments made m the wake of
Hurricane Carla, the Comm1t1ee
of lhc Teus House of Representatives gave full cred1t for respon sible perforn,ance to ttlose c:omby
n ''"oendent
agents
How to protect yourself. Buy
msuranc:e for
your
home, car, or
Butkus hangs
Arnencans at Pomeroy I 13'sl
JUNE 28 - Cheshtre at
Mi dd lepor t A's , Pomeroy
( 13's 1 at Racme, Mtddleport
Americans at Syracuse
JULY 2 - Syracuse at
C1wshtre, Mtddleport A's at
Pomeroy (13's), R.acme at
Mtddleport Americans
JULY 5 - Make-up and
ramed-<> ut ga mes Champtonshlp-playolf - July 9 and
t2 between SOuth and North
BIG
Karr &Van Zandt
ORDERS EARLY
Arltftctal Baskets
Monument Markers
Arltftcial Flower Pols
Live Flowe r
Combmaltons
Dudley's Aorist
59 N. Second 51
ddlepor!, 0 .
FIRESTONE
MOWER
VALUES
THRIFTI·CUT
-- SPECIAL
ONE/NINE
$6333
•3 H P Bnggs and
St ratt on automa tiC
choke e ng~ne.
reco1l starter
• Ftngertlp throttle
control on e ng~ne
• 19" cut . cuttmg
hetght adJuStable
from 1" to 3· 1/ 4"
FAIRLAWN®
20"ROTARV
MOWER
OB 0 1 401 9
• Bnggs and Stratton 3 H P .
automatic choke eng1ne
• Handle-mounted throttle
control
• Adjustable cutttng hetghl
• Front and rear underdeck
baffles
'3895
POMEROY HOME & AUTO
Your Complete Tire Center
Pomeroy, 0.
606 E. Main
t
HfLLSCORES
DENVER (UP!) - Ed Htll,
67, ts nearly blmd but he says
he dido 't worry about losing
stght of hlB golf ball on the parthree !55-yard 13th hole of
Meadow Htlls Country Club
last weekend
Hill, who lost all pptic nerves
m hts left eye in 1967 and is
bothered by a blood clot in his
righi eye, scored a lfole-m-<>ne
- the ninth one he has
record~d 10 hts 56-year career
of playmg golf.
Spring Special For LP Gas
IN
IN
POINT PLEASANT
CONTACI'
DONNA
·HERMAN LYNCH
PHONE 675-2460
SANDWICHES
\)wiTH ALL THE EXTRAS
STEWART
992-2145
.MOBILE HOMES AND NEW CENTRAL HEATING AND
SPACE HEATERS
NOW OPEN
Sunday-10A.M.Io11 P.M.
CITY ICE &FUEL CO.
Mdn. thru Thurs.-9 A.M. toll P.M.
Sal
- 9 A.M.1to 1 A.M
992-2556
'
POMEROY,O.
W. MAIN
,.
' '
I
FLOWER
4.() in 2 days
Adolph's Dairy·Vall~y
Middleport, Ohio
PLACE YOUR
MEMORIAL DAY
Marc.hi's goes -
ADOLPH'S DAIRY VAllEY
Fn. &
Agency, Inc.
ttnrd Southern got back 10to
the ga me w1th three b1g tal hes
tn the second , two commg tn em
a s1ngle by Pete Sayre
Ge lling hits for the wm ners
were Raymund ('>llller, Jaye
Mye rs, Rodney Benn ett,
Ca rpenter, Terry Saunders and
Robmson
SOuthern httters were Sayre
wtth two htls , John Sa lser, two
"ngles, Dave Thetss, Greg
Dunmng and Vern Ord. one htt
each
Jaye Myers was the \\ tnn1ng
pttc her wh tle Sayre took th e
loss
Southern travels to Symm es
Va lley Wednesday tn the ftnal
ga me of the year for both
squads
Lmescore
SV
221 02 1 l'--8 7 I
FRAZIER WORKOliTS
Southern
031 102 l'--7 7 10
PHILADELPHI A (UPI)
Myers 1Wl and Pme Sayre
Joe
Fraz1er ,
fo rmer 1L) and Dunm ng
heavywetght boxmg champiOn .
completed h1s first week of
heavy workouts Monday tn
preparatiOn for Ius JlUle 17
bout wtth Jerry Quarry 10 New
Yo rk's Mad1 son Square
Garden
up his_cleats
A DV :
bus me ss from un independenl
agent Then, 1f disaster slrikes,
your mdependent msurance agent
1s on your s1de ready to help
t\s independent msurance
agents, we g1ve you the cpnunumg personal artent10n you need m
msurance protectiOn- The B1g Difference 1n car, home, or busmess
msurance Call us soon
Downing~ilds
,,
The league ts orgamzed thls
}ea t mt o North ern and
Southern Divisions It mcludes
JUNE II - Ph1lltpes at
Rutland , Harnsonvtll e a t
Pomer oy A's . Maso n at
teams from Met gs and Galha Eastern
Counti es m OhiO and Mason JUNE 14- Pomeroy A's at
Co unty, W Va
Phtlltes. Rutlahd at Mason .
Th e lin eup has Cheshir e Harnsonvllle a t Eastern
JU NE 18 _ "• Ph1lli es at
ret urnm g to th e bas icall y
Me1gs league and mark s also Mason.Phtlltes Home Team ,
the return of Eastern and Eastern at Pomeroy A's
Mason to Pny ball after a bnef Harn sonv1lle at Rutland
lapse
J UNE 21 - Mason at
MEIGS 1974 PONY
Pomer oy A's, Rutland at
LEAGUE SCHEDULE
at
Phllhes
Easte rn ,
Northern Division
Harnsonvtlle-Ph1lhes Home
MAY 32 - Pomeroy A's at Team
Eastern , Pomeroy Phtlhes at
JUNE 25 - Pome1 oy A's at
Mason Merch, Rutland Reds at Rutland. Eastern at Ph tlhes,
Hijfnsonvlile
Mason at Harnsonv1lle
JUNE 4 - Pomeroy A's at
JUNE 26 - Rutland at
Ma son Merch, Easte rn at Philli es, Pome roy A's at
Rutland Reds. Ph1llies at Harn so nvill e, Easte rn a t
Hamsonville
Mason
JU NE 7 - Rutl and at
JU LY 2 - Philltes at
Pomeroy A's , Ph1llies a t Pomeroy A's, Maso n at
Easte rn , Harrt sonvtlle a t Rutl and ,
Eastern
at
Manon
Harnsonvtlle
JULY 5 - Make-up and
ra1n ed out games. Cham·
p1onsh1p play-<>lfs July 9 and 12
bet\\een North and South
'
Southern Division
MAY 31 - Syracuse at
Racme, Cheshtre at Pomeroy
here called the Dodgers' lith last 10 1-3 mnmgs, Dodger i 13's ), Mtddl eport A's at
Middleport Amencans
VICtory m 13 starts "an un- manger Walter Alston said
JUNE 4 - Racme at Mid"M1ke's been outstandmg for
portant wm ."
dlepo
r t A's, Sy racuse at
"Cincmnati is sllll the team us lately and he dtd another
Pomeroy
(1 3's), Middleport
to beat in our divtslon because great JOb tomght "
Amen
can
s
at Cheshire
The Dodgers now are three
they won last I year," Wynn
JUNE 7 - Middleport A's at
explamed. "They came m here for three agamst Cincmnatt
Syracuse,
Cheshire at Racme,
hot and it's mce to get a ltttle ttns year They'll try to make tt
Pomeroy
(13's
) at Middleport
more space bet ween them 10 lour for four tomght, sendmg
Doug Rau, 3-1, agamst Ro ger Amen ca ns
the standmgs."
JUNE II - Middleport A's at
The Toy Cannon, who sat out Nelson, 2-3
Cheshire
, Racme at Pomeroy
a 4-2 loss to Atlanta Sunday
Syracuse
at Mtddleport
113's)
,
because of a headache, exAmericans
ploded for both hts homers off
JUN E 14 - Cheshtre at
ex-Houston teammate Ja ck
Syracuse,
Pomeroy (IJ's ) at
Billmgham, both on 2-2 collllts.
Middleport
A's , Middleport
He hit a three-run shot mto the
Amencans at Racme
leftfteld pavtlion m the openmg
NEW
YORK
(UP!
)
The
JUNE 18 - Rac 1ne at
tnnmg and a solo homer deep
Natwnal
Football
League
has
Syracuse,
Pomeroy (13's) at
mto the leftfield stands m the
lost another ol Its playmg Ch es htre , Mtddl e port
Sixth
Mtke Marshall, the Dodgers' greats - but this time not to Amen cans at Middleport A's.
JUN E 21- Middleport A's at
other big offseason acqutst!lon, !he World Football League.
Dtck Butkus, generally Racme, Pomeroy ( 13) at
got his fourth save to preserve
veteran southpaw Tommy regarded as the greatest Syracuse, Cheshire at Mtd·
mtddl e linebacker m the dleport Arnencans.
John's first wm of May John,
JUNE 25 - Syracuse at
who set a Dodger club record game's history, announced hts
retirement Monday night after Mtddleport A's, Ractne at
by winnmg ftve games in April,
receiVIng the George Halas Ch es hire , Middl e p o rt
unproved hts record to 6-1
Award for courageousness
Of Marshall , who hasn't
fr om th e New York Pro
gtven up an earned run m his
Football Wnters.
Th1s Week ' s Spec1al
"There are two ways to
retire," the 31-year old Butkus
said, "etther of your own free
wtll or because you can't go on
anymore Unfortunately, the
second one is true m my case
The Marchi's Falls City Fast Although I love the game, tt
pitch softball team won four seems as if it's commg to an
games Saturday and Sunday abrupt end "
The team is made up of
mernber!'t frn:n Mt!1g:s t. . :ounty
and play home games at
Syracuse Park.
TWO SIGNED
On Saturday Falls City beat
KANSASCITY , Mo (UPI )V 8, a uto , P S, v1nyl roof,
Laurelville two games, 12 to 0 Rtght-handed pttcher David
fa ctor y a1r , 20,000 m 1les,
and 5 to 4. Sunday they went to Hasbach and left-handed
new Olds trade
Logan and beat Hockmg Honor pttcher Ken SOuza Monday
Camp two games, 15 to 2 and 14 stgned contracts wtth the
to 20.
Kansas City Royals Hasbach
Falls City now ts m hrst was Kansas City's top selection
place in the Hockmg Valley m the secondary phase of, the
" You'll L1k e Our Qual1ty
League, havmg won 6 and lost January free agent draft.
Way of Doing Bus• ness
0 Next Sunday they wtll play SOuza , from San Mateo, Calif.,
GMAC FINANCING
Circleville two games at Jumor College, was the club's 992 -5342 •
Pomeroy
Open Evemngs 'T1I6 . 00
Syracuse Park
No 1 chmce in the regular
T115 PM Sal
phase .
STOP AT···
William 0 . Childf
..
from a 441 defictt m the second
mnmg to tie the score at 5-5 m
the fourth then fell beh1nd :a-5
before closmg the gap to the
fmal 8-7 score
·
4 Door
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Pete Rose , the Nattonal
League'sMVPiast season, was
the target of a steady barrage
of abuse from the fans m the
leftfield pavthon at Dodger
Stadium Monday night and he
didn't like. it
" The vulgarity was unbelievable," the Cincmnati
Reds' hustlmg leftftelder satd.
"They were using words that in
no way should be used in
pubbc.
" How can people tall( like
that m front of women?" Reds'
manager Sparky Anderson was
incensed at the fans' actions
"The Dodgers have to take
care of this problem,'' An·
derson said. "People out there
were chanting profantlles at
Pete. I couldn't believe the
words they were usmg."
Durmg the game, the fans in
left field had to be warned over
the public address system to
stop throwing debris onto the
field.
-
says ~ eg 1 sl at1ve lnvest1gatm g Comm1ttee
pames represented
The V1k10gs won the !ltle tn
1972 and 1973 whtle the Bobcats
and Tornados fought tl out for
second place both years
Monday mght , with the
tn the second and one tn the
For Coa~h H1lton Wolfe 's
Tornados it was thetr second
stratght dtsappomtmg loss .
Last Fnday, Kyger Creek
' sole possessiOn of the
took
league's top spot w1th a 6-2
vtctory The Bobcats fl msred
league play wtlh a 10-2 mark
So uthern dropped to 8-3
nonday and must now battle
.he Vlktngs at W1llow Wood for
the second place spot tn the
•stahdlngs SV also has an 8-3
record
Monday mght . Sy mm es
Valley got two runs 111 t11e f1rst
mmng on a h1t batsman, stolen
base, walk and two out smglc
by Rodney Bennett
The Vtkm gs added two more
usEo cARs
73 OLDS
CutiaSs Supreme
at nasty fans
PHONE 773-5881
I
t;:apltol offenses are about
the only kind which are
' r~warded instead of
punished. sa:ys our resident
cynic.
DAYTON
PREMIUMH2
Up_to _
R
~·
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
Jl
0
0
pressure on, Southern ralh ed
Wynn wrecks Reds
A78x13
1
'/
4
champwnshtp
Expanded Pony ~eague
opens with full slate May 31 St
l 0 .lili.O
3 l .jth
1 0 .)~.3
16 1+50 ll5 127 112 125 110 25 9
16 42 8 78 117 84 100 76 24 3
'17.00
•
•
Michael (Vtrgmta) Shaw, as
choreographer, and Brant
Adams, arranger and accompanist.
btterviews and casting of the
various roles will be conducte'd
June 2 in the amphitheatre at
Bob Evans Farms, Rio
Grande, starting at 2 p.m. rain
or shine. Everyone interested
m all phases of the theatre is
mvtted. Backstage workers,
performers, singers, and
dancers
are still needed.
$2 50 , Business - Proposed. B 1'
S23 75, B·2 $21 60, B.M $20.85.
"Gallia Country" presented
Business - F'resent B 1 $18.10, the first time last year, drew
B 2Sl6 35, B·M $1540; Busmess
- Increase B 1 S5 65 , B -2 $5 25
huge
audiences
from
B M ss AS 1
'
surrounding
states
and
the
Rate Schedule . Grade of
Service-Schedule VII (96,001
Meigs-Gallla-Mason area.
192,000 main stations)
Critics were generous in praise
Residence , Proposed,
R-1
$11.65, R 2110 60, R-A S9 70, Fil -M
of the performances as well as
$10.00. Residence- Present, R
1 $9.15, R 2 18.1S, R 4 17 25, R·M the performers and over..all
~0. ReSidence- Increase R. production.
1$2 50, R·2 12.45, R 4$2 4S, R·M
Natural accoustics in the
S2 50, Business- Proposed, e 1
$24 85, B·2 $22 70. B M S21 95 , amphitheatre, combined with
Business - Present. B 1 519.00,
B-2 S1J 25, B M $16 25 . Business the beauty of the surrounding
-Increase, B·l S5 85, B·2 $5 45 scenery, provided a realistic
B M $5.70
'
Rate Schedule . Grade of setting for this hisioricalService Sct'tedule VIII dramatic pageant, an original
<192,001 384,000 n,am stations)
- Residence - Proposed , R 1 work of Lee Durieux of Mt.
S12.10, R 2 111 05, R.4 SlO os R Vernon, Ohio. Music, dialogue
M 510.35. Residence - Present
R 1 S9 50, R-2 S8 55, R-A $7 .50, R, and dancing combine to make
M S7 75 , Residence - Increase
the pageant entertainment for
R-1 $2 60, R 2 S2 50, R-A $2 55, R:
the entire family.
M S2.60; Buslnen - Proposed
s.1 126 20, B 2 S23 95, a.Ni
Performance dates are the
S23. 10; Business- Present, B -1
weekends
of July 5, 12 and 19.
$19.85 8.2 $18 10. B M $17 30 ·
Business- Increase, B 1 S6 35' Ticket sales information will
8·2 IS 85, B-M $5.80
'
Rate Schedule . Grade of be announced soon. For further
Service- Schedule tV CJ84,001 inlormation, call or write
lnd over main stattonsJ Residence, Proposed R·l $12 55 ' Thelma Elliott, Chamber of
R -2 Sll 45, R-ot SlO
R M Commerce office, State Street,
SlO 70 , Residence , Present, R
1 S9 80, ~ 2 58.90, R A $7 80, R M Gallipolis, Ohio.
'
1
MEDALLION
MARQUIS
,
First auditions for the Galha
Soc1ety
Dramatic · Arts
production, ' Gallia Country'',
were held May 18 in Jackson
and May 19 in Gallipolis t;
recruit prospective perfo~ers
10 this year's presentation.
More auditions wi~ be needed.
Murl H. Rush, Jr., who will
direct the overall production
again this year, has engaged E.
Kimball (Red) Suiter as
musical coordmator; Mrs.
VIII
II
IV
Ill $8 80 R 2 17.90, R·4 $6.95, R M B·2 16.05, B.M $6OS
I S7 .20; Resldenct- Increase. R VI 1 12 45, ~ · 2 12 35, ~·4 $2 45, R Mt 151 21 , 28 161 4, 3tc
2
3 0 .264
·
More auditions
t0
he announced
Business - lncretse B-1 SS.25,
B-2 SA 95, B-M SS 15.
S8 05, Residence- increase R
Rale Schedule . Grade of 1 S2 75, R ·2 5-2 .55, R A S2 60,
M
Sei'VIce- Schedule VI (48,001 - S2 65, Business- Proposed, B-1
96,000 main stallons l - 127 40, B·2 $25.05, B M 124 20 ,
Residence Proposed R 1 Business - Present. 8 1, •20 70,
$11 25, ~·2 110 25. R 4 SUO, R M B 2, 119 00, B·M 118 15 ·
S910;R811dence- Present R 1 Business - Increase. 8 1 S6 10'
0
t3
3
2
19 16
9 13
6 6
15 l7
MAY TIRE SALE NOW
IN PROGR!:SS
Ill
t
10
2 l .l.!-75
BEND TIRE CENTER.
I
',J
7
9
0
H,EAD COACH
RICHMOND, btd. (UPI )
George Waggoner, a member
of th e coachmg staff at
Westromster College m New
Wtlmington, Pa., the past four
years, Monday was named
head basketball coach at
Earlham College.
I
lit
15 40
3
l
u 18
Holllfl Runs : S tob al' t, George, English, Nesse1road each
1. Meigs 4. opponent! 2 •
••
•
•
S!?EAKING OF SENIOR CITIZENS, the group has been
influenllal in pushing children's books as a bookmobile service.
The consensus among the senior group commtltee was to
promote the interest m children's reading. Inctdentally, Mrs.
Vilma Pikkoja, bookmobile supervisor, points out that she would
consent to some senior citizen being assigned as many as 200
books if he or she would like to open their residence to yollllgsters
at certain times for reading. If interested, just let Mrs Pikkoja
know- she'll let no grass grow llllder her feet in getting the plan
rolling.
II
II
7 11
9
3
~ - - - --
Three-base hits: Ault 2 1 Wolfe l, Prioe 1, Stoba1·t l,
Davenport 1. Meigs 6, opponents 2.,
•
Of the Bend _£,/,
IV
16 47
J
-SO RBI SB SH AVE.
Two-base hits: Ault 2, Ash 3, Stcbart 3 1 Nes se1road ),
Davenport 3 1 Marshall 2 1 Georga 1.
Meigs 19, opponents 15.
tt
tt
IV
IV
VI
I
By Bob Hoeflich
•
ttl
ttl
IV
I
Seruor Citizens, mostly from Meigs County, bad a ball
IV
II Saturday afternoon when tbey boarded the Chaperone for a
Ill crutse on the "Old Ohto."
I
II
Of the 328 making the trtp, 275 were from the Meigs County
I
Senior
Citizens group with the remainder coming from Mason,
IV
Ill Vmton and Gallia Counties.
IV
Armand made the trip with the group providing organ music
Ill
II for singing and dancing, including squares. Armand donated his
IV talent for the excursion and really added life to the party.
I
II
Friday evening, the Meigs Senior Citizens held a square ~
Ill dance at the junior htgh auditorium in Pomeroy and $182 was .~
Ill
VI cleared for the citizens fund. The Hilltoppers donated their •
I
II servtces for that event. More pubhc square dances are being '
IV planned for the benefit of the Semor Cttlzens program.
''
II
II
I
lli
8 12 l
16 38 10
9 5 2
Meigs
Upponents
~
·~
Beat. ..
IV
Itt
11
II
I
II
II
II
s.
are Gary Hoffman who was escort for Miss Weaver,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Weaver of Letart, second
from left ; Tun Roush, escort for the prom queen; Miss
Lewts, Mr. Zell, Miss Fields, daughter of Mr. and Mrs
Leonard Felds of Hartford and escort, Jeff Harbrecht.
PROM ROYALTY- Cheryl Lewis, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Lewis of Letart, seated, was crowned the 1974
Wahama High School Prom Queen Saturday night by
Prmctpal John Zell. Vicky Weaver and Kim Fields, also
semors, were attendants for MlSS Lewis. Pictured, from left,
BARLOW
Lecithin won't lower cholesterol
intestinal wall it is no longer
lecithin.
The lecithin m our bloodstream is correlated ·with
cholesterol levels, and there is
some evtdence that if tt is high
xou will have less tendency to
fatty depostts m the artenes.
HOWEVER, and tt is a btg
however, the lectthm in the
blood ts manufactured by the
liver. Its level is mfluenced by
the many factors, even the
raho of male and female
hormones .
If you needed choline in your
dtet then lectthin would be
helpful This substance helps
protect the hver from fatty
degeneration that can occur m
fasting and other probleDIS.
But, many common foods in a
normal diet contain abundant
amounts of c)loline, such as
lean meats. lf you needed
choline you should be taking
choline, not lectthin or more
fat.
I do think you probably could
profit from taking some
. medicine for your persistent
high cholesterol levels, particularly if you have been oh a
proper diet and h4tve controlled
your weight. There is medicme
available specifically for
lowering the cholesterol m
' prople who can't accorqplish
this with diet. But tt is not
lecithin and mu~t be
prescribed by a1doctor.
A.
M.
Jaworski cites
DR. LAWHENCE E. LAMB
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am 4a
years old, five-feet-seven, and
. weigh 135 pounds. I have a
cholesterol count of about 330
reduced by diet from 395.
A recent magazine arhcle
said that lecithin reduces the
cholesterolm a person's blood.
Does lectthin really reduce the
count as they say? Thank you
for any help you provtde.
DEAR READER- I wtsh it
didn, but tt doesn't. The only
people who could posstbly
benefit from lectthin are a few
wl)o have a dietary deftciency
In polyunsaturated fats You
can solve that problem with a
proper diet that mcludes about
a third of the fat in your diet as
polyunsaturated fat as you get
in corn oil, safflower otl or
products made wtth these oils.
Excess amounts of these oils
won't help etther.
There is a lot of untrue
promotional material in
magazines about lecithin. It is
another fat. The difference is
that It contains some
phosphate
and
ts
a
phosopholipid. And, It is
1 connected to choline. Now that
is all fairly complex so let me
say that the lecithin particle is
broken dqwn by the digestive
llll)'llleS in the digestive tract
Into the choline, the fatty acids,
1
ud then absO..f?ed. In other
wards, once it gets thro~~h the
G,
bas been entered In the National Register of Historic Places.
The National Register is the official schedule of the nallon's
histortc property.
THE INDIAN burial mound to the nght m tHe ptcture
above of the Molllld Cemetery near Chester m Metgs Collllty
Prioe
Da'llenpor t
BUI'ney
George
English
Magnotta
1/.cKinaey
M'; on
Hamilton
Richards
Vaughan
Cremeans
Bsc hner
Defend10g Southern Valley
Athletic Conference champ,
Symm!] Valley , edged
Southern fl.7 Monday evemng
gtvmg Kyger Creek the 1974
undtsputed SVAC Base ball
POINT PLEASANT W,"VA.
-
I
'
I '
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
'
1
/'
..
"
�.'
.'
'I
:·
Do~ger
~; Vikings
.
·•. have new
'·
:· problems
•
BLOOMING TON , Min n.
I UP! )
J im
Fink s
rt.>sig natioi1 as
genera l
mam:tger of the Minnesota
Vikings arter
J'aising them
froln a so-so·-·expansion t ea m lo
a Super So\',:I power ;1pparently
resulted from differences with
Presiqent Max Win ter, a top
Viking offi Cia l said.
.
B. H. Ridder .Jr, chairman of
U1e club, said in New York,
''The prima ry reason for his
r esignation was differences be-
tween himse lf and the
president of U1e company."
But Winter said he didn 't
know the actual reason, called
Finks '·as good a general
man ager as I' ve eVer seen,"
and ndded that he and Finks
"never had .an argwncnt over
foo tbalL"
At least 15 applications to
succeed F inks rts gene ra l
manager poured into the club's
office within 24 hours after
Fin ks ' resigh8 tiori as announced Sunday night.
Of. the fir st appli can ts ,
"severa l are pro foot ball
people, several were in football
before and some weren't eve11
in football but have had good
records in business, n Winter
said.
"I want us to ge t the best new
manager we can," he said.
Golden Little
of Columbus dies
G·olden Little, 49, Columbus,
formerly of Middleport, di'ed
Monday in a Colum bus
Hospital.
He was the son of Mrs.
Bertha Little, Columbus, and '
the late Stroud Little , Sur·
viving besides his mother is his
wile , Ruby; four daughters and
two sons, all at home; two
brother , Wayne and Milton
Little, Columbus; and a sister ,
Mrs . Neva Laird of Akron .
He was preceded in death by
a broiher, Kenddl and a sister,
Opal Whitlatch McDaniel.
Funeral services will .be held
at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
Woodyard Funeral Home ,
South High St., Columbus and
burial will be in Columbus.
Calling hours are Tuesda y
from 7 to 9 p.m.
Mrs. Enid Zweyer
services are set
..
•
Graveside services for Mrs.
Enid Tuttle Zweyer, 68, former
Meigs-resident of Bal timore,
Md., who died F riday at a Long
Island, N. Y., hospiU.l, will be
held at 1Q :30 a .m. Thursday at
the Chester Cemeter y.
Mrs . Zw eyer resided in
Maryland sin ce 1930 . Her
address in Baltimore was 8134
Bullneck Road.
Surviving are ~r__husb~~ d ,
John.; a son, Earl A. Hussell of
Spokane, Wash.; two gra ndchildren,
two
gr ea t grandchi ldr en , a broth er,
Archie Tuttle, Minersville, and
several nieces, nephe ws and
cousins.
Funeral services were held
this morning at the J ohn J .
Duda Funeral Home in Dun·
dalk , Md. ·officiating at the '
local graveside ri tes will be
Mr. La rry 'Carnahan. There
will be no calling hours and the
family reques ts that no flowers
be sent. The Ewin g Funeral
Home is in charge of local
arrangeme_r:ts.
,.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Otis Casto,
Reedsville ; Arle ne Frye,
Belpre;
Lorene
Lucas,·
Ches hire ~ Francis Hawthorne ,
Portland ; Sarah Shoema ker
Bidwell : Lucy McCune, Ad-'
dison; Lillian Walker , Middleport ; Hattie Nessel road •
Pomeroy; 'Myrtl e Warner ,
Syracuse ; Danny Hobbs,
Mason ; Karl Grueser. Minersville ; Brenda Ta ylor, Racine;
Jerry Owens, Mount Vernon .
DISCHARGED Mary
Derenberger , Willi am Dye ,
Arlene Fry e.
,,'
,.
•
.TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
·The ·Pomeroy unit of the
, Southeastern <)hlo Emergency
Medical Service was calied to
• Rt. 2, R;tcine at 8:21! p.m.
Monday for Brenda Taylor.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial HOspital where she
was admitted ' as a ·.medical
·' patient.
l'liEW YORK 1UP I) - - Bill Curry, the personable pres ident of
the NFL Players· Association, is like no other football player you
have ever met.
·
His mind is laser-shar p, the ty pe which cuts to the co rC Q[ a
problem inllllt.>d ia tely, and when he speaks he has a way of
coll ar ing your attention with out pinning it up against the wall.
Now with the Housto"t1 Oilers, Curry has pu t in 10·seasons in
the NF L, but doesn't figure to be playing too much longer. Not
with the kind of mentality he has. Some smart corpora tion or
network wi ll come along pretty soon and hi re him away . Watch
and see .
Fur the moment though, the Oilers ' 31-year-old center, is
totally committed to the players' cause ami their so-<Oalled
fr eedom issues in the present impasse between them and the
owners.
Strike Talk
ll1e players presented 37 new demands upon the owners
Monday ma king a total of 94 in all, and now there is growing talk
of Mlother strike, but Curry, with his firm belief in people of all
kind s - even football owners - hopefully feels it won't come to
that again.
" I believe in the fraternity of pro football, " says the two-time
all -pro center without sounding at all stuffy about it.
''The r eason I say that is because I've never found this same
kind of love anywhere else between black and white people, rich
anctlpoor,•quar terbacks and offensive linemen . In this complex
society of ours, in this time, regarcU ess of whether you're in a ·
sports en vironment, an industrial environment or any oth er
environment, with people having the degree of sophistication
they never had before, it is imperative tbat they do. things
togeth er . The time is past when you can do it with a whip .
"You don't, for example, fin e a man one hundred dollars
beca use·he has a flat tire on his way to work. There is something
radically wrong in any system where you have to hne a mao to
make him produce . The fine procedure we have now is one in
which the player pays out for the ineptitude of his coach. I played
for Vince Lombardi and he certainly didn 't fine anyone. He knew
he could moti'\ate playe rs in other ways, and he did . Same with
Don Shula. Why should you have to fine a man to make him
perform? The whole concept is wrong."
~·ina! Judge
_ .._One of the freedom issues Bill Curry is concerned with is the :
Rozelle Rule , a rule under which , the players claim , Pete Rozelle
not only ser ves as NFL commissioner but also as final judge and
jury in all di sputes.
Curry says, with some justification, it is impossible for
Rozelle to serve as an impartial arbitrator between the owners
and players when his $200,QOO.a-year salary is paid him by .the
owners. He also says pro footb all 's reserve clause needs
reshaping.
· The owners, on the other hand, say, also ~ some
justification , that they can't just sit back and let the players run
the entire operation beca use that would result in absolute chaos.
It would also result in most of the owners asking themselves why
did tbey put up tbeir huge financial investmen t in tbe first place.
Bill Curry kn ows the way the owners feel.
"The real argument here is wheth er what we (the players)
are talking ~bout would lead to anarchy and destruction of
professional football," he says.
·
" I've heard it said that what we're seeking would enable one
owner,'the richest one. to corn er all the talent. That 's not true at
all. I don 't think any owner ~ goi~g t~ _l g~~ l!l'o million dollars
in order to hire a stable of superstars just so he can be known as
th e last owner to win th e Super Bowl championship as the NFL .
wen t down U1e tubes.
Changed Rules
Last Fall , Curry , playing against the Los Angeles Rams, had
som e bones in his left knee shattered trying to block Merlin
Olsen. Curry wore a steel rod in.his kn ee for seven months but
fe els r eady to go again . Only now the NFL owners have gone and
changd the rules on him. ·
·
"They changed them without consulting the olayers , or those
best qualified to help us, the. physicians and trainers," said
Curry.
" Let me show you what one of the new rules does. It says the '
offensive line willl'emain in place ·on punting situatwns until the
ball has been kicked. You know what this means to an old of·
fensive center ? It means a wall of blockers for punt returners
will be set up by th e time I start to run, and it is only a matter of
time until my knee goes again. If it goes once more, who knows .
formula: ·Wynn-ing ·t.tntrffll.cr·
lly Vl\1>:1) Me MAN E
this. " smiled tile Uodgers' new
UPI Spurts Wri.U•r
c.:cntcrfi elder . \!Eve rything is
Here 's llw pcrfec·t nmtto fo r \\'Or king out better than I .cOuld
th e Los An ge les Dodgers: have hoped. ,I've always hit
"Wyn n-ing IJllselwll. "
well at Dodger Stadium in the
The off-season trade that past and this time I have tlic
landed the Dodgers .Jim Wynn fans on my side, too .
from tht' Houston Astros has .
" I think we needed this one
been ever ything the cl ub hoped beca use Ci ncinnati has been
it would be .. . and more. Th e :12- play ing real hot basebalL "
year-<l ld outfi elder has bPen
Wynn 's lusty hitt ing helped
the hott est ba tter in Ihe Tommy John end a mild slump
National League over the past and win hi s sixth game aga inSt
two weeks and he's guttct1 the one loss. John , who had not won
Dodgers off to a comfortable since April 25, allowed seven
lead in the West D(vision hi ts in 7 2-3 innings before
pe rmant race .
giving way to Mike Marshall,
Wynn . who leads the ma jors who registered his fourth save.
in home runs and is ti ed for th e Joe Morgan hit a two-run
lead in runs batted in , drove in homer for Cincinnati , which
fo ur nu1s with a pa ir of homers lost fo r only tbe thirlllime in its
M onda ~ night to lead the last 11 games.
Dodger s to a 5-3 victory over
In the only other scheduled
Cincinnati whi ch increased Los Natio nal Leag ue ga mes ,
· An geles'lead in the NJ. West to Montreal downed Pittsburgh 4·
seven games over the second 2, Chi cago edged New York 2-1,
place Reds.
Philadelph ia nipped St. Lui s 2-1
The victory was the Dodgers' · an d Sa n Diego topped Houston
29th in 40 games this season, ll-6.
·
which figures out to a perOaklan d downed Minnesota
centage of .725. Los An geles is 5-4 and Milw a uk ee topped
the only tea m in the ma jor Detroit 6-4 in th e only games
leagues play ing better than scheduled in the American
.556.
I ~ a g ue.
Top Hitters
E xpos 4, Pirates Z
The two homers gave Wynn
Bob Bailey doubled home a
14 so far this season and the run in th e fifth then scored on a
RBI's raised his total to 41. He single by Ken Singleton to lead
also is hitting .328, whi ch puts th e Expos over the Pirates.
him among the top 10 hitter s in Mike Torrez went eight innings
the league.
for Montreal and received
"I've never had a sta rt lik e credit for his fourth win in the
seven decisions .
Cubs 2, Mets 1
Bill y Willia ms ' two-run
single in the sixth · inning
.JOCKEV CRIT!CAL
enabled the Cubs to defeat the
RUTLAND, Vt. (UP! )
Donald Baratini, an apprentice Mets and Sllap a fi ve-game
jQckcy, remained in critical losing streak. A sin gle by Don
condition at Rutland Hospital Kessin ger and a throwing error
Monday aft er suffering heaa by catcher J erry Grote on Matt
injuries Friday night at Green Al ~ x a nd er 's sacrifi ce bunt
preceded Williams' hit: Burt
Mountain Race Tra ck,
Hooton went the distance for
the Cubs, allowing only four
hits, to gain hi's setond win in
fi ve decisior,J.s .
Ph lilies 2, Cardil1l!IS I .
Steve Carlton tossed a n
eight-hitter and singled home
the deciding run in the seventh
inn ing to ·spark the Phillies'
triumph over the Cardinals.
·n, e victory. moved the Phillies
into first plac'e in th e NL East
by one-half game. Carlton,
boosting his record to 5-3, was
aided by two double plays in
tbe last two innings which cut
short St. Louis rallies .
Padres 8, Aslrns &
Willi e McCovey drove in four
runs with two doubles as the
Padres handed the Astros .their
lOth ·successive loss . Fred
Kendall also knocked in a pair
of r uns for San Diego, including
the tie-breaking run in the
seventh . Cliff Johnson had a
pinch-hit two-r.un homer for
Houston.
A's 5, Twins 4
Angel Mangual had three
hits, including a triple , drove in
a run and scored another to
help the A's to their ninth
triumph in 12 games, The A's
coll ected three triples and a
double as part of an ll.IJit
attack and helped Ken Holtzman to his fourth win. Rod
f•..
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4))
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•••
••
•
instruction to diagnose
coronary thrombosis more
quickly and better than a
•
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•
trained cardiologist ... The
National Gallery of Art In
Washington , 0 . C. Is the
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Railway Is the
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According to published
resu Its of studies by the U.
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merce and the Bureau of
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Statistics , the
family can save at least 5t2
515 a month by using
conditioned
refined water units are sold
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Sayre Hdwe., "It doesn 't
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the world's greatest art
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It always happens someplace
else, right? To the other guy.
