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                  <text>I&amp; - The Dally Sentinel. MlddleJJQrl-Pomeroy, 0 ., W"dnt·sday, Aut: . H: _197~_ ..... , .. , , . , ... -------- .... -.,.......,.,.:...,................ w.·.-.w.·.w.w.·.·-·-·-········-·&lt;

Bonnie Agan had -.. -..- .~~-;. ·~:;~::'·' ;:;··:;:;:;;;:·-·-·-·-·-·-· · ·WASHINGTON tUPI) -Congress was told TUesday

show's best work
Mrs. Bonnie Agan. of near
Pomeroy, won the hbcst of
show" award at the annual art
competition or the lllth Meigs
County falr .
Mrs . Agan, who has been
.serving as "artist in
residence" for the Meigs
County Humane Society during
her expected short residency
here, won blue ribbons for
water colors, a portrait for life
category, and in pastels in the
same category. Then, her work
was selected as lhe best of lhe
art ~!low in the senior fair
building.
Young Robert Lochary,
Pomeroy Route 2, scored well
in the winner's circle in the art
show. He won three blue ribbcms, a red for second, and two
third place while ribbons. Bill
Mayer was superintendent of
the show which was improved
this year, but some categories
in the
competition had no
.
en lr leS.
Winners included: Oil or
..
. .
.
acryhc pamtmg - Nancy
·
t
Yoacham, Racme Rou e 2,
first , and Susan Thoma,
Pomeroy, second, in the landscape from nature category;
Nancy
Jo
Clatworthy,
Pomeroy, first in the portrait
irom life category and first in
-the still life category·, water
color - Mrs. Agan, first in
pQrtrait from life ; drawing,
charcoal or pastel - Ralph P.
Kern, Shade, first, and
Margaret Parker • Pomeroy
Route 3, second, in landscape
from nature ; Mrs. Agan, rirst,
and
Jeanie
Schneid~r.
·
.
Pomeroy, second , in the

portrait from life category ;
Robert Lochal')'. first, and
Connie A. Swisher, Middleport,
second, in still life ; Robert
Lochary, first in marine study:
Susan Thoma, Hrst and
LQchary second in animal
study and Lochary. a first in
flower study with Nancy
Yoacham , Racine Route 2, first
in modern art.

that the Interior Department plalUi to move a~alnst mJnin~:,
rompanies that lease govemnrent t..&gt;oallands and then sh on
_ them wllhoul di~S~ the coal.
·

··we're changing policy/' Assistant

Fair Week Furniture Specials

tjw

il '"t; ' itt!!

