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•
I - The O.Uy sentU..I, Middleport.Pomeroy, 0., Moodily, All!:. 12, 1974

Carpenter

.Mason fair again

News .

• •

in

Brief~

· Continued from page I

News, Event

the biggest ever

Mr. and Mrs . Cc:irl Dunham

·have returned £roin a visit with
their son and da~hter-in-law,
Mr . and Mrs. J ohn Dunham
and family of New Boston, Ill.
Their grand$ons, John CnrJ
and : Richard
Dunham,
returned home with them.
Mr. and. Mrs. Larry Sl!onley
and Mila of Marion visited
tlleir parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Smith and Mr. and Mrs .
Eugene Stanley .
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Price,
Dan and Nicholas, Columbus,
were weekend guests of her
motller and stepfather, Mr.
and Mrs. Cecil Blackwood.
They attencted the wedding of
Helen Anita Walker, Thurman
and Richard K . Fisher.
Gallipolis, at Thurman , Miss
Walker is a granddaughter of
Dale Dye, local, who also attended the wedding along witll
other friends and realtives
rrom the community including
Mr. and Mrs. Thad Dye and
Charity, Lisa Dye and Mr. and
Mrs . Lewis Smith.

TillS NOVEL TRAIN vehicle in vivid orange and yellow visited the Mei;:s County communities of Pomeroy, Middleport, Rutland, Langsville, Racine and Syracuse SalUl'day
promoting soft drinks of the Gem Bottling Co., Wellston. Free samples of "Ski" were
distributed.

Rains came
Continued from page 1
drought and the rains brought
Ulem some consolation . If the ·
rains can revive the grass, feed
problems· could be averted
until at least late fall.

BUt some ranchers ,

· an~

ticipating the drought 's affects

on feed prices, still hurried to
sell their catUe.
11
l've never run into anything
•
like this in my life," said Bill

House, a Kansas rancher and
former president of the Ameri·
can National cattlemen's Association. "This is the first
time I can remember such a
Mal disastel' in grain and
grazing.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A ch:ilnce of daily showers
or thundershowers and
warm. Highs In the 80s and
lows in the 60s.

' LADIES IN RING
MADRID I UPI I - The
govermnent agreed today to Jet
women become lull-fledged
bullfighters, opening Spain's
stronghold of male chauvinism
to both sexes. The decision
marked the end or a three-year
battle by Angela Hernandez, a
27-year-(Jid bullfighter, for
equality with men in sPain 's
arenas.

uThe pastures are burned
up, but the real disaster is
Marriage License
there's no corn in the corn belt.
Bobby · Joe Werry , 21,
Corn means meat and milk in Pomeroy and Karen Leslie

..

Ill is part of the country and the

corn is gone no matter how

Price, 20, Middleport.

much it rains now. The

situation is . just about as
desperate as it can get."
TO HOSPITAL
The Pomeroy ER squad was
called Saturday at 11:20 a.m. to
Dr. Ridgway's office for Sam
Pickens who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

'

asnn

Drive-rn
Tonight, Tues.

Harrison
fires 3rd
no-hitter
Dale Harrison pitched his
third no.hitter of the season
Sunday, as Marchi's Falls City
fast pitch softball team swept
two games from McAr thur.
In the first game, Marchi's
fell behind by six runs in the
first and second innings before
coming back to win 34-7.
Marchi's scored 20 times in
the fifth inning, with the big
blow being a grand slam ho~
run by Ruddy Stewart. Bud
Cundiff was the winning pitch·
er.
Harrison added a three run
homer in the nightcap to go
with his no-hitter as Marchi's
ran its record to 20-4 with a 12--1

victory.
Pleasant Valley Discharges
Harry Varian, Clifton, Mrs.
Fred Shepherd, Wellston;
Terrv Whittington, Buffalo;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
Danny
Blanton,
Point
HIGH FLYERS
Pleasant; Mrs . Earl Roberts,
July 31 , 197'1
Bidwell; Mrs. Charles Morton,
W. L.
Buffalo; Mrs . frank Jones, Stow Pokes
28 12
23 17
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Richard H · S
D i zzy 4
18 22
Frie~d. daughter, Pomeroy;
Powel l' s Super Valu
16 22
17 23
William .Koko Spaeth, Marion, Slow Rolle rs
Born Winners
16 24
Ind .; Mrs. Guy Garrison ,
Team High Series ~ Slow
Robertsburg; Leon Rainey , Rollers 2216, Born Winners
2154, Slow Pokes 2114.
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Lafe
Team High Game - Slow
Jennings, Wellston , and Rollers 759 , Slow Pokes 758.
Slow Rol l ers 756 .
Garland Bostic,. GalliJiolis
Men 's High Series - Dewey
Smlh 579. Larry Powell 555.
Ferry .
Moses Norman
Jell Wilson

·Local Bowling

MEIGS THEATRE
Monday , Aug . 12 thru
Thursday, Aug. 22
NOT OPEN

ALSO
"Two Lane
Black Top"

FRI.- SAT.-SUN.
AUGUST23-24·25
THE SUGARLAND
EXPRESS

t PGl
CARTOONS
ShoW Starts 7 p.m.

---------------MONDAY thru FRIDAY
NO (OUPON NECESSARY

CARRY-OUT OR DRIVE-IN

ON.LY

11:00
. A.M.' TO 3:00 P.M..

494 .
Men's High Game - Larry
Poweii . Dewey Smith 222 ,
Moses Norman 189, Dewey
Smit h 187.'
Women's H igtl Series Betty Wh i tlat c h 494, Marlene
Wilson 483 , Myrtle Norman 427 .

Women's

l-ligh

Game

-

Myrtle Norman 187 , Betty ·
Wh i tlat ch 179 . Marlene Wilson
176
WEDNESDAY NIGHT

HIGH FLYERS
Aug. 7,1974

w.

L.
H-5
31 17
Slow Pokes
28 20
D izzy 4
26 22
Slow Rollers
2J 25
Powells Super Vatu
20 28
Born Winners
16 32
Team High Senes - H -S
2266 . Diuy 4 2257 , Powells
Super Valv 2139.
Team High Game - Slow
Rollers 79J , H . S 788 , H ·S 768 .
Men 's High Series - Larry
Powe ll 539 , Dewey Si"ni lh 533 ,
Moses Norman 523 .
Men ·~ High Game Dewey
Sm ilh , Larry Powell , · Bill
Hatf i eld . ·
Women 's High Series Marlene Wilson 524, Angela
Sm ilh ·.t88; ·Betty Whitlatch 486.
Women's High Game Marlene W i lson 198 , Mar lene
wftson 180, Angela Smifh ·Anne
Hatf i eld 178.

~ ,;;;,LiiliMilili ioTIIIiOiooNa SALES
BUTZ: FORD'S GREAT
NEW ORLEANS (UPI)
Agriculture Secretary Earl
Butz says President Ford is an
informal man who will be able
to draw on congressional and
Cabinet support in tackling the
country's problems . "He's a
great President," Bub; said
Sunday night. "He's taken it all
in great shape."

'

Bone sewi ng needles one to
two inches long with eyes
bored at both sides have ~en
"found in cave dwellings dat·
ing from 10,000 to S,OOO B.C.

LUNCH SPECIAL

PT. Pl.EASANT - Gates
closed on tile 13tll Annual
Mason County Fair Saturday
night after achieVing a record
attendance and once more
proclaimed, " the biggest and
best vet."
'
Saturday, by far the biggest
day, was attributed to entertainment and to tile popular
Horse Show.
Mrs . Philip Click Jr., known
to members of tile Letart
Homemakers Club to which
she belongs, as Dorothy and
her two children Roderick and
Beverly of MI. Alto were the
Sweepstakes winners after
accumulating 319 points.
Roderick is !:&gt;-years old and
Beverly is 14. He will be . a
sophomore at Wahama High
School and she will be a freshman at the bend area school in

the fall.
Melissa and Joe Miller, twins
and children of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Mlller of Leon won the
Mr . and Mrs. Earl Starkey Donnie Hill Award . The
were in Colwnbus where they
were guests at an a(ternoqn presentati~n is made through
party and dinner at the home of sponsorshi~ or Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. James Ward. Mr. Donnie . Hill of _Leon as a
Ward · is presidenf of the · mem~Ial to their . late soa,
Grange Mutual Casualty In- Donnte. The award ts for fFA
surance Company and the and I FHA work.
.
party was for directors and
F ~yd
~ayburn , . fair
ives Mr Starkey past president, With cooperation or
~irector ~d
p ~i
i _ other officials, estimated
'
a s e a1 n Sat d '
ur ay s a tte ndance to be
vitation for the occasion along
with Mrs. Starkey.
between 12,000 and 1S,OOO. Gate
Mr
and Mr
Arthur receipts far exceeded that on
Crabiree and Ms;s. Goldie each night of the five day stand
Gillogly spent Sunday af- as compared to that of previOus
te rnoon WI'th Mrs. G'll
1 og Iy •s years.
R b
.d "W
ld
ay urn s~l •
e so
brother-in-Jaw· and sister. Mr.
and Mrs . Otho Gregory at more season tickets and gate
Radcliff. Mrs. Gregory has · receipts were, higher than
before. We d1dn t ratse pnces,
been ill but is improved.
Mrs. Kelly Kerns and so the attendance had to be
greater.''
Dorothy Kerns, Ripley, W. Va.,
p te W
d th
were dinner guests of Mr. and
or r
agoner an
e
Mrs. Carrol Woodgerd and Wagon Maslers and other
family on Sunday . Afternoon Grand Ole Opry entertainers
callers were Mr. and Mrs. drew most of the evening
Eldon Markins and family and crowd when they presented a
Mr. and Mrs. Menda1 Jordan. show from the main outdoor
Mr. and Mrs. John Cordray, stage.
Fullerton, Calif., have arrived
Fiddlers had a heyday
here for a visit with his mother, Saturday when IIley held their
Mrs. Beulah Cordray, his contest on the main s.tage .
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. There was ple~1ty of toe tapping
and Mrs. Reed Jeffers and in the crowd too as the
other relatives here and in the m~icians competed for top
Athens area. Mr." and Mrs. place.
Kenny Sidle of. Newark, Ohio
John Cordray and Mr. and
Mrs. Reed Jeffers attended the won first place. Ray Spanaugle
funeral of an Wlcle, Walter of BrisioJviUe, Ohio, came in .
Cordray, in Mannington, w. second and Mike Humphreys of
va. 'on Saturday.
Charleston, Ohio ;vas· third. ·
Mrs. Beulab Cordray spent
Trqphies were presented
the weekend with her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Cordray, Athens
Route.
Mt . and Mrs. John Culwell of
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Orville Davis, Jackson, called
on Mr. and Mrs. William
Culwell and hls father, Jerry
Culwell Sunday evening.
Mrs . Noble Hamon has
returned home after spending
sometime at University
Hospital,, Columbus. She is
somewhat improved at this
time.
Mr. and Mrs. John Danham,
Yvonne and Connie, New
Boston, Ill., are here for a visit
with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Reed Jeffers and Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Dunham and to join
their sons who came earlier,
The family group all attended
the Jeffers reunion at Old
Man's Cave on Sunday along
with Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Don
and. Kathy, Mr. and Mrs.
William Cheadle, , Mella
F1sher, Mr. and Mrs. Lavern
Jordan and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Birchfield, Mr . and
Mrs. Gene Jeffers, Lester and
Marco, and Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Lawson.

longer hod to reckon with a credlblo NATO In the West' they could
further intensify their political and military pressure tn lll•
East" against China.

lor those receiving tile most
blue ribbOns In Home Arts.
Dorothy Click and her children
Roderick and Beverly won tile
first place. They exhibited 49
Items In Culinary Arts and had
several entries of paintings,
leatber and embroidery work.
SecOnd place winners were
June Burns, Betty Irvin and
family and Charles Foglesong
and family. The Robert Tillis
family placed third,

Bashan
News
Steve Trussell and Bruce
Riffle, with the Eastern Pony
League baseball team, spent
Saturday and Sunday in Cincinnati and attended tile ball
games at Riverfront Stadium.
Belinda Deeter, member of
the Eastern Eagle Band, spent
a we.ek al camp in Rio Grande .
Albert Hill spent an evening
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Trussell.
Scott and Renee Trussell and
Robin and Rocky Pitzer attended a birthday party for
David Ballard, July 31. He
celebrated his 9th birtllday.
Brenda Lee Ballard was also
present. Homemade ice cream
and cake were serve&lt;fby Mrs .
Ballard .
Mrs . Lelah Riffle Robinson
of Cleveland is visiting her son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Riffle and family.
Mrs. Thelma Eddy ana Mr.
and Mrs. Audley White and
children of Killbuck spent
Saturday night with relatives
here.
Mr . and Mrs. Ralph Ballard
and family attended the
Ballard reunion ·at Kyger
Creek Park Sunday.
Mrs. Ola Hysell, Mrs.
Mary Cowdery and son, Larry
of Long Bottom and Mrs.
Roberta Ridenour · and son,
Jason of Chester called on Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Trussell
recently.

SEATI'LE, WASH. - KJNG HUSSE~ OF JORDAN .
surrounded by tight security and secrecy, arrtVed this weekend
for aU. S. visit. On Thursday, he will be the first ofltclal dhmer
guest of President and Mrs. Ford at the White House.
.
The king was invited to Washington by former Pres1d~nt
Nixon during his Middle J;:ast trip last Jun~. Hussem, 38, h1s w1fe,
Alita Jordanian officials and representatives of the Boeing Co.
arriv~ in a Boeing-owned 7'11 jet al Paine Field 20 miles nortll of
Seattle Saturday.
SAIGON - COMMUNIST GENNERS ATI'ACKED the
sprawling Bien Hoa air base near Saigon for Ule third day in a
row today in shellings possibly signaling an offensive agamst the
capital's outskirts. In neighboring cambodia, rebeis sank two
navy boats In the Meking river early today, killing four men and
wounding nine others. Military sources said tbe vessels were
carrying pollee to a beleaguered provincial capital.
The Saigon command said the Communists fired three
rockets into Bien Hoa early this morning, wounding two
civilians, but causlng no military damage. South Vietnaz:n~se
military sources said the Communists used a ne.w £Lr~g
technique in sending 41 Soviet-made 122 mm rockets mto B1en
Hoa 14 miles northeast oi Saigon, during the past three days.
The sources said Communists connected the firing wires
through a Small can of water and then left. Hours later, when th~
hot sun evaporated Ule water, lbe connection was made and the
rockets fired by themselves.

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•

'

...

radio, he said.
Council th•reupon approved the $1,500 or less expenditure on
the proviso that the fire department provide a bonafide bill for an
entire purchase.
Council approved the muyor's report for July showing
receipts of $163 in merChant pollee collections and Jl,t98.70 in
fines and fees for a total of 11,661.70.
Clerk Grate read a letter from the division office of the Ohio
Department of Highways at Marietta, in regard to the village's
request for signs reading, " No Through Truck Traffic" in town.
The letter sU.ted that such signs could not be placed on SR 7 but
would have to be placed on the road which leaves SR 7. The
!Continued on page 8)

en tine
.I

c

/)evoted To The Interests uf The
· VOL XXVI

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 85

Meig.~-Musun

TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1974

Area

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CE'NTS

------~--------------------------~--------------------~----------------------------------------~~~~. J

Era of working together
begun by new President"
visers, congressmen, and announced he would sign a
"some or the best economic massive aid to education bill
brains from labor, industry which had raised veto threats
and agriculture" to find a way from the Nixon White House:
to solve the worst inflation called the nation's military
sinCe World War II -now establishment " superb" and
raging at an average rate of 11 promised to give it all the funds
it needed, and assured the
per cent.
world
there would be no
He asked Congress to reactivate the Cost of Living Council deviations from the Nixonto serve as a wage and price Kissinger foreign policy .
Ford, aware that he is the
watchdog but without power to
first
President never to have
reimpose controlS, Nixon had
sought the same thing unsuc- been elected to that office or to
the vice presidency, stressed
cessfully .
He also pledged to present a tllat he would seek to serve all
balanced budget for the fiscal Americans.
year that starts next July 1 -a
"To the limits of my strength
step many economists consider and ability," he said, ''I will be
C?nciliatio~asthehallmarksof
bad medicine. for an economy the President of t.h • h\~ck,
bLS adnumstrat.Jon ,. .,_ .
suffering
from risirrg unem- brown, red and wh1te AmeriCongressme!l · interrupted
ployment as well as inflation . . cans, o,f o~d an~ y~ung, of
their former colleagne 32 times
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, · women s hb~ratto~tsts and
withapplauseinthecourseofa
Ford's male chauvmtsts and all tile
D-Minn .,
called
32-rninute speech which they
economic prescription rest of us m between, of the
generally said showed him to
poor and tile rich, of native
be at ease, his own man and
' 'simplistic.''
sons
and new refugees, of those
fully capable of handling the
Ford also asked Congress to
job .
find a compromise and who work at lathes or at desks
Julie Nixon Eisenhower and
produce national health in- or in mines or in the fields, and
her husband David sitting in
surance legislation this year; of Christians, Jews, Moslems,
tile public galleri.,; did not
pushed for enactment of Buddhists and atheists,lf there
'
Nixon's stalled trade blll; really are any atheists after
what we have a11 been
;~~:::::::::: .:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::: ::;:::;:::::·:~:~:::~:::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::
through.''
When he had finished, members of both parties - many of
them his friends, many who
still call him " Jerry" WASHINGTON (UPI) Mansfield said he was glad
Several Other Democrats and pledged to cooperate.
House Democratic Leader
Senators and representatives Ford had accepted his pr9posal at least one Republican, Sen.
from both parties praised to call a domestic summit Jacob K. Javits of New York, Thomas P. O'Neill Jt&lt;: of
President Ford's first address meeting on the economy.
also questioned Ford's conten- Massachusetts, one of the
to a joint session of Congress
But Sen. Walter F. Mondale, tion that cutting back govern- behind-the-scenes powers in
Monday, but some Democrats D-Minn., an all-but-declared ment expenditures while the impeachment effort that
questioned the new ad- candidate for president in 1976, maintaining defense spending led to Nixon's resignation,
said : 04 He was the Jerry Ford
ministration's plans for said . he had the impression would help slow inflation.
fighting inflation .
Ford's ideas on the economy
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, we all knoW. A warm human
Senate Democratic Leader were only "half formed," and DMinn ., called Ford's speech being despite the awe of his
Mike Mansfield said, "I was that they would tend to burt "a solid, homespun message" high office. He asked for our
impressed," and Senate those who most need help in lhat gave the country "a sense help and our continued
Republican Leader Hugh Scott housing, unemployment and of confidence." But Humphrey criticism and you can bet we
will give him that."
called it ·,a bellringer."
other areas.
(Continued on page 6)

WASffiNGTON (UPI ) - In a
relaxed and homespun speech
tllat brought forth whoops of
approval from Congress,
President Ford promised to
start from scratch in looking
for something to do about inflation.
MANY ATTRACTIVE BOOTHS . showing picture-like
He said he would take perwork of Meigs Countians will be featured at the 111th annual
sonal charge of the search for a
Meigs County Fair which opened today. The junior fair
solution but he warned, too,
building will particularly be eye..,atching witll displays. Here
that prices were not going to
pretty Kim Krautter worked Monday to help complete the
stop rising soort.
display area of the Five Point Star Stitchers in the junior fair
In speech delivered from
building.
I I
the House chamber -he called
it "the People's House" in an
,.;,-.,..,.».~ old, s~ntimd ental phras~ - Fordd
•
•
.Promise compromise an

ews ln Br.zefis .
.

e ,. .

.

·

.

·
' ~·
· By United Press International
COLUMBUS - OffiO, UP TO NOW, HAS FARED better
Ill an other midWestern states in farm crop production with only
north central and northwestern Ohio farmers reporting reduced
crop production caused by extremely dry conditions, the Ohio
Crop Reporting Service said Monday. Recent drought conditions
across the nation cut the 1974 corn crop alone \O 4.966 billion
bushels and posed threats for further future food price increases,
the U. S. Department of Agriculture said.
Ohio's production of corn for grain was estimated by the
service at 2111 million bushels as of Aug. I. That was 17 per cent
above last year's 240 million bushels. Yield per acre was down by
three bushels per acre to 76 bushels, compared with last year.
"The big thing -about corn in Ohio is that we have about 700,000
acres more corn planted this year for harvest than we did last
year,'' Homer Carter, a·spokesman for the service said. ''This is
the Jactor that boosted crop production estimates."
LONDON - LONDON, WHERJ;: TilE sensational thigh-high
hemline was born, pronounced tbe final words Monday: the
miniskirt is dead. It was 10 years old.
Paris, New York, Rome, Florence and other fashion centers
might have decreed it earlier, but any lingering doubt was
removed by an announcement from the C and A chain store. The
chain, Britain's biggest clothes retailer, sold 18,000 miriiskirts a
day at the height of the fashion. But, it said, "There will be no
more miniskirts when present stocks run out." '

I

SAN CLEMENTE, CAL.JF. - RICHARD M. Nixon watched
on television as President Ford's outline for post·Nixon America
drew. warm cheers from the congressmen whose readiness to
impeach and convict him forced the former president from office . Nixon congratulated Ford in a telegram, calling the speech
"a splendid message," a spokesman said.
Nixon's wife Pat, his daughter Tricia and her husband,
Edward Cox, were with him at the family 's oceanfront villa. But
his other daughter, Julie, and her husband, David Eisenhower,
were in !.he audience in the House or Representatives, seated in a
special box with the Ford family as the new chief executive
delivered hls speech. They joined in the frequent applause for
Ford, except when Ford said there would be. "no illegal tapings,
eavesdropping, buggings or break-ins in my administration."
Then they sat stony-faced, staring' straight ahead, and did not
·
join the resounding applause from the congressmen.
TURKJSH PRt;:MIER BULENT ECEVIT SET ANOTHER
deadline of 3 p.m. EDT today on whether to continue. the bogged
down Geneva talks on Cyprus or abandon them altogether .
Secretary of State Henry A. Klssinger again was reported ilrging
Greece and Turkey to .use restraint.
The Geneva talks were bogged down on vastly dnferent
Greek and Turkish Cypriot approaches to a new cimstilutlon for
Ule Eastern Mediterranean island where the approximately
~.000 Greek Cypriots and the 120,000 Turkish Cypriots have
lived in a state of animosity that has flared Into open warfare
from time to time. It was the second deadline announced by
Turkey. Ecevit previously had given Ule conference until5 p.m.
EDT today, but Turkish Foreign Minister Turan Gunes said
today in Geneva tills was not an "ultimatum" and that the talks
with Britain and Greece
' would continue. ·

applaud when Ford said there
would be no "illegal tapings,
eavesdroppings, buggings or
break-ins" in the Ford administration .
This was unexpectedly explicit criticism of the conduct
of ·the presidency of Richard
Nixon. A Nixon spokesman in
San Clemente said the former
president.sent Ford a telegram
of praise for the speech.
As lhough to show he meant
business, Ford, before taking
!lie ride back to capitol Hill in
the fourth day of his presidency, engaged , in an act of
economic "jawboning" agai~t
. General Motors, the largest
corporation in the country,
He criticized through a White
.House statement GM's jntention -announced the day he
iook office - to raise prices for
new cars tllis fall by 10 per
cent, $460 each on the
averages.
· Ford said he would embrace
a suggestion from Senate
Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield and call a summit
meeting of presidential ad-

Praise is slightly mixed ,. ·.\

\

HUNTINGTON - Col. Scott
B. Smith assumed hls position
Monday as District Engineer
for the Army Corps of Enginers
here . He succeeded Brig. Gen.
Kenneth E. Mcintyre , engineer
since 1971, now Deputy
Director of Civil Works in the
office of the Chief of Engineers,
Washington, D. C.
The Huntington District is
responsible
for
water

F~ir

resources activities of the
Army Corps of Engineers, and
related real estate functions , in
central and southeastern Ohio,
eastern Kentucky, a portion of
midwestern Virginia, a small
portion of northwestern North
Carolina, and all but the
northern panhandle and northeastern portion o£ Wes t
Virginia . The Huntington
District is part or the Corps'

hegins

The lllth annual Meigs County Fair opened for its first full
day of activities this niorning under sunny skies.
Judging was underway Ulis morning in the Horticulture and
Domestic Arts Departments .. However, in most othe.r departments e&gt;thibltors have until4 p.m. today to get their displays into
place.
WASHINGTON - THE FEDERAL POWER CommiSsion
Last night the Meigs County Ministerial Assn. held Its rellgiou•
refused Monday lo reconsider a June 14 ruling licensing Ule
service
at the grandstand, "unofficially" opening the fair . The
controversial Blue Ridge power project unless Congress acts to
service. had been a tradition; but was discontinued a few years
preserve tile historic river that is involved In the dispute. A long
until last night. Speaker was George Glaze, minister of the
list of parties, including enviroruncntal groups, the state of North
Middleport Church of Christ, and th~re were special musical
Carolina and two North carolina counties, had flied a request lor
numbers.
a rehearing on the Blue Ridge project, but all were denied
This evening at 7:30 the grandstand attraction' will be the
wltllout comn&gt;ent by the FPC.
·
annual
pony pulling contest.
·'
·
The proposed $430 million hydroelectric powp plant would
Wednesday judging will contin~e and the open class beef
be constructed on the New River, which runs through West
judging
will begin at I p.m. The 1-H horse show was held this
Virginia, Virginia and North Carolina, and provide power to _
afternoon and 'tomorrow at 1 p.m. the open class horse show wlll
Virginia, West VIrginia, Ohio&gt; Kentucky, Indiana, TenneSllee.altd
(Continued on page 8)
MiChigan.
_.

•

Work to begin in September;
council considers request
for increase in cable TV
rates but action is delayed

Col. Smith bossing area. Corps.

YOUR HEADQUARTERS

TM

S1995

re&lt;Juelit for the rate Jucrease but It wM not known If tbe
mutiun would carry or nul, wlt}J onJy four members present.
Further investigation by Grate this morning, jQdlcates that
s ince the operation of the cable system In Middlepor1 was set
up by urdlnruwe, a11y changes in the operation lnduding rates
must also be handled by ordlnw1ce.
Along discussion wa.• held on the approv•l of the purchase of
new fitdiO equipment for the new Middleport emergency vehicle.
Councilman Hoffman urged approval of the new equipment while
Lhe lruck is being prepared for delivery . Council had recently
allocnted $1,500 from federal revenue sharing funds expected
during the next year for the equipment. However. the equipment
is ex-pt&gt;cted to cost more tha n $1 ,500, and hcoce would, by taw, be
r(1&lt;luired to be advertised for bids.
'1111! Flre Dept. has agreed to pay any additional cost over
$1,$00,
However, it was jnformally agreed that the depi~rtment,
perhaps ~ could purc hase t1 petrt of the equipment outright so that
the $1,500 rlgure, or Jess, could be maintained. Clerk-Trea.'iurer
Ge ne Grate, however , •tatcd that before he will pay the $1,500
sta tement for equipm ent, he must have a bonified bill so that th e
matter is covered legally. The bill cannot he only for a part of the

t

a

DOUBLE DUTY
UPRIGHT

. Saffron is the most expenSive of all spices. It is the stigma of a purple-flowered
crocus and when dried de velops its deep orange ~o lor
and aromatic flavor .

FOR·
Our Lunch Speci.!il Is another reason whY
"Melgs County loves "what 1he Colonel cooks."

-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

IICIUDfD

The ahcient science of
alchemy was based upon the
fut1le attempt to change lead,
~ron and ·other base metals
tnto gold.

Middleport VUlage Countil Monday night accepted the bid of
Jn addition\ the company was alSo contracted to do the
tile Shelly Co., Thornville, to r.,ur!ace portions of seve ral streets
Riverview Cemetery entrance, u disUmce of about 500 feet, Ht &lt;~
tn tile community at tbe cost of $23,120.
(..'Ost of about $2,800, '111 i~ wtll be paid for out of fed eral revenue
sharing funds .
Streets seleded ·for resurfacing were :
North Fiftll, a distance of about 560 feet.
Council meeting in regular session , approved th~ necessary
Fisher St. from North Fifth to tile nO&lt;th end, about 250 feet. transfers of f~nds to cover payment of the road improvemcnL'i.
Garfield and·Soutll First to South Second St., about 200 feet.
The status uf a rate increa~ request by the Pointvicw
· Lincoln St., from South First St. to South Second St., about. Television Cable Service was :stiU undetermined this mornh1g.
215 feet.
Officers of the company nlet with council to ask pcrmis:;ion
South Third St., l.Jlcust to Ash , about 500 feet.
to raise the monthly rate of subscribers frotrt ;:;.:;n to $6 and the
Mulberry and Fourth Sis. from South Third to Locos! St., ·rate for senior citizens and the handicapped from $3.50 to f4 .SO a
approximately 120 feet.
month . Councilmen ~"red Hoffman , WilHam Walters and JameS
Lynn St., from Oliver to Vine Sis., about 610 feet .
Brewer voted in favor of the request. However, councilman
Vine St. from Grant to its end, about360feet.
Martin Kelly cast a negative vote. With only four councilmen
present, a request was made to Solicitor Bernard Fultz On
Laurel St. from Pearl to Hysell, about 655 feet.
Maple and Fairview from Page to Park Sts., about440 feet. whether llle measure would pass uuder the J..l vote. A decision
will be forthcoming .
Park St. from Page to Fairview.
U1e alley behind the new apartments on first St., from
ln order to change the rlltes of the PolnTVIew Television
Walnut to Coal, about 2tio feet.
Cable service in Middleport, an ordinance must be p8.ssed by
Rutland St., First St. to Second St., about 2601eet.
village council, accordJng to word received late Tuesday
mondng by clerk.J.reasurer Gene Grate from the Ohio
The cost includes labor and material!. The Shelly Co., the
Bureau
of Inspection. Cow1cll approved 3-1 Monday ntght a
mly bidder, expects to start work in September.

STRIKING CARPENTERS RETURNED TO WORK IN
Southern Californi~ today, but bus drivers took to the picket
lines. Elsewhere, striking football players agreed ~ return to
their teams for a 14-&lt;iay cooling off period, local contract settlements were reached with the Bell Telephone employes in
Pennsylvania and Illinois and auto workers returned to their jobs
at one of tllree strike-bound General Mtors plants.
Some 3,000 drivers were involved in the Southern California
Rapid Transit District strike. Negotiations between the drivers,
represented by the United Transportation Union, and the district
broke down Sunday night. The strike coul~ affect an estimated
6SO 000 commuters in l.Jls Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San
Be;nardino counties. The union is seeking a 34 per cent pay hike
and has rejected Ule district's offer of a 7 to 7.5 per cent hike.

1r-;~
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$23,120 Middleport street repair contract let

Ohio River Division.
Col. Smith was Chief of
Plans , Research and Systems
in the Directorate of Military
Construction in the Office,
Ch ief
of
Engineers,
Washington , D. C. in his last
assignment.
Previous
assignments included disivion
level staff duty in the 9th Infantry (G-4) in Vietnam .
A 1956 graduate of the U, S.
Military Academy at West
Point, Col. Smith received a
master of science degree In
civil . engineering at the
!university of Illinois In 196i, .
and a master of public administration degree at Pennsylvania SU in 1973. He is a
graduate of the U. S. Army
Command and General Staff
College, the British Staff
College, and the U. .S. Army
War College.
He has been awarded · the
Silver Star, Legion of Meril
with I oak leaf cluster, Bronze
Star Medal wii.!J 4 -oal&lt; lear
clusters and V Device, Ali
Medal ( 20 awards) with V
Device, Army Commendation
Medal with 3 oak leaf clusters
and · V Device, Purple Hearl,
Gallantry Cross with Palm (4)
and nwnerous service medals
. and other foreign awards.

~

CHORES ARE INVOLVF;D in prepat·ing animal! for the '
glamour of the show ring. Here Scott Bearhs, 13, son of Mr.
and Mrs. James Bearhs, 'near Pomeroy, baths one of his
sheep for showing at Ule ill til Meigs County Fair.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A chance of dally showers
and thundershower~ and
warm. Highs tn the 80s
Thursday and middle 80s to
lower 90s Saturday. Lows in
the 60s early Thursday and
middle 60s to lower 70s early
Saturday.

Coal firm
to pay on
road work
Robert Clark, Meigs County
Commissioner, said today, the
Southern Ohio Coal Co. is going
to pay $75,000 of the county's
share, which is $120,000, to
improve the county road
system from Salem Center to
the Carpenter areas and SR
143.
With the coal company's
amolUlt, this will leave a
balance of $45,000 the coun ty
will spend .
Congressman
Monday
Cia; ence Miller announ ced
that the Economic Development Administration had
approved a grant of $460,000 for •
the $600,000 project.

Best hay will
win trophies

COL. · SMITII

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions - J;:rich Boegli,
Pomeroy i Zelia Lawson,
Racine ;
Linda
Baker,
Pomeroy; Rosa Bachus,
Racine;
Maggie Roush,
Racine : Rodney Grueser,
Pomeroy ; Menifee BlevinS,
Pomeroy; Vehna Amburgey,
Syracuse .
Discharges - None .

The Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District is inviting participation in the Hay
Show at \he 1974 Meigs County
Fair in which b'ophies wiil be
f!ol given in each of three
categories, best all grass hay,
·best 50 . percent . and over
legumes hay, and best 49
perceJJt and Wlder legumes
hay. .
.
Each ~car the district offers
awards for this segment of the
agriculture show at the fair .
This year the trophies wUI be
desk sets with engraves plates .
' ~amtng the appropriate
category. David Parry, district
con5ervationlst, is assisting in
the 4-H interviews concerning
conservation projects at tho
fair today.

Gridder in
road mishap
at Cheshire
A 16-year old Rt. 1 Gallipolis
youth, later identified by
school officials at Kyger Creek
High School as Jeffery J.
Blazer, center for the 1974 KC
football team, suffered a
fractured nose and body
bruises in a traffic accident at
10:30 a.m. Monday on Rt. 554,
seven lentils of a mile west of
Rt. 7.
The Gallia-Melgs Post State
Highway Patrol said the youth
lost contcol of his car which ran
off the left side of the highway
into. an embankment. There
was moderate damage to his
car. No charge was filed.
The first of two Meigs County
accidents occurred at 12:40
p.m. on Rt. 124, five and six
tenths miles east of Racine
where an auto driven by
Wilmer Woodrow Black, 58, Rt.
1, Racine, strUck the side of a
car driven by Marty Morarlta, ·
24, Rl. 1, Racine. The accident
occurred ·when the brakes on
Black's ~ar failed . Black was
cited to having defective
brakes.
Al4: 08 p.m. at tile junction of
Rl. 124 and 325, an unidentified
car flipped a stone into the
windshield of a vehicle driven
tiy Ralph Shane , 28, of
Syracuse .
SALE ON FRIDAY
The IUlnual Meigs County
Junior Fair steer, lamb and
swine sale will be held Friday
in the livestock judging are!UI
at 6:1S p.m. The. junior fair .
exhibitors of the county will
offer 06 steers, 30 lambs and U
hogs for · stile during th~
evening ..
SHORTER HOIJRS
The Meigs County Court.
house will be .closed '!'hurllday
and Friday afternoon&amp;, Auc.
15-16, to permit tho Mei&amp;l
County CoutlhOUJe employetta
to atterjd tile Meigs County
Fair. Hours wlll be from 9 II) 12.

~

�'

t - The Daily Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Tul'l'dav, Aug. 13, 197t

junior auxiliary names officers

II

. .....
ribbons; Kay and Mrs. cart.(Betty) Irvin, 11 blue ribbons;
and Nora stoats, chairman of the Home Arts Divtslon.
Missmg from the picture but als&lt;l placing second with II blue
ribbons is June Burns. The Robert Tillis family placed third

HOME ARTS TRUPHY WIN J~ C: KS - Mrs . Dorothy
Click (left ) was the top wmner m thts divisiOn with 16 blue
ribbons. She is followed by the two second place wmners
from left to right : Mr. and Mrs. Charles Foglesong, 11 blue

with nine blue tibbons.

New officers were elected
and several donahons were
Jll,llde during a recent meeting
of the Junior American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post ~9 , at the hoJJle of Mrs.
Harry Davis, advisor.
Elected were Pam Powers,
president ; Paula Kloes, vice
president ; Peggy Glrolami,
secretary; Cheryl Lehew,
chaplain; Ida Gasc1, sergeantat-arms ; Cheryl Lehew,
historian; Denice Marshall and
Miss Lehew, color bearers ;
and Mrs. Kloes and Lori Ann
WOod, color guards. The new
officers will be installed at the
September meeting.

