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                  <text>8- The O..uly St&gt;ntull~ l . Mtddkpvr t-Ptttlll'ro}. l) . Mund.:l\ : A w .

~ N': 1

LA ready for Reds' invasion
1

( UPI ) "We 're playm~ good ball and
they 'rp stayin~ good ball
We're as ready as w e'll e ve r
...OS

~GELES

be "

Davey Lopes, havmg JUSt
stolen a career-ltlgh four bases
In the Los Angeles Dodgers' 2·1
win over Houston Sunday, was
allowing hU11Self to look ahead
to ton tght 's crucial meetmg
w1th the Cmcmnat1 Reds
"We've won seven games m

durmMthe [lodgPrs'
downfall m. the late stage,.i of
the 1973 season "We were too
('()Cky and overconfident ThiS
year we know what they ca n
pr ~sen t

lhcre," IK• said " I t•ould have
~o ne on the sel·ond ptkh to lUll
Russell but I held up 1"e kt')'
thuu: m steahn~ a base '' to

do . ''

Lopes thnlled Sunday's
crowd by stealmMsecond three
tU)1es and thJrdonce, becommg
the flfst Dodger smce Ma ury
Walls to steal rour m one game
Wllls, who now serves as a
baserunnmg mstructor for the
team, stole a record 104 m that

Frances Conkle
died Saturday

know wlwt th•· plt&lt;·her

-

domg about Ctneinnah," he sald
a ll Lht&gt; tlm~ . And you can 't " lllat 's prohably what they
ht~slta t e or youtrr dead "
want you to do But you can't
IS

I Opt.'S has a "gree n hght u to look ahead to one series If we

at wtll , unless Dodger did that we would have lost to
Mana ~er Walt Alstoo tnstructs Houston and San Diego You
hun otherwtse. " It detJ('nd• on can't play Houston and be
the gwne SitUation," he says
thlnkmg about Clnclnnatt "
"Somctlfnes Alston wtlltell me
no t to KOtf the game ts out of
gu

hand one wuy or another

HOSPITAL

Mrs Frances K Conkle, Rt Today the game called for tt . 11
1, Cheshire, dted Saturday was close all the way ' '
Lopes Is certam hiS teama r ow," sa1d Lo pes, th e
evemng at Umvers1ty Hosptl&lt;il,
Dodgers' second baseman season
Colwnbus Aged 79, she was JOc.l les have learned a lesson
"The team that ma kes the
" I can't emphasize enough born May 31, 1895 at Kyger, from last ~eason
Veterans Memorial Hospital
"W
e
know
we
can't
worry
fewest mtstakes wtll probably how much Maury Wills has Ohio, the daughter of the late
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
•
comA out on top in the ser~es " contn buted to my success as a LewiS and LilheM Tate Athey.
- Josephtne Riffle; Waldo
Followmg the wm over the baserunner, " Lopes srud "He
Neal, Ully Robinson, Marton
She was preceded 10 death by
Astros, the Dodgers held a 6 •;, worked wi th us m sprmg her parents, her hus band,
Ebersbach , George Ba tey ,
game lead over the Reds m the tra trung and it IS pay10g off J onos M Conkle. th ree
James Garnes, Jr , Glema
(Continued from page 1)
National League West The now We're all runrung the brothers and one stster
Sctences
at Rio Grande College Yarbroug h, Dana Haning, J uly
teams meet In a three-game bases more aggreSSIVely n
Allen, Naomt Autherson
She as s ur v1ved by one
sertes begmmng ton1ghl
Lopes, who stole 36 bases daug hter, Mrs James (Carol) and Dr Everett N Roush, SUNDAY DISCHARGES Dtrector
of
Mars hall
" Last year we mtght not durmg h1s ftrst full season 10
Hafey, Grove Ctly, two sons, Untverslty Offtce of Alumm Mathe Yost, Sharon Kuhn,
have had enough respect f9r the btg leag ues last year, now
Henry Phelps, Margare t Gans
Robert and James, both of Rt
Affatrs
them," sa1d Lopes, who was has 44 He feels he could have
I, Cheshire, siX grandchtldren
Youn gsters will be happy to
made tt 45m the seventh mmng and two grea t-gra ndchtldren
fmd
Koko the Clown among Ute
Holzer Medical Center
of Sunday's game tf he had
Mrs Conkle was a member
crowded
walkways
Koko
wtll
(Births)
been more deCISive.
of the Kyger Methodtst Church be back wtth hiS antics and wtll
Saturday - Mr and Mrs.
" I thmk I could have stolen and the Ladtes A1d of the
prese nt kiddies w1th balloons Ja mes Crace, da ughte r,
thtrd m the seventh but I Church
depleting animals
Jackson Mr and Mrs Randall
second-guessed myself out
Servtces wtll be held WedFireworks Set
Tedrow, daughter, Hamden.
nesday at 2 p m at the
Ftreworks wtll be dtsplayed Mr and Mrs Ben Arthur, son,
Rawl10gs.Coats Funeral Home on opemng mght at 10 p m by Langsvtlle
wtth the Rev Chester Lemley Pomt Pleasant Volu nteer
Sunday - Mr and Mrs
ofhctaltng Burtal wtll be m the fare men
Bobby Pnce , da ug hter ,
Cheshtte
Gravel
H1ll
Wednesday wtll be observed Galhpohs , Mr and Mrs
Cemetery. Fnends may call at as Ohto Valley Mayor
Burnette,
son,
the funeral home any bme Assoclatton Day and Semor Carroll
CANTON, Ohto (UPI) Galltpohs, Mr and Mrs Garry
afternoon Tuesday
·Former Gov James A
Citizens Day The Pretty Baby Hager, son, Jackson
Griff M. Archer, 84 ,
contest and a Market Hog Show
Rhodes, campatgnmg here for Pomeroy, Rt 4, dted at hiS
are both on the schedule for 10
re..election thts weekend, ac· restdence Saturday evenmg Standford DtJnney
VISIT SON
cused the current adam
Mr Archer was preceded m
Mrs
Ehzaheth
A Fobes, son
The Florida Boys will he on
mlll!Stration wtth loadmg the death by h1s parents, Roland died on Sunday
mam sl&lt;ige outdoors for two Donald, of Cuyahoga Falls, and
state payroll wtth 1,600 "un- and Flora Hysell Archer, hiS
needed" bureaucrats at a cost ftrst wtfe, Ethel Schaefer
Stanford H Denney, 80, performances, one at 2 p m Mrs Eltzabeth Kackstetter,
Akron, were weekend guests of
of $25 m11llon.
Archer, one daughter, Ber- Mulberry Hetghts, Pomeroy, and the other at 9 p m
Denny
Fobes, Addtson
Rhodes satd Gov. John J nadme Archer, and one brother
Hannan Htgh's Wtldcat Band
dted Sunday evemng at
Mr Berme Fobes, and
G11Ugan has added many mtd- and one stster
Veterans Memonal Hospttal. wtU present mustc at 5 30 p m
are movmg to
famtly
level executtve Jobs pay10g
He was preceded m death by Another btg attraclton for
Mr Archer attended the
Columbta, S. C , this week,
about $15,000 annually.
Hysell Run Free Methodtst ht~ parents, Mr, and Mrs evemng wtll be that of the where he ts employed by the B
HThis ts the way government Church
Allred Denney, hts wtfe, JesSie Uttle Mtster and Ltllle MISS
F Goodrtch Tire and Rubber
get.. fat and sloppy," the GOP
He is survived by hts wtfe, Thaxton Denney, one brother Mason County contests Thts ts Co
gubernatorial candidate srud Mary EliZabeth Bowen Archer, and two Sisters
to take place at 7 p m from the
"Whenever you add an ad- two sons, Edward R Archer,
mdoor
stage
Mr Denney ts survtved by
ditionalsuperv~orylayer, you
For Gospel Mus1c lovers, a
Rosevtlle; Gnff Archer, Jr , two daughters, Leona Stewart
AT CAGE CAMP
have added fat and that lS Kohler, Wtsc. ; one daughter, and Mrs John (Le,ola ) Keck , Gospel Songfest has been
Rickey Wmebrenner, son of
extremely
diffi cult
to Mrs. Worley (Phylhs ) Haley, both of Pomeroy, one grand- planned for 7 p m outside on
Mr
and Mrs
Charles
remove!'
the
ma10
stage
and
once
more
daughter,
Lmda
Stewart,
Middleport ; seven grandRhodes charged that Gtlhgan c~tldren,
16
great- Pomeroy, one brother, Ernest under the dtrection of Harry N W10ebrenner, Cheshire, and
has added nearly 10,000 people grandchtldren, four great- Denney, Norwalk, and several Rhodes Thts ts another John Mark Haggerty, son of
to the state roster since taking great-grandchildren, and one nteces and nephews
growmg event and wiU have Mr and Mrs Robert Haggerty,
office 101971, yet state servtces nephew, Paul Archer
Funeral servtces wtll be held parttctpants from Charleston, Mtddleport, are 10 Lehanon
have detenorated
Funeral servtces will be held Wednesday at I p m at Ew10g Huntington and Crown Ctty, 0 thiS week at the Buckeye
Tuesday at I p.m. at the Hysell Cbapel Bur1al wtll be 10 P10e Among these wtll be the Basketball Crunp The camp Is
Run Free Methodist Church Grove Cemetery at Danvtlle Evangelters, the Newsmen a dtviSwn of the Dayton WYMC
program
with the Rev. Amos Tilhs of- Frtends may call after 7 p m Quartet, the Shaffer famtly and
the Harvest Time Singers.
ftclaiing. Burial will be m th1s evenmg
Monda y thru T h~ r sday
A htghhght of Thursday w&gt;ll
Beech Grove Cemetery
Aug s.6 1 8
TRIAL DATE SET
REHEARSAL SET
he a presentation from Jean
Fnends may call at the Ewmg
NOT OP EN
A JurY tr1al has been set for
The Metgs High School Shepherd of Grand Ole Opry
Funeral Home at anytiTOe
September
12 10 the case of
MaJOrette Corps and Flag fame who wtll appear on the
CorP.s wtll rehearse from 4 to 6 outdoor stage at 9 p m Daniel O'Dell, Shade, vs. Lake
p m. Tuesday at the htgh Wahruna's Whtte Falcon Band Shore Bus System, Inc .,
--- - - - - - school, Mrs Judy Rtggs said will furntsh mus1c at 6 p m and Columbus, m the Metgs County
YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK
----today Members of the flag the Baby Beef Show ts set for 7 Common Pleas Court. Ameal
Ntcholson, Rt 1, Langsville,
corps who bad not planned to pm
ftled
for dtvorce from Mary S
go to band camp at Rio Grande
Friday evemng wtll draw one
last week were able to attend of the largest crowds when the Ntcholson, Rt. 1, Langsv!Ue,
the fmal three days of camp Market 'Hog Sale and Baby chargmg gross neglect of duty
after all Mrs. Riggs was at Rto Beef Sale take place and and extreme cruelty m another
Grande to work with that group presentalton of the Fatr court entry
as well as the maJorettes.Scholarshtps made These
events take place In the arena
TWO ASSISTED
SQUAD ASSISTS
with the Hog Sale starting at
The Racme E·R Squad made
The Pomeroy E-R Squad was 7 30 p m and the Baby Beef two runs over the weekend
called Monday at 10 05 p m to Sale at 8 p m
Saturday at II 30 a m tt transFlatwoods for George Batey
Blue Max Will entertam both ported Martin Cunnlnghal)l to
who was taken to Veterans at 2 p.m and 9 p.m drawmg Veterans Memortal Hospital
Memorial Hospital.
most thetr audience from the and Sunday at 4 25 p m Ross
teenage set
Scarberry was taken to
BOOSTERS TO MEET
Then on closmg day, Veterans Memonal Hospital
The Metgs Athletic Boosters Saturday, the Sweepstake
will meet Tuesday at 7 30 p m. Awardwlllbepresentedat9 30
TESTS NEEDED
at Metgs Htgh School
p.m. from the ITilltn stage This
All teachmg and nonEveryone IS urged to attend
ts really a spectal mght for cerllfted employes of the Metgs
farm frunthes as fruits of their County School System are to
year's work pay off to lucky bave blood tests at the Metgs
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Marvm Darrell Dqdrlll, 26, wmners
County Dept. of Health durmg
An afternoon highltght wtll the department's work day on
Rt 2, Vmton, and Debra Sue
I
he the West Vtrgmta Foxhound Tuesday or Wednesday of thts
McDaniel, 18, Mtddleport.
Bench Show in the hvestock week
arena at 4 p.m. Also the Put·
nrun County Ptekers wtll be
present oo the stage to entertam at 1 p m The mam
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
stage will be Ule scene of the
Augu.ot 3, 1974
Ftddlers' Contest too at 6 p m
SALES REPORT OF
lutlt has WOI'I for • a
while the Style Show goes on m
Ohio
Valley Uvestock Co.
the Juntor Bwdlhg
fill
STOCKER CATTLE
A Fatr Horse Show ts still
STEERS
- 250 to 300 lbs 30 to
another main sttraction and ts
of YW'f pel frlancls.
to get under way at 7'30 p m 36; 300 to 400 lbs. 28 to 35 50, 400
The fmal enter(4lnment to 500 lbs 30 to 36 ; 500 to 600 lbs
comes at 9 p m. Saturday when 27.50 to 33 25; 600 to 700 lbS. 28
Porter Wagoner and the to 34.50; 700 lbs. and OVer 30 to
Wagonmasters present their 38.75
If you are one ol them, you
HEIFER CALVES - 250 to
show from the outdoor stage.
know why. If you're not, let
Each day a thrashmg 300 lbs. 27 to 35, 300 to 400 lbs.
us show you.
demonsll'atlon will he made at 28.50 to 34; 400 to 500 lbs. 25 to
3 p m along the main thorofare 33.75 ; 500 to 600 lbS 27.50 to
of Wadswortlt Avenue mstde 32.75 ; 600 to 700 lbS 26 75 to
the gates Howard Schul17. and 31.50; 700 lbs and over 28 to
Walden Roush wtll supply 36.50.
STOCK COWS &amp; BUU.S IBY
some of the equipment for thla
"Ws etn1er to prevent bad
The
Head) -Stock Cows 150 to
showing through the UJe of a
Mb1ts than 1t 1s to break
235; Stock Cows and Calves ms
them.··
steam engine
to 300; Stock Bulla 100 14 275;
You don't have to break
. .---~---. . Baby Calves 20 to 55, (By Tbe
your Piggy bank to get
Poudl - Canners &amp; Cutters
what you need at Pomeroy
Cows 10 to 22.75 , Holstein Cows
Cement Block Co, the home
Pomeroy, OhiO
21 to 25.75; Commercial Bulls
ot the " FRIENDLY
Drive-In
(1,000 lbs. and over) 27.50 to
ONES " Quality products
Mon .Tut$.
at a price to flf your budget
120,000 Maximum Insurance
33.50.
gives you two good reasons
Aug. 5·6
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
for
getting Into th~ habit of
for Each Depositor
lbs to 250 lbe. 41 50 to 50.50;
do1ng business there
' ' PETE 'N TILLIE "
Medium 200 lbs. to 300 34 to
I W'altoor MaNhau and Carol f2
50; Culla 30 Down.
Burnett
( PG)
IAMBS - Tops, 90 lba. to 110
- PLUS33 to 311.50; Seconds 75lb8 to 80
"SLAUGHTERHOUSE
FtVE"
24 to32; Ughla 40lbs. to~ 20 to
II•
I&lt;.A'~lf
\!lJ/1''-All(lN
w1th Michael S.ck•
23 ; Stock Ewes By the Head 7
I Rl
to 15.
SHOATS ...., 5 to 1450

NEWS

. .
F a1rs
tune

Bureaucracy
fattened up

Griff Archer
Rh
d
says
o es
. .,. died Saturday

MEIGS THEATRE

~-~---·

.

Oar style of
nsServlce
Mn't oR
In

wor.cltu

Market Report

as101 li111nt

THE FARMERS BANK

·AND SAVINGS CO.

•

Mason

_

•
IXOn ·a

•

News •. • rn Briefs

Senate's

f

(COntinued !rom page I I
$J10ech this week.
.
"There will not be a "'"""'h
thiS week, and also nothing l5
planned 1n the way o! a formal
presidential statement," Warren said

Warren sa•d Nl~on was not
considering resigning or temporartly stepping astde under
terms of the 25th Amendment,
which would make Ford acting
president until NIXon declared
he was ready to serve again.
Ford, speaking Saturday
rug ht m New Orleans, sa&gt;d,
"Censure Is less sertous (than
unpeactunent ) and, therefore,
If the alternattve was
presented and I were In the
House, I would fa vor &gt;1."
Though Ford repeated his
assertion that NIXon was mnocent of any Ul1peachable
offense. he sa1d, "the odds are
that he ITillYbe Impeached."
Jud1ciary Commtttee staff
members worked through the
weekend to set up facilities at
which all members of the
House could liSten to the tapes.
The 19 tapes wtU be played m
each of four House offtce
bU1ld10g rooms today tbrough
Fnday,
The scheduled playing of all
19 tapes once around -&lt;~bout
seven hours worth - will take
until Wednesday. Up to 204
members could hsten at a time
at tables eqwpped wtth earphones
One of the tapes Is a June 21&gt;,
1972, dtctabelt recording m
whtch N1xon recalled conversaltons he held wtth his
rudes about the Watergate
break-m three days earlier.
Also available ~ a Mareh 21,
1973, conversalton about the
posstbthty of paying hush
money to convtcted Watergate
conspirator E Howard Hunt,
and a March 22 recordmg _m
which NIXon advtsed hts aides
to "stonewall tt" and refuse to
proVIde any more information
about the cover-up
But the House ITillY not get a
chance to hear the 64 tapes
subpoenaed by Spectal
Prosecutor Leon Jaworski,
because 11 would take a long
ttme to mtltate and succeed
with any congressional subpoena for them.
Senate Republtcan whtp
Robert Griffin of Michigan
wrote Ntxon durmg the
weekend, saymg unless he
restgns, Ntxon would be Ul1·
peached and come to trial 10
the Senate.
Griffm srud the Senate then
would subpoena tapes which
Nixon had refused the House. If
the President did not comply
wtth the Senate subpoena,
Griffm satd he would consider
that an ITOpeachable offense.
The Judtctary Commtttee
alreay has ctted Ntxon for
defying preVIous subpoenas, as
well as for obstructing justice
m the cover-up and for abusmg
his powers.
Cotruruttee member Edward
Mezvinsky, !).Iowa, srud he
hoped new eVIdence would be
ITillde available soon, leading
to a fourth article of ITO·
peachmenl chargmg Ntxon
wtth tax fraud and unconstitutionaJ use of federal
funds for hts Galiforma and
Flonda properties.
Mezvinsky, who failed m
committee to win approval of
such an U11peachment article,
said if a grand Jury mvestigation of tbe President's financial
affatrs now under way came up
wtth new revelations,• "there
wiU still be an opportuntty for
Congress to co~~Sider tl."
But underr'1entatlve rules
adopted by, Ute House for the
ITOpeachment debate, a new
arltcle would bave to he voted
on again In the commtttee.
In other conunents dunng
the weekend
-Sen. Wllllam Prollllllre, !).

(ConUnii"CC !rom page I )
predicted Sunday that unempl&lt;lyment would not OX&lt;*d B per
cent thisyearand both said the rate of Inflation would be down 14
7.5 per cent by !he end or the year. Rush and Sen. Wllllam
Proxmlre, O.Wis' agreed there waa no ~IM)Il lor an ecooomlc
panic, despite a report In Sunday'• Washlngt&lt;ln P01t quolln&amp;
Otase Manhatlan Bank President David Rockefeller u 111)'ing
"one shouldn't discount the possibWty of a panic" because rl
current economtc uncertainties.

WASHINGTON \UP! ) - Prellldent Nlxoo now frankly adnuts
that he withheld daiTillglng Information obout his involvement m
the Watergate cover-up Reall%1ng the gravity of the dtsclooure
as Congress weighs hill possible removal from ofltce, he Ill said lQ
have seriously considered restgning.
Nixon said In a statement Monday ccompanted by !raw
crlptsof conversations he had with top aide H R Haldeman June
23, 197Z-that he recogntzes Impeachment by the House ts a
"foregone conclusion" and that he wtll be put on trial m the
Senate.
The strategy of acknowledgmg fat:, the flrot time thai he was
aware of some aspects of the Watergate cover-up as e&lt;~Tly as slx
days after the break-tn at Democratic headquarters apparently
was developed by Nixon and top aides at a weekend strategy
session at camp DaVId At a Sunday meeting, the Wash tngton
Post reported today, Nlxoo constdered-"and temporarily rejected"-reslgnlng.
The Post, quoting unnruned White House sources, said NIXon
even suggested at one point that one of hts speechwrlters
"prepare material that could be used for a resignation speech"
In the event he decided to qu1t
After Monday's statement admitting some of his preVIous
statements about Watergate were "Incomplete and m some
respects erroneous," together with the new transcrtpts of
discussions showing high~ ev el knowledge of the scandals, some
of Nixon's former leading supporters called for hts reslgnatton or
Impeachment ..
Rep. Charles E Wiggins, R.C. Iif., the President's leadmg
legal defender during House Judiciary Committee debate that
culminated in an Impeachment recommendahon, read a
statement, In a choked voice, saymg the new materJal showed
Nixon was guilty of obstruction of jUII!ce and that his

AUXILIARY TO MEET
The Junior American Legion
AUX!Uary Drew WebSter Unit
39 wtll meet at the home of
(Continued from page 1)
Mrs. Harry Davis Tuesday
Lawrence Hagen, a Pueblo, evening at 7 30.
Colo , cattleman wtth 30 years'
ranchmg expertence, said he end Yeager WP Zahn 12 1)
ne ver has seen a drier swn- L P- Robe-rts (6 9 )
mer, and was too depressed by nst g1 m el
00 1 OOl 03 1- 7 10 1
the weather even to curse his e rne!
Sen Diego
101 000 000- 2 11 3
fortunes
Norman . Baney
lSI an d
" You can't curse the ra ln." P lummer Jones , Hard Y 18 ).
( 8) and Kendall W Phe said dejectedly. " It 's Romo
Baney 11 OJ LP- Jo n es (7 151
doesn't do any good."
2nd gam e, 14 '""' )
An ofhc18l of the Colorado (Cmcl
nn at t •
ooo ooo ooo ooo oo- o 8 1
Cattle Feeders Assocla tlon
San D iego
predicted the drought would
000 000 000 000 01 - 1 8 0
result m less cattle on feedlots
K 1r by, C Carr oll ( 10 ) , Borbon
m the next few months. He and (12 ) and Ben d'l , Plum m er (71 ,
other experts agreed 'the Fr eisleben. Ge rhardt ( 14 ) and
Cann izzaro WP- Gerhard t ( I
drought would mean higher Ol
LP- Borbon 17 6)
meat pr1ces for conswners this
( 1st game )
fall
Ph II a
100 000 302- 6 11 0
010 ooo ooo- 1 5o
Agriculture Secretary Earl St Lou is
Sc hU @Ier (6 11 J and Boon e,
Butz charged that many people F oster
, Pena C9 l and Si mmon s
were pamcldng Ul the face of LP - Foster (57) HRs the drought. Bul7. sa1d that Sc hm ldt 2 (24th &amp; 25th l
while the drought was ser1ous, 12od g•m e)
a
000 000 000- 0 52
11 was not cnt1cal as far as food Phd
St Lou is
102 030 4h:- 11 11 o
supplies were concerned.
Ruthven . Garber ( 31. Scarce
(5). Watt 171. Hernalz (8 ) and
But Nebraska Gov. J . J . Boone
Cur ti s ( 6 10) and Hill
Exon said Sunday he feared LP- Ruth v en 14 9 )
Butz has failed to look at
A mer lean League
drought infonnation submitted ( 1st game)
Batt
010 000 000- 1 2 I
by Agriculture Department Detroit
200 31 0 OOK - 6 10 0
Cuellar , Jeffer son I 51 and
fteld personnel.
Hendr ic ks , Coleman (10 91 and
He satd the crop ytelds would L~mont
LP Cuellar (1 3 8) HR.
he below predictions "because - Sharon 11st l
of the worst drought since the (2nd game)

No relief

1930s "

And there also nught be
problems for next year's crops.
A published survey of ITilljor
corn seed growers showed th~
drought almost certainly would
result m seed corn prtce boosts
for 1975.

Ma tor League Results
By Un 1ted Press tnternat•onal
National League
N Y at Montreal, ppd , ra1n
- -~

(1st game)

(8th ), RUdl (11th)

000 010 000- 1 6 o
ooo 002 oox - 2 7 o

O ' Ac qu.sto (9 10 ) and Rader
WP - Hou se ( 4 2)
HRs- Lum
(7th) BBker (llth l. M a tthews
{ llth l. Spet e r (5 th )

(1st game)
Boston
New York

Haney,
HR -

100 103 002000 000 003-

T•ant I 11 71 and Blackwe l l.
Medtch , Stottlemyre ( 8) and
{2nd game)
Dempsey LP - Med lc h (13 9 )
At lanta
000 000 101 - 2 4 0 HR - MII1er (5th ) .
San Fran
300 010 lOx - S 11 0
L eon , J N1ekro ( 1), Fr1sella (2nd game)
(6 ). Krausse ( 8) and Correll. Bos t o n at N Y , ppd , ra1n
Caldwell. Sosa (9 ) and Rudolph
WP - Ca l dwell (10 3) LP - Leon ( I st game)
( 1 3 J HR - K.ngman l llth J
Te~eas
000 111 000- 3 9 2

I I s1 ga m e)

..

(2nd game)

(2 nd game)

Ch •cago

000 000 010- 1 6 3
P•tsbrgh
002 040 lOx - 7 9 1
Hutson , Frall lng (3 ). Hooten
(5 ). Zamora ( 5 ). Dettore (7 )
and Ste lmaszek , Kison Her
nandez 19) and Brmkman WP
- K•son (6 6 1 LP - Hutson (0 2)
HR - Parker C3rd l

Te~eas

sa1d NIXon should not
restgn, but should Instead turn
over the powers of his office to
Ford und&lt;!r terms of the 25th
Amendment. Promure satd
tltat step was a prerequisite to
regaining economic health.
-Sen. Howard Baker, R·
Tenn., satd he thought lm·
peachment probably would
happen and urged his
colleagues: "If we get a trial,
we should make sure that tt is
tried with excruciating faJr.

ness."
- Rep. Howard W. Robison,
R-N.Y., sa1d Nixon could avotd
Ul1peachment by going on
national teleVlSton to take full
blame for the Watergate
scandal.

-ews .• in Briefs

Pttiock
(1)
Gossage
C4l ,
Fors1er (6) and Downmg WPFors1er (6 7) LP - Foucaul1 1.4 •
6 ) HR s- Orta 17th), Burro ughs .
2 I 21st &amp; 22nd ), Melton (18th )

000 020 200- .4 8 1
100 000 101- 3 9 1
Bosman, Buskey (7) and -ElliS , Champ•on , Murphy (8)
and Moore WP- Bosman (5O &gt;
LP - Champion (5 21 HR Money (10th )

(2nd game)

Cleve

001 100 001 - J 10 o
Mtlwa
ooo 026 oox- 8 9 1
G
Perry, H llgendorf ( 61,
Wllcox (8) and Duncan , Kobel ,
Murphy (9) and Porter WP Kobel 15 8) LP- G Perry (15
61 HR - Montty (11th )

(1s t g1me1
Calif
021 001 000- 4 9 2
Kan City
102 003 .tiOx- 10 13 0
Lange, Quintan a (6) , Sells (6)
and Rodriguez , Busby , Mlngorl
C7 l and Mar ti nez, Healy 14)
WP- Busby &lt;16 9) LP - Lange
( 3 7)

Ond game)

Cal•f

ooo ooo ooo- o 6 2

Kan Cl1y
000 002 lOx- 3 6 o
Tanana , Pina (7 ) and Ro
drlquez , F •tzmorr Is, Hoerner
(7 ), B.rd (9 ) and Hea l y WP F itzmorrls (7 3l LP - Tanana
C6W

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
ON MECHANIC STREET
The new 1975 RCA co,l or and b lack and w hite
television sets a nd the new 1975 RCA Console
•

••

Stereos are now In stock, ready for you to Me
and buy.

SPECIAL INTRODUCI'ORY OFFER

SAVE 25% ON THE RCA XLIOO

••

:

15JNCH AND 17 INCH DIAGONAL MEASURE SCREEN SIZE

••

•

COlDR PORTABLE TV SETS
OFFER ENDS A UGUST 10, 1974

IN POMEROY

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

ASTRIKE BY U!E INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD of
Electrical Workers against Western Electrtc Co factones entered tl.s second day, today, Idling some 56,000 workers The
strike could ultlrnlltely affect 80,000 workers at 10 Wester n
Electric plants nationwide IBEW members remamed on their
jobS at fiVe other Westem Electrtc plants
IBEW wotkero walked off thetr jobs Monday, just hours after
a tentative contract agreement averted a nahon-wlde strtke
against the Bell Telephone gystem The tentahve pact - which
wiU cOli! American Telephone and Telegraph a n estimated $3
btlllon - must stiU be put to a ratification vote Some 77,000
mEW workero remained on thelf jobS at BeU System factlities,
since they are covered by tbe tentative pact.

Museum f und near $600
The cuiTent fund drive of the
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society designed to
provide money for converting
Ute museum building Into a
functional structure has
reached almost $600.
\
Latest contributors to the
t......dl'tve are Gladys Hayman
Long Bottom ~ Myrtle Walker;
Racine ; C. C. Cuckler, Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs. Homer

i

•

•

By United Press International
WASIDNGTON - REP DELBERT L LA'ITA, R-&lt;lhto, one
of the staunchest defenders of President NIXon on the House
Judictary Comnuttee, Monday mght mdicated he would vote for
Impeachment. Latta swd he was "very much dtsappo10ted" m
NIXon's concealment of vttal Watergate mformallon from his
own lawyer and Ute cotruruttee Latta, reserving !mal JUdgment
until he had read tbe transcnpts of three more presldenllal
conversations released Monday, md1cated he was dtsturhed by
the new evidence
"My posttion all along has been that the President has to be
personally mvolved," srud Latta "I don't think you can tnfer
prestdentlal mvolvement But thts (the transcripts released
Monday) IS dtrect eVIdence of prestdenttal mvolvement There
isn't any question."

FOUR STATES WITH GOVERNORSHIPS, AND SENATE
seals up for ele.:tton hold prunary hallotmg today. There are
Senate prlmartes m MISSOun, Kansas and Idaho. Gubernatonal
prunartes are bemg held m Michigan, Kansas aml'ldaho.
The most suspenseful prunary IS 10 Michtgan, where three
Democrats are seeking the nommatlon to oppose Repubhcan
Gov Wtlliam Mliltken. But m Mtchtgan, as m Idaho, the
pohtictans complained about voter apathy
Wtth Watergate apparently to blame, only 21l per cent of
Mich1gan's 4 6 million eUgtble voters were expected to cast
ballots. "Tbe whole Washmgton thmg Is depresSing everybody,"
a county Democrattc offtcial satd.

•

ELBERFELDS

MRS. GRETA SUI'TLE, SEATED, and Mrs. NelUe Vale,
Meigs County school superVlSOrs, are putting 1Il busy days
with the paperwork mvolved m the some 400 exh1b1ts of
Metgs County school children for the Metgs County Fatr
which opens next Tuesday Deadline for school exlubtts if 4
p.m Friday.

230 210 200- 10 13 1

Ch 1cago
103 21.4 llK - 13 18 1
Hargan , Foucault (6 ), Stan
house (6 ). Broberg 181 and
Sims , Sundberg (6 ), L Allen ,

Hou ston
100 000 000- 1 7 2
Los Ano
100 010 oox- 2 7 2 11 st gamel
Roberts , Forsch (7 ) and Cleve
Johnson
Zahn , MaJ Shall (9 ) Mllwa

W~ . .

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
•

TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1974

~t"*'.OZ:: ~
- :::X::

·:;:-.;.:;:,;;;;•:::!:?..&amp; ..:i:i:..

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Partly cloudy Thursday
and a chance of showers

Friday and Saturday. Highs
In the 90s. Low In the 60s.

in hWTy huddle

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Prt1ldent NIKoutlllliiiGHI
his cabinet to the While H011se today to ~Jve a ~
account of his statement Monday be withheld ~
lnlormatlou about his lnvolvemeul ID lbe Wa
le
coverup.
Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. W.....,n dii&lt;!GaJIIetl
rumors that It was an "emergency meetla&amp;," MJiq II
had been set up late Monda y. But Trea1ury Seeretary
Wllllam E Simon's office said he did not Roel•e a IIMIH
of the meeting until this mornlqg and Vloe Pralde~~t
Gerald P. Ford canceled a speech In order to so lo llle
Ca binel session.

"laundered" through a bank In Mexico to conceal the naJTielll
contributors

ot

•

At another pomt tn one of the conversatons, Haldeman told
the President he believed John N. Mitchell, former attorney
general who then was Nllton's campaign manager, knew In
advance of the Watergate break-m. In tbe same conveta~tion,
Nixon IS shown ratsmg the questton whether G. Gordon !Jddy,
later convtcted as a masternund tn the burglary, was irlwlved.
The transcript of the morning conversation between Nixon and
Haldeman showed the Prestdent asking Haldeman, " •. Did
Mttchell know about thts?"
Haldeman replied, "I thmk so I don't I.Qlnk he knew the
( Coontmued on page 10)

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Mtddleport pollee Monday
on

Ha ven, Pt Pleasant, Ravens-

The Meigs County Board of Retardation meetmg
Monday night voted to place a 2 75 mtll tax levy
before Meigs County voters m November to provide
operating funds for the Me1gs Commumty School
which serves the retarded of the county
Of the 2 75 mills, .75 of a m1ll Js a renewal wh1le
two mills would be an addJhonaJ tax The board has
• .25 of a mill whtch does not exp1re this year If
passed, the total millage for support of the school
would be three mills with one mill bringmg m an
Two m en and two women
estimated $40,000 a year, tt is r eported
arrested by Pomeroy and

•

Radford, Pomeroy Route 3;
Gaddie Wickham, Ga!Upolis;
Lena McKinley, Middleport ;
Ethel Grueser, Pomeroy Route
2; J . E Seelig, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs Harry Swan, Porlland ; Mr. and Mrs. L. F .
Schoenleb, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Florence Rhodes, Middleport.
Contributions may be sent to
the 110clety at P . 0 . Bo~ US,
Pomeroy.

'

All members of the hoard
attendmg Monday mght's
meeting voted m fa vor of
placmg the levy before voters
wtth the exceptton of Rtck
Crow. Ed Kennedy, preSident
of the hoard, dtd not vote
In another actton , the board
agreed to recommend to the
Metgs County Boa rd of
Commtsstoners that the
Carleton College Stte m
Syracuse , a httle over five
acres, be accepted as the site of
the new communtty school
The land has been offered free
and was recommended as the
best s1te by a state offtctal who
VISited the county recently
FWids for construction of a new
school bwldmg for the mentally retarded were approved
by voters of the county last fall
Aspec1al meetmg was set lor
Aug 19 to take up vacanc1es m
the school The teachmg staff lS
complete wtth the exceplton of
a d~rec tor for the workshop
progrrun and lor a speech
theraptst to work under the
Tttle I program

John Krawsczyn, who had

headed the workshop for the
past year , reported on a craft
sale held by students at the Btg
Bend Regatta. Plans are also
underway for a craft sale at the
Metgs County Fatr thiS month
It was announced that
Penelope Pleasant will be
assoctated with the commun1ty
school program m the fall
Attendmg the sesston held m
the commiSSioners' office were
Prestde nt Kennedy, Crow,
Mrs. Grace Weber, Manmng
Webster, Rtchard Chambers,
Rev BtU Perrtn and Mrs
Margaret Ella LewiS, who ts
the

n e w adm1m strator teacher of the commumty

school. Several applicants for
posttlons were also prese nt
It ts reported that the buses

will follow the same schedule
as last year when classes get
underway Aug 27 New
students of the school are
asked to conl&lt;ict Mrs LewiS so
that mt ervt ews ma y be
arranged before school starts

aftern oon a r e

wanted

charges of forgery accordmg to wood and Ripley Syracuse and
Pomeroy Pollee Cht ef Jed Mmersvtlle already are paymg
$6 a month
Webster
In other business, Frankhn
They were identllted as
Trula Hindman , 36, l:&gt;onna Rtzer asked counctl for perIsbell, 19, and Benme Robbms, rntsslOn to place a trailer on h1s
21&gt;, all of Knoxville, Tenn , and property on East Mam St lor
Wendell Mtller, 37, Rt 2, storage. Rt~er asked counctl,
s10ce he did not have enough
Bonvtlle, Tenn .
Accordmg to Lt Stlas J fool&lt;ige fr om the adJomlng
Hamtlton of the Gallla County property of Carl W1ll, to watve
Shenff 's Department they
passed two checks at Jones
Boys m Galhpohs owned by
Mr. and Mrs Stewart Case of
Upper Sandusky, Ohto , They
Closmg lime for practically
also had m their possesston
all
open class entrtes for the
credtt cards owned by the Case
lllth
annual Metgs County
famtly
Fatr wtll be at 4 p,m thiS
Lt Hamtlton satd the four
Frtday, Aug. 9
are also hemg questtoned m the
Mrs Mickey King, secrel&lt;iry
alleged beatmg of Jefferson
of the fatr board, wtll be at the
DaviS Swango II, 54, Rt 2, office on the Rock Spnngs
Bidwell
Fairgrounds from 10 a m to 4
They apparentl y forged
p m Thursday and Fnda y to
checks at the Jones Boys 10 accept enll'tes for the 1974 fatr
Pomeroy Monday They were
Excepttons to the deadline
apprehended after a chase by
Pomeroy pollee . The case ts

By United Press Intemattonal
Ohto Industrial Relatton s
Dlfector Joseph Shump today
promised to draft a tougher
coal mine safely law after
meetings Monday w1th angry
members of the United Mme
Workers from southeaste rn
Ohio
Shwnp pledged to the mmers
the Ohio Department of Industrial Relations would "put
together a bill for the
legislature to replace the
antiquated mining law now on

near Salem Center
Art Nelms, vtce preSident of
Umted Mine Workers Dtstr1ct
6, led some 25 pickets at the
Statehouse In Columbus
Monda y In protest of the
rehlflng of North Amencan Co
fore man Denztl Carpenter The
wuon blames Carpenter fo• the
death of a young miner ad the
firm 's operation In Powhatan
Point last year
The 1,600 workers at Consolidated joined another 2,200
UMW membe rs at North
Ute books"
Amencan operattons In JefShump said he had been ferson, Belmont and Monroe
assured by Oliio J;louse Speaker counties who walked off their
A G Lanclone, J).Bellatre, the jobs last Thursda y after
legislation would gel qwck learnlpg Carpenter had been
attention .
at
another
reinstated
Some 1,600 miners at Con- operation
\ solidated Coal Co operatlonstn
"We blamed ,the company
soUtheastern Ohio, claiming and the foreman , but the state
the state Bureau of Mines had has done nothing all this time
Ignored the death of a fellow to decide wheUter hts (Carworker last year, walked off penter's )' license should he
their jobs Monday.
revoked," said Nelms m
Also out of the shafts were Columbus "They will be there
miners at the Meigs Mines
Contmued on page 10

the 15-feet as reqwred m the
ordinance He had a letter from
Mr and Mrs. Wtll mformmg
counctl they had no objeclton.
Rtzer agreed to comply fully
wtth other condlllons m the
ord10ance Council granted the
request
Counctl agreed to a request
by Counctbnan John Manley on
behalf of the fire department
for permtssion to adverttse for
bids for a new truck chassis
Council also agreed to pay
expenses of Joe Struble ($120)
to attend the Ohto State Fife
School at Ohio State Unlverstty
from Sept 9 through 13 where
he wtll take mstruct10n m
emergency victim care
Struble also wtll ~&lt;ike trainmg
10 the emergency room at
Um verstty or Riverside
Hosp•tal
Counc1l agreed to g1ve the
Pomeroy Ftre Dept $300 to be
used toward expenses for

ftremen who wish to attend the
Ohio Slate Firemen's convention In Toledo on 23, 24 and
25, and transferred $6,000 from
the parking meter fund to the
street deparlment fund, $4,000
of whtch wiU be used to pay the
Shelly Co. for recent paving
work.
Dav1d Woolard was autgned
as a special pollee oillcer
followmg a request by Pollee
Chief Jed Webster. Wollard
wlll be paid tlirough the
Leadmg Creek Conservancy
District Council continued Its
discussion about purchulng
the Weed building at the corner
of Second and Butternut Ave.
Attending were Mayor Dale
Smtih, Ralph Werry, Willlain
Snouffer, Harry Davis, Phil
Globokar, and John Manley,
counctlmen; Jane Walton,
clerk, and Phyuts Hennessy,
treasurer

Open classes close Friday
for the open class competition
are the horse show which
closes to entrtes at 1 p m on
Aug 14 and the pony and horse

Mrs. Bradford
selected fair
board secretary

'

pulhng contests which close at
the time the events start as
grandstand attractions during
the fatr.
Exhibitors must determine
for themselves In what clauel
they wllliTillke entry and must
compl ete their own entry
blanks. Exhibits must be left in
place unW 4 p.m on Saturday,
Aug 17, or the exhibitor wl!l
forfe1l any premium awarded.

