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Nolan Rides' owner is at- home
for Big Bend Regatta Weekend

20- The DAily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, JWie 19, 197~

Both Ohio parties tied up on taxing, spending
By LEE LEONARD
. UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The plans of Gov. John J. Gilligan and
legislative leaders to spend excess state funds may have flopped
as the General Assembly fled to a summer vacation last week,
but tile montll-long discussion underscored at least two observations.
First, governors and lawmakers will fall all over tllemselves,
'" til• ·~tent of self-rontradiction. Ill make political points on
taking and using the taxpayers' money.
Second. legislators from both oarties have locked themselves

sold.
mittee.
The governor had to head off the Rep••blicans, who were putRevenue projections were seemingly pullM out of thin air, and
ting tcgetller their own package of stipplemental "goodies" the cost of the tax relief proposals in future y,ears changed almost
based on what tllh called a surplus in lleneral state revenues. hourly as the senators pushed and pulled the figures Ill make the
Gilligan beat them to the punch. firmly declaring ''there is no money meet their aims.
surplus and there w.on't be • surplus." Translated by the
It took a few trade..,ffs on pet biDs, but eventually all the
governor's fisca l operatives, tlus.means : "make sure there is no Republicans bought it. Democrats, in an unusual display of
surplus.''
frugali ty, railed at the extra spending.
Twist of Fate
Finally, there was a paradox surrounding the Democratic and
If by some twist of fate there were a surplus, however, the Repul)lican stances on a $30 million tax relief item.
governor had covered his tracks. The excess money would pay
Wanted to Repeal
for the supplefi1ental appropriations; the lottery money could be ' Republlcans wanted tc repeal the intangibles tax on income
used for something else. It all goes intc the same till and the from stocks, bonds and other securities, and tax that income
Wider the personal income tax.
dollars aren 'I ma,rked.
Democrats, who had tried to get that same "unfair" tax
in on campaign planks for the 1974 election on taxing and spenRepublicans, meanwhile, did something out of character. They
ding.
repealed in the Republican-&lt;:ontrolled legislature in 1971, wanted
proposed to spend ev~n more money.
Senate Republicans hiked the appropriation to $81.8 million, to keep lhe tax this time aroWid. Repealing it would cost the state
On May 9, Gilligan came up witll a list of $43.5 million worth of
"important, innovative programs to meet human needs" •Ill be sweetening it with $37 million worth of tax relief for the fall $120 miUion in the next biennium, they said.
financed by, of all things, the estimated proceeds from the first campaign.
Three Democrats and three Republicans will resume work qn
year of operation of the state lottery.
The proposal was written by a handful of men behind a closed the supplemental appropriation later this month, as revenue
Never mind that Gilligan had repeated for months that the door. Although it contained major revisions in the income, projections become clearer.
Meanwhile, each side has set the tone for the fall camoaign, not
lottery was not be regarded as a weUspring to finan ce state · property and intangibles tax laws, it spent not one minute in the
programs. And forget that the first ,lottery tic~et has yet to be Senate's tax-writing committee- the Ways and Means Com-

Ohio politics

OIL PROFITS
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Oil
companies are using higher
recent profits to buy non energy re la ted companies
rather than for exploration and
development of energy, Rep.
opposed.to the bill, and that up pressure on senators from Charles A. Yanik, D-Ohio,
Ill 22 of these will speak in Alaska , Arkansas, Colorado, charged Tuesday in a House
support (filibuster) of Senator Connecticut,
Delaware, speech. Yanik said both Mobil
(Sam) Ervin, D-N.C., who will Hawaii, Kansas, Louisiana, Oil Corp . and Gulf Oil have
lead the opposition."
Michigan, New Mexico, North been creating new sources of
The Senate rules provide that Dakota, Tennessee, Maryland, profit and power. He urged
a filibuster can be ended only if South Carolina and West Congress to end the tax breaks
currently enjoyed by oil cortwo thirds of those present and Virginia.
voting agree to it. Thus if all
( "Your senators' votes are porations.
100 senatcrs participate, 34. . critical Ill the final outcome,"
would be sufficient to keep the the letter states. "As many
filibuster alive.
calls and contacts as possible
Two years ago, the same should be made, !'•king: 1., that
PUBLIC NOTICE
OEPA Perm it No . Z 0063 AD
legislation died in a Senate they get in touch with Sen·.
ffe cti ve D a t e:
September
filibuster .
Ervin and offer support; 2, that 70,E 1974
The manufactureres group they either vote against cloture
National Pollutant
asked its members Ill put or 3, abstain from suCh vote.''
Di scharge Elimination

MICHAEL J. CONLON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Big
industry is putting home town
business pressure on senatcrs
from 15 states in ao attempt tc
kill legislation Ill create a
consumer protection agency
independent of the administration.
The strategy was revealed in
a letter the National Association of Manufacturers is sending to its member companies in
states, whose senators' votes
·are considered crucial in the
coming battle. Forces backing
the consumer proposal gave a
copy of the letter Ill UPJ.
Legislation to create an
agency Ill lobby . for the eonsumer with other government
"agencies has passed the House.
It due on the Senate floor in
mid-July, and a filibuster has
been promised by opponents.
Big business opposes the idea
as a costly, time&lt;Onsuming
Ralph Nade r-insplred plot.
Consumer groups favor it as a
chance to give the average
person the same leverage
enjoyed by companies which
hire high-paid lobbyists to
speak for them.
The NAM letter states that
"at least 34 senators are firmly

Tape may sh ow
d
kn
prior ow1e ge
•

.

Sy s t em ( N POE Sl

Permit Progra m

PUBLIC NOTICE
Proposed NPDES Per mit
Disc harge to State Wat er s

to

Oh io Er~vironmentat ProtectiorJ
Agency
0 . 0 . 8011: 1049
361 Ea st Broad Street
Cotum bu s, Ohio 43216
614 -406 -489 1
Public Notice No . OPEA -74 -06 -

110

The point may seem minor Dat e of I ssue of Public Notice :
but could be crucial. If the tape June 24, 1974
does establiah that, it could Name and Address of Ap ·
Widermine Nixon 's Watergate p l icant:
Tuppers Plains
Ches ter
defense.
Water Plant
P . 0. Box 7
It would throw intc question
Chester , Ohio 45720.
his contention th at, acting
Name and A ddress of Faci lity
decisively and swiftly , he Where
Discharge Occurs :
initiated "intensive new inTuppers Plains
Chester
Plant
quiries" immediately upon Water
Chester , Ohio 45720
learning on March 21, 1973, of
Receiving Water :
his administration 's comOhio River
plicity.
NOTICE : The above named
The tape the committee applicant has app li ed tor a
N P DES perm It to discharge
heard Tuesday was of a June 4, into the designated rece i ving
1973, conversation. In that water . The perm i t will be Issued
by the Ohio Environmental
conversation, according to Protection Agency.
Th is
applicant
is
a
Chairman Peter W. Rodino Jr., mun
By CRAIG A. PALMER
icipa l it y which operates an
Western Europe and the Soviet
and some olher members, existi ng water treatment
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Union.
Nixon acknowledged knowing fac i l1l y . The current operations
Sen. George McGovern, DOf this disc harge r result in an
McGovern's proposal came
effluen t floW of 5,000
S.D., today proposed a new $20 at the opening of three days of of "the possible involvement of average
gal lo ns
per
day .
Key
White
House
personnel"
in
the
billion a year international Senate hearings on developing
parameters to be lim i ted in the
proposed permits are as
food effort - "Plowshares for a national nutrition policy. He cover-up as early as March 17. fo
llows: Ch lor ides .
At
today's
closed-door
sesPeace" --to prevent mass is chairman of the Select
On the basis of p r e limin ary
ff rev iew a n d application of
starvation among the world's Committee on Nutrition and sion, the committee was to look sta
st?ndards and regulat i ons, the
into
the
very
event
which
hWigry.
Human Needs.
D 1rec to r of th e Ohio En brought life Ill Congress' im- vironmental Protec tion Agency
He also called on President
Although the plight of Ameriproposes to issue a p ermit for
Nixon and Secretary of State ca's hungry, including those peachment inquiry --the firing the discharge sub jec t to ce rta in
eff luen t condition s and spec ial
Kissinger to "place the great forced Ill eat dog and cat food of Archbibald Cox as special co
nd itions.
The
p r opo sed
Watergate
prosecutor
last
Oct.
world food and population for lack of money, will be
d etermi nation is te n ta t i ve but
20.
Shall be come final on th e ef .
problems at the top of their examined at the hearings, the
fective date un less ( 11 an ad The
iilsue
is
whether
Cox's
agenda" in their travels major foCUll will be on iniudica ti on hear i ng is requested
firing
represents
part
of
an
by
the permi lfee or (2) the
through the Middle East, ternational food and population
obstruction of justice by Nixon. Direc to r withdraw s and revises
problems and the U.S. role in
t he propo sed perm it after
Also under examination is co n sideration of the record of a
alleviating them.
whether the famous 1.8 'h publi c me eting or wr itte n
Dr. Jean Mayer, the Harvard
commen ts, or upon d isapproval
minute gap in another tape can by the Administra tor of the u .
nutritionist who organized the
be considered destruction of S. Environmental Protection
Agency . Any person may
Senate hearings as' he did tile
evidence.
submit a wri ften stateme nt
1969 White House Conference
After they had heard tile within th ir t y days o f th e date of
Tonight, Thur., Fri.
on Food, Nutrition and Health,
~ Public Not i ce as to why th e
June 19·20.21
June 4, 1973, tape, members th
o.rector sho u ld r evise th e
made that clear at a Senate
disagreed on whether it ahowed proposed ac t i on . If si gn ificant
Double Feature Program
reception Tuesday night.
publi~ interest is show n a public
"THE TEACHER"
Nixon had revealed knowledge m
eetmg may be he ld on motion
"We
meet
now
in
the
shadow
-Piusof the cover-up prior Ill March ?'f the D irector prior to f inal
"THE STEPMOTHER"
of an international crisis which
•ssuance
of
the
permit .
21., 1972.
Following final action by the
has periled the food supply of
So staunch a Nixon defender ~ I r ec tor , any party has the
hundreds of millions of people
r •ght to appea l to the En as Rep . Charles E. Wiggins, R- vi ronm ental Board of Review.
lhroughout the world," Mayer
In ter ested persons a r e invited
said. He included soaring ·· Callf., said the tape ahowed to submit written comments
Nixon had at least ao "inkling" upon the proposal d isc harge
world population, depleted
of his administration's involve- permi t . Comments ·shou ld be
fishing beds, rising food eonsub m i tted in person or by mail
ment in the .cover-up.
no later th an 30 days after th e
swnption among the affluent,
Rep. Walter Flowers, )).Ala., dat~ ·o f this Public Notice.
June 19'thru June27
low grain reserves and subDel•ver or mail al l comments
paraphr'!Sed Nixon as saYing to
NOT OPEN
:
Saharan drought 'among the
NPOE S Permit Sec tion
"perhaps, maybe I know of
factors threatening "higher
Ohio
E nv iro nm en t a l
Fri., Sat., Sun .
something around March 17." Protection
Ager1cy
(food) prices for us and great
· June 28·:*30
P . 0. Box 1049
But, he said "it was not a
T HE LAUGHING
misery abroad "
361 Eas t Broad Street
definite admission." Rep. DelCol umbus , Ohio 432 16
POLICEMAN
McGovern said Plowshares
The OEPA permit number
bert Latta, R.Qhio, however,
Walter Matthau
for Peace could be the
nd Pub l i c Notice numbers
Bruce Dern
said he heard no admission at qshould
appear next to th e above
beginning of a great American
( RJ
adclress on the e nve lope and on
all.
Colorcartoons
initiative for the 19'/0s and
eac h page of any SI.Jbmitted
John M. Doar, special im- comments
Show Starts 1 p.m.
.
All
c-omments
beyond.
peachment counsel, said the received no la ter than 30 days
the date o f this Public
committee had renewed its after
Notice Will be considered in the
request for a Marcil 17, 1973, formi.J tat ion of final deter min ation .
tape which would establish· The application , fact sheets,
·with finality whether Nixon proposed permi t Including
proposed effluent limitat i ons,
knew of the cover-up on that special con&lt;Htions , 'co mm ents
date. It was one of the first recei ved and other docUments
ar_e availab le for inspection an d
· tapes subpoenaed by the panel. may be c opied at a cos t of 15
Doarsaid James D. St. Clair, cents per page a t t he Ohio
The most popular night club rn
Environmental
Protect i on
Nixon's lawyer, told him the Agency at the ·address show n
request was under revlt w. He above any time betWeen the
hours of 8: 00a . m . and .4 :JO p .m,
the tri-county art;J is
quoted St. Clair as saying, Monday through Friday . Co pies
"The President hasn't made up of the PUblic Notice are
avail able lit no charge at the
proud to present
his mind about it."
same address .
WASHINGTON (UP!) Some members of the House
Judiciary Committee think
they've found evidence on one
of Presid~t Nixon's own tapes
that he knew of the Watergate
cover-up four days earlier than
he has insisted he first learned
of it.

World food
effort proposed

Mason
Drive-In

By Bob Hoelllch
Should old acquaintance be
forgot?
Let's hope not this week, at
least, as John E. Baker, former
Pom eroy resident, returns
home as manager-owner of the
Nolan Amusement Co. which is
here as a part of Big Bend
Regatta Weekend.
Baker looks upon every
location he visits with the
Nolan rides from April tllrough
mld.Qctcher as "old home
week" but with Pomeroy it
really rings true.
Born in Pomeroy, tile son of
the late William and · Katie
Baker, who lived on Mulberry
Ave. for many years and later
on .Union Ave., Baker carries
some keepsakes of Pomeroy in
his mobile home which moves
from town to town with the

lberfelds In Pomeroy

Hanes
A·Shirt &amp;Boxer
®

HOSPITAL

Business applying pressure
to ·derail CPA legislation
By

only! 'or legislative candidates, but in some cases for' Statewide
candidates.
Democrats have attempted Ill say they will not spend gener&amp;
revenues unless tax coUections live up to expectations, and when
lhe money is spent, it will be spent for improved services for the
people.
.
·
Republicans have tried to convey the lr9presslon tile income
tax has furnished more money than needed, wltllout equity or
relief. They say they want Ill give some money back to lhe taxpayers, and will do so if tile voters throw the Democrats out in tile
fall.

NEWS

THE FIRST madam to
ever seek political office In
American history is Beverly
Harrell, operator of a house
of prostitution In Nevada
where it is legal. Miss
Harrell announced she wlll
vie lor a seat In the Nevada
state assembly.

1 A-Shirt
3 for 3!13
Boxer
3 for 4!13
;,;,;w;:] The
HANES· . . tai lor lor co mfort
,. " """ ·
drHerence 1s rn Ihe weanng
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because HAN ES underw~a r is
made ·w11h you in mrnd'
Gripper boxer.
Now, fabulous no·bind comfo n.
Comb1natron boxer· top with
fly fronlrn while. panerns,
colors. Gripper snap faste ners
.. heat·res1stant. sh nnk·
resistant. cove red elastic
waistband. Re1nlorced lly.
Perma·white athletic shirt:
Super·qualily Swrss nbbing
with smooth narrow reinforced
shoulder strap. Tradrti onal all·
season pertormer'
... From the HAN ES lamrly of
f1ne underwear.

See the complete line of Hanes Underwear for
men and boys on the 1st floor.

60 INCH POL VESTER

DOUBLEKNIT FABRIC
99

'1

YARD

FALSE~

The
Middleport
Fire
·Department had two calls
Tuesday night;one at u :31 and
the other .at 11:32 tllat there
was a fire at the Duds and
Suds. Th.e area was chedked by
the pollee and the siren was not
l
'I
·
blowp
to' call out
.the men.

AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 9 T·IL 1

'

'

'· .

I

~::

. . . ,~ .... - ··*'-· . . ~

;::

f

'

::::

came to Syracuse in Meigs

County in the early 1930s and
later began working here with
the WPA, a part of the
program

for

recovery from the depression.
Successful with the program,
Baker was moved from Meigs
County to Scioto County as a
superv isor-timekeeper. Then
he was made payroll fiscal
officer at Zanesville . Later, he
was moved to Columbus and
became the state payroll officer in the program .

In 19~ 2. Baker beca me
associated with the Central
Administration Services which
set up the ptice controls, gas

.

IN HOME TOWN - John F. Baker, former Pomeroy
resident, takes a coffee break from his duties as ownermanager of the Nolan Amusement Co. which has set up near
the Pomeroy Junior High School for Big Bend Regatta
Weekend.

•

at y

enttne

for Regatta

•

..

\

OUR COMPLEtE STOCK
ANY •7.99 TO ~11.99 SHOES

s .oo ·oFF REG. ·

and

•

.

.

.

.(

:!1
::::

peachment .
While neither the President
nor Vice President Gerald R.
Ford mentioned it dunn g
ceremonies on the White House
lawn Wednesday, the we lcoming remarks indicated Nixon 's
diplomatic activities migh t
becorne a defense against
impeachment, a s k ing
Co ngress, 'how can you
remove from off1cc a President
that has contributed to peace to
the world ?'
" I am ... confident, Mr .
President, lhat the American
people will stand tall and
strong as they now move
forward in th e efforts to
achieve the peace that you
have worked so strenuously to
lay the groundwork for, not
on ly in the Middle East but in
Europe and SouU1east Asia."
Ford said.
"The American people will
be united. They will be tall and
they will back you as they have
in the past, in seeking the
peace that is sought by all," he
said .
"Achieved All Objectives"
" This trip now comes to an
end ," Nixon replied, "but it is
only the beginning of a much
longer journey, a journey that
will be difficult, a journey that
has many pitialls potentially in
it, but one that is worth taking,
a journey on which we are
embarked and on which we will
continue, a journey toward a
lasting peace, not only in the
Mideast but all over the
world."
White House chief of staff
Alexander M. Haig told reporters flying back on Air Force
One that tl1e President "achieved all the objectives set
rorth'' on the tour , which included resumption of di·
plomatic relations with Syria,
economic aid agreements with
all five Mideast countries and
promises of nuclear power
plants for Egypt and Israel. ·
One central problem in lh e
Middle East is Wisolved Palestinian Arabs forced from
their homes'by the creation of
Israel. Diplomatic so urces said
Arab leaders promised the
Palestinians to try to pressure
Israel, through Nixon, to make
co ncessions, in retu rn ror
promises by radical Arabs not"
to ca use embarrassment
during Nixon's trip.

French City ski club show

needed Sunday

THURSDAY
FRIDAY

::;:
::::

Nixon meets
with leadersof Congress

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
rationing, a nd tire priorities
WASHINGTON (UP! J which were to be associated
President Nixon, keeping up
-(Continued"''ln page 8)
the pace he followed for the last
10 days, scheduled meetings
will! congressional leaders and
administration off icj~ ls today
to discuss his diplomatic accomplishments in the Middle
East and plans for the Moscow
summit.
Nixon arrived in Washington
Wednesday afternoon, then
unwound in a tw&lt;H10ur evening
•
Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Are11
dinner cruise on the Potomac
River with ht~ wife and
ch ildren.
VOL XXVI NO. 48
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1974
PHONE 992·2156
TEN CENTS -l!uscheduleatrnostastight
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - -- -- - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - as those on his flve-&lt;:ountry
Mideast tour. Nixon planned an
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:::: ear ly
briefing
for
:·:·
;s:~
BLOODMOBILE COM ING MONDAY
:::; congressional leaders from
both parties, a Cabinet meeting
Monday. June 24, will be Bloodmobile Da y
and a National Security
for Meigs County.
Council session.
It will be a t lhc Pomeroy E lementary
He originally had planned to
School between I and 6 p. m . Seventeen year old
fly to Key Biscayne, Fla.,
persons can give if th ey have their pare nts'
tonight to prepare for his JWie
25 meeting with NATO leaders
consent.
in Brussels and his JWie 27 visit
-' '
::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:=::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::::;.;.:·:::•:::::·:::::·:::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
to tbe Soviet Union. Aides said
Nixon now planned tc stay near
Washington --either in lhe
White House or his Camp
David, Md ., retrea t - to
co nsult with admini stra tion
officials.
Full Diplomatic Summer
In addition Ill his summit
conference, aides said Nixon
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - inflation.''
Personal income, a broad planned Ill visit Europe again
Personal income surged by
$10.6 billion in May, the measure of consumer spending and go to Japan, filling . lhe
stronges t monthly increase power, is now running at a summer with diplomacy. He
this year, but income Ill far- seasonall y adjusted annual would then be out of town - but
mers was down for the fifth rate of $1,121.1 billion ( $1.1 still making headlines - while
Congress considers his immonth in row, the Commerce trillion ).
Payrolls
rose
$8.6
billion
in
Department said today.
Last month's rise in wages, May, up from April's level of Jam es Shields
salaries
and other forms of $5.3 billion. About $2 billion of
Charlotte
Porter,
penonnel
888istant,
ZanetiVIIIe,
Sectional
POST OFFICE BOSSES MEET - Sixty-two post offices
income
followed
a $9.1 billion .the rise in May resulted from dies .in Florida
(SCF);
back
row,
Gene
Scott,
mail
Center
Faellities
were represented at the meeting of the Athens-Zanesville
gain
in
April
and
was the expanded coverage and inprocessing representative, Akron district ; Dick Peyton,
district post masters at the Meigs Inn Wednesday. Hosted for
James Hobart Shields, 63,
biggest increase since a $10.9 creased mimimum wages
Zanesville SCF manager postmaster; Bob Hooper, director
the second tithe by Pomeroy Postmaster Jim Soulsby, the
billion jump last . November. Wider the federal minimum passed away Tuesday at
of customer services Zanesvllle SCF, and Lou Jordan, ad·
meetings are held quarterly for postmasters to, discuss
Farm Income. slid $2.3 wage law, the department said. Brooksville, Fla. Mr. Shields,
ministrative assistant, Zanesville.
business matters. From left, front, are Soulsby and Mrs.
formerly of Tuppers Plains,
billion, reflecting continuing
has resided in Florida the past
declines in livestock and crop
W:'~"'~::;i::::::::o~::~:&lt;::..,~:~;:;:::::::&gt;':l:'::::~,.,.'!&lt;::X$;:;:::::~::::~:::::;:;:;::::~:::::::::::~:::::::::~.
14 years.
jl'ices. Although farm income
FISH
FRY
SET
He is survived by his wife,
has been declining since the
GI edu.cational
The
Middleport
Fire
Phyllis Whaley Shields, at
first of the year, income in this
area still is 13 per cent above Department will hold a fish fry home; a daughter; Mrs. Elmo
benefits raised
beginning at 3:30p.m. Friday (Sharon ) Bennett , Win the same period in 1973.
.
By United Press International
WASHINGTON iUPI)
Commerce Secretary Freer- and continuing after the terhaven, Fla.; a son, James
WASHINGTON- THERE IS A GOOD CHANCE that an
a
The Senate voted 91 to 0
dick B. Dent said the overall regatta parade. Fish sand- Shields , Brooksville;
agreement on limiting undergroWid nuclear tests will result
wiches will be served. grandson. Michael Bennett ,
May
gain
"
reflects
the
Wednesday
to
hoost
G1
blll
from President Nixon's summit discussions in Moscow. Sen.
educational benefits for
strength of the U.S. economy Proceeds are to be ' used in and a granddaughter, Candy
Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., coming out of Wednesday's Armed
and the soWidness of economic maintaining the Ia test in Shields, and a sister-in-law,
Vietnam-era veterans by 18
Services Committee hearing where Defense Secretary James R.
policy designed to avoid a emergency and fire fightin g Mrs. Wallace Bradford, of near
per cent - the biggest such
Schlesinger testified behind closed doors, said he believed the
Coolville.
reccession and to restrain equipment.
Increase since World War II.
admlnistratiQil already had reached some kind of agreement
Veterans Administration
witll the Russians wh\ch would be announced during the Moscow
officials
estimate tbe Jn.
meeting beginning June 'll.
crease
wlll
cost t8lpayers
~ackson said he was not certain and would not know Witil
ahout $1.9 billion In Its first
Monday when Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger testifies.
Considerable cloudiness
year of operation.
But he said recent remarks by Soviet party chief Leonid I.
tcnight and Friday with chance
Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Ind.,
Brezlmev that Moscow was willing to limit underground nuclear
of showers and thun chairman
of the Senate
testing with a view to an eventual Ictal ban, " clearly implies that
dershowers tcnight but more
Veterans Affairs Committee,
some kind of agreement has been reached."
likely Friday. Low tonight in
called the blll "a major step
lhe 60s. High Friday in the 80s.
PAULA. GINN
in finally giving Vietnam era
WASHINGTON- AS MUCH AS ONE THIRD of the dog and
cat food sold in city slums is being eaten by humans, a food study veterans a real chance at
REGA'ITA TEMPS
group has tcld tile Senate. The 26-member panel said it getting an education and
The
temperature in beautiful
Twenty-six members of the with the Big Bend Regatta .
training, tbe kind of chance
questioned a small sample of residents of low income comdowntcwn Pomeroy on historic French City Ski Club with
The U. S. Coast Guard has
that
I
and
mllllons
like
me
munities aroWid the coWIIry about their eating habits.
Court
St.
Thursday
morning
at
Richard
Roy
as
advisor,
will
be
been
advised of the show which
had alter the Second World
"We also asked ... whetller or not people in the neighII
a.
m.
was
80
degrees
with
in
Pomeroy
Saturday
to
will
get
Widerway at I :30 p. m.
borhood thought pet food might be a good buy when food money War."
cloudy
skies
promising
rain
for
present a water show at the and conclude at 3 p. m.
was short," the food and nutrition experts said. 'Most answered ~:::::::::::.~:::::::::::::::::::::*:::::;:::::::::!:::::::~:!:i:::~::;:;:;:·
COLUMBUS - Paul A. Ginn, tile Big Bend Regatta.
Pomeroy levee in conjunction Navigation will be controlled
that they ~pie who bought dog food pretty regularly former Pomeroy resident,
mosUy Alpo." The panel quoted Agriculture Department
general
manager
and
statistics ahowing pet food sales increased by 12 per cent during
treasurer of ·the Park.{)hio
tile first nine months of last year.
:
Corporation of Columbus, has
been' elected· Ill the board of
WASHINGTON - A lllGH-RANKING GOVERNMENT
directors of the National
farm spokesman said today the adminls!ratlon hopes to help
Parking Association at the
hard.pressed cattlemen out of their current income depression
An urgent request was made organization's annual conwithout resorting to controls on imports of foreign beef. Assistant
today by the Pomeroy vention in New Orleans , La.
Agriculture Secretary Clayton Yeutter said in an interview he
Chamber. of Commer&lt;!e for The 1,200 member trade
believed beef Imports would be held substantially below the
three pickup boats needed for association represents the
earlier.predicted level of 1.575 billion pounds by using informal
commercial off-street parking
persuasion with Australia and otller beef ezporters. He also said Sunday's Regatta Races.
The three boats will be in the U.S., Canada, Mexico
exporterslhould be ·reluctant Ill ship beef at current low prices.
needed no later than 12 :30p . m. aod abroad.
Cattle industry spokesmen and a growing number of fann
The Park-Ohio
Corp.
Sunday. Residents having
belt lawmakers have been pressing the administration to reinoperates
12
parking
facilities
in
state fonnally the import controls, suspended by President boats and willing Ill assist with downtcwn Columbus. Ginn has
Nixon nearly two years ago when U. S. beef supplies were low. the races are asked to contact been general manager since
Such action would hold imports this year to about 1.1 billion Earl Ingels, Dwight Goins, or 1962 when, the · company •
pounds Instead of the to!Bl of roughly 1.3 billion .which some Jack Carsey or the Pomeroy op'erated two parking lots.
admlnisfration officials. speculate may be reached · without Chamber .of ,Commerce office
Ginn, a native of Pomeroy,
at 992-5005 as soon as possible.
controls.
who graduated from the
Pomeroy High School in 1950, is
OOLUMBUS- DEMOCRATIC State Chairman William A.
the son of the late Arthur and
Lavelle said Wednesday night DemocratS have a good chance of
r
Maude Ginn. He resides ~t 451
taking control of the Ohio Senate in tills year's election, adding
N. Powell Ave., Columbus,
EX'J'ENDED OUTLOOK
' · ihe stale party will offer all the help it can.
with his wife, Eva. At PHS he
A chance of sbowers or
"We recognize the only oppbrtunity for true majority rule Is
was an outstanding varsity
thundershowers Saturday
to gain control of the state Senate," Lavelle said at a $25-a-plate and Sunday, clearing and
football and basketball player.
rwxt raising dinner. "We are going Ill do everything in our power cooler Monday. Hlgba In the
. I
to help you." The ftind raising dinner was held at tile Stoney lila
ICE CREAM PACKED - Pete Thoren, left, and Frank Ryther packed l50 gallbns of
loW' !JOs Saturday~
NOW
YOU
KNOW
Q-eek Country Club in suburban· Reynoldsburg to aid
homenuide
lee
Wednesday night a.s the members of St. Paul's Lutheran Church
dropping to upper 70s and
More than 1,200 species of ·
Democratic candl~tes for tile state senate.
jl'epal'ed
for
their
slxtll
year
of selling ice cream and hot lunches during the Big Bend Regatta
lower 801 Monday. Lows In
c
plants and animals are unique
weekend. The lunches and Ice cream will be on 8ale at the church Friday from a a.m. until 8
· the 60s and ·lower 70s.
Ill the area aroWid Siberia's
' . ISRAEL . LAuNCHED . ITS BIGGEST air strikes intc
~.m. and Saturday beginnlng at II. Orde~ ·for quarts of ice cream will be taken during those
·I "
,
.
Lake. Baikal, lhe deepest lake
·
· (ConUnued
on
page
8)
hours
at WZ-201.0. Flavors include their own special regatta flavor "Knee Deep."
.
,.
in lhe world.
·

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1929. He was ...onjy- able to
secure pa ri t1me work . He

eco nomic ·

.

Pickup boats

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PRIC~

cream

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Pomeroy man
.on board of
national group

·LADIES SUMMER FOOTWEAR

.(6) 19, H e

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:} - ·

on Regatta card Saturday.

FAMOUS CHARM STEP-WILLIAMS

The MEIGS INN

GEO. HALL

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Weather

MEIGS THEATRE

Ma i l i ng l ists are maintained
for persons or groups who
desire to receive Public Notice
for all applications in the state
or for certain geogr"phlcal
areas . Persons or groups may
also reques t copies of fact
sheets, applications or other
~ocumen-ts
pertain i ng
to
speci f ic applica tions . Per son s
or groups m~y have the i r
.names put on I such a Jist by
making a wr i tten request to the'
Agency at the address · shown
above.

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HARGAIN DAY SET
.
Middleport Reta il Merchants will conduct
"Sidewalk Sales" all day Saturday. ·
.
Thas is a communtt y sales effort by 16
stores in connection with Regatta·· Weekend .
Hargains will be plentiful. Sec pages !J
th rough 1:1 today.

··p ,eivs...in Briefsl

Elberfelds In Pomeroy.

Spring and summer plain and
fan&lt;:' colors. Stock up now at
your friendly Stiffler stores.

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Incomes surge,
farmers' drop

REG. •2.99 AND •3.99

. POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT-POINT PLEASANT

Among the keepsakes are a even joined the union.
copy of a photograph taken
Plans Go Astray
However. the best laid plans
many years ago when Baker
wbrked as a youth at the Daily do go astray and that's what
with
Baker .
News in Pomeroy, an aged happened
copy of the " Purple and Following his grad uation from
Whit.. ", the Pomeroy High Pomeroy High School in 1924 School newspaper, and a that's 50 years ago - he went
picture of the sophomore class to Columbus and worked at the
of Pomeroy in the early 1920s. Daily News until fall. Baker
It's been said that people had planned to attend Ohio
entering the newspaper State University but before
profession develop printers ink classes star ted, decided to visit
for blood and never ge t it out of cousins in Akron. As it all
their system. This old adage, boiled down, he took a position
however, doesn't ring true for with the B. F. Goodrich Co. in
Baker. As an eighth grader in Akron and attended a branch of
Pomeroy, he delivered papers Akron University three nights
and then during the summer a week .
With the Goodrich Co., he
months accepted an invitation
to learn the printer's trade in worked in printing and
the composing and press room decorating rubber products.
of the Daily News. He did this All went well until the crash of

e

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged, June 18)
Judith Alleman, Debra
Bailey, Mrs: Paul Berridge and
son, Ralph Brewer, Glenna
Cochran, Clyde Dalton, Edna
Eberts, Gregory France,
Luster Hale, Arlie Hill, Martha
Hopkins, Keven Jarrells ,
Martha Jesse, Tracy Jones,
Cheryle Knight, Augusta
Lamb, Kenneth
Leedy,
Elizabeth McFann, Julia
Neekamp, Wesley Pearso n,
William Pettery, Terry Staten,
Anita Tucker, Delores Varian,
Sheryl Walters, Walter Ward·;
Hala Whee ler, and Nada Wolfe.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Lawrence, a son, Long Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. James
Halley , a daughter, Crown
City ; Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Rice,
a son, Jackson.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Jerry
Owens, MI. Vernon ; Mildred
Frank, Pomeroy ; Phyliss
Stone,
Pomeroy; James Mays,
UNITED METHODISTS
Chester.
LAKESIDE, Ohio (UPI) DISCHARGES - Richard
Delegates to the East Ohio
annual confere nce of the Gibbs, Homer Bradshaw,
United Methodist Church Emma Hayman, Vivian Gibbs,
Tuesday approved equalization Olive Erdn)an, John Thompof lay and ministerial mem- son, Barbara McMahon,
bership. The annual con- George Perry, Clara Edith
ference business sessions have Hall.
tra ditionally contained a
RULING STANDS
majority of clergy.
HONOLULU (UPI ) - City
building inspector Herbert
Muraoka cited Eric Chapman
for violating Honolulu's
SUIT F1LED
building code, explaining that
LANGSVILLE - Roger C. there could ~e no exceptions to
White, Rt. I, Langsville, has his department's restrictions.
filed suit against Roger Eric is 14 years old and the
for condemned structure was a
Musser, Columbus,
judgment in the amoWII of club house built by neigh$1,000.
horhood kids.
p ,

and became a journeyma n. He

rides.

i~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::~~::-:::.~;~:::i:~!:::::::;:::::::::::-~:;::;:;:::::::;::::::::::::::~::=: : ;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:; : ::::;:;;
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during the event for the safety
of the dub members who will
be pre se nting a five-man
pyramid, a kiu, flying act,
clowns,
two
three·man
pyramids, shoe skiing, criss
cross , slaloms, wake JWTips
and other water stWits.
Taking part will be Connie
Bradshaw , Annette Carter.
Marie Carter , Ray Lynn
Carter, Mark Currie, Re·gis
Gilman , Carla Rice , Randy
Rice , Bill Roger s, Suzelle
Robinson, Charlene Roy , Don
Roy , Karen Roy, Mary Agnes
Roy , 10, the youngest member
of the troupe, Peggy Scarberry , Marylou Simon ,
Sherwyn
Si.m on,
Gary
Snowden, Larry Snowden ,
David Thomas, Greg Thomas,
Tom Wiseman, Shawn Clark,
Bruce Scarberry , Dennis
Salisbury, Jayson Sheppard.
There is no charge for the
water show.
QUAKE REGISTERS SIX
Moscow- (UPIJ - An
earthquake· which registered
six points on the Richter Scale
Wednesday jarred the Siberian
region of Kolyma, where one of
the Soviet Union's largest
penal labor camps is located,
the Tass news agency said.
It said no casualties were
reported from the ·quake, the
epicenter of which ·was located
235 miles north of !4agadan.

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2- The DIIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Thursday, June 20, 19741
c

the environment loses another
By Stephen Ford
Neady 178 yea rs ago, George Washmj!ton left offtce as the
first President of the embryomc Un tted States. if at tha ttt me
the Oedghng natton could have been persomfted. tt tntghl
have been deptcted as a pmk-fa ced lad wtth the world at hts
feet.
.
When the naltons ftrsl chtef exec uttve stepped dow nlrom
office, he dtd not spew promtses of mrvana m the yea rs
ahead
. Instead, Washmgton admomshed the 13 dtsparate slates to
avotd e nor mous pubhc debts, entanglement wtth for etgn
powers and a mammoth mthtary, to rematn essenttally an
agrar ian country in order to feed tts ma sses and preserv e
natural resources. loJuard agamsl an ehle cadre of pohlt ·
cians centrahzmg an setzm g power and always to be warv
of btg busmess
It is tromc today to recall these anctent blueprints for the
natiOnal future . Almost from the moment Washmgton turned
over the presidency to bts successor, J ohn Adams, Amertca
began to follow an oppostle course
Dtsre_gard for Washmgton's warnmgs on the economy and
tne envtronment ts particularly relevant today
One has only to look at our capric tous envtronmental proleclton laws. And conservattOntsts, who a few years ago had
suet\ a good thing gomg, today are prtme lar~ e ts for
brickbats of corporaltons, bureaucrats, Wall Street s "Monday morning quarterbacks" and eve n the fellow who pumps
gas at tne ne1ghbornood stall on, reasomng bemg that tf these
alarmists had not shot tneir mouths off, we'd still be burning
away 34 cents a gallon ht·test

Und aunted conservalt ontsls are neverth ele.,; stepping lor·
ward again, but thts ltme as stlling ducks and not mess tahs
Ftve conscrv atton groups and three stales f1led sut ts
aga msl th e Rese rve Mmmg Company of Mmnesot a last
month to stop its dumpmg 67,000 tons of md ustrt al waste tnlo
Lake Supenor every day The platntt ffs charged the tacont le
rock dt sc harge produced asbestos-like ft bers m the lake
wht ch provtdes drmkmg wa ter for restdents of nearby
Duluth
US Dtslrtct Judge Mtles Lord subsequently tssued a n mlunclton agamst Reserve Mtntng cttmg lhetr dumpmg as a n
'tmmedtate heal ttl hazard" and ordered they cease at once.
On appeal, a three· Judge federal panel overturned Lord's
dectston and Issued a 70-day slay permttltng the company to
contmue dumpmg wastes tnlo the lake The Judges dtd
sttpulate that Reserve Mimn ~ must provtd e tis own land dts·
posal factlily as soon as poss tble
Reserv e Minmg offictals clatm tt wtll requtre three to ftve
years to complete the land dtsposal stl e. The JUdtcta l panel
acqutesced, slatmg there was no proof of Lord's content ton
there IS an tmmedtate health haza rd (Reserve Mmmg has
also requested $100 mtlhon m stale and federal a td to offse t
the costs of preparmg their land dtsposa l I
After all, the '"junctiOn mtghl curlatl Rese rve Mtnmg's
produclton schedu e whereas dumpmg wtll only effec t any·
one in Duluth who drmks water.
So Lake Superwr JOinS that hsl of mtsta kes bro ught about
by myopta and mdtfference
George Washmgton must be spmnmg beneath Mt Vernon
at 7,000 rpms

servtce productivity m the context of what the consumer
pays for a product durtng tts usable hfe "
Focusing mamly on the color televtstOn and refrtgerator
If you tnmk tnat tne prtces of most consumer goods have
been going up, you are correct. But tf you really want to industries - two of the largest m terms of consumer spendknow about tile htdden costs of products, such as consumer mg - the rej)Ort makes some strtking observattons
The owner of a $500 color teleVISIOn set, for example, ca n
appliances, hold on to your chairs.
According to a recent report by the Massacnusetts In· expect to spend another $500 on the set for servtcmg and
sl!tute of Technology, the hidden costs of major consumer electrtcal power costs during the TV's usable life
In the same way, the owner of a $400 refrigerato r. wtll
apphances are already at least equal to the purchase price
and tnreaten to jump sharply in the future.
spend ahout $1,100 on 11 durmg tts ltfe
The MIT study joins thousands of dtsgruntled consumers
"The Amertcan pubhc !!•nerally IS unaware of the 'life·
cycle costs' of major apphances, wnich in additton to pur- wno have already cnaqied that product rehabthty must be
chase price, include costs of mamtenance and repairin!l increased to reduce servtce costs over a product's usa ble
servicmg, electrtcal operating energy, and even disposal, 1 life.
Progress has already been made m thi s area, the report
says tne report.
In 1972, the MIT says, the American consumer patd be- notes, form the last e1ght years there has bee n a 50 per cent
tween $2.5 and M billion for radio, TV and household ap- decline m the need for servtce of color televtswn sets an d a
phance repair, and anotner $5 billion for energy to operate simtlar dechne in refrigerators over the last 14 years.
Unfortunately servtce costs have mcreased so greatly
these products. Sometimes the serv1ce costs for such appliances alone can cost more than the entire purchase prtce. that they have offset what otherwise would hav e been a
And with electric power rates rtSmg -a projected 75 per sharply reduced "hfe cycle cost" fo r those two items
So where willtl all end? Someday, perhaps, an apphance
cent increase between 1975 and 1980 - th1s cost can be
greater than both service costs and purcnase prtce, the MIT such as a color TV may need to be servtced only once m tis
report says.
·
enttre usable lifetime.
The recently pubhshed report is called "The Productivity
When that time comes, however, the TV re patrmen wtll
of Servicing Consumer Durable Products." It's major pur· have so little to do they wtll be forced to rat se thetr fees to
pose was to "examine alternatives for mcreasing appliance several hundred dolla rs per vtstl JUSt to make a livmg.
Then, of course, we'll be nghl back where we started
By Wilson MacDougall

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By Ray Cromley

..

WASHINGTON (NEAl
Congressional and private mvestigations into the polltlcal
contributions of the natton's da1rymen are yielding mterest·
ing patterns, not yet. fully explained.
This ts the mdustry whose contributions to President Nixon's re-election campaign the House Judiciary Committee is
now-studying to determine whether those dollars had anything to do with Mr. Nixon's boost of milk price supports m
1972.
The President has stated he was being pressured by
powerful senators and representatives. He acted, he said, to
prevent the Congress from pushing supports even higher.
There since have been reports the milk industry finan cially backe{! a good number of those '5enators and representatives pushing for higner m1lk supports. Data filed w1th
the government on campaign contributions also shows that
at least 12 members of the Judiciary Committee itself, includmJI Ctlatrman Peter W. Rodino Jr., (0-N.J ), received
campaign dollars directly from the milk men. How many
others received indirect donations funneled through party
committees is not known.
How does the milk industry operate m tne polihcal field?
How much money does it have available for such donations?
Where does the money go'
The Onanclal records are not complete since tne law requiring detatled publicity on campaign giving went into
effect on April 7, 1972 and considerable funds were given
before that date by many groups, mcludmg most probably
the mtlk mdustry.
But on tne record, the da1ry industry reP.?rted political
gifts In 1972 in tne neighborhood of $J.3 m1lhon. This was
about a 12th of all the money recorded as given to all presi-

8ERRfS WORLD

denttal, Senate and House candtdates, etlher dtrectly or
through partr committees by all regtstered political assoc1·
attons - busmess, agriculture, labor, health and the like
Almost all the $1.3 million was g1ven by three groups
The Committee for Thorough Agricultural Poliltcal
Educatton or~anized by the Associated Mtik Producers, Inc.,
1n San AntoniO, Texas.
Tne Agrtcultural and Dairy Educational Political Trust
set up by Mid-Amertca Datrymen, Inc., m Sprmgfteld, Mo.
The Trust for Special Pohhcal Agrtcultural Commumty
Educatton established by Datrymen, Inc , in Loutsvtlle, Ky
Approximately $718 mtlhon went to Democrattc candidates for the presidency, for the Senate and the House.
Roughly $834 million went to Republican candtdates.
From data collected by Common Cause, thts reporter ha'
identifted 41 senatorial candidates and 226 candidates for
the House of Representatives who recetved funds dtrectly
from tne three major milk groups. But thts hst, long as it is,
accounts for only die $592,000 gtven dtrectly to candidates. In
addition to direct contributions, the mtlk industry group provided a seventh (or $557,000) of the total $3 7 mtllion the nattonal Democratic and Republican Senate and House campaign committees gave to 83 Senate and ~98 House candt·
dates m 1972
The milk money was carefully spent. By a margtn of three
to four to one, the direct dollars went to the wmners of these
various races. In most cases, the dtrect contrtbuttons went to
mcumbents.
It is reasonable to conclude, from the data noted above
that directly and mdirectly a substanttal majortty of meumbent senators and representatives have recetved mtlk
money.
The Nixon re-election campaign recetved $95,000 on the
record. Vartous news reports have tndtcated the actual
figure was considerably htgher
Almost $70,000 m gifts were reported to the campatgns of
Democratic presidential hopefuls - mcludmg $54,000 for
Rep. Wilbur D. Mills &lt;D-Ark.), and much smaller amounts for
Sen Hubert Humphrey &lt;0-Minn.), Gov George C. Wallace,
(0-Ala.), Sen. EdmundS. Muskte &lt;D·Mainel, and Sen. Vance
Hartke !0-lndl, presumably in the race for the Democratic
nominatiOn.
As of early lhts year, these maJor datry tndustry pohhcal
education groups had $2 million on hand, much of whtch
presumably is available for helpmg candtdates in 1974 and
future campaigns. There IS every reason to beheve these
funds wtll be added to during the year.

Do It Every Time

~~
"TNnlt.

Cl 1t74"'

llfA, ...

~.

but you've mlatDelled horoscope. It's
H·O·R~O. not H-O JR-R·O-R-01"

I,

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OhiO 's coun ty commtsstons

have the greates t responstbth ly m the dectstons that set
the fate of chtldren, accordmg
to Max Buce y, pr ogram
spec ialist of Chtld Placement
Servtces of the Ohto Department of Welfare
Bucy spoke at a mee tmg of
Acr ( Adopt-A-Chtld-Today) of
Athens on June 14 lo
representatives of 14 southeastern OhiO counties Hts
remark s touched off a
dtscuss ton of the n ghts of
chtldren m the counties. Bucey
sa td the counties, not the sta te,
make the key dectsions about
chtldren
It was proposed that thts
should be chan ged, so that the
stale has juriSdiction over
tnese agencies, to see that
chtldren are serviced in the
manner most beeneftctal to
tnem.
Many

Ins ta nces

The Annual Rto Grande
College Alumni Banquet was
held recently in the College
Dimng Hall wtlh more than 200
alumm, frtends, faculty and
starr attendmg . During the
ceremomes, seven different
alumni awards and certificates
were presented.
The Alwood Achtevement
Award was gtven to Floyd
Beman , M.D of Columbus,
who graduated from Rio
Grande College m 1937.
Dr. Beman is Professor of
Medicme in gastroenterology
at OhiO State University
College of Medlcme. He has
recetved many awards from

DR. LAWHENCE E. LAMB

Can a uterus be rebuilt?
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - A wish
you would settle a dtspute between a relaltve and myself. 1
was told by a lady fnend that
her cousin was entermg the
hospital to nave her uter us
rebwlt. Can a uterus be rebuilt
in any way, whether a woman
has previously had it partially

By PHIL NEWSOM
UP! Foreign News Analyst
The 15 foreign ministers of
the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization are taking
belated note this week of the
Western alliance's 25th anniversary in an atmosphere
considerably relaxed from just
three months ago.
In fact, the two-day meeting
now concludmg in Ottawa is
laying the ,groundwork for
what President Nixon and
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger hope will be a truly
gala occas1on at a sununit
meeting in Brussels on June 26.
There, just one day before
· going on to Moscow, the
President is expected to
dehver a major address,
haihng a " new Atlantic
Charter" first called for by
Kissinger on April 23, 1973.
Thus, with the cheers of five
Mideastern nations st1ll
rtnging in his ears, 11 is the
presidential hope to mark in
his Brussels appearance a
symbolic reconciliation with
the United States' European
allies.
Friendly Atmosphere
In Moscow, Soviet party
leader Leomd I. Brezhnev
already has signaled his hopes
for "good new agreements"
pleasing to hoth the American
and Soviet publics.
A number of developments
have contributed to the new
friendly atmosphere' In sharp
contrast to the· bitter criticism
voiced by hoth Nixon and
Kissinger of the European
allies last winter.
U.S. charges that the Europeans were making decisions
without adequate consultation

''

•
I

' •

''

Ohio State Universi ty , m.cludmg the Man of the Year
Award. Dr . Beman is also
acltvtlel y mvolved m the
variOus medical associations,
includmg
the
A.M A ,
0 S.M.A., anti others.
The Atwood Achtevement
Award was presented to Dr.
Beman by Dr Joseph Bltonte ,
a member of the Rto Grande
College Boa rd of Trustees
Execul!ve Committee The
award was gtven in recogml!on
of Dr. Beman's professiOnal
and CIVIC accomplishments
reflecting credtl on Rto Grande
College

Gala meeting in
Brussels expected
with Washington led last
March to cancellation of a
planned Nixon VlSIL to Europe
in April.
Smce then a new government
has taken over in France,
seemingly less determmed to
shut the United States out of
Europe and more willing to
consult on even terms.
The Umted States and Germany have s1gned a new
agreement by which Bonn will
provide $2.2111-lnllion to orrset
the cost of maintaining 197,000
troops in Germany
Pressure !\rom Allies
Onder pressure from her
allies, the Dutch dropped
immediate plans, for a reduclton in the size of her armed
forces.
The Dutch contribution lS
relatively small-some 6,000
troops statiooed in Germanybut a reduction now could now
affect adversely talks m
Vienna aimed at a mutual
reduction of forces between
Communist Warsaw and NATO
pact memhers.
Rejection by the U.S. Senate
of a propoS!'! to reduce the
number of American troops
overseas gave the Europeans a
new confidence m the mtent of
the United States for th e
future.
In the original Kissinger
proposal it had been his mtent
that a new Atlantic Charter
would reflect the changed
economic, poht1cal and
military relationships .hetween
the U.S. and European countries, and that Japan would be
included.
This was as opposed to the
origtn11l charter of 1949, dvawn
up at,a time of mounting' lt!ar

II
\

•

or wholl y removed by a
hysterectomy'
I was also told doctors do not
have to tell th eir pa!tents they
have had a complete
hysterectomy or a parltal one,
beca use most hysterectomies
are not complete - m other
words, some·part of etlher the
uterus or ovary IS left so that a
woma n wtll not lose her sexual
urge. Won't yo u please explam,
for I've been told tf all ts
removed a woman does lose
her urge for sex, so par ts of
somethmg must be left m
I don't get it' Can't wait to
se ttl e this argument.
DEAR READER - These
Ideas are not WJ common, and
they are the result of half
truths and errors in communt ca hon
I suspect tha t the operalton
to "rebuild the uterus " ts
really a repatr of a prolapsed
uterus 'l'hts ts literally a
herma of Ute ute rus when 1t
falls down from 1ts normal
locatton. Thts problem IS
common m women who have
had children, and the surgery
ts common place. Tlus does not
mclude any actual work on the
uterus m the sense of reshaping
11 or anythmg like that
Now about those hysterectomy questtons. The uterus has
two parts, the body of the
uterus and the cervix It IS
much hke the body of a fruit Jar
and tis nm, the rim being the
cerVIX A parltal nysterectomy
may ta ke out only the body of
th e uter us and leave the cerv1k
It ts tmporlant to know this,
because tf the cervi x is left in it
ca n still develop ca ncer and
reg ul ar evaJu ahons ar e a
must.
Usually the cervix and th e
body of the uterus are removed
together and lhts ts a complete
and Sovtel ag gressiOn in

hysterectomy, meanmg all the
uterus was removed, mcludmg
the ce rvtx A co mple te
hysterectomy wtll not affect a

worn an's sex urge or her
capaci ty for normal actiVIty,
unless the woman has a
psychologtcal reacti on that ts
not par t of the surger y at all.
The man wtll not be able to tell
that anythi ng has been done,
etther
Sometimes the ovartes are
removed wtth a hysterec tomy.
Thts ts an oopherectomy, not a
hysterectomy You can have
the ovan es removed and leave
the uterus m or you can have
the
uterus
removed
(hysterec tomy , partial or
co mplete ) and • le av e ·the
ovaries mtacl. Or, you can
have both a hysterec tomy and
oopherectomy It's the ovaries
that mfluence a woman 's sex
urge, not her uterus. Ovanes
form mos t of the femP! hormones Their fatlure or
dege nera h on leads to the
menopause If the ovanes are
nonfun ctiomng and dtseased
the surgeon may think it w1se
to remove them In a younger
.woman, unless there ts a good
reason to ta ke them out, he
may leave them alone, even
though he may need to take out
the ute rus.
If th e ovarte s must Ile
removed sur gicall y, then
female hormone replace ment
,Can be gtven to prevent the
changes
attnbuted
to
menopa use
1 hope thts wtll g1ve you
enough mfor malton to settle
your arg ument Don't come to
blows Incidentally, 1 thmk all
doctors should always tell a
patient exac tly what has and
wha t has not been done and
what effects 1t wtll have

LAFF - A - DAY
I

retire pmch-hitter Joe Morga n
on a !mer to right field and the n
struck out Pete Rose and Cesar
Geronuno.
The Reds also went scoreless
the fin al two innings as Montague ptcked up hts first save,
while preserv tn g Torre z'
seventh v1ctory agamst fo ur
losses.
Mauch is using Montague m
relief althougtl he was a starter
with thetr Peninsula farm club
last year and topped the lnternaltonal League w1th 15
VIc tories.
"Because he has been a
sta rter unltl this season," said
Mauch, "I tried to treat him
pretty much like a starter by
giving him plenty of rest
between appearances on the
mound."
Montague's appearance
Wednesday was his ftrst since
last Fnday when he went four
and one-t hird mnings m relief.
The young r1gtlthander was
acquired fo r cash from Baltimore a few years back.
"That," said Mauch, "was
when the Orioles had ail those
2().game wmners."
The Reds loss Weditesday
went to Don Gullett , the victim
of all four Montreal runs
';'he Reds will play their
Maror Le ague Results
By Untied Press lnternat1onat
Indianapolis farm club in an
Nat tonal League
exhibition
game tomgtlt and
Montre al
200 200 000- &lt;l 8 1
Clnc1
002 ooo ooo- 2 9 1 then will wmd up tbeir home
T o rrez, M on ta g ue { 7 ) a nd
Foote , Gull ett , Bor bcn (8) a nd stand wtth a four-game series
Be nc h WP - To r r ez (7 4) LP against the Atlanta Braves
Gullett (7 4 )
begmnmg Friday mgtlt.
San 01ego
100 ooo ooo- 1 4 o

U.S and Eur opea n dtfftculties arose m great pa rt
because of a U.S. attempt to
mclude econormc, pohtical and
military pvoblems m one broad
declaration . In effect, the
United States had sought to
have the European allies m
NATO and the Eur opean
Common Market speak as one

(5 51

o

Houston
100 001 002- 4 14
Phila
10 2 002 OOx - 5 1 1 0
Gr-ifftn , For sch (6 ), Sc h erm an
( 7) and
Edwa r ds , L o n bo r g ,
Herna 1z (9 ) , Scarc e (9 ) a nd
Boone WP - Lo nborg (9 5) LP
- Gnffm (7 31
HR - L M ay
( 11th )

100 11 0 000-

Los Ang
P 1tsbrgh

- Cey (9th I
San F ran
St LOUtS

03 1 000 010400 000 000-

IT

5 14 0
4 50

D' A cqu, s to, Barber {91 and
Rader ;
G ibs on
(3 8 )
a nd
Simmon s WP - O ' A cqu 1st o (5
6)
HR s- Cruz ( 3r d ) , Bond s

!lOth I

Am encan Leagu e
Inn
ooo ooo 104- s 9 o
alt
001 202 01 x - 6 11 1
Butle r, Hands (4) and Hund
y, McNally, Reynolds 191,
Jackson (91 . Ga rl and 191 and
Etchebar'ren W P - M c N a ll y ( 6
51 LP- Butler II 21
Kan C1 1y
ototooooo- 2 70
M11wa
ooo ooo ooo- o o 2
Busby
{9 6)
and
Hea ly
Wnght (5 91 and Por ter

Chic ago

210 200 73 0- 15 20 2

Herrmann ,

Arlin ,

Cleve
OJO100 ooo- 4 9 o
Bahnsen , P•tlo ck 161 and

ooo 200 ooo 02- 4 13 2
ooo ot o oto oo- 2 • 2
Coleman , Hill e r
( 7)
and
Freehan , Brown , Fouca ult ( 11 1
and S•ms, Sundberg 18 1 WPHiller (8 4) LP - Brown {6 J J
HRs- Ogl.v•el1stl S1ms l2 nd l
'
New York
oot too ooo- 2 9 1
Calif
100 000 000- I 7 l

Med lch (8 5 ) and Mun son ,
Hassler co 1) and Rodr~gu ez ,
Egan (8 l. L ~asster (0 1 J

( 11 Innings )

OUR- BOARDING HOUSE

37 0

100 040 02x- 7 I I 0
Rau, Marshall (SJ. Houg h (7)
and Y eag er , Re uss (6 4 ) and
Sanguill en LP - Rau (5 3) HR

with Major Hoople

Bostn

000

100 000 01- 2 6 2

Oklnd

ooo ooo 01 0 oo- 1 4 o

Tiant, segu 1 ( 11) and F 1Sk ,

~ll ,

Blue , Ftngers (11 ), Lmdblad

ll ll ond Tenace. WP - T•an t (9
(2nd I, Tenace (8 thl

BK'OWN '

,O,CTIN'
,._ND WH"-T

6) LP- Btue (6 7). HR s - Ca t er

WHfo,T

tMfo,61Nfo,T!ON'
AN l USED TO
T"INK SA NK$
WE~ E.

Be Happy, Go Huffy

DI,MS VILLE1

· l.O

CLEVE LAND (UP! ) Q eveland Manager Ken Aspromonte can usually be found
'" his stadium orrtce on orr
days, but you won'I find him
there to day.
"I'm not gomg anywhere
nea r th e park," said Aspromonte after watching his
team go down to a 154 defeat at
the hands of the Chtcago White
Sox Wednesday rught
The White Sox, who banged
out six homers in whippmg the
Indians Tuesday night, hit only
one Wedn esday, but it was a
two-run blast off the bat of Dick
Allen that triggered a sevenrun seventh mning.
While a crowd of 35,592 sat
hoping for a Cleveland comeback tn the SIXth inning, the
White Sox had other ideas as
they turned a 54 lead mto a
complete rout m the seventh
"They htl everything that we
threw up there. It seemed that
the harder our pitchers threw
th e ball, the better they htl it,"
sa1d Cleveland ptlching coach
Q ay Bryant.
After tbe White Sox grabbed
a 3-1lead, the Indians bounre d
back to lte the score m the
second mnmg. But the mvaders
from the Wmdy City chased
aeveland starter and loser

raced to third when Jose
Cardenal's throw from rtgtll
field was slow. Tolan then
scored when Don Kessinger,
the relay man, threw wtde of
third base mto the Cubs'
dugout for an error.
In other NL games, Montreal
defeated Cincinnati, 4-2; Atlanta beat New Yor 5-0 ; Ptllsburgh stopped Los Angeles, 73;
Phtladelphia
nipped
Houston, 54, and San FranCISCO edged St. Louis, 54.
In the American League,
Kansas Ctly blanked Milwaukee, 2-0, behind the no-btl
pitchin g of Steve Busby,
Baltimore edged Mmnesota, &amp;5; Chicago routed Cleveland,
154; Detroit beat Texas, 4-2, m
11 mmngs; New York nipped
Calliorma, 2-1, and Boston
defeated Oakland, 2-1, in 11
innings.

I

Steve Arlm m the fourth when
Ed Herrmann smgled home the
go-ahead run and Bill Melton
hit a sacrifice Oy
" Arlin had control problems,
but if that ts his only problem
he wtll help the team. He has a
hve fastball and a good curve,"
sa1d Aspromonte.
Qeveland reliever Tom Hilgendorf retired 11 Chicago
hatters m order before Jorge
Orta smgled wtth two out and
Aspromonte took out th e
lefthander adbrought 1n Fed
Beene.
Allen rapped Beene's ftrst
pitch far over the centeti1eld
fence and wben the smoke had
cleared, the Whtte Sox had put
seven runs on the scoreboard
and added three more m the
eighth.
A run-scormg trtple by Oscar
Gamble, run-scormg smgles by
George Hendrick and Frank

POSTPON ED
The Meigs-New Ha ven,
American Legion baseball
game, slated for Wednesday
evening
at
Syra cuse
Municipal Park, "as postponed because of rain.

Duffy and Leron Lee's fourth
homer of the yea r was tne only
offenstve power the Indta ns
could muster.
Stan Bahnsen, who, went ftve
ummgs to ptck up the IOOth
VIctory of hts career , was
tagged for eight htls and four
r uns before reltever Sktp

.

'·'

M a 1or L ea g ue Standtng s
B y Un tt c d Pre ss ln ter naf to na l
N a f •onal L eagu e

Ch •cago f Hooton 3 ~ ) '} JO p n
New York. (Koosman 6 11 ,,,
Pnrlade l phh1 ( R ulhven r2
7 35 p m
(On ly gam es scheduled l

Ea st

Expos 4 Reds 2
John Montague snuffed out a
seventh-mnm g Cincmnalt
threat to preserve Mtke
Torrez' seventh victory agamst
four losses as the Expos
defeated the Reds. The Expos
scored two runs in the ft.rsl
ummg and two more m the
fourth to tag Don Gullett wtlh
his fourth loss against seven
wins .
Braves 5 Mets 0
Buzz Capra and Tom House
combmed on a three-httter and
Capra started a fifth-inning
rally w1th a single, leading the
Braves to victory over the
Mets Capra, m raismg his
re1;0rd to 7-2 beat h1s former
teammates for the first time,
yielding three hits in 5 2-3 mmngs. He was lifted in favor of
House when the Mets filled the
bases w1th two out in the sixth.

AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - Pete
Miller, the keeper of the
Firestone Country Club's two
meticulously manicured and
mind-bending golf layouts, has
a problem.
Her name is Mother Nature.
And, as women sometimes are
wont to do, she lSII 'l cooperating.
Miller, 35, ha s been doing his
best to prepare Ft.reslone for
the 99 professtonal golfers in
the $170,000 American Golf
Classic that gets underway
today over the treacherous
par-70, 7,1116-yard course. But
be hasn't succeeded, at least m
his own mind. Compared to the
U.S. Open, Miller said, the 72hole test here "shouldn't be
much of a challenge, nothing at
all."
"I really don't think it's
going to be tough enough," he
sa1d. "The rain we got left
everything wet and everybody
knows it's better that
everything would be dry.
" The way it looks now, it
points to low scores -aboot
eight-under-par 272 -because
the greens are slow and there's
not that much rough. What
rougtl there Is, say ahout four
Inches, is fairly thin, too ."
The pros can use a breather
after ule tor exacted ~ the
brutal U.S. Open's Wmged
I'J1¢.ji'ourse. But the SlJPI!rslick
-ll(l'eens of the Open .rlay be
I

infltcted agam upon the golfers
at Ft.restone.
"We have double-cut the
greens to speed them up a bit,"
Mtller said. "That's because
we want them fast, very fast,
so the bail will slide off them
just like at the Open. We
haven't watered the course at
all because of the weather."
Among the parttcipants will
be defending champion Bruce
Cramtpon, U.S. Open winner
Hale Irwin, Masters victor
Gary Player,· Arnold Palmer,
Tom Weiskopf, host pro Bobby
Nichols and Texan Ben Cren-

WASHINGTON (U P!) - The
top 20 money wmners of the
PGA tour through the 1974
Urutcd States Open
1 J Miller
$204,750
2. H Green
157,465
3. H lrwm
131,936
4. J . Heard
120,427
5. J . Ntcklaus
1!9,582
6. B. Allin
1!7,356
7 R. Curl
109,895
8. L Trevmo
108,468
9.G Player
99,188
10. J . Mahaffey
97,465
II. L. Thompson
96,943
12. D Hill
79,1185
13. D Stockton
77,972
14. T Watson
74,192
15. B. Ntchols
70,114
16. J . Snead
64,739
17 B. Charles
64,394
18 T. Wetskopf
61 ,718
19 B. Menne
58,419
20. G. LtIller
58,251

Ptllsburgh

3rd AVE.

] d

15

New York

• b

Fnd a y 's Game!.
Ptllsburgh at Ch •cago
New York a t Phlla n •qt1t
Montrea l a t St Lou• S n gil t
San D1ego at Hou s ton n•ohl
San F r a n at Lo::. Ang •uqltl
A l lan Ia at C• nc n 1qht

I' '

'7' '

Jl

"l

6

411

]9

]81

10

West
pel g b
657
77 585
5
C1nc•nna t r
36 17 57 1 6
Housto11
33 31 493 11
San F r a n c•sco 33 36 478 12
San D•ego
29 41 408 17
Wed n es day's R(' su ll s
Mo ntrea l 4 C1n c 1nn a t • 7
San Oteg o 1 Ch 1cago 0
Allr~nla 5 New Y ork o
Pll l sbu r gh 7 LOS Anq 3
Phlla 5 Hous t on 4
San Fra n 5 St LOUIS 4
To day' s P ro b ab le P1t ch e rs
{A ll T rme s E DTI
P•llsbury h (R ooke r 3 51 at

Los Ange l es
Mlanta

Pitlock carne m and blanked
the Indtans on one hit over the
ftnal four mrun gs
TI1e lndtans. who are back to
on ly one game over the 500
mark, ta ke off on a stx-game
road lrtp startmg wtth a threegame set m Boston Fnday
ru ght

1
73

44
JB

Amen ca n Le.l glH'
East

w

Bos ton
Detro •I
Bal l rmore
Cleveland
New Yo r k
Mllw.1ukc e

SCIOTO RESUTS
COLUMB US ( UP!) - A
couple of numerically named
harness race horses - Four
and Deuce - battled for the
lead down the stretch tn the
fea tured etghth race at Scioto
Downs Wednesday mght before
Four pulled away to capture
the race by three and one-half
lengths.
F'our returned $11 .20, 6.20
and 3 20, while Deuce patd $6 40
and 4 60 Joyce C. ftmshed
!turd and returned $2 80.
K D Tune, the wtnner of the
ft rst race , and Mtster Poppo,
vtctor m the second, combtned
for a $44.00 payoff on the ntgtltly double combmatton of 5 and
9

A crowd of 4,560 wagered
$247,094 .

