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12 - The Dmly Sent mel, M1ddlepo1·t-Pomt•roy. 0 , Tuesday, June 4. 1!174
:-:,:-:-:-:=:=:-:::::::::-:=:=:·:=::::::::::::::::-:,:,:,:,:-:,:,:,:,:,:-::':'__ Cb a rlt·, G iJ 11111 re
Mrs. Edwards
SYRIA FRIENI&gt;LIF.R
DAMASCUS
I
UPil
of
I{
utJaud diei;
of Oklahoma dies
Syrta plans to restorr fuJI
diploma til' relations with the

Mrs Jack Edwards, the
United States. Foreign
for '1 er Ruby Montgomery or
Minister
Abdel Hallm
Mason County, died Monday in
Khaddam
said
today.
Parkview Hosp1lai, Ei Reno,
told
a news
Khaddam
Okla , after several weeks
co nfe rence that during
illness. Mrs Edwards spent
Secretary
of Stale Henry A.
her early ch1ldhood m Mason
Ki
ssinger's
recent talks with
County and, w1th her husband,
Syrian
leaders
m Damascus,
moved to El Reno in 1949.
" the questton of restoring
She is survived by her
relations was discussed and
husband and children, Harold,
relations will be restored beGreer Road, Point Pleasant;
tween
the United States and
Wilbur, Chr1stianburg, Va .;
Syria. "
William, Bethany, Okla ; John,
Clearwater; V~rg1l, Leesburg, -:::-:-:-:::::-:::·:-::::::~:::·:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:
Va.;
Elsie
McKinley,
Holler Medical Center
Lawrence
0 ,
Jacks&lt;Jn,
IDischarged, June 6)
and Junior Edwards, GalSharon
Bailey, Sharon
lipolis Ferry. and ArthBelcher
,
Rodge
r Biggs, Esther
ur. stat10ned at El Reno
Black
,
BenJamin
Bra gg ,
AFB Funeral serv~ces will be
held at the Wilson Funeral Jame s Campbell, Hel en
Home, Nor th Barker St., Ei Cossm, Thelma Damels, Amta
Reno, Thursday Burial w1ll be Dodson , Edward Duncan ,
Richard Lambert, Florence
m El Reno.
Miller, Mrs. Kenneth Pa tr~ ck
and daughler, Helen Sch1lhng,
Helen Sheets , ·Frederick
S1sson, William Stump, Karen
Thomas , Ronald Toland,
TONIGHT
Richard Wau gh, Margaret
JUNE 4
W1lbur.
Fred Zmnemann 's
THEDAYOF
!Births, June 2)
THE JACKAL
Mr and Mrs Rodney Roush,
I Techn1cotor)
a
son, Middleport: Mr and
Edward Fo)(
Mrs
Robert Lee Sm1th, a son,
Alan Bade I
Tony Br 1tt on
Bidwell ; Mr and Mrs Dav1d
lPG)
A. James, a son, New Ha ven,
Show Starts 7 p m
W. Va .
1Births, June 3)
Wednesday and Thursday
Mr.
and
Mrs. Larry Haynes,
June S-6
a son, Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
NOT OPEN
Paul Hesson, a son, Letart, W.
Va .; Mr and Mrs. Arnold
R1ddie, a daughler , Wellston.

MEIGS THEAjRE

Mason
Drive-In

Streets

Tonight, June 4

.lutlgnwnl awarded

HUTLAND -:;- Charles Daniel
• G1imore, 59, Rl. 1, Rutland ,
di ed Monday mghl al Veterans
Mcmon al Hosp1ta l.
Mr Gilmore was born Aug.

:11, 1914, a son or the late

Dayton and Neva

Hobbs

G1lmore He was preceded m

. dea th by one daughler , three
· s1sters and one brother .
Sept. 22, 1936, he married
Leola Bolin who survives Also
surv1vm g are one daughter,

Mrs. La rry IE&lt;\na ) Lavender,
Syracuse , two sons, Charles,
Frankfort, rnd ; and Carol, Rt
1, Rutland , three ststers, Mrs
Thelma Cremeans , MarysviUe,
Mrs
George
I Berm ce I

Molden, Rutland, and Mrs.
Arnold ( Betty ) Cremeans,
Marysville; 13 grandchildren
and three great-grandchildren.
and a hos t of meces and
nephews

Funeral

be

services w1ll

Fnday at 2 p m at the Walker
Funeral Home m Rutland w1th
Rev . Robert Sm1th and Rev .
Amos Tillis officiating. Burial
w1ll be in Bradford Cemetery
Fnends may call at the funeral
home any tune after 2 p m.

Thursday. The ramily Will
receive friends Thursday from
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

DEVIL'S
NIGHTMARE
( Color)
Nothing can prepare you for

what happens'

I PGI

- PLUS" DEVILS GARDEN"

"

Wed , Thur., Fn .
June 5-6-7

Double Feature Program
"CENTERFOLD GIRLS"
PLUS
"THE CANDY
SNATCHERS"
Ti ffany Bollmg

Ben P1azza
Wa s a piece of candy worth a
fortune In d iamonds?

Rated R

for ALL your banking needs

We Save You
Fuss, Bother
And Energy!
You never have to stand in line if
you do your banking by mail. It's
just one of''the helps we offer to
busy people like you. Ask about it.

Scull M Kmsicy , Columbus,
was awarded JUdgment lor
$2,500 by Judge John C Bacon,

Workers of America went on

m the Common Pleas Court of
Me1gs County The amount
covered counsel fees mcurrcd
when Klsley won a workmen's
compensatiOn case for Da na

str1kc

Monday

effe ctively

closing dowu the men 's and
boys' clothmg industry.
A spokesman for the union
sa id picket lines were set up
in several cities across the

Cover!, Pomeroy, 111 F1·anklin
County, January , 1969

country. Rut the utnon a~
peared to have some dif·
ficulti es in New York, \\here
1t was unable to provide
picket signs on time for the

1'he defendan I recetved a

settlement of nearly $10,000 Ill
1972 He hsU:d h1s counsel lees
as $2,500 as pari! a I JUStifica tion
lor the se ttlement However,
he neg iecled to pay the counsel

40,000

strikers

in

the

Metropolitan area. Many of
the pickets were sent home

fees

and told to return Tuesday
when the signs would be
rea dy.

SQUAD CALLED
The Po~eroy ER Squad was
called Monday at 5:05pm to
OFFICER HIRED
Pleasant R1dge for Danny Will
RUTLAND
Rutland
who sustatned a possible
Mayor
Eugene
Thompson
sa1d
fractured leg 111 a bicycle actoday
he
ha
s
h~red James
ciden t. He was taken to Holzer
Quillen
on
a
30-day
Medical Cenler.
probatwnary basis as a village
pollee officer. Quillen "1tl
assiSt
chief of pollee Bruce
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Dav1s
Follow111g
the
The Middleport ER Squad
was called Monday at 6:40p.m . probatiOnary penod , if Quillen
for Tracy Manley who was meets reqUirements or the
taken to Velerans Memorial mayor and council he w11l be
h1red on a permanent basis,
Hospital
Mayor Thompson said

Graduate work at
Marshall planned
Joe V Reichman, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Manning Webster ,
Pome'roy , ha s been accepted

lor graduate work at Marshall
Unaver s1ty w Hunhn gto n
beginnmg thiS month
Reichman, discharged !rom
the U S. Army 1n which he
se rved :16 monthS, 32 111 Germany, was awarded the U. S.
Army Commendation Medal
for hi s work in Germany
Reichman received hiS BS
degree from Ohw. Stale
Umver51ty,
College
or
Busmess, in 1970

Voting deadliue
Me1gs County residents are
rem111ded that they have until4
p.m. Thursday to cast ballots
v1a the absentee, disabled and
servtce'men 's route for the
spec1al election to be held June
II. The June II special elecbon
deals Wllh a tax levy for the
support or the Rio Grande
Commun1ty College.
The Meigs County Board or
Elections office is open from I
to 4 p.m. through Thursday lor
process111g the absente voting.

SALE PLANNED
The
Pomeroy Girls' Softball
INSPECTION SET
OMITTED
Team will hold a rummage
RACINE - Annual mRoy Ro'u sh dies
The name or Ronald sale Friday at Grace EpiScopal
spection or Racme Chapler 134 Hawkins, Meigs H1gh School ·
Church Pansh House from 9
Roy Roush, former Racme OES w1ll be held Fnday at 8
freshman, was om1tled from unt1l 5. It Will continue
area resident, d1ed un ex- ' p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
the Me1gs honor roll .
Satyrday morning unbl noon.
pectedly Sunday evemng at his
home m Freedom , Pa Mrs.
Sarah Diddle or Racine Route
2, IS a SISler. Among the other
survivors are his wife and
three children.
funeral services were held
at I 30 p.m. today at the Jack
Gross Funeral Home 111
Rochesler, Pa. Attending from
here were Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Diddle and Mr and Mrs
Jerry Powell.
I.

(Contmued from page I )
the June 17 meehng to request
$750 to be used to match federal
funding for senior citizens.
The CAP crew was commended for a good JOb mowm g
along the streets or the town.
THREE RUNS MADE
Under discussion was the
The
Pomeroy unit or the
quantity Of gas used Ill the Clly
truck, the sewage problem on SEOEMS made three runs
Lasley St., and the sliding hill Monday, at 4·30 p.m . to asSist
on Osborne St. No actwn was Mary L. Wh1te, Rt 3, Pomeroy,
taken on any or the Situations taken to Holzer Medical
Present at the meeting were Cenler; to the A and P Store 111
Cou ncilmen Bill Snouffer, Middleport at 5:30p.m. to take
Ralph Werry, Harry Davis , Harry E. Rowley, Gallipolis, to
John Manley, Lou Osborne and Velerans Memorial Hospital,
Phil Globokar, clerk, Jane and at 6 15 p.m. an emergency
transfer or Rowley from
Walton, and treasurer , Phyllis
Velerans Memorial to Holzer
Hennessey.
Med1cal Center

Double Feature Program

CLOTHING STRIKE
NEW YORK IUP I) Some I 10,000 members of the
Amalgamated Clothing

•

'

SCHOOL SET
Bible School will begin at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ
June 10 and will continue
through June 14 meeting each
evening from 6:30 until8:30. A
p1cnic will be held Saturday to
conclude the school with a
program following at 7:30p.m.

The study -carried out by a
committee from the National
Academy of Sciences and the
National
Academy
of
Engineering - also warned
against strip mming m some
areas .
"Rehabilitatton in the desert
areas is extremely low. In tlie
Sagebrush Foothill regions, If·
habilitation Is chancy - eVI!n
the best or methods would lie
subJect to failure duri~g
drought years."
The . coal deposits extetld
from the Canad1an border ·to
the MexiCan border, and fn.
elude all or parts or Ari1.oria,
Colorado, Montana, New
Mexico, North Dakota, Sout)t
Dakota, Utah, Washington a¢
Wyoming.
,
The fields would be tapped to
help meet President NIXon's
call for a tripling of coal pt,iiduction by 1980 to ease U.S.
reliance on foreign energy

sources.

:.

"Current projecllons of coal
production indicate that f40
square miles would l)e
disturbed by strip mining .by
1990, and 300 square miles by
the year 20110.
•

.OESTOMEET
,
Pomeroy Chapter 186 OES
will meel tonight at 7:45 p.m.
at the Masonic Hall.
:

ELBERFELD$ IN. POMEROY
SHOP WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

VOL. XXVI NO. 37

·'

BOND FORFEITED
SYRACUSE - Robert E.
Bissell, Chester, forfeited a
$200 bond in Syracuse Mayor
Herman London 's Court
Monday night on a charge of
operating a motor vehiCle
while under the influence or
alcohol. He was ciled to court
by police ch1er Milton Vartan.

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURG!'

l.ilbens ~alional
INNATI

IXOD

SUIT FILED
RACINE James M
Hamm, Rt. I, Racine, riled sUit
for divorce against Mary V.
Hamm , Rt. 4, Pomeroy ,
chargmg gross neglect of duty,
111 Me1gs qou nty Common
Pleas Court

LEWISBURG, PA. - FORMER WHITE HOUSE aide Jeb
stuart MaGruder, an admitted conspirator in the Watergate
cover-up, Tuesday began serving a HI-month to four-year sentence at the Allenwood Federal Prison camp.
MaGruder, smiling and in a relaxed mood, told wa1ting
newsmen at the minimnm-secunty facility that he hoped to use
his time in prison "to the best advantage and come out and start
living again." The 39-year-old former chief of PreSident Nixon's
1972 campaign organization was sentenced in Washington on
May 21 by U. S. District Judge John J. Sinca after pleading
gUilty to a cherge or conspiracy to obstruct just1ce and defraud
the United States.

CLUB TO MEET
The Meigs County Young
Republicans will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at the Meigs Inn.
All inlerested young people are
urged to attend.

WASHINGTON - THE SENATE TUESDAY voted to
prohil,lit the Army from testing poiSOn gas on beagle puppies and
told the Pent~~on not to spend any money that was added to the
defense budget just to prime the economic pump. In the second
day or debate on the $21.8 billion 1975 arms procurement bill, the
Senate turned back proposals to publish annually an overall
figure on U.S. mtelligence operations overseas and to set up a
fund to convert U. S. war industries to peacetune productlon.
The Senate approved the beagles measure on a vote or 76 to
12 alter its sponsor, Sen. Hubert Humphrey, D-Minn , argued
that "there are plenty or other animals they can use, such as rats
or ll)ice." A new Army bid for 450 beagles to be used at' its
Edgewood Arsenal, Md., chemical warfare center was revealed
last week by Rep. Les Aspm, D-Wis. Hnmphrey,said he had once
owned a beagle and would not have its memory "desecrated" by
the Army experiments.

Not1 ce

FABRIC sale Al l fabnc m shop
on sa le one week only
Monday , June J, througtl
Saturday, June 8 All f1rst
qual1ty polyester kn rts as low
&lt;ts $1.49 per yard We will be
closed for vacat Fon f rom Jun e
14 to July 1. Caro l1na F abr1c ,
Route 7, one half mi le north of
Ch ester , Ohio
Henry and

Doyle Hudson . second house

west of Happy Hollow Road
on 124 n ea r Ru11and l,..ots of
nice c lothing and other items

Judy Ann Combs
6 4-'2tc

LA PAZ , BOLIVIA- AN ARMY REGIMENT REVOLTED
the government of President Hugo Banzer today and
troops attempted to smash into the presidential palace. The
goverrunent said it crushed Ute revolt but the rebels claimed
victory.
Tanks, annored cars and infantry troops filled the streets or
the capital before dawn, sealing off the presidential palace and
· strategic areas. A presidential spokesman said Banzer was not m
the palace at the time or the revolt and had lert Tuesday on a tnp
to the town of Tupiza in southern Bolivia.
'j _iv•.nmtion M· nL'fM Gutll:·. r· u. .::.Ul;;. ....:O and high command
spokesman Gen. Carlos Alcoreza sald a revolt by the Tarapaca
regiment, based nine miles outside La Paz, bad been quelled and
the goverrunen( retained COI\trol Of the country.
aga~l

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Super Sports by Queen Casuals have sunny dispositions
I

Cool , soft cotton and Dacron® polyester knits in bright, paint box colors.

,.... ....... - " ··~ ...