mining firms that hold them .
·--~!
~~~.r,

Bids awarded for fire truck
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council accepted bids
Monday · ~night
totaling
$34•260 ·56·for 3 fully equipped
new 1,000 gallon pwnper fire
truck .
A bid of ,8,159 was accepted
from Meigs Equipment Co.,
Pomeroy, to furnjsh the truck
chassis and the Allegheny Fire
Eqwpmen
.
1Co., H1m ti ng ton, w.
..Va ., ~as awarded contrRcts to
furm sh
apparatus
an~
.
.1.
t
b"d
aUXJ 1ary eqwpmen on 1 s
total" $2S 10, 56
mg
• . •· '
.
The truck IS lo be delivered

Turks launch

z

Dootors

I

l """"""""",.;""""""illl""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""-""""""•

Once
again
from
theirfamilies
houses, scramcarrybled
ing suitcases·, boxes and small
children. Those with cars piled
them with household goods and
l!ped toward the safer Greekheld areas on the south coast.
The flight began wilh warning cries, "The Thrks are
coming!"

The Cyprus crisis tore a
gaping hole in lhe military
defenses of the western
alliance and put a question
mark over the future of
American base facilities in
Greece and th e British
sovereign bases on the island,

(

FREE

I

"Gracious
Living"

yourbrandoffun

BOOK

Sl9.99

Free for the asking at
our office.
Ten -Speed
Casuals
Keep It c asual. Ou r
Ten-Speed Casuals
go anywhere you do •.. in a walk . Or,•On a bike, tor
m111ter. On the town.- 01', just to. lounge around. Take
life easy. And took goo ct doing II. Go casua l!

Helpful hints on hOme
detorating and home
improvement · ideas.

·Meip Co. Branch

.-(!)

UPI diplomatic correspQndent
K.C. Thaler reported from
umdon.
Greece and Turkey are both
members of NATO and have
be en guar d"mg the sensitive
southern flank of the alliance
close to the borders of the
Soviet Union.
Greece has now quit her
military commitment under
the alliance. Turkey and
Greecearefightingeachother,
and the Western allies ineluding the United States have
lost much of their credibilily in
both Ankara and Athens.
The sole wirmer is so far the
Soviet Union which, without
lifting a rifle now sees NATO's
so uthern flank weakened
beyond expectations, Thaler
said.
Turkish Foreign Minister
Turan Gunes told a news .
conference in Geneva today ·
Turkey broke off the peace
talks because of · "deiaying
tactic~ and maneuvers by
Greece."
He had refused a request by
British Foreign Minister
Jame~,Callaghan for a 48-hour
cooling off-period .
In Athens, Premier Constatine
Karamanlis
hei:
emergency meetings with his
cabinet and military chiefs and
then announced withdrawal of
Greek armed forces from
NATO. Greece still is a
member of lhe pQlilical wing of
NATO.
"What happened this dawn is.
a stigma for Lhe civilized ·
world, " Greek
Foreign
Minister George Mavros sfl,id
in a formal statement after
returning to Athens from
Geneva. "-There is only one
similar precedent in modern
history- tlle Japanese attack
against Pearl Harbor .... "

SPRINGFIELD - Gladwyn
E. French, 76, formerly of the
Snowville area, died Monday
evening in the IOOF Home at
Springfield.
She spent most of her life in
Columbus. She was a member
I of Rebecca Lodge, Columbus.
She was preceded in death by
one brother.
She is survived by one sisterin-law, Lena Oberholzer ,
Albany, RD, two nieces and
one nephew.
Funeral service will be
Friday at 1p.m. at the BigomyJordan Funeral Home, Albany,
with Rev . Howard Mayne
officiating. Burial will be in
Wells Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home Thurs'
day from 7 to 9 p.m.

TAKINGI.EAVE
Rev. Fr. John Nadzam has
announced that he is taking a
Jeave of ' absence from his
duties as pastor of Sacred
Heart Parish fn Pomeroy .
J,eaving because of ill health,
--be-ha•-beenpastor-oflhe1Jarish
since spring of lhis year. A
replacement will be appointed

~s~:h~ i~~be~~~~leMussion,
TICKETS ON SALE

·~·.·~ • .;o

.4_ ,.

i f .. ....... ~""

' ...........,. ......
·;,

I

VOL XXVI NO. 87

"··~ .

.•

Middle oflhe Upper Block. Pomeroy
Open All Day Thundays
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL'

Save Up To •300.00

·,

•

POMEROY,

0.

Hundreds of Greek Cypriot students rallied ln front of the
University or Athens, chanti~ rhyttunicfl:lly, .. Kissinger~rnu·
rdercr !" and "NATO-CJA.!Jetrayal!"
'

Turks break through
1i.Jrkey's armor, infantry and artiUery blitz broke through
Gre&lt;!k-led defenders at the eastern pori of FIJmagusta today and
!Joirurk &lt;:~gainst the western town of l£fka in a double.barrel~
drive virtually culling war-torn (,'yprus in two.
UPJ correspondent Michael Keats said the tank-led Turkish
columns converged £rom three directions on the island's third
largest city with warplanes leaving Famagusta's famed ' golden
mile" of tourist hotels in ruins .
Th e TUrkish Cypriot radio in Nicosia said the advancing
1

S. forces

troops smaahed through Greek-led naUonal guard fol'(tll
defending Famagusta and linked up with local mUlttamen holed
up iii the city's old walled section .
On the other front, U. N. officials said warplanes battered_
· national guard JJQsilions in northwestern Cyprus in advance of
Turkish ground troops driving against the strategic town of
lefka.
capture of the 65 miles of arrid, rocky land between
Famagusta and lefka would leave Turkey in control of the
northern third of the embatlled island, setting the stage lor the
cre~tion of a self-governing region in the occupied •one.
Greece protested the Turkish drive, bul gave no sign8 of
entering the conOict - a move that would pit two of Americ$'S
allies against each other in an aU-out war.
Western diplomats in Istanbul said the invasion force was
Continued on page 12

!Vow

en tine

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Sale '498

Reg. $189.00 Black Naugahyde Love Seat.

Sale '12900
Reg. $457 .oo 2 pc; Suite. Nylon. Black, gol!l beige and white
stripes.

Sale •29f100

MRS. BONNIE AGAN OF NEAR POMEROY is pictured
with her waier color painting, a portrait from life, which was
'!l'~le\1,8&amp; "best Q! sho'l'" ill the open class ilrt competition
-rf'lhe Meigs County Fair. MisS carol Bachtel of·MiddleJJQrl
was judge of this year's art show.

Reg. $219.00 Sofa. Black Naugahyde with walnut trim.

Sale '13C)OO
-

Reg. $749.00 2 pc. Suite. Early American· - nylon. Green tweed
with red and orange.
Sale •44C)OO

Sale •569

By Uolled Press lnleroatlonal

Reg. $659.00 Sofa. Mediterranean. Red background, floral velvet
with red, black and white.
.
Sale '39900

Sale '18800
-Sale '16C)OO

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Reg. $319.00 Brown Velvet Love Seat.
'
'

Sale '19900

Reg. $759.00 2 pc. Herculon Suite. light blue with dark blue, gold,
brown stripes.

Sale '55900
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Reg. $398.00 Brown Velvet Sofa.

•

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Sale •24900

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Serta Smooth To·p Innerspring Mattresses·
Full .Size Mattress........................Sale '54.00
Twin Size Mattress .....................Sale •44.00
Matching Box Springs At
Same Sale Prices
.·

•:--"!'"""""""•,
W e Will
Cl
At
N
·
Th
·
·
.
ose
oon
ursd ay'
For The Meigs County fair

I _-JI"':IJIIIIJIII~::-•:-:~:":':""':::""""""-"""':'~~~~--~-=:••. .

Be Sure To Read Thursday's Paper For Shopping News

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY .
.
.

WASHINGTON - IN ITS FINAL ACf ON impeachment, the
House Judiciary Committee conCludes that Richard M. Nixon
left the presidency for good reasons - he lied, violated laws and
subverted the Constitution. The charges are spelled oul in a
report the panel will submit to the full House next week, explaining the actions it took on impeachment the pastlO montha,
laying out the evidence supporting the three articles of impeachment il adopted and offering eonclusions on guilt. Nixon,
faced with the certainty that he would be Impeached and
removed from office, resigned last week.
"For mote than two years, the President engaged in a course
of conduct which involved deliberate, repeated and conUnued
deception of the American people," the report said. The ·committee members have until the end of today to suhmil any additional or differing views to the report, which exists only in draft
form. The 193-page draft was circulated to the 38 committee
members late Wednesday and UP! obtained a copy .
NEW YORK - RABBI MEIR KAHANE, fonner leader of
the militant Jewish Defense league, Wednesday said Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger would be the target· of a series of
demonstralions because of Kissinger's hanclling of the Mideast
crisis and his alleged failure to aid Soviet Jews.
"It's about time the myths of Kissinger as savior of Israel
and the free world are punctured," Kahane declared as 100
chanting, singing and sign carrying supJJQrlets pressed around
hlm upon his arrival at Kennedy Airport from Tel Aviv .

.

•

SALE I

::::
..

:;~

.

Bickers has
finest hull

-

Reg. $269.00 Love Seat. Green, gold, white velvet stripe.

y

Developers to · &amp;,
~~l\-·-· use Watergate ~ ,.,~~

"
··:One of the most ·successful Hawk, Patrece Circle, Kristie Reed ".; !i)ird place went to J. Shobe, Point Pleasan t, riding ple~sure horse class with ~:~: MIAMI
(UPI) - Miami :;:;
~orse shows of open com~
Allen sworth, Roger Smith, R. Kerinedy, Tuppers Plains " Miss Hacksaw" and Tony second place going to Arnie ?.:: builder Jolin Prles·ies, ::~
petition in recent years was Dorothy .Musser, Buddy riding "Clarice McCue". J . R. Kennedy of Tuppers Plains Huston, Syracusf:!', on " Benny" :~:~ fresh from a·· slx·montlls ~:;:
held Wednesday at the llllh .Musser, Sherrie French, Krista Kennedy riding "Trisia Mc- was third on "Dandy D. and third went to Karen j~ prison term for brlbel')', :~;j
annual Meigs County Fair.
·
Sells, Mica J ones, Elise Meier, Cue" won first place in the Dickens ".
· Griffith riding "Sasha" owned :=::: and three convicted ::;:
Bill Downie and Danny Mark Probesek, Larry Cross, Western pleasure horse class
Kim Knotler riding for Cole by Connie Graves of Pomeroy. :~J Watergate burglars plan to
Zirkle were superintendents of Terry Cross, Belly Jo Hun land with second going to Sharon Stables was first on 11 Jett In the Western pleasure pony, ::~: build a housing develop- :~
the show which had a notable Jason Nottingham .
Wilson of Middleport riding Reed " in the English pleasure under 48 Inches class, first ;:;: ment In central Florida to ~
inc;:rease in the number of
Kay Harper rdlng Crown 1s "Miss Polly Dolly". Bill Cole horse class with Debbie Jones, place went to ''Johnny Reb" ::::be called "Watergate :;::
entries. The show, as a result, Tammy owned by Debbie on "Jell Reed" was third. Pomeroy, secorid, on "Leather ridden by Cindy Daughterly, ~:: HUls."
~
lasted more than an hour Lewis, letart, W. Va ., was first Robin Ritchie of Cole Stables, Wood Selection". There were Point Pleasant. Second place in :~; Priestes was convicted of ?i
longer than usual.
place winner ·in the open Tuppers Plains, was first on only two entries in the class. the class went to Tony Kennedy ::~ offering bribes to an aide of f.j
In the lead-in pony class, horsemanship class. Second "Miss Tinker" in the Western Debbie Lewis, Letart, W. Va., riding Lilt Chief Handprint" ~!l U. S. Sen. Edward Gurney .:1!
each rider received a small place honors went to Bill Cole pleasaure pony class, 48-56 look first place honors in the and third to David Darst, Point :::: and served slx months iD ·~
trophy . They were Robbie of Tuppers Plains riding " J~\\ inches. Second was Randy non . . regiS:tered
Western Pleasant, riding "Cr.ocket's ~m prison. HJs assoelates are.'
Pride."
:;:: Bernard Barker, ~ugenlo ;~
In the trail horse cJass Sally :::: Martinez and VIrgilio &gt;:-.
Lambert riding " Bullet", ~:;: GGnzaletJ, aU members of ~
owned by Brenda Williams of :!:!the Watergate burglary ;;;;
Rutland was first. Second was :~: team. Prlestes said be wUli:&gt;J
Arnie Huston on "Benny" and :~!; direct eooslrllcllon aDd the
third was "Clarice McCue" j~\ others wUJ handle sales.
ridden by J . R. Kennedy. Tony ::&lt; Asked why the name was
Kennedy scored another first :;~ chosen for the $7 Dunton
in the trail pony class riding :?,; proje&lt;l near Lake Wales, ,~
"LitUe Chief Handprint" with ~;~ Fla., Prlestes told a news !\~
second place going to Cindy ~:: conferen~e Wedneaday, ~
Daugherty riding "Johnny ~\"there Is a lot of water and ~
Reb" and third to Robin Richie ::1 a lot of hUJs there."
~
Continued on page 2
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=~·:•,._ ...•,•:••:•..•'.:•.....
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Reg. $769.00 2 pc. Suite. .Green velvet floral. Quilted Early
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00

Reg. $298.00 Sofa. Blue, green matelasse.

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green with white background.
Sale '32901!

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background. Early American.
00

Today is the 205lh anniversary of
Napoleon
Bonaparte's birth in Ajacoio,
Corsica.

Horse show at fair successful

-·•

LARGE SELECTION OF COVERS AND STYLES

Devoted To The lnteresls Of Th e Meigs-Mason Area
THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1974

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

On Kroehler Living Room Suites,
Sofas and ·Love Seats

You Know

•

•
•

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. NIGHTS TIL 8

MEIGS INN

Greece's reported decision to refuse to conler with the Unilcd
·States and to force U.S. am1ed for &lt;.-es out of lhe country cmnc as
waves of bitter hUmiliation over Turkey's victori~s on Cypn.L.,
and of anti-Ameri can f~ling washt-d over the nation .
Greek troops remained on a war..ready alert. Premier Constantine KaramanHs was t.o address the nation of television at 9
p.m. ( 3 p.m. EDT) .
Pulll"e guards were ordered increased tenfold at the U.S.
l!:mbassy today after Greek withdrawal from NATO •nd bec•use
of the anti-American student demonstrations Wednesday nit:{ht.

•

Blue Denim with Red Sole ·

Hartley 's Shoes

in Greece.

••

Of Our Friday and Saturday Fair: Week Speclais

n.i Athtm County
$avh•tt &amp; \.oln Ca.
2" S.C:ood $1PoiMrOY, Ohio

forces.
" We are now studyislg the legal asp&lt;.-.:ts of the problem," he
said . "We mean buslness. This is no tempOrary measure ."
U.S. troops are currently stationed at air force and nuvul bases

Fa1r tonight with lows in the
low lo mid 60s. Increasing
cloudine~ Friday with chance
of showers late in the day in the
north portion. Highs Friday in
the mid and upper 80s.

Gladwyn French
died on Monday

and toke over milita.ry fucilitie!j in Greece now u~rated bY U.S.

U~

Weather

in about a year . Delivery of the prOved or an orUinance to
chassis will be in about eight vacate an unnamed alley be~
months; another four months tween lots 6 and 7 of Burwill be needed lo install ils lington's addition along Church
St.
.
apparatus.
Attending were Mayor
Council also approved a
resolution authorizing the Herman London, police Chief
filing of an application for a 50 Milton Vari-an and council
pet. federai g:rant on U1e town's member~ Eber Pickens, Barry
McCoy ; Henry Hill and Robert
proposed swimmir1;g pool.
The first re&amp;dhlg was ap- Wingett.

The Love

'

ATHENS (upi ) - A hlgh government official said today tm1t
Greek Foreign Minister George Mavros had rejected an in- ·
vitation to ny lo Washington lo confer with Secretary of State
Henl')' A. Kissinger an!! that Greece has decided to e.pel U.S.
troops from lhe co110try.
The government official said Kissinger telephoned from
Washington lo urge Mavros lo confer with hlm on the TUrkish
army sweep through war~orn Cyprus.
" Mr . Mavros cannot accept the invlt.atlon ln view of continued
Turkish aggression," the official said . 11 American Interest in
Greece's predicament has come a Ultle too late."
Greece pulled its armed forces out of NATO Wednesaay in a
move that ~aU!ned to collapse the Atlantic alliance's southern
Dank, and antiAmericah demonstrations broke out in Athens ..
The government official said today that Greece intends lo
complete the withdrawal of its forces fr om the NATO mllltary

•

ne w legislation was needed. Mrs. Mink, who chairs the
panel, raised the question alter noting thai ooly some 10 per
cent of leased coal lands were under development by the

MASON DR. IN

that

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Horton said the department was moving Wlder ex_lsUng
authority lo for ce hol(le.rs ol government coal leases to dig
the coal after Rep. Palsy T. Mink, D-Hawall , asked whether

, MEIGS THEATRE

LOST GIRLS"

Secretary

contmltlee.

(Continued from page I )
of the Greek military dieFour defendants
tatorship.
Britain, the colonial ruler of
Cyprus before its independence
·f'me d b y erkle
in 1960, ordered the evacuation
of 14,000 British nationals from
Four defendants were fined "''
d fl
·
· f
and two others forfeiU!d bonds ~,prus an ew m rem orcements for its 10,000-man garri, in Middleport Mayor John son on a fleet of 23 planes from
Zerkle's court Tuesday night. B · · s·
d th
Fined were Alfred Birchr1tm.n, mgpore an o er
bases. Britain also has about
field, 47, Middleport, $25 and 1,500 men with the U.N. peace
costs, assault and battery; k · f
Jinimy Garnes, Middleport,
eepmg orces.
The Turkish Cypriot radio
$30 and costs, assault; James JJQured out one victory claim
W. Queen, 25, Middleport, $5 - after another. It said Ute
and costs, rwming red light; Turkish forces were advancing
Tonight thr'u Thursday
George Mershon," 42, Spring- rapidly • "demolishing ail
Aug. 14·22
field, $30 and costs , disturbing obstacles . . A great many
NOT OPEN
theForfeiting
peace.
· bonos
enemy tan ks and art"1llery un1'ts
.
were have been wiped out. The
FRI., SAT., SUN.
Franc1s
Mershon,
no.
addr~ss
nwnber of prisoilers of war
AUG. 23-24-25
recorded,$~ ~nd, d1sturb~ . , takeh are increasing ."
"THE SUGARLANO
EXPRESS"
the peace ; W!llte lee Cook, no \ "The Turkish alr force is
Goldie Hawn
ad~e"': _ ret~orded, $30 bon"'"'continuing to hit military ·
lPG I
dts
urbmg e peace.
targets with all ils pQwer," one
ALSO
broadcast said. "Turkish tanks
CARTOONS
· Show Starts 7 p.m.
are progressing in all direclions.· The Greek Cypriot
Veterans Memorial Hospital
national guard is being surADMISSIONS - Icy Tucker, rounded by the Turks in larger
Racine ;
John
Dailey , and larger numbers. Greek
Pomeroy ; Jeslie Molden , Cypriots are fleein g from
Rutland ; Clarence McDaniel, Nicosia and other cities."
Rutland ; Judith Steinmetz,
WED THRU FRI
The 'Greek Cypriot . radio ·
Albany; Carl Gagnon, Miners- reported the national guard
ville; Jame• Harless, Delroit, had shot down two of the
Mich.
Americanmade F4 Turkish
DISCHARGES - Joseph Phantoms which struck
Hood, Joyce. Vance , Flora Nicosia today, blasting the
Murphy, Ted Hatfield, Jr ., airpQrt held by U.N. troops and
thlo moetlncrecll~~ experiment · Leona Hysell, Nora Reuter.
hitting a mental hospital and
Ln thlo llltlory ol' love.
Greek-run installations around
'
'""""'Ann Jannln, Anne Acres, 1
Nicosia.
Win~tnn St. lie
UP! Correspondent Felix
Viaxis reJX)rted. from Nicosia
ALSO
HJLO TEMPS
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The that the Turkish planes swept
highest temperature reported over Nicosia at dawn dropping
. lo the National Weather Ser- bombs and strafing Greek
vice Tuesday, excluding Cypriot positions. National
Alaska and Hawaii , was 107 guardsmen replied with bardegrees al Biylhe, Calif. rages of antiaircraft and arToday's low was 35 degrees at tillery fire and Nicosia was
RATED R
darkened by columns of black
Reno, Nev .
smoke.

"ISLAND OF

lnt~rior

Jack 0. Horton told the House Mines and Mining Sub-

Kissinger .snubbed; Greece ejects

•

'

WASHINGTOJII -,- "I THINK WE DID all right," President
Ford said Wednesday of the United States respQnse to the
Turkish onslaught on Cyprus - Lhe first major international
crisis of his administralion. Ford's assessment was challenged
by Archbishop Makarios, the deposed Cypriot president, who
said in London that Washington could have. prevented the
Turkish attack by pressuring ' the Ankara government.
Ford pii)Ilned to meet again today with Secretary of Sta!A!
Henry Klssinger to review overnight developments on Cyprus.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD HAS taken one more
step toward ending a 40-year ban on gold ownership by U. S.
citizens. Ford signed a law Wednesday making it legal for
Americans .lo buy and lrade bullion as soon as lhe President
gives the word, but no later than December 31,1974.
.
II is an open question whether ending the ban wiU touch off a
iiew wave of speculallon or whether investors wiD greet the news ·
with a big yawn. The price of gold has been-rapidly rising and
bulllon appears to have become a speculator's fad and a way for
Investors lo hold off Inflation. One New ·York corpQralion,
Samuel Weiss Co,, promptly announced tbatlthas approval from
the New York Stock l!:xchange to act as a bullion agent. It said it
was going lo make gold bars of Y.l, I, 5, 10, 25 and 50 troy ounces.
WASHINGTON -

CHICKEN AND EGG producers told

Congress today they favor government action lo monitor grain
expQrts and limitlhem If needed to avoid skyrocketing domestlc

GRAND CHAMPION HERI!:FORD bull judged in the open class at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday was owned
by Ben Bickers.
·
'

Athenian
gets 2-15
Rick Wayne Morris, 18, of 8-3
Conestoga Trailer Court,
Athens, was sentenced to two
to 15 years in an institution in
the State of Ohio by Judge
Manning Webster , Meigs
County Common Pleas Court,
Thursday morning.
Morris
was
arrested
Tuesday by Deputy Sheriff
Elmer Althouse in connection ~
. with a robbery which occurred
Friday night al the Vista
Station at Five Points. Morris
admitted his guilt : &gt;to
Prosecutor Bernard Fultz and
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
Harteilbach; ·
Fultz prepared a bill of information, and Morris was
taken before Judge Webster.
· He entered a plea of guilty to
the charge of atlempiing or
committing a theft offense by
use of threat of the tminediate
·use of force against Linda Sue
Wolfe, employe of the Vista
Station in violation of Seclion
2911-02 of the Ohio ReviS.d
COde.
Previously it was reported
that the theft had been an
armed robbery. However, the
charge of armed robber)' was
not enforced because the
employe was not able to stale
whether the defendant had a
gun.
,

. prices and food Inflation for conalll!lers next year. But spokesmen lor the American Fann Bureau Federation said they
strongly were oppQSed to controlling grain exports. Thls week's
reports that U. S. feed grain production in 1974 was cut sharply
TO HOSPITAL
by droiiRht do not amount to an emergency, the spokesmen said.
The
Pomeroy
E-R squad was
The conflicUng testimOny was prepared for a hearing before ·
a Senate Agriculture subcomrnlttee headed by Sen. Walter D. called at 10:37 p.m. Wednesday
Huddleston, P-Ky. The "emergency" -iort was ordered by for Ray Sisk, Ash St., MidCommittee OlaiJ1nan Herman E . Talmadge, ~a . , to explore dleport, who had a disloc~ted
the tmpUcaUoMio farmers and consumer• of the short 1974 grim disk. He was tal&lt;,en to Holzer
. corpo.
Medic~! Center .
$&gt;

•

Livestock judging got underway Wednesday at the lllth
Meigs County Fair with
Herman Carson, Lauren E.
Hoffman and Benny Slawter
heading the beef cattle
department judged yesterday.
In the Hereford division, Ben
Bickers, Racine Route 1,
exhibiU!d the grand champion
bull and Hugh Leifheit,
Pomeroy Route 2, the. reserve
champion . Btian Windon,
Pomeroy Route 3, exhibited the
grand champion · female and
Mandie Rose of Long· Bottom,
the reserve champion female .
~ifheit won a first· place with

his . bull, two years and over
class; Bickers, a blue ribbon
with his !IIDlllller y.earling bull;
Windon, three firsts in the
calcgories of junior bull calf,
cow two y,ears and over, and
summer yearling heifer .
Leifheit won another first in
the junior yearling heifer
categOt-y,
In Angus judging, James F.
Conner of Reedsville won firsts
in the bull, two years and over,
and the senior bull calf
divisions and won the rosettes
for the grand champion and
reserve champion bulls.

Korea's first
lady shot dead
SEOUL (UP!) - A g110man
today shot and killed the
wife of South Korean President
Park Ch110g-hee and a teenaged schoolgirl in an lin. successful
attempt · · · to
assassinate Park as he
delivered a nationally ~levised
speech In a crowded theater.
The would-be presidential
assassin, a suSpected member
o! an antigovernment youth
group, was wounded by security guards and La ken into

custody.
Mrs. Park, 49, admired by
many Korean women as a
model of true national beauty,
was ·struck in lhe _head by a
· bullet intended · for · her · '
husband.
The gunman ran llCI'eamJng
down the aisle in the crowded
theater where Park was deUvering a · speech
commelnoraUng Korea's liberation '
from Japan in World War II.
BRIAN WINDON, RT. 3, Pomeroy, is shown with his grand champion female Hereford
Before the eyes of the 2,500
judged in the open class at the Meigs County fair Wednesday.
persons in the audience l!lld
untold thousands watchin8 on
--~'TWO CAUl! TAKEN
television, the gunman opened
The MiddlepOrt E-R squad fire at the pQdlum.
answered two ca lls WedPark · ducked behind the
nesday. AI 5:35 p. m. il lectern and moments later his
removed Vtvlan Mitchell to wife slumped to the floor,
Veterans Memorial Hospital, mortall~ wounded •.
and al 10:17 p. m. Keith !Qeln,
Another bullet struck a 1717,
Pomeroy, who had fallen off year-old high school girl sealed
The judging of · pony and Pomeroy, with "Black Shiek" rutesar", Point Pleasant and
horse conformation was a in lhe Appaloosa mares and · He.rb Ervin, · Racirie , with the cliff at !be fairgrounds, also in the third row.
Memorial
highlight of the Meigs County gelding class; Sherry lndasted, " Pappy Sorrell'', Western to · Veterans
Mrs. Park died in Seoul .
Pomeroy , with "Hank's U~tle gelding any age ; Bill Cole wilh Hospital, with a possible National University hol!pit.l
Fair Wednesday morning.
First and second Place. Chick" owned by Bob Daniels, " Phoebus" and Jennings broken leg and left shoulder. six hours after uoaucceolful
•
honors, .respectively , in ' the MiddlepQrl, on entry in the Beegle, Minersville, with "Old
swgery , to save her lile. The
judging of the various classes WeStern mare, three years and Roy· Browning", Western
PlCKUP DAY SET
school girl, Chang Dongollwl,
stallion_
,
any
age;
Bill
·
Cole;
. Included : Sharon Wilson, older class; BiU Cole with
SYRACUSE - Workers of was killed instantly.
MiddlepQrl , with " Miss Polly "Trible's Fool", only entry in 11 Trible's. Fool", and Sherry the ScienUiic SanitaUon Co. ' Mts. · Park, conlldtnd •
· Dolly " and Rob\n Ri.tchie, · Appaloosa stallion class ; Parla Indestad with "Culler Frost", . who serve the community. of national beauty, loved to wear
TUppers Plains, with "Miss Stanley, Athens, with "Doree Western yearling; Tony Syracuse and-other towns will traditional Koreon clolhlnl
Tinker " · in_ lhe youth Dee 'Dee" and Bill Cole with l Kennedy, TUppers Plains, with be picking up refuse In and tardy WIIMtllln WoMrll
showmanship class; Bill Cole, ''Doll Caesar", Western ·mare ;,Little Chief Handprint" and Syracuse each Thursday ln the dre... She cut • craC*IW ftpn
1'uppers Piail11l, with "Jett four years and older; Arnold Cindy Daugherty ; Point future Instead of later in the in her chlm8ctwcort- Konln
Continued on page 2
Reeq" and Pam Nottingham, Daughterly with
" Bar
week.
COlli and Ulr\ .

Judging of _ponies, horses
feature of fair Wednesday

•

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3- The Daily !ienllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tioursdav, Au~·. IS, 1974

•

15, 1974

Reds top Bucs, now within 4¥2 of LA

Mr. Nixon

Highlights ,of
'

lllth Meigs

subpoenaed

•

County Fair

FIRST AND SECOND PLACE winners in the junior fair
showmanship at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday were

Becky Windon, left, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, seoond place, and
Mandy Rose, Long Bottom, right, who too k first place.

Exam set for.

sub ·carrier
REEDSVILLE - The Unit..d
States Pos tal Servi ce has
ann oW1ced an examination for

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~' .

THESE ARE TilE RESERVE and grand chwnpiOIIB in
flower arranging of the.Meigs County Junior Fair. Pictured
with.their arrangements and rosettes are Terri Pullins, left,
a member of the Five Point Star Stitchers, grand champion, and Pam Evans, Rock Springs Lady !lugs, reserve
champion.

MRS. LUCII..LE LEIF!U1:1T, A NEW MEMBER of the Meigs County Fair Board, is pictured with this neat and attractive Rock Springs Grange booth which was awarded first place
honors ihls year among the grange exhibits. The grange receives a $55 award for first place.
second, a prize of $50, went to Hemlock Grange; third, a $45 prize, to Ohio Valley Grange, and
fourth, a prize of $40, to Star Grange.

STEVE ELDRED, ASSISTANT to the Director of the
Ohio Department cif Agriculture, visited the Meigs County
Fair Wednesday to conduct an inspection tour. With him is
Mrs. Mickey King, fair board secretary.

substi tute rura l ca rrier .of
re cord at the Reedsville Post
Office,_to be given in Athens.
All inf&lt;!rest..d applicants will
recei ve consideration for
employment without regard to
race, color, national origin or
sex. Application forms can be
obtained at the Reedsville
office and will be accepted
unut Sept. 3, 1974. Applicants
must have reached (lleir 18th
birthday. Their is no maximum
age limit.
All substitutes must have a
vaJid state dri ver's license and
furnish their own vehicle for
which they are reimbursed at
the present rate of 15\'., cents
per. mile.
Interest..d applicants should
inquire at the Reedsville office.

Visitor fotind
on Front •

WASHI NGTON ( UPI )
Today's subpoena was ad·
Former Presi~nt Richard M. dressed to NIKon at the
Nixon was subpoenaed today to "presideritlal compound, San
appear as a. witness at the aemente, Calif."
·
Watergate cover-up trial by
LaWYers for HaldeiiUIII conlawyers for his form er aide, tended Wednesday in asking
John D. Ehrlichman.
for delay of t,he trial that tile
The trial is scheduled to public has been so polsofle\1
begin in U.S. District Court against him that no Jury would
here Sept. 9. Ehrlic hman, flndhlminnocentof Watergate
fOrmer domestic affairs ad- crimes.
viser to Nixon, is one of six
He said any prospective
former advisers or associates · juror who could honestly say he
of Nixdn facing trial in the knows
nothing
about
cover-up.
Watergate or had fanned nee
.•·Ehrlichman, H.R. Haldeman opinions In the case would be
lind the other five are accused "so oblivious to national afof conspiracy and other char- fairs" he would not be smart
ges. Nixon was named an enough to serve on the jury.
unindicted co-conspirator in
Another defendant, former
the case.
Nixon campaign lawyer
Nixon was SUbpoenaed to Kenneth w. Parkinson, rued.
appear Sept. 9. The subpoena papers opposing any delay. He:
was signed by Andrew G. Hall, asked instead that he he given ,
Ehrlichman's attorney.
a separate trial and that It~ .
Witnesses are routinely sub- moved away from Washington ,~
poenaed to appear on the day a
Parkinson's laWYers said he
trial begins, but do not has only a "peripheral attach• •
ment" to hiS. codefendanUI, "al11
necessar il y appear that day.
Ehrlichman •s action was the of whom are politicians".,
first legal step taken against rather than practicing lawyers,;
Nixon since he resigned last as he is, and four of whom he.;
does not even know. He
wee k.
. said his..
The subpoena · came as case could be wrapped up at a ..
.Special Watergate prosecutor separate !rial witllin a month.;
Leon Jaworski was reported to
The trial of the ""Watergate
he studying the possibility of stx'' also includes Ro~rt C. ,
taking legal action against the Mardian and Gordon Strachan.,;
former President.
Haldeman also argued that ~
Erhlichman, Haldeman and Nixon's release of the crucial .,
forme r Attorney Ge nera l John June 23,· 1972, tape of their ~
N. Mitchell have asked for a discussion limiting the FBI's ,.
&lt;liltay in the trial and a hearing early Watergate investigation,.
·
f
d
b
severely damaged his case. 1s set or Mon ay efore .
"Witll the complete impreg- .
Federal Judge John J. Sirlca.
Ehrlic~ had tried to nation of the public miild by tile ,.
subpoena Nixon while he was continuous reporting of alleged, ~
still President, but at that time proofs of guilt on the part of ,,.
his laWYers argued he could not this defendant, a fair trial by ,
be compelled to appear while an Intelligent jury cannot be ;;
he was still in office.
obtained at this time," Haldeman's lawyers said.

Rhodes· charges
•
mismanagement

".

"'.

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,.•

LANCASI'ER, Ohio (UP!) the book to cover up his own
Former governor James A. mjsmanagemen t," . said,
Rhodes, seeking a third lenn, Rhodes.
u
'
said today Gov. John J. Gilli"His charge that the leglsla- ·,;
gan is a "chronic public apolo- ture mlsupderstands the "·
Middleport Police Chief J. J . gist" for the fiscal affairs of the hud~et it approved is tota~y IT
Cremeans is investigating the present state administration, . unfa1r and uncaUed for," satd . ·
death of a man who was found
Rhodes,
in
remarks Rhodes. "If there is anybody in ' '
on Front st. near the Qhio . prepared for delivery . at a state government who doesn't ...
Hotel about 9:30 p.m. Wed- campaign breakfast meeting understand
money 1 ~
nesday night.
here; said Gilligan, whom he management, it's Gilligan , ,
Dead is Uoyd Rollins, 56, will oppose in November, most himself.
.
Columbus, who was taken to recentiy attempted to blame
"II is. his constant
lllismjln- ",
Veterans Memorial Hospital the legislature for . the agement of slate affairs that ~ .
by the Pomeroy Emergency discovery of an $80 million causes him to he a chronic
·
state budget surplus.
Sq d h
public apologist," Rhodes said. ,
ua • T e Middleport Squad
" First, Gilligan attempted to
was on duty at the Meigs
''
County Fair.
blame his own staff for giving
Meigs County Coroner Dr. R. him bad figures," said Rhndes.
R. Pickens said Mr. Rollins " That didn't hold water. Now,
died of a skull fracture and he is trying to lay the blame on
contusions of the head. Rollins mem'b.ers of the Ohio legisConlinued from oage 1
had a room at the hot..!, it was lature by saying they don't .
:.,
report..d, and visited in Mid- understand the budget process. riding "Miss Tinker".
Junior Shelpma.n, Maeder- :
.
"U it wasn 'I for the legisladleport Sev era I tunes
a year
!IIOtt,
Ohio, took first, second •
taking a room at the hot..i when . tors who accurately ·projected
and
third
place honors in the
In Middleport.
state revenues, Ohio might
Chief Cremeans said that never have known the state's barrel race riding three difRollins had a laceration or the ' true fiscal picture_," said ferent animals. Shelpman
repeated his feat for the top
left side of the face when ·he Rhoes.
"Gilligan
got
caught three honors in the next event,
was found and the emergency redhanded and he knows it, and the flag race. Jackie St..wart, , "
squad Was called . An invesligation is being conduct..d he's been trying eery trick in Kingston, won first place in the '"
egg and spoon race with second "'
to determine if the death was
.
going to Darla Stanley of •.•:
accidental or homicide.
Athens, and third to Shelpman.
E-R UNIT CALLED
Shelpman won first and third ' ,,
RACINE - The Racine place in the dash for money , ·;
em~rgency
squad was called at race with Jackie Stewart on ''"
' INFANTBORNDEAD
11
Brown" placing second. ~.
The infant son of Brenda 9:42a. m. Wednesday for Mrs.
Warden
Ours,
Rt.
1,
Long
Shelpman
was first and second ' •
Hood, Columbus, was born
dead Aug . 11 at St. Ann's Bottom, who was IU. She was in the stake race and third was " •
Hospital. Burial was in taken to Vet..rans Memorial Richard Franklin of Point ""
Hospital.
Pleasant on 11 Pee Gee".
:_.,,
Columbus.

St. dies later

Horse show::

/ ;

A RECORD !UGH OF ALMOSI' 500 enlries was reached this year in the display booths 0 ,
the Me1gs &lt;;ounty Schools at ~e lllth annual Meigs County Fair. County Supt. Robert Bowen is
supenntendent of the school displays. In the area of the numerous exhibits Wednesday were I to
r , Mrs. Greta Sutt!e, l\1rs. Freda Kennedy, Athens, a retired teacher who judged the mmoy
entnes, and Mrs. Nelhe Vale. Mrs. Suttle and Mrs. Vale are Meigs County school super visors.

MISS CAROL. LEWIS of Pomeroy was reserve grand
champion in the decorama of th e Meigs County Junior Fair.
Misa Lewis is pictured with an antique washstand which won
for her the reserve grand champion award.

HOSPITAL NEWS·

Plans made fol"
picnic by ~lub

Veterans Memorial Hospital · Mr . and Mrs . &lt;.;harles
P!ans for a club picnic were
ADMISSIONS - Muril Ours, Harrison, a son . Rt. 3, O"ak madedurlng the noon meeting
Long Bottom; Azalea Odist..r, Hill ; Mr. and Mrs. Patrick of the Pomeroy - Middleport
Pomeroy ; Gertrude Dra ke, Mullen, a daughter, Rt. , 4, Lions Club Wedrie~ay at the
Vinton; Phill ip Donovan, Pom eroy.
Meigs Inn . The picnic will be
Poultry winners
Syrac use ; Rober t Leifheit,
an event of Aug . 22 at the
IDischarges ) ·
Shade; Freda H.e nderson,
·Mazadell Bailey , Judith Pomeroy Golf Club and will
&lt;.;ontinued from page I
·
Pomeroy;
Bessie
Kapple
,
. judged at .fair
Brown, Mrs. Denver Casto and begin at 6 p.m.
Coolvi
lie;
Grover
Klein,
Pleasant, with ' 'Johnny Reb",
son ; Merch Clark, Mary_ Clarence Struble reported on ·
pony Ul!der 38. inches, mares · Poultry at the annual Meigs . Pomer0y.
Dobbins, Nola ·Eggers, Wilma the light bulb sale, and futUre
and geldings; Robin Rl.tchle, County Fair was . judged
DISCHARGES . - .M~misee . Ervin, John Gambfe, Anita plans were made for another
Blevins, Linda · Baker , Guy Grahwn, Mary Gillespie, Dora night sale. The 11ag progrwn
Tuppers Plains, with "Miss · Wednesday.
nnker" and Tondy Kennedy
Dan R. Dailey, Guysville Carleton, Virginia Hubbard, Hersko, Mabel Hughes, was reviewed and plans made
witll "Dandy Dee Dickens", Route 1, won a blue ribbon for Zelma Hawley, Agnes Isaacs. Georgiana Jenkins, Jeffrey to Ins tall new holders.
pony, 43-66inches, mares and his pen of pullets in the New
Julius Preston, Jr., assistant
Johnson, Pearl · Little, Mrs.
geldings; Debbie Jones, · Hampshire Reds breed and
Charles R. -Lambert and son, manager of the Blue and Gray,
Pomeroy, with "Leatherwood . Mrs.Mildred Donohew, Racine
Margare t McCumber, George wa• a guest of Bruce Teaford.
Holzer Medical Center
Selection" and lillerry Indellted Route 2, won a blue for her best
(Births, Aug.l4)
McGerly, John T. Milliken, Richard Chambers,lifst vice
with "Alrod", English aad- pen of broilers in Silver Laced
Mr. and Mrs. Miltt Lee, a Mrs. Robert J . McClure and president, P9'Sided .
dlebred mare or horse; Sllerry Wyandotes. Dailey and Mrs. son, Eureka Star Rt:; Mr. and daught~r . Helen Newberry ,
lndeatad with "Miss Con. .Donohew al.so won first place Mrs. Jay Schoolcraft, a · Naomi Price, Mary Queen,
LOCAL TEMPS
'r~e temperature in downnamora ",only entry In English awards in thi! open . class for daughter, Vinton; Mr. and Carol
Rhodes,
Eldin
town
Pomeroy at U a. m.
Nddlebred mare with spring any other recognized breeds of Mrs. · William Stanley, ·a Ridgeway, Anlts St..venson,
colt.
Thursday was 79 degrees under ·
chickens.
·
· dalll(hter, Eureka Star Rt. ; John Tipton , John 'rrace.
sunny skies.
·

Judging of ·

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.KING ANO, QUEEN ot the Meigs County Fair, Grant Jobnl(!n Md llarblra Jordan; Jed the .
parade at the Meigs CoUnty Junior Fair Wednesday oven~nc. They were lnlroduced 14 tile
e.rowd by last year's king and queen, Ed O'oa and Ingrid ~•lev.
..
4
I

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sport• Writer
The Ci ncinnati Reds are
_giving their own manager the
:shakes so you can imagine
:What they' re doing to the Los
! Ange les Dodgers .
"'Look, I can hard ly hold it, "
sa id Ma nager Sparky An_derson Wednesday nig ht as he
Juggled a roest heel sandiwch
.after the Reds pulled out a
·:cliffhange r " 3-2 victory over

the Pit!sburg l'irates. "'The

or

Dodgers arei) ' (oijt the woods
yet because they have six

three nnd :o~hll pkk up a gari1c
in the standinf;(s, it makes you
feel good," addt&gt;d Anderson,
referring to lhe fad lh&lt;.tl the
Beds wvn only one J{ame 11£

games left with the Pirates.''
The lli.od.s ' victory moved
them to within 4l.2 f::allles of the their seJ'ics with the Pu·atcs
fi rst-place Dodgers in the but guined ground because _th
Natfonal League East. The l&gt;odgers Just thei r thr e·gamc
Reds were four games behind series with the. New York Mel, .
U.e Dodgers as late as Aug . 30 The Mel• completed the sw~cp
last season and still won the Wed nesday with u :$-2 triumph .
division crown.
Cesar Geronimo drove in lhe
"' When you win one out or win ning rWl when he doubled

.

honm D:.~vc ConceJ:k:IOO w1U1

wefl\."
The Royals knocked out Fred
Holdsworth during a · six-run
first inning that included
Solaita's lhree-run blast and
Busby was able to coast to the
victory.
In othe games Minnesota ·
edged
Cleveland · . 1-0,
Milwaukee nipped Texas 6-5,
Chicagonippped Baltimore 5-4,
New York downed Oakland 4-1,
and California blanked Boston
5-0.
In the National League, New
York nipped Los Angeles 3-2,
Chicago beat Houston 6-5, San
Francisco edge Philadelphia 64, Atlanta drubbed Montreal 61, Cincinnati edged Pittsburgh

3-2 in 10 innings and .St. Louis
beat San Diego 5-1.
Twlnsllndians 0
Joe Decker and Bill Cwnpbell combined on four -hi Iter
to give Minnesota the victory
Cleveland .
Gle nn
over
Borgmann 's sacrifice fly in the
·seventh accounted for the only
run off loser Fritz Pe~rs on.
White Sox 5, Orioles 4
Ken Henderson drove in
three rlllls with a homer and a
single but the White Sox also
needed a run-scoring single
from Brian Downing in the
eighth inning to edg e
Baltimore. Dick Allen had two
hits to stretch his hitting streak
to 15 games for th e Sox.
Yanks 4, A's 1
Elliott Maddox snapped a tie
with a two. run double in the
ninth inning and Rudy May
pitched a four-hitt..r tQ give
New York the victory over
Oakland. Maddox 's double
followed base hits by Gene
Michael and Sandy Alomar and

a

Major League Standing.s
Bv United Press International .
National League
East
w . L pet. g.b.
St . Loui s
62 57 :52 1
Philadelphia
60 58 .508 I 1/2
PitfSbl.lrgh
59 59 .500 21/:z
Montreal
55 60 .478 s
New York
51 63 .447 8 1/:z
Chi cago
47 67 .412 121/:z
West
w . I. pet. g.b.
75 43 .636 ·
Los An geles
Cincinnat i
71 48 .597 4'h
Atlanta
63 {J4 .538 1l 1f2
Houston
59 57 .509 15
San Fran .
54 65 .45;1 2Jlh
San Diego
47 72 .395 28 112
Wednesday's Results
New York J Lo_s Angeles 2
Ch i c~go 6 Houston 5
San Francisco 6 Phl.ladelphia 4
Atlanta 6 Montreal 1
Cincinnati,J Pittsburgh 2, 10 inn .
St. Loui s 5 San Diego 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
Houston (Gr iff in 12·5) a1
Chicago (Rel.lschel Jl .9) , 2:30
p.m
(only game sched uled )
Friday's Games
San Diego at Ch icago _
Houston at Montreal , n'ight
Los Angeles at Pittsb1.1rgh ,
night
Philadelphia at Atlan ta. nig ht
New York at Cin cinnati , night
San Francisco at St . Lo1.1is,
night

snapped the ri ve.game winning
streak or Vida Blue, now 14-10.
Angels 5, Red Sox 0
Winston Uenas and Bobby
Valentine each singled in a rufl
during a three-run thi rd inning
to help California down Boston.
Rooki e Frank Tanana got his
first shutout with a sevenhitter .

relieved Matthew Reed with
the Americans ahead Il-l) and
directed Birminghwn to four
TDs. He also passed 26 yds to
Dennis Homan for a score.
Willie Smith had an 81-yard
punt return for ·a TD, Jimmy
Edwards ran seven yards for
another and Art Cantrelle
plunged a yard for still another
as the Americans, the only
undefeated team in th"e WFL,
ran their record to 6-0.
Fire 32, BeD Z9
Carter, who played at Cincinnati and Chicago before
ners.
,
The unbeaten Americans falling out of favor, threw an
blasted the. Hawailans 39-0 1!-yard TD pass to Jack Dolbin
before 43,29'1 in Birminghwn, with 1 :34 left to play to lift the .
the
Fire
edged
the · Fire over Philadlephia. carter
Philadelphia Bell 32-29 before his five straight" passes as he .
'l1,6lYI in Chicago, the Memphis moved Chicago 80 yards in the
Southmen "crushed the winless last two minutes for the winDetroit Wheels 37-7 before ning score. Carter earlier
14,424 at Ypsilanti, Mich., the passed six yards to Cyril
Stars whipped the Portland Pindec for a score and Pinder
Storm 38-16 before 16,222 in and Mark Kellar each ran a
New York and the Florida yard for TDs. ·
The Bell's King Corcoran,
Blazers
downed
the
Jacksonville Sharks 33-26 the WFL passing leader, had
before 23,890 in Orlando. The TD posses of two yards to Alan
Southern california Sun is at Thompson and 45 yards to
Houston against tile Texan$ Claude Watts and ran a yard
· ·tonight In a riatlonally televised for another s~ve ..
· game.
SOuihmen 37, Wheel• 7
Huarte, a former Helsman
Americans 31, Ha.wallanl 0
Trophy
winner at Notre Dame,
Mira, Who knocked around In
San Francisco, Philadelphia banged around the NFL for 10
and Canada for a while without years. He has a starling job at
making It lUg, came off the Memphis and he's mal!lng the
bench and threw two touch- most of it u he herped the
down passes - one a 95-yarder Southmen to their fourth win in
14 Allred Jenkins - as Bir- six games Wednesday night.
mingham
blasted
the Huarte threw a 12-yard TO
HawaUa1111. Mira, making his pass to Ed Marshall and set up
.first appearance since injuring a pair of one-yard TD bursis by
his ankle . three weeka ago, Willie Spencer as Memphis

'.

and

Frank

w~s i22-yt!ar -o ld lcClh&lt;Jntlt·il

Husty

."itotuh 's

U1frd ~amc agmnst six losses.
St. Louis defeated San Die~o
5-I, Atlanta beat Montreal 6-l,
San · Francisco
topped'
Philadelphia 6-4 and Chi cago
·shade-d Hvuston IJ-5 in other Nl.
games.
American J:eague r esults
were Chicago 5 Bcdtimore 4,
Min nesota l Cleveland 0,
Kansas City 9, Detro! t 1,
Milwaukee 6 Tex~s 5, New
YQrk 4 Oakland I, and
Califor nia 5 Boston o.

s in~le

dlll' ll.IXl'd

a twO-run ninU1 inning rally whi ch g~tVe the Mel')

P ir.ates un firs t .an(l third ;md

their swccJl uf Lhc Dodge rs and

none out in the mnth and t.Jggcd Jr on Man reliever Mike
n: tlrccl the Side" itlwut allow a ~~r.shall with his cighU1 loss .
run .
Ken Boswell's walk, a sacrifi.ce
Don Gullett curri ed a :l-0 lc~•d 11nd an error by (:Cntcrfielder
into the seven th but Uw Pirates Tom Paciorek e.n&lt;Jhlcd the
lied the score on sin~ les by Met.-; to tie the score at 2·2
before hitshy Felix Mil an and
Sl&lt;mb brought the winning run
&lt;~round . Tug MeCraw won his

Rrewcrs 6, Rungc rs 5
Tim J ohnson 's pinch single
in the eighth in ning led
Milwa ukee over Texas .
Doubles by George Scott and
Darreli Porter tied the score
before Johnson's hit won it.
Cesar Tovar went S~fo r -5 for
the Brewers in the losi ng:
ca use.

tourneys All
Scheduled -

manhandled Detroit. Davis
Thomas also had a 3!1-yard
interception return for a TD
and sub quarterback Dal)ny
While passed 31 yards jO Gary
Powell for another score.
Detroit, now 0-6, got it.. only
TD on a one-yard plunge by
Bubba Wyche .
Stars 38, Storm 0
Sherman, who nev~r really
got much opportunity in brief
trials with New England and
Buffalo, had his best game of
the young season as he threw
two TO passes to veteran
George Sauer ·and ran five
yards for another score to lead
New York to its fourth straight
wio. Sherman, Who WaS
playing in the minors In recent
years, hit Sa"uer on TD passes .
of 20 and three yards and
·helped set up Andy Huff's fouryard ·scoring burst.

Greg Barton, who relieved
rookie ·Ken Johnson in the
second bali, threw TD passes
of 15 yards to Jim Krief with
1:43 left and 12 yards to Ken
Matthews as time expired.
Portland is now t).5.J.
Blazers 33, Sharks 26
Davis, who spent the last few
seasons as understudy to Joe
Namath in New York and
Archie Manning in New
Orleans, ran a yard for one
score and set up a pair of short
TD plunges by Jim Strong in
Florida's
vic tory
over
Jacksonville. The Blazers built
up a 31·11 lead after three
periods and held on in the final
quarter as Reggie Oliver ran
tiine yardS· (or one TD and
passed seven .vards to Tom
Whittier for another . The
victory left Florida, now 5-1 , In
first place in the East.

GIANTS ACQUIRE GLASS
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Tight
end Chip Glass was acquired
by the . New York Giants
Wednesday from the Cleveland
Browns in exc hange !or
defensive end carter Campbell
in a trade involving two
players committed to the
World . Football League next
year .
.
Originally drafted by San
Francisco, Campbell, 27, who
has signed for 1975 with the
WFL's New York Stars, was
obta ined on waviers from
Denver by the Giant.. in 1972
and started at defensive left
end last se-ason .
Glass, also 27, under a 1975
contrac t to the Jacksonville
Sharks, is a five-year Browns'
ve~ran , with 1970 his best
season when he caught 19
passes for 304 yards. lie un·
derwent. surgery for a, hernia
disc last season , but is fully
' recovered.

Braves6 Expos J

Hank Aaron hit his 16th
horner and the 729th of his
ca reer and Dusty Baker also
homered to lead the Braves' 10hit attack. Baker's homer was
a three-run shot in a row--run
first whiCh sent Carl Morton off
to a fast start toward his 12th
wi n against seven losses.
Oentiis Blair suffered his fifth

homer climaxed a five-run fifth
inning rally which enabled the
Cardinals' Alan Foster to win
his seventh game with a six·

Major League Leaders
United Press International
Leading Batters
National League
g ab r
h pet .
Gar r .Atl
116 489 67 178.364
Gross, Ho 11 1 407 6 2 132 .324
Zis k, Pi tt
107 388 56 125 .322
Grvy , LA
113 467 67 150 .3.21
Montanez. Phil
103 361 39 115 .31 9
Smit h, St. L.
' 101 356 52 11 3 .31 7
Brck , St. L 111 457 75 144 .31 5
Bcknr , LA 102 405 53 125 .309
Olivr . Pit
103 426 64 131 .308
Crdnl , Ch
101 390 53 120 JOB
American league
g ab r
h pet .
Crw, Mnn 113 451 66 165 .366
Hargrv , Tx 96 JOB -14 107 .347
McRa, KC 103 370 54 119 .322
Rand(, Tx 112 382 50 121 .317
Orta, Chi
97 355 57 Ill .313
Allen . Chi 110 A0 2 79 125 .3 11
Yaz , Bos
110 385 70 119 .309
Jcksn , Ok
109 375 65 116 .309
Mddx , NY
92 296 47 91 .307
Rudi , Oak l iS 438 56 133 .3 04
Home Runs
National League : Wynn , LA
and Sc hmidt, Phil 27; Bench,
Cin 24; Sedeno , Ho u 22 ; Perez,
·Cih 21.
American League: All en, Chi
31 : Burroughs, Te x 22 ; Jackson.
Oak 21; Mayberry , KC and
Darw in, Minn• 19.
RunS Batted In
National League : Schmidt ,
Ph il91 ; Ben ch, Ci n 90; Cedeno,
Ho u and Wynn , LA 84 ; Ga rv ey,
LA ai1d Smith , St . L. 78 .
American
League :
Burro1.1 gh s, Tex 96 : Al len , Chi
83 ; Bando, Oak 81; Hend erson,
Chi and Rudi , Oak 74.
Stolen Bases
National League : Brock, St.
L. 80; Morgan , c in 50; LOpe s,
LA 47 .
American League : Nor:th ,
Oak 43; Rivers , Ca l 30 ;
Lowenstein , Cleve. and Carew ,
Minn 29 .
Pitching
National League : Bil lingham
Ci n and Car lton , Ph il 14·8; John 1
LA 13.3,· Messersm ith , LA lJ-4;
Gullett , Ci n and McGloth en, St.·.
L. 1J.8; P. Niekro, Atl 1J.9;
Lonborg , Ph il 13·11 .
American Lugue : Tiant , Bos
18·8; Busby , KC 18·9; W.Ood , Chi
18.13 ; H1.1 nter , Oak 17 . 9 ;
Jenkins, Tex 16.11 ; Bibby , Te x
l6.J4 .
By

setback .
Giants 6 Phillie• I
Bobby Bonds' two.run ninU.
inning homer lifted the Giants
over the Phils and gave Elias
Sosa his eighth win and Mac
Scarce his seventh defeat.
Gary Matthews and Ollie
Bro,wn also hQrnered.
Cu bs 6 A•tros 5
Don Kessinger's triple and
singles by Jose Cardenal, Billy
Williams anq Andy Thornton
gave the Cubs a 4-1 lead in the
firs t inning and they held on for
the win with the late-Inning
relief pitching of Oscar
Zamora and Jim Todd. The
victory snapped Chicago's
eight.game losi ng s treak.

Bengal vets back

WILM INGTON, Ohio I UP I)
All str iking Ci nci nn a ti
Bengals veterans returned to
camp Wednesday and ·Coach
Paul Brown said all will make
the tri p to Atlanta for Saturday
night's pre-season ga me
aga inst the Falcons.
. Brown says he won't play
returnees until he feels they'r e
ready for con tact but since all
say lliey've been staying in
good physical shape, some are
expec ted to see action
Saturday tiight.
Unlil the players' union 14·
da y "cooling off" period began
Wednesda y, the Bengals had
been without 19 veterans.
Seventeen of the 19 reported
Wednesday . The exce ptions
we.re Tommy 'Casanova, who is
in medical school until Aug. 24,
and Dav·e Lewis, who was sold
Wednesday to New England.
The s31e of Lewis, for an
undisclosed &lt;Jmount of cash,
was no surprise. The punter

Linescores

standout~

hitler. The Cards were held to
two hils by !Wndy Jones until 1
Luis Melendez led orr the fifth
wilh a double . Ken Reitz
.,ingled, Mike Tyson dvubled
and Ted Sizemore singled
before Smith delivered the
decisive blow. Nate Colbert
homered for the Padres.

Ca rd lm11s 5 Padres 1
Heggie Smith's three.r ur)

Softball

Three softball tourna ment•
are on tap in the nea r future in
southeaste rn Ohio, two over
the Labor Day weekend and
one in mid-Septembe r.
Loco! 1775 is sponsoring a
slo.pitch softball tournam ent
Sept. 13, 14 and 15 in the
Gallipololis area , according to
Ralph D. Jones, tour nament
director .
Foo te : Morton {12 71 and Entry fee for the tourney is
Major Leaug e Res ults
Co
rrell. LP- Biair (7 51 . HR SBy United Press International Baker
(15th ). Aaron {1 6thl. $35 and two Dudley softballs. It
Nat io nal Leagu e
Los Angeles 001 100 000- 2 12 1 Johnson (llt hl.
is an ASA sanctioned tou,rNew York 001 000 002- 3 9 0 San Diego
000
ooo
010I 6 0 nament and an $8 fee will be
Rau , Ma r shall ( 6 ) and
. Louis
oco 050 oox 5 8 0 cha rged extr a to nonYeager ; Seaver , McGraw (81 St Jones,
Hardy
{7) and Ken
an d Gro te. Oyer ( 8) . WP - da ll; Foster ( 7 nand
. sanctioned teams.
McGraw (3 6). LP - Marshall LP - Jorles (] 17) . HRSiS-mmons
Smi th An y team interes ted in en.
(11 .8) .
(17 th) , Colbert (l21h ).
!&lt;!ring should contact Jones as
Hous ton
102 ooo 001 -- 5 13 2
Fran . 100 001 022- 6 12 1 soon as poss ible a t 2131
Chicago
400 000 :wx .,.-- 6 B 2 San
.
ooo 010 300- 4 8 0 · ·
.
. ·
Wilson , Forsch (7) , York ( 8 ) Phila
Williams .. sosa (7l, Brad ley Chatham Ave. , Galhpohs ,, or
and M . May ; Stone, Frai ling
(7] , Za mo ra (7), Todd (9) an d (9) and Ru do lph; Twi tchelL by phone a t 446-7726 between
ber 161. ScllVele r (7), Watt
Swis he r. WP- Stone (4-4). LP- Gar
(8), Scarce (9) , Her naiz (9) and the .hours of 7·11 a. m. and
Wilson (B . JO) .
Boone. WP- Sosa (8.5/ . LP..:._._ 10 :30 . 11 :30 p. m .
Sca
rce (3 ~ 7J. HRS - Brown
Mont rea l 000 001 000- 1 9 2 (7t hl,
Matt hell'(s (14 th/, Bonds The Royal Crown Cola softAtlant a
400 000 20x - 6 10 1
ball team of Middleport is
Bl a ir , Montague 11). M1.1 rray 117th 1
(5) , Taylor (7), To r rez (8) and
sponsorin g an ASA san ctioned
( 10 inn.)
Pitts'bg h. ooo ooo 200 o- 2 10 3 double-e liminati on softball
Cin .
002 000 000 l-- 3 9 0
Roo ker, Gi1.1 sti f7 J. Kison (9L tournament over the Labor
Hernan dez l 101 and Sangu ille n, Day weekend, Aug. 30-Sept. 2,
G1.1tle tt , Kirby (8), McEna ney
h
d"
d·
(9), c. Ca r ro ll (I OJ and Benc h. at t e Kyger Creek Iamon m
WP-- c. car roll (8 -J) . LP - Cheshire.
Kison ( 6 7) .
Amt:!rican Leagu e
Entry fee for the tournament
Minnesota ooo ooo 10 0 ~ i 6 o is $40 and one Dudley softball.
' American League
CleDec
veland
4 0
Trophies will be aV.·arded to
·East
ker. Caooo
mpbooo
el l ooo--o
(9) and
w . I. p·ct . g.b. Borgmann ; Peterso n, Bu skey the top four finishers and 20
(8) an d Dun can . WP -- Deck er
h
Boston
64 53 .547
(1 2-10). LP- Peter!:.o n tB -7).
trophies will go tote chamClevelan d
Ba ltimore
~~ ~~ :~~~ ~1(1
600 001 011 --9 17 0 pionship team with ten trophies
New York
57 59 ,. 491 61/j Kan . City
1
000 000 001- 1 5 1 awarded to an all-tournament
Milwa ukee
56 62 _475 8 11 Detr oi t
Busby (18 .9) and Mart inez; !&lt;!am . If more than 20 ~ams
Detroit
55 63 .466 9fh
Holdswort h, Wal ker (1) and
West
w . 1. pet . .g .b . Wo cke nfuss . LP- Holdsworth enter, individual trophies will
(Q . J ).
HRs- So lai ta (4 th ), also go to the second place
Oakland
69 50 .580
Kansas City
62 54 .534 5 11' Ce peda flst ).
·
team .
Ch icag o
59 57 .509 Bh
100 002 110- 5 9 1 For further information.
Texas
60 60 .500 9 1!~ Chicago
Minnesota
58 60 .492 10117 Ba ltimore 000 210 100- 4 11 0
Wo od, Fo rs ter (7) a nd contact George Hoffman , 25
Californ ia
47 72 .395 2'2
Down ing ; McNally , Alexand er Riverview Place, Middleport,
Wednesday's Results
(71 and Etche barr en . WPCleveland 5 Balt imore 4
Forster (7-7) . · LP-- Aiex and er 992-5051 ; or David Lyons, 132 1.'.!
Minnesota 1 Cleveland 0
(5 -91-. HR-;- Hend erSon (14th ). Portsmouth Rd ., Gallipolis,
Kan sas City 9 Detroit l
Milwaukee 6 Tex as 5
Mi lwau kee 100 030 020- 6 ~2 1 446-4123.
New York 4 Oakland 1
Te xas
100 300 100- 5 15 1 Benny 's softball !&lt;!am of
Ca lifornia 5 Bos ton 0
S ~· aton , Trave rs (4), Murphy
Today's Probable.Pi1chers
(All times EDT)
(7)
and Po rt er ; Jen kin s, Portsmouth will hold its fourth
Chi cago 1Kaa1 13·9) at Fou ca 1.11t (9 1 and Sun db erg. annual Labor Day Tournament
Balt im ore (Cu ellar 13 -9), 7:30 WP -- M1.1r phy (5 .4). · LP-Jenk ins (16-ll l. ·H R-- Spence r the weekend of Aug. 31-Spet. 2.
p.m.
Minnesota (Biyl even 11-131 at (6th ).
The ASA sanctioned tourney
Cleveland {G . Pe r ry 15·71, 7·30
Boston
p.m.
000 000 000--C 7 2 will be double elimination and
Ca lif . 9
003 020 oox--5 ·6 1
ton ly ga mes scheduled J
Lee, Cleveland ( 5) and Mon t. a $40 entry fee will be charged.
Friday's Games
The drawing JVill be held
Chicago at N ew Yor k, 2. tw i· go mery ; Tan an a (8 .14) and
Rodr iguez . LP-- Lee ( 14-10) .
night .
·
Monday, Aug . 26, at Labold
Detro it st Oa kland , nig ht
Field
at 7 p. m.
New
York
000
000
0134
12
1
Milwaukee at Ca litron ia,
Oakland
100 000 000- 1 4 o Any team int..reste.d in enni ght .
May (5-21 and Munson; Bl1.1e,
Texas at Cle vel and , night
Kan sas Ci ty at Balt imor e, Fi ng ers (9) and Ten ac e. LP----:" tering should contact Jim Rhea
Bl ue (14 ·10).
night
at 2532 Argonne St., PortsMinn eso ta at Boston; night
·· mouth, 353-8790; or Ted Maze
at 1691 Charles St. , Portsmouth, 354-4635.

erbacks
By JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
It was the kind of night those
unhappy quarterbacks
dreamed of when they decided
to cast their fate with the new
World Footooll League.
.
··George Mira, Virgil carter,
Tom Sherman, John Huarte,
Bob Davis - aU were either
unhappy with their backup
roles In the National Football
League and decided to make
the jump. And Wednesday
night they came up big win-

7.tsk

relief pit ·her Will Mc·Emtney,
who Pnt(&gt; r etl .the ~arne wtth

Beach, bench could be
difference for Royals
American League Roundup
By VITO STELLINO
UP! Sports Writer .
One guy who's spent the
season on the be nch and
another who's spent it on the
beach could make the difference for the Kansas City
Royals this year.
The Oakland A's seemingly
have their fourth straight
Western Division title in hand
with a 51k gam·e lead but
Kansas City Manager Jack
McKeon thinks the Royals are
capable of catching the A's
with guys like Orlando Cepeda
and Tony Solaita around.
Cepeda, who spent the early
part of the season relaxing on a
long Puerto Rico vacation after
being cut by Boston in spring
training, continued his surge in
a Kansas City uniform with his
first homer of the year as the
Royals •outed the Detroit
Tigers 9-1.
Solalta, who's ·been on the
bench most of the year but is
now filling in for the injured
John Mayberry for the second
time this season, belted a
three..run homer in the easy
win as St..ve Busby coasted to
his !Btl! lriumph.
Cepeda is now hiiting .302 in
10 games for the Roy~)s and
has batied in 14 runs.· But he
was concerned that he hadn't
hit a homer in his first nine ··
games.
"The home run was im.
portant to me," he said. "I was
wondering where all my power

Hit-hie

One out in the boltoui of the ~.Oth · T;.~varas. ·'-' double by Manny
mnin~ bul 1\ndcrsvn 's " hero '' .San~.:ui llcn and two w&lt;tllt's.

had bee n at odds with
management and Brown believes he has a solid kicker in
Dave ·Green.
Green, a former Ohio
Uni versity star , is kicking
be tter now than in the two
preVious ye ars, when he also
tried to tak e t he No. 1 punting
job from Lewis. Lewis said he
expected to be shuffled and
looks forward to going to the
Patriots.
Lewis had been outspoken on
the picket line, saying he didn 't
know whether it was out of
" fear or respect" for Brown
that so me Bengals were
defying the strike and reporting to camp.
Meanwhile, returne e Ron
Pritchard said the strike "is all
behind us now. We've forgotten
about it. We're here to play
football. "
Nonstriker John Shinners
said, '."for all practical purposes, the strike is over. " If
things aren't settled in the two
weeks, I can 't see our guys
walking out . ! think the strikers
made this move to hasten the
negotiations. And I also think
they 're going to stay in ~amp
once they're here . The players
coming i_n now have opened the
flood gates and there ;s no
stopping the flow . It would be
almost impossible to walk
out."

Said Bengals player rep Pat
Matson, "We've decided to
forget abo ut the whole thing
and just play football. There
comes a poi nt whe n you've got
to shrug things off . It 's
arrived .''

BLUE
GRASS

Socket Sets

Several .Sizes
In Stock
STAR SUPPLY
Racine, Ohio

••••••••••••••••••••••
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FAIR, i•
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t·

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i• VISITORS i•
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New York Clothing House

:

KERM'S .KORNER

:

ln. Pomeroy Over 90 Years

FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY NIGHTS
10:00 TIL 2:00

FRIDAY, AUG. 16th UNTIL 5 PM

.

FOR

"ANNUAL EMPLOYEES PICNIC"

OF

The HAMER Companies

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Reserved Saturday Until5 P.M.

Group From Ashland, Ky., With Vocalist

"ANNUAL OUTING"

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HUNTINGTON LOCAL NO. 317

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PH. 992·3629
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FAIR WEEK SPECIAL

CAMDEN PARK RESERVED

•

�/

•

3- The Daily !ienllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tioursdav, Au~·. IS, 1974

•

15, 1974

Reds top Bucs, now within 4¥2 of LA

Mr. Nixon

Highlights ,of
'

lllth Meigs

subpoenaed

•

County Fair

FIRST AND SECOND PLACE winners in the junior fair
showmanship at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday were

Becky Windon, left, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, seoond place, and
Mandy Rose, Long Bottom, right, who too k first place.

Exam set for.

sub ·carrier
REEDSVILLE - The Unit..d
States Pos tal Servi ce has
ann oW1ced an examination for

....•

.'

~' .

THESE ARE TilE RESERVE and grand chwnpiOIIB in
flower arranging of the.Meigs County Junior Fair. Pictured
with.their arrangements and rosettes are Terri Pullins, left,
a member of the Five Point Star Stitchers, grand champion, and Pam Evans, Rock Springs Lady !lugs, reserve
champion.

MRS. LUCII..LE LEIF!U1:1T, A NEW MEMBER of the Meigs County Fair Board, is pictured with this neat and attractive Rock Springs Grange booth which was awarded first place
honors ihls year among the grange exhibits. The grange receives a $55 award for first place.
second, a prize of $50, went to Hemlock Grange; third, a $45 prize, to Ohio Valley Grange, and
fourth, a prize of $40, to Star Grange.

STEVE ELDRED, ASSISTANT to the Director of the
Ohio Department cif Agriculture, visited the Meigs County
Fair Wednesday to conduct an inspection tour. With him is
Mrs. Mickey King, fair board secretary.

substi tute rura l ca rrier .of
re cord at the Reedsville Post
Office,_to be given in Athens.
All inf&lt;!rest..d applicants will
recei ve consideration for
employment without regard to
race, color, national origin or
sex. Application forms can be
obtained at the Reedsville
office and will be accepted
unut Sept. 3, 1974. Applicants
must have reached (lleir 18th
birthday. Their is no maximum
age limit.
All substitutes must have a
vaJid state dri ver's license and
furnish their own vehicle for
which they are reimbursed at
the present rate of 15\'., cents
per. mile.
Interest..d applicants should
inquire at the Reedsville office.

Visitor fotind
on Front •

WASHI NGTON ( UPI )
Today's subpoena was ad·
Former Presi~nt Richard M. dressed to NIKon at the
Nixon was subpoenaed today to "presideritlal compound, San
appear as a. witness at the aemente, Calif."
·
Watergate cover-up trial by
LaWYers for HaldeiiUIII conlawyers for his form er aide, tended Wednesday in asking
John D. Ehrlichman.
for delay of t,he trial that tile
The trial is scheduled to public has been so polsofle\1
begin in U.S. District Court against him that no Jury would
here Sept. 9. Ehrlic hman, flndhlminnocentof Watergate
fOrmer domestic affairs ad- crimes.
viser to Nixon, is one of six
He said any prospective
former advisers or associates · juror who could honestly say he
of Nixdn facing trial in the knows
nothing
about
cover-up.
Watergate or had fanned nee
.•·Ehrlichman, H.R. Haldeman opinions In the case would be
lind the other five are accused "so oblivious to national afof conspiracy and other char- fairs" he would not be smart
ges. Nixon was named an enough to serve on the jury.
unindicted co-conspirator in
Another defendant, former
the case.
Nixon campaign lawyer
Nixon was SUbpoenaed to Kenneth w. Parkinson, rued.
appear Sept. 9. The subpoena papers opposing any delay. He:
was signed by Andrew G. Hall, asked instead that he he given ,
Ehrlichman's attorney.
a separate trial and that It~ .
Witnesses are routinely sub- moved away from Washington ,~
poenaed to appear on the day a
Parkinson's laWYers said he
trial begins, but do not has only a "peripheral attach• •
ment" to hiS. codefendanUI, "al11
necessar il y appear that day.
Ehrlichman •s action was the of whom are politicians".,
first legal step taken against rather than practicing lawyers,;
Nixon since he resigned last as he is, and four of whom he.;
does not even know. He
wee k.
. said his..
The subpoena · came as case could be wrapped up at a ..
.Special Watergate prosecutor separate !rial witllin a month.;
Leon Jaworski was reported to
The trial of the ""Watergate
he studying the possibility of stx'' also includes Ro~rt C. ,
taking legal action against the Mardian and Gordon Strachan.,;
former President.
Haldeman also argued that ~
Erhlichman, Haldeman and Nixon's release of the crucial .,
forme r Attorney Ge nera l John June 23,· 1972, tape of their ~
N. Mitchell have asked for a discussion limiting the FBI's ,.
&lt;liltay in the trial and a hearing early Watergate investigation,.
·
f
d
b
severely damaged his case. 1s set or Mon ay efore .
"Witll the complete impreg- .
Federal Judge John J. Sirlca.
Ehrlic~ had tried to nation of the public miild by tile ,.
subpoena Nixon while he was continuous reporting of alleged, ~
still President, but at that time proofs of guilt on the part of ,,.
his laWYers argued he could not this defendant, a fair trial by ,
be compelled to appear while an Intelligent jury cannot be ;;
he was still in office.
obtained at this time," Haldeman's lawyers said.

Rhodes· charges
•
mismanagement

".

"'.

'"
,.•

LANCASI'ER, Ohio (UP!) the book to cover up his own
Former governor James A. mjsmanagemen t," . said,
Rhodes, seeking a third lenn, Rhodes.
u
'
said today Gov. John J. Gilli"His charge that the leglsla- ·,;
gan is a "chronic public apolo- ture mlsupderstands the "·
Middleport Police Chief J. J . gist" for the fiscal affairs of the hud~et it approved is tota~y IT
Cremeans is investigating the present state administration, . unfa1r and uncaUed for," satd . ·
death of a man who was found
Rhodes,
in
remarks Rhodes. "If there is anybody in ' '
on Front st. near the Qhio . prepared for delivery . at a state government who doesn't ...
Hotel about 9:30 p.m. Wed- campaign breakfast meeting understand
money 1 ~
nesday night.
here; said Gilligan, whom he management, it's Gilligan , ,
Dead is Uoyd Rollins, 56, will oppose in November, most himself.
.
Columbus, who was taken to recentiy attempted to blame
"II is. his constant
lllismjln- ",
Veterans Memorial Hospital the legislature for . the agement of slate affairs that ~ .
by the Pomeroy Emergency discovery of an $80 million causes him to he a chronic
·
state budget surplus.
Sq d h
public apologist," Rhodes said. ,
ua • T e Middleport Squad
" First, Gilligan attempted to
was on duty at the Meigs
''
County Fair.
blame his own staff for giving
Meigs County Coroner Dr. R. him bad figures," said Rhndes.
R. Pickens said Mr. Rollins " That didn't hold water. Now,
died of a skull fracture and he is trying to lay the blame on
contusions of the head. Rollins mem'b.ers of the Ohio legisConlinued from oage 1
had a room at the hot..!, it was lature by saying they don't .
:.,
report..d, and visited in Mid- understand the budget process. riding "Miss Tinker".
Junior Shelpma.n, Maeder- :
.
"U it wasn 'I for the legisladleport Sev era I tunes
a year
!IIOtt,
Ohio, took first, second •
taking a room at the hot..i when . tors who accurately ·projected
and
third
place honors in the
In Middleport.
state revenues, Ohio might
Chief Cremeans said that never have known the state's barrel race riding three difRollins had a laceration or the ' true fiscal picture_," said ferent animals. Shelpman
repeated his feat for the top
left side of the face when ·he Rhoes.
"Gilligan
got
caught three honors in the next event,
was found and the emergency redhanded and he knows it, and the flag race. Jackie St..wart, , "
squad Was called . An invesligation is being conduct..d he's been trying eery trick in Kingston, won first place in the '"
egg and spoon race with second "'
to determine if the death was
.
going to Darla Stanley of •.•:
accidental or homicide.
Athens, and third to Shelpman.
E-R UNIT CALLED
Shelpman won first and third ' ,,
RACINE - The Racine place in the dash for money , ·;
em~rgency
squad was called at race with Jackie Stewart on ''"
' INFANTBORNDEAD
11
Brown" placing second. ~.
The infant son of Brenda 9:42a. m. Wednesday for Mrs.
Warden
Ours,
Rt.
1,
Long
Shelpman
was first and second ' •
Hood, Columbus, was born
dead Aug . 11 at St. Ann's Bottom, who was IU. She was in the stake race and third was " •
Hospital. Burial was in taken to Vet..rans Memorial Richard Franklin of Point ""
Hospital.
Pleasant on 11 Pee Gee".
:_.,,
Columbus.

St. dies later

Horse show::

/ ;

A RECORD !UGH OF ALMOSI' 500 enlries was reached this year in the display booths 0 ,
the Me1gs &lt;;ounty Schools at ~e lllth annual Meigs County Fair. County Supt. Robert Bowen is
supenntendent of the school displays. In the area of the numerous exhibits Wednesday were I to
r , Mrs. Greta Sutt!e, l\1rs. Freda Kennedy, Athens, a retired teacher who judged the mmoy
entnes, and Mrs. Nelhe Vale. Mrs. Suttle and Mrs. Vale are Meigs County school super visors.

MISS CAROL. LEWIS of Pomeroy was reserve grand
champion in the decorama of th e Meigs County Junior Fair.
Misa Lewis is pictured with an antique washstand which won
for her the reserve grand champion award.

HOSPITAL NEWS·

Plans made fol"
picnic by ~lub

Veterans Memorial Hospital · Mr . and Mrs . &lt;.;harles
P!ans for a club picnic were
ADMISSIONS - Muril Ours, Harrison, a son . Rt. 3, O"ak madedurlng the noon meeting
Long Bottom; Azalea Odist..r, Hill ; Mr. and Mrs. Patrick of the Pomeroy - Middleport
Pomeroy ; Gertrude Dra ke, Mullen, a daughter, Rt. , 4, Lions Club Wedrie~ay at the
Vinton; Phill ip Donovan, Pom eroy.
Meigs Inn . The picnic will be
Poultry winners
Syrac use ; Rober t Leifheit,
an event of Aug . 22 at the
IDischarges ) ·
Shade; Freda H.e nderson,
·Mazadell Bailey , Judith Pomeroy Golf Club and will
&lt;.;ontinued from page I
·
Pomeroy;
Bessie
Kapple
,
. judged at .fair
Brown, Mrs. Denver Casto and begin at 6 p.m.
Coolvi
lie;
Grover
Klein,
Pleasant, with ' 'Johnny Reb",
son ; Merch Clark, Mary_ Clarence Struble reported on ·
pony Ul!der 38. inches, mares · Poultry at the annual Meigs . Pomer0y.
Dobbins, Nola ·Eggers, Wilma the light bulb sale, and futUre
and geldings; Robin Rl.tchle, County Fair was . judged
DISCHARGES . - .M~misee . Ervin, John Gambfe, Anita plans were made for another
Blevins, Linda · Baker , Guy Grahwn, Mary Gillespie, Dora night sale. The 11ag progrwn
Tuppers Plains, with "Miss · Wednesday.
nnker" and Tondy Kennedy
Dan R. Dailey, Guysville Carleton, Virginia Hubbard, Hersko, Mabel Hughes, was reviewed and plans made
witll "Dandy Dee Dickens", Route 1, won a blue ribbon for Zelma Hawley, Agnes Isaacs. Georgiana Jenkins, Jeffrey to Ins tall new holders.
pony, 43-66inches, mares and his pen of pullets in the New
Julius Preston, Jr., assistant
Johnson, Pearl · Little, Mrs.
geldings; Debbie Jones, · Hampshire Reds breed and
Charles R. -Lambert and son, manager of the Blue and Gray,
Pomeroy, with "Leatherwood . Mrs.Mildred Donohew, Racine
Margare t McCumber, George wa• a guest of Bruce Teaford.
Holzer Medical Center
Selection" and lillerry Indellted Route 2, won a blue for her best
(Births, Aug.l4)
McGerly, John T. Milliken, Richard Chambers,lifst vice
with "Alrod", English aad- pen of broilers in Silver Laced
Mr. and Mrs. Miltt Lee, a Mrs. Robert J . McClure and president, P9'Sided .
dlebred mare or horse; Sllerry Wyandotes. Dailey and Mrs. son, Eureka Star Rt:; Mr. and daught~r . Helen Newberry ,
lndeatad with "Miss Con. .Donohew al.so won first place Mrs. Jay Schoolcraft, a · Naomi Price, Mary Queen,
LOCAL TEMPS
'r~e temperature in downnamora ",only entry In English awards in thi! open . class for daughter, Vinton; Mr. and Carol
Rhodes,
Eldin
town
Pomeroy at U a. m.
Nddlebred mare with spring any other recognized breeds of Mrs. · William Stanley, ·a Ridgeway, Anlts St..venson,
colt.
Thursday was 79 degrees under ·
chickens.
·
· dalll(hter, Eureka Star Rt. ; John Tipton , John 'rrace.
sunny skies.
·

Judging of ·

••

'

-~

"'-I

;

.KING ANO, QUEEN ot the Meigs County Fair, Grant Jobnl(!n Md llarblra Jordan; Jed the .
parade at the Meigs CoUnty Junior Fair Wednesday oven~nc. They were lnlroduced 14 tile
e.rowd by last year's king and queen, Ed O'oa and Ingrid ~•lev.
..
4
I

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sport• Writer
The Ci ncinnati Reds are
_giving their own manager the
:shakes so you can imagine
:What they' re doing to the Los
! Ange les Dodgers .
"'Look, I can hard ly hold it, "
sa id Ma nager Sparky An_derson Wednesday nig ht as he
Juggled a roest heel sandiwch
.after the Reds pulled out a
·:cliffhange r " 3-2 victory over

the Pit!sburg l'irates. "'The

or

Dodgers arei) ' (oijt the woods
yet because they have six

three nnd :o~hll pkk up a gari1c
in the standinf;(s, it makes you
feel good," addt&gt;d Anderson,
referring to lhe fad lh&lt;.tl the
Beds wvn only one J{ame 11£

games left with the Pirates.''
The lli.od.s ' victory moved
them to within 4l.2 f::allles of the their seJ'ics with the Pu·atcs
fi rst-place Dodgers in the but guined ground because _th
Natfonal League East. The l&gt;odgers Just thei r thr e·gamc
Reds were four games behind series with the. New York Mel, .
U.e Dodgers as late as Aug . 30 The Mel• completed the sw~cp
last season and still won the Wed nesday with u :$-2 triumph .
division crown.
Cesar Geronimo drove in lhe
"' When you win one out or win ning rWl when he doubled

.

honm D:.~vc ConceJ:k:IOO w1U1

wefl\."
The Royals knocked out Fred
Holdsworth during a · six-run
first inning that included
Solaita's lhree-run blast and
Busby was able to coast to the
victory.
In othe games Minnesota ·
edged
Cleveland · . 1-0,
Milwaukee nipped Texas 6-5,
Chicagonippped Baltimore 5-4,
New York downed Oakland 4-1,
and California blanked Boston
5-0.
In the National League, New
York nipped Los Angeles 3-2,
Chicago beat Houston 6-5, San
Francisco edge Philadelphia 64, Atlanta drubbed Montreal 61, Cincinnati edged Pittsburgh

3-2 in 10 innings and .St. Louis
beat San Diego 5-1.
Twlnsllndians 0
Joe Decker and Bill Cwnpbell combined on four -hi Iter
to give Minnesota the victory
Cleveland .
Gle nn
over
Borgmann 's sacrifice fly in the
·seventh accounted for the only
run off loser Fritz Pe~rs on.
White Sox 5, Orioles 4
Ken Henderson drove in
three rlllls with a homer and a
single but the White Sox also
needed a run-scoring single
from Brian Downing in the
eighth inning to edg e
Baltimore. Dick Allen had two
hits to stretch his hitting streak
to 15 games for th e Sox.
Yanks 4, A's 1
Elliott Maddox snapped a tie
with a two. run double in the
ninth inning and Rudy May
pitched a four-hitt..r tQ give
New York the victory over
Oakland. Maddox 's double
followed base hits by Gene
Michael and Sandy Alomar and

a

Major League Standing.s
Bv United Press International .
National League
East
w . L pet. g.b.
St . Loui s
62 57 :52 1
Philadelphia
60 58 .508 I 1/2
PitfSbl.lrgh
59 59 .500 21/:z
Montreal
55 60 .478 s
New York
51 63 .447 8 1/:z
Chi cago
47 67 .412 121/:z
West
w . I. pet. g.b.
75 43 .636 ·
Los An geles
Cincinnat i
71 48 .597 4'h
Atlanta
63 {J4 .538 1l 1f2
Houston
59 57 .509 15
San Fran .
54 65 .45;1 2Jlh
San Diego
47 72 .395 28 112
Wednesday's Results
New York J Lo_s Angeles 2
Ch i c~go 6 Houston 5
San Francisco 6 Phl.ladelphia 4
Atlanta 6 Montreal 1
Cincinnati,J Pittsburgh 2, 10 inn .
St. Loui s 5 San Diego 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
Houston (Gr iff in 12·5) a1
Chicago (Rel.lschel Jl .9) , 2:30
p.m
(only game sched uled )
Friday's Games
San Diego at Ch icago _
Houston at Montreal , n'ight
Los Angeles at Pittsb1.1rgh ,
night
Philadelphia at Atlan ta. nig ht
New York at Cin cinnati , night
San Francisco at St . Lo1.1is,
night

snapped the ri ve.game winning
streak or Vida Blue, now 14-10.
Angels 5, Red Sox 0
Winston Uenas and Bobby
Valentine each singled in a rufl
during a three-run thi rd inning
to help California down Boston.
Rooki e Frank Tanana got his
first shutout with a sevenhitter .

relieved Matthew Reed with
the Americans ahead Il-l) and
directed Birminghwn to four
TDs. He also passed 26 yds to
Dennis Homan for a score.
Willie Smith had an 81-yard
punt return for ·a TD, Jimmy
Edwards ran seven yards for
another and Art Cantrelle
plunged a yard for still another
as the Americans, the only
undefeated team in th"e WFL,
ran their record to 6-0.
Fire 32, BeD Z9
Carter, who played at Cincinnati and Chicago before
ners.
,
The unbeaten Americans falling out of favor, threw an
blasted the. Hawailans 39-0 1!-yard TD pass to Jack Dolbin
before 43,29'1 in Birminghwn, with 1 :34 left to play to lift the .
the
Fire
edged
the · Fire over Philadlephia. carter
Philadelphia Bell 32-29 before his five straight" passes as he .
'l1,6lYI in Chicago, the Memphis moved Chicago 80 yards in the
Southmen "crushed the winless last two minutes for the winDetroit Wheels 37-7 before ning score. Carter earlier
14,424 at Ypsilanti, Mich., the passed six yards to Cyril
Stars whipped the Portland Pindec for a score and Pinder
Storm 38-16 before 16,222 in and Mark Kellar each ran a
New York and the Florida yard for TDs. ·
The Bell's King Corcoran,
Blazers
downed
the
Jacksonville Sharks 33-26 the WFL passing leader, had
before 23,890 in Orlando. The TD posses of two yards to Alan
Southern california Sun is at Thompson and 45 yards to
Houston against tile Texan$ Claude Watts and ran a yard
· ·tonight In a riatlonally televised for another s~ve ..
· game.
SOuihmen 37, Wheel• 7
Huarte, a former Helsman
Americans 31, Ha.wallanl 0
Trophy
winner at Notre Dame,
Mira, Who knocked around In
San Francisco, Philadelphia banged around the NFL for 10
and Canada for a while without years. He has a starling job at
making It lUg, came off the Memphis and he's mal!lng the
bench and threw two touch- most of it u he herped the
down passes - one a 95-yarder Southmen to their fourth win in
14 Allred Jenkins - as Bir- six games Wednesday night.
mingham
blasted
the Huarte threw a 12-yard TO
HawaUa1111. Mira, making his pass to Ed Marshall and set up
.first appearance since injuring a pair of one-yard TD bursis by
his ankle . three weeka ago, Willie Spencer as Memphis

'.

and

Frank

w~s i22-yt!ar -o ld lcClh&lt;Jntlt·il

Husty

."itotuh 's

U1frd ~amc agmnst six losses.
St. Louis defeated San Die~o
5-I, Atlanta beat Montreal 6-l,
San · Francisco
topped'
Philadelphia 6-4 and Chi cago
·shade-d Hvuston IJ-5 in other Nl.
games.
American J:eague r esults
were Chicago 5 Bcdtimore 4,
Min nesota l Cleveland 0,
Kansas City 9, Detro! t 1,
Milwaukee 6 Tex~s 5, New
YQrk 4 Oakland I, and
Califor nia 5 Boston o.

s in~le

dlll' ll.IXl'd

a twO-run ninU1 inning rally whi ch g~tVe the Mel')

P ir.ates un firs t .an(l third ;md

their swccJl uf Lhc Dodge rs and

none out in the mnth and t.Jggcd Jr on Man reliever Mike
n: tlrccl the Side" itlwut allow a ~~r.shall with his cighU1 loss .
run .
Ken Boswell's walk, a sacrifi.ce
Don Gullett curri ed a :l-0 lc~•d 11nd an error by (:Cntcrfielder
into the seven th but Uw Pirates Tom Paciorek e.n&lt;Jhlcd the
lied the score on sin~ les by Met.-; to tie the score at 2·2
before hitshy Felix Mil an and
Sl&lt;mb brought the winning run
&lt;~round . Tug MeCraw won his

Rrewcrs 6, Rungc rs 5
Tim J ohnson 's pinch single
in the eighth in ning led
Milwa ukee over Texas .
Doubles by George Scott and
Darreli Porter tied the score
before Johnson's hit won it.
Cesar Tovar went S~fo r -5 for
the Brewers in the losi ng:
ca use.

tourneys All
Scheduled -

manhandled Detroit. Davis
Thomas also had a 3!1-yard
interception return for a TD
and sub quarterback Dal)ny
While passed 31 yards jO Gary
Powell for another score.
Detroit, now 0-6, got it.. only
TD on a one-yard plunge by
Bubba Wyche .
Stars 38, Storm 0
Sherman, who nev~r really
got much opportunity in brief
trials with New England and
Buffalo, had his best game of
the young season as he threw
two TO passes to veteran
George Sauer ·and ran five
yards for another score to lead
New York to its fourth straight
wio. Sherman, Who WaS
playing in the minors In recent
years, hit Sa"uer on TD passes .
of 20 and three yards and
·helped set up Andy Huff's fouryard ·scoring burst.

Greg Barton, who relieved
rookie ·Ken Johnson in the
second bali, threw TD passes
of 15 yards to Jim Krief with
1:43 left and 12 yards to Ken
Matthews as time expired.
Portland is now t).5.J.
Blazers 33, Sharks 26
Davis, who spent the last few
seasons as understudy to Joe
Namath in New York and
Archie Manning in New
Orleans, ran a yard for one
score and set up a pair of short
TD plunges by Jim Strong in
Florida's
vic tory
over
Jacksonville. The Blazers built
up a 31·11 lead after three
periods and held on in the final
quarter as Reggie Oliver ran
tiine yardS· (or one TD and
passed seven .vards to Tom
Whittier for another . The
victory left Florida, now 5-1 , In
first place in the East.

GIANTS ACQUIRE GLASS
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Tight
end Chip Glass was acquired
by the . New York Giants
Wednesday from the Cleveland
Browns in exc hange !or
defensive end carter Campbell
in a trade involving two
players committed to the
World . Football League next
year .
.
Originally drafted by San
Francisco, Campbell, 27, who
has signed for 1975 with the
WFL's New York Stars, was
obta ined on waviers from
Denver by the Giant.. in 1972
and started at defensive left
end last se-ason .
Glass, also 27, under a 1975
contrac t to the Jacksonville
Sharks, is a five-year Browns'
ve~ran , with 1970 his best
season when he caught 19
passes for 304 yards. lie un·
derwent. surgery for a, hernia
disc last season , but is fully
' recovered.

Braves6 Expos J

Hank Aaron hit his 16th
horner and the 729th of his
ca reer and Dusty Baker also
homered to lead the Braves' 10hit attack. Baker's homer was
a three-run shot in a row--run
first whiCh sent Carl Morton off
to a fast start toward his 12th
wi n against seven losses.
Oentiis Blair suffered his fifth

homer climaxed a five-run fifth
inning rally which enabled the
Cardinals' Alan Foster to win
his seventh game with a six·

Major League Leaders
United Press International
Leading Batters
National League
g ab r
h pet .
Gar r .Atl
116 489 67 178.364
Gross, Ho 11 1 407 6 2 132 .324
Zis k, Pi tt
107 388 56 125 .322
Grvy , LA
113 467 67 150 .3.21
Montanez. Phil
103 361 39 115 .31 9
Smit h, St. L.
' 101 356 52 11 3 .31 7
Brck , St. L 111 457 75 144 .31 5
Bcknr , LA 102 405 53 125 .309
Olivr . Pit
103 426 64 131 .308
Crdnl , Ch
101 390 53 120 JOB
American league
g ab r
h pet .
Crw, Mnn 113 451 66 165 .366
Hargrv , Tx 96 JOB -14 107 .347
McRa, KC 103 370 54 119 .322
Rand(, Tx 112 382 50 121 .317
Orta, Chi
97 355 57 Ill .313
Allen . Chi 110 A0 2 79 125 .3 11
Yaz , Bos
110 385 70 119 .309
Jcksn , Ok
109 375 65 116 .309
Mddx , NY
92 296 47 91 .307
Rudi , Oak l iS 438 56 133 .3 04
Home Runs
National League : Wynn , LA
and Sc hmidt, Phil 27; Bench,
Cin 24; Sedeno , Ho u 22 ; Perez,
·Cih 21.
American League: All en, Chi
31 : Burroughs, Te x 22 ; Jackson.
Oak 21; Mayberry , KC and
Darw in, Minn• 19.
RunS Batted In
National League : Schmidt ,
Ph il91 ; Ben ch, Ci n 90; Cedeno,
Ho u and Wynn , LA 84 ; Ga rv ey,
LA ai1d Smith , St . L. 78 .
American
League :
Burro1.1 gh s, Tex 96 : Al len , Chi
83 ; Bando, Oak 81; Hend erson,
Chi and Rudi , Oak 74.
Stolen Bases
National League : Brock, St.
L. 80; Morgan , c in 50; LOpe s,
LA 47 .
American League : Nor:th ,
Oak 43; Rivers , Ca l 30 ;
Lowenstein , Cleve. and Carew ,
Minn 29 .
Pitching
National League : Bil lingham
Ci n and Car lton , Ph il 14·8; John 1
LA 13.3,· Messersm ith , LA lJ-4;
Gullett , Ci n and McGloth en, St.·.
L. 1J.8; P. Niekro, Atl 1J.9;
Lonborg , Ph il 13·11 .
American Lugue : Tiant , Bos
18·8; Busby , KC 18·9; W.Ood , Chi
18.13 ; H1.1 nter , Oak 17 . 9 ;
Jenkins, Tex 16.11 ; Bibby , Te x
l6.J4 .
By

setback .
Giants 6 Phillie• I
Bobby Bonds' two.run ninU.
inning homer lifted the Giants
over the Phils and gave Elias
Sosa his eighth win and Mac
Scarce his seventh defeat.
Gary Matthews and Ollie
Bro,wn also hQrnered.
Cu bs 6 A•tros 5
Don Kessinger's triple and
singles by Jose Cardenal, Billy
Williams anq Andy Thornton
gave the Cubs a 4-1 lead in the
firs t inning and they held on for
the win with the late-Inning
relief pitching of Oscar
Zamora and Jim Todd. The
victory snapped Chicago's
eight.game losi ng s treak.

Bengal vets back

WILM INGTON, Ohio I UP I)
All str iking Ci nci nn a ti
Bengals veterans returned to
camp Wednesday and ·Coach
Paul Brown said all will make
the tri p to Atlanta for Saturday
night's pre-season ga me
aga inst the Falcons.
. Brown says he won't play
returnees until he feels they'r e
ready for con tact but since all
say lliey've been staying in
good physical shape, some are
expec ted to see action
Saturday tiight.
Unlil the players' union 14·
da y "cooling off" period began
Wednesda y, the Bengals had
been without 19 veterans.
Seventeen of the 19 reported
Wednesday . The exce ptions
we.re Tommy 'Casanova, who is
in medical school until Aug. 24,
and Dav·e Lewis, who was sold
Wednesday to New England.
The s31e of Lewis, for an
undisclosed &lt;Jmount of cash,
was no surprise. The punter

Linescores

standout~

hitler. The Cards were held to
two hils by !Wndy Jones until 1
Luis Melendez led orr the fifth
wilh a double . Ken Reitz
.,ingled, Mike Tyson dvubled
and Ted Sizemore singled
before Smith delivered the
decisive blow. Nate Colbert
homered for the Padres.

Ca rd lm11s 5 Padres 1
Heggie Smith's three.r ur)

Softball

Three softball tourna ment•
are on tap in the nea r future in
southeaste rn Ohio, two over
the Labor Day weekend and
one in mid-Septembe r.
Loco! 1775 is sponsoring a
slo.pitch softball tournam ent
Sept. 13, 14 and 15 in the
Gallipololis area , according to
Ralph D. Jones, tour nament
director .
Foo te : Morton {12 71 and Entry fee for the tourney is
Major Leaug e Res ults
Co
rrell. LP- Biair (7 51 . HR SBy United Press International Baker
(15th ). Aaron {1 6thl. $35 and two Dudley softballs. It
Nat io nal Leagu e
Los Angeles 001 100 000- 2 12 1 Johnson (llt hl.
is an ASA sanctioned tou,rNew York 001 000 002- 3 9 0 San Diego
000
ooo
010I 6 0 nament and an $8 fee will be
Rau , Ma r shall ( 6 ) and
. Louis
oco 050 oox 5 8 0 cha rged extr a to nonYeager ; Seaver , McGraw (81 St Jones,
Hardy
{7) and Ken
an d Gro te. Oyer ( 8) . WP - da ll; Foster ( 7 nand
. sanctioned teams.
McGraw (3 6). LP - Marshall LP - Jorles (] 17) . HRSiS-mmons
Smi th An y team interes ted in en.
(11 .8) .
(17 th) , Colbert (l21h ).
!&lt;!ring should contact Jones as
Hous ton
102 ooo 001 -- 5 13 2
Fran . 100 001 022- 6 12 1 soon as poss ible a t 2131
Chicago
400 000 :wx .,.-- 6 B 2 San
.
ooo 010 300- 4 8 0 · ·
.
. ·
Wilson , Forsch (7) , York ( 8 ) Phila
Williams .. sosa (7l, Brad ley Chatham Ave. , Galhpohs ,, or
and M . May ; Stone, Frai ling
(7] , Za mo ra (7), Todd (9) an d (9) and Ru do lph; Twi tchelL by phone a t 446-7726 between
ber 161. ScllVele r (7), Watt
Swis he r. WP- Stone (4-4). LP- Gar
(8), Scarce (9) , Her naiz (9) and the .hours of 7·11 a. m. and
Wilson (B . JO) .
Boone. WP- Sosa (8.5/ . LP..:._._ 10 :30 . 11 :30 p. m .
Sca
rce (3 ~ 7J. HRS - Brown
Mont rea l 000 001 000- 1 9 2 (7t hl,
Matt hell'(s (14 th/, Bonds The Royal Crown Cola softAtlant a
400 000 20x - 6 10 1
ball team of Middleport is
Bl a ir , Montague 11). M1.1 rray 117th 1
(5) , Taylor (7), To r rez (8) and
sponsorin g an ASA san ctioned
( 10 inn.)
Pitts'bg h. ooo ooo 200 o- 2 10 3 double-e liminati on softball
Cin .
002 000 000 l-- 3 9 0
Roo ker, Gi1.1 sti f7 J. Kison (9L tournament over the Labor
Hernan dez l 101 and Sangu ille n, Day weekend, Aug. 30-Sept. 2,
G1.1tle tt , Kirby (8), McEna ney
h
d"
d·
(9), c. Ca r ro ll (I OJ and Benc h. at t e Kyger Creek Iamon m
WP-- c. car roll (8 -J) . LP - Cheshire.
Kison ( 6 7) .
Amt:!rican Leagu e
Entry fee for the tournament
Minnesota ooo ooo 10 0 ~ i 6 o is $40 and one Dudley softball.
' American League
CleDec
veland
4 0
Trophies will be aV.·arded to
·East
ker. Caooo
mpbooo
el l ooo--o
(9) and
w . I. p·ct . g.b. Borgmann ; Peterso n, Bu skey the top four finishers and 20
(8) an d Dun can . WP -- Deck er
h
Boston
64 53 .547
(1 2-10). LP- Peter!:.o n tB -7).
trophies will go tote chamClevelan d
Ba ltimore
~~ ~~ :~~~ ~1(1
600 001 011 --9 17 0 pionship team with ten trophies
New York
57 59 ,. 491 61/j Kan . City
1
000 000 001- 1 5 1 awarded to an all-tournament
Milwa ukee
56 62 _475 8 11 Detr oi t
Busby (18 .9) and Mart inez; !&lt;!am . If more than 20 ~ams
Detroit
55 63 .466 9fh
Holdswort h, Wal ker (1) and
West
w . 1. pet . .g .b . Wo cke nfuss . LP- Holdsworth enter, individual trophies will
(Q . J ).
HRs- So lai ta (4 th ), also go to the second place
Oakland
69 50 .580
Kansas City
62 54 .534 5 11' Ce peda flst ).
·
team .
Ch icag o
59 57 .509 Bh
100 002 110- 5 9 1 For further information.
Texas
60 60 .500 9 1!~ Chicago
Minnesota
58 60 .492 10117 Ba ltimore 000 210 100- 4 11 0
Wo od, Fo rs ter (7) a nd contact George Hoffman , 25
Californ ia
47 72 .395 2'2
Down ing ; McNally , Alexand er Riverview Place, Middleport,
Wednesday's Results
(71 and Etche barr en . WPCleveland 5 Balt imore 4
Forster (7-7) . · LP-- Aiex and er 992-5051 ; or David Lyons, 132 1.'.!
Minnesota 1 Cleveland 0
(5 -91-. HR-;- Hend erSon (14th ). Portsmouth Rd ., Gallipolis,
Kan sas City 9 Detroit l
Milwaukee 6 Tex as 5
Mi lwau kee 100 030 020- 6 ~2 1 446-4123.
New York 4 Oakland 1
Te xas
100 300 100- 5 15 1 Benny 's softball !&lt;!am of
Ca lifornia 5 Bos ton 0
S ~· aton , Trave rs (4), Murphy
Today's Probable.Pi1chers
(All times EDT)
(7)
and Po rt er ; Jen kin s, Portsmouth will hold its fourth
Chi cago 1Kaa1 13·9) at Fou ca 1.11t (9 1 and Sun db erg. annual Labor Day Tournament
Balt im ore (Cu ellar 13 -9), 7:30 WP -- M1.1r phy (5 .4). · LP-Jenk ins (16-ll l. ·H R-- Spence r the weekend of Aug. 31-Spet. 2.
p.m.
Minnesota (Biyl even 11-131 at (6th ).
The ASA sanctioned tourney
Cleveland {G . Pe r ry 15·71, 7·30
Boston
p.m.
000 000 000--C 7 2 will be double elimination and
Ca lif . 9
003 020 oox--5 ·6 1
ton ly ga mes scheduled J
Lee, Cleveland ( 5) and Mon t. a $40 entry fee will be charged.
Friday's Games
The drawing JVill be held
Chicago at N ew Yor k, 2. tw i· go mery ; Tan an a (8 .14) and
Rodr iguez . LP-- Lee ( 14-10) .
night .
·
Monday, Aug . 26, at Labold
Detro it st Oa kland , nig ht
Field
at 7 p. m.
New
York
000
000
0134
12
1
Milwaukee at Ca litron ia,
Oakland
100 000 000- 1 4 o Any team int..reste.d in enni ght .
May (5-21 and Munson; Bl1.1e,
Texas at Cle vel and , night
Kan sas Ci ty at Balt imor e, Fi ng ers (9) and Ten ac e. LP----:" tering should contact Jim Rhea
Bl ue (14 ·10).
night
at 2532 Argonne St., PortsMinn eso ta at Boston; night
·· mouth, 353-8790; or Ted Maze
at 1691 Charles St. , Portsmouth, 354-4635.

erbacks
By JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
It was the kind of night those
unhappy quarterbacks
dreamed of when they decided
to cast their fate with the new
World Footooll League.
.
··George Mira, Virgil carter,
Tom Sherman, John Huarte,
Bob Davis - aU were either
unhappy with their backup
roles In the National Football
League and decided to make
the jump. And Wednesday
night they came up big win-

7.tsk

relief pit ·her Will Mc·Emtney,
who Pnt(&gt; r etl .the ~arne wtth

Beach, bench could be
difference for Royals
American League Roundup
By VITO STELLINO
UP! Sports Writer .
One guy who's spent the
season on the be nch and
another who's spent it on the
beach could make the difference for the Kansas City
Royals this year.
The Oakland A's seemingly
have their fourth straight
Western Division title in hand
with a 51k gam·e lead but
Kansas City Manager Jack
McKeon thinks the Royals are
capable of catching the A's
with guys like Orlando Cepeda
and Tony Solaita around.
Cepeda, who spent the early
part of the season relaxing on a
long Puerto Rico vacation after
being cut by Boston in spring
training, continued his surge in
a Kansas City uniform with his
first homer of the year as the
Royals •outed the Detroit
Tigers 9-1.
Solalta, who's ·been on the
bench most of the year but is
now filling in for the injured
John Mayberry for the second
time this season, belted a
three..run homer in the easy
win as St..ve Busby coasted to
his !Btl! lriumph.
Cepeda is now hiiting .302 in
10 games for the Roy~)s and
has batied in 14 runs.· But he
was concerned that he hadn't
hit a homer in his first nine ··
games.
"The home run was im.
portant to me," he said. "I was
wondering where all my power

Hit-hie

One out in the boltoui of the ~.Oth · T;.~varas. ·'-' double by Manny
mnin~ bul 1\ndcrsvn 's " hero '' .San~.:ui llcn and two w&lt;tllt's.

had bee n at odds with
management and Brown believes he has a solid kicker in
Dave ·Green.
Green, a former Ohio
Uni versity star , is kicking
be tter now than in the two
preVious ye ars, when he also
tried to tak e t he No. 1 punting
job from Lewis. Lewis said he
expected to be shuffled and
looks forward to going to the
Patriots.
Lewis had been outspoken on
the picket line, saying he didn 't
know whether it was out of
" fear or respect" for Brown
that so me Bengals were
defying the strike and reporting to camp.
Meanwhile, returne e Ron
Pritchard said the strike "is all
behind us now. We've forgotten
about it. We're here to play
football. "
Nonstriker John Shinners
said, '."for all practical purposes, the strike is over. " If
things aren't settled in the two
weeks, I can 't see our guys
walking out . ! think the strikers
made this move to hasten the
negotiations. And I also think
they 're going to stay in ~amp
once they're here . The players
coming i_n now have opened the
flood gates and there ;s no
stopping the flow . It would be
almost impossible to walk
out."

Said Bengals player rep Pat
Matson, "We've decided to
forget abo ut the whole thing
and just play football. There
comes a poi nt whe n you've got
to shrug things off . It 's
arrived .''

BLUE
GRASS

Socket Sets

Several .Sizes
In Stock
STAR SUPPLY
Racine, Ohio

••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•
:. Welcome ::
•
: MEIGS ·coUNTY i
••
••
!•
FAIR, i•
.

t·

.

•

i• VISITORS i•
•:

New York Clothing House

:

KERM'S .KORNER

:

ln. Pomeroy Over 90 Years

FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY NIGHTS
10:00 TIL 2:00

FRIDAY, AUG. 16th UNTIL 5 PM

.

FOR

"ANNUAL EMPLOYEES PICNIC"

OF

The HAMER Companies

---------------FOR

Reserved Saturday Until5 P.M.

Group From Ashland, Ky., With Vocalist

"ANNUAL OUTING"

The MEIGS INN

OF

I. B. E.' W.
HUNTINGTON LOCAL NO. 317

POMEROY

PH. 992·3629
'

I

.

~

•:
:

•
•e
••••••••••••••••••••••••

FAIR WEEK SPECIAL

CAMDEN PARK RESERVED

•

�.

4 - Tho DailySent intl, Middleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Au ~. IS, 1974

'l

Nallonal Football Loagu•
Roundup
By JOE CARNICELU
UPI Sports Wrtt•r
All the belligerent U.lk by
both striking player s a nd
coach.. seems ,to have died
down and tt's business as usual
in the National Foo tba ll
Loague camps.
For the most part, thHllost
outspoken

coaches ,

of

ve tera ns

re pOr tin~

or

there would be no animosity
toward the striking players and
the reg ula rs would start

Saturday night 's pre--seHson
like game with Cincinn ati in

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - One thing about Sid Gillman, the
Houston Oilers' coach, you always know where you stand with
him. He doesn 't rool arotuld.
Someone carne up and told him both sides in the NFL
players' strike were going to try a two-week cooling orr period,
and he immediately air-c"!'dltioned his ballclub by cutting seven veterans ...Sid, when they say cooling off, they don 't mean
freezing 'ern to death . . .
=
Jack Dempsey, 79, now talking or bow he reels about
nostalgia: "It's wonderful! You always remember the good, and
rorget about the bad." ...
George Scott's blood pressure is perfect and likely to stay
that way, Anytime the Milwaukee rirst baseman has something
on his chest, he gets it off. Wben the Brewers blew a rour-rtullead
and dropped an 8-5 decision in Kansas City last Saturday ror their·
ninth loss in the last II games, SCott marched himsel£ up to Del
a'andall's room.
He told the Milwaukee manager· he wanted pennission to
talk to the players, without Crandall or any or the coaches
present ... Pennission granted .. . Scott addressed his teammates in the clubhouse at Arlington, Tex., Monday arter the
Brewers were beaten again by the Royals Sunday. He began
sortly and worked himseH up nicely as he went along, rirst with
an ordinary every-day shout and then a terrifying roar that split
a hoff dozen eardnuns. "You could hear him througb two concrete w8lls," reports one Brewer player . Wbatever Scott said
must've made some Impression. Tbe Brewers went out and beat
the Rangers, 5-l, Monday nigbt and did it again by the same
score Tuesday night .. :.
Enos "Country" Slaughter, coaching baseball at Duke
·University now~ says expansion has resulted in major league
job&amp; for minor league players today. "I reel like they got beys in
the major leagues who couldn't even play Double-A and Triple-A
ball in the '4(8," says Slaughter ...
Bob Feller, never overly Impressed by Sandy Kourax• 2,396
strikeouts, isn 'I too excited either over the ract Bob Gibson
recently became the rlrst National Leaguer to strike out 3,000
hitters. "Ill wasn't in the service nearly rour years, I'd have
struck oUt more than 3,000," says Feller. He would've, too, the
way he was firing the ball when he went off to the Navy in 1942 at
theageo£23.Aaitwas,Fellerwoundupwith2,S81 . . ..
Now that Joe Mullaney has moved on to the Memphis Sounds
in the ABA, Zelmo Beaty may be named player-coach or the Utah
Stars. He wants the job, and with the kind or money he's getting,
the SU.rs could be saving themselves some salary by moving him
up ...
Joe DiMaggio, on how ltrelt having to quit baseball :
"When I walked out the door the last day, I knew I was going
to rnlsslt. I had an idea It was going to be an entirely new life ror
me.! went to the Yankees' office the next day, the day arter the
final game o! the 1951 World Series with the Giants, to tell Dan
Topping my plans. 'Dan,l'm here to tell you that game yesterday
was my lust game. l won't be coming back.' I said to him,
'You've always been rair to me and l thought it was only right
that I should leU you before l release It to the newspape... •
"He aaked me to think it over, and I told him my mind was
made up. I had alm061 quit the year berore. 'l can't recoup
anymore' I said to him. 'I can 'I getlt back the next day.' You see,
l had viral pneumonia In 1949 and I don't think l was ever the
sameagainalterthat. Anyway, at the time l told Dan Topping or
my decision I was about to go to Japan ror slx weeks with Lefty
O'Doul for a batting exhibition. Dan asked me to think over my
decision,
"'Well,! don 't beUeve it'll do any good, but I'll bcld off,' I told
him. ~t's the way we left it." Wben DIMaggio returned rrorn
!aPMaixweekslater, he feltthe same way.
'
~nkees called a news conference and Joe D. officially
called it qall$.

•

long string of vehidt&gt;s from

Bloonung ton. Minn ., where
they had been working oot

in Washington.
Twent y-seven _stri king
Atlanta veterans. reported and
Coach Norm VanBrocklin said

HOUston's Sid Gillman and AUanta .
At Houston , one Incident d1d
the leading player spokesmen, occur as outspoken striker
like the Bengals' Pat Matson, Fred Willis carried the ball and
toned down their threats and was met by linebacker Al
coun&lt;erthreatsand got down to Cowlings, a strike breaker who
the business of getting ready reported earlier this week
for the upcoming season.
Cowlings shouted at Willis, the
Wednesday was the repor- two came face~to..face, but no
ting date set by the NFL punches were thrown.
Players Association to begin a
The honking or car horns
1Hiay cooling orr period in signaled the arrival of a
hopes or bringing about a caravan of Minnesota Viking
contract setUernent. And there veterans at their training camp
were few problems as most at Mankato State College.
camps reported a gOOd number Thirty veterans showed up at

I

the same ti me, traveJing in a

pla nning to report soon. Tal ks
are scbeduled to resume today

Cindnnatl's Paul Brown, and

j

ruin."

Harsha, in a statement, said
propoeod leglalatlon coupled
wllh ailtlng appropriation!

would mean a "moownental"
ta blllkln would be available in
tranllt fuildl over lbe

nut lilt years.
The
Portsmouth
~ said about $2.8
I!UJioa aow available Wider the
11711 hdlnl Aid 'Highway
~~~would be enough
to llelp 10lw the maa lranalt

