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                  <text>.•

K -5 plan explained

'

PT. PLEASANT - Some 100
persons were present at a

POLLUTION EXP-ERTS
LONDON
tUPI)
Pa.,ersby complain milk
cartons, bottle l~&gt;ps, brtad,
cold tea and eoU~e dregs
shower down day long from a

building housing 1,000
governl'l"lent employees: Tbl'
go"·emment admits it - und
says the civil srrvants ha,1 e
been told to stop.
The build ing Is · th e
Departm ent of th e Environment. whiL·h controls
pollution.
· ITEMS NEEDED
Meigs County &amp;ilon 710, 8
and 40, members are gathering
up odds and ends and clothing
aiticJes for their nea market

Saturday and Stmday at the
Thabet Bldg ., Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy . Items ror the market
may be dropped off at the Mary
Martin home, Pomeroy.

Mason

·

Drive-In
Tonight and

Friday

'

July 25-26

Marriage l..icensj:!
Ronald Lee Clonch, 20,
Middleport, and Debra Joan
Milliion, Rt. 2, Racine.

Double Fea ture

sssssss"

i7

Plus
" THE BOY WHO CRIED
WEREWOLF "
RATEO " G"

CLUB TO MEET
The Wildwood Garden Club
will meet Wednesday, July 31,
at 6:30p.m. at thehomeof Mrs.
Stacie Arnold for a picnic.
Each member is to bring a
·covered dish and own table
'
servlce. . . Beverage
will be
provided.

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
NOT OPEN

'

Friday , Saturday, Sunday
July 26 -27 -28
AI Pacino in
"SERPICO"
!Technlcolor)
-- AI Pad no, John Randolph

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A chance of showers
Saturday fair Sunday and
Monday. High temperatures
in the 80s and lows in the 60s.

"R"

CARTOONS
Show Starts 7 p. m.
•

Overnight, in briefs

public meeting WedQt!Sday
evening to heflr a projec:ted
plan covering the next len
years, that would change the
majority of Mason County
schools to a so-called K-5 plan ,
with consolidations that would
result in the closing of 12
schools .
No strong di~pprova1 was
expressed with the $7,474,000
proposal, as a whole, but it
drew criticism in relation to
the county's Vocational Ce:nt.er .
The plan is only in a proposal
sl&lt;lge.
President Harry Siders said
Ute undertaking is more than
board membcrs"'want to handle
alone and will ask advice from
a special countywide committee.
In the K-5 -plan, elementary
schools would include Kindergarten uirough fifth gra de .
The next level would be that of
Junior High or Middle School to
include si xth, seve nth and
eigh th graders. High schools
would be set up on a nine
U1rough 12 plan . This plan is
recommended after 12 schools
are closed and changes made
with the exception of this being
ctone · at Leon and Mount
Flower which would pattern.on
the K-5 plan.

Collins votes added
·aid _
.
.

'

COLUMBUS
State
Athena County, li92,584:
Repreaentallve Oa.kley C. Fayelle, 1120,415: Gallla,
Collins this week voted lor a 1!20 ,2~3; Hockin g, 183 ,373:
supplemental appropriations Jackson, 1133,888; Lawrence ,
btU which provides $45 million 1277 ,822; Meigs, $97,687;
ln education aid, 110 million In Plckaway, $207,911; Ross,
tu relief and 15 milllon In 1268,751 ; Vinton, $49,705 ;
disaster relief fundlng ,
Wa'!!Jington, $266,148.
He noted th.at the educational
"The increase In the peraid will be provided on a 12il sonal jncome ta:x exempUon
per pupil basis for each or the from $500 to $650 In i975 was
elementary .and secondary particularly needed to provide
school districts ln the State or tax equity. Working Ohioans
Ohio. Th~ supplementary aid, and their families should not be
Collins said, will mean that penalized by our tax struclocal school districts will ture," Collins said.
receive the following additional aid next year :
. HOSPITAL NEWS

WASIUNGTON (UP!) - ln a solemn televised debate, the
~-Judiciary Corrunittee was framln8 charges ·today or
bmpeachable mltoonduct agalnat President Nixon.
By nightfall or ahorUy thereafter, a vote was to come and
an overwhelming recommendation of bmpeachmenl -by all
.. the committee's llemocrat.s and nearly fialf its Republicans
- was anticipated.
Thai would be enough to submit President Nixon to Impeachment prooeedlngs ln die House ne•l month.
The fight had gooe !Hit of his defenders. They predicted
their own defeat.
Today's vote was expected to recommend, that Nixon be
bmpeached for coverln8 up the Involvement of his closest
assoclatesln Watergate -a charge of ob~ctlon of justice.
OR Saturday, a secood vote Is to occur -on abuse of power
by turnlng goverrunenlagencles- the CIA, FBI and IRS -to
poi!Ucal Jllll'IlOSes,
· ·
These two days promised to be the bleakest yet in Nixon's
long fight to flnlsh out the tenn he won ln November, 1972. by
the greatest landslide in American history.

Mrs. Carpenter

of Albany dies

Hostages

SECOND CALL
WASHINGTON (UP!) Sen. Edward. W. Brooke, RMass.; called again today for
· President Nixon lo resign for
the good of the country.
·
Brooke,
who
last
November became the first
· leading Republican to call
for Nixon's resignation, sajd
serious domestJc problems
HUNTSVILLE, Tex. (UP!)
were being ignored because
- Fred Gomez Carrasco, a
of
Watergate and the Imreputed narcotics smuggler
peachment process.
balieved- responsible for 50
"The country Is literally .
murders in the United States
Umping along," Brooke said.
and Mexico, held 10 hostages at
"It · need.s · leadership
gunpoint in the sl&lt;lte prison
unencumbered by Watergate
today and vowed to ·kill them if
.
. . I just feel that the
his demands for freedom were
Pre.sldeot could perform a
not met.
great
service to his coUJltry,
Negotiations, which broke off
during the night, failed to ' to his party which Is In
disarray, and to hlmsell
resume as scheduled at
personally U he would resign
daybreak as priSon officials
and
not put us through
said they had no intentions or
further torture."
meeting Carrasco's demands
for three bulletproof vests, ~:~:::=:H:::::!:!~~:~:~:~:::=:::?.::::=:i:i:!:~:::i:=:=:::~::::::=:::.
three walky·talkies, three .
bullet proof helmets with
visQrs, we.apons, ammunition
and "suitable clothing."
Carrqsco, armed with 1 three
.38-caliber revolvers, held nine
teachers ; Including seven
women, and a security guard.

OFFICIA~

BAND SHOE

Devoted To The Interests of The
VOL. XXVI

WHITE BUCK WITH
WHITE RUBBER SOLE
Sizes For Boys &amp; Girls

heritage house

fllll:'

,ApPe3
•

for first

rt'.

e,
f1l •

J. t

.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT 10:00 TIL 2:00

•

The MEIGS .INN .
PH. 992-3629
'

(

.

POMEROY

Are.1

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

Economy slipping
WASHINGTON ( UP!) - The
American stamlard of living highest and most envied ln the
world -is ln eclipse, according
to some goVernment and
private economists.
In the headllnes are the
words of scholars and
theorists : ''recession'' ''in-

centered on how to distribute
the bmpact of reduced circumstances. Who will bear the
burden? The urb'an work-er, the
fanner, the senior citizen on
fixed lncome or the welfare
mother.
Alan Greenspan, chairlnandesignate of the Council of
fiation ."
EconomiC Advisers, puts it this
But translated into pocket- way :
book terms, inflation a~d
''The overall effect is that

reduced business activity and

consumer restraint.
ln the past six months, in- .
flation hu risen at a pace that
has eroded the buying power of
$1 to 90 cents. The most
noticeable efiect.S of the lnflatlon are ln the supennarket,
where it costs more to buy
smaller portions or food.
But food Is not the only sector
in which Americans have had

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Rep . John Sieberling,
D·Ohio, a member of the House Judiciary Committee which is conside~ing the impeachm.en~ of President Nixon said Thursday . the " preSidency
itself will have been permanently demeaned and
degraded" unless impeachment proceedings go to
their fullest extent.
Seiberling said testimony before the committee
showed that Nixon was activ~ly involved in the
Watergate coverup and with related incidents.
" The evidence we have reviewed in this
proceeding is overwhelming," said the Akron
congressman. "We have statement after statement
of President Nixon, in his own words, falsifying
facts , condoning and even directing a whole
speCtrum of misdeeds by his trusted aides, ranging
from violations of the constitution to corruption of
the Internal Rev~nue System."
" The pat.t ern o'r conduct evidence; ' he said. 1'lt is also

revealed by ihe acts of spelled out in President
President Nfxo n and his Nixon's own words.
~
~ associates is unrnistakeable ,''
''If with this record before us
he said . " President Nixon· was we allow this president to
0
~ obsessed with the preservation remain in office without. a fuli
~
LOS ANGELES (UP!)...:. President Nt.on's cure lor.Aiiierica's eeonomlc anxieties Is to \:( and extension of his own trial ·ofhisfitnessin the Senate,
~ buy less, save more and be paUelit. Dismissing the possibility of an economic ''shock · [.~ personal power. He was willing then the presidency itselll will
I
,
.
.
~; treatment," Nixon said 1bursday'an Income tax cut or a new round of wage"Pl'lce controls :t-: to ~se the powers of the have been permanently
to
destroy demeaned and degraded and
f.~ "would be like pouring gasoline on a ragmg fire."
:~ government
ONCE THE VILLAGE HALL- Omnce and Catherine Wolf Crlat gave up bUsy careers ln
anything
which
he
considered
the people 's trust in .the inj;:
Measures to bring "short-lenn reUel too often bring long-term grief," be told a ~;
Columbus six years ago to escape the city and enjoy an early retirement. This Is_their 140 year
an .actual ot potential threat to tegrity of our futur e presidents ·
;\: nallonaUy bro&amp;dcast meeting of West Coast businessmen.
·
old home-in Raclne.lt was once Racine's comblntition village hall and fire station.
will be permanently un·
~
The only new tactles he amlounced In outlining a strategy against inflation were culling ~ his power.
'
~ 40,000 federal jobS and 15 billion off the· federal budget. He also promised to velo any @ 'To this end he directed the der:mined," said Seiberling.
,
W, legislation that would exceed the budget. The job cuts would be through attrition and would ;:;: violation of the constitutional
~l take effect Immediately.
.:l; rights of Americah Citl7.ens, he "President Nixon wants us to
directed the cover-up of crimes believ:e that' his remajning in
)~:~::=:=:::::::::~::::::::;::::=:i!~i:!8?.=:~:;~:;:::!:i:!:i:i:!:!:?.=:?.=:i:i:i:?.=:=:=:~-:i:i:::::!!:::::::::
:
::-.:::::::::::::::::::-;;:~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::m:::::::"".x-:::::::!:'~"'!X:.:!:!:?.?.=:=::~
'
.
committed by his associates, office is . absolutely necessary ·
and
he kept as his closest aides to preserve a strong
recesSion
mean
Americans
are
everybody )a hurt. The only to cut back. The dream of
· By BOB HOEFLICH
Mr. and Mrs. Crist maintain historical horne a real cqnpaying more for less.
dJfierence Is between having ownln8 a home has become a men whom he knew had . presiden"!y," said Seiberling.
RACINE - More and more no schedule . these days. The versation piece.
has
been
a
real
''There
twQ brOken legs or one."
nightmare for more than one committed crimes against the "The ·truth is· that we will .
people, becoming disenchanted Wolf home - she was the
The Crisis wouldn't trade
Greenspan says the economy million potential buyers this very government they were permanent1y weaken not orily
with city living, are seeking a former Catherine Wolf - was their life in Racine for reduction in the standard of
professing to serve and which the presidency but our entire
living,"
says
Charles
L.
SchUlthas "deteriorated to the polnt year.
slower way of life - and a just loaded with collectibles .anything. They frankly admit
Slifer one.
Lewis Cenker, president of we are sworn to protect," said constitutional system if we fail
and antiques so the couple has that.when they do return to the ze, a senior fellow at the that the only alternatives are
· to impeach a president who has
Brookings
Institution.
distasteful," including WJem· the National Association of Seiberling.
This happened six years ago spent a great deal of time in city, they can hardly wait to
" This is the one pattern of so fla grantly violated the
Schultze says academic and ployment above the current 5.2 Home Builders, says the
to -Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Crist brousing an,d restoring the get back to the peace and
government
discussion
now
is
condJCt
which is consistent pub~ic trust and his own Oath of
per
cent,
less
federal
spending,
selling price or the average
\ of Racine,
beauty to older furnishings.
tranqullity or their home.
The couple was living in
The Crisis find they love ~::::::::::::::::;:;:;::::=:::::::::::=::::::::::::;:~:=::::::::::9.=:::=::(.;:;:::::::::.-::::::::::~:~::::::::::::::::::::~w..:::::::s::::::::::::~: home is now up to $35,000 with with the entire body of office."
interest rates averaging more
Columbus . She worked at gardening and recommend
than
9 per cent.
North American Aviation and home gardening for anyone
What it means Is competiUon
he was a building inspector for who can manage even the
for the same modest houses
the city . Pressures mounted - smallest plot. The Crisis have a
between a family earning
there were always schedules to 50 by 90 foot plot and the
$12,000 a year and one earnlng
meet and "dressing" for work. produce they get from the plot
$18,000, with the former forced
Two y~ars earlier Mrs. is amazing , Mrs .. Crist freezes
to continue renting and the
Crist's father, the late Benton and cans to help fill the food
latter
unsatisfied with the
Wolf, had died and the home in larder for the winter. Mr. and
Oil, ~crylic, water color, office on the Rock SpriQgs
quality of the home it can afRacine was available. Mr. and Mrs. Crist assemble grand·
drawings
in charcoa1 or pastels FairgrOlmds will be open from
ford.
Mrs. Crist talked it over and lather clocks and china
-have been included in the 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Aug. 8 and 9.
decided to retire, even though ca,binets, both of which are sold
On
a
larger
scale,
total
amateur
painting classes for
they were not at retirement from time to time . .
buslness activity has declined . _the 11\th Annual Meigs County
In the old and acrylic
age.
And
a
public
opinion
·
Fair
art
show
.
this
year.
painting category there are
"We just wanted to get to do
The Crist home is marked
pollster concludes that conWilliam J . Mayer is again classes for landscape from
things we could enjoy before with the lovely antiques and
superinterident of the ar t show. nature, portrait from life, still
we got too o1dt'' Mrs. Crist collectibles which were handed
Continued on page 10
Premium s will be awarded in . life, marine study and Mower.
recalled.
down through the Wolf family.
two places in each of the 19 In the water color and
Arrangements were made to About 140 yeArs.old, the home
classes of the show. All art dl'awings · in . · c.harC;oa l or
purchase the interests of the was once the village hall of
pieces must be ready to be pastels , the classes are the
other Wolf children in the Racine . The basement where
•
hung.
same and also Include a class ·homeplace and so Mr. and Mrs . Mr. and ~rs . Crist maintain
Only
entry
fee
is
a
mem·
for animal study. There is also
Crist pulled up their · roots in their workshop was once the
r..:
bership ticket and all entries il class for modern a.rt.
. Colwnbus and moved to Meigs fire station - in the days when
f:!
must be registered with the
Only one entry may he made
County. And they're loving it! horses pulled the fire wagons.
By Seth F. Nicholson
fair
secretary
by 4 p.m. on . by the same exhibitor In each
Mr . Crist was born in the city A bedroom was once the jail.
I can recall the festive occasion of my first attendance at the Dexter Bean Dinner in the fiJ181
Friday, Aug. 9. The secretUry's cl~ss .
·
so it was a drastic change.
Mr. and Mrs. Crist find their years of tbe dying nineteenth century.
These memorable events were held under the auspices of the Miles Standish Post of the Grand
Army
of the Republic. I cannot now recall the nwnber or this Post ; but one can see it on the
~-~-=·::::::i;::::··:-wu.:·····..~~:::».:.vx....:::::::·~·····.-.:·~~~-.=-······
monwnent to the Civil War Union soldiers from Meigs County which now stands In the Robinson
Cemetery midway between LangsviUe and Dexter. :this monwnent once stood .in the village of The Meigs Co unty Sheriff's
·
Dept. is investig ating a
Dexter.
Plans lor an outdoor presided over by Don Wilson,
.
.
The bean dinner wu hel&lt;l on a fann then owned by Sherman Minor. It was less than half a mile breaking and entering, two recreation show this year at vice president, to sponsor fow:
from the village and ln a forest on tbe right side or tbe road as one goes from Dexter toward Sl&lt;lr Hall. thefts and one incident of the Middleport Marina were merchants' promotions each
By UD.Ited Preollulernailonli
·
vandalism.
TURKEY LANDED MORE TROOPS ON CYPRUS TODAY There was no underbrusli, and the shade made It a welcome place in summer .
dropped after an intensive year . These will be in March,
Vernon · Bing , owner and discussion Tuesday night by June during 01~ Bend Regatl&lt;l
and acting Cypriot President GWkos Clerides warned ln Nicosia · 1 remember the happy anticipation of tbe dinner many days before its arrivaL It was, next to
that war would break !lUI agaln within a few hours unless the Christmas and birthdays, the happiest holiday to me.
operator of Bertha's Grocery the Middleport Chamber of weekend, In September. and
Turko stopped violating the cease.fire, Almost inunedlately
By the time thedayflnally dawned, thewbole family was up and on the go. Mother was a "whiz" located at the Crossroads on Com merce..
·
Christmas . The September
mortar and machine gun fire lroke out along the Green Line at housework as we children well knew. My oldest sister and I helped aU we could (aged 8and 5).
SR 124, reported the glass in
It was agreed , however, project this yea r will ba a
sejlarating Cyprus' Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot comFather a~d the hired man - I believe he was Nathan Gibnore - were up before dawn doing the the front door of his stOre was during the busiliess session sidewalk sule.
mun!Ues. Wltnesaes said Greek~ed National guardsmen began chores. The hired man fed, curried, and harnessed tbe team of draft horses while father sent the good broken and the store entered
The chamber voted to purpiilng lnlo trucks to move lnto position.
.·
.
shepherd dog, Rover, into the pasture rteld to bring the·cows down to the gate.
· ·
some time Wednesday night or
cha se
three
overhead
The peace talk• among Britain, Turkey and Gree&lt;;e opened
Rover brought them to the gate ln a leisurely manner as a well-tramed dog should do and held Thursday morning .-. Can~ of
Christmas
de
corations
to
/Ji.~pl11y plmuwd
ln Geneva but thli two antagonistS developed a hard line and them there while Father with some lasth'elp by the hired hand, milked the four cows . The men sat on soup, lun ch meat, cigarettes
complew 1~, set for the town .
there wu nq early prosreu. Both Greece and Turkey accused three-legged wooden stools and milked the cows by ha,nd into three-gallon milk' pails - no modern and a roll of nlckles were
·
.
Mrs . Alwilda Werner .was
Ott nutritio11
eioch other ·of ·breaking the cease .fire. · The ·situation was machinery was even dreamed of by .them then.
.
· .
. missing.
asked
to seeure
the.
There will be ;uitspluy on
. dartened by pollUcal developments ln Athena where Premier
on the way to the cellar, they stopped at the barn and gave the cats their morning meal of warm Jim Clifford , Rt. 2 Pomeroy,
decorations. The chamber met ·
Constantine Kramanlls wu reported hiMlng lnto snags ln the "'llllk. At the doghouse near the cellar, they gave Rover his reward for work well done .
·
'reported 'a suitcase ana toot nutrition featured at. t~e
in the social room of the
Pomeroy Public Library
completloo of his cabinet. He has named some key ministers but
In the cellar, they stralned the milk Into crocks and covered tbe crocks with clean pi ec~s of box were stolen fr om his truck
Columbus and Southern Ohio
hla cabinet llilt Is not ccmplete. ·
·
roofing slate. Not that day, but later on, Mother would skim off the cream that had risen to tbe top. which was parked !It the in~ next week. Posters on the
Electric Co.
Some of the skim milk would bJ! fed to the hogs or chickens, or made into cottage cheese.
tersectlon of US 33 and CR 18. basic fou r rood groups,
CHAJU.ESTON, W.VA. - ALMOST ON~FOURTH ' of a
We children loved to watch Mother churn the cream Into butter. I helped a little with that work , This was reported to the common nutrlents as w~ll ti~
related books will be
'IU million setUement awarded survivors of West Virglnla's for J loved drink-that old coWJtry buttennllk; but I do not like the commercial klnd of today.
department ThW"sday ,
wont recorded Oood dlaaster has been targeted for attorney:•
Breakfast was a meal of shorter duration than usual. We dressed in a hurry. We older two helped
Robert Myers, Rt. I, Albany, ei&lt;hlbltcd.
.Hours for the library are
fees
.
Mother with carln8 for the two younger sisters. · .
·
had a 7IJO.lb, short-horn Jersey
Charleston Gazelle late Thunday quoted Gerald Stern
The hired man watered the borseS at the wooden watering-trough that was fed from a well by stolen £rom bis pastw-e near · 9:30 ~. m . to2 p.m., Mondnys,
Cloudy tonight. Low~ In the
of Arnold f&lt;Porter, the Walhln&amp;ton firm which repr-nted the means or an Iron pipe line of 250 yards ln length. '
.
·
Snowville, and 'Eldon Blake, Wednesdays and Fridays: J 60s . Saturday
variable
plalnutra, aiiiiiYUI&amp; legal fees would conllliiM nea;ly 25 per cent
Then we seven (lncludlng the hired man) left for Mirior .Forest In th.e wagon dra\Yn by Ute two Reedsvllle, reparted several to 5:30 p.m., Tuesday• and cloudiness with a chance o( a
of tho aelllement. Early thla-month, lest than two weeks before draft hor ..s. A stout oak plank, two InChes thick and a fool wide, had been fashioned for a second seat windows were broken out of his · Thundays and from 9:30 ohower or thunde~a hower ,
the 164 million lawsuit was aet for triBlln federal court bere, the behind the regular spring seat upon which Father and Mother (baby sister In her arms) were seated. camper on Sugar Campo.creek a.m. to5 p.m. on Saturdays. Hlgh &amp;iturday again In the ltli\1
Continued on Pille 10 ·
·
this week.
Con tinued on pa e 2
tQ mid 8011.
I

~?.~~::::=:::i:~:::~======~==~===~r-~::::::::::::::;:;:;::~:::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i:i:i:!::;:;:;:;::::=::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:

l

Buy less, save more, be patient

~

fJ

WOMEN'S AND GIRLS .

.

SUMMER
l~·

SLEEPWEAR
BIG SELECTION OF MISSES,
WOMEN'S, GI_RLS 4 to 14
AND TODDLERS SLEEPWEAR.

1.

SELECTED FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK.

t

'

ews·~

PRICE

r------_..._.___________..__

I
1
I
~

FINAL CLEARANCE SALE

J

PRICES ON MEN'S AND BOYS

!

SHIRTS, WOMEN'S DRESSES

!I

·. . AND SPORTSWEAR, .

I

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L__~~~~~~~~:--~J
Free Customer Parking on Second Street andat the Mechanic Street ~arehouse

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.. '

-

.
Recollections of my first Bean Dinner

Burglars
get food,
ilickles

:···in B~zef;f·

Marina show out '

.

to

Weather

The

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..

Art show entries
cover ·19 classes

'

Transfers
. o

FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1974

\

July Clearance Sale

'

~

Presidency
issue d.r awn

Peace found zn village

Property

Flossie Dillon , Cecil Dillon to
Harold E. Smith, Barbara A.
Smith, ¥4 acre, Olive.
Brenner Realty, Inc. to
· Hershel McClure, Rhojean
McClure, Lot 95, Behan's Add.,
Middleport.
R. L. Miller, Juanita Miller
to Earl Richard DeWees ,
Peggy Lee DeWees, Lot 86,
Middleport.
Lois McKenzie to Ronald E.
iind Carol S. Gillilan , I acre,
Sutton.
William Braham , Sr .,
Patricia A. Braham to Robert
K. Hoeflich, Charlene E.
· Hoeflich, Lot , Pomeroy.
K. {1. Grueser, dec'd. to
Carrie E. Grueser, Don I(
Gruesei', MarCia S. Arnold,
Jane Ann Harris , Cert. of
Trans·., Sutton.
Donald A. Gosney to Ruth
Gosney, Lots, Middleport.
Lawrence
M..
Bush.
Katherine F. Bush to Wesley H.
.Gilkey, Unda An" Gilkey, Lot,
Middleport. · ··
· Cecil . Higginbotham to
Christopher Witt, Connie Witt,
54.05 Acres, Salem .
Jarvis Jackson Ramey, dec.
to . Alpha . Ramey , David
Ramey, Kenny Ramey, Craig
S. Ramey, Cert. for Trans.,
· Bedford ,
Tennan Isaac, Martha Isaac
to Rex M. Stone, Betty R.
Stone, 38.78 Acres, Rutland .
Orville E. Hugnall, Arizona
Hudn all to Beatrice Ellen ·
Smith, .50 Acre, Salisbury.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Meigs-Ma.~on

committee debate was foretold ln 10 hours of oratory Thuraday.
Over and over, Nixon's own words were used against hbn.
"This was the President of the Unlted States," said Rep .
Wayne Owens, D-Utah, recalling hearing Nil&lt;on bmploring
his aides to stonewall .it .•. plead the Filth Amendment, cover.
up or anythlng else ... "
OWens adde~ : "I co,uJd hardly believe what 1 was hearln8
on those tapes. The President's intention WBil clear, and
inescapable. •'
More painful to Nixon -and Ukely to be damaging to hbn
when the House debates impeachment in Augu.•t - was the
defection of two Republicans, botff elected to the·House ln
1972 on Nill.on's coattails .
Rep. Harold V. Froehlich, 32, of Wisconaln kept his position
secret even from his staff. He then told the coll!mittee he
would vote to impeach if he was satisfied with the exact
language or the article of lmpeachzlleirf.""'
He said testimony had shown Nixon acutely aware of
Contlnued on page 10

•

Meigs

Your Thom MeAn Store
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

NO. 73

.

Shop Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 8 pm

smuggler

Even Rep. Charies E. Wiggins, R.Callf., said he had no
stomach for furtber delay. The mood of the committee was to
end its long work by the weekend .
Wiggins, Nixon's most influential defender, and Rep,
Delbert Latta, 'R.Qhio, perhaps the President's most •ocal
defender, both admitted defeat [or now.
I .atl&lt;! said the vote against Nixon cuuld go as high as 21·1 1
-:-That would mean that eight of the 11 Republicans had gone
for impeachment.
Wiggins abandoned his longstanding prediction that the
House .PI Representatives would reject Impeachment no
matter what the committee does . "I honestly don't know
what Uie House will' bo/' he said.
There was some sentiment to write a tnird article of impeachment, accusing Nixon of violating his trust by
withholding subpoenaed tapes from Congress. That charge is
now embodied ln the second article, charglng abuse of power.
Despite the likelihood of wrangling over the precise
language to send to the House calling lot Nixon's impeachment, trial Wld removal from office, the· outcome of the

en tine

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

hel&lt;f'by

'

Members of the comrpUtee, ne~Jer before so exposed, were
""toolohed by the effect of belng on television. Message• of
support or opposition came b'om around the country as each
ooe spoke -but more politically significant were the lndlcatlons that many House members were 'looking ln -and
perhaps belng Influenced.
Rep . Jerome Waldle, ~II!., said he strolled on the House
noor after his speech and was surrounded by .congressmen
wbo had heard him. Usually when a con~ressman spea_ks, it
ill. to an empty chamber.
Rep. Rnbert McClory, R·ll!., a reluctant supporter of impeaching Nixon on grounds of abuse or office, said he would
make a fmal attempt today to block a committee impeachment vote. He said he would propose that the panelfirst try to
obtaln the 64 tapes the Supreme Court ordered Nixon to
surrender to Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski.
But Nixon already has rejected the committee 's subpoenaes for Ute same tapes and even if he changed his mind,
weeks, possibly months, would pass before lhe tapes would
be transcribed and becume available as potential evidence.

Ohio busing

!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::~:-:~:!:;:~:::!:=:i::::

AMERICA'
S
.

•

}

He no~ that he, along with
fellow Republicans, had
.
By UniCed Prft1 lntemadoaal
,
supported legislation to give
COLUMBUS - POUCE OFFICER CLARENCE N. BURNNEY, Lancuter, has been Indicted on
schools 152 million In ad·
charges of hitting three teenage boys while questioning them about alleged possession or lllegal
dltlonal aid when the bill was
drugs. The indictment was returned Wednesday by a U. S. District Court grand jury here. The
first considered by !he Ohio
Justice Department said Burnney Is charged with violating constitutional rights or three juveniles
House, but the amendment
listed as Michael Greer, 11, his brother, Terry, H, and Ronald Koch, 17, all of Lancaster. Burnney Is a
failed on the noor.
patrobman with the Lancaster Pollee Department.
.
Other appropriations In•
The nlulmwn penally on conviction or each of the three coWJb-agalnst the officer Is one-year in
eluded In the blll, which would
prison and a $1,000 fine.
_
_
"'
spend $80 million in state
TIFFIN, OHIO - FORMER GOV. JAMES A. RHODES, SEEKING a return to office this fail,
surplus funds and an ancharged the admlnlstration qfGoti. John J. Gilllgan Wednesday with having more surplus funds than
ticipated 145 mllllon ln state
the $80 milUon discovered recently. Rhodes, durlng an_appearance at the Seneca County Fair, said
tottecy revenue according to
any additional surplus money should be used to rebmburse worklng couples and parent.s of dependent
Colllns, include vocational •
children '1or the discriminatory t&amp;~es extracted from them."
technical education school
"After repeatedly denying that any surplus existed," said Rhodes, :'Gilligan flnaUy admitted to
constru ction, ~12 . 5 million;
$80 million . Now he says that Is all, but the credlbllity or his past perfonnance had been shattered.
Vietnam bonus, $14.5 million;
How do we know it Is not just another dodge to hide additional !WJds ?"
school for the bl)nd, $8110,000;
COLUMBUS - GERTRUDE W. DONAHEY, LAUNCHING ho{r Democratic campaign for retransporting menially rei!U'd·
election as state treasurer, said she will run on her record of having invested millions of taxpayers'
Holzer Medical Center
ed students, $2.1 million;
dollars witbout iosing a slngle penny. ''In 1970, the office of Treasurer of State wu scandal..-idden
(Births, July Ui
elderly bus fare subsidies, $2
due to bad cummercial paper investments," Mrs. Donahey said at her campaign·headquarters here.
Mr. and Mrs. James Eggers, million; for individuals in the
"I inherited a $23 milllon debt ln UllCOllected commercial paper Investments purchased by the
a son, Gallipolis: Mr . and Mrs. state retirement system not
previous administration ... and it .. . has been reduced to approlimately $13mllllon."
Donald Walton, a son,
CARPEN')"ER - Mrs. Mey Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs. Roger covered by previous lncreases,
Sle said her department earned a record-breaking $74 mJllion during the fiscal year, which
5.5 tnillion .
ended June 30. "And this, added to my previous earnings ln interest Income, amount.s to a total of (Vebma Vee) Carpenter, 89, Rt. Browning,
a
daughter,
•
over $180 million up to this time," she said. "I promised the taxpayers their money would be lnvested 3, Albany, died Tuesday Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Sidney
evening at the O'Bleness Humphrey, a son,• Leon, W.
ln safe secure investments, without the lollS of a single penny. I have kept that !"Omise."
Hospital
In Athens . Mrs . Va.: Mr. and Mrs. Charles
cLEVELAND ~ THE WORD "MALE" WILL NO LONGER BE a requirement ln rules per·
taining to eligibility, tire Ohio Athletic Conference announce&lt;i'today. The 14-member institutions of Carpenter had been in falling Peck, a son, Bidwell; Mr. and
the OAC voted to strike the word from the regulations which govern the lntercollegiate sports of the health several months. She was Mrs. Kenneth Shuler, a son,
Continued from page I
the daughter or the late Racine.
conference.
.
101,786; Cincinnati with 73,107-:
Officials said the action will pennlt women to compete on men's teams should the individual Thomas Jackson ·Vee and
Dayton
with 47,703 and
•
institutions allow such participation beginning this fall. "It's a step we were forced to take in lieu of Arvilla King Vee.
PLEASANT VALLEY
federal legislation, " said OAC Commissioner Michael J . Cleary. "Also,"'he added, "it will give the She is survived by her
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Cleo Youngstown with 23,732.
The Dayton case wu rejecthusband, Mey, and two Holley, Point Pleasant: Mrs.
lfldividuallnstitutlons flexibility ln developlng nonsex discriminatory athletic !"Ograms."
Cleary said women athletes will be able to compete on men's teams ln sports where there are no daughters , Martha Mays , Andrew Lemley, Mid&lt;!Jeport; ed In U.S. Di$rlct Court and Is
women's teams, except football and wrestling. Those sports, he added, are e'"mpt from federal Albany, and Roberta Parker, Mrs. Griffln Boggess, Point now pending before the 6th 'u.S.
Bolivar, Ohio.
.
.
guidellnes .
Pleasant; Mrs. Eva Stout, Circuit Court of Appeals ln Cin•
FWleral
services
will
be
EGYPT CALLED TODAY FOR SUMMIT TALKS WITH Syria, Jordan and the
Middleport; Mrs. William cinnati.
The Suprell)e Court opinion
Palestinian guerrilla movement to coordinate strategy for Arab-Israeli peace talk!! expected in the Friday at 2 p.m. at the Blgon· Marshall, - Mason; Isabell
Issued
today and written, by
Jordan
Funeral
Home,
Albany,
fall . The Arab Socilist Union, Egypt's only political party, said ln Cairo the three countries and the
Heck, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Palestinians should meet "to agree on a political plan to which aU Arab parties would be committed with the Rev. Howard Mayne Turley George, · Vinton; Chief Justice Warren E. Burg·
officiating, Burial wjll be in the Richard Yeager, Gal,ipolls er said boundary Unes may be
at the Geneva conference."
·
· Palestinian groups have denounced last week's Egyptian.Jordanian commUnique as a "seUout" Temple Cemetery. Friends Ferry; William Bowers, bridged in circumstances
because it rejected guerrilla demands that the Palestinian Liberation Organization be recognized as may call after 2 p.m. today.
Grimms Landing; Clara where · there hu been a .conthe sole representative or the refugees.
.
Cardwell, Gallipolis: Emanuel stitutional violation calling for
interdistrict relief but that
CHICAGO - U.S. APPEAlS COURT JUDGE OTTO Kerner - the first silting federal judge to be
Collas, Cohunbia, S. C.; John
TWO
ASK
DIVORCE
school
district lines may not be
convicted and sentenced for a crime - hu resigned his office, ending congressional moves to imWarner, Syracuse; Mrs .
Two
suits
for
divorce
filed
ln
caslJ!IIIY ignored or treated as
peach him.
·
.
Robert Rlmmey, Southside.
Meigs
CoWJty
Common
Pleas
a
mere administrative con·
The lonner Illinois governor ·submitted his resignation Wednesday- just five days before he is
Court
were
by
Brenda
S.
Gress,
·
venience.
to surrender to federal authorities to bagin.a three-year prison tenn for fraud, tax evasion and
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by
her
mother,
Colleen
Vanconspiracy. "This letter Is to tell you that I have submitted·my resignation to the President and Chief
ADMITTED . Sandra
Justice Warren Burger," Kerner said in a brief letter to Chief Judge Luther M. Swygert of the 7th U. Meter, Pomeroy, from Mark Hudson, Raclne; Rita Roush,
Patrick . Gress, asking her
S. Circuit Court 'or Appeals .
.
maiden
n-ame Brenda S. Pomeroy; Willie Harris ,
COLUMBUS - MART1N ESSEX, SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBUC instruction for Ohio,
LOCAL TEMPS ·
Middleport.
Wednesday praised the General Assembiy for eannarking 112.5 million ln additional funds for VanMeter be restored, and by
DISCHARGED - Marjorie The temperature in downvocational education projects and said the action allSures all locally voted projects matching funds Doris Haynes, Pomeroy. from
James
Dyer, town Pomeroy at II a.m.
Newlun,
and inunedlate building starts. The funds will aid vocational school districts at Tri·Rivers, Jackson, Basil Haynes,· Pomeroy,
Thursday was 73 degrees under .
Canton, Van Wert County,Mansfleld, Sylvania, Jefferson County, Perry, Lawrence County, North charging gross neglect of duty Margaret Blankenship, and
Maggie
Gilmore.
sunny skies.
and extreme cruelty.
·Canton and Warren County.

.

I

f'

1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Thursday, July :lli, 1914

. I
)

'

•

'II
\

..,

.,

�I
2- '!be O.llv SenUMI, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Friday, '"'Y 25, lrTt

. - -.

w ~st

16 ro d s a nd 16 lintu . Nor th
IN THE COUIII:TOF
10114 degrees w est 4 rods and :n
COMMON PLEAS;
lin k s. to a ston e on the nor th sfde
MIIIGS COUNTY. OHIO ,
of s a ld rood , and the N or t h line
PR08A.T£ DIVISION
Of Sec: t !Ou 17 , thence E ast o iOn9
Section I me 52 rods and I) !I nks
o•OVEA: WHITE , Jr ,
to th e p l ace• of beginn i ng ,
Adm lnistrator de bon II non of
lstat• of Pearl v Tanthore y, con t ai n ing 5 18 acru , mor e or
len Reference Deed Volume
deceased..
138, Page 551 , Deed Record s,
Plaint i ff ~
Melg~~o Coun t y , Oh io
• Yl •
PARCEL No 6 The coal , Ot l
THELMA EODY, ~~ .tl.,
and gas . together with the
Def•nd.tnh
N-o , 19, 512 mmtn9 ru~ ht s atraC'hed ther eto
tn an d
und er the fot low ln9
dtscn b ed real ~s ta t e slfvated Jn
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
t he Town s.h1 P of Oli ve. 10 the
BY PUBLICATION
Coun t y of M e1gs and Sta te of
To Tn e u n ~ nown ht tr$ a nd Ohio, tn Sect•on No 11 Town
dev isees of P ear l V T an thOrey . N o 4 , Ran ge No 11. of the Oh iO
Compan y 's Pur c hase , boun ded
deceased .
To Th e v n known he irs a nd an d d escrt b ed as fo ll ow s
B eg i n ning a t th e Nor thw est
dJv l nes of Jam es Ro bert cor
ner of Sec ti on No 11 , th ence
Lowther , decea sed , and
Ea st 19 r od s .and 11 l tnk, s to a
To
1da L owt.h er . w hose ston
e at the No rth east cor ne r of
address Is unknown and ca nn ot
w ith reason a b le d tll gence be a 10 a cre trac t d eed ed bY J B
Torr ence to J ames A Lo wt her ,
asc erta ined
You are hereby nottf ted that th en ce sou th along th e east l ine
you have been named defen of sa 1d tra ct JO rod s an d 12 li nks
dants In a lega l e~ c t i on enti tl ed to an tron p 1n 1n t he mi ddl e of
Gro~o-er
Wh tte ,
Jr ,
Ad I nd ia n Run Road then ce along
mlnl1trator de bon ts non of the the mldd le of s. atd r oad as
Sout h 493.;. deg rees
Estate of Pear l V Ten thore y , fo l lows
decea ~ ed , Platntlff, vs Th elma West 7 rod s. and 11 li nks . North
Eddy, et at , Defendants This 83 deg re es w es t 11 r ods and 17
act ion has been assigned Ca se li nks , th ence north 48 deg r ees
No 19,512 .n the court or we st 2 rod s and 14 l tnks to the
Common
P l eas. ,
Pr obat e w es t I m e of Sect •on 11; t hence
Division, Meigs County , Oh io north 34 r ods and 14 lin ks to the
The addren of sa id Court ts.. c o place of beg mnt ng , contam1na
Me igs County Court House, 4 2 1 a c re s . m o r e or less
Referenc f Deed Volume 138,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
The object of the Comp la int Is Pege .55 1, D eed Re cords , Meigs
to sell the real estate of the County , Oh 1Q
PARCEL No
7
Th e un
decedent to pay the debts and
costs of adm ln lster /ng her div ided one half Interes t 1n the
estate, which real estate rs oil and oas, togeth er w tth t he
mmtng rrghts atta c hed thereto,
described 11s follows
PARCEL No 1 The fOIIowmg tn and Under the fO llOWing
real estate Situated In the descr ibed real estate s• hi at ed 1n
County of Meigs, In the State of the Townsh ip of Oliv e. tn the
Ohio, and tn the Townsh tp of County of Me tgs , an d State of
Olive ,
and
bounded
and Ohio , m Se ction No 11 , Town 4
The Ohio VUiage Hotel hoiiSes both a smaU tavern for
described as follows Being the end Range No 11 . of the Ohio
Company
'
s
Pur
c
h.a
se
,
and
tight
refreshments and a complete dining room whtch wtU
north one ha If of the southeast
(IUArter of the southeast quarter bounded and des cr 1bed as
serve an authentic luncheon from the mtd.eighteen hundreds
of Section No 24, Town No 4, follows A lot of land bounded
on
the
Wes
t
by
Sect
tOn
No
17,
on
wtthin a few weeks.
Range No
11 of the Ohio
Company's Purchase , and the Nor th by lands formerly
being e 20 acre lot bounded by owned by Thomas Parker . on
lrtsh playwright George
In 1971, Apollo 15 blasted off
property ltnes as follows On the East by lands formerly
the north by lands of Davtd owned by Jostah Cowdery and for the moon w1th astronauts Barnard Shaw was born July
Rowland and J J Chute . on the D F F lelds , and on the South
Davtd Scott, James Irwm and 26, 1856 American actOr Jason
East by the East Ime of Sectton by lands formerly own~d by
No 24, on the sovth by lands of Josiah Cowdery , contatn tng 10
Robards also was born on th1s
Alfred Worden aboard
W J Hetney, and on the West acres , more or less
date m 1922
There Is ex c epted from
by lands of W J
Hemey
Reference Deed Vol 143 Page Parcel No 7, the follow tng
Begm
62 , Deed
Records , Metgs described real estate
nlng at the northwest corner of
County , Oh 10
PARCEL No 2 Also , the said Section No 11 , thence east
following real estate sltul!lted In 19 rods and 11 lmks to a stone at
Olive Townr.hlp , County of the northeast corner of a 10 acre
Metgs and State of Oh to, and m tract deeded by J B Torren ce
Section No 23 Beolnnlng 40 112 i!lnd wtfe to James R Lowther
rods Easf of the northwest thence south along the east ltne
corner of Sectton No 23 , th&amp;nce of satd tract 30 rods and 12 links
Eest 59 rods and 4 1h links . to an Iron pin tn the m iddle of
thence south 39112 rods. thence lndtan Run Road , thence along
west 59 rods o~r.C~nd 4% trnks. the m tddle of sa1d road as
South 493/• degrees
thence north 39 Y2 rods to the follows
place of begmnmg, contalnmg west 7 rods and 11 links. North
83 degrees west 11 rods and 17
14.55 acres, more or tess Ex
Paul M Smart, formerly of served by the company
ceptlng, however, from the !Inks , thence north 48 degrees Mtddleport, has been named to
uwe fmd that more and more
abOve tract of land a ceria In west 2 rods and 14 ltnks to the
of our time and efforts m
portion thereof, bounded as west ltne of said Sectton No 11 , the newly-created posttion of
follows
Beginning 40lf~ rods thence north 34 rods and 14 ltnks Vtce President · Legal and managmg the company's afeut of the northwest corner of to the place of begtnn Jng ,
fatrs are dtrected to these
abOve section , thence east 59 contatnJng 4 21 acres, more or elected Secretary of The
rods and ·4112 links to county less Reference Deed Volume Toledo Edison Company, John
regulatory areas, and we have
road, thence south lS feet. 138, Page 522. Deed Records ,
P Wilhamson, president, concluded that creating this
thence west 59 rods and 4lf2 Meigs County , Ohto
The tnterest of the grantee tn
links , thence north 16 teet to the
posttion wtll be a beneftctai
announced thts week
place of beginning , contammg Parcels 1, 2, 3. 4 and 1s sub 1ect
In announcmg the ap- step m concentratmg our ef36-100 acres. more or less The to an oil and gas lease granted
amount ,of land conveyed tn to W B and 8 B Otl and Gas pomtment, Wilhamson satd,
forts to ftnd solutions," he said.
above trec;t being 14 19 acres , Company
You
are
requtred
to
answer
Smart wtll contmue as a
"We have dectded to create
more or tess, and above
desc:ribed tra~ts bemg the same the complamt Withm 28 days thiS new postlton and to ask
partner m the Ia"ftrm of
premises conveyed by Frank after othe last publtcatton of th ts
Fuller, Henry, Hodge and
Founds and wife to for-mer notice, which will be pvbltshed Paul Smart to ftiltt because of
grantors by warranty deed of once each week for stx sue
weeks
The
last the increased mvolvement of Snyder and the ftrm will
date of April 23, 1936, and cessive
pu.bltcatton wtll be made on the company in the many
contmue as general counsel to
recorded May 6, 1936, tn vot
1A2, Page 54, Deed Records of August 123, 1974, and the 28 days complex regulatory processes Toledo Edtson.
Meigs County, Ohto Reference for answer will commen ce on
Deed Volume 143, Page 62, that date
which we now face resultmg
Mr Smart was graduated
rn case of your fatlure to
'('elgs County Deed Records
summa
cum laude from Ohio
from
stiffened
envrronmental
011 and gas Interests. as answer or otherwtse respond as
required
by
the
Ohto
Rules
of
follows
controls, the pressmg need for State Universtly Law School in
CIVIl Procedures, 1udgment by
PARCEL No 3
The un
rate relief, nuclear generation, 1953, and has practtced since
divided one half mterest tn the default will be rendered aglllnst
you
for
relief
demanded
m
th•s
oil and gu, together with the
the nahonal concern over that ttme with the...t.FJ!Iler,
m1ning rights attached thereto , Complaing
energy
shortages and others Henry, Hodge and Snyder finn
In &amp;nd under the following real
Janet
E
Morns
A parltai hstmg of the and 1ts predecessors He ~s
estate descrtbed as Parcel No
Deputy Clerk,
3, In the Townshtp of 011ve, tn
agencies
which have some been a partner smce 1959, and
Court of Common Pleas,
the County of Metgs and state of
Probate
Dtvlston,
Ohio The Southeast quarter of
JW'tsdtction over the company m recent
years
has
Metgs County , OhtO
the northeast quarter of Sectton
mcludes
the
Federal
Power
represented Toledo Edtson in a
No 17, Town 4 and Range No
(7) 19, 26 (8J 2, 9, 16, 23. 6tc
11, of the Ohio Company's
CommisslOn, The Secur1hes Wlde variety of local, state and
Purchase, containing 42 112
and Exchange Comm1sSwn, national governmental matacres, more or less Reference
Deed Volume 138, Page 522,
Atomtc Energy Commtsston, ters
On this day in history:
Deed Records, Meigs County ,
The
Federal Envtronmental
He has been active m bar
In 1847, Uberta, the only
Ohio
PARCEL No 4
The un
sovereign Negro democratic m Proteclton Agency, the State assocmhon work, servmg the
divided one half Interest m the
was declared a Environmental ProtectLOn past year as preSident of the
oil and gas, together Wtth the Africa,
m lnlng rights attached thereto repubbc.
Agency, the Ohto Power Sttmg Toledo Bar Assoctalion. He
In and under the following real
Commission,
the Pubitc serves currently as a member
In 1941, Gen. Douglas
estate descrtbed as Parcel No 4
situated in the Townshtp of MacArthur was named World
Utiltltes Comnusswn of OhiO, of the Counctl of J)eiegates of
Olive, In the County of Metgs
and
the Energy Emergency the OhiO State Bar Assoctatwn
and State of Ohto ~ The north half War II commander of Umted
of the northeast (luarter of States forces m the Phtbp·
Comrmsston
He also LS a member of the
Section No 17 , Town 4, Range 11
The
Company
IS
also
subJect
AmeriCan Bar Assoctahon and
pines.
of the Ohio Company's Pur
chtse, containtng 8411:! acres ,
to
regulatiOn
at
the
local
level
tiS sectiOns on Pubhc Utility
In 1967, four days of ractal
more or less There Is excepted ,
by
each
of
the
48
muntctpahltes
Law. 'Antitrust Law, Labor
rtoting in Detrott ended wtlh 39
however, from P~:~rcel No 4, the
m
the
northwestern
Ohio
area
following tract of land conveyed dead
Relations Law, and Cor·
by James R LowtHer to Hulda
L Matheny, by deed dated Jan •
23, 19'33, and recorded m Vol
139, at Page 171 thereof, and
described as follows Beginn.ng
at a stone 12 rods north of the
sovttwe'est corner of the north
half ot the northeast quarter of
said Section No 17, thence
north 5634 degrees east 47 rods
and 9 links to a stone thence
north 77•h degrees east 26 rods
to a stone. thence north 64
degrees east 7 rods and S ltnks
to e stone, thence north 8l lf2
degrees east 17 rod a and 6 links
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. lor the booklet on Balanced dtcatwn of whether a baby ts
to a stone, thence north 6211:!
degr~es east 37 rods and 51mks
DEAR DR LAMB - Can Diet Send 50 cents to cover premature or not Is tts ~trth
to a stone on tho south Side of
dieting
durmg pregnancy be costs.
wetght Premature babies
Indian Run, thence north 35
degrees west 19 rods and 15 harmful to the unborn baby?
The placenta and flutd often have serious health
links to the north line of Sectton
My
friend
ts
one
month
around
the baby wtll amount to problems at btrth
No 17 , thence west along the
north line of Secfton 17 , 110 rods pregnant and weighs 110 about two-and-a-half pounds
The mother's dtet must
lind 13 links to lands now or
pounds.
She
says
she
wtll
allow
The
uterus
w1ll
also
mcrease
m
contam
adequate amounts of
formerly owned by the estate of
J W Johnson , thence south 68 herself to gam no more than 10 we1ghl as it must develop to
mmerals The baby has lo
rods and 19 links to the place of
pounds
durmg
the
pregnancy
provtde
support
for
the
baby
develop
a complete skeleton
bevlnnlng , contalnmg 30 acres ,
more or less Except a road 30 , What does detennme the and delivery of the baby It
and that means 1t needs
feet wide from the 10 ecr.e lot
wetght
of
the
baby?
Is
there
usually
increases
over
two
calciUm. The mother can lose
known i!ls the Jacob Rardon lot
to the tract of land owned by J
any way a woman can control pounds m weight. The breasts calctwn from her own skeleton
M
Jackson , the roat! to be
If she doesn't pay attention to
located on the best tocat ton and the weight of the baby so she normally gam about two
grade
will have a smaller baby?
pounds That accounts for at thts The Amertcan dtet is often
Furthermore e)Cceptlng from
DEAR
READER
'!'he
only
least
SIX-and-a-half pounds deficient m calcium, so it is a
Parcel No 4 the following tract
of land Beglnnmg at the nor.th
person who should diet during without constdermg the wetght very tmpo~tant consideration.
east corner of Sect ton No 17 ,
The baby will also need lots of
thence South 34 rods and 14 llnlt.s a pregnancy IS a woman with a of the baby The body nonnally
to the middle of Indian Rvn medtcai problem, ltke toxemta accumulates some extra flwd iron The mother wtil need
Road , thence along the mtddle
more iron lo support ~er tn·
of said road as fallows North 48 of pregnancy. I think tl ts very durtng pregnancy, and the
degrees west 18 rods and 10 wtwJse for a pregnant woman mother's volume of blood IS creased amount of blood and to
links, north 64% degrees west
22 rods and 23 links , North 52 1!4 to diet except upon the advtce Increased to support the make up lor the blood loss
degrees west 16 rods and 16 of her doctor,
pregnancy
during delivery So, l can't
links, North 701J4 degrees West 4
The new baby needs protein ' It follows that In a normal emphasize too strongly the
rocrs and 21 links to a stone on
the North side Of road and the to develOp. If he doesn't get it
pregnancy wtth a baby of about Importance of a good dtel
North tine of Sect ton No 17 ,
seven pounds, the mother wtil durtng pregnan cy
thenet East atong the Section Utere is a posstbiiity of faulty
line .52 rods and 17 links to the development, or as some
gam a minimum or 15 to 20
Dlece of beginning, containing
sctentists have suggested, the pounds JUSl to support lhe
.; 11 acres, more or tes.s
~eference Oeed
Volume 138, baby's brain may not be
pregnancy. Nojl' tf she IS fat to
Page 522, Deed Records , Meigs
developed to tts full capactty. begtn wtth she can use some of
Coun fy, Oh lo
PARCEL NO 5
I, oil In plain language, the baby her body f~t . but oddly enough

•

·Ohio Village to open Saturday
.v...

COI .'"'"BUS - Alter more

·~
u•M t.' years of researcb an d

plan nmg and three years of
ac tua! cons lr ucIIon, the Oh to
Hislortcal Soctety's new Oh10
V'll
1 age wIll open aI 10 a.m
Saturday, J uly 27th.
l .ocated on a ten..,cre tract
just north of the Oh1o H1storical
Center at 1-71 and 17th Ave. m
Columbus, the village ls a
complete reconstruction of a
lyptcai Ohto county seat be·
tween 1800 and 1860
The 14 bUJidmgs of the
village are based on struc tures
thai now stand or once stood m
the state, representmg a
panorama of the early ar·
chtlectura l .&lt;yles. Board
stdewalks hnk the bwldlngs,
whtch 'If• arranged around a
central town square The dtrt
streets ha ve been cherrucaliy
treated and prepared to keep
them firm, even m a heavy
ram.