lnpeccobly tailo red by Queen Cos~ols 1n free and eosy lines for fun under

~~~ v~

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h"'-

Into • .,.r~trta 1'*1-.

the sun Total ly washable, totally wearable, and unbelievably

T... dll., IIIJIICI, ...,. .. ..,.,
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WASHINGTON - THE ATTORNEY GENERAL'S list or
subversive organization, '1\'hicb fueled CIVil liberlies debate for
much of two decades after World War II, L&lt; no more. President
Nixon Tuesday abolished by executive order ihe once feared list
of 300 groups allegedly dedicated to overthrowing the government by violenl or illegal means. He ordered federal agencies not
to use, publish or circtllate it in any way1
Attorney General William B. Saxbe, announcing the order,
said the list had "some justification" when President Harry S
(Continued on page 8) !

priced I Collect o whole exciting wardrobe of our new sporting seporotes.

•

Culotte. patterned placket shirt. Jamaica shorts. striped tank top .

SPORTSWEAR

I

Checked jamaicas, ' matching crew neck top . Checked culotte, coor-

SECOND FLOOR

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I
JURE
MIDOLEPORT, 0.

dinating placket shirt . Bottoms, sizes 8 to 20, 'tops S-M- L. Pink, white,

'I

- I-

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turquoise. or navy. ·

'

I

I

re n es po Icy critics

ANNAPOLIS, Md . (UP! ) PreSident NtXon sa1d today the
U.s.-sov1et detente cannot be
taken ror granted and that the
Russians ca nnot be expected to
be cooperative If "we seek to
intervene dire ctly " m thetr
domestic affa1rs
In a rebuke to congressiOnal
cntics \\hO contend he should
exact more concessions from
Moscow-such as relaxation of
restnct10ns on Jews and others
•
from leaving the Soviet
.. Union Nixon
said
Washmgton cou ld not intervene in Soviet internal
policies
''We cannot gear our foreign
policy to transrormahon of
other socte,tles, ' ' he satd "In
the nuclear age, our first
responsiblity must be the
preventiOn or a war that could
TRADITIONAL ROSE~ - Mrs. Judy Fraser, instructor
destroy
all societies."
of the Mid-Porn School of Dance, was presented a dozen roses
The
President
also cautioned
from her students at the school's tenth annual recital
against
a
"
new
wave of
Tuesday nigbt at the Meigs Jumor High School auditorium
isolatwmsm, blind to both the
Her students presented tap dances, toe dances, acrobatics
lessons or the past and the
and a spec1al lariat act. A family production, with Mrs .
perils
or the future " which he
Fraser's ent1re family assisting her, the show was well
said "remalllS today one of the
received by a crowd of approxunately 250
greatest potential dangers ra cmg our country ''
r::m::::::::::::;;::;::::--:::::~:=:=·========:·===:=·====::;.;::====·==:=======================================·=========·=:=:=:::::=========:=.=·:=::.
''In our era , Amencan
isolation could eaSily lead to
global desolation," he sald in a
prepared address at the I24th
~
v
commencement ceremony of
By,Unlted Press International
the U.S. Nava l Academy.
SPRINGFIELD, OHIO - DEPUTY STATE AUDITOR
NIXon, who heads to Moscow
Thomas Ferguson said today the first Ohio lottery tickets are lor hiS third summit meetmg
expecled to go on sale Aug. 12. Ferguson made the prediction m with Soviet leaders beginmng
remarks prepared for•delivery to a luncheon here.
June '1:1 , sa1d the alternative to
"We hope Ohio's lottery will be a success, and the experience deten te 15 a runaway nuclear
in other states indicates it will,be, '' Ferguson said, ''since most of arms race, a return to co nstant
the revenue going into the state's general fund will be earmarked confrontation and a "shatfpr public education and retirement or the Vietnam bonus tering setback" to hopes for
bonds."
building a structure for lasting
''We expect the first lottery tickets to go on sale around the peace in the world .
state on Aug. 12 and the first $300,000 drawing is to be held on
He put fresh emphasis on the
Aug. 29 during the Ohio State Fair," said Ferguson. Ferguson need for forging ahead in exsaid the first $1 million drawing should be held in late fall .
panding friendly relations w1th
"It really depends upon the volume or tlcket sales," he said.
He estunated that there would be about 20,000 winners or $20
weekly .

YARDsate , Junesand6 , from 1
to s p m at tile res 1dence of

~~...

• •

warns against U. S.

intervention in USSR affairs

Not ICe

flllal·lcoot.irot co...lortna.

~...:.P_H_
ON_1:._9_:_92...:.2~1__:
5 6_ _ _ __ __ _ _ _
1f.N CtNI S

~-------~·-

•

gradua~ion,

BELLEVILLE, ILL. -AN EARTH TREMOR shook the St.
Louis metropolitan area for ahout 21'.! mmutes shortly after 3
a.m. today, overturning some lamps and shaking residents
awake. It caused no reported injuries and httle damage.
The seismograph at St. Loms University measured the
tremor at 3.5 on the open-end Richter scale, a reading that
generally -indicates a minor earthquake.

$139

the Sov1et Umon and other
Communlst countnes desp1te

stron g res1sten ce from some
congressme n ' 'E loquent ap-"
peals are now bemg made
for the Umted Stales, throu gh
1ts fore1gn policy, to tran sfor m
the mternal as well as the mternatwnal -be haviOr or other
countnes, especia lly lhe Soviet
Uruon ," Nixon satd
He said the Russians do not
ltke thiS any more than
Amencans like Sov1et interventton in U.S domestic
affairS .
'
"Unt1l very recently the
pursUit or detente was not a
problem ror us," said NIXon .
"We were so engrossed m
trytng to sh1rt mternat10nai
tides away from confrontation
toward negottallon that people
were generally agreed that th e
overridmg cons1derat10n was
the establishment or a pat term
or peaceful mternatonal conduct But now that so much
progress hes been made. some
lake 11 for gran led ."
He stressed that detente
cannot be taken fo r gran ted,
. saymg "peace beween nat10ns
w1th totally diUerenl systems
IS also a moral objective •·
Nixon 's remarks. delivered
m the Navy-Manne Corps
Memonal Stad1wn on a sunny

Tax cut
hit by
Simon
.

spnn g morn1ng, apparenlly
were a1med at Senate crtiCiS ofhis Sov1et poitc1es such as Sen
Henry M Jackson, D-Wash
Jaekson and some others
ha ve demanded that the adrmmstratlon try to force the
Sov1et government to Ul ke a
more lcment attttude lo\\ard
diSSidents w1thm Huss1a a s a
price for better rclatwns With
the Umted States
The President , who begms
his third round or summ1t
meetmgs With Sov1et lea ders m
Moscow Jun e 27 after a tr1p to
the Middle East sta rlin g nexl
Monda y, sa1d , th e Umted
Slates did not have the
capab ilit y to In fl uence the
mternal conduct or the Soviet
Unton Signifi cantly through 1ls
foreign pohcy
" We would not \\ elcome th e
interventiOn of other countr1es
m our domestic affa1 rs and we
ca nnot expect them to be
cooperative when we seek to
intervene d~rec tl y m theirs,"
NI XOn Sa id.
Jackson and other senators
are seekmg to block N1xon's
errorts to grant trade conces::; wns to M oscow~a measure
necessary for the expanded
trade he hopes to promoteuntil the Sov1et government
I Con lmued on page B1

JULIUS PRESTON JR , left, Will manage the Blue and Grey Restaurant at the corner of
East Mam and Court Sts Ill Pome roy for h1s father, Julius Preston Sr., who has pu rchased the
establlsiunent from Mr. and Mrs Shtrley Gum ther , Lm coin He1gh~.&lt;; , Pomeroy

Pomeroy restaurant is sold
Th e Blu e and Grey
Hes l.mtrant, loc.lted at the
corner of F.~1st Mam and Cuurt
SL'i, hct s been purchased b.\

J uiJu:; Preston, of r:allipoll s
;md Mrs

fr om Mr

·-

I,
}4

.'

\,

thC' bu smes:s the pa s t 10 ~ e;n s
Gutnther ha s been

Mr~

a s.•·wci ~Jte d \~1th

classes set

I

r L· s t.au J c~ nt

employe smce 1940
Pres ton 0\\ner cmd oper,Ji oJ

Charles
1 c 1n :;

.July I to head the town of New
Haven after Y.lnn 1ng the

at regional event

\. '

the

.md bus stop off cmd un CI S ;m

Su uth \\Ill assume the

Baitkwomen

I

Sha le)

r.wn ther \\ ho ha\'e open-J ted

:"'EW Hil VEN -

Rlakesl ee, pr t&gt;'ii dent. The
agenda includes commitlel'
reports, Heritage Sunday m
fonn ection \\ith the Regatta.
and future plans generally.
It is open to the pubhc

training

Middleport

l

of p, cs ton's Restaurant r-mcl
P1zw Parlor m Ga ll tpohs, sa tel
the nl uc an d Grcv '~' II be
m.md ged In llis son. .Juhus
P1 es tun. J1

Pre ston took over the
rcst:wr ant June 1 He plans to
remod el the mW r 101, refurbis h
1/.lt' huu ths . be open fo r bus mess
Iunger rld1l y and rematn open
on Sundd} New hours w1ll be
from 6 d rn to 10 p 111 Mom.lay
tlu uugh Thursda} and 6 a m to

lllHlmgllt F'ndav ;md Sa turd a~
Ttl ese

hours

nC\\

"' 1l l

U1Ke

effec t J mm edJ.tte l ~, how('\ cr
Th e hours \\ 1ll 1 t:l!lillll the
sa me until 1em odrl u1g IS

completed
One L'llWl ~l' 111 the next tH IJ
wee ks wil l he the mlcl1t1un of
pi zza s t o the pr ese nt m enu Bu s

se rvice will (·on tlflu e

&lt;.l S

Jn tile

pa st Sh own m L' J uilu s Jr . ldt
and Pres ton, Sr

'

Lifesaving

by mayor in

\

Charles Smith wins voting
for Mayor of New Haven

MEET THL RSDA Y
The reg ular June mcehng
of the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historicai Socif't) will hr
Thursday at 8 p m according to Char les E.

WASHINGTON {UP!)
Treasury Secretary W1lham E.
S1mon urged senators today to
drop their plans for a tax
reform package - which mcludes a tax cut-&lt;Jn grounds it
could ca use an economic
slowdown
Simon said tax reform should
proceed slowly and carefully m
Congress' tax-writing committees, not from a senes or
amendments on the floor.
"Abrupt diSlocations cause
Seven defendants were fined economic slowdowns from
and two others forfeited bonds which no one benehts," Sunon
Jllruor and semor l1 fesavm g
in Middleport Mayor John sa1d. "Uncertamty alone can
classes
will begm.June 10 al the
Zerkle's Court Tuesday mght.
cause those major disloca- Middlepor t Mumc 1pai Pool
Fined were Don Lovett, 50,
tlons "
w1th semor hfesavmg from 8
Middleport, on two counts or
Although Simon was talkmg a.m. until 10 ~ m and JUniOr
diSorderly manner, $30 and
to the Finance Comm1ttee, his hfesaving from 10 unt1l nom},
costs; Ronme L. Ohlinger, 30,
words were intended for a Leanne Sebo, sw imrmng InMason, $10 and costs, reckless
group of liberal senators who structor and ass1slanl pool
operation , $100 and costs,
have served notice of plans to manager, ann ounced today
evad in g a police officer,
bypass the comm1ttee and
To be eli gible to tak e JlllllOI
Charles Boyles, 36, :vtiddleport,
formulate a mmbination tax- hfesav mg, one must not be
$10 and costs, disorderly
cut and rero;m bill on the under II or more than 14 years
manner; Charles L. Gnrftn, 18,
Senate floor.
or age or ha ve compleU:d the
Gallipolis, $10 and costs ,
The amendments would cut hrth grade One must have
spmnmg t~res;
William
individual taxes, then make up passed lhe1r 15th birthday or
Wailers , Middleport, $10 and
the loss to the Treasury have completed the mn th
costs, se lling fireworks;
througb ehnunat1on or several grade to be ellg1 ble for sent or
Dewayne Taylor. Middleport,
busmess tax advantages and lifesaving .
$10 and costs, disturbing the
an increase 111 the mmtmum
The cost or each course ts $8
peace , Wilham R Barnett, 35,
tax on tax-free income .
Children's
sw1mmmg lessons
Langsville, $150 and costs,
Simon said etiminat10n pf the to cost $4 wi ll begin June 24
three days confme men t,
oil depletion allowance, one The schedule lor children 's
dnvmg while mtoxicated.
!llajor liberal amendmen t, lessons are : Swimmer and
Forfeiting bonds were James
would result in higher prices to Advanced Swimmer, 8-1! 45,
W Farley, 31 , Middleport, $30
consumers. He sa1d changes in Inlermed1ate and Advanced
bond, !allure to y1eld nght of
other business tax laws would Begmner, 8:45-9: 30 ; Beginner
way, and Kenheth Lawson, 61,
discourage investment and IV , 9:30-10 15 ; Begmner rii ,
$25 bond, speeding.
slow the economy
10 15-11 , Beginner 11 , 11-11 ·45Sunon told UP! he would 12 30: and Baby Begmner,
continue strongly to oppose a 12 :30-1.
tax cut for individuals as mAdult lessons also will begin
flationary .
June 10 with classes from 6 to 7
p m. Monday, Wednesday and
Friday
District man Is
Joanne Williams, assistant
All persons inlerested in the
cash1er, The Farmers Bank
lessons should s1gn up al the
wanted by board
, and Savings Co., and Maxme
pool 1n Middleport begmning
Griffith, cashier, Pomeroy
EASTERN - John R1ebel , today after 1 p m
Nat ional Bank, are in supenntendent at Eas tern
Columbus today attending tlte loca l Htgh School DIStrict, said
Tri-Regional Conference of the tuday that the district board
National Association of Bank has indicated its interest in
CLUB TO' MEET
Women, Inc., at the Sheraton hmng a d1str1ct.wide mainThe Me1gs County Ridmg
Hole] June 5-7.
Club w1ll meet thiS evemng at 7
lenenace man .
Mrs. .Griffith will be
Riebel will accept ap- p.m. at the home or Eskey Hill .
recognized at the Thursday plicabons mailed to him in All members are urged to
luncheon as the Lake Region care of the h1gh school at attend
scholarship wmner. Sunday, Reedsville or by phone at 985I
she will be gmng to the Stonier 4292. The board will meet next
POST· TO MEET
Graduate School or Bankmg at Tuesday and members would
RACINE - The Rac in e
Rutgers University, New hke ror those who int~ nd to American LegiOn Po"l 602 w1ll
Brunswick. N.J. for two-weeks muke appllcattons to have meet Thursday alB p m. at the
or study.
Leg ion Hall.
them in by this time .

Seven fined

I

maJor 's race 1n the community 's bl ellfl l al

'I

el ect i on

Tue~clay

Sm1th won the top positiOn

Hfter polling 154 votes as a
ca ndidate 011 both the peoples
and citizens tiCkets . In dmng
so, Sm1th defeated Wilh am
o, e \\ ho reeel ved 59 votes on
an mdependent ticket
.Jane Ru sse ll , mcumbent,
won a nother term as town

Industry stand on
stripping rejected
WASHINGTON (UP I)- The
House lnterwr and Insular ArfaJrs Comm1ttee Tuesday rejected a coa l industry claim
that returmng strip-m med land
to 1ts approx imate ongma l
contoW" would be econom ically
proh1b1tlve.
The comm1ttee, in a 295-page
report accompanying a surfa ce-minin g b1 ll fo r House
fl oo r
co nsJcl enJ tl on ar1d
release d Tue sda y, s;ud

Thieves got
$200 cash
Some prett y co nsi der a te
th1e ves made a , bn er· a ppearan ce al the Court St. Gnll

m downtown Pomeroy last
Fnday night, 1t was disclosed
tOday
Accordmg to Fran~es Sc holl ,
own er of the gnll , th1eves
made the1r way through a pane
or glass In the back door' and
the n ope ned a cash register
and took $200 111 cash.
On their way out, the bandits
replaced the glass 1n the door
and added a str1p or wood so 11
would not fait out.
The Pomeroy Pollee Dept. IS
mvestigahn g the InCident
AGREEMENT MADE
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of Educati on
agreed to pay part of the expenses of Blue Cross and Rlue
Sh1e: i 10r employes or the
hoard when 1t met in regular
session Tuesday mght. Routine
matlers also were completed
by the board . Boa rd members
present were Robert Burdette,
G ord o~ Collins, Harold ,Lohse,
George Perry, Harold Roush ,
and • Robett Bowen , coun ty
supenn tendent.

I'

•.
I, ,

.Ja mes A (;d l fldci \l.;.t S th('

f1rs t ld t-h&lt;Hid e&lt;.l pres1r!tmt

President addresses Naval Academy

6 4-4tp

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

enttne

WWNtSUAY . JUNL S, l~/4

POMI:.ROY -MIDDLI:.PORI. OHIO

•

Mary Hunter , owners

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

!"ow You Know

IJf.'voted To The lntered$ Of The &gt;leig.,-Mwon Area

iNews .. in Briefsiii·

for girls who know the nome of the go me

•

at y

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

We Care About Our Customers

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW
AND AUTO TEUER WINDOW
OPEN FRI. EVENINGS 5 TO 7 P.M.

•

Partly cloudy today ll'llh a
chance of thund er s hOwPrs
H1gh around 85 . Thundershowers hk ely south e.~ntl a
chance of thunders howers
north tonight and Thursdnv
Low tonight around 65 Hi gh
Thursday around 85

National effort needed
to save western states
WASHINGTON (UP!) - If
coal fields m nme western
stales are to be stnp mmed to
ease the energy cnsis, it will
take an "unprecedented
national error(" to prevent
devastating damage to the
1 landscape, a Ford Foundationrmanced study says.
Vast tracts or the strlpmmed land could be reclaimed,
lite study sa1d, 11 the coal mme
companies were rorced to meet
strict land rehabilitation
sf&lt;tndards, and are required to
use
advanced
mining
lechmques.
But the study warned, ''rehabilitation on this unprecedented scale w1ll not occur
simply because society wishes
it, but only because society demands 1t.
"The mining industry ilself
should and can readily bear the
full expense of rehabilitation in
the western coal area with the
addition or a rew cents per ton
to the price or coaL"

Weather

•

-I

I,

re new ed federal com mit ments tow a rd coal as a
domes ti c energy so urce
assured the mdustry or a
reasonable return on 1ts in vestment
"Th us the argument that reclarriatJon IS prohtbitlvely expensive, if tt ever wa s va lid , 1s
certamiy no longer so," the
committee sa1d

"In regard to the most
stringent performan ce sta ndards, namely those associated
w1th rctW"mng the mmmg Site
to the approx1111ate, original
contour, recent studies have
shown that even m the steepest
Appalach i a n t erra in ,
reclamatiOn accordm g to those
reqmremenlc; IS economically
re aStbi e usm g cur rentl y
a va1lablc eqUipm ent; • th e
report sa1d.
" Th ere is evidence, m fa ct,
that compliance m some cases
Increases prohtab1hty to the
operator," the report added
The House cory&gt;mittee bill ,
which sti ll needs rules commitlee actwn before 1t goes to th e
floor, would requ~re surface
mined land to be returned to
the approxunate onginal contour, as well as sett mg van ous
other minmg and reclamalion
sta ndards.
The Senate passed strip mining legislation last October
The Hou se comm1 tt ee approved the b1ll on May 14 by a
26-15 vote.
In a minority report, 10
members of the corruruttee,
headed by rankmg Republican
Cra1g Hosmer of California,
sa1d passage or the measure
"would be unprovident , and
se rwusly endanger this
nation's economy.''
They said Congress "should
not further endanger this nation's energy supply and tliereby endanger 1ts economy by
adopting thiS ill-conceived legislation.''

rec ord er Sh e \!.aS a l'(,Jild ld alL'

on both the peoples and Ci ti ze ns
tickets Where HH votes were
cast 1n her favor
Shelby Dunca n, the Independent ca ndidate recc1ved
64 votes for the recm de1 post
Be rnar d Llc v1ng led ;:til
cand ida tes f Gr a cuun cJl ~eat 0 11
the ri ve-member b od~ when hts
vote cow1t totaled 198 Roth
Wil ha m Gibb s and r-.;._. 11

Haymaker rece1ved 187 votes
Charles Rousll's count was l i~
an d ThomCJs G11 nstea d won
"Wi th 166 votes These f i H! muke
up the new

council

A siXth candidate, Chesle r

Cw-ry. wa s edged out, poll!n g
101 votes. John Thor ne, the
retinn g ma yor. cl!d not seek rcelecbon Ne\\ town (JfriCI&lt;Jis
w11l beg m twO-} cor term s Jul )
I

Work stoppage
at Gavin plant
in second day
A s tn ke

&lt;.~ t

the G,J\'Jn Powl'I
Chesh u e entered 1t.s
se.::o nd day loda}. accortl mg to
Plan tnee.~ r

John Heese, Publ!c Affa ~r s Co
ordmalor "t the AEP facli1ly
Reese sa 1d there arc no
pu::kc t.."i an d no trou ble ha s been
reported m the work, s.t o ppag ~J
that began when th e BUll d~r~ g
ancl Trades Co un cil an d the
craflc; Y.Orkers wh o do not ha\'C
a contra c t failed to read1 an
ag reement.
Heese adclect that rmh :-~ f•·\'
elec tn c1ans came to \\ nrk
toda}.

Queen candidates
to meet Mond ay
There w11l be a meetmg or ali
runnin g ror the lltle of,
Regatta Queen Monda y, June'
10, at 7 p.m above the Me1gs
Museum, entering throu gh the
left door
The meetin g will be to
acqu aw t and dtscuss upcommg
mterv1ews. The gtrls ar e asked
to bring two photographs of
themselves and to dress appropriately ror pictures to be
taken that mght.
Anyone who hAs not Signed
up and is in teres led m enlering
the Regatta Queen contest
should call Debbie Buck at 9923833 or Karen McGraw at 992li862.
~ iri s

II
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�.,
•
3- TheDally

0., Wednesday, JWle 5, 1974

2 - The Dally St~.9t illl' L .\ lldd.it'lk l!'t ·!,I ·1111 Toy,() .. wt•d p·· ~tl•n ..hu ll' ~, ; :' , ;

Gilligan sp.e nding plari
in Senate committee
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statf'housr Ht•porkr
COLUMBUS ( UPI )- Afivemember Senate suix'ommi ttee
today was to begin consideration of a parcel of supplemental
appropriations which co uld
hold the key to whether the
General Assembly can adjourn
for the summer this week .
The subcommittee was
named Tuesday by Sen. Max
H. Dennis . . R- Wilmin gton,
chairman of the Senate
Finance Conunittee, to study
the proposal of the Gilligan
administration to spend $43.5
million in anticipated proceeds
from the first year ol opera lion
of the state lottery .
.AJso consigned to the su t&gt;committee was a Republican
plan to spend $63.7 million in
what the GOP calls a "surplus" which the administration
denies.
And there are several other
supplemental appropriations,
including $5 m illion for
disaster reHef in Xenia , and
extra subsidies for cou nty
homes caring for welfare
recipients.
Dennis named himself as
chairman of the subcommittee.
Serving with him are
Republican Sens. Howard C.
Cook of Toledo and Paul E.
Gillrnor of Port Clinton, and
Democratic Sens. Oliver
Ocasek of Akron and Douglas
Applegate of Steuvenville.
The subconuniltee is e~­
pected to decide whether a

comprumist• can lx' reat'ht•d on
the supplemental spending or
whether the proposais should
be abandoned in favo~ of .stun·
mer recess.

1'01(1) TO SI'J-:AK

!'Ol.LM IIl'S I liP II - Vio ·o·
l'n·sidt·nt f:t·rald It F unl b
s dh·duh·d lu add rt'SS H .$125:I·J•I :tll • Ht'J»uhli•·au fund
r:1 i si n ~ rlinut'r In- n: tonight.
~ tah·

l{l· puhli&lt;·an F irtann

( 'hairm a u .Jam t•s HU( 'h:tnan

111ajor urban ;u ras trying to
fund mass transit !:iyslt'JIIS. The

s~ticl

mnr(' thau 800 tif'kt'ls
had hl't'll ."inld ror tht• dimll'r.

Dairy-gifts come under probe
WA.';JJJ N! ;TON 1UP!) The
How.;e Judic.:iary Committee,
hiking a head to the fruits of
.JX&gt;ssible testimony by form er
pre~id ential assistant Charles
W. Colson, begins C!.O examination today of dairy contributions to President Nixon's reelection campaign.
The impeachment panel will
use ~l i1ew report from the
Sena te Watergat e Committee
contradicting Nixon's expl.ana·
lion that he raised milk price
supports in 1971 because of
congressional pressure.
The Senate committee staff
raised the question whether
Nixon increased the _supports
in return for a pledge of $2
million from the dairy industry .
Colson, who pleaded guilty

Monday. to. obst ruction of. deemed Tuesday to have been plotting to incriminate
Woods.
justice in the -E IIsberg break ·in purposely erased .
At Tuesday's judiciary
case, will be interviewed by
In a final report on the
impeac hment investigators as missing mi nutes, a panel of mittce mee tin g, m~~!~~~~
·a prelude to possible interroga- experts told U.S . Distr ict Court heard evidence on an
Telephone
lio n by the full judiciary . Judge John J . Sirica the same tiona !
committee.
thing II had said in a Telegraph Corp . antitrust
Nixon 's. former special coun- preliminary finding, that that was linked to a co1npanl
sel helped solicit the dairy so meone erased th e tape · pledge of financial support
donation pledge.
between five and nine times. the 1972 GOP co nvention .
The President has no reason
"'l11is report draws no infer· later said nothing
til fea r Colson's testimon y, said ences about such questions as
that Nixon's actions
Nixon lawyer James D. St. whether the erasure and buzz related to the convention
Clair Tuesday , and would were made accidentally or
There have been sug:ge!rtioln1(
welcome iL Th e judiciary intentionally, or when, or by tha t any te stimon y
committee probe of the milk what person or persons," it gives to the impeat
fund will include listening to said .
panel could be as explosive
two tape recordings of presi.
But the lawyer for presiden· last year 1s Senate testimonY
dential conversatipns it got ti a l sec reta ry Rose. Mary former Nixon counsel John
from lawyers for Ralph Nader. Woods, said the report was Dea n III .
Another tape, th e June 20, "worthless" and charged that
Colson was aided in
1972, recording that contained the White House, Sirica and deci!ilon by fellow members
an 18 1f,Hninute gap, was Watergat e pr.osecutors were a Capitol Hill prayer gro up.
Sen. Harold Hughes, u-J.ow''•
said Tuesday that Colson
to him and three other
bers of the prayer group
guidance
on the possibili ty
Most successful 'chuck hunt- cause the skill involved makes
guilty
plea.
ers use flat-shooting "var- the sport worthwhile.
Then, Sunday night,
mint" rifles in calibers capable
Ohio imposes no seasons or
of sending a lightweight bullet · limits on this sport, but does Hughes, Colson told his
several hundred yards with require hunters to display a leagues in prayer about
final decision, and hours
only a little loss of velocity.
valid state hunting license in
surprised
the federal
Perhaps the most popular the middle of the back.
troom
with
his plea.
calibers in use are the .22 Hornet, .222, .22-,250 Varminter, ,
and the standby .243. I use a
lethal little Wea therby Varmintmaster Mark V rifle in .22250, lilpped with a 3x9 va riable
scope with post retical.
This combination delivers
the bullet very fl atly out to 300
yards, well beyond the ranges
most Ohio shooters encounter
on this state's small (arms.
Woodchucks seem to prefer
living in slightly rolling, welldrained terrain containing lowgrowing field crops and perhaps a bit of woodland nearby.
Most hunters post themselves,
SPECIAL GROUP
concealed, within firing distance of a known woodchuck
G.$8.99 VALUES-SIDE SHOW
den entrance, feeding lane or
sunning area.
DRESS AIID CASUAL
The long-range caliber is
necessary because of the ani. mal's keen eyesight, and be- .
Ladies' famous Side Show brand
sport and casual footwear in the
latest spring styles and colors.
Regular $8.99 values. Save now!

ethics bill would darify proVf•tt•ra!IS Mt•mttriall-lospi~al
visions in the 1970 rthies law
Admi ...;sions
MilUn·d
and make ·adjustrmmts based
s,wnL
•t•r,J{acinc:
Huy
Johnsnn.
Took At'liun
on experi&lt;'ncc.
The House Tuesdav took
For exc-unplr. cer ~J in techni- Middlep(\rl : Oti s Arrwtl.
fi nal legislative actio~ on a t•al c oii'f lic t- of -i nlerest Haeim·: Terry Bdl. Ha cinc:
pair of bills liberalizing Ohio provisions which caused Rob i11 ,St .. ·wctrt, Syracusf~:
election laws and setting up a governmf'nt employes to Georg(' PNry. Oextcr : Berlh;1
Mit so n:
Rober!
sta le Court of Claims.
resign would Ue overlooked. Prinrt-',
Rutl1
Both measures were sent to
The House spent five hours S aq~l' nl. Hutl&lt;HH.l:
Duwkr,
Midd
leport
;
Betty
Gov. John J . Gilligan. who has on th e floor , passing a var iety
indicated he would sign them. of bills which will a~d to the l{()ush. H&lt;H'i lll'.
Dist: twrges -· Hor1ald l .yons,
The Democratic-:-5ponsored I Senate workload on the rve of
Elvc-1
Golden,
Sharon .
elections bill will provide an adjournment.
Cnmeans,
.Joseph
Quivey
,
additional hour or voting in
Severai of the bills provide
Penny
Cmuch,
Huby
Gibbs,
November between 6:30 and for pension increases, in·
7:30p.m.
eluding those for sta te Ruth KarT .
It also will aijow the sta te to legislators.
subsidize recounts in close
The House adopted, 87-5, a
elec tions , permit 17-year olds bi ll liberalizing pension
to vote in a primary if they will benefits lor persons covered by
DAYTON, Oh io - You can findin g landowners who will
be 18 by the general election, the four majo r retirement
fun, do local fa nners a welcome them to help thin out
have
and move the Ohio primary syste ms,
incl uding
the
favor,
and keep sharp for this the rodents' numbers.
from May to J un e sll'rting next lawmakers th emselves.
fa
ll
's
big game hunting by
All it usua lly requires is a
year. The House ratified
Similar approval was given
Sena te amendments to the bill, leg islation increasing pension seekin g Ohio's plentiful polite request, along with sincere assurances tha t all prop78-1 2.
benefitS for retired highway woodchuck s.
These
ground-&lt;lwelling
roerty
- fences, stock, bridges
The Court of Claims bill re- patrolmen, sheriffs and deputy
dents,
wh
ich
often
attains
and such - will be respected
ceived
similar
75-18 sheriffs.
weights
of
15-20
pounds
and
and left intact. Be sure to inratification in the House. It
The House also approved, 611abolishes the sta te Sundrv 27, and sent to the Senate a bill more, take up residence on a quire as to where the farmer.
Claims Board an d allow; which would lower from 55 to 50 farmer's property and grow fa t wants you to hunt - and where
lawsuits to be directed at the per cent the majority needed and complacent on a diet of he'd prefer you didn't.
Once you've successfull y restate . for the first time.
for a munici pality to increase soybeans, sweet corn and garden
plants.
moved
a few of the critters
Revise Ethics
its income tax at a special
In
addition
to
robbing
the
from
local farms, don't be Sill'·
The Senate passed and sent election .
to the House a pair of bills
The chief sponsor, Rep. C.J. fa rmer's fields, woodchucks prised if other farmers,
revising the sta te's ethics law McLin, D-Daylon, sa id the ot&gt;- have been known to d ig sim ilarly overridden with
and authorizing r egional jcctive was lo encourage muni- bur row entrances where groundhogs, call on the .phon e
transit authorities with taxing cipali ties to place income tax tractor wheels may find them, to ask that you hunt their
powers.
proposals on the ballot at breaking axles. Ca ttle, sheep property on your next trip .
Farmers are busy in swn~
The trausit bill is sought by special elections, not during and horses have been injured
by
stepping
into
these
cleverly
mer
and often don 't have the
prima ries or ge neral elections
~------------- - - ------ ---- when voter interest was ab- hidden holes in the ground .
lime to devote to hunting the
All
of
which
means
the
seriThe end result is
groundhog.
sorbed
by
.other
contests.
1
I
ous woodchuck hunter should easy hunter access and often
McLin
noted
his
home
city's
1
·
I
I
I problem in boosting its income encounter little problem in superb shooting opportunities.
I
I tax and said Dayton would
have to raise $4.3 million just to
I
I maintain CW' rent services.
1
By Clarence
Other House action included:
11
Miller
CHARITY - A 65-20 vote of
approval was given to a resolution callin g on the Public
By November 1974, the country's energy base; (5) Utilities Commission to conblueprint of the nati ona l expand ing the use of coal and sider utilities' charitabl e
energy po licy which will guide seeing to it that the in dustry is contributions in determining
the nation's energy develop- not hampered in its efforts to requests for rate increases.
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - in "wops" in the tapes, bu t · the
ment will be presented to the increase the produc tion The proposal was sent to the one "characJerization deleted" White House denied there were
President . This was the because of uncer ta inties Senate.
from Whi te House tapes. any etlmit: slurs. The denial
Tonight. Thur ., Fri .
CIVIL - Legislation con- Pres id ent Nixon suspected was repeated Sunday after
message that John Sawhill, r eg~ rd ing the regula tor
June 5·6·7
Ohio's
anti - Jewish official s. inc lud in g Hep. Jerome Wald ie, D:talif. ,
FEA Admin istrator, presented legislation; and ( 6) greatly fo rm ing
Double Fea ture Program
to the Members of the House increasing the use of nuclear discrimination provisions in Henry Kissinger, of ' leaking said he heard a slur while
" CENTERFOlD GIRlS"
Energy and ResowTes Tas k powe r by expe ditin g the employme nt, housing an d inform ation to Jewish news· li ste ning to the tapes in the
PlUS
Force , on which I serve.
licensing procedure which public accommoda tions with men, the Los Angeles Times Jud iciary Comm ittee hearings.
" THE CANDY
SNATCHERS"
Mr. Sawhill e.plained that might include form ing clusters federal law was cleared, 67-25, reported Tuesday.
.Ti
ffan y Balling
much .Sign'ificance , has been of nuclear plants in areas and sent to the Senate.
The Times sa id tha t it had
Ben Piazza
XENIA - The House ap- lea rned th at· one of th e
attached to attaining energy around the country.
Was a piece of candy worth a
self-sufficiency. He sa id that
Ind icat ions that some proved, 87-1, a bill making President's remarks that has
fortune in diamonds?
The Dai~ Sentinel
although he couldn't say segments of the public don 't Xenia and other cities been deleted from the tranRated R
exactly what. level of oil im- accept the fact that the U. S. damaged by na tural disasters scri pts .of a conversa tion beDEVOTEDT0111E
INTERESTOF •
ports
represented
self- .'i till r'aces se rious energy eligi ble for special relation: " tween Nixon and White Rouse
MEIGS-MASON AREA
~·
sufficiency, but offered that a problems is a matter of con. ships with private developers counsel John Dean on Feb. 28,
CH&amp;STERL. TANNEHU.L,
Exec. Ed.
good guideline would be a level cern to both the Members of for urban renewal projects. 1973. was:
ROI~ERT HOEFLIOI ,
of im.ports small enough to Ute Task Force and the Federal The bill went to the Senate.
City Editor
"Some of our Jew ish friends
Both chambers were to re- in the media have an 'in'
Published daily except Saturday by The
prevent serious damage to the F.nergy Admini::;triltion.
Ohio Valley Publishing Company, 111
Tonight &amp; Thursday
U. S. in · the case of future
As srunmer vacation time convene at ~:30 p.m. today.
around here. Kissinger leaks, Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 56789. Business
June 5·6
embargoes. This level, he felt, appr oaches, Ame ricans are
Phone 992-21~. Editorial Phone 992Simon leaks, and Stein leaks." Office
NOT OPEN
2157.
is cetain ly below the curren t oi l swallowing a dangerous
Secretary of Stale Ki ssinger
Second class postage paid at PtlmeroY
Ohio.
·'
import level of approximately ass umption lhat-'lbundant
an d adm in istra ti on offi cia l
Fri. , Sat., Sun .
Nallonal
advertising
representati
ve
40 pet. from foreign sources gasoline supplies exist and that
Herbert E. Stein are Jewish. Bottinelli.{Jallagher ,Inc., 12 East 42nd St.,
June 7-8·9
and is probably in the neigh· we can re turn to pre-embargo
CHARLEY VARRICK
The Presiden I apparenU y did NewYork.,NewYark.
Subscr i~tion rates: Delivered by .carrier
borhood of 15 to 25 pet. It is my fuel conswning habi ts. FEA
(T.echnicolor)
not rea li ze that Treasury w~re
8\'&amp;tlable 60 centlt per week ; By
Walter M atthau
opinion that the import level administrator Sawhill has said
Holzer Medical Center
Secretary William E. Sim on is Molar Route where carrier servi~ not
Joe Don Baker
available. One month, rl.IKI. By maU ln
should be even lower.
publicly that Americans can
(Discharged, June 4)
a Roman Catholic.
( PG J
Ohio and W. Va ., One Year, $18; Sll:
Meeting this goal is possible, · enjoy summer vacation tri ps
Ameila Bend, Nellie Betz,
Cartoons :
Previously, Th e New York months, S9.r,o ; Three months , $6.
acco rding to Sawhill, only this year - and that sufficien t Mary Br oyles, Raymond Times reported Nixon made Elsewhere ~ .00 year ; slx monthll SI UO:
Krazy Kat also Loopy
~ree mont!Js, $6.50. Subseriptlon price
Show Starts 1 p.m.
through a combination of ef- gasoline will be available to Broyles, Eva Castle, Donald references to "Jewboys" and lnC:ludes
Sunday Times-Sentinel.
forts including conservation , travel - for so long as we Cottrill, Nancy Cox, Hubert
increasing production and maintain the energy con- Deha r t, An na Douglass,
technolog ical improvements in servat io n methods imposed Frances Droz, Tonnie Fortner,
energy use. Mr . Sawhi ll last winter. Foremost among Beatrice Gettles, Tammy
recommended six vital areas these is observ ing the lower Gill e nw ater . William
wh ere
action
co ula speed limits and car pooling Holzapfel, Max Jarrell,
significantly increase energy wherever possible.
Charlotte McCorkle, George
production. Th e six are : r])
Asked about gasoline prices, McGoon, Mrs. James Myers
expanding the drilling on the Sawhill predicted that pri ces and son, Ella Pittenger, Tresa
outer continental 'shelf. "should begin to stabilize at Reapp, Ruth Richards , Detl1er
especially in the Atlantic; (21 about curren t levels." At th e Roush , J r., Mrs. Donald Smith
increasing the use of secondary same time the energy czar said and daughter, Rita Snyder,
recovery methods to get more tl1at a $1-per-gallon pri ce tag James Stewart, Frances
oi l and gas from the wells; (3) was "highly un li kely" and that Thomas, Rhonda Whaley.
deregulating natural gas; ( 4 ) a substantial price increase
(Births)
es tablishing environmenta l would surface only if the U. S.
Mr. and Mr s. Will iam
":'his. is Home Improvement Month and you'll
standards that will not inh ibi t fa ced a corresponding major Ch iappetta, daughte r ,
fmd lUSt abou! everything to build ·a nything here. ·
the incr eased use of coal and price hike in the cost of im- Pomeroy ; Mr . and Mrs. Eldon
Check our pr1ces. Free delivery service.
other energy sources as part of ported oil.
Massie, a son, Jackson; Mr.
Ute effort to increase the
and Mrs. David Wickline, a
son, Bidwell.

R ep0 rt

I,~

President thought
Kissinger leaked

Mason
Drive-In

Sundays 10 AM to 10 PM
PRICES GOOD THRU JUNE 8

BUILDING OR REMODELING •••

eQUALITY WMBER

PLANNED USE REPORT
GENERAL REVENUE SHARING

neral RL,'&lt;'''IP- Shanng p•ovo•le;, lad~;~ r al lun;ls tl'rec ll'( 10 loc.11 &lt;lr'ld stJi e go·• efr'lm e f'l t S lhe law requ1res uach g'overnmen!IO
b 1sh a ·ep·•rt uf rts pi(.! no;. lor lhl_' t.~f' nl t'•es!! lu ncl~ to on for m IS ~ruze ns and t o encovragl! rflerr p&lt;1111Crp&lt;llro·,, 1n dec,dn1g how
1
•·• ttobc
.W•t•·•·!··erh•';•o:.esl•~ t ed
r
n4.aych ange lhiS
r
T Hf GOVERNMENT Of

12,631',00

MENT OF
FDA HIE FIFTH ENTITLEMENT PERIOD. JULY 1, 1974

THR OUGH JUNE 30. 1975 . PLANS TO SPEND THESE
FUNDS FOflrTHE PURPOSES SHOWN .
,

ACCOUNT NO.

·

Twp . Clerk

utiny~t

HOGG &amp;zust&amp;rERIALS·co.

IUIM!:i

'

,,I

', -

PORK LOIN ................... ~~:.69~

/.

.,

I

CHICKEN BREASTS .................'?:. 69~

DINNER BELL

DINNER BEU

SMOKED PICNIC.~~-.~~~:.~~: 59~

BOLOGNA ..........................~~~---~~~: 79~

DINNER BELL

WHOLE

RIB EYE ... ~~~.~~~.~~~~..................'.~ ·- ~2 2"9

WIENERS .............. ~:~~:.~~~:.. 6 9 ~

WHOLE

CHICKEN THIGHS....... ~~:. 59~

SLICED

NEW YORK STRIP..~.~~-~ ......... ~~: .. ~2 39

BErrY CROCKER

ORANGE

H1-C.~~.~~.~. . . . . . . . . . ..

SPORT TOPS

CAKE MIX

Special group of la di es' screen
print polyesl er sl eeveless sport
tops in assorted colors and
patt.;rns. Regular S5.99 va l ues .

$

FAVORITE

BREAD

88

41s- o~$1

EACH

SPECIAL GROUP
VALUES TO '12.99

VINE RIPE

LA DIES-SPRING-SUMMER

DRESSES

.~.

TOMATOES. . . .. . . . ~~: . .

A sensa lional group of better dresses.
Regular va l ues to Sl2. 99. each . Ladies'

spri ng and summer dresses in assorted
colors, pattern s and fabrics . Good
range of siz es.

U.S. NO. 1 NEW

POT A TOES . ~ ......~.~..!~~~. -'1

49

SPECIAL CLEARANCE GROUP
LADIES FAMOUS BRANDS
SPRING AND SUMMER .

VAN CAMP

PORK AND

SPORTSWEAR

DOLE SLICED

3 oz. $1

.
BEANS.~ ..............

PINEAPPLE .........~.~~...

21

3

'1

CANS

\

Special gr oup of ladies' famo us bra·nds
of spr ing and ·Summer sportswear,
Russ Togs , Bobbie Brook!i. Shop early
fo r best ~e l ection fr om thi s clearance
group Save one.th ird at Stiff ler's.

REG.
PRICE

·nl-5554

GOLD MEDAL

ICE
CREA.M

FLOUR

.

5

~-

~GAL79e
DOLI PINEAPPLE

$ 44

FREE DEUVERY
..

GLACIER CLUB

OFF

STURDY 18 GALLON
LID
F.AMOUS 'GOTHAM PLUTIC

I

•

•

'

'·

lbs.

WHEATIES
18 OZ. BOX

'

JOICE ........... ~.~.~~... 39e

EACH

MASON, ,W, VA;

.\

LB.99e

'A SLICED

Large sturdy 18 gallon plastic trash
cans with lock lid and easy carT)'
handles. Made from unbreakable
plastic.

·

!CONOMIC
OEVHOPMEillr

..

- HAM~

GARBAGE CAN
We Can Save You Money

..

' DINNER BELL BONELESS

LADIES SCREEN PRINT
SLEEVELESS POL VESTER

ODen 8 a.m .-5 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Close at Noon Saturday

Rt. 3, Alb'any

1-LB. PKG.

REG. •5.99 VALUE

1 3

WITt... ne w• "'•d•i h••• been ,d ..in.f thtl 1 (Op~ 11!
lh •~ " pon hn betn P~bl shed In a lc-ul ntw•~ aper of genertl
cl!curauon. I ~aue rllcorth doeumentino;~ the comtntl of 11111
the ya raope n lorpubloc·

BACON

ESTIMATES UPON REQUES(

36 3 053 003

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
TWP. ClERK
MEIGS CO.
ALBANY, 0 . 45710

'!Pill! I

DINNER BELL VAC ·

PAIR

eWINOOWS.V.OOD OR ALUMINUM
•Pl-YWOODS .sHEATHING

ANTIC IPATING A GENERAL REVENUE SHARING PAY·

V

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

•PANELING •PAINTS ·

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
UBliC SMOI¥

•INSUlATION

NO SALES TO DEALERS

88

NEWS

I

Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to 10 PM

FOOTWEAR

HOSPITAL

I.

Store Hours:

- MIDDLEPORT
.
WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY

MEIGS THEATRE

.- .

POMEROY, OHIO

Groundhog shooting is fun; farmers like you

washington

,

298 SECOND ST

'

I

.

.·

I '

·,

.

.

.

... l"
~

'

'

I'

'

'.

..

'

I'

i

I

~

•' . i

I •

·I

'

.

�.,
•
3- TheDally

0., Wednesday, JWle 5, 1974

2 - The Dally St~.9t illl' L .\ lldd.it'lk l!'t ·!,I ·1111 Toy,() .. wt•d p·· ~tl•n ..hu ll' ~, ; :' , ;

Gilligan sp.e nding plari
in Senate committee
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statf'housr Ht•porkr
COLUMBUS ( UPI )- Afivemember Senate suix'ommi ttee
today was to begin consideration of a parcel of supplemental
appropriations which co uld
hold the key to whether the
General Assembly can adjourn
for the summer this week .
The subcommittee was
named Tuesday by Sen. Max
H. Dennis . . R- Wilmin gton,
chairman of the Senate
Finance Conunittee, to study
the proposal of the Gilligan
administration to spend $43.5
million in anticipated proceeds
from the first year ol opera lion
of the state lottery .
.AJso consigned to the su t&gt;committee was a Republican
plan to spend $63.7 million in
what the GOP calls a "surplus" which the administration
denies.
And there are several other
supplemental appropriations,
including $5 m illion for
disaster reHef in Xenia , and
extra subsidies for cou nty
homes caring for welfare
recipients.
Dennis named himself as
chairman of the subcommittee.
Serving with him are
Republican Sens. Howard C.
Cook of Toledo and Paul E.
Gillrnor of Port Clinton, and
Democratic Sens. Oliver
Ocasek of Akron and Douglas
Applegate of Steuvenville.
The subconuniltee is e~­
pected to decide whether a

comprumist• can lx' reat'ht•d on
the supplemental spending or
whether the proposais should
be abandoned in favo~ of .stun·
mer recess.

1'01(1) TO SI'J-:AK

!'Ol.LM IIl'S I liP II - Vio ·o·
l'n·sidt·nt f:t·rald It F unl b
s dh·duh·d lu add rt'SS H .$125:I·J•I :tll • Ht'J»uhli•·au fund
r:1 i si n ~ rlinut'r In- n: tonight.
~ tah·

l{l· puhli&lt;·an F irtann

( 'hairm a u .Jam t•s HU( 'h:tnan

111ajor urban ;u ras trying to
fund mass transit !:iyslt'JIIS. The

s~ticl

mnr(' thau 800 tif'kt'ls
had hl't'll ."inld ror tht• dimll'r.

Dairy-gifts come under probe
WA.';JJJ N! ;TON 1UP!) The
How.;e Judic.:iary Committee,
hiking a head to the fruits of
.JX&gt;ssible testimony by form er
pre~id ential assistant Charles
W. Colson, begins C!.O examination today of dairy contributions to President Nixon's reelection campaign.
The impeachment panel will
use ~l i1ew report from the
Sena te Watergat e Committee
contradicting Nixon's expl.ana·
lion that he raised milk price
supports in 1971 because of
congressional pressure.
The Senate committee staff
raised the question whether
Nixon increased the _supports
in return for a pledge of $2
million from the dairy industry .
Colson, who pleaded guilty

Monday. to. obst ruction of. deemed Tuesday to have been plotting to incriminate
Woods.
justice in the -E IIsberg break ·in purposely erased .
At Tuesday's judiciary
case, will be interviewed by
In a final report on the
impeac hment investigators as missing mi nutes, a panel of mittce mee tin g, m~~!~~~~
·a prelude to possible interroga- experts told U.S . Distr ict Court heard evidence on an
Telephone
lio n by the full judiciary . Judge John J . Sirica the same tiona !
committee.
thing II had said in a Telegraph Corp . antitrust
Nixon 's. former special coun- preliminary finding, that that was linked to a co1npanl
sel helped solicit the dairy so meone erased th e tape · pledge of financial support
donation pledge.
between five and nine times. the 1972 GOP co nvention .
The President has no reason
"'l11is report draws no infer· later said nothing
til fea r Colson's testimon y, said ences about such questions as
that Nixon's actions
Nixon lawyer James D. St. whether the erasure and buzz related to the convention
Clair Tuesday , and would were made accidentally or
There have been sug:ge!rtioln1(
welcome iL Th e judiciary intentionally, or when, or by tha t any te stimon y
committee probe of the milk what person or persons," it gives to the impeat
fund will include listening to said .
panel could be as explosive
two tape recordings of presi.
But the lawyer for presiden· last year 1s Senate testimonY
dential conversatipns it got ti a l sec reta ry Rose. Mary former Nixon counsel John
from lawyers for Ralph Nader. Woods, said the report was Dea n III .
Another tape, th e June 20, "worthless" and charged that
Colson was aided in
1972, recording that contained the White House, Sirica and deci!ilon by fellow members
an 18 1f,Hninute gap, was Watergat e pr.osecutors were a Capitol Hill prayer gro up.
Sen. Harold Hughes, u-J.ow''•
said Tuesday that Colson
to him and three other
bers of the prayer group
guidance
on the possibili ty
Most successful 'chuck hunt- cause the skill involved makes
guilty
plea.
ers use flat-shooting "var- the sport worthwhile.
Then, Sunday night,
mint" rifles in calibers capable
Ohio imposes no seasons or
of sending a lightweight bullet · limits on this sport, but does Hughes, Colson told his
several hundred yards with require hunters to display a leagues in prayer about
final decision, and hours
only a little loss of velocity.
valid state hunting license in
surprised
the federal
Perhaps the most popular the middle of the back.
troom
with
his plea.
calibers in use are the .22 Hornet, .222, .22-,250 Varminter, ,
and the standby .243. I use a
lethal little Wea therby Varmintmaster Mark V rifle in .22250, lilpped with a 3x9 va riable
scope with post retical.
This combination delivers
the bullet very fl atly out to 300
yards, well beyond the ranges
most Ohio shooters encounter
on this state's small (arms.
Woodchucks seem to prefer
living in slightly rolling, welldrained terrain containing lowgrowing field crops and perhaps a bit of woodland nearby.
Most hunters post themselves,
SPECIAL GROUP
concealed, within firing distance of a known woodchuck
G.$8.99 VALUES-SIDE SHOW
den entrance, feeding lane or
sunning area.
DRESS AIID CASUAL
The long-range caliber is
necessary because of the ani. mal's keen eyesight, and be- .
Ladies' famous Side Show brand
sport and casual footwear in the
latest spring styles and colors.
Regular $8.99 values. Save now!

ethics bill would darify proVf•tt•ra!IS Mt•mttriall-lospi~al
visions in the 1970 rthies law
Admi ...;sions
MilUn·d
and make ·adjustrmmts based
s,wnL
•t•r,J{acinc:
Huy
Johnsnn.
Took At'liun
on experi&lt;'ncc.
The House Tuesdav took
For exc-unplr. cer ~J in techni- Middlep(\rl : Oti s Arrwtl.
fi nal legislative actio~ on a t•al c oii'f lic t- of -i nlerest Haeim·: Terry Bdl. Ha cinc:
pair of bills liberalizing Ohio provisions which caused Rob i11 ,St .. ·wctrt, Syracusf~:
election laws and setting up a governmf'nt employes to Georg(' PNry. Oextcr : Berlh;1
Mit so n:
Rober!
sta le Court of Claims.
resign would Ue overlooked. Prinrt-',
Rutl1
Both measures were sent to
The House spent five hours S aq~l' nl. Hutl&lt;HH.l:
Duwkr,
Midd
leport
;
Betty
Gov. John J . Gilligan. who has on th e floor , passing a var iety
indicated he would sign them. of bills which will a~d to the l{()ush. H&lt;H'i lll'.
Dist: twrges -· Hor1ald l .yons,
The Democratic-:-5ponsored I Senate workload on the rve of
Elvc-1
Golden,
Sharon .
elections bill will provide an adjournment.
Cnmeans,
.Joseph
Quivey
,
additional hour or voting in
Severai of the bills provide
Penny
Cmuch,
Huby
Gibbs,
November between 6:30 and for pension increases, in·
7:30p.m.
eluding those for sta te Ruth KarT .
It also will aijow the sta te to legislators.
subsidize recounts in close
The House adopted, 87-5, a
elec tions , permit 17-year olds bi ll liberalizing pension
to vote in a primary if they will benefits lor persons covered by
DAYTON, Oh io - You can findin g landowners who will
be 18 by the general election, the four majo r retirement
fun, do local fa nners a welcome them to help thin out
have
and move the Ohio primary syste ms,
incl uding
the
favor,
and keep sharp for this the rodents' numbers.
from May to J un e sll'rting next lawmakers th emselves.
fa
ll
's
big game hunting by
All it usua lly requires is a
year. The House ratified
Similar approval was given
Sena te amendments to the bill, leg islation increasing pension seekin g Ohio's plentiful polite request, along with sincere assurances tha t all prop78-1 2.
benefitS for retired highway woodchuck s.
These
ground-&lt;lwelling
roerty
- fences, stock, bridges
The Court of Claims bill re- patrolmen, sheriffs and deputy
dents,
wh
ich
often
attains
and such - will be respected
ceived
similar
75-18 sheriffs.
weights
of
15-20
pounds
and
and left intact. Be sure to inratification in the House. It
The House also approved, 611abolishes the sta te Sundrv 27, and sent to the Senate a bill more, take up residence on a quire as to where the farmer.
Claims Board an d allow; which would lower from 55 to 50 farmer's property and grow fa t wants you to hunt - and where
lawsuits to be directed at the per cent the majority needed and complacent on a diet of he'd prefer you didn't.
Once you've successfull y restate . for the first time.
for a munici pality to increase soybeans, sweet corn and garden
plants.
moved
a few of the critters
Revise Ethics
its income tax at a special
In
addition
to
robbing
the
from
local farms, don't be Sill'·
The Senate passed and sent election .
to the House a pair of bills
The chief sponsor, Rep. C.J. fa rmer's fields, woodchucks prised if other farmers,
revising the sta te's ethics law McLin, D-Daylon, sa id the ot&gt;- have been known to d ig sim ilarly overridden with
and authorizing r egional jcctive was lo encourage muni- bur row entrances where groundhogs, call on the .phon e
transit authorities with taxing cipali ties to place income tax tractor wheels may find them, to ask that you hunt their
powers.
proposals on the ballot at breaking axles. Ca ttle, sheep property on your next trip .
Farmers are busy in swn~
The trausit bill is sought by special elections, not during and horses have been injured
by
stepping
into
these
cleverly
mer
and often don 't have the
prima ries or ge neral elections
~------------- - - ------ ---- when voter interest was ab- hidden holes in the ground .
lime to devote to hunting the
All
of
which
means
the
seriThe end result is
groundhog.
sorbed
by
.other
contests.
1
I
ous woodchuck hunter should easy hunter access and often
McLin
noted
his
home
city's
1
·
I
I
I problem in boosting its income encounter little problem in superb shooting opportunities.
I
I tax and said Dayton would
have to raise $4.3 million just to
I
I maintain CW' rent services.
1
By Clarence
Other House action included:
11
Miller
CHARITY - A 65-20 vote of