Pl"OI*m.

"We bne 'double dlglt'

ciple reason ror our terrible
economic predicament Ia
uncontrolled government
spending, and the only way we
are going to escape total
economic disaster is to reduce
that spending.
"Although masa tr8ll!llt can
help alleviate our problems of
!raffle congestion , pollution
and energy ronswnpUon It will
do us no good if our economy
collapoes under the burden of
excessive and unrealistic
government spending/' he
said.
" If we go over .these limits
once more - as Congress has
done time and Urne again In the
past - all we will be doing II
IUbsldlzing our own Olqll'eU
ride into financial ruin and I
doubt the American taxpayer
Ia willing to buy that," said

and lire Uke!r to
111 llleed wtlh It r. 'Illite lame
time," IUI-Henba. ''Tho
, prtn. Harsha, ·

lnlllllaa -

I

'

'

tor ano ther season," suid
quarterback Fran Tarkenton.

part o! the strike dispute .
"l ha ven't asked anybody 1r
" £t's great to get back"
they're going to leave in two
Coach Bud Grant wan ted no weeks." He said. " I ha ve no

control over it. I 'm a coach,
an owner. My job is to get
players in shape ror a ganJe

Po-m eroy famous for its streets system ,
Ed. Note : The story below,
wri tten by Georg_e E. Condon,.
Cleveland, was publisbed m the
Cleveland Plai n Dealer AIJ8 . 8.
1974, Condon, a vetera n
me tropolitan newspa perman,
tra vels abcut Ohw searching
out unusual people and pLwes
to write about in the Plain
Dealer.

Robert I. Ripley's "Believe It
or Not" cartoon seri es . What
stirred Ripley's incredulity
was that Pomeroy absolutely
was withOut a single fourway
street intersec tion.
So far as anybody kn ows, no
other community In the United
States - perhaps no other
community in the world -can
cla1m to be without a four-way
By GEORGE CONDON
intersection But then lew
POMEROY, 0. - Prog ress, other places in this world sit on
in thts town that 1s the seat of · such a constricted site as does
government for Meigs County, Pomeroy. There is room for
appears to ha ve rWJ smBck into only two mam streets to run
a s tone wall.
parallel with the Ohio River,
To be more accurate, the and they are joined by a
stone wall is actually a stone number Of side sb'eets rwming
mountainside against which perpendtcular to the river.
the town snuggles with its reet They don't run very rar, obdrawn up so as not to get them viously , being frustrated by the
wet in the Ohi o River. Only a river on the one end and the
narrow sUver of land about 300 stone mountain on the other .
feet deep separates the river Thus, no fourway street in~
from the rormidable hillside - tersections, believe it or not.
a highly unlikely location,
The most imposing public or
actually, for a county seat, or private building in Pomeroy is
any kind of setUement.
the county courthouse, a
The history or Pomeroy is not mighty, pillared edirice or
studded with stirring events, stone that sits with its back to
which is probably why almost the mountainside an d rrowns
everybody remembers the down on all that spreads out at
time the town was reatured in its reet. It has gOOd reason to

fr own , close inspection
reveals, because the illrortunes that have beset this
part or Ohio's Appalachia in
modern times are reflected in
the shabby, rundown condition
Of the old courthouse. A modes t
program of renovation is un ~
derway at the present time, but
it will hardly do more than
keep the structure fr om toppling into the river.
A sometime Cleve lander,
Common Pleas Judge John
Ch£ford Bacon, who rrequently
1s assigned to Cuyahoga
County as a visiting Judge, has
a warm regard for the old
coW'thouse on the river, run~
down condition or not. One of
the things about it that pleases
him particularly is the way it
came into being .
" Back when Pomeroy
became the county seat.'' he
said, "the story goes that some
or the county orflcials decided
that there was a cheaper way
to build a courthouse than to
hire an architect to draw up a
lot Of expensive plans. Scioto
County had built a new courthouse not long berore and it
looked pretty nice, so the boys

PORLAMAR , Vel&gt;e!ll!
(UP! ) - A rour-engined
boprop airliner, buffeted by
side wirm or Hurricane
It wasn't far from here that today crashed into a li'1ounta
the Silver Bridge over the Ohio on the resort i3land
River collapsed a few years . Margarita in zero visibility
ago, and that was roUowed by a all 43 persons aboard
· rockslide right in the heart or feared killed. The ViseoWI
town that demolished the local aircrart belonging to the
post o!fice.
owned Linea
Thlngs could be a lot better Venerolana ( LAV )
than they are in Pomeroy, but into Iache Hill at 9:2&gt;:1 a .m.
there is an unquenchable sense was circling abcve the
ol optimism here, an Wl· airport in a ram and
paralled view or the beautirul storm.
Ohio River, and a quet
satisraction that this is the best
Of all places to be. Believe It or

rrom Meigs County went to the
Scioto County people and asked
ir they could use the same set or
plans.
"Itwas af]attering request, r
suppose, and no doubt the
Scioto County people were
pleased by this ultimate
compliment to their 'new courthouse, but they weren't about
to give their plans away.
'~ You can have the plans,"
they said, "but they'll cost you
$30, " The Meigs County
representatives agreed to the
price and the deal was closed. not.
Not a bad deal, either. That 's
the way we used to operate,
GIRLS Klu.ED
you know. not like today, with
CLEVELAND
(UPI ) - Two
the federal government trying
to push more money on us than teenaged girls rrom suburban
Gartield Heights -were round
we care to spend."
,
dead
early Wednesday near a
Pomeroy is a surprisingly
cheerful town considering that lake in Summit County, apthe events of recent years parenUy the victims of lighthave
not been happy ning. 'The victims were idenones. The last orricial tified as Marie Cejka, 17, and
count of population here Janice Filarski, 17, who were
showed 3,400 residents com- round huddled beneath a tree
pared with a rormer total of near Willow Lake by Edward
10,000 back in the early part of Filarski, the lather or one or
the century when foa l mining the victims, Authorities said
was a big, thriving industry in the bodies were found near
the area.
' their parked bicycles.

...........
.
HOSIERY!

FRANKLII)I

CARR SCHOOL
TUPPERS PI_.A INS - 1llo
, ., Carr School reWlion was hdd
in the WoQde Grove 1 Sw1dny I
lj"' I
At¥~:. ll , Wtth an tttlendnnce ur
m 18. A bHskel dinner wus served
at noon with Nina HolHnso n
askin g the blessmg.
"'' '" The aft er noon proJ?ram
.... : opened· with group slnKmg of
,~· : ''Standing on the Promises "
.,.... , Read ings included t·on1\'..,•' tributwns from Nina Robm ~
v
son; "That One Room School' 1
":' by Charles D. Woode; " My
, ·· Life" by Osie Henderson:
''"" " Remember to La ugh" by
~~I; I Helen Woode: ''What Makes a
1o
.;. H o rne~ · · by Thelma H en~
..... derson: "Old Fol ks Are
· . People" by Mary Carr and
' · ' ·~Twenty -One'' by Osie Hcn'' j1·derson.
Mus1cal present a tions mcluded group si ngi ng of
"Where We 'll Never Grow
Old" and " Unclouded Day •·
The group plann ed to
remember a nwnber of sick
and shut ~m members Wllh
cards which will be sent out bv
the secretary.
·
1
(~ / The 1975 reunion will be held
, : at the grove on the second
• ---Sunday in August.
: ... Attending beside th ose
1
mentioned above were Clara
·: ·;;Follrod, Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
: Hawk, Carrie Burson , Mr. and
: ;;;Mrs . Waid Swartz , all of
•''"'Athens ; Mr . and Mrs. Otto ·
Swartz, Shade; Garner Griff "";,Jini
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
: "Neutzling: Hobart Swartz.
; ·.. Deceased since last year was
1
Bertha Schreiber, Mason, W.

'

Vo.

A ll•llt•r was n•ad frQ-In Mr.
m1d Mr ~ . fJ nrold Hmh•km.
llt•lprl', v.·ho Wl•r·r unabl\' to
nt lend .

Gifls were

·presPntcr1 111

C'itrrw Btu·son, olclt•sl: Mr mhl

Ma·s . Waid Sw&lt;Jrtz. comtn~ th•·
f11rthe s t, ilnd Tht1 lnw f lrn clcrson. yow1~cst.
Offinrs. rctainf'd from Ja.o;t
~· c.tr. will be Clyde Whitt·.
president : Mary f'ilrr, vu'l'
pJ·esJdcnl ; and Helen Woodl1 ,
sccrctary ~ treasurer .

Mary Carr prestded because
or the Illness or Clyde White
durmg this year's ga thcnng
NICUOI..SON
DEXTER - The 45th annual
Nicholson reumon was held
Sunday, Aug . 4. al Forest
Acres Park .
The picmc din ner was held at
noon w1th Rev. Alan Bla c k~
wood aski ng the bleSsi ng.
Norman C. Will, president.
held a bustness meeti ng afler
the dinner. Office rs elected
were prestdent, Norman C.
W11l ; vtce presid ent , Mrs
Donn a Zeller ; secr eta rytreasur er, Seth F. Nicholson.
A b1rlhday card was Signed
and se nt to the oldest member
of the rarn,ly, Mrs. Eliza beth
McCumber , who was unable to
attend. She was 102 years old
AIJ8 . 9.
Games were played and
scrne rishing took place. The
group visited Fort Meigs.
Pnzes went to Seth F
Nichol son, olde st ; Patrick
Dale Shrirnplin , youn gest:

I }(o~lfl

t · umm~

K. Will.

fadh('s,l ~. (mill(}'

witll

lilt'
IIIUSI

duldn:n prt.'Sflllt, Mr ami Mrs
0!)){'1' OliVl'l' , dour P''l7(.'. I )(·;_m

K. Wilt,

wnud. H)'i'SVIII(• ; Dun 1.. Wix)() ,

Pom ·roy ; Mr. aud Mrs . f)£~1 c
NJc·hulsclll, Mr and Mr s
!)emus llntkell, Mr. and Mrs.
4'arlcr Frem;h., Wayne l•nd
Pilln('k D:tle Shrunplin, Hev .
aud Mr:; . Alan BlackwoCKI,

t· .

uuc\ Mr s, Nuruwn
llanHitun , Vt:ruuUmn ; Mr. rmd

M1 .

By (ioldic Cleud('ll ill

pnsc for IJrolhcr Sam, seemg

PORTLAND - We at the
Reorganized Church or JCS lL'i
Christ of Lntter. D.ay-Saints
lmvc enjoyetl fo r the last wt.&gt;ck
the ministry of Patrtarch Sam
Zonker of up Akron way. He
and Ius wife were w1th us the
fi rst wee k of the month,
makmg thc1r home with U1e
Joe Stobarts at Letart but
Vls ilin ~ ,~11110 n g the Saints
Sam, li ke all R. I.. D.S.
ministers, was self-supporttng
un til retirement last year .
Noe he and his wife t rav ~ J
a round to the branches and
they always gtve the peo ple a
hrt .
.
One day Joe Stobart and he
went to Ravenswood where Bill
Roush, bra nch leader, and his
twm sons, Denny and Danny,
own and operf)te " Bill's Body
Shop", where Sam found a co~
worker of his hving there .
Bill ferried them over and
back in the "Ampie" - carboat. 111ey all amved on time
for services that evening at
church. It was a happy sur~

his old friend .
The Zonkers lwd evenin~
m~als w1lh Bill and llah Roush,
J•:dgar aud Lucy Taylor , lhi~
reporter and ulhers, but ate
mostly :1t the Hivcrboat Inn 10

and D u ;mp

Conservative ly, t he U.S.
Children's Bureau places the
annual lncid e n c~ at about
5(),000 to 75,000 cases.
In a 1973 report for the
American
Me d ica l
Association, Dr. Vincent J.
Fontana, a leading authority
on the problem, speculated
that if the present pattern or
mcrease continu es, during the
next ri ve to 10 years, doctors
ca n expect to be confron ted
wi th at least 1.5 million ca ses of
suspected maltreatment.
Among them will be an
estima te d 50,000 deaths at-

We

newspotpers. We wonder what
impels the parent who with
unbeliev~blc cruelty abuses
the child And we wonder what
can be done for the children
;md also to rehabilitate the
p,a rcntq
Muct1 1s being accom plished
thr01;~h legislallon and the
court-,, by the medtca l profes::sion, by volu nteer groups offer ing aid, and by parents
themselves who realize their
troubJe, Even so, the prob lem

A l ~r•o l:'nnlo

M rc

~rows.

UJ•J Women's F.ditor

Nl':W YORK rUPI ) -

walu Nichulsun,
Sr ., W:nd N1cholson, Jr .,
J:)(•xtcr : Mr. '-lnd Mrs, Hoy
Wiseman, Mr. and Mrs. Hobcrl
.fl'W&lt;' Il , ltarrisunvillc ; Mr . and
M1s . l .o.•r ry (.1ark, Tarnrtt and
Penny , Ch~ster; Mr. a11d Mrs
H. E. Starkey, Car penter, Mr
and Mrs. James Nicholson, Mr .
•md Mrs. Ernest Nicholson,
Mr an d Mrs. Nortnan C. Will

J1

lly G AY I'A ULF:y

read tht•ir sad stortes in the

Patriarch C'am Zonker r:'iddlet~J~t:
visits local saints

~FRA N

WATCHES!

S

Child abuse cases grows

llt•alln:r ;u1d Darien· Bl&lt;u·k+

Th(IS'' ;1lll'n&lt;lw~ were Bean
K Wtll , . l ;wk~lrtV IIIt • , Fl.l ;
Tuuu11)' Will , C'hr~rh ·sum,

Called 'national disgrace '

Mrs . Jestie Molden, Me and
Mrs. Owen Bli.iC kwood, Mrs
Huby llalhday, Mrs. Paulme ::::=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:•:·:·:·:=:=:::=:: :·:·:-:-:-:-::::::::::::::::::::::::::•:=:=~:::=:=:=:=:::=:=:=:=:::·:·=~=!=:~:::::::::z
H~1 ci n e .
On Sunday. Aug. 11 , our Atkins, Kare n R1ggs, Mr s
retired 170) Phil Moore and Ro~e r R t ~a:s, Christmc and
Jason and Mr . an d Mrs. Seth F' ii·[
wtfe of Lancaster, Oh10 ca m e
Nicholson, Rutl and
fur rn ormng services. He had
THURSDAY '
SUNDAY
conducted a workshop here last
RA
CINE
American Legion
The Almanac
SLIDES Series beginning
wmtcr on Church Leadership. By United Press International Post 602, regular meehng, 8 Sunday, Aug. 18 at 7 p.m. at the
Like the Sam Zonkers, they
Today is Wednesd ay, Aug, 14, p.m. at the post home . Reorgaruzed Church of Jesus
travel about among the saints. the 226th day or 1971 with 139 to Refreshments of sweet corn, Christ of Latter-Day.S.ints,
Hts f1eld is cvangehsm or rollow.
hamburgers and hot and cold Racine-l'ortiand Rd. Second o!
nuss10nary work . They left at
The moon is between the last drmk s to be served .
f1ve, "Tbe Falling Away".
noon and that evening Joe quarter an d new phase.
BUSY BE E Class, MidSto ba rt star ted s how i n g ~ a_ Th e morning stars are
dleport
First Bantist Church,
series of slides, the first one Mercury, Venus, JupJter and
7:30p.m. at the church.
being "Chnst Sets Up His Saturn .
Chur ch n.
Next
Sunday
The evening star is Mars.
evemng, Aug. 18, the second
Those born on this date are Rebellion .
shde w11l deal with the "Falling under the sign or Leo.
In 1935, the Social Security
Away " of the church, among
NatW'alist Ernest Thompson Act was passed by Congress.
Mr . and Mrs. J. W. Lawson
other things.
Seton was born A!J8 . 14, 1860.
In 1945, President Harry
Everyone is invited to attend
On thiS day m history :
Trwnan announced that Japan spent the weekend in Colwnbus
these next hve Sunday nights
In 1900, 2,000 American had accepted terms for Wlcon~ as guests or their son, Mr. and
of showing slides wtth com- Marines helped capture Peking, ditional surrender , ending Mrs. Albert Lawson ' and
ramily.
mentary by Joe Stobart.
anna, to end the Boxer World War ll .
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Talbott
and rarnil y visi ted in
Steubenville on Wednesday.
I II'III T•tun .. 'lo
Lorraine and Sue McMurray,
rormerly or this area and now
residing in Athens , have
returned from a two-.weeks
vacation in Cincinnati. They
enjoyed sight-seeing, attended
nine Reds horne games, and
w. re introduced to catcher
S1.79
·Johnny Bench when they dined
at his restaurant, Home Plate.
Choow l1om ola.n or
Mabel McDaniels, Janeen
plaiT! oo""'' aH ! ~led
"" t~ 4 1 '~""'" ct 1ulld
ind 4
and Janette Cooper, Fairfax,
Va . and Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Abels, local, were callers at the
home of Mr. and Mrs . Louis De
Luz, last week.
Mrs. Carl Autherson is
PEIICIL
convalescing at home alter
SHARPENER
undergoing
surgery
~~
tto nom y
IMorpene•
mounll
Veterans Memorial Hospital
I
ea ••lv W1 ! h •crtws
recently.
Mr. Clint Birch and Leota
denl111
PAClltiE Of 6
attended
the Singer rewrlon at
REI'OR!COVRS
PADFOLIOS
Royal Oaks Park, Pomeroy, on
Sunday .
Members of the Stiversville
MEW WORLD
stitchers 4-H Club were partiCTIOMNI'I
Uclpants in the Style Revue at
Eope.,a llv du ovn e d
too ~ve rv d oy u"" 512
Meigs High School Tuesday ·
5e [)00 onlll! t
night.
Mrs . Penny Price and
daughter, Long Bottom, visited
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Mlddleswart on Tuesday afternoon.
Mrs. Barbara Talbott and
daughters, local, and Mrs.
Carol Cornell and Sherry, East
Liverpool, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Bryant, Dave and Debra,
recently.
Those visiting the E. H.
tiC , HACK
Carpenter rarnUy in the past
tALL PEN$
week were S. W. Durst, Louis
sa~• on ~ ~' bo •~ .,
Dod ot 11100- pon• on
De Luz, Paul Evans, Paul
mod colo11
Dean Evans, J. W. Lawson,
Danny Black, Duke Dalley,
Mike Dailey, Melvin Dalley,
Darrell Roush, Mrs. Ruby
Bryant, Debra, Dave and Fred,
Tom Durst, Nicki Dawn Van
Meter, Melinda Dalley,
~AVE MORE AT POMEROY BEN FRANKLIN
Delbert Lawson, Jake Shuler,
CHECK THESE SPECIAL VALUESI
Mrs. Ethel Mundry and
daughter , Mr. and Mrs. John
Russell and Chuck McCloud.

I

,~·

~

Social Calendar

Stivers ville
News Notes

REG.

N

K

REG .

Pl~e•

$2 .29

0 ~ .. \jnBd

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combmallon I&lt;Jct
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lock~ro

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mock t~t l l..,..;h
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Pamy Hose

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99c

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MEN'S, BOYS'

, , ctnttrp.ecto ~'"'" O..:On11o)flo C:lloow t
bll nc:l&gt; o l bft•t•lul llowou "'""" I oo deloc111
t - d f l'lmmtd Wllrt ft&lt;nl lwtb y bt N !hl IPI
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01 $Oil von~ C~Oit~O II ~"'"'' l o~l

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Qtrlt7I01 4

PACKAGE OFJ
TOOTHBRUSHES
~' oil ~• a l a"uJ)p~ot
nyl t"' l&lt;londlc••• vou•
c l~ 1~ e 01 [ QIQII
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GoldtNI Hanway·
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12.49

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O.c.ront ootvntH aNI
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SLACKS ... '
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lop"" ~. non • • M1H Toddltrtt toNI
C:i'lldf ... I lfi-J Of f'lod W"l'l -1'!1 'l'liiMI '
11\11 ..,....,.,. 1 ff'l cholc:1 ol ... IW 01' ~Melt

(Editor's Note: A copy of
"To Combat CbUd Abuae and
Neglect" Is available lor 35
cents from the PubUc Affaln
Committee, 381 Part Ave. S.,
New York, N.Y. 10018).

SLACKS :

•

DENIM
BASKETBAll SHOES
REG. 54,,

tr ibut ed to battering and
300,000 children permanently
Injured
physicolly
or
emotionally.
Dr. Fontana says that child
battering had · become an
"insidious epidemic". He be·
lieves it is Hprobably the most
common cause of death among
children toda y, outnumbering
those due to any of the infectious diseases, leukemia,
and automobile accidents .. .lt is
a national disgrace ."
The "national disgrace " o!
the battered child is examined
m depth in a new publication
rrom the Public Affairs Committee, Inc., a nonprofit educational organization, wUh
headquarters in New York .
The author of "To Combat
Child Abuse and Neglect" is
Theodore Irwin who writes
extensively on health and
social problems.
Irwin explores the causes,
£inding that most child battering is done by apparently
" normal" people in a criUcal
period, that even among
serious cases of abuse, iess
than 10 per cent of the parents
are round to be alcoholic or
emotionall y •. disturbed or
mentally ill. ·
"Generally,'' he writes,
"abusive parents strike out in
rage, resentment of sheer
ignorance."
Maltrealment often has been
traced to compulsive disciplinarians, he says. It's the old
"spare the rod and spoil the
child" dictum.
But an impelling factor lies
in the upbringing of the parents
themselves. Many were reared
in homes where beating children was a common practice sc
they repeat the cycle.
One autborlty, Dr . Eli H.
Newberger, reports Uult most
abusive parents appear to be
overwhelmed by their (own)
life circumstances, the
stresses and strains that make
them laah out at children.
On the legal rront of
p!evention, aU 50 states now
require medical practiUoners
to report to appropriate
authorities suspected cases of
child abuse or glaring neglect.
Then there comes the controversial issue- the right or
parents to rear their children
as they see fit, versus the right
of a child to "life, Uberty and
the pursuit o! hllppiness.''
Irwin describes some new
approaches on the comniunity
level. He finds less emphasis
on placing abused youngsters
in foster homes and more on
helping parents cope. "Obviously, ''he writes, ~~educating
parents about child development an&lt;\ chlld rearing can
help avert abuse a]\d
dangerous neglect.
"So can decent housing,
medical care, jobs, whatever
nurtures a healthy rsmUy."
Irwin concludes that •:the
viCious cycle or child abuse and
neglect rrom generation to
generation must be broken. In
the long run, that can be accomplished only If trealment or
the abusive parent is coupled
with efforts to Improve the
conditions - social, economic,
payehologlcal - underlying the
problem."

93~

§

NO-IROfl I

,. ,

.....

~nde ofl

M l&lt;l ~jll

Pu1t lt an d duk

Harsha critical
of transit hill
WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep. William Harsha, R-Ohio,
said Wedneedoy
a proposed $20
'&lt;f' • I
liiiJioo autllo!W'tion ror mass
tranalt would subsidize "our
own express ride into financial

daily as a unit at a high .&lt;(!hool Alan Page, a member or the
field,
negotiatjng commi ttee, who
The only experienced player will be in Washington today,
01
not in camp was all-pro tackle
Now•s the time to ge t ready

48Klu.ED

"

\

:\1rs lh·rb Y.t•lll ·r, .Jrrr ;mtJ
Ttidd : lhm ~1ltl
it·holMrn ami
Jolw H;1y, 1J1Ihm·d : Mr. imd
Mrs Ohlt·r Olivt"•·. uud Larry ,

Recent re.unions mark Meigs scene

•

1

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FOR

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4 - Tho DailySent intl, Middleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Au ~. IS, 1974

'l

Nallonal Football Loagu•
Roundup
By JOE CARNICELU
UPI Sports Wrtt•r
All the belligerent U.lk by
both striking player s a nd
coach.. seems ,to have died
down and tt's business as usual
in the National Foo tba ll
Loague camps.
For the most part, thHllost
outspoken

coaches ,

of

ve tera ns

re pOr tin~

or

there would be no animosity
toward the striking players and
the reg ula rs would start

Saturday night 's pre--seHson
like game with Cincinn ati in

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - One thing about Sid Gillman, the
Houston Oilers' coach, you always know where you stand with
him. He doesn 't rool arotuld.
Someone carne up and told him both sides in the NFL
players' strike were going to try a two-week cooling orr period,
and he immediately air-c"!'dltioned his ballclub by cutting seven veterans ...Sid, when they say cooling off, they don 't mean
freezing 'ern to death . . .
=
Jack Dempsey, 79, now talking or bow he reels about
nostalgia: "It's wonderful! You always remember the good, and
rorget about the bad." ...
George Scott's blood pressure is perfect and likely to stay
that way, Anytime the Milwaukee rirst baseman has something
on his chest, he gets it off. Wben the Brewers blew a rour-rtullead
and dropped an 8-5 decision in Kansas City last Saturday ror their·
ninth loss in the last II games, SCott marched himsel£ up to Del
a'andall's room.
He told the Milwaukee manager· he wanted pennission to
talk to the players, without Crandall or any or the coaches
present ... Pennission granted .. . Scott addressed his teammates in the clubhouse at Arlington, Tex., Monday arter the
Brewers were beaten again by the Royals Sunday. He began
sortly and worked himseH up nicely as he went along, rirst with
an ordinary every-day shout and then a terrifying roar that split
a hoff dozen eardnuns. "You could hear him througb two concrete w8lls," reports one Brewer player . Wbatever Scott said
must've made some Impression. Tbe Brewers went out and beat
the Rangers, 5-l, Monday nigbt and did it again by the same
score Tuesday night .. :.
Enos "Country" Slaughter, coaching baseball at Duke
·University now~ says expansion has resulted in major league
job&amp; for minor league players today. "I reel like they got beys in
the major leagues who couldn't even play Double-A and Triple-A
ball in the '4(8," says Slaughter ...
Bob Feller, never overly Impressed by Sandy Kourax• 2,396
strikeouts, isn 'I too excited either over the ract Bob Gibson
recently became the rlrst National Leaguer to strike out 3,000
hitters. "Ill wasn't in the service nearly rour years, I'd have
struck oUt more than 3,000," says Feller. He would've, too, the
way he was firing the ball when he went off to the Navy in 1942 at
theageo£23.Aaitwas,Fellerwoundupwith2,S81 . . ..
Now that Joe Mullaney has moved on to the Memphis Sounds
in the ABA, Zelmo Beaty may be named player-coach or the Utah
Stars. He wants the job, and with the kind or money he's getting,
the SU.rs could be saving themselves some salary by moving him
up ...
Joe DiMaggio, on how ltrelt having to quit baseball :
"When I walked out the door the last day, I knew I was going
to rnlsslt. I had an idea It was going to be an entirely new life ror
me.! went to the Yankees' office the next day, the day arter the
final game o! the 1951 World Series with the Giants, to tell Dan
Topping my plans. 'Dan,l'm here to tell you that game yesterday
was my lust game. l won't be coming back.' I said to him,
'You've always been rair to me and l thought it was only right
that I should leU you before l release It to the newspape... •
"He aaked me to think it over, and I told him my mind was
made up. I had alm061 quit the year berore. 'l can't recoup
anymore' I said to him. 'I can 'I getlt back the next day.' You see,
l had viral pneumonia In 1949 and I don't think l was ever the
sameagainalterthat. Anyway, at the time l told Dan Topping or
my decision I was about to go to Japan ror slx weeks with Lefty
O'Doul for a batting exhibition. Dan asked me to think over my
decision,
"'Well,! don 't beUeve it'll do any good, but I'll bcld off,' I told
him. ~t's the way we left it." Wben DIMaggio returned rrorn
!aPMaixweekslater, he feltthe same way.
'
~nkees called a news conference and Joe D. officially
called it qall$.

•

long string of vehidt&gt;s from

Bloonung ton. Minn ., where
they had been working oot

in Washington.
Twent y-seven _stri king
Atlanta veterans. reported and
Coach Norm VanBrocklin said

HOUston's Sid Gillman and AUanta .
At Houston , one Incident d1d
the leading player spokesmen, occur as outspoken striker
like the Bengals' Pat Matson, Fred Willis carried the ball and
toned down their threats and was met by linebacker Al
coun&lt;erthreatsand got down to Cowlings, a strike breaker who
the business of getting ready reported earlier this week
for the upcoming season.
Cowlings shouted at Willis, the
Wednesday was the repor- two came face~to..face, but no
ting date set by the NFL punches were thrown.
Players Association to begin a
The honking or car horns
1Hiay cooling orr period in signaled the arrival of a
hopes or bringing about a caravan of Minnesota Viking
contract setUernent. And there veterans at their training camp
were few problems as most at Mankato State College.
camps reported a gOOd number Thirty veterans showed up at

I

the same ti me, traveJing in a

pla nning to report soon. Tal ks
are scbeduled to resume today

Cindnnatl's Paul Brown, and

j

ruin."