A package was prepared

during the meeting lor Dorothy
Leifheit at the Orient Hospital.
Donations were made to tbe
Anita Renee Lavacy fund to
assist with open heart surgery
and to muscular dystrophy.
Three members of the unit,
Debra, Charlotte and Robin
Lehew, Colwnbus, will stage a
carnival at their home
Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday with proceeds to go
to muscular dystrophy. The
juniors donated 50 nag lapel
pins to be used at the carnival
which w11l be televised over
WTVN, Channel 6, Columbus.
Ge~weU cards were signed
for Mrs. Tom Goett and Robm

Lehew. Flowers were sent to
Mrs. Goett at Veter•""
Memorial Hospital and a gill
was sent to Robin who Is now
re cupera tlng from a tonslllectl)my.
Read at the meeting were
thank-you notes from Mrs. Ed
UUum, Dayton Veterans
Hospital, for ribbons sent there
to be used in rug making, and
from Richard Cromstock,
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital,
for items taken to the Eighth
District birthday party last
month. A letter was also read
!rom Mrs. Melvm Junge for a
large box of cancelled stamps
to be used in a special project
of her unit. A thank-you card
·will be sent to Mrs. Frank

Birthday meal
honors ladies

Powers for hosting a cookout
for the junior auxiliary
members recenUy.
A swimming party is being
held today at the Middleport
pool. Next meeting will be a
workshop Sept. 5 at the Legion
hall . Fay Reibel, president,
had charge of the meeting with
Cheryl Lehew giving the
opening prayer and members
saying the pledge and
preamble In unison.
During the concluding social
hour, ice cream and cake were
served In observance of the
birthday anniversary of Mrs.
Grace Pratt, president of the
American Leg1on AUiiliary.
Mrs. Robert Couch was a guest
at the meeting.
row, Frank Seth, coach, Kim Setll, Marty Krawsczyn,
Rhonda Hudson, Susan Wright, Jane Sisson, Mel Snouffer,
Gathy Blaettnar, Susan Zirkle, and Lori Seth, assistant
coach. Absent were Lorra Wisecup, K.rlstian Anderson ,
Andrea Riggs, and Beth Perrin.

POMEROY GIRLS' SOFTBALL TEAM finished the
season with a ~7 record. Shown are, front row, 1-r, Sandi
Miller, Peggy Girolami, Anne Filch, Shari Mttch, Joni
Murray, Nancy Sm1th, Raeleen Oliver, Jamie Sisson; back

Polly 's Pointers

&gt;

.

CULiNARY ARTS AWARDS - Trophies were presented
by the Mason County Fair Culinary Arts Co.chairmen, Mrs.
Clair Lee Cottrill, Jr., far left, and Mrs. Lieulo Roush, right,
to the exhibitors wllllling the most blue ribbons m that

department at this year's Mason County Fair. Receiving the
trophies are Mrs. C. E. Erwin, second from left, third place ;
Mrs. Manford Bauer, Sr., second place and Mrs. Dayton
Durst, first place.

Mrs .
Olive
Stobart,
Seminole, Fla ., and Mrs .
Mildred Lee, Albany, _were
honored at a surprise birthday
dinner held at the home of their
brother and sister·in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Laurence Donohue,
Pomeroy .
Attending
were
Gene
Slobart, Seminole, Fla ., Mrs.
Lee's children, Mary, Anita
and Amanda, and her granddaughter, Angela Lee; Mr. and
Mrs . Raymond Donohue and
children Dennis, Linda, and
Kenda ; and children of the
hosts, Michael, William,
Katrina, Lorena and Barbara.
Mr. and Mrs. Slobarl stayed
al'the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Donohue durmg their vacation
in Ohio.
ATI'END FUNERAL
Mrs. Sylvia Carman, Long
Hollow Rd., Pomeroy, has
received word of the death of
her first cousin, Adran Smith,
at TUscarawas. The funeral
was held at 11 a.m. Monday at
Tuscarawas and going from
here were Mrs. Carman, Mrs .
Leota Smith and Mr. and Mrs.
Don Belzing, Hemlock Grove .

Ross Filson of
Mason Co. dies
PT. PLEASANT - Ross N.
Filson , 86, 1825 Jefferson
Boulevard, a prominent Point
Pleasant businessman,
president of the Point Pleasant
Building and Loan Company
the past eight years, died at
5:30p.m. Sunday in Pleasant
Valley Hospital after a brief
illness .
Funeral
services are
scheduled Wednesday at 2 p.m.
at the Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home. The Rev. Rufus A.
Cromartie will be in charge.
Burial will follow 'in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
V1s1tation hours will be after
2 p m. Tuesday at the funeral
home . In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made to the
Mason County Cancer Fund or
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr. Filson, who had contributed to his adopted
hometown in many ways, was
born m Racine, Ohio, March 3,
1888, a son of the late Frank
Leshe and Deliah Aumiller
Filson.
He was a veteran of World
War II; a 50-year member of
Point Pleasant Mmturn Lodge
AF and AM, Masons ; and a
member of the Point Pleasant
Post American Legion 23.
For more than 50 years he
was m the theater business in
Pomt Pleasant being the owner
and manager of the former
Lyric Theater, Stale Theater
and the Mason Drive-ln. He
had been assoc1ated with the
Pomt Pleasant Building and
Loan since 1940.
Survivors inclUde his widow,
Mrs. Clara Wartenburg Filson ;
one daughter, Mrs. Polly A.
Adkins, Point Pleasant; three
grandchildren, Greg, Bruce
and Unda Adkms ; a brother,
William
Filson,
Point
Pleasant, and a sister, Mrs.
Homer G. Marlin, local.

SWEEPSTAKES AWARD - Fair Board President Floyd Rayburn, right, is shown
presenting the 13th Annual Mason County Fair Sweepstakes Trophy to Mr. and Mrs. Phllbp
Click, Jr.,Mt Alto. The Clicks won the awa1·d for domg the most outstanding job m showing at
the fair .

DR. LAMB

Swing your
partner
.
to good health
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
wonderful spor t" Severa l
doctors
have told us that
DEAR DR. LAMB - This IS
probably a somewhat different •partici patiOn 1n thiS hght
letter or inuiry than yo u are exercise, both physical and
accustomed to rece1vmg. l'm mental, was probably largely
now nearly 72 and have been responSible for our well bemg .
married 53 years. I inherited a Why don't they recommend 1t
fine body and was blessed with to others or participate m it
pare nts who never became themselves ? Our c ompany
tired of advising me to breathe doctor, who checks me every
deeply, drink plenty of 1\'ater, year , usually greets me w1lh
chew my food well and never 11 Hey I \\'hat are you doing
make a glutton of myself They here ? I should be gettmg adalso admonished me to "keep vice from you. " But when 1
busy domg good and produc- say, "Why don' t you lake up
ll ve thmgs. " It all made good square dan cmg ?'' he changes
sense to me, so 1 followed their the subject. Can you tell me
advice J strayed, but never far why ? My w1fe contends they
- and it has pa1d off.
are afratd they'll run out of
1 have never requtred an patie nts . Could this be true'
aspirm nor a doctor 's care
DEAR READER - Dancmg
ex:cept for a hernia operation Is wonderful e xer cise. It's
when a young man . L seldom great for those who enJOY 1t. I
smoke, but dnnk beer or lugh- have orte'n recommended 1t to
bal1s on occaston to celebrate people . It IS a lot more fun than
something. Both my wife and I joggmg . YQu can dance m
have always been physically accbrdance to your level of
active all our lives . We have physical fitness and healtll. A
played baseball, rot ball, tennis slow ballroom dance is fme for
and enjoy skating , swimmmg those who are not used to much
and dancing. We take no activity. When you are in
vitamins or special sup- better shape you might wan t to
plements, but cat stmpl e. do somethmg more achve . Of
•ourishing food . We both weigh course, if you haven't been
ubout the same as when we doing much physica ll y for
were kids and have never had some time 'I would ouggost
the need to diet.
laking 11 easy at first and
About 22 years a go we gradually building up your
· switched from ballroom toleran ce as you would In any
dancing to square and round other spOrt.
.dancing, which we have both
[ suspect that most doctors
taught and called for over 20 don 't recommend it because
years. Many people we teoch they don ' t like to dane&lt;
and call for enjoy much the themselves (because of lack ol
same gOod physical and mental experience ). What your doctor
alertness and health. We recommends often has a lot to
beHeve this wholesome sport do with his own habits. If he
does help most people enor- smokes he may be reluctant to
!&lt;!U you that you should slop. If
mously.
My question is, why do so few he is on the fat side he may be
doctors ever recommend this 'ooo easy oh you about your own

~

diet problems.
Jackte Sorenson of the
~;'resident's
Co un cil
on
Physical Fitness and Sports
has been promoting ''Aerobic
Dancing'' from one end of the
coun try to the other . By
vigorous dancmg, as she
demonstrates, you can get a
t r emendous

amount

of

phySical ac tivity. And, thiS
he lps a lot 10 mamtaining
health and controllmg wmghl.
Anyway, I'm all for it and think
it is good exerciSe for all people
at all ages. Just choose the
nght level to start with and
enjoy yourself on the way to
better health
COURSE COMPLETED
LONG BOTI'OM - Private
Harvey E. Roseberry, 21, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Albert E.
Roseberry, completed a nineweek fleid rad io mechanic
course at the U.S. Army F1eld
Artilleo. School, Ft. Sill, Okla.

~~~

DaiiJ ~~~~
I

DEVOTEDromE
fN'I'ER!BI'OF •

I

MKIGS-M~ ""EA,

•

:

Grid tickets

CHE8TER L. TANNDIILL,
Elet.Ed.
KOIIF.RTIIOEP'LICB.

m,.ra.r

,

Publilhed d.lly l!acept Slturcft, h1 The
Ohio Y1Uey Publlahlng eompny, lll
Court St, ~~ Ohkl, 587• 11u.LneM
· Office Phone tn-Zl51 Edttorill Phone tn- '
21~7 .

SK'and clua potllfl

I

p16d •t ~,

Oh.lo.

1

I

'
N1tlon•l adverU1In1 rtpreant.tlve 1
Bottlntlll&amp;LIIpll!r. Inc •12 EaM: 4)'1(1 Sl '

1 NnYort., NtwVork
J
1
~r•Let DrellnftdbJ~
wtlere available Ill cent~ pow
u1
MaiM aouw trhth t:lirTk ..-.tee I'IDt

I

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IY&amp;U.bll. One ll*litl, A.IO. By Dllll -.,
CtUo mel W, Va , 0.. Y..-, tit; lib
1 montha, "~ : Thru monlh1, M
Ellewben $2Z.OIIyw ; ab:lTIObtha 'IUO,

thrt~.~ rnonU., •aa. ~
lndudfa~y'f1mn.&amp;ntlnel.

pice '

~---~~--------~
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••

un sale at l,oint
PT. PLEASANT - Season
tickets to Point Pleasant Higl•
School football games are
available at Long's Sport Shop
on Sixth St. Season passes must
be renewed by Augusl30. After
this date all remaining seats
will be put on sale on a first
come first served basis. Single
game reserve seals will go on
sale at 6 p.m. the night of the
game.

What's what with
Social Security?

Reds, Dodgers dropped Ryan whiffs 19 batters

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I would like to know if and how one can
restore the luster to polished cotton. - MARIE.

By CHRIS TURKEL
UP! Sports Writer
Willie Montanez says he's
glad be wasn't traded. The
Philadelphia Phillies are glad
too, considering the way the 26year-old first baseman is
hitting.
Montanez, now second ln the
National League in hitting,
smashed two doubles Monday
night, driving in two runs and
scoring once to lead Philadelphia to a 4-1 win over the
San Francisco Giants. And he
attributes his recent torridhitting streak to something off
the field.
" My new son (Guillermo Jr.)
has been gOod luck to me,"
Montanez said.
The
elder
Montanez
celebrated the birth of his
namesake July 13 by going 4for-4 that day. Since then, he
has hit safely in 32 of hiS lasl33
games, including a streak of 24
games. He currently is
working on an eight-game
string.
In the month since he has had
his good luck charm, the proud
father has hit at a .409 clip to
move into second place among
NL batting leaders with a .324
average.
He has easily been the
Phillies' most productive hitter
during the last month, squelching trade rumors which had
persisted since last winter.
"It was hard, not knowing

.,

DEAR POLLY - My biggest Pet Peeve is with the way
Social Security is set up. Both my husband and I worked fuU time ·•
until65and paid almost the full a~ount most or the time. Yet, as
a wife 1can receive either the Soclal Security for which I patd or ·"
as a ~ife or widow only the one I choose of the two, which
probably will be the one that is the greatest This is also for the
husband if the wife dies first. I do not think thiS IS farr as both my "
husband and 1 paid into tbe fund and yet the remaining one gets "'
the benefit of only one contributiOn.
"
There should be some allowance for this double payment. No ..
other insurance demands two prenuums with only one benefit. "
This facet of Social Security must have been pla!Uled by rich "'
men or some college professors out of touch with a realistic "
world. This letter is long but so ts (IIY Pet Peeve - and strong, ...
too. - ]llRS. PET PEEVE HERSELF.
DltAR POLLY - Lucille should put her shedding angora and ·•
rabbit's hair sweater in a lightweight plastic sweater bag and '"
pop it in the bottom of the refrigerator. No fuss, no muss and good
luck to her.
''
I remove glue left from !bose picture hangers with lighter ..
fiuid. lt takes spOts off painted walls when carefully applied with ·•
a clean natural sponge. - E.C.Q.
··
DEAR POLLY - When making my own body shirts I use
fast tape on the crotches that close. This is the , •
tape such as we put on wrap-around skirts, slips and hair
Pam Clary and family, Mrs.. protectors to wear at night. This is easier to fasten than the snaps
Connie Hill, Sharon Hill, Mrs. usually round on readymade body shirts. - L. T.
Wilma Ervin.
DEAR POLLy _ Mter one has her first baby most of us hate
Others presenting gifts to to throw away the cute baby cards we have received. I bought a
Mrs. Ervin were The Sulton large inexpensive picture frame and painted it white. White ,.
Methodist Church Adult Class, construction paper was used for the background mat. Then I .,
Mrs. Opal Van Meter, Lisa Van mounted about a dozen of the cards on it and an unusual "picMeter, Mrs . Betty Bell, Mrs . . ture" was aU ready to fill a bare spot on !be wall in baby's room
Debbie Rose, Mrs. · Tom where it has become a conversation piece. I have since used • •
McKitterick, Edith and John, other greeting cards in frames for other places and thought some ,..
Mrs. Ruth McKitterick and ofthereaders might like to try this, too. - MRS. R. H.
family, Mrs. Winston Varney,
"
Mrs. John Jinks, Mrs. Elmer
You wlll receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homeCook and Mrs. luka Christman. making Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution to a
problem. Write Polly in care ol tbls newspaper,

RACINE - A layette shower
honoring Mrs. Eugene Ervin
was held recenlly at the home
of Mrs. Paul Ervin, Racine,
with Kathy McDaniel, Helen
and Debb1e Hill as hostesses.
Games were played with
prizes awarded to the winners.
Cake, decorated with pink and
blue booties, nuts, mints and
punch were served.
Attending were Mrs. Elsie
Circle, Mrs. Sue Follrod, Mrs.
Teresa Van Meter, Becky and
Melanie, Mrs. Mary Circle,
Mrs. Martha Lee, Mrs. Wilma
McGraw, Mrs. Claudia Roush,
Mrs. Beulah Roush, Mrs .
Grace Chaney, Mrs. Dorothy
C)laney, Mrs. Lois Bell and
Lorna, Mrs. Faith Varney,
Jenny Raye Varney, Mrs.
Mary Smith and Jerry, Mrs.
Donna Jean Smith, Bonnie and
The lOth birthday anTammy Smith, Mrs. Helen niversary of Brian Lee George
Bickers, Kim Bickers, Mrs. was observed Friday with a
party from 6 to 8 p.m. at the
home of his grandparents, Mr.
ENJOY OUTING
and Mrs. Lee McComas,
Mr. and Mrs. James Brewer Middleport.
·
entertained Sunday at their
Games were played under
Middleport home with a family
the superviSion of Mrs. Tom
cookout. Attending were Mr.
Grueser, with prizes being won
and Mrs. Buddy Moore, Jill
and Brent, Gallipolis; Mr. and by Barbara Grueser, Brent
George, Eddie Johnson and
Mrs. Richard Douglas and
Paul Horton. The refreshment
Kelly, Alfred; Mr. and Mrs.
table was centered with two
Ted Riley, Sr., Clifton, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Roush, cakes, one a gift from Brian's
grandmother, the other a gift
Guy Ia and Tommy, Mason, W.
from Mrs. Robert Rinehart.
Va. ; Betty Lou Gilmore, Kelly
Gilmore, Mike Newell, Mr. and Mrs. Dianne George assisted
bY. Mrs. Rinehart and Mrs.
Mrs. Ted Riley, Jr., and John
Judy Burns served cake, ice
Pat, Mrs. Ronald Cowan and
cream and Kool-Ald.
Ryan, Marybeth Brewer and
Attending were Rhonda ,
Jimmy and Terry Brewer. Ice
Wendie and James Burns,
cream for the outing was made
Barbara Grueser, Anthony
by Vernon Roush.
Wilson, Darin and Beth Ann
Wolf, Lydia and Eddie JohnCELEBRATES
son, David, Jeanne and Paula
Tracy . Dawn
Eblin Horton, Margery MiUer, Terri
celebrated her first birthday Marie Sprouse, David Hendrix,
recenlly with a party at the Brent, Da~id and Christopher
home of her parents, Mr. and 'George.
Mrs. Richard Eblin, Pomeroy.
Sending a gift but unable to
Gifts were presented to the attend due to illness was Tanya
youngster and refreshments of Stobart. Adults attending were
ice cream, cake and Kool-Aid Mrs . ,Grueser, Mrs. Eloise
were served. Attending were Wilson, Mrs .~ Rinehart, Mrs.
)irs . Ann Evans, Pam, Burns and Mrs. McComas.
Christie, Jay; Mrs. Janel Balloons, chewing gum and
Eblin, Doug and Mandy; Mr. suckers were given as favors .
and Mrs. Lawrence Triplett,
Mike and Angie ; Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford IcenhoWer, Mr . and
Mrs . Walter Wears, Mrs. Anna
Ward, Dixle, Kim and Tami
SYRACUSE - "Group Care
Eblin, and Kelli Ross, visiting
for
Young Children" was the
here from Youngstown. Sending gifts were Tracy's · program topic presented to
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Karl Kloes at the August
meeting of the United
Clay Eblin.
Methodist Women ol• jthe
Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse.
Mrs. Kloes was assisted tn
HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Lucille Harrison, the program by Mrs. Helen
Middleport, Is a medical Teaford, Miss Marcia Karr and
patient at Holzer Medical Mrs. Bernice Winebrenner.
Center. Those wishing I!&gt; send The meetlng, ' at the home o(
her cards may address them to Mrs. Grace Weese, opened
Room 401 at the hOspital.
wltil a call to worship, prayer

~.;.o;.q;,;,;.o~;o;.o;.u:o,o;o;.o.•,• '•'•'•' 0

~~-:..-.o;.:·.·;-..!&lt;.•.·t.~

~-·

•:0:

..0:•.

-~·

LANCASTER - The annual
Matlack family reunion was
held recenUy at the Rising
Park at Lancaster with a
picnic lunch at noon.
Mrs. Josephine McGhee,
Woodstrock, Va., the only
surviving descendent of the
late William and Lydia
Matlack, was present. Others
attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Robinson, Woodstock
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Brooks, Mansfield ; Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Kim, Elizabeth,
Cynthia and Lara, Marietta;
Mr. and 'Mrs. John Arbaugh,
Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs.
Hardy Rausch, Marysville;
Mr. and Mrs. Foster Bean,
Guysville; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Roush, Chester ; Mrs. Diana
Roush and Jeff, Chester; .-Mr.
and Mrs . Ronnle Pooler,
Jimmy and Susie, Middleport;
Mrs .
Mabel
Sindle,
Springfield ; Mr . and Mrs .
Elwood Sindl.e , Springfield;
Lily, Donna and Doug Shultz,
Columbus; Leah Arbaugh
Hawkins , Columbus; Carl
Matlack, Tuppers Plains ;
Virginia Kim Campbell, Guysville; Rosalie, Bruce, Lon and
Ailsa HUJJlphrey, Mr'. and Mrs.
Harold Parker, David and
Jhonda, Coal Grove.

•
UMW
h
as meettnV
Asbury
0
from the calendar of daily
prayers, and a reading from
"The Healing Fountain" given
by Mrs . Kloes, president,
Devotions by Mrs . Allee
Capehart Included scrlplure
from I Cor, 2:9-10, a poem,
"Consecralloo" and an article
" Dwell Deep" . OflicerJ'
reporla were given with 10
shuWn calls being reported.
"One Solitary 'Life" and the
reading of Psalm 8 by Mra.
Tearord
concluded
the
meeting.
,

I

I

»
::.·

c·

:~:

from day to day whether I
would be with the team. But
I'm glad I wasn't traded,"
Montanez said. "I'm a better
hitter now than I wa s in my
rookie season ( 1971) when I hit
30 homers.
"All my life I've been a line
drive hitter. In '71, the ball just
rose. Overall, though, it probably hurl me. People were
expecting home runs after that
and that's not really my style."
Jim Lonborg checked the
Giants on seven hits to post his
13th victory against 11 losses.
After the game, Lonborg said,
"Pitching is more fun now than
it was in 1967.''
The former ace of the Boston
Red Sox staff credited his new
attitude to his transihon from a
thrower to a pitcher, saying,
" If you're going to pitch a long
time in the ' big leagues, you
have to learn how to pitch
instead of just throw."
In the only other NL games,
New York trimmed Los An·
geles, 3-1 ; Pittsburgh beat
Cincinnati, 7-4, and St. Louis
edged San Diego, &amp;.5, in . 13
innings.
In American League action,
Detroit stopped Kansas City, 5I; Milwaukee roped Texas, 5-1;
Oakland nipped New York, 3-~,
and California topped Boston;
4-2, in the only scheduled
games.
Mets 3, Dodgers 1
Harry Parker scattered nine

hits for his first complete
major league game and John
Milner bounced an estimated
475:fool homer off the scoreboard in ri~hlto g1ve the Mets
a triumph over the Dodgers.
Milner's blast, his 18th, was
believed to be the longest
homer ever hit to right field at
Shea Stad1um.
Pirates 7, Reds 4
Willie Stargell and Ed Kirkpatrick hit two-run homers and
AI Oliver added four hils to
lead the Pirates over the Reds

'

TUESDAY
REVIVAL now in progress at ' ·
Faith Tabernacle Church, '"
Bailey Run Rd., through Aug . .,
14. Rev. L. M. Adams, HunUnglon, guest speaker. Ri!v.
Emmett Rawson is the pastor. '
Everyone welcome .
REGULAR August meeting "
Meigs Chapter 53, DAY, "
can!!lllled. Picnic for members ,
and wives at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Those attending take '
table service and covered dish "
dinner. Be at the chapter
home,
Butternut
Ave ., ...
Pomeroy, by 8 p.m. precedmg
.'
picnic.
RACINE Lodge !61 F and
AM , regular meeting 7:30p.m.
Work in fellowcraft degree.
Refreshments afterward .
WEDNESDAY
MEIGS Band Boosters, 9 . '
a.m. at Meigs Stadtiun in
Pomeroy. Bring pam! brushes
and rollers to paint booth .
PAST presidents of Drew
Webster Unit 39 American
Legion Auxiliary , ~ annual
picnic, home of Mrs. Harry
Houdashelt, Grant St. , Middleport, 6:30p.m.
WHITE Rose Lodge, family ·,'
potluck picnic, 6:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Dorothy Morris, · '
Sioslh Second, Middleport.
PAST Presidents, American
Legion Auxiliary, Drew "
Webster Post 39, 6 p.m.,
cookout-at the home of Mrs.
Harry Houdashelt, Grant St., "
Middleport.
POMEROY - Middleport ''"
Uons Club, noon, Meigs Inn. ""
THURSDAY
RACINE American Legion
Post 61Yl, regular meeting, 8 ...
p.m. at the p_ost home .
Refreahments of sweet corn,
hamb\l'ger~ lllld hot and cold
!Ill
drlnlta to be eerved.

.....

BU&amp;Y BEE Class, Mid· ~·
dleport First Baptllt Church, ..
7:30p.m. at the church,

COOPERSTOWN , N.Y.
(UPI) - Mickey Mantle had
beld the crowd in the palm of
his hand for 10 minutes during
his Hall of Fame induction.
Now it was time for his
closing remark.
The audience of about 2,500
had been treated to a wonderful display of wit and poise
by Mantle and Whitey Ford,
two of the greatest stars of the
New York Yankees' golden
age, bringing to a climax the
induction of six immortals into
baseball's Hall of Fame.
In addition to Manlle and
Ford, the new Hall of Famers
were Cool Papa Bell, a star for
29 years in the old Negro
League; Jocko Conlan, a
National League umpire for 25
years, and the late Sunny Jim
Bottomley and Sam Thompson,
sluggers of other eras.
The crowd had heard everything it wanted to hear but 21
members of the Hall of Fame
were waiting to hear one thing
more. Bill Terry, fQI"mer New
York Giant first baseman and
the National League's last .400.
hitter, had said It for them all
Sunday night wben he asked
the new inductees, "don't just
take the plaques and walk
away ...come back."
This annual Hall of Fame
ceremooy Is pure Americana
out of the past. They come
every year ...old men, some of
them in wheel chairs, cherishIng a dream that baseball and
the American flag are synonymous ...that baseball Is still No.
1 despite the competition of
football, basketball and hockey ... that t)lelr old values will
yet be the salvation of the
country.
The thing they concern
''themselves moel with Is lhal
guys llke Mantle and Ford great players, yes, but whiP"
perert~~ppera in their eyes really doo't care that much,
Manlle put their fears to rest
-at leut Cor t!le moment.
Turning to the 21 ... ted on
'

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
Nolan Ryan has a way of
making the art of pitching look
much too easy.
The 27-year-old righthander
of the Californ1a Angels added
•
another clipping to his scraP"
Cards 6, Padres 5
book Monday night when he
Bake McBnde hit a sacrifice equalled the major league
ny with the bases loaded in the record for most strikeouts in a
bottom ol the 13th to give the nine-inning game by fanning 19
Cardinals a win over the in a 4-2 victory over the Boston
Padres. St. Louis remains 1 Red Sox.
games in front in the NL East.
Ryan, who set a major

in a nationally te levised game.
The victory was the Pirates'
seventh in their last eight
games. Despite the loss, the
Reds remained 5 games behind
Los Angeles in the NL West
because of the Dodgers' loss.

SYRACUSE GIRL's SOFI'BALL TEAM - The Syracuse
squad ended its season in a tie with the Pantherettes with a 75 record. First row, Shannon Slavin, mascot; second row,
Pe!Uly Wolfe, Kim Riffle, Melody Cundiff; th,ird row, Krystal
Winebrenner, Toma Ash, Rebecca Dempsey, Mary Slavin,
Teresa Imboden, Tina Gibbs, Paula Barnett, Robbie Gibbs,

Mantle superb
in·Hall speech

k
Matlac s 1...~ Soct·al r....
has birthday
th
·
ga er IJ alendarf

Brian George

'

Bailey, Terri Zirkle, Shorty Gibbs; back row, Kenda Rainey,
coach, Cynthia Lane, Patty Boyles, Marcia Gale, Glenda
Brown, Megan Miller, Shelia Harman, and Tracy Burdette.

By PoUy Cramer
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Turner
have returned to their home in
Florida after spending the past
week here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Kesterson.
J'hey had earlier slopped in
Hamilton to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Kesterson. The past
several months they have
spent at Enterprise, Ore., w1th
Roy Heilman and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis
spent the weekend in
Springfield with Mrs. Alma
Johnson . Saturday, Mrs. Davis
and Mrs. Johnson drove to
Orient to visit thetr sister, Miss
Dorothy Leifheit at the Orient
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Smith
and children, Ralph and
Denean, left Friday for their
home in Lincoln Park, Mich.,
after a vacation here with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs . John
Beaver, Nye Ave., and Mr. and
Mrs. Wetzel Fields, New
Haven. While here they also
visited Mr. and Mrs. John C.
Beaver , J. D. and Doug ,
Flatwoods Rd., and Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Curtis and Gayla
Lee, Middleport.

Mrs. Ervin honored
ROSS N. FILSON

"PAN'MiERETTES" - "The Pantherettes," girls'
softball team, ended its season with a 7-5 record, tied with ·
Syracuse in league actlon. Shown are, front row, l..r, Mary
Miller, Jo McKinney, Missy Cale, Brenda Brown, Carin

Given his choice of a strlkeoutllsl while pitching the
strikeout mark or a no.lJltter, Tigers over the Royals. LaUch,
however, Ryan would prefer a increasing hls record to 13-14,
struck out seven to move past
no-hitter.
" A no-bitter Is a greater· Don Drysdale with a total of
achievement -there is no 2,492 strikeouts.
A's 3, Yankees 2
margin for error in a nohitter,"
Atwo-base throwing error by
Ryan said. "II means more .
But I just tried to put tbe last third baseman Gralg Nettles
game out of my mind. Marty enabled tbe A's to score two
Springstead (home plate runs In the eighth inning and
UJJlpire) called them ldild of defeat the Yankees. Jim
tight. I had to work for each Hunter was the beneficiary of
the gift runs and· won his 17th
strike.
game
against nine losses, whUe
"I really fell everythin~ was
going right tonight," Ryan hardluck Pat Dobson llllffered
said. "I think I got better as the his 14th loss in 24 decialona.
game went on. I don't think I Brewers 5, Ra111en 1
George Scott and Darrell
thought about tbe record until
about the eighth or ninth in- ·Porter each drove in two runs
and Jim Colborn ended a
ning.
"I think my location was personal five-game losing
good tonight. I put the baU streak as the Brewers downed
pretty much where I wanted it. the Rangers. Steve Hargan
Any time you can do that, it was tagged with hiJi seventh
makes a difference. n
loss in 16 decisions. Colborn,
Ryan's effort was the best who last won on July 13,
ever for an American League allowed five hits in 6 2'3 innings
pitcher, bettering Bob Feller's to improve his record to 7-10(
record of 18 strikeouts in 1938,
and equalling the major league
mark shared by Steve Carlton
TICKETS ON SALE
of Philadelphia and Tom
Seaver of the New York Mets.
Tom Cheney of Washington
holds tbe record for most
strikeouts in an extra inning
game with 21 in a 16-i!Uling
contest against Baltimore In
1962.
In \he only otber AL games,
Detroit topped Kansas City, 5hat boy; fourth row, Wanda Teaford, assistant coach, Rita
1; Oakland edged New York, 3Slavin, coach, Rosemary Hubbard, Rhonda Cook, Carla
POMEROY, 0~
2, and Milwaukee downed
Teaford, Kim Winebrenner, Lorna Grindley, Vickie Cundiff,
Texas, 5-l.
Sonia Ash, Bob and Judy Gibbs, assistant coaches. Absent
Pittsburgh beat Cincinnati,
• were Carol Gibbs, Meg Amburger, and Teresa Ferrell.
7-4; New York defeated Los
Angeles, 3-1; St. Louis nipped
San Diego, &amp;.5, in 13 Innings,
and Philadelphia beat San
Francisco, 4-1, in tbe only
National League action.
Tigers 5, Royals 1
Detroit's Mickey Lolich,
backed by rookie Ron
and Ray Mowery with a the title game, "We would like LeFlore's two-run homer,
double.
to say thanks and express our tossed a fivehitter and moved
(('(
Hitters for the Braves were appreciation for all the help into ninth place on the aU-time.
/;))
Jeff Peckham, Dave Hysell, that went Into making the first
Maior League Results
By United Preu lnterna11onal
Stove Fife, Jeff Wayland, and Meigs Little League TourNa11onal League
Mike Miller all with a single nament a reality and a suc- San Fran
000 010 000- 1 7 0
Phil a
200 000 02x- 4 9 0
each, and Britt Dodson and cess."
Bryant ( 5) , Bradley
Terry Wayland each with a
They con tlnued, " Also, we (7)Halicki,
and Rader , Lonborg (13 11)
pair of singles.
would like to express our and Cox LP- Hallckl (1 6)
The " lead" In lead
pencils
Is not lead, but
The champloDBhip game
thanks to the umpires, Art Los Ang
000 010 000- 1 9 0
graphite
mixed with clay to
200 001 oox- 3 5 o
Saturday evening was taped Stobart, Homer Smilh, Clyde N v .
make It soft and smooth
Messersmith , Marshall (])
by Cable TV-5, and will be Ingels, Rick Stobart and Chip and Yeager ; Parker (4 IOl and
enough to rub off when It
aired tonight beginning at 7 Haggerty and also compliment Grote LP - Messersmlth (13 --41
moved across paj:)er . Hard
H R- MIIner (18th )
lead has more clay mixed
or 7:30 p.m.
all the learns and their
with
the graph ite than a
102 200 110- 7 12 0
The tournament Officials managers Cor the fine sport. Pitsbrgh
sot1 lead. To make " lead",
Cine I
000 120 100- 4 10 2
said following the conclusion of smanship displayed in this, the
clay, powdered graphite
Reuss , Morlan (6 ), G1ust l (7 )
first annual Meigs Little and Sangui11en , Kirby , McE and water are mixed into a
fS L C Carroll OJ. Hall
kind of dough Put through
League Tournament. This year naney
(9 1 and Plummer . WP - Reuss
a
machine, a tiny rope of
98 boys and 2 girls participated ( 12 9 ) LP- K irby f7 7) HRsdough emerges, whlch Is
Stargell
(20th ),
K trk patr lc k
for a total of 100 players".
straightened ovt: and c,_,t
f3rd l .
league record of 383 strikeouts
last season and also pitched
two nohitters, tumed in his
second blue chip performance
in a row by slopping the Red
Sox on seven hits for his 15th
victory.
In his last start, Ryan pit.
ched hitless ball for 8 1-3 innings before giving up three
hits and losing to the Chicago
White Sox, 2'1. Earlier this
year, be had a one.lJitter
against Texas, one of four in
his seven-year career.

MEIGS INN

fiiiRACilS
00

Braves win title

the porch of the National
Baseball Library, Mantle
closed his remarks with the
statement, "I hope Whitey and
I can live up to what these guys
stand for .''
It was a fitting end to an
emotion-packed day during
which two of casey Stengel's
"rogues" of the 1950s and 1960s
captivated the audience with
their wit and poise.
"When you think about what
happened in Washington last
week/' Ford had said, "you'd
have to say It's been a pretty
good week for Fords."
Mantle thanked Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who
presided over the ceremonies,
for "leaving all those
strikeouts" off his plaque .. .
recounted ho;w his motber and
father sacrified to help him as
a boy in Commerce, Okla ...and
then added a quip about an
unsuccessful business venture
In which he was engaged with a
hotel restaurant chain.
"I made up the slogan for the
restaurant," he said. " It was
'to get a better piece of
chicken, you'd have to be a

The Middleport Braves
captured the first annual Meigs
Little League Tournament
championship Saturday with
an 8-0 win over the Syracuse
Astros.
Mike Miller opened the game
with a single, fMlowed by a
Steve Fife home run which
proved to be enough as the
Braves added three runs in the
third, two in the fourth and one
in the sixth.
Miller started for the Braves
and was credited with the win,
walking two and striking out
none. He was relieved' by Jeff
Wayland 10 the third who
struck out three and walked
one. Britt Dodson came on in
the last two frames, striking
out three and walking none.
John Davis started for the
Astros, s triking out three and
walking one, while bemg
charged with the loss. He was
replaced by Mike Nance in the
fifth who walked four and
struck out two before Jack
Duffy came on in the fifth to
strike out three and walk one
batter in going the rest of the
way .
Leading the Braves' 8-hlt
attack, w.as Steve Fife with a
triple and home run, Dodson
with a double and single, Dave
Hysell with a double, Malt
Weaver with a double and
si~gle and Miller with u single.
For the Astros, John
Williams had a pair of singles,
Mark Davis a double, and
Duffy and Dave Nanc~ each
singled.
In Saturday's semi-fi nal
games, the Syracuse Astros
topped the Middleport Indians
ll-5as Johnny Williams cracked
a three-run homer In !he
bottom of the sixth.
The winning pitcher was
John Davis who struck out 11
and walked three. The losing
hurler was Terry Gardner,
striking out nine and walkmg
seven. Hitters for the Astros

rooster."'
Earlier in the ceremonies,
Bell, 71, said he was standing
" here to receive the greatest
honor of my life .. .I thank God
for enabling me to smell the
roses when yet living" and
Conlan paid tribute to former
National League president
Warren Giles as "the greatest
president in the history of
baseball."
Betty Bottomley Tucker,
Jim's widow, and Lawrence
Thompson, a nephew, accepted
the plaques on behalf of the
other new lllductees, Both
thanked baseball and Hall of
FJtme officials "from the
bottom of" their hearts .
The new inductees raised the
membership In the ahrlne to
148, Including only 114 players.
The other 32 are founding
111oneers and various officials
of the game.
\

..

were Williams with that home
run and Dave Nance with a
single.
For the Indians, Shane Smith
had a triple, Roger Carson a
single and triple and John
Cremeans a three-run homer.
In Saturday's second game,
the Braves topped the Dogers,
7·0 as M1ke Miller went the
distance for the Braves,
striking out nine and walking
two . Losing p1tcher Steve
Lambert struck out nine and
walked one. Rutland hitters
were Mark Tyree with a single

.#,~ _
M&gt;&gt;

I 13 inns.)

San Diego
.2 00 020 01 0 000 0St LouiS

.
Ma1or League Standiogs

Amtrlciln League

By United Pren lnternat•onal
Nat1onal Leagu e

East

61 56
59 57

pet . g.b .
521
509
11h

Boston
Cle ve lan d

55

. .487

Milwaukee

w.

Sf LOU IS
Philadelphia
P 1ttsburgh

Montrea l
New York
Chicago

E~ISt

1.

sa sa soo 21f,
58

4

49 63 .4 38 91f.
46 66 .411 12 1ft
West
w . I. pet . g . b.
Los Ange l e~
75 41
647
Cincinnat i
70 47 598
S lf'O
Atlanta
61 54 530 ll lf2
Houston
58 56 509 16
San F ran c isco 53 64 453 22 1t2
SE'n Diego
46 71 .393 291!,
Monday ' s Results
Phllad&amp;l.phla 4 San Fran cisco 1
N ew York 3 Los Angeles 1
St LouiS 6 S . D. 5. 13 Inns
PIUsburgh 1 Cinci nnat i 4
(Onlvgames sched uled )
Todar 's Probabale Pi1chers

w. I . pc1 .

63 52
58 54

Ba1t1more

57 57
56 58
55 61
54 62

New York
Detrolt

548
518
500
.491
474
.466

West
w. I pet .
68 49 58 1
Oakland
60 54 526
KansesCI1Y
Ch1cago
58 56 509
60 5&amp; 508
Texas
Minnesota
51 60 ,487
46 71 .393
Ca l i fornia

Monday's Re s ulh

s Kansas

American League

Kan City
000 100 OOQ- 1 5 1
Detro1t
003 2{)0 OOK- 5 11 0
g .b.
Brlles,McOenret (4J, 'Hoerner
_,_
(8 ) and H ealy . Lollch ( 13 14 J
3112 and Lamont. L P- Brtl es (3 5)
5 112 H R- LeFtore ( 1stl .

61!2
__ ,...._.
Blf2 M llwa
'• , 200 000 JO'o- 5 12 1
9112 Texas
ooo ooo 100- 1 5 1
Colborn , M ur ph y (7) and
Porter; Hargan , Clyd e (7) ,
g .b . Broberg (81. Merritt (8) and
....I.
Sundberg . WP - Colborn C7 -10)
61f7 LP - Hargan f9 7l.
8 112
81J, 1 New York
00 1 OOQ 001 - 2 S 1
11
OakiMd
001000 0:2K ~ 3 7 1
23
Oobson ( JQ . J4) end Munson ,·
Hunter
(·17 -9)
and
Haney ,
Tenace- 18 1
1

City 1
Milwaukee S Texas 1
Oakland 3 New York :2
Ca lifornia 4 Boston 2
(On tv games sche duled )
Detroit

000 010 001 -

Boston
; Cali f

ooo 310' oox-

J 70

471

Moret (6 -S l an d Montgomery i
Ryan (15 . 12) and Rodriguez .
HR- Oilver (7th ).
(On ly ga mes scheduledl

All Times EDT )
Hou slon (Roberts 6·101 at
Today's Probable Pl1cher s
Ch1cago (Bonham ~0· 14), J : J O
(All Times e-oTJ
.,.---~~--~---,
p m
Chicago ( Bahnsen 10-13) at
''Send A
San Francisco (Barr 10·5) at Baltimore rAiex~nder 5·8 L 7 30

Philadelphia

(Rulhven

•·91. p m.

7 35 p m
Montreal
(Torr'ez 9·81 l'lt
A tl anta (Reed 7·6J. 7 35 p m ,
Los Angeles IZaht'l 2-'21 at
N ew York (Matlack 109 ), 8OS
p .m .
Pittsburgh !Demery 2·41 a t
Cincinna t i (B1HlnQhllm 14.7) ,
' m.
8 t 05 ,..
Sen Diego (Romo s.s) &amp;t Sl.
Lovls ( Siebert7 -6).8 : 30pm
'
Wednesdty's Garnu
Houston at Chicago
LOS Angeles at New York
San Fran at Phil&amp; , night
Montreal at AtiMta, night
Pittsburgh at Clncl , night
· san D iego at St. Louis , night

'

Long Lasting

1Brow.n9·8),9p m.
New York &lt;Med lch 13· 10 ) at
Oakland &lt;Hol tzman 12-13&gt;. 11/
p .m
Bos 1on IT Ilin t l •r -8) at Call .
forn i a (Fig ueroa 2-3) , 11 p.m !
(O nlygames sc heduled l
?
Wednesday's Games
Chicago at Baltimore, n igh t
Mmnesota at Cleveland, n igh t
Kansas City at Detroit. night
M ilwaukee al Texu. nig hJ
New York at Oakland , night
Boston at Call for nl., , night
"

.

''H

To Say

8' thd

appy lr
ay
From $5.00

''

Dudley'S florist
59 N. Second St.
a..a1·ddleporl, 0.
'"1

11.

sticks. To complete the

pencil, these s11cks of lead
encased In wood and
usually topped with an
eraser Only tertaln wood&amp;

are

are suitable for lead
pencils. The best Is red
cedar . A pencil mad&amp; of rtd
cedar ls easy to shar~n.

The

.,....... _...~~

Miracle

Super

Appliance Is not 11 wattr

softner but a water refiner .

OSED CARS

'73 BUICK
'
Electra .225 Cus.
4 Dr. H.T.
Full power, factory air,

tape, 10,000 mlles .

Although It does soften

water, It does much more,
tool Thanks to an exclusive

Patented Process of
Treatlnq
Water",
a
Miracle Water
Refiner

''

1

cleans. filters and remov"

odor 1nd taste miner• I•
from your water. More and

more peO!'Ieare finding ouf
the advonfages of Refined
Water tvery day •lid mort

and mOre people er1
dlscoverlnq the difference
~hal

PLANT

TeKas

10 3

ooo 500 ooo ooo 1- 6 a 1
Greif. Laxton ( 9 ) and Ken
dall. Curtis, Forsch (8) , Hra .
bosky (91 and Simmons WP Hrabosky (6 . 1) LP - Laxton &lt;O ·

st ereo

BLOOMING

Kansas City (Fitzmorris 7 3)
at Detro it (Coleman 10.9 ), 8
p m
Mllw&amp;u~ee (Champion 6·2) at

~

Into p1eces. The pieces are
then baked for seVeral
hours In a big oven to drive
out the moisture. When
removed from the oven,
they are hard s.lender

'4895
karr ·&amp; Van lanett·

a

Miracle , W•ltr

Refiner makH over. .n

ordinary

water

con -

ditioner. Went to knoW
more7 Call 112·2525.

SAYB'
tiARDWA•
-

llt·tul
Hevtll, .,, v•.

•

�'

t - The Daily Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Tul'l'dav, Aug. 13, 197t

junior auxiliary names officers

II

. .....
ribbons; Kay and Mrs. cart.(Betty) Irvin, 11 blue ribbons;
and Nora stoats, chairman of the Home Arts Divtslon.
Missmg from the picture but als&lt;l placing second with II blue
ribbons is June Burns. The Robert Tillis family placed third

HOME ARTS TRUPHY WIN J~ C: KS - Mrs . Dorothy
Click (left ) was the top wmner m thts divisiOn with 16 blue
ribbons. She is followed by the two second place wmners
from left to right : Mr. and Mrs. Charles Foglesong, 11 blue

with nine blue tibbons.

New officers were elected
and several donahons were
Jll,llde during a recent meeting
of the Junior American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post ~9 , at the hoJJle of Mrs.
Harry Davis, advisor.
Elected were Pam Powers,
president ; Paula Kloes, vice
president ; Peggy Glrolami,
secretary; Cheryl Lehew,
chaplain; Ida Gasc1, sergeantat-arms ; Cheryl Lehew,
historian; Denice Marshall and
Miss Lehew, color bearers ;
and Mrs. Kloes and Lori Ann
WOod, color guards. The new
officers will be installed at the
September meeting.

A package was prepared

during the meeting lor Dorothy
Leifheit at the Orient Hospital.
Donations were made to tbe
Anita Renee Lavacy fund to
assist with open heart surgery
and to muscular dystrophy.
Three members of the unit,
Debra, Charlotte and Robin
Lehew, Colwnbus, will stage a
carnival at their home
Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday with proceeds to go
to muscular dystrophy. The
juniors donated 50 nag lapel
pins to be used at the carnival
which w11l be televised over
WTVN, Channel 6, Columbus.
Ge~weU cards were signed
for Mrs. Tom Goett and Robm

Lehew. Flowers were sent to
Mrs. Goett at Veter•""
Memorial Hospital and a gill
was sent to Robin who Is now
re cupera tlng from a tonslllectl)my.
Read at the meeting were
thank-you notes from Mrs. Ed
UUum, Dayton Veterans
Hospital, for ribbons sent there
to be used in rug making, and
from Richard Cromstock,
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital,
for items taken to the Eighth
District birthday party last
month. A letter was also read
!rom Mrs. Melvm Junge for a
large box of cancelled stamps
to be used in a special project
of her unit. A thank-you card
·will be sent to Mrs. Frank

Birthday meal
honors ladies

Powers for hosting a cookout
for the junior auxiliary
members recenUy.
A swimming party is being
held today at the Middleport
pool. Next meeting will be a
workshop Sept. 5 at the Legion
hall . Fay Reibel, president,
had charge of the meeting with
Cheryl Lehew giving the
opening prayer and members
saying the pledge and
preamble In unison.
During the concluding social
hour, ice cream and cake were
served In observance of the
birthday anniversary of Mrs.
Grace Pratt, president of the
American Leg1on AUiiliary.
Mrs. Robert Couch was a guest
at the meeting.
row, Frank Seth, coach, Kim Setll, Marty Krawsczyn,
Rhonda Hudson, Susan Wright, Jane Sisson, Mel Snouffer,
Gathy Blaettnar, Susan Zirkle, and Lori Seth, assistant
coach. Absent were Lorra Wisecup, K.rlstian Anderson ,
Andrea Riggs, and Beth Perrin.

POMEROY GIRLS' SOFTBALL TEAM finished the
season with a ~7 record. Shown are, front row, 1-r, Sandi
Miller, Peggy Girolami, Anne Filch, Shari Mttch, Joni
Murray, Nancy Sm1th, Raeleen Oliver, Jamie Sisson; back

Polly 's Pointers

&gt;

.

CULiNARY ARTS AWARDS - Trophies were presented
by the Mason County Fair Culinary Arts Co.chairmen, Mrs.
Clair Lee Cottrill, Jr., far left, and Mrs. Lieulo Roush, right,
to the exhibitors wllllling the most blue ribbons m that

department at this year's Mason County Fair. Receiving the
trophies are Mrs. C. E. Erwin, second from left, third place ;
Mrs. Manford Bauer, Sr., second place and Mrs. Dayton
Durst, first place.

Mrs .
Olive
Stobart,
Seminole, Fla ., and Mrs .
Mildred Lee, Albany, _were
honored at a surprise birthday
dinner held at the home of their
brother and sister·in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Laurence Donohue,
Pomeroy .
Attending
were
Gene
Slobart, Seminole, Fla ., Mrs.
Lee's children, Mary, Anita
and Amanda, and her granddaughter, Angela Lee; Mr. and
Mrs . Raymond Donohue and
children Dennis, Linda, and
Kenda ; and children of the
hosts, Michael, William,
Katrina, Lorena and Barbara.
Mr. and Mrs. Slobarl stayed
al'the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Donohue durmg their vacation
in Ohio.
ATI'END FUNERAL
Mrs. Sylvia Carman, Long
Hollow Rd., Pomeroy, has
received word of the death of
her first cousin, Adran Smith,
at TUscarawas. The funeral
was held at 11 a.m. Monday at
Tuscarawas and going from
here were Mrs. Carman, Mrs .
Leota Smith and Mr. and Mrs.
Don Belzing, Hemlock Grove .

Ross Filson of
Mason Co. dies
PT. PLEASANT - Ross N.
Filson , 86, 1825 Jefferson
Boulevard, a prominent Point
Pleasant businessman,
president of the Point Pleasant
Building and Loan Company
the past eight years, died at
5:30p.m. Sunday in Pleasant
Valley Hospital after a brief
illness .
Funeral
services are
scheduled Wednesday at 2 p.m.
at the Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home. The Rev. Rufus A.
Cromartie will be in charge.
Burial will follow 'in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
V1s1tation hours will be after
2 p m. Tuesday at the funeral
home . In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made to the
Mason County Cancer Fund or
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr. Filson, who had contributed to his adopted
hometown in many ways, was
born m Racine, Ohio, March 3,
1888, a son of the late Frank
Leshe and Deliah Aumiller
Filson.
He was a veteran of World
War II; a 50-year member of
Point Pleasant Mmturn Lodge
AF and AM, Masons ; and a
member of the Point Pleasant
Post American Legion 23.
For more than 50 years he
was m the theater business in
Pomt Pleasant being the owner
and manager of the former
Lyric Theater, Stale Theater
and the Mason Drive-ln. He
had been assoc1ated with the
Pomt Pleasant Building and
Loan since 1940.
Survivors inclUde his widow,
Mrs. Clara Wartenburg Filson ;
one daughter, Mrs. Polly A.
Adkins, Point Pleasant; three
grandchildren, Greg, Bruce
and Unda Adkms ; a brother,
William
Filson,
Point
Pleasant, and a sister, Mrs.
Homer G. Marlin, local.

SWEEPSTAKES AWARD - Fair Board President Floyd Rayburn, right, is shown
presenting the 13th Annual Mason County Fair Sweepstakes Trophy to Mr. and Mrs. Phllbp
Click, Jr.,Mt Alto. The Clicks won the awa1·d for domg the most outstanding job m showing at
the fair .

DR. LAMB

Swing your
partner
.
to good health
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
wonderful spor t" Severa l
doctors
have told us that
DEAR DR. LAMB - This IS
probably a somewhat different •partici patiOn 1n thiS hght
letter or inuiry than yo u are exercise, both physical and
accustomed to rece1vmg. l'm mental, was probably largely
now nearly 72 and have been responSible for our well bemg .
married 53 years. I inherited a Why don't they recommend 1t
fine body and was blessed with to others or participate m it
pare nts who never became themselves ? Our c ompany
tired of advising me to breathe doctor, who checks me every
deeply, drink plenty of 1\'ater, year , usually greets me w1lh
chew my food well and never 11 Hey I \\'hat are you doing
make a glutton of myself They here ? I should be gettmg adalso admonished me to "keep vice from you. " But when 1
busy domg good and produc- say, "Why don' t you lake up
ll ve thmgs. " It all made good square dan cmg ?'' he changes
sense to me, so 1 followed their the subject. Can you tell me
advice J strayed, but never far why ? My w1fe contends they
- and it has pa1d off.
are afratd they'll run out of
1 have never requtred an patie nts . Could this be true'
aspirm nor a doctor 's care
DEAR READER - Dancmg
ex:cept for a hernia operation Is wonderful e xer cise. It's
when a young man . L seldom great for those who enJOY 1t. I
smoke, but dnnk beer or lugh- have orte'n recommended 1t to
bal1s on occaston to celebrate people . It IS a lot more fun than
something. Both my wife and I joggmg . YQu can dance m
have always been physically accbrdance to your level of
active all our lives . We have physical fitness and healtll. A
played baseball, rot ball, tennis slow ballroom dance is fme for
and enjoy skating , swimmmg those who are not used to much
and dancing. We take no activity. When you are in
vitamins or special sup- better shape you might wan t to
plements, but cat stmpl e. do somethmg more achve . Of
•ourishing food . We both weigh course, if you haven't been
ubout the same as when we doing much physica ll y for
were kids and have never had some time 'I would ouggost
the need to diet.
laking 11 easy at first and
About 22 years a go we gradually building up your
· switched from ballroom toleran ce as you would In any
dancing to square and round other spOrt.
.dancing, which we have both
[ suspect that most doctors
taught and called for over 20 don 't recommend it because
years. Many people we teoch they don ' t like to dane&lt;
and call for enjoy much the themselves (because of lack ol
same gOod physical and mental experience ). What your doctor
alertness and health. We recommends often has a lot to
beHeve this wholesome sport do with his own habits. If he
does help most people enor- smokes he may be reluctant to
!&lt;!U you that you should slop. If
mously.
My question is, why do so few he is on the fat side he may be
doctors ever recommend this 'ooo easy oh you about your own

~

diet problems.
Jackte Sorenson of the
~;'resident's
Co un cil
on
Physical Fitness and Sports
has been promoting ''Aerobic
Dancing'' from one end of the
coun try to the other . By
vigorous dancmg, as she
demonstrates, you can get a
t r emendous

amount

of

phySical ac tivity. And, thiS
he lps a lot 10 mamtaining
health and controllmg wmghl.
Anyway, I'm all for it and think
it is good exerciSe for all people
at all ages. Just choose the
nght level to start with and
enjoy yourself on the way to
better health
COURSE COMPLETED
LONG BOTI'OM - Private
Harvey E. Roseberry, 21, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Albert E.
Roseberry, completed a nineweek fleid rad io mechanic
course at the U.S. Army F1eld
Artilleo. School, Ft. Sill, Okla.