Mrs Wallace Bt'adford was
named new secretary, Of the
Metgs County Fa1r Board
Monday mght when the board
met a t the Rock Sprmgs
Fatrgrounds
Mrs. Bradford wtll offtclally
lake over after Nov. 30 when
Mrs Mtckey Km g, present
A $15,000 grant from ACsecretary who IS res1gmn g,
TION
for coordmalton of
volun teer progra ms m the
leaves the pos1l10n Mrs
Membership ltckets for the Bradford ts the wtfe of the
Buckeye Htlls-Hocklng Valley
Janel Maue, daughter of Mr.
RegiOnal Development District 1974 Me&gt;gs County FaiT have board prestdent.
and Mrs. Harold Maue, Rt 2
Also, 1t was announ ced today Albany, and Brian Windon, son
(BH-HVRDD) has been an- been placed on sale m several
nounced by Execultve Com- business houses
that bands of the Me1gs County of Mr and Mrs : VIrgil Wlndon,
The ticke~. at $4 each, en- h1gh schools wtll not be making Rt 3, Pomeroy, lelt Monday to
mtltee President Richa rd H
titled the purchaser to ad- thetr tradttlonaL appearances take part tn the week-long
Holl
The postlton of Volunteer miSSIOn and fre e parking for at the county fair thts montlt conservation camp ill 4-H
It will be the ftrst ltme 10 Camp Ohio.
Programs Coordmator wtll be the ftve day fatr . All grand1
estabhsheil al the Dtsll'•ct level stand performances are free of many years that the local
Janel, 16, involved In 4-H ,,
to promote the use of volun· charge, once the patron Is bands have not appeared at the work eight years, Is prelident '
leers m improving services to admttted to the grounds Ticket latr The hoard agreed to ol the HarrlaonviUe Honor
residents of the program area purchasers are also ehgtble to dtscontlnue the tradition
Girls 4-H Club, and lreallllV ot
whtch mcludes Washmgton, vote or ftle for the bOard of
the Junior Leadership Club.
directors
of
the
SOCiety
Morgan , Monroe , Noble,
Brian , 15, In 4-H work live
TESTS THIS WEEK
Tickets may he purchased
years,
Is a member ot the
Perry. Hocking, Athens and
Skin tests for teaching and
1
from
any
fair
board
member
or
Meigs counUes
non-&lt;:ertifled employes of the Meigs County Better Beef
The overall objective of tbe at Dick's Grocery , Route 33, Meigs County Schools will be Uveatock +H Club, the ,]tlelel
project wtll be to d~ termme the north of Pomeroy; New York gtven Wednesday and Thurs· County Shepherde, l ancl
Dtstric t's need areas tn Clothing House, Green Lan· day mornings only at the Meigs recreation leader of the JU11lor
tern, Sugar Run MtU, Swlsher- Coun ty Health Dept , East Leadership Club.
relation to volun teer services
Drugs, Five Points Grtll , Mai n St , Pomeroy
l.ohse
Recruitment and tra1 mng
The camp prOflrarn Ia emprograms wtll then be Gloeckner's Gale, Pomeroy;
phasizing man In hll relallon to
FJ,SH FRY SET
developed to spectflcally meet Sa die 's Markel, Syracuse ;
soiL water, foralry, wlldlill,
Baum
LUmber
Co.,
Chester
;
The
Middleport
Fire
the volunteer needs of Ute
sritl fecreatlon. EalenJlon
sports
department
at
Mid·
Department
will
hold
a
fish
fry
program area The District
IIJM!(Iallsta and ..enta en .._
office will also provide Ute dleport Department Store; Friday starting at 3:30p.m. at teachin1 1111d Mlnlnlall'etlft
necessary techntcal assistance Mtller Brothers Grocery, the fire hall. Sandwiches will camp 1talh. Colltll •••
to fa clhta te program lm- Rutland; Wald Cross Sons, be sold Proceeds wUI go to the peOple .... cabin -.elan.
Ractne .
fire equl~ment lund
plemenlal!on
111e eamp endl Alii· 10.

still under mvesllgahon

Tougher mine
laws promised

Cable TV up 50 cents
Cable TV rates m Pomeroy
wtll he Increased effecttve
Sept I, from $5 50 to $6 per
month and to $4 50 a month for
dtsabled and semor ctttzens, 1!
was announced at the regular
meet1ng of Pomeroy counctl
Monday mght
A letter from Pomtvlew
Cable of Pl. Pleasant addressed to Mayor Dale 8mlth
was read by Clerk Jane Walton
announcmg the system-wtde
tncrease and will affect Mtd·
dleport, Pomeroy, Mason , New

Police
hold 4

7 90
3 10 2

Ch icago
000 201 21 x- 6 10 2
Clyde , Foucault (6 L Merritt
Ch 1cago
000 '220 000- 4 9 0 IBJ and Sundberg , B Johnson
Ptts brgh
201 000 000- 3 8 0 I (4 OJ and
Downtng
LPBonham (10 lJl and Sw1sher , Foucault (.4 Sl HRs- 0 Allen
Rooker (1 9 ) and Sangull l en (29th) , Henderson (13th)
HR - Thornton (6th)

NO 80

New school may he
built
in
Syracuse
'

001 003 600- 10 12 o
012 001 000- 4 9 A
Hunter 115 91 and Tenace,
De c ker , Burgmeler (7) , Albury
(81 and Borgmann LP - Oecker.
(11 10 1
HR - Oarwln
!18th) ,
Borgmann (2nd) , Mangual

and

~Cabinet

2.75 mill tax levy going on ballot

M tnn

( 4 2)

"magnlfkent career ol public serv•ce must be wrmma ted m- In order to attend a cabtnet meeting called by NIXon for late m
voluntarlly "
the mormng, posstbly to renew the ort...epeated Whtte House
lnststence
that the Prestdent has no In tention of restgnlng.
Several other Repobhcans who voted against Impeac hment In
'!'he President has been larKely m secluston the past week
the Judiciary hearings also said they had now &lt;hanged the•r
llslenmg to tapes of his old Watergate conversattons that the
minds.
At Sunday's Camp Dav id strategy session, the Post said, Nixon Supreme Court ordered surrendered for POSSible use 10 next
"sertously considered the opllon of restgniOK and temporarily month's Watergate coverup tnal
rejected 1t,"
The W1ggins announcement thai he now would vote for tmThe Post quoted one sourt'e as saying that Nixoo gave most peachment was followed today by the declaration by the most
serious consideration to lettmg VIce President Gerald R Ford voctlerous pres1dent1al defender at the Judtctary hearmgs, Rep
Charles W Sandman, R-N J , that he, too, now favored ITO~&lt;ike over as acttng president temporarily under under terms of
peachment
the 25th Amendment's pre81denttal dlllllbtllty provls10n .
Sandman said the transcnpls released Monday by Nixon carry
1'he newspaper said none of the President's advisers fe lt that
he should sertously constder mvoklng the 25th Amendment and the "hard proof" of crunmallty and predtcted the House ITO·
one source was quoted that "for the present t1me, at least, that peachment vote "wtll be practically unanimous "
option has been forec losed."
The newly released transcnpt showed tha t Ntxon and HalFor his part, Ford announced that he was calling a ha lt to his deman, dunng the flfst of thetr June 23, 1972, meetings discussed
steady public defense of Nixon
pohtica l advantages of USing the CIA to blunt part of an FBI
Ford, named by Nuton last December to succeed Splfo T lnvestigatton of Watergate
Agnew who resigned In a separate admlntstra tton scanda l, satd
On tnstructtons from Ntxon, Haldeman later reported to the
in a statement Monday nigh t that he stood by his pronoun- Pres1denl that he contacted Asststant CIA Dtrector Vernon
cements that he did not helleve the President IS guilty of an Walters and the mvesllgatwn "was leadmg tnto directions that
tmpeacha ble offense "under the conslltutwnal defmtllon of were going to creaw potential problems because they were extreason, bribery or other htgh crunes a nd misdemeanors "'
ploring leads that led back Into areas that would be harmf ul to
But Ford satd he did not believe 1! would be m the public 10- the CIA and barmlul to the government "
terest to reiterate that position He S81d that 10 vtew of the new
At another pomt, HaldelllWl told Ntxon that L Patrick Gray,
matenals released by Nixon, " J Inlend to respectfully dechne to then actmg FBI director, had called CIA Director Rtchatd
discuss ITOpeachment matters m pubhc or 10 response to Helms, "and sa1d I think we've run r•ght mto the mtddle of a CIA
queshons until the facts a re more fully avatlable "
covert operation "
Ford has been makmg almost daily speeches, mostly out of
The purpose of the effort supposedly was to prevent disclosure
town He called off a scheduled appeara nce today m Washmgton, of the source of some re-&lt;&gt;lection campatgn fu nds that were

VOL. XXVI

&lt;1st game)
Oakl and

Abbott

ev1 ence

In

0

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area

LaGrow , Slayback (J l and
Moses
L P- LaGrow (7 121
HRs Robinson 16th ), Ro
drlguez 2 (4th and 5th )

Butler ( 4 4) and Roof
Bando (15th )

•

enttne

303 200 01Q- 9 12 0
100 100 001 - 3 7 1
McNally (10 8) and Wi lliams.

At lanta
001 000 102- 4 1 0
San Fran
000 200 000- 2 7 0
Reed , House (8 ) anti Oates ,

m1ts

·•

•

Balf
Detroit

(2nd game)
Oakl and
\\ Inn

•

Coordinator
to be hired

Tickets to

Two youths

fair go on

attending

public sale

4-H camp

"

••

'

�•

3- T"-

•

• ".:. ntanei,Mlddleport l'omeroy o ,1\lesday , Aug 6, 1974

•

DR. LAMB

He needs psychiatric help
United .,_, Internatlooal
The worst drought to hal Ute
naUon smce the 1930s showed
oo mgns of weake111ng today
and officials feared diSBSier for
By

farmers and

rarK"hers and

skyrockeUng praces for con-

WANTED

swners

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER
PHONE 992 2156

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
POMEROY, 0.

Em pjllyment Wanted
n

WILL do babys ttlng
home
EM per enced

my

Phone
Mrs Glen Smtth Rock
Spnngs Rd 992 3613
7 31 6tc

Auto Sales
1963 OODG E P ckup 6 cyl nder
3 n3'2 t re ~ S3SO Phon e 992
5301
a 4 Jtc

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

1973 DODGE Charger Rally
automat c P S P B am tm
stereo radto rape player new
Crager wheels and t res a r
shocks Ask ng S3 500 Phone
949 4989
B 6 3tp

Rep Wrll1am Scherle, Rlowa, saad Monday that rf Ute
drought IS not broken soon
Congress Will hove to pass
WAYNE SEARLS
RUTI.AND -Wayne Searls, emergency legJSiation to proson of Mr and Mrs Ray Searls VIde beleaguered farmers wath
of 235 DeJM&gt;t St , RuUand, disaster loans
"Certainly these steps would
enlisted in the Uruted States
Arr Force on July 18 Wayne, a be mandatory to forestall a
graduate of Meigs High School, catastrophic depressron which
wrll receive Air Force training would \\rench our nation from
at Lockland Air Force Base, Its economtc shores,' Scherle
San Antoniot Texas Upon told a farmers group an
completion of six weeks of i Columbia, Mo
Already the drought has cost
basic training, he wm be
assrgoed to Sheppard AFB, fanners and ranchers more
Texas for 30 weeks lraluJng as than $9 btllion m crop and
a commumcatJoos and relay livestock losses
Nebraska reports $2 36
center equipment repairman
btllion m losses, Kansas and
Texas each report $2 billion m
losses Iowa clauns losses of
VISITS GRANDMOTIIER
$1 6 brllion, Olino!S more Ulan
Philip Gmther, Mrddleport
$1 billion and Oh10 more Ulan
left Sunday after an overnaght $300 million
VISit With his grandmother,
Oklahoma Gov Davtd Hall
Mrs OriS Gmther, Chesler Rd Monday asked that 35 counties
Mrs Gmther had spent Frtday 111 the western and southern
and Saturday 111 Mrddietown part of his stale be declared
wath the James GmUter family drought disaster areas and

Wanted To Buy
FARM :200 acres more or less
S5 000 down rest n payments
to owner Wr te R Breun g
2916 Blueberry La Bowte
Md 20715 or c&amp;ll CJ OlJ 262
2057
8 6 ltc

Autos complete and
del vered to our yard We ptck
up auto bodies and buy all
k nds of scrap metals and
Iron R der s Salvage State
Rt 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohto
Phone 992 5468
7 31 26tp

JUNK

CASH paid for all ma'kes and
models of mob1fe homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 ffc
OLD furntture oak tables
clocks Ice boxes brass beds
dtShes desks or complete
households Wr te M 0
Miller Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
ca 11 992 7760
5 13 tfc

---- --------5 ACRES of level to gently

rolllng l.!!nd not too far from
town Send any Inform atron to
Box 729 C care of the Da lly
Senttnel Pomeroy Oh o
45769
B2 12tc

CASH FOR JUNK CARS
complete Frye s Truck and
Auto Parts Rutrend Oh o 24
HOUR WRECI&lt;ER SER
VICE PhOne 7426094
7 26 26tc

---...----------S5 for 1unk automob les We wtl1

p ck up R ver!s de Auto
Wreckmg Phone (3041 773
5890

------------'!..._-7 s lfc
Mob1le Homes For Sale

NEW
\974 Gettysburg by
Castle 3 bedroom
front
k1tchen model total electr.c
set up ~nd ready to move nto
S6 695 Be the f irst to en lOY
country I vmg with c1t y
conven•ences Can be seen at
Country Mob le Home Park
Oarwm OhiO Call 992 7034

for mform a11on

Eugene Wyatt of Cheshire dies
Eugene Wyatt 66 Rt 1
Cheshare dred Monday at
Holzer Medacal Center He was
born Dec 25 1907 m Vargama
Precedmg him m death were
h1s father, Samuel Wyatt, one
brother, Clarence and an
rnfant Sisler
He IS survrved by hiS wale
Nma Irene Frecker Wyatt, hiS
mother, Bertie Asbury Wyatt
a daughter, Mrs Clarence
(Kathryn) Ash Dayton three
sisters, Mrs Russell (Pearl)
Uttle, Rutland Mrs Wtlll811l
(Eunrce) Chase and Mrs Leo
(Kate) Smith, both of
Columbus, and two brothers
James Wyatt, Pomeroy and

Barbara Coleman wtth lave
years servtce at Ute Pomeroy
City Loan, was recognized at
the annual service award
ceremony and 62nd brrUtday
anniversary celebration of The
City Loan and Savmgs Com
pany recently at ats home offace
mUma
Altogether 274 employees
were honored w1th service
awards and oUter mdlvadual
lrrbutes She receaved a gold
pm set with a daamond
#:::AA:::O.;&amp;;:O:!R '"'~S!~Y:! ;.- .,

..

,

1972 3 BEDROOM W ndsor
Mob1le Home on 1 acre of
ground
For
more
In
format on call 992 7638

-.

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

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO

FAYE E COWDERY
Reednille Ohto
Pia mt1ff
V$
DALE CECIL COWDERY
Address Unknown
Defendant
No 15 602
-NOTICE BY
PUBLICATIONPlaintiff has brought this
actton nam ng you as defendant
ln the above named court by
flftng her Compla nt on the 6th
day of July 1974
The oblect ot the Compla nt
and the demand for reltef are to
obta n a d vorce and tor other
proper rel ief
You are requtred to answer
the Compla nt wlthm twenty
eight days after the last
publ cat on of th s not ce wh lc h
Will be PUblished once each
week for s x consecut iVf! weeks
and the la~t publ1cat lon will be
made on the 20th day of August
l974 Your answer date wtll be
on September 18 197&lt;1
In the case of your fa lure to
a"swer or ot he rw se respond as
permttted by the Ohio Rules of
Ctvll Procedure wi1h n the t me
stated judgment by default will
be rendered Qga ns.t you fpr the
relief demanded n the Com
plaint

'
(?) 9 16

LARRY E SPENCER
Clerk of
Common Preas Court
Meigs County Ohio
Court House
Pomeroy Oh 0
23 30 (81 6 13 20 7tc

NOTICE
Rtvlnd Code
sec 2717 01
Notice rs hereby given that
the undersigned Intend$ to
m•k•arpllcatlon to the Probat~
Court o Meigs County Ohio for
In order to change her name to
Slrl Ellz•btlh Burns
Slid 1ppllcat1on wltl be by
Pl'tltlon to bt filed rn sa ld
Probltf Court on or after the
7th diV of StP.ttmbtr 1974
Dltl'd this 30th Clay of July
1,74

Elizabeth Burn!&gt;
TWI Sf•tt of OhiO Melgs
County

Servaces wall be Thursday at
2 p m at the Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home wrth Tom Clark
and Frank Porter offlcaatmg
Burtal wall be m the Gravel Hill
Cemetery Cheshrre
Fraends may call at the
funeral home UIIS evemng from
7-9 p m and Wednesday between 10 a m and noon and
430and9pm

In commemoration of the
anniversary, officers,
executives and honored servace
employees from all over Ohio
gathered in Uma for Ute
awards ceremony, banquet
and special entertaiDment
The company started
busmess ID Wapakoneta In
1912 Today the fll'IIl maintains
187 offrces all over Ohw em
ploymg more Ulan 1,200 people
wath total resources over $226
million

--:o;;:::&amp;;.,::.-~::::X:::~:!:::!~~o.·

D£:AL ME

~

~

"'·

~~

.;

7 30 tfc

x 12 MOBILE home 3
bedroom bath J vtng room
hall and 2 bedrooms car
peted Phone 992 7751
6 16 tfc

several years

i'
~:

'.!.;.

~

IN, too

~f
..~
,

By Jo Ellen Dlebl
For the past five weeks I worked in Galllpolls In the advertising department of the Sunday Tlmes..SOnUnel and Daily
Tribune, so I massed out on wrating columns and the like
However, I gamed a bat of knowledge of the newspaper busmess
m diSCovermg another facet of Ute paper's production
But, more unportant I found an enlhuSUIBIIJ that I've never
seen 111 Utis area The enthuSI88IIl was for Ute town as a whole, a
sort of prade m Ute conunwuty which has helped the town to
grow
Very few properties In town are run down 111 the least and the
communaty IS kept very clean There are many volunteer groups
ready and willing to take part 111 community projects, and area
busmessmeye not afraad to mvest m the area wath new
busmesses ii\IIR!UCh
Whenever there IS a problem there seems to be amaglnative
adeas floWing for the lmjlrovement of the community so that It
will continue to grow and attract newcomel'l, not turn them off
wrth a slow, unprogressrve way of life It would be nice If some of
Ute commwuty spmt of Gallipolis could be transferred upriver to
make Meigs County a bat more progre5save mmded
A FAMI !JAR FACE to Meigs County is that of Fred Lee who
recently returned home from Germany after serving wtth the U
S Army Fred plans to enter Ohao University In Ute fall
BECKY WRIGHT CARD 1B off to Myrtle Beach thiS week
with her brother, Benny Wraght, following summer school at Rio
Grande College Benny as home on leave from the Air Force 111
South Dakota
Becky bas become quite a traveller this swnmer, going to
Georgia and Florida before •ummer school began and planmng
more traps for Ute remamder of lire s~ Whale she's not
travelling she attenda college planning a career In special
education
She and Benny are the children of Mr and Mrs Lloyd
Wraght, Beech St , Pomeroy
WORK HAS BEGUN ON the new water system for Pomeroy
pretty quick to go to work after Ute town council acted on the
sltuataon
BEST OF LUCK NEXT WEEK to 4-H membel'!l, FFA, Girl
Scouts and Boy Scouf.ll who will be participating In the Meags
County Jr F811' Aug 13-17 Much work g.., Into preparing for
the Junior fair, and Ute young men and women of the county
deserve all the credit they receive

S1r1

(II '· ltc

'

r

You seem from your letter.
DEAR DR LAMB - In a to be fwrly braght so you
recent column you wrote that should be able to accept the
aid request
Hall s press secretary, Ed male hormones accentuate Idea that you are not at all
Hard y said farm ers and masculine charac tertstlcs capable of or trained to
anrludang diagnose your own problem
ranchers In Oklahoma have o ften
You wrll need professtonal help
been hard hrt
aggressiveness
to gel the rrght answers about
They've been waped out by
I hove read that male hor
thiS drought he saad
mones are not very efteclive m yourself
One of the most rmportant
Though Agrrculture treatmg homosexuality and on
Secrelary Earl Butz has noted that baSis concluded that they purposes of psychologacal and
that the drought while seraous would not help me But l psych1atnc counseling 1s to
is not cntica l as far as food behove that my problem may help a person change h1s
Your letter
supphes are concerned a be more one of lack of personality
slrongly
suggests
that you
number of ofhcaals m Ute aggressiveness than actual
would like to change And from
drought areas drsagreed
homosexuality
It s WIShful thmking on the
I have never had any type of your remarks l would agree
that you could develop a
part of some to believe the sexual encounter "'1th anyone
drought rsn t gomg to have the and my fantasies mvolve g1rls, broader mteresl m life Uta! wdl
effect on overall productaon at albCLt I am not 1nvolved m make hfe much more pleasant
Wlll have.'' said Iowa AgncuJ. them except as a spectator I for you m the future
There ts no evu:!ence m your
ture Secretary Robert Louns bate any kind of physrcal
berry
letter
Utat you are oraented
exertaon and am extremelY
Lounsberry, however saad lazy l have no fnends and no more to homosexual activity
than you are to heterosexual
Butz was nght m seeking to mterests
activaty
It docs suggest that
prevent pamc and keepmg
I sleep most of the tame and
commmodity speculators from masturbate heavily M~ only you are afrard of personal
creatang a false market
concern 1s myself, but I do not mvolvement w1th anyone Your
self-centered bebav10r may
f1ght or work to get external
well
be because you are
rewards I get enjoyment out of
rem1mscmg about prevJOus afrard of other people and at IS a
Martin promoted
achievements that were wtthm defense mechamsm You may
a harrbreadth of me but whrch I not think you are able to
Mrs Mary Martm Pomeroy threw away
sustain a meamngful close
em ploy ed for the past 18
relationship, including good,
I am 21 and obvrously self
months w1th the Enforcement centered What can be ac
close fraendshlps that normal
DIVISIOn of the Buteau of Motor comphshed wtth male hor- people develop wrtll members
Vehicles, has been promoted to mone• Could I be helped by at' of both sexes It IS JUSt as
fteld coordmator m the
DEAR READER - The Slgnifacant that you have no
Audrtmg DrVlswn of the BMV begmmng of the solution to any close male fnends as that you
She was one of seven persons m problem 1s recogmzmg you have no close female fnends
the Bureau selected to frll Ute have one You have already
It IS qUite passable that you
new posLbons
hove
a very bad mfenoraty
made the frrst step
Her duties wlll mclude
You are worned about complex It may be this feeling
superVISIOn of Ute 68 deputy whether
lou
have
a Utat causes you to farl m
registrars m the counties of homosexual oraentatwn It as developmg human relatwns
Lawrence Gallra Athens normal to worry about Utat rf The problem here then IS not
Me1gs, Jackson
Vmton
you haven t yet established a your sex oraentatlon but why do
Hockmg , Perry Morgan
heterosexual life That doesn't you have thiS oprnlon of
Farrfreld Washrngton , mean
though
that yourself Concerted or self
Belmont, and Noble
homosexual responses are centered people often really
have an mfenonty complex
your problem at all

HAPPY WEDDING anniversary to my parenf.ll, Mr and
Ml'll James Diehl' They are celebrating 3! years of married life
today

•

By La" renee E Lamb, M D

Overnight

• • •

Your masturbation Is normal Jt is about the only sexual

outlet you could have rn view of
your llfe style And smce you
have normal sexual tenstons tl
" the expected form of
behavaor It should not become
a substitute for more mature
relatronshaps "ath members of
Ute opposite sex
Mode hormone won t do a
thrng for you J am faarly
confident that you have normal
hormone functiOnS In YIC\\ Of
your sexual hiStory The only
way they could help would be to
gtve you some self-confidence
because you expected them to
do somethrng for you
Most people wrth your
problem are afrard of gettmg
hurt ThiS usually means tbat
they already have been
usually m chtldhood The root
of the problem often IS m the
relatron of Ute chrld to the
parents Such md!VIduals have
often been rejected by one or
more often both parents The
srtuataon snowballs from Utere
Handicapped from thiS ex
pertence the person has di!
frculty relatrng to playmates
early an life The problem then
JUSt expands and repeats atself
Smce he can't relate to play
mates, the playmates reJect
hun re..enforcmg hlS sense of
lack of worth After all the
parents drdn t grve hrm sup
port so someUtmg must be
wrong wath hrm he thmks
And then the same Utmg
happened agaan and again and
agam Each new experLence
proves agam to the person that
he IS unworthy Such m
drvtduals may seek qut op
portunataes to be rejected, to
puniSh themselves for some
supposed gUilt
What you need IS a shrmk

in briefs

By United PressJnternaUooal
OOLUMBUS - REP SAMUEL L DEVINE, R~HIO, ALWAYS a staunch supporter of
Presadent Rachard M NIXon m Ute past, sard Monday unpeachment was meVItable followmg the
Presadent s admrssron he had wathheid evtdence for Watergate mvestigators Rather than put the
country through thiS long process, I Utink he should gave seraous constderatlon to reSignmg " saad
DeVIne, an occasiOnal guest of Ute Prestdent s on hiS cruases on the prestdentlal yacht
On balance he's done a good job, excluding the Watergate Utmg, particularly m foreagn affaars,
Devme noted But at looks like a clear case of obstruction of JUstace •

Employe honored

_____ ________._, 51 c

65

Samuel Wyatt Jr Zanesville
Mr Wyatt a mechamc by
trade operated the Wyatt and
Ihle Servace Center below
Hobson He was a maintenance
operator for Cheshrre Town
shrp Vtllage and Ute State of
Ohto m Meags County for

sa1d that, unless ram comes
soon, aiJ 77 counties an the state
may be mcluded m a drsaster

ALAN McLAUGHLIN

McLaughlin in

new Who's Who
for students
Alan B McLaughlm, a 1974
graduate of Meags Hrgh School,
wall be featured m the eaghlh
annual edttion of Who's Who
Among Amencan Hagh School
Students, 1973-1974 Ute largest
student award pubhcatlon m
Ute nataon
Students from over 20,000
public, private and parochtal
high schools throughout Ute
country are recogmzed for
thell' leadershtp m academics,
athlet1cs, acttv1ties or com
munrty service m the books
Less than 3 pet of the Junror
and semor class students
nationwade are awarded this
recogmtlon
McLaughlin Ute son of Mr
and Mrs KenneUt McLaughlm,
Pomeroy, lS a member of the
Trmrty Church While at Mergs
Hrgh he won three varstty
letters m football and three
varstly ! ~tiers m wrestlmg In
addtlton to havmg has
baography published m Ute
book, McLaughlm W!U also
compete for one of ten
scholarship awards of $000 to
$1,000 funded by the publishers
and wtU be mvrted to par
t1c1pate m the flrm s annual
Survey of Hrgh Achaevers
McLaughlin plans to attend
Hocking Techmcal College,
Nelsonvalle, begmmng rn
September He as workmg
durmg this summer at Essex
Corp Carey, Ohro

The ~

Sentiiii - 1
I

DEVOJ'IDTOTHE

""""""or

___........... ........,.,.,.
MEIQHIA80N AR.a
OIEII'ER L. TANNEIID..L

"""

ROII:ln'HODUal

vane, P\1~ ~ 111
Ccmtlt P«wot Ohkr _ . ....._

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PUmlr~
reprtltnt.IUwe

clul ptlttql )llkl at

Nattonalldvvtllint
~

lAc' Utul Old St
Jffii'York. NftYor\

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WASHINGTON - ACKNOWLEDGING THAT 'l'liE HOUSE WOUW PASS articles of rm
peachment and there would be a Senate trtal for Presadent Nrxon Vtce President Gerald R Ford
Monday said he Will make no further comments about tt In a statement issued Monday, Ford sind
The publtc mteresiiS no longer served by repetitaon of my prevwusly expressed belle! that, on
Ute basts of all the eVIdence known to me and the Ameracan people, the PreSident IS not gwlty of an
rmpeacbable offense under Ute Constrtutwn, which specifies treason brabery, hrgh crunes and
mtsdemeanors
Inasmuch as addational evadence IS about to be forthcommg from the Presadent - which he
SB)S may be damagmg -I an tend to respectfully decline to discuss unpeachment matters m public
or m response to questtons until the matters are more fully available •
CLEVELAND - TilE CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER OHIO S largest newspaper today
stated man edatoraal that President Richard M NIXon should resagn from offrce now
The Prestdent s shocking admission yesterday (Monday) that he deliberately withheld m
formatiOn and rrusled Congress and the nallon about Ute Watergate coverup now makes hiS removal
from office a certamty ' Ute newspaper satd 'To spare the nation the agony of the Impeachment
process and himself of Ute hunullallon of conVIction, Vresadent NIXon should hegm dlScussaons for
the orderly transttaon of power to VIce Presadent Gerald R Ford
It IS dtsheartenmg to advocate thiS course of action, but the Plam Dealer believes Uta! m the
best mterest of Ute Umted States, Presadent Nrxon should step down, the newspaper added '
WASHINGTON- THE AMERICAN TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH CO has offered to
make ne.tly negotaated pay mcreases for most of tts system employes relroacllve if umon members
rallfy Ute contract thiS monUt A Bell Telephone spokesman swd Ute new contracts regardless of
when Utey are ratified will mean higher phone bWs
But Utere was still no agreement today on money and related Issues mvolvrng workers stall on
strake m Ute AIT Western Electric subsuliartes, the manufacturmg arm of the BeD system Bell
Telephone offactals Monday diSclosed details of the tentative agreement reached Sunday rught two
hours he!ore a stnke deadline by most of tts 725,000 workers
TURKEY AND GREECE SET A NEW ROUND OF PEACE TALKS ON war-ravaged Cyprus
today after reaching a breakthrough agreement on tentative cease-frre lines The Uruted Nations
however reported heavy fightmg m Famagusta a port city on Cyprus southeastern coast underscormg the tnstabilaty of Ute week-&lt;Jld cease.frre
in AUtens, Greece threatened to boycott future full-acale negotiations 111 Geneva unless gaven
safeguards agamstfresh Turkish VIolations of the truce U S troubleshooter Arthur A Hartman
held talks m Nacosra waUl leaders of the Greek and Turktsh Cypraot communities as weU as Brrt!Sh
and U N offtctals man attempt to head off new clashes AU N spokesman m Nrcosaa sard Greek
and Turktsh army offrcers called a mornmg meetmg today w1Ut Bratish and u
N mrlltary representatives to finish chartmg cease frre lines
SAIGON - OOMMUNIST TROOPS F1RED A BARRAGE of rockets at Da Nang today and
moved heavy tanks mto a ragmg battle to capture Ute approaches to South Vrelnam s second
largest caty
CommuniSt gunners frred a salvo of 10 Sovretoffi8de 122nun rockets at the sprawling Da Nang
wr base and surroundmg homes lluring the morniDg wounding three CIVIlians and a mrhtlaman
UP! photographer Lun Thanh Van, reporting from the scene, saad Ute shelling _ the fourth rn a
:;;,',:week-old CommuniSt drive against Da Nang - battered an aar force helicopter and a CIVIlia n
COLUMBUS - GOY JOHN J GIUJGAN S PLAN TO DIVIDE Ohio mto uniform se
"In
1
P anmng dls t r Ic ts WI U
no way tak e government a)Vay from the people the govern rvace am
'
or s press
secretary sard Monday
Robert Tennenbaum, answering charges made by James Rhodes former Ohao gov
anc
Gtll rgan •s opponent 111 the fa 11 e1ectlon, saad, Gov Gilligan's pian Js •unquestionably Inernor
the besr
mteres\s of the catizens of every part of the state and wUlm no way take government away from the
people Rhodes said Friday that Ute governors plan would blur the adentlties of cou t 11
d •
take government away from lhe people," Rhodes pledged he would • scrap Ute entir n Yi n-;s1
was elected governor In November
e Pan

;'!,.

Jn

DETROIT -SOME3,800WORKERSATGENERALMOTORS ~MBLV plant In Dor
Ga, walked off UtejobMonday Ina localcontracldlspute to join 13 500worker$ a !read
t ~k et
plants in Ohio and Missouri GM also faces the threat of a fourth w'alkout Friday as 1 r~n s r ~a
of Umted Auto Workers Local&gt;HO bave set a 2 30 p.m deadline for setUement of loc j 1 mem rs
a S!ues at the
centralfoundry plant in Bedford,lnd , a key part. supplier
The plants are among 14 of I~ UAW~M bargaining unlta sliD without local agr
supplement the national pact, reached laat November, which covers economic wuelee;~n~ ~~
contracts cover in-plant worklpg conditions The strike at the Doraville plant beg
oca
Monday after local contract negoUatlons failed to produce a new local pact The Ia~ 1
Chevrolet Chevelle, Monte Carlo, El Camino and Oldamoblle CutlaS! models 8 day P
u

:t /.::0

COLUMBUS - NATIONWIDE CORPORATION MONDAY announced first half earnlll for
l974lncreased 10 4 per cent compared to 1aat year'• figures Net Income for the first •lunon~ of
operations was 19 8 million, up 1905,000 from the same period in 1973, according to General Chairman Dean W Jeffers On a per..U.are basil!, current year earnings from operations were 94 rent.
up~M-tstnlm
'

'

By VITO STELLINO

UP! SJM&gt;rt. Wr!U.r
Jlnuny Wynn likes to think
it's almost all over but Ute
Cincinnati Redo still have
history of thetr side
''The Redo are scared they
know at and we know It," Wynn
beamed Monday night alter he
hit a two-run horner and Steve
Yeager htfa grand slam to give
the Dodgers a 6-3 vactory over
the Redo In a nataonallytelevised game
'I don't know what thiS win
does to Cincy but at really
helped our sprnts, Wynn
added 'Thts game was really

to look at your basic problem
It cuuld be very worUtwhiie for
you because you are very
young Hnd it could make the
difference in a lifetime of
achievement and norm.,l
happiness versus a con
tinuallon of your current life
style or worse I'd suggest you
get on wlUt the busmess of
getting some professional help
to work on the baste problem
rather
than concermng
yourself about a symptom
Forget about the hormones
DEAR DR LAMB - I am 62
years of age and have been
through the change of life and
haven t menstruated for 10
years There Is an elderly
gentleman who wants to marry
me and he wanted to know your
opanron Could I possrbly
become pregnant' He docsn t
want any children
' I never did understand Ute
facts of life, and I wondered af
you would be kind enough to
eniaghten me l ve asked
several people and they ail
have a drfferent opamon What
IS the truth'
DEAR READER - Dont
worry The oldest rehable
record of a woman gavmg btrlh
was at age 52 We generally
state Uta! rf a woman IS past 52
and has not menstruated for
more than two years that at IS
most unlikely that she can get
pregnant
The most unlikely' IS
because you can never be 100
per cent sure about what a
btologtcal system wall do
However, I ve confadent that at
age 62 and havmg gone Utrough
the change of life you have
nothmg to worry about m that
department And, If some
maracle should occur you
would be ncb and fall)ous as a
real frrst Relax and marry the
gentleman rf that as what you
want

I

92.1
WMPO-FM
Mtddteporf Pomeroy •

By FREP DOWN
UP! SJM&gt;rt. Writer
The Baltunore Orroles, who
used speed to wm the
Amertcan League's Eastern
DaVISton TIUe m 1973, hope
power wall do rt for them this
year
The Onoles staged a strong
finish last season wrlh ' road
runners Al Bumgry and
Rach Coggi!IS leading Uterr
attack They aren t exactly
knocking down fences this
season but Utey've had a flurry
of seven homers m !herr last
seven games and are now three
games behind the frrst.place
Boston Red Sox
Bobby Grrch and Paul Blair,
both of wbom have already
surpassed Uterr 1973 season
homer totals, connected for Ute
game-wmnmg blows Monday
rught when the Ortoles swept
the Detroit Tigers 7-1 and 6-3
Grach hat a three-run homer
m Ute second mmrog of the frrst
game and also singled m a run
to help Wayne Garland wan his
fourUt game Grach has hat 17
homers Ibis year compared to
12 last season
Paul Blarr hat hiS 12th homer
-compsred to 10 last seasonto snap a 3-3 tie an the stxth
Inning of Ute second game
Doyle Alexander went 7 1-3
mnmgs m Utat one for his fifth
WID
Between them, Grieb and
Blaar had seven hats, scored 10
runs and drove m SIX durmg
the doubleheader
New York Yankees heat
Boston 8-0, Texas pummelled
Chacago 13-8 and Mmnesota

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MEIGS THEATRE

FOLIAGE
GARDENS

Tontght thru Thursday
AUG 6 7 8
NOT OPEN
Fn sat &amp;Sun

To Cheer the Sack
From

August 9 10 11

THE CHINESE
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( Technecolor)

Bruce Lee the Master of
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•4,00
Dudley's Aorist
59 N Second St
Maddleport, 0.

THE STONE KILLER
( Techntcolar)

Chas Bronson

Martin Balsam

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Show Starts 7 p.m.

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Drive-In

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Tonight/Aug.~

DOUBLE;fEAT.ORE
PETE N TILLIE"

Walter MaHhau and Carol
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FIVE'
wtth Mtchael Sacks

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Wed

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GREAT NOTION
(GP)

OSEO CARS

'73 BUICK

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Full power factory air
atereo tape 10 000 miles

'4895
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01'1\.AC .F tNANCINO

992 5:14 2

One of the mystenes of
water Is the Dew Pond
Dew ponds never overflow
yet never go dry There are
no Inlets or outlets to
regUlate water level The
dew pond Is made by
digging a shallow bowl tn
the earth The surface Is
covered w1th straw Then a
top layer cf clay 1s added
Water 1S either carried or
rained Into the bowl Some
authorities feel that con
dens~;~tlon
caused by
cooling at night keep~ the
water level but as yet no
plausible explanation can
be given as to where the
water comes from to refill
and replenish the supply
There Is no mystery In
securing fresh sparkling
water tor every need In
v.our
home
Miracle
Water
Refiners
are
engineered and designed to
teke the drudgery from all
r;leanlnQ jobs A Miracle
Super Appliance also has
many convenience features
you will enjoy such as the
remote elec1ro !.elector In
fashion colors Before you
buy try our refiners Call
for tree home demon
slrollon 882 2525

SAYRE
tiARDWARE

You tiiJktOurQuolltv

Dodg~r• in two weeks They
were 4 .,., behind on Aug 28 •nd
five games ahead by Sept 12
The Reds won by 3 I&gt;
The Dodgers this year don 't
seem on the verge of collapse
They were ~ 'h 1n rront at the
Ali.Star break and have won 10
of !3 since then, Including eight
1n a row
The Dodgers are 1).1 against
the Reds Utis year although
Anderson said before the
game, at doesn't matter who
you wln Utem against, ybu've
just got to wan the most games
!'hey could turn around and
lose several an a row

Yeager hit the farst grand
slam of his career in Ute
seventh Inning off Don Cullett
after Ron Qly beat out an Infield hit, Joe Ferguaon walked
and Tom Paciorek loaded the
bases with a bunt single wher.
he was trying to sacrlface
Dodger Manager Walt Alston
hopes Yeager doesn t keep
shootmg for homers now He
said 'Steve sometimes swmgs
too hard I hope this doesn t
sporl hun He s hrt better this
year because he s going to
rtghlfield more '
Alston saad that 1f Anderson
had brought m a rleht-hander

Orioles surging again

GREAf
COUNTRY

snREo

Important You could sense the
significance by Ute reaction of
the crowd It really built our ,
morale They know Utey're
going 10 have to do more than
we do to get going ..
Tne victory moved the
Dodgers 7 1&gt; games ahead with
two more games left 1n this
series and even Reds Manager
Sparky Anderson admitted,
obVIously it was a very
Important vactory for Los
Angeles
But the Reds remember last
year-and the Dodgers must,
too Last year, Ute Reds ad
vanced Dille games on the

112 2S25

Mow Hovtll W VI

Pomorov

Open Evonlnga Ttl ' '11.0

Stanhouse hiS frrst vrctory The
Rangers scored s1x runs m the
flrst ummg wtth Tovar scormg
the frrst run after a walk and
drrvmg m the last two wrth a
bases-filled smgle
Carlos May had three hrts
mcludmg hiS eaghUt homer of
the season, for Ute White Sox
Stan Bahnsen was kayoed m
the Rangers stx.run hrst tn·
rung and lost hiS 13th deciSIOn
agamst mne wms
A's z..a, Twins 1-4
Reggie Jackson hrt hrs 20th
homer to snap a 1-1 tie m the

rebounded from a 2.-1 openmg
game loss to down Oakland 4-3
m other AL games
Natwnal League results
were Houston 7 San Franctsco
2, New York 10 Montrea14, Los
Angeles 6 CancaMata 3, St
LouiS 3 Philadelphia 2, and
Atlanta 9 San Otego 7
Yankees 8, Red Sox 0
Rudy May patched a twohitter and Thurman Munson
and Roy White homered as the
Yankees dealt Ball Lee his lOth
loss agamst 12 victoraes Jun
Mason had two hats and drove
In three runs for the Yankees
The shutout was May s first of
the year He struck out seven
and walked three
Rangers 13, White Sox 8
Cesar Tovar, Mike Hargrove
and Jun Spencer had three hats
each to pace a Hi-htt Texas
attack whach brought Don

erghth inmng of the ftrst game
as Ken Holtzman outdueied
Bert Blyleven for his 12th
tnumph Blyleven aUowed only
five hats and struck out mne but
suffered hiS 13th loss
The Twms scored three runs
off Dave Hamilton on a walk,
singles by Steve Braun, Jerry
Terrell and Rod Carew and
Errc Soderholm s sacrifice fly
and then held on to win Ute
nlghlcap BID Handa went six
I!IDIDgs for his Ultrd WID With
the closeout relief help of BrU
Campbell

to prtch to Yeager, he rrughl
have bltted for him Of course
If Paciorek had been out on his
S&lt;~crlflce attempt, the Reds
probably would have wall&lt;ed
Yeager and he wouldn't have
had a shot at the homer
In reference to the Wynn and
Yea get homers Gullett-who
allowed just one hit ( Wynn'o
homer) over the frrst SIX ,..
nlngs - said sunply, "you
make two bad patches and at
costs you "
In the other games HOIISton
downed San FranciSCo 7-2, New
York routed Montreal 10-4, St
LouiS nipped Philadelphia 3-2
m 13 mrungs and AUanta
ouUasted San Drego 9-7
In Ute American League,
New York blanked Boston ~.
Baltunore swept Detroit 7-4
and 6-3, Oakland beat Minnesota Z.l but lost the second
game 4-3 and Texas belted
Chicago 13-8
Cards 3, Phlls %
Joe-'forre 's bases-loaded sangle 111 the !3Ut mnlng lifted Sl
LouiS over Philadelphia Lou
Brock, batting 320 got four
hits and Bake McBride, hitting
304, collected three When
atling Reggae Smtth, hitting
320, gets back mto the lineup,
the Carda wall hove a 300
hittmg outfaeld The Cards sent

~:i~~E

Major League Results
By Un1tcd Press lnternattonar
Nattonal League
Houston
001 000 402- 7 19 0
San Fran
000 000 011- 2 6 0
Wilson
Forsch (8) and
M May Wtll ams MoffIt {6)
Sosa (7) Morr s (9) and
Rudolph DaRader 19) WPW lson (8 8) L P W IItams { l
31 HR - Bonds (15)
Atlante
\00 ISO 002- 910 3
San Otego 000 211 030- 7 7 2
Morton Leon (8) House 181
and C~sanova Sp liner Palmer
(5) M Johnson 15 ) Laxton {6}
Hardy (8) Gerhardt (9) Romo
(91 and Canntzzaro WP- Leon
{2 3} LP- Gerhardt (1 1) HR McCovey (14th ) Evans 112thl
New York 002 000 233--10 7 1
Montreat
211 000 000- 4 9 2
Seaver McGraw (7J and Grote
era r Montague (9) and Foole
WP- McGraw (2 5) LP ~ Bia r
{6 4) HR Boswell (2nd) - - ( 13 1nntngs)
Ph1ladefph1a
100 000 001 000 0- 2 6 2
St LOUIS
000 000 002 000 1- 3 12 5
Twitchell Rtchert (1'2) Garber
(13) and Boone G bson Hra
bosky (9) Folkers 111 l Gar
man (llJ and Stmmon~ WPGarman (4 21 LP- Rtchert 11
1) HR - s mmons (14th)
Ctncmn;,tt 000 000 210- 3 9 2
LOS Angeles 200 000 4Dll- 6 5 I
Gullett C Carroll (81 and
Plummer Rau Marshall (8)
and Yeager WP - Rau Ill 6J
LP- Gullett (13 81 HR - Foster
15th) Wynn qsthJ Yeager
(6thl 1 Only games scheduled)
Amencan league
TeKas
610 230 001 - 13 15 2
Chtcago
013 300 001- 8 11 2
J Brown Broberg (4) Stan
house (6) and Sundberg
Bahnsen Acosta 11) Gossage
15) and Oowntng WP-Stan
house { 11 1 LP- Bahnsen {9
13 ) HR - May (8th)
Boston
ooo ooo ooo- o 2 1
New York 010 030 13x- 814 0
Lee Segu t (8) and Mont
gomery May (3 2) and Mun
son LP- Lee Cl2 101 HRSMunson llOth l Whtte (3rd l (1st Game)
Batttmore 130 011 001-7 9 o
Detrott
100 000 12o-- 4 8 0
Garland Reynolds 18) Jackson
181 Grimsley (9) and Etch
ebarren Fryman Ray l4l
H ller (9) and Lamon t WPGarrand (4 5) LP- Fryman (5
7) HR S- Gr ch (17th) North
rup { l lthl
(lnd oameJ
Baltimore 002 012 001- 6 10 1
Detroit
002 010 000- 3 6 1
Alexander Jackson (8) and
Etchebarren Walker H ller (7J
and Moses WP- Aiexander IS
B)
LP ~ Walker
(4 3) HR Biar {12th )
( fsr Gamel
Oakland
100 000 10o- 2 51
Mtnneso-a ooo 100 ooo- 1 6 2
Holtzman Fingers (9) and
Tena ce Haney 191 Blyleven
(10 13) and Borgmann WPHoltzrnan (\2 12) HR - J.:tc.k.son
I 20th l
(2nd game)
ooo 012 ooo- 3 6 o
Oakland
Minnesota 000 310 OOK- 4 8 0
Hamilton Lindblad (4) Fin
gers (BJ and Haney Tenace
(51 Hend s Campbell (7) and
Roof WP - Hands (3 41 LPHamllton (6 &lt;~ ) HR - Bando
(16t h) (Only games 'SChedu
led)