Harsha, in a statement, said
propoeod leglalatlon coupled
wllh ailtlng appropriation!

would mean a "moownental"
ta blllkln would be available in
tranllt fuildl over lbe

nut lilt years.
The
Portsmouth
~ said about $2.8
I!UJioa aow available Wider the
11711 hdlnl Aid 'Highway
~~~would be enough
to llelp 10lw the maa lranalt

Pl"OI*m.

"We bne 'double dlglt'

ciple reason ror our terrible
economic predicament Ia
uncontrolled government
spending, and the only way we
are going to escape total
economic disaster is to reduce
that spending.
"Although masa tr8ll!llt can
help alleviate our problems of
!raffle congestion , pollution
and energy ronswnpUon It will
do us no good if our economy
collapoes under the burden of
excessive and unrealistic
government spending/' he
said.
" If we go over .these limits
once more - as Congress has
done time and Urne again In the
past - all we will be doing II
IUbsldlzing our own Olqll'eU
ride into financial ruin and I
doubt the American taxpayer
Ia willing to buy that," said

and lire Uke!r to
111 llleed wtlh It r. 'Illite lame
time," IUI-Henba. ''Tho
, prtn. Harsha, ·

lnlllllaa -

I

'

'

tor ano ther season," suid
quarterback Fran Tarkenton.

part o! the strike dispute .
"l ha ven't asked anybody 1r
" £t's great to get back"
they're going to leave in two
Coach Bud Grant wan ted no weeks." He said. " I ha ve no

control over it. I 'm a coach,
an owner. My job is to get
players in shape ror a ganJe

Po-m eroy famous for its streets system ,
Ed. Note : The story below,
wri tten by Georg_e E. Condon,.
Cleveland, was publisbed m the
Cleveland Plai n Dealer AIJ8 . 8.
1974, Condon, a vetera n
me tropolitan newspa perman,
tra vels abcut Ohw searching
out unusual people and pLwes
to write about in the Plain
Dealer.

Robert I. Ripley's "Believe It
or Not" cartoon seri es . What
stirred Ripley's incredulity
was that Pomeroy absolutely
was withOut a single fourway
street intersec tion.
So far as anybody kn ows, no
other community In the United
States - perhaps no other
community in the world -can
cla1m to be without a four-way
By GEORGE CONDON
intersection But then lew
POMEROY, 0. - Prog ress, other places in this world sit on
in thts town that 1s the seat of · such a constricted site as does
government for Meigs County, Pomeroy. There is room for
appears to ha ve rWJ smBck into only two mam streets to run
a s tone wall.
parallel with the Ohio River,
To be more accurate, the and they are joined by a
stone wall is actually a stone number Of side sb'eets rwming
mountainside against which perpendtcular to the river.
the town snuggles with its reet They don't run very rar, obdrawn up so as not to get them viously , being frustrated by the
wet in the Ohi o River. Only a river on the one end and the
narrow sUver of land about 300 stone mountain on the other .
feet deep separates the river Thus, no fourway street in~
from the rormidable hillside - tersections, believe it or not.
a highly unlikely location,
The most imposing public or
actually, for a county seat, or private building in Pomeroy is
any kind of setUement.
the county courthouse, a
The history or Pomeroy is not mighty, pillared edirice or
studded with stirring events, stone that sits with its back to
which is probably why almost the mountainside an d rrowns
everybody remembers the down on all that spreads out at
time the town was reatured in its reet. It has gOOd reason to

fr own , close inspection
reveals, because the illrortunes that have beset this
part or Ohio's Appalachia in
modern times are reflected in
the shabby, rundown condition
Of the old courthouse. A modes t
program of renovation is un ~
derway at the present time, but
it will hardly do more than
keep the structure fr om toppling into the river.
A sometime Cleve lander,
Common Pleas Judge John
Ch£ford Bacon, who rrequently
1s assigned to Cuyahoga
County as a visiting Judge, has
a warm regard for the old
coW'thouse on the river, run~
down condition or not. One of
the things about it that pleases
him particularly is the way it
came into being .
" Back when Pomeroy
became the county seat.'' he
said, "the story goes that some
or the county orflcials decided
that there was a cheaper way
to build a courthouse than to
hire an architect to draw up a
lot Of expensive plans. Scioto
County had built a new courthouse not long berore and it
looked pretty nice, so the boys

PORLAMAR , Vel&gt;e!ll!
(UP! ) - A rour-engined
boprop airliner, buffeted by
side wirm or Hurricane
It wasn't far from here that today crashed into a li'1ounta
the Silver Bridge over the Ohio on the resort i3land
River collapsed a few years . Margarita in zero visibility
ago, and that was roUowed by a all 43 persons aboard
· rockslide right in the heart or feared killed. The ViseoWI
town that demolished the local aircrart belonging to the
post o!fice.
owned Linea
Thlngs could be a lot better Venerolana ( LAV )
than they are in Pomeroy, but into Iache Hill at 9:2&gt;:1 a .m.
there is an unquenchable sense was circling abcve the
ol optimism here, an Wl· airport in a ram and
paralled view or the beautirul storm.
Ohio River, and a quet
satisraction that this is the best
Of all places to be. Believe It or

rrom Meigs County went to the
Scioto County people and asked
ir they could use the same set or
plans.
"Itwas af]attering request, r
suppose, and no doubt the
Scioto County people were
pleased by this ultimate
compliment to their 'new courthouse, but they weren't about
to give their plans away.
'~ You can have the plans,"
they said, "but they'll cost you
$30, " The Meigs County
representatives agreed to the
price and the deal was closed. not.
Not a bad deal, either. That 's
the way we used to operate,
GIRLS Klu.ED
you know. not like today, with
CLEVELAND
(UPI ) - Two
the federal government trying
to push more money on us than teenaged girls rrom suburban
Gartield Heights -were round
we care to spend."
,
dead
early Wednesday near a
Pomeroy is a surprisingly
cheerful town considering that lake in Summit County, apthe events of recent years parenUy the victims of lighthave
not been happy ning. 'The victims were idenones. The last orricial tified as Marie Cejka, 17, and
count of population here Janice Filarski, 17, who were
showed 3,400 residents com- round huddled beneath a tree
pared with a rormer total of near Willow Lake by Edward
10,000 back in the early part of Filarski, the lather or one or
the century when foa l mining the victims, Authorities said
was a big, thriving industry in the bodies were found near
the area.
' their parked bicycles.

...........
.
HOSIERY!

FRANKLII)I

CARR SCHOOL
TUPPERS PI_.A INS - 1llo
, ., Carr School reWlion was hdd
in the WoQde Grove 1 Sw1dny I
lj"' I
At¥~:. ll , Wtth an tttlendnnce ur
m 18. A bHskel dinner wus served
at noon with Nina HolHnso n
askin g the blessmg.
"'' '" The aft er noon proJ?ram
.... : opened· with group slnKmg of
,~· : ''Standing on the Promises "
.,.... , Read ings included t·on1\'..,•' tributwns from Nina Robm ~
v
son; "That One Room School' 1
":' by Charles D. Woode; " My
, ·· Life" by Osie Henderson:
''"" " Remember to La ugh" by
~~I; I Helen Woode: ''What Makes a
1o
.;. H o rne~ · · by Thelma H en~
..... derson: "Old Fol ks Are
· . People" by Mary Carr and
' · ' ·~Twenty -One'' by Osie Hcn'' j1·derson.
Mus1cal present a tions mcluded group si ngi ng of
"Where We 'll Never Grow
Old" and " Unclouded Day •·
The group plann ed to
remember a nwnber of sick
and shut ~m members Wllh
cards which will be sent out bv
the secretary.
·
1
(~ / The 1975 reunion will be held
, : at the grove on the second
• ---Sunday in August.
: ... Attending beside th ose
1
mentioned above were Clara
·: ·;;Follrod, Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
: Hawk, Carrie Burson , Mr. and
: ;;;Mrs . Waid Swartz , all of
•''"'Athens ; Mr . and Mrs. Otto ·
Swartz, Shade; Garner Griff "";,Jini
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
: "Neutzling: Hobart Swartz.
; ·.. Deceased since last year was
1
Bertha Schreiber, Mason, W.

'

Vo.

A ll•llt•r was n•ad frQ-In Mr.
m1d Mr ~ . fJ nrold Hmh•km.
llt•lprl', v.·ho Wl•r·r unabl\' to
nt lend .

Gifls were

·presPntcr1 111

C'itrrw Btu·son, olclt•sl: Mr mhl

Ma·s . Waid Sw&lt;Jrtz. comtn~ th•·
f11rthe s t, ilnd Tht1 lnw f lrn clcrson. yow1~cst.
Offinrs. rctainf'd from Ja.o;t
~· c.tr. will be Clyde Whitt·.
president : Mary f'ilrr, vu'l'
pJ·esJdcnl ; and Helen Woodl1 ,
sccrctary ~ treasurer .

Mary Carr prestded because
or the Illness or Clyde White
durmg this year's ga thcnng
NICUOI..SON
DEXTER - The 45th annual
Nicholson reumon was held
Sunday, Aug . 4. al Forest
Acres Park .
The picmc din ner was held at
noon w1th Rev. Alan Bla c k~
wood aski ng the bleSsi ng.
Norman C. Will, president.
held a bustness meeti ng afler
the dinner. Office rs elected
were prestdent, Norman C.
W11l ; vtce presid ent , Mrs
Donn a Zeller ; secr eta rytreasur er, Seth F. Nicholson.
A b1rlhday card was Signed
and se nt to the oldest member
of the rarn,ly, Mrs. Eliza beth
McCumber , who was unable to
attend. She was 102 years old
AIJ8 . 9.
Games were played and
scrne rishing took place. The
group visited Fort Meigs.
Pnzes went to Seth F
Nichol son, olde st ; Patrick
Dale Shrirnplin , youn gest:

I }(o~lfl

t · umm~

K. Will.

fadh('s,l ~. (mill(}'

witll

lilt'
IIIUSI

duldn:n prt.'Sflllt, Mr ami Mrs
0!)){'1' OliVl'l' , dour P''l7(.'. I )(·;_m

K. Wilt,

wnud. H)'i'SVIII(• ; Dun 1.. Wix)() ,

Pom ·roy ; Mr. aud Mrs . f)£~1 c
NJc·hulsclll, Mr and Mr s
!)emus llntkell, Mr. and Mrs.
4'arlcr Frem;h., Wayne l•nd
Pilln('k D:tle Shrunplin, Hev .
aud Mr:; . Alan BlackwoCKI,

t· .

uuc\ Mr s, Nuruwn
llanHitun , Vt:ruuUmn ; Mr. rmd

M1 .

By (ioldic Cleud('ll ill

pnsc for IJrolhcr Sam, seemg

PORTLAND - We at the
Reorganized Church or JCS lL'i
Christ of Lntter. D.ay-Saints
lmvc enjoyetl fo r the last wt.&gt;ck
the ministry of Patrtarch Sam
Zonker of up Akron way. He
and Ius wife were w1th us the
fi rst wee k of the month,
makmg thc1r home with U1e
Joe Stobarts at Letart but
Vls ilin ~ ,~11110 n g the Saints
Sam, li ke all R. I.. D.S.
ministers, was self-supporttng
un til retirement last year .
Noe he and his wife t rav ~ J
a round to the branches and
they always gtve the peo ple a
hrt .
.
One day Joe Stobart and he
went to Ravenswood where Bill
Roush, bra nch leader, and his
twm sons, Denny and Danny,
own and operf)te " Bill's Body
Shop", where Sam found a co~
worker of his hving there .
Bill ferried them over and
back in the "Ampie" - carboat. 111ey all amved on time
for services that evening at
church. It was a happy sur~

his old friend .
The Zonkers lwd evenin~
m~als w1lh Bill and llah Roush,
J•:dgar aud Lucy Taylor , lhi~
reporter and ulhers, but ate
mostly :1t the Hivcrboat Inn 10

and D u ;mp

Conservative ly, t he U.S.
Children's Bureau places the
annual lncid e n c~ at about
5(),000 to 75,000 cases.
In a 1973 report for the
American
Me d ica l
Association, Dr. Vincent J.
Fontana, a leading authority
on the problem, speculated
that if the present pattern or
mcrease continu es, during the
next ri ve to 10 years, doctors
ca n expect to be confron ted
wi th at least 1.5 million ca ses of
suspected maltreatment.
Among them will be an
estima te d 50,000 deaths at-

We

newspotpers. We wonder what
impels the parent who with
unbeliev~blc cruelty abuses
the child And we wonder what
can be done for the children
;md also to rehabilitate the
p,a rcntq
Muct1 1s being accom plished
thr01;~h legislallon and the
court-,, by the medtca l profes::sion, by volu nteer groups offer ing aid, and by parents
themselves who realize their
troubJe, Even so, the prob lem

A l ~r•o l:'nnlo

M rc

~rows.

UJ•J Women's F.ditor

Nl':W YORK rUPI ) -

walu Nichulsun,
Sr ., W:nd N1cholson, Jr .,
J:)(•xtcr : Mr. '-lnd Mrs, Hoy
Wiseman, Mr. and Mrs. Hobcrl
.fl'W&lt;' Il , ltarrisunvillc ; Mr . and
M1s . l .o.•r ry (.1ark, Tarnrtt and
Penny , Ch~ster; Mr. a11d Mrs
H. E. Starkey, Car penter, Mr
and Mrs. James Nicholson, Mr .
•md Mrs. Ernest Nicholson,
Mr an d Mrs. Nortnan C. Will

J1

lly G AY I'A ULF:y

read tht•ir sad stortes in the

Patriarch C'am Zonker r:'iddlet~J~t:
visits local saints

~FRA N

WATCHES!

S

Child abuse cases grows

llt•alln:r ;u1d Darien· Bl&lt;u·k+

Th(IS'' ;1lll'n&lt;lw~ were Bean
K Wtll , . l ;wk~lrtV IIIt • , Fl.l ;
Tuuu11)' Will , C'hr~rh ·sum,

Called 'national disgrace '

Mrs . Jestie Molden, Me and
Mrs. Owen Bli.iC kwood, Mrs
Huby llalhday, Mrs. Paulme ::::=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:•:·:·:·:=:=:::=:: :·:·:-:-:-:-::::::::::::::::::::::::::•:=:=~:::=:=:=:=:::=:=:=:=:::·:·=~=!=:~:::::::::z
H~1 ci n e .
On Sunday. Aug. 11 , our Atkins, Kare n R1ggs, Mr s
retired 170) Phil Moore and Ro~e r R t ~a:s, Christmc and
Jason and Mr . an d Mrs. Seth F' ii·[
wtfe of Lancaster, Oh10 ca m e
Nicholson, Rutl and
fur rn ormng services. He had
THURSDAY '
SUNDAY
conducted a workshop here last
RA
CINE
American Legion
The Almanac
SLIDES Series beginning
wmtcr on Church Leadership. By United Press International Post 602, regular meehng, 8 Sunday, Aug. 18 at 7 p.m. at the
Like the Sam Zonkers, they
Today is Wednesd ay, Aug, 14, p.m. at the post home . Reorgaruzed Church of Jesus
travel about among the saints. the 226th day or 1971 with 139 to Refreshments of sweet corn, Christ of Latter-Day.S.ints,
Hts f1eld is cvangehsm or rollow.
hamburgers and hot and cold Racine-l'ortiand Rd. Second o!
nuss10nary work . They left at
The moon is between the last drmk s to be served .
f1ve, "Tbe Falling Away".
noon and that evening Joe quarter an d new phase.
BUSY BE E Class, MidSto ba rt star ted s how i n g ~ a_ Th e morning stars are
dleport
First Bantist Church,
series of slides, the first one Mercury, Venus, JupJter and
7:30p.m. at the church.
being "Chnst Sets Up His Saturn .
Chur ch n.
Next
Sunday
The evening star is Mars.
evemng, Aug. 18, the second
Those born on this date are Rebellion .
shde w11l deal with the "Falling under the sign or Leo.
In 1935, the Social Security
Away " of the church, among
NatW'alist Ernest Thompson Act was passed by Congress.
Mr . and Mrs. J. W. Lawson
other things.
Seton was born A!J8 . 14, 1860.
In 1945, President Harry
Everyone is invited to attend
On thiS day m history :
Trwnan announced that Japan spent the weekend in Colwnbus
these next hve Sunday nights
In 1900, 2,000 American had accepted terms for Wlcon~ as guests or their son, Mr. and
of showing slides wtth com- Marines helped capture Peking, ditional surrender , ending Mrs. Albert Lawson ' and
ramily.
mentary by Joe Stobart.
anna, to end the Boxer World War ll .
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Talbott
and rarnil y visi ted in
Steubenville on Wednesday.
I II'III T•tun .. 'lo
Lorraine and Sue McMurray,
rormerly or this area and now
residing in Athens , have
returned from a two-.weeks
vacation in Cincinnati. They
enjoyed sight-seeing, attended
nine Reds horne games, and
w. re introduced to catcher
S1.79
·Johnny Bench when they dined
at his restaurant, Home Plate.
Choow l1om ola.n or
Mabel McDaniels, Janeen
plaiT! oo""'' aH ! ~led
"" t~ 4 1 '~""'" ct 1ulld
ind 4
and Janette Cooper, Fairfax,
Va . and Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Abels, local, were callers at the
home of Mr. and Mrs . Louis De
Luz, last week.
Mrs. Carl Autherson is
PEIICIL
convalescing at home alter
SHARPENER
undergoing
surgery
~~
tto nom y
IMorpene•
mounll
Veterans Memorial Hospital
I
ea ••lv W1 ! h •crtws
recently.
Mr. Clint Birch and Leota
denl111
PAClltiE Of 6
attended
the Singer rewrlon at
REI'OR!COVRS
PADFOLIOS
Royal Oaks Park, Pomeroy, on
Sunday .
Members of the Stiversville
MEW WORLD
stitchers 4-H Club were partiCTIOMNI'I
Uclpants in the Style Revue at
Eope.,a llv du ovn e d
too ~ve rv d oy u"" 512
Meigs High School Tuesday ·
5e [)00 onlll! t
night.
Mrs . Penny Price and
daughter, Long Bottom, visited
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Mlddleswart on Tuesday afternoon.
Mrs. Barbara Talbott and
daughters, local, and Mrs.
Carol Cornell and Sherry, East
Liverpool, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Bryant, Dave and Debra,
recently.
Those visiting the E. H.
tiC , HACK
Carpenter rarnUy in the past
tALL PEN$
week were S. W. Durst, Louis
sa~• on ~ ~' bo •~ .,
Dod ot 11100- pon• on
De Luz, Paul Evans, Paul
mod colo11
Dean Evans, J. W. Lawson,
Danny Black, Duke Dalley,
Mike Dailey, Melvin Dalley,
Darrell Roush, Mrs. Ruby
Bryant, Debra, Dave and Fred,
Tom Durst, Nicki Dawn Van
Meter, Melinda Dalley,
~AVE MORE AT POMEROY BEN FRANKLIN
Delbert Lawson, Jake Shuler,
CHECK THESE SPECIAL VALUESI
Mrs. Ethel Mundry and
daughter , Mr. and Mrs. John
Russell and Chuck McCloud.

I

,~·

~

Social Calendar

Stivers ville
News Notes

REG.

N

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$2 .29

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lop"" ~. non • • M1H Toddltrtt toNI
C:i'lldf ... I lfi-J Of f'lod W"l'l -1'!1 'l'liiMI '
11\11 ..,....,.,. 1 ff'l cholc:1 ol ... IW 01' ~Melt

(Editor's Note: A copy of
"To Combat CbUd Abuae and
Neglect" Is available lor 35
cents from the PubUc Affaln
Committee, 381 Part Ave. S.,
New York, N.Y. 10018).

SLACKS :

•

DENIM
BASKETBAll SHOES
REG. 54,,

tr ibut ed to battering and
300,000 children permanently
Injured
physicolly
or
emotionally.
Dr. Fontana says that child
battering had · become an
"insidious epidemic". He be·
lieves it is Hprobably the most
common cause of death among
children toda y, outnumbering
those due to any of the infectious diseases, leukemia,
and automobile accidents .. .lt is
a national disgrace ."
The "national disgrace " o!
the battered child is examined
m depth in a new publication
rrom the Public Affairs Committee, Inc., a nonprofit educational organization, wUh
headquarters in New York .
The author of "To Combat
Child Abuse and Neglect" is
Theodore Irwin who writes
extensively on health and
social problems.
Irwin explores the causes,
£inding that most child battering is done by apparently
" normal" people in a criUcal
period, that even among
serious cases of abuse, iess
than 10 per cent of the parents
are round to be alcoholic or
emotionall y •. disturbed or
mentally ill. ·
"Generally,'' he writes,
"abusive parents strike out in
rage, resentment of sheer
ignorance."
Maltrealment often has been
traced to compulsive disciplinarians, he says. It's the old
"spare the rod and spoil the
child" dictum.
But an impelling factor lies
in the upbringing of the parents
themselves. Many were reared
in homes where beating children was a common practice sc
they repeat the cycle.
One autborlty, Dr . Eli H.
Newberger, reports Uult most
abusive parents appear to be
overwhelmed by their (own)
life circumstances, the
stresses and strains that make
them laah out at children.
On the legal rront of
p!evention, aU 50 states now
require medical practiUoners
to report to appropriate
authorities suspected cases of
child abuse or glaring neglect.
Then there comes the controversial issue- the right or
parents to rear their children
as they see fit, versus the right
of a child to "life, Uberty and
the pursuit o! hllppiness.''
Irwin describes some new
approaches on the comniunity
level. He finds less emphasis
on placing abused youngsters
in foster homes and more on
helping parents cope. "Obviously, ''he writes, ~~educating
parents about child development an&lt;\ chlld rearing can
help avert abuse a]\d
dangerous neglect.
"So can decent housing,
medical care, jobs, whatever
nurtures a healthy rsmUy."
Irwin concludes that •:the
viCious cycle or child abuse and
neglect rrom generation to
generation must be broken. In
the long run, that can be accomplished only If trealment or
the abusive parent is coupled
with efforts to Improve the
conditions - social, economic,
payehologlcal - underlying the
problem."

93~

§

NO-IROfl I

,. ,

.....

~nde ofl

M l&lt;l ~jll

Pu1t lt an d duk

Harsha critical
of transit hill
WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep. William Harsha, R-Ohio,
said Wedneedoy
a proposed $20
'&lt;f' • I
liiiJioo autllo!W'tion ror mass
tranalt would subsidize "our
own express ride into financial

daily as a unit at a high .&lt;(!hool Alan Page, a member or the
field,
negotiatjng commi ttee, who
The only experienced player will be in Washington today,
01
not in camp was all-pro tackle
Now•s the time to ge t ready

48Klu.ED

"

\

:\1rs lh·rb Y.t•lll ·r, .Jrrr ;mtJ
Ttidd : lhm ~1ltl
it·holMrn ami
Jolw H;1y, 1J1Ihm·d : Mr. imd
Mrs Ohlt·r Olivt"•·. uud Larry ,

Recent re.unions mark Meigs scene

•

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Make Pomeroy Your Shopping Center
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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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�'

6- The Daily Sentillt'l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. 111Ursda)•, Aug. 15, 1974

Enforcer wanted

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Three new achievement
awards were presented at the
flower show, .. Nostal~ia,
USA", staged Wednesday at
the lllth Annual Meigs County
Fair on the Rock Springs
FairgroWJds.
The '" Best of Show" award in
the artistic arrangements
division went to Mrs. Joe Bolin,
Rutland, for h~r entry in
''Scrapbook Pages", a design
depicting yesterday and today
and displayed in a niche. The
entry was selected by the
ju-4e, Mrs. Gilbert CuJlen ,
Marietta , an accredited judge

of the- Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs, from the blue
rlbbon winners in the dh•islon.
Mrs. Homer Holter, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, a member or the
Chester Garden Club, won the
''Horticu1ture Sweeps~kes''
award, given on the basis of
nwnber of points accumulated
in tlle specimen classes : rive
for blue ribbon, three for red ,
and two for white.
Selected as the "Junior
Gardener" for the show, also
on the basis of point accumulation in all junior

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Miss Catherine Jill Harris
bride-elect of Clarence Jame~
WiiJiams ,
was
honored
recenUy with a shower given
by Mrs. Francis Biron at the
horne of Mrs . George Miller,
408 South .Fifth St., Middleport .
Centeripg the gift table was a
yellow wnbre lla covered with
white flowers and green ribbons. Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Carl
Wolfe, Mrs . Charles A.
Bradbury , Mrs .
George
Hackett, Jr., and Mrs. Dale
Walburn .

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wa s Jayn e L('e · Mrs~ J oe Bulin, Hullar1d
Zinnias, cadus flo"'ered :
Hoeflkh, Pomeroy .
Friendly Gardeners.
Jayne
Lt.'&lt;! Hoeflich.
All three were presenLc-d
".Co\'ered Bridges '' ; Mrs .
Mari~old s:
J&lt;Jyne Lee
rosettes by Mrs. J:&gt;m&lt;•s Car- Earl Thoiua, Wmdin~ l'nlil :
Hoefli
&lt;'h
.
·
penler, show c hairwoman . Mrs. F:arl Dean, Chester Club:
Plaque of seeds, seed pods
Mrs . Bolin and Mrs. Holter will . Mrs. Erwin .
and-or
drit'd materials : Brian
each receive $2.50 in premilun.s
" Nickels for the Jukebox " :
King
,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy ; Jay
wtu1 Miss HocfUch to re('cive Mrs. James Carpenter, Mrs.
Carpenter ;
J.ayn e
Lee
$1.50.
Joe Bolin, Mrs, Wilson Ca r- Hoeflich.
Ribbon winners in the pen[&lt;,r,
Jlnrtlcullure Division
Wednesday show, listed first,
" Scrapbook Pages" : Mrs .
Rose
: Hybrid Tea, red , pink
second and third , respec tively, Bolin, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
in the various divisions were ;.1s Mrs. Charles Kuhl, Rl. 3, or blends : Mrs. Homer Holter,
Mrs . Richard Barton, Chester
follows :
Pomeroy.
Garden
Club, no third .
Artistic Arrangements
" Arhong My Souvenirs":
Rose, Hybrid Tea, yellow, ·
"Rwnbleseal
Romunce" : Mrs . Wilson Carpenter, Mrs.
or blends : Mrs. Barton;
orarige
Mrs. Robert Lewis , Winding Purley Karr 1 Chester Garden
Mrs . Robert Thompson,
Trail Garden 'Club ; Mr s . Club; Mrs . Erwin .
Wi'nding Trail Garden Club, no
Leonard Erwin, Chester
"' Happy Days Are Here third .
Garden Club; Mrs. Wilson Again '' : Mrs. Linda L. Wilson,
Gladiolus : Mrs. Charles
Carpenter, Bend 0' the River Route 1. Reedsville ; Mrs .
Kuhl,
Rt . 3, Pomeroy, all three
Garden Club.
Maxine Hart, Walk-in Garden places .
" Home Cooking and Mom 's Club ; no third.
Gladiolus: (collection of
Apple Pie ": Mrs . William
Junior Division .
three ), Mrs. Homer Holter:
Willford, Rutland Friendly
· 'Summe·r Vacation s", an
Zinnia, dahJia flowered:
Gardeners; · Mrs . James artistic arrange ment: Jayne
Carpenter, Rutland Friendly Lee Hoeflich, Pomeroy ; Jay. Mrs . Homer Holter, Mrs .
Gardeners ; Mrs . Wil son Carpenter, Reedsvill e, R.D .: Dean, Mrs . Purley Karr .
Zinnia, cactus flowers: Mrs.
Carpenter.
and Sue Ellen Fry, Pomeroy.
Purley
Karr, Mrs . Homer
" Bicycles Built for Two":
Horticulture Zinnias Holter.
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon, Wildwood dahlia flowered : Tammie · L:
Dahlia, decorative type :
Garden Club; Mrs . Erwin, Starcher, Rt. 1, Minersville .
Mrs . Holter, Mrs. Rose Gin-

· JUDG~G - Exhibitors in the first flower show of the
Meigs County Senior Fair with second show.schedulOd for
Friday were able to Jearn where they had gone wrong in their
arrangements Wednesday as Mrs. Gilbert Cullen, Marietta,
an accredited Ohio Assn . of Garden Clubs judge, moved
through the entries of the entire show with a microphone
pointing out the good and bad points of the entries. With Mrs .
Cullen is Mrs. James Carpenter, serving for the first time as
chairwoman of the county 'f air flower shows.

An arrarigement of ye llow
mums, carnationS:, Paby's
breath and fern flanked by
yellow tapers cen.[&lt;,red the
refr es hment table. Sandwi c hes, ca ke, mint s, nuts,
PW1Ch and coffee were served.
The guest li st included Mrs .
fl oyd Williams, Mrs . Clyde
fisher , Mrs. Clifford Kennedy,
Mrs. Dale Walburn, Mrs . Guy
Re y nolds,
Mr s.
James
Souders,
Mrs . · Ri c hud
Hovatter, Mrs. E. 0. Rail, Mrs .
Don Frymyer, Mrs. James
Arnold , Mrs. Ruth Hawkins,

a

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4-H winners announced

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Twenty-four winners were
announced in the 4-H interview
judging Tuesday afternoon at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Winners in the· various
projects and their respective
clubs were INSECTS - Keith
Jordan, Mixed-Up Hotshots
grana champion; FISHING _:_
Dennis
Thornton,
Irish
Leprechauns.
. PHOrOGRAPHY - Ray
Werry, Chester Farm Boys,
grand
champion,
June
Wamsley, Pomeroy_I.Jvewires,
reserve champion; ELECTRICITY Billy Dyer
Hlllblllies, grand, Gary Hutton:
Mixed-Up Hotshots, reserve ;
BICYCLE - Tommy Pullins,
Five Point Bucks, grand,
Denni.s
Thornton,
Irish
LeprechaunS, reserve ·
WOODWORKING - Randy
Kennedy, Harrisonville BOys
Honor Club, grand; Gary
Nelson, Chesler Farm Boys,

reserve.
TRACTQR :_ David Riggs,
Harrisonville Boys Honor
Club; CAR - Lester Jeffers,
Mixed-Up Hotshots, gra nd ;
Snowville 4-H Club, reserve i
WELDING - Brian Jordan,
Mixed-Up Hotshots, grand·,
Lester Jeffers , Mixed-Up
Hotshots, reserve; ROPE Roger Wamsley , Leading
Creek Crickets, grand, Keith
Bentz, Five POirit Bucks ,
reserve ; SMALL ENGINE
POWER :_ Rodney Keller,
Chester Farm· Boys, grand,
Bryan Gheen, Harrisonville
Boys Honor Club, reserve ;
VEGETABLE GARDENING
- Randy Keller, Chester farm
Boys, grand, Tim Wyant ,
Snowvllle, reserve ; CROPS Steve Stout, Snowville, grand,
Ralph J ordan, Mixed-Up
Hotshots, re,serve ; FLOWER
GARDENING
Renee
Trussell, Bashan Bunch .

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A GREAT TIME FOR THE GOOD TIME

Caravelleeby Bulova

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U1cr , Chester Gi.lrden Club.
Dahlia~ ce:tclus type : Mrs.
Purley Karr .
Marigolds : Mrs . Purley
Karr, Mrs. Homer HoJter, Mrs .
Dean.
Illy : Mrs . Ri chard Barton,
Mrs. Robert Thompson, Mrs. ·
Barton.
Potted Plant, foliage type :

Mrs . Charles Kohl, first and
second. and Mrs . James
Carpenter, third.
A£rican
Violets : Mrs.
Richard Barton, Unda Wilson,

Morgan, Mrs. Robert Thompson, Mrs. James Carpenter.
In Lhe educallonal exhibit
showing methods of preserviqg
or treating plant material lor
U$e in a decorative or practical
manner the winners were Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter, ' first; Mrs.
James Carpenter, seco11d, and
Mrs. Robert Lewis, third.

Mrs. Barton,

Perennial Flowers : Mrs.
Pur ley Karr, Mrs. Ginther,
Mrs . Barton .
Terrariums: Mrs . RQger

S~•lc
COLUMBUS I UPI)
Industrial Helntions Clu f
Joseph Shump has asked Ohio
Attorney Genera l William .J.
Brown to assign one of Ins
asslsta'nts
'to prosecute
violations found in the state's
coal fields.

"The coal com~anies t~rc
dire ctly

responsible
ror
providing u safe place· to
work, " said Shumo.

.Give the gift he or she will appreciate most. Keep
them on lime in the finest fashion with a precision
Jeweled, qualitv-made Caravella watch .
See our great selection of gilt watches. We have the
newest styles, the latest features. Caravella by
Bulova. Expensive watches at lnexpens.ive prices.
Gents from ~14.95 ·
Lad. From, '15.95

i'

"

E

DEAR POL,LY - While applying bright rose nail polish 1

dr~pped the bottle and was left with an eight-inch trail of rose

poltsh down one front leg of my new white crimp pants. The
cleaners say they cannot Terhove it. I do not want to fool with
'.'~uess " reme~es. I hope someone has a solution from a similar
m1shap.· Please come forward if you haVe a magic formula I ·
would be so grateful. - SlllRLEY.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with sun glasses that fit
over regular g lasses. I wish they could be obtained in the popular
shapes and colors but s tiH with resistance' to the sun's glare _
MICKY.
.
' DEAR POLLY - .Like Irma my daughter had trouble with
cats walking on the hood of her car. She crushed moth balls to a
powder and then shook them all over the top and hoi:&gt;d of the car.
There were no more cat marks. - IRENI': .
DEAR POLLY - and Irma - My father-in-law very neatly
solved the problem of cats walking on his. car. He placed
aluminwn pie pans, face down, on the hood and windshield of his
Pickup truck. When a cat hit the pans the noise scared him away
and after a few tries left for good. Pans also could be put on the
top and ba ck if needed. - MRS. D.R .
DEAR POLLY - Do tell Irma that to keep cats off my car I
opened two sheel.s of newspaper and fastened one end of each
sheet under a windshield wiper and they also covered the hood
and were kept in motiOn by the wind . This w;sldone for about a
week and I have hatl no more cat tracks. - MARIE .
DEAR POLLY - My husband's feet acquired an odor that
. sprays did not help. Now I sprinkle baking soda in his shoes and it
works like a charm. - MARY P ,
·
DEAR POLLY - When I buy chickens at the store or even
when I dress them myself I cut up the chickens, place the unwrapped pieces on a cooky she!l-1 so the pieces are not touching
each other and put the sheet in the deep freeze for two or three
hours_. Then the chicken pieces are taken out and put in a plastic
con tamer and returned to the freezer . When unexpected com. pany ~omes or I forget to remove meat from the freezer until
mealhme I have no problem but jsut remove the chicken from
the freezer. The pieces usually come apart quire easily. Put in
water for IQ to 15 minutes and they are ready for cooking BER~IGE .
.
.

Who 's
Who
Among
American High Sc hool
Sludents the second straight
year.
Ingrid, the daughter of • Mrs. Dianne Hawle y, 102
Wolfe DrJve, Pomeroy, Is
acti\'e In Candystrlpers 1 4·H,
School Yearbook Co-Editor,
marching and conce rt
bands, Trinity Church, wa s
an
American
Legion
Scholarship winner and was
1973 Meigs County Junior
Fair Queen. She plans to
attend Capital University
lhlo fall

BOYS AND GIRLS
SUM.MER

WEAR
Shorts
Sleeveless Tops
Shorts Sets

NEW AWARDS - Winners of new awards given for flower shows at the Meigs C&lt;Junty Fair
for the first time this year were Mrs. Joe (Janet) Bolin, Rutland, left, and Jayne Lee Hoeflich,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Bolin received a special rosette and ah addiitonal premium for her
arrangement in the category of "Scrapbook Pages" having been selected " best of show" and
Jayne Lee received a rosette and an additional cash premium for being the "Junior Gardener"
of the show compiling the most points in the junior division of the show. Presenting the awards
on the right is ~s. James Parker, Carpeqter, chairwoman of the county fair flower shows. The
winner of a third similar award for the most points compiled by a senior gardener in the
1specimen classes wa~}dr.s. Homer Holter, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, who was not present.

TICKETS ON SALE

New Me Club has meet

is listed
Miss Sheila Tucker, a senior
at Kyger Creek High School
has been notified that she will
be listed in the 1973-74 edition of
" Who 's Who Am ong Ame.rican
High School Students."
The daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Tucker, Roush Lane
Cheshire, she 1has participBted
in s tuden t coun cil, keyettes,
pep club, distri~t- sc hola rship
ream and the yea rbook staff .
Following graduati on , · Miss
Tucker plans to obtain a job in
the secretarial field .

Recent meetings pf the New
Me Club were held at the home
of Mrs. Ruth Putman with
Connie Putman and Cheryl
Mowbry being named queens
for having the greatest weight

Joss.
At one of the. meetings the
birthday of Linda Well was
celebrated with gifts being
presented to her by the
members . A butterfly cake
baked by Marlene Putman was
served . with homemade ice
cream, and punch to those
named and Evelyn Well ,
Georgia Smith, Eileen Martin
.
'
Pam Hoffman and Glenda
Hunt.
At another meeting it w~s
repor~d that a planter had
been sent to Georgia Smith
during her hospitalization. She
is now recuperating at home
and members sighed a card.
The birlhday of Ruth Putman
was observed with gifts being
given her by the ll)embers and

a decorated cake made by
Marlene Putman being served
with a Jello salad.
Membership in the group is
invited arid those interested in
joining_may ca ii37S-6371 or 6673396 for information .

MEIGS INN

POMEROY, 0.

r=::::::=:s

•,
•,

ON YOUR
TO

BACK .

SCHOOL

SHOES
WITH

FOR·

·THIS COUPON

He also ordered the swte's 19
mine

ir~ ~mcctors

tv

take

United Mine Workers Safety
Commiltt"C members .along on
every mine safety tour.
'''l11e employt.·~ should be

the miner's lives al stake,'' he
said.

At :1 mecling or lnspt,'Ctor&amp;.
earli&lt;:r this week , Shump also
told them not lo consider the
cost ()f eorructi vc measures .
''The qucstioo or expense is not
your concern," sald Shu_mp.

[$
"'
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Vietnam policy wholly insane

WASHINGTON fUPII Treasury Secretary William E,
this fall at /{IO Gr&lt;:~nde College.
Simon said today "the insane
Plannin~
to
major
in.
fiscal policy of guns and butoor
elementary education , she is a
dur-ing the Vietnam War" was
~raduate of Eas tern Hi gh
largely to blame lor the
School.
nation's current inflationary
problems .
Simon sc.id that while
perhaps
15 per cent of the -InThe state insec t uf PennSyi Vilnia is the fin~ ny .
flation that has occurred since

PLASTIC
RULERS

Denim Look

ALADDIN
WORTHALL
THERMOS

PRITT

3-RING BINDER

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Quart Size
53.35 Value

perty.''
After adding closing costs,
interest, tax and $SOD in miscellaneous expenses to Solomon's $22,500 buying price, she
then subtracted $1,500 in rental
income he received during the
one year for a final property
value of no more than $23,711.
Mrs. Douglass alsO said she
has received complilints from
area farm owners that
Solomon has expressed inrerest in other property near
Malabar Farm and about the
tactics he used. She said she
has infonnation that indicates
the Department sent Soiomon
to a sheriff's auction to bid on
adjoining-property rather than
using the proper state
negotiators to acquire land .
"We have our. own apparent
scandal here in Richland
C&lt;Junty which demands an
inunediate and effective investigation of potential abuse of
position by one of the adminis-.
!ration employes for personal
profll.s," she said in asking
Gov. John J . Gilligan to look
into the land deaL
Robert Tenenbaum, press
secretary for Gilligan, said the
state C&lt;Jntrolling Board apparently is satisifled with the
Department's reasons for paying the higher price and
released the money.
"If the controlling board is
satisfied, then we are," Tenenbaum said, noting ihat Gilligan
had not yet received the
request for an investigation. "I
would say, though, it's up to the
public to determine whether
this is a polltical shot or not."

. 9$

Hoeton

60 count
29c Value

1971 could be bla'lled on
devaluations of Lhe dollAr, the
bulk of the cause waa Vielnam.
"The Insane fiscal policy ol
guns and butter during the
Vietnam War, especially In the
late 196!1s, was the O'llljor
contributo r to the current
problems," Simon said at a
Senate Finance subcommittee
hearing.

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FREE
of SI.OO or more,

17 Jtwtll.

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b~ck- to...school

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EXplrtS :

BAKER FURNITURE ·
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

WITH

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Miss Breck

CEPACOL

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SPRAY
13 oz.
$1.45 V~lue·

14 oz .

$1.45 Value

BOBBY PINS

Hubbard

&amp;

METAL

6. 9$

FOOT 1LOCKERS Metal consiruclion lor rugg.,

ly
Toothpaste
up
$1.18 Value
CLOSE-v
1•...;_.;;..,.._.;;._;.._____________"1

long wear, features insidt
fray, side &amp; front handles, lock

with keys, is 31" long. Choice
colors.
·

8 oz.
HERBAL ESSENCE
SHAMPOO
$1.59 Value

'1377

2 6$
h:Jo:"T.~~--::-~~v~a~lu~"-:-;~::~CA~inte~E;x)RDER
$1 29
cassette
l
$1 39·
'2'995
CHILDREN'S ASPIRIN

n

Sinus Tablets
$2.50 Vahle

SINUTAB

,.

Fealures aulomalic recording

~~~~~------~~-----::-::11evel,
-up
remotepopcontrol

ST.RAW. . BROOM' S
$2.25 Value

ejector,
microphone.

AC adapter includes batteries
and earphone.
$45.95 Value

VINYL or CLOTH

STENO ·
PADS

GYM · BAGS
Big 16" with full
length zipper ..
Easy To Keep Clean

No.

$3.25 Value
SUMMER CLOSEOUT SPECIALS
Proctor-Silex
4 Quart Electric

J9c Value

ICE CREAM
I

MAK~

Makes

4

Aunt Jane

quarts

HAMBURGER

delicious ice crea
Electricity does all
work . American Eag

DILL PICKLE SLICES
64c Value

design .
$14.95 Value

$10.50 Value

49~ Qt.

T. ·v.
PILLOWS

TEX

'2.98 Value

69c Value

2/29~
TERAGRAN VITAMINS
100with30FREE $ n
Recjular 511.10 Value

SPORTSMAN
FELL FROM CLIFF
The Pomeroy E·R Squad was
called to Meigs County
Fairgrounds at 9:36 p .m.
Tuesday for Jimmy Harless,
11, Detroit, who fell from the
middle of the cliff landing of
. lhe race track below. He was
laken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and adllllt[&lt;,d for a
J)O.Islbie backinjliry . At 11 a.m.
Tuesday the B&lt;tU&amp;d was called
to Cheater Rd . for Firgll
Sardona who was oJ.so taken to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL

$1.98 Value

W180

RAY-0 -VAC

Wilh every pair of

MIODLEPORT, 0.

I'

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YOUR HEADQUARTERS

IICIPffR CAlENDIAL "M''

Court St.; Pomeroy · ·

~~

•••

P.AIR TUBE SOCKS ~

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE

r:orn-

possi ble safety
vinlutions , simply tx.•cause it's

«
·,·

a

I

&lt;II.

G~er's Jewelry Store

COLUMBUS (UP! )- Saying
that Richland County has an
"apparent scandal,'' . Rep .
Joan Douglass, R-Mansfield,
Wednesday called for an investigation into
land
acquisition deal involVing
Malabar Farm and an f!Uploye
. who "exploited the Ohio taxpayers" for nearly ,4,000.
Mrs. Douglass has charged
·that the curator of Malabar
Farm purchased an abutting
farm property for $22,500 and
then one year later sold the
piece to the state for $27,678.
She claimed that Curator C.J.
Solomon knew before hand that
the Department of Natural
Resources was interested in
the property.
The
Department
has
justified the higher price
because of expenses Solomon
said he incurred during the one
year, but Mrs. Douglass said
ac cording to her figures, ''the
. taxpayers are being exploited
by an employe of the state to

MANDIE ROSE OF LONG .BOITOM smiles into the mirror of an antique dresser h · h
she restored to win grand champion honors in the decorama of the annual Meigs Count Jw ~c
Fair.
y umor

j

sa f ~ty

coa l

were nul takin.c proper
prcci.luttons.

re~ardinx

Scandal
hinted

sonable expenses that come
during one year of holding pro-

Mt'ss 'T'ucke
r
.1.

(&gt;:.tnit-s

~iven the' benefll of the doubt

IUO GHANDF. Miss
Melissa J . Coleman, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs . Hi chard
Coleman, or Long Bottom, hC:I s
tx-er1 :~ ct•ept.ed for enrollment

FOR
10' VALUE

the tune of $3,967."
11
Beihg a realtor, " she said,
"I am quite fainiliar with rea-

SHEILA TIJCKER .

tht• requt.ost
rollowing a walk out last week
m Eastern Ohio by miners who
flt:Hi«•

cuntcudt·d sorntl

coal field

Ill

;~;~;;;;:;:.;.:;:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·~·=-:~:::::::::::::::::::~::::::::;:;.;:;::::::::.:·:-::::::;:;:;:~::~.::~::::::=1
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A('( 'E IYJ't: U' AT R fO

INGRID HAWLEY
IDgrld Hawl ey, a 1974
graduale of Meigs High
School, was recently notified
that she Is to he featured In
tile El~hth Annual Edition of

•

Mrs. · Clilford Rhodes, Miss
Judy Arnold, Mrs. Pat O'Brien,
Miss Patty Harris.
Mrs. Harry Watson, Mrs .
Perry Kennedy, Mrs. Elbert
Williams, Mrs. Don Mullens,
Mrs. George Ha ckett, Sr., Mrs.
Mickey Williams, Mrs. R. R.
Pickens,
Mrs .
Ronald
Williams,
Mrs . Lenville
Harmon, Mrs. Ray Wi11iatns,
Mrs. Dean Lutz, Mrs. George
Hackett, Jr., Mrs. 0 . B. Stout,
Mrs . Emmett Shuler, Mrs .
Morris Neutzling, Mrs. MyrOn
Miller , Mrs. Thomas Hennessy, Mrs. Manning Webster,
Mrs. Art Gilmore .
Mrs . Charles A. Bradbury,
Mrs. Roger Spencer, Mrs.
Cecil. Bradbury, Mrs. -Betty
Spencer, Miss Nellie Zerkle,
Mrs . J . W. Weatherby; Miss
Hallie Zerkle, Mrs. J ohn
Zerkle, Mrs . Rita Hamm, Mrs.
John Blake, Mrs. Pat Duffy,
Mrs . Glenn Lambert, Mrs. Dor
Coa tes, Mrs. Charles Gaskill,
Mrs. Lillie Dyke, Mrs . Pearl
Stanley, Mrs. Walter B. Harris,
Mrs . George Miller ; Miss
Megan Miller, Miss Mary Ann
Mille', Miss Margie Miller and
Miss Wendy Wolfe. ,

Shump

·· ut'T TO JA I' AN
WASllfNGTON rU PI J
Prc~idcnt Votd will visit J:ipan
tx·forc Lhe ('fld of 1974, making
hirn Lhe rir:,1 U. S. chief
CU'Culiw lo tn.we l to that
l'Ountry., while in offi rt', the
Whitt•
House announ ced
Wt'&lt;lnesday . Both U. S. an~
Japanese officials s)l&lt;-eulated
that the trip woul~ not be
sc heduled until after the
November congressional
ciL'&lt;' lions. TI1e visit was first
disc losed by the Japanese
Embassy .

'"

Miss Cqtherine Harris feted

••

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•

azr owers

c l8sses.

•

4

,-

I

FlASHLIGHT
With Batteries

20's
$2.95 Value

ChrOme plate4;i all steel
flashlight comes with 2
size " 0 ; .. h.eavy duty,

super cell batteries . .
U .76 Value

$ 77

'1"

~;::~!;.!:~Theragran- M STAYFREE MINI-PADS
$11.76

Value

30's

$1.18

Value

89~
,

MAXI-PADS
12's
64c Value

54~

r
\

t

�'

6- The Daily Sentillt'l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. 111Ursda)•, Aug. 15, 1974

Enforcer wanted

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Three new achievement
awards were presented at the
flower show, .. Nostal~ia,
USA", staged Wednesday at
the lllth Annual Meigs County
Fair on the Rock Springs
FairgroWJds.
The '" Best of Show" award in
the artistic arrangements
division went to Mrs. Joe Bolin,
Rutland, for h~r entry in
''Scrapbook Pages", a design
depicting yesterday and today
and displayed in a niche. The
entry was selected by the
ju-4e, Mrs. Gilbert CuJlen ,
Marietta , an accredited judge

of the- Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs, from the blue
rlbbon winners in the dh•islon.
Mrs. Homer Holter, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, a member or the
Chester Garden Club, won the
''Horticu1ture Sweeps~kes''
award, given on the basis of
nwnber of points accumulated
in tlle specimen classes : rive
for blue ribbon, three for red ,
and two for white.
Selected as the "Junior
Gardener" for the show, also
on the basis of point accumulation in all junior

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Miss Catherine Jill Harris
bride-elect of Clarence Jame~
WiiJiams ,
was
honored
recenUy with a shower given
by Mrs. Francis Biron at the
horne of Mrs . George Miller,
408 South .Fifth St., Middleport .
Centeripg the gift table was a
yellow wnbre lla covered with
white flowers and green ribbons. Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Carl
Wolfe, Mrs . Charles A.
Bradbury , Mrs .
George
Hackett, Jr., and Mrs. Dale
Walburn .

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wa s Jayn e L('e · Mrs~ J oe Bulin, Hullar1d
Zinnias, cadus flo"'ered :
Hoeflkh, Pomeroy .
Friendly Gardeners.
Jayne
Lt.'&lt;! Hoeflich.
All three were presenLc-d
".Co\'ered Bridges '' ; Mrs .
Mari~old s:
J&lt;Jyne Lee
rosettes by Mrs. J:&gt;m&lt;•s Car- Earl Thoiua, Wmdin~ l'nlil :
Hoefli
&lt;'h
.
·
penler, show c hairwoman . Mrs. F:arl Dean, Chester Club:
Plaque of seeds, seed pods
Mrs . Bolin and Mrs. Holter will . Mrs. Erwin .
and-or
drit'd materials : Brian
each receive $2.50 in premilun.s
" Nickels for the Jukebox " :
King
,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy ; Jay
wtu1 Miss HocfUch to re('cive Mrs. James Carpenter, Mrs.
Carpenter ;
J.ayn e
Lee
$1.50.
Joe Bolin, Mrs, Wilson Ca r- Hoeflich.
Ribbon winners in the pen[&lt;,r,
Jlnrtlcullure Division
Wednesday show, listed first,
" Scrapbook Pages" : Mrs .
Rose
: Hybrid Tea, red , pink
second and third , respec tively, Bolin, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
in the various divisions were ;.1s Mrs. Charles Kuhl, Rl. 3, or blends : Mrs. Homer Holter,
Mrs . Richard Barton, Chester
follows :
Pomeroy.
Garden
Club, no third .
Artistic Arrangements
" Arhong My Souvenirs":
Rose, Hybrid Tea, yellow, ·
"Rwnbleseal
Romunce" : Mrs . Wilson Carpenter, Mrs.
or blends : Mrs. Barton;
orarige
Mrs. Robert Lewis , Winding Purley Karr 1 Chester Garden
Mrs . Robert Thompson,
Trail Garden 'Club ; Mr s . Club; Mrs . Erwin .
Wi'nding Trail Garden Club, no
Leonard Erwin, Chester
"' Happy Days Are Here third .
Garden Club; Mrs. Wilson Again '' : Mrs. Linda L. Wilson,
Gladiolus : Mrs. Charles
Carpenter, Bend 0' the River Route 1. Reedsville ; Mrs .
Kuhl,
Rt . 3, Pomeroy, all three
Garden Club.
Maxine Hart, Walk-in Garden places .
" Home Cooking and Mom 's Club ; no third.
Gladiolus: (collection of
Apple Pie ": Mrs . William
Junior Division .
three ), Mrs. Homer Holter:
Willford, Rutland Friendly
· 'Summe·r Vacation s", an
Zinnia, dahJia flowered:
Gardeners; · Mrs . James artistic arrange ment: Jayne
Carpenter, Rutland Friendly Lee Hoeflich, Pomeroy ; Jay. Mrs . Homer Holter, Mrs .
Gardeners ; Mrs . Wil son Carpenter, Reedsvill e, R.D .: Dean, Mrs . Purley Karr .
Zinnia, cactus flowers: Mrs.
Carpenter.
and Sue Ellen Fry, Pomeroy.
Purley
Karr, Mrs . Homer
" Bicycles Built for Two":
Horticulture Zinnias Holter.
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon, Wildwood dahlia flowered : Tammie · L:
Dahlia, decorative type :
Garden Club; Mrs . Erwin, Starcher, Rt. 1, Minersville .
Mrs . Holter, Mrs. Rose Gin-

· JUDG~G - Exhibitors in the first flower show of the
Meigs County Senior Fair with second show.schedulOd for
Friday were able to Jearn where they had gone wrong in their
arrangements Wednesday as Mrs. Gilbert Cullen, Marietta,
an accredited Ohio Assn . of Garden Clubs judge, moved
through the entries of the entire show with a microphone
pointing out the good and bad points of the entries. With Mrs .
Cullen is Mrs. James Carpenter, serving for the first time as
chairwoman of the county 'f air flower shows.

An arrarigement of ye llow
mums, carnationS:, Paby's
breath and fern flanked by
yellow tapers cen.[&lt;,red the
refr es hment table. Sandwi c hes, ca ke, mint s, nuts,
PW1Ch and coffee were served.
The guest li st included Mrs .
fl oyd Williams, Mrs . Clyde
fisher , Mrs. Clifford Kennedy,
Mrs. Dale Walburn, Mrs . Guy
Re y nolds,
Mr s.
James
Souders,
Mrs . · Ri c hud
Hovatter, Mrs. E. 0. Rail, Mrs .
Don Frymyer, Mrs. James
Arnold , Mrs. Ruth Hawkins,

a

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4-H winners announced

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Twenty-four winners were
announced in the 4-H interview
judging Tuesday afternoon at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Winners in the· various
projects and their respective
clubs were INSECTS - Keith
Jordan, Mixed-Up Hotshots
grana champion; FISHING _:_
Dennis
Thornton,
Irish
Leprechauns.
. PHOrOGRAPHY - Ray
Werry, Chester Farm Boys,
grand
champion,
June
Wamsley, Pomeroy_I.Jvewires,
reserve champion; ELECTRICITY Billy Dyer
Hlllblllies, grand, Gary Hutton:
Mixed-Up Hotshots, reserve ;
BICYCLE - Tommy Pullins,
Five Point Bucks, grand,
Denni.s
Thornton,
Irish
LeprechaunS, reserve ·
WOODWORKING - Randy
Kennedy, Harrisonville BOys
Honor Club, grand; Gary
Nelson, Chesler Farm Boys,

reserve.
TRACTQR :_ David Riggs,
Harrisonville Boys Honor
Club; CAR - Lester Jeffers,
Mixed-Up Hotshots, gra nd ;
Snowville 4-H Club, reserve i
WELDING - Brian Jordan,
Mixed-Up Hotshots, grand·,
Lester Jeffers , Mixed-Up
Hotshots, reserve; ROPE Roger Wamsley , Leading
Creek Crickets, grand, Keith
Bentz, Five POirit Bucks ,
reserve ; SMALL ENGINE
POWER :_ Rodney Keller,
Chester Farm· Boys, grand,
Bryan Gheen, Harrisonville
Boys Honor Club, reserve ;
VEGETABLE GARDENING
- Randy Keller, Chester farm
Boys, grand, Tim Wyant ,
Snowvllle, reserve ; CROPS Steve Stout, Snowville, grand,
Ralph J ordan, Mixed-Up
Hotshots, re,serve ; FLOWER
GARDENING
Renee
Trussell, Bashan Bunch .

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A GREAT TIME FOR THE GOOD TIME

Caravelleeby Bulova

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U1cr , Chester Gi.lrden Club.
Dahlia~ ce:tclus type : Mrs.
Purley Karr .
Marigolds : Mrs . Purley
Karr, Mrs. Homer HoJter, Mrs .
Dean.
Illy : Mrs . Ri chard Barton,
Mrs. Robert Thompson, Mrs. ·
Barton.
Potted Plant, foliage type :

Mrs . Charles Kohl, first and
second. and Mrs . James
Carpenter, third.
A£rican
Violets : Mrs.
Richard Barton, Unda Wilson,

Morgan, Mrs. Robert Thompson, Mrs. James Carpenter.
In Lhe educallonal exhibit
showing methods of preserviqg
or treating plant material lor
U$e in a decorative or practical
manner the winners were Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter, ' first; Mrs.
James Carpenter, seco11d, and
Mrs. Robert Lewis, third.

Mrs. Barton,

Perennial Flowers : Mrs.
Pur ley Karr, Mrs. Ginther,
Mrs . Barton .
Terrariums: Mrs . RQger

S~•lc
COLUMBUS I UPI)
Industrial Helntions Clu f
Joseph Shump has asked Ohio
Attorney Genera l William .J.
Brown to assign one of Ins
asslsta'nts
'to prosecute
violations found in the state's
coal fields.