~~~

DaiiJ ~~~~
I

DEVOTEDromE
fN'I'ER!BI'OF •

I

MKIGS-M~ ""EA,

•

:

Grid tickets

CHE8TER L. TANNDIILL,
Elet.Ed.
KOIIF.RTIIOEP'LICB.

m,.ra.r

,

Publilhed d.lly l!acept Slturcft, h1 The
Ohio Y1Uey Publlahlng eompny, lll
Court St, ~~ Ohkl, 587• 11u.LneM
· Office Phone tn-Zl51 Edttorill Phone tn- '
21~7 .

SK'and clua potllfl

I

p16d •t ~,

Oh.lo.

1

I

'
N1tlon•l adverU1In1 rtpreant.tlve 1
Bottlntlll&amp;LIIpll!r. Inc •12 EaM: 4)'1(1 Sl '

1 NnYort., NtwVork
J
1
~r•Let DrellnftdbJ~
wtlere available Ill cent~ pow
u1
MaiM aouw trhth t:lirTk ..-.tee I'IDt

I

"*•

IY&amp;U.bll. One ll*litl, A.IO. By Dllll -.,
CtUo mel W, Va , 0.. Y..-, tit; lib
1 montha, "~ : Thru monlh1, M
Ellewben $2Z.OIIyw ; ab:lTIObtha 'IUO,

thrt~.~ rnonU., •aa. ~
lndudfa~y'f1mn.&amp;ntlnel.

pice '

~---~~--------~
==·~ l

••

un sale at l,oint
PT. PLEASANT - Season
tickets to Point Pleasant Higl•
School football games are
available at Long's Sport Shop
on Sixth St. Season passes must
be renewed by Augusl30. After
this date all remaining seats
will be put on sale on a first
come first served basis. Single
game reserve seals will go on
sale at 6 p.m. the night of the
game.

What's what with
Social Security?

Reds, Dodgers dropped Ryan whiffs 19 batters

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I would like to know if and how one can
restore the luster to polished cotton. - MARIE.

By CHRIS TURKEL
UP! Sports Writer
Willie Montanez says he's
glad be wasn't traded. The
Philadelphia Phillies are glad
too, considering the way the 26year-old first baseman is
hitting.
Montanez, now second ln the
National League in hitting,
smashed two doubles Monday
night, driving in two runs and
scoring once to lead Philadelphia to a 4-1 win over the
San Francisco Giants. And he
attributes his recent torridhitting streak to something off
the field.
" My new son (Guillermo Jr.)
has been gOod luck to me,"
Montanez said.
The
elder
Montanez
celebrated the birth of his
namesake July 13 by going 4for-4 that day. Since then, he
has hit safely in 32 of hiS lasl33
games, including a streak of 24
games. He currently is
working on an eight-game
string.
In the month since he has had
his good luck charm, the proud
father has hit at a .409 clip to
move into second place among
NL batting leaders with a .324
average.
He has easily been the
Phillies' most productive hitter
during the last month, squelching trade rumors which had
persisted since last winter.
"It was hard, not knowing

.,

DEAR POLLY - My biggest Pet Peeve is with the way
Social Security is set up. Both my husband and I worked fuU time ·•
until65and paid almost the full a~ount most or the time. Yet, as
a wife 1can receive either the Soclal Security for which I patd or ·"
as a ~ife or widow only the one I choose of the two, which
probably will be the one that is the greatest This is also for the
husband if the wife dies first. I do not think thiS IS farr as both my "
husband and 1 paid into tbe fund and yet the remaining one gets "'
the benefit of only one contributiOn.
"
There should be some allowance for this double payment. No ..
other insurance demands two prenuums with only one benefit. "
This facet of Social Security must have been pla!Uled by rich "'
men or some college professors out of touch with a realistic "
world. This letter is long but so ts (IIY Pet Peeve - and strong, ...
too. - ]llRS. PET PEEVE HERSELF.
DltAR POLLY - Lucille should put her shedding angora and ·•
rabbit's hair sweater in a lightweight plastic sweater bag and '"
pop it in the bottom of the refrigerator. No fuss, no muss and good
luck to her.
''
I remove glue left from !bose picture hangers with lighter ..
fiuid. lt takes spOts off painted walls when carefully applied with ·•
a clean natural sponge. - E.C.Q.
··
DEAR POLLY - When making my own body shirts I use
fast tape on the crotches that close. This is the , •
tape such as we put on wrap-around skirts, slips and hair
Pam Clary and family, Mrs.. protectors to wear at night. This is easier to fasten than the snaps
Connie Hill, Sharon Hill, Mrs. usually round on readymade body shirts. - L. T.
Wilma Ervin.
DEAR POLLy _ Mter one has her first baby most of us hate
Others presenting gifts to to throw away the cute baby cards we have received. I bought a
Mrs. Ervin were The Sulton large inexpensive picture frame and painted it white. White ,.
Methodist Church Adult Class, construction paper was used for the background mat. Then I .,
Mrs. Opal Van Meter, Lisa Van mounted about a dozen of the cards on it and an unusual "picMeter, Mrs . Betty Bell, Mrs . . ture" was aU ready to fill a bare spot on !be wall in baby's room
Debbie Rose, Mrs. · Tom where it has become a conversation piece. I have since used • •
McKitterick, Edith and John, other greeting cards in frames for other places and thought some ,..
Mrs. Ruth McKitterick and ofthereaders might like to try this, too. - MRS. R. H.
family, Mrs. Winston Varney,
"
Mrs. John Jinks, Mrs. Elmer
You wlll receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homeCook and Mrs. luka Christman. making Idea, Pet Peeve, Polly's Problem or solution to a
problem. Write Polly in care ol tbls newspaper,

RACINE - A layette shower
honoring Mrs. Eugene Ervin
was held recenlly at the home
of Mrs. Paul Ervin, Racine,
with Kathy McDaniel, Helen
and Debb1e Hill as hostesses.
Games were played with
prizes awarded to the winners.
Cake, decorated with pink and
blue booties, nuts, mints and
punch were served.
Attending were Mrs. Elsie
Circle, Mrs. Sue Follrod, Mrs.
Teresa Van Meter, Becky and
Melanie, Mrs. Mary Circle,
Mrs. Martha Lee, Mrs. Wilma
McGraw, Mrs. Claudia Roush,
Mrs. Beulah Roush, Mrs .
Grace Chaney, Mrs. Dorothy
C)laney, Mrs. Lois Bell and
Lorna, Mrs. Faith Varney,
Jenny Raye Varney, Mrs.
Mary Smith and Jerry, Mrs.
Donna Jean Smith, Bonnie and
The lOth birthday anTammy Smith, Mrs. Helen niversary of Brian Lee George
Bickers, Kim Bickers, Mrs. was observed Friday with a
party from 6 to 8 p.m. at the
home of his grandparents, Mr.
ENJOY OUTING
and Mrs. Lee McComas,
Mr. and Mrs. James Brewer Middleport.
·
entertained Sunday at their
Games were played under
Middleport home with a family
the superviSion of Mrs. Tom
cookout. Attending were Mr.
Grueser, with prizes being won
and Mrs. Buddy Moore, Jill
and Brent, Gallipolis; Mr. and by Barbara Grueser, Brent
George, Eddie Johnson and
Mrs. Richard Douglas and
Paul Horton. The refreshment
Kelly, Alfred; Mr. and Mrs.
table was centered with two
Ted Riley, Sr., Clifton, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Roush, cakes, one a gift from Brian's
grandmother, the other a gift
Guy Ia and Tommy, Mason, W.
from Mrs. Robert Rinehart.
Va. ; Betty Lou Gilmore, Kelly
Gilmore, Mike Newell, Mr. and Mrs. Dianne George assisted
bY. Mrs. Rinehart and Mrs.
Mrs. Ted Riley, Jr., and John
Judy Burns served cake, ice
Pat, Mrs. Ronald Cowan and
cream and Kool-Ald.
Ryan, Marybeth Brewer and
Attending were Rhonda ,
Jimmy and Terry Brewer. Ice
Wendie and James Burns,
cream for the outing was made
Barbara Grueser, Anthony
by Vernon Roush.
Wilson, Darin and Beth Ann
Wolf, Lydia and Eddie JohnCELEBRATES
son, David, Jeanne and Paula
Tracy . Dawn
Eblin Horton, Margery MiUer, Terri
celebrated her first birthday Marie Sprouse, David Hendrix,
recenlly with a party at the Brent, Da~id and Christopher
home of her parents, Mr. and 'George.
Mrs. Richard Eblin, Pomeroy.
Sending a gift but unable to
Gifts were presented to the attend due to illness was Tanya
youngster and refreshments of Stobart. Adults attending were
ice cream, cake and Kool-Aid Mrs . ,Grueser, Mrs. Eloise
were served. Attending were Wilson, Mrs .~ Rinehart, Mrs.
)irs . Ann Evans, Pam, Burns and Mrs. McComas.
Christie, Jay; Mrs. Janel Balloons, chewing gum and
Eblin, Doug and Mandy; Mr. suckers were given as favors .
and Mrs. Lawrence Triplett,
Mike and Angie ; Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford IcenhoWer, Mr . and
Mrs . Walter Wears, Mrs. Anna
Ward, Dixle, Kim and Tami
SYRACUSE - "Group Care
Eblin, and Kelli Ross, visiting
for
Young Children" was the
here from Youngstown. Sending gifts were Tracy's · program topic presented to
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Karl Kloes at the August
meeting of the United
Clay Eblin.
Methodist Women ol• jthe
Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse.
Mrs. Kloes was assisted tn
HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Lucille Harrison, the program by Mrs. Helen
Middleport, Is a medical Teaford, Miss Marcia Karr and
patient at Holzer Medical Mrs. Bernice Winebrenner.
Center. Those wishing I!&gt; send The meetlng, ' at the home o(
her cards may address them to Mrs. Grace Weese, opened
Room 401 at the hOspital.
wltil a call to worship, prayer

~.;.o;.q;,;,;.o~;o;.o;.u:o,o;o;.o.•,• '•'•'•' 0

~~-:..-.o;.:·.·;-..!&lt;.•.·t.~

~-·

•:0:

..0:•.

-~·

LANCASTER - The annual
Matlack family reunion was
held recenUy at the Rising
Park at Lancaster with a
picnic lunch at noon.
Mrs. Josephine McGhee,
Woodstrock, Va., the only
surviving descendent of the
late William and Lydia
Matlack, was present. Others
attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Robinson, Woodstock
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Brooks, Mansfield ; Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Kim, Elizabeth,
Cynthia and Lara, Marietta;
Mr. and 'Mrs. John Arbaugh,
Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs.
Hardy Rausch, Marysville;
Mr. and Mrs. Foster Bean,
Guysville; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Roush, Chester ; Mrs. Diana
Roush and Jeff, Chester; .-Mr.
and Mrs . Ronnle Pooler,
Jimmy and Susie, Middleport;
Mrs .
Mabel
Sindle,
Springfield ; Mr . and Mrs .
Elwood Sindl.e , Springfield;
Lily, Donna and Doug Shultz,
Columbus; Leah Arbaugh
Hawkins , Columbus; Carl
Matlack, Tuppers Plains ;
Virginia Kim Campbell, Guysville; Rosalie, Bruce, Lon and
Ailsa HUJJlphrey, Mr'. and Mrs.
Harold Parker, David and
Jhonda, Coal Grove.

•
UMW
h
as meettnV
Asbury
0
from the calendar of daily
prayers, and a reading from
"The Healing Fountain" given
by Mrs . Kloes, president,
Devotions by Mrs . Allee
Capehart Included scrlplure
from I Cor, 2:9-10, a poem,
"Consecralloo" and an article
" Dwell Deep" . OflicerJ'
reporla were given with 10
shuWn calls being reported.
"One Solitary 'Life" and the
reading of Psalm 8 by Mra.
Tearord
concluded
the
meeting.
,

I

I

»
::.·

c·

:~:

from day to day whether I
would be with the team. But
I'm glad I wasn't traded,"
Montanez said. "I'm a better
hitter now than I wa s in my
rookie season ( 1971) when I hit
30 homers.
"All my life I've been a line
drive hitter. In '71, the ball just
rose. Overall, though, it probably hurl me. People were
expecting home runs after that
and that's not really my style."
Jim Lonborg checked the
Giants on seven hits to post his
13th victory against 11 losses.
After the game, Lonborg said,
"Pitching is more fun now than
it was in 1967.''
The former ace of the Boston
Red Sox staff credited his new
attitude to his transihon from a
thrower to a pitcher, saying,
" If you're going to pitch a long
time in the ' big leagues, you
have to learn how to pitch
instead of just throw."
In the only other NL games,
New York trimmed Los An·
geles, 3-1 ; Pittsburgh beat
Cincinnati, 7-4, and St. Louis
edged San Diego, &amp;.5, in . 13
innings.
In American League action,
Detroit stopped Kansas City, 5I; Milwaukee roped Texas, 5-1;
Oakland nipped New York, 3-~,
and California topped Boston;
4-2, in the only scheduled
games.
Mets 3, Dodgers 1
Harry Parker scattered nine

hits for his first complete
major league game and John
Milner bounced an estimated
475:fool homer off the scoreboard in ri~hlto g1ve the Mets
a triumph over the Dodgers.
Milner's blast, his 18th, was
believed to be the longest
homer ever hit to right field at
Shea Stad1um.
Pirates 7, Reds 4
Willie Stargell and Ed Kirkpatrick hit two-run homers and
AI Oliver added four hils to
lead the Pirates over the Reds

'

TUESDAY
REVIVAL now in progress at ' ·
Faith Tabernacle Church, '"
Bailey Run Rd., through Aug . .,
14. Rev. L. M. Adams, HunUnglon, guest speaker. Ri!v.
Emmett Rawson is the pastor. '
Everyone welcome .
REGULAR August meeting "
Meigs Chapter 53, DAY, "
can!!lllled. Picnic for members ,
and wives at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Those attending take '
table service and covered dish "
dinner. Be at the chapter
home,
Butternut
Ave ., ...
Pomeroy, by 8 p.m. precedmg
.'
picnic.
RACINE Lodge !61 F and
AM , regular meeting 7:30p.m.
Work in fellowcraft degree.
Refreshments afterward .
WEDNESDAY
MEIGS Band Boosters, 9 . '
a.m. at Meigs Stadtiun in
Pomeroy. Bring pam! brushes
and rollers to paint booth .
PAST presidents of Drew
Webster Unit 39 American
Legion Auxiliary , ~ annual
picnic, home of Mrs. Harry
Houdashelt, Grant St. , Middleport, 6:30p.m.
WHITE Rose Lodge, family ·,'
potluck picnic, 6:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Dorothy Morris, · '
Sioslh Second, Middleport.
PAST Presidents, American
Legion Auxiliary, Drew "
Webster Post 39, 6 p.m.,
cookout-at the home of Mrs.
Harry Houdashelt, Grant St., "
Middleport.
POMEROY - Middleport ''"
Uons Club, noon, Meigs Inn. ""
THURSDAY
RACINE American Legion
Post 61Yl, regular meeting, 8 ...
p.m. at the p_ost home .
Refreahments of sweet corn,
hamb\l'ger~ lllld hot and cold
!Ill
drlnlta to be eerved.

.....

BU&amp;Y BEE Class, Mid· ~·
dleport First Baptllt Church, ..
7:30p.m. at the church,

COOPERSTOWN , N.Y.
(UPI) - Mickey Mantle had
beld the crowd in the palm of
his hand for 10 minutes during
his Hall of Fame induction.
Now it was time for his
closing remark.
The audience of about 2,500
had been treated to a wonderful display of wit and poise
by Mantle and Whitey Ford,
two of the greatest stars of the
New York Yankees' golden
age, bringing to a climax the
induction of six immortals into
baseball's Hall of Fame.
In addition to Manlle and
Ford, the new Hall of Famers
were Cool Papa Bell, a star for
29 years in the old Negro
League; Jocko Conlan, a
National League umpire for 25
years, and the late Sunny Jim
Bottomley and Sam Thompson,
sluggers of other eras.
The crowd had heard everything it wanted to hear but 21
members of the Hall of Fame
were waiting to hear one thing
more. Bill Terry, fQI"mer New
York Giant first baseman and
the National League's last .400.
hitter, had said It for them all
Sunday night wben he asked
the new inductees, "don't just
take the plaques and walk
away ...come back."
This annual Hall of Fame
ceremooy Is pure Americana
out of the past. They come
every year ...old men, some of
them in wheel chairs, cherishIng a dream that baseball and
the American flag are synonymous ...that baseball Is still No.
1 despite the competition of
football, basketball and hockey ... that t)lelr old values will
yet be the salvation of the
country.
The thing they concern
''themselves moel with Is lhal
guys llke Mantle and Ford great players, yes, but whiP"
perert~~ppera in their eyes really doo't care that much,
Manlle put their fears to rest
-at leut Cor t!le moment.
Turning to the 21 ... ted on
'

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
Nolan Ryan has a way of
making the art of pitching look
much too easy.
The 27-year-old righthander
of the Californ1a Angels added
•
another clipping to his scraP"
Cards 6, Padres 5
book Monday night when he
Bake McBnde hit a sacrifice equalled the major league
ny with the bases loaded in the record for most strikeouts in a
bottom ol the 13th to give the nine-inning game by fanning 19
Cardinals a win over the in a 4-2 victory over the Boston
Padres. St. Louis remains 1 Red Sox.
games in front in the NL East.
Ryan, who set a major

in a nationally te levised game.
The victory was the Pirates'
seventh in their last eight
games. Despite the loss, the
Reds remained 5 games behind
Los Angeles in the NL West
because of the Dodgers' loss.

SYRACUSE GIRL's SOFI'BALL TEAM - The Syracuse
squad ended its season in a tie with the Pantherettes with a 75 record. First row, Shannon Slavin, mascot; second row,
Pe!Uly Wolfe, Kim Riffle, Melody Cundiff; th,ird row, Krystal
Winebrenner, Toma Ash, Rebecca Dempsey, Mary Slavin,
Teresa Imboden, Tina Gibbs, Paula Barnett, Robbie Gibbs,

Mantle superb
in·Hall speech

k
Matlac s 1...~ Soct·al r....
has birthday
th
·
ga er IJ alendarf

Brian George

'

Bailey, Terri Zirkle, Shorty Gibbs; back row, Kenda Rainey,
coach, Cynthia Lane, Patty Boyles, Marcia Gale, Glenda
Brown, Megan Miller, Shelia Harman, and Tracy Burdette.

By PoUy Cramer
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Turner
have returned to their home in
Florida after spending the past
week here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Kesterson.
J'hey had earlier slopped in
Hamilton to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Kesterson. The past
several months they have
spent at Enterprise, Ore., w1th
Roy Heilman and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis
spent the weekend in
Springfield with Mrs. Alma
Johnson . Saturday, Mrs. Davis
and Mrs. Johnson drove to
Orient to visit thetr sister, Miss
Dorothy Leifheit at the Orient
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Smith
and children, Ralph and
Denean, left Friday for their
home in Lincoln Park, Mich.,
after a vacation here with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs . John
Beaver, Nye Ave., and Mr. and
Mrs. Wetzel Fields, New
Haven. While here they also
visited Mr. and Mrs. John C.
Beaver , J. D. and Doug ,
Flatwoods Rd., and Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Curtis and Gayla
Lee, Middleport.