But the bwldings alone do not
make the VIllage. The real
exc•U!ment Ill the Ohw Vtllage
comes from the craftsmen,
hos ts and hostesses. each

costwned'" authenltc ciothmg
of the penod who brmg the
town to hfe.
The village shops and
busmesses are staffed wtlh a
carefully selected group of
master craftsmen and apprenttces , many of whom
learned thetr trades at Colonial

of Toledo Edison company

s

the

•

•

won't be as smart as It sltould
be.
The latest recommendaltqns
from Ute Food and Nutrition
Council of the Nattonal
Academy
of
Sctences
recommends in addition of 30
grams of protein a day at a
bare minimum. For more
information on dietary
requirements write to me in
care of this n""''PI1per, P.O.
Box 1561, Radio City Stalioo,
New York, N.Y.10019, and ask

tt is the skinny · woman who
wants to avoid gaimng wetght
during pregnancy . So she
harms her own body and
harms her baby by fatting to
follow the good advl&gt;• of her
doctor. •
The baby's wetght wiU Indeed depend upon the mother's
health durmg th• pregnancy,
and that diflnlteiy tncludes
what she eats. It wtil also
depend upon how long the
pregnancy lasts. One m-

piam the operation of the
phys1c1an's offtce and home,
the town hall, the village hole!
and the general store where the

prod•~ts
or tlte craftsmen wiU' center of village
~
1 ltin speci•l
ft

be avat'lable lor ..
- Je along with
hardware, candles, candies,
SPices' tobacco' Clothl·ng, seeds
lll\d other ttems thai would
have been used before the Civil
War
'J'h.e village hotel housos two
food servtce operations The
tavern room will be open from
the first day servmg light
refreshme nts and pastr ies .
Within a few weeks, the mam
hot..l dtmng room WIU begm
servmg luncheon fr om an
authentic menu of the mtd-18
hundreds.
'J'he village museum and
glass and chma shop wtll also
be opened m August The
museum ts a reconstruction of
. a typtcal museum of curiOsities
that would have been popular
in the earl y years of statehood.
The glass and chma shop wtll
display orlgmai anltques from

events, from v ' 1 brg uera IA·
men to holiday ce le a ~··
number of spec! a even .. are
ed
tit viii
being plann.. 1or e , age
lltroughout
u•e year.
The original
14 buildings of
1 1 th
the vtllage represen on Y e
begmnlng. In the years to come
the vtllage wiii grow 85
existing buildings are moved to
the stle and new ones con·
structed.
The OhiOVillage will be open
year round from 10 a.m. to 6 ,.
P m Wednesday through "
Sunday The viUage jVIU be
closed on Monda}'&gt; and ""•
Tuesday. Admission is $!.50 for
adults and 50 cents for unaccompanted children 13 and
under Organized school
groups and members of the
OhiO Historical Society Will be
adrmtted free . Adaquate free
parking is ava1iabie to ail

.

one of the fmest coUechons m vtllage visitors.
the mtd-wesl and seU hcen~d
For a unique taste of Ohio

"'
reproductions of both Ohto and before the Civil War, plan to "'
EID'opean chma and pottery VISit the new Ohto ViUage this
The open market wtll be Ute summer and watch it grow
•

Recollections of my first Bean Drnner eontinued from page 1

Power

Association.

Bar

,

Mr. and Mrs Smart restde at
283211W. Rtver Road, Perrysburg, Ohto. They have three
daughters, Sue, Barbara and
Berta Mr Smart IS the son of
Mr and Mrs Paul S Smart, 44
Uncoin St , Mtddleport

DEVOTED TOmE
IN'l'EIIf'8l'OF

MEIG8-MASON ARE..'
CHESI'ERL TANNEHILL,
EutEd
ROBERT HOEFLICH,.
CUJ E4Htar
'
Publilbed daRy ucept Sahar~y by Tbe
Ohio Vanty Publlshin!il Comi:any, 111
Cow1 st' Pomeroy, Ohio, 51111 Buainesl
Office Phone tn-2156 Edltoril!l Phone m~ claaa poSlalfe pall! at

..
..

THE

Elsewhere $22 011 yar. m month! $ll ~
three moolhl, tB 611 &amp;ibecrtptim price

•
''
I'

I

'

Gospel of Christ

Rto Grande and Point
Pleasant City Ice and Fuel will
battle tomght at 8 p.m for the
championship or the 16th annual Kyger Creek L1ttle
League tournament .
Tho Galllpohs Yankees and
New Haven Reds wtll meet m
the 6:30 consolabon g am ~
Rio Grande came up with

smgle and Brian McDade wtlh
a stngle.
For lhe Yanks, Btg John

three runs in the s1xth innmg

Los Angeles Dodgers
take two from Astros

Thursday night enroute to a 4-3
win over the Yankees, whtle
City Ice and Fuel's Bob Beller
tossed a one-htller tn the
mghtcap to 11!1 CIF to a ~ I
triwnph over the Reds
The Yanks, down HI In the
ftrsl, came back wtth two m the
second and one m the third to
take a ~~ lead before Rio
struck three times in the !mal
frame on just three htts
Tony Weiher went the
distance for the win, whtie Boo
Weaver was charged the loss
At one time, Weaver put down

14 Rio batters m order, from
the last out m the first innmg
through the ftrst out m the
stxth.
Top hitters for Rio were
Weiher wtth a double and
smgle, Curt Ramey wtth a patr
of smgies, Riok Whaley with a
.

12

SUCCESS STORIES

•

"They Overcame
Hearing Loss"
0

Free Booklet es pe c •al l y
p r epared
to en courage
Americans of all ag es who
suffer from uncorre cted or
untreated heanng loss to
seek help
Well -known celebnttes from
all walk s of l1fe tell thetr
personal stones of tnum ph
m the1r ftelds because they
overcame th e •r
tmpatrment

hear tng

,.,

Come m

or Phone

Wnte

'or yovr FREE COPY

BRO. FRANK HIGGINBOTHAM
Evangelist
Chester, West Virginia

(Jo~pe/ .Ateeting~

9r&amp;u 29 - Aug. 2. 1974

••t

1 Founded by Chnst.
2. Founded m Jerusalem on Pentecost.
3. Chnst is Its Head

PHONE:

592-6238

Chuck Sanders ali had singles
In Thursday's mghtcap,
Beller not only allowed JUSt one
hll, but he also struck out 15

By STU CAMEN
UP! Sports Writer
Jtmmy Wynn and Tony
Perez, teammates Tuesday

mght 1,n the All.Star game, are
back with their respecltve
clubs domg what they do best
- wrecking havoc upon the
rest of the Nallonai League.
Wynn clubbea hiS 22na
homer and three singles
Thursday night in leading Los
Angeles to an ll.J victory over
Houston in the opener of a
twmigh~oubleheader . The
Dodgers, behind Ute seven-hit
shutout pitching of Doug Rau,
also won lhe second game, 2-0,
to hold on to their 5~.game
lead over second-place cinCtn1J8ti tn the West DIVIsiOn.
Cincinnati kept pace thanks
to Perez' 17th homer, a two-run
shot, that climaxed a five-run
ninth inning as Ute Reds rallied
for a 14-13 victory over San
Francisco in the opener and
then took the nightcap ;..o
behind the five-lit! shutout
pitching of Fred Norman
"It makes us play harder to
find Cincinnalt behind and then
commg back to score five runs
in Ute ninth inning," said Wynn
when asked how he and the rest
of the Dodgers felt about the
Reds' rally. "I know it makes
me play harder."
The Dodgers bangep out 15hits in the first game to help
Don Sutton snap a personal sixgame losing streak and record
his first victory since May 14.
Rau's shutout in the nightcap
was his first ever in the major
leagues and gave Ute threeyear veteran his ninth wm of
the season.
Perez' homer m the Reds'
opener was hiS nmth gamewinning hit of the season.
Cincmnati got all the offensive
support it needed in the

•

1•

"The Home of the Friendly Folks"

•

4 No Creed but Cbrtst.
5. No disc1phne but New Testament.

6. Pleads for Unity,
7. Seeks to Reproduce the New Testament Church.
B Believes the Bible ts D1vinely Inspired

Services Each Evening at 7 :30 p.ll).

R1vers1de Professional Bldg
444 W Unton St, Athens

Arms tro ng , Ma rk Shee ts,
Weave r , Ken Caudtll a nd

~

9 The Btble IS Final Authority
10. Calls Btble Things by Bible Names
II Does Btblc Thtngs in the l!iblc Way.

•
•"'•'
••
•~

298
Second St.
POO!eroy, 0.

y

1

.•
4

.,•
•'

-

STORE HOURS:
MONDAY-SATURDAY 8 AM-10 PM

SUNDAY 10 AM TO 10 PM

'6

COME STUDY WITH US

MASON CHURCH of CHRIST
MILLER STREET
MASON, WEST VIRGINIA

~

'
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~~

~•\os
••

c
•

,.,.•
,.

Have You Been looking
WHY NOT VISIT US THIS WEEK!
I

SERVICES
SUNDAY SOiOOL .................... 10:00 AM
MORNING SERVICE.. ................ ll:OO AM
EVENING SERVIC~!"'"'""""' "'"7:3U PM

~

\
\

I ,

j

:,.

-•

Falrarou~ds,

Off RL 62, 4 Miles North of 'raitt Ple•lllt

tomght's fma le by beatmg
Portland , the Mtddleport
Vtnce Weaver .
Braves , Fruth s and the
Gary Rtchards was charged Yankees
wtth lhe loss He ytelded htl.s to
CiF, mcanwhtle, got past the
Beller, a Single and a double, Gallipolis Orioles, i\ddavtlle,
Aver1lle Sayre, three s mgles, the Gallipolis Ttgers and New
and a double lo Lemme Sayre Haven.
Rw Grande made tt mto

nightcap from Ken Griffey who
homered and Cesar Gerommo
who rapped out two stngles and
a -trtpie.
In other NL games, Philadelphia whipped Chicago, 1().2;
St. LouiS swept a pBif from

I

The 1974 Ohio high school football season IS six days away,
with physical conditioning drills beginnmg Thursday, Aug. 1
As the gridiron weeks draw nearer and nearer, and Ute
baseball seasons come to an end, 1t's time for sportswriters to
start leafing through old files and prepare for the upcoming
onslaught of stories and features on local teams.
For the Meigs Marauders, in a brief capsule VIew, it will be a
year of defintte question marks, wtth the btggest by far bemg the
rebuilding of both the offensive and defmstve lines.
Some of Ute offenstve backfield wiU be back, espectally mUte
speed of semors Terry Whitlatch and the power of Jack Otier.
But the Meigs backfield has lost quarterback Jay Warner,
labeled by mentor Charley Chancey as one of the biggest and
most pleasant surprises of 11173.
His shoos wiU be hard to flU, along with those of ends Melvm
Cremans and Dave Wolfe, without a doubt the finest pair of pass
calchtng ends in the SEOAL last season.
Wolfe, by the' way, has reCeived a grant.jn-aid to attend
Marietta CoUege where he is also expected to make ~ run at a
spot on the Pioneer baseball squad
Also gone wiU be several of the mainstays of the defensive
unit, tackle BUI Slack, middle guard AI McLaughitn, and
linebackers Jobu Lehew and J. D Story, to mention a few.
The successful rebuUding of those lines sltouid be the key to
the Meigs success thiS year.
THE GALUPOUS Blue Devtis think this may be their year,
and lhey're hopmg for a repeat of that 11170 season when tlte Blue
beat everybody.
Fourteen lettermen wiU be returning for Johnny Ecker, and
more speed should be the key if the Devils are going to live up to
last year's banquet predict ton ("Wtn tt all in '74")
The feeling in Gallipolis IS that If the Blue Devils can get past
that rugged league opener against Ironton, then they in fact will
go ali the way.
AT RACINE, the Southern Tornados should have another
SVAC powerhouse, losing five regulars from the 1973 squad that
placed second in the league.
1
Graduating were Randy Forbes, Vern Ord, Jim Wtlliams,
Mike Codner and Dennis Hawk, all mainstays of the Tornado
squad the past two years.
But hack will be the SVAC's leading ground gainer, Mttch
Nease, who should continue to romp through opposing defenses
for big hunks of yardage.
THE EASTERN EAGLES could be the surprise of the SVAC
this season. Spike Berhlmer, in his second year, will have lost
just three regulars from 197~, fullback~inebacker John Sheets,
end 'l'im Baum and Dan Chaffee.
The Birds finished a good third last season, behind Kyger
Creek and Southern, and this just mtght be their year.
Hopefully, Dale Rothgeb, Jr., the walking SVAC computer,
will be back from vacation next week, and since he's the GaUia
County expert, I'll leave the remaining area teams' for bim to
present his capsule views of the 11174 football campaigns.
Meanwhile, Col. Mole and Sgt. Swami are reportedly
refllling their poison pens in anticipation of the first football
games in September.
Col. Mole won last year's first annual bitter rivalry, with
Swami finishing jiiSI behind.
Rumor has it that Swami is going for the crown this year, and
aithoughhlsjabswiU be just as sharp as before, he is expected to
take the race more serious, especially considering Col. Mole's
vanity.

ward the Reds' 18-lttt attack tn
the f1rst game mciuded a
double, two smgies and his
seventh homer as he drove
home three runs.

PHILADELPHIA (UPI ) Rookte Moses Lajlennan was
cut by New York earlier this
year but after ktckmg the
wlnnmg field goal Thursday
rught, Stars Coach Dave Parilh
said he'U be keepmg him
around
"Earlier in the year l cut him
from tfi'e squad," Parilli satd.
"But my regular kteker, Peter
Rajecki, hurt his rtbs and I had
to call back LaJlerman a day or
two ago. He'U stay wtth us
now."
LaJU!rman, playing m his
first pro game, k1cked a 4().
yard held goal wtth 3 ·12
rematrung to gtve the Slats a
17-15 World Football League
win over the Philadelphia Bell
m a nationally televised game.
The VICtory was the first m
three games for the Stars and
Parilh's ftrsl as a ~ead coach
''It's good to wm one cause
it's been so long," PariUi sald.
"I was not happy, though, with
our over aU performance. I
thought we played sloppy, but
I'll take the vtctory regard-

2 SPEm MOTOR

,

Yankees keep

HEADUGHT
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RUG ADJUSTMENT

MIDDLEPORT, 0.•

BAKER

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Chesle r , Ohio

Phone 985-3307

Concepcion'stwo..rWl homer. A

run splurge by lhe Gtants m
the ftfth lnntng qwckly evaporated the lead.
The Gtants went ahead 12-7
by scormg twtce m the seventh.
The Reds got the two back m
the etghth when Johnny Bench

SIX

homered With a runner on

base
The Reds' ftve.r un splurge m
the nmth came after a solo
homer by Bobby Bonds put the
Gtants ahead 1 ~9 in the top of
the mnmg.
SurprJSmgly, the vtctory
went to Jack Blilingham, now

FURNITURE
MIDDlEPOIT, 0• .

30 yards m etght plays. Tom
Shennan missed both passmg
attempts for extra points
Philadelphia rrussed two attempts to wm the game with a
fteld goal after Lajtennan's
successful kick .
A kick by Jack Simcsak from
the 2&amp;-yard lme wtth 2:10
rematrung was wtde of the
nght uprtght and another 2&amp;yard attempt by George
Chatlos was left of the
goalposts as tune ran out.
Phtladelphia marched 89
yards m five plays to take an 80 lead m the first quarter. King
Corcoran passed 18 yards to
aaude Watts for a touchdown,
then scored the extra pomt on a
quarterback sneak on the third
try after New York was twice
called for offstdes.
New York closed the gap to 87 mtdway through the second
pertod when Dave Rtchards
plunged over from the one to
cap an 85-yard drtve The Bell
did not lead agam until 5:51 of
the thtrd penod at 15-14 when
Corcoran

connected

•

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More than 174 m il l JOn persons
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srn c e tt opened July 17, 1955

MOST CONVENIENT LOCATION IN COUNTY!
ROCK S PRINGS
Srtoaleli m a l{'v o.:ly ~ liSIOIIC (I I SU!

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li(1r ~

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The Pomeroy Ultie League
champtons kept thetr perfect
record gomg this week as the
Yankees trounced Harrtson
VIlle, 20-4
Stevte Call ftred a two-httler,
strtking out etght and walkmg
only one
Howard and Arnold w1th a
smgle each
The Yankees, who are no\\
HHl m league play, were led ir,
httlmg by Ttm Roush wlth •
double and pa1r ol

smgles, Call ,wtlh a tnple and
patr of smglcs, Steve L1ttle
with a tnple and a smgle, Ttm
Faulk wtth three smgies, Tom
Owens . wtlh two singles and
Mtke Whitlatch wtth a single
The Yankees have two
games left, one wtth the Tigers
and the other "1th the Gaints
The league standmgs are as

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The Stars went ahead 14-3 at
12.30 of the second pertod when
Bob Gladieux npped over from
the one after the team marched

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•

-

Concepcion's contributiOn to-

'-

"But Ute big thing wu the
catch he made of Gary
Thomasson 'a liner with Ute
bases loaded In the third inning," said Sparky .
The two teains wind up Ute
series tonight with Don Gullett
going against the Glanta' Jim
Barr.

Field goal gives
Stars 17-15 win

By DennY'
Fobes ~

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CINCINNATI (UPI ) - It Thursday night.
now appears Dave Concepcion
" What It bolls down tn now,"
wasn't kidding early in May said Reds Manager Sparky
when he predicted he and his Ander son, "is how many
roomy, Tony Perez, would games we can beat the
drtve home 200 runs between Dodgers. l figure we've got to
them
wm at leaxt siX or tbe rune left,
Because after the two led the maybe even seven."
Reds lo a doubleheader sweep
The Dodgers have won etghl
over the San Francisco Giants of the rune lhe two teams ha ve
Thursday night, 14·13 • nd 5-ll, played so far
thetr combmed RBis totaled
The Glanto scored three runs
105
m lbe ftrst mmng of the ftrst
Perez boosted hiS total to 59 game and the Reds came back
when he slammed hiS 17th 1 w1tl1 f1ve in the ~nd
homer wtth two out and a
Alter the Gtants scored their
rwm er on to climax a ftve--run fourth run m the thtrd mnmg,
runth lllning rally which beat the Reds boWJced back m their
the Gtants m the opene r
half to take a 7-4 lead on

The Reds shortstop scored
one run and doubled home
another m the second game to
boost hts RBI total to 46 as
New York, 4-3 and 4-1, Pills- Fred Norman blanked the
burgh and Montre•l d1v1ded Gtants to notch his loth vtctory.
wtth the Expos, taking the The Reds fatled to gam on Los
opener' 1~. and losing the Angeles, wh1ch sttll leads the
mghtcap, 3-2, and Atlanta Nattonai League West by 5 1'.!
shaded San Diego, 1~. m 10 games after sweepmg a
doubleheader from Houston
mnmgs.

Sports
esk

Ii

uFor twe.ty years •he wouJdn't
do a thing we uked her to do,

I.Qcated next to Mason County

batters of a possible 18. The
lone Red safety was a tn pie by

AI&amp;or.&amp;

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MOIOf1lOLA
QUASAR

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FOR ...•
•.AN OLD TIME, BIBLE BELIEVING, BIBLE PREACHING,
SOUL WINNING, GOING, G.,.OWING CHURCH?

..... ......... __

81111 now ohe P!'Omiloo to obe)'
~e guy ahe'o Ollly known two
month• ''

Rio, CI&amp;F to clash for 1974
K yg.e r Creek .LL baseball crown

CHURCH OF CHRIST

Romans 1:16 I Cor. 9:18 2 Cor. 4:4

Pomer,,

Ntow Yorlt. , New York.
&amp;lbla'iptiefl rates Dellvend by,prrier
whert available 10 centa per week , By
Motor Route where CBn1er awvlce oot
available Ole rrm.th, $2JO By mail In
Ohio and W Va , On! Yur, '1!, Sb
monthl, $9 &amp;11, Three months, $6

'"
'"

Tllis is your invitation to llear

National advertlalf\11 representative '
BottlneW.Oallagber,lnc , 12 Eut 42nd St ,

includ.a !landlly Ttmea-Sertinel

~·

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in a series of

21$7

"o

11·7, Ute last of seven Reds
pitchers who was making hi•
ftrst rwief appearance of the
season .
Anderson said Cesar Geronimo "won " the second game.
Geronuno singled twice and
trtpled while scoring two run.s
and dnving home anotber

Reds pull off amaZing comeback

William S Diles
Diles Heanng Aid Center

poratton,
l:Sankmg
and
Busmess Law, as well as the

Federal

,,

Blankets were spread upon the seats to make them safer for our clothes and more comfortable as •
weU.
There were no automobiles then. Folks began arrivmg on the scene by shank's mares, buggies,
'"
surreys, express wagons, wagons, and hay wagonloads, or on horseback
Horses were unhitched from tbetrvehicles and Ued to treesandgivea feed of hay, oats, etc.
A time of VISiting and remiilisctng foUowed for tbe older folks. Tbe younger children were ••
cautioned to remain near their parents because of the danger of Sllakes, espel'iaUy the venomous, "
cantankerous copperheada. The older children played at games or just enjoyed exploring the woods. ••
You may be sure that the young people thoroughly enjoyed the occasion
The cooks and their helpers were soon engaged m prepatmg the noonday feast. I remember one,
m particular, the head cook; but I cannot recall her name. I can sUII see her as she hustled around
making SID'e that tbe delectable combination of pork and beans in the huge kettle was being properly "
stirred.
She was a sturdy, hard-working, plam-speakmg, not overly.educated pioneer woman, sincere m
all that site did. The food she prepared for us, If memory served me aright, should have delighted the
most fasttdious epicure or gourmet.
The coffee she prepared seemed to satisfy every drinker. When ~veral complimented her on her
coffee she was pleased and had one set reply; and she dtd not mean it as a double-entendre. She
meant that she did not make weak coffee.
Her answer was: "When I make coffee, I make coffee: When I make water, I make water."
I do not suppose I would have remembered ber answer if I had not beard older folks recall the
incident later; but I could never forget how dellcio115ly and completely my appetite was finally
satisfied by pork and beans and crackers.
J'
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An hour or so afterward, the crowd gathered around the speaker's platfonn. If memory serves
me right, there were some backless benches for those who were fortunate in getting them.
The commander of the local Post, the orator for the occasion, and other dignitaries were seated
an Ute platform which had rrulings on three sides and steps to Ute other.
The greatest afternoon treat for me was the stirring mustc made by the local G.A.R. Band. The
drums, fifes, and bugle stirred my youUtfuipatrioiiSD1; and I can stiU hear it in my mind's ear.
I can remember but one of the bandsmen, George Carpenter, who Jived in RuUand for many
years. Iioved to watch him beat the big drum. I was also proud of my maternal grandfather, W. A.
(Lon) Hunt. He looked "sweU"tomeinhiaG.A.R uniform
The stirring, patriotic address was weU-received by aU. Then the local commander took care of ' \''
Ute regular business of Ute day; but many were loath to leave the scene.
'
There was a hwnoroiiS incident at one similar gathering, so I have heard. A veteran, who had '
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pertaken of something stronger than coffee, loudly proclauned thiS statement of his patriotism:
'
"Ladies and GenUemen: I fQught and bled and died for my country; and I'd gladly do so again If II
''
ne~ed my services."
I
I
Then came the journey back to the every day routine that would end too soon for so\ne of us
cblldren, at least; but the happy experiences of Ute day would linger on in Memory'sGarden.

PAUL M. SMART

DR. LAWHENCE E. LAMB

LAFF- A- DAY
~~

Williamsburg In Vlrg!llia an d
Sturbridge
Vtllage . 1n
Massac husetts. They will
fashion handmade products
us mg th e origmal and
. ear iY.
re(ll'oduccd tools oI the1r
19th century forefathers
The shoemakers will
manufacture shoos, boots and
other leather goods, the
blacksmtlhs wiU hammer ~ron
and steel mto' tools and hardware The cabmelmakers wtll
work wood mlo lurntlure and
accessortes
From the weaver's loom wtll
come plain and ornate fabrtcs
The prtnt..rs wiU publlslt the
vtliage newspaper , as weU as
posters, business cards and
public n otu~es . 'J'he hnsmtlhs
wtll !ashton domestic utenstls
that range from lanterns to
cookie cutters . 'J'he gunsmtths
wtll bwld Amen can western
long rtfles and ptslois.
The vtllage gwd es wtll ex-

Smart named vice president

Will diet harm unborn baby?

~ - The O.Uy !lonliiiOl,,.MJddleport·Porneroy, 0 ., t'ri&lt;lay, J uly 25, 1117j

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$10.49
$24.29
$28.69

POSTS-GA TES-HAROW.ARIIXTIA

OHIO-VALLEY.. FENCE
lraun load • 1 mile oil rout• SO • lolp&lt;•. Ohio
Coli Cct .. ct 42.3-1411

�I
2- '!be O.llv SenUMI, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Friday, '"'Y 25, lrTt

. - -.

w ~st

16 ro d s a nd 16 lintu . Nor th
IN THE COUIII:TOF
10114 degrees w est 4 rods and :n
COMMON PLEAS;
lin k s. to a ston e on the nor th sfde
MIIIGS COUNTY. OHIO ,
of s a ld rood , and the N or t h line
PR08A.T£ DIVISION
Of Sec: t !Ou 17 , thence E ast o iOn9
Section I me 52 rods and I) !I nks
o•OVEA: WHITE , Jr ,
to th e p l ace• of beginn i ng ,
Adm lnistrator de bon II non of
lstat• of Pearl v Tanthore y, con t ai n ing 5 18 acru , mor e or
len Reference Deed Volume
deceased..
138, Page 551 , Deed Record s,
Plaint i ff ~
Melg~~o Coun t y , Oh io
• Yl •
PARCEL No 6 The coal , Ot l
THELMA EODY, ~~ .tl.,
and gas . together with the
Def•nd.tnh
N-o , 19, 512 mmtn9 ru~ ht s atraC'hed ther eto
tn an d
und er the fot low ln9
dtscn b ed real ~s ta t e slfvated Jn
NOTICE FOR SERVICE
t he Town s.h1 P of Oli ve. 10 the
BY PUBLICATION
Coun t y of M e1gs and Sta te of
To Tn e u n ~ nown ht tr$ a nd Ohio, tn Sect•on No 11 Town
dev isees of P ear l V T an thOrey . N o 4 , Ran ge No 11. of the Oh iO
Compan y 's Pur c hase , boun ded
deceased .
To Th e v n known he irs a nd an d d escrt b ed as fo ll ow s
B eg i n ning a t th e Nor thw est
dJv l nes of Jam es Ro bert cor
ner of Sec ti on No 11 , th ence
Lowther , decea sed , and
Ea st 19 r od s .and 11 l tnk, s to a
To
1da L owt.h er . w hose ston
e at the No rth east cor ne r of
address Is unknown and ca nn ot
w ith reason a b le d tll gence be a 10 a cre trac t d eed ed bY J B
Torr ence to J ames A Lo wt her ,
asc erta ined
You are hereby nottf ted that th en ce sou th along th e east l ine
you have been named defen of sa 1d tra ct JO rod s an d 12 li nks
dants In a lega l e~ c t i on enti tl ed to an tron p 1n 1n t he mi ddl e of
Gro~o-er
Wh tte ,
Jr ,
Ad I nd ia n Run Road then ce along
mlnl1trator de bon ts non of the the mldd le of s. atd r oad as
Sout h 493.;. deg rees
Estate of Pear l V Ten thore y , fo l lows
decea ~ ed , Platntlff, vs Th elma West 7 rod s. and 11 li nks . North
Eddy, et at , Defendants This 83 deg re es w es t 11 r ods and 17
act ion has been assigned Ca se li nks , th ence north 48 deg r ees
No 19,512 .n the court or we st 2 rod s and 14 l tnks to the
Common
P l eas. ,
Pr obat e w es t I m e of Sect •on 11; t hence
Division, Meigs County , Oh io north 34 r ods and 14 lin ks to the
The addren of sa id Court ts.. c o place of beg mnt ng , contam1na
Me igs County Court House, 4 2 1 a c re s . m o r e or less
Referenc f Deed Volume 138,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
The object of the Comp la int Is Pege .55 1, D eed Re cords , Meigs
to sell the real estate of the County , Oh 1Q
PARCEL No
7
Th e un
decedent to pay the debts and
costs of adm ln lster /ng her div ided one half Interes t 1n the
estate, which real estate rs oil and oas, togeth er w tth t he
mmtng rrghts atta c hed thereto,
described 11s follows
PARCEL No 1 The fOIIowmg tn and Under the fO llOWing
real estate Situated In the descr ibed real estate s• hi at ed 1n
County of Meigs, In the State of the Townsh ip of Oliv e. tn the
Ohio, and tn the Townsh tp of County of Me tgs , an d State of
Olive ,
and
bounded
and Ohio , m Se ction No 11 , Town 4
The Ohio VUiage Hotel hoiiSes both a smaU tavern for
described as follows Being the end Range No 11 . of the Ohio
Company
'
s
Pur
c
h.a
se
,
and
tight
refreshments and a complete dining room whtch wtU
north one ha If of the southeast
(IUArter of the southeast quarter bounded and des cr 1bed as
serve an authentic luncheon from the mtd.eighteen hundreds
of Section No 24, Town No 4, follows A lot of land bounded
on
the
Wes
t
by
Sect
tOn
No
17,
on
wtthin a few weeks.
Range No
11 of the Ohio
Company's Purchase , and the Nor th by lands formerly
being e 20 acre lot bounded by owned by Thomas Parker . on
lrtsh playwright George
In 1971, Apollo 15 blasted off
property ltnes as follows On the East by lands formerly
the north by lands of Davtd owned by Jostah Cowdery and for the moon w1th astronauts Barnard Shaw was born July
Rowland and J J Chute . on the D F F lelds , and on the South
Davtd Scott, James Irwm and 26, 1856 American actOr Jason
East by the East Ime of Sectton by lands formerly own~d by
No 24, on the sovth by lands of Josiah Cowdery , contatn tng 10
Robards also was born on th1s
Alfred Worden aboard
W J Hetney, and on the West acres , more or less
date m 1922
There Is ex c epted from
by lands of W J
Hemey
Reference Deed Vol 143 Page Parcel No 7, the follow tng
Begm
62 , Deed
Records , Metgs described real estate
nlng at the northwest corner of
County , Oh 10
PARCEL No 2 Also , the said Section No 11 , thence east
following real estate sltul!lted In 19 rods and 11 lmks to a stone at
Olive Townr.hlp , County of the northeast corner of a 10 acre
Metgs and State of Oh to, and m tract deeded by J B Torren ce
Section No 23 Beolnnlng 40 112 i!lnd wtfe to James R Lowther
rods Easf of the northwest thence south along the east ltne
corner of Sectton No 23 , th&amp;nce of satd tract 30 rods and 12 links
Eest 59 rods and 4 1h links . to an Iron pin tn the m iddle of
thence south 39112 rods. thence lndtan Run Road , thence along
west 59 rods o~r.C~nd 4% trnks. the m tddle of sa1d road as
South 493/• degrees
thence north 39 Y2 rods to the follows
place of begmnmg, contalnmg west 7 rods and 11 links. North
83 degrees west 11 rods and 17
14.55 acres, more or tess Ex
Paul M Smart, formerly of served by the company
ceptlng, however, from the !Inks , thence north 48 degrees Mtddleport, has been named to
uwe fmd that more and more
abOve tract of land a ceria In west 2 rods and 14 ltnks to the
of our time and efforts m
portion thereof, bounded as west ltne of said Sectton No 11 , the newly-created posttion of
follows
Beginning 40lf~ rods thence north 34 rods and 14 ltnks Vtce President · Legal and managmg the company's afeut of the northwest corner of to the place of begtnn Jng ,
fatrs are dtrected to these
abOve section , thence east 59 contatnJng 4 21 acres, more or elected Secretary of The
rods and ·4112 links to county less Reference Deed Volume Toledo Edison Company, John
regulatory areas, and we have
road, thence south lS feet. 138, Page 522. Deed Records ,
P Wilhamson, president, concluded that creating this
thence west 59 rods and 4lf2 Meigs County , Ohto
The tnterest of the grantee tn
links , thence north 16 teet to the
posttion wtll be a beneftctai
announced thts week
place of beginning , contammg Parcels 1, 2, 3. 4 and 1s sub 1ect
In announcmg the ap- step m concentratmg our ef36-100 acres. more or less The to an oil and gas lease granted
amount ,of land conveyed tn to W B and 8 B Otl and Gas pomtment, Wilhamson satd,
forts to ftnd solutions," he said.
above trec;t being 14 19 acres , Company
You
are
requtred
to
answer
Smart wtll contmue as a
"We have dectded to create
more or tess, and above
desc:ribed tra~ts bemg the same the complamt Withm 28 days thiS new postlton and to ask
partner m the Ia"ftrm of
premises conveyed by Frank after othe last publtcatton of th ts
Fuller, Henry, Hodge and
Founds and wife to for-mer notice, which will be pvbltshed Paul Smart to ftiltt because of
grantors by warranty deed of once each week for stx sue
weeks
The
last the increased mvolvement of Snyder and the ftrm will
date of April 23, 1936, and cessive
pu.bltcatton wtll be made on the company in the many
contmue as general counsel to
recorded May 6, 1936, tn vot
1A2, Page 54, Deed Records of August 123, 1974, and the 28 days complex regulatory processes Toledo Edtson.
Meigs County, Ohto Reference for answer will commen ce on
Deed Volume 143, Page 62, that date
which we now face resultmg
Mr Smart was graduated
rn case of your fatlure to
'('elgs County Deed Records
summa
cum laude from Ohio
from
stiffened
envrronmental
011 and gas Interests. as answer or otherwtse respond as
required
by
the
Ohto
Rules
of
follows
controls, the pressmg need for State Universtly Law School in
CIVIl Procedures, 1udgment by
PARCEL No 3
The un
rate relief, nuclear generation, 1953, and has practtced since
divided one half mterest tn the default will be rendered aglllnst
you
for
relief
demanded
m
th•s
oil and gu, together with the
the nahonal concern over that ttme with the...t.FJ!Iler,
m1ning rights attached thereto , Complaing
energy
shortages and others Henry, Hodge and Snyder finn
In &amp;nd under the following real
Janet
E
Morns
A parltai hstmg of the and 1ts predecessors He ~s
estate descrtbed as Parcel No
Deputy Clerk,
3, In the Townshtp of 011ve, tn
agencies
which have some been a partner smce 1959, and
Court of Common Pleas,
the County of Metgs and state of
Probate
Dtvlston,
Ohio The Southeast quarter of
JW'tsdtction over the company m recent
years
has
Metgs County , OhtO
the northeast quarter of Sectton
mcludes
the
Federal
Power
represented Toledo Edtson in a
No 17, Town 4 and Range No
(7) 19, 26 (8J 2, 9, 16, 23. 6tc
11, of the Ohio Company's
CommisslOn, The Secur1hes Wlde variety of local, state and
Purchase, containing 42 112
and Exchange Comm1sSwn, national governmental matacres, more or less Reference
Deed Volume 138, Page 522,
Atomtc Energy Commtsston, ters
On this day in history:
Deed Records, Meigs County ,
The
Federal Envtronmental
He has been active m bar
In 1847, Uberta, the only
Ohio
PARCEL No 4
The un
sovereign Negro democratic m Proteclton Agency, the State assocmhon work, servmg the
divided one half Interest m the
was declared a Environmental ProtectLOn past year as preSident of the
oil and gas, together Wtth the Africa,
m lnlng rights attached thereto repubbc.
Agency, the Ohto Power Sttmg Toledo Bar Assoctalion. He
In and under the following real
Commission,
the Pubitc serves currently as a member
In 1941, Gen. Douglas
estate descrtbed as Parcel No 4
situated in the Townshtp of MacArthur was named World
Utiltltes Comnusswn of OhiO, of the Counctl of J)eiegates of
Olive, In the County of Metgs
and
the Energy Emergency the OhiO State Bar Assoctatwn
and State of Ohto ~ The north half War II commander of Umted
of the northeast (luarter of States forces m the Phtbp·
Comrmsston
He also LS a member of the
Section No 17 , Town 4, Range 11
The
Company
IS
also
subJect
AmeriCan Bar Assoctahon and
pines.
of the Ohio Company's Pur
chtse, containtng 8411:! acres ,
to
regulatiOn
at
the
local
level
tiS sectiOns on Pubhc Utility
In 1967, four days of ractal
more or less There Is excepted ,
by
each
of
the
48
muntctpahltes
Law. 'Antitrust Law, Labor
rtoting in Detrott ended wtlh 39
however, from P~:~rcel No 4, the
m
the
northwestern
Ohio
area
following tract of land conveyed dead
Relations Law, and Cor·
by James R LowtHer to Hulda
L Matheny, by deed dated Jan •
23, 19'33, and recorded m Vol
139, at Page 171 thereof, and
described as follows Beginn.ng
at a stone 12 rods north of the
sovttwe'est corner of the north
half ot the northeast quarter of
said Section No 17, thence
north 5634 degrees east 47 rods
and 9 links to a stone thence
north 77•h degrees east 26 rods
to a stone. thence north 64
degrees east 7 rods and S ltnks
to e stone, thence north 8l lf2
degrees east 17 rod a and 6 links
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. lor the booklet on Balanced dtcatwn of whether a baby ts
to a stone, thence north 6211:!
degr~es east 37 rods and 51mks
DEAR DR LAMB - Can Diet Send 50 cents to cover premature or not Is tts ~trth
to a stone on tho south Side of
dieting
durmg pregnancy be costs.
wetght Premature babies
Indian Run, thence north 35
degrees west 19 rods and 15 harmful to the unborn baby?
The placenta and flutd often have serious health
links to the north line of Sectton
My
friend
ts
one
month
around
the baby wtll amount to problems at btrth
No 17 , thence west along the
north line of Secfton 17 , 110 rods pregnant and weighs 110 about two-and-a-half pounds
The mother's dtet must
lind 13 links to lands now or
pounds.
She
says
she
wtll
allow
The
uterus
w1ll
also
mcrease
m
contam
adequate amounts of
formerly owned by the estate of
J W Johnson , thence south 68 herself to gam no more than 10 we1ghl as it must develop to
mmerals The baby has lo
rods and 19 links to the place of
pounds
durmg
the
pregnancy
provtde
support
for
the
baby
develop
a complete skeleton
bevlnnlng , contalnmg 30 acres ,
more or less Except a road 30 , What does detennme the and delivery of the baby It
and that means 1t needs
feet wide from the 10 ecr.e lot
wetght
of
the
baby?
Is
there
usually
increases
over
two
calciUm. The mother can lose
known i!ls the Jacob Rardon lot
to the tract of land owned by J
any way a woman can control pounds m weight. The breasts calctwn from her own skeleton
M
Jackson , the roat! to be
If she doesn't pay attention to
located on the best tocat ton and the weight of the baby so she normally gam about two
grade
will have a smaller baby?
pounds That accounts for at thts The Amertcan dtet is often
Furthermore e)Cceptlng from
DEAR
READER
'!'he
only
least
SIX-and-a-half pounds deficient m calcium, so it is a
Parcel No 4 the following tract
of land Beglnnmg at the nor.th
person who should diet during without constdermg the wetght very tmpo~tant consideration.
east corner of Sect ton No 17 ,
The baby will also need lots of
thence South 34 rods and 14 llnlt.s a pregnancy IS a woman with a of the baby The body nonnally
to the middle of Indian Rvn medtcai problem, ltke toxemta accumulates some extra flwd iron The mother wtil need
Road , thence along the mtddle
more iron lo support ~er tn·
of said road as fallows North 48 of pregnancy. I think tl ts very durtng pregnancy, and the
degrees west 18 rods and 10 wtwJse for a pregnant woman mother's volume of blood IS creased amount of blood and to
links, north 64% degrees west
22 rods and 23 links , North 52 1!4 to diet except upon the advtce Increased to support the make up lor the blood loss
degrees west 16 rods and 16 of her doctor,
pregnancy
during delivery So, l can't
links, North 701J4 degrees West 4
The new baby needs protein ' It follows that In a normal emphasize too strongly the
rocrs and 21 links to a stone on
the North side Of road and the to develOp. If he doesn't get it
pregnancy wtth a baby of about Importance of a good dtel
North tine of Sect ton No 17 ,
seven pounds, the mother wtil durtng pregnan cy
thenet East atong the Section Utere is a posstbiiity of faulty
line .52 rods and 17 links to the development, or as some
gam a minimum or 15 to 20
Dlece of beginning, containing
sctentists have suggested, the pounds JUSl to support lhe
.; 11 acres, more or tes.s
~eference Oeed
Volume 138, baby's brain may not be
pregnancy. Nojl' tf she IS fat to
Page 522, Deed Records , Meigs
developed to tts full capactty. begtn wtth she can use some of
Coun fy, Oh lo
PARCEL NO 5
I, oil In plain language, the baby her body f~t . but oddly enough

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·Ohio Village to open Saturday
.v...

COI .'"'"BUS - Alter more

·~
u•M t.' years of researcb an d

plan nmg and three years of
ac tua! cons lr ucIIon, the Oh to
Hislortcal Soctety's new Oh10
V'll
1 age wIll open aI 10 a.m
Saturday, J uly 27th.
l .ocated on a ten..,cre tract
just north of the Oh1o H1storical
Center at 1-71 and 17th Ave. m
Columbus, the village ls a
complete reconstruction of a
lyptcai Ohto county seat be·
tween 1800 and 1860
The 14 bUJidmgs of the
village are based on struc tures
thai now stand or once stood m
the state, representmg a
panorama of the early ar·
chtlectura l .&lt;yles. Board
stdewalks hnk the bwldlngs,
whtch 'If• arranged around a
central town square The dtrt
streets ha ve been cherrucaliy
treated and prepared to keep
them firm, even m a heavy
ram.

But the bwldings alone do not
make the VIllage. The real
exc•U!ment Ill the Ohw Vtllage
comes from the craftsmen,
hos ts and hostesses. each

costwned'" authenltc ciothmg
of the penod who brmg the
town to hfe.
The village shops and
busmesses are staffed wtlh a
carefully selected group of
master craftsmen and apprenttces , many of whom
learned thetr trades at Colonial

of Toledo Edison company

s

the

•

•

won't be as smart as It sltould
be.
The latest recommendaltqns
from Ute Food and Nutrition
Council of the Nattonal
Academy
of
Sctences
recommends in addition of 30
grams of protein a day at a
bare minimum. For more
information on dietary
requirements write to me in
care of this n""''PI1per, P.O.
Box 1561, Radio City Stalioo,
New York, N.Y.10019, and ask

tt is the skinny · woman who
wants to avoid gaimng wetght
during pregnancy . So she
harms her own body and
harms her baby by fatting to
follow the good advl&gt;• of her
doctor. •
The baby's wetght wiU Indeed depend upon the mother's
health durmg th• pregnancy,
and that diflnlteiy tncludes
what she eats. It wtil also
depend upon how long the
pregnancy lasts. One m-

piam the operation of the
phys1c1an's offtce and home,
the town hall, the village hole!
and the general store where the

prod•~ts
or tlte craftsmen wiU' center of village
~
1 ltin speci•l
ft

be avat'lable lor ..
- Je along with
hardware, candles, candies,
SPices' tobacco' Clothl·ng, seeds
lll\d other ttems thai would
have been used before the Civil
War
'J'h.e village hotel housos two
food servtce operations The
tavern room will be open from
the first day servmg light
refreshme nts and pastr ies .
Within a few weeks, the mam
hot..l dtmng room WIU begm
servmg luncheon fr om an
authentic menu of the mtd-18
hundreds.
'J'he village museum and
glass and chma shop wtll also
be opened m August The
museum ts a reconstruction of
. a typtcal museum of curiOsities
that would have been popular
in the earl y years of statehood.
The glass and chma shop wtll
display orlgmai anltques from

events, from v ' 1 brg uera IA·
men to holiday ce le a ~··
number of spec! a even .. are
ed
tit viii
being plann.. 1or e , age
lltroughout
u•e year.
The original
14 buildings of
1 1 th
the vtllage represen on Y e
begmnlng. In the years to come
the vtllage wiii grow 85
existing buildings are moved to
the stle and new ones con·
structed.
The OhiOVillage will be open
year round from 10 a.m. to 6 ,.
P m Wednesday through "
Sunday The viUage jVIU be
closed on Monda}'&gt; and ""•
Tuesday. Admission is $!.50 for
adults and 50 cents for unaccompanted children 13 and
under Organized school
groups and members of the
OhiO Historical Society Will be
adrmtted free . Adaquate free
parking is ava1iabie to ail

.

one of the fmest coUechons m vtllage visitors.
the mtd-wesl and seU hcen~d
For a unique taste of Ohio

"'
reproductions of both Ohto and before the Civil War, plan to "'
EID'opean chma and pottery VISit the new Ohto ViUage this
The open market wtll be Ute summer and watch it grow
•

Recollections of my first Bean Drnner eontinued from page 1

Power

Association.

Bar

,

Mr. and Mrs Smart restde at
283211W. Rtver Road, Perrysburg, Ohto. They have three
daughters, Sue, Barbara and
Berta Mr Smart IS the son of
Mr and Mrs Paul S Smart, 44
Uncoin St , Mtddleport

DEVOTED TOmE
IN'l'EIIf'8l'OF

MEIG8-MASON ARE..'
CHESI'ERL TANNEHILL,
EutEd
ROBERT HOEFLICH,.
CUJ E4Htar
'
Publilbed daRy ucept Sahar~y by Tbe
Ohio Vanty Publlshin!il Comi:any, 111
Cow1 st' Pomeroy, Ohio, 51111 Buainesl
Office Phone tn-2156 Edltoril!l Phone m~ claaa poSlalfe pall! at

..
..

THE

Elsewhere $22 011 yar. m month! $ll ~
three moolhl, tB 611 &amp;ibecrtptim price

•
''
I'

I

'

Gospel of Christ

Rto Grande and Point
Pleasant City Ice and Fuel will
battle tomght at 8 p.m for the
championship or the 16th annual Kyger Creek L1ttle
League tournament .
Tho Galllpohs Yankees and
New Haven Reds wtll meet m
the 6:30 consolabon g am ~
Rio Grande came up with

smgle and Brian McDade wtlh
a stngle.
For lhe Yanks, Btg John

three runs in the s1xth innmg

Los Angeles Dodgers
take two from Astros

Thursday night enroute to a 4-3
win over the Yankees, whtle
City Ice and Fuel's Bob Beller
tossed a one-htller tn the
mghtcap to 11!1 CIF to a ~ I
triwnph over the Reds
The Yanks, down HI In the
ftrsl, came back wtth two m the
second and one m the third to
take a ~~ lead before Rio
struck three times in the !mal
frame on just three htts
Tony Weiher went the
distance for the win, whtie Boo
Weaver was charged the loss
At one time, Weaver put down

14 Rio batters m order, from
the last out m the first innmg
through the ftrst out m the
stxth.
Top hitters for Rio were
Weiher wtth a double and
smgle, Curt Ramey wtth a patr
of smgies, Riok Whaley with a
.

12

SUCCESS STORIES

•

"They Overcame
Hearing Loss"
0

Free Booklet es pe c •al l y
p r epared
to en courage
Americans of all ag es who
suffer from uncorre cted or
untreated heanng loss to
seek help
Well -known celebnttes from
all walk s of l1fe tell thetr
personal stones of tnum ph
m the1r ftelds because they
overcame th e •r
tmpatrment

hear tng

,.,

Come m

or Phone

Wnte

'or yovr FREE COPY

BRO. FRANK HIGGINBOTHAM
Evangelist
Chester, West Virginia

(Jo~pe/ .Ateeting~

9r&amp;u 29 - Aug. 2. 1974

••t

1 Founded by Chnst.
2. Founded m Jerusalem on Pentecost.
3. Chnst is Its Head

PHONE:

592-6238

Chuck Sanders ali had singles
In Thursday's mghtcap,
Beller not only allowed JUSt one
hll, but he also struck out 15

By STU CAMEN
UP! Sports Writer
Jtmmy Wynn and Tony
Perez, teammates Tuesday

mght 1,n the All.Star game, are
back with their respecltve
clubs domg what they do best
- wrecking havoc upon the
rest of the Nallonai League.
Wynn clubbea hiS 22na
homer and three singles
Thursday night in leading Los
Angeles to an ll.J victory over
Houston in the opener of a
twmigh~oubleheader . The
Dodgers, behind Ute seven-hit
shutout pitching of Doug Rau,
also won lhe second game, 2-0,
to hold on to their 5~.game
lead over second-place cinCtn1J8ti tn the West DIVIsiOn.
Cincinnati kept pace thanks
to Perez' 17th homer, a two-run
shot, that climaxed a five-run
ninth inning as Ute Reds rallied
for a 14-13 victory over San
Francisco in the opener and
then took the nightcap ;..o
behind the five-lit! shutout
pitching of Fred Norman
"It makes us play harder to
find Cincinnalt behind and then
commg back to score five runs
in Ute ninth inning," said Wynn
when asked how he and the rest
of the Dodgers felt about the
Reds' rally. "I know it makes
me play harder."
The Dodgers bangep out 15hits in the first game to help
Don Sutton snap a personal sixgame losing streak and record
his first victory since May 14.
Rau's shutout in the nightcap
was his first ever in the major
leagues and gave Ute threeyear veteran his ninth wm of
the season.
Perez' homer m the Reds'
opener was hiS nmth gamewinning hit of the season.
Cincmnati got all the offensive
support it needed in the

•

1•

"The Home of the Friendly Folks"

•

4 No Creed but Cbrtst.
5. No disc1phne but New Testament.

6. Pleads for Unity,
7. Seeks to Reproduce the New Testament Church.
B Believes the Bible ts D1vinely Inspired

Services Each Evening at 7 :30 p.ll).

R1vers1de Professional Bldg
444 W Unton St, Athens

Arms tro ng , Ma rk Shee ts,
Weave r , Ken Caudtll a nd

~

9 The Btble IS Final Authority
10. Calls Btble Things by Bible Names
II Does Btblc Thtngs in the l!iblc Way.

•
•"'•'
••
•~

298
Second St.
POO!eroy, 0.

y

1

.•
4

.,•
•'

-

STORE HOURS:
MONDAY-SATURDAY 8 AM-10 PM

SUNDAY 10 AM TO 10 PM

'6

COME STUDY WITH US

MASON CHURCH of CHRIST
MILLER STREET
MASON, WEST VIRGINIA

~

'
~--~---

~~

~•\os
••

c
•

,.,.•
,.

Have You Been looking
WHY NOT VISIT US THIS WEEK!
I

SERVICES
SUNDAY SOiOOL .................... 10:00 AM
MORNING SERVICE.. ................ ll:OO AM
EVENING SERVIC~!"'"'""""' "'"7:3U PM

~

\
\

I ,

j

:,.

-•

Falrarou~ds,

Off RL 62, 4 Miles North of 'raitt Ple•lllt

tomght's fma le by beatmg
Portland , the Mtddleport
Vtnce Weaver .
Braves , Fruth s and the
Gary Rtchards was charged Yankees
wtth lhe loss He ytelded htl.s to
CiF, mcanwhtle, got past the
Beller, a Single and a double, Gallipolis Orioles, i\ddavtlle,
Aver1lle Sayre, three s mgles, the Gallipolis Ttgers and New
and a double lo Lemme Sayre Haven.
Rw Grande made tt mto

nightcap from Ken Griffey who
homered and Cesar Gerommo
who rapped out two stngles and
a -trtpie.
In other NL games, Philadelphia whipped Chicago, 1().2;
St. LouiS swept a pBif from

I

The 1974 Ohio high school football season IS six days away,
with physical conditioning drills beginnmg Thursday, Aug. 1
As the gridiron weeks draw nearer and nearer, and Ute
baseball seasons come to an end, 1t's time for sportswriters to
start leafing through old files and prepare for the upcoming
onslaught of stories and features on local teams.
For the Meigs Marauders, in a brief capsule VIew, it will be a
year of defintte question marks, wtth the btggest by far bemg the
rebuilding of both the offensive and defmstve lines.
Some of Ute offenstve backfield wiU be back, espectally mUte
speed of semors Terry Whitlatch and the power of Jack Otier.
But the Meigs backfield has lost quarterback Jay Warner,
labeled by mentor Charley Chancey as one of the biggest and
most pleasant surprises of 11173.
His shoos wiU be hard to flU, along with those of ends Melvm
Cremans and Dave Wolfe, without a doubt the finest pair of pass
calchtng ends in the SEOAL last season.
Wolfe, by the' way, has reCeived a grant.jn-aid to attend
Marietta CoUege where he is also expected to make ~ run at a
spot on the Pioneer baseball squad
Also gone wiU be several of the mainstays of the defensive
unit, tackle BUI Slack, middle guard AI McLaughitn, and
linebackers Jobu Lehew and J. D Story, to mention a few.
The successful rebuUding of those lines sltouid be the key to
the Meigs success thiS year.
THE GALUPOUS Blue Devtis think this may be their year,
and lhey're hopmg for a repeat of that 11170 season when tlte Blue
beat everybody.
Fourteen lettermen wiU be returning for Johnny Ecker, and
more speed should be the key if the Devils are going to live up to
last year's banquet predict ton ("Wtn tt all in '74")
The feeling in Gallipolis IS that If the Blue Devils can get past
that rugged league opener against Ironton, then they in fact will
go ali the way.
AT RACINE, the Southern Tornados should have another
SVAC powerhouse, losing five regulars from the 1973 squad that
placed second in the league.
1
Graduating were Randy Forbes, Vern Ord, Jim Wtlliams,
Mike Codner and Dennis Hawk, all mainstays of the Tornado
squad the past two years.
But hack will be the SVAC's leading ground gainer, Mttch
Nease, who should continue to romp through opposing defenses
for big hunks of yardage.
THE EASTERN EAGLES could be the surprise of the SVAC
this season. Spike Berhlmer, in his second year, will have lost
just three regulars from 197~, fullback~inebacker John Sheets,
end 'l'im Baum and Dan Chaffee.
The Birds finished a good third last season, behind Kyger
Creek and Southern, and this just mtght be their year.
Hopefully, Dale Rothgeb, Jr., the walking SVAC computer,
will be back from vacation next week, and since he's the GaUia
County expert, I'll leave the remaining area teams' for bim to
present his capsule views of the 11174 football campaigns.
Meanwhile, Col. Mole and Sgt. Swami are reportedly
refllling their poison pens in anticipation of the first football
games in September.
Col. Mole won last year's first annual bitter rivalry, with
Swami finishing jiiSI behind.
Rumor has it that Swami is going for the crown this year, and
aithoughhlsjabswiU be just as sharp as before, he is expected to
take the race more serious, especially considering Col. Mole's
vanity.

ward the Reds' 18-lttt attack tn
the f1rst game mciuded a
double, two smgies and his
seventh homer as he drove
home three runs.