"The coal com~anies t~rc
dire ctly

responsible
ror
providing u safe place· to
work, " said Shumo.

.Give the gift he or she will appreciate most. Keep
them on lime in the finest fashion with a precision
Jeweled, qualitv-made Caravella watch .
See our great selection of gilt watches. We have the
newest styles, the latest features. Caravella by
Bulova. Expensive watches at lnexpens.ive prices.
Gents from ~14.95 ·
Lad. From, '15.95

i'

"

E

DEAR POL,LY - While applying bright rose nail polish 1

dr~pped the bottle and was left with an eight-inch trail of rose

poltsh down one front leg of my new white crimp pants. The
cleaners say they cannot Terhove it. I do not want to fool with
'.'~uess " reme~es. I hope someone has a solution from a similar
m1shap.· Please come forward if you haVe a magic formula I ·
would be so grateful. - SlllRLEY.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with sun glasses that fit
over regular g lasses. I wish they could be obtained in the popular
shapes and colors but s tiH with resistance' to the sun's glare _
MICKY.
.
' DEAR POLLY - .Like Irma my daughter had trouble with
cats walking on the hood of her car. She crushed moth balls to a
powder and then shook them all over the top and hoi:&gt;d of the car.
There were no more cat marks. - IRENI': .
DEAR POLLY - and Irma - My father-in-law very neatly
solved the problem of cats walking on his. car. He placed
aluminwn pie pans, face down, on the hood and windshield of his
Pickup truck. When a cat hit the pans the noise scared him away
and after a few tries left for good. Pans also could be put on the
top and ba ck if needed. - MRS. D.R .
DEAR POLLY - Do tell Irma that to keep cats off my car I
opened two sheel.s of newspaper and fastened one end of each
sheet under a windshield wiper and they also covered the hood
and were kept in motiOn by the wind . This w;sldone for about a
week and I have hatl no more cat tracks. - MARIE .
DEAR POLLY - My husband's feet acquired an odor that
. sprays did not help. Now I sprinkle baking soda in his shoes and it
works like a charm. - MARY P ,
·
DEAR POLLY - When I buy chickens at the store or even
when I dress them myself I cut up the chickens, place the unwrapped pieces on a cooky she!l-1 so the pieces are not touching
each other and put the sheet in the deep freeze for two or three
hours_. Then the chicken pieces are taken out and put in a plastic
con tamer and returned to the freezer . When unexpected com. pany ~omes or I forget to remove meat from the freezer until
mealhme I have no problem but jsut remove the chicken from
the freezer. The pieces usually come apart quire easily. Put in
water for IQ to 15 minutes and they are ready for cooking BER~IGE .
.
.

Who 's
Who
Among
American High Sc hool
Sludents the second straight
year.
Ingrid, the daughter of • Mrs. Dianne Hawle y, 102
Wolfe DrJve, Pomeroy, Is
acti\'e In Candystrlpers 1 4·H,
School Yearbook Co-Editor,
marching and conce rt
bands, Trinity Church, wa s
an
American
Legion
Scholarship winner and was
1973 Meigs County Junior
Fair Queen. She plans to
attend Capital University
lhlo fall

BOYS AND GIRLS
SUM.MER

WEAR
Shorts
Sleeveless Tops
Shorts Sets

NEW AWARDS - Winners of new awards given for flower shows at the Meigs C&lt;Junty Fair
for the first time this year were Mrs. Joe (Janet) Bolin, Rutland, left, and Jayne Lee Hoeflich,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Bolin received a special rosette and ah addiitonal premium for her
arrangement in the category of "Scrapbook Pages" having been selected " best of show" and
Jayne Lee received a rosette and an additional cash premium for being the "Junior Gardener"
of the show compiling the most points in the junior division of the show. Presenting the awards
on the right is ~s. James Parker, Carpeqter, chairwoman of the county fair flower shows. The
winner of a third similar award for the most points compiled by a senior gardener in the
1specimen classes wa~}dr.s. Homer Holter, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, who was not present.

TICKETS ON SALE

New Me Club has meet

is listed
Miss Sheila Tucker, a senior
at Kyger Creek High School
has been notified that she will
be listed in the 1973-74 edition of
" Who 's Who Am ong Ame.rican
High School Students."
The daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Tucker, Roush Lane
Cheshire, she 1has participBted
in s tuden t coun cil, keyettes,
pep club, distri~t- sc hola rship
ream and the yea rbook staff .
Following graduati on , · Miss
Tucker plans to obtain a job in
the secretarial field .

Recent meetings pf the New
Me Club were held at the home
of Mrs. Ruth Putman with
Connie Putman and Cheryl
Mowbry being named queens
for having the greatest weight

Joss.
At one of the. meetings the
birthday of Linda Well was
celebrated with gifts being
presented to her by the
members . A butterfly cake
baked by Marlene Putman was
served . with homemade ice
cream, and punch to those
named and Evelyn Well ,
Georgia Smith, Eileen Martin
.
'
Pam Hoffman and Glenda
Hunt.
At another meeting it w~s
repor~d that a planter had
been sent to Georgia Smith
during her hospitalization. She
is now recuperating at home
and members sighed a card.
The birlhday of Ruth Putman
was observed with gifts being
given her by the ll)embers and

a decorated cake made by
Marlene Putman being served
with a Jello salad.
Membership in the group is
invited arid those interested in
joining_may ca ii37S-6371 or 6673396 for information .

MEIGS INN

POMEROY, 0.

r=::::::=:s

•,
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ON YOUR
TO

BACK .

SCHOOL

SHOES
WITH

FOR·

·THIS COUPON

He also ordered the swte's 19
mine

ir~ ~mcctors

tv

take

United Mine Workers Safety
Commiltt"C members .along on
every mine safety tour.
'''l11e employt.·~ should be

the miner's lives al stake,'' he
said.

At :1 mecling or lnspt,'Ctor&amp;.
earli&lt;:r this week , Shump also
told them not lo consider the
cost ()f eorructi vc measures .
''The qucstioo or expense is not
your concern," sald Shu_mp.

[$
"'
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Vietnam policy wholly insane

WASHINGTON fUPII Treasury Secretary William E,
this fall at /{IO Gr&lt;:~nde College.
Simon said today "the insane
Plannin~
to
major
in.
fiscal policy of guns and butoor
elementary education , she is a
dur-ing the Vietnam War" was
~raduate of Eas tern Hi gh
largely to blame lor the
School.
nation's current inflationary
problems .
Simon sc.id that while
perhaps
15 per cent of the -InThe state insec t uf PennSyi Vilnia is the fin~ ny .
flation that has occurred since

PLASTIC
RULERS

Denim Look

ALADDIN
WORTHALL
THERMOS

PRITT

3-RING BINDER

GWE STICK
llh"

Capacity

I

$2.25

0.22 oz.

BOmE

Reg . 79c

Quart Size
53.35 Value

perty.''
After adding closing costs,
interest, tax and $SOD in miscellaneous expenses to Solomon's $22,500 buying price, she
then subtracted $1,500 in rental
income he received during the
one year for a final property
value of no more than $23,711.
Mrs. Douglass alsO said she
has received complilints from
area farm owners that
Solomon has expressed inrerest in other property near
Malabar Farm and about the
tactics he used. She said she
has infonnation that indicates
the Department sent Soiomon
to a sheriff's auction to bid on
adjoining-property rather than
using the proper state
negotiators to acquire land .
"We have our. own apparent
scandal here in Richland
C&lt;Junty which demands an
inunediate and effective investigation of potential abuse of
position by one of the adminis-.
!ration employes for personal
profll.s," she said in asking
Gov. John J . Gilligan to look
into the land deaL
Robert Tenenbaum, press
secretary for Gilligan, said the
state C&lt;Jntrolling Board apparently is satisifled with the
Department's reasons for paying the higher price and
released the money.
"If the controlling board is
satisfied, then we are," Tenenbaum said, noting ihat Gilligan
had not yet received the
request for an investigation. "I
would say, though, it's up to the
public to determine whether
this is a polltical shot or not."

. 9$

Hoeton

60 count
29c Value

1971 could be bla'lled on
devaluations of Lhe dollAr, the
bulk of the cause waa Vielnam.
"The Insane fiscal policy ol
guns and butter during the
Vietnam War, especially In the
late 196!1s, was the O'llljor
contributo r to the current
problems," Simon said at a
Senate Finance subcommittee
hearing.

~~.~j) ~

FREE
of SI.OO or more,

17 Jtwtll.

~tO!IIItlc.

b~ck- to...school

shoes.

V~luts

Good AI ' horii•Rt houso

EXplrtS :

BAKER FURNITURE ·
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

WITH

heritage house
Your Thom MeAn Store

.

Miss Breck

CEPACOL

HAik
SPRAY
13 oz.
$1.45 V~lue·

14 oz .

$1.45 Value

BOBBY PINS

Hubbard

&amp;

METAL

6. 9$

FOOT 1LOCKERS Metal consiruclion lor rugg.,

ly
Toothpaste
up
$1.18 Value
CLOSE-v
1•...;_.;;..,.._.;;._;.._____________"1

long wear, features insidt
fray, side &amp; front handles, lock

with keys, is 31" long. Choice
colors.
·

8 oz.
HERBAL ESSENCE
SHAMPOO
$1.59 Value

'1377

2 6$
h:Jo:"T.~~--::-~~v~a~lu~"-:-;~::~CA~inte~E;x)RDER
$1 29
cassette
l
$1 39·
'2'995
CHILDREN'S ASPIRIN

n

Sinus Tablets
$2.50 Vahle

SINUTAB

,.