Maybe so. But the poi'1t is,
it happens. Or can. Along
with ice·storms and fires and
floods and anything else that's
disastrous .
So no matter how remot.;
the chances are, we have to be
ready. Just in case. It makes
us feel better. .. probably
because on that score we're
a lot better off than most.
First of all, we can muster a
small army on short notice.
Mighty good men from every
phone company in the
Mid..Continent System, serving
the Next America from
Florida to Michigan and
nine more states east of the
Mississippi.
Second, we've got the hardware. In spades. Because
we've got the telephone- .
equipment company that
supplies all of Mid-Continent
behind us. So whatever it
takes to get things back
to normal in the Next America,
it's ours fQf the ask,ing. Just
as quick as it's humanly
:tpossible to get it here.
Third, we've got the heads
to put together. Hundreds of
years of combined MidContinent know-how handling ·
JUSt about every crisis under
the sun.
·
What it all means is that
when and if the crunch.comes,
you'll have the whole Mid- •
Contl~ent System working for
you wtth us. And all with
only one purpose. To restore
servKJe, fast.
.
Because we think that at
least where your phone is
concerned, you're entitled to a
. little peace of mind.
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Say re
By Bertha Parker
were Ga llipolis visitors
Sabbath School atiendance
Monday and also VISited M•·. May 12 at the Free Methodist
and Mrs . Brice Say re a t Church was 105, There' were
75
'0
Jackson.
persons at the mormn g worMr. and Mrs. Da ve Sayre ship service. Offering for all
and Mrs. Doris Sayre we re serv ices was $125.20.
Gallipolis visitors Wednesda y.
Mrs.
Clarence
Curtis
Mrs . Ann Radfo rd a nd received a flower Mother's
Stephanie of Pomeroy Route , Day for bein g the oldest
Mrs. Ma bel Shields, Mrs. Facie · mother a nd Mrs . Brenda
Hayman, Mrs . Marlene Fisher Hagg y a fl ower for th e
and children, Mr. and Mrs. Bill youngest m·oth er, at the local
Robinson an d children, Mrs. church.
Clara Mae Sargen t all visited
Mrs. Victor Leifheit reamins
Mrs.
Berth a
Rob inson, a patient at Holzer Medica:
Mo the•·'s Day.
Center.
·
Mr. and M1·s. Dana Lewis of
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs is a
Clifton, W. Va ., spent Mother's pa tient at Veterans Memorial
Day eve ning with ,;tr. and Mrs. Hospital.
Russell Roush and family.
Pa ul Archer, Columbus ,
Bi ll ·Douglas of De tro it ,. spen t Saturday with his
Mi ch. , visited his mo tl1er, Mrs . mother , Mrs . Georgia Diehl
Ma ry Donohue and Davi d and and Charles Anthony Di ehl .
Mrs. Rose Bachus over the
A Billy Graham film " Isn't It
weekend .
Good To Know" will be shown
Mrs. Barbara Sutton and Sunday evening, May 19, at·
Mrs . Annette Perr y of 7:30 p. m.. at the local church.
Columbus visited their .fat her, Everyone is welcome.
Charley Blake, Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs : Phil .Wise of
Moth er's Day we ekend McCo nn els ville a tt e nd ed
guests of Mr . ar1d Mrs. Herbert morn ing worship' service at tbe
Sayre were Mr. and Mrs . Dea n local churr h.
Sayre of Middletown, Pa ., Mr.
Mr,- and Mrs. William Perry,
and Mrs . Brice Sayre and baby Athens, Mr. and Mrs: Vern
of J ackson, Mr . and Mrs. Story and John visite<t'Sunday
Danny Sayre and Mr . and Mrs. with Mr. and Mrs . Norman
Buck Rogers of Columbus.'
Schaefer .
·
Mr. and Mrs. Ott Boston of ' Crys tal Buckley and Charles
Racine spent a recent Saturday Anthony were unable to attend
nig ht with Mt s . Ruth Parsons. school for several days due to
Mr. and Mrs . Bob Lawson · illness.
and children, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Mrs . Mike Douglas , Athens ,
Lawson and baby, Mr. and Mrs . Robert Burke and Chris of
Mrs. Harold Lawson and c. J . Columbus, Mrs. Che~ter Roush
of l..e,tart, W. Va., Mr. and and Stacie, Maryland, visited
Mrs. Bill 'Parsons and children recen.tly with their grand· .
visited Mr. and Mrs. Charles parents , Mr. and Mrs. Harmon
Lawson, Mother's Day.
Fox. Mr. and Mrs. Fox at.
'. Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie·RUSS<!II tended the 25th wedding an.
and children Mandy and Mike · niversary observance of their
of Fo\irt Meacte, ·Md ., were . daughter and s~n-in-law , Mr.
rece nt visitors of Mr. and Mrs . and Mrs. Johnny Douglas,
Russell Roush and famil y.
Albany, Sunday.
I +
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WEIGHT
Starting Today
Laurel Cliff
\
j{~
Carew ,had three hits for the
Twins and boosted his AL
leading batting average to .418.
Brewers 6, Tigers 4 ·
· Dave May's double off relief
ace John Hiller scored two runs.
in the eighth and gave lhe
Brewers a victory ·over the
Tigers. Ed Sprague, starting
only his tbird game since 1971
and Second this season, went
eight innings and received
credit for his second win.
... ?"
Fairview
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SEA PACK FROZEN
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5 LB.$}~
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Do~ger
~; Vikings
.
·•. have new
'·
:· problems
•
BLOOMING TON , Min n.
I UP! )
J im
Fink s
rt.>sig natioi1 as
genera l
mam:tger of the Minnesota
Vikings arter
J'aising them
froln a so-so·-·expansion t ea m lo
a Super So\',:I power ;1pparently
resulted from differences with
Presiqent Max Win ter, a top
Viking offi Cia l said.
.
B. H. Ridder .Jr, chairman of
U1e club, said in New York,
''The prima ry reason for his
r esignation was differences be-
tween himse lf and the
president of U1e company."
But Winter said he didn 't
know the actual reason, called
Finks '·as good a general
man ager as I' ve eVer seen,"
and ndded that he and Finks
"never had .an argwncnt over
foo tbalL"
At least 15 applications to
succeed F inks rts gene ra l
manager poured into the club's
office within 24 hours after
Fin ks ' resigh8 tiori as announced Sunday night.
Of. the fir st appli can ts ,
"severa l are pro foot ball
people, several were in football
before and some weren't eve11
in football but have had good
records in business, n Winter
said.
"I want us to ge t the best new
manager we can," he said.
Golden Little
of Columbus dies
G·olden Little, 49, Columbus,
formerly of Middleport, di'ed
Monday in a Colum bus
Hospital.
He was the son of Mrs.
Bertha Little, Columbus, and '
the late Stroud Little , Sur·
viving besides his mother is his
wile , Ruby; four daughters and
two sons, all at home; two
brother , Wayne and Milton
Little, Columbus; and a sister ,
Mrs . Neva Laird of Akron .
He was preceded in death by
a broiher, Kenddl and a sister,
Opal Whitlatch McDaniel.
Funeral services will .be held
at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
Woodyard Funeral Home ,
South High St., Columbus and
burial will be in Columbus.
Calling hours are Tuesda y
from 7 to 9 p.m.
Mrs. Enid Zweyer
services are set
..
•
Graveside services for Mrs.
Enid Tuttle Zweyer, 68, former
Meigs-resident of Bal timore,
Md., who died F riday at a Long
Island, N. Y., hospiU.l, will be
held at 1Q :30 a .m. Thursday at
the Chester Cemeter y.
Mrs . Zw eyer resided in
Maryland sin ce 1930 . Her
address in Baltimore was 8134
Bullneck Road.
Surviving are ~r__husb~~ d ,
John.; a son, Earl A. Hussell of
Spokane, Wash.; two gra ndchildren,
two
gr ea t grandchi ldr en , a broth er,
Archie Tuttle, Minersville, and
several nieces, nephe ws and
cousins.
Funeral services were held
this morning at the J ohn J .
Duda Funeral Home in Dun·
dalk , Md. ·officiating at the '
local graveside ri tes will be
Mr. La rry 'Carnahan. There
will be no calling hours and the
family reques ts that no flowers
be sent. The Ewin g Funeral
Home is in charge of local
arrangeme_r:ts.
,.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Otis Casto,
Reedsville ; Arle ne Frye,
Belpre;
Lorene
Lucas,·
Ches hire ~ Francis Hawthorne ,
Portland ; Sarah Shoema ker
Bidwell : Lucy McCune, Ad-'
dison; Lillian Walker , Middleport ; Hattie Nessel road •
Pomeroy; 'Myrtl e Warner ,
Syracuse ; Danny Hobbs,
Mason ; Karl Grueser. Minersville ; Brenda Ta ylor, Racine;
Jerry Owens, Mount Vernon .
DISCHARGED Mary
Derenberger , Willi am Dye ,
Arlene Fry e.
,,'
,.
•
.TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
·The ·Pomeroy unit of the
, Southeastern <)hlo Emergency
Medical Service was calied to
• Rt. 2, R;tcine at 8:21! p.m.
Monday for Brenda Taylor.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial HOspital where she
was admitted ' as a ·.medical
·' patient.
l'liEW YORK 1UP I) - - Bill Curry, the personable pres ident of
the NFL Players· Association, is like no other football player you
have ever met.
·
His mind is laser-shar p, the ty pe which cuts to the co rC Q[ a
problem inllllt.>d ia tely, and when he speaks he has a way of
coll ar ing your attention with out pinning it up against the wall.
Now with the Housto"t1 Oilers, Curry has pu t in 10·seasons in
the NF L, but doesn't figure to be playing too much longer. Not
with the kind of mentality he has. Some smart corpora tion or
network wi ll come along pretty soon and hi re him away . Watch
and see .
Fur the moment though, the Oilers ' 31-year-old center, is
totally committed to the players' cause ami their so-<Oalled
fr eedom issues in the present impasse between them and the
owners.
Strike Talk
ll1e players presented 37 new demands upon the owners
Monday ma king a total of 94 in all, and now there is growing talk
of Mlother strike, but Curry, with his firm belief in people of all
kind s - even football owners - hopefully feels it won't come to
that again.
" I believe in the fraternity of pro football, " says the two-time
all -pro center without sounding at all stuffy about it.
''The r eason I say that is because I've never found this same
kind of love anywhere else between black and white people, rich
anctlpoor,•quar terbacks and offensive linemen . In this complex
society of ours, in this time, regarcU ess of whether you're in a ·
sports en vironment, an industrial environment or any oth er
environment, with people having the degree of sophistication
they never had before, it is imperative tbat they do. things
togeth er . The time is past when you can do it with a whip .
"You don't, for example, fin e a man one hundred dollars
beca use·he has a flat tire on his way to work. There is something
radically wrong in any system where you have to hne a mao to
make him produce . The fine procedure we have now is one in
which the player pays out for the ineptitude of his coach. I played
for Vince Lombardi and he certainly didn 't fine anyone. He knew
he could moti'\ate playe rs in other ways, and he did . Same with
Don Shula. Why should you have to fine a man to make him
perform? The whole concept is wrong."
~·ina! Judge
_ .._One of the freedom issues Bill Curry is concerned with is the :
Rozelle Rule , a rule under which , the players claim , Pete Rozelle
not only ser ves as NFL commissioner but also as final judge and
jury in all di sputes.
Curry says, with some justification, it is impossible for
Rozelle to serve as an impartial arbitrator between the owners
and players when his $200,QOO.a-year salary is paid him by .the
owners. He also says pro footb all 's reserve clause needs
reshaping.
· The owners, on the other hand, say, also ~ some
justification , that they can't just sit back and let the players run
the entire operation beca use that would result in absolute chaos.
It would also result in most of the owners asking themselves why
did tbey put up tbeir huge financial investmen t in tbe first place.
Bill Curry kn ows the way the owners feel.
"The real argument here is wheth er what we (the players)
are talking ~bout would lead to anarchy and destruction of
professional football," he says.
·
" I've heard it said that what we're seeking would enable one
owner,'the richest one. to corn er all the talent. That 's not true at
all. I don 't think any owner ~ goi~g t~ _l g~~ l!l'o million dollars
in order to hire a stable of superstars just so he can be known as
th e last owner to win th e Super Bowl championship as the NFL .
wen t down U1e tubes.
Changed Rules
Last Fall , Curry , playing against the Los Angeles Rams, had
som e bones in his left knee shattered trying to block Merlin
Olsen. Curry wore a steel rod in.his kn ee for seven months but
fe els r eady to go again . Only now the NFL owners have gone and
changd the rules on him. ·
·
"They changed them without consulting the olayers , or those
best qualified to help us, the. physicians and trainers," said
Curry.
" Let me show you what one of the new rules does. It says the '
offensive line willl'emain in place ·on punting situatwns until the
ball has been kicked. You know what this means to an old of·
fensive center ? It means a wall of blockers for punt returners
will be set up by th e time I start to run, and it is only a matter of
time until my knee goes again. If it goes once more, who knows .
formula: ·Wynn-ing ·t.tntrffll.cr·
lly Vl\1>:1) Me MAN E
this. " smiled tile Uodgers' new
UPI Spurts Wri.U•r
c.:cntcrfi elder . \!Eve rything is
Here 's llw pcrfec·t nmtto fo r \\'Or king out better than I .cOuld
th e Los An ge les Dodgers: have hoped. ,I've always hit
"Wyn n-ing IJllselwll. "
well at Dodger Stadium in the
The off-season trade that past and this time I have tlic
landed the Dodgers .Jim Wynn fans on my side, too .
from tht' Houston Astros has .
" I think we needed this one
been ever ything the cl ub hoped beca use Ci ncinnati has been
it would be .. . and more. Th e :12- play ing real hot basebalL "
year-<l ld outfi elder has bPen
Wynn 's lusty hitt ing helped
the hott est ba tter in Ihe Tommy John end a mild slump
National League over the past and win hi s sixth game aga inSt
two weeks and he's guttct1 the one loss. John , who had not won
Dodgers off to a comfortable since April 25, allowed seven
lead in the West D(vision hi ts in 7 2-3 innings before
pe rmant race .
giving way to Mike Marshall,
Wynn . who leads the ma jors who registered his fourth save.
in home runs and is ti ed for th e Joe Morgan hit a two-run
lead in runs batted in , drove in homer for Cincinnati , which
fo ur nu1s with a pa ir of homers lost fo r only tbe thirlllime in its
M onda ~ night to lead the last 11 games.
Dodger s to a 5-3 victory over
In the only other scheduled
Cincinnati whi ch increased Los Natio nal Leag ue ga mes ,
· An geles'lead in the NJ. West to Montreal downed Pittsburgh 4·
seven games over the second 2, Chi cago edged New York 2-1,
place Reds.
Philadelph ia nipped St. Lui s 2-1
The victory was the Dodgers' · an d Sa n Diego topped Houston
29th in 40 games this season, ll-6.
·
which figures out to a perOaklan d downed Minnesota
centage of .725. Los An geles is 5-4 and Milw a uk ee topped
the only tea m in the ma jor Detroit 6-4 in th e only games
leagues play ing better than scheduled in the American
.556.
I ~ a g ue.
Top Hitters
E xpos 4, Pirates Z
The two homers gave Wynn
Bob Bailey doubled home a
14 so far this season and the run in th e fifth then scored on a
RBI's raised his total to 41. He single by Ken Singleton to lead
also is hitting .328, whi ch puts th e Expos over the Pirates.
him among the top 10 hitter s in Mike Torrez went eight innings
the league.
for Montreal and received
"I've never had a sta rt lik e credit for his fourth win in the
seven decisions .
Cubs 2, Mets 1
Bill y Willia ms ' two-run
single in the sixth · inning
.JOCKEV CRIT!CAL
enabled the Cubs to defeat the
RUTLAND, Vt. (UP! )
Donald Baratini, an apprentice Mets and Sllap a fi ve-game
jQckcy, remained in critical losing streak. A sin gle by Don
condition at Rutland Hospital Kessin ger and a throwing error
Monday aft er suffering heaa by catcher J erry Grote on Matt
injuries Friday night at Green Al ~ x a nd er 's sacrifi ce bunt
preceded Williams' hit: Burt
Mountain Race Tra ck,
Hooton went the distance for
the Cubs, allowing only four
hits, to gain hi's setond win in
fi ve decisior,J.s .
Ph lilies 2, Cardil1l!IS I .
Steve Carlton tossed a n
eight-hitter and singled home
the deciding run in the seventh
inn ing to ·spark the Phillies'
triumph over the Cardinals.
·n, e victory. moved the Phillies
into first plac'e in th e NL East
by one-half game. Carlton,
boosting his record to 5-3, was
aided by two double plays in
tbe last two innings which cut
short St. Louis rallies .
Padres 8, Aslrns &
Willi e McCovey drove in four
runs with two doubles as the
Padres handed the Astros .their
lOth ·successive loss . Fred
Kendall also knocked in a pair
of r uns for San Diego, including
the tie-breaking run in the
seventh . Cliff Johnson had a
pinch-hit two-r.un homer for
Houston.
A's 5, Twins 4
Angel Mangual had three
hits, including a triple , drove in
a run and scored another to
help the A's to their ninth
triumph in 12 games, The A's
coll ected three triples and a
double as part of an ll.IJit
attack and helped Ken Holtzman to his fourth win. Rod
f•..
'
"
4))
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OPEN
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existence, houses many of
the world's greatest art
After 5
FOR VOUR HOLIDAY PICNIC
••
polarcardlograph I PPG)
perm its
the
family
physician. with very little
works ,,. The Canadian
992-2725
On Street
Parking
••
An
Instrument
for
detecting and locating
co!lrdiac damage called a
water. Instead of tap WEier .
And did you know that
· I69 N. 2nd
FREE
12 OL
pkg.
Whole
or Half
lb .
69¢-
SUPERIORS All BEEF
WIENERS
12 oz.
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SWIFT'S PREMIUM
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$
3 lb.
0 0 •
can
0 0 0 0 0 ••• 0 •
79e
,....
399
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HOME MADE
It always happens someplace
else, right? To the other guy.
Maybe so. But the poi'1t is,
it happens. Or can. Along
with ice·storms and fires and
floods and anything else that's
disastrous .
So no matter how remot.;
the chances are, we have to be
ready. Just in case. It makes
us feel better. .. probably
because on that score we're
a lot better off than most.
First of all, we can muster a
small army on short notice.
Mighty good men from every
phone company in the
Mid..Continent System, serving
the Next America from
Florida to Michigan and
nine more states east of the
Mississippi.
Second, we've got the hardware. In spades. Because
we've got the telephone- .
equipment company that
supplies all of Mid-Continent
behind us. So whatever it
takes to get things back
to normal in the Next America,
it's ours fQf the ask,ing. Just
as quick as it's humanly
:tpossible to get it here.
Third, we've got the heads
to put together. Hundreds of
years of combined MidContinent know-how handling ·
JUSt about every crisis under
the sun.
·
What it all means is that
when and if the crunch.comes,
you'll have the whole Mid- •
Contl~ent System working for
you wtth us. And all with
only one purpose. To restore
servKJe, fast.
.
Because we think that at
least where your phone is
concerned, you're entitled to a
. little peace of mind.
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Say re
By Bertha Parker
were Ga llipolis visitors
Sabbath School atiendance
Monday and also VISited M•·. May 12 at the Free Methodist
and Mrs . Brice Say re a t Church was 105, There' were
75
'0
Jackson.
persons at the mormn g worMr. and Mrs. Da ve Sayre ship service. Offering for all
and Mrs. Doris Sayre we re serv ices was $125.20.
Gallipolis visitors Wednesda y.
Mrs.
Clarence
Curtis
Mrs . Ann Radfo rd a nd received a flower Mother's
Stephanie of Pomeroy Route , Day for bein g the oldest
Mrs. Ma bel Shields, Mrs. Facie · mother a nd Mrs . Brenda
Hayman, Mrs . Marlene Fisher Hagg y a fl ower for th e
and children, Mr. and Mrs. Bill youngest m·oth er, at the local
Robinson an d children, Mrs. church.
Clara Mae Sargen t all visited
Mrs. Victor Leifheit reamins
Mrs.
Berth a
Rob inson, a patient at Holzer Medica:
Mo the•·'s Day.
Center.
·
Mr. and M1·s. Dana Lewis of
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs is a
Clifton, W. Va ., spent Mother's pa tient at Veterans Memorial
Day eve ning with ,;tr. and Mrs. Hospital.
Russell Roush and family.
Pa ul Archer, Columbus ,
Bi ll ·Douglas of De tro it ,. spen t Saturday with his
Mi ch. , visited his mo tl1er, Mrs . mother , Mrs . Georgia Diehl
Ma ry Donohue and Davi d and and Charles Anthony Di ehl .
Mrs. Rose Bachus over the
A Billy Graham film " Isn't It
weekend .
Good To Know" will be shown
Mrs. Barbara Sutton and Sunday evening, May 19, at·
Mrs . Annette Perr y of 7:30 p. m.. at the local church.
Columbus visited their .fat her, Everyone is welcome.
Charley Blake, Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs : Phil .Wise of
Moth er's Day we ekend McCo nn els ville a tt e nd ed
guests of Mr . ar1d Mrs. Herbert morn ing worship' service at tbe
Sayre were Mr. and Mrs . Dea n local churr h.
Sayre of Middletown, Pa ., Mr.
Mr,- and Mrs. William Perry,
and Mrs . Brice Sayre and baby Athens, Mr. and Mrs: Vern
of J ackson, Mr . and Mrs. Story and John visite<t'Sunday
Danny Sayre and Mr . and Mrs. with Mr. and Mrs . Norman
Buck Rogers of Columbus.'
Schaefer .
·
Mr. and Mrs. Ott Boston of ' Crys tal Buckley and Charles
Racine spent a recent Saturday Anthony were unable to attend
nig ht with Mt s . Ruth Parsons. school for several days due to
Mr. and Mrs . Bob Lawson · illness.
and children, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Mrs . Mike Douglas , Athens ,
Lawson and baby, Mr. and Mrs . Robert Burke and Chris of
Mrs. Harold Lawson and c. J . Columbus, Mrs. Che~ter Roush
of l..e,tart, W. Va., Mr. and and Stacie, Maryland, visited
Mrs. Bill 'Parsons and children recen.tly with their grand· .
visited Mr. and Mrs. Charles parents , Mr. and Mrs. Harmon
Lawson, Mother's Day.
Fox. Mr. and Mrs. Fox at.
'. Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie·RUSS<!II tended the 25th wedding an.
and children Mandy and Mike · niversary observance of their
of Fo\irt Meacte, ·Md ., were . daughter and s~n-in-law , Mr.
rece nt visitors of Mr. and Mrs . and Mrs. Johnny Douglas,
Russell Roush and famil y.
Albany, Sunday.
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Now en joy good eating and lose unwanted
Ia). For over 15 years the clinically tested
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LYSOL
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Best Bacon ................. ~~: ...89e
Bologna .... ,,-..................1.~: ...6
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Polish Sausage ...........~~-....79
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BREAD
By
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1.18 Value
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POTATO
EXCEDRIN P.M;
89~
CHJPS
sug
2 pak
Value
POT PIES
4 for 89e
1.39 Value
LEMONS
ORANGES
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MO,UTHWASH
14 oz.
BoHle
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$1.49
Value
RC COLA
89
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·16oz.
EVERY DAY PRICE -
8 PAK 99'
NORTH STAR FROZEN
Calif.
LISTERMINT
•·
carton
BABY
50c MAIL IN
...
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BANQUET FROZEN
1
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MAXWELL HOUSEI'JcoFFEE
10 OZ. JAR ONLY$1 ...J· ~
· ;;;;_~;::_..,
JOHNSON'S
7 oz. Bottle
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INSrANr
OCEAN PERCH
lb. 89e
TWIN POPS
DAD'S ROOT BEER
24 count 99e
6 FOR 49c
REFUND OFFER on
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WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A. lO .OZ. JAR OF
FROZEN
SHAMPOO
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for
PRINGLES.
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30
Tabs
CoffeeMate
22 oz.
FAIRMONT
1
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Cottage Cheese ·
Serving The Next Amerlc: .
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lb
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Help u~ serve you. In case of emergency, a downed line, or a telephone problem
of any sort, call: 667.-3111 ,
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Ham Salad.....................:.. .
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SUGARDALE CHUCK WAGON
DISINFECTANT
7 oz. SPRAY
98c Value
WzmmResttwe~
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SHED 10. 20. 30 POUNDS AND lORE
lo F1d Olela.lo Stnnuoua Ex1rclna
NELSON ' S DRUG STORE
36 Tables- SI.98 Value
11 .69
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WEIGHT
Starting Today
Laurel Cliff
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Carew ,had three hits for the
Twins and boosted his AL
leading batting average to .418.
Brewers 6, Tigers 4 ·
· Dave May's double off relief
ace John Hiller scored two runs.
in the eighth and gave lhe
Brewers a victory ·over the
Tigers. Ed Sprague, starting
only his tbird game since 1971
and Second this season, went
eight innings and received
credit for his second win.
... ?"
Fairview
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OR NEW DIET RITE COLA (SUGAR FREE)
SEA PACK FROZEN
1
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ONION RINGS
2·lb. r pkg.' $1.29
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BANANAS
5 LB.$}~
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o - Tilt• Da il~ Sentinel. i>:.ddleport-Pomeruy. 0., Tuesday. May 21, I!J!•!.._. >:. ... : . ';;;;··· w;:;·····.,·.·.w.·.··············w.-.·.····>······>''•'·»'·'•'·"<'·:·:·:<·:·;o;·::;·;:-m:·y
!if'~ - ' ' <s~'c' j' ~' f';., , , l~i: Gard~n
7 . - The Daily :~ot- ntin.f' l , M irldl tpo r
club · names new -officers
Chuf:ch class to .. r;~~·-w~;h~F~~d''l
I
I Ic.·a
·len d
... arI::::f::!i,c:i~-·t: ~r~~~;.:;E~~t~~ ~E~~;;tf~I@
buy properties
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By Charle'!e Hoeflich .
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Purchases of
full-length '
mirror for the men's lounge
and a pulpit cover' were ap·
proved at the Thursday night
meeting of the Busy Bee Class
of the Middleport Firs.t Baptist
· Church held at the home of
Mrs. Wilma Parmalee.
Read at the meeting was a
tl1ank you note from the Baker
family. Also received from the
family was a $50 check of
apprecia tion fo r kindnesses
extended during tlieir receni
bereavement.
Mrs . Elizabeth Gardner gave
devotions using scripture from
St. Matthew and a reading
" Prologue to Prayer." Plans
were made for a potluck dinner
10 be held at the home of Mrs.
Rosemary Lyons in June .
Members sang "Happy Birthday" to Mrs. Cora PUllins,
Mrs. Ruth Johnson, Mrs. Gar<!rier, Miss Kathryn Werner,
Mrs, Alice Freeland and Mrs.
Leora" Sigman .
Mrs . . Ethel Hughes, Mrs.
EJecta Souders and J11rs. Ferne
Bradbury were co-hostess for
the meeting and served strawberry shortcake and coffee.
Program by Mrs. Iva Turner
included a poe1,11, "Our Prayer
Meeting," and a reading, " I 'm
a Vitamin ." There was also a
reading by Mrs. Beulah White
entitled ''Eighteen Bottles ."
Others attending besides
those named were Mrs. Nora
Jordan , Mrs. Roma Hawkins ,
Mrs. Lettie Roush , Mrs .
Frances
Bearhs,
Mrs .
Elizabeth .Slavin, Mrs. Eva
Har tley , Mrs. Pearl Hoffman ,
and Mrs. Isabelle Winebren-
ner.
·-$-500 donation made
A check for $500 was
presen ted to the Pomeroy
Firemen's Association at the
Sunday morning service of
Trinity Church.
The Rev. W. H. Perrin made
the presentation on behalf qf
the church to Joseph Struble,
representing the firemen. The
money was raised by the
women or the church through a
two-day cafeteria operation in
the church basement.
Another feature of the
·Trinity church service was the
recognition of seniors each of
whom received a book entitled
" When the Tassel is Turned."
In the group were · Melanie
Burt, Ingrid Hawley, Alan
McLaughlin, Paul Voss, Janice
Holter, Martin Barnes, and Joe
Rosenbaum, Meigs High
School ;
Debbie
Wilson ,
Eastern High School, and
Nancy Crow, Southern High
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Anita Collins
weds in
South
Miss Anita Collins,' daughter
of Mr. and 'Mrs. William
Collins, Fort Myers, Fla.,
formerly of Pomeroy, and Mr.
Bruce Isphording, son of Mr.
and Mrs. William Isphording of
Sarasota, were married on
April 19 at the First Christian
Church in Sarasota. The Rev.
Bernard C. Meece officiated at
ihe ceremony.
The bride wore a gown of
chantilly lace. She was attended by Miss Becky Ireland.
Best man for the bridegroom
was Mr. Tom Cornelison, and
the usher was Allen Lassila.
The couple resides at 1102
Coalton Drive, Sarasota.
Following their wedding they
look a trip to Orlando and Fort
Lauderdale.
The new Mrs. isphording is a
graduate of Florida State
University
and
Emory
University and is employed at
the Sa~asota Herald Tribune.
Mr. Jsphoi'ding is a graduate of
the University of South
Alabama and is employed at
the Sarasota Journal.
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Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
The meeting of the Esther
Circle at the · home of Mrs.
Edna
Pickens
Monday
evening, May 13 opened with
devotions by Mrs. Dorothy
Badgley, who read scripture
from Psalms, Isaiah and John.
'The hyinn, 'Love Divine" and
prayer preceded the business
session in charge of Mrs.
Gretta Simpson, chairman. " A
Biblical Basis for En·
couragement" was the topic of
a program presented by Mi-s .
Ura Morris. a period of worship included the hymn, "I
Love to Tell the Story ",
scritpure, Hebrew 10:23-24 and
prayer. Readings were given
on " Christian Regard for
Others,'' ''Encouragement: A
New Lease on Life", "En~
couragement Through Our
j
Pr·ayer
Life" , ·
"En·
couragement.
Through
Fellowship'', ''Encouragem~nt
Through Courage." In a period
of sharing, five questions were
asked and discussed· by all.
After singing "My Prayer" the
closing prayer and ben,diction
was presented by several
member• with · all joining
handa In a triendsl!lp circle.
During the fellowship . boor
Mrs. Pickell!!, hostess, served
refreshment& to Mrs. W. P.
r
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Sehool.
In tribute to the graduating
seniors, all attired in caps and
gowns, the choir sang "Just
One Day at a Time."
:r::
Doris Spenecr ca lled the other ilay to tell us she had tried the
chocolate· ice box pie recipe passed alpng to ~' un with F'oods by
Marion Mit hael and that what really sets it off is choeolate
· tppping.
.
As yo u may remember thcpie recipe called for egg yolks but
gave no use for the whites. Doris' recipe takes care or the whites.
.
CHOCOLATE TOPPING
2 egg whites, one-third cup sugar, 2tablespooos cocoa. and ~,
teaspoon vanilla.
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Beat the egg whiles to a froth, gradually and add the sugar,
beat to stiff peaks. Fold in the cocoa and vanilla. Heap on the lop
of the pic spreading right to tbe edges.
WHAT'S BETIER THAN strawberry pie' Mrs. Spencer has
a favorite recipe which can be made with either fresh or frozen
•1rawberries .
To a cup of slic'ed.strawberries, she adds one cup of sugar, 1
cup of water, a scant '·• cup of cornstarch, and a a few drops of
red food coloring. This mixture she cooks until it thickens.
Into a baked pie crust she puts more strawberries after
sprinkling \, cup of powdered sugar In the bottom. On top of this
she podr. the cooked strawberry mixture.
LUCILLE SWACKHAMER makes a delicious cauliflower
dip and after we had mentioned how good it was, Mrs. ~erman
Lohse of Middleport wrote Mrs. Swackhamer for the recope , and
also got permission to pass it along for use in this column.
In her Jetter to Mrs. Lohse, Mrs .. Swackhamer said that the
Wilson's Beeler-Upper used In the recipe is a litOe hard to find.
She said it comes both In liquid and paste form and that either is
suitable for the dip.
CAULIFWWER DIP
2large packages Philadelphia Cream cheese, I grated onion,
large, 1 can Wilson's Beefer·Upper. Fold in one quart Helhnan's
mayonnaise.
Mission group dines at Ravenswood inn
The
NEW HAVEN Woman's Missionary Society of
the New Haven First Church of
God held its annual MaY
Fellowship dinner at the
Victorian Inn at Ravenswood.
The welcome . was given by
the president, Orpha Fields.
Spiritual Ufe Director, Delores
Taylor, gave the invocation. A
· reading, ''Slow Me Down,
Lord," was read by Becky
Reed . Mter dinner, a short
business meeting was conducted. Bonnie Fields said
flowers have been sent to
Bikacsan , Mrs. Gretta Simp·
son, Mrs. Dorothy Badgley,
Mrs. Ura Morris, Mrs. Marie
Roy , Mrs. Frances Wilcoxen,
Miss Vera Beegle, Mrs. Isabel
Simpson, Mrs. Marie Roush,
members In the hospital and
that flowers had been placed on
the altar in memory of Viola
Roush.
Members
were
reminded to bring gifts for the
birthday of a patient In l;ikin
State Hospital .
Membership and attendance
chairman Roberta Maynard
reported the membership
totaled 28. Three tablecloths
have 'been purchased for the
kitchen . Roberta Maynard and
Anna Johnson will host the
June meeting.
An impressive installation of
officers was given by Barbara
Simmons. The presenteil each
offjcer wi'th a key taken from a
large cardboard key ·stating
the goal for each.
The door prize was won by
Connie Aeiker. Gifts were
presented to the oldest
mothers, . Iva Capehart and
Rena Johnson , and th e
youngest , Becky Reed.
Altending were Delores
Taylor , Orpha Fields, Iva
Capehart, Barhara Simmons,
Bonnie Fields, Sue Erwin,
Grace Cunningham, Florene
Finnicum, Susie Wolfe, Sarah
Gibbs, Rena Johnson, Fay
Carpenter, Connie Aeiker ,
Roberta Maynard, Becky
Reed, Eleanor Davis ~nd
Lucille Powell.
Engagement Property
z's announcea·' Transfers
Leonard Koenig, dec'd . to
Doris Koenig, Uoyd Koenig,
Dorothy Myers, Elsie Lou
Hawk,
Donald
Koenig,
Leonard Koenig, Jr., Rickey
Koenig, Cert. Trans., Chester.
Lloyd Koenig, Jeanette
.Koenig, Dorothy Myers, Bruce
Myers, Elsie Lou Hawk,
Donald Hawk, Donald Koenig,
Norma Koenig, Leonard
Koenig, Jr ., Sondra Koenig,
Rickey Koenig to Doris Koenig,
Parcels, Otester.
Elmer Tufts, Myrtle Tufts to
Jack Carsey, Neacil Carsey,
Russell Wood,. !lhonda Wood,
Ease., Middleport.
Clarence Brown, Alberta
Brown to Otis W. James, Sr.,
Irene 0. James, Lot 14, Olive.
Martha C. Howell to Anna
Howell Blackwood, Lloyd
Blackwood, Parcels , Middleport.
J·
II Ease., Tuppers PlainsChester.
Randall H. Nichols to James
F. Arnold, .39 Acre, Salisbury.
Norman J . Schoonover,
Margie E. Schoonover to John
D. Schuler, Priscilla C.
Schuler, Lots 16, 17, 18,
Rutland.
Helen Sprague to Stephen P.
Marcinko, Karen L. Marcinko,
.87 Acre, Olive.
Ra)imond Arnold M. Irene
Arnold to Bobby Arnold,
Bonnie Arnold, 39.20 Acres,
Seipio.
William J. Halley to Mary ·F.
Halley, Lot 7. Tuppers Plains,
Arbaugh's 3rd.
James S. Rucker, C!Jnnie H. ·
Rucker to Monongahela Power
Co., Ease., Oliv.e.
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As one lo ca l commenc-e m ent s peake r sa id S und ay. "Your parents
~ .-.wars ago a lso probably heard this advice, that you will be making
lh<; ell'!· is inns in the years to con1e."
ll w~iS l'ai'r warninj,N.hen . and still is.