L ead m g Batters
ab

r

h

pet

57 20 7 34 77 Jn
65 281 39 104 370
62 288 36 72 )46

Brock S IL
Buckne r , L A
G ar vey , L A
Oav.s., M tl

57
55
66
55

3I
JJ
11

19
W

Nattona l Le ague
9

30
30

W es t

Ma tor L eag ue L ea d ers
By Un 1ted Pre s s tnt cr n at• ona l

S m 1l h , St L
Ga r r , At I
Gross , Hou
Sc hm 1dt Ph•l
Madd0)( , 5F
Z tsk P 1l

I

2'

31
]3
33
32
34

65 2 16 4 1 70 324
66 269 41 87 323
56 189 31 61 323

239 47 77 3'22
2 14 211 69 322
273 44 87 31 9
22 7 30 72 317
Am enca n L eag ue
g . a b r h. pe t
Ca r ew M •n
60 240 35 95 396
Jackson Oa k 57 199 41 70 352
F tsk Bos
45 162 32 54 333
Rob1 n sn Ba t
61 22 4 17 74 JJO
Broha m r ,Ci e .u 150 20 49 321
0 11va M 1n
52 190 15 62 326
McRae KC
60 20 1 29 64 318
Rud 1 O a k
63 247 28 78 3 16
Y a ze m s k 1 B os 62 219 4 1 69 3 15
Brau n , M m
51 172 20 54 314
Hom e Run s
Na tt o n al Lea g ue Wy n n LA
a nd Sc hm •dt Pt1d 17 Be n c h ,
Cm. Cede no Hou and G arv ey,
LA 13
Amencan L eagu e A l l en , Ch 1
and M a y b err y , KC 16 . H or ton ,
D e l and Ja c k son , Oak 15,
Bu r roughS , T ex l3
R uns Batt e d In
Nati on a l L ea gue Gar v ey L A
55 W y nn , L A 54 Sm 1th St L
51 . Ced e no, Hou and Sc h rn •d t ,
Phil 50
A m c r 1 c a n L ea gu e Bur
ro ugh s T ex 55 , Mayberr y , KC
and R ud1 Oa k 47 A ll en , Chi
d6, Ja c k son , Oa k 4 3
Ptfchmg
N aho nal L eagu e Joh n , LA
10 2.
M cG lot hen
Sl L 9 3
Ca r lto n , P hil 9 4 , Lonbor g, Phd
9 5 P N rek r o A t ! and B r ett ,
p, tf 8 4 M o r ton , Atl B 6
A m er~ca n Leagu e
G P erry ,
Clev 12 1, wood. Ctl • 11 7
B1bby Tex 10 8 , Cue lla r, Balt
9 J T 1a nt Bos and Bu sb y KC
96

I

p et

,,
,,

shaw, who already has hagge d
$52,380 in hts first full year on
the tour.
Jack Nicklaus, who became
golf's third mtllwnatre some
eight years and 170 events after
his inaugural appearance m
professional golf in 1961, has
skipped this 13111 annual
tournament as has Lee
Trevino. Nicklaus ts JUSI taking
a break from the rigors of
traveling, but Trevino said he
never would play here agam
because the monstrous course
is not tailored for his kind of
game.

508

IR J
'"'

pe l

.,._ _ _ _ _ _ __ _. .

CREMEANS
CONCRETE
READY MIX
Dejjvered Mond:ty
thru Saturd ay

Also Evening
Delivery
PHONE 446-1146
GALLIPOLIS, 0

SATURDAY

ODD LOT OF MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

LUGGAGE
Not every color m e_very s1ze

SPORT SHIRTS
REG. •5.98

OFF

ODD LOT MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

KNIT SHIRTS

&amp; Supply Co.

992-2709

• OFF

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

Round neck and V neck st yles. Reg. $5.98
to $1 3.00, now $3.99 to $8.67.

•
MIDDLEPORT

9 L

pm
(On ly games sc hedule cl '
Fnday 's Gam es
D et r o 1t at New York , n Qh1
Cl eve l an d at Bo ston n1qht
Ball• mo re at M i lwauk ee nr ~1 ht
Ch1 cago a t M 1n neso t a lli i.J hl
Ca l•f a t TeKa s 2 1wm1gt1t
Ka n sasC!Iy a t 0&lt;1kland nrg hl

and

Regatta Special-3.99

'•

Oak land
31 31
~2 3
KansasCtty
32 30 516
Texas
33 32 50 8
Ch1cago
?9 30 49 ?
?a 38 J ? 1 f.
Ca ll l or nla
M•n n eso ta
25 36
11 0
1
Wed nesday 's R esu lt s
Ba lt 1m ore 6 M1 n neso t a 5
Chrca g o 15 Cl eveland J
Kansas C1ly 2 Mdwauk e( 0
De t ro !! 4 Tc;o; 'i 1 1 '"" s
New Yor k 1 Callforn• , 1
Bos ton 2 Oa klnd 1, 11 •nn s
T odav 's Probabl e P rt ch ers
(A ll T tm es E D T )
Ch 1cago
{WO&lt;JC1
II !)
,,
M1 nn eso ta ICo r b•n 1 01
B 10
pm
Ba l timo r e (Alexander 7]) &lt;1
M •l w aukee I Colborn 3 J) ll t'l
p m
Cat. f ornra ( La nge 1 7J
rH
T ex a s \C l yde 3 3). 9 p m
Kansas CtiY fF•tunor,, ::. 6 7'
a l Oak l an d ( Hunt er B 81
11

FRIDAY

Regatta Special

q 11

&lt;18

On Our Sidewalk At Comer Main &amp; Lynn

REMODELING
NEEDS
lu~ber

pel

Regatta Week Specials

FOR ALL YOUR

Valley

"
"w

Ch iCilQO

Pirates 7 Dodgers 3
Gtants' VIctory over the Car·
Run-scormg smgles by Ed dinals. The htt was the 14th off
Kirkpatrtck and Marto Men- Cardi nal starter Bob Gtbson,
doza keyed a four-run fifth who lost hts etghth game m-Il
mnmg outburst as the Ptrates deCISIOOS.
came from behind to defeat th e
Dodgers for their siXth stra tgtlt
VICtory. Jerry Reuss scattered
seven htls m postmg h1s sixth
VICtory agamst four losses
while Doug Rau, 5-3, suffered
the defeat.
Philties 5 Astros 4
M1ke Schmidt drove m two
runs w1th smgles to spark the
Phillies and Jtm Lonborg to a
victory over the Astros Lonborg ptcked up his ninth victory agamst ftve defeats Tom
Griffm, 7-3, took the mss for
Houston
Giants 5 Cardinals 4
Tito Fuentes delivered a twoout smgle with two men on m
the etghth mnmg to spark the

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS

I

I

w

Jl JO 538
JO 18 511
Jl J I 508

Top winners

Nature tames Firestone

I

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tnn mg enabled the A's to edg t
the Red Sox Luts Tia nt went Ill
ummgs, allowmg on ly threL
hits, to wm hts mnth game,
while Vtda Blue suffered Ius
seventh loss m 13 de&lt;tswns
Danny Cater homered fc•r
Boston , whtle Gene Ten a&lt; e
homered for Oakland

5 1 LOUIS

35,592 see Tribe lose

I

'
\

BY NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Rookte Dan Sp1llner admitted he was concerned aboot
the hot weather at Wrigley
F1eld Wednesday, but 11 was
the Chicago Cubs who reacted
adversely to the heat.
Sptl!ner, a 22-year-old right
hander, allowed only one htta ae!Jected tn!leld IIJier by Rick
Monday m the third mmng -as
the San Diego Padres recorded
thetr 11th victory in thetr last
15 contests wtlh a 1~ decision
over the slumpmg Cubs.
The lone hit by Monday came
wtth two out m the third and
was a lme shot that hounced off
~illner 's back toward first
se
' , Second baseman Derrel
Thomas was unable to make a
playonthehallasMondaywas
credited with a safety.
ll
sed
Spt ner, who u
an assort~
menI of fastballs and sliders to
rec'O rd his third victory in four
decisions with the Padres,
admitted he was only "hopmg
for the best" m Chicago's
warm, humtd weather.
"I'm not a hot weather
• h " S 'lin
ptlc er,
p1 er sat'd. " 1I
usually takes me a couple of
games in warm weather to get
used to it because I'm used to
all th
1•~
' th
ose n.,..t games on e
West Coast, where it's 30
degrees or something like
tftat."
Tolan Scored The Run
San Diego scored in the first
um
' .
he Bobb T I beat
mg W n
Y 0 an
out a drag bunt for a single and
t t
d
0 ave
wen
o secon
on
Roberts ' sacrifice. Dave Winfield flied deon to ri•"t field
~,.
51'
and Tolan , after taggmg up,

home the lte-brea kmg run m
the fourth inrung and George
Medtch scattered seven hits to
win hts etghth game agamst
ftvc losses as the Yankees
topped the Angels.
A's 2, Red Sox I
Bob Mon tgomery's bases
loaded sacrifi ce fly m the 11th

Philadelphia
Mo n treal

Padres roll behind one-hitter

Atlanta
000 020 01 2- 5 10 1
New York
000 000 000- o 3 1
"' Capra , House f6) and Oa tes
Matla c k , Mill e r {7) and G ro te
WP - Ca pra ( 1"J2 ) LP - M a tl ack

Oet
Te x

Adjustmg the mr cond1t10mng
Now it recogmzes they ac- 111 em offi ce IS a tncky
tually are two.
busmcss '

Sa n Otego nt pped Chicago, 1 ~ : tr tgge red a seven-run seventh
Pittsburgh defeated Los An- tnnm g that helped the Whtte
ge les, 7-3 ; Philadelphia mpped Sox whip the Indians Stan
Houston, 54 ; San Fra nctsco Bahnsen went ftve mmngs to
edged St. Louts, 54, Montreal get the wm whtle Steve Arim,
downed Cincinnati, 4-2, and makmg his ftrst A!. start, was
Atlanta b~New Yor k, 5-0 charged wtth the loss. Leron
Orioles 6,
~ts 5
i.ee had a homer for Cleveland
Brooks
obmson drove
Tigers 4, Rangers 2
across three
s wtth a pa tr of
Ed Brinkman doubled home
doubles to lead the Ortoles to a th e go-ahead run m the I tth
three-game sweep of the --mmng to lead the Tigers over
Twms. Robmson, ratstng his the Rangers The loss snapped
average to 3301 h1t a two--run starter Jackie BIOW0 1S fivedouble m the fourth mnmg, game wlltnmg streak Ben
smgled durmg a two-r un sixth Ogtiv1e homered for De trmt
and do ubled home a ru n tn the and Duke Suns connected for
etghth mnmg Dave McNa lly Texas
got the wm
Yankees 2, Angels I
Dtck Allen's two-run homer
Chrts Chambltss doubl ed

LP- Todd (1 -11

( 11 inntngs)

vmce

Busby, who won 16 games
last year and was selected as
the Amertca n l..eague's top
rookte pitcher, admttted he
began thmking about the nohi tter m tbe ftfth mning. "But f
was ftgtltmg har.d after that to
keep my concentration," he
satd. "I had good stuff from the
begmning."
In • other AL games, Baltunore edged Mumesota , 6-5 ,
Chicago routed Cleveland, 1$4: Detroit topped Texas, 4-2, in
11 innings ; New York mpped
Caltforma, 2-1, and Boston
downed Oakland, 2-1, m 11
Innings
__In the National League, Dan
Spillher pitched a one-hitter as

Ctllcago
000 000 000- o 1 1
Spilln er (3 1) and B a rt on ,
Todd , Hooton ( 9 ) and Sw ish er

H ilg endor f
(.t), Beene ( 7L
Wil cox (1) ,
Bo sman (8J and D un ca n W P Batlnse n (6. 7} LP - Arlrn (1 e&gt;
HRs - Ail e n ( 16t t1 L Lee ( 4t h)

E urope.

4-2

CINCINNATI (UPI ) - If
John Montague, the pitcher, is
as good as John Montague, the
golfer, the Montreal Expos
have a real wumer.
Monta gue, the pitcher,
blanked the Cincinnati Reds
the last three ummgs Wednesday afternoon as the Expos
beat the Cmcumati Reds 4-2.
You have to be a golf addtct
and nave a touch of gray in
your hair. to remember Montague the golfer. Gene Mauch,
the Expos' manager qualifies
oo both counts.
"Sure, I remember Man·
Iague the golfer," said Mauch.
" He was one of the greatest
hustlers in the game."
Is Montague the pitcher
related to the golfer?
"No," answered Mauch "In
fact, I doubt If he's ever even
heard of him "
Dave Concepcion and
Darrell Chaney had led off the
seventh inning with smgles
wben Montague, a 2&amp;-year-old
rookie rigtlthander, took over
for starter Mike Torrez.
The rookie proceeded to

I
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Cin~y,

wer e

brought to Bucey's attenlton
about alleged ne glect of
chtidren because agencies are
not domg thetr appomted JObs
Explammg the postlton that the
state ts m, Bucey pointed out
that its hands are lted because
changes can only come about
through pressure by people.
Bucey explamed the Ohto
Adoplton Resource Exchange,
and how tl is trying to bring
about state-wtde cooperation
between agenci es to help
chtld ren m pert!. Many
counties, he satd, are not
parltctpatm g on any level
Bucey satd Ohio has the best
substdtzed adoption btll m the
nation but unfortunately ther e
are no fund s allocated by the
state government County
agenctes do not parltctpate m
substdtzed adoptton due to lack
offunds available to them from
local and county levels

of the Kansas Ctly Royals, first two seasons
tabbed by man y to be
Busby, who no-htt the DetrOit
baseball's next ptlching super- Tigers on Aprtl 23 of hts rookte
star, made hiStory Wednesday--season last year, stunned the
night when he became the fir st Mtlwaukee Brewers, 2~. this
ptlcher in major league annals tune and came close to tossing
to hurl a ncHntte r m each of his the ft rst perfect game tn the
maJors smce 1968 Only a walk
to George Scott m the thtrd
inning deprtved him of that
achievement
As tl was, Busby's no-h1t ter
was the fir st tos sed at
Mtlwaukee's County Stadium
smce Hall of Farner Warren
Spahn of the old Milwaukee
Braves blanked the Sa n FranctscoG ta nts , 1~ . m 1961.11 was
also the f1rst no-Inlier tn the
maJors Uus season.

Expos nip

Rio Atwood Award

Both parties skim
milk money benefits ~

••

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Wr iter
Steven Lee_ Busby has that
little something extra, w~ch
could be called potential .
greatness.
The 24-year-old rtgtlthander

Dr. Beman receives

Ray Cromley

••

Busby fires season's first no•hitter

in key role on

child services

purchase price is only the beginning

•

·"The Hills Are Alive . . "

Commissions

., EDITORIALS

3- }'he Daily Sent mel, Mtddlepo'rt-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 20, 1974

OFF

�r

2- The DIIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Thursday, June 20, 19741
c

the environment loses another
By Stephen Ford
Neady 178 yea rs ago, George Washmj!ton left offtce as the
first President of the embryomc Un tted States. if at tha ttt me
the Oedghng natton could have been persomfted. tt tntghl
have been deptcted as a pmk-fa ced lad wtth the world at hts
feet.
.
When the naltons ftrsl chtef exec uttve stepped dow nlrom
office, he dtd not spew promtses of mrvana m the yea rs
ahead
. Instead, Washmgton admomshed the 13 dtsparate slates to
avotd e nor mous pubhc debts, entanglement wtth for etgn
powers and a mammoth mthtary, to rematn essenttally an
agrar ian country in order to feed tts ma sses and preserv e
natural resources. loJuard agamsl an ehle cadre of pohlt ·
cians centrahzmg an setzm g power and always to be warv
of btg busmess
It is tromc today to recall these anctent blueprints for the
natiOnal future . Almost from the moment Washmgton turned
over the presidency to bts successor, J ohn Adams, Amertca
began to follow an oppostle course
Dtsre_gard for Washmgton's warnmgs on the economy and
tne envtronment ts particularly relevant today
One has only to look at our capric tous envtronmental proleclton laws. And conservattOntsts, who a few years ago had
suet\ a good thing gomg, today are prtme lar~ e ts for
brickbats of corporaltons, bureaucrats, Wall Street s "Monday morning quarterbacks" and eve n the fellow who pumps
gas at tne ne1ghbornood stall on, reasomng bemg that tf these
alarmists had not shot tneir mouths off, we'd still be burning
away 34 cents a gallon ht·test

Und aunted conservalt ontsls are neverth ele.,; stepping lor·
ward again, but thts ltme as stlling ducks and not mess tahs
Ftve conscrv atton groups and three stales f1led sut ts
aga msl th e Rese rve Mmmg Company of Mmnesot a last
month to stop its dumpmg 67,000 tons of md ustrt al waste tnlo
Lake Supenor every day The platntt ffs charged the tacont le
rock dt sc harge produced asbestos-like ft bers m the lake
wht ch provtdes drmkmg wa ter for restdents of nearby
Duluth
US Dtslrtct Judge Mtles Lord subsequently tssued a n mlunclton agamst Reserve Mtntng cttmg lhetr dumpmg as a n
'tmmedtate heal ttl hazard" and ordered they cease at once.
On appeal, a three· Judge federal panel overturned Lord's
dectston and Issued a 70-day slay permttltng the company to
contmue dumpmg wastes tnlo the lake The Judges dtd
sttpulate that Reserve Mimn ~ must provtd e tis own land dts·
posal factlily as soon as poss tble
Reserv e Minmg offictals clatm tt wtll requtre three to ftve
years to complete the land dtsposal stl e. The JUdtcta l panel
acqutesced, slatmg there was no proof of Lord's content ton
there IS an tmmedtate health haza rd (Reserve Mmmg has
also requested $100 mtlhon m stale and federal a td to offse t
the costs of preparmg their land dtsposa l I
After all, the '"junctiOn mtghl curlatl Rese rve Mtnmg's
produclton schedu e whereas dumpmg wtll only effec t any·
one in Duluth who drmks water.
So Lake Superwr JOinS that hsl of mtsta kes bro ught about
by myopta and mdtfference
George Washmgton must be spmnmg beneath Mt Vernon
at 7,000 rpms

servtce productivity m the context of what the consumer
pays for a product durtng tts usable hfe "
Focusing mamly on the color televtstOn and refrtgerator
If you tnmk tnat tne prtces of most consumer goods have
been going up, you are correct. But tf you really want to industries - two of the largest m terms of consumer spendknow about tile htdden costs of products, such as consumer mg - the rej)Ort makes some strtking observattons
The owner of a $500 color teleVISIOn set, for example, ca n
appliances, hold on to your chairs.
According to a recent report by the Massacnusetts In· expect to spend another $500 on the set for servtcmg and
sl!tute of Technology, the hidden costs of major consumer electrtcal power costs during the TV's usable life
In the same way, the owner of a $400 refrigerato r. wtll
apphances are already at least equal to the purchase price
and tnreaten to jump sharply in the future.
spend ahout $1,100 on 11 durmg tts ltfe
The MIT study joins thousands of dtsgruntled consumers
"The Amertcan pubhc !!•nerally IS unaware of the 'life·
cycle costs' of major apphances, wnich in additton to pur- wno have already cnaqied that product rehabthty must be
chase price, include costs of mamtenance and repairin!l increased to reduce servtce costs over a product's usa ble
servicmg, electrtcal operating energy, and even disposal, 1 life.
Progress has already been made m thi s area, the report
says tne report.
In 1972, the MIT says, the American consumer patd be- notes, form the last e1ght years there has bee n a 50 per cent
tween $2.5 and M billion for radio, TV and household ap- decline m the need for servtce of color televtswn sets an d a
phance repair, and anotner $5 billion for energy to operate simtlar dechne in refrigerators over the last 14 years.
Unfortunately servtce costs have mcreased so greatly
these products. Sometimes the serv1ce costs for such appliances alone can cost more than the entire purchase prtce. that they have offset what otherwise would hav e been a
And with electric power rates rtSmg -a projected 75 per sharply reduced "hfe cycle cost" fo r those two items
So where willtl all end? Someday, perhaps, an apphance
cent increase between 1975 and 1980 - th1s cost can be
greater than both service costs and purcnase prtce, the MIT such as a color TV may need to be servtced only once m tis
report says.
·
enttre usable lifetime.
The recently pubhshed report is called "The Productivity
When that time comes, however, the TV re patrmen wtll
of Servicing Consumer Durable Products." It's major pur· have so little to do they wtll be forced to rat se thetr fees to
pose was to "examine alternatives for mcreasing appliance several hundred dolla rs per vtstl JUSt to make a livmg.
Then, of course, we'll be nghl back where we started
By Wilson MacDougall

•
•'

By Ray Cromley

..

WASHINGTON (NEAl
Congressional and private mvestigations into the polltlcal
contributions of the natton's da1rymen are yielding mterest·
ing patterns, not yet. fully explained.
This ts the mdustry whose contributions to President Nixon's re-election campaign the House Judiciary Committee is
now-studying to determine whether those dollars had anything to do with Mr. Nixon's boost of milk price supports m
1972.
The President has stated he was being pressured by
powerful senators and representatives. He acted, he said, to
prevent the Congress from pushing supports even higher.
There since have been reports the milk industry finan cially backe{! a good number of those '5enators and representatives pushing for higner m1lk supports. Data filed w1th
the government on campaign contributions also shows that
at least 12 members of the Judiciary Committee itself, includmJI Ctlatrman Peter W. Rodino Jr., (0-N.J ), received
campaign dollars directly from the milk men. How many
others received indirect donations funneled through party
committees is not known.
How does the milk industry operate m tne polihcal field?
How much money does it have available for such donations?
Where does the money go'
The Onanclal records are not complete since tne law requiring detatled publicity on campaign giving went into
effect on April 7, 1972 and considerable funds were given
before that date by many groups, mcludmg most probably
the mtlk mdustry.
But on tne record, the da1ry industry reP.?rted political
gifts In 1972 in tne neighborhood of $J.3 m1lhon. This was
about a 12th of all the money recorded as given to all presi-

8ERRfS WORLD

denttal, Senate and House candtdates, etlher dtrectly or
through partr committees by all regtstered political assoc1·
attons - busmess, agriculture, labor, health and the like
Almost all the $1.3 million was g1ven by three groups
The Committee for Thorough Agricultural Poliltcal
Educatton or~anized by the Associated Mtik Producers, Inc.,
1n San AntoniO, Texas.
Tne Agrtcultural and Dairy Educational Political Trust
set up by Mid-Amertca Datrymen, Inc., m Sprmgfteld, Mo.
The Trust for Special Pohhcal Agrtcultural Commumty
Educatton established by Datrymen, Inc , in Loutsvtlle, Ky
Approximately $718 mtlhon went to Democrattc candidates for the presidency, for the Senate and the House.
Roughly $834 million went to Republican candtdates.
From data collected by Common Cause, thts reporter ha'
identifted 41 senatorial candidates and 226 candidates for
the House of Representatives who recetved funds dtrectly
from tne three major milk groups. But thts hst, long as it is,
accounts for only die $592,000 gtven dtrectly to candidates. In
addition to direct contributions, the mtlk industry group provided a seventh (or $557,000) of the total $3 7 mtllion the nattonal Democratic and Republican Senate and House campaign committees gave to 83 Senate and ~98 House candt·
dates m 1972
The milk money was carefully spent. By a margtn of three
to four to one, the direct dollars went to the wmners of these
various races. In most cases, the dtrect contrtbuttons went to
mcumbents.
It is reasonable to conclude, from the data noted above
that directly and mdirectly a substanttal majortty of meumbent senators and representatives have recetved mtlk
money.
The Nixon re-election campaign recetved $95,000 on the
record. Vartous news reports have tndtcated the actual
figure was considerably htgher
Almost $70,000 m gifts were reported to the campatgns of
Democratic presidential hopefuls - mcludmg $54,000 for
Rep. Wilbur D. Mills &lt;D-Ark.), and much smaller amounts for
Sen Hubert Humphrey &lt;0-Minn.), Gov George C. Wallace,
(0-Ala.), Sen. EdmundS. Muskte &lt;D·Mainel, and Sen. Vance
Hartke !0-lndl, presumably in the race for the Democratic
nominatiOn.
As of early lhts year, these maJor datry tndustry pohhcal
education groups had $2 million on hand, much of whtch
presumably is available for helpmg candtdates in 1974 and
future campaigns. There IS every reason to beheve these
funds wtll be added to during the year.

Do It Every Time

~~
"TNnlt.

Cl 1t74"'

llfA, ...

~.

but you've mlatDelled horoscope. It's
H·O·R~O. not H-O JR-R·O-R-01"

I,

••
•

r,

OhiO 's coun ty commtsstons

have the greates t responstbth ly m the dectstons that set
the fate of chtldren, accordmg
to Max Buce y, pr ogram
spec ialist of Chtld Placement
Servtces of the Ohto Department of Welfare
Bucy spoke at a mee tmg of
Acr ( Adopt-A-Chtld-Today) of
Athens on June 14 lo
representatives of 14 southeastern OhiO counties Hts
remark s touched off a
dtscuss ton of the n ghts of
chtldren m the counties. Bucey
sa td the counties, not the sta te,
make the key dectsions about
chtldren
It was proposed that thts
should be chan ged, so that the
stale has juriSdiction over
tnese agencies, to see that
chtldren are serviced in the
manner most beeneftctal to
tnem.
Many

Ins ta nces

The Annual Rto Grande
College Alumni Banquet was
held recently in the College
Dimng Hall wtlh more than 200
alumm, frtends, faculty and
starr attendmg . During the
ceremomes, seven different
alumni awards and certificates
were presented.
The Alwood Achtevement
Award was gtven to Floyd
Beman , M.D of Columbus,
who graduated from Rio
Grande College m 1937.
Dr. Beman is Professor of
Medicme in gastroenterology
at OhiO State University
College of Medlcme. He has
recetved many awards from

DR. LAWHENCE E. LAMB

Can a uterus be rebuilt?
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - A wish
you would settle a dtspute between a relaltve and myself. 1
was told by a lady fnend that
her cousin was entermg the
hospital to nave her uter us
rebwlt. Can a uterus be rebuilt
in any way, whether a woman
has previously had it partially

By PHIL NEWSOM
UP! Foreign News Analyst
The 15 foreign ministers of
the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization are taking
belated note this week of the
Western alliance's 25th anniversary in an atmosphere
considerably relaxed from just
three months ago.
In fact, the two-day meeting
now concludmg in Ottawa is
laying the ,groundwork for
what President Nixon and
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger hope will be a truly
gala occas1on at a sununit
meeting in Brussels on June 26.
There, just one day before
· going on to Moscow, the
President is expected to
dehver a major address,
haihng a " new Atlantic
Charter" first called for by
Kissinger on April 23, 1973.
Thus, with the cheers of five
Mideastern nations st1ll
rtnging in his ears, 11 is the
presidential hope to mark in
his Brussels appearance a
symbolic reconciliation with
the United States' European
allies.
Friendly Atmosphere
In Moscow, Soviet party
leader Leomd I. Brezhnev
already has signaled his hopes
for "good new agreements"
pleasing to hoth the American
and Soviet publics.
A number of developments
have contributed to the new
friendly atmosphere' In sharp
contrast to the· bitter criticism
voiced by hoth Nixon and
Kissinger of the European
allies last winter.
U.S. charges that the Europeans were making decisions
without adequate consultation

''

•
I

' •

''

Ohio State Universi ty , m.cludmg the Man of the Year
Award. Dr . Beman is also
acltvtlel y mvolved m the
variOus medical associations,
includmg
the
A.M A ,
0 S.M.A., anti others.
The Atwood Achtevement
Award was presented to Dr.
Beman by Dr Joseph Bltonte ,
a member of the Rto Grande
College Boa rd of Trustees
Execul!ve Committee The
award was gtven in recogml!on
of Dr. Beman's professiOnal
and CIVIC accomplishments
reflecting credtl on Rto Grande
College

Gala meeting in
Brussels expected
with Washington led last
March to cancellation of a
planned Nixon VlSIL to Europe
in April.
Smce then a new government
has taken over in France,
seemingly less determmed to
shut the United States out of
Europe and more willing to
consult on even terms.
The Umted States and Germany have s1gned a new
agreement by which Bonn will
provide $2.2111-lnllion to orrset
the cost of maintaining 197,000
troops in Germany
Pressure !\rom Allies
Onder pressure from her
allies, the Dutch dropped
immediate plans, for a reduclton in the size of her armed
forces.
The Dutch contribution lS
relatively small-some 6,000
troops statiooed in Germanybut a reduction now could now
affect adversely talks m
Vienna aimed at a mutual
reduction of forces between
Communist Warsaw and NATO
pact memhers.
Rejection by the U.S. Senate
of a propoS!'! to reduce the
number of American troops
overseas gave the Europeans a
new confidence m the mtent of
the United States for th e
future.
In the original Kissinger
proposal it had been his mtent
that a new Atlantic Charter
would reflect the changed
economic, poht1cal and
military relationships .hetween
the U.S. and European countries, and that Japan would be
included.
This was as opposed to the
origtn11l charter of 1949, dvawn
up at,a time of mounting' lt!ar

II
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•

or wholl y removed by a
hysterectomy'
I was also told doctors do not
have to tell th eir pa!tents they
have had a complete
hysterectomy or a parltal one,
beca use most hysterectomies
are not complete - m other
words, some·part of etlher the
uterus or ovary IS left so that a
woma n wtll not lose her sexual
urge. Won't yo u please explam,
for I've been told tf all ts
removed a woman does lose
her urge for sex, so par ts of
somethmg must be left m
I don't get it' Can't wait to
se ttl e this argument.
DEAR READER - These
Ideas are not WJ common, and
they are the result of half
truths and errors in communt ca hon
I suspect tha t the operalton
to "rebuild the uterus " ts
really a repatr of a prolapsed
uterus 'l'hts ts literally a
herma of Ute ute rus when 1t
falls down from 1ts normal
locatton. Thts problem IS
common m women who have
had children, and the surgery
ts common place. Tlus does not
mclude any actual work on the
uterus m the sense of reshaping
11 or anythmg like that
Now about those hysterectomy questtons. The uterus has
two parts, the body of the
uterus and the cervix It IS
much hke the body of a fruit Jar
and tis nm, the rim being the
cerVIX A parltal nysterectomy
may ta ke out only the body of
th e uter us and leave the cerv1k
It ts tmporlant to know this,
because tf the cervi x is left in it
ca n still develop ca ncer and
reg ul ar evaJu ahons ar e a
must.
Usually the cervix and th e
body of the uterus are removed
together and lhts ts a complete
and Sovtel ag gressiOn in

hysterectomy, meanmg all the
uterus was removed, mcludmg
the ce rvtx A co mple te
hysterectomy wtll not affect a

worn an's sex urge or her
capaci ty for normal actiVIty,
unless the woman has a
psychologtcal reacti on that ts
not par t of the surger y at all.
The man wtll not be able to tell
that anythi ng has been done,
etther
Sometimes the ovartes are
removed wtth a hysterec tomy.
Thts ts an oopherectomy, not a
hysterectomy You can have
the ovan es removed and leave
the uterus m or you can have
the
uterus
removed
(hysterec tomy , partial or
co mplete ) and • le av e ·the
ovaries mtacl. Or, you can
have both a hysterec tomy and
oopherectomy It's the ovaries
that mfluence a woman 's sex
urge, not her uterus. Ovanes
form mos t of the femP! hormones Their fatlure or
dege nera h on leads to the
menopause If the ovanes are
nonfun ctiomng and dtseased
the surgeon may think it w1se
to remove them In a younger
.woman, unless there ts a good
reason to ta ke them out, he
may leave them alone, even
though he may need to take out
the ute rus.
If th e ovarte s must Ile
removed sur gicall y, then
female hormone replace ment
,Can be gtven to prevent the
changes
attnbuted
to
menopa use
1 hope thts wtll g1ve you
enough mfor malton to settle
your arg ument Don't come to
blows Incidentally, 1 thmk all
doctors should always tell a
patient exac tly what has and
wha t has not been done and
what effects 1t wtll have

LAFF - A - DAY
I

retire pmch-hitter Joe Morga n
on a !mer to right field and the n
struck out Pete Rose and Cesar
Geronuno.
The Reds also went scoreless
the fin al two innings as Montague ptcked up hts first save,
while preserv tn g Torre z'
seventh v1ctory agamst fo ur
losses.
Mauch is using Montague m
relief althougtl he was a starter
with thetr Peninsula farm club
last year and topped the lnternaltonal League w1th 15
VIc tories.
"Because he has been a
sta rter unltl this season," said
Mauch, "I tried to treat him
pretty much like a starter by
giving him plenty of rest
between appearances on the
mound."
Montague's appearance
Wednesday was his ftrst since
last Fnday when he went four
and one-t hird mnings m relief.
The young r1gtlthander was
acquired fo r cash from Baltimore a few years back.
"That," said Mauch, "was
when the Orioles had ail those
2().game wmners."
The Reds loss Weditesday
went to Don Gullett , the victim
of all four Montreal runs
';'he Reds will play their
Maror Le ague Results
By Untied Press lnternat1onat
Indianapolis farm club in an
Nat tonal League
exhibition
game tomgtlt and
Montre al
200 200 000- &lt;l 8 1
Clnc1
002 ooo ooo- 2 9 1 then will wmd up tbeir home
T o rrez, M on ta g ue { 7 ) a nd
Foote , Gull ett , Bor bcn (8) a nd stand wtth a four-game series
Be nc h WP - To r r ez (7 4) LP against the Atlanta Braves
Gullett (7 4 )
begmnmg Friday mgtlt.
San 01ego
100 ooo ooo- 1 4 o

U.S and Eur opea n dtfftculties arose m great pa rt
because of a U.S. attempt to
mclude econormc, pohtical and
military pvoblems m one broad
declaration . In effect, the
United States had sought to
have the European allies m
NATO and the Eur opean
Common Market speak as one

(5 51

o

Houston
100 001 002- 4 14
Phila
10 2 002 OOx - 5 1 1 0
Gr-ifftn , For sch (6 ), Sc h erm an
( 7) and
Edwa r ds , L o n bo r g ,
Herna 1z (9 ) , Scarc e (9 ) a nd
Boone WP - Lo nborg (9 5) LP
- Gnffm (7 31
HR - L M ay
( 11th )

100 11 0 000-

Los Ang
P 1tsbrgh

- Cey (9th I
San F ran
St LOUtS

03 1 000 010400 000 000-

IT

5 14 0
4 50

D' A cqu, s to, Barber {91 and
Rader ;
G ibs on
(3 8 )
a nd
Simmon s WP - O ' A cqu 1st o (5
6)
HR s- Cruz ( 3r d ) , Bond s

!lOth I

Am encan Leagu e
Inn
ooo ooo 104- s 9 o
alt
001 202 01 x - 6 11 1
Butle r, Hands (4) and Hund
y, McNally, Reynolds 191,
Jackson (91 . Ga rl and 191 and
Etchebar'ren W P - M c N a ll y ( 6
51 LP- Butler II 21
Kan C1 1y
ototooooo- 2 70
M11wa
ooo ooo ooo- o o 2
Busby
{9 6)
and
Hea ly
Wnght (5 91 and Por ter

Chic ago

210 200 73 0- 15 20 2

Herrmann ,

Arlin ,

Cleve
OJO100 ooo- 4 9 o
Bahnsen , P•tlo ck 161 and

ooo 200 ooo 02- 4 13 2
ooo ot o oto oo- 2 • 2
Coleman , Hill e r
( 7)
and
Freehan , Brown , Fouca ult ( 11 1
and S•ms, Sundberg 18 1 WPHiller (8 4) LP - Brown {6 J J
HRs- Ogl.v•el1stl S1ms l2 nd l
'
New York
oot too ooo- 2 9 1
Calif
100 000 000- I 7 l

Med lch (8 5 ) and Mun son ,
Hassler co 1) and Rodr~gu ez ,
Egan (8 l. L ~asster (0 1 J

( 11 Innings )

OUR- BOARDING HOUSE

37 0

100 040 02x- 7 I I 0
Rau, Marshall (SJ. Houg h (7)
and Y eag er , Re uss (6 4 ) and
Sanguill en LP - Rau (5 3) HR

with Major Hoople

Bostn

000

100 000 01- 2 6 2

Oklnd

ooo ooo 01 0 oo- 1 4 o

Tiant, segu 1 ( 11) and F 1Sk ,

~ll ,

Blue , Ftngers (11 ), Lmdblad

ll ll ond Tenace. WP - T•an t (9
(2nd I, Tenace (8 thl

BK'OWN '

,O,CTIN'
,._ND WH"-T

6) LP- Btue (6 7). HR s - Ca t er

WHfo,T

tMfo,61Nfo,T!ON'
AN l USED TO
T"INK SA NK$
WE~ E.

Be Happy, Go Huffy

DI,MS VILLE1

· l.O

CLEVE LAND (UP! ) Q eveland Manager Ken Aspromonte can usually be found
'" his stadium orrtce on orr
days, but you won'I find him
there to day.
"I'm not gomg anywhere
nea r th e park," said Aspromonte after watching his
team go down to a 154 defeat at
the hands of the Chtcago White
Sox Wednesday rught
The White Sox, who banged
out six homers in whippmg the
Indians Tuesday night, hit only
one Wedn esday, but it was a
two-run blast off the bat of Dick
Allen that triggered a sevenrun seventh mning.
While a crowd of 35,592 sat
hoping for a Cleveland comeback tn the SIXth inning, the
White Sox had other ideas as
they turned a 54 lead mto a
complete rout m the seventh
"They htl everything that we
threw up there. It seemed that
the harder our pitchers threw
th e ball, the better they htl it,"
sa1d Cleveland ptlching coach
Q ay Bryant.
After tbe White Sox grabbed
a 3-1lead, the Indians bounre d
back to lte the score m the
second mnmg. But the mvaders
from the Wmdy City chased
aeveland starter and loser

raced to third when Jose
Cardenal's throw from rtgtll
field was slow. Tolan then
scored when Don Kessinger,
the relay man, threw wtde of
third base mto the Cubs'
dugout for an error.
In other NL games, Montreal
defeated Cincinnati, 4-2; Atlanta beat New Yor 5-0 ; Ptllsburgh stopped Los Angeles, 73;
Phtladelphia
nipped
Houston, 54, and San FranCISCO edged St. Louis, 54.
In the American League,
Kansas Ctly blanked Milwaukee, 2-0, behind the no-btl
pitchin g of Steve Busby,
Baltimore edged Mmnesota, &amp;5; Chicago routed Cleveland,
154; Detroit beat Texas, 4-2, m
11 mmngs; New York nipped
Calliorma, 2-1, and Boston
defeated Oakland, 2-1, in 11
innings.

I

Steve Arlm m the fourth when
Ed Herrmann smgled home the
go-ahead run and Bill Melton
hit a sacrifice Oy
" Arlin had control problems,
but if that ts his only problem
he wtll help the team. He has a
hve fastball and a good curve,"
sa1d Aspromonte.
Qeveland reliever Tom Hilgendorf retired 11 Chicago
hatters m order before Jorge
Orta smgled wtth two out and
Aspromonte took out th e
lefthander adbrought 1n Fed
Beene.
Allen rapped Beene's ftrst
pitch far over the centeti1eld
fence and wben the smoke had
cleared, the Whtte Sox had put
seven runs on the scoreboard
and added three more m the
eighth.
A run-scormg trtple by Oscar
Gamble, run-scormg smgles by
George Hendrick and Frank

POSTPON ED
The Meigs-New Ha ven,
American Legion baseball
game, slated for Wednesday
evening
at
Syra cuse
Municipal Park, "as postponed because of rain.

Duffy and Leron Lee's fourth
homer of the yea r was tne only
offenstve power the Indta ns
could muster.
Stan Bahnsen, who, went ftve
ummgs to ptck up the IOOth
VIctory of hts career , was
tagged for eight htls and four
r uns before reltever Sktp

.

'·'

M a 1or L ea g ue Standtng s
B y Un tt c d Pre ss ln ter naf to na l
N a f •onal L eagu e

Ch •cago f Hooton 3 ~ ) '} JO p n
New York. (Koosman 6 11 ,,,
Pnrlade l phh1 ( R ulhven r2
7 35 p m
(On ly gam es scheduled l

Ea st

Expos 4 Reds 2
John Montague snuffed out a
seventh-mnm g Cincmnalt
threat to preserve Mtke
Torrez' seventh victory agamst
four losses as the Expos
defeated the Reds. The Expos
scored two runs in the ft.rsl
ummg and two more m the
fourth to tag Don Gullett wtlh
his fourth loss against seven
wins .
Braves 5 Mets 0
Buzz Capra and Tom House
combmed on a three-httter and
Capra started a fifth-inning
rally w1th a single, leading the
Braves to victory over the
Mets Capra, m raismg his
re1;0rd to 7-2 beat h1s former
teammates for the first time,
yielding three hits in 5 2-3 mmngs. He was lifted in favor of
House when the Mets filled the
bases w1th two out in the sixth.

AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - Pete
Miller, the keeper of the
Firestone Country Club's two
meticulously manicured and
mind-bending golf layouts, has
a problem.
Her name is Mother Nature.
And, as women sometimes are
wont to do, she lSII 'l cooperating.
Miller, 35, ha s been doing his
best to prepare Ft.reslone for
the 99 professtonal golfers in
the $170,000 American Golf
Classic that gets underway
today over the treacherous
par-70, 7,1116-yard course. But
be hasn't succeeded, at least m
his own mind. Compared to the
U.S. Open, Miller said, the 72hole test here "shouldn't be
much of a challenge, nothing at
all."
"I really don't think it's
going to be tough enough," he
sa1d. "The rain we got left
everything wet and everybody
knows it's better that
everything would be dry.
" The way it looks now, it
points to low scores -aboot
eight-under-par 272 -because
the greens are slow and there's
not that much rough. What
rougtl there Is, say ahout four
Inches, is fairly thin, too ."
The pros can use a breather
after ule tor exacted ~ the
brutal U.S. Open's Wmged
I'J1¢.ji'ourse. But the SlJPI!rslick
-ll(l'eens of the Open .rlay be
I

infltcted agam upon the golfers
at Ft.restone.
"We have double-cut the
greens to speed them up a bit,"
Mtller said. "That's because
we want them fast, very fast,
so the bail will slide off them
just like at the Open. We
haven't watered the course at
all because of the weather."
Among the parttcipants will
be defending champion Bruce
Cramtpon, U.S. Open winner
Hale Irwin, Masters victor
Gary Player,· Arnold Palmer,
Tom Weiskopf, host pro Bobby
Nichols and Texan Ben Cren-

WASHINGTON (U P!) - The
top 20 money wmners of the
PGA tour through the 1974
Urutcd States Open
1 J Miller
$204,750
2. H Green
157,465
3. H lrwm
131,936
4. J . Heard
120,427
5. J . Ntcklaus
1!9,582
6. B. Allin
1!7,356
7 R. Curl
109,895
8. L Trevmo
108,468
9.G Player
99,188
10. J . Mahaffey
97,465
II. L. Thompson
96,943
12. D Hill
79,1185
13. D Stockton
77,972
14. T Watson
74,192
15. B. Ntchols
70,114
16. J . Snead
64,739
17 B. Charles
64,394
18 T. Wetskopf
61 ,718
19 B. Menne
58,419
20. G. LtIller
58,251

Ptllsburgh

3rd AVE.

] d

15

New York

• b

Fnd a y 's Game!.
Ptllsburgh at Ch •cago
New York a t Phlla n •qt1t
Montrea l a t St Lou• S n gil t
San D1ego at Hou s ton n•ohl
San F r a n at Lo::. Ang •uqltl
A l lan Ia at C• nc n 1qht

I' '

'7' '

Jl

"l

6

411

]9

]81

10

West
pel g b
657
77 585
5
C1nc•nna t r
36 17 57 1 6
Housto11
33 31 493 11
San F r a n c•sco 33 36 478 12
San D•ego
29 41 408 17
Wed n es day's R(' su ll s
Mo ntrea l 4 C1n c 1nn a t • 7
San Oteg o 1 Ch 1cago 0
Allr~nla 5 New Y ork o
Pll l sbu r gh 7 LOS Anq 3
Phlla 5 Hous t on 4
San Fra n 5 St LOUIS 4
To day' s P ro b ab le P1t ch e rs
{A ll T rme s E DTI
P•llsbury h (R ooke r 3 51 at

Los Ange l es
Mlanta

Pitlock carne m and blanked
the Indtans on one hit over the
ftnal four mrun gs
TI1e lndtans. who are back to
on ly one game over the 500
mark, ta ke off on a stx-game
road lrtp startmg wtth a threegame set m Boston Fnday
ru ght

1
73

44
JB

Amen ca n Le.l glH'
East

w

Bos ton
Detro •I
Bal l rmore
Cleveland
New Yo r k
Mllw.1ukc e

SCIOTO RESUTS
COLUMB US ( UP!) - A
couple of numerically named
harness race horses - Four
and Deuce - battled for the
lead down the stretch tn the
fea tured etghth race at Scioto
Downs Wednesday mght before
Four pulled away to capture
the race by three and one-half
lengths.
F'our returned $11 .20, 6.20
and 3 20, while Deuce patd $6 40
and 4 60 Joyce C. ftmshed
!turd and returned $2 80.
K D Tune, the wtnner of the
ft rst race , and Mtster Poppo,
vtctor m the second, combtned
for a $44.00 payoff on the ntgtltly double combmatton of 5 and
9

A crowd of 4,560 wagered
$247,094 .

L ead m g Batters
ab

r

h

pet

57 20 7 34 77 Jn
65 281 39 104 370
62 288 36 72 )46

Brock S IL
Buckne r , L A
G ar vey , L A
Oav.s., M tl

57
55
66
55

3I
JJ
11

19
W

Nattona l Le ague
9

30
30

W es t

Ma tor L eag ue L ea d ers
By Un 1ted Pre s s tnt cr n at• ona l

S m 1l h , St L
Ga r r , At I
Gross , Hou
Sc hm 1dt Ph•l
Madd0)( , 5F
Z tsk P 1l

I

2'

31
]3
33
32
34

65 2 16 4 1 70 324
66 269 41 87 323
56 189 31 61 323

239 47 77 3'22
2 14 211 69 322
273 44 87 31 9
22 7 30 72 317
Am enca n L eag ue
g . a b r h. pe t
Ca r ew M •n
60 240 35 95 396
Jackson Oa k 57 199 41 70 352
F tsk Bos
45 162 32 54 333
Rob1 n sn Ba t
61 22 4 17 74 JJO
Broha m r ,Ci e .u 150 20 49 321
0 11va M 1n
52 190 15 62 326
McRae KC
60 20 1 29 64 318
Rud 1 O a k
63 247 28 78 3 16
Y a ze m s k 1 B os 62 219 4 1 69 3 15
Brau n , M m
51 172 20 54 314
Hom e Run s
Na tt o n al Lea g ue Wy n n LA
a nd Sc hm •dt Pt1d 17 Be n c h ,
Cm. Cede no Hou and G arv ey,
LA 13
Amencan L eagu e A l l en , Ch 1
and M a y b err y , KC 16 . H or ton ,
D e l and Ja c k son , Oak 15,
Bu r roughS , T ex l3
R uns Batt e d In
Nati on a l L ea gue Gar v ey L A
55 W y nn , L A 54 Sm 1th St L
51 . Ced e no, Hou and Sc h rn •d t ,
Phil 50
A m c r 1 c a n L ea gu e Bur
ro ugh s T ex 55 , Mayberr y , KC
and R ud1 Oa k 47 A ll en , Chi
d6, Ja c k son , Oa k 4 3
Ptfchmg
N aho nal L eagu e Joh n , LA
10 2.
M cG lot hen
Sl L 9 3
Ca r lto n , P hil 9 4 , Lonbor g, Phd
9 5 P N rek r o A t ! and B r ett ,
p, tf 8 4 M o r ton , Atl B 6
A m er~ca n Leagu e
G P erry ,
Clev 12 1, wood. Ctl • 11 7
B1bby Tex 10 8 , Cue lla r, Balt
9 J T 1a nt Bos and Bu sb y KC
96

I

p et

,,
,,

shaw, who already has hagge d
$52,380 in hts first full year on
the tour.
Jack Nicklaus, who became
golf's third mtllwnatre some
eight years and 170 events after
his inaugural appearance m
professional golf in 1961, has
skipped this 13111 annual
tournament as has Lee
Trevino. Nicklaus ts JUSI taking
a break from the rigors of
traveling, but Trevino said he
never would play here agam
because the monstrous course
is not tailored for his kind of
game.

508

IR J
'"'

pe l

.,._ _ _ _ _ _ __ _. .

CREMEANS
CONCRETE
READY MIX
Dejjvered Mond:ty
thru Saturd ay

Also Evening
Delivery
PHONE 446-1146
GALLIPOLIS, 0

SATURDAY

ODD LOT OF MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

LUGGAGE
Not every color m e_very s1ze

SPORT SHIRTS
REG. •5.98

OFF

ODD LOT MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

KNIT SHIRTS

&amp; Supply Co.

992-2709

• OFF

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

Round neck and V neck st yles. Reg. $5.98
to $1 3.00, now $3.99 to $8.67.

•
MIDDLEPORT

9 L

pm
(On ly games sc hedule cl '
Fnday 's Gam es
D et r o 1t at New York , n Qh1
Cl eve l an d at Bo ston n1qht
Ball• mo re at M i lwauk ee nr ~1 ht
Ch1 cago a t M 1n neso t a lli i.J hl
Ca l•f a t TeKa s 2 1wm1gt1t
Ka n sasC!Iy a t 0&lt;1kland nrg hl

and

Regatta Special-3.99

'•

Oak land
31 31
~2 3
KansasCtty
32 30 516
Texas
33 32 50 8
Ch1cago
?9 30 49 ?
?a 38 J ? 1 f.
Ca ll l or nla
M•n n eso ta
25 36
11 0
1
Wed nesday 's R esu lt s
Ba lt 1m ore 6 M1 n neso t a 5
Chrca g o 15 Cl eveland J
Kansas C1ly 2 Mdwauk e( 0
De t ro !! 4 Tc;o; 'i 1 1 '"" s
New Yor k 1 Callforn• , 1
Bos ton 2 Oa klnd 1, 11 •nn s
T odav 's Probabl e P rt ch ers
(A ll T tm es E D T )
Ch 1cago
{WO&lt;JC1
II !)
,,
M1 nn eso ta ICo r b•n 1 01
B 10
pm
Ba l timo r e (Alexander 7]) &lt;1
M •l w aukee I Colborn 3 J) ll t'l
p m
Cat. f ornra ( La nge 1 7J
rH
T ex a s \C l yde 3 3). 9 p m
Kansas CtiY fF•tunor,, ::. 6 7'
a l Oak l an d ( Hunt er B 81
11

FRIDAY

Regatta Special

q 11

&lt;18

On Our Sidewalk At Comer Main &amp; Lynn

REMODELING
NEEDS
lu~ber

pel

Regatta Week Specials

FOR ALL YOUR

Valley

"
"w

Ch iCilQO

Pirates 7 Dodgers 3
Gtants' VIctory over the Car·
Run-scormg smgles by Ed dinals. The htt was the 14th off
Kirkpatrtck and Marto Men- Cardi nal starter Bob Gtbson,
doza keyed a four-run fifth who lost hts etghth game m-Il
mnmg outburst as the Ptrates deCISIOOS.
came from behind to defeat th e
Dodgers for their siXth stra tgtlt
VICtory. Jerry Reuss scattered
seven htls m postmg h1s sixth
VICtory agamst four losses
while Doug Rau, 5-3, suffered
the defeat.
Philties 5 Astros 4
M1ke Schmidt drove m two
runs w1th smgles to spark the
Phillies and Jtm Lonborg to a
victory over the Astros Lonborg ptcked up his ninth victory agamst ftve defeats Tom
Griffm, 7-3, took the mss for
Houston
Giants 5 Cardinals 4
Tito Fuentes delivered a twoout smgle with two men on m
the etghth mnmg to spark the

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS

I

I

w

Jl JO 538
JO 18 511
Jl J I 508

Top winners

Nature tames Firestone

I

'

tnn mg enabled the A's to edg t
the Red Sox Luts Tia nt went Ill
ummgs, allowmg on ly threL
hits, to wm hts mnth game,
while Vtda Blue suffered Ius
seventh loss m 13 de&lt;tswns
Danny Cater homered fc•r
Boston , whtle Gene Ten a&lt; e
homered for Oakland

5 1 LOUIS

35,592 see Tribe lose

I

'
\

BY NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Rookte Dan Sp1llner admitted he was concerned aboot
the hot weather at Wrigley
F1eld Wednesday, but 11 was
the Chicago Cubs who reacted
adversely to the heat.
Sptl!ner, a 22-year-old right
hander, allowed only one htta ae!Jected tn!leld IIJier by Rick
Monday m the third mmng -as
the San Diego Padres recorded
thetr 11th victory in thetr last
15 contests wtlh a 1~ decision
over the slumpmg Cubs.
The lone hit by Monday came
wtth two out m the third and
was a lme shot that hounced off
~illner 's back toward first
se
' , Second baseman Derrel
Thomas was unable to make a
playonthehallasMondaywas
credited with a safety.
ll
sed
Spt ner, who u
an assort~
menI of fastballs and sliders to
rec'O rd his third victory in four
decisions with the Padres,
admitted he was only "hopmg
for the best" m Chicago's
warm, humtd weather.
"I'm not a hot weather
• h " S 'lin
ptlc er,
p1 er sat'd. " 1I
usually takes me a couple of
games in warm weather to get
used to it because I'm used to
all th
1•~
' th
ose n.,..t games on e
West Coast, where it's 30
degrees or something like
tftat."
Tolan Scored The Run
San Diego scored in the first
um
' .
he Bobb T I beat
mg W n
Y 0 an
out a drag bunt for a single and
t t
d
0 ave
wen
o secon
on
Roberts ' sacrifice. Dave Winfield flied deon to ri•"t field
~,.
51'
and Tolan , after taggmg up,

home the lte-brea kmg run m
the fourth inrung and George
Medtch scattered seven hits to
win hts etghth game agamst
ftvc losses as the Yankees
topped the Angels.
A's 2, Red Sox I
Bob Mon tgomery's bases
loaded sacrifi ce fly m the 11th

Philadelphia
Mo n treal

Padres roll behind one-hitter

Atlanta
000 020 01 2- 5 10 1
New York
000 000 000- o 3 1
"' Capra , House f6) and Oa tes
Matla c k , Mill e r {7) and G ro te
WP - Ca pra ( 1"J2 ) LP - M a tl ack

Oet
Te x

Adjustmg the mr cond1t10mng
Now it recogmzes they ac- 111 em offi ce IS a tncky
tually are two.
busmcss '

Sa n Otego nt pped Chicago, 1 ~ : tr tgge red a seven-run seventh
Pittsburgh defeated Los An- tnnm g that helped the Whtte
ge les, 7-3 ; Philadelphia mpped Sox whip the Indians Stan
Houston, 54 ; San Fra nctsco Bahnsen went ftve mmngs to
edged St. Louts, 54, Montreal get the wm whtle Steve Arim,
downed Cincinnati, 4-2, and makmg his ftrst A!. start, was
Atlanta b~New Yor k, 5-0 charged wtth the loss. Leron
Orioles 6,
~ts 5
i.ee had a homer for Cleveland
Brooks
obmson drove
Tigers 4, Rangers 2
across three
s wtth a pa tr of
Ed Brinkman doubled home
doubles to lead the Ortoles to a th e go-ahead run m the I tth
three-game sweep of the --mmng to lead the Tigers over
Twms. Robmson, ratstng his the Rangers The loss snapped
average to 3301 h1t a two--run starter Jackie BIOW0 1S fivedouble m the fourth mnmg, game wlltnmg streak Ben
smgled durmg a two-r un sixth Ogtiv1e homered for De trmt
and do ubled home a ru n tn the and Duke Suns connected for
etghth mnmg Dave McNa lly Texas
got the wm
Yankees 2, Angels I
Dtck Allen's two-run homer
Chrts Chambltss doubl ed

LP- Todd (1 -11

( 11 inntngs)

vmce

Busby, who won 16 games
last year and was selected as
the Amertca n l..eague's top
rookte pitcher, admttted he
began thmking about the nohi tter m tbe ftfth mning. "But f
was ftgtltmg har.d after that to
keep my concentration," he
satd. "I had good stuff from the
begmning."
In • other AL games, Baltunore edged Mumesota , 6-5 ,
Chicago routed Cleveland, 1$4: Detroit topped Texas, 4-2, in
11 innings ; New York mpped
Caltforma, 2-1, and Boston
downed Oakland, 2-1, m 11
Innings
__In the National League, Dan
Spillher pitched a one-hitter as

Ctllcago
000 000 000- o 1 1
Spilln er (3 1) and B a rt on ,
Todd , Hooton ( 9 ) and Sw ish er

H ilg endor f
(.t), Beene ( 7L
Wil cox (1) ,
Bo sman (8J and D un ca n W P Batlnse n (6. 7} LP - Arlrn (1 e&gt;
HRs - Ail e n ( 16t t1 L Lee ( 4t h)

E urope.

4-2

CINCINNATI (UPI ) - If
John Montague, the pitcher, is
as good as John Montague, the
golfer, the Montreal Expos
have a real wumer.
Monta gue, the pitcher,
blanked the Cincinnati Reds
the last three ummgs Wednesday afternoon as the Expos
beat the Cmcumati Reds 4-2.
You have to be a golf addtct
and nave a touch of gray in
your hair. to remember Montague the golfer. Gene Mauch,
the Expos' manager qualifies
oo both counts.
"Sure, I remember Man·
Iague the golfer," said Mauch.
" He was one of the greatest
hustlers in the game."
Is Montague the pitcher
related to the golfer?
"No," answered Mauch "In
fact, I doubt If he's ever even
heard of him "
Dave Concepcion and
Darrell Chaney had led off the
seventh inning with smgles
wben Montague, a 2&amp;-year-old
rookie rigtlthander, took over
for starter Mike Torrez.
The rookie proceeded to

I
I

\

Cin~y,

wer e

brought to Bucey's attenlton
about alleged ne glect of
chtidren because agencies are
not domg thetr appomted JObs
Explammg the postlton that the
state ts m, Bucey pointed out
that its hands are lted because
changes can only come about
through pressure by people.
Bucey explamed the Ohto
Adoplton Resource Exchange,
and how tl is trying to bring
about state-wtde cooperation
between agenci es to help
chtld ren m pert!. Many
counties, he satd, are not
parltctpatm g on any level
Bucey satd Ohio has the best
substdtzed adoption btll m the
nation but unfortunately ther e
are no fund s allocated by the
state government County
agenctes do not parltctpate m
substdtzed adoptton due to lack
offunds available to them from
local and county levels

of the Kansas Ctly Royals, first two seasons
tabbed by man y to be
Busby, who no-htt the DetrOit
baseball's next ptlching super- Tigers on Aprtl 23 of hts rookte
star, made hiStory Wednesday--season last year, stunned the
night when he became the fir st Mtlwaukee Brewers, 2~. this
ptlcher in major league annals tune and came close to tossing
to hurl a ncHntte r m each of his the ft rst perfect game tn the
maJors smce 1968 Only a walk
to George Scott m the thtrd
inning deprtved him of that
achievement
As tl was, Busby's no-h1t ter
was the fir st tos sed at
Mtlwaukee's County Stadium
smce Hall of Farner Warren
Spahn of the old Milwaukee
Braves blanked the Sa n FranctscoG ta nts , 1~ . m 1961.11 was
also the f1rst no-Inlier tn the
maJors Uus season.