Fealures aulomalic recording

~~~~~------~~-----::-::11evel,
-up
remotepopcontrol

ST.RAW. . BROOM' S
$2.25 Value

ejector,
microphone.

AC adapter includes batteries
and earphone.
$45.95 Value

VINYL or CLOTH

STENO ·
PADS

GYM · BAGS
Big 16" with full
length zipper ..
Easy To Keep Clean

No.

$3.25 Value
SUMMER CLOSEOUT SPECIALS
Proctor-Silex
4 Quart Electric

J9c Value

ICE CREAM
I

MAK~

Makes

4

Aunt Jane

quarts

HAMBURGER

delicious ice crea
Electricity does all
work . American Eag

DILL PICKLE SLICES
64c Value

design .
$14.95 Value

$10.50 Value

49~ Qt.

T. ·v.
PILLOWS

TEX

'2.98 Value

69c Value

2/29~
TERAGRAN VITAMINS
100with30FREE $ n
Recjular 511.10 Value

SPORTSMAN
FELL FROM CLIFF
The Pomeroy E·R Squad was
called to Meigs County
Fairgrounds at 9:36 p .m.
Tuesday for Jimmy Harless,
11, Detroit, who fell from the
middle of the cliff landing of
. lhe race track below. He was
laken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and adllllt[&lt;,d for a
J)O.Islbie backinjliry . At 11 a.m.
Tuesday the B&lt;tU&amp;d was called
to Cheater Rd . for Firgll
Sardona who was oJ.so taken to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL

$1.98 Value

W180

RAY-0 -VAC

Wilh every pair of

MIODLEPORT, 0.

I'

•

YOUR HEADQUARTERS

IICIPffR CAlENDIAL "M''

Court St.; Pomeroy · ·

~~

•••

P.AIR TUBE SOCKS ~

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE

r:orn-

possi ble safety
vinlutions , simply tx.•cause it's

«
·,·

a

I

&lt;II.

G~er's Jewelry Store

COLUMBUS (UP! )- Saying
that Richland County has an
"apparent scandal,'' . Rep .
Joan Douglass, R-Mansfield,
Wednesday called for an investigation into
land
acquisition deal involVing
Malabar Farm and an f!Uploye
. who "exploited the Ohio taxpayers" for nearly ,4,000.
Mrs. Douglass has charged
·that the curator of Malabar
Farm purchased an abutting
farm property for $22,500 and
then one year later sold the
piece to the state for $27,678.
She claimed that Curator C.J.
Solomon knew before hand that
the Department of Natural
Resources was interested in
the property.
The
Department
has
justified the higher price
because of expenses Solomon
said he incurred during the one
year, but Mrs. Douglass said
ac cording to her figures, ''the
. taxpayers are being exploited
by an employe of the state to

MANDIE ROSE OF LONG .BOITOM smiles into the mirror of an antique dresser h · h
she restored to win grand champion honors in the decorama of the annual Meigs Count Jw ~c
Fair.
y umor

j

sa f ~ty

coa l

were nul takin.c proper
prcci.luttons.

re~ardinx

Scandal
hinted

sonable expenses that come
during one year of holding pro-

Mt'ss 'T'ucke
r
.1.

(&gt;:.tnit-s

~iven the' benefll of the doubt

IUO GHANDF. Miss
Melissa J . Coleman, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs . Hi chard
Coleman, or Long Bottom, hC:I s
tx-er1 :~ ct•ept.ed for enrollment

FOR
10' VALUE

the tune of $3,967."
11
Beihg a realtor, " she said,
"I am quite fainiliar with rea-

SHEILA TIJCKER .

tht• requt.ost
rollowing a walk out last week
m Eastern Ohio by miners who
flt:Hi«•

cuntcudt·d sorntl

coal field

Ill

;~;~;;;;:;:.;.:;:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·~·=-:~:::::::::::::::::::~::::::::;:;.;:;::::::::.:·:-::::::;:;:;:~::~.::~::::::=1
.
•

A('( 'E IYJ't: U' AT R fO

INGRID HAWLEY
IDgrld Hawl ey, a 1974
graduale of Meigs High
School, was recently notified
that she Is to he featured In
tile El~hth Annual Edition of

•

Mrs. · Clilford Rhodes, Miss
Judy Arnold, Mrs. Pat O'Brien,
Miss Patty Harris.
Mrs. Harry Watson, Mrs .
Perry Kennedy, Mrs. Elbert
Williams, Mrs. Don Mullens,
Mrs. George Ha ckett, Sr., Mrs.
Mickey Williams, Mrs. R. R.
Pickens,
Mrs .
Ronald
Williams,
Mrs . Lenville
Harmon, Mrs. Ray Wi11iatns,
Mrs. Dean Lutz, Mrs. George
Hackett, Jr., Mrs. 0 . B. Stout,
Mrs . Emmett Shuler, Mrs .
Morris Neutzling, Mrs. MyrOn
Miller , Mrs. Thomas Hennessy, Mrs. Manning Webster,
Mrs. Art Gilmore .
Mrs . Charles A. Bradbury,
Mrs. Roger Spencer, Mrs.
Cecil. Bradbury, Mrs. -Betty
Spencer, Miss Nellie Zerkle,
Mrs . J . W. Weatherby; Miss
Hallie Zerkle, Mrs. J ohn
Zerkle, Mrs . Rita Hamm, Mrs.
John Blake, Mrs. Pat Duffy,
Mrs . Glenn Lambert, Mrs. Dor
Coa tes, Mrs. Charles Gaskill,
Mrs. Lillie Dyke, Mrs . Pearl
Stanley, Mrs. Walter B. Harris,
Mrs . George Miller ; Miss
Megan Miller, Miss Mary Ann
Mille', Miss Margie Miller and
Miss Wendy Wolfe. ,

Shump

·· ut'T TO JA I' AN
WASllfNGTON rU PI J
Prc~idcnt Votd will visit J:ipan
tx·forc Lhe ('fld of 1974, making
hirn Lhe rir:,1 U. S. chief
CU'Culiw lo tn.we l to that
l'Ountry., while in offi rt', the
Whitt•
House announ ced
Wt'&lt;lnesday . Both U. S. an~
Japanese officials s)l&lt;-eulated
that the trip woul~ not be
sc heduled until after the
November congressional
ciL'&lt;' lions. TI1e visit was first
disc losed by the Japanese
Embassy .

'"

Miss Cqtherine Harris feted

••

•
•
•

azr owers

c l8sses.

•

4

,-

I

FlASHLIGHT
With Batteries

20's
$2.95 Value

ChrOme plate4;i all steel
flashlight comes with 2
size " 0 ; .. h.eavy duty,

super cell batteries . .
U .76 Value

$ 77

'1"

~;::~!;.!:~Theragran- M STAYFREE MINI-PADS
$11.76

Value

30's

$1.18

Value

89~
,

MAXI-PADS
12's
64c Value

54~

r
\

t

�•

9 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. t~. t974

8 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Aug. 1~. 1974

--------------------------~
Loll&lt;n o1 optaloo "" wtlromed. They should bo lou
I

•

f

be subj.rl to rt'duciJoo by lllo

I1 Namu
fdllort aad must
~-lth
odd.-....
I
may b• wlthh•ld upon publlration. How•ver, .,.
I
be slgnt'd

1
I

- II

•

••
••

I

tnt•. addresliog i••urs. not ptrsonauu...

0

Al~..t~~~···~~ uuwr,:

.

••

II

is

due

Pomeroy, Ohio
August 13, 1974

•
•

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dedicated, consciencious, and progressive men which were

••

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•
••
•
••

-.
-

~

..
~

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~~
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•~

MARTA GUILKEY, HOME ECX&gt;NOMIST for the Meigs
County Extension Service, is pictured with the three
achievement aw!V'd winners after they reeeived their award
Wednesday night during jr. fair night activities. Left to right
are Miss Guilkey, Barbara Jordan, jr. fair queen and 4-H

Brocalsa Chemical Salt Works thriv~d in Syracuse
ABOVE IS AN ARTIST'S CONCEPTION OF Brocalsa
Chemical Salt Works Co. when it was a thriving business in the
village of Syracuse many years ago. The drawing was submitted
by Glen Cundiff who owns P'!rt of the ground where the plant
once stood in upper Syracuse. Bob Louks owns a trailer ·t'Ourt on
a portion of the property where the mining of salt onc.e look

place .
The late E. H. Holmes was general plant manager and
president of the company. Cliff WiUiarns was superintendent of
the ptant.
The site for the plant was purchasect from Mr. and Mrs. W. D.
Roush on Feb. 24, 1919. Brocalsa oold the plant March 8, 1927, to

r-------------------------i

IWashington !
Report Miller
Ciarence
,

I
I

·

·

DR. LAMB

I
I

By

I,

Gimick diets will never die

1

By Lawrenee E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR OR. LAMB
Recently in-- our paper there
was an article about a new
vitamin E plus C diet which
was supposed to give fast
weight loss. Reading the ar· .
ticle convinced me that it was
another scheme to defrauct
gullible fat p•ople who were so
eager to reduce that they were
willing to try anything. I am
enclosing this article, and I
hope you will comment on · it,
either pro or con, accordiilg to
its merits .
DEAR READER- I can't
find much fault in your impression. These ads are now
sweeping the COlllltry, listed as

•

a "new vitamin E discovery' '
or the E plus C diet. The list of
foods in the diet shows that it is
another low-carbohydrate diet
of the same type used by Dr.
Atkins or earlier by Dr . Taller
in "Calories Don't Count. " Dr.
Taller ran into legal problems
with his diet, and Atkins diet
has been bri;Inded by
knowledgeable and leading
nutritionists in the COlllltry as
unscientific and dang 0rous.
Such diets work because the
person eats fewer calOries.
Many high protein foods, Ie·an
steak for example, contain a lot
of water. Lean raw rolllld steak
is 70 per cent water and a
pOUlld has only 600 calories.
These diets· also cause the
body to lose too much salt
through the kidneys. Your bOdy
is more than 50 per cent water
normally (your lean muscles
are also 70 percent water), and
· when you lose salt, water goes
with it. The loss of too much
salt and water leads to fatigue,
fainting and a chemical
disturbance of the body. You
can recover from this by adding carbohydrates in a normal amollllt to your diet and
then regain your normal
annount of salt. and water.
The vitamins in the so-called
E and C diet do not do a thing to

m mcome tax by Rh0 d. es

a

REMODELING?

body would not use that many
calories a day so you can't lose
a pound ofFAT a day with any
of these diets. The misleading
statement is "a· pound a day,"
but the question is A POUND
OF WHAT? You have to be

1

1

•

' to a lack of coal needed to stay
the Salt Products Refining Co. due
in operation and continuous strikes. The business mined salt and
oold by-products.
Employees of the company who are still living Include Mrs.
Dorothy Roller; Middleport, bookkeeper; Mrs. Edward Foster,
Pomeroy, addresoograph operator ; and Mrs. Mildred Shorn
Cotterill, file clerk .

IT'S

TIME

FOR CANVAS OXFORDS
"WHY

Grand Rapids, Mich. in 1942,
and divorced in 1947 when she
was 29. She married Ford the
following year. Warren said
little about Mrs. Ford other
Ulan "she's a nice person ."
He was slightly irritated at a
recent quote attributed to Mrs.
Ford that she had no idea
where he was.
"I know Jerry Ford," he
said. "We 're still gOOd friends." But asked if he sent'
congratulations on Ford 's
inauguration, Warreri said,
"Well, we 're n,ot that good
friends ."

PAYA
FORTUNE?"

THE SHOE BOX
Our Shoes are Sti II Sensibly Priced
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Your Headquarters
36 2 os3
1

FRIDAY, AUGUST 16 .

ooi

RACINE VILLAGE
/ VILLAGE CLERK
. RA &lt;iJ NE, O_H _IO 45771

8: 00 A.M.- Weigh Steers, Lambs, and
Swine for sale
9:00 A.M.-4-H Nutr ition- Show
4- H Girts' Demonstrations

.•

12:00 Noon4· H Nutrition
Contesr
.
.
.
'

x-2: 00 P.M.- Pony Harness Races

Ul ........ ~ ........ , • .,• • ~ ......... 3698.00

2:00-4:00 P.M.- 4· H Demonstrations
" Best of Day "

Ill ........ - . . ............... ....

-

5:00 P.M.:.... Twilight Horse Harness Racing
8: 15 P.M.-Junior Fair Market , Steer,
Lamb and Pig Sale
8:30 P.M.- Horse Pulling Contest

992-2709
MIDDLEPORT

x- Grandstand Attractions

.r

• - - - - - - •••:....... 1141.oQ
.................. , •.,.: .......... 1,67.00

....,._ ........ ___ ......... .,... .....
-..

.................
--.-................
' '

'

.

I,

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TIIE ROCK SPRINGS Lady Bugs took -first pla~e in the parade with their floa t entry.
Second place float was by the Harrisonville Boys and Girls.

~

. '

~·
~---···

~-

,...

thty

work

gently

to

l'ltlp

Y&lt;!.u lOP

w••••·bioat.AOUATAUS - o wmr
pill.. that works - $3.00.
1nd sold by :

e STEREO

Both

GYarantMd

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharm.1cy,

E. Ma in, Pomeroy &amp;
Dutton Drug Store, Mid ·
dleporl . Mail Orders Filled .
~ Adv .

.MASON FURNITURE

112

Ea sy Terms!
Free Delivery!

HERMAN GRATE
MASON , W. VA .

771-5592

-

•

THURS., FRI., SAT. &amp; SUN •

ON ANY

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992:2955
Friendly ·service
112 E. MAl N
POME;R~O~Y;_,

WASHINGTON - A contract
for initial development of the
Ohio River Leith Run Public
Access site on the Wayne
National Forest was awarded
Wednesday.
Co ng r essman Clarence
Mi11er said the contract was
awarded to the D. V. Weber
Construction Company of
Reedsville, Meigs County. The
initial work consists iJf con- ·
struction of the underwater
portion of the boat laUllching
ramp and shaping and grading
of a portion .of the .future embayment.
Construction for this portion
of the development amounts to
$34,987.50.
The Leith Run project is a
public access recreation area
being developed by the U. S.
Forest Sen'ice adjacent to the
pool to be created by the
Willow Island Lock and Darn
navigation project on the Ohio
River. When fully developed,
the National Forest r.:eCreation
area Wil1 provide a boat ramp,
a parking area for cars with
boat trailers and 35 picnic

.

PRINCESS HONORED
LONDON (UPI) - Queen
Elizabeth II today awarded her
daughter Princess Anne a 24th
birthday medal for "calm and
brave" behavior dUring a
shooting attempt to kidnap her
five nionths ago.
The Queen made Anne a
Dame Grand Cross of the
Royal Victorian Order in
recognition · of her conduct
during the March ZQ incident in
the
Mall
leading
to
Buckingham Palace.
Anne's husband, Capt. Mark
THE STAR JUNIOR Grange No. 878 of Dexter won first place among the walking groups
Phillips,
25, was made a
participating in the junior fair patade. They were attired in maroon and gold costumes. Second
Commander of the Order.
place was taken by the Five Point Bucks 4-H Club.
Rowena Brassey, Anne's lady
· ·in waiting who was in the royal
car, became a member of the
order, fourth class.
Ian Ball, a 2&amp;-year-old Lon·
doner, was conunitted to a
mental institution for · the
single-handed attempt to
Grant
Johnson.
kidnap Anne for ransom. F&lt;&gt;ur
Awards presented during Jr. Rabbits - Best Showman,
High · Point Girls 4-H, persons were shot and
Fair night Wednesday were: Patty Parker ; Best of Show.
Horses - Presenied · by Nick Leonard; Poultry, Besi presented by Becky Will , wounded including Anne's
Farm Bureau, after U.e 4-H Showman, F1oyd Holliday, and sponsored by the A&amp;P, to personal bodyguard, Police
· Horse Show at noon, Grand Best of Show, Ronnie Wood, by Barbara Jordan.
lnspeetor James Beaton.
the
Farm
Bureau.
Champion, Tony Kennedy;
Beef Showmanship and
Reserve Champion, Robin
Ritchie (both to State Fair); Judging, Grand Champion
Outstanding 4-H Club mem- Steer, . Roger Gaul; Reserve
bers, Pam Nottingham and Champion Steer, Becky
Windon; Grand Champion
Andy Pocklington .
Rabblt and Poultry Show: Showmanship, Mandie Rose;
Reserve
C hampion
Showmanship, Becky Windon,
by the Farm Bureau,
Grand Champ(ons qf Style
ANDY TO TEsTIFY
Review,
Nancy Ridneour,
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~dy Granatelli, the television School Clothes; Betsy Amsspokesman for the STP Corp., bary, lounging clothes; Mary
has been ordered by a federal Mora, sports clothes; Barbara
judge to testify before. inves- Douglas, dress-up; . Mandie
tigators Of the Federal Trade Rose, formal; Ingrid Hawley,
coats and jackets, and Barbara
Commission.
.
The FTc . ts looking into Coates; clothing complements;
w-h ether the company is all trophies, by Farm Bureau.
Food and Nutrition, Best of
making false or misleading
Show,
Rachel Hunter · and
pollution or performance
claims for its products. The Nancy Ridenour, Teens En!nvesllgation !Ia• been gOing on tertain; Barbara Jordan, Food
Preservation ; Teri!Bli Carr, Ali
for three years.
American
Foods; Stephanie
Granat.elll, a former race
driver, has appeared on hun· Radford1 International Foods;
by
dreds of broadcast com- Julia Gheen, . Breads,
Farm
Bureau.
nrercials for th.e corpratlon
Achievement Awards, High
which advertises Its oil and
Point
Boys, 'FFA. presented by
. gasoline additives as "the
representative of Pomeroy ·
racer's edge ."
Olltrlct Court Judge National Bank, !A)e Ann Nease
CIIarles Richey· ordered to Rick Macomber.·
BECKY. WILL OF .THE Me!gi County Extension Office
High . Point . Boys; 4·H,
· GrMatellllo teottfy before the
prese'nted the first place trophy In tbe animal division to Pam
Investigators arwl appear in presented by a representative
Notttrigham, representing the Meigs Pleasure Riders. Rogle
court 011 Sept. 6 lor a heilr!ng on of _Farmers Bank an(j Savings · l Gaul, with_hls grand champion of the beef showing_. took
Company, Becky Wll), to Phlllp
the subpoenas.
secon~ place bonors In the parade.

.

'

JUSTIN FINE LEATHER
PURSE or BILLFOLD

Sunday 11'1 : 3010 12:lOandSio9p.m .

o:;:·; ...J---

Cha\\\ Up Big

All FOSTER GRANT &amp; POLAROID

SUNGLASSES

,,

....._

#~f~J .MYADEC '

.·

CAPSULES OR TABLETS,,_

PRICE
2
COPPERTONE, SEA &amp; SKI,
SWEDISH· TANNING
SECRET AND TANYA

7~

~.......

#

-------1
SUDDEN BEAUTY •
REG. 1.10
ONLY

ONLY

11-MI

Y2 PRICE

12 Ol

•

100 TABLETS
REG •

SUNTAN
PRODUCTS
.
.

HAIR SPRAY

·g
31

-I
.-.
REXALL ASPIRIN
I
28~ . ,ft
•
·--·
..........
30 Free With 100
REG. 7.79
O_NLY

~'

.

REXALL

VITAMIN E
CAPSULES
400 UNITS
100 CAPSULES

.,.,

REG. 6.49
ONLY

••

------••
·GILLETTE FOAMY
,...........,-

SHAVE CREAM

•
...
,.

16 Ol
REG. 8l
ONLY

REG. OR

~.

•

SURE DEODORANT

14 Ol -

9 OUNCE

REG. 1.39

.ONLY

99·~-

._,, ·-,,.....
REG.l75

ONLY

.

.

I

--

'

••
•'

~\

.

'I

'·'

••

slzt 111 15.00. Al10 try AOUAT ABS .

areas.

· u.s.

~ .

today. MONADEX cost $3.00 for
2~ da_y •upptv. Large econom~

•

all

~. ,.,.• .....,.,.. ... ~~··-- 2112.00

• ..._....,, •••••• ••••••••.•••••11 None
" ' - - - .............. .4/611~.,0L

x-2: 30 P.M. - Pony Running Races

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

~

BlACK &amp;
WHITE TV

a

will start

Awards at Junior Fair

Blue, Gold, Black &amp; White, Red.

•

.Stan los.ing w•it~ht today or monty
tl.ek MO,_.AOEX ts 1 tinv tabltt
and j,asy to tak•. MONADEX will
halp curb your d~ire for uc:~
food E.- .._ - 'wttQh 1. .. Cont~uns
no d•nv-ou• drugs 1nd will not
mab. you n~~rvous. N~ t.tr.,-. uous
enrctM, Chl"if your hfl •.. start

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph .
Open Daily B: oo a.m. to 9:30p.m.

access site

'j

•

lllth MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

BUILDING SUPPLIES

.
•

cause a person to lose weight. a day, and if you are starving
That is pure hokum. It is a good you won 't feel like being that
idea to take vitamins, though, active. When you see any ad
if one is on a poor or un- stating you will lose a pOUlld a
balanced diet that limits all day, raise your index of
. those important vegetables, suspicion to the red ~ert level.
cereals, fruits and milk with
If you lose muscle and cells
their . essential vitamins anq from vital organs in U.e body,
minerals. Such unbalanced you are in trouble. Muscle
diets are deficient in vitamins •tissues uses more calories even
and minerals.
.
when it is resting than fat
The ad you sent me clatms tissue does. Keeping a good
one can lose a. polllld a day . . muscular body helps you keep
That may be true If y~u lose too · from getting fat UnsoUlld diets
much of your water and sal~ or that ·cause you to lose part of
If you start lostng your tm- your muscles fix your body so
portant muscle mass. That you use less calories at rest.
means loss of protein from Then you have to eat a Jot less
YOUR !30DY. There are 3,500 to keep from getting fat.. These - ·
calories in a pound of fat . Even diets then make it likely that ·
if you ate nothing at all and ,;ou will have a die! and obesity.
were starved completely, your problem thereafter.

COJ, hitting .Jt4, injured hlt
left knee Tueadlly n[ghl tn 11
collision at home plate wlU!
outfielder BObby Bonds of lhe
San f:'rancisco Giants after
starting the tast two games /pi'
the Phillies because of a slump
by regular catcher Bob Boone.

ZENITH
~OLOR TV

Weber firm

very active to use 3,500 calories

' ACTUA

:

girts winner, Grant Johnoon, jr. lair king and 4-H boys
winner, and Rick Macomber ;FF Awinner. The trophies were
provide&lt;! by Pomeroy National Bank, Farmers Bank and
Savings C&lt;&gt;., and A&amp;P. Miss Lee Ann Nease presented the
FF A trophy and Becky Will the 4-H trophies.

·.

Discrimination charged

3nt AVE.

IN WHO'S WHO

CHESHlRE _ Timothy
Michael McDaniel. a senior at
K ger Creek High School is to
Y
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be featured in the eighth annual edition of Who's Who
Among American High School
Students 1973-1974 He is the
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son of Mr. and Mrs.· Everett
McDaniel, Jr ., Route 2,
Cheshire . He is working during
the swnmer at Andrew Cross
Prod uce, Letar t F aIIs.

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· The government of Turkey troduced with my str ong
has lifted Its ban on opium support calling the President to
poppy production.
suspend U. S. aid to Turkey.
Until Turkey outlawed poppy The measw-e.J_ coming one day
growing in 1971 , the COUlltry after Turks lifted the poppy
was the source of about 80 ban, is an important step
percent of the illegal heroin because it indicates that a
ravagi ng Americ~ 's cities . powerful House cl&gt;mmittee Then, beca use of U. S. the House Judiciary Com.
Government pressure, Turkey mittee - is gi-ving the issue the
prohibited opium growing. In attention it deserves. The
exchange, the U. S. agreed to primary sponsor of the bill is
pay some $36 million to com· the chairman ofthe Judiciary
pensate an estimated 100,000 Com111ittee .
. poppy farm ers while they
Public outcry on Turkish
UNITCALLED
The Racine E-R Squ~d is still prepared their acreage for a opiWTi growing, accompanied
RACINE - The Racine E~R accepting pop bottle caps less lethal crop.
by tougher legislation, might
Squad was called Tuesday at I which will be turned in for
The Turkish governm ent persuade the government in
a.m. for Icy Tucker who was proceeds to be used toward the now contends that ~~ Turkey's Ankara to reverse its decision.
taken to Veteran~ Memorial pwrchase .of its new E-R am- opium poppy production will
feed the intern.ational pharmaceutical industry, " and
promises that "The government will take stringent
measures to prevent illegal
poppy growing and drug
trafficking."
However, the only stringent
.
.
measures to prevent illegal
Wheel Chairs ·
drug trafficking that the
WILLOUGHBY, Ohio (UP! ) promise Rhodes said had not
Turkish government has ever
Walkers
taken have been those that - Former governor James A. been kept.
prohibited
their own people Rhodes, ruiUiing for a third
Crutches and Canes
" If you think for one moment
from being victimized by term, said Wednesday the that school officials, teachers
Back Braces
narcotics dealers . Drug ped- current state income tax and parents of school children
dling in Turkey commonly discriminates against working don't realize what has hal&gt;'
Bedside Commodes
draws the death penally or life people and called for a raise in pened, just ask them," said
the state exemption for
imprisonment.
Rhodes. "And ask them why
Support Stockings
The Turkish government dependent to $750.
additional property taxes for
Rhodes, who will oppose schools are being proposed all
now plans to distribute gerTrusses
minating poppy seeds to far· Gov. John J . Gilligan in the over this state.
· Traction Equipment
mers in six provinces from now November election, made the
"The blunt truth is that
in.
remarks Gilligan went back on his
until October when the planting statement
Elastic Supports
prepared for delivery to the pledge to the schools," Rhodes
season begins.
Given the Turkish record, it Willoughby Chamber of said.
Surgical Dressings
is impossible to believe that the Commerce here.
" The cWTent Ohio income
new licensing of opium
tax
discriminates against
production will not be abused.
working
couples, most of whom
The profits derived from
FORMER HUSBAND
have
children
in
school,
by
diverting opi1Jl11 from legal
IRRATATED
pharmaceutical manufac- assessing a higher rate against
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) turing to illegal herioh them, and by not allowing William C. Warren , a furniture
production are just too great, enough of an exemption for the 'and lamp dealer, has become
and past Turkish security children," said Rhodes.
an Instant celebrity as the
Rhodes also accused Gilligan former husband of First Lady
measures to prevent illegal
diversion have been too faulty. of selling the state income tax Betty Ford, but he does not
Legislation has been in- to Ohioans with a promise to show any·enthusiasm.
use the money to relieve school
Warren and the former Betty
financial problems - a
Bloomer were married ln

FOR ALL YOUR
LUMBER AND

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COX DISABLED
PHII..ADELPHIA (UP! )
Larry Cax was ptaced on the
lr.day disabled list Wednesday
by the Philadelphia Phillies.
who recalled catcher Jim
Essian from Toledo of the
International League.

LOSE UGLY FAT

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donor, who wishes to remain anonymas, was finally found to

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dir&lt;)Ctly involved in bringing about the chain of events which led
to the bringing about of such good fortune to our county.
The story started with a telephone call from Tom Closser,
acting director of the Buckeye Hills Hoc_king Valley Regional
Development District, (B.H.H.V.RD.), which said, "! have
$300,000 in E.D.A. money. Can Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty use it?" (This later
blosoomed into $480,000.) Of course the answer was " Yes, but
what can we use it for?" "Roads in an 8conomic Development
Area" was the reply. These funds co uld be had on an 80-20 basis&amp;l pet . E.D.A. and 20 pel. li)cal match.
..
Where could Meigs County raise its 20 pet . of $75,000? A

come up with the $75,000. (Later it was announced that Southern
:l Ohio Coal Co. donated the $75,000. - Ed .)
: ·
By this timeMeigsCollllty had but one week to supply a road
:. plan of improvement for county road l, !A, 6 and 27 to meet
• . E.D.A. deadline for these funds. This seemingly impossible task
•' was accomplished by two very persevedng w.en. Our Meigs
•• County Engineer, Wesley Buehl and David Wright, an employee
: : of the Southern Ohio Coal Company on loan to help Wes.
••
While these men were doing the field work, Phil Lavelle,
:': E.D.A. representative to our area and Tom Closser, and the
• · whole Buckeye Hills staff cleared up the "red tape. " which
looked like a mail order catalog when finished, a jqb which
; should have taken months was detailect, signed, sealed and
~. delivered in less than week with a bonus of possibly $180,000.
::: (Thanks to Phil again.)
:
Meigs Countians, we owe these men Phil Lavelle, Torn
• Closser, Buckeye Hills Staff, Wesley Buehl, Meigs County
• · Engineer, David Wright and all those others, who helped to clear
~: the way, a very special vote of thanks.
...
This money wiU be used in a "Force-Fund", which means the
•• money will come to Meigs County and they will use a Ia bor force
: hired through the collllty to do the work . This will mean. jobs for
• many Ullemployed area men.
L
Meigs County is on the move and if more dedicated, unselfish,
.:;: Progressive people will come to the front we can \!lOVe even
•• further .
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Meigs County, people are looking at you. Let 's show them
••• what we have.
,~ -James E. Roush, Meigs County Auditor, Executive Com~ mitteeman B.H.H.V.R.D.)

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AWI\HOS IN T liiU;~: DIVISIONS,
wafl&lt;ing groups, Ooats, and animals, . were
givPII Wednesday night during the parade
which was a part of junior fair night activities
at t he Meigs County Fair. There were 20 entries in the parade .

:

Dear Sir:
I, like most people reading the headlines in our local
newspaper, saw thai Meigs C&lt;&gt;llllty had received $4&amp;!,000 grant
made for roads," and I, like most people never really see the
work or, for that matter, think of the effort to bring such a thing
like this about. And 1 probably would have not thought much
about this news release and the time and eCfort connected to
brin~ it about either. But being closely connected with the story
behind the scenes on this particular news release, I would like to
the tell the story .
· I hope Meigs County will feel deeply grateful to a group of

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Parade in three divisions

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Credit where ('red it

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the •lgnH's

1 reqUfst, names will bo disrlosrd. Lttttrs 1hould be Ia lood

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Junior Fair Parade event of Wednesday evenmg

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I U.u 300 word! long ,or

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9 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. t~. t974

8 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Aug. 1~. 1974

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Loll&lt;n o1 optaloo "" wtlromed. They should bo lou
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be subj.rl to rt'duciJoo by lllo

I1 Namu
fdllort aad must
~-lth
odd.-....
I
may b• wlthh•ld upon publlration. How•ver, .,.
I
be slgnt'd

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tnt•. addresliog i••urs. not ptrsonauu...

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Al~..t~~~···~~ uuwr,:

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due

Pomeroy, Ohio
August 13, 1974

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dedicated, consciencious, and progressive men which were

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MARTA GUILKEY, HOME ECX&gt;NOMIST for the Meigs
County Extension Service, is pictured with the three
achievement aw!V'd winners after they reeeived their award
Wednesday night during jr. fair night activities. Left to right
are Miss Guilkey, Barbara Jordan, jr. fair queen and 4-H

Brocalsa Chemical Salt Works thriv~d in Syracuse
ABOVE IS AN ARTIST'S CONCEPTION OF Brocalsa
Chemical Salt Works Co. when it was a thriving business in the
village of Syracuse many years ago. The drawing was submitted
by Glen Cundiff who owns P'!rt of the ground where the plant
once stood in upper Syracuse. Bob Louks owns a trailer ·t'Ourt on
a portion of the property where the mining of salt onc.e look

place .
The late E. H. Holmes was general plant manager and
president of the company. Cliff WiUiarns was superintendent of
the ptant.
The site for the plant was purchasect from Mr. and Mrs. W. D.
Roush on Feb. 24, 1919. Brocalsa oold the plant March 8, 1927, to

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IWashington !
Report Miller
Ciarence
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DR. LAMB

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By

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Gimick diets will never die

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By Lawrenee E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR OR. LAMB
Recently in-- our paper there
was an article about a new
vitamin E plus C diet which
was supposed to give fast
weight loss. Reading the ar· .
ticle convinced me that it was
another scheme to defrauct
gullible fat p•ople who were so
eager to reduce that they were
willing to try anything. I am
enclosing this article, and I
hope you will comment on · it,
either pro or con, accordiilg to
its merits .
DEAR READER- I can't
find much fault in your impression. These ads are now
sweeping the COlllltry, listed as

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a "new vitamin E discovery' '
or the E plus C diet. The list of
foods in the diet shows that it is
another low-carbohydrate diet
of the same type used by Dr.
Atkins or earlier by Dr . Taller
in "Calories Don't Count. " Dr.
Taller ran into legal problems
with his diet, and Atkins diet
has been bri;Inded by
knowledgeable and leading
nutritionists in the COlllltry as
unscientific and dang 0rous.
Such diets work because the
person eats fewer calOries.
Many high protein foods, Ie·an
steak for example, contain a lot
of water. Lean raw rolllld steak
is 70 per cent water and a
pOUlld has only 600 calories.
These diets· also cause the
body to lose too much salt
through the kidneys. Your bOdy
is more than 50 per cent water
normally (your lean muscles
are also 70 percent water), and
· when you lose salt, water goes
with it. The loss of too much
salt and water leads to fatigue,
fainting and a chemical
disturbance of the body. You
can recover from this by adding carbohydrates in a normal amollllt to your diet and
then regain your normal
annount of salt. and water.
The vitamins in the so-called
E and C diet do not do a thing to

m mcome tax by Rh0 d. es

a

REMODELING?

body would not use that many
calories a day so you can't lose
a pound ofFAT a day with any
of these diets. The misleading
statement is "a· pound a day,"
but the question is A POUND
OF WHAT? You have to be

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' to a lack of coal needed to stay
the Salt Products Refining Co. due
in operation and continuous strikes. The business mined salt and
oold by-products.
Employees of the company who are still living Include Mrs.
Dorothy Roller; Middleport, bookkeeper; Mrs. Edward Foster,
Pomeroy, addresoograph operator ; and Mrs. Mildred Shorn
Cotterill, file clerk .

IT'S

TIME

FOR CANVAS OXFORDS
"WHY

Grand Rapids, Mich. in 1942,
and divorced in 1947 when she
was 29. She married Ford the
following year. Warren said
little about Mrs. Ford other
Ulan "she's a nice person ."
He was slightly irritated at a
recent quote attributed to Mrs.
Ford that she had no idea
where he was.
"I know Jerry Ford," he
said. "We 're still gOOd friends." But asked if he sent'
congratulations on Ford 's
inauguration, Warreri said,
"Well, we 're n,ot that good
friends ."

PAYA
FORTUNE?"

THE SHOE BOX
Our Shoes are Sti II Sensibly Priced
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Your Headquarters
36 2 os3
1

FRIDAY, AUGUST 16 .

ooi

RACINE VILLAGE
/ VILLAGE CLERK
. RA &lt;iJ NE, O_H _IO 45771

8: 00 A.M.- Weigh Steers, Lambs, and
Swine for sale
9:00 A.M.-4-H Nutr ition- Show
4- H Girts' Demonstrations

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12:00 Noon4· H Nutrition
Contesr
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x-2: 00 P.M.- Pony Harness Races

Ul ........ ~ ........ , • .,• • ~ ......... 3698.00

2:00-4:00 P.M.- 4· H Demonstrations
" Best of Day "

Ill ........ - . . ............... ....

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5:00 P.M.:.... Twilight Horse Harness Racing
8: 15 P.M.-Junior Fair Market , Steer,
Lamb and Pig Sale
8:30 P.M.- Horse Pulling Contest

992-2709
MIDDLEPORT

x- Grandstand Attractions

.r

• - - - - - - •••:....... 1141.oQ
.................. , •.,.: .......... 1,67.00

....,._ ........ ___ ......... .,... .....
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TIIE ROCK SPRINGS Lady Bugs took -first pla~e in the parade with their floa t entry.
Second place float was by the Harrisonville Boys and Girls.

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thty

work

gently

to

l'ltlp

Y&lt;!.u lOP

w••••·bioat.AOUATAUS - o wmr
pill.. that works - $3.00.
1nd sold by :

e STEREO

Both

GYarantMd

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharm.1cy,

E. Ma in, Pomeroy &amp;
Dutton Drug Store, Mid ·
dleporl . Mail Orders Filled .
~ Adv .

.MASON FURNITURE

112

Ea sy Terms!
Free Delivery!

HERMAN GRATE
MASON , W. VA .

771-5592

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THURS., FRI., SAT. &amp; SUN •

ON ANY

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992:2955
Friendly ·service
112 E. MAl N
POME;R~O~Y;_,

WASHINGTON - A contract
for initial development of the
Ohio River Leith Run Public
Access site on the Wayne
National Forest was awarded
Wednesday.
Co ng r essman Clarence
Mi11er said the contract was
awarded to the D. V. Weber
Construction Company of
Reedsville, Meigs County. The
initial work consists iJf con- ·
struction of the underwater
portion of the boat laUllching
ramp and shaping and grading
of a portion .of the .future embayment.
Construction for this portion
of the development amounts to
$34,987.50.
The Leith Run project is a
public access recreation area
being developed by the U. S.
Forest Sen'ice adjacent to the
pool to be created by the
Willow Island Lock and Darn
navigation project on the Ohio
River. When fully developed,
the National Forest r.:eCreation
area Wil1 provide a boat ramp,
a parking area for cars with
boat trailers and 35 picnic

.

PRINCESS HONORED
LONDON (UPI) - Queen
Elizabeth II today awarded her
daughter Princess Anne a 24th
birthday medal for "calm and
brave" behavior dUring a
shooting attempt to kidnap her
five nionths ago.
The Queen made Anne a
Dame Grand Cross of the
Royal Victorian Order in
recognition · of her conduct
during the March ZQ incident in
the
Mall
leading
to
Buckingham Palace.
Anne's husband, Capt. Mark
THE STAR JUNIOR Grange No. 878 of Dexter won first place among the walking groups
Phillips,
25, was made a
participating in the junior fair patade. They were attired in maroon and gold costumes. Second
Commander of the Order.
place was taken by the Five Point Bucks 4-H Club.
Rowena Brassey, Anne's lady
· ·in waiting who was in the royal
car, became a member of the
order, fourth class.
Ian Ball, a 2&amp;-year-old Lon·
doner, was conunitted to a
mental institution for · the
single-handed attempt to
Grant
Johnson.
kidnap Anne for ransom. F&lt;&gt;ur
Awards presented during Jr. Rabbits - Best Showman,
High · Point Girls 4-H, persons were shot and
Fair night Wednesday were: Patty Parker ; Best of Show.
Horses - Presenied · by Nick Leonard; Poultry, Besi presented by Becky Will , wounded including Anne's
Farm Bureau, after U.e 4-H Showman, F1oyd Holliday, and sponsored by the A&amp;P, to personal bodyguard, Police
· Horse Show at noon, Grand Best of Show, Ronnie Wood, by Barbara Jordan.
lnspeetor James Beaton.
the
Farm
Bureau.
Champion, Tony Kennedy;
Beef Showmanship and
Reserve Champion, Robin
Ritchie (both to State Fair); Judging, Grand Champion
Outstanding 4-H Club mem- Steer, . Roger Gaul; Reserve
bers, Pam Nottingham and Champion Steer, Becky
Windon; Grand Champion
Andy Pocklington .
Rabblt and Poultry Show: Showmanship, Mandie Rose;
Reserve
C hampion
Showmanship, Becky Windon,
by the Farm Bureau,
Grand Champ(ons qf Style
ANDY TO TEsTIFY
Review,
Nancy Ridneour,
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~dy Granatelli, the television School Clothes; Betsy Amsspokesman for the STP Corp., bary, lounging clothes; Mary
has been ordered by a federal Mora, sports clothes; Barbara
judge to testify before. inves- Douglas, dress-up; . Mandie
tigators Of the Federal Trade Rose, formal; Ingrid Hawley,
coats and jackets, and Barbara
Commission.
.
The FTc . ts looking into Coates; clothing complements;
w-h ether the company is all trophies, by Farm Bureau.
Food and Nutrition, Best of
making false or misleading
Show,
Rachel Hunter · and
pollution or performance
claims for its products. The Nancy Ridenour, Teens En!nvesllgation !Ia• been gOing on tertain; Barbara Jordan, Food
Preservation ; Teri!Bli Carr, Ali
for three years.
American
Foods; Stephanie
Granat.elll, a former race
driver, has appeared on hun· Radford1 International Foods;
by
dreds of broadcast com- Julia Gheen, . Breads,
Farm
Bureau.
nrercials for th.e corpratlon
Achievement Awards, High
which advertises Its oil and
Point
Boys, 'FFA. presented by
. gasoline additives as "the
representative of Pomeroy ·
racer's edge ."
Olltrlct Court Judge National Bank, !A)e Ann Nease
CIIarles Richey· ordered to Rick Macomber.·
BECKY. WILL OF .THE Me!gi County Extension Office
High . Point . Boys; 4·H,
· GrMatellllo teottfy before the
prese'nted the first place trophy In tbe animal division to Pam
Investigators arwl appear in presented by a representative
Notttrigham, representing the Meigs Pleasure Riders. Rogle
court 011 Sept. 6 lor a heilr!ng on of _Farmers Bank an(j Savings · l Gaul, with_hls grand champion of the beef showing_. took
Company, Becky Wll), to Phlllp
the subpoenas.
secon~ place bonors In the parade.

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JUSTIN FINE LEATHER
PURSE or BILLFOLD

Sunday 11'1 : 3010 12:lOandSio9p.m .

o:;:·; ...J---

Cha\\\ Up Big

All FOSTER GRANT &amp; POLAROID

SUNGLASSES

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#~f~J .MYADEC '

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CAPSULES OR TABLETS,,_

PRICE
2
COPPERTONE, SEA &amp; SKI,
SWEDISH· TANNING
SECRET AND TANYA

7~

~.......

#

-------1
SUDDEN BEAUTY •
REG. 1.10
ONLY

ONLY

11-MI

Y2 PRICE

12 Ol

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100 TABLETS
REG •

SUNTAN
PRODUCTS
.
.

HAIR SPRAY

·g
31

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REXALL ASPIRIN
I
28~ . ,ft
•
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30 Free With 100
REG. 7.79
O_NLY

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REXALL

VITAMIN E
CAPSULES
400 UNITS
100 CAPSULES

.,.,

REG. 6.49
ONLY

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·GILLETTE FOAMY
,...........,-

SHAVE CREAM

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16 Ol
REG. 8l
ONLY

REG. OR

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SURE DEODORANT

14 Ol -

9 OUNCE

REG. 1.39

.ONLY

99·~-

._,, ·-,,.....
REG.l75

ONLY

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slzt 111 15.00. Al10 try AOUAT ABS .

areas.

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today. MONADEX cost $3.00 for
2~ da_y •upptv. Large econom~

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all

~. ,.,.• .....,.,.. ... ~~··-- 2112.00

• ..._....,, •••••• ••••••••.•••••11 None
" ' - - - .............. .4/611~.,0L

x-2: 30 P.M. - Pony Running Races

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

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BlACK &amp;
WHITE TV

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will start

Awards at Junior Fair

Blue, Gold, Black &amp; White, Red.

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.Stan los.ing w•it~ht today or monty
tl.ek MO,_.AOEX ts 1 tinv tabltt
and j,asy to tak•. MONADEX will
halp curb your d~ire for uc:~
food E.- .._ - 'wttQh 1. .. Cont~uns
no d•nv-ou• drugs 1nd will not
mab. you n~~rvous. N~ t.tr.,-. uous
enrctM, Chl"if your hfl •.. start

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph .
Open Daily B: oo a.m. to 9:30p.m.

access site

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lllth MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

BUILDING SUPPLIES

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cause a person to lose weight. a day, and if you are starving
That is pure hokum. It is a good you won 't feel like being that
idea to take vitamins, though, active. When you see any ad
if one is on a poor or un- stating you will lose a pOUlld a
balanced diet that limits all day, raise your index of
. those important vegetables, suspicion to the red ~ert level.
cereals, fruits and milk with
If you lose muscle and cells
their . essential vitamins anq from vital organs in U.e body,
minerals. Such unbalanced you are in trouble. Muscle
diets are deficient in vitamins •tissues uses more calories even
and minerals.
.
when it is resting than fat
The ad you sent me clatms tissue does. Keeping a good
one can lose a. polllld a day . . muscular body helps you keep
That may be true If y~u lose too · from getting fat UnsoUlld diets
much of your water and sal~ or that ·cause you to lose part of
If you start lostng your tm- your muscles fix your body so
portant muscle mass. That you use less calories at rest.
means loss of protein from Then you have to eat a Jot less
YOUR !30DY. There are 3,500 to keep from getting fat.. These - ·
calories in a pound of fat . Even diets then make it likely that ·
if you ate nothing at all and ,;ou will have a die! and obesity.
were starved completely, your problem thereafter.

COJ, hitting .Jt4, injured hlt
left knee Tueadlly n[ghl tn 11
collision at home plate wlU!
outfielder BObby Bonds of lhe
San f:'rancisco Giants after
starting the tast two games /pi'
the Phillies because of a slump
by regular catcher Bob Boone.

ZENITH
~OLOR TV

Weber firm

very active to use 3,500 calories

' ACTUA

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girts winner, Grant Johnoon, jr. lair king and 4-H boys
winner, and Rick Macomber ;FF Awinner. The trophies were
provide&lt;! by Pomeroy National Bank, Farmers Bank and
Savings C&lt;&gt;., and A&amp;P. Miss Lee Ann Nease presented the
FF A trophy and Becky Will the 4-H trophies.

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Discrimination charged

3nt AVE.

IN WHO'S WHO

CHESHlRE _ Timothy
Michael McDaniel. a senior at
K ger Creek High School is to
Y
'
be featured in the eighth annual edition of Who's Who
Among American High School
Students 1973-1974 He is the
'
·
son of Mr. and Mrs.· Everett
McDaniel, Jr ., Route 2,
Cheshire . He is working during
the swnmer at Andrew Cross
Prod uce, Letar t F aIIs.

"'

· The government of Turkey troduced with my str ong
has lifted Its ban on opium support calling the President to
poppy production.
suspend U. S. aid to Turkey.
Until Turkey outlawed poppy The measw-e.J_ coming one day
growing in 1971 , the COUlltry after Turks lifted the poppy
was the source of about 80 ban, is an important step
percent of the illegal heroin because it indicates that a
ravagi ng Americ~ 's cities . powerful House cl&gt;mmittee Then, beca use of U. S. the House Judiciary Com.
Government pressure, Turkey mittee - is gi-ving the issue the
prohibited opium growing. In attention it deserves. The
exchange, the U. S. agreed to primary sponsor of the bill is
pay some $36 million to com· the chairman ofthe Judiciary
pensate an estimated 100,000 Com111ittee .
. poppy farm ers while they
Public outcry on Turkish
UNITCALLED
The Racine E-R Squ~d is still prepared their acreage for a opiWTi growing, accompanied
RACINE - The Racine E~R accepting pop bottle caps less lethal crop.
by tougher legislation, might
Squad was called Tuesday at I which will be turned in for
The Turkish governm ent persuade the government in
a.m. for Icy Tucker who was proceeds to be used toward the now contends that ~~ Turkey's Ankara to reverse its decision.
taken to Veteran~ Memorial pwrchase .of its new E-R am- opium poppy production will
feed the intern.ational pharmaceutical industry, " and
promises that "The government will take stringent
measures to prevent illegal
poppy growing and drug
trafficking."
However, the only stringent
.
.
measures to prevent illegal
Wheel Chairs ·
drug trafficking that the
WILLOUGHBY, Ohio (UP! ) promise Rhodes said had not
Turkish government has ever
Walkers
taken have been those that - Former governor James A. been kept.
prohibited
their own people Rhodes, ruiUiing for a third
Crutches and Canes
" If you think for one moment
from being victimized by term, said Wednesday the that school officials, teachers
Back Braces
narcotics dealers . Drug ped- current state income tax and parents of school children
dling in Turkey commonly discriminates against working don't realize what has hal&gt;'
Bedside Commodes
draws the death penally or life people and called for a raise in pened, just ask them," said
the state exemption for
imprisonment.
Rhodes. "And ask them why
Support Stockings
The Turkish government dependent to $750.
additional property taxes for
Rhodes, who will oppose schools are being proposed all
now plans to distribute gerTrusses
minating poppy seeds to far· Gov. John J . Gilligan in the over this state.
· Traction Equipment
mers in six provinces from now November election, made the
"The blunt truth is that
in.
remarks Gilligan went back on his
until October when the planting statement
Elastic Supports
prepared for delivery to the pledge to the schools," Rhodes
season begins.
Given the Turkish record, it Willoughby Chamber of said.
Surgical Dressings
is impossible to believe that the Commerce here.
" The cWTent Ohio income
new licensing of opium
tax
discriminates against
production will not be abused.
working
couples, most of whom
The profits derived from
FORMER HUSBAND
have
children
in
school,
by
diverting opi1Jl11 from legal
IRRATATED
pharmaceutical manufac- assessing a higher rate against
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) turing to illegal herioh them, and by not allowing William C. Warren , a furniture
production are just too great, enough of an exemption for the 'and lamp dealer, has become
and past Turkish security children," said Rhodes.
an Instant celebrity as the
Rhodes also accused Gilligan former husband of First Lady
measures to prevent illegal
diversion have been too faulty. of selling the state income tax Betty Ford, but he does not
Legislation has been in- to Ohioans with a promise to show any·enthusiasm.
use the money to relieve school
Warren and the former Betty
financial problems - a
Bloomer were married ln

FOR ALL YOUR
LUMBER AND

'

--•

~

~

~'

COX DISABLED
PHII..ADELPHIA (UP! )
Larry Cax was ptaced on the
lr.day disabled list Wednesday
by the Philadelphia Phillies.
who recalled catcher Jim
Essian from Toledo of the
International League.

LOSE UGLY FAT

•

•
*

donor, who wishes to remain anonymas, was finally found to

-·

.: -

-

dir&lt;)Ctly involved in bringing about the chain of events which led
to the bringing about of such good fortune to our county.
The story started with a telephone call from Tom Closser,
acting director of the Buckeye Hills Hoc_king Valley Regional
Development District, (B.H.H.V.RD.), which said, "! have
$300,000 in E.D.A. money. Can Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty use it?" (This later
blosoomed into $480,000.) Of course the answer was " Yes, but
what can we use it for?" "Roads in an 8conomic Development
Area" was the reply. These funds co uld be had on an 80-20 basis&amp;l pet . E.D.A. and 20 pel. li)cal match.
..
Where could Meigs County raise its 20 pet . of $75,000? A

come up with the $75,000. (Later it was announced that Southern
:l Ohio Coal Co. donated the $75,000. - Ed .)
: ·
By this timeMeigsCollllty had but one week to supply a road
:. plan of improvement for county road l, !A, 6 and 27 to meet
• . E.D.A. deadline for these funds. This seemingly impossible task
•' was accomplished by two very persevedng w.en. Our Meigs
•• County Engineer, Wesley Buehl and David Wright, an employee
: : of the Southern Ohio Coal Company on loan to help Wes.
••
While these men were doing the field work, Phil Lavelle,
:': E.D.A. representative to our area and Tom Closser, and the
• · whole Buckeye Hills staff cleared up the "red tape. " which
looked like a mail order catalog when finished, a jqb which
; should have taken months was detailect, signed, sealed and
~. delivered in less than week with a bonus of possibly $180,000.
::: (Thanks to Phil again.)
:
Meigs Countians, we owe these men Phil Lavelle, Torn
• Closser, Buckeye Hills Staff, Wesley Buehl, Meigs County
• · Engineer, David Wright and all those others, who helped to clear
~: the way, a very special vote of thanks.
...
This money wiU be used in a "Force-Fund", which means the
•• money will come to Meigs County and they will use a Ia bor force
: hired through the collllty to do the work . This will mean. jobs for
• many Ullemployed area men.
L
Meigs County is on the move and if more dedicated, unselfish,
.:;: Progressive people will come to the front we can \!lOVe even
•• further .
·
:;
Meigs County, people are looking at you. Let 's show them
••• what we have.
,~ -James E. Roush, Meigs County Auditor, Executive Com~ mitteeman B.H.H.V.R.D.)

..

AWI\HOS IN T liiU;~: DIVISIONS,
wafl&lt;ing groups, Ooats, and animals, . were
givPII Wednesday night during the parade
which was a part of junior fair night activities
at t he Meigs County Fair. There were 20 entries in the parade .

:

Dear Sir:
I, like most people reading the headlines in our local
newspaper, saw thai Meigs C&lt;&gt;llllty had received $4&amp;!,000 grant
made for roads," and I, like most people never really see the
work or, for that matter, think of the effort to bring such a thing
like this about. And 1 probably would have not thought much
about this news release and the time and eCfort connected to
brin~ it about either. But being closely connected with the story
behind the scenes on this particular news release, I would like to
the tell the story .
· I hope Meigs County will feel deeply grateful to a group of

•

Parade in three divisions

1

I

Credit where ('red it

••
•
•.

I

I

I

•

•

the •lgnH's

1 reqUfst, names will bo disrlosrd. Lttttrs 1hould be Ia lood

.

Junior Fair Parade event of Wednesday evenmg

.I

I U.u 300 word! long ,or

.

�10 'Fhe lla1ly S.nline l Middleport l' ouwroy 0 Thursda)

u~

I•

1~ ~

For Sale

Sentinel Classifieds Get Result...!
Not1ce
WH.. L CJo rootlno h eat ng
r epa i r p l um b ng and e lec
tr l cai w ork Ph on e Char les
s nc:l el r 985 41 71
8 7 12tc

------

Spec1al Mobile Home
Roofs Patnled Before
Fall and Wrnter Sets In
$22
$25
527
530

OFFER ENDS
SEPTEMBER30 1974

8

D ON T KNOW T H AT MGM
F ea Mark e l Sp ec a s
S5
n s de S3 o u s de Spr ng
A ve
Pom e oy
Oh o
Co ectors
dea ers
et c
Ev er y Sat and Sunday
8 7 tt c

-------

4 Jtp

WE H AVE a
yo ur upho s t ery
ne ed s
B u r ap
de n m

t 71r

Pomeroy ·r
Motor Co. cosco ----------su so

QUALITY

1972 VEGA HATCHBACK CPE

...,.....

52095

BOWERS
REPAIR

_____________
For the Lowest

Loc a l 1 owner t rade n 4 speed tra ns G T equ pmen t
re'!i. clecm ns de red hn sh bl k vtnyl nl

1970CHEV MONTE CARI.O

-

T1re Pnces

52095

POMEROY MOTOR CO•
OPEN EVES8 00 F- M
POMEROY OHIO

Its

@) I
"All'
Uf"

J

w

W~nted

LL k ee p e der
h o me

v peo p e

For

n my

Phone 99 2 7A60

8 7 7t c

-\
sp ng s and
c ps
c h pboa d
b u tton W ILL do babys I ng n gh s or
davl me Thu r sd a y or Sund ay
tw ne
se w ng th rt&gt;ad
eg s
R ea sona D e ra t es PhonP 992
upho s e r y book s d a c ron
747 4 or 742 490 2 afrer 4 p m
w eb b ng spr ng tw n e ra c k s
8 14 6t c
we i c ord c o t o n s w ve
bases and f oam foam foam
Pomeroy Recovery 622 I:
Man St
Pome r oy
Oh o
Ph one 99 2 7554
OLD paver p ana r ot s Ca l
742 562 5
7 24 26 tc
a 9 6tc
--- CANNIN G peaches now
n
sea son Two t r uck loa ds ea c h WA NTED ol d up r gh l p anos
we ek Pr ce st art ng at 56 98
an y cond ton
Pa y ng S10
per bushel P ease br ng you
cas h F rs l floor only Wr te to
own conta n~ r s Bob s Mark el
an d g ve d r ee l ons to W tten
n ~ ar Po m eroy Ma so n Br d ge
P an o Com pany
Box ta8
Ma son
W
Va
Home of
Sard s Oh o 43946
quat ty fru t and v egct ab es
61p
Open se ven d a ys
0 p m
-------~
8 12 tf c
WE N E ED 200 ton s ot sh eet
--c as t new or o d a um num
KO SCO T
KO SMET CS
&amp;
K ee p can s se parat e The
WIG S For a good
ne ot
Ros
enb erg Co Athen s Oh o
Cosm pf cs fr en d v serv ce
a 15 tic
and som eone to ch a t w lh g ve
-me a ca I Helen J ane Brown
JU NK Autos c amp e f e and
992 511 3
de vered lo our yard We p ck
3 19 tf c
up auto bod es and buy a I
k nds of sc rap meta s and
A TO Z MART used furn l u re
ron R der s Sa vagp State
applian ces and m sc Rt 33
Rt 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
Hartford w Va
Phone 992 5468
7 26 tfc
7 3 26tp
------CHICKEN barbecue
Ra e ne CA SH pad for a makes and
F re Sta on Aug us
8
I
modes of mob e homes
am t '
Phone area code 614 423 9531
8 13 Stc
4 IJ lfc
srr p

Wanted To Buy

All Small Appliances
Lawn Mowers

Chester, Ohio
985 4102

Nextto H1ghwa v
Garage on Route 1
Pomeroy Route 3

&amp;
Butldmg
Home
Alummum
Addtttons
&amp; Vmyl Sodmg, Floor
Sandmg &amp; F~n15hmg

Rent

BEDROO M
a pa r t
a r con d I o ned f ur
n shed
R ea so nab e re nt
Located
2 m les
fr om
Pomeroy P hOne 304 77] 5 118
a 14 f c

n en

on
Ke no Ba shan
Road
De po s t r eq u r ed Phone 843
21 94
8 S 3tc

992 3092

BEND TIRE CENTER t.~!~r At·:~~k a,:;,~e :~~~
112

5881

l•lolled

1966 EA S Y TR AV E L Tra ler
see ps 6 s to ve
ce bo)( and
wa te r un der cr essu r e 1963
Fo rd !fa t bPd J • ton and 1967
Buc k w ldca t conv~:&gt;r t b e

B0 b

Television -Log

See or Call

-

CAMP E R 8 fl w d e 20 ft ong
sl eep s s )( self co nta n ed
la rg e aw n n g
c arpet ng
throu g h out See at 630 P um
St M dd l eporl
8 15 61p

• Lawn Boy
• Te cumseh
• Ko hler
• w scans n
• A 1 other
makes

\
-..

AUGl ll•sa slf7•
News I 10 TliURSDAY
Sesame S1 10
Yoga a nd You 33
T TruthorConseq 6 New~oJ _. 15 IJ
' 30- News 3 • 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Room m 13

W11f do
Dour &amp;
Backhoe Work, lnst•ll
Septtc Tanks, H•ul
Dtrt,
Gravel, I .
Limestone or Rent One
Of
Our
Trucks
Backhoe or Dozers

Flower Show 33
l 00 - Beat Ihe Clock • Wllat s My Lloe 8 NewS6 tO Etec Co
10 Trut~ or Con• l l.et s Make A Deal 13 Sporto Desk IS
M.on Builds Man Destroys 33

~ JO - Hollywood Square-s 3 Wild Kingdom 10 To Tell the
Truth 6 Beat 1he Oock 13 Zoom 20 Deal er s Choice 4

Oule s Girls 8 TBA IS The Session 33

8 00 - Waltons 8 10 Temperatures Rising

•

I,

11 JO - Johnny Carson J A 1S Mission Impossi ble 6 Un
touchables 13 News 10 Movie Operat ion Counterspy 10

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

l Z 00 - News8 Movie Five Finger Exercise 10
1 ~ 30 -

•

- --------

----

---------

FRIDAY AUG 26 1174

6 00 - Sunrise Semester 4 Summer Semester 10
6 25 -

Pomeroy 0. ,

K&amp;H ROOFING

-----

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY

•'

Shuler's rJJartet

742-5293

----------

Mobile Homes For Sale

----------

------ -----

- ----------

--

-

----

- --

-------

- -------

----- ------

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING 00.

DEOORATING

Interior, Exterior
Decorating and

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

HOME

I

PHONE 992-5476

For Sale

Pels For Sale

Auto Sales

7 30 - New Zoo Revue6 Tennessee TuxedolJ

8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Jeffs Collie 6 Man from COS I 10

------------- HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS

-

-----

4,000 BTU

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

- ------

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

- --------

----

s

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

••

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

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

•

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- - ---

--

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

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-

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

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

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

__________

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

-------------a
------------------------------------"""""---....- ----

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

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

________ ______

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

Real Estate For Sale

----------

For Rent

,

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

•

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

For Sale

'

R el111ble Sero1ee

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

------ --

WORLD ALMANAC

Known &amp;

----- ----

-------

---------

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

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

COUNTRY

-------------s•

- ------- __ ___________
f

Lost 13 Mister Rogers 33
9 30 - ToTellfheTruthJ lucy ShowS ElectrlcCo JJ
10 00 - Jokers Wild 8 10 Company 6 Lilias Yoga &amp;
Name That Tune 3 15

10 30 - Gambit 8 10 W nn1ng Streak 3

'

$11REO
92.1

WN\PQ.FM

'

You 33

IS Turn ing Points 33

4

11 00- Password 13 Now You See It 8 10 H gh Rollers 3 -4 15

$10 000 Pyramid 6 Sesame Street 33

11 30- Hollywood Squares 3 -4 15 Brady Bunch 13 love of Life

8 10 Lucy Show 6
1155-CBS News8 DanlmelsWorldiO
12 00 -

Password 6

News 8 10 13

Jackpot 3 IS Mr Rogers 33

Bob Brauns 50 50 Club .4

12 30 - Celebrity Sweepstakes 3 15 Split Second 6 Search for
TomorrowS 10 Electric Co 33 Atternoonwlth OJ 13

12 5S- NBC News 3 IS
1 00- News 3 All My Children 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
What s My line 10 FTench Chef 33 HazelS

Travel 33

Jeopardy J -4 15

2 00 - Days of Our Llyes3 4 15 Guiding Light 8 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13 FestiYal Films 33
2 30- Doctors 3 4 15 Edge of Night 8 10 Girl in My L le 6 13
Paul Nuchlms 33
3 00 - Another World 3 -4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Price Is

Right 8 10

---....___

3 30 - One life to live 13 Phil Donshue -4 How To Survtve A

Marriage 3 15 Match Game 8 10 T me for Timothy 33
Lassie 6

4 00- Mr Cart&lt;XJn 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Tattletales
8 Gilligan s Island 6 Mov1e Hurricane Smlth 10 SlO 000

Pyramid 13
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Bonanza 15 Jackpot 4 V rglnian 8
Dna~el Boone 13 Mod Squad 6
S 00 - Bonanzlll Merv Griffin 4 M ster Rogers 20 33

5 30- Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Hogan s Heroes 13
Western Star Theater 15 News 6
6 00- News 3 4 8 15 ABC News 13 Sesame St 20 News 6
Great American Dream Machine 33

6 30 -

NBC News 3 4 IS CBS News 8 10

Room 221 13

WIN AT BRIDGE

Generation Rap

i

By Helen and Sue Boncl

&lt;

I BUT C
I thmk your parents may be achng more shook than lhey
actually are to make sure you remember their No 1 slwnber
party rule no boys allowed especoally through the back gate or
over the fence
They know you JUSt talked (so dod my parent.'l when l was
giving juruor hogh school sleep-&lt;JUt.'l and somehow a boy or two
always managed to fmd out when and where) But as chaperons
for you g1rls they can t take chances
Let them know you see tlle1r s1de and they ll soon be trustmg
youagam (I doubt that they ever stopped ) - SUE

.2

TODAY S QUESTION
You do bld four notrump As
expe&lt;:ted your partner shows one
ace What do you do now?

Fot Frldl

Aug 16 1i74
ARIES (MO•Ch 2 t April 19)

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Now 22)

You ac l ons a t l h1s time w n
respoc: t and alleg ance I om
t wo va uable all es who w II
back you n what you want to
acc omol sh

SAGITTARIUS (Now

TAURUS (April 20 Moy 20)

tha t Involve lr ends can be
furthered p ov dCd they re not
prese ted too forc efu lly Use
some su ga c oat ng

CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jan

GEMINI (Moy 21 June 20)

19) A sec ret d es re of yours s

You Ida Wt! 1 n any area today
that reQUi res menta deM ter l y
o mag nat ve th nk ng C on
c entral e yout eff orts accord

1ket y to be eal zed atth s 1me
bec ause of the way
events w II unl old

AOUARIUS (Jon

ng y
CANCER (Juno 21 July 22)
u any bu s ness or c omme C;I BI
de a ngs you re nvolved n can
te no w than yOtJ w ould la ter

Dear In But Con
Ah those )Umor hogh slwnber parties and lhe worroes we
chaperoning parent.'l suffered' We knew that if other parents
learned boys had been sneaking aroWid we d be blamed
and we also knew they d try to JUmp the fence wothout much
argument from the g1rls Not that the g1rls were bad but
having your slumber party crashed was a safe and darmg ad
venture It gave you status woth the kids
I U bet your mother remembers when she and her teen
Bewitched 6
Truth or Conseq 3 Beat the Clock 4 News 10 What s
My line? 8 Aviation Weather 33 Wtld Kingdom 13 I Spy IS
Electric Company 20 Bowling For Dollars 6
7 30 - Porter Wagoner 3 New Treasure Hunt 10 Beat the
Clock 13 Hollywood Squares 4 Concentration 8 To Tell The
Trufh 6 You ONe It to Yourself 20 Jeann1e Wolfe W1th
33
8 00- Sanford and Son 3 4 15 Wash ngton Rev ew 20 33 Your
Hit Parade 8 10 Brady Bunch 6 13
30-GoodTmes8 10 WaiiStreetWeek20 33 Bnan Keth3
4 15 Chicago Meanwh le Back At the Ranch 6 13
9 00 - Mev es Number One 3 4 15
State Far
10
Marriage Times Four B Masterp ece Theatre 20 33

7

oo -

a

9 30 - Odd Couple 6 13
10 00- ABC News Closeup 6 13 News 20 V deo Vislonanes 33
10 30 - Ohio This Week 20 Day At N ~ht 33

11 00- NewsJ 4 6 8 10 13 15 Av lit on Weather 20 JanakiJJ
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Mtss1on Impossible 6 Un

touchables 13
Mev es
Count Yorga
Vamp re
B
Dlnosaurust 10
12 30- Don Ktrshner s Rock Concert 6 W de World m Concert

13
1 00- Midnight Special 3 4 Take F ve for L1fe 15 MoYle The
10

00- News 13

2 30 5 00 -

Movie The Buccaneer 4
Mov1e The Depserate Hours
6 30- International Zone ~

7 30 p m

You d be very mu ch m stak en I
you th nk the wo rk you re now
do ng s go ng unnot c ed by
.persons you want to mpr ess

Sool 22)

Love

poet
14 Summer
hat
15 Definitely I

II Name
(sl)
17 Tantalize
lt Cockneys
flock
ZO Golfer a

DOWN
I Tar a
greeting
Z Songwriter s
subject
3 Wriggle
(3 wds)
4 Much
used
5 Dethrone
I Silly
7 Polish
wifely
UUe
10 Disapprove
(4 wds)
II Came

lntG

sight

concern

12Piaces
for

food

Yeslenlay'o Alllwer
16 s~
za Thwart
obstruct
sound wonl
11 Being (Sp ) 28 Michelangelo
zo Soprano
statue
Teresa30 Paper
%1 From
quanUty
13 to 19
32 Hurt
( hyph wd ) 33 Free
zz Macerate
scope
24 Talus
35 I do
eg
II

extra
Inning
Z4 Shaded

recess

%5Advlse
In ScoUand
Zl Caches
27 Formic
acid

source
friends JUSt accodentally mentioned they were sleepmg out to a
couple of guys
and how HER folks reacted - HELEN

+++

~~!M@~®IJ.J -wlt.l-.1 , _
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square to
form four ordmary words

280neof
the Lees
Z11 Bullish
31 Distant
34 Concurred
35Teus
city
36 Governing

body
37 Reflect
iterate
36 SpoU
311 Consider

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It·

I BASHO

I
III
IGO[)XY I [j I

lsrLEr±J

II

One letter almply otanda for another In thiJ sample A IJ

••

Now arranp the

cirel~

lotion

1

1

1ft! ... SIIII!IIISUIISWIIIIIn

I

mrrxrtJ

auueat~

•

CBYPTOQUOTES

JMYME

VJDPG
DTHJ

OCV

XJCA
XJCA

ATHD
ATHD

PB

MJCVWT

PB

by the above c~n

(Au-.n •omor-row)
Y~•terd*y

apootrophea the length and formotlon of the words are aD
hlnta. Each day the code 1ette,. ore dlfterent

YOU GENERALLY
FINt:&gt; THe
OLJT&lt;501NIS iYPE5

to form the aurpriH &amp;Nwer, u

Wrestlmg

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFELLOW

used for the three L • X for the two 0 s etc Single letters

OCV

CABLE CHANNEU

Champtons (color)
All Star
Cowtown Rodeo
9 30- Operation Gangbuster Burkes law
10 30 - Meigs Counfv ~~ r

ACROSS
1 Choor
voice
5 Pickpocket
(sl )
8 Wail
9 Paint
13 Art of

ZZWise
Z3 One

I

4

~-"-

.., THOMAS JOSEPH

20 Fob

PISCES (Fob 20 Morch 20)

22)

Shou d yo u see a s tua t on tha t
you e ted t o w th another
b eg n to Ia ter mo ve n Qu ck y
Tak e o ver c ontra yourse I
2~

a c na n of

19) A dec s on that has a
d reel eff ec t upon you even
though t w II be made b\1
someone e se w U be dec ded
your favor

be conc luded you I lf're bet

VIRGO (Aua

23

Dee 21) Plans 'lou now have

Changes or Impro vements you
nake a ound the hOuse now
are apt to be we ll thought ou t
They II pro ve sat sfa c to y O\ler
the long haul

LEO (July 23 Aug

Aug 18 1874
There w 1I be a nartted 1n
crecase n YOlir popular l y th .s
COI'THng year Also you 1 heve
more ol a management rota n
organ zat OilS ol vour cho c e or
peer group

You w 11 try har der now and be
mo e successful a t what you
d6 I you mak e yoursell awa e
of the mater al goats behind
your ettorts

+++

1

NORTH
15
• AQ1094
"A 62
• 974
... KS
WEST
EAST IDl
• 76 3
"QJ08 75
• 832
+AKQJIO S
... Q64
... J972

L et the oU\er person (Jo nosl o l
th~ ta k no I you re try1ng to
make a de a You II go t bane
terms than you would have
a5JIIed tor you rsel f
LIBRA (Sopl 23 Del 23)
Y01.111 ha ve a cnanc::e to lake
some pas t &gt;J8 steps regard ng
a new dea Do I bel ore you
lose your nsp 1ra1 On

~

PARENTSWH() LOSEFAI111'
Dear Helen and Sue
My two girlfriends and I were sleepmg out In our backyard
when two guys came over to see us All we did was talk but my
parents came out and discovered them there and got ve ry upset
They say we invited lhe bo~ over when actually we JUSt
accidentally mentioned we were sleeping out when we Slj w them
earlier that day
Our parents f1gure lhey know exactly whal we wer e
lhinkmg because they were once that age They say the boys
will make up ugly rumors and our reputatlons will be ruined
When we just talked '
We know we should have told Mom and Dad when the guys
showed up and then 11 would have been okay because we wouldn t
have been 81leakmg as lhey say What we can I Wlderst.and IS
if they d let the boys VISit knowmg they were there why d1d they
get so puslled out of shape fonding outfor themselves'
Now we re restricted mdelmotely as our parents say lhey ve
lost aU faolh m us
How can we get Lhelt trust back and prove we aren t bad
g~rls' - INNOCENT BUT CONVIC"fED

Phantom Speaks

Squeeze causes heart problems

•

W/hi@#&amp;;W///o:--""-""W~,

ll

30 - As the World Turns 8 10 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 Lets

Jumbl.. CRESS FORAY HOMAG~ BECOME

MJCVWT -APGGPHZ

ZCEM
SGHXM

-

Yeltenlay'a Cryploquole IT IS ALWAYS A GREAT
MISTAKE TO COMMAND WHEN YOU ARE NOT SURE YOU
WILL BE OBEYED -HONORE MIRABEAU

What the char•table law_yer ta1d when lu• cltent
waa acq~ttlled- FREE OF CHARGE!"

(0 tn411.1oJ ,...,._ BJBdleow lao 1

DICI\ IKAU:'

"J

SOUTH
• K J85
"K943
+s
... A 1083
Both v ulnerable

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

--- - -----

Help Wanted

Brady Bunch 6 Green Acres 10

8 ~5 - Chuck White Reports 10 News 13
9 »o- AM 3 Paul Dixon 41Wild Wild West 6 Phil Donahue 15
Abbott &amp; Costello 8 Co pta n Kangaroo 10 MoY ie Little Boy

- ------

'109.95

The Rosenberg Co

L::===========

All·WEAlHER

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

____ __

- - ----- -

Morning Report 3 Farmt lme 10

Speedracer 6

REDECORATING?

-- ------ -

Real Estate For Sale

--- ------

6 45 -

Bible Answers 8

7 00 - Today 3 • 15 CBS News 8 10 Dick Van Dyke 13

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

-

- --- -

Farm Report JJ
Five Minutes to Li v e By 4 News 6

Blue Ridge Quartet 13 Sacred Heart 10
6 35 - Columbus Today 4

Refrtgerators,
1~
Freezers, Home &amp; • Auto A1r Condrhoners
and . commerctal
Un.ts
"

Remodeling

--------

6 30 -

B JO -

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------

----

Wild Wild West 6 Wide World Speclai 13 Movie

Thunder In the East 8
1 00 - Tomorrowl 4 TakeF i vefor Li fe lS
2 00 - News 4 13

-------- --

-----

Journey to Japen 33

4 15

8 15 - Jack LaLanne 13

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

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

33 moYie 1\.llrtd the Great 10 Dora s World 13

10 '()!) - Streets Of 5an Fran cisco 6 13 News 20 Comedy World 3

10 30 - Day At Night 33
11 OO- News3 4 6 810 13 IS Janak l 33

PUBLIC NOTICE
1957
CHEV
Y
Nom
an
wa9on
James
Not c e s her eby g ven t hat
e)(c et ent c ond t on bu t 28 3
sea ed b ds w 1 be r ece v ed at
2 BEDR OO M Ira er w th or
tour speed trans m Iss on 456
Don t forget the roof of r.our
he oft ce o f I he VI age C.o unc
w t ho ut ut 1 1 es c a 992 3509
pos t ve tra ct on ready f or
un t
2 o c loc k noo n on the 2nd
home
Have a beautiful new
9 12 6t c
street or s tr p w II trade for
day of Sept embe
974 tor th e
roof Installed by All Weather
Moved to Rutland ~... mile
m
o
torcy
c
e
or
boat
1968
2
pu r chase ot
n e fo ow n g
BEDR OO M
apartm Pnt
Rooting Co
ns de c ty limit on right
Dodge RT 440 mag s bu t for
desc r bed r e a l estat e
R utland Ph on e 992 5a58
st
p
motor
and
tran
sm
ss
on
corner
Blrck
St
and
Rf
12-i
Th e fo tow ng desc r bed Real
8 3 tfc
all new T om K ng Shady
E s at e s tuated n t h e V llage o t
Cove Road M dd!eport Oh o
All fhat ts needed for a free
Pomeroy Cou nty ot M e gs and
Free Estimates
COUNTRY M ob e Home Park
8 15 31 c
esttmate ts a .phone call
Stat e of Oh o Beg nn ng 60 te et
R t 33 ten m les north of
--and 7 nche s sou hw esterly from
Please Phone
Pomeroy
Large ofs w th
the so vthea s t er y corner of Lot
any
Now Open for Bus mess
c oncrete pat os
s dewatks
others We I g ve you a
151 n sad v age on Second
ru nners
and off
street
Stre P
at t he so uthea sterly
profess ona roof for tess
park ng
A so
spaces for
corner ol the b u ld ng now or
s ma tra ers Phone 992 7479
Call992 2836 For
former y ow n ed by sad C ty ot
Pomeroy
7 21 tf c
Estimates
of Any Type
Pomeroy ( known as the C tY
Ha J then c e northwe sterly
para e w lh the westerly ne of
Stop Here
L ot 151 100 feet o to the north
On
Your
Way From
I ne of an unnumber ed lot
972 J BEDROOM W ndsor
located be ween ots number ed
The Fa1r For Your
Mob te Hom e on
acre of
151 and 152 n sad VI age
ground
F or
more
n
Fresh Frutt
thence southwe s er y fo tow ng
formal on ca 99 2 763a
thE-northerly neot Lot 152 and
&amp; Vegetables
7 30 tfc
the heretofore ment oned un
--~
numbered Lot to the no th
964 COLONIAL 50xl0 mob te
easter y c orner of the prem ses
home c ean rem ode ed
2
Our atm IS to please
now or formerly owned by Th~1
bedrooms
Natural
gas
FOR your remodeling roofing
Elberfeld Rea ty Company (For
our customers
Conestoga Tra er Court
p~lnt ng repairing concre te
referPnce deed see Vo l 161
Athens Oh o phone 592 240a
ALSO SHAMPOO
and masonry work
call
page 350 Thense south easter y
a
1
1
6t
c
Ronne
Hubb~rd
992
3511
or
para e wht the westerly ne of BACK to Schoo spec a
a
OLD F URNITURE oak tabes
CARPETS
-- --~CLOSE OUT on New Z g Zag
992 7302 Work by hour or
Lot 152 to Second Street thence
permanents S2 off b ow cuts
c ocks ce boxes brass beds
£on tra ct
TH S Befo r e you buy
Sew ng Ma ch nes For sew ng
AND CLEAN
northeasterfy to ow ng the
$4 50 Operators
Jeanette
d shes desks
or c omp ete READ
PH 992 7454 or
s tr etc h fabr cs buttonho es
any new 14 w de Mob e
souther y ne of Lot 152 and the
Radford
Jack e N bert
8 1 26tc
households
Wr te M
D
UPHOLSTERY
Home be sure lo see the a
fancy des gns etc Pa nl
unnumbered Lot ocated be
Ruth s Beauty Shop Mason
992 7129
M er Rt -4 Pomeroy Oh o
steel bonded Detro fer Mob l e
s ght y blem shed Cho ce of
SEJ3T IC
TANK S
cleaned
tween Lots 15 and 152 to the
W V a phone 773 56a6
c a 992 7760
Homes
The stee l bond
carry ng case or sew ng Free Est• mates M1ddlepor:t 0 !
reasonable rates
Ph
446
p l!lceofbeginn ng Th s l o t to be
8 13 tf c
5 13 ftc
Detro ter
s
'V rtually
stand
$49
80
cash
or
terms
so ld s known as the C ty Hal
4782
Galllpol
s
John
Russell
-f reproof and has many
ava table Phone 992 2653
owner and operator
Pomeroy Oh o
AUCT ON every Thursday 5 A C RE S of teve to gently
features
that
no
other
Mob
te
a
13
ff
c
There s a so nc uded a str p
n ght beg nn ng Aug 15 7 p m
5 12 tfc
ro I ng and not too fa from
Home on the market can
of land on the eas erly s de of
near 8 and 8 Market Mason
lown Send any nformat on to
match We also have one of ELECTROL U X Sweeper de U)(e GROCERY bus ness for sa e
FREE k liens must get r d of SEPTIC TA NK S
AROBIC
the here n descr bed prem ses
W va Br ng c ons gnments
Box 729 C care Of the Da ty
the argest select ons of good
model
Compete w th all
by Saturday n ght Ca I 992
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
extend ng from Second St r eet to
Wednesday and Thursday
Bu
ld
ng
tor
sale
or
lease
Sent ne
P o meroy
Oh o
7714
used and repossessed Mob le
c ean ng a tla chments and
th e rear of sa d Lot a str p 5
CLEANED
REPAIRED
a m to 6 p m or ca I 773 5471
Phone 77 3 561a from a 30 p m
45769
•
Homes of any dea er n the
uses paper bags S ght y used
MILLER
SA NITATION
feet w de tor the purpose of an
8
14
3tc
o
10
p
m
for
appo
ntment
8 13 3t c
8 2 2tc
area
Don
twa
t
shop
today
but
c
leans
and
ooks
ke
new
STEWART OHIO PH 662
a ley , to be used n comrnon br
3 20 tfc ---- at
Berry Ml er
Mob e
3035
W 1 se l for $37 25 cash or
th e Melhod s t Ep scopal Clwrch
CASH
FOR
JUNK
CARS
T me s
Homes Sales 705 Farson
erms ava la b e Phone 992
of PomProy Oh o and the here n MEIGS SENIORS
10 .4 tiC
com
p
et
e
Frye
s
Truck
and
runn ng ( ou t
Ca
Grover s
2653
Street Be pre Oh o Phone
named V II age of Pomeroy
CANNING tomatoes
br ng
Auto Parts Rut and Oh o 24
Stud
o
at
992
2475
to
make
42
3
953
1
8 13 tfc
TANKS
cleane d
the r successors and ass gns
conta ner
George
H I
HOUSE
2 or 3 bedrooms SEP Tt C
HOUR WRECKER
SER
your appo ntment for Sen or
a a T2tc
Rae ne
Modern Sani tation 992 3954 or
There s also nc lud ed the
V
CE
Phone
742
6094
modern
k
tchen
Phone
992
Portra ts tak en
Aug
20
MOTORCYCLE Har ey
992 73-49
right to use an a ey 4 teet and
8 12 6tc
5737
7 26 26tc
through Aug 24 Or drop n af
Dav dson c hopper rea n ce
10 nches w de on he west Sid e
10 23 tfc
8 11 6tc
our booth at thp County Far
must SPII reasonab y p ced
of the here n descr bed rea
1 000 L B comb nat on safe Ca
---------"=- -S5
for
unk
automob
es
We
w
1
Grover s Stud o n M dd eporl
T m Demosky 992 5663
SEWING
MACHINES
Repa
r
estate sa d a ley to be used n
992
9972
p ck up
R vers de Auto
HOU SE for sa te 1n Syracuse 5
w II be c osed d ur ng he fa r
974
PLY
MO
L
TH
Sate
te
8
13
6fp
serv
ce
all
makes
992
2284
common w th th e Elberfe d
__.._
_._
8
12
61C
Wreck ng Phone (304) 773
rooms and garage located
8 8 8t c
Sebr ng 2 dr hardtop p s
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Realty Company and !he
5890
near the schoo l Phone 992
100 000
p b v nyl top ra ly wheels JOHNSON furnace
VI lage of Pomeroy for the
Author zed S nger Sates aQd
Ja60
7 5 ttc
BT,.U 2 years o d I ke new
2 450 m les excellent con
Service We sharpen Sc ssors l'f
purpose of hgress and egrees
a 2 tfc
for ced a r fue o I f red $200
d ton S3 100 Phone 992 34l0
said alley s loca ted n Lot 152
3 29 tfc
SOLID
Phone 843 2286
Sa d prop erty s to be so d and
8 4 6tc
VINYL
SIDING
- - -- - Scrap Iron Cast Iron
8 13 5tc
conveyed to the h ghest b dder
HOUSE n town $500 down and DOZER work and clearing by
1969 FORD P ckup new bed and
upon the follow ng terms Cash
the acre hourly or contract
sao per month Tra ter and
Motor
blocks
copper
Haro d
n hand on day of sa e
'Jl
pa nt ob Phone 992 3640 af CANN NG tomatoes
farm ponds roads etc Large tot 2 bedroom $10 500 Phone
Produced from a spec al
Roush Portland Oh o a43
ter5pm
8147t c
992 3975
The r ght s reserved tore ect
w1re
brass
dozer and oper~tor w th over
vmyl compound made by B
2865
---any and a I b ds
20 years exper ence Put Ins
B 14 tic
F Goodr ch and Monsanto 5
alum1num
dte cast
8 13 6tc
Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh o
1972 MG M dget ow m eage
t mes thicker t han meta
Phone 992 2478
Ra ph Werry
zmc
stamless steel
good cond t on 33 m es per
s d ng W
not dent ch p
6 ROOM white frame home 3
2 CARGAR whee s tor Chev
Pres den of Coun c
12 19 tfc
ga l on Phone 949 3955
crack
peel
ro
ust
or
Sell
to
bedrooms fu
basemen! 2
and 2
160t res 1 Cour er C
Da e Sm th
a
9
6tc
cha k
c ty lots In Pomeroy Phon e oDELL A I nement loc~ted
B Rad o 23 channe Phone
Mayor
446 9488
667 37 59
These s zes also aYa lable - ·
beh nd R1,1tland Gr~de SchOol
969
MU
STANG
Fastba
ck
6
FREE HOME ESTIMATES
a 11 6t c
Jane Wa ton
a
13
3tc
complete front end service
cy nder std good cond 1 on
s
000
6
000
8
000
10 000 and
------Clerk
brakes
and tuneups wheels
$700
Phone
992
2075
6ROOMh0uS'eWth
3
3
aCres
of
SUPERIOR
12 000 BTU
oval 1 d
P.art y
Athens Oh1o
balanced electron cally Open
B 9 Sip OLD trunk
and
a
1972
3
bedroom
tra1ter
VINYL
PRODUCTS
brass &lt;very o d ) Make me an
(8) 1 8 15 22 29 Si c
POMEROY LANDMARK
8 to a daly Call 742 3232 on