Ma1or League Leaders
By Un1ted Press International
Lead1ng Batters
Nat1onar League
g
ab r h
pet
Garr Atr lOB 451 6.4 164 364
Grvy LA 105 &lt;136 66 1&lt;10 321
Brck Sl L 101 413 71 1J2 320
Sm th St L 95 338 49 108 320
Bcknr LA 94 377 51 120 318
Gross Ho 103 372 60 118 :117
Zl~k. Ptt
98 345 48 109 316
Mntnz Phi 94 328 35 103 314
Grnmo Cn 99 295 50 92 312
Schm dt Ph I
109 374 75 1 5 307
American League
g
ab r h
pet
Carw Mn 106 421 61 155 368
Hargrv TxB7 212 41 93 342
Ystrzmsk Bos
102 J57 68 116 325
Orta Chi 89 J20 53 103 322
Jcksn Ok 100 J45 61 109 316
Randl Tx 103 J42 46 107 313
Scott M I 107 406 53 125 308
Brrgh Tx 106 398 63 122 307
McRa KC 94 33J 46 102 306
Mddx NY 84 266 &lt;14 81 305
Home Runs
Natlonal league Wynn LA
and Schmtdl Ph r 25 Cedeno
Hou 22 Bench and Perez Ctn
20
Amertcan Lugue D Allen
Ch 29 Burroughs Te'X 21
Jackson Oak 20 Mayberry KC
19 Mellon Ch Hendrt ck Clev
and Oarw n M nn 18
Runs Batted In
Naltonal League Schmidt
Ph il 87 Cedero Ho u 82
Bench Cln and Wynn LA 79
Cey LA 75
A m e r I c a n League Bu~
roughs Tex 91 0 Allen Chi
78 Sando Oak 77 Darwin
M nn
67
Hender!&gt;on Chi
Jackson and Rudr Oak 66
Pitching
N.aHonal League Messers
m th LA 13 2 John LA 13 3.
Btll ngham Cln and Carlton
Phtl 13 7 Gullett Cln 13 8
American League Tlant Bos
17 7 Busby KC 16 9 Wood Chl
16 13 G Perry Clev 1S 6
Hunter Oak 15 9 Bibby Tex 15

Sparky sullen in face of
7!h game Red deficit
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Sparky Anderson was almost
sullen an the face of Ute 7 12game deficit his club faces
I don t like finishing second
at anyUtmg,• Ute whlt~arred
manager of Ute ClnCI!Inati
Reds saad "Anybody who's
happy to finish second iB a born
loser "
HIS team was second Monday rught The Reds, wi!IDers
of two Nataonal League tttles
and Utree Western DiVISion
pennants In four years under
Anderson, loot a bag game to

STANDINGS

Mat or League Standings
By Untted Press lnternattonal
East
wlpCif:lb
St LOU s
57 52 523
Phtladelph a 55 54 sos 2
P ttsburgh
52 51 477 5
Montreal
50 56 472 S I'J
New York
47 58 4&lt;18 tl
Chicago
46 60 434 9 h
Wes1
w r pet 9 b
LosAngeles 73 37 664
•t..
crncrnnat
66 45
595 7 h
camp Since u1ere are 1,300 Houston
56 52 519 16
veterans and 572 starters on the Atlanta
56 53 s14 16 h
San franc sco sO 62 446 24
Ia
26 teams, the P yers are san Ot&amp;go
45 67 .t02 29
holdmg steady wrUt the start of
Monday s R•sults
Houston 7 San Francisco 2
the regular season sbll almost N y 10 Montreal 4 night
SIX weeks away
St Louts 3 Phi Ia 2 n ght
L A 6 CtnCt 3 lwt
But the players have failed to Atlanta 9 s Otego 1 n ght
either keep the rookies out of !only games scheduled)
camp or to stop the exhtbtbon
Tod~yA~t,.r,~;~~~~~fhers
games from betng played- two St Lou1s (McGlothe n 12 1 and
Bare 0 2) at Montreat (Torrez
Ob]ecbves they mentioned ear~ 9 1 and Rogers 11 131 2 6os
her The players' strake P m
Ch cago (Stone 3 31 at Phlla
th oug h dtrec Uy res ul ted tn ,t..
u1e del ph a (Carlton 13 7l 7 35
low attendance at the 12 P m
exhtbttion games over the 0 ,~~~(bare1 T~~'2)n 1 1 ~J Pa~ San
weekend The players claim the New York. (Koosman 11 71 at
P ttsburgh (Ells 7 8 ) 7 35 p m
owners 1ost $3 4 m111 wn The cmc nnat IT carroll 3 OJ at
ownersadimt they lost money- Los Angeles &lt;Sutton 9 81 10 30
although the players flgW'e P ~ouston (Osteen 9 9) at San
may be high- but they say 1t Franc1sco (Hal ck 1 4) 10 30
doesn t help the players If they P m wedntsda'y s Games
have less money to meet the st Lou at Mntrl ntght
Ch cago at Ph !Ia ntght
Players fmanctal demands
N Y at Pttfs ntght
The negotiations sta'rt at 2 Atlanta at Houston n ght
CtnCI at L A n ght
p m t oday w1th f edera1 me dIa
(only games scheduled)
tor Wrlllam Usery trymg to fmd
some common ground
But John Thompson, executrve drrector of the NFL
Management Councal, saad
were a long long way apart
We re farther apart than we
were on March 16 And we re
no closer together as a result of
ASHLAND, Ohto (UP!) thiS weekend
The frrst exhabatron weekend PortsmouUt sent ats heavyended Monday mght when hitting team against two-tune
35 321 fans pard to see Ute Ohro champron Cmcmnatl
Kansas Caty Chtefs down Ute Budde today after reg1stermg
Delrort Uons ro-12 The Chaefs, two Vlctoraes Monday ID openwho sold out the 7B,OOIJ.£eat mg compehtton of the
Legion State
Arrowhead Stadrum for all of Amerrcan
!herr exhabrtaon games last Basebell Tournament at
season oraganally sold 38 000 Ashland College
PortsmouUt defeated Santickets for the game Eight
dusky,
6-4, In a morning game
thousand fans asked tor refunds
but 5 000 more bought them at Monday and came back m the
Ute gate for the total of 35,321 afternoon to dump SteubenVIlle
The IZ.game total for the 6-1
weekend was 315,834 - over In other afternoon games,
2110 000 below Ute total for the Miamisburg scored four times
m the seventh mning to down
farst weekend last year
The players are hopmg the Uma, 4-3, Lancaster pushed
small crowds at the exhtbttion across siX runs m Ute runth to
games Will force Ute owners to blank Ottawa, ~ and Columbus Scaoto exploded wath rune
make concesstons

Negotiations
resume today
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Negotratrons resume today m
the stalemated 36-day-&lt;Jld National Football League players
strake but there seems to be
little hope of a qwck settlement
The players and the owners
are startmg to resemble two
weary frghters m the late
rounds who are mfhctmg a lot
of damage on each other but
are both mcapable of scormg a
knockout punch
A few brg names ancludmg
John Hadl Bob Gnese and
Terry Bradshaw crossed the
packet lmes Monday but despate
rwnors of wholesale defections,
the players ranks remaaned
farrly solid
And two New York Jets John
Ebersole and Rob Sprcer,
checked back out of camp
Monday and jOtned the ptcket
lme after prevtously crossmg
the hne
Accordmg to the owners'
figures 323 veterans and 98
starters have checked mto

the game lnto Ute e1tra tMlngs innings, gained credit for hb runs m the flrat obi
wiUt two runs in the mntll on etghth vactory
Braveo I, Plldno 7
homers by McBride and Ted
Mel4 10, Eipoo 4
Hank Aaron'• rur&gt;ec&lt;lrini
Simmons
Reliever '1\!g McGraw hit a olngle and Duaty Baker'•
Astroo 7, Glanto z
three-run double In the eighth sacrlflceny in the nlnlh inRft'11
Greg Groes collected fave IDmng to hand Ute Mets the lilted Atlanta to the vlctoey
sangles, scored a run drove m VlCtory over the Expos It also over San Diego Mike Lum'a
one and stole a base to lead the gave McGraw hts second wm stngle and a walk set the auae
Aslros over Ute Giants Don agalnot five losses McGraw for Aaron's hit Max Leon go\
WIL.on, wath relief help from went the !mal three tmmgs Ute wiD In relief and rookie
Ken Forsch over Ute last I 2.-3 after Torn Seaver allowed fQur Rusty Gerhardt got the looa

1

1

Amencen League
East

Boston
Cleveland
Belt lmore
New York
Mtlwaukee
Detrott

w

I

58 49

56 50
56 53

pel

542

..,
528

514

gb
l'h
3

•
the Los Angele Dodgers 6-3
Second to the Reds m Ute
dlvisLon a year ago, the
Dodgers are now the team to
beat
"lt obVIously was a very
IIIIportant wm for Los An·
geles,' conceded Anderson ' If
we had that much of a lead
we'd hove a mortal lock on Ute
pennant 11
The Reds and Dodgers have
eaght more games left-lncludmg conlests here to01ght and
Wednesday rught-;ond Anderson was asked If has club had to
win a certain number of Utem
to overtake the dtviSaon
leaders
"No certain amoWJt," he
sa1d The Important Utmg IS
who wlD9 the most games It
doesn't matter who you win
them agamst The Dodgers
have won eaght 111 a row Heck,
Utey could turn around and lose

53 55
5'1'
52 56 481 6112
52 57 477 7
Wet1
w I pc1 g b
Oakland
64 46 582
KansasCrty 54 52 509 B
Texas
56 55 50S
8 '12
Ch cago
54 54 500 9
Mlnnesote
.53 57 482 11
Cal1forn a
43 67 391 21
Monday s Results
N Y 8 Boston 0 ntght
Bait 7 Detro• I 4 lst twt
Bait 6 Detro t 3 2nd night
Oakland 2 Mlnn 1 1st twl
M nn • Oakland 3 2nd night
Texas 13 Chicago 8 n ght
{onry games scheduled)
Today s Probable Pitchers
(All Ttmes EDT)
Bait more (Palmer J 8 ) at
New York (Ttdrow 8 8) 8 00
PM
Cleveland ( J Perry 11 8 ) a
etrort I Lemanczyk 1 OJ 8 00
p m
Bo5ton (Drago 57 and Marl
chal 3 1 l at Milwaukee (Slaton
8 12 and Wrrght 8 15&gt; 2 1 oo
pm
M nnesota (Corbrn (6 3) at
Kansas City fOal C~nton 6 5)
8 30 p m
Caltfornta CHas!&gt;ler 2 5) et
Chicago (Wood 16 13) 9 oo p m
Oakland (Blue 13 9) at Texas
(Jenkms 14 10) 9 00 p m
Wsg)rhm 6 sGamu
M nn at K C 2 twl night
Oakland at Te•as night
Calif at Chicago n ght
Boston at M lw night
Cle'W'e at Detroit n ght
B.!!ltlmore at N Y

American Assoclatton
Stand1ngs
By Untted Prus International
East
wlpctgb
63 4A 589
lndlenapolts
60 46 566 2 12
Iowa
5&lt;1 54 500 9lf2
Evansv lie
42 67 385 22
Omeha
Wes1
wlpctgb
Tulsa
62 44 sas
Wtchlta
54 55 495 91 2
Oklahoma City 47 S9 443 15
Denver
47 60 439 15 V~
Mondays Results
lndianapolts 6 Tulsa 5
Oklahoma C ty 9 Evansv lie 7
W1Chtla 5 Omaha 1
Iowa 10 Denver 0
Tuesday's Games
Evansv 11e at Tulsa
Indianapolis at Oklahoma City
Denver at Omaha
W ch ta at Iowa

-

f

lS

a liar "
.

Back To
'
. ·
School
SpecUJl

FREE
1 pr. Tube Sox with
eve!J pair of back to
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heritage house
Your Thom MeAn

Middleport

Store

CHAIRBED

Portsmouth takes on
perennial powerhouse
runs In Ute lith inning to dump
KlrUand, 13-8
Marton defeated Chagrtn
"Exciting Furniture Showrooms
Falls, 5-4, on a siDgle by Don
Price 111 the nmth inning while
Cincinnati showed Its hitting
power with a 19-2 runaway vicMIDII.EPORT, 0.
tory over Maynard Rtck
Headorn accounted for seven Yo...::...::....::....::..::&gt;-&lt;?&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;...::....::...::...::....:....:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;~
runs for Clnclnnatt
In today'• games Mar1on will
meet Miamisburg, Scioto goes
against Lancaster, Maynard
Vacation Tire Buy
meets Chagrin Falls, Lima
plays Kirtland, and Ottawa
goes agamst Steubenville
Portsmouth wtll battle
Cincinnati in an afternoon
contest, while Sandusky faces
the loser of the MaraonMuunlsburg game

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eight in a row "
After Monday night s game,
Ute Dodgers had 73 wins and
Ute Reds 66 A year ago, Cincinnati won With 99 victories to
95 for Los Angeles
It's going to take atleast 100
wlna thiS year," Anderaon said.
• I know Uta\ II ought even
take 102 •
It was pointed out to ~
deraon that hls team would be
the dtvlslon leader If it was in
the NL East
"I wouldn't want to be out of
thiS dlvtston.'' he replled "Il
you wm 11, you really win
something Up to this pomt, the
Dodgers have played better
than anybody else Maybe
they'll go on and win 106
games They're very capable
"But I'D say this, they have
a way to go before Utey wln
Uns"
Anderson was asked If the
Reds had kepi an eye on the
Dodgers' results this year
"Every night.'' he said
"Anybody who says they don't

•

'

'

,

�•

3- T"-

•

• ".:. ntanei,Mlddleport l'omeroy o ,1\lesday , Aug 6, 1974

•

DR. LAMB

He needs psychiatric help
United .,_, Internatlooal
The worst drought to hal Ute
naUon smce the 1930s showed
oo mgns of weake111ng today
and officials feared diSBSier for
By

farmers and

rarK"hers and

skyrockeUng praces for con-

WANTED

swners

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER
PHONE 992 2156

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
POMEROY, 0.

Em pjllyment Wanted
n

WILL do babys ttlng
home
EM per enced

my

Phone
Mrs Glen Smtth Rock
Spnngs Rd 992 3613
7 31 6tc

Auto Sales
1963 OODG E P ckup 6 cyl nder
3 n3'2 t re ~ S3SO Phon e 992
5301
a 4 Jtc

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

1973 DODGE Charger Rally
automat c P S P B am tm
stereo radto rape player new
Crager wheels and t res a r
shocks Ask ng S3 500 Phone
949 4989
B 6 3tp

Rep Wrll1am Scherle, Rlowa, saad Monday that rf Ute
drought IS not broken soon
Congress Will hove to pass
WAYNE SEARLS
RUTI.AND -Wayne Searls, emergency legJSiation to proson of Mr and Mrs Ray Searls VIde beleaguered farmers wath
of 235 DeJM&gt;t St , RuUand, disaster loans
"Certainly these steps would
enlisted in the Uruted States
Arr Force on July 18 Wayne, a be mandatory to forestall a
graduate of Meigs High School, catastrophic depressron which
wrll receive Air Force training would \\rench our nation from
at Lockland Air Force Base, Its economtc shores,' Scherle
San Antoniot Texas Upon told a farmers group an
completion of six weeks of i Columbia, Mo
Already the drought has cost
basic training, he wm be
assrgoed to Sheppard AFB, fanners and ranchers more
Texas for 30 weeks lraluJng as than $9 btllion m crop and
a commumcatJoos and relay livestock losses
Nebraska reports $2 36
center equipment repairman
btllion m losses, Kansas and
Texas each report $2 billion m
losses Iowa clauns losses of
VISITS GRANDMOTIIER
$1 6 brllion, Olino!S more Ulan
Philip Gmther, Mrddleport
$1 billion and Oh10 more Ulan
left Sunday after an overnaght $300 million
VISit With his grandmother,
Oklahoma Gov Davtd Hall
Mrs OriS Gmther, Chesler Rd Monday asked that 35 counties
Mrs Gmther had spent Frtday 111 the western and southern
and Saturday 111 Mrddietown part of his stale be declared
wath the James GmUter family drought disaster areas and

Wanted To Buy
FARM :200 acres more or less
S5 000 down rest n payments
to owner Wr te R Breun g
2916 Blueberry La Bowte
Md 20715 or c&amp;ll CJ OlJ 262
2057
8 6 ltc

Autos complete and
del vered to our yard We ptck
up auto bodies and buy all
k nds of scrap metals and
Iron R der s Salvage State
Rt 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohto
Phone 992 5468
7 31 26tp

JUNK

CASH paid for all ma'kes and
models of mob1fe homes
Phone area code 614 423 9531
4 13 ffc
OLD furntture oak tables
clocks Ice boxes brass beds
dtShes desks or complete
households Wr te M 0
Miller Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
ca 11 992 7760
5 13 tfc

---- --------5 ACRES of level to gently

rolllng l.!!nd not too far from
town Send any Inform atron to
Box 729 C care of the Da lly
Senttnel Pomeroy Oh o
45769
B2 12tc

CASH FOR JUNK CARS
complete Frye s Truck and
Auto Parts Rutrend Oh o 24
HOUR WRECI&lt;ER SER
VICE PhOne 7426094
7 26 26tc

---...----------S5 for 1unk automob les We wtl1

p ck up R ver!s de Auto
Wreckmg Phone (3041 773
5890

------------'!..._-7 s lfc
Mob1le Homes For Sale

NEW
\974 Gettysburg by
Castle 3 bedroom
front
k1tchen model total electr.c
set up ~nd ready to move nto
S6 695 Be the f irst to en lOY
country I vmg with c1t y
conven•ences Can be seen at
Country Mob le Home Park
Oarwm OhiO Call 992 7034

for mform a11on

Eugene Wyatt of Cheshire dies
Eugene Wyatt 66 Rt 1
Cheshare dred Monday at
Holzer Medacal Center He was
born Dec 25 1907 m Vargama
Precedmg him m death were
h1s father, Samuel Wyatt, one
brother, Clarence and an
rnfant Sisler
He IS survrved by hiS wale
Nma Irene Frecker Wyatt, hiS
mother, Bertie Asbury Wyatt
a daughter, Mrs Clarence
(Kathryn) Ash Dayton three
sisters, Mrs Russell (Pearl)
Uttle, Rutland Mrs Wtlll811l
(Eunrce) Chase and Mrs Leo
(Kate) Smith, both of
Columbus, and two brothers
James Wyatt, Pomeroy and

Barbara Coleman wtth lave
years servtce at Ute Pomeroy
City Loan, was recognized at
the annual service award
ceremony and 62nd brrUtday
anniversary celebration of The
City Loan and Savmgs Com
pany recently at ats home offace
mUma
Altogether 274 employees
were honored w1th service
awards and oUter mdlvadual
lrrbutes She receaved a gold
pm set with a daamond
#:::AA:::O.;&amp;;:O:!R '"'~S!~Y:! ;.- .,

..

,

1972 3 BEDROOM W ndsor
Mob1le Home on 1 acre of
ground
For
more
In
format on call 992 7638

-.

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

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO

FAYE E COWDERY
Reednille Ohto
Pia mt1ff
V$
DALE CECIL COWDERY
Address Unknown
Defendant
No 15 602
-NOTICE BY
PUBLICATIONPlaintiff has brought this
actton nam ng you as defendant
ln the above named court by
flftng her Compla nt on the 6th
day of July 1974
The oblect ot the Compla nt
and the demand for reltef are to
obta n a d vorce and tor other
proper rel ief
You are requtred to answer
the Compla nt wlthm twenty
eight days after the last
publ cat on of th s not ce wh lc h
Will be PUblished once each
week for s x consecut iVf! weeks
and the la~t publ1cat lon will be
made on the 20th day of August
l974 Your answer date wtll be
on September 18 197&lt;1
In the case of your fa lure to
a"swer or ot he rw se respond as
permttted by the Ohio Rules of
Ctvll Procedure wi1h n the t me
stated judgment by default will
be rendered Qga ns.t you fpr the
relief demanded n the Com
plaint

'
(?) 9 16

LARRY E SPENCER
Clerk of
Common Preas Court
Meigs County Ohio
Court House
Pomeroy Oh 0
23 30 (81 6 13 20 7tc

NOTICE
Rtvlnd Code
sec 2717 01
Notice rs hereby given that
the undersigned Intend$ to
m•k•arpllcatlon to the Probat~
Court o Meigs County Ohio for
In order to change her name to
Slrl Ellz•btlh Burns
Slid 1ppllcat1on wltl be by
Pl'tltlon to bt filed rn sa ld
Probltf Court on or after the
7th diV of StP.ttmbtr 1974
Dltl'd this 30th Clay of July
1,74

Elizabeth Burn!&gt;
TWI Sf•tt of OhiO Melgs
County

Servaces wall be Thursday at
2 p m at the Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home wrth Tom Clark
and Frank Porter offlcaatmg
Burtal wall be m the Gravel Hill
Cemetery Cheshrre
Fraends may call at the
funeral home UIIS evemng from
7-9 p m and Wednesday between 10 a m and noon and
430and9pm

In commemoration of the
anniversary, officers,
executives and honored servace
employees from all over Ohio
gathered in Uma for Ute
awards ceremony, banquet
and special entertaiDment
The company started
busmess ID Wapakoneta In
1912 Today the fll'IIl maintains
187 offrces all over Ohw em
ploymg more Ulan 1,200 people
wath total resources over $226
million

--:o;;:::&amp;;.,::.-~::::X:::~:!:::!~~o.·

D£:AL ME

~

~

"'·

~~

.;

7 30 tfc

x 12 MOBILE home 3
bedroom bath J vtng room
hall and 2 bedrooms car
peted Phone 992 7751
6 16 tfc

several years

i'
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,

By Jo Ellen Dlebl
For the past five weeks I worked in Galllpolls In the advertising department of the Sunday Tlmes..SOnUnel and Daily
Tribune, so I massed out on wrating columns and the like
However, I gamed a bat of knowledge of the newspaper busmess
m diSCovermg another facet of Ute paper's production
But, more unportant I found an enlhuSUIBIIJ that I've never
seen 111 Utis area The enthuSI88IIl was for Ute town as a whole, a
sort of prade m Ute conunwuty which has helped the town to
grow
Very few properties In town are run down 111 the least and the
communaty IS kept very clean There are many volunteer groups
ready and willing to take part 111 community projects, and area
busmessmeye not afraad to mvest m the area wath new
busmesses ii\IIR!UCh
Whenever there IS a problem there seems to be amaglnative
adeas floWing for the lmjlrovement of the community so that It
will continue to grow and attract newcomel'l, not turn them off
wrth a slow, unprogressrve way of life It would be nice If some of
Ute commwuty spmt of Gallipolis could be transferred upriver to
make Meigs County a bat more progre5save mmded
A FAMI !JAR FACE to Meigs County is that of Fred Lee who
recently returned home from Germany after serving wtth the U
S Army Fred plans to enter Ohao University In Ute fall
BECKY WRIGHT CARD 1B off to Myrtle Beach thiS week
with her brother, Benny Wraght, following summer school at Rio
Grande College Benny as home on leave from the Air Force 111
South Dakota
Becky bas become quite a traveller this swnmer, going to
Georgia and Florida before •ummer school began and planmng
more traps for Ute remamder of lire s~ Whale she's not
travelling she attenda college planning a career In special
education
She and Benny are the children of Mr and Mrs Lloyd
Wraght, Beech St , Pomeroy
WORK HAS BEGUN ON the new water system for Pomeroy
pretty quick to go to work after Ute town council acted on the
sltuataon
BEST OF LUCK NEXT WEEK to 4-H membel'!l, FFA, Girl
Scouts and Boy Scouf.ll who will be participating In the Meags
County Jr F811' Aug 13-17 Much work g.., Into preparing for
the Junior fair, and Ute young men and women of the county
deserve all the credit they receive

S1r1

(II '· ltc

'

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You seem from your letter.
DEAR DR LAMB - In a to be fwrly braght so you
recent column you wrote that should be able to accept the
aid request
Hall s press secretary, Ed male hormones accentuate Idea that you are not at all
Hard y said farm ers and masculine charac tertstlcs capable of or trained to
anrludang diagnose your own problem
ranchers In Oklahoma have o ften
You wrll need professtonal help
been hard hrt
aggressiveness
to gel the rrght answers about
They've been waped out by
I hove read that male hor
thiS drought he saad
mones are not very efteclive m yourself
One of the most rmportant
Though Agrrculture treatmg homosexuality and on
Secrelary Earl Butz has noted that baSis concluded that they purposes of psychologacal and
that the drought while seraous would not help me But l psych1atnc counseling 1s to
is not cntica l as far as food behove that my problem may help a person change h1s
Your letter
supphes are concerned a be more one of lack of personality
slrongly
suggests
that you
number of ofhcaals m Ute aggressiveness than actual
would like to change And from
drought areas drsagreed
homosexuality
It s WIShful thmking on the
I have never had any type of your remarks l would agree
that you could develop a
part of some to believe the sexual encounter "'1th anyone
drought rsn t gomg to have the and my fantasies mvolve g1rls, broader mteresl m life Uta! wdl
effect on overall productaon at albCLt I am not 1nvolved m make hfe much more pleasant
Wlll have.'' said Iowa AgncuJ. them except as a spectator I for you m the future
There ts no evu:!ence m your
ture Secretary Robert Louns bate any kind of physrcal
berry
letter
Utat you are oraented
exertaon and am extremelY
Lounsberry, however saad lazy l have no fnends and no more to homosexual activity
than you are to heterosexual
Butz was nght m seeking to mterests
activaty
It docs suggest that
prevent pamc and keepmg
I sleep most of the tame and
commmodity speculators from masturbate heavily M~ only you are afrard of personal
creatang a false market
concern 1s myself, but I do not mvolvement w1th anyone Your
self-centered bebav10r may
f1ght or work to get external
well
be because you are
rewards I get enjoyment out of
rem1mscmg about prevJOus afrard of other people and at IS a
Martin promoted
achievements that were wtthm defense mechamsm You may
a harrbreadth of me but whrch I not think you are able to
Mrs Mary Martm Pomeroy threw away
sustain a meamngful close
em ploy ed for the past 18
relationship, including good,
I am 21 and obvrously self
months w1th the Enforcement centered What can be ac
close fraendshlps that normal
DIVISIOn of the Buteau of Motor comphshed wtth male hor- people develop wrtll members
Vehicles, has been promoted to mone• Could I be helped by at' of both sexes It IS JUSt as
fteld coordmator m the
DEAR READER - The Slgnifacant that you have no
Audrtmg DrVlswn of the BMV begmmng of the solution to any close male fnends as that you
She was one of seven persons m problem 1s recogmzmg you have no close female fnends
the Bureau selected to frll Ute have one You have already
It IS qUite passable that you
new posLbons
hove
a very bad mfenoraty
made the frrst step
Her duties wlll mclude
You are worned about complex It may be this feeling
superVISIOn of Ute 68 deputy whether
lou
have
a Utat causes you to farl m
registrars m the counties of homosexual oraentatwn It as developmg human relatwns
Lawrence Gallra Athens normal to worry about Utat rf The problem here then IS not
Me1gs, Jackson
Vmton
you haven t yet established a your sex oraentatlon but why do
Hockmg , Perry Morgan
heterosexual life That doesn't you have thiS oprnlon of
Farrfreld Washrngton , mean
though
that yourself Concerted or self
Belmont, and Noble
homosexual responses are centered people often really
have an mfenonty complex
your problem at all

HAPPY WEDDING anniversary to my parenf.ll, Mr and
Ml'll James Diehl' They are celebrating 3! years of married life
today

•

By La" renee E Lamb, M D

Overnight

• • •

Your masturbation Is normal Jt is about the only sexual

outlet you could have rn view of
your llfe style And smce you
have normal sexual tenstons tl
" the expected form of
behavaor It should not become
a substitute for more mature
relatronshaps "ath members of
Ute opposite sex
Mode hormone won t do a
thrng for you J am faarly
confident that you have normal
hormone functiOnS In YIC\\ Of
your sexual hiStory The only
way they could help would be to
gtve you some self-confidence
because you expected them to
do somethrng for you
Most people wrth your
problem are afrard of gettmg
hurt ThiS usually means tbat
they already have been
usually m chtldhood The root
of the problem often IS m the
relatron of Ute chrld to the
parents Such md!VIduals have
often been rejected by one or
more often both parents The
srtuataon snowballs from Utere
Handicapped from thiS ex
pertence the person has di!
frculty relatrng to playmates
early an life The problem then
JUSt expands and repeats atself
Smce he can't relate to play
mates, the playmates reJect
hun re..enforcmg hlS sense of
lack of worth After all the
parents drdn t grve hrm sup
port so someUtmg must be
wrong wath hrm he thmks
And then the same Utmg
happened agaan and again and
agam Each new experLence
proves agam to the person that
he IS unworthy Such m
drvtduals may seek qut op
portunataes to be rejected, to
puniSh themselves for some
supposed gUilt
What you need IS a shrmk

in briefs

By United PressJnternaUooal
OOLUMBUS - REP SAMUEL L DEVINE, R~HIO, ALWAYS a staunch supporter of
Presadent Rachard M NIXon m Ute past, sard Monday unpeachment was meVItable followmg the
Presadent s admrssron he had wathheid evtdence for Watergate mvestigators Rather than put the
country through thiS long process, I Utink he should gave seraous constderatlon to reSignmg " saad
DeVIne, an occasiOnal guest of Ute Prestdent s on hiS cruases on the prestdentlal yacht
On balance he's done a good job, excluding the Watergate Utmg, particularly m foreagn affaars,
Devme noted But at looks like a clear case of obstruction of JUstace •

Employe honored

_____ ________._, 51 c

65

Samuel Wyatt Jr Zanesville
Mr Wyatt a mechamc by
trade operated the Wyatt and
Ihle Servace Center below
Hobson He was a maintenance
operator for Cheshrre Town
shrp Vtllage and Ute State of
Ohto m Meags County for

sa1d that, unless ram comes
soon, aiJ 77 counties an the state
may be mcluded m a drsaster

ALAN McLAUGHLIN

McLaughlin in

new Who's Who
for students
Alan B McLaughlm, a 1974
graduate of Meags Hrgh School,
wall be featured m the eaghlh
annual edttion of Who's Who
Among Amencan Hagh School
Students, 1973-1974 Ute largest
student award pubhcatlon m
Ute nataon
Students from over 20,000
public, private and parochtal
high schools throughout Ute
country are recogmzed for
thell' leadershtp m academics,
athlet1cs, acttv1ties or com
munrty service m the books
Less than 3 pet of the Junror
and semor class students
nationwade are awarded this
recogmtlon
McLaughlin Ute son of Mr
and Mrs KenneUt McLaughlm,
Pomeroy, lS a member of the
Trmrty Church While at Mergs
Hrgh he won three varstty
letters m football and three
varstly ! ~tiers m wrestlmg In
addtlton to havmg has
baography published m Ute
book, McLaughlm W!U also
compete for one of ten
scholarship awards of $000 to
$1,000 funded by the publishers
and wtU be mvrted to par
t1c1pate m the flrm s annual
Survey of Hrgh Achaevers
McLaughlin plans to attend
Hocking Techmcal College,
Nelsonvalle, begmmng rn
September He as workmg
durmg this summer at Essex
Corp Carey, Ohro

The ~

Sentiiii - 1
I

DEVOJ'IDTOTHE

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___........... ........,.,.,.
MEIQHIA80N AR.a
OIEII'ER L. TANNEIID..L

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ROII:ln'HODUal

vane, P\1~ ~ 111
Ccmtlt P«wot Ohkr _ . ....._

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PUmlr~
reprtltnt.IUwe

clul ptlttql )llkl at

Nattonalldvvtllint
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lAc' Utul Old St
Jffii'York. NftYor\

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WASHINGTON - ACKNOWLEDGING THAT 'l'liE HOUSE WOUW PASS articles of rm
peachment and there would be a Senate trtal for Presadent Nrxon Vtce President Gerald R Ford
Monday said he Will make no further comments about tt In a statement issued Monday, Ford sind
The publtc mteresiiS no longer served by repetitaon of my prevwusly expressed belle! that, on
Ute basts of all the eVIdence known to me and the Ameracan people, the PreSident IS not gwlty of an
rmpeacbable offense under Ute Constrtutwn, which specifies treason brabery, hrgh crunes and
mtsdemeanors
Inasmuch as addational evadence IS about to be forthcommg from the Presadent - which he
SB)S may be damagmg -I an tend to respectfully decline to discuss unpeachment matters m public
or m response to questtons until the matters are more fully available •
CLEVELAND - TilE CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER OHIO S largest newspaper today
stated man edatoraal that President Richard M NIXon should resagn from offrce now
The Prestdent s shocking admission yesterday (Monday) that he deliberately withheld m
formatiOn and rrusled Congress and the nallon about Ute Watergate coverup now makes hiS removal
from office a certamty ' Ute newspaper satd 'To spare the nation the agony of the Impeachment
process and himself of Ute hunullallon of conVIction, Vresadent NIXon should hegm dlScussaons for
the orderly transttaon of power to VIce Presadent Gerald R Ford
It IS dtsheartenmg to advocate thiS course of action, but the Plam Dealer believes Uta! m the
best mterest of Ute Umted States, Presadent Nrxon should step down, the newspaper added '
WASHINGTON- THE AMERICAN TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH CO has offered to
make ne.tly negotaated pay mcreases for most of tts system employes relroacllve if umon members
rallfy Ute contract thiS monUt A Bell Telephone spokesman swd Ute new contracts regardless of
when Utey are ratified will mean higher phone bWs
But Utere was still no agreement today on money and related Issues mvolvrng workers stall on
strake m Ute AIT Western Electric subsuliartes, the manufacturmg arm of the BeD system Bell
Telephone offactals Monday diSclosed details of the tentative agreement reached Sunday rught two
hours he!ore a stnke deadline by most of tts 725,000 workers
TURKEY AND GREECE SET A NEW ROUND OF PEACE TALKS ON war-ravaged Cyprus
today after reaching a breakthrough agreement on tentative cease-frre lines The Uruted Nations
however reported heavy fightmg m Famagusta a port city on Cyprus southeastern coast underscormg the tnstabilaty of Ute week-&lt;Jld cease.frre
in AUtens, Greece threatened to boycott future full-acale negotiations 111 Geneva unless gaven
safeguards agamstfresh Turkish VIolations of the truce U S troubleshooter Arthur A Hartman
held talks m Nacosra waUl leaders of the Greek and Turktsh Cypraot communities as weU as Brrt!Sh
and U N offtctals man attempt to head off new clashes AU N spokesman m Nrcosaa sard Greek
and Turktsh army offrcers called a mornmg meetmg today w1Ut Bratish and u
N mrlltary representatives to finish chartmg cease frre lines
SAIGON - OOMMUNIST TROOPS F1RED A BARRAGE of rockets at Da Nang today and
moved heavy tanks mto a ragmg battle to capture Ute approaches to South Vrelnam s second
largest caty
CommuniSt gunners frred a salvo of 10 Sovretoffi8de 122nun rockets at the sprawling Da Nang
wr base and surroundmg homes lluring the morniDg wounding three CIVIlians and a mrhtlaman
UP! photographer Lun Thanh Van, reporting from the scene, saad Ute shelling _ the fourth rn a
:;;,',:week-old CommuniSt drive against Da Nang - battered an aar force helicopter and a CIVIlia n
COLUMBUS - GOY JOHN J GIUJGAN S PLAN TO DIVIDE Ohio mto uniform se
"In
1
P anmng dls t r Ic ts WI U
no way tak e government a)Vay from the people the govern rvace am
'
or s press
secretary sard Monday
Robert Tennenbaum, answering charges made by James Rhodes former Ohao gov
anc
Gtll rgan •s opponent 111 the fa 11 e1ectlon, saad, Gov Gilligan's pian Js •unquestionably Inernor
the besr
mteres\s of the catizens of every part of the state and wUlm no way take government away from the
people Rhodes said Friday that Ute governors plan would blur the adentlties of cou t 11
d •
take government away from lhe people," Rhodes pledged he would • scrap Ute entir n Yi n-;s1
was elected governor In November
e Pan

;'!,.

Jn

DETROIT -SOME3,800WORKERSATGENERALMOTORS ~MBLV plant In Dor
Ga, walked off UtejobMonday Ina localcontracldlspute to join 13 500worker$ a !read
t ~k et
plants in Ohio and Missouri GM also faces the threat of a fourth w'alkout Friday as 1 r~n s r ~a
of Umted Auto Workers Local&gt;HO bave set a 2 30 p.m deadline for setUement of loc j 1 mem rs
a S!ues at the
centralfoundry plant in Bedford,lnd , a key part. supplier
The plants are among 14 of I~ UAW~M bargaining unlta sliD without local agr
supplement the national pact, reached laat November, which covers economic wuelee;~n~ ~~
contracts cover in-plant worklpg conditions The strike at the Doraville plant beg
oca
Monday after local contract negoUatlons failed to produce a new local pact The Ia~ 1
Chevrolet Chevelle, Monte Carlo, El Camino and Oldamoblle CutlaS! models 8 day P
u

:t /.::0

COLUMBUS - NATIONWIDE CORPORATION MONDAY announced first half earnlll for
l974lncreased 10 4 per cent compared to 1aat year'• figures Net Income for the first •lunon~ of
operations was 19 8 million, up 1905,000 from the same period in 1973, according to General Chairman Dean W Jeffers On a per..U.are basil!, current year earnings from operations were 94 rent.
up~M-tstnlm
'

'

By VITO STELLINO

UP! SJM&gt;rt. Wr!U.r
Jlnuny Wynn likes to think
it's almost all over but Ute
Cincinnati Redo still have
history of thetr side
''The Redo are scared they
know at and we know It," Wynn
beamed Monday night alter he
hit a two-run horner and Steve
Yeager htfa grand slam to give
the Dodgers a 6-3 vactory over
the Redo In a nataonallytelevised game
'I don't know what thiS win
does to Cincy but at really
helped our sprnts, Wynn
added 'Thts game was really

to look at your basic problem
It cuuld be very worUtwhiie for
you because you are very
young Hnd it could make the
difference in a lifetime of
achievement and norm.,l
happiness versus a con
tinuallon of your current life
style or worse I'd suggest you
get on wlUt the busmess of
getting some professional help
to work on the baste problem
rather
than concermng
yourself about a symptom
Forget about the hormones
DEAR DR LAMB - I am 62
years of age and have been
through the change of life and
haven t menstruated for 10
years There Is an elderly
gentleman who wants to marry
me and he wanted to know your
opanron Could I possrbly
become pregnant' He docsn t
want any children
' I never did understand Ute
facts of life, and I wondered af
you would be kind enough to
eniaghten me l ve asked
several people and they ail
have a drfferent opamon What
IS the truth'
DEAR READER - Dont
worry The oldest rehable
record of a woman gavmg btrlh
was at age 52 We generally
state Uta! rf a woman IS past 52
and has not menstruated for
more than two years that at IS
most unlikely that she can get
pregnant
The most unlikely' IS
because you can never be 100
per cent sure about what a
btologtcal system wall do
However, I ve confadent that at
age 62 and havmg gone Utrough
the change of life you have
nothmg to worry about m that
department And, If some
maracle should occur you
would be ncb and fall)ous as a
real frrst Relax and marry the
gentleman rf that as what you
want

I

92.1
WMPO-FM
Mtddteporf Pomeroy •

By FREP DOWN
UP! SJM&gt;rt. Writer
The Baltunore Orroles, who
used speed to wm the
Amertcan League's Eastern
DaVISton TIUe m 1973, hope
power wall do rt for them this
year
The Onoles staged a strong
finish last season wrlh ' road
runners Al Bumgry and
Rach Coggi!IS leading Uterr
attack They aren t exactly
knocking down fences this
season but Utey've had a flurry
of seven homers m !herr last
seven games and are now three
games behind the frrst.place
Boston Red Sox
Bobby Grrch and Paul Blair,
both of wbom have already
surpassed Uterr 1973 season
homer totals, connected for Ute
game-wmnmg blows Monday
rught when the Ortoles swept
the Detroit Tigers 7-1 and 6-3
Grach hat a three-run homer
m Ute second mmrog of the frrst
game and also singled m a run
to help Wayne Garland wan his
fourUt game Grach has hat 17
homers Ibis year compared to
12 last season
Paul Blarr hat hiS 12th homer
-compsred to 10 last seasonto snap a 3-3 tie an the stxth
Inning of Ute second game
Doyle Alexander went 7 1-3
mnmgs m Utat one for his fifth
WID
Between them, Grieb and
Blaar had seven hats, scored 10
runs and drove m SIX durmg
the doubleheader
New York Yankees heat
Boston 8-0, Texas pummelled
Chacago 13-8 and Mmnesota

"Greenhouse Fresh"

MEIGS THEATRE

FOLIAGE
GARDENS

Tontght thru Thursday
AUG 6 7 8
NOT OPEN
Fn sat &amp;Sun

To Cheer the Sack
From

August 9 10 11

THE CHINESE
CONNECTION
( Technecolor)

Bruce Lee the Master of
Karate

( RI

•4,00
Dudley's Aorist
59 N Second St
Maddleport, 0.

THE STONE KILLER
( Techntcolar)

Chas Bronson

Martin Balsam

( RI
Show Starts 7 p.m.