PHILADELPHIA (UPI ) Rookte Moses Lajlennan was
cut by New York earlier this
year but after ktckmg the
wlnnmg field goal Thursday
rught, Stars Coach Dave Parilh
said he'U be keepmg him
around
"Earlier in the year l cut him
from tfi'e squad," Parilli satd.
"But my regular kteker, Peter
Rajecki, hurt his rtbs and I had
to call back LaJlerman a day or
two ago. He'U stay wtth us
now."
LaJU!rman, playing m his
first pro game, k1cked a 4().
yard held goal wtth 3 ·12
rematrung to gtve the Slats a
17-15 World Football League
win over the Philadelphia Bell
m a nationally televised game.
The VICtory was the first m
three games for the Stars and
Parilh's ftrsl as a ~ead coach
''It's good to wm one cause
it's been so long," PariUi sald.
"I was not happy, though, with
our over aU performance. I
thought we played sloppy, but
I'll take the vtctory regard-

2 SPEm MOTOR

,

Yankees keep

HEADUGHT
4 POSITIOII
RUG ADJUSTMENT

MIDDLEPORT, 0.•

BAKER

APPLIANCE
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Chesle r , Ohio

Phone 985-3307

Concepcion'stwo..rWl homer. A

run splurge by lhe Gtants m
the ftfth lnntng qwckly evaporated the lead.
The Gtants went ahead 12-7
by scormg twtce m the seventh.
The Reds got the two back m
the etghth when Johnny Bench

SIX

homered With a runner on

base
The Reds' ftve.r un splurge m
the nmth came after a solo
homer by Bobby Bonds put the
Gtants ahead 1 ~9 in the top of
the mnmg.
SurprJSmgly, the vtctory
went to Jack Blilingham, now

FURNITURE
MIDDlEPOIT, 0• .

30 yards m etght plays. Tom
Shennan missed both passmg
attempts for extra points
Philadelphia rrussed two attempts to wm the game with a
fteld goal after Lajtennan's
successful kick .
A kick by Jack Simcsak from
the 2&amp;-yard lme wtth 2:10
rematrung was wtde of the
nght uprtght and another 2&amp;yard attempt by George
Chatlos was left of the
goalposts as tune ran out.
Phtladelphia marched 89
yards m five plays to take an 80 lead m the first quarter. King
Corcoran passed 18 yards to
aaude Watts for a touchdown,
then scored the extra pomt on a
quarterback sneak on the third
try after New York was twice
called for offstdes.
New York closed the gap to 87 mtdway through the second
pertod when Dave Rtchards
plunged over from the one to
cap an 85-yard drtve The Bell
did not lead agam until 5:51 of
the thtrd penod at 15-14 when
Corcoran

connected

•

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More than 174 m il l JOn persons
have VI Stfed the 73 4 acres of
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srn c e tt opened July 17, 1955

MOST CONVENIENT LOCATION IN COUNTY!
ROCK S PRINGS
Srtoaleli m a l{'v o.:ly ~ liSIOIIC (I I SU!

record clean

li(1r ~

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Sr

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The Pomeroy Ultie League
champtons kept thetr perfect
record gomg this week as the
Yankees trounced Harrtson
VIlle, 20-4
Stevte Call ftred a two-httler,
strtking out etght and walkmg
only one
Howard and Arnold w1th a
smgle each
The Yankees, who are no\\
HHl m league play, were led ir,
httlmg by Ttm Roush wlth •
double and pa1r ol

smgles, Call ,wtlh a tnple and
patr of smglcs, Steve L1ttle
with a tnple and a smgle, Ttm
Faulk wtth three smgies, Tom
Owens . wtlh two singles and
Mtke Whitlatch wtth a single
The Yankees have two
games left, one wtth the Tigers
and the other "1th the Gaints
The league standmgs are as

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WAR·DECLAR.ED!
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Special purcha se :J too t htg h
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Regular 6 foot 2 ,!4 mch mesh · 11 Gauge
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The Stars went ahead 14-3 at
12.30 of the second pertod when
Bob Gladieux npped over from
the one after the team marched

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TEAM
Yankees
Ttgers

J/0111' ~~ou~~~..,.

•

-

Concepcion's contributiOn to-

'-

"But Ute big thing wu the
catch he made of Gary
Thomasson 'a liner with Ute
bases loaded In the third inning," said Sparky .
The two teains wind up Ute
series tonight with Don Gullett
going against the Glanta' Jim
Barr.

Field goal gives
Stars 17-15 win

By DennY'
Fobes ~

••

:

CINCINNATI (UPI ) - It Thursday night.
now appears Dave Concepcion
" What It bolls down tn now,"
wasn't kidding early in May said Reds Manager Sparky
when he predicted he and his Ander son, "is how many
roomy, Tony Perez, would games we can beat the
drtve home 200 runs between Dodgers. l figure we've got to
them
wm at leaxt siX or tbe rune left,
Because after the two led the maybe even seven."
Reds lo a doubleheader sweep
The Dodgers have won etghl
over the San Francisco Giants of the rune lhe two teams ha ve
Thursday night, 14·13 • nd 5-ll, played so far
thetr combmed RBis totaled
The Glanto scored three runs
105
m lbe ftrst mmng of the ftrst
Perez boosted hiS total to 59 game and the Reds came back
when he slammed hiS 17th 1 w1tl1 f1ve in the ~nd
homer wtth two out and a
Alter the Gtants scored their
rwm er on to climax a ftve--run fourth run m the thtrd mnmg,
runth lllning rally which beat the Reds boWJced back m their
the Gtants m the opene r
half to take a 7-4 lead on

The Reds shortstop scored
one run and doubled home
another m the second game to
boost hts RBI total to 46 as
New York, 4-3 and 4-1, Pills- Fred Norman blanked the
burgh and Montre•l d1v1ded Gtants to notch his loth vtctory.
wtth the Expos, taking the The Reds fatled to gam on Los
opener' 1~. and losing the Angeles, wh1ch sttll leads the
mghtcap, 3-2, and Atlanta Nattonai League West by 5 1'.!
shaded San Diego, 1~. m 10 games after sweepmg a
doubleheader from Houston
mnmgs.

Sports
esk

Ii

uFor twe.ty years •he wouJdn't
do a thing we uked her to do,

I.Qcated next to Mason County

batters of a possible 18. The
lone Red safety was a tn pie by

AI&amp;or.&amp;

i

:

_.._

MOIOf1lOLA
QUASAR

l:

FOR ...•
•.AN OLD TIME, BIBLE BELIEVING, BIBLE PREACHING,
SOUL WINNING, GOING, G.,.OWING CHURCH?

..... ......... __

81111 now ohe P!'Omiloo to obe)'
~e guy ahe'o Ollly known two
month• ''

Rio, CI&amp;F to clash for 1974
K yg.e r Creek .LL baseball crown

CHURCH OF CHRIST

Romans 1:16 I Cor. 9:18 2 Cor. 4:4

Pomer,,

Ntow Yorlt. , New York.
&amp;lbla'iptiefl rates Dellvend by,prrier
whert available 10 centa per week , By
Motor Route where CBn1er awvlce oot
available Ole rrm.th, $2JO By mail In
Ohio and W Va , On! Yur, '1!, Sb
monthl, $9 &amp;11, Three months, $6

'"
'"

Tllis is your invitation to llear

National advertlalf\11 representative '
BottlneW.Oallagber,lnc , 12 Eut 42nd St ,

includ.a !landlly Ttmea-Sertinel

~·

..

in a series of

21$7

"o

11·7, Ute last of seven Reds
pitchers who was making hi•
ftrst rwief appearance of the
season .
Anderson said Cesar Geronimo "won " the second game.
Geronuno singled twice and
trtpled while scoring two run.s
and dnving home anotber

Reds pull off amaZing comeback

William S Diles
Diles Heanng Aid Center

poratton,
l:Sankmg
and
Busmess Law, as well as the

Federal

,,

Blankets were spread upon the seats to make them safer for our clothes and more comfortable as •
weU.
There were no automobiles then. Folks began arrivmg on the scene by shank's mares, buggies,
'"
surreys, express wagons, wagons, and hay wagonloads, or on horseback
Horses were unhitched from tbetrvehicles and Ued to treesandgivea feed of hay, oats, etc.
A time of VISiting and remiilisctng foUowed for tbe older folks. Tbe younger children were ••
cautioned to remain near their parents because of the danger of Sllakes, espel'iaUy the venomous, "
cantankerous copperheada. The older children played at games or just enjoyed exploring the woods. ••
You may be sure that the young people thoroughly enjoyed the occasion
The cooks and their helpers were soon engaged m prepatmg the noonday feast. I remember one,
m particular, the head cook; but I cannot recall her name. I can sUII see her as she hustled around
making SID'e that tbe delectable combination of pork and beans in the huge kettle was being properly "
stirred.
She was a sturdy, hard-working, plam-speakmg, not overly.educated pioneer woman, sincere m
all that site did. The food she prepared for us, If memory served me aright, should have delighted the
most fasttdious epicure or gourmet.
The coffee she prepared seemed to satisfy every drinker. When ~veral complimented her on her
coffee she was pleased and had one set reply; and she dtd not mean it as a double-entendre. She
meant that she did not make weak coffee.
Her answer was: "When I make coffee, I make coffee: When I make water, I make water."
I do not suppose I would have remembered ber answer if I had not beard older folks recall the
incident later; but I could never forget how dellcio115ly and completely my appetite was finally
satisfied by pork and beans and crackers.
J'
'
An hour or so afterward, the crowd gathered around the speaker's platfonn. If memory serves
me right, there were some backless benches for those who were fortunate in getting them.
The commander of the local Post, the orator for the occasion, and other dignitaries were seated
an Ute platform which had rrulings on three sides and steps to Ute other.
The greatest afternoon treat for me was the stirring mustc made by the local G.A.R. Band. The
drums, fifes, and bugle stirred my youUtfuipatrioiiSD1; and I can stiU hear it in my mind's ear.
I can remember but one of the bandsmen, George Carpenter, who Jived in RuUand for many
years. Iioved to watch him beat the big drum. I was also proud of my maternal grandfather, W. A.
(Lon) Hunt. He looked "sweU"tomeinhiaG.A.R uniform
The stirring, patriotic address was weU-received by aU. Then the local commander took care of ' \''
Ute regular business of Ute day; but many were loath to leave the scene.
'
There was a hwnoroiiS incident at one similar gathering, so I have heard. A veteran, who had '
•
pertaken of something stronger than coffee, loudly proclauned thiS statement of his patriotism:
'
"Ladies and GenUemen: I fQught and bled and died for my country; and I'd gladly do so again If II
''
ne~ed my services."
I
I
Then came the journey back to the every day routine that would end too soon for so\ne of us
cblldren, at least; but the happy experiences of Ute day would linger on in Memory'sGarden.

PAUL M. SMART

DR. LAWHENCE E. LAMB

LAFF- A- DAY
~~

Williamsburg In Vlrg!llia an d
Sturbridge
Vtllage . 1n
Massac husetts. They will
fashion handmade products
us mg th e origmal and
. ear iY.
re(ll'oduccd tools oI the1r
19th century forefathers
The shoemakers will
manufacture shoos, boots and
other leather goods, the
blacksmtlhs wiU hammer ~ron
and steel mto' tools and hardware The cabmelmakers wtll
work wood mlo lurntlure and
accessortes
From the weaver's loom wtll
come plain and ornate fabrtcs
The prtnt..rs wiU publlslt the
vtliage newspaper , as weU as
posters, business cards and
public n otu~es . 'J'he hnsmtlhs
wtll !ashton domestic utenstls
that range from lanterns to
cookie cutters . 'J'he gunsmtths
wtll bwld Amen can western
long rtfles and ptslois.
The vtllage gwd es wtll ex-

Smart named vice president

Will diet harm unborn baby?

~ - The O.Uy !lonliiiOl,,.MJddleport·Porneroy, 0 ., t'ri&lt;lay, J uly 25, 1117j

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$10.49
$24.29
$28.69

POSTS-GA TES-HAROW.ARIIXTIA

OHIO-VALLEY.. FENCE
lraun load • 1 mile oil rout• SO • lolp&lt;•. Ohio
Coli Cct .. ct 42.3-1411

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4 - The Daily Sent~!, ~iddleport-P9111eroy, 0., Friday,,July 26, 1974

•

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vrro STEUJNO

UPI Sport. Writer

Sal Bando found his place In
the oun this week.
The Oakland A's' third
baseman, who was supposed to
have been the American
League's
backup thir~
baseman in the All-Star game,
was excuaed because he ln·
jured his knee Sunday with a
• foul tip. ·
"I did nothing but sit in the
sun and swim in a neighbor's
pool the last three days, "
Bando said. "The rest helped
me."
With a .brace on his knee,
Dando showed how well he
recovered bjr homering in his
first two at bais Thursday
night after the AU-Star break to
start the Oakland A's on their
way to a ~1 victory over the
Mirmesota Twins.

Major League Standings
By United Press lnfern!)fional
National League
East
w. I . pet. g . b .
P.hilade!ph ia 50 ~6 .521
St . Louis
48 49 . 495 2112
Montreal
46 49 . 484 J1f2
Pittsburgh
46 50 . 479 -4
Chicago . .
41 53 .436 B1h
New York ·
40 54 .426 9
west
w. I. Dcf. g . b .
Los Angeles
65. 34 . 657 Cincinnati
60 40 . 600 5112
Houston
51 48 .515 14
Atlanta
51 · 49 . 510 14 '.12
San Franc isco 45 55 ..450 20112
San Diego .
43 59 .422 23 V'2
.
Thunday 's Results
Phi ladelphia 10 Chicago 2
Atlanta 1 S .D . 0. 10 inns .
Los Ang 11 Houston 3. 1st
Los Ang 2 Houston 0, 2nd
Cincinnati l4 San Fran 13, lsf
Ci ncinnat i 5 San Fran 0. 2nd
Montreal 10 Pittsburgh 5 , 1st
~
P ittsburgh 3 Montreal 2, 2nd
St.-l. 4 N.Y . J, lst, 10 inns .
St. Louis 4 New York 1, 2nd
Today's Prob1ble Pitchers
I Allfitr:'les EDT)
Philadelp,h la ILonborg 12·9)
at &lt;;:hicago &lt;Reuscnel 9· 71 , 2: 30

Bando hit a twO-rWI homer
off loser Joe Decker in the first
irming and added a solo shot,
his 13th, in the third.
That's all the help Vida Blue
needed •• he posted a threehitter. He lost his bid for a
shutout in the seventh when
rookie Craig Kusick homered.
The victory moved the .A's,
· shooting for their fourth
straight Western Division
crown and their third straight "
world championship, six
games in front. They're altempting to become only the
third team ln history to win
three straight world crowns,
In the other AL games,
Cleveland swept Baltimore, 3-7
and6-4inl3innlngs; New York
blanked . Milwauke&amp;, 1-0;
Boston rou.ted Detroit, 124;
Texas beat Chicago, 4-1, and
Kansas City downed Califor-

American League
East
,.. w . I. pet . g . b .
Boston
,,51 45 .531
Clev.eland
50 45 .526
111
Baltimore
49 47 .5 10 1
New York
49 47 .510
1
Milwaukee
47 49 . . 490
A
Detroit
45 51 .469
6
West
w . 1. pet . g.b.
Oakland
56 41 . ~77
Chicago
49 46 .516
6
KansasCity
48 47 .5 0 5 7.
Texas
49 50 .495
9
M innesota
4.7 51 .-48 0 91h
California
39 60 .394 18
Thursday' ~ Results
Cleveland 8 Balt i more 7, 1st
Cleve 5 Salt 4, 2nd , 13 inns .
New· vork l MilwauKee 0
Boston 12 Oetroil 4
Texas 4 C.hicago 1
Kansas City 2 California 1
Oakland 5 Minnesota 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All times EDTJ
Baltimore (Cuellar 13 ·6 ) at
Cleve land (G . Periy 153), 7:30

nia, 2-l.
the bases lo~ed in the ninth. In
In the National League, the second game, they lied it on
Pbiladelphia downed Chicago, Buddy Bell's two-t'un homer in
11}.2; AUanta beat San Diego, 1- the ninth, fell behind in the top
0; Los Angeles swept Houston, of the 13tll and pushed across
11.:1 and 2-0; Cineinnati swept two runs In the bottom of the
San Francisco, 1~and $-0; inning to win il.
Montreal beat Pitts~rgh, 1().5,
Yanks 1, Brewers 0
but lost the second game, :1-2,
George.Medich hurled a fiveand St. Louis swept New York, hitter to give New York the
4-3 and 4,1.
victory over Milwaukee.!! was
Cleveland !HI, Baltimore 4-7 his 13th victory, Bobby Murcer
The Indians jumped to an 3-3 singled ln the game's only run
lead in the opener and hung on in the first inning to heat Clyde
for an &amp;-7 win
Tom Buskey Wright.
retired Brooks Robinson with

Rangers 4, Wblte Sox 1
Jim Fregosi's lOth homer, a
two-run drive in the fourth,
helped carry texas past Chicago . Ferguson Jenkins went the
distance for the Rangers to
boost his record to t:J.9 on a
seven-hltter. Wilbur Wood, the
majors' winningest pitcher this
season, dropped to lll-12 with
the loss.
Red Sox 12, Tfgen 4
Carl Yastrzemski hit the
300th homer of his career,
becoming the 36th player to
reach that figure, and Ricq

as

.'

Beverly Hllli h ' the world 's
highest concentratiOtl ol Roth
Royces . AbOuf 100 n~w model:~

are sold ea h ve~r .

plaint by an 13-year-&lt;Jid girl.
Six returning members of last
But the university, in disclosyear's un~ten and untied ing the dismi8sals Thursday,
Notre Dame football team noted that no criminal activity
have been dismissed from was involved.
school following a rape comThough the university

Mike Reid reports
to Bengals camp

BOOSTER

Uving"

•3.86
BAUM'S TRUE

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LIKE ME."

•

.._says Beautena
t

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••Y'

w

calvea? " Here's ttw tKret,n
a.utene, the happy
heifer calf at our Chfc:kerboard Store. '' .FoliC~~~ the thr~

step Purina Calf Program . It's so economle~~l. I ~vent
had a drop of whale milk since I was thrHd•YI old.

2

1
Fr:om 4 days thru
A weeks
Feed
F ..Jtlne
Nuritng

cr.ow.

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3

' '

Helpful hints on home
decorating and home
improvement ideas.

MeiD Co. Blanch

.-@ ·
The Athens County'

Savings &amp;.Loa,n Co .
29' Second St.
Pomt! rOy, ;Ohio

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il c· alendar ~i~'

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Ask us fordet•ll• oft~ itew, bttter-ftaln-ever PuriM C. If

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Proar•m.

IPURI~_AEHO_WS '
I

MODERN SUPPLY
39t w. Main St
992· 2164
Pomeroy, Ohio
TheStoreWith"ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
For Pets .. Stables - Large &amp; Small Animals · LaWnsGardens.
·

·- . ·-------- ·.

' srorr BRINKER
•

Party honors
Scott Brinker

••

Plymouth Duster:

Healthy Hogs
Always

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Finish
First

1n

on the
In recent U.S. Auld Club tests, our Plymouth Duster,
equipped with its standard Sl.arlt 6 engine and manual transmls.s ion , got 26.6 mites per gallon, going 55 miles per hour
on the open road . That's better gas mileage than the Nova.
or Maverick 6. And in those same tests, Ouster e:ven got

slightly better gas mileage , in city driving, than Mustang It

The Whispering Pines Nlte Club

AU'THOftlliO OIAU::t

.

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The Club is changing to a private club.
We will be taking applications July 25
·to August 15, in person please.
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CHRYSLER
PIIJnwulfi

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197~ Plymouth Duster

•

honored

TUPPERS PLAINS - A.
party was held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. James Stout,
Tuppers Plains, in honor of the
6th birthday of their daughter,
Terri Ann.
A doll cake decorated by
Terri's aunt, Mrs. Grace Stout, ·
highlighted the table. Bidloons,
hats and horns were given as
favors. Cake and ic~ cream
were served to 17 guests.
Those attending were Connie
K. Stout, Jimmy and Jeff
Caldwell; Beth, Kenny and
Jane Ritchie, Lisa Henderson,
Matt Hensley, Jimmy Weber,
Greg Hensley, Keith Lee Stout,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhill, ·
Mrs. Floyd Stout, Mrs. Grace
Stout, Mrs. Sally Caldwell and
Mrs. Joyce Ritchie .
Sending gifts were Alan and
Danny Trip,

'l"YD.
POLYESTER~TTON

.KNITS FO~O~A~K
'149 YD.
NEW! DENIM LOOK

CoiTONS
s1.98 YD.
POLYESTER
REG. 14.98

NOW •3.49

~{.

- ~:

FLOWERS
For All Occasions
We Wire FloWers

Camping In
When an unexpected
young guest stays the night
and you're afraid your sleeping quarters aren't adequate,
open up a sleeping bag on the
couch or floor . This makes
an instant bedroom with lit·
lie fuss.

Everywhere

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop

23/T SOLID-STATE

Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph, 992-203~
Ph, 992-5721

DIAGONAL

The ALTAIR • E4547M
Brilliant 23" diagonal Solid-State
Chromacolor II. Authentically styled
Early American lowboy console,
Wrap-around gallery, shaped apron
front rail with turnings and spoolturned legs. Maple color. Advanced
Chromacolor Picture Tube. 100%
Solid-State Tilan 300V Chassis wlih
Power Sentry Voltage Regulator. Solid·
State Super Video Range Tuning
System. Chromatic One·butlon
Tuning. AFC.

'

WEEKEND SPECIAL!
ONE LOT • WOMEN'S

DRESS SHOES

•aaa

••

399 SOUtH 3RD AVt, MIDDLEPORT,
0. ...~
'.

.•.•
-••
,

I

Mr . and Mrs. Harold
Hawkins of Washington, Ind.
were the recent visitors of his
aunt, Mrs. Homer Hawkins,
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sisson of
Galion spent the weekend here
visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Leland Sisson.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Morris,
Carol and Danny, have
returned from a .V..cation ln
Tennessee and North ~rolina.
They toured Gatlinburg, Tenn., ,
visited Christus Garden, ·car
Musewn, Magic World and
Forbidden Cabins, traveled
through ·the Smoky Molilltains,
visited Cades Cove, and from
there went on to Nashville to
see the Country Music HaU of
Fame. They also toured
Opryland, !he old Opry House,
and the new Opry House where
they attended a matinee
performance. From there they
· drove tQ Olerokee, N.C. to see
the Indian reservations.

*

WAS $61995

2 FOR
*1000

SAVE.
UP TO $J.25°0
.
·. oN OTHER.MODELSI
.

400/./0 OFF .

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.

•Jtli111.UTQI ' ~

SUMMER WHITES

•

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ZS

MEN'S THOM MeAN DRESS AND

•

It costs us more to keep em than to sell em. · ~
So c'mon in fora Clean-up Deal. . ·· ·
~

TOM RUE MOTORS

I

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SWEATER
KNIT

The qualify gee! In before the name goe• 01&gt;"

PAA

Thank You
Rod Groves

M ZSS
' StOUt'

Pomeroy · · · Ill
Personal Notes f

All OTHER . . . .
SUMMER SHOES...........

..••

•

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Eugen•
Siders, 6268 Price Rd., Loveland, forme~ residents, a~e
announcing the engagement and approachmg marriage of
their daughter, Mila Jean, to Mark Allen Corder, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Corder, Bryden Road, Reynoldsburg.
Miss Siders is a 1974 gr11duate of Reynoldsburg High SchooL
Her fiance will enter the U. S. Army in August. Wedding
plans are ,incomplete.

All SUMMER SANDALS· 1/z PRICE
.
11.00 ·
·GROUP CHILDREN'S SANDALS

.

CHRYSLER

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Wood III; Salem St.,
Rutland, annolillce the birth of
a son, Joshua Dale, July 21 at
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed 7 lbs., Ill&gt; ozs,
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. William Dean,
Rutland, and paternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Wood II, Rt. 1 Rutland. The
couple also has a daughter,
Heather Alayne, 3.

Miss Mila jean Siders

::\::::::::::::::=~:=~:=::::::x::~=~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

$600PAIR

even though il has a 4-cylinder engine. Dl course, the
kind ol mileag~ . you get depends on your driving habits, _
h•ghway cond1t1ons, an'd the condition ol your car. But thesetests prove t.hat our Dusler's a gas economy superstar.
:
And right now, Duster.is clearance priced. So c'mon In . . . :
tor a great clean· up deal.
•

USE SURE WIN
Pig starter and Sure Win Pork Mak'er for
faster grow and best feed efficiency. Get it , ·
here!.

"Christ for the World We
Sing", and prayer by Mrs.
Ethel Smith closed the
devotions.
The wonder box donated by
Mrs. Smith was won by Mrs,
Buck. During the business
meeting it was noted that the
class stlll has rain bonnets,
bags and knives for sale . Mrs.
Agnes Weeks reported ~~~the ·
church centennial plates are
also still for sale.
·
ABiblequizwaswonbyMrs.
Dixon and Mrs. Smith.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess to those named and
Mrs. Mabel Moore and Mrs.
Mary Bowen. The August
meeting will be in the church
social room .

PAIR

MOTDIII CDill'QIIAnQII

Is Changing lt'J Name Tq, • • .

-Tall Timbers Nite ·Club

Mrs. Bowen presents program

HYMN ,SING at Ash Street ·A farewell party honoring
Freewill Baptist Church, Rev . and Mrs. Robert Buckley
Middleport,
7: 30
p.m. and family was held Thursday
night at the Roadside Park, US
Everyone welcome .
GOSPEL Sing, 7:30p.m., at 33.
The minister and his family
Langsville Christian Church.
moved
Thursday to Mayfield
The "Monarcs" from Woos~r
Heights,
near Cleveland.
will be featilred . The public is
Invited .to attend.
· Approximately BO attended the
party which was preceded by
SUNDAY
REVIVAL at Freedom group singing accompanied by
Gospel Mission at Bald Knob Steve Eblin' on the guitar. A
Sunday through Aug. 4, 7:30 love offering was taken for the
p.m. Rev. 0. G. McKinney, minister and following a
Charleston, will be guest prayer service, ice cream and
speaker. Special singing each cake were served.
Rev. Buckley has pastured
evening. The public is invited.
the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
ANNUAL Homecoming at
the Long Bottom Methodist Church for the past two years.
Church; basket dinner at noon.
Everyone welcome.
SON BORN

Mr. and Mrs. Butch Brinker,
Middleport, entertained
recently with a party honoring
their son, Scott Wllliam, on his
first birthday anniversary.
A Snoopy !heme was carried
MIDDLEPORT Firemen and
out in the decorations in yellow Auxiliary members annual
.and green. Guests at the party picnic, 2 p.m., Legion
were Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Dill, Memorial Park next to the Post
Mr. and Mrs. William Hub· Office.
bard, Mark . and Tony, Mrs.
Donna Brinker, Frankie and
SINGER reunion, at the
Teresa, Mrs. Rita Boggess and Royal Oak Park. Basket dinner
Tammy, Mrs. Roger Stobart, at noon. Friends of the Singer,
Shelly, H. J . and Edie, Mrs. · . family invited.
·charles Oh'inger and Johnny,
MATLACK family reunion,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Covert, Rising Park at Lancaster:
Mrs. Michael Brothers, Amy potluck dinner at noon.
and Billy, Miss Donna Hub·
COZART reunion, 1 p.m . at
bard, Crystal and . Tracy state park on US 33 north.
~ Manley, Julia and Crystal
1836 GROUP potluck picnic,
"Taylor, Crissy Walburn and Portland park, noon. Everyone
Jlryan Holman.
welcome.
• Sending gifts were Mrs. Jo~n
NELSON reunion, Forest
,&amp;con, Frank Dill, Mrs. Walter Acres Park.
Walker, Mrs . Raymond
OHIO Valley Grange 2612,
;Walburn, Mrs. Clara Bacon,
Kendy and Kelly Rizer, Mr. Letart Falls, will hold a picnic
and Mrs. Manning Roush, Kim Sunday for members and
and Kris and Tammy and friends at 5 p.m. at the State,
Park on the right on US 33,
Stacey Tyree.
' '
going north to Columbus.
Those attending are to take a
basket dinner.
•
.Clear Eyes
MON'oAY
Contact l ens wearer s
REVIVAL
beginning
shou ld a'void using lash
Monday
at
Hazel
Commurlity
lengthening mascara and
Church
between
Long
Bottom
dusting powder on lashes
before opplying mascara . and Portland, SR 124 .
Both of these procedures pro· Eyangelist will be the Rev. Bud
duce loose partides that Hatfield. Special singing each
could il' l'itate the eyes gel night. Services 7:30 p.m.
under lenses.
nightly.

HOG RAISERS

NOTICE

Mrs . Dorothy Morris and Mrs, · Mrs. lla1.el Wood, Mr . and Mrs.
Wllma Terrell. Mrs. Dollie P. D. McC.'reedy, Mrs. Sue
Haye5 presided al the girt Dillon and Christopher, Mrs.
table, and serving refresh- Austin Kelton, Mr. and Mrs.
ments were Mrs. Margaret Larry Kelton , Lori and Teri,
Rose, Mrs, Doris Grueser, Mr. and Mrs. E. 0 . Plymale,
Mrs . Marilyn Fultz, Mrs . Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
Terrell, Mrs. Rachael Downie, Bastian!, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Mrs. Clara Lochary, Mrs. Cora Haskins, all of Gallipolis; Mr.
Beegle, Mrs. Susie Miller and and Mrs. Bruce Deitz, PortsMrs. Addalou Lewis. Punch, mouth; r.)r. and Mrs. Gale .
cake, coffee, mints and nuts Bailey, Franklin Furnace; Mr.
were served.
and Mrs. John Brown 'and
Out-&lt;&gt;f-town gueots were familv . Columbus; Mr. and
George Shlveler, Jr ., and Mrs. Kirk Kilhcart and family,
Jayne, Mrs. George Shlvel~r. . Mr. and Mrs. William Staffor~.
Sr., Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. James Ellls, Mr.
Lyston Fultz, Xenia; Chester and Mrs. Alfred Sprouse, Point
Leaper, Galllpolis; Mr. and Pleasant, w. Va .; Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs . Fred Reibel, Columbus; Rome Williamson, Mason, W.
Sam Strauss, Athens; Mr. and Va.; and Mr. and Mrs . Elby
Mrs. Terry Phalin, Marietta; Keen, Malonton, Ky,
-,·;o;:»;·:-....:·&gt;0"&amp;8·:·:·:···-.·-:-:.;.:.~~-:·:·:···~··:·:·:.:·;;~
and Mrs. Glen Martin,
Hosting the observance were
i(\m.,~S
~. oc
~"l;~a
u w . T~ Mr.
Athens; Mr . and Mrs. Mr . and Mrs. Kelton's
Brother, Nitro, W. daughij!r, Mrs, Kaaron Austin
~~~:
~~! Woodrow
Va,;
Mr.
and
Mrs. Alan Fultz, and Mrs. Rita Lozier, and their
~~'
..:(.; Lynwood, Calif.
families .
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Phalin ,

.

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Birthday
observed

R~-:TURN

. l..

From 2
From A davs thru
, rn Qntht
mont-hs
Feed
2
Purlnl
Purlnl · C•lt Grawtnl
.
Startene .

VALUE STORE

one hit each came off the bats
of Vicki Cundiff, Kim
Winebrenner , Rosemary
Hubbard and Carol Gibbs.
The winning pitcher was
Carla Teaford.
Leading hitters for the
Pantherettes were Glenda
Brown with a home run and
two singles, $. Burns' and
Tracy Burdette with two hits
each, and one hit each by Jo ·
McKinney, Missy Cale, Marcia
Cale, Megan Miller and Brenda
Brown.
'
' Th~ win moved Syracuse into
a third place tie with the
Pantherettes.

BRENDA JEFFERS

O!NN~: ~t

!lOME
A dinner will be served at
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mra.
Drew Webster Post 39, of the , Carrol Neig!er und Karen and
AmericOJI Legion, Pomeroy, Nol~ . Syracuse, have returned
Tuesday, July 30, for Post home after visiting in NashCommanders and captai'ns of ville, ·renn., where Nelgler
the poli(.. detail at the Meigs attended hl• annual army
Cotlllt)r FB1ir. Serving will begin
While there
many points of in teN~

Over 400 uttended the 40th
weddin g anniversary
celebration honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Aaron Kelton recently at
the Meigs Inn.
For the affair tables were
decorated in a red and white
color scheme wilh O.owers, a
three tiered anniversary cake
topped with a miniature bride
and groom, and silver ap.
polntments, Favors were thank
you scrolls and matches in the
red and white colors of the
observance.
Music during the afternoon
was provided by George Hall,
organist. Registering guests
were Mrs. Mazie Hannahs,
Mrs. Pat Thoma, Mrs. Loretta
Beegle, Mrs. Eloise White,

•
;
A surprise birthday party
• honoring Brenda Jeffers was
&gt;
given Tuesday night by her
family
at the home of her
1
• parenis, Mr. and Mrs, Guy
: Priddy.
;
Cake, ice cream and punch
• were served. Gifts were ::::
::::
' presented to the honored guest.
FRIDAY
. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
" God's Word for In·
MEIGS County Pomona
' Bruce Teaford and daughter,
dependence Day" was the title
l Sherry, Wanda Stewart and Grange visits Gallia County of the program presented by
Pomona at the Springfield
: daughter, Darlene, Diane
Hall, SR 160, north of Mrs. Marjorie Bowen at a
• Hendricks, daughter, Sheila,
recent meeting of the Willing
•
• Mrs. Ruth Michaels and Gallipolis, 8 p.m.
MONTHLY meeting, United Workers Class of the En: daughter, Tracy, James
terprise United Methodist
~ Priddy, Jeanie Buckley and Methodist Men, 7:45 p.m. Church at the home of Beatrice
• daughters, Rita and Kim, Mrs. Heath Church, Middleport. Buck.
: Marjorie Rife and daughters, Group singing, music:, short
A meditation by Mrs. Bowen
• Shelly and Milsy, Mrs. Eula business meeting followed by opened the program and
• ' Jeffers, Ron and Rise Jeffers refreshments.
•• and daug.hter, Renee. Mr. and
REVIVAL starting Friday, responsive call to worship was
read in unison by the group.
, Mrs. Guy Priddy, Donnie 7:30 each evening at Mt . Mrs. Agnes Dixon read the
; Casto, and Dave Jeffers and Moriah Church of God with lyrics to the hymn "0 God, Our
Dayton speaker.
~ 1011, Ry~m.
Help ln Ages Past". Scripture
POMONA Grange will host the
from Psalm 33 was read by
Meigs County Pomona Garage
Mrs. Ruby Frick, and there
at the Springfield Hall ; was group singing of the' hymn
members bring potluck.
"Battle Hymn of the
SATURDAY
Republic". Mrs. Bowen read
HYMN sing, 7:30 p.m. at the
Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church, Middleport. Everyone
invited. Rev. Noel Herman,
pastor.
'

CABLE

BOOK

SLATE

·Celebration honors Keltons

oven,

Do you want to sell all vour milk but ttl.ll grow .,g, thrifty

,

Party held\\

Pomeroy, Syracuse .win

FREE
·"Gracious

Soooy rwtw&amp;jMpers mot~y be
drfttd qulckfy In o11 mlcrowa"-

"GROW
BIG
CALVES

Petrocelli and Tommy Harper
al110 homered to help. Boston
downed Detroit. Mickey Lollch
lost his sixth stalght game and
is 111-13.
Royals %, Angelo l
Jim Wohlford's third single
of the game drove in Tony
Solaita from secood base with
the deciding run in the eighth
inning as Kansas City edged
California . Nolan Ryan, . now
12-10, gave up just six hits but
walked seven and threw-three
wild pitches while suffering the
loss.

reason for the dismissals, St.
Joseph County Chief Deputy
Prosecutor Ken Fedder said a
girl had made an informal,
verbal complaint accusing
"certain persons" of rape.
He refused to say if the girl
specifically named the six
dismissed players but noted
that she did provide the
prosecutor 's office with names.
No formal charges have been
filed in the case and county
Prosecutor William E. Voor Jr.
said the girl's attorney has
informed the prosecutor's
office she would not wish to
proceed
with
further
prosecution if the university
expells the students -all of
whom were to be sophomores
this faiL
The players left the campus
before Thursday evening and
were reluctant to discuss the
incident, a Notre Dame
spokesman said.

SOUTH BEND, jnd. (UP!) -

~IOI't·Pomel'oy, 0 ., Friday, Jqly 1:8, 1974

••

6 Irish gridders dismissed

WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP! )
- All-Pro defensive ta~kle
Mike Reid, saying it was time
to start work because the
season was nearing, became
the 21st Cincinnati Bengals
veteran to defy the NFL
Players Association strike
when he reported to training
camp Thursday .
Meanwhile, head coach Paul
Brown reported that regular
quarterback Ken Anderson,
along with some other Wl·
named veterans, would be in
p.m.
Milwaukee (Co lborn 6 . 7) al camp early next week .
New York (Dobson 7·12) , 8 p .m .
Reid, sporting a beard,
Boston {Tiant 14.7) al Detro il
(Coleman 8.9) , 8 p .m .
arrived
early Thursday afChicago (Kaat 11 .6) at Texas
p .m .
ternoon
and immediately
(Bibby
13
-2),
9
p
.m
.
San Diego (Freisleben 7·5) at
M
innesOta
fBiyleven
10
-10)
at
Atlanta ( P .' N ieKro 9-9 ). 7:30
suited uP and participated in
Oakland (H unter H .a or Blue
. p .m.
the regular mid-afternoon
11
·91
,
11
p
.m.
.,San Francisco (Barr 1·5) at
Kansas City ( Busby 13 -9 ) at workout.
Cincinnati (Gultetl 12·6 &gt;. 8:05
Ca l iforn fa (Lange 3· 6), 11 p . m .
p .m.
"With the season getting so
Saturday's Games
. Pittsburgh
fE II Is
5·81 at
M innesota at Oak l and
Montreal (B lair 5·21. 8 :05 o.m.
close I thought I should be
Detroit at Cleveland
New York (Seaver 6·6) at St.
getting
in here," said the 6-3,
Chicago
at
Texas
,
lwilight
Louis (McGloth en 12·6) , 8:30
Kan City at Calif., tWi lig ht
p .m .
255-pounder, an i]I-American
Los Angeles (Messersmith 11 · Milwaukee C!l Balt i more. night
at
Penn State five years ago.
New
York
at
BOston
,
ni
ght
21 at Houston !Griffin 11 ·3J.
8 :35 p . m.
" With what. I'm being paid
S.aturday's G11me_S
a shami if I don't come in
it's
St . Louis ·at Chicago
Pitsbr.gh at Phi la, 2, twinigl1t
to get ready so I can perform at
The state fl.ower of South
San D iego at Cincinnati , n ignt
Carolina
is
the.
y_
ellow
jes·
my
best.
,
Los Angeles at Atlanta, night
samine. The state bird is the
Montreal at New York, rbtght
"Things are very confused
San Frllnc is co at Houston , hight Carolina wren.
with the strike now. People are
being backed into corners. I'm
really kind of sympathetic to
all sides."
Asked if the arrival of Reid
Pomeroy topped the Meigs with two singles, Marty was a "major defection.,· from
Inn 1:J.3, and Syracuse nipped Krawsczyn with two singles, the group of striking Bengais,
the Purple Pantherettes !1-8 in Cathy Blaettnar with one player rep Pat Matson said,
10 innings hi Meigs !;iris·J\UiiOr single and Jane Sisson a single. ''they're al~ major defections.''
Softball ·League action WedAll the Meigs Inn hits were ·, Commented a · pleased
singles, by Rena Lefebre, Brown, "we got one of our
nesday.
Rbonda Hudson got the win Cathy Whitlatch, Cheryl . prime guys ·today."
for Pomeroy, while Cheryl Lefebre, S. Smith, L. S!nith and
Brown also defended the
· Lefebre suffered the Joss.
K. Smith.
need for disciplinary rules and
A lOth inn(ng double by curfews in pro football and
,Top hitters for Pomeroy
were Kim Seth with a home run Rosemary Hubbard scored criticized
Ed
Garvey,
and double, Shari Mitch with a Vicki Cundiff with the winning executive director of the
pair of doubles, Susan Wright run in Syracuse's win over the players association · who is
Purple Pantherettes.
leading the fight for the
Syracuse led 6-3 until the "freedom" detnands.
fifth inning when a home run
"Garvey never wore a jock
by
Glenda Brown pulled the strap'so he doesn'Omow what's
•
Pantherettes to within two at 6· required ·in sPorts," said
··~·
4. Runs by Jo M;cKinney, Tracy Brown. "1 can't understand
Burdette, Megan Miller and how people (striking players)
Snarl Proof
MiS.y Call gave the Pan- can be taken in like this."
'Reg. $4.69
thetettes an 11-0 lead, before a
.Meanwhile,
Bengals
two-run homer by Tonia Ash in veterans Dave Lewis and
ONLY
the seventh sent the game into Rufus Mayes walked the picket
extra innings.
1line Thursday and wondered
Syracuse had 13 hits, with why so many Bengals have
homeruns by Sonia and Tonia defied the strike.
Ash leading the way. Teresa
985-3301
Chester. 0.
The reason, they decided,
Ferrell had three ,hits, Sonia
Free for the 'a sking at
Ash, Tonia Ash, and Carla
our office.
Teaford each had two hits, and

•
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...._

A's triumph; Indians capture pair
By

•••

Trodo\ ~01~

'

,.

/•

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'

INGELS FURNITURE

VA(UES TO 119.99

'

Heritage House of Shoes

.
YOUR AUTHORIZED KEEPSAKE JEWELER
·\·.

llrt

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

MIDDLEPORT

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IYIJQU11DIITMI'Ia

.

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'

PH._992-2635

I

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MIDDLEPORT. '

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�-.

•

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4 - The Daily Sent~!, ~iddleport-P9111eroy, 0., Friday,,July 26, 1974

•

•

vrro STEUJNO

UPI Sport. Writer

Sal Bando found his place In
the oun this week.
The Oakland A's' third
baseman, who was supposed to
have been the American
League's
backup thir~
baseman in the All-Star game,
was excuaed because he ln·
jured his knee Sunday with a
• foul tip. ·
"I did nothing but sit in the
sun and swim in a neighbor's
pool the last three days, "
Bando said. "The rest helped
me."
With a .brace on his knee,
Dando showed how well he
recovered bjr homering in his
first two at bais Thursday
night after the AU-Star break to
start the Oakland A's on their
way to a ~1 victory over the
Mirmesota Twins.

Major League Standings
By United Press lnfern!)fional
National League
East
w. I . pet. g . b .
P.hilade!ph ia 50 ~6 .521
St . Louis
48 49 . 495 2112
Montreal
46 49 . 484 J1f2
Pittsburgh
46 50 . 479 -4
Chicago . .
41 53 .436 B1h
New York ·
40 54 .426 9
west
w. I. Dcf. g . b .
Los Angeles
65. 34 . 657 Cincinnati
60 40 . 600 5112
Houston
51 48 .515 14
Atlanta
51 · 49 . 510 14 '.12
San Franc isco 45 55 ..450 20112
San Diego .
43 59 .422 23 V'2
.
Thunday 's Results
Phi ladelphia 10 Chicago 2
Atlanta 1 S .D . 0. 10 inns .
Los Ang 11 Houston 3. 1st
Los Ang 2 Houston 0, 2nd
Cincinnati l4 San Fran 13, lsf
Ci ncinnat i 5 San Fran 0. 2nd
Montreal 10 Pittsburgh 5 , 1st
~
P ittsburgh 3 Montreal 2, 2nd
St.-l. 4 N.Y . J, lst, 10 inns .
St. Louis 4 New York 1, 2nd
Today's Prob1ble Pitchers
I Allfitr:'les EDT)
Philadelp,h la ILonborg 12·9)
at &lt;;:hicago &lt;Reuscnel 9· 71 , 2: 30

Bando hit a twO-rWI homer
off loser Joe Decker in the first
irming and added a solo shot,
his 13th, in the third.
That's all the help Vida Blue
needed •• he posted a threehitter. He lost his bid for a
shutout in the seventh when
rookie Craig Kusick homered.
The victory moved the .A's,
· shooting for their fourth
straight Western Division
crown and their third straight "
world championship, six
games in front. They're altempting to become only the
third team ln history to win
three straight world crowns,
In the other AL games,
Cleveland swept Baltimore, 3-7
and6-4inl3innlngs; New York
blanked . Milwauke&amp;, 1-0;
Boston rou.ted Detroit, 124;
Texas beat Chicago, 4-1, and
Kansas City downed Califor-

American League
East
,.. w . I. pet . g . b .
Boston
,,51 45 .531
Clev.eland
50 45 .526
111
Baltimore
49 47 .5 10 1
New York
49 47 .510
1
Milwaukee
47 49 . . 490
A
Detroit
45 51 .469
6
West
w . 1. pet . g.b.
Oakland
56 41 . ~77
Chicago
49 46 .516
6
KansasCity
48 47 .5 0 5 7.
Texas
49 50 .495
9
M innesota
4.7 51 .-48 0 91h
California
39 60 .394 18
Thursday' ~ Results
Cleveland 8 Balt i more 7, 1st
Cleve 5 Salt 4, 2nd , 13 inns .
New· vork l MilwauKee 0
Boston 12 Oetroil 4
Texas 4 C.hicago 1
Kansas City 2 California 1
Oakland 5 Minnesota 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All times EDTJ
Baltimore (Cuellar 13 ·6 ) at
Cleve land (G . Periy 153), 7:30

nia, 2-l.
the bases lo~ed in the ninth. In
In the National League, the second game, they lied it on
Pbiladelphia downed Chicago, Buddy Bell's two-t'un homer in
11}.2; AUanta beat San Diego, 1- the ninth, fell behind in the top
0; Los Angeles swept Houston, of the 13tll and pushed across
11.:1 and 2-0; Cineinnati swept two runs In the bottom of the
San Francisco, 1~and $-0; inning to win il.
Montreal beat Pitts~rgh, 1().5,
Yanks 1, Brewers 0
but lost the second game, :1-2,
George.Medich hurled a fiveand St. Louis swept New York, hitter to give New York the
4-3 and 4,1.
victory over Milwaukee.!! was
Cleveland !HI, Baltimore 4-7 his 13th victory, Bobby Murcer
The Indians jumped to an 3-3 singled ln the game's only run
lead in the opener and hung on in the first inning to heat Clyde
for an &amp;-7 win
Tom Buskey Wright.
retired Brooks Robinson with

Rangers 4, Wblte Sox 1
Jim Fregosi's lOth homer, a
two-run drive in the fourth,
helped carry texas past Chicago . Ferguson Jenkins went the
distance for the Rangers to
boost his record to t:J.9 on a
seven-hltter. Wilbur Wood, the
majors' winningest pitcher this
season, dropped to lll-12 with
the loss.
Red Sox 12, Tfgen 4
Carl Yastrzemski hit the
300th homer of his career,
becoming the 36th player to
reach that figure, and Ricq

as

.'

Beverly Hllli h ' the world 's
highest concentratiOtl ol Roth
Royces . AbOuf 100 n~w model:~

are sold ea h ve~r .

plaint by an 13-year-&lt;Jid girl.
Six returning members of last
But the university, in disclosyear's un~ten and untied ing the dismi8sals Thursday,
Notre Dame football team noted that no criminal activity
have been dismissed from was involved.
school following a rape comThough the university

Mike Reid reports
to Bengals camp

BOOSTER

Uving"

•3.86
BAUM'S TRUE

•''
,;

'

••'
'
•.'

LIKE ME."

•

.._says Beautena
t

••
•

••Y'

w

calvea? " Here's ttw tKret,n
a.utene, the happy
heifer calf at our Chfc:kerboard Store. '' .FoliC~~~ the thr~

step Purina Calf Program . It's so economle~~l. I ~vent
had a drop of whale milk since I was thrHd•YI old.

2

1
Fr:om 4 days thru
A weeks
Feed
F ..Jtlne
Nuritng

cr.ow.

•

3

' '

Helpful hints on home
decorating and home
improvement ideas.

MeiD Co. Blanch

.-@ ·
The Athens County'

Savings &amp;.Loa,n Co .
29' Second St.
Pomt! rOy, ;Ohio

•

.
'

il c· alendar ~i~'

•

••
•
••
Ask us fordet•ll• oft~ itew, bttter-ftaln-ever PuriM C. If

•

Proar•m.

IPURI~_AEHO_WS '
I

MODERN SUPPLY
39t w. Main St
992· 2164
Pomeroy, Ohio
TheStoreWith"ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
For Pets .. Stables - Large &amp; Small Animals · LaWnsGardens.
·

·- . ·-------- ·.

' srorr BRINKER
•

Party honors
Scott Brinker

••

Plymouth Duster:

Healthy Hogs
Always

•

Finish
First

1n

on the
In recent U.S. Auld Club tests, our Plymouth Duster,
equipped with its standard Sl.arlt 6 engine and manual transmls.s ion , got 26.6 mites per gallon, going 55 miles per hour
on the open road . That's better gas mileage than the Nova.
or Maverick 6. And in those same tests, Ouster e:ven got

slightly better gas mileage , in city driving, than Mustang It

The Whispering Pines Nlte Club

AU'THOftlliO OIAU::t

.

'

,

The Club is changing to a private club.
We will be taking applications July 25
·to August 15, in person please.
'
.

0.

..•

M

.

CHRYSLER
PIIJnwulfi

•

197~ Plymouth Duster

•

honored

TUPPERS PLAINS - A.
party was held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. James Stout,
Tuppers Plains, in honor of the
6th birthday of their daughter,
Terri Ann.
A doll cake decorated by
Terri's aunt, Mrs. Grace Stout, ·
highlighted the table. Bidloons,
hats and horns were given as
favors. Cake and ic~ cream
were served to 17 guests.
Those attending were Connie
K. Stout, Jimmy and Jeff
Caldwell; Beth, Kenny and
Jane Ritchie, Lisa Henderson,
Matt Hensley, Jimmy Weber,
Greg Hensley, Keith Lee Stout,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhill, ·
Mrs. Floyd Stout, Mrs. Grace
Stout, Mrs. Sally Caldwell and
Mrs. Joyce Ritchie .
Sending gifts were Alan and
Danny Trip,

'l"YD.
POLYESTER~TTON

.KNITS FO~O~A~K
'149 YD.
NEW! DENIM LOOK

CoiTONS
s1.98 YD.
POLYESTER
REG. 14.98

NOW •3.49

~{.

- ~:

FLOWERS
For All Occasions
We Wire FloWers

Camping In
When an unexpected
young guest stays the night
and you're afraid your sleeping quarters aren't adequate,
open up a sleeping bag on the
couch or floor . This makes
an instant bedroom with lit·
lie fuss.

Everywhere

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop

23/T SOLID-STATE

Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph, 992-203~
Ph, 992-5721

DIAGONAL

The ALTAIR • E4547M
Brilliant 23" diagonal Solid-State
Chromacolor II. Authentically styled
Early American lowboy console,
Wrap-around gallery, shaped apron
front rail with turnings and spoolturned legs. Maple color. Advanced
Chromacolor Picture Tube. 100%
Solid-State Tilan 300V Chassis wlih
Power Sentry Voltage Regulator. Solid·
State Super Video Range Tuning
System. Chromatic One·butlon
Tuning. AFC.

'

WEEKEND SPECIAL!
ONE LOT • WOMEN'S

DRESS SHOES

•aaa

••

399 SOUtH 3RD AVt, MIDDLEPORT,
0. ...~
'.

.•.•
-••
,

I

Mr . and Mrs. Harold
Hawkins of Washington, Ind.
were the recent visitors of his
aunt, Mrs. Homer Hawkins,
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sisson of
Galion spent the weekend here
visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Leland Sisson.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Morris,
Carol and Danny, have
returned from a .V..cation ln
Tennessee and North ~rolina.
They toured Gatlinburg, Tenn., ,
visited Christus Garden, ·car
Musewn, Magic World and
Forbidden Cabins, traveled
through ·the Smoky Molilltains,
visited Cades Cove, and from
there went on to Nashville to
see the Country Music HaU of
Fame. They also toured
Opryland, !he old Opry House,
and the new Opry House where
they attended a matinee
performance. From there they
· drove tQ Olerokee, N.C. to see
the Indian reservations.

*

WAS $61995

2 FOR
*1000

SAVE.
UP TO $J.25°0
.
·. oN OTHER.MODELSI
.

400/./0 OFF .

.

.

•Jtli111.UTQI ' ~

SUMMER WHITES

•

'

ZS

MEN'S THOM MeAN DRESS AND

•

It costs us more to keep em than to sell em. · ~
So c'mon in fora Clean-up Deal. . ·· ·
~

TOM RUE MOTORS

I

•

SWEATER
KNIT

The qualify gee! In before the name goe• 01&gt;"

PAA

Thank You
Rod Groves

M ZSS
' StOUt'

Pomeroy · · · Ill
Personal Notes f

All OTHER . . . .
SUMMER SHOES...........

..••

•

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT -Mr. and Mrs. Eugen•
Siders, 6268 Price Rd., Loveland, forme~ residents, a~e
announcing the engagement and approachmg marriage of
their daughter, Mila Jean, to Mark Allen Corder, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Corder, Bryden Road, Reynoldsburg.
Miss Siders is a 1974 gr11duate of Reynoldsburg High SchooL
Her fiance will enter the U. S. Army in August. Wedding
plans are ,incomplete.

All SUMMER SANDALS· 1/z PRICE
.
11.00 ·
·GROUP CHILDREN'S SANDALS

.

CHRYSLER

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Wood III; Salem St.,
Rutland, annolillce the birth of
a son, Joshua Dale, July 21 at
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed 7 lbs., Ill&gt; ozs,
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. William Dean,
Rutland, and paternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Wood II, Rt. 1 Rutland. The
couple also has a daughter,
Heather Alayne, 3.

Miss Mila jean Siders

::\::::::::::::::=~:=~:=::::::x::~=~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

$600PAIR

even though il has a 4-cylinder engine. Dl course, the
kind ol mileag~ . you get depends on your driving habits, _
h•ghway cond1t1ons, an'd the condition ol your car. But thesetests prove t.hat our Dusler's a gas economy superstar.
:
And right now, Duster.is clearance priced. So c'mon In . . . :
tor a great clean· up deal.
•

USE SURE WIN
Pig starter and Sure Win Pork Mak'er for
faster grow and best feed efficiency. Get it , ·
here!.

"Christ for the World We
Sing", and prayer by Mrs.
Ethel Smith closed the
devotions.
The wonder box donated by
Mrs. Smith was won by Mrs,
Buck. During the business
meeting it was noted that the
class stlll has rain bonnets,
bags and knives for sale . Mrs.
Agnes Weeks reported ~~~the ·
church centennial plates are
also still for sale.
·
ABiblequizwaswonbyMrs.
Dixon and Mrs. Smith.
Refreshments were served by
the hostess to those named and
Mrs. Mabel Moore and Mrs.
Mary Bowen. The August
meeting will be in the church
social room .

PAIR

MOTDIII CDill'QIIAnQII

Is Changing lt'J Name Tq, • • .

-Tall Timbers Nite ·Club

Mrs. Bowen presents program

HYMN ,SING at Ash Street ·A farewell party honoring
Freewill Baptist Church, Rev . and Mrs. Robert Buckley
Middleport,
7: 30
p.m. and family was held Thursday
night at the Roadside Park, US
Everyone welcome .
GOSPEL Sing, 7:30p.m., at 33.
The minister and his family
Langsville Christian Church.
moved
Thursday to Mayfield
The "Monarcs" from Woos~r
Heights,
near Cleveland.
will be featilred . The public is
Invited .to attend.
· Approximately BO attended the
party which was preceded by
SUNDAY
REVIVAL at Freedom group singing accompanied by
Gospel Mission at Bald Knob Steve Eblin' on the guitar. A
Sunday through Aug. 4, 7:30 love offering was taken for the
p.m. Rev. 0. G. McKinney, minister and following a
Charleston, will be guest prayer service, ice cream and
speaker. Special singing each cake were served.
Rev. Buckley has pastured
evening. The public is invited.
the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
ANNUAL Homecoming at
the Long Bottom Methodist Church for the past two years.
Church; basket dinner at noon.
Everyone welcome.
SON BORN

Mr. and Mrs. Butch Brinker,
Middleport, entertained
recently with a party honoring
their son, Scott Wllliam, on his
first birthday anniversary.
A Snoopy !heme was carried
MIDDLEPORT Firemen and
out in the decorations in yellow Auxiliary members annual
.and green. Guests at the party picnic, 2 p.m., Legion
were Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Dill, Memorial Park next to the Post
Mr. and Mrs. William Hub· Office.
bard, Mark . and Tony, Mrs.
Donna Brinker, Frankie and
SINGER reunion, at the
Teresa, Mrs. Rita Boggess and Royal Oak Park. Basket dinner
Tammy, Mrs. Roger Stobart, at noon. Friends of the Singer,
Shelly, H. J . and Edie, Mrs. · . family invited.
·charles Oh'inger and Johnny,
MATLACK family reunion,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Covert, Rising Park at Lancaster:
Mrs. Michael Brothers, Amy potluck dinner at noon.
and Billy, Miss Donna Hub·
COZART reunion, 1 p.m . at
bard, Crystal and . Tracy state park on US 33 north.
~ Manley, Julia and Crystal
1836 GROUP potluck picnic,
"Taylor, Crissy Walburn and Portland park, noon. Everyone
Jlryan Holman.
welcome.
• Sending gifts were Mrs. Jo~n
NELSON reunion, Forest
,&amp;con, Frank Dill, Mrs. Walter Acres Park.
Walker, Mrs . Raymond
OHIO Valley Grange 2612,
;Walburn, Mrs. Clara Bacon,
Kendy and Kelly Rizer, Mr. Letart Falls, will hold a picnic
and Mrs. Manning Roush, Kim Sunday for members and
and Kris and Tammy and friends at 5 p.m. at the State,
Park on the right on US 33,
Stacey Tyree.
' '
going north to Columbus.
Those attending are to take a
basket dinner.
•
.Clear Eyes
MON'oAY
Contact l ens wearer s
REVIVAL
beginning
shou ld a'void using lash
Monday
at
Hazel
Commurlity
lengthening mascara and
Church
between
Long
Bottom
dusting powder on lashes
before opplying mascara . and Portland, SR 124 .
Both of these procedures pro· Eyangelist will be the Rev. Bud
duce loose partides that Hatfield. Special singing each
could il' l'itate the eyes gel night. Services 7:30 p.m.
under lenses.
nightly.

HOG RAISERS

NOTICE

Mrs . Dorothy Morris and Mrs, · Mrs. lla1.el Wood, Mr . and Mrs.
Wllma Terrell. Mrs. Dollie P. D. McC.'reedy, Mrs. Sue
Haye5 presided al the girt Dillon and Christopher, Mrs.
table, and serving refresh- Austin Kelton, Mr. and Mrs.
ments were Mrs. Margaret Larry Kelton , Lori and Teri,
Rose, Mrs, Doris Grueser, Mr. and Mrs. E. 0 . Plymale,
Mrs . Marilyn Fultz, Mrs . Mr . and Mrs . Lawrence
Terrell, Mrs. Rachael Downie, Bastian!, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Mrs. Clara Lochary, Mrs. Cora Haskins, all of Gallipolis; Mr.
Beegle, Mrs. Susie Miller and and Mrs. Bruce Deitz, PortsMrs. Addalou Lewis. Punch, mouth; r.)r. and Mrs. Gale .
cake, coffee, mints and nuts Bailey, Franklin Furnace; Mr.
were served.
and Mrs. John Brown 'and
Out-&lt;&gt;f-town gueots were familv . Columbus; Mr. and
George Shlveler, Jr ., and Mrs. Kirk Kilhcart and family,
Jayne, Mrs. George Shlvel~r. . Mr. and Mrs. William Staffor~.
Sr., Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. James Ellls, Mr.
Lyston Fultz, Xenia; Chester and Mrs. Alfred Sprouse, Point
Leaper, Galllpolis; Mr. and Pleasant, w. Va .; Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs . Fred Reibel, Columbus; Rome Williamson, Mason, W.
Sam Strauss, Athens; Mr. and Va.; and Mr. and Mrs . Elby
Mrs. Terry Phalin, Marietta; Keen, Malonton, Ky,
-,·;o;:»;·:-....:·&gt;0"&amp;8·:·:·:···-.·-:-:.;.:.~~-:·:·:···~··:·:·:.:·;;~
and Mrs. Glen Martin,
Hosting the observance were
i(\m.,~S
~. oc
~"l;~a
u w . T~ Mr.
Athens; Mr . and Mrs. Mr . and Mrs. Kelton's
Brother, Nitro, W. daughij!r, Mrs, Kaaron Austin
~~~:
~~! Woodrow
Va,;
Mr.
and
Mrs. Alan Fultz, and Mrs. Rita Lozier, and their
~~'
..:(.; Lynwood, Calif.
families .
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Phalin ,