Some say today , consi d ering the condition of W!Jrld affairs. the
a<lvicl' was littl e heeded in 1!14!1.
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something lik e 4•,, billion people wait upon a genera tion that will
find a nsw l't' s. Th e hi g h school seniors on thi s p age may in du e time
~untribut!•. Such is the universal hope: that here and in other nation s
,vnull!llleopl e ye t willing to learn , to put aside , old ways , to rededicate
themsel.,cs lo fr eedom. can brea k the traps of the past.
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GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS
HOYT FAVORED
RENO, Nev. (UPI)-{lddsmaker
North
Swanson
Monday installed A. J. Foyt as
a :i-1 choice to win Sunday's
Indianapolis >OO auto . race.
. . Spotted at S-1 were Gordon
Johncock, Bobby Unser and
Wally Dallenbach, while Mario
Andretti, Mike Hiss and
Johnny Rutherford were at 1().
I; Mike Mosley and David
Hobbs · at 12-1; and Bill
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Salel USED
MACHINES
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Meigs High School Seniors, 1974
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Eastern High School Seniors, 1974
Meigs High School Seniors, 1974
Good selection portable and
cabinet models.
-
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The Fabric Shop, 115 W. Second, Pome"'
Ph. 992~2284
I
Vukovich, AI Unser and Garry . L-•-••_R_o_v,_o_s_••_•_•_• _o_" _' _'R - - -- - .- -- -- - - -'A
_ r _" _"'_"_" _''_"_I_T_H_E_s_oN_G_E
_R_c_o_M_P_A_N_Y...J
Bettenhausen at l:i-1.
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If you sold your home today. you
know you·a make money. Probably
·
lots of money.
But there's anottier wdy to get your
money you probably never even
thoughl of.
The City Loon · Company has a
plan that lets you use the money
in your home when you need it ...
The City Loan HomeOwner Loan.
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Wahama High School Seniors, 1974
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p71 ·11o
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INIUIA .NC:I
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Southern High School Seniors, 1974
IU1'l fAIM
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CITY LOAN
COMPANY
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It's a . big loon. Bigger than most. ·
But easy to get. And easy to repay.
Because it's backed by on asset thai
keeps growing.
·
You put money into your house.
· Why not get it out for the things you
need today?
See.The City Loon Company obout
a HomeOwner Loon today.
;=;:__-~
. like a good neighbor,
State Faim
there.
•urOMOIILE
IJIIUUIICE COY,Itn
Mo.. .Diflu:
,~.
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da
The MEIGS INN
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<f
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dance
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SlATE fUM MUfUH
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'4.99
heritage house
Alumni banquet,
I CALl: 992-1155
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Men's
Mesh Shoes
Car Insurance?
Why settle .for
less than the best?
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'\\w•,fb\'' roi.·y 'll . t ~ ii
Congratulations, Bend .Area seniors·!
TONIGHT 9 TIL 1
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Mrs. Grace Jividen, and Mrs.
Lillian Hayman.
Mrs. Harriet Neigler has
Former , Middleport
returned from Holzer Medical
residents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Center.
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Mrs. Mary Grady was taken E. Bush, 3325 Westbury Drive,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital Columbus are announcing the
and Mrs. Maude Young to engagement of their youngest
daughter, Martha Anne, to Mr.
Holzer Medical Center.
Among those coming for a William Richey Graf, Jr ., son
distance for the funeral service of Dr. and Mrs. William Rich~y
for Mr. Otto Bradford, included Graf, Cincinnati.
Both Miss · Bush and her
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Bradford,
son, W~yiJe, of Arlington, Ohio; fiance are 1972 graduates of
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Bradford Denison University, Granville,
and sons, Brent and Berry, where she affiliated with
Wooster ; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority,
Bradford, children Usa and and he served as president of,
Todd, of Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Phi Delta Theta Fraternity . He
Robert Bradford of Hebron; is currently a student in the
Mr. and Mrs . Malcolm College of Law at Ohio State
Bradford of Marysville; Mr. University.
The wedding will be held in
Ralph Bradford of Columbus:
Donna True of Grove City, Swasey Chapel on the Campus
Louise Colin! of Belleville, of Denison University on June
Edith Grimm of Kent, M~. 22.
Miss Bush is a grand·
Reed Rose and son, Harold of
Newarlt, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon daughter of Mrs. Clifford J.
Rose and Randy and Eleanor Rhodes, Middleport, and of Mr.
of Grandville; Albert Wolfe of A. L. Bush. Her late grand·
Olmstead, Mr. and Mrs. Leon parents were Mr. and Mr~ .
Jor<,lan of Thornville, Mrs. Usle D. Diles, Middleport.
Nancy Jaspers, Milford, Critt
Bradford, Jr. of Worthington,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Duke
McKenzie, Philip, Jeff, and
and Annette of Alexandria,
Jozie, of Gallipolis were
Mollie Pullins, Mr. and Mrs. Mother's Day guests of Mr. and
Ehner Swank, Dora Crispin, Mrs. Roy ntffle.
Mrs.I!Mildred Orr and Roberta
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Swift of
Whitehead, all of Newark.
ColumbusspentSaturday, May
Rev . Howard Shivley spent 11, with her parents, Mr . ar.d
overnighi Friday, May 10, with Mrs. Francis ·Morris.
his mother and aunt in
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease
Wlhnington and on Saturday and son, David of Baltimore,
conducted a funeral at Lit. were holiday weekend guests
Ueton Funeral Home at Sabina of his mother, Mrs. Carrie
for Jacob Cline.. Mrs . ·Nease.
Shiveley's mother, Mrs.
Maycle Zvara and Violet
Myrtle Loumenhouser, ac- Fis~er of Akron are visiting ·
companied Rev. Shivley home Mr. and Mrs. Henry Roush and
·to visit over high school . family. ·
,
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Badgley
commencement exercises.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. and Kelli of Columbus spent a
Francis Morris May 9 were week with his parents, Mr. and
their
grandsons,
Ron Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
Schroeder of Columbus and
Mr. · and Mrs. Martin
Steve Schroeder who was Wilcoxen spent Mother's Day
spending a week vacation at In Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
home from St. Louis, Mo. R<ick Young and Andy.
University.
Mrs. Genevieve Estes of Los
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bobb of Alamitos, Calif., returned
Columbus and Russell Radcliff home after a visit with her
of Syracuse sJient a day with mother, Mrs. James Swart,
·
Hazel Carnahan.
and the Alfred Crow family.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross
and Ray of Columbus spent
Mother's Day weekend with
SAlTS SIGN
her mother, Mrs . . Frankie
NEW ORLEANS (UPI)
Neigler.
The New Orleans Saints of the
Clifford Bryson of Pitt- National Football League
sburgh, Pa., was a weekend Monday
ano.ounced
the
guest of his mother , Mrs. signlngs of John Moon, a 6-foot
Hobart Bryson .
3, 265-pound, offensive tackle,
Mr. and ' Mrs . Charles and Clinton Tapper, a &-1, 24().
Mallory returnep to their home · pound, offensive ![uard.
at Riverdale, Georgia, after .< Both Moon and Tapper
~ndlng a . week with his
played college football at the
mother, Mr s: Mayme Mallory . . · University
South~rn
Mr . and Mr~ . William Mississippi.
.·:· Garden Club held at the home . club picnic was announced for around shrubs to keep down
of Mrs. Hazel Barnhart. They . June 19 al the home of Mrs. weeds and to reduce .watering.
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TUESDAY
are
Mrs. Rose Carr, president ; Vercia Sto ut who . will be
FRIENDLY Cjrcle, Trinity
Church, 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Ken- . Mrs. Ina· Massar, vice assisted by Mrs. Grace Stout.
Each· member is to take a
neth Harri s to have the .~president ; Mrs. Mary Jane covered dish and the picnic will
program ; Mrs. Roy Mayer and Goebel, secretary; Mrs. Helen
Mrs. Donald Hauck, hostesses. Dorst treasurer; and Mrs. be held at 6:30 p.m. Anyone
CHESTER Coun cil 323 Ethei,Arbaugh, news reporter. interested in joining the club is
A committee to make up the welcome to attend the picnic.
Daughters of America, 7:30
Members answered roll ca ll
Tie and Slipon ·
p.m. at the hall. Fortieth an- new programs was appointe(!
by
exhibiting an arrangement
Black or Natural
niversary to be observed with
of spring flowers . De votions
recognition of charter memwere given by Mrs. Goebel
bers.
following the gardeners '
CHESTER PTA. at the
prayer . ' The
program
school, 7:30 p.m. J oe Struble
presented by Mr s . Merle
will preseQt a safety program
Your Thom MeAn Store
Griffith was on planting a
and names for committees and
~iddleport , 0 .
terrarium . Mrs. Dorothy Stout
room mothers will be taken.
HARRISONVILLE ~ The gave the verse of the month .
Refreshments.
annual Harrisonville Alumni
MEIGS Muzzle Loader Rifle banquet and dance will be held
Club, 6 p.m., Jzaak Walton Saturday at the elementary
League Club House. New school.
members welcome.
;
'· . Guest speaker will be Clinton
OHIO ETA Phi Ch~pter, Gilkey, Albany , and special
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30 singer will be Jack Warner of
p.m. picnic, at the southbound Harrisonville. Serving, starThe most popular night club in
park on Route aa. Libby Sayre ling at 7 p.m., will follow the
to have cultural report, " Make program and dinner with the .
the tri-county area lS
An Art of Living", with the Kord Kings of Belpre providing
losing attendance team to music for square dancing from
serve as hostesses for the 9 until midnight. Reservations
proud .to present
picnic.
can be made by ca lling 949CHESTER Courlcil No. 323, 49oi, 992-38>4 or 69&-3477.
Daughters of America, 8 p.m .
Tuesday night at the Chester
hall. 40th anniversary to be
IN HOSPITAL
observed. All Charter memMrs. Ann Sauer Walters is a
surgical patient at the Martins
bers urged to attend.
WOMEN ' S Auxiliary , Ferry Hospital, Martins Ferry.
Veterans Memorial Hospital, Her room number is 301. She is
7:30 tonight at hospital. a sister to Charles Sauer,
Program
following
the Middleport.
business session.
WEDNESDAY
REVIVAL, Walnut Grove
Bible Christian Church, Vinton
County Road 17, 7:30 p.m.
Evangelist Rev. Dennis Tabor,
Athens.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary .- Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Wednesday, 6:30
potluck dinner , followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m . at the
hall.
AMERICAN Legion , FeeneyBennett Post 128, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at tbe hall.
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club, Wednesday noon,
at the Meigs Inn .
Converts instantly from flat to
OHIO Valley Commandery
'free arm' tubular sewing with ·
out changing parts or position!
24, Knights or Templar, 7:30
Suddenl y . diffi cult ~ew in g
p.m. Wednesday at the
t.t ... ~ . . tt tT c, r... y! 11 \ .ttru ly rcvo ·
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
luti on,u-y rn .n.: hin c, by Singer,
THURSDAY
w i 1 h .t n cx (. lu . . ivc onc- ... tt:!p
PROGRESSIVE Dinner by
butl (itl holc t , cH iu . . ivc pu\h·
Preceptor Chapter , Beta
bui\ Dtl l rurl\ chop -in bobb in ,
Sigma Phi Sorority, Thursday.
cxc fu..,i vc ... cc - t hru bo bbi n
Appetizers, home • of Nellie
wind ow .. . k.Hurc dl lCr l edBrown, 6 p.m.; second stop,
lure ·to rn .tk t ... ewi ng pl cdS~Ir ·
home of June Van Vranken,
,1bl c. $ec i 1 now !
salad; third stop, home of
Ullian Moore, main course ;
final stop, home of Mary
Pickens, dessert and social
hour .
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o - Tilt• Da il~ Sentinel. i>:.ddleport-Pomeruy. 0., Tuesday. May 21, I!J!•!.._. >:. ... : . ';;;;··· w;:;·····.,·.·.w.·.··············w.-.·.····>······>''•'·»'·'•'·"<'·:·:·:<·:·;o;·::;·;:-m:·y
!if'~ - ' ' <s~'c' j' ~' f';., , , l~i: Gard~n
7 . - The Daily :~ot- ntin.f' l , M irldl tpo r
club · names new -officers
Chuf:ch class to .. r;~~·-w~;h~F~~d''l
I
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·len d
... arI::::f::!i,c:i~-·t: ~r~~~;.:;E~~t~~ ~E~~;;tf~I@
buy properties
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By Charle'!e Hoeflich .
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Purchases of
full-length '
mirror for the men's lounge
and a pulpit cover' were ap·
proved at the Thursday night
meeting of the Busy Bee Class
of the Middleport Firs.t Baptist
· Church held at the home of
Mrs. Wilma Parmalee.
Read at the meeting was a
tl1ank you note from the Baker
family. Also received from the
family was a $50 check of
apprecia tion fo r kindnesses
extended during tlieir receni
bereavement.
Mrs . Elizabeth Gardner gave
devotions using scripture from
St. Matthew and a reading
" Prologue to Prayer." Plans
were made for a potluck dinner
10 be held at the home of Mrs.
Rosemary Lyons in June .
Members sang "Happy Birthday" to Mrs. Cora PUllins,
Mrs. Ruth Johnson, Mrs. Gar<!rier, Miss Kathryn Werner,
Mrs, Alice Freeland and Mrs.
Leora" Sigman .
Mrs . . Ethel Hughes, Mrs.
EJecta Souders and J11rs. Ferne
Bradbury were co-hostess for
the meeting and served strawberry shortcake and coffee.
Program by Mrs. Iva Turner
included a poe1,11, "Our Prayer
Meeting," and a reading, " I 'm
a Vitamin ." There was also a
reading by Mrs. Beulah White
entitled ''Eighteen Bottles ."
Others attending besides
those named were Mrs. Nora
Jordan , Mrs. Roma Hawkins ,
Mrs. Lettie Roush , Mrs .
Frances
Bearhs,
Mrs .
Elizabeth .Slavin, Mrs. Eva
Har tley , Mrs. Pearl Hoffman ,
and Mrs. Isabelle Winebren-
ner.
·-$-500 donation made
A check for $500 was
presen ted to the Pomeroy
Firemen's Association at the
Sunday morning service of
Trinity Church.
The Rev. W. H. Perrin made
the presentation on behalf qf
the church to Joseph Struble,
representing the firemen. The
money was raised by the
women or the church through a
two-day cafeteria operation in
the church basement.
Another feature of the
·Trinity church service was the
recognition of seniors each of
whom received a book entitled
" When the Tassel is Turned."
In the group were · Melanie
Burt, Ingrid Hawley, Alan
McLaughlin, Paul Voss, Janice
Holter, Martin Barnes, and Joe
Rosenbaum, Meigs High
School ;
Debbie
Wilson ,
Eastern High School, and
Nancy Crow, Southern High
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Anita Collins
weds in
South
Miss Anita Collins,' daughter
of Mr. and 'Mrs. William
Collins, Fort Myers, Fla.,
formerly of Pomeroy, and Mr.
Bruce Isphording, son of Mr.
and Mrs. William Isphording of
Sarasota, were married on
April 19 at the First Christian
Church in Sarasota. The Rev.
Bernard C. Meece officiated at
ihe ceremony.
The bride wore a gown of
chantilly lace. She was attended by Miss Becky Ireland.
Best man for the bridegroom
was Mr. Tom Cornelison, and
the usher was Allen Lassila.
The couple resides at 1102
Coalton Drive, Sarasota.
Following their wedding they
look a trip to Orlando and Fort
Lauderdale.
The new Mrs. isphording is a
graduate of Florida State
University
and
Emory
University and is employed at
the Sa~asota Herald Tribune.
Mr. Jsphoi'ding is a graduate of
the University of South
Alabama and is employed at
the Sarasota Journal.
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Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
The meeting of the Esther
Circle at the · home of Mrs.
Edna
Pickens
Monday
evening, May 13 opened with
devotions by Mrs. Dorothy
Badgley, who read scripture
from Psalms, Isaiah and John.
'The hyinn, 'Love Divine" and
prayer preceded the business
session in charge of Mrs.
Gretta Simpson, chairman. " A
Biblical Basis for En·
couragement" was the topic of
a program presented by Mi-s .
Ura Morris. a period of worship included the hymn, "I
Love to Tell the Story ",
scritpure, Hebrew 10:23-24 and
prayer. Readings were given
on " Christian Regard for
Others,'' ''Encouragement: A
New Lease on Life", "En~
couragement Through Our
j
Pr·ayer
Life" , ·
"En·
couragement.
Through
Fellowship'', ''Encouragem~nt
Through Courage." In a period
of sharing, five questions were
asked and discussed· by all.
After singing "My Prayer" the
closing prayer and ben,diction
was presented by several
member• with · all joining
handa In a triendsl!lp circle.
During the fellowship . boor
Mrs. Pickell!!, hostess, served
refreshment& to Mrs. W. P.
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Sehool.
In tribute to the graduating
seniors, all attired in caps and
gowns, the choir sang "Just
One Day at a Time."
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Doris Spenecr ca lled the other ilay to tell us she had tried the
chocolate· ice box pie recipe passed alpng to ~' un with F'oods by
Marion Mit hael and that what really sets it off is choeolate
· tppping.
.
As yo u may remember thcpie recipe called for egg yolks but
gave no use for the whites. Doris' recipe takes care or the whites.
.
CHOCOLATE TOPPING
2 egg whites, one-third cup sugar, 2tablespooos cocoa. and ~,
teaspoon vanilla.
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Beat the egg whiles to a froth, gradually and add the sugar,
beat to stiff peaks. Fold in the cocoa and vanilla. Heap on the lop
of the pic spreading right to tbe edges.
WHAT'S BETIER THAN strawberry pie' Mrs. Spencer has
a favorite recipe which can be made with either fresh or frozen
•1rawberries .
To a cup of slic'ed.strawberries, she adds one cup of sugar, 1
cup of water, a scant '·• cup of cornstarch, and a a few drops of
red food coloring. This mixture she cooks until it thickens.
Into a baked pie crust she puts more strawberries after
sprinkling \, cup of powdered sugar In the bottom. On top of this
she podr. the cooked strawberry mixture.
LUCILLE SWACKHAMER makes a delicious cauliflower
dip and after we had mentioned how good it was, Mrs. ~erman
Lohse of Middleport wrote Mrs. Swackhamer for the recope , and
also got permission to pass it along for use in this column.
In her Jetter to Mrs. Lohse, Mrs .. Swackhamer said that the
Wilson's Beeler-Upper used In the recipe is a litOe hard to find.
She said it comes both In liquid and paste form and that either is
suitable for the dip.
CAULIFWWER DIP
2large packages Philadelphia Cream cheese, I grated onion,
large, 1 can Wilson's Beefer·Upper. Fold in one quart Helhnan's
mayonnaise.
Mission group dines at Ravenswood inn
The
NEW HAVEN Woman's Missionary Society of
the New Haven First Church of
God held its annual MaY
Fellowship dinner at the
Victorian Inn at Ravenswood.
The welcome . was given by
the president, Orpha Fields.
Spiritual Ufe Director, Delores
Taylor, gave the invocation. A
· reading, ''Slow Me Down,
Lord," was read by Becky
Reed . Mter dinner, a short
business meeting was conducted. Bonnie Fields said
flowers have been sent to
Bikacsan , Mrs. Gretta Simp·
son, Mrs. Dorothy Badgley,
Mrs. Ura Morris, Mrs. Marie
Roy , Mrs. Frances Wilcoxen,
Miss Vera Beegle, Mrs. Isabel
Simpson, Mrs. Marie Roush,
members In the hospital and
that flowers had been placed on
the altar in memory of Viola
Roush.
Members
were
reminded to bring gifts for the
birthday of a patient In l;ikin
State Hospital .
Membership and attendance
chairman Roberta Maynard
reported the membership
totaled 28. Three tablecloths
have 'been purchased for the
kitchen . Roberta Maynard and
Anna Johnson will host the
June meeting.
An impressive installation of
officers was given by Barbara
Simmons. The presenteil each
offjcer wi'th a key taken from a
large cardboard key ·stating
the goal for each.
The door prize was won by
Connie Aeiker. Gifts were
presented to the oldest
mothers, . Iva Capehart and
Rena Johnson , and th e
youngest , Becky Reed.
Altending were Delores
Taylor , Orpha Fields, Iva
Capehart, Barhara Simmons,
Bonnie Fields, Sue Erwin,
Grace Cunningham, Florene
Finnicum, Susie Wolfe, Sarah
Gibbs, Rena Johnson, Fay
Carpenter, Connie Aeiker ,
Roberta Maynard, Becky
Reed, Eleanor Davis ~nd
Lucille Powell.
Engagement Property
z's announcea·' Transfers
Leonard Koenig, dec'd . to
Doris Koenig, Uoyd Koenig,
Dorothy Myers, Elsie Lou
Hawk,
Donald
Koenig,
Leonard Koenig, Jr., Rickey
Koenig, Cert. Trans., Chester.
Lloyd Koenig, Jeanette
.Koenig, Dorothy Myers, Bruce
Myers, Elsie Lou Hawk,
Donald Hawk, Donald Koenig,
Norma Koenig, Leonard
Koenig, Jr ., Sondra Koenig,
Rickey Koenig to Doris Koenig,
Parcels, Otester.
Elmer Tufts, Myrtle Tufts to
Jack Carsey, Neacil Carsey,
Russell Wood,. !lhonda Wood,
Ease., Middleport.
Clarence Brown, Alberta
Brown to Otis W. James, Sr.,
Irene 0. James, Lot 14, Olive.
Martha C. Howell to Anna
Howell Blackwood, Lloyd
Blackwood, Parcels , Middleport.
J·
II Ease., Tuppers PlainsChester.
Randall H. Nichols to James
F. Arnold, .39 Acre, Salisbury.
Norman J . Schoonover,
Margie E. Schoonover to John
D. Schuler, Priscilla C.
Schuler, Lots 16, 17, 18,
Rutland.
Helen Sprague to Stephen P.
Marcinko, Karen L. Marcinko,
.87 Acre, Olive.
Ra)imond Arnold M. Irene
Arnold to Bobby Arnold,
Bonnie Arnold, 39.20 Acres,
Seipio.
William J. Halley to Mary ·F.
Halley, Lot 7. Tuppers Plains,
Arbaugh's 3rd.
James S. Rucker, C!Jnnie H. ·
Rucker to Monongahela Power
Co., Ease., Oliv.e.
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As one lo ca l commenc-e m ent s peake r sa id S und ay. "Your parents
~ .-.wars ago a lso probably heard this advice, that you will be making
lh<; ell'!· is inns in the years to con1e."
ll w~iS l'ai'r warninj,N.hen . and still is.
Some say today , consi d ering the condition of W!Jrld affairs. the
a<lvicl' was littl e heeded in 1!14!1.
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something lik e 4•,, billion people wait upon a genera tion that will
find a nsw l't' s. Th e hi g h school seniors on thi s p age may in du e time
~untribut!•. Such is the universal hope: that here and in other nation s
,vnull!llleopl e ye t willing to learn , to put aside , old ways , to rededicate
themsel.,cs lo fr eedom. can brea k the traps of the past.
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GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS
HOYT FAVORED
RENO, Nev. (UPI)-{lddsmaker
North
Swanson
Monday installed A. J. Foyt as
a :i-1 choice to win Sunday's
Indianapolis >OO auto . race.
. . Spotted at S-1 were Gordon
Johncock, Bobby Unser and
Wally Dallenbach, while Mario
Andretti, Mike Hiss and
Johnny Rutherford were at 1().
I; Mike Mosley and David
Hobbs · at 12-1; and Bill
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Salel USED
MACHINES
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Meigs High School Seniors, 1974
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Eastern High School Seniors, 1974
Meigs High School Seniors, 1974
Good selection portable and
cabinet models.
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The Fabric Shop, 115 W. Second, Pome"'
Ph. 992~2284
I
Vukovich, AI Unser and Garry . L-•-••_R_o_v,_o_s_••_•_•_• _o_" _' _'R - - -- - .- -- -- - - -'A
_ r _" _"'_"_" _''_"_I_T_H_E_s_oN_G_E
_R_c_o_M_P_A_N_Y...J
Bettenhausen at l:i-1.
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If you sold your home today. you
know you·a make money. Probably
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lots of money.
But there's anottier wdy to get your
money you probably never even
thoughl of.
The City Loon · Company has a
plan that lets you use the money
in your home when you need it ...
The City Loan HomeOwner Loan.
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Wahama High School Seniors, 1974
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p71 ·11o
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Southern High School Seniors, 1974
IU1'l fAIM
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CITY LOAN
COMPANY
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It's a . big loon. Bigger than most. ·
But easy to get. And easy to repay.
Because it's backed by on asset thai
keeps growing.
·
You put money into your house.
· Why not get it out for the things you
need today?
See.The City Loon Company obout
a HomeOwner Loon today.
;=;:__-~
. like a good neighbor,
State Faim
there.
•urOMOIILE
IJIIUUIICE COY,Itn
Mo.. .Diflu:
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The MEIGS INN
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SlATE fUM MUfUH
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'4.99
heritage house
Alumni banquet,
I CALl: 992-1155
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Men's
Mesh Shoes
Car Insurance?
Why settle .for
less than the best?
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Congratulations, Bend .Area seniors·!
TONIGHT 9 TIL 1
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Mrs. Grace Jividen, and Mrs.
Lillian Hayman.
Mrs. Harriet Neigler has
Former , Middleport
returned from Holzer Medical
residents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Center.
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Mrs. Mary Grady was taken E. Bush, 3325 Westbury Drive,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital Columbus are announcing the
and Mrs. Maude Young to engagement of their youngest
daughter, Martha Anne, to Mr.
Holzer Medical Center.
Among those coming for a William Richey Graf, Jr ., son
distance for the funeral service of Dr. and Mrs. William Rich~y
for Mr. Otto Bradford, included Graf, Cincinnati.
Both Miss · Bush and her
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Bradford,
son, W~yiJe, of Arlington, Ohio; fiance are 1972 graduates of
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Bradford Denison University, Granville,
and sons, Brent and Berry, where she affiliated with
Wooster ; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority,
Bradford, children Usa and and he served as president of,
Todd, of Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Phi Delta Theta Fraternity . He
Robert Bradford of Hebron; is currently a student in the
Mr. and Mrs . Malcolm College of Law at Ohio State
Bradford of Marysville; Mr. University.
The wedding will be held in
Ralph Bradford of Columbus:
Donna True of Grove City, Swasey Chapel on the Campus
Louise Colin! of Belleville, of Denison University on June
Edith Grimm of Kent, M~. 22.
Miss Bush is a grand·
Reed Rose and son, Harold of
Newarlt, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon daughter of Mrs. Clifford J.
Rose and Randy and Eleanor Rhodes, Middleport, and of Mr.
of Grandville; Albert Wolfe of A. L. Bush. Her late grand·
Olmstead, Mr. and Mrs. Leon parents were Mr. and Mr~ .
Jor<,lan of Thornville, Mrs. Usle D. Diles, Middleport.
Nancy Jaspers, Milford, Critt
Bradford, Jr. of Worthington,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Duke
McKenzie, Philip, Jeff, and
and Annette of Alexandria,
Jozie, of Gallipolis were
Mollie Pullins, Mr. and Mrs. Mother's Day guests of Mr. and
Ehner Swank, Dora Crispin, Mrs. Roy ntffle.
Mrs.I!Mildred Orr and Roberta
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Swift of
Whitehead, all of Newark.
ColumbusspentSaturday, May
Rev . Howard Shivley spent 11, with her parents, Mr . ar.d
overnighi Friday, May 10, with Mrs. Francis ·Morris.
his mother and aunt in
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease
Wlhnington and on Saturday and son, David of Baltimore,
conducted a funeral at Lit. were holiday weekend guests
Ueton Funeral Home at Sabina of his mother, Mrs. Carrie
for Jacob Cline.. Mrs . ·Nease.
Shiveley's mother, Mrs.
Maycle Zvara and Violet
Myrtle Loumenhouser, ac- Fis~er of Akron are visiting ·
companied Rev. Shivley home Mr. and Mrs. Henry Roush and
·to visit over high school . family. ·
,
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Badgley
commencement exercises.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. and Kelli of Columbus spent a
Francis Morris May 9 were week with his parents, Mr. and
their
grandsons,
Ron Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
Schroeder of Columbus and
Mr. · and Mrs. Martin
Steve Schroeder who was Wilcoxen spent Mother's Day
spending a week vacation at In Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
home from St. Louis, Mo. R<ick Young and Andy.
University.
Mrs. Genevieve Estes of Los
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bobb of Alamitos, Calif., returned
Columbus and Russell Radcliff home after a visit with her
of Syracuse sJient a day with mother, Mrs. James Swart,
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Hazel Carnahan.
and the Alfred Crow family.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross
and Ray of Columbus spent
Mother's Day weekend with
SAlTS SIGN
her mother, Mrs . . Frankie
NEW ORLEANS (UPI)
Neigler.
The New Orleans Saints of the
Clifford Bryson of Pitt- National Football League
sburgh, Pa., was a weekend Monday
ano.ounced
the
guest of his mother , Mrs. signlngs of John Moon, a 6-foot
Hobart Bryson .
3, 265-pound, offensive tackle,
Mr. and ' Mrs . Charles and Clinton Tapper, a &-1, 24().
Mallory returnep to their home · pound, offensive ![uard.
at Riverdale, Georgia, after .< Both Moon and Tapper
~ndlng a . week with his
played college football at the
mother, Mr s: Mayme Mallory . . · University
South~rn
Mr . and Mr~ . William Mississippi.
.·:· Garden Club held at the home . club picnic was announced for around shrubs to keep down
of Mrs. Hazel Barnhart. They . June 19 al the home of Mrs. weeds and to reduce .watering.
.
TUESDAY
are
Mrs. Rose Carr, president ; Vercia Sto ut who . will be
FRIENDLY Cjrcle, Trinity
Church, 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Ken- . Mrs. Ina· Massar, vice assisted by Mrs. Grace Stout.
Each· member is to take a
neth Harri s to have the .~president ; Mrs. Mary Jane covered dish and the picnic will
program ; Mrs. Roy Mayer and Goebel, secretary; Mrs. Helen
Mrs. Donald Hauck, hostesses. Dorst treasurer; and Mrs. be held at 6:30 p.m. Anyone
CHESTER Coun cil 323 Ethei,Arbaugh, news reporter. interested in joining the club is
A committee to make up the welcome to attend the picnic.
Daughters of America, 7:30
Members answered roll ca ll
Tie and Slipon ·
p.m. at the hall. Fortieth an- new programs was appointe(!
by
exhibiting an arrangement
Black or Natural
niversary to be observed with
of spring flowers . De votions
recognition of charter memwere given by Mrs. Goebel
bers.
following the gardeners '
CHESTER PTA. at the
prayer . ' The
program
school, 7:30 p.m. J oe Struble
presented by Mr s . Merle
will preseQt a safety program
Your Thom MeAn Store
Griffith was on planting a
and names for committees and
~iddleport , 0 .
terrarium . Mrs. Dorothy Stout
room mothers will be taken.
HARRISONVILLE ~ The gave the verse of the month .
Refreshments.
annual Harrisonville Alumni
MEIGS Muzzle Loader Rifle banquet and dance will be held
Club, 6 p.m., Jzaak Walton Saturday at the elementary
League Club House. New school.
members welcome.
;
'· . Guest speaker will be Clinton
OHIO ETA Phi Ch~pter, Gilkey, Albany , and special
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30 singer will be Jack Warner of
p.m. picnic, at the southbound Harrisonville. Serving, starThe most popular night club in
park on Route aa. Libby Sayre ling at 7 p.m., will follow the
to have cultural report, " Make program and dinner with the .
the tri-county area lS
An Art of Living", with the Kord Kings of Belpre providing
losing attendance team to music for square dancing from
serve as hostesses for the 9 until midnight. Reservations
proud .to present
picnic.
can be made by ca lling 949CHESTER Courlcil No. 323, 49oi, 992-38>4 or 69&-3477.
Daughters of America, 8 p.m .
Tuesday night at the Chester
hall. 40th anniversary to be
IN HOSPITAL
observed. All Charter memMrs. Ann Sauer Walters is a
surgical patient at the Martins
bers urged to attend.
WOMEN ' S Auxiliary , Ferry Hospital, Martins Ferry.
Veterans Memorial Hospital, Her room number is 301. She is
7:30 tonight at hospital. a sister to Charles Sauer,
Program
following
the Middleport.
business session.
WEDNESDAY
REVIVAL, Walnut Grove
Bible Christian Church, Vinton
County Road 17, 7:30 p.m.
Evangelist Rev. Dennis Tabor,
Athens.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary .- Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Wednesday, 6:30
potluck dinner , followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m . at the
hall.
AMERICAN Legion , FeeneyBennett Post 128, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at tbe hall.
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club, Wednesday noon,
at the Meigs Inn .
Converts instantly from flat to
OHIO Valley Commandery
'free arm' tubular sewing with ·
out changing parts or position!
24, Knights or Templar, 7:30
Suddenl y . diffi cult ~ew in g
p.m. Wednesday at the
t.t ... ~ . . tt tT c, r... y! 11 \ .ttru ly rcvo ·
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
luti on,u-y rn .n.: hin c, by Singer,
THURSDAY
w i 1 h .t n cx (. lu . . ivc onc- ... tt:!p
PROGRESSIVE Dinner by
butl (itl holc t , cH iu . . ivc pu\h·
Preceptor Chapter , Beta
bui\ Dtl l rurl\ chop -in bobb in ,
Sigma Phi Sorority, Thursday.
cxc fu..,i vc ... cc - t hru bo bbi n
Appetizers, home • of Nellie
wind ow .. . k.Hurc dl lCr l edBrown, 6 p.m.; second stop,
lure ·to rn .tk t ... ewi ng pl cdS~Ir ·
home of June Van Vranken,
,1bl c. $ec i 1 now !
salad; third stop, home of
Ullian Moore, main course ;
final stop, home of Mary
Pickens, dessert and social
hour .
-P OnJ('I"(l V' ('
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74. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. _. . . . . . . ... .. _ . _ . _. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . .. .
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SSo 14
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From All Of Us
I
.
We're proud of our new generation of Graduates.~
but where will. the·y be tomorrow?
Right now, it's graduation time, time for
careers . All of us have a definite interest in
celebrations, for parties and for gifts ... but
the future of these young people, and we'll
tomorrow, after all the
i
To All Of You! .
hono~s
have been
all benefit if graduates find opportunities
bestowed; our grads will be looking to the
here. We invite you to join in our efforts to
future. Some will choose to continue their
make our comm·u nity a good place to live. a
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education, others will enter the bu siness
These stores and
-....•.
-.-·..
--......·-,.
.,
good place to shop, a good place to wor~.
Organizations Are Sponsoring
~
world now. Sooner or later, all will decide
and a good place to raise a family.
where they can best begin . and build th eir
These Pages and
~-·
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Salute You
On This Occasion
'
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Marguerite's Shoe Shop, Pomeroy
Moore's American Hardware, Pomerut
Robinson's Laundry &Dry Cleaning
Western Auto Store, Middleport
Meigs Tire Center, Pomeroy
Rutland Furniture Co., Rutland
Walker Funeral Home, Rutland
Racine Home National Bank, Racine
Pomeroy Cement Block Co., PQmeroy
Ridenour J..V. &Appliances, Chester
'
Racine Food Market, Racine
Keith Goble Ford, ·Inc., Middleport
Star Supp~ Hdwe., R~ine
Crow's St~k House, Porrleroy
Ebelsbach Hardware, Pomeroy
· Larry's Mobile Homes, Pornerut
.-Dale C. Warner. Ins. Agency, Pomeroy
heritage house, Middleport
i.:::Welker's Ashland Service Station, Pomeniy
Erwin's Gulf Service, Middleport
·· New York Clothing House, Pomeroy
Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy ·
Chapman Shoes, Pomeroy
·Citizens National Bank, Middleport
'
-!:!~wisner
& Lohse. Pharmacy, Pomeroy
Royal Crown Bottling Co., M-iddleport
,. ':·•
...'-.e,
.
.
~ Franklin Store, Pomer1r1
The Kiddie Shoppe, Middleport
Middleport Book Store, Middleport
Karr &VanZandt Motor Sales, Pomeroy
.