Mrs. Ervin honored
ROSS N. FILSON

"PAN'MiERETTES" - "The Pantherettes," girls'
softball team, ended its season with a 7-5 record, tied with ·
Syracuse in league actlon. Shown are, front row, l..r, Mary
Miller, Jo McKinney, Missy Cale, Brenda Brown, Carin

Given his choice of a strlkeoutllsl while pitching the
strikeout mark or a no.lJltter, Tigers over the Royals. LaUch,
however, Ryan would prefer a increasing hls record to 13-14,
struck out seven to move past
no-hitter.
" A no-bitter Is a greater· Don Drysdale with a total of
achievement -there is no 2,492 strikeouts.
A's 3, Yankees 2
margin for error in a nohitter,"
Atwo-base throwing error by
Ryan said. "II means more .
But I just tried to put tbe last third baseman Gralg Nettles
game out of my mind. Marty enabled tbe A's to score two
Springstead (home plate runs In the eighth inning and
UJJlpire) called them ldild of defeat the Yankees. Jim
tight. I had to work for each Hunter was the beneficiary of
the gift runs and· won his 17th
strike.
game
against nine losses, whUe
"I really fell everythin~ was
going right tonight," Ryan hardluck Pat Dobson llllffered
said. "I think I got better as the his 14th loss in 24 decialona.
game went on. I don't think I Brewers 5, Ra111en 1
George Scott and Darrell
thought about tbe record until
about the eighth or ninth in- ·Porter each drove in two runs
and Jim Colborn ended a
ning.
"I think my location was personal five-game losing
good tonight. I put the baU streak as the Brewers downed
pretty much where I wanted it. the Rangers. Steve Hargan
Any time you can do that, it was tagged with hiJi seventh
makes a difference. n
loss in 16 decisions. Colborn,
Ryan's effort was the best who last won on July 13,
ever for an American League allowed five hits in 6 2'3 innings
pitcher, bettering Bob Feller's to improve his record to 7-10(
record of 18 strikeouts in 1938,
and equalling the major league
mark shared by Steve Carlton
TICKETS ON SALE
of Philadelphia and Tom
Seaver of the New York Mets.
Tom Cheney of Washington
holds tbe record for most
strikeouts in an extra inning
game with 21 in a 16-i!Uling
contest against Baltimore In
1962.
In \he only otber AL games,
Detroit topped Kansas City, 5hat boy; fourth row, Wanda Teaford, assistant coach, Rita
1; Oakland edged New York, 3Slavin, coach, Rosemary Hubbard, Rhonda Cook, Carla
POMEROY, 0~
2, and Milwaukee downed
Teaford, Kim Winebrenner, Lorna Grindley, Vickie Cundiff,
Texas, 5-l.
Sonia Ash, Bob and Judy Gibbs, assistant coaches. Absent
Pittsburgh beat Cincinnati,
• were Carol Gibbs, Meg Amburger, and Teresa Ferrell.
7-4; New York defeated Los
Angeles, 3-1; St. Louis nipped
San Diego, &amp;.5, in 13 Innings,
and Philadelphia beat San
Francisco, 4-1, in tbe only
National League action.
Tigers 5, Royals 1
Detroit's Mickey Lolich,
backed by rookie Ron
and Ray Mowery with a the title game, "We would like LeFlore's two-run homer,
double.
to say thanks and express our tossed a fivehitter and moved
(('(
Hitters for the Braves were appreciation for all the help into ninth place on the aU-time.
/;))
Jeff Peckham, Dave Hysell, that went Into making the first
Maior League Results
By United Preu lnterna11onal
Stove Fife, Jeff Wayland, and Meigs Little League TourNa11onal League
Mike Miller all with a single nament a reality and a suc- San Fran
000 010 000- 1 7 0
Phil a
200 000 02x- 4 9 0
each, and Britt Dodson and cess."
Bryant ( 5) , Bradley
Terry Wayland each with a
They con tlnued, " Also, we (7)Halicki,
and Rader , Lonborg (13 11)
pair of singles.
would like to express our and Cox LP- Hallckl (1 6)
The " lead" In lead
pencils
Is not lead, but
The champloDBhip game
thanks to the umpires, Art Los Ang
000 010 000- 1 9 0
graphite
mixed with clay to
200 001 oox- 3 5 o
Saturday evening was taped Stobart, Homer Smilh, Clyde N v .
make It soft and smooth
Messersmith , Marshall (])
by Cable TV-5, and will be Ingels, Rick Stobart and Chip and Yeager ; Parker (4 IOl and
enough to rub off when It
aired tonight beginning at 7 Haggerty and also compliment Grote LP - Messersmlth (13 --41
moved across paj:)er . Hard
H R- MIIner (18th )
lead has more clay mixed
or 7:30 p.m.
all the learns and their
with
the graph ite than a
102 200 110- 7 12 0
The tournament Officials managers Cor the fine sport. Pitsbrgh
sot1 lead. To make " lead",
Cine I
000 120 100- 4 10 2
said following the conclusion of smanship displayed in this, the
clay, powdered graphite
Reuss , Morlan (6 ), G1ust l (7 )
first annual Meigs Little and Sangui11en , Kirby , McE and water are mixed into a
fS L C Carroll OJ. Hall
kind of dough Put through
League Tournament. This year naney
(9 1 and Plummer . WP - Reuss
a
machine, a tiny rope of
98 boys and 2 girls participated ( 12 9 ) LP- K irby f7 7) HRsdough emerges, whlch Is
Stargell
(20th ),
K trk patr lc k
for a total of 100 players".
straightened ovt: and c,_,t
f3rd l .
league record of 383 strikeouts
last season and also pitched
two nohitters, tumed in his
second blue chip performance
in a row by slopping the Red
Sox on seven hits for his 15th
victory.
In his last start, Ryan pit.
ched hitless ball for 8 1-3 innings before giving up three
hits and losing to the Chicago
White Sox, 2'1. Earlier this
year, be had a one.lJitter
against Texas, one of four in
his seven-year career.

MEIGS INN

fiiiRACilS
00

Braves win title

the porch of the National
Baseball Library, Mantle
closed his remarks with the
statement, "I hope Whitey and
I can live up to what these guys
stand for .''
It was a fitting end to an
emotion-packed day during
which two of casey Stengel's
"rogues" of the 1950s and 1960s
captivated the audience with
their wit and poise.
"When you think about what
happened in Washington last
week/' Ford had said, "you'd
have to say It's been a pretty
good week for Fords."
Mantle thanked Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who
presided over the ceremonies,
for "leaving all those
strikeouts" off his plaque .. .
recounted ho;w his motber and
father sacrified to help him as
a boy in Commerce, Okla ...and
then added a quip about an
unsuccessful business venture
In which he was engaged with a
hotel restaurant chain.
"I made up the slogan for the
restaurant," he said. " It was
'to get a better piece of
chicken, you'd have to be a

The Middleport Braves
captured the first annual Meigs
Little League Tournament
championship Saturday with
an 8-0 win over the Syracuse
Astros.
Mike Miller opened the game
with a single, fMlowed by a
Steve Fife home run which
proved to be enough as the
Braves added three runs in the
third, two in the fourth and one
in the sixth.
Miller started for the Braves
and was credited with the win,
walking two and striking out
none. He was relieved' by Jeff
Wayland 10 the third who
struck out three and walked
one. Britt Dodson came on in
the last two frames, striking
out three and walking none.
John Davis started for the
Astros, s triking out three and
walking one, while bemg
charged with the loss. He was
replaced by Mike Nance in the
fifth who walked four and
struck out two before Jack
Duffy came on in the fifth to
strike out three and walk one
batter in going the rest of the
way .
Leading the Braves' 8-hlt
attack, w.as Steve Fife with a
triple and home run, Dodson
with a double and single, Dave
Hysell with a double, Malt
Weaver with a double and
si~gle and Miller with u single.
For the Astros, John
Williams had a pair of singles,
Mark Davis a double, and
Duffy and Dave Nanc~ each
singled.
In Saturday's semi-fi nal
games, the Syracuse Astros
topped the Middleport Indians
ll-5as Johnny Williams cracked
a three-run homer In !he
bottom of the sixth.
The winning pitcher was
John Davis who struck out 11
and walked three. The losing
hurler was Terry Gardner,
striking out nine and walkmg
seven. Hitters for the Astros

rooster."'
Earlier in the ceremonies,
Bell, 71, said he was standing
" here to receive the greatest
honor of my life .. .I thank God
for enabling me to smell the
roses when yet living" and
Conlan paid tribute to former
National League president
Warren Giles as "the greatest
president in the history of
baseball."
Betty Bottomley Tucker,
Jim's widow, and Lawrence
Thompson, a nephew, accepted
the plaques on behalf of the
other new lllductees, Both
thanked baseball and Hall of
FJtme officials "from the
bottom of" their hearts .
The new inductees raised the
membership In the ahrlne to
148, Including only 114 players.
The other 32 are founding
111oneers and various officials
of the game.
\

..

were Williams with that home
run and Dave Nance with a
single.
For the Indians, Shane Smith
had a triple, Roger Carson a
single and triple and John
Cremeans a three-run homer.
In Saturday's second game,
the Braves topped the Dogers,
7·0 as M1ke Miller went the
distance for the Braves,
striking out nine and walking
two . Losing p1tcher Steve
Lambert struck out nine and
walked one. Rutland hitters
were Mark Tyree with a single

.#,~ _
M&gt;&gt;

I 13 inns.)

San Diego
.2 00 020 01 0 000 0St LouiS

.
Ma1or League Standiogs

Amtrlciln League

By United Pren lnternat•onal
Nat1onal Leagu e

East

61 56
59 57

pet . g.b .
521
509
11h

Boston
Cle ve lan d

55

. .487

Milwaukee

w.

Sf LOU IS
Philadelphia
P 1ttsburgh

Montrea l
New York
Chicago

E~ISt

1.

sa sa soo 21f,
58

4

49 63 .4 38 91f.
46 66 .411 12 1ft
West
w . I. pet . g . b.
Los Ange l e~
75 41
647
Cincinnat i
70 47 598
S lf'O
Atlanta
61 54 530 ll lf2
Houston
58 56 509 16
San F ran c isco 53 64 453 22 1t2
SE'n Diego
46 71 .393 291!,
Monday ' s Results
Phllad&amp;l.phla 4 San Fran cisco 1
N ew York 3 Los Angeles 1
St LouiS 6 S . D. 5. 13 Inns
PIUsburgh 1 Cinci nnat i 4
(Onlvgames sched uled )
Todar 's Probabale Pi1chers

w. I . pc1 .

63 52
58 54

Ba1t1more

57 57
56 58
55 61
54 62

New York
Detrolt

548
518
500
.491
474
.466

West
w. I pet .
68 49 58 1
Oakland
60 54 526
KansesCI1Y
Ch1cago
58 56 509
60 5&amp; 508
Texas
Minnesota
51 60 ,487
46 71 .393
Ca l i fornia

Monday's Re s ulh

s Kansas

American League

Kan City
000 100 OOQ- 1 5 1
Detro1t
003 2{)0 OOK- 5 11 0
g .b.
Brlles,McOenret (4J, 'Hoerner
_,_
(8 ) and H ealy . Lollch ( 13 14 J
3112 and Lamont. L P- Brtl es (3 5)
5 112 H R- LeFtore ( 1stl .

61!2
__ ,...._.
Blf2 M llwa
'• , 200 000 JO'o- 5 12 1
9112 Texas
ooo ooo 100- 1 5 1
Colborn , M ur ph y (7) and
Porter; Hargan , Clyd e (7) ,
g .b . Broberg (81. Merritt (8) and
....I.
Sundberg . WP - Colborn C7 -10)
61f7 LP - Hargan f9 7l.
8 112
81J, 1 New York
00 1 OOQ 001 - 2 S 1
11
OakiMd
001000 0:2K ~ 3 7 1
23
Oobson ( JQ . J4) end Munson ,·
Hunter
(·17 -9)
and
Haney ,
Tenace- 18 1
1

City 1
Milwaukee S Texas 1
Oakland 3 New York :2
Ca lifornia 4 Boston 2
(On tv games sche duled )
Detroit

000 010 001 -

Boston
; Cali f

ooo 310' oox-

J 70

471

Moret (6 -S l an d Montgomery i
Ryan (15 . 12) and Rodriguez .
HR- Oilver (7th ).
(On ly ga mes scheduledl

All Times EDT )
Hou slon (Roberts 6·101 at
Today's Probable Pl1cher s
Ch1cago (Bonham ~0· 14), J : J O
(All Times e-oTJ
.,.---~~--~---,
p m
Chicago ( Bahnsen 10-13) at
''Send A
San Francisco (Barr 10·5) at Baltimore rAiex~nder 5·8 L 7 30

Philadelphia

(Rulhven

•·91. p m.

7 35 p m
Montreal
(Torr'ez 9·81 l'lt
A tl anta (Reed 7·6J. 7 35 p m ,
Los Angeles IZaht'l 2-'21 at
N ew York (Matlack 109 ), 8OS
p .m .
Pittsburgh !Demery 2·41 a t
Cincinna t i (B1HlnQhllm 14.7) ,
' m.
8 t 05 ,..
Sen Diego (Romo s.s) &amp;t Sl.
Lovls ( Siebert7 -6).8 : 30pm
'
Wednesdty's Garnu
Houston at Chicago
LOS Angeles at New York
San Fran at Phil&amp; , night
Montreal at AtiMta, night
Pittsburgh at Clncl , night
· san D iego at St. Louis , night

'

Long Lasting

1Brow.n9·8),9p m.
New York &lt;Med lch 13· 10 ) at
Oakland &lt;Hol tzman 12-13&gt;. 11/
p .m
Bos 1on IT Ilin t l •r -8) at Call .
forn i a (Fig ueroa 2-3) , 11 p.m !
(O nlygames sc heduled l
?
Wednesday's Games
Chicago at Baltimore, n igh t
Mmnesota at Cleveland, n igh t
Kansas City at Detroit. night
M ilwaukee al Texu. nig hJ
New York at Oakland , night
Boston at Call for nl., , night
"

.

''H

To Say

8' thd

appy lr
ay
From $5.00

''

Dudley'S florist
59 N. Second St.
a..a1·ddleporl, 0.
'"1

11.

sticks. To complete the

pencil, these s11cks of lead
encased In wood and
usually topped with an
eraser Only tertaln wood&amp;

are

are suitable for lead
pencils. The best Is red
cedar . A pencil mad&amp; of rtd
cedar ls easy to shar~n.

The

.,....... _...~~

Miracle

Super

Appliance Is not 11 wattr

softner but a water refiner .

OSED CARS

'73 BUICK
'
Electra .225 Cus.
4 Dr. H.T.
Full power, factory air,

tape, 10,000 mlles .

Although It does soften

water, It does much more,
tool Thanks to an exclusive

Patented Process of
Treatlnq
Water",
a
Miracle Water
Refiner

''

1

cleans. filters and remov"

odor 1nd taste miner• I•
from your water. More and

more peO!'Ieare finding ouf
the advonfages of Refined
Water tvery day •lid mort

and mOre people er1
dlscoverlnq the difference
~hal

PLANT

TeKas

10 3

ooo 500 ooo ooo 1- 6 a 1
Greif. Laxton ( 9 ) and Ken
dall. Curtis, Forsch (8) , Hra .
bosky (91 and Simmons WP Hrabosky (6 . 1) LP - Laxton &lt;O ·

st ereo

BLOOMING

Kansas City (Fitzmorris 7 3)
at Detro it (Coleman 10.9 ), 8
p m
Mllw&amp;u~ee (Champion 6·2) at

~

Into p1eces. The pieces are
then baked for seVeral
hours In a big oven to drive
out the moisture. When
removed from the oven,
they are hard s.lender

'4895
karr ·&amp; Van lanett·

a

Miracle , W•ltr

Refiner makH over. .n

ordinary

water

con -

ditioner. Went to knoW
more7 Call 112·2525.

SAYB'
tiARDWA•
-

llt·tul
Hevtll, .,, v•.

•

�•

•

4-

••

.

-•••

.
The Daily Sent inti, Middl~port- Pomeroy, 0 .; Tllesday, Au~. 13,

j Fun With Food

f.
.

.

AIR

By Charlene Hoeflich

What with vacation and all, we kind of got sidetrack~ from
peanut butter, vinegar and SUBar cream pies, but here we are

bock.

.

WE

The response tel U.ese pie recipes has just been tremendous.
We've heard from readers In Dayton, Crooksville and Columbus
as well as Meigs homemakers. And how nice it is to hear. We not
only enjoy receiving the recipes but the chatty letters.
From Mildred Eskew, Dayton, wereceiv~ the recipe for the
Peanut Streusel Pie, the same one we had gotten earlier from
Jeanne Hines, Colwnbus. Mrs. Eskew did tell us, however, that
the pie recipe was a grand prize wiMer of the Kroger and
Westinghouse Third AMual Junior t:ook-Ott in 1961, and that
Bettijean Jeska, a 17-year-old, won $5,000and a trip to Europe for
the recipe.
A different peanut butter chiffon pie recipe came In from
MTP. LenaHamm, Pomeroy, who sent along not only that one but
a variety of her favorites, which we'll be passing along from time
to time, Anyway, the chiffon pie recipe caUs for a cup of dairy

PRICES ARE IN EFFECT TUESDAY-5 PM

•'

'
•'
•
l

Some time ago Mrs. Iva Siewart of out Rutland way had

ask~ for a vinegar pie recipe. Mrs. Maxine Russell, Crooksville,

sent along the one which her mother, Mrs. Clifford Jenkinson,
.used {llany years ago. It was taken from an old Larkin
Housewives Cookbook, Mrs. Russell tells us.

OUR ENTIRE STOCK ON SALE!

8 TRACK STEREO TAPES
I

••
•

:
'I

'

REGULAR •2.77
Country, rock, easy listening, etc.
Add to your collection now and

save. Famous artists.

Miss Terry Lee Ross

ON

SALE

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Miss Terry Lee Ross ,
daughter of Mr. and Mr~. John H. Ross, Mason, W. Va., is
announcing her engagement and approaching marriage to
Randall D. Snider, son of ·Mr. and Mrs. Morris D. Snider,
Pomeroy. The open church wedding will be an event of pee, 7
at the United Brethren Church, Mason .

NOW!

•

•
•

.•

10K Gold
Wedding Rings

•

•

•

f.

••

'•
•

GOESSLER'S

'

••

COLOR
TV
.
-

BlACK &amp;

•

•
..
~

•

••

•

12

oz.

PKG.

.

. • STEREO

79e

SUPERIORS
AL.. MEAT

BOLOGNA

PRICE

79e

POLISH
SAUSAGE

WOMEN'S
POLYESTER

Teens-Womens
EMBROIDERED

TODDLERS
COTTON

JAMAICA
SHORTS
Regular and e ..: Ira la rge

.sizes. They wer.e · $3.94.

NYLON
TOPS

TRAINING
PANTS

Sh'ort sleeve styles with
pretty
embroidered
design s.

White or pastel colors.
Double crotch . Sizes 2-46.

38~r.

$}66

Men or Womens

HAIR BRUSH
· RIOT
Stock up now types and sizes.

LB.

many

\CE lEI\ M\J., 1.7 01..

69~

LOW CUT TENNIS SHOES
By "Bata "

1.19.

HOME MADE
HAM SALAD

l.B.

79(
FRESH
LEAN

GROUND
ROUND
LB. 5

1.29 '"
DAIRY DEPARTMENT

Red: Gold
Navy.White.Biack

2FOR$100

SCOT LAD

Boys
and

"

VISIT
SHOPPERS MART
FOR ·ALL
SCHOOL NEEDS

ARTIFICIAL
FLOWERS
Regular Stock
Be and 13c

doz.

BROUGHTON'S

I .

SUMMER
SHOES

fork &amp; spoon. salad forks , butter
tablespoons, tea Spoorls,

1f2

OCEAN PERCH

FROZEN BUY!

l·lb.

FILLETS

BANQUET

WOMEN'S AND GIRLS

Cake server , tureen spoons, baby

1h GAL..

HOMO MILK

WE'LL SAVE YOU CASH
STAINLESS .TABLEWARE

.~

%GAL

ICE CREAM ·

Mens

5 DAY SALE!
.·!
~. ~··

Ls. 5

10 "~"'

GET THE SHOPPER'S MART SAVING HABIT
Bags to fit most any type
sweeper. 5 day sale. 3 and 4
disposable bags to pkg.

GROUND
CHUCK

NESlEA

$394UP

VACUUM CLEANER BAGS

79e

FRESH &amp; LEAN

POT PIES

pkg.

•

FAIRMONT

PRICE

GALLON

·2% MILK

lllth MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

Afternoon Demonstrations- FHA
12:30 P.M.- Flower Show Judging
1:00 P.M.-Open Class Beef Judging
·
Decorama
Horse Show
1:00 P.M.- 4-H Decor a rna
2:00-4:00 P.M.-Demonstrations ."Best of · Day
.
6:00 P.M.- Junior Fair Niglit
Dog ·show
x-7: 00 P.M ......: Parade moves ·
(Start lining up at .6 .p.m ,)
(Immediately after parade, little
Prince and Princess Contest) ·
x-7: 45 P.M .-Presentation of King and Queen
x-8: 25 P.M.. Achievement Awards Special Awards
·
x-8: 30 P.M .-Games and Races for all youth
x-9: 00 P.M.- Garden Tractor for youth
Horse Games
x- Grandstand Attractions

MIDDLEPORT, ()'

WIENERS

•

\

Court St., Pomeroy

ZENITH

'

•1!!

To IJmlt Quantities"

SUPERIORS

JEWELRY STORE

Celeste dinner
set at Meigs

lh

1

SUPERIORS All BEEF

LB.

pin

•
•

PHONE: 992·3480

45th anniversary marked

Priscilla

•

WOMEN'S
SUMMER TOPS
SHORT SETS
PANTS

AN·epl Fedf'rlll Food ~lflmp:~
Reserve The

•

VINEGAR PIE
AreceptionhonoringMr. and Mrs. Grace Hawley, Mrs .
1 egg; 3 tbsp. cider vinegar; pinch of salt; I tsp. lemon · Mrs. Leo Searls on their 45th Kathryn Ervin, Mr. and Mrs.
flavoring; 4 tbsp. flour; I c. sugar; I c. water.
wedding anniversary was held Charles Searles.
Mix sugar, flour and salt together thoroughly , then add
Others se nding gifts and-or
Sunday at the Middleport
boiling waler. Cook five minutes in a double boiler. Add egg, well
Church ·of Christ fe llowship cards and telephoning their
beaten. Cook another two minules. Add lemon flavoring and
hall. Hosting the observance congratulations were Roma
vinegar. Put into a pie crust that has been bak~ and top with
were Misi; Carolyn Searls, Anguish, Florence and Lavada
meringue.
Columbus, and Mrs. Jean WoOdyard, Mr. and Mrs. c. H.
A little different recipe for a vinegar pie was sent in by Mrs.
Searls Craig, Middleport, Wise, Carie Smith, Mr. and
Lena Hainm:
daughters of the couple. '
Mrs. Charles Flugan, Kathryn
OLD FASIDONED VINEGAR PIE
The color scheme of yellow Bibighaus, Mrs, Mary Bailey,
To one egg, beaten, add I c. of sugar and three.scant tbsp. of
·and white was carried' out and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Swisher,
aJI. purpose flour. Beat until mixture is creamy. Then add 1 c.
the ann iversary c~ke was Mr . and Mrs . George
water and 2 tbsp. vinegar. Mix well.
inscrib~ " Happy 45th An- Meinhart, Mrs. Florence
Pour into a nine inch unbak~ pie shell. Sprinkle with cin·
niversary, Martha and Leo." A Rhodes , Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
namon and dot with bits of butter. Bake in a 425 degree oven for
floral centerpiece, corsage and Van Cooney, Mrs. Clara
20 minutes, then reduce heat to 350 degrees and bake until done.
boutonniere for the couple · Adams and Mrs. Mabel
were gifts of Mr. and Mrs . Walburn .
Another vinegar pie recipe which Mrs. Harnm sent called for
·Thomas Darst. . . .·
----------making a filling of II&gt; c. sugar, 2 eggs, 2 tbsp. flour , 4 tbsp.
quests · were registered by
vinegar, and 11&gt; c.ofboiUng water. The sugar and flour are to be
Pat Craig. Ci nd y Craig
mixed and added to the beaten eggs . .Then the vinegar is stirred
.assisted ~iss Searls and Mrs.
in and the boiling water is added gradually. Thix lnixture is then " Carig with the serving. Miss
cooked in a sauce pan until thick and pour~ into a nine-inch pie
Searls presided at the punch
shell.
bowl and Mrs. Craig at the
coffee service.
A!lending were Miss Mildred
Hawley, Mrs. Kathy Erwin and
Smartly Styled
daUBhter, Amy, Mrs. Betty
Exceptional Values
The 23rd annual Hobstetter dinner after which a business McKinley, Mrs . Regina Swife, ·
reunion was held Sunday at session was held. D. Russell Miss Frances Roush, Jim
Roach, Bill Burgess, Mr. and ·
RtJral Oak Park.
Lee was reelected president,
Those in attendance .were Eric Chambers, vice president, Mrs. Harold Lohse, Mrs. Lena
Jessie
Miss
Mr. ' ahd Mrs. Richard and Mrs . Richard Chambers, McKinley,
Chambers, Eric Chambers, secretary. Gecirge Hobstetter Saunders, Debbie Taylor, Mr.
Middlepori; Donald Hill , was appointed as chairwoman and Mrs. Tom Darst and Craig,
Mrs. Helen Reynolds, Mrs.
Dayton; Mr. and Mril. Richard of the flower committee.
Helen
Kennedy, Mrs. Donja
Lee, Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. D.
Russell, Mrs . Nellie Ohlinger,
RU88ell Lee, West Chesler; Mr.
Mrs
. Mabel Walburn, Mr. and
and Mrs. Chauncey E .
Mrs. Glenn Hensler and son,
Harrison, Gallipolis ; Mrs . Mrs. Tuttle gets
Bill.
Lillian R. Lee, Racine; Mr. and .
Mrs. Martha Childs, Mr. and
Mrs. J . W. Lee, Racine ; Mrs.
Allen Jenkinson, Mrs.
Mrs.
Hazel Groff, Shaker Heights; 25 year D of A
Alice Robeson, Mrs. Lula Mae
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hob·
Lynch,
Mr . . and Mrs. Wilbur
st(!tter, Pomeroy ; ]11r. and .
CHESTER - A 25-year pin Theobald, Duffy Craig, JenMrs. William J. Hobstetter,
was
presented to Mrs .. nifer Ferguson, Mrs. Louise
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. James
Margaret
Tllttle at a recent McElhinny, Mrs. E lecta
W. Hobstetter, R.D., Rutland;
Mr. and 'Mrs. George Tasslan meeting' of Chester Council 323, Souders, Mrs. Freda Welling.
L. D. Hartin ger , Sarah
and daUBhters Kitsa and Eliza, DaUBhters of America , at 1the
hall.
Koehler,
Mrs. Nettie Warner,
Cincinnati; C. K. Nease and
Tllttle
was
escorted
to
P!;l1 S£1
Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Aaron Kelton ,
son, Minersville; Herman
RINGS
ENLARGED TO SHOW DETAIL
Strauss, Athens; and Mrs. the altar by the flagbearers for Mrs. Reva ·Beach, Mrs. Ida
Cinda Bartlett and daUBhters, the presentation ceremony. It Childs, Mrs. Chester Erwin,
Karen and Christina, Athens. was reported durin g the Mr. and Mrs. George Glaze,
The grOUp enjoyed a picnic meeting presided over by Mrs. Trey and Clinton, Mr. and Mrs.
Erma Cleland, that Mrs. Alice Harold Wolfe, Beth and Darin,
Curtis is a patient at Veterans Mr. and Mrs . . Blythe · Theiss, ,
over by Mrs. Erma Cleland, Mrs .. James Brew:er, Mr. ahd
that Mrs. Alice Curtis is a Mrs. steve Scaggs and Da.rell,
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. It was announced
that there will be no meeting of
A potluck dinner will be held the Past Councilors Club in ·
Thursday at 6 p.{ll. at the AUBust.
Meigs County Fairgrounds in
Attending were those named
honor of Richard P. Celeste .and Mrs. Zona Biggs, ~rs .
and famUy. Celeste is rUHning Mabel Van Meter, Mrs. lnzy
for lieutenant governor of the Newell; Mrs. J~an Sum.
state of Ohio on the Democratic merfield, Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler,
ticket.
Mrs. Betty Roush, Mrs . .Ada
WEDNESDAY, AUGUSTl4
To reach the area, enter the .Morris, M'rs, ~tha Wooct,.Mrs.
9: 15 A.M.-Junior Fair Beef Showmanship
main gate, drive beyond the Goldi,e Frederick, Mrs. Ethel
and Judging
'county garage to a graS.y Orr, Mrs. Ada Van Meter, Mrs.
10: 00 A.M.- 4- H Club Outstanding Class
knoll. The dinner is open to all Zelda· Weber, Mrs. Dorothy
Awards
Democrats and interested Ritchie, Mrs. Opal Hollon, Mrs.
Conformation Show- Horses and
perl10118.
Hattie Frederick, Mrs. Ada
Ponies
.
Thoee attending are asked to Neutzllng and Mrs. Dorothy
12:00
(Noon)
4-H
Flower
Show
Judging
bring lawn chairs.
Lawson.

Hobstetter reunion held

Wr!

•
•
••

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON STORES

sour

'

SALE

•

sour cream.

PEANUT BU'ITER CHIFFON PIE
1 envelope unflavor~ gelatin; 1&gt; c. sugar: \1 tsp. salt; 1 c.
milk; 2 eggs separated; tw&lt;rthirds c. smooth peanut butter; 1 c.
dairy
cr'e am; I bak~ nine-inch pie shell.
In the top of small double boiler, mix gelatin, ¥• c. of the
SUBar and the salt. Add Milk and egg yolks and beat with a rotary
beater until blended. Put over simmering water and cook
stirring until mixture thickens slightly and coats a spoon.
Remove from the heat, pour into a bowl and beat in peanut
•'
butter. Cool thoroughly.
Beat egg whites until foamy. Gradually add \1 c. sugar lind
beat until stiff.
Stir the sour cream Into the peanut butter mixtUre, then fold
in the beaten egg white. Pile lightly into shell and chill until firnl .

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 · Sun. 10 to .10

.

$ 19

VINYL PLACE MATS
Foam Back -

·6 .·.·•1 oo.

Tangerine,
Aqua .
Green
or White
29c VALUE ,

A 98c VALUE

\

4$ Count

A $1.29 VALUE

CRAYOLA
CRAYONS

3 PIECE CAR
CARE KIT
8White
Inch Wall
Sponge
Scrubber
$ponge Squeezee

66"' 82e
,.

.

.

A DISCOUNT
DEPARTMENT STOlt!.
POINT PLEASANT OR MASON
I

RC COLA

BE-FREE
WOMEN'S

16 oz.

NYLON
PANTIES

bots.
pak

Everyday Price .- 8 P"ak • .29 ,

77!r.

r ----

PLENTY OF
FREE
PARKING.!
NO
.MnERS TO
FIID

f
I

r

-•••
"

~

~

1
1
.

.

1
1

----~

8awe

I
I

MAXW•LL HOUs•·

1

COFFEE
AT. MARk

VSTORE ::-:-::-w.:ru

~2~L~B~,C~A~N~O~N~L~Y~~~~llij;d

L,, - ~·~ - _!!!A~~".!!. ·~F!II ~~~

DAD'S ROOT BEER

I

·WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY THE 2 LB. CAN OF

I
1
j

. -.:....: _J

.

\

OR NEW DIET RITE COU. (SUGAR FREE)

\

8

PAK
16 oz.
btls.

., 19

�•

•

4-

••

.

-•••

.
The Daily Sent inti, Middl~port- Pomeroy, 0 .; Tllesday, Au~. 13,

j Fun With Food

f.
.

.

AIR

By Charlene Hoeflich

What with vacation and all, we kind of got sidetrack~ from
peanut butter, vinegar and SUBar cream pies, but here we are

bock.

.

WE

The response tel U.ese pie recipes has just been tremendous.
We've heard from readers In Dayton, Crooksville and Columbus
as well as Meigs homemakers. And how nice it is to hear. We not
only enjoy receiving the recipes but the chatty letters.
From Mildred Eskew, Dayton, wereceiv~ the recipe for the
Peanut Streusel Pie, the same one we had gotten earlier from
Jeanne Hines, Colwnbus. Mrs. Eskew did tell us, however, that
the pie recipe was a grand prize wiMer of the Kroger and
Westinghouse Third AMual Junior t:ook-Ott in 1961, and that
Bettijean Jeska, a 17-year-old, won $5,000and a trip to Europe for
the recipe.
A different peanut butter chiffon pie recipe came In from
MTP. LenaHamm, Pomeroy, who sent along not only that one but
a variety of her favorites, which we'll be passing along from time
to time, Anyway, the chiffon pie recipe caUs for a cup of dairy

PRICES ARE IN EFFECT TUESDAY-5 PM

•'

'
•'
•
l

Some time ago Mrs. Iva Siewart of out Rutland way had

ask~ for a vinegar pie recipe. Mrs. Maxine Russell, Crooksville,

sent along the one which her mother, Mrs. Clifford Jenkinson,
.used {llany years ago. It was taken from an old Larkin
Housewives Cookbook, Mrs. Russell tells us.

OUR ENTIRE STOCK ON SALE!

8 TRACK STEREO TAPES
I

••
•

:
'I

'

REGULAR •2.77
Country, rock, easy listening, etc.
Add to your collection now and

save. Famous artists.

Miss Terry Lee Ross

ON

SALE

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Miss Terry Lee Ross ,
daughter of Mr. and Mr~. John H. Ross, Mason, W. Va., is
announcing her engagement and approaching marriage to
Randall D. Snider, son of ·Mr. and Mrs. Morris D. Snider,
Pomeroy. The open church wedding will be an event of pee, 7
at the United Brethren Church, Mason .

NOW!

•

•
•

.•

10K Gold
Wedding Rings

•

•

•

f.

••

'•
•

GOESSLER'S

'

••

COLOR
TV
.
-

BlACK &amp;

•

•
..
~

•

••

•

12

oz.

PKG.

.

. • STEREO

79e

SUPERIORS
AL.. MEAT

BOLOGNA

PRICE

79e

POLISH
SAUSAGE

WOMEN'S
POLYESTER

Teens-Womens
EMBROIDERED

TODDLERS
COTTON

JAMAICA
SHORTS
Regular and e ..: Ira la rge

.sizes. They wer.e · $3.94.

NYLON
TOPS

TRAINING
PANTS

Sh'ort sleeve styles with
pretty
embroidered
design s.

White or pastel colors.
Double crotch . Sizes 2-46.

38~r.

$}66

Men or Womens

HAIR BRUSH
· RIOT
Stock up now types and sizes.

LB.

many

\CE lEI\ M\J., 1.7 01..

69~

LOW CUT TENNIS SHOES
By "Bata "

1.19.

HOME MADE
HAM SALAD

l.B.

79(
FRESH
LEAN

GROUND
ROUND
LB. 5

1.29 '"
DAIRY DEPARTMENT

Red: Gold
Navy.White.Biack

2FOR$100

SCOT LAD

Boys
and

"

VISIT
SHOPPERS MART
FOR ·ALL
SCHOOL NEEDS

ARTIFICIAL
FLOWERS
Regular Stock
Be and 13c

doz.

BROUGHTON'S

I .

SUMMER
SHOES

fork &amp; spoon. salad forks , butter
tablespoons, tea Spoorls,

1f2

OCEAN PERCH

FROZEN BUY!

l·lb.

FILLETS

BANQUET

WOMEN'S AND GIRLS

Cake server , tureen spoons, baby

1h GAL..

HOMO MILK

WE'LL SAVE YOU CASH
STAINLESS .TABLEWARE

.~

%GAL

ICE CREAM ·

Mens

5 DAY SALE!
.·!
~. ~··

Ls. 5

10 "~"'

GET THE SHOPPER'S MART SAVING HABIT
Bags to fit most any type
sweeper. 5 day sale. 3 and 4
disposable bags to pkg.

GROUND
CHUCK

NESlEA

$394UP

VACUUM CLEANER BAGS

79e

FRESH &amp; LEAN

POT PIES

pkg.

•

FAIRMONT

PRICE

GALLON

·2% MILK

lllth MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

Afternoon Demonstrations- FHA
12:30 P.M.- Flower Show Judging
1:00 P.M.-Open Class Beef Judging
·
Decorama
Horse Show
1:00 P.M.- 4-H Decor a rna
2:00-4:00 P.M.-Demonstrations ."Best of · Day
.
6:00 P.M.- Junior Fair Niglit
Dog ·show
x-7: 00 P.M ......: Parade moves ·
(Start lining up at .6 .p.m ,)
(Immediately after parade, little
Prince and Princess Contest) ·
x-7: 45 P.M .-Presentation of King and Queen
x-8: 25 P.M.. Achievement Awards Special Awards
·
x-8: 30 P.M .-Games and Races for all youth
x-9: 00 P.M.- Garden Tractor for youth
Horse Games
x- Grandstand Attractions

MIDDLEPORT, ()'

WIENERS

•

\

Court St., Pomeroy

ZENITH

'

•1!!