"UtRACLES
,... DO
-

~qppe!?:

Masnr.
Drive-In

U[l]OOIIfllll

Tonight/Aug.~

DOUBLE;fEAT.ORE
PETE N TILLIE"

Walter MaHhau and Carol
Burnell
( PGI
- PLUS' SLAUGHTERHOUSE
FIVE'
wtth Mtchael Sacks

( RI
Wed

Thur Fn

AUG 189
JESUS CHRtST
SUPERSTAR
(G)

PLUS
SOMETIMES A
GREAT NOTION
(GP)

OSEO CARS

'73 BUICK

EJectra 225 Cus.
4 Dr. H.T.
Full power factory air
atereo tape 10 000 miles

'4895
Karr &amp;Van landt
W•~- o(

Ootng Buatn 010
01'1\.AC .F tNANCINO

992 5:14 2

One of the mystenes of
water Is the Dew Pond
Dew ponds never overflow
yet never go dry There are
no Inlets or outlets to
regUlate water level The
dew pond Is made by
digging a shallow bowl tn
the earth The surface Is
covered w1th straw Then a
top layer cf clay 1s added
Water 1S either carried or
rained Into the bowl Some
authorities feel that con
dens~;~tlon
caused by
cooling at night keep~ the
water level but as yet no
plausible explanation can
be given as to where the
water comes from to refill
and replenish the supply
There Is no mystery In
securing fresh sparkling
water tor every need In
v.our
home
Miracle
Water
Refiners
are
engineered and designed to
teke the drudgery from all
r;leanlnQ jobs A Miracle
Super Appliance also has
many convenience features
you will enjoy such as the
remote elec1ro !.elector In
fashion colors Before you
buy try our refiners Call
for tree home demon
slrollon 882 2525

SAYRE
tiARDWARE

You tiiJktOurQuolltv

Dodg~r• in two weeks They
were 4 .,., behind on Aug 28 •nd
five games ahead by Sept 12
The Reds won by 3 I&gt;
The Dodgers this year don 't
seem on the verge of collapse
They were ~ 'h 1n rront at the
Ali.Star break and have won 10
of !3 since then, Including eight
1n a row
The Dodgers are 1).1 against
the Reds Utis year although
Anderson said before the
game, at doesn't matter who
you wln Utem against, ybu've
just got to wan the most games
!'hey could turn around and
lose several an a row

Yeager hit the farst grand
slam of his career in Ute
seventh Inning off Don Cullett
after Ron Qly beat out an Infield hit, Joe Ferguaon walked
and Tom Paciorek loaded the
bases with a bunt single wher.
he was trying to sacrlface
Dodger Manager Walt Alston
hopes Yeager doesn t keep
shootmg for homers now He
said 'Steve sometimes swmgs
too hard I hope this doesn t
sporl hun He s hrt better this
year because he s going to
rtghlfield more '
Alston saad that 1f Anderson
had brought m a rleht-hander

Orioles surging again

GREAf
COUNTRY

snREo

Important You could sense the
significance by Ute reaction of
the crowd It really built our ,
morale They know Utey're
going 10 have to do more than
we do to get going ..
Tne victory moved the
Dodgers 7 1&gt; games ahead with
two more games left 1n this
series and even Reds Manager
Sparky Anderson admitted,
obVIously it was a very
Important vactory for Los
Angeles
But the Reds remember last
year-and the Dodgers must,
too Last year, Ute Reds ad
vanced Dille games on the

112 2S25

Mow Hovtll W VI

Pomorov

Open Evonlnga Ttl ' '11.0

Stanhouse hiS frrst vrctory The
Rangers scored s1x runs m the
flrst ummg wtth Tovar scormg
the frrst run after a walk and
drrvmg m the last two wrth a
bases-filled smgle
Carlos May had three hrts
mcludmg hiS eaghUt homer of
the season, for Ute White Sox
Stan Bahnsen was kayoed m
the Rangers stx.run hrst tn·
rung and lost hiS 13th deciSIOn
agamst mne wms
A's z..a, Twins 1-4
Reggie Jackson hrt hrs 20th
homer to snap a 1-1 tie m the

rebounded from a 2.-1 openmg
game loss to down Oakland 4-3
m other AL games
Natwnal League results
were Houston 7 San Franctsco
2, New York 10 Montrea14, Los
Angeles 6 CancaMata 3, St
LouiS 3 Philadelphia 2, and
Atlanta 9 San Otego 7
Yankees 8, Red Sox 0
Rudy May patched a twohitter and Thurman Munson
and Roy White homered as the
Yankees dealt Ball Lee his lOth
loss agamst 12 victoraes Jun
Mason had two hats and drove
In three runs for the Yankees
The shutout was May s first of
the year He struck out seven
and walked three
Rangers 13, White Sox 8
Cesar Tovar, Mike Hargrove
and Jun Spencer had three hats
each to pace a Hi-htt Texas
attack whach brought Don

erghth inmng of the ftrst game
as Ken Holtzman outdueied
Bert Blyleven for his 12th
tnumph Blyleven aUowed only
five hats and struck out mne but
suffered hiS 13th loss
The Twms scored three runs
off Dave Hamilton on a walk,
singles by Steve Braun, Jerry
Terrell and Rod Carew and
Errc Soderholm s sacrifice fly
and then held on to win Ute
nlghlcap BID Handa went six
I!IDIDgs for his Ultrd WID With
the closeout relief help of BrU
Campbell

to prtch to Yeager, he rrughl
have bltted for him Of course
If Paciorek had been out on his
S&lt;~crlflce attempt, the Reds
probably would have wall&lt;ed
Yeager and he wouldn't have
had a shot at the homer
In reference to the Wynn and
Yea get homers Gullett-who
allowed just one hit ( Wynn'o
homer) over the frrst SIX ,..
nlngs - said sunply, "you
make two bad patches and at
costs you "
In the other games HOIISton
downed San FranciSCo 7-2, New
York routed Montreal 10-4, St
LouiS nipped Philadelphia 3-2
m 13 mrungs and AUanta
ouUasted San Drego 9-7
In Ute American League,
New York blanked Boston ~.
Baltunore swept Detroit 7-4
and 6-3, Oakland beat Minnesota Z.l but lost the second
game 4-3 and Texas belted
Chicago 13-8
Cards 3, Phlls %
Joe-'forre 's bases-loaded sangle 111 the !3Ut mnlng lifted Sl
LouiS over Philadelphia Lou
Brock, batting 320 got four
hits and Bake McBride, hitting
304, collected three When
atling Reggae Smtth, hitting
320, gets back mto the lineup,
the Carda wall hove a 300
hittmg outfaeld The Cards sent

~:i~~E

Major League Results
By Un1tcd Press lnternattonar
Nattonal League
Houston
001 000 402- 7 19 0
San Fran
000 000 011- 2 6 0
Wilson
Forsch (8) and
M May Wtll ams MoffIt {6)
Sosa (7) Morr s (9) and
Rudolph DaRader 19) WPW lson (8 8) L P W IItams { l
31 HR - Bonds (15)
Atlante
\00 ISO 002- 910 3
San Otego 000 211 030- 7 7 2
Morton Leon (8) House 181
and C~sanova Sp liner Palmer
(5) M Johnson 15 ) Laxton {6}
Hardy (8) Gerhardt (9) Romo
(91 and Canntzzaro WP- Leon
{2 3} LP- Gerhardt (1 1) HR McCovey (14th ) Evans 112thl
New York 002 000 233--10 7 1
Montreat
211 000 000- 4 9 2
Seaver McGraw (7J and Grote
era r Montague (9) and Foole
WP- McGraw (2 5) LP ~ Bia r
{6 4) HR Boswell (2nd) - - ( 13 1nntngs)
Ph1ladefph1a
100 000 001 000 0- 2 6 2
St LOUIS
000 000 002 000 1- 3 12 5
Twitchell Rtchert (1'2) Garber
(13) and Boone G bson Hra
bosky (9) Folkers 111 l Gar
man (llJ and Stmmon~ WPGarman (4 21 LP- Rtchert 11
1) HR - s mmons (14th)
Ctncmn;,tt 000 000 210- 3 9 2
LOS Angeles 200 000 4Dll- 6 5 I
Gullett C Carroll (81 and
Plummer Rau Marshall (8)
and Yeager WP - Rau Ill 6J
LP- Gullett (13 81 HR - Foster
15th) Wynn qsthJ Yeager
(6thl 1 Only games scheduled)
Amencan league
TeKas
610 230 001 - 13 15 2
Chtcago
013 300 001- 8 11 2
J Brown Broberg (4) Stan
house (6) and Sundberg
Bahnsen Acosta 11) Gossage
15) and Oowntng WP-Stan
house { 11 1 LP- Bahnsen {9
13 ) HR - May (8th)
Boston
ooo ooo ooo- o 2 1
New York 010 030 13x- 814 0
Lee Segu t (8) and Mont
gomery May (3 2) and Mun
son LP- Lee Cl2 101 HRSMunson llOth l Whtte (3rd l (1st Game)
Batttmore 130 011 001-7 9 o
Detrott
100 000 12o-- 4 8 0
Garland Reynolds 18) Jackson
181 Grimsley (9) and Etch
ebarren Fryman Ray l4l
H ller (9) and Lamon t WPGarrand (4 5) LP- Fryman (5
7) HR S- Gr ch (17th) North
rup { l lthl
(lnd oameJ
Baltimore 002 012 001- 6 10 1
Detroit
002 010 000- 3 6 1
Alexander Jackson (8) and
Etchebarren Walker H ller (7J
and Moses WP- Aiexander IS
B)
LP ~ Walker
(4 3) HR Biar {12th )
( fsr Gamel
Oakland
100 000 10o- 2 51
Mtnneso-a ooo 100 ooo- 1 6 2
Holtzman Fingers (9) and
Tena ce Haney 191 Blyleven
(10 13) and Borgmann WPHoltzrnan (\2 12) HR - J.:tc.k.son
I 20th l
(2nd game)
ooo 012 ooo- 3 6 o
Oakland
Minnesota 000 310 OOK- 4 8 0
Hamilton Lindblad (4) Fin
gers (BJ and Haney Tenace
(51 Hend s Campbell (7) and
Roof WP - Hands (3 41 LPHamllton (6 &lt;~ ) HR - Bando
(16t h) (Only games 'SChedu
led)

Ma1or League Leaders
By Un1ted Press International
Lead1ng Batters
Nat1onar League
g
ab r h
pet
Garr Atr lOB 451 6.4 164 364
Grvy LA 105 &lt;136 66 1&lt;10 321
Brck Sl L 101 413 71 1J2 320
Sm th St L 95 338 49 108 320
Bcknr LA 94 377 51 120 318
Gross Ho 103 372 60 118 :117
Zl~k. Ptt
98 345 48 109 316
Mntnz Phi 94 328 35 103 314
Grnmo Cn 99 295 50 92 312
Schm dt Ph I
109 374 75 1 5 307
American League
g
ab r h
pet
Carw Mn 106 421 61 155 368
Hargrv TxB7 212 41 93 342
Ystrzmsk Bos
102 J57 68 116 325
Orta Chi 89 J20 53 103 322
Jcksn Ok 100 J45 61 109 316
Randl Tx 103 J42 46 107 313
Scott M I 107 406 53 125 308
Brrgh Tx 106 398 63 122 307
McRa KC 94 33J 46 102 306
Mddx NY 84 266 &lt;14 81 305
Home Runs
Natlonal league Wynn LA
and Schmtdl Ph r 25 Cedeno
Hou 22 Bench and Perez Ctn
20
Amertcan Lugue D Allen
Ch 29 Burroughs Te'X 21
Jackson Oak 20 Mayberry KC
19 Mellon Ch Hendrt ck Clev
and Oarw n M nn 18
Runs Batted In
Naltonal League Schmidt
Ph il 87 Cedero Ho u 82
Bench Cln and Wynn LA 79
Cey LA 75
A m e r I c a n League Bu~
roughs Tex 91 0 Allen Chi
78 Sando Oak 77 Darwin
M nn
67
Hender!&gt;on Chi
Jackson and Rudr Oak 66
Pitching
N.aHonal League Messers
m th LA 13 2 John LA 13 3.
Btll ngham Cln and Carlton
Phtl 13 7 Gullett Cln 13 8
American League Tlant Bos
17 7 Busby KC 16 9 Wood Chl
16 13 G Perry Clev 1S 6
Hunter Oak 15 9 Bibby Tex 15

Sparky sullen in face of
7!h game Red deficit
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Sparky Anderson was almost
sullen an the face of Ute 7 12game deficit his club faces
I don t like finishing second
at anyUtmg,• Ute whlt~arred
manager of Ute ClnCI!Inati
Reds saad "Anybody who's
happy to finish second iB a born
loser "
HIS team was second Monday rught The Reds, wi!IDers
of two Nataonal League tttles
and Utree Western DiVISion
pennants In four years under
Anderson, loot a bag game to

STANDINGS

Mat or League Standings
By Untted Press lnternattonal
East
wlpCif:lb
St LOU s
57 52 523
Phtladelph a 55 54 sos 2
P ttsburgh
52 51 477 5
Montreal
50 56 472 S I'J
New York
47 58 4&lt;18 tl
Chicago
46 60 434 9 h
Wes1
w r pet 9 b
LosAngeles 73 37 664
•t..
crncrnnat
66 45
595 7 h
camp Since u1ere are 1,300 Houston
56 52 519 16
veterans and 572 starters on the Atlanta
56 53 s14 16 h
San franc sco sO 62 446 24
Ia
26 teams, the P yers are san Ot&amp;go
45 67 .t02 29
holdmg steady wrUt the start of
Monday s R•sults
Houston 7 San Francisco 2
the regular season sbll almost N y 10 Montreal 4 night
SIX weeks away
St Louts 3 Phi Ia 2 n ght
L A 6 CtnCt 3 lwt
But the players have failed to Atlanta 9 s Otego 1 n ght
either keep the rookies out of !only games scheduled)
camp or to stop the exhtbtbon
Tod~yA~t,.r,~;~~~~~fhers
games from betng played- two St Lou1s (McGlothe n 12 1 and
Bare 0 2) at Montreat (Torrez
Ob]ecbves they mentioned ear~ 9 1 and Rogers 11 131 2 6os
her The players' strake P m
Ch cago (Stone 3 31 at Phlla
th oug h dtrec Uy res ul ted tn ,t..
u1e del ph a (Carlton 13 7l 7 35
low attendance at the 12 P m
exhtbttion games over the 0 ,~~~(bare1 T~~'2)n 1 1 ~J Pa~ San
weekend The players claim the New York. (Koosman 11 71 at
P ttsburgh (Ells 7 8 ) 7 35 p m
owners 1ost $3 4 m111 wn The cmc nnat IT carroll 3 OJ at
ownersadimt they lost money- Los Angeles &lt;Sutton 9 81 10 30
although the players flgW'e P ~ouston (Osteen 9 9) at San
may be high- but they say 1t Franc1sco (Hal ck 1 4) 10 30
doesn t help the players If they P m wedntsda'y s Games
have less money to meet the st Lou at Mntrl ntght
Ch cago at Ph !Ia ntght
Players fmanctal demands
N Y at Pttfs ntght
The negotiations sta'rt at 2 Atlanta at Houston n ght
CtnCI at L A n ght
p m t oday w1th f edera1 me dIa
(only games scheduled)
tor Wrlllam Usery trymg to fmd
some common ground
But John Thompson, executrve drrector of the NFL
Management Councal, saad
were a long long way apart
We re farther apart than we
were on March 16 And we re
no closer together as a result of
ASHLAND, Ohto (UP!) thiS weekend
The frrst exhabatron weekend PortsmouUt sent ats heavyended Monday mght when hitting team against two-tune
35 321 fans pard to see Ute Ohro champron Cmcmnatl
Kansas Caty Chtefs down Ute Budde today after reg1stermg
Delrort Uons ro-12 The Chaefs, two Vlctoraes Monday ID openwho sold out the 7B,OOIJ.£eat mg compehtton of the
Legion State
Arrowhead Stadrum for all of Amerrcan
!herr exhabrtaon games last Basebell Tournament at
season oraganally sold 38 000 Ashland College
PortsmouUt defeated Santickets for the game Eight
dusky,
6-4, In a morning game
thousand fans asked tor refunds
but 5 000 more bought them at Monday and came back m the
Ute gate for the total of 35,321 afternoon to dump SteubenVIlle
The IZ.game total for the 6-1
weekend was 315,834 - over In other afternoon games,
2110 000 below Ute total for the Miamisburg scored four times
m the seventh mning to down
farst weekend last year
The players are hopmg the Uma, 4-3, Lancaster pushed
small crowds at the exhtbttion across siX runs m Ute runth to
games Will force Ute owners to blank Ottawa, ~ and Columbus Scaoto exploded wath rune
make concesstons

Negotiations
resume today
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Negotratrons resume today m
the stalemated 36-day-&lt;Jld National Football League players
strake but there seems to be
little hope of a qwck settlement
The players and the owners
are startmg to resemble two
weary frghters m the late
rounds who are mfhctmg a lot
of damage on each other but
are both mcapable of scormg a
knockout punch
A few brg names ancludmg
John Hadl Bob Gnese and
Terry Bradshaw crossed the
packet lmes Monday but despate
rwnors of wholesale defections,
the players ranks remaaned
farrly solid
And two New York Jets John
Ebersole and Rob Sprcer,
checked back out of camp
Monday and jOtned the ptcket
lme after prevtously crossmg
the hne
Accordmg to the owners'
figures 323 veterans and 98
starters have checked mto

the game lnto Ute e1tra tMlngs innings, gained credit for hb runs m the flrat obi
wiUt two runs in the mntll on etghth vactory
Braveo I, Plldno 7
homers by McBride and Ted
Mel4 10, Eipoo 4
Hank Aaron'• rur&gt;ec&lt;lrini
Simmons
Reliever '1\!g McGraw hit a olngle and Duaty Baker'•
Astroo 7, Glanto z
three-run double In the eighth sacrlflceny in the nlnlh inRft'11
Greg Groes collected fave IDmng to hand Ute Mets the lilted Atlanta to the vlctoey
sangles, scored a run drove m VlCtory over the Expos It also over San Diego Mike Lum'a
one and stole a base to lead the gave McGraw hts second wm stngle and a walk set the auae
Aslros over Ute Giants Don agalnot five losses McGraw for Aaron's hit Max Leon go\
WIL.on, wath relief help from went the !mal three tmmgs Ute wiD In relief and rookie
Ken Forsch over Ute last I 2.-3 after Torn Seaver allowed fQur Rusty Gerhardt got the looa

1

1

Amencen League
East

Boston
Cleveland
Belt lmore
New York
Mtlwaukee
Detrott

w

I

58 49

56 50
56 53

pel

542

..,
528

514

gb
l'h
3

•
the Los Angele Dodgers 6-3
Second to the Reds m Ute
dlvisLon a year ago, the
Dodgers are now the team to
beat
"lt obVIously was a very
IIIIportant wm for Los An·
geles,' conceded Anderson ' If
we had that much of a lead
we'd hove a mortal lock on Ute
pennant 11
The Reds and Dodgers have
eaght more games left-lncludmg conlests here to01ght and
Wednesday rught-;ond Anderson was asked If has club had to
win a certain number of Utem
to overtake the dtviSaon
leaders
"No certain amoWJt," he
sa1d The Important Utmg IS
who wlD9 the most games It
doesn't matter who you win
them agamst The Dodgers
have won eaght 111 a row Heck,
Utey could turn around and lose

53 55
5'1'
52 56 481 6112
52 57 477 7
Wet1
w I pc1 g b
Oakland
64 46 582
KansasCrty 54 52 509 B
Texas
56 55 50S
8 '12
Ch cago
54 54 500 9
Mlnnesote
.53 57 482 11
Cal1forn a
43 67 391 21
Monday s Results
N Y 8 Boston 0 ntght
Bait 7 Detro• I 4 lst twt
Bait 6 Detro t 3 2nd night
Oakland 2 Mlnn 1 1st twl
M nn • Oakland 3 2nd night
Texas 13 Chicago 8 n ght
{onry games scheduled)
Today s Probable Pitchers
(All Ttmes EDT)
Bait more (Palmer J 8 ) at
New York (Ttdrow 8 8) 8 00
PM
Cleveland ( J Perry 11 8 ) a
etrort I Lemanczyk 1 OJ 8 00
p m
Bo5ton (Drago 57 and Marl
chal 3 1 l at Milwaukee (Slaton
8 12 and Wrrght 8 15&gt; 2 1 oo
pm
M nnesota (Corbrn (6 3) at
Kansas City fOal C~nton 6 5)
8 30 p m
Caltfornta CHas!&gt;ler 2 5) et
Chicago (Wood 16 13) 9 oo p m
Oakland (Blue 13 9) at Texas
(Jenkms 14 10) 9 00 p m
Wsg)rhm 6 sGamu
M nn at K C 2 twl night
Oakland at Te•as night
Calif at Chicago n ght
Boston at M lw night
Cle'W'e at Detroit n ght
B.!!ltlmore at N Y

American Assoclatton
Stand1ngs
By Untted Prus International
East
wlpctgb
63 4A 589
lndlenapolts
60 46 566 2 12
Iowa
5&lt;1 54 500 9lf2
Evansv lie
42 67 385 22
Omeha
Wes1
wlpctgb
Tulsa
62 44 sas
Wtchlta
54 55 495 91 2
Oklahoma City 47 S9 443 15
Denver
47 60 439 15 V~
Mondays Results
lndianapolts 6 Tulsa 5
Oklahoma C ty 9 Evansv lie 7
W1Chtla 5 Omaha 1
Iowa 10 Denver 0
Tuesday's Games
Evansv 11e at Tulsa
Indianapolis at Oklahoma City
Denver at Omaha
W ch ta at Iowa

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Portsmouth takes on
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Marton defeated Chagrtn
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Falls, 5-4, on a siDgle by Don
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Cincinnati showed Its hitting
power with a 19-2 runaway vicMIDII.EPORT, 0.
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Headorn accounted for seven Yo...::...::....::....::..::&gt;-&lt;?&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;...::....::...::...::....:....:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;~
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In today'• games Mar1on will
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against Lancaster, Maynard
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plays Kirtland, and Ottawa
goes agamst Steubenville
Portsmouth wtll battle
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contest, while Sandusky faces
the loser of the MaraonMuunlsburg game

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eight in a row "
After Monday night s game,
Ute Dodgers had 73 wins and
Ute Reds 66 A year ago, Cincinnati won With 99 victories to
95 for Los Angeles
It's going to take atleast 100
wlna thiS year," Anderaon said.
• I know Uta\ II ought even
take 102 •
It was pointed out to ~
deraon that hls team would be
the dtvlslon leader If it was in
the NL East
"I wouldn't want to be out of
thiS dlvtston.'' he replled "Il
you wm 11, you really win
something Up to this pomt, the
Dodgers have played better
than anybody else Maybe
they'll go on and win 106
games They're very capable
"But I'D say this, they have
a way to go before Utey wln
Uns"
Anderson was asked If the
Reds had kepi an eye on the
Dodgers' results this year
"Every night.'' he said
"Anybody who says they don't

•

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�5 - Tt&gt;o "-lly S.ntinel, Middlepori-Pumeroy, 0 ., Tu~a)'. Aug. 6,

1~74

Player goes lor
third major win

•

CLEMMONS, N.C. (UP!) South African Gary Player ,
easily the best of the "tittle"
golfers since Ben Hosan 's legs
gave out, has his eye set this
week on one of " Bantam
Ben's"
m ost
c heri shed
record&amp;.
Hogan, now retired, is the
only man to win, in the same
year, three of the four tournam~nts that make up the
" grand slam" of professional
golf- the Masters, the U.S. and
British Opens and the PGA. No
one hill! won au' four in lhe
same year.
Hogan won three In 1953,
missing lhalye aronly !he PGA
(won by Walter Burkemo).
Jack Nicklaus made a run two
years ag.o when he won the
Masters and the U.S. Open, but
Nicklaus finished second to Lee
Trevino In the British Open and
Player then won the PGA that
year.
Now Player hill! a shot at that
record. Winner of the Masters
and the British Open , but not
the U.S. Open, Player is the
favorite In the PGA which
begins Thursday here at the
bunker-riddled Tanglewood
Country Club course.
Niclaus is the defending
champion.
·
4
' Pd like to have come in here

having a chance for the slam,''

" It 's a well-bala nced course
wllh a variety of holes. The
bunke rs are we ll placed and
they have good sand."
Pla yer predicted even-par
280 would be a good score for
lhe four dsys of play. " I'd say
that would come close to

Harrisonville
wins first game
Bob Williams and Gar y
Howard combined to fire a onehiller
Saturday,
as
Harrisonville won the opening
game or the first annual Meigs
Little League Tournament, 15-1
over the Rutland A's.
Williams
s tarted · for
Harrisonville, being relieved in
the fourth by Howard .
Meanwhile,
Harrisonville
slapped just five hits 'in scoring
its 15 runs off John Van Meter
and Dave Davis.

Marchis wins

•

were envtron

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

still expected to be ready by
Thursday 's opening round.
"Of course, going for thrslam would have made a
tremendous difference In m y
preparatlon. But, this is still a
major championship and that's
Important, too. Winnin g ma jor
wbmlng."
,
tournaments Is wh at really
The 37-year-old Pla yer counts. They are the yardstick
hasn 't been on the lour since by which golfe rs must be
winning the British Open last judged for posterity."
month. He said he would have
And, of course, there's that
returned to the States at least Hogan record to· consider .
two weeks earlier if he had had Three-fourths of a slam is
a shot at the grand slam, but better than none.

Leading hillers for the
·said Player, a two-time · PGA
champ who has won eight
''major" titles in all, six less
than the record-holding Nicklaus. ·
Marchi's Falls City fast pitch
"It would have made it really
.
softball
team split a pair of
· exciting, both for me and for
the spectators. But, when you games Sunday at Logan,
consider that Ben Hogan is the winning the opener 2-1 before.
only golfer ever to win three of · dropping the nightcap H .
Dale flarrison was the
the four, !hat's something to
winning
pitcher in the first
s11oot for." .
game,
firing
a two-hiller. Dick
Player,
Nicklaus and
Trevino all skipped this past Sinnott suffered the loss ..
Bud Cundiff suffered the loss
weekend's PGA stop at Sutton,
.
for
Falls City in the second
Mass., to get in some early
practice on the 7,050-yard game, while Chet Vermillion .
Tanglewood course; located tossed a two-hitler . for the
about 10 miles southwest of Logan Eagles in the nightcap.
Falls City, with an 18-4
Winston-salem, N.C., the
record, takes on McArthur
tobacco capital.
Sunday
at Syracuse Municipal
Player arrived here Sunday
Park.
and practiced Sunday and
Monday despite a constant
threat of rain. The course got.a .
good soaking last week. but
Player and other early arrivals
&amp;moking is a disgusting
praised its condition on Monhabit,
and we'll be able to
day.
finish our editorial about it
"It's a true test lor a major after we run o1,1t for a pack of
champiooship," said Player. smokes.

Once this was famished farmland, then our stripmine. We reclaimed it into lovely woodland and lakes-a tiny part of our investment in environment.

..

winners

were

Williams ,

Howard and Dave Harper with
home run s, whil e Ra ndy'
Milchetl and J erry Branham ·
each doubled.
Todd Snowden's single was
the lone hit for the A's.

Girls softball
tourney slated
The Meigs Girls Softball
League coaches, along with
Kenny Wiggins, met Sunday
and set up a league tow;..
namenl.
Beginning Aug . 21 at Racine,
the tournament pairings are aS'
follows :
Racine and Pomeroy open
the tournament Aug. 21 at 6
p.m. with the winner laking on
Forest Run , which drew a bye,
Aug . 22 at 6 p.m.
The Panlberetles play
Syracuse at 7 p.m. on Aug . 21,
with the winner of !hat game
going into Aug. 22's championship game at 7 p.m.

ISAAC TO RACE AGAIN
. TALLADEGA, Ala. (UP!) Bobby Isaac Mondsy said he
would end a one-year retirement from NASCI\.R Grand
National Stock Car raciog and
enter the Aug. II Talladega
500.
Isaac, 40, of Catawba, N.C.,
drove his 1973 Ford into tbe pits
during the 1973 Talladega 500
and said he was retiring from
the NASCAR circuit_ He is loth
in all-lime NASCAR victories
with 37.
"I know I said I would never
·run ~~ Talladega again, bUt I
changed my mind~'' Isaac said.
"The Talladega 500 is too big a
race to miss. I can 'l afford to
pass it up. I've got a competitive car and I feel I can win
so I decided to give it another

NEW YOHK IUPI)
This was the good ·Sluff, not some
reasonable facsimile, and the botUe of Scotch had a brief

messa ~ti

uttached.

" Mr . McDermott," It said, "you're terrific."
Twcnly years a~o . the same gift could 've come from some girl
looking for a party or a date wiui Boston's widely publicized,
skinny strikeout king, Mickey McDermott.
,
This lime it came from the grateful mother of a 12-yew.&lt;Jid boy
who had attended McDermott's Baseball Clinic in Po ughkeepsie,
N.Y.
" ll was her way of showing apprecia tion for all the things her
son told her he lea rned althc clinic," said the former Red Sox
fireballcr . "She left me a bottle of booze . She knew I wasn'i a
Coca.Cola drinker.''
•
Mickey McDer mott a lways had a few faults, but giving himself
th e best or It never really was one of them. He still hasn 't
chan ge-d much in that regard . Nor ha s he changed that much
physically,
At 45, to be sure, McDermott doesn 't cut the same dashing,
swinging, pcnci1 4hin figure he did when he broke into
professional baseball with Scranton of the Eastern League at 16,
or with Boston at 19.
He has put on some weight and his sideburns are aU gray, but
there still is that unmistakable boyish enthusiaSI)labout him that
probably will be his personal trademark for Ill! long as he lives.
Mickey McDermott put on a Red Sox uniform again at Shea stadium for Saturday 's Old Timers' Game arranged by the New
York Yankees• promotion department and for some reason it
made his mind race back to the first lime he did the same thing
·
with Boston:
" You have no idea how excited, how elated l was," he said,
looking at the Red Sox lettering stitched across his chest. " I
remember the first guy I ever faced in the big leagues, Charlie
· Keller: lthrew him a curve ball right over the-middle of the plate
for strike thi-ee. He didn 't know I will! shaking like a leaf.
" That was in relief. A little later; l made my first start against
the Yankees in Boston and Joe DiMaggio beat me with a home
run in the lOth Inning. He hit the ball so far it cost $10.80 ·on a cab
meter to find il - l don 't know this for sure, but they told me it
killed a lady having breakfast at the Hotel Kenmore."
Mickey McDermott laughe&lt;j over hls private little joke and got
back to the baseball clinic he ran for five weeks in Poughkeepsie.
"I was born there, and it's a tough town," he said. "They give
you two claps, and you've had it. Anyway, this fellow, Jack
Miller, an undertaker, told me to come back up there from
Phoenix where I live now and when l asked him what for, he said
to run a baseball clinic . I wasn't so hot on the idea at first, but
alter I got into it, I enjoyed it a lot. "
The clinic was in the form of a day camp. For $45 a week, kids
In two age groups - 9 to 12 and 12 to 15 - were taught the fun.
damentals of baseball. McDermott turned out to be a fine
teacher, showing tremendous patience with the kids.
''I Javed working" with them/; he said. ''They're beautiful.
They start 9 in the morning and by 9:30 they're asking 'when's '
lunch?' One little boy, about nine years old, came over to me and
said, 'Mr. McDermott, where's right field?' I told him I'd show
him, and took him out there by the hand. I'm telling you, I .loved

it."

•

•
power generation cooled· by towers than
any electric utility in the country.

Like electrostatic precipitators that today
remove 99.7% of the fly ash. We began with
mechanical dust collectors as early as 1918.
Installed and tested out first electrostatic .
pretipitator in 1941. That's 26~ years before
the Clean Air Act.
Today we're in the midst of a massive five
year program of new installations and
backfitting of existing· precipitators. The cost?
·'
Over.f ive hundred million dollars.
Or cooling towers, wher.e they are needed
to safeguard water quality. We were the ·
first in theWestern ·Hemisphere to build a
natural draft cooling tower. We have more

Today we are operating, building or
designing 13 cooling towers to eliminate
the discharge of heat into adjacent
waterways. The cost? .Over one hundred
million dollars.
Or tall chimney stacks that disperse sulfuroxides over a wide area in the upper
atmosphere . .
We couple these tall stacks (as high as
1200 feet- that's slightly less than the
Empire State Building) w~tli an extensive,
computerized, system of ground-level
monitoring to assure that the quality of air
is not harmful to human health, animals
or plants.

....

We've invested tens of millions of dollars
in these tall stacks and ground-level
monitoring beca.use it's a system that works.
A system that permits full compliance with
ambient air standards of the Clean Air Act.

Tall Timbers ·Nite Club

Carpenter News., Event

Now.
Don't miss lt. ·

..
· than ever before. . .
That means lletter seleetfon and prfea
that
never h this
alflln. •

Proof too, of our historic concern for the
environment. Even before it was popular.
•

America has more coal
· than the Middle Eaat
.....-:;~has oil. Let;s dig ltl

CITY LOAN
COMPANY

FORD

See your local
Ford Dealer

A vital part of the 7-state American Electric Power System.
I

i't

,

with the Ripley Ali-Stars
Sunday at 1:30 p.m.
Middleport, now 2-1 In the
tournament action Is cornprlaed Q! Ray M~ery Mike
Miller, Steve Fife, 'Steve
Lambert Britt Dodaon Terry
Gardner :Terry Wayland, Mike
Gore, Jeff Wayland, Dave
HyseiJ, Dave Davis, Paul
McElhaney, Ray Stewart and
Dick Herman.
'
.

Want a great small ear
dearan• prlea?

These major investments, plus many less
dramatic ones are proof of our nearly one
billion dollar commitment to enhance and .
protect the environment.

Ohio Power Company
•

attack was Jeff Wayland with a
double and single, while Ray
Mowery had a double and
MiUer a single.
,
and
Paul
Wayland
McElhaney made two butstanding plays In the field In
the sixth and final frame to
preserve the vlcl&lt;lry.
Hitters for Beverly were
McCutcheon with a double,
Fltchmlller with a slngle and
Offenburger· with a pair Q!
singles.
Middleport Ia now one Qf
eight teams remaining In the
tournament, and will do battle

NOTICE

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE ·

.We've never been reluctant to invest in
projects or workable controls to enhance
and protect the environment.

The Middleport All-Stars went the distance for Middefeated the Beverly Ali..Slars, dleport, striking out four and
4-2 in the Belpre Ali.Slar allowing just four hits, while
Tournament, as Mike Miller walking none.
Ferguson suffered the loss
for Beverly,· striking out six,
DON GRANT'S PLANS
walking seven and also
NEW YORK (UPI ) - M. allowing just four hits.
Donald Grant, chairman of lhe
Leading .the Middleport
hoard or the New York Mets, is
expected to take more direct TWO MORE STRIKERS
control of the daily operations
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y . . (UP!) .
of the club next season.
- The New York Jets an· Mets• General Manager Bob nouced
Monday
that
Scheffing, 60, is considering linebackers John Ebersole and
retiring at the end of the 1974 Rob Spicer have left camp to
season but may accept another join their striking NFL
leanunates.
·
position with the club.
The
two
.linebackers
said
Joe McDonald, director of
the Mets• farm operations, is they felt their loyalties lay with
one of the candidates who the p1ckellng veterans rather
would assume some of lhe than with the players In camp.
general manager's duties but,
The d~fectlons left nine •
whether he does or not, Grant veterans m camp.
will be the guiding voice.
Ebersole. started for the Jets
Manager Yogi Berra is ~~ yea.r 10 place of Injured ..
unlikely to be affected by anY, mJ?dle ~ebacker AI Atkinson,
change inasmuch as he is while Spicer started a han~ul
working on the first year of a of games at his .o utside
position.
three-year contract.

That represents a complete turnaround from the Mickey
McDermott of 20 years ago, who frequently was considered a CHARGERS GET 2 VETS
"flake."
. SAN DIEGO (UPI) - Two
"I was a wild kid, •• he confessed, referring to the way he more veterans reported to the
behaved off the mound as well as on it. "l never got into any bad San Diego Chargers training
The Whispering Pines Nlte Club '
trouble, but I enjoyed fun, laughter and people. For all this, I got . camp Monday and seven
a reputation. Sure I drank some beer, but not anywhere near rookies were cut.
what they said I did.
·
The latest to report were
Is Changing It's Name To •••
"Looking back, I wouldn't change anything. I did it my way. ·running back Bob Thomas and
You know, the same way Frank Sinatra sings about in that kicker Gunter Enz. San Diego
song."
·
now bas 10 veteralis in camp.
Cut were guard Tom Forrest,
· an eighth round draft cboice';
linebacker John KetChoyian, a
The Club is changing to a private club.
!Oih
round
choice;
and
free
and as far north as Wawa,
We will be taking applications July 25
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Glen Canada
agents running back AI King,
to August IS, in person please.
Gassaway, Powell, visited
Mr . .;.d Mrj!. Paul Gaston running back Clint Knott, wide
., .1- •
the1r son-m-law a?~ daughter, were hosts to members of the receiver Izell Gunner, wide
Mr. and Mrs . Wilham Miller Gospelaires Singing Group receiver Terrell Ray and
Thank You
and daughters: Other recent from Appalachian Bible In- defensive back Ray YoungRod Groves .
guests at the Miller home were stilule, Bradley, w. Va., who blood.
hts parents, Mr. and Mrs. presented an evening.. of
Best Rate's 1n Town
Chester Miller, Caledoma; and gospel music at Albany
try."
Isaac, who will drive a 1974. h1~ . cousms, Mr. and Mrs. Baptist Church. The young •
. Check With Us Before You Buy ...
•
Chevrolet in the race, holds the Wilham Lawson and Cheryl, folks . who were enterlained
qualifying speed record for local.
. .
were
Corinne
Boggs,
Mr.
_and
Mrs.
Ronald
Bolen
Churubusco,
Indiana;
Becky
· Alabamo International Motor
107Sycamore
Speedway of 199.658 miles per and Usa h~ve returned from a Pipkin, Bradley, w. Va., and
99?-5130
Pomeroy
vacalwn tr1p to Lake Superior Connie Cummings, St. Albans,
hour, set in 1970.
W. Va .
Mrs. T. M. Galaway, Mr. and
Mrs. H. E. Starkey, Carl
Greenlees, and Mr. and Mrs.
.Mendal Jordan, Columbia
Grange, were among the 32
Grangers from Meigs CoWJly
who attended Gallia County
Pomona Grange at Springfield
. Grange near Gallipolis on
Friday evening and presented
a program· on vacations.
Special music, including songs
by Reverend Alan Blackwood
accompanied by his brother,
Owen, and a special number by
Keith Ashley, were enjoyed.
Ed Mattox has returned to
· his ·home after attending a
reunion . of former Army
buddies at Wilmington-Hilton
Hotel in Wilmington, North
. at
Carollo~.
·
Ford fs now phH!uefne JnON .smarr ears
Mr. and Mrs. Rick McDaniel
were .in Cincinnati .for a Cin·
cinnali Reds • San Francisco
Giants b~lgame and also went
to Kings Islimd.
mil)!
low
Mr. and Mrs. John D.
Gillogly, Mark and David,
vacationed . at Kings Island
If you solo your home today. you It's a big loan. Bigger than most.
near Cincinnati and visited
know you'd make money. Probably But easy to get. And easy to repay.
Sea
World at Aurora .
Because It's backed by an asset that
lots of money.
Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, Bryan
FORD MUSTANG II
But there's another way to get your .keeps growing. .
.
The - r~ght car at the right
and Keith and frlend.s and Mrs.
money you probably never even · You put money .into your house
lime. It 's 1marter lhtm taat
Walter Jordiln spent a day at
thoug!lt of.' ·
.
. . ,_. .
. Why not get It out for the things you
POIID PllltO
, yee r'a Mustang . Redeeigned
Camden
Park
in
Hun
tlnglon,
Amer1c1'1
bulo
ecen""' oar.
FORD
MAVERICK
to
give
you
luxurY,
comfort
,
The· City Loan Company has a need today? ,
.
·
. Va . .,..-.The lamliy compact has an qut·
Get back to b111c1 wit" fttMe'8 .
.and
economy in one 1ma!l
See The CitY Loa n Comparw about
pion tf.lat leis you use the money
lhrifll- aooo.oc, ~-ayl­
standing reputation lor economy.
package, You get many
A Hymn Sing was held at
a HomeOwner Loan today ·
in your.•home when You need it. ..
.Wlth a standard 200 -cut:lic-lnch
englne. Wlth at1nd1rcf ""'Pfftlnl
featureS at a surprlalngly
arpenler Baptist Church on
like rront dlto braktiiiNI
6-cyl inder englhe that's euy·to ,
low hue stic ker price .
The City Loon HomeOwner ;.L:
oa=n~·----~
Sunday afternoon. · Rev .
service and easy on gas.
r.. k ond pinion eiHI!ng. h'e
America'• .nnalble economy ur.
Freeland ,Norris and his group
along with local talent
presented an afternoon's
service in soog. There was a
goOd crowd In attendance,. \
Steve Gillogly spent a week
' at Camp Christian at Magnetic
Springs and another week as ··
the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
12&amp; E. Main .,. IIZ.%171
•
, 1\.rnold Wol{e and daughter,
"
'
. Peggy, Cedar Falls.

INSURANCE

I

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Middleport All-Stars wm

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�5 - Tt&gt;o "-lly S.ntinel, Middlepori-Pumeroy, 0 ., Tu~a)'. Aug. 6,

1~74

Player goes lor
third major win

•

CLEMMONS, N.C. (UP!) South African Gary Player ,
easily the best of the "tittle"
golfers since Ben Hosan 's legs
gave out, has his eye set this
week on one of " Bantam
Ben's"
m ost
c heri shed
record&amp;.
Hogan, now retired, is the
only man to win, in the same
year, three of the four tournam~nts that make up the
" grand slam" of professional
golf- the Masters, the U.S. and
British Opens and the PGA. No
one hill! won au' four in lhe
same year.
Hogan won three In 1953,
missing lhalye aronly !he PGA
(won by Walter Burkemo).
Jack Nicklaus made a run two
years ag.o when he won the
Masters and the U.S. Open, but
Nicklaus finished second to Lee
Trevino In the British Open and
Player then won the PGA that
year.
Now Player hill! a shot at that
record. Winner of the Masters
and the British Open , but not
the U.S. Open, Player is the
favorite In the PGA which
begins Thursday here at the
bunker-riddled Tanglewood
Country Club course.
Niclaus is the defending
champion.
·
4
' Pd like to have come in here

having a chance for the slam,''

" It 's a well-bala nced course
wllh a variety of holes. The
bunke rs are we ll placed and
they have good sand."
Pla yer predicted even-par
280 would be a good score for
lhe four dsys of play. " I'd say
that would come close to

Harrisonville
wins first game
Bob Williams and Gar y
Howard combined to fire a onehiller
Saturday,
as
Harrisonville won the opening
game or the first annual Meigs
Little League Tournament, 15-1
over the Rutland A's.
Williams
s tarted · for
Harrisonville, being relieved in
the fourth by Howard .
Meanwhile,
Harrisonville
slapped just five hits 'in scoring
its 15 runs off John Van Meter
and Dave Davis.

Marchis wins

•

were envtron

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

still expected to be ready by
Thursday 's opening round.
"Of course, going for thrslam would have made a
tremendous difference In m y
preparatlon. But, this is still a
major championship and that's
Important, too. Winnin g ma jor
wbmlng."
,
tournaments Is wh at really
The 37-year-old Pla yer counts. They are the yardstick
hasn 't been on the lour since by which golfe rs must be
winning the British Open last judged for posterity."
month. He said he would have
And, of course, there's that
returned to the States at least Hogan record to· consider .
two weeks earlier if he had had Three-fourths of a slam is
a shot at the grand slam, but better than none.

Leading hillers for the
·said Player, a two-time · PGA
champ who has won eight
''major" titles in all, six less
than the record-holding Nicklaus. ·
Marchi's Falls City fast pitch
"It would have made it really
.
softball
team split a pair of
· exciting, both for me and for
the spectators. But, when you games Sunday at Logan,
consider that Ben Hogan is the winning the opener 2-1 before.
only golfer ever to win three of · dropping the nightcap H .
Dale flarrison was the
the four, !hat's something to
winning
pitcher in the first
s11oot for." .
game,
firing
a two-hiller. Dick
Player,
Nicklaus and
Trevino all skipped this past Sinnott suffered the loss ..
Bud Cundiff suffered the loss
weekend's PGA stop at Sutton,
.
for
Falls City in the second
Mass., to get in some early
practice on the 7,050-yard game, while Chet Vermillion .
Tanglewood course; located tossed a two-hitler . for the
about 10 miles southwest of Logan Eagles in the nightcap.
Falls City, with an 18-4
Winston-salem, N.C., the
record, takes on McArthur
tobacco capital.
Sunday
at Syracuse Municipal
Player arrived here Sunday
Park.
and practiced Sunday and
Monday despite a constant
threat of rain. The course got.a .
good soaking last week. but
Player and other early arrivals
&amp;moking is a disgusting
praised its condition on Monhabit,
and we'll be able to
day.
finish our editorial about it
"It's a true test lor a major after we run o1,1t for a pack of
champiooship," said Player. smokes.

Once this was famished farmland, then our stripmine. We reclaimed it into lovely woodland and lakes-a tiny part of our investment in environment.

..

winners

were

Williams ,

Howard and Dave Harper with
home run s, whil e Ra ndy'
Milchetl and J erry Branham ·
each doubled.
Todd Snowden's single was
the lone hit for the A's.

Girls softball
tourney slated
The Meigs Girls Softball
League coaches, along with
Kenny Wiggins, met Sunday
and set up a league tow;..
namenl.
Beginning Aug . 21 at Racine,
the tournament pairings are aS'
follows :
Racine and Pomeroy open
the tournament Aug. 21 at 6
p.m. with the winner laking on
Forest Run , which drew a bye,
Aug . 22 at 6 p.m.
The Panlberetles play
Syracuse at 7 p.m. on Aug . 21,
with the winner of !hat game
going into Aug. 22's championship game at 7 p.m.

ISAAC TO RACE AGAIN
. TALLADEGA, Ala. (UP!) Bobby Isaac Mondsy said he
would end a one-year retirement from NASCI\.R Grand
National Stock Car raciog and
enter the Aug. II Talladega
500.
Isaac, 40, of Catawba, N.C.,
drove his 1973 Ford into tbe pits
during the 1973 Talladega 500
and said he was retiring from
the NASCAR circuit_ He is loth
in all-lime NASCAR victories
with 37.
"I know I said I would never
·run ~~ Talladega again, bUt I
changed my mind~'' Isaac said.
"The Talladega 500 is too big a
race to miss. I can 'l afford to
pass it up. I've got a competitive car and I feel I can win
so I decided to give it another

NEW YOHK IUPI)
This was the good ·Sluff, not some
reasonable facsimile, and the botUe of Scotch had a brief

messa ~ti

uttached.