approval was given to a resolution callin g on the Public
By November 1974, the country's energy base; (5) Utilities Commission to conblueprint of the nati ona l expand ing the use of coal and sider utilities' charitabl e
energy po licy which will guide seeing to it that the in dustry is contributions in determining
the nation's energy develop- not hampered in its efforts to requests for rate increases.
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - in "wops" in the tapes, bu t · the
ment will be presented to the increase the produc tion The proposal was sent to the one "characJerization deleted" White House denied there were
President . This was the because of uncer ta inties Senate.
from Whi te House tapes. any etlmit: slurs. The denial
Tonight. Thur ., Fri .
CIVIL - Legislation con- Pres id ent Nixon suspected was repeated Sunday after
message that John Sawhill, r eg~ rd ing the regula tor
June 5·6·7
Ohio's
anti - Jewish official s. inc lud in g Hep. Jerome Wald ie, D:talif. ,
FEA Admin istrator, presented legislation; and ( 6) greatly fo rm ing
Double Fea ture Program
to the Members of the House increasing the use of nuclear discrimination provisions in Henry Kissinger, of ' leaking said he heard a slur while
" CENTERFOlD GIRlS"
Energy and ResowTes Tas k powe r by expe ditin g the employme nt, housing an d inform ation to Jewish news· li ste ning to the tapes in the
PlUS
Force , on which I serve.
licensing procedure which public accommoda tions with men, the Los Angeles Times Jud iciary Comm ittee hearings.
" THE CANDY
SNATCHERS"
Mr. Sawhill e.plained that might include form ing clusters federal law was cleared, 67-25, reported Tuesday.
.Ti
ffan y Balling
much .Sign'ificance , has been of nuclear plants in areas and sent to the Senate.
The Times sa id tha t it had
Ben Piazza
XENIA - The House ap- lea rned th at· one of th e
attached to attaining energy around the country.
Was a piece of candy worth a
self-sufficiency. He sa id that
Ind icat ions that some proved, 87-1, a bill making President's remarks that has
fortune in diamonds?
The Dai~ Sentinel
although he couldn't say segments of the public don 't Xenia and other cities been deleted from the tranRated R
exactly what. level of oil im- accept the fact that the U. S. damaged by na tural disasters scri pts .of a conversa tion beDEVOTEDT0111E
INTERESTOF •
ports
represented
self- .'i till r'aces se rious energy eligi ble for special relation: " tween Nixon and White Rouse
MEIGS-MASON AREA
~·
sufficiency, but offered that a problems is a matter of con. ships with private developers counsel John Dean on Feb. 28,
CH&amp;STERL. TANNEHU.L,
Exec. Ed.
good guideline would be a level cern to both the Members of for urban renewal projects. 1973. was:
ROI~ERT HOEFLIOI ,
of im.ports small enough to Ute Task Force and the Federal The bill went to the Senate.
City Editor
"Some of our Jew ish friends
Both chambers were to re- in the media have an 'in'
Published daily except Saturday by The
prevent serious damage to the F.nergy Admini::;triltion.
Ohio Valley Publishing Company, 111
Tonight &amp; Thursday
U. S. in · the case of future
As srunmer vacation time convene at ~:30 p.m. today.
around here. Kissinger leaks, Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 56789. Business
June 5·6
embargoes. This level, he felt, appr oaches, Ame ricans are
Phone 992-21~. Editorial Phone 992Simon leaks, and Stein leaks." Office
NOT OPEN
2157.
is cetain ly below the curren t oi l swallowing a dangerous
Secretary of Stale Ki ssinger
Second class postage paid at PtlmeroY
Ohio.
·'
import level of approximately ass umption lhat-'lbundant
an d adm in istra ti on offi cia l
Fri. , Sat., Sun .
Nallonal
advertising
representati
ve
40 pet. from foreign sources gasoline supplies exist and that
Herbert E. Stein are Jewish. Bottinelli.{Jallagher ,Inc., 12 East 42nd St.,
June 7-8·9
and is probably in the neigh· we can re turn to pre-embargo
CHARLEY VARRICK
The Presiden I apparenU y did NewYork.,NewYark.
Subscr i~tion rates: Delivered by .carrier
borhood of 15 to 25 pet. It is my fuel conswning habi ts. FEA
(T.echnicolor)
not rea li ze that Treasury w~re
8\'&amp;tlable 60 centlt per week ; By
Walter M atthau
opinion that the import level administrator Sawhill has said
Holzer Medical Center
Secretary William E. Sim on is Molar Route where carrier servi~ not
Joe Don Baker
available. One month, rl.IKI. By maU ln
should be even lower.
publicly that Americans can
(Discharged, June 4)
a Roman Catholic.
( PG J
Ohio and W. Va ., One Year, $18; Sll:
Meeting this goal is possible, · enjoy summer vacation tri ps
Ameila Bend, Nellie Betz,
Cartoons :
Previously, Th e New York months, S9.r,o ; Three months , $6.
acco rding to Sawhill, only this year - and that sufficien t Mary Br oyles, Raymond Times reported Nixon made Elsewhere ~ .00 year ; slx monthll SI UO:
Krazy Kat also Loopy
~ree mont!Js, $6.50. Subseriptlon price
Show Starts 1 p.m.
through a combination of ef- gasoline will be available to Broyles, Eva Castle, Donald references to "Jewboys" and lnC:ludes
Sunday Times-Sentinel.
forts including conservation , travel - for so long as we Cottrill, Nancy Cox, Hubert
increasing production and maintain the energy con- Deha r t, An na Douglass,
technolog ical improvements in servat io n methods imposed Frances Droz, Tonnie Fortner,
energy use. Mr . Sawhi ll last winter. Foremost among Beatrice Gettles, Tammy
recommended six vital areas these is observ ing the lower Gill e nw ater . William
wh ere
action
co ula speed limits and car pooling Holzapfel, Max Jarrell,
significantly increase energy wherever possible.
Charlotte McCorkle, George
production. Th e six are : r])
Asked about gasoline prices, McGoon, Mrs. James Myers
expanding the drilling on the Sawhill predicted that pri ces and son, Ella Pittenger, Tresa
outer continental 'shelf. "should begin to stabilize at Reapp, Ruth Richards , Detl1er
especially in the Atlantic; (21 about curren t levels." At th e Roush , J r., Mrs. Donald Smith
increasing the use of secondary same time the energy czar said and daughter, Rita Snyder,
recovery methods to get more tl1at a $1-per-gallon pri ce tag James Stewart, Frances
oi l and gas from the wells; (3) was "highly un li kely" and that Thomas, Rhonda Whaley.
deregulating natural gas; ( 4 ) a substantial price increase
(Births)
es tablishing environmenta l would surface only if the U. S.
Mr. and Mr s. Will iam
":'his. is Home Improvement Month and you'll
standards that will not inh ibi t fa ced a corresponding major Ch iappetta, daughte r ,
fmd lUSt abou! everything to build ·a nything here. ·
the incr eased use of coal and price hike in the cost of im- Pomeroy ; Mr . and Mrs. Eldon
Check our pr1ces. Free delivery service.
other energy sources as part of ported oil.
Massie, a son, Jackson; Mr.
Ute effort to increase the
and Mrs. David Wickline, a
son, Bidwell.

R ep0 rt

I,~

President thought
Kissinger leaked

Mason
Drive-In

Sundays 10 AM to 10 PM
PRICES GOOD THRU JUNE 8

BUILDING OR REMODELING •••

eQUALITY WMBER

PLANNED USE REPORT
GENERAL REVENUE SHARING

neral RL,'&lt;'''IP- Shanng p•ovo•le;, lad~;~ r al lun;ls tl'rec ll'( 10 loc.11 &lt;lr'ld stJi e go·• efr'lm e f'l t S lhe law requ1res uach g'overnmen!IO
b 1sh a ·ep·•rt uf rts pi(.! no;. lor lhl_' t.~f' nl t'•es!! lu ncl~ to on for m IS ~ruze ns and t o encovragl! rflerr p&lt;1111Crp&lt;llro·,, 1n dec,dn1g how
1
•·• ttobc
.W•t•·•·!··erh•';•o:.esl•~ t ed
r
n4.aych ange lhiS
r
T Hf GOVERNMENT Of

12,631',00

MENT OF
FDA HIE FIFTH ENTITLEMENT PERIOD. JULY 1, 1974

THR OUGH JUNE 30. 1975 . PLANS TO SPEND THESE
FUNDS FOflrTHE PURPOSES SHOWN .
,

ACCOUNT NO.

·

Twp . Clerk

utiny~t

HOGG &amp;zust&amp;rERIALS·co.

IUIM!:i

'

,,I

', -

PORK LOIN ................... ~~:.69~

/.

.,

I

CHICKEN BREASTS .................'?:. 69~

DINNER BELL

DINNER BEU

SMOKED PICNIC.~~-.~~~:.~~: 59~

BOLOGNA ..........................~~~---~~~: 79~

DINNER BELL

WHOLE

RIB EYE ... ~~~.~~~.~~~~..................'.~ ·- ~2 2"9

WIENERS .............. ~:~~:.~~~:.. 6 9 ~

WHOLE

CHICKEN THIGHS....... ~~:. 59~

SLICED

NEW YORK STRIP..~.~~-~ ......... ~~: .. ~2 39

BErrY CROCKER

ORANGE

H1-C.~~.~~.~. . . . . . . . . . ..

SPORT TOPS

CAKE MIX

Special group of la di es' screen
print polyesl er sl eeveless sport
tops in assorted colors and
patt.;rns. Regular S5.99 va l ues .

$

FAVORITE

BREAD

88

41s- o~$1

EACH

SPECIAL GROUP
VALUES TO '12.99

VINE RIPE

LA DIES-SPRING-SUMMER

DRESSES

.~.

TOMATOES. . . .. . . . ~~: . .

A sensa lional group of better dresses.
Regular va l ues to Sl2. 99. each . Ladies'

spri ng and summer dresses in assorted
colors, pattern s and fabrics . Good
range of siz es.

U.S. NO. 1 NEW

POT A TOES . ~ ......~.~..!~~~. -'1

49

SPECIAL CLEARANCE GROUP
LADIES FAMOUS BRANDS
SPRING AND SUMMER .

VAN CAMP

PORK AND

SPORTSWEAR

DOLE SLICED

3 oz. $1

.
BEANS.~ ..............

PINEAPPLE .........~.~~...

21

3

'1

CANS

\

Special gr oup of ladies' famo us bra·nds
of spr ing and ·Summer sportswear,
Russ Togs , Bobbie Brook!i. Shop early
fo r best ~e l ection fr om thi s clearance
group Save one.th ird at Stiff ler's.

REG.
PRICE

·nl-5554

GOLD MEDAL

ICE
CREA.M

FLOUR

.

5

~-

~GAL79e
DOLI PINEAPPLE

$ 44

FREE DEUVERY
..

GLACIER CLUB

OFF

STURDY 18 GALLON
LID
F.AMOUS 'GOTHAM PLUTIC

I

•

•

'

'·

lbs.

WHEATIES
18 OZ. BOX

'

JOICE ........... ~.~.~~... 39e

EACH

MASON, ,W, VA;

.\

LB.99e

'A SLICED

Large sturdy 18 gallon plastic trash
cans with lock lid and easy carT)'
handles. Made from unbreakable
plastic.

·

!CONOMIC
OEVHOPMEillr

..

- HAM~

GARBAGE CAN
We Can Save You Money

..

' DINNER BELL BONELESS

LADIES SCREEN PRINT
SLEEVELESS POL VESTER

ODen 8 a.m .-5 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Close at Noon Saturday

Rt. 3, Alb'any

1-LB. PKG.

REG. •5.99 VALUE

1 3

WITt... ne w• "'•d•i h••• been ,d ..in.f thtl 1 (Op~ 11!
lh •~ " pon hn betn P~bl shed In a lc-ul ntw•~ aper of genertl
cl!curauon. I ~aue rllcorth doeumentino;~ the comtntl of 11111
the ya raope n lorpubloc·

BACON

ESTIMATES UPON REQUES(

36 3 053 003

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
TWP. ClERK
MEIGS CO.
ALBANY, 0 . 45710

'!Pill! I

DINNER BELL VAC ·

PAIR

eWINOOWS.V.OOD OR ALUMINUM
•Pl-YWOODS .sHEATHING

ANTIC IPATING A GENERAL REVENUE SHARING PAY·

V

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

•PANELING •PAINTS ·

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
UBliC SMOI¥

•INSUlATION

NO SALES TO DEALERS

88

NEWS

I

Monday thru Saturday 8 AM to 10 PM

FOOTWEAR

HOSPITAL

I.

Store Hours:

- MIDDLEPORT
.
WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY

MEIGS THEATRE

.- .

POMEROY, OHIO

Groundhog shooting is fun; farmers like you

washington

,

298 SECOND ST

'

I

.

.·

I '

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.

.

.

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~

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Cincy tops Mets
• 10 innings::
6-3 In

Ttibe players I Snorts
.r
avert di.sa.ster P
Desk

Folw,,

UPI Sp&lt;lrtS Wri l&lt;'r
The rash of ugly incidents
inYolring fans lhi.s season
continued Tuesday night whl'n
an unruly group nt. Mu niei p.al
Stc:Jclium in Cle\·rlaml mobbed
thr field in the ni11th inning and
forcL~cl the umpires lo forfeit
till' ~cnne to the Texas Hangt•rs
9-0.
"The~· \\..-ere just uncontrollable beas ts," said umpire
Nester ('}lyhlk. who was hit on
the lll'ad as the bottles and
chCJ irs \Wrc flying .
"\Vlwn Cllylak got hit on the
head. I knew we lost the
game,·· sa id Cleveland !\·Tanager Ken Aspromonte . "' lt's just
disgrc1ceful."'
Cleveland official s double d
their rwrmal security force for
the game but po lice could not
control the crowd of 25.134 on
hand for "1tkent-beer-n ight. ..
The tea ms had participated in
a br~~wl in Texas last week.
Lee MacPhail, the Amen can
l....e[Jgue president, said, ··it was
e~ situation fraught with prot&gt;-

·.·.•.·

IPillS,"

The players on hoth .:·iidrs did
t'xn·pt
to th'fL•nd tlwm~clvrs wht'l l the
f&lt;ms mobbL•d the fl£'1d .
.. l[ it
wa sn't
fo r thP
Clt·,·dan d pl a ~t· rs tonight. wt'
would lla \'t' got killed,"' :-;&lt;:1ili
no fig hting Lhis time

on£' Tcx;1s

pla~ 1 l'r.

hrst Sl rli't ~ Jlw St'll&lt;ltur s [ill'ft: l r ·
I ht· :\1eig~ i\Hit' l"lt 'nr : : A'l.!ion IJCJschall lcam tries to top the
('d to th e 1'\t'W York Yank \.'l'!-1 I! \
.
',O
IIIrJark
1Ptli g ht, a .'- 1t travt•ls u~ 1'1\'er for a single gumc with'thc
W a.shim~tnn on St·pt. '!."1. 1~7! .
\Ltrtl'lta
J
,1,.'~ ionna1rc s.
Th;.tt wa s tlwir l;,s1 t~ aJPt' 1n
Tlw dicnnondrrw n of l;t•orgc t'/esst'lruatl and Rod K:trr
Wa shi11g1un ()l' ftl r t' mn\'tn g !ll
O
fh
..
·rwd lht• \~1 :' ·4 ~t';I S(lTl wi lh a duuhl{'ht . ;uli·r s pilt r1t G1ou ~k r.
Tt 'X; l !-i.
Tl H' twu tt'&lt;llllS sti lllli-1 \'l' hm
more gariH'S to p l t~y in thl'

Sl'rit•s ton igh t and

Aftl'r Joh 11 I .uwt-nst.cin's ~wc­
rifiel' fly tit•d the store at 5-5 in
th&lt;' ninth, some of the fans
jumpt•d out of tht• stands ;md
ch:1rg1'd TPxas righ tfielde r Jf' ff
Burrou~hs .

'NH' TC'xas bench rushed out

Thur sda~

ll i~:ht.

In the other i\ nw ric&lt;Jn
Lt•ag ue gam es , Oak land lwat
Drt.roit 4-(l hut lost th C' second
ga m e 4-1, Kansas City blankl'd
Baltimore 8-0, ~ Bos ton nippeJ
Mirmeso ta 4-:J in l1 innings,

to hdp Burroughs with Cleveland players also charging ou t
to help the Rangers. When
Burronghs fought back against
the cmwd , Chylak was hit in
the head by a chc1 ir and it was
~~ t that po int tha t the ga me was
forfrttcd to the Rangers.
" It wa s the worst .sports
showing that .I have ever seen
in my htstory of baseball but I
am very proud of the Cleve land
players,'' said Texas Manager
Billy Martin.
The forfeit was ba seball 's

Milwaukee edged Californta 4-3
and ChiC(! go routed New York
9-2.
In th e Na ti ona l Lea g ue,
Atlanta edg ed Philadelphi a 7-.1,
Ci ncinn:c~ti topped New York fi-3
in 10 innings , Montrea l blcmkctl
Houston :HJ, San Diego edge d
Chicago 6-5. Lus An ge l es
blanked Pittsburgh 5-0 and San
Francisco bea t St. Loui s 5-3.
Tigers 0-4, A's 4-1
Ken Holtzman pitched a
three-hitter to give Oakland the
victory in the first gnme an d
'
Lerrin Lagrow Uu·ew H s ix~
hit ter in the second ga me to
hand Detroit the doubleheader
split. Holtzman bested Mickey
Lolich, who gave up just fo ur
hjts, and struck out 12 to vault
past Sandy Koufax and Sam
McDowelltn to lOth place on the
Hli -tim e strik eo ut li st with
2, 405.
White So x 9, Yanks 2
Dick Allen drilled his seve nth
blow for the Expos .
ca reer gra nd slam. a 430-foot
Reds 6, Mets 3
shot, in the six th inmn g to
Cesar Geronimo, who en- propel Wilbur Wood and th e
tered the game as a pinch- White Sox over th e Yank ees.
runner in the seventh inning, Wood pitched a seven-hitter to
hit a 2-run triple in the lOth to ge t the victory· and boost his
key Cincinnati's win over the record to 9-0.
Mets. Pedro Borbon, who took Brewers 4, Angels 3
over in th e eighth inning,
Dave May 1S run-scoring sinreceived credit for his fourth gle capped a three-run ra lly in
victory aga inst two losses.
th e ·seve nth inning and led
Giants 5, Cardinals 3
Milwauk ee ove r California.
Gary Matthews hit a two-run The wm brok e a three-game ·
homer and Ed Goodson deliv- Brewer losing streak .
ered a solo blast to lead San Red So,;: 41 Twins :1
Francisco past St. Louis. Tom
Danny Cater singled home
Bradley picked up his sixth pinch r unner Tommy Harper
victory wi th relief help from with one out in the lllh inning
Elias Sosa in the seventh in- to lift Boston past Minnesota.
ning. Lou Brock and Reggie Reliever Bill Campbell paved
Smith homered for the Car- the way for his own defeat with
dinals .
a throwing eror before Cater's
Padres 6, Cubs 5
htt.
Clarence Gaston's pinch-hi t Royals 8, Orioles 0
home run in the eig hth inning
John Mayberry and Amos
snapped a 5-5 tie and gave San Otis slammed home runs to
Diego its win over Chicago, back the th ree-hit pitching of
snapping the Padres' nine- Al Fitzmorris as the Royals
game losing streak. McCovey cl ubbed
th e
Orio les.
also homered for San Diego.

Aaron breaks

NL slam record

.,.

By STU CAMEN
UPI Sports Writer
Han k Aaron didn't take long
to welcome Eddie Watt to a
not-so-exclusive tljj.Ib Tuesday
ni ght.
Aaron
ripped
the
· Philadelphia reliever's first
pitch for his 16th grand slam
homer ,in the se venth inning to
lea d the Braves to a 7-3 victory
over tile Phils. The 32-year&lt;lld
Watt spent his ftr st eight
seasons in the maj ors with
Baltimore of the American
League before being traded to
Philadelphia last winter and
was facing Aaron for the first
time .
" I only recall (acing Watt in
spring training and he threw a
lot of breaking balls," sa id
Aaron, who s_aid he was looking
for a breaking pitch and belted
a slider.
The homer was Aaron's lOth
of the season and 723rd of his
career. It also enabled him to
pass Babe Ruth for the second
time tjlis seaso n. Aaron passed
Ruth when he hit his 715th
homer two months ago and,
counting home runs hit in AllStar and World Series competition, Aaron now has a total of
i3! compared to Ruth's 730.
The grand slam moved
Aaron past Willie McCovey of
San Diego for first place in the
National League in that
department. Lou Gehrig holds
the major league record with
23 grand slams.
The homer was only Aaron 's
29th hit of the season but
enabied him to raise his RBI
total to 29, making him the
most dangerous .248 batter in
th e majors.
Aaron 's blast sparked a sixrun seven th inning and helped
Rorie Harrison, who pitched
th e first six innings, pick up the
win. his fou rth in 10 decisions ..
In other NL galhes, Los
Angeles blanked Pittsburgh 50, Montreal shut out Houston 50, Cincinnati tripped New York
6-3 in 10 innings, San Fra ncisco
beat St. Lou is 5-3 and San
Diego edged Chicago 6-5.
In the AL, Texa s was
declared a 9-{) winner over
Cleveland when an unrul y
crowd caused U1e Indians to
forfeit tlle game in the ninth
inning, Chicago whipped New
Yock 9-2, Boston edged Min·nesota 4:.:3 in ·11 innings, Kansas
City blanked Baltimore 8-D,
Mih ·aukee nipped California 43 and Oakland stopped Detroit
4-0 before losing the second
game of the twi-ni ght
doubleheader 4-l.
Dodgers 5, Pirates 0
Los Angeles southpaw
Tommy John hurl ed a fiv~-hit
shutout to become the NL's
fir st nine.game winner and
Tom Paciorek ripped a threerun triple to pace the Dodgers
over Pittspurgh. The victnry
enabled first place I.os Angeles
to maintain its 6 I&gt; game lead
over Cincinnati in the West
Division.
Expos 5, Astros 0
Ernie Mctnally scattered
fiv e hits, all singles, to record .
his second shutout . of the
season in hurling Montreal
past Houston. Ron Fairly's
hases loaded, .two-run single, m
the fourth inning wa 'be. big

i\ ft•igs touk tlw first

J..:&lt;-11 111'

Th t• ~lt•il.~-" !.~&lt;tiLing &lt;~VPI'&lt;. lJ.:t',

hittcr, is ;111 ;u l('Jtlic
an·rag£· nf . ~4 5

Oakland
KL~nsas City
Te xos

25 22 ,. 532
2,1 26 . &lt;180

1
3 1 ..,

24 26 . &lt;lBO
24" 26
48 0
25 28
&lt;172
w es r

31 &lt;
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I. o c t . a . h .
.577
5 10 3 1 7
26 25
.510 3' ~

30 22
26 25

2J "lJ
24 2l

Chicaqo
Cali fo rnia

.500 &lt;1
47 1 s• ..
M 1nnesota
2 1 26 .447 61 ,
· T ucs dily's Re sult s
Oakland.\ De tr oi t o. 1st
De tro rt ·I Oakla nd l. 2nd
T e xas 9 Clevcl.lnd 0. forfeit
Kansas Ci ty R Ra!timor E' 0
Bo s ton i.l Minnes ota 3.

11
innin gs
Milwaukee t. Cali forn ia J
Chic aqo 9 New York 2
Wednesday 's Game s
I All T ime s E D Tl
Kansas C1ty ( D a l C nn ton 3 J l
&lt;1 1 B&lt;JII ImOr e ( McNally J J ),
7 30 p m
T·e)(as (Bibby 7 7) at Cl eve
land Uoh n 5on 1 2 1,7:30 p .m .
Oakland (•Blue .1 51 at De tro i t
(C oleMnn6 5'. 8 prn
Boston n 1ant 6 .S I at Min
nesota (Goltl. 1 OJ. 8 · 30 p m
Cali fqrn ia
( Ry an
7 5)
at
M i lwa u k ee (S laton 6 6 ), 8 . 30
p ,m
N ew Yor k : Tidrow ''5 1 at
Cll ,c a go ! Wood B 6 1. 9 p m
Thu rs dil y's Gam es
Cali forn i a at Milwaukee
Te xCJs CJ I Ct eve land , nig ht
New York at Chicaqo , night
( On lyqamcs sc heduled )

~-~

Three runn ers lwve the early lead in stolen bases, ull with
one l'ilCh - Perk Ault, Brett Wtlson a mi Bill Holland .
Ba ird. Wil son nnd Watson huvc scored thi s season's lone
U1rce runs .

Ther e should be a tight raee this season among players
seeking the most wa lks.
Brett Wilson, Mike Nesselroad and Mick Davenport are this
corner's eu rly fiivorites for the 'free pass".top spot.
It see ms maxing (I walk is a vani shing art form , and anybody
in baseball will tell you tlwt a walk isn't always as good as a hi t,
but, e.,;;ppda ll y wiUJ no ont•on base, it .serves the same purpose as
a single.
I

"De pth" is the key word in the infield this year , witil tile
Legion abnost three deep at every dirt spol.
The outfield isn't in as good a shape, although it's fairly
strong ~~ t around two deep .
l':verybody saw action in Sunday's second ga me, with only
one of the 20p layers not stepping up for a turn at the plate, and he
was on deck when the last out was made in th e seVe nth inning.
Tll e addition of Rick VanMatre to the coaching staff should
be an evident asset this season. VanMatre, a hurler for the Rio
Grande Redmcn thi&gt; past sprin g, is in cha rge of the pitching
sta ff, the fir st time in a while the Legion has had a specialized
coach for the mound workers.
He was a former sta r in his own ri ght while throwing for the
Meigs Legion tea m several years ago when the squad won the
di strict tourney and ga ined a berth in the state championships in
Ashland .
Hopefully , the rest of the tea ms on this year 's schedule who
were also on last year's aren't as improved as Glouster.
The Tomcat Leg ion was a disaster in 1973, but thi s year's
corps is much more competitive. It helps when you have one of
the SEOAL's top pitchers, Well ston's Manring.
Roger Shultz put up a good fi ght in the opener , losing that
tough mound battle to Baird ~
A note of clarifi cation for all surruner baseball managers -

all il ttle lea gue and pony league games will run in Tu esday 's and
Friday's editions of the Daily Sentinel.
RAC IN E - Fol low-ing are the f inal sta tis1ics for th e 197A
Southern Tornado ba sebal l season. The d iamondm en of Hilton ·
Woll e Jr ., concluded the season wi t h a 10-8 re cord . fin ishing in a
second pla ce l ie w1 fh Sy mm es Val ley in the SVAC ra ce.

At l anta 7 Philadelphia 3
Ci n cin nat i 6 New York 3. 10
inn .
Montreal 5 Hou s t on 0
San Oieqo 6 Chicaqo 5
Los Angeles 5 Pittsburqh 0
San Francisco 5 51. Lou is 3
Wedn esday's Gam es
(All Tim es E DT )
St . Louis. (S i eber t 5 31 at San
F rancisco { Bryant ? J l. 3 : 15
P.m .
Atlanta
( N rekr o 1 6 3 1
at
Ph iladelph ia { Lonborq 5 Sl. 7 : 35
p .m .
Mont r eal
( Torr es 'I ,11 a t
Houston (Os teen 54). 8 . 35 p m
Chicago I Hooten ? 51 a t San
Diego ( Arlin 17 1, lO · JOp m .
Pitt sburgh { Rook er 2 J ) at
Los Angeles IMess~rsrni th 5 l J.
10 30 p . m
(O n ly games sc hedu led I
Thursday' s Gam es
Cincinna t i at N ew York
St Louis at San Fran cisc o
Montreal at H ous ton , night
Chi cago at San Dicqo, n io ht
P i ttsburgh at Los Anqeles.

Play er

AB

R

55
56

15
13

6

2

53

8

30
8
4
58
29
46

4

1
0
13
7
14

41

lO

H BB RBI
26

5

22
2

2
1

17
9

4
6

2
1

2

0

0

14
7
11

11
9
17

9
9
,5

15

J
2

9"

14
3
3
33
7
7
10
1
2
13
5
2
5
2
0
7
0
0
2
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
472 lOS 134

•

1
5

I

5
9
0
8
1
0
0
0
0
9S

3 .333
8

.10
I

6
5

.J./'1
.300
.250

I

~ 250

4

0

0
0
0
94

FINAL PITCHING RECORDS

l J .2 Al
7 .241
11 .239
8

.220

2
16

.214
.212
.:100
.154
.000

4

6
2
4
1
1
1
lOB

w

Brady Huffm a n

Riff le

Dave Th eiss

.473
.393

15

0
6
0

Pete Sayre
Jim

50 AV.

12
17

mo~&gt;t

9
I

L
5
3

0
0

0
0

Th e Meig s Junjur 'Girl s'
Softba ll Lea~ue opens its
season tonight . with two ~ames
eaelt at Syracuse Field Nn ~ 2.
and in J . C. Cook Park in

Nl:ltional Bank and Syracu.se ,
along wtth Mason of West
Vir gi nia.
The first week's schedule is
as follows: Wed~, June 5 Mas on ~
Ma son vs. Meigs Inn, o: l5 at
Th e leag ue, for g irl s between Mason : Syn1cuse vs. Mason ,
the ages of 10 and 14, co~s i s t s of 7: !5 at Mason ; Purple Pansev en tea m s. From Meigs teret tes vs. Rac in e Home
Co un ty they are Forest Rtm, Natio nal Bank , 6:15 at
Mei gs Inn , Pomeroy, Pm·pJe Syracuse; and Forest RW1 vs.
_P_a_n_te_r_e_tt_c_s_,_R_a_c_in_e_ r.:_lo_:m
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TONIGHT 9 TIL

NEW YORK (~UP!) - If a
city wan ts an National Football
League franchise , it doesn't
hurt to build a domed stadiwn.
Th e lure of a domed stadium
was one of the main reasons
why Sea ttle, which lost its
American League baseball
franchi se to Milwaukee after
the 1969 season, was awarded
th e 28th NFL franch ise
Tuesday at the league owners
meetings.
•
Seattle's·new domed stadium
is supposed to be completed in
the summer of 1975, and that
was its major selling point.
Seattle will join Tampa,
whi ch was voted a franchise in
April; in the league in 1976,
although Corrunissioner Pete
Rozelle sa id that Tampa interests are trying to get the
NFL to push up the date to 1975.
The owners for the Seattle
and Tampa teams haven'! been
pi cked but each franchi se will
cost $16 million, which the 26
existing teams will be able to
divide - more than a $1 million
for each club.
The big losers Tuesday were
Memphis and Phoenix, which
had high hopes of getting
franchises when it was thought
the league might expand to 30
teams. 13ut the NFL owners
had second thou ghts about
adding four clubs at once and
decided to just admit two at
this time.
Honolulu was al:;o a longshot
entry but the travel problems
involved hurt its chances ,
Ro ze lle said that fu ture
expansion is an "open deck 11
and that cities with NFL
teams; including New York,
Chicago and Los Angeles, will
be considered.
Although it was reported that
rental terms for the new domed
st adium in Seattle were
ho lding up the city 's bid to land
an NFL fran chise, Rozelle said
that all of those problems have
been solved and the terms now
were "quite equitable."
" Seatl!~ is ihc 16th largest
m!:!.: ket and therefore very
attractive," he said. ·•rn add i ti~ r · I·• . the new domed
staJiu111 .. . ach will seat about
65,00tl, it is the only area in the
country in which we didn't
have a team. "
Rozelle said he expected the
Seattle and Tampa ownerships
tn be selected within the next 00
days.

USDA
I CHOICE

popub1r night dub in

. ·:·

Dome wins
franchise
for Seattle

-9

.000

nigh I

proud to present

c
z:
LIJ
z:

best," satd Anderson Tuesday triple gave the Reds a 5-3 lead
night after Pedro Borbo n · and Geronimo scored the third
~ained his fourth victory of the run of the inning on Pete Rose's
seaso n in the Reds ' 6-3 10- sacrific;e fly.
The Reds had tied the score
inni ng victory over the New
3-3 ' in the seventh inning
at
York Mets. " But I think
Borbun is better than Marshall . when pinch-hitter Dan DrieS"He's been our saviour. He sen, hitless in 16 previous
can pit ch all the time, lon g or appeara nces at the plate,
short. He throws a very heavy delivered a two-run single with
ball, whether sinker or slider, the bases filled.
Borbun, who has seven saves
and has tremendous courage.
in
addi tion to four victories,
Nothing bothers hi m.
hi s ea rn ed run
reduced
" I'm especially proud of him
average
to
1.65~
becatLse when I fir st had him ,
Rose 1 who was involved in a
he would destroy himself by
fight
with the Mets' sua
gettin g mad. But our pitching
Harrleson
in last October's
coach, La rry Shephard, has
was
booed by Shea
playoffs
,
calmed him down. He hangs
ri ght in th ere and does the Stadium fans for the second
straigh t ni ght but there were
job."
Borbun, a 28-year native of no incidents.
"The New York fans have
th e Dominican_j(epublic, "did
th e job" Tuesday night with been good to me this trip, " sald
th ree inn ings of hitless relief Rose . "I haven't been insulted
and also started the Reds' by anyone. In fact , several
winnin g rally in the lOth with a people have gone out of their
single. George Foster's double way to be nice to me. I hope the
and Cesar Geronimo 's two-run incident is forgotten."

NE W YO RK I UPI)
Sparky Anderson of the Cincinnati RedS is probably the
only mana ge r in' baseba ll who
think' he has a better relief
pitcher than Mike Marshall Of
the Ili S Angeles Dodge rs.
" I can understand why the
Dodgers thmk Ma rshall is the

Junior Girls' League opens

the tri-cuunty 11re11 t~&gt;

1-The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmoroy,

.000
.000
.000
.284

TRUST us·
The MEIGS INN TO HANDLE
A LOAN OF
The

'

Kt.:~UII S

team l&gt;otting

Th e Meigs ~atting statistics arc led ~ Y Mick Ash with a .:133
"veragc am! two HB! s. Mike Watso n also at .333, and Mike
La rkin s at .:&gt;:1:1 wi th one IUH .
Bill Holl and is next il l .2116 while .John Baird is the only otl1er
player wtth a bit at .20tl.

ScorrWOife
National L eague Standing s
Mit ch Nease
By Un ited Pr ess Int erna t ional
w. 1. pet . g . b . . J. F. You ng
28 24 .538
Phila
Randy Warn er
1 ;•
26 23 .531
St L ouis
Greg
Dunning
'J? 21 .512 1 1 ;
Mon tr eal
Gr eg Cun di ff
19 27
&lt;113 6
Ch icago
Verne Ord
21 30
J 12 6 1 ~
N ew York
Eric D unning
18 29 .383 ]1 -;o
Pitts
Brady
Huf frnan
W es t
Dave Bass
w. 1. p et . g .b.
Rex Roy
Los Ang
38 15 .717
C incinnati
JO 20 .600 61~
Glen Rou sh
Atlanta
28 2~ .5 38 9' ;• Robert Waldnig
Sa n Fran .
28 27
509 11
Rog er Adkins
Hou ston
'17 26 509 11
TOTALS
Sa n !"' ieg o
19 1~
111 / 1
I Ut.'SOiiY S

a

tll t• fir·s1 ti nw the 20 youths on the roster he-HI ever played
togrthe r .

Steve Hend ricks

w . I . oct. o .b .
2B 23 .5&lt;19

help from that nv-

Tht· brightest spot in Sunday's openi ng twinbill , besides th e
ww; &lt;.~ n t:'tTor less two games, whi le (i loustrr committ ed thrtl' rniS(' Ues.
Thr ubsc nfC' of errors was surprising {'onsi dering that it w~-1 5

John Sa lser
Dave Cla rk

Bos t on
Milwaukee
Cleyeland
Balt i more
Detroit
New Yo rk

lot~ of

a~ ~lit · k

burnin ~ sun.

Dave Th eiss
Pete Say r e
Jim Riffl e

E ast

wi th

.nu. v... hik opponctll'l howe

Player

Major L eague Standing s
American L eague Standing s
By Un it ed Pre ss Int ernat io nal

2-1 bc·!1Uu.l tlw fuur -hi t pitchi r\g of

\"t'H•r;t ti.John B;drd. wll ilt • (;luustl'r took tlw mght("..IJlfi·l
\!;r~1ri11~~ fin•d a t1t1-hitll'r .

'

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•&gt;

ti'

B)' \ 'ITO STEL I.INO

•

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Cincy tops Mets
• 10 innings::
6-3 In

Ttibe players I Snorts
.r
avert di.sa.ster P
Desk

Folw,,

UPI Sp&lt;lrtS Wri l&lt;'r
The rash of ugly incidents
inYolring fans lhi.s season
continued Tuesday night whl'n
an unruly group nt. Mu niei p.al
Stc:Jclium in Cle\·rlaml mobbed
thr field in the ni11th inning and
forcL~cl the umpires lo forfeit
till' ~cnne to the Texas Hangt•rs
9-0.
"The~· \\..-ere just uncontrollable beas ts," said umpire
Nester ('}lyhlk. who was hit on
the lll'ad as the bottles and
chCJ irs \Wrc flying .
"\Vlwn Cllylak got hit on the
head. I knew we lost the
game,·· sa id Cleveland !\·Tanager Ken Aspromonte . "' lt's just
disgrc1ceful."'
Cleveland official s double d
their rwrmal security force for
the game but po lice could not
control the crowd of 25.134 on
hand for "1tkent-beer-n ight. ..
The tea ms had participated in
a br~~wl in Texas last week.
Lee MacPhail, the Amen can
l....e[Jgue president, said, ··it was
e~ situation fraught with prot&gt;-

·.·.•.·

IPillS,"

The players on hoth .:·iidrs did
t'xn·pt
to th'fL•nd tlwm~clvrs wht'l l the
f&lt;ms mobbL•d the fl£'1d .
.. l[ it
wa sn't
fo r thP
Clt·,·dan d pl a ~t· rs tonight. wt'
would lla \'t' got killed,"' :-;&lt;:1ili
no fig hting Lhis time

on£' Tcx;1s

pla~ 1 l'r.

hrst Sl rli't ~ Jlw St'll&lt;ltur s [ill'ft: l r ·
I ht· :\1eig~ i\Hit' l"lt 'nr : : A'l.!ion IJCJschall lcam tries to top the
('d to th e 1'\t'W York Yank \.'l'!-1 I! \
.
',O
IIIrJark
1Ptli g ht, a .'- 1t travt•ls u~ 1'1\'er for a single gumc with'thc
W a.shim~tnn on St·pt. '!."1. 1~7! .
\Ltrtl'lta
J
,1,.'~ ionna1rc s.
Th;.tt wa s tlwir l;,s1 t~ aJPt' 1n
Tlw dicnnondrrw n of l;t•orgc t'/esst'lruatl and Rod K:trr
Wa shi11g1un ()l' ftl r t' mn\'tn g !ll
O
fh
..
·rwd lht• \~1 :' ·4 ~t';I S(lTl wi lh a duuhl{'ht . ;uli·r s pilt r1t G1ou ~k r.
Tt 'X; l !-i.
Tl H' twu tt'&lt;llllS sti lllli-1 \'l' hm
more gariH'S to p l t~y in thl'

Sl'rit•s ton igh t and

Aftl'r Joh 11 I .uwt-nst.cin's ~wc­
rifiel' fly tit•d the store at 5-5 in
th&lt;' ninth, some of the fans
jumpt•d out of tht• stands ;md
ch:1rg1'd TPxas righ tfielde r Jf' ff
Burrou~hs .

'NH' TC'xas bench rushed out

Thur sda~

ll i~:ht.

In the other i\ nw ric&lt;Jn
Lt•ag ue gam es , Oak land lwat
Drt.roit 4-(l hut lost th C' second
ga m e 4-1, Kansas City blankl'd
Baltimore 8-0, ~ Bos ton nippeJ
Mirmeso ta 4-:J in l1 innings,

to hdp Burroughs with Cleveland players also charging ou t
to help the Rangers. When
Burronghs fought back against
the cmwd , Chylak was hit in
the head by a chc1 ir and it was
~~ t that po int tha t the ga me was
forfrttcd to the Rangers.
" It wa s the worst .sports
showing that .I have ever seen
in my htstory of baseball but I
am very proud of the Cleve land
players,'' said Texas Manager
Billy Martin.
The forfeit was ba seball 's

Milwaukee edged Californta 4-3
and ChiC(! go routed New York
9-2.
In th e Na ti ona l Lea g ue,
Atlanta edg ed Philadelphi a 7-.1,
Ci ncinn:c~ti topped New York fi-3
in 10 innings , Montrea l blcmkctl
Houston :HJ, San Diego edge d
Chicago 6-5. Lus An ge l es
blanked Pittsburgh 5-0 and San
Francisco bea t St. Loui s 5-3.
Tigers 0-4, A's 4-1
Ken Holtzman pitched a
three-hitter to give Oakland the
victory in the first gnme an d
'
Lerrin Lagrow Uu·ew H s ix~
hit ter in the second ga me to
hand Detroit the doubleheader
split. Holtzman bested Mickey
Lolich, who gave up just fo ur
hjts, and struck out 12 to vault
past Sandy Koufax and Sam
McDowelltn to lOth place on the
Hli -tim e strik eo ut li st with
2, 405.
White So x 9, Yanks 2
Dick Allen drilled his seve nth
blow for the Expos .
ca reer gra nd slam. a 430-foot
Reds 6, Mets 3
shot, in the six th inmn g to
Cesar Geronimo, who en- propel Wilbur Wood and th e
tered the game as a pinch- White Sox over th e Yank ees.
runner in the seventh inning, Wood pitched a seven-hitter to
hit a 2-run triple in the lOth to ge t the victory· and boost his
key Cincinnati's win over the record to 9-0.
Mets. Pedro Borbon, who took Brewers 4, Angels 3
over in th e eighth inning,
Dave May 1S run-scoring sinreceived credit for his fourth gle capped a three-run ra lly in
victory aga inst two losses.
th e ·seve nth inning and led
Giants 5, Cardinals 3
Milwauk ee ove r California.
Gary Matthews hit a two-run The wm brok e a three-game ·
homer and Ed Goodson deliv- Brewer losing streak .
ered a solo blast to lead San Red So,;: 41 Twins :1
Francisco past St. Louis. Tom
Danny Cater singled home
Bradley picked up his sixth pinch r unner Tommy Harper
victory wi th relief help from with one out in the lllh inning
Elias Sosa in the seventh in- to lift Boston past Minnesota.
ning. Lou Brock and Reggie Reliever Bill Campbell paved
Smith homered for the Car- the way for his own defeat with
dinals .
a throwing eror before Cater's
Padres 6, Cubs 5
htt.
Clarence Gaston's pinch-hi t Royals 8, Orioles 0
home run in the eig hth inning
John Mayberry and Amos
snapped a 5-5 tie and gave San Otis slammed home runs to
Diego its win over Chicago, back the th ree-hit pitching of
snapping the Padres' nine- Al Fitzmorris as the Royals
game losing streak. McCovey cl ubbed
th e
Orio les.
also homered for San Diego.

Aaron breaks

NL slam record

.,.

By STU CAMEN
UPI Sports Writer
Han k Aaron didn't take long
to welcome Eddie Watt to a
not-so-exclusive tljj.Ib Tuesday
ni ght.
Aaron
ripped
the
· Philadelphia reliever's first
pitch for his 16th grand slam
homer ,in the se venth inning to
lea d the Braves to a 7-3 victory
over tile Phils. The 32-year&lt;lld
Watt spent his ftr st eight
seasons in the maj ors with
Baltimore of the American
League before being traded to
Philadelphia last winter and
was facing Aaron for the first
time .
" I only recall (acing Watt in
spring training and he threw a
lot of breaking balls," sa id
Aaron, who s_aid he was looking
for a breaking pitch and belted
a slider.
The homer was Aaron's lOth
of the season and 723rd of his
career. It also enabled him to
pass Babe Ruth for the second
time tjlis seaso n. Aaron passed
Ruth when he hit his 715th
homer two months ago and,
counting home runs hit in AllStar and World Series competition, Aaron now has a total of
i3! compared to Ruth's 730.
The grand slam moved
Aaron past Willie McCovey of
San Diego for first place in the
National League in that
department. Lou Gehrig holds
the major league record with
23 grand slams.
The homer was only Aaron 's
29th hit of the season but
enabied him to raise his RBI
total to 29, making him the
most dangerous .248 batter in
th e majors.
Aaron 's blast sparked a sixrun seven th inning and helped
Rorie Harrison, who pitched
th e first six innings, pick up the
win. his fou rth in 10 decisions ..
In other NL galhes, Los
Angeles blanked Pittsburgh 50, Montreal shut out Houston 50, Cincinnati tripped New York
6-3 in 10 innings, San Fra ncisco
beat St. Lou is 5-3 and San
Diego edged Chicago 6-5.
In the AL, Texa s was
declared a 9-{) winner over
Cleveland when an unrul y
crowd caused U1e Indians to
forfeit tlle game in the ninth
inning, Chicago whipped New
Yock 9-2, Boston edged Min·nesota 4:.:3 in ·11 innings, Kansas
City blanked Baltimore 8-D,
Mih ·aukee nipped California 43 and Oakland stopped Detroit
4-0 before losing the second
game of the twi-ni ght
doubleheader 4-l.
Dodgers 5, Pirates 0
Los Angeles southpaw
Tommy John hurl ed a fiv~-hit
shutout to become the NL's
fir st nine.game winner and
Tom Paciorek ripped a threerun triple to pace the Dodgers
over Pittspurgh. The victnry
enabled first place I.os Angeles
to maintain its 6 I&gt; game lead
over Cincinnati in the West
Division.
Expos 5, Astros 0
Ernie Mctnally scattered
fiv e hits, all singles, to record .
his second shutout . of the
season in hurling Montreal
past Houston. Ron Fairly's
hases loaded, .two-run single, m
the fourth inning wa 'be. big

i\ ft•igs touk tlw first

J..:&lt;-11 111'

Th t• ~lt•il.~-" !.~&lt;tiLing &lt;~VPI'&lt;. lJ.:t',

hittcr, is ;111 ;u l('Jtlic
an·rag£· nf . ~4 5

Oakland
KL~nsas City
Te xos

25 22 ,. 532
2,1 26 . &lt;180

1
3 1 ..,

24 26 . &lt;lBO
24" 26
48 0
25 28
&lt;172
w es r

31 &lt;
]I 7

4

w.

I. o c t . a . h .
.577
5 10 3 1 7
26 25
.510 3' ~

30 22
26 25

2J "lJ
24 2l

Chicaqo
Cali fo rnia

.500 &lt;1
47 1 s• ..
M 1nnesota
2 1 26 .447 61 ,
· T ucs dily's Re sult s
Oakland.\ De tr oi t o. 1st
De tro rt ·I Oakla nd l. 2nd
T e xas 9 Clevcl.lnd 0. forfeit
Kansas Ci ty R Ra!timor E' 0
Bo s ton i.l Minnes ota 3.

11
innin gs
Milwaukee t. Cali forn ia J
Chic aqo 9 New York 2
Wednesday 's Game s
I All T ime s E D Tl
Kansas C1ty ( D a l C nn ton 3 J l
&lt;1 1 B&lt;JII ImOr e ( McNally J J ),
7 30 p m
T·e)(as (Bibby 7 7) at Cl eve
land Uoh n 5on 1 2 1,7:30 p .m .
Oakland (•Blue .1 51 at De tro i t
(C oleMnn6 5'. 8 prn
Boston n 1ant 6 .S I at Min
nesota (Goltl. 1 OJ. 8 · 30 p m
Cali fqrn ia
( Ry an
7 5)
at
M i lwa u k ee (S laton 6 6 ), 8 . 30
p ,m
N ew Yor k : Tidrow ''5 1 at
Cll ,c a go ! Wood B 6 1. 9 p m
Thu rs dil y's Gam es
Cali forn i a at Milwaukee
Te xCJs CJ I Ct eve land , nig ht
New York at Chicaqo , night
( On lyqamcs sc heduled )

~-~

Three runn ers lwve the early lead in stolen bases, ull with
one l'ilCh - Perk Ault, Brett Wtlson a mi Bill Holland .
Ba ird. Wil son nnd Watson huvc scored thi s season's lone
U1rce runs .

Ther e should be a tight raee this season among players
seeking the most wa lks.
Brett Wilson, Mike Nesselroad and Mick Davenport are this
corner's eu rly fiivorites for the 'free pass".top spot.
It see ms maxing (I walk is a vani shing art form , and anybody
in baseball will tell you tlwt a walk isn't always as good as a hi t,
but, e.,;;ppda ll y wiUJ no ont•on base, it .serves the same purpose as
a single.
I

"De pth" is the key word in the infield this year , witil tile
Legion abnost three deep at every dirt spol.
The outfield isn't in as good a shape, although it's fairly
strong ~~ t around two deep .
l':verybody saw action in Sunday's second ga me, with only
one of the 20p layers not stepping up for a turn at the plate, and he
was on deck when the last out was made in th e seVe nth inning.
Tll e addition of Rick VanMatre to the coaching staff should
be an evident asset this season. VanMatre, a hurler for the Rio
Grande Redmcn thi&gt; past sprin g, is in cha rge of the pitching
sta ff, the fir st time in a while the Legion has had a specialized
coach for the mound workers.
He was a former sta r in his own ri ght while throwing for the
Meigs Legion tea m several years ago when the squad won the
di strict tourney and ga ined a berth in the state championships in
Ashland .
Hopefully , the rest of the tea ms on this year 's schedule who
were also on last year's aren't as improved as Glouster.
The Tomcat Leg ion was a disaster in 1973, but thi s year's
corps is much more competitive. It helps when you have one of
the SEOAL's top pitchers, Well ston's Manring.
Roger Shultz put up a good fi ght in the opener , losing that
tough mound battle to Baird ~
A note of clarifi cation for all surruner baseball managers -

all il ttle lea gue and pony league games will run in Tu esday 's and
Friday's editions of the Daily Sentinel.
RAC IN E - Fol low-ing are the f inal sta tis1ics for th e 197A
Southern Tornado ba sebal l season. The d iamondm en of Hilton ·
Woll e Jr ., concluded the season wi t h a 10-8 re cord . fin ishing in a
second pla ce l ie w1 fh Sy mm es Val ley in the SVAC ra ce.

At l anta 7 Philadelphia 3
Ci n cin nat i 6 New York 3. 10
inn .
Montreal 5 Hou s t on 0
San Oieqo 6 Chicaqo 5
Los Angeles 5 Pittsburqh 0
San Francisco 5 51. Lou is 3
Wedn esday's Gam es
(All Tim es E DT )
St . Louis. (S i eber t 5 31 at San
F rancisco { Bryant ? J l. 3 : 15
P.m .
Atlanta
( N rekr o 1 6 3 1
at
Ph iladelph ia { Lonborq 5 Sl. 7 : 35
p .m .
Mont r eal
( Torr es 'I ,11 a t
Houston (Os teen 54). 8 . 35 p m
Chicago I Hooten ? 51 a t San
Diego ( Arlin 17 1, lO · JOp m .
Pitt sburgh { Rook er 2 J ) at
Los Angeles IMess~rsrni th 5 l J.
10 30 p . m
(O n ly games sc hedu led I
Thursday' s Gam es
Cincinna t i at N ew York
St Louis at San Fran cisc o
Montreal at H ous ton , night
Chi cago at San Dicqo, n io ht
P i ttsburgh at Los Anqeles.

Play er

AB

R

55
56

15
13

6

2

53

8

30
8
4
58
29
46

4

1
0
13
7
14

41

lO

H BB RBI
26

5

22
2

2
1

17
9

4
6

2
1

2

0

0

14
7
11

11
9
17

9
9
,5

15

J
2

9"

14
3
3
33
7
7
10
1
2
13
5
2
5
2
0
7
0
0
2
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
472 lOS 134

•

1
5

I

5
9
0
8
1
0
0
0
0
9S

3 .333
8

.10
I

6
5

.J./'1
.300
.250

I

~ 250

4

0

0
0
0
94

FINAL PITCHING RECORDS

l J .2 Al
7 .241
11 .239
8

.220

2
16

.214
.212
.:100
.154
.000

4

6
2
4
1
1
1
lOB

w

Brady Huffm a n

Riff le

Dave Th eiss

.473
.393

15

0
6
0

Pete Sayre
Jim

50 AV.

12
17

mo~&gt;t

9
I

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5
3

0
0

0
0

Th e Meig s Junjur 'Girl s'
Softba ll Lea~ue opens its
season tonight . with two ~ames
eaelt at Syracuse Field Nn ~ 2.
and in J . C. Cook Park in

Nl:ltional Bank and Syracu.se ,
along wtth Mason of West
Vir gi nia.
The first week's schedule is
as follows: Wed~, June 5 Mas on ~
Ma son vs. Meigs Inn, o: l5 at
Th e leag ue, for g irl s between Mason : Syn1cuse vs. Mason ,
the ages of 10 and 14, co~s i s t s of 7: !5 at Mason ; Purple Pansev en tea m s. From Meigs teret tes vs. Rac in e Home
Co un ty they are Forest Rtm, Natio nal Bank , 6:15 at
Mei gs Inn , Pomeroy, Pm·pJe Syracuse; and Forest RW1 vs.
_P_a_n_te_r_e_tt_c_s_,_R_a_c_in_e_ r.:_lo_:m
_:e_:P_:o:::":::'e::r_:o.: . :_v. 7: 15 "' Svracuse .

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POMEROY, OHIO

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AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 9 TIL

NEW YORK (~UP!) - If a
city wan ts an National Football
League franchise , it doesn't
hurt to build a domed stadiwn.
Th e lure of a domed stadium
was one of the main reasons
why Sea ttle, which lost its
American League baseball
franchi se to Milwaukee after
the 1969 season, was awarded
th e 28th NFL franch ise
Tuesday at the league owners
meetings.
•
Seattle's·new domed stadium
is supposed to be completed in
the summer of 1975, and that
was its major selling point.
Seattle will join Tampa,
whi ch was voted a franchise in
April; in the league in 1976,
although Corrunissioner Pete
Rozelle sa id that Tampa interests are trying to get the
NFL to push up the date to 1975.
The owners for the Seattle
and Tampa teams haven'! been
pi cked but each franchi se will
cost $16 million, which the 26
existing teams will be able to
divide - more than a $1 million
for each club.
The big losers Tuesday were
Memphis and Phoenix, which
had high hopes of getting
franchises when it was thought
the league might expand to 30
teams. 13ut the NFL owners
had second thou ghts about
adding four clubs at once and
decided to just admit two at
this time.
Honolulu was al:;o a longshot
entry but the travel problems
involved hurt its chances ,
Ro ze lle said that fu ture
expansion is an "open deck 11
and that cities with NFL
teams; including New York,
Chicago and Los Angeles, will
be considered.
Although it was reported that
rental terms for the new domed
st adium in Seattle were
ho lding up the city 's bid to land
an NFL fran chise, Rozelle said
that all of those problems have
been solved and the terms now
were "quite equitable."
" Seatl!~ is ihc 16th largest
m!:!.: ket and therefore very
attractive," he said. ·•rn add i ti~ r · I·• . the new domed
staJiu111 .. . ach will seat about
65,00tl, it is the only area in the
country in which we didn't
have a team. "
Rozelle said he expected the
Seattle and Tampa ownerships
tn be selected within the next 00
days.

USDA
I CHOICE

popub1r night dub in

. ·:·

Dome wins
franchise
for Seattle

-9

.000

nigh I

proud to present

c
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best," satd Anderson Tuesday triple gave the Reds a 5-3 lead
night after Pedro Borbo n · and Geronimo scored the third
~ained his fourth victory of the run of the inning on Pete Rose's
seaso n in the Reds ' 6-3 10- sacrific;e fly.
The Reds had tied the score
inni ng victory over the New
3-3 ' in the seventh inning
at
York Mets. " But I think
Borbun is better than Marshall . when pinch-hitter Dan DrieS"He's been our saviour. He sen, hitless in 16 previous
can pit ch all the time, lon g or appeara nces at the plate,
short. He throws a very heavy delivered a two-run single with
ball, whether sinker or slider, the bases filled.
Borbun, who has seven saves
and has tremendous courage.
in
addi tion to four victories,
Nothing bothers hi m.
hi s ea rn ed run
reduced
" I'm especially proud of him
average
to
1.65~
becatLse when I fir st had him ,
Rose 1 who was involved in a
he would destroy himself by
fight
with the Mets' sua
gettin g mad. But our pitching
Harrleson
in last October's
coach, La rry Shephard, has
was
booed by Shea
playoffs
,
calmed him down. He hangs
ri ght in th ere and does the Stadium fans for the second
straigh t ni ght but there were
job."
Borbun, a 28-year native of no incidents.
"The New York fans have
th e Dominican_j(epublic, "did
th e job" Tuesday night with been good to me this trip, " sald
th ree inn ings of hitless relief Rose . "I haven't been insulted
and also started the Reds' by anyone. In fact , several
winnin g rally in the lOth with a people have gone out of their
single. George Foster's double way to be nice to me. I hope the
and Cesar Geronimo 's two-run incident is forgotten."

NE W YO RK I UPI)
Sparky Anderson of the Cincinnati RedS is probably the
only mana ge r in' baseba ll who
think' he has a better relief
pitcher than Mike Marshall Of
the Ili S Angeles Dodge rs.
" I can understand why the
Dodgers thmk Ma rshall is the

Junior Girls' League opens

the tri-cuunty 11re11 t~&gt;

1-The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmoroy,

.000
.000
.000
.284

TRUST us·
The MEIGS INN TO HANDLE
A LOAN OF
The

'

Kt.:~UII S

team l&gt;otting

Th e Meigs ~atting statistics arc led ~ Y Mick Ash with a .:133
"veragc am! two HB! s. Mike Watso n also at .333, and Mike
La rkin s at .:&gt;:1:1 wi th one IUH .
Bill Holl and is next il l .2116 while .John Baird is the only otl1er
player wtth a bit at .20tl.

ScorrWOife
National L eague Standing s
Mit ch Nease
By Un ited Pr ess Int erna t ional
w. 1. pet . g . b . . J. F. You ng
28 24 .538
Phila
Randy Warn er
1 ;•
26 23 .531
St L ouis
Greg
Dunning
'J? 21 .512 1 1 ;
Mon tr eal
Gr eg Cun di ff
19 27
&lt;113 6
Ch icago
Verne Ord
21 30
J 12 6 1 ~
N ew York
Eric D unning
18 29 .383 ]1 -;o
Pitts
Brady
Huf frnan
W es t
Dave Bass
w. 1. p et . g .b.
Rex Roy
Los Ang
38 15 .717
C incinnati
JO 20 .600 61~
Glen Rou sh
Atlanta
28 2~ .5 38 9' ;• Robert Waldnig
Sa n Fran .
28 27
509 11
Rog er Adkins
Hou ston
'17 26 509 11
TOTALS
Sa n !"' ieg o
19 1~
111 / 1
I Ut.'SOiiY S

a

tll t• fir·s1 ti nw the 20 youths on the roster he-HI ever played
togrthe r .

Steve Hend ricks

w . I . oct. o .b .
2B 23 .5&lt;19

help from that nv-

Tht· brightest spot in Sunday's openi ng twinbill , besides th e
ww; &lt;.~ n t:'tTor less two games, whi le (i loustrr committ ed thrtl' rniS(' Ues.
Thr ubsc nfC' of errors was surprising {'onsi dering that it w~-1 5

John Sa lser
Dave Cla rk

Bos t on
Milwaukee
Cleyeland
Balt i more
Detroit
New Yo rk

lot~ of

a~ ~lit · k

burnin ~ sun.

Dave Th eiss
Pete Say r e
Jim Riffl e

E ast

wi th

.nu. v... hik opponctll'l howe

Player

Major L eague Standing s
American L eague Standing s
By Un it ed Pre ss Int ernat io nal

2-1 bc·!1Uu.l tlw fuur -hi t pitchi r\g of

\"t'H•r;t ti.John B;drd. wll ilt • (;luustl'r took tlw mght("..IJlfi·l
\!;r~1ri11~~ fin•d a t1t1-hitll'r .

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6- The DaUy Sentinel, .Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 5,1974

Council plans journey

ICalendarI

. The

Mc1gs Coun ty

Youth

( 'r, undlof the Unitec.l Mcthodi:')l
Churfhc:-; in Mc.ig ~ Coun ty IS

Wt-:IJ I\ I ·:~ I M

\'
l\&lt;i1io nal
Farnwr ~ · or g &lt;Hl\7.oll\011, 11 p .lll .
e~l StcdP Park . HI. :n.
I.ADIF:S Coif ;tl Pmllt.."ru\·

MEI C S l'uunt~·

Cn!f C'!ub. Tt'l' off wi!l l.Jt• a t 1-Cl
.r un . i\ll ltHllt'S 111\'i te(l.

firt'll ll'n's

Mll11ll.I-~ I'I J H T
,auxili c.u·~· .

ACT MF:ET ING. R p.m .
Count y l-knlth Ot•twrtmC'nt. W.
Union ~f. , ( SH 5ti 1, !\ 1he ns .
~ IWiikl·r.

J n1 1

$19

!.antic.

MEI(~S C(l tHJ ty Dt• nwna li e
Cumm ittt"c . 8 p.m ., (· our·troum
a t eour rh oust· .
FHID,\Y

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Miss Carolyn Manuel

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MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Charles R.
Manuel! Racine, are announcing the forthcoming marriage
of their daughter , Carolyn, to Carl Lee Robinson. Carolyn is a
1973 graduate of Rio Grande College with a B.S. in elementary education and present.Iy teaching third grade for the
Wetzel County Schools. Robinson is in the Navy stationed at
Norfolk, Va. The wedding will be an event of June 16, at 1
p.m. at the Apple Grove Methodist Church, Apple Gro ve. The
custom of open church wedding will be observed.

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Community service held

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LETART fALLS - The an d Mrs. Ca rl Norris of .Juncannual Memorial Day dinner ti on City; Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
was held at the Lel&lt;!rt falls Holter, Mr. and Mrs. Pmd
Communit y Hall Sunday . Eich, Mrs. Ellen Swa rtw art ,
Grace was given by Harold Mrs . Nancy Ca rnahan, Mr. and
Roush. Portland.
Mrs. Wayne Roush. Eudell
Door priz es \\.'ere give n, Sayre of Col umbus; Mr . and