To IJmlt Quantities"

SUPERIORS

JEWELRY STORE

Celeste dinner
set at Meigs

lh

1

SUPERIORS All BEEF

LB.

pin

•
•

PHONE: 992·3480

45th anniversary marked

Priscilla

•

WOMEN'S
SUMMER TOPS
SHORT SETS
PANTS

AN·epl Fedf'rlll Food ~lflmp:~
Reserve The

•

VINEGAR PIE
AreceptionhonoringMr. and Mrs. Grace Hawley, Mrs .
1 egg; 3 tbsp. cider vinegar; pinch of salt; I tsp. lemon · Mrs. Leo Searls on their 45th Kathryn Ervin, Mr. and Mrs.
flavoring; 4 tbsp. flour; I c. sugar; I c. water.
wedding anniversary was held Charles Searles.
Mix sugar, flour and salt together thoroughly , then add
Others se nding gifts and-or
Sunday at the Middleport
boiling waler. Cook five minutes in a double boiler. Add egg, well
Church ·of Christ fe llowship cards and telephoning their
beaten. Cook another two minules. Add lemon flavoring and
hall. Hosting the observance congratulations were Roma
vinegar. Put into a pie crust that has been bak~ and top with
were Misi; Carolyn Searls, Anguish, Florence and Lavada
meringue.
Columbus, and Mrs. Jean WoOdyard, Mr. and Mrs. c. H.
A little different recipe for a vinegar pie was sent in by Mrs.
Searls Craig, Middleport, Wise, Carie Smith, Mr. and
Lena Hainm:
daughters of the couple. '
Mrs. Charles Flugan, Kathryn
OLD FASIDONED VINEGAR PIE
The color scheme of yellow Bibighaus, Mrs, Mary Bailey,
To one egg, beaten, add I c. of sugar and three.scant tbsp. of
·and white was carried' out and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Swisher,
aJI. purpose flour. Beat until mixture is creamy. Then add 1 c.
the ann iversary c~ke was Mr . and Mrs . George
water and 2 tbsp. vinegar. Mix well.
inscrib~ " Happy 45th An- Meinhart, Mrs. Florence
Pour into a nine inch unbak~ pie shell. Sprinkle with cin·
niversary, Martha and Leo." A Rhodes , Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
namon and dot with bits of butter. Bake in a 425 degree oven for
floral centerpiece, corsage and Van Cooney, Mrs. Clara
20 minutes, then reduce heat to 350 degrees and bake until done.
boutonniere for the couple · Adams and Mrs. Mabel
were gifts of Mr. and Mrs . Walburn .
Another vinegar pie recipe which Mrs. Harnm sent called for
·Thomas Darst. . . .·
----------making a filling of II&gt; c. sugar, 2 eggs, 2 tbsp. flour , 4 tbsp.
quests · were registered by
vinegar, and 11&gt; c.ofboiUng water. The sugar and flour are to be
Pat Craig. Ci nd y Craig
mixed and added to the beaten eggs . .Then the vinegar is stirred
.assisted ~iss Searls and Mrs.
in and the boiling water is added gradually. Thix lnixture is then " Carig with the serving. Miss
cooked in a sauce pan until thick and pour~ into a nine-inch pie
Searls presided at the punch
shell.
bowl and Mrs. Craig at the
coffee service.
A!lending were Miss Mildred
Hawley, Mrs. Kathy Erwin and
Smartly Styled
daUBhter, Amy, Mrs. Betty
Exceptional Values
The 23rd annual Hobstetter dinner after which a business McKinley, Mrs . Regina Swife, ·
reunion was held Sunday at session was held. D. Russell Miss Frances Roush, Jim
Roach, Bill Burgess, Mr. and ·
RtJral Oak Park.
Lee was reelected president,
Those in attendance .were Eric Chambers, vice president, Mrs. Harold Lohse, Mrs. Lena
Jessie
Miss
Mr. ' ahd Mrs. Richard and Mrs . Richard Chambers, McKinley,
Chambers, Eric Chambers, secretary. Gecirge Hobstetter Saunders, Debbie Taylor, Mr.
Middlepori; Donald Hill , was appointed as chairwoman and Mrs. Tom Darst and Craig,
Mrs. Helen Reynolds, Mrs.
Dayton; Mr. and Mril. Richard of the flower committee.
Helen
Kennedy, Mrs. Donja
Lee, Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. D.
Russell, Mrs . Nellie Ohlinger,
RU88ell Lee, West Chesler; Mr.
Mrs
. Mabel Walburn, Mr. and
and Mrs. Chauncey E .
Mrs. Glenn Hensler and son,
Harrison, Gallipolis ; Mrs . Mrs. Tuttle gets
Bill.
Lillian R. Lee, Racine; Mr. and .
Mrs. Martha Childs, Mr. and
Mrs. J . W. Lee, Racine ; Mrs.
Allen Jenkinson, Mrs.
Mrs.
Hazel Groff, Shaker Heights; 25 year D of A
Alice Robeson, Mrs. Lula Mae
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hob·
Lynch,
Mr . . and Mrs. Wilbur
st(!tter, Pomeroy ; ]11r. and .
CHESTER - A 25-year pin Theobald, Duffy Craig, JenMrs. William J. Hobstetter,
was
presented to Mrs .. nifer Ferguson, Mrs. Louise
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. James
Margaret
Tllttle at a recent McElhinny, Mrs. E lecta
W. Hobstetter, R.D., Rutland;
Mr. and 'Mrs. George Tasslan meeting' of Chester Council 323, Souders, Mrs. Freda Welling.
L. D. Hartin ger , Sarah
and daUBhters Kitsa and Eliza, DaUBhters of America , at 1the
hall.
Koehler,
Mrs. Nettie Warner,
Cincinnati; C. K. Nease and
Tllttle
was
escorted
to
P!;l1 S£1
Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Aaron Kelton ,
son, Minersville; Herman
RINGS
ENLARGED TO SHOW DETAIL
Strauss, Athens; and Mrs. the altar by the flagbearers for Mrs. Reva ·Beach, Mrs. Ida
Cinda Bartlett and daUBhters, the presentation ceremony. It Childs, Mrs. Chester Erwin,
Karen and Christina, Athens. was reported durin g the Mr. and Mrs. George Glaze,
The grOUp enjoyed a picnic meeting presided over by Mrs. Trey and Clinton, Mr. and Mrs.
Erma Cleland, that Mrs. Alice Harold Wolfe, Beth and Darin,
Curtis is a patient at Veterans Mr. and Mrs . . Blythe · Theiss, ,
over by Mrs. Erma Cleland, Mrs .. James Brew:er, Mr. ahd
that Mrs. Alice Curtis is a Mrs. steve Scaggs and Da.rell,
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. It was announced
that there will be no meeting of
A potluck dinner will be held the Past Councilors Club in ·
Thursday at 6 p.{ll. at the AUBust.
Meigs County Fairgrounds in
Attending were those named
honor of Richard P. Celeste .and Mrs. Zona Biggs, ~rs .
and famUy. Celeste is rUHning Mabel Van Meter, Mrs. lnzy
for lieutenant governor of the Newell; Mrs. J~an Sum.
state of Ohio on the Democratic merfield, Mrs. Mary Jo Pooler,
ticket.
Mrs. Betty Roush, Mrs . .Ada
WEDNESDAY, AUGUSTl4
To reach the area, enter the .Morris, M'rs, ~tha Wooct,.Mrs.
9: 15 A.M.-Junior Fair Beef Showmanship
main gate, drive beyond the Goldi,e Frederick, Mrs. Ethel
and Judging
'county garage to a graS.y Orr, Mrs. Ada Van Meter, Mrs.
10: 00 A.M.- 4- H Club Outstanding Class
knoll. The dinner is open to all Zelda· Weber, Mrs. Dorothy
Awards
Democrats and interested Ritchie, Mrs. Opal Hollon, Mrs.
Conformation Show- Horses and
perl10118.
Hattie Frederick, Mrs. Ada
Ponies
.
Thoee attending are asked to Neutzllng and Mrs. Dorothy
12:00
(Noon)
4-H
Flower
Show
Judging
bring lawn chairs.
Lawson.

Hobstetter reunion held

Wr!

•
•
••

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON STORES

sour

'

SALE

•

sour cream.

PEANUT BU'ITER CHIFFON PIE
1 envelope unflavor~ gelatin; 1&gt; c. sugar: \1 tsp. salt; 1 c.
milk; 2 eggs separated; tw&lt;rthirds c. smooth peanut butter; 1 c.
dairy
cr'e am; I bak~ nine-inch pie shell.
In the top of small double boiler, mix gelatin, ¥• c. of the
SUBar and the salt. Add Milk and egg yolks and beat with a rotary
beater until blended. Put over simmering water and cook
stirring until mixture thickens slightly and coats a spoon.
Remove from the heat, pour into a bowl and beat in peanut
•'
butter. Cool thoroughly.
Beat egg whites until foamy. Gradually add \1 c. sugar lind
beat until stiff.
Stir the sour cream Into the peanut butter mixtUre, then fold
in the beaten egg white. Pile lightly into shell and chill until firnl .

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 · Sun. 10 to .10

.

$ 19

VINYL PLACE MATS
Foam Back -

·6 .·.·•1 oo.

Tangerine,
Aqua .
Green
or White
29c VALUE ,

A 98c VALUE

\

4$ Count

A $1.29 VALUE

CRAYOLA
CRAYONS

3 PIECE CAR
CARE KIT
8White
Inch Wall
Sponge
Scrubber
$ponge Squeezee

66"' 82e
,.

.

.

A DISCOUNT
DEPARTMENT STOlt!.
POINT PLEASANT OR MASON
I

RC COLA

BE-FREE
WOMEN'S

16 oz.

NYLON
PANTIES

bots.
pak

Everyday Price .- 8 P"ak • .29 ,

77!r.

r ----

PLENTY OF
FREE
PARKING.!
NO
.MnERS TO
FIID

f
I

r

-•••
"

~

~

1
1
.

.

1
1

----~

8awe

I
I

MAXW•LL HOUs•·

1

COFFEE
AT. MARk

VSTORE ::-:-::-w.:ru

~2~L~B~,C~A~N~O~N~L~Y~~~~llij;d

L,, - ~·~ - _!!!A~~".!!. ·~F!II ~~~

DAD'S ROOT BEER

I

·WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY THE 2 LB. CAN OF

I
1
j

. -.:....: _J

.

\

OR NEW DIET RITE COU. (SUGAR FREE)

\

8

PAK
16 oz.
btls.

., 19

�7- The OeUy SenUnel, Midl!lePott-Pomeroy, Q . Tu.,.S.y, Aug
.6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0

l'ues(JHy, Aug IJ, 1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Notice

2 SIGNS
Of

R:UMMAGE Sale Aug 1.4 15
1• 101 m to 4 p m 230 S Sth.

AVI'

MlddlepoJ'f

8 ll Jt c
I

WILL do roofmg l'leal lno
repair plum bmg and elec
trlcal work Phone Charles
S nclalr 985 ,.171
8 7 12tc.

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

I OION T KNOW THAT' .MGM
Flu Mar~et Spec i als S!i
Inside S3 OUIStde Spring
Ave
Pomero y
Onlo

Collectors
Every Sa t

dealers

~nd

et c

SUnday

B 7 1ft

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

WE HAVE all vour uphols.ter~
need s
Burlap
den m
camb r ic foam glue llpper5
tacking strtp spnngs and
clip~
ch t pboard
button
twtne sew1ng thread legs
upholstery books dacron
welJblng spnng twtne tacks
well card colton swtve t
basn and foam foam foa m
Pomeroy Recovery 62.2 E
Man st
Pomeroy
Oh io
Phone 992 7554
1 24 26 tc

Rt

191 I OODGE DART

Swinger HT C!Je rhed green finish with blk "''"YI roof
green vmvl 1nterlor frlm V 8 engine automatic trons
sport St wnael , full wh cover Like new w w tires rad•o
relll nice

l970CHEV MONTE CARLO

33

blue •ntenor blue vmy l roof factory air condllloned like

106 COURT ST.

--------------FURNI SHED
apartment

--------------CHICKEN barbe cue
Rac ine
11

?

8 13 SIC

-------------For Sale

TREE rtpened peaches wh te
and yellow at Mason peach
orchard
Mason
West
Vlrgmla
a 13 tfc

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

Major League Leaders
By Un1ted Press International
Ludlng Batters
National League
g ab r h pet
Garr Atl
1l4 481 67 177 368
Montnz Phil 101 355 39 115 324
Garvey LA 111 458 67 148 323
Gross Hou
108 399 62 128 321
Smith StL
99 349 50 111 318
Brock StL
109 450 76 142 316
Z l'!ik Pit
105 377 52 119 316
B •ckner LA 100 397 52 123 310
Oliver Ptt
101 416 63 127 305
Cardnt Chi
99 385 so 117 304
Amencan League
g ab r h pet
Carew Min 112 448 66 165 368
Hargrve Tex 94 299 43 103 344
McRae KC 101 360 52 116 322
Orta Cht
95 348 57 110 316
Jacksn Oak 107 368 65 115 313
Yaz Bos
109 381 69 118 310
Rudl Oak
113 430 55 132 307
Allen Chi
108 395 76 121 306
Randle Tex 110 373 49 11.11 306
Maddox NY 90 288 .115 88 306
Home Runs
National Lugue Wynn LA
27 Schm ldt Ph II 25 Bench
Cln 24 Cedeno Hou 22 P~rez
tin 21
American League Allen Chi
Jf Burroughs Tex 22 Jack
son Oak 21 Mayberry K c and
Darwin Mlnn 19
Runs Batted In
National League Bench Cln
and Schm ldt Phil 88 Cedeno
Hou and Wynn LA Boll Garvey

LA 78

A m e r I c 1 n League Bur
roughs Tex 95 Allen Chi 83
Bendo Oak 80 Rudl Oak 73
Henderson Chi and Darwin
Mlnn 71
PitChing
National League Billrngham
Cln 14 7 Carlton Phil 14 8
John LA 13 3 Messersm 1th
LA 13 A
Gullett
Cm and
McGlothen
St L
13 8
p
Ntek,-o Atl 13 9 Lon borg Ph1l

13 11

Am erlcan League Wood ChI
11 13 Tlant Bos 17 8 Busby
KC and Hunter
Oak 17 9
Jenkins rex 16 10 Bibby Tex
16 1A
•

Meigs
Property

Transfers
Thomas Marhn, Flo D
MarUn to William J Hobsteter,
Elbabeth Hobstetler, Ease ,
Rutland VIllage
Paul KBrr, Ruth Karrto Paul
Karr, Ruth Karr, Parcels,
Oleoter
Leonard Haah, Phyllis Hash
to Franklin Real Estate Co ,
Rei of Vendor's Ueu, Salem
France• E Williams to
Suluel John ctow, Judith
O'ow, 83 Acre, Salisbury
Kenneth WUt, poria WUt to
O.'fid H Zirkle, Maude Ann
11rkle, Lot 15, Myers Add ,

adults only In
Phon e 992 3874

OLD trunk oval lid
Partl y
brass (ve ry old) Make me an
offer Phone 992 5142
REGISTERED
half Arabtan
mare with her reg istered ~
Arabran
filly
Raffles
breeding
Call
667 3610
Coolville
8 13 5tp

M iddleport

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

BLACK pony sadd le
good
c ond 11/on Call 992 3059
8 13 3tc

Piamt lff has brought thiS
act 1on nam1ng you as defendant
In the above named court by
f ltng her Com plaint on the 6th
day of Jul y 1974
The obfect of the Comp la nt
and the demand for r ei ef are to
obtam a d rvorce and for oth er
proper rei ef
You are requ ired to ans wer
the Compla nt w th in twenty
e1ght day s after the last
publ l catron of th s not tc e wh ch
wt/ J be published once each
week for SIX consecut1ve weeks
ar'ld the last publl cat on Will be
made on the 20th day of August
1974 Your answer date w 11 be
on S~ptember 18 1974
In the case of your failure to
answer or otherw se respond as
perm itted by the Oh10 Rules of
CtvJI Procedure w thm ttle t me
stated jUdgment by default wr!l
be rendered aga nst you for the
relref demanded m the Com
plamt
LARRY E SPENCER
Clerk of
Common Pleas Courl
Me tgS County Oh tO
Court House
Pomeroy Oh 10
(7 ) 9 16 23 30 I8J 6 13 20 7tc
-----------""
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNT S
PROBATE COURT MEIGS

COUNTY OH IO

Accounts and vouchers of the
follow ing named flduc,anes
have been filed rn the Probate
Court Metg S County Oh o for
approval and settlement
CASE NO 20121 Ftfth Annual
Account of Frank W Porter
Jr Trustee Under Item V of the
Last Will and Testamen t of
Jan#!
Loutse
D
Smith
Deceased
CASE NO 20745 F~rst Annual
and Ftnal Account of Marie
DeVIetro Guard an of the
Person and Estate of Robert P
DIV etro
an
Incompetent
Person
CASE NO 20987 First and
Ftnal Account of Paul S Smart
Adm lnlstrator with the Will
Annexed of the Estate of Harry
M Cross Deceased
CASE NO 210.113 F.rst and
Fina l Account of Emma G
Broderick
ExecutriX of th e
Estate of VIncent P Brodenck
Deceased
CASE NO 21064 F rrst and
F inal Account of Martha Lou ise
Coli ns Executrrx of the Estate
of John P Kauff Deceased
CASE NO 21090 F 1rst and
Final Account of Clarence M
Headley Executor of the Estate
of ~ Mildred
B
Headley
Deceased
Unless except1ons are flied
thereto sa1d accounts wil t be
for hear ing before sad Court on
the 11th day of September 197.11
at which t me sa1d accounts will
be constdered and continued
from day to day until finally
disposed of
Any person mterested may
file wrrtten except1ons to said
accounts or to matters per
tainrng to the executtpn of t he
tru s t not less than f ive days
pr or to the date set for hearing
MANNING D WEB ST ER
JUDGE
CO MMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
(Bl 13 u c

PARK HEADS RANGERS

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

'*nrd

I

Pets For Sale

Call Collect 1 592 5544

------------1973 HONDA 50 m 1n l tra 1l b1ke

Athens, Oh1o

delivered right to your
project Fast and easy Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goeglem Ready M1x Co
Middleport Ohro
6 30 lf c

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

on
a1um1num
replacement
Windows siding storm doors
and wrndows Ra ling Phone
Charles Lisle Syrac~se Oh o
Carl
Jacob
Sales
Representat ve
v
v
Johnson and Son Inc
4 30 tfc

WILL keep elderly people tn my
home Phone 992 7460
8 1 12tc

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

BLACK and tan dog on Spencer
Rd 3 weeks ago Reward 1f
found Phone ~22 0139
8 7 61p

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

Wanted To Buy

BEDROOM home 1 floor
plan E1ther In Mtddleport
Pomeroy
Syracuse
or
Racme Phone 992 3122
811 3tc

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

OLD pla yer p1ano rol ls Call
742 5625
8 9 6tc

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

WANTED old uprtght p anos
any condlt on
Paymg SlO
cash F 1rstfloor only Wr 1te to
and g ve direct ons to W1tten
P1t1no Company
Box 188
Sardts Ohio .&lt;13946
8 II 6tp

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

Scrap Iron, Cast Iron,
Motor blocks, copper

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

alummum, d1e cast,
zmc, stam less steel
Sell to

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

3 lots eac h 50x1 00' 112 State
Street Pomeroy Phone 992
7311

a 8 5tc

LOTS for sale tra ler or house
All u t lites Phone 742 3615
Rutland O h ra
7 16 tfc

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

CASH pa id for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area cod e 6U 423 9531
_ _ - J _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ......_ _ _ _
4 13 tfc

OLD FURNITURE oak tables
clock.s Ice boxes bran beds
dishes desks or complete
households
Wr ite M
o
Mil ler Rt o1 Pomeroy Ohio
call 992 17 60
13 tfc

s

:SACREs- of l~ el-~~e,;ly
roll In; land not too far from
town Send any Informat ion to
Box 729 C car e of the Dally
Se n11nel
Pomeroy
Ohio
.45769
8 2 12tc

- - - -- - -

- --

- -- -

l

1969 MUSTANG F•stback '6
cyli nder std good condrt,on
S100 Phone 992 2075

These sizes also available

5

-------------For Sale

------------- - ------------------------------------------ -------------(30A ) 773

--------------.-..------------Help Wanted

8llo4tp

old 5St0
oreen broke Gtntle Cotl
992

1 1 nc
WALNUT
modern atereo
----rad io am frn e track ta"'e EXCELSIOR San works
E
SITTE R In my home for 5 year
combn••t t /on 4 speaker sound
Main St Pomeroy All kinds
Old boy 11 30 a m 5 30 p m
SY"em 81111nce 1101 9l or
or salt water pellets water
days a Wttk Call 992 514.&lt;1
budl)tt term• Phone 992 3965
nuggetJ block salt and own
8 13 3tc
1 1 tfc
Oh io River Salt Phone "2

s

vnder roof stocked pond a 11

- Nice 3
utility large

bedrooms

2 carport and 2 outbuildings 1101
acfe Of level land

Want

lUSt

$16 500 DO
HERE YOU AAE - Cabin In
the woods, 3 rooms 2 porches
and a bath
Asking only
$300000 Plentyofflsh
YOUR CHANCE - 4 rentals In

the heart of Middleport Close
lo all shopping Asking

$35 000: 00 but want you to look
and make us an offer
10 ACRES In Middleport
Good locatlon for several
h
•
t 11
Ma b
oush or ra l'f'S
V e a

S2S 000 00

Just

give us an offer on this
li sten

small farm

We It

MOBILE HOME &amp; LOT - 2
Bedrooms nicely furnished

Near store and shopping A

re~~l buy for a
S5 750 00

couple

for

BUY NOW AND GET SET
TLEO BEFORE WINTER
6 $ lfc SEE OR CALL US

--------------- -------------- 3191
----------Slltfc
-------------- ------------------------_________
__
_
1113tc
'
------------- -------T-----ASSISTANT mttnager wented
Apply at Crow 1 Steak House
contact Bob Crow

WILL pelnt roofs and houses
tree eltlmlftl Cell 992 ~A82
brlno
8 9 121c CA NNING tomatoes
( ontalner
George
Hill
Racine
motor John1on 18
SOMEONE neecttd to eut my OUTBOARD
a 12: 6tc
h p electrlc start or will
gress fhet 11 relleb/t tnd
tradt
ror
1qu11
vafut
Phone
deptndlblt Phone t92 7174
....._
992 7.rl9.c Fltea M lddleport '000 LB combination " ' • Cefl
a 1t 6tc

992 9972

1 12 6fc

12 55 - NBC News 3 15

1 00 - News 3 All Mv Children 6 13 Not for Women Only 15
Ha zelS What s My Lme 10 Cookln Ca1un 33
1 30 - As the World Turns 8 10 Jeopardy 3 4 15 Journey to
Japan 33 ABC Afternoon Playbreak 6 13
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Gu1d1ng LJght B 10 Mounta in
Scene 33

2 00 - Doclors 3 4 IS Edge of Night 8 10 Open Mmd 33
J 00 -

fenced S43 000 00
218 ACRES - Close to State
Park and Lake all minet'al-s

paid water tap 20 pel dQwn
balance like rent lust 5125

,s 30 -

Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Hogan s Heroes 13

Western Star Theater 15 News 6
'6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesame St 20 Catch
33 33 News 6
6JO - News3 4 81015 Room22213 JourneytoJapan33
Bewitched 6
7 00 - News 10 What s My Line 8 Truth or Consequences 3
Beat the Clock 4 J1mmy Dean 13 Zoom 33 I Spy 15 Electric
Co 20 Bowling for Dollars 6

NORTH
• 109
¥1087 52

+ 10 7 6 2

-DOZER
-----------work land c lear ing by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w1th over
20 years experience Pull rns
Excavatmg Pomeroy Ohro
Phone 992 2478
1219tfc

23

21 ) There s someone
yo u re 11ud up Wlfh you d be
better o tf wttho ut 11 you can t
d1SSOI11e the assoc1allon at
!east watch h1m-ca rel~lly

GEMINI (May 21 Juno 20)

CAPRI~ORN

Be scns ble about how you

(Dee

carne

CANCER [June 2t July 22)

cetus

16 Obscure
17 One ol
60 (abbr)

ridden
(3 wds )
4 Spamsh
queen
18 Conserva •
live
5Race
(hyph wd ) 6 Smyrna fJg
7 High211 Where
4mder's
Kokomo
IS(abbr)
head
Zl Hue
covenng
2Z Fonner
10 Awakenmg
23 Old
(3 wds )
chap
25 Hazard
26 Load
cargo
2'1 Nwsance
za Wooden
core
29 Embark
(2 wds)
3Z Aunt,
10 ltaUa
33 Skilled
workman ·
ship
34 Gll'l's
mckname
35 Reqwre

19) You re QO•ng to be try ng
lo c atch up on a lot o f work
you ve lefl und one Y ou II
c reate eJ;tra pres sure by push
1ng yourse/1 loo hard

LEO (July 23 Aug 221 Thts

s one of those day s when
you rc apt to make much more
o f someth ng n your own m1nd
than tl really 1S Look lor lhe
bnght side

+++
Dis

And 1! your b I doesn t even notice maybe you ve got the
wrong guy - SUE
Dear Helen and Sue
My dad bas a temble temper If someone gets a spot on the
rug or loses a tool from the garage or almost anything he '!lime
up all usk1dsand ask m a mean vo1ce, Who did 1t?
If nobody confesses (sometunes we really don't know ) he
starts yelling and hitting us wtth his belt We're supposed to kneel
and take 1t and 1t hurls '
Once Mom proved he made the spot hunself but he never

3Ennw

or horse
9 - minlng
13 Star m

AOUARICIS (Jan 20 Feb

You re go1ng to run 1nto some
prelty slrtl resrstance 1f you re
too set upon hav1ng everythmg
done your way Yield a b t

15 Notion

aero..

19) Be rnore sclect1ve than
usual conc crnrng I hose w lh
whom you pal around At pres
enl you re beJng Judged by the
company you keep

spent;t thi S week s budget or
there w II be some OOhc IS to
con tend w1th when the b1 tts

14 Extract

clique

2 2 Jon

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
Yo u w II try to h de someth ng
tram one you lo ve hop1ng to
spare h u rl feel tng s Yo u
shOuldn 1 - 11 w 1 come out
anyway

apologtzed and ned tune we got a harder spanking
Could you please say a word about fathers hke this' - 12YEAR.OLD
Dear 12
Yes - depraved 1 And 1f your mother allows this m1serable
treatment, she IS JUst as gwlty - HELEN
P S rake loa relat1ve or fnend who can perhaps show your
fath er how wrong he IS
Year.{)ld
If adults got this kind or treatment at work - t&gt;r even 1n
pnson - there s be a maJor mvesllgallon Too bad children don't
have equal nghts? But llDless spankmg becomes 'battermg ' or
author1lles can prove neglect, they can't mterfere in famtly
arfa1rs
Let s hope SOMEONE does 1 - SUE

3'7 Mrs

Khrushchev

hy HF NUl AflNOl () •"" ' UOU lf E

8
8
9
9
10

11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 1J 15 ABCNew s33
11 30- Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Miss1on Imposs ibl e 6 Mov1es
The Glass Hou se 8
Blue Den1m 10 Untouchables 13
Janak1 33
12 30 - Wlid Wild West6 W1de Wor ld Spec 1a113
1 00 - TomorrowJ 4 TakeF1ve tor Life15
2 00 - News 4 13

CABLE CHANNELS
Country &amp; Western U SA

Color

Blue R 1dge

Kotty Wells Show

8 30 p m ~ Family Favonte
Enslgn O'Toole
Tom Ewe l l
Show
9 30 p m - Superstar Theatre
lloyd Bridges Show
J une
AI lyson Show
•
10 30 p m - Meigs Count y Fa1r

25 No~llst

12Eucute

Rebecca
2'1 Bet,

IS Break
bread
19 Similar
22 Malt
kiln
23 - up
(becorpes
angry )
24 Leaf
part

b-+-+-

I

film
fl!$jance

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It·
Ia

•
One leUer o110ply otands for another In thlo oample A II

YUGLE!

I ( ] (] I

tLAISOR

IJ

~

II

for the
apostrophes,

used

three L's, X for the two O's etc Smg1e letters,
the length and formation of the wordl are all
btnts Eacb day the c:ode )etters are dll'erent

CRYPTQQUOTES

FOFt F'EOP'LE WHO

C.AN'i 5EEil.fE.

LOR - JTHG

WFtliiN6 ON IHE WALL I

LJ

SPOGLEl

I I I

~

Now BJTange the ctrcled lettera

V~
to form the surpnae anawer, u
:=::::d~==!':,=:::::J:·=::':·:::::=·=:'·...;suggested by the above cartoon

1L""""Prill=
.. SIRIIISI==·NSWIII=-=-' l i
Yetlerday t

I

J11ml.ol e~; SHEAF MOTIF DAINTY
An1•cr1

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

LJ

UR

OPWKRTRK

ITSJDYJWLPUHR

LMJTF

xr r r xJ

BPG

MF

TJL

YJWLPUHR

LJ

ATJB

SJTKM ·
JY

JTR - YWRGP

P

SJD·

FLPWA

Yesterday's Cryptoqllllle: THE DISCOVERY OF A NEW
DISH DOES MORE FOR THE HAPPINESS OF MAN THAN
THE DISCOVERY OF A STAR -BRIU.AT.sAVARIN
(0 11'10 JUne P•w- 8Jo41coito,lne.)

(AN•en tomorrow)
TAMPER

J.l.hot the balloluu€rdtd w1th h11 g1rl
fru•ntl - M6.0I;: A. HIT

EAST

.62
¥AJ94

+JI062

+974

North

2•

CJnd backhoe work
septrc
tanks Installed dump trucks
and lo boys for "'Ire will haul
fill d.rt tap so!t limestone &amp;
gravel Call Bob or Roger ...
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

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

FOR your remodeling roofmg
painting repairing concrete
and masonry work
call
Ronne Hubbard 992 3511 or
992 7302 Work by hour or
.contract
8 7 26tc

--------------SEPT IC
TANKS
cleaned

reasonable ra tes
Ph
446
4782 Gallipolis. John Russell
owner and operator
5 12 tfc

-SEPTIC
-------------TANK S
AROBIC

SYSTEMS
REPAIRED "

SANITATION
OHIO PH 662

10 4 tfc
-SE-------------PTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San ltatlon 992 395' or
992 7349
10 23 tfc

~ves, ~E IC~

CREAl

BAR AND CANDY

BUS! NESS WILL BOO
roo...v, Ct.IIEF."

I

East

,.

3.

Pass
Dble Pass
Pass
Opemng lead - K•

South

4.

Pass

GASOLINE ALLEY
LOO K 1 KNOW THI 5 MPEii!:SONAi ON
SA LOT TO A?K 50 LET ME OR. 1/E
YOLJ NTO LONDON TO YOUR HOTE:L

Here

I

tt 15,
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby Slim
1
One of the chapters m the Your
Morehead Frey book diS· home
cusses the general folly of
b1ddmg your partners cards for
for h1m Th1s hand IS g1ven as the
a proper example of when to ne~t
b1d for your partner The rea· week'
son 1s that wh1le he probably
has little or nothmg m the
way of strength h1s cards such as they are - w11l help
you
If West hac! opened ace and
one spade he would have
beaten the hand, but he d1d
open the kmg of clubs South
ruffed led a diamond to
dummy s queen a second
d1amond back to h1s ace,
ruffed h1s last small diamond
and played a trump
West took h1s ace and led
h1s last d1amond East ruffed
and the contract had nown

(,) N THC WAY, YOLJ CAN TH INK
IF 'IOU DECIDE ..,.OU
CAN T HE·LP ME IL L. QU ITE
If OVER

U N D~ R 5 TAND

TilE BORN LOSER
I"I\0\IJ aws; '()!)NEVER IMIIRIED llt~T

"U:

roi

HCWEZ

away

,•

Once dummy had been able
to ruff that low diamond,
South had a sure thmg play

"

starmg
h1mtor1ght
m the
facea
All he had
do was
to ruff
second club m h1s hand ruff
h1s kmjt of d 1amonds With
dummy s last trump show
the opponents h1s hand and
claim h1s contract He would

I&lt;,.,---,_...,..______,

couNrav
S'IIREO
92.1

have s1x tncks m and four
sure trump trtck.s to come
!NEWSPAPER ENTEKPHISE ASSN l

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
r-----"

HOW FAR
SHAll I

CONTINUE?
•

THE CHICKE)'I GOT
AWAY. YQII'R&amp;.

"mEN WED
13EIIER DUCK
51GH'T I

our.o.