" Mr . McDermott," It said, "you're terrific."
Twcnly years a~o . the same gift could 've come from some girl
looking for a party or a date wiui Boston's widely publicized,
skinny strikeout king, Mickey McDermott.
,
This lime it came from the grateful mother of a 12-yew.&lt;Jid boy
who had attended McDermott's Baseball Clinic in Po ughkeepsie,
N.Y.
" ll was her way of showing apprecia tion for all the things her
son told her he lea rned althc clinic," said the former Red Sox
fireballcr . "She left me a bottle of booze . She knew I wasn'i a
Coca.Cola drinker.''
•
Mickey McDer mott a lways had a few faults, but giving himself
th e best or It never really was one of them. He still hasn 't
chan ge-d much in that regard . Nor ha s he changed that much
physically,
At 45, to be sure, McDermott doesn 't cut the same dashing,
swinging, pcnci1 4hin figure he did when he broke into
professional baseball with Scranton of the Eastern League at 16,
or with Boston at 19.
He has put on some weight and his sideburns are aU gray, but
there still is that unmistakable boyish enthusiaSI)labout him that
probably will be his personal trademark for Ill! long as he lives.
Mickey McDermott put on a Red Sox uniform again at Shea stadium for Saturday 's Old Timers' Game arranged by the New
York Yankees• promotion department and for some reason it
made his mind race back to the first lime he did the same thing
·
with Boston:
" You have no idea how excited, how elated l was," he said,
looking at the Red Sox lettering stitched across his chest. " I
remember the first guy I ever faced in the big leagues, Charlie
· Keller: lthrew him a curve ball right over the-middle of the plate
for strike thi-ee. He didn 't know I will! shaking like a leaf.
" That was in relief. A little later; l made my first start against
the Yankees in Boston and Joe DiMaggio beat me with a home
run in the lOth Inning. He hit the ball so far it cost $10.80 ·on a cab
meter to find il - l don 't know this for sure, but they told me it
killed a lady having breakfast at the Hotel Kenmore."
Mickey McDermott laughe&lt;j over hls private little joke and got
back to the baseball clinic he ran for five weeks in Poughkeepsie.
"I was born there, and it's a tough town," he said. "They give
you two claps, and you've had it. Anyway, this fellow, Jack
Miller, an undertaker, told me to come back up there from
Phoenix where I live now and when l asked him what for, he said
to run a baseball clinic . I wasn't so hot on the idea at first, but
alter I got into it, I enjoyed it a lot. "
The clinic was in the form of a day camp. For $45 a week, kids
In two age groups - 9 to 12 and 12 to 15 - were taught the fun.
damentals of baseball. McDermott turned out to be a fine
teacher, showing tremendous patience with the kids.
''I Javed working" with them/; he said. ''They're beautiful.
They start 9 in the morning and by 9:30 they're asking 'when's '
lunch?' One little boy, about nine years old, came over to me and
said, 'Mr. McDermott, where's right field?' I told him I'd show
him, and took him out there by the hand. I'm telling you, I .loved

it."

•

•
power generation cooled· by towers than
any electric utility in the country.

Like electrostatic precipitators that today
remove 99.7% of the fly ash. We began with
mechanical dust collectors as early as 1918.
Installed and tested out first electrostatic .
pretipitator in 1941. That's 26~ years before
the Clean Air Act.
Today we're in the midst of a massive five
year program of new installations and
backfitting of existing· precipitators. The cost?
·'
Over.f ive hundred million dollars.
Or cooling towers, wher.e they are needed
to safeguard water quality. We were the ·
first in theWestern ·Hemisphere to build a
natural draft cooling tower. We have more

Today we are operating, building or
designing 13 cooling towers to eliminate
the discharge of heat into adjacent
waterways. The cost? .Over one hundred
million dollars.
Or tall chimney stacks that disperse sulfuroxides over a wide area in the upper
atmosphere . .
We couple these tall stacks (as high as
1200 feet- that's slightly less than the
Empire State Building) w~tli an extensive,
computerized, system of ground-level
monitoring to assure that the quality of air
is not harmful to human health, animals
or plants.

....

We've invested tens of millions of dollars
in these tall stacks and ground-level
monitoring beca.use it's a system that works.
A system that permits full compliance with
ambient air standards of the Clean Air Act.

Tall Timbers ·Nite Club

Carpenter News., Event

Now.
Don't miss lt. ·

..
· than ever before. . .
That means lletter seleetfon and prfea
that
never h this
alflln. •

Proof too, of our historic concern for the
environment. Even before it was popular.
•

America has more coal
· than the Middle Eaat
.....-:;~has oil. Let;s dig ltl

CITY LOAN
COMPANY

FORD

See your local
Ford Dealer

A vital part of the 7-state American Electric Power System.
I

i't

,

with the Ripley Ali-Stars
Sunday at 1:30 p.m.
Middleport, now 2-1 In the
tournament action Is cornprlaed Q! Ray M~ery Mike
Miller, Steve Fife, 'Steve
Lambert Britt Dodaon Terry
Gardner :Terry Wayland, Mike
Gore, Jeff Wayland, Dave
HyseiJ, Dave Davis, Paul
McElhaney, Ray Stewart and
Dick Herman.
'
.

Want a great small ear
dearan• prlea?

These major investments, plus many less
dramatic ones are proof of our nearly one
billion dollar commitment to enhance and .
protect the environment.

Ohio Power Company
•

attack was Jeff Wayland with a
double and single, while Ray
Mowery had a double and
MiUer a single.
,
and
Paul
Wayland
McElhaney made two butstanding plays In the field In
the sixth and final frame to
preserve the vlcl&lt;lry.
Hitters for Beverly were
McCutcheon with a double,
Fltchmlller with a slngle and
Offenburger· with a pair Q!
singles.
Middleport Ia now one Qf
eight teams remaining In the
tournament, and will do battle

NOTICE

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE ·

.We've never been reluctant to invest in
projects or workable controls to enhance
and protect the environment.

The Middleport All-Stars went the distance for Middefeated the Beverly Ali..Slars, dleport, striking out four and
4-2 in the Belpre Ali.Slar allowing just four hits, while
Tournament, as Mike Miller walking none.
Ferguson suffered the loss
for Beverly,· striking out six,
DON GRANT'S PLANS
walking seven and also
NEW YORK (UPI ) - M. allowing just four hits.
Donald Grant, chairman of lhe
Leading .the Middleport
hoard or the New York Mets, is
expected to take more direct TWO MORE STRIKERS
control of the daily operations
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y . . (UP!) .
of the club next season.
- The New York Jets an· Mets• General Manager Bob nouced
Monday
that
Scheffing, 60, is considering linebackers John Ebersole and
retiring at the end of the 1974 Rob Spicer have left camp to
season but may accept another join their striking NFL
leanunates.
·
position with the club.
The
two
.linebackers
said
Joe McDonald, director of
the Mets• farm operations, is they felt their loyalties lay with
one of the candidates who the p1ckellng veterans rather
would assume some of lhe than with the players In camp.
general manager's duties but,
The d~fectlons left nine •
whether he does or not, Grant veterans m camp.
will be the guiding voice.
Ebersole. started for the Jets
Manager Yogi Berra is ~~ yea.r 10 place of Injured ..
unlikely to be affected by anY, mJ?dle ~ebacker AI Atkinson,
change inasmuch as he is while Spicer started a han~ul
working on the first year of a of games at his .o utside
position.
three-year contract.

That represents a complete turnaround from the Mickey
McDermott of 20 years ago, who frequently was considered a CHARGERS GET 2 VETS
"flake."
. SAN DIEGO (UPI) - Two
"I was a wild kid, •• he confessed, referring to the way he more veterans reported to the
behaved off the mound as well as on it. "l never got into any bad San Diego Chargers training
The Whispering Pines Nlte Club '
trouble, but I enjoyed fun, laughter and people. For all this, I got . camp Monday and seven
a reputation. Sure I drank some beer, but not anywhere near rookies were cut.
what they said I did.
·
The latest to report were
Is Changing It's Name To •••
"Looking back, I wouldn't change anything. I did it my way. ·running back Bob Thomas and
You know, the same way Frank Sinatra sings about in that kicker Gunter Enz. San Diego
song."
·
now bas 10 veteralis in camp.
Cut were guard Tom Forrest,
· an eighth round draft cboice';
linebacker John KetChoyian, a
The Club is changing to a private club.
!Oih
round
choice;
and
free
and as far north as Wawa,
We will be taking applications July 25
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Glen Canada
agents running back AI King,
to August IS, in person please.
Gassaway, Powell, visited
Mr . .;.d Mrj!. Paul Gaston running back Clint Knott, wide
., .1- •
the1r son-m-law a?~ daughter, were hosts to members of the receiver Izell Gunner, wide
Mr. and Mrs . Wilham Miller Gospelaires Singing Group receiver Terrell Ray and
Thank You
and daughters: Other recent from Appalachian Bible In- defensive back Ray YoungRod Groves .
guests at the Miller home were stilule, Bradley, w. Va., who blood.
hts parents, Mr. and Mrs. presented an evening.. of
Best Rate's 1n Town
Chester Miller, Caledoma; and gospel music at Albany
try."
Isaac, who will drive a 1974. h1~ . cousms, Mr. and Mrs. Baptist Church. The young •
. Check With Us Before You Buy ...
•
Chevrolet in the race, holds the Wilham Lawson and Cheryl, folks . who were enterlained
qualifying speed record for local.
. .
were
Corinne
Boggs,
Mr.
_and
Mrs.
Ronald
Bolen
Churubusco,
Indiana;
Becky
· Alabamo International Motor
107Sycamore
Speedway of 199.658 miles per and Usa h~ve returned from a Pipkin, Bradley, w. Va., and
99?-5130
Pomeroy
vacalwn tr1p to Lake Superior Connie Cummings, St. Albans,
hour, set in 1970.
W. Va .
Mrs. T. M. Galaway, Mr. and
Mrs. H. E. Starkey, Carl
Greenlees, and Mr. and Mrs.
.Mendal Jordan, Columbia
Grange, were among the 32
Grangers from Meigs CoWJly
who attended Gallia County
Pomona Grange at Springfield
. Grange near Gallipolis on
Friday evening and presented
a program· on vacations.
Special music, including songs
by Reverend Alan Blackwood
accompanied by his brother,
Owen, and a special number by
Keith Ashley, were enjoyed.
Ed Mattox has returned to
· his ·home after attending a
reunion . of former Army
buddies at Wilmington-Hilton
Hotel in Wilmington, North
. at
Carollo~.
·
Ford fs now phH!uefne JnON .smarr ears
Mr. and Mrs. Rick McDaniel
were .in Cincinnati .for a Cin·
cinnali Reds • San Francisco
Giants b~lgame and also went
to Kings Islimd.
mil)!
low
Mr. and Mrs. John D.
Gillogly, Mark and David,
vacationed . at Kings Island
If you solo your home today. you It's a big loan. Bigger than most.
near Cincinnati and visited
know you'd make money. Probably But easy to get. And easy to repay.
Sea
World at Aurora .
Because It's backed by an asset that
lots of money.
Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, Bryan
FORD MUSTANG II
But there's another way to get your .keeps growing. .
.
The - r~ght car at the right
and Keith and frlend.s and Mrs.
money you probably never even · You put money .into your house
lime. It 's 1marter lhtm taat
Walter Jordiln spent a day at
thoug!lt of.' ·
.
. . ,_. .
. Why not get It out for the things you
POIID PllltO
, yee r'a Mustang . Redeeigned
Camden
Park
in
Hun
tlnglon,
Amer1c1'1
bulo
ecen""' oar.
FORD
MAVERICK
to
give
you
luxurY,
comfort
,
The· City Loan Company has a need today? ,
.
·
. Va . .,..-.The lamliy compact has an qut·
Get back to b111c1 wit" fttMe'8 .
.and
economy in one 1ma!l
See The CitY Loa n Comparw about
pion tf.lat leis you use the money
lhrifll- aooo.oc, ~-ayl­
standing reputation lor economy.
package, You get many
A Hymn Sing was held at
a HomeOwner Loan today ·
in your.•home when You need it. ..
.Wlth a standard 200 -cut:lic-lnch
englne. Wlth at1nd1rcf ""'Pfftlnl
featureS at a surprlalngly
arpenler Baptist Church on
like rront dlto braktiiiNI
6-cyl inder englhe that's euy·to ,
low hue stic ker price .
The City Loon HomeOwner ;.L:
oa=n~·----~
Sunday afternoon. · Rev .
service and easy on gas.
r.. k ond pinion eiHI!ng. h'e
America'• .nnalble economy ur.
Freeland ,Norris and his group
along with local talent
presented an afternoon's
service in soog. There was a
goOd crowd In attendance,. \
Steve Gillogly spent a week
' at Camp Christian at Magnetic
Springs and another week as ··
the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
12&amp; E. Main .,. IIZ.%171
•
, 1\.rnold Wol{e and daughter,
"
'
. Peggy, Cedar Falls.

INSURANCE

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Middleport All-Stars wm

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•

.

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�-'

t - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 6,!97•

Exhibitors invited to fair show
Dahlia: decorative type, one bloom.
Overheard more than once at
bloom.
Dahlia : Pompon type, one
~most any flower show is the
one
Dahlia
:
cactus
typ.
e
,
stalk.
comment:
Marigold: large, collection of
"I've got nicer gladioli (or bloom .
Marigold
:
large,
collection
of
three,
all same variety.
roses, or geraniwns, or zin·
Aster : Collection of three, ail
nias ) ill my garden than those three.
Uly
:
one
sta1!(,
true
genus
same
variety.
blue ribbon winners."
Wiwn
.
But in the garden they are,
Celosia: Plumed, one stalk.
Celosia: Cl'l'SUit, (crested ),
Potted Plant: flowering type,
and while the flowers may
one
stalk.
one potted specimen.
grow bigger and better, the
Potted Plant: foliage type,
blue ribbons go to the garCacti and-or Succulents :
deners who not only ·grow but ·ne potted specimen .
collection of three different
African Viole ts: one polled varieties, labeled.
show.
Annual flowers : collection of
As Mrs. James Carpenter, specirrien, any variety .
Perennial
flowers
:
co1lection
six different types, labeled.
chairwoman for the two flower
shows to be staged next week of six different types labeled.
Rules of the shows specify
Terrarium
:
all
plants
that ali entries must be in the
at the !11th Annual Meigs
hands of the placement
County Fair, puts it: " The labeled on separate card.
In the Friday, Aug . 16, show, committee before 11 a.m. on
judge picks the best that she
the classes are:
the day of the show. Judging
sees entered in the show."
Rose: Hybrid Tea, collection will begin at J2 :30on each show
And from Mrs. Carpenter
comes the invitation to exhibit. of three, each a different day. It will be oral and done by
an accredited judge of the Ohio
Entries
to be made this variety,
Rose
:
Fioribunda.
week, either Thursday or
Association of Garden Clubs.
Rose : Grandiflora .
Friday, between 10 a.m. and 4
A new award will be
Gladiolus
:
Collection
of
p.m. , at the secretary's office
presented this . year to the
on
the
Rock
Springs three , each a different variety. exhibitor compiling the most
Zinnia : dahlia flowered , points in th~ horticulture
Fairgrounds. The only entry
collection
of three , same classes. It is called the "horfee is the purchase of a $4
ticulture sweekstakes," and
membership ticket, and this is variety.
Zinnia
:
cactus
flowered
,
not required for exhibitors
will consist of a rosette and
collection of three, sa me $2.50. Selection
under 12.
be made on
variety.
Any Meigs County resident,
the basis of accumulated points
Zinnia : Pompon, lillipul, or - five for blue ribbons, three
or anyone living outside Meigs
County but a member of a button type, 1 potted specimen. for red, and two for white. •
Dahlia : decorative type , one
Meigs Co,.nty Garden Club, is
Ribbons and premiums for
bloom.
all classes are blue, $1.25; red,
eilgibie " exhibit. Th···e are
Dahlia : cactus type, one $1; and white, 75 cents.
also a few Cl3sses in eat how
which are open to nside,.ts of
other coun tie"'
Mrs. Carpente1 emphasizes
that the shows are not
restricted to garden club
members, 'b"t that anyone men, women and Children may enter. She particularly
urges male participation.
Purchase of a membership
ticket entitles the holder to
come and go onto the
· fairgrounds all five days, to
CARE has $14.30 more this week to distribute to needy
free parking, to all .the grand• children, thanks to six Middleport pre-teens who staged a carstand events; to exhibit in any nival in the Kenneth Wilcox backyard .
of the competitive classes ·and
The six girls - Kim Glass, Shiela Horky, Lydia Johnson,
to view the numerous displays . . Lori Kloes, Nancy Wallace and Darla Wilcox - made puppets,
In urging participation in the wrote a play, had a ventriloquist, provided wheelbarrow rides,
flower show, as well as other operated a refreshment stand and conducted games of skill, to
competitive events of the fair, raise the money. It was great fun for them and for the numerous
Mrs. Carpenter referred to the children and the few adults who attended.
exhibits as "the very roots of
. the county fair." She said that
EVERYBODY has health problems now and then but some
fairs gq back to Ute time, when people just seem to have more than their share. Kathy Smith, a
farmers met to decide who victim of rheumatoid arthritis since she was a teenager, is one Of
really grew the . biggest, those people. Right now she is back at Mount Cannel West
slllnlest apples, or the best hay Hospital in Columbus, 7~3 W. State St., Room 339, and ber conor corn, and that as the years dition remains serious.. Her motber, Mrs. Albert Roush ' is
passed, other areas of com- spending the week with her. Becky Roush and Christi Smiih
.
'
petition, including flower eight year old daughter of Kathy, were there Tuesday. Ingrowing and arranging, were cidentally, Kathy is listed at the hospital as Alveta Kathy Smith,
if you're thinking of sending along a gel-well card.
added.
In
the
horticulture
specimens division of the
GREG GROVER, Pomeroy, is having a bad time at the
Wednesday Aug. 14, show are Holzer Medical Center where he's been a patient for tbe past
month. Greg received a severe compound fracture of his left leg
the following classes:
Rose: Hybrid Tea, red, pink when the motorcycle he was riding was struck by a truck on July
3. He b11d his second leg surgery Friday, and expects to be
or blends of these.
Rose: Hybrid Tea, yellow, hospitalized ior at leas\ another couple of weeks. Greg, son of
Mrs. Myrtle Grover, is in Room 320.
orange or blends of these. ·
Rose: Floribunda.
AND Thursday, Ferne B. Hayman, East Letart, enters
Rose: Grandlflora.
Gladiolus: one ·of any color. Holzer _for cataract surgery on Tuesday.
Gladiolus: collection of
SKYDIVING may not be your thing, but it certainly is what
three, each ad!fferent variety.
Marine
G. Sgt. Walter Murray Harris likes to do best. He is now
Zinnia: dahlia flowered,
coUection of three · all same home from Japan where he's spent the past yesr and joining him
here for the past couple of weeks have been Sgt. John R. Kalikan,
variety.
Zinnia: cactus flowered, · stationed with the Marines at Iwakuni, Japan, and Sgt. Marvin
collection of -three, all same Floyd 'of Virginia. The three, all -sky diving enthusiasts, have
spent many of their days at the Bidwell field.
variety.
They have all been houseguests of Walter Murray's parents;
' ~::-«3$::=::::::~;:::::::~?
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Searles,.wbo have also had their grandson,
Walt, Jackson, Miss., for the past several weeks, Next week
they'll take eight-year-old Walt home and then continue on a
vacation.
~~
From here G. Sgt. Harris will be joining the Dayton Marine
·
Reserve Unit.

are

will

·,

By Polly Cramer

Weed kilter odor
clings to 'jeans
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Help! The win !)lew some weed
killer I was spraying on the lawn onto my jeans and suede
shoes. What can I do to remove the awful smell they now
have? I have washed the jeans several times and dried
theminthe sun but thatndor remains. - SUsAN.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the manufacturers of
baby clothes who put the size on a scratchy piece of cardboard
sewed in the garment. This has to be torn out to protect baby.
There is no record left for us to remember sizes to use for handme-downs. - MRS . N. C.
DEAR POLLY - Cindy should take her yellow satin shoes
back to the store where they were dyed and have brown dye put
over the yellow and then they should be beautiful. If she cannot
go to the same place, any other store that dyes shoes would do
them for her. I dyed many pairs when I sold shoes and know this
can be most successful. - DOT.
.
DEAR GIRLS and CINDY - Dot's suggestion Is, of course,
the best and safest one. U it Is Impossible to get a store that does
such work, this can be done at home. I have done It to silk shoes.
Of course, a darker shade must be used over the prvious dye. 1
found the greatest help Is to have the shoe fabric DAMP, not wet
Go over it with a wet soft old toothbrush. I used regular dye, such
as used for clothing, that was still just warm and had been
strained to be free of auy lumps and bits. Smoothly brush on with
the soft toothbrush and apply a seeond coat if needed. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My preschool children have their own
record library . Even though they cannot read the labels they still
want to select and care for their own records. I found it helpful
and reaUy·necessary to find a picture about one inch square that
suggested what was on a particular record. I glued this on the
record label so the children can select a wanted record and then
return it to the proper album cover. I always put the label on side
one so they know where to start a record. Sometimes I have even
had to resort to cutting a small picture off an a1bum cover. I am
surprised some record company has not thought of. labeling
records so small children could identify them. - MRS. J . H.

,

•
GJatence CUrtiJ, Mrs .. Ruby •
Frick, Mrs. c,e*gla Diehl, •
Mrs . Bertha Parker, Mrs . ••
Brenda Haggy and dS.aghters, •
•
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright an~ •
family' Mrs. Michael Wrigh ••
and children, Mrs. Mrs. Donna ••
Gilmore, Mrs. Nellie ~cy, ••
Mrs . Mabel Tracy and grand· ••
son.
!
Next meeUng will be held at ~.
the home o( Mrs. Nellie Tracy;'· :
Sept. 10.
:

•

By Helen Hennessy

KEILYDeCONNICK

Miss De Connick
jeted in japan

NEA Women's Edllor
Snappy new separates for 7
through 14 year olds have
taken inspiration from big
sister for some of the smartest
looking back-to-school clothes
for fall.
Tartan plaids and patterned
sweaters make bi8 news in the
schoolyard 'tn an array of
warm fall colors. This season

the art of punch picture
making.

.

Address of the DeConnicks is
Sgt. and Mrs. R. L. DeConnick,
6920th Security Group, PSC
Box 779, APO San Francisco,
96210.

r~~=---.,-••·
~~ONG RIFLE SHOP .:•
~•

992-3090

-

Pomeroy

••

SUPERIORS USDA CHOia

SUPER MARKET: Open Daily 9 to 10 · Sun. lU to 10
WP- Accept Federal Food

..
---

the sweater message is loud
and clear . Bright diamond ': ~~
patterns colored in rust and ..camel spark!~ on a zipped-up ;-':
sweater and teams with «
. kicky pleated skirt. The ever·u, ,_
popular pullover is updated •~­
with varsity stripes i~ con- trasting colors on collar and :!
cuffs, When pulled over lrirrt fitting pants they make a , , ,
dynamite duo.
·
·-Swin8Y fly-away. jackets and~=.;
spiffy waist length jackets,. ...
come· in color cornbinatlons or' •
brown and cameI • navy an d•••n
u. I l '-.
rust, and l't'd and green plaid. _
Whether they complemen ~ .:'
pants th&amp;t match or skirts ~-..:
jackets are tops for fall.
u U 'I

Riverview Dr.

•

••
•
'• •

'Separates ' in for fall

Kelly Sue DeConnick, great·
granddaughter of Mr.l!/ld Mrs.
Dick
Karr,
Pomeroy,
celebrated her fourth birthday
anniversary Juuly 15 in
Misawa, Japan, at the home of
her parents, Sgt. and Mrs.
Robert DeConnick. Mrs.
DeConnick and Kelly Sue spent
about a year here with the Karr
family before joining Sgt.
DeConnick in Japan.
Traditional Japanese gifts
were presented to Kelly Sue.
These included a pair of
Japanese Machi boots and a 24
inch Japanese china doli in a
· glass case.
.
About" 20cards were received
· from men and women at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Cen~r where Mr. and Mrs.
Karr are active.
Kelly Sue is heing enrolled
for Japanese- culture classes
which are held five days a
week and emphasize inYou wlll receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite home· struction in the language,
making Jdea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solutJon to a traditions and· culture as well
problem. Write Polly in care of this .newspaper.
'
as Japanese necdlecr!'fL and •

PHONE: 992-3480

MIDDLEPORT, 0'

1'o Umit QuanUUes"

Reserve The

;uPERIORS All MEAT

POR STEA

/!;Mmps

'

LEAN AND TENDER

BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
lb.

SUPERIORS

.SUPERIORS
BABYALL BEEF
.LIVER
••••••••••••
2~·.'79e
MEAT
·'
.
·
WIENERS
•••••••••••••••••••
!~!'!-.P.~
79e
SUPERIORS
.
.
SHORT
RIBS
OF
BEEF.
•••.•••
~b; 79e
SUPERIORS ALL BEEF
.
WlEN ERS••••••••••••••••• ~.. ~2. ~ e,. 79e
-HAM SALAD......................
- . ..lb.. 79e

'

~EMADE

... .

.

Fl$ SNACKS...BOB'S

-

•

..

SUPERIORS
BONELESS

1t&gt;.,

.

-= C,.HICKEN SALAD••••••• ••••!2~!~·.79e
CHEESE SPREAD•••••••••••8.~;f~ 79e
lf:ORK SAUSAGE ••••••••••••••• :~· 79e
•

"NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS"

:~

HOURS: 5:30P.M. to 10:30 P.M.

BOB'S PIMENTO

.

-

., .

HOIEMADE PURE

TRUST YOUR HOME
HEAT TO •••

lb.

·

..-:

lb .

· %gallon
.CURITY TAPE TAB

Sealtest ·Ice Cream

CANS$
FOR

•

-•

C8EPS DELIGHT
.

ON

..
(JRNATION
.

•

~LB.

LlnLE
CIGARS

carton
GRADE B LARGE SIZE

EGGS

&amp;

r. MIX

-:•• KEN-L-RATION

FOR ALL YOUR

NOW GET

5 cans

.•
DOG
FOOD
..
: (CHICKEN FLAVOR)
.-•.

SERVICE- SPECIAL

PARTY
ICE

DOZEN

~

!&gt;IEIGS Athl~tlc . Boosters,
7:30 p.m. at high school.
POMEROY Chapter 186
OES, Pomeroy Masonic

$

OZ:sile

SEE US TODAY!

",,

..

-·
.. "
•
• •'

2 '1.39
lb.
box

Everyday P.-lce - 8 Pak ' ·

Our skilled mechanics set caster. camber
arid toe~in to original specs.

We perform only 'ervices which YOU
authorize . We return your worn pl!lrts
in a pla"stlc bag for your inspec1ion .

HOME &amp;

,

Lodse 453 -F

IIIII AM, l"eelllar meeting, at
1111
I p.rp, Jill Masl4!r
,,
, :--·
lmlied.
l

our Complete ·Tire Center .

li06 E. MAIN
. I

•

-BANQUET .

MOORE'S
OOOKING BAGS · ONION RINGS

.-

.f or factOry •li or tOnion bar citra .

I

--today.
'1'111ll18DAY
IIWlE Rlvtr

NOADDITIONALCHAAGE

.-.

BotHe)
(64 oz. . 1h gallon)

16 oz.
bois.
pak

·hoNtsnAv·

F .U AM, regular meeting,
7:30 p.m•• Sojourner's night.
All Muter Muonll!nv!ted. . .
SOUTHERN FIJA and home
_.uc lltudenta who wish to
dllplay lfmnl at Melga County
F.Ir, brln8 them to school or·
CG~IIIct Mn. Erma McClung at
the ICbool. !lema should be in
lllclwlq condition. Deadline is

(Throw~Away

RC COLA

GORTON'S
..
BREADED
FISH PORTION!

Temple 7:46 p.m.

·. POMEROY Lodge No.. 164

10 LB.
BAG

-..

FOR ONLY

55

CARTON

COCA-COLA

HEATING. NEEDS

portauon.
.

..

CHEWING
TOBACCO.

BOX

HOT COCOA

rt.restone

WINOfESTER

1h gallon

"'

PYROFAX GAS

DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS

n

BIG rALL SPECIAL

79~

lb.

,MILK

.

CHEESE

79e

Broughton's ·

~

.

POLISH

79e

PURITY

King Size
-... Loaf
BRYAN
VIENNA.
..
·sAuSAGE

SUPERIORS

SALT PORK
SAUSAGE
BACON

·&amp;READ
•.

SUPERIORS

PORK
ROAST

••

'

Calendarl

nJESDAY
WINDING Trail Garden
Club, tour of Mrs. Thereon
Johnson's · flower . garden at
U.tart,'6:30 p.m. Members are
to meet at the FultonThompson Tr'actor Sales for a
ride.
· ROCK Springs Grange, 8
p.m., to vacate the Grange Hall
for the Meigs County Fair.
MEIGS County Riding Club
meeting and poUuck supper 1
home of Bob Daniels, Middleport, 7 p.m. Bring covered ·
dish, drink and table .service.
- ...
THE WINDING Trail
Garden Club will tout Mrs.
Theron ' Johnson's flower
garden at Letart Falls Aug. 6 at
8:30p.m. Members are to meet
at the Fulton - Thompson
. Tractor Sales for trans•

The annual picnic or the
~..&amp;urel Cliff Better Health Club
was held Thursday at the U.S.
35 Roadside Park
Attending wer~ tlfe Rev.
Floyd Shook new pastor o( the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church and Mrs. Shook, Mr.
and M.:S. Ernest Powell, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Clark and
family, Mi. and Mrs. Gerald
Pullins and son, Mr. and Mrs .
- Otto Lohn , Mr. and Mrs .

Polly 's Pointers

I

~ Social

Health club has picnic

'

'

·'

••

'

PHONE 992-2145
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PHONE 67&gt;2.:
POINT PLEASANT

,

j

•

••

.-...
...
...
.·-...
-...

16 oz.
bag

69~

TOMATOES

DAD'S ROOT

3 lb. basket

'

OR NEW DIET RITE COlA. (SUGAR FRU)

CABBAGE'........ ..

..

......•

-

.
,'' I

-

.

~

LB.

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

8

lOt
.

'

'

•

PM
16 oz.

16. .

,

�-'

t - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 6,!97•

Exhibitors invited to fair show
Dahlia: decorative type, one bloom.
Overheard more than once at
bloom.
Dahlia : Pompon type, one
~most any flower show is the
one
Dahlia
:
cactus
typ.
e
,
stalk.
comment:
Marigold: large, collection of
"I've got nicer gladioli (or bloom .
Marigold
:
large,
collection
of
three,
all same variety.
roses, or geraniwns, or zin·
Aster : Collection of three, ail
nias ) ill my garden than those three.
Uly
:
one
sta1!(,
true
genus
same
variety.
blue ribbon winners."
Wiwn
.
But in the garden they are,
Celosia: Plumed, one stalk.
Celosia: Cl'l'SUit, (crested ),
Potted Plant: flowering type,
and while the flowers may
one
stalk.
one potted specimen.
grow bigger and better, the
Potted Plant: foliage type,
blue ribbons go to the garCacti and-or Succulents :
deners who not only ·grow but ·ne potted specimen .
collection of three different
African Viole ts: one polled varieties, labeled.
show.
Annual flowers : collection of
As Mrs. James Carpenter, specirrien, any variety .
Perennial
flowers
:
co1lection
six different types, labeled.
chairwoman for the two flower
shows to be staged next week of six different types labeled.
Rules of the shows specify
Terrarium
:
all
plants
that ali entries must be in the
at the !11th Annual Meigs
hands of the placement
County Fair, puts it: " The labeled on separate card.
In the Friday, Aug . 16, show, committee before 11 a.m. on
judge picks the best that she
the classes are:
the day of the show. Judging
sees entered in the show."
Rose: Hybrid Tea, collection will begin at J2 :30on each show
And from Mrs. Carpenter
comes the invitation to exhibit. of three, each a different day. It will be oral and done by
an accredited judge of the Ohio
Entries
to be made this variety,
Rose
:
Fioribunda.
week, either Thursday or
Association of Garden Clubs.
Rose : Grandiflora .
Friday, between 10 a.m. and 4
A new award will be
Gladiolus
:
Collection
of
p.m. , at the secretary's office
presented this . year to the
on
the
Rock
Springs three , each a different variety. exhibitor compiling the most
Zinnia : dahlia flowered , points in th~ horticulture
Fairgrounds. The only entry
collection
of three , same classes. It is called the "horfee is the purchase of a $4
ticulture sweekstakes," and
membership ticket, and this is variety.
Zinnia
:
cactus
flowered
,
not required for exhibitors
will consist of a rosette and
collection of three, sa me $2.50. Selection
under 12.
be made on
variety.
Any Meigs County resident,
the basis of accumulated points
Zinnia : Pompon, lillipul, or - five for blue ribbons, three
or anyone living outside Meigs
County but a member of a button type, 1 potted specimen. for red, and two for white. •
Dahlia : decorative type , one
Meigs Co,.nty Garden Club, is
Ribbons and premiums for
bloom.
all classes are blue, $1.25; red,
eilgibie " exhibit. Th···e are
Dahlia : cactus type, one $1; and white, 75 cents.
also a few Cl3sses in eat how
which are open to nside,.ts of
other coun tie"'
Mrs. Carpente1 emphasizes
that the shows are not
restricted to garden club
members, 'b"t that anyone men, women and Children may enter. She particularly
urges male participation.
Purchase of a membership
ticket entitles the holder to
come and go onto the
· fairgrounds all five days, to
CARE has $14.30 more this week to distribute to needy
free parking, to all .the grand• children, thanks to six Middleport pre-teens who staged a carstand events; to exhibit in any nival in the Kenneth Wilcox backyard .
of the competitive classes ·and
The six girls - Kim Glass, Shiela Horky, Lydia Johnson,
to view the numerous displays . . Lori Kloes, Nancy Wallace and Darla Wilcox - made puppets,
In urging participation in the wrote a play, had a ventriloquist, provided wheelbarrow rides,
flower show, as well as other operated a refreshment stand and conducted games of skill, to
competitive events of the fair, raise the money. It was great fun for them and for the numerous
Mrs. Carpenter referred to the children and the few adults who attended.
exhibits as "the very roots of
. the county fair." She said that
EVERYBODY has health problems now and then but some
fairs gq back to Ute time, when people just seem to have more than their share. Kathy Smith, a
farmers met to decide who victim of rheumatoid arthritis since she was a teenager, is one Of
really grew the . biggest, those people. Right now she is back at Mount Cannel West
slllnlest apples, or the best hay Hospital in Columbus, 7~3 W. State St., Room 339, and ber conor corn, and that as the years dition remains serious.. Her motber, Mrs. Albert Roush ' is
passed, other areas of com- spending the week with her. Becky Roush and Christi Smiih
.
'
petition, including flower eight year old daughter of Kathy, were there Tuesday. Ingrowing and arranging, were cidentally, Kathy is listed at the hospital as Alveta Kathy Smith,
if you're thinking of sending along a gel-well card.
added.
In
the
horticulture
specimens division of the
GREG GROVER, Pomeroy, is having a bad time at the
Wednesday Aug. 14, show are Holzer Medical Center where he's been a patient for tbe past
month. Greg received a severe compound fracture of his left leg
the following classes:
Rose: Hybrid Tea, red, pink when the motorcycle he was riding was struck by a truck on July
3. He b11d his second leg surgery Friday, and expects to be
or blends of these.
Rose: Hybrid Tea, yellow, hospitalized ior at leas\ another couple of weeks. Greg, son of
Mrs. Myrtle Grover, is in Room 320.
orange or blends of these. ·
Rose: Floribunda.
AND Thursday, Ferne B. Hayman, East Letart, enters
Rose: Grandlflora.
Gladiolus: one ·of any color. Holzer _for cataract surgery on Tuesday.
Gladiolus: collection of
SKYDIVING may not be your thing, but it certainly is what
three, each ad!fferent variety.
Marine
G. Sgt. Walter Murray Harris likes to do best. He is now
Zinnia: dahlia flowered,
coUection of three · all same home from Japan where he's spent the past yesr and joining him
here for the past couple of weeks have been Sgt. John R. Kalikan,
variety.
Zinnia: cactus flowered, · stationed with the Marines at Iwakuni, Japan, and Sgt. Marvin
collection of -three, all same Floyd 'of Virginia. The three, all -sky diving enthusiasts, have
spent many of their days at the Bidwell field.
variety.
They have all been houseguests of Walter Murray's parents;
' ~::-«3$::=::::::~;:::::::~?
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Searles,.wbo have also had their grandson,
Walt, Jackson, Miss., for the past several weeks, Next week
they'll take eight-year-old Walt home and then continue on a
vacation.
~~
From here G. Sgt. Harris will be joining the Dayton Marine
·
Reserve Unit.

are

will

·,

By Polly Cramer

Weed kilter odor
clings to 'jeans
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Help! The win !)lew some weed
killer I was spraying on the lawn onto my jeans and suede
shoes. What can I do to remove the awful smell they now
have? I have washed the jeans several times and dried
theminthe sun but thatndor remains. - SUsAN.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with the manufacturers of
baby clothes who put the size on a scratchy piece of cardboard
sewed in the garment. This has to be torn out to protect baby.
There is no record left for us to remember sizes to use for handme-downs. - MRS . N. C.
DEAR POLLY - Cindy should take her yellow satin shoes
back to the store where they were dyed and have brown dye put
over the yellow and then they should be beautiful. If she cannot
go to the same place, any other store that dyes shoes would do
them for her. I dyed many pairs when I sold shoes and know this
can be most successful. - DOT.
.
DEAR GIRLS and CINDY - Dot's suggestion Is, of course,
the best and safest one. U it Is Impossible to get a store that does
such work, this can be done at home. I have done It to silk shoes.
Of course, a darker shade must be used over the prvious dye. 1
found the greatest help Is to have the shoe fabric DAMP, not wet
Go over it with a wet soft old toothbrush. I used regular dye, such
as used for clothing, that was still just warm and had been
strained to be free of auy lumps and bits. Smoothly brush on with
the soft toothbrush and apply a seeond coat if needed. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My preschool children have their own
record library . Even though they cannot read the labels they still
want to select and care for their own records. I found it helpful
and reaUy·necessary to find a picture about one inch square that
suggested what was on a particular record. I glued this on the
record label so the children can select a wanted record and then
return it to the proper album cover. I always put the label on side
one so they know where to start a record. Sometimes I have even
had to resort to cutting a small picture off an a1bum cover. I am
surprised some record company has not thought of. labeling
records so small children could identify them. - MRS. J . H.

,

•
GJatence CUrtiJ, Mrs .. Ruby •
Frick, Mrs. c,e*gla Diehl, •
Mrs . Bertha Parker, Mrs . ••
Brenda Haggy and dS.aghters, •
•
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright an~ •
family' Mrs. Michael Wrigh ••
and children, Mrs. Mrs. Donna ••
Gilmore, Mrs. Nellie ~cy, ••
Mrs . Mabel Tracy and grand· ••
son.
!
Next meeUng will be held at ~.
the home o( Mrs. Nellie Tracy;'· :
Sept. 10.
:

•

By Helen Hennessy

KEILYDeCONNICK

Miss De Connick
jeted in japan

NEA Women's Edllor
Snappy new separates for 7
through 14 year olds have
taken inspiration from big
sister for some of the smartest
looking back-to-school clothes
for fall.
Tartan plaids and patterned
sweaters make bi8 news in the
schoolyard 'tn an array of
warm fall colors. This season

the art of punch picture
making.

.

Address of the DeConnicks is
Sgt. and Mrs. R. L. DeConnick,
6920th Security Group, PSC
Box 779, APO San Francisco,
96210.

r~~=---.,-••·
~~ONG RIFLE SHOP .:•
~•

992-3090

-

Pomeroy

••

SUPERIORS USDA CHOia

SUPER MARKET: Open Daily 9 to 10 · Sun. lU to 10
WP- Accept Federal Food

..
---

the sweater message is loud
and clear . Bright diamond ': ~~
patterns colored in rust and ..camel spark!~ on a zipped-up ;-':
sweater and teams with «
. kicky pleated skirt. The ever·u, ,_
popular pullover is updated •~­
with varsity stripes i~ con- trasting colors on collar and :!
cuffs, When pulled over lrirrt fitting pants they make a , , ,
dynamite duo.
·
·-Swin8Y fly-away. jackets and~=.;
spiffy waist length jackets,. ...
come· in color cornbinatlons or' •
brown and cameI • navy an d•••n
u. I l '-.
rust, and l't'd and green plaid. _
Whether they complemen ~ .:'
pants th&amp;t match or skirts ~-..:
jackets are tops for fall.
u U 'I

Riverview Dr.

•

••
•
'• •

'Separates ' in for fall

Kelly Sue DeConnick, great·
granddaughter of Mr.l!/ld Mrs.
Dick
Karr,
Pomeroy,
celebrated her fourth birthday
anniversary Juuly 15 in
Misawa, Japan, at the home of
her parents, Sgt. and Mrs.
Robert DeConnick. Mrs.
DeConnick and Kelly Sue spent
about a year here with the Karr
family before joining Sgt.
DeConnick in Japan.
Traditional Japanese gifts
were presented to Kelly Sue.
These included a pair of
Japanese Machi boots and a 24
inch Japanese china doli in a
· glass case.
.
About" 20cards were received
· from men and women at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Cen~r where Mr. and Mrs.
Karr are active.
Kelly Sue is heing enrolled
for Japanese- culture classes
which are held five days a
week and emphasize inYou wlll receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite home· struction in the language,
making Jdea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solutJon to a traditions and· culture as well
problem. Write Polly in care of this .newspaper.
'
as Japanese necdlecr!'fL and •

PHONE: 992-3480

MIDDLEPORT, 0'

1'o Umit QuanUUes"

Reserve The

;uPERIORS All MEAT

POR STEA

/!;Mmps

'

LEAN AND TENDER

BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
lb.

SUPERIORS

.SUPERIORS
BABYALL BEEF
.LIVER
••••••••••••
2~·.'79e
MEAT
·'
.
·
WIENERS
•••••••••••••••••••
!~!'!-.P.~
79e
SUPERIORS
.
.
SHORT
RIBS
OF
BEEF.
•••.•••
~b; 79e
SUPERIORS ALL BEEF
.
WlEN ERS••••••••••••••••• ~.. ~2. ~ e,. 79e
-HAM SALAD......................
- . ..lb.. 79e

'

~EMADE

... .

.

Fl$ SNACKS...BOB'S

-

•

..

SUPERIORS
BONELESS

1t&gt;.,

.

-= C,.HICKEN SALAD••••••• ••••!2~!~·.79e
CHEESE SPREAD•••••••••••8.~;f~ 79e
lf:ORK SAUSAGE ••••••••••••••• :~· 79e
•

"NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS"

:~

HOURS: 5:30P.M. to 10:30 P.M.

BOB'S PIMENTO

.

-

., .

HOIEMADE PURE

TRUST YOUR HOME
HEAT TO •••

lb.

·

..-:

lb .

· %gallon
.CURITY TAPE TAB

Sealtest ·Ice Cream

CANS$
FOR

•

-•

C8EPS DELIGHT
.

ON

..
(JRNATION
.

•

~LB.

LlnLE
CIGARS

carton
GRADE B LARGE SIZE

EGGS

&amp;

r. MIX

-:•• KEN-L-RATION

FOR ALL YOUR

NOW GET

5 cans

.•
DOG
FOOD
..
: (CHICKEN FLAVOR)
.-•.

SERVICE- SPECIAL

PARTY
ICE

DOZEN

~

!&gt;IEIGS Athl~tlc . Boosters,
7:30 p.m. at high school.
POMEROY Chapter 186
OES, Pomeroy Masonic

$

OZ:sile

SEE US TODAY!

",,

..

-·
.. "
•
• •'

2 '1.39
lb.
box

Everyday P.-lce - 8 Pak ' ·

Our skilled mechanics set caster. camber
arid toe~in to original specs.

We perform only 'ervices which YOU
authorize . We return your worn pl!lrts
in a pla"stlc bag for your inspec1ion .

HOME &amp;

,

Lodse 453 -F

IIIII AM, l"eelllar meeting, at
1111
I p.rp, Jill Masl4!r
,,
, :--·
lmlied.
l

our Complete ·Tire Center .

li06 E. MAIN
. I

•

-BANQUET .

MOORE'S
OOOKING BAGS · ONION RINGS

.-

.f or factOry •li or tOnion bar citra .

I

--today.
'1'111ll18DAY
IIWlE Rlvtr

NOADDITIONALCHAAGE

.-.

BotHe)
(64 oz. . 1h gallon)

16 oz.
bois.
pak

·hoNtsnAv·

F .U AM, regular meeting,
7:30 p.m•• Sojourner's night.
All Muter Muonll!nv!ted. . .
SOUTHERN FIJA and home
_.uc lltudenta who wish to
dllplay lfmnl at Melga County
F.Ir, brln8 them to school or·
CG~IIIct Mn. Erma McClung at
the ICbool. !lema should be in
lllclwlq condition. Deadline is

(Throw~Away

RC COLA

GORTON'S
..
BREADED
FISH PORTION!

Temple 7:46 p.m.

·. POMEROY Lodge No.. 164

10 LB.
BAG

-..

FOR ONLY

55

CARTON

COCA-COLA

HEATING. NEEDS

portauon.
.

..

CHEWING
TOBACCO.

BOX

HOT COCOA

rt.restone

WINOfESTER

1h gallon

"'

PYROFAX GAS

DISPOSABLE
DIAPERS

n

BIG rALL SPECIAL

79~

lb.

,MILK

.

CHEESE

79e

Broughton's ·

~

.