co mplime nts of Shulcrs Mrs . Danie l Hensler a nd
Market, Pomeroy, Jones Boys Jam ie, Walter McDade of
Store, Ohio Valley Industries, Troy, 0 .: Eleanor I Sayre 1
Sadies Market, Ha yman's Das her ,
Phil
Da sher.
Store, Elberfelds Store, M. and Marysville, 0 .: Minnie Savre
R. Barga in Land, Middleport Dudley of Columbus ; Mr. ~ nd
Book Store, Racine 'Recrea tion Mrs. Liege Shields, Mr. and
Ce nte r , Village Cut Rate, Mrs. Wilbur Gathers and
Racine, and Western Auto.
Sandra, Col unnbus; Mr. and
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Dallas Hill , Mrs. Shirlcv
Marshall Roush and Joey, Ables and Vicki, Mr . and Mr~.
Robert Norris. Darrell Nor ris, George Hill, .John Hill, Max
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill , Jr. , Hill Jr. , Clifford Hill, William
Racine·; Mr. and Mrs. Barney Reed, Ca rol Reed, Ma rk
Shain , Sherri Reed, Mrs . Parsons , Chuck fortune,
Mildred Spencer , Tracy Preston Parsons, Mrs. Edna
Norris , Mrs. Maggie Roush, Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Cha rles
Millie Ripley , Charleston, w. Haym an of Westerville, 0.:
Va.; Bill and Bea Cornell, Mr. Terry Hayman, W. B. Cross,
and Mrs. Harold Grimm, .Gretta Carnahan , Mildr ed
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs . Carnahan , Mrs. Frances
Raymond Hensler , Mont Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Quillen, Verlma and Russell Roberts, Mr . and Mrs. Bot
Quillen,
Hal
Leonard, McKelvey of Belpre ; Mr. and
Raven swoo d ;
David Mrs. Cecil Hill, Robin Terri
Gloeckner, Mrs. Luda Arnott, and Marlene Hill, Kim Dugan,
Belpre ; Mrs. Dora Grimm , Ernest Clark , Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs.
Wa yne Wood ya rd , Barney O'Brien,.Mr. and Mrs.
Wa s hington Court House; Brady Huffman, Greg and
Keith Ashley , Emma Saun- Beth , Mrs. Inez Hill, Mr. and
ders, Clara Noll, Mr. and Mrs . Mrs. Waid H ay man~ Mrs .
Daniel Shindler of Sheffield Cheryl Knight, Mr. and Mrs.
Lake, 0 .; Mr. and Mrs . Paul Henry Roush , Mr . and Mrs.
Davis of Parkersburg ; Mr. and Linley Hart, Dale Roush, Mr.
Mrs. Roger Roush , Mr. and and Mrs . Austin Wolfe and
Mrs . Olden Thaxton, Eva Amiee , Syracuse; Mr. and
Sayre, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mrs. Harold Hayman of
Roush, Mrs. Selma Price Deyo
of Huntington, W. Va.; Wright ·
Roush, Ar thur Smith or'
Chillicothe: Sharon Roush.
Early Roush, Mr. and Mrs,
Tommy Hill , Mrs. Garnet
The Middleport Garden Club
Ervine, Mr . and Mrs . Bill met Monday night at the home
McKelvey, Don Richard Hill of Mrs. Siblev Slack-with Mrs.
and son Heath, Harry Hill, Mr. Slack, Mrs. C. 0. fi sher , and
and Mrs. Herbert Roush , Mrs. Mrs. William Hamm acting as
Leora Young , Mrs . Dolly hostesses.
Klienschmidt, of Logan, 0.;
Presiding over the meeting
Llewellyn Hensley, Mrs. Hattie was Mrs. Etoilla Cassell,
Hittingbottom, Mrs. Alber!&lt;! president. Roll call was,.anNorthstine , Colunnbus ; Mr . and sWered by tributes to flowers
Mrs. Pat Webb, Mr. and Mrs. and birds in song.
Robert Ashley and Heidi, Mr.
During the treasure r 's
repor t, the cl ub made a
donation to the Rega l!&lt;! Flower
Show to be held in conjuncti on
with the Big Bend Regatl&lt;!.
No games. No gimmi cks
Mrs. William Morris, vicepresiden t, reported on the care
and exhibition of roses for
home and fl ower shows, and
rose arrangements brought by
members were exhibited and
discussed .
Mrs. Aaron Kelton , regional
garden club director, reported
on the recent regional meeting
ON PASSBOOK
in McArthur at which Mrs.
· SAVINGS
Earl Bender presented modern
s 1.4 per cent year paid on
Japanese
arrangements and
Regular Passbook Savings.
mass
arrangements
for public
No Minjmum . Interest
from 'date of deposit to date
auditoriums and homes.
of withdrawal. Interest
Mrs. M. J. fry announced
compounded qua_rterly .
the club's project for June 27 as
being at Gallipolis State Institute.
d)MEIGS ·
New officers for 1974-75 were

en

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HYM N SING ~~t Ma son First
Baptist Churcll. i::JO p.m. with
the "Havenai res ... Cha rleston
lQ be feot w·cd. F: vc ryoneone

SUN IJAY
BOBO VAM IL Y Reunion. ft.
Meigs. New Li ma Rd .. basket
dinner at 1 p .m . Friends,
relat ives welcome.

. Just Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

51f4%

~~RANCH

'

Th~

Athens County

Sninqs • l.OiiM co :
296 Sedmd St ' •

.,

Pomeroy, Ohio
All Accounts Insured To
IS10.000 by FSLIC.

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BRENDA Gil Y Zirkle,
Middll'port, l't' lchratrd her
secund birthda~· rcr rntly at
the honw of her parf'nts, Mr.
:.md 1\trs. [)~wid Zirkle. ta ke,

Miss Sheila Marie Folmer
ANNO UNCE WEDIJING - Mrs. Betty Fol mer,
Pomeroy. is an nouncing the approachi ng wedding of her
dau ghter, Sheila Ma rie Fol mer . to Steve E. Pow ell, son of
Mr . and Mrs. GentlLl Powell , Pomeroy. Miss Fo!nlcr is the
daughter of the lat e Donald H. Folmer . The open church
wedding will be a n eve nt of Sunday , Jun£' 16, at 6 :30 p,m . in
the Grace Episcopa l Chun:h, Pomeroy, with a reception
followi ng in the t•hu rch parish house.

Polly 's Pointers
Doggy's breath
puts her off
By Polly Cramer

Westervr lle. 0.: Mr . and Mrs.
Bill Zer kl e and Jackie. Mr . and
Mrs .
Fred
Goe glein,
Rock Springs ; Mr. and Mrs.
Darr ell Duga 11, Kev in and
Richard, Cindy and Sha ron
Roush, Ca rol, Phrl ip and T
Gera ce, Jerry , Pat and Co nni e
Crawford, Ern ie Mille r , Elmer
Prckens. Pam Crawford. Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin Rize r and
Milisa , Pomeroy: Mrs. Eileen
Rousl1. Mrs. Vir gie Roush,
Mrs. Don Be ll , Mrs. Eula
Wolfe, Mrs. fl orence Sm ith.
Mrs. Robert Sm ith .Jr .,
Millvale, Pa.; Dea n Hill , Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Sargent ,
Middleport ; Mr· . and Mrs .
Charl es Wagner, · Gre lla
Simpson, Dorothy Whi tmer,
Isabel Wilson, Mr . and Mrs.
Norman Roush and Ga rcn, Mr.
an d Mr s. Ca rroll No rri s,
Brenda and Jerry Coughlin.
Mr. and Mrs. Wiliia m Grueser,
Mr. and Mr s. Mike Gerlach ,
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Zer kle, Mrs.
Leah Weatherly, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Manuel and children, Mrs.
Pauline Wolfe , Mrs. Dorothy
Sayre, Miss Joyce Bigley and
·thirty members of the Souther~
Local High School -Band.
·

Mrs. Slack hosts club

..

heritage house

wel come.
SONGFF:ST, 2 p.m. at the
Eag lt.; Ridge Com munity
Churc h. All sing ers ond public
invi ted.

an noun ced as Mrs . Sibley
Slack, presiden t; 111rs. Charles
McDaniel, vice-president;
Mrs. Carl Horky , secretary:
and Mi ss Nel li e Zerkle,
treasurer.
f ollowing the meeting , Mrs.
Cassell presided at the punch
·bow l and Mrs. fisher at a
silver coffee service arran ged
on a l&lt;!ble in while . Mrs. Slack
and Mrs. Hamm served the
dessert course .
Guests were Mrs. Carl Kloes,
Mrs. Aaron Kelton, and Miss
Nina Russell.

POLLY 'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My two-year-old Pomeranian dog is
beauti ful and so loving but he has VERY bad breath. 1
followed my vet's advice and had the tartar removed from
his teeth and even had some extracted but th e bad breath
persists. I have tried those "doggy brea ths" but noth ing
he lps. r am a Senior Citizen and my dog is compa ny for me
but often 1 cannot let him come near me because of tllis
problem . Does anyone have any advice ' - EUGEN IA.

ite t:n·am, pop and ic.cd lea
were S(.' rvcd to Mrs. Rohcrt:1
1\-tay narfl, gn111dmothcr, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Maynard, Mr.
and Mrs. Hu sscll Maynard,
Samantha and Husl)'; Ruth
r\nna, Sammy and LeAnna
Plants: her sisters, Tt•rri
and D1•bbit·. tht• hono.red
g ul' st and her pafl'nts.
S('nding a gift wa s Mr. and

Wm.ROGERS &amp; SON~ SILVERPLATE

;/ '. r:\

GIFT SELECTION

Mrs. Mic·hael Zirklr, Mi c-hele
and P~1m e l a. Rrcmht also
rceeivcd g ift s from he r
great- grandmother, Mrs .
Vina Pre £'e e, and ht•r greataunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmlr D. AllCil. all or hlCl,
Ky .

H~:C EIVF:S AlVAH!)
Lorena Co llins Rice, Mid·
dleport, has r ~ceiv~d a .pi n
from the Huyal Neighbors of
Arneric&lt;J Lodge for ·being a
member 50 years. She was
c hapte r sec r etet r y fo r tw o
yea r s.

RETUHN HOME
Mr . and Mr s. Elwin Bowers,
Pomeroy , and her mother,
Mr s. Herbert Mi ller , returned
home :\1onday from a visit with
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve concerns embroidery fl oss. I Mrs. Miller 's daughter and
do wish it wou ld co me on spcols like other thread . This would son -in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John
save a lot of tempers, a lot of tangled thr ead that is r uined and Michael. Mount Prospect, Ill .
make for neater sewi ng baskets. - SUE.
DEAR POLLY - I am a professional dressma ker . Lik e Liz I
have many fabnc scraps that I cannot bear to throw away and
ha ve found· many uses for them . Squares and strips sewn
together , after ca refull y sorting colors and textures, can mak e
hostess skirts, vests and shoulder bags and such patchwork
garments are very fashionable. Oil be careful not to mix
washable and dry cleana ble fabrics .
A larger remnant often will make a fu ll garment fo r a tod·
cller . Smaller ones l]lake stuffed toys, bean bags, pencil cases
and beanie ca ps. Colorfu l throw pillows, hot pads and mitts and
small appliance covers are also possibilities.
An old garment can be give n new life by us ing such scraps
Meut Specillls
for contrasting collars, pccket.o; or appliques. My so n's favorite
idea is using wild colors and patterns for patches an d cuff s on
blue jeans. Wel come gifts would be glass cases, cosmetic bags,
EVANS 5 TO 7 LB. AVERAGE
shoe bags, jewelry cases and other things to use in a suitcase.
SMOKED
The list is almost endless. Anything left over will be welcomed by
a charitable institution or children's organization. - SHARON .
· DEAR POLLY - I am chairman of a Red Cross sewing
department and we never waste a thread , much less fa brics. Do
tell Liz that similar fabrics can be sewn together and then
chi ldren's clothes cut from them. We make puppets out of all
sorts of materials and piece hard-to-get flannel scraps to make
baby clothes, bibs and bootees. Aprons are made for use in
mental hospitals - the band of one material, strings another,
pccket another and so on. Even hats can be made. Of course, all
our things are for the. needy . - ROSEMARY .
DEAR POLLY ""1 put a thin but strong piece of leftover
material over the opening of my glue bottle and then screw the
lid on so the bottle is not impossible to open the next time l need
glue. - ELAINE. age 11.
You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homemaking idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution lo a
problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper.

VIENNA
BEEF OR PORK

BAR-8-Q

Callie Ham ........ !~: .. 59¢

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAR B.S

Bird Mi !-isinn , Beverley, Ky .,
June 24, 25 a nd 21;. Bnlh Un ilt&gt;d cmc meal will ha\'!· tr, be b rJu~hl
Mctl1otlist youth and udui L"i CJrc while . tnt vcli n ~ dr,wn ~,n d
arH1thcr bcmght on the wr1y
invited to gu with them .
Th ere ;.lfe a limi tl'd number b~w k . The ('(Jst of thuse twrJ
of vac e~n ci c s left &lt;tnd up- m e~J ls will be the ;-,·.4 ponsibil!l\·
pli&lt;.:ations will be &lt;:H.Tcptcd of c&lt;Jth pers1m 1-(IJing.
unll l J une 19 . rt will ht.' (ln a ·
firs i-{.' Omc fir st served ba si:-;
w1til all v:u:a ncics w·c f illed. 1 - - The Rev . D. William Sydcn~ tr ickcr is th\.: Youth Courdina lor and cun b(' co n t~wtcd
for Iurt11er cletalis, at 9n2&lt;l:ll7
or at 992-i 400 . The c- ost for U.M.
you th will be $10 since the
Youth Cuun&lt;:i l is urJ.dcrw riti ng
99
the bal;m ce of the PX penses
For adul ts the cos t will bl' $20 .
Those go in g will stay ol a
dorm itory on the Hcd Bi rd
Mission grounds for lhe tw o
Your Thom Me An Sto:-e
Middl epor t , 0 .
nighl'i thcrt' and will be ea t ing
in the cafete ri a. Both room and

"STEEL TOE"

fl ltllldrr .

ANNUAL 1!\SPECTION.
Rac-ine Cliaplcr 1:14 OES 8 p.m.
at the Ma soni c Templ ~ .
HYM N SJ:&gt;:r.. Haw! Comnnmity Churc h. lnca tccl be ~
tween Long Buttum ami Por t·
land off SH 124. i:10 p.m .
Fealurcrl singe rs a r e th eMorri s Family and the
Even in g Light Qtwr tet.
Enryone welcome.
SATU RIJIIY
HUMM /\ (If. sale and ~lll C ·
tion. Had m• F.mC"rgenc y Squ:ul
spon sorC"d. 10 ::10 a. m . r~t the
fi r ehouse. Some &lt;w liq ucs .
Proceeds for :1 new tru ck

BAKER'S

FLORIDA

s lb ,
GRAPEFRUIT..~.~~.

79¢.

NE

FRENCH
FRIES

2 lb.

CRISCO
OIL

'

Middleport, 0.

'3

12-0Z.

Jar

NESCAFE

SPAGHffil &amp;GR. BEEF
CHICKEN &amp;DUMPLINGS
CHILl WITH BEANS

.' BAKER

LES

Bag

CASTLEBERRY

FURNITURE

INSTANT

COFFEE

10-oz

Jar

SWEEPSTAKES

5 h ·oz.
cans
1

· MACKEREL
15-oz.

Cans

I

I

I

I
I

"t

" .

"

/J

I

1

.. I

"

,_

.

89¢

Chocolate
32 oz . can

MIX OR MATCH
" Stre &lt;~ki n ~"

Can

QUIK

GARDEN DELIGHT

Bill co ll ectors a re what
most of us hav e become.
Why does the phone al·
ways ring when you're home
alone and just starting to
shower?

oz.

10

ARMOUR

Frozen Foods

By PHIL PASTOR.ET

is ju s t the
modern verswn or what happened when yo u lost a t strip
poker.
·
We know a fellow who '~
PTA PLANS SALE
well-suited for his job - but
The Pomeroy Elementary that's about his onlv
"
PTA will sponsor a runnmage qualific ation.
and bake sale at the Pomeroy
Elementary School, Saturday
Th e r ea l Jo hnn y Ap from 9 a .m. to 5 p.m. Bring all
pl eseed was J ohn Chapman
rummage to the school any who sold and gave away ap·
time after 1 p.m. friday and pie seeds and saplings as he
baked goods Saturday mor- Jr~veled in his Chri stian mi sning . For ·pick-up of runnmage sionary work in the la t·e 18th
and t•a r ly 19th ce nturi es. ·
call 992-5297 or 992·2377.

iS intluded 1n l hL· cr •sl
st&lt;Jtcd with the ex&lt;.;cption lt1"t
b&lt;JHfli

MINERS BOOTS

/::10 p.m.

l'H t; K~IJAY

Gtll'!:i l

spmrsur urg a tri p to the Hc;d

' '

i'

l89C

�i

'[:,_, ,.,., .,s .o·c · a .,. .,. . . . .J~:

6- The DaUy Sentinel, .Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 5,1974

Council plans journey

ICalendarI

. The

Mc1gs Coun ty

Youth

( 'r, undlof the Unitec.l Mcthodi:')l
Churfhc:-; in Mc.ig ~ Coun ty IS

Wt-:IJ I\ I ·:~ I M

\'
l\&lt;i1io nal
Farnwr ~ · or g &lt;Hl\7.oll\011, 11 p .lll .
e~l StcdP Park . HI. :n.
I.ADIF:S Coif ;tl Pmllt.."ru\·

MEI C S l'uunt~·

Cn!f C'!ub. Tt'l' off wi!l l.Jt• a t 1-Cl
.r un . i\ll ltHllt'S 111\'i te(l.

firt'll ll'n's

Mll11ll.I-~ I'I J H T
,auxili c.u·~· .

ACT MF:ET ING. R p.m .
Count y l-knlth Ot•twrtmC'nt. W.
Union ~f. , ( SH 5ti 1, !\ 1he ns .
~ IWiikl·r.

J n1 1

$19

!.antic.

MEI(~S C(l tHJ ty Dt• nwna li e
Cumm ittt"c . 8 p.m ., (· our·troum
a t eour rh oust· .
FHID,\Y

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MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Charles R.
Manuel! Racine, are announcing the forthcoming marriage
of their daughter , Carolyn, to Carl Lee Robinson. Carolyn is a
1973 graduate of Rio Grande College with a B.S. in elementary education and present.Iy teaching third grade for the
Wetzel County Schools. Robinson is in the Navy stationed at
Norfolk, Va. The wedding will be an event of June 16, at 1
p.m. at the Apple Grove Methodist Church, Apple Gro ve. The
custom of open church wedding will be observed.

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LETART fALLS - The an d Mrs. Ca rl Norris of .Juncannual Memorial Day dinner ti on City; Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
was held at the Lel&lt;!rt falls Holter, Mr. and Mrs. Pmd
Communit y Hall Sunday . Eich, Mrs. Ellen Swa rtw art ,
Grace was given by Harold Mrs . Nancy Ca rnahan, Mr. and
Roush. Portland.
Mrs. Wayne Roush. Eudell
Door priz es \\.'ere give n, Sayre of Col umbus; Mr . and
co mplime nts of Shulcrs Mrs . Danie l Hensler a nd
Market, Pomeroy, Jones Boys Jam ie, Walter McDade of
Store, Ohio Valley Industries, Troy, 0 .: Eleanor I Sayre 1
Sadies Market, Ha yman's Das her ,
Phil
Da sher.
Store, Elberfelds Store, M. and Marysville, 0 .: Minnie Savre
R. Barga in Land, Middleport Dudley of Columbus ; Mr. ~ nd
Book Store, Racine 'Recrea tion Mrs. Liege Shields, Mr. and
Ce nte r , Village Cut Rate, Mrs. Wilbur Gathers and
Racine, and Western Auto.
Sandra, Col unnbus; Mr. and
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Dallas Hill , Mrs. Shirlcv
Marshall Roush and Joey, Ables and Vicki, Mr . and Mr~.
Robert Norris. Darrell Nor ris, George Hill, .John Hill, Max
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill , Jr. , Hill Jr. , Clifford Hill, William
Racine·; Mr. and Mrs. Barney Reed, Ca rol Reed, Ma rk
Shain , Sherri Reed, Mrs . Parsons , Chuck fortune,
Mildred Spencer , Tracy Preston Parsons, Mrs. Edna
Norris , Mrs. Maggie Roush, Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Cha rles
Millie Ripley , Charleston, w. Haym an of Westerville, 0.:
Va.; Bill and Bea Cornell, Mr. Terry Hayman, W. B. Cross,
and Mrs. Harold Grimm, .Gretta Carnahan , Mildr ed
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs . Carnahan , Mrs. Frances
Raymond Hensler , Mont Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Quillen, Verlma and Russell Roberts, Mr . and Mrs. Bot
Quillen,
Hal
Leonard, McKelvey of Belpre ; Mr. and
Raven swoo d ;
David Mrs. Cecil Hill, Robin Terri
Gloeckner, Mrs. Luda Arnott, and Marlene Hill, Kim Dugan,
Belpre ; Mrs. Dora Grimm , Ernest Clark , Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs.
Wa yne Wood ya rd , Barney O'Brien,.Mr. and Mrs.
Wa s hington Court House; Brady Huffman, Greg and
Keith Ashley , Emma Saun- Beth , Mrs. Inez Hill, Mr. and
ders, Clara Noll, Mr. and Mrs . Mrs. Waid H ay man~ Mrs .
Daniel Shindler of Sheffield Cheryl Knight, Mr. and Mrs.
Lake, 0 .; Mr. and Mrs . Paul Henry Roush , Mr . and Mrs.
Davis of Parkersburg ; Mr. and Linley Hart, Dale Roush, Mr.
Mrs. Roger Roush , Mr. and and Mrs . Austin Wolfe and
Mrs . Olden Thaxton, Eva Amiee , Syracuse; Mr. and
Sayre, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mrs. Harold Hayman of
Roush, Mrs. Selma Price Deyo
of Huntington, W. Va.; Wright ·
Roush, Ar thur Smith or'
Chillicothe: Sharon Roush.
Early Roush, Mr. and Mrs,
Tommy Hill , Mrs. Garnet
The Middleport Garden Club
Ervine, Mr . and Mrs . Bill met Monday night at the home
McKelvey, Don Richard Hill of Mrs. Siblev Slack-with Mrs.
and son Heath, Harry Hill, Mr. Slack, Mrs. C. 0. fi sher , and
and Mrs. Herbert Roush , Mrs. Mrs. William Hamm acting as
Leora Young , Mrs . Dolly hostesses.
Klienschmidt, of Logan, 0.;
Presiding over the meeting
Llewellyn Hensley, Mrs. Hattie was Mrs. Etoilla Cassell,
Hittingbottom, Mrs. Alber!&lt;! president. Roll call was,.anNorthstine , Colunnbus ; Mr . and sWered by tributes to flowers
Mrs. Pat Webb, Mr. and Mrs. and birds in song.
Robert Ashley and Heidi, Mr.
During the treasure r 's
repor t, the cl ub made a
donation to the Rega l!&lt;! Flower
Show to be held in conjuncti on
with the Big Bend Regatl&lt;!.
No games. No gimmi cks
Mrs. William Morris, vicepresiden t, reported on the care
and exhibition of roses for
home and fl ower shows, and
rose arrangements brought by
members were exhibited and
discussed .
Mrs. Aaron Kelton , regional
garden club director, reported
on the recent regional meeting
ON PASSBOOK
in McArthur at which Mrs.
· SAVINGS
Earl Bender presented modern
s 1.4 per cent year paid on
Japanese
arrangements and
Regular Passbook Savings.
mass
arrangements
for public
No Minjmum . Interest
from 'date of deposit to date
auditoriums and homes.
of withdrawal. Interest
Mrs. M. J. fry announced
compounded qua_rterly .
the club's project for June 27 as
being at Gallipolis State Institute.
d)MEIGS ·
New officers for 1974-75 were

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HYM N SING ~~t Ma son First
Baptist Churcll. i::JO p.m. with
the "Havenai res ... Cha rleston
lQ be feot w·cd. F: vc ryoneone

SUN IJAY
BOBO VAM IL Y Reunion. ft.
Meigs. New Li ma Rd .. basket
dinner at 1 p .m . Friends,
relat ives welcome.

. Just Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

51f4%

~~RANCH

'

Th~

Athens County

Sninqs • l.OiiM co :
296 Sedmd St ' •

.,

Pomeroy, Ohio
All Accounts Insured To
IS10.000 by FSLIC.

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BRENDA Gil Y Zirkle,
Middll'port, l't' lchratrd her
secund birthda~· rcr rntly at
the honw of her parf'nts, Mr.
:.md 1\trs. [)~wid Zirkle. ta ke,

Miss Sheila Marie Folmer
ANNO UNCE WEDIJING - Mrs. Betty Fol mer,
Pomeroy. is an nouncing the approachi ng wedding of her
dau ghter, Sheila Ma rie Fol mer . to Steve E. Pow ell, son of
Mr . and Mrs. GentlLl Powell , Pomeroy. Miss Fo!nlcr is the
daughter of the lat e Donald H. Folmer . The open church
wedding will be a n eve nt of Sunday , Jun£' 16, at 6 :30 p,m . in
the Grace Episcopa l Chun:h, Pomeroy, with a reception
followi ng in the t•hu rch parish house.

Polly 's Pointers
Doggy's breath
puts her off
By Polly Cramer

Westervr lle. 0.: Mr . and Mrs.
Bill Zer kl e and Jackie. Mr . and
Mrs .
Fred
Goe glein,
Rock Springs ; Mr. and Mrs.
Darr ell Duga 11, Kev in and
Richard, Cindy and Sha ron
Roush, Ca rol, Phrl ip and T
Gera ce, Jerry , Pat and Co nni e
Crawford, Ern ie Mille r , Elmer
Prckens. Pam Crawford. Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin Rize r and
Milisa , Pomeroy: Mrs. Eileen
Rousl1. Mrs. Vir gie Roush,
Mrs. Don Be ll , Mrs. Eula
Wolfe, Mrs. fl orence Sm ith.
Mrs. Robert Sm ith .Jr .,
Millvale, Pa.; Dea n Hill , Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Sargent ,
Middleport ; Mr· . and Mrs .
Charl es Wagner, · Gre lla
Simpson, Dorothy Whi tmer,
Isabel Wilson, Mr . and Mrs.
Norman Roush and Ga rcn, Mr.
an d Mr s. Ca rroll No rri s,
Brenda and Jerry Coughlin.
Mr. and Mrs. Wiliia m Grueser,
Mr. and Mr s. Mike Gerlach ,
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Zer kle, Mrs.
Leah Weatherly, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Manuel and children, Mrs.
Pauline Wolfe , Mrs. Dorothy
Sayre, Miss Joyce Bigley and
·thirty members of the Souther~
Local High School -Band.
·

Mrs. Slack hosts club

..

heritage house

wel come.
SONGFF:ST, 2 p.m. at the
Eag lt.; Ridge Com munity
Churc h. All sing ers ond public
invi ted.

an noun ced as Mrs . Sibley
Slack, presiden t; 111rs. Charles
McDaniel, vice-president;
Mrs. Carl Horky , secretary:
and Mi ss Nel li e Zerkle,
treasurer.
f ollowing the meeting , Mrs.
Cassell presided at the punch
·bow l and Mrs. fisher at a
silver coffee service arran ged
on a l&lt;!ble in while . Mrs. Slack
and Mrs. Hamm served the
dessert course .
Guests were Mrs. Carl Kloes,
Mrs. Aaron Kelton, and Miss
Nina Russell.

POLLY 'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My two-year-old Pomeranian dog is
beauti ful and so loving but he has VERY bad breath. 1
followed my vet's advice and had the tartar removed from
his teeth and even had some extracted but th e bad breath
persists. I have tried those "doggy brea ths" but noth ing
he lps. r am a Senior Citizen and my dog is compa ny for me
but often 1 cannot let him come near me because of tllis
problem . Does anyone have any advice ' - EUGEN IA.

ite t:n·am, pop and ic.cd lea
were S(.' rvcd to Mrs. Rohcrt:1
1\-tay narfl, gn111dmothcr, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Maynard, Mr.
and Mrs. Hu sscll Maynard,
Samantha and Husl)'; Ruth
r\nna, Sammy and LeAnna
Plants: her sisters, Tt•rri
and D1•bbit·. tht• hono.red
g ul' st and her pafl'nts.
S('nding a gift wa s Mr. and

Wm.ROGERS &amp; SON~ SILVERPLATE

;/ '. r:\

GIFT SELECTION

Mrs. Mic·hael Zirklr, Mi c-hele
and P~1m e l a. Rrcmht also
rceeivcd g ift s from he r
great- grandmother, Mrs .
Vina Pre £'e e, and ht•r greataunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmlr D. AllCil. all or hlCl,
Ky .

H~:C EIVF:S AlVAH!)
Lorena Co llins Rice, Mid·
dleport, has r ~ceiv~d a .pi n
from the Huyal Neighbors of
Arneric&lt;J Lodge for ·being a
member 50 years. She was
c hapte r sec r etet r y fo r tw o
yea r s.

RETUHN HOME
Mr . and Mr s. Elwin Bowers,
Pomeroy , and her mother,
Mr s. Herbert Mi ller , returned
home :\1onday from a visit with
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve concerns embroidery fl oss. I Mrs. Miller 's daughter and
do wish it wou ld co me on spcols like other thread . This would son -in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John
save a lot of tempers, a lot of tangled thr ead that is r uined and Michael. Mount Prospect, Ill .
make for neater sewi ng baskets. - SUE.
DEAR POLLY - I am a professional dressma ker . Lik e Liz I
have many fabnc scraps that I cannot bear to throw away and
ha ve found· many uses for them . Squares and strips sewn
together , after ca refull y sorting colors and textures, can mak e
hostess skirts, vests and shoulder bags and such patchwork
garments are very fashionable. Oil be careful not to mix
washable and dry cleana ble fabrics .
A larger remnant often will make a fu ll garment fo r a tod·
cller . Smaller ones l]lake stuffed toys, bean bags, pencil cases
and beanie ca ps. Colorfu l throw pillows, hot pads and mitts and
small appliance covers are also possibilities.
An old garment can be give n new life by us ing such scraps
Meut Specillls
for contrasting collars, pccket.o; or appliques. My so n's favorite
idea is using wild colors and patterns for patches an d cuff s on
blue jeans. Wel come gifts would be glass cases, cosmetic bags,
EVANS 5 TO 7 LB. AVERAGE
shoe bags, jewelry cases and other things to use in a suitcase.
SMOKED
The list is almost endless. Anything left over will be welcomed by
a charitable institution or children's organization. - SHARON .
· DEAR POLLY - I am chairman of a Red Cross sewing
department and we never waste a thread , much less fa brics. Do
tell Liz that similar fabrics can be sewn together and then
chi ldren's clothes cut from them. We make puppets out of all
sorts of materials and piece hard-to-get flannel scraps to make
baby clothes, bibs and bootees. Aprons are made for use in
mental hospitals - the band of one material, strings another,
pccket another and so on. Even hats can be made. Of course, all
our things are for the. needy . - ROSEMARY .
DEAR POLLY ""1 put a thin but strong piece of leftover
material over the opening of my glue bottle and then screw the
lid on so the bottle is not impossible to open the next time l need
glue. - ELAINE. age 11.
You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homemaking idea, Pel Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution lo a
problem. Write Polly in care of this newspaper.

VIENNA
BEEF OR PORK

BAR-8-Q

Callie Ham ........ !~: .. 59¢

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM
BAR B.S

Bird Mi !-isinn , Beverley, Ky .,
June 24, 25 a nd 21;. Bnlh Un ilt&gt;d cmc meal will ha\'!· tr, be b rJu~hl
Mctl1otlist youth and udui L"i CJrc while . tnt vcli n ~ dr,wn ~,n d
arH1thcr bcmght on the wr1y
invited to gu with them .
Th ere ;.lfe a limi tl'd number b~w k . The ('(Jst of thuse twrJ
of vac e~n ci c s left &lt;tnd up- m e~J ls will be the ;-,·.4 ponsibil!l\·
pli&lt;.:ations will be &lt;:H.Tcptcd of c&lt;Jth pers1m 1-(IJing.
unll l J une 19 . rt will ht.' (ln a ·
firs i-{.' Omc fir st served ba si:-;
w1til all v:u:a ncics w·c f illed. 1 - - The Rev . D. William Sydcn~ tr ickcr is th\.: Youth Courdina lor and cun b(' co n t~wtcd
for Iurt11er cletalis, at 9n2&lt;l:ll7
or at 992-i 400 . The c- ost for U.M.
you th will be $10 since the
Youth Cuun&lt;:i l is urJ.dcrw riti ng
99
the bal;m ce of the PX penses
For adul ts the cos t will bl' $20 .
Those go in g will stay ol a
dorm itory on the Hcd Bi rd
Mission grounds for lhe tw o
Your Thom Me An Sto:-e
Middl epor t , 0 .
nighl'i thcrt' and will be ea t ing
in the cafete ri a. Both room and

"STEEL TOE"

fl ltllldrr .

ANNUAL 1!\SPECTION.
Rac-ine Cliaplcr 1:14 OES 8 p.m.
at the Ma soni c Templ ~ .
HYM N SJ:&gt;:r.. Haw! Comnnmity Churc h. lnca tccl be ~
tween Long Buttum ami Por t·
land off SH 124. i:10 p.m .
Fealurcrl singe rs a r e th eMorri s Family and the
Even in g Light Qtwr tet.
Enryone welcome.
SATU RIJIIY
HUMM /\ (If. sale and ~lll C ·
tion. Had m• F.mC"rgenc y Squ:ul
spon sorC"d. 10 ::10 a. m . r~t the
fi r ehouse. Some &lt;w liq ucs .
Proceeds for :1 new tru ck

BAKER'S

FLORIDA

s lb ,
GRAPEFRUIT..~.~~.

79¢.

NE

FRENCH
FRIES

2 lb.

CRISCO
OIL

'

Middleport, 0.

'3

12-0Z.

Jar

NESCAFE

SPAGHffil &amp;GR. BEEF
CHICKEN &amp;DUMPLINGS
CHILl WITH BEANS

.' BAKER

LES

Bag

CASTLEBERRY

FURNITURE

INSTANT

COFFEE

10-oz

Jar

SWEEPSTAKES

5 h ·oz.
cans
1

· MACKEREL
15-oz.

Cans

I

I

I

I
I

"t

" .

"

/J

I

1

.. I

"

,_

.

89¢

Chocolate
32 oz . can

MIX OR MATCH
" Stre &lt;~ki n ~"

Can

QUIK

GARDEN DELIGHT

Bill co ll ectors a re what
most of us hav e become.
Why does the phone al·
ways ring when you're home
alone and just starting to
shower?

oz.

10

ARMOUR

Frozen Foods

By PHIL PASTOR.ET

is ju s t the
modern verswn or what happened when yo u lost a t strip
poker.
·
We know a fellow who '~
PTA PLANS SALE
well-suited for his job - but
The Pomeroy Elementary that's about his onlv
"
PTA will sponsor a runnmage qualific ation.
and bake sale at the Pomeroy
Elementary School, Saturday
Th e r ea l Jo hnn y Ap from 9 a .m. to 5 p.m. Bring all
pl eseed was J ohn Chapman
rummage to the school any who sold and gave away ap·
time after 1 p.m. friday and pie seeds and saplings as he
baked goods Saturday mor- Jr~veled in his Chri stian mi sning . For ·pick-up of runnmage sionary work in the la t·e 18th
and t•a r ly 19th ce nturi es. ·
call 992-5297 or 992·2377.

iS intluded 1n l hL· cr •sl
st&lt;Jtcd with the ex&lt;.;cption lt1"t
b&lt;JHfli

MINERS BOOTS

/::10 p.m.

l'H t; K~IJAY

Gtll'!:i l

spmrsur urg a tri p to the Hc;d

' '

i'

l89C

�•

••
ft

The Dafly Sentinel Middlepol'l-Pulll l'I'UY , u .. \Vt•dn6tl&lt;-tl, ,JlU!l' 5. !:fi4

Columbus to 'have
first solar house

Apple Grove

Nixon
1~on linued from page I l
.L,'U(:Ir;mlt•cs· fn-e inunih,rauun

Qf Soviet

J~w s .

"Our fore i!-,'Tl policy rnusl
reflect our idea ls and purpuses," he said . " We can not
ne ver acquiesce in the sup.
pression of human liberties.
We must do all that we
reasonably can to promote
peace," he said.
"But there ate limits to what
we ec.m do, and we must ask
our selves
so me
hard
questions :
"What is our capabili ty to
change the domest ic structure ,
of other nations ? Would a
slowdown or reversa l of
detente help or hurt the
pos itive evolution of ot her
social systems? What price- in
terms of renewed conflict-&lt;Jur
we willing to pay to bri ng
pressw·e to bear for human

1

MASON ,- Plans we re made
purchase
add itio na l
eq uipment fo r the town's wa ter
syste·m, the vo lunteer fire
depar tmen t will launch a new
pr ojec t, iJ nd speed control
signs were discussed in this
week's mee ting of Mason Town
Council.
Mayor lr'a Atkinson presided
when council agreed to advertise for bids for a new 20
horsepower pump lor the water
deparimen t. This wou ld be in
addition to the same size pump
now in use . Presently, an
auxiliary pwnp, which is 10
horsepower, has been in use,
but this is res ulting in some of
the others not opera ting all the
lime since the smaller mo tor
throws off the a utoma ti c
swi tch. Once the new motor is

News, Events

l• · •

' obtained the smaller one will
be sued again as an auxiliary
for pwn ping wa ter direc tly into
the reservoir.
A dwn p sta tion will be
arranged by the fi re department, it was reported, to be of
benefit to campers returning
from trips. It will be located
between the fire station and
city bu ilding.
Through this project, a
sa nitary serv ice will be
provided for users of camping
trailers. It is a means of taking
ca re of sewage from tanks of
suc h vehicles. A charge will be
made and profits will benefit
the fi re departme nt.
Coun cil spent considerable
time disc ussing and cons id~ring . a Wes t Virg in ia
Department of Highw ays

sur vey concern ing speed
through the town.
A council committee, with
poli ce, we re qes ignated to
s tudy the needs and then will
go to department headquarters
in Cha rleston for furth er
discussion of the PACA
package deal. Council is also
trying to obtain a traffic light
at the in tersection of Brown
and Second Streets .
In other action, council:
Ap proved tra iler permits for
Roger A. Hall, Larry J. Fry
and Harry C. Roush: approved
purchase of rubber gloves and
hip boots for the wa ter
department; discussed water
policies, especially per taining
to customers who have trailers
loca ted on the Ohio River
bank ; rescinded a previous

WASHINGTON (UP! )- The
Labor Department Tuesday
allocated $10 million to provide
pa rttime · employment for
about 3,800 persons aged 55 or
older with low income and poor
employment prospects.
Ohio received $467,000.
The fund allocation was an·
nounced in conjunction with
the signing or r egulation s
placing into effect a section of
the Older Americans AcL The
section caDs for utilization of
or ganizations pres ently
spon s orin g s ucce s sful
programs for older workers.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy Wednesday at
11 a.m. was 76 degrees under
sunny skies.
TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport ER squad
was ca lled a t 7:27 p.m.
Tuesday for Ruth Ann Dowler
who was ta ken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

~·

TO LAY PIPE
POMEROY - The Colwnbia
Gas Company was given
persmission by the Meigs
Co u nty Co m missione r s
Tuesday to lay pipeline over
and under coun ty roads 14 and
18 in Bedford Twp. Attending
were Robert Clark, Warden
Ours and Henry Wells, commissioners, . an d Mar th a
Chambers, clerk.

COLEMAN
ONE GALLON

GET THE LIONS SHARE OF

---

JUG

•429

;ri' '

I

=

__./

COLEMAN

WIICHESnR

80 QT.

22 AUTOMATIC RIFLE

COOLER

WITH SCOPE

, . . HECK'S
REG. '64.95

HECK'S REG. 15.99
SPORTS DEPT.

$2499

=----~~--- HECK'S

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

COLOR TV

2-BURNER STOVE

SLEEPING BAG

\

ON~499

$15

ZENITH

Black

&amp;

While

Ht.&gt;re \ a '}b urner that \ l:! cono m r

col ond rl\ eo~y por to b lrt y rep re ·

99

~ e rll~

MARLIN GLENFIELD

22 SINGLE SHOT RIFLE

HECK'S REG. 25.99

lo&gt;. ,.,.,..., . ~ d•d

StoD•

C• • ~'•• 'rl

o

?0'\l • •

HECK'S REG .

HECK 'S REG . $32. 9 5

$1 5 .66

WASHER

IIG SCRIIN IV .
AI AlOW PRICI

Juil lhe righ l size woshe• lor mol'l)' fom .
oliou! FeatVI'e•
fomou\ Fih er -Fio "
w(nh systet11 . f our wa,h ~ ~lin : Norl'rlol.
Pumon•nt Preu with ' old water coot.
down , ill.nivcned S.Ook , Oe!i(ote. Thr ee
woth· lemperot ..re ond rinw-tempero .
tvre co mb,nc;~t i onl in cl~rde tpet io! cold
... urer 1e!utiont lor 1pec:i o! core ol
moderl'l tynthet•o . Three wa ter !eveh.

SPOIITS DEPT.
COUMAN

EVEREADY
"D" SIZE

ZENITH

SPIN CAST ROD .
1 piece, 5' so lid fiberg lass rod . Ch rom e guide.:. and tipfop. Po si ti ve-locki ng reel se aL

29cPlCII

COLOR

HE~I&lt; ' S

$9.99

MEIGS COUNTY REAL ESTATE OWNERS

DELUXE

THE TAX BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN
FOR THE JUNE OR SECOND HALF
COLLECTION OF THE 1973 REAL
ESTATE
TAXES . ALSO
FOR
DE'LINQUENT TAX.
CLOSING
DATE WILL BE JUNE 20, 1974.

oct;on Zebl lex 6100 cost;ng •o d
-1!11. ! '..,.&lt;LAL- - _ _HECK 'S REG . $22 .99

.--r- ~ -··.

~-­
# 3490

OVEN

Wo11 1 nn

.

90&lt;ol.nt

'&lt;'"

&lt;'"•

SPO/ITS DEPT.

~ ~"'~• • &lt;

P'~ '" '

''"'"''"DI•

~n l• f~ " IO"rl " "!If 1•1

'""&lt;!

7'x7'

SPORTS DEPT.
While Only

CABIN
TENT

4 to 10 ib . Test.

$119

14 QUART

FOAM COOLER

SPOOL
HECK'S REG. $1 .99

SPOIITS DEPT.

~ ;-.

79&lt;

Th e b rig ht canvas top a nd
storm flops provide breatheo·

'

HOWARD E. FRANK
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

hJ!n• •&lt;

P•&lt;~PO' O &lt;Jno;.

••n• • no•

ss~s

$5 :13

$299

.oloman

11 o ~1

l"ormc""&lt;'" fOicil "&lt;&gt;' ' o• t l" r '"'
'f""Q and' ' "'"~"

HECK'S REG .

REtRICERATOR

WHITE OR
COLORS ARE
ALL 011 SAL£

s1299

COLEMAN

Med ium /h ea vy·· fr esh water fis hi ng . Fo ·
mou s Zebco 33 spin· ca st reel. 6 ' med ium·

$299

FROST FREE
19CUT.

SPOIITS DEPT.

ZEBCO ROD AND REEL COMBO

BOX

FROST FREE
14 CU. FT.
DELUXE
REFRIGERATOR

$3.2 9

HECK'S REG.

2-TRAY ALUMINUM TACKLE
AMANA

$799

HEC K'S REG.

REG . 46'

SPORTS DEPT.

GIBSON

30 QT. POLY LITE COOLER

SOUTH BEND

BATTERIES
2-11 PlCIC

TABU MODEl

a ppe al for b udg e!

$1288

$2499

SPORTS DEPT

NORGE

~olrd

mm d ed ( Omoe " w ho li ke to l ro . e(

.'\ r, n• h ~H Qlho~ ''"91, 1~01 71 '" ' ' o b~clc;~r P' ' ~ toQ A M&gt;' ,.,. , ,. " •~ ' "II ·,~· ,, • •
mu• • .h• hon.-i&lt;r&gt;f • • &lt;l h• l" ' "'""" ~.,..,.,,,~,..,, '"'"&lt;!"' '"""' ~ '' " ·•• •••l r 1 g., •.•
Q•go "'!d lc• !1pO II 1&lt;0 1)( mo...,! d "'d• rod ~ r~!nuO hmt~ h&lt;.ud o-ood Uo " Ap"' " ' •
lbt

1

OTHIRSIIUS
/ SOLID STAll SSlt

REG. 128.38

COLEMAN

COLEMAN

LEGAL

MARRIAGE LICENSE
Stephen Eric Powell , 19,
Pomeroy, and Sheila Marie
Folmer, 20, Pomer oy.

'

action concerning a tax on
bow ling alleys, the business
tax being left in force at $15 per
year, but the recrea tion tax of
$120 per year being rescinded
with Cou ncilm a n Russ ell
Capeha rt not voting because of
persona l in volvemen t, and set
its next mee tin g for June 17.

News ... in Briefs

ALWT MONEY

'

Town to buy water system equipment·

Mr . and Mrs. I.JQn .Hodges of
Co lu mb us spent Memoria l
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio rvery 15 minutes- inc luding
week end with . Mrs. J une
State University and the wea ther: tempe ratures at
Wickersham and sons.
Homewood Corp. wi ll build the ground level, in the attic, crawl
Mr. and Mrs. Don Grimm of
first com plete ly solarized spaccs · and slab: heat flow ;
Belpre, Mr . and Mrs. Walter
house of its kind in the United wind. direction and sp...,d ; the
McDade of Troy, 0., Mr. and
States, the univer sity a n- intensity .. of indirect sol ar
Mrs. Herbert Roush visited
nounced.
radiation: and even th e
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush
Professor Charles F . Sepsy, num ber of times doors open
Sunday.
research superv isor of the an d close.
Mr . and Mrs. J im Connolly
school's departm en t
of
The data will be eva luated,
and ch il dren of Syracuse
mechanical engineering, sa id giving future developers informoved to Mt. Vernon, 0. Lester
the house will contain elements mation needed to build the
Roush ass isted them in
to make it the most flexible most feasible sola r home.
moving.
from a research standpo int of
The house is a fo ur-bedroom,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mcany solar houses cw-rently in ·two and one-half bath home,
Dade of Troy, 0 . visi ted Mrs.
operation.
providmg about 2,700 feet of
Gladys Shields, Mrs. Edna
Scheduled for completion on living space. It will be a metal
Ro us h a t Raci ne over
Aug. 22, the house is be ing con- structure covered by blown
Memorial week end and called
structed on the Ohio State concrete. Only 3 per cent of the
on other relatives.
Fairgrounds.
wall space will be given to
Mrs . Edna Quicki e of
"The short-term objective," windows.
causes?"
Loudenville, 0., Mrs. Chester
said Sepsy, ·'is to show that it is
TI1e latest in energy saving
The President said that with
Durst of Niles, 0 . visited Mr.
possible to build a functional devices will be insta lled in the the end of Cold War rivalries and Mrs. Herbert Roush , Mr.
solar home using currently house, incl uding a plwnbing an d the end to America's in- and Mrs. Russell Roush, Mr.
available materials."
system designed to conserve volvemen t in Vietnam, some and Mrs. Dorsa Pa r sons
He said the long-range objec- water by equipping pipes with America n leaders had coun- Saturday .
tive is to determine the techni- va lves that allow just enough seled a return to isolationism.
Brice, Be th Ann and Beverly
cal and economic practicality water to pass.
Such advocates , he sai d, were Ha rt, Allen Cu nn ingham
of utilizing solar energy for
Homewood Cor p. is a local "blind to both the lessons of the visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
residential purposes through a house building orga ni zat ion past and the perils of the Hayman and Kei th Wedt w o-to- t hree-year ex- and operates developme nts in future."
nesday.
perimenta l research program . Oh io, Indiana, Michigan ,
Isolationism, he said, is '·one
Attending funeral · services
A computer will be built into Kentucky, Florida and Puerto of the greatest potential dan- for Mrs. · Freda Evans · and
the house, recording data Rico.
ge rs faci ng our country."
spending Memorial week end
Nixon told the gradua ting with Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
mids hipm en that Amer ican Adams were Mrs. Millie Norris
diplomacy is "totally commit- of Laurel, Md., !llr, and Mrs.
te d" to achiev ing las ting ' Larry Grogel and children of
(Con tinued from page I )
peace, and "itis a goal that can Colum bus, Mr. a nd Mrs.
only
be reached when backed Vernon Cady, Lori and Jerry of
Truman created it in 1947. But he said it has become a "vestigial
ta il on the federal government 's security progra ms" and no by American strength and West Jefferson , 0 ., Mrs.
longer serves a purpose.
American resolve ."
Flossie Church of Delaware, 0.
The President who hopes
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Donohue
DUBLIN - TilREE MASKED GUNMEN SPEAKING with that his world tra vels will and children of Marion spent
strong Northern Ireland accents today kidnaped an elderly dramatize his strong suit- Memorial week end with Mr.
British earl and his wife from their plush estate in the Irish foreign policy- in the face of and Mrs. Vernon Donohue and
Republic. The three men escapCif by car in the direction of the cur rent impeachament attended funeral services for
Dublin with the Earl of Donoughmore, 71, a former member of inquiry also gave his public Mrs. Freda Evans at Ewing
the British parliament, and his wile Dorothy Jean, 68.
explanation of why he intends Funeral Home Sunday .
Police threw up roadblocks in the area around the Earl's to journey to the Middle East
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
mansion at Knocklofty, 110 miles southwest of Dublin , and or- and Russia !Ius month.
Hay man of Westerville, 0 .
"My trip to the Middle East attended Memorial dinner at
dered a nationwide alert lor the vehicle. A police spokesman said
one theory being investigated was the possibility th e kidnaping next week will provide an Letart Community Hall Sunwas connected with Irish prisoners who have been on hunger opportunity to ex plore with the day and visited Mr. and Mrs.
leaders of the na tions I shall Ray Hayman. ·
strikes in British jails. One of the strikers died Monday.
visit ways in whi ch we can
Mr. a nd Mrs. Lawren ce
continue our progress toward Balser and children of Tuppers
per manent peace in that Plains, Lawrence, Paul and
PLEASANT VALLEY
DIVORCE ASK ED
area,"
he said.
Ronnie Ables wer e dinner
DISC HARGE S :
He nry
Dean Lutz, Middleport , filed
"On
June
27, I will again guests Sunday of Mrs. Alice
Vester , Point Pleasant ; Mrs. a suit for divorce in Meigs
J ohn Cheese brew , Poi nt County Common Pleas Court, journey to Moscow to meet Balser.
Mrs. Mildred Foster , Mrs.
Pleasant; Mrs. Garnett Rife, against Yvonne Scally Lutz, with Ge neral Secretary
(Leonid)
Brezltnev
to
explore
Betty Stewart, Mrs. Cora Buck
Middl epor t ; Mrs. Patrick Middl epor t, c ha rging gr oss
Harris, Newport News, N. C. neglect of duty and mental further avenues and further of Columbus vis ite d Mrs.
BIRTHS - Jun e 3, a cruelty, Ruth A. Henry was prospects for a lasting peace, Eileen Buck Sunday,
Miss Millie Ripley of
daughter to Mr. and Mrs. granted a divorce from Ca rl F. not only between the Soviet
and.
the
United
States,
Union
Char leston, W. Va. spent
Jam es
Whee ler,
Po in t Henry in another en try fi led
but
among
all
nations,:•
he
Memorial
week end with Mrs.
Pleasant, and June 4, .a son to
tOday.
added
.
Maggie
Roush
.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Gray,
Letart.

I

- rl ·~

9 - The Da ily Se ntinel, MiddleP.,rt-Pomcroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June&gt;. 1974

bility and pv t the k;bosh on ;o.

HECK'SREG .

side con den sa tion . The Expo's
se lf-ad1ust ing outs ide suspe n·
sian requi res no odjustmentafter set -up a nd provides an
unobs tr uded d oorway. ,

$ 1.39

/:,;.,,.:./;'•··

-- --·- --

SI'OIIJ'S
DEfT.
,

I

\

-

SPOIITS
DEPT.

Our Good Grade
Ground Beef
From USDA Choice
Fresh Beef

HECK'S REG.

$59 .99

SPOIITS DEPT.
SPORTS DEPT.

POLYTARPS

AIR MATTRESS

$299
...

5th and PEARL STS., RAt;INE
"The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE'
Right reserved m lt mit quantities
.We

Glad~

Accept Fed. Food Slam ps

Prices Effective June 5-12
9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

HI.C

SUNDAYS .
.

.

VALVOUNE

HOME GROWN

MOTOR OIL
All .Climate
Heavy Duty
lOW, 20W

-

ind40W
'

LETART

..,

LONG GREEN

CABBAGE

QUARl

59~

-Choice Produce

CUCUMBERS

'

EACH
..

~.

.\

.

. ""

·10~ .

USDA CHOICE - .U.S•
GOVERNMENT INSPECTED·

'

46
...........

OL

.

CALIFORNIA
WHITE

POTATOES

$13 .99

SPOIITS DEPT.

lb.

TAVERN
.BONELESS HAMS
CITY

66~. .

MINNOW TRAP

$14.95

65~

HECK' S REG.• $3 .48.

SPALDING
TENNIS BALLS

HECK'S REG . TO $1 .45

SPORTS DEPT.

$199

DRIBBLE SEAL

SPORTS DEPT.

BASKETBALL
TilE Uifa

3 IN CAN
.

~~99e

.

SPIII.G 01 SPII CAST RODS

"199

HECK'S
.REG.
1

3.58 '

TUBE SOCKS

'

POLY TARP

WHOLE OR HALf

F~ENOI

san

)

10'x12'

HECK'S REG.

f

SPORTS DEPT.

$377
HECK'S REG. 16.99

,,______.,.~
:;:.o· SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

VALUABLE COUPON

WIENERS
1-LB. PKG.

10 $1 99 .
LB.

,.

I
1'

HECK'S REG.

HECK' S REG. $4,99

PORK STEAK

~

REYNOLDS

Monday Thru Friday

' CLOSED

DRY MILK ..............~~~-~~~...... . ...........~~t . ~2~99
·POITED MEAT.........~~~~. . ...............5~: $}
SALAD DRESSING ...... ~~~-~~~..........·.~~..... 59~
fQ
18"x25'
.ALUM. IL........~~~~-~-~!!.....................~~~ .....49
STARKIST TUNA....... ~~~-~-~!~~........~:~~~ . .59~
FR 'D . . ..
,.................U.IT..... ·RINKS. ~RANGE &amp;GRA~.E ~?.... 39~

FISH LANDING NET

~·

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1

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!

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'

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ft

The Dafly Sentinel Middlepol'l-Pulll l'I'UY , u .. \Vt•dn6tl&lt;-tl, ,JlU!l' 5. !:fi4

Columbus to 'have
first solar house

Apple Grove

Nixon
1~on linued from page I l
.L,'U(:Ir;mlt•cs· fn-e inunih,rauun

Qf Soviet

J~w s .

"Our fore i!-,'Tl policy rnusl
reflect our idea ls and purpuses," he said . " We can not
ne ver acquiesce in the sup.
pression of human liberties.
We must do all that we
reasonably can to promote
peace," he said.
"But there ate limits to what
we ec.m do, and we must ask
our selves
so me
hard
questions :
"What is our capabili ty to
change the domest ic structure ,
of other nations ? Would a
slowdown or reversa l of
detente help or hurt the
pos itive evolution of ot her
social systems? What price- in
terms of renewed conflict-&lt;Jur
we willing to pay to bri ng
pressw·e to bear for human

1

MASON ,- Plans we re made
purchase
add itio na l
eq uipment fo r the town's wa ter
syste·m, the vo lunteer fire
depar tmen t will launch a new
pr ojec t, iJ nd speed control
signs were discussed in this
week's mee ting of Mason Town
Council.
Mayor lr'a Atkinson presided
when council agreed to advertise for bids for a new 20
horsepower pump lor the water
deparimen t. This wou ld be in
addition to the same size pump
now in use . Presently, an
auxiliary pwnp, which is 10
horsepower, has been in use,
but this is res ulting in some of
the others not opera ting all the
lime since the smaller mo tor
throws off the a utoma ti c
swi tch. Once the new motor is

News, Events

l• · •

' obtained the smaller one will
be sued again as an auxiliary
for pwn ping wa ter direc tly into
the reservoir.
A dwn p sta tion will be
arranged by the fi re department, it was reported, to be of
benefit to campers returning
from trips. It will be located
between the fire station and
city bu ilding.
Through this project, a
sa nitary serv ice will be
provided for users of camping
trailers. It is a means of taking
ca re of sewage from tanks of
suc h vehicles. A charge will be
made and profits will benefit
the fi re departme nt.
Coun cil spent considerable
time disc ussing and cons id~ring . a Wes t Virg in ia
Department of Highw ays

sur vey concern ing speed
through the town.
A council committee, with
poli ce, we re qes ignated to
s tudy the needs and then will
go to department headquarters
in Cha rleston for furth er
discussion of the PACA
package deal. Council is also
trying to obtain a traffic light
at the in tersection of Brown
and Second Streets .
In other action, council:
Ap proved tra iler permits for
Roger A. Hall, Larry J. Fry
and Harry C. Roush: approved
purchase of rubber gloves and
hip boots for the wa ter
department; discussed water
policies, especially per taining
to customers who have trailers
loca ted on the Ohio River
bank ; rescinded a previous

WASHINGTON (UP! )- The
Labor Department Tuesday
allocated $10 million to provide
pa rttime · employment for
about 3,800 persons aged 55 or
older with low income and poor
employment prospects.
Ohio received $467,000.
The fund allocation was an·
nounced in conjunction with
the signing or r egulation s
placing into effect a section of
the Older Americans AcL The
section caDs for utilization of
or ganizations pres ently
spon s orin g s ucce s sful
programs for older workers.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy Wednesday at
11 a.m. was 76 degrees under
sunny skies.
TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport ER squad
was ca lled a t 7:27 p.m.
Tuesday for Ruth Ann Dowler
who was ta ken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

~·

TO LAY PIPE
POMEROY - The Colwnbia
Gas Company was given
persmission by the Meigs
Co u nty Co m missione r s
Tuesday to lay pipeline over
and under coun ty roads 14 and
18 in Bedford Twp. Attending
were Robert Clark, Warden
Ours and Henry Wells, commissioners, . an d Mar th a
Chambers, clerk.

COLEMAN
ONE GALLON

GET THE LIONS SHARE OF

---

JUG

•429

;ri' '

I

=

__./

COLEMAN

WIICHESnR

80 QT.

22 AUTOMATIC RIFLE

COOLER

WITH SCOPE

, . . HECK'S
REG. '64.95

HECK'S REG. 15.99
SPORTS DEPT.

$2499

=----~~--- HECK'S

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

COLOR TV

2-BURNER STOVE

SLEEPING BAG

\

ON~499

$15

ZENITH

Black

&amp;

While

Ht.&gt;re \ a '}b urner that \ l:! cono m r

col ond rl\ eo~y por to b lrt y rep re ·

99

~ e rll~

MARLIN GLENFIELD

22 SINGLE SHOT RIFLE

HECK'S REG. 25.99

lo&gt;. ,.,.,..., . ~ d•d

StoD•

C• • ~'•• 'rl

o

?0'\l • •

HECK'S REG .

HECK 'S REG . $32. 9 5

$1 5 .66

WASHER

IIG SCRIIN IV .
AI AlOW PRICI

Juil lhe righ l size woshe• lor mol'l)' fom .
oliou! FeatVI'e•
fomou\ Fih er -Fio "
w(nh systet11 . f our wa,h ~ ~lin : Norl'rlol.
Pumon•nt Preu with ' old water coot.
down , ill.nivcned S.Ook , Oe!i(ote. Thr ee
woth· lemperot ..re ond rinw-tempero .
tvre co mb,nc;~t i onl in cl~rde tpet io! cold
... urer 1e!utiont lor 1pec:i o! core ol
moderl'l tynthet•o . Three wa ter !eveh.

SPOIITS DEPT.
COUMAN

EVEREADY
"D" SIZE

ZENITH

SPIN CAST ROD .
1 piece, 5' so lid fiberg lass rod . Ch rom e guide.:. and tipfop. Po si ti ve-locki ng reel se aL

29cPlCII

COLOR

HE~I&lt; ' S

$9.99

MEIGS COUNTY REAL ESTATE OWNERS

DELUXE

THE TAX BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN
FOR THE JUNE OR SECOND HALF
COLLECTION OF THE 1973 REAL
ESTATE
TAXES . ALSO
FOR
DE'LINQUENT TAX.
CLOSING
DATE WILL BE JUNE 20, 1974.

oct;on Zebl lex 6100 cost;ng •o d
-1!11. ! '..,.&lt;LAL- - _ _HECK 'S REG . $22 .99

.--r- ~ -··.

~-­
# 3490

OVEN

Wo11 1 nn

.

90&lt;ol.nt

'&lt;'"

&lt;'"•

SPO/ITS DEPT.

~ ~"'~• • &lt;

P'~ '" '

''"'"''"DI•

~n l• f~ " IO"rl " "!If 1•1

'""&lt;!

7'x7'

SPORTS DEPT.
While Only

CABIN
TENT

4 to 10 ib . Test.