Pomeroy National Bank, Pomeroy-RUtland
King Builder'$ SUpp~ Co., Middleport
'
M&R Shopping.Center, Middleport
' Mullen Ins. Agency Inc., Pomeroy
Legar Monument.
Co., '.'Pomenrt
·· ' · .Waid Crms Sot,s Store, R.acine ·
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Meigs Inn, Pomenrj
Mark VStore, Middlepon
McClure's Dairy Isle, Middleport
Sears Catalog Store, Pomeroy
Ohio Valley Plumbing &Heating, Inc., Pomeroy ·
P. J. Pauley, Nationwide Ins., Pomeroy
Rawlings-Coats Home For Funerals, Middleport
Athens County Savings &Loan .(Meigs Branch)
Kings Arms Nite Club,., 3 Mi S. Middleport, Kt. 1
Village Pharmacy, Middleport
· Pomeroy Flower Shop, Pomeroy ·
New Haven Super Market, New Haven, W. Va.
The Sewing Center, Middleport
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Farmers BanklBidg., Pomeroy
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. ~ral tire Sales, Middleport
Rutla~d Dept. ·Store'"'fMiand
. Racine Planing Mill, - . . . .
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The Farmers.Bank &Savings Co.,_Pomeroy
Smith Nelson Motors, Inc., Pomeroy
Sadie's. Market "Conpatulations
John", Syracuse
..
&wning.Childs Ins. Agency, Middleport
· Adolph's Dairy Valley, Pomeroy
Elberfelds In PomenrJ, .Pomet:9J
.· ·
'"'
i
Gene Riggs 'Ins. Representing JQfin Ha~
.
__
..
Meigs Equipment Co.; Pomeroy
Bahr Clothiers, Middleport ,
Rail's Ben Franklin, Middleport
Village Cut Rate, Racine
Goessler's Jewelry, Pomeroy
The Fabric Shop i'omeroy
K&C Jewelers, Pomeroy
G&J Auto Parts, Pomeroy .
Modem Supply, Pomer1r1 .
Nelson's Drug, Pomeroy
Landmark, Pomeroy
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,Th:eoo:ar~.M;ar~2t~,J9:
74. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. _. . . . . . . ... .. _ . _ . _. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . .. .
I
.
.i
•
•
.,I
I
SSo 14
#
f'
From All Of Us
I
.
We're proud of our new generation of Graduates.~
but where will. the·y be tomorrow?
Right now, it's graduation time, time for
careers . All of us have a definite interest in
celebrations, for parties and for gifts ... but
the future of these young people, and we'll
tomorrow, after all the
i
To All Of You! .
hono~s
have been
all benefit if graduates find opportunities
bestowed; our grads will be looking to the
here. We invite you to join in our efforts to
future. Some will choose to continue their
make our comm·u nity a good place to live. a
'
..
•
1
.
_,
...,.,
'
~
'
education, others will enter the bu siness
These stores and
-....•.
-.-·..
--......·-,.
.,
good place to shop, a good place to wor~.
Organizations Are Sponsoring
~
world now. Sooner or later, all will decide
and a good place to raise a family.
where they can best begin . and build th eir
These Pages and
~-·
••
..,
Salute You
On This Occasion
'
....,'
'
•
Marguerite's Shoe Shop, Pomeroy
Moore's American Hardware, Pomerut
Robinson's Laundry &Dry Cleaning
Western Auto Store, Middleport
Meigs Tire Center, Pomeroy
Rutland Furniture Co., Rutland
Walker Funeral Home, Rutland
Racine Home National Bank, Racine
Pomeroy Cement Block Co., PQmeroy
Ridenour J..V. &Appliances, Chester
'
Racine Food Market, Racine
Keith Goble Ford, ·Inc., Middleport
Star Supp~ Hdwe., R~ine
Crow's St~k House, Porrleroy
Ebelsbach Hardware, Pomeroy
· Larry's Mobile Homes, Pornerut
.-Dale C. Warner. Ins. Agency, Pomeroy
heritage house, Middleport
i.:::Welker's Ashland Service Station, Pomeniy
Erwin's Gulf Service, Middleport
·· New York Clothing House, Pomeroy
Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy ·
Chapman Shoes, Pomeroy
·Citizens National Bank, Middleport
'
-!:!~wisner
& Lohse. Pharmacy, Pomeroy
Royal Crown Bottling Co., M-iddleport
,. ':·•
...'-.e,
.
.
~ Franklin Store, Pomer1r1
The Kiddie Shoppe, Middleport
Middleport Book Store, Middleport
Karr &VanZandt Motor Sales, Pomeroy
.
Pomeroy National Bank, Pomeroy-RUtland
King Builder'$ SUpp~ Co., Middleport
'
M&R Shopping.Center, Middleport
' Mullen Ins. Agency Inc., Pomeroy
Legar Monument.
Co., '.'Pomenrt
·· ' · .Waid Crms Sot,s Store, R.acine ·
1
.
.
;
.
II
•.
I
Meigs Inn, Pomenrj
Mark VStore, Middlepon
McClure's Dairy Isle, Middleport
Sears Catalog Store, Pomeroy
Ohio Valley Plumbing &Heating, Inc., Pomeroy ·
P. J. Pauley, Nationwide Ins., Pomeroy
Rawlings-Coats Home For Funerals, Middleport
Athens County Savings &Loan .(Meigs Branch)
Kings Arms Nite Club,., 3 Mi S. Middleport, Kt. 1
Village Pharmacy, Middleport
· Pomeroy Flower Shop, Pomeroy ·
New Haven Super Market, New Haven, W. Va.
The Sewing Center, Middleport
'
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Farmers BanklBidg., Pomeroy
' -'
.
.
'
'
.
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. ~ral tire Sales, Middleport
Rutla~d Dept. ·Store'"'fMiand
. Racine Planing Mill, - . . . .
· ·
{·
~
.
'
.·..
"
'
\~
'
. I
'
I
The Farmers.Bank &Savings Co.,_Pomeroy
Smith Nelson Motors, Inc., Pomeroy
Sadie's. Market "Conpatulations
John", Syracuse
..
&wning.Childs Ins. Agency, Middleport
· Adolph's Dairy Valley, Pomeroy
Elberfelds In PomenrJ, .Pomet:9J
.· ·
'"'
i
Gene Riggs 'Ins. Representing JQfin Ha~
.
__
..
Meigs Equipment Co.; Pomeroy
Bahr Clothiers, Middleport ,
Rail's Ben Franklin, Middleport
Village Cut Rate, Racine
Goessler's Jewelry, Pomeroy
The Fabric Shop i'omeroy
K&C Jewelers, Pomeroy
G&J Auto Parts, Pomeroy .
Modem Supply, Pomer1r1 .
Nelson's Drug, Pomeroy
Landmark, Pomeroy
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11 - The !Jilily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesd~y. May 21 , 1974
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10 - The Oailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 .. Tuesday, May 21. 1974
ED. NOTE : WilliamS. White will retire soon ending a career ·
of dlstlnctioo as a syndicated CQ)UIMist for United Features
.··· ·~
.~
,...-~ ... :· ~ "'-i'.
Syndicate.
..
Addressing himself in a recent CQIUIIII) · published in this
newspaper to the problem of faith in the future he wrote that in
his many years of ·intimate relationShips with CQngressmen all
but a few that he knew were dedicated servants of the nation.
Diversified in interests, yes, but united is their desire to maintain
.the republic.
Today, in one of his last essays, he speaks of his reluctant
conclusion abOut anotl),er vital proposition:· " Should TV, if the
President Is impeached, be allowed to cover the Senate trial?"
..... ,__
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By WILLIAM S. WHITE
WASHINGTON- As a great respecter of Senate traditions
and no mad lover of the tube, this CQJumnist nevertheless has
reached a reluctant conclusion. This Is that If Senators are ever
required to txy President Nixon on a bill of impeachment sent
over by the House, they should do so under the lights of television
every step of the way.
For the Senate itself, letting TV into the chamber would be
an enormous and scarcely believable break with the past by a
chamber that won't even allow so much as a tourist camera in its
public galleries.
,
Indeed, it Is at this point touch and go as to whether a
majority of Senators would actudlly allow TV coverage. The
purpose of this co1wnn·1s to urge the Senate to consider accepting
a form and degree of public exposure which would be WJthinkable In ordinary limes should the House In fact indict the
President.
.
But the whole point is that these are extraordinary times,
what with a Hoose committee even now CQnductlng an inquiry as
to whether the second effort in all our history to impeach a
President of the United States should be undertaken.
If this somber effort should actually be made by the House -
'
and those who are automatically assuming that it will be are
getting out on a pretty long limb - one utter necessity will out-weigh all other CQnslderations.
·
· This will be the utter necessity for the American public to see
for itself that justice is not only being sought in Congress but that
juotice is being dooe .
Already, the Watergate tragedy has produced a gray flood of
rumor, innuendo, hearsay and they-68y and a tidal wave of leaks
on one side or another from SOI!rces that are rarely identified and
thus are not subject to any form of test of their reliability.
The CQuntry doesn't need any more of this sort of thing,
irrespective of _whether Mr. Nixoo is or is not guilty of impeachable conduct. What the country needs is to be ohown that
the institution of Congress is able and willing to fulfill one of its
highest and gravest and rarest of obligations.
If a President is in effect to be put into the dock, then the
people need not only to read the evidence, so far as the preso for
reasons of space can report it, but also to see and hear both sides
of the case for themselves.
If there is no substitute for examinatiorl and crossexamination to get at truth and justice in any criinlnal case and a bill of impeachment forms a criminal case of the highest
magnitude - there is also no substitute for the sense of sight.
Sometimes, the demeanor of a witneso is an important, In
trying, for illustration, wdetermine his credibility, so are his
words themselves.
If Richard Nixon must in the end suffer the ordeal of a trial in
the Senate, it will not be his ordeal al~ne. It will be the nation's .
ordeal as' well and the nation will have both the righland the d11ty
to share in it - to see !l'ecisely why the President was convicted
if. convicted he should be, or w see precisely why he was
acquitted If acquitted he should be.
It is not the public's business to bring in the ultimate verdict
but it is the public's positive duty w inform itself w the last
posoible detail.
TilE MIDDLESWART SCHOOL, ABOUT 1910 - Left to
right front row, Willie Wolfe, Esther Van Meter, Mary Wolfe,
Anna Henderson, Dorsa Carpenter, Kate Alexander, Eber
Carpenter, Oscar Middleswart, Bruce Henderson, Alvin
Shrine Hospital Week
salutes philanthropy
International Shrine Hospital Week will
be observed in Ohio, May 19-~. as a tribute
to those who have supported "the world 's
greates philanthropy" during its almost
52-year history .
Charles A. Dinwiddie, Illustrious
Potentate of Aladdin Temple, Nobles of the
Mystic Shrine, said the temple's more than
14,300 memhers will join with their 900,000
fellow Nobles acroso lhe country on May 19
to give thanks for the vision which resulted
in establishment of the Shrine's 19 Crippled Children's Hospitals and three Burns
lnslitutes.
Since the first Shrine Hospital was
opened September 16, 1922, at Shreveport,
Louisiana, more than 169,000 children
from all parts of the world have been
treated, "restored to health and well
being, or materially aided"- without cost
of any kind to the child or the family ,
Dinwiddie said.
The free treatment of orthopedic and
burns patients is financed by the contributions and legacies of Shriners ·and
n.on-Shriners. Not a cenl of government
money is used.
The little pat'ient, who may be of any
race, creed 'or nationality, must be under
15 years of age and sponsored by a Shriner.
During the first 51 years of service, the
Shriners Crippled Children's Hospitals
have chalked up 15,329,856 patient days in
their brief history. More than $75 million
were spent in hospital construction costs
Early days recalled at Middleswart School
BVNEIL (TALBOTr) MIDDLESWART
Age 14, Portland, Ohio
PORTLAND - The Portland schools were divided into three
horse to a log and drag it to the school house. then to several
hollows and make a good path for us kids wget to school. Lots of
people lived in log cabim at that time.
The picture that l have must have been taken at noon time. A
lot of us were not In the picture because we went home for lunch
of Portland on the Portland.Stiversville road. Children living on when the weather was nice. I went through the fifth and sixth
the rise above Portland, and the children that lived back in the grade McGuffeys with the same teacher, Mr. Alexander. The
hills and hollows attended the Middleswart school. The Mid- older students studied high school subjects. I didn't getthat far in
dleswart one room school was built In the late 1800s. l started school. My next teacher was Alberta Buckley. She taught me for
school in 1907 at the age of seven. ·
two terms. The last teacher was Elmer Daugherty.
The building had two large windows and one door on the east
The first years of school we always got a treat for Christmas.
side and two large windows on the west side. The north end had One time Uncle Jinunie Anderson brought a phonograph with a
large blackboards, the teachers desk and some floor space. The big horn and cylinder records. For some of us it was the first time
south end had along bench for lunch buckets, water buckets, and we had ever heard anything like that. We had spelling bees. Our
a space to hang our coats. There was a pot bellied stove in the parents would take us to them. They carried lanterns and were
center of the room and three rows of desks and seats on each side used to light the school house. We played baseball, but most of
of the stove. We had to burn coal for fuel. The older boys took the boys played marbles. We also played hop scotch.
turns carrying coal.
The school house had a beD on top and the rope hung down
My neighbor, Eher Carpenter, said his first teacher was through the ceiling. Sometimes us kids could ring the bell. The
George Crow. My brother, Dell Talbott's first teacher was Will · teacher had a small bell on his desk he would ring when reCI'llS
Crow. I started school here in 1907, my fils! teacher was David was over. 1
Alexaoder. ·We all lived a mile or so from the school house. We
There ·are two families not in this picture. They were
had the McGuffey Readers one through six and If we got through Clarence ·ward and AnnabeD Ward and Reid Rose and Lottie
the one reader we were ready for the second readers next term. · Rose.
When the first class recessed the teacher would let us go
One term my brother Dell and I were janitors for the school.
outside and play. We carried our drinking water from d!Herent Each evening we erased the blackboard and swept the floor. The
places. The teacher would let two of us go get water after our next morning we would build the fire and dust all the deskS and
lessons were over. We usually went where we thought someone seats. For the six or eight month school term we earned $8. After
would give us apples or cookies. We had a big tin bucket and a the Portland consolidated school was built, the school house was
long handled dipper. We all used the same dipper.
sold to the Middleswaris. It was used for a dwelling house for
The roads were real muddy in the winter because the roads many years. In 1937 the building burned down. Today a heautiful
were dirt, not gravel. Some times it took a double team of horses maple tree stands on the ground where the building srood. 'The
to pull a wagon through the mud. I remember when we had a big older generation called this school "Brush College."
mow Dell Middleswart, )Vho lived with Mr. Alex, would hitch a
For many people, including me, this was the only school we
'
ever went to.
GUESTS CAME
PARTY GIVEN .
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Julie Kitchen entertained Mrs. Sidney Russell, Midwith a ·slumber· party Friday dleport, were Mrs. Harry
NEW HAVEN The theme of the observance was
night at her Middleport home. Shepherd, Mrs. Ernest Norris,
Woman's
Missionary
Society
of "Great is Thy Faithfulness."
Guests were Meigs Junior High Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Seth
the
New
Haven
First
Church
of
Clell Wood led in p~ayer.
School cheerleaders; this year Nicholson, Rutland; Mrs. Leah
God
held
their
annual
Spiritual
Scripture
readings were given
and last. Pizza, soda and chips Whitlock and Mr. and Mrs.
Birthday
Observance
at
the
by Fay Carpenter and Roberta
were served. Attending were William Yeager, Kent, Mrs.
Judy Hall, Susie Smith, Pam Ruth Tuckerman Cyr, and Mr. church on May 15. Spiritual Maynard. Orpha Fields and
Brauer, Sandy Hamilton, Shari • and Mrs. Creighton Cyr, Life Ilirector, Delores Taylor, Eleanor Davis sang a special
served as the leader. The ·song "My Soul is Satisfied"
Mitch and Sherrie Osborne.
I.Jncoln, Neb.
and Barbara Simmons sang
the solo, "Great Is Thy Faith-
~~~~~o:~:~oo.o~~~h':v":s~!-: :~r::~t::;
.
Spiritual birthday observed
")
'
'
•
•'
••
•I'
•' ..
\
J
. fulness."
THIS IS YOUR
INVITATI01V
••
J.
J
I
•••
•
'•
•
•'
HEAR
CECIL WILLIS
.•
•
•'
•'
•
What we did and ?re still doing to 125,000acre
of famished farmland in Ohio is a national
model for beautification of mined terrain.
Yet it's not released.
Why?
Some say mining will scar the land. They're
suspicious of private enterprise; they do not
believe industry will ~ct responsibly, and
restore the land.
I
..
I
'
•
•,'
The U.S. Government can control allocation
to users who need low-sulfur coal.
·
•'
'••
•
It's the people's coal, and the people need lt.
~
t
.••
POMEROY,
0.
..
".t
7:30 PM MONDAY •.SATURDAY
.
.
10:00 AM &, 6100 PM. SUNDAY
•
•••
America llu ntOH COlli
than the Mlddlelut
..........~-- oil. Let'i ""Itt
-~
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.
',
(
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.
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Racine • .
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. David
Fields, Jr. of New Haven was
installed as state president
during the State Woman's
Mlsoionary Society Convention
recently in New Martinsville.
She attends the First Church of
God in New Haven. ·
The theme of the convention
wns "Keys to Success" and the
speakers for the two-day event .
were Dr. Nelli• Snowsen ,
Executive SecretaryTreasurer of lhe Natlonai
Woman's Misoionary Society
and Sherry Rayl, National
Membership and Attendance
Chairman . Other members
attending from the New Haven
society were Iva Capehart and
Bonnie Fields. Mrs. Fields also
attended the Presidents'
CoiUlcil dinner at the Well's Inn
iJ\ Sistersville.
·
•
:I'
•
\
I
~~
DINNER SET
Best Rates on Town
Check With Us Before You Buy ...
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
107 Sycamore
99? . 5130
Pomeroy
•
p
be held on Sunday at the Letart
Falls CommWJity Hall starting
at 12 noon.
WDGETOMEET
A speCial meeting of Racine
Lodge 461,_F&AM, wiD be held
at 7:30p.m. Friday with work
in the Master Masons Degree.
C. Soltly brush textured case
and bracelet. 17 jewels. $75
D. Slim.line rectangle with
• •· alligator patterned bracelet.
17 jewels. $85.
Circ le her wrist with lime's most flatter ing
fas h;un ... the Bulova Goddess of Time. Each
beautifully textured a nd shapely case
blends into ils match ing bracelet, crealing
that costly one piece jewelry look-:-Give
'your Goddess the watch lhal's as precise as
it is pretty .. . she'll love it. And y6u. too .
·~
-POWELL'S
GIFT WATCHES FOR
.
298
ALL 1974 GRADS
Second~
'·
Pomeni,, 0.
•
'!
,
SUNDAY lO .AM TO. lO PM
\.,
'
Goessler's Jev,relry Store
STORE HOURS:
MONDAY-SATURDAYBAM-10 PM
,.
GROUP TO MEET
A meeting of Group II of the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church
scheduled for this evening at
the home of Mrs. Mildred Karr
will beheld instead at 7:30p.m.
on Tuesday, May 28, at the
Karr home.
BULOVA
!·
Court St•
'
\
. I
ment, schooling and other necessities- is
provided without cost to the family.
The Aladdin potentate said orthO)idlc·
cases over the years have averaged about
$1,700 each. Burns treaiment is much
more costly, running between $10,000 and
· $12,000 on an average. One case cost in
exceso of $100,000.
Columbus area youngsters, who qualify
because of type of handicap, needineso of
the family and age, are admitted to either
the Burns Institute at Cincinnati or the
Orthopedic Unit at Lexington, Kentucky . .
The Cincinnati facilily observed its lOth
Anniversary . in February , 1974, and
reported it had treated 950 patients from
five countries, 35 states and 104 Temples.
Sixty of them would not have survived
without the specialized trealment
provided, Dinwiddie said.
_The watch. that reoll~ 50~5
I love ~ou
I
•
care, braces, crutches, medical treat-
RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Harry s.
Moore, Middleport, have
returned from a board meeting
of the Episcopal Churchwomen
held atlhe Proctor Conference
Center near London. Mrs .
Moore serves on the board.
American Legion, will be
present and Modern Woodmen
Camp 7230 will conduct a flag
parade at the cemetery and
will decorate graves. The Rev.
Freeland Norris will be
speaker and the Norris Quartet
will present musical numbers .
A Memorial Day dinner will
.
-
and approximately $274 ,142,000 in
operating expenses between 1922 and 1974.
The 1974 operating budget is nearly $40
million.
Each Shriners Hospital, in addition to
having the most modern equipment, is
both a school and a home away from home.
Everything possible is done to give the
patient a normal life, including a happy
and pleasant atmosphere with a "where
love comes first" philosophy. Everything
that the youngster may require while
hospitalized .. . clothing, toilet articles,
laundry, linen, barbering, food, dental
SERVICES SET
Mrs. Fields made · Memorial
Day services will
'
be held at the Burlingham
Church at I :30 p.m. Monday.
state president
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
"The Home (4 the Friendly Folks"
I .
••
;·,)
a.ELAND'S
GREENHOUSE
HAPPY SHRINE PATIENT Five-year-old Laurie of Estherville, Ia.
is one of the 6,000 patients treated free
of charge each year by Shrlners
Hospitals for Crippled Childreo. AI the
ag~ of live-months, Laurie had to have
both feet amputated following injuries
by lire. She has been In a Shriners
Hospital five limes for surgery on the
scarring of her hand and arm, surgery
on her legs to straighten the knees, and
re-fitting, or replacement of her
prostheses as she grows. Today she
walks without assistance. Shriners will
pay for her medical treatment until she
is 16 years of age, during which time
she will be fitted with new prostheses to
match ber growth.
-les.
-.
.. Ayital part oUhe 7-state American Electric Power System.
'
Combination pots and
geraniums. Also other
potted flowers.
Deer Fri8nds •
This Is a special Invitation to all of .you who may be troubled by the current and massiv~
"Holy Splrtr' movemenl In our community. Bro. Willis will present lessons ol a general
nature tor the first three sessions of the
but will direct the lessons -of Thursday,
Friday. end Saturday evening speciflaolly .._ard clearing the olr on this movement.
Thursday evening, the lesson Is entitled, "Tile HOly Spirit and Revelation"; F rlday evening,
the lesson Is entitled, "The Holy Splrltend Confirmation"; and the Saturday evening·lesson
Is, "Neo·Penlecostallsm" ..We ~nly Invite you to come and bring your Bible, examine
what Is taught, and II you do not understand. or you desire further study, we will be most
happy to discuss yoor qu.e!ltlonl !llere at the meeting house or wher.eever and whenever Is
convenient frir you. Others are not willing to make thiS challenge about their doctrine. Will
. you accept this o·nd come .see 'I" Y'?""MII? You·wlll benefll.by so dolngl _!
..•
•
The U.S. Government can restore the land
exactly the way the U.S. people want it to.
_Ohio Power Compan~
.
For
Memorial Day
.,, ..
••
l
(
....-......lliiiiiiiii~-.
Vine St.
200 W. MAIN ST.
I
•f
•
MRS. BUTLER HOME
Mrs . Sherman Buller,
[Mland, has returned home
· after visiting 10 days in Findlay with her son, Cecil.
WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST
•
NO"'
If private corporations aren't tru.sted to do
the job, let the U.S. Government, itself,
mine the coal.
We can't speak for others- but long before
environmental groups were formed or
reclamation laws framed, American Electn ..
Power was restoring mined land to a condition
played ·during the silent
meditation .
The offertory prayer was
given by Sue Erwin. The offering is one of the five national
proj""ts or the ~ociety .
Two special solos were given
by Blain Gilland, "More About
Jesus.,. and "Down at the
Cross." A poeP"t, "Myself" was
read by Orpha Fields.
Refreshmen Is of cake and
pWJch were served in the
fellowship building to all .
I
But. .
And their voices block the release of this
non-polluting coal.
I
•'
--·· ·--· "
'••,
The U.S.Government can guarantee that no
company will profit from the mining.
Any, responsible corporation experienced in
land reclamation can develop and carry out
a plan to mine the Western coal and return
the land to a condifion as good as or better
than it was befdfe.
SPECIAL SERIES OF
GOSPEL seRMONS
MAY 20-26
.,'
•
'•
The U.S. Governm~t can fix the price of coal
to include reclamation costs.
more productive, enjoyable and valuable
than before the coal was mined.
Simmons
IN A
'
'•
Out in the West, the U.S. Government owns
vast reserves of clean low-sulfur coat-It is
desperately needed to solve America'senergy problem.
Mrs.
Henderson, Frank Alexander; second row, Ch8rles McDade,
Ross Henderson, Winnie Wolfe, Carl Henderson, Harry
Adams, Fred Henderson, David Alexander (teacher), Latin
Davies, Neva Davies, Alice Wolfe and Homer Larkins.
..
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Pomeroy
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L
11 - The !Jilily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesd~y. May 21 , 1974
'r" _
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-----....----------·-
I
10 - The Oailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 .. Tuesday, May 21. 1974
ED. NOTE : WilliamS. White will retire soon ending a career ·
of dlstlnctioo as a syndicated CQ)UIMist for United Features
.··· ·~
.~
,...-~ ... :· ~ "'-i'.
Syndicate.
..
Addressing himself in a recent CQIUIIII) · published in this
newspaper to the problem of faith in the future he wrote that in
his many years of ·intimate relationShips with CQngressmen all
but a few that he knew were dedicated servants of the nation.
Diversified in interests, yes, but united is their desire to maintain
.the republic.
Today, in one of his last essays, he speaks of his reluctant
conclusion abOut anotl),er vital proposition:· " Should TV, if the
President Is impeached, be allowed to cover the Senate trial?"
..... ,__
·I··~''"''"
'"
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r ·-'"
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By WILLIAM S. WHITE
WASHINGTON- As a great respecter of Senate traditions
and no mad lover of the tube, this CQJumnist nevertheless has
reached a reluctant conclusion. This Is that If Senators are ever
required to txy President Nixon on a bill of impeachment sent
over by the House, they should do so under the lights of television
every step of the way.
For the Senate itself, letting TV into the chamber would be
an enormous and scarcely believable break with the past by a
chamber that won't even allow so much as a tourist camera in its
public galleries.
,
Indeed, it Is at this point touch and go as to whether a
majority of Senators would actudlly allow TV coverage. The
purpose of this co1wnn·1s to urge the Senate to consider accepting
a form and degree of public exposure which would be WJthinkable In ordinary limes should the House In fact indict the
President.
.
But the whole point is that these are extraordinary times,
what with a Hoose committee even now CQnductlng an inquiry as
to whether the second effort in all our history to impeach a
President of the United States should be undertaken.
If this somber effort should actually be made by the House -
'
and those who are automatically assuming that it will be are
getting out on a pretty long limb - one utter necessity will out-weigh all other CQnslderations.
·
· This will be the utter necessity for the American public to see
for itself that justice is not only being sought in Congress but that
juotice is being dooe .
Already, the Watergate tragedy has produced a gray flood of
rumor, innuendo, hearsay and they-68y and a tidal wave of leaks
on one side or another from SOI!rces that are rarely identified and
thus are not subject to any form of test of their reliability.
The CQuntry doesn't need any more of this sort of thing,
irrespective of _whether Mr. Nixoo is or is not guilty of impeachable conduct. What the country needs is to be ohown that
the institution of Congress is able and willing to fulfill one of its
highest and gravest and rarest of obligations.
If a President is in effect to be put into the dock, then the
people need not only to read the evidence, so far as the preso for
reasons of space can report it, but also to see and hear both sides
of the case for themselves.
If there is no substitute for examinatiorl and crossexamination to get at truth and justice in any criinlnal case and a bill of impeachment forms a criminal case of the highest
magnitude - there is also no substitute for the sense of sight.
Sometimes, the demeanor of a witneso is an important, In
trying, for illustration, wdetermine his credibility, so are his
words themselves.
If Richard Nixon must in the end suffer the ordeal of a trial in
the Senate, it will not be his ordeal al~ne. It will be the nation's .
ordeal as' well and the nation will have both the righland the d11ty
to share in it - to see !l'ecisely why the President was convicted
if. convicted he should be, or w see precisely why he was
acquitted If acquitted he should be.
It is not the public's business to bring in the ultimate verdict
but it is the public's positive duty w inform itself w the last
posoible detail.
TilE MIDDLESWART SCHOOL, ABOUT 1910 - Left to
right front row, Willie Wolfe, Esther Van Meter, Mary Wolfe,
Anna Henderson, Dorsa Carpenter, Kate Alexander, Eber
Carpenter, Oscar Middleswart, Bruce Henderson, Alvin
Shrine Hospital Week
salutes philanthropy
International Shrine Hospital Week will
be observed in Ohio, May 19-~. as a tribute
to those who have supported "the world 's
greates philanthropy" during its almost
52-year history .
Charles A. Dinwiddie, Illustrious
Potentate of Aladdin Temple, Nobles of the
Mystic Shrine, said the temple's more than
14,300 memhers will join with their 900,000
fellow Nobles acroso lhe country on May 19
to give thanks for the vision which resulted
in establishment of the Shrine's 19 Crippled Children's Hospitals and three Burns
lnslitutes.
Since the first Shrine Hospital was
opened September 16, 1922, at Shreveport,
Louisiana, more than 169,000 children
from all parts of the world have been
treated, "restored to health and well
being, or materially aided"- without cost
of any kind to the child or the family ,
Dinwiddie said.
The free treatment of orthopedic and
burns patients is financed by the contributions and legacies of Shriners ·and
n.on-Shriners. Not a cenl of government
money is used.
The little pat'ient, who may be of any
race, creed 'or nationality, must be under
15 years of age and sponsored by a Shriner.
During the first 51 years of service, the
Shriners Crippled Children's Hospitals
have chalked up 15,329,856 patient days in
their brief history. More than $75 million
were spent in hospital construction costs
Early days recalled at Middleswart School
BVNEIL (TALBOTr) MIDDLESWART
Age 14, Portland, Ohio
PORTLAND - The Portland schools were divided into three
horse to a log and drag it to the school house. then to several
hollows and make a good path for us kids wget to school. Lots of
people lived in log cabim at that time.
The picture that l have must have been taken at noon time. A
lot of us were not In the picture because we went home for lunch
of Portland on the Portland.Stiversville road. Children living on when the weather was nice. I went through the fifth and sixth
the rise above Portland, and the children that lived back in the grade McGuffeys with the same teacher, Mr. Alexander. The
hills and hollows attended the Middleswart school. The Mid- older students studied high school subjects. I didn't getthat far in
dleswart one room school was built In the late 1800s. l started school. My next teacher was Alberta Buckley. She taught me for
school in 1907 at the age of seven. ·
two terms. The last teacher was Elmer Daugherty.
The building had two large windows and one door on the east
The first years of school we always got a treat for Christmas.
side and two large windows on the west side. The north end had One time Uncle Jinunie Anderson brought a phonograph with a
large blackboards, the teachers desk and some floor space. The big horn and cylinder records. For some of us it was the first time
south end had along bench for lunch buckets, water buckets, and we had ever heard anything like that. We had spelling bees. Our
a space to hang our coats. There was a pot bellied stove in the parents would take us to them. They carried lanterns and were
center of the room and three rows of desks and seats on each side used to light the school house. We played baseball, but most of
of the stove. We had to burn coal for fuel. The older boys took the boys played marbles. We also played hop scotch.
turns carrying coal.
The school house had a beD on top and the rope hung down
My neighbor, Eher Carpenter, said his first teacher was through the ceiling. Sometimes us kids could ring the bell. The
George Crow. My brother, Dell Talbott's first teacher was Will · teacher had a small bell on his desk he would ring when reCI'llS
Crow. I started school here in 1907, my fils! teacher was David was over. 1
Alexaoder. ·We all lived a mile or so from the school house. We
There ·are two families not in this picture. They were
had the McGuffey Readers one through six and If we got through Clarence ·ward and AnnabeD Ward and Reid Rose and Lottie
the one reader we were ready for the second readers next term. · Rose.
When the first class recessed the teacher would let us go
One term my brother Dell and I were janitors for the school.
outside and play. We carried our drinking water from d!Herent Each evening we erased the blackboard and swept the floor. The
places. The teacher would let two of us go get water after our next morning we would build the fire and dust all the deskS and
lessons were over. We usually went where we thought someone seats. For the six or eight month school term we earned $8. After
would give us apples or cookies. We had a big tin bucket and a the Portland consolidated school was built, the school house was
long handled dipper. We all used the same dipper.
sold to the Middleswaris. It was used for a dwelling house for
The roads were real muddy in the winter because the roads many years. In 1937 the building burned down. Today a heautiful
were dirt, not gravel. Some times it took a double team of horses maple tree stands on the ground where the building srood. 'The
to pull a wagon through the mud. I remember when we had a big older generation called this school "Brush College."
mow Dell Middleswart, )Vho lived with Mr. Alex, would hitch a
For many people, including me, this was the only school we
'
ever went to.
GUESTS CAME
PARTY GIVEN .
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Julie Kitchen entertained Mrs. Sidney Russell, Midwith a ·slumber· party Friday dleport, were Mrs. Harry
NEW HAVEN The theme of the observance was
night at her Middleport home. Shepherd, Mrs. Ernest Norris,
Woman's
Missionary
Society
of "Great is Thy Faithfulness."
Guests were Meigs Junior High Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Seth
the
New
Haven
First
Church
of
Clell Wood led in p~ayer.
School cheerleaders; this year Nicholson, Rutland; Mrs. Leah
God
held
their
annual
Spiritual
Scripture
readings were given
and last. Pizza, soda and chips Whitlock and Mr. and Mrs.
Birthday
Observance
at
the
by Fay Carpenter and Roberta
were served. Attending were William Yeager, Kent, Mrs.
Judy Hall, Susie Smith, Pam Ruth Tuckerman Cyr, and Mr. church on May 15. Spiritual Maynard. Orpha Fields and
Brauer, Sandy Hamilton, Shari • and Mrs. Creighton Cyr, Life Ilirector, Delores Taylor, Eleanor Davis sang a special
served as the leader. The ·song "My Soul is Satisfied"
Mitch and Sherrie Osborne.
I.Jncoln, Neb.
and Barbara Simmons sang
the solo, "Great Is Thy Faith-
~~~~~o:~:~oo.o~~~h':v":s~!-: :~r::~t::;
.
Spiritual birthday observed
")
'
'
•
•'
••
•I'
•' ..
\
J
. fulness."
THIS IS YOUR
INVITATI01V
••
J.
J
I
•••
•
'•
•
•'
HEAR
CECIL WILLIS
.•
•
•'
•'
•
What we did and ?re still doing to 125,000acre
of famished farmland in Ohio is a national
model for beautification of mined terrain.
Yet it's not released.
Why?
Some say mining will scar the land. They're
suspicious of private enterprise; they do not
believe industry will ~ct responsibly, and
restore the land.
I
..
I
'
•
•,'
The U.S. Government can control allocation
to users who need low-sulfur coal.
·
•'
'••
•
It's the people's coal, and the people need lt.
~
t
.••
POMEROY,
0.
..
".t
7:30 PM MONDAY •.SATURDAY
.
.
10:00 AM &, 6100 PM. SUNDAY
•
•••
America llu ntOH COlli
than the Mlddlelut
..........~-- oil. Let'i ""Itt
-~
.
r
.•
-'
I
.
',
(
. •r
.
'I
.
I
.
'
I
.
'
( :
. :.
·'
r
I
·
...•
.•
r.
..
·•
·
.
I
·'
•
..
I'
o.
Racine • .
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. David
Fields, Jr. of New Haven was
installed as state president
during the State Woman's
Mlsoionary Society Convention
recently in New Martinsville.
She attends the First Church of
God in New Haven. ·
The theme of the convention
wns "Keys to Success" and the
speakers for the two-day event .
were Dr. Nelli• Snowsen ,
Executive SecretaryTreasurer of lhe Natlonai
Woman's Misoionary Society
and Sherry Rayl, National
Membership and Attendance
Chairman . Other members
attending from the New Haven
society were Iva Capehart and
Bonnie Fields. Mrs. Fields also
attended the Presidents'
CoiUlcil dinner at the Well's Inn
iJ\ Sistersville.