Expos nip

Rio Atwood Award

Both parties skim
milk money benefits ~

••

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Wr iter
Steven Lee_ Busby has that
little something extra, w~ch
could be called potential .
greatness.
The 24-year-old rtgtlthander

Dr. Beman receives

Ray Cromley

••

Busby fires season's first no•hitter

in key role on

child services

purchase price is only the beginning

•

·"The Hills Are Alive . . "

Commissions

., EDITORIALS

3- }'he Daily Sent mel, Mtddlepo'rt-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 20, 1974

OFF

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r4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 20, 1974

Sport f!arade
By MD-TON RICHMAN
Spnr~ s

F.dilor

By RITA SHADE
COLUMBUS ( UPil- J enn y
sat Indian-style on the highbacked chair . Her swollen
belly·nearly touched her knees.
At 15, she was ready to deliver
her first ·child any .day .
"I always wanted a baby,"
was her only answer when
asked why she chose not to give
the child up fo r adoption . "I

NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Hank Aaron always sits in back of the
bus.
He likes it there.
Maybe because Ralph Garr sits back there, too, and always
Hos t Marietta will be going 1935, 1942, 1949, 1954, 1958, 1959,
Lancaster is defending team Friday, SEOGA members will
makes him laugh.
after its 16th Southeastern Ohio 1960, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1968, champion. Gallipolis finished conduct their annual business
Whenever the AUanta Braves are on the road, Hank Aaron Golf
Association
team and 1972.
eighth out of 10 teams in 1973 meeting, and select the site for
generally is the last one to board the team bus. He's ·not playing championship this weekend .
Athens has won 10 team with a 957 effort. Dan Lam- the 1975 tournament.
the big shot. All he wants to do is keep the bus from waiting on
Pro-am action Friday will titles, Chillicothe seven,
Representing Gallipolls
him. That happens every time the autograph-seekers detain him. get things rolling. Team play is Gallipolis.six, Portsmouth and bright, Lancaster, .captured
honor:s
wltli
a
144last
medalist
thla
year are Atty. · Bill
What he usually does is make a beeline from the hotel and as soon
scheduled Saturday and Lancaster five each, Cir- summer.
Conley, Charleo Kleollng,
as he's on the bus, it moves.
SEOGA MEDALISTS
Sunday.
cleville two and Jackson one.
Joe
Cardenas
Lancaster's
Don S~eet&amp;, George Pope,
That's the way it happened before Wednesdi!y's ball game with
Marietta has won 15 team
Gallipolis will be going
and Dr. U&gt;well LeClair are
YEAR~MEDALIST- TEAM-SCORE
Terry Shrader, Roa Ellla,
the New York Mets.
titles since tournament
after Its first team title in I2
defending pro-am champions,
Clark
Hager,
R.
D.
Wblte,
1924--R. M. Noll, Marietta,
Two youths were among those waiting for Aaron in the hotel
competition began In 1925.
years. Last time the Old
having won the ti tie two years
Blll Thomas and Leo
1925--W. S. Barrett, Chillicothe, ..
lobby. They were alert, but Aaron, who has slgned more than a
The River City crew first French Clly crew came out
in
succession.
Valentine.
half million autographs by now, was even more so.
1926 - R. M. Noll , Marietta, 168
captured the team title in 1926. on top was in 1962.
Following pro-am play
Alternates are E. V. Clarke,
He was by them and moving to the back of the bus before they
1927- Gien Bishop, Jackson, 166
Other crowns were won in 1934,
Vic Hager and Mike Noe .
realized it, and almost inunediately the bus started moving on its
1926-B. T. Grover, Athens, 162
way to Shea Stadium.
1929-B. T. Grover, Athens, 159
"Backpack" Penloteat
193(}-E. J . Livesay, Portsmouth, 153
The twp young men looking for Aaron's autograph wouldn't he
1931-B. T. Grover, Athens, 160
put off that easlly though. One came equipped for a long trip. He
1932-Jack Preston, Athens, 153
was wearing a backpack.
Both began running alongside the bus.
ZANESVILLE, Ohio ( UPI) 73,. which killed his champion- 144; Doug Shilliday, Columbus, Ritter, West Milton, 78-78--IM;
1933-Curtis Reed, Chillicothe, 154
!h ...elght...12 blocks, they ran, occasionally even moving -Bob Roll won the 19th annual ship hopes.
and Joe Sugar Jr., Columbus, Art Cloran, East Liverpool, 'If&gt;.
1934--Max DeVol, Marietta, 142
ahead of the bus. Now some of the Braves began taking notice, Ohio Golf Aasociation PreKrwmnel missed the cup by both 144.
82-157; AI Hager, Mans·
1935--Max DeVol, Marietta, 146
and those wbo did witnessed a minor disaster.
Seniors Golf Championship an inch for a birdie on the first
Class B -Low gross: Quinn, field,77
1936-B. T. Grover, Athens, 148
One of the two pursuers, the one without the backpack, was here Wednesday when he extra hole. Theq, Roll drove 7f&gt;.73-148; Pandel Savic, ColClass C - U&gt;w gross: Ted
1937- Curtis Reed, Chillicothe, 150
watching the bus so Intently while trying to thread his way dropped in a 14-foot putt on the onto the green and calmly umbus, 78-74--152 and Gene Ritter, West Milton, 78-78--154;
193&amp;-Curtis Reed, Chillicothe, 151
through the thick mid-town Manhattan traffic that he failed to first hole of a sudden deal~ tapped in his deciding 14- Roccardi, Columbus, 78-74-- Art Cloran, East Liverpool, 751939--Curtis Reed, Cliillicothe, 151
see an elderly woman getting Into a taxi.
playoff.
footer.
I52. Low net : George Wagner, 82-157; Al Hager, Mansfield,
He ran straight Into her, knocking her down, but never missed
Roll, a 45-year-old ad1940-Dan Cawley, Marietta, 144
Defending champion Don Al- Newark, 144; Bill Paisley, 78-79-157. Low net: Walt
a stride. He kept right on running after the bus. The woman got vertising man from Greenville, ,herf of Columbus tallied his Aahland, 144.
1941-H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 147
Howland, Cincinnati, 145; Curt
up hollering some terrible things, and, incredibly, began running had tied at 147 with Paul second consecutive 79 for a 158
Class C - U&gt;w gross: Ted U&gt;ng, Columbus, 146.
1942-Curtis Reed, Chillicothe, 150
after the youth.
Kruinmel, a Cincinnati dentist, total, the same as posted by
1943 -No Tourney
Atlanta pitcher Rorie Harrison and catcher Paul Casanova at the end of the second round three-time champion Bob Sey1944--H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 148
swear Backpack was still on even tenns with the bus after more of play at the Zanesville ler of Ashland, after a con1945--W. B. Saunders Gallipolis, !50
than two miles.
Country Club.
cluding 80 round. Jack Hesler
Casanova lncredalous
1946-W.
B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 143
Roll, the 1948 Juniors cham- of Colwnbus, the 1971 Ohio
· Casanova blinked his eyes. He couldn't believe what he was pion and twice runnerup in the Ama leur champion, carded a
1947-H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 140
seeing.
Ohio Amateur who was the 75 for a I53.
1946-Dow Finsterwald, Athens, 147
"Hey, Hank," he exclaimed, pointing out the window, "you first day leader al two-over-par
Top golfers by classes :
1949-Dan Cawley, Marietta, 143
gotta sign for this guy. He deserves it. wok, his tongue is 74, had tallied a 73 while KrumClass A - Low gross : Krum·
1950--Dow Finsterwald, Athens, 138
hanging out! The poor guy has been running all the way from the mel turned In the only even par mel, 7f&gt;.72-147; Joe Sugar Jr.,
1951-Dow Finsterwald, Athens ; 142
hotel."
round of the tourney by the 145 Columbus, and Fred Nadelin,
1952- Rick Spires, Lancaster, 142
Hank Aaron had to laugh. He then signed a photo of himself golfers at the 6,51().yard layout. Columbus, both 78-74--152. U&gt;w
CLEVELAND
(UPI)- berg was third with 101 points
passed through the window by Backpack when the bus slowed Quinn bogied his last hole for a net: Rollin Hammum, Newark,
1953-H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 142
Mount Union College today was on titles In football, basketball
momentarily.
1954-Ailen Vierebome , Lancaster, 136
awarded the Ohio Conference and golf.
Aaron has enjoyed precious little privacy since his 715th home
1955--AIIen Vierebome, Lancaster, 154
All-Sports Championships on
llaldwin-Wallace, winner of
run two months ago. Sometimes, he looks like a prisoner of his
195&amp;-Frank Rizak, Cambridge, 136
sirength of three conference the AU-sports Utle the previous
own accomplishment. Sometimes, he confesses, he feels like one.
championships
and
runner-up
1957- H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 142
three years, feU to fourth place
"It's a very lonely life now," he says. "!used to he able to go
spots
In
.
two
others.
Ibis
year
with
91
points.
1958--ID.
B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 145
where l want. N&lt;&gt;more. The club tries to help. It registers me in
The
Purple
Raiders
garOther
team
standings
In
the
1959-Frank Riiak; Cambridge, 145
one room ofthe hotel and puts me in another, but the kids always
nered 109 championship points All..Sports race were: Denison,
find me.! can't sit in the lobby anymore, either.
1960-H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 147
with first place finishes In fifth with 87; Marietta, sixth
·
NoMoreFun
1961-H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 143
NEW YORK (UP!) - The three times this year, winning wrestling, cross coWJtry and with 86; Wooster, seventh with
"Usually I take my meals in my room . l l({Ck myself in my
1962-Frank
Rizak, Cambridge, 142
82; Musklngum, 80.5; Qberlin,
room. If I do go out to eat, I go with Casanova to some ouk&gt;fthe- horse that won the first race at his last start and finishing !bird soccer.
1963-Larry Cassady, Marietta, 142
Ohio Wesleyan finished a 68.5; Heidelberg, 67.5; Capital,
way place, maybe a Chinese restaurant or some place like that." Belmont Park Wednesday in another, and was ridden to a
close
second
with
108.5
points
1964--Frank Rizak, Cambridge, 147
65; Kenyon, 64.5; Ohio NorthThe demands on him, and on his time, continue though. dropped dead in the winner's two-length victory in the sixwith
conference
tiUes
In
soccer
ern,
64;
Otterbein,
62.5
.
1965--Bob Littler, Athens, 143
Everybody wants his picture taken with Hank Aaron. Everybody . circle immedia !ely after ·the furlong claiming Miss Smith to
(tie) and tennis, while Wittenwants his autograph. Everybody wants just five minutes with race. He was Coup Landing, a pay $6.20.
1966-Bob Littler, Athens, 142
After picture taking In the
half-brother to I972 Kentucky
him.
1967- Jim Romanowski, Athens, 145
winner's circle, Coup Landing
"It's tapered off some since I broke the record," he says, "but I Derby winner Riva Ridge.
1968--Wilbur Jerles, Cambridge, 142
Coup Landing, a gelding, was toppled over, but stood up
don't think it'll ever calm down or disappear entirely . I don't
1969-Ron Ellis, Gallipolis, 146
9 years old, and the last jockey again. Then he got to his knees
think thst will happen even after I quit playing ball.
197(}-Marvin l:lughes, Lancaster, 146
"Right now, I'm to the point where baseball is no fun anymore. to ride him, Robyn C. Smith, a again, but finally went over on By United Press International able to ·rally. Tommy Moore
Jim
Burton,
out
with
a
bad
1971-Ciiff Rhein, Lancaster, 141
was !be beneficiary of 13 Tides'
· I still enjoy playing, being out there on the field. But when I come woman, said he was the second his side. .
back
earlier
in
the
season,
hits
and
ran
his
record
to
3-6.
oldest racing horse in New
1972-Lowell LeClair, Lancaster, 143
off it, sometimes it just gets to he too much."
Coup Landing and Rlva
Ridge both were sired by First disabled the bats of the Joe Pactwa was the loser for
- - - - - - ' ' - York.
1973-Dan Lambright, Lancaster, 144
Charleston Charlies Wed- Syracuse.
Middleport.
Coup . Landing had raced Landing.
nesday night.
•
Paul P. Simon, Allie M.
Toledo rallied for a run In the
Burton, who won his first eighth Inning to nip Memphis 3Simon to Hiram A. Richardson,
by Dick Turner
CARNIVAL
SPURS SIGN TEMPLE
game of the -year, did so in 2. Al Santorini picked· up his FOUR JETS BACK
.60 acre, Chester.
NEW
YORK
(UPI)
The
SAN ANTONIO, Tex .. (UP!)
sparkling
fashion
when
he
fourth victory In seven deci. Howard E. Young, Betty
New
Yp~k
Jets
have
signed
Collis Temple, the No. 2
struck out 18 and aUowed only sions for !be Mud Hens, whlle
Young, aka Betty J. Young to
four
veterans
to
1974
contracts,
choice of the San Antonio
draft
two hits in pitching .the Brian Abraham suffered his
Hiriam A. Richardson , .55
Spurs, signed his 1974 contract
Pawtucket Red Sox to a 2-1 win first defeat after posting three the club announced today.
acre, Chester.
to
terms
were
Agreeing
witb the ABA club Wednesday.
over
the
Cllarlies.
victories.
Hiriam Richardson, Yvonne
safety
Chris
Farasopoulos,
Temple, a 6-foot-8 l'o inch
The 24-year-old former
Bob Lang made his first
Martha Holsinger to Virgil c. K. Richardson to Okey Ray
Michigan All-American went appearance of !be year a cornerback Rich Sowells and forward, played for lSU last
Holsinger, Geraldine R Laud.e rmilt, Cheryl Ann
averaging 10.5
the distance for the first time. noticeable one as he went the linebackers John Ebersole and season,
Holsinger, 3.90 acres, Olve. · Laudermilt, parcels, Chester .
Rob
Spicer.
rebounds
and
15.8 points.
this season in gaining his initial distance and pitched a fourCharles T. Neece, Gertrude
Richard M. Young, Linda A.
victory against four !oases. He hitter In the nightcap for
Young to Richard M. Young Neece to Edward D. Neece,
has pitched impressively since Memphis. Catcher Gary Carter
Carolyn Neece, 5.17 acre ,
Linda A. Young, 2.06acres,
returning
to the roster only a contributed two home runs to
Salisbury.
acre, Salisbury.
NORTHFIELD
lew
weeks
ago.
c
the victory, running his total
James F. Arnold, Ruth B.
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
Lucille Brown Jesse to
Pawtucket scored aU the for the year to seven. Jay
(UPI)Instant
Credit
edged
Richard M. Young, Linda A. Arnold to Rolland E. Smith,
runs it needed in the fourth Johnstone homered for Toledo.
Karen D. Smith , parcel,
Miss Win Maker at the wire
Young, 1.16 acres, Salisbury.
when
Jim Rice reached fll'st on
Rutland.
Wednesday night to take the
Flossie Ragan, Leo Ragan to
a fielder's choice, Dave
featured ninth race at
Dorothy Mercer, Glenn Ragan, RIDING EVERTON II
Coleman singled, and Tim
Norlhfild Park for his second
25 acres, Columbia.
BlackweU WJ!oaed a two-run
DETROIT (UPI) - Jockey
RIVER
DOWNS
•
win
of the season.
Beatrice Robson to Peggy J. Ahgel Cordero Jr., who rnde
double.
ClNCINN~TI (UP!)- GeorThe seven-year-old, driven
Kerns, Cleo Kerns. easement. Cannonade to victory in the
Juan Jimene?; took the loss,
gla Grey P81d $88.40, $11.60 and by Tom Pedersen covered the
evening his record at 2-2. Jim
Kentucky Derby, will be
$3.20 at River Downs Wednes- mile In 2:115.2
paid S4.00,
·
Campanis gave Charleston a
aboard Everton II when the
day for a 1:34 4-5 victory In the $3.20 and $3.20. Trig Time
brief lead when he slammed featured $2,400 ninth race finished third.
South American horse runs in
his sixth homer of the season In allowance over seven and one.
the $100,000 Michigan Mile and
the fourth inning.
One-Eighth at Detroit Race
half furlongs on the turf.
In other games: Richmond
Course
Saturday.
Len-Lee was a length and
Tonight &amp; Friday
defeated Rochester 6-4; one-half back, followed by CuCordero was the national
June 20-21
Tidewater beat Syracuse 7-li; ban Rum.
riding champion in 1968 with
"Yeah. that perfume doe s make you smell nice, grandma . .
Double Fe1ture Program
and
Toledo and Memphis split
345 victories, and has been the
how did you USED to smell ?"
An 11-10 dally double combo
"THE TEACHER"
a
doubleheader
with
Toledo
leading
rider
at
New
York's
-Piusof Frum Purple and Cross
AARON VS. OH
RANGERS SIGN F1VE
takil)g !be opener 3-2 in eight Tiger paid $11!5.•.
"THE STEPMOTHER"
"Big . Four" thoroughbred
NEW YORK (UPI) - Hank
ARLINGTON, Tex. (UP!) - innlngs'and Memphis winning
tracks . for three separate
Attendance was 3,872 and the
Aaron, baseball's all-time Five players selected in the the nightcap 6-2.
·years.
day's handle wu $375,816.
home run king, would love to recent summer baseball draft
Joe Grzenda notched his fifth
meet Japan's slugging sen- were signed Wednesday by the victory in relief for Richmond
.sation, Sadaharu Oh, in 11 Texas Rangers,
Start losin_J_ w•ight today or money homer-hitting contest but the · The five were pitchers Dave against only two losses. He
back MONAD~X is 1 tiny tablet
replaced slarter Jim Freeman ATHLETE'S FOOT
and 8asv to tlke. MONADEX will Atlanta Braves' star said he McCarthy, 18, Phoenix, Ariz.; In the fourth and allowed ...ly HOW TO TREAT IT~
help c:urb your desire for excea
Applp •ulck-dr,-lq T..4-L F .. l tt
Tonight thru June 27
food. Eat I • - wetgh 1... Contains :would I)Ot be able to participate Ward Smith, 17, Sacramento, ·two runs the rest of the way. A tab llot• to ehck ltcla. •umlnl' ia
' .
NOT OPEN
no dangerous drug~ and ' will not m such an event until Calif.; Ed Hohnan, 21, Monroe, four-run rally in the second MINUTES. Ia. 3 to 5 clap" Infected
make VOL! nervous. No strenuous sometime in November.
•Ida •lou•U olf. Watch HEALTHY
La ., and Dave Braden, 22, provided the Braves with a •ld•
~lace Itt If nO I d.llahted IN
exMciY. Change your life •• . start
HOUR. year 5k Hck at •ny
Oh, who has hit 600 homers in Franklin, Ohio, and shortstop lead they never relinquished. ONE
today. MONADEX cost $3.00 for
Fri., S;tt., Sun.
drua eount.r. MOW at
a 20 day supply. Lartt economy 16 seasons with the Yomiuri Tommy Smith, 18, Bethesda,
June 28-29-30
Syracuse spotted Tidewater NelsOn Drug Store; Swisher&amp;.
size is$5.00. Also try AQUATABS:
THE LAUGHING
they wol'lc. gently to http you 1011 Giants, sent a special auto- Md. Ali will report to Sarasota to.a six-run lead and was never Lohse Pharm1cy. ' ·
POLICEMAN
-adv .
water-bloat. AQUA TABS -a "water graphed baseball with his· of the Gulf Coast League.
Walter Matlhau
pill" that works - $3.00. Both
Bruce Dern
guaranteed and sold by :
personal congratulations to
( Rl
.Swisher
&amp; L~;&gt;hse Pharmacy, Aaron for breaking Babe
Co,lorcartoons
112 E. Main, Pomeroy, _ &amp; Ruth's record and said he
Show Starts 7 p.m.
Dutton Orug Store, Middleport. would not mind meeting the
. Mail Orders Filled.
MA-9 . Braves•: star in a· one-to-one
UNTIL s · P.M.
home run contest.

Southeastern
golf medalists

' II

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Ohio news focu s

Roll wins Pre-Seniors tourney

oc

Horse dies in
winner's circle

'

Otarleston bats disabled

Meigs

Property

Transfers

o.J9

and

I

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'llw t's

ok&lt;~y.

But if you gel

c vt•r yboqy stn r ts
t~1 l k.inJ~ about how you'vr bocn
s i C'e.pin~ around . Ami i£ you

prc~nant.

want to ket'p the baby , you still
hcwe to go [) WH Y some place-·
'cause people t.lord want to see
you p rc~ nanl a nd uot
rnarried,'' Sanely said.

the {uture.

·

" I'd be scared to get an

abortion . I want to keep the

DI-GEL
ANTACID
TABLETS
56' s

$1.50 Valu e

MEIGS THEATRE

J. J. DAVIS. MD

·_ SATURDAY, JUNE 22nd

-"SUMMER OUTING"
FOR

00-J~r-YOU~SELF

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Pnnce Charmmg !\it

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INCLUDES ONE FROG &amp; ONE TUBE OF CHe.PSJICK
SATISFACTIGN G.UARANTEED. GET YOURS JODAY.

OF

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ClosFC~ EverfMonday Exc"pt Labor Day

I

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,

ELI EBERSBACH
Navy Seamiln Recruit Eli
Ebenbacb, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ell Eberobach of 692
Plum St., Middleport, has
graduated from recruit
training at the Naval Training
Center, Great Lakes, 01. He
will now report to a formal
school for specialty training or
to a ship or shore station for on·
the-job training.

Hoce elected to
commander post.

I

·· ·. MIDIUPORT. OfiJO
Member Flld,ral Depasit InsuranCe Corporation
1\

'
' .

The Crittenden Home, wh ich . l1ospilal ilnd C:Jrc for the 1n·
operates seveai homes in Oh io f:.n ts 24 ho urs a rla y unch, r
and mor e than 100 ml tionwide , close supervision ."
About 2110 girls &gt;t"y &lt;lt the
is beg innin g to deve lop pro·
Crittenden lf ome hen: e:1121l
year , cmd within ;1 f t•\\' months,
J enny . Mar y , Sr:tndy :tnd
Teresa will be gone.
" New gir ls will l'O!Il C," Mi:-\

gram s for girls , to return for

dail y child-reil r in g cla sses ,
Miss Stavrakis said.
" As more homes close because abortion is becoming acceptable, we see a need to do Stavr11kis sa id . '"llwy'll!k Ull·
something for those girls who Sl&lt;Jble, h~llC their buyfr i L'n\~"i
are not prepared to raise chil- and wan t to kep their h ~1bu·:-;."

J oh nson 's

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1 ..

:
. " ' o, . , . . , . .

. .

although I'm not sure that's
what ·I would hHve done. "
Teresa comes from a rural
self."
Ohio town and her parents sent
Only Teresa, 14, hact decided her to th e Crittenden Home to
to give her baby up [or adop- avoid F!OSSip.
"People Talk"
tion.
" I was seven months befor e I
" My daddy, he's in business
to ld my parents I was preg- and people talk," she said.
nant , " she said, bar e ly "Everybody thinks I'm in a

Lhem, 10 shc said . " ldi•ally, Wt''U
llkc to have rooms here where
ttlc gir ls c&lt;m rctur n frum th1:

My boy£riend showed me .' '

huspitill. I didn't even tell my
boyfriend ·1 was pregnant. lie
prooobly woul.d have wanted
me to keep the baby. but another family could give it a
better home. I wanted to go
back to school and do some
things."
None of the girls had used
birth control -or kn ew very
much about sex education .
"Sex ·is such a big deal,"

$547

CINCINNATI

LARGE INDUSTRIAL CONCERN

shuwmg &lt;.tL ,.,gill tT IIJit Lh s . " It
was too late to get an ·abortion ,

can ra iSl' a hH by on my own.
My molh l'r raised 11' by her-

Large colorful umbrella
attaches to any chair to
block ·otu sun .

litbens ~alional

,

nwrr ied . Sonu• day, metybe,
wli l· n l'111 oldc r ," sin.! addell . " I

STAPO CHAIR
SUN UMBRELLA

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

- ·- .

~t!t

lo

F. Hollander

WE WILL NOT BE OPEN
FRIDAY· NIGHT, JUNE 21st
FOR OUR USUAL
5 TO 7 BANKING HOURS

PARK RESERVED

W~lll l

d! d !t "l

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PARADE COMMITTEE, AND IN THE
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PEDESTRIANS

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LAVORIS
MOUTH
WASH

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nubudy s;·Jy S .-mything to you.

roi·

IN OOOPERATION WITH THE

I

bahy . Y11l1 knov. wlwt ge ts Hll',
! h (JJL!." "l If yuu f.!.Cl an abortion,

to ge t marri ed a nd has m ixed
emotions about marriage

"NOTICE"

,.
'
I'

i:lgrtin. The b&lt;Jb ies

Sandy, 15, absolutely refused
lo gel an abortion, didn' t wan t

m

MY OFFicE WILL
BE Q.OSED
FROM
JUNE 26 TO
JULY 15.

l.'Y{'I l'

will be rais~d in the same kind
o.f environ ment that theSl' gir l::;
ca me [rom ."
Rl'fuscs Abortion

can take care of one. I can get a
job somewhere.
"After- I have the baby, I
guess I 'll go home," she said
softly, having to be drawn into
conversation. "I don't like
'school. I'm not going back
there."
Jenny is like most of the
other girls staying at the Flo·
rence Crittenden Home for unwed mothers.
She comes from an unstable
family, was sent to the Crittenden Home by her probation
officer and could not be persuaded to get an abortion or
place the baby with an adoption agency.
"It used to be that 99 out of
100 girls who came here were
from families who just wanted
to keep the pregnancy quiet,
and then the baby would be put
up for adoption," said Billie
Stavrakis, who directs the Crittenden Home.
"Problem Children"
"But now, those girls are the
ones who are getting abortions.
Most of the girls we get today
are sent to us from Children's
Services and are problem
children themselves ," she
continued.
"And it seems like the more
troubled the girls are- the
least likely they are to give the
baby up for adoption," Miss
stavrakis said. "You just can't
convince them
and
Children's Services is hesitant
about recommending abortions."
Mary, who recently dropped
out of the ninth grade, said she
planned her pregnancy and
came to the home on her own.
"I wanted the baby . I
planned it that way," she saiG
matterof.factly. "I came here
'cause I didn't want my
friends-who knew I was
pregnant anyway- to keep
asking me how I felt."
When she delivers her baby
next month, Mary will live with
her parents until she is old
· enough to get a job.
"I've changed plenty of diapers. I hsd lots of brothers and
sisters. I can take care of a
baby of my own," she said. "I
kind of see it like having my
own thing in life."
Miss Stavrakis, who said the
staff at the Crittenden Home
does not try to change a girl's
decision about whether to keep
the baby, compared the teenager's thoughts on raising a
child to getting a puppy.
"They say they are going to
keep the l&gt;aby and take care of
it, but actually, it's someone
else
the family who raises
the chlld-maybe a cousin or
her mother," Miss Stavrakis
said. "And that jusl hegins the

Mount Union
•
tops zn

)

entire

I

Officers ·for 1974-75 Chapter
53 of the Disabled American
Veterans were elected Tuesday
evening.
They are Raymond F. Hoce,
commnder; Orville Graham,
senior vice conunander; Earl
Frec)t:er, junior vice commander; M.L. Kelly, adj .·
treas.; and Oliver' Graham,
.supervisor of sick room
equipment and the home . .
Meetings of the chapter .are
held the Se&lt;:ond Tuesday of
each month at the chapter
home on Butternut at 7:30p.m.
.. ~
'
I' 'I.
' I1
.,.

.I

ke£ ·pin, ~

flren but ins1 :-.L !Ill

Sa nd y said . " \VIusper ,
whisper . You have to find out
about everything on your own.

Most un.wed child mothers want to .keep their babies

Marietta going after 16th
SEOGA title this weekend

Today's

UPI

5.:_ The Daily Sentinel, Middl eport-l'omcroy, 0 ., ·nmrsdily, June 20 . !a74

59c Value -

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51.25 Value

''I

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I'
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I'

�'

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I .

r4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 20, 1974

Sport f!arade
By MD-TON RICHMAN
Spnr~ s

F.dilor

By RITA SHADE
COLUMBUS ( UPil- J enn y
sat Indian-style on the highbacked chair . Her swollen
belly·nearly touched her knees.
At 15, she was ready to deliver
her first ·child any .day .
"I always wanted a baby,"
was her only answer when
asked why she chose not to give
the child up fo r adoption . "I

NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Hank Aaron always sits in back of the
bus.
He likes it there.
Maybe because Ralph Garr sits back there, too, and always
Hos t Marietta will be going 1935, 1942, 1949, 1954, 1958, 1959,
Lancaster is defending team Friday, SEOGA members will
makes him laugh.
after its 16th Southeastern Ohio 1960, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1968, champion. Gallipolis finished conduct their annual business
Whenever the AUanta Braves are on the road, Hank Aaron Golf
Association
team and 1972.
eighth out of 10 teams in 1973 meeting, and select the site for
generally is the last one to board the team bus. He's ·not playing championship this weekend .
Athens has won 10 team with a 957 effort. Dan Lam- the 1975 tournament.
the big shot. All he wants to do is keep the bus from waiting on
Pro-am action Friday will titles, Chillicothe seven,
Representing Gallipolls
him. That happens every time the autograph-seekers detain him. get things rolling. Team play is Gallipolis.six, Portsmouth and bright, Lancaster, .captured
honor:s
wltli
a
144last
medalist
thla
year are Atty. · Bill
What he usually does is make a beeline from the hotel and as soon
scheduled Saturday and Lancaster five each, Cir- summer.
Conley, Charleo Kleollng,
as he's on the bus, it moves.
SEOGA MEDALISTS
Sunday.
cleville two and Jackson one.
Joe
Cardenas
Lancaster's
Don S~eet&amp;, George Pope,
That's the way it happened before Wednesdi!y's ball game with
Marietta has won 15 team
Gallipolis will be going
and Dr. U&gt;well LeClair are
YEAR~MEDALIST- TEAM-SCORE
Terry Shrader, Roa Ellla,
the New York Mets.
titles since tournament
after Its first team title in I2
defending pro-am champions,
Clark
Hager,
R.
D.
Wblte,
1924--R. M. Noll, Marietta,
Two youths were among those waiting for Aaron in the hotel
competition began In 1925.
years. Last time the Old
having won the ti tie two years
Blll Thomas and Leo
1925--W. S. Barrett, Chillicothe, ..
lobby. They were alert, but Aaron, who has slgned more than a
The River City crew first French Clly crew came out
in
succession.
Valentine.
half million autographs by now, was even more so.
1926 - R. M. Noll , Marietta, 168
captured the team title in 1926. on top was in 1962.
Following pro-am play
Alternates are E. V. Clarke,
He was by them and moving to the back of the bus before they
1927- Gien Bishop, Jackson, 166
Other crowns were won in 1934,
Vic Hager and Mike Noe .
realized it, and almost inunediately the bus started moving on its
1926-B. T. Grover, Athens, 162
way to Shea Stadium.
1929-B. T. Grover, Athens, 159
"Backpack" Penloteat
193(}-E. J . Livesay, Portsmouth, 153
The twp young men looking for Aaron's autograph wouldn't he
1931-B. T. Grover, Athens, 160
put off that easlly though. One came equipped for a long trip. He
1932-Jack Preston, Athens, 153
was wearing a backpack.
Both began running alongside the bus.
ZANESVILLE, Ohio ( UPI) 73,. which killed his champion- 144; Doug Shilliday, Columbus, Ritter, West Milton, 78-78--IM;
1933-Curtis Reed, Chillicothe, 154
!h ...elght...12 blocks, they ran, occasionally even moving -Bob Roll won the 19th annual ship hopes.
and Joe Sugar Jr., Columbus, Art Cloran, East Liverpool, 'If&gt;.
1934--Max DeVol, Marietta, 142
ahead of the bus. Now some of the Braves began taking notice, Ohio Golf Aasociation PreKrwmnel missed the cup by both 144.
82-157; AI Hager, Mans·
1935--Max DeVol, Marietta, 146
and those wbo did witnessed a minor disaster.
Seniors Golf Championship an inch for a birdie on the first
Class B -Low gross: Quinn, field,77
1936-B. T. Grover, Athens, 148
One of the two pursuers, the one without the backpack, was here Wednesday when he extra hole. Theq, Roll drove 7f&gt;.73-148; Pandel Savic, ColClass C - U&gt;w gross: Ted
1937- Curtis Reed, Chillicothe, 150
watching the bus so Intently while trying to thread his way dropped in a 14-foot putt on the onto the green and calmly umbus, 78-74--152 and Gene Ritter, West Milton, 78-78--154;
193&amp;-Curtis Reed, Chillicothe, 151
through the thick mid-town Manhattan traffic that he failed to first hole of a sudden deal~ tapped in his deciding 14- Roccardi, Columbus, 78-74-- Art Cloran, East Liverpool, 751939--Curtis Reed, Cliillicothe, 151
see an elderly woman getting Into a taxi.
playoff.
footer.
I52. Low net : George Wagner, 82-157; Al Hager, Mansfield,
He ran straight Into her, knocking her down, but never missed
Roll, a 45-year-old ad1940-Dan Cawley, Marietta, 144
Defending champion Don Al- Newark, 144; Bill Paisley, 78-79-157. Low net: Walt
a stride. He kept right on running after the bus. The woman got vertising man from Greenville, ,herf of Columbus tallied his Aahland, 144.
1941-H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 147
Howland, Cincinnati, 145; Curt
up hollering some terrible things, and, incredibly, began running had tied at 147 with Paul second consecutive 79 for a 158
Class C - U&gt;w gross: Ted U&gt;ng, Columbus, 146.
1942-Curtis Reed, Chillicothe, 150
after the youth.
Kruinmel, a Cincinnati dentist, total, the same as posted by
1943 -No Tourney
Atlanta pitcher Rorie Harrison and catcher Paul Casanova at the end of the second round three-time champion Bob Sey1944--H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 148
swear Backpack was still on even tenns with the bus after more of play at the Zanesville ler of Ashland, after a con1945--W. B. Saunders Gallipolis, !50
than two miles.
Country Club.
cluding 80 round. Jack Hesler
Casanova lncredalous
1946-W.
B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 143
Roll, the 1948 Juniors cham- of Colwnbus, the 1971 Ohio
· Casanova blinked his eyes. He couldn't believe what he was pion and twice runnerup in the Ama leur champion, carded a
1947-H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 140
seeing.
Ohio Amateur who was the 75 for a I53.
1946-Dow Finsterwald, Athens, 147
"Hey, Hank," he exclaimed, pointing out the window, "you first day leader al two-over-par
Top golfers by classes :
1949-Dan Cawley, Marietta, 143
gotta sign for this guy. He deserves it. wok, his tongue is 74, had tallied a 73 while KrumClass A - Low gross : Krum·
1950--Dow Finsterwald, Athens, 138
hanging out! The poor guy has been running all the way from the mel turned In the only even par mel, 7f&gt;.72-147; Joe Sugar Jr.,
1951-Dow Finsterwald, Athens ; 142
hotel."
round of the tourney by the 145 Columbus, and Fred Nadelin,
1952- Rick Spires, Lancaster, 142
Hank Aaron had to laugh. He then signed a photo of himself golfers at the 6,51().yard layout. Columbus, both 78-74--152. U&gt;w
CLEVELAND
(UPI)- berg was third with 101 points
passed through the window by Backpack when the bus slowed Quinn bogied his last hole for a net: Rollin Hammum, Newark,
1953-H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 142
Mount Union College today was on titles In football, basketball
momentarily.
1954-Ailen Vierebome , Lancaster, 136
awarded the Ohio Conference and golf.
Aaron has enjoyed precious little privacy since his 715th home
1955--AIIen Vierebome, Lancaster, 154
All-Sports Championships on
llaldwin-Wallace, winner of
run two months ago. Sometimes, he looks like a prisoner of his
195&amp;-Frank Rizak, Cambridge, 136
sirength of three conference the AU-sports Utle the previous
own accomplishment. Sometimes, he confesses, he feels like one.
championships
and
runner-up
1957- H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 142
three years, feU to fourth place
"It's a very lonely life now," he says. "!used to he able to go
spots
In
.
two
others.
Ibis
year
with
91
points.
1958--ID.
B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 145
where l want. N&lt;&gt;more. The club tries to help. It registers me in
The
Purple
Raiders
garOther
team
standings
In
the
1959-Frank Riiak; Cambridge, 145
one room ofthe hotel and puts me in another, but the kids always
nered 109 championship points All..Sports race were: Denison,
find me.! can't sit in the lobby anymore, either.
1960-H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 147
with first place finishes In fifth with 87; Marietta, sixth
·
NoMoreFun
1961-H. B. Saunders, Gallipolis, 143
NEW YORK (UP!) - The three times this year, winning wrestling, cross coWJtry and with 86; Wooster, seventh with
"Usually I take my meals in my room . l l({Ck myself in my
1962-Frank
Rizak, Cambridge, 142
82; Musklngum, 80.5; Qberlin,
room. If I do go out to eat, I go with Casanova to some ouk&gt;fthe- horse that won the first race at his last start and finishing !bird soccer.
1963-Larry Cassady, Marietta, 142
Ohio Wesleyan finished a 68.5; Heidelberg, 67.5; Capital,
way place, maybe a Chinese restaurant or some place like that." Belmont Park Wednesday in another, and was ridden to a
close
second
with
108.5
points
1964--Frank Rizak, Cambridge, 147
65; Kenyon, 64.5; Ohio NorthThe demands on him, and on his time, continue though. dropped dead in the winner's two-length victory in the sixwith
conference
tiUes
In
soccer
ern,
64;
Otterbein,
62.5
.
1965--Bob Littler, Athens, 143
Everybody wants his picture taken with Hank Aaron. Everybody . circle immedia !ely after ·the furlong claiming Miss Smith to
(tie) and tennis, while Wittenwants his autograph. Everybody wants just five minutes with race. He was Coup Landing, a pay $6.20.
1966-Bob Littler, Athens, 142
After picture taking In the
half-brother to I972 Kentucky
him.
1967- Jim Romanowski, Athens, 145
winner's circle, Coup Landing
"It's tapered off some since I broke the record," he says, "but I Derby winner Riva Ridge.
1968--Wilbur Jerles, Cambridge, 142
Coup Landing, a gelding, was toppled over, but stood up
don't think it'll ever calm down or disappear entirely . I don't
1969-Ron Ellis, Gallipolis, 146
9 years old, and the last jockey again. Then he got to his knees
think thst will happen even after I quit playing ball.
197(}-Marvin l:lughes, Lancaster, 146
"Right now, I'm to the point where baseball is no fun anymore. to ride him, Robyn C. Smith, a again, but finally went over on By United Press International able to ·rally. Tommy Moore
Jim
Burton,
out
with
a
bad
1971-Ciiff Rhein, Lancaster, 141
was !be beneficiary of 13 Tides'
· I still enjoy playing, being out there on the field. But when I come woman, said he was the second his side. .
back
earlier
in
the
season,
hits
and
ran
his
record
to
3-6.
oldest racing horse in New
1972-Lowell LeClair, Lancaster, 143
off it, sometimes it just gets to he too much."
Coup Landing and Rlva
Ridge both were sired by First disabled the bats of the Joe Pactwa was the loser for
- - - - - - ' ' - York.
1973-Dan Lambright, Lancaster, 144
Charleston Charlies Wed- Syracuse.
Middleport.
Coup . Landing had raced Landing.
nesday night.
•
Paul P. Simon, Allie M.
Toledo rallied for a run In the
Burton, who won his first eighth Inning to nip Memphis 3Simon to Hiram A. Richardson,
by Dick Turner
CARNIVAL
SPURS SIGN TEMPLE
game of the -year, did so in 2. Al Santorini picked· up his FOUR JETS BACK
.60 acre, Chester.
NEW
YORK
(UPI)
The
SAN ANTONIO, Tex .. (UP!)
sparkling
fashion
when
he
fourth victory In seven deci. Howard E. Young, Betty
New
Yp~k
Jets
have
signed
Collis Temple, the No. 2
struck out 18 and aUowed only sions for !be Mud Hens, whlle
Young, aka Betty J. Young to
four
veterans
to
1974
contracts,
choice of the San Antonio
draft
two hits in pitching .the Brian Abraham suffered his
Hiriam A. Richardson , .55
Spurs, signed his 1974 contract
Pawtucket Red Sox to a 2-1 win first defeat after posting three the club announced today.
acre, Chester.
to
terms
were
Agreeing
witb the ABA club Wednesday.
over
the
Cllarlies.
victories.
Hiriam Richardson, Yvonne
safety
Chris
Farasopoulos,
Temple, a 6-foot-8 l'o inch
The 24-year-old former
Bob Lang made his first
Martha Holsinger to Virgil c. K. Richardson to Okey Ray
Michigan All-American went appearance of !be year a cornerback Rich Sowells and forward, played for lSU last
Holsinger, Geraldine R Laud.e rmilt, Cheryl Ann
averaging 10.5
the distance for the first time. noticeable one as he went the linebackers John Ebersole and season,
Holsinger, 3.90 acres, Olve. · Laudermilt, parcels, Chester .
Rob
Spicer.
rebounds
and
15.8 points.
this season in gaining his initial distance and pitched a fourCharles T. Neece, Gertrude
Richard M. Young, Linda A.
victory against four !oases. He hitter In the nightcap for
Young to Richard M. Young Neece to Edward D. Neece,
has pitched impressively since Memphis. Catcher Gary Carter
Carolyn Neece, 5.17 acre ,
Linda A. Young, 2.06acres,
returning
to the roster only a contributed two home runs to
Salisbury.
acre, Salisbury.
NORTHFIELD
lew
weeks
ago.
c
the victory, running his total
James F. Arnold, Ruth B.
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
Lucille Brown Jesse to
Pawtucket scored aU the for the year to seven. Jay
(UPI)Instant
Credit
edged
Richard M. Young, Linda A. Arnold to Rolland E. Smith,
runs it needed in the fourth Johnstone homered for Toledo.
Karen D. Smith , parcel,
Miss Win Maker at the wire
Young, 1.16 acres, Salisbury.
when
Jim Rice reached fll'st on
Rutland.
Wednesday night to take the
Flossie Ragan, Leo Ragan to
a fielder's choice, Dave
featured ninth race at
Dorothy Mercer, Glenn Ragan, RIDING EVERTON II
Coleman singled, and Tim
Norlhfild Park for his second
25 acres, Columbia.
BlackweU WJ!oaed a two-run
DETROIT (UPI) - Jockey
RIVER
DOWNS
•
win
of the season.
Beatrice Robson to Peggy J. Ahgel Cordero Jr., who rnde
double.
ClNCINN~TI (UP!)- GeorThe seven-year-old, driven
Kerns, Cleo Kerns. easement. Cannonade to victory in the
Juan Jimene?; took the loss,
gla Grey P81d $88.40, $11.60 and by Tom Pedersen covered the
evening his record at 2-2. Jim
Kentucky Derby, will be
$3.20 at River Downs Wednes- mile In 2:115.2
paid S4.00,
·
Campanis gave Charleston a
aboard Everton II when the
day for a 1:34 4-5 victory In the $3.20 and $3.20. Trig Time
brief lead when he slammed featured $2,400 ninth race finished third.
South American horse runs in
his sixth homer of the season In allowance over seven and one.
the $100,000 Michigan Mile and
the fourth inning.
One-Eighth at Detroit Race
half furlongs on the turf.
In other games: Richmond
Course
Saturday.
Len-Lee was a length and
Tonight &amp; Friday
defeated Rochester 6-4; one-half back, followed by CuCordero was the national
June 20-21
Tidewater beat Syracuse 7-li; ban Rum.
riding champion in 1968 with
"Yeah. that perfume doe s make you smell nice, grandma . .
Double Fe1ture Program
and
Toledo and Memphis split
345 victories, and has been the
how did you USED to smell ?"
An 11-10 dally double combo
"THE TEACHER"
a
doubleheader
with
Toledo
leading
rider
at
New
York's
-Piusof Frum Purple and Cross
AARON VS. OH
RANGERS SIGN F1VE
takil)g !be opener 3-2 in eight Tiger paid $11!5.•.
"THE STEPMOTHER"
"Big . Four" thoroughbred
NEW YORK (UPI) - Hank
ARLINGTON, Tex. (UP!) - innlngs'and Memphis winning
tracks . for three separate
Attendance was 3,872 and the
Aaron, baseball's all-time Five players selected in the the nightcap 6-2.
·years.
day's handle wu $375,816.
home run king, would love to recent summer baseball draft
Joe Grzenda notched his fifth
meet Japan's slugging sen- were signed Wednesday by the victory in relief for Richmond
.sation, Sadaharu Oh, in 11 Texas Rangers,
Start losin_J_ w•ight today or money homer-hitting contest but the · The five were pitchers Dave against only two losses. He
back MONAD~X is 1 tiny tablet
replaced slarter Jim Freeman ATHLETE'S FOOT
and 8asv to tlke. MONADEX will Atlanta Braves' star said he McCarthy, 18, Phoenix, Ariz.; In the fourth and allowed ...ly HOW TO TREAT IT~
help c:urb your desire for excea
Applp •ulck-dr,-lq T..4-L F .. l tt
Tonight thru June 27
food. Eat I • - wetgh 1... Contains :would I)Ot be able to participate Ward Smith, 17, Sacramento, ·two runs the rest of the way. A tab llot• to ehck ltcla. •umlnl' ia
' .
NOT OPEN
no dangerous drug~ and ' will not m such an event until Calif.; Ed Hohnan, 21, Monroe, four-run rally in the second MINUTES. Ia. 3 to 5 clap" Infected
make VOL! nervous. No strenuous sometime in November.
•Ida •lou•U olf. Watch HEALTHY
La ., and Dave Braden, 22, provided the Braves with a •ld•
~lace Itt If nO I d.llahted IN
exMciY. Change your life •• . start
HOUR. year 5k Hck at •ny
Oh, who has hit 600 homers in Franklin, Ohio, and shortstop lead they never relinquished. ONE
today. MONADEX cost $3.00 for
Fri., S;tt., Sun.
drua eount.r. MOW at
a 20 day supply. Lartt economy 16 seasons with the Yomiuri Tommy Smith, 18, Bethesda,
June 28-29-30
Syracuse spotted Tidewater NelsOn Drug Store; Swisher&amp;.
size is$5.00. Also try AQUATABS:
THE LAUGHING
they wol'lc. gently to http you 1011 Giants, sent a special auto- Md. Ali will report to Sarasota to.a six-run lead and was never Lohse Pharm1cy. ' ·
POLICEMAN
-adv .
water-bloat. AQUA TABS -a "water graphed baseball with his· of the Gulf Coast League.
Walter Matlhau
pill" that works - $3.00. Both
Bruce Dern
guaranteed and sold by :
personal congratulations to
( Rl
.Swisher
&amp; L~;&gt;hse Pharmacy, Aaron for breaking Babe
Co,lorcartoons
112 E. Main, Pomeroy, _ &amp; Ruth's record and said he
Show Starts 7 p.m.
Dutton Orug Store, Middleport. would not mind meeting the
. Mail Orders Filled.
MA-9 . Braves•: star in a· one-to-one
UNTIL s · P.M.
home run contest.

Southeastern
golf medalists

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Ohio news focu s

Roll wins Pre-Seniors tourney

oc

Horse dies in
winner's circle

'

Otarleston bats disabled

Meigs

Property

Transfers

o.J9

and

I

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I

'llw t's

ok&lt;~y.

But if you gel

c vt•r yboqy stn r ts
t~1 l k.inJ~ about how you'vr bocn
s i C'e.pin~ around . Ami i£ you

prc~nant.

want to ket'p the baby , you still
hcwe to go [) WH Y some place-·
'cause people t.lord want to see
you p rc~ nanl a nd uot
rnarried,'' Sanely said.

the {uture.

·

" I'd be scared to get an

abortion . I want to keep the

DI-GEL
ANTACID
TABLETS
56' s

$1.50 Valu e

MEIGS THEATRE

J. J. DAVIS. MD

·_ SATURDAY, JUNE 22nd

-"SUMMER OUTING"
FOR

00-J~r-YOU~SELF

• \

•

I

Pnnce Charmmg !\it

J

INCLUDES ONE FROG &amp; ONE TUBE OF CHe.PSJICK
SATISFACTIGN G.UARANTEED. GET YOURS JODAY.

OF

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"

ClosFC~ EverfMonday Exc"pt Labor Day

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ELI EBERSBACH
Navy Seamiln Recruit Eli
Ebenbacb, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ell Eberobach of 692
Plum St., Middleport, has
graduated from recruit
training at the Naval Training
Center, Great Lakes, 01. He
will now report to a formal
school for specialty training or
to a ship or shore station for on·
the-job training.

Hoce elected to
commander post.

I

·· ·. MIDIUPORT. OfiJO
Member Flld,ral Depasit InsuranCe Corporation
1\

'
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The Crittenden Home, wh ich . l1ospilal ilnd C:Jrc for the 1n·
operates seveai homes in Oh io f:.n ts 24 ho urs a rla y unch, r
and mor e than 100 ml tionwide , close supervision ."
About 2110 girls &gt;t"y &lt;lt the
is beg innin g to deve lop pro·
Crittenden lf ome hen: e:1121l
year , cmd within ;1 f t•\\' months,
J enny . Mar y , Sr:tndy :tnd
Teresa will be gone.
" New gir ls will l'O!Il C," Mi:-\

gram s for girls , to return for

dail y child-reil r in g cla sses ,
Miss Stavrakis said.
" As more homes close because abortion is becoming acceptable, we see a need to do Stavr11kis sa id . '"llwy'll!k Ull·
something for those girls who Sl&lt;Jble, h~llC their buyfr i L'n\~"i
are not prepared to raise chil- and wan t to kep their h ~1bu·:-;."

J oh nson 's

Johnson's

BABY

~~11101\..

.,...

bah,·
oil ·

JELLY

32 oz .

12 oz.
98c Value

$2.47 Value

$1.09 Value

1

10 oz .
Sl.S9 Value

SO's

powder

,.

..

1

~-

POWDER
24

oz .

$1.95 Va lue

-·-·-···--·-·

Polaroid

108 COLOR
FILM

A WO&lt;O\M''

~n"• Lll~alove

$3

S5 .85 Value

CHAIR
Value
CHAISE LOUN

79

ss.oo

$10 .50
Value

EVER

FLEXWALL POOL

'

Foam Insulated Cups
20-7 oz. Cups

IO's
30 Gallon Bags
with Ties
98c Value

6' Diameter, 15" Deep
Sets up in 20 seconds
has no braces or sharp
edg es . Fle xible but rugged.
$15.34 Value

KOOLY KUPPS

TRASH BAGS

29~

$1112

CRESTLINE

PEDESTAL
HIBACHI

HEALTH -0 -SWIM

EAR PLUGS
49~

CHARCOAL BRIQUETS

NOSE CLIPS

10 lb. Bag
99c Value

12"x16"x28" high
Easy adjusting
"lok-Tite' '
grid po~itioner
2 Adjustable vents
Wooden carrying

•a~:les

Pistol Grip

HOSE NOmE
Adjustable Spray
$1.00 Value

'1364

\.

PATIO
TORCHES
Reg . $7.49

I'OLORON

GALLON JUG
$2.09
Value

.,69

I

@)'
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:
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. .

although I'm not sure that's
what ·I would hHve done. "
Teresa comes from a rural
self."
Ohio town and her parents sent
Only Teresa, 14, hact decided her to th e Crittenden Home to
to give her baby up [or adop- avoid F!OSSip.
"People Talk"
tion.
" I was seven months befor e I
" My daddy, he's in business
to ld my parents I was preg- and people talk," she said.
nant , " she said, bar e ly "Everybody thinks I'm in a

Lhem, 10 shc said . " ldi•ally, Wt''U
llkc to have rooms here where
ttlc gir ls c&lt;m rctur n frum th1:

My boy£riend showed me .' '

huspitill. I didn't even tell my
boyfriend ·1 was pregnant. lie
prooobly woul.d have wanted
me to keep the baby. but another family could give it a
better home. I wanted to go
back to school and do some
things."
None of the girls had used
birth control -or kn ew very
much about sex education .
"Sex ·is such a big deal,"

$547

CINCINNATI

LARGE INDUSTRIAL CONCERN

shuwmg &lt;.tL ,.,gill tT IIJit Lh s . " It
was too late to get an ·abortion ,

can ra iSl' a hH by on my own.
My molh l'r raised 11' by her-

Large colorful umbrella
attaches to any chair to
block ·otu sun .

litbens ~alional

,

nwrr ied . Sonu• day, metybe,
wli l· n l'111 oldc r ," sin.! addell . " I

STAPO CHAIR
SUN UMBRELLA

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

- ·- .

~t!t

lo

F. Hollander

WE WILL NOT BE OPEN
FRIDAY· NIGHT, JUNE 21st
FOR OUR USUAL
5 TO 7 BANKING HOURS

PARK RESERVED

W~lll l

d! d !t "l

88c;

PARADE COMMITTEE, AND IN THE
iNTEREST OF SAFETY TO
PEDESTRIANS

LOSE UGLY FAT

'" I

LAVORIS
MOUTH
WASH

VIUAGE POLICE, THE REGATTA

lr--••••••••••••!111••••••••••••••••

I

nubudy s;·Jy S .-mything to you.

roi·

IN OOOPERATION WITH THE

I

bahy . Y11l1 knov. wlwt ge ts Hll',
! h (JJL!." "l If yuu f.!.Cl an abortion,

to ge t marri ed a nd has m ixed
emotions about marriage

"NOTICE"

,.
'
I'

i:lgrtin. The b&lt;Jb ies

Sandy, 15, absolutely refused
lo gel an abortion, didn' t wan t

m

MY OFFicE WILL
BE Q.OSED
FROM
JUNE 26 TO
JULY 15.

l.'Y{'I l'

will be rais~d in the same kind
o.f environ ment that theSl' gir l::;
ca me [rom ."
Rl'fuscs Abortion

can take care of one. I can get a
job somewhere.
"After- I have the baby, I
guess I 'll go home," she said
softly, having to be drawn into
conversation. "I don't like
'school. I'm not going back
there."
Jenny is like most of the
other girls staying at the Flo·
rence Crittenden Home for unwed mothers.
She comes from an unstable
family, was sent to the Crittenden Home by her probation
officer and could not be persuaded to get an abortion or
place the baby with an adoption agency.
"It used to be that 99 out of
100 girls who came here were
from families who just wanted
to keep the pregnancy quiet,
and then the baby would be put
up for adoption," said Billie
Stavrakis, who directs the Crittenden Home.
"Problem Children"
"But now, those girls are the
ones who are getting abortions.
Most of the girls we get today
are sent to us from Children's
Services and are problem
children themselves ," she
continued.
"And it seems like the more
troubled the girls are- the
least likely they are to give the
baby up for adoption," Miss
stavrakis said. "You just can't
convince them
and
Children's Services is hesitant
about recommending abortions."
Mary, who recently dropped
out of the ninth grade, said she
planned her pregnancy and
came to the home on her own.
"I wanted the baby . I
planned it that way," she saiG
matterof.factly. "I came here
'cause I didn't want my
friends-who knew I was
pregnant anyway- to keep
asking me how I felt."
When she delivers her baby
next month, Mary will live with
her parents until she is old
· enough to get a job.
"I've changed plenty of diapers. I hsd lots of brothers and
sisters. I can take care of a
baby of my own," she said. "I
kind of see it like having my
own thing in life."
Miss Stavrakis, who said the
staff at the Crittenden Home
does not try to change a girl's
decision about whether to keep
the baby, compared the teenager's thoughts on raising a
child to getting a puppy.
"They say they are going to
keep the l&gt;aby and take care of
it, but actually, it's someone
else
the family who raises
the chlld-maybe a cousin or
her mother," Miss Stavrakis
said. "And that jusl hegins the

Mount Union
•
tops zn

)

entire

I

Officers ·for 1974-75 Chapter
53 of the Disabled American
Veterans were elected Tuesday
evening.
They are Raymond F. Hoce,
commnder; Orville Graham,
senior vice conunander; Earl
Frec)t:er, junior vice commander; M.L. Kelly, adj .·
treas.; and Oliver' Graham,
.supervisor of sick room
equipment and the home . .
Meetings of the chapter .are
held the Se&lt;:ond Tuesday of
each month at the chapter
home on Butternut at 7:30p.m.
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ke£ ·pin, ~

flren but ins1 :-.L !Ill

Sa nd y said . " \VIusper ,
whisper . You have to find out
about everything on your own.

Most un.wed child mothers want to .keep their babies

Marietta going after 16th
SEOGA title this weekend

Today's

UPI

5.:_ The Daily Sentinel, Middl eport-l'omcroy, 0 ., ·nmrsdily, June 20 . !a74

59c Value -

....

~----~~=~
- a~m-.-.
..1 I/-

-1

·'t ~~"'. {'
.!},

44~
1 t---~~~~~------------1
,,. ,,.