$119

14 QUART

FOAM COOLER

SPOOL
HECK'S REG. $1 .99

SPOIITS DEPT.

~ ;-.

79&lt;

Th e b rig ht canvas top a nd
storm flops provide breatheo·

'

HOWARD E. FRANK
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

hJ!n• •&lt;

P•&lt;~PO' O &lt;Jno;.

••n• • no•

ss~s

$5 :13

$299

.oloman

11 o ~1

l"ormc""&lt;'" fOicil "&lt;&gt;' ' o• t l" r '"'
'f""Q and' ' "'"~"

HECK'S REG .

REtRICERATOR

WHITE OR
COLORS ARE
ALL 011 SAL£

s1299

COLEMAN

Med ium /h ea vy·· fr esh water fis hi ng . Fo ·
mou s Zebco 33 spin· ca st reel. 6 ' med ium·

$299

FROST FREE
19CUT.

SPOIITS DEPT.

ZEBCO ROD AND REEL COMBO

BOX

FROST FREE
14 CU. FT.
DELUXE
REFRIGERATOR

$3.2 9

HECK'S REG.

2-TRAY ALUMINUM TACKLE
AMANA

$799

HEC K'S REG.

REG . 46'

SPORTS DEPT.

GIBSON

30 QT. POLY LITE COOLER

SOUTH BEND

BATTERIES
2-11 PlCIC

TABU MODEl

a ppe al for b udg e!

$1288

$2499

SPORTS DEPT

NORGE

~olrd

mm d ed ( Omoe " w ho li ke to l ro . e(

.'\ r, n• h ~H Qlho~ ''"91, 1~01 71 '" ' ' o b~clc;~r P' ' ~ toQ A M&gt;' ,.,. , ,. " •~ ' "II ·,~· ,, • •
mu• • .h• hon.-i&lt;r&gt;f • • &lt;l h• l" ' "'""" ~.,..,.,,,~,..,, '"'"&lt;!"' '"""' ~ '' " ·•• •••l r 1 g., •.•
Q•go "'!d lc• !1pO II 1&lt;0 1)( mo...,! d "'d• rod ~ r~!nuO hmt~ h&lt;.ud o-ood Uo " Ap"' " ' •
lbt

1

OTHIRSIIUS
/ SOLID STAll SSlt

REG. 128.38

COLEMAN

COLEMAN

LEGAL

MARRIAGE LICENSE
Stephen Eric Powell , 19,
Pomeroy, and Sheila Marie
Folmer, 20, Pomer oy.

'

action concerning a tax on
bow ling alleys, the business
tax being left in force at $15 per
year, but the recrea tion tax of
$120 per year being rescinded
with Cou ncilm a n Russ ell
Capeha rt not voting because of
persona l in volvemen t, and set
its next mee tin g for June 17.

News ... in Briefs

ALWT MONEY

'

Town to buy water system equipment·

Mr . and Mrs. I.JQn .Hodges of
Co lu mb us spent Memoria l
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio rvery 15 minutes- inc luding
week end with . Mrs. J une
State University and the wea ther: tempe ratures at
Wickersham and sons.
Homewood Corp. wi ll build the ground level, in the attic, crawl
Mr. and Mrs. Don Grimm of
first com plete ly solarized spaccs · and slab: heat flow ;
Belpre, Mr . and Mrs. Walter
house of its kind in the United wind. direction and sp...,d ; the
McDade of Troy, 0., Mr. and
States, the univer sity a n- intensity .. of indirect sol ar
Mrs. Herbert Roush visited
nounced.
radiation: and even th e
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush
Professor Charles F . Sepsy, num ber of times doors open
Sunday.
research superv isor of the an d close.
Mr . and Mrs. J im Connolly
school's departm en t
of
The data will be eva luated,
and ch il dren of Syracuse
mechanical engineering, sa id giving future developers informoved to Mt. Vernon, 0. Lester
the house will contain elements mation needed to build the
Roush ass isted them in
to make it the most flexible most feasible sola r home.
moving.
from a research standpo int of
The house is a fo ur-bedroom,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mcany solar houses cw-rently in ·two and one-half bath home,
Dade of Troy, 0 . visi ted Mrs.
operation.
providmg about 2,700 feet of
Gladys Shields, Mrs. Edna
Scheduled for completion on living space. It will be a metal
Ro us h a t Raci ne over
Aug. 22, the house is be ing con- structure covered by blown
Memorial week end and called
structed on the Ohio State concrete. Only 3 per cent of the
on other relatives.
Fairgrounds.
wall space will be given to
Mrs . Edna Quicki e of
"The short-term objective," windows.
causes?"
Loudenville, 0., Mrs. Chester
said Sepsy, ·'is to show that it is
TI1e latest in energy saving
The President said that with
Durst of Niles, 0 . visited Mr.
possible to build a functional devices will be insta lled in the the end of Cold War rivalries and Mrs. Herbert Roush , Mr.
solar home using currently house, incl uding a plwnbing an d the end to America's in- and Mrs. Russell Roush, Mr.
available materials."
system designed to conserve volvemen t in Vietnam, some and Mrs. Dorsa Pa r sons
He said the long-range objec- water by equipping pipes with America n leaders had coun- Saturday .
tive is to determine the techni- va lves that allow just enough seled a return to isolationism.
Brice, Be th Ann and Beverly
cal and economic practicality water to pass.
Such advocates , he sai d, were Ha rt, Allen Cu nn ingham
of utilizing solar energy for
Homewood Cor p. is a local "blind to both the lessons of the visited Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
residential purposes through a house building orga ni zat ion past and the perils of the Hayman and Kei th Wedt w o-to- t hree-year ex- and operates developme nts in future."
nesday.
perimenta l research program . Oh io, Indiana, Michigan ,
Isolationism, he said, is '·one
Attending funeral · services
A computer will be built into Kentucky, Florida and Puerto of the greatest potential dan- for Mrs. · Freda Evans · and
the house, recording data Rico.
ge rs faci ng our country."
spending Memorial week end
Nixon told the gradua ting with Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
mids hipm en that Amer ican Adams were Mrs. Millie Norris
diplomacy is "totally commit- of Laurel, Md., !llr, and Mrs.
te d" to achiev ing las ting ' Larry Grogel and children of
(Con tinued from page I )
peace, and "itis a goal that can Colum bus, Mr. a nd Mrs.
only
be reached when backed Vernon Cady, Lori and Jerry of
Truman created it in 1947. But he said it has become a "vestigial
ta il on the federal government 's security progra ms" and no by American strength and West Jefferson , 0 ., Mrs.
longer serves a purpose.
American resolve ."
Flossie Church of Delaware, 0.
The President who hopes
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Donohue
DUBLIN - TilREE MASKED GUNMEN SPEAKING with that his world tra vels will and children of Marion spent
strong Northern Ireland accents today kidnaped an elderly dramatize his strong suit- Memorial week end with Mr.
British earl and his wife from their plush estate in the Irish foreign policy- in the face of and Mrs. Vernon Donohue and
Republic. The three men escapCif by car in the direction of the cur rent impeachament attended funeral services for
Dublin with the Earl of Donoughmore, 71, a former member of inquiry also gave his public Mrs. Freda Evans at Ewing
the British parliament, and his wile Dorothy Jean, 68.
explanation of why he intends Funeral Home Sunday .
Police threw up roadblocks in the area around the Earl's to journey to the Middle East
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
mansion at Knocklofty, 110 miles southwest of Dublin , and or- and Russia !Ius month.
Hay man of Westerville, 0 .
"My trip to the Middle East attended Memorial dinner at
dered a nationwide alert lor the vehicle. A police spokesman said
one theory being investigated was the possibility th e kidnaping next week will provide an Letart Community Hall Sunwas connected with Irish prisoners who have been on hunger opportunity to ex plore with the day and visited Mr. and Mrs.
leaders of the na tions I shall Ray Hayman. ·
strikes in British jails. One of the strikers died Monday.
visit ways in whi ch we can
Mr. a nd Mrs. Lawren ce
continue our progress toward Balser and children of Tuppers
per manent peace in that Plains, Lawrence, Paul and
PLEASANT VALLEY
DIVORCE ASK ED
area,"
he said.
Ronnie Ables wer e dinner
DISC HARGE S :
He nry
Dean Lutz, Middleport , filed
"On
June
27, I will again guests Sunday of Mrs. Alice
Vester , Point Pleasant ; Mrs. a suit for divorce in Meigs
J ohn Cheese brew , Poi nt County Common Pleas Court, journey to Moscow to meet Balser.
Mrs. Mildred Foster , Mrs.
Pleasant; Mrs. Garnett Rife, against Yvonne Scally Lutz, with Ge neral Secretary
(Leonid)
Brezltnev
to
explore
Betty Stewart, Mrs. Cora Buck
Middl epor t ; Mrs. Patrick Middl epor t, c ha rging gr oss
Harris, Newport News, N. C. neglect of duty and mental further avenues and further of Columbus vis ite d Mrs.
BIRTHS - Jun e 3, a cruelty, Ruth A. Henry was prospects for a lasting peace, Eileen Buck Sunday,
Miss Millie Ripley of
daughter to Mr. and Mrs. granted a divorce from Ca rl F. not only between the Soviet
and.
the
United
States,
Union
Char leston, W. Va. spent
Jam es
Whee ler,
Po in t Henry in another en try fi led
but
among
all
nations,:•
he
Memorial
week end with Mrs.
Pleasant, and June 4, .a son to
tOday.
added
.
Maggie
Roush
.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Gray,
Letart.

I

- rl ·~

9 - The Da ily Se ntinel, MiddleP.,rt-Pomcroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June&gt;. 1974

bility and pv t the k;bosh on ;o.

HECK'SREG .

side con den sa tion . The Expo's
se lf-ad1ust ing outs ide suspe n·
sian requi res no odjustmentafter set -up a nd provides an
unobs tr uded d oorway. ,

$ 1.39

/:,;.,,.:./;'•··

-- --·- --

SI'OIIJ'S
DEfT.
,

I

\

-

SPOIITS
DEPT.

Our Good Grade
Ground Beef
From USDA Choice
Fresh Beef

HECK'S REG.

$59 .99

SPOIITS DEPT.
SPORTS DEPT.

POLYTARPS

AIR MATTRESS

$299
...

5th and PEARL STS., RAt;INE
"The Store With A Heart
You, WE LIKE'
Right reserved m lt mit quantities
.We

Glad~

Accept Fed. Food Slam ps

Prices Effective June 5-12
9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

HI.C

SUNDAYS .
.

.

VALVOUNE

HOME GROWN

MOTOR OIL
All .Climate
Heavy Duty
lOW, 20W

-

ind40W
'

LETART

..,

LONG GREEN

CABBAGE

QUARl

59~

-Choice Produce

CUCUMBERS

'

EACH
..

~.

.\

.

. ""

·10~ .

USDA CHOICE - .U.S•
GOVERNMENT INSPECTED·

'

46
...........

OL

.

CALIFORNIA
WHITE

POTATOES

$13 .99

SPOIITS DEPT.

lb.

TAVERN
.BONELESS HAMS
CITY

66~. .

MINNOW TRAP

$14.95

65~

HECK' S REG.• $3 .48.

SPALDING
TENNIS BALLS

HECK'S REG . TO $1 .45

SPORTS DEPT.

$199

DRIBBLE SEAL

SPORTS DEPT.

BASKETBALL
TilE Uifa

3 IN CAN
.

~~99e

.

SPIII.G 01 SPII CAST RODS

"199

HECK'S
.REG.
1

3.58 '

TUBE SOCKS

'

POLY TARP

WHOLE OR HALf

F~ENOI

san

)

10'x12'

HECK'S REG.

f

SPORTS DEPT.

$377
HECK'S REG. 16.99

,,______.,.~
:;:.o· SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

VALUABLE COUPON

WIENERS
1-LB. PKG.

10 $1 99 .
LB.

,.

I
1'

HECK'S REG.

HECK' S REG. $4,99

PORK STEAK

~

REYNOLDS

Monday Thru Friday

' CLOSED

DRY MILK ..............~~~-~~~...... . ...........~~t . ~2~99
·POITED MEAT.........~~~~. . ...............5~: $}
SALAD DRESSING ...... ~~~-~~~..........·.~~..... 59~
fQ
18"x25'
.ALUM. IL........~~~~-~-~!!.....................~~~ .....49
STARKIST TUNA....... ~~~-~-~!~~........~:~~~ . .59~
FR 'D . . ..
,.................U.IT..... ·RINKS. ~RANGE &amp;GRA~.E ~?.... 39~

FISH LANDING NET

~·

I

' I
.\

•

~

/1,
I - .

..

..'I . \

.

1

I

,, \
!

;:
'

-

I

'

·.'I

I. .

..

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' I

I
'

'

I..,,

•

'

.

�,
11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Wednesday, JW\e 5, 1974 '

18 - The Daily Sentinel,
Middleport-Pomeroy,
0., Wednesday,
J une 5, 1974
- .
.
D

OPEN DAILY

OPIIIAILT

'

OPEl DAILY ,

OPEN DAILY

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

•

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

SUNDAY

I TO 7

I

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, JUNE 9,
PREMIER

POLAROID

'MINUTE MAKER KIT

DELUXE SLIDE INTERVIEWER

Muwh: Make• K1 t : It has. everythmg yo'J need to w tch tne be~ t
minutes ol the day . There ' 1 the Square Shoo ter 2, a pock o l

Polaro1d's &gt;quare Co lorpock I1Im and two Sylvon10 -Bi ue Dar

'

PORTABLE VACUUM

SUNSET

Ideal lor sta.r s, drapes, woodwork, furniture ,

do~e t s.

ca rs, boar s,

Similar
To ·

illustra tio n

and all the reo;! ol th ose ha rd to get at areas . Complete with two 16 "
wands. one 6" wand , upholstery and lo brk nozzle, dus ting brush,
crev ice too l ar;d a djuS!ob le car ryin g strop.

lloshcubes dour -shots each ). And -,.ou o l1 o get a hond\ome
cose lo corry il oil around .

$2699

AUTO STEREO
SPEAKERS

$

HECK'S REG.
$31.88

HECK'S REG .
$5 .96

·\

BLACK W/ CHROME TRIM.
HECK'S REG .
$22.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

$

•

HECK' S REG.
$9 .96

JEWElRY DEPT.

'

3"X5%"

I

5''

(
·I
I

JEWElRY DEPT.

P4-MV2

LADIES'

MEN'S

CLOCK

X45

WITH CHIME
An authentic repro duction of a classic desig n Co lonial Grand f ather
clock in mantel , table or shelf size.
Realisticol,ly molded in Amer ican
Walnut groin and parquet. Beveled
. crystals formed with tra ditio nal cu t
leaf design Pendulum swi ngs in beat
wi th a pleasa nt tick : Electric pe ndulu m 1"\I:)Vements for l lO volt AC on ly.

SX-70 MIRACLE
CAMERA

KODAK
CAMERA

Thi~ ele ctnc comero does •mluoUy ever yt hing for you . Now you

con olmosl wi ~ h the p1ctvre and hove it . Just focu ~ and preu the
shuller bullon . A
~ torl i ng l y beautiful picture deveklps
il&gt;e lf before your e)'eS without llle\s or
fu ~s or on ythin~ to throw away . You
~ on tal..e instant p h o l og r aph~ ot clari ty
and brilliance unmatched by any other
&gt;y&gt;tem in amateur photography.

HECK'S REG. '49.96

HECK'S REG .
$13.96

JEWElRY
DEPT.
"

JEWElRY
DEPT.

AIREQUIPT

.

. FEMALE

TELEPHONE PLUG

~:-. : ·:.~:·

~-··
l

55C

$17

KODAK

mafic t hreadi ng. Dua l
format. Super 8mm and
regular 8mm f ilm . Forward reel-to-reel r e-

fects ( 13 to 28mm ) • Focusing
f/ 2.7 lens • Automotic e&lt;po-

wind. 500 -watt lamp

su re

e

self-contained carryi ng
case end 400' take-up
reel.

$5799

99 '

Zoom lens for e,.;~ it i ng ef·

e CdS elect ric eye

'14

HECK'S REG. $74 .96

HECK' S REG. 79.96

21001

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

CAMEU

$3.99

HECK'S REG . $3.99

CLOTHING
DEPT.

ClOTHING
DEPT.

.~

JEWElRY
DEPT.

__

:

;

I ~

:

K818 /

_;

-- .

HECK'S
REG. $18.88

',1: ..

.... ...

/

I

:.· ' ..

I

42MINUTE

MAN'S SHAVER

BLANK

Fine -too th trimmer work~ like o ~tro1gh l · edge, ond,viduo ll y mo lched and fitted heads and b lades . Rich Olive
or Block color with acce nts of br-..shed chro me, ~l o i n ·
less steel ond gold A great shover, o great shove fml , cla\e, com lortoble .

I-TRACK

I

$122

LUGGAGE SPECIAL

MEN'S
DRESS

.

STEREO

HEAD

....

SET

'

BLUE ONLY

SOCKS onesi,efit s 10-14.
Select lrom 11 colo rs.

HECK'S REG • .
99'

ClOTHING DEPT.

21''CASE ••••• ••••• • •••••

$799

24" CASE . • • • . • • • • • • • • • • •

s899

26"CASE ••• •• • • • • •• •••.• s999
HECK' S REG . TO $14.88

'--

pap gun

'\

--·-··· "

.

S100
lFOR

Stylish FM/ AM portable ra dio has ho rizontal design. In
whi te, black, vio let or go ld . Horizonta l sli de-r ule tu ni ng.

Choose from ton kords and
goblets in assort ed co lors.

CHOICE
HECK'S REG .
79' EACH

29!cH

HOUSEWARE
I DEPT.

HECK'SREG. 41 ' EACH

DINNERWARE
SET

ALUMINUM

3 QT. STRAINER SAUCE PAN
CHOICE ·

$899

HECK' S REG.

•1.44

HECK'S REG. $14.88

HOUSEWARE
DEPT•

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

•12.99

TOY

DII'T.

HECK'S REG.

TO~=~PT.

HECK'S RE~ .

68(
EACH

ECUBE TRAYS

7-PIECE

KITCHEN TOOL

_sse

SET

HECK'S REG .

$2''

-

JEWElRY
DEPT.

DII'T.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

"

CLEANER

$299

TOY

HECK'S REG. $15.99

TOILET BOWL

CIGARETTE LIGHTERS

3 .96

$999

LYSOL

BENTLEY

$1-!111.

SWAG LIGHTS

Auoned color. cod. ruso&lt;ted shades,

16 oz.

2-PACK

SHOOTING
RIFLE

)

20 - PIECE
IRONSTONE

GLASSWARE

2-step tone control. AFC on FM. Built-i n FM and AM a nten-

$144

ClOTHING DEPT.

MEMO MINDER

.AM-FM PORTABLE RADIO

LAWNMOWER

'

CORK
HECK'S
REG.
84'

HECK' S REG .

.I

HECK' S REG . $3 .48

_FESCO PLASTIC

PANASONIC

LOUIS MARX
ZA-ZOOM

' . ... ,,, 1

Sa fety and beauty are comb ined to offer you this
gown in G!lso rt ed prtnn. Sire!! 4 to i 4.

HECK'S REG .
$4.88

JEWELRY DEPT.

•'

-

SHORTGOW

ClOTHING !JEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

;

ClOTHING
DEPT.

GIRLS'
fLAMt.RETARDANT

KNIT TOPS
~tripes in size!. S-M-l. A
large assortment includes;
turtle -necks , U-necks, crew·
necks ond V-necks.

Ju~ t in time for the vocation s.eason .

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

TWIN SAUCERS
OR
FLIIIG·A·RIH

HECK'S REG.
TO '16.99

LADIES'

$199
TO

RF519

SONIC

ClOTHING DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

/

ClOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $4.88

HECK'S REG.
$2.39

JEWElRY DEPT.

TO 3 FOR •4.29

TIES

...... . .

nas. 2 Y, " speaker. co rrying strap .

HECKS REG.
•$25.88

ClOTHING DEPT.

HECK' S REG .

A~sorted s.o ~d~ , prints and ·

.

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

HECK' S REG .
TO $6 . 88

HECK' S REG .
$3 .48

to rge selection of hoo~ on or regu·
lo r lie\ in ~olids or Iandes .

i '

1-

s3 7''

HECK'
S REG .
$47.66

$1066

BOXER SHORTS 12.86

Many styles in solid~, floral ond
checks to choo!le from. Styled with
cvfh and no cuffs. Sizes 8-20.

$]44
TO

MEN ' S

~.. \

:/ .

SMITH CORONA

SUNBEAM·.

PANTS

Selell from l(.'(p, o &lt;olton brieh ,
lee sh irh or bo~er short~ . ree stm h
ond brieh in \lie~ S·M·l ·Xl ond
bo J&lt;:er short\ sites 30-44 .

As sorted print s all
flame retardant in
sizes 4-14.

ti _'_' ,.,.

.:

\I . .

SOUNDESICN

JEWElRY DEPT.

l

PAJAMAS

5-M -l-Xl .

'

-~
•
I .-~"'

• J

TAPES

'

'

$]99

HECK'S REG. $119 .96

JEWElRY DEPT.

--

''

. . ~---:-....,:
~ .~ .-

CORSAIR TYPEWRITER

HECK' S REG. $6.96

~

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

Perfect foi summe r wear. Se lect from so lid poster and hig h
shades with sle eve lesi print lop~ and .s ~ orts. Size&amp; 8·1 8.

JEWElRY DEPT.

lADIES'
COTTON

UNDERWEA

$244

ClOTHING
DEPT.

-SHORT SETS

HECK'S REG.
$2 -l9

/ii·

BABY DOLL

'

. ···

, ....

!

Weighing in of on ly 9 lb&gt;, it feature s a personal touch se lect or; o n 84
character keyboard; o two color ribbon ; o ha lf-space fea ture ; end of
page indicator ; po~r support arms ; and beautiful mo ulded colors . Pica
~ize type face.

CAMERA
CASE
FOR SX-70 CAMERA

HECK'S
REG. ·
$7.88

LADIES'

Economicoll2 " diagono l .s cree n port ·
cble TV ho~ tl 100% solid-~tate chos·
~is . lnlegro ted ci rcuitry . law 45W pow·
er consumption. 3 VIF stages. VHF
monopo le ond UH F loop an t en n a~.

'

~

BLACK &amp; WHITE
JEWElRY
T.V.
DEPT.

FLASHFor.BAR
SX-70

models. Si zes 5-M-l-XL.

HECK'S REG.

PANASONIC

SYLVANIA

I
I

Pe r manen t press sport!.
shirts in many !io tyles a nd
patterns with regu lar co llar

W.'iii\CA

CAMERA
STROBE
8

$5999

'

3FOR

KAKO ELECTRONIC

MOVIE CAMERA

F/ 1.5 Zoom le ns au to·

SPORT SHIRT

Un l in e d wi.nd breokers in poplin
and nylon (n si zes

MEN'S
DERBY BRAND

and si mple. Uses Kodak 110 film.

SUPER 8

DUAL 8 MOVIE PROJECTOR

JEWElRY DEPT.

Setter pictur es . Flash shooting requi res
no b atteries. Dro~ i n film loadi ng is sure

JACKETS

I

BICYCLE
PANTS

MEN'S
SHORT SLEEVE

Perm ane nt press
sh irts in Solid colors on ly. Beauti fu lly tailo red shi rts in
sizes 14 1h-17.

HECK' S REG. $21.96

HECK'S
REG.
$159.88

JEWElRY DEPT.

HECK ' S
REG .
$3.99

POCKET
CA,.,ERA KIT

•

•3996
30FT.
TELEPHONE
EXTENSION
C.ORD

DRESS
SHIRTS

YASHICA

'

I

SHORT SLEEVE

LUX GRANDFATHER

I'

MEN' S

HECK'S REG. 11.59
. · HOUSEWARIDEPT.

''·

T.V. BED &amp; LAP TRAY

66c__

LY.SOL
ft

HECK'S REG. •l.h
HOI/SEWARE IJEPT.

...

BASil TUB &amp; TILE CLEAIER
LYSOL DISINFECTANT SP!tAY
HECK' SIIEG.
93' EACH ·

HOUSIWAIE DII'T.

39(

·····'
..

CHOICE
· 1

.'

tt.J

HECK'S REG.
55'

HOUSEWARE
DIPT.

HE.CK'S REG. 83'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

' '
!

I,

' I

'
.

•
I

'

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'
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..

'

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.

'

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�,
11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Wednesday, JW\e 5, 1974 '

18 - The Daily Sentinel,
Middleport-Pomeroy,
0., Wednesday,
J une 5, 1974
- .
.
D

OPEN DAILY

OPIIIAILT

'

OPEl DAILY ,

OPEN DAILY

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

•

10 TO 9

10 TO 9

SUNDAY

I TO 7

I

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY, JUNE 9,
PREMIER

POLAROID

'MINUTE MAKER KIT

DELUXE SLIDE INTERVIEWER

Muwh: Make• K1 t : It has. everythmg yo'J need to w tch tne be~ t
minutes ol the day . There ' 1 the Square Shoo ter 2, a pock o l

Polaro1d's &gt;quare Co lorpock I1Im and two Sylvon10 -Bi ue Dar

'

PORTABLE VACUUM

SUNSET

Ideal lor sta.r s, drapes, woodwork, furniture ,

do~e t s.

ca rs, boar s,

Similar
To ·

illustra tio n

and all the reo;! ol th ose ha rd to get at areas . Complete with two 16 "
wands. one 6" wand , upholstery and lo brk nozzle, dus ting brush,
crev ice too l ar;d a djuS!ob le car ryin g strop.

lloshcubes dour -shots each ). And -,.ou o l1 o get a hond\ome
cose lo corry il oil around .

$2699

AUTO STEREO
SPEAKERS

$

HECK'S REG.
$31.88

HECK'S REG .
$5 .96

·\

BLACK W/ CHROME TRIM.
HECK'S REG .
$22.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

$

•

HECK' S REG.
$9 .96

JEWElRY DEPT.

'

3"X5%"

I

5''

(
·I
I

JEWElRY DEPT.

P4-MV2

LADIES'

MEN'S

CLOCK

X45

WITH CHIME
An authentic repro duction of a classic desig n Co lonial Grand f ather
clock in mantel , table or shelf size.
Realisticol,ly molded in Amer ican
Walnut groin and parquet. Beveled
. crystals formed with tra ditio nal cu t
leaf design Pendulum swi ngs in beat
wi th a pleasa nt tick : Electric pe ndulu m 1"\I:)Vements for l lO volt AC on ly.

SX-70 MIRACLE
CAMERA

KODAK
CAMERA

Thi~ ele ctnc comero does •mluoUy ever yt hing for you . Now you

con olmosl wi ~ h the p1ctvre and hove it . Just focu ~ and preu the
shuller bullon . A
~ torl i ng l y beautiful picture deveklps
il&gt;e lf before your e)'eS without llle\s or
fu ~s or on ythin~ to throw away . You
~ on tal..e instant p h o l og r aph~ ot clari ty
and brilliance unmatched by any other
&gt;y&gt;tem in amateur photography.

HECK'S REG. '49.96

HECK'S REG .
$13.96

JEWElRY
DEPT.
"

JEWElRY
DEPT.

AIREQUIPT

.

. FEMALE

TELEPHONE PLUG

~:-. : ·:.~:·

~-··
l

55C

$17

KODAK

mafic t hreadi ng. Dua l
format. Super 8mm and
regular 8mm f ilm . Forward reel-to-reel r e-

fects ( 13 to 28mm ) • Focusing
f/ 2.7 lens • Automotic e&lt;po-

wind. 500 -watt lamp

su re

e

self-contained carryi ng
case end 400' take-up
reel.

$5799

99 '

Zoom lens for e,.;~ it i ng ef·

e CdS elect ric eye

'14

HECK'S REG. $74 .96

HECK' S REG. 79.96

21001

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

CAMEU

$3.99

HECK'S REG . $3.99

CLOTHING
DEPT.

ClOTHING
DEPT.

.~

JEWElRY
DEPT.

__

:

;

I ~

:

K818 /

_;

-- .

HECK'S
REG. $18.88

',1: ..

.... ...

/

I

:.· ' ..

I

42MINUTE

MAN'S SHAVER

BLANK

Fine -too th trimmer work~ like o ~tro1gh l · edge, ond,viduo ll y mo lched and fitted heads and b lades . Rich Olive
or Block color with acce nts of br-..shed chro me, ~l o i n ·
less steel ond gold A great shover, o great shove fml , cla\e, com lortoble .

I-TRACK

I

$122

LUGGAGE SPECIAL

MEN'S
DRESS

.

STEREO

HEAD

....

SET

'

BLUE ONLY

SOCKS onesi,efit s 10-14.
Select lrom 11 colo rs.

HECK'S REG • .
99'

ClOTHING DEPT.

21''CASE ••••• ••••• • •••••

$799

24" CASE . • • • . • • • • • • • • • • •

s899

26"CASE ••• •• • • • • •• •••.• s999
HECK' S REG . TO $14.88

'--

pap gun

'\

--·-··· "

.

S100
lFOR

Stylish FM/ AM portable ra dio has ho rizontal design. In
whi te, black, vio let or go ld . Horizonta l sli de-r ule tu ni ng.

Choose from ton kords and
goblets in assort ed co lors.

CHOICE
HECK'S REG .
79' EACH

29!cH

HOUSEWARE
I DEPT.

HECK'SREG. 41 ' EACH

DINNERWARE
SET

ALUMINUM

3 QT. STRAINER SAUCE PAN
CHOICE ·

$899

HECK' S REG.

•1.44

HECK'S REG. $14.88

HOUSEWARE
DEPT•

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

•12.99

TOY

DII'T.

HECK'S REG.

TO~=~PT.

HECK'S RE~ .

68(
EACH

ECUBE TRAYS

7-PIECE

KITCHEN TOOL

_sse

SET

HECK'S REG .

$2''

-

JEWElRY
DEPT.

DII'T.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

"

CLEANER

$299

TOY

HECK'S REG. $15.99

TOILET BOWL

CIGARETTE LIGHTERS

3 .96

$999

LYSOL

BENTLEY

$1-!111.

SWAG LIGHTS

Auoned color. cod. ruso&lt;ted shades,

16 oz.

2-PACK

SHOOTING
RIFLE

)

20 - PIECE
IRONSTONE

GLASSWARE

2-step tone control. AFC on FM. Built-i n FM and AM a nten-

$144

ClOTHING DEPT.

MEMO MINDER

.AM-FM PORTABLE RADIO

LAWNMOWER

'

CORK
HECK'S
REG.
84'

HECK' S REG .

.I

HECK' S REG . $3 .48

_FESCO PLASTIC

PANASONIC

LOUIS MARX
ZA-ZOOM

' . ... ,,, 1

Sa fety and beauty are comb ined to offer you this
gown in G!lso rt ed prtnn. Sire!! 4 to i 4.

HECK'S REG .
$4.88

JEWELRY DEPT.

•'

-

SHORTGOW

ClOTHING !JEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

;

ClOTHING
DEPT.

GIRLS'
fLAMt.RETARDANT

KNIT TOPS
~tripes in size!. S-M-l. A
large assortment includes;
turtle -necks , U-necks, crew·
necks ond V-necks.

Ju~ t in time for the vocation s.eason .

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

TWIN SAUCERS
OR
FLIIIG·A·RIH

HECK'S REG.
TO '16.99

LADIES'

$199
TO

RF519

SONIC

ClOTHING DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

/

ClOTHING DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $4.88

HECK'S REG.
$2.39

JEWElRY DEPT.

TO 3 FOR •4.29

TIES

...... . .

nas. 2 Y, " speaker. co rrying strap .

HECKS REG.
•$25.88

ClOTHING DEPT.

HECK' S REG .

A~sorted s.o ~d~ , prints and ·

.

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

HECK' S REG .
TO $6 . 88

HECK' S REG .
$3 .48

to rge selection of hoo~ on or regu·
lo r lie\ in ~olids or Iandes .

i '

1-

s3 7''

HECK'
S REG .
$47.66

$1066

BOXER SHORTS 12.86

Many styles in solid~, floral ond
checks to choo!le from. Styled with
cvfh and no cuffs. Sizes 8-20.

$]44
TO

MEN ' S

~.. \

:/ .

SMITH CORONA

SUNBEAM·.

PANTS

Selell from l(.'(p, o &lt;olton brieh ,
lee sh irh or bo~er short~ . ree stm h
ond brieh in \lie~ S·M·l ·Xl ond
bo J&lt;:er short\ sites 30-44 .

As sorted print s all
flame retardant in
sizes 4-14.

ti _'_' ,.,.

.:

\I . .

SOUNDESICN

JEWElRY DEPT.

l

PAJAMAS

5-M -l-Xl .

'

-~
•
I .-~"'

• J

TAPES

'

'

$]99

HECK'S REG. $119 .96

JEWElRY DEPT.

--

''

. . ~---:-....,:
~ .~ .-

CORSAIR TYPEWRITER

HECK' S REG. $6.96

~

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

Perfect foi summe r wear. Se lect from so lid poster and hig h
shades with sle eve lesi print lop~ and .s ~ orts. Size&amp; 8·1 8.

JEWElRY DEPT.

lADIES'
COTTON

UNDERWEA

$244

ClOTHING
DEPT.

-SHORT SETS

HECK'S REG.
$2 -l9

/ii·

BABY DOLL

'

. ···

, ....

!

Weighing in of on ly 9 lb&gt;, it feature s a personal touch se lect or; o n 84
character keyboard; o two color ribbon ; o ha lf-space fea ture ; end of
page indicator ; po~r support arms ; and beautiful mo ulded colors . Pica
~ize type face.

CAMERA
CASE
FOR SX-70 CAMERA

HECK'S
REG. ·
$7.88

LADIES'

Economicoll2 " diagono l .s cree n port ·
cble TV ho~ tl 100% solid-~tate chos·
~is . lnlegro ted ci rcuitry . law 45W pow·
er consumption. 3 VIF stages. VHF
monopo le ond UH F loop an t en n a~.

'

~

BLACK &amp; WHITE
JEWElRY
T.V.
DEPT.

FLASHFor.BAR
SX-70

models. Si zes 5-M-l-XL.

HECK'S REG.

PANASONIC

SYLVANIA

I
I

Pe r manen t press sport!.
shirts in many !io tyles a nd
patterns with regu lar co llar

W.'iii\CA

CAMERA
STROBE
8

$5999

'

3FOR

KAKO ELECTRONIC

MOVIE CAMERA

F/ 1.5 Zoom le ns au to·

SPORT SHIRT

Un l in e d wi.nd breokers in poplin
and nylon (n si zes

MEN'S
DERBY BRAND

and si mple. Uses Kodak 110 film.

SUPER 8

DUAL 8 MOVIE PROJECTOR

JEWElRY DEPT.

Setter pictur es . Flash shooting requi res
no b atteries. Dro~ i n film loadi ng is sure

JACKETS

I

BICYCLE
PANTS

MEN'S
SHORT SLEEVE

Perm ane nt press
sh irts in Solid colors on ly. Beauti fu lly tailo red shi rts in
sizes 14 1h-17.

HECK' S REG. $21.96

HECK'S
REG.
$159.88

JEWElRY DEPT.

HECK ' S
REG .
$3.99

POCKET
CA,.,ERA KIT

•

•3996
30FT.
TELEPHONE
EXTENSION
C.ORD

DRESS
SHIRTS

YASHICA

'

I

SHORT SLEEVE

LUX GRANDFATHER

I'

MEN' S

HECK'S REG. 11.59
. · HOUSEWARIDEPT.

''·

T.V. BED &amp; LAP TRAY

66c__

LY.SOL
ft

HECK'S REG. •l.h
HOI/SEWARE IJEPT.

...

BASil TUB &amp; TILE CLEAIER
LYSOL DISINFECTANT SP!tAY
HECK' SIIEG.
93' EACH ·

HOUSIWAIE DII'T.

39(

·····'
..

CHOICE
· 1

.'

tt.J

HECK'S REG.
55'

HOUSEWARE
DIPT.

HE.CK'S REG. 83'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

' '
!

I,

' I

'
.

•
I

'

I

'
I·

..

'

' I

. '\

/

.

'

•'

I'

'

�n - The Daily &amp;nt ind,

12'- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrt-Pomeroy, 0., Wed~esday. June 5, 1974

....'.
PLENTY
OF FREE

OPEN DAILY

10 TO 9

MARIETTA
Ohio
vacationers will be cncoura gcd
to "Travel Ohio·· this year as
part of a campaign. being
moun ted by the Gove rnor·s
Coun cil on Travel an d
Tourism.
As par t of the campaign the

SUNDAY

Tu es da y ' s Ba se ball R esu lt s
B v Un tied P ress lnte r n at tOil tll
American L ea gu e
( 1stl
Oak
100 700 001 J .1 1
Del
000 000 ooo o 3 1
Holtz man ( 6 6 t and Fosse

HOUSE&amp;

GARDEN
BUG KILLER

Lol ic h (57) and FrC'e han
Rud i (6th t

HECK'S

20" 1-SPEED
FAN

HOUSE PAINT

HECK'S

HECK'S REG.
18.99

elemen ts. White and five co lo r s.

$]~~.

$299Gallon

The "hu o l th lle11" Ir e"' ~&lt;k '1 O vo ioly lu i ~• ..,0 11
P"""' g.,.goJcbl~ on Cl wr de. l~lecl oon cl d.oornto&lt;
1~0~1
pl ~ 1 """flu. In &gt;u•t cr)'{lne ' ' ""~ T~ i •
wall CoCTong CO '&gt;tn mo ll ce&gt;lor\ with I" ' ' ooe &lt;CC&gt; I "~ .
paonl rn lht fTIOrnon &lt;;~ . porty in the e..,ninll · Co mpore
H EC ~ " 5 PREMIUM w rth c ny other wa ll poin t &lt;II ony
po et YOU .,,11 be p le o &gt;o ntly wrprr ~ed

Rmtprool_ c hrome-p la ted gr rd . New
r·o~itive grid adjus t ment ho ~ lour

herghts and cool, hardwood ponels.
Rem ovoble tripod -type legs of plo ted

HECK'SREG.19.88

'

SAFETY

N .Y .
010010000- 2 7 I
Chic
0 10 0&lt;1 0 22x - 9 16 0
Dob son , Pa g an (7) , Wallace
(BJ an d Dempsey ; Wood ( 9 6 1
and Herrman n . LP Dob son (l
8 ). . HRs -AIIe n
( 11fh ),
D ent
(2nd) .

.

(1 1 i nn s)
Bost
100 0 10 00 1 01- 4 7 1
Minn
001 100 00 1 00 - 3 12 3
Lee . Seg ui {10) , Moret (Il l
end Fisk ; D ecke r , Burg me ie r
(5), Camp be ll ( 5 ) and Borg
mann , Roo f (1 0 1. WP .Segu l (3 .
4 ) . LP -Campbell {2 -4) _ HR S
Evans (4th ), Hisl e (B ih ) .

~.:.

.'

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FLAG

'•

.. .

~oeen ! G reOte r

or
luorel&lt;tnl

1olt ly '" lroff•c. on llreth. holil
POl hi 8r o11ht pt MoM!•n f
cole" Mcunli! don vnb•e o ~ oble wl·
od l obl e t;~lo" p olo, ,.,, h b o oc~el l o;~•
eo•y o no&lt;hmenl

. , ..
~ ~

•

.'.'

AUTO BODY

CASTROL
20W50
MOTOR OIL

3 LBS.

FLUID
Quart

LIMITS QTS.

AUTO
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 79'

AUTO. DEPT.

33

$

99c

HECK'S REG.
58'

'luart

WINDOW SCREEN$

GRASS SEED

25&lt;

49c

REPAIR KIT

fOLDING

QT. SIZE

MOTOR OIL

Acomplete kit. The black

2 Gallon Can

p la~ic

·HECK'S

ROCKET

body filler th at

..
' .

wo n' t crock or shri nk

REG.
2.77

.·

$199

HECK'S REG.
2.19 '

HECK'S REG.
2.69

HECK'S REG.
2.99

HECK'S REG.

HARDWARE DEFT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

AUTO DEPT.

AUTO DEPT.

2.77

LAWIMOWER

l

FOG LIGHTS

ARMOR ALL

SPARK PLUGS

AMBER OR CLEAR

Pitts

t he ·sun,

AUTO DEPT.

$599

8 OZ. SIZE

SPORT DEPT.

14 oz. DUPONT

WIRE CUSHION

RALLY CREAM WAX

FOR DRIVING COMFORT

AUTO DEPT.

CAR INNER TUBES

WITH .~PPLICATOR

13"-14"-15"
Sizes to fit most cars.

, .,c

'

LEE

CAR BATTERIES

Lifetime I 00% Free Replacement fo r as long c s yo u o wn the co rn which
the boNery was installed (provided the ba ttery remains in that cor), If th~
boNery should fail to accept and hold the cha rge, si mply relur n it a nd we
will replace it fre e of charge. Th is warranty doe s not ap pl y to ba tteries
insta lled on com mercial v ehi cle ~.

$266
HECK'S REG.
$ .1 .59

HECK'S REG.
1.49

AUTO DEPT.

DALLAS (UP! ) -Four free
agents who sought jobs with
the Dallas Cowboys during a
tryout camp last month have
been · invited to rePQrt with
other · rookies when the
National Football League
opens its training camp at
Thousand Oaks, Calif., July 7.
They are running back
Clarence Alberts of Texas A&amp;l,
defensive
tackle. Paul
Billingsly of Abilene Christian,
defensive back Roy Buford of
Texas Southern and linebacker
Ronnie Pettit of Bishop
College.

HECK'S REG. $8.44"

VENTILATED

$259.9

HECK'S REG. 3.99

HECK'S REG; 34.95
Life. lim

AUTO DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

410 000 000- 5 B 1
200 010 21x - 6 10 0

S.D .
Bonham , LaRoche (7) a nd
M i tterwald , L u n d s t e d t (7);
Greif , Arlin (1 ), To mli n (5),
Hardy (8 J. Romo
( 9 ) an d
Kendall. WP -Hardy (4 .2). LP .
LaRoch e (1 -1). HR -M cCovey
14th I.

It 's the latest thing in performance muff lerSand it has the
gut -stretching ro ar of a big cot stalking game. It's the
ne w Tige r Muffler. Sizes for most American niade cars.

HECK'S REG. 99'

AUTO
DEPT.

Ch ic

TIGER MUFFLER

ozone, and smog .

HECK'S REG.
$7.44

so

and Sanguillen ; J ohn (9 -1) and
Yeager . LP -Reu ss (4 -4).

HI-PERF()RMANCE

cracki ng, harde ning , or dulli ng caused

by

oooooo ooo- o

L.A .
OOJ 011 oox - 5 10 o
Reuss , Tekulve (5) , Giu sti (7)

For most power mowers.

Sto ps rot . Gives new beauty to rubber,
vi nyl , leather, and plastics. Sto ps rotting ,

Gommnnlty Developmrn i to
distribute the tr;wel bllnk ll'l s

·· Beautiful Ohio.··
Di!-itrict T€&gt;n Dcput~· Direct or
S( •llll'

Cuarant:e

popul ar tour ist boo klet which
offers Ohi o touris ts a gui de tu

popul ar spots found throughout
the state. Sections found in thr

publication include ··Historic
Oh io.··
., Scemc
Oh1 o.··
·· Recreational Oh io·· and
"Cultural Ohio.'"
Requests for ·· Beautifu l
Ohio" ' are to be made to the
Publi c In formati on Office .
Ohio Department of TransTe n_

Muskingum Drive. Mariett&lt;J.
Oh1 o 45750. In terested persons
are asked to lim it . th eir
requesl.s to one book let as
supp lies are limited and of-

I

B' 1.41\~n· nn· i-:. l.:unh. r\l.ll .
ll l·: i\H IJH . I.MIH t·:•wrt: )

18

11

oz.

·GILLETTE FOAMY

SCOPE
MOUTHWASH

59

Re9ular, Menthol and lemon lime.

79e

'
HECK'
S REG. 11.19

iiLACK &amp; BROWN

C Heel(~ Reg. 97c

28C

.:OSMETI~ DE~T.

HECK'S REG. 11.09
COSMETICS DEPT.

COSMETICS DEPT.

ESQUIRE
SHOE POLISH

oz.

HECK'S REG. 57'
COSMETICS DEPT.

13

-·

oz.

STYLE
HAIR SPRAY

49i~
HECK'S REG. 7'
COSMETICS DEPT.·

'•111 1 plt• 1t • l~
!l t '"~

u•,

ddJiill ;ll l lll-! 1\l'ilk ·
Urin;tlron.

t·r l :tk~·" Tilt'

;1!

tilt',

!-;p;t~ll(' f't ll fl n ~\l"l lt ' lh

(';II· ~·

,,f

\'(•w Y11rk , !'\ . Y. 10019 and as k
ft,r th~&gt;

Jj(,r tkl Plrtn spas ti C'
&amp;nd JO C"&lt;"ll b u, con: r

HI

thi S rlf•\\'Sfli-t f)~'l' . I' 0 .

I'Ol,on .
tfJ ~t s.

t.: tt.'-. pru lth'II1 S ,.., ltould l iit\T ;1

\l: tm
t! ;t SI 'Iil!:-&gt;

no "f!as'" slwr lagt• anwnl-! us

l!l'nr !I IL'S ,." 'Y ltr ~ t ' ll ( :nHI :1
r.. t;!l .. r 1\\ o qJ t; u· r ~ tllii _\ lw

liH· lwsil' uncll'l"l .\ 'ln g n H·dt l'i tl

Yt~!l lt·d dur inu Ill~ · IH'x1 ft ' \\
hour s. T h e w;tlk ltJ tl w
h:tt hruP II11Jrrolllt'S a lw r r u! t•; m

\\ttl ; \·uur prnbh•n• of s p ; l'-. 111 '

11hk r fo l k s' Wl' gn on h::w in g
"gds "

t..r oubll'

rt' lliltJit•

f\)r l &lt;:tc k of ~~

way lo prevPut or g1't

qui ck re li ef . Your views frn lhL'

.cuhjt•t·t would ht• Wf'lcOmt •.
I. myse lf. h;wc suf£errd (rolli
what ha s b('C'Il rliagnos(•d i! l"i
:;pa sttc t' ll \u n . i\ bland. lowr tJ ugh agt' di e t and antispa s1ntldi&lt;.· 11 1e dicati ons IW VL'

::; alisfa c tor y

rt&gt; su lt s.
l1lrre is a side effec t that I
hc1ve not been able to impn•ss
Ill\' d octor sufficiently with .
Tl;e gas atlct cks occur usua ll y
&lt;:~I night . the pressure incrt·ases
and it ha s a marked effect on
th e heart.

,

The pul se rate, normally
64, beeomes highly
erratic and speeds up to 90 to
120 while at thc same tiine a
around

'l'hf'

r~.: UTll l l :t ltun Ill;!~· p111p11 1111

!;-t sk i ll H ~ lt• ; t\ 't•~ 1111 ' \1 L'Hk i! lHI

cases .

Wh:11

l"all

\ \t'

t~ ld s lt&gt; r s clir to

Pl"t' \ "C• n t ~ a s ;tlla&lt;'h : ;rn d wh ; 1l
&lt;"&lt;Ill

b(' d11!lt' fo r

l't'i !SIIrl :lhl!

p rtr lnpl rpiLcf''

DE,\H

Thi.o

m:,\lli-~ H

IS; ,

~(J I

all

mon · rt.•ccn t .\T&lt;tl"!'

IL•mlcrll'y h ;ts

b l'L' II

tltf-

IN TUESDAY, JUNE 4TH AD ·

ttfll' ll

PICNIC JUGS
TRIPlE IN SUlATED BY "Amoco"
RIGID VINYl PlASTIC

Th&lt;tt

IJutl t·rn 1i Ik.

tiJ.._.

1 GAllON SIZE ........ $2&amp;4"'

Of ('IIJ U"S{', yo u are probably
iill'l' ady L'lin1i natin g \ "t!l'Lr

to . gn·L'

peoplf' \\ il h s pa sl ic ro l o!i
f1PJIJ]PIH S &lt;I die! C'tllltOJill l ll ~ lul :-;

St'~1srmin~~- bul

l' l uni n;t! (•

it l'&lt;l ll of r uul! hHgt' . The vo lon 1~ :1
('(! US(.' a SC \'t'l"l' diSl'OillfOrt. ;1s lliUSt"U!ttr tu tw It ha s liJ llii\'!'
you krww . I Sli SJWd ! (IU r heart l'll UUgh bul k tit l'Oil ll"&lt;tl' l &lt;l j~ ;dn s 1
irr eg ulariti es ar r ind c t'd 10 ha \"e nor maL r h) tlnnt r
CCJUSC'&lt;I b~· the gils. You &lt;Jl" l '
ct~nl r t· lc ti u n s without c r arnp s II /"
desl' ribing a n impt' IHlin g f;:~i n t . sp as m s. Specifical ly , lhp d il't
These c.:a n br inclun~ d by pat n s hould incluc\L' cpr e,a l fiber
fr o111 cmy sources. In thi s in- You get thi s from real wht; k
stance yolU- ptl in is caused b.v wheal brrcnl and wh oh• gr;1in
distcnthtn &lt;lllci spasm in your cerea ls. Use plen ty il f IL· afy
colon.
\-egrtablrs and sa lads .
A11yonc wh o has cxl'cssivc
To hrlp control the j..l as

l'llllll!HIIl

•

CORRECTION

11:1\·e

&lt;lf1d

fl'll ll l !IJLIJ" tJH •I for StJI I\1' t l ll ll' .
tn c ludl· s c hl'C SL' ;1rHI

tl• 1r!III" S \'.11\lld

ag rL·P \V i lli y1rur di(' t. IHml' \Tr .
In

\\ ho

pruldt:'lll:-.

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

Jah l'l i•d (I S
.'-.j);t SIIL " l"tJ[(,n. l"l'itJ Jy l'illl ll u l
luh-t"itll' tlw lm· IIISt' milk Slig ar
111ndlk iiiH it ni lk pr11d tw t:-;. Thl'
lt• st llt·n· \\ IJ uld tw to el i1 n1n&lt;tte
&lt;til lllilk :tn d nLilk prodllc ls

ro lnn .

f &lt;Hilt.

I'Otl\pli:ll'l~· IIIHkl"

pcupl c

flt 'Ui li i 'S,

pn•1J it'11t &lt; I ~ II h; tS Ill ,\"IIJJ I' ('; l SI '

Tilt· dll lr-!' p :tSI IIHdii"S ~Uil ill'\ '
lc1 kin g :t rP iiii JWrt ;m t ir1 Sl'\T!"I'

been the ffi(t in con trol wit h less

th an

11 11 !1('.

•

li •;t.s1 IU ili l the ga s and colon ·

t!IIIH I II U•di r·; tl t':'C IIII ill;IIHHI ,

nrdl!t ; tl'i)y,,n , ·~ : 1 lll t.: hl ,;r

l" tii ii]JI:tinf Wil l

St':ISIH ill l!-:S
fro n t

it 's illlp(rrt ;lnt to
all
t hL• SJlli' Y
int'iuditll.,: garJi (' ,

!J1 GAllON SIZE ..... ..$144
FUll GUARANTEE

Ihe dict to ;w c, id g a s. :Vlos!

pL'opl c· williL'i l rn !hat the re arp
crrtmn foods that ;11·e pcw-

ticul arl! gas-fon nl'rs fnr the111 .
Th ts uften ind udcs on ions,
ce~bba~-:e and beans.
Sueh a n indh·IC!ual sho uld
avoid cdl sweet. starchy foods
Uw t &lt;liT ll1ilde mth wh ile nour.
'l11a t inc:lucl cs elimination of
pit• . l'i!kl' , swce l rolls. puddin gs

A OtSCO\JNT
OfPART M f. NT' STO.I

Silver Bridge
Shopping Plaza

Pleasant

Mason
W. Va.

residin g i n an a rea where

'.

Meigs
•

Property

SQUARE CUT BLADE

Transfers

G r ov~ r .

WHERE ECONOMY ORIG,IHATES
Prices Effective Thru Sat.
June 8

Parcel ,

-g~

?Mit, .~

Ch.urh."Rood,

lb.89e .

Middleport, 0.

99~.

Open Daily 9 to 9

WHOLE OR HALF

(ClOSED SUNDAYS)

Sf.ah '"Baeo •~
a to
~~ -

ANYSIZE PIECE

Bologna • • • • • '"67c
FINEST VALUE
Beef Liver . • • • "79"
All GOOD
Sliced Bacon • • • · ·79"
ANY SIZE PIECE
Braunschweiger • '"59"
GREAT ON GRILL
$149
A&amp;P Wieners • • 2
EXCEPT SALAMI
A&amp;P Lunchmeat •
All BEEF
Hamburger • • • '"89"

Rutland.

3-month limit
to welfare
put on some
AKRON , Ohio (UPI )General welfare recipients in
Summit County will only be
able to collect relief payments
for three months in any single
year as a result of action wken
Tuesday by the county com-

NEW CROP

•' 59clb.
,o.,e

NEW CROP

NEW CROP TEXAS

-gu.:g CkeMi•41

Yellow O"i"""'

&amp;9¢1b.

:J~~~s~

SUGAR SWEET

lb.

pkg.

· as·

missioners. ·

The commissioners approved a proposal submitted
by Welfare Director Frank
Birkel which stipulates that
only those who can prove they
have physical or psychological
handicaps that make them
unemployable will be able to
collect for more tha n three
months. The measure was
made retroactive to June 1.
The county's financial ·crisis,
aggravated by the failure of a
one-half of one per cent piggyback sales wx on the May ballot, was blamed for the cutback.

RIB HALF POlK LOIN
SLICED INTO

At A&amp;P WEO Stores

1o~.169
bag

iumbo7.
size 6

· A&amp;P 100'/o fLORID4

o........, 9·~- 6 -9e
.Juie&amp;
c+a.

INSTANT

Nescafe Coffee
'JI COIFFEE CREAMER
Coffeemate

~;

S

252

sse

Friskies Din~ers .'~. . , . 25 ~!~ $4.39
Carnation Slender .. ... - .. ~:;:;. 89c

Aunt Jemima French Toasl . ~;: 65c
Flavarland Strawberries ''~'" . .':;:~· 79c
•
•
Jar
NuMaid Margarine 'J.-Ib . l!i&lt;U . . . ~:: 49c
$l]g Nab.csco oreo •s ........... 1••"·69c
....
c lu~
Reames Frozen Noodles .. - . !..":.-59c
• 1 •
,,-~
Wheat Chex ..... .. ... . .. 1:;:_ S3c
Pillsbury Cornbread HJ".~\" . . . !i.o:: 35c Rice Chex ... - . - .. . - . . . ':..~~· 6Ic
Miracle Whip . . . . . . . . .' ~;9 3t Corn Chex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •;;~~ 69c
•

•
11 -oz.

•
3

DEODORANT

l.a.vO'U,a,

SoffN1&gt;lU

69¢
•••

u-••· gge

s....

btl.

9¢h

RED RIPE

FLORIDA VALENCIA

w~

_ 0~

half
melon

eac;

D&amp;P
Tootkpaa.fe.

99¢

r••••
1
1

A BRAND NEW BREAD

:

THAT STAYS SOFTER LONGER !
r--:;:;-;;:-;-:;=:;-----,
Wf P.t.CK IT rRESH rROIIt THE OVEN IN
WE USE MODERN ...

1
1

I

PLASTIC BAGS

BAKING PROCESS
lll lt PIOChiCI$ 1 ve iVII~ ·Soft , sllk1·

:

ltlll ln!' RE USABlE with I Kwidlok

0

~;;.;;"~'~'"~""~'~lla~.;,~;:~i· ~::::;l;";';"'~~~"'':"'~'~'~~~~"~'·;:=~
r WE DO ONE MORE THING

WE DATE OUR BREAD
ttult"s the

o~IJ

1b.olute &amp;Uir1n1M

ollresnne11 rou Mw .
unltu 10\,j bike 1&lt;Mlr own.

I0
.

JANE PARKER BAKERY WEEK!

WE USE "A BIT MORE"
MILK, SUGAR AND

P • 0 VALUA8LE COUPON" "I f • •VALUABLE COUPON • •

r• •v.t.LUABLE COUPON• •

'I

'I

1

JANE PARKER

1

: Crumb Square :
: CoHee Cake :
1

I

,...,L
,,, _

89c

JANE P4RKER
King Size

"'':' Donuts
With This i
""','...,,_75c With This
,,,_
Coupon
Coupon 1.

I

I

I
I
I
I

Apple
'~"'
n•e

I

1

:
1
r.:1 l

L!!J

Date Filled
Coffee Cake
, _,_6Sc With Th is

JANE PARKER
Fresh

I
I

:

I
PM ~:.
•
Coupon
I
Good
Thru
Sat.,
June
8th
I
At
All
A&amp;P
WEO's
I
• • • • • •liMIT ONE COUPON • • • • •

We Want You To Squeeze Our Bread
lin fact we dare you to squeeze it.)

I

I

• • • • • •llht'T ONE COUPON••• • •
r • •""' • •VAl UABLE COUPON • • • • •
I
JANE P4RKER

I

we hlvt to, to 11-.e 10U
1 nclltr ICill of b read.

...

.

JANE PARKER
Buttercreme
Filled Rolls
•
'~"'·
This
oft&lt;. 69C With
Cau pon
Good ¥tuu Sat.. June 8th
At~ll A&amp;P WEO's

1

SHORTENING

jum~D $100

64 me .

·YALUAILE COU~ON• • • • • •1

:

tn.n

'

MOUTHWASH

Pie

611k
With This
7 _. Coupon

'I

t- • VALUABLE COUPON• •
JANE PARKER .
Angel Food

•

'I

••

Cake
""L 59c With This
Coupon

Pkl .

I

I Good Thru Sat., June 8th
Good Thru Sat., June 8th
: Good Thru Sal., June 8th : Good Thru Sat., June 8th
A 20 mile " March for long, but they are ready to go, "
At All A&amp;P WEO's r:;-1
At All A&amp;P WEO 's r.::1
At All A&amp;P WEO's G 1
At All A&amp;P WEO's @] 11
1
Missions" will be staged explained . the Rev . Knitte l.
L.!.J
L-'.'J
7-· ..
tube
L.,LIMIT ONE COUPON •• J l . oUMtT ONE COUPON•• J I . • LIMIT ONE COUPON• • .I II. • &lt;I.IMIT ONI COUPON•• :.1
through Middleport and "Our objective is not fund
- • "VALUABLE CO.UPON1 • •i i• •vALUABLE COUPON• • .- i ••VALUABLE COUPON• • i - • •IJA.LUAILf..COUPON • _.
Pomeroy Saturday by the raising alone, but to prov ide an
youth and participating opportunity to u.nified in- ·. r • • • •V,l:lUAILf
• • •., r • • •" VALUAil£ COUPON• • • • 'I
FLEISCHMANN'S
1 1
BORDEN AMERlCAN
I
KRAFT
I
·sc OFF LAIEL
1 1
II
.
I
u
•
d
I
members of the Middleport volvement. The march will
With This I I
2sc Off LABEL
Soft Bowl
~~ I
Cheese
I
macaroni an
1P-300
United Pentecoswl Church.
really be somew hat of a "' 1
Coupon I I
Cold
Power
•
I
Sl'
' I Ch
D'
I
B
The Rev. William Knittel, spiritual experience for most of . ' I
Margarme
1 11
1ces
11
1nner 1I
or oap
an a l·lb. baq of
I ,I
Dt
t
1'
-eese
~
pastor of the church, and Leroy . the participants," he con1
E' ht O'CI lc
1 1
e ergen
,., •. 59c With This"'
'":'· $~09 With This · 1
'-'~"'"$100 Wit.h This 1
49c Wci thupTohni.s
.•
Sauters, y.outh director, an- tinued.
0
1g
OC
: :
...... $119 With This
,.,_
Coupon l . l
' •· II
Coupon
"""·
Coupon 1
.•
,
1
' nounced that the march will be
Bean
CoHee
1
.
1
...
Coupon
1,1
1
I
h
.
I
Their goal of $2,000 will be
Good Thru Sat., June 8th I 1 Goad Thru Sat., June 8th 1 Good Thru Sat., June 8th I Good Thru Sat..,June 8t ·
.•· a part of the annual "Sheaves allocated -toward the purchase . 11
Good
Thru
Sat.
.
,
June
8th
:
.
:
Good
Thru
Sal.,
Jul\
,
e
8th
At All A&amp;P WEO's --. I
At All A&amp;P WEO's r.:1 . I
At .All A&amp;P .WEO's "] I.
At All A&amp;P WEO's r.1 ' •
for Christ" fund raising drive of vehicles and equipment ·for
1
AtAIIA&amp;PWEO
~~ 1 I
~ I
~ I
t2..,.
I
AtAIIA&amp;PWEQ's
~I I
S
@' •••LIMIT ONI COUPON ••• ~·.LIMIT ONE COUPON•-• ••• J.tMITONE COUPON••• ... LIMIT ONE COUPON••
~
for missions project. Par- missionaries, church extension
I.,.,.
•
•
~lull
ow•
COUI'O.
"
_-·.
'!'.,
•
:J
!.
•
•
•
•'
IMIT
ON
I_
COUPONoo
•
•
•
•
.
.
.
u
'
.
•
•o
.
VAlUAILE
c
·o·'
•oN
•
•
'
• · ticipants in the march are programs in the United States
M
...
.,...
•
- - V4LUAILE COUPON . . . . . . "V4LUAILE COUPO"• -·
• -- v..LU48LE COUr N·-. ·-.
. Ur •
-~--v·LUAI.
LICOUPON
..........
r••••yALUAIUCOUPO..----·
•
I I
' ..
·- I
.
W
'th
Th'
I
t.f:
r
obtaining sponsors who pledge and Canada and cerl&lt;!in youth
15 1 '
"
I I
A&amp;P
I I
UP DISPOSABLE
I I
HEINZ
I
9C 1
a certain amount per mile evangelism projects.
1Sc
'
10'
: :
Beef
: :
Overnight
: :.
Keg-0
: I
Coupon: :
walked. Checkpoints are to be " Over 2,000 churches took part
el l
II
D'1Cipers . I
t
Kth
II
•••l·lb. ba9of
I •
.. set up along the march route to in last year's "March for II
•• a 20•01. ••• of
••• 12-oz. bor at Post
I I
tew
I I
I I
e c up
I I E' ht O'Clock I •
each
person 's Missions" drive, in which more
verify
:
Mg11 lc
Honeycomb
1 :
., .... - 9c With This: _1
.,..,_79cWith This: , •
.... 59c With Thi•r :
1g .
: .;
''mileage''_
.
1/
'"" 6
:r
:
Coupon 1 :
....
Coupon 1 :
Ja•
f!lupon 1 1 Bean CoHee
than
$1,250,000
was
raised
.
1
1 ..,
•1'fhis is necessary since the
1·•
.
Spray Sizing
Cereal
1 1
· .
a ..o
The march will begin · at 8· 11
1 1
1 1
1 1 Good Thru Sat., June 8th 1 1 G~od Thru Sat., June 8th 1 f Good Thru Sat., june 8th 1 1 Good Thru Sat., June Bth 1 :
march is not limi led to young a.m. Saturday at the MidGoodThruSat., June8th I
GoodThruSat., June8th
AtAIIA&amp;PWEO's r:l l 1
_AtAIIA&amp;PWEO's lOl l 1
At. AIIA&amp;PWEO's 171 1 1
AtAUA&amp;rWEO's r.:ti?;~.•
11
: ' people. Some of . the older dlepor t United Pentecostal ' .11I
At All A,&amp;P..WEO's .
[!] 1
At All A&amp;P WEO's
l!J
~I 1
.
· ~I 1
I.:.J I I
,
t!!ll )!.
1
1
members wl)o ..are involved Church.
., •l" •!PM,IT •ONI cO.UPON.~ "'·" -~ • • • • ••LIMIT ONE COUPON!'" • ::• • .,.; • ,LIMIT ONI COUPON • -.•""-':.LIMIT ONE COl!lON_~,,'- . •• LI~".T .01'\J COUPON •., • . -., oLI~IT 01'11 CO.UP~~~:• :'¥~
may find the 20 mile trek a bit
I !
•

ssc

;: Save ]l'k
u-

·s

4

f:

.-

: Save

/

td l ttH ·

Br,,., 1551. Hadir&gt; City Station,
tthlllll

l'l ll llll"l ;t!Pd . I·: Jt rlll l ii lh- ;d~·ultqJ .'

1"111! lrul ,.

l'I"!S iS 01' ll o, lltl't'l' SCl'I IIS ltJ b('

Mission march set

BUFFERIN .
lOO's

oil."'

pr udw · l ~

\' f l/" IJIIII"(' lllf•JrJII fiiiCJ/1

selected media are handli ng
dis tri buti on will be directed to
those facilities.

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) lrv Kaze, who began his career
in baseball 20 years ago, has
been appointed the administrator for communications of the
The
commissioners
National League.
estimated the county will save
Kaze, who most recently $750,000 next year. Currently,
worked for the San Diego some 1,400 persons are on
Chargers of the National general relief.
Football League, will asstune
The cutback does not affect
his duties · with the National .aid to dependent children or
League on June 18.
aid to the aged. ·

AUTO DEPT.

fla \ '111"

;111d \ llllllill'

fir st se rved " basis. Anyone

Gloria D.

(6th) , Goodson ( 2nd l.

,r,.l . ~l fft•ln;tll'd

;Ill lht'

fl!.l!h]l' lll." :t!'\'

Nat ional Leagu e
Randall L. Davis, Carolyn R.
Atia ·· · - -- - -,oo ooo 6oo- 7 9 o Davis to Harry Hall, Lots 117.
Ph i l
0 10 100 010 - 3 7 l
118, Middleport.
Ha rr ison.
H o use
(7)
and
Casanova ; Schu el er , Wa tt (7),
Basharat A. Mi ener, Ameena
Sca r ce (7) , Culver (9) and
B. Miener to Richard Dai ley ,
Boone . WP -Har rison (4 -6) . LP
Sc hu eler ( 3.6) , HR s -lum (&lt;ll h ) , Ethel Da iley, Parcels, Sci pi o.
Un se r (4t h ), Aa r on ( l Oth ).
Richard Da iley, Ethel Dailey
Mont
020 030 000- 5 7 1 to Georgia A. Christopher.
Ho us
000 000 000 - 0 5 1
M c Anally ( 4 -&lt;1) an d Hum · Parcels, Scipio.
phrey ; , Griffin , Cosg ro ve (5 ),
l)ale L. Connally. Donna l..
Johnson ( 9 J a nd M . May . LP
Co nnally to Chester R. Foully,
Griffi n (6 -2) .
Ocie
L. Foully. ParceL Olive.
(10 inns )
Denver
P. Staley, Wilma
Cini
000 100 200 3- 6 14 1
N.Y .
002 001 000 0- 3 9 0 Staley, Ches ter P Foutty. Ocie
Gu l lett , Car roll (7) , Borbon
L. Foully to Cecil Wagone r,
(8 )
and
Be n ch :
K oosman,
Park er (7), Sadecki (8) and
Lessie Wagoner, 13 Acres .
Grote . WP -Borbon ( d-2). LP ·
Orange.
Sa decki f2 -2J. HR -Garr e tt ( 6th J.
Belly J. Hawley, Norman E.
St . L outs
000 003 000- 3 8 1
San F ra n
00 1 120 01x - 5 10 0 Haw ley to Corbett E. Ratl iff.
Gibson, G ar man
(7)
and
Parcel, Salisbury .
Simmons ; Bradley . S osa (7J
Douglas D. Grover, 1'\orma
and Rader. WP -Bradley ( 6·41.
LP . Gibson
&lt;3 -6 ).
HR s -Bro c k
Grover to Douglas C. Grove•-.
( 3rd J. Smi th (Ht h ), M a t thews

;- .

pp(j
TRANSMISSION

"Gas· prohletns in older folks

})(&gt;p;-1r tmcn t 11f Et·o notl til' CJTH!

Dis tri ct

lrl-

;u' l' 1rn !;~ t i11 J to 1111' ndtHI Tt• a .
;n1d l" n l a s s ll to tild ;,1!,11 ])I'

11f Tr : rn ~­
por ta tlon wil l lt\1 111 with tlw

por tat ion,

li S ftll"lll ~.

pr-odut' ls. The

Ohio lle 1Jartnll'lll

Max H.. Farley said lhat

~.tJ )

Ill

dudlll ~~

DH. LA WHENCE E. LAMH

fered only on a '' fi rst come ·

01.

HARDWARE DEPT.

BIKE

Game

Calif
ooo 012 000- l 7 o
, Mil
010 000 30X - 4 7 0
Si n ge r
(7 4 ) and El
Ro
dr lg uez . Egan (8), Kob el. Ed .
Rodr iguez (6 ). Murphy (BJ and
Port er WP - Ed . Rodr ig ue z (4

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $5.68
HARDWARE DEPT.

McJI&lt;e lur e you ore

Te x a s a t C leveland :
forfe ited to Te x as 9 0

'

~ t ee l ,

5]99
GAllON

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

105011 000 - 8100
Ba i t
000 000 ooo o 3 o
~itzmorr i s {5 -2 1 and Hea l y .
Grtmsley , Je ff erso n (JJ, Rey
nol d s (9) and Hendr icks LP
G rims ley (5 -6 J HR s Ot is (l rd l.
Mayberr y (12 th t
K .C

24"
BAR-I-QUE GRILL

HECK'S
REG.
$1.66

FLAT WALL PAINT

HECK'S REG. $5.48

HECK'S REG. $3.48

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

priced yet durable . gives vnsur·
posed p rotect1on against the

A "bet1er buy '' ot Hed' ~ . . . chao~
" orn te l" nlodcrn co lors plu~ two whrt_es
in t hi~ eo~ily applied lole)( wall por_nt
• . • durab le, ol1
q r ac1rve · ·· your ~o tr s·
foctmn ~~gua ranteed .

$999

HECK'S PREMIUM LATEX

Po int goes o n wi th li ttl e or no
dripp ing' o r sp latte r . l ow

FLAT WALl PAINT

HECK'S REG. 25'

•

LATEX

HR .

(2 n d l
Oa k .
100 000 000 1 6 1
Del
400 000 OOx J J 0
Ha m 1 It o n , L indbl a d {1!,
Odom O J and Ten a ce , Ha ney
(8 ) ; L aGrow ( 4 J ) and Moses .
LP -H amilton ( ~ 1J.

..

McGRAW

t' o~(ft ·i '

mrdia hav e bee·n i:lS kf'd to aid
i n t he dis tributi on ur thr

RAID
VEGETABLE
SEEDS

jJI"IJIJII 'fll IHil' ~ IIIJI!ld t •l !illlfiil ll '

Home state ltrged
on Ohio travelers

•

I

~ltddll' I"IUI't -l'l'"ll'n•) . ~ 1 • \\ ~.,, ,, , .... d.l .' . . h .tl t' .1. .' 1•