·
•
:I'
•
\
I
~~
DINNER SET
Best Rates on Town
Check With Us Before You Buy ...
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
107 Sycamore
99? . 5130
Pomeroy
•
p
be held on Sunday at the Letart
Falls CommWJity Hall starting
at 12 noon.
WDGETOMEET
A speCial meeting of Racine
Lodge 461,_F&AM, wiD be held
at 7:30p.m. Friday with work
in the Master Masons Degree.
C. Soltly brush textured case
and bracelet. 17 jewels. $75
D. Slim.line rectangle with
• •· alligator patterned bracelet.
17 jewels. $85.
Circ le her wrist with lime's most flatter ing
fas h;un ... the Bulova Goddess of Time. Each
beautifully textured a nd shapely case
blends into ils match ing bracelet, crealing
that costly one piece jewelry look-:-Give
'your Goddess the watch lhal's as precise as
it is pretty .. . she'll love it. And y6u. too .
·~
-POWELL'S
GIFT WATCHES FOR
.
298
ALL 1974 GRADS
Second~
'·
Pomeni,, 0.
•
'!
,
SUNDAY lO .AM TO. lO PM
\.,
'
Goessler's Jev,relry Store
STORE HOURS:
MONDAY-SATURDAYBAM-10 PM
,.
GROUP TO MEET
A meeting of Group II of the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church
scheduled for this evening at
the home of Mrs. Mildred Karr
will beheld instead at 7:30p.m.
on Tuesday, May 28, at the
Karr home.
BULOVA
!·
Court St•
'
\
. I
ment, schooling and other necessities- is
provided without cost to the family.
The Aladdin potentate said orthO)idlc·
cases over the years have averaged about
$1,700 each. Burns treaiment is much
more costly, running between $10,000 and
· $12,000 on an average. One case cost in
exceso of $100,000.
Columbus area youngsters, who qualify
because of type of handicap, needineso of
the family and age, are admitted to either
the Burns Institute at Cincinnati or the
Orthopedic Unit at Lexington, Kentucky . .
The Cincinnati facilily observed its lOth
Anniversary . in February , 1974, and
reported it had treated 950 patients from
five countries, 35 states and 104 Temples.
Sixty of them would not have survived
without the specialized trealment
provided, Dinwiddie said.
_The watch. that reoll~ 50~5
I love ~ou
I
•
care, braces, crutches, medical treat-
RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Harry s.
Moore, Middleport, have
returned from a board meeting
of the Episcopal Churchwomen
held atlhe Proctor Conference
Center near London. Mrs .
Moore serves on the board.
American Legion, will be
present and Modern Woodmen
Camp 7230 will conduct a flag
parade at the cemetery and
will decorate graves. The Rev.
Freeland Norris will be
speaker and the Norris Quartet
will present musical numbers .
A Memorial Day dinner will
.
-
and approximately $274 ,142,000 in
operating expenses between 1922 and 1974.
The 1974 operating budget is nearly $40
million.
Each Shriners Hospital, in addition to
having the most modern equipment, is
both a school and a home away from home.
Everything possible is done to give the
patient a normal life, including a happy
and pleasant atmosphere with a "where
love comes first" philosophy. Everything
that the youngster may require while
hospitalized .. . clothing, toilet articles,
laundry, linen, barbering, food, dental
SERVICES SET
Mrs. Fields made · Memorial
Day services will
'
be held at the Burlingham
Church at I :30 p.m. Monday.
state president
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
"The Home (4 the Friendly Folks"
I .
••
;·,)
a.ELAND'S
GREENHOUSE
HAPPY SHRINE PATIENT Five-year-old Laurie of Estherville, Ia.
is one of the 6,000 patients treated free
of charge each year by Shrlners
Hospitals for Crippled Childreo. AI the
ag~ of live-months, Laurie had to have
both feet amputated following injuries
by lire. She has been In a Shriners
Hospital five limes for surgery on the
scarring of her hand and arm, surgery
on her legs to straighten the knees, and
re-fitting, or replacement of her
prostheses as she grows. Today she
walks without assistance. Shriners will
pay for her medical treatment until she
is 16 years of age, during which time
she will be fitted with new prostheses to
match ber growth.
-les.
-.
.. Ayital part oUhe 7-state American Electric Power System.
'
Combination pots and
geraniums. Also other
potted flowers.
Deer Fri8nds •
This Is a special Invitation to all of .you who may be troubled by the current and massiv~
"Holy Splrtr' movemenl In our community. Bro. Willis will present lessons ol a general
nature tor the first three sessions of the
but will direct the lessons -of Thursday,
Friday. end Saturday evening speciflaolly .._ard clearing the olr on this movement.
Thursday evening, the lesson Is entitled, "Tile HOly Spirit and Revelation"; F rlday evening,
the lesson Is entitled, "The Holy Splrltend Confirmation"; and the Saturday evening·lesson
Is, "Neo·Penlecostallsm" ..We ~nly Invite you to come and bring your Bible, examine
what Is taught, and II you do not understand. or you desire further study, we will be most
happy to discuss yoor qu.e!ltlonl !llere at the meeting house or wher.eever and whenever Is
convenient frir you. Others are not willing to make thiS challenge about their doctrine. Will
. you accept this o·nd come .see 'I" Y'?""MII? You·wlll benefll.by so dolngl _!
..•
•
The U.S. Government can restore the land
exactly the way the U.S. people want it to.
_Ohio Power Compan~
.
For
Memorial Day
.,, ..
••
l
(
....-......lliiiiiiiii~-.
Vine St.
200 W. MAIN ST.
I
•f
•
MRS. BUTLER HOME
Mrs . Sherman Buller,
[Mland, has returned home
· after visiting 10 days in Findlay with her son, Cecil.
WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST
•
NO"'
If private corporations aren't tru.sted to do
the job, let the U.S. Government, itself,
mine the coal.
We can't speak for others- but long before
environmental groups were formed or
reclamation laws framed, American Electn ..
Power was restoring mined land to a condition
played ·during the silent
meditation .
The offertory prayer was
given by Sue Erwin. The offering is one of the five national
proj""ts or the ~ociety .
Two special solos were given
by Blain Gilland, "More About
Jesus.,. and "Down at the
Cross." A poeP"t, "Myself" was
read by Orpha Fields.
Refreshmen Is of cake and
pWJch were served in the
fellowship building to all .
I
But. .
And their voices block the release of this
non-polluting coal.
I
•'
--·· ·--· "
'••,
The U.S.Government can guarantee that no
company will profit from the mining.
Any, responsible corporation experienced in
land reclamation can develop and carry out
a plan to mine the Western coal and return
the land to a condifion as good as or better
than it was befdfe.
SPECIAL SERIES OF
GOSPEL seRMONS
MAY 20-26
.,'
•
'•
The U.S. Governm~t can fix the price of coal
to include reclamation costs.
more productive, enjoyable and valuable
than before the coal was mined.
Simmons
IN A
'
'•
Out in the West, the U.S. Government owns
vast reserves of clean low-sulfur coat-It is
desperately needed to solve America'senergy problem.
Mrs.
Henderson, Frank Alexander; second row, Ch8rles McDade,
Ross Henderson, Winnie Wolfe, Carl Henderson, Harry
Adams, Fred Henderson, David Alexander (teacher), Latin
Davies, Neva Davies, Alice Wolfe and Homer Larkins.
..
,
.
J
. I
Pomeroy
I,•
'
..
- - -~
'
...
-
. ...
)
�. l Classz~ -f.:•zed s Get R esu lts., p~~J.~~·;;_.~~~~~~~··· J~.~ B us1ttess
.
. sfervtces
.
Sentzne
1
\:======~~;:=::;~======::::=--~=-===;:-r==::;~~~=::=:::====~-.
12 - The Dmll Sent mel lfilddleport Pomeroy 0
l'uesday May 21, 1974
I
For Sale
•
COE N
Card of Thanks
whose address•• are MY
~fif~:~:~i~ndd f~~~~t~
w
TO The u1-1known h ers
see• legatees ex.eculors
adm nrstrators and ass gns of
H L Co en and Vada Coen f
they are deceEtsed
You are nereby not 1 ed t hat
you have been named deten
dants n a l ega l action en t tied
Roberta C
0 Br en
el
al
ptamtlffs vs H L Coen et al
de f endan t s
Th1 S act on ha s
been ass •gncd Case No 15 542 n
n e Common Pl eas Court of
Oh o <17569
The obtcct of the com pia nl s
to dct erm ne hers and part t on
o 1 a1 d gas underi Y ng rea
es ta te sit uated
n Salsbury
Tow 1Sh p
Me gs Coun t y
th a nk s for th e
~~ ~~~~e;g cardn~y ald p;:t:~~
dev
Me 1gs County
heartfet
Oh o
tlos prtal za fton and a very
s pec al thanks to th e Holze r
Med cal Center ' la tt
Or
Harder and my wonderful
n e ghbor s
and
c hur c h
fr ends
ThanKs to Rev
Rob ert Bumgarner for h s
frequ en t vr s ts Mr s Ralptl
Rade l ffe Sy ra cuse Oh o
52 ! lip
-----------WE WISH to thank. all our
fr e nd s
ne ghbors
and
retat ves for the r k. ndnes•
and sympa thy after th e dt;>all
of our wrfe and moth e r
Gerald ne Eynon Spe c a l
thanKs to Rev Po l ng and
Re v Sellers for ttle r K nd and
consol ng words and to th e
Ew ng F uneral Hom e t he
EM S th e pa ll bear er s and to
those send ng cards flow ers
and food and to all tho se who
help ed n any way Em
Eynon
Son De nn s a nd
Fam ly
5 21 lip
@)
2 SIGNS
"AN~
OF
(II'-
QUALITY
Pomeroy
Motor Co.
;>
wh ch s desc r bed as tot lows
A ll of th e northwest quarter of
)ec t on 34 Tow nsll p 2 n Range
13 o f the Oh o Com pany s
Purchase conta n ng 160 acres
:>e the Si!m e mor e o r tess
Be ng on e of tile tra ct s or
parce ls of lan d conveyed to the
M e gs County 0 I & Coal
Con pany by deed dated Sept
Aucl on
e\iery
18 1865 and recorded n Vo l 29 P OLLY S
Fr day 1 D m at PMk -'lnt1
pag~> 118
119 an d 120 Me,gs
H gh Sts AnltQues collec tor
County Dee d Re cords
1fem s ant qu e !u rn lur e
F ur th er r e f erence Is made o
Deeds r ecorded n Volume 34 co lor T V s Step n P & J
IY71 DODGE CORONET
SI69.S
Stat1on Wagon loca l car l1ke new 1st I ne f res
automaftc gold f nt sh dean tntertor 318 V 8 power
steertng & au lomafte tran s
1970 NOVA CPE
$1545
Loca l 1 owner car good ftres 6 cy l w1th au tom af tc t rans
radro blue f n sh spot less c lean blue nte nor
$1445
1970 FORD MAVERICK
wrfh
aulomatrc
trans
Local 1 owner good t. res 6 cyl
radro blue f n1 sh spotless clean blue ntenor
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY, OHIO
For Sale
Wanted To Rent
PA ST URE for 7 year I ng
he fer s Phon e 64 3 2963
5 21 2tc
, --
SOD~~~SE(~~a~gm9~~0~1~11fl n ts
TOMATO pan ts Marg lob e
Oxharf
Cam pb ell s
and
ye llow 40c per doz Phon e
991 6602
5 21 Jtc
IS YOUR ROOF
LEAKING?
IS IT COLOR FADED?
WE HAV E a ll your uphols tery
ne ed s
Burlap
den m
cambrc foam glue 7. pp ers
tack ng s trrp s pr ng s rmd
c Ip s ch p boar d buttons
tw ne sew ng ttl read
egs
upho ls t ery booK s da cro
spr ng tw ne tacks we lt .::ord
c otton sw vet ba ses and
foam foan foam Po n eroy
622 Ea st Matn
Recovery
S tr ~e t Ph one 99'1 755 1
5 15 261C
MOWERS
As Long As They Last
POMEROY LANDMARK
..... _ Jack W Carsey Mgr
~
Phone 992 2181
r,
All WEAJH• ER
HARDWARE
Mt~port
Pomeroy
PH. 949-3611
HOGG &ZUSPAN
RACINE GARAGE
and
- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094
FURNITURE
Pomeroy Home & Auto
Set~
Our
I
_j
INTERIOR EXTERIOR
PAINTING
ROOF PAINTING
Real Estate For Sale
992·2156
PRICE
CONSTRUCTim
____________ __
PAPER
CARRIER
WANTED
IN RACINE
Real Estate For Sale
THE
WISEMAN
THE
DAILY SENTINEL
AGJ;NC'\
PHONE 992 2156
--------------
For Rent
---------- ---Wanted To Buy
- - ---------- -
Mobile Homes For Sale
Reedsville
Business 1Jpportumt1es
ClElAND
REALTY
--------------
Water Eleclnc Gas Sewer
L1n es
rn s talled
Work
guaranteed
Dozer Backhoe Trucks
Limestone & F1ll Dtrt
Commeroal Restdenttal
Construct ton & Remodel
8-K EXCAVATiftG
COMPANY
J
All WEATHER
HARDWARE
N 2nd Ave
777 Pearl Street
WEDNESDAY MAY22 1974
6 00 - Sunnse Semtnar .t Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Urban Leagve 10
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30 ~ FtveM1nutes to Live By 4 News6 B1ble Answers 8 The
Story 13
6 35 - Col umbus Today 4
6 45- Farmftme 10 Morn.ng Report 3
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Dick Van Dyke 13 H R
Pufnstuf 6
7 30 - Rocky & Bu llwtnkle 13 New Zoo Revue 6
8 00 - New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33 Capt Kangaroo 8 10
Jeff s Collie 6
8 25 - Jack Lalanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13
9 00- Paul D xon .4 Fnendly Junctton 10 AM 3 Abbott Costello 8 Phtl Donahue 15 Wtld Wtld West 6 Mo\i e When
My Baby Smtles AI Me 13
9 30 - To Tell the Trvth 3 Tatlletales 8
9 55 - Chuck Wh 1te Reports 10
10 00 - Donah Shore 3 15 Jokers W1ld 8 10 Company 6
10 30 - Jeopardy3 4 15 GambitS 10
11 00 - Password 13 W1zard of Odds 3 4 15 Mtke Douglas 6
Now You See It 8 10
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of Life B 10 Brady
Bunch 13 Sesame Street 33
11 55-CBSNewsB OanlmelsWorld10
12 00 - Password 6 Bob Bravn s 50 so Club • News 8 10 13
Jackpot 3 15
12 30 - Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Split Second 6 Celebr~ty
Sweepstakes 3 15 Afternoon W th DJ 13
12 45 - Elec Co 33
12 55 - NBC New• 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Not for Women Only 15
Concentrat1on 8 What s My ltne 10
1 30- 3 On A Match 3 ' 15 As the World Tvrns 8 10 Lets
Make A Deal 6 13
2 30 - Doctors3' 15 EdgeoiNoghtB 10 GirllnMyLtfe6 13
3 00 - Another World 3 • 15 General Hospttal 6 13 Pme Is
Roght 8 10 RFD 20
3 30- One L1fe to L1ve 6 13 Phol Donahue 4 Match Game 8
10 How to Survtve a Marr1age 3 IS The Way Thtngs Are 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame Sf 20 33 Lucy
Show 8 Huck & Yogt 6 I Dream of Jeannte 13 Movte These
Three 10
,
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Bonanza b
Hazel 8 Jackpot' 4
Gtlltgan s Island 6 13
5 00 - Mr Roberts 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Grtffm 4 Andy
Gr~fftlh 8 Bog Valley6 Gomer Pyle USMC 13
5 30- Elec Co 33 Beverly H111boll1e•B Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Hogans Heroes 13 Western Star Theater 15
6 oo- News 3 4 8 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesame St 20 Per
sonaltty Behav1oral Development 33 Truth or Cons 6
6 30 - News3 • 6 8 10 15 Room 22213
Mtddleport Oh10
Phone ~92 536 7 or 992 1861
BROWN'S FIRE &
SAFETY EQUIPMENT
1\i•ddleport 0
FIRE DEPARTMENT
EQUIPMENT
EXTINGUISHER
SALES& SERVICE
HOME ALARMS
Now under new
manage ment
RON AND
KAREN THOMAS
Phone 742 4,673
742 5595
B1ll Brown. Owner
Rutland, Oh10
Stop tn and say Hello Bm~
rn th1 s ad tor a Fr.ee GtU
GENE WOLFE'S
BODY SHOP
Wtlktnson Small Engtne
992 3092
399 W Matn
~omeroy 0
Located at Modern Supply
Small Engrne Reparr
808 W Matn St
Pomeroy
PHONE 992-5271
• Lawn Boy
• Tecumseh
• Koh ler
• Wrscons.n
• All oth er
makes
DAY OR NIGHT
1 ree
Garage
Est1mates
AIR CONDITION NOW?
DITCHING SERVlCE
YES!
Water Ltnes and Power
Ltnes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sept1c tanks m
Now whtle lhe weather 1s
st1ll cool ts the best ftme It
can be mstalled at your
convem ence w1th no wattmg
around tn hot muggy
weather
Phone 992 2550
l ~telled
5ee or
Call
Bob or Roger Jeilers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232
ALL WEATiiER
HARDWARE
SEWING MACHINES Reparr
se rv ce all maKes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Author zed s nger Sales and
Serv ce We Sharpen Scrssors
3 29 tfc
J&B AUTO
DOZER work and clear ng by
the acre hOurly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w th over
20 years exper ence Pull ns
Excavat1ng Pomeroy Oh o
Phon e 992 2478
12 19 tf c
SEP TIC
TANKS cleaned
reasonab e rates Ph <l46
4782 Gall po rs John Rus sell
owner and op erator
5 12 tf c
SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
C LE ANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SA NITATI ON
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035
10 4 tfc
.J
Moved to Rutland 3!4 m1le
ms1de crty l1mlt on rrght
corner Btrck Sf and Rt 124
Free Estimates
Now Open for Bustness
.I.
----------- ---
~LACK
•
BARBS
e
c
News 6 10 What s My L ne 8 Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
the Clock .t Etec Co 20 Know Your Sc hools. 33 J mmy
Dean 13 I Spy 15
1 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 Sale of the Century 8 The Judge 10
Beat the Clock 13 Poltce Surgeon 3 Antrques 20 E ptsode
Ad10n 33 On the Money 4 Amencan Trrp 15
a 00 - Sonny & Cher 8 10 B II Moye r s Journa l 20 Wash ng ton
Connectlon33 Chase3 4 JaneGoodall6 13 Baseba!llS
8 30 - Theater m Amenca 33
9 00 - Cannon 8 10 One Mrllton Strong 20 Mov re
Th e
Header s 3 4 Jul e and Jackte How Swee t It Is 6 13
10 00 - Doc Ell tot 6 13 Kojak a News 20 Frniand 10 Inte rfa ce
33
10 30 - Day At Noght 33
11 00 - New• 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janak 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 (a nd d Came ra A 25th An
ntversary Salvte6 Movte Puppet on a Chatn 8 Strangers
at Sunrise 10 Untouchables 13
12 30 - New• 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Cand d Camera A 25th Ann \iersary
Salute Take Ftve For Ltfe 15
200 - News4
2 30 - News 13
CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7 00 p m - Local News
7 30 p m - Country & Western ( Blue R dge Quartet K tty
Wells Show)
8 30 p m
Comedy ( Enstgn 0 Tool e Smother s Brothers
Show)
Superstar (Lloyd Brrdges Show Jun e Al lyso n
9 30 p m
Show)
7 00 -
Dear Eleanor
Thank ~ for the pra ctiCal t1ps We hope tliey end up m many
tourmg students luggage - HELEN AND SUE
JJW~Ibrn® UuJ lct_,I.J -1 ,_.
Unscram ble these four Jumblts.
one letter to each squart. to
form four ordmary "'ord!l
reserve
Curtam
nation
24 Rattle
25 - arts
2'7 Sons and
Lovers
hero
31 Overeat
32 Presbyter
37 N1genan
tr1besman
38 Collo1dal
sub-
stance
ham
22 Twm
crystal
25 Aspect
26 Girl's
name
2'7 Opposite
of max
Z8 Arab
garment
29 Slavery
33 Res1dent
(abbr )
34 Before
35 Musical
note
36 Total
38 SurroWld
39 Faust'
character
~Brink
41 Fortunetelling
cards
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
10 10
tLINKUE
IJ
WEDDEG
II
b
t
\J
C.~ ITI C.I':Z.E:.
JA'IWA~KE-R
CRYPTOQUOTES
V'
'.1
Now ammre the circled lelten
to form the 1urprlae anawer, u
I
;;;~;-:=-"-:-;;~;:)l~:::;,;:f\.::;;.A:.,;.
•~ur~l~••ted by t~e aboYe cortoon.
~ BY (
HIM (
J
XI I I 11 )
J"mbl" BRIBE
l et lerd• y •
I
~n•'"n
CHESS
TIMELY
III
DRUDGE
QOU
L SA U J
SQ
L
QSWU
DJBDUJ
S L
AUUA
QOU
I BQ
ABI U
QB
NYQUJ
FBI·
GUYBJU
NIBI
Yesterday's Cryptoquole NOTHlNG IS MORE COMMON
.,.... • ., • FOOL WITH A STRONG MEMORY --C C OOLTON
H-hen he won th11 raC'e 1l went rtght
to h" head- THE DERBY
1HA1 't"'!JriGSTERI
SO CH!!!.RFU~ AtiD
I1APPY
AHO Al
THE. SAME
North
East
Pass
1•
Double 2t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
TIME. SO
PRACTICAL At«>
~1'i3f-
South
4.t•
stuck
her
m.nd1n'
qoat till she
q•t well'
TilE BORN LOSER
\TWAS ALL
~::~=~!.~;,:--~ OUR HOTEL ~AD VIRTUALLY
STAFC
~611IDIEWA5R~IfT WHEN SHE mt.D
nt o "7><F
WOMEN'.:) UBEIIATION
HAS
SHE WAo 50 ~ARNED
EFFIC ENT I HAD
NO WOMEN ON 1HE
10 1\QR\<oJWICE AS
I WAS PRESSURED 10
HARD TD HOLD
MY JOB
HIRE ONE AS MY
A~I5TAN T
':The b1dd1ng has been
IDE~
WELL IM GlAD THAT'& ALL
BEH NO YOU '-ON AND YOU
CAN AWAIT THE ~IIW< OF
V
WHHl ~()()-lE/1.1/6 \JS
~1/E:IJ ~D,
YOUR CHilD TOGETHER'
t)I6'Rf WiJO, TO
tr
H~IJf; ~00
ST\lffi:D t>.IJD
~liJIDA
L~MP
sl:t:,..
<2'
YES I DID
'TO AVOID NA5TINESS
WITH THE BL.OOMER
FIEND HER MAUEST'I'S
GOVERNMENT IS
Gl\111-JG 'IOU A FREE
TRIP 'TO A SAFE
PLACE-
Wott
&
North
Double
1~
21
Eaol
··----·---
South
?
Pass
' Y oo South hold
+7 4 3 2 410 6 3
What do you do now"
A-Bid lwo dlamondL Year
pari- hao uked you lo bid a
.Q 9 6 5
.-K.
MARCH 'iORE£ELF
OUT TO TH WOODSHED
THIS VERI/ £ECONT 11
oall
~TEREO
TODAY'S QUESTION
Yoo b1d two d~amonds Your
partner contmues lo two hearts.
What do you do now?
I
HE~MAN GRATE
•lli ,,c:
MASON W VA
--'---~--- ---- "-~
"'
L
10ve
cookouts fhey
leave us free to enJOY the
• - •II hv ourself
I
I
•
It
One letter s1mply stands for another In thts sample A it
used for the three L's X for the two 0 s e tc Smgte letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aU
blots Each day the code letters are different
\-!OW '-lOT 10
A
how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW
cz:a;1 :~ •Mklf.!t u
MASON FURNilURE
773 5592
•
Dear Helen and Sue
As a frequent hotel guest I have observed the behaVIOr or
young people on tours Perhaps you would bke to list these dos
and don'tsfor teenagers who will be making tnps to Was hmgto n
New York andotherclbesthlssummer
D
BIG CITY VISITORS
1 AvOid runnmg m lobb1es or hallways of hotels
2 When usmg elevators don t overcrowd them and don t
bold the door for someone who IS still m h1s or her room Other
people have schedules to keep Elevators get out of order eas1 ly
often from too much playmg w1th them
3 Squattmg IS for camps, not hotel lobbies
4 Combmg your hrur should he done m private, not m a lob b)
or dmmg room It makes otlier people !eel a little •tchy
5 If a fr1end has the room he low you, VISit m your respective
rooms Don t carry on a conversation out the wmdow You may
fall forlone tlimg For anotlier adult guests aren t mterested m
9 Follow mstruct10ns of tour gu1des or bus dr1vers They ve
been through 1t and know what s best for you
JO Kee p track of your luggage An extra prur of eyes IS
useful
11 Carry a little e xtra mone) You never know when you U
need a cushiOn for a call home medical expenses extra Sldetnps, a g1fl that stnkes your fancy
t 2 If yo u go on y our own to see a pomt of mterest mqwre
beforehand the bes t \lay to get there how long 1t w1ll take and
th e cost Tin s Wlllms ure agamst cabbies driVIng you aU over
town - to ge t to a destmat1on only l1ve blocks from your hotel
ElEANOR B
23 Iron
'
•
ll
an} ttme
29 Cap
30 In
malicious
•
WHITE TV
'
people must be up and out early
7 &lore yo u amve bone up on places to be VISited You ll
e nJO) them more when yo u know their background
6 Prov1de clothes [or all weather so you U be comfortable
22 Most
Too Good to Latt
We won t go so far as to say
that every cloud has a Silver
llmng but w11l content our
selves w1th saymg that most
clouds do
South ducks the f~rst diamond as a matter of prmc1·
pie He wms the contmuat1on,
plays out h1s ace and kmg of
trumps and stops
A cloud has appeared on
the honzon, but 1f South
works thmgs out he Will fmd
1ts Silver hmng
If East h&s to follow to five
rounds of clubs South can col·
lect 10 tncks before losmg
the lead Also 1t 1s qu1te
likely that West started Wllhll red cards He had passed
ongmally and then made a
takeout double
In any event there 1s no
profit m g1vmg up South
cashes dummy s ace and kmg
of clubs and sure enough
West shows out Now he ruffs
a club, enters dummy w1th
the ace of hearts ruffs anoth·
er club, leads and ruffs h1s
last d1amond, ruffs dummy s
last club and concedes the
last two tr1cks Poor East has
19 use h1s good trumps to ruff
West's good hearts
92.1
WMPO-FM
For Sale
'I
+-i+
+-i+
yo ur co nversatiOns
6 No loud talking espec1ally alter 11 p m Many busmess
Yesterday's Answer
By Oswald & James Jacoby
•
f
Dear Shopper
Jack the Rip.oller and hiS kmd cost the Amencan tax
payer approxunately $16 5 million a year m traflic and r oad
s 1gns - and that doesn t COWlt the damage even deaths from
acc.J""ts that happen when strategic Signs came up m1ss mg
Your fnend had better lmd a safer game - and a legal \l ay
to earn money - HELEN
ACROSS
42 Unfnendly
1 Faultlmd
glance
5 Candle
DOWN
10 Toward
I Jeweler s
shelter
measure
11 Large
2 Texas
olive
cottonwood
12 Engrossed
3 H•t
13 Egg
back at
dish
4 Coddle
14 Candlenut
5 Diffident
tree
6 Soul ( Fr )
15 Hawauan
7 Body assembly
8 Ennoble
16 Marsh
9 Drwn roll
elder
( hyph wd l
17 Babes
11 Throb
m - •
15 Robust
19 Make
18 Mascagm
lace
herome
20 Expenenced 21 Sally 21- Tushlng
---~
ZENITH
COLOR lV
c
+++
Opemng lead- t K
STEREO
------ --------
'
West
GREAT
COUNTRY
j'
I
Yes, 1t s too much' Your $10 m1ght buy more than )OU
bargruned lor like an arrest lor acceptmg stolen propel t)
SUE
p S My adVIce IS Decllgn the s1gn or [ace a f1gn I whtch 1sn t
a very good rhygm but 11 s all m1gn )
by THOMAS JOSEPH
•
•lNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l
____ _________
ss
~IU-~tJ'
East West vulnerable
NEIG LER Bu ld ng Supply for
but drng hou ses phone 949
3604
c all Guy Ne gter
Rae n e Ohio
5 J 26tc
Terms!
uses and tlie mks he takes
Do you think this IS too much? - SIGN SHOPPER
mee t through a lr end In other
are as th1ngs w111 come too
easy You II make ess o t them
than you sho u d
.. 62
EXCAVATING rln1er lOAder
and backhoe work
sept c
tanks ms talled dump trucks'
and !o boys for h1re wrll haul
f 11 dirt top sort I mestone
and gravel Ca ll Bob or Roge r.
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc
FUR 'FREE est mates or!
alum num
replacement
w ndows srdrng storm doors
and w ndows R:a1llng Phone
Charles L sle Syracuse Oh o
Carl
Ja cob
Sa les
Representat ve
V
V
Johnson and Son Inc
4 30 tfc
-+-------------
'
some new stgnals
U anyone wants a road Sign hke Slow
Stop
Curves
Ahead, etc JUst ask hun and he II pick one up for you He
considers 11 a game, nppmg off the h1gh\\ay departm ent Of
course he charges $10 and up for the s 1gns to pa) lor the gas he
May 22 1974
A smcere new re la t onsh1p Will
result th s year w th one you 11
+
742-5293
-- -----------
31p
'
My lnend Ja~k IS a collector He has slop and go traffic
lights m his bedroom that he got when the Cit) \la s pultlng up
+
+
C BRADFORD Aucf oneer
AUTOMOBILE rnsurance been
Comolete Serv ce
cancelled?
Lost
your
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
operator s lrcense Call ~2
Rae ne Oh o
7428
Cntt Bradford
6 15 tfc
5 1 tfc
------------~~
Rap
For Wednesday May 22
1974
ARIES (March 21 Apnl 191
Ke e p ym• 1ps seated today If
you don t yo u re I kely to le t
s ometh ng tha t was told you n
con! dence out at the bag
TAURUS IAp"l 20 May 20)
II you re not careful yo u re
go ng to b e far nore ge nerous
' a s1tua t on lhat you nlended
10 bt! You want to make a
good mpress on
GEMINI (May 21 June 201
Be sure goals you re a tm 19 tor
a re not too nflated and
unrea st c Yo u II be d sap
po nted whe n hey don t mate
at ze
CANCER (June 21 July 22)
fh s s not a good day to re ly
too heav y on others to help
you w Ul pe rso na l prob len s
ce yuu re hav ng performed I
you want tl ltntshed properly
AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Feb
19) Theresa hltle too muc h of
the gamb ler m you today
You re apt to take nsks you
normally wou!dn t Be careful
PISCES (feb 20 March 20)
You re prone lo exaggerate a
b1! today to bolster your ego
Go ahead 1f you want to but
you re the only one who I be
1eve what you re lay ng down
• 862
OPEN Rog e,.. Hysell s Garage ..,.
near Cro .) s oads on State
SEPT C TANKS
cleaned
Route 124 a 30 to 6 p m
Modern San1tatron 992 3954 or
Monday through Sa turday
992 7349
Phone 992 56 82 or 992 7121
10 23 tfc
5 15 26tc
READY MIX
CONCRETE
delrvered r ght to your H & W Refr gerat on Ser\irces
Refr gerators fre ezer a r
protect Fast and easy Free
conditioners and commerc at
est mates Phone 992 3284
un1ts Phone 992 5587 or 99 1
Goegle n Ready M x Co
7204
Mrddleport Oh to
v
S 1526tp ...
6 30 tfc
EXPERIENCED
parnters
Reasonable rate s Call 99:2
3538
Go Slow' On Jac k Th~ Rlp.()ffcr
21
'A84
• 75
.. AK9S4
EAST
WESTIDl •
.Q1094
'KJ97 52
'10
1083
KQJ64
.. QJ1083
.. 7
SOUTH
• AK753
'Q63
A92
BODY
WILL trim or cut trees and
shrubbery Also clean out
basements a ll cs etc Phone
9A9 3221 or 742 4441
.t 23 26tc
By Helen and Sue Bolle!