.

"

1

•

Birthday
observed

R~-:TURN

. l..

From 2
From A davs thru
, rn Qntht
mont-hs
Feed
2
Purlnl
Purlnl · C•lt Grawtnl
.
Startene .

VALUE STORE

one hit each came off the bats
of Vicki Cundiff, Kim
Winebrenner , Rosemary
Hubbard and Carol Gibbs.
The winning pitcher was
Carla Teaford.
Leading hitters for the
Pantherettes were Glenda
Brown with a home run and
two singles, $. Burns' and
Tracy Burdette with two hits
each, and one hit each by Jo ·
McKinney, Missy Cale, Marcia
Cale, Megan Miller and Brenda
Brown.
'
' Th~ win moved Syracuse into
a third place tie with the
Pantherettes.

BRENDA JEFFERS

O!NN~: ~t

!lOME
A dinner will be served at
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mra.
Drew Webster Post 39, of the , Carrol Neig!er und Karen and
AmericOJI Legion, Pomeroy, Nol~ . Syracuse, have returned
Tuesday, July 30, for Post home after visiting in NashCommanders and captai'ns of ville, ·renn., where Nelgler
the poli(.. detail at the Meigs attended hl• annual army
Cotlllt)r FB1ir. Serving will begin
While there
many points of in teN~

Over 400 uttended the 40th
weddin g anniversary
celebration honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Aaron Kelton recently at
the Meigs Inn.
For the affair tables were
decorated in a red and white
color scheme wilh O.owers, a
three tiered anniversary cake
topped with a miniature bride
and groom, and silver ap.
polntments, Favors were thank
you scrolls and matches in the
red and white colors of the
observance.
Music during the afternoon
was provided by George Hall,
organist. Registering guests
were Mrs. Mazie Hannahs,
Mrs. Pat Thoma, Mrs. Loretta
Beegle, Mrs. Eloise White,

•
;
A surprise birthday party
• honoring Brenda Jeffers was
&gt;
given Tuesday night by her
family
at the home of her
1
• parenis, Mr. and Mrs, Guy
: Priddy.
;
Cake, ice cream and punch
• were served. Gifts were ::::
::::
' presented to the honored guest.
FRIDAY
. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
" God's Word for In·
MEIGS County Pomona
' Bruce Teaford and daughter,
dependence Day" was the title
l Sherry, Wanda Stewart and Grange visits Gallia County of the program presented by
Pomona at the Springfield
: daughter, Darlene, Diane
Hall, SR 160, north of Mrs. Marjorie Bowen at a
• Hendricks, daughter, Sheila,
recent meeting of the Willing
•
• Mrs. Ruth Michaels and Gallipolis, 8 p.m.
MONTHLY meeting, United Workers Class of the En: daughter, Tracy, James
terprise United Methodist
~ Priddy, Jeanie Buckley and Methodist Men, 7:45 p.m. Church at the home of Beatrice
• daughters, Rita and Kim, Mrs. Heath Church, Middleport. Buck.
: Marjorie Rife and daughters, Group singing, music:, short
A meditation by Mrs. Bowen
• Shelly and Milsy, Mrs. Eula business meeting followed by opened the program and
• ' Jeffers, Ron and Rise Jeffers refreshments.
•• and daug.hter, Renee. Mr. and
REVIVAL starting Friday, responsive call to worship was
read in unison by the group.
, Mrs. Guy Priddy, Donnie 7:30 each evening at Mt . Mrs. Agnes Dixon read the
; Casto, and Dave Jeffers and Moriah Church of God with lyrics to the hymn "0 God, Our
Dayton speaker.
~ 1011, Ry~m.
Help ln Ages Past". Scripture
POMONA Grange will host the
from Psalm 33 was read by
Meigs County Pomona Garage
Mrs. Ruby Frick, and there
at the Springfield Hall ; was group singing of the' hymn
members bring potluck.
"Battle Hymn of the
SATURDAY
Republic". Mrs. Bowen read
HYMN sing, 7:30 p.m. at the
Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church, Middleport. Everyone
invited. Rev. Noel Herman,
pastor.
'

CABLE

BOOK

SLATE

·Celebration honors Keltons

oven,

Do you want to sell all vour milk but ttl.ll grow .,g, thrifty

,

Party held\\

Pomeroy, Syracuse .win

FREE
·"Gracious

Soooy rwtw&amp;jMpers mot~y be
drfttd qulckfy In o11 mlcrowa"-

"GROW
BIG
CALVES

Petrocelli and Tommy Harper
al110 homered to help. Boston
downed Detroit. Mickey Lollch
lost his sixth stalght game and
is 111-13.
Royals %, Angelo l
Jim Wohlford's third single
of the game drove in Tony
Solaita from secood base with
the deciding run in the eighth
inning as Kansas City edged
California . Nolan Ryan, . now
12-10, gave up just six hits but
walked seven and threw-three
wild pitches while suffering the
loss.

reason for the dismissals, St.
Joseph County Chief Deputy
Prosecutor Ken Fedder said a
girl had made an informal,
verbal complaint accusing
"certain persons" of rape.
He refused to say if the girl
specifically named the six
dismissed players but noted
that she did provide the
prosecutor 's office with names.
No formal charges have been
filed in the case and county
Prosecutor William E. Voor Jr.
said the girl's attorney has
informed the prosecutor's
office she would not wish to
proceed
with
further
prosecution if the university
expells the students -all of
whom were to be sophomores
this faiL
The players left the campus
before Thursday evening and
were reluctant to discuss the
incident, a Notre Dame
spokesman said.

SOUTH BEND, jnd. (UP!) -

~IOI't·Pomel'oy, 0 ., Friday, Jqly 1:8, 1974

••

6 Irish gridders dismissed

WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP! )
- All-Pro defensive ta~kle
Mike Reid, saying it was time
to start work because the
season was nearing, became
the 21st Cincinnati Bengals
veteran to defy the NFL
Players Association strike
when he reported to training
camp Thursday .
Meanwhile, head coach Paul
Brown reported that regular
quarterback Ken Anderson,
along with some other Wl·
named veterans, would be in
p.m.
Milwaukee (Co lborn 6 . 7) al camp early next week .
New York (Dobson 7·12) , 8 p .m .
Reid, sporting a beard,
Boston {Tiant 14.7) al Detro il
(Coleman 8.9) , 8 p .m .
arrived
early Thursday afChicago (Kaat 11 .6) at Texas
p .m .
ternoon
and immediately
(Bibby
13
-2),
9
p
.m
.
San Diego (Freisleben 7·5) at
M
innesOta
fBiyleven
10
-10)
at
Atlanta ( P .' N ieKro 9-9 ). 7:30
suited uP and participated in
Oakland (H unter H .a or Blue
. p .m.
the regular mid-afternoon
11
·91
,
11
p
.m.
.,San Francisco (Barr 1·5) at
Kansas City ( Busby 13 -9 ) at workout.
Cincinnati (Gultetl 12·6 &gt;. 8:05
Ca l iforn fa (Lange 3· 6), 11 p . m .
p .m.
"With the season getting so
Saturday's Games
. Pittsburgh
fE II Is
5·81 at
M innesota at Oak l and
Montreal (B lair 5·21. 8 :05 o.m.
close I thought I should be
Detroit at Cleveland
New York (Seaver 6·6) at St.
getting
in here," said the 6-3,
Chicago
at
Texas
,
lwilight
Louis (McGloth en 12·6) , 8:30
Kan City at Calif., tWi lig ht
p .m .
255-pounder, an i]I-American
Los Angeles (Messersmith 11 · Milwaukee C!l Balt i more. night
at
Penn State five years ago.
New
York
at
BOston
,
ni
ght
21 at Houston !Griffin 11 ·3J.
8 :35 p . m.
" With what. I'm being paid
S.aturday's G11me_S
a shami if I don't come in
it's
St . Louis ·at Chicago
Pitsbr.gh at Phi la, 2, twinigl1t
to get ready so I can perform at
The state fl.ower of South
San D iego at Cincinnati , n ignt
Carolina
is
the.
y_
ellow
jes·
my
best.
,
Los Angeles at Atlanta, night
samine. The state bird is the
Montreal at New York, rbtght
"Things are very confused
San Frllnc is co at Houston , hight Carolina wren.
with the strike now. People are
being backed into corners. I'm
really kind of sympathetic to
all sides."
Asked if the arrival of Reid
Pomeroy topped the Meigs with two singles, Marty was a "major defection.,· from
Inn 1:J.3, and Syracuse nipped Krawsczyn with two singles, the group of striking Bengais,
the Purple Pantherettes !1-8 in Cathy Blaettnar with one player rep Pat Matson said,
10 innings hi Meigs !;iris·J\UiiOr single and Jane Sisson a single. ''they're al~ major defections.''
Softball ·League action WedAll the Meigs Inn hits were ·, Commented a · pleased
singles, by Rena Lefebre, Brown, "we got one of our
nesday.
Rbonda Hudson got the win Cathy Whitlatch, Cheryl . prime guys ·today."
for Pomeroy, while Cheryl Lefebre, S. Smith, L. S!nith and
Brown also defended the
· Lefebre suffered the Joss.
K. Smith.
need for disciplinary rules and
A lOth inn(ng double by curfews in pro football and
,Top hitters for Pomeroy
were Kim Seth with a home run Rosemary Hubbard scored criticized
Ed
Garvey,
and double, Shari Mitch with a Vicki Cundiff with the winning executive director of the
pair of doubles, Susan Wright run in Syracuse's win over the players association · who is
Purple Pantherettes.
leading the fight for the
Syracuse led 6-3 until the "freedom" detnands.
fifth inning when a home run
"Garvey never wore a jock
by
Glenda Brown pulled the strap'so he doesn'Omow what's
•
Pantherettes to within two at 6· required ·in sPorts," said
··~·
4. Runs by Jo M;cKinney, Tracy Brown. "1 can't understand
Burdette, Megan Miller and how people (striking players)
Snarl Proof
MiS.y Call gave the Pan- can be taken in like this."
'Reg. $4.69
thetettes an 11-0 lead, before a
.Meanwhile,
Bengals
two-run homer by Tonia Ash in veterans Dave Lewis and
ONLY
the seventh sent the game into Rufus Mayes walked the picket
extra innings.
1line Thursday and wondered
Syracuse had 13 hits, with why so many Bengals have
homeruns by Sonia and Tonia defied the strike.
Ash leading the way. Teresa
985-3301
Chester. 0.
The reason, they decided,
Ferrell had three ,hits, Sonia
Free for the 'a sking at
Ash, Tonia Ash, and Carla
our office.
Teaford each had two hits, and

•
\;

.

...._

A's triumph; Indians capture pair
By

•••

Trodo\ ~01~

'

,.

/•

.

'

INGELS FURNITURE

VA(UES TO 119.99

'

Heritage House of Shoes

.
YOUR AUTHORIZED KEEPSAKE JEWELER
·\·.

llrt

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

MIDDLEPORT

'

IYIJQU11DIITMI'Ia

.

')

'

PH._992-2635

I

•

•

.

MIDDLEPORT. '

•

•

�•
r

6-1be O.ily Sentinel, Mtddl•~.. Pomeroy 0 , Fri(!ay, July 26 1914
SEVENTH
OAY
AO
VENTlST
Mulberry
He-19htS
Pornt-roy
Pastor
G1rard Seton Sabbitth schQol
every Saturday at 7 p m i)nd
worstup sef'vlce follow1ng at
3 IS
p m
Open
81ble
diSCUSSIOn 7 30 p m ilf the
chu rch each TC,ursday

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
A:ev W H Perr in p.a!for Roy
Mayer Sunday school supt
Church school 9 15 a m

worsh ip sl!rvtce
Youth chotr
dilly J JO p m

10 l.t am

rehearsal
under

Mon

d~rectton

ot Mary Sk1nner sen tor cho~r
rehearsal 7 JO p m Thursday
wtlh
Mrs
Paul
Nease

director

POMERoY CH UKt" OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner

•

Unton and Mulberry
Rev
Clyde V Henderson pastor
Sunday school 9 30 a m Glen
McClung
supt
morn i ng
worshtp 10 30 a m
e\len ng
Sle:tvtce 7 30 m td week ser
vlu Wednesday 7 30 p m

GRACE EPISCOPAL -

The

Rev Harold Deeth rector
Church sennces 10 30 a m

Holy communion first Sunday
of month church school 10 30
a m for nursery throuQh 12

POMERO Y CHURCH OF

CHRIST - Ferrell Groninger
pastor Btble schOol 9 30a m
worSh iP
10 30 a m
adult
wor Sh1p serv ce and young
peoples meetmg 7 30 p m
Comb ined Bib le study and
prayer meetm g Wednesday
7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy Ray W W n ng o ff icer
In c harg e Sunday 10 a m
Holiness meetmg 10 30 a m
Sunday School Young Peopl es
Leg1on 7 p m Thursday 1 to 3
p m Lad1es Hnm e League 1
p m Prep c la~:,~:o
ST PAUL LUTHERAN Corner Second and Sycamore
Sts
Pam eroy
t he Rev
W1111a m Mtddlewor t h pastor
Sunday School 9 30 a m
church services 10 30 a m

SACRED HEART Rev
Father
John
Nadzam
pastor
Phone
992 282S
Saturday even ing Mass 7 3G
p m Sund ay Mus i and 10
a m Confesstons Satu rday 7
7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAP
TIST - Robert Kuhn pastor
WJII •m Watson Sunday school
supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
BYF
6 p m
B ble study
Wednesday 7 p m
choir
pracltce Wednesday 8 JO p m
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
HOLIN ESS
C HURCH Harr is onville Rev
0 Dell
Manley Pe~stor Henry Ebltn
Sunday School Su pt Sunday
School 9 lO am
Evening
worship 7 JO p m Prayer and
Pra fse serv1ce Thursday 7 30

pm

SYRACUSE
FIRST
CHURCH OF GOO
Rev
George Oder pastor Sunday
school
9 45 a m
morn ng
preachmg
ll
am
evangel st c serv1ce 7 30 p m
Pray er meet ng Thursday
7 30 p l1
POMEROY - WE STSIDE
CHURCH OF CHRIST 20P W
Main St - Loren T Stephens
evangelist pho ne 992 7856
Conservat1ve
non
mstrumenta l Sunday worShiP
10 am
Bible study 11 am
worsh p 6 p m
Wednesday
B ble study J p m
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY
CHURCH
( non
jenom mat1ona1 )
Langsville
Dexter Road the Rev Worley
Haley pastor Sunday sc hool
10 am evening worsh1p 7 30
p m
Prayer
meet i ng
Tuesday
7 30 p m
youth
group Fr1day 7 30 p m

GftAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Preaching
9 30 a m
first and uc-ond
Sund ays of each mon1h th1rC1
and fourth Sundays each
month worsh ip service at 7 JO
P m Wednesday even1nos at
7 30 Prayer and B1bte Study
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP
T I ST 282 Mulberry Ave
Pomeroy
atf•l1ated
w1th
S B C
the Rev
F red Hilt
pastor Trov Zw111tng Sunday
School supt S\Jnday schooL
9 30 am
morn 1n9 worsh ip
I O,JO
Su nday e .... angellst lc
meet ng
1 JO p m
Prayer
meet ng Wednesday 1 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT
MT MORtAH BAPTIST Corner Fourth and Ma1n
Middleport Rev Henry Key
Jr pastor Sunday Sc hool 9 30
a m
Mrs Ervtn Baumgard
ner supt
Mornmg worshiP
10 45 a m
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES Larry Carnahan presid i ng
m ln1ster Sunday
B ble l-ee
t ure 9 30 a m
Watchtower
stu d y 10 30 a m
Tuesday
B1ble study 7 30 p m
Thurs
day m m t stry school 1 30
p m
service m eetlno B 30

nesctav 1 30 p m
U ~M w
trrsl W~dn~s.dtt" • '1 JO
m
WESI..EYAN &lt;R•c ntJ Sunday school
10 am
worSh ip 11 a m ~ 81ble- lfudr
Thursday
1 p m
cho r
pracl ce Tttursday 8 p m
fellowship
supp~r
f i rst
Wectnesdi!IY 6 JO p m U M w
fourth M;nday 8 p m

r,

G~EAT BEND - WorShip 11
am
1nQ anct Afh Svndays
Church School 10 a m
LETART FALLS - Worsh ip
10 a m Church School 9 a m
8/ble Sludy 7 JO p m e\lerv
Tue$day
MORNING STAR - WorShip
9 30 • m
Church School 10 30
a m
Mid Week
Service
Wednesday 8 p rn
MORSE CHAPEL Wor
Ship 11 am
lsi and 3rd
Sun days
Church School 10

am

PORTLAND - WOrShip 7 30
P m Church School 9 30 a m
SUTTON - WorShip 11 am
1nd and Al h Sundavs Church
School 10 a m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev RobertMeece
Rev Stanley Brand urn
JOPPA - Worsh ip 10 a m
Church School 9 a m
Prayar
Meeting Wednesdav 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM Church
services
9 a m
Sundav
Schoo l 9 A5 a m Bi ble Study
every Thursday 7 30 p m
NORTH B l;.THEL Wor
sh lp 11 a m Chvrch School 10

am

the Sermonette

'

BAPTIST
Rev Cec1t Co" pnlor Sunday
Sc1'1ool su,:~t
Jot Sayre
SuncUry 'ChOOI 9 A5 a m
Sund ay evening worship 7 JO 1
W•dnesday prayer and Etlbl~
.study 1 30 p m
TUPPERS
PLAINS
C' HrtUTIAN
CHURC H
Eugene Undrrwood
pastor
tioward Caldwell Jr .Sunday
School Supt
Svt'ldi!l y School
9 30 .am
Morn1no Se-rmon
10 ]0 am
Sunday even ing
serv•ce 1 p m
LETART FALLS UNITED
BRETHREN - Rev Fr.eland
Norr is pastor Floyd Norr is
sup! Sunday school 9 JO am
morning termon 10 30 am
Prtyer service Wednesday
7 JO p m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
GOD OF PROPHECY - G P
Sm lth pastor Sunday School
10 a m Arthur Henson Supt
Morn ing Wonh lp
11 am
Youn9 Peoples 1erv1ce 7
p m
Evening service 7 30
p m Wednesef!lly M i d Week
Prayer Ser~lce
7 30 p m
Youth meeting
6 30 p m
Evening worsnlp 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Rev
Herbert Grate pastor Wor
Ship service 11 am and 7 30
p m Sun day Sunday Sc!l ool
9 30 am
Richard Barton
supt Pra yer meeting Wed
nesday 1 30 p m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CH R 1ST Cl1 fford Sm lth
m n lster Su nday School 9 30
11 m
mornmg ch ur ch 10 30
a m
Sun day evening service
7 30p m Wednesday serv.ce 8

.........•

News "' Behind the LlntJ 33
6 30 ...... NBC News l .4 IS ABC News 6 CBS News I 10 Room
222 13
7 00 - Truth or Cons 3 News 6, 10 Whets My Line a Beat The
Clock 4 Avlollon Woather 33 Wild Kingdom 13 I Spy IS

Us.

Electric Company 20

Hvnt 10 , To Tell the Truth 6 Conc;entrot lon 8 BetJt The Clock
lJ You ONe It To Yourself 20 Boboqulvorl 33
8 00 - Washlngton Revlew20 JJ Sanford&amp; Son 3 4 15 Brady
Bunch6 13 Movie • Around the World In 80 Days 8 10~

Mo\lle Three Into Two Won t Go 4 Hollywood Television
Theatre 20
9 30 - Odd Couple 6 13
10 00 - Portrait The Woman 1 Love 6 13 News 20

10 30 - Day AI Night 33 Ott to This Week 20

11 00 - Neyt.s 3 4 8 10 13 lS Janak133 News 6

11 30 -

Johnny Carson 3 4 Untouc;hables 13 Mission lm
posslble6 AOJiatlon Weather 20 Movies House ol Usher 8
Flight to Mars 10 News 15
12 00 - Johnny Carson 15
11 .10 - Don Kirshner's Rock Concert Wide World Special
1 00 - Mldn lght Special J 4 Mov ie Voyage to the Planet ol
Prehistoric Women 10 Take Five For Life 15

Dear Pon
I doubt that reality would equal your fantasies - and,
bestdes, thts elderly gentleman may have a wife who wouldn't
apprectate a 24.year&lt;&gt;ld rival
Perhaps you have a grandfather fixation, but I'd be more apt
to guess you're lonely, a little shy with men your own age, and
you'd raUter dream than take a chance on being hurt agam
Honest, now, wouldn't you cool off fast if he made advances'
There's nothing wrong with daydreaming, but try some selfanalySis too And then look around at the younger, unattached
mentnyouroffice SomeofthemareattracUvetoo - H

2 30 - Movle TheManWhoCouldCheat Death 4
4 00 - Movie I
117 - Mission for a Miller 4
5 30 - Movie Jack Frost 4

ass

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE

The Champions
Operation Gangbusters

SATURDAY JULV27
6 00 - Summer Semester 10
6 30- Ky Afield 13 Christopher Closeup 10 TV Classroom 8
Fun for Everyone 6 Treehouse Club 8

Faith tor Today 10

In Touch 13

+++

7 30- Sesame St 20 Saturdays Report 3 Osmonds 13 Farm
Fron t 4 Speedracer 6 Speed Buggy 8 Treehouse Club 10

Dear Helen
•
Awhile back you ran a complaint from "Overrun Husband"
about his wile picking up bargains at garage sales Stnce I hit the
garage sale circuit - I feel duty bound to give you my opinion
about this excrtmg and educational game
True, anttque dealers may have been there, thoutih not
necessarily first You see, I help my lwo daughters tn their an·
tique business From expenence, we lmow dealers can't always
be ftrst at sales, and aometlmes If they are, they can't afford,
don't know, or don't deal m the things we wa~t
Mayhe the Items aren't 100 years old, but many are &lt;leslrable
and collectible
I've been to garage sales on second days and have bought
Utmgs that any dealer would giVe both eye teeth for I say, let tile
lady hit the garage circuit - she 15 very likely to come home wtth
bargatns and if she h118 stora~e space
well, "Overrun
Husband" ought to thank hts lucky stars that his wife lSD't

B 00 -

Jakes Place 6 Lldsvll le 3 4 15 Bugs Bunny 13 Hair
Bear Bunch 8 Lassie 10
8 30 - Yogis Gang 13 Mister Rogers 20 Addams Family 3 4
15 Sabrina 8 Popeye 10 Edward Saunders 6
9 00 - Emergency Plus 3 4 I S Super Friends 6 13 Movle 8
10 Sesame St 20

In another moment he wtll be gettmg up and walking toward you, eager to
tell the secret of hiS calmness and strength W1ll you listen?
He has solved many problems, overcome much gnef and temptation, been
able to meet the cond1t1ons of every-day hvmg, all because through the Church
he has come m contact With the Source of all power In tbe Church he bas found
compamonshtp Its worship servtces have brought fa1th , peace and serentty Its
acUvttles have furniSh ed an outlet for hts creattve abthttes and energy The Church
has been a part of hiS ltfe from boyhood Through Its various departments the
needs of h1s hfe have been met He has enJoyeJ the fellowship there and, looking
back he IS able to trace h1s own growth
Have you learned his secret? Wouldn't you ltke to know tt?
What the Church has done for h1m It can do for you Tf you are young, 11 Will
help meet your problems If you are older, tt wtll brtng satiSfaction and peace
Scr phi e1 ~le&lt; ed ~Y Tke A.me lean 8 ble Soc ely

Copyri11h1 1974 Keliler Adver1ls ns Se"' ce Inc Str&amp;lburg.

9 30- lnch High Priva te Eye 3 4 IS

10 00 - Elec Co 20 l.assle s Rescue Rangers 6 13 My FavorUe
Martian 8 10 S1gmund &amp; The Sea Monsters 3 4 15
10 30 - Goober and The Ghost Chasers 6 13 Pink Panthj!rs 3 4
15 Zoom 20 Jeannie 8 10
11 00 - Brady Kids 6 13 Abbott &amp; Costello 8 Sesame St 20

Speed Buggy 10 Sfar Trek 3 4 IS

11 30 -

Josle &amp; The Pussycats in Outer Space 8 10 Butch
Cassidy 3 4 15 Ml:sslon Magic 6 13
12 00 - Elec Co 10 Jetsons 3 4 15 Pebbles and Bamm Bamm
8 10 Movie Daffy Duck and Por ky Pig Meet the Groovte
Goalies 6 l3

12 30-Fa1Aibert8 10 Go3 4 15

1 00 - Ch ildren s Film Festival 8 10 Man f rom UNCL E 4
Lassie 15 Banana Splits 3 Action 74 6 13
1 30 - TBA 15 Beatles 3
2 DO-Soul Traln6 Mulligan Stew 10 VIewpoints Baseba ll Pre
Game Show 3 4 15 Women s Pro Tenn is 13

Vl~lnla

2
Tuesday

W~dn~ sday

415

316

1554 58

111828

10 A Look at the Book IS

6 30 - News 3 4 15 Zoom 33 Beverly Hlllblll1es 8 Movie
Charge of the Lancers 10
7 00 - Hee Haw 6 8 Catch 33 33 Lawrence Welk 4 13 15
Thr!Useekers 3

3 30 -Anythmg You Ca n Do 13

4 00- The Naturalists 33 NFL Football 6
4 30 - Sewing Skills 33

5

W1th the hope tt wtlL 1n some measure, foster and help sustatn that
wh1ch ts good tn famlly and communtty ltfe, th1s feature ts sponsored by
the bus mess ftrms and organtzattons whose names appear below

700E

Maln

A B1t wtfh Kn~t 33 Wrestl~ng 8 Death Valley Da ys 10
Sale of the Century 4 Petticoat Junction 3 TBA 15

Dtal992 2101

Thinking could rum the game

Bakers of Good Bread
Hvntmgton W Va

RACINE FOOD MARKET

NO RTH

• J 10 7
' A 92
• 7 52

INGLES ASHLAND SERVICE

+ K8 54

-

EAST

• 6

•

Dtal 992 3284

M iddleport

•

~Q4

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

Butck Pont1ac Ope l G M C Dealer
Ph 992 2174
500 E Mam St

'3

Mtddleport Ohio

+ A72

'

337 N 2nd

Racine

Ph 949 9591

Both vulner able

Ph 992 2550

No rth

East

Mlddleporl Ohio

Ph 992 2178

GAUL'S MARKET

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
We Fill All Doctors
992 2955

Chester Oh10

THE AlliENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296 W. Secood

TWO LOCATIONS
59 N Secood St
Middleport o
46 Court St.
Gallipolis, 0
A

Ph. 992 3863

Pomeroy
.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

GENE'S BODY SHOP
•

808W Main

Prescriptions
Pomeroy

(:....
-~.

Meigs County Branch

Ph 992 5211
Pomeroy

-

.

2'1'

2•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

The Friendly Folks"
Pomeroy Ohio

I,

Ph 992 3785

I,
.

I GAMNY

[J

!I I I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work

IEXVONC~

rx

AXYDLBAAXR.
LONGFELLOW
h
One letter limply otando for another ln thlo oample A is;,
used for the three L's, X for the two 0 s etc Single letten,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the warda are aU ~
hmts Each day the code letters are different
II

T HE LATE5T
SATELLITE

1

INUCHE1

CRYPTOQUOTES

Now IJ'l'ai\P the eirt:led letten
to fonn the aurprlae anawer, aa
ounettterl b7 the above cartoon

4

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TYMRQ

XTYSSR

ZQATDLZQ
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Yetlerday •

JOUST

(AM.,.en •••orrow)
WHINNY UNHOLY

\ Aa.wen No part coal4 k aa ,-eat a th ... - THE WHOLE

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.

XDJLDIDJD

Yesterday's Cryptoquote. THE TRUE SOURCE OF RIGHTS;'
IS DUTY IF WE DISCHARGE OUR DUTIES, RIGHTS WILL'
NOT BE FAR TO SEEK -{;ANDHI
'-

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Have
t.jOU

;een

•

CAPTAIN EASY

lt6 ttme to

FAST5N VOLJR 5EAT l!H1'.S

WE AJ:ZE ABOUT TO
LAND AT HeATHROW A1RPOIZT

PI-E'A5S:

qo and I can t

OUTSIDE

f&lt;nd h1 m t

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•AQ654,AQ654+AK ... 2

TUPPERS PLAINS HARDWARE

RACINE PlANING MILL

Paint Plumbing a. Electrlc:.ol Supplies
Tuppers Plains
Ph 1&gt;67 3963

Building Supplies a. Custom Millwork
Ph 992 3978

Whut do you d o now1
A - Bid s l" spad es Your
partrrer II Rh~;twlng lhe ace of
cluh!ll \'ou doll llry for se~e ll flea
cause hl11 first bid wall Otll~ •
81ngle rai se

.

J&amp;B AUTO BODY

Pf\W I WI SH 'If:
WOULDN T AST
PARSON TO DO
SUPPER 015HE6

WHV

0 0

NOT?

0

!'luH•nd

•

II
,'II

"'

'
"'
..j

RfNG,

11

'••

$P&amp;des over your one spade What

Jim Hokornt;; Owner

Salem 51

AFRAID OF' MMBE SHfS

I,

Instead of b1dd1ng 1wo spade•
your partner has jump&lt;.'&lt;l to three

•

'•

WHAT 15 THERE 10 6E
JU5T KIND OF LONEL ~

'I'()DAY S QUESTION

CARPENTER'S MARKET
Rutland

-'
,.

'u

26

West

Pn"'
'V ou

Mlddleporl, Ohio

I

.

I

•

HALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

"

Ph. 742 5293

c .:.~'l.:".'ii'::::.-

Devoted to Meig!J Mason Area
Pomeroy 0

7034

Keepsake Diamond R i ngs

St Rt 124

LIBRA (Sept 23 Del 23) No t

through your own effort s but
because o l the help of some

lliE DAILY SENTINEL

K&amp;C JEWELfRS
Pomeroy

trad1119

NF\'oSI \I ~H tNT 11111 11S~ ASSN I

The b1ddmg has been

212 E Main St

barter.ng

o r se llmg IS you r c up of tea to
day Hold llrm to your pos1t1on
and sway your prospec t w1lh
saleSm(lnstup

birth

30 European '
country
31 Gennan
city
33 Bridge
( Fr )
33 Son of
Bela

South

T ills would g1ve him an
ove1 tnck 1f li:as1 held the ace,
bu l wtlh that card restmg
comfortably '" the West
hand South would Just make
IllS contrtct fhat ts cella tnly
a lot bette1 than gomg down

.

The Fh'lest In Mobile Homes
Maln
Pomeroy
Ph 992

VIRGO (Aug 23· Sept 22)

Barga1n ng

29 Concemln!
one'•

a d1amond towatd Ius kmg

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

You have some resources to
draw upon that your~ not tully
aware of at present Through
another you wtll I nd a prohta
ble channel

You ve made a much beiter 1m
presston on someone 1mpor
tan! than you ve g1ven yourself
c red11 fo r Later you ll hear thiS
from another
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) II YO\J
speak lrom the real
tnner
you listeners whose altentton
you deslre w1t1 s t up and take
nollce of what you have to say

dumm) Till ee rounds of
clubs would come next He
would 1uff the tlnrd , go to
dummy w1th dummy s last
trump dJScal d a diamond on
the 13th club a nd fmally lead

Dlal992 2318

Grocerie s &amp; General Merchendlse
Rac i ne
Ph 949 5772

PISCES !Feb 20 Ma•ch 20)

CANCER (June 21 July 221

1O\IJH.lS of trump s and s top so
.IS 1o leave a t 1 ump e ntl y to

Nat ionwide Insurance Co of Columbus 0
307 Spring Ave
Pomeroy

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

You re s t1t11n a cycle where Ihe
good you do s more read ly
nolect and appreCiated by your
contemporar e s Keep your
best root forward

The type ol tasks you shou ld
1nvo1ve yourself w1 th today are
tho se that you took upon as a
labor o f love You II really pro
duce 11 you do

1$ Old·
fogyish
18 Lingered
21 From
that
place
2Z Shine
23 Exasperated
24 Breakfast
food
26 About

I.

' Haste makes waste IS a
!me old maxim that bndge
players should keep m mmd
at a ll limes
South couldn I wait to put
dummy s ace of hearts on
Wes1 s ltmg Thts gave him
the fusl tnck but lost h1m the
co ntract because he had to
lose three d tamonds and a
club late•
A l1ttl e thoug ht before
play mg to the ftrs t trtck
would have told South that he
had a sure club loser and that
If possible he wa nted to keep
East from ever gam mg the
lead After that thought he
could htn e let West hold the
flisl tnck
West would c ont1nue
he3! ts South would w tn the
second hea1 t a nd dtscard a
club rhen he would play two

Ph 992 3030

Lou1s W Osborne
Pomeroy

220 E Ma in

1100 E

West

By Oswald &amp; James &lt;Jacoby

Gay 90s Bread

MARK V STORE

4 00 - Movle The Boy Who Caught a Crook 4
6 00 - Peyton Place 4

ADUARtUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)

GEMINI (May 21 June 20)

Yeoterday'o ,\Dower

Openmg lead-K •

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

SEARS CATALOGUE MERCHANT

You 11 hnd you and your
spec• at someone are rn accord
on most major tssues Now put
your collective Ideas to work

t K63

t:lASDL!NE ALLEY

Bakers of
M1ddlepor1

11 • 35 - News 3 4 Midnight Special 15
12 05 - Movies The Hanged Man J Woman Times Seven'
1 00 - Speakeasr, 6 Movie House of Horrors 1 13
2 00 - Movie
Desert Detour 1 4
2 30 - News 13

(D,o 22 ·

Jan 19) A short wtnle ago you
wouldn 1 have been able to gat
a certain person lo do you a
spec rat Javor Surprrs ngly f
you were to ijSk. now he would

t JI098
4oQJJO

.

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

CAPRICORN

SOUTH IDl

.

Middleport

people yov (ton I know too
well Take a back seal anc:t
11slen and team

Bold measure~ wrll w in po1nts
for yov Don I be afra1d to bluff
a hllle w1thout gomg over
board

. AKQ984

ALL WEAlliER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

For S•turdaw July 27 1974

ARIES (March 21 April 191

' ,1064

4o 963

GOEGLEIN READY MIX

way

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23
Dec 21) You re not too .sure or
yourself n a new ven ture w1th

• 532

"KQ J875

Ph 992 2366

Send $1 lor JAC08Y M ODERN
book to
W n at Br dge (clo
th s newspaper) P 0 BoK 48Q
Rad o C ly Stat on New York
NY 10019

WEST

M1nor Repairs &amp; Tune up
Middleport
Beech &amp; Locust

The Sto r e w 1th A Heart
Phone 949 3342

26

Emergency 3 4 15

8 30- MAS H8 10 Movie The Hanged Man 6 13 Hollywood
Te levision Theatre 33
9 OO - MaryTylerMoore8 10 Movie Marooned '3 4 15
9 30 - BobNewhartS 10 Movie OrphansoftheStorm 33
10 00 - Owen Marshall Barnaby Jones 8, 10
11 15 - Movie Horror Island 6 News 13
11 30 - M ?lv1es 1 R ide Beyond Vengeance' 8 A New Kind of
Love 10
Horror Island 13 Janakl 33

WIN AT BRIDGE

HEINERS BAKERY

Pomeroy

Racme

oo -

Beat 33

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

7 30- Bobby Goldsboro 3 Course of Our Times 33
8 00 - All tn the Family 8 10 Partridge Family 6 13 Book

by THOMAS JOS£PH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Dolt
1 Apprehension
4 Italian
2 Pacific
nver
ISland
8 Once
group
3 Old t&gt;me
around
the track
weapon
9 Election
t Rose
results
essence
12 Wooden
5 Pester
for
core
13 Spi1Jlg
I payment
14 Chlcken
6 Falling
16 Write
m
17 Dean or
folds
Mary
7 Lobster's
18 " Wrttten
feeler
on the -" 9 Hit the
19 Military
sack
10 Correct
supplies
( abbr )
a text
20 Meara
11 DISpatcher
of comedy
21 Barter
24 Prop
for
Groucho
25 Suspend
26 That
(Fr)
'E1 Irritable
28 Peaceful
32 Never
(Ger)
33 Precede
tn tune
34 Fonn of
the samba
38 Indian
cymbals
:n Unending
38 Wholly
39 Redact
tO Caustic
substance

SCORPIO lOot 24 Nov 22)

Ralher than let a s1 tua1 10n
ltouncJer that another has mud
died up lake charge of thrngs
yourself and handle tt yovr

5 30 - Let s Grow a Garden 33 Championship F lshlng 10 •
World of Survival 4 New Dating Game 3
6 OO - L 1I1as Yogaal1c!Yov33 NewsB News3 4 In the Know

2 30- Arth ur Smlth 8 Stars of Tomorrow
3 OQ-Nallonal Geograprlc 6 Mov1e 8 Mov1 e The Little
Shepherd of Kingdom Come 10 Dusty s Trail 13

Thursday
Fnday
I Co r nth1ans II Connth1ans J Connth1ans Deuteronomy

Dear B
Unle .. you can change hll three bad hablt.l - ...u, maybo
lwo out of three - yeo• - H

one else lh1s w11t eventually
turn out to be a PfOhl able day

ICEROW

Baseball 15 3 4

IS -

DearGS.S
I've heard from many gill"age 111le enthiiSia.slll who tell me I
don't know what I'm missing Maybe, S&lt;lme day, I'll join the
porade - when I get a bl&amp;ger garage for lltorlng (and tram my
h111balld not to "clean out the junk" every other Saturday) - H

TAURUS (Ap•tl 20· May 20)

2 00 - News 13

7 00 -

• •

Dear Helen
l m o 2f.year&lt;&gt;ld divorcee, well built, considered attractive
I don't let myself get seduced on dat.ea I'm oot a weirdo J111t a
normal, reserved peraoo - with an unusual problem
I m mentally having a very emotlonalafflllr with a security
guard at my office building, rut no one knows It, least of all him I
fantasize about him, dream of being crushed In his artruJ But
he's over 60' A very sexy looking 60, lm!shtadd
I don't want marrtase - he may eyen hove a wile for all I
know But I want the adventure of being WIIMhls elderly male
Yet I scarcely say "Hi" to him
Should I follow my desires and let him k110w how I feel, or what' - PONDERING

8 JO - Brian Keith 3 4 15 Wall Stre&lt;1l Week 20 33 Six Million
Dollar Man 6 13
9 00 - Masterpiece Theatre 33 Short Stor ies ot Love J 15

7 30 p m 9 30 p m -

By Helen Dottel

It'• aGrudldJerComple~•

1 30 - Porter Wagoner 3 HollywOOd Squares A New Trellsure

Detar Helen
"
My hu$band hu three bad bablll He- ....._llllletllll
~aaya ll'•badfor theonamel He crlnU fnllll...V won Ina til
late at rJght. And he won't like a barb or dlqe hie CloiiMI.ell
1tell him a dozen t1mea But be'• asoocl wwker,lnd 111 11M liC!Dd
teeth Can't NY the 1111t1e about hla breelb or b o Slnct I c.'t
stand them Is separate rooma theannor• - B W

running to Ute ne.areat Uquor lllore or lmodtlng llim down for
another man
Wlllh you could llloo by my housuome time and I'd ~lve vou
IIOJlle flrat-hand eumples of wllectlbles -{;ARAGE SALE
SISTER