~~~p:h~s

Save

~~~~~·

3 " ., : _

:s ave

s

L

'

' I

I
I.

\

I •.
.

.

'

,I

,I

'

.,

'I

•

.I .

IJ

I'

'"'':

�n - The Daily &amp;nt ind,

12'- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrt-Pomeroy, 0., Wed~esday. June 5, 1974

....'.
PLENTY
OF FREE

OPEN DAILY

10 TO 9

MARIETTA
Ohio
vacationers will be cncoura gcd
to "Travel Ohio·· this year as
part of a campaign. being
moun ted by the Gove rnor·s
Coun cil on Travel an d
Tourism.
As par t of the campaign the

SUNDAY

Tu es da y ' s Ba se ball R esu lt s
B v Un tied P ress lnte r n at tOil tll
American L ea gu e
( 1stl
Oak
100 700 001 J .1 1
Del
000 000 ooo o 3 1
Holtz man ( 6 6 t and Fosse

HOUSE&amp;

GARDEN
BUG KILLER

Lol ic h (57) and FrC'e han
Rud i (6th t

HECK'S

20" 1-SPEED
FAN

HOUSE PAINT

HECK'S

HECK'S REG.
18.99

elemen ts. White and five co lo r s.

$]~~.

$299Gallon

The "hu o l th lle11" Ir e"' ~&lt;k '1 O vo ioly lu i ~• ..,0 11
P"""' g.,.goJcbl~ on Cl wr de. l~lecl oon cl d.oornto&lt;
1~0~1
pl ~ 1 """flu. In &gt;u•t cr)'{lne ' ' ""~ T~ i •
wall CoCTong CO '&gt;tn mo ll ce&gt;lor\ with I" ' ' ooe &lt;CC&gt; I "~ .
paonl rn lht fTIOrnon &lt;;~ . porty in the e..,ninll · Co mpore
H EC ~ " 5 PREMIUM w rth c ny other wa ll poin t &lt;II ony
po et YOU .,,11 be p le o &gt;o ntly wrprr ~ed

Rmtprool_ c hrome-p la ted gr rd . New
r·o~itive grid adjus t ment ho ~ lour

herghts and cool, hardwood ponels.
Rem ovoble tripod -type legs of plo ted

HECK'SREG.19.88

'

SAFETY

N .Y .
010010000- 2 7 I
Chic
0 10 0&lt;1 0 22x - 9 16 0
Dob son , Pa g an (7) , Wallace
(BJ an d Dempsey ; Wood ( 9 6 1
and Herrman n . LP Dob son (l
8 ). . HRs -AIIe n
( 11fh ),
D ent
(2nd) .

.

(1 1 i nn s)
Bost
100 0 10 00 1 01- 4 7 1
Minn
001 100 00 1 00 - 3 12 3
Lee . Seg ui {10) , Moret (Il l
end Fisk ; D ecke r , Burg me ie r
(5), Camp be ll ( 5 ) and Borg
mann , Roo f (1 0 1. WP .Segu l (3 .
4 ) . LP -Campbell {2 -4) _ HR S
Evans (4th ), Hisl e (B ih ) .

~.:.

.'

',•

FLAG

'•

.. .

~oeen ! G reOte r

or
luorel&lt;tnl

1olt ly '" lroff•c. on llreth. holil
POl hi 8r o11ht pt MoM!•n f
cole" Mcunli! don vnb•e o ~ oble wl·
od l obl e t;~lo" p olo, ,.,, h b o oc~el l o;~•
eo•y o no&lt;hmenl

. , ..
~ ~

•

.'.'

AUTO BODY

CASTROL
20W50
MOTOR OIL

3 LBS.

FLUID
Quart

LIMITS QTS.

AUTO
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. 79'

AUTO. DEPT.

33

$

99c

HECK'S REG.
58'

'luart

WINDOW SCREEN$

GRASS SEED

25&lt;

49c

REPAIR KIT

fOLDING

QT. SIZE

MOTOR OIL

Acomplete kit. The black

2 Gallon Can

p la~ic

·HECK'S

ROCKET

body filler th at

..
' .

wo n' t crock or shri nk

REG.
2.77

.·

$199

HECK'S REG.
2.19 '

HECK'S REG.
2.69

HECK'S REG.
2.99

HECK'S REG.

HARDWARE DEFT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

AUTO DEPT.

AUTO DEPT.

2.77

LAWIMOWER

l

FOG LIGHTS

ARMOR ALL

SPARK PLUGS

AMBER OR CLEAR

Pitts

t he ·sun,

AUTO DEPT.

$599

8 OZ. SIZE

SPORT DEPT.

14 oz. DUPONT

WIRE CUSHION

RALLY CREAM WAX

FOR DRIVING COMFORT

AUTO DEPT.

CAR INNER TUBES

WITH .~PPLICATOR

13"-14"-15"
Sizes to fit most cars.

, .,c

'

LEE

CAR BATTERIES

Lifetime I 00% Free Replacement fo r as long c s yo u o wn the co rn which
the boNery was installed (provided the ba ttery remains in that cor), If th~
boNery should fail to accept and hold the cha rge, si mply relur n it a nd we
will replace it fre e of charge. Th is warranty doe s not ap pl y to ba tteries
insta lled on com mercial v ehi cle ~.

$266
HECK'S REG.
$ .1 .59

HECK'S REG.
1.49

AUTO DEPT.

DALLAS (UP! ) -Four free
agents who sought jobs with
the Dallas Cowboys during a
tryout camp last month have
been · invited to rePQrt with
other · rookies when the
National Football League
opens its training camp at
Thousand Oaks, Calif., July 7.
They are running back
Clarence Alberts of Texas A&amp;l,
defensive
tackle. Paul
Billingsly of Abilene Christian,
defensive back Roy Buford of
Texas Southern and linebacker
Ronnie Pettit of Bishop
College.

HECK'S REG. $8.44"

VENTILATED

$259.9

HECK'S REG. 3.99

HECK'S REG; 34.95
Life. lim

AUTO DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

410 000 000- 5 B 1
200 010 21x - 6 10 0

S.D .
Bonham , LaRoche (7) a nd
M i tterwald , L u n d s t e d t (7);
Greif , Arlin (1 ), To mli n (5),
Hardy (8 J. Romo
( 9 ) an d
Kendall. WP -Hardy (4 .2). LP .
LaRoch e (1 -1). HR -M cCovey
14th I.

It 's the latest thing in performance muff lerSand it has the
gut -stretching ro ar of a big cot stalking game. It's the
ne w Tige r Muffler. Sizes for most American niade cars.

HECK'S REG. 99'

AUTO
DEPT.

Ch ic

TIGER MUFFLER

ozone, and smog .

HECK'S REG.
$7.44

so

and Sanguillen ; J ohn (9 -1) and
Yeager . LP -Reu ss (4 -4).

HI-PERF()RMANCE

cracki ng, harde ning , or dulli ng caused

by

oooooo ooo- o

L.A .
OOJ 011 oox - 5 10 o
Reuss , Tekulve (5) , Giu sti (7)

For most power mowers.

Sto ps rot . Gives new beauty to rubber,
vi nyl , leather, and plastics. Sto ps rotting ,

Gommnnlty Developmrn i to
distribute the tr;wel bllnk ll'l s

·· Beautiful Ohio.··
Di!-itrict T€&gt;n Dcput~· Direct or
S( •llll'

Cuarant:e

popul ar tour ist boo klet which
offers Ohi o touris ts a gui de tu

popul ar spots found throughout
the state. Sections found in thr

publication include ··Historic
Oh io.··
., Scemc
Oh1 o.··
·· Recreational Oh io·· and
"Cultural Ohio.'"
Requests for ·· Beautifu l
Ohio" ' are to be made to the
Publi c In formati on Office .
Ohio Department of TransTe n_

Muskingum Drive. Mariett&lt;J.
Oh1 o 45750. In terested persons
are asked to lim it . th eir
requesl.s to one book let as
supp lies are limited and of-

I

B' 1.41\~n· nn· i-:. l.:unh. r\l.ll .
ll l·: i\H IJH . I.MIH t·:•wrt: )

18

11

oz.

·GILLETTE FOAMY

SCOPE
MOUTHWASH

59

Re9ular, Menthol and lemon lime.

79e

'
HECK'
S REG. 11.19

iiLACK &amp; BROWN

C Heel(~ Reg. 97c

28C

.:OSMETI~ DE~T.

HECK'S REG. 11.09
COSMETICS DEPT.

COSMETICS DEPT.

ESQUIRE
SHOE POLISH

oz.

HECK'S REG. 57'
COSMETICS DEPT.

13

-·

oz.

STYLE
HAIR SPRAY

49i~
HECK'S REG. 7'
COSMETICS DEPT.·

'•111 1 plt• 1t • l~
!l t '"~

u•,

ddJiill ;ll l lll-! 1\l'ilk ·
Urin;tlron.

t·r l :tk~·" Tilt'

;1!

tilt',

!-;p;t~ll(' f't ll fl n ~\l"l lt ' lh

(';II· ~·

,,f

\'(•w Y11rk , !'\ . Y. 10019 and as k
ft,r th~&gt;

Jj(,r tkl Plrtn spas ti C'
&amp;nd JO C"&lt;"ll b u, con: r

HI

thi S rlf•\\'Sfli-t f)~'l' . I' 0 .

I'Ol,on .
tfJ ~t s.

t.: tt.'-. pru lth'II1 S ,.., ltould l iit\T ;1

\l: tm
t! ;t SI 'Iil!:-&gt;

no "f!as'" slwr lagt• anwnl-! us

l!l'nr !I IL'S ,." 'Y ltr ~ t ' ll ( :nHI :1
r.. t;!l .. r 1\\ o qJ t; u· r ~ tllii _\ lw

liH· lwsil' uncll'l"l .\ 'ln g n H·dt l'i tl

Yt~!l lt·d dur inu Ill~ · IH'x1 ft ' \\
hour s. T h e w;tlk ltJ tl w
h:tt hruP II11Jrrolllt'S a lw r r u! t•; m

\\ttl ; \·uur prnbh•n• of s p ; l'-. 111 '

11hk r fo l k s' Wl' gn on h::w in g
"gds "

t..r oubll'

rt' lliltJit•

f\)r l &lt;:tc k of ~~

way lo prevPut or g1't

qui ck re li ef . Your views frn lhL'

.cuhjt•t·t would ht• Wf'lcOmt •.
I. myse lf. h;wc suf£errd (rolli
what ha s b('C'Il rliagnos(•d i! l"i
:;pa sttc t' ll \u n . i\ bland. lowr tJ ugh agt' di e t and antispa s1ntldi&lt;.· 11 1e dicati ons IW VL'

::; alisfa c tor y

rt&gt; su lt s.
l1lrre is a side effec t that I
hc1ve not been able to impn•ss
Ill\' d octor sufficiently with .
Tl;e gas atlct cks occur usua ll y
&lt;:~I night . the pressure incrt·ases
and it ha s a marked effect on
th e heart.

,

The pul se rate, normally
64, beeomes highly
erratic and speeds up to 90 to
120 while at thc same tiine a
around

'l'hf'

r~.: UTll l l :t ltun Ill;!~· p111p11 1111

!;-t sk i ll H ~ lt• ; t\ 't•~ 1111 ' \1 L'Hk i! lHI

cases .

Wh:11

l"all

\ \t'

t~ ld s lt&gt; r s clir to

Pl"t' \ "C• n t ~ a s ;tlla&lt;'h : ;rn d wh ; 1l
&lt;"&lt;Ill

b(' d11!lt' fo r

l't'i !SIIrl :lhl!

p rtr lnpl rpiLcf''

DE,\H

Thi.o

m:,\lli-~ H

IS; ,

~(J I

all

mon · rt.•ccn t .\T&lt;tl"!'

IL•mlcrll'y h ;ts

b l'L' II

tltf-

IN TUESDAY, JUNE 4TH AD ·

ttfll' ll

PICNIC JUGS
TRIPlE IN SUlATED BY "Amoco"
RIGID VINYl PlASTIC

Th&lt;tt

IJutl t·rn 1i Ik.

tiJ.._.

1 GAllON SIZE ........ $2&amp;4"'

Of ('IIJ U"S{', yo u are probably
iill'l' ady L'lin1i natin g \ "t!l'Lr

to . gn·L'

peoplf' \\ il h s pa sl ic ro l o!i
f1PJIJ]PIH S &lt;I die! C'tllltOJill l ll ~ lul :-;

St'~1srmin~~- bul

l' l uni n;t! (•

it l'&lt;l ll of r uul! hHgt' . The vo lon 1~ :1
('(! US(.' a SC \'t'l"l' diSl'OillfOrt. ;1s lliUSt"U!ttr tu tw It ha s liJ llii\'!'
you krww . I Sli SJWd ! (IU r heart l'll UUgh bul k tit l'Oil ll"&lt;tl' l &lt;l j~ ;dn s 1
irr eg ulariti es ar r ind c t'd 10 ha \"e nor maL r h) tlnnt r
CCJUSC'&lt;I b~· the gils. You &lt;Jl" l '
ct~nl r t· lc ti u n s without c r arnp s II /"
desl' ribing a n impt' IHlin g f;:~i n t . sp as m s. Specifical ly , lhp d il't
These c.:a n br inclun~ d by pat n s hould incluc\L' cpr e,a l fiber
fr o111 cmy sources. In thi s in- You get thi s from real wht; k
stance yolU- ptl in is caused b.v wheal brrcnl and wh oh• gr;1in
distcnthtn &lt;lllci spasm in your cerea ls. Use plen ty il f IL· afy
colon.
\-egrtablrs and sa lads .
A11yonc wh o has cxl'cssivc
To hrlp control the j..l as

l'llllll!HIIl

•

CORRECTION

11:1\·e

&lt;lf1d

fl'll ll l !IJLIJ" tJH •I for StJI I\1' t l ll ll' .
tn c ludl· s c hl'C SL' ;1rHI

tl• 1r!III" S \'.11\lld

ag rL·P \V i lli y1rur di(' t. IHml' \Tr .
In

\\ ho

pruldt:'lll:-.

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

Jah l'l i•d (I S
.'-.j);t SIIL " l"tJ[(,n. l"l'itJ Jy l'illl ll u l
luh-t"itll' tlw lm· IIISt' milk Slig ar
111ndlk iiiH it ni lk pr11d tw t:-;. Thl'
lt• st llt·n· \\ IJ uld tw to el i1 n1n&lt;tte
&lt;til lllilk :tn d nLilk prodllc ls

ro lnn .

f &lt;Hilt.

I'Otl\pli:ll'l~· IIIHkl"

pcupl c

flt 'Ui li i 'S,

pn•1J it'11t &lt; I ~ II h; tS Ill ,\"IIJJ I' ('; l SI '

Tilt· dll lr-!' p :tSI IIHdii"S ~Uil ill'\ '
lc1 kin g :t rP iiii JWrt ;m t ir1 Sl'\T!"I'

been the ffi(t in con trol wit h less

th an

11 11 !1('.

•

li •;t.s1 IU ili l the ga s and colon ·

t!IIIH I II U•di r·; tl t':'C IIII ill;IIHHI ,

nrdl!t ; tl'i)y,,n , ·~ : 1 lll t.: hl ,;r

l" tii ii]JI:tinf Wil l

St':ISIH ill l!-:S
fro n t

it 's illlp(rrt ;lnt to
all
t hL• SJlli' Y
int'iuditll.,: garJi (' ,

!J1 GAllON SIZE ..... ..$144
FUll GUARANTEE

Ihe dict to ;w c, id g a s. :Vlos!

pL'opl c· williL'i l rn !hat the re arp
crrtmn foods that ;11·e pcw-

ticul arl! gas-fon nl'rs fnr the111 .
Th ts uften ind udcs on ions,
ce~bba~-:e and beans.
Sueh a n indh·IC!ual sho uld
avoid cdl sweet. starchy foods
Uw t &lt;liT ll1ilde mth wh ile nour.
'l11a t inc:lucl cs elimination of
pit• . l'i!kl' , swce l rolls. puddin gs

A OtSCO\JNT
OfPART M f. NT' STO.I

Silver Bridge
Shopping Plaza

Pleasant

Mason
W. Va.

residin g i n an a rea where

'.

Meigs
•

Property

SQUARE CUT BLADE

Transfers

G r ov~ r .

WHERE ECONOMY ORIG,IHATES
Prices Effective Thru Sat.
June 8

Parcel ,

-g~

?Mit, .~

Ch.urh."Rood,

lb.89e .

Middleport, 0.

99~.

Open Daily 9 to 9

WHOLE OR HALF

(ClOSED SUNDAYS)

Sf.ah '"Baeo •~
a to
~~ -

ANYSIZE PIECE

Bologna • • • • • '"67c
FINEST VALUE
Beef Liver . • • • "79"
All GOOD
Sliced Bacon • • • · ·79"
ANY SIZE PIECE
Braunschweiger • '"59"
GREAT ON GRILL
$149
A&amp;P Wieners • • 2
EXCEPT SALAMI
A&amp;P Lunchmeat •
All BEEF
Hamburger • • • '"89"

Rutland.

3-month limit
to welfare
put on some
AKRON , Ohio (UPI )General welfare recipients in
Summit County will only be
able to collect relief payments
for three months in any single
year as a result of action wken
Tuesday by the county com-

NEW CROP

•' 59clb.
,o.,e

NEW CROP

NEW CROP TEXAS

-gu.:g CkeMi•41

Yellow O"i"""'

&amp;9¢1b.

:J~~~s~

SUGAR SWEET

lb.

pkg.

· as·

missioners. ·

The commissioners approved a proposal submitted
by Welfare Director Frank
Birkel which stipulates that
only those who can prove they
have physical or psychological
handicaps that make them
unemployable will be able to
collect for more tha n three
months. The measure was
made retroactive to June 1.
The county's financial ·crisis,
aggravated by the failure of a
one-half of one per cent piggyback sales wx on the May ballot, was blamed for the cutback.

RIB HALF POlK LOIN
SLICED INTO

At A&amp;P WEO Stores

1o~.169
bag

iumbo7.
size 6

· A&amp;P 100'/o fLORID4

o........, 9·~- 6 -9e
.Juie&amp;
c+a.

INSTANT

Nescafe Coffee
'JI COIFFEE CREAMER
Coffeemate

~;

S

252

sse

Friskies Din~ers .'~. . , . 25 ~!~ $4.39
Carnation Slender .. ... - .. ~:;:;. 89c

Aunt Jemima French Toasl . ~;: 65c
Flavarland Strawberries ''~'" . .':;:~· 79c
•
•
Jar
NuMaid Margarine 'J.-Ib . l!i&lt;U . . . ~:: 49c
$l]g Nab.csco oreo •s ........... 1••"·69c
....
c lu~
Reames Frozen Noodles .. - . !..":.-59c
• 1 •
,,-~
Wheat Chex ..... .. ... . .. 1:;:_ S3c
Pillsbury Cornbread HJ".~\" . . . !i.o:: 35c Rice Chex ... - . - .. . - . . . ':..~~· 6Ic
Miracle Whip . . . . . . . . .' ~;9 3t Corn Chex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •;;~~ 69c
•

•
11 -oz.

•
3

DEODORANT

l.a.vO'U,a,

SoffN1&gt;lU

69¢
•••

u-••· gge

s....

btl.

9¢h

RED RIPE

FLORIDA VALENCIA

w~

_ 0~

half
melon

eac;

D&amp;P
Tootkpaa.fe.

99¢

r••••
1
1

A BRAND NEW BREAD

:

THAT STAYS SOFTER LONGER !
r--:;:;-;;:-;-:;=:;-----,
Wf P.t.CK IT rRESH rROIIt THE OVEN IN
WE USE MODERN ...

1
1

I

PLASTIC BAGS

BAKING PROCESS
lll lt PIOChiCI$ 1 ve iVII~ ·Soft , sllk1·

:

ltlll ln!' RE USABlE with I Kwidlok

0

~;;.;;"~'~'"~""~'~lla~.;,~;:~i· ~::::;l;";';"'~~~"'':"'~'~'~~~~"~'·;:=~
r WE DO ONE MORE THING

WE DATE OUR BREAD
ttult"s the

o~IJ

1b.olute &amp;Uir1n1M

ollresnne11 rou Mw .
unltu 10\,j bike 1&lt;Mlr own.

I0
.

JANE PARKER BAKERY WEEK!

WE USE "A BIT MORE"
MILK, SUGAR AND

P • 0 VALUA8LE COUPON" "I f • •VALUABLE COUPON • •

r• •v.t.LUABLE COUPON• •

'I

'I

1

JANE PARKER

1

: Crumb Square :
: CoHee Cake :
1

I

,...,L
,,, _

89c

JANE P4RKER
King Size

"'':' Donuts
With This i
""','...,,_75c With This
,,,_
Coupon
Coupon 1.

I

I

I
I
I
I

Apple
'~"'
n•e

I

1

:
1
r.:1 l

L!!J

Date Filled
Coffee Cake
, _,_6Sc With Th is

JANE PARKER
Fresh

I
I

:

I
PM ~:.
•
Coupon
I
Good
Thru
Sat.,
June
8th
I
At
All
A&amp;P
WEO's
I
• • • • • •liMIT ONE COUPON • • • • •

We Want You To Squeeze Our Bread
lin fact we dare you to squeeze it.)

I

I

• • • • • •llht'T ONE COUPON••• • •
r • •""' • •VAl UABLE COUPON • • • • •
I
JANE P4RKER

I

we hlvt to, to 11-.e 10U
1 nclltr ICill of b read.

...

.

JANE PARKER
Buttercreme
Filled Rolls
•
'~"'·
This
oft&lt;. 69C With
Cau pon
Good ¥tuu Sat.. June 8th
At~ll A&amp;P WEO's

1

SHORTENING

jum~D $100

64 me .

·YALUAILE COU~ON• • • • • •1

:

tn.n

'

MOUTHWASH

Pie

611k
With This
7 _. Coupon

'I

t- • VALUABLE COUPON• •
JANE PARKER .
Angel Food

•

'I

••

Cake
""L 59c With This
Coupon

Pkl .

I

I Good Thru Sat., June 8th
Good Thru Sat., June 8th
: Good Thru Sal., June 8th : Good Thru Sat., June 8th
A 20 mile " March for long, but they are ready to go, "
At All A&amp;P WEO's r:;-1
At All A&amp;P WEO 's r.::1
At All A&amp;P WEO's G 1
At All A&amp;P WEO's @] 11
1
Missions" will be staged explained . the Rev . Knitte l.
L.!.J
L-'.'J
7-· ..
tube
L.,LIMIT ONE COUPON •• J l . oUMtT ONE COUPON•• J I . • LIMIT ONE COUPON• • .I II. • &lt;I.IMIT ONI COUPON•• :.1
through Middleport and "Our objective is not fund
- • "VALUABLE CO.UPON1 • •i i• •vALUABLE COUPON• • .- i ••VALUABLE COUPON• • i - • •IJA.LUAILf..COUPON • _.
Pomeroy Saturday by the raising alone, but to prov ide an
youth and participating opportunity to u.nified in- ·. r • • • •V,l:lUAILf
• • •., r • • •" VALUAil£ COUPON• • • • 'I
FLEISCHMANN'S
1 1
BORDEN AMERlCAN
I
KRAFT
I
·sc OFF LAIEL
1 1
II
.
I
u
•
d
I
members of the Middleport volvement. The march will
With This I I
2sc Off LABEL
Soft Bowl
~~ I
Cheese
I
macaroni an
1P-300
United Pentecoswl Church.
really be somew hat of a "' 1
Coupon I I
Cold
Power
•
I
Sl'
' I Ch
D'
I
B
The Rev. William Knittel, spiritual experience for most of . ' I
Margarme
1 11
1ces
11
1nner 1I
or oap
an a l·lb. baq of
I ,I
Dt
t
1'
-eese
~
pastor of the church, and Leroy . the participants," he con1
E' ht O'CI lc
1 1
e ergen
,., •. 59c With This"'
'":'· $~09 With This · 1
'-'~"'"$100 Wit.h This 1
49c Wci thupTohni.s
.•
Sauters, y.outh director, an- tinued.
0
1g
OC
: :
...... $119 With This
,.,_
Coupon l . l
' •· II
Coupon
"""·
Coupon 1
.•
,
1
' nounced that the march will be
Bean
CoHee
1
.
1
...
Coupon
1,1
1
I
h
.
I
Their goal of $2,000 will be
Good Thru Sat., June 8th I 1 Goad Thru Sat., June 8th 1 Good Thru Sat., June 8th I Good Thru Sat..,June 8t ·
.•· a part of the annual "Sheaves allocated -toward the purchase . 11
Good
Thru
Sat.
.
,
June
8th
:
.
:
Good
Thru
Sal.,
Jul\
,
e
8th
At All A&amp;P WEO's --. I
At All A&amp;P WEO's r.:1 . I
At .All A&amp;P .WEO's "] I.
At All A&amp;P WEO's r.1 ' •
for Christ" fund raising drive of vehicles and equipment ·for
1
AtAIIA&amp;PWEO
~~ 1 I
~ I
~ I
t2..,.
I
AtAIIA&amp;PWEQ's
~I I
S
@' •••LIMIT ONI COUPON ••• ~·.LIMIT ONE COUPON•-• ••• J.tMITONE COUPON••• ... LIMIT ONE COUPON••
~
for missions project. Par- missionaries, church extension
I.,.,.
•
•
~lull
ow•
COUI'O.
"
_-·.
'!'.,
•
:J
!.
•
•
•
•'
IMIT
ON
I_
COUPONoo
•
•
•
•
.
.
.
u
'
.
•
•o
.
VAlUAILE
c
·o·'
•oN
•
•
'
• · ticipants in the march are programs in the United States
M
...
.,...
•
- - V4LUAILE COUPON . . . . . . "V4LUAILE COUPO"• -·
• -- v..LU48LE COUr N·-. ·-.
. Ur •
-~--v·LUAI.
LICOUPON
..........
r••••yALUAIUCOUPO..----·
•
I I
' ..
·- I
.
W
'th
Th'
I
t.f:
r
obtaining sponsors who pledge and Canada and cerl&lt;!in youth
15 1 '
"
I I
A&amp;P
I I
UP DISPOSABLE
I I
HEINZ
I
9C 1
a certain amount per mile evangelism projects.
1Sc
'
10'
: :
Beef
: :
Overnight
: :.
Keg-0
: I
Coupon: :
walked. Checkpoints are to be " Over 2,000 churches took part
el l
II
D'1Cipers . I
t
Kth
II
•••l·lb. ba9of
I •
.. set up along the march route to in last year's "March for II
•• a 20•01. ••• of
••• 12-oz. bor at Post
I I
tew
I I
I I
e c up
I I E' ht O'Clock I •
each
person 's Missions" drive, in which more
verify
:
Mg11 lc
Honeycomb
1 :
., .... - 9c With This: _1
.,..,_79cWith This: , •
.... 59c With Thi•r :
1g .
: .;
''mileage''_
.
1/
'"" 6
:r
:
Coupon 1 :
....
Coupon 1 :
Ja•
f!lupon 1 1 Bean CoHee
than
$1,250,000
was
raised
.
1
1 ..,
•1'fhis is necessary since the
1·•
.
Spray Sizing
Cereal
1 1
· .
a ..o
The march will begin · at 8· 11
1 1
1 1
1 1 Good Thru Sat., June 8th 1 1 G~od Thru Sat., June 8th 1 f Good Thru Sat., june 8th 1 1 Good Thru Sat., June Bth 1 :
march is not limi led to young a.m. Saturday at the MidGoodThruSat., June8th I
GoodThruSat., June8th
AtAIIA&amp;PWEO's r:l l 1
_AtAIIA&amp;PWEO's lOl l 1
At. AIIA&amp;PWEO's 171 1 1
AtAUA&amp;rWEO's r.:ti?;~.•
11
: ' people. Some of . the older dlepor t United Pentecostal ' .11I
At All A,&amp;P..WEO's .
[!] 1
At All A&amp;P WEO's
l!J
~I 1
.
· ~I 1
I.:.J I I
,
t!!ll )!.
1
1
members wl)o ..are involved Church.
., •l" •!PM,IT •ONI cO.UPON.~ "'·" -~ • • • • ••LIMIT ONE COUPON!'" • ::• • .,.; • ,LIMIT ONI COUPON • -.•""-':.LIMIT ONE COl!lON_~,,'- . •• LI~".T .01'\J COUPON •., • . -., oLI~IT 01'11 CO.UP~~~:• :'¥~
may find the 20 mile trek a bit
I !
•

ssc

;: Save ]l'k
u-

·s

4

f:

.-

: Save

/

td l ttH ·

Br,,., 1551. Hadir&gt; City Station,
tthlllll

l'l ll llll"l ;t!Pd . I·: Jt rlll l ii lh- ;d~·ultqJ .'

1"111! lrul ,.

l'I"!S iS 01' ll o, lltl't'l' SCl'I IIS ltJ b('

Mission march set

BUFFERIN .
lOO's

oil."'

pr udw · l ~

\' f l/" IJIIII"(' lllf•JrJII fiiiCJ/1

selected media are handli ng
dis tri buti on will be directed to
those facilities.

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) lrv Kaze, who began his career
in baseball 20 years ago, has
been appointed the administrator for communications of the
The
commissioners
National League.
estimated the county will save
Kaze, who most recently $750,000 next year. Currently,
worked for the San Diego some 1,400 persons are on
Chargers of the National general relief.
Football League, will asstune
The cutback does not affect
his duties · with the National .aid to dependent children or
League on June 18.
aid to the aged. ·

AUTO DEPT.

fla \ '111"

;111d \ llllllill'

fir st se rved " basis. Anyone

Gloria D.

(6th) , Goodson ( 2nd l.

,r,.l . ~l fft•ln;tll'd

;Ill lht'

fl!.l!h]l' lll." :t!'\'

Nat ional Leagu e
Randall L. Davis, Carolyn R.
Atia ·· · - -- - -,oo ooo 6oo- 7 9 o Davis to Harry Hall, Lots 117.
Ph i l
0 10 100 010 - 3 7 l
118, Middleport.
Ha rr ison.
H o use
(7)
and
Casanova ; Schu el er , Wa tt (7),
Basharat A. Mi ener, Ameena
Sca r ce (7) , Culver (9) and
B. Miener to Richard Dai ley ,
Boone . WP -Har rison (4 -6) . LP
Sc hu eler ( 3.6) , HR s -lum (&lt;ll h ) , Ethel Da iley, Parcels, Sci pi o.
Un se r (4t h ), Aa r on ( l Oth ).
Richard Da iley, Ethel Dailey
Mont
020 030 000- 5 7 1 to Georgia A. Christopher.
Ho us
000 000 000 - 0 5 1
M c Anally ( 4 -&lt;1) an d Hum · Parcels, Scipio.
phrey ; , Griffin , Cosg ro ve (5 ),
l)ale L. Connally. Donna l..
Johnson ( 9 J a nd M . May . LP
Co nnally to Chester R. Foully,
Griffi n (6 -2) .
Ocie
L. Foully. ParceL Olive.
(10 inns )
Denver
P. Staley, Wilma
Cini
000 100 200 3- 6 14 1
N.Y .
002 001 000 0- 3 9 0 Staley, Ches ter P Foutty. Ocie
Gu l lett , Car roll (7) , Borbon
L. Foully to Cecil Wagone r,
(8 )
and
Be n ch :
K oosman,
Park er (7), Sadecki (8) and
Lessie Wagoner, 13 Acres .
Grote . WP -Borbon ( d-2). LP ·
Orange.
Sa decki f2 -2J. HR -Garr e tt ( 6th J.
Belly J. Hawley, Norman E.
St . L outs
000 003 000- 3 8 1
San F ra n
00 1 120 01x - 5 10 0 Haw ley to Corbett E. Ratl iff.
Gibson, G ar man
(7)
and
Parcel, Salisbury .
Simmons ; Bradley . S osa (7J
Douglas D. Grover, 1'\orma
and Rader. WP -Bradley ( 6·41.
LP . Gibson
&lt;3 -6 ).
HR s -Bro c k
Grover to Douglas C. Grove•-.
( 3rd J. Smi th (Ht h ), M a t thews

;- .

pp(j
TRANSMISSION

"Gas· prohletns in older folks

})(&gt;p;-1r tmcn t 11f Et·o notl til' CJTH!

Dis tri ct

lrl-

;u' l' 1rn !;~ t i11 J to 1111' ndtHI Tt• a .
;n1d l" n l a s s ll to tild ;,1!,11 ])I'

11f Tr : rn ~­
por ta tlon wil l lt\1 111 with tlw

por tat ion,

li S ftll"lll ~.

pr-odut' ls. The

Ohio lle 1Jartnll'lll

Max H.. Farley said lhat

~.tJ )

Ill

dudlll ~~

DH. LA WHENCE E. LAMH

fered only on a '' fi rst come ·

01.

HARDWARE DEPT.

BIKE

Game

Calif
ooo 012 000- l 7 o
, Mil
010 000 30X - 4 7 0
Si n ge r
(7 4 ) and El
Ro
dr lg uez . Egan (8), Kob el. Ed .
Rodr iguez (6 ). Murphy (BJ and
Port er WP - Ed . Rodr ig ue z (4

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $5.68
HARDWARE DEPT.

McJI&lt;e lur e you ore

Te x a s a t C leveland :
forfe ited to Te x as 9 0

'

~ t ee l ,

5]99
GAllON

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

105011 000 - 8100
Ba i t
000 000 ooo o 3 o
~itzmorr i s {5 -2 1 and Hea l y .
Grtmsley , Je ff erso n (JJ, Rey
nol d s (9) and Hendr icks LP
G rims ley (5 -6 J HR s Ot is (l rd l.
Mayberr y (12 th t
K .C

24"
BAR-I-QUE GRILL

HECK'S
REG.
$1.66

FLAT WALL PAINT

HECK'S REG. $5.48

HECK'S REG. $3.48

HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

priced yet durable . gives vnsur·
posed p rotect1on against the

A "bet1er buy '' ot Hed' ~ . . . chao~
" orn te l" nlodcrn co lors plu~ two whrt_es
in t hi~ eo~ily applied lole)( wall por_nt
• . • durab le, ol1
q r ac1rve · ·· your ~o tr s·
foctmn ~~gua ranteed .

$999

HECK'S PREMIUM LATEX

Po int goes o n wi th li ttl e or no
dripp ing' o r sp latte r . l ow

FLAT WALl PAINT

HECK'S REG. 25'

•

LATEX

HR .

(2 n d l
Oa k .
100 000 000 1 6 1
Del
400 000 OOx J J 0
Ha m 1 It o n , L indbl a d {1!,
Odom O J and Ten a ce , Ha ney
(8 ) ; L aGrow ( 4 J ) and Moses .
LP -H amilton ( ~ 1J.

..

McGRAW

t' o~(ft ·i '

mrdia hav e bee·n i:lS kf'd to aid
i n t he dis tributi on ur thr

RAID
VEGETABLE
SEEDS

jJI"IJIJII 'fll IHil' ~ IIIJI!ld t •l !illlfiil ll '

Home state ltrged
on Ohio travelers

•

I

~ltddll' I"IUI't -l'l'"ll'n•) . ~ 1 • \\ ~.,, ,, , .... d.l .' . . h .tl t' .1. .' 1•