SPRAY MIST
SPECIALS

/

~~~~;(~
'""""'...

· One Ounce

Handmade Imported

STRAW BAGS
Large colorful bags
are perfect for beach,
shopping or knitting.

COTY

SWEET EARTH
SHAMPOO

·L'AIMANT
L'ORIGAN
IMPREVU
EMERAUDE

ULTRA VELVET

s1.oo Value 59c
ULTRA FROST
51.25 Value

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�7- The Daily Sentmel, Middleoort-Pnml't'ov. 0 .. Thursday, June 20, 1974

6-'The Oatly Sentmel, M1ddleport-Pomcro&gt;, 0 , TI1w '"'·•v..Jun e :m. :~74

60th anniversary marked

Social 5,0th.anniversary observed Sunday
{Calendar

CARPE,NTER - Mr and Mr and Mrs Eugrn(' H ol hd a~. Stu··~lon,Hld DHOilcl, M1 ~ Z1b.1
The go ld en wedding an - baked by Mrs Lewts and and Mrs G R Thompson, Mrs Margaret Houdashelt,
Mrs Earl Starkey observed Mr and Mrs Honnu.' Y11ung Mldk1£r , Mrs r cut&lt;t Smtih M1
mversary of Mr and Mrs decorated by Mrs Robert Pomeroy , Mr and Mrs James Mr and Mrs. Robert Beegle,
lhe1r 60th weddmg anmversary and Renee . Esther Andel son .mrl Mrs Wilh,un Ha rt, Mr
Ralph McKenzie was observed Thompson Thank -you notes Clatworthy , Mrs Kenneth the Rev and Mrs Howard
at the1r home, june 2 Yellow and Mabel Pauley, Dext.•J
and Mt s Homc1 Radford. Mr
Sunday w1th an open house prmted m gold and encircled Imboden, Middleport
Shtveley, Mrs Emma Adams,
roses m a gold vase. a g1ll from
Beulah Jones. MIS Jesse .md Mrs J.co Stur~ Mr o~nd
TIIURSDAY
hosted by the1r daughter, Mrs w1th a gold weddmg band were
Mrs .
Clara
Marlin , Miss Mary V Easterday, Mr.
Mr and Mrs. Edward Haaf, Cuckler, M1 and Mrs Wa) ne Mrs Dean lll.• ckv. orxl Luc1 lle
FELLOWSHIP Omner at Robert LeWIS, Pomeroy
presented
to
each
VISJlor
Call
forma
,
Mr
and
Mrs.
Davtd and Mrs. Bert Gnmm, Mrs
Rey nolds burg, a bea ulJful France. Noah Gibbs Edna R l.eJfheJ l, M1 and Mr. ('harles M01 mng Star Church by the
For the occaswn, Mrs
The
guests
were
re~1stered
McKenzie, PhJihp, Jeffrey and Joe Stobart, all of Racine, and
basket of daisies presented Jones, Freda Kennedy , Mr Blakeslee. Mr '""' Mrs Fred commumty, 7 p m Potluck McKenzie wore a corsage of
by
Mrs
Garrett
C1rcle
Jozte, Galhpohs; Mr and Mrs the host famtly, Mr. and Mrs.
them by A R. Caster and Mr and Mrs Alton Hope, Mrs Ann Biae tnar. and Mr and Mrs dinner Brmg own table ser- gold
tmted
ca rnatiOns Pres1dmg at the stlver coffee Buel Rtdenour, Chester, Mrs Robert Lew1s , David and
and Mrs Chester Spencer. Algae, Mrs Lcw1s McBnde. Robert P1ckett and fan lll); VIce Everyone welcome
presented to her by her two servtce was M1ss Oebb1e
Carol.
Charleston, W Va., and a four- and M1 and Mrs Scott Pomeroy, M• and M1 s IA.'e
WD.UNG Workers Class of grandchildren, David and Hoelzel, Columbus, and M1ss Betty Chnstopherson, Mr and
Sendmg gifts were Mr. and
Mrs Owen Watson, Mr and
her cake, decora ted w1th a 60th Neutzhng, Athens. John F Wood, Rhonda and Fhonda, Entci pnse Umted Methodist Carol Lew1s
Drema
Lilly,
also
of
Columbus,
Mrs Crtlt Bradford, Mtss Ann Mrs Millard Van Meter, Mrs.
anmversa ry emblem, were Dowler , Ashv11le. Dw1ght Mr
and Mrs
Harvey Church, 7:30p.m. home of Mrs
A hered wedding cake poured the punch The cake
Coe, Mrs Ltllian Jividen, Mrs. Phthp Meinhart, Mrs. J. C.
spec1al for the occasiOn
Se1ple, Dayton: Mr. and Mrs Erlewme, Stella Alktns, Ruby Carl Moore
tnmmed with gold roses and was served by Mtss Carol
Grace Knder , Mrs. Ruth Wyatt, Mrs. Owtght Parker,
Several other gifts were Raymond Axline , Man on M Halliday, Pauline Atkms,
topped
w1th the numerals "50" Lewts.
TWIN
CITY
Shnne
Club
Tucker, Mrs Lavmta Sllllpson, Mtss Myrtts K Parker,
recetved from frtend s and Foster, New Straitsville· Mr Mr and Mrs Owen Blacktn gold , centered the refreshmembers
to
meet
at
7
30
p
m
Guests
attendmg
were
Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Htll, Mr. Pomeroy; Mrs Charles H.
relattves and an extra spectal and Mrs Wesley A Ogdm, wood , Mary D1ehl, Ruby Diehl ,
ment table The l&lt;!ble was and Mrs. Laurance Morr1son,
at
Shnne
Park
m
Racme;
final
and
Mrs. Robert Hill, Mrs. Bryson, Mrs Grella Simpson,
gtll, a dulcuner, was presented Middletown , Mr and Mrs Mr and Mrs Seth Nicholson,
plans for parllclpallng m B1g covered w1th a deep gold cloth Mr and Mrs. Henry Mc- Grace JIVIden, Mrs. Mayme Mrs Grace Holter, Mrs
to the couple by Mr and M1 s Cheste r Ba um ga rdn er, Mrs Eth el Evans. Jcs t1 e
and whtte nettmg accented at
William Grueser.
Coshocton, Mr and Mrs Pearl Molden, Anna Elizabeth Bend Regatl&lt;l Parade Frtday the drapes w1th gold rose Cormtck and Pat, Mr and Mrs. Mallory, Mr. and Mrs. Davtd Gladys Shields, Mr and Mrs.
evcnmg Any member unable
Paul Hoelzel and Debbie, Mr
Scotty Rees, and Mr and Mrs
Their granddaughter, Mrs Chase , Chauncey; Mr. and Turner, Nelhe Vale, Fanme
replicas. The g1ft l&lt;!ble was and Mrs James Lewts, Drema L Htll, Mrs Edna Pickens,
to
attend
the
meetmg
ts
asked
Jtm Rees, Racme; and Mrs
Mr
and
Mrs.
WiUtam
Cozart,
Larry
Clark,
Chester , Mrs Russell Lemgar, New Pelht, Mr and Mrs Norman
to be at the parade locatiOn m also decorated m gold and Lilly, Columbus; Mr and Mrs Mr and Mrs. Vernal E Black- George Schneider, Syracuse
regtstered guests, a mece, Maishf1eld, Emma W Chnc. W11l, Mrs Francis Alkire and
Middlepor t by Fnday w1th fez wh1te and arrangements of Aaron Kelton, Mtss Eleanor wood, Mr. and Mrs. Garrett
Mrs
Chester
Spencer , Sprmgboro , Mella P01mb, Ra;· Alkire, Harn sonvtlleLAUREL Chff Better Health gold mums were used m the Robson , Mrs Paul Kloes, Mr Ctrcle, Mr and Mrs Curbs
Charleston, W. Va , accepted Tallmadge, Mr and Mrs Rulland area, Mr and Mrs
VISIT LAKE HOPE
hvmg room The cake was and Mrs John Terrell, and Mr
Johnson, M1ss Vera M Beegle,
gtfts for them; two meces, Mrs Charles Call, Stow, Mrs Ina Raymond Nelson , Ora Proffitt, Club, 7 30 p m at the home of
RACINE - Mr and Mrs
Allen
Ewhtnger,
Eugene Holliday, Dexter, and Sams, Newark , Mrs Ge01ge Mr and Mrs Glen Turner, Mr Mrs
Kenneth
Russell , Rl 2, Racme,
Mulberry He1ghts
Beulah Jones, Athens, served Rad ekm , McArthur , Mrs and Mrs Glen Chne, Mr and
~
~
spent Father's Day weekend at
ANNUAL Meetmg of Me1gs
cake and punch and others W1lham Ph1lhps, Frankfort, Mrs Wayne Chase, Dale Dye.
Chapter
of
Am
encan
Red
asststing were Mr and Mrs Mrs Leshe Hoffman, Langs- Wanda Oxley, Mr and Mrs
Doyle Hudson and Mr and VIlle, Mrs James COI&gt;kie, Dale Stansbury, Mr. and Mrs Cross, 7·30 p m, Veterans
and Mrs Floyd Chapman, and
Mrs
Lee Woods and Cheshire, Mr and Mrs Arthur Crabtree, Mr and Mrs Memonal Hospital Two gallon
The
28th
anmversary
of
the
Mrs
Nelhe
Vale,
president,
mmts Mrs Forrest had daughters, Shelley and Ktmdaughters , Rhonda and Gordon Caldwell , Tuppers Walter Swett, Mr and Mrs donors will be r ecog mzed Mtddleport Busmess and Mrs Werner, Mrs. Grace Pratt prayer
berly, Columbus The ChapOpen
to
the
public
Fhonda
Plams , Mr and Mrs L W. Carl Greenlees, Rtlla Rhoad es,
Professtonal Women's Club and Mrs. Betty Conkle Mrs
mans
are spendmg a week at
Mtss
Houdashelt
reported
on
REVIVAL at Bradbury
The daughters and sons-m- McComas and Mr and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Frank Turner
was
observed
Monday
mght
also
received
a
25
year
Pratt
one
of
the Lake Hope cabms
the
presidents
'
meeting
June
6
law of the couple, Mr. and Mrs Doyle Hudson, Mtddleport, and Marsha, Mr and Mrs Church of Chnst, Rt I, Mid- wtth a dinner at the home of membership spoon, and
while
on
vacation from thetr
at the Coach House in Wellston
Roy Wtseman, Harrisonvtlle, Mr and Mrs Earl Cross and Mendal Jordan, Mr. and Mrs dleport, now through Frtday, 8 Mrs. Alwtlda Werner
presented
to
Mrs.
Werner
and announced that the employment at Columbus.
and Mr and Mrs. Donald family , Racine; Mrs Maxme Dorsey Jordan, Vtrgtma , Rtck p m mghtly . Dave Lucas,
Charter members were •mmedtate past prestdent, by meeting wtll be m Middleport,
Jones, Nelsonvtlle , were Dyer, Opal, Patty and Btlly; and Ralph, Mr and Mrs A W Evangelist. Spec1al smg1ng by recogmzed by Mrs Mary Mtss Houdashelt was a BPW
June 5, 1g75. She also anpresent. Also present were the Mrs Robert Rumfteld, Mrs Rupe , Mr and Mrs Edwm the Watchmen
Martm, vtce president, who desk pen
nounced the state convenllon
following grandchtldren and Everett Colwell, and Mr and Z1mmerman, Cora Moore,
FRIDAY
presented them wtth yellow
The green and gold colors of May 16-18, 1975. It was noted
famtlies Mr and Mrs. Larry Mrs John Colwell, Vmton, Erma Nelson and R S. Turner,
SANDWICHES, cake , and green carnation corsages the BPW were carrted out m that stx new members were
homemade tee cream, today made by Mrs. Lmda Stobart. the table decoratwns wtth the taken into the club last year
Clark, Tamara and Penny, Patrtcta Grounds, Anita Lew1s, local area
Chester; and Mr. and Mrs. Mr and Mrs Sam Lewts, Mr.
More than 100 greehng cards and Saturday, 11 a m to 8 p m They were Mrs Edtth Forrest, candles and the napkms
Voted mto membership at
Donald Jones, Jr , Brtan and and Mrs Amos Leonard, Mr. were also recetved from Trtmly Church basement
Mrs Rose Reynolds and M1ss featured the club motif The the anmversary meeting was
Carrte of Alexandrta , Va. and Mrs. Wi!Uam Grueser.
LUNCHEONS AND suppers, Freddte Houdashell. Also name place card favors were Mrs Dolly Hayes who was
friends who could not be
Mr. and Mrs Stanford present
Grandchtldren unable to attend
begm 11 a m for Regall&lt;! g1ven the corsages were past mmtature unbrellas filled with presented a club membeship
were Rev and Mrs. Davtd
weekend at St Paul Lutheran
1
cerhf1cate. Also recetving one
Church fellowship hall
Wiseman, Renee, Evan Oavtd
was Mrs Mary Bacon who was
· and Owen Earl, Cambrtdge,
Homemade Ice cream and
taken into membershtp last
cake on the menu
and David Jones, wtlh the
month
army in Fiortda
OHIO VALLEY Chapter of
Meebngs of the circles of the
A card was s1gned by the
Mrs. Kahe Anthony presided
Relallves and frtends who
Adopt-a-&lt;::htld Today, Inc , wtll B H Sanborn Mtsswnary
members
for Mrs Esste
wtth Mrs. Martha King gtvmg
called at the home included
hold June meeting at St Marys Soc1ety of the Middleport Ftrst
devohons on the toptc, "Count Russell who was reported
Mrs. Jessie Jewell , Mr and
Church, Markel Sl , Waverly, Baptist Church were held w1th
Your Blessmgs". The program tmprovmg Commtttees were
Mrs. Cectl Jewell, Mr and
at 8 p m
summer activiltes betng by Mrs Cora Pullen was taken announced for the 1974-75 year PET CARE CENTER
Mrs. Edward C. Haaf, Mr and
FISH FRY by Middleport planned.
from "Women to Women" by and Mrs Vale read "Parable G1ve your pet lhe care he
Mrs Rodney B Baldwm, and
Fire Department startmg 3.30
ELECTA CIRCLE
deserves wllh Sergeant's Pet
Eugema Prtce and dealt wtth of the Good Teacher".
Mr and Mrs. James A. Ward,
p m , at the ftre statiOn and
Meeting at the home of Mrs. Chnstian adornment. Refresh·
Games were played wtth Care Products Select from 1
Columbus area; Mr and Mrs.
conllnumg after parade. Ftsh Pauhne Hoffman, the EJecta
ments were served to those cake and sherbet bemg served of Sergeant's most popular
Forrest Harper, Aida Wtlson,
sandwiches to be served Circle planned a ptcmc at the
named and Mrs June Kloes , by the hostesses, Miss g-oommg a1ds and remed1es,
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Mr. and Mrs James Starkey
Project lo ratse funds for latest Hood campstte across the river
Mrs.
Janet Lewts, Mrs Lillie Houdashelt, Mrs Martin, Mrs. Jncludmg Sergeant's famous
DEAR POLLY - I hope someone can tell me how to remove m eqmpment for f1re ftghtmg for July 16 They also made
and
Teresa
Dowler,
Hubbard,
Mrs. Frances Smart, Elotse Wtlson, and Mrs. Ann Sentry Collars and Tags
Chillicothe; Ruth H Powell, stains from my bronze stove top and lanunated plasbc ble and emergency care
arrangements to remember Mrs Iva Turner, Mrs. Clara Bailey
Lynn Reynolds,
Highland; A. R. Caster and Mr. counter tops. Bowl rings and slams really show up Since we have
the birthdays of two shut-ins. Mae Darst and Mrs. Loutse granddaughter of Mrs Rose
and Mrs. Chester Spencer, hard water f wonder if that is causing them Please help me
Mrs. Freda Hood prestded at Skaggs
Reynolds, was a guest at the
Charleston, W. Va ; Mrs Elma remedy this problem. - MRS. F E.I.
the meeting wtth Mrs Hoffman
meeting
Mrs. Stobart won the
DORCAS CIRCLE
Vernon and Mr. and Mrs John
gtving devohons on the theme
Racine, Ohio
traveling
prize
Members of the Dorcas
DEAR POLLY - I work m a small convenience-type store
F Vernon, New Lexmgton ;
"Gtvmg Others A Lift"
Ctrcle met at the church for a
from 7 a. m. to 4 p. m. each day and am amazed at the lack of
The program by Mrs. Bert potluck supper The blessmg
courtesy shown by many customers. I try very hard to be poh te
Bodllller mcluded an edtlortal was given by Mrs. Beulah
but sometimes my anger breaks through. Most people seem to
by Dr. Joseph I Chapman White and Mrs. Marjone
have forgotten how to say "Please" and "Thank you." So many
MASON, w. Va - A per- blled "The Most for Your
"The Home of the Friendly Folks"
demand rather than ask and I feel sure all salespeople would be sonal shower was held June Money" Mtss Rhoda Haii, Walburn had devotions using
'more than willing to meet them half way or more. Thanks for 14th at the Mason Umted prestdent of the Sanborn scnpture from Matt. 13 1-13
allowing me to votce mr Pet Peeve. -LINDA
MethodiSt Church for Miss Soctety , was a guest at the Shut-ms for the year were
DEAR POLLY -I am allS)Yerlng Mrs. F J.S. who complamed ' Debbte Gtlland, daughter of meeting Refreshments were announced -and offermgs were
Election of three Meigs
taken Attendmg were Mrs
County g1rls to posttions at about shoppmg carts being so unsarutary because of mothers Mr and Mrs Lewts Gtlland, served by Mrs Hoffman.
Walburn, Mrs Alwtlda WerBuckeye Gtrls' State underway carrymg babies in the part that is intended for groceries. She is Mason, w1th Mtss Beverly
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
ner, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, Mrs
this week on the campus of apparently a Mrs. but surely not a mother for a mother would Knapp and Mrs Sherry
The Love Joy Circle met wtlh Jamce Gibbs, Mrs. Ethel
Capital Umverstty, Columbus, know that a baby is usually the most sterilized member of the Busktrk hostesses
Mrs Roma Hawkms A
Mtss Gilland IS bride-elect of hamburger fry was planned for Hughes, Mrs. Whtle , Mrs
was announced by offtctals family. The "Baby's slobbermg over the cart with cookies and
candy" and contaminating Mrs. F .J .S.'s lettuce, celery, etc., can Charles Wesley Roush son of July at the home of Mrs Tony Wmme Whtte, Mrs Jesste
today.
Mary Lowse Mtlls, Rt 3, hardly be more offending than an adult pinchmg and handling Mr and Mrs Harry 'Roush Fowler Cards were stgned for Houdashelt, Miss Freddte
Pomeroy, was elected a fruits and vegetables with unwashed hands whtle a cigarette Mason The weddmg wtll tak~ Mrs Jame:. Murray and Mrs. Houdashelt and Mrs. Leora
STORE HOURS:
.
place Fnday, June 21, at the Dana Hamm, and plans made Stgman. Mrs Sigman will host
member of counc1ltn the city of dangles from a coughing mouth.
BAM-10 PM
MONDAY-SATURDAY
Also, Mrs. F J.S. did not include dogs and other pets that are Mason Umted MethodiSt to remember the btrlhday the July meeting at her home
Burwell, Gtll County; Lou Ann
~
Newell, Chester, was elected to supposedly forbidden in stores but often tolerated. I have an tdea Church Games were played anmversary of Mrs Murray, and all members are to take a
SUNDAY
lOAM
TO
10
PM
favortte rectpe for cake or pie.
the school board of Miller she is more in sympathy With those who leave a shopping cart and prt&gt;es were won by Mrs July 9.
County, and Aprtl Fraser, Uttered with hair, dirty faCla! tissues, coffee cups, etc., than Judy RICe
Middleport, was elected to the those carrying Baby. -MRS H. H.
Refreshments were served to
DEAR GIRLS --After Mrs. F.J.S.'s letter was published we
school board of Smith County.
Lmda Roush, Mrs. Kathy
DEV0'11!11 TO 111E
lln'EIIEBr OF
Buckeye Gtrls' State to heard from one company. Its business Is picking up such grocery Zerkle, Sharon Wtlson, Jo
MEJG8MJJJCflf.w:j\
conclude Sunday is destgned to carts at many stores periodically to sterilize them. Stere owners Ellen Dtehl, Mrs Judy Rtce
CIIESrERL TANNEliiLL,
educate the ctbzen of are not unaware of the problem. -POLLY.
and Andrea, Conme Gilland
DEAR POLLY - After washmg my hair I r!J1Se tl wtth cold
ROBERTIIOEFIJDI,
tomorrow in representaltve
· and the guest of honor, Debbte
City Bdltor
water. This closes the oil glands and I do not have to wash it so
government
Gtlland.
Among
those
sendmg
'
"""""""
daUy
OU&lt;pl S.tw-$y by~
often -DENA.
gtfts were Mrs. Cozy Halstead, (Jiio Valley PlabUihins Com111ny, 111
DEAR GIRLS -This PoiDter was printed iD Ibis column some
Coon Sl • l'oln&lt;noy. Ohio, """ Offlce PfKlne f82.21$1 Ed6toial Pbtw lnyears ago but is well wortb repealing. I have WJed It constantly Kay Schaekel and Suste Me- ~17
Dame!.
sill&lt;!e then and now would not feel my hair was clean if rinsed
Ohio
• """"' '1''
with warm water. The eHect is so stimulating. I use it ev n in
National advanlslna repreaentaUve
winter when the water is icy cold. -POLLY.
BottJneiU.GalJagh Inc J2 East Cld St
GUEST SPEAKER SET
A father-son banquet was
Nn York , New York
DEAR POLLY - Our son was so busy while in college tha e
Mrs
Jane
Baker,
prestdent
held Friday at the Mtddleport knew he had little time for writing but still felt we had to
~--nlet DelJ,.,..~ ..m
whr:re IVIi.lab)e to ceRa !)« weeli, 8)'
Church of Christ with the touch. We would buy 10 stamped post cards at a time, add ess of the Amencan Baptist Mo&amp;or Rwle wbere ctrrter ller'Vice not
dinner bemg prepared and them to ourselves and send them to him so all he had to do as Women of Ohto, wtll speak I ataU.ble One mooth, t:.ID By mau ln
and W VI , One Year, Ill, SiJ:
bnefly at the 10· 30 a.m servtce llllo
served by the Phtla thea
moDUli, $1 50, Three monthJ fll I
,Women
of the Pomeroy Ftrst Baptist E~Rwbere $21.011 ye.r, Jh: months fn 50;
see his handwriting and know he was all rtght. -MRS. V .
three months, • to &amp;abecripti• prtct
Church Sunday mornmg.
A program honored the
Include! &amp;mday Tbnea.Sentlnel
oldest in attendance, Edgar
Wolfe, and the youngest,
George Gla2e Also honored
New off•cers were Installed secrel&lt;!ry; Mrs. Dale Kennedy,
was the four generation Wolfe
at
the recent meetmg of the treasurer; Mrs Marvm Kelly,
famtly - Edgar , Joseph,
Auxthary
of the Metgs Cha~lam; and Mrs . Asel
Harold and Darin.
There was group smgmg of Dtsabled American Veterans Searles, sergeant at arms
" Smtle ",
a
reading, at the hall.
It was noted that the 1974-75
NEW ONES JUST ARRIVED!
Installed were Mrs Sam dues are payable before June
"Becommg a Dad" by Mr
Glaze, a duet, "Stde by Stde" Clark, president ; Mrs. Chester 30and may be sent etther to the
by Amy Erwm and Beth Wolfe, Wolfe, semor vtce prestdent; department or p1id to one of
and poems, "What Is a Boy" by Mrs Don Roach, junior vtce the untl offtcers
Cathy Erwin and "That's What prestdent; Mrs. Dale Sisson,
Grandpas Are For" by Amy
Erwin.
John Reece showed a film
PICNIC suppfles- napk•ns. plates,
titled "Recreation", the story
LAWN
cups, table cloths, forks. spoons
DECORATIONS
of Ohio Power's redevelopment
Hen &amp; chiCkens, duck
of land dllturbed in coq&amp;
ducklings , SUMMER and swim toys - sand pads,
~ii=
roosters . llammgos, garden sets, sprinkling can s, wad mg
strucUon projecta.
·
egrets, wtld geese
"WHITE ,MOUNTAIN",· HAND &amp; ELEC.
The most popular night club in
pools, play balls and sw•m sup phes
Attending the banquet
•
besides those named were
the tri-county aren is
Marvm Kelly, Lawrence
Stewart, Barry Stewart,
The elegant look of wro ug ht 1ron 1n
I ,
h•gh tmpact polystyrene • W1tl not rust
Clarence Murray, Don Erwm,
proud to present
,
MANY
SPECIAL
fade warp peel or (jentl Tnrns &amp; pro
Scolt Reuter, Earl McKinley,
VALUES!
.
tects lawns and gardens Snaplock
Scott McKinley, Clarence
McNeal, Curtis Jenkinson,
Alle'l Jenkinson, Glenn Glaze,
NTER
~
Eugene Hawkins, George
Meinhart, Albert Roush, Leo
·Searls, Chester Erwin, Dana
Swift, Sidney Russell, Robert
992-3498
POM
I '-'HIO
McElhinny, Geor.ge Conroy,
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAy NIGHTS TIL 9
"Everything In Hardware"
Edgar Reynolds, Clinton 11nd
'
Use- O~r Convenient Lay-A-Way Plan.
Trey Glaze, Carl Roach and
MAIN ST.
POMEROY
,
barin Roach. •
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J\
r
" 'I
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Bn
r

w observes 28 years M

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Officers
selected

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CLOSE 10 HOME ntiS YEAR

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A Wide Variety Of
Items Now For

WELCOME

REGAITA

INN

·

GEO. HALL

AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 9 TIL 1

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to be detenmned cJt the Augu st
nwetmg

bd.cl&lt;~ SS J fl erl c~s

c1n

01

will

c1ghth

grade teums 1n the leag ue, rmd
Waverly will ha ve no 1untor

high learns 10 the league
It v.as suggested that se rwu s
co nstde rut10n be g1ven to
ba seba ll doublehead ers on
Saturda~s ln li eu of the prcsenl
league dtamond sc hedule and
It was mthcated by the bo,~rd 1t wa s also Indicated that the
of control that most league Athlettc Dlr('ctors mee t1n g
members had already se t or \\ Ould be held one wec; k pr wr tu
pl,m to set ad m1 ss1on charges the leag ue summer rr1 eel1ng
at $1 for studen ts and $1 50 [or
Ftnally, the August mectutg
adults for the forthconung \HIS set for Augus t 21 ~1t
football and basketba ll J" t kson Hr gh School, oJ I 7 p
sea sons
m
'&gt;uth dll hea d ~.:oe~ c: hcs
Wellston
have no e1gh th asked to attend to present
grade football team but 11111 recommende~t10ns to the buarJ
have freshman and reserves , 1t of control

for offi cers at the August
meeting was formed Th e
c Oimmttce we ude s Buck
Lockhart of Wells ton, ~..:hm r ·
man , John Marlin of Waver ly
and Joe Murtha of Loga n

'"II

The c ross~co untr} mee t for

1974 wa s se t for Oct 15 and the

C&amp;O sued for
discrimination
•

WASHINGTO N I UP!) - The
Lahar Department has sued
the Chesapea ke and Oh10
Rmlv.ay Co and the Balll more
and Oh10 Railroad Co to obtam
mor e tha n $20 mtihon for 300
ratl workers allegedly v1ctmls
of age d1scnmmatwn
The department sa1d the su1t,
filed m U S D1stnct Court m
Baltllllore, IS the largest age
disc nmmatwn swt fl ied yet
The su11 accllSes the two
firms of 'dischargmg, refusmg
to htre, demotmg and othcrWl SC discrumnatmg" agarnst
emplo)es because of the1r age
The smt also charged the
comparues' recent revisiOns m

M~ra ucl e r s

pensiOn plans provided for
man datory retirement at age
62 The Labor Department sa1d
such a proviSIOn \10lates the

Age D•scrlJTlmalJOn m the Employment Act of 1967 The act
covers employes aged 40-65
The su1t, m addition to back
pay, also asked the co urt to
order remstatemenl of mdiVIduals discharged, retnstatement
of workers demoted and abohlJOn of the mandatory rellrement provtswns
An age dtscrumnat10n smt
fl ied m May agamst the Standard 011 Ca of Calilorma,
brought a judgment of $2 milbon for 160 workers

Chairwomen appointed
Chairwomen fm the 1974-75
year were appomted by Mrs
Allen Hampton, president, at a
meeting Tuesday mght of the
Amencan LegiOn Aux tharv,
Lew1s Manley Post 263. at the
home of Mrs Campbell Harper
Appomted were Mrs Harper
Amen camsm , Mrs
Hamson Bentley, children and
youth , Mrs Sherman Buller,
reh.1bil1~1l1on, Mrs Barbara
James, commumty servtce.
Mrs Wilham Sm ith, poppy
day , Mrs Ernest Bowles ,
leg Jsiallve Mrs Harper ,
mus1c, and Mr s Smtth ,
natwnal secunty
Read at the mee lmg wa s a
co mmuni catiO n fr om Mrs
Nancy Sallolt, department
prestdent, concermng Buckeye
Girls' State, bemg held th1s
week on Cap1l&lt;! l Umvers1ty
campus, Columbus The umt
voted to send a letter to
cong re ssm a n co ncermng

Postal 81ll S-411
A fmal report m1 the Pop p)
Day sale v.a s giVen b) Mt s
Sm ath Gel-\\ell cards were
s 1 ~ n ed fo 1 Mrs
Dcll ona
Pannell , Mrs Hulda Gordon
and James Bo\\ les, and a
sympathy ca rd wa s sent to the
Waller Green fam1 ly
Mrs Hampton prese nted the
awards won by the umt HI the
summer conventiOn he ld
ea rher this month m Pomero,
The illllt recetved a ! tbbon for
bemg a goal um! '"and ce rIJflcates for mak1ng birthday
roll call, for be1 ng a goal umt m
September,
for
hav1n g
membership m by January ,
and for children and )Outh
work m the E1ghtl1 Drstnct
A prayer for peace b) Mrs
W1llram Wmston closed the
meeting Fo!lo" mg retiremen t
of the colors , Mrs Harper
se rved sandwi ches , coo ktes
and tee cream

Vacati on B1ble School
pr og ram was held Fnday mght
al the Sut ton Um ted Method1sl
Ch urc h ~ 1th Cathy Smrth,
Pl&lt;lnts l
pia) tng
the
prou:sswna l as the 22 studenl'i
man.: hed wto the sanctuary
Flagbearers were Tammy
Sm 1th &lt;~nd Ted Sm1th Cary
Holler carrr ed the 81ble The
group sang the theme song
· (,c,od Ne\\ S ts J es us " and
g"'e pled ~es to the flag s and
the Brule ,\ Devotronal talk
wa s g1ve n b' Ma l tha Lee,
dtrN tor
Tc~k1n g p(.J rt m the p1 ogram
and presented d1plurna s were
Ke111 Varn ey, Julie Powell and
C.Jro! Ann Morri s of the yo uth
class tau~h t by Mrs Lee K1m
Brcker s K1m F'ollrod, Renee
1'1 ussell , 'I d iTIITI) Srmth Bret
Fnend rodd V.Hilcy. Bob Lee
Cm I Mm n s, Kev m Holter ,
JUIII OI s laug h! by Helen
B1 cker s teac her Mary Rose
helper
Becky Lee. Hobrn P1tzer
Cla1r M o~r~ s Scolt Trussell
Da\ld Pov.ell Doug Powell
fed Sm1lh , Randy Werry and
H1ck) Werr) m1dd lers, taught
by Cathy Sm rth and Brenda
H o lle~
and Ga ry Holter
beginners. l&lt;!ught by Judy
Holter Bettv Fr1end ass rsted
Mrs IRe tn dtrectmg the school
prog ram
After the program a ha;nde ,
Wllh lransporl&lt;! tion prov1ded
by Dan Snu th and a wtener
roast at the home of Bob and
Becky Lee v.cre enJO)ed by the
Bible sc hool students

Jona than Da yton , at the
ag e of 26 wa s the youngest
s1gner of th e US Consll t u·
l10n Dayton Oh1o , IS nam ed
f01 h1m

.

For Your Old Living Room Suite

Palomar college

,•

"The late Carl Schaefer, brother of Dar Schaefer, Lincoln
Drive one-time Pomeroy newspaper man, later a Flortda
_.,., busin;ssman was one of the last men of the Hard Hitters to go
"! came 'upon thts m a clipping provided by Mmneapolis,
; ' Minn., stockbroker Reinbolt Mees, a recent vtsttor wtth his
:::. sister, Mrs. Edward Baue. , Breezy Hctghts Mr. Schaefer, ac~ cording to the clippmg (Pomeroy Tribune, 1940), fully expected
~ to be the last man of the Hard Httters of 1902. But Mr. Mees ts,
- now
:'..
"Names of Mees's teammates rmg familiar bells -listen.
;:' George Rappold, (Captain), Ed. H. Scharf, manager; Carl
• Schaefer Frankte Vincent, Fntzer King, Clarence Cooper, Drew
. , · Webster,' Ralston Gress, Otho Ashworth, Horton .Ketser, and
'
Frank Roush. Walter RollSh was mascot
;
"Congratulations, Mr. Mees, may the last cup be good "
Mr. Mees adds the names of Herbert Gtles and Benny Kauff
to the players. Kauff later 11916-18) was to star wtth the New
• York Giants. He added also a note that Frankie Johnson was a
\
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businessman backer.
'
His final note: "ft surely should be," of that last cup to the
~
;Jast Hard Hitter.

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the ~c~ me

The Me1gs

ha ve no seve nth

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romance.

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New grid coach hired at Logan
AA Dtstrtct champwns.
Btggers coaching expertence
also mcludes an assistant
coachmg JOb under Gene
Slaughter at Capt tal Umvers1ty
i1 1g71 Biggers was recommended for the job by
Slaughter, accordmg to Logan
prmctpal, Joe Murtha
Biggers is a graduate of
Columbus West Htgh School
and an alumnus of Gapttal
Umversity
VISIT COUSIN
Mrs 0 0 Mcintyre, Mrs
Katherine Frtdrock, and Mtss
THIRD CHILD BORN
Eva Hutsinptller, Galhpohs,
RACINE _ Mr. and Mrs called ml'• thetr cousm, Mrs
James L (Wtmpy) Hunt, Rt. 2, Walter Athey , So Third ,
Racine, are announcing the Middleport, recently They
birth of th~ir thtrd child, a presented her with a magnolia
daughter, Jl'reoda Renee, at for her garden
Holzer Medical Center, June
FAMILY TO MEET
11. She weighed O'h lbs
There wtll be a meeting at
Grandparents are Mr . and the home of Fern Gaul Sunday
Mrs. Bert Hunt, Rt 2 Racine, at 3 p.m to make plans for the
Mrs Marie Smith, Mason, W; annual Beegle famtly reumon.
va . Great-grandmother ts Mrs '-&lt;rhe reunion will. be held in
Bessie Young , Rl 2, Racine Melgf County thts year, the
The Hunts have a son, Briun , first weekeod m August, wtth
and daughter, Tress!!;plana .to be announced later

William C. Biggers, a 28 year
old nallve of Athens, has been
named by the Logan school
ooard to replace Paul Adams
retired Logan Htgh School
football coach
Biggers was the head football mentor at Wtllard H1gh
' School the past two seasons
where hts teams compiled an II9-3 record Biggers was also
the assistant track coach at
Willard m 1973 when the
Wtllard thmclads were Class

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1g75 The 1974 golf match IS
Oct l , at Ironton
A nommatwn comtmttcc to
prepare a slate of camlldatcs

wa s dnnounccd

graduates from

HARDWARE

l

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!2,

S-Sgt. Russell

EBERSBACI;i

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If the game was not played
for anv reaso n other than an
Sectwn h \\ ciS &lt;Hided to Al ~ ct of God " and could not be
l lciC 5 of the le,1gue co n- resc heduled, the cu11test shall
slttut!O n, br u u ~ h t abo ut be classified as a forfertcd"
be ca use of the Wells ton gn me
tedche r s stnke l.ast wtnte r
Tl1e nev. section goes on tu
that h.tmpered lhe cornplet10n s;.,} thut 1f the VJSJltng tea rn IS
of the leag ue b,JSkelba ll slc~le lhe fod erh ng le.Jm , 1t
pay
SeciJon 6. 1n effect, sla tes the home team $500 rf 11 1s a
lhat 1f sc hools e~rr closed or 1f foothall game, and $200 fm
anAl t of God co uses a gc:~ rne to forfe•ted basketball games
be unp la\ed let~guc membe1 s
In other act10n , the 1975 dll·
are to make every cffm t to lcdg ue tra ck meet s1te WdS se t
make up the unpla;ed ga me ,,t Athens \\llh the exact dutc

F'cb

-~· IIIII' the thy after -. .

FISHING

THERMOS JUGS

1n

\He stllng meet fm

..

1CE CREAM FREEZERS

FENCING &amp;CORNERS

been employ ed thts past ycc~r
the Wellston mst.a nce reads,

sl'hcdulc ·
All golf ma td1~s will sta t t dl
4 30 p 111

con tcs1 \\Ill

1,300 girls
taking tour

OUTDOOR GRILLS
PORTABLE FANS

fUN TIME FOR THE FAMILY

Seminar
slated

Tarbahy act was
pediatrics hit

PORCH SWINGS

TO DIE

I

the sectwn , whtch v. ould ha ve

ca nnot be rescheduled, the

ATHENS - The Ohw Youth
Comm1sswn iOYC ), 10 conJUnctiOn w1lh the Hoc km g
Techmcal College "1!1 pr escnl
a three-day trammg se mmctr
for foster parents and foster
children, from June 25-27, at
the Hockmg Valley Mo tor
Lodge 10 Ne lsonv ille
Robert Trowbndge, Com
mumty Restdenlla l Sen.tces
• ••
Specialis ts, for OYC's 21·
Coun ty Athens Regwn, sa1d the
The nurstng staff and composerl of fea ts of mag1c, semmar w1ll focus on fatmly
pallents of the pedtalrtcs umt slet ght -vf-hand acts and cns1s s1tuahons , employment
. . Holzer Medt~a l Center were IllUsiOns, comple te w1th the sk• lis devel opment and
dellghtfully entertamed las t ma gician 's old standb ys
educa ll onal problems
Monday afternoon by th e yards • of s1lky scarfs, a
Or Roger Uhl of Kentucky
celebrated act of "Marko the ghstemng white dove and a Sl&lt;!te Umvers1ly wtll be proJect
Magtctan" and hts brother, glea mm g blac k rabbit, all coordmator of the prog ram
"Tarbaby the Clown" other- appeanng and d1sappearwg by Athens Regwnal Office Staff
wtse known as Mark and Bryan the touch of the mag1c wand r v.11l ass1st m the presenl&lt;!tJOn
Wood of Route I, Jackson,
"Marko" and' Tarbaby" are
Ohto
expenenced performers w1lh a
Both enterpnsmg young men background of many years
_ generously donated thm ex- entertammg chtld re n and
:; traordmary talents towards adults at school ssem bhes,
entertatntng the young pahents pnvate parlles and communtly
and thetr nurses at Holzer.
fund ratsmg eve nts and
The fun.ftlled program was promotions 1n the sur roundmg
area of Southern Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A bus
tour to pomts of state govern·
mental mterest, mcluding the
:~t~;~;~;r:m;;r;;;~~~~;:l;;;~;~t;l:l;l~;lli=1=~:;;~r:~i;;l~:: . ~~~~t· :Q;~: :·:=
·:=~=~:::
statehouse, 1s one of sev~ral
acllv1ties planned today for the
approxllllalely 1,300 gtrts attendmg Buckeye Gtrls State on
:·:·:·:
the Capital Umvers1ty campus
by the editor
here
Eleven years ago come September I dtd a bnef column about
Followmg the tour, the g~rls
the last of the Hard Httters. Last week the last man of the Hard wtll parttctpate m games and a
Hitters was in town again to visit relatives. He called , missed ptcruc supper prtor to an ad_ me; I called him that evening at the home of Mrs Charles Evans, dress by Mrs Robert E Riley,
215 Mulberry Ave., and I miSSed hllll
of the Ohto Amencan Legion
Remholt Mees, m 1963 a MinneapoliS stock broker ( wlro I'll Auxtllary, sponsor of the anbet is retired today, the stock market and hts age bemg what they nual event.
are) now of Seal Beach, Calif., saved a clippmg of that 1963
Htghhghtmg Fnday's acl tVJ·
sketch of the Hard Hitters of 19Q2. On the cllppmg left for me he lies Will be a panel diSCllSSIOO
appendea a few addttional names and credits But hrst, the 1963 on OhiO courts, modera ted by
paragraphs kept by Mr Mees ·
Judge Alba L WhttesJde of the
"Where are "the good old days" when a Pomeroy baseball lOth Otstrict Court of APpeals
team was known wtde and far as the Hard Httter Boys of the
Third Ward (and a bloop double, maybe, was a good long ball)
and most communities had an over...upply of "Last Man dubs"?
You remember - like the last living Hard Httter was to go out m
style cradlmg a quart of chal\lpagne (just emptied)
"There was a Last Man's club for the famous Lost BatalUon
of the U. S. Rainbow diviSion in World War I. Smular clubs of
other World War I outfits held informal, tf infrequent, meetings
Always m readmg about these men wtth rteh memortes of past
fellowships born in mortal dangers, was the feeling of genwne

Home and Outdoors

DA V ladies install officers

-

"unplayed ' ga rnc
The most lnlJ&gt;Ortant Ptl ft of

not played
becc~use of an t\d of God c~nd

TARBABY the Clown was a recent vtsttor m the
pediatrics ward at the Holzer Medical Center. Tarbaby ts
known off-otage as Bryan Wood, Rt I, Jackson

Second St.
Pomeroy, 0.

- ..... -1!0 . . . ,, . ___,_

197~
tiS pi ejJrll ed !Jj
'I fJITI
Sl&lt;Jter of l.ug,m. w~ s .tpprovt:JI
and the boa rd voted to thank
Slat er for preparin g the

and

298

Father-son
banquet held

~~

J_ " \ l

STAR SUPPLY

.,.......

AII.Sports Trophy fo• 197'1 -74 a
new fall golf sc hedule "·' s
appr oved , and the league
ctmstitut\On was amended m
aciJons at tl1e SEOAL spnng
meetmg Wednesday m Athens
Ironton edged Athens for the
ail-sports trop hy, maml) on the
streng th of league ciwm·
pwnsh1ps 10 football. base b.J!I
and track Othe1 league lJtlrsls
recogn1zed at Wedn esdd ) s
meehng Y.ilS the Gal lia
Academy Blue Dev1ls golf
team
The gol f schedule fo r F.dl

"

onuay~~:h:rop:~/s~~~-t!.~~

Shower fetes
Miss Gilland

..

." "

Sanborn society meets

,.

Ironton was rec Og mzed as
the wmner of the Southeastern
Oh10 Athleti c Leag ue I SEOAI. I

..
"

VBS has
program

Ironton top dog in SEOAL sports

'

Manne S -Sg t. Karl R
Russell gra duated from
Palomar College, San Mar cos,
Cahf , on June 8
He graduated wtth an
assoctate of arts degree m
busmess admmistratton wtth
an overall average of 3.4. His
scholastic standmg makes
Russell eligtble for permanent
membership m Alpha Gamma
Stgma Honor Soctety Sgt
RllSsell was named to the
dean's ltst for all of the
semesters he attended
After two more years of
active duty wtth the Marme
Corps, Russell can attend the
untverstly of hts ch01ce to
secure hts bachelor of arts
degree Russell ts a 1966
graduate of Racme Htgh
School and of M A.T A
College, Columbus
Sgt. Russell is son of Mr
and Mrs. Kenneth Russell,
Racme Route 2, and ts marrted
to the former Lmda Smith,
daughter of Mr and Mrs Roy
0 Smtih, Rockspnngs Road
They have two chtldren,
Melissa Lynn, 4 and Kenneth
Roy , 2. They now res1de m San
Marcos, Calif The Russells
plan to vtstl relallves and
fnends here thts summer. Sgt
Russell ts now awa1tmg orders

• • • ON ANY

.

THIS

OFFER FOR A

LIMITED TIME!

2 Pc. Living Room Suite in Stock
I·
50 SUITES TO CHOOSE FROM
I

POONA GETS SMASHER
NEW DELHI (UP! ) - The
US. Atomtc Energy Corrumsston has presented a $100,000
atom smasher to Poona
Uruversity.
Built at the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory in California,
the I 5-ton rrucrotron is capable
of hurling pullets of atomtc
particles (electrons) at a speed
of 62,500 miles per second.
The machme, the first of tts
kind m Indta, Will be used for
research
and
cancer
therapy

I

I.
I

' I

\

/ I'

I

I

''
1'

'

�7- The Daily Sentmel, Middleoort-Pnml't'ov. 0 .. Thursday, June 20, 1974

6-'The Oatly Sentmel, M1ddleport-Pomcro&gt;, 0 , TI1w '"'·•v..Jun e :m. :~74

60th anniversary marked

Social 5,0th.anniversary observed Sunday
{Calendar

CARPE,NTER - Mr and Mr and Mrs Eugrn(' H ol hd a~. Stu··~lon,Hld DHOilcl, M1 ~ Z1b.1
The go ld en wedding an - baked by Mrs Lewts and and Mrs G R Thompson, Mrs Margaret Houdashelt,
Mrs Earl Starkey observed Mr and Mrs Honnu.' Y11ung Mldk1£r , Mrs r cut&lt;t Smtih M1
mversary of Mr and Mrs decorated by Mrs Robert Pomeroy , Mr and Mrs James Mr and Mrs. Robert Beegle,
lhe1r 60th weddmg anmversary and Renee . Esther Andel son .mrl Mrs Wilh,un Ha rt, Mr
Ralph McKenzie was observed Thompson Thank -you notes Clatworthy , Mrs Kenneth the Rev and Mrs Howard
at the1r home, june 2 Yellow and Mabel Pauley, Dext.•J
and Mt s Homc1 Radford. Mr
Sunday w1th an open house prmted m gold and encircled Imboden, Middleport
Shtveley, Mrs Emma Adams,
roses m a gold vase. a g1ll from
Beulah Jones. MIS Jesse .md Mrs J.co Stur~ Mr o~nd
TIIURSDAY
hosted by the1r daughter, Mrs w1th a gold weddmg band were
Mrs .
Clara
Marlin , Miss Mary V Easterday, Mr.
Mr and Mrs. Edward Haaf, Cuckler, M1 and Mrs Wa) ne Mrs Dean lll.• ckv. orxl Luc1 lle
FELLOWSHIP Omner at Robert LeWIS, Pomeroy
presented
to
each
VISJlor
Call
forma
,
Mr
and
Mrs.
Davtd and Mrs. Bert Gnmm, Mrs
Rey nolds burg, a bea ulJful France. Noah Gibbs Edna R l.eJfheJ l, M1 and Mr. ('harles M01 mng Star Church by the
For the occaswn, Mrs
The
guests
were
re~1stered
McKenzie, PhJihp, Jeffrey and Joe Stobart, all of Racine, and
basket of daisies presented Jones, Freda Kennedy , Mr Blakeslee. Mr '""' Mrs Fred commumty, 7 p m Potluck McKenzie wore a corsage of
by
Mrs
Garrett
C1rcle
Jozte, Galhpohs; Mr and Mrs the host famtly, Mr. and Mrs.
them by A R. Caster and Mr and Mrs Alton Hope, Mrs Ann Biae tnar. and Mr and Mrs dinner Brmg own table ser- gold
tmted
ca rnatiOns Pres1dmg at the stlver coffee Buel Rtdenour, Chester, Mrs Robert Lew1s , David and
and Mrs Chester Spencer. Algae, Mrs Lcw1s McBnde. Robert P1ckett and fan lll); VIce Everyone welcome
presented to her by her two servtce was M1ss Oebb1e
Carol.
Charleston, W Va., and a four- and M1 and Mrs Scott Pomeroy, M• and M1 s IA.'e
WD.UNG Workers Class of grandchildren, David and Hoelzel, Columbus, and M1ss Betty Chnstopherson, Mr and
Sendmg gifts were Mr. and
Mrs Owen Watson, Mr and
her cake, decora ted w1th a 60th Neutzhng, Athens. John F Wood, Rhonda and Fhonda, Entci pnse Umted Methodist Carol Lew1s
Drema
Lilly,
also
of
Columbus,
Mrs Crtlt Bradford, Mtss Ann Mrs Millard Van Meter, Mrs.
anmversa ry emblem, were Dowler , Ashv11le. Dw1ght Mr
and Mrs
Harvey Church, 7:30p.m. home of Mrs
A hered wedding cake poured the punch The cake
Coe, Mrs Ltllian Jividen, Mrs. Phthp Meinhart, Mrs. J. C.
spec1al for the occasiOn
Se1ple, Dayton: Mr. and Mrs Erlewme, Stella Alktns, Ruby Carl Moore
tnmmed with gold roses and was served by Mtss Carol
Grace Knder , Mrs. Ruth Wyatt, Mrs. Owtght Parker,
Several other gifts were Raymond Axline , Man on M Halliday, Pauline Atkms,
topped
w1th the numerals "50" Lewts.
TWIN
CITY
Shnne
Club
Tucker, Mrs Lavmta Sllllpson, Mtss Myrtts K Parker,
recetved from frtend s and Foster, New Straitsville· Mr Mr and Mrs Owen Blacktn gold , centered the refreshmembers
to
meet
at
7
30
p
m
Guests
attendmg
were
Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Htll, Mr. Pomeroy; Mrs Charles H.
relattves and an extra spectal and Mrs Wesley A Ogdm, wood , Mary D1ehl, Ruby Diehl ,
ment table The l&lt;!ble was and Mrs. Laurance Morr1son,
at
Shnne
Park
m
Racme;
final
and
Mrs. Robert Hill, Mrs. Bryson, Mrs Grella Simpson,
gtll, a dulcuner, was presented Middletown , Mr and Mrs Mr and Mrs Seth Nicholson,
plans for parllclpallng m B1g covered w1th a deep gold cloth Mr and Mrs. Henry Mc- Grace JIVIden, Mrs. Mayme Mrs Grace Holter, Mrs
to the couple by Mr and M1 s Cheste r Ba um ga rdn er, Mrs Eth el Evans. Jcs t1 e
and whtte nettmg accented at
William Grueser.
Coshocton, Mr and Mrs Pearl Molden, Anna Elizabeth Bend Regatl&lt;l Parade Frtday the drapes w1th gold rose Cormtck and Pat, Mr and Mrs. Mallory, Mr. and Mrs. Davtd Gladys Shields, Mr and Mrs.
evcnmg Any member unable
Paul Hoelzel and Debbie, Mr
Scotty Rees, and Mr and Mrs
Their granddaughter, Mrs Chase , Chauncey; Mr. and Turner, Nelhe Vale, Fanme
replicas. The g1ft l&lt;!ble was and Mrs James Lewts, Drema L Htll, Mrs Edna Pickens,
to
attend
the
meetmg
ts
asked
Jtm Rees, Racme; and Mrs
Mr
and
Mrs.
WiUtam
Cozart,
Larry
Clark,
Chester , Mrs Russell Lemgar, New Pelht, Mr and Mrs Norman
to be at the parade locatiOn m also decorated m gold and Lilly, Columbus; Mr and Mrs Mr and Mrs. Vernal E Black- George Schneider, Syracuse
regtstered guests, a mece, Maishf1eld, Emma W Chnc. W11l, Mrs Francis Alkire and
Middlepor t by Fnday w1th fez wh1te and arrangements of Aaron Kelton, Mtss Eleanor wood, Mr. and Mrs. Garrett
Mrs
Chester
Spencer , Sprmgboro , Mella P01mb, Ra;· Alkire, Harn sonvtlleLAUREL Chff Better Health gold mums were used m the Robson , Mrs Paul Kloes, Mr Ctrcle, Mr and Mrs Curbs
Charleston, W. Va , accepted Tallmadge, Mr and Mrs Rulland area, Mr and Mrs
VISIT LAKE HOPE
hvmg room The cake was and Mrs John Terrell, and Mr
Johnson, M1ss Vera M Beegle,
gtfts for them; two meces, Mrs Charles Call, Stow, Mrs Ina Raymond Nelson , Ora Proffitt, Club, 7 30 p m at the home of
RACINE - Mr and Mrs
Allen
Ewhtnger,
Eugene Holliday, Dexter, and Sams, Newark , Mrs Ge01ge Mr and Mrs Glen Turner, Mr Mrs
Kenneth
Russell , Rl 2, Racme,
Mulberry He1ghts
Beulah Jones, Athens, served Rad ekm , McArthur , Mrs and Mrs Glen Chne, Mr and
~
~
spent Father's Day weekend at
ANNUAL Meetmg of Me1gs
cake and punch and others W1lham Ph1lhps, Frankfort, Mrs Wayne Chase, Dale Dye.
Chapter
of
Am
encan
Red
asststing were Mr and Mrs Mrs Leshe Hoffman, Langs- Wanda Oxley, Mr and Mrs
Doyle Hudson and Mr and VIlle, Mrs James COI&gt;kie, Dale Stansbury, Mr. and Mrs Cross, 7·30 p m, Veterans
and Mrs Floyd Chapman, and
Mrs
Lee Woods and Cheshire, Mr and Mrs Arthur Crabtree, Mr and Mrs Memonal Hospital Two gallon
The
28th
anmversary
of
the
Mrs
Nelhe
Vale,
president,
mmts Mrs Forrest had daughters, Shelley and Ktmdaughters , Rhonda and Gordon Caldwell , Tuppers Walter Swett, Mr and Mrs donors will be r ecog mzed Mtddleport Busmess and Mrs Werner, Mrs. Grace Pratt prayer
berly, Columbus The ChapOpen
to
the
public
Fhonda
Plams , Mr and Mrs L W. Carl Greenlees, Rtlla Rhoad es,
Professtonal Women's Club and Mrs. Betty Conkle Mrs
mans
are spendmg a week at
Mtss
Houdashelt
reported
on
REVIVAL at Bradbury
The daughters and sons-m- McComas and Mr and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Frank Turner
was
observed
Monday
mght
also
received
a
25
year
Pratt
one
of
the Lake Hope cabms
the
presidents
'
meeting
June
6
law of the couple, Mr. and Mrs Doyle Hudson, Mtddleport, and Marsha, Mr and Mrs Church of Chnst, Rt I, Mid- wtth a dinner at the home of membership spoon, and
while
on
vacation from thetr
at the Coach House in Wellston
Roy Wtseman, Harrisonvtlle, Mr and Mrs Earl Cross and Mendal Jordan, Mr. and Mrs dleport, now through Frtday, 8 Mrs. Alwtlda Werner
presented
to
Mrs.
Werner
and announced that the employment at Columbus.
and Mr and Mrs. Donald family , Racine; Mrs Maxme Dorsey Jordan, Vtrgtma , Rtck p m mghtly . Dave Lucas,
Charter members were •mmedtate past prestdent, by meeting wtll be m Middleport,
Jones, Nelsonvtlle , were Dyer, Opal, Patty and Btlly; and Ralph, Mr and Mrs A W Evangelist. Spec1al smg1ng by recogmzed by Mrs Mary Mtss Houdashelt was a BPW
June 5, 1g75. She also anpresent. Also present were the Mrs Robert Rumfteld, Mrs Rupe , Mr and Mrs Edwm the Watchmen
Martm, vtce president, who desk pen
nounced the state convenllon
following grandchtldren and Everett Colwell, and Mr and Z1mmerman, Cora Moore,
FRIDAY
presented them wtth yellow
The green and gold colors of May 16-18, 1975. It was noted
famtlies Mr and Mrs. Larry Mrs John Colwell, Vmton, Erma Nelson and R S. Turner,
SANDWICHES, cake , and green carnation corsages the BPW were carrted out m that stx new members were
homemade tee cream, today made by Mrs. Lmda Stobart. the table decoratwns wtth the taken into the club last year
Clark, Tamara and Penny, Patrtcta Grounds, Anita Lew1s, local area
Chester; and Mr. and Mrs. Mr and Mrs Sam Lewts, Mr.
More than 100 greehng cards and Saturday, 11 a m to 8 p m They were Mrs Edtth Forrest, candles and the napkms
Voted mto membership at
Donald Jones, Jr , Brtan and and Mrs Amos Leonard, Mr. were also recetved from Trtmly Church basement
Mrs Rose Reynolds and M1ss featured the club motif The the anmversary meeting was
Carrte of Alexandrta , Va. and Mrs. Wi!Uam Grueser.
LUNCHEONS AND suppers, Freddte Houdashell. Also name place card favors were Mrs Dolly Hayes who was
friends who could not be
Mr. and Mrs Stanford present
Grandchtldren unable to attend
begm 11 a m for Regall&lt;! g1ven the corsages were past mmtature unbrellas filled with presented a club membeship
were Rev and Mrs. Davtd
weekend at St Paul Lutheran
1
cerhf1cate. Also recetving one
Church fellowship hall
Wiseman, Renee, Evan Oavtd
was Mrs Mary Bacon who was
· and Owen Earl, Cambrtdge,
Homemade Ice cream and
taken into membershtp last
cake on the menu
and David Jones, wtlh the
month
army in Fiortda
OHIO VALLEY Chapter of
Meebngs of the circles of the
A card was s1gned by the
Mrs. Kahe Anthony presided
Relallves and frtends who
Adopt-a-&lt;::htld Today, Inc , wtll B H Sanborn Mtsswnary
members
for Mrs Esste
wtth Mrs. Martha King gtvmg
called at the home included
hold June meeting at St Marys Soc1ety of the Middleport Ftrst
devohons on the toptc, "Count Russell who was reported
Mrs. Jessie Jewell , Mr and
Church, Markel Sl , Waverly, Baptist Church were held w1th
Your Blessmgs". The program tmprovmg Commtttees were
Mrs. Cectl Jewell, Mr and
at 8 p m
summer activiltes betng by Mrs Cora Pullen was taken announced for the 1974-75 year PET CARE CENTER
Mrs. Edward C. Haaf, Mr and
FISH FRY by Middleport planned.
from "Women to Women" by and Mrs Vale read "Parable G1ve your pet lhe care he
Mrs Rodney B Baldwm, and
Fire Department startmg 3.30
ELECTA CIRCLE
deserves wllh Sergeant's Pet
Eugema Prtce and dealt wtth of the Good Teacher".
Mr and Mrs. James A. Ward,
p m , at the ftre statiOn and
Meeting at the home of Mrs. Chnstian adornment. Refresh·
Games were played wtth Care Products Select from 1
Columbus area; Mr and Mrs.
conllnumg after parade. Ftsh Pauhne Hoffman, the EJecta
ments were served to those cake and sherbet bemg served of Sergeant's most popular
Forrest Harper, Aida Wtlson,
sandwiches to be served Circle planned a ptcmc at the
named and Mrs June Kloes , by the hostesses, Miss g-oommg a1ds and remed1es,
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Mr. and Mrs James Starkey
Project lo ratse funds for latest Hood campstte across the river
Mrs.
Janet Lewts, Mrs Lillie Houdashelt, Mrs Martin, Mrs. Jncludmg Sergeant's famous
DEAR POLLY - I hope someone can tell me how to remove m eqmpment for f1re ftghtmg for July 16 They also made
and
Teresa
Dowler,
Hubbard,
Mrs. Frances Smart, Elotse Wtlson, and Mrs. Ann Sentry Collars and Tags
Chillicothe; Ruth H Powell, stains from my bronze stove top and lanunated plasbc ble and emergency care
arrangements to remember Mrs Iva Turner, Mrs. Clara Bailey
Lynn Reynolds,
Highland; A. R. Caster and Mr. counter tops. Bowl rings and slams really show up Since we have
the birthdays of two shut-ins. Mae Darst and Mrs. Loutse granddaughter of Mrs Rose
and Mrs. Chester Spencer, hard water f wonder if that is causing them Please help me
Mrs. Freda Hood prestded at Skaggs
Reynolds, was a guest at the
Charleston, W. Va ; Mrs Elma remedy this problem. - MRS. F E.I.
the meeting wtth Mrs Hoffman
meeting
Mrs. Stobart won the
DORCAS CIRCLE
Vernon and Mr. and Mrs John
gtving devohons on the theme
Racine, Ohio
traveling
prize
Members of the Dorcas
DEAR POLLY - I work m a small convenience-type store
F Vernon, New Lexmgton ;
"Gtvmg Others A Lift"
Ctrcle met at the church for a
from 7 a. m. to 4 p. m. each day and am amazed at the lack of
The program by Mrs. Bert potluck supper The blessmg
courtesy shown by many customers. I try very hard to be poh te
Bodllller mcluded an edtlortal was given by Mrs. Beulah
but sometimes my anger breaks through. Most people seem to
by Dr. Joseph I Chapman White and Mrs. Marjone
have forgotten how to say "Please" and "Thank you." So many
MASON, w. Va - A per- blled "The Most for Your
"The Home of the Friendly Folks"
demand rather than ask and I feel sure all salespeople would be sonal shower was held June Money" Mtss Rhoda Haii, Walburn had devotions using
'more than willing to meet them half way or more. Thanks for 14th at the Mason Umted prestdent of the Sanborn scnpture from Matt. 13 1-13
allowing me to votce mr Pet Peeve. -LINDA
MethodiSt Church for Miss Soctety , was a guest at the Shut-ms for the year were
DEAR POLLY -I am allS)Yerlng Mrs. F J.S. who complamed ' Debbte Gtlland, daughter of meeting Refreshments were announced -and offermgs were
Election of three Meigs
taken Attendmg were Mrs
County g1rls to posttions at about shoppmg carts being so unsarutary because of mothers Mr and Mrs Lewts Gtlland, served by Mrs Hoffman.
Walburn, Mrs Alwtlda WerBuckeye Gtrls' State underway carrymg babies in the part that is intended for groceries. She is Mason, w1th Mtss Beverly
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
ner, Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, Mrs
this week on the campus of apparently a Mrs. but surely not a mother for a mother would Knapp and Mrs Sherry
The Love Joy Circle met wtlh Jamce Gibbs, Mrs. Ethel
Capital Umverstty, Columbus, know that a baby is usually the most sterilized member of the Busktrk hostesses
Mrs Roma Hawkms A
Mtss Gilland IS bride-elect of hamburger fry was planned for Hughes, Mrs. Whtle , Mrs
was announced by offtctals family. The "Baby's slobbermg over the cart with cookies and
candy" and contaminating Mrs. F .J .S.'s lettuce, celery, etc., can Charles Wesley Roush son of July at the home of Mrs Tony Wmme Whtte, Mrs Jesste
today.
Mary Lowse Mtlls, Rt 3, hardly be more offending than an adult pinchmg and handling Mr and Mrs Harry 'Roush Fowler Cards were stgned for Houdashelt, Miss Freddte
Pomeroy, was elected a fruits and vegetables with unwashed hands whtle a cigarette Mason The weddmg wtll tak~ Mrs Jame:. Murray and Mrs. Houdashelt and Mrs. Leora
STORE HOURS:
.
place Fnday, June 21, at the Dana Hamm, and plans made Stgman. Mrs Sigman will host
member of counc1ltn the city of dangles from a coughing mouth.
BAM-10 PM
MONDAY-SATURDAY
Also, Mrs. F J.S. did not include dogs and other pets that are Mason Umted MethodiSt to remember the btrlhday the July meeting at her home
Burwell, Gtll County; Lou Ann
~
Newell, Chester, was elected to supposedly forbidden in stores but often tolerated. I have an tdea Church Games were played anmversary of Mrs Murray, and all members are to take a
SUNDAY
lOAM
TO
10
PM
favortte rectpe for cake or pie.
the school board of Miller she is more in sympathy With those who leave a shopping cart and prt&gt;es were won by Mrs July 9.
County, and Aprtl Fraser, Uttered with hair, dirty faCla! tissues, coffee cups, etc., than Judy RICe
Middleport, was elected to the those carrying Baby. -MRS H. H.
Refreshments were served to
DEAR GIRLS --After Mrs. F.J.S.'s letter was published we
school board of Smith County.
Lmda Roush, Mrs. Kathy
DEV0'11!11 TO 111E
lln'EIIEBr OF
Buckeye Gtrls' State to heard from one company. Its business Is picking up such grocery Zerkle, Sharon Wtlson, Jo
MEJG8MJJJCflf.w:j\
conclude Sunday is destgned to carts at many stores periodically to sterilize them. Stere owners Ellen Dtehl, Mrs Judy Rtce
CIIESrERL TANNEliiLL,
educate the ctbzen of are not unaware of the problem. -POLLY.
and Andrea, Conme Gilland
DEAR POLLY - After washmg my hair I r!J1Se tl wtth cold
ROBERTIIOEFIJDI,
tomorrow in representaltve
· and the guest of honor, Debbte
City Bdltor
water. This closes the oil glands and I do not have to wash it so
government
Gtlland.
Among
those
sendmg
'
"""""""
daUy
OU&lt;pl S.tw-$y by~
often -DENA.
gtfts were Mrs. Cozy Halstead, (Jiio Valley PlabUihins Com111ny, 111
DEAR GIRLS -This PoiDter was printed iD Ibis column some
Coon Sl • l'oln&lt;noy. Ohio, """ Offlce PfKlne f82.21$1 Ed6toial Pbtw lnyears ago but is well wortb repealing. I have WJed It constantly Kay Schaekel and Suste Me- ~17
Dame!.
sill&lt;!e then and now would not feel my hair was clean if rinsed
Ohio
• """"' '1''
with warm water. The eHect is so stimulating. I use it ev n in
National advanlslna repreaentaUve
winter when the water is icy cold. -POLLY.
BottJneiU.GalJagh Inc J2 East Cld St
GUEST SPEAKER SET
A father-son banquet was
Nn York , New York
DEAR POLLY - Our son was so busy while in college tha e
Mrs
Jane
Baker,
prestdent
held Friday at the Mtddleport knew he had little time for writing but still felt we had to
~--nlet DelJ,.,..~ ..m
whr:re IVIi.lab)e to ceRa !)« weeli, 8)'
Church of Christ with the touch. We would buy 10 stamped post cards at a time, add ess of the Amencan Baptist Mo&amp;or Rwle wbere ctrrter ller'Vice not
dinner bemg prepared and them to ourselves and send them to him so all he had to do as Women of Ohto, wtll speak I ataU.ble One mooth, t:.ID By mau ln
and W VI , One Year, Ill, SiJ:
bnefly at the 10· 30 a.m servtce llllo
served by the Phtla thea
moDUli, $1 50, Three monthJ fll I
,Women
of the Pomeroy Ftrst Baptist E~Rwbere $21.011 ye.r, Jh: months fn 50;
see his handwriting and know he was all rtght. -MRS. V .
three months, • to &amp;abecripti• prtct
Church Sunday mornmg.
A program honored the
Include! &amp;mday Tbnea.Sentlnel
oldest in attendance, Edgar
Wolfe, and the youngest,
George Gla2e Also honored
New off•cers were Installed secrel&lt;!ry; Mrs. Dale Kennedy,
was the four generation Wolfe
at
the recent meetmg of the treasurer; Mrs Marvm Kelly,
famtly - Edgar , Joseph,
Auxthary
of the Metgs Cha~lam; and Mrs . Asel
Harold and Darin.
There was group smgmg of Dtsabled American Veterans Searles, sergeant at arms
" Smtle ",
a
reading, at the hall.
It was noted that the 1974-75
NEW ONES JUST ARRIVED!
Installed were Mrs Sam dues are payable before June
"Becommg a Dad" by Mr
Glaze, a duet, "Stde by Stde" Clark, president ; Mrs. Chester 30and may be sent etther to the
by Amy Erwm and Beth Wolfe, Wolfe, semor vtce prestdent; department or p1id to one of
and poems, "What Is a Boy" by Mrs Don Roach, junior vtce the untl offtcers
Cathy Erwin and "That's What prestdent; Mrs. Dale Sisson,
Grandpas Are For" by Amy
Erwin.
John Reece showed a film
PICNIC suppfles- napk•ns. plates,
titled "Recreation", the story
LAWN
cups, table cloths, forks. spoons
DECORATIONS
of Ohio Power's redevelopment
Hen &amp; chiCkens, duck
of land dllturbed in coq&amp;
ducklings , SUMMER and swim toys - sand pads,
~ii=
roosters . llammgos, garden sets, sprinkling can s, wad mg
strucUon projecta.
·
egrets, wtld geese
"WHITE ,MOUNTAIN",· HAND &amp; ELEC.
The most popular night club in
pools, play balls and sw•m sup phes
Attending the banquet
•
besides those named were
the tri-county aren is
Marvm Kelly, Lawrence
Stewart, Barry Stewart,
The elegant look of wro ug ht 1ron 1n
I ,
h•gh tmpact polystyrene • W1tl not rust
Clarence Murray, Don Erwm,
proud to present
,
MANY
SPECIAL
fade warp peel or (jentl Tnrns &amp; pro
Scolt Reuter, Earl McKinley,
VALUES!
.
tects lawns and gardens Snaplock
Scott McKinley, Clarence
McNeal, Curtis Jenkinson,
Alle'l Jenkinson, Glenn Glaze,
NTER
~
Eugene Hawkins, George
Meinhart, Albert Roush, Leo
·Searls, Chester Erwin, Dana
Swift, Sidney Russell, Robert
992-3498
POM
I '-'HIO
McElhinny, Geor.ge Conroy,
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAy NIGHTS TIL 9
"Everything In Hardware"
Edgar Reynolds, Clinton 11nd
'
Use- O~r Convenient Lay-A-Way Plan.
Trey Glaze, Carl Roach and
MAIN ST.
POMEROY
,
barin Roach. •
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w observes 28 years M

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Officers
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CLOSE 10 HOME ntiS YEAR

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A Wide Variety Of
Items Now For

WELCOME

REGAITA

INN

·

GEO. HALL

AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 9 TIL 1

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to be detenmned cJt the Augu st
nwetmg

bd.cl&lt;~ SS J fl erl c~s

c1n

01

will

c1ghth

grade teums 1n the leag ue, rmd
Waverly will ha ve no 1untor

high learns 10 the league
It v.as suggested that se rwu s
co nstde rut10n be g1ven to
ba seba ll doublehead ers on
Saturda~s ln li eu of the prcsenl
league dtamond sc hedule and
It was mthcated by the bo,~rd 1t wa s also Indicated that the
of control that most league Athlettc Dlr('ctors mee t1n g
members had already se t or \\ Ould be held one wec; k pr wr tu
pl,m to set ad m1 ss1on charges the leag ue summer rr1 eel1ng
at $1 for studen ts and $1 50 [or
Ftnally, the August mectutg
adults for the forthconung \HIS set for Augus t 21 ~1t
football and basketba ll J" t kson Hr gh School, oJ I 7 p
sea sons
m
'&gt;uth dll hea d ~.:oe~ c: hcs
Wellston
have no e1gh th asked to attend to present
grade football team but 11111 recommende~t10ns to the buarJ
have freshman and reserves , 1t of control

for offi cers at the August
meeting was formed Th e
c Oimmttce we ude s Buck
Lockhart of Wells ton, ~..:hm r ·
man , John Marlin of Waver ly
and Joe Murtha of Loga n

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The c ross~co untr} mee t for

1974 wa s se t for Oct 15 and the

C&amp;O sued for
discrimination
•

WASHINGTO N I UP!) - The
Lahar Department has sued
the Chesapea ke and Oh10
Rmlv.ay Co and the Balll more
and Oh10 Railroad Co to obtam
mor e tha n $20 mtihon for 300
ratl workers allegedly v1ctmls
of age d1scnmmatwn
The department sa1d the su1t,
filed m U S D1stnct Court m
Baltllllore, IS the largest age
disc nmmatwn swt fl ied yet
The su11 accllSes the two
firms of 'dischargmg, refusmg
to htre, demotmg and othcrWl SC discrumnatmg" agarnst
emplo)es because of the1r age
The smt also charged the
comparues' recent revisiOns m

M~ra ucl e r s

pensiOn plans provided for
man datory retirement at age
62 The Labor Department sa1d
such a proviSIOn \10lates the

Age D•scrlJTlmalJOn m the Employment Act of 1967 The act
covers employes aged 40-65
The su1t, m addition to back
pay, also asked the co urt to
order remstatemenl of mdiVIduals discharged, retnstatement
of workers demoted and abohlJOn of the mandatory rellrement provtswns
An age dtscrumnat10n smt
fl ied m May agamst the Standard 011 Ca of Calilorma,
brought a judgment of $2 milbon for 160 workers

Chairwomen appointed
Chairwomen fm the 1974-75
year were appomted by Mrs
Allen Hampton, president, at a
meeting Tuesday mght of the
Amencan LegiOn Aux tharv,
Lew1s Manley Post 263. at the
home of Mrs Campbell Harper
Appomted were Mrs Harper
Amen camsm , Mrs
Hamson Bentley, children and
youth , Mrs Sherman Buller,
reh.1bil1~1l1on, Mrs Barbara
James, commumty servtce.
Mrs Wilham Sm ith, poppy
day , Mrs Ernest Bowles ,
leg Jsiallve Mrs Harper ,
mus1c, and Mr s Smtth ,
natwnal secunty
Read at the mee lmg wa s a
co mmuni catiO n fr om Mrs
Nancy Sallolt, department
prestdent, concermng Buckeye
Girls' State, bemg held th1s
week on Cap1l&lt;! l Umvers1ty
campus, Columbus The umt
voted to send a letter to