FIAED, WORMBE'RT

lT'S TOO LATE
HES SEEN US '

WH.I.T'LL WE
00 to.IOW"

•

~~~g:~~~~~~~

:::

•

•
•

Mlddjeporl Pllflloroy
The blddmg has been
North Eaot
Pass
Pass
3.
Pass

t•

NOTICE

Pass

Coriung Soon 24X52 Sectiona I House,
shingle roof, house siding &amp; windows
with big spacing on first five homes.
Watch for our formal Open House
Showing !II

3 NT

Pass

You South hold
.A Q 6 54 'A Q 6 54 +A

13

South
U

3'

1

K.

2

What do you do now1
A-Pau You have a mqnlf&amp;·
cent hand. b•t yoar par,ner hat
hearcl your b'd• and Che com·
blnetl hands are clearly a mllllt

LARRrS MOBILE tllMES SALES, INC.
600 WEST MAIN ST.
Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. wun1

wager

29 An African
capital
30 Ultimate
31 Signal
deVIce
36 SwiSS
nver
37 Texture

39 From a

13 Pollee Svrgeon 3 Antiques 20 Episode Achon 33 O n The
Monev 4 Grandvtew A P roud He ntage 10
00 - The Cowboys 6 13 Unto The Htl is 33 Consumer Games
20 Chase 3 4 Hudson Brothers 8 10 Ba se ball 15
30 - Mov1e Mel v 1n Pur v1s G Man 13 M ov 1e N1ght Slaves
6 Great Ame~ 1can Dream Ma ch ne 20 33
00 - /!Mv1e Remember When 3 4 Cannon 8 10
30 - Boarding House 20 33
00 - Doc Elliot 6 13 Festtv.al Frlm s 33 Ko1ak 8 10 News 20

10 30- TBA 15 Day al Ntght 33

11 Show

38 1943
Bogart

Shap41 up o r 1h p ou ll

Unscramble the se four Jumbles.
one letter to each square to
form four ord1 nary word !I

leMIIl

Soccer
great
DOWN
I Popular
West
Indies •
dance
Z Style ol
window

s Coterie,

Dec

You 11 be a brl m tated when
you hi:tve to change some lun
plans rn o rd er to lake c are ol (t
problem that w1ll pop up

41 ot

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIE
LI'I'TL&amp;

.A4
'K 6

West

7 16 tfc
--------------EXCAVATING dozer loader

WM~M

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

East West vulnerable

Sunday for appt

1

Of course - HELEN

l3

+-

beh ind Rutland Grade School
complete front end serv 1ce
brakes and tuneups whee l s
balanced electronically Open
8 to 8 dally Call 742 3232 on

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

Sha"e t1 orf
TAURUS [April 20 May 20)

be l()tji:ly

.

te Emel'llOII

ACROSS
I Part ol
the ear

+AKJ 54
+Q983
SOUTH &lt;Dl
• KQJ8753
¥Q3
+ AK53

-----------o DELL Allnement located

3035

ARIES ( M•rch 21 Aptlt 19)

It s not hk e ~ou to be o verly •n
fluenceu o r di SCOUraged by the
op n1ons o l o the rs '1'81 you wrll

12

Quartet

+QB

WEST

11174

++-l

Dis

7 30 p m -

When to bid for your partner

SEWING MACHINE S Repa tr
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabrrc Shop Pomeroy
AuthOrtled Singer Sales and
Serv ice We sharpen Scissors
3 29 tfc

MILLER.
STEWA RT

+++

If you go out w1th a boyfnend and he sort of 1gnores you and
talks to h1s fnends (and you're not gomg steady), should you
dance if someone else asks you? - DISGUSTED

WIN AT BRIDGE
.

For Wedn"dly Aug 14

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 221 11

Dear C
Repeat lo yourself at least 50 tunes a day l am tu ed of
bemg hurt, let down and deserted Then think what th1s kind of
hfe would do 1o a baby If you go off w1th Edd1e a gam yo u don t
deserve another rescue - SUE

7 30- To Telllhe Truth 6 Sale oflhe Century 8 Beatthe Clock

Serv1ce

c are lullhal you d0t'1t gel your
sell out on a hmb then saw rl
o " by promrsrng rnore than you
can delrver
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 221
You may tt;~arn of something
untrutt that another has sa1d
about you Don I o ~teneac l de
lendmg yOUI Self

Pr1ce Is

' 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Sesame St 33 Tattletales 8 Somerset
, 15 Gilligan s Island 6 510 000 Pyramid 13 Mov1e Ten Tall
Men 10
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr iffin 4

Known &amp; Reftable

SEWAGE
CLEANED

+++

6

ALL WEATHER
337 N 2 Middleport
992 25SO

:

Dear C
Tell Eddie the Army needs h1m more than yo u do Smce he s
probably sllll AWOL your problem may be solved any day now
- by the m1htary pollee - HELEN

One L 1fe to L1ve 13 Ph1l Donahue 4 Match Game 8 10
How to Survive~ Marriage 3 15 Carrascolendas 33 Lass1e

All that IS needed for a free
esttmate ts a phone calf .
Please Phone

per acre

ALL PRICED HOMES TO
CHOOSE FROM
soLD LAST WEEK 4
PROPERTIES - WITH 10
YEARS EXPERIENCE WE
KNOW THE TOP DOLLAR
VALUE
ON
YOUR
PROPERTY
(OVER
PRICED PROPERTIES
SELDOM SELL) IF YOU
REALLY WANT TO SELL
CA~L US TODAY

Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital6 13

mRF:E STRIKE'! AND Ht~'S OUT
Dear Rap
My husband and I were both 18 when we married l had more
than the average girl car, money, JOb and parents who cared
They saw trouble ahead With Eddie but l only saw love
J tw!came pregnant nght away but we never settled down
just traveled a ll over the U S because l':ddie wanted to He
deserted me in Am.ona and I caUed my folks m Connecticut
They wlred me money to t:ome home
A few weeks later, he drove up A few soil words and off we
went agam Same thing happened when l was nine months along
- him AWOL from the Army, me 1n labor with no husband anu
no money Agmn, my father res&lt;;ued me
After f1ve months Edd1e came t.o claun me and the son he
had never seen !love h1m deeply but I am tired or being hurt, let
doWTI and deserted JUst so he can travel and he thmks th1s is the
only way t.o live
What should I do' - C A H

Rap

Aug 14 1874
A por• •oo of 1h•s year w11/ be
spent c tearmg ou1 obstactn
that have hlf'ldered YOUI prog
f BSS Slrong new foundationS
w 111 be la rd to buttd upon for the
new and rpore prom slflg

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oet 231Be

By Helen and Sue Bo.ttel

J 30 -

Roofong Co

f:::...=:;;;;jjii;;;;~::J!il

8 000 sq It of good buildings

garage and ~reezeway
--------------a 9 Sip .-I,.::;;;::;:.._,!:Ph~on~e:.;9~9~2~2.!:18~1c-~J, llvtng
Large lot In, Tuppers Plains
•
CREEZER corn
White and 1 You need $16 00000
1969 CHEVY Town sm an station
K:j~~~l Phone Tom Sayre ~ ew LISTING - 4 bedrooms
wagon SI 195 good c ond t on
Phone 992 7620
8 1J 31p large living balh front porch
5 24 tic - -- - - - -- - - - - - 1970 CARMAN Gh/a VW 1969
vw
Mayrag washer and
dryer portable like new ~9.111
Pontiac 6 cyltnder Phone
REGISTERED Thoroughbred
992 2584
8 11 3tc
yeerrllng filly gentle 2 yr old
grade flll'l' Phone 992 50.39 - - - -- - - -- -- -- 8 12 5tc ASSORTED furn i ,ure and
appliances Private Phone
1974 SUZUKI off on road tra il
992 7066
8 11 lfc
bike Call 992 5601 after 5 p m
8 12 Stc - - - - -- - - - - - - WE ARE picking up a pl ano In
your aree and would l i ke
MELON S 1weet corn green
some responsible party to
pepper • cucumbers for sate
take over payments
Call
Geraldine Cleland
Ra ci ne
Credit Manager (61.11) 772
Ol&lt;l to
$669 or wr l! e 260 East Marn
8 11 tiC
Streef Chil l co th e Ohio .45601
4 1 lfc
ADMIRAL am tm 1tereo radio
-record pla'l'tr Phone 98.$ 3305 R IOI~G hOrse for sale 2 years
Chnter

12 00 - Pa ssword 6 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4 News 8 10 13
Jack pot 3 15 Mr Rogers 33
12 30 - Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Sfl 1t Second 6 Celebnty
Sweepstakes 3 15 Afternoon w1th D 13 Electric Co 33

Don t forget the roof of your
home Have a beautiful new
roof mstafled by All Weather

· :·

B

Sunr ise Seminar .11 Summer Semesfer 10
25 - Farm Report 13
•
30 - F ave Minutes to Live By 4 News 6 Bibl e An swe r s 8 The
St ory 13 Sacred Heart 10
35 - Columbus Today 4
45 - Farmtime 10 Morning Report 3
30 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Dock Van Dyke 13 H R
Pufnst uf 6
30 - New Zoo Revue6 Tuxedo Tennessee 13
00 - New Zoo Revue 13 Capt Kangaroo B Jeffs Coll1e 6
Sesame Street 33 Urban L.:eague 10
25 - Jack Lalanne 13
30 - Brady Bunch 6 Green Acres 10
55 - News 13 Chuck White Reports 10
00 - Paul Dixon 4 AM 3 Abbott Coste llo 8 Phil Donahue 15
Wild Wild West 6 Captain Kangaroo 10 Master Rogers 33
M ovie Law of the Lawl ess 13
JO - To Tell the Truth 3 Lucy Show 8 Elec tn c Co 33
00 - Jokers Wild 8 10 Company 6 Lilias Yoga and You JJ
Name That Tune 3 15
30 - Gamb1t 8 10 Winning Streak 3 4 15 Turn1ng Pomts 33
00 - Password 13 H1gh Rollers 3 4 15 Now You See It 8 10
$10 000 Pyramtd 6 Sesame Street 33
30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of Life 8 10 Brady
Bunch 13 Lucy Show 6

Roght 8 10

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

carpeting &amp; paneling 2 free
2 water wells
basement F A heat over

Movies

11 55- CBS News 8 Dan Imel s World 10

REDECORATING? ·

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

gaS~ wells

•'

....

8
9

C. II 992 28:U For

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

000 6 000 8 000 10 000 and
12 000 BTU
POMEROY LANOMARK
• ..:: Jack w Carsey Mar

7

8

ing?
to any
others We II g rve you a
professiona l roof tor less

--------------WILL trim or cut trees and

4,000 BTU

1'109.95

7

l1

CREMEANS
CONCRETE
del1vered M o nday through
Saturday
and
even1ngs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 t fc

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

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

6

6

10

'

------------- -HOTPOINT
AIR CONDinONERS --- ----------

JUNK Autos complete and
delivered to our yard We pack
up auto bodies and buy all
kinds of scrap metals and
Iron R lder s Salvage State f 972 MG M idge t low mHeage
Rt 12.r1 Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohio
good cond ition 33 mtles per
Phone 992 5468
ga llon Phone 949 3955
7 31 26tp
8 9 6tc

6

9

Now Open tor Business

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

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

6

Free Est1mates

742-5293

33

Un

WEDNESDAY AUG 14 1974

6 00 -

10

Moved to Rutland ll• mile
lnSJde ctty limit on nght
corner 81rck St and Rt 124

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

Athens, Oh1o
We close each Frtday
at noon for balance of
week.

1

K&amp;H ROOFING

BODY

Janaki

lmpossrble 6
Murder Ahoy

TomorrowJ 4 Take Five for Lite IS
News ' 13

1 00 -

2 00 -

B

J&amp;B AUTO

M idwestern Governors

12 30 - Wide World Mystery IJ

Pomeroy, 0

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

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

The Rosenberg Co.

touchables 13
Ulysses 10

work and sephc tanks h1 ~

Refrtgeralors,
Freezers, Home &amp;
Auto Atr Cond1!1oners
and
Commercul
Un1ts

TBA 15

11 00 - News 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC News 33
\1 30 - Johnny Carson 4 J 15 M ission

&lt;lolled

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

4

10 30 Day at N ig ht 33
Conference 20

8

Real Estate For Sale

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

Auto Sales

Pollee Story 3

r Water Ltnes •nd Powtrl
Ltn•s All work done bV the
foot or contract Also dozer

.Middleport Oh1o
992 5:147

Real Estate For Sale

--------------,. .-

brass,

Phone

Building for sale or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo intment
3 20 tfc

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

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

Hawaii Five 0 8 10 Eye to E:ye 33 Faraday lind
Company 3 4
9 00 - Firlngllne-20 JeanneWollwlthJJ
9 30 - PerformanceJJ Mov ie Cowboy 8 Hawkins 10
10 00 - News 20 Marcus Welb y M 0 6 13 M ountain Scene l J

For Sale

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

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

8 30 -

MfQfiNG SERVu:E

1n P.. rt st

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

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

13 Boseball 15

of Any Type

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

Lost

Maude 8 10 Man Builds Man Destroys 33 Adam 12 J
4 Crime &amp; Pun ishment 20 Mov ie Pray for the Wildcats 0

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeifers
Day 992 7089
Nlght992 3525
or 992 5212

shrubbery Also clean out
1972 3 BEDROOM W rndsor
basements att 1cs etc Phone
Mobile Home on 1 a cre of
949 3221 or 7.112 4.441
ground
For
more
tn FOAM to f II your old couch and 6 ROOM wh te frame home 3
chatr cush ron s as low as
7 14 26tc
tormat 1on call 992 7638
bedrooms full basement 2
SlO 95 upholstery okks on ly
7 30 tfc
c 1ty lots n Pomeroy Phone JOBS contracted Phone 742
SOc 4 nch covered foam
.rl46 9488
307 4 or wr te Box 23 Langs
ma ttresses for standard s ze
8 11 6tc
1964 COLO NIAL ,50x10 mobile
ville Oh ro
bed
S29 95
Pomeroy
home clean
remodeled 2
Recovery 622 E Mam St
7 23 26tc
bedrooms
Natural
gas
Pomeroy Ohio Phone 992 6 ROOM house w 1fh 33 a c res of
Conestoga Tra1ler Court
AUTOMOBILE 1nsurance been
7554
la nd a 1972 3 bedroom trailer
Athens Oh o phone 592 2408
ca ncell ed?
Lost
your
7 24 26tc
A ll tor sate for $35 000 Phone
8 11 6tc
operator s 1 cense ca 11 992
99 2 3792
7428
UPHOL STERY fabr" ICS by the
READ THIS• Before you buy
615tfc
yard 5.11 nches w de as low as
any new 14 w de Mob Je
$2 49 PE:r yard Velvets as low
APPROX 49 acres on Bailey
Home be sure to see the all
as $5 25
Imported velvets
Run Road one mde from
steel bonded Detro ter Mob1le
59 60 We also have nylon
Homes
The steel bond
crossroads
not too far from
her c ulon
cotton
pr nts
Detrolter
as
v1r-tually
the Salem Center M tne Good
vmyls and remnants by the
fireproof and has manv
road frontage some t1mber
yard or by the p.ece Pomeroy
features that no other Mob1le
The Bailey Farm c ontact CARSON
Servrce
Statron
Recovery 622 E Ma in St
Mrs Paul Be l le y
Home on the market can
Garage
50x60
bullcllng
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
match We also have one of
8 6 6tp
Cement dr veway Phone 742
7 24 26t~
the largest selections of good
5052
used and repossessed Mobile .11.110 DODGE engrne and 318 HOUSE
7 16 ftc
2
or
3
bedrooms
Homes of any dealer in the
Plymouth eng 1ne both 1968
modern kttchen Phone 992
area Don I wa l t - shop today
5737
models Phone ( 614 ) 843 2116
at
Berry Miller
Mobile
8 8 6tp
8 11 6tc
Homes Sa les
705 Farson
St reet Belpre Oh 10 Phone 1970 18 FT Scott 1e Camper
3 BEDROOM house all car
423 953 I
sleeps 6 Se lf contained good
peted and furn ished White
8 8 12tc
condlt ton Phone 992 7126
v nyl Sid ing window awnings
8 8 tfc
2 car gatage attached to the
house and basement 6 acres
FARM
Machtnery
New
of land In the coun try on
Holland balers haybmes
Blacktop county rd 82 Also
forage
equ tpmenl
used
1972 DODGE Colt 31 000 m lies
space for 2 tra i lers Phone
balers mowers New Holland
985 39.117
rad10
rad1a1 tires
$1 850
Phone 992 7066
baler tw 1ne a 000 ft
S26
8 11 3tp
10 000 ft $28 and S30 Gould
8 13 3tc
.AEIOUIT ~HILLY ACRES Tractor Sates
St
Rt
2 HOUSE
,.,.,__ .. 3 B R home bath lots
630 Mtll St
Mid
Murraysv1/le
W
Va
26153
1971
VEGA
Hatchback
dleport 6 rooms 1 112 batt1s
of tile and paneling nice
or phone (304 ) 273 3497
automat 1c low mrleage new
full
basement
partially
t res
call days 992 2644
8 a 6tc
kitchen
ou1
carpeted kitchen complete
even lngs 667 3785
washer
and
dryer
etc
tovld
water and gas
8 13 6tp 1973 YAMAHA 250 CC Enduro
be 3 bedrooms gas furnace
JUST
with e-xtras 3600 miles $625
f i replace storm doors and
1974 CUTLASS Supreme arr
Phone ( 304 ) 882 3297
10
LEVEL ACRES
windows
curtai ns and drapes
condtt oned am fm rad 10
8 8 12tc
On
good
tlshlng
creek city
ncluded For Information call
super sport wheels
V 8
Elden Walburn 992 2805
available
Ideal for
automat c Phone 992 9981
8 13 ffc
home trailer or summ er
after 2 p m
cottage near mine No 1 on
8 11 3tc
2 BEDROOM house Rutland
good blacktop road Rutland
Phone 992 5858
1974 PLYMOUTH Satellite
8 13 tfc
area S6 000 00
Sebring 2 dr hardtop p s
60
ACRES - About 20
P b vinyl top rally wheels
12 450 m lies excellent con
tillable many bulldmg sites
dltlon SJ 100 Phone 992
w1th city water home has. 3
3.1110
8 8 6tc
B R s bath ullllty R some

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

•
8 00 -

11
• Lawn Boy
• Tecumseh
• Kohler
• W sconsm
• All other
makes

3), Bewitched 6
CO.... What • My Line

8 DIJ1ty ~Trail 13 ~lee Co ;&gt;0 Truth
or Conseq 3 Beat the Clock A Paul Nuch l m'5 33 News tO
Bowl Ina for Oolla;rs 6 TBA u
1 30- To Tell lhe Truth~ New Price I• Right 8 10 R FD 20
Hollywood SquarH 3 Beat the Clock IJ Hollywood Squares

"

B&amp;K EXCAVATING

992 7204

C BRADFORD Auct oneer
Complete Serv 1ce
HOUSE for salem Syr acu se 5
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
rooms and garage located
Racrne Oh io
near the school Phon e 992
3860
Cntt Bradford
1
5 1 tfc
8 2 ftc

------------FOR FREE estimates

~

Next to H1ghway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

W1 II do
Dozer &amp;
Backhoe Work, Install
Sept1c Tanks, Haul
D1rt,
Gravel.
L1 meslone or Rent One
of
Our
Trucks,
Backhoe or Dozers.

8 13 3tc
--------------------------READY MIX
CONCRETE GROC ERY business for sale

Mob1le Homes For Sale

Employment Wanted

Jf9 w Mam
Pomeroy, 0
Located at Mo.dern Supply
Small Engme Repatr

9 YEAR OLD Sorre l mare tpr
sale S275 Phone 843 2242
8 8 6tc

S100 Phone 949 3195

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

7 5 lf c

n .,

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

SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

Wrecking
5890

Acres, Scipio
Raellle
Joe l'w'ner, Adm , Alfred J
~lie M Durst to Bradley Foster, dec to Ohlo Power Co
y, lpelqr, P'aye A. Spencer, 114 Acres Coal, Columbia
.'ttl, Ptaletvy
Mary Saxton, dec to Charleo
U.Aibnan to Paul Nebon Saxton, Maxine HyseU, Eileen
Plrcela, Salem
Kirk, Aff for trans , Mid·
E Dougherty, dlep«t
O..,berty, a.ymond J
J B O'Brien Roberta C
to E. Winnilred O'Brien, to James A Kroegel,
, II.IYIIIGnd Saller. Georgia Kroegel, Parcels,
Aanl, 41 34 Acrel. 20 Olive.
1
I

8 13 6tc

R t 3J ten m iles north of
Pomeroy
Large lots wrth
concrete patiOS Sidewalks
runners and off
street
parking
Also
spaces for
small trailers Phone 992 7.1179
7 21 tfc

MALE Regrstered St Bernard
Very well marked Phone 992
7519
a 8 6tc

NEW YORK (UPI)- General Manager-Coach Emile
FOR JUNK CARS
Francis announced Monday CASH
comple te' Frye s Truck and
Auto Parts RuHand Ohio 24
the appointment of Sll&lt;·year pro
HOUR WRECKER SER
Brad Park, a National Hockey
VICE Phone 742609-i
League All~ar defenaeman
7 ~6 26t'
the last live sell80118, DB captain ss for lunk autol}'lob/les We will
the New York Rangers lor 197._
pick up
R i verside Auto

75

- --------------------------COLOR
EO TV Phon e 949 3057
COU NTRY Mobile Home Park
3 11 tf c

coats Bu ld1ng N Second
M 1ddleport
over Columba
Gas Co Phone 992 3641 or 992
2589
8 13 6tc

Wtlktnson Small Enarne
992 3092

oven trmer clock electnc
rot1sser le good cond1t1on S40
Gas floor f urnace 530 Mason
773 5386
8 13 3f p

phone 992

tn

Home
Bu1ld1ng
&amp;
Add1t1ons, Alumtnum
&amp; Vmyl S1d1ng, Floor
Sandmg &amp; Fimshmg.

-------------36 GAS stove- With automat c

unfurn ished
apartment s
Phone 992 5.1134
4 12 ftc

Rutland Phone 992 5858
8 13 lfc

FREE HOME ESTIMATES

wrre,

AN 0

2

Produced frQm a speCial
v ny l co mpound made by B
F Goodr 1c h and Monsanto S
t mes th c ker than metal
s ding W II not dent chi p ,
crack peel
rot
rust or
ctialk

3

--------------3
4 ROOM turn rshed and

-------------SEMI FURNISHED apartment

Chester, Oh1o
9854102

Tablets and H y dr ex Water
P liS
Dutton Dr ug
M d
..dteporl and Nelson Drug
8 13 3tc

-------------BED ROOM
apartment

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

BISSELl BROTHERS
CONST. CO.

You 33 News 8 10 IS News 6
6 30 - News 8 tO NBC News 3 o4 tS Room 212 13 French Chef

1

All Small Appliances
lawn Mowers

Of PHONE 992-5476

-------------LOSE we ght with New Shape

close to Powell s Super Valu
Phone 992 3658
8 7 tfc

3915

PH 992 7454 or
992 7129
Free Eshmates, Middleport,

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR
.
ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

Remodeling

'

you have bus.ness or ttnanc l31
dealings where ltW:He IS a frtend
rtlYOived don I behatro In a
setllsh mannar or there wtU be
a r II

Generation Rap

1J lt74

6 00 - NB C News 13 Sesarne St 10 News 3 4 Lilies Yoga &amp;

0

BOWERS
REPAIR

DECORAnNG

------------~~ 5tc L-----------.1

--------------PRIVATE meeting room for

MEIGS SE NIOR S I T me rs
r unn 1ng out
Call Grover s
Stud o at 992 2A7S to ma ke
your appointment for Senior
Portra1t s taken
Aug
20
through Aug 24 Or drop 1n at
our' booth at the County Far
Grover s Studio n Middleport
w II be cl osed durmg the far
8 8 8tc

843

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

-.11 -------------ROOM furn 1shed apartment

any organ1zatlon

Oh10

and 2 - 160 tires 1 Courier C
B Radro 23 channel Phon e
667 3759
8 13 3tc

Ma in St
Pomeroy
Ohio
Phone 992 5786 or 992 3975
6 12 tfc

POMEROY

Portland

Interior, Exterior
Decorating and

TUESDAY, AUG

1

HOME

lHE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACJ'ING CO.

8 13 6tc
------------2 CARGAR wheel s for Chev

7

No!tee

FAYE E COWDERY
Reedsvrlle Oh1o
Platntiff
VS
DALE CECIL COWDERY
Address Unknown
Defendant
No IS 602
- NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION-

8 8 Stp

ntght beginning Aug 15 7 p m
near Band B Market Mason
W Va Bring consignments
Wednesday and Thursday 11
am to6p m or call 773 5471
8 13 3t c

Roush
2865

Phone 992

18 tfc
--------------BUSINESS room 22X80 234 E

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO

Scoff 9923718

-------------AUCTION every Thursday

Pomeroy

MONTGOMERY WARD
CATALOG STORE

1.------------------...1

------=----- ---PIANO TUN IN G Call Charles

permanents $2 off blow cu t s
S4 50 Operators - Jeanette
Radford
Jackie N i bert
Ruth s Beauty Shop Mason
W Va phone 773 5686
a 13 tfc

-------------CA NN lNG tomatoes
Ha rold

TWO 4 room and bath apts n
M lddleport For nforma t lon
cell 992 2550 or 742 6551
7 3 tfc

OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY, AUGUST 15TH

give away to any ont! who
would g ve the m a gooa nome
Phone 84 3 2094 or contact
John Bogar d
8 8 Stc

-------------BACK to school special all

BTU 2 years old lrke new
forced a r fuel o 1 f red S200
Phone 843 2186
8 13 Sic

2 BEDROOM tra1ler wtth or
Wifhout utlll t tes Call 992 3509
8 12 6tc

AU DAY WEDNESDAY FOR THE FAIR

3--------LOVABL E female __
pup f. ;!3
es tfc
to

18

-----.---------JO HN SON furnace
100 000

For Rent

Court
3324

-------

MOTORCYCLE Harley
Davrdson chopper real nu~ e
must sell re-asonably pr iced
T i m Demosk v 992 5663
B 13 6tp

POMEROY, 0.

Busine~~s Serv~ces
.

z,o

CLO:;t u uT on New
Z:ag
Sewing Mach ines. For sewtno
sfretch fabr ics buttonholes
lancv dei l gns etc
P4tln1
sligt111 y blem Ished Cho ice ot
carrv1ng c•se- or sewlnv
slan lj $.49 10 cash or lerms
avatlable Phone 992 26S3
8 13 ttc

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

5 12 ttc

n ···~~~

August

S4595

WILL BE CLOSED

~~~r c~~:;~~~~·
M~~~; :;',~~~:'
w Va Home of

Fire Statron

l

THE DAILY
SENnNEL

new w w t1res rad•o M.any other ex tras

season PrTwo
uck loads
each
week
ce tr
starting
at S6
98
per bushel Please br ing your

a m til

$209S

3~ V a automat1c P steering &amp; brakes dark blue ftnlsh

"

ELECTROLVX Sweeper delul!e
model
Comple t e with all
cleaning attachments and
uSe$ paper bags Sllghlly used
but cleans and looJc.s like new
W ltl Sell for S37 2S c ash or
terms avarlable Phone 992
2653
8 13 ffc

--------------TRAILER
Browns Trailer

-------------CANNING peaches now In
6~~~, ,~."~' o~~~

PHONE 992·2156

OPEN EVES8 00 PM
POMEROY, OHIO

7 26 ft c

Maso

li"S

For Sale

------

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

3 19 lfc
-------------A TO Z MART used furn ture

appl ian ces and mrsc
Hartford W Va

QUAliTY

WANTED

3 Seat Red and whl1e saddle cus tom vmyl trim t1nt
glass dual a~r cond itioning h dutv shocks 350 V 8 engine
turbo hydramatlc power steering and brakes radio
chrome ari lle I 7A 1"i w w tires Chevenne Super equip
ment never t itled A sharp unit that w1 11 do the tow job for
you Retail Stacker S6 078 M

.!
lrne ot
ser v1ce
th give
Brown

1

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1973 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN

-kO------------SCO T
KOSMETICS
WIGS For a good
Cosmettcs fr iendly
and someone to Ch.at w
me a call He len Jane
992511J

Help Wanted

Television Log

.

13,.1971jj4·•••••-1:1:1Jlj----~---~

FEELIN' A
HEAPGOODER
NOW,PARSON

•

I S HORE AM TICKLED
TO HEAR HE'S SACK
01\1 HIS FEET AG II\I

\IIHEN ! CO.~E
ARQ\.O"lD WJIJ
5TAND VP DO
~HEARME 1

ITS l·tt:R !!
ITS f.IER 11
MY FIRST

SIIIEETHEAilT 1

'

IF ~OU DON T DO
THIS fjEA6LE WILL
'IOIJR LE6

•
.

TODAY 8 QUESTION
Instead of bidding three
'

•

...

oolrump your partner has bid
three spades over your three
hearta What do you do nnw'

"

•

•

•

•

'

•

�7- The OeUy SenUnel, Midl!lePott-Pomeroy, Q . Tu.,.S.y, Aug
.6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0

l'ues(JHy, Aug IJ, 1974

Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Notice

2 SIGNS
Of

R:UMMAGE Sale Aug 1.4 15
1• 101 m to 4 p m 230 S Sth.

AVI'

MlddlepoJ'f

8 ll Jt c
I

WILL do roofmg l'leal lno
repair plum bmg and elec
trlcal work Phone Charles
S nclalr 985 ,.171
8 7 12tc.

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

I OION T KNOW THAT' .MGM
Flu Mar~et Spec i als S!i
Inside S3 OUIStde Spring
Ave
Pomero y
Onlo

Collectors
Every Sa t

dealers

~nd

et c

SUnday

B 7 1ft

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

WE HAVE all vour uphols.ter~
need s
Burlap
den m
camb r ic foam glue llpper5
tacking strtp spnngs and
clip~
ch t pboard
button
twtne sew1ng thread legs
upholstery books dacron
welJblng spnng twtne tacks
well card colton swtve t
basn and foam foam foa m
Pomeroy Recovery 62.2 E
Man st
Pomeroy
Oh io
Phone 992 7554
1 24 26 tc

Rt

191 I OODGE DART

Swinger HT C!Je rhed green finish with blk "''"YI roof
green vmvl 1nterlor frlm V 8 engine automatic trons
sport St wnael , full wh cover Like new w w tires rad•o
relll nice

l970CHEV MONTE CARLO

33

blue •ntenor blue vmy l roof factory air condllloned like

106 COURT ST.

--------------FURNI SHED
apartment

--------------CHICKEN barbe cue
Rac ine
11

?

8 13 SIC

-------------For Sale

TREE rtpened peaches wh te
and yellow at Mason peach
orchard
Mason
West
Vlrgmla
a 13 tfc

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

Major League Leaders
By Un1ted Press International
Ludlng Batters
National League
g ab r h pet
Garr Atl
1l4 481 67 177 368
Montnz Phil 101 355 39 115 324
Garvey LA 111 458 67 148 323
Gross Hou
108 399 62 128 321
Smith StL
99 349 50 111 318
Brock StL
109 450 76 142 316
Z l'!ik Pit
105 377 52 119 316
B •ckner LA 100 397 52 123 310
Oliver Ptt
101 416 63 127 305
Cardnt Chi
99 385 so 117 304
Amencan League
g ab r h pet
Carew Min 112 448 66 165 368
Hargrve Tex 94 299 43 103 344
McRae KC 101 360 52 116 322
Orta Cht
95 348 57 110 316
Jacksn Oak 107 368 65 115 313
Yaz Bos
109 381 69 118 310
Rudl Oak
113 430 55 132 307
Allen Chi
108 395 76 121 306
Randle Tex 110 373 49 11.11 306
Maddox NY 90 288 .115 88 306
Home Runs
National Lugue Wynn LA
27 Schm ldt Ph II 25 Bench
Cln 24 Cedeno Hou 22 P~rez
tin 21
American League Allen Chi
Jf Burroughs Tex 22 Jack
son Oak 21 Mayberry K c and
Darwin Mlnn 19
Runs Batted In
National League Bench Cln
and Schm ldt Phil 88 Cedeno
Hou and Wynn LA Boll Garvey

LA 78

A m e r I c 1 n League Bur
roughs Tex 95 Allen Chi 83
Bendo Oak 80 Rudl Oak 73
Henderson Chi and Darwin
Mlnn 71
PitChing
National League Billrngham
Cln 14 7 Carlton Phil 14 8
John LA 13 3 Messersm 1th
LA 13 A
Gullett
Cm and
McGlothen
St L
13 8
p
Ntek,-o Atl 13 9 Lon borg Ph1l

13 11

Am erlcan League Wood ChI
11 13 Tlant Bos 17 8 Busby
KC and Hunter
Oak 17 9
Jenkins rex 16 10 Bibby Tex
16 1A
•

Meigs
Property

Transfers
Thomas Marhn, Flo D
MarUn to William J Hobsteter,
Elbabeth Hobstetler, Ease ,
Rutland VIllage
Paul KBrr, Ruth Karrto Paul
Karr, Ruth Karr, Parcels,
Oleoter
Leonard Haah, Phyllis Hash
to Franklin Real Estate Co ,
Rei of Vendor's Ueu, Salem
France• E Williams to
Suluel John ctow, Judith
O'ow, 83 Acre, Salisbury
Kenneth WUt, poria WUt to
O.'fid H Zirkle, Maude Ann
11rkle, Lot 15, Myers Add ,

adults only In
Phon e 992 3874

OLD trunk oval lid
Partl y
brass (ve ry old) Make me an
offer Phone 992 5142
REGISTERED
half Arabtan
mare with her reg istered ~
Arabran
filly
Raffles
breeding
Call
667 3610
Coolville
8 13 5tp

M iddleport

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

BLACK pony sadd le
good
c ond 11/on Call 992 3059
8 13 3tc

Piamt lff has brought thiS
act 1on nam1ng you as defendant
In the above named court by
f ltng her Com plaint on the 6th
day of Jul y 1974
The obfect of the Comp la nt
and the demand for r ei ef are to
obtam a d rvorce and for oth er
proper rei ef
You are requ ired to ans wer
the Compla nt w th in twenty
e1ght day s after the last
publ l catron of th s not tc e wh ch
wt/ J be published once each
week for SIX consecut1ve weeks
ar'ld the last publl cat on Will be
made on the 20th day of August
1974 Your answer date w 11 be
on S~ptember 18 1974
In the case of your failure to
answer or otherw se respond as
perm itted by the Oh10 Rules of
CtvJI Procedure w thm ttle t me
stated jUdgment by default wr!l
be rendered aga nst you for the
relref demanded m the Com
plamt
LARRY E SPENCER
Clerk of
Common Pleas Courl
Me tgS County Oh tO
Court House
Pomeroy Oh 10
(7 ) 9 16 23 30 I8J 6 13 20 7tc
-----------""
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNT S
PROBATE COURT MEIGS

COUNTY OH IO

Accounts and vouchers of the
follow ing named flduc,anes
have been filed rn the Probate
Court Metg S County Oh o for
approval and settlement
CASE NO 20121 Ftfth Annual
Account of Frank W Porter
Jr Trustee Under Item V of the
Last Will and Testamen t of
Jan#!
Loutse
D
Smith
Deceased
CASE NO 20745 F~rst Annual
and Ftnal Account of Marie
DeVIetro Guard an of the
Person and Estate of Robert P
DIV etro
an
Incompetent
Person
CASE NO 20987 First and
Ftnal Account of Paul S Smart
Adm lnlstrator with the Will
Annexed of the Estate of Harry
M Cross Deceased
CASE NO 210.113 F.rst and
Fina l Account of Emma G
Broderick
ExecutriX of th e
Estate of VIncent P Brodenck
Deceased
CASE NO 21064 F rrst and
F inal Account of Martha Lou ise
Coli ns Executrrx of the Estate
of John P Kauff Deceased
CASE NO 21090 F 1rst and
Final Account of Clarence M
Headley Executor of the Estate
of ~ Mildred
B
Headley
Deceased
Unless except1ons are flied
thereto sa1d accounts wil t be
for hear ing before sad Court on
the 11th day of September 197.11
at which t me sa1d accounts will
be constdered and continued
from day to day until finally
disposed of
Any person mterested may
file wrrtten except1ons to said
accounts or to matters per
tainrng to the executtpn of t he
tru s t not less than f ive days
pr or to the date set for hearing
MANNING D WEB ST ER
JUDGE
CO MMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
(Bl 13 u c

PARK HEADS RANGERS

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

'*nrd

I

Pets For Sale

Call Collect 1 592 5544

------------1973 HONDA 50 m 1n l tra 1l b1ke

Athens, Oh1o

delivered right to your
project Fast and easy Free
est mates Phone 992 3284
Goeglem Ready M1x Co
Middleport Ohro
6 30 lf c

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

on
a1um1num
replacement
Windows siding storm doors
and wrndows Ra ling Phone
Charles Lisle Syrac~se Oh o
Carl
Jacob
Sales
Representat ve
v
v
Johnson and Son Inc
4 30 tfc

WILL keep elderly people tn my
home Phone 992 7460
8 1 12tc

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

BLACK and tan dog on Spencer
Rd 3 weeks ago Reward 1f
found Phone ~22 0139
8 7 61p

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

Wanted To Buy

BEDROOM home 1 floor
plan E1ther In Mtddleport
Pomeroy
Syracuse
or
Racme Phone 992 3122
811 3tc

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

OLD pla yer p1ano rol ls Call
742 5625
8 9 6tc

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

WANTED old uprtght p anos
any condlt on
Paymg SlO
cash F 1rstfloor only Wr 1te to
and g ve direct ons to W1tten
P1t1no Company
Box 188
Sardts Ohio .&lt;13946
8 II 6tp

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

Scrap Iron, Cast Iron,
Motor blocks, copper

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

alummum, d1e cast,
zmc, stam less steel
Sell to

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

3 lots eac h 50x1 00' 112 State
Street Pomeroy Phone 992
7311

a 8 5tc

LOTS for sale tra ler or house
All u t lites Phone 742 3615
Rutland O h ra
7 16 tfc

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

CASH pa id for all makes and
models of mobile homes
Phone area cod e 6U 423 9531
_ _ - J _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ......_ _ _ _
4 13 tfc

OLD FURNITURE oak tables
clock.s Ice boxes bran beds
dishes desks or complete
households
Wr ite M
o
Mil ler Rt o1 Pomeroy Ohio
call 992 17 60
13 tfc

s

:SACREs- of l~ el-~~e,;ly
roll In; land not too far from
town Send any Informat ion to
Box 729 C car e of the Dally
Se n11nel
Pomeroy
Ohio
.45769
8 2 12tc

- - - -- - -

- --

- -- -

l

1969 MUSTANG F•stback '6
cyli nder std good condrt,on
S100 Phone 992 2075

These sizes also available

5

-------------For Sale

------------- - ------------------------------------------ -------------(30A ) 773

--------------.-..------------Help Wanted

8llo4tp

old 5St0
oreen broke Gtntle Cotl
992

1 1 nc
WALNUT
modern atereo
----rad io am frn e track ta"'e EXCELSIOR San works
E
SITTE R In my home for 5 year
combn••t t /on 4 speaker sound
Main St Pomeroy All kinds
Old boy 11 30 a m 5 30 p m
SY"em 81111nce 1101 9l or
or salt water pellets water
days a Wttk Call 992 514.&lt;1
budl)tt term• Phone 992 3965
nuggetJ block salt and own
8 13 3tc
1 1 tfc
Oh io River Salt Phone "2

s

vnder roof stocked pond a 11

- Nice 3
utility large

bedrooms

2 carport and 2 outbuildings 1101
acfe Of level land

Want

lUSt

$16 500 DO
HERE YOU AAE - Cabin In
the woods, 3 rooms 2 porches
and a bath
Asking only
$300000 Plentyofflsh
YOUR CHANCE - 4 rentals In

the heart of Middleport Close
lo all shopping Asking

$35 000: 00 but want you to look
and make us an offer
10 ACRES In Middleport
Good locatlon for several
h
•
t 11
Ma b
oush or ra l'f'S
V e a

S2S 000 00

Just

give us an offer on this
li sten

small farm

We It

MOBILE HOME &amp; LOT - 2
Bedrooms nicely furnished

Near store and shopping A

re~~l buy for a
S5 750 00

couple

for

BUY NOW AND GET SET
TLEO BEFORE WINTER
6 $ lfc SEE OR CALL US

--------------- -------------- 3191
----------Slltfc
-------------- ------------------------_________
__
_
1113tc
'
------------- -------T-----ASSISTANT mttnager wented
Apply at Crow 1 Steak House
contact Bob Crow

WILL pelnt roofs and houses
tree eltlmlftl Cell 992 ~A82
brlno
8 9 121c CA NNING tomatoes
( ontalner
George
Hill
Racine
motor John1on 18
SOMEONE neecttd to eut my OUTBOARD
a 12: 6tc
h p electrlc start or will
gress fhet 11 relleb/t tnd
tradt
ror
1qu11
vafut
Phone
deptndlblt Phone t92 7174
....._
992 7.rl9.c Fltea M lddleport '000 LB combination " ' • Cefl
a 1t 6tc

992 9972

1 12 6fc

12 55 - NBC News 3 15

1 00 - News 3 All Mv Children 6 13 Not for Women Only 15
Ha zelS What s My Lme 10 Cookln Ca1un 33
1 30 - As the World Turns 8 10 Jeopardy 3 4 15 Journey to
Japan 33 ABC Afternoon Playbreak 6 13
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 Gu1d1ng LJght B 10 Mounta in
Scene 33

2 00 - Doclors 3 4 IS Edge of Night 8 10 Open Mmd 33
J 00 -

fenced S43 000 00
218 ACRES - Close to State
Park and Lake all minet'al-s

paid water tap 20 pel dQwn
balance like rent lust 5125

,s 30 -

Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Hogan s Heroes 13

Western Star Theater 15 News 6
'6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15 ABC News 13 Sesame St 20 Catch
33 33 News 6
6JO - News3 4 81015 Room22213 JourneytoJapan33
Bewitched 6
7 00 - News 10 What s My Line 8 Truth or Consequences 3
Beat the Clock 4 J1mmy Dean 13 Zoom 33 I Spy 15 Electric
Co 20 Bowling for Dollars 6

NORTH
• 109
¥1087 52

+ 10 7 6 2

-DOZER
-----------work land c lear ing by
the acre hourly or contract
farm ponds roads etc Large
dozer and operator w1th over
20 years experience Pull rns
Excavatmg Pomeroy Ohro
Phone 992 2478
1219tfc

23

21 ) There s someone
yo u re 11ud up Wlfh you d be
better o tf wttho ut 11 you can t
d1SSOI11e the assoc1allon at
!east watch h1m-ca rel~lly

GEMINI (May 21 Juno 20)

CAPRI~ORN

Be scns ble about how you

(Dee

carne

CANCER [June 2t July 22)

cetus

16 Obscure
17 One ol
60 (abbr)

ridden
(3 wds )
4 Spamsh
queen
18 Conserva •
live
5Race
(hyph wd ) 6 Smyrna fJg
7 High211 Where
4mder's
Kokomo
IS(abbr)
head
Zl Hue
covenng
2Z Fonner
10 Awakenmg
23 Old
(3 wds )
chap
25 Hazard
26 Load
cargo
2'1 Nwsance
za Wooden
core
29 Embark
(2 wds)
3Z Aunt,
10 ltaUa
33 Skilled
workman ·
ship
34 Gll'l's
mckname
35 Reqwre

19) You re QO•ng to be try ng
lo c atch up on a lot o f work
you ve lefl und one Y ou II
c reate eJ;tra pres sure by push
1ng yourse/1 loo hard

LEO (July 23 Aug 221 Thts

s one of those day s when
you rc apt to make much more
o f someth ng n your own m1nd
than tl really 1S Look lor lhe
bnght side

+++
Dis

And 1! your b I doesn t even notice maybe you ve got the
wrong guy - SUE
Dear Helen and Sue
My dad bas a temble temper If someone gets a spot on the
rug or loses a tool from the garage or almost anything he '!lime
up all usk1dsand ask m a mean vo1ce, Who did 1t?
If nobody confesses (sometunes we really don't know ) he
starts yelling and hitting us wtth his belt We're supposed to kneel
and take 1t and 1t hurls '
Once Mom proved he made the spot hunself but he never

3Ennw

or horse
9 - minlng
13 Star m

AOUARICIS (Jan 20 Feb

You re go1ng to run 1nto some
prelty slrtl resrstance 1f you re
too set upon hav1ng everythmg
done your way Yield a b t

15 Notion

aero..