FRIDAY JULVU, Itl&lt;
6 00 - Newa 3. 8 lO, ll 15 Truth or Cons 6 Sesame S1 20

TilE
SECRET

to

Carpenter News, Event

~WH
_e
_lwe
-n
-~H
-ewlp

Television Log

1 JO p m
NIT . UNIO~Qi

ALFRED - Sunday schOOl
9 45 a m
each Sunday
prea ching 11t 11 am
eac h
Sunday ~rayer meet ng 7 45
pm
pm
p m Wednesday WSCS 8 p m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
on third Tuesday each month
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
Chrtst m Chnst.an UnionREEDSVILLE Sunday METHODIST - Rev Robert
Lawrence Manley
pastor
schoo l 9 30 p rea chmg 7 30
E
Bu ckley pastor
l l oy d
Mrs Russell Young Sunda y
p m Sunday prayer meetmg
Wnght
Sunday
school
supt
School Supt sunday School
7 30 p m Tuesday WSCS 1 30 Sunday school 9 30 a m
9 30 a m
Eventng worsh p
first Thursday each month
morning worshiP 10 JO am
7 30
Wednesday
prayer
SILVER RIDGE - Worship evenmg worShip
"! 30 p m
meetmg 7 30 p m
10 a m
Church School 9 a m
Wednesday Chnst1an Youth
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Crusade
6 30 p m
Cho r
GOD Rae ne Route 2 th e
Worsh i p 9 am
Churc h pract ce Thu r sday 7 p m
Rev J ames M Muncy pastor
Sc hool 10 a m
Su nday school 9 45 a m
KENO
CHURCH
OF
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
mornmg worsh i p
11 am
CH R 1ST - George Frederick
CHRIST T1m
Russett
evenmg worsh ip
7 30 p m
supt Serv1ce week ly 9 JO am
m1n1ster Norman C Will
Prayer meetrng Tuesday 7 30
on Sunday Preachmg frrst and
su nd~Y school supt
Sunday
p m Young peoples meeti ng
third Sundays of month by sc hool
9 30 a m
worsh ip
7 30 D m Thursday
Clrfford Smt t h 9 30 a m
serv ce 10 JO a m
B1ble
RUTLAND CHURCH Of
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN study Wednesday 7 30 p m
GOD - Phtll lp Wh ttey pastor
UNION - Darrell
Doddr I I
THE SIMPLE GOSPEL
Sunday sc h o ol
10 a m
pastor Sunday Sc hool
9 30
REORGANIZED CHURCH
~ In our day of tetru10logy and to man, mau ts a smner and worShip se r v1ce 7 p m
am
Leonard G1lmore f1rst OF )E SUS
CHRIST
OF
er meet ng Wednesday
elder
evening servtce
7 30 I.!.ATTER DAY SAINTS deep studtes of every area of cannot save h&gt;mself and God 7Pray
30 p m
p m
Wednesday
prayer Portland
Racrne Road
life those who are trymg to wm must puniSh sm U this would
meetmg 7 30 p m
Wilham Roush pastor Denny
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
Evans
Sunday
School
the world from sm and be the end of the Gospel we can CHURCH - Near Long Bot GOD
- Racme Roule 2 The
Dtre ctor Sunday School 9 30
tom Estll Hart pastor Roy
6estruction need to get back to readily see that there ts no Brown
Rev Char les Hand pa stor
am
Morn ng worSh i P 10 30
ass stan t
pllstor
Su
nday
schoo
l
9
45
a
m
a
m
Sunday
even ng serv1ce 7
the sunple gospel Man con- hope for man to obtam heaven Sunday school 10 a m Chvr ch morning worsh 1p 11 am p m Wednesday
evenrng
7
30
p
m
each
Sunday
!limes to seek answers to all the and ISdoomed for death or hell e\lenmg prayer meetmg 7 30 Evenrng serv1ces Tuesday and prayer se rv 1ces 7. 30 p m
F r iday 7 30
world around h&gt;m whtch m- But God from the begmmng of p m Thursday
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
MIDDLEPORT
PEN
Rev
Earl Shul er
pastor
eludes seeking answers to hts time planned a solutiOn to thts TECOSTAL
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
Bible
- Th1rd Ave the
Wor:shtp serv u;e
9 30 am
Study
9 JO am
morning
spiritual life and the questiOn great dilemma The solution ts Rev Wdl1am Kn ittel pa stor worship
Sunday Sunday school lO 30
10 JO am
evenmg
Ronald Dugan Sundar Sc hool
a
m B ble study and prayer
that comes from a study of all wrapp..,ct up m God's only Supt
worsh1p
6
30
p
m
Wedn
esday
Classes for all ages
serv ce 7 30 p m Thursday
8 ble Study 7 30 p m
God's Holy Word
son Jesus Chnst
even ng serv1ce 7 30 p m
MT
OLIVE CHURCH K ngsbury
Road
Slinday
study Wednesday 7 30
If we could answer all the
Who was Jesus' He was the pBible
Long Bottom Sunday School
School 9 30 a m Ralph Ca rl
m
youth serv1ces F r iday
10 am W1fh W i llard P 1golt
supt Worsh p serv1ce 10 30
questions men ask about God mfmlte God-man John 1 1 In 7 30 p m
su pt Evang e list ic message a m and 7 30 p m alternatel y
FREEWILL
BAPTIST
and His word, would tt do any the begmnmg was the Word Corner Ash and Plum Mtd each Su nday evenmg 7 30 p m Prayer m eet 1ng Wednesday
by
Elder
Russell
C l 1ne
7 30 p m
Rev
Jay Stil es good m the savmg of his soul' (Ch rtst) and the Word was w1th dleport
Noel
Herrman
mmtster
ot
the
ApostoliC
F a tth
pastor
pastor
Saturday eve nmg
No
God and the Word was God ' serv 1ce 7 p m Sunda y sc hoo l Btble Stud y Wednesday 7 JO
pm
So the a&gt;m of the ChriStian Verse 14, ' And the Word was I O a m
Sunday even 1n g
STIVERSVILLE
COM
worship 7 p m
OLD
DEXTER
CON
should be to spread the s&gt;mple made flesh and dwelt among us
MUtJITY CHURCH - Su nda y GREGATIONAL CHURCH MIDDLEPORT
FIRSf
school
serv
1ce
10
am
Prayer
gospel and not worry about
' Not only IS tt &gt;mportant BAPTIST - Cor ner Srxth and meet1n9 Thur sday ,. 7 p m
Mrs Worle y Franc1s Sunday
scho
trymg to answer all the who Jesus was but also what Palmer th e Rev Steve Sunday evenmg serviCe 7 p m am ol supt Sund ay schoo l 10
pastor
Danny
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
questions man proposed Many He dtd for mankmd He pmd Skaggs
Thompson Sun day school supt
Pomeroy
Harr1 sonvrlle
LONG
BOTTOM
ask questiOns only to hide thetr for our sms and purchased a WMPO rad 1o program 7 45 Road R 1ck Mornson pastor
CHRISTIAN Mr
Robert
a
m
Sund
ay
school
9
15
a
m
Sunday
sc
hool
supt
Steven
own !allure to accept the place m Heaven for u&amp; which morn mg worsh 1p 10 I 5 a m
Stan ley Sun day schoo l 9 30 Wyatt pa sto r Sunday Sch ool
Gospel of Jesus Christ m thetr He offers as a gift which may Youth achv1t es and fe llow Ship a m morn ng worsh iP and supt Ronald Os borne B ble
Sc hool 9 30 a m
preachmg
for 1un 1or and sen1or h1gh
c ommun1on
10 JO
am
own life and try to make be recetved by faith Isaiah stu
Even ng servi ces
dents 6 p m B1ble study
Su nday
even ng
you th 10 4 5 am
7 30 p m
\hernselves better than those 53 6, "All we like sheep have 7 30 p m M d week prayer Chr sta n Endea\lor 6 30 p m
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
servte
e
Wednesday
7
30
p
m
wor
shiP
serv1ce
S.unday
7
30
who know Jesus as their gone astray we have turned
p m
Wedne sd ay even 1"19 METHODIST - Ronald Wells
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
Su nday Sch ool 9 30
personal Savtour
everyone to his own way, and Middleport 5th and Ma 1n
prayer meet ng and B i ble pastor
am
Mornmg
worsh tp 10 30"
st
udy
7
30
p
m
The s&gt;mple Gospel mcludes the Lord hath latd on Htm the George Gla ze
m 1n rst er
a m
Young Peop les Service
ST JOHN LUTHERAN James
Sheets
superintendent
live baSic truths that the Btble mtq1llty of us all "
6 45 p m
Evangel strc ser
Pme Grove the Rev Arthur
Brble school
9 JO a m
v
1ce
7
30
p m
Prayer
Combs
pastor
Sunday
school
proclaims
If we receive th1s by faith morn1ng worsh1p 10 30 am
meetmg Thursday 7 30 p m
9 30 am
chur c h serv1ces
evenmg
worSh
iP
7
JO
p
m
First, the grace of God offers then what ts faith? Faith IS not prayer serv ce 7 p m Wed 10 30 a m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION
Bald
Knobs
Rev
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF
to every man heaven as a free mtellectual assent We may nesdav
l
R
Gluesencamp pastor
CHRIST
B ble Sc hoo l
9 30
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
gHt Romans 6 23, " the gift know all the Btble says to OF THE NAZARENE - Rev am morn1ng worsh p 10 30 Roger Wilfred Sr
Sunday
Sc
hool
Su
pt
Sunday
School
a
m
Sunday
evenmg
Wor.sh
p
Floyd
of God IS eternal life
mankind and believe 1! to be Don Cole pastor
Sunday evening
Serv lce
7 30 p m
chotr 9 30 a m
Carson
Su
nday
Sc
hool
supt
(heaven) 'We cannot earn our truth but thts Is not fatth and Sunday Sc hool 9 30 am
worship 7 JO Prayer meet ing
pract1ce Sunday and Wed
Tuesday
7 30 p m
Ernest
nesday
7
p
m
prayer
meehng
mornmg
worsh1p
10
30
am
way
heaven by our works will not save us The Btble tells
Deeter cla ss leader Youlh
and Bible Study Wednesday
Sunday evangel st1c meeting
Neither do we deserve heaven us that the devil believes and 7 30 p m
meetmg
Wednesday
7 30
7 30 p m
prayer meet ng
p
m
Ernest
Deeter
leader
ANTIQUITY
BAPTIST
Wednesday
7
JO
p
m
no matter how good we make trembles Real faith IS not just
MT HERMON CHURCH OF
Rev Freeland Norns pastor
GRACE BAPTIST - 305 N
o"ilrselves But, heaven ts of temporal fatth Faith that we Second
THE UNITED BRETHREN IN
Sunday school 10 a m
Chur ch
Ave
Mtddleport
CHRIST Robert Shook
fered free to anyone who Will exercJse for our needs here on Les ley G Holt pastor Sunday serv 1ce 7 p m Wednesday pastor
Sunday school
9 30
B1ble St udy 7 p m
School
10
a
m
worsh
1
p
ser
accept It
earth such as food, shelter, v1ce 11 a m worShip serv rce
a m
Russell Spencer supt
RACINE FIRST CHURCH
worsh1p serv ice 10 45 am
Secondly, all men are sin· healing, etc Faith saving faith 7 30 p m Sunday Wednesday OF THE NAZARENE
evenmg
worShip alternat in g
Sunday
Schoo
l
9
30
a
m
ners Romans 3 23, "For aU - IS trustmg m Jesus ChrJSt nrg h t prayer serv ice 7 JO
wllh C E at 7 30 p m on
Morn ing Worsh1p 10 30 am
Sunday Prayer meetmg 7 30
Evening Worsh1p 7 JO p m
have smned and come short alone for- our salvahon John
THE
UNITED
PRES
p
m Wednesday Alfred Wolfe
BYTERIAN
MINISTRY Wednesday M id Week Se rv1ce
" Not only are all men Sin· I 12 But as many as recetved OF
lay leader
MEIGS COUNTY Dw ight Sunday School Super ntendent
WHITES
CHAPEL
Gerald Wells
Pastor
Rev
ners but he cannot save h&gt;m Him, to them gave He power to L Zavttz Pastor Drrector
Coolville
RD
Rev
Roy Deeter
Morns
M
Wolfe
HARRISONVILLE
self Ephesians 2 8-9, 'For by become the sons of God even Sunday
pa stor
Su nday school 9 30
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Church School 9 30
am
worsh1p serv1ce 10 30
Walter P Blkacsan pastor
grace are you saved through to them that believe on His am Mrs Homer Lee S~pl
a
m
B
ble study and prayer
Ronn
1
e
Salser
s
s
Supt
Morn ing Worsh1p 10 30 am
faith, and that not of your· name '
serv tee Wednesday 7 JO p m
MIDDLEPORt Sunday Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m
RUTLAND
selves It ts the gift of God, not
The Holy Spirit ts fatthful m Church School 9 JO a m John Morn lng Worshrp 10 45 a m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Sunday even1ng worSh i p 7 30
F
Fultz
SuAt
Morn1ng
of works lest any man should calling all men to God Worsh 1p 10 30 a m
CHRIST- Rod Kaster pa stor
p m Wednesday even ng 6 1ble
V H Braley Sunday school
SYRACUSE
Morn in g Study a p m
boast
Revelation 3 19,20 As many
supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Worship
9 am
S unday
Thirdly, the Btble tells us as !love !rebuke and chasten Church
wors h 1p service and com
School 10 a m
Mrs
Re\1 Le ton Glasure pastor
m Un+on
10 30 a m
youth
Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m
that God Jf merctful and be zealous therefore and Sampson Hall Suot
meet ng
6 p m
Sunday
youth
and
lun
lor
youth
serv
1ce
M t: "'");
doesn't want to punish us II repent Behold I stand at the
evenmg ser\1 ce 7
regu l ar
6 45 p m
e\lening worsh ip
COOPERATIVE
board m eettng th~rd Saturday
7
30
p
m
prayer
and
pra
se
Peter 3 9, "The Lord IS long. door, and knock If any man
PAR ISH
7 p m
Wednesday 1 ~.Q.ro
....
THE UNITED
suffertng to us-ward,
not hear my voice and open the
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
SILVER
RUN
FREE
METHODIST CHURCH
CHURCH Su nday School
BAPTIST
Rev
Ralph
Dean
willing that any should periSh door, I wtll come m to h&gt;m and
Robert T Bumgarner
9 JO a m Worsh ip service 11
pastor Sunday Sc hool 10 a m
Director
but that all should come to Will sup with h&gt;m and he wtth
a m
Wednesday
prayer
Leon M11ter
su p t
Even ing
POMEROY CLUSTER
meeting
7 JO p m
Sunday
se
rv1
ce
7
30
p
m
Pra
yer
repentance " But God ts not me " If JesUs through the Holy
Rev CarlE Hicks
n1ght worship 7 30 p m
meet
nQ
Thursday
7
30
p
m
Rev D Wm $ydens1rtcker
only merciful but he ts also just Spirit IS lmocking at your
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
"t'Rt::!lo I t:M t:rt\JRCH OF
CHESTER - Won~hlp 9 15
THE
NAZARENE Rev
so must puntsh stn Romans heart's door, open the door and am Church School 10 am
GOD Rev
James Sa t
Lloyd
0
Gr
i
mm
Jr
pastor
lerfleld pastor Sunday Sc hool
ENTERPRISE - Wor"sh1p 9
6 23 "For the wages of sm ts let h&gt;m come m and dwell
Sunday School 9 30 a m
9 JO am
worsh ip service 11
a m
Church School 10 a m
Morning worsh ip 10 30 am
withm you and receive His
death "
a
m
evening
serv
ce
7
FLATWOODS - Worsh ip 11
Young peoples serv iCe 6 45
prayer serv i ce and youth
a m
Church Sc hool 10 a m
All thiS proposes a great gospel
p m
EvangeltStlc service
service Wednesd,a\' 7 c m
POMEROY
Worsh i p
dlle.!llJila Heaven Is a free gift
By Rev Thomas E Weaver 10 30 a m Church, School 9 15
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN 1 30 p m Wednesday evenmg
servIce 7 JO.J' m
CHURCH - Robert E Musser
am
U MY F 6 JO p m
MASO C.OUNTY
pastor
Suliday School
9 JO
ROCK SPRINGS - Worsh ip
THE HILAND CHAPEL
am
Roy
S1
gman
supt
1011 m Church School 9 a m
George Casto pastor Sunday
morn ing
worsh i p
10 30
UMYF 6 30 p m
Sc hool 9~ven 1 ng worship
Sunday evenmg ser\l lc e 7 30
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTl::R
7 30 Thurs day even 1ng prayer
M
id
week
service
Wednesday
Rev Robert Bumgarner
se r vice 7 30 p m
730pm ,_
HEATH WorsA i p 10 JO
MASON FIRST BAPTIST SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
a m Church School 9 30 a m
Second
and Pomeroy Sts Stan
THE
NAZARENE
Rev
M
UMYF7pm
Craig
pastor
Sunday school
C
L11rlmore pasto r
Bob
RUTLAND - Worsh i p 9 15
9 45 a m worsh lp service 11
Moore
Su
nday
Sc
hool
Supt
am
Church
Sch
ool
10
am
Mr and Mrs Roger C Greer
tra i ning un ion
6 30
Mrs
Elba
McKmght, UM'(F 7 p m
Sunday School classes fo r all am
p
m
evenmg
worsh
ip
serv1ce
ages 9 30 am
morning
and children, Warner·Robbms, Colwnbus, vlstted With Mrs
SALEM CENTER Wor
7 30 p m
Mid week prayer
worsh lp 10 45 NY p S Sunday
ship 9 am
Church Sc hool 10
Georgia, who are en route home Goldie Gillogly Mr and Mrs am
serv ic e Wednesday 7 30 p m
6
30p
m
evangel•st
l
c
serv
i
ce
UMYF Thursday 7 p m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
Sunday 7 30 p m Mid week
from a combined bustness and Harold Gillogly and Mr and
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
CHRIST P 0 Box 487 M1ller
j:)rayer
meeting
Wednesdav
Rev
Richard
E
Jarvis
pleasure trip to Caiiforma, are Mrs Otho McKmght thiS past
St
Ma son W Va
Sunday
7 ~Op m M issionary meeting
ASBURY Worship 11
Bible
Study
10
a
m
Worship
sec::ond Wednesday 7 30 p m
mltlng thetr mothers, Mrs weekend
a m Church School 9 50 a m
11 a m and 7 p m B ble Stud y
UNITED
FAITH
NON
wsc s 1st Tuesday
Dolphus Burke, Sr and Mrs
Wednesday 7 p m
Vocal
Mr and Mrs Murrell Bailey
DENOMINATIONAL
Rev
FOREST RUN - Worship 9
Andrew Greer and other are announcmg the birth of a a m Church School 10 a m 1 Robert sm.th pastor Sunday music
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP
school 9 30 a m c la ss leader
W SCS Jr d Wedn!!sday 7 3u
relatives m the area
TIST - Corner of Sec ond and
daughter, Beth Allen on July pm
Leo H il l
wor shi p se rv ic e
Anderson
Meson
Pastor
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey 17 1.-ocal grandparents are Mr
10 JO a m
chur ch 7 30 p m
MINERSVILLE - Worsh iP
Walter Cloud Sunday School
EDEN UNITED BRETW 9 AS am worsh i p service 11
were guests of her stster Mrs and Mrs Dana Ba1ley and Mrs 10 a m Chu r ch School 9 a m
W SCS lrd Monday 1 30 p m
REN IN CHRIST - Elden R
am and 7 30 p m Week l y
Elma Vernon m New Helen Queen IS a great
SYRACUSE
Chu r ch
Blake pastor Sunday School Bi ble study Wednesday 7 30
Sc hool 9 30 a m
worsh lp
pm
Lexington and she ac grandin other
10 a
m
Howard McCoy
serv ~ 7 30 p m
supt
Morning sermon 1I a
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
companied them to the wed
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
m
Sun day night serv ices
GOD - second St Muon w
Rev Steven Wilson
Ch r istian E ndeaver 7 30 p
ding of her grandson, IJohn
Va Ches ter Tennant pastor
Mr and Mrs Frank Ryther,
R ev Larry Poling
m
Song serv lcP 8 p m
Sunday school
10 a m
David Vernon, which waslheld Pomeroy, called on Mr and
Bev Howard Shrv411111Y
Preaching 8 30 p m
Mid
morn i ng worship
11 am
BETHANY
( OornsJ
-.
at Somerset They also at- Mrs Arthur Crabtree and Mr
week Prayer meeting Wed
e-vangelistic tervlce 7 30 p m
i p 9 30 am
Church
ntsdey 7 p m
Ray Adam.s
Bible study and prayer service
tended the reception at the and Mrs Cecil G1Uogly and Worsh
Sch ool 10 .lO a m
lay lea der
Wednesday 1 30 p m Phone
CARMEL Worship
11
New Lexington Church
113 5133
lamtly on SWiday a~rnoon a m
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
1st and 3rd Sundays
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
Roberll! Parker, Strasburg ,
CHRIST - Located at Rulland
Mr and Mrs Cecil Black Church Sc hool 10 a m
CHRIST In Chrlstl1n Urtlon APPLE GROVE - Worsh ip On New L ima Road nexl to
is spending some time here wood, IJsa Dye William C and
The Rev William Campbell
F=orest Acre Park Rev Ray
7 30 p m first •nd th ird Sun
pastor
Sunday Sc hool 9 30
with her parents, Mr and Mrs Paul Peck, spent a few daya tn
Rouse pastor Robert Musser ,
m
James
Hvgnes supt
'
APPL~ GROVE - Sun day Sunde y School supt Sun da y
Ney Carpenter Her mother Is Arnulda, Mlchtgan, as guesta IChOOI
evening strvlce
7 JO p m
9 ~ 30 8 m
WOrSh ip
l 10 30 am
worsh i p
Wednesday evening prayer
aeriOUIIy ill and confined to or Mr and Mrs Edjcar f ir st And third Su nday 1 ~0 1schoo
30 p m
Bible lfYdY Wed .
meeting
7 30 p m
Youth
P m J prayer meertnv W f d
nnd.ay 1 JO p m
Sltl.lrday
O'Bieneos Memorial Hospital Crablree and Mr and Mrs nttdey
pray•r aervlce each Tvesday
7 30 p m Fellowtt\,ip night prayer lervlc:a 7 30 p m
FAIRVIEW
IIILE
Athena Other relatives who Ma•
first .S •turday .s p m
HEMLOCK
OROVR
Crabtree,
former IUPPtr
CHURCH
,
Letart
W
V1t Rt
IJ M W ucond TIJttd'ay 7 30 CHRISTIAN - Roger Watson
havt been calledl!ere were Mr reoidepts of the ~omm1111lty Pm
1 Rev
George Hosc:hn
putor
Ray Wh•tey tupt ;
Ptltor
Sunday Stl'l:ool 9 30
.ad Mrs Tommy Parker , Mnl Cl'•blre;; If a lli•ter or
Mornfng worl h lp '30 • m
• m Prayer and Bible study
t;:hu
rcfl
school
10
JO
a
m
Anna Puker and Ney Parker, Paul 1111d WIIUam C. Peck tilld
7 30 p m
Cott•g• Prayer
YOUI'I(I PIOPit I muting 6 30
Strvlce Tuuctay
10 a m
OIM t Of Mrt m.cJtwood
P rTI
tt.'•nlng worsh_lp , 7 :10
Worahlp service
Thuraday
P m Blblt lludv Wedntt day
130 p m
f
'

ntlnf.l Ml~dl port Pomeroy,O,Frlday,July26 191~

7- 1bellally

Ph 742 J9S~

••
••

do you do now?
An1wer Tomorrow

•A

1t

'

'

•

�•
r

6-1be O.ily Sentinel, Mtddl•~.. Pomeroy 0 , Fri(!ay, July 26 1914
SEVENTH
OAY
AO
VENTlST
Mulberry
He-19htS
Pornt-roy
Pastor
G1rard Seton Sabbitth schQol
every Saturday at 7 p m i)nd
worstup sef'vlce follow1ng at
3 IS
p m
Open
81ble
diSCUSSIOn 7 30 p m ilf the
chu rch each TC,ursday

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY
A:ev W H Perr in p.a!for Roy
Mayer Sunday school supt
Church school 9 15 a m

worsh ip sl!rvtce
Youth chotr
dilly J JO p m

10 l.t am

rehearsal
under

Mon

d~rectton

ot Mary Sk1nner sen tor cho~r
rehearsal 7 JO p m Thursday
wtlh
Mrs
Paul
Nease

director

POMERoY CH UKt" OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner

•

Unton and Mulberry
Rev
Clyde V Henderson pastor
Sunday school 9 30 a m Glen
McClung
supt
morn i ng
worshtp 10 30 a m
e\len ng
Sle:tvtce 7 30 m td week ser
vlu Wednesday 7 30 p m

GRACE EPISCOPAL -

The

Rev Harold Deeth rector
Church sennces 10 30 a m

Holy communion first Sunday
of month church school 10 30
a m for nursery throuQh 12

POMERO Y CHURCH OF

CHRIST - Ferrell Groninger
pastor Btble schOol 9 30a m
worSh iP
10 30 a m
adult
wor Sh1p serv ce and young
peoples meetmg 7 30 p m
Comb ined Bib le study and
prayer meetm g Wednesday
7 30 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy Ray W W n ng o ff icer
In c harg e Sunday 10 a m
Holiness meetmg 10 30 a m
Sunday School Young Peopl es
Leg1on 7 p m Thursday 1 to 3
p m Lad1es Hnm e League 1
p m Prep c la~:,~:o
ST PAUL LUTHERAN Corner Second and Sycamore
Sts
Pam eroy
t he Rev
W1111a m Mtddlewor t h pastor
Sunday School 9 30 a m
church services 10 30 a m

SACRED HEART Rev
Father
John
Nadzam
pastor
Phone
992 282S
Saturday even ing Mass 7 3G
p m Sund ay Mus i and 10
a m Confesstons Satu rday 7
7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAP
TIST - Robert Kuhn pastor
WJII •m Watson Sunday school
supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
BYF
6 p m
B ble study
Wednesday 7 p m
choir
pracltce Wednesday 8 JO p m
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
HOLIN ESS
C HURCH Harr is onville Rev
0 Dell
Manley Pe~stor Henry Ebltn
Sunday School Su pt Sunday
School 9 lO am
Evening
worship 7 JO p m Prayer and
Pra fse serv1ce Thursday 7 30

pm

SYRACUSE
FIRST
CHURCH OF GOO
Rev
George Oder pastor Sunday
school
9 45 a m
morn ng
preachmg
ll
am
evangel st c serv1ce 7 30 p m
Pray er meet ng Thursday
7 30 p l1
POMEROY - WE STSIDE
CHURCH OF CHRIST 20P W
Main St - Loren T Stephens
evangelist pho ne 992 7856
Conservat1ve
non
mstrumenta l Sunday worShiP
10 am
Bible study 11 am
worsh p 6 p m
Wednesday
B ble study J p m
MIDWAY
COMMUNITY
CHURCH
( non
jenom mat1ona1 )
Langsville
Dexter Road the Rev Worley
Haley pastor Sunday sc hool
10 am evening worsh1p 7 30
p m
Prayer
meet i ng
Tuesday
7 30 p m
youth
group Fr1day 7 30 p m

GftAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Preaching
9 30 a m
first and uc-ond
Sund ays of each mon1h th1rC1
and fourth Sundays each
month worsh ip service at 7 JO
P m Wednesday even1nos at
7 30 Prayer and B1bte Study
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP
T I ST 282 Mulberry Ave
Pomeroy
atf•l1ated
w1th
S B C
the Rev
F red Hilt
pastor Trov Zw111tng Sunday
School supt S\Jnday schooL
9 30 am
morn 1n9 worsh ip
I O,JO
Su nday e .... angellst lc
meet ng
1 JO p m
Prayer
meet ng Wednesday 1 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT
MT MORtAH BAPTIST Corner Fourth and Ma1n
Middleport Rev Henry Key
Jr pastor Sunday Sc hool 9 30
a m
Mrs Ervtn Baumgard
ner supt
Mornmg worshiP
10 45 a m
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES Larry Carnahan presid i ng
m ln1ster Sunday
B ble l-ee
t ure 9 30 a m
Watchtower
stu d y 10 30 a m
Tuesday
B1ble study 7 30 p m
Thurs
day m m t stry school 1 30
p m
service m eetlno B 30

nesctav 1 30 p m
U ~M w
trrsl W~dn~s.dtt" • '1 JO
m
WESI..EYAN &lt;R•c ntJ Sunday school
10 am
worSh ip 11 a m ~ 81ble- lfudr
Thursday
1 p m
cho r
pracl ce Tttursday 8 p m
fellowship
supp~r
f i rst
Wectnesdi!IY 6 JO p m U M w
fourth M;nday 8 p m

r,

G~EAT BEND - WorShip 11
am
1nQ anct Afh Svndays
Church School 10 a m
LETART FALLS - Worsh ip
10 a m Church School 9 a m
8/ble Sludy 7 JO p m e\lerv
Tue$day
MORNING STAR - WorShip
9 30 • m
Church School 10 30
a m
Mid Week
Service
Wednesday 8 p rn
MORSE CHAPEL Wor
Ship 11 am
lsi and 3rd
Sun days
Church School 10

am

PORTLAND - WOrShip 7 30
P m Church School 9 30 a m
SUTTON - WorShip 11 am
1nd and Al h Sundavs Church
School 10 a m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev RobertMeece
Rev Stanley Brand urn
JOPPA - Worsh ip 10 a m
Church School 9 a m
Prayar
Meeting Wednesdav 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM Church
services
9 a m
Sundav
Schoo l 9 A5 a m Bi ble Study
every Thursday 7 30 p m
NORTH B l;.THEL Wor
sh lp 11 a m Chvrch School 10

am

the Sermonette

'

BAPTIST
Rev Cec1t Co" pnlor Sunday
Sc1'1ool su,:~t
Jot Sayre
SuncUry 'ChOOI 9 A5 a m
Sund ay evening worship 7 JO 1
W•dnesday prayer and Etlbl~
.study 1 30 p m
TUPPERS
PLAINS
C' HrtUTIAN
CHURC H
Eugene Undrrwood
pastor
tioward Caldwell Jr .Sunday
School Supt
Svt'ldi!l y School
9 30 .am
Morn1no Se-rmon
10 ]0 am
Sunday even ing
serv•ce 1 p m
LETART FALLS UNITED
BRETHREN - Rev Fr.eland
Norr is pastor Floyd Norr is
sup! Sunday school 9 JO am
morning termon 10 30 am
Prtyer service Wednesday
7 JO p m
CHESHIRE CHURCH OF
GOD OF PROPHECY - G P
Sm lth pastor Sunday School
10 a m Arthur Henson Supt
Morn ing Wonh lp
11 am
Youn9 Peoples 1erv1ce 7
p m
Evening service 7 30
p m Wednesef!lly M i d Week
Prayer Ser~lce
7 30 p m
Youth meeting
6 30 p m
Evening worsnlp 7 30 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE Rev
Herbert Grate pastor Wor
Ship service 11 am and 7 30
p m Sun day Sunday Sc!l ool
9 30 am
Richard Barton
supt Pra yer meeting Wed
nesday 1 30 p m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF
CH R 1ST Cl1 fford Sm lth
m n lster Su nday School 9 30
11 m
mornmg ch ur ch 10 30
a m
Sun day evening service
7 30p m Wednesday serv.ce 8

.........•

News "' Behind the LlntJ 33
6 30 ...... NBC News l .4 IS ABC News 6 CBS News I 10 Room
222 13
7 00 - Truth or Cons 3 News 6, 10 Whets My Line a Beat The
Clock 4 Avlollon Woather 33 Wild Kingdom 13 I Spy IS

Us.

Electric Company 20

Hvnt 10 , To Tell the Truth 6 Conc;entrot lon 8 BetJt The Clock
lJ You ONe It To Yourself 20 Boboqulvorl 33
8 00 - Washlngton Revlew20 JJ Sanford&amp; Son 3 4 15 Brady
Bunch6 13 Movie • Around the World In 80 Days 8 10~

Mo\lle Three Into Two Won t Go 4 Hollywood Television
Theatre 20
9 30 - Odd Couple 6 13
10 00 - Portrait The Woman 1 Love 6 13 News 20

10 30 - Day AI Night 33 Ott to This Week 20

11 00 - Neyt.s 3 4 8 10 13 lS Janak133 News 6

11 30 -

Johnny Carson 3 4 Untouc;hables 13 Mission lm
posslble6 AOJiatlon Weather 20 Movies House ol Usher 8
Flight to Mars 10 News 15
12 00 - Johnny Carson 15
11 .10 - Don Kirshner's Rock Concert Wide World Special
1 00 - Mldn lght Special J 4 Mov ie Voyage to the Planet ol
Prehistoric Women 10 Take Five For Life 15

Dear Pon
I doubt that reality would equal your fantasies - and,
bestdes, thts elderly gentleman may have a wife who wouldn't
apprectate a 24.year&lt;&gt;ld rival
Perhaps you have a grandfather fixation, but I'd be more apt
to guess you're lonely, a little shy with men your own age, and
you'd raUter dream than take a chance on being hurt agam
Honest, now, wouldn't you cool off fast if he made advances'
There's nothing wrong with daydreaming, but try some selfanalySis too And then look around at the younger, unattached
mentnyouroffice SomeofthemareattracUvetoo - H

2 30 - Movle TheManWhoCouldCheat Death 4
4 00 - Movie I
117 - Mission for a Miller 4
5 30 - Movie Jack Frost 4

ass

CABLE CHANNEL FIVE

The Champions
Operation Gangbusters

SATURDAY JULV27
6 00 - Summer Semester 10
6 30- Ky Afield 13 Christopher Closeup 10 TV Classroom 8
Fun for Everyone 6 Treehouse Club 8

Faith tor Today 10

In Touch 13

+++

7 30- Sesame St 20 Saturdays Report 3 Osmonds 13 Farm
Fron t 4 Speedracer 6 Speed Buggy 8 Treehouse Club 10

Dear Helen
•
Awhile back you ran a complaint from "Overrun Husband"
about his wile picking up bargains at garage sales Stnce I hit the
garage sale circuit - I feel duty bound to give you my opinion
about this excrtmg and educational game
True, anttque dealers may have been there, thoutih not
necessarily first You see, I help my lwo daughters tn their an·
tique business From expenence, we lmow dealers can't always
be ftrst at sales, and aometlmes If they are, they can't afford,
don't know, or don't deal m the things we wa~t
Mayhe the Items aren't 100 years old, but many are &lt;leslrable
and collectible
I've been to garage sales on second days and have bought
Utmgs that any dealer would giVe both eye teeth for I say, let tile
lady hit the garage circuit - she 15 very likely to come home wtth
bargatns and if she h118 stora~e space
well, "Overrun
Husband" ought to thank hts lucky stars that his wife lSD't

B 00 -

Jakes Place 6 Lldsvll le 3 4 15 Bugs Bunny 13 Hair
Bear Bunch 8 Lassie 10
8 30 - Yogis Gang 13 Mister Rogers 20 Addams Family 3 4
15 Sabrina 8 Popeye 10 Edward Saunders 6
9 00 - Emergency Plus 3 4 I S Super Friends 6 13 Movle 8
10 Sesame St 20

In another moment he wtll be gettmg up and walking toward you, eager to
tell the secret of hiS calmness and strength W1ll you listen?
He has solved many problems, overcome much gnef and temptation, been
able to meet the cond1t1ons of every-day hvmg, all because through the Church
he has come m contact With the Source of all power In tbe Church he bas found
compamonshtp Its worship servtces have brought fa1th , peace and serentty Its
acUvttles have furniSh ed an outlet for hts creattve abthttes and energy The Church
has been a part of hiS ltfe from boyhood Through Its various departments the
needs of h1s hfe have been met He has enJoyeJ the fellowship there and, looking
back he IS able to trace h1s own growth
Have you learned his secret? Wouldn't you ltke to know tt?
What the Church has done for h1m It can do for you Tf you are young, 11 Will
help meet your problems If you are older, tt wtll brtng satiSfaction and peace
Scr phi e1 ~le&lt; ed ~Y Tke A.me lean 8 ble Soc ely

Copyri11h1 1974 Keliler Adver1ls ns Se"' ce Inc Str&amp;lburg.

9 30- lnch High Priva te Eye 3 4 IS

10 00 - Elec Co 20 l.assle s Rescue Rangers 6 13 My FavorUe
Martian 8 10 S1gmund &amp; The Sea Monsters 3 4 15
10 30 - Goober and The Ghost Chasers 6 13 Pink Panthj!rs 3 4
15 Zoom 20 Jeannie 8 10
11 00 - Brady Kids 6 13 Abbott &amp; Costello 8 Sesame St 20

Speed Buggy 10 Sfar Trek 3 4 IS

11 30 -

Josle &amp; The Pussycats in Outer Space 8 10 Butch
Cassidy 3 4 15 Ml:sslon Magic 6 13
12 00 - Elec Co 10 Jetsons 3 4 15 Pebbles and Bamm Bamm
8 10 Movie Daffy Duck and Por ky Pig Meet the Groovte
Goalies 6 l3

12 30-Fa1Aibert8 10 Go3 4 15

1 00 - Ch ildren s Film Festival 8 10 Man f rom UNCL E 4
Lassie 15 Banana Splits 3 Action 74 6 13
1 30 - TBA 15 Beatles 3
2 DO-Soul Traln6 Mulligan Stew 10 VIewpoints Baseba ll Pre
Game Show 3 4 15 Women s Pro Tenn is 13

Vl~lnla

2
Tuesday

W~dn~ sday

415

316

1554 58

111828

10 A Look at the Book IS

6 30 - News 3 4 15 Zoom 33 Beverly Hlllblll1es 8 Movie
Charge of the Lancers 10
7 00 - Hee Haw 6 8 Catch 33 33 Lawrence Welk 4 13 15
Thr!Useekers 3

3 30 -Anythmg You Ca n Do 13

4 00- The Naturalists 33 NFL Football 6
4 30 - Sewing Skills 33

5

W1th the hope tt wtlL 1n some measure, foster and help sustatn that
wh1ch ts good tn famlly and communtty ltfe, th1s feature ts sponsored by
the bus mess ftrms and organtzattons whose names appear below

700E

Maln

A B1t wtfh Kn~t 33 Wrestl~ng 8 Death Valley Da ys 10
Sale of the Century 4 Petticoat Junction 3 TBA 15

Dtal992 2101

Thinking could rum the game

Bakers of Good Bread
Hvntmgton W Va

RACINE FOOD MARKET

NO RTH

• J 10 7
' A 92
• 7 52

INGLES ASHLAND SERVICE

+ K8 54

-

EAST

• 6

•

Dtal 992 3284

M iddleport

•

~Q4

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER
IGA FOODLINER

Butck Pont1ac Ope l G M C Dealer
Ph 992 2174
500 E Mam St

'3

Mtddleport Ohio

+ A72

'

337 N 2nd

Racine

Ph 949 9591

Both vulner able

Ph 992 2550

No rth

East

Mlddleporl Ohio

Ph 992 2178

GAUL'S MARKET

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
We Fill All Doctors
992 2955

Chester Oh10

THE AlliENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
296 W. Secood

TWO LOCATIONS
59 N Secood St
Middleport o
46 Court St.
Gallipolis, 0
A

Ph. 992 3863

Pomeroy
.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

GENE'S BODY SHOP
•

808W Main

Prescriptions
Pomeroy

(:....
-~.

Meigs County Branch

Ph 992 5211
Pomeroy

-

.

2'1'

2•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

The Friendly Folks"
Pomeroy Ohio

I,

Ph 992 3785

I,
.

I GAMNY

[J

!I I I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work

IEXVONC~

rx

AXYDLBAAXR.
LONGFELLOW
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One letter limply otando for another ln thlo oample A is;,
used for the three L's, X for the two 0 s etc Single letten,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the warda are aU ~
hmts Each day the code letters are different
II

T HE LATE5T
SATELLITE

1

INUCHE1

CRYPTOQUOTES

Now IJ'l'ai\P the eirt:led letten
to fonn the aurprlae anawer, aa
ounettterl b7 the above cartoon

4

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TYMRQ

XTYSSR

ZQATDLZQ
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Jumble• EXCEL
Yetlerday •

JOUST

(AM.,.en •••orrow)
WHINNY UNHOLY

\ Aa.wen No part coal4 k aa ,-eat a th ... - THE WHOLE

DL

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AJZQATDLZQ0

.

XDJLDIDJD

Yesterday's Cryptoquote. THE TRUE SOURCE OF RIGHTS;'
IS DUTY IF WE DISCHARGE OUR DUTIES, RIGHTS WILL'
NOT BE FAR TO SEEK -{;ANDHI
'-

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Have
t.jOU

;een

•

CAPTAIN EASY

lt6 ttme to

FAST5N VOLJR 5EAT l!H1'.S

WE AJ:ZE ABOUT TO
LAND AT HeATHROW A1RPOIZT

PI-E'A5S:

qo and I can t

OUTSIDE

f&lt;nd h1 m t

LO~DO~

: hua,
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TO DO

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•AQ654,AQ654+AK ... 2

TUPPERS PLAINS HARDWARE

RACINE PlANING MILL

Paint Plumbing a. Electrlc:.ol Supplies
Tuppers Plains
Ph 1&gt;67 3963

Building Supplies a. Custom Millwork
Ph 992 3978

Whut do you d o now1
A - Bid s l" spad es Your
partrrer II Rh~;twlng lhe ace of
cluh!ll \'ou doll llry for se~e ll flea
cause hl11 first bid wall Otll~ •
81ngle rai se

.

J&amp;B AUTO BODY

Pf\W I WI SH 'If:
WOULDN T AST
PARSON TO DO
SUPPER 015HE6

WHV

0 0

NOT?

0

!'luH•nd

•

II
,'II

"'

'
"'
..j

RfNG,

11

'••

$P&amp;des over your one spade What

Jim Hokornt;; Owner

Salem 51

AFRAID OF' MMBE SHfS

I,

Instead of b1dd1ng 1wo spade•
your partner has jump&lt;.'&lt;l to three

•

'•

WHAT 15 THERE 10 6E
JU5T KIND OF LONEL ~

'I'()DAY S QUESTION

CARPENTER'S MARKET
Rutland

-'
,.

'u

26

West

Pn"'
'V ou

Mlddleporl, Ohio

I

.

I

•

HALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

"

Ph. 742 5293

c .:.~'l.:".'ii'::::.-

Devoted to Meig!J Mason Area
Pomeroy 0

7034

Keepsake Diamond R i ngs

St Rt 124

LIBRA (Sept 23 Del 23) No t

through your own effort s but
because o l the help of some

lliE DAILY SENTINEL

K&amp;C JEWELfRS
Pomeroy

trad1119

NF\'oSI \I ~H tNT 11111 11S~ ASSN I

The b1ddmg has been

212 E Main St

barter.ng

o r se llmg IS you r c up of tea to
day Hold llrm to your pos1t1on
and sway your prospec t w1lh
saleSm(lnstup

birth

30 European '
country
31 Gennan
city
33 Bridge
( Fr )
33 Son of
Bela

South

T ills would g1ve him an
ove1 tnck 1f li:as1 held the ace,
bu l wtlh that card restmg
comfortably '" the West
hand South would Just make
IllS contrtct fhat ts cella tnly
a lot bette1 than gomg down

.

The Fh'lest In Mobile Homes
Maln
Pomeroy
Ph 992

VIRGO (Aug 23· Sept 22)

Barga1n ng

29 Concemln!
one'•

a d1amond towatd Ius kmg

POWELL'S SUPER VALU

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

You have some resources to
draw upon that your~ not tully
aware of at present Through
another you wtll I nd a prohta
ble channel

You ve made a much beiter 1m
presston on someone 1mpor
tan! than you ve g1ven yourself
c red11 fo r Later you ll hear thiS
from another
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) II YO\J
speak lrom the real
tnner
you listeners whose altentton
you deslre w1t1 s t up and take
nollce of what you have to say

dumm) Till ee rounds of
clubs would come next He
would 1uff the tlnrd , go to
dummy w1th dummy s last
trump dJScal d a diamond on
the 13th club a nd fmally lead

Dlal992 2318

Grocerie s &amp; General Merchendlse
Rac i ne
Ph 949 5772

PISCES !Feb 20 Ma•ch 20)

CANCER (June 21 July 221

1O\IJH.lS of trump s and s top so
.IS 1o leave a t 1 ump e ntl y to

Nat ionwide Insurance Co of Columbus 0
307 Spring Ave
Pomeroy

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

You re s t1t11n a cycle where Ihe
good you do s more read ly
nolect and appreCiated by your
contemporar e s Keep your
best root forward

The type ol tasks you shou ld
1nvo1ve yourself w1 th today are
tho se that you took upon as a
labor o f love You II really pro
duce 11 you do

1$ Old·
fogyish
18 Lingered
21 From
that
place
2Z Shine
23 Exasperated
24 Breakfast
food
26 About

I.

' Haste makes waste IS a
!me old maxim that bndge
players should keep m mmd
at a ll limes
South couldn I wait to put
dummy s ace of hearts on
Wes1 s ltmg Thts gave him
the fusl tnck but lost h1m the
co ntract because he had to
lose three d tamonds and a
club late•
A l1ttl e thoug ht before
play mg to the ftrs t trtck
would have told South that he
had a sure club loser and that
If possible he wa nted to keep
East from ever gam mg the
lead After that thought he
could htn e let West hold the
flisl tnck
West would c ont1nue
he3! ts South would w tn the
second hea1 t a nd dtscard a
club rhen he would play two

Ph 992 3030

Lou1s W Osborne
Pomeroy

220 E Ma in

1100 E

West

By Oswald &amp; James &lt;Jacoby

Gay 90s Bread

MARK V STORE

4 00 - Movle The Boy Who Caught a Crook 4
6 00 - Peyton Place 4

ADUARtUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)

GEMINI (May 21 June 20)

Yeoterday'o ,\Dower

Openmg lead-K •

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

SEARS CATALOGUE MERCHANT

You 11 hnd you and your
spec• at someone are rn accord
on most major tssues Now put
your collective Ideas to work

t K63

t:lASDL!NE ALLEY

Bakers of
M1ddlepor1

11 • 35 - News 3 4 Midnight Special 15
12 05 - Movies The Hanged Man J Woman Times Seven'
1 00 - Speakeasr, 6 Movie House of Horrors 1 13
2 00 - Movie
Desert Detour 1 4
2 30 - News 13

(D,o 22 ·

Jan 19) A short wtnle ago you
wouldn 1 have been able to gat
a certain person lo do you a
spec rat Javor Surprrs ngly f
you were to ijSk. now he would

t JI098
4oQJJO

.

ROSEBERRY'S SERVICE STATION

CAPRICORN

SOUTH IDl

.

Middleport

people yov (ton I know too
well Take a back seal anc:t
11slen and team

Bold measure~ wrll w in po1nts
for yov Don I be afra1d to bluff
a hllle w1thout gomg over
board

. AKQ984

ALL WEAlliER ROOFING
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

For S•turdaw July 27 1974

ARIES (March 21 April 191

' ,1064

4o 963

GOEGLEIN READY MIX

way

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23
Dec 21) You re not too .sure or
yourself n a new ven ture w1th

• 532

"KQ J875

Ph 992 2366

Send $1 lor JAC08Y M ODERN
book to
W n at Br dge (clo
th s newspaper) P 0 BoK 48Q
Rad o C ly Stat on New York
NY 10019

WEST

M1nor Repairs &amp; Tune up
Middleport
Beech &amp; Locust

The Sto r e w 1th A Heart
Phone 949 3342

26

Emergency 3 4 15

8 30- MAS H8 10 Movie The Hanged Man 6 13 Hollywood
Te levision Theatre 33
9 OO - MaryTylerMoore8 10 Movie Marooned '3 4 15
9 30 - BobNewhartS 10 Movie OrphansoftheStorm 33
10 00 - Owen Marshall Barnaby Jones 8, 10
11 15 - Movie Horror Island 6 News 13
11 30 - M ?lv1es 1 R ide Beyond Vengeance' 8 A New Kind of
Love 10
Horror Island 13 Janakl 33

WIN AT BRIDGE

HEINERS BAKERY

Pomeroy

Racme

oo -

Beat 33

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

7 30- Bobby Goldsboro 3 Course of Our Times 33
8 00 - All tn the Family 8 10 Partridge Family 6 13 Book

by THOMAS JOS£PH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Dolt
1 Apprehension
4 Italian
2 Pacific
nver
ISland
8 Once
group
3 Old t&gt;me
around
the track
weapon
9 Election
t Rose
results
essence
12 Wooden
5 Pester
for
core
13 Spi1Jlg
I payment
14 Chlcken
6 Falling
16 Write
m
17 Dean or
folds
Mary
7 Lobster's
18 " Wrttten
feeler
on the -" 9 Hit the
19 Military
sack
10 Correct
supplies
( abbr )
a text
20 Meara
11 DISpatcher
of comedy
21 Barter
24 Prop
for
Groucho
25 Suspend
26 That
(Fr)
'E1 Irritable
28 Peaceful
32 Never
(Ger)
33 Precede
tn tune
34 Fonn of
the samba
38 Indian
cymbals
:n Unending
38 Wholly
39 Redact
tO Caustic
substance

SCORPIO lOot 24 Nov 22)

Ralher than let a s1 tua1 10n
ltouncJer that another has mud
died up lake charge of thrngs
yourself and handle tt yovr

5 30 - Let s Grow a Garden 33 Championship F lshlng 10 •
World of Survival 4 New Dating Game 3
6 OO - L 1I1as Yogaal1c!Yov33 NewsB News3 4 In the Know

2 30- Arth ur Smlth 8 Stars of Tomorrow
3 OQ-Nallonal Geograprlc 6 Mov1e 8 Mov1 e The Little
Shepherd of Kingdom Come 10 Dusty s Trail 13

Thursday
Fnday
I Co r nth1ans II Connth1ans J Connth1ans Deuteronomy

Dear B
Unle .. you can change hll three bad hablt.l - ...u, maybo
lwo out of three - yeo• - H

one else lh1s w11t eventually
turn out to be a PfOhl able day

ICEROW

Baseball 15 3 4

IS -

DearGS.S
I've heard from many gill"age 111le enthiiSia.slll who tell me I
don't know what I'm missing Maybe, S&lt;lme day, I'll join the
porade - when I get a bl&amp;ger garage for lltorlng (and tram my
h111balld not to "clean out the junk" every other Saturday) - H

TAURUS (Ap•tl 20· May 20)

2 00 - News 13

7 00 -

• •

Dear Helen
l m o 2f.year&lt;&gt;ld divorcee, well built, considered attractive
I don't let myself get seduced on dat.ea I'm oot a weirdo J111t a
normal, reserved peraoo - with an unusual problem
I m mentally having a very emotlonalafflllr with a security
guard at my office building, rut no one knows It, least of all him I
fantasize about him, dream of being crushed In his artruJ But
he's over 60' A very sexy looking 60, lm!shtadd
I don't want marrtase - he may eyen hove a wile for all I
know But I want the adventure of being WIIMhls elderly male
Yet I scarcely say "Hi" to him
Should I follow my desires and let him k110w how I feel, or what' - PONDERING

8 JO - Brian Keith 3 4 15 Wall Stre&lt;1l Week 20 33 Six Million
Dollar Man 6 13
9 00 - Masterpiece Theatre 33 Short Stor ies ot Love J 15

7 30 p m 9 30 p m -

By Helen Dottel

It'• aGrudldJerComple~•

1 30 - Porter Wagoner 3 HollywOOd Squares A New Trellsure

Detar Helen
"
My hu$band hu three bad bablll He- ....._llllletllll
~aaya ll'•badfor theonamel He crlnU fnllll...V won Ina til
late at rJght. And he won't like a barb or dlqe hie CloiiMI.ell
1tell him a dozen t1mea But be'• asoocl wwker,lnd 111 11M liC!Dd
teeth Can't NY the 1111t1e about hla breelb or b o Slnct I c.'t
stand them Is separate rooma theannor• - B W

running to Ute ne.areat Uquor lllore or lmodtlng llim down for
another man
Wlllh you could llloo by my housuome time and I'd ~lve vou
IIOJlle flrat-hand eumples of wllectlbles -{;ARAGE SALE
SISTER