POLISH

79e

PURITY

King Size
-... Loaf
BRYAN
VIENNA.
..
·sAuSAGE

SUPERIORS

SALT PORK
SAUSAGE
BACON

·&amp;READ
•.

SUPERIORS

PORK
ROAST

••

'

Calendarl

nJESDAY
WINDING Trail Garden
Club, tour of Mrs. Thereon
Johnson's · flower . garden at
U.tart,'6:30 p.m. Members are
to meet at the FultonThompson Tr'actor Sales for a
ride.
· ROCK Springs Grange, 8
p.m., to vacate the Grange Hall
for the Meigs County Fair.
MEIGS County Riding Club
meeting and poUuck supper 1
home of Bob Daniels, Middleport, 7 p.m. Bring covered ·
dish, drink and table .service.
- ...
THE WINDING Trail
Garden Club will tout Mrs.
Theron ' Johnson's flower
garden at Letart Falls Aug. 6 at
8:30p.m. Members are to meet
at the Fulton - Thompson
. Tractor Sales for trans•

The annual picnic or the
~..&amp;urel Cliff Better Health Club
was held Thursday at the U.S.
35 Roadside Park
Attending wer~ tlfe Rev.
Floyd Shook new pastor o( the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church and Mrs. Shook, Mr.
and M.:S. Ernest Powell, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Clark and
family, Mi. and Mrs. Gerald
Pullins and son, Mr. and Mrs .
- Otto Lohn , Mr. and Mrs .

Polly 's Pointers

I

~ Social

Health club has picnic

'

'

·'

••

'

PHONE 992-2145
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PHONE 67&gt;2.:
POINT PLEASANT

,

j

•

••

.-...
...
...
.·-...
-...

16 oz.
bag

69~

TOMATOES

DAD'S ROOT

3 lb. basket

'

OR NEW DIET RITE COlA. (SUGAR FRU)

CABBAGE'........ ..

..

......•

-

.
,'' I

-

.

~

LB.

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

8

lOt
.

'

'

•

PM
16 oz.

16. .

,

�•

1-TheO.UySentlnel,MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy,O.,Tu~y,Au8 . ti,IY/t;..IMIWWWW!IIMIIIM-WWIIIIIIII!IIM_IMII_ _ _ _ __

~

Television

J~og

esse')~

furnish an apartment with almost no money . I'm nol turned on by
the Idea . In the first place, what could you call -a bridal shower
when the girl won 't be a bride ? - STILL TRADITIONAL

8: ~ - Happy Oav• 6, 13; Maude 8, 10; "!"'n Bu llds , Man
Destroys 33 ; Adam-12 3, .4 , 15 ; Crime&amp; Punishment 20.
8: 30 ~ Hawaii FIYe -0 8, 10 ; Tenafly 3. li, 15; Movie " Sh l r~ ­
Sklns" ll ; Movie " The Moan Who Wanted to Live Forever " 6 :
Dear Tradilional :
Eye to Eye 33. ·
·
,
An ~~ unbridled .. shower'! (Dictionary definition : ''without
9: 00 - Firing Line 20 ; Je~nne Wolf with 33 .
9: 30 - Movie ' 'Rampage of Apache Wells" 8; Shaft 10: Per "
restraint, " which sorta fits, right ?)- HELEN
tormance 33 .
P .S . I'd say your friend has WJbridled nerve, too!
10: 00- News3 1 20 ; Marcus Welby, M. D. 6 , 13; Pollee Story 4, IS ;
~++
Mountain Scene 33.
10: 30- Base bait 3; Day at Night 33.
•
S.T.:
11 : 00 - News -4, 6. 8. 10, 13, IS ; ABC News ~3 .
.
.
U you're not turned on by the idea, don 't give the shower.
•ll : JO - Johnny Carson -4, 15; MisSion : lm~ss1ble 6; M~v1es
Even
i! I his girl were getting married she has no right to suggest
·
" The Face of Fu Manchu" 8 : " The Solid Gold Cadillac 10 ;
;
Untouchables 13 ; Janaki 33 .
parties in her honor . That 's no better than begging lor gills. •12: 30 - Wide World Mystery 13 .
SUE
: 1: 00 - Tomori-ow 3, 4; Take Five for Life 15.
1 2:00 - News 4, 13.
Rap:
.
WEDNESDAY, AUG . 7, 1974
I asked my mother why she started smoking, and she said,
6 : 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6: 25 - Farm Report 13.
"To !eel more popular at high school." l didn 't say any more, but
6 • 30 - Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8 ; The
I wonder :
Story lJ; Sacred Heart 10.
Why doesn't she want to •·feel more popular" . with her
6 : 35 - Columbus Today 4.
6:45 - Farmtime 10; Morn ing Report J .
family? By quitting, I mean. - NONSMOKJNG SON
7: 00 - Tocay 3. 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; Dick Van Dyke 13 ; H. R.
Pufnstuf 6.
7: 30 - New Zoo Revu e 6; Tuxedo Tennessee 13.
N .S.S.:
..i
a ~ oo - New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33; Cap1. Kangaroo 8;
Why don't you ask your motheJ this questloo? - SUE
Jeff's Collie 6 ; Urban League 10.
8:25 - Jack lalanne 13.
8:30 - Brady Bunc h 6 ; Green Acres 10.
Dear S&lt;&gt;n:
· '8: 55 - Chuck White Reports 10 ; News 13 .
She'd probably answer, " Starting's easy, quitting's rough!"
-9: 00 - Paul Di xon 4 ,· Frrendly Junction 10 ; AM J ; Abbott However, she can knock the cigarette habit if she r eally feels
Costello 8;. Phil Donahue 15; Wild. Wild West 6 ; Captain
motivated. S&lt;&gt; get motivatin', son 1 - HELEN
Kangaroo 10 ; Mov ie "Suicide Commandos'' 13 ; M ister
Rogers 33.
·
9: 30 - To Tell the Truth 3; I love Lucy 8: Electric Co . 33.
Dear Rap:
10: 00 - Joker's Wild 8, 10; Company 6 ;, Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 33 ;
For the past three years, s ince I was 13, my father has made
Name That Tune 3, 15.
1'0 : 30 - GambitS, 10 ; Winning Streak 3, 4, 15 ; Wheels , Ki lns &amp;
unfatherly advances lo me. Althou gh it has not affected my at' Clay 33.
.
· ··
titudes toward boyfriends, it makes m e nauseated and frightened
\1:00- Password 13 ; Now You See It 8, 10 : High Rollers 3, 4, 15 ;
to be near him. When he touches me, I c ringe .
·
$10,000 Pyramid 6 ; Sesame St. 33.
' .
It bap.Jl.Oned aru&lt;in tonight. Again I tried to laugh it off, while
11 : 30- Hollvwood SQuares 3, 4, 15 ; Love of life 8, 10; Brady
• Bunch 13 ; Lucy Show 6.
/ !ighling my father off. Yel he expects me to be his good pal, bei 1: 55 - CBS News Bi Dan I mel's World 10.
tweentimes. It's like he can't help· himself.
12: 00- Password 6; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 8. 10. 13 ;
I don 't want to hurt my mother by having her know, nor do I
Jackpot J, IS ; Mr . Roger:-s 33.
.
.
12: 30 - Search for Tomorrow 8. 10; Split Second 6; Celebnty
want to hate my father, but I'm scared. He asks nie not to be mad
Sweepstakes3, lS ; Afternoon with OJ 13 ; Electric Co. 33.
at him afterwards, but then it happens again: Please, some
12: 55 - NBC News 3, 15.
1: 00 - News 3 ; All My Children 6, 13 ; Not For Women Only 15 :
advice 1 - S.S.
Hazel&amp; : What's My Line 10 ; Cookin' Cajun 33.
·1: 30 - As the World Turns 8 , 10 ; Jeopardy 3, 4, 15; Journey to
S.S.:
Japan 33; Let's Make A Deal 6, 13.
Talk to your family doctor . He ~an advise you because,
2:00- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15 ; Gulqlng Light 8, 10; Newlywed
believe me, he 1s faced this problem before: ince~t, either real or
Game 6, 13 ; Mountain Scene 33.
2: 30- Doctors 3, 4, IS ; Girl in My Life 6, 13 ; Edge of Night 8, 10;
Open Mind 33.
News 6 , 13.
·
3:00 -r Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospltal6, 13 ; Price is
6:30 - News 3, tl, 8, 10. 15; Room -222 13: Journey to Japan 33;
Right 8, 10.
.
Bevlltc hed 6.
3:30 - One Life to live 13 ; Phil Donahue 4 ; Match Game 8, 10 ;
7: 00 - News 10 ; What 's My l ine 8; Truth or Cons . 3 ; Beat the
How to Survive a Mart'lage 3, 15 ; Carrascolendas 33 ; Lassie
' ..
Clock A; Elec . Co. 20; Jimm y Dean 13 ; I Spy 15 ; Zoom 33 ;
' . 6.
Bowling tor Dollars 6.
.
,
4: 00 - Mr , Cartoon 3; Somerset 15 ; Se$ame St. 33 ; I Dream of
7 : 30 ~ Police -Surgeon J ; On The Money 4; Eptsode Act10n 33;
Jeannie 13; Tattletales 8; Gilligan' s !stand 6; Movie " Miss
To Tell the Tr uth' 6 ; Sale of the Centu ry 8; The J udg e 10; Beat
Grant Takes Richmond" 10.
the Clock 13 ; Know Your Antiques 20 .
4: 30 - Green Acres 3; Bonanza 13 ; Jackpot 4; Virginian 8;
8:00 - Chase 3, 15; The Cowboys 6, 13; People in Para~ise 4:
Daniel Boone 13 ; MOO Squad 6.
Hudson Broth er s 8, 10 ; Consumer Ga me 20 ; Unto the Htlls 33.
5:00- Mr. Rogers 2o; JJ ; Bonanza 3; .Merv Griffin 4.
8:
30-,
Mov ie " The Stranger Who looks Li ke Me " 6, 13 ; Grea t
5: 30- Elec. Co. 33 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Hogan's Heroes 13:
American
Dream Mach ine 20 , 33.
Western Star Theat!1!r 1.5; News 6.
9:
00
Movie
" The Hea lers" 3, 4, 15 ; Ca nnon 8, 10.
6:00- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 ; Sesame §1. 20; C.tch-33. 33 ; ABC
9:30 - Boarding House 20, 33 .
_
10 :00 - Doc Elliot 6, 13 ; Koiak 8, 10 ; News 20; Festival Films 33 .
10: JO - . Day at Night 33.
WIN
BRIDGE
11 :00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15. ·
11 : 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 ; Mission : Impossi ble ; Untouchables 13 ; Mov ies " Assignme.nt K" 8; "Torpedo Bay" 10.
12:30 - Wild, Wild West 6; Wide World Special13.
1: 00 ---=- Tomorrow4 ; Take Five fat life 15.
club overcall. What do you do 2:00 - News 4, 13.
now?
6
NORm
• J 64
'105
• 7653
4A652
• WEST
EAST
: .Q73
.K52
• . AQ
.876432
~ +QJ1094
+B2

+++

+++

+++

AT

Two tricks With two entries

10 keep tne

peace

SCORPIO COct. 24-Noo. 221
Vou can breathe • sigh of
relief someone is going to
help you in the mck of lime with
a responstbilily that would
ha~te lallen to you alone &gt;
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 23·
o.c. 21) Before dcnng any·
thing that has an element of
chance involved. re · hastt it In
your own mind. then talk it OOJ8r
with others as well .
CAPRICORN CDec. 22-Jan.
1~) Take eX1ra caution with
your possessions. If you 're
going out . be ~ure alllhe doors
and windows In your nouse are
properly secured.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob.
19) Just because someone
who now offers you sugge~ ·
tions Is lorceful doesn't mean
hrs ideas are right. Weigh what
he says before trying.
PISCES (Fob. 20·Merch 20)
II wouldn't be wtse If you 're in ·
debted to someone to let him
know you 're spending money
o n someth ing else before
repaying nim.

Wbat Unbridled Nerve!

Sle wants me to give a kitchen shower for her, as they must

ld fle toCJ

lii~A CSot&gt;t. n-Oel. Z3)
Tt\ings are. not goinG 10 QO enlir,ly yOUf way . C~romise
and concessione. w111 be nee·

By Helen and Sue Bouel
Dear Helen and Sue :
A girlfriend plans to live wilh her guy al college this year .
Marrtage may come later , lhey haven't decided yet.

8

selfishly

Generation Rap

TUESOAY. AUG. 6, lf74
6;00 - ,.NBC News 13 ; sesame St. 20 ; News J, 4; Utlas , Yoga &amp;
You 33; News. I. 1'0, l.S ; News 6.
6: JO - News a, 10; NBC News l , .t, 15 : Room -22213 : French Chei
33; Bewllcned 6.
7: 00 - What's My L.lne I ; Dusty' s Tralll3; E!ec:- Co. 20; Truth
or Conse&lt;~ . 3; Be-•t the Clock 4; Paul Nuch1ms 33 : News 10 ;
Washington Debates for the 70$ 15 ; Bowling tor Dollars 6.
7:30 - To Til the Truth 6; New Price Is Right 8. lO ; RFD 20 ;
Hollywood Squares 3: Beat the Clock 13; Hollywood Square$

behavmo

•&amp;

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191
A slight misunderstanding is
ltkely to develop between ~au
and a close cQmP&amp;nlon. tt can
be re c tif ied if you a c t

promptly.

TAURUS CApr11 20-Moy 20)
Something distaatetul you've
been putting or will sqoeete
you into a comer wlth Its im·
medlacy. It will demand attention now.
GEMINI CMoy 21·Juno 20)
One Who is not your favorite
person has been saying some
untlatterino things about you .
Your trlends have tuned him

out

C'ANCER (June 21-July 22)
Center your attention on the
real values you hope to gain
lrom your presenl goals . not
the emotional side issues.
LEO CJuly 23-Aug. 22) You'll
have to be careful today when
dealing with others that you
don't say one thing and mean
another, Tell it like it is .
VIRGO CAug. 23-Sept. 22)
There's a potential problem
brewing with a friend of yours
over something material , Each

companloo
orative
4e Island In
pillar
the Medll
6 GenUeman'o DOWN
attire
I - the
10 Lamont·
dark
Crafll!ton:s
( 2 wds.)
alter ego,
%Highland
with "The"
garb
11 Black
3 Advanlage
J% Newspaper 4 Asiatic
file room
sardine
13 SpOken
5 Merino
14 Aquatic
females

very personal mailers), then ll)ake your father face 'his problem.
Tell him that he must either get psychiatric help or your mother
will have to know.
.
You say, " It's like he can't help himself," ·and that mens he
needs counseling from an expert 1 - SUE

tll&amp;Will!1~®1kat kJt-~IJ .-I,_
h¥ HENnl AHNUlU , u &gt;&lt;IIIOA I EE

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter ·to each square, to
form four ordinary words .

[J

_..............

15 Recent

heroine
7 Infuriate
s Cut a
figure 8
9 "Tippecanoe
and -

16 Aunt
( Sp. 1
17 French
painter,
remand -

too''

IS Sicilian
city

10 Struck

IRAKNECj
I

r

GLUFEN
V' "i
I

[]
THE. TIF&lt;:eD
INTIWVel'ti t&gt;I~' T
HAVE: ib 8E.
P'E.I&lt;:~UA!7EI7

1

iO 170.

Now ananre the circled letten
to form the 1urpri1e &amp;Nwer, u

~=L'::::::.J:::=:::=====::'. augreated by·the above.cartoon.
P1ill ... SIRS( INSWIR lterw
[I]"

I 'T I I I ]

(Aiuwen tomorrow)

JuOlblee; JUDGE MADAM ADDUCE NOGGIN
v~llerday'•

What the bride dropped at her
weddino-HER MAIDEN NAIIE

An1wen

%Z Poetically

premier

alw.ays
%3 Breakfast
cereal
24 Representtatives
26

3Z TUrldsh
standard
33- del
Mar,

Chile

34 Monkeys'
taboo

~~a!wus

~

,
7-JI

6l c

-&amp; - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - -

N 1.

0 ICe

For Rent

BUStN ESS room , 1"1 11. 80 ,23 4 E
Ma in St.. Pom eroy , Ohio.
Phone 992 57 86 or 992 3975 .
6 12 ti c

A TO~ M A RT . used furn i t u r e,
a pp iJ &amp;n ces an d m isc . Rt J3

Har tfo rd , w

va .

·

'

7 26 tfc

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

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

FURNISHED
apartment.
adults only in Midd lepor1.
Phone 992-3874.
·
5-12 -ffc

Pr od uced from a s pec ia l
viny l compo Und mad e by B
~ - G oodr ic h and Mon s anto . 5
11.m_cs th ic Ker than metal
.s1 d mg . Will nOt dent, chip ,
cra c k. , pee l, rot . rus t or
ch alk. .

BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom tur .
nished aparlment . ca rpe ted .
a li electr ic includes washer
and dryer in downtown
M iddleport ove r Slim N'
~ Trim . Phone 992 -5320 or . ~9'2 ·
7889.

BAN 0 , Thur Sdety . Fri d a y an d

Stewa r t
' and the Amba ssa dor s. Ki ng's
Arms Nile Club . 3 mi les south
ot M idd leport on St . Rt . 7.
8·6 4t c
Saturday

n ig h IS. R e d

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

YARD Sale
F r id ay
and
Saturday , Aug . 9 and '10 . Li lli e
b it of everyth ing . Hoba rt
Smalley
Re s id ence
in
Chester, Oh io.
8-6-3tc

-:,--------------GROVER ' S Studio w ill

be
closed
for
emp loy ee s'
vacat ion July '2 9 through Aug .
5. Open Aug . 6 t hrough Aug .
10. Closed Aug . 13 through
Aug . 17 for Meigs County
Fa ir . Vis it our booth in the
commercia l build ing .
· 7-'26: \a tc

lil&lt;e
bridge
36 Reside, as
a domestic
(2 wds. )
37 OppOsed
to
38 Isolate

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

TICKETS ON SAlE

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFELLOW

QNJJXQV

CXSIVEMIJ

UZXJJU

CXSQZ.-

SGGX

SJJ
NG

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurn is hed
apartments .
Phone 992 -5434 .
4-12,tf c

SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

GLOECKNER CAFE
110 E . Main

Pomeroy

Athe ns, Ohio

1002 E. Main

P.omeroy

PIANO teacher now ac c ept ing
student s, have college degree
and experience . Phone Mr s.
Con(lie Ha'ddad Fre cke r , 91J5 ,
J627 .
B-4-6t c

KNOONH

JEGBCX.OFZ

GARAGE Sa le on Bail ey Run
Road off s t.
Rt . 143 ,
Cr ossroads ,
Wednesda.y ,
Thursday, and Friday .
B-4-4t c

Yesterday's Cryptoqnote: LABOR:
ONE . OF '!'HE
PROCESSES BY WinCH "A" ACQUIRES PROPERTY FOR
"B."-AMBROSE BIERCE
(@ t'tn Kine Ptaturt~ SrndiPte.lne.)

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

Athens, Ohio. We close each
Friday at noon for balance of
week.

Wanted To Rent
HOUSE in Ruttand , La ngsvi lle,
or Harr isonville area . Ph one
742 -6205 .
8-2-6tc

For Rent
TRAILER , Brown's Trailer
Court. Pom eroy. Phone 992· ·
332-1 .

-

1-First floor
apt,,
2
bedrooms complete ly furnished on Main St., Pomeroy
with garage and nice front &amp;
backyards, washers and
dryers on premises.

4KQJ4
Nelther vulnerable

·: West

North

' Pass

3N.T.

East

South

Pass

2 N.T.
Pass

G~LINE

ALLEY

Pass

Where is
this
cabin

Opening lead.-Q+
By Oswald &amp;

James Jacoby

1-Second floor apt., com·

QH, VE'S- - VEIZ"'' MUO-Io
THANK YOU! .
I'M SO~RV TO
~A'VE CAV5-ED
..;o M L!C I--I

pletely

'

a

w..

Auto Sales
1~69 CHEVY Townsman station
w~gon . S I, 195 good cond Ilion.

•'
5ECAU$E THE

SOUND$

CREWWlLL

A
'lH II;

BE. WAfTI NG"

•
'•

I

•••

IB VERY
10ME: .

~M E!

'

'

••
••

•••

•••
•

•••
••
••

••

- TO COUt&lt;TERACT THAT
ABSURD IMPRESSION,
WE RECOMMEND YOU
GM! 10 MIUION TO

••

Ct4AAI1Y"
.
"

with the tricks he needs.

,·

c:e:J:i !Mt*:'

6

North

Eaot

SoothBARNE
I.

PO.

••

P••

'

PlM

2•

·- AN' HE STILL 8Ritll6S
HIS WORK HOME EVER'
BLESSET N:GHT

BEEN WORI&lt;IN' AT
TH' 61\WMIU.I'ER
'fEARS·-·

Joel• ,.,.

of'"""'""

DE LCC&gt;-shocks and batteries
BORG WARNER- ignition. clutches. joints
VALVOLINE- oils and fluids
WAGNER- brakes and small parts
AP-exhaust systems
CHAMPION-spark plugs
AC- oil and air filters . spark plugs. pumps
AUTOLITE- spark plug s and· lune-up kits
TRW-suspension parts and servi ce line
ARROW- rebuilt pumps . starters, alternators
HUSKY- complete tool line-up
DUPONT- chemical s and poli shes
HASTINGs-piston rings
GATEs-belts, hoses. thermostats
MANY, MANY MORE ... WE CAN SAVE YOU $$

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

1968 iMPALA wagon , 1968
Buick converlible , Ca ll 949 2826.
8-2-5tc

rtelp Wanted
"YILL do babysitting in my
home nights . Reasonable
rates . Ca ll 99 2-747-4.
8-6-6t c
MIDDLE AGED lady to live In
or come In and work 4 hours
per day . Light housework .
!)hone 99 2·3442.
8-6-5tc

--------ll.-----SERV ICE
manager
tor

e~utomobile dealership , se·nd
resume to Box 729M, c -o The
Dally Se ntin e l. Pomer·o y .
·OhiO 45769 .
8-1:Stc

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

'
''

•••

w•

yqtlr partner

hal bid two IPOdes over the two

•

'

I

'

1971 NIMROD fold -out camping
trailer . sleeps 6. Lik.e new .
Phone 99 2-7369.
8--4 -6tc

HOTPOINT
AIR OONDITIONERS
4,000 BTU

'

'

We alsp ha)le one of the best wheel alignment
and wheel balan~e men In the area. Herschel
Rose will do your work by appointment by
calling 992-2151. Call today and talk to Herschel about your problems. Satls!actlon
guaranteed:

Interior. Exterior
Decorating and
Remodeling
PH. 992-7454 or
992-7129

POMEROY -

.

1 s tor y frame,

3 B. R., bat h, some carpe ting
and panel ing, love ly larg e
lot. basement. all in ex cellent condi ti on . $10,000.
'
MIDDLEPORT Nice 3
B. R. home , 1 story frame.
bath , ut ility room, dining
room,
carpet ing
and
paneling , porches, leve l lot'
close to shopping . $8, 500 .
PROP ERTY IS SE LLING
FAST .
WE
NEED
LI ST INGS .
IF
YOU
REALLY WANT TO SELL
CONTACT US TODAY .

TEAFORD
B f,·,dord
li I 'lk I ' I

'l'•·•

12,000 BTU . '
POMEROY LANDMARK
1
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
.
Phone 992-2181

13 ACRES - 2 mObile homes .
One 1974 , other rented . 2
bedrooms eac h . Drilled well.
All for only S10,500 .00 .
NEW LISTING - Extra nice 3
bedroom home, and 4 good
rentals with income of $520.00 a
m onlh , level lot and ci ty wate r .
BU -S INESS BUILDING - Like
new , air condi tioned br ick .
Lots of Storag e and parking on
Rt . 7.
BUILDING
LOT
In
Po m eroy Village ·sOx160 only
$1500.00.
.
2 ACRES - Large 8 room
house, ..t bed room s, modern
kit chen , and furna ce heat.
Barn ·and garage. Only
$15,000 .00 .
BIG HOUSE - 5 baths , 6
bedrooms ,
larg e
lawn ,
workshop and double garage,
RUTLAND - · Brick veneer,
nearly new, 3 bedroom,
moder1;1 kitchen. full basement
and 2 car garage.
3 APARTMENTS Double
garage , corner tot , hot water
heat . Nea r heart of M iddleport .
S8 , SOO . OO 2 bedrooms,
garage, T. P. ,water and on 1
ac re .

James

leak ing ?
Compare our pr ices to any
other s . We 'l l g lve- you a
profess ional root for tess .
ca 11992-2836 For
Estimates of Any Type

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

BOWERS

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR
ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
ANO CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

PHONE 992-5476
Wilkinson Small Engine
90'l,.J092
399 W , Main
Pomeroy, ()
Located at Modern SupplY'
Small Eng ine Repair

es t imates on
a l uminum
replacement
w indows. siding , storm doors
and w indows . Rail ing . Phone
Charles Lis le , Syra cuse. Ohio .
Carl
Jacob ,
Sales
Representat iVe ,
V.
V.
Johnson and Son , inc .
4-30.tfc

• Law n Bo y
• Tecumseh
• Koh ler
• 'w isc onsi n
• Al l oth er
m akes
O ' DELL Ali nement , lo c ated
beh ind Rutland Grade Schoo l,
comp lete front end serv ice ,
brakes and tune ups , whee ls
balan c ed electron ica lly . Open
8 to 8 da ily , Call 742 -·3232 on
Sunday for appt.
7-16-ttc

IS THIS FOR YOU?
Is there SOI)Ieone with a strong desire
for a healthy financial future with no
travel, no competition and no
soliciting .

If So Our Company OffeJS

REPAIR
All Small Appliances
.Lawn Mowers
Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

I. Complete Company Training
Program
2. Unlimited Advancement
Opportunities

3. '16,500 to '19,500 lst Year
Income

BISSEU.
BROTHERS
,__
OONST. 00.

'4, Major Medical Hospitalization
and Pension Plan
5. Excellent Working Conditions

Chester, Ohio
985-4102
Home Building &amp;
Additions, Aluminum ·
&amp; Vinyl Siding, Floor
Sanding &amp; Finishing.

Apply by phone Thursday, Aug. a,
12:30 p.m.· 1:30 .p.m. and 4:3.0 p.m.
5:30p.m. 992-2579. •

Will do Dozer &amp;
Backhoe Work. Install
Septic Tanks, Haul
Dirt,
Gravel,
Limestone or Rent One
of
Our
Trucks,
Backhoe or Dozers.

B&amp;K EXCAVATtNG
777 Pearl St.
Midclleporf, Ohio
"2-5367

J&amp;l AUTO

BODY
Moved to Rutland , lJ.. mile
inside city limit on right
corner Blrck St. and Rt. 124.

. :oEAL Y MIS:MATCH ONCE-A- YEAR

.free Estimates

contracted . Phone 7-42 -

3074 or wr •'le Bo·
" 23',, Langs ·

ville . Oh io . ·

7-23 -26tc

------

sh rubb ery . ,Also . clea n' out
basements. att ics , et c . Phone
949 -3'2'21 or 742-4-441 ,
7-14·2Mc

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

SEW IN G MACHINES . Repair
urvlte, alt makes , 992-'228A .
- Th&amp; Fabr ic Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Si nger Sales ,e~~nc
ServIce . We Sh arpen Sclssor1
...,.
._
3-29-tfC.

_____ __ ____ _

DOZER work, lend .clearing by
the a cre hoUrly or contract,
farm ponds , roads, etc . Large
doter and oper.etor with over
:zo,years experience . Pullins·
E~~;cavatlng , Pomeroy , Oh io .
Phone 992 -2_.78 .
·
.
12-19 -tfc

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

MAnRESS SALE

Now Open for Business

742-5293

Save 30% to 50% On
. Quality Sealy Mattresses Now I

Wlu.'S CARPET
&amp; INTERIORS

JUST .ARRIVED!
TWO TRUCKLOADS
GOOD USED FURNITURE

Hours : 9-6 Weekdays

"WILL
":'- ------------.-tr im or cu t trees and

•,

DE«DRATING

Pomeroy, o.

Refrigerators,
Fr.eezers, Home &amp;
Auto Air Conditioners
and
Commercial
Units.

Business Services

----

~.m.

.See or C~ll
Bob or Roger Jef.fers
Day 992-7089
Night 992-3525
or 992-52l2
FUk ' fl-(te

located on 3rd Street tn
Racine, Ohio.

LEGHORN hen s. been lay ing 6 AUTOMOB ILE In sura nce been
ca n ce ll ed?
Los t
your
months . S1 eac h . Welker 's
op erator 's lice nse . Call 992 ·
Poultry Fa rm , Hem lo ck
7428 .
Grove. Oh 10 . Available im .
6-l.Nfc
mediately . Ph one 992 -5836 ..
8-4-51c - - - ........
CREMEANS
CO N CRETE
delivered Monday t hro ugh
Saturday and even/nos .
Phon e 446 -114'2 ,
6·13-tfc

Monday to Frld,o y, 9 0 .m. tu

HOME

~lled.

Armstrong Llnoltum
Wall Paper
Vinyl Wall Fabric
Special! On Carpet Rem·
nanh. Free Estimates •

---.,._·----.-----19:70 SUZUK I 350 s
d s45o · JOB S

A614-228-17S1

DtTCIIING SERVI£E
Water Lines and Power
lines . All work done by the
fool or contract. Also do zer
work and septic tanks in

BUY IT NOW, TOMORROW IT
WILL PROBABLY BE A LOT
MORE . DROP IN AND LET'S
TALK TURKEY.

REGISTERED
polled HOUSE insula t ing ; blow en for
Hereford bull , l-4 m onths o ld ,
better results . Cuts fuel bill s
·also yea r I ing bulls . Phone 985 down . Free es timates . Cali
353C . Paul Karr, Chester ,
74 2·44'28 .
· Ohio .
8-4-5tp
8-4-3tp

Flrostono Bulldlng-51nce1146
161 N. 3rd St ., Columbus, Ohlo4321S

MANAGER

_j

ll•lr.fi. , ,h ,lnrt
r
f'lltllr'1 ' 0y . Ohii _l :', If.')

L

~Loca ted bottom' otspee
Rose' Hili·
Rd
Rt 33
· ·
· on
8 .4.Jtp

E. MAIN STREE'T
POMEROY
- Wash&amp;WaiC
Sll .95
- l~o~be, Oil , Filter
9.SO
- Tune -Up
16.95

BENNY BRANHAM

K&amp;H ROOFING

992·2259 or 992·2568

V~t - qli

WILSON'S
PENNZOIL

Free Ettimil tts, Middleport. 0 1

OLDER HOME - Ph story
frame, J B.R., ba lh , porches,
ba semen1 with almost new
F. A. heating s ystem , doub le
level lots . $6 ,500 .

lhese sizes also available :

Or Write Flrtltone Phototr•phs

'

.REAlTY

s.ooo. 6,000 , a.ooo·, 10,000 and

CALL: Mr. Davis: Calle(t

\

608 E.
MAIN
POMI:ROY. 0.

'109.95

Quollfltd lndlvlduol Male or Famole needed to dlstrlbule
world f.1tnOus l&lt;od•k film through com,.ny estJbllshed
locollons .
"NO
SELLING
OR
SOliCITING
REQUIRED.'' Moke this ytar your yeor for indopendooce . 13995.00 Invest mont ·Guaranteed 12 month
repurchase aoreement.

'
I

ONE light brown , embos sed,
hand -tooted' Western Saddle,
breast collar and one ear
br id le . Ha s bee n used very
litt le. Pr ice $150 , Phon e 7-42 58'20 .
S-Otc
- - -- - - - - - - - -- 1967 10x 40 2 BEDR OOM trai ler ,
1972 16 ft . boat w ith trailer
and 50 h .p . me r c ury motor .
Phone 992 - 3380~
8-4-3tc

DISTRIBUTOR
WANTED

.

••
•• '
•

TOOU-8 QUEIITION
1-.t

Tlaer aotd . in good cond.ition '
$875. Phone 992 -3700.
·
7,24 . 13t p

I

••

UPHOLSTERY fabr ics by th e
yard. 54 inChes w ide, as low as
S2 .49 per yard . Velvets as low
as $5 25. Import ed ve lv ets
S9 .60. We also have nylon ,
her c uion. cotfon prints ,
vinyls , and remnants by the
yard or bY the p iece. Pomeroy
Recovery , 62'2 E ·. Main St .,
Pom.eroy . Ph ore 992 ·7554 .
7-24 -26tc

--------.,.-----1971 TRIUMPH Bonneville 650

,.
•

••
•
•• •

What do you do nOw?
A-Let yo•r con.c:lence be
,_ pl... Po-. II piobo-ly
rlllll. IMn If you want to ramble
1• . . and bid til. FIYO hnrll
..... "" oiiiJ .._ lllol ......
.tmJIIJ thai ,..
pitte•· ·

tlolelulolon.

1957 CHEVY. Ca ll 992 -2967 after
5 p .m .
6-2-6tc

~~ ...·•

THUTTV f&gt;ADBURN

You, South, nold:

•AQ654 •AQ654 +AK.2

7-31-6tp

..
•. .
.,.• ..•
...-.
....•
•

~~~Y~?]~:.;ij§~~~~
'
. M'l MAN lUKI:VS

Wea

p..

....

5-24 -tf c

1974 VEGA GT, 7,700 miles , p .s .
and automatic . Phone 992 ~
3362.

•

1

24- .

.,

•••
••
•••
• .
M

c~EWSP~PER ENTERPHISE ASSN.!

Phone 992-7620.

Now open the "BIGGEST llffiE"
automotive parts supp~ store in
Middleport. We carry all "NAME
BRAND" items.

•

doesn't cover and winds up

The bidding has ~n:

2

bedrooms,
nice
yard
available, washers and
dryers on _premises. Phone
992-3863 before 3 p.m., otter 6
p.m . 992-5844.

T R OU BLE~

Continuing with our be·
kind-to-declarers week, we
give South ni~e 21 -point two
notrump. North raises him to
game and after South looks af
dummy he sees that he can
count on one spade, two diamonds and four clubs for ·a
total of seven tricks .
South sees that if he can get
to dummy twice, he can produce those two extra tricks in
either spades or hearts. He
can get them in hearts if East
®I ENJQ'\IED DININcr
holds the queen. That is a 50
WI'T&gt;i ~,BUT r¥JW
per cent chance. Or .he can I MUST GET MCK
10 WORK!
get them in spades provided
that East holds at least one of
the two missing honors. That
is a 76 per cent chance.
His next step is to try to
find two entries to dummy.
He sees they will be there m
the club suit provided that
clubs break 3·2.
.
He proceeds to cash the
king and queen of clubs. Both
opponents follow. He overtakes his jack with dummy's
ace, leads a low spade and
finesSes his 10.
t takes his queen and
leads another diamond.
South enters dummy with the
six of clubs; leads the jack of
spades; lets it ride if East

furnished,

THE DEPENDABLE
.OONTRACTING 00.

-~------ --- - --=--

FOR RENT

+AK

ClElAND

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

INROW

'KJ9

Business Services

992-7204

p.m.

4107

•

NIMROD fo ld -down camper in
oood condit ion . s lee p s 4.
Phone 985 -3353 .
7-30 6tp

4 ROOMS and bath home for TWIN
NE EDLE S EWING
rent in Rutland . Phone 99 2MACH IN E S 1974 Model i n
5858.
walnut sta nd . All feature s
7 -14-tf c
built -in to make fan cy designs
and do stretch sewi ng . Al!.o
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pai"k ,
buttonholes , bi in d hem~ , etc .
Rt . 33,. ten miles north of
S43 . 35
ca~sh
or
term s
Pomeroy . Large lots with
available . Phone 99'2 -265 3.
concrete patios . si dewa lks ,
8-6-tf c
runners and off street
parking . Also. spaces for VACUUM CLE A NER S Electro
s mal l trailers . Phone 992 -7479 .
Hygiene New Demonstrators
7 -2l ·tf C
ha s all c lean ing attachments
pl us the new Elect ro Suds for
shampooing carpet . Only
$'27 .50
cash
or
t e r ms
availab le . Phone 992 ·2653 .
8-6-tt c
GREY MANOR APART·
MENTS
IRI SH , Cobbler potatoes . J ust
FOR RENT
off St . Rt. 12.4 on Co . Rd . 35
Ra cine - Port land Road . Dale
117 North Fourth Avenue
R. Pr offit1 .
Middleport 1 Ohio
8-6-Stp
1-2 bedroom furnished apt.
.
in nice area .
WALNUT , modern, stereo
1-Efficiency apt . prefer
rad io , am .fm 8 track tap e
single
male~
utilities
combin ation , 4 spea ker sound
system . Balance $10 1.93 or
provided.
budget terms . Phone 992-3965
Phone 992 -3863 before· 3:00
·
8· 1-tfc
p.m.1 aHer 6:00
992SB44.
FOAM to fill your old couch a nd
chair cushions as low as
S10.95 , upholstery okks , only
SOc , 4 inch covered foam
~-----------i
mattresses for standard size
bed ,
$29,95.
Pomeroy
Re covery , 622 E . Main St .,
Pomeroy , Ohio . Ph one 99 27554. .
7 -24, 2 6tc

SOUTH (D)
• A 1098

•
~

1969 SU N F\ [ II.M Alpin.:&gt; , ? dr
sedan. ta lr condil1on . 3A m1ll'~
per q4110n , tow mlle~gto Mu!:ll OL 0 House 4 I'001n1 and bath
$(111 , best off el' Phone 9-t9
wtth two nice- lo is , S:hc.IOO
')067
ea c h \4 ,000 Jn 'ivracr··
8 4 )I (
Phone 991 51:191:1
·
8 Stc
1969 FORO Tor mo . ti speed , nC!W
tires llr'ld IJ.a ll erv ('nntr~rt
Char les Sayre. 985 419J \600 NEW two hNiroom all electric
.
8 ~ ] Ip
nome
carpeted .
t u/1
b&lt;tsement. carpo r t. on one
aoe 10 1 Located on R1 1-43
For 1nore inform11 110n call
!4 'J 661 i
R IDIN G horse for sale . '2 year s
8 4 6tc
Ol d , green bl'oke Gt:'nlle Call
992 ss 10
8 1 li e CAR SON
Service
Station
Garage , 50x60 building ,
G REE N bea n s, g reen pepper s,
Cement driveway . Phone 74'2
cucu m be r s , t omatoe s,
~052
7 16 ti c
Clelan d Farms, Gerald ine
Cll.!o lan d , Recine. Ohio
7 17 ! lc. HOU SE lor safe in Syracuse. 5
room s and garage loc at ed
near
lhe school. Ph one 99'1
1964 FO R D ani;! one new
3860
be g inner's electri c Kay
8 '} lfc
Guitar tor sa te . con tact Carl
Ra ird en , Ha rtf ord , W. Va
7 31 6tc NEW HOME. :! be dr oom~,
Hutchinson
SubDivision ,
Rutland Phone 742 3615 o r
CANNIN G to ma locs. br 1ng
see Milo Hutchinson. Ru tland
conta iner . Ge r aldine Cleland.
7 28 -111c
Ra c in e
7 30 lie SEVEN room house, ba lh , tar g e
lot. gar age, Main St r&lt;ee L
Rutland . Ask.ing S12,0 00 .
J ROCERY bus iness for sa le .
Phone 74'2 -4712
Build ing tor s a le or lea se.
1 28 12 tc
Phone 77 3·561 8 from 8 : 30 p.m .
to 10 p .m ., for appoj nt rne nt.
3-20 ti c "A PP RO X" 49 ac r es on Ba iley
Run Roa d, one mile tro m
WE ARE p ick ing up a pian o in
c ross r oa ds, not to o far from
your area and wo uld li ke
the Sal em Center Mine. Good
some responsible party to
ro ad fr ontage . some ti mber .
take over payments . Ca ll
The Ba iley F a r m , conte c t
Cred it Manager, (614) 77 2
Mrs . Paul Ba ile y .
5669 or wr ite '260 Ea s t Ma in
8&gt;6·61p
Street, Chil licothe , Oh io 4S60l. --~-----~----4.7,ftc

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

7-18 -lfc
KOSCO·T
KOS METI CS
&amp; - ~-~ -------- .....WIGS : For · a good line of 4 ROOMS and bath furni shed
apartment in
Pom e roy .
tosme1ics , fr iend ly serv ice··
Phone 9_92 -5908 .
and someone to chat w ith ,..
give ·me a ~;ail. Helen Jane
Brown , 992 -5.\13.
·
3, 19-tfc FUR NI SHE D. 1 bedroom ·a pt .
tor ren t . 134112 Mu lbe rry Ave.,
Pom eroy . Phon e 992 ,5436.
8·4-6t c

lJli.:K TRACY

Sales

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

Brown Pasteboard , Sheet
Iron , Refrigerators 1 Hot
Water Tanks, Auto bodies
without motors, Scrap Iron:
Cast _Iron , Copper, BraSs 1
Aluminum, Auto Batteries,
Auto Radiators. Sell to

Estate For Sale

LOT S tot sale , tra ile.- or house
All util i lies Phone 742 J6lS,
Rvttand . Ohio
7 16 ft c

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

Call Collect 1-S92 -SS44

WHITEHOUSE TAVERN

vzx
vzx

Real

EXCELSIOR Salt Works, E .
Ma in St .. Pomeroy. Ali kinds
of sa·lf water pellets , water
nuggets ; block salt and own
PRIVATE meeting room for .
Ohio River Salt. Phone 992 any organization,· phone 99-2 3891 .
3975 .
'
6·5-lfc
3-11 -lfc
~~----..- ------.
9 CORRIEDALE S ewe lamb s.
TWO 5 room and bi!lth apts . in
one Reg . Susfolk r am . Also ,
Middleport. FOr information ,
s laughter lambs . Phon e 949 ,
call 99~ - 2550 or 74'2 -6551 .
3073
7-3-ttc
8 -2-6t c

'

CRYPTOQUOTES
QSGGNV

FREE HOME ESTIMATES

The Rosenberg Co.

•

• 4983

W E HA VE al l your upholstery

Call 99 2 r77 14

card
game

NGX

QUALITY

1971 FORD MAVERICK
1199S
Grabber , beige fin is h . tan vinyl root , 6 cyl. , automat ic
tra ns .. P. stee ring , rad io, locall owner , low mileage un it.

FREE kl tten s to good home .

sacred book

35

OF

8 6 lip

need s ,
Bu rl ap ,
den im.
c ambr ic. foam Qlue , zippe rs.
tac l(. lnQ s tr ip. sp r ings ;:,n d
Cl i p s, c h ipbo a rd, bu Hon
tw ine , sew !ng thr ead legs
upholstery boo k s . ditcron'
webb ing , s pr ing lw ine, tac ks:
welt co rd , colt on , s w ivel
ba s es an d toa rn. foam , toam
Pomeroy. Recove r y, 621 E
Ma in St ., P ome r oy. Ohio
Phone 99 2-755 4.
7-24 26tc

One letter &amp;imply stand• for another. In this aample A . II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slncle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words' are all
hints. Each day the c:ode letters are dltferent.

I

I

H Vichy

,.-,.,.....,.,.-r.::-t:::-

Is

b

lace

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

1971 DODGE OART
11995
Swln~er HT cpc .• m ecl. gr~n finish wi1h blk . vlnyl · root,
gr een -4l ny1 Inter ior tri m . V-8 engine. automat ic trans ,,
sport St. wheel. 1lJ II w h . cove r . Like new w-w 1ire5. rad io,
real nice .
1970 CHEV . MONTE CARLO
$2095
J50 V_- 8, autom atic, P. steer ing &amp; brakes. dark blue fin is h .
blue m te r ior, blue vi nyl roof. lac1ory air cond itioned , like
new w -w tires. rad lo. Many o ther e)( fra s ,

Notice

cluslc

trlan's

)
I

I

17 - McCallister %1 King of
It Daughter
the. HUllS
of Pe~
%8 Alan Ladd
Make ' ·
film

zo

Jon~

or

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTE- Here's how to :work It:

....... ,.. p ~ ..........

I

Y Ulerday'l WWOr

to~ osplla l ,

Catrle Neu t:rllng
or g an ist. Alilet thanli.s t o~
flow ers &amp;nd car(l-5 during her
S illY In th e h ospiled . Your
k indne ss will never be
fo rgo ll en .
Mrs Evelyn HHI
Mr Wilson Dick
Mr Lo r en Weru
l,eona K Kohl
R l dgwa y,

of war

If you don't have a family doctor (or can't talk to him about

TRIGE

· M emorl • l

6 ' 'La Traviata"

32. Zoroas-

I YUCIJ
I

cannot exprus our
.appreci •t lon to l hOJe wh
w •r•t:o tl.lnd (t ur ing l h t lltnes~
and dllll!lttl of ou r d ear r'llO(her
a nd friend , E:tha Sue EJI!s
Sp ecial th an k.' to R ev Robert
l
Bum gar n er , t he Ew /n
F un t rfl t ti omf! , Yf!ltrang

1 Co01JT10m .

mammals

Auto

W O ~ OS

39 Laddie's

ACROSS

S.S. :

+++

Card ol Thanks

loy THOMAS JOSEPH

Your father may need psychiatric counseling. In fact,
psychotherapy might h elp the whole family. Give your doctor the
facts, and probably he'll start working toward a solution . HELEN

think.

Sentznel l;lassifieds Get Results!

t!$Ht1M"tHuJt'

20 Lugged
21 Inclined
against
%3 Aspect
%5 Down
with! (Fr.)
29 Beer
variety
30 Belgian
town
31 God

alternpted, happens more often than most Americans want to

·. Se:llll'l, M iddleporl-~rnneroy , o .. 1'uesday' AuK . 6, 1974

Aup. 7, HH.t
You're tW..ety to btl on the VO
much more tnis yeer man you

9-9 Weekends

SE PTI C TAN .KS cleaned,
r easonable rates. Ph . 446·
4782. Gelllpol,ls:~P·John Russell ,
owner and opera tor .
5-12 -tfc
SE PTJC

TANI\. .&gt;,

S &amp;,W A G E

AROBIC

SV S T E MS

CLEANED ,
REPAIRED .
MILLER
SANITATION,
STEWART . OHIO . PH . 662 ·
. 3035 .
'
10-4-tfc

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

SEPTIC
TANKS ctea'ned.
Modern s~n ltatlol'l 992 -3954 or.
992 -7349 ,
10-23 ·tfC
I

-----:--------READY -MIX
CONCRETE'
delivered right io your
project. Fast and easy . Free
estimates . Phone 992 -3284 .
Goeg lein Rtady ·MI)C. Co . •
Middleport. Ohio .
6-JO.tfc

C. BRADFOR 0 , AI,Jctioneer
Comolete Service
Phone 949 -3821 or 949 -3161
Raclne ,' Ohlo
~rltt Bradford
5· 1-th

-""-----------~'E)&lt;cl!.vAT
lNG ; ··oozer. · loader ,

7-Refrigerators, green. copper, white, frostfree included
30" Gas Ranges. gold and green
Mediterranean 2-mirror Triple Dresser.
Chest, Nile Stand
Solid Maple Dresser
Solid Oak Dresser
Walnut Chest
Twin Size Box Springs and Mattresses
Maple Bed, complete
3-Spindle Beds, twin size
2-Solid Oak Note Stands
Metal Beds
3-2 pc. Living Room Suites
2-0ffice Storage Cabinets
Several Odd Chairs
Poster Bed, compiete
1-~)d Bed, looks. like trim was hand painted
Sohd Maple Bedroom Suite, queen size
l;'ortable Color TV and F'ortable B-W TV
-OTHER ITEMS SUCH AS: sinks, metal
.cabinets, recliners, stereos·, dryers, wringer
washers, gas &amp; oil heaters. portable air
conditioners and other Items too numerous
to mention.
Come and be first to see this fine selection of
good used furniture. Hurry to our store! Check
other prices In the area. We believe you can't
beat our .selection and Ices.

and bickhoe work : aepflr
tan ki"1 nstall8d ; diJf'ri p -,ruc:u
•nd IO ·bOYI for hire ; Will hiUI
flll dirt , top soil, llmestont
and gravel ; Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 992 =7019 ;
night phone 992 ·3525 or 992·
5232.
2-11-tfc
...... --------- ~ .......

'--

•

,.
I

�•

1-TheO.UySentlnel,MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy,O.,Tu~y,Au8 . ti,IY/t;..IMIWWWW!IIMIIIM-WWIIIIIIII!IIM_IMII_ _ _ _ __

~

Television

J~og

esse')~

furnish an apartment with almost no money . I'm nol turned on by
the Idea . In the first place, what could you call -a bridal shower
when the girl won 't be a bride ? - STILL TRADITIONAL

8: ~ - Happy Oav• 6, 13; Maude 8, 10; "!"'n Bu llds , Man
Destroys 33 ; Adam-12 3, .4 , 15 ; Crime&amp; Punishment 20.
8: 30 ~ Hawaii FIYe -0 8, 10 ; Tenafly 3. li, 15; Movie " Sh l r~ ­
Sklns" ll ; Movie " The Moan Who Wanted to Live Forever " 6 :
Dear Tradilional :
Eye to Eye 33. ·
·
,
An ~~ unbridled .. shower'! (Dictionary definition : ''without
9: 00 - Firing Line 20 ; Je~nne Wolf with 33 .
9: 30 - Movie ' 'Rampage of Apache Wells" 8; Shaft 10: Per "
restraint, " which sorta fits, right ?)- HELEN
tormance 33 .
P .S . I'd say your friend has WJbridled nerve, too!
10: 00- News3 1 20 ; Marcus Welby, M. D. 6 , 13; Pollee Story 4, IS ;
~++
Mountain Scene 33.
10: 30- Base bait 3; Day at Night 33.
•
S.T.:
11 : 00 - News -4, 6. 8. 10, 13, IS ; ABC News ~3 .
.
.
U you're not turned on by the idea, don 't give the shower.
•ll : JO - Johnny Carson -4, 15; MisSion : lm~ss1ble 6; M~v1es
Even
i! I his girl were getting married she has no right to suggest
·
" The Face of Fu Manchu" 8 : " The Solid Gold Cadillac 10 ;
;
Untouchables 13 ; Janaki 33 .
parties in her honor . That 's no better than begging lor gills. •12: 30 - Wide World Mystery 13 .
SUE
: 1: 00 - Tomori-ow 3, 4; Take Five for Life 15.
1 2:00 - News 4, 13.
Rap:
.
WEDNESDAY, AUG . 7, 1974
I asked my mother why she started smoking, and she said,
6 : 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Summer Semester 10.
6: 25 - Farm Report 13.
"To !eel more popular at high school." l didn 't say any more, but
6 • 30 - Five Minutes to Live By 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8 ; The
I wonder :
Story lJ; Sacred Heart 10.
Why doesn't she want to •·feel more popular" . with her
6 : 35 - Columbus Today 4.
6:45 - Farmtime 10; Morn ing Report J .
family? By quitting, I mean. - NONSMOKJNG SON
7: 00 - Tocay 3. 4, 15; CBS News 8, 10; Dick Van Dyke 13 ; H. R.
Pufnstuf 6.
7: 30 - New Zoo Revu e 6; Tuxedo Tennessee 13.
N .S.S.:
..i
a ~ oo - New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33; Cap1. Kangaroo 8;
Why don't you ask your motheJ this questloo? - SUE
Jeff's Collie 6 ; Urban League 10.
8:25 - Jack lalanne 13.
8:30 - Brady Bunc h 6 ; Green Acres 10.
Dear S&lt;&gt;n:
· '8: 55 - Chuck White Reports 10 ; News 13 .
She'd probably answer, " Starting's easy, quitting's rough!"
-9: 00 - Paul Di xon 4 ,· Frrendly Junction 10 ; AM J ; Abbott However, she can knock the cigarette habit if she r eally feels
Costello 8;. Phil Donahue 15; Wild. Wild West 6 ; Captain
motivated. S&lt;&gt; get motivatin', son 1 - HELEN
Kangaroo 10 ; Mov ie "Suicide Commandos'' 13 ; M ister
Rogers 33.
·
9: 30 - To Tell the Truth 3; I love Lucy 8: Electric Co . 33.
Dear Rap:
10: 00 - Joker's Wild 8, 10; Company 6 ;, Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 33 ;
For the past three years, s ince I was 13, my father has made
Name That Tune 3, 15.
1'0 : 30 - GambitS, 10 ; Winning Streak 3, 4, 15 ; Wheels , Ki lns &amp;
unfatherly advances lo me. Althou gh it has not affected my at' Clay 33.
.
· ··
titudes toward boyfriends, it makes m e nauseated and frightened
\1:00- Password 13 ; Now You See It 8, 10 : High Rollers 3, 4, 15 ;
to be near him. When he touches me, I c ringe .
·
$10,000 Pyramid 6 ; Sesame St. 33.
' .
It bap.Jl.Oned aru&lt;in tonight. Again I tried to laugh it off, while
11 : 30- Hollvwood SQuares 3, 4, 15 ; Love of life 8, 10; Brady
• Bunch 13 ; Lucy Show 6.
/ !ighling my father off. Yel he expects me to be his good pal, bei 1: 55 - CBS News Bi Dan I mel's World 10.
tweentimes. It's like he can't help· himself.
12: 00- Password 6; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 8. 10. 13 ;
I don 't want to hurt my mother by having her know, nor do I
Jackpot J, IS ; Mr . Roger:-s 33.
.
.
12: 30 - Search for Tomorrow 8. 10; Split Second 6; Celebnty
want to hate my father, but I'm scared. He asks nie not to be mad
Sweepstakes3, lS ; Afternoon with OJ 13 ; Electric Co. 33.
at him afterwards, but then it happens again: Please, some
12: 55 - NBC News 3, 15.
1: 00 - News 3 ; All My Children 6, 13 ; Not For Women Only 15 :
advice 1 - S.S.
Hazel&amp; : What's My Line 10 ; Cookin' Cajun 33.
·1: 30 - As the World Turns 8 , 10 ; Jeopardy 3, 4, 15; Journey to
S.S.:
Japan 33; Let's Make A Deal 6, 13.
Talk to your family doctor . He ~an advise you because,
2:00- Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15 ; Gulqlng Light 8, 10; Newlywed
believe me, he 1s faced this problem before: ince~t, either real or
Game 6, 13 ; Mountain Scene 33.
2: 30- Doctors 3, 4, IS ; Girl in My Life 6, 13 ; Edge of Night 8, 10;
Open Mind 33.
News 6 , 13.
·
3:00 -r Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospltal6, 13 ; Price is
6:30 - News 3, tl, 8, 10. 15; Room -222 13: Journey to Japan 33;
Right 8, 10.
.
Bevlltc hed 6.
3:30 - One Life to live 13 ; Phil Donahue 4 ; Match Game 8, 10 ;
7: 00 - News 10 ; What 's My l ine 8; Truth or Cons . 3 ; Beat the
How to Survive a Mart'lage 3, 15 ; Carrascolendas 33 ; Lassie
' ..
Clock A; Elec . Co. 20; Jimm y Dean 13 ; I Spy 15 ; Zoom 33 ;
' . 6.
Bowling tor Dollars 6.
.
,
4: 00 - Mr , Cartoon 3; Somerset 15 ; Se$ame St. 33 ; I Dream of
7 : 30 ~ Police -Surgeon J ; On The Money 4; Eptsode Act10n 33;
Jeannie 13; Tattletales 8; Gilligan' s !stand 6; Movie " Miss
To Tell the Tr uth' 6 ; Sale of the Centu ry 8; The J udg e 10; Beat
Grant Takes Richmond" 10.
the Clock 13 ; Know Your Antiques 20 .
4: 30 - Green Acres 3; Bonanza 13 ; Jackpot 4; Virginian 8;
8:00 - Chase 3, 15; The Cowboys 6, 13; People in Para~ise 4:
Daniel Boone 13 ; MOO Squad 6.
Hudson Broth er s 8, 10 ; Consumer Ga me 20 ; Unto the Htlls 33.
5:00- Mr. Rogers 2o; JJ ; Bonanza 3; .Merv Griffin 4.
8:
30-,
Mov ie " The Stranger Who looks Li ke Me " 6, 13 ; Grea t
5: 30- Elec. Co. 33 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Hogan's Heroes 13:
American
Dream Mach ine 20 , 33.
Western Star Theat!1!r 1.5; News 6.
9:
00
Movie
" The Hea lers" 3, 4, 15 ; Ca nnon 8, 10.
6:00- News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15 ; Sesame §1. 20; C.tch-33. 33 ; ABC
9:30 - Boarding House 20, 33 .
_
10 :00 - Doc Elliot 6, 13 ; Koiak 8, 10 ; News 20; Festival Films 33 .
10: JO - . Day at Night 33.
WIN
BRIDGE
11 :00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15. ·
11 : 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 ; Mission : Impossi ble ; Untouchables 13 ; Mov ies " Assignme.nt K" 8; "Torpedo Bay" 10.
12:30 - Wild, Wild West 6; Wide World Special13.
1: 00 ---=- Tomorrow4 ; Take Five fat life 15.
club overcall. What do you do 2:00 - News 4, 13.
now?
6
NORm
• J 64
'105
• 7653
4A652
• WEST
EAST
: .Q73
.K52
• . AQ
.876432
~ +QJ1094
+B2

+++

+++

+++

AT

Two tricks With two entries

10 keep tne

peace

SCORPIO COct. 24-Noo. 221
Vou can breathe • sigh of
relief someone is going to
help you in the mck of lime with
a responstbilily that would
ha~te lallen to you alone &gt;
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 23·
o.c. 21) Before dcnng any·
thing that has an element of
chance involved. re · hastt it In
your own mind. then talk it OOJ8r
with others as well .
CAPRICORN CDec. 22-Jan.
1~) Take eX1ra caution with
your possessions. If you 're
going out . be ~ure alllhe doors
and windows In your nouse are
properly secured.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob.
19) Just because someone
who now offers you sugge~ ·
tions Is lorceful doesn't mean
hrs ideas are right. Weigh what
he says before trying.
PISCES (Fob. 20·Merch 20)
II wouldn't be wtse If you 're in ·
debted to someone to let him
know you 're spending money
o n someth ing else before
repaying nim.

Wbat Unbridled Nerve!

Sle wants me to give a kitchen shower for her, as they must

ld fle toCJ

lii~A CSot&gt;t. n-Oel. Z3)
Tt\ings are. not goinG 10 QO enlir,ly yOUf way . C~romise
and concessione. w111 be nee·

By Helen and Sue Bouel
Dear Helen and Sue :
A girlfriend plans to live wilh her guy al college this year .
Marrtage may come later , lhey haven't decided yet.

8

selfishly

Generation Rap

TUESOAY. AUG. 6, lf74
6;00 - ,.NBC News 13 ; sesame St. 20 ; News J, 4; Utlas , Yoga &amp;
You 33; News. I. 1'0, l.S ; News 6.
6: JO - News a, 10; NBC News l , .t, 15 : Room -22213 : French Chei
33; Bewllcned 6.
7: 00 - What's My L.lne I ; Dusty' s Tralll3; E!ec:- Co. 20; Truth
or Conse&lt;~ . 3; Be-•t the Clock 4; Paul Nuch1ms 33 : News 10 ;
Washington Debates for the 70$ 15 ; Bowling tor Dollars 6.
7:30 - To Til the Truth 6; New Price Is Right 8. lO ; RFD 20 ;
Hollywood Squares 3: Beat the Clock 13; Hollywood Square$

behavmo

•&amp;

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191
A slight misunderstanding is
ltkely to develop between ~au
and a close cQmP&amp;nlon. tt can
be re c tif ied if you a c t

promptly.

TAURUS CApr11 20-Moy 20)
Something distaatetul you've
been putting or will sqoeete
you into a comer wlth Its im·
medlacy. It will demand attention now.
GEMINI CMoy 21·Juno 20)
One Who is not your favorite
person has been saying some
untlatterino things about you .
Your trlends have tuned him

out

C'ANCER (June 21-July 22)
Center your attention on the
real values you hope to gain
lrom your presenl goals . not
the emotional side issues.
LEO CJuly 23-Aug. 22) You'll
have to be careful today when
dealing with others that you
don't say one thing and mean
another, Tell it like it is .
VIRGO CAug. 23-Sept. 22)
There's a potential problem
brewing with a friend of yours
over something material , Each

companloo
orative
4e Island In
pillar
the Medll
6 GenUeman'o DOWN
attire
I - the
10 Lamont·
dark
Crafll!ton:s
( 2 wds.)
alter ego,
%Highland
with "The"
garb
11 Black
3 Advanlage
J% Newspaper 4 Asiatic
file room
sardine
13 SpOken
5 Merino
14 Aquatic
females

very personal mailers), then ll)ake your father face 'his problem.
Tell him that he must either get psychiatric help or your mother
will have to know.
.
You say, " It's like he can't help himself," ·and that mens he
needs counseling from an expert 1 - SUE

tll&amp;Will!1~®1kat kJt-~IJ .-I,_
h¥ HENnl AHNUlU , u &gt;&lt;IIIOA I EE

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter ·to each square, to
form four ordinary words .

[J

_..............

15 Recent

heroine
7 Infuriate
s Cut a
figure 8
9 "Tippecanoe
and -

16 Aunt
( Sp. 1
17 French
painter,
remand -

too''

IS Sicilian
city

10 Struck

IRAKNECj
I

r

GLUFEN
V' "i
I

[]
THE. TIF&lt;:eD
INTIWVel'ti t&gt;I~' T
HAVE: ib 8E.
P'E.I&lt;:~UA!7EI7

1

iO 170.

Now ananre the circled letten
to form the 1urpri1e &amp;Nwer, u

~=L'::::::.J:::=:::=====::'. augreated by·the above.cartoon.
P1ill ... SIRS( INSWIR lterw
[I]"

I 'T I I I ]

(Aiuwen tomorrow)

JuOlblee; JUDGE MADAM ADDUCE NOGGIN
v~llerday'•

What the bride dropped at her
weddino-HER MAIDEN NAIIE

An1wen

%Z Poetically

premier

alw.ays
%3 Breakfast
cereal
24 Representtatives
26

3Z TUrldsh
standard
33- del
Mar,

Chile

34 Monkeys'
taboo

~~a!wus

~

,
7-JI

6l c

-&amp; - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - -

N 1.

0 ICe

For Rent

BUStN ESS room , 1"1 11. 80 ,23 4 E
Ma in St.. Pom eroy , Ohio.
Phone 992 57 86 or 992 3975 .
6 12 ti c

A TO~ M A RT . used furn i t u r e,
a pp iJ &amp;n ces an d m isc . Rt J3

Har tfo rd , w

va .

·

'

7 26 tfc

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

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

FURNISHED
apartment.
adults only in Midd lepor1.
Phone 992-3874.
·
5-12 -ffc

Pr od uced from a s pec ia l
viny l compo Und mad e by B
~ - G oodr ic h and Mon s anto . 5
11.m_cs th ic Ker than metal
.s1 d mg . Will nOt dent, chip ,
cra c k. , pee l, rot . rus t or
ch alk. .

BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom tur .
nished aparlment . ca rpe ted .
a li electr ic includes washer
and dryer in downtown
M iddleport ove r Slim N'
~ Trim . Phone 992 -5320 or . ~9'2 ·
7889.

BAN 0 , Thur Sdety . Fri d a y an d

Stewa r t
' and the Amba ssa dor s. Ki ng's
Arms Nile Club . 3 mi les south
ot M idd leport on St . Rt . 7.
8·6 4t c
Saturday

n ig h IS. R e d

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

YARD Sale
F r id ay
and
Saturday , Aug . 9 and '10 . Li lli e
b it of everyth ing . Hoba rt
Smalley
Re s id ence
in
Chester, Oh io.
8-6-3tc

-:,--------------GROVER ' S Studio w ill

be
closed
for
emp loy ee s'
vacat ion July '2 9 through Aug .
5. Open Aug . 6 t hrough Aug .
10. Closed Aug . 13 through
Aug . 17 for Meigs County
Fa ir . Vis it our booth in the
commercia l build ing .
· 7-'26: \a tc

lil&lt;e
bridge
36 Reside, as
a domestic
(2 wds. )
37 OppOsed
to
38 Isolate

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

TICKETS ON SAlE

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFELLOW

QNJJXQV

CXSIVEMIJ

UZXJJU

CXSQZ.-

SGGX

SJJ
NG

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
unfurn is hed
apartments .
Phone 992 -5434 .
4-12,tf c

SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

GLOECKNER CAFE
110 E . Main

Pomeroy

Athe ns, Ohio

1002 E. Main

P.omeroy

PIANO teacher now ac c ept ing
student s, have college degree
and experience . Phone Mr s.
Con(lie Ha'ddad Fre cke r , 91J5 ,
J627 .
B-4-6t c

KNOONH

JEGBCX.OFZ

GARAGE Sa le on Bail ey Run
Road off s t.
Rt . 143 ,
Cr ossroads ,
Wednesda.y ,
Thursday, and Friday .
B-4-4t c

Yesterday's Cryptoqnote: LABOR:
ONE . OF '!'HE
PROCESSES BY WinCH "A" ACQUIRES PROPERTY FOR
"B."-AMBROSE BIERCE
(@ t'tn Kine Ptaturt~ SrndiPte.lne.)

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

Athens, Ohio. We close each
Friday at noon for balance of
week.

Wanted To Rent
HOUSE in Ruttand , La ngsvi lle,
or Harr isonville area . Ph one
742 -6205 .
8-2-6tc

For Rent
TRAILER , Brown's Trailer
Court. Pom eroy. Phone 992· ·
332-1 .

-

1-First floor
apt,,
2
bedrooms complete ly furnished on Main St., Pomeroy
with garage and nice front &amp;
backyards, washers and
dryers on premises.

4KQJ4
Nelther vulnerable

·: West

North

' Pass

3N.T.

East

South

Pass

2 N.T.
Pass

G~LINE

ALLEY

Pass

Where is
this
cabin

Opening lead.-Q+
By Oswald &amp;

James Jacoby

1-Second floor apt., com·

QH, VE'S- - VEIZ"'' MUO-Io
THANK YOU! .
I'M SO~RV TO
~A'VE CAV5-ED
..;o M L!C I--I

pletely

'

a

w..

Auto Sales
1~69 CHEVY Townsman station
w~gon . S I, 195 good cond Ilion.

•'
5ECAU$E THE

SOUND$

CREWWlLL

A
'lH II;

BE. WAfTI NG"

•
'•

I

•••

IB VERY
10ME: .

~M E!

'

'

••
••

•••

•••
•

•••
••
••

••

- TO COUt&lt;TERACT THAT
ABSURD IMPRESSION,
WE RECOMMEND YOU
GM! 10 MIUION TO

••

Ct4AAI1Y"
.
"

with the tricks he needs.

,·

c:e:J:i !Mt*:'

6

North

Eaot

SoothBARNE
I.

PO.

••

P••

'

PlM

2•

·- AN' HE STILL 8Ritll6S
HIS WORK HOME EVER'
BLESSET N:GHT

BEEN WORI&lt;IN' AT
TH' 61\WMIU.I'ER
'fEARS·-·

Joel• ,.,.

of'"""'""

DE LCC&gt;-shocks and batteries
BORG WARNER- ignition. clutches. joints
VALVOLINE- oils and fluids
WAGNER- brakes and small parts
AP-exhaust systems
CHAMPION-spark plugs
AC- oil and air filters . spark plugs. pumps
AUTOLITE- spark plug s and· lune-up kits
TRW-suspension parts and servi ce line
ARROW- rebuilt pumps . starters, alternators
HUSKY- complete tool line-up
DUPONT- chemical s and poli shes
HASTINGs-piston rings
GATEs-belts, hoses. thermostats
MANY, MANY MORE ... WE CAN SAVE YOU $$

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

1968 iMPALA wagon , 1968
Buick converlible , Ca ll 949 2826.
8-2-5tc

rtelp Wanted
"YILL do babysitting in my
home nights . Reasonable
rates . Ca ll 99 2-747-4.
8-6-6t c
MIDDLE AGED lady to live In
or come In and work 4 hours
per day . Light housework .
!)hone 99 2·3442.
8-6-5tc

--------ll.-----SERV ICE
manager
tor

e~utomobile dealership , se·nd
resume to Box 729M, c -o The
Dally Se ntin e l. Pomer·o y .
·OhiO 45769 .
8-1:Stc

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

'
''

•••

w•

yqtlr partner

hal bid two IPOdes over the two

•

'

I

'

1971 NIMROD fold -out camping
trailer . sleeps 6. Lik.e new .
Phone 99 2-7369.
8--4 -6tc

HOTPOINT
AIR OONDITIONERS
4,000 BTU

'

'

We alsp ha)le one of the best wheel alignment
and wheel balan~e men In the area. Herschel
Rose will do your work by appointment by
calling 992-2151. Call today and talk to Herschel about your problems. Satls!actlon
guaranteed:

Interior. Exterior
Decorating and
Remodeling
PH. 992-7454 or
992-7129

POMEROY -

.

1 s tor y frame,

3 B. R., bat h, some carpe ting
and panel ing, love ly larg e
lot. basement. all in ex cellent condi ti on . $10,000.
'
MIDDLEPORT Nice 3
B. R. home , 1 story frame.
bath , ut ility room, dining
room,
carpet ing
and
paneling , porches, leve l lot'
close to shopping . $8, 500 .
PROP ERTY IS SE LLING
FAST .
WE
NEED
LI ST INGS .
IF
YOU
REALLY WANT TO SELL
CONTACT US TODAY .

TEAFORD
B f,·,dord
li I 'lk I ' I

'l'•·•

12,000 BTU . '
POMEROY LANDMARK
1
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
.
Phone 992-2181

13 ACRES - 2 mObile homes .
One 1974 , other rented . 2
bedrooms eac h . Drilled well.
All for only S10,500 .00 .
NEW LISTING - Extra nice 3
bedroom home, and 4 good
rentals with income of $520.00 a
m onlh , level lot and ci ty wate r .
BU -S INESS BUILDING - Like
new , air condi tioned br ick .
Lots of Storag e and parking on
Rt . 7.
BUILDING
LOT
In
Po m eroy Village ·sOx160 only
$1500.00.
.
2 ACRES - Large 8 room
house, ..t bed room s, modern
kit chen , and furna ce heat.
Barn ·and garage. Only
$15,000 .00 .
BIG HOUSE - 5 baths , 6
bedrooms ,
larg e
lawn ,
workshop and double garage,
RUTLAND - · Brick veneer,
nearly new, 3 bedroom,
moder1;1 kitchen. full basement
and 2 car garage.
3 APARTMENTS Double
garage , corner tot , hot water
heat . Nea r heart of M iddleport .
S8 , SOO . OO 2 bedrooms,
garage, T. P. ,water and on 1
ac re .

James

leak ing ?
Compare our pr ices to any
other s . We 'l l g lve- you a
profess ional root for tess .
ca 11992-2836 For
Estimates of Any Type

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

BOWERS

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR
ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
ANO CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

PHONE 992-5476
Wilkinson Small Engine
90'l,.J092
399 W , Main
Pomeroy, ()
Located at Modern SupplY'
Small Eng ine Repair

es t imates on
a l uminum
replacement
w indows. siding , storm doors
and w indows . Rail ing . Phone
Charles Lis le , Syra cuse. Ohio .
Carl
Jacob ,
Sales
Representat iVe ,
V.
V.
Johnson and Son , inc .
4-30.tfc

• Law n Bo y
• Tecumseh
• Koh ler
• 'w isc onsi n
• Al l oth er
m akes
O ' DELL Ali nement , lo c ated
beh ind Rutland Grade Schoo l,
comp lete front end serv ice ,
brakes and tune ups , whee ls
balan c ed electron ica lly . Open
8 to 8 da ily , Call 742 -·3232 on
Sunday for appt.
7-16-ttc

IS THIS FOR YOU?
Is there SOI)Ieone with a strong desire
for a healthy financial future with no
travel, no competition and no
soliciting .

If So Our Company OffeJS

REPAIR
All Small Appliances
.Lawn Mowers
Next to Highway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

I. Complete Company Training
Program
2. Unlimited Advancement
Opportunities

3. '16,500 to '19,500 lst Year
Income

BISSEU.
BROTHERS
,__
OONST. 00.

'4, Major Medical Hospitalization
and Pension Plan
5. Excellent Working Conditions

Chester, Ohio
985-4102
Home Building &amp;
Additions, Aluminum ·
&amp; Vinyl Siding, Floor
Sanding &amp; Finishing.

Apply by phone Thursday, Aug. a,
12:30 p.m.· 1:30 .p.m. and 4:3.0 p.m.
5:30p.m. 992-2579. •

Will do Dozer &amp;
Backhoe Work. Install
Septic Tanks, Haul
Dirt,
Gravel,
Limestone or Rent One
of
Our
Trucks,
Backhoe or Dozers.

B&amp;K EXCAVATtNG
777 Pearl St.
Midclleporf, Ohio
"2-5367

J&amp;l AUTO

BODY
Moved to Rutland , lJ.. mile
inside city limit on right
corner Blrck St. and Rt. 124.

. :oEAL Y MIS:MATCH ONCE-A- YEAR

.free Estimates

contracted . Phone 7-42 -

3074 or wr •'le Bo·
" 23',, Langs ·

ville . Oh io . ·

7-23 -26tc

------

sh rubb ery . ,Also . clea n' out
basements. att ics , et c . Phone
949 -3'2'21 or 742-4-441 ,
7-14·2Mc

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

SEW IN G MACHINES . Repair
urvlte, alt makes , 992-'228A .
- Th&amp; Fabr ic Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Si nger Sales ,e~~nc
ServIce . We Sh arpen Sclssor1
...,.
._
3-29-tfC.

_____ __ ____ _

DOZER work, lend .clearing by
the a cre hoUrly or contract,
farm ponds , roads, etc . Large
doter and oper.etor with over
:zo,years experience . Pullins·
E~~;cavatlng , Pomeroy , Oh io .
Phone 992 -2_.78 .
·
.
12-19 -tfc

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

MAnRESS SALE

Now Open for Business

742-5293

Save 30% to 50% On
. Quality Sealy Mattresses Now I

Wlu.'S CARPET
&amp; INTERIORS

JUST .ARRIVED!
TWO TRUCKLOADS
GOOD USED FURNITURE

Hours : 9-6 Weekdays

"WILL
":'- ------------.-tr im or cu t trees and

•,

DE«DRATING

Pomeroy, o.

Refrigerators,
Fr.eezers, Home &amp;
Auto Air Conditioners
and
Commercial
Units.

Business Services

----

~.m.

.See or C~ll
Bob or Roger Jef.fers
Day 992-7089
Night 992-3525
or 992-52l2
FUk ' fl-(te

located on 3rd Street tn
Racine, Ohio.

LEGHORN hen s. been lay ing 6 AUTOMOB ILE In sura nce been
ca n ce ll ed?
Los t
your
months . S1 eac h . Welker 's
op erator 's lice nse . Call 992 ·
Poultry Fa rm , Hem lo ck
7428 .
Grove. Oh 10 . Available im .
6-l.Nfc
mediately . Ph one 992 -5836 ..
8-4-51c - - - ........
CREMEANS
CO N CRETE
delivered Monday t hro ugh
Saturday and even/nos .
Phon e 446 -114'2 ,
6·13-tfc

Monday to Frld,o y, 9 0 .m. tu

HOME

~lled.

Armstrong Llnoltum
Wall Paper
Vinyl Wall Fabric
Special! On Carpet Rem·
nanh. Free Estimates •

---.,._·----.-----19:70 SUZUK I 350 s
d s45o · JOB S

A614-228-17S1

DtTCIIING SERVI£E
Water Lines and Power
lines . All work done by the
fool or contract. Also do zer
work and septic tanks in

BUY IT NOW, TOMORROW IT
WILL PROBABLY BE A LOT
MORE . DROP IN AND LET'S
TALK TURKEY.

REGISTERED
polled HOUSE insula t ing ; blow en for
Hereford bull , l-4 m onths o ld ,
better results . Cuts fuel bill s
·also yea r I ing bulls . Phone 985 down . Free es timates . Cali
353C . Paul Karr, Chester ,
74 2·44'28 .
· Ohio .
8-4-5tp
8-4-3tp

Flrostono Bulldlng-51nce1146
161 N. 3rd St ., Columbus, Ohlo4321S

MANAGER

_j

ll•lr.fi. , ,h ,lnrt
r
f'lltllr'1 ' 0y . Ohii _l :', If.')

L

~Loca ted bottom' otspee
Rose' Hili·
Rd
Rt 33
· ·
· on
8 .4.Jtp

E. MAIN STREE'T
POMEROY
- Wash&amp;WaiC
Sll .95
- l~o~be, Oil , Filter
9.SO
- Tune -Up
16.95

BENNY BRANHAM

K&amp;H ROOFING

992·2259 or 992·2568

V~t - qli

WILSON'S
PENNZOIL

Free Ettimil tts, Middleport. 0 1

OLDER HOME - Ph story
frame, J B.R., ba lh , porches,
ba semen1 with almost new
F. A. heating s ystem , doub le
level lots . $6 ,500 .

lhese sizes also available :

Or Write Flrtltone Phototr•phs

'

.REAlTY

s.ooo. 6,000 , a.ooo·, 10,000 and

CALL: Mr. Davis: Calle(t

\

608 E.
MAIN
POMI:ROY. 0.

'109.95

Quollfltd lndlvlduol Male or Famole needed to dlstrlbule
world f.1tnOus l&lt;od•k film through com,.ny estJbllshed
locollons .
"NO
SELLING
OR
SOliCITING
REQUIRED.'' Moke this ytar your yeor for indopendooce . 13995.00 Invest mont ·Guaranteed 12 month
repurchase aoreement.

'
I

ONE light brown , embos sed,
hand -tooted' Western Saddle,
breast collar and one ear
br id le . Ha s bee n used very
litt le. Pr ice $150 , Phon e 7-42 58'20 .
S-Otc
- - -- - - - - - - - -- 1967 10x 40 2 BEDR OOM trai ler ,
1972 16 ft . boat w ith trailer
and 50 h .p . me r c ury motor .
Phone 992 - 3380~
8-4-3tc

DISTRIBUTOR
WANTED

.

••
•• '
•

TOOU-8 QUEIITION
1-.t

Tlaer aotd . in good cond.ition '
$875. Phone 992 -3700.
·
7,24 . 13t p

I

••

UPHOLSTERY fabr ics by th e
yard. 54 inChes w ide, as low as
S2 .49 per yard . Velvets as low
as $5 25. Import ed ve lv ets
S9 .60. We also have nylon ,
her c uion. cotfon prints ,
vinyls , and remnants by the
yard or bY the p iece. Pomeroy
Recovery , 62'2 E ·. Main St .,
Pom.eroy . Ph ore 992 ·7554 .
7-24 -26tc

--------.,.-----1971 TRIUMPH Bonneville 650

,.
•

••
•
•• •

What do you do nOw?
A-Let yo•r con.c:lence be
,_ pl... Po-. II piobo-ly
rlllll. IMn If you want to ramble
1• . . and bid til. FIYO hnrll
..... "" oiiiJ .._ lllol ......
.tmJIIJ thai ,..
pitte•· ·

tlolelulolon.

1957 CHEVY. Ca ll 992 -2967 after
5 p .m .
6-2-6tc

~~ ...·•

THUTTV f&gt;ADBURN

You, South, nold:

•AQ654 •AQ654 +AK.2

7-31-6tp

..
•. .
.,.• ..•
...-.
....•
•

~~~Y~?]~:.;ij§~~~~
'
. M'l MAN lUKI:VS

Wea

p..

....

5-24 -tf c

1974 VEGA GT, 7,700 miles , p .s .
and automatic . Phone 992 ~
3362.

•

1

24- .

.,

•••
••
•••
• .
M

c~EWSP~PER ENTERPHISE ASSN.!

Phone 992-7620.

Now open the "BIGGEST llffiE"
automotive parts supp~ store in
Middleport. We carry all "NAME
BRAND" items.

•

doesn't cover and winds up

The bidding has ~n:

2

bedrooms,
nice
yard
available, washers and
dryers on _premises. Phone
992-3863 before 3 p.m., otter 6
p.m . 992-5844.

T R OU BLE~

Continuing with our be·
kind-to-declarers week, we
give South ni~e 21 -point two
notrump. North raises him to
game and after South looks af
dummy he sees that he can
count on one spade, two diamonds and four clubs for ·a
total of seven tricks .
South sees that if he can get
to dummy twice, he can produce those two extra tricks in
either spades or hearts. He
can get them in hearts if East
®I ENJQ'\IED DININcr
holds the queen. That is a 50
WI'T&gt;i ~,BUT r¥JW
per cent chance. Or .he can I MUST GET MCK
10 WORK!
get them in spades provided
that East holds at least one of
the two missing honors. That
is a 76 per cent chance.
His next step is to try to
find two entries to dummy.
He sees they will be there m
the club suit provided that
clubs break 3·2.
.
He proceeds to cash the
king and queen of clubs. Both
opponents follow. He overtakes his jack with dummy's
ace, leads a low spade and
finesSes his 10.
t takes his queen and
leads another diamond.
South enters dummy with the
six of clubs; leads the jack of
spades; lets it ride if East

furnished,

THE DEPENDABLE
.OONTRACTING 00.

-~------ --- - --=--

FOR RENT

+AK

ClElAND

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

INROW

'KJ9

Business Services

992-7204

p.m.

4107

•

NIMROD fo ld -down camper in
oood condit ion . s lee p s 4.
Phone 985 -3353 .
7-30 6tp

4 ROOMS and bath home for TWIN
NE EDLE S EWING
rent in Rutland . Phone 99 2MACH IN E S 1974 Model i n
5858.
walnut sta nd . All feature s
7 -14-tf c
built -in to make fan cy designs
and do stretch sewi ng . Al!.o
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pai"k ,
buttonholes , bi in d hem~ , etc .
Rt . 33,. ten miles north of
S43 . 35
ca~sh
or
term s
Pomeroy . Large lots with
available . Phone 99'2 -265 3.
concrete patios . si dewa lks ,
8-6-tf c
runners and off street
parking . Also. spaces for VACUUM CLE A NER S Electro
s mal l trailers . Phone 992 -7479 .
Hygiene New Demonstrators
7 -2l ·tf C
ha s all c lean ing attachments
pl us the new Elect ro Suds for
shampooing carpet . Only
$'27 .50
cash
or
t e r ms
availab le . Phone 992 ·2653 .
8-6-tt c
GREY MANOR APART·
MENTS
IRI SH , Cobbler potatoes . J ust
FOR RENT
off St . Rt. 12.4 on Co . Rd . 35
Ra cine - Port land Road . Dale
117 North Fourth Avenue
R. Pr offit1 .
Middleport 1 Ohio
8-6-Stp
1-2 bedroom furnished apt.
.
in nice area .
WALNUT , modern, stereo
1-Efficiency apt . prefer
rad io , am .fm 8 track tap e
single
male~
utilities
combin ation , 4 spea ker sound
system . Balance $10 1.93 or
provided.
budget terms . Phone 992-3965
Phone 992 -3863 before· 3:00
·
8· 1-tfc
p.m.1 aHer 6:00
992SB44.
FOAM to fill your old couch a nd
chair cushions as low as
S10.95 , upholstery okks , only
SOc , 4 inch covered foam
~-----------i
mattresses for standard size
bed ,
$29,95.
Pomeroy
Re covery , 622 E . Main St .,
Pomeroy , Ohio . Ph one 99 27554. .
7 -24, 2 6tc

SOUTH (D)
• A 1098

•
~

1969 SU N F\ [ II.M Alpin.:&gt; , ? dr
sedan. ta lr condil1on . 3A m1ll'~
per q4110n , tow mlle~gto Mu!:ll OL 0 House 4 I'001n1 and bath
$(111 , best off el' Phone 9-t9
wtth two nice- lo is , S:hc.IOO
')067
ea c h \4 ,000 Jn 'ivracr··
8 4 )I (
Phone 991 51:191:1
·
8 Stc
1969 FORO Tor mo . ti speed , nC!W
tires llr'ld IJ.a ll erv ('nntr~rt
Char les Sayre. 985 419J \600 NEW two hNiroom all electric
.
8 ~ ] Ip
nome
carpeted .
t u/1
b&lt;tsement. carpo r t. on one
aoe 10 1 Located on R1 1-43
For 1nore inform11 110n call
!4 'J 661 i
R IDIN G horse for sale . '2 year s
8 4 6tc
Ol d , green bl'oke Gt:'nlle Call
992 ss 10
8 1 li e CAR SON
Service
Station
Garage , 50x60 building ,
G REE N bea n s, g reen pepper s,
Cement driveway . Phone 74'2
cucu m be r s , t omatoe s,
~052
7 16 ti c
Clelan d Farms, Gerald ine
Cll.!o lan d , Recine. Ohio
7 17 ! lc. HOU SE lor safe in Syracuse. 5
room s and garage loc at ed
near
lhe school. Ph one 99'1
1964 FO R D ani;! one new
3860
be g inner's electri c Kay
8 '} lfc
Guitar tor sa te . con tact Carl
Ra ird en , Ha rtf ord , W. Va
7 31 6tc NEW HOME. :! be dr oom~,
Hutchinson
SubDivision ,
Rutland Phone 742 3615 o r
CANNIN G to ma locs. br 1ng
see Milo Hutchinson. Ru tland
conta iner . Ge r aldine Cleland.
7 28 -111c
Ra c in e
7 30 lie SEVEN room house, ba lh , tar g e
lot. gar age, Main St r&lt;ee L
Rutland . Ask.ing S12,0 00 .
J ROCERY bus iness for sa le .
Phone 74'2 -4712
Build ing tor s a le or lea se.
1 28 12 tc
Phone 77 3·561 8 from 8 : 30 p.m .
to 10 p .m ., for appoj nt rne nt.
3-20 ti c "A PP RO X" 49 ac r es on Ba iley
Run Roa d, one mile tro m
WE ARE p ick ing up a pian o in
c ross r oa ds, not to o far from
your area and wo uld li ke
the Sal em Center Mine. Good
some responsible party to
ro ad fr ontage . some ti mber .
take over payments . Ca ll
The Ba iley F a r m , conte c t
Cred it Manager, (614) 77 2
Mrs . Paul Ba ile y .
5669 or wr ite '260 Ea s t Ma in
8&gt;6·61p
Street, Chil licothe , Oh io 4S60l. --~-----~----4.7,ftc

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

7-18 -lfc
KOSCO·T
KOS METI CS
&amp; - ~-~ -------- .....WIGS : For · a good line of 4 ROOMS and bath furni shed
apartment in
Pom e roy .
tosme1ics , fr iend ly serv ice··
Phone 9_92 -5908 .
and someone to chat w ith ,..
give ·me a ~;ail. Helen Jane
Brown , 992 -5.\13.
·
3, 19-tfc FUR NI SHE D. 1 bedroom ·a pt .
tor ren t . 134112 Mu lbe rry Ave.,
Pom eroy . Phon e 992 ,5436.
8·4-6t c

lJli.:K TRACY

Sales

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

Brown Pasteboard , Sheet
Iron , Refrigerators 1 Hot
Water Tanks, Auto bodies
without motors, Scrap Iron:
Cast _Iron , Copper, BraSs 1
Aluminum, Auto Batteries,
Auto Radiators. Sell to

Estate For Sale

LOT S tot sale , tra ile.- or house
All util i lies Phone 742 J6lS,
Rvttand . Ohio
7 16 ft c

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

Call Collect 1-S92 -SS44

WHITEHOUSE TAVERN

vzx
vzx

Real

EXCELSIOR Salt Works, E .
Ma in St .. Pomeroy. Ali kinds
of sa·lf water pellets , water
nuggets ; block salt and own
PRIVATE meeting room for .
Ohio River Salt. Phone 992 any organization,· phone 99-2 3891 .
3975 .
'
6·5-lfc
3-11 -lfc
~~----..- ------.
9 CORRIEDALE S ewe lamb s.
TWO 5 room and bi!lth apts . in
one Reg . Susfolk r am . Also ,
Middleport. FOr information ,
s laughter lambs . Phon e 949 ,
call 99~ - 2550 or 74'2 -6551 .
3073
7-3-ttc
8 -2-6t c

'

CRYPTOQUOTES
QSGGNV

FREE HOME ESTIMATES

The Rosenberg Co.

•

• 4983

W E HA VE al l your upholstery

Call 99 2 r77 14

card
game

NGX

QUALITY

1971 FORD MAVERICK
1199S
Grabber , beige fin is h . tan vinyl root , 6 cyl. , automat ic
tra ns .. P. stee ring , rad io, locall owner , low mileage un it.