AI for sa e for $35 000 Phone
We close each Fnday
offer Phone 992 5142
Sun day for appt
992
3792
111f
•.
Jack
W
Carsey
Mgr
Call Collect 1 592 5544
1969 CHEVY Townsman stat on
8 13 5tc 1
at
noon
for
balance
of
716tfc
8
9
6tp
At.~
Phone
99'2
2181
NOTICE OF
Athens Oh10
wagon ~ 95 good cond ton
week
Phone 992 7620
REGISTERED
half Arab an
EXCAVATING dozer loa der •
AP PO I NTME
CaseNT
No 21257 'llare w th her reg sterPd J ~ WE: ARE p ck ng up a p a no n
CARSON
Serv ce
Sla t on
5 24 f c
and backhoe work
septic
your area and wou d I ke
Estate of Marvin Delbert Ktng
Arab an
fll y
Raffles
Garage
50x60
build ng
tanks
Installed
dump
trucks
PUBLIC NOTICE
Deceased
some respons b e party to
breed ng
Call
667 36 10
Cement dr veway Phon e 742
1972 DODGE Cot 3t 000 m es
and lo boys tor h re wl hau
The unknown hers dev sees
take over payments
Call
Not ce s hereby g ven t hat
Coo v I e
5052
rad
o
rad
a
t
res
s
850
f I d rt top soli I mestone &amp;
egatees
executors
ad SITTER n my horne tor 5 year
Cred
t
Manager
[614
772
W n fred
Jane
K ng
of
a 13 p
Phone 992 7066
7 16 tic
gravel ca
Bob or Roger
old boy 11 30 a m 5 30 p m 5
5669 or wr te 260 East Ma n
Pomeroy Oh o R 0 has been m n fstrators and ass gns of
Jeffers day phone 992 70a9
8
3
Jtc
Street
days a week Cal 992 5844
Ch
1
cot
h
e
Ohio
45601
duly appo nted Execufr x of the Ne e Adk ns Deceased the
BLACK pony sadd e good
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
unknown
her s
de v sees
78 ACRFS 2 akes beaut ful
Estate of Marv n De bert K ng
8 13 3tc 197
4 7 tfc
cond ton Call 992 3059
S232
VEGA
Hatchback
executors
ad
trees
rolling
meadows
-~-------deceased late of Pomeroy Oh o legate es
a 13 3tc
automat c ow m eage new
2 11 tfc
m nlstrators and ass gns of BABYS TTER needed n my
electr c ty Salem Townsh p
R DING horse for sa te 2 years
R D Me gs County Ohio
t
res
c
at
days
992
2644
F
lorence
Taylor
Deceased
the
o
d
green
broke
Gent
e
Cal
Rd
No
625
dead
ends
nto
Cred tors are requ red to I le
home 5 days week. Ca 1 992
LOSE we1ght w lh New Shape
even ngs 667 3785
CONCRETE
9925510
heirs
dev sees
3581
man entry - IDEAL HOME CREMEANS
the r ( a ms w t h sa d t due ary unknown
Tablets and Hydrex Water
8
13
6tp
delivered Monday through
l ega tees
executors
ad
with n four months
SITE Also fronts on
8 1 tfc
8 14 3fc
P s Dutton Drug
M d
Sa turday
and
eve n ngs
Town sh p Road No 16 Listed
Dated th s lOth day of August m n strator s and ass gns of
d eporl and Ne lson Drug
1969 OODGE w ndowed super
Phone 446 1142
Andrew Tay or Deceased I he PART TIME babys tier from I
1974
EXCELS I OR Salt Works E
at $300 per acre Make offer
8
13
3t
c
van automat c transm ss on
unknown
hers
dev sees
6 13 tfc
waters Realty
Box 324
Man St Pomeroy All k nds
4 p m 2 3 days a week Phone
Runs
good Looks good $1295
legatees
executors
i;td
773
5857
of sa lt water pellets water
Worth ngton On o .43085
Mann ng D Webster
36
GAS
stove
w
th
automat
c
George Hat 992 5949
nuggets bock salf and own
Phone (614) 888 1892 or (6 141 WILL tr m or cu t trees and
Judge m n strators and ass gns of W
.8 14 6t c
oven t mer clock etectr c
8 15 3t c
888 2803
shrubbery
A so clea n out
n
Moore Deceased the unknown
(81 15 22 29 3tc
Oh
o
R
ver
Sa
t
Phone
992
rot
sser
e
good
cond
t
on
$40
basements a1t cs etc Phone
389 1
hers
dev sees
legatees
Gas
f
oar
furna
ce
SJO
Mason
8
15
3tc
949 3221 or 742 4441
executors cldmln strators and CAREER OPPORTUNITY for
773 5386
6 5 He
Men or Women - Nat onw de
assig ns of Harry Stevens
7 14 26tc
8 13 3tp
I nsurance offers earn ngs up
Deceased the unknown hers
J
to S15 000 (lh s sa salary not A SSORTED
JOBS contracted Phone 742
dev sees
egatees e)(ecu tors
PUBLIC NOTICE
turn
ture
and
COLORED
TV
Phone
949
3057
"
a draw to se I camp ete n
3074 or write Box 23 Langs
app Bnces
The Southern Loca ~hOot admln strators and ass gns of
Pr vale
Phone
8 13 61C
surance protect on
I fe
v lie Ohio
Lucy
Stevens
992 7066
o strict wl 1 offer for sale a 1962 Florence
hea th
auto
f re
com
1 23 26tc
Dodge and a 1963 Internal onat Deceased the unknown hetrs
8 11 tfc 1973 HONDA 50 m 1'1 Ira I b ke
mercia
auto f nance and
ega t ees executors
school bus All b ds must be devisees
$100 Phone 9493195
mutua
l
funds
No
pr
or
ex
AUTOMOBILE nsurance been
subm uted to t he c erk s off ce adm 1n strators and ass gns of
8 13 31c
per ence s necessary s nee OUTBOARD motor Johnson 18
cancelled?
Lost
your
no lat er than September 16 1974 Ne l e Rucker Deceased the
h
p
e
ectr
c
start
or
w
!I
we have one ot the- most
he rs
dev see s
operators
I
cense
Call
992
~~ 12 00 0 clock noon at which unknown
trade for equa ve ue Phone 1 ACRE LOT su table tor house
compete tra n ng programs
7.428
egatees
executors
ad
t me the b ds w
be opened
992 7494 F fe s M dd leport
n
the
ndustry
f
you
are
or Ira ler Water tap s n
m nlstrators and ass gns of
6 15 tfc
The h ghest b d w I be ac
a 11 6tc
nterested n a career op
sta ed
1 m lie south of
===---=-- -=------- -cepted The Board has the r o ht Henry Lawson De c eased the
portunlfy
n
a
reward
ng
he i rs
deV'Isees
Rutland on County Rt 3
to ret use any and a 1 b ds unknown
b u ~ ness
c al
Stan l ey REG STEREO ThOroughbr ed
exe c utors
ad
Phone 742 3654
NEW LISTING Nice 3 ABOUT S Hli.LY ACRES P ease spec:lfy n bid wh c h bus l egatees
Fergu son &amp;t 614 -446 4707
Is desired More nformat on min strators and ass gns of R
3 B R home bath lots
bedrooms
bath
utll1fy
large
u5TS;or:-sale trall~r or house
year ngf II';'
f lly Phone
gent e 992
2 yr5039
old -------~---••s_•'-'
Co lect M onday lh u Fr day
grade
concern ng lh e buses c an be P Sk nner Deceased and th e
All uf lites Phone 7•2 3615
of tile and paneling nice
I
v
ng
garage
and
breezeway
a
a
m
lo
4
30
p
m
An
Equel
hers
devisees
8 12 SI C
obte ned
by
c a lng;
the unknown
Rut and Oh io
Opport
un
ty
Employer
k
tchen
porches
out
Large
lot
n
Tuppers
Plains
legatees
executors
ad
READY MIX
CONCRETE
Super ntendent s Off ce
7 16 tfc
8
s
2t
c
bu !ding city water and gas
min slr ators and ass gn s of
TREE r pened pea ches wh t e
del vered right fo
your
You need $16 000 00
A ma B Sk nner Dec eased w I
pro ject F as! and easy Free
and yellow at Mason pea ch
f8 ) 15 22 29 ! 9) S 4t c
JUST $8 000 00
APPROX 49 acres on Baley
N~W LISTING - 4 bedrooms
take not ce that on the 12th day APPL CATION S are be ng
orchard
Ma so n
West
estlmales Phone 992 3284
Run Road one m le from
10
AI.MOST
LEVEL
ACRES
cce
pted
at
fh
e
off
c
e
ol
the
a
large
l1ving
bath
front
porch
V rg n a
of July 1974 James s nger
Goeg en Ready M x Co
crossroads
not foo far from
c
erl&lt;.
for
wate
ma
ntenan
ce
- On good fish ng creek c ty
be ng
P a ntlff
f ed h s
2 carport and 2 outbuildings 2
M dd ~port Oh o
8 13 lfc
the Sa lem Ce nter M ne Good
man n Ra e ne Rep y boK 33
Com pta nt In the Common P ea s
water available Ideal for
6 30 He
~
acre of level land Want lust
road fr o nt~ge some timber
8 IS 10 c
Court Me gs County Oh o n
1974 SUZ UK I off on road Ira 1
home trailer or summer
The Bailey Farm
conta ct
$16
500
00
Case No 15 610 aga nst the --------~-~
b ke Ca 1 992 5601 after 5 p m
C BRADFORD Auct oneer
Mrs Paul Bal ey
cottage
near
mine
No
1
on
HERE
YOU
ARE
Cab
n
In
above named parties and
Comple t e Serv ce
8125t c
8 6 6tp
good blacktop road Rutland
others demanding that a I
Phone 949 3a21 or 949 3161
the woods 3 rooms 2 porches
----------~-.........
FACTS
calms of the defenc;tants may be
ME LO N S sweet corn gr een
Racine Oh o
area
S6
000
00
and a bath
Asking only
HOUSE 630 M II st
Md
~djudged nuj and vo d and that
peppe rs cue urn ber s for sa e
Cr It Bradford
60 ACRES - About 20
TWO
4
room
and
bath
ap
t
s
n
$3
000
oo
Plenty
of lish
•••rort 6 rooms 1 , baths
Pia nt ff s t t e be qu eted on l..ol
Gerald
ne
C
eland
Ra
e
ne
s
1
ttc
M ddleport For nforme~t on
fut
basement
part ally
tillable many building sites
Oh o
No 425 n S W Pomeroy s
YOUR CHANCE - 4 renlols In
call 992 2550 or 74 6551
carpeted
kitche-n
comp let~
with
city
water
home
has
3
Add ton to tower Pomeroy now
tt c F OR FREE est mates on
8
the heart ol Middleport Close
7 3 He
w~sh
Bnd dryer efc Could
Incorporated n the v !age of
a umlnvm
replacement
B R s beth utility R some
to all shopping
Asking
he :l u~drooms gas furnace
M dd eport
Me gs County
ADMIRAL
am
fm
stereo
rad
o
w
ndows
Sid
ng
storm
doors
TRA LER
Br owns Tra ler
carpeti ng &amp; paneling 2 free
r
place storm doors and
$35 000 00 but wan t you to look
Oh o R~ference Deeds Vol 82
re cord player flhone 9a5 3305
and w dews Ra ling Ptione
Court
Pomeroy
Phone
997
w ndows curtains and drapes
gas wells 2 water wells
Chester
Page 585 Vol 80 Pages 212 and
Chari
Isle
Syra
cuse
Oh
o
and
make
us
an
offer
33l 4
Included For Information ca ll
213
Deed Re c ords
Me gs
basement F A heat over
Car
Jacob
Sales
8 11 :i tp
10
ACRES
In
Middleport
7 18 ttc
EIden Wat burn 992 2805
county Oh o
Representative
V
V
8 000 sq ft or good buildings
Good location for several
a 13 tfc
You are requ red to answer
JOhnson
and
Son
Inc
under roof stocked pond all
the Compta nt w thin 28 days BU SINES S room 22:\BO 234 E
houses
or
trailers
Maybe
a
4 30 tfc
Man St
Pomeroy
Oh o
2 BEOI!lOOM l'iouse RutlAnd
fenced S~3 000 00
after the ast publ cation of th s
sma ll farm S25 000 00 Just
Phone
992
5786
or
992
3975
Phone 992 5858
not ce wh ch w ll be P\Jbl shed
211
ACRES
Close
to
Stote
_..
give us an offer on this We II
6 12 He
to f I your old COUCh Md
8 tJ tfc
once each week for s x sue
8 14 71c FOAM
Park and Lake all minerals
cha r cu hlons a.s low .u
l isten
cess ve w~eks and the last
apartment
SlO 95 upholstery okka only
STEREO RADIO l!im fm 8
publ cat on wl I be made on FURNISH ED
MOBII.E HOME &amp; LOT - 2 pa ld woter fop 20 pet down
adulfs only In M lddleporf
SOc 4 Inc h covered foAm
August 29th 1974 Answer date
tr&amp; c k tape c omb nat on 4
balance like rent just $125
Bedrooms nicely furnished
Phone 992 3874
matlre ss~s tot- $1Mdt~rd s ze
w I be September 27th 1974
speaker
sound
system
per
acre
Near store ond shop_p)ng A
5 12 tfc
bed
$79 95
Pomeroy
In case of your fa lure to
B~tan ce S106 78 Or' ea~f
The dachshund IS a breed of answer
AI.L
PRICED HOMES TO
Recovery
622
E
Main
51
term s C.eti 992 3965
real buy for fl couple for
or otherw se respond as
.....
dog developed m Germany to p~rmttted by the Oh io Rules of 4 ROOM furn shed apartment
.....
..__
Pomeroy
Oh
io
Phone
992
CHOOSE
FROM
S5 75000
8 14tfc
cl ose to Powells Super Valu
7554
pursue badgers mto the1r C vI Procedure w fh n the t ime
SOLD
LAST
WEEK 4
Phone 992 3658
7 74 26tc
N E W green re e l ner
stated iudgment by defau t w 1
$1 50
burrows The World Almanac be
BUY
NOW
AND
GET
SET
WITH 10
PROPERTIES
8 7 He
PhOne 992 2571
aga nst you for the
notes The dachshund has a ret rendered
TLED
BEFORE
WINTER
YEI\.RS
EXPERIENCE
WE
UPHOLSTERY
fabrics
by
the
ef demanded n the Corn
8 14 tfc
3 ANO 4 ROOM furniShed and
yard
nchn w de as low 1111
SEE OR CI\.LI. US
long body w1th a deep chest PI-a nt
KNOW
THE
TOP
DOli.AR
unfurn shed
apartment'
$2 ~9 p&amp;r yard Vet vets u tow
POTATOE S Phone 8-43 7-i95
ON
YOU~
shorl lees and long ears The
VALUE
Phone 992 5434
1mpor't&amp;d velvttl
as SS 25
LARRY E SPENCER
lA l2tc
Wire ha1red dachshund has
PROPERTY
!OVER
4
12
lfc
l9
60
We
also
have
nvlan
Clerk of Courts
hercuton
cotton
prints
remarkable stamma and
PRICED PROPERTIES
Court of Common Peas PRIVATE meetng room for NIGHTCLUB w fh 2 30 am
-vinyls and remnants by lht
courage and has been used m
license Write 6oJ~ 729 w c o
SEI.DOM
SELL.) IF YOU
Me igs County Oh o
any organ tat on phone 992
yard or by 1he p1tce Pomeroy
The Oat v Sentinel Pomeroy
Aomeroy Oh o
hunhng wild boar and stag
REALLY
WI\.NT
TO SELL
397S
Recovery 627 E Meln St
Oh o
deer
US
TOO/\.
Y
3
11
tfc
Pomeroy
Phone
992
7554
....,.
(7) 18 25 ( 8) 1 8 IS 22 29 7tc
B 14 Me
MlddiOHrf Pomeroy
1 24 26tc

----

Evening at Pops

6

10 3J Mec0avls3 415 OorasWortd6 JudySi ng s 13
9 00 - Kung Fv 6 Ironside 3 4 15 International PertOf"mance
20

171 Purl 51
Mlclclteport Ohio
9U-S367

.1_91:;;.4;_-0:WJ~IfMi~=

00 -

1.

B&amp;K EXCAVATING

992 7204

R
r Jeffers
Or Oge
Dav 992 7089
Ntghl 992 3525
or 992 5232

8 15 61c

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

w Matn
Pomeroy 0
Locl1ed .-t Modern Su~ply
Sm~ll Engine Rep••r

399

loot or contract Also dozer
work and sephc tanks '"

Mason W Ya

Cal ' " 382

------- ---J B E D ROO M house f urn She d

W1lk1nson Small Eng1ne

!)ITCHING SERVLCE

"--,.--,.----~,

_:__- -- - -- - ----:- - - . : J

Employment

BISSELl BROlHERS
CONST. CO.

' "the Area

350 V 8 au toma t c P steer ng &amp; bra k es da r k blve f ln~s h
bl ue nler or b lue v inyl roo t fa c tory air e.ond I oned I ke
new w w t tres rad o Many ot her ex tr a s

11 - The O.Uy S.ntlnel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Thursday .\ug 15

--

Oetu•e stroller
Cosc-o h gh cho ir 18 50 Cosco
playpen
Sl2 50
Ro c k i ng
horse u 00 All new Ph.One
Mason 773 5477
B IS lip

rad o good t
ow mileage

c a n br c foa m g ue z ppers
tack ng

e9

~·n

I

Sa l e
F r dil y
an d
Sat u r day 6 98 Lau r e S
M d d eporl 9 a m o S P m
8 14 J c

BO B S A sh land A uto Se r v ces
190 M u berry St
P ome r oy
O h o E)Cper e-n ce d mec l"l a n c
on du ty gen erd ove r hau
Tun e up s S5 a nd up B a k. e
work - carb ad us men !

m at es Ca H• ttl

SECL U DED new four bt!Qroom
1wo bath toto&amp; I electr ic hott •
9;1 acres n ic f 1!. IChen tvll
carpet Ca 1 747 -ii JJ
I IS 6t p

1974 OPEL MANTA
12995
1 Door orange f n sh blk v lnyl1n tenor bucket sea ts less
than S 000 m les &amp; 3 mo old Rad io deluxe bumpers

Y AR D

oo
00
oo
00

fre~ l!~ f

lp m

Y A RD S AL E JO.q
Sou t h 2- d
Street
M dd e po rl
Oh o
A ugu st 18 and 19
8 S 3tc

Prices do not Include patnt
WtdeW•deW•deWJde-

~

Y A RD SALE
Fr day and
Sa t u rda y
Lar k. n
S
R ut and
M n re f gera tor
o ld pu m p o r g ~n n ex cel enf
c ond f on an t QUCS o lamps
c r eam c ans d Shes c roc k
ars etc
81S?c

Ph 992 74S4 or 9'92 7179

8
10
12
14

SH OOTI N G
M "' (h
Co n
Ho i pw Gun Club tu n f irst
r gh t aft er M If'S Ceme ery
R utla n d
Fac tory c hokpd
gu ns only Sund ay A.ugus t 18
8 15 JIC

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING CO.

2 s~c;ees

'(#.\

Not1ce

Business Services
- ..,.._.:._____

WILL pant root s and !louses

est

North

East

I+
ass

ass
Pass
Pass

2+
3'1'

s•Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

South

Dble

2.
4'1'

6.
THE

Openmg lead-8+

BANK

SAD

SYEJO!.Y

THNG5

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
South d1dn t have much of
a takeout double but after
North cue b1d m doamonds
and then bod hearts and f•ve
Sl?ades South dectded that
h•s l?artner wanted h1m to go
to s1x 1f he held a Singleton
d1amond
When South looked at dum
my he wtshed he hadn t ac
cepted the slam mvilatton NINN!E WINKLE
There appeared to be two
losers unless he COUld dro~
the queen jack of clubs Wit
three leads Then he saw the
chance for a squeeze and
decoded to retam all options
He ruffed the second d1a
mond led a trump to dummy
ruffed dummy s last d1a
mond played two more
rounds of trumps wh1le d1s
card mg his fh• ee ot hearts
and Ihen led out lhree rounds
of clubs 1 uffmR the thud one

OKAY

~
' , ....
'"'"" M-

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

' ......

:::=======::::---r:;;;;-;;:~;;:;-;;-;;-~:;::;-:;;:;-;;-r----;-c----;-cy---;;;-;:;;;~~;:;;;;:;;:;--r;:;;:;-;;;-;:~"1;"-;:;::;-;;;::,l
WHEN YOU COJLD e&gt;E ON1HAT
GO ALONG l HAVE

~ w NNIE T BEEM6 5 LLY
'OR You 10 5 TOUT
&lt;ERE: N "THE HOT
:&gt;UN WATCH No us
rAKE P CTIJRE5

FABULOUS YACHT WTH
1HAT AlTfiACTIVE
AVA LABLE MUL1
MlL ONA fiE

YOUR BEST N
TE Rc5T5 AT HEART

m dummy

East had shown up woth
lh1ee spades and three clubs '
and surely held at least fiVe -:::=:::::::::--:-;r,~;.;:;;;;;~;:;,:;;;;,
d•amonds That meant he .
TO PROVE YOU'RE
cou ld no I hold more than two
A NUTL!:IUTLEY hearts and a squeeze aga mst
1 LL &gt;&lt;t:ACH
West was gomg to work
BE~IND MESouth led dummy s last
trump d1scarded another
heart and watched West
squirm West could onlliJ!pld
lhree cards One had to I!I!Jthe
Jack of clubs He was forced
to unguard h1s queen of
hearts and the slam wu
made
IN!.'WSI'AI Ell ENTI!:HP IIISE A!iSN

-

.,_,

c:q;J :1 •!iZ!:ZtJ
The blddmg has been
11
Wetl
Norlh Eoll Soulh
••
Pass U
Pass
Pass ·a•
Pau
3•
Pass ••

s•

Pass

~•

Pass

'

You South hold
UQ&amp;&amp;t 'I'A9854 +AK•z
What do you do now"
A- Five heorll to the Kloollflc
coli 8i1 beorll would 1101 be H•
bul you mlthl •ol -ke •
Four notrump 111110 haa 10me
mer II

ol••

•

'

LUKEV
PLAV
CHECKERS
SNUFFV
HE WENT TO A BODACIOUS

TAFFV

STOP
TWITCH IN
'lORE TAIL
0~ TAFFV

I

A few thoughts
a lost love

Rats 1

�10 'Fhe lla1ly S.nline l Middleport l' ouwroy 0 Thursda)

u~

I•

1~ ~

For Sale

Sentinel Classifieds Get Result...!
Not1ce
WH.. L CJo rootlno h eat ng
r epa i r p l um b ng and e lec
tr l cai w ork Ph on e Char les
s nc:l el r 985 41 71
8 7 12tc

------

Spec1al Mobile Home
Roofs Patnled Before
Fall and Wrnter Sets In
$22
$25
527
530

OFFER ENDS
SEPTEMBER30 1974

8

D ON T KNOW T H AT MGM
F ea Mark e l Sp ec a s
S5
n s de S3 o u s de Spr ng
A ve
Pom e oy
Oh o
Co ectors
dea ers
et c
Ev er y Sat and Sunday
8 7 tt c

-------

4 Jtp

WE H AVE a
yo ur upho s t ery
ne ed s
B u r ap
de n m

t 71r

Pomeroy ·r
Motor Co. cosco ----------su so

QUALITY

1972 VEGA HATCHBACK CPE

...,.....

52095

BOWERS
REPAIR

_____________
For the Lowest

Loc a l 1 owner t rade n 4 speed tra ns G T equ pmen t
re'!i. clecm ns de red hn sh bl k vtnyl nl

1970CHEV MONTE CARI.O

-

T1re Pnces

52095

POMEROY MOTOR CO•
OPEN EVES8 00 F- M
POMEROY OHIO

Its

@) I
"All'
Uf"

J

w

W~nted

LL k ee p e der
h o me

v peo p e

For

n my

Phone 99 2 7A60

8 7 7t c

-\
sp ng s and
c ps
c h pboa d
b u tton W ILL do babys I ng n gh s or
davl me Thu r sd a y or Sund ay
tw ne
se w ng th rt&gt;ad
eg s
R ea sona D e ra t es PhonP 992
upho s e r y book s d a c ron
747 4 or 742 490 2 afrer 4 p m
w eb b ng spr ng tw n e ra c k s
8 14 6t c
we i c ord c o t o n s w ve
bases and f oam foam foam
Pomeroy Recovery 622 I:
Man St
Pome r oy
Oh o
Ph one 99 2 7554
OLD paver p ana r ot s Ca l
742 562 5
7 24 26 tc
a 9 6tc
--- CANNIN G peaches now
n
sea son Two t r uck loa ds ea c h WA NTED ol d up r gh l p anos
we ek Pr ce st art ng at 56 98
an y cond ton
Pa y ng S10
per bushel P ease br ng you
cas h F rs l floor only Wr te to
own conta n~ r s Bob s Mark el
an d g ve d r ee l ons to W tten
n ~ ar Po m eroy Ma so n Br d ge
P an o Com pany
Box ta8
Ma son
W
Va
Home of
Sard s Oh o 43946
quat ty fru t and v egct ab es
61p
Open se ven d a ys
0 p m
-------~
8 12 tf c
WE N E ED 200 ton s ot sh eet
--c as t new or o d a um num
KO SCO T
KO SMET CS
&amp;
K ee p can s se parat e The
WIG S For a good
ne ot
Ros
enb erg Co Athen s Oh o
Cosm pf cs fr en d v serv ce
a 15 tic
and som eone to ch a t w lh g ve
-me a ca I Helen J ane Brown
JU NK Autos c amp e f e and
992 511 3
de vered lo our yard We p ck
3 19 tf c
up auto bod es and buy a I
k nds of sc rap meta s and
A TO Z MART used furn l u re
ron R der s Sa vagp State
applian ces and m sc Rt 33
Rt 124 Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh o
Hartford w Va
Phone 992 5468
7 26 tfc
7 3 26tp
------CHICKEN barbecue
Ra e ne CA SH pad for a makes and
F re Sta on Aug us
8
I
modes of mob e homes
am t '
Phone area code 614 423 9531
8 13 Stc
4 IJ lfc
srr p

Wanted To Buy

All Small Appliances
Lawn Mowers

Chester, Ohio
985 4102

Nextto H1ghwa v
Garage on Route 1
Pomeroy Route 3

&amp;
Butldmg
Home
Alummum
Addtttons
&amp; Vmyl Sodmg, Floor
Sandmg &amp; F~n15hmg

Rent

BEDROO M
a pa r t
a r con d I o ned f ur
n shed
R ea so nab e re nt
Located
2 m les
fr om
Pomeroy P hOne 304 77] 5 118
a 14 f c

n en

on
Ke no Ba shan
Road
De po s t r eq u r ed Phone 843
21 94
8 S 3tc

992 3092

BEND TIRE CENTER t.~!~r At·:~~k a,:;,~e :~~~
112

5881

l•lolled

1966 EA S Y TR AV E L Tra ler
see ps 6 s to ve
ce bo)( and
wa te r un der cr essu r e 1963
Fo rd !fa t bPd J • ton and 1967
Buc k w ldca t conv~:&gt;r t b e

B0 b

Television -Log

See or Call

-

CAMP E R 8 fl w d e 20 ft ong
sl eep s s )( self co nta n ed
la rg e aw n n g
c arpet ng
throu g h out See at 630 P um
St M dd l eporl
8 15 61p

• Lawn Boy
• Te cumseh
• Ko hler
• w scans n
• A 1 other
makes

\
-..

AUGl ll•sa slf7•
News I 10 TliURSDAY
Sesame S1 10
Yoga a nd You 33
T TruthorConseq 6 New~oJ _. 15 IJ
' 30- News 3 • 15 ABC News 6 CBS News 8 10 Room m 13

W11f do
Dour &amp;
Backhoe Work, lnst•ll
Septtc Tanks, H•ul
Dtrt,
Gravel, I .
Limestone or Rent One
Of
Our
Trucks
Backhoe or Dozers

Flower Show 33
l 00 - Beat Ihe Clock • Wllat s My Lloe 8 NewS6 tO Etec Co
10 Trut~ or Con• l l.et s Make A Deal 13 Sporto Desk IS
M.on Builds Man Destroys 33

~ JO - Hollywood Square-s 3 Wild Kingdom 10 To Tell the
Truth 6 Beat 1he Oock 13 Zoom 20 Deal er s Choice 4

Oule s Girls 8 TBA IS The Session 33

8 00 - Waltons 8 10 Temperatures Rising

•

I,

11 JO - Johnny Carson J A 1S Mission Impossi ble 6 Un
touchables 13 News 10 Movie Operat ion Counterspy 10

WARNER'S
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE

l Z 00 - News8 Movie Five Finger Exercise 10
1 ~ 30 -

•

- --------

----

---------

FRIDAY AUG 26 1174

6 00 - Sunrise Semester 4 Summer Semester 10
6 25 -

Pomeroy 0. ,

K&amp;H ROOFING

-----

J&amp;B AUTO
BODY

•'

Shuler's rJJartet

742-5293

----------

Mobile Homes For Sale

----------

------ -----

- ----------

--

-

----

- --

-------

- -------

----- ------

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING 00.

DEOORATING

Interior, Exterior
Decorating and

INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR

HOME

I

PHONE 992-5476

For Sale

Pels For Sale

Auto Sales

7 30 - New Zoo Revue6 Tennessee TuxedolJ

8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 8 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33
Jeffs Collie 6 Man from COS I 10

------------- HOTPOINT
AIR CONDITIONERS

-

-----

4,000 BTU

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

- ------

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

- --------

----

s

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

••

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

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

•

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

- - ---

--

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

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

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

-

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

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

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

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

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

__________

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

-------------a
------------------------------------"""""---....- ----

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

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

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

________ ______

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

Real Estate For Sale

----------

For Rent

,

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

•

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

For Sale

'

R el111ble Sero1ee

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

------ --

WORLD ALMANAC

Known &amp;

----- ----

-------

---------

337 N. 2, Middleport
992-2550

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

COUNTRY

-------------s•

- ------- __ ___________
f

Lost 13 Mister Rogers 33
9 30 - ToTellfheTruthJ lucy ShowS ElectrlcCo JJ
10 00 - Jokers Wild 8 10 Company 6 Lilias Yoga &amp;
Name That Tune 3 15

10 30 - Gambit 8 10 W nn1ng Streak 3

'

$11REO
92.1

WN\PQ.FM

'

You 33

IS Turn ing Points 33

4

11 00- Password 13 Now You See It 8 10 H gh Rollers 3 -4 15

$10 000 Pyramid 6 Sesame Street 33

11 30- Hollywood Squares 3 -4 15 Brady Bunch 13 love of Life

8 10 Lucy Show 6
1155-CBS News8 DanlmelsWorldiO
12 00 -

Password 6

News 8 10 13

Jackpot 3 IS Mr Rogers 33

Bob Brauns 50 50 Club .4

12 30 - Celebrity Sweepstakes 3 15 Split Second 6 Search for
TomorrowS 10 Electric Co 33 Atternoonwlth OJ 13

12 5S- NBC News 3 IS
1 00- News 3 All My Children 6 13 Not For Women Only 15
What s My line 10 FTench Chef 33 HazelS

Travel 33

Jeopardy J -4 15

2 00 - Days of Our Llyes3 4 15 Guiding Light 8 10 Newlywed
Game 6 13 FestiYal Films 33
2 30- Doctors 3 4 15 Edge of Night 8 10 Girl in My L le 6 13
Paul Nuchlms 33
3 00 - Another World 3 -4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Price Is

Right 8 10

---....___

3 30 - One life to live 13 Phil Donshue -4 How To Survtve A

Marriage 3 15 Match Game 8 10 T me for Timothy 33
Lassie 6

4 00- Mr Cart&lt;XJn 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 Tattletales
8 Gilligan s Island 6 Mov1e Hurricane Smlth 10 SlO 000

Pyramid 13
4 30 - Green Acres 3 Bonanza 15 Jackpot 4 V rglnian 8
Dna~el Boone 13 Mod Squad 6
S 00 - Bonanzlll Merv Griffin 4 M ster Rogers 20 33

5 30- Elec Co 33 Hodgepodge Lodge 20 Hogan s Heroes 13
Western Star Theater 15 News 6
6 00- News 3 4 8 15 ABC News 13 Sesame St 20 News 6
Great American Dream Machine 33

6 30 -

NBC News 3 4 IS CBS News 8 10

Room 221 13

WIN AT BRIDGE

Generation Rap

i

By Helen and Sue Boncl

&lt;

I BUT C
I thmk your parents may be achng more shook than lhey
actually are to make sure you remember their No 1 slwnber
party rule no boys allowed especoally through the back gate or
over the fence
They know you JUSt talked (so dod my parent.'l when l was
giving juruor hogh school sleep-&lt;JUt.'l and somehow a boy or two
always managed to fmd out when and where) But as chaperons
for you g1rls they can t take chances
Let them know you see tlle1r s1de and they ll soon be trustmg
youagam (I doubt that they ever stopped ) - SUE

.2

TODAY S QUESTION
You do bld four notrump As
expe&lt;:ted your partner shows one
ace What do you do now?

Fot Frldl

Aug 16 1i74
ARIES (MO•Ch 2 t April 19)

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Now 22)

You ac l ons a t l h1s time w n
respoc: t and alleg ance I om
t wo va uable all es who w II
back you n what you want to
acc omol sh

SAGITTARIUS (Now

TAURUS (April 20 Moy 20)

tha t Involve lr ends can be
furthered p ov dCd they re not
prese ted too forc efu lly Use
some su ga c oat ng

CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jan

GEMINI (Moy 21 June 20)

19) A sec ret d es re of yours s

You Ida Wt! 1 n any area today
that reQUi res menta deM ter l y
o mag nat ve th nk ng C on
c entral e yout eff orts accord

1ket y to be eal zed atth s 1me
bec ause of the way
events w II unl old

AOUARIUS (Jon

ng y
CANCER (Juno 21 July 22)
u any bu s ness or c omme C;I BI
de a ngs you re nvolved n can
te no w than yOtJ w ould la ter

Dear In But Con
Ah those )Umor hogh slwnber parties and lhe worroes we
chaperoning parent.'l suffered' We knew that if other parents
learned boys had been sneaking aroWid we d be blamed
and we also knew they d try to JUmp the fence wothout much
argument from the g1rls Not that the g1rls were bad but
having your slumber party crashed was a safe and darmg ad
venture It gave you status woth the kids
I U bet your mother remembers when she and her teen
Bewitched 6
Truth or Conseq 3 Beat the Clock 4 News 10 What s
My line? 8 Aviation Weather 33 Wtld Kingdom 13 I Spy IS
Electric Company 20 Bowling For Dollars 6
7 30 - Porter Wagoner 3 New Treasure Hunt 10 Beat the
Clock 13 Hollywood Squares 4 Concentration 8 To Tell The
Trufh 6 You ONe It to Yourself 20 Jeann1e Wolfe W1th
33
8 00- Sanford and Son 3 4 15 Wash ngton Rev ew 20 33 Your
Hit Parade 8 10 Brady Bunch 6 13
30-GoodTmes8 10 WaiiStreetWeek20 33 Bnan Keth3
4 15 Chicago Meanwh le Back At the Ranch 6 13
9 00 - Mev es Number One 3 4 15
State Far
10
Marriage Times Four B Masterp ece Theatre 20 33

7

oo -

a

9 30 - Odd Couple 6 13
10 00- ABC News Closeup 6 13 News 20 V deo Vislonanes 33
10 30 - Ohio This Week 20 Day At N ~ht 33

11 00- NewsJ 4 6 8 10 13 15 Av lit on Weather 20 JanakiJJ
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Mtss1on Impossible 6 Un

touchables 13
Mev es
Count Yorga
Vamp re
B
Dlnosaurust 10
12 30- Don Ktrshner s Rock Concert 6 W de World m Concert

13
1 00- Midnight Special 3 4 Take F ve for L1fe 15 MoYle The
10

00- News 13

2 30 5 00 -

Movie The Buccaneer 4
Mov1e The Depserate Hours
6 30- International Zone ~

7 30 p m

You d be very mu ch m stak en I
you th nk the wo rk you re now
do ng s go ng unnot c ed by
.persons you want to mpr ess

Sool 22)

Love

poet
14 Summer
hat
15 Definitely I

II Name
(sl)
17 Tantalize
lt Cockneys
flock
ZO Golfer a

DOWN
I Tar a
greeting
Z Songwriter s
subject
3 Wriggle
(3 wds)
4 Much
used
5 Dethrone
I Silly
7 Polish
wifely
UUe
10 Disapprove
(4 wds)
II Came

lntG

sight

concern

12Piaces
for

food

Yeslenlay'o Alllwer
16 s~
za Thwart
obstruct
sound wonl
11 Being (Sp ) 28 Michelangelo
zo Soprano
statue
Teresa30 Paper
%1 From
quanUty
13 to 19
32 Hurt
( hyph wd ) 33 Free
zz Macerate
scope
24 Talus
35 I do
eg
II

extra
Inning
Z4 Shaded

recess

%5Advlse
In ScoUand
Zl Caches
27 Formic
acid

source
friends JUSt accodentally mentioned they were sleepmg out to a
couple of guys
and how HER folks reacted - HELEN

+++

~~!M@~®IJ.J -wlt.l-.1 , _
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square to
form four ordmary words

280neof
the Lees
Z11 Bullish
31 Distant
34 Concurred
35Teus
city
36 Governing

body
37 Reflect
iterate
36 SpoU
311 Consider

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It·

I BASHO

I
III
IGO[)XY I [j I

lsrLEr±J

II

One letter almply otanda for another In thiJ sample A IJ

••

Now arranp the

cirel~

lotion

1

1

1ft! ... SIIII!IIISUIISWIIIIIn

I

mrrxrtJ

auueat~

•

CBYPTOQUOTES

JMYME

VJDPG
DTHJ

OCV

XJCA
XJCA

ATHD
ATHD

PB

MJCVWT

PB

by the above c~n

(Au-.n •omor-row)
Y~•terd*y

apootrophea the length and formotlon of the words are aD
hlnta. Each day the code 1ette,. ore dlfterent

YOU GENERALLY
FINt:&gt; THe
OLJT&lt;501NIS iYPE5

to form the aurpriH &amp;Nwer, u

Wrestlmg

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFELLOW

used for the three L • X for the two 0 s etc Single letters

OCV

CABLE CHANNEU

Champtons (color)
All Star
Cowtown Rodeo
9 30- Operation Gangbuster Burkes law
10 30 - Meigs Counfv ~~ r

ACROSS
1 Choor
voice
5 Pickpocket
(sl )
8 Wail
9 Paint
13 Art of

ZZWise
Z3 One

I

4

~-"-

.., THOMAS JOSEPH

20 Fob

PISCES (Fob 20 Morch 20)

22)

Shou d yo u see a s tua t on tha t
you e ted t o w th another
b eg n to Ia ter mo ve n Qu ck y
Tak e o ver c ontra yourse I
2~

a c na n of

19) A dec s on that has a
d reel eff ec t upon you even
though t w II be made b\1
someone e se w U be dec ded
your favor

be conc luded you I lf're bet

VIRGO (Aua

23

Dee 21) Plans 'lou now have

Changes or Impro vements you
nake a ound the hOuse now
are apt to be we ll thought ou t
They II pro ve sat sfa c to y O\ler
the long haul

LEO (July 23 Aug

Aug 18 1874
There w 1I be a nartted 1n
crecase n YOlir popular l y th .s
COI'THng year Also you 1 heve
more ol a management rota n
organ zat OilS ol vour cho c e or
peer group

You w 11 try har der now and be
mo e successful a t what you
d6 I you mak e yoursell awa e
of the mater al goats behind
your ettorts

+++

1

NORTH
15
• AQ1094
"A 62
• 974
... KS
WEST
EAST IDl
• 76 3
"QJ08 75
• 832
+AKQJIO S
... Q64
... J972

L et the oU\er person (Jo nosl o l
th~ ta k no I you re try1ng to
make a de a You II go t bane
terms than you would have
a5JIIed tor you rsel f
LIBRA (Sopl 23 Del 23)
Y01.111 ha ve a cnanc::e to lake
some pas t &gt;J8 steps regard ng
a new dea Do I bel ore you
lose your nsp 1ra1 On

~

PARENTSWH() LOSEFAI111'
Dear Helen and Sue
My two girlfriends and I were sleepmg out In our backyard
when two guys came over to see us All we did was talk but my
parents came out and discovered them there and got ve ry upset
They say we invited lhe bo~ over when actually we JUSt
accidentally mentioned we were sleeping out when we Slj w them
earlier that day
Our parents f1gure lhey know exactly whal we wer e
lhinkmg because they were once that age They say the boys
will make up ugly rumors and our reputatlons will be ruined
When we just talked '
We know we should have told Mom and Dad when the guys
showed up and then 11 would have been okay because we wouldn t
have been 81leakmg as lhey say What we can I Wlderst.and IS
if they d let the boys VISit knowmg they were there why d1d they
get so puslled out of shape fonding outfor themselves'
Now we re restricted mdelmotely as our parents say lhey ve
lost aU faolh m us
How can we get Lhelt trust back and prove we aren t bad
g~rls' - INNOCENT BUT CONVIC"fED

Phantom Speaks

Squeeze causes heart problems

•

W/hi@#&amp;;W///o:--""-""W~,

ll

30 - As the World Turns 8 10 Lets Make A Deal 6 13 Lets

Jumbl.. CRESS FORAY HOMAG~ BECOME

MJCVWT -APGGPHZ

ZCEM
SGHXM

-

Yeltenlay'a Cryploquole IT IS ALWAYS A GREAT
MISTAKE TO COMMAND WHEN YOU ARE NOT SURE YOU
WILL BE OBEYED -HONORE MIRABEAU

What the char•table law_yer ta1d when lu• cltent
waa acq~ttlled- FREE OF CHARGE!"

(0 tn411.1oJ ,...,._ BJBdleow lao 1

DICI\ IKAU:'

"J

SOUTH
• K J85
"K943
+s
... A 1083
Both v ulnerable

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

--- - -----

Help Wanted

Brady Bunch 6 Green Acres 10

8 ~5 - Chuck White Reports 10 News 13
9 »o- AM 3 Paul Dixon 41Wild Wild West 6 Phil Donahue 15
Abbott &amp; Costello 8 Co pta n Kangaroo 10 MoY ie Little Boy

- ------

'109.95

The Rosenberg Co

L::===========

All·WEAlHER

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

____ __

- - ----- -

Morning Report 3 Farmt lme 10

Speedracer 6

REDECORATING?

-- ------ -

Real Estate For Sale

--- ------

6 45 -

Bible Answers 8

7 00 - Today 3 • 15 CBS News 8 10 Dick Van Dyke 13

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

-

- --- -

Farm Report JJ
Five Minutes to Li v e By 4 News 6

Blue Ridge Quartet 13 Sacred Heart 10
6 35 - Columbus Today 4

Refrtgerators,
1~
Freezers, Home &amp; • Auto A1r Condrhoners
and . commerctal
Un.ts
"

Remodeling

--------

6 30 -

B JO -

---

-----

------

----

Wild Wild West 6 Wide World Speclai 13 Movie

Thunder In the East 8
1 00 - Tomorrowl 4 TakeF i vefor Li fe lS
2 00 - News 4 13

-------- --

-----

Journey to Japen 33

4 15

8 15 - Jack LaLanne 13

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

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

33 moYie 1\.llrtd the Great 10 Dora s World 13

10 '()!) - Streets Of 5an Fran cisco 6 13 News 20 Comedy World 3

10 30 - Day At Night 33
11 OO- News3 4 6 810 13 IS Janak l 33

PUBLIC NOTICE
1957
CHEV
Y
Nom
an
wa9on
James
Not c e s her eby g ven t hat
e)(c et ent c ond t on bu t 28 3
sea ed b ds w 1 be r ece v ed at
2 BEDR OO M Ira er w th or
tour speed trans m Iss on 456
Don t forget the roof of r.our
he oft ce o f I he VI age C.o unc
w t ho ut ut 1 1 es c a 992 3509
pos t ve tra ct on ready f or
un t
2 o c loc k noo n on the 2nd
home
Have a beautiful new
9 12 6t c
street or s tr p w II trade for
day of Sept embe
974 tor th e
roof Installed by All Weather
Moved to Rutland ~... mile
m
o
torcy
c
e
or
boat
1968
2
pu r chase ot
n e fo ow n g
BEDR OO M
apartm Pnt
Rooting Co
ns de c ty limit on right
Dodge RT 440 mag s bu t for
desc r bed r e a l estat e
R utland Ph on e 992 5a58
st
p
motor
and
tran
sm
ss
on
corner
Blrck
St
and
Rf
12-i
Th e fo tow ng desc r bed Real
8 3 tfc
all new T om K ng Shady
E s at e s tuated n t h e V llage o t
Cove Road M dd!eport Oh o
All fhat ts needed for a free
Pomeroy Cou nty ot M e gs and
Free Estimates
COUNTRY M ob e Home Park
8 15 31 c
esttmate ts a .phone call
Stat e of Oh o Beg nn ng 60 te et
R t 33 ten m les north of
--and 7 nche s sou hw esterly from
Please Phone
Pomeroy
Large ofs w th
the so vthea s t er y corner of Lot
any
Now Open for Bus mess
c oncrete pat os
s dewatks
others We I g ve you a
151 n sad v age on Second
ru nners
and off
street
Stre P
at t he so uthea sterly
profess ona roof for tess
park ng
A so
spaces for
corner ol the b u ld ng now or
s ma tra ers Phone 992 7479
Call992 2836 For
former y ow n ed by sad C ty ot
Pomeroy
7 21 tf c
Estimates
of Any Type
Pomeroy ( known as the C tY
Ha J then c e northwe sterly
para e w lh the westerly ne of
Stop Here
L ot 151 100 feet o to the north
On
Your
Way From
I ne of an unnumber ed lot
972 J BEDROOM W ndsor
located be ween ots number ed
The Fa1r For Your
Mob te Hom e on
acre of
151 and 152 n sad VI age
ground
F or
more
n
Fresh Frutt
thence southwe s er y fo tow ng
formal on ca 99 2 763a
thE-northerly neot Lot 152 and
&amp; Vegetables
7 30 tfc
the heretofore ment oned un
--~
numbered Lot to the no th
964 COLONIAL 50xl0 mob te
easter y c orner of the prem ses
home c ean rem ode ed
2
Our atm IS to please
now or formerly owned by Th~1
bedrooms
Natural
gas
FOR your remodeling roofing
Elberfeld Rea ty Company (For
our customers
Conestoga Tra er Court
p~lnt ng repairing concre te
referPnce deed see Vo l 161
Athens Oh o phone 592 240a
ALSO SHAMPOO
and masonry work
call
page 350 Thense south easter y
a
1
1
6t
c
Ronne
Hubb~rd
992
3511
or
para e wht the westerly ne of BACK to Schoo spec a
a
OLD F URNITURE oak tabes
CARPETS
-- --~CLOSE OUT on New Z g Zag
992 7302 Work by hour or
Lot 152 to Second Street thence
permanents S2 off b ow cuts
c ocks ce boxes brass beds
£on tra ct
TH S Befo r e you buy
Sew ng Ma ch nes For sew ng
AND CLEAN
northeasterfy to ow ng the
$4 50 Operators
Jeanette
d shes desks
or c omp ete READ
PH 992 7454 or
s tr etc h fabr cs buttonho es
any new 14 w de Mob e
souther y ne of Lot 152 and the
Radford
Jack e N bert
8 1 26tc
households
Wr te M
D
UPHOLSTERY
Home be sure lo see the a
fancy des gns etc Pa nl
unnumbered Lot ocated be
Ruth s Beauty Shop Mason
992 7129
M er Rt -4 Pomeroy Oh o
steel bonded Detro fer Mob l e
s ght y blem shed Cho ce of
SEJ3T IC
TANK S
cleaned
tween Lots 15 and 152 to the
W V a phone 773 56a6
c a 992 7760
Homes
The stee l bond
carry ng case or sew ng Free Est• mates M1ddlepor:t 0 !
reasonable rates
Ph
446
p l!lceofbeginn ng Th s l o t to be
8 13 tf c
5 13 ftc
Detro ter
s
'V rtually
stand
$49
80
cash
or
terms
so ld s known as the C ty Hal
4782
Galllpol
s
John
Russell
-f reproof and has many
ava table Phone 992 2653
owner and operator
Pomeroy Oh o
AUCT ON every Thursday 5 A C RE S of teve to gently
features
that
no
other
Mob
te
a
13
ff
c
There s a so nc uded a str p
n ght beg nn ng Aug 15 7 p m
5 12 tfc
ro I ng and not too fa from
Home on the market can
of land on the eas erly s de of
near 8 and 8 Market Mason
lown Send any nformat on to
match We also have one of ELECTROL U X Sweeper de U)(e GROCERY bus ness for sa e
FREE k liens must get r d of SEPTIC TA NK S
AROBIC
the here n descr bed prem ses
W va Br ng c ons gnments
Box 729 C care Of the Da ty
the argest select ons of good
model
Compete w th all
by Saturday n ght Ca I 992
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
extend ng from Second St r eet to
Wednesday and Thursday
Bu
ld
ng
tor
sale
or
lease
Sent ne
P o meroy
Oh o
7714
used and repossessed Mob le
c ean ng a tla chments and
th e rear of sa d Lot a str p 5
CLEANED
REPAIRED
a m to 6 p m or ca I 773 5471
Phone 77 3 561a from a 30 p m
45769
•
Homes of any dea er n the
uses paper bags S ght y used
MILLER
SA NITATION
feet w de tor the purpose of an
8
14
3tc
o
10
p
m
for
appo
ntment
8 13 3t c
8 2 2tc
area
Don
twa
t
shop
today
but
c
leans
and
ooks
ke
new
STEWART OHIO PH 662
a ley , to be used n comrnon br
3 20 tfc ---- at
Berry Ml er
Mob e
3035
W 1 se l for $37 25 cash or
th e Melhod s t Ep scopal Clwrch
CASH
FOR
JUNK
CARS
T me s
Homes Sales 705 Farson
erms ava la b e Phone 992
of PomProy Oh o and the here n MEIGS SENIORS
10 .4 tiC
com
p
et
e
Frye
s
Truck
and
runn ng ( ou t
Ca
Grover s
2653
Street Be pre Oh o Phone
named V II age of Pomeroy
CANNING tomatoes
br ng
Auto Parts Rut and Oh o 24
Stud
o
at
992
2475
to
make
42
3
953
1
8 13 tfc
TANKS
cleane d
the r successors and ass gns
conta ner
George
H I
HOUSE
2 or 3 bedrooms SEP Tt C
HOUR WRECKER
SER
your appo ntment for Sen or
a a T2tc
Rae ne
Modern Sani tation 992 3954 or
There s also nc lud ed the
V
CE
Phone
742
6094
modern
k
tchen
Phone
992
Portra ts tak en
Aug
20
MOTORCYCLE Har ey
992 73-49
right to use an a ey 4 teet and
8 12 6tc
5737
7 26 26tc
through Aug 24 Or drop n af
Dav dson c hopper rea n ce
10 nches w de on he west Sid e
10 23 tfc
8 11 6tc
our booth at thp County Far
must SPII reasonab y p ced
of the here n descr bed rea
1 000 L B comb nat on safe Ca
---------"=- -S5
for
unk
automob
es
We
w
1
Grover s Stud o n M dd eporl
T m Demosky 992 5663
SEWING
MACHINES
Repa
r
estate sa d a ley to be used n
992
9972
p ck up
R vers de Auto
HOU SE for sa te 1n Syracuse 5
w II be c osed d ur ng he fa r
974
PLY
MO
L
TH
Sate
te
8
13
6fp
serv
ce
all
makes
992
2284
common w th th e Elberfe d
__.._
_._
8
12
61C
Wreck ng Phone (304) 773
rooms and garage located
8 8 8t c
Sebr ng 2 dr hardtop p s
The Fabr c Shop Pomeroy
Realty Company and !he
5890
near the schoo l Phone 992
100 000
p b v nyl top ra ly wheels JOHNSON furnace
VI lage of Pomeroy for the
Author zed S nger Sates aQd
Ja60
7 5 ttc
BT,.U 2 years o d I ke new
2 450 m les excellent con
Service We sharpen Sc ssors l'f
purpose of hgress and egrees
a 2 tfc
for ced a r fue o I f red $200
d ton S3 100 Phone 992 34l0
said alley s loca ted n Lot 152
3 29 tfc
SOLID
Phone 843 2286
Sa d prop erty s to be so d and
8 4 6tc
VINYL
SIDING
- - -- - Scrap Iron Cast Iron
8 13 5tc
conveyed to the h ghest b dder
HOUSE n town $500 down and DOZER work and clearing by
1969 FORD P ckup new bed and
upon the follow ng terms Cash
the acre hourly or contract
sao per month Tra ter and
Motor
blocks
copper
Haro d
n hand on day of sa e
'Jl
pa nt ob Phone 992 3640 af CANN NG tomatoes
farm ponds roads etc Large tot 2 bedroom $10 500 Phone
Produced from a spec al
Roush Portland Oh o a43
ter5pm
8147t c
992 3975
The r ght s reserved tore ect
w1re
brass
dozer and oper~tor w th over
vmyl compound made by B
2865
---any and a I b ds
20 years exper ence Put Ins
B 14 tic
F Goodr ch and Monsanto 5
alum1num
dte cast
8 13 6tc
Excavat ng Pomeroy Oh o
1972 MG M dget ow m eage
t mes thicker t han meta
Phone 992 2478
Ra ph Werry
zmc
stamless steel
good cond t on 33 m es per
s d ng W
not dent ch p
6 ROOM white frame home 3
2 CARGAR whee s tor Chev
Pres den of Coun c
12 19 tfc
ga l on Phone 949 3955
crack
peel
ro
ust
or
Sell
to
bedrooms fu
basemen! 2
and 2
160t res 1 Cour er C
Da e Sm th
a
9
6tc
cha k
c ty lots In Pomeroy Phon e oDELL A I nement loc~ted
B Rad o 23 channe Phone
Mayor
446 9488
667 37 59
These s zes also aYa lable - ·
beh nd R1,1tland Gr~de SchOol
969
MU
STANG
Fastba
ck
6
FREE HOME ESTIMATES
a 11 6t c
Jane Wa ton
a
13
3tc
complete front end service
cy nder std good cond 1 on
s
000
6
000
8
000
10 000 and
------Clerk
brakes
and tuneups wheels
$700
Phone
992
2075
6ROOMh0uS'eWth
3
3
aCres
of
SUPERIOR
12 000 BTU
oval 1 d
P.art y
Athens Oh1o
balanced electron cally Open
B 9 Sip OLD trunk
and
a
1972
3
bedroom
tra1ter
VINYL
PRODUCTS
brass &lt;very o d ) Make me an
(8) 1 8 15 22 29 Si c
POMEROY LANDMARK
8 to a daly Call 742 3232 on
AI for sa e for $35 000 Phone
We close each Fnday
offer Phone 992 5142
Sun day for appt
992
3792
111f
•.
Jack
W
Carsey
Mgr
Call Collect 1 592 5544
1969 CHEVY Townsman stat on
8 13 5tc 1
at
noon
for
balance
of
716tfc
8
9
6tp
At.~
Phone
99'2
2181
NOTICE OF
Athens Oh10
wagon ~ 95 good cond ton
week
Phone 992 7620
REGISTERED
half Arab an
EXCAVATING dozer loa der •
AP PO I NTME
CaseNT
No 21257 'llare w th her reg sterPd J ~ WE: ARE p ck ng up a p a no n
CARSON
Serv ce
Sla t on
5 24 f c
and backhoe work
septic
your area and wou d I ke
Estate of Marvin Delbert Ktng
Arab an
fll y
Raffles
Garage
50x60
build ng
tanks
Installed
dump
trucks
PUBLIC NOTICE
Deceased
some respons b e party to
breed ng
Call
667 36 10
Cement dr veway Phon e 742
1972 DODGE Cot 3t 000 m es
and lo boys tor h re wl hau
The unknown hers dev sees
take over payments
Call
Not ce s hereby g ven t hat
Coo v I e
5052
rad
o
rad
a
t
res
s
850
f I d rt top soli I mestone &amp;
egatees
executors
ad SITTER n my horne tor 5 year
Cred
t
Manager
[614
772
W n fred
Jane
K ng
of
a 13 p
Phone 992 7066
7 16 tic
gravel ca
Bob or Roger
old boy 11 30 a m 5 30 p m 5
5669 or wr te 260 East Ma n
Pomeroy Oh o R 0 has been m n fstrators and ass gns of
Jeffers day phone 992 70a9
8
3
Jtc
Street
days a week Cal 992 5844
Ch
1
cot
h
e
Ohio
45601
duly appo nted Execufr x of the Ne e Adk ns Deceased the
BLACK pony sadd e good
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
unknown
her s
de v sees
78 ACRFS 2 akes beaut ful
Estate of Marv n De bert K ng
8 13 3tc 197
4 7 tfc
cond ton Call 992 3059
S232
VEGA
Hatchback
executors
ad
trees
rolling
meadows
-~-------deceased late of Pomeroy Oh o legate es
a 13 3tc
automat c ow m eage new
2 11 tfc
m nlstrators and ass gns of BABYS TTER needed n my
electr c ty Salem Townsh p
R DING horse for sa te 2 years
R D Me gs County Ohio
t
res
c
at
days
992
2644
F
lorence
Taylor
Deceased
the
o
d
green
broke
Gent
e
Cal
Rd
No
625
dead
ends
nto
Cred tors are requ red to I le
home 5 days week. Ca 1 992
LOSE we1ght w lh New Shape
even ngs 667 3785
CONCRETE
9925510
heirs
dev sees
3581
man entry - IDEAL HOME CREMEANS
the r ( a ms w t h sa d t due ary unknown
Tablets and Hydrex Water
8
13
6tp
delivered Monday through
l ega tees
executors
ad
with n four months
SITE Also fronts on
8 1 tfc
8 14 3fc
P s Dutton Drug
M d
Sa turday
and
eve n ngs
Town sh p Road No 16 Listed
Dated th s lOth day of August m n strator s and ass gns of
d eporl and Ne lson Drug
1969 OODGE w ndowed super
Phone 446 1142
Andrew Tay or Deceased I he PART TIME babys tier from I
1974
EXCELS I OR Salt Works E
at $300 per acre Make offer
8
13
3t
c
van automat c transm ss on
unknown
hers
dev sees
6 13 tfc
waters Realty
Box 324
Man St Pomeroy All k nds
4 p m 2 3 days a week Phone
Runs
good Looks good $1295
legatees
executors
i;td
773
5857
of sa lt water pellets water
Worth ngton On o .43085
Mann ng D Webster
36
GAS
stove
w
th
automat
c
George Hat 992 5949
nuggets bock salf and own
Phone (614) 888 1892 or (6 141 WILL tr m or cu t trees and
Judge m n strators and ass gns of W
.8 14 6t c
oven t mer clock etectr c
8 15 3t c
888 2803
shrubbery
A so clea n out
n
Moore Deceased the unknown
(81 15 22 29 3tc
Oh
o
R
ver
Sa
t
Phone
992
rot
sser
e
good
cond
t
on
$40
basements a1t cs etc Phone
389 1
hers
dev sees
legatees
Gas
f
oar
furna
ce
SJO
Mason
8
15
3tc
949 3221 or 742 4441
executors cldmln strators and CAREER OPPORTUNITY for
773 5386
6 5 He
Men or Women - Nat onw de
assig ns of Harry Stevens
7 14 26tc
8 13 3tp
I nsurance offers earn ngs up
Deceased the unknown hers
J
to S15 000 (lh s sa salary not A SSORTED
JOBS contracted Phone 742
dev sees
egatees e)(ecu tors
PUBLIC NOTICE
turn
ture
and
COLORED
TV
Phone
949
3057
"
a draw to se I camp ete n
3074 or write Box 23 Langs
app Bnces
The Southern Loca ~hOot admln strators and ass gns of
Pr vale
Phone
8 13 61C
surance protect on
I fe
v lie Ohio
Lucy
Stevens
992 7066
o strict wl 1 offer for sale a 1962 Florence
hea th
auto
f re
com
1 23 26tc
Dodge and a 1963 Internal onat Deceased the unknown hetrs
8 11 tfc 1973 HONDA 50 m 1'1 Ira I b ke
mercia
auto f nance and
ega t ees executors
school bus All b ds must be devisees
$100 Phone 9493195
mutua
l
funds
No
pr
or
ex
AUTOMOBILE nsurance been
subm uted to t he c erk s off ce adm 1n strators and ass gns of
8 13 31c
per ence s necessary s nee OUTBOARD motor Johnson 18
cancelled?
Lost
your
no lat er than September 16 1974 Ne l e Rucker Deceased the
h
p
e
ectr
c
start
or
w
!I
we have one ot the- most
he rs
dev see s
operators
I
cense
Call
992
~~ 12 00 0 clock noon at which unknown
trade for equa ve ue Phone 1 ACRE LOT su table tor house
compete tra n ng programs
7.428
egatees
executors
ad
t me the b ds w
be opened
992 7494 F fe s M dd leport
n
the
ndustry
f
you
are
or Ira ler Water tap s n
m nlstrators and ass gns of
6 15 tfc
The h ghest b d w I be ac
a 11 6tc
nterested n a career op
sta ed
1 m lie south of
===---=-- -=------- -cepted The Board has the r o ht Henry Lawson De c eased the
portunlfy
n
a
reward
ng
he i rs
deV'Isees
Rutland on County Rt 3
to ret use any and a 1 b ds unknown
b u ~ ness
c al
Stan l ey REG STEREO ThOroughbr ed
exe c utors
ad
Phone 742 3654
NEW LISTING Nice 3 ABOUT S Hli.LY ACRES P ease spec:lfy n bid wh c h bus l egatees
Fergu son &amp;t 614 -446 4707
Is desired More nformat on min strators and ass gns of R
3 B R home bath lots
bedrooms
bath
utll1fy
large
u5TS;or:-sale trall~r or house
year ngf II';'
f lly Phone
gent e 992
2 yr5039
old -------~---••s_•'-'
Co lect M onday lh u Fr day
grade
concern ng lh e buses c an be P Sk nner Deceased and th e
All uf lites Phone 7•2 3615
of tile and paneling nice
I
v
ng
garage
and
breezeway
a
a
m
lo
4
30
p
m
An
Equel
hers
devisees
8 12 SI C
obte ned
by
c a lng;
the unknown
Rut and Oh io
Opport
un
ty
Employer
k
tchen
porches
out
Large
lot
n
Tuppers
Plains
legatees
executors
ad
READY MIX
CONCRETE
Super ntendent s Off ce
7 16 tfc
8
s
2t
c
bu !ding city water and gas
min slr ators and ass gn s of
TREE r pened pea ches wh t e
del vered right fo
your
You need $16 000 00
A ma B Sk nner Dec eased w I
pro ject F as! and easy Free
and yellow at Mason pea ch
f8 ) 15 22 29 ! 9) S 4t c
JUST $8 000 00
APPROX 49 acres on Baley
N~W LISTING - 4 bedrooms
take not ce that on the 12th day APPL CATION S are be ng
orchard
Ma so n
West
estlmales Phone 992 3284
Run Road one m le from
10
AI.MOST
LEVEL
ACRES
cce
pted
at
fh
e
off
c
e
ol
the
a
large
l1ving
bath
front
porch
V rg n a
of July 1974 James s nger
Goeg en Ready M x Co
crossroads
not foo far from
c
erl&lt;.
for
wate
ma
ntenan
ce
- On good fish ng creek c ty
be ng
P a ntlff
f ed h s
2 carport and 2 outbuildings 2
M dd ~port Oh o
8 13 lfc
the Sa lem Ce nter M ne Good
man n Ra e ne Rep y boK 33
Com pta nt In the Common P ea s
water available Ideal for
6 30 He
~
acre of level land Want lust
road fr o nt~ge some timber
8 IS 10 c
Court Me gs County Oh o n
1974 SUZ UK I off on road Ira 1
home trailer or summer
The Bailey Farm
conta ct
$16
500
00
Case No 15 610 aga nst the --------~-~
b ke Ca 1 992 5601 after 5 p m
C BRADFORD Auct oneer
Mrs Paul Bal ey
cottage
near
mine
No
1
on
HERE
YOU
ARE
Cab
n
In
above named parties and
Comple t e Serv ce
8125t c
8 6 6tp
good blacktop road Rutland
others demanding that a I
Phone 949 3a21 or 949 3161
the woods 3 rooms 2 porches
----------~-.........
FACTS
calms of the defenc;tants may be
ME LO N S sweet corn gr een
Racine Oh o
area
S6
000
00
and a bath
Asking only
HOUSE 630 M II st
Md
~djudged nuj and vo d and that
peppe rs cue urn ber s for sa e
Cr It Bradford
60 ACRES - About 20
TWO
4
room
and
bath
ap
t
s
n
$3
000
oo
Plenty
of lish
•••rort 6 rooms 1 , baths
Pia nt ff s t t e be qu eted on l..ol
Gerald
ne
C
eland
Ra
e
ne
s
1
ttc
M ddleport For nforme~t on
fut
basement
part ally
tillable many building sites
Oh o
No 425 n S W Pomeroy s
YOUR CHANCE - 4 renlols In
call 992 2550 or 74 6551
carpeted
kitche-n
comp let~
with
city
water
home
has
3
Add ton to tower Pomeroy now
tt c F OR FREE est mates on
8
the heart ol Middleport Close
7 3 He
w~sh
Bnd dryer efc Could
Incorporated n the v !age of
a umlnvm
replacement
B R s beth utility R some
to all shopping
Asking
he :l u~drooms gas furnace
M dd eport
Me gs County
ADMIRAL
am
fm
stereo
rad
o
w
ndows
Sid
ng
storm
doors
TRA LER
Br owns Tra ler
carpeti ng &amp; paneling 2 free
r
place storm doors and
$35 000 00 but wan t you to look
Oh o R~ference Deeds Vol 82
re cord player flhone 9a5 3305
and w dews Ra ling Ptione
Court
Pomeroy
Phone
997
w ndows curtains and drapes
gas wells 2 water wells
Chester
Page 585 Vol 80 Pages 212 and
Chari
Isle
Syra
cuse
Oh
o
and
make
us
an
offer
33l 4
Included For Information ca ll
213
Deed Re c ords
Me gs
basement F A heat over
Car
Jacob
Sales
8 11 :i tp
10
ACRES
In
Middleport
7 18 ttc
EIden Wat burn 992 2805
county Oh o
Representative
V
V
8 000 sq ft or good buildings
Good location for several
a 13 tfc
You are requ red to answer
JOhnson
and
Son
Inc
under roof stocked pond all
the Compta nt w thin 28 days BU SINES S room 22:\BO 234 E
houses
or
trailers
Maybe
a
4 30 tfc
Man St
Pomeroy
Oh o
2 BEOI!lOOM l'iouse RutlAnd
fenced S~3 000 00
after the ast publ cation of th s
sma ll farm S25 000 00 Just
Phone
992
5786
or
992
3975
Phone 992 5858
not ce wh ch w ll be P\Jbl shed
211
ACRES
Close
to
Stote
_..
give us an offer on this We II
6 12 He
to f I your old COUCh Md
8 tJ tfc
once each week for s x sue
8 14 71c FOAM
Park and Lake all minerals
cha r cu hlons a.s low .u
l isten
cess ve w~eks and the last
apartment
SlO 95 upholstery okka only
STEREO RADIO l!im fm 8
publ cat on wl I be made on FURNISH ED
MOBII.E HOME &amp; LOT - 2 pa ld woter fop 20 pet down
adulfs only In M lddleporf
SOc 4 Inc h covered foAm
August 29th 1974 Answer date
tr&amp; c k tape c omb nat on 4
balance like rent just $125
Bedrooms nicely furnished
Phone 992 3874
matlre ss~s tot- $1Mdt~rd s ze
w I be September 27th 1974
speaker
sound
system
per
acre
Near store ond shop_p)ng A
5 12 tfc
bed
$79 95
Pomeroy
In case of your fa lure to
B~tan ce S106 78 Or' ea~f
The dachshund IS a breed of answer
AI.L
PRICED HOMES TO
Recovery
622
E
Main
51
term s C.eti 992 3965
real buy for fl couple for
or otherw se respond as
.....
dog developed m Germany to p~rmttted by the Oh io Rules of 4 ROOM furn shed apartment
.....
..__
Pomeroy
Oh
io
Phone
992
CHOOSE
FROM
S5 75000
8 14tfc
cl ose to Powells Super Valu
7554
pursue badgers mto the1r C vI Procedure w fh n the t ime
SOLD
LAST
WEEK 4
Phone 992 3658
7 74 26tc
N E W green re e l ner
stated iudgment by defau t w 1
$1 50
burrows The World Almanac be
BUY
NOW
AND
GET
SET
WITH 10
PROPERTIES
8 7 He
PhOne 992 2571
aga nst you for the
notes The dachshund has a ret rendered
TLED
BEFORE
WINTER
YEI\.RS
EXPERIENCE
WE
UPHOLSTERY
fabrics
by
the
ef demanded n the Corn
8 14 tfc
3 ANO 4 ROOM furniShed and
yard
nchn w de as low 1111
SEE OR CI\.LI. US
long body w1th a deep chest PI-a nt
KNOW
THE
TOP
DOli.AR
unfurn shed
apartment'
$2 ~9 p&amp;r yard Vet vets u tow
POTATOE S Phone 8-43 7-i95
ON
YOU~
shorl lees and long ears The
VALUE
Phone 992 5434
1mpor't&amp;d velvttl
as SS 25
LARRY E SPENCER
lA l2tc
Wire ha1red dachshund has
PROPERTY
!OVER
4
12
lfc
l9
60
We
also
have
nvlan
Clerk of Courts
hercuton
cotton
prints
remarkable stamma and
PRICED PROPERTIES
Court of Common Peas PRIVATE meetng room for NIGHTCLUB w fh 2 30 am
-vinyls and remnants by lht
courage and has been used m
license Write 6oJ~ 729 w c o
SEI.DOM
SELL.) IF YOU
Me igs County Oh o
any organ tat on phone 992
yard or by 1he p1tce Pomeroy
The Oat v Sentinel Pomeroy
Aomeroy Oh o
hunhng wild boar and stag
REALLY
WI\.NT
TO SELL
397S
Recovery 627 E Meln St
Oh o
deer
US
TOO/\.
Y
3
11
tfc
Pomeroy
Phone
992
7554
....,.
(7) 18 25 ( 8) 1 8 IS 22 29 7tc
B 14 Me
MlddiOHrf Pomeroy
1 24 26tc

----

Evening at Pops

6

10 3J Mec0avls3 415 OorasWortd6 JudySi ng s 13
9 00 - Kung Fv 6 Ironside 3 4 15 International PertOf"mance
20

171 Purl 51
Mlclclteport Ohio
9U-S367

.1_91:;;.4;_-0:WJ~IfMi~=

00 -

1.

B&amp;K EXCAVATING

992 7204

R
r Jeffers
Or Oge
Dav 992 7089
Ntghl 992 3525
or 992 5232

8 15 61c

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

w Matn
Pomeroy 0
Locl1ed .-t Modern Su~ply
Sm~ll Engine Rep••r

399

loot or contract Also dozer
work and sephc tanks '"

Mason W Ya

Cal ' " 382

------- ---J B E D ROO M house f urn She d

W1lk1nson Small Eng1ne

!)ITCHING SERVLCE

"--,.--,.----~,

_:__- -- - -- - ----:- - - . : J

Employment

BISSELl BROlHERS
CONST. CO.

' "the Area

350 V 8 au toma t c P steer ng &amp; bra k es da r k blve f ln~s h
bl ue nler or b lue v inyl roo t fa c tory air e.ond I oned I ke
new w w t tres rad o Many ot her ex tr a s

11 - The O.Uy S.ntlnel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Thursday .\ug 15

--

Oetu•e stroller
Cosc-o h gh cho ir 18 50 Cosco
playpen
Sl2 50
Ro c k i ng
horse u 00 All new Ph.One
Mason 773 5477
B IS lip

rad o good t
ow mileage

c a n br c foa m g ue z ppers
tack ng

e9

~·n

I

Sa l e
F r dil y
an d
Sat u r day 6 98 Lau r e S
M d d eporl 9 a m o S P m
8 14 J c

BO B S A sh land A uto Se r v ces
190 M u berry St
P ome r oy
O h o E)Cper e-n ce d mec l"l a n c
on du ty gen erd ove r hau
Tun e up s S5 a nd up B a k. e
work - carb ad us men !

m at es Ca H• ttl

SECL U DED new four bt!Qroom
1wo bath toto&amp; I electr ic hott •
9;1 acres n ic f 1!. IChen tvll
carpet Ca 1 747 -ii JJ
I IS 6t p

1974 OPEL MANTA
12995
1 Door orange f n sh blk v lnyl1n tenor bucket sea ts less
than S 000 m les &amp; 3 mo old Rad io deluxe bumpers

Y AR D

oo
00
oo
00

fre~ l!~ f

lp m

Y A RD S AL E JO.q
Sou t h 2- d
Street
M dd e po rl
Oh o
A ugu st 18 and 19
8 S 3tc

Prices do not Include patnt
WtdeW•deW•deWJde-

~

Y A RD SALE
Fr day and
Sa t u rda y
Lar k. n
S
R ut and
M n re f gera tor
o ld pu m p o r g ~n n ex cel enf
c ond f on an t QUCS o lamps
c r eam c ans d Shes c roc k
ars etc
81S?c

Ph 992 74S4 or 9'92 7179

8
10
12
14

SH OOTI N G
M "' (h
Co n
Ho i pw Gun Club tu n f irst
r gh t aft er M If'S Ceme ery
R utla n d
Fac tory c hokpd
gu ns only Sund ay A.ugus t 18
8 15 JIC

THE DEPENDABLE
CONTRACTING CO.

2 s~c;ees

'(#.\

Not1ce

Business Services
- ..,.._.:._____

WILL pant root s and !louses

est

North

East

I+
ass

ass
Pass
Pass

2+
3'1'

s•Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

South

Dble

2.
4'1'

6.
THE

Openmg lead-8+

BANK

SAD

SYEJO!.Y

THNG5

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
South d1dn t have much of
a takeout double but after
North cue b1d m doamonds
and then bod hearts and f•ve
Sl?ades South dectded that
h•s l?artner wanted h1m to go
to s1x 1f he held a Singleton
d1amond
When South looked at dum
my he wtshed he hadn t ac
cepted the slam mvilatton NINN!E WINKLE
There appeared to be two
losers unless he COUld dro~
the queen jack of clubs Wit
three leads Then he saw the
chance for a squeeze and
decoded to retam all options
He ruffed the second d1a
mond led a trump to dummy
ruffed dummy s last d1a
mond played two more
rounds of trumps wh1le d1s
card mg his fh• ee ot hearts
and Ihen led out lhree rounds
of clubs 1 uffmR the thud one

OKAY

~
' , ....
'"'"" M-

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

' ......

:::=======::::---r:;;;;-;;:~;;:;-;;-;;-~:;::;-:;;:;-;;-r----;-c----;-cy---;;;-;:;;;~~;:;;;;:;;:;--r;:;;:;-;;;-;:~"1;"-;:;::;-;;;::,l
WHEN YOU COJLD e&gt;E ON1HAT
GO ALONG l HAVE

~ w NNIE T BEEM6 5 LLY
'OR You 10 5 TOUT
&lt;ERE: N "THE HOT
:&gt;UN WATCH No us
rAKE P CTIJRE5

FABULOUS YACHT WTH
1HAT AlTfiACTIVE
AVA LABLE MUL1
MlL ONA fiE

YOUR BEST N
TE Rc5T5 AT HEART

m dummy

East had shown up woth
lh1ee spades and three clubs '
and surely held at least fiVe -:::=:::::::::--:-;r,~;.;:;;;;;~;:;,:;;;;,
d•amonds That meant he .
TO PROVE YOU'RE
cou ld no I hold more than two
A NUTL!:IUTLEY hearts and a squeeze aga mst
1 LL &gt;&lt;t:ACH
West was gomg to work
BE~IND MESouth led dummy s last
trump d1scarded another
heart and watched West
squirm West could onlliJ!pld
lhree cards One had to I!I!Jthe
Jack of clubs He was forced
to unguard h1s queen of
hearts and the slam wu
made
IN!.'WSI'AI Ell ENTI!:HP IIISE A!iSN

-

.,_,

c:q;J :1 •!iZ!:ZtJ
The blddmg has been
11
Wetl
Norlh Eoll Soulh
••
Pass U
Pass
Pass ·a•
Pau
3•
Pass ••

s•

Pass

~•

Pass

'

You South hold
UQ&amp;&amp;t 'I'A9854 +AK•z
What do you do now"
A- Five heorll to the Kloollflc
coli 8i1 beorll would 1101 be H•
bul you mlthl •ol -ke •
Four notrump 111110 haa 10me
mer II

ol••

•

'

LUKEV
PLAV
CHECKERS
SNUFFV
HE WENT TO A BODACIOUS

TAFFV

STOP
TWITCH IN
'lORE TAIL
0~ TAFFV

I

A few thoughts
a lost love

Rats 1

�•

•

Fly ash, sewage sludge
key in strip mi"ne study

Bar may oppose
immunity for

•

ex-president

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

. · OUth
Portsm
•
L • wms
e-

Social Notes

MRS. VANAMAN DIES
RUTLAND - Mrs. Bernice
E. Vanaman, 60, Rt. I,
Rutland, died early Wednesday
evening at the Holzer Medical
Cenr.,r. The body was taken to
the Walker Funeral Home at
Rutland
where
funeral
arrangements are being
compler.,d.

\

AFI'ER HOURS DRINKING
MIDO~ESBROUGH,
England (UP I) - Robert Hendersoo, 53, was jailed for
six months •Wednesday on
charges be hid in the men's
room of a pub and drank nine
botUes of spiritS when the pub
closed. Pollee said che was
found in the morning finishing
the ninth botUe.
·

MEIGS
lltEATRE
Tonlghit. AuG. 16-1hru
TllursdiY Aug .. 11

NOT OPEN
FRI .. SAT .. SUN.
AUG. 2:1-14·25
"THE SUGARLANO
· ·EXPRESS"
Goldie Hawn

I

CPGl

ALSO
CARTOONS
-•S•how-•SI•o•rii7P•·•m•._ _ .

..

.

•••••••••

T

EASTERN - The Eastern
Local School District Board of
Educa ti on has approved
subs tit ute teachers, bus
drivers and cooks for the new
school year.
The list includes Kathryn
Baum , J . S. Davis, Violet
Millhone, Augusta Barnhart,
Alice Phillips, Lawrence Rose,
Mrs . Ja mes Bac h, Sus ie
Heiner, J ennifer Butcher, Leo
Kennedy, Farie Kennedy ,
Grace Hawley, Vinas Lee,
Susan Miller, Chlorus Grimm,
Suzann Wolle, teachers; Ar·
chie Rose, Dan Ayers , Gary
Dill, Or'is Smith, Harold
Brannon, C. 0 . Ne wland,
Herman Schul, Larry E .
Millhone · and Larry A.
Millhone, bus drivers ; Mildred
Bissell, Virginia Walton ,
Virginia Burke, Helen Frank,
Juanita Spencer, . Barbara
Masters, Jean Sexson, Lucille
Smith, Betty Young, Ethel
Carson, 'Mrs. Larry Young,
Opal Hollon, Doris King and
Martha Bailey, cooks.

COORDINATE
Coordinates is included in thi s s al e. Pants.
Skirt s · .Blous es · Jacke ts · Vests . Sh irt
Jacs . Mi sses · Womens . Juniors.

SALE PRICES

1

l

I
I

.

.

for$} 00

DRESS SLACKS
Sizes 29 to 42 and extra large sizes 44 to 50 .
Solid colors : plaids · neat patterns. A fine
new selection .
This sale include s our entire stock.

1
1
~

·

BIG PRE-SEASON SAVINGS

Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens
Mens

9.95 Dress
10.95 Dress
11.95 Dress
12.95 Dress
13.95' Dress
14.95 Dress
16.95 Dress

Slacks
Slacks
Slacks
Slacks· ·
Slacks
Slacks ·
Slacks •

Sale
S.ale
Sale
Sale
saallee
Sale
5

7.88
8.88
9.38
9.88
10.• 88
11.88
13 88

MEN'S '6.95

j---;;,;-~ruu-1! FLANNEL SHIRTS

! WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR !l
j

Special purchase from a famous ·
maker . Long gowns · short gowns .

!

Reg. 10.00 &amp; 12.00 Sleepwear . . .. Sale 4.99
Reg. 8.00 &amp; 9.00 Sleepwear ... . Sale 3.99
Reg . 6.00 &amp; 7.00 Sleepwear . .•. Sale 2.99
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Fair Days Sale

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. 100 Pet . Cotton

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Reg . S!OOfor

1
1

1st Qualify

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SALE 401

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MEN'S MR. LEGGS
Blue Denim

WESTERN JACKETS

II

-~::;~~Royal
. . . Matching

'·

Regular price 12.95. 14 ounce blue denim.
Small , m edi,um , large and extra large sizes.

SALE PRICE $gas

Towels
- Hand Towels
Bath

[---FAii-;;~-sit~::::_.

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DOUBLE KNIT SPORT COATS

~olid color blazers and fan c y pattern ~oat s.
S1 zes 36 to 46 in regulars and long·s.
Special Sate Price '

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Fair Days Sale
Sale

DRAPERIES
.a~ rid

84"

Sizes 29 to 42 waist. Includes our entire
stock . Polyester and cotton blend twills.
Houndst.ooth checks . colorful plaids. Stock
up now for back. to-school wear..

Mens 8.95 Fashion Jeans · · · . , Sale 7.00
Mens 9.95 Fashion Jeans •• • •• · Sale 8.00
Mens 10.95 .Fashion Jeans .• • •• Sale 9.00

1st qualltv . foam back fibergla u .

63"

Fair Days Sale
•

Men's and Young Men's
t
FASHION JEANS

Mens $49.95

!

Fair Days Sale

BATH
ENSEMBLES

length· ~ .

Mens 11.95 Fashion Jeans •••• • Sale 10.00

MAIN ·STORE AND MECHANIC ·sTREET WAREHOUSE
.OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM

'

ELBERFELDS IN POME.ROY

•

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Fair Days Sale

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Specia I Sale Price

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GIRLS PANTIES I
Sizes 2 to 8
Darnette Seconds

Sizes small (14-14112), medium (15-15'12),
large (16-16'12), extra large (17-17'12).
Permanent press · colorful plaid patterns.

~~

blanket awarded by the Meigs
County Branch of the Athens
C&lt;&gt;wtty Savings and Loan Co.
Third place In the first race
was won by "Gorgeous 1.ady,"
owned by Donald 1.. and
Sedonia Spencer, with Spencer,
formerly of Pomeroy, driving.
"Gorgeous Lady" came in
second in the fourth race.

In the third and sixth rac•t•sfo_r lhe three year old "trotter,
"B.FD," owned by Ray
Newhart or Marietta, WOil first
in both . "B .FD" had the f:o •test
time and was the trophy horse
amung the three year old
trotters. Presenting tJ1e trophy
blanket on behalf of Elberfeld's
were Mr. and Mrs . William
Downie . Second place in the

First in the second race was
"Our Gold" owned by Jack
Wentz of Vincent with " Brad's
Hot Wheels" owned by Virgil
Butt of Croton talting second
and "Bye Bye Gigi" owned by
Donald L. and Sedonia Spencer
taking third with Don Spencer
again driving.
First in the fifth race went to
''Travlllon J ane" owned by Dr .
Robert G. Fletcher of Galena ;
"Bye Bye Gigi" moved to
second in that race and third
was "Brad's Hot Wheels."
Most crowded in the entries
was the three year old trot with
three different divisions having
· to be made because of the
many entries.

third race went to " Bea Sur-

!))~!F~~~9~~t~
~

Brzefs.

By United Press International
SEOUL-SOUTH KOREAN PRESIDENT Park Chunghee
asked his cabinet today to shorten the period of mourning for Ius
wife, killed by an assassin's bullet.meant for him, because of
"busy state affairs." The 57-year-old Park ducked Thursday
when.the assassin starr.,ct shooting, but his wife and a 17-year-old
girl were killed while he gave a televised speech at the National
Theater.
The cabinet proclaimed fi ve days of official
mourning aod decided to move up the dar., of Mrs. Park's funeral
from Wednesday to Monday In deference to Park's wishes to get
on · with official business. "The · decision was made after the
president personally asked that tile mourning period for the First
Lady be shorr.,ned In view of busy state affairs." a cabinet
'
spokesman said. ·
The 49-year-old Mrs. Park was struck on the head by the
second of four bullets fired by a gunman who was later wounded
In the thigh by Park's security agents. She died 8'h hours later,
after surgery.
·

prise " owned by Henry
Beaver ,
Sunbury,
with
" Anotller Doll ," owned by
Charles
Ecker. Donald
Spencer, and Michael Swalzel. took third .
·
In the sixth ra ce, " Ira Nib"
was second and " Speedy
Kitten " owned by Sidney and
Roger Spencer of Pomeroy and
Dr . Jacob
Weinber ge r ,
Gallipolis, was third .
"Can Town" own&amp;! by Fred
Polk, Zanesville , won first
place honors in the seventh and
lOth races . Second in the
sevent h was " Rican Tam
Tam" owned by Wi IIi am
Miller, Piketon, with "R. E.
Leigh" owned by Jim A.rledge,
third. In the lOth race, "R: E.
Leigh" was second and
"Grape," owned by Norman

ood Donna Anderson of Cir·
deville. was third.
First place in tile eighth and
ltth ra&lt;&gt;cs, still for three year
old trotters. went to " Belittle"
owned by Corner Lea F'arm ,
WashinKton C. H. Second place
in the two races .went

to

" l)amaska" owned by Hobert
I .ewi s , Donald Brodess and
Donald Rarker of Piketon and
W~verly . '111ird place in the
eighth went to Speed N' Glory"
owned by several Circleville
men and third in th e 11th we nt
to " Big Kitty ," owned by
l£sterStcwurt , Mason , W. Va.,

and

Ralph

Calvert,

Jr .,

Pomeroy.

Don Spencer, formerly of
Pomeroy,
dr ove
his
" Fascination Mir " to first
pla&lt;;e spots in both the ninth

and 12th ra ces to become the

trophy blanket winner in the
free lor all pace. The trophy
was donated by the Davis
Insurance Agency of Pomeroy.
Second place in both races
went to "Tuloma" owned by
Virginia L. Russ, Oak Hill, and
third place wenl to " Miss Kay
Vola" in both races. 'l'h~t
animal is owned by Dor is
Newhart of Marietta .

en tine
Devoted To Th e
VOL. XXVI NO. 88

POM EROY·MIDOLE PORT, OHIO

Interest.~

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Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions - Sarah Congo,
Portland ; Paula VanCooney,
Middleport ;
William
Buchanan , HocKingport ;
Pauline
Derenberger,
Pomeroy; William Morris ,
Pomeroy; Harold Fetty,
Langsville .
Discharges - Grever Klein,
[)orothy Jarvis, Ethel Ferrell,
Rodney Grueser, Allan Taylor,
James Harless, Phyllis Ben·
nett, Jay ·Neutzling , Frank
Lance, Doris neer.,r.

Nixon for vice president?

Edgar Russell 89, dies
Edgar J . Russell, 89, Rt. I,
. Middleport, died Thursday at
Camden Clark Memorial
Hoopital, Parkersburg.
He was !'receded in death by
his parents, Mltchell and
Alvlra . Archer' Russell, his
wife, Martha Hysell Russell, In
. 1970, one · sister, Anna Buck,
and one brother, Clyde.
Survivors Include one son,
Guy A., Rt. I, Middleport; two
daughl&lt;!rs, Gladys Hendricks,
ParkersbiD'g, and Vera Cantleberry, Columbus; 10 grandchildren;
18'
great•
grandchildren·; two great .
great - grandchildren; one

YOUNG TONY KENNEDY, SON OF Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Kennedy of Tuppers Plains, riding
"Bachelor Boy", almost a fixture at Meigs County Fairs after many years, drew enthusiastic
applause again this year as he escorts horses in the harness racin g program past racing fans at
the grandstand.
·

which in turn started a chain
reaction involving four other
parked cars . They were owned
by Jo Helen and Roy E.
Thomas, Charleston, W. Va .,
WASHINGTON ( UP!) ~ The
Stanley Kaldor, Rt . I , Shade, ir.,m, routinely dropped into
Ross sr.,wart, Minersville, and the Congressional Record ,
Robert Rhodes, Rt. 2, Ra cine. seemed to praise form er
There were no injuries and ' President Richard Nixon and
no citation . There wa s over recommended 'that President
$100 damage to the Kolesser Ford appoint his predecessor
vetilcle.
vice president and then resign.
But it was a phony, slipped
intO Thursday's recOrd aSide
IT WENT DARK
Complications developed
In the free grandstand entertainment at the Meigs
County Fair Thursday night,
but the show, In typlcalLone.
tradition, went on.
A transformer failed
throwing the grandstand
area "into darkness and
cutting out the sound of the
performers, Nat.- Sutckey,
Lanzo and Oscar and Terry
Lane. A portable transformer w11_s pressed toto use
and th Nhow went on."

brother, Guy R. Warren; one
sister, · Georgia
Diehl ,
Pomeroy, and several nieces
and nephews.
He .was a member of the
Pomeroy Chur.ch of Chriat and
atr.,nded the Bradford Church
of Christ.
Funeral services will be
Sunday at 2 p.m. in the
Bradford Church qf Christ
where the body wlU lie in state
from I until 2 p.m. Burial wtll
be In the Bradford Cemetery.
Clifford Smith and John Wyatt
will officiate . Friends may· call
at the Ewing Funeral Home at
any time. ·

M eig.~·Mason

Area

PHONE 992-2 156

TEN CrNTS

Cypriot defenses
cruntble to Turks
NICOSIA (UP!) - Turkish
forces thundered acr oss
Cyprus at will today, securing
the northeastern third of the
island and nearly isolating this
capital city. Greek defenders
scattered southwards.
Heavy lightin g erupr.,d at the
line of white painr.,d oil drums
dividing the Greek and Turkish
Cypr.iot communities a nd

Turkish warplanes and artillery hammered the area
around the U.N.·held airport,
practically encircling it.
Turltish troof&gt;s bore down on
the city from the north but did
not surround it.
'
Thousands of Greek Cypriots
civilians fl ed .before the
onr us hing Tu rk s . Refu gees
streamed south to Umassol

near the British base areas at
Akrotiri and Episkope.
The remnants of ·Greek
Cypriot forces moved along the
main road from Nicosia to .
Larnaca on the south coast In
an effort to keep one lifeline to
the capital open. Turkish artillery and mortar fire zeroed
in on tile road 15 mi les north of

Larflaca.

Stitzlein.new Jackson
area development agent

The ·annual horse pulling Junior Fair Market wlll be held
conr.,si will be the grandstand at 8:15p.m.
attraction at 8:30 this evening
Saturday's attractions will
at the !lith Annual Meigs include a horse harness racing
County Fair.
program beginning at 3 p. m.
The fair opened today for the and the John Mathews Gospel
fourth consecutive day under Singing Family as the free
sunny skies. At 5 p. m. today, grandstand attraction at 8:30
the second evening of twilight p. m. The fair closes Saturday
horse harness racing will get night.
underway and the annual

The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department investigated a six
car chain reaction accident
Thursday at 9:25 p. m. at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Ethelyn Kolesser , 58 ,
Columbus , was proceeding
north on the fairgrounds road
when she atr.,mpted to avoid
hitting a pony. She mistakenly
pressed the gas pedal rather
than the brake and struck a
parked car owned by Paul L.
Sturgeon, Hartford , w. Va .,

of The

FRIDAY. AUGUST 16, 1974

. WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT FORD, still keeping the
nation and many of his closest allies in suspense over his choice
for vice president, . called Teamster President Frank Fitzsimmons for a chat today at the White House. This was the
second conference of the week by Ford with a high-level labor
leader. He talked with George Meany on Tuesday. Fitzsimmons
was the str9ngest supporter of President Richard M. Nixon in
organized labor while Meany was one of Nixon's harshest critics.
On emerging from his 'home in Alexandria, Va. - which he
will continue using until moving Into the Whir., House next week
- Ford was asked this morning whether he had reached a
decision ·on his selection for vice president. With a broad grin he
said, "I haven't been thinking about it." ·

Six cars damaged

blan ket trophy provided by the Davis Insurance Agency In
Pomeroy. With Spencer and '' Fascination Mir' 1 are his wife,
the former Sandy Well of near Pomeroy, and tlleir children,
Kimmy, 2%, and Scott, 9 mo. ·The Spencers reside in
Marietta .

DON SPENCER, SON OF Pomeroy's veteran horse
tra ine r and driver, Sidney Spencer, drove his own horse
j'Fascination Mir" to two first place fi nishes· in the 9th and
12th races at the Fair Thursday night. Spencer received the

Horses to puii ·

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Fair Days S&lt;!le

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THIS WEEKEND

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Sunday School attendance on
Aug. 11 was 39, the offering
$18.28.
Worship services were held
at 11 o'clock with Bill
Winebrenner lay-speaker,
from the Asbury u. M. Church
In Syracuse, 0 . His scripture
reading was J ohn 3: 1~. At·
r.,ndance was 14, offering $11
Hnd ple9ges $68.
The Women's Society of
Christian Service will meet on
Tuesday evening , Aug. ·20 at 8
o'clock at tbe home of Nellle
Parker with a 11 roWid-robin"
program.
· Sunday guests of Clara
Follrod· and Nina Robinson
were Uncle John Follrod of Mt.
Sterling, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs.
otto Swartz o( Shade and Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Neutzling of
Long Bottom , R.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
and family of Sugar Grove, 0 .
came Sunday and with
SON BORN
Genevieve Guthrie attended
SYRACUSE - Mr . and Mrs.
the Parker reunion at Tuppers J ohn Arnott, Syracuse, are
Plains. Also attending this announcing the birth of a son
reunion were Mr, and Mrs. Aug . 6 at the Holzer Medical
Wilber Parker .
Certer. The 7lbs., 11 ozs. infant
Mr. and Mrs. Wald Swartz has been named Kevin Clay.
and Carrie Burson of Athens Mr . and Mrs. Arnott have a
called on Mr . and Mrs, Vere daughter, Becky Jane, age
Swartz Sunday afternoon.
. seven. Grandparents are Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs. ' Gerald. · Betty Curfman, Williamstown '
Guthrie, Paul and Diana, Ethel W. Va.; and Mr. and Mrs.
Guthrie, Mary Carr, and Mr. . William R. Arnott, R.aol.ge.
and Mrs. Charles D. Woode a11d Great-grandparents are Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bibbee and Mrs. D. 0 . Umensetr.,r,
and Dorsel attended services Pa~kersburg, Mrs . Ellen
at Bearwallow Church of Curfman, Gallipolis ; James ·
Christ. Sunday evening .with Sellers, . Portland, and Ott
. Edward White speaking.
· Arnott, Racine.

·

Misses · Womens · Preteens . Juniors
Girls. Fur trims . all weather . suedes
untrimmed .

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MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT

FALL COATS

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SUNDAY
CURTIS Reunion of Hoi! and
Mary Fosr.,r Curtis. the 67th,
will be held at the No. I
Pavilion at Thompson Park,
East Uverpool. Basket dinner
at noon. All relatives and
friends invir.,d.
REVIVAL at the Church of
Christ in Christian Union,
Pearl
St.,
Middl eport,
beginning today through the
25th, 7:30 p.m. nightly . Rev.
George Scott guest speaker. ·
Bissell Br others fea tured
singers.
, HOMECOMING a t Zion
Church of Christ, SR 143,
Pomeroy~Harrisonville
Rd.,
Sunday School at 9:30 a. m.
Worship service , 10:30 a.m ..
with basket dinner at 12:30
p.m. Afr.,rnoon progra!ll at 2
p.m. featuring the "Gospel
Tones" . Rick Morrison will be
the minisr.,r . Everyone is invir.,ct to attend.

PRICE

Y2

by Presto

1oo pet. cotton
checks .

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II SALE $33 4 I
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FAIR DAYS SALE

WOMEN'S .
DAYTIME DRESSES
SALE

DISH
CLOTHS

-4

FAIR DAYS SALE

1

Pressure
Canners

Jt waon't advertised, but
horae racing fMs got about
double entertainment Thursday at regular prices, at the
Meigs County fait . Because of
the large number of entries the
raeing progfam started early
and finished late.
Twelve races were offered
during the twilight racing
program which was starr.,d a
hall hour earllet than
scheduled.
The firs t and fourtll and the
second and fifth races were for
two year old pacers. Local fans
were given a special treat in
the first race when " Meigs
Marauder" owned and driven
by. Burdell McKinney of
Middleport raced to first place
honors. The Marauder dropped
to third place in the fourth
race.
Second in the first race was
" Palatine" owned by Deane H.
Northrup of Marietta and this
borse won first in the fourth
race. Having the best record in
the pac ing field , "Palatine"
was the winner of the trophy

11·~ews •• zn

r-~;"D;~~ -F~ro;;~;;e
I

FAIR DAYS SALE ·

Soc'1al ~~
l! Ca Iend arII
'

D
PE I I.

Big selection of slee veless and s hort sleeve
styles in s izes 10 thru 52.

Professional performers will
be the free grandstand entertainment for the lllth
Annual Meigs County Fair at
8:30 this evening.
Appearing for the evening
entertainment will be Nat .
Stuckey, Terri Lane and Lonzo
and Oscar.
Judging continued today at
the fair which opened under .
sunny slties today for the third
consecutive day. Friday, pony
harness ra cing and pony
running races will be held in
the afr.,rnoon with twilight
horse harness racing beginning
at 5 p. m. Tony Kennedy on '
Bachelor Boy will serve as the
outrider for the · racin g
program .
Friday night at 8:30 tile
annual horse pulling contest
wiU .be held.
..•. ' ....·.-.·;,.;t=.
,~'?.*.:.-::&gt;.
•.·.
~.....•·-:-:-.~·.·:·:·)

·::::