Skies are cloudy but bright
NORTH
Work ou t your own so!utrons
LEO (July 23 Aug 22)
You re counl ng a ltttle too
heavtly on luck to get you
1hrough so mett1tng today
You I tare belter f you rely on
you r sk lis
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sepl 221
Your aHarrs should be runn ng
smoothly but t would be a rn s
taK e lo laKe H'ungs for granted
A watchful eye s sttll needed
LIBRA (Sepl 23 Ocl 23) II
you make an error where you
are concemed 11 s bound to be
a whopper Concentrate con
cer Irate concentrate
SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22)
You I start out w th good tn
tenllons but you II be eas ly led
as tray II s un tkely you 11 do
1he produc t ve th ngs you m
tended lo do today
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23
Dec 21) Don 1 behave too 1n
dependently n a srtual1on
where you have a partner tn
valved II w111 take two heads
to sol ve tOday s problem
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan
19) It w II prove to your benef I
to c losely supervtse any serv
--G~e~n-e;:~i~n Rap
WIN AT BRIDGE
•
N lnd Ave
Middleport 0
Under New MiJnagement
Pets For Sale
-------r-------
8 30-Banacek 3 4 15 Hawatt Ftve 0 8 10 Movtes I Love
You Goodbye 13
Love Hate Love 6
9 QO--Biack Journal 33 The Way Thmgs Are 20
9 31f-Book Beat 20 Movte Cry R•pe 8 10
10 DO-Mi!rcvs Welby M D 6 13 Wa•hlngton Slraoghl Tatk 33
News 20 Pollee Story 3 4 15
10 3Q-Day At Noght 33
11 DO-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janak\ 33
11 3Q-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Dea lh To Sister Mary 6 Mov1es
If He Hollers Let Him Go' 8 Days of W1ne and Roses
10 Untouchables 13
12 Jo-News 13
1 DO-Tomorrow 3 4 Take F1ve For Ltfe 15 Death To Sister
Mary 13
2 DO-News 4
2 31f-News 13
RACINE OHIO
Open 8 Ttl S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mat n Pom eroy 0
CALL CARL NELSON
PHONE 992 5083
THE DAILY
SENTINEL
•
On Most Amencan Car•
OFFICE SUPPLIES
NELSON
News, Notes
Delivered to Job Stte
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
992 2094
Stop In and
Floor Display
We repa 1r lawn mowers and
gr-rden tractors
EXPERT
POMEROY
HOME & AUTO
Help Wanted
NOTICE
ANNUAL MEETING
k
ButlttoYour Specs
Auto Sales
PAPER CARRIER
REPAIR
MATERIALS CO
77l55S4
Mason W Va
Under N ew Manageme nt
606 E Mam
AUTOMOTIVE
•
l>or Free Esftmale inqUir e
now about a beaulrful new
roof tn fa shmn colors
N 1'nd
TUESDAY MAY 21 1974
6 DO-ABC News 13 Sesame Sl 20 News 3 4 Trvth or Conseq
6 New• 8 10 15 Ltll~a• Yoga & Yov 33
6 3()-News 6 8 10 NBC New• 3 4 15 Room 222 13 Patchwork
33
7 DO-What sMy L~ne8 Dusly s Tra•ll3 Elec Co 20 Truth or
Conseq 3 Beat The Clock 4 News 6 10 H•gh School TV
Honor Soc•ely 15 Avdubon Wtldl1le Theatre 33
7 3D-To Tell The Truth 6 New Proce ts Right 8 10 RFD 20
Hollywood Squares 3 Dealers Cho1ce 4 Beat The Clock 13
Call of the West 15 Lenox Qvartet Haydon s Opus 20 33
8 DO-Happy Days 6 13 8 111 Moyers Journal 33 Nova 20
Adam 12 3 4 15 Maude 8 10
COMPLETE
WOOD TRUSSES
pag e 609 Me gs Co unty Deed Odds and Ends 215 North Re cord s and Volume 130 page Se cond St for tu rn Jure
EXPERIENCED
161 Me gs
County
Deed barga ns Wr ll se ll your
PORTABLE
typewr
ter
Sm
th
m er c hand se th e au c: t on way
Records
Corona One e lectr c broom 1967 F IAT Sed a1 12 4 very good
Ca I 992 3509
Savc~nd exce pt about 4acres
sma ll black and whrte Zen th
5 t 2otc
CJllli1ltion 25 rn les per ga len
3 BEDROOM hou se loca ted one
so ld to Le onard Koen g 2 1
TV homemade qu II wr ng
$450. ~one 9~9 4609
m le from c tv lim rt s on Route
ac res so ld to James and Eth e
er wash er Phone 992 33 59
5 2 51 c
7 Newly remodeled K tchen
Jeffers and about 6 of an acre 4 FAM jL Y Yard Sale off Route
5 2 Stc
7 on 143 May 22 thr ough 25th
I v ng room w th bath and
sold for h ghway purposes
From th e largest Truck or
1968 CHEVELL E V8 eng ne
Clothes all s zes and lots of
utI tv room II 1terested
Also ex c eptmg 15 38 acres and
Bulldozer Rad1alor to the
18 1 FT F berglas s boat wrth
c:h ldren s c lothes
au! om a t c tr an sm ss on $600
ca ll 992 5128
10 a cr es pr ev rouslv sold by W
smallest Heater Core
ler
and
105
h
p
motor
tra
5
21
2tc
Call
992
3S38
5
19
6tp
H South and Ora B Sou th
ful y equ pp e d pr ce d for
5 21 Jtp
Nathan B1ggs
You are requ red to answer
qu ck sale $1 695 Phone 992
Rad1ator Spectaltsl
the Compl a nt w th n 28 days 4 FA MILY yard Sale May 23
3877
1972 DODGE Charg e r SE Good
24 and 25 at 965 Ash Stree t
a fter the la st publ cat on of th s
5 21 ti c
le
oort
10
a
m
t
II
4
p
m
Mldd
cond ton $2 100 before J un e
not ce wh ch w II be publ shed
SMITH NELSON
Good s um mer c lothes nfant WAITRE SS ESwanted Apply n
1 Phon e 99 2 3663
on ce eact week for s x con
16
FOO
T
Sea
Star
super
deluxe
through
adults
Furntture
A
5
21
6tp
person
Crow
s
Steak
House
s ecut \i e weeks
Th e la s t
MOTORS, INC.
bass or pleasure boat 135
lot of odd s and ends
5 14 tf c
pubt cation w 11 be made on
Ev nrude motor Lt ttl e Dude 1969 CHEVY Townsman stat on
5 21 Jtc
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2174
Jtme 4 1974 and the 28 days for
trarler all 73 model Boat ha s
HOUSEKEEPER needed for
wagon $1 195 good cond t on
answer w rl l s tart on that date
ta chometer speedomete r
e ld er ly lady
Reference
Phon e 99 7 7670
In case of you r farlure to FOUR fam ty yard sale at 367
automatrc anchor bu If n
Hamrtton St
M ddleport
requ red Call 992 5293
5 21 2tc
ansNer or otherw se respond as
ba t welt
b lg e pump
5 21 tfc
May 22 23 and 24th 10 am to
r~qurred by the Oh o Rules of
spotltght etectr c troll ng
3 p m Turn at Speed Queen
C vii Proce dure tudgm ent by
motor depth .. f nder 3 sw vet 1949 W LL Y S 2 dr s tatton
Laundrymat on dead e nd JANITOR full ttme Ap ply n
default w 1 be re ndered aga nst
wagon w fh t tt e for parts
person
Me
gs
IIJn
seats
bu 11 n ro d boxes new
s
treet
You for rei ef demanded n th s
Phone 992 3646
5
19
3tc
batter
es
and
car
petrn
g
5
21
3tc
comp la nt
5 11 4tc
Actual cost $4 695 w t se ll for
- :c: - ~ ------ --S2
650
Phone
992
2335
YARD
Sa
Le
101
Park
Street
Larry E Spencer
5 21 tt c 1964 CHEVEL L E excellent
Middleport from 9 am to 7
ClerK of Courts
runn ng cond !ton Fre dd y
p m Cloth ng old dlstles
WANTED
Common Pleas Court
Thabet Mason W Va
1971
LOWREY
Organ
$8
50
depress
on
glass
a\ion
bot
Me gs County Oh o
5 15 fi e
Excellent ~::ond I on
Phon e
tieS etc
{4) 30 (5) 7 14 21 2B (6 ) 4 6t c
9A9 4566
5 21 3tc
5 71 5tp 1967 ONE !on Ford SlaKe bed
PUBLIC NOTICE
RACINE F re Dept
and
trucK Ptlone 992 2550 or 742
IN
( 11 Pursuan t to Amended
INTERNATION AL 25 mow er
AuK ll~ry sponso r ng ch1cken
6551
Senate Bill No 169 of the 110th
that wri t f 1 Far ma ll H
barbec ue Sunday May 26
4 JO tfc
Genera l Assembly effective
tractor 6 ft cut tn good
se r v ng beg ns 11 30 am
POMEROY
December 17th
1973
t he
cond hon Phon e 992 6056
1968 CHEVROLET Suburban 6
5 19 Jtc
D rector of the Oh o Depart
5 21 31c
cy ttn der 4 speed Good gas
ment of Admrn1stratrve Ser MEIG S Coun tv Hum ane Soc•e ly
m lea ge
Harold Brewe r
vrces s au thorrzed to offer at
MOTORCYCLE
650
Spt1f
re
for
Long Bottom Phone 985 355 4
Thr ft Shop open 10 am tIt
publrc sa te ceria n rea l
sa le Phone 667 3263
5 17 ti c
4 30 p m every Fr day and
property n M e gs County Oh o
5 21 ] tp
Sa turday New used s toc k
known as the Southea s tern
arrr\i ng weekly Cloth ng
Branch of !he Ohro Agrrcultura
TWIN
NEEDLE S EWING
co llect bles
applrances
Research and Development
MACHINE S 1974 Mod e l rn
P~ONE
treasures records p c tures
Center The property Is located
walnut stand All features 1 BEDROOM hou se n M d
books lamps toys Located
n Sect ons 4 S and 11 rn
bu It rn to make fancy deS1gns
dleport New k tc hen and
ac
ross
fro
m
Pomeroy
Post
Cotumb a Townsh p Me gs
and do stre tctl se w ng Al so
DEPENDABLE person wanted
bath app ances n cl ud ed
Off ce
County approK mately one half
buttonholes bl nd h e ms etc
lo babysrt n my home for two
Roofing Spoulln~
Ca l 992 5310
5 12 tfc
m le east of the v llage of
543 35
c ash
or
t erms
boys ages one year and 8
4__.25 26tc
Alummum S1dmg
Carpenter on Slate Route 143 CONCERN lNG Luke 18 26 n
ava tabl e Ptlone 992 265 3
vears 5 days per week Some
and con tarn s 330 9.7 acres
5 14 tf c HOUSE 7 room s and bath w th
weekends mcluded w th the 5
And Complete
the B ble Is ther e a plan of
(2) The d rector shall sell the
days Wrrte Box 166 M d
gas fu rna ce n Pom eroy Ca I
salvation"
Yes
Mark
16
16
Remodeling
property to !he h ghest ac
dleport References reQu red VACUUM CLEA NER S E lec tro
99 2 3807
s een
by
ap
Acts 2 38
cepfable brdder at not tess than
Hyg
ene
New
Demonstrators
Job
begms
th
e
end
of
May
po
ntm
en
t
5 17 6tc
the approved appra sed va lu e of
has a I clean rng attachments
5 21 3 p
5 17 61C
PHONE
One Hu n dred Th rty Frve ------------p lus th e new Electro Su ds for
------------Thousand (5135 000 00 ) Dollars
shampoorng carpe t Only
(3) The terms of sale shall be
S27 50
cas h
or
terms NtCE 3 bedroom home for sal e
742-6273
$11 000 Phone 992 3975 or 992
ten {101 per cent of the purchase
ava tabl e Phone 992 2653
2571
pr ce m cash benk draft or
5 14 tf c
4J9tfc
cert f ed check on the date of
sa le with the balance payable
STEREO rad o am fm 8 tr ack
wrthm s xty {60) days after the
!ape combrnat on 4 speaKer
date of sa e If the balance of the Of the Sutton and Chester
sound
system
Balance
purchase pr ce s not rece ved
$109 72 or easy t erms Ca ll
Mutual
Farmers
Fire
l~tWtlhm s xty (60) days the
992 3965
brdder shal! forfett the moneys surance Co , Inc at the
,
5 14 tfc
patd The d r ector mav re1 ect
Forrest
Run
United
any and all b ds
STRAWBERRY plants Rt 338
14 1 The sate shall take place Methodist Church. 9 00 A M
near Rae me LocKs and Dam~
at 12 00 Noon Frrday May 31
Charlre Foster 247 2309
Monday,
June
3,
1974
All
1974 at the farm managers
s 14 10tc
restdence located tust north
policy holders welcome
and west of the ntersectton of
GaillpOir:i
A c 4 row corn planter wtth
Paul H Baer, Sec Treas
Sta te Route 1.43 and Me gs
rnsect crde and tung crde
County Road No 10
attachment wrll f t AC NEW LISTING - 3 apls One 2
tractor or any 3 po nt tractor
B R apt down 1 B R apl vp
&
THE OHIO DEPARTMENT KOSCO.l • KOSMETICS
Phon e 992 2307
and
a 3 B R apt over double
WIGS
For
a
good
line
of
WANTED
OF
ADMINISTRATIVE
experienced
5 19 31p
RACINE
garage N1ce leve l lot on
Cosmettcs fr endly servrce
SERVICES
plumber none other need
1
STORY
PERMA STONE 3
DIVI SION
OF
P UBLIC
and someoqe to c hat wrth
apply All Weather Rootrng
STRAWBERRIES Phone 949 corner For qu1ck sale at
BR
LARGE
MODERN
gtve me a ralt Helen Jane
WORKS
"
331 North Second Avenue
4171 Ra cme
$25 500 00
KITCHEN
J lh
BATHS
Brown 992 5113
Middleport or phone 992 2550
5 19 tfc NEW LISTING - Br ck veneer
CARPET THROUGHOUT
R A NESSLINGER
4 30 He
3 19 tfc
3
B
R
all electnc home
FULL BASEMENT 2 CAR
Deputy Orr ector
6 ROW mount ed I eld sprayer
Modern ktl w1th cook and bake
GARAGE
ALL
ONE
A TO Z Mart used furnrshed
Call 985 3805
Otnrng area
full
LA RGE
FLAT
WELL
applrances c/othrng d shes
{5J 21 28 2tc
5 19 3tc urpts
LANDSCA PED
LOT
and mise Rt 33 oppos te
basement and 2 car garage
PRICED MID TWENTIE S
Ira ler cou rt Hartford W 3 ROOMS and bath turn shed GOOD gas hot water h ea ter 17 $30 000 00
Va
apartment extra n ce Adutts
x 65 mobrle home 3 bedrooms NEW LISTING - New 3 B R
only Deposrt requ ired Phone
4 10 lfc
fully carpe ted Ca ll even ngs home n the country All
RUTLAND
.NOTICE OF
992 3205 before 7 30 p m
992 5832
electnc large ktf wtth cook
APPOINTMENT
DEEM Custom Butcher ng
5 19 3tc
5 19 3tc and bak,e un1ts l'h baths
Case No 21'120
Meet Process ng Phone 667
3BEOROOMS LARGE KIT
S28 000 00
2 BEDROOM unfurnrshed MINIBIKE $125 we tghts $15
3608 Coolville Ohro
Estate Of BIRDIE MAE
LIKE
NEW
CARPET
5 5 26tp
apartment Very n ce w th
81 ACRES - Gas well for hea t
BAKER Deceased
portable ster eo w th 1 por
ALUM S IDIN G
OWNER
sma ll yard and garage 127
Notice Is hereby gtven that
7 rooms bath 2 barns and ali
table speaker 525 Call 247
WILL HELP F=INANCE
L n c oln H ill
Call T racy
Mary v rg n a Hrndy of Seneca
2641 after 5 p m
mtneral s Large stock farm
FOR QUALIF IE D BUYER 1
Whaley 992 3054
Falls N Y and Artte Mae
5 19 3fp pond Lots of young t1mber 40
PRICED
BELOW"
5 19 6tc
BuskrrK of M ddleport Ohro 3 POINT h tch cull r\i ator Phone
acres of hay $32 500 00
MARKET $12 000
have been duly appo nted co
843 2963
CLELAND
FARMS
AND COUNTRY SPOT - 7 rooms
Executrrces of the Estate of
5 21 2tc 3 A~u 4 ROOM furn shed and
GREENHOUSE A \iar ely of bath gas F A furnace utlltty
Brrd e Mae Baker deceased
unfurntshed
apartments
OFFICE-446 3643
ca bbage and lo"Jato plants w1th cellar Askmg $9 500 00
late of Me gs County Oh o
OLD Upr ght p anos
Any
Phon e 992 5434
for sale Also broccolr and
EVENINGS
Credttors are reQutred to ftle
What w1ll you g1ve
condlt on pay ng $10 cash
4 12 tfc
caul flower sweet peppers
dud McGhee- 446 1255
the r claims w th sad f due ary
Wrrte g ve drrectrons
to
hot peppers eggplants head CATTLE FARM - Noce \aymg
c. M r Ike W seman-446
w th in four months
WITTEN PIANO CO P 0 PRIVATE meet ng room for
lettu ce
and
EASTER tractor land 2 farm pond s
37116
Dated thts 15th day of May
Box 18 Sar d s Oh o 43946
any organrzatlon phone 992
FLOWERS pansy mums
barn and good fences Timber
1974
3975
4 26 30tp
azalea
hydrangea
and mmerals S59 600 00
3 11 tfc
geranrums petunia s severa l
Ma nn ng D Webste r CASH pard for all makes and
k nds of hang ng baskets
Judge
models of mob le homes 4 ROOM furn shed apartmen t
Gerald
ne Cleland Racrnc
Co urt of Common Plea s
Phone area code 614 423 9531
3 BEDROOM mob1 e home
Ohro
Ava tab le Saturday
Phon e
Probate D v rs on
.t 13 He
pract cally new 73 model 65 x
3 29 If c.
992 3658
12 s tuated on 1 2 acre
5
16
tiL
151 21 28 !61 4 3t c
OLO furnrture oak tab les
pr val e lot wrth all utr l I es
FOR
Memor
e~r
ue~r
...
e
c locks tee boxes brass beds
large garden area (a lready
selec t ron of Flowers Baskets
apartmen t
d shes desks or comple te FURNI S HED
planted) 12 x 12 storage
Sprays
Faye
s
G
ft
Shop
adult s only n M dd lepor t
households Wr te M D
buddmg 36 x 12 patro r ew
North Second St M ddleport
Phone 992 3874
Mrller Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohro
und e rp nnrng and c ustom
5 7 tfc
5 12 tfc
call 992 7760
steps \Mobde home eQu pped
s 13 tfc
w th modern house type
..,ROCERY
bus
ness
for
sale
APARTMENT furniShed a r
furnttu r e heavy duty Whirl
Bu
ld
ng
for
sale
or
lease
cond rt oned Reasonab le rent
pool washer and dryer
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
12 m les from Pomeroy Call
Span Sh Amerrcan bedroom
to 10 p m for appo nlment
304 773 5118
su t e Broyle Htl l sofa map e
INTERESTED n berng your
3
20
tfc
5 14 He
hu_t ch deeptreeze new end
own boss and ownrng your
tables tamps and other
own
bus ness?
L rmrted OFFICE s pace a nd bu ld ng 1972HoNOASo~-4Cylnder
furnrture $13 000 for all or
Phone 98 5 3828 after 6 p m
amount of ca pttal necessar.y
Mason area Good loca l on
would cons der se ll ng un
5 16 6tc
608 E
Th s gorn~ bus ness can be
Wrll remodel to suit tenant
furniShed PhOne 992 2335
By Mrs L Balderson
frnanced Call 992 5786
Ca ll (304) 173 5118
MAIN
5 21 tfc
SIOR Salt Works E
4 29 26tc
Mrs Mane Swan of Long
5 14 tfc EXCEL
Mam St Pomeroy All kmds
POMEROY, 0
Bottom Mrs Hazel Edge! and
of salt water pellets water
4 MOBILE homes two 12x50 1
FUR N ISHED
apartmen t
nuggets block salt and own
year old and 2 bedroom one
Mrs Margaret Brown VISited Chevalier spent the weekend
MIDDLEPORT
1
story
adults on ly Phone 992 5592
Oh o R 1ver Salt Phone 992
12x65 1969 J bedroom one 2
frame 6 rooms 3 B.R dlntng
4 9 tfc
wltli Mrs Bess Larkms
3891
bedroom lOxSO Phone 742
With Mr and Mrs Lowell
R
dtntng
bath some
5980
6 5 tfc
Recent visitors at the Chevalier and fam1lj. at
1 BEDROOM furn rshed apt
paneling & carpettng leve l
5 7 tfc
Wilhams -Balderson
home Mansfield
WE ARE p c.k ng up a p ano In
Call 992 3173 after 4 p m
lot A good bvy at $8 500 00
your area and would like
5 20 3tc
BERRY MILLtl-o( MOOt le Hom e
were Mrs Margaret Douglas
POMEROY Bus1ness
Mrs Ben Buckley IS a patient
some responsible party to
Sa les has a lot to off er when
room w1th apartment over
of Hamsonville Mrs Clara at Camden-Clark Hospital 1n
take over payments catt
you star t shopp ng for your
75 ft fronlage lots of
Credtt Manager (614) 772
Mob le Home You can beat
Hull and Mr and Mrs Jumor Parkersburg
5669 or wr le 260 East Ma n
parking space garage on
the htQh deprec atton you II
AKC
Brrttany
pups
ready
to
go
Hull of Waldo, Mrs Roy F1ck
Street Ch llrcothe Oh o 45601
ha\ie on your home ttle ft\St
Ma1n St S16 500 00
.lean Whitehead and Isaac
May 15 through 20th 2 hun
_. 7 lfc
two year;; by shopp ng for a
and Beth Anne of Columbus
ters only Mr Ed s Brrttanys
MIDDLEPORT Large
Frydman of Colwnbus v1s1ted
tate model used Mob1le Home
5 mr es on 50A from Athens
bnck has 3 apartments for
REGISTERED Angus bulls
C B C club met With Ronald recently
Here are some every day low
at the Ernest
Phone 448 3809
Call or see B Witte Rock tncome lots of parking
prrces
and Ella Osborne Busmess Whitehead home
5 12 10tc
Spr ng s 992 27 9 after s p m
space always rented walk
5 15 6tc to shop $22 soo 00
sess1on was conducted by
6Dx 12 VtS on 3 bedroom $5 995
John Buchanan was a pallent AKC Ce ll e pupp es Phone
60x12
K ng 2 bedroom 1'12 bath
Denver Weber, president The at Holzer Medical Cbmc 10
(304) 675 3055
MIDDLEPORT - Lol for
HOME GROWN tpmato plants
$5 995
5 19 7tc
i mproved Mex can yellow home or trailer 70x90
co'Olmumty flower fund dnve Gallipolis
6Cl x12 Elcona 2 bedroom ss A'9S
rub lee lirnds 1350 Also hot uttlltaes near In good netgh
60xl2 Fleetwood 2 bedroom
IBS been completed A cleanup
peppers
and
mangoes
S5 995
borhood ONLY S2 000 00
Thomas Hayman across
project for Reedsville was
2 - 10 w des S2 995 each
POMEROY
1'12
story
from Mun c1pat Park n
1 Bank repossess on super n ce
discussed The hosts displayed
frame
3
BR
balh
THE
VILLAGE
Fabrrcs
Syracuse
S500 and take over payments
Tupper
s
PI"
ns
well
5
12
18tc
basement
uttltty
some
antique
newspapers,
I
established bustness w th low
carpeting & panelmg large
These are most ly late model
magazmes and books Refresh
nves t ment
For more n
homes and the ~rices nclude
lot for children HW floors,
for_.mat1on see at V ltage
men ts were served to the
your del very and coniple te
SIO
000
00
By PHIL PASTORET
F alJrrcs
set up So for an honest to
Browns, Webers, Whiteheads,
YOU LL GIVE UP LITTLE
5 20 4tp
goodness oood deal stop m
- ANO GET A LOT - IN
Pickens' and Dav1d Brown
The neighbor 15 really mto
today at Berry Miller Mob le
Home Sales 705 Farson
OUR CHOICE LISTINGS!
The next meeting will be at the th1s ecology thmg He bought 1967 MERCURY Monterey 475
Street Belpre Oh o ~hone
CALL
TODAY
Phone
992
2693
weekdays
an
ecolog1cal
lawn
mowe
r
IBrown home
423 9531 c losed Sunday
5 16 12tp
,.....
.,....
992 2259 or 992 2S68_
a goat
4 30 tfc
s 17 6tc
Mr
and Mrs
Edward
For Rent or Sale
..
ASK US ABOUT
E FABRICATED
PR
5 q J tc
20"-3 HP
•52.95
Self Propelled
22"- 3% HP
•76.95
POMEROY MOTOR CO.
Notice
Donald Poo le r Ches ter 98 5
morn ng s or
5 19 31C
;e~~ n~ac t y
Tuesday Ma) 21 1974
Television Log
•
1
PUS tiC NOTICE
TO H L COE N and VADA
13- The Dally Sentmel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0
I
\
�. l Classz~ -f.:•zed s Get R esu lts., p~~J.~~·;;_.~~~~~~~··· J~.~ B us1ttess
.
. sfervtces
.
Sentzne
1
\:======~~;:=::;~======::::=--~=-===;:-r==::;~~~=::=:::====~-.
12 - The Dmll Sent mel lfilddleport Pomeroy 0
l'uesday May 21, 1974
I
For Sale
•
COE N
Card of Thanks
whose address•• are MY
~fif~:~:~i~ndd f~~~~t~
w
TO The u1-1known h ers
see• legatees ex.eculors
adm nrstrators and ass gns of
H L Co en and Vada Coen f
they are deceEtsed
You are nereby not 1 ed t hat
you have been named deten
dants n a l ega l action en t tied
Roberta C
0 Br en
el
al
ptamtlffs vs H L Coen et al
de f endan t s
Th1 S act on ha s
been ass •gncd Case No 15 542 n
n e Common Pl eas Court of
Oh o <17569
The obtcct of the com pia nl s
to dct erm ne hers and part t on
o 1 a1 d gas underi Y ng rea
es ta te sit uated
n Salsbury
Tow 1Sh p
Me gs Coun t y
th a nk s for th e
~~ ~~~~e;g cardn~y ald p;:t:~~
dev
Me 1gs County
heartfet
Oh o
tlos prtal za fton and a very
s pec al thanks to th e Holze r
Med cal Center ' la tt
Or
Harder and my wonderful
n e ghbor s
and
c hur c h
fr ends
ThanKs to Rev
Rob ert Bumgarner for h s
frequ en t vr s ts Mr s Ralptl
Rade l ffe Sy ra cuse Oh o
52 ! lip
-----------WE WISH to thank. all our
fr e nd s
ne ghbors
and
retat ves for the r k. ndnes•
and sympa thy after th e dt;>all
of our wrfe and moth e r
Gerald ne Eynon Spe c a l
thanKs to Rev Po l ng and
Re v Sellers for ttle r K nd and
consol ng words and to th e
Ew ng F uneral Hom e t he
EM S th e pa ll bear er s and to
those send ng cards flow ers
and food and to all tho se who
help ed n any way Em
Eynon
Son De nn s a nd
Fam ly
5 21 lip
@)
2 SIGNS
"AN~
OF
(II'-
QUALITY
Pomeroy
Motor Co.
;>
wh ch s desc r bed as tot lows
A ll of th e northwest quarter of
)ec t on 34 Tow nsll p 2 n Range
13 o f the Oh o Com pany s
Purchase conta n ng 160 acres
:>e the Si!m e mor e o r tess
Be ng on e of tile tra ct s or
parce ls of lan d conveyed to the
M e gs County 0 I & Coal
Con pany by deed dated Sept
Aucl on
e\iery
18 1865 and recorded n Vo l 29 P OLLY S
Fr day 1 D m at PMk -'lnt1
pag~> 118
119 an d 120 Me,gs
H gh Sts AnltQues collec tor
County Dee d Re cords
1fem s ant qu e !u rn lur e
F ur th er r e f erence Is made o
Deeds r ecorded n Volume 34 co lor T V s Step n P & J
IY71 DODGE CORONET
SI69.S
Stat1on Wagon loca l car l1ke new 1st I ne f res
automaftc gold f nt sh dean tntertor 318 V 8 power
steertng & au lomafte tran s
1970 NOVA CPE
$1545
Loca l 1 owner car good ftres 6 cy l w1th au tom af tc t rans
radro blue f n sh spot less c lean blue nte nor
$1445
1970 FORD MAVERICK
wrfh
aulomatrc
trans
Local 1 owner good t. res 6 cyl
radro blue f n1 sh spotless clean blue ntenor
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY, OHIO
For Sale
Wanted To Rent
PA ST URE for 7 year I ng
he fer s Phon e 64 3 2963
5 21 2tc
, --
SOD~~~SE(~~a~gm9~~0~1~11fl n ts
TOMATO pan ts Marg lob e
Oxharf
Cam pb ell s
and
ye llow 40c per doz Phon e
991 6602
5 21 Jtc
IS YOUR ROOF
LEAKING?
IS IT COLOR FADED?
WE HAV E a ll your uphols tery
ne ed s
Burlap
den m
cambrc foam glue 7. pp ers
tack ng s trrp s pr ng s rmd
c Ip s ch p boar d buttons
tw ne sew ng ttl read
egs
upho ls t ery booK s da cro
spr ng tw ne tacks we lt .::ord
c otton sw vet ba ses and
foam foan foam Po n eroy
622 Ea st Matn
Recovery
S tr ~e t Ph one 99'1 755 1
5 15 261C
MOWERS
As Long As They Last
POMEROY LANDMARK
..... _ Jack W Carsey Mgr
~
Phone 992 2181
r,
All WEAJH• ER
HARDWARE
Mt~port
Pomeroy
PH. 949-3611
HOGG &ZUSPAN
RACINE GARAGE
and
- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094
FURNITURE
Pomeroy Home & Auto
Set~
Our
I
_j
INTERIOR EXTERIOR
PAINTING
ROOF PAINTING
Real Estate For Sale
992·2156
PRICE
CONSTRUCTim
____________ __
PAPER
CARRIER
WANTED
IN RACINE
Real Estate For Sale
THE
WISEMAN
THE
DAILY SENTINEL
AGJ;NC'\
PHONE 992 2156
--------------
For Rent
---------- ---Wanted To Buy
- - ---------- -
Mobile Homes For Sale
Reedsville
Business 1Jpportumt1es
ClElAND
REALTY
--------------
Water Eleclnc Gas Sewer
L1n es
rn s talled
Work
guaranteed
Dozer Backhoe Trucks
Limestone & F1ll Dtrt
Commeroal Restdenttal
Construct ton & Remodel
8-K EXCAVATiftG
COMPANY
J
All WEATHER
HARDWARE
N 2nd Ave
777 Pearl Street
WEDNESDAY MAY22 1974
6 00 - Sunnse Semtnar .t Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Urban Leagve 10
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30 ~ FtveM1nutes to Live By 4 News6 B1ble Answers 8 The
Story 13
6 35 - Col umbus Today 4
6 45- Farmftme 10 Morn.ng Report 3
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Dick Van Dyke 13 H R
Pufnstuf 6
7 30 - Rocky & Bu llwtnkle 13 New Zoo Revue 6
8 00 - New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33 Capt Kangaroo 8 10
Jeff s Collie 6
8 25 - Jack Lalanne 13
8 30 - Brady Bunch 6
8 55 - News 13
9 00- Paul D xon .4 Fnendly Junctton 10 AM 3 Abbott Costello 8 Phtl Donahue 15 Wtld Wtld West 6 Mo\i e When
My Baby Smtles AI Me 13
9 30 - To Tell the Trvth 3 Tatlletales 8
9 55 - Chuck Wh 1te Reports 10
10 00 - Donah Shore 3 15 Jokers W1ld 8 10 Company 6
10 30 - Jeopardy3 4 15 GambitS 10
11 00 - Password 13 W1zard of Odds 3 4 15 Mtke Douglas 6
Now You See It 8 10
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of Life B 10 Brady
Bunch 13 Sesame Street 33
11 55-CBSNewsB OanlmelsWorld10
12 00 - Password 6 Bob Bravn s 50 so Club • News 8 10 13
Jackpot 3 15
12 30 - Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Split Second 6 Celebr~ty
Sweepstakes 3 15 Afternoon W th DJ 13
12 45 - Elec Co 33
12 55 - NBC New• 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 Not for Women Only 15
Concentrat1on 8 What s My ltne 10
1 30- 3 On A Match 3 ' 15 As the World Tvrns 8 10 Lets
Make A Deal 6 13
2 30 - Doctors3' 15 EdgeoiNoghtB 10 GirllnMyLtfe6 13
3 00 - Another World 3 • 15 General Hospttal 6 13 Pme Is
Roght 8 10 RFD 20
3 30- One L1fe to L1ve 6 13 Phol Donahue 4 Match Game 8
10 How to Survtve a Marr1age 3 IS The Way Thtngs Are 20
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame Sf 20 33 Lucy
Show 8 Huck & Yogt 6 I Dream of Jeannte 13 Movte These
Three 10
,
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Bonanza b
Hazel 8 Jackpot' 4
Gtlltgan s Island 6 13
5 00 - Mr Roberts 20 33 Bonanza 3 Merv Grtffm 4 Andy
Gr~fftlh 8 Bog Valley6 Gomer Pyle USMC 13
5 30- Elec Co 33 Beverly H111boll1e•B Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Hogans Heroes 13 Western Star Theater 15
6 oo- News 3 4 8 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesame St 20 Per
sonaltty Behav1oral Development 33 Truth or Cons 6
6 30 - News3 • 6 8 10 15 Room 22213
Mtddleport Oh10
Phone ~92 536 7 or 992 1861
BROWN'S FIRE &
SAFETY EQUIPMENT
1\i•ddleport 0
FIRE DEPARTMENT
EQUIPMENT
EXTINGUISHER
SALES& SERVICE
HOME ALARMS
Now under new
manage ment
RON AND
KAREN THOMAS
Phone 742 4,673
742 5595
B1ll Brown. Owner
Rutland, Oh10
Stop tn and say Hello Bm~
rn th1 s ad tor a Fr.ee GtU
GENE WOLFE'S
BODY SHOP
Wtlktnson Small Engtne
992 3092
399 W Matn
~omeroy 0
Located at Modern Supply
Small Engrne Reparr
808 W Matn St
Pomeroy
PHONE 992-5271
• Lawn Boy
• Tecumseh
• Koh ler
• Wrscons.n
• All oth er
makes
DAY OR NIGHT
1 ree
Garage
Est1mates
AIR CONDITION NOW?
DITCHING SERVlCE
YES!
Water Ltnes and Power
Ltnes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sept1c tanks m
Now whtle lhe weather 1s
st1ll cool ts the best ftme It
can be mstalled at your
convem ence w1th no wattmg
around tn hot muggy
weather
Phone 992 2550
l ~telled
5ee or
Call
Bob or Roger Jeilers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232
ALL WEATiiER
HARDWARE
SEWING MACHINES Reparr
se rv ce all maKes 992 2284
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Author zed s nger Sales and
Serv ce We Sharpen Scrssors
3 29 tfc
J&B AUTO
DOZER work and clear ng by
the acre hOurly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w th over
20 years exper ence Pull ns
Excavat1ng Pomeroy Oh o
Phon e 992 2478
12 19 tf c
SEP TIC
TANKS cleaned
reasonab e rates Ph <l46
4782 Gall po rs John Rus sell
owner and op erator
5 12 tf c
SEPTIC TANKS
AROBIC
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
C LE ANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SA NITATI ON
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035
10 4 tfc
.J
Moved to Rutland 3!4 m1le
ms1de crty l1mlt on rrght
corner Btrck Sf and Rt 124
Free Estimates
Now Open for Bustness
.I.
----------- ---
~LACK
•
BARBS
e
c
News 6 10 What s My L ne 8 Truth or Conseq 3 Beat
the Clock .t Etec Co 20 Know Your Sc hools. 33 J mmy
Dean 13 I Spy 15
1 30 - To Tell the Truth 6 Sale of the Century 8 The Judge 10
Beat the Clock 13 Poltce Surgeon 3 Antrques 20 E ptsode
Ad10n 33 On the Money 4 Amencan Trrp 15
a 00 - Sonny & Cher 8 10 B II Moye r s Journa l 20 Wash ng ton
Connectlon33 Chase3 4 JaneGoodall6 13 Baseba!llS
8 30 - Theater m Amenca 33
9 00 - Cannon 8 10 One Mrllton Strong 20 Mov re
Th e
Header s 3 4 Jul e and Jackte How Swee t It Is 6 13
10 00 - Doc Ell tot 6 13 Kojak a News 20 Frniand 10 Inte rfa ce
33
10 30 - Day At Noght 33
11 00 - New• 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janak 33
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 (a nd d Came ra A 25th An
ntversary Salvte6 Movte Puppet on a Chatn 8 Strangers
at Sunrise 10 Untouchables 13
12 30 - New• 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Cand d Camera A 25th Ann \iersary
Salute Take Ftve For Ltfe 15
200 - News4
2 30 - News 13
CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
7 00 p m - Local News
7 30 p m - Country & Western ( Blue R dge Quartet K tty
Wells Show)
8 30 p m
Comedy ( Enstgn 0 Tool e Smother s Brothers
Show)
Superstar (Lloyd Brrdges Show Jun e Al lyso n
9 30 p m
Show)
7 00 -
Dear Eleanor
Thank ~ for the pra ctiCal t1ps We hope tliey end up m many
tourmg students luggage - HELEN AND SUE
JJW~Ibrn® UuJ lct_,I.J -1 ,_.
Unscram ble these four Jumblts.
one letter to each squart. to
form four ordmary "'ord!l
reserve
Curtam
nation
24 Rattle
25 - arts
2'7 Sons and
Lovers
hero
31 Overeat
32 Presbyter
37 N1genan
tr1besman
38 Collo1dal
sub-
stance
ham
22 Twm
crystal
25 Aspect
26 Girl's
name
2'7 Opposite
of max
Z8 Arab
garment
29 Slavery
33 Res1dent
(abbr )
34 Before
35 Musical
note
36 Total
38 SurroWld
39 Faust'
character
~Brink
41 Fortunetelling
cards
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
10 10
tLINKUE
IJ
WEDDEG
II
b
t
\J
C.~ ITI C.I':Z.E:.
JA'IWA~KE-R
CRYPTOQUOTES
V'
'.1
Now ammre the circled lelten
to form the 1urprlae anawer, u
I
;;;~;-:=-"-:-;;~;:)l~:::;,;:f\.::;;.A:.,;.
•~ur~l~••ted by t~e aboYe cortoon.
~ BY (
HIM (
J
XI I I 11 )
J"mbl" BRIBE
l et lerd• y •
I
~n•'"n
CHESS
TIMELY
III
DRUDGE
QOU
L SA U J
SQ
L
QSWU
DJBDUJ
S L
AUUA
QOU
I BQ
ABI U
QB
NYQUJ
FBI·
GUYBJU
NIBI
Yesterday's Cryptoquole NOTHlNG IS MORE COMMON
.,.... • ., • FOOL WITH A STRONG MEMORY --C C OOLTON
H-hen he won th11 raC'e 1l went rtght
to h" head- THE DERBY
1HA1 't"'!JriGSTERI
SO CH!!!.RFU~ AtiD
I1APPY
AHO Al
THE. SAME
North
East
Pass
1•
Double 2t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
TIME. SO
PRACTICAL At«>
~1'i3f-
South
4.t•
stuck
her
m.nd1n'
qoat till she
q•t well'
TilE BORN LOSER
\TWAS ALL
~::~=~!.~;,:--~ OUR HOTEL ~AD VIRTUALLY
STAFC
~611IDIEWA5R~IfT WHEN SHE mt.D
nt o "7><F
WOMEN'.:) UBEIIATION
HAS
SHE WAo 50 ~ARNED
EFFIC ENT I HAD
NO WOMEN ON 1HE
10 1\QR\<oJWICE AS
I WAS PRESSURED 10
HARD TD HOLD
MY JOB
HIRE ONE AS MY
A~I5TAN T
':The b1dd1ng has been
IDE~
WELL IM GlAD THAT'& ALL
BEH NO YOU '-ON AND YOU
CAN AWAIT THE ~IIW< OF
V
WHHl ~()()-lE/1.1/6 \JS
~1/E:IJ ~D,
YOUR CHilD TOGETHER'
t)I6'Rf WiJO, TO
tr
H~IJf; ~00
ST\lffi:D t>.IJD
~liJIDA
L~MP
sl:t:,..