~~~p:h~s

Save

~~~~~·

3 " ., : _

:s ave

s

L

'

' I

I
I.

\

I •.
.

.

'

,I

,I

'

.,

'I

•

.I .

IJ

I'

'"'':

�'
'

1~ 'J'he Dally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomero~, 0 ., Wedgesday, June (~2,\

•oo-~~~~~~~t~~.:~?~"''" Ii.

~

~

7 00 - News 6, 10, What s My Line 8 Truth or Cons 3 Beat The
Clock ~ . Elec Co 20, Jommy Dean 13 Wacky World of
Jonathan Wmters 15. lenox Quartet Haydn s Opus 20 33

~

or \"'ns 6 , Black Journal 33
6 30- ,,ews3 4, 6,8 10. 15 , Room 222 13

•7 30- To Tell The Truth 6, Sale of the Century 8 The Ju dg e 10,

Beat The Clock 13 Pol1 ce Surgeon 3 Antl~ues 20 Ept sode
Actlon33 OnThe Money4 Cal loftheWest 15
·B 00 - Washington Conned 1on 33 Chase 3, 4 The Cw boys 6
13. Billie Graham Crusade 8, 15 , Bobble Gentry V Young
Filmmaker 's Fest tva l 20 .
18 30 Mov 1e ' Blood Sport 6 13 , Hollywood Te!~v t slon
Theatre JJ
'
9 00 - Movte 'Th e Wor l d of Henr y Onent " 3 4 15 Billy
Graham Crusade 10 V tdeo The "'ew Wave 20
00 - Horray for Hollywood 6 Ko1ak 8 10 News 20
Graham Cru sade 13 El 1ot Norton Rev •ews 33

10

Btlly

10 30 - Da y At Noght 33
11 00 - News 3, • 6 8, 10, 13, 15 Janaki33
11 30 -

Johnny Car son 3, 4, 15 MISS IOn Impossib le 6 Movtes
" The Am en ca no "
' Dest re In The Dust " 10 Untouchables

a,

13

12 30 - News 13 W ild Wild West 6
1 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4 T a k e F1ve For Ltfe 15 Sa l ute to Dar ryl

F Zanuck 13
2 00 -

6
6
6
6

N ews 4

THURSOA Y, JUNE 6, 1974
Sunnse Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Amert ca ' s Problems 10
Farm Report 13
Btble Answers 8, Pa tter n for Ltvtng 13

00 15 25 30 -

News 6

Ftve

Farm ftm e 10, M ornmg Report 3
Today J 4 15 News 8 10 Otck Van Dyke 13

7 00 -

Make A

Wosh 6

7

New Zoo

30 -

8 00 -

Revue6 Tennessee Tuxedo 13
Capt Kangaroo 8, 10 Sesame St 33 Ne w Zoo Revue 13,

Jeff's
8 25 8 30 8 30 -

Coff1e 6
Jack LaLanne 13
Brady Bunch 6
News 13

9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 AM 3, Pht l Donahue 15 Abbott - Costello
8 , Fnendly Junction 10 Wtld W ild West 6 , M ovre D Day the
Sixth of June'

13

Mtster Rogers 33

9 30 - To Tell the Tr th 3 TBA 8 Electric Company 33
9 55 - Ch"
Whit e Reports 10
10 00 - Dina , Shnr e 3 IS .: f)ker 's Wt ld 8 10 Company 6, An

tlques 33
Jeopa rdy 3 4 1r

10 30 -

33

11 00 -

Gdm blt 8, 10 , Wheel s, Kilns and Clay

W tzard of Odds 3, 4 15

Password 13 Mike Dougl as 6,

Now You See It 8 10 TBA 33
II 55 - CBS News 8 t.,an Imel's World tO
12 00 - Jackpot ' 3, 15 Password 6, Bob Braun's 50 50 Club
News B, 10, l J M1ster Rogers 33
12 J()- .ipl tt Se\.on d 6 Search for Tomorrow

4

8, 10 Celebrity

Sweepstakes 3 15 Afternoon With OJ 13, Electric Co 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - All My Choldren 6, 13 , Concentration 8, News 3, Nat For
Women Only 15 What's

My

Line? 10. Flower Show 33

1 30- 3 Oil A Match 3, 4, 15 As the World Turns 8, 10 , Lei's
Make A Deal6, 13 Let's Grrm a Garden 33
2 0)- Days of Our Lives 15 , Gu iding Light 8, 10, Newlywed
Game6 13 TBA 3, Dugout Dope4. Our Street33
2 10 - Baseball 3, 4
2 30 - Doctors 15 Edge of N1ght 8, 10 . Girl In My Life 6, 13 ,
-~-· 33
00 - ""' 'urorer wwv' tu 1.,, General Hospltal6, 13, Price Is Right
A,
10 ,
Ultas,
Yoga
and
You
20

J

Jo- One life to L tve 6, 13, How to Survive A Marr i age 15,
Match Game a, 10, Dollars Decoslons 20, Episode Action 33
4 00- Sesame Sl 20, 33, Mr. Cartoon &amp; The Banana Spl11s 3,
Huck and Y091 6, Somerset 15; I Dream of Jeannie 13 , Tat
tletales8 , Movie " Mr Belevedere Goes to Col lege" 10
J

4 30 - Gilligan's Is 6, Green Acres J, Bonanza 15 , Virginian 8,

Daniel Boone 13
~5- TBA 4
5 00 - Mister Rogers 20 33. Bonanza 3. Merv Griffin 4, Big
4

Us.

k;

"'

By Helen Hottel

••

Fat Chance Vs. Full l!earu :
Dear Helen
I told my wife I'd shave my beard when she loses all the
weight she's gamed since we were roamed She says this Isn 't
fa1r, for all the wh1le she 's losmg those 60 pounds, she has to
"suffer" through my beard
I say what's a few thousand extra hall's on the face, com·
pared to blubber• Looks like a MeXIcan stand-&lt;Jff Any solution •
- STIJBBORN
Dear Stubborn
How about cutting an mch from your beard for every 10
poWlds your wife loses• If yow- whiSkers aren't that LONG, then
shave aome off the s1des each time she truns somethmg off HER
s1des - H
Dear Helen
I have a fnend who IS always complaing because no one
comes to see her Feeling guilty, I called up and asked when it
would be converuent to come over She sa1d "any time," but
when I arnved she was watching a soap opera, that turned mto a
long strrng of aoap8 and game shows on TV
Each lime I opened my mouth, I was shushed. Fmally I got
up and walked out, with a bnef "Good-bye."
Now she's telllng everybody I'm rude. Should I apologize? I
don 't feel this "soap" freak needs me -IGNORED
Dear Ignored
Nor does she need your soft soap Why apologiZe when SHE
was the rude one• - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
We read everywhere that regular self-inspections for cancer
s1gns are a must and we should never delay sleing a doctor If we
fmd one.
I found a lump on my breast, went to my doctor, and he said
11 was ''probably just a blocked gland'" I insisted on fw-ther tests
- a spectrotberm, I believe it's called He said It wasn't
necessary, but when 1 held finn he wrote out the referral, and on

5

However you re apt to make a

For Thuraday, June 8,1974
ARIES (March 21·Aprff 19)
Th1ngs w1ll work out belter for
you m the long run 1f you don t
let others get too Involved m
your present plans

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

Today you Will express your·
self 1n a way that w i ll not be
well recetved by others Harsh
words w111 draw a similar
response

QEMINI (May 21-June 201 In

your matenal dealings w tlh
others today you II have to be
ca reful and bus1nessl1ke Dts ~
pules or mtsundersrandmgs

are likely
CANCER (June 21-July 221
In order not to be disappointed don 1 ask co·operallon from a person who nor
ma lly lsn t co -operative Shes
even less helptul today
LEO (July 23· Aug 22) You II
be a rather reluctant worker
Your at11tude 1s gomg to make
more at each task than 11 really
IS

VIRGO (Aug 23·Sepl 22)

considerably
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 221
Someone alder than you who
holds very strong opln1ons w111
give you a real patn tn the neck
1f you start dtscusslng philaso·
phles

SAGITTARIUS (Now 23·

Dec 21) The financtal drain on
your purse Is apt to be qutle

hea vy at thts time Cut some
corners on your spendmg

CAPRICORN (Dec 22· Jan
10) Opposmg v1ews will be
very strong tn one of your
c lose personal relatJonshtps
Don t say things you II later

regret

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb
19) Responslb1llt1es that
you ve swept under the rug are
going to ca ll for prompt atten·
lion Best you attend to them

PISCES (Feb 20·March 20)
You r soc ta l plans wtlt undergo

some re\I JStons but not of your
maktng Someone 1n the grou p
IS rewrttlng the s-cenano to su1t
her schedu le

the bottom of the sheet under "explanaUons," he scribbled,
"Cancerphobia "
Since several people in my famlly have dled of cancer, I
don't think that was fair. Do you'- Naf A HYPOCHONDRIAC
Dear NAH;
I think this was neitber fair nor wise I also think that very
soon women will be receiving routine spectrotltenns tests or
"scails" for possible breast cancer, juast as they now have
yearly Pap tests to check for cancer of the uterus.
Better a few dollars invested for a negaUve report than a
lump discovered too late ' - H.
'

~lgJOOID~®~ ~tow#IJ MIIWl , _
Hy i iiN II \(o. lfN &lt;llll

u«II H Jf l Lif

Unscramble these four Jumbleo,
letter to each aquare, to

on~

Valley 6.

6 00 - News 8, 10, Sesame Sl 20, ABC News 13, News 3, 4, t5 ,

Truth or Conseo 6, Lilias, Y09a and YouJ3

222 13. Washington Connection 33

7 00 - Beat the Clock&lt;!, What's My Line 8, News 6, 10, Elec Co

20 . Trulh or Consequences 3, Let's Make A Deal 13, Sports
Desk 15, Turned on Crisis 33
7 30- Hollywood Squares 3, Wild Kingdom 10; To Tell The
Truth 6. Beat the Clock 13, Zoom 20; Dealer's Choice~ . Johnny
Mann's Stand Up and Cheer 15 , Ozzfe's Girls 8
8 00 - The Waltons 8, Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15, Chopper One 13, 6,
Movie "Guys and Dolls" 10, Nallonal Spelling Bee 20, 33
8 30- Firehouse 13, 6
9 00- Ironside 3, 4, Kung Fu 6, 13, War and Peace 33, Movie
"The Man from the D1ner's Club" 8, The Place For No Slory
20
10 00- News 20, Streets of San Franclsco6, 13. Comedy World 3,

10 30 - Day at Night 33
11 00 - News 13: Janakl33, News 3, ~. 6, 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 15 , Untouchables 13, Mission lm
possible 6, Movies " The Spy with a Cold Nose 1 ' 8, " Vanentlno"
10
o2 30 - News 13, Wild Wild Wes1 6
two sp11ut!S after your partner's 1 00- Tomorrow 3. 4, Take Five For Life 15; Geraldo Rivera
Goodnight America 13
double What do you do now'}
2 00 - News 4

when

It lo needed.

~:et1tll"
by THOMAS JOSEPH

20 Ocean
(abbr )
21 Pharaoh
after

Rameses I

Z'l

u_

to

Zl Compact

23 Trustworthy 30 - Wy
31 M-I'IGpl'll-

no, Roullr&amp;t·

34 Gaunt
31 Sailor

22 Jalopy
25 Kind of

nickname
28 Name in
boxing
29 Comfort
32 You
(Ger.)
33 Generally
35 Tell
tales
37 Pelvic
bones
38 Require
39- Bator
40 Dilatory
41 Lone
Ranger's
trademark

[5) 22

ORDINANCE NO 101 3 74
An Ord,nance for th e pos lion o f
ASSiS tant Park o ,re c to r and
Poo l Manager and to f 1;&lt;c the
~alary for the Swrmrn ng In
structor
Be II orda1ned by the Coun cr l
of th e V llaqe or Mrddl epor l as
follow s
Sec
I
That
there
be
es t ab l rshed the pos t 1on of
a'!&gt;s ts l ant Park D r ec l or and
Pool Manager
Sec II The sala r y for the
posd10n o f aSSIStar"\1 Park
D re cto r and Poo l Manag er
shalt be $ 180 00 per mon t h for
Jun e Jul y a nd Augus t to con
t rnu e tor th e per1od of t m e th e
sw mm1ng Pool rs op en wh rch
rsno r mally 1rom Mem orrnl Day
throu gh Labor Oily
Sec
111
Be rl f ur th er
reso l ved that a wage lor th e
Swrmm 1ng Instructor be and
the same 1S hereby f1xed at 57 00
per hour
Sec IV That th1S Ordrnance
1s her eby de term n ed to be an
emerge n cy measur e necessary
for the 1mmedra t e preservat1on
or t he pe ace health sa l ety and
ge nera l
wel f are
of
the
nhab1tants of l he Vi l lage and
for th e r eason that
1t
rs
necessary th a t t hr s 1egts lal1on
b ec om e mmedtalely eff ect v e
Sec V T h1s Dr dmance sha ll
take effect &lt;Jnd bern for ce f r om
nnd a ft er May 28 1974
Pa sse d the 2Bih day of May
197 ,j

One letter simply •Iandi for another. ln thll umple A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc Slnele !etten,
apootropheo, tho length and fonnatlon of tho warde ore Ill
hlnll. Each day the code letters are dU!orent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
CWMZ

I

the
1urpriH

to

"r I

Prill II - - -

I I I J"

(A.iwert IOID0,....W,
Ye1terd•1'•

AXYDLBAAXJ,
LONGFELLOW

Is

No" orranrt
circled ltlltrs
form
the
&amp;IIIWer, aa
[
I
I
J
~=::::::=.=:~~:;~=::_~•:u~u••led by the above cartoon.

Jumbt"' BRAWL SOOTY EXPEND

I

An1wer1

'

ASSAIL

How lhr butv carloon.itl• •ettled the

Ma nn •ng D Web ster
Probate Judge
of sa1d Counry
19 (6J 6 Jtc

:17 Girl's

LI

WMT

VLKT,

CQUPHG
YFX

VQLDWMMQ

WCH

GXQKK

UPWQMG
UPWQMG.-

CFIIQMQ

Yeateiday's Cryptoquote: MAN WILL Nar LIVE WITHOUT
ANSWERS TO HIS QUESTIONS. - HANS MORGENTHAU

Fred Ho ff man
Presrdent of Council

&lt;C 117« Kl~ reoltlno s,.,dJ..u, r...)

A tt est
Gene G rat e
Cl erk

g""ll•on-THEY OREW LOTS

(6) 5

12 2tc

,foK86

WEST

EAST

ORPHAN ANNIE-C:LAII• MVTTI

• 3

• 8

'K Q 183
+J97

'A9652
+K843

.. J9S2

,foQto7

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

SOUTH IDI
• AQJ965

'7
+A 106
.. A43

East West vulnerable
West

North

East

Pass 2•
Pass
Pass Pass
Pass
Qpemng Jead - •K .

South

l.

4•

.

By' Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
A Flonda reader asks,
"How should I have played
the d•amonds"" I did lead toward dummy's queen, only to
have East take the tr1ck w1th
the kmg and lead the su1t
back to g1ve h1s partner a
tr1ck w1th t he jack My
partner pomts out that •f I
had s•mply stripped the hand
of other su1ts 1 could have let
West hold the first tr1ck wtth
the seven and made my con·
tract"
The answer to our reader's
questton IS that wh1le the play
suggested by h1s partner ®!. DIDNT REALIZE 1HI5TTIIP10
would have worked th1s time GREECt:,_ ~ND 'THE RESULTANT
11 was both unnatural and un· PUBLICI Y1 WERE 50
necessary The way for South IMPOII.TANTID
WINN IE AND
to play the diamonds was to
make an opponent lead them
for h1m
After ruffmg the second
heart, South had an automat·
1c way to make h1s contract
He should draw trumps One
lead would be enough Then
play ace. kmg and another
club
It wouldn't matter wh1ch
opponent led the diamond or
where the kmg and Jack were
located South would Simply
play low from whic hever
hanC: had to play f1r st and be
sure "f two tncks m the smt
Suppose the defender re
fused to lead a diamond• He
would have to lead a club or
heart South would s1mply
ruff m one hand and discard
a diamond from the other to
wind up losmg just one dJa·
mond tr1ck

The Motor Vehicle Manu·
fa cluters AssocJatron reports
that about 85 per ce nt of all
automobiles 111 use m the
Umted States a re equ 1pp'e d
With one or mot e emtssJon
co ntrol systems A1r pollutiOn
caused by automobi les has
conseq uen tly bee n g reat ly
reduced compa red to pre
vmus level s, and wil l con

,, .

tJJ ~U e

to deere a ~ as mar e
new cars w1th em rssw n con
THE BORN~SER

•
Cl '" "' ~LI "",,~us , , llll

I 'M OONG 10 SEE

IF WINNIE WANTtl
ME 10 5TAY LATE

tu tnn~h l ~

'\ \

AND HElP HER

o

trois rep la ce old e r c ar s
v.h1ch have lim1ted or no co n
trois. The Wot ld Almana c
notes
'&gt;;~WS t

\J (:]{

t

IY74

-.:n.:H I' HJS~

\ SS'

OJT

The Almanac
By Umted Press International
Today IS Wednesday , June 5,
the !56th day of 1974 "'th 209 to
follow
The moon IS between lis full
phase and las t quarter
The mormog sl&lt;lrs are Venus
and Jupiter
The evenmg sl&lt;lrs are Mer
cury, Mars and Saturn
Those born on this day are
under the s1gn of Gem1m
Madame Ch1ang Kat-shek,
w1fe of the leader of Nabonalist
Chma, was born JIUle 5, 1897
On Ibis day in h1story
In 1917, more than 9 5 million
Amencans between the ages of
2! and 31 reg1stered m World
War f draft
•
In 1933, Pres1d~t Franklm D
Roosevelt s1gned a bill abolish·
mg the gold sl&lt;lndard
In 1966, Amencan astronaut
Gene Cernan left Gem•m 9 for

ALlEY OOP

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

•
The btddmg has been
5
Wtsl
North Easl South
t•
Double Pass 2'
2t
2NT
Pass ?
You, Soulh, hold
• 6 5 'J 4 3 2 t A Q 91. 8 53
What do you do now•

a

two- hour !

10-mmute

"spacewalk "
In 1968, Sen Robert !(ennedy
was fatally shot m Los Angeles
by a 24·year-&lt;Jid Arab nallonal
later 1dentif•ed_ as Sirhan
Sirhan The assassm was
sentenced to life 1mpnsonment

fiAI'INS OUR

EARs fiERCED

~ 'IOOJI( IDEA,

LIJCILLE!

A-Bid &amp;hree notrump Your

partner has made a very strorq;

A thought for the day
Pres1dent Franlthn D Roosevelt sa1d, ~ "There 1s no

b id

TODAV'S QUESTION
Instead or passmg East has b1d

•'

md1spensa ble man "

Pomeroy
Motor Co•

OF
QUAliTY

- J

•

I

( I

f\

I..OIIliJ H

'I'!

I I

ho

•
r1r

I

I
I I

'I

I,

• ll

I

I

~nr
r{

p tdy

r

f t 1-

t

t ) It

r!

r

1\ '

l 'lll,~ll')

~

(

Lost

h i Ime t re s
3 18 V 8 powN

ll

6 ) ] 1p

11 30

Ra c 1nq 1 on, 1m lc s
8csl Ph o to on Coun t y
Road 56 13r mstonr R.J cc w;; y
Park Coolv1IIC 011rO
66 3 (

PI A N O tunmg Cnil r le&lt;; Sc o n
Pt&gt;on e 99? ]71B fl.; ,ddl c por t
OhiO
6 5 51p
YARD Sale Sn t June8 91m
Women sand m err s cl olh 1 n~
sh oes
pocke t books
oB Q
qr II drape s bedspreads
blanket s
p llows
tape
r ecorde r
co ff ee tabl e oc
cordt on d1 s he s whatnot s
glassware rad 10
qam es
Go•no overse,;s M v'!&gt;l s£111'
V Vril n Jo hnson r c;;1 drn cc
Cherry St
R~• c I'!'{&gt;
O~&lt;~ro
Joseph Stephenso n
6 5 ] tp

GU N Shoo t 7 p m Fr1day at th e
Factory
Ra c 1ne Gun Cl ub
choked quns only Assorte d
meats
~ 5 l tc
SW E EP E R Repa rr P arts and
Supples
Oav 1s Vacuum
Cleaner
11
m rle!'&gt;
up
Georg es Cr eek Road o ff Slat e
Rout e 7 Phon e JJ6 029J
6 5 II c
AUCTION

The follow 1nq
property o f Gertrude
McBr d e w 11 be sotd a t 'he
res dence lower College Rd
( ' mtle o ff 51 Rl
12.:1 1
Syr acu'!&gt;e Oh10
FRIDAY
June 7 197.:1 12 30 p m Nash
sf anc:
blanket chest
oak
rock er 6 l eg stan d ladder
bac k rattan bo i c ha1r 2 pc
bedroom su1te ch1flarobe 5
c hars ( 0r 1~1na1 J cane bot
tom
w1 l h
table
Early
o\m err can loveseat
3 sec
bookcase
s ew 1ng r oc k e r
small p1ne tr easu re ches !
cedar chest
maple bed
(smg l e P 1neapple P ost ) pre
s afe
RCA
Vtctor
TV
pla tfor m r ocke r r ecltnde r
v bra to r oak washstand oval
p ctu re fra me Ke nm ore 30 n
ran ge ele cir 1c heater me t ul
d1sh cupboa r d H&amp;R 32 p 1SIO I
antique l amp stand ant 1que
stool bool\s sterescope an d
p1 clu res F n gr d atre r ef S1ck
rm
c harr
trun k
old
lash toned cheesebox Aust r a
Chr na c ream and suga r
Germany Ch na Drsh
P1n
He1 sey Bavar ia Salt
Hant.1
pa1nted Nrppon butt~r d1Sh
Havrtand L moge Ch rna
Pape rw e ghl eye I st cu p
stan~ tars
cream crock
T er ms
cash
BRAD FO RD
AUCTION CO
Box 116
Rae n e Phone 949 3161 C C
Bradf ord
Auc t
A
C
Br ad fo rd
Mgr
S IGNED
Ally In Fact Edtson Hob
s tett er
6 5 1tc

GARAGE Sale Sa t
Ju n e 8
num erou s 1t ems 9 am Mrs
Ge~ S!out Syra cuse
6 5 31c

FAB RI C sa le A ll fabrr c n shop
on sale one week only
Monday
June 3. through
Saturday June e Al l f r sl
qual1 ty polyes ter kn fs as l ow
as S1 49 per yard we wd l be
close d for vaca t ron fr om June
1.:1 to J&lt;J i y 1 Ca ro l na F a br c
Route7 one half mrle north ol
Ches ter
Oh 1o
H enr y and
Ma ry Hunte r owners
6 ,j 4tp

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB
Frt &amp; Sat. Ntghts
10 Ttl 2
Mus1c by : Bill Mar ·
shall and Satrsf1ed
Minds
For Sale
5N ICErrdn ghO r s.es allgenlle
Phone 7&lt;~2 411 1 After 5 c all
742 550 1 or 7d2 6863
6 5 61C
PUBLIC NOTICt
Lead1 ng Creek Conser vancy
D stncf Box 278 Rutland Oh10
45775 does hereby r equest bt ds
for
2 Way
Radro
Com
mu n tcalrons
EQU t pm ent
cons1Sf 1ng of the followmg
2 - 100 Wa ft Mobtl Rad ros 2
f requency operat•on
Tone
Coded
Squelch
Sol 1d St at e
Ctrcu11 r y
1 - 100 Wa tt Base Statton 2
f requency operation
Ton e
Coded SQ uelch
So lr d Stat e
C1rcut1ry
1 _.__ Remote Control Un1t 2
f req u e ncy _ operation
Tone
Coded Sque l ch
Sold S tat e
Ctrcudry
2 Portables , 2 frequen cy
opera! on Ton e Code d SQuelch
SO l id State C1rcu try M rn rmum
1 5 watts RF Power
100 ft Transmrssron L tne
1 - Antenna
And any and all n ecessary
f rx tur es
Thr~ eQutpmen t must
be
cqutvalent to the Top L n e
Equ,pmenf
produced
bY
manufacturer s
such
as
Motorola or General E lec lrr c
B1dder wr l l be r equ 1r ed l o
delrVE:I" eQuipment and lllSfall
Wtthtn 100 .days
Bed openrng wd l be June 7
1974 12 00 Noon at th e Co n
se rvan cy Dr s tr ct OfflCe rn
Rut land , Ohro

''

~&lt;;y

'1 &lt;. f • r t o r

1\

II

(n

1

r{"l

\ ' 1 ''

11~

Y 'RO ~ 1\L E C1?9 " ou1 11 Tl1 rrd
Ave
fl.,~ ddlf'port
Tu£' '!&gt; d av
Wcd neO. dd y
rmc; Tl ur S(!i'!t
Ju n ll~6

1]

II (

OLD t urn l ure o,lk tilble'!&gt;
cloc k s l l tloli.C~ br 1sc; beds
d• Sh l•s &lt;le&lt;;k s or comp lete
1/1. r r! e

M

1\v t o&lt;,
con p l t tr
J Hi
d el vPr d ro o 1r y.1rc1
wr
11 r !q p 1\ t i Q i l O ll r \ 'ltl ~d l')c.~y )f
" l rlCh o t ~c r ,1p rn('t,li S i"l n d
ro n (.( cl('r &lt;., \,11v acw '-. l clt (
ROUT I' I I IJ
I P o mr r oy
Otno Pi10 tH Q!J? ~ 1&lt;'- R
'i I ) ?flp

!LJ N K

9~ ? 350 ~

( &lt;'!II

5 1 I 761C

1R A L ER

I&lt;ICill tor couple 10
l l"'- Nor tl • o t Po n c r ov ,1 1r
con cl rl ro n ul SAO per mon tl1
p!f' c tr c
v,ltf'r 1nel
r wcr
t urn &lt;\hf'CI (11 9'1"'7 17'1
f. , • tc

KOSCOT
KOSM ET I CS
&amp;
IN IGS
For a good 11ne ot
Cosmei !CS
fr endly serv ct•
and someone to chat wrth
g ve me a '" all He len Jane
Brown 99'2511 3
JIUI.! NI '-. HED
3 19 tr c
&lt;ltfutr.-, only 111 ~,~ dct! rpor t
Pt1onr 9'1 '} lfl l t
A TO Z Marl used ! urn shed
~ 1 ;r l! c
app lt ances clothmg drshe s
and m1sc
Rt
33 OIJPOStt e TR•\ ILER
Hrown .-. rr .1r10r
trader court
Hanford W
Cou rt 997 11? 1
Va
5 79 tf (
4 10 tf c

1p1rt~lr n1

S.11e

S illurdr~ y

Ru t land
otf1cc

&gt;r dav

and
Roild
Srcms &lt;.Ia t at po st
N e l ~o n

6 t 31c
At CK Y arcJ Sa l e June~ 6 and

7t h 9,1 m IO 7 D tll '11 10 1
P ,Hk
Sf
M ddi COQ t I
Clo th ng
d e pr~' ~S on
a lass
Avon bolll es s!l o!{tun m sc
Al l r e &lt;~ son abl e
6 \ ] I(

f&gt;IEIG &lt;;Co un!y H umane Soc c-r y
Thr fl Shop ope n 10 ct m trtl
J 30 P m
eve r y F r 1day Clnd
Sa tu r day
New used stoc k
arr r v 1ng wee k ly Clot11 nq
collect bl es
appl 1nnce s
lreu sur e-; re cord '!&gt; p re tur es
book s lr1 m ps toys Locnted
&lt;'~ C r o ss fr om
Pomeroy Po s t
0 11 (('
~ 17 I ! C

3 .1\NO t ROOf\,, t u rn r~h ed ond
unl urn1ShCd
apa rt me nt 5
Phon e 997 5~:1 1
t 1? t fc
PRivt,T E mee t nq r oom for
any o rqan •Jat on phone 997
397 5
J 11 II c

For Sale

6 I I!

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
PHONE 992-2156
WA I TRE SS E S wanted Apply 1n
pe r son Cr ows Stenk House
5 1J ttc

POSITIONS AVAILABLE
Male or Female
Help Wanted
Full or Parttime
Opemngs
No expe nence necessary

On the job training.
Ground floor op
portumty.
Coni act Ge neral Manager
Mon &amp; Tue s Only

pA M to 5 30 PM
For conf1de nftalmterv1ews

I 446 -0677

ttH!
I' 0rr

'

o prano rn
your &lt;'H P CI .md wou l d I k e
&lt;.ome re spo t1Srble party to
tak.e over payment s
Call
Cred 1 WnnRq er
(6 1 ~ 1
771
)66 9 or wr te "60 Ea st Ma rl
Slr Pe l Ct11ll cot he Of1 o 4~ 601
t 7 !l c

NE 1\R E p1ck tHt up

If&lt;

I

1

1\1

!.&lt;

~. l

1\

r

':,

I

RHODODENDR O N S
pu r ple
and p nk
Clela 1d G r een
housP Ge rald rn e Cle lil nd
6 3 3t c
vROCERY bUS rness for sa le
Bu1ld1ng for sale or lease
Phone 77 3 56 18 I rom 8 30 p m
to 10 p m l or a ppo rnlment
3 20 lie
REDUCE safe ano fas t With
GoB ese Tabl ets &amp; EVap
water p li S
Nelso n Drug
6 5 ttc
NEW I mprov ed Z1pp es
th~&gt;
great 1ron p II now wr th
V la m 1n C N el son Drug
6 5 ltc
YOUNG r abb t s for S2
378 6261

U&lt;.;Fn T.lpiln q,1 ., r'lnq r
lr P ,lt
! or &lt;l PI or tr il lcr f' f-0 1, l6 '

\.11 6H

l

1 HOTPOINT
l AIR CONDITIONERS I
4,000 BTU

I

'109.95

r

EXPERT

tap e combrna110n d sp eaker
soun d
sys!em
Ba l ance
S106 3J o r eas~;: terms Call
992 3965
s 19 !fc.
WE H AV E all your upholstery
needs
Bur l ap
den 1m
cambr1c loam glue zrppe r s
rackmg slrrp
spnn gs and
c l tps chipboard
Duttons
1w1ne sew ng thread
legs
uphols t ery books da c ron
sprrng fw ne tacks well cord
cotton " s w rve l bases and
loam foam foam Pomeroy
Recovery
622 East Marn
Str eet Phone 9n 7554
5 15 2&lt;itc

FURNITURE
Stop tn and Se~
Floor Dt s play

Our

Wheel Alignment

Wat e r L1n es a nd Pow er
Lin es All wo rk don e by the
foot or contra ct Al so doz er
work and se pttc tank s tn
"S tu lied

•s.ss
- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094
Ope n S T1 IS
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E M a1n 1 Pom er oy 0

.See or Call
Bob or Rog er Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

Wtlktmon Smal l Eng m e
992 3092

Jomeroy Home &amp; Autv

'

I

~1

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY

DITCHING SERVICE

M oved l o R ull.:trHJ
4
tn le
ns1de ctl y I rn t on rrght ~ J
corner B •rc k St and Rt 1?1

J

Free E sf •mut es

'l,

Now Open l or Bu sr nPss

I

742-5293

. J

Ph one 9fl2 7 181

Auto Sales
19!t ( HI V EIIF
~' '&lt; ((' •' nt
run r1 nq con e; t ron 1 r 1d c!y
Th fwt M.l&lt;,o 1 W V,;
'&gt; I~ 1' r
l QM C tlE VI-J()l E" f
Qf)j

{fr

I

~

Bu1ltto Your Spec s
De liv ered to Job S1t e

808 W M a1 n St

""'

C. rlt

l?l fl

5

I'

c

~ 1 ,~

61 Mt:f.i'C U RY fL.'ont('r r ,

Pt10n1 1691 w rrkc11 ys

• L awn Boy
• Tecumseh
• Kohler
• W 1sc.on srn
• Al l other
ma k es

Ma son , W Va

GREAT
COUNTRY

W.11er E le clrtc Ga s Sewer
L1n 0'&gt;
tn ~ l a l lcd
Wor k
qu Han t ee d
Oou~ r Backhoe Tr uck !&gt;
Lnne:. f on e &amp; Ftll Dtrt
Co rnm erc tal Res tdentt al
Cu n '. l ruclton &amp; Re model

STEREO
92.1
WMPO-FM

s?no

"oc oe

, , ' " •' ' W &lt; II

we"

6A I

DH.Nrt

6 'J 6tp

Real Estate For Sale

TEAFORD
Virgil B. Tea ford. Sr.
Brok er
110 M ec hanic Stree t

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING - Re nova te d 2
BR hom e wtlh large cl oe,e t s
Nrce bath and k1l ch en Wall to
wall carpef •ng Nal gas Jur
na ce Garag e dnd over J 1 a cr e
ot land Young fru 1t A skmg

51290000
MIDDLE PORT

Large 9

r oom ho use full bas em e nt 2
porches 2 ba th s now 1n 2 apts
Rent one to help w th th e
ove r hea d
A sktng
only

518 000 00
8 ROOMS
N ea r Gav n 2
buth s modern ktlchen Huge
front porch forced atr fu rnace
full basement v..t! h showe r l 37
of an acre on Rt 7 Want

S15 000 00
GROCERY All stock clnd
A g ood
so m e equ pmen t
bu s1ness lor a cou ple wtlh
amb !ton Work f or your&lt;&gt;e lf
and I ve a !of bett er W1ll se ll
no w tor the value of th e stock
Interested see us now
LOT ~ - For your new home
We have se Jera l tn th e M e rg s
and Eastern sc hool d slrr c t s
Call to see

LIF E IS EXC ITIN G WHE N
YOU BUY SOMET HING YOU
ENJO Y CHOOSE A NEW
ONE AND WE WILL SELL
YO URS
GOR DON B. TEAFORD
HELE .N l

TEA FORD

ASSOCIATES

992-3325 or

992-3615
..;...,_
litE

WISEMAN

Rea IESa
I Ie FOr SaIe
Phon~

992
6 1 Si c

? flEDROO N' hou se rn Md
cil e port
New krtche n li nd
b&lt;11h ilppl un ccs r~1 c lud c d
Ca l l Qq] 53 10
6 2 26tp
f R OO M S ano ba t h CJclS f ur nace

742 5595

Bill Brown . Owner
Rutland , Oh1o

-

'
SE PTIC
TA NK S clc an l" d '
r easo nabl e r;l1C S Ph
116!
t7fl2 Gu li •POi iS Jo t n Ru ss e t) ,
own t: r il nd operator
5 I ? I fc

DOZER work land c 1ear1ng b y
t he ac r e hourly or co n tract
lar m ponds ro ads et c Larg e
do zer and operafor wrth ove r
20 years expenence Pull 1n s
Excavatmg Pomero y Oh10
Phone 992 2.478
12 19 li e

SEPTIC
TA NK S
AROB I~S EWAGE
SYSTE M s-"'CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
SA N I TA TI O N
STEWART OH I O PH 661

H &amp; W Relr1geraf10n Se rv tces
R e l r ,ge ralor s fre e1e r &lt;1 1r
condt lr oners and com mere ell
un11s Phone 99 2 5587 or 99 2

CLELAND

"

FIRE DEPARTMENT
EQUIPMENT
EXT INGU ISHER
SALES&amp; SERVICE
HOME ALARMS

SEWING MA C HINE S Repa11
serv1ce all makes 99 :&gt; 2?84
The Fao r c Shop Pom ero y
A uthor 1zed Sr nger Sales and
Ser v iCe We Sharp en Sc ssors
3 29 lfc

1?&lt;11 !1 qar&lt;to ~ 1n Syr ac use Call SERVICE S o ff ered
fu r noture
Q9'} J B60
upholsle r ng
r eason ilblc
6 2 6tp
rale s P1 c kup and d e l ve r y
free
eS I1mate s
3
profe ssst onat cr a ft s 11cn to
NIC E i story hom e to r sa le by
serve you be tt er and l asl er
own er 3 be droom batlr and
Phone Mowr ey c; Upho l stery
modern k1t chen n ew qil s
675 41 S4 PI Pleasan t w V a
f urn.1 ce sec lud ed y~ud for
5 30 161 c
pr va cy Ho mC&gt; n e xce ll ent
c ondolron Prt cc d to sci! at
OPE N Roger Hy sell s Garage
'!.15 00\l
LOUliCd
n M id
(tleport Oh o
near Cro ss r oads on Stat e
Rou te 12.:1 8 30 to 6 p m
6 4 3tc
Monday through Sa tu-rday
Ptwn e 992 56B:&gt; ar 997 7 121
5 15 :/61C

3035
10

.:1

lf c

SEPTIC
TANKS
c leaned
Modern Sa nt1at1on 9Q2 3954 or
991 73.:19
10 23 li e
READY MIX
CONCRE TE
del1 v e r e d rrghf r o you r
pro 1ect Fas t ilnd easy Fre-e•
est ma t es Phone 992 328 4 ,.'1
Goeglern Ready M1x Co
Mtddleporl Oh1 0
630tfc ·

7

~~---

-----

C ORADFORD Auct1oncN
Como le te Sc r v1ce
Phone 9&lt;~9 387 1o r 9119 3161
Rac.ne Oh•o
Cr1 1t Brad ford

-

5 I t fc.

0 DELL A \r nemenl lo ca t ed on
Rout e 171 and Count y Rd ~
Cro s'&gt; road s complete ! rant
end ru n eup and brak e se r v1cc
Pl ease c all lor appo 1n t ment1
71\2 373/
'

7 :

•, '

'20 &lt;~

5 15261 p

REALTY

FUR
;.REE esl •mat es on
alum rnum
repla cemen t
w1ndows 51d.ng stor m doors
and wtn dow s Ra 11ng Phone
Cha rl es Lts l e Syracuse Oh1 0
Jacob
Sales
Carl
Representattv e
V
V
Johnson and Son In c
&lt;~ JO lie

MAIN
POMEROY, 0
CHESTER - 4 BR bath
d•nmg room
som e car
pe ttng ba rn 2 other out
butld tn g s abou t l acre,
corner lot S13 500

TUPPERS PLAINS
stor y
acre
ba th
che n

BROWN'S FIRE &amp;
SAFETY EQUIPMENT

Phon e 742 4673

n Pome roy
Call 99] 3807
see n by ilDPO i ntment
ROOFS and houses pa1nted
~ 30 6tp
F ree esl 1mates
pl enty ol
r ef er en ces
Phon e 991 33 63
5 30 12tn
Rt N CH s t,i\ e ho me 5 r oom&lt;,

60S E

F' re e Garag e
Es t1mates

717 Pea r l Street
M Jd lepo r t Ohto
Phon e 992 5367 or 992 38 61

M iddleport Pom eroy

9 '\(R E S o f ldnd
769 6

DAY OR NIGHT

B·K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

1 'l I 1/ 1 p

t961 PO N TifiC for sa r

Pom eroy:

PHONE 992-5271

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
773 5554

000 B.TU
POMEROY LANDMARK
't'.. _ Ja ck W CM sey Mgr
~

Pom e roy 0
Locat ed ar Modern Sup pl y
,. Small En g rnc R e p a r

WOOD TRUSSES

c=:&lt;/\')s,

GENE WOlFE'S
BODY SHOP

399 W Matn

MATERIALS CO

17

NEN 1974 Z g Za~ SE NING
MACHINE S
n
orrgrnal
carton
Z1g Zag to mak e
buttonhol es sew on buttons
monograms and maKe fancy
deSrgn,S With tUSt the IWI Sf Of a
s ngle d1al L ef t n lay a way
nnd never been u~ed Wtl, sel l
l or only S~7 cash o r t er ms
avadaOie Phon e 992 2653
5 29 lfc

-------------AM F M stereo r ad to - 8 track

and

6 'J li e

Phone

E LEC T ROLUX
va cuum
cleane rs A 1 c ondrt•on uses
paper oag s has co rd wmder
and many at ta chme nts Also
shampooe r attachme nt rn
el ud ed ( Only 4 available ) at
$37 70
cash
or
term s
available Phone 992 2653
5 19 lfc

I?AC IN E OH IO

Pome-roy

On Mosl Am.;n c an Cars

oull10 1r tt Ch ry &lt;l tr "''/'i &lt;,l &lt;llll 0
nq n1
1'&gt;\ 11 n
Vo l vo ?t:,[)
ou TilO rlr ct drovf' 1,1 1d £' n1 t tr
rrlrt (' r 1nc1 ,111 cu nv'l'&gt; f"\ouQ tl t
n • "''' u&lt;:."d ,,,.., ., t!1.1n 1'&gt;0 r.our &lt;,
:. " lr '&gt;O
C.il l C. My Grl)'!&gt;on
l\ !l1f'1F ~ ?l nr..~ &lt;~Itt r 7 p m
7 L?l69 t

6 5 71c

'

Ph 991 2174

OFFICE SUPPLIES

PH. 949-3611

RACINE GARAGE

-.

992 2094
Pom e roy
606 E Mam

WL t c pa tr h wn mowers and
q,1rd en trad o r 5o

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

~

HOME &amp; AUTO

•

F rom th e larges t Tru ck or
Bul l do1er Rnd1a tor to th e
s m.;~lles t He;1ter Cor e
Nathn n B1gg 5o
R:ndtator Spec1a1tst

ul

1 110 I W I 11 ( \ (1(1{ ( 'I tJ 11
1¥ 0 ( t r t '&gt; lt 1 Cro wn n i)O tlrcl

r Ill

6 I TI (

Pets For Sale

-LINCOLN HILL
-CONDOR STREET
-MONKEY RUN
- BUITERNUT AVENUE
-RACINE
-SYRACUSE

A tlll\1

11 rrHI IH' fpr•, ?
1 u
Hr r r l nr (l
7 I fl ltl r r ,

r-=::OMEROY

AUTOMOTIVE
REPAIR

lt c

NIC E 1 r oon ,1pt all Clcct r c 111 19~9 CHFVY Tow n',l1 rln &lt;. ! 'lt on
P 0 11 C' r oy ove rl oo k. •no tt,r
v.nqon S 1 195 C!OQd co nJ I ro n
Ohro
~~v C'r
V'1a11
oven
Ph one 997 7 6/0
t abl c ' o n
ranqf'
Ph on cJ 7 1 li e
Gal1 rpo l rs
! 16 699
r~ltcr
5
o 111 &lt;;u nd,1y t6 9)3 9
196R CHF V FLI F t,uronl11 c
6 ~ 61 p
tran s l l S5rOn
107 (' r)qrnC'
qood condr! on SliD (,111 9U
NICE block horne 7 roo ms rn
3538
Syr ilcu-;.e
Must
tr av c
f.
1tp
rP f cr encec; un f rn 1S hed I 'Hq r
t.,i t Chen Phone G.1 11 rpol 15 116
?IJQ9 il ll c r '1 D m Sunday t !6 196 3 MCR CU [ Y 'l lill on w,lqOn
'!.'UO lall '19 ?) 111 aii N 1 JO
9J39
D 111
6 7 6t c

2 BED R OOM lr ,11 1cr 1n Rutland
W I LSON S P ennZOII V'Je'!&gt;t Ma•n
v..1 th /\C Ph one 7 12 3 171 il ft er
Sl Now open for all types of
5 or phon e 7t2 56 \l any t ime
au to r t' p&lt;J!r Oil c hanqe lub e
6 7 6t (
10bs t une up an d automat c
tr ansmr SS IOn repa1r All al
d scount prr ce Al so off er 1ng F URNI SHED.:tpJ rt mcnt l 1 vtn~
room
2 bcdroom5 krl ch f'n
wnsh 1ob s and au to r econ
R ey nolds
Ap,1r mPnt;. up
d lion ng Tra rmd mechanr c
c lose to Drrv c In Theat er rn
on duty
Ma son Ca ll alt e r r p m 773
5 :1 1 71c
J 1 11 Mason
6 1 61p
SE L L lNG J househOlds t h s
F r 1day 3 1 and ne xl F rrdily
J une 7 Sale 5tart c; 7 30 p m
Ani ques q l usswu e Ch 1na
l rnen s quilt s la mps c lock s
St rlmPSC
old trunks dolls postcard s IRI SH Se tt er pup~
K !ten s J\KC Poodl e pupp cs
cookOooks
numerous
Ph cclsa nf ch1c k 5 Phone 1 156
collec tor s
!em s
p1ctures
62 17
wrck e r furn t ture l awn cha rr s
6 1 26tc
lounq e
cha r s
garden
equ1pment g l •de r I ertable s
step tabl es n exl week 3 n ce
bed r oom surtc 'i 1 nr rc I1V1nq
room SUi tes
I qood TV 5
color and BW
w nq bilck NEW Cr atr srnan se lf propell ed
cha r s an t1q ue !u rn tu r e
lawn mo w er 2? rnches 6 h p
I brary
tabl es
7
n rce
enct n e S/00 Ph one 7 t :&gt; 6? 73
rc lr rge r &lt;J tor e; Wllh fr eeze r
6 J He
c ompart ment 1 upr tgh l deep
freeze n 1ce Chrna cupb oard SHASTA Camper
qood con
rocl&lt;.er s so bo Ke s of good
drt 10 n Co;a rl c; Tr atle r Court
household terns als o tak1ng
rn
Rac1ne
Oh10
Vr r q rl
b1ds on so l i d brii SS bed open 9
Walker
to ~ Call 99 /350 9 Polly s
6 .J 6tc
Auct on Paq e and H rqh St
M 1ddleport
DOZER or ba ck h oe wor k. Ph
J 3 I 7tc
116 39R1 o r t.J 6 3 159

CARRIERS
WANTED

I

T hese su e&lt;., &lt;'ll c;o av,1t l ablc
S 000 6 000 8 000 10 000 and

For R~nt
n1

YI\RD

COMPLETE

Rad

D

M rll cr Rl I PomE' r Oy Oh o
c a l l 99? 7 !60
S 13 II (

6 l l ie

POLLY S
/'\Vet on
Pllrry
I r 1d ~v f om .11 Pe~rk 11u 1
H qh Sts l\ ni 1(1U(''l roll~rlor
1t ems
,1 nt 1QU C' f urnt l ure
co lor T V 5 Sl r p n P &amp; 1
Odd~ Clnd
End &lt;; ?1'1 North
f o r f ur n rt ure
St&gt; c ond S •
barqa rns
W1ll :,ell y our
rn c r chttr1d iS(' th e auc t r(' n W&lt;lY

'(

6 5 1f c

~·(

CA SH prtrd for 011 qo,lk. cs and
modPI S 01 moO le 11ornes
Phone Mea code 6 1 r 173 95) 1
t 13 lf C

rousehOid~

(n\1

I I
I
No t II\
It II HI I ' f l

EXC E L , J ~ 5,111 Works
E
Md ln S• Pome roy 1111 k 1nd s
of 5all wa ter pellet s water
nuQllels b lock salt ilnd own
Oh1 0 R v f' r Sail Phon ~ 991
l!l'?1

_.-•
l

EXPERIENCED

II

" ''

t r o~&lt;

D

PHtl(l

11~
~

Yf1f.(Qsa1e JL)n t
6 fr om I
to ~ p tl\ M thfl r f'SidencC' of
Doyle Hud&lt;.on secon d house
W€5 1 Ol Happy II QIIOW Ro ad
on 17J n ea r R utl ,1nd Lo ts ol
n rce c lo th nq and other t r&gt;m~
Judy 1\ nn Con b '&gt;

''P

o'

1'

I:' I I

~o r
f.
1( . " DOl ~

t~ ) lt1

"-, o !

Help Wanted

' '

!\l l)ll~
1~ 1 I

1

pe r son&lt;~l

29 (6 J s 31c

I

N O 1 CO PPEI.. ' l~c r,1 C1r,ltOr &lt;.
J'&gt;c r c:d l) r ,15C, tOe l) ,l tt r r t ~
S I 10
1 n&lt;;C't H I
}'iO
Vt I OY.
root S
M,w 1\ ppl! oo( M
A
H,lll
Rrrdsv rll f'
Oh o
Phon e 1 'll b? I Q

6 I

P I

C 1rp r 1

Wanted To Buy

'L Pr1 c t cc

P&lt;" SI

n

t t

flirt

Notrce

I hm rl rE"i Tt1u r s
Fr clly •lnd Si! t urd :l y 9
' •" r be tw een Hobson an d lo! t
7 by pa ss County Road 3
Wa t ch tor s CHIS

(5l

~ ,

r h r1

OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY. OH 10

MO TO ('R() &lt;:,&lt;:, Jur: e

~

r

Q !1

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

day

(

11 •

I
I I

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1970 DODGE POLARA
~1195
1 door
fa ctory e11r
automa t c lr&lt;'!nsm r5 5iOn
p ov.1 r
stcertng 8. b rclk.e s good whrle v.clll lrrP S V' h te I n sh
v1 n yl r oot radto hcuvy duly wspe ns o n

Yti.RD S&lt;1IC

r

Oil

/111) 1 n lf on

I

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"'
I
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( "t
I 1" 11 •

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Not1ce

I I 0 1

( o

':J J) ( d l

1- ( i ~l

\ Y I A I old ,

11695

Slcllron Wagon
loci'! I r M
ltk e ne w
automcl l c gol d ftn sh c lciln 1n tenor
stecrtng &amp; &lt;'lulomal c tretn s

Pr, ,, ..,

Business Services

1

111(1 'of' f \,1

0

I

SJ39S
Wh t e tm1 sh blue v ny l r oot 350 V 8 eng ciP i u~c tx It s
s rdc body mldg
wllc c l rove r s w w I rf' S P 8 rndr o
autornal1c w rl h power ste er 1ng &amp; brilke s full wMriln l y

197 1 DODGE CORONET

ih ly

!\ Ill nq&lt;,

Help Wame d

'
'I

'I t
I'

73 1,. r'ALA SPT C PE

?

mushroom
26 On the

I KYASH

ITAGASHI

2 SIGNS

' 17

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 212 19
Estate
of
LIL L IA N
TRIPLETT O ecea~ed
J
Not,ce c; hereOy g i ven th ai Jo
Ann Whtte Of M i ddleport Oh o
has been du l y .;lpp('rnted Ad
mtn!S t rntr rl'\ With the W 11
An nel(ed of the EState o f Lrl ll ~n
J Trl plell decea sed late o t
Metgs County Oh 1o
Cred1tors are requ red 10 hie
I he r cia ms wrth sad fldUc ary
w th 1n four months
ated th s 15th day 0 1 Muy
19 4

Look At"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

II

PhO n I

J
---------------- - -

For Sale

\ J I ()

SALE.' SAL!;' SA_LE' Barry
M tier Mobrle Hone s,11c .-. s
oversto cked Or"\ used 'HHl r ('
pos sessed Mob rtc Ho mes Wehave 11 u'ied 10 nnd 12 w d C's
th&lt;ll r11U SI be- SOld 111 .-,
w ee ken d Our pr Cl' S rnclude
your dehverv and comp le t ese t up Sloe Ll1 or cilll to chlY
you II be q l ad you d 1d Barry
M ller Mob teo hom r ~ d r l ~ 1 u~
F drson S!r ce t Rf'l pr (' Oh 0
phon e 173 9 ~ 11
6 6 I Otc

y etlerday'l Alllwer

24 Short
operatic
song
%5 Measure

"

VI&lt; •l •n t

19 70 PMC Mob I&lt;J Hom e un
furnrshed 3 bedroom }] 000
STU A1r COnd ll ron•
t1 d
r
POr c h
n awnr nq S~ 9SO EJ; c;: f'll c nt
con dll to n Phone 74 1 :'!R t 1
&gt;
6 5 11 (

21 Sun room
22 Spotless;
W1SUllied

t•dnt ~d.; I\ ,l,uu )

Mob1le Homes For Sale
6 '} !I [

DOWN
1 Defame
2 Wedding
vow
3 Obliterate
4 Empower
5 Humperdinck
heroine
6 Adjust
anew
7 Fonnic
ac1d
source
8 Speech
defect
9 Glut
12 Legume
16 Commedla
dell'-

\\

l o l l fr

10x50 TR fl l lf" R
3651

ACROSS
I Shanty
5 - roots
10 Old facts
11 - library
13 Single
14 Property
15 Cheerful;
optlmlsUc
17 Andy
Gump's
wife
18 Deplore
19 Floor
covenng

~

will bit avail·

spot

5 30- Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Elec Co 33, Hogan's Heroes 13 ,
Western Star Theatre 15.

6 30- News 3, 4 CBS News 8. 10, News 15, ABC News 6; Room

able

{

Sentinel Classifieds '(Jet 1-l.esuJts!

po~lon

loundatlons Help

competitive situations today
you tend to gtve your oppost·
l ion the edge before you start
This cuts down your chances

Corm four ordinary worde.

Make opponent play your suit
i':ORTH
.KI074 2
'104
+Q52

June 1, 11174
of ttQ year wtn
be SPent weeding out okl
problems and buildinG otronu-

A good

big thlnQ ot It
LIBRA (9epl 23-0cl 23) In

Helen Help

.4, 15

WIN AT BRIDGE

15 - lllc n ,uh Sl'Jlttnl'l, :\lldd!L'j.M.JI t-POilh r U \.
One ot your friends has said
something unflattenng about

you bul 1ts not all that bad

+++

Minutes to Love By 4
6 35 - Columbus Today •
6 45 -

...,. ··&gt;=·=·=-=--··:&lt;*'·&gt;.:.&lt;·:·:::,;·:·:· ·&lt;&gt;.;::::&lt;~·.::-:w~-~

brrck cor ner lot ove r 1
1n new add!lton , 3 BR
dmrng R
lovely k 1f
basement 8 yea r s ol d

S22 500 00
MIDDLEPORT - 8u stn ess
room modern a pt ove r 3
BR 111 ba th s dtnrng R HW
f loo r s wt lh ca r pettng ove r
hot wa ter hea t a l most new
but ldmg S26 500

POMEROY - Ranch lype 2
BR ba th HW floors wtth
ca rp e t ng
over
fu ll
basement
sma ll
lo t
f 1replace tn LR $15 000
POMEROY - 11'4 acr es 200
It fron ta ge or g1na ll y ha s 2
housP s •dea l fo r trailers or
hom e SJ 000

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP 705 acre s 7 room home new
stocked lake. new barn a nd
other butldtngs
lots of
wa lnut maple htcko ry 100
acres fence d runn.ng ca ttl e

$46 000
LI ST YOUR PR OPERTY
WITH US YOU CA N T GO
WRONG
992 2259 or 992 2568

--------------EXCAVATING rln 7P.r

lo.:~der

and backh oe work
sept1c
tanks msta lled dump t r ucKs
and lo boys for tltre wtll haul
f II d rt top so t! l tmes tone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Je ff er s da y phone 992 7089
n ghl phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 ll ti c
AUTOMOBILE rns uran ce Oeen
cancelle d?
Lost
your
operators lt cense Ca ll 992
7428
6 15 tic

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

Real Estate For Sale
70 ACRE farm 1 ro om hou se
wtth ce nfral heat carpetrng
modern k1 l C1len w dh d1Sh
washer 2 ba ths and a path
good earn gorden one ac re
pond lo r f rs h rnQ and sw m
m 1ng scen 1c and prrvate 4
fl'lrles fr om Harr i SOnv lie 1n
Sc1p 0 Town Sh ip ~30 000 Call
7424521
5 24 12tc

Kuhl 's sells both
Used F urntture
Every appliance sold
u se d and carrtes . a
O· da y
refund
or
r ep la cement
GUAR
ANTEE

"Chec k us out " lor all
your hou sehold fur
n •s htng n eed s 1f
don 't have 1t . we' ll t
fO ftnd If I

ONE new all el ect r c
3
bedroom $19 900 and 3 other
homes Phone 992 3975 or 992
1571
6 5 lfc

AGE,\U
Galltpolt s

•
RACINE
2 STORY PERMA STO NE 3
BR
LARGE
M OD ERN
KITCHEN
1 7 BATH S
CAR PE T
THROUGHOU T
FULL BA SEMENT 2 CAR
GARAGE
ALL
ON E
L ARGE
FLAT
WELL
L A N D S CAPE D
LOT
P RICED M ID TWENTIES

RUTLAND

MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; CO.
(Serving America for 100 Years)
Offers .an exciting op~lor!unity to operate a business of your
own w1th a very sma I mvestment. We are interested in a
qualified Sales oriented person with previous retail ex penence to own and operate a catalog store in Pomeroy,
Oh1o.
'

I ' IJ •

~ 'I
11 "

....

" "

IIIII

.,

3 BEDR OOMS LA RGE KIT
LIKE
NEW
C A RPET
ALUM SIDI NG
OWNE:R
WILL
HELP
~!NANCE
FOR QUAUF IE O BUYER
P RICED
BELOwJ
MARKE T S12000
•

If you are willing to accept responsibility in return for a
future tn your own business, write giving full personal
qualifi cations to:

•• •&gt;

OFFICE 446 3643
EVENING S
Bud McGh ee- 44 6 125S
E M 'I ke' W• se man- 446

E. A1 Smith, 4-1
100 S. Monroe Street
Baltimore. Maryland 21232

...

3796

~------------~~~----~
' .,

�'
'

1~ 'J'he Dally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomero~, 0 ., Wedgesday, June (~2,\

•oo-~~~~~~~t~~.:~?~"''" Ii.

~

~

7 00 - News 6, 10, What s My Line 8 Truth or Cons 3 Beat The
Clock ~ . Elec Co 20, Jommy Dean 13 Wacky World of
Jonathan Wmters 15. lenox Quartet Haydn s Opus 20 33

~

or \"'ns 6 , Black Journal 33
6 30- ,,ews3 4, 6,8 10. 15 , Room 222 13

•7 30- To Tell The Truth 6, Sale of the Century 8 The Ju dg e 10,

Beat The Clock 13 Pol1 ce Surgeon 3 Antl~ues 20 Ept sode
Actlon33 OnThe Money4 Cal loftheWest 15
·B 00 - Washington Conned 1on 33 Chase 3, 4 The Cw boys 6
13. Billie Graham Crusade 8, 15 , Bobble Gentry V Young
Filmmaker 's Fest tva l 20 .
18 30 Mov 1e ' Blood Sport 6 13 , Hollywood Te!~v t slon
Theatre JJ
'
9 00 - Movte 'Th e Wor l d of Henr y Onent " 3 4 15 Billy
Graham Crusade 10 V tdeo The "'ew Wave 20
00 - Horray for Hollywood 6 Ko1ak 8 10 News 20
Graham Cru sade 13 El 1ot Norton Rev •ews 33

10

Btlly

10 30 - Da y At Noght 33
11 00 - News 3, • 6 8, 10, 13, 15 Janaki33
11 30 -

Johnny Car son 3, 4, 15 MISS IOn Impossib le 6 Movtes
" The Am en ca no "
' Dest re In The Dust " 10 Untouchables

a,

13

12 30 - News 13 W ild Wild West 6
1 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4 T a k e F1ve For Ltfe 15 Sa l ute to Dar ryl

F Zanuck 13
2 00 -

6
6
6
6

N ews 4

THURSOA Y, JUNE 6, 1974
Sunnse Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
Amert ca ' s Problems 10
Farm Report 13
Btble Answers 8, Pa tter n for Ltvtng 13

00 15 25 30 -

News 6

Ftve

Farm ftm e 10, M ornmg Report 3
Today J 4 15 News 8 10 Otck Van Dyke 13

7 00 -

Make A

Wosh 6

7

New Zoo

30 -

8 00 -

Revue6 Tennessee Tuxedo 13
Capt Kangaroo 8, 10 Sesame St 33 Ne w Zoo Revue 13,

Jeff's
8 25 8 30 8 30 -

Coff1e 6
Jack LaLanne 13
Brady Bunch 6
News 13

9 00 - Paul Dixon 4 AM 3, Pht l Donahue 15 Abbott - Costello
8 , Fnendly Junction 10 Wtld W ild West 6 , M ovre D Day the
Sixth of June'

13

Mtster Rogers 33

9 30 - To Tell the Tr th 3 TBA 8 Electric Company 33
9 55 - Ch"
Whit e Reports 10
10 00 - Dina , Shnr e 3 IS .: f)ker 's Wt ld 8 10 Company 6, An

tlques 33
Jeopa rdy 3 4 1r

10 30 -

33

11 00 -

Gdm blt 8, 10 , Wheel s, Kilns and Clay

W tzard of Odds 3, 4 15

Password 13 Mike Dougl as 6,

Now You See It 8 10 TBA 33
II 55 - CBS News 8 t.,an Imel's World tO
12 00 - Jackpot ' 3, 15 Password 6, Bob Braun's 50 50 Club
News B, 10, l J M1ster Rogers 33
12 J()- .ipl tt Se\.on d 6 Search for Tomorrow

4

8, 10 Celebrity

Sweepstakes 3 15 Afternoon With OJ 13, Electric Co 33
12 55 - NBC News 3 15
1 00 - All My Choldren 6, 13 , Concentration 8, News 3, Nat For
Women Only 15 What's

My

Line? 10. Flower Show 33

1 30- 3 Oil A Match 3, 4, 15 As the World Turns 8, 10 , Lei's
Make A Deal6, 13 Let's Grrm a Garden 33
2 0)- Days of Our Lives 15 , Gu iding Light 8, 10, Newlywed
Game6 13 TBA 3, Dugout Dope4. Our Street33
2 10 - Baseball 3, 4
2 30 - Doctors 15 Edge of N1ght 8, 10 . Girl In My Life 6, 13 ,
-~-· 33
00 - ""' 'urorer wwv' tu 1.,, General Hospltal6, 13, Price Is Right
A,
10 ,
Ultas,
Yoga
and
You
20

J

Jo- One life to L tve 6, 13, How to Survive A Marr i age 15,
Match Game a, 10, Dollars Decoslons 20, Episode Action 33
4 00- Sesame Sl 20, 33, Mr. Cartoon &amp; The Banana Spl11s 3,
Huck and Y091 6, Somerset 15; I Dream of Jeannie 13 , Tat
tletales8 , Movie " Mr Belevedere Goes to Col lege" 10
J

4 30 - Gilligan's Is 6, Green Acres J, Bonanza 15 , Virginian 8,

Daniel Boone 13
~5- TBA 4
5 00 - Mister Rogers 20 33. Bonanza 3. Merv Griffin 4, Big
4

Us.

k;

"'

By Helen Hottel

••

Fat Chance Vs. Full l!earu :
Dear Helen
I told my wife I'd shave my beard when she loses all the
weight she's gamed since we were roamed She says this Isn 't
fa1r, for all the wh1le she 's losmg those 60 pounds, she has to
"suffer" through my beard
I say what's a few thousand extra hall's on the face, com·
pared to blubber• Looks like a MeXIcan stand-&lt;Jff Any solution •
- STIJBBORN
Dear Stubborn
How about cutting an mch from your beard for every 10
poWlds your wife loses• If yow- whiSkers aren't that LONG, then
shave aome off the s1des each time she truns somethmg off HER
s1des - H
Dear Helen
I have a fnend who IS always complaing because no one
comes to see her Feeling guilty, I called up and asked when it
would be converuent to come over She sa1d "any time," but
when I arnved she was watching a soap opera, that turned mto a
long strrng of aoap8 and game shows on TV
Each lime I opened my mouth, I was shushed. Fmally I got
up and walked out, with a bnef "Good-bye."
Now she's telllng everybody I'm rude. Should I apologize? I
don 't feel this "soap" freak needs me -IGNORED
Dear Ignored
Nor does she need your soft soap Why apologiZe when SHE
was the rude one• - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
We read everywhere that regular self-inspections for cancer
s1gns are a must and we should never delay sleing a doctor If we
fmd one.
I found a lump on my breast, went to my doctor, and he said
11 was ''probably just a blocked gland'" I insisted on fw-ther tests
- a spectrotberm, I believe it's called He said It wasn't
necessary, but when 1 held finn he wrote out the referral, and on

5

However you re apt to make a

For Thuraday, June 8,1974
ARIES (March 21·Aprff 19)
Th1ngs w1ll work out belter for
you m the long run 1f you don t
let others get too Involved m
your present plans

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

Today you Will express your·
self 1n a way that w i ll not be
well recetved by others Harsh
words w111 draw a similar
response

QEMINI (May 21-June 201 In

your matenal dealings w tlh
others today you II have to be
ca reful and bus1nessl1ke Dts ~
pules or mtsundersrandmgs

are likely
CANCER (June 21-July 221
In order not to be disappointed don 1 ask co·operallon from a person who nor
ma lly lsn t co -operative Shes
even less helptul today
LEO (July 23· Aug 22) You II
be a rather reluctant worker
Your at11tude 1s gomg to make
more at each task than 11 really
IS

VIRGO (Aug 23·Sepl 22)

considerably
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 221
Someone alder than you who
holds very strong opln1ons w111
give you a real patn tn the neck
1f you start dtscusslng philaso·
phles

SAGITTARIUS (Now 23·

Dec 21) The financtal drain on
your purse Is apt to be qutle

hea vy at thts time Cut some
corners on your spendmg

CAPRICORN (Dec 22· Jan
10) Opposmg v1ews will be
very strong tn one of your
c lose personal relatJonshtps
Don t say things you II later

regret

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb
19) Responslb1llt1es that
you ve swept under the rug are
going to ca ll for prompt atten·
lion Best you attend to them

PISCES (Feb 20·March 20)
You r soc ta l plans wtlt undergo

some re\I JStons but not of your
maktng Someone 1n the grou p
IS rewrttlng the s-cenano to su1t
her schedu le

the bottom of the sheet under "explanaUons," he scribbled,
"Cancerphobia "
Since several people in my famlly have dled of cancer, I
don't think that was fair. Do you'- Naf A HYPOCHONDRIAC
Dear NAH;
I think this was neitber fair nor wise I also think that very
soon women will be receiving routine spectrotltenns tests or
"scails" for possible breast cancer, juast as they now have
yearly Pap tests to check for cancer of the uterus.
Better a few dollars invested for a negaUve report than a
lump discovered too late ' - H.
'

~lgJOOID~®~ ~tow#IJ MIIWl , _
Hy i iiN II \(o. lfN &lt;llll

u«II H Jf l Lif

Unscramble these four Jumbleo,
letter to each aquare, to

on~

Valley 6.

6 00 - News 8, 10, Sesame Sl 20, ABC News 13, News 3, 4, t5 ,

Truth or Conseo 6, Lilias, Y09a and YouJ3

222 13. Washington Connection 33

7 00 - Beat the Clock&lt;!, What's My Line 8, News 6, 10, Elec Co

20 . Trulh or Consequences 3, Let's Make A Deal 13, Sports
Desk 15, Turned on Crisis 33
7 30- Hollywood Squares 3, Wild Kingdom 10; To Tell The
Truth 6. Beat the Clock 13, Zoom 20; Dealer's Choice~ . Johnny
Mann's Stand Up and Cheer 15 , Ozzfe's Girls 8
8 00 - The Waltons 8, Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15, Chopper One 13, 6,
Movie "Guys and Dolls" 10, Nallonal Spelling Bee 20, 33
8 30- Firehouse 13, 6
9 00- Ironside 3, 4, Kung Fu 6, 13, War and Peace 33, Movie
"The Man from the D1ner's Club" 8, The Place For No Slory
20
10 00- News 20, Streets of San Franclsco6, 13. Comedy World 3,

10 30 - Day at Night 33
11 00 - News 13: Janakl33, News 3, ~. 6, 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 15 , Untouchables 13, Mission lm
possible 6, Movies " The Spy with a Cold Nose 1 ' 8, " Vanentlno"
10
o2 30 - News 13, Wild Wild Wes1 6
two sp11ut!S after your partner's 1 00- Tomorrow 3. 4, Take Five For Life 15; Geraldo Rivera
Goodnight America 13
double What do you do now'}
2 00 - News 4

when

It lo needed.

~:et1tll"
by THOMAS JOSEPH

20 Ocean
(abbr )
21 Pharaoh
after

Rameses I

Z'l

u_

to

Zl Compact

23 Trustworthy 30 - Wy
31 M-I'IGpl'll-

no, Roullr&amp;t·

34 Gaunt
31 Sailor

22 Jalopy
25 Kind of

nickname
28 Name in
boxing
29 Comfort
32 You
(Ger.)
33 Generally
35 Tell
tales
37 Pelvic
bones
38 Require
39- Bator
40 Dilatory
41 Lone
Ranger's
trademark

[5) 22

ORDINANCE NO 101 3 74
An Ord,nance for th e pos lion o f
ASSiS tant Park o ,re c to r and
Poo l Manager and to f 1;&lt;c the
~alary for the Swrmrn ng In
structor
Be II orda1ned by the Coun cr l
of th e V llaqe or Mrddl epor l as
follow s
Sec
I
That
there
be
es t ab l rshed the pos t 1on of
a'!&gt;s ts l ant Park D r ec l or and
Pool Manager
Sec II The sala r y for the
posd10n o f aSSIStar"\1 Park
D re cto r and Poo l Manag er
shalt be $ 180 00 per mon t h for
Jun e Jul y a nd Augus t to con
t rnu e tor th e per1od of t m e th e
sw mm1ng Pool rs op en wh rch
rsno r mally 1rom Mem orrnl Day
throu gh Labor Oily
Sec
111
Be rl f ur th er
reso l ved that a wage lor th e
Swrmm 1ng Instructor be and
the same 1S hereby f1xed at 57 00
per hour
Sec IV That th1S Ordrnance
1s her eby de term n ed to be an
emerge n cy measur e necessary
for the 1mmedra t e preservat1on
or t he pe ace health sa l ety and
ge nera l
wel f are
of
the
nhab1tants of l he Vi l lage and
for th e r eason that
1t
rs
necessary th a t t hr s 1egts lal1on
b ec om e mmedtalely eff ect v e
Sec V T h1s Dr dmance sha ll
take effect &lt;Jnd bern for ce f r om
nnd a ft er May 28 1974
Pa sse d the 2Bih day of May
197 ,j

One letter simply •Iandi for another. ln thll umple A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc Slnele !etten,
apootropheo, tho length and fonnatlon of tho warde ore Ill
hlnll. Each day the code letters are dU!orent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
CWMZ

I

the
1urpriH

to

"r I

Prill II - - -

I I I J"

(A.iwert IOID0,....W,
Ye1terd•1'•

AXYDLBAAXJ,
LONGFELLOW

Is

No" orranrt
circled ltlltrs
form
the
&amp;IIIWer, aa
[
I
I
J
~=::::::=.=:~~:;~=::_~•:u~u••led by the above cartoon.

Jumbt"' BRAWL SOOTY EXPEND

I

An1wer1

'

ASSAIL

How lhr butv carloon.itl• •ettled the

Ma nn •ng D Web ster
Probate Judge
of sa1d Counry
19 (6J 6 Jtc

:17 Girl's

LI

WMT

VLKT,

CQUPHG
YFX

VQLDWMMQ

WCH

GXQKK

UPWQMG
UPWQMG.-

CFIIQMQ

Yeateiday's Cryptoquote: MAN WILL Nar LIVE WITHOUT
ANSWERS TO HIS QUESTIONS. - HANS MORGENTHAU

Fred Ho ff man
Presrdent of Council

&lt;C 117« Kl~ reoltlno s,.,dJ..u, r...)

A tt est
Gene G rat e
Cl erk

g""ll•on-THEY OREW LOTS

(6) 5

12 2tc

,foK86

WEST

EAST

ORPHAN ANNIE-C:LAII• MVTTI

• 3

• 8

'K Q 183
+J97

'A9652
+K843

.. J9S2

,foQto7

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

SOUTH IDI
• AQJ965

'7
+A 106
.. A43

East West vulnerable
West

North

East

Pass 2•
Pass
Pass Pass
Pass
Qpemng Jead - •K .

South

l.

4•

.

By' Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
A Flonda reader asks,
"How should I have played
the d•amonds"" I did lead toward dummy's queen, only to
have East take the tr1ck w1th
the kmg and lead the su1t
back to g1ve h1s partner a
tr1ck w1th t he jack My
partner pomts out that •f I
had s•mply stripped the hand
of other su1ts 1 could have let
West hold the first tr1ck wtth
the seven and made my con·
tract"
The answer to our reader's
questton IS that wh1le the play
suggested by h1s partner ®!. DIDNT REALIZE 1HI5TTIIP10
would have worked th1s time GREECt:,_ ~ND 'THE RESULTANT
11 was both unnatural and un· PUBLICI Y1 WERE 50
necessary The way for South IMPOII.TANTID
WINN IE AND
to play the diamonds was to
make an opponent lead them
for h1m
After ruffmg the second
heart, South had an automat·
1c way to make h1s contract
He should draw trumps One
lead would be enough Then
play ace. kmg and another
club
It wouldn't matter wh1ch
opponent led the diamond or
where the kmg and Jack were
located South would Simply
play low from whic hever
hanC: had to play f1r st and be
sure "f two tncks m the smt
Suppose the defender re
fused to lead a diamond• He
would have to lead a club or
heart South would s1mply
ruff m one hand and discard
a diamond from the other to
wind up losmg just one dJa·
mond tr1ck

The Motor Vehicle Manu·
fa cluters AssocJatron reports
that about 85 per ce nt of all
automobiles 111 use m the
Umted States a re equ 1pp'e d
With one or mot e emtssJon
co ntrol systems A1r pollutiOn
caused by automobi les has
conseq uen tly bee n g reat ly
reduced compa red to pre
vmus level s, and wil l con

,, .

tJJ ~U e

to deere a ~ as mar e
new cars w1th em rssw n con
THE BORN~SER

•
Cl '" "' ~LI "",,~us , , llll

I 'M OONG 10 SEE

IF WINNIE WANTtl
ME 10 5TAY LATE

tu tnn~h l ~

'\ \

AND HElP HER

o

trois rep la ce old e r c ar s
v.h1ch have lim1ted or no co n
trois. The Wot ld Almana c
notes
'&gt;;~WS t

\J (:]{

t

IY74

-.:n.:H I' HJS~

\ SS'

OJT

The Almanac
By Umted Press International
Today IS Wednesday , June 5,
the !56th day of 1974 "'th 209 to
follow
The moon IS between lis full
phase and las t quarter
The mormog sl&lt;lrs are Venus
and Jupiter
The evenmg sl&lt;lrs are Mer
cury, Mars and Saturn
Those born on this day are
under the s1gn of Gem1m
Madame Ch1ang Kat-shek,
w1fe of the leader of Nabonalist
Chma, was born JIUle 5, 1897
On Ibis day in h1story
In 1917, more than 9 5 million
Amencans between the ages of
2! and 31 reg1stered m World
War f draft
•
In 1933, Pres1d~t Franklm D
Roosevelt s1gned a bill abolish·
mg the gold sl&lt;lndard
In 1966, Amencan astronaut
Gene Cernan left Gem•m 9 for

ALlEY OOP

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

•
The btddmg has been
5
Wtsl
North Easl South
t•
Double Pass 2'
2t
2NT
Pass ?
You, Soulh, hold
• 6 5 'J 4 3 2 t A Q 91. 8 53
What do you do now•

a

two- hour !

10-mmute

"spacewalk "
In 1968, Sen Robert !(ennedy
was fatally shot m Los Angeles
by a 24·year-&lt;Jid Arab nallonal
later 1dentif•ed_ as Sirhan
Sirhan The assassm was
sentenced to life 1mpnsonment

fiAI'INS OUR

EARs fiERCED

~ 'IOOJI( IDEA,

LIJCILLE!

A-Bid &amp;hree notrump Your

partner has made a very strorq;

A thought for the day
Pres1dent Franlthn D Roosevelt sa1d, ~ "There 1s no

b id

TODAV'S QUESTION
Instead or passmg East has b1d

•'

md1spensa ble man "

Pomeroy
Motor Co•

OF
QUAliTY

- J

•

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( I

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ho

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Lost

h i Ime t re s
3 18 V 8 powN

ll

6 ) ] 1p

11 30

Ra c 1nq 1 on, 1m lc s
8csl Ph o to on Coun t y
Road 56 13r mstonr R.J cc w;; y
Park Coolv1IIC 011rO
66 3 (

PI A N O tunmg Cnil r le&lt;; Sc o n
Pt&gt;on e 99? ]71B fl.; ,ddl c por t
OhiO
6 5 51p
YARD Sale Sn t June8 91m
Women sand m err s cl olh 1 n~
sh oes
pocke t books
oB Q
qr II drape s bedspreads
blanket s
p llows
tape
r ecorde r
co ff ee tabl e oc
cordt on d1 s he s whatnot s
glassware rad 10
qam es
Go•no overse,;s M v'!&gt;l s£111'
V Vril n Jo hnson r c;;1 drn cc
Cherry St
R~• c I'!'{&gt;
O~&lt;~ro
Joseph Stephenso n
6 5 ] tp

GU N Shoo t 7 p m Fr1day at th e
Factory
Ra c 1ne Gun Cl ub
choked quns only Assorte d
meats
~ 5 l tc
SW E EP E R Repa rr P arts and
Supples
Oav 1s Vacuum
Cleaner
11
m rle!'&gt;
up
Georg es Cr eek Road o ff Slat e
Rout e 7 Phon e JJ6 029J
6 5 II c
AUCTION

The follow 1nq
property o f Gertrude
McBr d e w 11 be sotd a t 'he
res dence lower College Rd
( ' mtle o ff 51 Rl
12.:1 1
Syr acu'!&gt;e Oh10
FRIDAY
June 7 197.:1 12 30 p m Nash
sf anc:
blanket chest
oak
rock er 6 l eg stan d ladder
bac k rattan bo i c ha1r 2 pc
bedroom su1te ch1flarobe 5
c hars ( 0r 1~1na1 J cane bot
tom
w1 l h
table
Early
o\m err can loveseat
3 sec
bookcase
s ew 1ng r oc k e r
small p1ne tr easu re ches !
cedar chest
maple bed
(smg l e P 1neapple P ost ) pre
s afe
RCA
Vtctor
TV
pla tfor m r ocke r r ecltnde r
v bra to r oak washstand oval
p ctu re fra me Ke nm ore 30 n
ran ge ele cir 1c heater me t ul
d1sh cupboa r d H&amp;R 32 p 1SIO I
antique l amp stand ant 1que
stool bool\s sterescope an d
p1 clu res F n gr d atre r ef S1ck
rm
c harr
trun k
old
lash toned cheesebox Aust r a
Chr na c ream and suga r
Germany Ch na Drsh
P1n
He1 sey Bavar ia Salt
Hant.1
pa1nted Nrppon butt~r d1Sh
Havrtand L moge Ch rna
Pape rw e ghl eye I st cu p
stan~ tars
cream crock
T er ms
cash
BRAD FO RD
AUCTION CO
Box 116
Rae n e Phone 949 3161 C C
Bradf ord
Auc t
A
C
Br ad fo rd
Mgr
S IGNED
Ally In Fact Edtson Hob
s tett er
6 5 1tc

GARAGE Sale Sa t
Ju n e 8
num erou s 1t ems 9 am Mrs
Ge~ S!out Syra cuse
6 5 31c

FAB RI C sa le A ll fabrr c n shop
on sale one week only
Monday
June 3. through
Saturday June e Al l f r sl
qual1 ty polyes ter kn fs as l ow
as S1 49 per yard we wd l be
close d for vaca t ron fr om June
1.:1 to J&lt;J i y 1 Ca ro l na F a br c
Route7 one half mrle north ol
Ches ter
Oh 1o
H enr y and
Ma ry Hunte r owners
6 ,j 4tp

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB
Frt &amp; Sat. Ntghts