FRIDAY JULVU, Itl&lt;
6 00 - Newa 3. 8 lO, ll 15 Truth or Cons 6 Sesame S1 20

TilE
SECRET

to

Carpenter News, Event

~WH
_e
_lwe
-n
-~H
-ewlp

Television Log

1 JO p m
NIT . UNIO~Qi

ALFRED - Sunday schOOl
9 45 a m
each Sunday
prea ching 11t 11 am
eac h
Sunday ~rayer meet ng 7 45
pm
pm
p m Wednesday WSCS 8 p m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
on third Tuesday each month
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
Chrtst m Chnst.an UnionREEDSVILLE Sunday METHODIST - Rev Robert
Lawrence Manley
pastor
schoo l 9 30 p rea chmg 7 30
E
Bu ckley pastor
l l oy d
Mrs Russell Young Sunda y
p m Sunday prayer meetmg
Wnght
Sunday
school
supt
School Supt sunday School
7 30 p m Tuesday WSCS 1 30 Sunday school 9 30 a m
9 30 a m
Eventng worsh p
first Thursday each month
morning worshiP 10 JO am
7 30
Wednesday
prayer
SILVER RIDGE - Worship evenmg worShip
"! 30 p m
meetmg 7 30 p m
10 a m
Church School 9 a m
Wednesday Chnst1an Youth
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Crusade
6 30 p m
Cho r
GOD Rae ne Route 2 th e
Worsh i p 9 am
Churc h pract ce Thu r sday 7 p m
Rev J ames M Muncy pastor
Sc hool 10 a m
Su nday school 9 45 a m
KENO
CHURCH
OF
DEXTER
CHURCH
OF
mornmg worsh i p
11 am
CH R 1ST - George Frederick
CHRIST T1m
Russett
evenmg worsh ip
7 30 p m
supt Serv1ce week ly 9 JO am
m1n1ster Norman C Will
Prayer meetrng Tuesday 7 30
on Sunday Preachmg frrst and
su nd~Y school supt
Sunday
p m Young peoples meeti ng
third Sundays of month by sc hool
9 30 a m
worsh ip
7 30 D m Thursday
Clrfford Smt t h 9 30 a m
serv ce 10 JO a m
B1ble
RUTLAND CHURCH Of
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN study Wednesday 7 30 p m
GOD - Phtll lp Wh ttey pastor
UNION - Darrell
Doddr I I
THE SIMPLE GOSPEL
Sunday sc h o ol
10 a m
pastor Sunday Sc hool
9 30
REORGANIZED CHURCH
~ In our day of tetru10logy and to man, mau ts a smner and worShip se r v1ce 7 p m
am
Leonard G1lmore f1rst OF )E SUS
CHRIST
OF
er meet ng Wednesday
elder
evening servtce
7 30 I.!.ATTER DAY SAINTS deep studtes of every area of cannot save h&gt;mself and God 7Pray
30 p m
p m
Wednesday
prayer Portland
Racrne Road
life those who are trymg to wm must puniSh sm U this would
meetmg 7 30 p m
Wilham Roush pastor Denny
HAZEL
COMMUNITY
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF
Evans
Sunday
School
the world from sm and be the end of the Gospel we can CHURCH - Near Long Bot GOD
- Racme Roule 2 The
Dtre ctor Sunday School 9 30
tom Estll Hart pastor Roy
6estruction need to get back to readily see that there ts no Brown
Rev Char les Hand pa stor
am
Morn ng worSh i P 10 30
ass stan t
pllstor
Su
nday
schoo
l
9
45
a
m
a
m
Sunday
even ng serv1ce 7
the sunple gospel Man con- hope for man to obtam heaven Sunday school 10 a m Chvr ch morning worsh 1p 11 am p m Wednesday
evenrng
7
30
p
m
each
Sunday
!limes to seek answers to all the and ISdoomed for death or hell e\lenmg prayer meetmg 7 30 Evenrng serv1ces Tuesday and prayer se rv 1ces 7. 30 p m
F r iday 7 30
world around h&gt;m whtch m- But God from the begmmng of p m Thursday
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST BEARWALLOW
RIDGE
MIDDLEPORT
PEN
Rev
Earl Shul er
pastor
eludes seeking answers to hts time planned a solutiOn to thts TECOSTAL
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
Bible
- Th1rd Ave the
Wor:shtp serv u;e
9 30 am
Study
9 JO am
morning
spiritual life and the questiOn great dilemma The solution ts Rev Wdl1am Kn ittel pa stor worship
Sunday Sunday school lO 30
10 JO am
evenmg
Ronald Dugan Sundar Sc hool
a
m B ble study and prayer
that comes from a study of all wrapp..,ct up m God's only Supt
worsh1p
6
30
p
m
Wedn
esday
Classes for all ages
serv ce 7 30 p m Thursday
8 ble Study 7 30 p m
God's Holy Word
son Jesus Chnst
even ng serv1ce 7 30 p m
MT
OLIVE CHURCH K ngsbury
Road
Slinday
study Wednesday 7 30
If we could answer all the
Who was Jesus' He was the pBible
Long Bottom Sunday School
School 9 30 a m Ralph Ca rl
m
youth serv1ces F r iday
10 am W1fh W i llard P 1golt
supt Worsh p serv1ce 10 30
questions men ask about God mfmlte God-man John 1 1 In 7 30 p m
su pt Evang e list ic message a m and 7 30 p m alternatel y
FREEWILL
BAPTIST
and His word, would tt do any the begmnmg was the Word Corner Ash and Plum Mtd each Su nday evenmg 7 30 p m Prayer m eet 1ng Wednesday
by
Elder
Russell
C l 1ne
7 30 p m
Rev
Jay Stil es good m the savmg of his soul' (Ch rtst) and the Word was w1th dleport
Noel
Herrman
mmtster
ot
the
ApostoliC
F a tth
pastor
pastor
Saturday eve nmg
No
God and the Word was God ' serv 1ce 7 p m Sunda y sc hoo l Btble Stud y Wednesday 7 JO
pm
So the a&gt;m of the ChriStian Verse 14, ' And the Word was I O a m
Sunday even 1n g
STIVERSVILLE
COM
worship 7 p m
OLD
DEXTER
CON
should be to spread the s&gt;mple made flesh and dwelt among us
MUtJITY CHURCH - Su nda y GREGATIONAL CHURCH MIDDLEPORT
FIRSf
school
serv
1ce
10
am
Prayer
gospel and not worry about
' Not only IS tt &gt;mportant BAPTIST - Cor ner Srxth and meet1n9 Thur sday ,. 7 p m
Mrs Worle y Franc1s Sunday
scho
trymg to answer all the who Jesus was but also what Palmer th e Rev Steve Sunday evenmg serviCe 7 p m am ol supt Sund ay schoo l 10
pastor
Danny
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
questions man proposed Many He dtd for mankmd He pmd Skaggs
Thompson Sun day school supt
Pomeroy
Harr1 sonvrlle
LONG
BOTTOM
ask questiOns only to hide thetr for our sms and purchased a WMPO rad 1o program 7 45 Road R 1ck Mornson pastor
CHRISTIAN Mr
Robert
a
m
Sund
ay
school
9
15
a
m
Sunday
sc
hool
supt
Steven
own !allure to accept the place m Heaven for u&amp; which morn mg worsh 1p 10 I 5 a m
Stan ley Sun day schoo l 9 30 Wyatt pa sto r Sunday Sch ool
Gospel of Jesus Christ m thetr He offers as a gift which may Youth achv1t es and fe llow Ship a m morn ng worsh iP and supt Ronald Os borne B ble
Sc hool 9 30 a m
preachmg
for 1un 1or and sen1or h1gh
c ommun1on
10 JO
am
own life and try to make be recetved by faith Isaiah stu
Even ng servi ces
dents 6 p m B1ble study
Su nday
even ng
you th 10 4 5 am
7 30 p m
\hernselves better than those 53 6, "All we like sheep have 7 30 p m M d week prayer Chr sta n Endea\lor 6 30 p m
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
servte
e
Wednesday
7
30
p
m
wor
shiP
serv1ce
S.unday
7
30
who know Jesus as their gone astray we have turned
p m
Wedne sd ay even 1"19 METHODIST - Ronald Wells
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
Su nday Sch ool 9 30
personal Savtour
everyone to his own way, and Middleport 5th and Ma 1n
prayer meet ng and B i ble pastor
am
Mornmg
worsh tp 10 30"
st
udy
7
30
p
m
The s&gt;mple Gospel mcludes the Lord hath latd on Htm the George Gla ze
m 1n rst er
a m
Young Peop les Service
ST JOHN LUTHERAN James
Sheets
superintendent
live baSic truths that the Btble mtq1llty of us all "
6 45 p m
Evangel strc ser
Pme Grove the Rev Arthur
Brble school
9 JO a m
v
1ce
7
30
p m
Prayer
Combs
pastor
Sunday
school
proclaims
If we receive th1s by faith morn1ng worsh1p 10 30 am
meetmg Thursday 7 30 p m
9 30 am
chur c h serv1ces
evenmg
worSh
iP
7
JO
p
m
First, the grace of God offers then what ts faith? Faith IS not prayer serv ce 7 p m Wed 10 30 a m
FREEDOM
GOSPEL
MISSION
Bald
Knobs
Rev
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF
to every man heaven as a free mtellectual assent We may nesdav
l
R
Gluesencamp pastor
CHRIST
B ble Sc hoo l
9 30
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
gHt Romans 6 23, " the gift know all the Btble says to OF THE NAZARENE - Rev am morn1ng worsh p 10 30 Roger Wilfred Sr
Sunday
Sc
hool
Su
pt
Sunday
School
a
m
Sunday
evenmg
Wor.sh
p
Floyd
of God IS eternal life
mankind and believe 1! to be Don Cole pastor
Sunday evening
Serv lce
7 30 p m
chotr 9 30 a m
Carson
Su
nday
Sc
hool
supt
(heaven) 'We cannot earn our truth but thts Is not fatth and Sunday Sc hool 9 30 am
worship 7 JO Prayer meet ing
pract1ce Sunday and Wed
Tuesday
7 30 p m
Ernest
nesday
7
p
m
prayer
meehng
mornmg
worsh1p
10
30
am
way
heaven by our works will not save us The Btble tells
Deeter cla ss leader Youlh
and Bible Study Wednesday
Sunday evangel st1c meeting
Neither do we deserve heaven us that the devil believes and 7 30 p m
meetmg
Wednesday
7 30
7 30 p m
prayer meet ng
p
m
Ernest
Deeter
leader
ANTIQUITY
BAPTIST
Wednesday
7
JO
p
m
no matter how good we make trembles Real faith IS not just
MT HERMON CHURCH OF
Rev Freeland Norns pastor
GRACE BAPTIST - 305 N
o"ilrselves But, heaven ts of temporal fatth Faith that we Second
THE UNITED BRETHREN IN
Sunday school 10 a m
Chur ch
Ave
Mtddleport
CHRIST Robert Shook
fered free to anyone who Will exercJse for our needs here on Les ley G Holt pastor Sunday serv 1ce 7 p m Wednesday pastor
Sunday school
9 30
B1ble St udy 7 p m
School
10
a
m
worsh
1
p
ser
accept It
earth such as food, shelter, v1ce 11 a m worShip serv rce
a m
Russell Spencer supt
RACINE FIRST CHURCH
worsh1p serv ice 10 45 am
Secondly, all men are sin· healing, etc Faith saving faith 7 30 p m Sunday Wednesday OF THE NAZARENE
evenmg
worShip alternat in g
Sunday
Schoo
l
9
30
a
m
ners Romans 3 23, "For aU - IS trustmg m Jesus ChrJSt nrg h t prayer serv ice 7 JO
wllh C E at 7 30 p m on
Morn ing Worsh1p 10 30 am
Sunday Prayer meetmg 7 30
Evening Worsh1p 7 JO p m
have smned and come short alone for- our salvahon John
THE
UNITED
PRES
p
m Wednesday Alfred Wolfe
BYTERIAN
MINISTRY Wednesday M id Week Se rv1ce
" Not only are all men Sin· I 12 But as many as recetved OF
lay leader
MEIGS COUNTY Dw ight Sunday School Super ntendent
WHITES
CHAPEL
Gerald Wells
Pastor
Rev
ners but he cannot save h&gt;m Him, to them gave He power to L Zavttz Pastor Drrector
Coolville
RD
Rev
Roy Deeter
Morns
M
Wolfe
HARRISONVILLE
self Ephesians 2 8-9, 'For by become the sons of God even Sunday
pa stor
Su nday school 9 30
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Church School 9 30
am
worsh1p serv1ce 10 30
Walter P Blkacsan pastor
grace are you saved through to them that believe on His am Mrs Homer Lee S~pl
a
m
B
ble study and prayer
Ronn
1
e
Salser
s
s
Supt
Morn ing Worsh1p 10 30 am
faith, and that not of your· name '
serv tee Wednesday 7 JO p m
MIDDLEPORt Sunday Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m
RUTLAND
selves It ts the gift of God, not
The Holy Spirit ts fatthful m Church School 9 JO a m John Morn lng Worshrp 10 45 a m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
Sunday even1ng worSh i p 7 30
F
Fultz
SuAt
Morn1ng
of works lest any man should calling all men to God Worsh 1p 10 30 a m
CHRIST- Rod Kaster pa stor
p m Wednesday even ng 6 1ble
V H Braley Sunday school
SYRACUSE
Morn in g Study a p m
boast
Revelation 3 19,20 As many
supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Worship
9 am
S unday
Thirdly, the Btble tells us as !love !rebuke and chasten Church
wors h 1p service and com
School 10 a m
Mrs
Re\1 Le ton Glasure pastor
m Un+on
10 30 a m
youth
Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m
that God Jf merctful and be zealous therefore and Sampson Hall Suot
meet ng
6 p m
Sunday
youth
and
lun
lor
youth
serv
1ce
M t: "'");
doesn't want to punish us II repent Behold I stand at the
evenmg ser\1 ce 7
regu l ar
6 45 p m
e\lening worsh ip
COOPERATIVE
board m eettng th~rd Saturday
7
30
p
m
prayer
and
pra
se
Peter 3 9, "The Lord IS long. door, and knock If any man
PAR ISH
7 p m
Wednesday 1 ~.Q.ro
....
THE UNITED
suffertng to us-ward,
not hear my voice and open the
RUTLAND
COMMUNITY
SILVER
RUN
FREE
METHODIST CHURCH
CHURCH Su nday School
BAPTIST
Rev
Ralph
Dean
willing that any should periSh door, I wtll come m to h&gt;m and
Robert T Bumgarner
9 JO a m Worsh ip service 11
pastor Sunday Sc hool 10 a m
Director
but that all should come to Will sup with h&gt;m and he wtth
a m
Wednesday
prayer
Leon M11ter
su p t
Even ing
POMEROY CLUSTER
meeting
7 JO p m
Sunday
se
rv1
ce
7
30
p
m
Pra
yer
repentance " But God ts not me " If JesUs through the Holy
Rev CarlE Hicks
n1ght worship 7 30 p m
meet
nQ
Thursday
7
30
p
m
Rev D Wm $ydens1rtcker
only merciful but he ts also just Spirit IS lmocking at your
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
"t'Rt::!lo I t:M t:rt\JRCH OF
CHESTER - Won~hlp 9 15
THE
NAZARENE Rev
so must puntsh stn Romans heart's door, open the door and am Church School 10 am
GOD Rev
James Sa t
Lloyd
0
Gr
i
mm
Jr
pastor
lerfleld pastor Sunday Sc hool
ENTERPRISE - Wor"sh1p 9
6 23 "For the wages of sm ts let h&gt;m come m and dwell
Sunday School 9 30 a m
9 JO am
worsh ip service 11
a m
Church School 10 a m
Morning worsh ip 10 30 am
withm you and receive His
death "
a
m
evening
serv
ce
7
FLATWOODS - Worsh ip 11
Young peoples serv iCe 6 45
prayer serv i ce and youth
a m
Church Sc hool 10 a m
All thiS proposes a great gospel
p m
EvangeltStlc service
service Wednesd,a\' 7 c m
POMEROY
Worsh i p
dlle.!llJila Heaven Is a free gift
By Rev Thomas E Weaver 10 30 a m Church, School 9 15
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN 1 30 p m Wednesday evenmg
servIce 7 JO.J' m
CHURCH - Robert E Musser
am
U MY F 6 JO p m
MASO C.OUNTY
pastor
Suliday School
9 JO
ROCK SPRINGS - Worsh ip
THE HILAND CHAPEL
am
Roy
S1
gman
supt
1011 m Church School 9 a m
George Casto pastor Sunday
morn ing
worsh i p
10 30
UMYF 6 30 p m
Sc hool 9~ven 1 ng worship
Sunday evenmg ser\l lc e 7 30
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTl::R
7 30 Thurs day even 1ng prayer
M
id
week
service
Wednesday
Rev Robert Bumgarner
se r vice 7 30 p m
730pm ,_
HEATH WorsA i p 10 JO
MASON FIRST BAPTIST SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
a m Church School 9 30 a m
Second
and Pomeroy Sts Stan
THE
NAZARENE
Rev
M
UMYF7pm
Craig
pastor
Sunday school
C
L11rlmore pasto r
Bob
RUTLAND - Worsh i p 9 15
9 45 a m worsh lp service 11
Moore
Su
nday
Sc
hool
Supt
am
Church
Sch
ool
10
am
Mr and Mrs Roger C Greer
tra i ning un ion
6 30
Mrs
Elba
McKmght, UM'(F 7 p m
Sunday School classes fo r all am
p
m
evenmg
worsh
ip
serv1ce
ages 9 30 am
morning
and children, Warner·Robbms, Colwnbus, vlstted With Mrs
SALEM CENTER Wor
7 30 p m
Mid week prayer
worsh lp 10 45 NY p S Sunday
ship 9 am
Church Sc hool 10
Georgia, who are en route home Goldie Gillogly Mr and Mrs am
serv ic e Wednesday 7 30 p m
6
30p
m
evangel•st
l
c
serv
i
ce
UMYF Thursday 7 p m
MASON
CHURCH
OF
Sunday 7 30 p m Mid week
from a combined bustness and Harold Gillogly and Mr and
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
CHRIST P 0 Box 487 M1ller
j:)rayer
meeting
Wednesdav
Rev
Richard
E
Jarvis
pleasure trip to Caiiforma, are Mrs Otho McKmght thiS past
St
Ma son W Va
Sunday
7 ~Op m M issionary meeting
ASBURY Worship 11
Bible
Study
10
a
m
Worship
sec::ond Wednesday 7 30 p m
mltlng thetr mothers, Mrs weekend
a m Church School 9 50 a m
11 a m and 7 p m B ble Stud y
UNITED
FAITH
NON
wsc s 1st Tuesday
Dolphus Burke, Sr and Mrs
Wednesday 7 p m
Vocal
Mr and Mrs Murrell Bailey
DENOMINATIONAL
Rev
FOREST RUN - Worship 9
Andrew Greer and other are announcmg the birth of a a m Church School 10 a m 1 Robert sm.th pastor Sunday music
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP
school 9 30 a m c la ss leader
W SCS Jr d Wedn!!sday 7 3u
relatives m the area
TIST - Corner of Sec ond and
daughter, Beth Allen on July pm
Leo H il l
wor shi p se rv ic e
Anderson
Meson
Pastor
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey 17 1.-ocal grandparents are Mr
10 JO a m
chur ch 7 30 p m
MINERSVILLE - Worsh iP
Walter Cloud Sunday School
EDEN UNITED BRETW 9 AS am worsh i p service 11
were guests of her stster Mrs and Mrs Dana Ba1ley and Mrs 10 a m Chu r ch School 9 a m
W SCS lrd Monday 1 30 p m
REN IN CHRIST - Elden R
am and 7 30 p m Week l y
Elma Vernon m New Helen Queen IS a great
SYRACUSE
Chu r ch
Blake pastor Sunday School Bi ble study Wednesday 7 30
Sc hool 9 30 a m
worsh lp
pm
Lexington and she ac grandin other
10 a
m
Howard McCoy
serv ~ 7 30 p m
supt
Morning sermon 1I a
MASON ASSEMBLY OF
companied them to the wed
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
m
Sun day night serv ices
GOD - second St Muon w
Rev Steven Wilson
Ch r istian E ndeaver 7 30 p
ding of her grandson, IJohn
Va Ches ter Tennant pastor
Mr and Mrs Frank Ryther,
R ev Larry Poling
m
Song serv lcP 8 p m
Sunday school
10 a m
David Vernon, which waslheld Pomeroy, called on Mr and
Bev Howard Shrv411111Y
Preaching 8 30 p m
Mid
morn i ng worship
11 am
BETHANY
( OornsJ
-.
at Somerset They also at- Mrs Arthur Crabtree and Mr
week Prayer meeting Wed
e-vangelistic tervlce 7 30 p m
i p 9 30 am
Church
ntsdey 7 p m
Ray Adam.s
Bible study and prayer service
tended the reception at the and Mrs Cecil G1Uogly and Worsh
Sch ool 10 .lO a m
lay lea der
Wednesday 1 30 p m Phone
CARMEL Worship
11
New Lexington Church
113 5133
lamtly on SWiday a~rnoon a m
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
1st and 3rd Sundays
HARTFORD CHURCH OF
Roberll! Parker, Strasburg ,
CHRIST - Located at Rulland
Mr and Mrs Cecil Black Church Sc hool 10 a m
CHRIST In Chrlstl1n Urtlon APPLE GROVE - Worsh ip On New L ima Road nexl to
is spending some time here wood, IJsa Dye William C and
The Rev William Campbell
F=orest Acre Park Rev Ray
7 30 p m first •nd th ird Sun
pastor
Sunday Sc hool 9 30
with her parents, Mr and Mrs Paul Peck, spent a few daya tn
Rouse pastor Robert Musser ,
m
James
Hvgnes supt
'
APPL~ GROVE - Sun day Sunde y School supt Sun da y
Ney Carpenter Her mother Is Arnulda, Mlchtgan, as guesta IChOOI
evening strvlce
7 JO p m
9 ~ 30 8 m
WOrSh ip
l 10 30 am
worsh i p
Wednesday evening prayer
aeriOUIIy ill and confined to or Mr and Mrs Edjcar f ir st And third Su nday 1 ~0 1schoo
30 p m
Bible lfYdY Wed .
meeting
7 30 p m
Youth
P m J prayer meertnv W f d
nnd.ay 1 JO p m
Sltl.lrday
O'Bieneos Memorial Hospital Crablree and Mr and Mrs nttdey
pray•r aervlce each Tvesday
7 30 p m Fellowtt\,ip night prayer lervlc:a 7 30 p m
FAIRVIEW
IIILE
Athena Other relatives who Ma•
first .S •turday .s p m
HEMLOCK
OROVR
Crabtree,
former IUPPtr
CHURCH
,
Letart
W
V1t Rt
IJ M W ucond TIJttd'ay 7 30 CHRISTIAN - Roger Watson
havt been calledl!ere were Mr reoidepts of the ~omm1111lty Pm
1 Rev
George Hosc:hn
putor
Ray Wh•tey tupt ;
Ptltor
Sunday Stl'l:ool 9 30
.ad Mrs Tommy Parker , Mnl Cl'•blre;; If a lli•ter or
Mornfng worl h lp '30 • m
• m Prayer and Bible study
t;:hu
rcfl
school
10
JO
a
m
Anna Puker and Ney Parker, Paul 1111d WIIUam C. Peck tilld
7 30 p m
Cott•g• Prayer
YOUI'I(I PIOPit I muting 6 30
Strvlce Tuuctay
10 a m
OIM t Of Mrt m.cJtwood
P rTI
tt.'•nlng worsh_lp , 7 :10
Worahlp service
Thuraday
P m Blblt lludv Wedntt day
130 p m
f
'

ntlnf.l Ml~dl port Pomeroy,O,Frlday,July26 191~

7- 1bellally

Ph 742 J9S~

••
••

do you do now?
An1wer Tomorrow

•A

1t

'

'

•

�1- Tllelllllll' Senllntl, ~-PIImero 0 f'rii!.IY, July :IS, 11174

•

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Jlolice
GROVER S

Studio

will

DON T MtSS the b ig open house
i!lt Rock Spr ings
fust l ' 1
miles north of Pomeroy on R 1
33 New homes , cho• c:e tots
Great Amencan Hom e s. ,
phone 992 5976 Also Sa l es by
George Hobst~IIE-r Broker
985 4186
7 26 2tc

be

closed
for
emplo,-et1i '
vacation July Ztthrouo., Aug
S Op~ Aug 6 tt~rough Aug
10 CIOS@d Aug ll through
Aug
17 for M~los County
Fair V Isit our booth In ll'!e

commercial bu!ldtng

1 26 181C

YARD Sale at 870 South Second

St

M•ddlepor1 From 9 to S
p m dal ly Lot.s or ntce ttems
7 23 6l c
12 FAMILY yard sale tor a
church qroup from 10 30 to 3
July 2(1 and 11 (dO Fourth
Street New Haven W Va
7 23 4t C
YARD Sale rest of week Come

see all day long and evenmg
At the res idence of Howard

Russell Wolf Pen Road lUSt
off Rt 143
7 23 41C

I WILL prosecute anyone found
guilty of burnmg the lnstde of
my
outstde
torlet
The

property belongs to the State
Ernu.t ( Rmk )

of Ohto
Davidson
Pomeroy

____

113 Ebenezer St

________

...__

7 24 1:2tp

YARD Sa le Today 1st road to
let1 on Rl 124 off Rt 7 Call
992 5282
7 24 lie
WE HAVE all your upholstery
needs
Burlap
den1m,
cambr1c foam glue z1ppers
tack 1ng stnp
spr~ngs
and
clips
ch •pboard , button
tw10e sewmg thread legs
upholstery books dacron
webbmg sprmg twine tac ks
welt cord
co1ton sw1vel
bases and foi!lm foam foam
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
Ma •n St
Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 7554
7 24 26tc
ME;;tG S County Humane Soc1ety
Tttr l ft Shop open tO a m tilt
4 30 p m every Fnday and
Saturday N ew used stock
arriving weekly Clo1h•nQ
collec tibl es
app li ances
trea sure s records p1ctures
books lamps toy s Located
across from Pomeroy Post
OffiCe
5 12 tfc
KOSCOT
t&lt;OSMETICS
&amp;
WIGS For a good line of
Cosmetics, f,-tendty service
and someone to chat w•th,
give me a -:ell Helen Jane
Brown 992 5113
:J 19 tfc
- -~-----------

A TO z Mart used furnIShed
appliances clothing d•shes
and m1sc Rt 33 opposite
trailer court. Hartford W

A TO Z MART used turn•ture ,
app l nmces and mise Rt 33
Hartford W Va
7 26 H e
BRACE yourstl'lf tor a thnll the
first ttme you use Blue Lustre
to cleen rugs Rent electr ic
shampooer S1 Baker Fur
nlfure Company
.._
7 26 Jtc

_____ _______ _

GIGA NTI C Flea Market1 70
yard sales All concentrated
at one p lace 1h mllttout Spr ing
Avenue off Rt 7 Main St •
Pomeroy Oh10 Free ad
m iSSIOn plenty of parking
restrooms and refreshments
1ns1de and outside Contact
Fredd te Thabet 773 5651 after
5 p m every Saturday and
Sunday E\leryone welcome
7 18 H e
SHOOTI NG
match
Corn
Hollow Gun Club turn first
right a fter Miles Cemetery ,
Rutland
F actory choked
guns only Su nday July 28 1
pm
7 25 3tc

Wanted To Buy
OLD furn ,f ure , oak tables
c locks •ce box es brass beds
dishes, desks or comp lete
households Write M
D
Miller Rt ~ . Pomeroy Ohto
call 9'12 7760
S I 3 ffc

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

CASH paid for all ma'kes &amp;nd
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 61.4 A23 953 I
A 13 tfc

-----------JUNK AUTOS complete and

delivered to our yard we
piCkup auto bod 1es and buy all
k1nds of scrap metals and
iron Riders Sa lvage State
Rt 12A Rt 4 Pom eroy Oh10
Phone 992 5468
6 26 26tp

Brown Pasteboard, Sheet
I ron, Refrigerators, Hot
Water Tanks, Auto boches,
Without motors, Scrap Iron,
Cast Iron, Copper, Brass,
Alummum.. Auto Batteries,
Auto Radiators Sell to

Va

The Rosenberg

4 10 tfc

-------------1 w 1LL do roofmg, heating
repa~r

plum bmg and elec
!neal work Phone Charles
Sinclair 985 4121
7 21 7tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
TO BIDDER$
Sealed proposals Will be
rece1ved by the Veterans
Memor.al Hosp1tal
Meigs
County Oh1o at the Veterans
Memorial Hospital , located m
Pomeroy Ohio on Monday
August 12 1974 until 12 00
Noon
Eastern
Daylight
Savings
Time ,
and
at
that time w 1l l be opened
PUblicly -and read
for the
furn•S!Hng of all labor and
mater1al necessary for the
construction of an Emergency
Treatment Addition Veterans
Memonat Hosp.tal Pomeroy
Ohio All WQrk shall be done
4ccordmg to the drawings and
spec lf•catlons as preP.ared by
Hayes Donaldson W11tenmyer
&amp; Partn ~ rs
Architects. 601
Eighth Street, Portsmouth,
Ohio
Separatfi!' proposals will be
received for General Work
Electr1C'al Work
Plut:nbmg
Work Heatmg Venhlating Elnd
A.r Cond•I•On i ng Work and
Metal Casework
Proposals shall be subm1tted
on Proposal Form conta.ned In
the spec.•f1cat•ons and Other
contract documents whtch
documents are on file at the
-Hosp l tfll and at the office of the
Architect and are available to
all prospective b1dders dunng
regular off1Ce hours unlll the
closing of b1ds
One complete set of b 1d
documents for the purpose of
blddmg may be obtained from
Haves Donaldson Wittenmyer
&amp; PartnerS Architects
601
Eigth Street Portsmouth Oh•O
Upon deposit of SSO 00 wh •ch
depos 1t Will be refunded upon
return of bid doc.uments In good
condition w•th•n a per iod of
fifteen ( 15 ) days after open•ng
of b1ds Contra ct documents will
be mailed collect upon wntten
request and depos•t subm1tted
All proposals must be ac
companied by a bid bond bound
In the spec lfteat1ons and
executed by a bond mg company
licensed by the State of Ohio
ayable to- th e order of the
wner In an amount not less
an f1ve (5 pet ) percent of the
amount of the b1ds The l)ond or
check shall be forfe1ted tf the
.bidder fells to enter into a
Contract wi th said Owner The
bonds or checks of the three
lowest bidders wtll be held unt il
the exfcut ion of the contract
and the furnlshm;s of the
requ~red performence bond
after Whtch they w i ll be
returned on demand
The
checks of other b•dders w ill be
r(!turned on demand after th e
bids are canvassed
A performan ce borfd and a
labor and material pavment
bond both of 100 percent of the
amount of the contract wtfh
satlsf.,ctory sureties, will be
required from the successful
bidders for the faithful per
formance of the WQrk for uch
Contract awarded
B ids shall be submitted to the
Owner only upon the pltns and
lf)eclflcatlons that ha ve been
Obtained from the office of the
Architect
The right Is reserved by the
Owner to reject any and all
bldl , and no b i dder may with
draw his bid tor a penod of
forty five (45 ) days
ntis prolect Is under the state
conditions of E E o at per
Government Ex.ecutlve Order
ol January 27 1972 flrovide
Cener•t Requirements ot af
flrm•tlve action program "'
per Plrt 4, Sub Part A , Sect ion
401 of Governmflnt E)lecuthre
Order
By Order Ot
The Meigs County
Hospital Comm iss ion
• and Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Inc
Pomeroy , Oh 10
(1) 19, 26 (8) 2, 9, -4tC

&amp;

The lndtan word canoe
Wll Introduced tnto the
lllllllllh lanaua1e by John
B:mltb, duer~blng the
lloUowed•out log u!!t!d by
lbe llldilllll ror water travel

Co.

Athens, Ohto We close each
Friday at noon fo,- balance of

week
CASH FOR
JUNK CARS
complete Frye s Truck and
Auto Parts Rutland Ohio ;24
HOUR WRECKER SER
V 1c E Phone 742 6094
7 26 26tc
S5 for l unk automobiles We w1H
p1ck up
Rivers ide Auto
Wreckmg Phone (304 ) 773
5890
1 5 tfc

_____ T________
For Rent

SMALL mobile home double
W1de 2 bedrooms furn ished
utlitt•es
pa 1d
Adults
preferred Phone 992 7017
7 2~ 31C

-2 BEDROOM
---- -- -----trailer ca rpet
and a.r condlt10nmg
992 3509

Phone

7 24 4tc
--- ~ -------- --

COUNTRY Mob1te Home Park
Rt 33 ten miles north of
Pomeroy
Large tots with
concrete pat,os Sidewalks
runners and
off street
park1ng
Also
spaces for
small tra1ters Phone 992 7479
1 21 tfc
~ URNI S HED

adults only '"
Phone 992 3874

~or

for s.ile

Notice

apartment
Middleport

Sewing Machines, In sew ing
table Makes buttonho l es.
sews on buttons . blind hems
etc Top notch cond ition Pay
551 or terms available Phon e
992 26.SJ
1 16 tf c

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

tllTPOINT
AIR OONDITIONERS

SHULER~"S MARKET

4,000

Pameroy

These s1zes also avatlable

For Fresh Fruit

5 000. 6,000 8 000, 10 000
12 000 BTU

and Vegetables

J 9.

TAPPAN Eye Level oven and
surface range harvest go ld
Gas
Brand New
co lo r
Deluxe Model Selling below
cos t
$125
Phon e Larry s
Mobile Homes 992 7717
1 24 6tc
NEW llv•ng room suttes 1n
Modern MedtfE- rranean
Ear l y Amencan and Span•sh
Styles Your chotce of col ors
In velvet or nylon W1th Scotch
gard
Star t .ng as low as
Sl49 95 Pomeroy Recovery
622 E Ma•n St
Pomeroy
Phone 992 7554
7 24 7tc
FOA M to fill your Old COUCh and
c hair c ush•ons as tow as
510 95 upholstery okks only
50c
4 mch covered foam
mattresses for standard S1ZC
bed
$29 95
Pomer ov
Recovery 622 E Mam St
Pomeroy Oh1o Phon e 992
755 4
7 24 261c

UPHOLSTERY fabri CS by the
yard , 54 In ches w tde, as low as
52 49 per yard Velvets as low
Imported velvets
as SS 25
S9 60 w e .)!so ha ve nylon
hercuton
cotton
prmts
vmyls and remnants by the
yllrd or by the p •ece Pomeroy
Recovery 622 E Ma•n St
Pomeroy Phon e 992 7554
7 24 261C

-------------SOLID
VINYL SIDING

Produced trQm a special
vinyl compound made by B~
F Goodrich and Monsanto 5
l•mes thicker than m etal
siding W1il not den t ch 1p ,
cra ck peel rot, rust or
chalk

FREE HOME ESTIMATES
SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS
Calf Collect 1 59:2-5544
Atllens, Oh1o

'

GREEN beans green _p ep pers
cucumbers
tom aloes
Cleland Farms Geraldine
Cleland Racme Oh10
~
7 17 tfc
1 72 ACRES lan d 1965 Fo rd
L TO 30 30 Wtn chester Phone
742 3656
7 26 ltp

5 12 tf c
-TRAILER
--------------------.
,. .,.-- - --Brown 's Trailer
SPINET CONSOLE PIANO
Court Pomeroy Phone 992

Syra cuse , U 000
5898

Jack W Carsey . Mgr

Pho"e 9921181

n
Phon e 992
7 23 5t c

BEDRO O M bath
k•I Ch(l:n
liv i ng
room
and
full
ba se m ent ta r ge lot Marlin
St Ma so n Phone 173 5.40~
7 23 6tp

J

10lh FT SYCA MORE Sl1de m
camper sel f con tamed A I
cond1f 10n 51 600 Phone 843
2064 aft er 8 p m
7 25 3tc

25 3tp

Pels For Sale

AKC Toy POOdle puppi eS
S1am ese K II tens l n sh Se tt er
pups Ken nels of Ca lh oun 1
256 ·6247
7 18 26tc

65

trailer 8x25 gas heat operates
on AC or DC. and a new moon
lh60, with ce n tra l a1r 3
bedrooms waSher dryer and
ut.llt y budding

NEW LISTING - Modern

BLACK and Wh1te S•benan
Husky
blue eyes
female
spayed 3 yrs Oct Wonderful
pet for children Reasonable
to fam 1ly to furn 1Sh good
home Mu st have 6 tt ' e11ced
1n vard
C
E
Wh1te
Murravsv1lle W Va 26153
1 23 6tp

Mobile Homes

NEW LISTING- I camping

For

COUNTRY HOME - Modern 2
bedroom hom e cook and bake
un 1ts Full basement w1th
garage

MONEY WORTHLESS THEN
BUY REAL ESTATE IT HAS
BEEN GOING UP FOR
YEARS
LOOK
WHAT
OTHERS HAVE DONE

Sale

12 MOBILE hom e 3
bedroom bat h. llv1ng room
hall and 2 bedroom s car
Qeted Phone 992 775 1
)I(

------------ 1971 3 BEDROOM W•ndsor
6 16 " '

For

Sale

t:XCELSIOR Salt Works 1 E
Me ln St Pomeroy All kinds
of salt water p&amp;llets water
nuggets , bloc:k s1Ut and own
Ohio R tve-r Salt Phone 992
3191
4 5 ttc

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

REAR end and axle tor 19S;i
Dodge 34 ton trucle R1chard
QuJIJs, Middlef'ort Oh1o
7 25 3tp

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

FORO tr•ctor W1tt't 6 ft Side
mounted mower Good tires
goOd condition Henry Bahr
Long Bottom , Oh io Phone
915 3981

7 25

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

Jtp

'so

IHS

B&amp;K EXCAVATING
BENNY BRANHAM

171

MANAGER
.
.

All Small Appliances

Chester, Ohto
985·4102

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

2 Or Sedan power steering auto. trans
w tires, radio Very low mileage

,., 3097
399 W Main
Pomeroy, 0
Louted at Modern Supply
small Engine Repa•r

HOME
DEOORATING
INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

• Lawn Bov
• Tecumseh
• Koh le r
• Wlscons•n
•All other
makes

AUTOMOBILE Insu ran ce been
ca n c elled'
Lost
your
operator s license Call 992
7f28
6 15-tfc

- ---- ------...-CREMEANS
CONCRETE
del•vered Monday through
sa turday
and
even1ngs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 tfc

-SEW
-------------ING MACHINE: ,:, Repau·
service all makes 992 2284
The Fabr•c Shop Pomeroy
A uthonzed Singer Sales and
Serv ic e We Sharpen Sctssors
3 29 tfc
DOZER work, land ctean11g by
the a cre hourly or contract
farm ponds ~ road s etc Large
dozer and operator w ith over
2~ 1 y ears expenence Pullins
Excavating Pomeroy , Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tfc

ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

PHONE 992-5476
SE PTIC
TA NK S cleaned
reasonable rates
Ph
446
4782, Ga ii i POits 'John Russett ,
owner and operator
512 tfc 1

WIU'S CARPET
&amp; INTERIORS

Street

Modern san, t atlo n , 992 3954 or
992 7349
10 23 tfc

6
Phone

THREE homes in Rutland 2
new Phone 742 6254
7 21 6tc

7 26 l tp
------------1972 CHEVROLET
ton leaf

--~~~-o!!"'-•13 BEDROOM house wall to wall
PO&gt;M.E
carpetmg , large kitchen and
bath uttllty room lf&lt;~ acre,
atum1num siding
storm
RUTLAND AREA -60

Hours 9 6 Weekdays
9 9 Weekends

IN

Appliance service m•n wdh
knowledGe of refrtgeratlon .
V•c•tlon &amp; tr1vel , . , ...

Galtla Retrogerotlon Co
Phon• 446 4066

Pomeroy firm needs PART TIME
TYPIST for at- least 60 days commencing immediately. Will provide
free parking and guarantee 16 hours
per week with a mutually agreed upon
schedule. Rate per hour commensurate with · experience otnd
ability. Must be able to type neatly
using IBM electric. Reply to Box 729Q,
DAILY SENTINEL.

73 Olds 98 HT Cpe.,

1971 FORD VB CUSTOM .......... .S1695

73 Olds Cutlass S. Cpe., v-:roof, au, stereo .. '3895

4 Dr Sedan 351 V B, 4 dr power steering power brakes
auto trans , new Ford trade fr om or iginal owner

73 Dodge Pol. 4 Dr.

One local

1969 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX ....... 11695
2 Dr hardtop, fastest sell ing Pont1a c sport car Th•s one 1s

"
'

WILL tr1m or c ut trees and
shrubbery Also c lea n out
basements att •cs etc Phone
949 3221 or 742 44 41
7 14 26tc

EST ...TE

or 992 2568

Price Includes 1nsta11a11on
and free padding Talk to
Wendell
Grafe,
carpet
consultant ,.
- We have hundreds ot
carpet values Your lob can
be completed In l to 2 weelts
No long waiting period

SPECIALI
1 Roll C•ndy Strtpe With
rubber back 3 99 sq yd
Nu~e tor bedrooms, dens,
kitchens, etc

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

92.1
WMPO.fM

Rutlond, 0

.,1Maytog

C•R.• f lry

Autom1tles
2 speed oreretlon I
C:t'tolce o
water
'•mps Auto water !
level control Ltn ll
Filter or Power Fin •
Agitator
Perm• Prus
M1yt111

n

New offtcers for 1974-75 year
were elected when the
Pomeroy Women's Clmstian
Temperance

Umon

met

Wednesday at Ute home of MISs
Lucreha Genhetmer for a
covered dtsh dinner
Elected were Mrs Allen
Hampton, president, Mrs T

"'.

Halo at H. . t

Dryers
Surround
ctothll
with gtntle, 1ven
h .. l No hot spots ,
no ovtrdrylng Fine
Melt\ Lint Fitter
We SpeCI•III• In

MAYTAG

lttd Carpet
Servlu

RUTlAND FURNITURE
742-4211
Arnold Grere
-Rutl•nd
----~--~--~---r--------~J

"'

'• '

Save money on such items as: ·
Fngidaire 17 cu. ft. Refrigerator, frost free,
Tappan double oven elec. range, w1th con·
tlnuous clean oven; 3 pc. pine bedroom su1te
with Sealy Posturepedic maHress &amp; box
sprmg; Sylvania color TV, maple; Magnavox
stereo, maple; 3 pc. Early Am. living room
suite; 3 solid maple tables.

•

"' "'

.'."'-

ALL ITEMS ARE LIKE NEW
SAVE UPtOS2000N EVERY PIECE

VINYL REWNERS

ONLY 6
No Delivery
At This Price

Several Gas &amp; Electric R•nges
30.00 up
1o- Refrigerators. best nleclion now 25.00 up
New 4 &amp; 5 Dr•wer Mllple Chests
29.95 and 39.95
New Vinyl Recliners
49.95
)-Wrlnpr Washers, -then now 49.95 up

v-roof, air ......... 13495

72 Chev. Imp Cpe., v.g auto., P.S... ...... 12495
72 Ford Cus. 500 4 dr. Sed., pow. alt •••• '1495
72 Pontiac Cat. HT Cpe., DOWer, a1r ........ '2895

.

Pontiac Cat. 4 Door, v.roof

70 Chevelle

HT

12195

&amp; air ........ 11795

Cpe, V8, auto, P.S......... 11795

Ftrebl rd V 8, auto , P S , P B , low mileage For

Marquis
mileage

Only

4 Dr H T , vinyl top , atr cond , low

Only

Imp 2 dr H T V 8 std
but pr iced to se ll

P S This car Is rough

Vista Cruiser Wag , V 8 auto , P S
real mce wagon

2 dr H

T , VB. auto

P B , atr A

P

S,

PB

extra n1ce Yours For

Wagon V 8, auto, P S

P B Nice family car

'

'1495
'1095

BUY ANY CAR, NEW OR USED.
' We BuiH Our

70 Chrysler Newport 4 Dr., pow. &amp; alr..... '1995

Business on SeiVice

70 Olds 98 Hoi. Sed., power, a1r .......... '1895

and now Se1V1ce IS

70 Ford Gal. 500 2 Dr., V8, 3 speed ...... 11295

Building Our Business

69 Olds Cut. S Cpe, V:roof, auto, P.S ....... !1495

..

"

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO fi AUL FREOER IC K OR
NER JR wllose la st known
address was Walnut Bottom
Road
Carl 1sle Pennsylvan a
17013
You are hereby not•f• ed that
YI?U have been named defendant
In a lega l action ent1tled Ellen
Garnet Orner vs oaul Fredenck
Orner Jr Th1s act 1on h as been
assigned Case No IS 174 in the
Cou~t of Common Pleas Me igs
County Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Th e prayer of the complain t 1s
for ttivor c e r es torat ion of
ma •den name award o f per
sonal property
and othe r
proper relief You are rqu.red 10
answer' the compla int w 1thln 28
days after th e las! publl cat •on of
th is not ice wh ic h will be
published once each week for
siX consecutive weeks The la st
publ ication w i l l be mad e on Ju l'(
26 and the 28 days lor answer
will commence on th e date
Larry Spen cer Clerk
Cou rt of Common Pleas
of M e1gs County
Pomeroy Oh to 45769

-'
'

'•

••

'

69 Chev. Mal. 4 Dr., V-8 auto., P.S ........'1195

day anmversary of M1ss

161 21 28 {7) 5 12 19 26 6tC

69 Ponllac Bonn., 2 Dr. H.T., v·roof, air..... '895

she was presented wtth a
corsage by Mrs Norman

68 Chev. Mal. Wagon, V-8 auto., P.S ....... !ll95

Baxter Grace was by Rev
Hicks Mrs Htcks was at the
ptano for group smgmg of the
hymn, " Standmg on the

67 Olds Cutlass 4 Door, V-8, auto••••••••••••'695

Promises " There was a stlent
memonal prayer for Mrs

66 Pontiac Cat.

there wtth emphasis on liquor
m relatton to edu-cation, m-

dustry and spmtuahty
Devotwns by Mrs Warner
were on the topiC WOmen,
Guardtan of Commumty
01

Standards," wtth scrtpture
from II Cor 9 6-8 Guests were

Mrs David Grueser and Mrs
E M Rottgen Rev Htcks had
Ute closing prayer
RIVER DOWNS

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Ftve
Grandsons covered the mtle
and 70 yards of Ute $3,200
etghUt race pllowance at River
Downs here Thursday m I 43,
returning $II 60, $2 80 and $2 60
Eager Wish was back by
one-half lengUt, followed by
Mtlton Bey
Lee S Mtss and Matt Allen
combined for a l!f.ll daily
double comblnallon worUt $114
Attendance was 3,591 and Ute
day's handle was $318.877

Pomeroy
OF
tuAun Motor Co.
2 SIGNS

.Jf]l DODGE DART

'

S"'S

Swinger HT cpe, med green finish with blk vinyl ,-ogf,
green vinyl Interior tr i m V 8 engine, automatic trans ,
sport St wh~l , full wh cover Like new w w tiJ;;ts, radio,
teal nice

lt70NOVACPE

Jl49l

Local 1 owner , good tires 6 cy i with ,flutomatic tr'ans ,
· radio, blue flnlth , spotless c:lean blue Interior

OPEN EVES. 8;00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

l ·. ..:__ _ _ _ __

68 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, power, air....... '1495

4 Dr.,

VB, auto, P.S......... '595

65 Olds 98 H.T. Sedan .....................

1195

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"Yo u' ll Ltke Our Qual tty Way
of Domg Bus t:1ess "
992- ~.42

GMC FINANCING
POMEROY.'
Open Evenmgs Unttl6. 0~ Ttl 5 p.m. S~t

OPEN EVENINGS
Till 7 PM

WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

SAT. Till

5 PM

SERVICE Till

500 E MAm St., Pomeroy, Ohto

Veterans will get first jobs
"Apply for a JOb tmmedtately at your local slate
employment service offtce," L
M MeiTitt, dtrector of Ute
Cleveland Veterans Ad·
m1mstratwn Regional Offtce,
advtses all veterans recently
separated from mth lary
service
Memtt noted Ute Department of Labor has primary
responstbthly for jobs, and
gives prlortly to veterans
...........................

-

State employment servtce
ofhces refer veterans to
avatlable JO~s , or allow Utem to
apply for unemployment
compensatiOn, he satd

J

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohto
Metgs
Countv, Court of common
Pleas Probate Dlv1sion
To th e Admtn•stratn~~: W W ~
of t he estate to such of the
fol lowing as are r es 1dents of the
State Of OhiO VIZ - the SU r
v 1vmg spouse the ne)l(t Of 1t..1n
th e beneftc !a r .es under the will
and to th e attorney or attorneys
any
of
the
r epresen ttn g
atorement•oned persons
Lll l an J Tnpl ett Deceased
M1ddleport Oh 10 Sal •s bury
Town sh1p No 21219
You are hereby n01 1f1ed t hat
the
In ventory
and
Ap
pra.sem ent o f th e est ate of th e
aforementtoned deceased l ate
of sa1d County was fded m th1S
Cou rt
Satd Inv entory and
Appra1sement will be for
heanng before lh1 S Court on th e
9th da y of August 1974 a t 10 00
o clock A M
Anv person des•nng to f tle
except•on s thereto mu st f ile
th em al l eas t f 1ve dav s pr•or to
th e dat e set for hear m g
G1ven under my hand and
sea l ot s~•d Co urt th iS 24th da y
of Ju l y 1974
Mannmg D Webst er
Judge
By Ann B Watson
Deput y Clerk
(7 ) 26 {8 ) 2 2t c

..

12

NOON ON SAT.

Jozte of Galbpobs, were guests
Sunday of Mr and Mrs Roy
Riffle an&lt;l celebrated Philip's
By Mrs Francis Morris
WlUt Ute Lord's Prayer m 16Ut birthday OUter guests
The Booster Class of Ute untson and potluck refresh· were Mrs Walter Wells of
Washington Court House and
Ftrsl Baptist Church School ments were served
met In the basement soctal
Mr
Melvm Rtffle of Mr Harry Curtis, local
Mr and Mrs Frank Cleland
rooms Frtday evemng, July 19 Columbus ts home wtUt hts
The hymn "He HideUt My parents, Mr and Mrs Roy held a family gel-togeUter at
Soul" opened the devotiOnal Rtffle, convalescmg after thetr home Sunday Those
present vere Mr and Mrs
program by Mrs Grella surgery at Grant Hospital
Stmpson and scrtpture, Matt
Mr and Mrs Warren L John Leary and family of PI
Pleasant, W Va , Mrs' Evelyn
4 12·30 and a meditation, Wilson, sons, Marty and Andy,
Young
and sons or Gallipolis,
"What They Lacked" A lovmg and daughter , Nancy of
!rtbute to Mrs EUtel SmtUt and Durham, North Carohna, are Mrs Ivan Powell and
Mrs Marte Roush, compiled vtsttmg thetr son and brother, daughters and Mr and Mrs
by Mrs Vazte Lee, was read by Rev Steve Wtlson for Utree Steve Cleland and sons,
Racrne
Isabel Sunpson R~admgs by days
Mr and Mrs Edmond Henry
members mcluded "Be A
Mr and Mrs Allen Orr of
and
Mrs Harry Hayman of
Fnend' , "Friends", " Praise Columbus vtstted Mr and Mrs
Jackson were Sunday visitors
In s t ead of Cn hctsm ", " A Chnste Powell
of
Miss EdlUt Hayman
Cross In My Pocket",
Mrs Audrey Schroeder,
"Remember, You Belong to Steve and Mae Fern, of
Chnst", "Lesson from the Columbus, spent Saturday wtUt
River" The group sang "In the Mr and Mrs Francis Moms
Cross of Christ" followed by a and called on Mrs Crill
busmess sessiOn with Mrs Bradford In Ute afternoon
Edna Ptckens, president,
Mr and Mrs Wtlbam
prestdmg The meeting closed McKenZie, Phthp, Jeff and

Hollywood ' s pop ar1 arch1tec
ture began tn 1926 when
Herbert Somborn bu 1lt the
Brown Derby restaurant m the
shape of a hat
~

Gallia County
Jr. Fair
We Will be showmg at
he fatr . Stop tn. see
ur dtsplay.

FIRE &amp; SAFETY EQUIPMENT
Busmess Phone- 992-2804
E. M. Blake, Jr.
J . T. Blake
Phone 992-5404
Phone 992-7117
308 S. Third Avenue, Box 267

COMPLETE SERVICE
DEPARTMENT
and Full Time Qualified Service Man
COMPLETE INSPECTION SERVICE
Complete Lme of Parts for All Makes of Ex·
tlngulshers
Rechargtng . Hydrostatk Testmg · Safety
Lights Strens Hose • Commerctal Alarm
Sy,tems - Spnnkler Systems · New F1re
Trucks . ladders · Home Alarm Systems ·
New Exllngutshers.
We have a complete line of Tags, Signs and
Arrows to meet OSHA Requirements
Open 9 A.M. · 5 P.M., Mondaythru Fr1dav

Frank Gheen,
Sales Mgr. •
PHONE 992-7777

POMEROY

HOURS:

SUNDAYS
1 PM-6 PM

'.

'

'

''

5 Mtles West of Zanesvtlle, Oh1o on Old Rt. 40

"THE STONEHINGE"

SUNDAY, JULY 28 AT 9:59 A.M. SHARP
Take 1·70 east from Columbus-exit (No. 55)
onto Rt. 668 and turn on Rt. 40 east to the 5 mtle
highway marker on US 40. Or traveling We$1
out of Zanesville towards Columbus on 1-70
(ext! 55) onto US 40 passed Old Headley Inn
11/2 mtle to the 5 mtle highway marker. (5
miles west of Zanesville, Oh1o on Old Rt. 40h
Having sold our estate will sell complete contents con
slsting of 20 pes fine oak furniture , cherry collection ,
walnut collection , 2 organs , 3 Grandfather clocks , large
collec::tlon of leaded glass lamps , Tiffany lamps, Aladdin
lamps , old &amp; new guns Weller, Crooksville, &amp; Roseville
pottery
4 beautiful statues , large lnsortment of
glassware &amp; china many, many collectables, and a
1
complete line of modern furniture
Be on tlme1t 9.59 a .m Sunday, July 28 as this Is a vety
l•rge nle being sold out of the old Stonehinge Home.
Plenty of sh1d1 so brlna your lawn chair and pl1n to stay

lofe Wolf bt setting antiques &amp; good Items 11 beginning ot
sale

DAILY
9 AM-8 PM

f

•

ANTIQUE FURNITURE, GLASSWARE, ETC.

LARRY'S
MOBILE
HOMES

-•

J
I

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

R. E. TRACY

''

Racine Social Events

OPENS JULY 30

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

19nVE~A
Local 1 owner trade ln. ll speed frliM , G T equipment
radio, good tires , cleart Inside. red finish , blk vinyl lnt,
n,w mileage

J'·
J

69 Ford LTD Wagon, V-8 auto., P.S ..........~95

Genheuner was observed and

T Shelton, vice prestdent
Mrs
Robert
Warner ,
Vona McKmght A card of
secretary, and Mrs Joseph sympathy was sent to her
Cook, treasurer The new of- family, and 11 was dectded that
ftcers were mstalled by Rev Ute WCTU WIU ~lace a book m
Carl Hicks, a guest at Ute her memory at' the Pomeroy
meeting Welcomed mto lhe Public Ubrary
membership was Mrs Anna
Mrs Roberl Warner read an
Cornell
article from a 1941 newspaper
At the dmner the 93rd btrlh· by Laura Trachsel, regardmg
the first temperance group m
IN THE
Amertca, established by Ute
COMMON PLEAS COURT
Indians
of New York 108 years
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ELLEN GARNET ORNER
ago She satd Uta! they have an
PLAINTIFF
annual temperance conventton
VS
NO 15,174

NEW WET LOOK

power, a1r..... 14695

'2895
'1695
'1095
'795
'1595

YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELF TO CHECK WITH CEWARD CALVERT OR BILL NELSON BEFORE YOU

DEFENDANT

Special of the Week!

ONLY

Pont. Tempest, HT Cpe., V-8, auto., P.S 12095

JR

12-1 &amp; 2 Pc. Uving Room Su1tes
20.00 up
IS--Chests and Dressers
15.00 up
2S--Twin and Full Size Beds, complete 39.95 up
2- Poster Beds, you muslseethese 39.95 up

A real gas saver

71
71

WCTV elects officers

"•

CARPETING
501 NYLON
Yd

standard

1969 FORD

PAUL FREDERICK ORNDER ,

•7.95 Sq

Maverick 4 cyl

69 Ford LTD HT. Cpe., V roof, air ...........11195

snREo

Just Received
Houseful
Fumiture In A-1 Condition

Yellow with tape cteck &amp; air cond Good buy

Volkswagen 411 4 Door, auto........... 12195

Phones. 992 2196
After hours 992 2412
Wrecker servtce 992-7587 or 992 7135

windows
storage build ing
Phone
742 4601
Owner
moving to Flor~da
Wtll
sacr ifice for quick sale
7 21 6tc

R•GULAR $9 95

v.w.

'2595
'21-95
'1595

71

YOU LOOK, THE BETTER
WE LOOK

GREAT
COUNTRY

Duster brown wiih vinyl top &amp; factory a ir N1ce

1970 MERCURY MARAUDER ..... 11495

~CLOSER
••

1972 PLYMOUTH car
1971
1970 FORD
1970 CAD.
1969 PONTIAC
1969 MERCURY
1969 CHEV.
1969 OLDS
Chevell M.\ltbu
1969 CHEV.

Dodge Dart Swinger, Slant 6, auto......

Open unttl6 00 PM Weekdays except Ttlurs &amp; Sat 5 PM Closed
Sundays

.

'

71

See Fred Blaettnar or Dan Thompson

READY MIX
CONCRETE
Ca 11992 2136 For
del ive r e d r1ght 1o your
Estimates
of Any Type
protect Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 3284
Goegle •n Ready Mix Co , JOBS contracted Phone 7.42
3074 or wnte Box 23 Langs
M •ddleport Ohio
vdle Oh ro
6 30 tfc
1 23 261c
.' .
C BRADFORD Auc tioneer
Com otete Serv1ce
Phone 9A9 ~ 821 or 949 3161
~aclne Oh •o
Crill Bradford
5 1 tfc

HT.,

SOME GREAT USED CAR BUYS
1973 V •W • BUG One owner light blue In color Sharp'
'2395

beau!y

2 Dr hardtop, an exceptionally sharp ca r of one of Mer
cury's finest One local owner

Is your
leaking?
Compare our pr ices to any
others
We'll gi ve you a
profess•onel roof for tess

v-roof,

WE HAVE A FEW 6 CYL. BUICK APOLLOS AND PONTIAC VENTURAS
AND 4 CYL. OPELS. WE ARE GIVING BIG SAVINGS ON THESE 6 CYL.
'
and 4 CYL. OPELS FOR THE MONTHS OF JULY
AND AUGUST.