<2'
YES I DID
'TO AVOID NA5TINESS
WITH THE BL.OOMER
FIEND HER MAUEST'I'S
GOVERNMENT IS
Gl\111-JG 'IOU A FREE
TRIP 'TO A SAFE
PLACE-
Wott
&
North
Double
1~
21
Eaol
··----·---
South
?
Pass
' Y oo South hold
+7 4 3 2 410 6 3
What do you do now"
A-Bid lwo dlamondL Year
pari- hao uked you lo bid a
.Q 9 6 5
.-K.
MARCH 'iORE£ELF
OUT TO TH WOODSHED
THIS VERI/ £ECONT 11
oall
~TEREO
TODAY'S QUESTION
Yoo b1d two d~amonds Your
partner contmues lo two hearts.
What do you do now?
I
HE~MAN GRATE
•lli ,,c:
MASON W VA
--'---~--- ---- "-~
"'
L
10ve
cookouts fhey
leave us free to enJOY the
• - •II hv ourself
I
I
•
It
One letter s1mply stands for another In thts sample A it
used for the three L's X for the two 0 s e tc Smgte letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aU
blots Each day the code letters are different
\-!OW '-lOT 10
A
how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW
cz:a;1 :~ •Mklf.!t u
MASON FURNilURE
773 5592
•
Dear Helen and Sue
As a frequent hotel guest I have observed the behaVIOr or
young people on tours Perhaps you would bke to list these dos
and don'tsfor teenagers who will be making tnps to Was hmgto n
New York andotherclbesthlssummer
D
BIG CITY VISITORS
1 AvOid runnmg m lobb1es or hallways of hotels
2 When usmg elevators don t overcrowd them and don t
bold the door for someone who IS still m h1s or her room Other
people have schedules to keep Elevators get out of order eas1 ly
often from too much playmg w1th them
3 Squattmg IS for camps, not hotel lobbies
4 Combmg your hrur should he done m private, not m a lob b)
or dmmg room It makes otlier people !eel a little •tchy
5 If a fr1end has the room he low you, VISit m your respective
rooms Don t carry on a conversation out the wmdow You may
fall forlone tlimg For anotlier adult guests aren t mterested m
9 Follow mstruct10ns of tour gu1des or bus dr1vers They ve
been through 1t and know what s best for you
JO Kee p track of your luggage An extra prur of eyes IS
useful
11 Carry a little e xtra mone) You never know when you U
need a cushiOn for a call home medical expenses extra Sldetnps, a g1fl that stnkes your fancy
t 2 If yo u go on y our own to see a pomt of mterest mqwre
beforehand the bes t \lay to get there how long 1t w1ll take and
th e cost Tin s Wlllms ure agamst cabbies driVIng you aU over
town - to ge t to a destmat1on only l1ve blocks from your hotel
ElEANOR B
23 Iron
'
•
ll
an} ttme
29 Cap
30 In
malicious
•
WHITE TV
'
people must be up and out early
7 &lore yo u amve bone up on places to be VISited You ll
e nJO) them more when yo u know their background
6 Prov1de clothes [or all weather so you U be comfortable
22 Most
Too Good to Latt
We won t go so far as to say
that every cloud has a Silver
llmng but w11l content our
selves w1th saymg that most
clouds do
South ducks the f~rst diamond as a matter of prmc1·
pie He wms the contmuat1on,
plays out h1s ace and kmg of
trumps and stops
A cloud has appeared on
the honzon, but 1f South
works thmgs out he Will fmd
1ts Silver hmng
If East h&s to follow to five
rounds of clubs South can col·
lect 10 tncks before losmg
the lead Also 1t 1s qu1te
likely that West started Wllhll red cards He had passed
ongmally and then made a
takeout double
In any event there 1s no
profit m g1vmg up South
cashes dummy s ace and kmg
of clubs and sure enough
West shows out Now he ruffs
a club, enters dummy w1th
the ace of hearts ruffs anoth·
er club, leads and ruffs h1s
last d1amond, ruffs dummy s
last club and concedes the
last two tr1cks Poor East has
19 use h1s good trumps to ruff
West's good hearts
92.1
WMPO-FM
For Sale
'I
+-i+
+-i+
yo ur co nversatiOns
6 No loud talking espec1ally alter 11 p m Many busmess
Yesterday's Answer
By Oswald & James Jacoby
•
f
Dear Shopper
Jack the Rip.oller and hiS kmd cost the Amencan tax
payer approxunately $16 5 million a year m traflic and r oad
s 1gns - and that doesn t COWlt the damage even deaths from
acc.J""ts that happen when strategic Signs came up m1ss mg
Your fnend had better lmd a safer game - and a legal \l ay
to earn money - HELEN
ACROSS
42 Unfnendly
1 Faultlmd
glance
5 Candle
DOWN
10 Toward
I Jeweler s
shelter
measure
11 Large
2 Texas
olive
cottonwood
12 Engrossed
3 H•t
13 Egg
back at
dish
4 Coddle
14 Candlenut
5 Diffident
tree
6 Soul ( Fr )
15 Hawauan
7 Body assembly
8 Ennoble
16 Marsh
9 Drwn roll
elder
( hyph wd l
17 Babes
11 Throb
m - •
15 Robust
19 Make
18 Mascagm
lace
herome
20 Expenenced 21 Sally 21- Tushlng
---~
ZENITH
COLOR lV
c
+++
Opemng lead- t K
STEREO
------ --------
'
West
GREAT
COUNTRY
j'
I
Yes, 1t s too much' Your $10 m1ght buy more than )OU
bargruned lor like an arrest lor acceptmg stolen propel t)
SUE
p S My adVIce IS Decllgn the s1gn or [ace a f1gn I whtch 1sn t
a very good rhygm but 11 s all m1gn )
by THOMAS JOSEPH
•
•lNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l
____ _________
ss
~IU-~tJ'
East West vulnerable
NEIG LER Bu ld ng Supply for
but drng hou ses phone 949
3604
c all Guy Ne gter
Rae n e Ohio
5 J 26tc
Terms!
uses and tlie mks he takes
Do you think this IS too much? - SIGN SHOPPER
mee t through a lr end In other
are as th1ngs w111 come too
easy You II make ess o t them
than you sho u d
.. 62
EXCAVATING rln1er lOAder
and backhoe work
sept c
tanks ms talled dump trucks'
and !o boys for h1re wrll haul
f 11 dirt top sort I mestone
and gravel Ca ll Bob or Roge r.
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc
FUR 'FREE est mates or!
alum num
replacement
w ndows srdrng storm doors
and w ndows R:a1llng Phone
Charles L sle Syracuse Oh o
Carl
Ja cob
Sa les
Representat ve
V
V
Johnson and Son Inc
4 30 tfc
-+-------------
'
some new stgnals
U anyone wants a road Sign hke Slow
Stop
Curves
Ahead, etc JUst ask hun and he II pick one up for you He
considers 11 a game, nppmg off the h1gh\\ay departm ent Of
course he charges $10 and up for the s 1gns to pa) lor the gas he
May 22 1974
A smcere new re la t onsh1p Will
result th s year w th one you 11
+
742-5293
-- -----------
31p
'
My lnend Ja~k IS a collector He has slop and go traffic
lights m his bedroom that he got when the Cit) \la s pultlng up
+
+
C BRADFORD Aucf oneer
AUTOMOBILE rnsurance been
Comolete Serv ce
cancelled?
Lost
your
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
operator s lrcense Call ~2
Rae ne Oh o
7428
Cntt Bradford
6 15 tfc
5 1 tfc
------------~~
Rap
For Wednesday May 22
1974
ARIES (March 21 Apnl 191
Ke e p ym• 1ps seated today If
you don t yo u re I kely to le t
s ometh ng tha t was told you n
con! dence out at the bag
TAURUS IAp"l 20 May 20)
II you re not careful yo u re
go ng to b e far nore ge nerous
' a s1tua t on lhat you nlended
10 bt! You want to make a
good mpress on
GEMINI (May 21 June 201
Be sure goals you re a tm 19 tor
a re not too nflated and
unrea st c Yo u II be d sap
po nted whe n hey don t mate
at ze
CANCER (June 21 July 22)
fh s s not a good day to re ly
too heav y on others to help
you w Ul pe rso na l prob len s
ce yuu re hav ng performed I
you want tl ltntshed properly
AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Feb
19) Theresa hltle too muc h of
the gamb ler m you today
You re apt to take nsks you
normally wou!dn t Be careful
PISCES (feb 20 March 20)
You re prone lo exaggerate a
b1! today to bolster your ego
Go ahead 1f you want to but
you re the only one who I be
1eve what you re lay ng down
• 862
OPEN Rog e,.. Hysell s Garage ..,.
near Cro .) s oads on State
SEPT C TANKS
cleaned
Route 124 a 30 to 6 p m
Modern San1tatron 992 3954 or
Monday through Sa turday
992 7349
Phone 992 56 82 or 992 7121
10 23 tfc
5 15 26tc
READY MIX
CONCRETE
delrvered r ght to your H & W Refr gerat on Ser\irces
Refr gerators fre ezer a r
protect Fast and easy Free
conditioners and commerc at
est mates Phone 992 3284
un1ts Phone 992 5587 or 99 1
Goegle n Ready M x Co
7204
Mrddleport Oh to
v
S 1526tp ...
6 30 tfc
EXPERIENCED
parnters
Reasonable rate s Call 99:2
3538
Go Slow' On Jac k Th~ Rlp.()ffcr
21
'A84
• 75
.. AK9S4
EAST
WESTIDl •
.Q1094
'KJ97 52
'10
1083
KQJ64
.. QJ1083
.. 7
SOUTH
• AK753
'Q63
A92
BODY
WILL trim or cut trees and
shrubbery Also clean out
basements a ll cs etc Phone
9A9 3221 or 742 4441
.t 23 26tc
By Helen and Sue Bolle!
Skies are cloudy but bright
NORTH
Work ou t your own so!utrons
LEO (July 23 Aug 22)
You re counl ng a ltttle too
heavtly on luck to get you
1hrough so mett1tng today
You I tare belter f you rely on
you r sk lis
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sepl 221
Your aHarrs should be runn ng
smoothly but t would be a rn s
taK e lo laKe H'ungs for granted
A watchful eye s sttll needed
LIBRA (Sepl 23 Ocl 23) II
you make an error where you
are concemed 11 s bound to be
a whopper Concentrate con
cer Irate concentrate
SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22)
You I start out w th good tn
tenllons but you II be eas ly led
as tray II s un tkely you 11 do
1he produc t ve th ngs you m
tended lo do today
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23
Dec 21) Don 1 behave too 1n
dependently n a srtual1on
where you have a partner tn
valved II w111 take two heads
to sol ve tOday s problem
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan
19) It w II prove to your benef I
to c losely supervtse any serv
--G~e~n-e;:~i~n Rap
WIN AT BRIDGE
•
N lnd Ave
Middleport 0
Under New MiJnagement
Pets For Sale
-------r-------
8 30-Banacek 3 4 15 Hawatt Ftve 0 8 10 Movtes I Love
You Goodbye 13
Love Hate Love 6
9 QO--Biack Journal 33 The Way Thmgs Are 20
9 31f-Book Beat 20 Movte Cry R•pe 8 10
10 DO-Mi!rcvs Welby M D 6 13 Wa•hlngton Slraoghl Tatk 33
News 20 Pollee Story 3 4 15
10 3Q-Day At Noght 33
11 DO-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Janak\ 33
11 3Q-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Dea lh To Sister Mary 6 Mov1es
If He Hollers Let Him Go' 8 Days of W1ne and Roses
10 Untouchables 13
12 Jo-News 13
1 DO-Tomorrow 3 4 Take F1ve For Ltfe 15 Death To Sister
Mary 13
2 DO-News 4
2 31f-News 13
RACINE OHIO
Open 8 Ttl S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mat n Pom eroy 0
CALL CARL NELSON
PHONE 992 5083
THE DAILY
SENTINEL
•
On Most Amencan Car•
OFFICE SUPPLIES
NELSON
News, Notes
Delivered to Job Stte
Wheel Alignment
'5.55
992 2094
Stop In and
Floor Display
We repa 1r lawn mowers and
gr-rden tractors
EXPERT
POMEROY
HOME & AUTO
Help Wanted
NOTICE
ANNUAL MEETING
k
ButlttoYour Specs
Auto Sales
PAPER CARRIER
REPAIR
MATERIALS CO
77l55S4
Mason W Va
Under N ew Manageme nt
606 E Mam
AUTOMOTIVE
•
l>or Free Esftmale inqUir e
now about a beaulrful new
roof tn fa shmn colors
N 1'nd
TUESDAY MAY 21 1974
6 DO-ABC News 13 Sesame Sl 20 News 3 4 Trvth or Conseq
6 New• 8 10 15 Ltll~a• Yoga & Yov 33
6 3()-News 6 8 10 NBC New• 3 4 15 Room 222 13 Patchwork
33
7 DO-What sMy L~ne8 Dusly s Tra•ll3 Elec Co 20 Truth or
Conseq 3 Beat The Clock 4 News 6 10 H•gh School TV
Honor Soc•ely 15 Avdubon Wtldl1le Theatre 33
7 3D-To Tell The Truth 6 New Proce ts Right 8 10 RFD 20
Hollywood Squares 3 Dealers Cho1ce 4 Beat The Clock 13
Call of the West 15 Lenox Qvartet Haydon s Opus 20 33
8 DO-Happy Days 6 13 8 111 Moyers Journal 33 Nova 20
Adam 12 3 4 15 Maude 8 10
COMPLETE
WOOD TRUSSES
pag e 609 Me gs Co unty Deed Odds and Ends 215 North Re cord s and Volume 130 page Se cond St for tu rn Jure
EXPERIENCED
161 Me gs
County
Deed barga ns Wr ll se ll your
PORTABLE
typewr
ter
Sm
th
m er c hand se th e au c: t on way
Records
Corona One e lectr c broom 1967 F IAT Sed a1 12 4 very good
Ca I 992 3509
Savc~nd exce pt about 4acres
sma ll black and whrte Zen th
5 t 2otc
CJllli1ltion 25 rn les per ga len
3 BEDROOM hou se loca ted one
so ld to Le onard Koen g 2 1
TV homemade qu II wr ng
$450. ~one 9~9 4609
m le from c tv lim rt s on Route
ac res so ld to James and Eth e
er wash er Phone 992 33 59
5 2 51 c
7 Newly remodeled K tchen
Jeffers and about 6 of an acre 4 FAM jL Y Yard Sale off Route
5 2 Stc
7 on 143 May 22 thr ough 25th
I v ng room w th bath and
sold for h ghway purposes
From th e largest Truck or
1968 CHEVELL E V8 eng ne
Clothes all s zes and lots of
utI tv room II 1terested
Also ex c eptmg 15 38 acres and
Bulldozer Rad1alor to the
18 1 FT F berglas s boat wrth
c:h ldren s c lothes
au! om a t c tr an sm ss on $600
ca ll 992 5128
10 a cr es pr ev rouslv sold by W
smallest Heater Core
ler
and
105
h
p
motor
tra
5
21
2tc
Call
992
3S38
5
19
6tp
H South and Ora B Sou th
ful y equ pp e d pr ce d for
5 21 Jtp
Nathan B1ggs
You are requ red to answer
qu ck sale $1 695 Phone 992
Rad1ator Spectaltsl
the Compl a nt w th n 28 days 4 FA MILY yard Sale May 23
3877
1972 DODGE Charg e r SE Good
24 and 25 at 965 Ash Stree t
a fter the la st publ cat on of th s
5 21 ti c
le
oort
10
a
m
t
II
4
p
m
Mldd
cond ton $2 100 before J un e
not ce wh ch w II be publ shed
SMITH NELSON
Good s um mer c lothes nfant WAITRE SS ESwanted Apply n
1 Phon e 99 2 3663
on ce eact week for s x con
16
FOO
T
Sea
Star
super
deluxe
through
adults
Furntture
A
5
21
6tp
person
Crow
s
Steak
House
s ecut \i e weeks
Th e la s t
MOTORS, INC.
bass or pleasure boat 135
lot of odd s and ends
5 14 tf c
pubt cation w 11 be made on
Ev nrude motor Lt ttl e Dude 1969 CHEVY Townsman stat on
5 21 Jtc
Pomeroy
Ph 992 2174
Jtme 4 1974 and the 28 days for
trarler all 73 model Boat ha s
HOUSEKEEPER needed for
wagon $1 195 good cond t on
answer w rl l s tart on that date
ta chometer speedomete r
e ld er ly lady
Reference
Phon e 99 7 7670
In case of you r farlure to FOUR fam ty yard sale at 367
automatrc anchor bu If n
Hamrtton St
M ddleport
requ red Call 992 5293
5 21 2tc
ansNer or otherw se respond as
ba t welt
b lg e pump
5 21 tfc
May 22 23 and 24th 10 am to
r~qurred by the Oh o Rules of
spotltght etectr c troll ng
3 p m Turn at Speed Queen
C vii Proce dure tudgm ent by
motor depth .. f nder 3 sw vet 1949 W LL Y S 2 dr s tatton
Laundrymat on dead e nd JANITOR full ttme Ap ply n
default w 1 be re ndered aga nst
wagon w fh t tt e for parts
person
Me
gs
IIJn
seats
bu 11 n ro d boxes new
s
treet
You for rei ef demanded n th s
Phone 992 3646
5
19
3tc
batter
es
and
car
petrn
g
5
21
3tc
comp la nt
5 11 4tc
Actual cost $4 695 w t se ll for
- :c: - ~ ------ --S2
650
Phone
992
2335
YARD
Sa
Le
101
Park
Street
Larry E Spencer
5 21 tt c 1964 CHEVEL L E excellent
Middleport from 9 am to 7
ClerK of Courts
runn ng cond !ton Fre dd y
p m Cloth ng old dlstles
WANTED
Common Pleas Court
Thabet Mason W Va
1971
LOWREY
Organ
$8
50
depress
on
glass
a\ion
bot
Me gs County Oh o
5 15 fi e
Excellent ~::ond I on
Phon e
tieS etc
{4) 30 (5) 7 14 21 2B (6 ) 4 6t c
9A9 4566
5 21 3tc
5 71 5tp 1967 ONE !on Ford SlaKe bed
PUBLIC NOTICE
RACINE F re Dept
and
trucK Ptlone 992 2550 or 742
IN
( 11 Pursuan t to Amended
INTERNATION AL 25 mow er
AuK ll~ry sponso r ng ch1cken
6551
Senate Bill No 169 of the 110th
that wri t f 1 Far ma ll H
barbec ue Sunday May 26
4 JO tfc
Genera l Assembly effective
tractor 6 ft cut tn good
se r v ng beg ns 11 30 am
POMEROY
December 17th
1973
t he
cond hon Phon e 992 6056
1968 CHEVROLET Suburban 6
5 19 Jtc
D rector of the Oh o Depart
5 21 31c
cy ttn der 4 speed Good gas
ment of Admrn1stratrve Ser MEIG S Coun tv Hum ane Soc•e ly
m lea ge
Harold Brewe r
vrces s au thorrzed to offer at
MOTORCYCLE
650
Spt1f
re
for
Long Bottom Phone 985 355 4
Thr ft Shop open 10 am tIt
publrc sa te ceria n rea l
sa le Phone 667 3263
5 17 ti c
4 30 p m every Fr day and
property n M e gs County Oh o
5 21 ] tp
Sa turday New used s toc k
known as the Southea s tern
arrr\i ng weekly Cloth ng
Branch of !he Ohro Agrrcultura
TWIN
NEEDLE S EWING
co llect bles
applrances
Research and Development
MACHINE S 1974 Mod e l rn
P~ONE
treasures records p c tures
Center The property Is located
walnut stand All features 1 BEDROOM hou se n M d
books lamps toys Located
n Sect ons 4 S and 11 rn
bu It rn to make fancy deS1gns
dleport New k tc hen and
ac
ross
fro
m
Pomeroy
Post
Cotumb a Townsh p Me gs
and do stre tctl se w ng Al so
DEPENDABLE person wanted
bath app ances n cl ud ed
Off ce
County approK mately one half
buttonholes bl nd h e ms etc
lo babysrt n my home for two
Roofing Spoulln~
Ca l 992 5310
5 12 tfc
m le east of the v llage of
543 35
c ash
or
t erms
boys ages one year and 8
4__.25 26tc
Alummum S1dmg
Carpenter on Slate Route 143 CONCERN lNG Luke 18 26 n
ava tabl e Ptlone 992 265 3
vears 5 days per week Some
and con tarn s 330 9.7 acres
5 14 tf c HOUSE 7 room s and bath w th
weekends mcluded w th the 5
And Complete
the B ble Is ther e a plan of
(2) The d rector shall sell the
days Wrrte Box 166 M d
gas fu rna ce n Pom eroy Ca I
salvation"
Yes
Mark
16
16
Remodeling
property to !he h ghest ac
dleport References reQu red VACUUM CLEA NER S E lec tro
99 2 3807
s een
by
ap
Acts 2 38
cepfable brdder at not tess than
Hyg
ene
New
Demonstrators
Job
begms
th
e
end
of
May
po
ntm
en
t
5 17 6tc
the approved appra sed va lu e of
has a I clean rng attachments
5 21 3 p
5 17 61C
PHONE
One Hu n dred Th rty Frve ------------p lus th e new Electro Su ds for
------------Thousand (5135 000 00 ) Dollars
shampoorng carpe t Only
(3) The terms of sale shall be
S27 50
cas h
or
terms NtCE 3 bedroom home for sal e
742-6273
$11 000 Phone 992 3975 or 992
ten {101 per cent of the purchase
ava tabl e Phone 992 2653
2571
pr ce m cash benk draft or
5 14 tf c
4J9tfc
cert f ed check on the date of
sa le with the balance payable
STEREO rad o am fm 8 tr ack
wrthm s xty {60) days after the
!ape combrnat on 4 speaKer
date of sa e If the balance of the Of the Sutton and Chester
sound
system
Balance
purchase pr ce s not rece ved
$109 72 or easy t erms Ca ll
Mutual
Farmers
Fire
l~tWtlhm s xty (60) days the
992 3965
brdder shal! forfett the moneys surance Co , Inc at the
,
5 14 tfc
patd The d r ector mav re1 ect
Forrest
Run
United
any and all b ds
STRAWBERRY plants Rt 338
14 1 The sate shall take place Methodist Church. 9 00 A M
near Rae me LocKs and Dam~
at 12 00 Noon Frrday May 31
Charlre Foster 247 2309
Monday,
June
3,
1974
All
1974 at the farm managers
s 14 10tc
restdence located tust north
policy holders welcome
and west of the ntersectton of
GaillpOir:i
A c 4 row corn planter wtth
Paul H Baer, Sec Treas
Sta te Route 1.43 and Me gs
rnsect crde and tung crde
County Road No 10
attachment wrll f t AC NEW LISTING - 3 apls One 2
tractor or any 3 po nt tractor
B R apt down 1 B R apl vp
&
THE OHIO DEPARTMENT KOSCO.l • KOSMETICS
Phon e 992 2307
and
a 3 B R apt over double
WIGS
For
a
good
line
of
WANTED
OF
ADMINISTRATIVE
experienced
5 19 31p
RACINE
garage N1ce leve l lot on
Cosmettcs fr endly servrce
SERVICES
plumber none other need
1
STORY
PERMA STONE 3
DIVI SION
OF
P UBLIC
and someoqe to c hat wrth
apply All Weather Rootrng
STRAWBERRIES Phone 949 corner For qu1ck sale at
BR
LARGE
MODERN
gtve me a ralt Helen Jane
WORKS
"
331 North Second Avenue
4171 Ra cme
$25 500 00
KITCHEN
J lh
BATHS
Brown 992 5113
Middleport or phone 992 2550
5 19 tfc NEW LISTING - Br ck veneer
CARPET THROUGHOUT
R A NESSLINGER
4 30 He
3 19 tfc
3
B
R
all electnc home
FULL BASEMENT 2 CAR
Deputy Orr ector
6 ROW mount ed I eld sprayer
Modern ktl w1th cook and bake
GARAGE
ALL
ONE
A TO Z Mart used furnrshed
Call 985 3805
Otnrng area
full
LA RGE
FLAT
WELL
applrances c/othrng d shes
{5J 21 28 2tc
5 19 3tc urpts
LANDSCA PED
LOT
and mise Rt 33 oppos te
basement and 2 car garage
PRICED MID TWENTIE S
Ira ler cou rt Hartford W 3 ROOMS and bath turn shed GOOD gas hot water h ea ter 17 $30 000 00
Va
apartment extra n ce Adutts
x 65 mobrle home 3 bedrooms NEW LISTING - New 3 B R
only Deposrt requ ired Phone
4 10 lfc
fully carpe ted Ca ll even ngs home n the country All
RUTLAND
.NOTICE OF
992 3205 before 7 30 p m
992 5832
electnc large ktf wtth cook
APPOINTMENT
DEEM Custom Butcher ng
5 19 3tc
5 19 3tc and bak,e un1ts l'h baths
Case No 21'120
Meet Process ng Phone 667
3BEOROOMS LARGE KIT
S28 000 00
2 BEDROOM unfurnrshed MINIBIKE $125 we tghts $15
3608 Coolville Ohro
Estate Of BIRDIE MAE
LIKE
NEW
CARPET
5 5 26tp
apartment Very n ce w th
81 ACRES - Gas well for hea t
BAKER Deceased
portable ster eo w th 1 por
ALUM S IDIN G
OWNER
sma ll yard and garage 127
Notice Is hereby gtven that
7 rooms bath 2 barns and ali
table speaker 525 Call 247
WILL HELP F=INANCE
L n c oln H ill
Call T racy
Mary v rg n a Hrndy of Seneca
2641 after 5 p m
mtneral s Large stock farm
FOR QUALIF IE D BUYER 1
Whaley 992 3054
Falls N Y and Artte Mae
5 19 3fp pond Lots of young t1mber 40
PRICED
BELOW"
5 19 6tc
BuskrrK of M ddleport Ohro 3 POINT h tch cull r\i ator Phone
acres of hay $32 500 00
MARKET $12 000
have been duly appo nted co
843 2963
CLELAND
FARMS
AND COUNTRY SPOT - 7 rooms
Executrrces of the Estate of
5 21 2tc 3 A~u 4 ROOM furn shed and
GREENHOUSE A \iar ely of bath gas F A furnace utlltty
Brrd e Mae Baker deceased
unfurntshed
apartments
OFFICE-446 3643
ca bbage and lo"Jato plants w1th cellar Askmg $9 500 00
late of Me gs County Oh o
OLD Upr ght p anos
Any
Phon e 992 5434
for sale Also broccolr and
EVENINGS
Credttors are reQutred to ftle
What w1ll you g1ve
condlt on pay ng $10 cash
4 12 tfc
caul flower sweet peppers
dud McGhee- 446 1255
the r claims w th sad f due ary
Wrrte g ve drrectrons
to
hot peppers eggplants head CATTLE FARM - Noce \aymg
c. M r Ike W seman-446
w th in four months
WITTEN PIANO CO P 0 PRIVATE meet ng room for
lettu ce
and
EASTER tractor land 2 farm pond s
37116
Dated thts 15th day of May
Box 18 Sar d s Oh o 43946
any organrzatlon phone 992
FLOWERS pansy mums
barn and good fences Timber
1974
3975
4 26 30tp
azalea
hydrangea
and mmerals S59 600 00
3 11 tfc
geranrums petunia s severa l
Ma nn ng D Webste r CASH pard for all makes and
k nds of hang ng baskets
Judge
models of mob le homes 4 ROOM furn shed apartmen t
Gerald
ne Cleland Racrnc
Co urt of Common Plea s
Phone area code 614 423 9531
3 BEDROOM mob1 e home
Ohro
Ava tab le Saturday
Phon e
Probate D v rs on
.t 13 He
pract cally new 73 model 65 x
3 29 If c.
992 3658
12 s tuated on 1 2 acre
5
16
tiL
151 21 28 !61 4 3t c
OLO furnrture oak tab les
pr val e lot wrth all utr l I es
FOR
Memor
e~r
ue~r
...
e
c locks tee boxes brass beds
large garden area (a lready
selec t ron of Flowers Baskets
apartmen t
d shes desks or comple te FURNI S HED
planted) 12 x 12 storage
Sprays
Faye
s
G
ft
Shop
adult s only n M dd lepor t
households Wr te M D
buddmg 36 x 12 patro r ew
North Second St M ddleport
Phone 992 3874
Mrller Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohro
und e rp nnrng and c ustom
5 7 tfc
5 12 tfc
call 992 7760
steps \Mobde home eQu pped
s 13 tfc
w th modern house type
..,ROCERY
bus
ness
for
sale
APARTMENT furniShed a r
furnttu r e heavy duty Whirl
Bu
ld
ng
for
sale
or
lease
cond rt oned Reasonab le rent
pool washer and dryer
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
12 m les from Pomeroy Call
Span Sh Amerrcan bedroom
to 10 p m for appo nlment
304 773 5118
su t e Broyle Htl l sofa map e
INTERESTED n berng your
3
20
tfc
5 14 He
hu_t ch deeptreeze new end
own boss and ownrng your
tables tamps and other
own
bus ness?
L rmrted OFFICE s pace a nd bu ld ng 1972HoNOASo~-4Cylnder
furnrture $13 000 for all or
Phone 98 5 3828 after 6 p m
amount of ca pttal necessar.y
Mason area Good loca l on
would cons der se ll ng un
5 16 6tc
608 E
Th s gorn~ bus ness can be
Wrll remodel to suit tenant
furniShed PhOne 992 2335
By Mrs L Balderson
frnanced Call 992 5786
Ca ll (304) 173 5118
MAIN
5 21 tfc
SIOR Salt Works E
4 29 26tc
Mrs Mane Swan of Long
5 14 tfc EXCEL
Mam St Pomeroy All kmds
POMEROY, 0
Bottom Mrs Hazel Edge! and
of salt water pellets water
4 MOBILE homes two 12x50 1
FUR N ISHED
apartmen t
nuggets block salt and own
year old and 2 bedroom one
Mrs Margaret Brown VISited Chevalier spent the weekend
MIDDLEPORT
1
story
adults on ly Phone 992 5592
Oh o R 1ver Salt Phone 992
12x65 1969 J bedroom one 2
frame 6 rooms 3 B.R dlntng
4 9 tfc
wltli Mrs Bess Larkms
3891
bedroom lOxSO Phone 742
With Mr and Mrs Lowell
R
dtntng
bath some
5980
6 5 tfc
Recent visitors at the Chevalier and fam1lj. at
1 BEDROOM furn rshed apt
paneling & carpettng leve l
5 7 tfc
Wilhams -Balderson
home Mansfield
WE ARE p c.k ng up a p ano In
Call 992 3173 after 4 p m
lot A good bvy at $8 500 00
your area and would like
5 20 3tc
BERRY MILLtl-o( MOOt le Hom e
were Mrs Margaret Douglas
POMEROY Bus1ness
Mrs Ben Buckley IS a patient
some responsible party to
Sa les has a lot to off er when
room w1th apartment over
of Hamsonville Mrs Clara at Camden-Clark Hospital 1n
take over payments catt
you star t shopp ng for your
75 ft fronlage lots of
Credtt Manager (614) 772
Mob le Home You can beat
Hull and Mr and Mrs Jumor Parkersburg
5669 or wr le 260 East Ma n
parking space garage on
the htQh deprec atton you II
AKC
Brrttany
pups
ready
to
go
Hull of Waldo, Mrs Roy F1ck
Street Ch llrcothe Oh o 45601
ha\ie on your home ttle ft\St
Ma1n St S16 500 00
.lean Whitehead and Isaac
May 15 through 20th 2 hun
_. 7 lfc
two year;; by shopp ng for a
and Beth Anne of Columbus
ters only Mr Ed s Brrttanys
MIDDLEPORT Large
Frydman of Colwnbus v1s1ted
tate model used Mob1le Home
5 mr es on 50A from Athens
bnck has 3 apartments for
REGISTERED Angus bulls
C B C club met With Ronald recently
Here are some every day low
at the Ernest
Phone 448 3809
Call or see B Witte Rock tncome lots of parking
prrces
and Ella Osborne Busmess Whitehead home
5 12 10tc
Spr ng s 992 27 9 after s p m
space always rented walk
5 15 6tc to shop $22 soo 00
sess1on was conducted by
6Dx 12 VtS on 3 bedroom $5 995
John Buchanan was a pallent AKC Ce ll e pupp es Phone
60x12
K ng 2 bedroom 1'12 bath
Denver Weber, president The at Holzer Medical Cbmc 10
(304) 675 3055
MIDDLEPORT - Lol for
HOME GROWN tpmato plants
$5 995
5 19 7tc
i mproved Mex can yellow home or trailer 70x90
co'Olmumty flower fund dnve Gallipolis
6Cl x12 Elcona 2 bedroom ss A'9S
rub lee lirnds 1350 Also hot uttlltaes near In good netgh
60xl2 Fleetwood 2 bedroom
IBS been completed A cleanup
peppers
and
mangoes
S5 995
borhood ONLY S2 000 00
Thomas Hayman across
project for Reedsville was
2 - 10 w des S2 995 each
POMEROY
1'12
story
from Mun c1pat Park n
1 Bank repossess on super n ce
discussed The hosts displayed
frame
3
BR
balh
THE
VILLAGE
Fabrrcs
Syracuse
S500 and take over payments
Tupper
s
PI"
ns
well
5
12
18tc
basement
uttltty
some
antique
newspapers,
I
established bustness w th low
carpeting & panelmg large
These are most ly late model
magazmes and books Refresh
nves t ment
For more n
homes and the ~rices nclude
lot for children HW floors,
for_.mat1on see at V ltage
men ts were served to the
your del very and coniple te
SIO
000
00
By PHIL PASTORET
F alJrrcs
set up So for an honest to
Browns, Webers, Whiteheads,
YOU LL GIVE UP LITTLE
5 20 4tp
goodness oood deal stop m
- ANO GET A LOT - IN
Pickens' and Dav1d Brown
The neighbor 15 really mto
today at Berry Miller Mob le
Home Sales 705 Farson
OUR CHOICE LISTINGS!
The next meeting will be at the th1s ecology thmg He bought 1967 MERCURY Monterey 475
Street Belpre Oh o ~hone
CALL
TODAY
Phone
992
2693
weekdays
an
ecolog1cal
lawn
mowe
r
IBrown home
423 9531 c losed Sunday
5 16 12tp
,.....
.,....
992 2259 or 992 2S68_
a goat
4 30 tfc
s 17 6tc
Mr
and Mrs
Edward
For Rent or Sale
..
ASK US ABOUT
E FABRICATED
PR
5 q J tc
20"-3 HP
•52.95
Self Propelled
22"- 3% HP
•76.95
POMEROY MOTOR CO.
Notice
Donald Poo le r Ches ter 98 5
morn ng s or
5 19 31C
;e~~ n~ac t y
Tuesday Ma) 21 1974
Television Log
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1
PUS tiC NOTICE
TO H L COE N and VADA
13- The Dally Sentmel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0
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Tht• [ ),1 1 1~ St.•Jthn• •, Ml{ldlepot t- l 'oJIIt'l V), 0. Tu csd;J ~ , M. 1\ ~~ \!J,.j
Opportunity
M)'l1le Beach trip plans completed
Pla ns were completed ror
the~
umforms the first time. For the
band's projec ted tnp to the Regatta parade in Jun e, the
·Mvrtle Beach Sun Fun band IS to meet in M1ddlepm t
F~s !tva l , Myrtle Beach, S C. at 6 p.m.
when the Metgs Htgh School
Goms also ann ounced July 211
Band Boos ters met Monday - Aug. 3 as the dales the band
mght at the school
wtll attend camp at RIO Grande
Ba nd members wtll leave College.