10 Ttl 2
Mus1c by : Bill Mar ·
shall and Satrsf1ed
Minds
For Sale
5N ICErrdn ghO r s.es allgenlle
Phone 7&lt;~2 411 1 After 5 c all
742 550 1 or 7d2 6863
6 5 61C
PUBLIC NOTICt
Lead1 ng Creek Conser vancy
D stncf Box 278 Rutland Oh10
45775 does hereby r equest bt ds
for
2 Way
Radro
Com
mu n tcalrons
EQU t pm ent
cons1Sf 1ng of the followmg
2 - 100 Wa ft Mobtl Rad ros 2
f requency operat•on
Tone
Coded
Squelch
Sol 1d St at e
Ctrcu11 r y
1 - 100 Wa tt Base Statton 2
f requency operation
Ton e
Coded SQ uelch
So lr d Stat e
C1rcut1ry
1 _.__ Remote Control Un1t 2
f req u e ncy _ operation
Tone
Coded Sque l ch
Sold S tat e
Ctrcudry
2 Portables , 2 frequen cy
opera! on Ton e Code d SQuelch
SO l id State C1rcu try M rn rmum
1 5 watts RF Power
100 ft Transmrssron L tne
1 - Antenna
And any and all n ecessary
f rx tur es
Thr~ eQutpmen t must
be
cqutvalent to the Top L n e
Equ,pmenf
produced
bY
manufacturer s
such
as
Motorola or General E lec lrr c
B1dder wr l l be r equ 1r ed l o
delrVE:I" eQuipment and lllSfall
Wtthtn 100 .days
Bed openrng wd l be June 7
1974 12 00 Noon at th e Co n
se rvan cy Dr s tr ct OfflCe rn
Rut land , Ohro

''

~&lt;;y

'1 &lt;. f • r t o r

1\

II

(n

1

r{"l

\ ' 1 ''

11~

Y 'RO ~ 1\L E C1?9 " ou1 11 Tl1 rrd
Ave
fl.,~ ddlf'port
Tu£' '!&gt; d av
Wcd neO. dd y
rmc; Tl ur S(!i'!t
Ju n ll~6

1]

II (

OLD t urn l ure o,lk tilble'!&gt;
cloc k s l l tloli.C~ br 1sc; beds
d• Sh l•s &lt;le&lt;;k s or comp lete
1/1. r r! e

M

1\v t o&lt;,
con p l t tr
J Hi
d el vPr d ro o 1r y.1rc1
wr
11 r !q p 1\ t i Q i l O ll r \ 'ltl ~d l')c.~y )f
" l rlCh o t ~c r ,1p rn('t,li S i"l n d
ro n (.( cl('r &lt;., \,11v acw '-. l clt (
ROUT I' I I IJ
I P o mr r oy
Otno Pi10 tH Q!J? ~ 1&lt;'- R
'i I ) ?flp

!LJ N K

9~ ? 350 ~

( &lt;'!II

5 1 I 761C

1R A L ER

I&lt;ICill tor couple 10
l l"'- Nor tl • o t Po n c r ov ,1 1r
con cl rl ro n ul SAO per mon tl1
p!f' c tr c
v,ltf'r 1nel
r wcr
t urn &lt;\hf'CI (11 9'1"'7 17'1
f. , • tc

KOSCOT
KOSM ET I CS
&amp;
IN IGS
For a good 11ne ot
Cosmei !CS
fr endly serv ct•
and someone to chat wrth
g ve me a '" all He len Jane
Brown 99'2511 3
JIUI.! NI '-. HED
3 19 tr c
&lt;ltfutr.-, only 111 ~,~ dct! rpor t
Pt1onr 9'1 '} lfl l t
A TO Z Marl used ! urn shed
~ 1 ;r l! c
app lt ances clothmg drshe s
and m1sc
Rt
33 OIJPOStt e TR•\ ILER
Hrown .-. rr .1r10r
trader court
Hanford W
Cou rt 997 11? 1
Va
5 79 tf (
4 10 tf c

1p1rt~lr n1

S.11e

S illurdr~ y

Ru t land
otf1cc

&gt;r dav

and
Roild
Srcms &lt;.Ia t at po st
N e l ~o n

6 t 31c
At CK Y arcJ Sa l e June~ 6 and

7t h 9,1 m IO 7 D tll '11 10 1
P ,Hk
Sf
M ddi COQ t I
Clo th ng
d e pr~' ~S on
a lass
Avon bolll es s!l o!{tun m sc
Al l r e &lt;~ son abl e
6 \ ] I(

f&gt;IEIG &lt;;Co un!y H umane Soc c-r y
Thr fl Shop ope n 10 ct m trtl
J 30 P m
eve r y F r 1day Clnd
Sa tu r day
New used stoc k
arr r v 1ng wee k ly Clot11 nq
collect bl es
appl 1nnce s
lreu sur e-; re cord '!&gt; p re tur es
book s lr1 m ps toys Locnted
&lt;'~ C r o ss fr om
Pomeroy Po s t
0 11 (('
~ 17 I ! C

3 .1\NO t ROOf\,, t u rn r~h ed ond
unl urn1ShCd
apa rt me nt 5
Phon e 997 5~:1 1
t 1? t fc
PRivt,T E mee t nq r oom for
any o rqan •Jat on phone 997
397 5
J 11 II c

For Sale

6 I I!

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
PHONE 992-2156
WA I TRE SS E S wanted Apply 1n
pe r son Cr ows Stenk House
5 1J ttc

POSITIONS AVAILABLE
Male or Female
Help Wanted
Full or Parttime
Opemngs
No expe nence necessary

On the job training.
Ground floor op
portumty.
Coni act Ge neral Manager
Mon &amp; Tue s Only

pA M to 5 30 PM
For conf1de nftalmterv1ews

I 446 -0677

ttH!
I' 0rr

'

o prano rn
your &lt;'H P CI .md wou l d I k e
&lt;.ome re spo t1Srble party to
tak.e over payment s
Call
Cred 1 WnnRq er
(6 1 ~ 1
771
)66 9 or wr te "60 Ea st Ma rl
Slr Pe l Ct11ll cot he Of1 o 4~ 601
t 7 !l c

NE 1\R E p1ck tHt up

If&lt;

I

1

1\1

!.&lt;

~. l

1\

r

':,

I

RHODODENDR O N S
pu r ple
and p nk
Clela 1d G r een
housP Ge rald rn e Cle lil nd
6 3 3t c
vROCERY bUS rness for sa le
Bu1ld1ng for sale or lease
Phone 77 3 56 18 I rom 8 30 p m
to 10 p m l or a ppo rnlment
3 20 lie
REDUCE safe ano fas t With
GoB ese Tabl ets &amp; EVap
water p li S
Nelso n Drug
6 5 ttc
NEW I mprov ed Z1pp es
th~&gt;
great 1ron p II now wr th
V la m 1n C N el son Drug
6 5 ltc
YOUNG r abb t s for S2
378 6261

U&lt;.;Fn T.lpiln q,1 ., r'lnq r
lr P ,lt
! or &lt;l PI or tr il lcr f' f-0 1, l6 '

\.11 6H

l

1 HOTPOINT
l AIR CONDITIONERS I
4,000 BTU

I

'109.95

r

EXPERT

tap e combrna110n d sp eaker
soun d
sys!em
Ba l ance
S106 3J o r eas~;: terms Call
992 3965
s 19 !fc.
WE H AV E all your upholstery
needs
Bur l ap
den 1m
cambr1c loam glue zrppe r s
rackmg slrrp
spnn gs and
c l tps chipboard
Duttons
1w1ne sew ng thread
legs
uphols t ery books da c ron
sprrng fw ne tacks well cord
cotton " s w rve l bases and
loam foam foam Pomeroy
Recovery
622 East Marn
Str eet Phone 9n 7554
5 15 2&lt;itc

FURNITURE
Stop tn and Se~
Floor Dt s play

Our

Wheel Alignment

Wat e r L1n es a nd Pow er
Lin es All wo rk don e by the
foot or contra ct Al so doz er
work and se pttc tank s tn
"S tu lied

•s.ss
- GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094
Ope n S T1 IS
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E M a1n 1 Pom er oy 0

.See or Call
Bob or Rog er Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

Wtlktmon Smal l Eng m e
992 3092

Jomeroy Home &amp; Autv

'

I

~1

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY

DITCHING SERVICE

M oved l o R ull.:trHJ
4
tn le
ns1de ctl y I rn t on rrght ~ J
corner B •rc k St and Rt 1?1

J

Free E sf •mut es

'l,

Now Open l or Bu sr nPss

I

742-5293

. J

Ph one 9fl2 7 181

Auto Sales
19!t ( HI V EIIF
~' '&lt; ((' •' nt
run r1 nq con e; t ron 1 r 1d c!y
Th fwt M.l&lt;,o 1 W V,;
'&gt; I~ 1' r
l QM C tlE VI-J()l E" f
Qf)j

{fr

I

~

Bu1ltto Your Spec s
De liv ered to Job S1t e

808 W M a1 n St

""'

C. rlt

l?l fl

5

I'

c

~ 1 ,~

61 Mt:f.i'C U RY fL.'ont('r r ,

Pt10n1 1691 w rrkc11 ys

• L awn Boy
• Tecumseh
• Kohler
• W 1sc.on srn
• Al l other
ma k es

Ma son , W Va

GREAT
COUNTRY

W.11er E le clrtc Ga s Sewer
L1n 0'&gt;
tn ~ l a l lcd
Wor k
qu Han t ee d
Oou~ r Backhoe Tr uck !&gt;
Lnne:. f on e &amp; Ftll Dtrt
Co rnm erc tal Res tdentt al
Cu n '. l ruclton &amp; Re model

STEREO
92.1
WMPO-FM

s?no

"oc oe

, , ' " •' ' W &lt; II

we"

6A I

DH.Nrt

6 'J 6tp

Real Estate For Sale

TEAFORD
Virgil B. Tea ford. Sr.
Brok er
110 M ec hanic Stree t

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEW LISTING - Re nova te d 2
BR hom e wtlh large cl oe,e t s
Nrce bath and k1l ch en Wall to
wall carpef •ng Nal gas Jur
na ce Garag e dnd over J 1 a cr e
ot land Young fru 1t A skmg

51290000
MIDDLE PORT

Large 9

r oom ho use full bas em e nt 2
porches 2 ba th s now 1n 2 apts
Rent one to help w th th e
ove r hea d
A sktng
only

518 000 00
8 ROOMS
N ea r Gav n 2
buth s modern ktlchen Huge
front porch forced atr fu rnace
full basement v..t! h showe r l 37
of an acre on Rt 7 Want

S15 000 00
GROCERY All stock clnd
A g ood
so m e equ pmen t
bu s1ness lor a cou ple wtlh
amb !ton Work f or your&lt;&gt;e lf
and I ve a !of bett er W1ll se ll
no w tor the value of th e stock
Interested see us now
LOT ~ - For your new home
We have se Jera l tn th e M e rg s
and Eastern sc hool d slrr c t s
Call to see

LIF E IS EXC ITIN G WHE N
YOU BUY SOMET HING YOU
ENJO Y CHOOSE A NEW
ONE AND WE WILL SELL
YO URS
GOR DON B. TEAFORD
HELE .N l

TEA FORD

ASSOCIATES

992-3325 or

992-3615
..;...,_
litE

WISEMAN

Rea IESa
I Ie FOr SaIe
Phon~

992
6 1 Si c

? flEDROO N' hou se rn Md
cil e port
New krtche n li nd
b&lt;11h ilppl un ccs r~1 c lud c d
Ca l l Qq] 53 10
6 2 26tp
f R OO M S ano ba t h CJclS f ur nace

742 5595

Bill Brown . Owner
Rutland , Oh1o

-

'
SE PTIC
TA NK S clc an l" d '
r easo nabl e r;l1C S Ph
116!
t7fl2 Gu li •POi iS Jo t n Ru ss e t) ,
own t: r il nd operator
5 I ? I fc

DOZER work land c 1ear1ng b y
t he ac r e hourly or co n tract
lar m ponds ro ads et c Larg e
do zer and operafor wrth ove r
20 years expenence Pull 1n s
Excavatmg Pomero y Oh10
Phone 992 2.478
12 19 li e

SEPTIC
TA NK S
AROB I~S EWAGE
SYSTE M s-"'CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
SA N I TA TI O N
STEWART OH I O PH 661

H &amp; W Relr1geraf10n Se rv tces
R e l r ,ge ralor s fre e1e r &lt;1 1r
condt lr oners and com mere ell
un11s Phone 99 2 5587 or 99 2

CLELAND

"

FIRE DEPARTMENT
EQUIPMENT
EXT INGU ISHER
SALES&amp; SERVICE
HOME ALARMS

SEWING MA C HINE S Repa11
serv1ce all makes 99 :&gt; 2?84
The Fao r c Shop Pom ero y
A uthor 1zed Sr nger Sales and
Ser v iCe We Sharp en Sc ssors
3 29 lfc

1?&lt;11 !1 qar&lt;to ~ 1n Syr ac use Call SERVICE S o ff ered
fu r noture
Q9'} J B60
upholsle r ng
r eason ilblc
6 2 6tp
rale s P1 c kup and d e l ve r y
free
eS I1mate s
3
profe ssst onat cr a ft s 11cn to
NIC E i story hom e to r sa le by
serve you be tt er and l asl er
own er 3 be droom batlr and
Phone Mowr ey c; Upho l stery
modern k1t chen n ew qil s
675 41 S4 PI Pleasan t w V a
f urn.1 ce sec lud ed y~ud for
5 30 161 c
pr va cy Ho mC&gt; n e xce ll ent
c ondolron Prt cc d to sci! at
OPE N Roger Hy sell s Garage
'!.15 00\l
LOUliCd
n M id
(tleport Oh o
near Cro ss r oads on Stat e
Rou te 12.:1 8 30 to 6 p m
6 4 3tc
Monday through Sa tu-rday
Ptwn e 992 56B:&gt; ar 997 7 121
5 15 :/61C

3035
10

.:1

lf c

SEPTIC
TANKS
c leaned
Modern Sa nt1at1on 9Q2 3954 or
991 73.:19
10 23 li e
READY MIX
CONCRE TE
del1 v e r e d rrghf r o you r
pro 1ect Fas t ilnd easy Fre-e•
est ma t es Phone 992 328 4 ,.'1
Goeglern Ready M1x Co
Mtddleporl Oh1 0
630tfc ·

7

~~---

-----

C ORADFORD Auct1oncN
Como le te Sc r v1ce
Phone 9&lt;~9 387 1o r 9119 3161
Rac.ne Oh•o
Cr1 1t Brad ford

-

5 I t fc.

0 DELL A \r nemenl lo ca t ed on
Rout e 171 and Count y Rd ~
Cro s'&gt; road s complete ! rant
end ru n eup and brak e se r v1cc
Pl ease c all lor appo 1n t ment1
71\2 373/
'

7 :

•, '

'20 &lt;~

5 15261 p

REALTY

FUR
;.REE esl •mat es on
alum rnum
repla cemen t
w1ndows 51d.ng stor m doors
and wtn dow s Ra 11ng Phone
Cha rl es Lts l e Syracuse Oh1 0
Jacob
Sales
Carl
Representattv e
V
V
Johnson and Son In c
&lt;~ JO lie

MAIN
POMEROY, 0
CHESTER - 4 BR bath
d•nmg room
som e car
pe ttng ba rn 2 other out
butld tn g s abou t l acre,
corner lot S13 500

TUPPERS PLAINS
stor y
acre
ba th
che n

BROWN'S FIRE &amp;
SAFETY EQUIPMENT

Phon e 742 4673

n Pome roy
Call 99] 3807
see n by ilDPO i ntment
ROOFS and houses pa1nted
~ 30 6tp
F ree esl 1mates
pl enty ol
r ef er en ces
Phon e 991 33 63
5 30 12tn
Rt N CH s t,i\ e ho me 5 r oom&lt;,

60S E

F' re e Garag e
Es t1mates

717 Pea r l Street
M Jd lepo r t Ohto
Phon e 992 5367 or 992 38 61

M iddleport Pom eroy

9 '\(R E S o f ldnd
769 6

DAY OR NIGHT

B·K EXCAVATING
COMPANY

1 'l I 1/ 1 p

t961 PO N TifiC for sa r

Pom eroy:

PHONE 992-5271

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
773 5554

000 B.TU
POMEROY LANDMARK
't'.. _ Ja ck W CM sey Mgr
~

Pom e roy 0
Locat ed ar Modern Sup pl y
,. Small En g rnc R e p a r

WOOD TRUSSES

c=:&lt;/\')s,

GENE WOlFE'S
BODY SHOP

399 W Matn

MATERIALS CO

17

NEN 1974 Z g Za~ SE NING
MACHINE S
n
orrgrnal
carton
Z1g Zag to mak e
buttonhol es sew on buttons
monograms and maKe fancy
deSrgn,S With tUSt the IWI Sf Of a
s ngle d1al L ef t n lay a way
nnd never been u~ed Wtl, sel l
l or only S~7 cash o r t er ms
avadaOie Phon e 992 2653
5 29 lfc

-------------AM F M stereo r ad to - 8 track

and

6 'J li e

Phone

E LEC T ROLUX
va cuum
cleane rs A 1 c ondrt•on uses
paper oag s has co rd wmder
and many at ta chme nts Also
shampooe r attachme nt rn
el ud ed ( Only 4 available ) at
$37 70
cash
or
term s
available Phone 992 2653
5 19 lfc

I?AC IN E OH IO

Pome-roy

On Mosl Am.;n c an Cars

oull10 1r tt Ch ry &lt;l tr "''/'i &lt;,l &lt;llll 0
nq n1
1'&gt;\ 11 n
Vo l vo ?t:,[)
ou TilO rlr ct drovf' 1,1 1d £' n1 t tr
rrlrt (' r 1nc1 ,111 cu nv'l'&gt; f"\ouQ tl t
n • "''' u&lt;:."d ,,,.., ., t!1.1n 1'&gt;0 r.our &lt;,
:. " lr '&gt;O
C.il l C. My Grl)'!&gt;on
l\ !l1f'1F ~ ?l nr..~ &lt;~Itt r 7 p m
7 L?l69 t

6 5 71c

'

Ph 991 2174

OFFICE SUPPLIES

PH. 949-3611

RACINE GARAGE

-.

992 2094
Pom e roy
606 E Mam

WL t c pa tr h wn mowers and
q,1rd en trad o r 5o

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

~

HOME &amp; AUTO

•

F rom th e larges t Tru ck or
Bul l do1er Rnd1a tor to th e
s m.;~lles t He;1ter Cor e
Nathn n B1gg 5o
R:ndtator Spec1a1tst

ul

1 110 I W I 11 ( \ (1(1{ ( 'I tJ 11
1¥ 0 ( t r t '&gt; lt 1 Cro wn n i)O tlrcl

r Ill

6 I TI (

Pets For Sale

-LINCOLN HILL
-CONDOR STREET
-MONKEY RUN
- BUITERNUT AVENUE
-RACINE
-SYRACUSE

A tlll\1

11 rrHI IH' fpr•, ?
1 u
Hr r r l nr (l
7 I fl ltl r r ,

r-=::OMEROY

AUTOMOTIVE
REPAIR

lt c

NIC E 1 r oon ,1pt all Clcct r c 111 19~9 CHFVY Tow n',l1 rln &lt;. ! 'lt on
P 0 11 C' r oy ove rl oo k. •no tt,r
v.nqon S 1 195 C!OQd co nJ I ro n
Ohro
~~v C'r
V'1a11
oven
Ph one 997 7 6/0
t abl c ' o n
ranqf'
Ph on cJ 7 1 li e
Gal1 rpo l rs
! 16 699
r~ltcr
5
o 111 &lt;;u nd,1y t6 9)3 9
196R CHF V FLI F t,uronl11 c
6 ~ 61 p
tran s l l S5rOn
107 (' r)qrnC'
qood condr! on SliD (,111 9U
NICE block horne 7 roo ms rn
3538
Syr ilcu-;.e
Must
tr av c
f.
1tp
rP f cr encec; un f rn 1S hed I 'Hq r
t.,i t Chen Phone G.1 11 rpol 15 116
?IJQ9 il ll c r '1 D m Sunday t !6 196 3 MCR CU [ Y 'l lill on w,lqOn
'!.'UO lall '19 ?) 111 aii N 1 JO
9J39
D 111
6 7 6t c

2 BED R OOM lr ,11 1cr 1n Rutland
W I LSON S P ennZOII V'Je'!&gt;t Ma•n
v..1 th /\C Ph one 7 12 3 171 il ft er
Sl Now open for all types of
5 or phon e 7t2 56 \l any t ime
au to r t' p&lt;J!r Oil c hanqe lub e
6 7 6t (
10bs t une up an d automat c
tr ansmr SS IOn repa1r All al
d scount prr ce Al so off er 1ng F URNI SHED.:tpJ rt mcnt l 1 vtn~
room
2 bcdroom5 krl ch f'n
wnsh 1ob s and au to r econ
R ey nolds
Ap,1r mPnt;. up
d lion ng Tra rmd mechanr c
c lose to Drrv c In Theat er rn
on duty
Ma son Ca ll alt e r r p m 773
5 :1 1 71c
J 1 11 Mason
6 1 61p
SE L L lNG J househOlds t h s
F r 1day 3 1 and ne xl F rrdily
J une 7 Sale 5tart c; 7 30 p m
Ani ques q l usswu e Ch 1na
l rnen s quilt s la mps c lock s
St rlmPSC
old trunks dolls postcard s IRI SH Se tt er pup~
K !ten s J\KC Poodl e pupp cs
cookOooks
numerous
Ph cclsa nf ch1c k 5 Phone 1 156
collec tor s
!em s
p1ctures
62 17
wrck e r furn t ture l awn cha rr s
6 1 26tc
lounq e
cha r s
garden
equ1pment g l •de r I ertable s
step tabl es n exl week 3 n ce
bed r oom surtc 'i 1 nr rc I1V1nq
room SUi tes
I qood TV 5
color and BW
w nq bilck NEW Cr atr srnan se lf propell ed
cha r s an t1q ue !u rn tu r e
lawn mo w er 2? rnches 6 h p
I brary
tabl es
7
n rce
enct n e S/00 Ph one 7 t :&gt; 6? 73
rc lr rge r &lt;J tor e; Wllh fr eeze r
6 J He
c ompart ment 1 upr tgh l deep
freeze n 1ce Chrna cupb oard SHASTA Camper
qood con
rocl&lt;.er s so bo Ke s of good
drt 10 n Co;a rl c; Tr atle r Court
household terns als o tak1ng
rn
Rac1ne
Oh10
Vr r q rl
b1ds on so l i d brii SS bed open 9
Walker
to ~ Call 99 /350 9 Polly s
6 .J 6tc
Auct on Paq e and H rqh St
M 1ddleport
DOZER or ba ck h oe wor k. Ph
J 3 I 7tc
116 39R1 o r t.J 6 3 159

CARRIERS
WANTED

I

T hese su e&lt;., &lt;'ll c;o av,1t l ablc
S 000 6 000 8 000 10 000 and

For R~nt
n1

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COMPLETE

Rad

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M rll cr Rl I PomE' r Oy Oh o
c a l l 99? 7 !60
S 13 II (

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POLLY S
/'\Vet on
Pllrry
I r 1d ~v f om .11 Pe~rk 11u 1
H qh Sts l\ ni 1(1U(''l roll~rlor
1t ems
,1 nt 1QU C' f urnt l ure
co lor T V 5 Sl r p n P &amp; 1
Odd~ Clnd
End &lt;; ?1'1 North
f o r f ur n rt ure
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barqa rns
W1ll :,ell y our
rn c r chttr1d iS(' th e auc t r(' n W&lt;lY

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modPI S 01 moO le 11ornes
Phone Mea code 6 1 r 173 95) 1
t 13 lf C

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EXC E L , J ~ 5,111 Works
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Md ln S• Pome roy 1111 k 1nd s
of 5all wa ter pellet s water
nuQllels b lock salt ilnd own
Oh1 0 R v f' r Sail Phon ~ 991
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W€5 1 Ol Happy II QIIOW Ro ad
on 17J n ea r R utl ,1nd Lo ts ol
n rce c lo th nq and other t r&gt;m~
Judy 1\ nn Con b '&gt;

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flirt

Notrce

I hm rl rE"i Tt1u r s
Fr clly •lnd Si! t urd :l y 9
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7 by pa ss County Road 3
Wa t ch tor s CHIS

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OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
POMEROY. OH 10

MO TO ('R() &lt;:,&lt;:, Jur: e

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POMEROY MOTOR CO.

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1970 DODGE POLARA
~1195
1 door
fa ctory e11r
automa t c lr&lt;'!nsm r5 5iOn
p ov.1 r
stcertng 8. b rclk.e s good whrle v.clll lrrP S V' h te I n sh
v1 n yl r oot radto hcuvy duly wspe ns o n

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Slcllron Wagon
loci'! I r M
ltk e ne w
automcl l c gol d ftn sh c lciln 1n tenor
stecrtng &amp; &lt;'lulomal c tretn s

Pr, ,, ..,

Business Services

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Wh t e tm1 sh blue v ny l r oot 350 V 8 eng ciP i u~c tx It s
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wllc c l rove r s w w I rf' S P 8 rndr o
autornal1c w rl h power ste er 1ng &amp; brilke s full wMriln l y

197 1 DODGE CORONET

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mushroom
26 On the

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ITAGASHI

2 SIGNS

' 17

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No 212 19
Estate
of
LIL L IA N
TRIPLETT O ecea~ed
J
Not,ce c; hereOy g i ven th ai Jo
Ann Whtte Of M i ddleport Oh o
has been du l y .;lpp('rnted Ad
mtn!S t rntr rl'\ With the W 11
An nel(ed of the EState o f Lrl ll ~n
J Trl plell decea sed late o t
Metgs County Oh 1o
Cred1tors are requ red 10 hie
I he r cia ms wrth sad fldUc ary
w th 1n four months
ated th s 15th day 0 1 Muy
19 4

Look At"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

II

PhO n I

J
---------------- - -

For Sale

\ J I ()

SALE.' SAL!;' SA_LE' Barry
M tier Mobrle Hone s,11c .-. s
oversto cked Or"\ used 'HHl r ('
pos sessed Mob rtc Ho mes Wehave 11 u'ied 10 nnd 12 w d C's
th&lt;ll r11U SI be- SOld 111 .-,
w ee ken d Our pr Cl' S rnclude
your dehverv and comp le t ese t up Sloe Ll1 or cilll to chlY
you II be q l ad you d 1d Barry
M ller Mob teo hom r ~ d r l ~ 1 u~
F drson S!r ce t Rf'l pr (' Oh 0
phon e 173 9 ~ 11
6 6 I Otc

y etlerday'l Alllwer

24 Short
operatic
song
%5 Measure

"

VI&lt; •l •n t

19 70 PMC Mob I&lt;J Hom e un
furnrshed 3 bedroom }] 000
STU A1r COnd ll ron•
t1 d
r
POr c h
n awnr nq S~ 9SO EJ; c;: f'll c nt
con dll to n Phone 74 1 :'!R t 1
&gt;
6 5 11 (

21 Sun room
22 Spotless;
W1SUllied

t•dnt ~d.; I\ ,l,uu )

Mob1le Homes For Sale
6 '} !I [

DOWN
1 Defame
2 Wedding
vow
3 Obliterate
4 Empower
5 Humperdinck
heroine
6 Adjust
anew
7 Fonnic
ac1d
source
8 Speech
defect
9 Glut
12 Legume
16 Commedla
dell'-

\\

l o l l fr

10x50 TR fl l lf" R
3651

ACROSS
I Shanty
5 - roots
10 Old facts
11 - library
13 Single
14 Property
15 Cheerful;
optlmlsUc
17 Andy
Gump's
wife
18 Deplore
19 Floor
covenng

~

will bit avail·

spot

5 30- Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Elec Co 33, Hogan's Heroes 13 ,
Western Star Theatre 15.

6 30- News 3, 4 CBS News 8. 10, News 15, ABC News 6; Room

able

{

Sentinel Classifieds '(Jet 1-l.esuJts!

po~lon

loundatlons Help

competitive situations today
you tend to gtve your oppost·
l ion the edge before you start
This cuts down your chances

Corm four ordinary worde.

Make opponent play your suit
i':ORTH
.KI074 2
'104
+Q52

June 1, 11174
of ttQ year wtn
be SPent weeding out okl
problems and buildinG otronu-

A good

big thlnQ ot It
LIBRA (9epl 23-0cl 23) In

Helen Help

.4, 15

WIN AT BRIDGE

15 - lllc n ,uh Sl'Jlttnl'l, :\lldd!L'j.M.JI t-POilh r U \.
One ot your friends has said
something unflattenng about

you bul 1ts not all that bad

+++

Minutes to Love By 4
6 35 - Columbus Today •
6 45 -

...,. ··&gt;=·=·=-=--··:&lt;*'·&gt;.:.&lt;·:·:::,;·:·:· ·&lt;&gt;.;::::&lt;~·.::-:w~-~

brrck cor ner lot ove r 1
1n new add!lton , 3 BR
dmrng R
lovely k 1f
basement 8 yea r s ol d

S22 500 00
MIDDLEPORT - 8u stn ess
room modern a pt ove r 3
BR 111 ba th s dtnrng R HW
f loo r s wt lh ca r pettng ove r
hot wa ter hea t a l most new
but ldmg S26 500

POMEROY - Ranch lype 2
BR ba th HW floors wtth
ca rp e t ng
over
fu ll
basement
sma ll
lo t
f 1replace tn LR $15 000
POMEROY - 11'4 acr es 200
It fron ta ge or g1na ll y ha s 2
housP s •dea l fo r trailers or
hom e SJ 000

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP 705 acre s 7 room home new
stocked lake. new barn a nd
other butldtngs
lots of
wa lnut maple htcko ry 100
acres fence d runn.ng ca ttl e

$46 000
LI ST YOUR PR OPERTY
WITH US YOU CA N T GO
WRONG
992 2259 or 992 2568

--------------EXCAVATING rln 7P.r

lo.:~der

and backh oe work
sept1c
tanks msta lled dump t r ucKs
and lo boys for tltre wtll haul
f II d rt top so t! l tmes tone
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
Je ff er s da y phone 992 7089
n ghl phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 ll ti c
AUTOMOBILE rns uran ce Oeen
cancelle d?
Lost
your
operators lt cense Ca ll 992
7428
6 15 tic

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

Real Estate For Sale
70 ACRE farm 1 ro om hou se
wtth ce nfral heat carpetrng
modern k1 l C1len w dh d1Sh
washer 2 ba ths and a path
good earn gorden one ac re
pond lo r f rs h rnQ and sw m
m 1ng scen 1c and prrvate 4
fl'lrles fr om Harr i SOnv lie 1n
Sc1p 0 Town Sh ip ~30 000 Call
7424521
5 24 12tc

Kuhl 's sells both
Used F urntture
Every appliance sold
u se d and carrtes . a
O· da y
refund
or
r ep la cement
GUAR
ANTEE

"Chec k us out " lor all
your hou sehold fur
n •s htng n eed s 1f
don 't have 1t . we' ll t
fO ftnd If I

ONE new all el ect r c
3
bedroom $19 900 and 3 other
homes Phone 992 3975 or 992
1571
6 5 lfc

AGE,\U
Galltpolt s

•
RACINE
2 STORY PERMA STO NE 3
BR
LARGE
M OD ERN
KITCHEN
1 7 BATH S
CAR PE T
THROUGHOU T
FULL BA SEMENT 2 CAR
GARAGE
ALL
ON E
L ARGE
FLAT
WELL
L A N D S CAPE D
LOT
P RICED M ID TWENTIES

RUTLAND

MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; CO.
(Serving America for 100 Years)
Offers .an exciting op~lor!unity to operate a business of your
own w1th a very sma I mvestment. We are interested in a
qualified Sales oriented person with previous retail ex penence to own and operate a catalog store in Pomeroy,
Oh1o.
'

I ' IJ •

~ 'I
11 "

....

" "

IIIII

.,

3 BEDR OOMS LA RGE KIT
LIKE
NEW
C A RPET
ALUM SIDI NG
OWNE:R
WILL
HELP
~!NANCE
FOR QUAUF IE O BUYER
P RICED
BELOwJ
MARKE T S12000
•

If you are willing to accept responsibility in return for a
future tn your own business, write giving full personal
qualifi cations to:

•• •&gt;

OFFICE 446 3643
EVENING S
Bud McGh ee- 44 6 125S
E M 'I ke' W• se man- 446

E. A1 Smith, 4-1
100 S. Monroe Street
Baltimore. Maryland 21232

...

3796

~------------~~~----~
' .,

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Tainted Watergate candidate loses in California.

A tour uf the pilstural

H} STEVE GERSTEL
Umll'd Pn· !\s Inlernatlnnal
Hepubhcan voters, g1rdmg

Sl'nalortt;t l prm ary m South

fur what could be the GOP's
sternest test ever m November . flatl y rejec ted a
Waterga te ta inted candtdate tn
Cahforma, ptcked a poltttcally
Wlknown war hero m South
Dakota and chose a harsh
critic of Prestdent Ntxon m
Iowa m Tuesda y's prunary
elections
State Con troller Houston
Flournoy, a Repubhca n progressive, crushed Lt. Gov Ed
Reinecke, who has been indtcted on thrC€ counts of pet Jury
by a Watergate grand jury, to
wtn the GOP gubernatonal
prtmary m California
In the Democratic prunary,
Secretary of Sl&lt;!te Edmund G
Brown, son of form er two-term
Gov . Edmund G (Pat) Brown
who delated Prestdent Nixon
for the governorship m 1962,
turned back challenges from
San Francisco Mayor Joseph
Altoto and Assembly Speaker
setting above is inviting
Bob Moretti.
Flournoy and Brown . newcomers to national polittcs, w11l
battle It out m November, with
the wmner succeedmg Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
Leo Thorsness, a Medal of
Honor winner who was held
captive by North Vietnam for
stx years , mad e hi s first
pohtical outing an tmpresstve
past the uder bouse. will bnng an other look at the canal days one by wtnntng the GOP
you to the carefull y re slm ed of early Ohl o These g1ant slqne
double pen log barn built by struct ures would raise and
Johnston tn 182G to house both lower the boats to ~llio"' them
sheep and hugs Tod ay severa l to pass ttu uugh the gentl)
mules al so h ve m the sturd y rollmg hills or 1he area
str ueture.
The P1q uc-1 H1stor teal A1 ea 1s
A trat l bm dered by spht 1at! open from 10 .a m to 5 p m •
fences leads from th e farm- Tuc sda) llu ough Sunday, from
stead to the Htston c Ind wn Aprtl through October AdWASHINGTON i UPl i Mu se um . It Is mos t ap - mtss ion Is $1 for adults and 50 Mmnun, Kemo Sabee 1 No
propnate that the home of the ce nts for childr en OhiO more Lone Ranger rmgs or
Indian 's fn end , John John ston, Htston cal Society members
stlver bullets•
should be chosen to retell the ~md orgamzed sc hoo l group:;
That's nght, Tonto Maybe
story of the proud tnbes that are adm itted fr ee The no more Ca ptam Video
lt ved m the i:lrea from thl! 17th I.ockm gton Loeks ~~ e open decoders. Davy Crockett Tthrough the 19th cenjurv A vear-round durmg the da ylight shtrts, or Sky Ktng turquoise
stor'y tha t IS expressed thr ough hours
rmgs either.
the eyes of those persons who
A fr ee bookl et on 'Oh1o 's
Wtlham Tell Overture in the
kn ew the Indtans bes t - fur Yes terd ay geta ways" ts background -and the scene
traders, soldiers, nusstonanes. avatlable by wrthng the Publtc shtfts to Washmgton , DC .
a nd captives Indian a r tifacts Informa tion Office, the OhiO
and li fe size rnann equw s Hlstollcal Center , Columbu s,
combme to pain t a vivid pic- Ohi O 4:!21 1
ture of thas Importan t time m
Amen ca 's past.
Perhaps, the crowmng glory
O[ the Ptqua l{i SIOIICai At ca IS'
the more than one mtle of the
Mtanu -En e Canal tha t h(:l s
bee n reclaimed from decades

Geor ge .S. Mc Govern, the in·

Piqua Historical Area offers
rarest simplicity to visitors
PIQUA. OhiO - It's the
marvelous simplici ty of thmgs
tha t ca n ma ke a tn p to The
Piqua Hi sto rical Area on
Hardm Road m Piqua a mos t
memo ra bl e experience this
summer.
To different peo ple. th e
memories could come from
dtfferent thtngs The bnght
reflec tiOn of the red brtck home
and spnnghouse tn the clear
waters of the ltdy fa rm pond ,
the lingertng scen t of htckory
logs a nd sou rd ough bread
filhn g the atr near the outdoor
even, the sohd prac ticality of
the log barn, the clean lines of
the Htstoric Indian Museum
rtst ng out of the land like a
contemporary fort, or a nde on
the Genl Hamson canalboa t
where the paC€ of life moves no
faster t~an a team of mules can
walk.
The bea utiful farmstead was
constructed in the early 1600s
by Col John Johnston. Johnston became a trusted ally of
the Indians of the area and
champi oned th eir cau ses
during the tran st twn of Ohw
from a land of the red man to
the land of the whtte. Hts fa rm
operated wtth the most modern
of sctenhftc a gricultura l
techmques known at tha t lime
When the Ohto Htston cal
Society obtain'ed the la nd
almost ten years ago, many
', believed the restoratiOn of the
butldmgs, so long neglected
could never be accomplished
But even a qwck tour about the
grounds thts summ er wtll

prove l h&lt;:~ l VIC WpOin t \HIS Hl COI'I'€C t

The Piqua Htston ca l At ea
f ar

m ore

than

Cl

Is

s td llS

res tm atwn. It~ 174 uc1es me
ahve w Jtl-j th e actJvJbes tha i
would have bee n fo und on the
fa rm "hen the Johnstons hved
he re uve1 q century ago You
ca n h~ lsure l} wander throug h
the finely furmshed rooms of
the mam house and \\o atch a
cos tumed gtrl blend the fres h
mgred1ents for a homemade
ct:l~e m a crockery bowl &lt;:~ n d
then bake ,t to a golden brown
m an outdoOr oven
Just below the oven and frm t
k1 ln, a spnnghousc harnesses
the water from a htilstde sprtng
for use tn the fam tly's cooktng
and wa shin g Above the
spnn ghou se , g1rls 1n pnn t
dresses sptn flax tnlo dehca te
threads and dye the carefulll
wrapped skems of varn wtth
the JUi ces of berm s and
leaves In another cornez, a
weaver sktllfully shu ttles the
bobbw on her loom back and
for th to crea te beauti ful bolts
o[ clo th fr ,o m th e fr eshly
colored yarn.
Outstde. on a flags tone courtyard, a young man dips can dles mto molten beeswax fr om
an tron kettle heated over a log
ftre and a gtrl casts large bars
of lye soap tn a wooden frame
Nearby a flock of ducks tgnores
the prese nce of gutdes and
visitors ahke as they bob effortlessly about on the ge ntle
rtpples of the pond.
Ashort walk up the dtr t path ,

Thorsness wtll fa ce Sen
cumbent Democrat next fall .
Mt'Go,. ern, comp] etm g hts second term , was th e 1972
De mocrati c pr es td enttal
ca ndtdate and one of the most
outspoken cnhcs of th e Vtetnam war m whr ch Tiwrsness
fou ~ ht

In Iowa , State Rep Davtd
Stanley won the Republtcan
senatorial nommat10n whtle
Rep John Culver took the
Democrati c prunary without
opposition Stanley, who narrowly lost to Sen. Harold
Hughes m 1968, sharply cti!tctzed Prestdent Ntxon durmg
the campatgn.
Stanley satd of Ntxon ''He's
hurting our party, he's hurting
our country and he 's givmg the
appearance of havmg something to htde."
califorma voters also gave a
landslide endorsement to Watergate inspired reforms ,
enacttn g the stnctest campatgn spendmg laws m the
country .
In all, etght states he! pnmartes, and almost everywhere there was a low voter
turnout.
These are the results:
CALIFORNIA - lncwnbent
Sen. Alan Cranston won easy
renommatton
m
the
Democratic primary over

Lone Ranger tethered,
his silver bullets at an end
v. here the cause of th1s con-

tice .. " he sa1d.

That apparently could mean
sternation ts revealed. On
that
netther Hank Aaron nor
Monday , Lewis A. Engman,
chatrman of the Federal Trade Mtghty Mouse could endorse
Commission, proposed banning C€real.
[n, addtlton Engman said
kids' teleVIsion commercials m
consideration
should be given
whtch prtzes are offered for
to stoppmg conunercials for
sending in box tops.
"I am now prepared to Vltamms or over-the-counter
c.:onclude, as a matter of law, drugs auned at children, as
that the inclusiOn of premium well as pitches for dangerous
offers m children's teleVISion toys or "other products
advertising has no plaC€ tn hazardous to health or safety. "
Consumer groups which
Amencan marketmg and -as
have
been pushing both the
I read the law - is a violation of
the Federal Trade Conuntsston FTC and the Federal Comact," he said tn a speech to the munications Commission
Amertcan Advertising Federa- (FCC) to do somethmg about
kiddy commercials for years
tiOn .
To members of the Tonto were happy.
Peggy Charron of the
generahon that mtght sound
Action
on
Bostonbased
ltke enough of a social
The second quarterly revolution for one day, but Children 's Televison called
meeting of the Ohto- Kanawha Engman was JUSt warmtng up. Engman ' s announcement a
"I also have concluded that, " beautiful first step." She
Branch of lhe Sons and
Daughters of Pwnee~ River- under some ctrcumstances al looks forward to reducing the
men will be held on Jun e 23 at least, the use of 'hero ftgures ' number of mmutes of comPomt Pleasant mstead of June m children's advertismg may mercials to which children
9 tn Hunttng ton as was con stitute an unfatr prac- may be exposed m one day.
previously announced
ThiS group, conststmg of
members of the parent
orgamzatwn fr om southern
West Vtrgmia and adjacent
Ohio and Kent~cky areas, will
mee t at 2 p.m m the meetmg
room of the Tu-Endt-Wet
Manor Housmg Development
to conduct busmess, have an
mformal get-together for the
exchange of ptclures and information, and perhaps take a
walkmg tour of pmnts of interest
and
htstort cal
stgntftcance lo the steam boating trade and Industry of
yesteryears
All members of the parent
Buy your summer furmlure now during this sale - for
yourself - for Father's Day giving on June 16th.
Sons and Daughters of Ptoneer
Well known makes - excellent quality - names like
Rivermen orgamzation a r e
Telescope Lawnlite - John Hancock - Lloyd.
urged to attend as there are no
for
other reqUirem ents
membership tn thts branch.
Persons mterested in the lore
of the rtvers and the paddle
wheel steamers arc welcome
Fohng Chatrs - Rockers - Chatse

Ohio-Kanawha

Branch to meet

Auto goes into

of abandon and eroswn Here,

yo lll' family ca n ride a Soctety
constructed cana lboat pulled
by a team of mul es tn tandem
The bearded boa t captain wtll
rchve the tales of OhiO's manma de ri vers wl11le th e ca nal
water laps softl y agamst the
hull Even tf tt's JUSt [or a bnef
moment, yo u can really get lost
m a bygone era .
Just three miles north of the
Ptqua H1stoncal Area, the
Lockin gton Locks offer yet

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, JUNE 8th
UNTIL S PM

EMPIRE-DETROIT STEEL
11

DCikota

tok en oppositi on In the
Re publi ca n s enatorial
pnm ary , State Sen H L.
RtchardsOn, a former member
of the John Birch Soctety,
defeated Earl Bnan , a Vietnam hero a nd Reagan 's former
health] and welfare dtrector.
IOWA - Stanley, who
narrowly lost to retiring Sen.
Harold E Hughes m 1968,
eastly won the Republican
senator1al nommatwn, beatin g
State Sen. George Mtlligan . He
will face Rep. John Culver,
who was unopposed tn the
Democr a ti c primary . Gov .
Robert Ray was unopposed in
hts btd for a fourth term. The
wmn er of the Democratic
gubernatorial nommataon was
state party leader James
Schaben, who defeated former
stale Rep. Wtlltam Gannon and
former state Democratic
chatrman Clark Rasmussen.
SOUTH DAKOTA - Thorsness, m hts £irst political
outing, won a clear majority in
a three-way ra ce for the
Republtcan senatorial nommatwn . He ran far ahead of
businessman AI Schock. Former
NatiOnal
committeewoman Barbara Gunderson
tratled
badly .
McGovern was unopposed . In
the governors ' primaries,
incumbent Richard Kneip
outdistanced hts lieutenant
govenor, William Dougherty.
The Republicans chose former

at Tu-Endie· Wei

Lebanon creek

A tee nage drrver mtssed an

mter sect1on on a rural road
about 11 30 o'clock Saturda~
mght and went mto a creek, the
Metgs County Sheriff's Dept
reported Tuesday m a delayed
report
16,
Deborah
Harden,
Syracuse, with Kathy Kendall,
Warren, Mtch as a passenger,
wa s travelling north on Sharon
Hollo\\ Road m Lebanon Twp.
11hen, tn turnin g left onto
County Road 35, drove mto a
creek. There was extensive
damage to the vehtcle but no
InJuries and no c1tahon .

Not tce
SHOO T I N G mat c h , Rutland
Gun Cl ub Sund a y , Jun e 9 1
p m 300 ya rd s Sport er rtf les
onl y

FAMILY DAY PICNIC 11

6 5 4tc

state htghway director Jolin
Olson by a wtde margm.
MISSISSIPPI - Repubhcan
Thad Cochran and Democrat
Davtd R. Bowen, the otily
members of the House del egation wtth primary oppos1tlon,
swept 1 to vtctory. James H.
Meredith, a symbol of the civil
rtghts crusade when he
became the first black to enter
th e University of Mtsstssippi in
1962, was forced tnto a runoff
against Kenneth L. Dean for
the chan&lt;!€ to !&lt;Ike on Cochran
in the fall,
NEW
JERSEY
Incumbents faced only token
opposition, but the rettrement
of Rep. Peter H. Frelmghuysen
touched off a race among nine
candidates in the fifth distnct.
Millicent Fenwick won the
Republican nomination by 72
votes but assemblyman
Thomas H. Kean indtcated he
would ask for a recount The
Democratic winner was
Frederick M. Bohen.
ALABAMA - Jere
L.
Beasley, nding the coattruls of
Gov. George C. Wallace, won
nomlnation for a second term
as lieutenant governor tn a
runoff agamsl buSinessman
Charles Woods.

-

tr u ct o r 9 new ltr es,
br akes a nd m uffl er , excel lent

!= O RO

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

co n d tt ton

S9 50

Ph on e 985

3594

CAMDEN PARK

3 PT PI CKUP d tSk , 7 II S2 SO
Two l &lt;i m c h plow s, front end
loader eac h $150 A ll w or k s
on For d t ra c tor Pt10ne 98 5
3594

HUNTINGTON

U.S. 60 WEST

.

6 5 41 c

6 5 4f C

Spring Special For LP Gas

An editorial

available for

There are sufficient reasons

'75 wheat crop

we believe to support the

A new farm whea\ allotment
may be established for 1975
crop wheat acreage for farms
that dtd not have a 1974
allotment tf they meet
eli g tbtlt ty requirements
Clarence Prtce, chatrman of
the Meigs ASC Commtltee,
announced Tuesday.
A 1975 wheat allotment wtll
be established automatiCally
for most farm s that had a
wheat allotment m 1974.
To be eligtble for a new farm
allotment, the operator must
expect to receive more than 50
pet. of his income from farming Netther the farm owner
or Operator may have an in~
teres! m any other farm which
wtll have a 1975 wheat alotment
at the hme the request is made,
and the person making application must have had at
leas t one year production
experience in a priOr year.
Appltcattons for a new farm
allotment must be filed m the
county office on or before July
I, 1974. Any interested
producer who can meet these
requirements should contact
the county offtce before 'the
fmal date for ftling an ap-·
phcatwn.

IN
POINT PLEASANT
CONTACT
HERMAN LYNCH
PHONE 675-2460

DONNA

STEWART
992-2145

MOBILE] HOMES AND NEW CENTRAL HEATING AND
SPACE HEATERS

.CITY ICE ·&amp; FUEL CO.
POINT PLEASANT W. VA.

I

M,IDDLEPORT, ·OHIO

Dnve to Elberfelds Warehouse on

House action

'"

Whirlpool Air Conditioners
5,000, 6,000, 8,000, 11,~00, 18,000, 19,000,
22.000 BTU coolin_g capacity.
Easy-to-install. Some are 110 volt . some
are 220. Now is the best time to select the
air. conditioner yo-u need for your home.
offtce, church - or buy as a Father 's Day
gift June 16.

1

,.

''

.

'

\

/,

'

I,

r I

-•
I'

I'
•

da ys befo re any de finitive
diagnosis ca n be made Unless
there IS a change m his con·
dttion, no further repor t wtll be
made until then ." Murphy
tndtca ted tt was the fir st time
Hayes, a tireless wor ker who
often works 12 to 14 hour days,
had ever expen e nced chest
patn s

Gen. Bradley, returns to Omaha Beach
OMAHA BBACH. No rmandy, France (UP! ) - ,
Thtrty years after thetr longest
day, Allted wa r veterans led by
five star Gen Omar N.
Bradley, 81, returned to the DDay beaches of Normandy
today and patd tnbute to thetr
fallen comrades.
At Bayeux, Amen can old
soldters were JOined by a
French delega tt on led by
Armed Forces Mtntster
Jacques Souffle! and walked m
solemn procesSio n to th e
Memorial of the Ltberatwn to
la y wreaths
At Omaha beach, where

Ameri can troops landed, there
v. as a rehgwus se rVlc e at the
U S cemetery and another
wreath-laying at the National
Guard monwnent whtch was
spectally erec ted for the 25th
D-Day anmvetsa ry. Further
ceremomes took place at Pomt
du Hoc, where the Rang ers
stormed ashore and clunbed an
unposstble cliff.
The 90th Dtvtston was honored at carentan and Gen.
Ma xwell Taylor 's atrborn e
troo ps at St. Mere I'Eghse,
where a pnvate f1rst class onc'C
dangled by his parachute from
the church steeple and watched

ha nd-to-hand ltghtmg go on in
the square below
A total of 130,000 men landed
on the Normandy beaches June
6, 1944 Of those 9,000 died.
It was htstor y's biggest
seaborne operation , corrunand·
ed by the then General of the"'
Army Dwtght D Etsenhower,
and proved the beginmng of the
end for Adolf HtUer , funnelling
eventually onto the shores of
France a body of human betngs
larger than the populatton of
Pittsburgh.
Among the American veterans who came to Normandy to
re-live the day were Bradley,

Taylor , Gen. Mark Clark, Gen.
J . Lawton Colltns, Gen. Ira C.
Eak er and representatives of
seven U S veteran groups
U S Ambassador to France
John lrwtn was among them.
Rusted meta l skeletons and
an occasional slab of concrete
poked through the tw!fling
sa nd, the last ves tige of
Httler 's ~' ortr ess Europe. Pa~
rows of whi te crosse1&lt;;.: ·the
nearby fields of
mandy
bloomed wtth s prin~ flowers.
F'r om Outs treham to St .
Vaast, all was peaceful and
qutel on the 30th anmversary of
D-Day.

N":

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enttne

Devoted To The lnleresu Of The Meigs-Mason Area

_V.:.::O.::..L.:..:XX:....VI_~N-=-0.-=3-=--8_ _P
_O_ME
_R_OY_-MIDDLEPORT. OH I0

People ask us , "What lS the community college? Should I
vote for tt?"
The nuts and bolts of what the CC Is are easy to list. They
have been on display in local news media for weeks - even
months -for everyone to read. I! interested, you read about It; if
not, you turned to the comics or crossword puzzle or the latest
Watergate twist.
Now, however, provided you are a property owner, the
conununity college proposition threatens to cost you something.
Not much to the average taxpayer: something like $4 per year,
which ill about what the gas costs you to drive to Columbus, to eat
a pretty decent dinner at a good area restaurant, to take home
three six-packs, or eight packs of cancer sticks; to have your
lawn mowed a couple of ttmes, or to pay half your telephone bill
for one month (if you made no toll calls).
Even so, the way the country is going, the way taxes ar.e
being spent by the town, state and ~tiona! govenunent - $100
million for example, proposed to rebuild some funny-named town
over in some place called the Golan Heights seven or eig!lt
thousand miles away -we have to close the gate somewhere!
That's right, it should be ciOI!Od somewhere, and quickly.
But not, we submit, next Tuesday at the special election to
vole up or down a one-mill levy for operation of the community
college that will serve Meigs, Jackson, Vinton and Gallia
Counties.
In support of this position we would offer the following
reasons for voters to consider. They may not be worth those eight
packs of cigarettes to some people; we only ask that the relative
~erits be given an honest weighing. (In any case, yes or no, vote
next Tuesday). We suggest that:
-The proven truth that educational opportunities is the
basic requirement for the general welfare of this or any area is
never more apparent anywhere than in the four southeastern
Ohio counties the cc will serve. The CC will make advanced
education in the vocational arts and In the hwnanities and !me
arts available at an extremely low cost to everyone, young,
middle-aged, and elderly. SCholarships that will defray the
tuition to IJ'aCtically nothing will be available to most young
people particularly of Meigs County.
-Parents who want to make college or advanced vocational
training available to their children now, five years from now or
10 or more years from now, and foresee problems in paying the
bill to the ever-more costly big state universities, stmply will
have missed their boat altogether if they don't support the CC.
Urban populations have access to this type of school. We do not.
We can now. And the opportunity may never arise again.
-The objection (seen in Mr. Tom Breech's letter on page 2
today) that public supported higher education is leading down
the road to soclalillm is the most unfortunate sort of argwnent. It
is unworthy even of the late Sen. Joe McCarthy wbo recognized
that this nation, before Its constitution was written and acC€pted
by the 13 colonies, embarked upon a policy of free public schools.
The Northwest Territory (Ohio etc.) through the Ordinance. of
1787 set aside one section of land in each township for the support
of public schools. This main stream of America has never
wavered significantly from that early beginning.
-The proposed one-mill levy, under state law, would not
have to be renewed, nor could it be increased.
-In this era when taxes are being wasted so freely in
duplication in the military establislunent, welfare services, and
billions of dollars In outright grants to foreign nations the $4
annually to help 0[1'!rate a hom~Hlriented college ill the best
bargain Meigs County will ever be offered.
-Rio Grande College, which will be tied into the conununity
college as a four-year degree granting school, rapidly is
emerging as a "prestige" college as more people, young and old,
become disenchanted with the drug induced modern life styles
surrounding the big universities.
-Severallnmdred young people graduating annually from
Meigs County high schools will never find out if college can
benefit them should the conununity college issue fall. They'll
simply be unable to enroll in one.

(Edllon: Jane 6 Is the 3Ith
tJlllll"'nary of D-Day, tbe
~glmtnc of the ead of Gorman
ieslstan~ In World War 11.
UPI's Pentagon reporter, War·
l'Oil -1. Nelson, reconUy lnlervtewod MaxweU Taylor, thea a
l1ro4ter II!IIOr.l 1wbo led a
dl'l'llloo of paratroopen In tbe
darblc raid aplattt Gorman

You'll enjoy a trip to Elberfelds Mechanic Street Warehouse.
Open every week day 9:30A.M. to 5 P. M. and Friday and saturday 9·30
A.M. to 9 P. M.
.

·ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

4

tncludtng a 42-21 vtctory over
Southern California tn the Rose
Bowl Game Jan. I.
Dr. Rober t J Murphy, head
phystctan on the OSU Athletic
De partmen t staff, said Hayes
u as admitted to the hospt tal
afte r complatmng of ches t
patns whtle at home
'' H1s condth on IS stable",
Murphy said " It will be three

THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1974

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

Jury did not indict hut
named Nixon in coverup
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
federal graod jury voted last
February to nam~ President
Nixon as an unind1cted coconspirator in the Watergate
coverup, it was disclosed
today.
The
President's
impeachment lawyer, James D.
St. Clair, told reporters he was
informed of the development three or four weeks ago

by Spec1al Prosecutor Leon
Jaworski.
St. Clatr made the comment
after the Washintgon Post and
the Washmgton Star-News said
the grand jury named-but did
not ind1ct- the President and
others in a sealed indictment
returned March I against
seven former White House and
Nixon campaign a1des.
The Lo! An~eles Times .

which first reported the grand
jury wanted to name Nixon,
said Jaworski persuaded the
jurors not to menlton the
President even as an umndicted co-conspirator.
Asked about the reports, St.
Clair said when Nixon was told
that the grand jury wanted to
name him, the President said,
"They JUSt don'l have the
evidence and they are wrong."

Marietta board reneged
ROCKFORD, lll. (UP! ) Rockford School Superintendent Robert Salisbury, who
resigned under fire last month,
had a new job lined up in Ohio,
but it has fallen through.
Salisbury was told by phone
Wednesday that the Marietta,
Ohio, School Board had voted
not to accept hill application for
the superintendent's job there.
He was asked to withdraw it.
Marietta attorney Roland W.
Riggs, acting for the board,
said he personally made the
phone call so Salisbury would
not get the bad news through
the media.
Riggs said the Marietta
board voted last month to hire
Salisbury, but was unaware at
the time of an investigation lnvolvmg Salisbury's use of
Rockford School Board funds
for personal expenses.
"I don't think anyone here

knew," Riggs said in a phone Salisbury applied for the $26.interview. "It came as qwle a 000-a-year school superintendshock."
ent's job at Marietta, a comSalisbury resigned his munity of some 16,000 located
$40,IJOO.a-year job at Rockford in southern Ohio near the West
effechve Aug. 1, after he was Virginia border.
accused of billing the school
Hts application was acboard for personal expenses, cepted, but the board reversed
and of filing a double expense itself • in a vote earlier this
account for three trips.
week .
He repaid $2,600 to the board
"We made a nustake," said
and said it had been an over- board member Donna Beal.
Sight on his part.
The school board gave a vote
of confidence, but a teachers
'
union . called
for . his
resignation, and he resJgned
May 24. About the same time,
Winnebago County state's •
attorney Phillip Reinhard ffi
announced he would present
A strtke at the Gavm Power
evtdence to a county grand
Cheshtre, entered Its
Plant,
jury on "certain financial
third
day
today, although about
transactions involving the
one-th1rd
of the employees
superintendent of schools."
While Utis was occurring, reported for work this mormng, accordtng to John Reece,
Pubhc Affairs Co-ordtnator for
the AEP; Iacihty .
Wednesday, only a few
electricians reported for work
Elks Club. The busmess porReece said the craft workers
tlon will begin at 8 p.m. Dirl(ler and the BUilding and Trade
will be available from 5 lo 1:30 Counctl have faded to reach an
p. m.
agreementron a new contract.
\
He mdicated an agreement
Only paid up members of the should be possible some time
organizahon will be elig1ble to next week.
vote. Membership may be
No progress has been
purchased a! the meeting. reported between the two
District wide candidates will organizations, and no pickets
attend and all state-w1de or trouble have been reported
candtdates hav~· been invited . at the plant.
I

Gavin strike

third day

l

Democrats to convene
Democrats of the lOth
Congressional Distr~ct will
convene m Martella, June 12 to
elect a president, vicepresident, secretary, treasurer
and press secretary and select
members for thelf executive
committee
Club President Hanley
Hackett said all area
Democrats are mviled. The
meeting wtll be at the Marietta

The names of the seven
persons mdicted, mcluding top
former presidenttal advisers
HR . Haldeman, John D.
Ehrlichman and John N.
Mitchell, were revealed March
1. No names of co-conpsirators
were dtsclosed.
Later, the grand jury turned
over voluminous material it
used m Its Invesltgation, mcluding any evidence relating
to Nixon, to !he House
Judiciary Conunitttee for its
unpeachment inqwry.
The newspapers cited unnamed sources as the baSis for
their reports.
The Post and Star-News satd
the jurors actually wanted to
indict the Prestdent, but
named him as an unindtcted
co-conspirator mstead after
Jaworski told them there was
some questton whether they
had power to indict a President.
As an unindtcted co-conspirator, Nixon would not laC€
crimmal penalties.
St Clair said today, "The
President said they JUSt don't
have all the evidence and they
are wrong." Intervtewed as he
arnved for a closed session of
the Judiciary Conumttee, St.
Clair satd:
"I don't thmk the evtdenC€
supports tt. It wouldn't be the
first time a grand -jury was
wrong-and tl has no legal
effect "
St. Clatr added that the
President is "very confident
that the true facts wtll come
out and that he will be
exonerated ."
The Washtngton newspapers
said N!Xon was named m
sealed docwnents turned over
to Federal District Judge John
J. Sirica, bul satd the House
Judiciary Committee was not
told of the co-conspirator
listmg.
The Post satd the grand
jury's findings were relayed to
attorneys for the defendants
May·6 at a closed session wtth
(Continued on page 12 )

1

LEANNE SEBO AND ROGER BRAUER are assistant
park manager and park manager, respectively, of the
Middleport Pool this summer. Offered at the pool are
swmunlng and tennis lessons, basketball for boys and softball for girls tn the 4th, 5th and 6th. Those interested m the
programs may sign up at the pool.

·,New programs
going at park
There's plenty to do at the
Mtddleport Park thts swnmer
wtth new programs betng offe red to the public .
Mond ay and Wednesday
mornmgs from 10 until noon,
4th, 5th and 6th grade boys can
take advantage of a basketball
program under the dtrectt on of
Roger Brauer, park mana ger .
Tuesdays and Thursdays are
set astde for 4th, 5th and 6th
gra de gtrls wtth an tnstru cti onal softball leag ue
being organtzed to pia~ from 10

a m.

to ~noon .

For those who don 't wish to
swim alongstde httle toddlers,
each Tuesday and Thursday
mght ts adult and family mg_ht

for persons 18 years of age • nd
older Those wtth famtly
tickets are admitted fr ee of
charge, and for- others the cost
IS 25c. The !tme IS 7 to 9
Wednesday night the pool is
open to the publtcfrom 7 to 9 at
25c I."r pers on, and Fnday
mght is teen mght from 7-10,
again at ,25c per person for
those over 13 years of age.
Tenms lessons also wtll be
offered at the pool. All Interested persons should stgn up
at the pool.
Regular swnmer Red Cross
swtmmmg ' less ons
are
beginnmg nex t week wtth
JuniOr and senior hfesaving
( Contrnued on page 121

Normandy Invasion beginning of the end of German resistance

~~s o at Elberfelds Warehouse- Special sale prices on RCA TV Sets . Dehumidifiers M
th ~ Rang~s all at sale prices - Carpet by the yard Armstrong and Congoleum Shtnyl Vagt~
P a ~equtres no wa x Sftck Dow11 Wonder floor Ttle by Congoleum complete line of Gllddnv
atn s ·, Lawn Boy Lawn Mowers . Whtrlpool no frost upright Deep Freezers 15 and 12 en
ft ~ ~c·~ ·
w

;.

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Showers and thundershowers
likely west today and a chance
of thundershowers east htghs
75 lo 80
ConSiderable
cloudmess tonight and Friday
with a chance of showers. Low
tumght m the mid to upper 60s .
High Fnday tn the 70s

coach of the Buckeyes tins fall.
Hayes coached ar· Dcmson
and Mtartll (OhiO ) pnor to
bccom mg head coach at OhiO
State m 1951 Hts tea ms have
won three natJOli al cham ·
p10nsh1ps, s ix outn ght B1g Ten
ti tles and shared three others
Last season. the Buckeyes
were co-c ham piOns w Lth
M1chrgan Y.. lth a 11)..0 1 m:1rk ,

at y

proposed community college

Lounges - Lawn Swmg wtth Canopy,
Mechamc Street - Plenty of free
parking . See the fme selection of
porch , lawn and patio furniture. Buy
th e p1eces you want and save now

0~

Hayes has bC€n head football
coach at Ohio State fo r 23
years. H1s teams have won 159
ga mes. lost 49 and hed etght
He ts a native of Newcomers·
town and a graduate of Demson
Umvers1ly.
Hayes, who was born at
Cltfton, Ohto but ra tsed tn
Newcome rs town , wil l be
starlin g hts 24th yea r as head

•

New allotments

Sale! Summer Porch,
lawn and Patio
Furniture

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
OhiO House Tuesday passed,
87-5. and sent to the Senate
legislation hberalizmg penston
beneftts for rehred sc hool
teachers, school employes and
public employes, Including
state legislators
The btU, sponsored by Rep .
John D. Thompson, DCleveland, reduces from five to
three the number of years used
m calculatmg the final Ferage
salary for rettrees , thus
boosting the average salary on
whi ch pensiOn benefits are
based.
The House tgnored warnings
by House minority leader
Charles F Kurfess ' R-Bowling
Green that the $42 nullion cost
· of. the mcrease \VOUid not be
funded under the btll.
House members rejected an
amendment by Rep. Charles E.
Fry. R-Sprtngfield , wht ch
would have approprtated $38
mtlh on to pa y for most of the
benefits.

..

OFF TO MYRTLE BEACH - These six girls excitedly packed their luggage tn watting
chartered bu.!es Wednesday before the Meigs Marauder Marching Band left for the Sun Fun
Band Festival in Myrtle Beach, S. C. Meigs was one of 35 bands invited to the festtval. Front, 1r, are Mona King, Autwnn Sayre, Kathy Werry ; back row, Julie Hamm, Lisa Thomas and Kim
Jones.

Warehouse on Mechanic Street

benefit from

COLUMBUS (UP! I - OhiO
State Umv erstty football Coac h
Woody Hayes, 61 . was rushed
to Umversity Hospttal today
where he was listed m guarded
condttton He was be heved to
have suffered a heart atta ck
~~ coach Woody Hayes was
admttted to the Umve rs1 ty
Hospttal at 8 a m ,' ' the
hosptttal admtmstratton sa td tn
a statement "He has bee n
placed m the coronary care
unit until such hme as final
reports are received from the
cltnical tests and laboratory
tests .
"He is bein g treated as a
coronary type pahent," tl1e
statemen t said ' 1 HIS conditton
IS rated as guarded unttl such
time as a fmal diagnosis ca n be
established "

.r

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Ex·teachers

Hayes in ·guarded' condition

;

Weather

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Fo r Sa l e

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forces at NormaDdy.)
By WARREN L. NEUlON
WASHINGTON (UPI)- For
Maj. Gen. Mazwell D. Taylor,
D-Day began as he stood in a
damp Normandy pasture, star'
·~ I
'

log at and being stared at in

return by French cows.
"! jumped with a stick of
about 11 men but I fell into one
field," Taylor recalled in a
recent interview. It was 1 a.m.,
Jurie6, 1944,and Taylor and his
men were the start of the
massive allied D-~y invasion.
Taylor was commander of
the 10lst Airborne Division. He
had jumped with his men and
ended up in --" typical Normandy field, divided from all
the neighboring fields by high
hedg~.
. . I

of D-Day observed

'

"There was a group of cows
In the field munchil\g thelf

cuds and obviously wondering
who this guy was. I IJ'esented a

Tl)e cricket was qne of
Taylor's imovatiops. During
paratroop drops in Sicily his
men had been badly scattered.
He anticipated that the
very undignified picture.
dispersion
amid the Nol'flllUldY
"You had to buckle 'yourself
hedgerows
would create ~Htvoc,
, real tightly into those old
and
11\,
wanted
j his trOOPs to
parachutes. When I landed, I

.

\

;

.-

30th anniversary_

'•

I .

couldn't get the snaps unbuckled. I pulled my knife out of my
boots. I had my pistol in one
hand, my cricket m the other,
so I'd put the pistol down and
ptck it up and put it down again
as I tried to cut myself out of
the chute."

~

~

"

...

I

I'

'

.

\ I

.

have a distinctive noisemaker
to identify themselves. An &amp;de
came up with a simple
children's toy, a metal cricket.'
"To this day the old veterans
will come up to me and go pop,
pop in my ear with their
crickets," Taylor satd. "They
still have them.
"I crept along the hedgerow
Iookmg for a gate. Just as I
found It I heard a sttr on the
other side .I drew my pistol and
go! all set Then I heard the
chck That was the most
pleasant sound I ever heard in

the entire war.
"We literally fell on each
other's shoulders. He was
looking tough- like I hoped he
would. "
Taylor couldn't recall the
name of that first American he
met on French soU. "It was a
Polish name. I saw him years
later. Unfortunately he'd
gotten fat. It's always disappointing to see your lean
paratrooper get potbellied."
Taylor later rose tp four-star
rank ,
commanded
all
Amencan troops m the Korean

I ~

'

\

.

war, became Army chief of
staff
under
President
~IsenhOwer, chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff under
PreSident Kennedy and ambassador to South Vietnam
under President Johnson. In
the last two posts he joined In a
number of controversial
decisions deepening U.S. Involvement in Vietnam.
Taylor, at 72, a lillie stooped
and hard of hearing, still is
vigorous. As he thinks hack 30
years to D-Day he smiles, "My
m~ory is not Kood anvmnr~ 1
(Continued on p&amp;g, 2)
' 4
~
,I
' l ,, I

I·

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