cong re ssm a n co ncermng

Postal 81ll S-411
A fmal report m1 the Pop p)
Day sale v.a s giVen b) Mt s
Sm ath Gel-\\ell cards were
s 1 ~ n ed fo 1 Mrs
Dcll ona
Pannell , Mrs Hulda Gordon
and James Bo\\ les, and a
sympathy ca rd wa s sent to the
Waller Green fam1 ly
Mrs Hampton prese nted the
awards won by the umt HI the
summer conventiOn he ld
ea rher this month m Pomero,
The illllt recetved a ! tbbon for
bemg a goal um! '"and ce rIJflcates for mak1ng birthday
roll call, for be1 ng a goal umt m
September,
for
hav1n g
membership m by January ,
and for children and )Outh
work m the E1ghtl1 Drstnct
A prayer for peace b) Mrs
W1llram Wmston closed the
meeting Fo!lo" mg retiremen t
of the colors , Mrs Harper
se rved sandwi ches , coo ktes
and tee cream

Vacati on B1ble School
pr og ram was held Fnday mght
al the Sut ton Um ted Method1sl
Ch urc h ~ 1th Cathy Smrth,
Pl&lt;lnts l
pia) tng
the
prou:sswna l as the 22 studenl'i
man.: hed wto the sanctuary
Flagbearers were Tammy
Sm 1th &lt;~nd Ted Sm1th Cary
Holler carrr ed the 81ble The
group sang the theme song
· (,c,od Ne\\ S ts J es us " and
g"'e pled ~es to the flag s and
the Brule ,\ Devotronal talk
wa s g1ve n b' Ma l tha Lee,
dtrN tor
Tc~k1n g p(.J rt m the p1 ogram
and presented d1plurna s were
Ke111 Varn ey, Julie Powell and
C.Jro! Ann Morri s of the yo uth
class tau~h t by Mrs Lee K1m
Brcker s K1m F'ollrod, Renee
1'1 ussell , 'I d iTIITI) Srmth Bret
Fnend rodd V.Hilcy. Bob Lee
Cm I Mm n s, Kev m Holter ,
JUIII OI s laug h! by Helen
B1 cker s teac her Mary Rose
helper
Becky Lee. Hobrn P1tzer
Cla1r M o~r~ s Scolt Trussell
Da\ld Pov.ell Doug Powell
fed Sm1lh , Randy Werry and
H1ck) Werr) m1dd lers, taught
by Cathy Sm rth and Brenda
H o lle~
and Ga ry Holter
beginners. l&lt;!ught by Judy
Holter Bettv Fr1end ass rsted
Mrs IRe tn dtrectmg the school
prog ram
After the program a ha;nde ,
Wllh lransporl&lt;! tion prov1ded
by Dan Snu th and a wtener
roast at the home of Bob and
Becky Lee v.cre enJO)ed by the
Bible sc hool students

Jona than Da yton , at the
ag e of 26 wa s the youngest
s1gner of th e US Consll t u·
l10n Dayton Oh1o , IS nam ed
f01 h1m

.

For Your Old Living Room Suite

Palomar college

,•

"The late Carl Schaefer, brother of Dar Schaefer, Lincoln
Drive one-time Pomeroy newspaper man, later a Flortda
_.,., busin;ssman was one of the last men of the Hard Hitters to go
"! came 'upon thts m a clipping provided by Mmneapolis,
; ' Minn., stockbroker Reinbolt Mees, a recent vtsttor wtth his
:::. sister, Mrs. Edward Baue. , Breezy Hctghts Mr. Schaefer, ac~ cording to the clippmg (Pomeroy Tribune, 1940), fully expected
~ to be the last man of the Hard Httters of 1902. But Mr. Mees ts,
- now
:'..
"Names of Mees's teammates rmg familiar bells -listen.
;:' George Rappold, (Captain), Ed. H. Scharf, manager; Carl
• Schaefer Frankte Vincent, Fntzer King, Clarence Cooper, Drew
. , · Webster,' Ralston Gress, Otho Ashworth, Horton .Ketser, and
'
Frank Roush. Walter RollSh was mascot
;
"Congratulations, Mr. Mees, may the last cup be good "
Mr. Mees adds the names of Herbert Gtles and Benny Kauff
to the players. Kauff later 11916-18) was to star wtth the New
• York Giants. He added also a note that Frankie Johnson was a
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businessman backer.
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His final note: "ft surely should be," of that last cup to the
~
;Jast Hard Hitter.

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the ~c~ me

The Me1gs

ha ve no seve nth

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romance.

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New grid coach hired at Logan
AA Dtstrtct champwns.
Btggers coaching expertence
also mcludes an assistant
coachmg JOb under Gene
Slaughter at Capt tal Umvers1ty
i1 1g71 Biggers was recommended for the job by
Slaughter, accordmg to Logan
prmctpal, Joe Murtha
Biggers is a graduate of
Columbus West Htgh School
and an alumnus of Gapttal
Umversity
VISIT COUSIN
Mrs 0 0 Mcintyre, Mrs
Katherine Frtdrock, and Mtss
THIRD CHILD BORN
Eva Hutsinptller, Galhpohs,
RACINE _ Mr. and Mrs called ml'• thetr cousm, Mrs
James L (Wtmpy) Hunt, Rt. 2, Walter Athey , So Third ,
Racine, are announcing the Middleport, recently They
birth of th~ir thtrd child, a presented her with a magnolia
daughter, Jl'reoda Renee, at for her garden
Holzer Medical Center, June
FAMILY TO MEET
11. She weighed O'h lbs
There wtll be a meeting at
Grandparents are Mr . and the home of Fern Gaul Sunday
Mrs. Bert Hunt, Rt 2 Racine, at 3 p.m to make plans for the
Mrs Marie Smith, Mason, W; annual Beegle famtly reumon.
va . Great-grandmother ts Mrs '-&lt;rhe reunion will. be held in
Bessie Young , Rl 2, Racine Melgf County thts year, the
The Hunts have a son, Briun , first weekeod m August, wtth
and daughter, Tress!!;plana .to be announced later

William C. Biggers, a 28 year
old nallve of Athens, has been
named by the Logan school
ooard to replace Paul Adams
retired Logan Htgh School
football coach
Biggers was the head football mentor at Wtllard H1gh
' School the past two seasons
where hts teams compiled an II9-3 record Biggers was also
the assistant track coach at
Willard m 1973 when the
Wtllard thmclads were Class

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1g75 The 1974 golf match IS
Oct l , at Ironton
A nommatwn comtmttcc to
prepare a slate of camlldatcs

wa s dnnounccd

graduates from

HARDWARE

l

'"II

!2,

S-Sgt. Russell

EBERSBACI;i

, ~,~l

If the game was not played
for anv reaso n other than an
Sectwn h \\ ciS &lt;Hided to Al ~ ct of God " and could not be
l lciC 5 of the le,1gue co n- resc heduled, the cu11test shall
slttut!O n, br u u ~ h t abo ut be classified as a forfertcd"
be ca use of the Wells ton gn me
tedche r s stnke l.ast wtnte r
Tl1e nev. section goes on tu
that h.tmpered lhe cornplet10n s;.,} thut 1f the VJSJltng tea rn IS
of the leag ue b,JSkelba ll slc~le lhe fod erh ng le.Jm , 1t
pay
SeciJon 6. 1n effect, sla tes the home team $500 rf 11 1s a
lhat 1f sc hools e~rr closed or 1f foothall game, and $200 fm
anAl t of God co uses a gc:~ rne to forfe•ted basketball games
be unp la\ed let~guc membe1 s
In other act10n , the 1975 dll·
are to make every cffm t to lcdg ue tra ck meet s1te WdS se t
make up the unpla;ed ga me ,,t Athens \\llh the exact dutc

F'cb

-~· IIIII' the thy after -. .

FISHING

THERMOS JUGS

1n

\He stllng meet fm

..

1CE CREAM FREEZERS

FENCING &amp;CORNERS

been employ ed thts past ycc~r
the Wellston mst.a nce reads,

sl'hcdulc ·
All golf ma td1~s will sta t t dl
4 30 p 111

con tcs1 \\Ill

1,300 girls
taking tour

OUTDOOR GRILLS
PORTABLE FANS

fUN TIME FOR THE FAMILY

Seminar
slated

Tarbahy act was
pediatrics hit

PORCH SWINGS

TO DIE

I

the sectwn , whtch v. ould ha ve

ca nnot be rescheduled, the

ATHENS - The Ohw Youth
Comm1sswn iOYC ), 10 conJUnctiOn w1lh the Hoc km g
Techmcal College "1!1 pr escnl
a three-day trammg se mmctr
for foster parents and foster
children, from June 25-27, at
the Hockmg Valley Mo tor
Lodge 10 Ne lsonv ille
Robert Trowbndge, Com
mumty Restdenlla l Sen.tces
• ••
Specialis ts, for OYC's 21·
Coun ty Athens Regwn, sa1d the
The nurstng staff and composerl of fea ts of mag1c, semmar w1ll focus on fatmly
pallents of the pedtalrtcs umt slet ght -vf-hand acts and cns1s s1tuahons , employment
. . Holzer Medt~a l Center were IllUsiOns, comple te w1th the sk• lis devel opment and
dellghtfully entertamed las t ma gician 's old standb ys
educa ll onal problems
Monday afternoon by th e yards • of s1lky scarfs, a
Or Roger Uhl of Kentucky
celebrated act of "Marko the ghstemng white dove and a Sl&lt;!te Umvers1ly wtll be proJect
Magtctan" and hts brother, glea mm g blac k rabbit, all coordmator of the prog ram
"Tarbaby the Clown" other- appeanng and d1sappearwg by Athens Regwnal Office Staff
wtse known as Mark and Bryan the touch of the mag1c wand r v.11l ass1st m the presenl&lt;!tJOn
Wood of Route I, Jackson,
"Marko" and' Tarbaby" are
Ohto
expenenced performers w1lh a
Both enterpnsmg young men background of many years
_ generously donated thm ex- entertammg chtld re n and
:; traordmary talents towards adults at school ssem bhes,
entertatntng the young pahents pnvate parlles and communtly
and thetr nurses at Holzer.
fund ratsmg eve nts and
The fun.ftlled program was promotions 1n the sur roundmg
area of Southern Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A bus
tour to pomts of state govern·
mental mterest, mcluding the
:~t~;~;~;r:m;;r;;;~~~~;:l;;;~;~t;l:l;l~;lli=1=~:;;~r:~i;;l~:: . ~~~~t· :Q;~: :·:=
·:=~=~:::
statehouse, 1s one of sev~ral
acllv1ties planned today for the
approxllllalely 1,300 gtrts attendmg Buckeye Gtrls State on
:·:·:·:
the Capital Umvers1ty campus
by the editor
here
Eleven years ago come September I dtd a bnef column about
Followmg the tour, the g~rls
the last of the Hard Httters. Last week the last man of the Hard wtll parttctpate m games and a
Hitters was in town again to visit relatives. He called , missed ptcruc supper prtor to an ad_ me; I called him that evening at the home of Mrs Charles Evans, dress by Mrs Robert E Riley,
215 Mulberry Ave., and I miSSed hllll
of the Ohto Amencan Legion
Remholt Mees, m 1963 a MinneapoliS stock broker ( wlro I'll Auxtllary, sponsor of the anbet is retired today, the stock market and hts age bemg what they nual event.
are) now of Seal Beach, Calif., saved a clippmg of that 1963
Htghhghtmg Fnday's acl tVJ·
sketch of the Hard Hitters of 19Q2. On the cllppmg left for me he lies Will be a panel diSCllSSIOO
appendea a few addttional names and credits But hrst, the 1963 on OhiO courts, modera ted by
paragraphs kept by Mr Mees ·
Judge Alba L WhttesJde of the
"Where are "the good old days" when a Pomeroy baseball lOth Otstrict Court of APpeals
team was known wtde and far as the Hard Httter Boys of the
Third Ward (and a bloop double, maybe, was a good long ball)
and most communities had an over...upply of "Last Man dubs"?
You remember - like the last living Hard Httter was to go out m
style cradlmg a quart of chal\lpagne (just emptied)
"There was a Last Man's club for the famous Lost BatalUon
of the U. S. Rainbow diviSion in World War I. Smular clubs of
other World War I outfits held informal, tf infrequent, meetings
Always m readmg about these men wtth rteh memortes of past
fellowships born in mortal dangers, was the feeling of genwne

Home and Outdoors

DA V ladies install officers

-

"unplayed ' ga rnc
The most lnlJ&gt;Ortant Ptl ft of

not played
becc~use of an t\d of God c~nd

TARBABY the Clown was a recent vtsttor m the
pediatrics ward at the Holzer Medical Center. Tarbaby ts
known off-otage as Bryan Wood, Rt I, Jackson

Second St.
Pomeroy, 0.

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197~
tiS pi ejJrll ed !Jj
'I fJITI
Sl&lt;Jter of l.ug,m. w~ s .tpprovt:JI
and the boa rd voted to thank
Slat er for preparin g the

and

298

Father-son
banquet held

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STAR SUPPLY

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AII.Sports Trophy fo• 197'1 -74 a
new fall golf sc hedule "·' s
appr oved , and the league
ctmstitut\On was amended m
aciJons at tl1e SEOAL spnng
meetmg Wednesday m Athens
Ironton edged Athens for the
ail-sports trop hy, maml) on the
streng th of league ciwm·
pwnsh1ps 10 football. base b.J!I
and track Othe1 league lJtlrsls
recogn1zed at Wedn esdd ) s
meehng Y.ilS the Gal lia
Academy Blue Dev1ls golf
team
The gol f schedule fo r F.dl

"

onuay~~:h:rop:~/s~~~-t!.~~

Shower fetes
Miss Gilland

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Sanborn society meets

,.

Ironton was rec Og mzed as
the wmner of the Southeastern
Oh10 Athleti c Leag ue I SEOAI. I

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VBS has
program

Ironton top dog in SEOAL sports

'

Manne S -Sg t. Karl R
Russell gra duated from
Palomar College, San Mar cos,
Cahf , on June 8
He graduated wtth an
assoctate of arts degree m
busmess admmistratton wtth
an overall average of 3.4. His
scholastic standmg makes
Russell eligtble for permanent
membership m Alpha Gamma
Stgma Honor Soctety Sgt
RllSsell was named to the
dean's ltst for all of the
semesters he attended
After two more years of
active duty wtth the Marme
Corps, Russell can attend the
untverstly of hts ch01ce to
secure hts bachelor of arts
degree Russell ts a 1966
graduate of Racme Htgh
School and of M A.T A
College, Columbus
Sgt. Russell is son of Mr
and Mrs. Kenneth Russell,
Racme Route 2, and ts marrted
to the former Lmda Smith,
daughter of Mr and Mrs Roy
0 Smtih, Rockspnngs Road
They have two chtldren,
Melissa Lynn, 4 and Kenneth
Roy , 2. They now res1de m San
Marcos, Calif The Russells
plan to vtstl relallves and
fnends here thts summer. Sgt
Russell ts now awa1tmg orders

• • • ON ANY

.

THIS

OFFER FOR A

LIMITED TIME!

2 Pc. Living Room Suite in Stock
I·
50 SUITES TO CHOOSE FROM
I

POONA GETS SMASHER
NEW DELHI (UP! ) - The
US. Atomtc Energy Corrumsston has presented a $100,000
atom smasher to Poona
Uruversity.
Built at the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory in California,
the I 5-ton rrucrotron is capable
of hurling pullets of atomtc
particles (electrons) at a speed
of 62,500 miles per second.
The machme, the first of tts
kind m Indta, Will be used for
research
and
cancer
therapy

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�Nolan rides Coal project New's • • • in Briefs
.1Continued from page 1l
(Continued from
1
with the· upcoming World War
Lebanon
in
more
than
a
month
today,
bombing
and strafing at
restored
II. He worked with the Federal
least four Palestinian encampments around the Mediterranean
pa~e

operation in Columbus, then
was transferred to Cleveland in
the same kind of work. He was
active in closing of the price
control and rationing offices
following the end of the war.
Early '' DiscoUnter"

By this time Baker was
Wlder civil service. He had
been for a number of years, so
he took an extended leave of
absence to open a warehouse to
supply hard-to-get post war
merchandise to the public.
The business went well for
seven or eight years until
discolUlt houses opened and he
was Wlable to meet the competition . The warehouse
business was sold.
Having
made
many
associations in his work over
the years, Baker in 1958
became associa ted with the
No lan Amusement Co. at
Zanesville. He is now a major
stockholder of the company
• which is officially named the
Zane Amusement Co. The
company owns some 70
amusement rides , over 20 of
which are placed for the entire
summer at Moxahola Park .
The others are in units
traveling Ohio, Kentucky and
West Virginia during the
season.
12 Rides Here
This week Baker has 12 of the
rides in Pomeroy lor Big Bend
Regatta Weekend. He has kept
up pretty well with Meigs
County and tosses the names of
many residents about in his
conversation.
He delights in seeing old
friends about the grounds on
the weekend although he is
busy with numerous details
involved in moving in, setting
up a successful operation, and
moving out.
Perhaps you remember the
Bakers . Besides John F. , there
is another son, Ted, who
resides in Bucyrus, and there
were two daughters, the late
Kathryn Puhl of Scranton, Pa.,
and the younger, Ruth, who is
Mrs . Bill Grate , of the
Charleston area.
.If you see Baker on Regatta
Weekend, do say ''hello".
There's nothing like being
made to feel at home in your
old hom~ town .

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WASHINGTON I UPI l - The
proposed $3 million allocation
for a coal research project at
Morgantown, W.Va., was restored to the budget . Wednesday by a House-Senate
conference committee.
Both houses must now approve the conference report,
which includes funds for supporting a coal gasification pro.
ject to be conducted at the
Energy Research Center in
Morgantown.
The flUids, provided through
an amendment by Sen. Robert
C. Byrd, 0-W.Va., had been cut
from the House version of a
special energy research bill.
As proposed, the $3 million
would be followed within three
years by $15 or $25 million to
build a small pilot plant, Byrd
said.
Byrd and Sen. Jannings Ran·
dolph had these other annolUlcements concerning West
Virginia:
-The Appalachian Regional
Commission approved a $43,200
grant to help enlarge the Hepzibah Public Service District
water system near Clarksburg.
- The Office of Hwnan De·
velopment of the Der&gt;artrnent •
of Health, Education and Wei.
fare awarded a $24,000 grant to
the Wood County school board
to aid the county's Family
.
Education Center.
- The Public Health Service
awarded $277,391 to the Valley
Counselling Community Health
.Center, Inc., In Morgantown,
for use in staffing the community mental health center.

-

coastal iowns of Sidon and Tyre. The guerrillas said they shot
down two Israeli planes but the Israelis denied this.
It was the third consecutive day of reprisal attacks for the
guerrilla attack which killed three women at the border village of
Shamir on June 13. There was no immediate retaliation because
President Nixon was visiting the Middle East at the time.
First reports said "some" persons were killed and about 50
wounded. Two Beirut newspapers said as many as 50 guerrlllas
were believed killed and 60 wounded in the Israeli attacks
Tuesday and Wednesday in what the newspapers called an
Israeli "scorched earth" policy against guerriUa bases.
WASHINGTON - CONGRESS HAS SENT President Nixon a
bill to extend until 1980 a deadlirie requiring newspapers and
magazines to pay the full mail rate. The House, on a vote of 'l/7 to
129 gave final congressional approval to the legislation Wedne;day. The biD also extends to 1988 the deadline for nonprolit
organizations, such as libraries and charitable groups, to pay
their full mailing rate.
The second, third and fourth class mailers traditionally paid
only a part of the rate applied to their class. But Congress, when
it shed control of the Post Office and turned it over to the
privately operated U. S. Postal Service in 1970, ordered these
subsidies eliminated. Newspapers and news magazines were to
lose the subsidies by 19777 and the nonprofit mailers by 1982.
Rep. James Hanley, 0-N.Y., manager of the bill, said
without the added phaseout time publishers and church and
education groups would be faced with at least a 217 per cent increase in their mailing costs because of steadily mounting postal
rates.

UNDA AT THE RACES
LONDON (UPI) - Sex
queen Unda Lovelace, star of
the movie "Deep Throat,"
attended opening day of the
Royal Ascot horse races
wearing an all-revealing, seethrough black chiffon blouse. It
had
males
gaping,
photographers snapping and
British newspapermen all
writing about her in Wednesday's edtitions.
The Sun said of Miss
Lovelace: "Odds on favorite
for the prize of . best looking
filly."
PRAYER MEETING
The Daily Express : "Miss
An old fashioned prayer
Lovelace
meeting will be held at the · breadth." won Ascot by a
Rutland Church of God Friday
The Daily Mirror said one
at 7:30 p. m. The public is in· woman
shrieked with alarm
vited to attend.
when she thought Miss Love-

lace was a bout to enter the
Royal Enclosure.
"I don't know what she was
screaming about," it quoted
Miss Lovelace as saying. "I
couldn't tell her front from her
back. At least everyone knew
my front."
Miss Lovelace returned to
Ascot Wednesday in another
fashlon spectacular -a seethrough net dress. Beneath the
dress she wore a highly opaque
g-strlng.

DIVORCE ASKED
Linda Jell, Pomeroy, has
filed suit for divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
against Don A. Jett, Pomeroy,
charging gross neglect ol duty
and extreme cruelty,

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 20~ 1974

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8- The Daily Sentiriel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.; Thtirsday, June 20, 1974

Nixon's intent under probing

Battle of Pt . .Pleasant -.
college seminar theme...:

ROSTERS DUE
A spokesman of the Kyger
Creek
Little
League
Baseball Tournament today
reminded all area Ultle
League baseball managers
that team rooters should be
mailed or turned In to Bill
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
' Hubbard, Box 81, Kyger College will sponsor a weekend
Creek
Power
PLant,
commemorative. seminar on
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, by
the Battle of Point Pleasant
Friday. The 1974tournament July 13-14.
'
will begin on Monday, July 8.
· Assistant Dean Sam Smith
Drawings wltl be held next
said the Battle of Point
week.
Pleasant (W. Va.), part of Lord
Dunmore 's "frontier war"
against the Ohio Indians in
1774, is considered by many
Tire failure is
authorities the first battle ol
the American Revolution. It
accident cause
occurred on October 10, 1774,
more than six months before
The Meigs County Sheriff's the battles of Lexington and
office investigated a one car Concord.
accident early Thursday on
Retained to initiate this
ColUlty Road 34 at Morning bicentennial observance is
Star.
Miss Patricia Burton of Troy,
A car driven by Diane
Hendricks was travelling south
when a rear tire blew out. Her
car struck a mailbox owned by
Fred Smith and went .into a
ditch. Mrs. Hendricks and her
daughter, Sheila, age 3, were
The Meigs County Riding
taken ro Veterans Memorial Club will sponsor an OVHSA
Hospital by private car, approved horse show Saturday
treated and released. There at
Rock
Springs
the
was moderate damage to the Fairgrounds beginning at 6 p.
car.
m. The show will be held rain
or shine.
Prizes of $25 will be given to
the high point contest horse
CHOW'S NESTING. RECORD and the · high point pleasure
horse. Five ribbons and prize
SPOKANE, Wash. (UPI) JIMie Cox, 26, Spokane, began money of $8, $6, $4 and $2 will
her quest Wednesday for a also be presented along with
world's record for craw's nest three tiophies. Jim Deeter,
Athens, will serve as judge,
sitting.
and
an entry fee of $2 will be
She also hoped to shed 30
charged.
pounds from her I'15-pound
Categories are lead in pony ;
frame by dieting during the sitin, taking place in the court- English three gaited (full mane
yard of a downtown complex and tail); poles : open
bareback pleasure ; egg ~nd
of shops.
spoon;
Western horsemanship
Mrs. Cox said she hoped to
remain in the lour-foot tub atop (rider under 14- horse or
a 40-foot metal mast for at least ponies ); stake race ; roadster
pony (50" and under) ;
30 days.
There is no known record for registered quarter horse
pleasure; English pleasure
crow's nesting.
· (saddle seat); ladies barrel
race; barrell race; western
pleasure pony (48" and under,
rider, 12 and under); junior
western pleasure (open, rider
18yearsand under, no stallion;
English five gaited; western
pleasure pony (48" and 56"
inclusive); non-registered
western pleasure horse; pony
from the rocks or cliffs back of harrell race; senior western
the village, ''which have an horsemanship (rider over 18
antiquated and picturesque years); English equitation
appearance.''
(rider 18 years and under);
That is about all there is to flag race; open pleasure horse;
report from Antiquity.
dash for cash; western
Except that the Baptist horsennanship (rider 14
Ghurch draws a good crowd on through 18) and trail class.
Sundays and that only Sunday
In registered classes, proof
School is held at the Methodist of registration must be shown
church, because there is no
pastor for the !lock that
nwnbers only six .
"People here live right,
though," said Diddle.
"Like you said they do over
at Tranquility, we try to Uve
each day for the Hereafter we
know will be tomorrow."

Mich., the nation's for~most
authority on the Battle and a
leading exponent of its
recognition as the first battle of
the American Revolution .
Miss Burton has conducted
10 years extensive research
here and abroad on the bottle
and ils participants. She will
work with Professor C. Robert
Leith ol the Rio Grande College
History Department, who is
also a recognized authority on
colonial and revolutionary
history .
The first set of lectures and
presentations will be presented
on Saturday afternoon, July 13,
in the College Cafeteria. A
memorial dinner will lollow

Riding club staging
show on Saturday
at entry, and proof of age for
youth may be requested . All
ponies
must
have
measurement cards. All
contest classes ' wiD be electrically timed. All entries are
final, and exhibitors not
registered in a class will be
excused.
There will be a gate donation
of $1 and food will be served on
the grounds. For further information, contact Sharon
Wilson, 630 Brownell Ave.,
Middleport, or phone 992-8680
or 992-3742 after 5 p. m.

•

on Saturday evening. Participants in the seminar w·ill
have the opportunity on
Saturday night to witness the
outdoor drama of the early
settlement of the region,
"Gallia Country."
Sunday morning , seminar
participants will tour the PQint
Pleasant Battlefield (TuEndie-Wei Park ) for services
conducted by the Point
Pleasant Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution. Sunday aftern®n,
Miss Burton will conclud~ her
presentation with the history.of
the battle and studies of the
lives of the participants of the
battle in later years.
·
The seminar is open to the 1
public at a minimal cost of $10
per participant. Those wishing
to attend the dinner and
"Gallia Country" will pay
additional costs of $5 and' $3
respectively.
The college expects to offer
one credit hour in history to
each participant for an additional $10 fee . College dormitory facilities will be made
available to the participants
who wish to stay overnight
Saturday.
Those interested should
make reservations with
Professor Sam S. Smith,
assistant dean of Rio Grande
College, Rio Grande, Ohio
45674, by July . 8. Telephone
·reservations will also be accepted at 245-5353.

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DONATION MADE - Mrs. Willa Burray Breland, center, hands a volume oi her
professional library to Sam S. $mith , assistant dean for social and administrative sciences, in
an informal ceremony earlier this week. At left is Prof. Edward Sofranko, Dept. of
Psychology; Mrs. Darlene U!mbert, fourth from left, a social work major , and Ray Matura of
the Rio Grande College Sociology Dept .

Washin g ton University
Hospital, the Department of
Health, Territory of Hawaii ,

and
Queen's
Hospital ,
Honolulu .
Listed in "Who's Wh o m'
American Wome n," Mrs .
Breland
has
extens ive
association with many national

SGT. WEAVER CITED
RUTLAND - Marine Sgt.
Thomas E. Weaver, husband of
the former Miss Kathy J. Tillis,
Rutland, received the Good.
Conduct Medal first award at
the Marine Cors Air Station at
Cherry Point, N.C. He was
cited for his exemplary service
during the past three years.

this weelf.. so as to begin
examining witnesses in early

July, the com mittee Wednesday constdered the firing of

and international societies in
the field of psychiatric social
work.
Dean Smith said the dona tion
is a "highly significant" addition to Rio Grande College's
library resow-ces in social
work .

CLEVELAND (UP!)- A
two-month delay in the slate of
the Ohio lottery was predicted
Wednesday after Deputy _State
Auditor Toni Ferguson made a
procedural ruling.
'"The state must issue checks
to the wirmers," Ferguson in·
sisted, striking down plans for
immediate payment of $21!
lottery winners. A Lottery
Commission olficial said that
would mean redesigning lottery tickets which were ready
for printing .
The tickers included instructions lor ticket agenls which

I

vestigations .

Rep. Charles Rangel , asked
his opinion as to why Nixon

wan t ed Co x removed, an ·
swcred with one word :

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" f e ar . ~"

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Shop Our

specified that they could pay
off $20 winners.
" You don 't even know what
the' procedures of your own
game are yet," Ferguson told the commission prior to his
ruling.
"Don •t tell us what we know
or don 't know,'' Commissioner
Loui s Goldman shot back.
"Tell us whal you are here to
discuss."
Then Ferguson delivered his
ruling, saying winners must be
paid by check because Ohio
law dictates tha t procedure .

ON THE

SIDEWALK
SATURDAY, JUNE 22
MANY SURPRISES -

COME AND SEE

BAHR CLOTHIERS
SIDEWALK SALE SATURDAY· 1 DAY ONLY

SATURDAY

JUNE

lee shirts or boxer shorls . fee t hirh

.Cnd briefs in sizes S.M·L·XL ond
bo11e r'shorts Wze1 30-.U,

22

HECK'S
REG.
3 for

')

3.19

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

A SALE YOU DON'T

:;:;.;::(\,,

1

':.&gt;._.·_
. ' {~.':-

·~t '·.-.;

One Day Only!

. WANT TO MISS

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HECK'S DISCOUNT STORE
PT. PLEASANT STORE

Q-T

DESENEX

AEROSOL SPRAY

QUICK ·J AN

(F.O R ATHLETES FOOT)

2 OZ. TUBE

SUDDEN TAN
BRONZING FOAM

REG. '1.59

PAPER
PLATES

100
COUNT

FOAM .

77~

WTION OR OIL

QT. PlASTIC

FREEZER
CONTAINERS

4

REG. $} 29

OOPPERTONE

2 QT.

PLASTIC
BUCKET

.'

SOLARCAINE
LOTION
6 oz.

Four miles isn't veey far to QO,
·untess you're drilling a hofe.
Four miles is just about how deep we're
drilling into the earth now, in the Appalachian area, to find more natural gas.
That's about lhree miles deeper than
most wells in the area have ever gone.
And the deeper the well, the more it
costs-as much as $l million a mile.
· Deep-driiling is a high-risk, high-cost
venture. But Columbia is doing it to
seek more clean-burning natural gas

u~omg som~t~in~

rA.uMBIA GAS.
''

WITH HANDLE

'179

I•

REG.
$2.19

TANNING
BUTTER

. KLEEN-UP
MOIST
TOWELS

Spray
40Z.

4 oz.
REG. 12.56

69e

40 OZ.

1·5/8

4

oz.

REG. 11.79

oz.

REG. 89•

e
1 EACH

'$13.9

COPPERTONE
OIL OR
LOTION

59e

,.

about the energy crisis
•

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r

REG. 98'

that will help solve the energy crisis.
And, when you consider the alternative
of less energy, we think you'll agree th~i
the price is oot too high.
Columbia &lt;;Jas is investing millions of
dol.lars to develop many new sources of
gas- in the Arctic, under the sea, over•
seas, from petroleum liquids, from coal
- as well as .exploring four miles deep
right here in our backyard.
I

'-·

' •. ' ' •

TANN.ING
LOTION -

ONLY

REG. •1.97

WITH TOP

LID

$129

oz.

2 OT.

FOOD
CONTAINERS

oz.

LESTOIL CLEANER

CALADRYL
SPRAY
4

oz.

REG. '1.75

PLASTIC
PITCHER

LOUNGE
CHAIR

ONLY
SWEDISH
TANNING SECRET

6

REG. •1.98

REG.

20's
9 oz.

HOT AND OOW

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Bahr Clothiers, Middleport

Lottery delay expected

Library donated to Rio
RIO GRANDE - Mrs. Willa
Murray Breland, retiring after
56 years in social work, the last
five at the Gallipolis State
Institute, has donated her
professional library to the
Social Work Depariment of Rio
Grande College.
Mrs. Breland founded and
directed the social services
department of Mayo Clinic
from 1917 to 1923 and later was
Social Servrce Director in
Veterans Hospital, Little Rock ,
Ark.; Municipal Hospital ,
Washington, D. C.; George

examination of the evidence

except inte ntionally and rna ~
nu al!y.
As for Cox' firing, some
Democrats said i( occur red
because Nixon fe lt the heal of
the
prosecutor 's
tn ·

Ar chibald Cox as special
Watergate prosecutor and th e
18 '1:! minute gap in a key
Watergate tape.
Afterwards, members had
little new light to shed on either
ma tte r. They wat ched a
demonstration on a Uher 5000
t&lt;lpe recorder but came up wilh
no ex planation of how the tape
co uld have been erased

Select from lbo% cotton brith ,

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prior to July 25, 1969, when a
tax law permittin g public
figures to take deductwru; lor
the gifts of their public papers
was changed.
Seeking to co nclude tts

UNDERWEAR

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only for a clear criminal
violation. Ev idence that Nixon
committed tax fraud in the
payment of his taxes would be
such a violation .
But the question of fraud was
not examined publicly in lwo
· previo us investigations of
Nixon 's taxes. The White.
House said the IRS found no
evidence of fraud . Congress·
Joint Committee on Internal
Revenue Taxatio.n, whi ch
came up with a tax onderpayment about equal to the
ms. did not examine the issue
of fraud .
The chief issue in Nixon's
underpaymenl was the $482,Q19
he and Mrs . Nixon had
deducted because of his gift of
his vice presidential papers to
the National Archives .
The gi ft was disallowed
because it had not been made

MEN'S
DERIYIRAND

Jewelry $be

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PAPER CUPS

GOESSLER

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SWISHER -LOHSE

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(.c:;;r
···.,

by'JJ~

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$1.00each

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BRIDES

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For June

SPECIAL!
SOLID
COLOGNE

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WASHINGTO N t UPI ) -- The
House Judiciary Committee is
going into the question today of
whether President Nixon acted
wilfully when he underpaid his
federal income taxes from 1!!70
through 1973 by $432,787 .
The White House always has
said Nixon merely followed the
advice of his tax lawyers and
accountants when he filed his
returns and claimed the dedUC·
lions which were subsequently
disallowed in an Internal
Revenue Service reaudit of his
returns.
John M. Doar, special
counsel to the impeachment
investigation ·· undertaken by
the House committee, told a
reporter "the ques tion of
wilfulness" was the key issue.
Many Republicans in Congress -and Nixon himself have taken the position a
President can be impeAched

CORRECTION

Big Town reporter finds Antiquity
like Tranquility of Adams County

in southern Ohio's Meigs Diddle tried to flush It out with
Jo:d. Note : Ed Heinke,
county.
his garden hose, but no snake.
retired manager of tbe Ohio
But Its very name lures you
Scrlppo Howard Bureau wbo
Also considered newsworthy
Pleasant Valley Hospital
into it to talk to some of the by the Diddles and his neighhas found It tmposaible to pnt
DISCHARGES - Harry
people and find out what is bors was the appearance of a
hto typewriter away for
Hallscot, Point Pleasant;
going
on . Just like the .hamlet bear near Racine this swruner,
good, travels throu&amp;h Qhto
Kerry Smith, Point Pleasant;
of
Tranquility
not too far away they said. Deer, possum, coon,
reporting what interests
Mrs. Jackie VanMeter; New
in Adams county where the mink, fox · and muskrats are
htm.
Haven; Carl Adkins, Point
people dream of the second common, Diddle said.
Pleasant; Cynthia Ury, Point
By Ed Heinke
coming of Christ and try to live
The Diddles like to sit on
Pleasant; Mrs. Larry Eads,
Courtesy of the
their lives in a way to prepare their porch overlooking the
Gallipolis; Elma McGinnis ,
Columbus Citizen Journal
them to meet their Maker.
river and watcb the boats. Mrs.
Point Pleasant; Mrs. ·Patrick
ANTIQUITY, Ohio- You're
So here is an up-to-date Diddle says hello at night to the
Harris and daughter, Newport, probably never even heard of account ol what's going on in
river pilots by a spoUight atN. C. and Mrs. James Durbin, this little village stuck deep in Antiquity, Ohio.
tached to.the porch roof. Even
Point Pleasant.
a pocket along the Ohio River
Sadly enough, it's going the Delta ~een flashes back
down steadily, like other small its "hello" signal, said Mrs.
Ohio communities, with the Diddle.
population down to less than
Diddle, a lormer riverboat
200 who live high on the banks man, has three sons working on
of the Ohio that flows along Rt. the river, Bernard on the locks
338, south of Pomeroy.
at Gallipolis, Tom a! the
Even as far back as 1880, Bellville locks and Wade at
TAKEN TO HOLZER
there were .741 residents when Fish Trap Dam, Pikesville, Ky.
One run was made Wedthe coal and salt mines and the
If you want to know how nesday by · the Southeastern
boatyard were operating. But Antiquity got its name, the 1891
Ohio Emergency Medical
it's all gone now. Not even a Historical and Business
Serviee. At 6:30 p. m. they
store, postoffice or a gas Review of Meigs and Gallia transported Paul Fee, Dexter,
station, unless you want to counties states the hame is
a medical patient, to Holzer
count the antique shop that supposed to have been derived
Medical Center.
opened its door only last
Friday, that the owner, Mrs.
Velma Stobart, is going to call
The Spinning Wheel.
She said she and her
husband, George, have been
collecting "stuff" for 40 years
and they've run out of places to
store it, including their home at
nearby Racinerso bought the .
old building, Antiquity's last
grocery. There was a pretty
PIERCED PAUL REVERE
good crowd of lookers Friday
BOWLS WITH LINERS
and some buyers.
You'd think there'd be a lot of
~
'·
old people in a place called
' '
Antiquity. But' not so. Just a
.-/ '
few. They're mosUy under 65.
·-.
W. F. Sa)'l:e, who started the
. ,.
old store, has been long gone.
He had two daughters, Mable
and Frances . "Granddad"
COMPOTE
Charley Shain took it,over with
$16.50
regular $2.50 size, limited time only
Frances and Ma~le, whom he
married. Granddad and Mable
AMBUSH • TABU • 20 CARATS
$13.50
are gone .
Frances, now 77, went up to
Cleveland two years ago to
visit her daughter, Mrs.
Virginia Plischta, 4931 ParkAll the lu xury o f an all -time favorite , p riced for
way Dr ., Garfield Heights, had
cool, qui ck ldv irgs. Colo r keyed cap : black for TABU;
a stroke, and hasn 't been .back
pin k for AMBUSH; and golden ye llow fcir 20 CARATS.
since.
BREAD TRAY
"There really have been no
'
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;$19.50
, old people around here since I
i
came from Pomeroy in 1929,"
said Mrs. Spencer, who is 83.
"I guess we're the oldest
people around here," said Oval
Diddle, 71, and his wife, Sarah,
73.
..,....
Probably
the
biggest
news
of
'
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
the swnmer so far as the
Open Daily 8:00a.m. to 9:30p.m.
Su.~o_y I0:30iol2:30ond Ho 9p.m.
Diddles , ar~ concerned happened last Friday when he
PRESCRIPTiONS
PH:-992-2955
spotted
a 2'h.foot copperhead
1
Friendly Service ·
In
his
yard
while washing his
112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
SILVER SHAKERS
car. He ran for a hoe, but the
Col)rf
Pomeroy
snake escaped under a btg r'!"k
$8.95
Diddle was Ill able to move.

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�Nolan rides Coal project New's • • • in Briefs
.1Continued from page 1l
(Continued from
1
with the· upcoming World War
Lebanon
in
more
than
a
month
today,
bombing
and strafing at
restored
II. He worked with the Federal
least four Palestinian encampments around the Mediterranean
pa~e

operation in Columbus, then
was transferred to Cleveland in
the same kind of work. He was
active in closing of the price
control and rationing offices
following the end of the war.
Early '' DiscoUnter"

By this time Baker was
Wlder civil service. He had
been for a number of years, so
he took an extended leave of
absence to open a warehouse to
supply hard-to-get post war
merchandise to the public.
The business went well for
seven or eight years until
discolUlt houses opened and he
was Wlable to meet the competition . The warehouse
business was sold.
Having
made
many
associations in his work over
the years, Baker in 1958
became associa ted with the
No lan Amusement Co. at
Zanesville. He is now a major
stockholder of the company
• which is officially named the
Zane Amusement Co. The
company owns some 70
amusement rides , over 20 of
which are placed for the entire
summer at Moxahola Park .
The others are in units
traveling Ohio, Kentucky and
West Virginia during the
season.
12 Rides Here
This week Baker has 12 of the
rides in Pomeroy lor Big Bend
Regatta Weekend. He has kept
up pretty well with Meigs
County and tosses the names of
many residents about in his
conversation.
He delights in seeing old
friends about the grounds on
the weekend although he is
busy with numerous details
involved in moving in, setting
up a successful operation, and
moving out.
Perhaps you remember the
Bakers . Besides John F. , there
is another son, Ted, who
resides in Bucyrus, and there
were two daughters, the late
Kathryn Puhl of Scranton, Pa.,
and the younger, Ruth, who is
Mrs . Bill Grate , of the
Charleston area.
.If you see Baker on Regatta
Weekend, do say ''hello".
There's nothing like being
made to feel at home in your
old hom~ town .

l

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WASHINGTON I UPI l - The
proposed $3 million allocation
for a coal research project at
Morgantown, W.Va., was restored to the budget . Wednesday by a House-Senate
conference committee.
Both houses must now approve the conference report,
which includes funds for supporting a coal gasification pro.
ject to be conducted at the
Energy Research Center in
Morgantown.
The flUids, provided through
an amendment by Sen. Robert
C. Byrd, 0-W.Va., had been cut
from the House version of a
special energy research bill.
As proposed, the $3 million
would be followed within three
years by $15 or $25 million to
build a small pilot plant, Byrd
said.
Byrd and Sen. Jannings Ran·
dolph had these other annolUlcements concerning West
Virginia:
-The Appalachian Regional
Commission approved a $43,200
grant to help enlarge the Hepzibah Public Service District
water system near Clarksburg.
- The Office of Hwnan De·
velopment of the Der&gt;artrnent •
of Health, Education and Wei.
fare awarded a $24,000 grant to
the Wood County school board
to aid the county's Family
.
Education Center.
- The Public Health Service
awarded $277,391 to the Valley
Counselling Community Health
.Center, Inc., In Morgantown,
for use in staffing the community mental health center.

-

coastal iowns of Sidon and Tyre. The guerrillas said they shot
down two Israeli planes but the Israelis denied this.
It was the third consecutive day of reprisal attacks for the
guerrilla attack which killed three women at the border village of
Shamir on June 13. There was no immediate retaliation because
President Nixon was visiting the Middle East at the time.
First reports said "some" persons were killed and about 50
wounded. Two Beirut newspapers said as many as 50 guerrlllas
were believed killed and 60 wounded in the Israeli attacks
Tuesday and Wednesday in what the newspapers called an
Israeli "scorched earth" policy against guerriUa bases.
WASHINGTON - CONGRESS HAS SENT President Nixon a
bill to extend until 1980 a deadlirie requiring newspapers and
magazines to pay the full mail rate. The House, on a vote of 'l/7 to
129 gave final congressional approval to the legislation Wedne;day. The biD also extends to 1988 the deadline for nonprolit
organizations, such as libraries and charitable groups, to pay
their full mailing rate.
The second, third and fourth class mailers traditionally paid
only a part of the rate applied to their class. But Congress, when
it shed control of the Post Office and turned it over to the
privately operated U. S. Postal Service in 1970, ordered these
subsidies eliminated. Newspapers and news magazines were to
lose the subsidies by 19777 and the nonprofit mailers by 1982.
Rep. James Hanley, 0-N.Y., manager of the bill, said
without the added phaseout time publishers and church and
education groups would be faced with at least a 217 per cent increase in their mailing costs because of steadily mounting postal
rates.

UNDA AT THE RACES
LONDON (UPI) - Sex
queen Unda Lovelace, star of
the movie "Deep Throat,"
attended opening day of the
Royal Ascot horse races
wearing an all-revealing, seethrough black chiffon blouse. It
had
males
gaping,
photographers snapping and
British newspapermen all
writing about her in Wednesday's edtitions.
The Sun said of Miss
Lovelace: "Odds on favorite
for the prize of . best looking
filly."
PRAYER MEETING
The Daily Express : "Miss
An old fashioned prayer
Lovelace
meeting will be held at the · breadth." won Ascot by a
Rutland Church of God Friday
The Daily Mirror said one
at 7:30 p. m. The public is in· woman
shrieked with alarm
vited to attend.
when she thought Miss Love-

lace was a bout to enter the
Royal Enclosure.
"I don't know what she was
screaming about," it quoted
Miss Lovelace as saying. "I
couldn't tell her front from her
back. At least everyone knew
my front."
Miss Lovelace returned to
Ascot Wednesday in another
fashlon spectacular -a seethrough net dress. Beneath the
dress she wore a highly opaque
g-strlng.

DIVORCE ASKED
Linda Jell, Pomeroy, has
filed suit for divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
against Don A. Jett, Pomeroy,
charging gross neglect ol duty
and extreme cruelty,

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 20~ 1974

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8- The Daily Sentiriel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.; Thtirsday, June 20, 1974

Nixon's intent under probing

Battle of Pt . .Pleasant -.
college seminar theme...:

ROSTERS DUE
A spokesman of the Kyger
Creek
Little
League
Baseball Tournament today
reminded all area Ultle
League baseball managers
that team rooters should be
mailed or turned In to Bill
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
' Hubbard, Box 81, Kyger College will sponsor a weekend
Creek
Power
PLant,
commemorative. seminar on
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, by
the Battle of Point Pleasant
Friday. The 1974tournament July 13-14.
'
will begin on Monday, July 8.
· Assistant Dean Sam Smith
Drawings wltl be held next
said the Battle of Point
week.
Pleasant (W. Va.), part of Lord
Dunmore 's "frontier war"
against the Ohio Indians in
1774, is considered by many
Tire failure is
authorities the first battle ol
the American Revolution. It
accident cause
occurred on October 10, 1774,
more than six months before
The Meigs County Sheriff's the battles of Lexington and
office investigated a one car Concord.
accident early Thursday on
Retained to initiate this
ColUlty Road 34 at Morning bicentennial observance is
Star.
Miss Patricia Burton of Troy,
A car driven by Diane
Hendricks was travelling south
when a rear tire blew out. Her
car struck a mailbox owned by
Fred Smith and went .into a
ditch. Mrs. Hendricks and her
daughter, Sheila, age 3, were
The Meigs County Riding
taken ro Veterans Memorial Club will sponsor an OVHSA
Hospital by private car, approved horse show Saturday
treated and released. There at
Rock
Springs
the
was moderate damage to the Fairgrounds beginning at 6 p.
car.
m. The show will be held rain
or shine.
Prizes of $25 will be given to
the high point contest horse
CHOW'S NESTING. RECORD and the · high point pleasure
horse. Five ribbons and prize
SPOKANE, Wash. (UPI) JIMie Cox, 26, Spokane, began money of $8, $6, $4 and $2 will
her quest Wednesday for a also be presented along with
world's record for craw's nest three tiophies. Jim Deeter,
Athens, will serve as judge,
sitting.
and
an entry fee of $2 will be
She also hoped to shed 30
charged.
pounds from her I'15-pound
Categories are lead in pony ;
frame by dieting during the sitin, taking place in the court- English three gaited (full mane
yard of a downtown complex and tail); poles : open
bareback pleasure ; egg ~nd
of shops.
spoon;
Western horsemanship
Mrs. Cox said she hoped to
remain in the lour-foot tub atop (rider under 14- horse or
a 40-foot metal mast for at least ponies ); stake race ; roadster
pony (50" and under) ;
30 days.
There is no known record for registered quarter horse
pleasure; English pleasure
crow's nesting.
· (saddle seat); ladies barrel
race; barrell race; western
pleasure pony (48" and under,
rider, 12 and under); junior
western pleasure (open, rider
18yearsand under, no stallion;
English five gaited; western
pleasure pony (48" and 56"
inclusive); non-registered
western pleasure horse; pony
from the rocks or cliffs back of harrell race; senior western
the village, ''which have an horsemanship (rider over 18
antiquated and picturesque years); English equitation
appearance.''
(rider 18 years and under);
That is about all there is to flag race; open pleasure horse;
report from Antiquity.
dash for cash; western
Except that the Baptist horsennanship (rider 14
Ghurch draws a good crowd on through 18) and trail class.
Sundays and that only Sunday
In registered classes, proof
School is held at the Methodist of registration must be shown
church, because there is no
pastor for the !lock that
nwnbers only six .
"People here live right,
though," said Diddle.
"Like you said they do over
at Tranquility, we try to Uve
each day for the Hereafter we
know will be tomorrow."

Mich., the nation's for~most
authority on the Battle and a
leading exponent of its
recognition as the first battle of
the American Revolution .
Miss Burton has conducted
10 years extensive research
here and abroad on the bottle
and ils participants. She will
work with Professor C. Robert
Leith ol the Rio Grande College
History Department, who is
also a recognized authority on
colonial and revolutionary
history .
The first set of lectures and
presentations will be presented
on Saturday afternoon, July 13,
in the College Cafeteria. A
memorial dinner will lollow

Riding club staging
show on Saturday
at entry, and proof of age for
youth may be requested . All
ponies
must
have
measurement cards. All
contest classes ' wiD be electrically timed. All entries are
final, and exhibitors not
registered in a class will be
excused.
There will be a gate donation
of $1 and food will be served on
the grounds. For further information, contact Sharon
Wilson, 630 Brownell Ave.,
Middleport, or phone 992-8680
or 992-3742 after 5 p. m.

•

on Saturday evening. Participants in the seminar w·ill
have the opportunity on
Saturday night to witness the
outdoor drama of the early
settlement of the region,
"Gallia Country."
Sunday morning , seminar
participants will tour the PQint
Pleasant Battlefield (TuEndie-Wei Park ) for services
conducted by the Point
Pleasant Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution. Sunday aftern®n,
Miss Burton will conclud~ her
presentation with the history.of
the battle and studies of the
lives of the participants of the
battle in later years.
·
The seminar is open to the 1
public at a minimal cost of $10
per participant. Those wishing
to attend the dinner and
"Gallia Country" will pay
additional costs of $5 and' $3
respectively.
The college expects to offer
one credit hour in history to
each participant for an additional $10 fee . College dormitory facilities will be made
available to the participants
who wish to stay overnight
Saturday.
Those interested should
make reservations with
Professor Sam S. Smith,
assistant dean of Rio Grande
College, Rio Grande, Ohio
45674, by July . 8. Telephone
·reservations will also be accepted at 245-5353.

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DONATION MADE - Mrs. Willa Burray Breland, center, hands a volume oi her
professional library to Sam S. $mith , assistant dean for social and administrative sciences, in
an informal ceremony earlier this week. At left is Prof. Edward Sofranko, Dept. of
Psychology; Mrs. Darlene U!mbert, fourth from left, a social work major , and Ray Matura of
the Rio Grande College Sociology Dept .

Washin g ton University
Hospital, the Department of
Health, Territory of Hawaii ,

and
Queen's
Hospital ,
Honolulu .
Listed in "Who's Wh o m'
American Wome n," Mrs .
Breland
has
extens ive
association with many national

SGT. WEAVER CITED
RUTLAND - Marine Sgt.
Thomas E. Weaver, husband of
the former Miss Kathy J. Tillis,
Rutland, received the Good.
Conduct Medal first award at
the Marine Cors Air Station at
Cherry Point, N.C. He was
cited for his exemplary service
during the past three years.

this weelf.. so as to begin
examining witnesses in early

July, the com mittee Wednesday constdered the firing of

and international societies in
the field of psychiatric social
work.
Dean Smith said the dona tion
is a "highly significant" addition to Rio Grande College's
library resow-ces in social
work .

CLEVELAND (UP!)- A
two-month delay in the slate of
the Ohio lottery was predicted
Wednesday after Deputy _State
Auditor Toni Ferguson made a
procedural ruling.
'"The state must issue checks
to the wirmers," Ferguson in·
sisted, striking down plans for
immediate payment of $21!
lottery winners. A Lottery
Commission olficial said that
would mean redesigning lottery tickets which were ready
for printing .
The tickers included instructions lor ticket agenls which

I

vestigations .

Rep. Charles Rangel , asked
his opinion as to why Nixon

wan t ed Co x removed, an ·
swcred with one word :

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" f e ar . ~"

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Shop Our

specified that they could pay
off $20 winners.
" You don 't even know what
the' procedures of your own
game are yet," Ferguson told the commission prior to his
ruling.
"Don •t tell us what we know
or don 't know,'' Commissioner
Loui s Goldman shot back.
"Tell us whal you are here to
discuss."
Then Ferguson delivered his
ruling, saying winners must be
paid by check because Ohio
law dictates tha t procedure .

ON THE

SIDEWALK
SATURDAY, JUNE 22
MANY SURPRISES -

COME AND SEE

BAHR CLOTHIERS
SIDEWALK SALE SATURDAY· 1 DAY ONLY

SATURDAY

JUNE

lee shirts or boxer shorls . fee t hirh

.Cnd briefs in sizes S.M·L·XL ond
bo11e r'shorts Wze1 30-.U,

22

HECK'S
REG.
3 for

')

3.19

\

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

A SALE YOU DON'T

:;:;.;::(\,,

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. ' {~.':-

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One Day Only!

. WANT TO MISS

:

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HECK'S DISCOUNT STORE
PT. PLEASANT STORE

Q-T

DESENEX

AEROSOL SPRAY

QUICK ·J AN

(F.O R ATHLETES FOOT)

2 OZ. TUBE

SUDDEN TAN
BRONZING FOAM

REG. '1.59

PAPER
PLATES

100
COUNT

FOAM .

77~

WTION OR OIL

QT. PlASTIC

FREEZER
CONTAINERS

4

REG. $} 29

OOPPERTONE

2 QT.

PLASTIC
BUCKET

.'

SOLARCAINE
LOTION
6 oz.

Four miles isn't veey far to QO,
·untess you're drilling a hofe.
Four miles is just about how deep we're
drilling into the earth now, in the Appalachian area, to find more natural gas.
That's about lhree miles deeper than
most wells in the area have ever gone.
And the deeper the well, the more it
costs-as much as $l million a mile.
· Deep-driiling is a high-risk, high-cost
venture. But Columbia is doing it to
seek more clean-burning natural gas

u~omg som~t~in~

rA.uMBIA GAS.
''

WITH HANDLE

'179

I•

REG.
$2.19

TANNING
BUTTER

. KLEEN-UP
MOIST
TOWELS

Spray
40Z.

4 oz.
REG. 12.56

69e

40 OZ.

1·5/8

4

oz.

REG. 11.79

oz.

REG. 89•

e
1 EACH

'$13.9

COPPERTONE
OIL OR
LOTION

59e

,.

about the energy crisis
•

J

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REG. 98'

that will help solve the energy crisis.
And, when you consider the alternative
of less energy, we think you'll agree th~i
the price is oot too high.
Columbia &lt;;Jas is investing millions of
dol.lars to develop many new sources of
gas- in the Arctic, under the sea, over•
seas, from petroleum liquids, from coal
- as well as .exploring four miles deep
right here in our backyard.
I

'-·

' •. ' ' •

TANN.ING
LOTION -

ONLY

REG. •1.97

WITH TOP

LID

$129

oz.

2 OT.

FOOD
CONTAINERS

oz.

LESTOIL CLEANER

CALADRYL
SPRAY
4

oz.

REG. '1.75

PLASTIC
PITCHER

LOUNGE
CHAIR

ONLY
SWEDISH
TANNING SECRET

6

REG. •1.98

REG.

20's
9 oz.

HOT AND OOW

' .

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Bahr Clothiers, Middleport

Lottery delay expected

Library donated to Rio
RIO GRANDE - Mrs. Willa
Murray Breland, retiring after
56 years in social work, the last
five at the Gallipolis State
Institute, has donated her
professional library to the
Social Work Depariment of Rio
Grande College.
Mrs. Breland founded and
directed the social services
department of Mayo Clinic
from 1917 to 1923 and later was
Social Servrce Director in
Veterans Hospital, Little Rock ,
Ark.; Municipal Hospital ,
Washington, D. C.; George

examination of the evidence

except inte ntionally and rna ~
nu al!y.
As for Cox' firing, some
Democrats said i( occur red
because Nixon fe lt the heal of
the
prosecutor 's
tn ·

Ar chibald Cox as special
Watergate prosecutor and th e
18 '1:! minute gap in a key
Watergate tape.
Afterwards, members had
little new light to shed on either
ma tte r. They wat ched a
demonstration on a Uher 5000
t&lt;lpe recorder but came up wilh
no ex planation of how the tape
co uld have been erased

Select from lbo% cotton brith ,

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prior to July 25, 1969, when a
tax law permittin g public
figures to take deductwru; lor
the gifts of their public papers
was changed.
Seeking to co nclude tts

UNDERWEAR

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only for a clear criminal
violation. Ev idence that Nixon
committed tax fraud in the
payment of his taxes would be
such a violation .
But the question of fraud was
not examined publicly in lwo
· previo us investigations of
Nixon 's taxes. The White.
House said the IRS found no
evidence of fraud . Congress·
Joint Committee on Internal
Revenue Taxatio.n, whi ch
came up with a tax onderpayment about equal to the
ms. did not examine the issue
of fraud .
The chief issue in Nixon's
underpaymenl was the $482,Q19
he and Mrs . Nixon had
deducted because of his gift of
his vice presidential papers to
the National Archives .
The gi ft was disallowed
because it had not been made

MEN'S
DERIYIRAND

Jewelry $be

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PAPER CUPS

GOESSLER

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SWISHER -LOHSE

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$1.00each

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For June

SPECIAL!
SOLID
COLOGNE

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WASHINGTO N t UPI ) -- The
House Judiciary Committee is
going into the question today of
whether President Nixon acted
wilfully when he underpaid his
federal income taxes from 1!!70
through 1973 by $432,787 .
The White House always has
said Nixon merely followed the
advice of his tax lawyers and
accountants when he filed his
returns and claimed the dedUC·
lions which were subsequently
disallowed in an Internal
Revenue Service reaudit of his
returns.
John M. Doar, special
counsel to the impeachment
investigation ·· undertaken by
the House committee, told a
reporter "the ques tion of
wilfulness" was the key issue.
Many Republicans in Congress -and Nixon himself have taken the position a
President can be impeAched

CORRECTION

Big Town reporter finds Antiquity
like Tranquility of Adams County

in southern Ohio's Meigs Diddle tried to flush It out with
Jo:d. Note : Ed Heinke,
county.
his garden hose, but no snake.
retired manager of tbe Ohio
But Its very name lures you
Scrlppo Howard Bureau wbo
Also considered newsworthy
Pleasant Valley Hospital
into it to talk to some of the by the Diddles and his neighhas found It tmposaible to pnt
DISCHARGES - Harry
people and find out what is bors was the appearance of a
hto typewriter away for
Hallscot, Point Pleasant;
going
on . Just like the .hamlet bear near Racine this swruner,
good, travels throu&amp;h Qhto
Kerry Smith, Point Pleasant;
of
Tranquility
not too far away they said. Deer, possum, coon,
reporting what interests
Mrs. Jackie VanMeter; New
in Adams county where the mink, fox · and muskrats are
htm.
Haven; Carl Adkins, Point
people dream of the second common, Diddle said.
Pleasant; Cynthia Ury, Point
By Ed Heinke
coming of Christ and try to live
The Diddles like to sit on
Pleasant; Mrs. Larry Eads,
Courtesy of the
their lives in a way to prepare their porch overlooking the
Gallipolis; Elma McGinnis ,
Columbus Citizen Journal
them to meet their Maker.
river and watcb the boats. Mrs.
Point Pleasant; Mrs. ·Patrick
ANTIQUITY, Ohio- You're
So here is an up-to-date Diddle says hello at night to the
Harris and daughter, Newport, probably never even heard of account ol what's going on in
river pilots by a spoUight atN. C. and Mrs. James Durbin, this little village stuck deep in Antiquity, Ohio.
tached to.the porch roof. Even
Point Pleasant.
a pocket along the Ohio River
Sadly enough, it's going the Delta ~een flashes back
down steadily, like other small its "hello" signal, said Mrs.
Ohio communities, with the Diddle.
population down to less than
Diddle, a lormer riverboat
200 who live high on the banks man, has three sons working on
of the Ohio that flows along Rt. the river, Bernard on the locks