19) Be rnore sclect1ve than
usual conc crnrng I hose w lh
whom you pal around At pres
enl you re beJng Judged by the
company you keep

spent;t thi S week s budget or
there w II be some OOhc IS to
con tend w1th when the b1 tts

14 Extract

clique

2 2 Jon

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
Yo u w II try to h de someth ng
tram one you lo ve hop1ng to
spare h u rl feel tng s Yo u
shOuldn 1 - 11 w 1 come out
anyway

apologtzed and ned tune we got a harder spanking
Could you please say a word about fathers hke this' - 12YEAR.OLD
Dear 12
Yes - depraved 1 And 1f your mother allows this m1serable
treatment, she IS JUst as gwlty - HELEN
P S rake loa relat1ve or fnend who can perhaps show your
fath er how wrong he IS
Year.{)ld
If adults got this kind or treatment at work - t&gt;r even 1n
pnson - there s be a maJor mvesllgallon Too bad children don't
have equal nghts? But llDless spankmg becomes 'battermg ' or
author1lles can prove neglect, they can't mterfere in famtly
arfa1rs
Let s hope SOMEONE does 1 - SUE

3'7 Mrs

Khrushchev

hy HF NUl AflNOl () •"" ' UOU lf E

8
8
9
9
10

11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 1J 15 ABCNew s33
11 30- Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Miss1on Imposs ibl e 6 Mov1es
The Glass Hou se 8
Blue Den1m 10 Untouchables 13
Janak1 33
12 30 - Wlid Wild West6 W1de Wor ld Spec 1a113
1 00 - TomorrowJ 4 TakeF1ve tor Life15
2 00 - News 4 13

CABLE CHANNELS
Country &amp; Western U SA

Color

Blue R 1dge

Kotty Wells Show

8 30 p m ~ Family Favonte
Enslgn O'Toole
Tom Ewe l l
Show
9 30 p m - Superstar Theatre
lloyd Bridges Show
J une
AI lyson Show
•
10 30 p m - Meigs Count y Fa1r

25 No~llst

12Eucute

Rebecca
2'1 Bet,

IS Break
bread
19 Similar
22 Malt
kiln
23 - up
(becorpes
angry )
24 Leaf
part

b-+-+-

I

film
fl!$jance

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It·
Ia

•
One leUer o110ply otands for another In thlo oample A II

YUGLE!

I ( ] (] I

tLAISOR

IJ

~

II

for the
apostrophes,

used

three L's, X for the two O's etc Smg1e letters,
the length and formation of the wordl are all
btnts Eacb day the c:ode )etters are dll'erent

CRYPTQQUOTES

FOFt F'EOP'LE WHO

C.AN'i 5EEil.fE.

LOR - JTHG

WFtliiN6 ON IHE WALL I

LJ

SPOGLEl

I I I

~

Now BJTange the ctrcled lettera

V~
to form the surpnae anawer, u
:=::::d~==!':,=:::::J:·=::':·:::::=·=:'·...;suggested by the above cartoon

1L""""Prill=
.. SIRIIISI==·NSWIII=-=-' l i
Yetlerday t

I

J11ml.ol e~; SHEAF MOTIF DAINTY
An1•cr1

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

LJ

UR

OPWKRTRK

ITSJDYJWLPUHR

LMJTF

xr r r xJ

BPG

MF

TJL

YJWLPUHR

LJ

ATJB

SJTKM ·
JY

JTR - YWRGP

P

SJD·

FLPWA

Yesterday's Cryptoqllllle: THE DISCOVERY OF A NEW
DISH DOES MORE FOR THE HAPPINESS OF MAN THAN
THE DISCOVERY OF A STAR -BRIU.AT.sAVARIN
(0 11'10 JUne P•w- 8Jo41coito,lne.)

(AN•en tomorrow)
TAMPER

J.l.hot the balloluu€rdtd w1th h11 g1rl
fru•ntl - M6.0I;: A. HIT

EAST

.62
¥AJ94

+JI062

+974

North

2•

CJnd backhoe work
septrc
tanks Installed dump trucks
and lo boys for "'Ire will haul
fill d.rt tap so!t limestone &amp;
gravel Call Bob or Roger ...
Jeffers day phone 992 7089
night phone 992 3525 or 992
5232
2 11 tfc

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

FOR your remodeling roofmg
painting repairing concrete
and masonry work
call
Ronne Hubbard 992 3511 or
992 7302 Work by hour or
.contract
8 7 26tc

--------------SEPT IC
TANKS
cleaned

reasonable ra tes
Ph
446
4782 Gallipolis. John Russell
owner and operator
5 12 tfc

-SEPTIC
-------------TANK S
AROBIC

SYSTEMS
REPAIRED "

SANITATION
OHIO PH 662

10 4 tfc
-SE-------------PTIC
TANKS
cleaned
Modern San ltatlon 992 395' or
992 7349
10 23 tfc

~ves, ~E IC~

CREAl

BAR AND CANDY

BUS! NESS WILL BOO
roo...v, Ct.IIEF."

I

East

,.

3.

Pass
Dble Pass
Pass
Opemng lead - K•

South

4.

Pass

GASOLINE ALLEY
LOO K 1 KNOW THI 5 MPEii!:SONAi ON
SA LOT TO A?K 50 LET ME OR. 1/E
YOLJ NTO LONDON TO YOUR HOTE:L

Here

I

tt 15,
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby Slim
1
One of the chapters m the Your
Morehead Frey book diS· home
cusses the general folly of
b1ddmg your partners cards for
for h1m Th1s hand IS g1ven as the
a proper example of when to ne~t
b1d for your partner The rea· week'
son 1s that wh1le he probably
has little or nothmg m the
way of strength h1s cards such as they are - w11l help
you
If West hac! opened ace and
one spade he would have
beaten the hand, but he d1d
open the kmg of clubs South
ruffed led a diamond to
dummy s queen a second
d1amond back to h1s ace,
ruffed h1s last small diamond
and played a trump
West took h1s ace and led
h1s last d1amond East ruffed
and the contract had nown

(,) N THC WAY, YOLJ CAN TH INK
IF 'IOU DECIDE ..,.OU
CAN T HE·LP ME IL L. QU ITE
If OVER

U N D~ R 5 TAND

TilE BORN LOSER
I"I\0\IJ aws; '()!)NEVER IMIIRIED llt~T

"U:

roi

HCWEZ

away

,•

Once dummy had been able
to ruff that low diamond,
South had a sure thmg play

"

starmg
h1mtor1ght
m the
facea
All he had
do was
to ruff
second club m h1s hand ruff
h1s kmjt of d 1amonds With
dummy s last trump show
the opponents h1s hand and
claim h1s contract He would

I&lt;,.,---,_...,..______,

couNrav
S'IIREO
92.1

have s1x tncks m and four
sure trump trtck.s to come
!NEWSPAPER ENTEKPHISE ASSN l

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
r-----"

HOW FAR
SHAll I

CONTINUE?
•

THE CHICKE)'I GOT
AWAY. YQII'R&amp;.

"mEN WED
13EIIER DUCK
51GH'T I

our.o.

FIAED, WORMBE'RT

lT'S TOO LATE
HES SEEN US '

WH.I.T'LL WE
00 to.IOW"

•

~~~g:~~~~~~~

:::

•

•
•

Mlddjeporl Pllflloroy
The blddmg has been
North Eaot
Pass
Pass
3.
Pass

t•

NOTICE

Pass

Coriung Soon 24X52 Sectiona I House,
shingle roof, house siding &amp; windows
with big spacing on first five homes.
Watch for our formal Open House
Showing !II

3 NT

Pass

You South hold
.A Q 6 54 'A Q 6 54 +A

13

South
U

3'

1

K.

2

What do you do now1
A-Pau You have a mqnlf&amp;·
cent hand. b•t yoar par,ner hat
hearcl your b'd• and Che com·
blnetl hands are clearly a mllllt

LARRrS MOBILE tllMES SALES, INC.
600 WEST MAIN ST.
Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. wun1

wager

29 An African
capital
30 Ultimate
31 Signal
deVIce
36 SwiSS
nver
37 Texture

39 From a

13 Pollee Svrgeon 3 Antiques 20 Episode Achon 33 O n The
Monev 4 Grandvtew A P roud He ntage 10
00 - The Cowboys 6 13 Unto The Htl is 33 Consumer Games
20 Chase 3 4 Hudson Brothers 8 10 Ba se ball 15
30 - Mov1e Mel v 1n Pur v1s G Man 13 M ov 1e N1ght Slaves
6 Great Ame~ 1can Dream Ma ch ne 20 33
00 - /!Mv1e Remember When 3 4 Cannon 8 10
30 - Boarding House 20 33
00 - Doc Elliot 6 13 Festtv.al Frlm s 33 Ko1ak 8 10 News 20

10 30- TBA 15 Day al Ntght 33

11 Show

38 1943
Bogart

Shap41 up o r 1h p ou ll

Unscramble the se four Jumbles.
one letter to each square to
form four ord1 nary word !I

leMIIl

Soccer
great
DOWN
I Popular
West
Indies •
dance
Z Style ol
window

s Coterie,

Dec

You 11 be a brl m tated when
you hi:tve to change some lun
plans rn o rd er to lake c are ol (t
problem that w1ll pop up

41 ot

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIE
LI'I'TL&amp;

.A4
'K 6

West

7 16 tfc
--------------EXCAVATING dozer loader

WM~M

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

East West vulnerable

Sunday for appt

1

Of course - HELEN

l3

+-

beh ind Rutland Grade School
complete front end serv 1ce
brakes and tuneups whee l s
balanced electronically Open
8 to 8 dally Call 742 3232 on

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

Sha"e t1 orf
TAURUS [April 20 May 20)

be l()tji:ly

.

te Emel'llOII

ACROSS
I Part ol
the ear

+AKJ 54
+Q983
SOUTH &lt;Dl
• KQJ8753
¥Q3
+ AK53

-----------o DELL Allnement located

3035

ARIES ( M•rch 21 Aptlt 19)

It s not hk e ~ou to be o verly •n
fluenceu o r di SCOUraged by the
op n1ons o l o the rs '1'81 you wrll

12

Quartet

+QB

WEST

11174

++-l

Dis

7 30 p m -

When to bid for your partner

SEWING MACHINE S Repa tr
serv1ce all makes 992 2284
The Fabrrc Shop Pomeroy
AuthOrtled Singer Sales and
Serv ice We sharpen Scissors
3 29 tfc

MILLER.
STEWA RT

+++

If you go out w1th a boyfnend and he sort of 1gnores you and
talks to h1s fnends (and you're not gomg steady), should you
dance if someone else asks you? - DISGUSTED

WIN AT BRIDGE
.

For Wedn"dly Aug 14

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 221 11

Dear C
Repeat lo yourself at least 50 tunes a day l am tu ed of
bemg hurt, let down and deserted Then think what th1s kind of
hfe would do 1o a baby If you go off w1th Edd1e a gam yo u don t
deserve another rescue - SUE

7 30- To Telllhe Truth 6 Sale oflhe Century 8 Beatthe Clock

Serv1ce

c are lullhal you d0t'1t gel your
sell out on a hmb then saw rl
o " by promrsrng rnore than you
can delrver
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 221
You may tt;~arn of something
untrutt that another has sa1d
about you Don I o ~teneac l de
lendmg yOUI Self

Pr1ce Is

' 4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Sesame St 33 Tattletales 8 Somerset
, 15 Gilligan s Island 6 510 000 Pyramid 13 Mov1e Ten Tall
Men 10
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Bonanza 3 Merv Gr iffin 4

Known &amp; Reftable

SEWAGE
CLEANED

+++

6

ALL WEATHER
337 N 2 Middleport
992 25SO

:

Dear C
Tell Eddie the Army needs h1m more than yo u do Smce he s
probably sllll AWOL your problem may be solved any day now
- by the m1htary pollee - HELEN

One L 1fe to L1ve 13 Ph1l Donahue 4 Match Game 8 10
How to Survive~ Marriage 3 15 Carrascolendas 33 Lass1e

All that IS needed for a free
esttmate ts a phone calf .
Please Phone

per acre

ALL PRICED HOMES TO
CHOOSE FROM
soLD LAST WEEK 4
PROPERTIES - WITH 10
YEARS EXPERIENCE WE
KNOW THE TOP DOLLAR
VALUE
ON
YOUR
PROPERTY
(OVER
PRICED PROPERTIES
SELDOM SELL) IF YOU
REALLY WANT TO SELL
CA~L US TODAY

Another World 3 4 15 General Hospital6 13

mRF:E STRIKE'! AND Ht~'S OUT
Dear Rap
My husband and I were both 18 when we married l had more
than the average girl car, money, JOb and parents who cared
They saw trouble ahead With Eddie but l only saw love
J tw!came pregnant nght away but we never settled down
just traveled a ll over the U S because l':ddie wanted to He
deserted me in Am.ona and I caUed my folks m Connecticut
They wlred me money to t:ome home
A few weeks later, he drove up A few soil words and off we
went agam Same thing happened when l was nine months along
- him AWOL from the Army, me 1n labor with no husband anu
no money Agmn, my father res&lt;;ued me
After f1ve months Edd1e came t.o claun me and the son he
had never seen !love h1m deeply but I am tired or being hurt, let
doWTI and deserted JUst so he can travel and he thmks th1s is the
only way t.o live
What should I do' - C A H

Rap

Aug 14 1874
A por• •oo of 1h•s year w11/ be
spent c tearmg ou1 obstactn
that have hlf'ldered YOUI prog
f BSS Slrong new foundationS
w 111 be la rd to buttd upon for the
new and rpore prom slflg

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oet 231Be

By Helen and Sue Bo.ttel

J 30 -

Roofong Co

f:::...=:;;;;jjii;;;;~::J!il

8 000 sq It of good buildings

garage and ~reezeway
--------------a 9 Sip .-I,.::;;;::;:.._,!:Ph~on~e:.;9~9~2~2.!:18~1c-~J, llvtng
Large lot In, Tuppers Plains
•
CREEZER corn
White and 1 You need $16 00000
1969 CHEVY Town sm an station
K:j~~~l Phone Tom Sayre ~ ew LISTING - 4 bedrooms
wagon SI 195 good c ond t on
Phone 992 7620
8 1J 31p large living balh front porch
5 24 tic - -- - - - -- - - - - - 1970 CARMAN Gh/a VW 1969
vw
Mayrag washer and
dryer portable like new ~9.111
Pontiac 6 cyltnder Phone
REGISTERED Thoroughbred
992 2584
8 11 3tc
yeerrllng filly gentle 2 yr old
grade flll'l' Phone 992 50.39 - - - -- - - -- -- -- 8 12 5tc ASSORTED furn i ,ure and
appliances Private Phone
1974 SUZUKI off on road tra il
992 7066
8 11 lfc
bike Call 992 5601 after 5 p m
8 12 Stc - - - - -- - - - - - - WE ARE picking up a pl ano In
your aree and would l i ke
MELON S 1weet corn green
some responsible party to
pepper • cucumbers for sate
take over payments
Call
Geraldine Cleland
Ra ci ne
Credit Manager (61.11) 772
Ol&lt;l to
$669 or wr l! e 260 East Marn
8 11 tiC
Streef Chil l co th e Ohio .45601
4 1 lfc
ADMIRAL am tm 1tereo radio
-record pla'l'tr Phone 98.$ 3305 R IOI~G hOrse for sale 2 years
Chnter

12 00 - Pa ssword 6 Bob Braun s 50 50 Club 4 News 8 10 13
Jack pot 3 15 Mr Rogers 33
12 30 - Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Sfl 1t Second 6 Celebnty
Sweepstakes 3 15 Afternoon w1th D 13 Electric Co 33

Don t forget the roof of your
home Have a beautiful new
roof mstafled by All Weather

· :·

B

Sunr ise Seminar .11 Summer Semesfer 10
25 - Farm Report 13
•
30 - F ave Minutes to Live By 4 News 6 Bibl e An swe r s 8 The
St ory 13 Sacred Heart 10
35 - Columbus Today 4
45 - Farmtime 10 Morning Report 3
30 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News 8 10 Dock Van Dyke 13 H R
Pufnst uf 6
30 - New Zoo Revue6 Tuxedo Tennessee 13
00 - New Zoo Revue 13 Capt Kangaroo B Jeffs Coll1e 6
Sesame Street 33 Urban L.:eague 10
25 - Jack Lalanne 13
30 - Brady Bunch 6 Green Acres 10
55 - News 13 Chuck White Reports 10
00 - Paul Dixon 4 AM 3 Abbott Coste llo 8 Phil Donahue 15
Wild Wild West 6 Captain Kangaroo 10 Master Rogers 33
M ovie Law of the Lawl ess 13
JO - To Tell the Truth 3 Lucy Show 8 Elec tn c Co 33
00 - Jokers Wild 8 10 Company 6 Lilias Yoga and You JJ
Name That Tune 3 15
30 - Gamb1t 8 10 Winning Streak 3 4 15 Turn1ng Pomts 33
00 - Password 13 H1gh Rollers 3 4 15 Now You See It 8 10
$10 000 Pyramtd 6 Sesame Street 33
30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4 15 Love of Life 8 10 Brady
Bunch 13 Lucy Show 6

Roght 8 10

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

carpeting &amp; paneling 2 free
2 water wells
basement F A heat over

Movies

11 55- CBS News 8 Dan Imel s World 10

REDECORATING? ·

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

gaS~ wells

•'

....

8
9

C. II 992 28:U For

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

000 6 000 8 000 10 000 and
12 000 BTU
POMEROY LANOMARK
• ..:: Jack w Carsey Mar

7

8

ing?
to any
others We II g rve you a
professiona l roof tor less

--------------WILL trim or cut trees and

4,000 BTU

1'109.95

7

l1

CREMEANS
CONCRETE
del1vered M o nday through
Saturday
and
even1ngs
Phone 446 1142
6 13 t fc

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

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

6

6

10

'

------------- -HOTPOINT
AIR CONDinONERS --- ----------

JUNK Autos complete and
delivered to our yard We pack
up auto bodies and buy all
kinds of scrap metals and
Iron R lder s Salvage State f 972 MG M idge t low mHeage
Rt 12.r1 Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohio
good cond ition 33 mtles per
Phone 992 5468
ga llon Phone 949 3955
7 31 26tp
8 9 6tc

6

9

Now Open tor Business

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

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

6

Free Est1mates

742-5293

33

Un

WEDNESDAY AUG 14 1974

6 00 -

10

Moved to Rutland ll• mile
lnSJde ctty limit on nght
corner 81rck St and Rt 124

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

Athens, Oh1o
We close each Frtday
at noon for balance of
week.

1

K&amp;H ROOFING

BODY

Janaki

lmpossrble 6
Murder Ahoy

TomorrowJ 4 Take Five for Lite IS
News ' 13

1 00 -

2 00 -

B

J&amp;B AUTO

M idwestern Governors

12 30 - Wide World Mystery IJ

Pomeroy, 0

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

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

The Rosenberg Co.

touchables 13
Ulysses 10

work and sephc tanks h1 ~

Refrtgeralors,
Freezers, Home &amp;
Auto Atr Cond1!1oners
and
Commercul
Un1ts

TBA 15

11 00 - News 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC News 33
\1 30 - Johnny Carson 4 J 15 M ission

&lt;lolled

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

4

10 30 Day at N ig ht 33
Conference 20

8

Real Estate For Sale

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

Auto Sales

Pollee Story 3

r Water Ltnes •nd Powtrl
Ltn•s All work done bV the
foot or contract Also dozer

.Middleport Oh1o
992 5:147

Real Estate For Sale

--------------,. .-

brass,

Phone

Building for sale or lease
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
to 10 p m for appo intment
3 20 tfc

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

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

Hawaii Five 0 8 10 Eye to E:ye 33 Faraday lind
Company 3 4
9 00 - Firlngllne-20 JeanneWollwlthJJ
9 30 - PerformanceJJ Mov ie Cowboy 8 Hawkins 10
10 00 - News 20 Marcus Welb y M 0 6 13 M ountain Scene l J

For Sale

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

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

8 30 -

MfQfiNG SERVu:E

1n P.. rt st

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

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

13 Boseball 15

of Any Type

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

Lost

Maude 8 10 Man Builds Man Destroys 33 Adam 12 J
4 Crime &amp; Pun ishment 20 Mov ie Pray for the Wildcats 0

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeifers
Day 992 7089
Nlght992 3525
or 992 5212

shrubbery Also clean out
1972 3 BEDROOM W rndsor
basements att 1cs etc Phone
Mobile Home on 1 a cre of
949 3221 or 7.112 4.441
ground
For
more
tn FOAM to f II your old couch and 6 ROOM wh te frame home 3
chatr cush ron s as low as
7 14 26tc
tormat 1on call 992 7638
bedrooms full basement 2
SlO 95 upholstery okks on ly
7 30 tfc
c 1ty lots n Pomeroy Phone JOBS contracted Phone 742
SOc 4 nch covered foam
.rl46 9488
307 4 or wr te Box 23 Langs
ma ttresses for standard s ze
8 11 6tc
1964 COLO NIAL ,50x10 mobile
ville Oh ro
bed
S29 95
Pomeroy
home clean
remodeled 2
Recovery 622 E Mam St
7 23 26tc
bedrooms
Natural
gas
Pomeroy Ohio Phone 992 6 ROOM house w 1fh 33 a c res of
Conestoga Tra1ler Court
AUTOMOBILE 1nsurance been
7554
la nd a 1972 3 bedroom trailer
Athens Oh o phone 592 2408
ca ncell ed?
Lost
your
7 24 26tc
A ll tor sate for $35 000 Phone
8 11 6tc
operator s 1 cense ca 11 992
99 2 3792
7428
UPHOL STERY fabr" ICS by the
READ THIS• Before you buy
615tfc
yard 5.11 nches w de as low as
any new 14 w de Mob Je
$2 49 PE:r yard Velvets as low
APPROX 49 acres on Bailey
Home be sure to see the all
as $5 25
Imported velvets
Run Road one mde from
steel bonded Detro ter Mob1le
59 60 We also have nylon
Homes
The steel bond
crossroads
not too far from
her c ulon
cotton
pr nts
Detrolter
as
v1r-tually
the Salem Center M tne Good
vmyls and remnants by the
fireproof and has manv
road frontage some t1mber
yard or by the p.ece Pomeroy
features that no other Mob1le
The Bailey Farm c ontact CARSON
Servrce
Statron
Recovery 622 E Ma in St
Mrs Paul Be l le y
Home on the market can
Garage
50x60
bullcllng
Pomeroy Phone 992 7554
match We also have one of
8 6 6tp
Cement dr veway Phone 742
7 24 26t~
the largest selections of good
5052
used and repossessed Mobile .11.110 DODGE engrne and 318 HOUSE
7 16 ftc
2
or
3
bedrooms
Homes of any dealer in the
Plymouth eng 1ne both 1968
modern kttchen Phone 992
area Don I wa l t - shop today
5737
models Phone ( 614 ) 843 2116
at
Berry Miller
Mobile
8 8 6tp
8 11 6tc
Homes Sa les
705 Farson
St reet Belpre Oh 10 Phone 1970 18 FT Scott 1e Camper
3 BEDROOM house all car
423 953 I
sleeps 6 Se lf contained good
peted and furn ished White
8 8 12tc
condlt ton Phone 992 7126
v nyl Sid ing window awnings
8 8 tfc
2 car gatage attached to the
house and basement 6 acres
FARM
Machtnery
New
of land In the coun try on
Holland balers haybmes
Blacktop county rd 82 Also
forage
equ tpmenl
used
1972 DODGE Colt 31 000 m lies
space for 2 tra i lers Phone
balers mowers New Holland
985 39.117
rad10
rad1a1 tires
$1 850
Phone 992 7066
baler tw 1ne a 000 ft
S26
8 11 3tp
10 000 ft $28 and S30 Gould
8 13 3tc
.AEIOUIT ~HILLY ACRES Tractor Sates
St
Rt
2 HOUSE
,.,.,__ .. 3 B R home bath lots
630 Mtll St
Mid
Murraysv1/le
W
Va
26153
1971
VEGA
Hatchback
dleport 6 rooms 1 112 batt1s
of tile and paneling nice
or phone (304 ) 273 3497
automat 1c low mrleage new
full
basement
partially
t res
call days 992 2644
8 a 6tc
kitchen
ou1
carpeted kitchen complete
even lngs 667 3785
washer
and
dryer
etc
tovld
water and gas
8 13 6tp 1973 YAMAHA 250 CC Enduro
be 3 bedrooms gas furnace
JUST
with e-xtras 3600 miles $625
f i replace storm doors and
1974 CUTLASS Supreme arr
Phone ( 304 ) 882 3297
10
LEVEL ACRES
windows
curtai ns and drapes
condtt oned am fm rad 10
8 8 12tc
On
good
tlshlng
creek city
ncluded For Information call
super sport wheels
V 8
Elden Walburn 992 2805
available
Ideal for
automat c Phone 992 9981
8 13 ffc
home trailer or summ er
after 2 p m
cottage near mine No 1 on
8 11 3tc
2 BEDROOM house Rutland
good blacktop road Rutland
Phone 992 5858
1974 PLYMOUTH Satellite
8 13 tfc
area S6 000 00
Sebring 2 dr hardtop p s
60
ACRES - About 20
P b vinyl top rally wheels
12 450 m lies excellent con
tillable many bulldmg sites
dltlon SJ 100 Phone 992
w1th city water home has. 3
3.1110
8 8 6tc
B R s bath ullllty R some

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

•
8 00 -

11
• Lawn Boy
• Tecumseh
• Kohler
• W sconsm
• All other
makes

3), Bewitched 6
CO.... What • My Line

8 DIJ1ty ~Trail 13 ~lee Co ;&gt;0 Truth
or Conseq 3 Beat the Clock A Paul Nuch l m'5 33 News tO
Bowl Ina for Oolla;rs 6 TBA u
1 30- To Tell lhe Truth~ New Price I• Right 8 10 R FD 20
Hollywood SquarH 3 Beat the Clock IJ Hollywood Squares

"

B&amp;K EXCAVATING

992 7204

C BRADFORD Auct oneer
Complete Serv 1ce
HOUSE for salem Syr acu se 5
Phone 949 3821 or 949 3161
rooms and garage located
Racrne Oh io
near the school Phon e 992
3860
Cntt Bradford
1
5 1 tfc
8 2 ftc

------------FOR FREE estimates

~

Next to H1ghway
Garage on Route 7
Pomeroy Route 3

W1 II do
Dozer &amp;
Backhoe Work, Install
Sept1c Tanks, Haul
D1rt,
Gravel.
L1 meslone or Rent One
of
Our
Trucks,
Backhoe or Dozers.

8 13 3tc
--------------------------READY MIX
CONCRETE GROC ERY business for sale

Mob1le Homes For Sale

Employment Wanted

Jf9 w Mam
Pomeroy, 0
Located at Mo.dern Supply
Small Engme Repatr

9 YEAR OLD Sorre l mare tpr
sale S275 Phone 843 2242
8 8 6tc

S100 Phone 949 3195

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

7 5 lf c

n .,

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

SUPERIOR
VINYL PRODUCTS

Wrecking
5890

Acres, Scipio
Raellle
Joe l'w'ner, Adm , Alfred J
~lie M Durst to Bradley Foster, dec to Ohlo Power Co
y, lpelqr, P'aye A. Spencer, 114 Acres Coal, Columbia
.'ttl, Ptaletvy
Mary Saxton, dec to Charleo
U.Aibnan to Paul Nebon Saxton, Maxine HyseU, Eileen
Plrcela, Salem
Kirk, Aff for trans , Mid·
E Dougherty, dlep«t
O..,berty, a.ymond J
J B O'Brien Roberta C
to E. Winnilred O'Brien, to James A Kroegel,
, II.IYIIIGnd Saller. Georgia Kroegel, Parcels,
Aanl, 41 34 Acrel. 20 Olive.
1
I

8 13 6tc

R t 3J ten m iles north of
Pomeroy
Large lots wrth
concrete patiOS Sidewalks
runners and off
street
parking
Also
spaces for
small trailers Phone 992 7.1179
7 21 tfc

MALE Regrstered St Bernard
Very well marked Phone 992
7519
a 8 6tc

NEW YORK (UPI)- General Manager-Coach Emile
FOR JUNK CARS
Francis announced Monday CASH
comple te' Frye s Truck and
Auto Parts RuHand Ohio 24
the appointment of Sll&lt;·year pro
HOUR WRECKER SER
Brad Park, a National Hockey
VICE Phone 742609-i
League All~ar defenaeman
7 ~6 26t'
the last live sell80118, DB captain ss for lunk autol}'lob/les We will
the New York Rangers lor 197._
pick up
R i verside Auto

75

- --------------------------COLOR
EO TV Phon e 949 3057
COU NTRY Mobile Home Park
3 11 tf c

coats Bu ld1ng N Second
M 1ddleport
over Columba
Gas Co Phone 992 3641 or 992
2589
8 13 6tc

Wtlktnson Small Enarne
992 3092

oven trmer clock electnc
rot1sser le good cond1t1on S40
Gas floor f urnace 530 Mason
773 5386
8 13 3f p

phone 992

tn

Home
Bu1ld1ng
&amp;
Add1t1ons, Alumtnum
&amp; Vmyl S1d1ng, Floor
Sandmg &amp; Fimshmg.

-------------36 GAS stove- With automat c

unfurn ished
apartment s
Phone 992 5.1134
4 12 ftc

Rutland Phone 992 5858
8 13 lfc

FREE HOME ESTIMATES

wrre,

AN 0

2

Produced frQm a speCial
v ny l co mpound made by B
F Goodr 1c h and Monsanto S
t mes th c ker than metal
s ding W II not dent chi p ,
crack peel
rot
rust or
ctialk

3

--------------3
4 ROOM turn rshed and

-------------SEMI FURNISHED apartment

Chester, Oh1o
9854102

Tablets and H y dr ex Water
P liS
Dutton Dr ug
M d
..dteporl and Nelson Drug
8 13 3tc

-------------BED ROOM
apartment

SOLID
VINYL SIDING

BISSELl BROTHERS
CONST. CO.

You 33 News 8 10 IS News 6
6 30 - News 8 tO NBC News 3 o4 tS Room 212 13 French Chef

1

All Small Appliances
lawn Mowers

Of PHONE 992-5476

-------------LOSE we ght with New Shape

close to Powell s Super Valu
Phone 992 3658
8 7 tfc

3915

PH 992 7454 or
992 7129
Free Eshmates, Middleport,

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR
.
ALSO SHAMPOO
CARPETS
AND CLEAN
UPHOLSTERY

Remodeling

'

you have bus.ness or ttnanc l31
dealings where ltW:He IS a frtend
rtlYOived don I behatro In a
setllsh mannar or there wtU be
a r II

Generation Rap

1J lt74

6 00 - NB C News 13 Sesarne St 10 News 3 4 Lilies Yoga &amp;

0

BOWERS
REPAIR

DECORAnNG

------------~~ 5tc L-----------.1

--------------PRIVATE meeting room for

MEIGS SE NIOR S I T me rs
r unn 1ng out
Call Grover s
Stud o at 992 2A7S to ma ke
your appointment for Senior
Portra1t s taken
Aug
20
through Aug 24 Or drop 1n at
our' booth at the County Far
Grover s Studio n Middleport
w II be cl osed durmg the far
8 8 8tc

843

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

-.11 -------------ROOM furn 1shed apartment

any organ1zatlon

Oh10

and 2 - 160 tires 1 Courier C
B Radro 23 channel Phon e
667 3759
8 13 3tc

Ma in St
Pomeroy
Ohio
Phone 992 5786 or 992 3975
6 12 tfc

POMEROY

Portland

Interior, Exterior
Decorating and

TUESDAY, AUG

1

HOME

lHE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACJ'ING CO.

8 13 6tc
------------2 CARGAR wheel s for Chev

7

No!tee

FAYE E COWDERY
Reedsvrlle Oh1o
Platntiff
VS
DALE CECIL COWDERY
Address Unknown
Defendant
No IS 602
- NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION-

8 8 Stp

ntght beginning Aug 15 7 p m
near Band B Market Mason
W Va Bring consignments
Wednesday and Thursday 11
am to6p m or call 773 5471
8 13 3t c

Roush
2865

Phone 992

18 tfc
--------------BUSINESS room 22X80 234 E

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO

Scoff 9923718

-------------AUCTION every Thursday

Pomeroy

MONTGOMERY WARD
CATALOG STORE

1.------------------...1

------=----- ---PIANO TUN IN G Call Charles

permanents $2 off blow cu t s
S4 50 Operators - Jeanette
Radford
Jackie N i bert
Ruth s Beauty Shop Mason
W Va phone 773 5686
a 13 tfc

-------------CA NN lNG tomatoes
Ha rold

TWO 4 room and bath apts n
M lddleport For nforma t lon
cell 992 2550 or 742 6551
7 3 tfc

OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY, AUGUST 15TH

give away to any ont! who
would g ve the m a gooa nome
Phone 84 3 2094 or contact
John Bogar d
8 8 Stc

-------------BACK to school special all

BTU 2 years old lrke new
forced a r fuel o 1 f red S200
Phone 843 2186
8 13 Sic

2 BEDROOM tra1ler wtth or
Wifhout utlll t tes Call 992 3509
8 12 6tc

AU DAY WEDNESDAY FOR THE FAIR

3--------LOVABL E female __
pup f. ;!3
es tfc
to

18

-----.---------JO HN SON furnace
100 000

For Rent

Court
3324

-------

MOTORCYCLE Harley
Davrdson chopper real nu~ e
must sell re-asonably pr iced
T i m Demosk v 992 5663
B 13 6tp

POMEROY, 0.

Busine~~s Serv~ces
.

z,o

CLO:;t u uT on New
Z:ag
Sewing Mach ines. For sewtno
sfretch fabr ics buttonholes
lancv dei l gns etc
P4tln1
sligt111 y blem Ished Cho ice ot
carrv1ng c•se- or sewlnv
slan lj $.49 10 cash or lerms
avatlable Phone 992 26S3
8 13 ttc

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

5 12 ttc

n ···~~~

August

S4595

WILL BE CLOSED

~~~r c~~:;~~~~·
M~~~; :;',~~~:'
w Va Home of

Fire Statron

l

THE DAILY
SENnNEL

new w w t1res rad•o M.any other ex tras

season PrTwo
uck loads
each
week
ce tr
starting
at S6
98
per bushel Please br ing your

a m til

$209S

3~ V a automat1c P steering &amp; brakes dark blue ftnlsh

"

ELECTROLVX Sweeper delul!e
model
Comple t e with all
cleaning attachments and
uSe$ paper bags Sllghlly used
but cleans and looJc.s like new
W ltl Sell for S37 2S c ash or
terms avarlable Phone 992
2653
8 13 ffc

--------------TRAILER
Browns Trailer

-------------CANNING peaches now In
6~~~, ,~."~' o~~~

PHONE 992·2156

OPEN EVES8 00 PM
POMEROY, OHIO

7 26 ft c

Maso

li"S

For Sale

------

MOTOR ROUTE
DRIVER

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

3 19 lfc
-------------A TO Z MART used furn ture

appl ian ces and mrsc
Hartford W Va

QUAliTY

WANTED

3 Seat Red and whl1e saddle cus tom vmyl trim t1nt
glass dual a~r cond itioning h dutv shocks 350 V 8 engine
turbo hydramatlc power steering and brakes radio
chrome ari lle I 7A 1"i w w tires Chevenne Super equip
ment never t itled A sharp unit that w1 11 do the tow job for
you Retail Stacker S6 078 M

.!
lrne ot
ser v1ce
th give
Brown

1

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1973 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN

-kO------------SCO T
KOSMETICS
WIGS For a good
Cosmettcs fr iendly
and someone to Ch.at w
me a call He len Jane
992511J

Help Wanted

Television Log

.