4 Dr H T Sed Deville ThiS car has everything
A real buy

2 Or hardtop Special Ed ition 318 V 8 eng i ne power
steering euto trans , power brakes, one local owner

Sta Wagon, air condition , fully equtpped
owner

K&amp;H ROOFING

matching lnt , full

Sold New, SS300.25 NOW •4400

1970 FORD VB TORINO ............ 11295

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

__

Help Wanted

Ci tation bronze sadd le vinyl roof
power, air, 5,500 miles

1971 DODGE CHARGER ............ 11995

Real Estate For Scile

-1967
-----------DODGE
Coro n et,

___________

~wer steering

4 Or Sedan Very sharp car power steering auto trans

in

full

Was SS294.55
NOW •4400
74 Olds Delta 88 Royale HT Cpe.

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO ........ 2995

SEfiTIC TANKS
AROBIC
SE WAGE
SYSTE MS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
SA NITATION ,
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035
10 4 tfc

-------------SE f'TIC
TANKS
c leaned

$AVE
power air DRIVER'S ED CAR

1

Armstrong l1noleum
Wall Paper
VInYl Wall Fabr1c
Spec1alt On Carpet Remnants Free Eshmates
located on lrd
Ractne , Ohto

Clove brown saddle vinyl top Crulsl!-Control FM stereo,
steel rad ial tires power door locks

Citation bronze. saddle vinyl roof, sadd le vinyl In!

1972 FORD GRAN TORINO ........s2395
4 Or Sedan beautiful li ght blue tlnlsh
automatic trans , shows tender care

Wllkmson Small EnGme

74 Olds 9B LS. Sedan Demo

74 Olds Delta 88 Hardtop Sedan

steel belted w s

ON NEW &amp; USED CARS

.

BIG SALE

1974 MUSTANG 11.. .................13295

Building &amp;
Home
Addtttons, Aluminum
&amp; Vmyl Siding, Floor
Sandtng &amp; Finishing.

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

1961 BUICK Spe c 1al
1955
ChE"Vrote f Phone 742 4846
7 26 61p

lf2

YOU DOLLAR WILL NEVER BUY MORE CAR!
Featunng a great end of the season savtngs on
a wide seleclton of '74s
Featurmg great savmgs on fully recondtltoned
used cars backed by well equipped shop and
parts department. We can gtve you the name
and aildress and often phone number of
previous owner on every car.

(

PH. 992·2174

BIG SAVINGS

USED CARS

-

BISSEll BROTHERS
• OONST. 00.

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

•

The Great Clearance Sale.

BOWERS
REPAIR

•

500 E. MAIN

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

'

Lawn Mowers

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

•

f!M:U7

.

h

SUMMER ~
OF'74
~
:• SAVINGS :••

--

sm

sprmg s 8ft bed custom cab
and body chrome 2 tone
patnt b1g 6 293 3 speed power
d 1sc brakers new topper all
paneled both like new M us.t
se ll $2 450 Call 667 3364 or
Belp re 423 8584
1 26 Jt c

~
~
•

I...;

Peorl Sl,

11174•--::::::::::::::--~.,

•

•

Middloporl, Oltlo

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

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

_________ ____

·=
-....
....

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

-·li:
-;;

Mobtle Hom e on 1 acre of
For
more
•n
g r ound
TOTAL electric 3 bedroo m EXCAVATING dnzer loilder
tormat•on ca ll 99 2 7638
home
Hardwood
floors
7 23 6tc
and backhoe work
septic
breezeway an d garage to t
'anks
Installed
dump
trucks
100&gt;&lt;420
18 0 Arball St
1964 ELCONA 5Sx l 0 With t 1po ut
and to boys for h i re will haul O ' DELL Allnement located
Tuppers Plains
Wtll take
kitchen and living room
beh tnd R uti and Grade School
rtl l dirt top soil, limestone
S5 000 down and take over
52 800 Phone (304J 173 5428
complete front and tuneup
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
payments Phone 667 6386
7 23 61 c
and brake service Phone 742
Jeffers dlly phone 992 7089
7 24 4tc
3232 Open 8 to 8 da1ly Sun
niQht phone 992 3525 or 992
days by appt only
1912GRANVILLE 12x65 2 BR
apt
a nd
7 14 tfc
2 n ttc
front den total elec tr. c STOR E butld•ng
garage 75 tt frontage, large
fu r n •shed 2 porches 8 x 20ft
park tng area Pnce SIS 000 O'DELL Al•n em ent located
awning and underp •nnmg
E Mam St Pomeroy Ohio
Call 367 7823 or 367 7437 after 5
beh lnd Rut land Grade School
Wnte P 0 Bo)l( 2.43 Sy racuse
pm
co mplete front end serv i ce,
OhiO
brakes and tuneugs wheels
7 25 At e
7
18
tfc
balanced electronically Open
--------~----8 to B da1iy Call 742 3232 on
Sunday for appt
7 16 tfc
Auto Sales

cylmder automattc
Racme 949 475 1

1 - 'l1le Dally Sentlntl,,Ml4dleport-l"&lt;&gt;merqy, 0., Friday, July 26.

'

,-,.,.-=--=-- ---------.

LA DY of good character to
make home w ith and care for
3 year Old g lrl Phon e 992 :1297
_,_
7 26 3tc

742-5293

FU'f&lt; ~ t·f"E ~ esttmates on
alum i num
replacement
wmdows siding storm doors
and windows Railing Phone
Charles L1sle Syracuse Ohio
carl
Jacob,
Sates
Representattve,
V
V
Johnson and Son Inc
4 30 tfc

------'--y------ --

4 ROOMS and bath home for
rent In Rutland Phone 99 2
5858
7 1A tfc

3

bedroom home
all large
c losets master has two L1vmg
roqm 18x30 Nat gas, FA
furnace
Garage with n 1ce
shop

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

BAbYSITTER for 3 SCh001 SIZe
chil dren , 4 days &amp; week Call
992 36.4S
7 2'6 lfc

Now Open for Bus iness

NEW liSTING- 2 level lots m
Syra cuse, 1 block off 124

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

Help Wanted

Free Estimates

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

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

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

Moved to Rutland. 3!.. m1le
Inside city limit on right
corner B1rck St and Rt 12.4

\

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

PRIVATE entran ce-. bedroom
bath and kitchen apt Phone
992 5508 Gentlemen Please
1·26 :uc

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY

1950 FERGUSO N 20
new
eng ine Phon e 98 5 3594 In
good cond1t10n and pnced at
$1 000
7 23 5tc
..:oROCERY bus•ness for sate
Bu i lding for sale or lease
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m , for appomtment
'3 20 He

- Tune Up

.•

I '· ,.
Will do Dour &amp;
Baclch.o. Work, lntt811 •
Septic Tank,, Heul
DIrt.
Gr•vel.
Limestone or Rlftt 0... I ~
of
Our
Trucks.
Backhoe or Dozer~ •

E MAIN STREET
POMEROY
- Wash&amp;Wu
JIIU
- lube , Oil, Filler

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jet ters
Day 992-708 9
Ntght 992.352 5
or 992-5232

Creek
high

acres
about
20
for
Wanted Re spon s1 ble partv to
3324
pur
c
hase
sp
1
net
p
1an
o
on
tow
cultlvat10n
or
!lovely
bu
tldmg
7 18 tfc
monthly payments Can be
sites 1112 story frame home
seen lo ca lly Wr 1te Sale s
3
bedrooms bath utlltfy
Mani!tger
P 0
Box 276
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
so
me
ca rpeting paneling
Shelbyville lnd•ana 46176
unfurnished
apartment s
7 26 2tp 1969 VW $700 Phone 9'12 5891
Phone 992 543.4
and f1le Garage Barn and
A 12 tfc
other bulldtng 8 168 sq ft 2
7 26 3tc
1969 GMC A stra 318 Detro it 13
water wells 2 gas wells,
speed Phone 992 7586
PRIVATE meeting room for
pond
ASKING
JU ST
7 26 6t!: 1971 TRIUMPH Bonnev1lle 650
any organlzat1on phone 99-2
T1aer qold m good cond lt •on
3975
$43,000 00
5875 Phone 992 3700
3 11 tfc CAN NING tomatoes bnnq yo ur
POMEROY - Ranch type
own conta .ner s Arnold Hupp
7 24 13tp
(modern ) 2 BR bath , n1ce
Letart
Falls
Ca
ll
'ld7
2623
BUSINESS r oom 22 )I( 80 234 E
7 26 3t c 1972 MG MIDGET Convert ible
kitchen lots of cab1nets
Moln 51
Pom eroy
OhtO
good co ndlt1on and tow
range &amp; oven large L R with
Phone 992 5786 or 992 3975
m•leage Call 949 3955
HAY and straw for sate 70c per
6 12 tf c
fi
r ep la ce, carpeted
full
7 24 6tc
bale Con ta ct W A R1 ce Rt 1
bas eme nt
with
ut11ity
R ee d sv ill e near Tupp ers
TWO 5 room and bath apts In
Pla i ns phone 66 7 32 67
1969 CHEVY Townsman stat1on
garage $15,000
Middleport For Information
7 26 3t c
wagon S1 195 g.ood condt t•on
BRADBURY Jlh story
c all 992· 2550 or 742 6551
Phone 992 7620
7 3 tfc
frame
4
BR
bath
d
i n ing R
IRI SH Cobbler potatoes Just
5 24 tfc
off St Rt 124 on Co Rd 35 --~-- -- --- ~ -lots of carpe t ing, new FA ga s
Racme Portland Road Date 1966 FORD J ., ton pt ckup
MOBILE HOME Jn Middleport
rnac e1 double lot with
R Profit tt
Adutts only Phone 992 5592
automat1c
transmiSSIOn
tra
ile r
hookup
small
7 26 2tc
6 '15 tfc
Good t1res Camper Special
basement
with
ut1t1ty
Phone Harold Brewer Long
Sl2,900
Bottom 985 3554
1
4 ROOM furniShed apt Phone Employment Wanted
POMEROY Bu s1 nes s
7 23 tfc
992 5908
room with tots of parking
7 23 6tc WILL do babysitting In my
and apartment over for
home day or weekly Phone
Real
Estate
For
Sale
mcome, has garage Th1s Is
992
7.:168
NICE 3 rooms and bath aft
3
BEDROOM
home
comp
let
ely
7
26
3tc
an excellent buy Aski ng tust
e le ( tr ic
apartment
In
remodeled 1ns1de antj out
Pomeroy Table top ran9e
$16 500 00
Newly bu •ll f •r e ptace for ced
watt oven real n1ce apart
W I LL do babystft lng for
TIME NOW TO BUY AND
ai r heat large fenced In yard
ment
Call
446 76 99
or
work i ng mothers 1n my home
GET
SETTLED BEFORE
For further •n forl'hatlon or
e ven 1ngs
at
446 95 39
Phone
992
6865
or
992
5669
showing
call
949
2571
SCHOOL
STARTS CALL
Ga llipoli s
' 23 6t c
__, 7 26 Jtc
7 26 6tc
TODAY FOR YOUR NEEDS

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

•lolled

--------------on 91

SON
Serv iC e
Station
L I VING room s u.te
wh tte CAR
Garage
50~~:60
bulldmg
velvet cou ch. W1th gold ve lvet
Cement dr.veway Phone 742
matchmo chatrs 2 lamps and
5052
center pieces •ncluded . Call
7 16 tfc
99 2 3581 or c an be seen at 975
Maple St Midd leport Best
LOTS for sale trailer or house
offer buys 1f
All ut•l•l•es Phone 742 36 15
7 23 5tc
Rutland Oh10
7 16 tfc
1953 FERGUSON 30 new t.res
new pamt new motor $1 SOO
PhOne 985 3.594
1
1 23 5tc

WILSON'S
PENNZOIL

DITQIING SERV LCE

-

'

H OU SE In Pomeroy , 5 rooms 2
bedrooms
Jlh bath , utility
room
bu il t m
kitchen
cab i nets
panel•ng , c om
pletely
carpeted
Full
basement
Good lo c at10n
Pr teed reasonable seE-n by
appo intment only Phone 992
5769
7 25 ltp

RECREATIONAL
equ1pment 5 ROOM hou se with bath
ac re tarm on Lead i ng
everything for a good pay~ng
Road 3 m lies off new
bus•ness priced reasonably
way Phone 742 6~78
Part l•me work
full time
7
earn ings Phone 949 2803
7 24 4tc

Our a1m is to Please
Our Customers.

1969 TRIUMPH 500 m otorcycle
Chopped excellent cond1t1on
can 992 7439
7 24 Jtc

and

POMEROY LANDMARK

..:.

-------------O LD hovse- w 1th 2 n ice lots

BTU

·'109.95

SEE US•.•

TAPES
Rock
Gospel
and
Country &amp; western S2 15 each
or 2 for S5 Open daily except
Sunday 9 a m
to S p m
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
Mam St
Pomerpy flhone
992 7554
1 24 3tc

-----

Wate r Ltnu ilnd Paw•r'
l1n.i AU work done by !ho
foot or contract AI so dour
work and septic t• nks In-

. !r-.

.•

-.

•s

.SINGER
--!----------Automal tC: l1g zag

STEREO rad•o am tm B tri!l c k
tape combtnallon 4 speaker
sound
system
Balan c e
SJ05 39 or easy terms Call
992 3965
1 24 tfc

Busmess Services .

....__
PAIN I I.)AMA G E \ 9H ZIQ: hg
SEWING MACMINE: S STILL
In ono inal co&amp;rtO('Is No at 5 ROOM house on I ,a cr e of land
tachm!'nts nee(ted
our
Phon e 992 1145
controls are bLJtlt In sews
1 22 61c
w ith 1 or 2 needles makes
-----~--.1--~
buttonholes nw on buttons S ROOM house and bath wit h
mon04;1rams and blind hem
!i hower , 2 Iaroe l ots and new
stitch Full ( Uh pr i ce SJI so
ut ili ty bu lldmg In Racu'le
or buQget pi,a,n available
Oh 10 Call 949 S21S
PhOne 992 2'653
7 16 11tc
7 16 tfc

WE ARE picking up a p lano In
your area and would li ke
some respons ible party 1o
take over pavments
C1t1
Credit Manager , t 6U ) 112
.5669 or write 260 East Ma in
Street Ch l lhcothe Oh io 45601
4 7 ttc

W Main

•

____

Sale

.

•

P6enty coHN, douGhnuts, and lunch on prtmisn

Parking of fool of hill only Sole hold roln or shine
Nothing shown before day of s11e Positive ID Termscub d•r of sale Not responsible tor acctdents S.e
ParkersburG Sentinel Sunday, July 21 for complete
ltstmg

Owners- Mr. and Mrs. Clinton R. Cohen,
Phone 614-451·5106
,
Auctioneers- Bill Janes &amp; Associates, Phone
614·557-3411

'

'"''"''I

Walnut t rad1tt ona ll y
with lig ht
a small
••••utv - S99 7 '8 9 pc dining
cra fted In wood
plastics) pwcan
, maple from

cupboard
II ~?~~;:• top
door

•

NEW FURNITURE Includes
2 pc living rooms In nylon ,
her cu lon velvet vinyl l!lnd
Sco t chg ard co tton s from
S199 map le J pc table set
$34 95 3 pc maple rtnlsh
bedroom $132 50 4 drawer
maple chests S30 1 patch &amp;
f l ora l swivel rockers
$69 95 v inyl rectlnen I
$70 ) $4 S (I f you mention
ad - thru July or wh
supply las ts )
APPLIANCES (all
back gu•ran
I &amp; gas rengts.
c.c.;~ •·· ·
(a
greet
- some frost
wrinotr

a.

'•
•

rl

..
..
'

7•
•

•'

�1- Tllelllllll' Senllntl, ~-PIImero 0 f'rii!.IY, July :IS, 11174

•

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Jlolice
GROVER S

Studio

will

DON T MtSS the b ig open house
i!lt Rock Spr ings
fust l ' 1
miles north of Pomeroy on R 1
33 New homes , cho• c:e tots
Great Amencan Hom e s. ,
phone 992 5976 Also Sa l es by
George Hobst~IIE-r Broker
985 4186
7 26 2tc

be

closed
for
emplo,-et1i '
vacation July Ztthrouo., Aug
S Op~ Aug 6 tt~rough Aug
10 CIOS@d Aug ll through
Aug
17 for M~los County
Fair V Isit our booth In ll'!e

commercial bu!ldtng

1 26 181C

YARD Sale at 870 South Second

St

M•ddlepor1 From 9 to S
p m dal ly Lot.s or ntce ttems
7 23 6l c
12 FAMILY yard sale tor a
church qroup from 10 30 to 3
July 2(1 and 11 (dO Fourth
Street New Haven W Va
7 23 4t C
YARD Sale rest of week Come

see all day long and evenmg
At the res idence of Howard

Russell Wolf Pen Road lUSt
off Rt 143
7 23 41C

I WILL prosecute anyone found
guilty of burnmg the lnstde of
my
outstde
torlet
The

property belongs to the State
Ernu.t ( Rmk )

of Ohto
Davidson
Pomeroy

____

113 Ebenezer St

________

...__

7 24 1:2tp

YARD Sa le Today 1st road to
let1 on Rl 124 off Rt 7 Call
992 5282
7 24 lie
WE HAVE all your upholstery
needs
Burlap
den1m,
cambr1c foam glue z1ppers
tack 1ng stnp
spr~ngs
and
clips
ch •pboard , button
tw10e sewmg thread legs
upholstery books dacron
webbmg sprmg twine tac ks
welt cord
co1ton sw1vel
bases and foi!lm foam foam
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
Ma •n St
Pomeroy Ohio
Phone 992 7554
7 24 26tc
ME;;tG S County Humane Soc1ety
Tttr l ft Shop open tO a m tilt
4 30 p m every Fnday and
Saturday N ew used stock
arriving weekly Clo1h•nQ
collec tibl es
app li ances
trea sure s records p1ctures
books lamps toy s Located
across from Pomeroy Post
OffiCe
5 12 tfc
KOSCOT
t&lt;OSMETICS
&amp;
WIGS For a good line of
Cosmetics, f,-tendty service
and someone to chat w•th,
give me a -:ell Helen Jane
Brown 992 5113
:J 19 tfc
- -~-----------

A TO z Mart used furnIShed
appliances clothing d•shes
and m1sc Rt 33 opposite
trailer court. Hartford W

A TO Z MART used turn•ture ,
app l nmces and mise Rt 33
Hartford W Va
7 26 H e
BRACE yourstl'lf tor a thnll the
first ttme you use Blue Lustre
to cleen rugs Rent electr ic
shampooer S1 Baker Fur
nlfure Company
.._
7 26 Jtc

_____ _______ _

GIGA NTI C Flea Market1 70
yard sales All concentrated
at one p lace 1h mllttout Spr ing
Avenue off Rt 7 Main St •
Pomeroy Oh10 Free ad
m iSSIOn plenty of parking
restrooms and refreshments
1ns1de and outside Contact
Fredd te Thabet 773 5651 after
5 p m every Saturday and
Sunday E\leryone welcome
7 18 H e
SHOOTI NG
match
Corn
Hollow Gun Club turn first
right a fter Miles Cemetery ,
Rutland
F actory choked
guns only Su nday July 28 1
pm
7 25 3tc

Wanted To Buy
OLD furn ,f ure , oak tables
c locks •ce box es brass beds
dishes, desks or comp lete
households Write M
D
Miller Rt ~ . Pomeroy Ohto
call 9'12 7760
S I 3 ffc

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

CASH paid for all ma'kes &amp;nd
models of mobile homes
Phone area code 61.4 A23 953 I
A 13 tfc

-----------JUNK AUTOS complete and

delivered to our yard we
piCkup auto bod 1es and buy all
k1nds of scrap metals and
iron Riders Sa lvage State
Rt 12A Rt 4 Pom eroy Oh10
Phone 992 5468
6 26 26tp

Brown Pasteboard, Sheet
I ron, Refrigerators, Hot
Water Tanks, Auto boches,
Without motors, Scrap Iron,
Cast Iron, Copper, Brass,
Alummum.. Auto Batteries,
Auto Radiators Sell to

Va

The Rosenberg

4 10 tfc

-------------1 w 1LL do roofmg, heating
repa~r

plum bmg and elec
!neal work Phone Charles
Sinclair 985 4121
7 21 7tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
TO BIDDER$
Sealed proposals Will be
rece1ved by the Veterans
Memor.al Hosp1tal
Meigs
County Oh1o at the Veterans
Memorial Hospital , located m
Pomeroy Ohio on Monday
August 12 1974 until 12 00
Noon
Eastern
Daylight
Savings
Time ,
and
at
that time w 1l l be opened
PUblicly -and read
for the
furn•S!Hng of all labor and
mater1al necessary for the
construction of an Emergency
Treatment Addition Veterans
Memonat Hosp.tal Pomeroy
Ohio All WQrk shall be done
4ccordmg to the drawings and
spec lf•catlons as preP.ared by
Hayes Donaldson W11tenmyer
&amp; Partn ~ rs
Architects. 601
Eighth Street, Portsmouth,
Ohio
Separatfi!' proposals will be
received for General Work
Electr1C'al Work
Plut:nbmg
Work Heatmg Venhlating Elnd
A.r Cond•I•On i ng Work and
Metal Casework
Proposals shall be subm1tted
on Proposal Form conta.ned In
the spec.•f1cat•ons and Other
contract documents whtch
documents are on file at the
-Hosp l tfll and at the office of the
Architect and are available to
all prospective b1dders dunng
regular off1Ce hours unlll the
closing of b1ds
One complete set of b 1d
documents for the purpose of
blddmg may be obtained from
Haves Donaldson Wittenmyer
&amp; PartnerS Architects
601
Eigth Street Portsmouth Oh•O
Upon deposit of SSO 00 wh •ch
depos 1t Will be refunded upon
return of bid doc.uments In good
condition w•th•n a per iod of
fifteen ( 15 ) days after open•ng
of b1ds Contra ct documents will
be mailed collect upon wntten
request and depos•t subm1tted
All proposals must be ac
companied by a bid bond bound
In the spec lfteat1ons and
executed by a bond mg company
licensed by the State of Ohio
ayable to- th e order of the
wner In an amount not less
an f1ve (5 pet ) percent of the
amount of the b1ds The l)ond or
check shall be forfe1ted tf the
.bidder fells to enter into a
Contract wi th said Owner The
bonds or checks of the three
lowest bidders wtll be held unt il
the exfcut ion of the contract
and the furnlshm;s of the
requ~red performence bond
after Whtch they w i ll be
returned on demand
The
checks of other b•dders w ill be
r(!turned on demand after th e
bids are canvassed
A performan ce borfd and a
labor and material pavment
bond both of 100 percent of the
amount of the contract wtfh
satlsf.,ctory sureties, will be
required from the successful
bidders for the faithful per
formance of the WQrk for uch
Contract awarded
B ids shall be submitted to the
Owner only upon the pltns and
lf)eclflcatlons that ha ve been
Obtained from the office of the
Architect
The right Is reserved by the
Owner to reject any and all
bldl , and no b i dder may with
draw his bid tor a penod of
forty five (45 ) days
ntis prolect Is under the state
conditions of E E o at per
Government Ex.ecutlve Order
ol January 27 1972 flrovide
Cener•t Requirements ot af
flrm•tlve action program "'
per Plrt 4, Sub Part A , Sect ion
401 of Governmflnt E)lecuthre
Order
By Order Ot
The Meigs County
Hospital Comm iss ion
• and Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Inc
Pomeroy , Oh 10
(1) 19, 26 (8) 2, 9, -4tC

&amp;

The lndtan word canoe
Wll Introduced tnto the
lllllllllh lanaua1e by John
B:mltb, duer~blng the
lloUowed•out log u!!t!d by
lbe llldilllll ror water travel

Co.

Athens, Ohto We close each
Friday at noon fo,- balance of

week
CASH FOR
JUNK CARS
complete Frye s Truck and
Auto Parts Rutland Ohio ;24
HOUR WRECKER SER
V 1c E Phone 742 6094
7 26 26tc
S5 for l unk automobiles We w1H
p1ck up
Rivers ide Auto
Wreckmg Phone (304 ) 773
5890
1 5 tfc

_____ T________
For Rent

SMALL mobile home double
W1de 2 bedrooms furn ished
utlitt•es
pa 1d
Adults
preferred Phone 992 7017
7 2~ 31C

-2 BEDROOM
---- -- -----trailer ca rpet
and a.r condlt10nmg
992 3509

Phone

7 24 4tc
--- ~ -------- --

COUNTRY Mob1te Home Park
Rt 33 ten miles north of
Pomeroy
Large tots with
concrete pat,os Sidewalks
runners and
off street
park1ng
Also
spaces for
small tra1ters Phone 992 7479
1 21 tfc
~ URNI S HED

adults only '"
Phone 992 3874

~or

for s.ile

Notice

apartment
Middleport

Sewing Machines, In sew ing
table Makes buttonho l es.
sews on buttons . blind hems
etc Top notch cond ition Pay
551 or terms available Phon e
992 26.SJ
1 16 tf c

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

tllTPOINT
AIR OONDITIONERS

SHULER~"S MARKET

4,000

Pameroy

These s1zes also avatlable

For Fresh Fruit

5 000. 6,000 8 000, 10 000
12 000 BTU

and Vegetables

J 9.

TAPPAN Eye Level oven and
surface range harvest go ld
Gas
Brand New
co lo r
Deluxe Model Selling below
cos t
$125
Phon e Larry s
Mobile Homes 992 7717
1 24 6tc
NEW llv•ng room suttes 1n
Modern MedtfE- rranean
Ear l y Amencan and Span•sh
Styles Your chotce of col ors
In velvet or nylon W1th Scotch
gard
Star t .ng as low as
Sl49 95 Pomeroy Recovery
622 E Ma•n St
Pomeroy
Phone 992 7554
7 24 7tc
FOA M to fill your Old COUCh and
c hair c ush•ons as tow as
510 95 upholstery okks only
50c
4 mch covered foam
mattresses for standard S1ZC
bed
$29 95
Pomer ov
Recovery 622 E Mam St
Pomeroy Oh1o Phon e 992
755 4
7 24 261c

UPHOLSTERY fabri CS by the
yard , 54 In ches w tde, as low as
52 49 per yard Velvets as low
Imported velvets
as SS 25
S9 60 w e .)!so ha ve nylon
hercuton
cotton
prmts
vmyls and remnants by the
yllrd or by the p •ece Pomeroy
Recovery 622 E Ma•n St
Pomeroy Phon e 992 7554
7 24 261C

-------------SOLID
VINYL SIDING

Produced trQm a special
vinyl compound made by B~
F Goodrich and Monsanto 5
l•mes thicker than m etal
siding W1il not den t ch 1p ,
cra ck peel rot, rust or
chalk

FREE HOME ESTIMATES
SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS
Calf Collect 1 59:2-5544
Atllens, Oh1o

'

GREEN beans green _p ep pers
cucumbers
tom aloes
Cleland Farms Geraldine
Cleland Racme Oh10
~
7 17 tfc
1 72 ACRES lan d 1965 Fo rd
L TO 30 30 Wtn chester Phone
742 3656
7 26 ltp

5 12 tf c
-TRAILER
--------------------.
,. .,.-- - --Brown 's Trailer
SPINET CONSOLE PIANO
Court Pomeroy Phone 992

Syra cuse , U 000
5898

Jack W Carsey . Mgr

Pho"e 9921181

n
Phon e 992
7 23 5t c

BEDRO O M bath
k•I Ch(l:n
liv i ng
room
and
full
ba se m ent ta r ge lot Marlin
St Ma so n Phone 173 5.40~
7 23 6tp

J

10lh FT SYCA MORE Sl1de m
camper sel f con tamed A I
cond1f 10n 51 600 Phone 843
2064 aft er 8 p m
7 25 3tc

25 3tp

Pels For Sale

AKC Toy POOdle puppi eS
S1am ese K II tens l n sh Se tt er
pups Ken nels of Ca lh oun 1
256 ·6247
7 18 26tc

65

trailer 8x25 gas heat operates
on AC or DC. and a new moon
lh60, with ce n tra l a1r 3
bedrooms waSher dryer and
ut.llt y budding

NEW LISTING - Modern

BLACK and Wh1te S•benan
Husky
blue eyes
female
spayed 3 yrs Oct Wonderful
pet for children Reasonable
to fam 1ly to furn 1Sh good
home Mu st have 6 tt ' e11ced
1n vard
C
E
Wh1te
Murravsv1lle W Va 26153
1 23 6tp

Mobile Homes

NEW LISTING- I camping

For

COUNTRY HOME - Modern 2
bedroom hom e cook and bake
un 1ts Full basement w1th
garage

MONEY WORTHLESS THEN
BUY REAL ESTATE IT HAS
BEEN GOING UP FOR
YEARS
LOOK
WHAT
OTHERS HAVE DONE

Sale

12 MOBILE hom e 3
bedroom bat h. llv1ng room
hall and 2 bedroom s car
Qeted Phone 992 775 1
)I(

------------ 1971 3 BEDROOM W•ndsor
6 16 " '

For

Sale

t:XCELSIOR Salt Works 1 E
Me ln St Pomeroy All kinds
of salt water p&amp;llets water
nuggets , bloc:k s1Ut and own
Ohio R tve-r Salt Phone 992
3191
4 5 ttc

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

REAR end and axle tor 19S;i
Dodge 34 ton trucle R1chard
QuJIJs, Middlef'ort Oh1o
7 25 3tp

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

FORO tr•ctor W1tt't 6 ft Side
mounted mower Good tires
goOd condition Henry Bahr
Long Bottom , Oh io Phone
915 3981

7 25

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

Jtp

'so

IHS

B&amp;K EXCAVATING
BENNY BRANHAM

171

MANAGER
.
.

All Small Appliances

Chester, Ohto
985·4102

Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

2 Or Sedan power steering auto. trans
w tires, radio Very low mileage

,., 3097
399 W Main
Pomeroy, 0
Louted at Modern Supply
small Engine Repa•r

HOME
DEOORATING
INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

• Lawn Bov
• Tecumseh
• Koh le r
• Wlscons•n
•All other
makes

AUTOMOBILE Insu ran ce been
ca n c elled'
Lost
your
operator s license Call 992
7f28
6 15-tfc

- ---- ------...-CREMEANS
CONCRETE
del•vered Monday through
sa turday
and
even1ngs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 tfc

-SEW
-------------ING MACHINE: ,:, Repau·
service all makes 992 2284
The Fabr•c Shop Pomeroy
A uthonzed Singer Sales and
Serv ic e We Sharpen Sctssors
3 29 tfc
DOZER work, land ctean11g by
the a cre hourly or contract
farm ponds ~ road s etc Large
dozer and operator w ith over
2~ 1 y ears expenence Pullins
Excavating Pomeroy , Ohio
Phone 992 2478
12 19 tfc

ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

PHONE 992-5476
SE PTIC
TA NK S cleaned
reasonable rates
Ph
446
4782, Ga ii i POits 'John Russett ,
owner and operator
512 tfc 1

WIU'S CARPET
&amp; INTERIORS

Street

Modern san, t atlo n , 992 3954 or
992 7349
10 23 tfc

6
Phone

THREE homes in Rutland 2
new Phone 742 6254
7 21 6tc

7 26 l tp
------------1972 CHEVROLET
ton leaf

--~~~-o!!"'-•13 BEDROOM house wall to wall
PO&gt;M.E
carpetmg , large kitchen and
bath uttllty room lf&lt;~ acre,
atum1num siding
storm
RUTLAND AREA -60

Hours 9 6 Weekdays
9 9 Weekends

IN

Appliance service m•n wdh
knowledGe of refrtgeratlon .
V•c•tlon &amp; tr1vel , . , ...

Galtla Retrogerotlon Co
Phon• 446 4066

Pomeroy firm needs PART TIME
TYPIST for at- least 60 days commencing immediately. Will provide
free parking and guarantee 16 hours
per week with a mutually agreed upon
schedule. Rate per hour commensurate with · experience otnd
ability. Must be able to type neatly
using IBM electric. Reply to Box 729Q,
DAILY SENTINEL.

73 Olds 98 HT Cpe.,

1971 FORD VB CUSTOM .......... .S1695

73 Olds Cutlass S. Cpe., v-:roof, au, stereo .. '3895

4 Dr Sedan 351 V B, 4 dr power steering power brakes
auto trans , new Ford trade fr om or iginal owner

73 Dodge Pol. 4 Dr.

One local

1969 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX ....... 11695
2 Dr hardtop, fastest sell ing Pont1a c sport car Th•s one 1s

"
'

WILL tr1m or c ut trees and
shrubbery Also c lea n out
basements att •cs etc Phone
949 3221 or 742 44 41
7 14 26tc

EST ...TE

or 992 2568

Price Includes 1nsta11a11on
and free padding Talk to
Wendell
Grafe,
carpet
consultant ,.
- We have hundreds ot
carpet values Your lob can
be completed In l to 2 weelts
No long waiting period

SPECIALI
1 Roll C•ndy Strtpe With
rubber back 3 99 sq yd
Nu~e tor bedrooms, dens,
kitchens, etc

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

92.1
WMPO.fM

Rutlond, 0

.,1Maytog

C•R.• f lry

Autom1tles
2 speed oreretlon I
C:t'tolce o
water
'•mps Auto water !
level control Ltn ll
Filter or Power Fin •
Agitator
Perm• Prus
M1yt111

n

New offtcers for 1974-75 year
were elected when the
Pomeroy Women's Clmstian
Temperance

Umon

met

Wednesday at Ute home of MISs
Lucreha Genhetmer for a
covered dtsh dinner
Elected were Mrs Allen
Hampton, president, Mrs T

"'.

Halo at H. . t

Dryers
Surround
ctothll
with gtntle, 1ven
h .. l No hot spots ,
no ovtrdrylng Fine
Melt\ Lint Fitter
We SpeCI•III• In

MAYTAG

lttd Carpet
Servlu

RUTlAND FURNITURE
742-4211
Arnold Grere
-Rutl•nd
----~--~--~---r--------~J

"'

'• '

Save money on such items as: ·
Fngidaire 17 cu. ft. Refrigerator, frost free,
Tappan double oven elec. range, w1th con·
tlnuous clean oven; 3 pc. pine bedroom su1te
with Sealy Posturepedic maHress &amp; box
sprmg; Sylvania color TV, maple; Magnavox
stereo, maple; 3 pc. Early Am. living room
suite; 3 solid maple tables.

•

"' "'

.'."'-

ALL ITEMS ARE LIKE NEW
SAVE UPtOS2000N EVERY PIECE

VINYL REWNERS

ONLY 6
No Delivery
At This Price

Several Gas &amp; Electric R•nges
30.00 up
1o- Refrigerators. best nleclion now 25.00 up
New 4 &amp; 5 Dr•wer Mllple Chests
29.95 and 39.95
New Vinyl Recliners
49.95
)-Wrlnpr Washers, -then now 49.95 up

v-roof, air ......... 13495

72 Chev. Imp Cpe., v.g auto., P.S... ...... 12495
72 Ford Cus. 500 4 dr. Sed., pow. alt •••• '1495
72 Pontiac Cat. HT Cpe., DOWer, a1r ........ '2895

.

Pontiac Cat. 4 Door, v.roof

70 Chevelle

HT

12195

&amp; air ........ 11795

Cpe, V8, auto, P.S......... 11795

Ftrebl rd V 8, auto , P S , P B , low mileage For

Marquis
mileage

Only

4 Dr H T , vinyl top , atr cond , low

Only

Imp 2 dr H T V 8 std
but pr iced to se ll

P S This car Is rough

Vista Cruiser Wag , V 8 auto , P S
real mce wagon

2 dr H

T , VB. auto

P B , atr A

P

S,

PB

extra n1ce Yours For

Wagon V 8, auto, P S

P B Nice family car

'

'1495
'1095

BUY ANY CAR, NEW OR USED.
' We BuiH Our

70 Chrysler Newport 4 Dr., pow. &amp; alr..... '1995

Business on SeiVice

70 Olds 98 Hoi. Sed., power, a1r .......... '1895

and now Se1V1ce IS

70 Ford Gal. 500 2 Dr., V8, 3 speed ...... 11295

Building Our Business

69 Olds Cut. S Cpe, V:roof, auto, P.S ....... !1495

..

"

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO fi AUL FREOER IC K OR
NER JR wllose la st known
address was Walnut Bottom
Road
Carl 1sle Pennsylvan a
17013
You are hereby not•f• ed that
YI?U have been named defendant
In a lega l action ent1tled Ellen
Garnet Orner vs oaul Fredenck
Orner Jr Th1s act 1on h as been
assigned Case No IS 174 in the
Cou~t of Common Pleas Me igs
County Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Th e prayer of the complain t 1s
for ttivor c e r es torat ion of
ma •den name award o f per
sonal property
and othe r
proper relief You are rqu.red 10
answer' the compla int w 1thln 28
days after th e las! publl cat •on of
th is not ice wh ic h will be
published once each week for
siX consecutive weeks The la st
publ ication w i l l be mad e on Ju l'(
26 and the 28 days lor answer
will commence on th e date
Larry Spen cer Clerk
Cou rt of Common Pleas
of M e1gs County
Pomeroy Oh to 45769

-'
'

'•

••

'

69 Chev. Mal. 4 Dr., V-8 auto., P.S ........'1195

day anmversary of M1ss

161 21 28 {7) 5 12 19 26 6tC

69 Ponllac Bonn., 2 Dr. H.T., v·roof, air..... '895

she was presented wtth a
corsage by Mrs Norman

68 Chev. Mal. Wagon, V-8 auto., P.S ....... !ll95

Baxter Grace was by Rev
Hicks Mrs Htcks was at the
ptano for group smgmg of the
hymn, " Standmg on the

67 Olds Cutlass 4 Door, V-8, auto••••••••••••'695

Promises " There was a stlent
memonal prayer for Mrs

66 Pontiac Cat.

there wtth emphasis on liquor
m relatton to edu-cation, m-

dustry and spmtuahty
Devotwns by Mrs Warner
were on the topiC WOmen,
Guardtan of Commumty
01

Standards," wtth scrtpture
from II Cor 9 6-8 Guests were

Mrs David Grueser and Mrs
E M Rottgen Rev Htcks had
Ute closing prayer
RIVER DOWNS

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Ftve
Grandsons covered the mtle
and 70 yards of Ute $3,200
etghUt race pllowance at River
Downs here Thursday m I 43,
returning $II 60, $2 80 and $2 60
Eager Wish was back by
one-half lengUt, followed by
Mtlton Bey
Lee S Mtss and Matt Allen
combined for a l!f.ll daily
double comblnallon worUt $114
Attendance was 3,591 and Ute
day's handle was $318.877

Pomeroy
OF
tuAun Motor Co.
2 SIGNS

.Jf]l DODGE DART

'

S"'S

Swinger HT cpe, med green finish with blk vinyl ,-ogf,
green vinyl Interior tr i m V 8 engine, automatic trans ,
sport St wh~l , full wh cover Like new w w tiJ;;ts, radio,
teal nice

lt70NOVACPE

Jl49l

Local 1 owner , good tires 6 cy i with ,flutomatic tr'ans ,
· radio, blue flnlth , spotless c:lean blue Interior

OPEN EVES. 8;00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

l ·. ..:__ _ _ _ __

68 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, power, air....... '1495

4 Dr.,

VB, auto, P.S......... '595

65 Olds 98 H.T. Sedan .....................

1195

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"Yo u' ll Ltke Our Qual tty Way
of Domg Bus t:1ess "
992- ~.42

GMC FINANCING
POMEROY.'
Open Evenmgs Unttl6. 0~ Ttl 5 p.m. S~t

OPEN EVENINGS
Till 7 PM

WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

SAT. Till

5 PM

SERVICE Till

500 E MAm St., Pomeroy, Ohto

Veterans will get first jobs
"Apply for a JOb tmmedtately at your local slate
employment service offtce," L
M MeiTitt, dtrector of Ute
Cleveland Veterans Ad·
m1mstratwn Regional Offtce,
advtses all veterans recently
separated from mth lary
service
Memtt noted Ute Department of Labor has primary
responstbthly for jobs, and
gives prlortly to veterans
...........................

-

State employment servtce
ofhces refer veterans to
avatlable JO~s , or allow Utem to
apply for unemployment
compensatiOn, he satd

J

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohto
Metgs
Countv, Court of common
Pleas Probate Dlv1sion
To th e Admtn•stratn~~: W W ~
of t he estate to such of the
fol lowing as are r es 1dents of the
State Of OhiO VIZ - the SU r
v 1vmg spouse the ne)l(t Of 1t..1n
th e beneftc !a r .es under the will
and to th e attorney or attorneys
any
of
the
r epresen ttn g
atorement•oned persons
Lll l an J Tnpl ett Deceased
M1ddleport Oh 10 Sal •s bury
Town sh1p No 21219
You are hereby n01 1f1ed t hat
the
In ventory
and
Ap
pra.sem ent o f th e est ate of th e
aforementtoned deceased l ate
of sa1d County was fded m th1S
Cou rt
Satd Inv entory and
Appra1sement will be for
heanng before lh1 S Court on th e
9th da y of August 1974 a t 10 00
o clock A M
Anv person des•nng to f tle
except•on s thereto mu st f ile
th em al l eas t f 1ve dav s pr•or to
th e dat e set for hear m g
G1ven under my hand and
sea l ot s~•d Co urt th iS 24th da y
of Ju l y 1974
Mannmg D Webst er
Judge
By Ann B Watson
Deput y Clerk
(7 ) 26 {8 ) 2 2t c

..

12

NOON ON SAT.

Jozte of Galbpobs, were guests
Sunday of Mr and Mrs Roy
Riffle an&lt;l celebrated Philip's
By Mrs Francis Morris
WlUt Ute Lord's Prayer m 16Ut birthday OUter guests
The Booster Class of Ute untson and potluck refresh· were Mrs Walter Wells of
Washington Court House and
Ftrsl Baptist Church School ments were served
met In the basement soctal
Mr
Melvm Rtffle of Mr Harry Curtis, local
Mr and Mrs Frank Cleland
rooms Frtday evemng, July 19 Columbus ts home wtUt hts
The hymn "He HideUt My parents, Mr and Mrs Roy held a family gel-togeUter at
Soul" opened the devotiOnal Rtffle, convalescmg after thetr home Sunday Those
present vere Mr and Mrs
program by Mrs Grella surgery at Grant Hospital
Stmpson and scrtpture, Matt
Mr and Mrs Warren L John Leary and family of PI
Pleasant, W Va , Mrs' Evelyn
4 12·30 and a meditation, Wilson, sons, Marty and Andy,
Young
and sons or Gallipolis,
"What They Lacked" A lovmg and daughter , Nancy of
!rtbute to Mrs EUtel SmtUt and Durham, North Carohna, are Mrs Ivan Powell and
Mrs Marte Roush, compiled vtsttmg thetr son and brother, daughters and Mr and Mrs
by Mrs Vazte Lee, was read by Rev Steve Wtlson for Utree Steve Cleland and sons,
Racrne
Isabel Sunpson R~admgs by days
Mr and Mrs Edmond Henry
members mcluded "Be A
Mr and Mrs Allen Orr of
and
Mrs Harry Hayman of
Fnend' , "Friends", " Praise Columbus vtstted Mr and Mrs
Jackson were Sunday visitors
In s t ead of Cn hctsm ", " A Chnste Powell
of
Miss EdlUt Hayman
Cross In My Pocket",
Mrs Audrey Schroeder,
"Remember, You Belong to Steve and Mae Fern, of
Chnst", "Lesson from the Columbus, spent Saturday wtUt
River" The group sang "In the Mr and Mrs Francis Moms
Cross of Christ" followed by a and called on Mrs Crill
busmess sessiOn with Mrs Bradford In Ute afternoon
Edna Ptckens, president,
Mr and Mrs Wtlbam
prestdmg The meeting closed McKenZie, Phthp, Jeff and

Hollywood ' s pop ar1 arch1tec
ture began tn 1926 when
Herbert Somborn bu 1lt the
Brown Derby restaurant m the
shape of a hat
~

Gallia County
Jr. Fair
We Will be showmg at
he fatr . Stop tn. see
ur dtsplay.

FIRE &amp; SAFETY EQUIPMENT
Busmess Phone- 992-2804
E. M. Blake, Jr.
J . T. Blake
Phone 992-5404
Phone 992-7117
308 S. Third Avenue, Box 267

COMPLETE SERVICE
DEPARTMENT
and Full Time Qualified Service Man
COMPLETE INSPECTION SERVICE
Complete Lme of Parts for All Makes of Ex·
tlngulshers
Rechargtng . Hydrostatk Testmg · Safety
Lights Strens Hose • Commerctal Alarm
Sy,tems - Spnnkler Systems · New F1re
Trucks . ladders · Home Alarm Systems ·
New Exllngutshers.
We have a complete line of Tags, Signs and
Arrows to meet OSHA Requirements
Open 9 A.M. · 5 P.M., Mondaythru Fr1dav

Frank Gheen,
Sales Mgr. •
PHONE 992-7777

POMEROY

HOURS:

SUNDAYS
1 PM-6 PM

'.

'

'

''

5 Mtles West of Zanesvtlle, Oh1o on Old Rt. 40

"THE STONEHINGE"

SUNDAY, JULY 28 AT 9:59 A.M. SHARP
Take 1·70 east from Columbus-exit (No. 55)
onto Rt. 668 and turn on Rt. 40 east to the 5 mtle
highway marker on US 40. Or traveling We$1
out of Zanesville towards Columbus on 1-70
(ext! 55) onto US 40 passed Old Headley Inn
11/2 mtle to the 5 mtle highway marker. (5
miles west of Zanesville, Oh1o on Old Rt. 40h
Having sold our estate will sell complete contents con
slsting of 20 pes fine oak furniture , cherry collection ,
walnut collection , 2 organs , 3 Grandfather clocks , large
collec::tlon of leaded glass lamps , Tiffany lamps, Aladdin
lamps , old &amp; new guns Weller, Crooksville, &amp; Roseville
pottery
4 beautiful statues , large lnsortment of
glassware &amp; china many, many collectables, and a
1
complete line of modern furniture
Be on tlme1t 9.59 a .m Sunday, July 28 as this Is a vety
l•rge nle being sold out of the old Stonehinge Home.
Plenty of sh1d1 so brlna your lawn chair and pl1n to stay

lofe Wolf bt setting antiques &amp; good Items 11 beginning ot
sale

DAILY
9 AM-8 PM

f

•

ANTIQUE FURNITURE, GLASSWARE, ETC.

LARRY'S
MOBILE
HOMES

-•

J
I

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

R. E. TRACY

''

Racine Social Events

OPENS JULY 30

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

19nVE~A
Local 1 owner trade ln. ll speed frliM , G T equipment
radio, good tires , cleart Inside. red finish , blk vinyl lnt,
n,w mileage

J'·
J

69 Ford LTD Wagon, V-8 auto., P.S ..........~95

Genheuner was observed and

T Shelton, vice prestdent
Mrs
Robert
Warner ,
Vona McKmght A card of
secretary, and Mrs Joseph sympathy was sent to her
Cook, treasurer The new of- family, and 11 was dectded that
ftcers were mstalled by Rev Ute WCTU WIU ~lace a book m
Carl Hicks, a guest at Ute her memory at' the Pomeroy
meeting Welcomed mto lhe Public Ubrary
membership was Mrs Anna
Mrs Roberl Warner read an
Cornell
article from a 1941 newspaper
At the dmner the 93rd btrlh· by Laura Trachsel, regardmg
the first temperance group m
IN THE
Amertca, established by Ute
COMMON PLEAS COURT
Indians
of New York 108 years
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ELLEN GARNET ORNER
ago She satd Uta! they have an
PLAINTIFF
annual temperance conventton
VS
NO 15,174

NEW WET LOOK

power, a1r..... 14695

'2895
'1695
'1095
'795
'1595

YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELF TO CHECK WITH CEWARD CALVERT OR BILL NELSON BEFORE YOU

DEFENDANT

Special of the Week!

ONLY

Pont. Tempest, HT Cpe., V-8, auto., P.S 12095

JR

12-1 &amp; 2 Pc. Uving Room Su1tes
20.00 up
IS--Chests and Dressers
15.00 up
2S--Twin and Full Size Beds, complete 39.95 up
2- Poster Beds, you muslseethese 39.95 up

A real gas saver

71
71

WCTV elects officers

"•

CARPETING
501 NYLON
Yd

standard

1969 FORD

PAUL FREDERICK ORNDER ,

•7.95 Sq

Maverick 4 cyl

69 Ford LTD HT. Cpe., V roof, air ...........11195

snREo

Just Received
Houseful
Fumiture In A-1 Condition

Yellow with tape cteck &amp; air cond Good buy

Volkswagen 411 4 Door, auto........... 12195

Phones. 992 2196
After hours 992 2412
Wrecker servtce 992-7587 or 992 7135

windows
storage build ing
Phone
742 4601
Owner
moving to Flor~da
Wtll
sacr ifice for quick sale
7 21 6tc

R•GULAR $9 95

v.w.

'2595
'21-95
'1595

71

YOU LOOK, THE BETTER
WE LOOK

GREAT
COUNTRY

Duster brown wiih vinyl top &amp; factory a ir N1ce

1970 MERCURY MARAUDER ..... 11495

~CLOSER
••

1972 PLYMOUTH car
1971
1970 FORD
1970 CAD.
1969 PONTIAC
1969 MERCURY
1969 CHEV.
1969 OLDS
Chevell M.\ltbu
1969 CHEV.

Dodge Dart Swinger, Slant 6, auto......

Open unttl6 00 PM Weekdays except Ttlurs &amp; Sat 5 PM Closed
Sundays

.

'

71

See Fred Blaettnar or Dan Thompson

READY MIX
CONCRETE
Ca 11992 2136 For
del ive r e d r1ght 1o your
Estimates
of Any Type
protect Fast and easy Free
estimates Phone 992 3284
Goegle •n Ready Mix Co , JOBS contracted Phone 7.42
3074 or wnte Box 23 Langs
M •ddleport Ohio
vdle Oh ro
6 30 tfc
1 23 261c
.' .
C BRADFORD Auc tioneer
Com otete Serv1ce
Phone 9A9 ~ 821 or 949 3161
~aclne Oh •o
Crill Bradford
5 1 tfc

HT.,

SOME GREAT USED CAR BUYS
1973 V •W • BUG One owner light blue In color Sharp'
'2395

beau!y

2 Dr hardtop, an exceptionally sharp ca r of one of Mer
cury's finest One local owner

Is your
leaking?
Compare our pr ices to any
others
We'll gi ve you a
profess•onel roof for tess

v-roof,

WE HAVE A FEW 6 CYL. BUICK APOLLOS AND PONTIAC VENTURAS
AND 4 CYL. OPELS. WE ARE GIVING BIG SAVINGS ON THESE 6 CYL.
'
and 4 CYL. OPELS FOR THE MONTHS OF JULY
AND AUGUST.

4 Dr H T Sed Deville ThiS car has everything
A real buy

2 Or hardtop Special Ed ition 318 V 8 eng i ne power
steering euto trans , power brakes, one local owner

Sta Wagon, air condition , fully equtpped
owner

K&amp;H ROOFING

matching lnt , full

Sold New, SS300.25 NOW •4400

1970 FORD VB TORINO ............ 11295

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

__

Help Wanted

Ci tation bronze sadd le vinyl roof
power, air, 5,500 miles

1971 DODGE CHARGER ............ 11995

Real Estate For Scile

-1967
-----------DODGE
Coro n et,

___________

~wer steering

4 Or Sedan Very sharp car power steering auto trans

in

full

Was SS294.55
NOW •4400
74 Olds Delta 88 Royale HT Cpe.

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO ........ 2995

SEfiTIC TANKS
AROBIC
SE WAGE
SYSTE MS
CLEANED
REPAIRED
MILLER
SA NITATION ,
STEWART OHIO PH 662
3035
10 4 tfc

-------------SE f'TIC
TANKS
c leaned

$AVE
power air DRIVER'S ED CAR

1

Armstrong l1noleum
Wall Paper
VInYl Wall Fabr1c
Spec1alt On Carpet Remnants Free Eshmates
located on lrd
Ractne , Ohto

Clove brown saddle vinyl top Crulsl!-Control FM stereo,
steel rad ial tires power door locks

Citation bronze. saddle vinyl roof, sadd le vinyl In!

1972 FORD GRAN TORINO ........s2395
4 Or Sedan beautiful li ght blue tlnlsh
automatic trans , shows tender care

Wllkmson Small EnGme

74 Olds 9B LS. Sedan Demo

74 Olds Delta 88 Hardtop Sedan

steel belted w s

ON NEW &amp; USED CARS

.

BIG SALE

1974 MUSTANG 11.. .................13295

Building &amp;
Home
Addtttons, Aluminum
&amp; Vmyl Siding, Floor
Sandtng &amp; Finishing.

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

1961 BUICK Spe c 1al
1955
ChE"Vrote f Phone 742 4846
7 26 61p

lf2

YOU DOLLAR WILL NEVER BUY MORE CAR!
Featunng a great end of the season savtngs on
a wide seleclton of '74s
Featurmg great savmgs on fully recondtltoned
used cars backed by well equipped shop and
parts department. We can gtve you the name
and aildress and often phone number of
previous owner on every car.

(

PH. 992·2174

BIG SAVINGS

USED CARS

-

BISSEll BROTHERS
• OONST. 00.

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

•

The Great Clearance Sale.