338, south of Pomeroy.
at Gallipolis, Tom a! the
Even as far back as 1880, Bellville locks and Wade at
TAKEN TO HOLZER
there were .741 residents when Fish Trap Dam, Pikesville, Ky.
One run was made Wedthe coal and salt mines and the
If you want to know how nesday by · the Southeastern
boatyard were operating. But Antiquity got its name, the 1891
Ohio Emergency Medical
it's all gone now. Not even a Historical and Business
Serviee. At 6:30 p. m. they
store, postoffice or a gas Review of Meigs and Gallia transported Paul Fee, Dexter,
station, unless you want to counties states the hame is
a medical patient, to Holzer
count the antique shop that supposed to have been derived
Medical Center.
opened its door only last
Friday, that the owner, Mrs.
Velma Stobart, is going to call
The Spinning Wheel.
She said she and her
husband, George, have been
collecting "stuff" for 40 years
and they've run out of places to
store it, including their home at
nearby Racinerso bought the .
old building, Antiquity's last
grocery. There was a pretty
PIERCED PAUL REVERE
good crowd of lookers Friday
BOWLS WITH LINERS
and some buyers.
You'd think there'd be a lot of
~
'·
old people in a place called
' '
Antiquity. But' not so. Just a
.-/ '
few. They're mosUy under 65.
·-.
W. F. Sa)'l:e, who started the
. ,.
old store, has been long gone.
He had two daughters, Mable
and Frances . "Granddad"
COMPOTE
Charley Shain took it,over with
$16.50
regular $2.50 size, limited time only
Frances and Ma~le, whom he
married. Granddad and Mable
AMBUSH • TABU • 20 CARATS
$13.50
are gone .
Frances, now 77, went up to
Cleveland two years ago to
visit her daughter, Mrs.
Virginia Plischta, 4931 ParkAll the lu xury o f an all -time favorite , p riced for
way Dr ., Garfield Heights, had
cool, qui ck ldv irgs. Colo r keyed cap : black for TABU;
a stroke, and hasn 't been .back
pin k for AMBUSH; and golden ye llow fcir 20 CARATS.
since.
BREAD TRAY
"There really have been no
'
'
;$19.50
, old people around here since I
i
came from Pomeroy in 1929,"
said Mrs. Spencer, who is 83.
"I guess we're the oldest
people around here," said Oval
Diddle, 71, and his wife, Sarah,
73.
..,....
Probably
the
biggest
news
of
'
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
the swnmer so far as the
Open Daily 8:00a.m. to 9:30p.m.
Su.~o_y I0:30iol2:30ond Ho 9p.m.
Diddles , ar~ concerned happened last Friday when he
PRESCRIPTiONS
PH:-992-2955
spotted
a 2'h.foot copperhead
1
Friendly Service ·
In
his
yard
while washing his
112 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
SILVER SHAKERS
car. He ran for a hoe, but the
Col)rf
Pomeroy
snake escaped under a btg r'!"k
$8.95
Diddle was Ill able to move.

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10- ~ Dally Senttnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jundl, 1974

'

chance to change his mind and
avoid jaU.
But Lewis did not change his
mind, citing constitutional
guarantees of freejlom of the
press for his stand. He was
found in contempt for refusing
to cooperate with a federal
grand jury investigation of the
SLA and other underground
terror Isis.
Lewis, who refused either to
turn over evidence or answer
questions before the grand

jury, could remain behind bars
until ·the grand jury's term
expires, which is scheduled for
September but could be extended by up to a year.
Promise Is Key
The key Issue in the dispute
is whether newsmen can
protect news sources If no
promise oJ confidentiality was
made to obtain infonnation.
The last communication
from Miss Hearst, and Emily
and William Harris, was a

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SIDEWALl&lt; SALE!

•

SATURDAY, JUNE 22.

MEN'S WORK SHOES
VALUES TO '19.99

.
.•' '

.

.,

13 Pairs Men's6 inch Workshoi
___ Sale$9.25
·
Neoprene Sole C- 0- E E widths-broken sizes
Sale 57.00
..
1 Pair Size 10 E width-Mens Chippewa
61nch Work shoe - Hypalon Sole
5 Pairs Ranger Brand Work Shoe..
___-__ ..____ Sale$7.50
Para Crepe Sole, cushion insole
·
2 Pair~ Onlv-Heavv Duty_____ _-- .-,:=r:---::-:cll'"":':::::-=--- Sale $6.25
But Light Weight-sole. cushion Insole. soft upper
Sale ss.oo
6 Pairs Mens Work- Para Crepe Sole.
and cushion Insole. D &amp; E E E widths
1 Pair size .10 Work Shoe with Para Crepe Sole: _ _ _ __
Sale 54~50
Sale $6.00
5 Pairs 6 inch Work Shoe, Rawhide,.,.........,---:--·- - - Cork sole· hooks and eyes
4 Pairs Black 6 inch Work Shoe•-,----:--:--------- Sale 56.00
Nylon cord sole
3 Pairs Black 6.inch Safety To•"-::---- -·- - - - - - Sale 59.00
I Pair Safety Toe Shoe by Douglas
. Sale 54.75
2 Pairs 6 inch Work Shoes
__ Sale 56.00
1 Pair 6 inch Work Shoe
. _ Slle 53.00
6 Pairs Safety 6 inch Work Slioe-M width
--- Sale $9.35
4 Pairs Mens Safety linch Boot.
·
Sale 512.50

·-------------------------------------to
Sale $5.00
Youths White Oxford. sizes 8 3 by Robin Hood._ ____
Sale 53.50
Youths White Strap, sizes IO'Iz to 3 - - -..,--...,---Youths Red-White-Blue Oxford by Robin Hood
Sizes 13 to 3 Sale $5.50
Sizes9to 12 Sale $5.00
Womens Brown Leather Sandals, 2 styles
. Sale 53.09
1 Pair Mens Sandals, size 61f1 - - -- - - - - - - - - -- 54.50
Child's Sandals 3'12 to 6 .
54.50
10 Pairs (Sizes 11-3), Youths Sandal
·-·- - - - - ---- $4.00
4 Pairs (Sizes 10-3) ·
$3.00

••

ALL SALES
FIN ALl

Sizes Are Broken
Shoes on Display-" Look At Sole"
For Available Sizes

taped messase left under a
mattress behind the radio
station June 7.· An anonymous
telephone caller told station
personnel It was there.
"There's no confidentiality

here. none whatsoever,'' said
U.S. District CQurt Judge A.
Andrew Hauk in sending Lewis
to jail. "There' s been no
promise, no agreement by
anyone at Pacifica to. keep
infonnation confidential."
(The nonprofit Pacifica
Foundation runs KPFK and its
sister station in San Francisco,
KPF A, which Is frequently
chosen · by underground or
radical groups with messages
to deliver.)
Lewis: Promise Implied
• Lewis argued there was an
implied promise of confidentiality, even to an unknown
source, and that if the station
surrendered t4e materials, it
"would then have the reputation in the community as a
station that automatically
cooperates with the FBI."

SAT. ONlY, JUNE 22

l

The station has provided the
FBI with copies of the tape,
which had been broadcast in its
entir~ty anyway. It balked at
handing over the original tape
itself, together with wrappers
or any other "paraphernalia"
found with it: The FBI wants to
examine the originals for
clues, such as fingerprints or
technical indicators of where
and when the tapes were made
or handled.
Lewis also refused to hand
over the original of a letter
from the "Weather Underground," taking responsi bility
for bombing the state attorney
general 's office here May 31 as
a gesture of support for the
SLA.

ON M&amp;R

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Nixon policy· opposed :,l.:,~.

:·:·

WASHINGTON. (UPI) President Nixiin's proposal to
provide Egypt and Israel with
nuclear power plants has run
into opposition in the Senate.
Sen. William Proxmire, DWis., Wednesday introdUced
legislation which would require
approval by the Senate and
House before the power plants
and fuel are sent to the two
Middle East nations.
A similar proposal was
defeated overwhelmingly in
the House Tuesday when Rep.

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Proxmire sa id "some

Mario Biaggi, D-N .Y., tried to
tie it to an appropriations bill.
Under present law . the
agreements would go into
effect automatically 60 days
alter they are submitted to
·Congress unless the Senate and
House voted to disapprove
them.
Un d e r
Proxm ir e's
legislation, which would be
retroactive to June I, the
agreements could not go into
eff.ect until the Senate and
House approved them.

'

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...
COMBINATION I-TRACK
.STEREO TAPE PLAYER

"

Presbyterians in
heated sessions

SAT.,
JUNE

WUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!) The procedural situation was
getting so complicated when
United Presbyterian Church
Moderator Robert C. Lamar
recognized 5-foot-1 Debbie
Hosey that even parliamentarian WiUiam P. Thompson,
sometimes called the "Wizard
o( Wichita" was having trouble
keeping things straight.
The Issue on the floor of the
!86th general assembly of the
2.9 million-member northernbased church was alleged
11
•
sexism 1 ' in the rites and
hymns of the Presbyterian
. worship book.
Emotions among the 725
delegates were running high.
In recognizing Miss Hosey, a
Washington, D.C. youth delegate, Lamar made what might
be a male assumption - that
she would speak against Ule
resolution keeping the hymn
book's present wording. But
· Miss Hosey, out of breath from
waving for recognition, electrified the convention hall by calling the proposed changes
''trivial."
"It's time to stop trilling with
words and begin dealing with
each other as people," she
pleaded to loud applause.

ages.
Critics said an example of a
sexist biblical passage would
be "If a man is in Christ ... "
A
committee
report
estimated it would .cost $110,000
to make such Changes after
which the hour and a half
debate
including
parliamentary maneuvers
bordering on throwing the
convention into chaos -began.
Some commissioners argued
passionately the changes were
not trivial but a top priority.
The Rev. Jim Angell, a delegate from San Grabriel, CaliJ.,
told the assembly he did not
"know any issue before our society that is more important
than the role of women. "
But Rev. William Blair, of
Birmingham, Ala., who moved
that the committee be dismissed without changing the worship book, touched the nerve of
a decisive majority of the delegates when he said the proposed changes would be too expensive by requiring new
printings .of the service book
and hymnal. •
"Let's put our money where
it will heal broken spirits and
broken lives," he said.
The move apparently saves
Women, and money, were such favorite Presbyterian
the key issues that defeated the hymns as "This is My Fathers
year-old effort to alter the lan- World" and "Once to Every
guage of the service book by Man and Nation."
changing more than 250 pass-

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Combinatiol'l 8 ·1fack ste reo tape plaver and
portabl e phonogr ap h m hig h impact
polystvrenc cabil'le l

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RADIOS
WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.

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AMBER

IN HOSPITAL
MASON, W. Va . - Chmles
(Chuck ) Gr imm, originally of
Mason, W. Va.. underwent
surgery on Tuesday at the
Me th od is t
Hospita l
in
Rochester, Minn ., (55901) and
is rep.orted to be recovering
satisfacto rily . His room
number is 510A. Grimm is the
son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Warner , Pomeroy,
and is the husband of the
former Anna Lee W ar ne~. The
Grimms resiqe in Naples, Fla .

ALSO
AM • CLOCK • PORTABLE

'

•'·,

5 Sets Only!

SERVICE SLATED
There wili be a weekend
service a t Red Brush with
Denver Hili, Foster, W. Va ..
preaching, begi nning at 7:30
p.m. Saturday. Sunday worship services are a t 10 a.m. and
6 p.m. Everyone is welcome.

22

•'

f'X-

the agreements have not been
answered. "With such ruomentous issues as yet unresolved ,
th e Congress cannot stand by
and allow this proposed agreement ... or any future
agreements to go into effect
without an expression of
support or denial," he said.
Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y .,
said he would work against any
agreemen t dealing with
nuclear materials for Egypt
and Israel unless Congress
approves. "My answer to the
U.S.-Egyptian atomic power
' deal is wariness," he dec lared.
Reservations were voiced by
Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich.,
who said that the more nuclear
power plants the United Stales
provides other countries, "the
greater the risk that an accident might destroy ali of us."
Sen. Mike Gravel, D-Aiaska,
said sending nuclear power
plants to Egypt and Israel was
"like exportin g tile black
plague."

.

PRICES GOOD
SATURDAY
ONLY! !

·:::

tra()rdinary questions" about

.

CA MPING ENJOYED
The Rev . Robert Kuhn,
chaplain at the Gallipolis SUite
Institute, and Mrs. Kuhn accompanied a group of young
patients on an overnight camp
at Forked Run Lake Wednesday.

.

_g,».,Jm~~Jr:~~~~~~~~~P::~;~~~g,~,~;,&amp;~,:m:f:~,~~r:d~~,~}N,,;,n,,,,,,,,,~,,, ,, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ~ ,, , , , , , ,:, . B
i:~

.Radio .statiQn manager jailed
WSANGELES (UP!)- The
general manager of radio
11.\!tlon KPFK was jaUed for
contempt of court Wednesday
because he refused to give the
FBI the original of a tape
recorded message from Patricia Hearst and two other
Symbiooeae Liberation Army
fugitives.
Will Lewis, 42, was led from
U.S. District Court in handcuffs at the end of a 5:).mi.nute
hearing called to give him a

! · ·

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

·

'

ureau presidents will discuss bad farm prices·

Co unty

"The hig h cos t of food is not

Fa rm

prcsit.lcnr s from Ullin' ::. 86 reltt!.cd lu the fmn.1 price of

~.:ounty Farm Bureaus will milk . meat ar1d eggs and most.

meet in Columbus tomorrOw to o,fthe re~il priCe is now gui ng
di sc uSs ways farm ers ca n to the middleman." h&lt;; said.
combat low farm prices, Ohio · ~And with low ment prit.:es
Farm Burea u Fede rati on staring us in the fa ce , we now

Executive Vice ,Presiden t C.
Willi a m Swank announ ced
today.
Ohio Farm Bureau
President Leonard Schnell will
moderate the one.Uay meeting
at Imperial Hou se North on
Morse Road . The session will
begin at 10 a. m. wi th a
disc uss ion of far~ income.
"Farmers had a good year
last year ,'' Swank said. "But
it's not fair to ask hog. ca ttle
and poultry farmers to accept
razor-thin profits or a loss in
the face of sky-rocketing inflation , and still expec t them to

pr ess ure

retai lers

in to

rcdue i n~

pri ees, c:hangi ng tcu
laws whiGh cncourH ge nonfa rmers to enter in nonprofi t

[(:lrmin~ fur tax- wr it.e-of.fs and
to purchase me(:tt and gra in for
ship~uent

oversea s to hunger·
stricken areas .

have the threat of disastr ous
decline s in grain prices:·
Swank
said
co un ty
presidents will determi ne wha t ·
ac tion the Farm Burea u wi ll
U!ke at local and sUi te levels to
combat low farm prices. This

action might include a call to
U!ke su rplus crop land out of
production in order to susta in a
stable, fair price a nd sl&lt;ltewide checks on supermarkets
to determi ne if unduly high
reU.il profits are being taken.
The presiderj.ls also may ca ll on

SATURDAY, JUNE 22

the fedend gover nm e nt to

CANDY STRIPE

farm ."

ERA dead, dead, dead

RUGS_

BATON ROUGE, La . fUPII
-

STRAW PORCH

A legislative committee

Wednesday apparentl y kiiled
a ny chance Loui siana wi,ll
ratify th e Equa l Rig hts
Amendment to the U.S. Con·
stitution. " It's dead , dead.
dead, dead , for good, across
the nation," predicted Rep.
Louise Johnson of Bernice. the
leader of the opponents of the
ERA . "That's the end of it."
The resolution was supported
by the Louisiana AFL-C IO, the
NAACP, the League of Women
Voters and a number of
women's organ izations. But
Mrs . Johnson and her forces
&lt;l'gued that the ammendmerit
would give the federal
gove rnm ent con tr ol over
family laws, disrupt marriages
and make women subj ec t to the
DAVID TYREE
Navy Seaman Recruit David draft.
L. Tyree, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Tyree, Middleport, has
HILLS TO MEET
graduated from recruit
The annual Hill reunion of
training at the Naval Training th e descendants of Albert and
Center, Great Lakes, Ill. He Eliza Hill will be held Sunday ,
will now report to a formal June 30, at the Portland Park .
school for specialty training or There will be a basket dinner at
to a ship or shore station for on- noon . Families and Friends are
the-job training.
invited.

RUGS

REG. 169.89

LINEOLEUM
RUGS 9Xl2 $588

.•
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Cookware ·

GLASSES

FLOOR

$239

COVERING

SQ. YARD

OLD FASHIONED WOOD

BACK

KITCHEN
CHAIRS

CHAIRS

MANY SPECIAL VALUES ON ADMIRAL,
FRIGEDAIRE, SPEED QUEEN, ·
HOOVER, FLEXSTEEL .-

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BAKER FU.RNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

RECORD-BREAKING SPECIALS - 1 DAY ONLY

IN MIDDLEPORT

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$

88

12 OZ. SIZE
8 PACK

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SATURDAY, JUNE 22
REG.
8-TRACK TAPES
EA. '3.981
16.00

KIDS
PICNIC
TABLE

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• Four lull plies of strong nylon cord
• Meets modern 78 series tire specifications
• Long wearing Poly-BD Tread Rubber

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MANY SURPRISES ON
OUR SIDEWALK

WITHOUT liDS

TABLE5-CHAIRS-LA_MPS

BIG

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AND
LAWN FURNITURE

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OTHER ODDS AND ENDS
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ONE
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8-13, F-15

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fur

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BOATING ACCESSORIES

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Odd??.?

MANY
OTHER
ITEMS
INSIDE
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Little ones love our low
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YARD DEOORATIVE FENCING
10 FT. WIRE

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Plus Fed. Excise Tax

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u mr , tmlf' 11nd lm\1\nN'. ,\utomfll t•· ur Jllfithlilol ·
ton rnnn,ml tnwk ~h~·ti rm .
llw. I.,TI f'll t fltf'('-mwnl !&lt;111:'·•1u.,.,. llhn nin..'tto.. l
pr11Cfllrrl :.r. ll'f\Qt . ( '(lnlt'l'i \loith oll·lllflll:&lt; lr t\ tinn

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tHJit' . .. irina am! moont ma h n•• · k~&gt;~ .Japan
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·An Items

Th e ,
di scuss the Ohio Farnf
Bureau,s
purchase
of
Columbus radio station WRF'D.
the Farm aurea u's rural crime
study and implementa tion of
State Issue One.

$150
SJ.50
Join the sun fun on
W.A. Water Skis!

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10- ~ Dally Senttnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jundl, 1974

'

chance to change his mind and
avoid jaU.
But Lewis did not change his
mind, citing constitutional
guarantees of freejlom of the
press for his stand. He was
found in contempt for refusing
to cooperate with a federal
grand jury investigation of the
SLA and other underground
terror Isis.
Lewis, who refused either to
turn over evidence or answer
questions before the grand

jury, could remain behind bars
until ·the grand jury's term
expires, which is scheduled for
September but could be extended by up to a year.
Promise Is Key
The key Issue in the dispute
is whether newsmen can
protect news sources If no
promise oJ confidentiality was
made to obtain infonnation.
The last communication
from Miss Hearst, and Emily
and William Harris, was a

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SIDEWALl&lt; SALE!

•

SATURDAY, JUNE 22.

MEN'S WORK SHOES
VALUES TO '19.99

.
.•' '

.

.,

13 Pairs Men's6 inch Workshoi
___ Sale$9.25
·
Neoprene Sole C- 0- E E widths-broken sizes
Sale 57.00
..
1 Pair Size 10 E width-Mens Chippewa
61nch Work shoe - Hypalon Sole
5 Pairs Ranger Brand Work Shoe..
___-__ ..____ Sale$7.50
Para Crepe Sole, cushion insole
·
2 Pair~ Onlv-Heavv Duty_____ _-- .-,:=r:---::-:cll'"":':::::-=--- Sale $6.25
But Light Weight-sole. cushion Insole. soft upper
Sale ss.oo
6 Pairs Mens Work- Para Crepe Sole.
and cushion Insole. D &amp; E E E widths
1 Pair size .10 Work Shoe with Para Crepe Sole: _ _ _ __
Sale 54~50
Sale $6.00
5 Pairs 6 inch Work Shoe, Rawhide,.,.........,---:--·- - - Cork sole· hooks and eyes
4 Pairs Black 6 inch Work Shoe•-,----:--:--------- Sale 56.00
Nylon cord sole
3 Pairs Black 6.inch Safety To•"-::---- -·- - - - - - Sale 59.00
I Pair Safety Toe Shoe by Douglas
. Sale 54.75
2 Pairs 6 inch Work Shoes
__ Sale 56.00
1 Pair 6 inch Work Shoe
. _ Slle 53.00
6 Pairs Safety 6 inch Work Slioe-M width
--- Sale $9.35
4 Pairs Mens Safety linch Boot.
·
Sale 512.50

·-------------------------------------to
Sale $5.00
Youths White Oxford. sizes 8 3 by Robin Hood._ ____
Sale 53.50
Youths White Strap, sizes IO'Iz to 3 - - -..,--...,---Youths Red-White-Blue Oxford by Robin Hood
Sizes 13 to 3 Sale $5.50
Sizes9to 12 Sale $5.00
Womens Brown Leather Sandals, 2 styles
. Sale 53.09
1 Pair Mens Sandals, size 61f1 - - -- - - - - - - - - -- 54.50
Child's Sandals 3'12 to 6 .
54.50
10 Pairs (Sizes 11-3), Youths Sandal
·-·- - - - - ---- $4.00
4 Pairs (Sizes 10-3) ·
$3.00

••

ALL SALES
FIN ALl

Sizes Are Broken
Shoes on Display-" Look At Sole"
For Available Sizes

taped messase left under a
mattress behind the radio
station June 7.· An anonymous
telephone caller told station
personnel It was there.
"There's no confidentiality

here. none whatsoever,'' said
U.S. District CQurt Judge A.
Andrew Hauk in sending Lewis
to jail. "There' s been no
promise, no agreement by
anyone at Pacifica to. keep
infonnation confidential."
(The nonprofit Pacifica
Foundation runs KPFK and its
sister station in San Francisco,
KPF A, which Is frequently
chosen · by underground or
radical groups with messages
to deliver.)
Lewis: Promise Implied
• Lewis argued there was an
implied promise of confidentiality, even to an unknown
source, and that if the station
surrendered t4e materials, it
"would then have the reputation in the community as a
station that automatically
cooperates with the FBI."

SAT. ONlY, JUNE 22

l

The station has provided the
FBI with copies of the tape,
which had been broadcast in its
entir~ty anyway. It balked at
handing over the original tape
itself, together with wrappers
or any other "paraphernalia"
found with it: The FBI wants to
examine the originals for
clues, such as fingerprints or
technical indicators of where
and when the tapes were made
or handled.
Lewis also refused to hand
over the original of a letter
from the "Weather Underground," taking responsi bility
for bombing the state attorney
general 's office here May 31 as
a gesture of support for the
SLA.

ON M&amp;R

'.r
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\.\.\.1.

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:~::

·

Nixon policy· opposed :,l.:,~.

:·:·

WASHINGTON. (UPI) President Nixiin's proposal to
provide Egypt and Israel with
nuclear power plants has run
into opposition in the Senate.
Sen. William Proxmire, DWis., Wednesday introdUced
legislation which would require
approval by the Senate and
House before the power plants
and fuel are sent to the two
Middle East nations.
A similar proposal was
defeated overwhelmingly in
the House Tuesday when Rep.

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Proxmire sa id "some

Mario Biaggi, D-N .Y., tried to
tie it to an appropriations bill.
Under present law . the
agreements would go into
effect automatically 60 days
alter they are submitted to
·Congress unless the Senate and
House voted to disapprove
them.
Un d e r
Proxm ir e's
legislation, which would be
retroactive to June I, the
agreements could not go into
eff.ect until the Senate and
House approved them.

'

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...
COMBINATION I-TRACK
.STEREO TAPE PLAYER

"

Presbyterians in
heated sessions

SAT.,
JUNE

WUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!) The procedural situation was
getting so complicated when
United Presbyterian Church
Moderator Robert C. Lamar
recognized 5-foot-1 Debbie
Hosey that even parliamentarian WiUiam P. Thompson,
sometimes called the "Wizard
o( Wichita" was having trouble
keeping things straight.
The Issue on the floor of the
!86th general assembly of the
2.9 million-member northernbased church was alleged
11
•
sexism 1 ' in the rites and
hymns of the Presbyterian
. worship book.
Emotions among the 725
delegates were running high.
In recognizing Miss Hosey, a
Washington, D.C. youth delegate, Lamar made what might
be a male assumption - that
she would speak against Ule
resolution keeping the hymn
book's present wording. But
· Miss Hosey, out of breath from
waving for recognition, electrified the convention hall by calling the proposed changes
''trivial."
"It's time to stop trilling with
words and begin dealing with
each other as people," she
pleaded to loud applause.

ages.
Critics said an example of a
sexist biblical passage would
be "If a man is in Christ ... "
A
committee
report
estimated it would .cost $110,000
to make such Changes after
which the hour and a half
debate
including
parliamentary maneuvers
bordering on throwing the
convention into chaos -began.
Some commissioners argued
passionately the changes were
not trivial but a top priority.
The Rev. Jim Angell, a delegate from San Grabriel, CaliJ.,
told the assembly he did not
"know any issue before our society that is more important
than the role of women. "
But Rev. William Blair, of
Birmingham, Ala., who moved
that the committee be dismissed without changing the worship book, touched the nerve of
a decisive majority of the delegates when he said the proposed changes would be too expensive by requiring new
printings .of the service book
and hymnal. •
"Let's put our money where
it will heal broken spirits and
broken lives," he said.
The move apparently saves
Women, and money, were such favorite Presbyterian
the key issues that defeated the hymns as "This is My Fathers
year-old effort to alter the lan- World" and "Once to Every
guage of the service book by Man and Nation."
changing more than 250 pass-

'

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Combinatiol'l 8 ·1fack ste reo tape plaver and
portabl e phonogr ap h m hig h impact
polystvrenc cabil'le l

••"

'·t

•
,,'•

RADIOS
WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.

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k

h

AMBER

IN HOSPITAL
MASON, W. Va . - Chmles
(Chuck ) Gr imm, originally of
Mason, W. Va.. underwent
surgery on Tuesday at the
Me th od is t
Hospita l
in
Rochester, Minn ., (55901) and
is rep.orted to be recovering
satisfacto rily . His room
number is 510A. Grimm is the
son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Warner , Pomeroy,
and is the husband of the
former Anna Lee W ar ne~. The
Grimms resiqe in Naples, Fla .

ALSO
AM • CLOCK • PORTABLE

'

•'·,

5 Sets Only!

SERVICE SLATED
There wili be a weekend
service a t Red Brush with
Denver Hili, Foster, W. Va ..
preaching, begi nning at 7:30
p.m. Saturday. Sunday worship services are a t 10 a.m. and
6 p.m. Everyone is welcome.

22

•'

f'X-

the agreements have not been
answered. "With such ruomentous issues as yet unresolved ,
th e Congress cannot stand by
and allow this proposed agreement ... or any future
agreements to go into effect
without an expression of
support or denial," he said.
Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y .,
said he would work against any
agreemen t dealing with
nuclear materials for Egypt
and Israel unless Congress
approves. "My answer to the
U.S.-Egyptian atomic power
' deal is wariness," he dec lared.
Reservations were voiced by
Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich.,
who said that the more nuclear
power plants the United Stales
provides other countries, "the
greater the risk that an accident might destroy ali of us."
Sen. Mike Gravel, D-Aiaska,
said sending nuclear power
plants to Egypt and Israel was
"like exportin g tile black
plague."

.

PRICES GOOD
SATURDAY
ONLY! !

·:::

tra()rdinary questions" about

.

CA MPING ENJOYED
The Rev . Robert Kuhn,
chaplain at the Gallipolis SUite
Institute, and Mrs. Kuhn accompanied a group of young
patients on an overnight camp
at Forked Run Lake Wednesday.

.

_g,».,Jm~~Jr:~~~~~~~~~P::~;~~~g,~,~;,&amp;~,:m:f:~,~~r:d~~,~}N,,;,n,,,,,,,,,~,,, ,, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ~ ,, , , , , , ,:, . B
i:~

.Radio .statiQn manager jailed
WSANGELES (UP!)- The
general manager of radio
11.\!tlon KPFK was jaUed for
contempt of court Wednesday
because he refused to give the
FBI the original of a tape
recorded message from Patricia Hearst and two other
Symbiooeae Liberation Army
fugitives.
Will Lewis, 42, was led from
U.S. District Court in handcuffs at the end of a 5:).mi.nute
hearing called to give him a

! · ·

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

·

'

ureau presidents will discuss bad farm prices·

Co unty

"The hig h cos t of food is not

Fa rm

prcsit.lcnr s from Ullin' ::. 86 reltt!.cd lu the fmn.1 price of

~.:ounty Farm Bureaus will milk . meat ar1d eggs and most.

meet in Columbus tomorrOw to o,fthe re~il priCe is now gui ng
di sc uSs ways farm ers ca n to the middleman." h&lt;; said.
combat low farm prices, Ohio · ~And with low ment prit.:es
Farm Burea u Fede rati on staring us in the fa ce , we now

Executive Vice ,Presiden t C.
Willi a m Swank announ ced
today.
Ohio Farm Bureau
President Leonard Schnell will
moderate the one.Uay meeting
at Imperial Hou se North on
Morse Road . The session will
begin at 10 a. m. wi th a
disc uss ion of far~ income.
"Farmers had a good year
last year ,'' Swank said. "But
it's not fair to ask hog. ca ttle
and poultry farmers to accept
razor-thin profits or a loss in
the face of sky-rocketing inflation , and still expec t them to

pr ess ure

retai lers

in to

rcdue i n~

pri ees, c:hangi ng tcu
laws whiGh cncourH ge nonfa rmers to enter in nonprofi t

[(:lrmin~ fur tax- wr it.e-of.fs and
to purchase me(:tt and gra in for
ship~uent

oversea s to hunger·
stricken areas .

have the threat of disastr ous
decline s in grain prices:·
Swank
said
co un ty
presidents will determi ne wha t ·
ac tion the Farm Burea u wi ll
U!ke at local and sUi te levels to
combat low farm prices. This

action might include a call to
U!ke su rplus crop land out of
production in order to susta in a
stable, fair price a nd sl&lt;ltewide checks on supermarkets
to determi ne if unduly high
reU.il profits are being taken.
The presiderj.ls also may ca ll on

SATURDAY, JUNE 22

the fedend gover nm e nt to

CANDY STRIPE

farm ."

ERA dead, dead, dead

RUGS_

BATON ROUGE, La . fUPII
-

STRAW PORCH

A legislative committee

Wednesday apparentl y kiiled
a ny chance Loui siana wi,ll
ratify th e Equa l Rig hts
Amendment to the U.S. Con·
stitution. " It's dead , dead.
dead, dead , for good, across
the nation," predicted Rep.
Louise Johnson of Bernice. the
leader of the opponents of the
ERA . "That's the end of it."
The resolution was supported
by the Louisiana AFL-C IO, the
NAACP, the League of Women
Voters and a number of
women's organ izations. But
Mrs . Johnson and her forces
&lt;l'gued that the ammendmerit
would give the federal
gove rnm ent con tr ol over
family laws, disrupt marriages
and make women subj ec t to the
DAVID TYREE
Navy Seaman Recruit David draft.
L. Tyree, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Tyree, Middleport, has
HILLS TO MEET
graduated from recruit
The annual Hill reunion of
training at the Naval Training th e descendants of Albert and
Center, Great Lakes, Ill. He Eliza Hill will be held Sunday ,
will now report to a formal June 30, at the Portland Park .
school for specialty training or There will be a basket dinner at
to a ship or shore station for on- noon . Families and Friends are
the-job training.
invited.

RUGS

REG. 169.89

LINEOLEUM
RUGS 9Xl2 $588

.•
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Cookware ·

GLASSES

FLOOR

$239

COVERING

SQ. YARD

OLD FASHIONED WOOD

BACK

KITCHEN
CHAIRS

CHAIRS

MANY SPECIAL VALUES ON ADMIRAL,
FRIGEDAIRE, SPEED QUEEN, ·
HOOVER, FLEXSTEEL .-

-'

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BAKER FU.RNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

RECORD-BREAKING SPECIALS - 1 DAY ONLY

IN MIDDLEPORT

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SETS

$

88

12 OZ. SIZE
8 PACK

•••
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44¢

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ONLY

EACH

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OUR FINEST NON-BEL TEO
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PICTURES

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WARRANTY

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24"X48"

ART

SATURDAY, JUNE 22
REG.
8-TRACK TAPES
EA. '3.981
16.00

KIDS
PICNIC
TABLE

""

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COOl&lt; IE
JARS

• Four lull plies of strong nylon cord
• Meets modern 78 series tire specifications
• Long wearing Poly-BD Tread Rubber

'
Truetone :Micro 8 Track Stereo Tape Player
• With two surface -mount
3x5 Yl in. speakers

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• Features automatic or

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MANY SURPRISES ON
OUR SIDEWALK

WITHOUT liDS

TABLE5-CHAIRS-LA_MPS

BIG

'10

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AND
LAWN FURNITURE

-TABLE,. Many S,u rprisesl Come
and Seel

OTHER ODDS AND ENDS
'
FROM A FURNITURE STORE

-

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y

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REG.
1
194.95
ONE
ONLY

8-13, F-15

•15

fur

\·tol

BOATING ACCESSORIES

1 ONLY

~- ~fl
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Odd??.?

MANY
OTHER
ITEMS
INSIDE
'
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Little ones love our low
priced "Fun Land!"

YARD DEOORATIVE FENCING
10 FT. WIRE

30 IN. PLASTIC

69e

'29.95

Truetone FM/ A}vi/FM Stereo Table Radio

REGULAR
$205.95
NOW

SPORT
SHIRTS
NOW •1.19

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Plus Fed. Excise Tax

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u mr , tmlf' 11nd lm\1\nN'. ,\utomfll t•· ur Jllfithlilol ·
ton rnnn,ml tnwk ~h~·ti rm .
llw. I.,TI f'll t fltf'('-mwnl !&lt;111:'·•1u.,.,. llhn nin..'tto.. l
pr11Cfllrrl :.r. ll'f\Qt . ( '(lnlt'l'i \loith oll·lllflll:&lt; lr t\ tinn

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TEETER TOTTER

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HOLLAWAY
BED
SUMMER

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WITH 90 DAY WARRANTY

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Thi ~ Ttllt'lllllt' ·; \hr rn )ol Trao·l; 'l'11V1' Pla .\ 'o·r

tHJit' . .. irina am! moont ma h n•• · k~&gt;~ .Japan
4DCl'301- I'J \ ' J"""h''" or n....,.tiw· f!!TI"II'III , , .t59 'fl

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1 DAY-SATURDAY, JUNE 22

At~

$6!1
$}0!1

4X6

"••

*

·An Items

Th e ,
di scuss the Ohio Farnf
Bureau,s
purchase
of
Columbus radio station WRF'D.
the Farm aurea u's rural crime
study and implementa tion of
State Issue One.

$150
SJ.50
Join the sun fun on
W.A. Water Skis!

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I,.

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12- The D:nly Sent mel , Mtddlcpoii -Pcn

'I

oy. 0 .. nnu &gt;dd). June zt•. 1974

Drug abuse

Ervin's Watergate probers to remain neutral; not two others
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Senate Watergate committee
will issue tis report wtthout
reachmg any conclusiOns about
Prestdent Ntxon's ro le m
Wategate, but two other committees are trymg to answer
that and other puzzlmg questions.
The House Judtca ry Committee looked Wednesday into
NIXon's role m the fll"ing of
former Special Prosecutor Ar·
clubald Cox and the Senate

-

J udtcary Comm tttec heard
from Asststa nt Att orney
General Henry E. Petersen tn
an effort to fmd out why the
gove rnment stopped tis probe
of the Watergate brea k-i n
wtthout mvesttgatmg to see tf
anyone higher m the admtrustratton was Implicated
Pe tersen; wlio headed the
ongrnal Watergate mveshgatton, defended tt and m a
heated exchange wtth commtl·
tee member Sen Sam J Er.vin,

D-N C , satd the ongmal threeman prosecution team was
"snook..-ed" by li es told by the
seven n en convicted of brea kmg tl'l.o th e Watergate
butldmr
The foonate Jud tcary Committee 1S checkmg tnto the
matter as part ot conftrlnation
hean ngs on the nomination of
Earl J. Stlbert to be U S. attorney for the Dtstnct of
Columbta. Silbert headed the
on grnal Watergate probe unttl

SATURDAY, JUNE 22
"JUST INSIDE THE DOOR"

PRELL
SHAMPOO

BATH SIZE

PALMOLIVE
SOAP
35'

REG. 11.29

98~

PARTY
MINTS

TRASH
BAGS

SOFTIQUE

BATH OIL
BEADS
17

BOffiE OF 90

REG. 12.15

23~

REG.

oz.

16

8's

oz.

REG.

REG.

98'

59'

- --

70Z.

41~

REG.

59'

ION A

ltzer

LISTERINE
MOUTHWASH

ELECTRIC
MIXER

25's
REG. 79~

14 oz.
REG. 11.39.

REG. 10.00
1

'6'8

a year ago
Rteha rdson Pressured

"Well llcfore" A member of
the House unpeachmenl panel
disc losed the commtltee had
recetved an afhdavtt from
former Attorney General Elliot
1. Richardson mdicating Ntxon
wanted Cox removed "well
before" Cox actually was fired
Oct. 20, 1973
Rtchardson, who res1gned
rather than hre Cox in what
became known as the "Saturday Ntght massacre," was
reported to have satd White
House chief of staff Alexander
Hatg demanded that he mterfere m Cox's mvestigatwn as
early as July 3, 1973.
Excerpts of the afftdavtt
were published m a front-page
story in Wednesday 's edtltons
of the Boston Globe.
"In late September or early
October of 1973, I met with the
Prestdent in regard to the (exVtce Prestdent Sptro ) Agnew
matter After we had finished
our dts cussion about Mr .
Agnew and we were walkmg
toward the door , the President
satd msubstance, 'Now that we
have dtsposed orihatinatter.
we can go ahead and get rtd of
Cox.' There was nothmg more

sa td ," the Globe quot ed
Richardson as saymg .
Spe c ta l
pr e side ntial
assistant Patrtck J.· Buchannan
jomed other admmistralton spokesmen in
denouncing news leaks from
th e House comm1ttee . He
termed the leaks "a systematic
campatgn to tear down the
reputation of the President,"
and urged Judtcary Committee
leaders to question staff members under oath and fll"e those
responsible.
However, Nixon's ch1ef Wa·
tergate lawyer, James D. St.
Clair, sa td he thought Judicary
Commtttee Chairman Peter J
Rodmo , D-N .J., was doing all
he could to halt the leaks.
"From my vantage pomt, I
disagree," said St. Clair responding to criticism of the
comm1ttee .
In Other Watergate-related
developments :
--Spectal Prosecutor Leon
Jawo rski defended
the
relatively light sentences
severa l persons, including
former Attorney General
Richard G Klemdienst,
recetved after plea bargaining
with prosecutors.
Post Cited In Afflda vlt

--

-Se n. Barry Goldwater, RAriz., inserted a 38-page document into the Congr, ssional
Record citing the WasliingtDn
Post for publishing five top
secret documents leaked by
government officials in VIOla·
tion of national securtty laws.
- The Senate Foreign Rela·
tions Committee voted to open
formal hearings into Secretary
of SUite Henry A. Kissinger's
role in the 1969-70 wire!Bpping
of 13 of his subordinates and
lour newsmen.
- U.S. District Court Judge
John Lewis Smith Jr. refUsed a
motion by former Kissinger
aide Morton Halperin to
release secret FBI documenl:i
relating to the so-called
unational sec\U'ity wiretaps."
- Richardson told a special
Senate subcommittee on privacy and government data
systems that the kind of
electronic eavesdropping used
by Nixon ' to record White
House conversations should be
Illegal.
-Senate Democratic leader
Mike Mansfield said he was
disturbed and depressed over
leaks and delays surrounding
the House Judicary Committee's impeachment inquiry .

CINCINNATI - The Delta
Queen wtll extend tis 1974
schedul e through December,
with etg ht overm ght cruises
and five lunch and fiv e dmner
crutses ongma hng from the
Port of New Orleans m the
French Quarter
The deciston to extend the
1974crutses lo Jan I, 1975, was
based on the populanty of the
De ita Queen's expanded, early season sc hedul e on the lower
MtSSlSSippl
The Delta Queen origmated
12 crutses out of New Orleans
in the spnng, a nd the
November sc hedule wtll In clude etght cru1ses
December cruises out of
New Orleans are. New Orleans
to Na tchez , leav mg New
Orleans at 9 p m Sunday, Dec
I, and returmng at 9 a.m
Fnday, Dec. 6; New Orleans
Weekend, leaving New Orleans
at 6 p m Frtday, Dec 6, and
returnmg at 2 p.m., Sunday,
Dec 8; New Orleans to Nat-

chez, leaving New Orleans at 9
p m. Sunday, Dec . 8, and
returnmg at 9 a.m., Friday,
Dec 13 ; New Orleans
weekend, leaving New Orleans
at 6 p m Fnday, Dec. 13, and
re turning at 2 p.m. Sunday,
Dec . 15 ; New Orleans to
Natchez ~~ christmas Cruise ",
leaving New Orleans at 6 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 22, and returning
at 9 a.m. Friday, Dec. 27; New
Orleans weekend, leavmg New
Orleans at 6 p m. Friday, Dec.
27, and returning at 2 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 29; New Orleans
"New Year's", leaving New
Orleans at 9p.m., Sunday, Dec.
29, and returnmg at 5 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan I, 1975.
The December cruises out of
New Orle11_ns will include shore
stops and tours of the elegant
and histon e ante·bellum
homes and plantations of the
Ole South
The December crwses also
will feature gala holiday
parties aboard the Delta Queen

Values To 57.00

'

99~

LADIES TANK TOPS &amp;BLOUSES
Misses

FLARE LEG DENIM JEANS

Sale'3

Reg . $7.95

33

Values To SJ.50

JAMAICAS

FEW PAIR RECYa.ED JEANS

Sale •1 00

Reg . $5.99

ASK TOWED
Gregory Mack Stewart, 19,
Middleport, and Dmah Marie
Erlewme, 18, Dexter ; Sammie
Wtlliam Brown , 20, MinerSVIlle, and Loretta Ann
Spence r, 17, Rt. 3, Pomeroy ,
and Harry Richard Otler, 50,
Pomeroy , and Elizabetl\ Oiler,
50, Middleport.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Thomas
Willtams, Pt. Pleasant ; Clyde
Sarye, Racine; Wilma Gibbeaut, Pt. Pleasant.
DISCHARGES Ruth
Mulford, Jerry Owens, Goldie
Lawson , George Daniels,
Mildred Moorehead, Allegra
Will.

\

BOYS 13* OZ. WRANGLER JEANS

BEAUTIFUL SELECTION

}fioral f:antas'tes

ONE LOT QULDREN'S SHOES

BOOKS
JEWELRY
GREAT Gin BUYS

SATURDAY

Sale
•2"/'3"
Reg . $7.95
MEN'S &amp; BOYS' BICYa.E JACKETS
Sale '500
LADIES PANTY HOSE
2 pair '100
by Lee Trevino
Wrangler
MEN'S DRESS &amp;GOlf SLACKS
1J3 OFF
HOODED RAIN JACKETS

'·

OPEN: FRIDA¥ TIL 8

ARRANGEMENTS

SUMMER
PAJAMAS

OFF

.

' '

TO

~00

0.

SATURDAY
SIDEWALK
SALE

JUNE
22

ASSORTED
.
FOLIAGE PLANTS

50%0FF

00

$

1 GROUP

5
1
0
SANDALS ..........~.~~:.~:~~..~~.~:~~ .........!3°
MEN'S SHOES .................. .

By Dale Rothgeb Jr.
Drug abuse m Gallia County and tis related problems, an
explanation of probation and the difference between felony and
misdemeanor charges were toptcs explored Wednesday durmg a
special meettng of the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce
Guests serving as panelist for the discussiOn were
Prosecuting Attorney Gene Wetherholt; Ass1stant Pt osecutor
Bill Eaches; MuniCipal Court Judge Robert S Betz ; Common
Pleas Court Judge Ronald R. Calhoun, Juventle and Probate
Judge R Wtlllam Jenkins and Gallipolis Ctty Soiicttor Dean
Evans.
Charles Bosttc, chamber president, opened the discusston
w1th the questions ·
What can the chamber do to help you (the cou rts )'
What can you do to help us wtth the problem'
What constitutes reducing cer!Bm sente nces'
Eachus satd that certain cases are reduced or suspended due
to the Attorney General's rulmg that ftrst time offenders not be
given the Hmaxirnum" penalty.
Others are reduced because of mforma t10n gtven to our
department.
" I know tt looks bad to read tt in 'the paper , but there are
some cases in whtch information cannot be released to the news
media and general public," Eachus concluded.
Municipal Court Judge Robert S. Betz satd his cou rt ts getting a lot of adverse public reactton because of the suspension of
sentences and fmes. Said the JUdge "I urge those people and you
interested chamber dtrectors to come to my court and see what
goes on mstead of listenmg to rumors and hearsay.
"Charges have been reduced sometunes because the
defendants have agreed to cooperate wtth the prosecutor's off tce
m ob!Binmg evidence for convictions of other persons charged
with sirmlar crunes. In the last two months we have had some
drug cases in which all defendants received the maxtmum
peanlty of $1,000 and a stx months jail term I have suspended
fines and jail sentences and placed individuals on probatton, of
which the tenns are very stnct.
"We're not interested in making felons out of the people,"
Betz emphasized "We feel several persons can be rehat&gt;bilitated. We JUSt don't take probation lightly m my court "
Judge Betz used several examples fnom the latest list of
persons charged w1th possession of manjuana showmg that the
defendants came from all walks of life He also read a court
finding involvmg a young man who VIolated the court's
pi'obalton. The man was brought back to court and hts jail term
was reinstated.
Judge Betz contmued: ''Our problem ts not wtth the user but
w1th the pusher. The enforcement people are not at liberty to tell
you what they are doing about the pusher We're domg everytmg
we can do for the community. I'll put my record m my coUt·t up
against all other courts 111 the state"
In closing, Betz urged all busmessmen and mterested persons to come to court and see for themselves how the court
operates. "We're all concerned and are workmg hard on th e
problem," he satd.
Common Pleas Court Judge Ronald R. Calhoun observed
that he has had only two drug cases come to hts court m five
years. Judge Calhoun srud, however :
"Except in crunes of VIolence, first tune off enders should be
placed on probation ." He explained what happens when a perso n
is conVIcted of a felony. It results m many n ghts bemg taken
away from an individual , Calhoun satd.
·
Juvenile Court Judge R. William Jenkms also noted that he
had not had "very many" drug cases m hts court. He emphas1zed
that the county and city needs more law enforcement officers
"Most of our problems in Juvemle Court comes from people m
broken homes. We need to talk to parents, teachers and school
officials and rehabilitate the parents," Jenkins mam!Bmed
Pro~cutlng Attorney Wetherholt had a simtlar pomt of vtew.
"We could use more law enforcement officers in the county and
city. If we catch the drug pushers we wtll burn them, but you
must caleb them ftrst," he said.
Bostic reminded all interested persons to attend a community meeting Thursday, June 27 at 7:30 p m at Ga llla
Academy High School.
.
John WtnOwtchi, Narcotics Dtvtston, Bureau of Cn mmal
Investigation , Columbus, will be the prmcipal speaker.
Purpose of the meetmg w11l be to educa te the people on drug
abuse problems and get tdeas on what ca n be do ne to help solve
it.

ODD LOT
40~
SUMMER SHOES...................
0 OFF

·•3oo ro •soo
SEE THEM ALL AT THE-·

MANY TERRIFIC
FABRIC &amp;
NOTIONS
SAVINGS

50~

DENIM CLOGS

'5 00 ANo•7oo

1

heritage house

JUNE 22
NEXT DOOR TO
OUR SHOP

•

•

SAVE \VITH
THESE
SPECIAL
'
PRICES

..
./

'

I

FOOTWEAR
sa mpl es

broken s•zes

Save

.'

SP ECIAL GROUP LADIES'
POLYESTER DOUBl. EI&lt;NII

FLARE SLACKS
Sa le group of ~ lu cll 05 bett er 11ol vC'~ I• r
doub lek n1f Ha re leg -; t yh; &lt;&gt; ld cl-,•, 111
assorted fa sh1on sol1d colo r ':. M1d tc~n cr
pattern s Hun y Ia St illier s

1n

Spec •al sale group of lad•es' famou s
brand spnng and summer spor tswear

men s
women's
and
chil d ren s
foo tw ea r
Choose from bo t h d ress a nd

~'iiij~ casual s t yles
St• ftler 's

- ST IFFL E R'S SIDEWALK SALt: -

SPORTSWEAR

Close ou t group ot odd lots,

Shop ear ly f or best se lecho n from th1s

clea rance group Si dewa lk sa le spec1al

at

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE
- STIFFLE R'S SID EWALK SAL ELADIES' TOWN AND COUNTRY
NYLO N STRETCH

,•

PANTY HOSE

LADIES' NYLON
JAMAICA

SANDALS

1 One S1dewal k Sa le lor of

Lad1es' be tt er stretch
ny lon doublekn 1t Jama1 ca
sho rt s 1n assor ted ~ soli d
colors and wh 1te

lt al1an sty l e summe r
sanda ls 1n assor ted tolor s
and styles

•'

- SID EWAL K SAL EOne Group Ladt es'
BELTE D PANT

COATS

- SIDE WALK SALELa dtes' Better
ALL WEATHER

- STIFFLER' S SIDEWALK SALESpecta I Clearance Group
LADIES' DRESS&amp; CASUAL

COATS

SPRING COATS

S1dewa lk sa le group of
lad1 es' better all wea ther
coats 1n assorted spr rng
colors

One spec ral sale group of
lad1es' belted pant coa ls
Save now at St iffler 's

PAIR

- SIDEWALK SALEOne Lot Ladies'
ITALIAN STYLE

SHORTS

Lad1 es' f1rsl qua l1f y st r etch nylon panty hose
One s1ze f its all Seuson' s best shades
S d0wa lk Sa le Spec1a l 1

Spec 1a l clea r ance group fo r th1s s1dewa lk sa le
of lad tes' dress and cas ual coats m some of
the latest sty les

WASTE
36 Quar t pla st 1c waste ba ske ts
or \l/4 bushel s1ze plastic
laundry baskets Unbreakab le
plasttcs 1n asso rted color s

- SIDEWALK SAL E- ·::: - SIDEWALK SAL EOne Lot L~d 1cs'
SPECIAL GROUP
FASHION SUN
GOTHAM PLAST IC

GLASSES

DISH PANS

Got h a m
rect a n gu l ar
pl as t tc d1sh pan s rn
assor ted solid colors A
super val ue

Su le asso rtment of l ash1 fln
su n gl asses for the ladr C&gt;s 1
B1g ~1 % or t mr.nt of styl es

..

.•

,•

- Sttffler 's Sidewalk SaleTempo 100 Pet. Acryli c
MACHINE WASHABLE

KNITTING YARN

Tempo
acry l 1c
mach 1ne
was hable kn1tt1ng ya r n Worsted
we 1ght 1 Mothproof and non
allerg 1c Assorted colors

:··

·:·

'•.

- SIDEWA LK SAL Ellx l B ASSORTED
BROA DLOOM

:1:

67~ElN
·:

•'

- SID EWALK SALECANVAS TOP
FOLDING CAMP

- SIDEWALK SALE- .:::
SOLID COLOR
VINYL SHOE

- SIDEWALK SALEMill Assortment
LOOP and SHAG

PHOTOALBUMS
Spec1al group of magneh c styl e ph oto
albums at a low , low pr1 cc L1mlfcd
quant1ty One to a cus tomer

$1
- STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALESPECIAL GROUP
POLISHED ALUMINUM

COOKWARE
t1

Spec tal Sidewal k sa le assor tment
of
n am e bra nd
po l 1shed
alumtnu m cookwa r e Ta k e yovr
choice .

- SIDEWALK SAL E- ::
MARVEL RUBB ER
DOOR OR
·:

Spec ial Sal e Group Sturdy
Nevco Hardwood Expando

- SIDEWALK SALES PC. CERAMIC

COFFEE TREE

MUG SETS

GARMENT RACKS

Spec1al group of f1 ve piece
ceram 1c coffee t ree mug
se ts Assor ted styles

as~

- ST IFFLER' S SIDEWALK SALEFANCY PEPPERELL
TWIN &amp; FULL SIZE

NO-IRON
SHEETS
'

D1sconfmued patterns I Famous Pepperell
brand tw1n and rull stze fancy sheets

TWIN
2
SIZES ........ FOR

$500

FULL
2
SIZES. ........ FOR

$600

PILLOW
2
CAS ES ...... ,. P ~ .

$30Q

- SIDEWALK SALEONE LOT-FANCY
CERAMIC BASE

BOUDOIR
LAMPS

Sale asso rtm ent of cera mic
base bou do i r lamp s ln
assor ted fash1on designs
w 1th matchtng shades
Save at St ttfl er's

&gt; I

- SIDEWALK SALESPECIAL GROUP
'l2"x60 Yd. MASK lNG

TAPE
Spec 1al Sidewa lk sa le lot or
one mch by 60 ya rds q ua l 1t y
m aski ng tape

'

- SIDEWALK SALEINSULATED
STYRENE PICNIC
JUGS OR ICE

CHESTS
Sidewa lk Sale ~roup ol
famous Gotha m j 1nsu lated
st y r ene p 1cn ic 1ugs or
st y r ene ice chests. Gr eat
for su mmer of sun and fun .

OOEACH
','

- SIDEWALK SALEDENIM or DAISY
TV LAPOR

BED TRAYS

UTILITY MATS

EntOY fl1rl 1ne ser v1ng
com fort at home Oil iS Y or
dc n1m pattern s
St.11n
r es1s tant enam el f1 rush

l 9x24 mch srze Mar ve l
br and fancy ut d1ty or bath
mat s 1n assor ted co lor s and
patt er ns

•,

;.

- STiFF LER' S SID EWALK SALE-

,•

:·.

:·

S1dewa l k sa le group of
ca nvas top fo ldrng camp
stool Gr ea t for home or
camp1ng

Spec1a l group of walnut
fln1 shed fold 1ng hardw ood
ex pando garment rack s Save
at Sti ff ler 's dunng t he M1d
dleport Srd ewa lk Sales event

Speci al Group Beauttful Fa ncy
MA GNETIC STYLE

Deco r ator r ugs 1n a b1g
speCia l assort ment of loop
and shag rn soli d col or s and
fancy pattern s

Spec1a l sale gr oup of sol1d
color viny l shoe to te bag s 10
assorted so l 1d colors

..

·.

- STIF F LER' S SID EWALK SALE-

AREA RUGS

TOTE BAGS

STOOLS

RUG BLOCKS

''
1

~

- STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALESPECIAL SALE GROUP
BOBBI E BROOKS &amp; RUSS TOGS

- STI FF LE R'S SIDEWALK SALEOd d Lots - Broken Sizes - Sa mples
ME N'S WOM E N'S and CHILDREN 's

---------------··"'
·
1
STARTING SATURD AY ,

REG. '8.99 TO '9.99

LATIGO
PURSES
1f2 PRICE

MAN Y OTHER ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO LIST- SAVE NOW!

SIDEWALK
AND
REMODELING
SALE

I ·'

18' x77 ' '&gt; 17('

SATURDAY ONLY
JUNE 22
SAVE FOR YOURSELF AT STIFFLER'S IN MIDDLEPORT

block s made from heavy
qu a lify broa dl oofTI car
pet1ng

-,

'· Your Thom MeAn S,tc»re

I

h1gh gr~tde broudl oom carpc lmg

ONE DAY
ONLr! •

13xl8 mch assor ted rug

GROUP MEN AND WOMEN'S

ONLY

NOVELTIES

•

IT'S FUN TO
SAVE!

DENIM PURSES

N . 2nd
I

$}00

THE KIDDIE SHOPP£·

lf2 PRICE

DLEY~SFLO
]J

MANY SUMMER
&amp; WINTER
VAWES
TO $25.00

INFANT THRU SIZE 14
BOYS &amp; GIRLS

SADDLE OXFORDS

&amp;

60" WIDE POLY-KNIT FABRICS

NE 22

20% OFF

1 GROUP

ARTIACIAL

Mens &amp; Boys

Spec •al mill a~so rtmcnt ot c&lt;Jrpet mat 5 mndc ot

Gallia aired

NOVELTIES

SHOE SHINE KITS

ONE LOT WOMEN'S SHOES

RUG MATS

Spec 1al sale group of 1, 2 to 1 yard
leng th p1ece goods remnants m
assorted co lor s and patterns

I

MASON, W Va - Har.pld V
Sch,.ar tz, 61, Maso n, dted
Wedn esday eve mng at hts
restdence. He was an elec-

BARGAINS ON THE SIDEWALK
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY,
YOU 1 LL LOVE
JUNE 21-22
THIS SALEI
MEN'S WORK PANTS One Lot
Sizes 29-JO-Jl '1 99

- STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALESPEC IAL MILL ASSORTMEN TS
.QUALITY BROADLOOM

SATURDAy JUNE 22

Harold Schwartz died on Wednesday
Manlyn Strothers, Parkersburg; one grandson, Todd;
tllree brothers, Henry White
Sulphur Spnngs ; Mike, Mason,
and Earl, 'Mtaml, Fla. and two
trician
ststers,
Mrs V~rgm1a GrinFuneral servtces wtll be
stead
and
Mrs . Barbara Meconducted Saturday at I 30 p
Dame!,
both
of Mason
m at the Foglesong Funeral
Home here. The Rev. Clarence
McCloud w1ll offlctate and
bunal wtll follow m the Miles COLLECTING PENNIES
BANGKOK (UP!) - AmeriCemetery m Rutland. Frtends
will be received at the funeral can airmen on a U.S. Air Force
home from 2 to 4p. m. and 7 to 9 Base in central Thailand have
p. m. Fn day.
collected 45,000 pe!Ulies In a
Mr. Schwartz was born m drive to recll"culate the scarce
Hot Springs, Va. Sept 5, 1912, coms, U.S. military auiborities
son of Rhm ey a nd Nellie said today.
The drive was held at Takhli
Krautter Schwartz and was a
Roual
Thai Air Force Base, 100
member of the Mason U.M
miles north of Bangkok. U.S.
Church.
Survtvors mclude hts w1fe, currency is used on the six air
Luctlle; one daughter, Mrs bases maintained by the
Umted States In Thailand.

REMNANTS

problems in

Queen schedules last cruises
plus the traditional Delta
Queen fare of the Bon Voyage
Party,
Calliope mustc,
Dixieland, dancmg and the
Captain's Champagne Dmner.
In addition, the Dei!B Queen
is offermg luncheon cruises
departing New Orleans at II
a.m. and returning at 2 p.m.
daily, Dec . 16-20. Luncheon
cr¥ises are priced at $15 per
person.
Dinner cruises depart New
Orleans at 7 p.m. and return at
10 p.m. dally, Dec. 15-19.
Dinner crwses are priced at
$20 per person,
The New Orleans lunch and
dinner cruises also will Include
the happy river sounds of the
Delta Queen calliope and
music by the Riverboat
Ramblers.
For reservations and additional mformahon, contact
your travel agent or the
Reservations Department, The
Delta Queen Steamboat Co.,
322 E. 4th St., Cincinnati, Ohio
45202, Phone : (513) 621-1445.

- STIF F LER'S SID EWALK SALESP ECIAL SALE GROUP
'h to 1 YARD PIECE GOOD S

,•,

'•'

'•'

ST IFFL ER'S SIDEWALK SALESP ECIA L MI LL ASSORTMEN T
LOO P AN D CHENILL E

MILL END RUGS
Spec1al mill assortment of
chenille and loop mil l end rug s
rn assorted co lors, patterm
and sty les Sfl tf ler's S•dewalk
Sa le Va lue 1

25~ACH

- STIFFLER'S SI DEWALK SALESPECIAL GROUP 7 PIECE
COLORED ALUM INUM

COOKWARE SETS
Seve n p1 ece enameled
household aluminum cook
ware s7.ts made of Nevco
Colo r s· flame and avocado.
Sho p
Stiffler' s
t h is
Satu rday
dunng
the
S1 dewalk Sale

�'
•
13- The Dally Sent mel, Mtddlepo t t-l'omct OJ. 0 , I htu sdll)
12- The D:nly Sent mel , Mtddlcpoii -Pcn

'I

oy. 0 .. nnu &gt;dd). June zt•. 1974

Drug abuse

Ervin's Watergate probers to remain neutral; not two others
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
Senate Watergate committee
will issue tis report wtthout
reachmg any conclusiOns about
Prestdent Ntxon's ro le m
Wategate, but two other committees are trymg to answer
that and other puzzlmg questions.
The House Judtca ry Committee looked Wednesday into
NIXon's role m the fll"ing of
former Special Prosecutor Ar·
clubald Cox and the Senate

-

J udtcary Comm tttec heard
from Asststa nt Att orney
General Henry E. Petersen tn
an effort to fmd out why the
gove rnment stopped tis probe
of the Watergate brea k-i n
wtthout mvesttgatmg to see tf
anyone higher m the admtrustratton was Implicated
Pe tersen; wlio headed the
ongrnal Watergate mveshgatton, defended tt and m a
heated exchange wtth commtl·
tee member Sen Sam J Er.vin,

D-N C , satd the ongmal threeman prosecution team was
"snook..-ed" by li es told by the
seven n en convicted of brea kmg tl'l.o th e Watergate
butldmr
The foonate Jud tcary Committee 1S checkmg tnto the
matter as part ot conftrlnation
hean ngs on the nomination of
Earl J. Stlbert to be U S. attorney for the Dtstnct of
Columbta. Silbert headed the
on grnal Watergate probe unttl

SATURDAY, JUNE 22
"JUST INSIDE THE DOOR"

PRELL
SHAMPOO

BATH SIZE

PALMOLIVE
SOAP
35'

REG. 11.29

98~

PARTY
MINTS

TRASH
BAGS

SOFTIQUE

BATH OIL
BEADS
17

BOffiE OF 90

REG. 12.15

23~

REG.

oz.

16

8's

oz.

REG.

REG.

98'

59'

- --

70Z.

41~

REG.

59'

ION A

ltzer

LISTERINE
MOUTHWASH

ELECTRIC
MIXER

25's
REG. 79~

14 oz.
REG. 11.39.

REG. 10.00
1

'6'8

a year ago
Rteha rdson Pressured

"Well llcfore" A member of
the House unpeachmenl panel
disc losed the commtltee had
recetved an afhdavtt from
former Attorney General Elliot
1. Richardson mdicating Ntxon
wanted Cox removed "well
before" Cox actually was fired
Oct. 20, 1973
Rtchardson, who res1gned
rather than hre Cox in what
became known as the "Saturday Ntght massacre," was
reported to have satd White
House chief of staff Alexander
Hatg demanded that he mterfere m Cox's mvestigatwn as
early as July 3, 1973.
Excerpts of the afftdavtt
were published m a front-page
story in Wednesday 's edtltons
of the Boston Globe.
"In late September or early
October of 1973, I met with the
Prestdent in regard to the (exVtce Prestdent Sptro ) Agnew
matter After we had finished
our dts cussion about Mr .
Agnew and we were walkmg
toward the door , the President
satd msubstance, 'Now that we
have dtsposed orihatinatter.
we can go ahead and get rtd of
Cox.' There was nothmg more

sa td ," the Globe quot ed
Richardson as saymg .
Spe c ta l
pr e side ntial
assistant Patrtck J.· Buchannan
jomed other admmistralton spokesmen in
denouncing news leaks from
th e House comm1ttee . He
termed the leaks "a systematic
campatgn to tear down the
reputation of the President,"
and urged Judtcary Committee
leaders to question staff members under oath and fll"e those
responsible.
However, Nixon's ch1ef Wa·
tergate lawyer, James D. St.
Clair, sa td he thought Judicary
Commtttee Chairman Peter J
Rodmo , D-N .J., was doing all
he could to halt the leaks.
"From my vantage pomt, I
disagree," said St. Clair responding to criticism of the
comm1ttee .
In Other Watergate-related
developments :
--Spectal Prosecutor Leon
Jawo rski defended
the
relatively light sentences
severa l persons, including
former Attorney General
Richard G Klemdienst,
recetved after plea bargaining
with prosecutors.
Post Cited In Afflda vlt

--

-Se n. Barry Goldwater, RAriz., inserted a 38-page document into the Congr, ssional
Record citing the WasliingtDn
Post for publishing five top
secret documents leaked by
government officials in VIOla·
tion of national securtty laws.
- The Senate Foreign Rela·
tions Committee voted to open
formal hearings into Secretary
of SUite Henry A. Kissinger's
role in the 1969-70 wire!Bpping
of 13 of his subordinates and
lour newsmen.
- U.S. District Court Judge
John Lewis Smith Jr. refUsed a
motion by former Kissinger
aide Morton Halperin to
release secret FBI documenl:i
relating to the so-called
unational sec\U'ity wiretaps."
- Richardson told a special
Senate subcommittee on privacy and government data
systems that the kind of
electronic eavesdropping used
by Nixon ' to record White
House conversations should be
Illegal.
-Senate Democratic leader
Mike Mansfield said he was
disturbed and depressed over
leaks and delays surrounding