13,.1971jj4·•••••-1:1:1Jlj----~---~

FEELIN' A
HEAPGOODER
NOW,PARSON

•

I S HORE AM TICKLED
TO HEAR HE'S SACK
01\1 HIS FEET AG II\I

\IIHEN ! CO.~E
ARQ\.O"lD WJIJ
5TAND VP DO
~HEARME 1

ITS l·tt:R !!
ITS f.IER 11
MY FIRST

SIIIEETHEAilT 1

'

IF ~OU DON T DO
THIS fjEA6LE WILL
'IOIJR LE6

•
.

TODAY 8 QUESTION
Instead of bidding three
'

•

...

oolrump your partner has bid
three spades over your three
hearta What do you do nnw'

"

•

•

•

•

'

•

�•
8 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Au~. 13. 1974
~

Priddy will $23,120 street repairs Fruth' wins
1 Contimwd from page 1
•
viUage olflcials would like to place the signs at Bradbury,
head study Hobson
state title
and near the Pomeroy.Mason bridge.

Praise
Continued from page I
said

Ford'~

formula

for

. fighting 1nnat1on was " simplistic."
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, DMaine, said, " Cut1ing government experuHures alone won 't
cure inflation and can trigger a
recession and bring higher

PT. PLEASANT _ An adIn compliance with the rommunication from the Department
visory committee to study i.l of Highways, &lt;.:ouncil voted unanimously to request permission
pr oposed school building frumthe Meigs County Commissioners and the Pomeroy Village
prog ram in Mason County in its Council to post the signs.
Council again discussed the flood insurance program which
first meeting with the Board of
Education appointed 3 tern· the village joined r"""ntly. Several rouncilnlen had indicated a
unemployment. "
chairman
and desire to protest a flood plain map drawn by"'he Department of
porary
Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La. , sc heduJed a second meeting. NatW'al Resources because it shows nine--tenths of the town in a
chairman of the Senate
Russell Priddy Sr . was . flood area . Grate read a letter Indicating that council can file
Finance Committee, which elected to head the group until such a protest but the letter indicated that council will have to
would handle most of Ford's further organiwtion is made come up with technical information and factual material to
initiatives dealing with the when a greater number of the protest and not just simply di:s~gree with the map. The map was
economy, praised the speec h,
committee is present when prepared based on flood experiences in the town over the past 100
but conceded he was
subcommittees also wHJ be years.
" dismayed" that Ford inappoint..d. The nexl meeting
Council members maintain that the new rlood rontrol~ On the
d.icated inflation could be was set for Monday, Aug . , at Ohio River in recent years change the rlood plain picture.
19
controlled by cutting the 7:30p.m. in the " blue" building
Several counci~nen indicated that the law governing the flood
budcet. He added, "That 's a at Point Pleasant High SchooL insurance program will in time be changed because it is ronsmall beginning, a &lt;lrop ·in the
Harry Siders, school board troversial and too demanding.
bucket .''
president, presided until the
Letters of application for the position of maintenance
House Republican Leader chairman was elected. The supervisor replacing Harold Chase, who has indicated he would
John J . Rhodes of Arizona said, manuals, as prepared by RCA, like to resign at the end of the year, were read from Jack
" I don't remember hearin g a
were distributed and Advisory Phillips, Columbus, formerly of Middleport and Rutland, and
speech · as right for this c ommittee members were Carroll Johnson, Middleport. Johnson wa~ on hand at last night's
moment as was this one ."
advised to study these before meeting to express his interest in the post.
House Speaker Carl Albert
Council agreed to place three electric lights at the Midnext week 's meeting .
called Ford a "great AmeriOne of the main topics of dl~port Community Park and to place a yield or stop sign at the
can" and said Congress would
,discussion was busing. !t was rorner of Rutland and North Third St . Approval of an exdo all it could to help him
indicated the committee will penditure of $120 for tuition fees for Larry Baker to attend a fire
succeed.
make every effort to cut down and emergency school at Ohio State University, Columbus, in
House Democratic Leader
September was given. Baker will take a week of his personal
Thomas P. O'Neill of Massa- the time many children 1\''e
chusetts sajd: "He asked for spending in their travel to' and employment vacation in order to attend the school.
from school.
Besides the four councilmen, Mayor John Zerkle, clerkour help and ow- continued
While there were no actions treasurer Grate, Chase and police chief J . J. Cr~means attended
criticism and you can bet we
taken ~ it was aPparent that the meeting.
will give him that."
Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, R- some committee members
Ariz., said he has suggested believe consolidation of Point
· that Ford propose a 10 per cent Pleasant High School with
cut in federal salaries and Hannan High is a necessity,
federal programs and added, "because so many things hinge
on this.''
·
"He kind of liked the idea ."
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DMass., said the speech indicated that "in a political sense, it's
" I kind of believe Ford will
By United Press International
an entirely new ball game. "
try
harder than Nixon, in fa ct
Ohioans said they were
impressed with President he has to try hader," she ·said.
LOCAL TEMPS
A Mason County woman was Ford's . address to Congr.ess "He's a simple man, just like
The temperature in down- injtu'ed when two cars collided · Monday night - but some per- the rest of us. He can pull us
town Pomeroy at J1 a.m. Monday at I :35 p.m. according sons surveyed by United Press through if anyone can."
Mrs. Claire Barkley, 50, a
Tuesday was 79 degrees under to Pomeroy police chief Jed International said they · were
Webster.
sunny skies.
disturbed the President did not Shaker Heights housewife, said
Mrs. Helen Ellison, traveling detail his plans to curb infla- inflation had been taking a
"great piece" of her food bill.
south on SR 7, was slowing tion.
down to make a right hand turn
" President Ford was saying
"I was fairly impressed with
into the upper entrance of him and I found him a lot more things he wanted us to hear,''
Tonighr, Aug. 13 thru
Jones Boys when a car driven pleasant to hear than Nixon," she said. ''He does have sort of
Thursday , Aug . 22
by Mrs. Donald McKnight, no Jenny Ramey, 25, a Columbus a charisama but we really
NOT OPEN
address recorded, struck the librar ian, said. H[ think, don't have any choice so we all
rear of the Ellison car. Webster however, he's going to have a must be optimistic.
FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
" I was rather distressed he
said the brakes on the fi ght with Congress about his
AUGUST 23-24-25
McKnight vehicle failed.
THE SUGAR LAND
inflation program because so didn 'I talk about election
EXPRESS
Mrs. Ellison, taken to Holzer many Congressmen look upon reform but he does look like an
(PG)
Medical Center by the spending as a method of get- op~n sort of man," she added.
CARTOONS
Mrs. Barkley ' s husband ,
Pomeroy E-R squad , was ting votes.
Show Starts 7 p . m .
A1vin,
54, an insurance comadmitted. The accident is still
"I think starting with cw-under investigation. There was bing federal spending is a good pany president, said he is willheavy damage to both cars.·
place to start but (the speech) ing .lo give Ford a chance but
just sounded so ideal," she "frankly , I just don't know
what he can do ·about infla· added .
MII!'Y Reigle, 50, a Columbus tion ."
"My company had a board of
Tonight,
housewife, and she wasn't sure
Pleasant Valley Hospital
'Ford detailed his proposals to directors meeting Monday and
all we discussed was in·
DISCHARGES - Adolph fight inflation.
flation
," he said. "We have to
Bradshaw , Point Pleasant ;
" I just don 't think he said
Robert
Anthony.
Point enough about what he intends start thinking about pay raises
Pleasant; Helen Wheeler, West to do about inflation/' she said. for our employes, but our
Columbia;
Mrs.
Lewis "But I think we will hear more expenses are just continuing to
Williamson, Henderson; Mrs. about it later. I found the rise to a point where it is
Alfred
Sprouse,
Point President much better in all terribly problematic.,
"I get the feeling Ford is
Pleasant ; Mrs. Burl Birch- respects than NiXon was -he's
field , Crown City; Mrs. Patrick a friendlier type .person and I absolutely a sincere man,"
Foglesong, Point Pleasant.
think he will be more honest added Barkley. " In fact, so
ALSO
sincere I think he : is a little
NEW CITIZENS - Aug. 12, a and candid than Nixon."
son to Mr . and Mrs. John
Erry Longworth, 41, Parma, naive.''
Moore, Syracuse; a son to Mr. a foreman , said he felt Ford
and Mrs. Norman Bumgarn· was sincere but " nothing is
der. Point Pleasant.
going to happen in the next five
MYERS HASllEGREE
days if you really understand
LANGSVILLE - Joseph !':.
economics.''
Myers, son of Mr. and Mrs .
"I'll give him a chance Andrew Myers of Route I,
because I think anything that is Langsville, was one of 107
this deep-seeded takes time to graduates to receive a diploma
. co rr ect, " Longworth said . (M.A.T.) from
Hardin g
" President Ford has,to find the College at Searcy, Ark. during
root of the (inflation ) problem s umm er commencement
and that's going to take time." exercises Aug . 9. Myers was
Mrs. Joanne Rowe, 42, a
one of 18 graduates to receive
Cleveland Heights housewife, the M.A.T. degree. The class
said she found inflation a big included 58 awarded the B.A.
burden and termed current degree and 31 the B.S. degree.
food prices ~&lt;outrageous."

Woinan injured
in collision

Inflation still
worrying Ohioans

MEIGS THEATRE

asnn

Drive-rn

"Two Lane

Black Top"

,••hoxes
cashierandtravelerchecks
moneyordersandnotary!

FOR YOUR BACK

TO SCHOOL
SHOES
Come To The

heritage house
Your Thorn Me An

The town .Crier's trying to say that we have a
full rani&amp; of banking services available to
you. We're a full·servlce bank and that means
extra convenience. Orop In and we'll fill you
In on all our banking services

Store

DAUGHTER BORN
LANCASTER - Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Probasco, Lancaster ' are announcing the
birth of a 10 lb. daughter July
10, named Stacy Marie. Mrs.
Probasco is the former Brenda
Smith, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Guy . Smith, grand•
daughter of Mrs. Maggie '
Smith , Pomeroy, and niece of
Sylvia Carman , Long Hollow
Rd.

YOUR HEADQUARTERS

FOR· ·

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDOI.fPORT, 0.

..
'

WINS COMMISSION
NEW HAVEN, W. Va .
Cadet Gary A. Blackhw-st, son
of ~rs. Maryanne Gorrell, 122
Howard St., learned the fundamentals
of
military
leadership at Ft. Bragg, N. C.
in the advanced ROTC course
which ended July 26. A student
at West Virginia State College
at Illstitute, he was com.
missioned a second lieutenant
upon completion · of the
prog ram. His father, Arthur A.
Blackhw-st, lives at 801 Worthington Drive, Bridgeport, W.
Va.
FOUR RUNS MADE
RACINE - The Racine
emergency squad making fowruns over the weekend, at 2
a .m. Saturday took Pam
Shuler, Syracuse, to Holzer
Medical Center as a medical
patient; at I p.m . . Sunday
removed Mary Grady. Racine,
to
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital; and at 10 a .m.
Monday took Zelia Lawson and
at 1 p.m. Monday, Rose Bacchus , both to Veterans
Memorial as medical patients.
BANKS TO CLOSE
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. and the Pomeroy
National Bank will close
Thursday at noon in order that
their employees may attend
the Meigs County Fair.

1111\RKE.'T REPORT
Pol11t Plrusunt, W. Va.
A~gusi!D,I!nt

SLAUGHTER STEERS
Good &amp; Choice, 800-1100 lbs.
37.30-40.85, Standard 800-1100
lbs. 27.50.
SLAUGHTER HEfFERS Standard 700-1000 lbs . 23-26.90.
Si.AUGHTER COWS Utility 22.40, Canner &amp; Cutter
17.7~21, Bulls over 1,1100 Jbs.
29.50.
VEAL - Choice&amp; Prime 19!&gt;225 lbs. 51.75, 226-265lbs. 43.50.
HOGS - U.S. 1-3 190-240 tbs.
35-36.85, U.S. 1-3 24~260 lbs. 3838.50, Boars 300-liOO lbs. 20.25,
·Pigs (by head ) 20-40 lbs. 8-21.
YEARLfNG HEfFERS Good &amp; Choice 5\)().jjOO lbs.
24.7$-28.50.
STEER CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice under 300 lbs. 44-105.
HEIFER CALVES - Good &amp;
Choice under 300 lbs. 77.50132.50, 300-400 lbs . 132.50-140,'
Cows &amp; Calves (by head ) 315,
Cows (by head ) 146-230.
BABY CALVES (By Head)
- Beef 71, Holstein &amp; Brown
Swiss 29-48.

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. New Haven Council In regular
session Monday night at the
town hall votro to maintain the
$5.59 rates for the Point TV
Caple Service rejectin~ the
raise of 16 per month as
requested by the cable service,
Present were Mayor Olarles
Smith, Councilmen William
Gibbs, Bernard Ueving,
Thomas Grinstead and Charles
OFFICES CLOSING
The office of Middleport
Mayor John Zerkle and the
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs will be closed Thursday
afternoon in order that employes may attend U1e Meigs
County Fair.
REVIVAL SET
A reyival will be held at the
United Faith Church, on the
Pomeroy bypass, Aug. 21
through 2ii, 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Rev. Cecil Wise is the
evangelist. A hymn sing will be
held at 2 p.m. on the 25th .. The
public and an singers are
welcome.

Roush , Also pre.ent wer
Wllllllll\ Folmer aild Stephen
EIJlott.
The motion to retain the
pr~sent rates for tile TV ser·
vice was made by Gibbs llld
seconded by Grinstead.
Council Issued an order that
anyone caught rld.ing molor.
cycles in Quillen Park wUJ be
fined $50.
On motion of Ueving, council
voted for replacement of new
tires for the town police
cruiser The motion was
second by Grinstead !llld !Illproved. A motion by Grinstead
and seconded by Gibbs was
accept..d to erect signs 1'1 the
playground area and at the
New Haven Grade School.
Councilman Roush was instructed to order the signs.
A question on building
permits was discussed . on
motion of Roush and segllllied
by Ueving. Council voted one
without a permit will be fljjed
$50. Council also agreed all
dogs running loose wiU be
picked up and turned over to
the county dog warden.
T

"

.

The Middleport E-R Squad
made two runs Monday. At 5:22
p.m. they were called to
Liberty Lane for !ow--year-old
Brenda Taylor , a medical
patient, who was taken · to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ,
and at 9:22 p.m. to the
Tabernacle Church , Bailey
Run, for ~on Adams, Huntington, who was dead on
arrival of the squad. Mr.
Adams was here as guest
speaker at revival services at
the church.

LIONS SAY THANKS
NEW HAVEN , W. Va.
Members of the New Ha ven
Lions Club have expressed
appreciation to residents here
who bought brooms in the
club's broom sales. Dale
Starry, secretary, said brooms
are still available and persons
desiring to purchase these may
call any Lion .

'

Adrian Keith Smith, 25, Rt. 2,
Racine, employed by a carnival in Athens, was sentenced
to I to 10 years in prison
Tuesday by Meigs County
Probate Judge Manning
Webster following his plea of
guilty to a bill of information
charging abduction.
IQ a statement to Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach, Deputy
Sheriff Robert Beegle, and
·Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI) Officer
Herman Henry, Srili th substantially admitted as fact the
story given lawmen by a 16year-oid girl in which she
charged abduction and rape.
Smith, father of two children
. whose wife is pregnant, was

there were unofficial reports in.
TW'key launched massive Athens the Greek armed forces
air, tank and naval ~trikes had been placed on a full war
against
Greek
Cypriot footing along its frontier with
positions on Cyprus today in an Turkey.
The Geneva peace talks
apparent attempt to partition
the island by force of arms. among Britain 1 Turkey and
The attacks brought Greece Greece collapsed early today
Turkey close to war again and Britain called for an
and threatened to collapse the emergency meeting in New
York of the United Nations
southern flank of NATO.
Greece announced it was Security Council.
The council, in a 3:30 a.m.
withdrawing its armed forces
from NATO for its failure to EDT session, took 10 minutes
prevent what it called a to adopt unanimously a
Turkish Pearl Harbor, and resolution calling for a cease-

By United. Press International

I

and

TONI TODD
Just-right merging. and mi&lt;ing of soft sweater tax.
lures. Diamond patterned top shaped to a SC(Iid, free
moving gored skirt. A Toni Todd that loves to go in
swealery polyester double knit, machine washable/
dryoble.

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

\~~

FREE BRAKE DiECK ·- FREE .ESTIMATE

POMEROY HOME :&amp; AUTO
YOUR COMPLETE nRE CENTER
. 992·2094

SAiGON - COMMUNIST GUNNERS SHELLED ~ mental
hospital and two villages near the sprawling Bien Hoa Air Base
today, the.Saigon rommand said . Officers said the three-round
rocket barrage missed the base, 14 miles northeast of Saigon, but
gutted a mental hospital nearby in a direct hit, killing one patient
·and H other civilians and wounding nine persons.
TWo rockets also hit nearby villages and woundf!l five
persillls, the corrunand aald. Since last Saturday, 67 rockets have
hit Bien Hoa Air Base, ldlling at le1111t three persons. Military
sources said nine FS jeta have been damaged by the attacks .
ATLANTA - FIERY LT·. GOV. LESTER MADDOX, trying

wbecome Georgia's first repeat governor in 30 years, easily won
a plurality ot votes in the Democr.atlc primary Tuesday night,

POMEROY .

•

fire on Cyprus.
The call had no apparent
effect. Dispatches from
Nicosia and monitorings.of.the
Greek and Turkish Cypriot
radios there told of massive
Turkish tank thrusts eastward
from Nicosia toward the port of
Famagusta and westward toward the port of Lefka-drives
that would seal off northern
Cyprus.
There were heavy air strikes
against
Greek
Cypriot
positions in the capital of
Nirosia which sent thousands

arms 81\d legs and around
her neck and secured her to the
bed. Then he took several feet
of black electrician tape and
taped her mouth closed. He
told her he would return for her
when the carnival left Athe ns,
and he would lake her to
Tejuana , Mexico.
Around 10 : 45 a.m., she
managed to fr ee herself from .
the rope and break a fruit jar ·
that was in the bedroom using
it to cut the tape from her
mouth and hair . She then went
out an upstairs window and
jumped off the porch roof
because she was a~raid to go
downs tairs, th inking the
subject would be down there

waiting on her.
submit by force or threat of
Her neck and arms were force.
brui ses apparently by . the
On Sunday, · August 1J,
ropes binding her body.
Hartenba ch, Beegle, and
Sheriff Harten bach took the · Henry completed the ingirl and a woman dep uty vestigation at the house where
sheriff from Meigs County to the crime was committed:
the Athens Police Department.
After advising him of his
With Capt. Clyde Beasley, Sgt. rights, Smith was questioned
Hutchinson, and Boyd Sinclair, · by the three officers and at this
of the •Athens Police he went to time Smith gave a statement
the Athens County Fairgrounds substantia lly verifying the
where the identification of the story told to the prosecutor and
suspect was made, and i!Jl· sheriff Satw-day morning by
mediately was taken into the girl.
custody. Smith was arrested on
Sheriff Hartenbach thanks
a warrant charging that he the Athe ns Police Deparlment
engaged in sexua1 conduct with for its assistance and Henry,
a person not his spouse and expert in criminal" in.
purposefully compelled her to vestigation for his assistance in

gatheri ng
the
physical
evidence surrounding this
case.

On Tuesday, August 13 at
1:30 p.m., Adrian Keith Smith
was before Common P.leas
Court Judge Manning Webster .
on a bill o(information filed by ,
Bernard V. Fultz which led
from the cirCumstance in the
above named case. The charge
sa id Smith did, without
privilege to do so, knowi ngly,
by force or threat, restrain said
girl of her liberty, uniler circumstances creating a risk of
physi cal harm to her , or
placing her in fear , in violation
of Section 2905.02 of the · Ohio
Revised Code.

massive attac s

of refilgees streaming out of
the city toward the south and
dr ove U.N. peace ·ke eping
forces from three outposts west
of the capital. At least a dozen
U.N . troops were wounded.
President
Ford
and
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissing er were reported
followin g deve lopment s
closely. Kissinger had intervened repeatedly with a
barrage of telephone calls to
the Greek, Tw-kish and BritiSh
Foreign Ministers but was
unable to stave off the collapse

of the talks.
Turkey had invaded the
e.a stern Mediterranean ·island
on July 20 in a move that
almost brought war with
Greece.
It said it did so to protect the
approximately 125,1100 TW'kish
Cypriots from the plOre than
500,000 Greek
Cypriots
following the Greek-led Cypriot
National Guard coup which
overthrew President Archbishpp Makarios or. .Ju'y 1~ whiCh also brought on the fall
(Continued on page 16 )

Food servzce, handling

WASHINGTON - CONSERVATIVES ARE PUSHING
President Ford to nominate Republican National Chai!'!llan
George Bush as his vice president, and moderates are holding
out for former New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. The
deadline for their suggestions passes today, and Ford was expected to make his selection by the end of the week .
Ford gets hundreds of suggestions today from Congress, with
aeparate envelopes to be submitted by Senate GOP Lea de~ Hugh
Brott of Pennsylvania and his House rounterpart, John J . Rhodes
ol Arizona. Never before Jias there been as much interest in. the
aelection process, with Ford having solicited the views of hundreds of lawmakers and political leaders, and saylrg early in the
process he would not rule out anybody.
·
The person Ford selects wlll be the third vice president in
less than a year and will undergo intense finanCial and personal
IICI'IItiny from the FBI and Internal Revenue Service, as well as
from Congress, during confirmation hearings.

=1....:;:;1~

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992 -2156

•

By United Press International
WASIITNGTON - PRI&gt;SIDENT FORD, FACING the first
international crisis of his presidency , kept in close touch today
with the deteriorating Cyprus situation. A spokesman said the
President considered urgent the Turkish bombing of the Cypriot
capital and the Greek military withdrawal from NATO.
"The President and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger in
their daily consideration of urgent international matters have
been spend.ing considerable time on the question of Cyprus,"
White House Press Secretary Jerald A. terHorst said early
today.

All work. done· by automotive uperta ... Hurry in this week 1

606 E. MAIN

.

apprehended by the sheriff and what happened to her:
back in the car and the mao,
his dep uties . with the
She was picked up by a white wqom she identified as
cooperation of the Athens man at . the fairgrounds at " Rebel" Smith, drove her to a
Police Dept. Henry of the BCI ·Athens, Ohio, and was taken vacant house in the Morning
assisted in collecting the towards her home at Chaun- Star are in Sulton Township.
physical evidence.
cey 1 but because of high water At knifepoint he forced her to
The incident, as reported by ·on .the road, was unable to get enter the house through a
Sheriff Hartenbach , began to her residence. The man then window. He took her upstairs to
Satw-day, Aug: 10, at 11 :12 put a knife t.o her throatand a bedroom where there wa~ an
a.m . when the sheriff 's drove her to Meigs County old bed - he raped her. After
department responded to a he worked for the carnival at raping her he started taking
report from the Morning Star the Athens County Fair - and items from an old trunk in
area of Sutton Tpw . where a from the directions given by which he was going to put her
juvenile female of Chauncey, the female, it would have been - according to the girl - but
Ohio said she had been raped Columbia Township where she pleaded that she would not
and left tied up In a vacant they first stopped.
be able to breathe.
house. She was ta.ke!J to the
Then at knifepoint the man
He had taken some rope from
office of Prosecuting Attorney took her out of the car, but he his car, so he stretched her out
Bernard V . Fultz where she discovered there was another on the bed ~ s pread both arms
gave the following account of car at this spot, so they got and legs - put rope around her

ur s aunc
Sweaterdress,
success

The aftershaft of the emu
feather is as long as the main
feathe r.

Confessed abductor given 1-10 years In prison

•

HOMECOMING SLATED
The Zion Church of Christ,
SR 143 , on Pomeroy Harrisonville Rd ., will hold. a
homecom&lt;ng all day Sunday,
Aug . 16. Sunday School will be
at 9:30a.m., worship service at .
l0 .30, and a basket dinner at
12:30 p.m. The afternoon
progr~m will -be at 2 p.m.
featw-lllg the "Gospel Tones."
Everyone is invited to attend

HE$8 AT LEJEUNE
Marine Pvt. Larry l. Hess,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack I.
. Hess of 310 Main St., Point
Pleasant, has reportro for duty ·
with the 2d Marine Division at
.
'
the Marine Corps Base .a t
Camp ~jeune, N. C.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1974

•

•

'

~

Now YouKnow

enttne

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

I

CLERK NAMED
CHESTER - Milton F.
Tuttle has been named clerk
for Chester Twp. following the
resignailon of Lillian Frost. All
mail pertaining . to Chester
Twp. · is to be addressed to
Tuttle, Chester, Ohio.

-

twists into animal shapes. Here Delma Karr received her
balloon animal from the popular Koko.

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVI NO. 86

•

DROWNED IN ERIE
Mrs . Dwight (Kay ) Logan,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, received word
of the drowning in Lake Erie
Saturday of .her brother-in-law,
Chester Carson, in Sandusky.
The body was found Monday.
Funeral services will be held 1
Wendesday at 10 a.m. at the
Frey Funeral Home, Sandusky. He is survived by his
wife, Elsie Holley Carson.

KOKO, TI-m CWWN, will be on the Meigs County
Fairgrounds all week giving out skinry balloons which he

Generally clear, a little
cooler tonight. Low in the lower
60s. Cloudy, chance of thundershowers Thursday . High to
the middle 8\ls.

Continued frOm page 1
be held following the opening class conformation judging.
At 6 Wednesday evening, there will be a dog show to mark the
opening of junior fair night at the grandstand. The little prince
and princess rontest will be held along with a parade, at 7 p.m.,
the presentation of the king and queen, the junior fair style
revue, presentati_on of achievement and special awards, and
games and races for young people.

SERVICES HELD
MARIETTA Funeral
services were held for Mrs .
Paige Stalnaker, 74, Williamstown, W. Va ., who died Wednesday at Marietta Memorial
Hospital, at Cawley Funeral
Home, Marietta. She ·is survived by foW' sons and two
daughters including Har ley
Stalnaker, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and
Mrs. W. S. . Powell, Rt. 2,
Cheshire. Burial was in the
Lowell, Ohio, cemetery.
•

Shenefield, superintendent ol farm crops and horticulture;
Hamm, Kautz, and Jeff Pope, yoc-£9 instructor at North
Gallia High School, judge. Hollon was absent. The trophies
awarded to the hay winners were provided by the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District.

Weather

Fair b~gins today

..
•

PLACING FIRST in the Meigs County hay show at the
Fair In three division were Larry Hollon, 50 per cent or more
legume ; Dale Kautz, 49 per cent or less legume, and Tom
Hamm, aU grass. Presenting the awards are, ]; , Rex

Squad called out

SUITFII.ED
A sui t for money has been.
filed and two divorces have
been grantro In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. Clair
Shen~ield, 45, RFD I, Vinton,
filed a suit in the amount cif
$2,039.70 against Ida I. Martin,
Rt. 1, Vinton . James M. Hamm .
was granted a divorce from
Mary V. Hamm, and Mary
Edwards was granted a
·divorce from ·William Bruce
Edwards.

PITTSBURGt.

•

Cha·n ce of evening thund~rshowers south, otherwise
fair and not as warm tonight.
Low upper 50s and lower 60s.
Mostly sunny Wednesday. High
m the lower 80s.

Cable rate hike rejected

and enjoy Rick
the singing
· .and
' fellowship.
Morrison
is
tl)e minister.

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

y

Weather

Market Report

'--------------------"'~

Walk-Up Window and
Auto Teller Window ·
OPen Fri. Evenings 5 To 7 P.M.

MIDDLEP.ORT. OHIQ ·
Member Fede1q1l
Insurance Corporation

PT. PLEASANT - Fruth
Pharmacy of Point Pleasant
won the coveted slowi&gt;ltch
softball West Virginia State
championship Monday night at
City Park in Parkersburg,
The Fruth team. managed by
Jimmy Joe Hemsley, thus
earned a berth in the national
tournament at York, Pa .
Fruth, a team organized only
three years ago, will open its
participation in the national
event this Friday night at 9:30.
Fruth carne home with the
handsome staie championship ,
trophy after moving through
the loser's bracket of the
double - elimination event to
defeat Donohew of Clay County
twice last evening .
The Point Pleasant team, in
order to gain the state finals,
also downed talented Marathon
Coal
4-3
Monday night. Fruth Pharmacy, once in the finals,
downed previously unbeaten
Donohew by scores of 7-5 and 95, respectively. Sponsor Jack
Fruth; owner of Fruth Pharmacy, was with his team when
it accepted the state championship trophy from State
Commissioner Melvin Smith.
In the key Marathon Coal
victory, Fruth's came up with
two rWls in the seventh inning
to win. Down 3-2, Bob Whaley
started off seventh for Fruth by
reaching base on an error. Don
Swisher got on by a fielder's
choice that forced Whaley.
With one out, Ron Quillen
punched a single and then
pinch-hitter Bob Burdette
drove in the tying run with a
base knock. Steve Halstead
then batted in what proved to
be tbe winning marker with a
sacrifice Oy.

'

but was foreed into a runolt by the 12-m an field.
.
The one-time •~-handle foe of desegregation held a comll)andlng lead over his nearest challenger but failed to win' the
(ConUnued on page 13)

·I

.)

'

·r

regulations explained
Ohio 43138.
State food service and hand- facilities, adequate ventilating
Represenbltives of the Ohio
ling rules will be enforced hoods, use equipment and
WHAT LOOKS su.spiciously like Olarlie Brown's Great Pumpkin is on display at the Meigs
Department of Health will be
stricUy in Meigs County. Ar· utensils in good condition, have
County
Fair this week. The pumpkin, estimated to weigh almost 100 pounds, was the entry in
making
inspections
of
thur Gibson, J~ ., and Frank adequate, clean utensil stora ge
the horticulture department of Tanimy Starcher, It took the eye of many fairgoers including
a nd
adequate operations and enforcing the
Petrie of the State Department · space,
this eight-year-old, Kathy~ach ofMineraJWells, W. Va .
Food ServiCe Laws and
of Health told 31 owners and refrigeration.
a II Regulations of the State of Ohio
in
Therm os tats
operators· of lood establishas laid down in section ~ :HJ2.02
were
refrigeration units
men~ and vending machine
or 3732.08 of the Ohio Revised
operators in a meeting at the suggested.
Petrie will be in Pomeroy Code. Previously inspections
courthouse Tuesday.
· were conducted by the local
Gibson stressed the need for Wednesday and Thui.sday of
board of health's sani tation
cleanllness, and proper food each week at the local board of
stora ge. Struciures, including health . Persons having offi cer.
•
Bookl ets on food service
questions
\Jiay
call
him
at
the
walls, floors and ceilings1 must
operation, law, regulations and
be in good r epair ; have local office, 992-3723.
All food handlers licenses in terpretive guide were
adequate toilets (in good
Dale Ka ut z, Pome r oy Route
·Nwnerous ribbons ·and cash first of the open classes of this
7, lir·st, and -Edison Hollon ,
repair ); have handwashin g and food vending machine distributed. When operators' premiwns were awarded at the year 's fair .
M inersvill'J Rou te 1 second, in
licenses, which ha ve been licenses are due, applications
lllth
annual
Meigs
County
F'irst
and
second
place
be51 si x car s of ye l low hybrid
purchased by openitors at ihe will be mailed from the Logan
·· Fire, aid units
cor n ; Earl Dean , Pom~roy
Fair
Tuesday
when
f8rm
crops
winners,
with
only
firsts
li
sled
local board oi health, must now office. Those having problems
Route 3. best si x ears of white
and horticulture judging was in cases where there were no swee
t corn ; Ma)(ln e · Grlfll l ~.
be purchased from Southeast may also call the Logan office
called 35 times
held in the senior fair building. second place selections mat 38S-6851 .
Office,
Box
976,
Logan,
District
!Continued on page l3l
Thirty-five alarms answered
The judging was among ll&lt;c cl ude :
•
by the Middleport Fire
Department in July included
four to fires and 31 of a first aid
natw-e. or the total, 16 were in
to)Vn and 15 out-of-town and
three lnvolv~ motor vehicle
Mrs. Everett Calawa·y, ·half-day
sessions
were days and must wait at least 10 and Margaret Bissell, cooks.. ..
EASTERN - The Eastern
accidents .
spokeswoman · for
the . established. The board asked days before doing so. , [f the Hired were Joe Fields,
The total manhours for iire Local School District Board of
Education reversed its earlier protesting gr oup, presented the group to work just as hard OOard is unable to agree upon a Pomeroy, junior high school
only were 33.7 and for first aid, ·
petitions carrying 1,121 names if passage of a levy is needed. replacement, the ·task of ap- sc ience tcacller: Ml&lt;:hi.~Ol .
164. The average men per call decision for da y-long . kin dergarten seSsions and ar. asking that the board change~ The board then voted to pointing the replacement goes Wilfong, Vinton, junior- high
for fire only were 13. Total
half-day
kin- to the Meigs County Board of school mathematics; i&lt;Jiren
miles trayeled by all vehicles cepted the resignation of the its decision from the day-long - .. tab li sh
board president at a meeting session for kindergarten dergarten sessions for the next · [i;d ucatioil . The mee~~ng w.a$ 111omus, first grade ~t Tup~rs
were 708.8, according to I;;ire
recessed until Aug. 26 when the Plains; and James llach, third
Tuesday night.
children to half-day sessions. schoOl year.
Chief Bob Byer.
About 75 parents attended The thoughts of the board on ·.The board accepted the Eastern Board will dis~uss the grade ~t Chester , .Employed us .
secretaries were Jenny
·. the meeting to ·protest the tran sportation ex'penses in- resignation of Roger Epple, replacement.
Accepted
were
the Berklilmer , to serve at
EXTENDED OllTLOOK
board's ·earlier ~~cision which volved in half-day sessions and l&gt;oatd.president. Epple gave no
Riverview School, und Elolllll
·A cbance of showeu
Miller
resignations
of
Roberta
esta blished day•long sess.ions the savings which would result reasQri for his resignation . He
Friday ending on Satu~day.
for some 60 kind ~ r ga rt en from day-long sessions were has served on the board for who was a junior high schoOl Boston, who will servo as
Fair Sunday. Hlgholn lhellllo
mathematics teacher ; Bill ""cretary for the bOard clerk.
students · of the dislrlct this explained and the board about si x years.
The school lunch · policy
and lows In the lOs.
year at the Tuppers Plains stressed that it might need
The board will attempt lo Phillips as asslswnt football
coach
and
Dorothy
Cashdollar
Building .
additional operating funds If name a replacement within 30

Judging completed fo~
crops and horticulture

Kindergarten plan ·reversed in

•

'

•

..

'

East~rn

'

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