BOWERS
REPAIR

•

500 E. MAIN

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

'

Lawn Mowers

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

•

f!M:U7

.

h

SUMMER ~
OF'74
~
:• SAVINGS :••

--

sm

sprmg s 8ft bed custom cab
and body chrome 2 tone
patnt b1g 6 293 3 speed power
d 1sc brakers new topper all
paneled both like new M us.t
se ll $2 450 Call 667 3364 or
Belp re 423 8584
1 26 Jt c

~
~
•

I...;

Peorl Sl,

11174•--::::::::::::::--~.,

•

•

Middloporl, Oltlo

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

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

_________ ____

·=
-....
....

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

-·li:
-;;

Mobtle Hom e on 1 acre of
For
more
•n
g r ound
TOTAL electric 3 bedroo m EXCAVATING dnzer loilder
tormat•on ca ll 99 2 7638
home
Hardwood
floors
7 23 6tc
and backhoe work
septic
breezeway an d garage to t
'anks
Installed
dump
trucks
100&gt;&lt;420
18 0 Arball St
1964 ELCONA 5Sx l 0 With t 1po ut
and to boys for h i re will haul O ' DELL Allnement located
Tuppers Plains
Wtll take
kitchen and living room
beh tnd R uti and Grade School
rtl l dirt top soil, limestone
S5 000 down and take over
52 800 Phone (304J 173 5428
complete front and tuneup
and gravel Call Bob or Roger
payments Phone 667 6386
7 23 61 c
and brake service Phone 742
Jeffers dlly phone 992 7089
7 24 4tc
3232 Open 8 to 8 da1ly Sun
niQht phone 992 3525 or 992
days by appt only
1912GRANVILLE 12x65 2 BR
apt
a nd
7 14 tfc
2 n ttc
front den total elec tr. c STOR E butld•ng
garage 75 tt frontage, large
fu r n •shed 2 porches 8 x 20ft
park tng area Pnce SIS 000 O'DELL Al•n em ent located
awning and underp •nnmg
E Mam St Pomeroy Ohio
Call 367 7823 or 367 7437 after 5
beh lnd Rut land Grade School
Wnte P 0 Bo)l( 2.43 Sy racuse
pm
co mplete front end serv i ce,
OhiO
brakes and tuneugs wheels
7 25 At e
7
18
tfc
balanced electronically Open
--------~----8 to B da1iy Call 742 3232 on
Sunday for appt
7 16 tfc
Auto Sales

cylmder automattc
Racme 949 475 1

1 - 'l1le Dally Sentlntl,,Ml4dleport-l"&lt;&gt;merqy, 0., Friday, July 26.

'

,-,.,.-=--=-- ---------.

LA DY of good character to
make home w ith and care for
3 year Old g lrl Phon e 992 :1297
_,_
7 26 3tc

742-5293

FU'f&lt; ~ t·f"E ~ esttmates on
alum i num
replacement
wmdows siding storm doors
and windows Railing Phone
Charles L1sle Syracuse Ohio
carl
Jacob,
Sates
Representattve,
V
V
Johnson and Son Inc
4 30 tfc

------'--y------ --

4 ROOMS and bath home for
rent In Rutland Phone 99 2
5858
7 1A tfc

3

bedroom home
all large
c losets master has two L1vmg
roqm 18x30 Nat gas, FA
furnace
Garage with n 1ce
shop

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

BAbYSITTER for 3 SCh001 SIZe
chil dren , 4 days &amp; week Call
992 36.4S
7 2'6 lfc

Now Open for Bus iness

NEW liSTING- 2 level lots m
Syra cuse, 1 block off 124

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

Help Wanted

Free Estimates

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

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

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

Moved to Rutland. 3!.. m1le
Inside city limit on right
corner B1rck St and Rt 12.4

\

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

PRIVATE entran ce-. bedroom
bath and kitchen apt Phone
992 5508 Gentlemen Please
1·26 :uc

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY

1950 FERGUSO N 20
new
eng ine Phon e 98 5 3594 In
good cond1t10n and pnced at
$1 000
7 23 5tc
..:oROCERY bus•ness for sate
Bu i lding for sale or lease
Phone 773 56 18 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m , for appomtment
'3 20 He

- Tune Up

.•

I '· ,.
Will do Dour &amp;
Baclch.o. Work, lntt811 •
Septic Tank,, Heul
DIrt.
Gr•vel.
Limestone or Rlftt 0... I ~
of
Our
Trucks.
Backhoe or Dozer~ •

E MAIN STREET
POMEROY
- Wash&amp;Wu
JIIU
- lube , Oil, Filler

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jet ters
Day 992-708 9
Ntght 992.352 5
or 992-5232

Creek
high

acres
about
20
for
Wanted Re spon s1 ble partv to
3324
pur
c
hase
sp
1
net
p
1an
o
on
tow
cultlvat10n
or
!lovely
bu
tldmg
7 18 tfc
monthly payments Can be
sites 1112 story frame home
seen lo ca lly Wr 1te Sale s
3
bedrooms bath utlltfy
Mani!tger
P 0
Box 276
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
so
me
ca rpeting paneling
Shelbyville lnd•ana 46176
unfurnished
apartment s
7 26 2tp 1969 VW $700 Phone 9'12 5891
Phone 992 543.4
and f1le Garage Barn and
A 12 tfc
other bulldtng 8 168 sq ft 2
7 26 3tc
1969 GMC A stra 318 Detro it 13
water wells 2 gas wells,
speed Phone 992 7586
PRIVATE meeting room for
pond
ASKING
JU ST
7 26 6t!: 1971 TRIUMPH Bonnev1lle 650
any organlzat1on phone 99-2
T1aer qold m good cond lt •on
3975
$43,000 00
5875 Phone 992 3700
3 11 tfc CAN NING tomatoes bnnq yo ur
POMEROY - Ranch type
own conta .ner s Arnold Hupp
7 24 13tp
(modern ) 2 BR bath , n1ce
Letart
Falls
Ca
ll
'ld7
2623
BUSINESS r oom 22 )I( 80 234 E
7 26 3t c 1972 MG MIDGET Convert ible
kitchen lots of cab1nets
Moln 51
Pom eroy
OhtO
good co ndlt1on and tow
range &amp; oven large L R with
Phone 992 5786 or 992 3975
m•leage Call 949 3955
HAY and straw for sate 70c per
6 12 tf c
fi
r ep la ce, carpeted
full
7 24 6tc
bale Con ta ct W A R1 ce Rt 1
bas eme nt
with
ut11ity
R ee d sv ill e near Tupp ers
TWO 5 room and bath apts In
Pla i ns phone 66 7 32 67
1969 CHEVY Townsman stat1on
garage $15,000
Middleport For Information
7 26 3t c
wagon S1 195 g.ood condt t•on
BRADBURY Jlh story
c all 992· 2550 or 742 6551
Phone 992 7620
7 3 tfc
frame
4
BR
bath
d
i n ing R
IRI SH Cobbler potatoes Just
5 24 tfc
off St Rt 124 on Co Rd 35 --~-- -- --- ~ -lots of carpe t ing, new FA ga s
Racme Portland Road Date 1966 FORD J ., ton pt ckup
MOBILE HOME Jn Middleport
rnac e1 double lot with
R Profit tt
Adutts only Phone 992 5592
automat1c
transmiSSIOn
tra
ile r
hookup
small
7 26 2tc
6 '15 tfc
Good t1res Camper Special
basement
with
ut1t1ty
Phone Harold Brewer Long
Sl2,900
Bottom 985 3554
1
4 ROOM furniShed apt Phone Employment Wanted
POMEROY Bu s1 nes s
7 23 tfc
992 5908
room with tots of parking
7 23 6tc WILL do babysitting In my
and apartment over for
home day or weekly Phone
Real
Estate
For
Sale
mcome, has garage Th1s Is
992
7.:168
NICE 3 rooms and bath aft
3
BEDROOM
home
comp
let
ely
7
26
3tc
an excellent buy Aski ng tust
e le ( tr ic
apartment
In
remodeled 1ns1de antj out
Pomeroy Table top ran9e
$16 500 00
Newly bu •ll f •r e ptace for ced
watt oven real n1ce apart
W I LL do babystft lng for
TIME NOW TO BUY AND
ai r heat large fenced In yard
ment
Call
446 76 99
or
work i ng mothers 1n my home
GET
SETTLED BEFORE
For further •n forl'hatlon or
e ven 1ngs
at
446 95 39
Phone
992
6865
or
992
5669
showing
call
949
2571
SCHOOL
STARTS CALL
Ga llipoli s
' 23 6t c
__, 7 26 Jtc
7 26 6tc
TODAY FOR YOUR NEEDS

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

•lolled

--------------on 91

SON
Serv iC e
Station
L I VING room s u.te
wh tte CAR
Garage
50~~:60
bulldmg
velvet cou ch. W1th gold ve lvet
Cement dr.veway Phone 742
matchmo chatrs 2 lamps and
5052
center pieces •ncluded . Call
7 16 tfc
99 2 3581 or c an be seen at 975
Maple St Midd leport Best
LOTS for sale trailer or house
offer buys 1f
All ut•l•l•es Phone 742 36 15
7 23 5tc
Rutland Oh10
7 16 tfc
1953 FERGUSON 30 new t.res
new pamt new motor $1 SOO
PhOne 985 3.594
1
1 23 5tc

WILSON'S
PENNZOIL

DITQIING SERV LCE

-

'

H OU SE In Pomeroy , 5 rooms 2
bedrooms
Jlh bath , utility
room
bu il t m
kitchen
cab i nets
panel•ng , c om
pletely
carpeted
Full
basement
Good lo c at10n
Pr teed reasonable seE-n by
appo intment only Phone 992
5769
7 25 ltp

RECREATIONAL
equ1pment 5 ROOM hou se with bath
ac re tarm on Lead i ng
everything for a good pay~ng
Road 3 m lies off new
bus•ness priced reasonably
way Phone 742 6~78
Part l•me work
full time
7
earn ings Phone 949 2803
7 24 4tc

Our a1m is to Please
Our Customers.

1969 TRIUMPH 500 m otorcycle
Chopped excellent cond1t1on
can 992 7439
7 24 Jtc

and

POMEROY LANDMARK

..:.

-------------O LD hovse- w 1th 2 n ice lots

BTU

·'109.95

SEE US•.•

TAPES
Rock
Gospel
and
Country &amp; western S2 15 each
or 2 for S5 Open daily except
Sunday 9 a m
to S p m
Pomeroy Recovery 622 E
Mam St
Pomerpy flhone
992 7554
1 24 3tc

-----

Wate r Ltnu ilnd Paw•r'
l1n.i AU work done by !ho
foot or contract AI so dour
work and septic t• nks In-

. !r-.

.•

-.

•s

.SINGER
--!----------Automal tC: l1g zag

STEREO rad•o am tm B tri!l c k
tape combtnallon 4 speaker
sound
system
Balan c e
SJ05 39 or easy terms Call
992 3965
1 24 tfc

Busmess Services .

....__
PAIN I I.)AMA G E \ 9H ZIQ: hg
SEWING MACMINE: S STILL
In ono inal co&amp;rtO('Is No at 5 ROOM house on I ,a cr e of land
tachm!'nts nee(ted
our
Phon e 992 1145
controls are bLJtlt In sews
1 22 61c
w ith 1 or 2 needles makes
-----~--.1--~
buttonholes nw on buttons S ROOM house and bath wit h
mon04;1rams and blind hem
!i hower , 2 Iaroe l ots and new
stitch Full ( Uh pr i ce SJI so
ut ili ty bu lldmg In Racu'le
or buQget pi,a,n available
Oh 10 Call 949 S21S
PhOne 992 2'653
7 16 11tc
7 16 tfc

WE ARE picking up a p lano In
your area and would li ke
some respons ible party 1o
take over pavments
C1t1
Credit Manager , t 6U ) 112
.5669 or write 260 East Ma in
Street Ch l lhcothe Oh io 45601
4 7 ttc

W Main

•

____

Sale

.

•

P6enty coHN, douGhnuts, and lunch on prtmisn

Parking of fool of hill only Sole hold roln or shine
Nothing shown before day of s11e Positive ID Termscub d•r of sale Not responsible tor acctdents S.e
ParkersburG Sentinel Sunday, July 21 for complete
ltstmg

Owners- Mr. and Mrs. Clinton R. Cohen,
Phone 614-451·5106
,
Auctioneers- Bill Janes &amp; Associates, Phone
614·557-3411

'

'"''"''I

Walnut t rad1tt ona ll y
with lig ht
a small
••••utv - S99 7 '8 9 pc dining
cra fted In wood
plastics) pwcan
, maple from

cupboard
II ~?~~;:• top
door

•

NEW FURNITURE Includes
2 pc living rooms In nylon ,
her cu lon velvet vinyl l!lnd
Sco t chg ard co tton s from
S199 map le J pc table set
$34 95 3 pc maple rtnlsh
bedroom $132 50 4 drawer
maple chests S30 1 patch &amp;
f l ora l swivel rockers
$69 95 v inyl rectlnen I
$70 ) $4 S (I f you mention
ad - thru July or wh
supply las ts )
APPLIANCES (all
back gu•ran
I &amp; gas rengts.
c.c.;~ •·· ·
(a
greet
- some frost
wrinotr

a.

'•
•

rl

..
..
'

7•
•

•'

�•

•

10 - Tho DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, July 26, 1974

•

V•ltrans Mtmorlal Hotpl181
ADMITTED - Tommy
McGrath, Jr ., Minersville ; .
Dtnise Riffle, Racine ; Gilbert
Rothasker, Maple Heights ;
Shannon Stewart, Pomeroy ;
Sara
Willis,
Pomeroy;
Christine Robinson, Mid·
dleport; Meda Jenkinson,
Middleport.
"
DISCHARGED - Cynthia
Wolle, Herbert Whaley, John
Krawsczyn , Sr., and Griff
Archer.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Friday at II a.m. was
74 degrees under cloudy skies.

M~IGS

lHEATRE

Major clianges
made in Mason
PI'. PLEASANT -

More
major personnel changes have
been made in Mason County's
school system pertaining to
two of the high schools and part
of an Advis..-y Committee was
appointed Thursday night by
the board of education.
One of these concerns the
Wahama White Falcon Bano,
which has gained national
rec9gnition in the past nine
years under the leadership of
Gerald Simmons.
Sinunons of New Haven,

submitted his resignation ,

Tonight, Satu rday, Sunday
July 26-27-28

accept4'd by the board, to
further his edu(:ation . He is

accepting

AI Pacino in
" SERPICO"
(Technicolor)
AI Pacino, John Randolph

a

position

at

Hurricane Junior High to be
nearer Marshall University
where he plans to work for a

"R"

Master's degree.

CARTOONS

He is being replaced by
Charles Yeago, who has been

Show Starts 7 p.m .

his assistant over the past few

years. Robert Thomas Phillips

was employed last night as
assista nt Band Director.
r-eplacing Veago.
Another transfer was that of
Larry Martin from teacher at
Hannan High SChool lo viceprincipal at Point Pleasant
High SChool, effective August
l . Martin succeeds Larry
sawyers, who recently was
named Wahama principal, and
will work with Ralph Sayre,
whO remains PPHS principaL
James Langdon, president of
the Mason County ·Education
Association, Wayne Gibeau!
· and
Richard
Haycraft
discussed with the board : !Itservice, budget revlsion with a
request for increase in teacher
pay; discipline policy, lunch
periods,
especially
in
elementary schools; study
halls, records day and inservice at end of school year,
dues deductions, promotional
policy and teaching supplies.
Other business was routine.

Economy

Got some to spare?
Put it in a
Savings Account.
You'll get FDIC
protection.
Handsome interest.
And anew
point of view.

RISE ABOVE IT.
pomemy
•ulland

pomeroy
national
bank ·
the bonk of
the century
established 1872

....,

.~

FDIC
·

.

MAIN OFFICE

Mon ., Tues ., Wed ., Thurs . 9 a .m .-3 p.ni ,
Friday 9 a .m . to 7 p.m .
Saturday 9 a.m. 1o 1·2 Noon

•

RUTLAND BRANCH

,

Mon ., Tues ., Wed ., Sat ., 9 a .m .-3 p.m .
Thursday 9 a.m . to 12 Noon
Friday ·9l.l .m . to 7 p .m .

AUTO BANK HOURS

Continued from page 1
sumers are expecting an
economic collapse.
The Treasury De~rtment
says corporate income taxes
are $4 billion below expectations. The conunerce De~rt­
ment reported the Gross
National Product fell 7 per cent
between January and March
and slipped 1.2 per cent in the
AprU.June period.
Declining to label the ligures
as e-vidence of a recession,
Commerce Secretary
Frederick B. Dent says the
slowdown was merely a
11
spasm" caused by the energy
crisis, .
And the national Bureau of
Economic Research, which
detenilines when a recession
occurs, says GNP is part of the
criteria, but other factors such
aa unemployment and production have not worsened.
The latest Sindlinger pulllic
opinion poll says Americans
believe Inflation is at 20 per
cent, or 'double the government
estimate. And Sindlinger pr""
jects that the economy haa
moved from recession toward
depression.
Consumers are .cutting back
on spending and an economic
"Collapse" Is expected, Silldllnger says.
.
President Nixon, however,
says the American standard of
living can be maintained at a
high level.
"We will take what actions
are necessary 0gainst undue
hardship," Nixon said in an
economic talk tobuslnessmen .
in Los Angeles Thursday. "But
we will not react either to
general or · to specific needs
with gimmickry or emotionalism, and we will continue
steadily on our basic anti_infiationary course. "

FRIDAY 9 to 7.:.SAT0RDAY 9 to 12MONDAY-THURSDAY 9 to 3
_. A hometown friend.

NOW YOU KNOW
French horns are seven feet
long .

. f1'" Jl\e·'
for first J.'

.
ri~

.APPeJl

FRIDAY
&amp; SATURDAY
'
NIGHT 10:00 TIL 2:00

Dora Kennedy died Thursday
. RUTLAND- Mrs . Dora E.
Kennedy , 74, died at her
College
Ave . residence in
SEATTLE, Wasb. jUPlt - 00 sptn. obould be uamed .
Rutland
Thursday evening
after poiiUelans, 111 ealliroameoi.U.t bao JUIKOIIed.
lollowing a lengthy illness.
"Our niodest propoql," uld Dougi.lll Scott or u.e
Mrs . Kennedy was born May
Sierra Club, "Ia that each 1plll, like • b.urrteane, hllve a ·.
3, 1900, in · Rutland, the
name - the name ol a otale~eSillalor wllo valet In lavor of
daughter of the late Elza and
brlnglo8 big oil taobn bllo PuB•\ Sound.
.
Biney Near Haley. She was a
"Thai way, the publk wm be able ·w bep the sptn.
member of the Rutland
separate In tbelr mlods.t•
Oturch of the Nazarene and
had been married to Dwight
Kennedy, who survives • .for 56
years.
Other survlvors are four
sons,
Lewis (Duke), fire chief
•
at Rutland; Malcolm and
Continued rrom p~ge 1
Keith, all of Rutland; and
Pittston Coal Co., parent finn of Buffalo Mining Co., settled for
Robert , Middleport ; two
113.5 million.
Mrs.
Edith
daughters,
By Uolted Press International
Dewhurst, Chillicothe, and
. GREEK AND TURKlSH NEGOTIATORS MET IN
GENEVA today to arrange a mass pullout of foreign troops from
Cyprus as a first step toward restoring peace on the war-torn
island. Turkey, however, threatened the discussions by pouring
Nine defendants were fined,
more soldiers and supplies onto the turbulent island to shore up four forfeited bonds and two
gains made by its invasion force during tbe brief ''weekend others were assessed costs only
war."
in tire court of Pomeroy Mayor
UP! correspondent Michael Keats, reporting from Nicosia, Dale Smith Thursday night.
said the four-day-old cease-fire was holding despite ~poradic
Fined were Ralph Martin,
sniper fire during the night across the U. N. "green line" dividing Middleport, $125 and costs,
Nicosia's Turkish and Greek quarters. In Athens, where the selling intoxicating liquor to
Cyprus crisis led to the collapse of a military junl8, Prime juveniles; Henry Ohlinger,
Minister Constantine Karamanlis moved to free the junta's last Middleport, 110 and costs,
poiitica!prilloners and complete Greece's first civilian cabinet in squealing tires ; ·James
seven years.
Grueser, Rutland, $100 and
costs and three days in jail,
WASffiNGTDN - WATERGATE SPE(,1AL PROSECUTOR driving while intoxicated; Earl
Leon Jaworski and presidential attorney James D. St. Clair meet Ingels, Jr. , Middleport, $10 and
in court again today simunoned by U. S. District Court Judge costs, reckless operation;
John J . Sirica, this time to discuss a timetable for relessing tape Ronald Hoffman, Middleport,
recordings President N&amp;on must yield. Thursday, Jaworski
$5 and costs, assured clear
asked Sirica to order Nixon to begin delivering the 64 tapes to the distance; Keith Pickens, .ho
court within two days. The prosecutor said he wanted 20 tapes
address listed, $10 and costs,
delivered within two days, another 21 tapes within six days and
indecent exposure ; Walter
· the remaining 23 within 20 days.
and
Jaworski sought the tapes for evidence .in the September

News ·•.. in Briefs

trial of six former White House and campaign aides charged in
the Watergate cover-up. He said the first batch of tapes he
wanted were the ones behind the edited transcripts Nixon made
public. He said 13 of the 21 tapes in the second batch, as well as 33
of the total, ap~rently have been reviewed b)' Nixon already.
"No valid reason exists why the tapes of these 33 conversations should not be delivered to the court immediately,"
Jaworski told Sirica.

2•

•

mREE RUNS MADE
The Pomeroy . Emergent!
Squad made three runs Thlft
day night for medical patienll
At 7:57 p.m. the squad loot
Sara WUila, Union Ave., U
Veterans Memorial Hospital
She was admitted. At 10:•
p.m., the squad took Mn.
Meda Jenldnson, Middlep«t,
to the same hospital where*
was admitted. At !0:59p.m. !be
squad was called to Langsville
for Joyce Cleland who was aiiO
taken to .Veterans Memort.l
Hospital,
BODY IDENTIFIED
KENT, Ohio (UP!-) - Tile
body of a youth f.ound near a
Baltimore &amp; Ohio railroed
tracka east of here was ideaUfied as Brian Shippey, . 17,
Akron. · The body was fouricl
July 2. The victim was believed
to have been struck by a trala,
authorities said.
•

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharged - Mrs. Kenneth
RATED"G"
Coleman, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
John S. Reltmire and son,
· Salurday •.July l7
Mason ; Mrs. Garnet Wooten,
Double Featur.e
Point Pleasant; Arnold
. " THE ROOMMATES"
Runyon, Jr., Point Pleasant;
"R"
Mrs. · Ray Stephens, Leon ;
Plus
" THE RUTHLESS FOUR" . Joseph .Jl!ennett,
Point
PG"
Plea$-anr;-- and Harold G.
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.Wallace, Pliny.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport Emergency
Sq113d was called to Park St. at
6:59 p.m . Thursday for
Christine Robinson who wu
overmedicated. She was !ak~n
to Veterans Memorial HospiW
where s)le was admitted.

•

L

·

·

-Middle(;Oit._liOOk.StoreMill St.

Middleport,

o.

.

'

-

SUNDAY, JULY 28, 1974

talk aboul the President."
" I don't buy imputing criminal responsibility to the President for the acts of the
subordina~es," RBIIsback said.
"My belief Is that the President
should be charged with direct
acts or knowledge If we have
the evidence to prove it in the
Senate. I just happen ro think
Ulere is."
Rep. George Danielson, DCalif., proposed an amendment
to broaden the charge of interfering with investigations
conducted by tbe FBI, the
Department of Justice and the
Watergate special prosecutors
to include three congressional
committees.
Rep. Otarles Wiggins, J\..
Calif.,' aald the amendment
sought to punish the President
for considering his rightful
claims of executive privUege
or the right to withhold

PAGE l7

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - and the Harrises were last
While the disappearance' of reported seen the day after the
Patricia He~rst becomes more dramatic shoo tout in which the
g
U
enigmatic, the FBI grows more SLA was .almost annihilated lol
confident she will be found- when six of its nine known
al_ive to tell her story.
members were killed in Los HUNTSVILLE, Tex . (UP! ) _
"Time is on our side," says Angeles.
Fred Gomez Carrasco, leading
. Charles Bates, acting FBI
On May 18, the three dropped a ·desperate bid by three
agent in charge here. "People off a teen-ager they allegedly convicts to break .. out of the
can stay hldden for a long time kidnaped after commandeering · Texas State Penitentiary, jnbut few can .do it forever."
his van . Then they. vanished. dicated Saturday the time for
But after almost six months
Thousands of reports of his break, possibly to Mexico,
of failing to either rescue or sightings· around the country is nearing.
capture the renegade kidnap have Since poured in but none "I 'm sure 1 can't give them
victim, the FBI can only has checked out.
(prison authorities) too much
nurture patience and ' deterThe most detailed report of more time," Carrasco said.
mined optimisim.
Miss Hearst' s whereabouts "The people are starting to
''They have to make a came almost three weeks ago break down. The hosl2ges are
mQVe," says Bates of Miss but the FBI says it has been giving up. I'm a r·easonable
Hearst, who now calls herself unable to substantiate it.
man, but if they don't come
Tania, and remaining SymCiting police sources, KQED through I'll do what I have to
bioiiese· Liberation army fugi- television reporter Marilyn do ."
lives William and Emily ·Baker in San Francisco said Carrasco, 34 , suspected of
Harris. "We'll be looking until the heiress may have fled to committing 50 murders _during
we find them."
Guatemala with the Harrlses an alleged drug smuggling
Patricia Hearst is in the and linked up with underground business in Texas and Mexico
United Slates and probably in groups. She said they were and serving a life term for
California, the FBI believes.
believed to have traveled by assault'to kill a police officer,
The !!().year-old former coed, · boat to conceal weapons and Indicated to a reporter allowed
who faces charges of taking had assumed new identities.
to interview him by telephone
. ' part in an SLA bank robbery,
But, she added, other sources that he was tired of waiting in
spraying bullets _in a Los believed the three had then the prison classroom that he
Angeles street and helping . returned to the United States and the two other inmates have
commandeer getaway cars, is and were hiding in the Berkeley turned into a fortress . The
probably hiding out with area, where the bizarre case convicts seized the classroom
sym~thizers or admirers, a began last Feb. 4.
and the -11 persons in it
Wednesd~y afternoon.
veritable f6lk heroine of the
underground revolutionary frin-

growing colder. Miss Hearst
.

~

PRICE
MAIN STORE AND WAREHOUSE OPEN
SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ;

SAIGON (UP!) - Communist troops fired heavy
artillery and rocket barrages·
Saturday near Da Nang and
MAN CHARGED
battled 3,000 government
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Frank retnforcementa for oontrol of
B. Lusllg, 43, Columbus, has SOuth Vietnam'• second
been charged with. receiving largest citY, fl~ld officers said.
and concealing stolen property
U. Gen. Ngo QUang Truong,
In connec\lon with the theft of conunander of South . Vietover 4,0(10stolen blank drtver's nam's northern zone, fiew to
licenses. Franklin County the battlefield by helicopter to
sllerlff's deputies said ir10sl or take peraonal charge of the
the licensee we(e stolen from a government troops in the
deputy registrar's office. Lt. heaviest fightiDg since the
W. Davey said the licenses _-etlllborn ceaae-flre of 18
were eold for between $10 arid month• ago.
$1~ 111d were mosUy osed by
Government commander•
leenagm1 as ldenUficatlon.
Continued on ~ge 1&amp;

•

an

He said " I don't think we
should sacrifice thoroughness
for expeditiousness here .11
Rep. Lawrence J. Hogan, RMd., said Sandman "subjected
all of us yesterday to belabOred
arguments on the need for
specificity. He convinced us
that he is right. We're trying to
be responsible and specifically
support the arlifles of impeactunent.'"
Rep. Joseph J . Maraziti, J\..
N.J ., said Specific recltaUons
of charges should have been
included from the begiruiing.
Rep. Olarles B. Rangel, DN.Y., wanted to "move on and
vote on this historic matter ....
Rep. Dtlbert Latta, J\..Ohio,
said " We are not resorting to
dUatory tactics, as has been
reported in some places." But
he acknowledged, "We simply
don't have Ule vdtes."

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. reporter, ~~ are we still c.on(UP!) - President Nixon is Iiden! the President will not be
"absolutely" positive that the impeached," Ziegler replied
.
House· will not impeach him, tersely "absolutely ."
Nixon
does
not
plan
to
mount
but .has decided to remain
silent on the subject at this a lobbying effort against imtime, his chief spokesman said peachment in the House,
Ziegler said, adding that "we
Saturday.
do
have a firm belief that the
Nixon's attitude was expressed by Press Secretary President has supporters in
Ronald L. Ziegler, who said he Congress."
The President was expected
had discussed with the
President the impending House to fly back to the White House
Judiciary Committee Sunday for Ei closer look at the
recommendatlon ror im- . impeachment effort and a
peachrnent by the full House. personal review of the
tapes
and
Ziegler told reporters the Watergate
President's confidence was documents he must surrender
based on a firm belief that the next week under a Supreme
ful1 House " will exercise Court ruling.
An air of expectancy and
constitutional rights and will
not vote impeachment when uncertainty prevailed at the
Western White House although
there is no evidence."
He added that Nixon "feels aides indicated Nixon was
this is not the time to make any resigned to the prospects that
committee
. would
peFsonal comment" on the the
impeachment threat. He added recommend impeachment with
an impeachment vote in the
tha~ further comment by top
presidential aides also will be Democratic-controlled comwithheld "at this jll!lcture." mittee. Ziegler said that view
Repeating a question from a had not chanRed.

·
•
Carrasco wantzng
-f:o .bre k 0 ut soo
· n·

n·

evidence.
Rep . William Cohen, · RMalne, read evidence supportIng the charge that Nixon was
withholding material from
lawluUy author~ed law offleers and Investigating
agencies of the government.
Rep. Otarles San&lt;lman, RN.J ., referring to his decision
not to press for se~rate votes
on each of tbe·nlne charges in
Article 1, said defending the
President In the Judiciary
Committee
was
futile .
. Speaking to Rep. Walter
Flowers, D-Ala., he ssid, "II
you were to stand on your head
and do tho fanciest of tricka,
you would get 12 votes, no
more. So, please, let's wait
ll!ltil we get a proper forum."
Flowers said he wanted a
vote. on individual paragrapha
ln order to ~' Elicit inrormation" each contention.

•

MUTUAL AFFECTION is reflected in the eyes of Prime
Minister and Mrs. Pierre Elliott Trudeau during a reception ·
held for supporters of the Canadian leader. Trudeau and his
Liberal party were returned to office by ·an impressive
majority over the Conservative ~rty .
·

ShellS fl ·
::~.ttheFI,IIdoesn'tknowfor at a N·any ,·
The last solid clue is more
g
than two months old and
·

s

0

Nixon absolutely
sure~ o
the House

•

Patty is alive

'

~-·c----------~------------------~

"I have difficulty believing
that Richard Nixon, at any
point in time, contrived any
policy," Railsback said . "I
. think what the record shows
was a course of action."
Rep. James MaiUl, D-s.c.,
caUed the proposal . "more
definitive language."
The author ol the original

FBI certam

NATIONALLY KNOWN BRANDS

INFANTS SIZES THROUGH SIZE 14

~yidence.

language, Rep. Paul Sarbanes,
D-Md., accepted Railsback's
change. "Any lawyer worth his
salt ought to recognize an
improvement when It comes
along." he said.
Rep. 'John F. Seiberling, DOhio, who h elP!'(~ write the
language, sal.d: "Any time we
can make an improvement in
language to locus on substance, rather than semanties 01
it's a small step In the right
direction ."
Rep. David Dennis, R-Ind.,
asked if Railsback's language
would permit Nixon to be
charged with impeachable offenses for the acts of his
subOrdinates, and argued that
Nixon's aides, not the
President himself, were involved : ".You talk about Dean,
you talk about Mitchell, you
talk abOut McCord, you don't

Rhodes hits
Gilligan for
bottlenecks

.

.

S.HORTS AND TOPS

phrase.
The most significant,
proposed by Rep. Thomas F.
Rallsback, R·lll.; and approved by voice vote, said
NlxDn pursued a "course of
conduct or plan" during the
Watergate cover-up, rather
than a "policy." 'Railllback
complained that the word
"policy" Implied a carefuly,
preconceived decision behind
the cover-&lt;~p, for which he said
there . was
in~ufflcient

·COLUMBUS (UP!)- Fonn- nor, hlld placed hlgh priority on
er Gov. James A. Rhodes, development of Ohio highways.
"But you've got to keep with
cam~igning for another term
as Ohio governor, atl8cked the . it," he said. ' 'You 9811not let up
administration of Gov. John J. for a minute, and Gilligan let
Gilligan during the weekend up for three and one-half
for Ignoring highway con- · years," Rhodes said in his Sat-.
strul.'l:ion and causing traffic urday statement.
"When I return to the office
bottlenecks in the state.
"From the day he took office, of governor," Rhodes added,
Gilligan has downgraded the "we are going to move Ohio
need for a fully integrated .forward again by putting all
highway system," said rteeded llfOJecls on the front
Rhodes. "As a result, there is burner, and that_inclUdes higbno highway prdgram in Ohio," ways. We've got to break those
Gilligan bOttlenecks." .
· .said the former governor.
Rhodes said he, while gover-

JULY CLEARANCE SALE
CHILDREN'S PLAYWEAR '"
'

Nb. 26

VOL. 9

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8 PM

Plus
"THE BOY WHO CRIED
WEREWOLF"

resolution.
The paragraph retained acCU!ed NlxDn of: "Withholding
relevant and material evidence
or information from lawfully
authorized Investigative of·
fleers and employes vf the
United Sl8tes."
A slmUar bid by hard-IJne
Republicans to strike the first
count-making false or misleading statements lD Watergate invesUgators - was
defeated "E1 to II late Friday
night. When the committee
resumed work at 12:45 p.m.
EDT Saturday, the Repulllican
foes of impeachment indicated
they ha~ abandoned hope of
success.
Then the committee began
approving a series of perfeeling amendments in qUick
succession, many involving
only a change of word or

c ar e

In

0

~

ELBERFELDS IN · POMEROY

Drive-In

•

Junbap ~imts - itntintl

Overnight, in briefs

Mason

at Greatly Reduced Prices.

'

~itll •l

.

r----..;.

..

WASHING'roN (UP!)- The
!louse Judiciary Committee
dealt President Nbon 's
defender-a their oecond defeat
in less than hours Saturday,
refusing by voice vote to drop
an impeaclunent l:harge tbat
be withheld evidence from
Watergate lavestlgatoro.
With tishtenend rules to curb
the lengthy, rancoro\14 debate
of the day before, the 33member panel rolled toward a
probable final roll caU by
adjourrunent Saturday night on
recommending Nixon's impeachment for obl!tructing justice in the Watergate cover-&lt;~p.
Defeated In midalternoon
was a bid to delete the second
paragraph of nine. counts
against the President In connection with the cover·up,
covered by Article I of the
proposed Impeachment

Impeachment

ON FURNITURE, BOffiES, SILVER, EK
ALSO PRII:E GUIDE BOOKS_
Saturday Speci&lt;•l ----·~
! 1 Lot ot Jewelry and Assorted Gifi Items J

POMEROY

costs, drunk and disorderly ;
Reginald Gillespie, Letart, W.
Va ., $15 and costs, reckless
operation; and Dorothy seth,
•Pomeroy, IS and costs, lefl of
center.
Forfeiting bOnds were Okey
Kiser, Raclne, $30, posted on
an intoxication charge; Harold
Hysell, Portland, 1200, posted.
on a driving whUe intoxicated
charge; William Reeves ,
Pomeroy, $30, intoxication;
and Robert Bissell, Long
Bottom, 150. disturbing the
peace. Assessed costs only
were Keith Alker and Charles
Aeiker, bOth of Pomeroy, when
the complainant failed to
appear on the disturbing the
peace charg_es filed against the

it

EXTENDED OOTLOOI[
Ge...,..lly lair S. . . y . . .
Molllllly. Chaaee of lllew. .
Tuetday. Hlcba mooUy bollia
. . Slllldlly aad Maaday ...
upper 7h ..d tow ...
Tuetday. Lowo In the uppor
lito aDd lower 1111.

By United Press Jntematloul
ASHLAND, KY. "-ASHLAND OIL INC., ANNOUNCED today its net income for the nine months
ended June 30 was a record $85.7 million, up ~2 per cent fr&lt;Xll the $60.4 million in the comparable
period of 1973. The increase sent earnings up to $3.40 a .share, corn~red with $2.38 per ~are last
year.
Earnirigs for the three months ended June 30 were $32 million, up 44 per cent from the $22.1
million in the comparable 1973 quarter. Orin E .. Atkins, Ashland's bOard chainnan, said he expecta
yearend profits to be above tbe $4.25 a share level predicted earlier. The finn earned $3.37 a share In
.
Continued from page I
1973. Atkins said third quarter improvement was due to profit growlh in chemical, oil and gas ex·
everything in the White House ~ven deciding whether salad
ploration and production and Canadian subsidiary operations, along with ·road building and coal
was to be served at state diruiers and what pictures would
mining activities.
,
.
hang on the waUs at s~~&lt;;h times. He could not believe that
WASIUNGTDN - m'ATE LOTTERY WINNERS MAY FIND soon that Uncle Sam has taken a
such a president would not be aware of his administration's
tentatively approved today by the
bite of their winnings before they ever see them. Under legislation
deep involvement in the cover-up until March 21, 1973, he
.
House Ways and Means Committee, 20 per cent of all individual lottery wlnnlngs over 1100 would be
said.
withheld for tax purposes.
· Rep. M. Caldwell Butler, R-Va., the other defector, argued
The lottery wiruiings and the tax withholding then would be included on the indlvidnallncome tax
the old corruption Issue Nixon had raised in 1952, when he
: form 1040 just like normal earnings and withheld tax. The committee also volell tg exempt state
sought the vice presidency.
lotteries from a 10 per cent federal tax on the profits that states gain from the lottery. Under present
"For years we Republicans have campaigned against corlaw, only stale lotteries based on horse races are exempt from the tax.
·
ruption and misconduct in tlie administration of the governSeveral states have complained that an internal revenue service plan to collect this tax would
ment of the United States ·by the other party," he said.
bankrupt their lotteries. Similar legislation has been approved by the Senate Finance Committee.
"Indeed in my first political experience in 1952, Trumanlsm
wss the vehicle that carried Dwight Eisenhower to the White
AKRON, OffiO-'- THE GOODYEAR TIRE &amp; RUBBER CO~ has reported Its highest QUarterlY
House.
and slxo01onth sales and earningS in its history for the second quarter and first half ended June 30..
"But Watergate is our shame! Those things happened in
Charles ·J . Pllliod Jr., chainnan and chief executive officer, said Thursday that _siiles gained
.the Republican administration whUe we had a Republican in
momentum throughout the second quarter to total $1,368,060,000--.an increase of 13 per cent over the
the White House and every single person convicted to date
$1,210,754,000 .reported for the same period in 1973. This eclipsed the fonner quarterly record of
'
has one way or the other
owed allegiance to the Republican
$1,236, 734,000setin the fourth quarter-of last ye!ll'.
party."
Net income for ihe second quarter rose 10 per cent to $61,457,000 from $55,891,000 in the
Proimpeachment Speeches also came from the commitcorresponding period of 1973. The previous one-quarter high was $56,394,000- established in the last
tee's three Southern Democrats - Reps. James R. Mann of
three months of 1972.
·
South carolina, Walter Flowers of Alabama and Ray
Thornton of Arkansas,
SAIGON - THOUSANDS OF COMMUNISTS storined a strategic base guarding Da Nang,
Tears glistened in Mann's eyes as he announced his
touching off a bloody hattie that ldlled nearly 1,200 soldiers in the heaviest fighll.ng since the 1973
decision. He said he yearned for Nixon to give up tapes the
truce accord, It was reported today.
·
panel has subpoen8ed.. ''l'mstarving ror it,'' he said, ''but I'll
The Saigon military command said abOut 6,000 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong soldien
do the best I can with what I've got."
assaulted a 2,IJOO.man govenuneni outpost 25 miles southwest of Da Nang in a threat to South Vietaudinl81l Peter W. Rodino Jr., D-N.J., disclosed his
nam 's second largest city. The command said the VIet Cong and North Vietnamese began hbman
position for the first time at the end of the day.
,
wave assaults against the battered base Wednesday night after a day-long, 5,000-round sbelllng by
"I've searched within my heart and my conscience, and
Communist gunners. .
I've searched out the facts, and whim I test the facts I find the
President of the United States must be found wanting," he
GLACIER PARK, MONT.- A COIJ..EGE PRO::ESSOR survived a vicious atrack by a grizzly
ssid.
bear in Glacier National Park Thursday by wielding an ice ax and finally playing dead. Dr. J. Gordon
Of the 28 members who spoke Thursday, only eight-all
Edwards, of San Joae (Calif.) State University suffered only a bite on his left hand.
·
'
Republicans - explicitly or implicitly ruled out a vote
Edwards, author of books on mountain climbing in Glacier Park, was hlkl.ng when he Came upon
to impeach . .
a grizzly sow and her two cuba. The sow charged him, and he used Ute ax to fend ber off. The bear
attacked agsin and bit his hand. Edwards then went limp and played dead. The bear Slliffetl, ~wed
his bdy, and left.
Holzer Medical Center
Charlotte Griffith, Eile-en
(Discharged, July 25 I
Hammons, Jeff Holley, Buetah
SAN CLEMENTE, CAUF. - PRESIDENT NIXON apparently has written off chances of
Elizabeth Alcorn, Teresa Huff, Betty Jane Kay, Mrs . defeating an impeachmenlrecommendatlon by the House Judiciary Committee.
Barrett, Cecil Bauerle, Carter John Lemley and daughter,
Aides who usually reflect Nixon's views are talking of the next line of defense.:... the House. They
Belville, Mrs. Charles Craig· Beatrice May, Mrs. Boyd have said publicly they expect the House to reject impeaclunent. Privately the assessment of some ol
and daughter, Virgil Craig, McCain and daughter, Mrs . Nixon's top lieutenants Is that he may have to stake his fight to remain in office on a trial in the
Nora Curtis, Robert Eisnaugle, Carl McCoy and daughter, Senate.
Irvin Fellure, Mary Fowler, Judy Moore, Lloyd Patterson,
Tracey Fraley, Judi~ Gordon; Douglas Raike, Sr., Harold
Simpson, Mrs. Russell Smith
~
and daughter, Janice Stanley,
Vera Wall&lt;er , Rena Wells,
Gerald Williams, Jr., Mrs. Lee
Wood and son.
(Birtbs)
TONIGHT
Mr . and Mrs. William
July l6
Phillips, a spn, Oak Hill ; Mr.
•
Double Fea1urr
and · Mrs.· Melvin ·Cade, a
-daughter, Oak Hill.
"SSSSSSS"

Af'!ITIQUE AND COLLECTORS
BOOKS

PH •.992-3629

Mra . llobert E . (Dorothy )
Davis, Danville.; a btother,
Otarles lfa!ey, Crookaville; 13
grandchildren and seven greatgrandchUdren.
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Rutland
Oturch of the Nazarene with
Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.,
officiating. Burial will be in
Miles Cemetery. Friends may
call at the Walker Funeral
Home, Rutland, at any time
after 2 p.m. Saturday until 12
noon Sunday when the body
will be taken to the ~hurch to
lie in state one hour before ·the
services . The family will
rec~ive friends at Ule funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Saturday.

15 cases settled

11

The MEIGS INN

~~M. 'I '(

··

·

' Until Saturday's interview
with San Antonio Light.reporter
Clay Robinson, Carrasco apparently had beei'J content to sit
with his three pistols, waiting
until prison authorities decided
wheU1er to comply with his
request for rifles and ammunilion. However, in an exchange
with Robison , Carrasco Indica!ed the end may be coming.
"The only persons ·1 would
take with me are three women
and Father O'Brien (the Rev.
Joseph O'Brien, a hostage),"
Carrasco said . He said he
would release them when he
reached "safe soil. "
"What do yo u mean by 'safe
soil?"' Robison asked.
"I mean out of the country,
of course," Carrasco said.
"Would that be Mexico?"
Robison asked.
"Probably ," Carrasco said.
Carrasco warned authorities
not to rush the library or
continue to refuse his reques~
for guns and ammunition.
"There is no way I want to
harm these people," Carrasco
said . "I respect human life.''

·

The President emerged from
the seclusion. of his home
briefly Saturday to award a
Medal of Freedom to Dr.
Charles LeRoy Bowman,
founder ol orthopediC hospitals
in Los Angeles in 1919 who is
still treating crippled children
along the Mexlcan border. He
also met with Housing
Secretary James Lynn.
Nixon showeq no evidence of
strain and smiled frequently as
he went before television
cameras for the medal
ceremony. I..ooking sunburned
and calm, he even stopped
momentarily to banter with
reporters, commenting on the
"beautilul weather." But be
declined to be drawn into
conversation.
Ziegler was reticient to talk
abOut the enormous listening
task Nixon has ahead of him to
screen 20 lfiped Watergate
· conversations before 4 p.m.
EDT Tuesday - the courtordered deadline to turn them
·over to U. S. District Judge
John J . Sirica.

Computers do 'EXTRA'
NEW YORK (UP!) - Modern computer technology combined with the old-fashioned
newspaper extra is being used
for the first time in producing a
pocket
book-size
"1mpeachment Report" that will
be on newsstands across the
nation within 72 hours of a final
vote If the House Judiciary
Committee recommends
impeaclunent.
Computers are being used to
transmit copy at 1,050 worda a
minute from Washington to
editors in New York then pn to
Memphis,
Tenn.,
lor
typesetting the "instant" book
of up to ~50,000 wordsbetween _300 to 350 ~ges-of
the first momentous steps in

the possible impeaclunent of
President Nixon.
EntiUect "The impeachment
Report," it is a joint project of
United Press International,
The World" Almanac and The
New American Library
Publishing Co.
'
The book will include the
articles of impeaclunent as
recommended by the Rodino
committee, balanced
highlights of committee debate
and
votes,
historical
background an!!__ a special
introduction by Helen Thomas,
UP! While House Reporter. It
will be fully indexed.
The first printing run will be
750,000 copies with orders for
. the book, which will retail at

Impeachment
report will be
out quickly
$L95, indicating potential
heavy demand, according to
publishing officials.
World Almanac publisher
Edward R. Kennedy said, "It's
the first time that modern
computer technology has ever
been combined with the oldfashioned newspaper extra
Continued on page 18

4 killed in oil tank fire
INGLESIDE, Tex. (UP!) the burnl.ng oil out.
Firemen
Saturday
ex·
"It was too hot to go right in
tlngulshed a raging oil tank fire there, but then they got some
and later recovered the bodies pum~ working and pumped it
·of two of the four workmell_ "downsomesotheywereabte·to
killed eitber by an e1&lt;Jilosion or get some foam on top of lt and
the fire.
smothered it out," Davis said.
"Thefirewascontsinedat 11
The men killed worked for
last night (Friday) and extin- the Langford Painting Co. of
gulshed early today," said Corpus Christl, and were
re~ve police officer' BOb sandblasting the tank when the
DaviS.
explosion occurred. They were
Firemen earlier had thought all' from Corpus &lt;llrlsti, and
they would have to let the lire identified ss Robe,rt Lazos,
burn Itself out because of the Ramon Rodriguez, Norbet Wilintense heat and smoke, but IIams and Calvin Jackson .
then were able to pump some of / "The top (of the tank) went

up and came right back down,"

SECOND lboughls about
his death-defying jump
across Snake .River Canyon
seem to pre&lt;&gt;ecupy daredevil
Evel Kolevel during a vlalllo
New York. Kolevel oald bla
13-ioot loog "&amp;ky-cycle" wm
be jet-propelled 2,000 feet
across the chasm oo Sept- 8.
He's· guaranteed t6 mllllon
for the stunt-

Inmate
stabbed
to death
LUCASVILLE, 0 . (UPI)An irunate attbe Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility here,
Ohio•s maxim\lffi aecurlty prison, was stabbed to death Sat·
urday, ' State Correcllona Department officials said. It wu
the fourth stabbing In Ute lnltl•
tutlon 1a two weeka and ·the
first kUling.
Joseph Ashley, director of
~ommunlcatlons
for the
Corrections Department, said
Robert Drury, 25, WIUard,
Ohio, was dead on arrival at
Mercy Hospital in Portsmouth.
Ashley said Drury wu lila~
bed with a homemade knife in
the dining room of the prllon,
· one of 24 pe_nal instltutJOIII and
mental health facWtles hJt by a
strike by Ohio state employes
earlier this month.
Ashley said the recent, increase wstabbings -the other
three vlctJrils were taken to a
hospital run by the O&gt;rrectiona
Depariment at the old Ohio
Penitentiary In Columbuamay have been · a result of
reduced surveUlance during
the strike.
Ohio National Guard troops ·
llllllllled watchtowers and parolled the perimeter of the fa·
cillty here during the lllrlke.
Nearly 200 Inmates and pria..
on employe• were in the dining
area when Drury was lllabbed
once in the chest, Alhley said.
David R. I.Dvejoy, 30, of Atwater, Ohio, anotber Inmate
whO was serving an eJ:tended
sentence for participation in
the Ohio Penitentiary rlota four
years ago, was held In oonnectlon with the stabb~. Ashley
said. Drury was serving a IGto-30 year sentence for armed
robbery, breaking and entering
and car theft.
Lovejoy was . serving an
elght-to-35 year sentence ior
assaUlt with Intent to ldll,
forgery, larceny by trick and
auto theft in addition to added
time for the prison disturbances.

said police dispatcher W. T.
Morris. "The rop rose up in the
air a few feet."
Morris said several youths
were playing baseball nearby,
and saw the blast.
"One youngster told his
mother he saw a man flying
through the air with his clotljes
on fire," Morris said. "The
man fell back into the tank."
Two trucks parked nearby
BRUSSElS (UP I) . - A
were destroyed.
surprise British veto of EuroFlames from the 30 feet of oU pean Community energy policy
in the tank reached several has damaged attempta by 12
hundred feet in the alt.
major ·industrial nations to
• work out a common oU front,
energy experts of tho organlza.
lion said Saturday.
Britain vetoed the European
th
1
d
d Common · Markel plan lui
had been hit," he said. " If we rades, e peop e you epen
Tuesday. arguing tlull II wai
had stayed thee, we would have on."
premature.
been vulnerable at night.
Roberts plans to relate his
The source• said liMo 1111111
"And we kept gelling radio sociology degree to criminal serio111 impact ·..w ba on
messages from the other side justice and law. He hopes to France. The French had
of the hill ahout how they enter law school when hla wife ag(eed to end their boycott of
needed . help with the · Mary receives her degree in · internatlonll eftortl 10 IGrrn a
evacuationofthewounded,"he psychology next year.
common lront of major oil,
_said.
Roberts used his four-year uaing natlon1, but only If a
Roberta even has a logical presidential scholarabip{o help. common policy wu qreld on
explanation for the concept of him through college in three first .
herolim Itself.
rears. But he aoesri't plan to
The sources said the British
"The most important thl.ng in use his medal to gain his ad- veto is likely tO llow lhlwwlr
battle is to keep oneseU alive, mission to graduate school.
of Ute 1:W.atlon I!'.lllriY Caordl·
to not take riska, to aurvlve,"
"The medal does not tndlcaie nation Group, wlllch rDMII
he sa\d. "Now that may sound in any way my ability to per· here MOiiday .ad '1\JntJ.
selfish, but what people don't form well in school," he said.
The tnMtilll wu Gllltlll ..
(elllze is that realm of protec- "My gradel and my "board work out acr•r111t1 ID ....,...
lion also extends to one's cern- scores will detennlne that.

Oil front
seems off

-

He\ro wanted no fame u;hile .on t;ampus

.DAYTON (UP!) - Congressional Medal of Honor recipient
Gordon p . Roberts, wllo
· doeSII't feel like a hero was
scheduled to graduate Sunday
from the University of Dayton
. with a -degree in sociology.
Roberts was decorated !or
his heroics ln tbe Vietnam war.
While studying at the
University of Dayton, a
CathOliC university with 5,200
full-lime undergradQate
students, Roberta said he was
. treated as another student.
"That's the way l wanted it,"
he said. "I don't feel like a
hero, at least the traditional
type of hero."
Roberts had sake&lt;) the school

not to _publicize his presence on
the campus. He was honored
during half-time ceremonies
at a football game in 1971 wtth
a standing ovation.
"Even then, none of my feltow stUdents said anYthing
about It the following week,"
he said. '
Roberts, a native of
Lebanon, Ohio, joined the
Army when he was 17. He was
a' one-111an army in Vietnam
July 11, 1969.
The incident was several
weeks after. Hamburger Hill
andinthesamevicinllyasthal
battle.
..
Most of the members. of the
squad he was leading , were
I

either ldlled or wounded in an
attempt to take a hill that was
held by the North Vietnam~.
Roberts charged up the hill
by himself, knocking out four
enemy bunkers singlehand.edly
on his way.
After he real!hed the other
side of the hiU, he belped
evacuate the wounded of
another platoon.
''There were two pla~ns on
each side of the hill try_m ~ to
take it," hi!' recalls.
was toward nightfall. We were too
scattered to withdraw; besides
wemlghthaveleftsome of our
wounded.
"A lot of men in our squad

·:u

Continued 011 .,... 11

•

•

'

'

":#

J·

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