June 5 at noon by char ten;!d
The Band Boosters voted to
bus They are· to carry ,food hire Judy Rtggs, baton In w1lh them for their evemng structor, to tram the newly
meal on the bus The band w11l
be m competitiOn Fnday. Jurle
7, and if 11 happens to place.
they will comp ete agat n
Sa turday mormng Either way,
they wtll start home Saturday
aftern oon. Total cost f the tn p
wtll be $5,800
Dtrector Dwtg ht Goms sa1d
formed fla g corps and the
ma10rcltes. She w1ll attend
camp w1 th the band th1s
summer
It was also announced the
boosters are see kin g approval
to operate a concession stand
at the Rega tta during the frog
jumps
ElectiOn of officers was held
wtlh, Goms mstalhng them at
Eastern alumni Snags loom in
to dine, dance Mid-east peace
on June first
JERUSALEM IUPII With aides warning against
The Eastern Hi gh School
Pomeroy Monday at 9 30 a m. alumm dinner and dance will
weanng Its new sum mer be held tn the gymnasium
Saturday, June I Classes to be
honored w1ll be 1 9~9. 1964, and
1969. The gradua tmg class of _
Marria ge Licenses
1974
will be admitted to lhe
Roger Eugene Swartz, 23,
dance
free.
Middleport , and Marlene Sue
The steak dmner wtll be
Mtller, 24, Belpre ; Jess
served
at 7 p.m. and the coslts
William Wood, 29, Racine, and
$3
The
dance will follow from 9
l..ois Ann Wood, 26, Hebron;
to
liidmght.
Music will be
Charles Wilham Corneiii1I , 19,
provtded by "The Sound InFt. Bragg, N C. and Patsy Kay vestment,"
and the cost is one
Proffi tt, 17, Portland; Dorsey
dollar.
Annual
dues are 50
Otis Ohlinger, 19, Mtddleport,
cents.
and
Pansy
Gwendolyn
Reservaltons should be made
Thomas, 16, Pomeroy
by May 25 with Mrs. Jennifer
Mach:r,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy , Ohio
DIES IN SLEEP
4!i769.
It
1s requested local
MASON - Paul Washington
alumnt
notify
frtends and
of the Fairview Community,
Rt. I, Letart, W.Va ., died early relatives whose addresses
th1s mornmg in hts sleep. have changed.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by the Fogelsong
Funeral Home. ,
NOT OPEN
Fnday thru Tuesday
May 24 -28
JESUS 'CHRI9T
SUPERSTAR
( Techmcolor)
rJ.d Neeley, as Jesus Chnst ,
C~ r l Anderson , Juda s,
Yvonn e Ellim an, Mary
Magdalene
(G)
Also Shorts
Show Slarts 7 p.m .
me~ ting .
Elected were Frank Sisson,
president- elected for a second
term; Mrs Don Thomas, ftrst
v1ce president ; Mrs Donna
Grate, second vice president,
Mrs .
Mtckey
secretary ,
CALLED TO HELP
RACINE - The Racine E·R
squad was called to the Racine
ba II diamond to !cis1st Mike
Burckant, Stockdale , Ohio,
who suffered lacerations of the
leg . He was taken to VeteraDB
Memorial Hospital, treated,
and released. Today at 6:05
a.m. the squad transported
Virginia Thornton, Miners·
ville, to Holzer Medical Center,
and at 9 a.m. William Stover,
Racine Route z, to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. He was
having difficulty breathing .
l..ows tomght upper 50s to
mid 60s. Pa~tly d ourly northeast variable cloudmess with
showers ending elsewhere and
not quite as warm Thursday,
highs in the 708 .
Wtlliams,
Mrs.
Leon
McKnight, treasurer,_and Mrs.
John Murph y, publicity
chatrwoman
federal grants, which would
reduce thetr lees substantially.
Veterans wtll also be able to
attend the Community College
under the G. I. Bill
But, to operate Ri o Grande
Commumty College , voters
must approve a one mtll lax
levy :... or $4 more a year in
Ia xes - II one's home is valued
at $10,000 and assessed at
ovt" .... optimisrn1 Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger
went to Damascus again
today with the latest Israeli
st..uce on the details on
drawing a Golan Heights
cease-lire
line
and
separating the warring
armies there.
As the negotiations got
down to the line print on the
line and the numbers of men
and guDB thai will remain on
the Heights, American of·
ficials Increasingly
cautioned that "technical
snags" could still arise that
would have to be solved
later.
There appeared to be
broad agreement In prln·
elple on the cease-fire line
Itself but both American and
Israeli offlelals went out of
their way to say "minor
Issues" on 1hls stlll remain.
)
C. W. DeWees
of Middleport dies
Clarence
W
DeWees, 58 ,
Pearl Sl , Middleport. d1ed
unexpectly Monday night at
the Holzer Medica l Center
wher e he wa s taken earli er by
the M1ddleport E R umt.
Mr DeWees was born Apnl
18, 1916 m Middleport, the son
of the late Thomas and Grace
Edwards DeWees He was also
pre ceded 10 dep th by two
brothers .
Surviving are two sons ,
Clarence E. (Gene) of Grove
City , and Earl Richard , of
Middleport , a s• ster , Mrs Jay
( Mary Elizabeth} Rob.nson .of
Ravenna , a brother , PauL of
Kent , four grandchildren , and
several nieces and nephews
Fun eral se rvices will be he ld
at 1 p.m . Thursday at the
Rawl1ngs
Coats Funeral
Home with Mr. George Glaze
officiating Bur ial will be'" the
Gravel Hd I Cemetery at
Chesh1re. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to 4
and from 7 to 9 p.m Wed
nesday Mr DeWees wa s
employed as a pamter and
paper hanger
River
(Con hnued from page I)
weekly newspaper column of
the comrrHssion .
Mrs. Hilferty reported that
the essays being submitted on
Metgs Htslory in a contest held
by the Metgs County Pioneer
and Htstoncal Soctely will be
published · as a part of the
VOL. XXVI
10 faculty
at OU get
dismissal
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI ) - The
Ohio University Board of
Trustees voted Monday to
dismiss more than 10 tenured
faculty members, phase out
the School of Arch1etecture,
release a branch campus, and
begin looking for a new
president. The board voted to
uphold an earlier decision to
dismiss " IZ or 13" tenured
faculty members, effective in
1975, m an economy move.
Another move,
along
economic lines, was to phase
out the School of Architecture
effecttve next year, g1ving the
junior class an opportunity to
graduate. The board decided to
elimmate the school rather
than cut back on programs in
all other schools m the College
of Fme Arts.
The board also voted to
release the Portsmouth branch
campus to the Scioto County
Technical College in 1975.
Board chairman Wilham
Moms said he would pick ~
committee to begin looking for
a new president to replace
Claude Sowle who announced
his resignatiOn Sunday night.
The resignation becomes ef·
feclt.., this sullUI)er.
YOUNG FISHERMEN and women had big catches durmg the fishing derby of the Meigs
County Fish and Game Association Saturday near Rutland. On the nght IS Chris Ri chmond,
Beach Grove, who won $10 for the biggest catfish caught during the derby, a three and threequarter pounder .
Biggest fish ca.ught by
Bea ch Grove b~ oy age 9
Seventy-etght boys and girls
between the ages of four and 15
registered for a fishing derby
held Saturday at the farm of
the Rutland Amencan Legion
Post.
Wmmng cash prizes durmg
the event were Chris Richmond, 9, Beach Grove, $10 for
the largest catftsh, three and
three-quarter pounds; Rodney
Tripp, 9, Chester, $5 for the
second largest catfish, three
and one-half pounds, and Scott
Taylor, 9, of Gallipolis, won $5
for the smallest fish caught, a
four and one-hall inch bass A
reel donatf d by Tom Stewart
for the largest f1sh caught
durmg the day-long derby went
to Tom S1minons , 8, for a ftve
and one-half pound bowfm .
At 5 p.m. , the Meigs County
Two new divorce actions
have been filed and four others
settled in Meigs County
Cpmmon Pleas Court. They are
Iris E. &nith, Langsville, vs
Jackie Lee Smith, gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty, and Ruth A. Michael
vs David 0. Michael, Pomeroy,
gross neglect of duty.
Odessa Weddle was granted
a divorce from John Robert
Weddle, Sr., and Phyllis Blake
was ~ranted hers from O'Dell
G. Blake.
An order of sale was issued in
the case of Beulah Fay
Williams vs. Shirlene Maynard
and Paul Maynard, all of Vero
Beach, F1a., and Harriet L.
Temple was awarded $15,723.81
from William J. Marcwn and
Marion F. Marcum on a
promissory note.
CLEAN-UP SET
Clean-up evening at the
Letart Falls Community Hall
w11l be at 6 p.m. tonight All
restdents are asked to help
assist,
.,
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LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in doW!:·
to\\'11 Pomeroy at II a.m. was
76 degrees under sunny skies.
•
Our bank will be dosed Memorial
Day in honor of the men and women
of our armed forces who have served
our gteat country and the cause o'f
freedom throughout the world.
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW
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FromFng1da1re, here's an Environment Maker Room A1r Conditioner
that turns the the cool on or off
nr • Fng1daue Room A1r Cond1·
t10ner offers set-It-and-forget-It
cooling comfort by controll10g
compressor and fan speeds as
room temperature changes
from Frigidaire
J
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Friday and Saturday 9:30 AM to 9 PM
.ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
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proposed area service.
.-
,_
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th t• Chesle r area whe r e he res id es a nd opcratt•s h is conlilfU<'tton
New
TEN CEN T$
services, shoppmg, medical services, ''flow " towa rd Pomeroy,
She testified that she makes about 25long distance calls a month
and 50 pet of her calls are to Pomeroy 992numbers. 1
Mrs. Grtffilh indica ted that even though Western Reserve
customers had been advtsed that there would proba bly be a rate
mcrease mvolved m the extended area servtce, she had hoped
th a~
an increase would not be necessa ry.
As the hearing proceeded, there was little doubt that subscribers of both utiltties would pay increases. However . 11 was
noted th at the planned rate increases for General Telephone Co
customers wtll be lower than the projected $1.10 for Chester area
people.
Th e prominent Chester area businessman, ra ncher and
contractor Horace Karr, testified to having to make long
distance calls to employes and business concerns tn the General
Telephone Co. area.
Karr pointe d out tllat he even must call long dt slance fr om
his home to one of his prmc1pal places of busmess, Royal Oak
Park, m the Five Pomls area about two mtles distant. He sa id
also his farm ope rations require long distance calls to the
Pomeroy area.
Karr brought applause from the more than 100 at the session
~>hen he said about the only calls he could make on his Chester
phone was lo the company to report his phone out of order. He.
testified tbat ooly about one per cent of his business calls go Into
servaccs needed b} the district come from the PomeroJ area, he
sa id 1 pointing out that about 25 pet of the entu e ~ tudcnl
populatiOn of the dtstn ct res1de m the 992 area of the General
Telephone Co. thereby makm g many long distanc e ralls
tmder \\hat then wn s the Coolv11le Tele phone Co
Htggs smU m dea li ng tn real csl<.t lt· he lws iltl udll } lost s~lit'~
necessary for studenllli because severa l of the schools m the
distn ct a re 985, Western Reserve nwnbers
for Janel by peopl e who weH' not W!llmg trJ pa\ the long d1st(tncc
ph one calls from the Chester aro.1 to P01ne1 O) area fur the
va n uus scn1 ces tl1ey need t>d R1 ~gs smd ill' would pa,\ the ad
dit10nal costs mvolved 111 the ex tended arect srn•1cP but .. ,Hth
business.
John Riebel, Supt of the Eastern Local School D1stm t, .J iso
Ci ted the fl ow of school admm1stratton bu:smes:s to Pomeroy
where the count y supermtendent's ofhce IS located. Most of the
John T Wolle, prestdcnt of the Hacme Home Naltonal Bank,
ct ted costs to banking customers who must pay long diStance
charges to discuss a banking problem or some fma nctal matter
The prestdent of the Metgs County Board of Comm tsswnm·s.
Hober\ Clark, testt hcd to the coun ty's problem of long <hst:1ncc
charges needed between Chester and Pomeroy Problems w1th
dogs result m long d1stance charges and co un ty emp loye!j hdvc to
phone into th e Chester area on busmess matters
By the same token, resadents of the Chester area ha ve to PdJ'
long dtstance charges tf they wish to phone any or the count)
govermnent agenc1es Cla rk mdtcated hiS support of the ex-
relu ctance ''
M1:-;. Or ts Gmlher, .::mother Chester
<Jll~~~ ph one subscnber ,
tcstafJCd U1at s he has relative::; m both tc!Pphorw drP.:ls of Metgs
County She s~ud that she IS W!lltn g to p a~ fm t~xte m ll'tl arc<.~
serv1 ce
Mrs. Faye Wa tson, Rccdsv tllc Route l, scud extended c~rea
SC f\ ' ll'C would be "a wonderfu l thm g." She, too, potnt ecl out that
she mu5t turn to the Pomel'oy areH fm nwm sen 1<:es <ind llldlcated tha t she ts wt ll mg to pa y "" JnLr eas_~'d l'est for the ar t'rt
tended area ser vice.
Gene Rtggs, a restdent of the 985 Western Reserve area and a
SC r\· ll'C
busmessman in Pomeroy and the Chester area, told of the JUgglmg he does m makuig calls from hts home and fr om h1s ofhce m
order to avotd long dtslance charges.
•n Agmg, tcsttfted that the long diStance 9harge between Chester
and Pomeroy is keepmg many Meig:) scmor Ci tizens from takmg
(Contmued on page 2)
available-as he is on material
PROCLAMATION SIGNED- Meigs County Comm1sswner President Robert Clark, center,
1igns a proclamation designating May as "Older Americans Month" as declared by Pres1dcnt
Sixon. With him, seated, I tor, are CollUI)tssioners Henry Wells and Warden Ours. Standmg,
'rom tbe left, are Mayor Eugene Thompson of Rutland and C. J. Struble, president of the Meigs
::Ounty Council on Agmg. Mayors who will also sign the proclamation are Charles Pyles,
:U.cine; Herman l..ondon, Syracuse ; Dale Smith, Pomeroy, and John Zerkle, Middleport. Next
Sunday will be "Seruor Citizens Day" in the county which has about 3600 senior cillzens. The
Meigs County Council on Aging which sponsors the senior citizen programs in the county hopes
that all organizations and churches will recogmze the1r senior c11tzens Sunday or somet1me
during the month.
By United Press International
COLUMBUS -LEGISLATION PERMITTING state lottery
tickets to be sold in taverns is on its way to the office of Gov. John
J. Gilligan, with a quick stop m the House ' r concurrence in a
technical Senate change.
The Senate Tuesday passed, 26-1, the House-approved bill
sponsored by Rep. Arthur R. Wilkowski, D-Toledo. The measure
would allow the State Lottery ComllllSSJOn to sell ticket fran·
chises to taverns, VFW clubs, bowling alleays, grocery markets
and thousands of other small businesses
con ce rn ing the Watergat e
break-tn and coverup.
Nixon's ch1ef Watergate
attorney, Jam es St Clatr.
arranged to respond to the
request for II tapes and four
sets of official dairies by 10
a.m EDT today to the House
Judiciary Committee. He also
Will reply to a request for 66
ITT and datry tapes.
The President took St. Clair
and his other Wa te rgate
lawyer, J . Fred Buzhardt,
TWO ARE FINED
Two defendants " ere fined
and a third forfeited a bond m
the court of Middleport Mayor
John Zerkle Tuesday night
Alfred Evans, Middlepor t, was
fmed $2!i and costs on an
assault and battery cha rge,
and Brian E. Johnson, 18,
Mason, w~s fined $5 and costs.
on a charge of spmmng tires
Forfeiting a $30 bond posted on
a mtscondu ct charge wa s
Eddie Mt tchell, Langsvi lle.
Dr. Christensen cites
need for area college
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Using the quote, "I am full of
new beginnings," Dr. Alphus
Christensen, president of Rio
Grande College, addressed an
audience of 2,000 mcluding 207
graduates at tile seventh an-
per cent of the graduatmg class
had taken part in the
vocational classes offered, but
was disturbed that only 45 per
cent go on to post secondary
education for purely econom1c
nual commencement exercises
reasons,
at Meigs High School Tuesday
ev1ening.
Applying the quotation to the
Southeastern Ohw ar ea ,
Christensen sa1d this area is
full of new beginnings with the
opening
of
vocational
education in tile high school.
·He said he was pleased that 60
He cited the new community
college as a means of achteving
post secondary education if the
one mtll tax levy is passed m
Vmton, Gallia , Me1gs and
Jackson Counties on June II
"We must give tile young
men and women all the opportunity we can to solve our
'
r
Mr s Eleanor Thomas, director of the Me1gs Co unl) CourK'Ii
I
ATTEN D HEARING - Mo re than 100 persons packed tnto the Me1gs County courthousr
courtroom Tuesday for the PUCO hcanng on extended phone serv1ce
Center closed
rest of week
The Pomeroy Re crea ti on
Center wt ll not be open fo r the
rematnder of the week du e to
the Pome roy Hi gh School
Alumm Dance on Saturday
The center wtll reopen on May
28 from 6 to 9 30 a m
All students o[l th e Metgs
Local School Dtstrtct are invated to jom In recreation
center act1v1tJes The mem-
bership fee ts $1 a year A
membership ca rd must be
purchased by June I m orde r to
be admttted to the center for
actavihes
Ttckets may be purchased at
the center each mght it 1s open
j
former high school gym.
auditonwn. Dinner 1s at 6 30
p.m., the dance at 9.
Dr. Lewis Rickman , M.D.
('37), of Mt. Clemons, Mich. ,
will be the banquet speaker
Other graduates mv1ted to
make remarks will include
Dave Diles of Detroit, an ABC
television sporls personality ;
the football coach of the great
teams m the early 308, Clyde
Battin, of Columbus; Bruce
Bingham, Ravenswood , W.
'va., and Franklin Guinther'
Meigs High alumni dance set
'
Tickets on sale for the second
annual Meigs High School
Alumni Dance can be purchased until June 26 at the New
York Clothing House, Village
Pharmacy , , and Rutland
Department Store. Price is $3
for a membership and the
dance, $2 to the goes t of an
alwnnae, and $1 for this year's
seniors of the class of 1974.
I
and Gordon Harris, both of
Columbus.
Classes that would have had
reunions during the tllree yea rs
the alumm even t has not been
held are those of 62-U3-U4, 57-lil!59, 52-53-54, 47-46-19, 42-4344,
(Continued on page 16)
:·:==*:·:::•&;:::;:;:;::;:·:·::::;;:::::::::::·:·:~;:;:=.:::=.::•:::•:::·:x·::~~::;.;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~;·
~
two requinng hospilahzahon 1n
a single car acctdenl at 7 :!0
am. today on Rt. 218
Admitted to the Holzer
Medtcal Center were Theima
Damels, 52, Rt. I, Crown Ctly,
i;!
f1,
~
~
~
~
\!1
f
>~
Walls 1\\ as Cited to Me1gs
Count y Cou rt for havtng
dcfec t1ve brakes
Another single car acc1dent
occurred on Rt 7 at 2 a m.
Tuesday where Cecil Bruce
Youn g, 20. of Cheshtre, lost
wtth a frac tu red vertebra control of hts car wh tch ran orr
whteh reqUired surgery , her tile n ght Side O[ the h1 ghw ay
mother, Mrs. Ge rtie Swam, 72, striktng ~ metal post and
Gall ipolis, who suffered guard rail Th ere was minor
mul ltpl e conlustons of the damage and no charges were
scalp, and Evelyn Fowle r, 26, flied
Eureka Star Rt., Galllpohs,
who s4fferect' a fractured nose
Mrs. Dan1els and Mrs
Fowler are employ~es of the
Holzer Med tcal Cltnic . ·
According to the repor t, Mrs
Damcls lost control of her car
whtch sktdded on loose gravel
'
to get tickets
ll
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:~:~
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::;:
f:;~
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approved
The Metgs Count; Bo"rd or
Co rnml ss ion er s
Tuesday
passed a rcsolutwn prov1d111g
for the payment of local funds
totaling $1 ,646 25 on tile total
cos t or a full y equipped
emerge ncy
vehicle for
the
Hutland Commumty.
The total cos t of the vehicle IS
$17,669 75 with the balance
beyond local fun ds com1rtg
from a hea lth department
grant
1
Rutl and offi Clllls have ma de
arrangements w1th the Metgs
Local Board of EducatiOn for
Pe rsons havmg Pomer oy housing the new veh1cle
The cornm1ssi oners also
Alumm ltckets bemg held at
pa
sse d a r esolutiOn 1n
the New York Clothmg House
should pick them up as soon as coopera t\on w1 th tl1e director of
POSSI ble .
;:;: lmd they will be un able to use
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - President Nixon's attorney
said today the White House would refu se to hand over II
tapes subpoenaed by the House Judiciary Committee but
wouldofleritapartlallapeofoneofthem.
The partial version apparently would omit a con·
versation between the President, former White House
chief of staff H. R. Haldeman and then 4,ttorney General
John N. Mitchell In which plans lor spying on the
'
Grads advised
J re~eh~~~ bu~~~~ns~me t~~~:~~
Part of one tape will come
instead of 11 under demand
The dance w1ll be Saturday,
Democrats were discussed.
j~;
June Z9 at the Larry R.
Attorney James D. St. Clair, arriving for another ;:;;
Morrison Gymnasium from ·· closed door impeachment hearing, told reporters " In ~r!:
8:30-1 a.m. with refreshments
substance, it's our view that the committee. has had a :~
to be served. Music will be
great deal of information, reall all it needs."
I ·
provided by "Whale." Dress is
.', nle White House decision to refuse tbe subpoeans :o, '
semi.formal.
appeared certain to erode still further the President's ::~
Those who w~h to help with
support in the committee, jarred Tuesday by the playing v
~~
the arrangemenls are to, meet ,.,. of a March 21, l~'lil ta pe in whi ch he discussed E. Howard ~(
at the high school cafeterih ;;;; Hunt's demapd lor hush money payments.
~
Friday at 7:30.
!"' ...... ~~~·::~.::=.~«:."*:::!&.Yo!~:::::::::::::~~
·.
Th ree persons were Inju red ,
CLOSED MON DAY
The offices of the Middleport
Board of Public Affairs and the and turned over
Middleport Mayo r wt ll be
It was mvesttgated by thd
closed all day Monday due to Galha-Metgs Post State High1
Memorial Day.
' We must come to grips w1 th
way Pa trol.
reality and reahze th~t these
A truck driver cla1med inyoung people can do better 1f
jurtes in an accident at 7 35
TURNS 89 FRIDAY
they have pos t seconda ry
a m Tuesda y on Ht. 33, near
Mrs Walter (Na ncy ) Walker the junclton of township road
education whether they work
w1th the1r minds or thetr w1ll observe her 89th bir thday 242m Me1gs County . The patrol
hands Both are Importa nt. " at her home Frtday Her S8ld Ted Wa lls, 40, of
In conduswn, Christensen daughter, Mrs. Marton Howell, Zanesvtlle, lost control of his
Columbus, has been vlstltng truck on a sharp curve
(Contmued on page 2)
her.
The veh1cle left the htghwa y
strt kt ng an embankm en t.
'
More than 375 old grads of
Middleport High School, which
became a part of the Meigs
Local District in 1967, will dme
and dance together Friday
evenmg for tile first time in
four years.
Mrs. Iva Stewart Sisson ,
chairwoman of the 1974 Alumm
event, saul today AI Scarberry
(1946) will emcee the banquet
m the Middleport Elementary
School cafeteria and Tex
Hamson and h1s Valley Boys
will provide dance music in the
•
Three injured m
single car mishap
Payment
problems. We 've become
materialistically mmded . but
we must change so that people
are tmp orta nt and lhtngs
relatively untmpor tan t," he
said .
.
Middleport grads to dine, dance
PITTSBURGH - PI'ITSBURGH MAYOR PETER Flaherty
today won the Democratic nomination for the U. S. Senate,
narrowly defeating Herbert S. Denenberg on the strength of good
voter turnout in western Pe!lllsylvania. Unofficial returns gave
~herty a 26,000 vote edge with 91 pet. of the votes counted.
Some rebtrns from eastern counties - strong Deneberg territory
- still were missing, but tbe turnout was too light to help the
former Insurance Commissioner. The total vote was 4:!9,099 for
Flaherty aod 403,855 for Denenberg.
Gov. MiltonJ. Shapp easily defeated Rep, Marlin P. Mullen
in the race for Democratic nomination for governor. With 88 pet.
of the vote counted Sharp had 609,074 votes to Mullen's 174,350.
Harvey Johnston, a Pitlsburgh real estate man who also ran, got
77,781 votes.
Drew Lewis, the GOP-endorsed candidate, won the
Republican Primary for governor by defeating Joseph Alvin
Jacobson aod Leonard Strunk. With 88 pct . of the vote counted
Lewis had 432,992 votes wliile Jacobson got 90,581 and Strunk
54,662 votes.
\
..
I
Even at that, Rtggs stud sumetunes tw rnu~t 1rna kt> .-~hr,llt :10
L'a lls Cl month mto the GencriJl Teh:phmw (\) a1 f\1 fnHn h1s hrJJIIL'
tn the Chest L'J dr e<:I
Suwlnr problems wnh d used .~uto hu smc~s Ill Clwstrr \H' r t'
also 1elated by Riggs R1ggs was applauded wh en he sa id till"
pbone subsenber:-; of the Chester a1ea were ongm;JII:. pruml'-.('1. 1
toll free sc1vJce to t11e Ponl<!rO) di'C;t '~h P11 thr <tiL' ~ '.l.<ls f1r st pu t
She tesltfled that her own bustness, mcludin g govermnental
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - along w1th Gen . Alexande r M.
President Nixon is toughenmg Hatg, hts chief of sta ff, on a
his stand agamst any further · dinner crmse aboard hts yacht,
release of Watergate tapes Sequma , Tuesday mght
after meeting with his ch1ef
Th e outmg gave- Nixon an
impeachment defense lawyers, occaston to pb:tn h1s anti·
his top aides mdicated toda y. impeachment strategy with hts
But there were htnls that , counsel, and to discuss a sertes
Nixon may not be as n gid of events Tuesday whtch ocagamst
handtn g
over curced on Captlol H1ll and m
documents in the International the fed eral courts relatmg to
Telephone and Telegraph Watergate.
Corp. (ITT ) antitrust case and
When they reached Mount
materials relating to milk Vernon, they deba rk ed and
industr y campaign con· look a helicopter back to the
tribu twns-if
they
are White House.
WASHINGTON - JULIE AND DAVID Eisenhower will
move into an expensive two-bedroom apartmen~ across the
street from the Watergate complex Inext week because the
suburban Mltryland home they rent from Charles G. ")'!ebe"
Rebozo has been sold.
·
The White Houe said Tuesday tbe couple wtll pay $409 a
munth for the duplex in the 1,800 unit Columbta Plaza, rlear
George Washington Univ~rsity where Eisenhower will be attendil)g law school this sununer.
Shop EvelY Week -Day 9:30 AM to $ PM
The Environment Makers
BAKER
FURNITURE
Middlepor t, o.
'
Always Plenty of Free Parking
-~·I•CINNATI
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
' Member Federal DepOSit Insurance
.... _,__ Corporation
' '
- Used TV Sets. There's a fine selection now of used color TV's
-in excellent condition- ready for you to see and buy.
•certified by AHAM , when oper·
a~ "i_ on 230 voll!ll 14 500 BTUI!
hr. @ 208volt!l
1
liiilens l~aHonal
..
-Whirlpool Air Conditioners- A complete selection' sizes ~.ooo
BTU to 22.000 BTU. Get ready for hot summer weather.
automatically Th1s 15,000 BTUs/
WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE .
.--
..' .-:.: ·-.-
- Plus Wall· To-Wall Carpeting · Linoleum by the yard . RCA
Color and Black and White TV Sets - Stereos. Glidden Paints Lawn Boy Lawn Mowers - Magic Chef Gas and Electric
Ranges· Whirlpool Washers- Dryers· Refrigerators- Roll-up
Bamboo Shades.
15,000 BTUs / hr.*
AND AUTO TEUIR WINDOW
OPEN FRI. EVENINGS 5 TO 7 .P.M.
1n
Nixon will
get tougher
DAYTON, OHIO - MRS. JOHN J. GILLIGAN SAID
Tuesday that even though Ohio has come a long way in its
programs for the mentally retarded, "as long as there was one
child on a wailing list for a spec1al education program , the job is
not finished ."
"Wecao't transform a stale in Just four years, but I think we
have made each other aware of how much it's possible to do by
caring about each other," said Mrs. Gilligan, addressing the
Monf4!omery County Council for Retarded Children.
"I feel so strongly about improved services for children that
I ba ve begun to talk to a few groups around the state so that I can
tell themaboutchildadvocacy-speakingand acting on behalf of
the children who need our help and often our protection," she
said;
Also a fine selection o,f Lawnlite aluminum outdoor fur·
niture- Telescope furniture - Porch and lawn Swings. All
at sale prices right now.
r •
A·1538
I
WC:t !-:i Issued tn 1878
Hrt ven , Conn
WEDNESDAY, M.~AY:.,...:.::22~
, :.::
19_74_ _ _ _ _ _ _P_HO_NE 992 215 ~
I
Chaise Lounges - Love Seats . Picnic
Tables - Occasional Tables . Gin
Rummies - Rockers and Chairs .
Select what you need now during this
sale and really save.
automatic.
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Extended area serv1ce he tween subscri bers of th e Weste rn
Reserve Telephone Co. of th e Chester area and PomeroyMiddleport, Rutland and Racine patrons of the Ge neral
Telephone of Ohio is two to three years away.
Subscribers of both compames also will pay addi twnal
charges for the extended area serVICeS.
These were among the pomts emphasized in a day-long
hearing Tuesday on the serv1c~ m the Metgs County Common
Pleas Courtroom. Scheduled at Pomeroy Villa-ge Hall, the
hearing was moved to the courtroom when tl beca me clea r
village hall was not big enough.
Even the courtroom was a standing room only situatwn as
the hearing gol underway with John West, attorney-examiner for
the Ohio Public Utilities Commisston presidmg.
Nine Witnesses testified m the morning session on the need of
extended area servtce between \he two companies There was
frequent applause.
First on the witness stand was Mrs. Sandy Griffith of Reedsville Route I, who headed a committee wht ch had ca nvassed for
the service. She .;aid 463 subscribers of th e Western Reserve Co ,
(985 prefix) were surveyed with 74.8 percent volmg in fa vor of
extended service.
She said 74 subscnbers voted aga inst the ext ended servtce,
345 in favor ofitand 42 others did not respond .
She described the letters and cards by which the survey was
conducted. Subscribers were advised that they would have to pay
about $1.10 a month additional charges on their phone btlls for tile
Porch and Lawn Furniture
..
LEST WE FORGET ...
POM EROYMIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Price of
Sale! John Hancock California Redwood
Comfort
power. It's
NO. 28
Fish and Game Association competed m the event.
which staged the derby held a
Winning door prize~ were
Special contest in wh1ch each Mike Bartrum, Pomeroy Route
youngster was required to 4; Randy George, Rutland ;
bring m hts hne and ''bait up.' 1 Tony Venoy, Pomeroy Route 3;
Then, all cast at once to see Chris RIChmond, Beech Grove;
who could catch a f1sh first. Paul Mi cha el, Rutland ;
This $5 pr1ze went to four-year Rodney Tripp, Chester ; Billy
old Steve Quillen of Rutland. Dye r, Rutland ; Patty Dyer,
The interest mounted as the Rutland; Scott Bartrum ,
youngsters pulled tn their lines Pomeroy, and Ben · Cottrill ,
at the ftrsl nibble as they Harrisonville.
Bob Louks, secretary of the
F1sh and Game Assn. extended
thanks to all fath ers a.nd
(Continued from page I)
goods and services that cost $10 mothers who brought the
in 1967 had increased in price to children and to the Rutland
Legion Pos t for use of the lake.
$14.40 m Aprtl.
A separate report showed He also thanked Archie 's
Hill, Miller
that wa ges of America n Recrealton
workers, are falltng further Brothers Store, Bill Smith
behmd the inflation rate. Real Body Shop, Stewart Hardware,
spendable earnings of the the Rutland Department Store,
average blue collar worker tile Rutland Branch of the
dropped 0 8 pet in April to a Pomeroy National Bank and
level5.6 pet. below a year ago . the Legion Post at Rutland for
Real earnings equals take giving away ice cream, pop·
home pay minus deductions for s1cles, hot dogs, candy and
·social security and federal potato chips to youngsters
during the day .
income taxes.
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET
Actions filed
enttne
1he first telephone directory
Extended phone service 2~3 years off
Mrs , Thoma s concluded:
"Thts ts the only opportunity
we have to bring a statesupported college to thts
region. State offtctals have
Indi cated our 3rea is too
sparsely populated, with too
low a tax base, to build a $12
mtlh on fa ctlity for htgher
educatton 10 Southeast Oh10
11
But because Rio Grande
College has agreed to enter mto
contract for thetr buildings and
opportumty to enjoy the same
substdtes state-supported
colleges benefit from "
Introduced at the speakers'
table were Dinon Plummer,
Wellston; Mrs. Warren F.
Sheets, Galhpohs ; Delbert
Reese, McArthur, and Manning Welherholl, Gallipolis,
members of the Community
College's board of trustees,
along w1th Chuck Fenwick,
treasurer of the CC campaign
comm1ttee
Miles Epling, Gallipolis, is
VlCe chairman of the campaign
commtttee.
Unable to attend Monday's
kickoff meeting were board
f11embers Carol Ohlmger and
Orion Roush, Me1gs County ;
Bill Slavens, board president,
and Atty. Joe Oths, Jackson
County and Judge John Beckley, Vmlon County .
•
at y
I-
commissiOn column . Cash instructors, we now have an
prizes totaling $100 will be
awarded
It was reported that a courthouse replica is not available,
and so a float will not be made
for the regatta. Mrs. H1lberty
sa1d a display of paintings from
the Smithsonian Institute will
be shown at the museum
during Heritage Day on June 23
m conjunction with Regatta
Weekend.
Mutchler was introduced by
Mrs. Bowen to tile 30 members .
She told of hts work on newspapers in Wheeling and
Chicago before Mutchle r
returned to Athens in 1950 to
become a faculty member.
Mutchler presented the
commtssion with an 1863
proclamation signed by Gov.
Davts Todd in tribute to
southeastern Ohio men who
were actively engaged in the
Civil War and were known as
the "Sqwrrel Hunters."
Refreshments were served in
tile concludmg soctal hour
Now You Know
Devoted To The lnter~b Of The tleig&-Ma&On Area
$4,000
the band wtll parttcipate m the
May 21 ·23
the t:Oncluston of the
•
'
( Cnnhnued fr om pa ge l J
-
Me mon al Day Parade tn
Tonight thru Thursday
Weather
'
'
transporta tion
for
Improvement at grade crossmgs
of tracks of all rpilroad compames in Me1gs' County and tn
the fu ture wtll t maintam all
advance warning s1gns a,nd
pavement markin gs to the atgrade crossings.
thefilare asked to notify the
New York Clothmg House at
once
Alumm O[ Pomeroy High
School are to meet at the
Pome roy
Junior
High
Audi torium at 7:30p.m. Thursday to decorare' for the dance RESERVATIONS NEEDED
whtch will be held Saturday at
Reservations for the annual
9: 30 p.m. following the annual Racine Alumni Banquet to be
banquet,
held Saturday at 6 p m. at the
The dance IS Open to the Southern Htgh School must be
public1 and the cost ts Sl for ma de with Mrs. Raymond
tllose not -havmg Pomeroy Pierce >t 949-2374 Dinner will
alumm tickets.
be served-by the junior class
Friday, the alwnni group and their mothers. The dance
will mee t at the Pomeroy at 9 p.m. will feature music by
' a group called "Class." The
Elementary School at 7:30p.m.
to se t up the tables for the band which was schedpled to
banquet wh1fh gets und~rwily play ca nce lled beca use of
at 6:30p.m. Saturday.
illness.
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�
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05. May
Text
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Newspaper
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May 21, 1974
little
zweyer