FREE kl tten s to good home .

sacred book

35

OF

8 6 lip

need s ,
Bu rl ap ,
den im.
c ambr ic. foam Qlue , zippe rs.
tac l(. lnQ s tr ip. sp r ings ;:,n d
Cl i p s, c h ipbo a rd, bu Hon
tw ine , sew !ng thr ead legs
upholstery boo k s . ditcron'
webb ing , s pr ing lw ine, tac ks:
welt co rd , colt on , s w ivel
ba s es an d toa rn. foam , toam
Pomeroy. Recove r y, 621 E
Ma in St ., P ome r oy. Ohio
Phone 99 2-755 4.
7-24 26tc

One letter &amp;imply stand• for another. In this aample A . II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slncle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words' are all
hints. Each day the c:ode letters are dltferent.

I

I

H Vichy

,.-,.,.....,.,.-r.::-t:::-

Is

b

lace

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

1971 DODGE OART
11995
Swln~er HT cpc .• m ecl. gr~n finish wi1h blk . vlnyl · root,
gr een -4l ny1 Inter ior tri m . V-8 engine. automat ic trans ,,
sport St. wheel. 1lJ II w h . cove r . Like new w-w 1ire5. rad io,
real nice .
1970 CHEV . MONTE CARLO
$2095
J50 V_- 8, autom atic, P. steer ing &amp; brakes. dark blue fin is h .
blue m te r ior, blue vi nyl roof. lac1ory air cond itioned , like
new w -w tires. rad lo. Many o ther e)( fra s ,

Notice

cluslc

trlan's

)
I

I

17 - McCallister %1 King of
It Daughter
the. HUllS
of Pe~
%8 Alan Ladd
Make ' ·
film

zo

Jon~

or

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTE- Here's how to :work It:

....... ,.. p ~ ..........

I

Y Ulerday'l WWOr

to~ osplla l ,

Catrle Neu t:rllng
or g an ist. Alilet thanli.s t o~
flow ers &amp;nd car(l-5 during her
S illY In th e h ospiled . Your
k indne ss will never be
fo rgo ll en .
Mrs Evelyn HHI
Mr Wilson Dick
Mr Lo r en Weru
l,eona K Kohl
R l dgwa y,

of war

If you don't have a family doctor (or can't talk to him about

TRIGE

· M emorl • l

6 ' 'La Traviata"

32. Zoroas-

I YUCIJ
I

cannot exprus our
.appreci •t lon to l hOJe wh
w •r•t:o tl.lnd (t ur ing l h t lltnes~
and dllll!lttl of ou r d ear r'llO(her
a nd friend , E:tha Sue EJI!s
Sp ecial th an k.' to R ev Robert
l
Bum gar n er , t he Ew /n
F un t rfl t ti omf! , Yf!ltrang

1 Co01JT10m .

mammals

Auto

W O ~ OS

39 Laddie's

ACROSS

S.S. :

+++

Card ol Thanks

loy THOMAS JOSEPH

Your father may need psychiatric counseling. In fact,
psychotherapy might h elp the whole family. Give your doctor the
facts, and probably he'll start working toward a solution . HELEN

think.

Sentznel l;lassifieds Get Results!

t!$Ht1M"tHuJt'

20 Lugged
21 Inclined
against
%3 Aspect
%5 Down
with! (Fr.)
29 Beer
variety
30 Belgian
town
31 God

alternpted, happens more often than most Americans want to

·. Se:llll'l, M iddleporl-~rnneroy , o .. 1'uesday' AuK . 6, 1974

Aup. 7, HH.t
You're tW..ety to btl on the VO
much more tnis yeer man you

9-9 Weekends

SE PTI C TAN .KS cleaned,
r easonable rates. Ph . 446·
4782. Gelllpol,ls:~P·John Russell ,
owner and opera tor .
5-12 -tfc
SE PTJC

TANI\. .&gt;,

S &amp;,W A G E

AROBIC

SV S T E MS

CLEANED ,
REPAIRED .
MILLER
SANITATION,
STEWART . OHIO . PH . 662 ·
. 3035 .
'
10-4-tfc

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

SEPTIC
TANKS ctea'ned.
Modern s~n ltatlol'l 992 -3954 or.
992 -7349 ,
10-23 ·tfC
I

-----:--------READY -MIX
CONCRETE'
delivered right io your
project. Fast and easy . Free
estimates . Phone 992 -3284 .
Goeg lein Rtady ·MI)C. Co . •
Middleport. Ohio .
6-JO.tfc

C. BRADFOR 0 , AI,Jctioneer
Comolete Service
Phone 949 -3821 or 949 -3161
Raclne ,' Ohlo
~rltt Bradford
5· 1-th

-""-----------~'E)&lt;cl!.vAT
lNG ; ··oozer. · loader ,

7-Refrigerators, green. copper, white, frostfree included
30" Gas Ranges. gold and green
Mediterranean 2-mirror Triple Dresser.
Chest, Nile Stand
Solid Maple Dresser
Solid Oak Dresser
Walnut Chest
Twin Size Box Springs and Mattresses
Maple Bed, complete
3-Spindle Beds, twin size
2-Solid Oak Note Stands
Metal Beds
3-2 pc. Living Room Suites
2-0ffice Storage Cabinets
Several Odd Chairs
Poster Bed, compiete
1-~)d Bed, looks. like trim was hand painted
Sohd Maple Bedroom Suite, queen size
l;'ortable Color TV and F'ortable B-W TV
-OTHER ITEMS SUCH AS: sinks, metal
.cabinets, recliners, stereos·, dryers, wringer
washers, gas &amp; oil heaters. portable air
conditioners and other Items too numerous
to mention.
Come and be first to see this fine selection of
good used furniture. Hurry to our store! Check
other prices In the area. We believe you can't
beat our .selection and Ices.

and bickhoe work : aepflr
tan ki"1 nstall8d ; diJf'ri p -,ruc:u
•nd IO ·bOYI for hire ; Will hiUI
flll dirt , top soil, llmestont
and gravel ; Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 992 =7019 ;
night phone 992 ·3525 or 992·
5232.
2-11-tfc
...... --------- ~ .......

'--

•

,.
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10-

~ OIIUy Sentlne~ Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Alijl. 6, J974

Reunion Sandman defects
slated

Junior.Fair parade to move at 7, Aug. 14

The Meigs County Junior Fair Parade Is scheduled w move at 7 p.m. on the
falrgtounds' race track on August 14. Participants start lining up at 6 p.m •.
Three categories .will be used to divide the line of march. noats, walking
units. and animal units. Trophies and rosettes will be given for each of the above
categories.
·
.
The Green-Caster - Ogdin
All groups wishing to participate s hould complete the form below and return family reunion will he held at
It w the Meigs Extension Orfice, Boll 3Z, Pomeroy, no later than August 9. 1974. the Columbia Church Chapel
near Point Rock Sunday with a
basket dinner at noon. Officers
for the business session which
PARADE ENTRY FORM
follows dinner are W. A. Ogdin.
president ; Octa Gillogly, vice
Name _____________________________________________
president; Martha Chapman,
secretary-treasurer.
· Making up the table committee for the reunion are

Unit (check one l
1. Float
Z. Walking
3. Animal

Donna Nelson, Bessie Stone,
Wesley Bobo, Avanel HoUiday,
and Golda Bobo. Sherrie Might
is in charge of children's entertainment. Frie·nds

Absolute deadline is August 9, 1974.

Nixon
Continued from page

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detalla, but I think he knew."
"P. He didn't know how it wu going to be handled throUBh .. .
WeU, who was the (bad word ) that did ? Is it Liddy? Is that the
fellow? He must be a Uitle nuts !
"H. He is.
"P. I mean he just ·isn't .well screwd on, is he? Is that the
problem?
"H. No, _but be was wlder presaure, apparently, to get more
information, and·as he got more pressure, he pushed the people
harder to move harder.
"P. Pressure from Mitchell?
"H. Apparently,
"P. Oh, Mitchell. Mitchell wasat the point (unintelligible ).
11
H. Yeah.
"P. All right, fine. I understand it aU. We won't second guess
Mitchell and the rest. Thallk God it wasn't Colson (former
presidential aide Charles Colson )."
Mitchell, Haldeman, John D. Ehrlichman and three other
former presidential staff or campaign aides face trial next
month on Watergate cover-up charges.

Tougher

RECEIVES AWARD
Ruth Mn Bryan, 11-y0ar-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Bryan, Reynoldsburg,
and granddaughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John Bryan, Middleport,
has received the Timothy
Award, a trophy · for completing three consecutive years
of the Awana Program which
consists of completing three
books, three crafts, three torch
drills, memorizing arid reciting
over 300 Bible verses and attending &amp;mday school.

(Continued from page I)
(protesting ) until we get a
bearing. The Bureau of Mines
has jiJ!It been horsing around
on the thing."
In a suit rued In Colwnbus
Monday, Consolidated Coal Co.
asked U. S. District · Judge
JOS!&gt;ph P. Klnneary to force the
workers back to the mines. The
company also asked for an
unspecified
amoun.t
ot
monetary damages.
Nelms indicated Monday by
phC&gt;ne to local newspapers the
PLAN REUNION
union had ordered the men .
The Cleland reunion 'will be
hack into the pits today at the
Meigs mines. Mine executives held Sunday, AUM.ll, at Forest
were unavailable for comment Acres. Park. There will . he a
basket lunch.
this morning.

BRING THE
FAMILY
FOR GOOD FOOD

1

MD DAIRY D£UGtm

1

PROMPT SERVICE AT • • -

'l

~

Adolph's Dairy Valley

I

At the . Pomeroy-M1110n Brldl4i

VOTE

YES FOR A

and

relatives are invited . Families
are to take picnic basket.s.

Big day in
Pt. Pleasant
PT .. PLEASANT - Today is
the big day - opening day of
the 13th Annual Mason County
Fair for a five-day stand.
Highlighting today 's activities was a parade through
downtown Point Pleasant. A
main event or this evening's
festivities is dedication of the
fair al6 p_m. and crowning of a
_fair queen.
·
The fair officially opened at 9
a.m. with a · flag raising
cerepwny. Gus Douglas,
Commissioner o£ Agriculture,
will be on hand for the
dedication.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions
· Kevin
Eillford, Racine; Doris Deeter,
Long Bottom; Leo Light,
Mason; Eri,:: Boegli, Pomeroy ;
Seth Nicholson, Rutland; Ollie
Tyree, Middleport; Marshall
Adams, Racine.
·Discharges - Uoyd Burk,
Danna Cundiff, Geno Pierotti,
Mildred Fowler, Harold King,
Ada Clark, Kathryn Mees, ·
Dale Connolly, Robert Leifheit.

PT. PLf:ASANT - Grand Newell, Southside; Gilbert E.
and
pe~tjurors drawn Monday
Pearson, West Cohunbia; Mrs.
Contributors to date are Mr.
Edward W. Smith. Mt. Alto.
and Mrs. Denzil Goeglein, Mr. in Mason County were :
GRAND
JURORS
Nancy J. Harnm, 2102 North
and Mrs. Allen Eichinger, Mr.
ARBUCKLE _ Charles Main Street, Point Pleasant;
and Mrs. Charles Blakeslee,
Rawson,
Southside.
Melvin E. Donohew, Rt. I,
Mrs. Tom Rue, Mr. and Mrs.
CLENDEN IN _ Clayton Evans; Mary F. Fowler, Rt. I,
Roy Reuter, Mr. and Mrs.
Shuler,
Gallipolis Ferry ; Irvin Point Pleasant; Velma C.
Marvin Darst, Mr. and Ml-s . B.
Burris, Mason; Norman 'R.
F. Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Harper, Gallipolis Ferry.
COLOGNERoy
Hall
Rt
Scarberry,
117 Engllah Ct.,
E. Koehler, Mr. and Mrs.
2,
Leon.
·
Point
Pleasant;
Dorothy S.
Harold Blackston, Mr. and
COOPER - Fred Brinker Jones, Hartford.
Mrs .
Cleo
Chevalier,
Letart.
' Betty Henry , Gallipolis
Gallipolis; Mildred Hawley,
GRAHAM _ Mary J. Ten- Ferry; Roger Powell, GlenMyrtle Walker , Ruth Tucker,
nan!,
Broad Run, New Haven; wood; Nancy B. Mmton, 3002
P. E . SUinley, Betty Tyree, Mr.
and Mrs. Don E. Rea, Mr. and Elroy E. Kaylor, Rt 1, Lelart. ParriSh Ave., Pmnt Pleasant;
HANNAN - Betty J. Shank, Elberta I. Herdm~, Rt. I,
Mrs. Glen Stanley, Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Walker, Mr. and Ashton; Russell C. Sturgeon, Leon; Shirley A. Kitchen, 512
·
McNeill Ave., Point Pleasant.
Mrs. Carl Gorby, Mrs . Juanita RFD, Ashton.
LEWIS - Mary A. Pullins, Janet Elizabeth Holland, 123
B. Dopf, Norwalk; Mrs.
908
22nd Street, Point Pleasant
Street,
Point
Frances Carleton, Mrs. GerPleasant ; Marilyn L. Me- Pleasant; Alma M. Withrow,
trude Mitchell , N. L. Moore,
112 Pleasant Street, Rt. 3, Leon; Venice L. Ward,
Daniel,
Mae Darurow, Mr. and Mrs. E.
Point
Pleasant;
Barbara J. New Haven; Fern Schurman,
L. Kincaid, Mr. and Mrs.
Nathan Roush, and the Joppa Minton, 1714 Jefferson Blvd., 109 . Pleasant Street, Point
Point Pleasant.
Pleasant; Florence Stearns,
United Methodist Wornen 1s
ROBINSON _ Lena Mae 1412 Ohio Street, Point
Missionary Society.
Cox, Rt. I, Point Pleasant.
Pleasant; Charles T. Hoffman,
4th Street, New Haven.
UNION - J ohn R. Pri&lt;\dy,
Jake Deal, Glenwood; Alice
Rt.
3,
Leon.
M.
Barr 2002 Jefferson Ave.,
GUESTS HERE
WAGGENER
Hazel Point Pleasant; Michael R.
Mrs. Elmer Schaeffer and
children of Erie, Pa. have been Smith, Mason; Forest w. Lleving, Rt. I, West Columbia ;
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hargraves, West , Columbia. Roberta M. Young, Clifton;
ALTERNATE JURORS
Barbara W. Dunn, Box 137,
Kelly and family, Middleport.
CLENDENIN . - Jo Ann Mason . .
They also visited Mr. and Mrs.'
Eva Durst, Rt. 1, Leon;
Vincent Dabo, Pomerdy; and J:lavis, Henderson; Violet
Eulah M. Redman, Mason;
Mrs. J . K. Smith, a patient at Pyles, Gallipolis Ferry;
COLOGNE - Edra J . Bernard C. Neutzling, Mason;
the Wellston Nursing Home.
Other recent guests of Mr. and Doolittle, Rt. 2, Point Pleasant. Barbara K: McDaniel, Mason;
COOPER _ Maxine E. Violet Carson, New Haven.
Mrs. Dabo and the Kelly family
Maxine Fields, Hartford;
were Mr. and Mrs. Nat Har- Nibert, Rt. 2, Box 108, Letart.
ROBINSON - Harley Burns, Robert L. Neal, Rt. I, Box 99,
man , Pinellas Park, Fla.
Point Pleasant; Sara L.
During their visit here they Rt. I, Point Pleasant.
went daily to Wellston to visit
UNION - Delbert E. Stover, Conners, 1207 Meadowbrook
· Ave.; Mary A. Burton, Mason;
Mrs. Smith, mother of Mrs. Rt. 1, Cottageville, w. Va.
PETIT JURORS
Wiliiam R. Lewis, Sandy
Harman.
LulabeUe Morris 2316 Jef- Heights, Point Pleasant; ·John
ferson, Ave.; Mary L. Hoff- Campbell, Gallipolis Ferry.
VISITING HERE
man, 1st Street, New Haven ; Charles D. Getty, 2609
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Steiner, Jean A. Rzempoluch, 3103 Garfield Ave.,' Point Pleasant;
Cleveland, have been here Kathnor Lane, Point Pleasant· Martha A. Rhodes 3324
visiting his mother, Mrs. Marie Patricia L. Call, 2913 Birch Mossman Ave ., Carrie E.
Steiner. Steiner was on Ave., Point Pleasant; Fay D. Ward, Lakin; Sandra S.
vacation from his employment Pancake, 193 Park Drive, Point Nichols, No. I Orchard Hill,
Point Plesaant; Marie Duncan,
with
the.
Cleveland Pleasant.
llluminating Co. where he is
Polly A. Adkins, 1004 Simp- Gallipolis Ferry; John M.
employed as an electrical son, Point Pleasant; Gary .c. Murray, 106 Pleasant Street;
engineer.
Gibbs, Hartford ; Lester w. and Betty J . Fox, Clifton, W.
Va.

DISASTER
like this should strike our town ...
how well would
be pr4[)tect~:d

A bank that con do more "for you than
any other type of.financial institution . .

FUll SERviCE BANK
W•lk-Up Window and
Auto Teller Window
Open Fri. Evenings 5 To 7 P.M.

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

· . . Most serious complaints about payment
of lnsaraute clalD18 are made by people ll'ho have not .
IIIIIW'ed their homes thru local, eslabllshed agents
.. . says j.egislative Investigating Committee
Jn it1 Offlclal Report on loss adbusiness from an indcpcnden 1
jutemcntJ made in the ••kc of . agent. Thera, if disaster .strikes
Hurr~nt Carla. the Committee ' yo'ur 'independent insurAnce a,m1
ott~ T£:1LU Houte of Represent · is on your side rudy to help.
.UYeSIIYe full ucdil tor respon.
1\J independent insurance
1ible pcrfom~•nc:e ro those . corn- aacnts, we aivc yo u the continu PJDiet 1-eprtlented by ir •.. ocndent
ina. person•! aucntion you rlt'ed in
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insurincc prolttlio11,- The Bit Dif.
How lo protect rour~elf. Buy feren~ in car, .horne, or business
lnautance Por your home, r;ar, or insu~:ancc. Call us WX&gt;n.

William D. OM Ida

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...

.M_IDOLEPOaf, ~10

M1111ber Ftdllfl

l••ce Corpor.itiori

Downintaailds
Agency, Inc.
Mktdlepor:f, Ollio

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. MEETING OFF .
TUPPERS PLAINS
Because of the Meigs County
GRANGE TO MEET
Fair , the August meeting of the
Ohio Valley Grange 2612 Tuppers Plains Community
Lelart Falls, will meet Thurs- Club will be held at 7:30 p.m.
day at 8 p.m. Potluck .dinner Wednesday, Aug . 7, at the
will be ·served.
community building.

If a

That's
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the Senate, ~ presidency
would be dllu!ed" and the
country weakened for the rest
ol Ni:lon's tenn, Spndman
said.
He predicted the HQU.Se vote
on Impeachment 'ioill pracUcally be unanimous" and
therefore urged that the debate
be cut down to 20 hours - one
filth of the lime originally
contemplated.
Ten Republicans voted
against every article ol impeachment during the c&lt;mmit.
tee hearings, but six have
changed their minda since
Nixon's st•tement Monday J
that he withheld damaging
evidence from the committee.
The other four said they were
"reassessing" their positons.

Jury lists drawn

Fund now at $227
Contributions to a public
fund drive for four-year-old
AniUI Renee Levacy wbo is a
patient at Morton 's Children
Hospital at Louisville·, Ky.,
where she underwent open
heart surgery have reached
$227 .
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Walton
are heading the fund for the
child who has had two heart
operations and has other health
problems. About $1,500 is
needed to help the family .
Insurance for the family who
reside at Dexter is limited.
Mrs. Walton is serving as
chair person . Contributions
may be mailed to Box 668,
Pomeroy or dropped by the
New York Clothing House.
Checks are to be made payable
to the Anita Levacy fund.

By MIKE FEINSILIIER
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Rep . Carl W. Sandman Jr., RN.J ., tod.ay called for President
'Nixon's Impeachment, becoming the sixth of the 10 H011se
Judiciary Committee Repuhll·
cans who had voted against
such action to change his mind.
Sandman said new 1ranscript.s yielded Monday by
Nixon carried the " hard l""oof"
of criminality warranting Impeachment.
Sandman, whoee continually
applied ..-essure on Judiciary
Democrats for 11Specifity" dur·
ing committee hearings, told a
news conference he had sent a
letter to Nixon urging him to
consider resignation for Ule
good of the country.
''Even if he should preyail in

O'NEILL HONORED
SAN'F~ANCISCO (UP!) -

Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice C. Willism O'Neill was .
here Tuesday to receive a spe.
cia! award from
the
Association of Trial Lawyers of
America.
O'Neill was honored with the
association's "Most Outstanding Appellate Court
Junge. in the United States"
award in 1974.
AUERBACH REAPPOINTED .
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Republican Boris Auerbach of
Wyoming Monday was re.appointed commissioner of the
State Board of Unifonn State
Laws for another three-year
term.
Gov. John· J ; Gllligan announced the appointment of
Auerbach, 42, who is a Cornier
Ohio budget director .

'
KIRBY NAMED
COLUMBUS (UPI ) William T. Kirby was named to
a fiveyear term with the Board
of Examiners and Funeral
Directors Monday by Gov.
John J. Gi!ligan.
· .
··
Kirby, 53, 'of South Euclid, is
a Democrat. He succeeds
Mathias Marxen, whoee term
expired.
E-RCALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was caUed .to Minersville at 12:44 p,m. MIJ!Iday for
Joe Hood, who was ill. He wu
taken Ia Veterans Memorial
Hospltol .
LOCAL TEMPS
Th_e temperature In downtown Pom~roy at 11 a.m.
Tuesday was 73 degrees under .
sunny skies.
VETERANS "
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
DISCHARGES - . Gladys
GOUlding.

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.resign

the thy after .
by Chet Tannehill. _editor, Sunday TIJneii·S&lt;entin,
The casualty list said:
"Larry M. Boyer, !st. Lt., West VIrginia National GUion

KIA ."

Fortunately, Lt. Boyer was "killed in action" in aa,;~~
tactical exercise, not in the real thing, that IJ, acUon ''
which is the kind on hWidreds of battlefields onto
Americans have been ocder\!d for almost 200 years.
The terrain was the rolliJlg, wooded, sandy ground surT'"'"'
iJ)g Camp Pickell, Va . where the W.Va. Ll~t Maintenan~
No. 3664 NaUonal Guard conducted Its two-week summer
that ended Saturday. M~ fl'()m West Vii-ginla, Ohio and
tucky make up the 0111flt, many being from Meigs, GaUta
Mason CounUes. Lt. Boyer, who "got It," is an ad'ler4tisll1
representative of the Sunday Times-Sentinel and Gallip~
Tribune residing In Gallipolis.
Camp· Pickett raises a cacaphony ·of memories. It
Pickett where the '!bird Infantry Division shook down - sto!~d
- from mid-September throlijlh October, UH2 for the sea
dings near Casablanca, French Morocco pn the gray, misty
ol Nov. 8.
You can't go back, Thomas Wolfe said, which must be right,
for I've never seen Pickett since those foreboding days 32 years
ago filled with knowing my Pioneer Platoon of HQ Co. SecOnd
Battalion, 7th Regiment of the Third Division would he In the ftfst
wave .to land on the big rocks under the cannons spouting from
Fort · Blanden about eight miles north of metropolitan
&gt;
Casablanca.
November 8, 1942 couldn't have been aU that bad, could it'. '
for I made it and Lt. Boyer didn't!
•
"We were on this exercise," said the Lieutenant (who hopes
to make captain soon), "when a Specisl Forces character turns
up in our command post. Three times I ordered that he 'be
searched."
,
The searches turned up nothing of a suspicious nature. "The
harmless looking guy's story was he'd gotten lost from a unit
down our line," Boyer said.
But Boyer was not satisfied, especially after noticing that the
stranger kept his field hat crunched up in his right hand. So a
fourth search was ordered, which included the hand that held the
hat. Thereupon the innocent, lost soldier leaped toward Boyer .In
his hand was a knife that had been shrouded in his hat.
In real battle, the only judge of which side wins is a computerlike count of the dead and living on the First Sergeant's
Morning Report next day. Army ..xercises, on t~ other hand,
have a judge with each pseudo-combat unit in the field to fix on
the spot the number of casualties. In .Lt. Boyer's case, despite his
claim that the infiltrator was caught in time, that wasn't how the
field judge saw it.
The lieutenant was ruled a goner!

.

SERVICES HELD
Funeral services for Mrs .
Eliza Sue Ellis of 365 Grant St.,
Middleport, were held at 3 p.m.
Thursday at the Ewing
Funeral Home, Pomeroy. The
Rev. Robert T. Bumgarner
officiaU!d and burial was in the
Beech Grove Cemetery.
Relatives from out of town here
for the services were a
daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Hill,
Kenmore, N.Y.; Wilson Dick,
Tonawanda, N. Y.; Ray Wertz,
Mentor, 0 . and Loren Wertz,
Cleveland.
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McDaniel makes
School Who's Who
Michael E. McOaniel will he
featured in the eighth annual
edition of "Who's Who Among
American
High
School
students, 1973-74, the largest
student award publication in
the hation. \
Mike, a 197&gt;4 graduate of
Meigs High School, is the 80n of
Mr. and Mrs. Gene McDaniel
of Middleport. He was active in
school and church activiti'l'!, .
He is currently serving in the •
U. S. Air Force.
...

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SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport ER Sq1111d
answered two calls Monday.
They were called at 9 : ~3 a.m.
to New Lima Rd., for Gene
Wyatt. Wyatt, however, was
transported to an area hospiial
by the Southeastern Ohio
Emergency Medical Service.
At 3:57 p.m. the ER squad
transported Ollie Tyree to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

REUNION SET
~~-NEW HAVEN, W. Va. ~
Ancestors of· Marshall ana
Emily Wolfe will hold their
reunion Sunday at ·the Nell'
Haven Park, . New Haven, W.
\'a. A basket dinner will lie
held at 12:30 p.m. An invitation
is extended to the descendanta ·
of George and Betsy &lt;;rites
Wolle of Jackson County W.
'
Va..

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ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY
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JACKETS

Deputy PreBBSecrewry Gerald L. Warren said Nixon considered
and rejected reoignalion over the weekend .
·
Accordins to congressional sources, Tower and Sen. Barry M .
Goldwater, R·Ariz. - twopilla rs of conservatism on whom Nixon
had counted to surmount ·the U~reat of removal - ro90 at a
meeting of Republicans 'fuesday to say they had decided the
time had come foo: Nixon w relinquish power.
Goldwaler, throlijlh his staff·, denied the report. Tower made no
comment on lt.
He kept his advice to the President ..-ivate, but said It was "the
majority sentiment of Republican senators" that Nixon should
retire .
There was open speculation in the corridors of Congress over
how the nation and the Republican party would fare under the
stewardship of Gerald R. Ford, the good-natured and well-liked
Midwesterner whom Nixon picked to serve as vice president
when Spiro T. Agnew resigned in disgrace last O&lt;'loher.
Ford attended the caucus of Republican senators Tuesday, told
them of Nixon's determination to remain In office, then left

before the dc1011nd for resignation came up for discussion.
But despite the somberness of tOOir formal statemenu, many
It was difficult in either body to find any member of Congress Republicans seemed relieved at the turn of events.
willing to defend the President.
Nixon had made Impeachment a "safe vote." No longer did
All old stalwart, Rep. John J . Rhodes of Arizona, who suc- .they need fear retribution from members of one party or the
ceeded Ford as the elected leader of House Republicans, !Wid he other on their vote.
would vote to impeach Nixon for obstruction of justice, possibly
Rep. Delbert Lalla , R.Ohio, once one of Nixon's staunchest
also for misusing his authority.
defenders, said he would vote to Impeach and said If he were in
Rhodes hinted he was ready lo opposs Impeachment until Nixon's posltion he would resign.
Nixon's disclosure Monday that the President had withheld
He predicted the impeachment vote would be 410 to Impeach,
evidence on his efforts lo sUIII the FBI's investigtion of Water· 25 opposed.
gate .
Many members called for an early vote and a shortened
All tO Republican members of the House ,Judiciary .Committee debate .
·
who had voted solid ly against Impeachment aMounced Tuesday
House leaders agreed tn &lt;'Ut tl1e debate time from two weeks tO
they would vote tn impeach.
'
one, but Judiciary Committee Chairman Peter W. Rodino Jr.,!).
" In the shock of yesterday's revelations, I feel that I have been N.J., Insisted preparations ruled out a start of debate prior.to the
deceived," said their leader, Rep. Edward Hutchinson, Mich., a previously fixe&lt;! date - Aug. 19.
shy conservative.
Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield said the Senate
"Had this evidence been known to me during the inquiry , 1 could finish the tri.al before the Nov. 5 elec.tion if the House would
would have voted to Impeach the President, with a heavy heart."
fCon tinued on page 16 )

•

Weather
Mostly cloudy tonight with a
chance of showers south low in ·
the low to mid 60s. Cloudy
. Thursday with a _chance of
showers high in the upper 70S
and low 60s .

Now You Know

enttne

The first televised wedding
in the United States was that of
Cora Dennison and James
Fowlkes, who were married on
Oct. 14, 1928, in Des Plaines, lll.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

__
VO:__L_
.' X_XV:__
.I _,.:..:N:::.
O·..::B.:...
l _ _ _ _P:__
OM_E_RO_Y_
·M_ID_DL_EP_O_RT...:..
, _OH_IO_

_ _ __ _ _W
.c..:E---DNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1974

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992 -2156

Meigs Local schedule to hold
By KATE CROW
the district in regard to what board ·agreed to assign a try. John Beaver, John Fischer to Beaver, Fischer and Scragg.
The Meigs Local School authority they have in main· committee to help meet and John Scragg worked hard . In other business the board :
- Appointed the following
BOard in a long sessiOn taining discipline. Hargraves problems that might come up. · to have all these route buses in
d
d't'
H
teachers
.
pending
c:er·
Tuesday night voted to retain read a iist of what can and
Hargraves said that for the goo con 1 1 ~n ,
argraves tlfl cation, Karen Maziarz ,
the same school schedule as cannot be done on the buses by first time all 27 school buses said.
Dan lei Ruggles, Jane Bourne,
last year and remain on studenta. Most drivers agreed passed the State Highway
A resolution was passed to James Graner, Jane . Ru~s~ll
Continued on page 16
that the idea wu good. The Patrol inspection on the first send letters of commendation
daylight savings time.
George
H3r g rav es, ·
superintendent of lv)eigs Local
School District, reported that
the environmental Protection·
Agency is pushing the board to .
convert from coal to another
fuel. It would be fuel oil at
Salem center and Harrisonville and the EPA want' the
chan~e-over completed by next
surhmer . •
Robert Snowden, board
member, stated that the board
does not have the funds to
comply with svch a request ..
The hoard approved a motion
by Wendell Hoover that it seek
legal council in regard to the
problem and ask EPA for a
fl ve-year extension as the
board has no assurance other ·
fuel than,coal can. be obtained.
In other business the boatd
THE RIVERSIDE OF POMEROY'S ~pper parking lot, above, which several months ago
dfscont.inued all designated
was declared tiiiBafe, has not bOOn repaired. The Corps: of Engineers promised Pomeroy town , smoking areas in' the disbict's
council $50,000to rei&gt;air.damage caused by water.·erosion. There has been no commum&lt;.itoon
schools. They also agreed that
· from them since. Town officisls have been visiled by Rep. Clarence Miller ,concermng tbe
· if any problems arise at the ·
· par~ing lot; but.the officials believe nothing will be done unless Miller's River Erosion bill is
next Meigs High School Alwnni
passed in CongresS.
·
· Banquet as did this year the
as the 1974 Meigs County Junior F!llr Klnii and Queen
. ·1974 ROYAl-TY - Phillip Grant Johnson, second from
high school building wouid not
Tuesday night by the 1973 royalty, Ed Cr.oss and Ingrid
left, and Barbara Ann Jordan, third from left, were crowned
be available to the Alwnni
w. ~s
?¢:?,;.i:~,,l·:;;w.-B
··--wr,~~,l:~e·
~,,, ,:~s:.,,,,,l
Hawley.
Association.
Before · completing its
' ..
.
,. ~,:
..
··.
business for the evening, the
-~ ,,.,,,~."~·''''"'·'·-'"~
·· . . .
;,:
bOard met with bus drivers of
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON'S last' line of
Season football tickets for
Sharing totals
. defense against removal from office is crumbling in the Senate the Meigs High School
·$8.50 per capita
· as his staunchest Republic~n supporters call publicly and Marauders are now on sale,
privateiy for his resignation. Senate GOP leaders, conceding that James Diehl~ principal, anTbe Obio Public Exa strong majority of Republican senators want Nixon to step nounced today.
penditure
Council has
A ~ew vocational course ·
down lnimedlately, were seeking ways to get that message 1o the
The price of the tickets is
released the iollo.wlng called dlstrlbutiv~ education
President.
$8.75 and they may be purFederal
. Revenue Sharing will be offered all Meigs
GOP Leader Hugh Scott called a meeting of the party chased.al Diehl's office at the
expenditures for Meigs , County seniors at Meigs High
leadership today to continue discussing whether such a high school. Tickets will .\le
Aproposed bridge across the
'
County, Its munlclpalilles School this fall.
delegation should be sent and whom should it include. "I think held if the ~urchaser cails 992- Ohio River at Bavenswood, W.
The crowning of the 1974 Meigs County Junior
Dsltrlbutive education is a
and townsblps. The repart as
it's essential that ttie President know the view of the senators of 2158. Persohs holding tickets Va., . was discussed at the
Fair
Queen
and
King
highlighted
the
annual
4-H
received
for
Melgs
County,
cooperative
coorse in which
his own party as soon as that can be arranged," Scott said .
last year w,ill he given first Tuesday meeting of the Meigs
style
revue
Tuesday
night
at
Meigs
High
School.
· based tm tl.l per cent of its the student att'lnda classes at
Sens. Barry M. Goldwater and John Tower - two of Nixon's choice to buy the same seats County Commissioners, where
The
new
royal
figures
are
Barbara
Ann
Jordan,
property taxes, shows lhe the high school in the morning
staunchest conservative supporters in the Senate - said at until Sept. 1.
interested parties were
county government and is gainfully employed in a
Tuesday's meeting that they favored Nixon's resignation, ac·
There are five ho~e games requested to express their 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clay Jordan of Albany,
receiving $75,000, part ume job in privat~ ~
cording to three Senate sources, two of whom atiended: Gold· for the Marauders this season, views in writing on the and Phillip Grant Johnson , 17, son of Mr. and Mrs.
municipalities, $36,000, and dustry or comlnerce . in the
water d~nied the report and Tower could not be reached for Sept. 13 _ Belpre, Sept. 'll _
Gay Johnson , also of Albany.
proposed work.
townshlps,$57,000, a totalfor afternoon. The course IJ open
comment.
Athens, Oct. 4 - Gallipolis,
Giving sufficient details to
They were named at the ·also has served as a jLIDior
all ·political sul!dtvisions of to seniors wlro are 16 years oi
Oct. 18 - Wellston, and Nov. I establish a clear un- conclusion of last night's styie leader in both county and local
$168,000.
age or older an~ have a ~reer
· WASHINGTON - CONGRESS IS IN NO MOOD to grant - Jackson.
.derstanding of the reasons for revue by Ingrid Hawley, 1973 clubs and as a . 4-H camp
County Auditor James objective iri a business area.
President Nixou lnimunlty from criminal prosecution if he
The regular prices of ad- support .or opposition, protests queen, and Ed Cross, 1973 king, co\Ulselor. ·This year she was a
Roush
said the amount The career objective may be in
resigns, '"fhelaw should apply equally," said House Republican mission to all football and
or comments will be received who presented gifts to the delegate to Ohio 4-H Club
averages $8.50 per capita.. retail sellijlg, sales promotion
· leader John Rhodes in expressing what appeared to be the basketball games were . at the office of the Com,
couple . Miss Jordan also Congress .
(advertising), warehousing,
, majority sentiment among House members. . ·
recently raised to $1 for mander, ~cond Coast Guard received roses and a ·crown. As
Grant,
active
in
4-H
and
~holesaling , tr~nsportotion, or
Even thooe who earlier urged immunity as an inducement to students and $1.50 for adults, Oistrict, 1520 Market St., St.
the junior fair royalty, Miss FUture FArmers of America, is
finance.
Nixon to resign, such as Rep; Wilbur Mills, D-Ark., backed off, , general admis_
sion. The raise Louis, Mo., 63103, throlijlh.Aug. Jordan and Johnson will be
president of the Junior Fair
Distributive education difmaintaining their silence as almost everyone in Congress was in keeping with similar -!~ .
presented to the audience at Board. He is a member of the
fers
from some . other
assumed that Nixon either would step down or be removed from increases in admission prices
C. E. Blakeslee, Meigs the . grandstand each evening Meigs County 4-H 'Advisory
vocational courseS in that in
office in a Senate fri.al.
by other schools . in the County Regional Planning before ·programs ge t unCommittee, the Meigs County
'!be COnstitution expressly states that Nixon would be Southeastern Ohio Athletic
More th8Jf85 Meigs County 4- addition to being qualilied for
Director, presented the derway .
Better ·Beef Club, and the H girls will take part in a food an entry J.-·eJ position · upon
subject to criminsl prosecution if he is removed from office. The League.
commissioners with a public
Miss Jordan has been active Meigs County Shepherds. This fair beginning af 10 a.m. graduation, many
' students
only punishment allowed in an Impeachment trial is ~moval and
notice from G. H. Patrick In 4-H club work for 10 years. summer Grant was a coWlselor
disqualili~tion from holding any other federal position of honor
Friday at the St. Paul Lutheran also use this course as a back·
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Bursley, Rear Admiral, U. S. During this time she has at the Jackson Area Outdoor
ground
for
.additional ·
and trust. But the Constitution also says: "The party convicted
Church
Fellowship Hall.
Cloudy Friday and a
Coast Guard Commander, served on the Meigs County Adventure Camp . In past
Interviews will be held education leading to an
shall nevertheless be liable and subject to indictment, trial,
chance of showers Saturday
Second Coast Guard District, Advisory Committee, the years, he has served as a camp
the dal' for the girls associate degree at a technical
throughout
judgement and punishment according to law." .
or S~nday . Highs In the 80s
in regard to the .proposed Jun.ior Fair Board and the counselor and ha s attended 4-ll
who have entered food college or a baccalaureate
Any prosec~~tlon of ~ixDII after he leaves offoce. presumably . . lows ln. the 60s.
!style Revue Conunittee. She Club Congress.
(Continued on page 16)
projects. A reserve and a degree at a four year college.
would be decided by his successor, Vice President Gerald R.
The course is.open to seniors
grand champion winner will be
Ford, by Attorney General WiiUam Saxhe and possibly by
selected in each of the 13 at Meigs High School, Eastern
Special Prosecutor Leon Zaworskl.
classes. AI the conclusion of High School and Southern High
NEWSPAPERS IN MAJOR CITIES ACROSS the nation have
the fair , 6 o~tstandlng projects School. All students interested
will be selected to represent In distributive education
asked for President Nixon's resign~tlon foUowlng his latest
56 inches, mares and gelding, Meigs County at the Ohio State should call the office oftbe high ·
dlaclosuresahout Watergate. The Los Angelo~ Times, calling for
· Ttie horse Is apparently here in all classes except the lead-in until show time_.
his reslgnaUon, said in any event he will be impeached and
to stay - at least at the Meigs pony class in which each entry, The conformation judging any age; pony under 56 inches, Fair. The food fair is replacing S&lt;lhool where he or she iJ
oonvlcted.
.
wm. be at 10 a.m . .on Wed- slallions, any age. English the , food interviews · formerly presently enrolled .
County Fair ~ which opens receJ,ves a small trophy.
. "He should resign inunedl.otely,"the Times said. "There is
Tues~ay at the Rock Springs
Classes lor the show include nesday and that event Is also conformation- English saddle held ·d~lng the week of the
no question that he will be Impeached. His admissions on Monday
Fairgrounds.
lead-in pony, western tack, ·ss open to woild competition. bred, mare ot horse ; English Meigs County Junior Fair.
wure his cohvlction in the Senate. To resign is to achieve the
The fair hoard has scheduled Inches and under ; open horse- Classes include: Western - saddle bred, mare with spring
' NURSE HIRED
propose of Impeachment while sparing the nation more weeks of
youth
showmanship;
western
colt;
English
sa
ddle
br
ed
SQUAD
ASSISTS
horse shows, horse con- manship, any age, horses and
Mrs. Sharon Birch, Racino,
The Middleport Emergency was employed as the """" !or •
his inevitably uncertain leadership."
.
.
formation judging, horse and . ponies; Western pleasure mare , three years arid · &lt;yearling.
pony pulling contests, a horse, registered only; younger ; western mare, four . On Tuesday beginning at7:30 Squad was called to assist Melg~ County Schoola when the
IBRAEIJ WARPLANES BOMBED SOUTHERN Lebanon
program or horse harness Western pleasure pony, 48lo 56 years and older;· western a pony pulling contest will be Dave Hayes, 254 Mill St., Meigs County ~oatd of
~y in retaliatlon for the Arab abduction ol f Je)"ilh settlers
racing, quarter horse racing, inches : English pleasure gelding, any age; western the grandsland attraction with at 9:05 p.m. Tuesday .. H was EducaUon met Tueldly fliCitl.
blollding a security ience aloog the embattled frootler. The
pony and horse running races horse; Western pleasure horse, stallion, any age; western prizes of $30, $25, $20, $15 and taken to .P leasant .Valley Mrs. Blrdo; '8 gradua'- ot
military command In Tel AViv pld the Israeli jets blasted Arab
and pony barneS$ racing for non-registered : Western yearling . Appaloosa ·· con- $10 to be offered the lop five Hosplial where he was ad- Racine High School IIIII the
guerrilla targets thl!l morning at Harabeh junc:Uon three miles
the lllth annual lair.
pleasure pony, under 48 in· (ormation - appaloosa mares teams in three weight classes. mitted.
Riverside Holpi'-1 School o1
north of the Lebanese frontier village of AI Majldive.
and
geldings,
any
age;
aPunder
1,050
pounds
;
1,350
The horse show, open to ches; trail horse; trail pony ;
• · LOCAL TEMPS
NUI"Iing, Columbua,ln
Will
'!be command aald all the fighter-bombers returned safely to
·
work
in
all
three
loci!
ldlool
world competition, will be held barrel race, horses. or ponies; paloosa stallions, any age; pounds, Inclusive and 1,351 to
The temperature In downt.helr basea following the raid, the first alr strike against Lebanon
.
at I p.m. Wednesday wllh cash flag race, egg and spoon race, pony conformation - pony 1,650 pounds.
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. · distrlCU, whlch urU. IINid
slnce Ioraeli warplanes raided the same region two weeks ago.
The annual horse pulling Wednesday was 78 degrees · to sharo in \he CGIU ol the ·
premiums of $10, $8, $6, $4, and dash for money and the stake under 48 Inches,' mares and
(Continued on page 16) .
geldings,
any
age
;
pony
,
48
to:
(Continued on page 16)
$2 to be awarded place rosettes 'race . Entries will remain open
'!"•tin&amp; prOfltllll.
under cloudy sltlea.

· e·:

..

····.·

IIYumtedPresslnternatt~al

.. .

Season grid

.
.
.
ueen, k zng
are crowned

.,..,'«-.~"'

ducats here

Pro, con
invited

. Half-work ·

.,., .,~.-.·~&lt;-;&lt;o&gt;~~·

course set

Horses .everywhere at the fair

all the fashion details y'ou

BOYS DEPARTMENT

W.\SHIN()TON (UPI J - President Nixon 1J Wider extreme
Pl'••ur• to reolgn, It comes from his party and from his friends
and lheems more likely to intensify than abate.
'!be threat of Impeachment by the }foltse and removal from
otfice by the Senate gave teeth to the advice which Nixon was
receiving from !bose who only a few days a so vowed to defend
him against such a proopect.
·
· l!ivately, many in Congress predicted Nixon w0111d be out ol
offoce - thefirstpresidenttoresign - withinashorttime.'
Republican senators called a caucus to disCUSII privately how
to convey the message which Sen. John G. Tower, R-Tex., said
renected majority sentiment- that the time had come to give up
t.he fight In the face of Nixon's admission that he had withheld
evidence from Congress, the people and his own lawyer .
Nixon's own determination not to quit -conveyed to the nation
by cabinet members after a meeting with the Chief Executive mad• little differimce on Capitol HIU.
Treasury Secretary William E. Simon said after the cabinet
meeting Tueoday, " He absolutely is not considering resigning."

.

:

Interviews to
come on Friday

ALSO
WRANGLER
WESTERN DENIM

JACKETS

,

&amp;'Sortment of wa ist and

inseam sizes.

·

1•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'

I

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