the House Judicary Committee's impeachment inquiry .

CINCINNATI - The Delta
Queen wtll extend tis 1974
schedul e through December,
with etg ht overm ght cruises
and five lunch and fiv e dmner
crutses ongma hng from the
Port of New Orleans m the
French Quarter
The deciston to extend the
1974crutses lo Jan I, 1975, was
based on the populanty of the
De ita Queen's expanded, early season sc hedul e on the lower
MtSSlSSippl
The Delta Queen origmated
12 crutses out of New Orleans
in the spnng, a nd the
November sc hedule wtll In clude etght cru1ses
December cruises out of
New Orleans are. New Orleans
to Na tchez , leav mg New
Orleans at 9 p m Sunday, Dec
I, and returmng at 9 a.m
Fnday, Dec. 6; New Orleans
Weekend, leaving New Orleans
at 6 p m Frtday, Dec 6, and
returnmg at 2 p.m., Sunday,
Dec 8; New Orleans to Nat-

chez, leaving New Orleans at 9
p m. Sunday, Dec . 8, and
returnmg at 9 a.m., Friday,
Dec 13 ; New Orleans
weekend, leaving New Orleans
at 6 p m Fnday, Dec. 13, and
re turning at 2 p.m. Sunday,
Dec . 15 ; New Orleans to
Natchez ~~ christmas Cruise ",
leaving New Orleans at 6 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 22, and returning
at 9 a.m. Friday, Dec. 27; New
Orleans weekend, leavmg New
Orleans at 6 p m. Friday, Dec.
27, and returning at 2 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 29; New Orleans
"New Year's", leaving New
Orleans at 9p.m., Sunday, Dec.
29, and returnmg at 5 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan I, 1975.
The December cruises out of
New Orle11_ns will include shore
stops and tours of the elegant
and histon e ante·bellum
homes and plantations of the
Ole South
The December crwses also
will feature gala holiday
parties aboard the Delta Queen

Values To 57.00

'

99~

LADIES TANK TOPS &amp;BLOUSES
Misses

FLARE LEG DENIM JEANS

Sale'3

Reg . $7.95

33

Values To SJ.50

JAMAICAS

FEW PAIR RECYa.ED JEANS

Sale •1 00

Reg . $5.99

ASK TOWED
Gregory Mack Stewart, 19,
Middleport, and Dmah Marie
Erlewme, 18, Dexter ; Sammie
Wtlliam Brown , 20, MinerSVIlle, and Loretta Ann
Spence r, 17, Rt. 3, Pomeroy ,
and Harry Richard Otler, 50,
Pomeroy , and Elizabetl\ Oiler,
50, Middleport.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Thomas
Willtams, Pt. Pleasant ; Clyde
Sarye, Racine; Wilma Gibbeaut, Pt. Pleasant.
DISCHARGES Ruth
Mulford, Jerry Owens, Goldie
Lawson , George Daniels,
Mildred Moorehead, Allegra
Will.

\

BOYS 13* OZ. WRANGLER JEANS

BEAUTIFUL SELECTION

}fioral f:antas'tes

ONE LOT QULDREN'S SHOES

BOOKS
JEWELRY
GREAT Gin BUYS

SATURDAY

Sale
•2"/'3"
Reg . $7.95
MEN'S &amp; BOYS' BICYa.E JACKETS
Sale '500
LADIES PANTY HOSE
2 pair '100
by Lee Trevino
Wrangler
MEN'S DRESS &amp;GOlf SLACKS
1J3 OFF
HOODED RAIN JACKETS

'·

OPEN: FRIDA¥ TIL 8

ARRANGEMENTS

SUMMER
PAJAMAS

OFF

.

' '

TO

~00

0.

SATURDAY
SIDEWALK
SALE

JUNE
22

ASSORTED
.
FOLIAGE PLANTS

50%0FF

00

$

1 GROUP

5
1
0
SANDALS ..........~.~~:.~:~~..~~.~:~~ .........!3°
MEN'S SHOES .................. .

By Dale Rothgeb Jr.
Drug abuse m Gallia County and tis related problems, an
explanation of probation and the difference between felony and
misdemeanor charges were toptcs explored Wednesday durmg a
special meettng of the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce
Guests serving as panelist for the discussiOn were
Prosecuting Attorney Gene Wetherholt; Ass1stant Pt osecutor
Bill Eaches; MuniCipal Court Judge Robert S Betz ; Common
Pleas Court Judge Ronald R. Calhoun, Juventle and Probate
Judge R Wtlllam Jenkins and Gallipolis Ctty Soiicttor Dean
Evans.
Charles Bosttc, chamber president, opened the discusston
w1th the questions ·
What can the chamber do to help you (the cou rts )'
What can you do to help us wtth the problem'
What constitutes reducing cer!Bm sente nces'
Eachus satd that certain cases are reduced or suspended due
to the Attorney General's rulmg that ftrst time offenders not be
given the Hmaxirnum" penalty.
Others are reduced because of mforma t10n gtven to our
department.
" I know tt looks bad to read tt in 'the paper , but there are
some cases in whtch information cannot be released to the news
media and general public," Eachus concluded.
Municipal Court Judge Robert S. Betz satd his cou rt ts getting a lot of adverse public reactton because of the suspension of
sentences and fmes. Said the JUdge "I urge those people and you
interested chamber dtrectors to come to my court and see what
goes on mstead of listenmg to rumors and hearsay.
"Charges have been reduced sometunes because the
defendants have agreed to cooperate wtth the prosecutor's off tce
m ob!Binmg evidence for convictions of other persons charged
with sirmlar crunes. In the last two months we have had some
drug cases in which all defendants received the maxtmum
peanlty of $1,000 and a stx months jail term I have suspended
fines and jail sentences and placed individuals on probatton, of
which the tenns are very stnct.
"We're not interested in making felons out of the people,"
Betz emphasized "We feel several persons can be rehat&gt;bilitated. We JUSt don't take probation lightly m my court "
Judge Betz used several examples fnom the latest list of
persons charged w1th possession of manjuana showmg that the
defendants came from all walks of life He also read a court
finding involvmg a young man who VIolated the court's
pi'obalton. The man was brought back to court and hts jail term
was reinstated.
Judge Betz contmued: ''Our problem ts not wtth the user but
w1th the pusher. The enforcement people are not at liberty to tell
you what they are doing about the pusher We're domg everytmg
we can do for the community. I'll put my record m my coUt·t up
against all other courts 111 the state"
In closing, Betz urged all busmessmen and mterested persons to come to court and see for themselves how the court
operates. "We're all concerned and are workmg hard on th e
problem," he satd.
Common Pleas Court Judge Ronald R. Calhoun observed
that he has had only two drug cases come to hts court m five
years. Judge Calhoun srud, however :
"Except in crunes of VIolence, first tune off enders should be
placed on probation ." He explained what happens when a perso n
is conVIcted of a felony. It results m many n ghts bemg taken
away from an individual , Calhoun satd.
·
Juvenile Court Judge R. William Jenkms also noted that he
had not had "very many" drug cases m hts court. He emphas1zed
that the county and city needs more law enforcement officers
"Most of our problems in Juvemle Court comes from people m
broken homes. We need to talk to parents, teachers and school
officials and rehabilitate the parents," Jenkins mam!Bmed
Pro~cutlng Attorney Wetherholt had a simtlar pomt of vtew.
"We could use more law enforcement officers in the county and
city. If we catch the drug pushers we wtll burn them, but you
must caleb them ftrst," he said.
Bostic reminded all interested persons to attend a community meeting Thursday, June 27 at 7:30 p m at Ga llla
Academy High School.
.
John WtnOwtchi, Narcotics Dtvtston, Bureau of Cn mmal
Investigation , Columbus, will be the prmcipal speaker.
Purpose of the meetmg w11l be to educa te the people on drug
abuse problems and get tdeas on what ca n be do ne to help solve
it.

ODD LOT
40~
SUMMER SHOES...................
0 OFF

·•3oo ro •soo
SEE THEM ALL AT THE-·

MANY TERRIFIC
FABRIC &amp;
NOTIONS
SAVINGS

50~

DENIM CLOGS

'5 00 ANo•7oo

1

heritage house

JUNE 22
NEXT DOOR TO
OUR SHOP

•

•

SAVE \VITH
THESE
SPECIAL
'
PRICES

..
./

'

I

FOOTWEAR
sa mpl es

broken s•zes

Save

.'

SP ECIAL GROUP LADIES'
POLYESTER DOUBl. EI&lt;NII

FLARE SLACKS
Sa le group of ~ lu cll 05 bett er 11ol vC'~ I• r
doub lek n1f Ha re leg -; t yh; &lt;&gt; ld cl-,•, 111
assorted fa sh1on sol1d colo r ':. M1d tc~n cr
pattern s Hun y Ia St illier s

1n

Spec •al sale group of lad•es' famou s
brand spnng and summer spor tswear

men s
women's
and
chil d ren s
foo tw ea r
Choose from bo t h d ress a nd

~'iiij~ casual s t yles
St• ftler 's

- ST IFFL E R'S SIDEWALK SALt: -

SPORTSWEAR

Close ou t group ot odd lots,

Shop ear ly f or best se lecho n from th1s

clea rance group Si dewa lk sa le spec1al

at

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE
- STIFFLE R'S SID EWALK SAL ELADIES' TOWN AND COUNTRY
NYLO N STRETCH

,•

PANTY HOSE

LADIES' NYLON
JAMAICA

SANDALS

1 One S1dewal k Sa le lor of

Lad1es' be tt er stretch
ny lon doublekn 1t Jama1 ca
sho rt s 1n assor ted ~ soli d
colors and wh 1te

lt al1an sty l e summe r
sanda ls 1n assor ted tolor s
and styles

•'

- SID EWAL K SAL EOne Group Ladt es'
BELTE D PANT

COATS

- SIDE WALK SALELa dtes' Better
ALL WEATHER

- STIFFLER' S SIDEWALK SALESpecta I Clearance Group
LADIES' DRESS&amp; CASUAL

COATS

SPRING COATS

S1dewa lk sa le group of
lad1 es' better all wea ther
coats 1n assorted spr rng
colors

One spec ral sale group of
lad1es' belted pant coa ls
Save now at St iffler 's

PAIR

- SIDEWALK SALEOne Lot Ladies'
ITALIAN STYLE

SHORTS

Lad1 es' f1rsl qua l1f y st r etch nylon panty hose
One s1ze f its all Seuson' s best shades
S d0wa lk Sa le Spec1a l 1

Spec 1a l clea r ance group fo r th1s s1dewa lk sa le
of lad tes' dress and cas ual coats m some of
the latest sty les

WASTE
36 Quar t pla st 1c waste ba ske ts
or \l/4 bushel s1ze plastic
laundry baskets Unbreakab le
plasttcs 1n asso rted color s

- SIDEWALK SAL E- ·::: - SIDEWALK SAL EOne Lot L~d 1cs'
SPECIAL GROUP
FASHION SUN
GOTHAM PLAST IC

GLASSES

DISH PANS

Got h a m
rect a n gu l ar
pl as t tc d1sh pan s rn
assor ted solid colors A
super val ue

Su le asso rtment of l ash1 fln
su n gl asses for the ladr C&gt;s 1
B1g ~1 % or t mr.nt of styl es

..

.•

,•

- Sttffler 's Sidewalk SaleTempo 100 Pet. Acryli c
MACHINE WASHABLE

KNITTING YARN

Tempo
acry l 1c
mach 1ne
was hable kn1tt1ng ya r n Worsted
we 1ght 1 Mothproof and non
allerg 1c Assorted colors

:··

·:·

'•.

- SIDEWA LK SAL Ellx l B ASSORTED
BROA DLOOM

:1:

67~ElN
·:

•'

- SID EWALK SALECANVAS TOP
FOLDING CAMP

- SIDEWALK SALE- .:::
SOLID COLOR
VINYL SHOE

- SIDEWALK SALEMill Assortment
LOOP and SHAG

PHOTOALBUMS
Spec1al group of magneh c styl e ph oto
albums at a low , low pr1 cc L1mlfcd
quant1ty One to a cus tomer

$1
- STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALESPECIAL GROUP
POLISHED ALUMINUM

COOKWARE
t1

Spec tal Sidewal k sa le assor tment
of
n am e bra nd
po l 1shed
alumtnu m cookwa r e Ta k e yovr
choice .

- SIDEWALK SAL E- ::
MARVEL RUBB ER
DOOR OR
·:

Spec ial Sal e Group Sturdy
Nevco Hardwood Expando

- SIDEWALK SALES PC. CERAMIC

COFFEE TREE

MUG SETS

GARMENT RACKS

Spec1al group of f1 ve piece
ceram 1c coffee t ree mug
se ts Assor ted styles

as~

- ST IFFLER' S SIDEWALK SALEFANCY PEPPERELL
TWIN &amp; FULL SIZE

NO-IRON
SHEETS
'

D1sconfmued patterns I Famous Pepperell
brand tw1n and rull stze fancy sheets

TWIN
2
SIZES ........ FOR

$500

FULL
2
SIZES. ........ FOR

$600

PILLOW
2
CAS ES ...... ,. P ~ .

$30Q

- SIDEWALK SALEONE LOT-FANCY
CERAMIC BASE

BOUDOIR
LAMPS

Sale asso rtm ent of cera mic
base bou do i r lamp s ln
assor ted fash1on designs
w 1th matchtng shades
Save at St ttfl er's

&gt; I

- SIDEWALK SALESPECIAL GROUP
'l2"x60 Yd. MASK lNG

TAPE
Spec 1al Sidewa lk sa le lot or
one mch by 60 ya rds q ua l 1t y
m aski ng tape

'

- SIDEWALK SALEINSULATED
STYRENE PICNIC
JUGS OR ICE

CHESTS
Sidewa lk Sale ~roup ol
famous Gotha m j 1nsu lated
st y r ene p 1cn ic 1ugs or
st y r ene ice chests. Gr eat
for su mmer of sun and fun .

OOEACH
','

- SIDEWALK SALEDENIM or DAISY
TV LAPOR

BED TRAYS

UTILITY MATS

EntOY fl1rl 1ne ser v1ng
com fort at home Oil iS Y or
dc n1m pattern s
St.11n
r es1s tant enam el f1 rush

l 9x24 mch srze Mar ve l
br and fancy ut d1ty or bath
mat s 1n assor ted co lor s and
patt er ns

•,

;.

- STiFF LER' S SID EWALK SALE-

,•

:·.

:·

S1dewa l k sa le group of
ca nvas top fo ldrng camp
stool Gr ea t for home or
camp1ng

Spec1a l group of walnut
fln1 shed fold 1ng hardw ood
ex pando garment rack s Save
at Sti ff ler 's dunng t he M1d
dleport Srd ewa lk Sales event

Speci al Group Beauttful Fa ncy
MA GNETIC STYLE

Deco r ator r ugs 1n a b1g
speCia l assort ment of loop
and shag rn soli d col or s and
fancy pattern s

Spec1a l sale gr oup of sol1d
color viny l shoe to te bag s 10
assorted so l 1d colors

..

·.

- STIF F LER' S SID EWALK SALE-

AREA RUGS

TOTE BAGS

STOOLS

RUG BLOCKS

''
1

~

- STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALESPECIAL SALE GROUP
BOBBI E BROOKS &amp; RUSS TOGS

- STI FF LE R'S SIDEWALK SALEOd d Lots - Broken Sizes - Sa mples
ME N'S WOM E N'S and CHILDREN 's

---------------··"'
·
1
STARTING SATURD AY ,

REG. '8.99 TO '9.99

LATIGO
PURSES
1f2 PRICE

MAN Y OTHER ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO LIST- SAVE NOW!

SIDEWALK
AND
REMODELING
SALE

I ·'

18' x77 ' '&gt; 17('

SATURDAY ONLY
JUNE 22
SAVE FOR YOURSELF AT STIFFLER'S IN MIDDLEPORT

block s made from heavy
qu a lify broa dl oofTI car
pet1ng

-,

'· Your Thom MeAn S,tc»re

I

h1gh gr~tde broudl oom carpc lmg

ONE DAY
ONLr! •

13xl8 mch assor ted rug

GROUP MEN AND WOMEN'S

ONLY

NOVELTIES

•

IT'S FUN TO
SAVE!

DENIM PURSES

N . 2nd
I

$}00

THE KIDDIE SHOPP£·

lf2 PRICE

DLEY~SFLO
]J

MANY SUMMER
&amp; WINTER
VAWES
TO $25.00

INFANT THRU SIZE 14
BOYS &amp; GIRLS

SADDLE OXFORDS

&amp;

60" WIDE POLY-KNIT FABRICS

NE 22

20% OFF

1 GROUP

ARTIACIAL

Mens &amp; Boys

Spec •al mill a~so rtmcnt ot c&lt;Jrpet mat 5 mndc ot

Gallia aired

NOVELTIES

SHOE SHINE KITS

ONE LOT WOMEN'S SHOES

RUG MATS

Spec 1al sale group of 1, 2 to 1 yard
leng th p1ece goods remnants m
assorted co lor s and patterns

I

MASON, W Va - Har.pld V
Sch,.ar tz, 61, Maso n, dted
Wedn esday eve mng at hts
restdence. He was an elec-

BARGAINS ON THE SIDEWALK
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY,
YOU 1 LL LOVE
JUNE 21-22
THIS SALEI
MEN'S WORK PANTS One Lot
Sizes 29-JO-Jl '1 99

- STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALESPEC IAL MILL ASSORTMEN TS
.QUALITY BROADLOOM

SATURDAy JUNE 22

Harold Schwartz died on Wednesday
Manlyn Strothers, Parkersburg; one grandson, Todd;
tllree brothers, Henry White
Sulphur Spnngs ; Mike, Mason,
and Earl, 'Mtaml, Fla. and two
trician
ststers,
Mrs V~rgm1a GrinFuneral servtces wtll be
stead
and
Mrs . Barbara Meconducted Saturday at I 30 p
Dame!,
both
of Mason
m at the Foglesong Funeral
Home here. The Rev. Clarence
McCloud w1ll offlctate and
bunal wtll follow m the Miles COLLECTING PENNIES
BANGKOK (UP!) - AmeriCemetery m Rutland. Frtends
will be received at the funeral can airmen on a U.S. Air Force
home from 2 to 4p. m. and 7 to 9 Base in central Thailand have
p. m. Fn day.
collected 45,000 pe!Ulies In a
Mr. Schwartz was born m drive to recll"culate the scarce
Hot Springs, Va. Sept 5, 1912, coms, U.S. military auiborities
son of Rhm ey a nd Nellie said today.
The drive was held at Takhli
Krautter Schwartz and was a
Roual
Thai Air Force Base, 100
member of the Mason U.M
miles north of Bangkok. U.S.
Church.
Survtvors mclude hts w1fe, currency is used on the six air
Luctlle; one daughter, Mrs bases maintained by the
Umted States In Thailand.

REMNANTS

problems in

Queen schedules last cruises
plus the traditional Delta
Queen fare of the Bon Voyage
Party,
Calliope mustc,
Dixieland, dancmg and the
Captain's Champagne Dmner.
In addition, the Dei!B Queen
is offermg luncheon cruises
departing New Orleans at II
a.m. and returning at 2 p.m.
daily, Dec . 16-20. Luncheon
cr¥ises are priced at $15 per
person.
Dinner cruises depart New
Orleans at 7 p.m. and return at
10 p.m. dally, Dec. 15-19.
Dinner crwses are priced at
$20 per person,
The New Orleans lunch and
dinner cruises also will Include
the happy river sounds of the
Delta Queen calliope and
music by the Riverboat
Ramblers.
For reservations and additional mformahon, contact
your travel agent or the
Reservations Department, The
Delta Queen Steamboat Co.,
322 E. 4th St., Cincinnati, Ohio
45202, Phone : (513) 621-1445.

- STIF F LER'S SID EWALK SALESP ECIAL SALE GROUP
'h to 1 YARD PIECE GOOD S

,•,

'•'

'•'

ST IFFL ER'S SIDEWALK SALESP ECIA L MI LL ASSORTMEN T
LOO P AN D CHENILL E

MILL END RUGS
Spec1al mill assortment of
chenille and loop mil l end rug s
rn assorted co lors, patterm
and sty les Sfl tf ler's S•dewalk
Sa le Va lue 1

25~ACH

- STIFFLER'S SI DEWALK SALESPECIAL GROUP 7 PIECE
COLORED ALUM INUM

COOKWARE SETS
Seve n p1 ece enameled
household aluminum cook
ware s7.ts made of Nevco
Colo r s· flame and avocado.
Sho p
Stiffler' s
t h is
Satu rday
dunng
the
S1 dewalk Sale

�Television Log

IS- The Dally Sent111el Middleport Pomeroy 0 Thursday June 20 974
14-TheDallySent111el Middleport I o111uoy
ORDINANCE NO 1550 77
6R 446
AN ORDINANCE PROV D NG
FOR THE
SSUA N CE OF
NOT ES IN THE PR I NC PAL
AMOUNT OF SJOO 000 BY THE
V IL LAGE OF
POMEROY
OH 0
N ANT CIPAT I ON OF
THE I SSUANCE OF BOND S
FOR
THE
PURPOSE
OF
MAKIN G
MPROVEMENT S

TO

,_

..
...

~:

-

THE

WATERWORKS

SYSTEM O F THE VILLAGE
A ND
DECLAR N G
AN

EMERGENCY
WHEREAS heCounc o
V lage of Pome ro y Oh o
eques ed he V age C e k
f seal off ce
o cert fy
ma• mum matu ty o
bonds here n efcrred t o cJnd

he
has
as
t1e
tt e
he

notes here n author zed a d
f sea
off ce
h li~
s u ch
es t mated the
~ ot
he n

provemen as at cas

o

11 W&gt;U

I)

Junc 20 1~ 4

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Card of Thanks
f. AM LY

THE

John s o
hea H e

o

ex
!hanks o

lT

d

u~

he
he n &lt;1ny

l r ends
ne ghbor c:;
;,nd
relat v es for t e r t ood
p aye s I owcr s &lt;~nd c a ds
dur ng h s ln ~ss and a th e
f me ot h s dea h
Sp ec a l
hank;; o Rt'v Jake r ry
McCoy M oo e Funcra Hon c
l he s ngc s and pa bca r e s
lnd anyon e wh o e ped n any
way du nQ h s 1 me You
ac ts ot k ndncss w I o g be
en en be rcd M s B d e
Jo hns on a
am y
623 c

ve ye a s

and ce t r ed
hE&gt; ma x num
matu
y o f the bo ds as fa y
years and o t e no es o be
ssued n a nt r. pa on h ereo f ~
f ve years
f so ld pub c y

2 SIGNS
Of

WE W SH lo ex press ou
deepes g a udc nd h an k s
o h m ny
ends o ou
be l oved daugh er
Sarah
Gre en We ca n never express
n wo d s how we fee l n ou
nea'r s You wo ds k ndness
and dee ds n n s me of g eat
asress w
aways be
r emembered as long as fe
s a
as
ttm y of M
and
M s Wa it e L G een
6 10 p

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

QUALITY

For Rent

MOB LE
HOME
2
bedrooms
0 m nu es from
Pome oy or M dd epo r
Ca l
992 66 30 aft er d p m
6 20 6tc

s 895

1972 VEGAHATCHBAC KC PE

Loca
owner trade n 4 speed tran s G T equ pment
ado good I res clean ns de green f n sh

1970 NOVA CPE

$1495

local
owner good t es 6 cy l w th automat c tran s
ado blue f n sh spo t ess clean blue nter or

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

J&amp;B AUTO

HED
bed oom
o
aQe a t Rock Sp ng s P ced
on nspec on on l y Ca l 997
2789
6 20 6 c

f. UF&lt; N

Ox52

191 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN
522 95
350 V Beng ne automat c trans ~wer steer ng &amp; brakes
good t res clean nter or ch ome bumpers gr II &amp; wh
cove s rad o b lue t n sh

Business Services
BODY

WOOD TRUSSES

·sA&gt;

Moved to Rutland J" m le
ms de c ty
m t on nght
corner B rck Sf and Rt l24

Bu1ltto.Your Specs
Delivered to Job Stte

Free Est mates

FOR RENT

New~

742-5293

Remodeled

4-Room &amp; Bath
Furnished Apt

Wolk1nson Small Engone
992 3092
399 w Mam
Pomeroy

MATERIALS CO
773 SS54

othe w se one
year
Located at Modern Supply
NOW THER EFORE BE IT
Small Engme Repa.r
ORDA NED by th e Counc I o
he V age of Pom l'roy Me QS
No pels deposo t requ1red
County Ot'! a
304 Spnng Ave
Pomeroy
SECT ON
That t s here by
992
7556
dec hred n ecessa y n o der to
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
preserve the publ c peace
POMEROY OHIO
health
safety
comfort and
welfare ot t he nhab an s or I he
Lawn Boy
vii age to ssue bands of the
Tecumseh
4
ROOMS
and
balh
on
Hy
se
l
V I age or Pomeroy Oh a n th e
Koh er
Run Road
ch d on l y Phone
pr nc pal sum of $300 000 fa
W scons n
CLO SE OUT Si! IC V I age
742 5 13
m
th e purpose of mak ng
Fab c Shop Tuppers Pans
• AI other
6 19 4t c
provemen ts o the w aterwo ks
En e s ock go ng at cos
makes
FREE
K
TTENS
to
system of he v I age
Sa c ends June 28 Hou s 9 lo 3
CARPORT Sa e
65 V ne
qua fy ng persons can be
SECTION 2 That sad bonds
daly
S reel
M dd epo rt
Oh
o
M d
seen a 39a Gra n S
sha I be da ed approx rna e y
6 7 5 p
June 20 2 and 22 Msc
d epor
after 6 p m o ca l
June 1 975 sna 1 bea nlerest
REDUCE eHess flu ds w h
terns
9922520afte 6p m o ate 2
at he rate of aoo oxim ate v s x NO sewage or cf use s to be
F lu deK $1 89
Lose we gill
6 a -4 c
p
m
on
Saturday
per cent 6 pc
per nn um and
dumped n he c eek on my
w h Dex A D et capsu es at u ROCERY bus ness for sale
6
20
21c
Bu lei ng for sa e or ease
sha l ma ure n subs tan t a l y
prope y f om heR us c H IS
Sl 98 at Ne son Drugs
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
equal annua nsta lments over
a ea or
ny other a ea
6 20 p
YARD SALE
F r d ay
nd
to 10 p m tor appo ntment
a per ad of wenty (20) years
Geo ge Free and
Sa tur day a l La k ns S
after th e r ssuance
3 20 f c
I T HAD TO H APPEN the 3
6 a3 c
Ru l and Oh o G
s 'JO b ke
SECT ION 3 Tha t t she eby
whee wonde Tr sports n 1d
boys 24
b ke h gn cha r
determ ned that notes n he
mode ls hese ange from 3 o DOZER or backhoe work Ph
c eam can brown overs u f ed
446 3981 or 446 3459
pr nc pa amoun of SJOO 000
58 h p of f oad and street
cha r d s es amps 2 baby
Shal be ssued n ant c pat on of
PUBLI C NOTICE
64H
ega ! mach nes
See ng s
---- -----sa fety gates
Othe
m sc
t he ssu an ce of sa d bonds Sa d
NOTICE OF
be ev ng
Long
Fe ! ow
John
&amp;
May
Sis
ems
notes !iha l be dat ed Ju ne 4
PUBLIC HEARING
Mo tor s Ravenswood W Va
6 20 2 c
1974 sha ll bear nferest at the
OF BUDGET OF
Phone (304 273 3594
V1s1t Us For
rate of s x and s x tenths per
MIOOLEPORT OHIO
6 20 ltc
CL
P
NEW
SPA
PER
IT
EMS
FRESH
cent (6 6 pet ) per annum
Not ce s hereby g ven tha on
PH 992 2549
FOR CA SH PROF T S Earn
payab ea t matur ty matur ng the 8th day of Ju l y 974 at 1 30
LET u s SHOW yo u how to stay
55 00 to S35 00 ea ch
n
on Jun e 4 1975 sa d not es may P M a Publ c Hea lng w
be
a home h s summer and st 1
Oi&gt;~n~ daY' open
fo r ma li o n
Send SOc and
be sod as here nafter prov ded he d on the budget prepared by
f ee a m 1 on m tes away See
s amped se f dd essed
everungs by appomtment
In such denominations as may tt'! e V II age of M dd eport Me gs
our whole 1 ne of Chry sle
enve
ope
(C
K
Prof
1
Rt
1
be requested by the purcha se rs County Oh o for the next
Mar ne Product s
bo a s
Por l and Oh o
SEC TION 4 That sad notes succee d ng F sca t year end ng
mo o s and 3 6 boat r a er s
sha I be executied by th e Mayor Decembe 31 1975
6 20 Jtc
MERLE NORMAN
Powe s from h p to 150 h p
and Vi tage Cl erk and sha I bea r
Such hearing w I be he d a
outboard eng n e Boats f rom
COSMETICS
Dunng Regatta
the sea of the corporal on They t he V I age Ha I at M d d epar t MOTOCROS S June 23 p ac t ce
14 ft o 23 f cru ser s L ong
11 30 race l p m 2m espas t
Sha l be des gnated
Water Ohio
Weekend
Fe low Motors Ravenswood
Bes Photo on Co Rd 56
works Improv e m ent Not es
June
Specta
I
w
Va Phone 273 3594
8 mslone Raceway Par k
and shall be payab e at The
Gene Gr a e C erk
6 20 He
Mon &amp; Tues
Coo v li e Oh o
Centra l Trust Com pany C n
v age of M dd l epor
cinnatl Oh o They sha 1 ex
61 20 Jtc
Permanents - -S10 00
953 FERGU SO N 30 I actor
press upon th e r face the pur
new f ont
re s motor and
Ha1r Cuts
$1 50
pose for wh ch they are ssued
Mam
Pomeroy
pan t S 350 Phone 98S 359 4
and that they are ssued n
6 20 4tc
A1r
Condtf
oned
and
TV
For
NOTICE
OF
pursuance of thi s or d nance
-·-----Your Comfort
PUBLIC HEARING
SECTION 5 That sad notes
6 20 11p
COUCH
and
CHA R $75 26
ON THE COLUMBIA
Sha I be f rst offered to th e of
nch 5 horse po wer Craft
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES SHOOT IN G
Mach
Corn
fleer or off cers in charge of he
sman
d ng mower $140 5
Hoi ow Gun C ub !urn f rst
bond ret rem en t fund of t he BUOGET
pa r wood Shut ers s 5 Ca 1
r gh l after M le~ Ceme ery
v I age and any notes not taken
985 411 -4 befo e 3 p m
Not ce s ,ere by g ven lhil on
Ru and
Fa c o y c hok ed OL D fu n to r e oak t ab le s
by such ofr cer sha 1 be sold at
6 20 3tp
private sale to We I Roth &amp; th e5 thd ayo f July 974 a 8 30
guns on y Sunday une 23
clocks ce bo xes brass bed s
p m
Irving Inc c nc nnat Oh o n o c ock P M a pub! c hear ng
d shes desks or complete 1966 HONDA 30 5 Supe Hawk
accordance w th t s offer to wl I be he d on lh e Budget
6 20 3tc
househo ds Write M
0
A cond ton Phon e 949 3811
prepared
b
y
I
he
Co
umb
a
Twp
purchase sa m e wh ch 5 hereby
M fer Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
6 20 6tp
Trustees
of
Me
gs
Coun
y
Oh
a
accepted at not ess than par
ca I 992 7160
and accrued nterest and the for the ne~et succeed ng r sea
5 13 tf c 4 HORSE POW£ R and 5 h p
3 1st
proceeds from such sa le excep t year end ng Decembe
Me1gs County
975
ga den t ll ers and la wn
any prem urn and the accrued
These s1zes a lso avarlable
Fish &amp; Game Assoc
mowers Phone (30d 773 5323
Suc h hear ng w I be he ld at
CASH pad for a 1 makes and
nterest thereon sha l be pad
5 000 6 000 8 000 10 000 and
Mason
he Townsh p
nto the proper fund and used the off ce at
modes of mob l e hom es
12 000 BTU
for the purpose a loresa d and Bu !din g
Phone area co de 6 4 423 9531
6 19 6tc
for no other purpose
4 13 tt c
POMEROY LANDMARK
COMPLETE k ng s ze bed S200
SECT ON 6 That sa id not es
G or a Hufton
1
:
Y.
- Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone
992
36
9
Cle lo.. Co um b a
shall be the full genera
J UN K Au to s camp ete and
..,.
Phone992 -2181
6 20 3 c
obligation of the v llage and the
Twp Tr ustees
de vered o our yard We
full fa th cred t and revenue of
p ckup auto bod es and buy a 1
SA L E
OF
said v lage are hereby pled ged
k nds of scri\.Q_ m etals and TRUCKLOA D
LI V NG ROOM SUITES
tor the prompt pa yment of the
ron R de r s ' Sa l vag e St a e
FACTO RY CLO SE OUTS
same The par va ue to be
Route 24 Rl 4 Pom eroy
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
A ND
F IR ST
QUALITY GR LL cook and k tchen he p
r eceived from the sa e of bonds
Oh o Phone 992 5468
Separate sea l ed proposal s for
L V ING ROOM SU TES AT
ant c paled by sa d notes and
wanted Ap p y n person at
5
22
26tp
any excess fund resu I ng from co al and or fu e o furn ace for
LOW LOW PR CES "6. LE I S
Crow .s Stea k ~ouse
At Fraternal Order of Eagles
the
Southern
Junior
H
g
h
Sc
t'!oo
FRIDAY AND SAT URDAY
the ssuance of sa d notes sha l
6 14 12tc
Club Room Pomeroy Oh•o
JUNE 21 &amp; 22 OPEN FRIDA Y
to the extent necessa ry be used will be r eceived at the off ce of
June 20 starting 1 p m
only for the ret rement of sa d the C erk of the Board of
NIGHT UNTIL 9 PM SEE
Sell your steel scrap
notes at matur ty together w th Educat on of Soul he n Loca
Omner Served 5 p m to 7
US BEFORE YOU BUY
Interest thereon and are hereby Sc hool Oistr c Ra e ne Me gs
cast tron sheet 1ron
THAT
L VING
ROOM
pm
County Oh o un t 1 2 00 (l cock
p edged for such purpose
SU TE WE KNOW WE CAN IO xSO MOBILE home n ew
copper
brass
E ST
July 11
197 4
SEC TION 7 Tlla t dur ng the noon
car p et and furna c e 8 x 20
SAVE YOU MONEY
E Z
year or years wh e such notes Cop es of the spec f cat ons
awn ng
See Gary Sm th
TERMS AVAILABLE OR 30
alum1num
auto
and
Chester Oh o aft er 6 p m
run th ere sha I be lev ed on all nstruc t ens to b dders
D AY LAY A WAY SAME AS
SlagNo
MinorsStag
batteries
auto
of the t axable propert y n the proposa l fa ms m ay be obta ned
CASH
POM E ROY
6 18 6tp
Advance Tickets SJ 00
VI lage of Pom ei'IOy n add ton at th e off ce of t he Super n
RE COVE R Y 622 E M an
rad1ators
and
IBM
Sout
hern
H
gh
Schoo
l
AI
Door
Sl
SO
to all other t axes a d ee l tax t end ent
STREE T
POMEROY 6S X 2 MOB LE home 3
Products
to
the
annually not ess han that Rae n e Ohio
PHON E 992 7554
bedroom bath
v ng room
whi c h would have been l ev ed f
Sa d board of ed uc atio n · • - - - - - - - - - - - - '
6 19 3tc
Rosenberg
Co
hal
and 2 bedroo m s ca r
bonds had been ssued w thout res erves the r ght to wave
peted Phone 992 7751
nformal t es
o accep t or ME I GS Count y Hum ane Soc ety
pr or ssuance of such notes
Athens Oh1o We close STARC RAFT New and used
Th ft Shop open 0 a m t I
6 6 lfc
Sa d tax shall be and s he r eby re ect any and a I or parts of
campers A so auto awn ngs
4 30 p m every Friday and
each Frtday at Noon
any and al b ds Th e success ful
ordered computed
cert fed
Reese h t ches port a pot
Sa turd a y New used stock
o
lev ed and extended upon th e b dder w I be reQu rea
furnaces 25 pet off C osed for
and w1ll be closed 4 and
arr v ng week y Cloth n g
tu: dup c af e and collec ted by turn sh a sa t sfa cto r y pe r
vaca t on July 4 through 6th
col ec t bles
ap p ances
5 July
the same off ce s In the same fo mancc bond for one hundred
Camp Conley Starcraft Sa es
1970 DODGE 1 ton cab and
treasures r ecord s p c ures
manner and at the sa m e t me per ce nt of th e contra c t pr ce
Rt 62 N of Pt Peasant
chass s van 31 8 va newt res
boo
k
s
l
amps
lays
Loca
ted
Southern Loca School o s t l et
that tax es for general purposes
beh nd Red Ca rp et nn
exce ll ent cond ton S1 400
across f om Pome oy Po st
Grover Sa l ser Jr P es dent
for eac h of sa d years are
6
9
3t
c
Phone 992 3030 after 5 p m or
Off ce
Nancy Ca rn ahan Clerk
certlf ed
extended
a n-d
142 5943 after 6 p m
5 12 tfc
collec ted Sa d ax sha 1 be Treasurer
R
I
SH
Se
t
er
pu
ps
S
amese
EXCEL
SIOR
Salt
Works
E
6 19 4tc
(6)
20
27
71
3
8
'
c
placed before and n pr ef erence
Ma n St Pomeroy All kind s
KOSC OT
KOSM ET CS &amp; K ttens A K C Poodle pupp es
to all other tems and f or the tu 1
Pheasant ch cks Phon e 1 256
of salt water pell et s water
WI GS
F or a good lne of
1969 CHEVROLET 3:~~ quart er
amount th er eof
Th e funds
6247
The Almanac
nuggets block salt and own
Cosmet cs fri endly serv ce
ton p ckup good cond ton
der ved fr om sad tax levy
Oh
o
R
ver
Salt
Phone
992
6
4
26tc
and someone to chat w th
Joh n Rose 949 2822
hereby requ ed sha I be placed By United Press International
3891
g ve me a ,.at He en Jan e
n a separate and d s net fund
6 4 6tc
Today IS Thursday June 20
YORKSHIRE Terr er pups
6 5 tfc
Brown 992 511 3
a nd together w th nterest
AKC
Champ
on
s
re
d
7
wks
col ected on th e sa me sha I be the 171st day of 1974 With 194 to
J 19 t fc
FORD truck motor 6 cy! w th
o d
Sho s w o med
and WEAREpckngupapano n
rrevD c ab y pledged for
he follow
tran sm Iss on Also 1939 Ford
your
area
and
wo
uld
ke
ped
greed
Ph
one
985.4106
A TO Z Mart used furn shed
payment of t he pr nc pal and
tru c k I h ton 6 cyl or g nal
some
responsrble
party
t
o
6 l4 6tc
appliances cloth ng dishes
The moon ts between 1ts new
nter est of sa d notes or the
equ pment Co lec tor s tem
take over payments
Call
and m sc R t 33 opposite
bonds n an t c pat on of wh ch phase and first quarter
Good cond t on Phone 992
Cred t Manager (614) 772
t ra l er CCJurt Hartrord w
they are issued when and as the
7384 even ngs
5669
or
wr
te
260
E
ast
Ma
n
Va
The mornmg stars are Venus
same tal s du e
prov ded
6 18 ttc
Street
Chi
I
cothe
Ohio
45601
however hat to th e exten t ha and Ju[llter
4 10 tfc RIVERS DE apartm ents 271 N
4 7 ttc
surplus waterworks reven ues
F rsf Avenue M ddleport
The evenmg stars are Mer PARASOL Bout Que sa on nex t
are appropr a t ed and app ed to
WILLYS Jeep Phone 992 5726
Oh o Appl ca tions now be ng r---------.;.;;,;,~
o Skat e A Way announces
the pa yment of th e notes sad cury Mars and Saturn
6 18 61C
accep
ed
Phon
e
614
446
3746
he newt m e sav ng too proof
ta x needed not be ev ed
or
after
5
p
m
992
5730
un perm sys tem o g ve a
Those born on this date are
F ORD Mob e camper fu ly
SE CTION 8 Th s Counc t for
6 13 18tp
perfect perm on every head
equ pped
and on behalf ot the v 1 age of Wider the s1gn of Gemlm
$2 500
Pau
ntroductory Spec a Sl 8 50
Cheval e r
Pomeroy
Oh o
hereby
Long Bottom
T1re Pnces
German composer Jacques
reg S20 June 1 22 Phone fo ~ 3 ANO 4 ROOM turn shed and
Oh o
cove nants t hat t w 1 restr c t
appo ntm tn t now 985 41 4
th e use of the proceeds of the Offenbach was born June 20
6 18 6tp
unfurn sh ed
apar tments
Sandra Trussel
Kear n s
notes hereby i)Ufhor ze d n such
Ph one 992 5.434
-owner and oper ator
manner and to such extent f 1819
In the Area
4 12 tf c
1969 CHEVY Townsman st at on
6 9 2tc
any as may be necessa r y after
On
th1s
day
111
history
wagon Sl 95 good cond ton
tak ng nto ac count reasonab e
PRIVATE meetng room for
Phone 992 7620
In 1898 the U S Navy se1zed DUE to the ran fast weekend
expectations a t th e t me the
any organ zat on phon e 99-2
It's
epeat G gant c Yard Sale o
5 24 ttc
debt s ncurred so tha t they Gnam largest of the Marianas
3975
mor e tems R t 33 nor h t urn
w II not c anst tute
arb trage
3 11 rtc
r ght County Road 9 fo l ow
bond s under Sect on 103(d ) of Islanda m the Pacific dur111g
s gns Thursday Jun e 20 9 to
t he Interna l Revenue Code and the Spanish American War
5 Fr day 12 5
R I VERS ID ~ Apartm en ts 27 1
the regulat ons prescr bed
N F rSI Ave M ddleport
3 STORy t
6 19 2tp
thereunder The v !!age c erk The people of Guam were
Oh o Appl ca ons now be ng
ram e hom e g ar age
or any oth er off cer hav ng granted U S Cltizenslup 111
accephzd Phone 614 446 3746 772 5881
Mason W Va
carpeted w th new P umb ng
GARAGE Sa e o I am p s
responslb ty w th r espe«; t to
and
electr
c w rrng
Total2
or after S P m 992 5730
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _, ,
e ectr c ncludes
2 stoves
depress on
g la ss
guns
the IsSua nce of said notes s 1950
mante cocks and other
author zed an d d r ected to g ve
6 2 l 8t c refr gerators
and
some
In 1963 the Uruted Slates and
tems F r day and Sa urday
--------LOS E we ght w th New Shape
turn ture
s tuated
on
an apRroprlate ce rt f cate on
Jun e 2 and 22 Bash an Eag e ONE new furnished apartment
Tab lets and Hydr eK Water
beaut fu 314 ac re lot Ask ng
behe f of the v !age on the date Russ1a agreed on a !llK!alled
R dge Road q t Norman
3roomsandbath one4rooms
P ti S Dutton Dr u g M d
$29500 Cat 9925933
of d el very of sa d notes for
hot line commumcatlons
Hyse 1
and bath furn shed Reyno ds
deport and Ne son Drug
6 23 3tc
Inc ! us on n t he tran scr pt of
Apartment Mason W Va on
6 18 Jtp - - - - - - - - - - - - - proceeding s sett ng fort h the link between Washington and
Route 33 Phone IJO.t) 77J. - - - - - ----CHOICE of two 3 bedroom
fact s
est mates and ci
Moscow
5360
1974
Z~G ZAG
SEW ING-...... Itomes by owner Bath &amp; ,
cum stances and reasonab e
In 1967 the Amencan In618 12tc
MACHINES left n ayaway ""liu It in kitchen wall to wa 1
expectat ons pert a n ng to the
AI bu It n to buttanho e do
cl!l rpet lut basement w th
use of th e proceeds t he reof and dependent party was formed to
COUNTRY Mobl e Hom e Park
stretch sew ng and fancy
garage
Br ck.
fronts
the provls ons of !a d Sect on
New development off Route
st tch ng Pay lust S4 8 75 cash
alum num
s d i ng
and
103
(d)
and
r egu at ons back George Wallace of Alaba
thereunder
J3
t en m es north o f
or term'S avar abl e Trade Ins overhangs 1 acre to t Pr ce
rna for president
Pom eroy
Large lots w t h
accepted Phone 992 2653
S28 500 each Call 985 35~8 or
SECTION 9 That the Village
co ncrete pa tios
s dewatks
6 18 ttc
985 4177
In 1973 aner an exile of two
Clerk .J s hereby d r eeled to
runners
and
off st r ee t
forward ~cert r ed copy of t h s decades former Argentme
6 14 10tc
par k ng
Also
spaces for
ordinance t o the
County
sm al tra l ers Ph one 992 7479
Aud tor
Pl'esident Juan Peron returned
6 8 26tc
SECTION 10 That lh s or to Buenos Aires later to
We need man or woman to
d nance 5 hereby declar.ed to be
sell
full
lone
ot
Ad'ertising
an
emergency
measure resume his old post
BIJ S NE SS rCJom 22 x SO 734 E
Specoalties Co endors and
necessary for th e pre.servat Jon
Ma n S
Pomeroy
Qh o
G fts In the Pomeroy
of the pub! c peace health
Phon e 992 5786 or 992 3975
A thought for the day Irish
safety comfort and welfare of
M ddleporl Area Musl be
6 12 tfc
tl'le Inhabitant! of the V tlage of novelist George Moore sa1d
able to plan own time and
Pomeroy n that said notes must
4
work with a minimum of UNFUR NI SHED home
Mter all there Is but one race
be authorized to support con
ooms ut 1 ty room and bath
supervision
struct on contracts for the --humanity
garage 1655 Po nt L ane
propoaed waterworks
m
All accounts are protect ed
Phone 992 3874
provement and t sha 1 take
Repeat orders are protected
6 7 tf c
effect upon Is adopt on
Hogh
Commissions
payable
Adoptect M ay 20 1974
of Me gs Coun ty Oh o
FUR NI SHED elf c ency apt
w hen orders are passed for
Ca I 992 5786
Da e E Sm th
Jane Watton
cred t
6 _16 6tc
__t_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Mayor
C erk of Counc t
The Advertising Specialty
Attest
TRAILER for 1 or 2 adu IS only
Jane Walton
l ne is t he most ex tens ve n
RECEIPT
Call 992 J 81
Clerk of Counc 1
Pomeroy Oh o
the Industry Calendars are
6 16 6tc
May 21st 1974
manufactured al our R'ed
CERTIFICATE
The under sig n ed
County
O.k plant
The Ul'ldtrslgned Clerk of Auditor of Meigs Coun tv Ohio
2 PIE CE Early Amer ca n 1 v ng
F URNISHEO
apartment
Council Pomeroy Ohio hereby hereby acknowledges reee pt of
Wrtte Bob McKenz1e Sales
room suite and 1 platform
adu ts CJnlv n M cldleport
certlflft tnet tne for~Qolng Is a i!l certlfltd copy of the forego ng
rockers
Good co ndlt on
Manager The Thos D
Phone 992 3874
nance
Drd
true lnd corr1c1 copy of Or
Phone 992 5614
5
12
tfc
Murphy
Company
110
Sv
dlnence No 1550 27 adopted by
6 18 Jtc
'/,
Second Street Red Oak
satd council on tht 2()th day of
James E Roush Jr
TRA LER Browns Trailer WHITE Ch nese gees 6 weeks
May 1974 and that on 71st M ay
County A ud tor
Iowa 51566
Cour t 992 3324
191,._ sh• filed a certified copy
old Ca ll 992 768 5
ftttflot with the Countv Auditor: C6l 13 20 2tc
6 18 4tp
tfc
J
I
J

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

COM PAN~

For Sale

HOU SE 6 rooms and ball.l
c osed n porch 3 • acre land
Ches e Ca l 985 3537
6 13 6tc

SYRACUSE

•'•
•
•

••
•

2 BEDROOM house n M d
d eporl
New k tc hen and
bath app ances ncluded
Ca I 992 53 0
6 2 26tp

FRUITS &amp;
VEGETABLES

ON E new at
e ectr c
3
bed r oom 519 900 and 3 other
homes Phon e 992 3975 or 992
257
6 5 fc
HOUSE
5 room s
attached
garage oca ed near school
Syracuse Oh o Phone YY2

SHULER'S MARKET

3860

W

,'-------:-:----.,,.

HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS

Wanted To Buy

4,000 BTU

'109.95

ANNUAL

FISH

Help Wanted

FRY

Mobile Homes For Sale

I

•
'••

- ------Auto Sales

II 121p

6

TEAFORD
V~rqil

'.

w th

bedroom home

barn

bath

f urnace modern kttchen

and

garage Want only 515 000 00
MIDDLEPORT - Local on lor
store houses da ry shop
serv ce station or dr ve n

bedrooms

w1th

t

for

$5750 00
MIDDLE PORT- One

only

acre

plu s 2 houses that you can rent
Room for two trailers Want

lust 517 500 oo
80 ACRES - Under lease with
a I minerals

7 room house

free gas 2 barns and stocked
fish pond
FINE LARGE HOME - Sh
balhs 6 bedrooms steam heal
Large 12 rooms overlook ng the

Ohio R ve&lt;- Dbl garage on
larqe lot Needs owner
A HOME IS YOUR BEST
INVESTMENT YOU OC
CUPY IT AS YOU INCREASE
VALUE

BEND TIRE CENTER

CAN YOU WORK
WIOOUT

SUPERVISION

------

---

------

- --

---------

__ ___ -JF

•

I

------ -

Real Estate For Sale

6 00 ...:.... Sunrise Sem nar 4 Sacr ed Hea r t 0
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30 - F ve M nutes to L ve By 4 News 6 8 be Answe s 8

Blue R dge Quartet 13
Columbus Today 4

6 35 6 45 -

8
8
8
9

992 73&lt;9

CONCRETE

10 00-0 nah Shore 3 15 Jokers W ld 8 10 Company 6 L dS
Yooa &amp; You 33
10 30 - Jeopardy 3 4 15 G~mt&gt; I 8 10 Wheels K In &amp; Cay
I Dream of Jeanne 13
11 00 - Wozard of Odds 3 4 15 Password 13 Commun ty ot

30 ttc

C BRADFORD Auct oneer
Com olel e Serv c:e
Phone 949 382 ar 949 3161
Racine Ohio
Crltt Bradford
5 1 tfc

Lov ng Th ngs 33 M ke Doug a• 6 Now You See 118 10

8

11 35 - Matter of F ction 33
11 55- CBS News 8 Dan mel s World 10
12 00- Password 6 News 8 10 13 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4

Jackpot 3 15 Mr Rogers 33
12 30- Celebr ty Sweepstakes 3 15 Sp l t Second 6 Sea rch for
Tomorrow 8 10 Electr c Co 33 Aller noon with DJ 13
12 55
NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Ch ldren 6 13 Concentrat on 8 Not Fa
Women On ly 15 Whal s My L ne 10 French Chef 33
30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 As the Wor ld Turns 8 10 Lets
Make A Dea 6 13 Let s Tra ve l 33
2 00 - Daysofourl vesJ 4 IS Gu d ng L ghl8 0 Newlywed
Ga me 6 13 Our Street 33
2 30- DoctorsJ 4 15 Edge of NoghiB 10 G rl n My L fe 6 3
Joyce AI 34 33
3 00 - Another Wor ld J 4 5 General Hosp ta 6 13 Pr ce s
Roghl 8 10 Woman AI ve 33
3 30 - One L fe to Love6 13 Phil Donahue 4 How To Surv ve A
Marr age 3 15 Match Game 8 10

WILL TRIM or cut trees and
sh r ubbery Also clean out
ba se m ents att cs etc Phone
9.49 3221 or 742 4441
6 6 26tc

CONCRETE

4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Tat
lletales8 Huck !l. Yog 6 I Drea m ot Jea nnie 13 Move The

Kod from Spa in 10

and backhoe work
sept c
tanks nstalled dump trucks
and to bovs for hire wi I hau
fl I dirt top sol
I mestone
and gravel Ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992

4 30 - Green Acres 3 G I ligan s I sland 6 Bonanza 15 Jackpo t
4 V1rgtn1an 8 Dame Boone 13
5 00 - Bonanza 3 Merv Gr ff n 4 M ster Rogers 20 33 B g

Valley 6
5 JO - Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Hogans Heroes 13
Western Star Theater 15

2 11 tfc

Reese squeezes out btg slam

Authorized Singer Sates and
Service We Sharpen Sc ssors
3 29 tfc

'J
+

DOZER work land clear ng by
the acre haur y or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator with over
20 years experience Pu Ins
E x'cavating F"omeroy Oh o
Phone 992 2478
'Zl9 tfc

+J s

. 6

upho l ster ng
reasonable
rates Pickup and del very
free
est mates
J
profes ss onal craftsmen to
serve you better and faster
Phone Mowrey s Upholstery
675 4154 Pt ~ easant w va
5 30 261c
__._

THE

LOVELY FRAME &amp; BRICK
-

almost

new

excellent

neighborhood J BR double
closets

convenient klfchen

H W floors with carpeting
double
$24 000

carport

85

acre

00
WELL BUILT- older home

coop owner moving SlJ 500

CAN YOU PAPER OR
PAINT? - Here1sodondy 8
rooms

.t

B R

hookup

•

RACINE
PERMA STONE 3
BR
LARGE MODERN
KITCHEN
I , BATHS
CARPET THROUGHOUT
FULL BASEMENT 2 CAR
GARAGE
ALL
ONE
LARGE
FLAT WELL
LANDSCAPED
LOT
PR CEO MID TWEN TIE S

2 STORY

OFFICil-446 3643
EVENINGS
dud McGhee-446 1255
E M
Ike Wtseman- 446

3796

small

basement double lot with
trailer

&gt;

Gall pots

m quiet commun ty about 1

acre 3 B R donlng family
room bath born chicken

new

car

pel ng new gas F A fur
nace $12 900
NEAR MINE 3 - 2 story
frame 4 B R dining R 1',
baths 2 garages storage
aboul 2 acres $10 000

Dearp Rap
I KNOW whom) na tural mother IS and I wtsh I d dn 1 She
comes whmmg back mto my hfe every ttme she needs booze
money If I don t come through she curses me as a hard hearted

a

6 00
News 3 4
15 ABC News 3 Sesame Sl 20 Truth or
Cons 6 B I Moyers Journa 33

630 - NBCNew,34 5 ABC News6 CBSNewsB IO Room
222 13
o1

My L ne 8 W d K ngdom 3 Elec Co 20

33 I Spy 15

News 6 o What s
Av at on Wea her

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
You be lucky or yourse I and
olhe s oday I those you e n
vo ved w lh e you ca !h e
sho ts

TAURUS (April 20 May 201

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec

You be belle otl do ng whal
pleases you ather than at
emp ng a la sk tha i you hea 1

21) You

lare ve y we I you
deal sole y w h hose c ose to
you T eups w h ou ts de s
could be cost y

sn "
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) I

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan

you don I lo ck you budg et
down ght today you ego ng
to spend some und s I
vo ous y that you ve se as de
o mo e o act ca purposes

19) You gel a the coope a
I on you need f you et o the s
know !hal what you wan s o
to r you alone bu Ia them as
well

CANCER (June 21 July 22)

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)

Th s can be a lun day
you
don t le an ns gn I can! p ob
em ave whe m you thougl1 ts
T eat you se f o some h ng
n ce

You r rewa rd s w I cone on y
you f n sh wha you s art Don
JUmp f om one pro ect to an
othe

LEO (July 23 Aug 22 ) You

PISCES (Feb 20 March 201

spa e you self annoyance 1
you s eer c ea o f one wh o a
ways upse s you plans n
o de to sat sl y h s o wn n
e ests

You re ucky oday as long as
you bet on ly on su re th gs
T ak ng a chance on someth ng
you re no lam a w th w
p ave a op

son forgettmg that she was only too glad to be rid of me 25 years
ago And to thmk I opened up this ca n of worms
Yes I found her after a long search and a lot of argmr enl
With offtc1als And now I m - SORRY
Dear He len and Sue
In our slate Indiana we were told that our adopted son can
fmd out who his natural parents are when he reaches 21 AU he
has to do s go lo the agenc) of placement and they w11l get out the
f les
I thmk this IS fme - for later But presently I m glad I don t
know the names of our son s b olog1cal parents 1don l want them
rommg mto our hves perhaps wanting the1r ch1ld back and I d
be fearful1f I kne" who they were - PARENTS OF A CHOSEN
CHilD

tll&amp;MIDib~ ;; tkJ

.,,_u.J ..-~ ,_

hy H(NRI ARNOlO · ••HI non lff

Doe~

t.:nscramble th ese four Jumbl es
one leiter to e 1ch square to
rorm four ord nary words

a

a

0 00 -

Toma 6 13

New s 20 Con I c s of Har y S Truman 33

CBS Reports 8 0
0 30 - Day at N gh l 33 Oh o Th s Week 20

00
News J 4 6 8 10 3 5 Jana k 33 Av at on Wea th er 20
30
Johnny Ca r son 3 4 5 n Con ce t 6 Untouchab es 13
Mov es The Haunted Pa ace 8 Castle of Ev
o

2 30 - News 3
00 M dn ght Spec al 3 4 Don K sh e s Rock Concer 6
Move

Satan s Sate I tes

Lie 5
2 30 - Mov e 633 Squadron
M ov e

0 In Concert

4

The Red head and Cowboy

S 30 - Move The Gunf ght at Dodge C ty 4
CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
1 JO p m - The Champ ons
9 30 p m - ln lr gue
Soec a l

3 T ake F ve For
4

ACROSS
l Back of

the neck
S Swed sh
c I)

lOl lahao
bel
tow n
ll Gel o e s

40 Concu1
41 R1d ng
t1 e wet cs
OIJWN
I Cog wme
2 Co ral
1:;lund
l lndusl1
work

mcc nt ve

bear ngs

13 Anchor
l4 E nglish

2

Vts t&lt;:" rday

&gt;\d S

4 Goddess

f he I g
5 Zero
6 Commcd a
dell Reclme
8 In vest

essayist

IS Sp le
16 Ingested
17 Duffers
need
181ypeof
thread
un\\ tselv
20Kndof
4 wds
song
9 Away from
21 Ele\ated
m1htary
d1
ty 2 vds
22 Brewery
'
vat
23 Dougl y
glut nous
0
25 He s often
robbed
26 Pallld
27 lnsh
exclamatiOn
28 Be
prom nent
29 Corrupt ble
31 ConstellatiOns
mam star
32 Infamous
Nazi
Robert33 lllurmna ted
35 Ascended
37 The
two
38 Inner

12 Yuwogs lcr
col 4
16 ( ul ort
19 ( reek
syl\ an
lell)
:?0 A 1c tc nt
da gger
23 I rench
philosopher
24 Oregon
c1ty

fi Answer

25 V1ct1m
27 Rctahate
30 Lissome
32 Un asp1rated
consonant
34 r ea
genus
36 l1tle for
Hairy
Lauder
37 Lambkin s
cry

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here s ho" !o work 1t
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

and Son3 4 15 D rty Sa l y8 0

IS P lol F m 8 10
9 30 - 0ddCoup le6 13 P otFimB 0 Reno 20

by THOMAS JOSEPH

cover

Porter Wagone 3 Wal St Week 20 33 New T eas\J e
Hunt 0 Beat t he Clock 13 Ho lywood Squares 4 Con
central on
Tp Te I the Tr u th 6
00 - Wash ngton Rev ew 20 33 Brad y Bunch 6 3 Sanf ord

8 30 - The Forgott en War 20 Pr mal Man 6 13 Good T m es e
10 Gladys Kn ght and the P ps 3 4 15 Moun Ia n Scene 33
9 00 - Mast erp ece Theate 33 Mo ve
l ove My W fe J 4

~

39 Engllsh
poet

7 30 -

rx

III
'

I NAUGIA I
1

rJ

I

tJ

I I r ()
TIPEOAj

0

HOW THE CLOiHIN6
MEI&lt;:CHANT PEALT

l

lunll"

N ow arranp the cncled letters
to form the surpnse answer aa

r xx

NEWLY BAKED

ABACUS

Anl"ll'r Thry '11UJI luul. r uht to lfUtwrumc

RBQatta Parade &amp; Prev ew

UJLt\.

75

CRYPTOQUOTES
GJKZK

(An•w~tn lomoll' o"'

'fll'llf' day"'

One letter simply st and s f or an other In th1 s sample A IS
used for the t hree L s X lor the t\loo 0 s etc Smgle l etters
apostrophes t he length and formati on of the words are all
hmts Each day the code l c l ers arc d1fl'et cnt

W TH HIS CUSTOM~5

I
~=====;:~====~==:., aucceated by the above cartoon
1'--_,l_nt th_! _suR_PRISI_ AN_sw_ER_hm_____.l r I x xI
J

20

BELLOW
EVES

NI

AH

QDIGDGNAB
EGGKZ

NA

NAIDAN&lt;'lF
UDA

IH
SNCK

IDANGF

·-

GREAT
COUNTRY

{() 1974 Klnr Fe•tunt Syndlcatt Inc )

IHACY

snREo
92.1
WMPO-FM
~

The ma~or wants
to see

~.IN

..

v.JONDER MOP.ON "

WOULD

'/0 CalNS DEP, SETTL N N
DOGPATCH? - HAV N 'oO
ROUND v-.QULD MAKE US

HAD TO TUfl,N DOW .J T cAM F.
OFFER FUM COOIGP.ESS AN fH
'J'AL~ SCHOOL OF AI=I.T "

'/ORE PATR Of C DUT'/
TO SPREAD

·~--:::::.

N\Af-1

LACK 0 TALENT I'&gt;ELONGS TO
TH NATION"

---..
--•.
•••

..
---.

'"~.-

West
U

Norlh
Db!

20

East

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
3+
?
Pass
You Soulh hold
• 654,KJ432 +AQ 97 4J
What do you do now'

4'

WHAT HAVE 'IOU AN TATER
BEEN OP TO WHILE I WUZ
OUT CLEANI N UP TH
WOODSHED JUGHAID &gt;

A-Pass You are tempted to

bid "'l•ln but should resist thlo
lemplallon

TODAY S QUESTION
Instead or b1ddmg four hearts

"'

your partner has b1d three spades

,.

over your three hearts What do

:

you do now"

•

•

'/ORI'C
GGORANCE
A ROUND

HUH;:.

ALL FE.E.L SMAf'.T "

NEWSPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN

The b1ddmg has been

~OJ

'iOJ

~rl~~~,r,~~.,~
::. L#R;!:lt!@ifUJ

.
"'
-..

co.n

10.1\T Hie S JfiT
101 l-lcO wrrn

ALLE¥ OOP

LL TELL 'IE 01\! TH
WA'{ BACK OUT TO
iH WOODSHED

DI

DSSKA
MJNGK
Yesterdays Cryptoquote AS SOCIETY ADVANCES THE
STANDARD OF POVERTY RISES -THEODORE PARKER

+ 96

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Terence Reese s reputation
as one of the great play rs IS
so sec ure that he can k1d h1m
se lf on occasion We quote m
part from h1s descnptlon of
today s hand
The game was a m1xed
pa1r eve nt My partner s
three notrump was an effort
to get a top and my Jump to
stx notrump was prec ipitous
to say the least I realiy
should have b1d four d1a
monds and contmued with a
cue bid m spades wh1ch
would have got us to a safe
seven d1amonds
West c ouldn t sta nd
prospenty and doubled It
was now too late to expert
ment w1th d1amonds and ob
v1ously s1x notrump was not
gomg to make so I ran to
seven clubs West doubled
merely because she was mad
about my gettmg out of six
notrump
The play at seven clubs
was qu1te easy I ruffed the
spade lead and after cashmg
all the clubs and diamonds
found myself wtth the ace
queen of hearts and dummy
w1th the queen of spades and
a heart West discarded a
heart on the last d1amond so
pamfully that I knew she had
blanked the kmg and that
was all for the defense

PK

MNSSNDU

410953

4KQJ8 72
Ne1ther vulnerable
West North
East South
14
3.
3 NT
Pass 6NT
Dble Pass
Pass 74
Dble Pass
Pa~
Pass
Open ng lead- 6 K

6 15 tfc

AGENCY

Often I fee l hke half a person because I can t answer
questiOns that may be beneficial to my Crumly Did my bwlog cal
parents pass on weaknesses or strengths I m not a&gt;\ are of ? My
family tree ends with adopted Somellmes I scarcelv fee l
born but only found
And yet I wouldn t want w meet these strangers who
couldn t be parents to me I m1ghl disrupt their lives and
perhaps they d disrupt mme I only want lo know what they are
hke - from a distance - NOT FOR LOOKING I 00 CLOSELY

Today you de ve en oyment
om the qu ete th ngs Hang
ng a ound w th one to o act ve
w I cause d s upl ons you can
dow hout

' AQ4
+ AQ l0 2

------- -----Real Estate For sale

a.ELAND
608 E
REALTY
MAIN

Dear Helen and Sue
II:; the adopbve mother of three I have few obJect ons lo
open records My ch1ldren have been told all the facts known
about theor bwlog cal parents The two older ones prcscnlly have
no desire w check fur ther and tl e tl1rd cluld IS stillloo voung lo
decide
If they wanllo look up the r natural parents later on 1 do not
bebeve I will fee l threatened as. our relationship w1th them 1s
secure and I know that curiOSity 1s a natural tra1t
HOWEVER I do have one strong feeling about the matter A
woman ITUIY be more apt to choose for abort on I she knows lhal
he ch1ld ca n trace her popp ng up some 18 years hence to hawol
her And I m anti-abortion
The feelings of b1olog1cal parents shou ld be cons de red m any
new la"s about open records - MARGARET

For Friday June 21 19 7 4
ARIES (March 21 April 191

SOUTH CDI

______ _

WISEMAN

Don t make changes at he
p esen where you wo k o
ca ee s co nc e ne d You
co uld be yo ur o wn wo s t
enemy

K8743
.A4
WEST
EAST
.AKJ1098 4 .75 2
'K83
,10962

-=-====--------SERVICES offered furn ture

-----

Yes I m for open adopl1on records I m lhe mother of 1 son
I ve never seen smce the day I e left ll e I osp1tat
It hurt gmng hun up bull knew l was best for him as I was
very young and couldn t I ave cared for h m
There s nola lime n the da) when I don t think of h m I
wouldn t embarrass him by commg ba ck mw his hfe (even 1f I
knew h1m I bul I hope and pra) that some da) he II search me
out Perhaps we could be fnends - HOPEFUl MOTHER

7 00 - T ruth o Conseq 3 Beat the Clock

June 21 1974
Grea e oppo un 1 es w be
com g you way It'! s year
Pe sons n pas ons l o help
w
g ve you a needed boos

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23)

Rap

10 30 om -

NORTH
• Q63

Hotlt I

More Letters About Aduptl'ds

4 00 -

WIN AT BRIDGE

7&lt;28

POMEROY 0

Hollywood Squares3 4 15 Brad y Bunch 3 Love of L fe

11 30 -

oDELL AI nem ent ocated0i1
Route 12.4 and Co unty Rd S
Cr ossroads complete front
end tuneup and b ake serv ce
P ease c a I for appo ntment
742 3232
5 24 tf c

5232

Tarzan s

9 30 - To Tellthe Tru th 3 TBA 8
9 35 - Malter of Flct on 33

y our
Free
3284
Co

~uc

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22)
Try to cave you presen
needs w lh what you have a
hand Do n 1 bank on new
sou ces that have yet top ove
they can produce

Rap

Jeffs Co li e 6 Man from COS I 10
25
Jack LaLanne 3
30 - Brady Bunch 6
55- Chuck Whole Reports 10 News 13
00 - AM 3 Paul D xon 4 W ld W d Wesl6 Phi Donahue 15
Abbott &amp; Castello 8 Capta n Kangaroo 0 Move
Pen I 13 Commonty of L v ng Th ngs 33

10 23 tfc
del vered r ght to
pro ect Fi!ist and easy
esti mat es Phon e 992
G oeg le n Ready M x
M ddleport Oh o
6

0 D ck Van Dyke 13

New Zoo Revue6 Tenne ssee Tu xedo JJ
Capt Kangaroo 8 New Zoo Revue 3 Sesa me St 33

7 30 8 00

662

TANKS cleaned
Modern San tat an 992 395-t or

READY MIX

Morn ng Report 3 Fa m t lme 10

7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8
Speedr ader 6

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled ?
Lost
your
operator s license Call 992

For Rent

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

FRIDAY JUNE 21 1974

POMEROY - Bu ld ng lot has SEWING MACHINES Repa r
serv ce a l makes 992 2284
a 10x50 mob le home 2
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy

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

----------

.t

FA

Pets For Sale

-

200 - News&lt;

------------n&lt;tder
EXCAVAT NG tinu•r

Almost 2

small

1l 30 - Johnny Carson 3 &lt;1 15 M sslon
mposs be 6 Un
touchab es 13 Move
The Strawber y Sta ement
10
Bache or n Par ad se 10
12 JO - Wo d W d West 6 News 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Gera ldo R vera Good N gh l Amer ca
13 Take F ve For L fe 5

de lver e d Monday through
Saturday
and even ngs
Pllone 446 1142
6 13 tfc

11-:1 M1•d1.Jillt \frt·1·t

NEW LISTING -

10 JO - Day AI N gh t 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 5 Janak 33

SE PTI C

CREMEANS

B T1·,11u1d \1
Br-ni\•·r

Pollwroy, O h 10 JSJ6CI
acres

PH

To Te 1 The
4

B 00 - The Waltons B F p W son 3 4 5 Chopper One 6
Where 0 d A ll the An mals 0 World ot L berace 1J Move
Ques t For Love B
8 JO - F rehouse 6
9 00 - Irons del 4 5 Kung Fu 6 3 Move Where the Spes
Are
0
9 30 - The Gloucesterman 20 Lord of the Un verse 33
10 00 - Comedy World 3 4 5 Move 8 St eets o San Frnc sea
6 3 News 20

10 4 tfc

FAR M for sa e app ox mae y
5 m l es from Pom er oy 55
ac es 8 room house w h
ba t h 2 bar ns pond other ou
bu d ngs Phone 698 3791
6 14 6tc

Beauty Salon

OH 0

Hollywood Squares 3 WI d K ngdom 10

Truth 6 Beat The Clock 13 Zoom 20 Dea lers Cho ce
Ozz e s Gor is 8 TBA 15

FOR
t-~Et
est mat es on
a um num
r ep acement
w ndows s d ng storm doars
and w ndows Ra ling Phone
Char l es L sle Sy acuse Oh o
ca rl
Jacob
sa es
Representat ve
V
V
Johnson and son In c
4 30 lfc

3035

Rea I Estate For Sale

lOLA'S

7 30 -

l•telled

STEWART

For Sale

He letz Concert 33

Water L1nes and Power
L1nes All work done by the
foot or contract Also d01er
work and septic tanks in

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYS TEM S
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SA NITATION

771 Pearl Street
M ddleporl Ohoo
Phone 992 Sl67 or ~92 3861

Not1ce

1'12 13 F ower Show 33

By Hdcn and

Room

7 00 - Beat the Clock 4 What s My L ne8 New s 6 10 E ec Co
20 Truth or Cons 3 Le s Make A Deal J Sports Desk 15

SEF'T IC
TANKS
c eaned
reasonable r ates
Ph
446
4782 Gal po s John Russe I
owner and opera or
5 12 tfc

B-K EXCAVATING

Nobce

Nobce

Mason W Va

Wat er Electnc Ga s Sewer
L nes
n ~ talled
Work
gu.aranteed
Dozer Backhoe Trucks
L m es tone &amp; F II 0 r l
Com mere a I Restdenfla I
Cons t r uct on &amp; Remodel

0

Truth or Conseq. 6 L lias Yoga &amp; You 33
6 30 - NewsJ .t CBS NewsB 10 News 5 ABCNevs6

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeifers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Now Open tor Bus ness

THURSDAY JUNE 20 1974
6 00 - News 8 10 Sesame 51 20 ABC News 3 New s 3 4 5

DITCHING SERVlCE

.

rWW.(-i/.:!:!:0!'&lt;:::::G
;;::::::::e:::
&gt; :::::n::
:::::::e:
:::;:;r
;:;:;a::
:::;:t
;:;:i
:::::o
:;:;:;:;n
:;:;:;:;:::::·R
:·:·:·:·:·:·a
:;:·:·:p
·:·:::::;:·:·:;::&gt;::::::::::o;~,

�Television Log

IS- The Dally Sent111el Middleport Pomeroy 0 Thursday June 20 974
14-TheDallySent111el Middleport I o111uoy
ORDINANCE NO 1550 77
6R 446
AN ORDINANCE PROV D NG
FOR THE
SSUA N CE OF
NOT ES IN THE PR I NC PAL
AMOUNT OF SJOO 000 BY THE
V IL LAGE OF
POMEROY
OH 0
N ANT CIPAT I ON OF
THE I SSUANCE OF BOND S
FOR
THE
PURPOSE
OF
MAKIN G
MPROVEMENT S

TO

,_

..
...

~:

-

THE

WATERWORKS

SYSTEM O F THE VILLAGE
A ND
DECLAR N G
AN

EMERGENCY
WHEREAS heCounc o
V lage of Pome ro y Oh o
eques ed he V age C e k
f seal off ce
o cert fy
ma• mum matu ty o
bonds here n efcrred t o cJnd

he
has
as
t1e
tt e
he

notes here n author zed a d
f sea
off ce
h li~
s u ch
es t mated the
~ ot
he n

provemen as at cas

o

11 W&gt;U

I)

Junc 20 1~ 4

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Card of Thanks
f. AM LY

THE

John s o
hea H e

o

ex
!hanks o

lT

d

u~

he
he n &lt;1ny

l r ends
ne ghbor c:;
;,nd
relat v es for t e r t ood
p aye s I owcr s &lt;~nd c a ds
dur ng h s ln ~ss and a th e
f me ot h s dea h
Sp ec a l
hank;; o Rt'v Jake r ry
McCoy M oo e Funcra Hon c
l he s ngc s and pa bca r e s
lnd anyon e wh o e ped n any
way du nQ h s 1 me You
ac ts ot k ndncss w I o g be
en en be rcd M s B d e
Jo hns on a
am y
623 c

ve ye a s

and ce t r ed
hE&gt; ma x num
matu
y o f the bo ds as fa y
years and o t e no es o be
ssued n a nt r. pa on h ereo f ~
f ve years
f so ld pub c y

2 SIGNS
Of

WE W SH lo ex press ou
deepes g a udc nd h an k s
o h m ny
ends o ou
be l oved daugh er
Sarah
Gre en We ca n never express
n wo d s how we fee l n ou
nea'r s You wo ds k ndness
and dee ds n n s me of g eat
asress w
aways be
r emembered as long as fe
s a
as
ttm y of M
and
M s Wa it e L G een
6 10 p

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

QUALITY

For Rent

MOB LE
HOME
2
bedrooms
0 m nu es from
Pome oy or M dd epo r
Ca l
992 66 30 aft er d p m
6 20 6tc

s 895

1972 VEGAHATCHBAC KC PE

Loca
owner trade n 4 speed tran s G T equ pment
ado good I res clean ns de green f n sh

1970 NOVA CPE

$1495

local
owner good t es 6 cy l w th automat c tran s
ado blue f n sh spo t ess clean blue nter or

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

J&amp;B AUTO

HED
bed oom
o
aQe a t Rock Sp ng s P ced
on nspec on on l y Ca l 997
2789
6 20 6 c

f. UF&lt; N

Ox52

191 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN
522 95
350 V Beng ne automat c trans ~wer steer ng &amp; brakes
good t res clean nter or ch ome bumpers gr II &amp; wh
cove s rad o b lue t n sh

Business Services
BODY

WOOD TRUSSES

·sA&gt;

Moved to Rutland J" m le
ms de c ty
m t on nght
corner B rck Sf and Rt l24

Bu1ltto.Your Specs
Delivered to Job Stte

Free Est mates

FOR RENT

New~

742-5293

Remodeled

4-Room &amp; Bath
Furnished Apt

Wolk1nson Small Engone
992 3092
399 w Mam