~~~!!!!!!!!·!!· •••••

YOU'll FIND PLENTY OF GOOD OLD FASHIONED FUN
AT THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR. . • • .. AND YOU'LL
FIND PLENTY OF GOOD NEW FASHION BARGAINS
DURING THIS TWO DAY SALE

are approvea

Pros on stage
at Meigs Fair
hi
t .s evening

'

••
•
•
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

School staffs

~~~:~~ t~~:!fnhgh:~~ ~~~~ 1~~:~

co::~r::

Horse races in overtinte

FINALS SET Ul'
Arrangf'ments ban been
oompleted lor tile se m ~ llna l
round in. the Mt lgs County
Horse•hoe Pitching tour·
nament ~·htch Is underway
at lbe . Middleport Com·
mYIIlty Park.
Roger Bra uer, director of
the parlf., said Bob Miller
will meet Norman Hawley In
semHinal play, this evening
and Bob Reed will meet J ay
Brown at 10 a. m. Saturday.
Winners of the two matches wlll receive trophies
and winner of a playoff
betWeen the two runners-up will be third place winner
and will also receive a
lroph y.
Trophl e11
a re
·provided by the PolnTVIew
Cable TV Co.

Continued from page I
expected to set up a self-governing Turkish region in the. OC·
eupled .OOe, winning by military might what could no\ be gamed
At the conference table.
In Nicosia, Greekand Turkish Cypriots clashed with mortars
and machine guns in the walled capital this morning, ending a
brief cease-fire that brought a night of uneasy calm to the
capital.
·
Keats said battles In tile capital's eastern Industrial sector set
off big blazes witll colunms of black smoke swirling overhead
and darkening the clear blue sky .

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Fly in Nobel County by the Ohio
ash Md sewage sludge will be Agricultural Research and
used in a joint $20,000 one year Development Center.
study of a new me.thod o!strip
"If the study proves sucmlne r eclamation, i t was cessful , we will have a
announced Wednesday.
relatively inexpensive methotl
The study is financed jointly of reclaiming the strip mined
by the Ohio Department of land while utilizing fly ash and
Natural Resources, Ohio State sewage sludge - both conUniversity , the American sidered by most people to be
Electric Co., Monongah ela und esira ble bypro du cts of
Power C&lt;&gt;., tile U. S. Bureau of modern society," said Natural
Mines and the National Ash Resources Director William B.
Association Inc.
Nye.
The study is being conducted
Walt Roman. of the department's division of Researph,
said that the fly ash would help
neutralize acid-laden strip
mined land and help retain
moisture. Fly ash is a byproduct of coal burned at
electric generating plants.
"After the soil is neutralized,
sewage sludge will be aaded to
HONOLULU (UP! ) - The provide humus and nutrients,''
outgoing president of the Roman said.
Romari said once the soil has
Americ8n Bar Association is
predicting approve! of a been treated, various types of
~esolution opposing legal vegetation would be planted.
unrnuntty for former president
Richard M. Nixon.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
The resolution before the
Chance
of
showers
ABA's 340, member House of
Delegates today does ftot . Saturday through Monday.
High temperatures ln. the 80s
men~on Nixon by name. But
and
upper 70s. Low temPresident Chesterfield Smith
peratures In the 60s.
said the measure resulr.,d from
Watergate disclosures and was
drafr.,d by a commit,.,_ with
Nixon in mind.
The rsolution said, the ABA
should conUnue "its dedication
to the principle offair, just and
'
Impartial application and
BYBERTIIAPARKER
enforcement of the law
Sabb;ltll
School attendance
regardless of the position or
status of any Individual alleged Aug. 11 at the Free Metl!odist
Church was 98. Morning and
to have vlolar.,ct the law."
.
In an interview at the ABA's evening attendance was 114,
offering for all services was
annual convention Smith said, $201.50.
"The . resolution should not
Mr. Paul Jacobs, Soutlt
mention anyone by name.
AlthOUgh it Is aimed at ~ Shore, Ky. visir.,d Suriday with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
revelations about Nixon, it
enlinciates a general principle Pearl Jacobs and · attended
services at the local church.
of law."
Mr. Paul Archer, Columbus,
visited Tuesday with his ·
mother, Mrs. Georgia Diehl
and atr.,nded the funeral of his
uncle, Mr. Griff Archer.
o
. Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
e0'10D
visited Sunday . with their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. John Douglas, GuysSTEVENS PINTS, Wis. ville.
(UP!) - Portsmouth, Ohio,
Special singers Sunday
recorded an 11~ victory over evening at the local church
Magnolia, Ill., Wednesday to were Mr. and Mrs. Clark,
advan~ In the Great Lakes Harrisonville.
Regional American Legion
Mr. Olin Rife, Columbus, is
\o!lrnament here.
staying at his mother's Mrs.
Dave Bush s1ruck out 13 Cora .Reshow's home at the
batters for Portsmouth in present time.
going all . the way. John
Saturday, Aug. 10 a train
Newberry slammed out two
hits with three runs batr.,ct in
and two runs scored.
·ringing . The engine and
Portsmouth's record is now
29-!8 for the season.
Finals In the event wiU be
on rubber tires.
held Sunday. The winner will
·· go to the American Legion
World Series, to be held at
RosebiD'g, Ore., Aug. 22-27.

•

the routine items in the staid
" Mr. Speaker , f01 mer Presi· daily diary of Congress.
dent Nixon 's mother was a
It caused mo~e anger than saint, by Ois own admission in
laughter in the House, and one his farewell message to the
of the angriest congressman White House staff. But he
was Earl Landgrebe, R-Ind., a omitted mention of his own
staunch Nixon backer . The saintly qualities in that wonitem was under Landgrebe's derful and touching address.
name.
''Ri chard
Nixon was
Continued
on
pa'ge 10
The phony entry said:

JACKSON - Dr . ·J ohn concerns. Additionally, these secretary, and a research
Stitzlein, who recently joined leaders will share their ideas scientist and two p~oject
the ,Jackson Ao'ea Extension and experiences with each
·(Continued on page 10)
'
ee nr.,r staff as the Community olher and attempt to coorResource Development age nt, dinate development efforts in
will be responsible !or a special the five-eounty .a rea.
project to includ e Athens ,
Local leader participation in
Gallia . J ackson, Meigs, and identifying and resolving inVinton Counties kn own as the dividual community problems
GROW (Generating Rural Ohi o and concerns will also be enWeal !b ).
couraged. This will be doqe by
Extension area supervisor working closely' with local
Charles Kn otts said Dr. Slit- deve lopment and planning
zlein also will be concerned groups including the county
with on-going development co mmuni ty dev elopm ent
work in the area .
groups already organized by
A s teering committee con- t he Coopera ti ve Extension
sistin g of fiv e communi ty Service.
leaders fr om each of the live . The GROW project is being
counties is being organized to financed for three years under
give directi on to the CROW the Rural Development Act of
effort. This committee will 1972.
identify and attempt to resolve
Miss Denise Lorb ac h of
.
JOHN
STITZLEIN
a r ea wide prob lems a nd Jackson has been employed as

Tippy Dye to retire at Northwestern
,BY Chet Tannehill
The pint-sized kid fr om
Sugar Run , ha ving been to
the top in the world
of collegi ate athl etics as
a player , coac h, and adm i ni s ~rato r , .has
elected
to do some fi shing, play some
golf, and take it easy in
Florida .
William Henr y Harrison
(Tippy ) Dye, 60, announced his
retiremen t Thursday as
athl etic di rec tor of Nor th·
·western University, Eva nSton,
Ill. Wildca t Head F ootba ll
Coach John Pont wil l' succeed
him.
Five years ago the Dyes Mrs. Dye Is the former Mary
Russell of Pomeroy - bought
property near Port Charlotte,
Fla ., in antic ipation of Dye's
BLOODMOBILE TIME
Next Monday, Aug. 19 Is
Bloodmobile Day In Meigs
County. It will be at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
from I to 6 p.m.
Mark the dale and stop to'
any time In the uftemoon to
·donate a unit of blood.

retirement. Upon accepting the 19~5 Big Ten champions
appoin tment at Northweste rn coached by Francis Schmidt,
in 1967, Dye announced he · He was named to the All
woul d retire in eight yea rs.
American basketball r.,am in
As a boy and ma n who set tile 1936-37 season.
goals and achieved them, so he
In baseball he played second
has a t the end of his base and shortstop. And he won
professiona l career . Eight three letr.,rs each in footb:ill,
years · have gone by at North- basketball, and baseball .
western and Dye is re tiring .
For twn yea rs afte r
And if he said he will fi sh, play graduation, Dye was in the
golf, and lake it eas~ in insur ance busi ness in CinFlorid a, that is exactly wha t he ·cinnati at . the same time he
·will do.
played quarterba ck and
Born in Harrisonville, Dye ·coac hed the bac kfield !or a
moved into Pomeroy during his Cin.cinnati professional football
elementary school years.
r.,am. From there hi• coaching
The full name is William career · blossomed at GrandHenry Harrison Dye, after a view Heights high school in
great un cle and not the ninth Colum bus, Brown University,
president of the Unir.,d .Slates. at Providence, R. 1., and tllen
But tl1e nickn ame Tippy to his alma mater whcr:- e he
came from Williain Henry was ass.ista nt football and
Ha r ri so n's campa ign slo. basketball coach. He coached
gan of " Tippecanoe and Tyler the Ohio State baseball r.,am
that wiJn the Big Ten title In
Too.''
He starred in all sports at 1943.
Pomeroy h i ~h school. He was
During the Waf Tippy joined
all-sla te basketball guard his the V-5 program at North
Carolina U, coaching football
last two years.
Although shor t (5·S) by and basketball , and later at the
. todny's sports qu alifica tions he Corpus Christi Naval Air Base.
wos rugged enough at 145 ~bs . He returned to Ohio S~,t~ in
!Continued on page 10)
to quar terb ack Ohio Stale's

TIPPY AND MARY DYE

t

I

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