Pomeroy

MATERIALS CO
773 SS54

othe w se one
year
Located at Modern Supply
NOW THER EFORE BE IT
Small Engme Repa.r
ORDA NED by th e Counc I o
he V age of Pom l'roy Me QS
No pels deposo t requ1red
County Ot'! a
304 Spnng Ave
Pomeroy
SECT ON
That t s here by
992
7556
dec hred n ecessa y n o der to
OPEN EVES 8 00 PM
preserve the publ c peace
POMEROY OHIO
health
safety
comfort and
welfare ot t he nhab an s or I he
Lawn Boy
vii age to ssue bands of the
Tecumseh
4
ROOMS
and
balh
on
Hy
se
l
V I age or Pomeroy Oh a n th e
Koh er
Run Road
ch d on l y Phone
pr nc pal sum of $300 000 fa
W scons n
CLO SE OUT Si! IC V I age
742 5 13
m
th e purpose of mak ng
Fab c Shop Tuppers Pans
• AI other
6 19 4t c
provemen ts o the w aterwo ks
En e s ock go ng at cos
makes
FREE
K
TTENS
to
system of he v I age
Sa c ends June 28 Hou s 9 lo 3
CARPORT Sa e
65 V ne
qua fy ng persons can be
SECTION 2 That sad bonds
daly
S reel
M dd epo rt
Oh
o
M d
seen a 39a Gra n S
sha I be da ed approx rna e y
6 7 5 p
June 20 2 and 22 Msc
d epor
after 6 p m o ca l
June 1 975 sna 1 bea nlerest
REDUCE eHess flu ds w h
terns
9922520afte 6p m o ate 2
at he rate of aoo oxim ate v s x NO sewage or cf use s to be
F lu deK $1 89
Lose we gill
6 a -4 c
p
m
on
Saturday
per cent 6 pc
per nn um and
dumped n he c eek on my
w h Dex A D et capsu es at u ROCERY bus ness for sale
6
20
21c
Bu lei ng for sa e or ease
sha l ma ure n subs tan t a l y
prope y f om heR us c H IS
Sl 98 at Ne son Drugs
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
equal annua nsta lments over
a ea or
ny other a ea
6 20 p
YARD SALE
F r d ay
nd
to 10 p m tor appo ntment
a per ad of wenty (20) years
Geo ge Free and
Sa tur day a l La k ns S
after th e r ssuance
3 20 f c
I T HAD TO H APPEN the 3
6 a3 c
Ru l and Oh o G
s 'JO b ke
SECT ION 3 Tha t t she eby
whee wonde Tr sports n 1d
boys 24
b ke h gn cha r
determ ned that notes n he
mode ls hese ange from 3 o DOZER or backhoe work Ph
c eam can brown overs u f ed
446 3981 or 446 3459
pr nc pa amoun of SJOO 000
58 h p of f oad and street
cha r d s es amps 2 baby
Shal be ssued n ant c pat on of
PUBLI C NOTICE
64H
ega ! mach nes
See ng s
---- -----sa fety gates
Othe
m sc
t he ssu an ce of sa d bonds Sa d
NOTICE OF
be ev ng
Long
Fe ! ow
John
&amp;
May
Sis
ems
notes !iha l be dat ed Ju ne 4
PUBLIC HEARING
Mo tor s Ravenswood W Va
6 20 2 c
1974 sha ll bear nferest at the
OF BUDGET OF
Phone (304 273 3594
V1s1t Us For
rate of s x and s x tenths per
MIOOLEPORT OHIO
6 20 ltc
CL
P
NEW
SPA
PER
IT
EMS
FRESH
cent (6 6 pet ) per annum
Not ce s hereby g ven tha on
PH 992 2549
FOR CA SH PROF T S Earn
payab ea t matur ty matur ng the 8th day of Ju l y 974 at 1 30
LET u s SHOW yo u how to stay
55 00 to S35 00 ea ch
n
on Jun e 4 1975 sa d not es may P M a Publ c Hea lng w
be
a home h s summer and st 1
Oi&gt;~n~ daY' open
fo r ma li o n
Send SOc and
be sod as here nafter prov ded he d on the budget prepared by
f ee a m 1 on m tes away See
s amped se f dd essed
everungs by appomtment
In such denominations as may tt'! e V II age of M dd eport Me gs
our whole 1 ne of Chry sle
enve
ope
(C
K
Prof
1
Rt
1
be requested by the purcha se rs County Oh o for the next
Mar ne Product s
bo a s
Por l and Oh o
SEC TION 4 That sad notes succee d ng F sca t year end ng
mo o s and 3 6 boat r a er s
sha I be executied by th e Mayor Decembe 31 1975
6 20 Jtc
MERLE NORMAN
Powe s from h p to 150 h p
and Vi tage Cl erk and sha I bea r
Such hearing w I be he d a
outboard eng n e Boats f rom
COSMETICS
Dunng Regatta
the sea of the corporal on They t he V I age Ha I at M d d epar t MOTOCROS S June 23 p ac t ce
14 ft o 23 f cru ser s L ong
11 30 race l p m 2m espas t
Sha l be des gnated
Water Ohio
Weekend
Fe low Motors Ravenswood
Bes Photo on Co Rd 56
works Improv e m ent Not es
June
Specta
I
w
Va Phone 273 3594
8 mslone Raceway Par k
and shall be payab e at The
Gene Gr a e C erk
6 20 He
Mon &amp; Tues
Coo v li e Oh o
Centra l Trust Com pany C n
v age of M dd l epor
cinnatl Oh o They sha 1 ex
61 20 Jtc
Permanents - -S10 00
953 FERGU SO N 30 I actor
press upon th e r face the pur
new f ont
re s motor and
Ha1r Cuts
$1 50
pose for wh ch they are ssued
Mam
Pomeroy
pan t S 350 Phone 98S 359 4
and that they are ssued n
6 20 4tc
A1r
Condtf
oned
and
TV
For
NOTICE
OF
pursuance of thi s or d nance
-·-----Your Comfort
PUBLIC HEARING
SECTION 5 That sad notes
6 20 11p
COUCH
and
CHA R $75 26
ON THE COLUMBIA
Sha I be f rst offered to th e of
nch 5 horse po wer Craft
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES SHOOT IN G
Mach
Corn
fleer or off cers in charge of he
sman
d ng mower $140 5
Hoi ow Gun C ub !urn f rst
bond ret rem en t fund of t he BUOGET
pa r wood Shut ers s 5 Ca 1
r gh l after M le~ Ceme ery
v I age and any notes not taken
985 411 -4 befo e 3 p m
Not ce s ,ere by g ven lhil on
Ru and
Fa c o y c hok ed OL D fu n to r e oak t ab le s
by such ofr cer sha 1 be sold at
6 20 3tp
private sale to We I Roth &amp; th e5 thd ayo f July 974 a 8 30
guns on y Sunday une 23
clocks ce bo xes brass bed s
p m
Irving Inc c nc nnat Oh o n o c ock P M a pub! c hear ng
d shes desks or complete 1966 HONDA 30 5 Supe Hawk
accordance w th t s offer to wl I be he d on lh e Budget
6 20 3tc
househo ds Write M
0
A cond ton Phon e 949 3811
prepared
b
y
I
he
Co
umb
a
Twp
purchase sa m e wh ch 5 hereby
M fer Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
6 20 6tp
Trustees
of
Me
gs
Coun
y
Oh
a
accepted at not ess than par
ca I 992 7160
and accrued nterest and the for the ne~et succeed ng r sea
5 13 tf c 4 HORSE POW£ R and 5 h p
3 1st
proceeds from such sa le excep t year end ng Decembe
Me1gs County
975
ga den t ll ers and la wn
any prem urn and the accrued
These s1zes a lso avarlable
Fish &amp; Game Assoc
mowers Phone (30d 773 5323
Suc h hear ng w I be he ld at
CASH pad for a 1 makes and
nterest thereon sha l be pad
5 000 6 000 8 000 10 000 and
Mason
he Townsh p
nto the proper fund and used the off ce at
modes of mob l e hom es
12 000 BTU
for the purpose a loresa d and Bu !din g
Phone area co de 6 4 423 9531
6 19 6tc
for no other purpose
4 13 tt c
POMEROY LANDMARK
COMPLETE k ng s ze bed S200
SECT ON 6 That sa id not es
G or a Hufton
1
:
Y.
- Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone
992
36
9
Cle lo.. Co um b a
shall be the full genera
J UN K Au to s camp ete and
..,.
Phone992 -2181
6 20 3 c
obligation of the v llage and the
Twp Tr ustees
de vered o our yard We
full fa th cred t and revenue of
p ckup auto bod es and buy a 1
SA L E
OF
said v lage are hereby pled ged
k nds of scri\.Q_ m etals and TRUCKLOA D
LI V NG ROOM SUITES
tor the prompt pa yment of the
ron R de r s ' Sa l vag e St a e
FACTO RY CLO SE OUTS
same The par va ue to be
Route 24 Rl 4 Pom eroy
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
A ND
F IR ST
QUALITY GR LL cook and k tchen he p
r eceived from the sa e of bonds
Oh o Phone 992 5468
Separate sea l ed proposal s for
L V ING ROOM SU TES AT
ant c paled by sa d notes and
wanted Ap p y n person at
5
22
26tp
any excess fund resu I ng from co al and or fu e o furn ace for
LOW LOW PR CES "6. LE I S
Crow .s Stea k ~ouse
At Fraternal Order of Eagles
the
Southern
Junior
H
g
h
Sc
t'!oo
FRIDAY AND SAT URDAY
the ssuance of sa d notes sha l
6 14 12tc
Club Room Pomeroy Oh•o
JUNE 21 &amp; 22 OPEN FRIDA Y
to the extent necessa ry be used will be r eceived at the off ce of
June 20 starting 1 p m
only for the ret rement of sa d the C erk of the Board of
NIGHT UNTIL 9 PM SEE
Sell your steel scrap
notes at matur ty together w th Educat on of Soul he n Loca
Omner Served 5 p m to 7
US BEFORE YOU BUY
Interest thereon and are hereby Sc hool Oistr c Ra e ne Me gs
cast tron sheet 1ron
THAT
L VING
ROOM
pm
County Oh o un t 1 2 00 (l cock
p edged for such purpose
SU TE WE KNOW WE CAN IO xSO MOBILE home n ew
copper
brass
E ST
July 11
197 4
SEC TION 7 Tlla t dur ng the noon
car p et and furna c e 8 x 20
SAVE YOU MONEY
E Z
year or years wh e such notes Cop es of the spec f cat ons
awn ng
See Gary Sm th
TERMS AVAILABLE OR 30
alum1num
auto
and
Chester Oh o aft er 6 p m
run th ere sha I be lev ed on all nstruc t ens to b dders
D AY LAY A WAY SAME AS
SlagNo
MinorsStag
batteries
auto
of the t axable propert y n the proposa l fa ms m ay be obta ned
CASH
POM E ROY
6 18 6tp
Advance Tickets SJ 00
VI lage of Pom ei'IOy n add ton at th e off ce of t he Super n
RE COVE R Y 622 E M an
rad1ators
and
IBM
Sout
hern
H
gh
Schoo
l
AI
Door
Sl
SO
to all other t axes a d ee l tax t end ent
STREE T
POMEROY 6S X 2 MOB LE home 3
Products
to
the
annually not ess han that Rae n e Ohio
PHON E 992 7554
bedroom bath
v ng room
whi c h would have been l ev ed f
Sa d board of ed uc atio n · • - - - - - - - - - - - - '
6 19 3tc
Rosenberg
Co
hal
and 2 bedroo m s ca r
bonds had been ssued w thout res erves the r ght to wave
peted Phone 992 7751
nformal t es
o accep t or ME I GS Count y Hum ane Soc ety
pr or ssuance of such notes
Athens Oh1o We close STARC RAFT New and used
Th ft Shop open 0 a m t I
6 6 lfc
Sa d tax shall be and s he r eby re ect any and a I or parts of
campers A so auto awn ngs
4 30 p m every Friday and
each Frtday at Noon
any and al b ds Th e success ful
ordered computed
cert fed
Reese h t ches port a pot
Sa turd a y New used stock
o
lev ed and extended upon th e b dder w I be reQu rea
furnaces 25 pet off C osed for
and w1ll be closed 4 and
arr v ng week y Cloth n g
tu: dup c af e and collec ted by turn sh a sa t sfa cto r y pe r
vaca t on July 4 through 6th
col ec t bles
ap p ances
5 July
the same off ce s In the same fo mancc bond for one hundred
Camp Conley Starcraft Sa es
1970 DODGE 1 ton cab and
treasures r ecord s p c ures
manner and at the sa m e t me per ce nt of th e contra c t pr ce
Rt 62 N of Pt Peasant
chass s van 31 8 va newt res
boo
k
s
l
amps
lays
Loca
ted
Southern Loca School o s t l et
that tax es for general purposes
beh nd Red Ca rp et nn
exce ll ent cond ton S1 400
across f om Pome oy Po st
Grover Sa l ser Jr P es dent
for eac h of sa d years are
6
9
3t
c
Phone 992 3030 after 5 p m or
Off ce
Nancy Ca rn ahan Clerk
certlf ed
extended
a n-d
142 5943 after 6 p m
5 12 tfc
collec ted Sa d ax sha 1 be Treasurer
R
I
SH
Se
t
er
pu
ps
S
amese
EXCEL
SIOR
Salt
Works
E
6 19 4tc
(6)
20
27
71
3
8
'
c
placed before and n pr ef erence
Ma n St Pomeroy All kind s
KOSC OT
KOSM ET CS &amp; K ttens A K C Poodle pupp es
to all other tems and f or the tu 1
Pheasant ch cks Phon e 1 256
of salt water pell et s water
WI GS
F or a good lne of
1969 CHEVROLET 3:~~ quart er
amount th er eof
Th e funds
6247
The Almanac
nuggets block salt and own
Cosmet cs fri endly serv ce
ton p ckup good cond ton
der ved fr om sad tax levy
Oh
o
R
ver
Salt
Phone
992
6
4
26tc
and someone to chat w th
Joh n Rose 949 2822
hereby requ ed sha I be placed By United Press International
3891
g ve me a ,.at He en Jan e
n a separate and d s net fund
6 4 6tc
Today IS Thursday June 20
YORKSHIRE Terr er pups
6 5 tfc
Brown 992 511 3
a nd together w th nterest
AKC
Champ
on
s
re
d
7
wks
col ected on th e sa me sha I be the 171st day of 1974 With 194 to
J 19 t fc
FORD truck motor 6 cy! w th
o d
Sho s w o med
and WEAREpckngupapano n
rrevD c ab y pledged for
he follow
tran sm Iss on Also 1939 Ford
your
area
and
wo
uld
ke
ped
greed
Ph
one
985.4106
A TO Z Mart used furn shed
payment of t he pr nc pal and
tru c k I h ton 6 cyl or g nal
some
responsrble
party
t
o
6 l4 6tc
appliances cloth ng dishes
The moon ts between 1ts new
nter est of sa d notes or the
equ pment Co lec tor s tem
take over payments
Call
and m sc R t 33 opposite
bonds n an t c pat on of wh ch phase and first quarter
Good cond t on Phone 992
Cred t Manager (614) 772
t ra l er CCJurt Hartrord w
they are issued when and as the
7384 even ngs
5669
or
wr
te
260
E
ast
Ma
n
Va
The mornmg stars are Venus
same tal s du e
prov ded
6 18 ttc
Street
Chi
I
cothe
Ohio
45601
however hat to th e exten t ha and Ju[llter
4 10 tfc RIVERS DE apartm ents 271 N
4 7 ttc
surplus waterworks reven ues
F rsf Avenue M ddleport
The evenmg stars are Mer PARASOL Bout Que sa on nex t
are appropr a t ed and app ed to
WILLYS Jeep Phone 992 5726
Oh o Appl ca tions now be ng r---------.;.;;,;,~
o Skat e A Way announces
the pa yment of th e notes sad cury Mars and Saturn
6 18 61C
accep
ed
Phon
e
614
446
3746
he newt m e sav ng too proof
ta x needed not be ev ed
or
after
5
p
m
992
5730
un perm sys tem o g ve a
Those born on this date are
F ORD Mob e camper fu ly
SE CTION 8 Th s Counc t for
6 13 18tp
perfect perm on every head
equ pped
and on behalf ot the v 1 age of Wider the s1gn of Gemlm
$2 500
Pau
ntroductory Spec a Sl 8 50
Cheval e r
Pomeroy
Oh o
hereby
Long Bottom
T1re Pnces
German composer Jacques
reg S20 June 1 22 Phone fo ~ 3 ANO 4 ROOM turn shed and
Oh o
cove nants t hat t w 1 restr c t
appo ntm tn t now 985 41 4
th e use of the proceeds of the Offenbach was born June 20
6 18 6tp
unfurn sh ed
apar tments
Sandra Trussel
Kear n s
notes hereby i)Ufhor ze d n such
Ph one 992 5.434
-owner and oper ator
manner and to such extent f 1819
In the Area
4 12 tf c
1969 CHEVY Townsman st at on
6 9 2tc
any as may be necessa r y after
On
th1s
day
111
history
wagon Sl 95 good cond ton
tak ng nto ac count reasonab e
PRIVATE meetng room for
Phone 992 7620
In 1898 the U S Navy se1zed DUE to the ran fast weekend
expectations a t th e t me the
any organ zat on phon e 99-2
It's
epeat G gant c Yard Sale o
5 24 ttc
debt s ncurred so tha t they Gnam largest of the Marianas
3975
mor e tems R t 33 nor h t urn
w II not c anst tute
arb trage
3 11 rtc
r ght County Road 9 fo l ow
bond s under Sect on 103(d ) of Islanda m the Pacific dur111g
s gns Thursday Jun e 20 9 to
t he Interna l Revenue Code and the Spanish American War
5 Fr day 12 5
R I VERS ID ~ Apartm en ts 27 1
the regulat ons prescr bed
N F rSI Ave M ddleport
3 STORy t
6 19 2tp
thereunder The v !!age c erk The people of Guam were
Oh o Appl ca ons now be ng
ram e hom e g ar age
or any oth er off cer hav ng granted U S Cltizenslup 111
accephzd Phone 614 446 3746 772 5881
Mason W Va
carpeted w th new P umb ng
GARAGE Sa e o I am p s
responslb ty w th r espe«; t to
and
electr
c w rrng
Total2
or after S P m 992 5730
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _, ,
e ectr c ncludes
2 stoves
depress on
g la ss
guns
the IsSua nce of said notes s 1950
mante cocks and other
author zed an d d r ected to g ve
6 2 l 8t c refr gerators
and
some
In 1963 the Uruted Slates and
tems F r day and Sa urday
--------LOS E we ght w th New Shape
turn ture
s tuated
on
an apRroprlate ce rt f cate on
Jun e 2 and 22 Bash an Eag e ONE new furnished apartment
Tab lets and Hydr eK Water
beaut fu 314 ac re lot Ask ng
behe f of the v !age on the date Russ1a agreed on a !llK!alled
R dge Road q t Norman
3roomsandbath one4rooms
P ti S Dutton Dr u g M d
$29500 Cat 9925933
of d el very of sa d notes for
hot line commumcatlons
Hyse 1
and bath furn shed Reyno ds
deport and Ne son Drug
6 23 3tc
Inc ! us on n t he tran scr pt of
Apartment Mason W Va on
6 18 Jtp - - - - - - - - - - - - - proceeding s sett ng fort h the link between Washington and
Route 33 Phone IJO.t) 77J. - - - - - ----CHOICE of two 3 bedroom
fact s
est mates and ci
Moscow
5360
1974
Z~G ZAG
SEW ING-...... Itomes by owner Bath &amp; ,
cum stances and reasonab e
In 1967 the Amencan In618 12tc
MACHINES left n ayaway ""liu It in kitchen wall to wa 1
expectat ons pert a n ng to the
AI bu It n to buttanho e do
cl!l rpet lut basement w th
use of th e proceeds t he reof and dependent party was formed to
COUNTRY Mobl e Hom e Park
stretch sew ng and fancy
garage
Br ck.
fronts
the provls ons of !a d Sect on
New development off Route
st tch ng Pay lust S4 8 75 cash
alum num
s d i ng
and
103
(d)
and
r egu at ons back George Wallace of Alaba
thereunder
J3
t en m es north o f
or term'S avar abl e Trade Ins overhangs 1 acre to t Pr ce
rna for president
Pom eroy
Large lots w t h
accepted Phone 992 2653
S28 500 each Call 985 35~8 or
SECTION 9 That the Village
co ncrete pa tios
s dewatks
6 18 ttc
985 4177
In 1973 aner an exile of two
Clerk .J s hereby d r eeled to
runners
and
off st r ee t
forward ~cert r ed copy of t h s decades former Argentme
6 14 10tc
par k ng
Also
spaces for
ordinance t o the
County
sm al tra l ers Ph one 992 7479
Aud tor
Pl'esident Juan Peron returned
6 8 26tc
SECTION 10 That lh s or to Buenos Aires later to
We need man or woman to
d nance 5 hereby declar.ed to be
sell
full
lone
ot
Ad'ertising
an
emergency
measure resume his old post
BIJ S NE SS rCJom 22 x SO 734 E
Specoalties Co endors and
necessary for th e pre.servat Jon
Ma n S
Pomeroy
Qh o
G fts In the Pomeroy
of the pub! c peace health
Phon e 992 5786 or 992 3975
A thought for the day Irish
safety comfort and welfare of
M ddleporl Area Musl be
6 12 tfc
tl'le Inhabitant! of the V tlage of novelist George Moore sa1d
able to plan own time and
Pomeroy n that said notes must
4
work with a minimum of UNFUR NI SHED home
Mter all there Is but one race
be authorized to support con
ooms ut 1 ty room and bath
supervision
struct on contracts for the --humanity
garage 1655 Po nt L ane
propoaed waterworks
m
All accounts are protect ed
Phone 992 3874
provement and t sha 1 take
Repeat orders are protected
6 7 tf c
effect upon Is adopt on
Hogh
Commissions
payable
Adoptect M ay 20 1974
of Me gs Coun ty Oh o
FUR NI SHED elf c ency apt
w hen orders are passed for
Ca I 992 5786
Da e E Sm th
Jane Watton
cred t
6 _16 6tc
__t_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Mayor
C erk of Counc t
The Advertising Specialty
Attest
TRAILER for 1 or 2 adu IS only
Jane Walton
l ne is t he most ex tens ve n
RECEIPT
Call 992 J 81
Clerk of Counc 1
Pomeroy Oh o
the Industry Calendars are
6 16 6tc
May 21st 1974
manufactured al our R'ed
CERTIFICATE
The under sig n ed
County
O.k plant
The Ul'ldtrslgned Clerk of Auditor of Meigs Coun tv Ohio
2 PIE CE Early Amer ca n 1 v ng
F URNISHEO
apartment
Council Pomeroy Ohio hereby hereby acknowledges reee pt of
Wrtte Bob McKenz1e Sales
room suite and 1 platform
adu ts CJnlv n M cldleport
certlflft tnet tne for~Qolng Is a i!l certlfltd copy of the forego ng
rockers
Good co ndlt on
Manager The Thos D
Phone 992 3874
nance
Drd
true lnd corr1c1 copy of Or
Phone 992 5614
5
12
tfc
Murphy
Company
110
Sv
dlnence No 1550 27 adopted by
6 18 Jtc
'/,
Second Street Red Oak
satd council on tht 2()th day of
James E Roush Jr
TRA LER Browns Trailer WHITE Ch nese gees 6 weeks
May 1974 and that on 71st M ay
County A ud tor
Iowa 51566
Cour t 992 3324
191,._ sh• filed a certified copy
old Ca ll 992 768 5
ftttflot with the Countv Auditor: C6l 13 20 2tc
6 18 4tp
tfc
J
I
J

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

COM PAN~

For Sale

HOU SE 6 rooms and ball.l
c osed n porch 3 • acre land
Ches e Ca l 985 3537
6 13 6tc

SYRACUSE

•'•
•
•

••
•

2 BEDROOM house n M d
d eporl
New k tc hen and
bath app ances ncluded
Ca I 992 53 0
6 2 26tp

FRUITS &amp;
VEGETABLES

ON E new at
e ectr c
3
bed r oom 519 900 and 3 other
homes Phon e 992 3975 or 992
257
6 5 fc
HOUSE
5 room s
attached
garage oca ed near school
Syracuse Oh o Phone YY2

SHULER'S MARKET

3860

W

,'-------:-:----.,,.

HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS

Wanted To Buy

4,000 BTU

'109.95

ANNUAL

FISH

Help Wanted

FRY

Mobile Homes For Sale

I

•
'••

- ------Auto Sales

II 121p

6

TEAFORD
V~rqil

'.

w th

bedroom home

barn

bath

f urnace modern kttchen

and

garage Want only 515 000 00
MIDDLEPORT - Local on lor
store houses da ry shop
serv ce station or dr ve n

bedrooms

w1th

t

for

$5750 00
MIDDLE PORT- One

only

acre

plu s 2 houses that you can rent
Room for two trailers Want

lust 517 500 oo
80 ACRES - Under lease with
a I minerals

7 room house

free gas 2 barns and stocked
fish pond
FINE LARGE HOME - Sh
balhs 6 bedrooms steam heal
Large 12 rooms overlook ng the

Ohio R ve&lt;- Dbl garage on
larqe lot Needs owner
A HOME IS YOUR BEST
INVESTMENT YOU OC
CUPY IT AS YOU INCREASE
VALUE

BEND TIRE CENTER

CAN YOU WORK
WIOOUT

SUPERVISION

------

---

------

- --

---------

__ ___ -JF

•

I

------ -

Real Estate For Sale

6 00 ...:.... Sunrise Sem nar 4 Sacr ed Hea r t 0
6 25 - Farm Report 13
6 30 - F ve M nutes to L ve By 4 News 6 8 be Answe s 8

Blue R dge Quartet 13
Columbus Today 4

6 35 6 45 -

8
8
8
9

992 73&lt;9

CONCRETE

10 00-0 nah Shore 3 15 Jokers W ld 8 10 Company 6 L dS
Yooa &amp; You 33
10 30 - Jeopardy 3 4 15 G~mt&gt; I 8 10 Wheels K In &amp; Cay
I Dream of Jeanne 13
11 00 - Wozard of Odds 3 4 15 Password 13 Commun ty ot

30 ttc

C BRADFORD Auct oneer
Com olel e Serv c:e
Phone 949 382 ar 949 3161
Racine Ohio
Crltt Bradford
5 1 tfc

Lov ng Th ngs 33 M ke Doug a• 6 Now You See 118 10

8

11 35 - Matter of F ction 33
11 55- CBS News 8 Dan mel s World 10
12 00- Password 6 News 8 10 13 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4

Jackpot 3 15 Mr Rogers 33
12 30- Celebr ty Sweepstakes 3 15 Sp l t Second 6 Sea rch for
Tomorrow 8 10 Electr c Co 33 Aller noon with DJ 13
12 55
NBC News 3 15
1 00 - News 3 All My Ch ldren 6 13 Concentrat on 8 Not Fa
Women On ly 15 Whal s My L ne 10 French Chef 33
30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 As the Wor ld Turns 8 10 Lets
Make A Dea 6 13 Let s Tra ve l 33
2 00 - Daysofourl vesJ 4 IS Gu d ng L ghl8 0 Newlywed
Ga me 6 13 Our Street 33
2 30- DoctorsJ 4 15 Edge of NoghiB 10 G rl n My L fe 6 3
Joyce AI 34 33
3 00 - Another Wor ld J 4 5 General Hosp ta 6 13 Pr ce s
Roghl 8 10 Woman AI ve 33
3 30 - One L fe to Love6 13 Phil Donahue 4 How To Surv ve A
Marr age 3 15 Match Game 8 10

WILL TRIM or cut trees and
sh r ubbery Also clean out
ba se m ents att cs etc Phone
9.49 3221 or 742 4441
6 6 26tc

CONCRETE

4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33 Tat
lletales8 Huck !l. Yog 6 I Drea m ot Jea nnie 13 Move The

Kod from Spa in 10

and backhoe work
sept c
tanks nstalled dump trucks
and to bovs for hire wi I hau
fl I dirt top sol
I mestone
and gravel Ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992

4 30 - Green Acres 3 G I ligan s I sland 6 Bonanza 15 Jackpo t
4 V1rgtn1an 8 Dame Boone 13
5 00 - Bonanza 3 Merv Gr ff n 4 M ster Rogers 20 33 B g

Valley 6
5 JO - Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Hogans Heroes 13
Western Star Theater 15

2 11 tfc

Reese squeezes out btg slam

Authorized Singer Sates and
Service We Sharpen Sc ssors
3 29 tfc

'J
+

DOZER work land clear ng by
the acre haur y or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator with over
20 years experience Pu Ins
E x'cavating F"omeroy Oh o
Phone 992 2478
'Zl9 tfc

+J s

. 6

upho l ster ng
reasonable
rates Pickup and del very
free
est mates
J
profes ss onal craftsmen to
serve you better and faster
Phone Mowrey s Upholstery
675 4154 Pt ~ easant w va
5 30 261c
__._

THE

LOVELY FRAME &amp; BRICK
-

almost

new

excellent

neighborhood J BR double
closets

convenient klfchen

H W floors with carpeting
double
$24 000

carport

85

acre

00
WELL BUILT- older home

coop owner moving SlJ 500

CAN YOU PAPER OR
PAINT? - Here1sodondy 8
rooms

.t

B R

hookup

•

RACINE
PERMA STONE 3
BR
LARGE MODERN
KITCHEN
I , BATHS
CARPET THROUGHOUT
FULL BASEMENT 2 CAR
GARAGE
ALL
ONE
LARGE
FLAT WELL
LANDSCAPED
LOT
PR CEO MID TWEN TIE S

2 STORY

OFFICil-446 3643
EVENINGS
dud McGhee-446 1255
E M
Ike Wtseman- 446

3796

small

basement double lot with
trailer

&gt;

Gall pots

m quiet commun ty about 1

acre 3 B R donlng family
room bath born chicken

new

car

pel ng new gas F A fur
nace $12 900
NEAR MINE 3 - 2 story
frame 4 B R dining R 1',
baths 2 garages storage
aboul 2 acres $10 000

Dearp Rap
I KNOW whom) na tural mother IS and I wtsh I d dn 1 She
comes whmmg back mto my hfe every ttme she needs booze
money If I don t come through she curses me as a hard hearted

a

6 00
News 3 4
15 ABC News 3 Sesame Sl 20 Truth or
Cons 6 B I Moyers Journa 33

630 - NBCNew,34 5 ABC News6 CBSNewsB IO Room
222 13
o1

My L ne 8 W d K ngdom 3 Elec Co 20

33 I Spy 15

News 6 o What s
Av at on Wea her

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
You be lucky or yourse I and
olhe s oday I those you e n
vo ved w lh e you ca !h e
sho ts

TAURUS (April 20 May 201

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec

You be belle otl do ng whal
pleases you ather than at
emp ng a la sk tha i you hea 1

21) You

lare ve y we I you
deal sole y w h hose c ose to
you T eups w h ou ts de s
could be cost y

sn "
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) I

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan

you don I lo ck you budg et
down ght today you ego ng
to spend some und s I
vo ous y that you ve se as de
o mo e o act ca purposes

19) You gel a the coope a
I on you need f you et o the s
know !hal what you wan s o
to r you alone bu Ia them as
well

CANCER (June 21 July 22)

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)

Th s can be a lun day
you
don t le an ns gn I can! p ob
em ave whe m you thougl1 ts
T eat you se f o some h ng
n ce

You r rewa rd s w I cone on y
you f n sh wha you s art Don
JUmp f om one pro ect to an
othe

LEO (July 23 Aug 22 ) You

PISCES (Feb 20 March 201

spa e you self annoyance 1
you s eer c ea o f one wh o a
ways upse s you plans n
o de to sat sl y h s o wn n
e ests

You re ucky oday as long as
you bet on ly on su re th gs
T ak ng a chance on someth ng
you re no lam a w th w
p ave a op

son forgettmg that she was only too glad to be rid of me 25 years
ago And to thmk I opened up this ca n of worms
Yes I found her after a long search and a lot of argmr enl
With offtc1als And now I m - SORRY
Dear He len and Sue
In our slate Indiana we were told that our adopted son can
fmd out who his natural parents are when he reaches 21 AU he
has to do s go lo the agenc) of placement and they w11l get out the
f les
I thmk this IS fme - for later But presently I m glad I don t
know the names of our son s b olog1cal parents 1don l want them
rommg mto our hves perhaps wanting the1r ch1ld back and I d
be fearful1f I kne" who they were - PARENTS OF A CHOSEN
CHilD

tll&amp;MIDib~ ;; tkJ

.,,_u.J ..-~ ,_

hy H(NRI ARNOlO · ••HI non lff

Doe~

t.:nscramble th ese four Jumbl es
one leiter to e 1ch square to
rorm four ord nary words

a

a

0 00 -

Toma 6 13

New s 20 Con I c s of Har y S Truman 33

CBS Reports 8 0
0 30 - Day at N gh l 33 Oh o Th s Week 20

00
News J 4 6 8 10 3 5 Jana k 33 Av at on Wea th er 20
30
Johnny Ca r son 3 4 5 n Con ce t 6 Untouchab es 13
Mov es The Haunted Pa ace 8 Castle of Ev
o

2 30 - News 3
00 M dn ght Spec al 3 4 Don K sh e s Rock Concer 6
Move

Satan s Sate I tes

Lie 5
2 30 - Mov e 633 Squadron
M ov e

0 In Concert

4

The Red head and Cowboy

S 30 - Move The Gunf ght at Dodge C ty 4
CABLE CHANNEL FIVE
1 JO p m - The Champ ons
9 30 p m - ln lr gue
Soec a l

3 T ake F ve For
4

ACROSS
l Back of

the neck
S Swed sh
c I)

lOl lahao
bel
tow n
ll Gel o e s

40 Concu1
41 R1d ng
t1 e wet cs
OIJWN
I Cog wme
2 Co ral
1:;lund
l lndusl1
work

mcc nt ve

bear ngs

13 Anchor
l4 E nglish

2

Vts t&lt;:" rday

&gt;\d S

4 Goddess

f he I g
5 Zero
6 Commcd a
dell Reclme
8 In vest

essayist

IS Sp le
16 Ingested
17 Duffers
need
181ypeof
thread
un\\ tselv
20Kndof
4 wds
song
9 Away from
21 Ele\ated
m1htary
d1
ty 2 vds
22 Brewery
'
vat
23 Dougl y
glut nous
0
25 He s often
robbed
26 Pallld
27 lnsh
exclamatiOn
28 Be
prom nent
29 Corrupt ble
31 ConstellatiOns
mam star
32 Infamous
Nazi
Robert33 lllurmna ted
35 Ascended
37 The
two
38 Inner

12 Yuwogs lcr
col 4
16 ( ul ort
19 ( reek
syl\ an
lell)
:?0 A 1c tc nt
da gger
23 I rench
philosopher
24 Oregon
c1ty

fi Answer

25 V1ct1m
27 Rctahate
30 Lissome
32 Un asp1rated
consonant
34 r ea
genus
36 l1tle for
Hairy
Lauder
37 Lambkin s
cry

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here s ho" !o work 1t
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

and Son3 4 15 D rty Sa l y8 0

IS P lol F m 8 10
9 30 - 0ddCoup le6 13 P otFimB 0 Reno 20

by THOMAS JOSEPH

cover

Porter Wagone 3 Wal St Week 20 33 New T eas\J e
Hunt 0 Beat t he Clock 13 Ho lywood Squares 4 Con
central on
Tp Te I the Tr u th 6
00 - Wash ngton Rev ew 20 33 Brad y Bunch 6 3 Sanf ord

8 30 - The Forgott en War 20 Pr mal Man 6 13 Good T m es e
10 Gladys Kn ght and the P ps 3 4 15 Moun Ia n Scene 33
9 00 - Mast erp ece Theate 33 Mo ve
l ove My W fe J 4

~

39 Engllsh
poet

7 30 -

rx

III
'

I NAUGIA I
1

rJ

I

tJ

I I r ()
TIPEOAj

0

HOW THE CLOiHIN6
MEI&lt;:CHANT PEALT

l

lunll"

N ow arranp the cncled letters
to form the surpnse answer aa

r xx

NEWLY BAKED

ABACUS

Anl"ll'r Thry '11UJI luul. r uht to lfUtwrumc

RBQatta Parade &amp; Prev ew

UJLt\.

75

CRYPTOQUOTES
GJKZK

(An•w~tn lomoll' o"'

'fll'llf' day"'

One letter simply st and s f or an other In th1 s sample A IS
used for the t hree L s X lor the t\loo 0 s etc Smgle l etters
apostrophes t he length and formati on of the words are all
hmts Each day the code l c l ers arc d1fl'et cnt

W TH HIS CUSTOM~5

I
~=====;:~====~==:., aucceated by the above cartoon
1'--_,l_nt th_! _suR_PRISI_ AN_sw_ER_hm_____.l r I x xI
J

20

BELLOW
EVES

NI

AH

QDIGDGNAB
EGGKZ

NA

NAIDAN&lt;'lF
UDA

IH
SNCK

IDANGF

·-

GREAT
COUNTRY

{() 1974 Klnr Fe•tunt Syndlcatt Inc )

IHACY

snREo
92.1
WMPO-FM
~

The ma~or wants
to see

~.IN

..

v.JONDER MOP.ON "

WOULD

'/0 CalNS DEP, SETTL N N
DOGPATCH? - HAV N 'oO
ROUND v-.QULD MAKE US

HAD TO TUfl,N DOW .J T cAM F.
OFFER FUM COOIGP.ESS AN fH
'J'AL~ SCHOOL OF AI=I.T "

'/ORE PATR Of C DUT'/
TO SPREAD

·~--:::::.

N\Af-1

LACK 0 TALENT I'&gt;ELONGS TO
TH NATION"

---..
--•.
•••

..
---.

'"~.-

West
U

Norlh
Db!

20

East

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
3+
?
Pass
You Soulh hold
• 654,KJ432 +AQ 97 4J
What do you do now'

4'

WHAT HAVE 'IOU AN TATER
BEEN OP TO WHILE I WUZ
OUT CLEANI N UP TH
WOODSHED JUGHAID &gt;

A-Pass You are tempted to

bid "'l•ln but should resist thlo
lemplallon

TODAY S QUESTION
Instead or b1ddmg four hearts

"'

your partner has b1d three spades

,.

over your three hearts What do

:

you do now"

•

•

'/ORI'C
GGORANCE
A ROUND

HUH;:.

ALL FE.E.L SMAf'.T "

NEWSPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN

The b1ddmg has been

~OJ

'iOJ

~rl~~~,r,~~.,~
::. L#R;!:lt!@ifUJ

.
"'
-..

co.n

10.1\T Hie S JfiT
101 l-lcO wrrn

ALLE¥ OOP

LL TELL 'IE 01\! TH
WA'{ BACK OUT TO
iH WOODSHED

DI

DSSKA
MJNGK
Yesterdays Cryptoquote AS SOCIETY ADVANCES THE
STANDARD OF POVERTY RISES -THEODORE PARKER

+ 96

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Terence Reese s reputation
as one of the great play rs IS
so sec ure that he can k1d h1m
se lf on occasion We quote m
part from h1s descnptlon of
today s hand
The game was a m1xed
pa1r eve nt My partner s
three notrump was an effort
to get a top and my Jump to
stx notrump was prec ipitous
to say the least I realiy
should have b1d four d1a
monds and contmued with a
cue bid m spades wh1ch
would have got us to a safe
seven d1amonds
West c ouldn t sta nd
prospenty and doubled It
was now too late to expert
ment w1th d1amonds and ob
v1ously s1x notrump was not
gomg to make so I ran to
seven clubs West doubled
merely because she was mad
about my gettmg out of six
notrump
The play at seven clubs
was qu1te easy I ruffed the
spade lead and after cashmg
all the clubs and diamonds
found myself wtth the ace
queen of hearts and dummy
w1th the queen of spades and
a heart West discarded a
heart on the last d1amond so
pamfully that I knew she had
blanked the kmg and that
was all for the defense

PK

MNSSNDU

410953

4KQJ8 72
Ne1ther vulnerable
West North
East South
14
3.
3 NT
Pass 6NT
Dble Pass
Pass 74
Dble Pass
Pa~
Pass
Open ng lead- 6 K

6 15 tfc

AGENCY

Often I fee l hke half a person because I can t answer
questiOns that may be beneficial to my Crumly Did my bwlog cal
parents pass on weaknesses or strengths I m not a&gt;\ are of ? My
family tree ends with adopted Somellmes I scarcelv fee l
born but only found
And yet I wouldn t want w meet these strangers who
couldn t be parents to me I m1ghl disrupt their lives and
perhaps they d disrupt mme I only want lo know what they are
hke - from a distance - NOT FOR LOOKING I 00 CLOSELY

Today you de ve en oyment
om the qu ete th ngs Hang
ng a ound w th one to o act ve
w I cause d s upl ons you can
dow hout

' AQ4
+ AQ l0 2

------- -----Real Estate For sale

a.ELAND
608 E
REALTY
MAIN

Dear Helen and Sue
II:; the adopbve mother of three I have few obJect ons lo
open records My ch1ldren have been told all the facts known
about theor bwlog cal parents The two older ones prcscnlly have
no desire w check fur ther and tl e tl1rd cluld IS stillloo voung lo
decide
If they wanllo look up the r natural parents later on 1 do not
bebeve I will fee l threatened as. our relationship w1th them 1s
secure and I know that curiOSity 1s a natural tra1t
HOWEVER I do have one strong feeling about the matter A
woman ITUIY be more apt to choose for abort on I she knows lhal
he ch1ld ca n trace her popp ng up some 18 years hence to hawol
her And I m anti-abortion
The feelings of b1olog1cal parents shou ld be cons de red m any
new la"s about open records - MARGARET

For Friday June 21 19 7 4
ARIES (March 21 April 191

SOUTH CDI

______ _

WISEMAN

Don t make changes at he
p esen where you wo k o
ca ee s co nc e ne d You
co uld be yo ur o wn wo s t
enemy

K8743
.A4
WEST
EAST
.AKJ1098 4 .75 2
'K83
,10962

-=-====--------SERVICES offered furn ture

-----

Yes I m for open adopl1on records I m lhe mother of 1 son
I ve never seen smce the day I e left ll e I osp1tat
It hurt gmng hun up bull knew l was best for him as I was
very young and couldn t I ave cared for h m
There s nola lime n the da) when I don t think of h m I
wouldn t embarrass him by commg ba ck mw his hfe (even 1f I
knew h1m I bul I hope and pra) that some da) he II search me
out Perhaps we could be fnends - HOPEFUl MOTHER

7 00 - T ruth o Conseq 3 Beat the Clock

June 21 1974
Grea e oppo un 1 es w be
com g you way It'! s year
Pe sons n pas ons l o help
w
g ve you a needed boos

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23)

Rap

10 30 om -

NORTH
• Q63

Hotlt I

More Letters About Aduptl'ds

4 00 -

WIN AT BRIDGE

7&lt;28

POMEROY 0

Hollywood Squares3 4 15 Brad y Bunch 3 Love of L fe

11 30 -

oDELL AI nem ent ocated0i1
Route 12.4 and Co unty Rd S
Cr ossroads complete front
end tuneup and b ake serv ce
P ease c a I for appo ntment
742 3232
5 24 tf c

5232

Tarzan s

9 30 - To Tellthe Tru th 3 TBA 8
9 35 - Malter of Flct on 33

y our
Free
3284
Co

~uc

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22)
Try to cave you presen
needs w lh what you have a
hand Do n 1 bank on new
sou ces that have yet top ove
they can produce

Rap

Jeffs Co li e 6 Man from COS I 10
25
Jack LaLanne 3
30 - Brady Bunch 6
55- Chuck Whole Reports 10 News 13
00 - AM 3 Paul D xon 4 W ld W d Wesl6 Phi Donahue 15
Abbott &amp; Castello 8 Capta n Kangaroo 0 Move
Pen I 13 Commonty of L v ng Th ngs 33

10 23 tfc
del vered r ght to
pro ect Fi!ist and easy
esti mat es Phon e 992
G oeg le n Ready M x
M ddleport Oh o
6

0 D ck Van Dyke 13

New Zoo Revue6 Tenne ssee Tu xedo JJ
Capt Kangaroo 8 New Zoo Revue 3 Sesa me St 33

7 30 8 00

662

TANKS cleaned
Modern San tat an 992 395-t or

READY MIX

Morn ng Report 3 Fa m t lme 10

7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8
Speedr ader 6

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled ?
Lost
your
operator s license Call 992

For Rent

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

FRIDAY JUNE 21 1974

POMEROY - Bu ld ng lot has SEWING MACHINES Repa r
serv ce a l makes 992 2284
a 10x50 mob le home 2
The Fabric Shop Pomeroy

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

----------

.t

FA

Pets For Sale

-

200 - News&lt;

------------n&lt;tder
EXCAVAT NG tinu•r

Almost 2

small

1l 30 - Johnny Carson 3 &lt;1 15 M sslon
mposs be 6 Un
touchab es 13 Move
The Strawber y Sta ement
10
Bache or n Par ad se 10
12 JO - Wo d W d West 6 News 13
1 00 - Tomorrow 3 4 Gera ldo R vera Good N gh l Amer ca
13 Take F ve For L fe 5

de lver e d Monday through
Saturday
and even ngs
Pllone 446 1142
6 13 tfc

11-:1 M1•d1.Jillt \frt·1·t

NEW LISTING -

10 JO - Day AI N gh t 33
11 00 - News 3 4 6 8 10 13 5 Janak 33

SE PTI C

CREMEANS

B T1·,11u1d \1
Br-ni\•·r

Pollwroy, O h 10 JSJ6CI
acres

PH

To Te 1 The
4

B 00 - The Waltons B F p W son 3 4 5 Chopper One 6
Where 0 d A ll the An mals 0 World ot L berace 1J Move
Ques t For Love B
8 JO - F rehouse 6
9 00 - Irons del 4 5 Kung Fu 6 3 Move Where the Spes
Are
0
9 30 - The Gloucesterman 20 Lord of the Un verse 33
10 00 - Comedy World 3 4 5 Move 8 St eets o San Frnc sea
6 3 News 20

10 4 tfc

FAR M for sa e app ox mae y
5 m l es from Pom er oy 55
ac es 8 room house w h
ba t h 2 bar ns pond other ou
bu d ngs Phone 698 3791
6 14 6tc

Beauty Salon

OH 0

Hollywood Squares 3 WI d K ngdom 10

Truth 6 Beat The Clock 13 Zoom 20 Dea lers Cho ce
Ozz e s Gor is 8 TBA 15

FOR
t-~Et
est mat es on
a um num
r ep acement
w ndows s d ng storm doars
and w ndows Ra ling Phone
Char l es L sle Sy acuse Oh o
ca rl
Jacob
sa es
Representat ve
V
V
Johnson and son In c
4 30 lfc

3035

Rea I Estate For Sale

lOLA'S

7 30 -

l•telled

STEWART

For Sale

He letz Concert 33

Water L1nes and Power
L1nes All work done by the
foot or contract Also d01er
work and septic tanks in

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYS TEM S
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER SA NITATION

771 Pearl Street
M ddleporl Ohoo
Phone 992 Sl67 or ~92 3861

Not1ce

1'12 13 F ower Show 33

By Hdcn and

Room

7 00 - Beat the Clock 4 What s My L ne8 New s 6 10 E ec Co
20 Truth or Cons 3 Le s Make A Deal J Sports Desk 15

SEF'T IC
TANKS
c eaned
reasonable r ates
Ph
446
4782 Gal po s John Russe I
owner and opera or
5 12 tfc

B-K EXCAVATING

Nobce

Nobce

Mason W Va

Wat er Electnc Ga s Sewer
L nes
n ~ talled
Work
gu.aranteed
Dozer Backhoe Trucks
L m es tone &amp; F II 0 r l
Com mere a I Restdenfla I
Cons t r uct on &amp; Remodel

0

Truth or Conseq. 6 L lias Yoga &amp; You 33
6 30 - NewsJ .t CBS NewsB 10 News 5 ABCNevs6

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeifers
Day 992 7089
N1ght 992 3525
or 992 5232

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Now Open tor Bus ness

THURSDAY JUNE 20 1974
6 00 - News 8 10 Sesame 51 20 ABC News 3 New s 3 4 5

DITCHING SERVlCE

.

rWW.(-i/.:!:!:0!'&lt;:::::G
;;::::::::e:::
&gt; :::::n::
:::::::e:
:::;:;r
;:;:;a::
:::;:t
;:;:i
:::::o
:;:;:;:;n
:;:;:;:;:::::·R
:·:·:·:·:·:·a
:;:·:·:p
·:·:::::;:·:·:;::&gt;::::::::::o;~,

�•

..

"

Mea• bargains promised

•

16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThW'sday, june 20, 1974

-

~·

)

By JOHN LESAR
United Press International
Supermarkets across the
country have launched an allout campaign to offer oncescarce meats at bargain prices
in lin effort to clear out a glut of
beef which has kept livestoc k
prices below farmers' production costs.
11
ln our ads this week, we're
going to offer special freezer
bundles and - urge our
customers to load up on beef
while the prices are tow;" said
Ames Watson, president and
chief executive officer of
National Tea OJ.
National Tea operates stores
in Denver, Mirmeapolis, Minn.,
Milwaukee, Wis., Indianapolis,

•

•

In.d., St. Louis. New Orleans by as much as 34 cents per
pound on some cuts of beef
and Chicago.
Los Angeles newspaper ad- compared to Feb. 13 prices.
vertisements showed lower For example, he said, ch uck
beef prices this week. blade steak, which sold for
Spokesmen for a number of Los .$Ui9 per pound Feb. 13, is now
Angeles food store chains. said priced at 75 cents a pound .
market co nditions have
But he noted that pork,
allowed price cuts of f&gt;-10 cents poultry and cheese .'prices also
per pound on economy grades dropped sharply since early
of meat such as ground beef, February and "are in good
chuck and stew meat but competition with beef."
conditions were flexible .
Newby said center cut pork
Beef Sales
chops were down to 88 cents
Bill Newby, a spokesman for per pound compared to $1.69
Jewel Food Stores in Chicago, per pound in February .
said the chain has been cutting
Aspokesman for a New York
back beef prices for the past City food chain said the store
two months in an effort to step was not concerned with the
up beef sales.
livestock industry but was "out
He said prices had gone down to help the New York City

Glut of beef
in markets to
be moved out
consumer."
"We have co ntinuously been
reflecting a reduced price of
beef,"ssaid a spokesman for
New York's Sloan Supermarkets. He said the chain planned
sales on roast beef ($1.29 ). beef
live (59 cents), chopped chuck
(99 ce nts), ground round
i$1.39) and flank steaks ($1.79.
Neil Ja ckson , meat manager
for the Colonial Store in
(Con tinued on page 10)

•

at y

I

PRINCIPAL WEUX&gt;MED - Roger Epple, center,
president of the Eastern Local School District Board, and
John Riebel, district superintendent, right, welcome the new
8astern High School principal, Chester A. Gooding .

en tine

Gooding welcomed

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Are11
(

VOL. XXVI

NO. 49

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY: JUNE 21, 1974

Spring and Summer Styles From Several Famous Makers

MiSSESAND"l
,___w_o~~~~~~--J

•

Living

Syrian tempers rising,
warn of retaliations

::::: new Israe li air raids agai nst southern Leba non. \:::
):~!but Israel vowed to continue its campaign to ~:~: 1.1
~~:: wipe out Palestinian guerrilla bases.
By CHARLES E. FLINNER
=~~
Iraeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said
.,,
WASHINGTON (U PI) !:1: the Israeli and i\rab positions on a peace setWith food prices tW'ning up
§; llement were so wide apart that negotiation~ again, the cost of living to
i~! now were impossible.
Americans rose by 1.1 per cent
in
May, the gove rnm ent
::i(
In Damascus, a Syrian orrir.ial said his
reported today.
:!:!: government would not stay neutral in the
The Labor Department's Bu':!! Israeli air attacks in south Lebanon.
reau df Labor Statistics said
iii!
"Syria will not remain with its hands folded
food prices turned up 0.7 per
!:i in th e face of the barbaric shellings by Israel
cent in May after a decline of
i~ii against innocent civilians in southern Lebanon
0.3 per cent in ApriL In ad§! and hopes that other Arab countires will also
dition, price ·increases-- were
recorded in a wide range of
shoulder their responsibilities, " the official
other
goods and
~: said. The official, however, did not elaborate on !. services,consumer
including
used cars,
»~-~ any action planned by the government. Israel
apparel, g a s o 1 i n e and
and Syria are only five days away from a :;., housekeeping services.
. complete troop pullback in the Golan Heights. !:l
Fresh fruits and vegetables

%more

JUNIOR DRESSES

SALE~

PRICE

Special clearance sale prices
Friday and Saturday.
Not every size in every style.

SALE

3 PAIR •1.89

Mens 11.95 Knit Shirts-- --- Sale 9.39 -

DEPT~

Shirts-. ~

- - Sale 5.79 ..,._,

..
Mens 10.95 Knit Shirts--- - - Sale 8.39 ·

Mens 9.95 Knit Shirts---- - Sale 7.39 .:.

Sale For Friday and Saturday

ON THE 1ST FLOOR

BOYS KNIT SHIRTS
AND TANK TOPS

NEW SHIPMENT
ARTIFICIAL A.OWERS

An excellent selection - solid colors
stripes - many, many styles .
Sizes 2 to 7 and 8 to 18

Including ferns - daisies
wild flowers and others.

•6.88

SEOOND ROOR

Mens 7.95 Knit

•

HOUSEWARES DEPARTMENT

Sizes 32 to 50 waist. Solid colors dark
olive · navy blue - suntan. Permanent
press. Made by Lee.

.FREE SPIRIT
eBODY MAGIC

Mens 8.95 Knit Shirts-- .- - Sale 6.79 :.,--.::

SLACKS

.CROSS.YOUR.IfEART

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Non binding comfort top- one size fits
all sizes 10 thru 13. White with multicolor top.
Friday- Saturday Sale

FUll arT POLYESTER COIION

SAVE Na.Y ON THESE STYLES

•~

Mens 5.95 Knit Shirts--. -- Sale 4.79
Mens 6.95 Knit Shirts--- - - Sale 5.:&gt;9·.... ·..,_

SALE! MEN'S '8.19

PLAYTEX SALE

:!,!',..:

COTTON CREW SOCKS

SALE PRICES

~PRICE

FOUNDATIONS

for

t

Mens 3.95 Knit Shirts- .. -- Sale 2.79 · ..
Mens 4.9.5 Knit Shirts.---- Sale 3.79 ~ .

MEN'S JERKS '1.00

JACKETS

Includes our entire stock of mens hi!mging knit "'
shirts - slipovers · button front styles - tank -·
tops - numbers shirts. Solid colors- patternswhite.
·

Mens 2.95 Knit Shirts .. - - - Sale 2.49 ...

SALE PRICES

MEN'S LIGHTWEIGHT

JEANS
SELECTED
FROM
STOCK

Special Friday - Saturday Clearance
Sale prices. A good selection of styles colors - sizes.

SALE PRICES

JUNIORS/MISSES

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

JACKETS

Our entire stock is included. Big
selection - one and two-piece styles.

Save on necklaces, earrings, pins
selected from_our regular stock.

REGATTA "WEEKEND SALEI

BOYS LIGKJWEIGHT

peonies

SALE PRICES

..
·'

1.9 74 REGAnA PROGRAM

be explained

'

10:00 A.M. Children's Casting Derby - Tennis Court
9:00-6:00 P.M. - Flea Markel
10:00-11:00 P.M. · Carnival Rides
•
11:00 A.M. - Ndtlonal Baton Twirling P&gt;ntest
12 :00:1: 30 P.M.- Flower Show- Pomeroy Motor Company
1:30-3:00 P.M. - Water Ski Show
'
3:30 P.M. - Frog Jump- Football Field
9:30P.M.· Frog Ball· Pomeroy Jr. High Auditorium
10:00 A.M.-4: 00 P.M. Stagecoach Rides

.,

Sunday, June 23

.,

8:30-11:30 A.M. Church of youf choice
11 : 30 A.M. · 5:30P.M. Carnival Rides-F lower Show
12:30-6:00 P.M.· Flea Market - Power Boat Races
1:00 Sky Diving Exhibition
11:00-6:00 Heritage Sunday-Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society .
6:00P.M.- Balloon Rides- Pomeroy Pac.klng Lot

PARKING
MEatANIC STREET WAREHOUSE AFIVE MINUTE WALK FROM DOWNTOWN

FREDDIE
THE FROG -

MAIN STORE AND M~awtiC STR~ET WAREHOUSE OPEN FRIDAY AND SATUR~Y 9:30 10 8 PM

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ON FIRM GROUND
ST. LOUIS, Mo. I UP I) The Becky Tha tcher, a
Mississippi River paddleboat that was repossessed
by the bank of St. Lou.is
be~ause il wasn't on firm
ground financially, was on

.firm ground Thursday. It ran
aground in the river.
The boat struck the bottom
when the level of the river
dropped. The bank had big
cranes get it out ol the mud
and now hopes to sell it for
$300,000.

Prayer group in court
with former President's
counsel for sentencing

Sporn union
decertified

WASHINGTON I UP l l - Former White House
special counsel Cha r les W. Colson was se ntenced
today to a prison term of one to three years for
obstruction of justice in the Ellsberg break-in case.
U. S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell turned
down an impassioned plea by Colson's lawyer that
his 42-yea r-old client not go to jail.
NEW HAVEN, W.Va .-Local
With Sen. Harold .E Hughes , D-lowa , and other
426
U~ility Workers Union of
members of Colson 's prayer group sitting in the
front row of the courtroom with head s bowed, America, AFL-CIO, has been
· de-certified as representing the
Colson said in a long statement to the court that he employes o( the Philip Sporn
had always " tried to use every minute to maximum Plant, New Haven.
advantage.
The action came Thursday
" I had one rule : to get done what the President when the National Labor
wanted done. I never rea lly questioned whether it Relations Board, supervised an
election, plan! manager
was right or wrong. "

than usual for May. Gasoline
and motor oil continued to rise
but at a lesser rate than earlier
this year. •
Doctor fees and charges for
other medical services such as
eye examinations, laborator.y_..
tests and hospital rooms
Ollson hod said after pleadshowed large increases in May. ing guilty to the obstruction
More rapid increases than in count June 3 that it grew out of
recent months also were his conversion to Christianity.
recorded for services such as
He could have received up to
dry cleaning, shoe repairs, five years ~ imprisonment and a
laundries , and barber and $5,000 fine.
beauty shop services.
In exchange for his guilty

graduated from DaytonSlivers High School. During
World War U, he was a
sergeant in the U. S. Air Force .
He did his undergraduate work
a!- Dennison , Granville ; his
graduate work at the ·
University of Chicago, and
received his masters degree in
school adminis tration fr om
Miami University.
He and Mrs. Gooding are
parents of two grown sons who
include Chester, a sergeant in
the U.S. Air Force, and Mark,
who will be a freshman a! the
University of Cincinnati this
fall .

plea and a pledge of coopera- Eugene Gloss said.
The vote was 194 employes
tion with Watergate prosecuagainst
being represented by
tors, Special Prosecutor !.£on
Local
426
and 39 favo ring · the
Jaworski agreed fo drop
co nspiracy charges against union. The breakdown of the
Ollso n in the 1971 break-in of election by depadments, as
the office of the psychiatrist of reported by Gloss, was :
Production and Maintenance
(Continued on page 10)
- for . continued Local 426

representation,
31 , and
against, 178.
Plant Clerk - For, I, and
against, 11.
Office Clerks - For I, and
against, 5.
The
National
Labor
Relations Board officer in
charge of the election was John
Wisner.
The
National
Labor
Relations Board supervised
election which de-certified
Local426 UWUA, was a part of
the long, bitter strike by union
workers that began July 1,
1973. Charles Searls of Middleport is union president.

Visual history
project hegins

Fruit"growing in Rutland and Salem toWnships
By Seth Nicholson
Back in the late nineteenth and early in this century fruit growing was the best cash farm crop.
Strawberries and raspberries were the most popular.
Men, women, and children picked berries at wages beginning at one cent a quart in the 1890s and
around two cents a quart by the 1910s. I remember picking 54 quarts one forenoon when I was 10 for
which I received 6B cents, approximately a fann hand's daily wage in 1900.
Produce companies bad their local agents at the Dexter railroad station to look after their interests. J . C. Anderson, a long-time teacher and farmer, was the agent for the Jno. Amicon, Bros. &amp;
OJ., of Cclumbus, ¢ecompany to whom my father and grandfather (P. W. Nicholson &amp; Son) sent all
their berries', except the later ones; which often went to Charleston.
·
I remember once hearing Mr. Anderson quote prices he had just received from the Ami con Co.
by telegraph. I cannot recall the prices. I remember the price was so and so for ordinary berries; but
the good berries, like the Nichoison's, were something like 30 ·cents for a crate - an amount that
meant much more then than it-does today.
I thin~ the r.eason for the higher price was tbat my grandfather presided over the crating in the
berry shanty . He paid a bOnus to the pickers who did good work in keeping grass, overripe and bugbitten berries, small land turtles, and green berries out of their boxes. I have seen him empty the
boxes brought in my new pickers or by those he could not trust. These latter ones did not remain long
unless they did better work. He emptied the berries into other boxes. He had found a small land
.turtle, rocks, leaves, etc. on occasions .
·
Concerning Morgan's Raiders
I heard two ladies relate their experiences concerning this exciting time in our local history .
Miss Eliza Winn, later a teacher herself, was in school in the Side Hill school house about midway between Harrisonville and Rutland, when a horseman rode by with the news that' Morgan's
R-aiders \vere not far behind him. So the teacher and her pupils ran farther up the hillside and hid in
the woods and watched them ride by.
Mrs. George (Allie ) Carpenter was living then below the present Forest Acres about a mile (just
opposite the home of Nathan Vanaman) when a ·warning harseman reported the nearness of the
raiders. She hurrierl to take their horse!i !Jack m~r the hF !:; behind h~r home.
The rebels were rctre;;; tc.g. lrum ti1e Battle of huffington Isla rid near Portland whero they had
attempted to recross tbe Ohio River into (then) Virginia. Some were captured there, but the rebels
from whom Mrs. Carpenter hid her horses had circled westward looking for another crossing after
their defeat at Buffington Island.
My grandfather, Philip Nicholson , was present at the battle. His company, however, woo kid in
reserve and did not ta~e part.

Heritage Sunday at the
Meigs Museum in Pomeroy
Sunday will mark the begin·
ning of an extensive visual
history project at the museum .
From 1 to 5 in the afternoon,
a professional photographer
be
copying
old
will
photographs from Meigs
County's past. This will be the
slart, hopefully, of a large
photo archive in the museum's
library. From this collection,
the staff will create exciting
multi-media history shows for
the mini-theater and visuals
for historical displays.
The public is Invited to help
the museum by searching
attics and basement.-; for old
albums, photographs, portraits, tintypes and glass
negatives as well as stereo
views.
Ideally, the staff would. like
to have these donated so they
may be preserved properly. If
that is not possible, it is hoped
such materials will be brought
to !he museum Sunday to be
copied . The Meigs Historical
Society regrets, because of the
time and cost involved, personal copies cannot be made at
this time.
Luckily , the photographic
process goes back before the
Civil War allowing the society
to accurately portray a great
deal of Meigs County History if

NO COACH RIDES
Because of a death in the
family of James Six ,
Nelsonv ille, there will be no
stage coach rides as pla.1ned
during the Big Bend Regatta .

residents will but dust off a few
albums and frames by Sunday.
The society urges residents
to bring any old pictures they
have. In the background of
many family "portraits there
are views.of various sections of
town, industry, countryside or
agricultural processes that can
be obtained in no other way .

18-year-olds
•
may s:agn
up

now by mail
Ohio selective service
director Paul A. Corey said
today !!!-year-old men in Meigs
County will be able to register
for the draft by mail ·rather
than having to appear in
person at a registrar's office.
They can register at a local
board office, with a volunteer
registrar, or bymail. All male
persons In the United States
(except certain non-immigrant
aliens) register with selective
service within the 60-day
period commencing 30 days
prior to their 18th birthdav.
A young man may pick up a
form and complete it at home.
After completing the form , he
need only fold , seal, and mail
it. Poster-box displays containing the registration forms
are placed in post offices at
Middleport,
Pomeroy,
Harrisonville, Tupper~ Plains
and Chester and· is available
upon request at tl:e Area
Selective Service Office
locattd Old Co!lcge l:lldg ., 815
Gallia Street, Portsmouth.

-Middleport merchants holding sidewalk sales on - turday

,_-

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•

led the upswing in food prices
as the Olnsumer Price Index
rose to 145.6. This meant that
prices were 10.7 per cent
higher in May than May, 1973,
and that it cost $14.56 to buy the
same goods and services that
By United Press International
Fr. BENNING, GA.- FORMER ARMY Lt. William Cafley, co111d be obtained for $10 about
ordered back into military custody Thursday by a federal judge, seven years ago.
Prices for commodities other
was issued nondescript fatigues and spent the night in the post ·
stockade, marking only the second night he has been behind bars than food increased 1.6 per cent
since his My Lai murder conviction in 1971. U. S. Assistant At- in May compared to a 1.3 per
torney Charles Erion said the former platoon leader would be cent rise in April.
Prices at grocery stores
treated "just like any other prisoner ... and put in a jail celL"
But Kenneth Henson, one of Caney's attorneys, said his usually turn down in May but
they rose last month for most
client had, in effect, been put in solitary confinement.
items
except meats, poultry
Calley had been freed under a $1,000 personal recognizance
Those continued to
and
eggs.
bond since January until a three-judge panel of the 5th U. S.
Circuit &lt;:curt of Appeals in New Orleans revoked the bond and decline. Some producers in all
ordered Calley returned to prison . Attorneys for Calley have three categories bave said that
since asked all of the 15 judges on the appeals curt to review the they face financial disaster if
decision while 'also appealing the decision to the U. S. Supreme prices do not tW'n upward soon.
Fresh vegetable prices
Court.
womed upward in May by 19
COLUMBUS- FIVE OHIOANS WILL BE HONORED at the per cent, much more than
statehouse here Monday for holding the Medal of Honor, the normal.
Meat, poultry and fish prices
nation's highest medal for valor: Receiving honorary comdeclined
3.5 per cent from
mission as colonels in the Ohio military will be:
Almond E. Fisher, Mentor; Melvin Mayfield, ,Louisville; April.
But used cars increased 10.1
Forrest Everhart, Zanesville; Frank Herda, Brunswick Hills;
per cent , and new car prices
and Gordon R. Roberts, Dayton.
Fisher, Mayfield and Everhart are veterans of World War II. also went up, whereas they
usually decline in May. ClothHerda and Roberts are Vietnam veterans.
ing prices also increased more
··WASHINGTON - UBERAL DEMOCRATS likely will see
the last gasp of their efforts to pass a tax reform package early
next week. A vote is scheduled for 3:30p.m. EDT Monday on a
tax package sponsored by .Sen. Edward W. Kennedy, D-Mass.,
which would lower individual income taxes slightly and end
business lax break including the oil depletion allowance.
·
But conservatives led by Sen. James B. Allen, D-Ala ., have
maneuvered the liberals into almost certain defeat because the
William Carr, Meigs County
vote will be on the whole liberal reform package, not on each
Farm
Bureau president said
separa~ part. While many senators would vote for parts of the
package, such as a tax cut, enough of them oppose the package today Farmers' Wo~kmen's
Compensation and minimum
as a whole to ensure its defeat.
Allen and his GOP allies have !Jlanaged to thwart every Wage Laws, now in effect or
liberal move so far, and even brought ailing Sen. Norris OJ!ton, . going into effect July 1, this
R-N .H., to the Senate floor Thursday from Bethesda Naval year, will be explained 8 p.m.
Monday at the Episcopal
Hospital where he is recovering from a mild stroke.
Parish-flouse in Pomeroy. ·
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE JUDICIARY Committee is
Persons hiring one person for
taking a second look at President Nixon's income tax problems one hour should know the law
today, having learned Internal Revenue Service quietly im- and comply with it, Carr said,
posed a penalty of about $13,000 on him for preparing his returns who pointed out that hour
negligently. The committee staff told members ThW'sday tbat might be when the worker is
the revenue s&lt;crvice had, ,Oith no public announcement, imposed injured.
· ·
a 5 pet. negligence penalty, amounting to ·about $13,000. The
Full details of the law will be .
White House has not confirmed or denied this;
presented Using specialists to .
Members of tbe impeachment inquiry said they also learned explain all phases of the
that while Nixon has paid hi~overdue taxes for 1970 through 1973, · program .
Every one
is '
he bas still not paid back taxes for 1969. Since the statute of welcome to attend the inlimitations had expired for the 1969 taxes, the President could not formational sessio n. The
· be required to pay them, but he said previously he would parish house is located next .to
vohmtarily pay up. "The IRS' figure for .1969 is secret, bui the fomier Pomeroy Junior
·
(Continued on page 10)
High School in Pomeroy.

.

Saturday, June 22

12 :00-6:00 Flea Markel
12 :00-11; 00 P.M. Carnival Rides
6:00 P.M. Parade
8:00 P.M. Square Dance at Jr. High
9: 00 P.M. Teen Dance at Tennis Court
10; 00 P.M. Fireworks

...·:-:·..

New laws to
farmers will

BE SURE TO VISIT POMEROY DURING THE AN-NUAL REGATTA
Friday, June 21

PHONE 992-2156

:f;~:::::::::::::::B~:~:::::~:::::::::::i::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::s;:;:::~::::::=:=:=:=::::::::::::

By United Press International

JEWELRY SALE

Chester A. Gooding of
Gr-eenville, Ohio, was in Meigs
County Thursday preparing to
move here to begin his duties
as principal of Eastern High
School in August.
A veteran of World War II,
Gooding ha s been a teacher
and principal the past 24 years,
15 as a principal. For the past
three years he was principal ai
Greenville Hi gh School and
was principal of DaytonSlivers High-School 12 years
previous to his work a-t
Greenville.
The new Eastern principal,
who replaces Charles Swogger,

~

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Shorts, Pants, Jackets,
Shirts and Skirts

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